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                  <text>10- Till' Oal!y Sentill(:, Mid!lleport-Pumeroy, 0 .. &amp;pt. 28, 1~.~
Hobtt llll'dlnl Ctnt-.
l.Ot'; . { !' '\\! &lt;tl~
Hc•b;ing,
(OIIK'h.orgta 1
David Bare, Eugene
I UESOAY INDUSTRIAL
(Continutid from Page I)
Barringer, Mrs. Larry Cox and
Muon Bowling Center
Septtmhr25, lf7)
daughter, Mildred Franklin. Tum
·
Point1 Thursday and r•Hltiuued until
21 F•iday afternoon when utKevin Gibbs, Mrs . Dennis Bur1ons Sunoca
Charle s ~ , I:Je tzmg, 84 ,
81115
!!
Tuppers
died Thursday
Hooater and son, Tami Hat- Oh
io Electr ic
n torney Raymond G. Musgrave, at tho Plains,
Khnes
Co!\vatescent
field, Michael Jackson, l'A!lma ~ l gys Uud Cars
18 Counsel for Ldcul 426, was
Center following an extended
Coca
Cola
18
Kaylor, James Kerwood, Ftesners Te;.c.&amp;co
12 expected to call witnesses to illness,
a the stand.
Virginia McDaniel, Deanna Tuch~rs
Mr. Bettlno wo!ls born In
, Meigs.
Muon
Aggregatls
6
County, the son of .the
Merry, Joseph Miller, Pauline
Alleged vandalism at the l~te John
Team H fg.h Serlts - Burton~
Ellzaoelh Wells
Miller, Braidy Monroe, Mrs. Sunoco 2673. R tgga Uud Cars plant came as an aftermath of Bel l ing , Heand
was "lso preceded
2~46 ,
John Nance, Donald Norman,
a strike that began July I when In death by a sister and seven
Team High Game ..... Bur tons
Brenda Osborne, Heather Sunoco 911 , Burton' Sunoco a two-year contract between brothers .
Afarmer lor the greater part
Richards, Opal Ross, Golda 906.
the union and company ex- of his llle, Mr . Be!zlng was a
Ind i v idual High Seri!S Roush, Lydia Smith, Joseph Roge-r Riebel 608 , Russ pired.
former board member and
Capehart 517.
former clerk of the 01 iveThorne, Sr., Donald Van Meter
With Judge James Lee Orange
Ind ividual High Game Board of Education .
!1, Mrs. Arnot Weaver and Roger RIebel 222 , John Grate Thompson as the presiding
Surv iving art his wife, Mrs .
2\4 .
daughter, Donald Welch, Robbi
Jurist, attorneys Uttlepage and Edith Chr is ty Belzlng . a
Mrs. Dana (Bernice)
Westfall, William Wooldridge
Poff sought to show violations daughter,
Hoffman of Rutland ; two
and Mary Yoho.
of the agreement.
MR. WEEKS ILL
grandsons, Charles and Steven
(B.Irths)
Eldon W!!eks, Pomeroy, is a
Ralph E. Warner, assistant Hoffman of Columbus ,· a greatMr . · and Mrs. James patient at University Hospital, plant manager, was the first to granddaughter, Tina Hoffman,
and several nieces
Cochran, a daughter, Point Columbus. Cards may be sent testify and underwent cross Columbus,
and nephews.
Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs. James to him in care of the hospital. examination from attorney
Funeral services will be held
Durst, a son, Leon, W.Va.; Mr. His room number is. 785.
at
2 p.m. S~nday at the White
Musgrave when .ihe hearing
Fune:ral Home with the Rev .
and Mrs. Ralph Swint, a son,
was resumed Thursday.
Robert Meece officiating .
Oak Hill.
In the pnrade of witnesses, Burial wilt be idn the South
SPEAKER NAMED
Deputy Sheriff James F. Bethel Cemetery, Sliver Ridge.
MEET AT CAMP
The Rev. 0. G. McKinnery, Gaskins was the second called. Friends may call al the White
All residents interested in Charleston, W. Va., will be His testimony centered around Funeral Home in Coolville
after
noon
on
scouting are requested to meet evangelist for revival services activities of the past 10 days anytime
Saturday.
at Camp Kiashuta near to be held at the Syracuse when he was called to the plant
Chester beginning at 9 a.m. on Church of the Nazarene at 7:30 site because of periodic
Saturday and Sunday to belp p.m. each evening from disturbances
night
with repairs and cleaning up Sunday through Oct. 7. The hoU~"s. He ·toldduring
o! several
the Boy Scout camp. The group Rev. Mr. McKinney has served
PLANE LOST
being
gathe.red
at
persons
will be repairing the swinging as a minister for over :;o years entrances.
TEXARKANA, Ark. IUPI)
·
bridge , mowing grass and and has spoken many limes In
- An Army National Guard
Karl Wiles, Personnel helicopter, searching
making what repairs are this area. There will be special
necessary. Tbe camp will be music . The Rev. M. C. Supervisor, told of nails being forested foothllls . for a
the site of a camporee on Nov. Larimore, pnstor, invites the placed in roadways, leading miss lug jetliner, crashed in a
into plant properly, repeated heavy fog today killing all
16-18 for the MGM District.
public.
cuttings of the telephone and three mea aboard.
·
micro-wave cables, about a
The helicopter was leading
trailer being placed in com- a search for a Texas Inpany property. Wiles also ternational Airlines turdisclosed acts of vandalism boprop jel which crashed
which occurred to homes and Thursday night on a 25cars o( some ·supervisory mlnute night with 11 persons
employes. Among the victims aboard.
'
were Charles Yeager, R. J.
The wreckage of the
Williamson, Wayne Carter, C. jetliner was not found
A. Weaver.
overnight and searchers
Also relating events. per- were hampered today by
taining to the sub-station, stormy weather.
which is located across U. S.
Rl. 33, Wiles named · several
striking employes who were
recognized on these particular
occasions, I)Ot present in the company property.
courtroom yesterday.
Others called were Howard
Item after item was iden- Wagenhals, John A. Bryan,
tified, and marked as plain- Glen L. Hensler, John J: Sebo;
tiff's exhibits a.nd admitted as George VanOver, and Samuel
evidence to total 39 exhibits. Burns Jr.
Among those shown were
various concoctions of wire and
rock, chain and wire, and other
alleged to hav~ been thrown
over power lines which caused
flashes
and disruptions of
Once you decide on the car ...
electric
service.
then ask your dealer to finance it with us.
You'll get fast action. Low rates. Friendly ~ervice .
R. G. Lake, an employe, told
Agood deal. All the way.
of personal harassment · that
involved Shoving and adverse
.language directed at him while
he was out of the plant and at a
local gasoline station. He
identified his alleged assailant,
who was present In the court·room. Later testimony showed
this person as one of the
striking
employes.
pomeroy pomeroy
Jlm Muncy, Regional Chief
•utlond natlona
Dispatcher
for Appalachian
bank
Power Company, testified that
the bank of
disruption of electric service
ttie century
established 1872
was releated to acts of vandalism at the sub-station area.
Wallace Jamison, another
-bor
employe, cited explosions In
FDIC
the sub-station and its ·
surrounding area as he
. testified to vandalism on

Evidence

Mr.

84, clainwd

Mil. S l ' l· : ~n:JC I

Murv111 Hulph Spenl'CI\
dit"t.l f'rit 1 ~ y morn in~ ul

~;xn;Nm; o

l'mllt'roll.
Mr. Spt•ncer had bten m lllillrtC
\ t'ltMilll Sl. hinut.• iu

hl•Hlth scvcru1 ycurs. Surviviuu
11rc his wife, Judith llewctson

Spcnecr; a son , Urian Wayne,
und a datl.l(htcr, Melinda Joan
~pcn&lt; •cr , buth •t home, The
family desires there be no
public funcrol visitation or
flowers . Preceding Mr .
Spcntw in death were his
Jmrcnl•, Ralph und Thelma
Wehrung Spencer of Pomeroy.
NOW YOU !(NOW
San Francisco and New York
City were joined by telephone
in 1915.
i..&lt;&gt;CAL TEMPS ·
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at ll a.m.
Friday was 73 degrees under
cloudy skies.

UU1'1.tiOK

(1hanc·t· or rulu on Sunduy.

WJEH knocked off air

Highs In the 70s and fnws In
Hud1u Stallon WJ~;u In
th&lt;• ~Os .
lialllpolis wa• •truck by u rtre
at 8:20 u.m. today which will
~::::;:~~:::~:s:..~~"\~~:;;:;:;.~':-"$!·!&gt;:;:;:-:-:·:· keep it off the air at least 24
UNil' CAI.I.Eil
hours.
The Pomeroy E-1\ squ~d
Gallipolis Volunteer firemen,
answered n call to the Marvin local lawmen and slallon
Spencer residence, 307 Wet- personnel fought the blaze for
Z!lHII St. at 6:53 a.n1. today, Mr. one-half hour before bringing it
Spencer was dead up&lt;m the Wider ciontrol
squad's arrival.
The fire, believed caused by
CLUB TO MEET
an electrical short · irr light
The Middleport Garden Club fidures in the station's transwill meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday mitter room, was discovered
at the Coiwnbus and Southern by Mary Louise Thornton ,
'Eiectric .Co. social room.
statioq bookkeeper and Paul E.
Wagner, owner and president
CWA TO MEET .
Local 4375 of the Com- or Wagner Broadcasllng
·
munication Workers of Company.
Station
Manager
Bill
Miller
America will hold an important
union meeting at lhe junior fair said he and chief engineer
building on the Athens County Randy Callihan will check the
Fairgrounds at 1:30 p.m. damage later today to deterSunday. All unions members mine if the transmitters can be
repaired immediately .
are urged to attend.

AccordinK to Miller there
was minOt Mmoke and w~ter
damage to the ,sta lion's main
control room and the Fl\1
control room.
II was the second fire the
station 's 23-year history. In
19S7, a night blaze leveled the
main building .
Veterans Memoria l Hospllll
ADMITTED - Pat Aeikor,
Pomeroy : Rolland Morrf1,
Pomeroy ; Sarah Tuttle,
Pomeroy ; VIrginia Wolfe ,
Syracuse; Mary Davis, Clif·
' ton; Mary Estep, WeJt
Columbia.
DISCHARGED
Nan
Davis, Howard Largent, Er.lc
Morrl~. Carl Pullins, JoseJl_h
Wilson , George Hackett, 8('.,
Hurdle Nelson, Debor~h
Gillilan, Paul Eakin .

Elberfelds Store in Pomeroy and Elberfelds
Warehouse on Mechanic Street are open
until 9 at night on Fridays and Saturdays.
Special sale prices all over the store - Men's sport shirts entire stock at sale prices - Special sale
Men's All Weather Coats - Men's sleeveless sweater sale - White Swan Uniforms .

DECISIONS.
DECISIONS.

Cartoon:

in beef!

·,

Mr. Mouse Take• A Trip
Show Starts 7 p.m.

Love This Group!

! Returning This Week

The unique

tendern~u in @

Beef Is directly related

t~ delicious .trop~c~l frvih 1 such as pineapple, papaya, and
ftgs. Natures ongmal tendering agenh, already prisent In
beef~ ore supplemented by pUre food protein derivatives of
so~e of lhtne fruits. Minute quantities ore used to create 0
uruque tendernen never before pouible. This process j1 10
natural it ouures full beef flavor and nutrition . 0 1 well 01
. added tenderness.
·

WATER WHEEL
.

4-PIECE GROUP
WITII VOCALIST
They Play Everything!
SATURDAY NIGHT 10 TIL2

THE MEIGS INN
992·3S29.

POMEROY

'

Now, delightful in every tut-Swift's Premium

c§

Beef gives you tenderness 'so remarkable
that your whole concept of cooking will be
thanged. Chucks and rump sieaks ond roasts are

now all cui$ you con serve with pride and took

r

! .

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1973

. Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

eosier and qulck11r than I!Ver before I They're
delicious. You con save up to 30 minutes if you
decide to braise a pot roast. Look for- reach for '
- the Iobei Swift' I Premium~ Beef.

Pomeroy-Middleport

PRICE 20 CENTS

Twins killed·in
tractor mishap
EW!NGTON - Tragedy struck this
small community at 3:4S p.m. Friday
when Ivan Martin. and Irvin Marvin
Lambert, 18-year old twin sons of Ethel
and Orlle Lambert of Rt.1, Ewington, died
in a tractor ·accident near here. The GalllaMeigs Post State Highway Patrol and
Galli a County Sheriff Janies W. Saunders
said the victims were working on a farm
on Ewington Rd. and had driven the
tractor to a Service station. The accident
occurred on Ewington Rd., one half mile
from Rt. 160.
According to \he investigation, tile
young [!len were driving back to their work
when the tractor app!ll'e'ltlr went out of
control In loose.gravel and roiled over on
,. top of tliii victlffis. • ...
'
Dr. Donald R. Warehime, Gallla
County Coroner, ruled death was caused
by massive internal injuries.
The twins were born Aug. 17, 1955, at
Westerville, Ohio,
Surviving besides the parents are
eight brothers and five sisters: Stanley,
North Carolina; Charles, Rt. 4, Jackson ;
· Harvey, Venice, Fla.; Howard, Ostrander,

Roush heads Action ·Plan group

You1l Really

.

VOL 8 NO. 35

FOUR SECTIONS

SUPPORT FOR OIDO- Rep. Clarence Millet' (right), with Senator Robert
Taft, Jr, (second from ~t) and Duke Portmann (second from left) representing
. Sen. Willii!M Sal!be have expresse4 joint support that a proposed experllhental
coal gaslllc&amp;lion 'plant be loeated in southeastern Ohio. In a far-ranging meen~g
with George Fumlch, the 1\Cting odlrect&lt;ir of ·the U. S. Office of eoal Research;·
Miller, Taft and Polotmarm were advised that present plans for a proposed coal
gasification project involved cooperation between both the federal government
and private industry. Citing increasing U. S. energy requirements, Miller offered
that the federal government take ~e lead_ in putting the proposed ~iant into
operation with plans io eventually relinquish 1ts operation to commercoal mterest~.
Miller said, ·~lme is a critical factor in this matter" and that he would contmue to
urge the Administration and Congress to accelerate present energy-related
research and development efforts. Both Sen. Taft and Sen. Saxbe have directly
supported plans to convert coal into useable forins of gas and crude oil.

IGI

Families

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valier

46 PAGES

Karen Griffith of Pomeroy was the
first woman to win a regular appointment
last week to the OSU'band with9ut having
to challenge,
Miss Griffith, daughter of Mr. lind
Mrs. Charles Griffith, is a student in preveterinary mediclnst, She, as do the two
newest women meri!liers or the band, aiJO
plays trumpet.

Your Invited Guest
Reaching More
Than 12,000

tmts·

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Bear Country

•Cioing one dep further"

Considerable cloudiness
Sunday with a chance of
showers southwest in the afternoon, higha upper 60s to low
70s. aoudy with a chance of
Showers Sunday night and
Monday.

with Ponney Cboo;director. for the center. CIIQO has just
completed final plans for the architects. The project will be
advertised for bids in December. Acontract is expected to be
awarded in January , The school will be built on a 40 acre site_
on old Rl. 35 near Rio Grande.

+

Weather

Be Thrifty! Save all of your sales/ips from

SOUNDER

Oi'sney Featurette:

DISCUSS P~UMINARY DRAWING - aarence E.
Thomp11011, left, superintendent of the Buckeye Hills Career
Center, formerly the Joint Gallia.Jackson-VInton Vocational
School, is discussing the schools three proposed buildings

SCHOoL SIGN ERECTED - Po1111ey Cisco, director of the Joint Gallla·
Jackson-Vinton Vocational School points to a new sign erected at the 40 acre site
where the vocational complex will be constructed. The properly, formerly owned
by W. H. Calhoon, issltuated on old Rt. 35 in Raccoon Twp.

Visit every department - Shop every floor.

IT echnicolorl

Friday 9 a .m . to 7 p .m .

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Becky Plltker
of Dennison and Usa Bawnan ol Wor•
lhington performed successful ch8Uqes
last week and earned the right to be the
second and tlurd women to march In the
Ohio State University marching band.
The two glrll, who eao::h play trwnpet,
beat out regulars in the band. They were
. among the four girl altematell named
earlier this year.

Sale of desks - Gun cabinets · Another big shipment of ·bicycles and all are on sale right now -

Tonight, Sat.. Sun.
Sept. 28-29-JO

RUTLAND BRANCH .
Mon .• Tues., Wed ., Sat ., 9 a .m .-3 p.m .
Thursday 9 a.m . to 12 Noon

CALLI A·JACKSilN ANO.
VINTON
VlltATIIlNAL CENTER.

Bates Bedspreads ~ Red Heart Yarn - Cocoa Mats - Bedsprings and Mattresses by Simmons .

MEIGS THEATRE

Saturday 9a .m . to 12 Noon

-!

Women's fall pants • Girls' pants and jeans - Grils' blouses - Sale of dacron bed pillows -

MAIN OFFICE

Mon .• Tues., Wed .• Thurs. 9 a.m .-3 p.m.
.
Frlday 9 a .m, to 7 p.m.

fUTUII

Two lnore
join band

BY JAMES E. ROUSH
POMEROY - The Action Plan,
JX'Oposed by the Ohio Deportment of
Transportation to return ''town hall"
government to highway planning and
JX'Ojecls, got moving here last week.
Orion Roush, a Salem Center
dairyman, was elected chairman of the
Action Plan committee which met
Tuesday. Also elected was Robert Bowen,
Superintendent·of Meigs County Schools,

as ilecretary.

Members present were Wesley Buehl,
Meigs Colll\lY Engineer; C. E. Blakeslee,
Meigs County Extension Agent, and this
reporter. Building lnspector-8anltarlan.
The conunittee .approved the Action Plan
JX'Oposed by the Ohio Department of
Transportation and set up a list of agencies
to contact to get the committee involved in
the Action Plan program.
What Is an Action Plan? Anierlcans,
especially since the · late 1960s, have
displayed an "environmental awareness"
which has brought about a reassessment of
a number of long-standing assumptions ,
about the utilization of human and natural
reiources and the effects of our
development policietl on these rt!SOurces.
It lias aiJO been apparent that there is a
very pressing need for greater involvement of petentially affected citizens
in the planning and development of trans-

portation projects.
One indicator of this need is the in·
creasing actions at law brought by in·
dividuais to stop specific transportation
projects.
·
These -two major issqes, environ·
mental awareness and citizen awareness,
are now in the forefront. The Federal
Highway Department Policy and
Procedures 1\lemorandwn requested from
the Ohio ~partment of Transportation a
plan whereby environmental awareness
and citizen involvement should come to the
forefront in highway development. The
O.D.O.T. has requested from our county
an Action Plan so our Meigs County Highway Plan can develop around en·
vlronmentai protection and citizen
awareness.
In a sense, the Action Plan is a positive
step to go back and do what used to be
done; an effort to restore a semblance of a
"town hall" government to transportation
planning and projectS. In those days,
nearly every vital county decision -from
hiring a teacher to how to keep the roads
open in the winter ~ was made by people
who sat down together to make the
decisions. The O.D.O.T. members and
staff are convinced that people in each
conununity and the professionals they hire
can and must get in closer touch.
Together, they can make vital decisions.

And it niust be understood that society
is becoming more complicated every day
- it is harder to get a lot of people together
lor decision making - so . systematic
procedures must be developed. It Is only
good logic that procedures are to be
developed to involve the people of the
courity, then these people should be Involved in the development of s~ch
procedures! The Idea behind the Action
Plan is thai individuals and their
organizations, by the governing and nongoverning, can work together.
·
This is the effort. First, decide what
the Action Plan pieces should be and later
tomakethepieces work. What I have been
referring to is, "Full consideration of
·social, economic, and environmental
impact.''

Ohio; Clifford, in Korea with the armed
forces; Donald, Ronnie and Thomas, all at
home; Mrs. Gary (Janice) Swisher,
Venice_, Fla.; Mu. 'thomas (Susan)
Thompson, Rt. I, Ewington; Mrs. Wal.ter
(Terry) Merritt, McAtthur; Cathy and
Cindy, both at home.
The twins attended Vinton Cowtty
schools.
Funeral services will be held 1 p.m.
Mondsy at the McCoy-Moore Fwterai
Horil~ with Rev. John Bryant officiating.
Burial will be in ~dcliff. Cemetery.
Frle~ds may call at the funeral home
Sunday lletween 7 and 9 P·ll\·

Deputy has
good system
.. POMEROY - Deputy Sheriff Robert
Beegle caught one Saturday and used him
for bait to pull in another.
That's men, not fish.
Saturday at 2:41 a.m. Beegle apprehended Arthur DIU Koenig, Rl. 1,
ReedsviUe, on a standing warrant for
assault and battery in connection with the
alleged beating last summer of Jack Good
of Rutland. He was lodged in county jail in
lieu of $1,000 bond ordered by County Court
Judge Frank W. ·Porter.
The bait was out. At I p.m. Arthur
.Koenig's brother, Larry Elwood Koenig,
30, of Columbus, visited his brother In the
Meigs jail. That was when Deputy Beegle
arrested Larry Koenig, also wanted In
connection with the same attack on Good.
The second Koenig posted $50 and was
released.
Arthur Koenig will face additional
charge of contempt of court in Common
Pleas Court.
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport E-R
squadmen removed William Bacld~y to
Veterans Memorial Hospital from his
home at 7111 Oliver St., at 1:53 p.m.
Saturday.

Principals' fund is provided by board
RACINE - A principals' fund
providing $50 for each school Principal in
the Southern Local District for the pUrchase of small miscellaneous items was
set up Thursday night by lhe board of
education In a recessed session.
The Racine Home-National Bank was
designated as the official depository for .
school district funds. II was reported that
.the FHA and FFA had purchased air

'
conditioners to be used
within their
departments. The board commended the
district's athletic boosters·for their work
before and during tootball season.
It also was voted to make a play room
for kindergarten children in the former
vocational agriculture room and to pur·
chase a color television for the kindergarten .

9JU'mERN IDGH MAJORETI'ES - Brenda Lawrftlce, Valerie Jolllllon
(head majorette) and Bobble Chapman, from left, led the Tornado Marching Band
in a halftime show Friday evening at Racine,

Gas plentiful, but
prices have gone up
By DONALD E. MULLEN
United Press International
American motorists didn't have any
trouble finding gasoline Saturday. All they
had to do was grin and bear another price
hike.
Pump prl.ces on gasoline jumped
anywhere trom a penny to 2'.1 cents a
gallon in many parta of the country. Other
station operators said they were planning
to raise prices Monday after checking
what the competition was doing.
Some operators Indicated that com·
petition would keep the hikes down to
about a penny a galion.
Friday's decisioq by the Cost of Uvlfl8
CowtcU (CLC)· to raise retaU gas prices
followed widespread protest shutdowns of
stations across the country by operators
who claimed they were being squeezed out
of business by rising wholesale prices.
The operators' reaction to the price thaw
was mixed, but many indicated they felt
the CLC should have given them the right
to raise pump prices If wholesale prices
jump again - with widespread predictions

such hikes were .coming soon.
Independent dealers, who comprise
about nlioe out of every ten service staUon
operators, were free to boost prices lm·
mediately. Refinery owned stations mult
wait unW Monday.
Many stations, particularly Independents, were stiU forced to cioae early
and on Sunday because of the continuing
gaSQIIne shortage.
The new ceiling prices are computed by
using the prices charged to each customer
on May IS, 1973, pius the increased cost of
products incurred between May 15 and
Sept. 28.
Hwtdreds ol stations in the st. l.ou!J
area remained closed in a continuing
protest that started Thursday. An attorney
for the SerVIce Station Dealers A88oclatlon
of Missouri said the s\ations had voted to
rl!open Monday lnatead of WednesdaY
after they had studied tho new CLC
·guidelines.
In the New York City area, many
statioQs jumped their prices a penny a
gailon.

Court orders both sides at Sporn Plant to behave themselves
POINT PLEASANT - Both sides in
the strike at the Sporn Power Plant at
Graham Station were on good behavior
today, by order ol the courts . .
Mason CoWlty Circuit Court Judge
James Lee Thompoon found contempt ·ol
court and vlolaUon. by both sides after
hearinB three. days ol tealimony ending
Friday afternoon. 'llle parties are the
Central Operating ()pmpany (8pern Plant)
lild Local428, Utility Workers of America,
who had entered into an agreement last
July .1 and an unendell agreement on
Alliutt 3 to allllcably 11ltie their diflerenct~. Both had the force of the courts.
Central Operatlnc, the pl.ilntiff In the
hearln&amp;, had charled IUe&amp;al picketing and
other cr1met lild the Wlion charged Illegal
~~:Uona by the company against lawful
atrlkm. '
,
Judie 'lllompaon warned that activity
within the nut lew !'-Y• \110uld influence

his flnal ·decision.
The hearing In Mason County Circuit
Court came as the aftermath of a strike at
·the Philip Sporn Plant near New Haven,
which began July l.
At the conclusion of testimony by eight
witnessed called by Attorney Raymond G.
Musgrave late Friday afternonn, Judge
Thompson In the presence of counsel,
William Poll and Samuel D. Littlepage,
company attorneys, and Mr. MU!illrave
and W: Dan Roll, representing Local 426,
and others disclosed the findings.
Judge Thompson observed that he had
ma~e examination of the notea taken
dlll'ing the proceedlns, had l!Jtened to the
argumenta and pre11ntation. by counsel
before annOWlcins hla findings .
It waa '1110J11piOn'a opif!lons that there
was contempt and violation by both parUes.

Also that there has been more than one· Judge Thompson reaffirmed that ·both
violation that officers of local are held orders of the court, the Agreement and
responsible and that several Individual Amended Agreement, remain In effect. He
members are in contempt in provision of admonished against violations noting that
the order. ·
this could have bearing on his later
Further, Judge Thompson said he will · decision.
take under consideration these matters
Allegations made Tuesday and Thurs.
and will requi•e the attendance, in court,
day
by the plaintiff's witnesses were
of officers or the plaintiff, and officers or
the defendant local, and persons who the denied when Attorney Musgrave called
court has requested to be present of seven members of Local 428 to the stand
membership of the local, at 9:30 a.m. for sworn tesUmony:
October 19.
Carl Searls, president Of Local 426,
The jurist stipulated that the manner UWUA, denied there had been any acts of
In which the court will treat the contempt violence by any member of the bargaining
may well be Influenced by the conduct of unit or lhl!l any had been directed to do so
one or more or any or all ·bY persona by either himself or other union officials.
concerned and parties named in the in· He also stated that to his knowledge there
terlm,
had not been mass picketing,
Attorneys for both sides Indicated to
Glenn Johnson, Recording Secrellry
representatives or their respective groupo for Local 426, reaffirmed Searls'
that the court orders must be obeyed, as alltemenHhat men of the Local had been

advised that officials didn't want any
trouble on the picket line.
Keith Curtis, a picket captain, denied
accusations of violence and m.ss
picketing. Curtis related to Incident.
concerning the Wakenhut guards, recently
stationed at the plant facility,
In cross~amlnatlon, Curtis said tho
pickets were stationed approximately 70 to
75 feet away from the telephone polo and
cab!~ that earlier In Jestlmony were said
allegedly vandalized. CUI'tis admitted
seeing rocks and wires on lines, but d~nied
knowing how they got there.
Tom Belcher told of an Incident with
the security guards at the picket Une,
Paul E. Zerkle, another picket captain, told of alleged harassment from
security guards. He denied knowledge
about objects being thrown on Une1.
Charles Allensworth and David Glenn

Frye, also members of the bargaining
unit, took the stand and told of placln1 a
trailer, owned by Frye, near the main
plant entrance way, This earlier wu
contended by company oflicla!J to be "90
per t-ent:• on company property.
Max Whitlalth, UJing a cane (or
support, was the last o1 the Local to be
called and denied incidenta ol violence, on
the part of the union, but related tventa
rea.ardlns an aliesed accident In which he
was Injured.
!le denied any knowledge of how dUll!
to dawn lights on cornpan~ property had
been broken or how win1 had belli plactd
on the linol .
Ralph E. Warner, llliltanl pllal
manatler, wu the Lut 10 tat the Iliad
Friday and waa called brlllly to np1e!n
what conaUtulea company propel I)' 1111 the
aouth, or hllllldt, of U. S. Rl. 33.

I
'·

I

�3- The Swlduy rhucs Nerrtlnl'l Sunday So pt 30 1971
2- TheSundayT1mes Sentmel Sunday Sept 30 1973
pi!WiWii*~:~. . . .; ~-*:..~~ ',; ~~ .s....s?..~..~~ :::,:...'x

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HOW P arkinson 'S Iaw
.Is destro mg
. Oh.10

budge! was !JelnK (Ut by $6 nnlhQil
One of lhe things About
bureaucracy says Rep Robert E
Netz 1ey R 1.AUra wh0 spen t 10 years
011 the House ~lnance Committee 1s
U1at these V8fiOUS agency heads begin
loseegovernmentasthelrdepartment
alone
They think government IS only
welfare or government ts only better
prisons or better highways They don t
look at th e overa11 aspect of govern
I
men
Spend E
very Penny
All these thtn"•
m
.,., are oood
o
somebody s mmd Netzley continues
but If you did everything everybody
wanted you d spend every penny there
IS It would be all goverrunent and it
would fall by its own weight
The governor and the legislature are
supposed to be the buffers between

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EDIT0°
•• S NOTE In govern ",a pac It y to feed an d grow on them
ment each bureau&lt;rat thinks his selves m fact to reproduce themselves
agency is tbeooly slar in the firmament with enormous cost unphcations and
aud ohould get alltbe money It needs httle control by the body that created
Tbl• reasom~ has con tributed to I he them - the Ohio General Assembly
meteoric ri•e In the state budget from
Ued
.. 1 b Ilion .. billl in
Deta
Laler
.. I
to .. 9 on 10 years In
This process will be dela!led later tn
Pari Tbree of a series on the subject
th eser1es but a very recen t examp1eo f
UPI Statehouse Reporter Lee Leonard
Parkinson s Law can be presented
gives an example Parkinson s La11
bere
wtder which slate agencies feed on
The Gene al A
bl
ted th
r
ssem Y crea
e
their own public relations to promote OhiO EnVIronmental Protection Agency
pet spending prOJects multiply them (EPA) m 1972 With a one-year
selves
allocation of • 7 million and 200 new
•
employes
By LEE LEONARD
The EPA turned what seemed like
UPI Statehouse ReJ&gt;Orter
fully half this number of employes mto
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The handy public relatiOns personnel trumpeted
reason for the growmg cost of state the agency s mstant success and asked
•
t IS inflat1on It Is an easy for $31 3 million for the followmg
.overrunen
excuse for pollticl.3ns
b1enmum
B infla
uid 1
bl
ut
lion co no poss1 y ac
Lawmakers cut this r1gure back to
count for a $21 billion budget $255 million after seeing the public
mushroomu~g to $9 9billion m a !().year relations people stumbling over each
h
d h
pe riod
ot er an
earmg stones about a
Even a generous 10 oer cent annual professor being told what to do six
111crease m the cost of labor eqwp months after he was placed on the EPA
men t an d bwJd mgs wou ld have on1y payroll and about the secretary who
d bled th bud t to $4 2 billi
ou
e
ge
on
told a caller no one by the name of
Much of the answer outside of the (EPA Director Ira L ) Whitman
extra VItal services provided by worked there
goverrunentover the last decade lies m
Despite this hefty boost in the EPA
what Sen Howard C Cook R Toledo appropriation department officials
calls Parkinson s Law
mcludmg Whitman protested to the
ThIS Iaw h0ld that governmen tal bIller end m personal appearances
agencies like the amoeba have the before the legislature that the agency

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single-nunded agency spenders and the
laxpayers but neither has served thiS
purpose m recent years
An Important by product of
par kmson s Law IS the burgeoning
state employ~ payroll which has gone
fromatotalof45872mDecember 1962
toS7676mstateagencleslastJuly plus
an estunated 20 000 on Wllverslty
lis
payro
In other words state government
jobs have almost reproduced them
selves over a 1012 year cycle
Gov John J Gilligan tried to get
blanket authority to reshuffle govern
ment agencies hopefully to streamlme
them but the legislature refused
The governor IS trymg t o cu t ou t
some of these bureaucratic mazes but
deIe nd S House
no body IS IISten111g
Speaker A G Lanc1one D.sehall"e

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Message license tags cost $45
COLUMBUS (UPI)-Well
It s offiCial
The time bas finally come
when you can apply for an Ohio
license plate carr)'lllg your
own spec1al message like
dummy or HOTDOG OR
HEE HAW Of course 11 will
cost you an extra $35 over the
norma! fee
Under the new law which
became effective Ia.~ Fr1day
the state will set $30 of this
amount &amp;Side 111 a specu~l roadside part fund for con
structlng repall'lng mam
taining and acqwnng land for
parts along Oh10 highways
But w&amp;t a IDI1lute r
Before you rush to
your telephone or type
writer to unload your
vanity license plate request

on the Department of Highway
Safety s bureau of motor
vehrcles be adVIsed the plates
don t come out until 1975
And the bureau 1s not tak111g
applications until next May
Walt tU Nexl Year
Several hundred requests
have come 111 according to the
bureau and Writers are be111g
told they II rece1ve an applica
lion blank next year
Arthur R Feeney chief of
vehicle license records 111 the
bureau enVISions plenty of
headaches the fll"st year of the
new program and 11 pa111s him
to th111k about 11
I hate to look forward to
that first year sa1d Feeney
po111tmg out there already IS
fierce competition for the speCial-ordered three letter plates

~

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel
Wby Tate Any Chances?
Rap
After three years of marrl.3ge my husband and I have
decided to ha e a fanuly
We re both 111 gOOd health and eat good natural foods
For four or more years however we ve smoked grass Doos
anyone know if thiS will have a harmful effect on the baby? I plan
to qwt while I m carry111g - NATURE MOTHER
NM
No one knows for sure how mariJuana affects the mind and
body of the longtime smoker nor whether Its constant use may
create problems for pregnant women
But we agree - It s best not to take chances In your area a
pot bust Is still ser10us busmess and an arrest for either of you
could also have a harmful effect on the baby (Like a parent
with a record) - HELEN AND SUE
Rap

+++

I was at a party the other rught that lasted until about 2 a m
Afterwards a few of us volwtteered to stay and clean up Un
fortunately it was just me (a guy) and four gil"Is
There was booze and everyone was feeling very loose After
we worked for an hour or so the hostess invited us to her room to
Usten to records and f1rush off the drmks I just sat there and
listened to the cbattermg
Then one of the guls who IS trai!Ung to he a beautician got a
wild Idea of fiXmg me up like a female They gave me the full
treatment from false eyelashes and lipstrck to a long dress and
heels
It seemed funny at the time but the next morning I felt as ·
though I d had a temble rughtmare Thmgs seem different when
you re sober
If these gtrls blab my life will be ruined Why would they do
something like that to a mce guy of !7?- WORRIED BECAUSE
I M NOT ONE OF THE GIRLS
Womed
Hey don t feel so upset You aren t the only person who gets
loaded and a little carried away
Maybe you 11 be teased for a while (maybe not If you ve
asked the girls to keep quiet ) but laugh II off and 1t will soon be
forgotten
After all the glfls were only haVIng a lltUe fwt by taking
advantage of an Intoxicated male Its no big thing (But kind of a
switch right?) - SUE
Dear Womed
Funny if one of the girls had dressed up as a boy she
wouldn't have worried next day Not one b1t
So why the big panic when the tables are turned? You
haven t lostyourmanhood by putting on lipstick and a dress and
I doubt the girla meant to threaten it Lets hope they all forget
the incident smce 11 bothers you so much - HELEN

which have been on sale for
years for an extra $S
In fact Feeney sa1d the
series begmrung With the popularletters J R M and
W have been wiped out
Feeney noted that under the
new program four letter
names can he acoompamed by
two-digit numbers up to 99
Thus 99 persons could get the
same four~etter name
But who gets the one with
out a number? asked Feeney
Who gets just pla111 JOHN ?
He laughed when 11 was
suggested the governor m1ght
get that one
Another spokesman for the
department sa1d a 'mimi
lottery might have to be held
to detenmne who gets certam
plates
!'he other problem faced by
the department IS determm111g
what oombmat10ns are obscene
or have offensive double mean
mgs
What Creastons"
Suppose some guy wants
the letters 38BRA? Feeney
asked He nught have a wife
that he s very proud of and if
you think It s vulgar that s
your problem
Then too what s offensive
to a black man nught not he to
a white man and vice versa
There s Lat111 and Greek and
mathematical and chenucal
formulas that who knows what
they mean? I don t
A panel of experts Including
youths conversant With
modern language m1ght have
to be assembled to pass on the
plates
Nevertheless Feeney thmks
once the wrmkles are Ironed
out the program will be a
success from a commercial
standpomt Ca!ifornia made
$900 000 the first year 11 had
vanity plates

Aside from personal names
Feeney believes the plates will
be used for advert1s111g by
places likes DINOS Restaurant
or HERBS bar and gr11l
And suppose somebody like
the John Deere Co over 111
Sprmgf1eld wants to give Its
executives special plates
Feeney sa1d We can fit a fleet
of nme cars With JDEER1
JDEER2 etc
M1ss Nude Amer1ca already
has applied for MSNUDE
Feeney sa1d It will probably
do for her whatever she wants
II to

Long Bottom
Social Notes
Afam1ly birthday dinner was
held at PorUand Park honormg
Ruth Larkins on her 77th bll"th
day Guests were Mr and
Mrs Norman Weber and VIda
Mr and Mrs Charles Weber
and son Mr and Mrs Keith
Weber Tuppers Plams Mr
and Mrs Raymond Larkins
and daughter Pennsylvama
Fred Larkins and Mrs VIrgil
Bogard and family
Mr and Mrs Bill Thurston
entertamed w1th a dmner
honormg the birthday of Leona
Hensley
Mr and Mrs Joe Bissell
spent a weekend at Niagara
Fa!ls New York
VISiting Mr and Mrs Garth
Sm1th were Mr and Mrs
Claude Smith Reedsville Ollie
Young and V1rg1e Mora
Pomeroy and Gladys Croy
Chester and Dora Cr1spm
Newlll'k
Betty
Wamsley
and
daughter Cheshire were
Vlsltmg Mr and Mrs Dorsel
Larkins

WIN AT BRIDGE

Trump lead lets m game
NORTH iDl

29

+K 108 3
• A

+J9 75 42
+ AQ
WEST
• 54
¥ KJ974

EAST

t A3

• Q108
+K 1065

+ A6

• Q 1062

+J 943
SOUTH
+Q J972
• 85 3

t K6

+872
Both vulnerable

\l est

East
Pass

Pass

Norlh
It
3+

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

South

J+

4+

Open ng lead- + 5
By Oswald &amp; Jam., Jacoby

Four spades IS a very good
contract for South Grve East
the ace of diamonds and West
the krng of clubs and he would
+++
have no trouble making five
Dear Rap
odd
but those two cards are
I'm a 16-year-old guy who never had a date but wants one
placed just where he do es n t
with a girl I see every day but am afraid to speak to I m not want them to be
beinc vain when I say I m not ugly and I keep in shape but I AM In sp1te of this unfortunate
chicken
srtuat1on South found a way to
Pleue help me and a lot of others by giving me an opening make hrs contract after West
was krnd enough to open a
Une -CANTTHINKOFAWORDTOSAY
•
trump rather than a club
East took his ace and led
Dear CTWI'S
trumps
back South won rn
How about Hi I want to talk to you but I can t think of a
and dectded to attack
word toNy She Utake It from there Most girls love to help out dummy
dtamond s rtght away The
alhy lillY - especially If he isn t ugly and keeps m shape normal play would have been to
HELEN AND SUE
lead the deu ce and go up wtlh

hts krng but South had a shght
ly dtfferent rdea He led dum
my S JOCk
If East JUSt played low
South would stili have played
the kmg but East covered the
jack wrth the queen A bad
play but the so rt of bad play
that even the best players are
gorng to make nrne times out of
lO

Now Soulh held ba ck hr s
king Thrs left East on lead He
couldn t do any good by playing
a club and drd le~d a heart to
dummy s ace A second dra
mond was led and now the krng
lost to the ace
West led a club but tt was
too late South went up with
dummy s ace ruffed a dta
mond and eventually dtscarded
hrs losmg clubs on good d1a
monds

29

The bldd ns has been

West

North
IN T

Ea11
Pass

2t

Pas~

Pass

South
1ass

'

You South hold
+10 8 8 3 2 .K 7 5 tJ 9 4 +Q I
What do you do now"
A- Bid lwo 1padu You don t
wut to sell out this cheap
TODAY S QUESTION

Again your purtner opens one no
trump You -.re pia\ inJ{ Ju ob\

transfer brds and holt!
.AQ8 76 . K4 +142+KJ2
What do y u do no" ?
Ans"'er Mondn\

RI.ch donors
1·1St bare d
WASHING10N (UPI) _
President NIXon 8 1972 cam
paign raised $60 2 million to
W111 hiS re~lectlon more than
Stt million of it from well
heeled suPPQrters who rushed
their money m under assur
d be
ances lhear names woul
kept SelTet
Bowing to a federal court
d
h Fl
Co itt
or er t e nance mm ee
to ReElect the President
Friday released Its list of long
secret donors 8 list studded
w1 th the names of ambassadors bankers mdustrialists
andpromment Democrats The
mmi
a1
kno led d
CO
ttee SO ac W ge
$4 25000 111 illegal donations
from SIX corporations that
were later returned
The list conta!ned thousands
of names of donors during the
d f
J
1 1971
peno
rom
th gh A u 6an 1972
h
rou
pr
W O
supplied a net aggregate of
$! 9 9 11
to th
nu !On
e campaign
But the focus was on certain of
the listed donors who were not
preVIously Identified and who
contributed $II 3 million
durmg the period March 10
1972 through April 6 1972
Other listed donors Of $8 6
m1II ton durmg th e period J an
1 1971 through March 9 1972
had been Identified previOusly
The list was released pursu
ant to an order by US District
Court Judge JosephS Waddy
m a SUit brought last summer
by Common Cause the public
mterest lobby
Common Cause ca!culated
that $52 million alone was
collected m the last two days
before the new law went mto
effect
John W Gardner ch811"man
of Common Cause said his
group spent $75 000 seek111g
disclosure of the list
Campaign offic18ls had hat
tied to keep the contributor list
secret argumg that disclosure
was legally requ!fed only for
donatiOns received after Apr 1
7 the date the full-disclosure
campaign fmance law went
mto effect
The NIXon committee said
receI pt s from the campaign
totaled $60 2 million and ex
penditures $56 I million With a
surplus of $4 I million
WASH NGTON (UP II - Here
s a st of 94 persons or
fam es or em plove groups
dent fed by Common Cause as
nav ng contributed S40 000 or
more to President N xon s re
elechon campaign during the
per od Jan 1 19 71 through
Apr I 6 1972
The I st was abstracted from
a much larger I st of a
contr butors to the N xon
campa gn during the period
The F nance Comm ttee to Re
Elect the Pres dent was re
qul red to make pub c the fu
I st under a cou rt rul ng In a
su t brought against t by
Common Cause
The occupat ons t ties and
emp lo yers noted n the 1 st
were supplied bv Common
Cause a non proflt polltlca
act on group which describes
tself as a c1t zens lobby
Robert Allen pres dent Gu f
Resources &amp; Chemical Corp
Houston Te¥as SlOO ooo cnh
Walter An nenbergn amb!SSa
dor to Great Br ta n and
Philadelphia
publ sher
S2SO DOD
Emplovees of Amer can A r
lines New York S75 ooo
Theodore Ashley chairman
and president Warner Brothers
New York S137 056
Or n Atkins board cha rman
Ash and 0 I Ash and Kv
SlOD 000 cash
Loren Berry cha rman L M
Berry Co
Dayton Oh o
$102 000
Elmer Bobst honorary cha r
man Warner lambert Phar
maceutical Co Morr s Plains
N J SlDO ODO
E W
Brown Jr
board
cha rman lutcher &amp; Moore
Cypress lumber Co Orange
Texas and Gu fport Shipbuild
lng Co Port Arthur Texas
SlSO DOO
Wll am BUrden general part
ner W liam A H Burden &amp; Co
&lt;Investment bank ng&gt; New
York S97 895
Henrv Crown board chair
man Henry Crown and Co
Chicago SSD 819 IS2S 000 In
cash)
Nathan Cum m ngs honorary
cha rman Consol dated Foods
Corp and board chairman
Assoc ated Products New
York 544 J56
Theodore CummingS Beve rly
Hills Cat f $43 407
Brownlee Currev Jr sen or
vice President eaultable Secur
t es Morton (Investment bank
ing l New Yor S74 195
Stle by Davis ambassador to
Switzerland and former lnvut
ment banker SlOO 000
Chr stlan de Gulgne board
Cha rman Slauffer Chemica s
Co San Franc sco $101 895
v ncent de Roulet ambassa
dor to Jamaica $50 000 (Sl2 000
In CB$h)
Cit zens for Good Govern
menl LTV Corp Caerosoace
employees I Oallu tuas
S60 DDO
Frederick L Ehrman cha r
man executive committee Leh
man
Corp
( nvestment
banking I New York S6J 578
Harvey Firestone Jr rttlrtd
chairman and prtlldent Fire
stont T re &amp; Rubber Akron
Oh iO 1~8 712
.., Leonard F reston• president
r resto11e Tire &amp; Aubber of
California
Los Angelel
1100 000
RJ~ymond Firestone
board
chairman Firestone Tire &amp;
Rubber Akron Ohio 163 441
Max M FiJhtr bOard chair
man Flllher New Center Co
Detroit 1125 ooo
Mrs Edsel 8 Ford molhtr
of Henry Ford II Grone
Potnle Mlch 150 000 &gt;
Htnty Ford 11 boerd chair
man Foro MotM Co Grone
Pointe M ~,-h U6 176
Thomas Fard lnvetfments

Television Log

3,500 fans watch game's band show

SUNDAY SE PT JD 1973
00
Tra•ologuo 4
6 30 Tht• Week 4 Nowsmbkor 73 13 Lamp Unto My Feet 10 •
7 00 Time For Tlmolhy. Jenny Fa Iwell 13 Commu"lque 6
L ku
d Ll
10
8 Revival Fires 6 1-ieratd ol Truth 3
7 3;"...
Ca mera Three 0 Fi lm.
7 •s
News rd
• Repass 8 Gospel Carav~n 6 Church Servicw
8 DO - Leona
13 Billy James Harg s and his Ail American Kids 10 Mor ;o
mon Choir 3 Day of Discovery ,
8 30 Oral Roberts 3 Your He;rllh 4 Day of Diocovery 8 Re•
Humbard ll Rev vat Fires lS Kathryn Kuhlman 6 Get
Togelher lD
8 55 Black Ca meo 4
R b I 10 R
9 oo - S n~ing Jubilee 3 Cadle Chapel 4 Or~l o er s
e•
Humbard
6
15
Old
Fashioned
Mealing
8
9 30 _ Churcy By Side ollhe Road 4 Christls the Answer 13
Amazrng Chan a Popeye 10
10 oo _ Church Serv ces 4 This Is the L fe 3 Lrfe For Todar, IS
Kid Power 6 13 Rex Humbard 8 MOllie Funny Face tO
10 30 _ This 15 the Life 15 Gap ta1n Noah 3 Insight 4 Osmonds
13 Vision On 6
11 00 _ Point of v ew 6 Joy in L ving 13 TV Chapel 3 Focus On
Co umbus 4 Across the Fence 15 Notre DameS
I I JO - Thrs Is The Answer 3 Make A Wish 6 13 insight 15 OSU
Foolball Highlights 4
12 oo - At Issue 3 Bawling 6 Rev Ca lvin Evans 13 Sacred
Hearl JS Wesl v rg nia Unlverslly B Columbus Town
Meet
ng 10
12 15 _ Open Bible IS
11 30 - Rev val F res 13 Meellhe Press 3 4 15 NFl Pre Game
Show 8
12 55 - Ted Mul lins to
1 oo - Lower Ughlhouse 13 Pro Footba ii J 4 8 10 Eternol
Loht 15
1 oo--CollegeFootbail 197313 Sou1Traln6 ProFootball15
3 00 - Other People Other Places 6 Survival 13
3 30 - 0ddCouple6 Jim myDean Shaw13
4 oo _ Sesa me st 33 Pro Foolball 3 4 15 Rook es 6 America
13 UFO 8 The First Fifty lD
4 30 - Green Acres 10
5 00 - W•" t T II Your Father Gets Home 6 Films of the Gatsby
Era 33 Movie Our Man Flint 3 Famriy Cl~ss cs Theater
a Mag c c reus o
s 30 - Untamed World 6
6 OO - Lets MakeAOea l6 CBSNewsRet rospeclveB 10
7 00 _ Safa rr to Adventure 3 Zoom 10 33 Wild Kingdom 15
Crrcus 4 Lassie 8 tn the Know 10 untamed World 13
p
7 30 - World of D sney 3 4 15 French Chef 10 FBi 6 13 erry
Mason 8 10 Mounlaln Scene 33
8 00 - American V s on 10 33
a 30- McM II an and w fe 3 4 15 Move Fuzz 6 13 Manni x
a 10
9 00 - Mas terprece Th ea tre 20 33
9 30
Barnaby Jones 8 10
p h
10 00 - F r no lmP. ?O 33 We Think Yo ShOt d Knnw 1
l"n e
Conference wrth the Mayor 4 I Spy 15
10 30 Pollee Surgeon 15 Johnny Manns ~raM Up and Cheer
4 1\iews 6 8 High Road to Adventure 10 Newsmaker 73 13
11 oo - News 3 4 15 10 6 13 a
11 15- Pol ce Surgeon 6 CBS News 10 News 13 Movie Llv ng
It u 8
P
11 30 - Hope Bail Highi ~hts 4 Johnny Carson lS Movie
Every Days a Holiday 3 Face the Nation 10
12 30 - Movre Girl Happy 10
1 oo - Mav1es 3 4
6

f:il~nlor

;:.y

New York lA&lt; ooo
J Pau 1 G• n Y pres td en r
GetJv on Los Angeles 175 ooo
&amp; Emp ovoe~ ot Go~dveor OTt re
~ubber
o A ron
hio
S&lt;OAlbert
OOD
F Gordon
vice
~~~s i~:;,'rm•;: : ::;: P~o~o~v
&amp; co
lsrockbrokersl New
York 599 873
Kingdon Gould Jr rorm er
embassador to Lu•embouro
and ambassador designate to
Ihe Nether lands parking ot
:i~Q'~~ove Wash ngton o c
Raymond R Guest fo rmer
am oassador to roland King
George va s200 ooo
o t Co P
P Emptoves
llsburgh Paof Gulf
1100 ooo
Wa ter A Haas honorary
cha rman
L.e-v Stra uss &amp; Co
San
FranCISco
548 557
John P Humes ambassador
to ireland srooooo
0 ~0 "$~bdo~ughes washtnuron
John N irwin I om bassodor
to France $50000
Mar on w Isabell chairman
and chief executive off cer
~.~":ltrd a Inns Phoenl • Ariz
Peler Kiewit president
Omaha Neb construct on t rm
SlOO m
Roberr Kleberg preSident
Kno Ran ch Inc lca ttl e Oil
narura gas! Klngsv re Texas
5100 ooo
Lester B Kn ght chairman
Lester 8 Kn gh l and Assoc
ares !construct on and en
g neertng l Ch cago so 000
Gustave Levy general part
ner Goldman Sachs and Co
New
y( nvestment
k $70 44 2 bank ng l
or
Nalhon Lipson pres dent
Venture lndustr es Inc (carpet
manufactur er)
Atlanta
S98 12D
Anthony 0 Marshall ambes
sodor to Tr nldad S48 sos
J Wliard Morriolln chairman
board Marriott Corp Wash ng
ton o c S61167
Armand Hammer cha rman
and chief uecut ve off cer
Occ dental Petroleum Los An
oe es 546 ooo cash
Bob Hope entertainer North
Ho iywood Callt 550 ODO
OCT 1 1973
Jack Massey board chair 6 00 - Sunnse SemMONDAY
nar
4
Sacred
Heart 10
man Hasp tal Corporation of
6 15 - School Scene 10
America Nashville Tenn
6 20 - Farm Report 13
S2SO DDO
Mrs Abby R l~ockelel erl 6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
Mauze New York
N Y
6 30 - Columbus Today 4 Brble Answers 8 Good News 13
S5D ODO
News 6
Lew s Maytag cha rman and 6 45
- Corncob Report 3 Farmtlme 10
chief execul veoff cer National
7
00
Today 4 3 15 CBS News a 10 Fi ntstones 13 Romper
A ri nes Mtam F a sso ooo
Room 6
Otto N M l er cha rman
Sandard o of Cal fornio san 7 30 - Rocky &amp; Bullwtnkle 13 New Zoo Revue6
a 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8 10 Sesa me St 33 New Zoo Revue 13
Franc sco sso ooD
Seymour Mf ste n manufac
T1mmy and Lass e 6
tur ng execut ve Scarsda e a 30Huck &amp; Yog 6 Dick Van Dyke13
N Y 565 ooo
a 55
News 13
tr.'i:.':.~oys~~~ 0 g~ Ph 1 ps Pe 9 00- Paul D xon 4 Ph I Donahue 15 Fnendly Junct1on 10
Mr Rogers 33 AM 3 Brady Bunch 6 Abbott and Costello 8
Roger M ken president
Move When My Baby Sm rl es At Me 13
~;:;,~~b~r~ ~e~ lns~.'6g~ti •s l 9 30 - To Tell the Truth 3 Secret Storm a Mrchaeis &amp; Co 6
John Moran board chairman 9 55
Chuck Whrte Report 10
Hycel Inc (med ca chemlca ts 10 00 - DinahShore3 15 JokersWlldB 10
and laboratory equ pment ) 10 30 - Baffle 4 3 15 SlO 000 Pyram d a 10 Mrke Douglas 6
Houston Texas 1101 D08
John A Mu cahy president 11 oo - Password 13 Gambrta 10 Wizardof0dds4 3 15
Quig ey co Cslee subs diary of 11 30 - Hollywood Squares 4 3 15 Love of Life 8 10 Brady
Bunch 13 Bowl ng 6 Sesame Street 33
Pt zer ph am aceut cals 1 Bron•
ville N Y ..,573 559
11 55 - News 8 Dan lmel s World 10
c nr and John Murch son o 1 12 00 - Bob Braun s 50 50 Club 4 Jeopardy 3 15 News 8 10 13
producers and owners Da las
Password 6
Cowboys $50 000 cash
12
30
15 SearchforTomorrow8 10 Spir1 Second6
Joh n M
01 n
honorary 12 45 -- 3Ws3
Electr
c Company 33
cha rman 01 n Corp Ondustr al
and agricultural chem ca s) 12 55 - NBC News 15 3
1 oo - Ail My Ch ldren 6 13 Not for Women Only 15 News 3
New York 5100 000
Concentration 8 What s My Lrne 10
Wll am McKn ght honorary
cha rman M nnesota Min ng 1 30 - 3 On A Match 4 3 15 As the World Turns 8 10 Lets '
and Manufactur ng Co St
Make A Deal 13 6
Paul M nn SB5 191
2
00
- Days of Our L ves 4 3 15 Newlywed Game 6 13
Andre Meyer partner Lazard
Gu drng L ght 8 10
Freres Co ( nvestments ) New
2 30 - Doctors 4 3 15 EdgeofNghf8 10 Gri nMyLfe613
York 590 999
Joesph Meyerhoff cha rman 3 oo - Another World 4 3 15 Genera l Hospital 6 13 Price Is "
Rrght 8 10 How Do Your Chrldren Grow 10
~
Can t nenta
Propert ies Inc
(real estate deve opmentl Bal
3 30 - Return to Pe(fon Place 3 15 One Life to L ve 13 Phil •
I more Md 5104 848
Donahue 4 Secre Storm 10 Match Game 73 8 Flintstones
Spencer T 01 n director Olin
6 F lm 33 French Chef 20
Industries (Industria and 4 00- Love Amer can Style 13 Somersel1 5 Sesame 51 33 20 ~t~ ..!
agr cultural chem calsl St
Mr Cartoon and lhe Banana Splits 3 Speedracer 6 Lucy ,
Lous $94513
Show 8 Movre The Sheepman 10
'"
Florenz Our sman rea estate
developer Washmgton D c 4 30 - Green Acres 3 Jeopatdy 4 I Love Lucy 6 Hazel 8
51 SO ODO
G1lllgan s Island 13 Bonanze 15
t+oJ
Dav d Packard cha rm ., S 00 - I Dream of Jeanne 13 M1ster Rogers 20 33 Andy ,...
Hewlett Packard Co
(elec
Grrff th 8 Bonanza 3 Merv Griffin 4 Mission lmposs ble 6 '"
Iron csl Pa o Alto Cal f
s
30
- Beverly H lib ill es 8 Electr c Co 33 Gomer Pyle t3 ~
SS I OOp
Hodgepodge Lodge 10 Trails West t5
Thomas Papas president
5 55 - Earl Nightingale 15
,::
(food and quid mporter)
6 00 News 3 4 6 8 10 15 ABC News 13 Sesame Street 20 Boston Mass S100 673
Mrs Charles S Payson
~
Personal ty and Behal/ oral Development 33
owner New York Mels New 6 30 - ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10 NBC News 3 4 15 :"
York SBD 000
Hogan s Heroes 13
~
George Pfleger director 7 00 - Beat lhe Clock 4 News 10 Circus 13 What s My Line 8 ""'
Emerson E ectr c Co Newport
Eiec Co 10 People Places and Things 5 Trulh or Con ::'
Beach ca if $47 089
equences 6 3 Bobby Bowden 15
Ill"'
Mrs L an Phipps w dow of
Investment banker New York 7 30 - To Tell the Truth 6 Beat the Clock 13 Bobby Goldsboro~
IS 1 OOD
3 Hoi ywood Squares 4 Buck Owens 8 Ep sode Aetlon 33 ..,.
Valere Blair Potter oi man
Wacky World of Jonathan W10ters 15 Munlctpal Court 10 '"'
NaSh vii e Tenn $50 000
Conversat on with We111am Sarrett 20
::
Meshulam R klis chairman 8 00 - Gunsmoke 8 10 Lotsa Luck 3 4 15 Rookies 13 ..,
Rapid Amer can Corp (mens
Nat onal Geographic 6 Juvenrle Court 20 33
.,
c othlng maker ) New York
8 30 - Dia na 3 4 15
:;
sso 000
9 00 - Heres Lucy 8 10 Pro Football 6 13 Movie Doctors
John D Rockefeller S50 000
Wives 3 4 15
Laurance
Rockefe ll er
ISO 000
9 30 - D ck Van Dyke 8 10
Gov Nelson A Rockefe ller 10 00 - Medrcal Cenler 8 10
SSO ODD
•'
10 30 - News 10 Paul Nuchlms 33
•
John w R.ol ns president 10 45 - The Silent Years 10
Roll ns Intern at anal (broad
,.
casting trucking) Greenev lie 11 00 - NewsJ 4 6 8 10 13 15
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Janaki 33 moves Torch Song
Del S245 024
8 491 h Parallel 10
John H Safer sculptor and
•
rea estate deve oper Bethesda 12 oo - News 6 13
Md 5250 000
11 30 - Movie Cannibal Attack 13
Henry Salvatori cha rmen 1 00
Focus on Columbus 4
"'
Grant Of Too Co (o drilling 1 30 - News 4
~
toots ) Los Angeles $99 ~15
;
Richard Me ton Scaife Plfts 2 DO - News 13
burgh banker Sl m 11 on
Ken1 H Sm th ch&amp; rman
The Almanac
for a conference after which
hu,~rD~g1 Gores M lis Ohio ByUnltedPresslnternatlonal Br!Ush Prime Minister Neville
Howard Stamper cha rmon
TodaylsSWlday Sept 30 the Chamberlain promised peace
~:t~~el Foods 51 Lovis 273rd day of 1973 with 92 to in our time That peace p
Saul Stenberg cha rman follow
lasted exactly 337 days before:
Leasco
Carp
!computer
ser
Th
1
hi
1
v cesJ Great Neck N y
e moon s approac ng ts World War II started
•
'
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first quarter
George Steinbrenner chair
Th
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M
men American Sh pbu ldlng
e morn ng s rs are ars
Co Cleveland 175 OOD
and Saturn
SUNDAY
Tall Schreiber vice pres dent Th
I
Ia
Music ~orporatlon of America
e even ng s J;'S are Mer
tiMES.SENTINEL
lplionogroph records) Los An cury Venus and Jupiter
Pub shed every Sunuy
Qetes S66 102
by
T~e
Otl o Va lle y
Jules Ste n cho rmon Music Those born on this date are
Pub shlnl Co
•
Corpore! on of America Los under the sign of Libra
G L.L POI.IS
D.o.
I.Y
TR
8UNE
Angeles
1117I822
•
125 Th I'd Ave Gtl po It
W Cleme-n
Stone chairman Arne rlcan 1ndustr 1a1ist Wi I
•
Oh o 0631
Combined insurance Co ot llam Wrigley Jr was born
Pub lhed towery w"lo.dey
••
Amer ca Ch cago S2 mII Jon Se I 30
even ng uctp l Stturdlt
J File Sym nglon lu thervii
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Second CIUI Po111~1 Pt d
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On this day in history
THE A L.Y SENTINEL.
''
James Mlnnm
E Siewarr
1n 1•••
d u t 1 Cha res
1
111 Court St Pomeroy 0
neapolis
$50 000 M n
cnu a en s n
45769 Pub ltltd every w"k
TAPE Auociatad M lk Pro town, Mass extracted a tooth
dty hln nO IIICt pt Sltur
day En trt d 11 11cond c 111
~ri7"1~otn c san Anton Tex for the first time with the aid of
mt ling ITl•lter 11 Pomtroy
•
O~o Poat 011 c•
Dan •I J Terro chairmAn aneethesls-ether
V urr tr dillY lnd
Lawter Chern cola Ken I worttv In 1938 German F
Sunday 55c per wtek
'
lit 12!0 ooo
Y ranee
•
Ctwt1n Thornlon Chairman Britain and Italy met In Munich
$UBSC Rr?l~ 6N ~A TIS
•
Litton ndultrl e' Los Angeln
Tht Ga !if.OI s Trlbunt n
'
148 116
01'! o lnd 11t v ro nit ont
ye•r II~ t 111 monlhlll thrtt
Elisha Walktr inv•1tm1n11 - - - - - - - - - -monttlt iS t lltwhert 117 p1r
htir Now York City 1100 000
ntr 111!: ~ont"'s " three
RIV A Watt bolrd ch• rmen
Dewitt Wallace founder Rea
monlht Ui 0
der s Dlotsf Mt Klsco N Y Wall tndustrlll Los Angtitl
Ttlt Daly lmt f!ll ont
116 568
$100 000
t••r il6 00 11111 rnonlht 11 JD
•
J1ck Wrather founder and
nrat mont~•
00
J L warner motion picture
The U11llt
flrut In
lol Angelta Chelrmln Wrather Corp 1011
u:ecutlve
ftrnlllsna II UtiUIIvotly
neyiond Hotel Louie Voction
$100 000
ent tie to lht uu for
•
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MUIIk)
BtVtriY
Hiiil
Gene M Washburn Corona
pvbl Cll an of til newt
Co lli Ill 161
dol Mar Calif 150 ooo
d lpltChtt Cfld ltd to !hit
•
newtptptr Ina 1110 t~t loci
Arthur K Watson farm er Toddle Wynn• pres dent
1'\fWI
PLib
lhtG
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Amorlcon
Liberty
Oil
Co
lmbasudor to France ll'ld I':IM
Dol u •50 000
board cha rmen $300 000

..

•

OAillPOLiS - PerforrrrinM
before U1e largest holne crowd
of tl1e 1973 season _ np
proximately 3 soo ran ~ _
Rodney Tolliver s Guilla
Academy High School mar
chlng band presented anothe
outs~ndlng hnl!tllne show on
Memorial F leld Friday night

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES Mrs Elza
Powell Ashton Robert Sayre
Red House Sallie Wears Point
Pleasant Mrs Charles Cor
nell daughter Glenwood Mrs
Leonard Bass Syracuse
Cindy Roush Hartlord Gerald
Clarke and Myme Huff Point
Pl~asant

WRECKS PILE UP
M PLEASANT - Mason
County sheriff s deputies
were called out late Salur
day afternoon lo lnveRtlgale
a rash of auto accidents As
of 8 15 p m Saturday no
details were available from
the Mason County sheriff s
department AI -least four
wrecks were being probed by
office" The West VIrginia
State Pollee waR also called
out late Saturday afternoon
lo lnveRtigate a traffic
mishap

PTO TO MEET
HARRISONVILLE - The
Harrisonville P T 0 w1ll meet
Tuesday Oct 2 m the
Hamsonv1lle Elementary
Gym at 7 p m Installation of
officers will be held and can
d1dates for the school board
Wendall Hoover Bill Porter
Norman Hysell and Bob
Snowden will meet with the
members
Mrs Jennette Thomas will
diSCuss the levy for a school for
retarded classes m Me1gs
Cowtly Refreshments w1ll be
served by the teachers The
thll"d grade class will have the
program after the meeting
Theme will be Halloween

NEW HAYEN - Two calls
one a false alarm were an
swered by the New Haven Fire
Department Friday between
9 30pm andlO 30pm w1tha
total of 15 firemen answermg
the f1rst call w1th four trucks
while 21 firemen answered the
second call With five trucks
The 9 30 call was to Rt 33
above the Sporn Plant where a

-----------~--------------1
Letters of oplolon are welcomed They ohould he leAl

truck owned by Bob Redman
was on fire The fife was ex
tmgwshed and very hltle
damage was done
The second call to the
residence of Mack Ward New
Haven proved to be the false
alarm Lt Bill James said
today the two calls were the
12th and 13th calls since June
29

hll-sk •p m1shaps
GALLIPOLIS - Two ~ 1 1oklp accident• wert In
vutlgaled Friday
In
downtown Galllpolio City
pollee said the llnl occurred
In Two Hall Alley where an
auto owned by Steve Barker,
Rt I Gallipolis wao tlruck
by an unknown vehicle
Waller L Danner Rl 2
Galllpolls reported the olber
hit sltlp which occurred on
the parking lolal Bob Evan•
Steak Hou•e Danner Bald hlR
car wa• struck by an
unknown vehicle
A third accident occurred
at the Bob Evans Steak
House where an auto driven
by Luther Marlin of
Columbus was struck In tbe
rear by a car operated by
Robert L Rutherford 57 of
GalllpoliR

thu 300 words long (or be suhjecl to reducUon by the
editor) and must be tlglled with the aignee • addre••
I Namet may be withheld upon publlcalioo llowever on
I requeot, namea wiU be disclosed Letl&lt;n thould be In gOO)d
I taste addreuiDg istues, not penonaiiUea

'
II
I
I
I
I

l elebmtum 11 gre11t success
Dear Sirs
We are most grateful for the wooderful success of our llOth
annual Emancipation Celebration at the Galha County
Fairground on Sunday Sept 16 The day was Ideal for the large
crowd which gathered to meet old friends and to en)oy the
feastmg from thelf well packed baskets and the refreshment
stand
We especially wish to express our gratrtude to all who made
personal and fmanc1al contributiOns to help make our program
one of the best We are proud of the North Gallla High School
band w1th Mr Danco as director who gave us a !me performance
at the noon hour Agam we say Thank You
EmancipatiOn Committee Mrs Dorothy Thomas Chart
woman

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Beer drinker
needs help
now he wrll nat&lt;lrrnk a beer
durrng the week l know why
Dear Dr Lamb How beca use he can l dnnk one or
much alcohol or beer rs too two ca ns he always ha s to
much for a person to drrnk drrnk srx or eight man eve
over a weekend? My husband mng or on a we ekend Ca n you
drmk s a case or beer from tell me what to do or what to
Frtday nrght unt l Sunday say to h1m ? I ve done every
nrght This can t be good for thrng but tell lum I II JU St
hrm We have had several walk out He ts only 39 years
arguments about 11 He says 11 old and tl s really rurnmg our
rsn t hurtmg him and l say It marnage
rs He cant thtnk clearly and
Dear ReaderAnytrme
the smallest thrng rea lly sets that a drrnkrng habrt becomes
hrm off l m tellrng you thts a problem for a person erther
because these thrngs are on the JOb or at home It IS an
caused from his alcohol I m alcohol problem Accepting
sure He IS nervous short your statements as made If
tempered and very 1mpatrent your husband ha s already
Hts mother drank a lot of beer been to A A for help he must
for a few years and now she realize that he has an alcohol
has a hver dtsorder so her problem It IS true !fiat some
physician told her she had to mdivtduals are partrcularly
stop and she dtd
prone to ha ve a personality
My hu sband IS always change wrth even a small
catchmg colds and takes VIta amount of alcohol Some md1
mrns consrstently I say the v1duals wrth mild bram d1sor
alcoho l rs keeprng the vrta ders may get along perfectly
mrns from dorng thetr JOb well until they have had some
alco hol ln them even one
What do you say?
drink may cause a marked
A few years ago he did go change tn thetr personal ty
to Alcoholics
and cause difftcultres
I wtsh there was a qurck

By Lawrence E Lamb M 0

SEWING - NEW SHIPMENTS OF
FASHION DESIGNER COLOR
CO-ORDINATE

DOUBLE KNITS

ROOTING FOR FALOONS - Martha James Wahama
cheerle~der sends words of encouragement and Cheryl
Lcwrs JOinS other members of the White Falcons band
majorette corps m a crowd-plewing halftime performance
Frrday mght as the WHS football team scored a 4~ wm at
Southern Htgh m Racme

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

! Area Deaths !
Ernest llaker olflclating
Burial will be n lhe chu rch
cemetery under the d rectlon
of the Waugh Halley Wood
Funeral Home
Friends may call at lhe late
resi dence after 4 p m tOday
The body w II lie In state at the
church one hour prior to the
serv ces

JESSE PRICE SR
OAK HIL L - Jesse Price
Sr 74 of 3273 Towers Court
South Col umbus d1ed Thurs
day al 10 p m n St Anthony
Hosp tal Cc/umbus
Mr Price was a former
res denl of the Centerpoint
ne1ghbor hood n Gall a County
He was born in Johnson
County Ky July 11 1899 son
of the late Noah and Jenny P
Price
A ret red coal miner Mr
Pr ce s surv ved by h s w fe
Grace of Columbus four sons
Jesse Jr Harold H Charles
R and James A Pr ce a
daughter Mrs Janet Disney
two brothers Noah and Jonah
and one s ster Mrs Anna
Blankens hip
Funeral serv ces wi ll be held
af 1 p m Sunday al the Beaver
Valley Un ted Bapt st Church
Buna1 w II be n Fa rv ew
Cemetery Centerpomt Rev
R chard Preston wr ll offlc ate
Serv ces are under d1red10n
of the Kuhner Lew s Funeral
Home Oak H II

PAPERS FlLED
POMEROY - Artlclea of
lnct;orporatlon have been filed
In Colwnbus with Secretary of
State Ted W Brown by the
Meigs Racing Enterprise• on
200 shares of no par common
by Jack R Welker Jamflll
R Frecker and Charles E
Johnston with their agent being
James R Frecker Pomeroy,
and by Crow Crow and Porter
attorneys Pomeroy

NOTE TO STRIKERS
PT PLEASANT - Ap
phcatlons for participation m
the Mason County Food S~mp
Program for the striking
employees
of
Central
Operatrng Company will be
accepted between the hours of
1 p m and 4 p m Thursday
Oct 4 at the New Haven Fire
Station All mterested persons
should be there on that day No
applicatiOns will he taken 1n
the Mason County Office on
that day

ONE WEEK
Thursday thru
Wednesday

THE NUMBER ONE BOOK
OFTHEYEAR!
NOW-THE SUSPENSE
FILM OFTHEYEAR I

A UN VE.FISAl RElEASE !llmml'l!!r.
ECHN COl ORS ~&lt;oliiJIIP

Cartoon

ATIENTION

•

SENIOR CITIZENS

JOHN W FRAZIER
GALLI POLIS - John W
Frazer 72 d ed n Veterans
Hosp tal Hunt ngton Sept 23
He was a nat ve of Gal I poi s
The son of John W and
Calherrne Rubenslahl Frazer
he was a veteran of both Wor ld
Wars and served as a rad o
operator on merchant sh1ps
until h s ret rement
He was preceded In death by
one brother Leo
He as surv ved by h s son
John 0 Gro•e City four
daughters
Mrs
Mary
Blumberg Mchigan Anne
Pennsy lvan a Barbara and
Bonn e f ve grandchildren
one of whom Mrs Beth Shaw
was ra sed n the home Qf her
grandparents
Pnvate graves de services
w II be at Reynolds Cemetery
Add son at 1 p m Sunday The
fam ly requests 1he om ss on of
and easy answer ror you but flowers
there tsn t one that can be
WILMA M SHEETS
readrly accomplished A srg
GALLI POLIS - Mrs saac
mfrcant alcohol problem rs
somelhtng that the mate IW lma) M Sheets 74 a
usually can t do much about res dent of 244 Fourth Ave
ed at 1 15 am Saturday n
The Indtvrdual has to seek d1
the Holzer Medical Center
help on hi S ow n This IS true Arrangements will be an
whether rt s a man or a wom nounced by the Waugh Hal ley
an You should talk to your Wood Funeral Home
famrly doctor about rt and see
FRED A BOSTIC
if he has any suggesttons or rf
WATERLOO - Fred A
there rs an A A chapter close
by srnce he has been to one Boslrc 76 d ed al 10 30 a m
rn lhe Holzer Medical
before you mrght contact Saturday
Center
them and see If they could be
A ret red ma1l carr er Mr
of any help to you They Bostic was born Sept 20 1897
m1ght through his prevwus in Walnut Twp to the late
orgamzat1on connections be Addrson and Christina Price
ab[e to establish some form of He s survived by his w fe
contact wrth your husband and Alberta Strait and a daughter
Mrs Dale (Mary Lourse)
see 1f they could help him
M llspa ot Hebron Ohio He
I must tell you that the al was preceded in death by two
coho! won t necessarily keep brothers
Mr Bostic spent most of his
the vrtamrns from helptng
him but the vrtamms wrll not llle In the Waterloo Community
keep hiS body from bomg and was a member of the Olive
damaged by alcohol Exces Methodist Church
servrces will be held
srv e use of a lcohol can dam at Funeral
2 p m Monday from the
age the lrver the brain and Flag Spr nos Church with Rev
even the heart Thrs ts true
even 1! a person has an ade
Many of the nattve homes
quate vrtamm mtake
on the Dutch Cartbbean Island
If the alcohol problem can t of Aruba are colorfully deco
be solved 11 s up to you to rated with hex signs The
decrde what to do with your 81 gns are a vestige of the lime
life There rs nothmg that m which the early rnhabtlants
reqtiires a mate to live with of the 1s!anrl believed they
an alcoholrc mate I male or would ward off evil spmts
female) You mrght need to
ask what you have done to
de serve an alcoholtc mate
There Is an organtzatron
called AI Anon for mates and
famrltes of the alcoholic They
mtght be of help to you Some
times the mate I male or fe
male ) contrtbutes to the alco
hoi problem By learnmg what
the dynamiCS are the family
can help - lrterall y by help
lng themselves and changing
the dynamics Within the famr
ly Thrs however often re
quires profes sronal help for
both mates

SAVE

10%

On Prescriptions

.HERE'S HOW IT WORKS.
• You Must Be 60 years Old or Older.
• You Must Have AFruth Pharmacy Senior Citizen
10% Credit Card.
Fruth Pharmacy's

Senior Citizens 10%

CREDIT CARD
Full Cred1t Pnv1leges are extended to

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SIGNATURE _\'--+/""'d"""'"'.L./_..D'-'1•&lt;-'"'4""&lt;""'.---"'

/

THANK YOU
FRUTH PHARMACY
Your Drug Store

•

To Receive Your Card Fill Out Information Below And Bring
or Mail To: FRUTH PHARMACY
2501 Jackson Ave.

Pomt Pleasant, W.Va 25550

You Will Rece1ve Your Card By Retum Mail.

Sun

• All New Pall Fobrica
•AIIN-hlh
• All Color Co-Ordinated
• 60 to 66 Wide
• I 00" Polyfttor
• Poly•tlf and Wotol
• Potjculer Wool•ncl Silk
• Sw..llf Knits c.llf Co Orofinated

• Sold herywh~to Ito"'

•
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6 99to 12 99 yord

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Sep 30

.::AnD

MEIGS THEATRE

20 CE N 1URI'f0~ PM_$EN1 S
A SCRGE Sll BERMAN PROOUGTIQN
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Fruth Pharmacy

Octl23~

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S AJIRING fiOBER R'fAN
J ~N

r-- CLIP . .. FILL OUT AND MAIL

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TODil"

IG)
Disney Featurelle
Bear Country
Cartoon
Mr Mou&lt;e Takes A Trrp
Show Starts 7p m

•

tiOPI

NEW SP ~PER ENTt; RP I SE ASSN

TONIGHT
Sept 3D
SOUNDER
ITechnlcotor I

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Long Bottom

V-"-'.LL'n..Y

•

J'

lhelr h•lftlme •lluw Witlr ~Wt'\!l
Caroline with the majorettes
prcse ntm~ a dance routme
Other selections included
Delta Dawn Know the Way to
Son Jose fcaturiog the hrass

'
Vlsrtmg Mr and Mrs Wayne
Prince were Mrs Joe Fowtds
Chandiesville 0 Mr and
Mrs Lawrence Chevalier ,
Toronto 0 Mr and Mrs
Kehner Poole Mr~ Clarence
Dean Columbus and Janice
Davis Reedsville
VIsiting Ernestine Hayman
were Mr and Mrs David
Sherman
and
family
Arkansas Mr and Mrs Bob
Frtzpatnck and daughters
Colwnbus Mr and Mrs Keith
Ridenow- and son Kepo Mr
and Mrs Dick Hayman and
sons Success Road and Mr
and Mrs Tom Hayman and
daughters
Mr and Mrs David G
Stmth Marie!~ and Mr and
Mrs David A Sm1th and Dee
Dee were visiting A B Kibble
Reedsville
Mr and Mrs Hobart Newell
Chester and Mr and Mrs
Larry Curtis and family Keno
were viSiting Mary Pierce
Mr and Mrs Jerry An
derson
Columbus
were
vrs1tmg Mr and Mrs Bill
Thurston
Mr and Mrs Mtke Bissell
Colwnbus were VISitmg Mr
and Mrs Hank Holter
Ernestine Hayman spent
several days with Mr and Mrs
Elbert Fitzpatnck Lancaster
and othet relatives
Howard Larkins and family
Portland were vrsiting Mr
and Mrs Fred Larkins
Mr and Mrs Garth Smith
were visitmg Ed1th Osborn
Keno and Mr and Mrs
Norman Weber Tuppers
Plams
Mr and Mrs Dorsel Larkins
were vtsiting Mr and Mrs
VIrgil Wamsley Cheshire
-VIolet Smith

Poli('4' log two

r&lt;ection Swnmer llreeze Just
an Ole h shluned Love Son~
Kilts and Goodbye and Smoke
on Water
Roger Brwnfleld nurratcd
the show

during ll e Meigs Ualllpolls
loolball game
11rc Hlue Devil b~nd wns
minus 22 mern!Jers who were
sidelined by the flu bug
rhr GAHS mu•lcians began

One of two calls false

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@WIAAliY."-M:o&gt;r.&amp;mx.x~.:w~

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2501 Jackson Ave.

Phone 675·2303

P01nt Pleant

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�3- The Swlduy rhucs Nerrtlnl'l Sunday So pt 30 1971
2- TheSundayT1mes Sentmel Sunday Sept 30 1973
pi!WiWii*~:~. . . .; ~-*:..~~ ',; ~~ .s....s?..~..~~ :::,:...'x

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HOW P arkinson 'S Iaw
.Is destro mg
. Oh.10

budge! was !JelnK (Ut by $6 nnlhQil
One of lhe things About
bureaucracy says Rep Robert E
Netz 1ey R 1.AUra wh0 spen t 10 years
011 the House ~lnance Committee 1s
U1at these V8fiOUS agency heads begin
loseegovernmentasthelrdepartment
alone
They think government IS only
welfare or government ts only better
prisons or better highways They don t
look at th e overa11 aspect of govern
I
men
Spend E
very Penny
All these thtn"•
m
.,., are oood
o
somebody s mmd Netzley continues
but If you did everything everybody
wanted you d spend every penny there
IS It would be all goverrunent and it
would fall by its own weight
The governor and the legislature are
supposed to be the buffers between

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EDIT0°
•• S NOTE In govern ",a pac It y to feed an d grow on them
ment each bureau&lt;rat thinks his selves m fact to reproduce themselves
agency is tbeooly slar in the firmament with enormous cost unphcations and
aud ohould get alltbe money It needs httle control by the body that created
Tbl• reasom~ has con tributed to I he them - the Ohio General Assembly
meteoric ri•e In the state budget from
Ued
.. 1 b Ilion .. billl in
Deta
Laler
.. I
to .. 9 on 10 years In
This process will be dela!led later tn
Pari Tbree of a series on the subject
th eser1es but a very recen t examp1eo f
UPI Statehouse Reporter Lee Leonard
Parkinson s Law can be presented
gives an example Parkinson s La11
bere
wtder which slate agencies feed on
The Gene al A
bl
ted th
r
ssem Y crea
e
their own public relations to promote OhiO EnVIronmental Protection Agency
pet spending prOJects multiply them (EPA) m 1972 With a one-year
selves
allocation of • 7 million and 200 new
•
employes
By LEE LEONARD
The EPA turned what seemed like
UPI Statehouse ReJ&gt;Orter
fully half this number of employes mto
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The handy public relatiOns personnel trumpeted
reason for the growmg cost of state the agency s mstant success and asked
•
t IS inflat1on It Is an easy for $31 3 million for the followmg
.overrunen
excuse for pollticl.3ns
b1enmum
B infla
uid 1
bl
ut
lion co no poss1 y ac
Lawmakers cut this r1gure back to
count for a $21 billion budget $255 million after seeing the public
mushroomu~g to $9 9billion m a !().year relations people stumbling over each
h
d h
pe riod
ot er an
earmg stones about a
Even a generous 10 oer cent annual professor being told what to do six
111crease m the cost of labor eqwp months after he was placed on the EPA
men t an d bwJd mgs wou ld have on1y payroll and about the secretary who
d bled th bud t to $4 2 billi
ou
e
ge
on
told a caller no one by the name of
Much of the answer outside of the (EPA Director Ira L ) Whitman
extra VItal services provided by worked there
goverrunentover the last decade lies m
Despite this hefty boost in the EPA
what Sen Howard C Cook R Toledo appropriation department officials
calls Parkinson s Law
mcludmg Whitman protested to the
ThIS Iaw h0ld that governmen tal bIller end m personal appearances
agencies like the amoeba have the before the legislature that the agency

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single-nunded agency spenders and the
laxpayers but neither has served thiS
purpose m recent years
An Important by product of
par kmson s Law IS the burgeoning
state employ~ payroll which has gone
fromatotalof45872mDecember 1962
toS7676mstateagencleslastJuly plus
an estunated 20 000 on Wllverslty
lis
payro
In other words state government
jobs have almost reproduced them
selves over a 1012 year cycle
Gov John J Gilligan tried to get
blanket authority to reshuffle govern
ment agencies hopefully to streamlme
them but the legislature refused
The governor IS trymg t o cu t ou t
some of these bureaucratic mazes but
deIe nd S House
no body IS IISten111g
Speaker A G Lanc1one D.sehall"e

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Message license tags cost $45
COLUMBUS (UPI)-Well
It s offiCial
The time bas finally come
when you can apply for an Ohio
license plate carr)'lllg your
own spec1al message like
dummy or HOTDOG OR
HEE HAW Of course 11 will
cost you an extra $35 over the
norma! fee
Under the new law which
became effective Ia.~ Fr1day
the state will set $30 of this
amount &amp;Side 111 a specu~l roadside part fund for con
structlng repall'lng mam
taining and acqwnng land for
parts along Oh10 highways
But w&amp;t a IDI1lute r
Before you rush to
your telephone or type
writer to unload your
vanity license plate request

on the Department of Highway
Safety s bureau of motor
vehrcles be adVIsed the plates
don t come out until 1975
And the bureau 1s not tak111g
applications until next May
Walt tU Nexl Year
Several hundred requests
have come 111 according to the
bureau and Writers are be111g
told they II rece1ve an applica
lion blank next year
Arthur R Feeney chief of
vehicle license records 111 the
bureau enVISions plenty of
headaches the fll"st year of the
new program and 11 pa111s him
to th111k about 11
I hate to look forward to
that first year sa1d Feeney
po111tmg out there already IS
fierce competition for the speCial-ordered three letter plates

~

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel
Wby Tate Any Chances?
Rap
After three years of marrl.3ge my husband and I have
decided to ha e a fanuly
We re both 111 gOOd health and eat good natural foods
For four or more years however we ve smoked grass Doos
anyone know if thiS will have a harmful effect on the baby? I plan
to qwt while I m carry111g - NATURE MOTHER
NM
No one knows for sure how mariJuana affects the mind and
body of the longtime smoker nor whether Its constant use may
create problems for pregnant women
But we agree - It s best not to take chances In your area a
pot bust Is still ser10us busmess and an arrest for either of you
could also have a harmful effect on the baby (Like a parent
with a record) - HELEN AND SUE
Rap

+++

I was at a party the other rught that lasted until about 2 a m
Afterwards a few of us volwtteered to stay and clean up Un
fortunately it was just me (a guy) and four gil"Is
There was booze and everyone was feeling very loose After
we worked for an hour or so the hostess invited us to her room to
Usten to records and f1rush off the drmks I just sat there and
listened to the cbattermg
Then one of the guls who IS trai!Ung to he a beautician got a
wild Idea of fiXmg me up like a female They gave me the full
treatment from false eyelashes and lipstrck to a long dress and
heels
It seemed funny at the time but the next morning I felt as ·
though I d had a temble rughtmare Thmgs seem different when
you re sober
If these gtrls blab my life will be ruined Why would they do
something like that to a mce guy of !7?- WORRIED BECAUSE
I M NOT ONE OF THE GIRLS
Womed
Hey don t feel so upset You aren t the only person who gets
loaded and a little carried away
Maybe you 11 be teased for a while (maybe not If you ve
asked the girls to keep quiet ) but laugh II off and 1t will soon be
forgotten
After all the glfls were only haVIng a lltUe fwt by taking
advantage of an Intoxicated male Its no big thing (But kind of a
switch right?) - SUE
Dear Womed
Funny if one of the girls had dressed up as a boy she
wouldn't have worried next day Not one b1t
So why the big panic when the tables are turned? You
haven t lostyourmanhood by putting on lipstick and a dress and
I doubt the girla meant to threaten it Lets hope they all forget
the incident smce 11 bothers you so much - HELEN

which have been on sale for
years for an extra $S
In fact Feeney sa1d the
series begmrung With the popularletters J R M and
W have been wiped out
Feeney noted that under the
new program four letter
names can he acoompamed by
two-digit numbers up to 99
Thus 99 persons could get the
same four~etter name
But who gets the one with
out a number? asked Feeney
Who gets just pla111 JOHN ?
He laughed when 11 was
suggested the governor m1ght
get that one
Another spokesman for the
department sa1d a 'mimi
lottery might have to be held
to detenmne who gets certam
plates
!'he other problem faced by
the department IS determm111g
what oombmat10ns are obscene
or have offensive double mean
mgs
What Creastons"
Suppose some guy wants
the letters 38BRA? Feeney
asked He nught have a wife
that he s very proud of and if
you think It s vulgar that s
your problem
Then too what s offensive
to a black man nught not he to
a white man and vice versa
There s Lat111 and Greek and
mathematical and chenucal
formulas that who knows what
they mean? I don t
A panel of experts Including
youths conversant With
modern language m1ght have
to be assembled to pass on the
plates
Nevertheless Feeney thmks
once the wrmkles are Ironed
out the program will be a
success from a commercial
standpomt Ca!ifornia made
$900 000 the first year 11 had
vanity plates

Aside from personal names
Feeney believes the plates will
be used for advert1s111g by
places likes DINOS Restaurant
or HERBS bar and gr11l
And suppose somebody like
the John Deere Co over 111
Sprmgf1eld wants to give Its
executives special plates
Feeney sa1d We can fit a fleet
of nme cars With JDEER1
JDEER2 etc
M1ss Nude Amer1ca already
has applied for MSNUDE
Feeney sa1d It will probably
do for her whatever she wants
II to

Long Bottom
Social Notes
Afam1ly birthday dinner was
held at PorUand Park honormg
Ruth Larkins on her 77th bll"th
day Guests were Mr and
Mrs Norman Weber and VIda
Mr and Mrs Charles Weber
and son Mr and Mrs Keith
Weber Tuppers Plams Mr
and Mrs Raymond Larkins
and daughter Pennsylvama
Fred Larkins and Mrs VIrgil
Bogard and family
Mr and Mrs Bill Thurston
entertamed w1th a dmner
honormg the birthday of Leona
Hensley
Mr and Mrs Joe Bissell
spent a weekend at Niagara
Fa!ls New York
VISiting Mr and Mrs Garth
Sm1th were Mr and Mrs
Claude Smith Reedsville Ollie
Young and V1rg1e Mora
Pomeroy and Gladys Croy
Chester and Dora Cr1spm
Newlll'k
Betty
Wamsley
and
daughter Cheshire were
Vlsltmg Mr and Mrs Dorsel
Larkins

WIN AT BRIDGE

Trump lead lets m game
NORTH iDl

29

+K 108 3
• A

+J9 75 42
+ AQ
WEST
• 54
¥ KJ974

EAST

t A3

• Q108
+K 1065

+ A6

• Q 1062

+J 943
SOUTH
+Q J972
• 85 3

t K6

+872
Both vulnerable

\l est

East
Pass

Pass

Norlh
It
3+

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

South

J+

4+

Open ng lead- + 5
By Oswald &amp; Jam., Jacoby

Four spades IS a very good
contract for South Grve East
the ace of diamonds and West
the krng of clubs and he would
+++
have no trouble making five
Dear Rap
odd
but those two cards are
I'm a 16-year-old guy who never had a date but wants one
placed just where he do es n t
with a girl I see every day but am afraid to speak to I m not want them to be
beinc vain when I say I m not ugly and I keep in shape but I AM In sp1te of this unfortunate
chicken
srtuat1on South found a way to
Pleue help me and a lot of others by giving me an opening make hrs contract after West
was krnd enough to open a
Une -CANTTHINKOFAWORDTOSAY
•
trump rather than a club
East took his ace and led
Dear CTWI'S
trumps
back South won rn
How about Hi I want to talk to you but I can t think of a
and dectded to attack
word toNy She Utake It from there Most girls love to help out dummy
dtamond s rtght away The
alhy lillY - especially If he isn t ugly and keeps m shape normal play would have been to
HELEN AND SUE
lead the deu ce and go up wtlh

hts krng but South had a shght
ly dtfferent rdea He led dum
my S JOCk
If East JUSt played low
South would stili have played
the kmg but East covered the
jack wrth the queen A bad
play but the so rt of bad play
that even the best players are
gorng to make nrne times out of
lO

Now Soulh held ba ck hr s
king Thrs left East on lead He
couldn t do any good by playing
a club and drd le~d a heart to
dummy s ace A second dra
mond was led and now the krng
lost to the ace
West led a club but tt was
too late South went up with
dummy s ace ruffed a dta
mond and eventually dtscarded
hrs losmg clubs on good d1a
monds

29

The bldd ns has been

West

North
IN T

Ea11
Pass

2t

Pas~

Pass

South
1ass

'

You South hold
+10 8 8 3 2 .K 7 5 tJ 9 4 +Q I
What do you do now"
A- Bid lwo 1padu You don t
wut to sell out this cheap
TODAY S QUESTION

Again your purtner opens one no
trump You -.re pia\ inJ{ Ju ob\

transfer brds and holt!
.AQ8 76 . K4 +142+KJ2
What do y u do no" ?
Ans"'er Mondn\

RI.ch donors
1·1St bare d
WASHING10N (UPI) _
President NIXon 8 1972 cam
paign raised $60 2 million to
W111 hiS re~lectlon more than
Stt million of it from well
heeled suPPQrters who rushed
their money m under assur
d be
ances lhear names woul
kept SelTet
Bowing to a federal court
d
h Fl
Co itt
or er t e nance mm ee
to ReElect the President
Friday released Its list of long
secret donors 8 list studded
w1 th the names of ambassadors bankers mdustrialists
andpromment Democrats The
mmi
a1
kno led d
CO
ttee SO ac W ge
$4 25000 111 illegal donations
from SIX corporations that
were later returned
The list conta!ned thousands
of names of donors during the
d f
J
1 1971
peno
rom
th gh A u 6an 1972
h
rou
pr
W O
supplied a net aggregate of
$! 9 9 11
to th
nu !On
e campaign
But the focus was on certain of
the listed donors who were not
preVIously Identified and who
contributed $II 3 million
durmg the period March 10
1972 through April 6 1972
Other listed donors Of $8 6
m1II ton durmg th e period J an
1 1971 through March 9 1972
had been Identified previOusly
The list was released pursu
ant to an order by US District
Court Judge JosephS Waddy
m a SUit brought last summer
by Common Cause the public
mterest lobby
Common Cause ca!culated
that $52 million alone was
collected m the last two days
before the new law went mto
effect
John W Gardner ch811"man
of Common Cause said his
group spent $75 000 seek111g
disclosure of the list
Campaign offic18ls had hat
tied to keep the contributor list
secret argumg that disclosure
was legally requ!fed only for
donatiOns received after Apr 1
7 the date the full-disclosure
campaign fmance law went
mto effect
The NIXon committee said
receI pt s from the campaign
totaled $60 2 million and ex
penditures $56 I million With a
surplus of $4 I million
WASH NGTON (UP II - Here
s a st of 94 persons or
fam es or em plove groups
dent fed by Common Cause as
nav ng contributed S40 000 or
more to President N xon s re
elechon campaign during the
per od Jan 1 19 71 through
Apr I 6 1972
The I st was abstracted from
a much larger I st of a
contr butors to the N xon
campa gn during the period
The F nance Comm ttee to Re
Elect the Pres dent was re
qul red to make pub c the fu
I st under a cou rt rul ng In a
su t brought against t by
Common Cause
The occupat ons t ties and
emp lo yers noted n the 1 st
were supplied bv Common
Cause a non proflt polltlca
act on group which describes
tself as a c1t zens lobby
Robert Allen pres dent Gu f
Resources &amp; Chemical Corp
Houston Te¥as SlOO ooo cnh
Walter An nenbergn amb!SSa
dor to Great Br ta n and
Philadelphia
publ sher
S2SO DOD
Emplovees of Amer can A r
lines New York S75 ooo
Theodore Ashley chairman
and president Warner Brothers
New York S137 056
Or n Atkins board cha rman
Ash and 0 I Ash and Kv
SlOD 000 cash
Loren Berry cha rman L M
Berry Co
Dayton Oh o
$102 000
Elmer Bobst honorary cha r
man Warner lambert Phar
maceutical Co Morr s Plains
N J SlDO ODO
E W
Brown Jr
board
cha rman lutcher &amp; Moore
Cypress lumber Co Orange
Texas and Gu fport Shipbuild
lng Co Port Arthur Texas
SlSO DOO
Wll am BUrden general part
ner W liam A H Burden &amp; Co
&lt;Investment bank ng&gt; New
York S97 895
Henrv Crown board chair
man Henry Crown and Co
Chicago SSD 819 IS2S 000 In
cash)
Nathan Cum m ngs honorary
cha rman Consol dated Foods
Corp and board chairman
Assoc ated Products New
York 544 J56
Theodore CummingS Beve rly
Hills Cat f $43 407
Brownlee Currev Jr sen or
vice President eaultable Secur
t es Morton (Investment bank
ing l New Yor S74 195
Stle by Davis ambassador to
Switzerland and former lnvut
ment banker SlOO 000
Chr stlan de Gulgne board
Cha rman Slauffer Chemica s
Co San Franc sco $101 895
v ncent de Roulet ambassa
dor to Jamaica $50 000 (Sl2 000
In CB$h)
Cit zens for Good Govern
menl LTV Corp Caerosoace
employees I Oallu tuas
S60 DDO
Frederick L Ehrman cha r
man executive committee Leh
man
Corp
( nvestment
banking I New York S6J 578
Harvey Firestone Jr rttlrtd
chairman and prtlldent Fire
stont T re &amp; Rubber Akron
Oh iO 1~8 712
.., Leonard F reston• president
r resto11e Tire &amp; Aubber of
California
Los Angelel
1100 000
RJ~ymond Firestone
board
chairman Firestone Tire &amp;
Rubber Akron Ohio 163 441
Max M FiJhtr bOard chair
man Flllher New Center Co
Detroit 1125 ooo
Mrs Edsel 8 Ford molhtr
of Henry Ford II Grone
Potnle Mlch 150 000 &gt;
Htnty Ford 11 boerd chair
man Foro MotM Co Grone
Pointe M ~,-h U6 176
Thomas Fard lnvetfments

Television Log

3,500 fans watch game's band show

SUNDAY SE PT JD 1973
00
Tra•ologuo 4
6 30 Tht• Week 4 Nowsmbkor 73 13 Lamp Unto My Feet 10 •
7 00 Time For Tlmolhy. Jenny Fa Iwell 13 Commu"lque 6
L ku
d Ll
10
8 Revival Fires 6 1-ieratd ol Truth 3
7 3;"...
Ca mera Three 0 Fi lm.
7 •s
News rd
• Repass 8 Gospel Carav~n 6 Church Servicw
8 DO - Leona
13 Billy James Harg s and his Ail American Kids 10 Mor ;o
mon Choir 3 Day of Discovery ,
8 30 Oral Roberts 3 Your He;rllh 4 Day of Diocovery 8 Re•
Humbard ll Rev vat Fires lS Kathryn Kuhlman 6 Get
Togelher lD
8 55 Black Ca meo 4
R b I 10 R
9 oo - S n~ing Jubilee 3 Cadle Chapel 4 Or~l o er s
e•
Humbard
6
15
Old
Fashioned
Mealing
8
9 30 _ Churcy By Side ollhe Road 4 Christls the Answer 13
Amazrng Chan a Popeye 10
10 oo _ Church Serv ces 4 This Is the L fe 3 Lrfe For Todar, IS
Kid Power 6 13 Rex Humbard 8 MOllie Funny Face tO
10 30 _ This 15 the Life 15 Gap ta1n Noah 3 Insight 4 Osmonds
13 Vision On 6
11 00 _ Point of v ew 6 Joy in L ving 13 TV Chapel 3 Focus On
Co umbus 4 Across the Fence 15 Notre DameS
I I JO - Thrs Is The Answer 3 Make A Wish 6 13 insight 15 OSU
Foolball Highlights 4
12 oo - At Issue 3 Bawling 6 Rev Ca lvin Evans 13 Sacred
Hearl JS Wesl v rg nia Unlverslly B Columbus Town
Meet
ng 10
12 15 _ Open Bible IS
11 30 - Rev val F res 13 Meellhe Press 3 4 15 NFl Pre Game
Show 8
12 55 - Ted Mul lins to
1 oo - Lower Ughlhouse 13 Pro Footba ii J 4 8 10 Eternol
Loht 15
1 oo--CollegeFootbail 197313 Sou1Traln6 ProFootball15
3 00 - Other People Other Places 6 Survival 13
3 30 - 0ddCouple6 Jim myDean Shaw13
4 oo _ Sesa me st 33 Pro Foolball 3 4 15 Rook es 6 America
13 UFO 8 The First Fifty lD
4 30 - Green Acres 10
5 00 - W•" t T II Your Father Gets Home 6 Films of the Gatsby
Era 33 Movie Our Man Flint 3 Famriy Cl~ss cs Theater
a Mag c c reus o
s 30 - Untamed World 6
6 OO - Lets MakeAOea l6 CBSNewsRet rospeclveB 10
7 00 _ Safa rr to Adventure 3 Zoom 10 33 Wild Kingdom 15
Crrcus 4 Lassie 8 tn the Know 10 untamed World 13
p
7 30 - World of D sney 3 4 15 French Chef 10 FBi 6 13 erry
Mason 8 10 Mounlaln Scene 33
8 00 - American V s on 10 33
a 30- McM II an and w fe 3 4 15 Move Fuzz 6 13 Manni x
a 10
9 00 - Mas terprece Th ea tre 20 33
9 30
Barnaby Jones 8 10
p h
10 00 - F r no lmP. ?O 33 We Think Yo ShOt d Knnw 1
l"n e
Conference wrth the Mayor 4 I Spy 15
10 30 Pollee Surgeon 15 Johnny Manns ~raM Up and Cheer
4 1\iews 6 8 High Road to Adventure 10 Newsmaker 73 13
11 oo - News 3 4 15 10 6 13 a
11 15- Pol ce Surgeon 6 CBS News 10 News 13 Movie Llv ng
It u 8
P
11 30 - Hope Bail Highi ~hts 4 Johnny Carson lS Movie
Every Days a Holiday 3 Face the Nation 10
12 30 - Movre Girl Happy 10
1 oo - Mav1es 3 4
6

f:il~nlor

;:.y

New York lA&lt; ooo
J Pau 1 G• n Y pres td en r
GetJv on Los Angeles 175 ooo
&amp; Emp ovoe~ ot Go~dveor OTt re
~ubber
o A ron
hio
S&lt;OAlbert
OOD
F Gordon
vice
~~~s i~:;,'rm•;: : ::;: P~o~o~v
&amp; co
lsrockbrokersl New
York 599 873
Kingdon Gould Jr rorm er
embassador to Lu•embouro
and ambassador designate to
Ihe Nether lands parking ot
:i~Q'~~ove Wash ngton o c
Raymond R Guest fo rmer
am oassador to roland King
George va s200 ooo
o t Co P
P Emptoves
llsburgh Paof Gulf
1100 ooo
Wa ter A Haas honorary
cha rman
L.e-v Stra uss &amp; Co
San
FranCISco
548 557
John P Humes ambassador
to ireland srooooo
0 ~0 "$~bdo~ughes washtnuron
John N irwin I om bassodor
to France $50000
Mar on w Isabell chairman
and chief executive off cer
~.~":ltrd a Inns Phoenl • Ariz
Peler Kiewit president
Omaha Neb construct on t rm
SlOO m
Roberr Kleberg preSident
Kno Ran ch Inc lca ttl e Oil
narura gas! Klngsv re Texas
5100 ooo
Lester B Kn ght chairman
Lester 8 Kn gh l and Assoc
ares !construct on and en
g neertng l Ch cago so 000
Gustave Levy general part
ner Goldman Sachs and Co
New
y( nvestment
k $70 44 2 bank ng l
or
Nalhon Lipson pres dent
Venture lndustr es Inc (carpet
manufactur er)
Atlanta
S98 12D
Anthony 0 Marshall ambes
sodor to Tr nldad S48 sos
J Wliard Morriolln chairman
board Marriott Corp Wash ng
ton o c S61167
Armand Hammer cha rman
and chief uecut ve off cer
Occ dental Petroleum Los An
oe es 546 ooo cash
Bob Hope entertainer North
Ho iywood Callt 550 ODO
OCT 1 1973
Jack Massey board chair 6 00 - Sunnse SemMONDAY
nar
4
Sacred
Heart 10
man Hasp tal Corporation of
6 15 - School Scene 10
America Nashville Tenn
6 20 - Farm Report 13
S2SO DDO
Mrs Abby R l~ockelel erl 6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
Mauze New York
N Y
6 30 - Columbus Today 4 Brble Answers 8 Good News 13
S5D ODO
News 6
Lew s Maytag cha rman and 6 45
- Corncob Report 3 Farmtlme 10
chief execul veoff cer National
7
00
Today 4 3 15 CBS News a 10 Fi ntstones 13 Romper
A ri nes Mtam F a sso ooo
Room 6
Otto N M l er cha rman
Sandard o of Cal fornio san 7 30 - Rocky &amp; Bullwtnkle 13 New Zoo Revue6
a 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8 10 Sesa me St 33 New Zoo Revue 13
Franc sco sso ooD
Seymour Mf ste n manufac
T1mmy and Lass e 6
tur ng execut ve Scarsda e a 30Huck &amp; Yog 6 Dick Van Dyke13
N Y 565 ooo
a 55
News 13
tr.'i:.':.~oys~~~ 0 g~ Ph 1 ps Pe 9 00- Paul D xon 4 Ph I Donahue 15 Fnendly Junct1on 10
Mr Rogers 33 AM 3 Brady Bunch 6 Abbott and Costello 8
Roger M ken president
Move When My Baby Sm rl es At Me 13
~;:;,~~b~r~ ~e~ lns~.'6g~ti •s l 9 30 - To Tell the Truth 3 Secret Storm a Mrchaeis &amp; Co 6
John Moran board chairman 9 55
Chuck Whrte Report 10
Hycel Inc (med ca chemlca ts 10 00 - DinahShore3 15 JokersWlldB 10
and laboratory equ pment ) 10 30 - Baffle 4 3 15 SlO 000 Pyram d a 10 Mrke Douglas 6
Houston Texas 1101 D08
John A Mu cahy president 11 oo - Password 13 Gambrta 10 Wizardof0dds4 3 15
Quig ey co Cslee subs diary of 11 30 - Hollywood Squares 4 3 15 Love of Life 8 10 Brady
Bunch 13 Bowl ng 6 Sesame Street 33
Pt zer ph am aceut cals 1 Bron•
ville N Y ..,573 559
11 55 - News 8 Dan lmel s World 10
c nr and John Murch son o 1 12 00 - Bob Braun s 50 50 Club 4 Jeopardy 3 15 News 8 10 13
producers and owners Da las
Password 6
Cowboys $50 000 cash
12
30
15 SearchforTomorrow8 10 Spir1 Second6
Joh n M
01 n
honorary 12 45 -- 3Ws3
Electr
c Company 33
cha rman 01 n Corp Ondustr al
and agricultural chem ca s) 12 55 - NBC News 15 3
1 oo - Ail My Ch ldren 6 13 Not for Women Only 15 News 3
New York 5100 000
Concentration 8 What s My Lrne 10
Wll am McKn ght honorary
cha rman M nnesota Min ng 1 30 - 3 On A Match 4 3 15 As the World Turns 8 10 Lets '
and Manufactur ng Co St
Make A Deal 13 6
Paul M nn SB5 191
2
00
- Days of Our L ves 4 3 15 Newlywed Game 6 13
Andre Meyer partner Lazard
Gu drng L ght 8 10
Freres Co ( nvestments ) New
2 30 - Doctors 4 3 15 EdgeofNghf8 10 Gri nMyLfe613
York 590 999
Joesph Meyerhoff cha rman 3 oo - Another World 4 3 15 Genera l Hospital 6 13 Price Is "
Rrght 8 10 How Do Your Chrldren Grow 10
~
Can t nenta
Propert ies Inc
(real estate deve opmentl Bal
3 30 - Return to Pe(fon Place 3 15 One Life to L ve 13 Phil •
I more Md 5104 848
Donahue 4 Secre Storm 10 Match Game 73 8 Flintstones
Spencer T 01 n director Olin
6 F lm 33 French Chef 20
Industries (Industria and 4 00- Love Amer can Style 13 Somersel1 5 Sesame 51 33 20 ~t~ ..!
agr cultural chem calsl St
Mr Cartoon and lhe Banana Splits 3 Speedracer 6 Lucy ,
Lous $94513
Show 8 Movre The Sheepman 10
'"
Florenz Our sman rea estate
developer Washmgton D c 4 30 - Green Acres 3 Jeopatdy 4 I Love Lucy 6 Hazel 8
51 SO ODO
G1lllgan s Island 13 Bonanze 15
t+oJ
Dav d Packard cha rm ., S 00 - I Dream of Jeanne 13 M1ster Rogers 20 33 Andy ,...
Hewlett Packard Co
(elec
Grrff th 8 Bonanza 3 Merv Griffin 4 Mission lmposs ble 6 '"
Iron csl Pa o Alto Cal f
s
30
- Beverly H lib ill es 8 Electr c Co 33 Gomer Pyle t3 ~
SS I OOp
Hodgepodge Lodge 10 Trails West t5
Thomas Papas president
5 55 - Earl Nightingale 15
,::
(food and quid mporter)
6 00 News 3 4 6 8 10 15 ABC News 13 Sesame Street 20 Boston Mass S100 673
Mrs Charles S Payson
~
Personal ty and Behal/ oral Development 33
owner New York Mels New 6 30 - ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10 NBC News 3 4 15 :"
York SBD 000
Hogan s Heroes 13
~
George Pfleger director 7 00 - Beat lhe Clock 4 News 10 Circus 13 What s My Line 8 ""'
Emerson E ectr c Co Newport
Eiec Co 10 People Places and Things 5 Trulh or Con ::'
Beach ca if $47 089
equences 6 3 Bobby Bowden 15
Ill"'
Mrs L an Phipps w dow of
Investment banker New York 7 30 - To Tell the Truth 6 Beat the Clock 13 Bobby Goldsboro~
IS 1 OOD
3 Hoi ywood Squares 4 Buck Owens 8 Ep sode Aetlon 33 ..,.
Valere Blair Potter oi man
Wacky World of Jonathan W10ters 15 Munlctpal Court 10 '"'
NaSh vii e Tenn $50 000
Conversat on with We111am Sarrett 20
::
Meshulam R klis chairman 8 00 - Gunsmoke 8 10 Lotsa Luck 3 4 15 Rookies 13 ..,
Rapid Amer can Corp (mens
Nat onal Geographic 6 Juvenrle Court 20 33
.,
c othlng maker ) New York
8 30 - Dia na 3 4 15
:;
sso 000
9 00 - Heres Lucy 8 10 Pro Football 6 13 Movie Doctors
John D Rockefeller S50 000
Wives 3 4 15
Laurance
Rockefe ll er
ISO 000
9 30 - D ck Van Dyke 8 10
Gov Nelson A Rockefe ller 10 00 - Medrcal Cenler 8 10
SSO ODD
•'
10 30 - News 10 Paul Nuchlms 33
•
John w R.ol ns president 10 45 - The Silent Years 10
Roll ns Intern at anal (broad
,.
casting trucking) Greenev lie 11 00 - NewsJ 4 6 8 10 13 15
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Janaki 33 moves Torch Song
Del S245 024
8 491 h Parallel 10
John H Safer sculptor and
•
rea estate deve oper Bethesda 12 oo - News 6 13
Md 5250 000
11 30 - Movie Cannibal Attack 13
Henry Salvatori cha rmen 1 00
Focus on Columbus 4
"'
Grant Of Too Co (o drilling 1 30 - News 4
~
toots ) Los Angeles $99 ~15
;
Richard Me ton Scaife Plfts 2 DO - News 13
burgh banker Sl m 11 on
Ken1 H Sm th ch&amp; rman
The Almanac
for a conference after which
hu,~rD~g1 Gores M lis Ohio ByUnltedPresslnternatlonal Br!Ush Prime Minister Neville
Howard Stamper cha rmon
TodaylsSWlday Sept 30 the Chamberlain promised peace
~:t~~el Foods 51 Lovis 273rd day of 1973 with 92 to in our time That peace p
Saul Stenberg cha rman follow
lasted exactly 337 days before:
Leasco
Carp
!computer
ser
Th
1
hi
1
v cesJ Great Neck N y
e moon s approac ng ts World War II started
•
'
mo ooo
first quarter
George Steinbrenner chair
Th
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Ia
M
men American Sh pbu ldlng
e morn ng s rs are ars
Co Cleveland 175 OOD
and Saturn
SUNDAY
Tall Schreiber vice pres dent Th
I
Ia
Music ~orporatlon of America
e even ng s J;'S are Mer
tiMES.SENTINEL
lplionogroph records) Los An cury Venus and Jupiter
Pub shed every Sunuy
Qetes S66 102
by
T~e
Otl o Va lle y
Jules Ste n cho rmon Music Those born on this date are
Pub shlnl Co
•
Corpore! on of America Los under the sign of Libra
G L.L POI.IS
D.o.
I.Y
TR
8UNE
Angeles
1117I822
•
125 Th I'd Ave Gtl po It
W Cleme-n
Stone chairman Arne rlcan 1ndustr 1a1ist Wi I
•
Oh o 0631
Combined insurance Co ot llam Wrigley Jr was born
Pub lhed towery w"lo.dey
••
Amer ca Ch cago S2 mII Jon Se I 30
even ng uctp l Stturdlt
J File Sym nglon lu thervii
P
11161
Second CIUI Po111~1 Pt d
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On this day in history
THE A L.Y SENTINEL.
''
James Mlnnm
E Siewarr
1n 1•••
d u t 1 Cha res
1
111 Court St Pomeroy 0
neapolis
$50 000 M n
cnu a en s n
45769 Pub ltltd every w"k
TAPE Auociatad M lk Pro town, Mass extracted a tooth
dty hln nO IIICt pt Sltur
day En trt d 11 11cond c 111
~ri7"1~otn c san Anton Tex for the first time with the aid of
mt ling ITl•lter 11 Pomtroy
•
O~o Poat 011 c•
Dan •I J Terro chairmAn aneethesls-ether
V urr tr dillY lnd
Lawter Chern cola Ken I worttv In 1938 German F
Sunday 55c per wtek
'
lit 12!0 ooo
Y ranee
•
Ctwt1n Thornlon Chairman Britain and Italy met In Munich
$UBSC Rr?l~ 6N ~A TIS
•
Litton ndultrl e' Los Angeln
Tht Ga !if.OI s Trlbunt n
'
148 116
01'! o lnd 11t v ro nit ont
ye•r II~ t 111 monlhlll thrtt
Elisha Walktr inv•1tm1n11 - - - - - - - - - -monttlt iS t lltwhert 117 p1r
htir Now York City 1100 000
ntr 111!: ~ont"'s " three
RIV A Watt bolrd ch• rmen
Dewitt Wallace founder Rea
monlht Ui 0
der s Dlotsf Mt Klsco N Y Wall tndustrlll Los Angtitl
Ttlt Daly lmt f!ll ont
116 568
$100 000
t••r il6 00 11111 rnonlht 11 JD
•
J1ck Wrather founder and
nrat mont~•
00
J L warner motion picture
The U11llt
flrut In
lol Angelta Chelrmln Wrather Corp 1011
u:ecutlve
ftrnlllsna II UtiUIIvotly
neyiond Hotel Louie Voction
$100 000
ent tie to lht uu for
•
lind
MUIIk)
BtVtriY
Hiiil
Gene M Washburn Corona
pvbl Cll an of til newt
Co lli Ill 161
dol Mar Calif 150 ooo
d lpltChtt Cfld ltd to !hit
•
newtptptr Ina 1110 t~t loci
Arthur K Watson farm er Toddle Wynn• pres dent
1'\fWI
PLib
lhtG
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n
Amorlcon
Liberty
Oil
Co
lmbasudor to France ll'ld I':IM
Dol u •50 000
board cha rmen $300 000

..

•

OAillPOLiS - PerforrrrinM
before U1e largest holne crowd
of tl1e 1973 season _ np
proximately 3 soo ran ~ _
Rodney Tolliver s Guilla
Academy High School mar
chlng band presented anothe
outs~ndlng hnl!tllne show on
Memorial F leld Friday night

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES Mrs Elza
Powell Ashton Robert Sayre
Red House Sallie Wears Point
Pleasant Mrs Charles Cor
nell daughter Glenwood Mrs
Leonard Bass Syracuse
Cindy Roush Hartlord Gerald
Clarke and Myme Huff Point
Pl~asant

WRECKS PILE UP
M PLEASANT - Mason
County sheriff s deputies
were called out late Salur
day afternoon lo lnveRtlgale
a rash of auto accidents As
of 8 15 p m Saturday no
details were available from
the Mason County sheriff s
department AI -least four
wrecks were being probed by
office" The West VIrginia
State Pollee waR also called
out late Saturday afternoon
lo lnveRtigate a traffic
mishap

PTO TO MEET
HARRISONVILLE - The
Harrisonville P T 0 w1ll meet
Tuesday Oct 2 m the
Hamsonv1lle Elementary
Gym at 7 p m Installation of
officers will be held and can
d1dates for the school board
Wendall Hoover Bill Porter
Norman Hysell and Bob
Snowden will meet with the
members
Mrs Jennette Thomas will
diSCuss the levy for a school for
retarded classes m Me1gs
Cowtly Refreshments w1ll be
served by the teachers The
thll"d grade class will have the
program after the meeting
Theme will be Halloween

NEW HAYEN - Two calls
one a false alarm were an
swered by the New Haven Fire
Department Friday between
9 30pm andlO 30pm w1tha
total of 15 firemen answermg
the f1rst call w1th four trucks
while 21 firemen answered the
second call With five trucks
The 9 30 call was to Rt 33
above the Sporn Plant where a

-----------~--------------1
Letters of oplolon are welcomed They ohould he leAl

truck owned by Bob Redman
was on fire The fife was ex
tmgwshed and very hltle
damage was done
The second call to the
residence of Mack Ward New
Haven proved to be the false
alarm Lt Bill James said
today the two calls were the
12th and 13th calls since June
29

hll-sk •p m1shaps
GALLIPOLIS - Two ~ 1 1oklp accident• wert In
vutlgaled Friday
In
downtown Galllpolio City
pollee said the llnl occurred
In Two Hall Alley where an
auto owned by Steve Barker,
Rt I Gallipolis wao tlruck
by an unknown vehicle
Waller L Danner Rl 2
Galllpolls reported the olber
hit sltlp which occurred on
the parking lolal Bob Evan•
Steak Hou•e Danner Bald hlR
car wa• struck by an
unknown vehicle
A third accident occurred
at the Bob Evans Steak
House where an auto driven
by Luther Marlin of
Columbus was struck In tbe
rear by a car operated by
Robert L Rutherford 57 of
GalllpoliR

thu 300 words long (or be suhjecl to reducUon by the
editor) and must be tlglled with the aignee • addre••
I Namet may be withheld upon publlcalioo llowever on
I requeot, namea wiU be disclosed Letl&lt;n thould be In gOO)d
I taste addreuiDg istues, not penonaiiUea

'
II
I
I
I
I

l elebmtum 11 gre11t success
Dear Sirs
We are most grateful for the wooderful success of our llOth
annual Emancipation Celebration at the Galha County
Fairground on Sunday Sept 16 The day was Ideal for the large
crowd which gathered to meet old friends and to en)oy the
feastmg from thelf well packed baskets and the refreshment
stand
We especially wish to express our gratrtude to all who made
personal and fmanc1al contributiOns to help make our program
one of the best We are proud of the North Gallla High School
band w1th Mr Danco as director who gave us a !me performance
at the noon hour Agam we say Thank You
EmancipatiOn Committee Mrs Dorothy Thomas Chart
woman

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Beer drinker
needs help
now he wrll nat&lt;lrrnk a beer
durrng the week l know why
Dear Dr Lamb How beca use he can l dnnk one or
much alcohol or beer rs too two ca ns he always ha s to
much for a person to drrnk drrnk srx or eight man eve
over a weekend? My husband mng or on a we ekend Ca n you
drmk s a case or beer from tell me what to do or what to
Frtday nrght unt l Sunday say to h1m ? I ve done every
nrght This can t be good for thrng but tell lum I II JU St
hrm We have had several walk out He ts only 39 years
arguments about 11 He says 11 old and tl s really rurnmg our
rsn t hurtmg him and l say It marnage
rs He cant thtnk clearly and
Dear ReaderAnytrme
the smallest thrng rea lly sets that a drrnkrng habrt becomes
hrm off l m tellrng you thts a problem for a person erther
because these thrngs are on the JOb or at home It IS an
caused from his alcohol I m alcohol problem Accepting
sure He IS nervous short your statements as made If
tempered and very 1mpatrent your husband ha s already
Hts mother drank a lot of beer been to A A for help he must
for a few years and now she realize that he has an alcohol
has a hver dtsorder so her problem It IS true !fiat some
physician told her she had to mdivtduals are partrcularly
stop and she dtd
prone to ha ve a personality
My hu sband IS always change wrth even a small
catchmg colds and takes VIta amount of alcohol Some md1
mrns consrstently I say the v1duals wrth mild bram d1sor
alcoho l rs keeprng the vrta ders may get along perfectly
mrns from dorng thetr JOb well until they have had some
alco hol ln them even one
What do you say?
drink may cause a marked
A few years ago he did go change tn thetr personal ty
to Alcoholics
and cause difftcultres
I wtsh there was a qurck

By Lawrence E Lamb M 0

SEWING - NEW SHIPMENTS OF
FASHION DESIGNER COLOR
CO-ORDINATE

DOUBLE KNITS

ROOTING FOR FALOONS - Martha James Wahama
cheerle~der sends words of encouragement and Cheryl
Lcwrs JOinS other members of the White Falcons band
majorette corps m a crowd-plewing halftime performance
Frrday mght as the WHS football team scored a 4~ wm at
Southern Htgh m Racme

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

! Area Deaths !
Ernest llaker olflclating
Burial will be n lhe chu rch
cemetery under the d rectlon
of the Waugh Halley Wood
Funeral Home
Friends may call at lhe late
resi dence after 4 p m tOday
The body w II lie In state at the
church one hour prior to the
serv ces

JESSE PRICE SR
OAK HIL L - Jesse Price
Sr 74 of 3273 Towers Court
South Col umbus d1ed Thurs
day al 10 p m n St Anthony
Hosp tal Cc/umbus
Mr Price was a former
res denl of the Centerpoint
ne1ghbor hood n Gall a County
He was born in Johnson
County Ky July 11 1899 son
of the late Noah and Jenny P
Price
A ret red coal miner Mr
Pr ce s surv ved by h s w fe
Grace of Columbus four sons
Jesse Jr Harold H Charles
R and James A Pr ce a
daughter Mrs Janet Disney
two brothers Noah and Jonah
and one s ster Mrs Anna
Blankens hip
Funeral serv ces wi ll be held
af 1 p m Sunday al the Beaver
Valley Un ted Bapt st Church
Buna1 w II be n Fa rv ew
Cemetery Centerpomt Rev
R chard Preston wr ll offlc ate
Serv ces are under d1red10n
of the Kuhner Lew s Funeral
Home Oak H II

PAPERS FlLED
POMEROY - Artlclea of
lnct;orporatlon have been filed
In Colwnbus with Secretary of
State Ted W Brown by the
Meigs Racing Enterprise• on
200 shares of no par common
by Jack R Welker Jamflll
R Frecker and Charles E
Johnston with their agent being
James R Frecker Pomeroy,
and by Crow Crow and Porter
attorneys Pomeroy

NOTE TO STRIKERS
PT PLEASANT - Ap
phcatlons for participation m
the Mason County Food S~mp
Program for the striking
employees
of
Central
Operatrng Company will be
accepted between the hours of
1 p m and 4 p m Thursday
Oct 4 at the New Haven Fire
Station All mterested persons
should be there on that day No
applicatiOns will he taken 1n
the Mason County Office on
that day

ONE WEEK
Thursday thru
Wednesday

THE NUMBER ONE BOOK
OFTHEYEAR!
NOW-THE SUSPENSE
FILM OFTHEYEAR I

A UN VE.FISAl RElEASE !llmml'l!!r.
ECHN COl ORS ~&lt;oliiJIIP

Cartoon

ATIENTION

•

SENIOR CITIZENS

JOHN W FRAZIER
GALLI POLIS - John W
Frazer 72 d ed n Veterans
Hosp tal Hunt ngton Sept 23
He was a nat ve of Gal I poi s
The son of John W and
Calherrne Rubenslahl Frazer
he was a veteran of both Wor ld
Wars and served as a rad o
operator on merchant sh1ps
until h s ret rement
He was preceded In death by
one brother Leo
He as surv ved by h s son
John 0 Gro•e City four
daughters
Mrs
Mary
Blumberg Mchigan Anne
Pennsy lvan a Barbara and
Bonn e f ve grandchildren
one of whom Mrs Beth Shaw
was ra sed n the home Qf her
grandparents
Pnvate graves de services
w II be at Reynolds Cemetery
Add son at 1 p m Sunday The
fam ly requests 1he om ss on of
and easy answer ror you but flowers
there tsn t one that can be
WILMA M SHEETS
readrly accomplished A srg
GALLI POLIS - Mrs saac
mfrcant alcohol problem rs
somelhtng that the mate IW lma) M Sheets 74 a
usually can t do much about res dent of 244 Fourth Ave
ed at 1 15 am Saturday n
The Indtvrdual has to seek d1
the Holzer Medical Center
help on hi S ow n This IS true Arrangements will be an
whether rt s a man or a wom nounced by the Waugh Hal ley
an You should talk to your Wood Funeral Home
famrly doctor about rt and see
FRED A BOSTIC
if he has any suggesttons or rf
WATERLOO - Fred A
there rs an A A chapter close
by srnce he has been to one Boslrc 76 d ed al 10 30 a m
rn lhe Holzer Medical
before you mrght contact Saturday
Center
them and see If they could be
A ret red ma1l carr er Mr
of any help to you They Bostic was born Sept 20 1897
m1ght through his prevwus in Walnut Twp to the late
orgamzat1on connections be Addrson and Christina Price
ab[e to establish some form of He s survived by his w fe
contact wrth your husband and Alberta Strait and a daughter
Mrs Dale (Mary Lourse)
see 1f they could help him
M llspa ot Hebron Ohio He
I must tell you that the al was preceded in death by two
coho! won t necessarily keep brothers
Mr Bostic spent most of his
the vrtamrns from helptng
him but the vrtamms wrll not llle In the Waterloo Community
keep hiS body from bomg and was a member of the Olive
damaged by alcohol Exces Methodist Church
servrces will be held
srv e use of a lcohol can dam at Funeral
2 p m Monday from the
age the lrver the brain and Flag Spr nos Church with Rev
even the heart Thrs ts true
even 1! a person has an ade
Many of the nattve homes
quate vrtamm mtake
on the Dutch Cartbbean Island
If the alcohol problem can t of Aruba are colorfully deco
be solved 11 s up to you to rated with hex signs The
decrde what to do with your 81 gns are a vestige of the lime
life There rs nothmg that m which the early rnhabtlants
reqtiires a mate to live with of the 1s!anrl believed they
an alcoholrc mate I male or would ward off evil spmts
female) You mrght need to
ask what you have done to
de serve an alcoholtc mate
There Is an organtzatron
called AI Anon for mates and
famrltes of the alcoholic They
mtght be of help to you Some
times the mate I male or fe
male ) contrtbutes to the alco
hoi problem By learnmg what
the dynamiCS are the family
can help - lrterall y by help
lng themselves and changing
the dynamics Within the famr
ly Thrs however often re
quires profes sronal help for
both mates

SAVE

10%

On Prescriptions

.HERE'S HOW IT WORKS.
• You Must Be 60 years Old or Older.
• You Must Have AFruth Pharmacy Senior Citizen
10% Credit Card.
Fruth Pharmacy's

Senior Citizens 10%

CREDIT CARD
Full Cred1t Pnv1leges are extended to

'I

,; 1

SIGNATURE _\'--+/""'d"""'"'.L./_..D'-'1•&lt;-'"'4""&lt;""'.---"'

/

THANK YOU
FRUTH PHARMACY
Your Drug Store

•

To Receive Your Card Fill Out Information Below And Bring
or Mail To: FRUTH PHARMACY
2501 Jackson Ave.

Pomt Pleasant, W.Va 25550

You Will Rece1ve Your Card By Retum Mail.

Sun

• All New Pall Fobrica
•AIIN-hlh
• All Color Co-Ordinated
• 60 to 66 Wide
• I 00" Polyfttor
• Poly•tlf and Wotol
• Potjculer Wool•ncl Silk
• Sw..llf Knits c.llf Co Orofinated

• Sold herywh~to Ito"'

•
...•

6 99to 12 99 yord

..

Sep 30

.::AnD

MEIGS THEATRE

20 CE N 1URI'f0~ PM_$EN1 S
A SCRGE Sll BERMAN PROOUGTIQN
LOU STF!lN GNANl

(A MASSAP l.lOORAY

~tARROW

and

NAME

I

AGE

-----------------------·

I

I

------

ADDRESS

II

================

Jl

Fruth Pharmacy

Octl23~

NOT OPEN

II

I

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

Mondtry lhru Thursd•y

...

-,

I

i

~NDHQPI: 001(
S AJIRING fiOBER R'fAN
J ~N

r-- CLIP . .. FILL OUT AND MAIL

I

TODil"

IG)
Disney Featurelle
Bear Country
Cartoon
Mr Mou&lt;e Takes A Trrp
Show Starts 7p m

•

tiOPI

NEW SP ~PER ENTt; RP I SE ASSN

TONIGHT
Sept 3D
SOUNDER
ITechnlcotor I

.•
,
•

Long Bottom

V-"-'.LL'n..Y

•

J'

lhelr h•lftlme •lluw Witlr ~Wt'\!l
Caroline with the majorettes
prcse ntm~ a dance routme
Other selections included
Delta Dawn Know the Way to
Son Jose fcaturiog the hrass

'
Vlsrtmg Mr and Mrs Wayne
Prince were Mrs Joe Fowtds
Chandiesville 0 Mr and
Mrs Lawrence Chevalier ,
Toronto 0 Mr and Mrs
Kehner Poole Mr~ Clarence
Dean Columbus and Janice
Davis Reedsville
VIsiting Ernestine Hayman
were Mr and Mrs David
Sherman
and
family
Arkansas Mr and Mrs Bob
Frtzpatnck and daughters
Colwnbus Mr and Mrs Keith
Ridenow- and son Kepo Mr
and Mrs Dick Hayman and
sons Success Road and Mr
and Mrs Tom Hayman and
daughters
Mr and Mrs David G
Stmth Marie!~ and Mr and
Mrs David A Sm1th and Dee
Dee were visiting A B Kibble
Reedsville
Mr and Mrs Hobart Newell
Chester and Mr and Mrs
Larry Curtis and family Keno
were viSiting Mary Pierce
Mr and Mrs Jerry An
derson
Columbus
were
vrs1tmg Mr and Mrs Bill
Thurston
Mr and Mrs Mtke Bissell
Colwnbus were VISitmg Mr
and Mrs Hank Holter
Ernestine Hayman spent
several days with Mr and Mrs
Elbert Fitzpatnck Lancaster
and othet relatives
Howard Larkins and family
Portland were vrsiting Mr
and Mrs Fred Larkins
Mr and Mrs Garth Smith
were visitmg Ed1th Osborn
Keno and Mr and Mrs
Norman Weber Tuppers
Plams
Mr and Mrs Dorsel Larkins
were vtsiting Mr and Mrs
VIrgil Wamsley Cheshire
-VIolet Smith

Poli('4' log two

r&lt;ection Swnmer llreeze Just
an Ole h shluned Love Son~
Kilts and Goodbye and Smoke
on Water
Roger Brwnfleld nurratcd
the show

during ll e Meigs Ualllpolls
loolball game
11rc Hlue Devil b~nd wns
minus 22 mern!Jers who were
sidelined by the flu bug
rhr GAHS mu•lcians began

One of two calls false

..a

°

@WIAAliY."-M:o&gt;r.&amp;mx.x~.:w~

'

2501 Jackson Ave.

Phone 675·2303

P01nt Pleant

'
I

�•

..

•

J

•

I- Tht llll1dl1 Tbne. ·Btnllnel, Sundly, Sept. 30, 1173

1- The Sw11lay Ti111es- Sentinel, Sund•l", Sept. :10.1973

reKistercd the guesl.s.
FollowinM the weddtns trip to
· Hockln N Hills, the cou ple
resides •t 008 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis.
The bride._ graduated from
Gallipolis ACademy in 1973,
The wroom Is a 1971 Hraduate

and t employed b~ the South·

ern Ohio Coal Company.
Out-of-town guesl.s at the
wedding were Mr. and ldn .
Carl Kuehnert, Columbus : Mr.
and Mrs. Harold J. Harmon,
Bridgewater, Pa.; Mra. Harold
C. Harmon, Columbus.

Coming
Events

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Miss Pamela Lynn McCarty
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs. Homer L.
McCarty, Cheshire, allllounce the approaching marriage of
their daughter, Pamela Lynn, to Barry· Wilsori Burnett, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Claude Burnett, 620 Burnett Rd., Gallipolis.
The couple wiU b.e married November 10.

Mr. and Mrs. Danny R. Spurlock

Mr. and Mrs. Terry Harmon

Kiess-Spurlock vows read

Nuptials peiformed

POINT PLEASANT - In a
double ring ceremony Sept. 7at
the
Pembroke
United
Methodist Church, Pembroke,
Va., Miss Candace Lucille
Kiess became the bride of
Danny Ray Spurlick.
The bride is the daughter cj(
Mr. and Mrs. C. Edgar Kiess,
Pittsburgh, Pa., and the groom
is the son of Mr. and Mrs.

Lonnie Spurlock, 502 Parrish
Ave., Point Pleasant.
Following a wedding trip to
Virginia Beach, the couple was
IK&gt;nored at a reception at the
home of the groom's parents,
with family and close friends
attending.
They reside at the K and K
Mobile Home Park.

Delegates spe(lk at meet

jan's Side

GALLIPOLIS
Sara
Wetherhoit, Patti Welherholt,
Peggy Scarberry and Jenni
by
Clarke, all now Seniors at
Gallia Academy High School
'
Dorothy ]. Countryman
.
told of . their experienCe at
Buckeye Girls State at the
meeting of Layfayette Unit No.
GALUPOUS ~ I'd be less than honest if I didn't tell you all 27, American Legion Auxiliary
how tickled I am that you've been keeping my desk absolutely Tuesday evening. Girls State
stacked with stories.
was held on the campus of
There's so much copy around here, and, unfortunately, so Capital University, Columbus,
little space, that thin,•? don't always make the paper right away. in June. There more than 1,000
It's not that we're purposely trying to hold things out, just that we girls assembled to Jearn about
haven'troom.So the policy I've been using is to take things in the American Government and
order they come to me. II you bring in a story that has no "must- especially Ohio government.
run" deadline on it', it will wait behind other stories that came
During the business meeting,
. before it. It's the only fair way l know.
plans.were made to attend the
Fall Conference in Dist 8 in
OCCASIONALLY, too, as all newspeopie know, things are Jackson October 4, and to
apt to get lost. Especially with this huge backlog of stories. But again display and sell articles
we're trying, so please bear with us.
made at the VA Hospital in
I WANT to apologize to- the ladies of the DAR who were ex- . Chillicothe at Bob ;Evans Farm
peeling me for lunch Tuesday. Unhappily. my car suffers from Festival October 12, 13 and 14.
The! award winning scrapthe rigors of old age .and bas taken a streak of severe
book
on Hong Kong was on
unreliability. (As I write this it is sitting at my apartment With
the choke linkage apart ). Let us hope that I can get it back display. It received second
place at Department Contogether before anyone else invites me to lunch.
vention in Toledo. The unit also
TODAY IS opening day for the Wellston Centellllial. The won fir~ place for a narrative
week4oog celebration promises to be lovely. Do stop by and help report on community service,
. and third place for a foreign
our neighbors to the northeast celebrate.
relations essay. Unit was
A TREE an&lt;' leaf workshop is scheduled for Oct. li-7 at Lake awarded a citation for parHope state Park. Tbe threecdaY session and reservations can be ticipating in every phase of the
made for overnight accOmmodations by contacting the park at program of the auxiliary ~d
Zalellkl, 45698. GueSt leader at the workshop, which will inclUde for attaining their goal in
field \rips in the park woods will be Willian\ F. Cowen, OSU membership.
Communications read were
forestry prof, who is author ofthe book ' '()lili) Trees".
from ' the Community Mental
Health and Mental Retardation
HAVE A NICE WEEK.

Kingsridge
I

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Board explaining their services and bulletins from the
District President, Mrs. Devon
Tipple, Lancaster. A mem·
bership drive is underway and
anyone eligible for mem·
bership in the American
Legion Auxiliary is invited to
become a member . Membership is open to wives,
mothers, daughters, sisters
and granddaughters of
members of the American
Legion or of persons serving
during both World Wars, the
Korean conflict and Vietnam
action and are deceased.
Committees for the coming
year. named by the· president,
Mrs. Clarence Jones, are:
Americanism, Mrs . Silas
Hamilton; children and youth,
Mrs. Roy White; community
service, Mrs. W. J. Brown;
civil defense; Dorothy Hecker;
foreign relations, Mabel
Brown; legislative, Margaret
Topping; membership, Mrs.
Dann Taber; national security,
Edna Butterfield; Poppy,
Wanda Thomas; publicity,
Mabel Bto~ ; unit activities,
Janet Magg1ed, veterans affairs ~d rehabilitation, Ines
Marchi; flowers and cards,
Dorothy Hecker-

Kyger

coa ts

KINGSRIOGE.

and

u.i'ck s

r ·

325 near Pine Grove spent a
day with Mr. and Mrs. Clinton
Jones.
Monday callers of Mr. and
Mrs. Clinton Jones were Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Peck and
children of Marion.
s)lending the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs Mac ward and
. family and ~ith Mrs. Celcus
Reynolds were Gary, Ruby and
Eddie Reynolds or' Columbus.
Sunday .dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Steinbeck were ·
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Price.

BY IRMA BALES
Mr. and Mrs. Joe White
called on Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Stewart at
Minersville
Saturday afternoon.
Weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Torri Young and family
were Mr. and Mrs. Danny
Young of Parkersburg, W.Va.,
Mr. and Mrs. Buddy Kuhn of
New Haven, W. Va., Mr. and
Mrs. Glenn Young an'd
daughter, Michelle, Mr. and
Mrs . Woodrow Kuhn and Mr.
and Mrs. Marlin Rife.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe White
attended the annual picnic of
the Seventh-Day Adventist
churches of Pomeroy and
Athens which was held on Sept.
23 at the roadside park on State
Route 33. Marie Spires and .
daughters, Denise and Julie,
also attended.
Mr . and Mrs. Oshel Tribble
called on Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Lemley on Leading Creek Rd.
Sunday afternoon.
· Mr. and Mrs. Wendell James ·
of Gallipolis visited recenUy
with Mr. and Mrs . Oshel
Tribble.
Sunday guests of Mr . and
Mrs. Ed Spears were his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Spears and Mrs. Audrey
Spears of Roseville.
Mrs. Lucille Mulford, Mrs.
Annabelle Sisson and 'Mrs.
Mary Sisson attended the
homecoming at the Wesley
Chapel last Sunday.
Richard Grant of State Route

I

puff sleeves, in ~-line styling.
She carried a cornflower
nosegay. Janet Warren, attired
in a deep purple dotted swiss
gown, and June Warren ,
medium purple, were the
bridesmaids. Tammy Johnson,
sister of the brtide, was the
flower girl. Her gown was in
light purple. All the attendants
carried flowers matching those
of the honor attendant. Larry
Hemby served as )lest man.
Ushers were Robert Johnson,
brother of the bride, Galllpolis,
Jeff Sayre, Toledo. Randy
Johnson, brother of the bride,
was ringbearer.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Johnson, chose a violet
purple polyester dress with
pearls. She wore a white
carnation corsage. The mother
of the groom wore a lavender
polyester dress with a silver
brooch. Her corsage was also
white carnations,
· A reception was held In the
fellowship room following the
ceremony . Candlesticks
flanked the four-tier cake with
lavender
flowers
and
leatherleaf fern around its
base. Presiding at the table
were Terry White and Sandy
Steele.
Brenda
White

I

Miss Terry Lynn White

J~AIIIl&amp;

. ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs. Fred
White, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, announce the engagement and forthconung marriage of their daughter, Terry Lynn, to Larry
Hemby, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hemby, Bidwell. MiSs
White was a 1973 graduate of Gallia Academy High Scliool.
Hemby was a 1972graduate of North Gallia High School and
18 presently employed at Federal Mogul. The wedding will
take place at the Chapel Hill Church of Christ, November 21
at 8:30 P;m. A reception will follow in the fellowship room:
The gract?us custom of open church will be observed.

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1

A birthday party was given

Saturday night at the hO!lje of
Mr . and Mrs. Harold Rams.
burg, Middleport Rt., honoring
their son Ricky on his 15th
birthday . Attending were Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Price and family,
Harold, Jr., and Tina Wells,
Mr. and Mrs. Bob S~einbeck,

Open
Monday
TiiB p.m.

DRESS UP
YOUR DIAMOND
412-414 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Gallipolis, Ohio

300 Second Ave.

"Located in the New Lafayette Mall"

ZIO

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PENO ANT SETTING

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lUNDAY
CENTERPOINT ~' reewtll
Baptist Church homccomlnc
with the Rev, Eddie Boyer
ll'eachlng the morning service
llld Rev. Calvin Evans In the
llfternoon. The Jubilaires wW
II'OVidc special . music durtnc
llle afternoon. Dinner wiU be
ll!l'Ved, Everyon~ welcOIDI.
lEV. GEORGE Sexton will
~rea ch at Mt. Zion Baptlll
lhurch, Rt. 7, at 7:30 p.m.
tveryone welcome.
IIONDAY
lRACE Guild will meet at 6:31
),m, with Mrs. Robert Jenklnl
n charge of lhe program.
3rlng table service.
WERICAN Red Cross Grey
:..adies regu)ar luncheon
Jleeting in the Holzer Medical
::enter cafeteria at 12:30 p.m.
:lALLIA County Pomona
Grange meets at 8 p.m. at
Springfield Grange Hall.
Judging for baking and sewing
contesl.s. Potluck.
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio Gospel
Music Association meets at
7:30 p.m. at Allen Hall Rio
Grande College.
TEMPERATURES Rising
Veterinary Science 4-H Club
meets at the show arena,
Gallla County Fairgrounds
7:30p.m. Anyone interested in
joining is invited to attend.
GALLIA Academy Band
Boosters will meet in the band
room at 7:30 p.m. Parents of
cadet and senior band members are asked to attend.
TUESDAY - - - - - ENGLISH Club meet at the
home of Mrs. Zelma Northcutt,
Oakwood Dr., with Mrs .
Florence Wickline as cohostess at 7 p.m.
GALUA County TB and Health
Association semi-annual
meeting, 7:30 p.m., Gallia
County Health Department,
Courthouse. Public invited.
BIDWELL WSCS meets at the
church at 7:30 p.m. All
members are urged to attend.
WAYSIDE Garden Club meets
at the home of Mrs. Briggs
Kirby at 7:30p.m.

Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Young ,and
Michelle, Steve Young, Mr.
and Mrs. Danny Young, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Ramsburg,
Ed, Elaine and Robert and
Ricky and friend, Kevin .
Mr : and Mrs. Ronlal Jividen
and Mr. and Mrs. Ophie Casto
sp.ent Sunday _with Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Casto, Mrs. Sally
Presley and Homer Horn in
Ripley, W. Va. They ·are all
cousins of Mrs. Casto.
Joe_White recently called on
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Hubbard
and Bob Moore at Syracuse.
Miss Connie Gibbs of
Rutland visited recently with
Mrs. Muriel Spires, Mrs. Irtna
Bales and Ralph and Rhonda.
Mr. and Mrs. Hortie Roush,
Ve,raThomas and Mr. and Mrs.
Doyle Shuler attended the
Band-0-Rama Saturday night
at the Marietta College ball
field .
Mrs. _cora Ward Rupe ·at· ·
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. - "A
tended all day services at the Newer World," an original
Bidwell M. E. church last musicaL production composed
Sunday.
by a member of the Marshall
Mrs. Cora Ward Rupe made University music faculty, will
a business trip to Reedsville on have its public premiere
Tuesday.
Tuesday, Oct. 9, at a meeting of
Miss Margaret Persons of · the Huntington Branch of the
Little Kyger Rd. and Rick American Association of
Geiger of Gallipolis called on University Women (AAUW).
Rhonda_ Bales on Tuesday
Written by Dr. Paul A.
evening. ·
Whear, professor of music, "A
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. Newer World " will · be
and Mrs. 'Leo Rupe were Mr. presented by Dr. Paul A.
and Mrs. Marlin Rife.
Balshaw, associate professor
Sunday guests of Mr .. and of music, and the Marshall
Mrs. Joe Stewart were Mr. and University, Symphonic Choir
Mrs. Tommy Stewart and sons and lnstrwnental Ensemble.
of Columbus.
Mrs ..Leona .Whitt . and Mrs.
Homer· Hockman visited with
Harold Whitt on Tuesday, who trip to Newark recently .
Mrs. Treva Denney was an
is a pa!lent at the Veterans
overnight guest of Mr. and
Hospital in Chillicothe.
Mr. and· Mrs. Homer Hock- Mrs. Homer Hockman and
man and Billy made a business family on Tuesday .

each to enhance the true

bril liance .of your diamond.

(LARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE
342 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

'•

••
'•
•

'f&gt;Mtlqtt
WtM!

•

Check self. belted Blazer . singl~ breasted.

The Finest Food
In Town .Is At The
Shake Shoppe!

c.tD/1 lllpl/lt».

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Check cuffed pull -on pants .
mock fly .

· 'lrom
Hold liN magic
oi111J rldM btHn.

/(.., ,_,_,,. onw;.

'22

TM( re ,.,.,.lor 1 mllhrM
•fill • dflmond
. . . , . , _ , ""' 110111
Otlltflell_ _

•
•I

••

.•

PAUL DAVIES

--"·0...,...,_

~'i: - ;:sKnots Leather
is Back!
Bags from '11.00

PURE
BEEF
FRENCH
FRIES

1

j
,

•LAYAWAY

by

Vows read at Cheshire
GALLIPOLIS - Miss sheila
Kathryn Freeman became the
bride of Pvt. David Alan
Ferguson at 6:30 p.m. Saturday, Augusf25, in the Cheshire
Baptist Church.
Rev. William Uber officiated
over the double ring ceremony
for the daughter of Carol
McGuire, Gallipolis and Jack
B. Freeman, Pomeroy, and the
son of Mr . and Mrs. Lindsey
Ferguson, Ypsilanti, Mich.
Mrs. Vivian Kirby presented
an half hour of pre-nuptial
music with Mrs. KareP Moore,
soloist singing

••

Mon. &amp; Fri. 9: 30 tile p.m.

Use our Lay.Away, BankAmerlcard or MaSter
Chorge.

Tues. Wed. Thur. &amp; Sat.
9: 30 tll5 p.m.

--- t:tc. :
... .......
,,

·~ · -·~ -· ~

1 Believe" I

The work was commissioned
by the Huntington, Fayette,
Charleston , Elkins, Point
Pleasant and Parkersburg
branches of the AAUW in
delebration of the 50th anniversary of the orgat)ization's
West Virginia Division, according to Mrs. Mahlon C.
Brown, president of the
Huntington branch.
:: Mrs . Brown said AAUW
inembers throughout the state
are being invited to attend, the
Oct. 9meeting, to be held at the
Huntington .Woman's Club
beginning at 7:30 p.m. Mrs.
Charles Hagan and Mrs. Harry
Fallon are in charge of
arrangements for a reception
following the meeting.
Another highlight · of the
event will be an address by
Mrs . Douglas Tomkles,
"Cherish the Past, Create the
Future." Mrs. Tomkles, past
regional vice president of the
AAUW and a member of the
Huntington branch, presented
the address at last spring's 50th
convention of the West Virginia
AAUW at Jackson's Mill. Mrs.
Brown said Mrs. Tomkies had
been asked to repeat it for the
Huntington area members,
many of whom had not been
able to hear it earlier.
The AA UW is open to all
women who have earned at
least a bachelor's degree from
an accredited college or
university . The Huntington
branch lists 225 members.

lll

Watch your child's
face when you
give him his fi rst
rea l band Instrument! Note
th e pr ide he
takes in playing
his first melody.
You ' ll e njoy the .
world of tun music
gives your -:hlld, too l

"Home of Th11t Old Fa11hion Goodneu."

BRUNICARDI
HOUSE OF MUSIC
s~ Stato St. , ~~6 - lt&lt;il7
Gallipolis, Ohio

.•

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'
••

11

"Whither Thou Goest", and
"The Lord's Prayer".
Two seven branch silver
candelabra flanked the altar
accented by baskets of white
gladioli, mums and greenery,
White bows marked the' family
pews.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride chose an
imported empire a-line gown of
dacton organza styled with a
fitted bodice of vertical
beribboned embroidery .and a
mandarin neckline . Queen

CHICKEN

Matching belts available

GaNioolis.

ON THESE GREAT PLAYTEX• STYLES.

••

JEWELERS

We

Cor11er Second &amp; Olive

Gallipolis, Ohio

THE STUFTSHIRT IS BACKI

OuW-town 8Ufll.t ·II the
weddlnc Included Mn. aeor,.
Shamblin, Charleston; Mn.
Linda Spe~r and fllllily,
Dundee, Mich.; Mr. llld Mn.
Earl Harris, Florida; Mn.
Betty Mll111 and Rolle, Tiffen;
Mrs. Sue Hedrick, Bucom ;
Mrs. Richard Freeman,
Pomeroy ; John Dewald,
Tlffen; Mr. and Mn. Mu
Miles, and family, Tllfin; Mr.
and Mrs. Mark Blake, South
Webster: Mr. and Mn. u-y
FercUJO!l, Mtchlpn.

SAVE UP TO •2m

IDMAKI

•

guests.
For a brief wedding trip to
Porl.lmouth, the bride changed
to a pink jersey dreu wlljl
white aceeuories and a white
corsage.
The cruple is now residing in
Aschaffenburg, Germany,
where Ferguson is serving with
the United Slates Army.
The bride graduated from
Gallta Academy Hlgh School.
The groom Is a graduate of
South Webster High School and
attended Rio Grande College.

Pvt. and Mrs. David A. Ferguson

.Musical to premiere

.rn.e-r'

Second Avenu~

don'l see yourself this Fall In su lls,
spor1

GALL1POLIS
Miss
Johnson ,
Deborah Kay
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn Ray Johnson, 117
Mabelene Dr ., Gallipolis,
became the bride of Terry Jay
Harmon, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Willard Sisson, Eureka Star
Rt., at 2:30p.m. August ~. at
Chapel Hill Church of Christ
Joe Galloway performed the
double ring ceremony and
vOcal music was presented by
Barbara Galloway, Sandy
Steele, Arbutus Pauley, Kathy
Pauley, Eddie Galloway, Greg
Pauley, Loy Pauley •nd Gene
Browning.
A single
candelabra
decorated the church.
Given in marriage by her
!ather, the bride chose a gown
of angel-skin peau de soie and
schiffli embroidery. The bodice
featured an empire waist and
short sleeves of venice lace
with satin trim on the yoke,
sleeves and skirt. Her
cathedrai length butterfly train
was attached to a matching
mantilla and held by a camelot
cap of venice lace. She carried
a cornflower and lily-of-thevalley cascade nosegay.
"
Louise SOmmerville served
as matron of honor. She was
attired in a medium purple
gown with a high coiiar and

also white carnations.
The recepUon was held in the
church fellowship room
following the ceremony. The
bride's table was highlighted
by a four-tier wedding cake
topped with white doves and
flanked by white candles with
orchid ribbons.
Serving at the recepUon were
Mrs, Ralph Rite, Mrs. James
Preston, Miss Sheils Moore
and Miss Ellen Reese. Miss
Tereaa Sievers registered

are the only
authorized
Conn
Dealer in this area.

•
,.

Anne sleeves and a flowing a·
line skirt of organza
highlighted the gown which
swept into a chapel train. The
chapel length illusion veil fell
from a lace camelot headpiece.
She carried a bouquet of white,
orchid and pink daisies and
carnations. Her jewelry included pearl earrings and
necklace .
Miss Jacqueline Freeman,
Gallipolis, sister of the bride,
served as maid of honor. She
wore an orchid a-line gown
with butterfly sleeves and
carried a bouquet of white and
orchid daisies. An orchid
picture hat completed her
costume. Miss Tammy Tayior,
Huntington,
served
as
bridesmaid. Her pink gown
matched the maid of honor's in
design and her picture hat was
pink. She carried a pink and
white daisy bouquet. Miss Jodi
Hall, Cheshire, was the flower
girl. Her blue gown matched
the senior attendants. She
carried a basket of mixed pink
and orchid petals. Gary
Ferguson, Ypsilanti, Mich.,
served his brother as best man.
Ushers were Mark R. Blake,
South Webster, and Dwight
Shamblin, Charleston. Ronnie
Taylor, Huntington, was the
ringbearer.
The mother of the bride
chose a navy and white
polyester dress with white
accessories and a white carnation corsage. The mother of
the groom wore a blut
polyester dress with matching
accessories. Her flowers were

levt up to tt'.l1 when JOU b~twoofthtMCrOH VourHtlrt-lrM
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Style No. 38 -Underc;up Support panels 32 -JtA ,' 32 - -iOB
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Style fH-Piddtd .Brt-llce cupt32/36A, 32/3-88-2 for "At
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32138A, 32/ 428, 32/42c-2for H.M, 32/ 42D-tfor tl.tt
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llw 11o01 whlnrouiHrY• "NoV'-1~ Melflaoflupport"• bfa
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t~ow t Ul R~&amp;guler Girdle
Now 111.11
Shortla
Now 110." High Wal1tlong LegfNowS11.11
Average Leg How 111.M HJgh Wal1t Glrdlet Now $1J.ft
Long Leg
How ttt.tt
All S1ytoii-S,M.L.XL' ,XXL' OMC6P1 6•1el In S,M,L,XL',
()(L •, XXL•-s1 .00 mott) If Not IIVIillble in amall)

DEPARTMENT

STORE

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OPEN TIL
PM
MON.fRI.

9

SILVER
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PLAZA

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Tie version In

Nevy.Gin•r or Black-Taupe,
$17-.99 . Sling style In Red,
Navy, Ginger or Black , $15.99 .

Mon. a Fri. 1:30 tlt8 p.m.
Tuos. Wtd. Sol. 1: 301115 p.m.
Thursdoy ' : 30 lllt2 noon

�•

..

•

J

•

I- Tht llll1dl1 Tbne. ·Btnllnel, Sundly, Sept. 30, 1173

1- The Sw11lay Ti111es- Sentinel, Sund•l", Sept. :10.1973

reKistercd the guesl.s.
FollowinM the weddtns trip to
· Hockln N Hills, the cou ple
resides •t 008 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis.
The bride._ graduated from
Gallipolis ACademy in 1973,
The wroom Is a 1971 Hraduate

and t employed b~ the South·

ern Ohio Coal Company.
Out-of-town guesl.s at the
wedding were Mr. and ldn .
Carl Kuehnert, Columbus : Mr.
and Mrs. Harold J. Harmon,
Bridgewater, Pa.; Mra. Harold
C. Harmon, Columbus.

Coming
Events

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Miss Pamela Lynn McCarty
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs. Homer L.
McCarty, Cheshire, allllounce the approaching marriage of
their daughter, Pamela Lynn, to Barry· Wilsori Burnett, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Claude Burnett, 620 Burnett Rd., Gallipolis.
The couple wiU b.e married November 10.

Mr. and Mrs. Danny R. Spurlock

Mr. and Mrs. Terry Harmon

Kiess-Spurlock vows read

Nuptials peiformed

POINT PLEASANT - In a
double ring ceremony Sept. 7at
the
Pembroke
United
Methodist Church, Pembroke,
Va., Miss Candace Lucille
Kiess became the bride of
Danny Ray Spurlick.
The bride is the daughter cj(
Mr. and Mrs. C. Edgar Kiess,
Pittsburgh, Pa., and the groom
is the son of Mr. and Mrs.

Lonnie Spurlock, 502 Parrish
Ave., Point Pleasant.
Following a wedding trip to
Virginia Beach, the couple was
IK&gt;nored at a reception at the
home of the groom's parents,
with family and close friends
attending.
They reside at the K and K
Mobile Home Park.

Delegates spe(lk at meet

jan's Side

GALLIPOLIS
Sara
Wetherhoit, Patti Welherholt,
Peggy Scarberry and Jenni
by
Clarke, all now Seniors at
Gallia Academy High School
'
Dorothy ]. Countryman
.
told of . their experienCe at
Buckeye Girls State at the
meeting of Layfayette Unit No.
GALUPOUS ~ I'd be less than honest if I didn't tell you all 27, American Legion Auxiliary
how tickled I am that you've been keeping my desk absolutely Tuesday evening. Girls State
stacked with stories.
was held on the campus of
There's so much copy around here, and, unfortunately, so Capital University, Columbus,
little space, that thin,•? don't always make the paper right away. in June. There more than 1,000
It's not that we're purposely trying to hold things out, just that we girls assembled to Jearn about
haven'troom.So the policy I've been using is to take things in the American Government and
order they come to me. II you bring in a story that has no "must- especially Ohio government.
run" deadline on it', it will wait behind other stories that came
During the business meeting,
. before it. It's the only fair way l know.
plans.were made to attend the
Fall Conference in Dist 8 in
OCCASIONALLY, too, as all newspeopie know, things are Jackson October 4, and to
apt to get lost. Especially with this huge backlog of stories. But again display and sell articles
we're trying, so please bear with us.
made at the VA Hospital in
I WANT to apologize to- the ladies of the DAR who were ex- . Chillicothe at Bob ;Evans Farm
peeling me for lunch Tuesday. Unhappily. my car suffers from Festival October 12, 13 and 14.
The! award winning scrapthe rigors of old age .and bas taken a streak of severe
book
on Hong Kong was on
unreliability. (As I write this it is sitting at my apartment With
the choke linkage apart ). Let us hope that I can get it back display. It received second
place at Department Contogether before anyone else invites me to lunch.
vention in Toledo. The unit also
TODAY IS opening day for the Wellston Centellllial. The won fir~ place for a narrative
week4oog celebration promises to be lovely. Do stop by and help report on community service,
. and third place for a foreign
our neighbors to the northeast celebrate.
relations essay. Unit was
A TREE an&lt;' leaf workshop is scheduled for Oct. li-7 at Lake awarded a citation for parHope state Park. Tbe threecdaY session and reservations can be ticipating in every phase of the
made for overnight accOmmodations by contacting the park at program of the auxiliary ~d
Zalellkl, 45698. GueSt leader at the workshop, which will inclUde for attaining their goal in
field \rips in the park woods will be Willian\ F. Cowen, OSU membership.
Communications read were
forestry prof, who is author ofthe book ' '()lili) Trees".
from ' the Community Mental
Health and Mental Retardation
HAVE A NICE WEEK.

Kingsridge
I

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Board explaining their services and bulletins from the
District President, Mrs. Devon
Tipple, Lancaster. A mem·
bership drive is underway and
anyone eligible for mem·
bership in the American
Legion Auxiliary is invited to
become a member . Membership is open to wives,
mothers, daughters, sisters
and granddaughters of
members of the American
Legion or of persons serving
during both World Wars, the
Korean conflict and Vietnam
action and are deceased.
Committees for the coming
year. named by the· president,
Mrs. Clarence Jones, are:
Americanism, Mrs . Silas
Hamilton; children and youth,
Mrs. Roy White; community
service, Mrs. W. J. Brown;
civil defense; Dorothy Hecker;
foreign relations, Mabel
Brown; legislative, Margaret
Topping; membership, Mrs.
Dann Taber; national security,
Edna Butterfield; Poppy,
Wanda Thomas; publicity,
Mabel Bto~ ; unit activities,
Janet Magg1ed, veterans affairs ~d rehabilitation, Ines
Marchi; flowers and cards,
Dorothy Hecker-

Kyger

coa ts

KINGSRIOGE.

and

u.i'ck s

r ·

325 near Pine Grove spent a
day with Mr. and Mrs. Clinton
Jones.
Monday callers of Mr. and
Mrs. Clinton Jones were Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Peck and
children of Marion.
s)lending the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs Mac ward and
. family and ~ith Mrs. Celcus
Reynolds were Gary, Ruby and
Eddie Reynolds or' Columbus.
Sunday .dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Steinbeck were ·
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Price.

BY IRMA BALES
Mr. and Mrs. Joe White
called on Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Stewart at
Minersville
Saturday afternoon.
Weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Torri Young and family
were Mr. and Mrs. Danny
Young of Parkersburg, W.Va.,
Mr. and Mrs. Buddy Kuhn of
New Haven, W. Va., Mr. and
Mrs. Glenn Young an'd
daughter, Michelle, Mr. and
Mrs . Woodrow Kuhn and Mr.
and Mrs. Marlin Rife.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe White
attended the annual picnic of
the Seventh-Day Adventist
churches of Pomeroy and
Athens which was held on Sept.
23 at the roadside park on State
Route 33. Marie Spires and .
daughters, Denise and Julie,
also attended.
Mr . and Mrs. Oshel Tribble
called on Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Lemley on Leading Creek Rd.
Sunday afternoon.
· Mr. and Mrs. Wendell James ·
of Gallipolis visited recenUy
with Mr. and Mrs . Oshel
Tribble.
Sunday guests of Mr . and
Mrs. Ed Spears were his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Spears and Mrs. Audrey
Spears of Roseville.
Mrs. Lucille Mulford, Mrs.
Annabelle Sisson and 'Mrs.
Mary Sisson attended the
homecoming at the Wesley
Chapel last Sunday.
Richard Grant of State Route

I

puff sleeves, in ~-line styling.
She carried a cornflower
nosegay. Janet Warren, attired
in a deep purple dotted swiss
gown, and June Warren ,
medium purple, were the
bridesmaids. Tammy Johnson,
sister of the brtide, was the
flower girl. Her gown was in
light purple. All the attendants
carried flowers matching those
of the honor attendant. Larry
Hemby served as )lest man.
Ushers were Robert Johnson,
brother of the bride, Galllpolis,
Jeff Sayre, Toledo. Randy
Johnson, brother of the bride,
was ringbearer.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Johnson, chose a violet
purple polyester dress with
pearls. She wore a white
carnation corsage. The mother
of the groom wore a lavender
polyester dress with a silver
brooch. Her corsage was also
white carnations,
· A reception was held In the
fellowship room following the
ceremony . Candlesticks
flanked the four-tier cake with
lavender
flowers
and
leatherleaf fern around its
base. Presiding at the table
were Terry White and Sandy
Steele.
Brenda
White

I

Miss Terry Lynn White

J~AIIIl&amp;

. ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs. Fred
White, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, announce the engagement and forthconung marriage of their daughter, Terry Lynn, to Larry
Hemby, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hemby, Bidwell. MiSs
White was a 1973 graduate of Gallia Academy High Scliool.
Hemby was a 1972graduate of North Gallia High School and
18 presently employed at Federal Mogul. The wedding will
take place at the Chapel Hill Church of Christ, November 21
at 8:30 P;m. A reception will follow in the fellowship room:
The gract?us custom of open church will be observed.

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1

A birthday party was given

Saturday night at the hO!lje of
Mr . and Mrs. Harold Rams.
burg, Middleport Rt., honoring
their son Ricky on his 15th
birthday . Attending were Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Price and family,
Harold, Jr., and Tina Wells,
Mr. and Mrs. Bob S~einbeck,

Open
Monday
TiiB p.m.

DRESS UP
YOUR DIAMOND
412-414 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Gallipolis, Ohio

300 Second Ave.

"Located in the New Lafayette Mall"

ZIO

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lUNDAY
CENTERPOINT ~' reewtll
Baptist Church homccomlnc
with the Rev, Eddie Boyer
ll'eachlng the morning service
llld Rev. Calvin Evans In the
llfternoon. The Jubilaires wW
II'OVidc special . music durtnc
llle afternoon. Dinner wiU be
ll!l'Ved, Everyon~ welcOIDI.
lEV. GEORGE Sexton will
~rea ch at Mt. Zion Baptlll
lhurch, Rt. 7, at 7:30 p.m.
tveryone welcome.
IIONDAY
lRACE Guild will meet at 6:31
),m, with Mrs. Robert Jenklnl
n charge of lhe program.
3rlng table service.
WERICAN Red Cross Grey
:..adies regu)ar luncheon
Jleeting in the Holzer Medical
::enter cafeteria at 12:30 p.m.
:lALLIA County Pomona
Grange meets at 8 p.m. at
Springfield Grange Hall.
Judging for baking and sewing
contesl.s. Potluck.
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio Gospel
Music Association meets at
7:30 p.m. at Allen Hall Rio
Grande College.
TEMPERATURES Rising
Veterinary Science 4-H Club
meets at the show arena,
Gallla County Fairgrounds
7:30p.m. Anyone interested in
joining is invited to attend.
GALLIA Academy Band
Boosters will meet in the band
room at 7:30 p.m. Parents of
cadet and senior band members are asked to attend.
TUESDAY - - - - - ENGLISH Club meet at the
home of Mrs. Zelma Northcutt,
Oakwood Dr., with Mrs .
Florence Wickline as cohostess at 7 p.m.
GALUA County TB and Health
Association semi-annual
meeting, 7:30 p.m., Gallia
County Health Department,
Courthouse. Public invited.
BIDWELL WSCS meets at the
church at 7:30 p.m. All
members are urged to attend.
WAYSIDE Garden Club meets
at the home of Mrs. Briggs
Kirby at 7:30p.m.

Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Young ,and
Michelle, Steve Young, Mr.
and Mrs. Danny Young, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Ramsburg,
Ed, Elaine and Robert and
Ricky and friend, Kevin .
Mr : and Mrs. Ronlal Jividen
and Mr. and Mrs. Ophie Casto
sp.ent Sunday _with Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Casto, Mrs. Sally
Presley and Homer Horn in
Ripley, W. Va. They ·are all
cousins of Mrs. Casto.
Joe_White recently called on
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Hubbard
and Bob Moore at Syracuse.
Miss Connie Gibbs of
Rutland visited recently with
Mrs. Muriel Spires, Mrs. Irtna
Bales and Ralph and Rhonda.
Mr. and Mrs. Hortie Roush,
Ve,raThomas and Mr. and Mrs.
Doyle Shuler attended the
Band-0-Rama Saturday night
at the Marietta College ball
field .
Mrs. _cora Ward Rupe ·at· ·
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. - "A
tended all day services at the Newer World," an original
Bidwell M. E. church last musicaL production composed
Sunday.
by a member of the Marshall
Mrs. Cora Ward Rupe made University music faculty, will
a business trip to Reedsville on have its public premiere
Tuesday.
Tuesday, Oct. 9, at a meeting of
Miss Margaret Persons of · the Huntington Branch of the
Little Kyger Rd. and Rick American Association of
Geiger of Gallipolis called on University Women (AAUW).
Rhonda_ Bales on Tuesday
Written by Dr. Paul A.
evening. ·
Whear, professor of music, "A
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. Newer World " will · be
and Mrs. 'Leo Rupe were Mr. presented by Dr. Paul A.
and Mrs. Marlin Rife.
Balshaw, associate professor
Sunday guests of Mr .. and of music, and the Marshall
Mrs. Joe Stewart were Mr. and University, Symphonic Choir
Mrs. Tommy Stewart and sons and lnstrwnental Ensemble.
of Columbus.
Mrs ..Leona .Whitt . and Mrs.
Homer· Hockman visited with
Harold Whitt on Tuesday, who trip to Newark recently .
Mrs. Treva Denney was an
is a pa!lent at the Veterans
overnight guest of Mr. and
Hospital in Chillicothe.
Mr. and· Mrs. Homer Hock- Mrs. Homer Hockman and
man and Billy made a business family on Tuesday .

each to enhance the true

bril liance .of your diamond.

(LARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE
342 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

'•

••
'•
•

'f&gt;Mtlqtt
WtM!

•

Check self. belted Blazer . singl~ breasted.

The Finest Food
In Town .Is At The
Shake Shoppe!

c.tD/1 lllpl/lt».

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Check cuffed pull -on pants .
mock fly .

· 'lrom
Hold liN magic
oi111J rldM btHn.

/(.., ,_,_,,. onw;.

'22

TM( re ,.,.,.lor 1 mllhrM
•fill • dflmond
. . . , . , _ , ""' 110111
Otlltflell_ _

•
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PAUL DAVIES

--"·0...,...,_

~'i: - ;:sKnots Leather
is Back!
Bags from '11.00

PURE
BEEF
FRENCH
FRIES

1

j
,

•LAYAWAY

by

Vows read at Cheshire
GALLIPOLIS - Miss sheila
Kathryn Freeman became the
bride of Pvt. David Alan
Ferguson at 6:30 p.m. Saturday, Augusf25, in the Cheshire
Baptist Church.
Rev. William Uber officiated
over the double ring ceremony
for the daughter of Carol
McGuire, Gallipolis and Jack
B. Freeman, Pomeroy, and the
son of Mr . and Mrs. Lindsey
Ferguson, Ypsilanti, Mich.
Mrs. Vivian Kirby presented
an half hour of pre-nuptial
music with Mrs. KareP Moore,
soloist singing

••

Mon. &amp; Fri. 9: 30 tile p.m.

Use our Lay.Away, BankAmerlcard or MaSter
Chorge.

Tues. Wed. Thur. &amp; Sat.
9: 30 tll5 p.m.

--- t:tc. :
... .......
,,

·~ · -·~ -· ~

1 Believe" I

The work was commissioned
by the Huntington, Fayette,
Charleston , Elkins, Point
Pleasant and Parkersburg
branches of the AAUW in
delebration of the 50th anniversary of the orgat)ization's
West Virginia Division, according to Mrs. Mahlon C.
Brown, president of the
Huntington branch.
:: Mrs . Brown said AAUW
inembers throughout the state
are being invited to attend, the
Oct. 9meeting, to be held at the
Huntington .Woman's Club
beginning at 7:30 p.m. Mrs.
Charles Hagan and Mrs. Harry
Fallon are in charge of
arrangements for a reception
following the meeting.
Another highlight · of the
event will be an address by
Mrs . Douglas Tomkles,
"Cherish the Past, Create the
Future." Mrs. Tomkles, past
regional vice president of the
AAUW and a member of the
Huntington branch, presented
the address at last spring's 50th
convention of the West Virginia
AAUW at Jackson's Mill. Mrs.
Brown said Mrs. Tomkies had
been asked to repeat it for the
Huntington area members,
many of whom had not been
able to hear it earlier.
The AA UW is open to all
women who have earned at
least a bachelor's degree from
an accredited college or
university . The Huntington
branch lists 225 members.

lll

Watch your child's
face when you
give him his fi rst
rea l band Instrument! Note
th e pr ide he
takes in playing
his first melody.
You ' ll e njoy the .
world of tun music
gives your -:hlld, too l

"Home of Th11t Old Fa11hion Goodneu."

BRUNICARDI
HOUSE OF MUSIC
s~ Stato St. , ~~6 - lt&lt;il7
Gallipolis, Ohio

.•

"'
'
••

11

"Whither Thou Goest", and
"The Lord's Prayer".
Two seven branch silver
candelabra flanked the altar
accented by baskets of white
gladioli, mums and greenery,
White bows marked the' family
pews.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride chose an
imported empire a-line gown of
dacton organza styled with a
fitted bodice of vertical
beribboned embroidery .and a
mandarin neckline . Queen

CHICKEN

Matching belts available

GaNioolis.

ON THESE GREAT PLAYTEX• STYLES.

••

JEWELERS

We

Cor11er Second &amp; Olive

Gallipolis, Ohio

THE STUFTSHIRT IS BACKI

OuW-town 8Ufll.t ·II the
weddlnc Included Mn. aeor,.
Shamblin, Charleston; Mn.
Linda Spe~r and fllllily,
Dundee, Mich.; Mr. llld Mn.
Earl Harris, Florida; Mn.
Betty Mll111 and Rolle, Tiffen;
Mrs. Sue Hedrick, Bucom ;
Mrs. Richard Freeman,
Pomeroy ; John Dewald,
Tlffen; Mr. and Mn. Mu
Miles, and family, Tllfin; Mr.
and Mrs. Mark Blake, South
Webster: Mr. and Mn. u-y
FercUJO!l, Mtchlpn.

SAVE UP TO •2m

IDMAKI

•

guests.
For a brief wedding trip to
Porl.lmouth, the bride changed
to a pink jersey dreu wlljl
white aceeuories and a white
corsage.
The cruple is now residing in
Aschaffenburg, Germany,
where Ferguson is serving with
the United Slates Army.
The bride graduated from
Gallta Academy Hlgh School.
The groom Is a graduate of
South Webster High School and
attended Rio Grande College.

Pvt. and Mrs. David A. Ferguson

.Musical to premiere

.rn.e-r'

Second Avenu~

don'l see yourself this Fall In su lls,
spor1

GALL1POLIS
Miss
Johnson ,
Deborah Kay
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn Ray Johnson, 117
Mabelene Dr ., Gallipolis,
became the bride of Terry Jay
Harmon, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Willard Sisson, Eureka Star
Rt., at 2:30p.m. August ~. at
Chapel Hill Church of Christ
Joe Galloway performed the
double ring ceremony and
vOcal music was presented by
Barbara Galloway, Sandy
Steele, Arbutus Pauley, Kathy
Pauley, Eddie Galloway, Greg
Pauley, Loy Pauley •nd Gene
Browning.
A single
candelabra
decorated the church.
Given in marriage by her
!ather, the bride chose a gown
of angel-skin peau de soie and
schiffli embroidery. The bodice
featured an empire waist and
short sleeves of venice lace
with satin trim on the yoke,
sleeves and skirt. Her
cathedrai length butterfly train
was attached to a matching
mantilla and held by a camelot
cap of venice lace. She carried
a cornflower and lily-of-thevalley cascade nosegay.
"
Louise SOmmerville served
as matron of honor. She was
attired in a medium purple
gown with a high coiiar and

also white carnations.
The recepUon was held in the
church fellowship room
following the ceremony. The
bride's table was highlighted
by a four-tier wedding cake
topped with white doves and
flanked by white candles with
orchid ribbons.
Serving at the recepUon were
Mrs, Ralph Rite, Mrs. James
Preston, Miss Sheils Moore
and Miss Ellen Reese. Miss
Tereaa Sievers registered

are the only
authorized
Conn
Dealer in this area.

•
,.

Anne sleeves and a flowing a·
line skirt of organza
highlighted the gown which
swept into a chapel train. The
chapel length illusion veil fell
from a lace camelot headpiece.
She carried a bouquet of white,
orchid and pink daisies and
carnations. Her jewelry included pearl earrings and
necklace .
Miss Jacqueline Freeman,
Gallipolis, sister of the bride,
served as maid of honor. She
wore an orchid a-line gown
with butterfly sleeves and
carried a bouquet of white and
orchid daisies. An orchid
picture hat completed her
costume. Miss Tammy Tayior,
Huntington,
served
as
bridesmaid. Her pink gown
matched the maid of honor's in
design and her picture hat was
pink. She carried a pink and
white daisy bouquet. Miss Jodi
Hall, Cheshire, was the flower
girl. Her blue gown matched
the senior attendants. She
carried a basket of mixed pink
and orchid petals. Gary
Ferguson, Ypsilanti, Mich.,
served his brother as best man.
Ushers were Mark R. Blake,
South Webster, and Dwight
Shamblin, Charleston. Ronnie
Taylor, Huntington, was the
ringbearer.
The mother of the bride
chose a navy and white
polyester dress with white
accessories and a white carnation corsage. The mother of
the groom wore a blut
polyester dress with matching
accessories. Her flowers were

levt up to tt'.l1 when JOU b~twoofthtMCrOH VourHtlrt-lrM
Stylt131-SI1tk:h 8rt, Stretch Strapa 32138A. 32/408, 32/42C- 2 for Q.H
Style No. 38 -Underc;up Support panels 32 -JtA ,' 32 - -iOB
32/40C-I PorN ..., 321-i20- 2 Portr.ft

Style fH-Piddtd .Brt-llce cupt32/36A, 32/3-88-2 for "At
Style 1173-Strtlch Bra Hall Lace Cups-Str.tch StraPt
32138A, 32/ 428, 32/42c-2for H.M, 32/ 42D-tfor tl.tt
Sty{e 1111-StrJtch Bre-Lace CuPt32138A 32/408
32/42G-2 for tul, :W/420- 2 For*'·" '
'

llw 11o01 whlnrouiHrY• "NoV'-1~ Melflaoflupport"• bfa
t1*-Shltf Loct-Whl1e
11~8hNr-Whlte

'il1*-ShHr llelgo-32/36A, 32/406, 321~2C,
Now ontr MAt, 321.420 t1.00 more

11'1111o01 tn"ICin'thl!nell'sAira" 101 bta
Style f1~ular Cup- 34-36A, 32·428, 32-42C-..U4

32-42D-...M

Sty1e 112-Fiberllll Llntd~2-381\,
32-1011, 32-&lt;0C-fi.M
S1yto f20G-Long Une-3&lt;--026, 3H4CP.14, 34-440-ltD.M

___,..""'

, ..,, "'""'"'" glfdlo" 0 glBrlel
t~ow t Ul R~&amp;guler Girdle
Now 111.11
Shortla
Now 110." High Wal1tlong LegfNowS11.11
Average Leg How 111.M HJgh Wal1t Glrdlet Now $1J.ft
Long Leg
How ttt.tt
All S1ytoii-S,M.L.XL' ,XXL' OMC6P1 6•1el In S,M,L,XL',
()(L •, XXL•-s1 .00 mott) If Not IIVIillble in amall)

DEPARTMENT

STORE

,____
OPEN TIL
PM
MON.fRI.

9

SILVER
BRIDGE
PLAZA

•

'..,

.•••••
....
•

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

:UUtMIAM.

a.ltlfiiiii,O.

.''

''
••
••;
'I

L~

'.
'' 'I

...

'"

"'I

:I

discover your
new-est
fashion HIGH
from

conn1e·

Th~y 're TOWER HEELS the highfalutin-est heep of
height to pop-up. Combine 'em
wllh the bold-est bunch of

bottoms around and you·v~

got the now-est look In lootwear

tod~y .

Tie version In

Nevy.Gin•r or Black-Taupe,
$17-.99 . Sling style In Red,
Navy, Ginger or Black , $15.99 .

Mon. a Fri. 1:30 tlt8 p.m.
Tuos. Wtd. Sol. 1: 301115 p.m.
Thursdoy ' : 30 lllt2 noon

�..

-

.

r

7- 'l'hct&gt;unduy 'I'Imea • No&gt;nttnel, Sunday, S&lt;•pt. :10. w7;1

Plans completed Crafts day set Oct. 5

'

•

,.
,.,
'"

• ••

GALUPOIJS :.._ Mi.&lt;S F.rlilh
I.ong, brid~lecl of Charles
Baker , has completed her
weddin~ plans. The ceremony
will take place at the ··First
Church of God. 109 Garfield
Ave., atJ p.m., Sunday, Oct. 7,
with Rev. C. P. Conley of.
ficlating.
The gracious custom of open
church will be observed. 'l'he
reception will be held in the
parsonage Fellowship hall
immediately following the
ceremony.
Miss Long has choaen Mrs .
Bonnie saunders, Gallipolis, to
serve as her matron of honor.
· Bridesmaids will be Miss
Brend3 Johnson, Miss Marsha
Bush and Miss Denise Long,
sister of the bride. Flower girl

.... ,

•

•

Baptist teacbers,
ojficet'S /J(Ive meet

will bo.• Teresa l Am~. niet'&lt;' tlf
tin' lll'ide.
Rak••r has d10SCn Donald
saunders us . his best man.
St1rvtn~ •• li'lllct·s will be Mrs ,
S:,r&lt;,llumlilon. Mike [lush and
Mike Evans. 11ingbenrer will
be Stephen Haner, nephew or
the bride.
11egisterlng· guests will be
Mrs. Jcanetle Bragg . Prenuptial music will begin at 2:30
p.m. with Mrs. Gay Jeffers as
organist and Mrs. Knrcn
Moore, soloist.
Serving at the reception will
.be Mrs. Ruth Ann Hamilton;
Mrs. Joyce Harrington and
Mrs. Anita Long, sister-in-law
of the bride.
All friends or the bride and
groom are cordially invited to
auend.

Mr. ·and Mrs. William J Rhodes

Wedding vows read

Sr. Citizens
Calendar

Walk-a-thon scheduled
down Bidwell-Rodney Rd., turn
on Kerr Harrisburg, take the
Adamsville Rd. to old Rt. 35, .
follow it from Bob. Evans
sausage Shop to new ·Rt. 35,
take Rt. 554 back W Bidwell
Methodist Church. Parents will
man lhe eight check point
stations, located every lwo
miles, providing first aid
supplies and snack foods.
Anyone wanting to sponsor a
youth member can call Joanne
Roberts, advisor, 388-85(ll.

hulrpin lace, cunninu chRirs,
whitl.ling, dried upple dolls and
corn husk dolls, u~d dulcimer
mnkinc.
Each ndult registration lee of
50 cents will entllie the pnrtlclpnntlo a booklet describing
nil the crafts. Additional
oooklets are available for 10
cel\ls. Children under 14 nrc
admitted freem .

ATHENS
llow did C'uunly l'ooJWrutlve fo:&lt;tenslon
Grandma mnke Uont AOr~ t'OUS S..Arvlcc.s.
Lo ·ul &lt;1'111truncn will be Uterc
brnldl'!l rug sho used W huvo on
her parlor floor'! And how does 10 el1tlt with you anrl shOw you
George fi&lt; up those old ilmken their work In the areas ol
~locks ? Remember Aum splnnin ~ unrl weaving, emMHrlha 's dining room chairs broidery , n~edlepolnl .
with
those
ileautilul repuiring and making clocks,
needlepoint seats? Wonder how · braided an&lt;l hooked rugs,
· she made those?
~rewe l , furniture refinlshln~.
For the answers W these and
many other questions you've
always wanted 10 ask, visit the
Traditional American Arts and
fra fts Day, Friday, October 5.
Local Southeastern Ohio
BETTER FOOTWEA~
craftsmen will be demonstrating their skills from H
and 6-8 p.m. at the Athens ·
County Fairgrounds , West ·
Union Sl. (Houle 56 West),
Athens. This craft day is a joint
educalional project of th e
Athens, Vinton und Hocking

f?orrPU/snous

FOR THE FAMI~V

M~oy cr~ftsrnen will alao
huve iolormutlo~ bookltlM,
patlerns, and Instructions on
their particular craft to help
you get•1arted. There will be I
reference table conlalnlns
L'O mplcle books on moat creftl.
If YQU like to work with your
hantll, or you just like to see
what others cun do with theirs,
''Ome vlsllthe Arl!l and Crafts
Day. f'or further infonnaUon.
contact the CJ!Operallve !!;~­
tension Service in your county.

members that viSiting lhe sick
and being a good Samaritan
were the main things.
Mrs. Ben Rupe gave the
treasurer's report. A resolution
was made and passed to retain
all lhe old officers for lhe new
year. The class was organized
in 1937 and Mrs. R~pe has been
the treasurer sonce then.
Members wish to express their
!hanks for her sincere
dedication and the work she
has done for 36 years as
treasurer.
New and old business · was
discussed. Bible questions
were asked by Mrs. Hortie
11ousb. Readings were "The
Man That Owns The Man" by
Mrs. Willa Fry; "Take Time
To Pray" by Mrs. Rupe ;
"Making A Friend" by Miss
Mollie Johnson; "Thoughts
and Smiles" by Mrs. F'red
Si"sson; "Dear God" by Mrs.
Spires; "Think Pleasant" and
"Communication Gap" by
Mrs. Spears; "A Smile" .by
Mrs. Roush.
Mrs. Sisson won the door
prize and Mrs. Roush a quiz
question prize. The Lord's
Prayer was repeated . The
group will meet with Mrs. Ben
Rupe, October 25.

Best friends for going casually

SILVER BRID~E
PLAZA
OPEN SUNDAYS

Buy Both
and Save
another 1.00

back to school. Fascinating
latigo excitement in the
naiUral leather look of

Both for

autumn toast.

1380

Shoe was 10.99 ..... Now 7.90
Bag was 7.99. , . ... , . Now 6.90

Nature 's Garden Club has meet Luthe'rans meet
GALLIPOI.IS - Nature'l
Otrllen Club met t'hurtday
allernoon at 1 p.m. at Cottage
7, Gallipolis State lnslltute.
Mrs. W. Donald Galloway of
the Gallipolis Garden Club

opened ihe meellng. Naoho
tags decorawd with !lowers
and made by a member. were
dl1trlbuted . The gardener '•
pledge was recited and a poem,

Miss M11rte Meal ~nd Mrs.
Flore nee Trainer of the Frendt
City Gorden Club were In•
lroduced.
Miss
Meal
distributed song sheets and
"\'t1ur Garden," was read.
accompanied members while
songs were sung Including "In
a Garden," ··rtp-toc Through
t!Je Tulips," ''My Wild Irish
Rose" and "Chrysanthemum."
Flowers to be ldentllled were
shown. The variety included
begonia, lever-few, geranium·,
A clear and complete oulllne of rose, gl~Klosa daisy, aster,
what school exclusion Is and salvia, zinnia, marigold,
what It Isn't has also bee,n . dahlia, petunia, ageratum ,
made a part of the parents celosla, snapdragon and
guide, as well as sample letters others. Many of these are
and explicit procedures on grown In plots on the grounds.
each step of the enrollment A discussion followed, and lhe
services.
,
girls were complimented on
If you know of a handtcapped their tending various plols and
child who Is not In public receiving award ribbons at the
school, or il you are lhe parent judging held recently.
of a handicapped child (even il
Next, a flower game was
the school has already said played. Flower scrapbooks and
"No" to accepting your son or crayons were distributed.
daughl&lt;!r), you should write for
The hostess ·club served
a copy of "SI&lt;!p by Slep· - refreshments and awarded a
Getting Your Handicapped door prize which was shared by
Child in Schoob A G.ulde for all.
Parents." If you !)ave
Each member was given a
questions about the status of .piece of Joseph's Coat to take
your child, you are also urged to her cottage to r.oot. Progress
to contact Operation Childhunt. on this project is to be reported
Contact your local Junior at the next meeting.
Departrnent, West Virginia
Mrs. Garnet Wood of ocFederation of Women's Clubs cupational Therapy was in
or the West VIrginia atl&lt;!ndance.
Association lor Relarded
Children, 614 Union Trust
Building, Parkersburg, W. Va.
26101; or telephone 304-485.5283.
GALLIPOLIS - The Ambassadors Class of First
SAXBE'S VOTE
WAS)iiNGTON (UP!) -Sen . . Baptist Church recently held a
William Saxbe, R.Ohio, voted Canoe Party for lhe September
to delay acceleration of the outing. Following the canoe
Trident ·submarine missle ride down Raccoon freek the
System. The delay proposal group enjoyed an evening of
was defeated by a 4947 vow fellowship at the home of
associate pastor and Mrs.
'J:'llursday.
Sen. Robert Taft Jr., R.Ohio, Harry E. Cole, 1 Vine st. A
period of devolion was held
did not vote.
·with Paswr Cole leading ·the
groUp in the discussion of
family life. Following the
MORE TALKS SET
diSHOCfON, Ohio (UP!) - devotions refreshments were
Negotiations were W resume served by the hostess, Mrs.
Wednesday with a federal me- Cole to Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
diator sitting In with the strik- McDivitl, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
ing United Rubber Workers Marr, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Smith,
Local 50 and officials of lhe Mr. and Mrs. lloyd Danner,
and the host and hostess. The
Pretly Products Co.
The union struck the local next meeting will be Oc!Dber 13
plant und the warehouse at following the evangelistic
nearby Newcomerstown last crusade of Bill Compton and
Sunday midnight when the con- will be held In the fellowship
tract expired.
room of the church.
Thursday talks produced no
progress, It was reported.

Launch program
POINT PLEASANT - An
Intensive
one-month
"operation childhunt "
program will b1 launched
IDhlorrow, October 1, to locale
anC! ldenllfy handicapped
children who are nol currenUy
receiving an educational
program In the public school
system due to their physical or
mental disability. Sponsored
by the Junior Deparlrnent,
West VIrginia Federatjon of
Women's Clubs and the West
- Vlrglni!l Asso~latlon for
Re.tarded Children, Inc .,
"Operation Childhunt" will
concentraw on making lhe
general public a)l'are of .the
new provisions of West
VIrginia law thai require the
public schools to have all
handicapped children under
their aegis by .l'uly 1, 1974.
"Many parent.s still think
that the schools are not supposed to p~ovlde a free
education appropriate to the
needs of their handicapped
chlld,l' commented Mrs. Ellen
A. Brown, execullve director of
the West VIrginia Association
(or Retarded Children. "Bul
they're wrong, terribly and
tragically wrong," she added.
ll seema that many parents, as
well as educators and administrators themselves, are
unaware of the Mandatory
Education Bill that was passed
in 1969 by the WJst Virginia
legislation, to see to it·that ALL
handicapped ·children were
brought Into the mainstream of
• educational opportunity, and
their rights protected especially their rights to the
m~t basic of all American.
rlght.s - their rlght.s to ari
education. ·
An Informative guide for the
parents of such children who
are not now In public school has
been prepared which gives full
information on the steps the
parenla should take to see to It
• that their cblld Is properly
enrolled and placed In an
lppropriate learning situation.

Golden Rule Class meets

CHESHIRE - The Golden
GALLIPOLIS - The SepRule
Class of Old Kyger mel
tember Confet·ence or lhe Paint
Creek Sunday School teachers with Mrs. Edward Spears
for ils September
and officers met Thursday Thursday
meeting. .
evening at the home of Mr. and
The meeting was opened by
Mrs . ·James Robinson and
Wayne. Mrs. Dorothy Gordon the group singing ''Bringing In
led lhe devotions . Her subject The Sheaves." Mrs. Leona
wu "Live for olhets by giving Spires gave th.e opening
your service to God." She prayer . Scripture rrom
closed with a poem, "Just Proverbs 12 was read by Mrs:
Spears. Roll call was answered
Beyond the Shadows. "
groom. The columns held a
Mrs. Rosann Hollinshed gave by "What we need to do or
small cake decorated with
a report or the summer altend- would like lo do in the year to
doves and blue roses. Punch,
come." It was agreed by ali
tinted wedding bell mints and ance campaign. The Red leam
won and will be treated to an
nuts were served, Mrs. Russell
afternoon of . bow ling. Rally
Fellur~. aunt of the bride,
Day is being planned lor Oc-,
registered the guests.
Out-of-town guests were Wber 7. Rhonda Doss and
Mary Pullins, Jeanette Slone, Wayne Robinson were named
Jeff Hartenbach, Point chairpersons for lhe ThanksPleasant ; Mrs. Charles Bush giving program.
Educational feature for the
and Susan , Derl Oberlin ,
Logan; B. F. Houck, Ironton; evening was given by John
GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
Mr. and Mrs. Walt Stowers, Rippey . His subject was Citizens Center, located in the
Cheryl and Kevin, North "Peace." He read several Holzer Hospital Building,
Ridgeville; Mr. and Mrs . scripture verses from the Bible Cedar St. entrance is open
Joseph Hively and Lori, containing the word peace. The Monday through Friday from 9
Thurman; Mrs. Iva Sisson, meeting was closed by a.m. to 3 p.m. The schedule of
Rutlund; Mr. and Mrs. Dennis repeating Psalm 19:14. During evenls for this week is as
Zastrow, Sondra and Greg, · the social hour !!honda Doss follows :
Linda Sheets, Mr. and Mrs. conducted a Bible game, "Who · Monday, patchwork and
Keith Houck and Bruce, Am 11" The hostess served quilting, 9 a.m. - 3 p.m.
Dayton; Mrs. f'lorence Sheets, delicious refreshments. Mrs.
Tuesday, bread dough flower
Fairborn; Mrs. John Mitchell Hollinshed gave the vote of class, 1-3 p.m.
and Steve, Mr. and Mrs. Ted thanks.
Wednesday , make yarn,
Hanna and Bertha Hanna,
burlap and dough flowers, 1·3
Rodney.
p.m.
Lobsler 'f:hreatened
For a brief wedding trip, the
Thursday, make Chrislrnas
America 's delicious canni!ride changed to a two-piece
decorations,
1-3 p.m.
bal is in deep trouble . Over·
navy and while outfit with the fishing
Friday, work on crafts for
. increasing consumpcorsage from the cascade.
Bob
Evans Farms Festival 9
tion, and pollution so threaten
The new Mr. and Mrs. the true lob ster. Homaru s a.m. to 3 p.m. Senjor Citizens·
Americanus. that sdme biolo- wili have a booth at the
Rhode~ are at home to their
U.iends at 140\i! First Ave., gists predict demand will ex- Festival where they will sell
ceed supply by 1980.
Gallip&lt;!lis.
their articles.

GALLIPOLIS - The First
Chw-ch of G&lt;&gt;d, Garfield Ave.,
was the scene, August 11, al
6:30 pm., for the wedding of
Miss Deborah Lynn Houck,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Noah
Dale Houck, and William
Jeffrey Rhodes; son of Mr. and
Mrs. Delbert Hanna.
The double ring ceremony
was read by the Rev. C. P.
Conley, beneath an arch of
baby while carnations and
greenery: Nine-branch candelabra and standing baskets
of white carnations flanked the
arch. The family pews were
marked wllh while satin bows.
The !ride, given in marriage
by ber father, chose ~ white
gown of sheer orgll11l8 over
taffeta, styled with a subrince
neckline and loog camelot
sleeves. Venice lace accented
the bodice. Her mantilla
illusion veil fell from a crown
headdress, bordered in Venice
iace. Her only jewelry was a
pair of diamond earrings and a
diamond necklace, gifts from
the groom. She carried a
cascade of stephanotis, white
carnations and baby's breath
on a white Bible. •
An half bour of pre-nuptial
music was presented by Mrs.
John Jeffers. Soloist Tom
Kessel sang "A Time for Us."
Flower girl, Miss Cheryl
stowers, preceded lhe bride
BIDWELL - The BidweU
and ber father, down the white
United
Methodist Church
aisle l'UMer drowing pink rose
petals from a white lace Youth FeUowship is having a 16
basket. She w0re a light blue mile Walk-a-thon, October 20.
gown and a gold cross, given W The money will be donated to
the Galtia County Volunteer
her by the bride.
" During the ceremony. the . Emergency Squad. The group
bride and groom lighted the consists of 3li young people
single candle of unity and knelt beginning with age nine,
following lhe exchange of vows representing several local ,
while Kelisel sang "The Lord's churches including Bidwell,
Mt. Carmel, Ml. Olive, Clark
Prayer."
Miss Cathy Hall was maid of Chapel, White Oak, and
honor. She wore a light blue Calvary Baptist.
The youth who are divided
polyester gown trimmed in
i~to
junior and senior groups
while lace and carried a
nosegay of pink carnations and are combining their efforts in
white roses. Serving as brides-. order to make a success of the
maid was Miss Judy Ham- marathon. They will leave
mond, wbo wore a light blue BidweU Church at 9:30a.m. go
gown trimmed with white lace
on lhe bodice aud sleeves, and
BELVILLE AT DIX
carried a nosegay of pink
GALLIPOL!S Army
carnations and while roses. Private Olha R. Belville, 19,
Matron of honor was Mrs. son of Mrs. Ruth E. Caldwell,
Keith Houck, sister-in-law of Route 1, Gallipolis, completed
the bride. She wore a light blue eight weeks of basic training al
gown with white lace on the the U. S. Army Infantry
bodice and sleeves. She also Training Center at Ft. Dix, N.
carried a nosegay of pink J. Pvl. Belville's father, Otha
carnations and white roses. P. Belville, lives on Rout&lt;! 2
" Junior bridesmaids were Gallipolis.
cousins of the bride, Misses
Jelln and Jane Haner, attired
in light blue gowns with white
Since 1859
lace trim . Their nosegays were
of miniature pink carnations
and white rosebuds and .they
wore gold crosses, gifts from
the bride.
Keith Houck, brother of the
bride, served as best man.
Ushers were lillke Bush,
IK{It Et~IIOIU ~IGIII&amp;l(S
Russell Fellure, uncle of the
bride, Mike Allen and Gene
Everything
Brpwn. They wore blue
Guaranteed
tuxedos. 1\'laster Br~ce Houck,
nephew of the bride, served as
Satisfyringbearer. He carried lhe .
Or Mone Back
rings on a satin heart-shaped
pillow.
The bride's mother chose a
JANE PARKER
navy blue and white polyester
gown with white accessories.
She had a white cattelya orchid
conage. The mother of the
groom wore a light blue
polyelller gown with white
ICCt!IIIOrlea aud a white . cattleya jlrchld corsage.
A reception was held at the
home of lhe bride's parents,
Immediately following the
~y. Mra. Bob Saunders
.. d Mra. Larry Bet&amp; presided
It the llbll, L'lllllwed by a
th,.. ller cake topped by folD'
1IIIIM coiUJIIIIII ov.- a bride and

Prol'hctin~ . pomunder s und
tlryln~
flo"!crs, qulltln~.
kntttln~. enndle
muklng,

Class has meet

Blue Grass Music slated

The sun ·is 400 ,000 limes
brighter than a full moon.

GAWPOLIS - Bluegrass
Music returns to Gallla County
for the second time this season,
satw-day, October 6 at 8 p.m.
The show, slated for the
Gallla County fairgrounds, wUl
feature Forest Pelfrey, Dave
Sloa8 and the •Bluegrass Six,
the latter ·group having performe!\ together for over 20

years. Also on the bill are Conn
Sparks, Cline Blevins, the
Elliolt County Ramblers and
Gallia's own Bud Jolley and the
Hilltoppers.
Lots of good old time fiddling
and banjo picking are in store.
Admission will be $2 with
children under 12 free. A door
prize will be awarded.

!%Dr~Pill

DAN THOMA:.
AND SON

shoos

since 1936"

i Ohio

BETTER FOOTWEAR FOR THE FAMILY

SILVER BRIDGE
PLAZA

Shfil shops with a pu_rpose, and
she has an eye lor smart lashions

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and smart buys.
Yes, aha 's really got it. In a tot
of ways; And that Includes Mas ter

Charge, the card sho uses to help
manage her mQney and keep track
of major purchases with one
Itemized mOnthly statement
If you've got It, you 've probably got
Master Charge, too. So ... use 111

Is

To

PUMPKIN

PIES

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THE COMMERCIAL &amp; SAVINGS
BANK OF GALLIPOLIS
.
PROUDLY ANNOUNCES THESE }JARTICIPATING '
MERCHANTS IN THEIR MASTER CHARGE PROGRAM
'

AMY'S
CENTRAL SUPPLY CO.
CLARK'S JEWELRY STORE
COUNTRY FARE
FULL HOUSE OF CARDS
THE HUB
G&amp;J AUTO PARTS CO.
THE KNIT MILLS STORE

MY SISTER'S CLOSET
PAUL DAVIES JEWELERS
RIO GRANDE COLLEGE BOOK STORE
BERNADINE'S INC.
CHILDER'S MUSIC CENTER
CARL'S FAMILY SHOE STORE
DAN THOMAS &amp; SON SHOE STORE
THE HASKINS-TANNER CO.

THE IDEAL GIFT &amp;
CARD SHOPPE
JACK &amp; JILL'S
MARCHI'S CARRY OUT
THE NEW STYLE CENTER'
PJ's
SUSIE'S GREENHOUSE
THOMAS CLOTHIERS

See
All
the
Arrangements
on
Display. Free Door
Prize and Refreshments.

SUSIE'S
GREENHOUSE
St.Rt.588
Ph. 446-4610

l~lans

D.

Report.s were received from
ollicers and committee
chairwomen. Programs lor lhe
coming year were completed
with· lhc annual Halloweefl&gt;
(UNICEF) party In October.
The November meeting will lle
the LCW thank oflering gifts
for synodical year In the
church sanctuary . and special
ptog,ram presenl&lt;!d. The LCW
will host the Christmas Tree
trimming night as in past years
with lhe congregation members sharing in this event and

:Emanon
dinner
held

n•mlin~ .
Th" ~r~ceti ng

dosed with the
LC'W bencditllon read in
"•' ivillcsarcci!IIIJ&gt;icted fur I he unison . Helreshmcnta were
Christmas advent season.
served by Mrs. Schul&lt; W Mrs.
All &lt;&gt;lhcr programs monthly Darrell Hall, Mrs. Willi•m
will be h"" lcd by I.&lt;:W mem- Knight and Mrs. Dale Rou~h .
bers lrom January to May, the
Sunshine cards were mailed
latter to be u potluck meeting recently to several LCW
with Mrs. William Knight, members, Mrs. Marie Knoll,
hosl&lt;!ss. Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Mrs. Kenneth Roush, and Mrs.
Hall and Mr. and Mrs. Knight Charles Oliver. Mrs. Darrell
will start a Junior and Senior Hull will serve as sunshine
high youth group lor fun and chairwoman lor the coming
fellowship at St. Peter's year 1973-74. LCW members,
Church today.
please let her know or memSummer acllvllles of the
church included District No. 11
spring retreat al Ce~ar Lakes
near Ripley; w. Va., atwnded
by Mrs. Frank Scholz, vacation
DIAMOND
crall school in August with the
pastor, John F, · Haeberle,
RINGS
superintenden t, assisted by
for THAT
other teachers. Thew. Va .-Pa.
synodical assembly was Sept.
SOMEONE
22-23 at Kappel Lodge, Pills·
SPECIAL
burgh, Pa., attended by Mrs.
Frank Scholz, Sl. Peter LCW
and Mrs. Kathryn Daily, W.
Va. synodical LCW chairwoman, the latter or Parkersburg, W. Va. Mrs. Scholz was
appointed relreal chairwoman
of District No. 11 for coming
year . Church social ministry
chairwoman, Mrs. Dale Roush,
NOCTURNE
announced "The Word In
14K White or Yellow Gold
Season" is being mailed year
pr ic ed from $1 00
around W the college student.s,
see this style and others armilitary church members, any
address clia nge should. be
TAWNEY
given to her for correct
JEWELERS
mailing. These are also taken
Ave .
Gallipolis
lo lhe Pleasant Valley Hospital

hers sick or hospiU.I p~tienl,, Several specia l church
highlights were menlloned
with details tor·thcomlng by the

Sic Peler's LutllerMn Chutch
Junl ... Council Mnd pastor John
F'. Haeberle lor the church
year .

l'cfi'I,•SiifuctiL'\ Nc i'Vt.'tl ufler the

GALLIPOLIS
The
Emanon Club held a farewell
dinner party for Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence J. Waugh, Sunday
evening allhe home of Mr. and
Mrs. M. Harold Brown.
Mr. and Mrs. Waugh left
'J'uesday to make their home in
Florida,
The party was also lhe annual dinner meeting at which
the members of the club entertain their husbands. There
were 32 members and guests
present.
The dinner was followed by
bridge and socializing. The
commitwe assisting Mr. and
Mrs. Brown included Mrs. Leo
Mossman, Mrs. Kenneth
Frazer, Mrs. Selwyn White,
Mrs. A. Kimball Suiter, Mrs.
Robert Sheets and Mrs. Hoyt
Mullins.
The next meeting of the club·
will be October 4 at the home of
Mrs. Robert Caldwell.

Second Avenu~ .

~,ii ·

asks.
Sophisticated junior?*
See Emily M and Junior House

Size 3-15

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·~

*(A size not an age)

Use Our ' Lay .Away, BankAmericard or Master
Charge.

--- &amp;tc. ~

"The Store with More"
Gallipolis

Everyone's favorite
is the shirl·shape and
Crystal's 'gator ·
trimmed · sleek.
stitched·down
shirtdress is making
fashion news for fall
in camel doubleknits
of Dacron(r). 8·18.

$36•

OPEN MONDAY
9:30 TO 8:00

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L
CRYSTAL
David

Gallipolis,

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Albany, N.Y.
Concord, N.H.
$2.05 '
$2.00
Dallas,Tex.
Amarillo, Tex.
. $2.10
$2.10
Denver, Colo.
Ann Arbor, Mich.
$1.60
$2.10
Des Moines, Iowa
Atlanta, Ga.
$2.05
$2.00
Austin, Tex.
Detroit, Mich.
$1.60
$2.10
Erie, Pa.
Bangor, Me.
$1.60
$2.05
Fort Wayne, Ind.
Birmingham, Ala.
$1.60
$2.00
Bismarck, N.Dak.
Fort Worth, Tex.
$2.10
$2.10
Grand Island, Nebr.
Boise, Idaho
$2.50
$2.10
Great Falls, Mont,
Boston, Mass.
. $2.50
$2.05
Green Bay, Wis.
Charleston, S.C.
$2.00
$2.00
Charleston,W. Va.
Hartford, Conn.
$1.60
$2.00 '
Hempstead, N.Y.
Charlotte, N.C.
$2.00
$2.00
Compton,Cali£
Houston, Tex.
$2.10
$2.60

Indianapolis, Ind.
$1.60
Kansas City, Mo.
$2.o5

PhiJadelphia, Pa. .
$2.00
Phoenix, Ariz.
$2.50
Pittsburgh, Pa.
$1.60
Pontiac, Mich.
$1.60
Portland, Oreg.
$2.60
St.Louis, Mo.
$2.00
Salt Lake City, Utah
'
$2.50 .
San Diego, Calif.
$2.60
San Francisco, Calif. ·
$2.60
Seattle,Wash.
$2.60,/ '
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Trentoii, NJ.
. $2.00
·' Tulsa, Okla.
/

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LaCrosse, Wis.
$2.00
LasVegas, Nev.
$2.50
Los Angeles, Cali£
$2.60
Louisville, Ky.
$2.00
Memphis, Tenn.
$2.05
Miami, Fla.
$2.10
MoWit Vernon, N.Y.
$2.00
Newark, N.J.
$2.00
New York, N.Y.
$2.00
Norfolk,Va.
/
$2.05
$2.00
'
Waterbury, Conn.
Norwich, Coqn:
$2.00 . ,
$2.00
Wayne,Pa.
Oakland, Cali£
$2.00
$2.60
/

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If you're

into camel's
hair and cashmere
classics, you need
a shoe lhat does more
than look the part. We
have this great Sebago
fashion In a wide range of
sizes Priced at

As you can see, even a
10-minute long distance
call is pretty inexpensive.
Provided you follow
a few simple guidelines.
Just dia1 your long
distance calls direct,

'18.99

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r

COME OUT
TODAY!

POINT PI .EAMNT
Th&lt;•
St. PeU:r Lutheran Churrh
Women met Mondlly night at
Um lellowHhlp hall lor rirsl
meeting or the Iall season. Mrs.
Frank Scholz, president. wa• In
charge. She opened the
mccling wllh devotional
" Leadership Gifts .'' Corln-

anLI Lhi.' Mt•son Cuunty Jut! lo
llr tl!t&lt;'ti for dcvotiunul daily

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without operator
assistance. And dial them
between 5 and 11 PM.,
Sunday through Friday.
· (Rates are even lower

after 11 PM. and on
weekends.)
That's all it takes
to keep long distance
costs down.

@Ohio Bell
Use your phone for all it's worth.

Down so low that
instead of worryin~
about the cost, youll be
able to relax and enjoy
your long distance calls.
Even the 10-minute
ones.

D.ial-lt-younelf rates apply on out·of·state dio.led calls (without operator allistanCc) ftOJn mldtaet lad bull- phoaes 11117Wheftl
· lo the U.S. (cxetpt ltlo.ska and Hawaii) and on calls placed wlth an opemor whm direct dlali"' fadlllia ate DOt.a~able. Dlil-Jc-.,ouaelf -11o
to person-to·petson, coin, hotel81Jest, credit card, collect wil and oa calls ci"CJ i 10 a!!!!!lwiiWIIber.

lilt-

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7- 'l'hct&gt;unduy 'I'Imea • No&gt;nttnel, Sunday, S&lt;•pt. :10. w7;1

Plans completed Crafts day set Oct. 5

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GALUPOIJS :.._ Mi.&lt;S F.rlilh
I.ong, brid~lecl of Charles
Baker , has completed her
weddin~ plans. The ceremony
will take place at the ··First
Church of God. 109 Garfield
Ave., atJ p.m., Sunday, Oct. 7,
with Rev. C. P. Conley of.
ficlating.
The gracious custom of open
church will be observed. 'l'he
reception will be held in the
parsonage Fellowship hall
immediately following the
ceremony.
Miss Long has choaen Mrs .
Bonnie saunders, Gallipolis, to
serve as her matron of honor.
· Bridesmaids will be Miss
Brend3 Johnson, Miss Marsha
Bush and Miss Denise Long,
sister of the bride. Flower girl

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Baptist teacbers,
ojficet'S /J(Ive meet

will bo.• Teresa l Am~. niet'&lt;' tlf
tin' lll'ide.
Rak••r has d10SCn Donald
saunders us . his best man.
St1rvtn~ •• li'lllct·s will be Mrs ,
S:,r&lt;,llumlilon. Mike [lush and
Mike Evans. 11ingbenrer will
be Stephen Haner, nephew or
the bride.
11egisterlng· guests will be
Mrs. Jcanetle Bragg . Prenuptial music will begin at 2:30
p.m. with Mrs. Gay Jeffers as
organist and Mrs. Knrcn
Moore, soloist.
Serving at the reception will
.be Mrs. Ruth Ann Hamilton;
Mrs. Joyce Harrington and
Mrs. Anita Long, sister-in-law
of the bride.
All friends or the bride and
groom are cordially invited to
auend.

Mr. ·and Mrs. William J Rhodes

Wedding vows read

Sr. Citizens
Calendar

Walk-a-thon scheduled
down Bidwell-Rodney Rd., turn
on Kerr Harrisburg, take the
Adamsville Rd. to old Rt. 35, .
follow it from Bob. Evans
sausage Shop to new ·Rt. 35,
take Rt. 554 back W Bidwell
Methodist Church. Parents will
man lhe eight check point
stations, located every lwo
miles, providing first aid
supplies and snack foods.
Anyone wanting to sponsor a
youth member can call Joanne
Roberts, advisor, 388-85(ll.

hulrpin lace, cunninu chRirs,
whitl.ling, dried upple dolls and
corn husk dolls, u~d dulcimer
mnkinc.
Each ndult registration lee of
50 cents will entllie the pnrtlclpnntlo a booklet describing
nil the crafts. Additional
oooklets are available for 10
cel\ls. Children under 14 nrc
admitted freem .

ATHENS
llow did C'uunly l'ooJWrutlve fo:&lt;tenslon
Grandma mnke Uont AOr~ t'OUS S..Arvlcc.s.
Lo ·ul &lt;1'111truncn will be Uterc
brnldl'!l rug sho used W huvo on
her parlor floor'! And how does 10 el1tlt with you anrl shOw you
George fi&lt; up those old ilmken their work In the areas ol
~locks ? Remember Aum splnnin ~ unrl weaving, emMHrlha 's dining room chairs broidery , n~edlepolnl .
with
those
ileautilul repuiring and making clocks,
needlepoint seats? Wonder how · braided an&lt;l hooked rugs,
· she made those?
~rewe l , furniture refinlshln~.
For the answers W these and
many other questions you've
always wanted 10 ask, visit the
Traditional American Arts and
fra fts Day, Friday, October 5.
Local Southeastern Ohio
BETTER FOOTWEA~
craftsmen will be demonstrating their skills from H
and 6-8 p.m. at the Athens ·
County Fairgrounds , West ·
Union Sl. (Houle 56 West),
Athens. This craft day is a joint
educalional project of th e
Athens, Vinton und Hocking

f?orrPU/snous

FOR THE FAMI~V

M~oy cr~ftsrnen will alao
huve iolormutlo~ bookltlM,
patlerns, and Instructions on
their particular craft to help
you get•1arted. There will be I
reference table conlalnlns
L'O mplcle books on moat creftl.
If YQU like to work with your
hantll, or you just like to see
what others cun do with theirs,
''Ome vlsllthe Arl!l and Crafts
Day. f'or further infonnaUon.
contact the CJ!Operallve !!;~­
tension Service in your county.

members that viSiting lhe sick
and being a good Samaritan
were the main things.
Mrs. Ben Rupe gave the
treasurer's report. A resolution
was made and passed to retain
all lhe old officers for lhe new
year. The class was organized
in 1937 and Mrs. R~pe has been
the treasurer sonce then.
Members wish to express their
!hanks for her sincere
dedication and the work she
has done for 36 years as
treasurer.
New and old business · was
discussed. Bible questions
were asked by Mrs. Hortie
11ousb. Readings were "The
Man That Owns The Man" by
Mrs. Willa Fry; "Take Time
To Pray" by Mrs. Rupe ;
"Making A Friend" by Miss
Mollie Johnson; "Thoughts
and Smiles" by Mrs. F'red
Si"sson; "Dear God" by Mrs.
Spires; "Think Pleasant" and
"Communication Gap" by
Mrs. Spears; "A Smile" .by
Mrs. Roush.
Mrs. Sisson won the door
prize and Mrs. Roush a quiz
question prize. The Lord's
Prayer was repeated . The
group will meet with Mrs. Ben
Rupe, October 25.

Best friends for going casually

SILVER BRID~E
PLAZA
OPEN SUNDAYS

Buy Both
and Save
another 1.00

back to school. Fascinating
latigo excitement in the
naiUral leather look of

Both for

autumn toast.

1380

Shoe was 10.99 ..... Now 7.90
Bag was 7.99. , . ... , . Now 6.90

Nature 's Garden Club has meet Luthe'rans meet
GALLIPOI.IS - Nature'l
Otrllen Club met t'hurtday
allernoon at 1 p.m. at Cottage
7, Gallipolis State lnslltute.
Mrs. W. Donald Galloway of
the Gallipolis Garden Club

opened ihe meellng. Naoho
tags decorawd with !lowers
and made by a member. were
dl1trlbuted . The gardener '•
pledge was recited and a poem,

Miss M11rte Meal ~nd Mrs.
Flore nee Trainer of the Frendt
City Gorden Club were In•
lroduced.
Miss
Meal
distributed song sheets and
"\'t1ur Garden," was read.
accompanied members while
songs were sung Including "In
a Garden," ··rtp-toc Through
t!Je Tulips," ''My Wild Irish
Rose" and "Chrysanthemum."
Flowers to be ldentllled were
shown. The variety included
begonia, lever-few, geranium·,
A clear and complete oulllne of rose, gl~Klosa daisy, aster,
what school exclusion Is and salvia, zinnia, marigold,
what It Isn't has also bee,n . dahlia, petunia, ageratum ,
made a part of the parents celosla, snapdragon and
guide, as well as sample letters others. Many of these are
and explicit procedures on grown In plots on the grounds.
each step of the enrollment A discussion followed, and lhe
services.
,
girls were complimented on
If you know of a handtcapped their tending various plols and
child who Is not In public receiving award ribbons at the
school, or il you are lhe parent judging held recently.
of a handicapped child (even il
Next, a flower game was
the school has already said played. Flower scrapbooks and
"No" to accepting your son or crayons were distributed.
daughl&lt;!r), you should write for
The hostess ·club served
a copy of "SI&lt;!p by Slep· - refreshments and awarded a
Getting Your Handicapped door prize which was shared by
Child in Schoob A G.ulde for all.
Parents." If you !)ave
Each member was given a
questions about the status of .piece of Joseph's Coat to take
your child, you are also urged to her cottage to r.oot. Progress
to contact Operation Childhunt. on this project is to be reported
Contact your local Junior at the next meeting.
Departrnent, West Virginia
Mrs. Garnet Wood of ocFederation of Women's Clubs cupational Therapy was in
or the West VIrginia atl&lt;!ndance.
Association lor Relarded
Children, 614 Union Trust
Building, Parkersburg, W. Va.
26101; or telephone 304-485.5283.
GALLIPOLIS - The Ambassadors Class of First
SAXBE'S VOTE
WAS)iiNGTON (UP!) -Sen . . Baptist Church recently held a
William Saxbe, R.Ohio, voted Canoe Party for lhe September
to delay acceleration of the outing. Following the canoe
Trident ·submarine missle ride down Raccoon freek the
System. The delay proposal group enjoyed an evening of
was defeated by a 4947 vow fellowship at the home of
associate pastor and Mrs.
'J:'llursday.
Sen. Robert Taft Jr., R.Ohio, Harry E. Cole, 1 Vine st. A
period of devolion was held
did not vote.
·with Paswr Cole leading ·the
groUp in the discussion of
family life. Following the
MORE TALKS SET
diSHOCfON, Ohio (UP!) - devotions refreshments were
Negotiations were W resume served by the hostess, Mrs.
Wednesday with a federal me- Cole to Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
diator sitting In with the strik- McDivitl, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
ing United Rubber Workers Marr, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Smith,
Local 50 and officials of lhe Mr. and Mrs. lloyd Danner,
and the host and hostess. The
Pretly Products Co.
The union struck the local next meeting will be Oc!Dber 13
plant und the warehouse at following the evangelistic
nearby Newcomerstown last crusade of Bill Compton and
Sunday midnight when the con- will be held In the fellowship
tract expired.
room of the church.
Thursday talks produced no
progress, It was reported.

Launch program
POINT PLEASANT - An
Intensive
one-month
"operation childhunt "
program will b1 launched
IDhlorrow, October 1, to locale
anC! ldenllfy handicapped
children who are nol currenUy
receiving an educational
program In the public school
system due to their physical or
mental disability. Sponsored
by the Junior Deparlrnent,
West VIrginia Federatjon of
Women's Clubs and the West
- Vlrglni!l Asso~latlon for
Re.tarded Children, Inc .,
"Operation Childhunt" will
concentraw on making lhe
general public a)l'are of .the
new provisions of West
VIrginia law thai require the
public schools to have all
handicapped children under
their aegis by .l'uly 1, 1974.
"Many parent.s still think
that the schools are not supposed to p~ovlde a free
education appropriate to the
needs of their handicapped
chlld,l' commented Mrs. Ellen
A. Brown, execullve director of
the West VIrginia Association
(or Retarded Children. "Bul
they're wrong, terribly and
tragically wrong," she added.
ll seema that many parents, as
well as educators and administrators themselves, are
unaware of the Mandatory
Education Bill that was passed
in 1969 by the WJst Virginia
legislation, to see to it·that ALL
handicapped ·children were
brought Into the mainstream of
• educational opportunity, and
their rights protected especially their rights to the
m~t basic of all American.
rlght.s - their rlght.s to ari
education. ·
An Informative guide for the
parents of such children who
are not now In public school has
been prepared which gives full
information on the steps the
parenla should take to see to It
• that their cblld Is properly
enrolled and placed In an
lppropriate learning situation.

Golden Rule Class meets

CHESHIRE - The Golden
GALLIPOLIS - The SepRule
Class of Old Kyger mel
tember Confet·ence or lhe Paint
Creek Sunday School teachers with Mrs. Edward Spears
for ils September
and officers met Thursday Thursday
meeting. .
evening at the home of Mr. and
The meeting was opened by
Mrs . ·James Robinson and
Wayne. Mrs. Dorothy Gordon the group singing ''Bringing In
led lhe devotions . Her subject The Sheaves." Mrs. Leona
wu "Live for olhets by giving Spires gave th.e opening
your service to God." She prayer . Scripture rrom
closed with a poem, "Just Proverbs 12 was read by Mrs:
Spears. Roll call was answered
Beyond the Shadows. "
groom. The columns held a
Mrs. Rosann Hollinshed gave by "What we need to do or
small cake decorated with
a report or the summer altend- would like lo do in the year to
doves and blue roses. Punch,
come." It was agreed by ali
tinted wedding bell mints and ance campaign. The Red leam
won and will be treated to an
nuts were served, Mrs. Russell
afternoon of . bow ling. Rally
Fellur~. aunt of the bride,
Day is being planned lor Oc-,
registered the guests.
Out-of-town guests were Wber 7. Rhonda Doss and
Mary Pullins, Jeanette Slone, Wayne Robinson were named
Jeff Hartenbach, Point chairpersons for lhe ThanksPleasant ; Mrs. Charles Bush giving program.
Educational feature for the
and Susan , Derl Oberlin ,
Logan; B. F. Houck, Ironton; evening was given by John
GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
Mr. and Mrs. Walt Stowers, Rippey . His subject was Citizens Center, located in the
Cheryl and Kevin, North "Peace." He read several Holzer Hospital Building,
Ridgeville; Mr. and Mrs . scripture verses from the Bible Cedar St. entrance is open
Joseph Hively and Lori, containing the word peace. The Monday through Friday from 9
Thurman; Mrs. Iva Sisson, meeting was closed by a.m. to 3 p.m. The schedule of
Rutlund; Mr. and Mrs. Dennis repeating Psalm 19:14. During evenls for this week is as
Zastrow, Sondra and Greg, · the social hour !!honda Doss follows :
Linda Sheets, Mr. and Mrs. conducted a Bible game, "Who · Monday, patchwork and
Keith Houck and Bruce, Am 11" The hostess served quilting, 9 a.m. - 3 p.m.
Dayton; Mrs. f'lorence Sheets, delicious refreshments. Mrs.
Tuesday, bread dough flower
Fairborn; Mrs. John Mitchell Hollinshed gave the vote of class, 1-3 p.m.
and Steve, Mr. and Mrs. Ted thanks.
Wednesday , make yarn,
Hanna and Bertha Hanna,
burlap and dough flowers, 1·3
Rodney.
p.m.
Lobsler 'f:hreatened
For a brief wedding trip, the
Thursday, make Chrislrnas
America 's delicious canni!ride changed to a two-piece
decorations,
1-3 p.m.
bal is in deep trouble . Over·
navy and while outfit with the fishing
Friday, work on crafts for
. increasing consumpcorsage from the cascade.
Bob
Evans Farms Festival 9
tion, and pollution so threaten
The new Mr. and Mrs. the true lob ster. Homaru s a.m. to 3 p.m. Senjor Citizens·
Americanus. that sdme biolo- wili have a booth at the
Rhode~ are at home to their
U.iends at 140\i! First Ave., gists predict demand will ex- Festival where they will sell
ceed supply by 1980.
Gallip&lt;!lis.
their articles.

GALLIPOLIS - The First
Chw-ch of G&lt;&gt;d, Garfield Ave.,
was the scene, August 11, al
6:30 pm., for the wedding of
Miss Deborah Lynn Houck,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Noah
Dale Houck, and William
Jeffrey Rhodes; son of Mr. and
Mrs. Delbert Hanna.
The double ring ceremony
was read by the Rev. C. P.
Conley, beneath an arch of
baby while carnations and
greenery: Nine-branch candelabra and standing baskets
of white carnations flanked the
arch. The family pews were
marked wllh while satin bows.
The !ride, given in marriage
by ber father, chose ~ white
gown of sheer orgll11l8 over
taffeta, styled with a subrince
neckline and loog camelot
sleeves. Venice lace accented
the bodice. Her mantilla
illusion veil fell from a crown
headdress, bordered in Venice
iace. Her only jewelry was a
pair of diamond earrings and a
diamond necklace, gifts from
the groom. She carried a
cascade of stephanotis, white
carnations and baby's breath
on a white Bible. •
An half bour of pre-nuptial
music was presented by Mrs.
John Jeffers. Soloist Tom
Kessel sang "A Time for Us."
Flower girl, Miss Cheryl
stowers, preceded lhe bride
BIDWELL - The BidweU
and ber father, down the white
United
Methodist Church
aisle l'UMer drowing pink rose
petals from a white lace Youth FeUowship is having a 16
basket. She w0re a light blue mile Walk-a-thon, October 20.
gown and a gold cross, given W The money will be donated to
the Galtia County Volunteer
her by the bride.
" During the ceremony. the . Emergency Squad. The group
bride and groom lighted the consists of 3li young people
single candle of unity and knelt beginning with age nine,
following lhe exchange of vows representing several local ,
while Kelisel sang "The Lord's churches including Bidwell,
Mt. Carmel, Ml. Olive, Clark
Prayer."
Miss Cathy Hall was maid of Chapel, White Oak, and
honor. She wore a light blue Calvary Baptist.
The youth who are divided
polyester gown trimmed in
i~to
junior and senior groups
while lace and carried a
nosegay of pink carnations and are combining their efforts in
white roses. Serving as brides-. order to make a success of the
maid was Miss Judy Ham- marathon. They will leave
mond, wbo wore a light blue BidweU Church at 9:30a.m. go
gown trimmed with white lace
on lhe bodice aud sleeves, and
BELVILLE AT DIX
carried a nosegay of pink
GALLIPOL!S Army
carnations and while roses. Private Olha R. Belville, 19,
Matron of honor was Mrs. son of Mrs. Ruth E. Caldwell,
Keith Houck, sister-in-law of Route 1, Gallipolis, completed
the bride. She wore a light blue eight weeks of basic training al
gown with white lace on the the U. S. Army Infantry
bodice and sleeves. She also Training Center at Ft. Dix, N.
carried a nosegay of pink J. Pvl. Belville's father, Otha
carnations and white roses. P. Belville, lives on Rout&lt;! 2
" Junior bridesmaids were Gallipolis.
cousins of the bride, Misses
Jelln and Jane Haner, attired
in light blue gowns with white
Since 1859
lace trim . Their nosegays were
of miniature pink carnations
and white rosebuds and .they
wore gold crosses, gifts from
the bride.
Keith Houck, brother of the
bride, served as best man.
Ushers were lillke Bush,
IK{It Et~IIOIU ~IGIII&amp;l(S
Russell Fellure, uncle of the
bride, Mike Allen and Gene
Everything
Brpwn. They wore blue
Guaranteed
tuxedos. 1\'laster Br~ce Houck,
nephew of the bride, served as
Satisfyringbearer. He carried lhe .
Or Mone Back
rings on a satin heart-shaped
pillow.
The bride's mother chose a
JANE PARKER
navy blue and white polyester
gown with white accessories.
She had a white cattelya orchid
conage. The mother of the
groom wore a light blue
polyelller gown with white
ICCt!IIIOrlea aud a white . cattleya jlrchld corsage.
A reception was held at the
home of lhe bride's parents,
Immediately following the
~y. Mra. Bob Saunders
.. d Mra. Larry Bet&amp; presided
It the llbll, L'lllllwed by a
th,.. ller cake topped by folD'
1IIIIM coiUJIIIIII ov.- a bride and

Prol'hctin~ . pomunder s und
tlryln~
flo"!crs, qulltln~.
kntttln~. enndle
muklng,

Class has meet

Blue Grass Music slated

The sun ·is 400 ,000 limes
brighter than a full moon.

GAWPOLIS - Bluegrass
Music returns to Gallla County
for the second time this season,
satw-day, October 6 at 8 p.m.
The show, slated for the
Gallla County fairgrounds, wUl
feature Forest Pelfrey, Dave
Sloa8 and the •Bluegrass Six,
the latter ·group having performe!\ together for over 20

years. Also on the bill are Conn
Sparks, Cline Blevins, the
Elliolt County Ramblers and
Gallia's own Bud Jolley and the
Hilltoppers.
Lots of good old time fiddling
and banjo picking are in store.
Admission will be $2 with
children under 12 free. A door
prize will be awarded.

!%Dr~Pill

DAN THOMA:.
AND SON

shoos

since 1936"

i Ohio

BETTER FOOTWEAR FOR THE FAMILY

SILVER BRIDGE
PLAZA

Shfil shops with a pu_rpose, and
she has an eye lor smart lashions

•

and smart buys.
Yes, aha 's really got it. In a tot
of ways; And that Includes Mas ter

Charge, the card sho uses to help
manage her mQney and keep track
of major purchases with one
Itemized mOnthly statement
If you've got It, you 've probably got
Master Charge, too. So ... use 111

Is

To

PUMPKIN

PIES

.I

THE COMMERCIAL &amp; SAVINGS
BANK OF GALLIPOLIS
.
PROUDLY ANNOUNCES THESE }JARTICIPATING '
MERCHANTS IN THEIR MASTER CHARGE PROGRAM
'

AMY'S
CENTRAL SUPPLY CO.
CLARK'S JEWELRY STORE
COUNTRY FARE
FULL HOUSE OF CARDS
THE HUB
G&amp;J AUTO PARTS CO.
THE KNIT MILLS STORE

MY SISTER'S CLOSET
PAUL DAVIES JEWELERS
RIO GRANDE COLLEGE BOOK STORE
BERNADINE'S INC.
CHILDER'S MUSIC CENTER
CARL'S FAMILY SHOE STORE
DAN THOMAS &amp; SON SHOE STORE
THE HASKINS-TANNER CO.

THE IDEAL GIFT &amp;
CARD SHOPPE
JACK &amp; JILL'S
MARCHI'S CARRY OUT
THE NEW STYLE CENTER'
PJ's
SUSIE'S GREENHOUSE
THOMAS CLOTHIERS

See
All
the
Arrangements
on
Display. Free Door
Prize and Refreshments.

SUSIE'S
GREENHOUSE
St.Rt.588
Ph. 446-4610

l~lans

D.

Report.s were received from
ollicers and committee
chairwomen. Programs lor lhe
coming year were completed
with· lhc annual Halloweefl&gt;
(UNICEF) party In October.
The November meeting will lle
the LCW thank oflering gifts
for synodical year In the
church sanctuary . and special
ptog,ram presenl&lt;!d. The LCW
will host the Christmas Tree
trimming night as in past years
with lhe congregation members sharing in this event and

:Emanon
dinner
held

n•mlin~ .
Th" ~r~ceti ng

dosed with the
LC'W bencditllon read in
"•' ivillcsarcci!IIIJ&gt;icted fur I he unison . Helreshmcnta were
Christmas advent season.
served by Mrs. Schul&lt; W Mrs.
All &lt;&gt;lhcr programs monthly Darrell Hall, Mrs. Willi•m
will be h"" lcd by I.&lt;:W mem- Knight and Mrs. Dale Rou~h .
bers lrom January to May, the
Sunshine cards were mailed
latter to be u potluck meeting recently to several LCW
with Mrs. William Knight, members, Mrs. Marie Knoll,
hosl&lt;!ss. Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Mrs. Kenneth Roush, and Mrs.
Hall and Mr. and Mrs. Knight Charles Oliver. Mrs. Darrell
will start a Junior and Senior Hull will serve as sunshine
high youth group lor fun and chairwoman lor the coming
fellowship at St. Peter's year 1973-74. LCW members,
Church today.
please let her know or memSummer acllvllles of the
church included District No. 11
spring retreat al Ce~ar Lakes
near Ripley; w. Va., atwnded
by Mrs. Frank Scholz, vacation
DIAMOND
crall school in August with the
pastor, John F, · Haeberle,
RINGS
superintenden t, assisted by
for THAT
other teachers. Thew. Va .-Pa.
synodical assembly was Sept.
SOMEONE
22-23 at Kappel Lodge, Pills·
SPECIAL
burgh, Pa., attended by Mrs.
Frank Scholz, Sl. Peter LCW
and Mrs. Kathryn Daily, W.
Va. synodical LCW chairwoman, the latter or Parkersburg, W. Va. Mrs. Scholz was
appointed relreal chairwoman
of District No. 11 for coming
year . Church social ministry
chairwoman, Mrs. Dale Roush,
NOCTURNE
announced "The Word In
14K White or Yellow Gold
Season" is being mailed year
pr ic ed from $1 00
around W the college student.s,
see this style and others armilitary church members, any
address clia nge should. be
TAWNEY
given to her for correct
JEWELERS
mailing. These are also taken
Ave .
Gallipolis
lo lhe Pleasant Valley Hospital

hers sick or hospiU.I p~tienl,, Several specia l church
highlights were menlloned
with details tor·thcomlng by the

Sic Peler's LutllerMn Chutch
Junl ... Council Mnd pastor John
F'. Haeberle lor the church
year .

l'cfi'I,•SiifuctiL'\ Nc i'Vt.'tl ufler the

GALLIPOLIS
The
Emanon Club held a farewell
dinner party for Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence J. Waugh, Sunday
evening allhe home of Mr. and
Mrs. M. Harold Brown.
Mr. and Mrs. Waugh left
'J'uesday to make their home in
Florida,
The party was also lhe annual dinner meeting at which
the members of the club entertain their husbands. There
were 32 members and guests
present.
The dinner was followed by
bridge and socializing. The
commitwe assisting Mr. and
Mrs. Brown included Mrs. Leo
Mossman, Mrs. Kenneth
Frazer, Mrs. Selwyn White,
Mrs. A. Kimball Suiter, Mrs.
Robert Sheets and Mrs. Hoyt
Mullins.
The next meeting of the club·
will be October 4 at the home of
Mrs. Robert Caldwell.

Second Avenu~ .

~,ii ·

asks.
Sophisticated junior?*
See Emily M and Junior House

Size 3-15

.

·~

*(A size not an age)

Use Our ' Lay .Away, BankAmericard or Master
Charge.

--- &amp;tc. ~

"The Store with More"
Gallipolis

Everyone's favorite
is the shirl·shape and
Crystal's 'gator ·
trimmed · sleek.
stitched·down
shirtdress is making
fashion news for fall
in camel doubleknits
of Dacron(r). 8·18.

$36•

OPEN MONDAY
9:30 TO 8:00

•':
:i'.

1\

L
CRYSTAL
David

Gallipolis,

•
•
Albany, N.Y.
Concord, N.H.
$2.05 '
$2.00
Dallas,Tex.
Amarillo, Tex.
. $2.10
$2.10
Denver, Colo.
Ann Arbor, Mich.
$1.60
$2.10
Des Moines, Iowa
Atlanta, Ga.
$2.05
$2.00
Austin, Tex.
Detroit, Mich.
$1.60
$2.10
Erie, Pa.
Bangor, Me.
$1.60
$2.05
Fort Wayne, Ind.
Birmingham, Ala.
$1.60
$2.00
Bismarck, N.Dak.
Fort Worth, Tex.
$2.10
$2.10
Grand Island, Nebr.
Boise, Idaho
$2.50
$2.10
Great Falls, Mont,
Boston, Mass.
. $2.50
$2.05
Green Bay, Wis.
Charleston, S.C.
$2.00
$2.00
Charleston,W. Va.
Hartford, Conn.
$1.60
$2.00 '
Hempstead, N.Y.
Charlotte, N.C.
$2.00
$2.00
Compton,Cali£
Houston, Tex.
$2.10
$2.60

Indianapolis, Ind.
$1.60
Kansas City, Mo.
$2.o5

PhiJadelphia, Pa. .
$2.00
Phoenix, Ariz.
$2.50
Pittsburgh, Pa.
$1.60
Pontiac, Mich.
$1.60
Portland, Oreg.
$2.60
St.Louis, Mo.
$2.00
Salt Lake City, Utah
'
$2.50 .
San Diego, Calif.
$2.60
San Francisco, Calif. ·
$2.60
Seattle,Wash.
$2.60,/ '
'
Trentoii, NJ.
. $2.00
·' Tulsa, Okla.
/

I

LaCrosse, Wis.
$2.00
LasVegas, Nev.
$2.50
Los Angeles, Cali£
$2.60
Louisville, Ky.
$2.00
Memphis, Tenn.
$2.05
Miami, Fla.
$2.10
MoWit Vernon, N.Y.
$2.00
Newark, N.J.
$2.00
New York, N.Y.
$2.00
Norfolk,Va.
/
$2.05
$2.00
'
Waterbury, Conn.
Norwich, Coqn:
$2.00 . ,
$2.00
Wayne,Pa.
Oakland, Cali£
$2.00
$2.60
/

•'

If you're

into camel's
hair and cashmere
classics, you need
a shoe lhat does more
than look the part. We
have this great Sebago
fashion In a wide range of
sizes Priced at

As you can see, even a
10-minute long distance
call is pretty inexpensive.
Provided you follow
a few simple guidelines.
Just dia1 your long
distance calls direct,

'18.99

'

r

COME OUT
TODAY!

POINT PI .EAMNT
Th&lt;•
St. PeU:r Lutheran Churrh
Women met Mondlly night at
Um lellowHhlp hall lor rirsl
meeting or the Iall season. Mrs.
Frank Scholz, president. wa• In
charge. She opened the
mccling wllh devotional
" Leadership Gifts .'' Corln-

anLI Lhi.' Mt•son Cuunty Jut! lo
llr tl!t&lt;'ti for dcvotiunul daily

·'

•

without operator
assistance. And dial them
between 5 and 11 PM.,
Sunday through Friday.
· (Rates are even lower

after 11 PM. and on
weekends.)
That's all it takes
to keep long distance
costs down.

@Ohio Bell
Use your phone for all it's worth.

Down so low that
instead of worryin~
about the cost, youll be
able to relax and enjoy
your long distance calls.
Even the 10-minute
ones.

D.ial-lt-younelf rates apply on out·of·state dio.led calls (without operator allistanCc) ftOJn mldtaet lad bull- phoaes 11117Wheftl
· lo the U.S. (cxetpt ltlo.ska and Hawaii) and on calls placed wlth an opemor whm direct dlali"' fadlllia ate DOt.a~able. Dlil-Jc-.,ouaelf -11o
to person-to·petson, coin, hotel81Jest, credit card, collect wil and oa calls ci"CJ i 10 a!!!!!lwiiWIIber.

lilt-

•

-··

�•

I

•

Craftsmen will

Expresses appreciation
WORTHINGTON - The
shower o! cards !lent to Mrs.
•'Iorence (ROlle) Saunders
Houck, on her 91.nd birthday,
September 21, was most ap.
preclated by Mrs. Houck, her
sisters Elva Wolfe, and Daisy
Maxwell, and her niece, Bea
Pierce.
Nearly 50 cards, many
coolalnlng personal notes and
letters , and !lever a! glfta of
nowers, and other remem•
brances arrived at 1M Norworth Convalescent Center,
8830 N. High St., Worthington,
43085, where Mrs. Houdl, a
former resident ol Kanauga, is
now residing. Mrs. Houck
.ends ber personal thane to

show off skills
ATHENS - The Traditional
American Arts and Crafts Day
from 1-4 and IHl p.m. Friday,
Oct. 5 at the Athens County
Fairgrounds will feature local
craftsmen demonstrating their
skills. Mrs. Effie Grate and
Mrs. Vivian Tope, both from
the
Wilkesville
Jolly
Homemakers Club (Vinton
County 1will be demonatrating
cutwork and needlepoint, just
two of the many crafts being
featured.
•
Mrs. · Effle Grate started
MRS. EFFIE GRATE
doing cutwork around 1930
when it became a lad, much as
PAPERS FILED
· crocheting has become popular
DIVORCE ASKED
COLUMBUS - Articles of reeently. CUtworkoriginated In
GALLIPOUS - Charging incorporation have been filed · Italy, somewhere around the
gross neglect of duty' and ex- in Columbus with Secretary of 16th century. Most of the
treme cruelty, Janice Sue State Ted W. Brown by Cen- stitches still have Italian
CaldweU, Rt. 2, Crown City, terpoint Free Will Baptist names. Mrs. Grate credits its
Friday filed a divorce petition Church , Inc., Perry Twp., popularity to its individual
in Gallia County Common Gallia County. Elmer Hill, style and delicate beauty.
Pleas Cow-t against Mervin Walter Lambert and Eddie
How is cutwork done? "It's
Dale Caldweu; same address. Price are the incorporators. · embroidery on very fine,
They were married Feb. 271 Warren F. Sheet,! of Gallipolis closely woven linen," Mrs ..
1971 and have no children.
Grate told us. "Thrl pattern is
is the general agent.
stamped on the linen, then
worked In a buttonhole stitch.
Special embroidery Doss and
an embroidery needle are used
to create the stitches while the
linen is stretched tight with a
hoop."
Then comes the hard paft.
"The design is then cut out
Inside the stitches using small,
very sharp etllbroidery
·scissors. There are also special
curved scissors made just for
cutwork. But if you cut even
one th read of the emlroidery,
the whole design is ruined,"
smiles Mrs. Grate.
Mrs. Grate has completec!
over 50 pieces of cutwork,
mostly pillowcases and doilies.
Sle has given most of her work
away.
"CUtwork is .rare these dal'S
because it's so tedious. it tat.&gt;
a long time to complete even a
small piece. Long ago It ns
quite common ; pioneer women
even made tablecloths from
cutwork, It required long how-s
to do the many small squares
needed to make something as
big as a tablecloth, but they

el2 YEAR WARRANTY
el5 PLY SOUNDBOARD
e3 PEDAL
~EPt..A
.
,..o All .,c:·PRICES

were once popular,'' said Mrs.

Athens. conducted by the
Cooperativtt Extension Service. "Pat taught us how to do
the otltches right," ~d Mrs.
Tope.
Needlepoint is done on
special types of ~anvas using
needlepoint yarn . A half·
crosstitch is used to create the
designs . Needlepoint
originated in Ew-ope arou.~d
the 16th centw-y. It was extremely popular during
Colonial times when It was
used to" create pictures and
decorate upholstery and accessories. It has enjoyed a
revival in recent years and is
now becoming more common.
"I've done 5or 6pictqres and
helped teach a few classes,"
said Mrs. Tope of her experiences with needlepoint. "I
like to do it because it's
relaxing, and it's fun."
Both Mrs. Grate and Mrs.
Tope, as well as all oW' other
cr aftsmen, would be very
happy to tell you more about
their crafts as they demonstrate them at the Traditional
American Arts and Crafta Day,
Frldlly, Odober ~.

••l't

the

'

•

OHIO'S FABULOUS DISCOUNTERS!
SUNDAY HOUR.S: NOON TO 8 P.M.

137 PINE ST.-GALLIPOLIS
700 W. MAIN ST.-POMEROY

'Mr. and Mrs. Myron S. Franckowiak - - - - -

'
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED-.- Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth bnboden, Middleport, are announcing the engagement
and approaching marriage ol their daughter, Peggy L., to
Robert Lewis, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lewis; Sr.,
Middleport. The bride-&lt;!lect Is a senior at Meigs High School
and Ia employed at Krogers ln Pomeroy. Her fiance is a 1970
graduate of Meiga High School and is employed at Imperial
Electric. Wedding plans are Incomplete.

...

1/

'

i

"

,, .

,.
,r
REV. WILCOX

TV pastor to

.,.,

lead revival

BRUNICARDI

LOAN

....

WE'RE

NOW

,,..•

·LB. ·

'(

JONES BOYS

8 TRACK STEREO

HOMOGENIZED
,

TAPES

.·

MIL'K
.21 $ 01

ROCK AND COUNTRY

88

+,

HALF GALLON
CARTONS

EACH

I,

'•

GREAT LAKES

3 TIER

CHARCOAL

UTILITY tABLE

WHILE IT LASTS

...'
.,

•WHITE ENAMEL

10-LB. BAG

• UL ELEC. OUTLET

s 99.
EACH

• t' •

I

''

..

r,

"

carnival date

COM~Ufii.DED. QUARTERLY -

ASK US AlllUT
TilE HIGH£$T YIElD
PAID ON SAVINGS
· CERnfiCATES
IN THIS AREA

RETROACTIVE TO iULY 1, 1973

. EQUALS ANNUAL .
YIELD OF ••

•

THE GALLIPOLIS SAV-IN·GS
and LOAN COMPAN-Y
'WE SAVIIIC$ SlNC£

•'

'

")

REEDSVILLE
The
RiverviewSchool Carnival w!U
be held Satw-day, Oct. 6 at the
Riverview Elemenlary School
slarting with dinner at 5 p.m.
and .outdoor games at 5: 30.
The indoor carnival will
begin at 7 p.m. There w!U be
tractor rides, pony rides,
bingo, auctio~ , door prizes,
home baked .goods, country
store, games, and music by the
"Spectrum Four" (in the
fourth and fifth grade room) ,
and other attr,cUona.
Everyone Is w-ged to attend
in support of their school.
All Roods Lead ...
In Alaska's capital , automobfles literall y are for " town
drivi ng.·· No roads lead into
or out of Junea u. The city ia
connected with the rest of the
world bv its airport and seaport.
•

&lt;,

·,
..

.'

Riverview sets

ON PASSBOOK SAVINGS ·

lo

.

P AYIN.:..:::G~=t.

co.

'
t

in Gallipolis

GALLIPOLIS
SAVINGS

')

FRENCH CITY BRAND

~o~:~=~~

j

t

Miss Nieri is bride
ofMr. Franckowiak

Miss Peggy L. Imboden

PARENTS'

WITH
PADDED BENDt

In 1963, Earl Warren was
appointed chief juatice ol the
United States.

I

Grate.
Mrs. Grate, whose husband
is a retired farmer, likes to do
*-~ .,~,.
~.,.
an y kind of craft work. "I do it
Iii ~V
TO
~If\
as a p_astime; it's relaxing. I
·q.
CONSUMER BY,., ~
just like to do it ! It 's fun !" she
GALLIPOLIS - The Rev.
said. "Besides," she told us Willard Wilcox, minister of the
more quietly, "it keeps me television program "The
MAGAZIN E
·
from eating !"
Lower Lighthouse" channel 13,
~
If. PRODUCT
.
HunUngton, will be ,with the
~.. OR PERFORMANCE
"1 .t arted doing needlepoint First Church of God, 109
'lo,'\o IS DEFECTIVE &amp;
..t" "' I 1938," said Mrs. Vtvian Garfield Ave., Gallipolij, in a
·r learned from a friend series of evangelistic meetings
&lt;
umbus. I ftnished my beginning Wednesday, Oct. 3,
11 •t ~~ ctw-e in the early '40's"
and continuing through Sunday
"But it wasn't until . fow- evening, October 7, slartlng at
years ~go thatl lo~~ out I was 7:30 each evening.
domg tt all wrong .
Rev . Wilcox receiving his
Mrs. Tope learned the , B.A. degree from Asbury
correct . method of doing College, Wilmore, Ky. and ·his
HOUSE OF .MUSIC
needlepotnt from Miss Pat Master of Divinity degree from
Glass,
Area Ext. Agent, Ho~e Asbury Theological Seminary
54 Slale·SI.
Ph. 446-0687
Gallipolis
Ec., during a special class to of the same city.
In his ministerial career he
has pastored in Kentucky, Ohio
and Florida. For" the past 15
years he has carried the
program "The Lower Lighthouse" on TV. In conjunction
with the television ministry he
aerves as speaker for church'
revivals, clty·wide meetings,
area crusades and campmeetings, He makes Ashland,
Ky. ho111e for himself, his wife
and two daughters.
The pastor of First Chw-ch,
C. P. Conley; will preach
Monday and Tuesday evenings
'=~
AND .
October 1st and 2nd. The
churc h choir and special
singers will present a good
program of gospel music each
evening.
The First Church Invites the
public, said Pastor C. P.
Conley.

OMITTED

''

SEASIDE

CLEARANCE

LADIES PLASTIC

UMBRELLAS
INCLUDES BUBBLE TYPE

(DARK)

KIDNEY ·
BEANS

6
I

'l

QUAKER STATE

,)

1

l

SUPER 'BLEND

,l

MOTOR OIL

.,
I •

•
Lath0 l"C women meet
/1

GALLIPOLIS - The Sepiember meeting of the Catholic
Woman's Club of St. Louis
Church was opened by the
president, Mrs. Saundra Koby,
Monday evening, September
17, at 7:30p.m.
Newcomers welcomed were
Mrs. Mary Jo Johnson, Mrs.
Diane Bittner, Mrs. Gisela
Alonzo, Mrs. Pat Saunders,
Mrs. Mary Lou Fontecchio,
Mrs. Jonnie Gabrieill and Mrs.
MeUnda Donnellan.
A brief business meeUng was
held, with discuaaion centering
on money-making projects for
tile Blahop's Fund. II was
decided to holil a rummage
sale In the church basement
Friday, Oct. 5, from 7 to 9 p.m.-,
and on Saturday, October 6,
from 10 a.m. 10 ·5 p.m. to raise
the money for ihla fund .
AU church · members are
asked to bring their rummage,
empty sacka and hangers to the
church basement anytime ,
Friday, Oct. 5.
Mrs. Koby announced a
change In the board members
and the new committee
chairwomen. They are Mrs.
Martha Roderick succeeds
Mrs. Sandy Mazzuca, who has
resigned, a.s vice president;
phone committee chairwoman,
Mrs. Mary Lou Fontecchlo;
church committee service
chairwoman . (Includes
vlailatlon d. sick and elderly
and welcoming of newcomers),
Mrs. Cindy Young; community
and civic chairwoman (in·
eludes aertlce to GSI), not yet
announced; altar services
committee chairwoman, Mrs.
Judy Bloomer; famlly affalrll
committee chairwoman (includes retreata), Mrs. Bobbie
Zaldaln; International affairs
committee chairwoman (In·
eludes working with Church
Women United), Mrs. Mary
· Mulato.
Thoee Interested In serving
on any of theae committees
should contact 1M chairwoman

.

or Mrs. Koby.
Mrs. Gretchen Carty announced that dues are payable
at any time and should be sent
1o her.
Refreshments were served
by the board ·members (who
were in charge of this
meeUng ), before Mrs. Koby
began her .demonstration on
how to ·preserve summer
flowers for fall arrangements.
The next meeting will be
Monday, .October 15, and will
be handled bY, the International
Affairs Committee. The time
will be changed to 7:45p.m.
IH.o:«···~._v.~···&lt;:.······.-.-_.·.-..;.·······x•"-"'b."-"'•"•'•'•"o:.-::

~1-.t•'• .

or Mr•. Ray

name Ia jloiYII'•ph.
c,

.

·'

.., . ........, ................ ••••••••... ........·,y~.~-~·

~

•

.~

Addison ladies

Wanda Morris ond f•miiJ,
•ending gifts; Mrs. Joyce
Young, aa hosteu.
Jacob's Ladder in Christian
.art symbolizes the reunitl n1
of earth and heaven throu1h
Christ.

enjoy meeting

ADDISON - The AddisOn F•
W-B Ladles Aid held their
meeUng at the church Wednesday evening, Sept. 26.
In the absence of the
president and vice president,
secretary Shirley Martin
called the meeting to order.
. MarY Barcus was elected
president pro-tem for the
evening.
Mrs. Barcus called on Effie
Martin for the opening prayer . .
Secretary and treas~ r er
reports were read and ac·
cepted with 17 members answering roil call.
Nancy Taylor, Eva Gardner
and Dawn Martin won door
prizes.
Effie Martin, program
director, gave a Bible quiz with
Mary Barcus and Loretta
Clark winning the prizes.
Eva Gardner closed the
meeting with prayer.

MIDDLEPORT - Miss and Fred Dotzel, Wilkes-Barre,
Remalee Anne Nierl, dalll!hter Pa.
of. Mrs. Dorothy Nieri Rife,
For her daughter's wedding,
Middleport, and Myron S. Mrs. Rife wore a turquoise
Franckowiak, son of Mr . and gown of polyester and chiffon
Mrs. Matthew W. Fran- with white accessories, and a
5
5
ckowiak, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., corsage of sweetheart roses
exchanged wedding vows at a Unted to match her dress. The
Mi sses , Ha lf Size.s
Nuptial High Mass In St. groom's mother wore a pink
Joseph's Monastery, Wilkes- polyester and chiffon gown
Barre June 30 at 10 a.m.
with white accessories and a
The double ring ceremony pink sweetheart rose corsage.
· Main at Sycamore
wassolemnizedbytheRev. Fr.
Guests were regist.red by
POMEROY, OHIO
Neal Patton before an allar Miss Mary Ellen Franckowiak,
decorated with vases of white sister o! the groom.
gladioli and pink carnations. A For the procession of the
half-hour of nuptial music bridal party to the Cozy K.
preceded the meeting.
· Lounge where a dinner and
Given in marriage by her dance was held from 12 noon
mother, the bride was attired until 5 p.m., the cars were
in a gown ol silk organza and de cora ted
with
white
venice lace. II was fashioned streamers. Three white doves
with a high neckline, cap adorned the hood of the car
sleeves, and a full A-line skirt transporting the newlyweds. It
which fell Into a chapel train was driven by Paul Rollman,
edged in lace. The chapel Wilkes-Barre. Drivers of the
length veil of silk illusion was bridesmaids and mothers' cars
!rimmed with Venice lace and were . George Zaleski; Scranlell from a pillbox hat. The ton, Pa.; Gene Basham and
bride carried a bouquet of pink Louie Werniez, Wilkes-Barre.
sweetheart roses sw-rounded
The dinner · and dance was
by daisies and baby's breath. followed by a garden party at
Mrs. Zits Shuford served as the home of the groom's
matron of honor lor her sister, parents.
and Miss Tina · Marie Nlerl,
For her wedding trip to the
also a sister, was the maid of Pocono Mountains, the bride
honor. Bridesmaids were Miss wore a navy and white
· Heavy Gauge PlasticSandy Johnson, Middleport polkadot dress with white
and Miss Vickie Cassady, accessories and a corsage of
Colorful Plaids
Columbus, Their gowns were pink sweetheart roses.
Identically fashioned with
The couple. is residing in
draped necklines, lull cap Owensboro, Ky ., where
sleeves, gored skirts of chiffon Franckowiak is in the Coast
In pink, blue, yellow and mint Guard. Their address Is 2552
green. They wore picture hats, Apollo Ct., Apt. No. 1, Owensgloves, and shoes to match boro, Ky.
.
their gowns and carried
Out of town guests were Miss
bouquets of tinted daisies Sandy Johnson, Miss Teresa
matching their gowns. Each Casci, Middleport; Mr. and
one also wore a teardrop pearl Mrs . Charles Cassady,
necklace, gift from the bride. Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. W. A.
Matthew Franckowiak Yurke , Mr. and Mrs. Bill r----~~~~~~=-=-='~"'!'::-"'----,:
served as best man for his Ferrell, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew
brother, and the ushers were Zaleski, George Zaleski, Mark
Mark Zaleski, Scranton, Pa., Zaleski, all of Scra~ton, Pa.;
Makes IP ·
pllonces easy
to roll lor
clunlng or
moving.
Regular $1.57.

I

GALLIPOUS - Mr. and
Mrs. Larry M. Cox (Linda
Gardner), Eureka Star Rt., are
announcing the birth of their
first child, a daughter,
Satw-day, Sept. 22, at 8:34 p.ll).
Amanda Diane was born at the
Holzer Medical Center and
weighed 5 lbs., 121'1 ozs ,
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. George L. Gardner, Cheshire. Maternal greatgrandmother is Mrs. Harrison
N. Scott, South Zanesville.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Franklin (Pete) Cox,
Crown City.

ADDISON . - The Addison
United Methodist Women met
recently ai the home of Mrs.
Marvlr&gt; Glndlesberger with 13
adults and three children
present.
Mrs. Joe Drwnmond opened
the meetlnl with Mrs. Ray
Hughel giving the. aecretary's
report and· Mrs. Larry Hood
the lreaaurer's report. The
group discussed ways of
making money and agreed that
each member would make a
piedce to the, organization. A
donation will be sent to the
UMW World MlaiOIII. The
current slate of officers was
relalned.
AI · the next meeting Mrl.
Charla Shaver will bring the
my1tery packaae, with
procuill from the 1iale to ao to
the IOCiety,
At the clDH or the meeting, a
baby ~ower honortd Mr•· BID
Beell•· Refreahmenla, In·.
cludlnl a dec«ated cake, were

Tba lie d•tector'' ~tehnlcal

"

i~

UMWhas
meeting

at the borne
Hughll.

'LIMIT 6 QTS.

&lt;j

New ~e
IAmvals

eervtd.
Till Octaber meeUnl wiD be

CANS

·

Miss ThereSa Marglncage, Mr.
and Mrs. James Mlllham,
Mountaintop, Pa.; Mr . and
Mrs. Matthew Franckowiak,
Jr., Oliver Mills, Pa.; Mr. and
Mrs . Harold Lenahan,
Nuongola, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Bunslck, Mr. arid Mrs.
Paul Z8leskl, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Zaleski, Mrs. Richard Zaleski,
Parlin, Pa.; Mrs. Victoria
Bojar, Cataret, N. J. ; Mr. and.
Mrs. Steve Lukaslcek, Calaret,
N.J.; Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bojar,
Perth Amboy, N. J.; Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Wisniewski, Perth
Amboy, N. J.; Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Marchlnak, Woodbridge, N. J.: Mr. 811!1 Mrs.
RalphMocaln, Wlndaor, N. Y.;
Mrs . Betty Franckowiak,
Niagara Falls, N. Y.; Mr. and
Mrs. Clem Franckowiak, Inkster, Mich.

GALLIPOLIS - Omitted
from the report of the shower
each and every friend and for Miss Judy Young wve Mrs.
neighbor who so thoughtuRly Ella Burdell, attending; Mrs.
Ernestine Smith, Mrs. K.&amp;y
remembered her birthday.
Ervin, Mrs. Lois Stout and
Christy, Mr: and Mrs. Howard
H~tcher, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Elkins and Larry Jr., Mrs.

Chapman's Is Announcing

The Arrival of a New Line •••

,. -

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

l' ·

;

~

~. ' ~.

......... ' •'

~~.

.,.

THE

CLINIC

, . . ... ._. ..01

~

I Olf 1:11'' I

;.woo- -

Ill

~

lA

BUDGET
DRESSES
10 to 15

'

CHAPMAN'S '

lOLA'S

SHOES

. -.

96

On~!

SUNDAY
1 PM

ll

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

"'
In

... .

"'
"'

"

llbtt bMtd on lttlt 1"'«1dld to lllnilltlt home uno• under flt o utn tl ~ encou llltred cond!tlon1
and 11 tn tttctrlc l'llt ol3 W ill otr ~!lowatt ~r. Tut proetdurtt ,..,, adapttd trom .t.NSt
Sl8ndlfd 8 ·:11, Section t.l, wllh COI\IIOIIIItlng lo 11111/'0ieh 0" tfOf lrttrtrl t nd 31' trtftl61f'ttol'),

Aetu i!U¥Ifl01 ftll~ W
ltY beNd llpoti i0CIIti1Cifltftlll 1 cll llllllltl tondlll0111 tnd lndl'tldull UUQt.

Cam~lllt llll c~et~•rllllb!t uponj'"~r======::..__ _ _ _ __ ,

18.5 cu.lt. capacity Sh:le-by-Slde

ONLY 30" WIDE

.....................
llodll AT111811
ol ,.._ foodo

.

• No Frolt eyalem t1hnlnaltt dtfroatlna
• Automl11c lot Mtklr
• New S..Thru Clln dltPinHr, utility bin,

2 Plck-OtiiCIIIiliable olltl- In

lttthr-

PLASTIC
TUMBLERS

RAINBOW
RUG

Valued .to 19' - ·

¢

2

4

79

Each

'

Sunday On~!

111 ••• IIJ No PrMh&amp;lotfiJJ 1 r wl1ll

tor,_,

4 .................... • Ntw Quick COld control

111lrlgeretor cool.ctown
• loo- Ttuu bUlltr kHpor, Plck-Otl
tGO trNot
.

• 2 ICIIuolobltl Pick-Off ol\ol¥01 In
,.lrlgorolol door

SUNDAY ONLY
Entire Stock of
Flare Leg
'

BOYS PANTS
07_ off OUR LOW

0

/(

DISCOUNT
PRICES

·Regulars and slims . Size 6 to 11 .
Regular Values to $4.94. Many .
Fabrics &amp; colon.

Teens and

Entire
Fall
Stock!

FWE. Ull, OU FU Ull

IILO.S..fiLIEI1IIS-IIIT»

$ 00 OFF

PLASTIC TABLECLOTHS
Heavy Gauge
Quilted Plastic
Everyday Values to 1211

Size
52 X 52
and

52 X 70

Early Sunday ShoppeiS Bonus!

SWEATER DRYER
Mad&amp; of Nylon Mash on

covered vinyl frame .
Won't Rust
SmtiiLot

FOREMAN &amp; AB
•-------------.--=:- _______..
MIDDLEPORT, O.

A

•t•
Value

25~

,.

Visit Your
NHrest Slortl

5 HOURS -SUNDAY 1 P.M •.to 6 P.M.

Size 24"x45"

'..

"6PM

*COMPARE AND SAVE
l7
it

.".. ,.

..

TO

SUNDAY ONL
Regular 1147
ReveiSible

.. l

'
STOtES ·.
OPEN

The Regular,
Price

Given Away Value!
9 ounce

-~l-~-·

ALL 3 .,.

30
7.7¢
4

'

POMERO'I
~

WOMENS DRESS
MENS SUIT
TRAV.EL
BAGS

''•··

MAIN ST.

SUNDAY ONLY

or.

..

Pt. PlEASAIIT • MASOII • SlV£1 • • PlAJA

�•

I

•

Craftsmen will

Expresses appreciation
WORTHINGTON - The
shower o! cards !lent to Mrs.
•'Iorence (ROlle) Saunders
Houck, on her 91.nd birthday,
September 21, was most ap.
preclated by Mrs. Houck, her
sisters Elva Wolfe, and Daisy
Maxwell, and her niece, Bea
Pierce.
Nearly 50 cards, many
coolalnlng personal notes and
letters , and !lever a! glfta of
nowers, and other remem•
brances arrived at 1M Norworth Convalescent Center,
8830 N. High St., Worthington,
43085, where Mrs. Houdl, a
former resident ol Kanauga, is
now residing. Mrs. Houck
.ends ber personal thane to

show off skills
ATHENS - The Traditional
American Arts and Crafts Day
from 1-4 and IHl p.m. Friday,
Oct. 5 at the Athens County
Fairgrounds will feature local
craftsmen demonstrating their
skills. Mrs. Effie Grate and
Mrs. Vivian Tope, both from
the
Wilkesville
Jolly
Homemakers Club (Vinton
County 1will be demonatrating
cutwork and needlepoint, just
two of the many crafts being
featured.
•
Mrs. · Effle Grate started
MRS. EFFIE GRATE
doing cutwork around 1930
when it became a lad, much as
PAPERS FILED
· crocheting has become popular
DIVORCE ASKED
COLUMBUS - Articles of reeently. CUtworkoriginated In
GALLIPOUS - Charging incorporation have been filed · Italy, somewhere around the
gross neglect of duty' and ex- in Columbus with Secretary of 16th century. Most of the
treme cruelty, Janice Sue State Ted W. Brown by Cen- stitches still have Italian
CaldweU, Rt. 2, Crown City, terpoint Free Will Baptist names. Mrs. Grate credits its
Friday filed a divorce petition Church , Inc., Perry Twp., popularity to its individual
in Gallia County Common Gallia County. Elmer Hill, style and delicate beauty.
Pleas Cow-t against Mervin Walter Lambert and Eddie
How is cutwork done? "It's
Dale Caldweu; same address. Price are the incorporators. · embroidery on very fine,
They were married Feb. 271 Warren F. Sheet,! of Gallipolis closely woven linen," Mrs ..
1971 and have no children.
Grate told us. "Thrl pattern is
is the general agent.
stamped on the linen, then
worked In a buttonhole stitch.
Special embroidery Doss and
an embroidery needle are used
to create the stitches while the
linen is stretched tight with a
hoop."
Then comes the hard paft.
"The design is then cut out
Inside the stitches using small,
very sharp etllbroidery
·scissors. There are also special
curved scissors made just for
cutwork. But if you cut even
one th read of the emlroidery,
the whole design is ruined,"
smiles Mrs. Grate.
Mrs. Grate has completec!
over 50 pieces of cutwork,
mostly pillowcases and doilies.
Sle has given most of her work
away.
"CUtwork is .rare these dal'S
because it's so tedious. it tat.&gt;
a long time to complete even a
small piece. Long ago It ns
quite common ; pioneer women
even made tablecloths from
cutwork, It required long how-s
to do the many small squares
needed to make something as
big as a tablecloth, but they

el2 YEAR WARRANTY
el5 PLY SOUNDBOARD
e3 PEDAL
~EPt..A
.
,..o All .,c:·PRICES

were once popular,'' said Mrs.

Athens. conducted by the
Cooperativtt Extension Service. "Pat taught us how to do
the otltches right," ~d Mrs.
Tope.
Needlepoint is done on
special types of ~anvas using
needlepoint yarn . A half·
crosstitch is used to create the
designs . Needlepoint
originated in Ew-ope arou.~d
the 16th centw-y. It was extremely popular during
Colonial times when It was
used to" create pictures and
decorate upholstery and accessories. It has enjoyed a
revival in recent years and is
now becoming more common.
"I've done 5or 6pictqres and
helped teach a few classes,"
said Mrs. Tope of her experiences with needlepoint. "I
like to do it because it's
relaxing, and it's fun."
Both Mrs. Grate and Mrs.
Tope, as well as all oW' other
cr aftsmen, would be very
happy to tell you more about
their crafts as they demonstrate them at the Traditional
American Arts and Crafta Day,
Frldlly, Odober ~.

••l't

the

'

•

OHIO'S FABULOUS DISCOUNTERS!
SUNDAY HOUR.S: NOON TO 8 P.M.

137 PINE ST.-GALLIPOLIS
700 W. MAIN ST.-POMEROY

'Mr. and Mrs. Myron S. Franckowiak - - - - -

'
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED-.- Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth bnboden, Middleport, are announcing the engagement
and approaching marriage ol their daughter, Peggy L., to
Robert Lewis, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lewis; Sr.,
Middleport. The bride-&lt;!lect Is a senior at Meigs High School
and Ia employed at Krogers ln Pomeroy. Her fiance is a 1970
graduate of Meiga High School and is employed at Imperial
Electric. Wedding plans are Incomplete.

...

1/

'

i

"

,, .

,.
,r
REV. WILCOX

TV pastor to

.,.,

lead revival

BRUNICARDI

LOAN

....

WE'RE

NOW

,,..•

·LB. ·

'(

JONES BOYS

8 TRACK STEREO

HOMOGENIZED
,

TAPES

.·

MIL'K
.21 $ 01

ROCK AND COUNTRY

88

+,

HALF GALLON
CARTONS

EACH

I,

'•

GREAT LAKES

3 TIER

CHARCOAL

UTILITY tABLE

WHILE IT LASTS

...'
.,

•WHITE ENAMEL

10-LB. BAG

• UL ELEC. OUTLET

s 99.
EACH

• t' •

I

''

..

r,

"

carnival date

COM~Ufii.DED. QUARTERLY -

ASK US AlllUT
TilE HIGH£$T YIElD
PAID ON SAVINGS
· CERnfiCATES
IN THIS AREA

RETROACTIVE TO iULY 1, 1973

. EQUALS ANNUAL .
YIELD OF ••

•

THE GALLIPOLIS SAV-IN·GS
and LOAN COMPAN-Y
'WE SAVIIIC$ SlNC£

•'

'

")

REEDSVILLE
The
RiverviewSchool Carnival w!U
be held Satw-day, Oct. 6 at the
Riverview Elemenlary School
slarting with dinner at 5 p.m.
and .outdoor games at 5: 30.
The indoor carnival will
begin at 7 p.m. There w!U be
tractor rides, pony rides,
bingo, auctio~ , door prizes,
home baked .goods, country
store, games, and music by the
"Spectrum Four" (in the
fourth and fifth grade room) ,
and other attr,cUona.
Everyone Is w-ged to attend
in support of their school.
All Roods Lead ...
In Alaska's capital , automobfles literall y are for " town
drivi ng.·· No roads lead into
or out of Junea u. The city ia
connected with the rest of the
world bv its airport and seaport.
•

&lt;,

·,
..

.'

Riverview sets

ON PASSBOOK SAVINGS ·

lo

.

P AYIN.:..:::G~=t.

co.

'
t

in Gallipolis

GALLIPOLIS
SAVINGS

')

FRENCH CITY BRAND

~o~:~=~~

j

t

Miss Nieri is bride
ofMr. Franckowiak

Miss Peggy L. Imboden

PARENTS'

WITH
PADDED BENDt

In 1963, Earl Warren was
appointed chief juatice ol the
United States.

I

Grate.
Mrs. Grate, whose husband
is a retired farmer, likes to do
*-~ .,~,.
~.,.
an y kind of craft work. "I do it
Iii ~V
TO
~If\
as a p_astime; it's relaxing. I
·q.
CONSUMER BY,., ~
just like to do it ! It 's fun !" she
GALLIPOLIS - The Rev.
said. "Besides," she told us Willard Wilcox, minister of the
more quietly, "it keeps me television program "The
MAGAZIN E
·
from eating !"
Lower Lighthouse" channel 13,
~
If. PRODUCT
.
HunUngton, will be ,with the
~.. OR PERFORMANCE
"1 .t arted doing needlepoint First Church of God, 109
'lo,'\o IS DEFECTIVE &amp;
..t" "' I 1938," said Mrs. Vtvian Garfield Ave., Gallipolij, in a
·r learned from a friend series of evangelistic meetings
&lt;
umbus. I ftnished my beginning Wednesday, Oct. 3,
11 •t ~~ ctw-e in the early '40's"
and continuing through Sunday
"But it wasn't until . fow- evening, October 7, slartlng at
years ~go thatl lo~~ out I was 7:30 each evening.
domg tt all wrong .
Rev . Wilcox receiving his
Mrs. Tope learned the , B.A. degree from Asbury
correct . method of doing College, Wilmore, Ky. and ·his
HOUSE OF .MUSIC
needlepotnt from Miss Pat Master of Divinity degree from
Glass,
Area Ext. Agent, Ho~e Asbury Theological Seminary
54 Slale·SI.
Ph. 446-0687
Gallipolis
Ec., during a special class to of the same city.
In his ministerial career he
has pastored in Kentucky, Ohio
and Florida. For" the past 15
years he has carried the
program "The Lower Lighthouse" on TV. In conjunction
with the television ministry he
aerves as speaker for church'
revivals, clty·wide meetings,
area crusades and campmeetings, He makes Ashland,
Ky. ho111e for himself, his wife
and two daughters.
The pastor of First Chw-ch,
C. P. Conley; will preach
Monday and Tuesday evenings
'=~
AND .
October 1st and 2nd. The
churc h choir and special
singers will present a good
program of gospel music each
evening.
The First Church Invites the
public, said Pastor C. P.
Conley.

OMITTED

''

SEASIDE

CLEARANCE

LADIES PLASTIC

UMBRELLAS
INCLUDES BUBBLE TYPE

(DARK)

KIDNEY ·
BEANS

6
I

'l

QUAKER STATE

,)

1

l

SUPER 'BLEND

,l

MOTOR OIL

.,
I •

•
Lath0 l"C women meet
/1

GALLIPOLIS - The Sepiember meeting of the Catholic
Woman's Club of St. Louis
Church was opened by the
president, Mrs. Saundra Koby,
Monday evening, September
17, at 7:30p.m.
Newcomers welcomed were
Mrs. Mary Jo Johnson, Mrs.
Diane Bittner, Mrs. Gisela
Alonzo, Mrs. Pat Saunders,
Mrs. Mary Lou Fontecchio,
Mrs. Jonnie Gabrieill and Mrs.
MeUnda Donnellan.
A brief business meeUng was
held, with discuaaion centering
on money-making projects for
tile Blahop's Fund. II was
decided to holil a rummage
sale In the church basement
Friday, Oct. 5, from 7 to 9 p.m.-,
and on Saturday, October 6,
from 10 a.m. 10 ·5 p.m. to raise
the money for ihla fund .
AU church · members are
asked to bring their rummage,
empty sacka and hangers to the
church basement anytime ,
Friday, Oct. 5.
Mrs. Koby announced a
change In the board members
and the new committee
chairwomen. They are Mrs.
Martha Roderick succeeds
Mrs. Sandy Mazzuca, who has
resigned, a.s vice president;
phone committee chairwoman,
Mrs. Mary Lou Fontecchlo;
church committee service
chairwoman . (Includes
vlailatlon d. sick and elderly
and welcoming of newcomers),
Mrs. Cindy Young; community
and civic chairwoman (in·
eludes aertlce to GSI), not yet
announced; altar services
committee chairwoman, Mrs.
Judy Bloomer; famlly affalrll
committee chairwoman (includes retreata), Mrs. Bobbie
Zaldaln; International affairs
committee chairwoman (In·
eludes working with Church
Women United), Mrs. Mary
· Mulato.
Thoee Interested In serving
on any of theae committees
should contact 1M chairwoman

.

or Mrs. Koby.
Mrs. Gretchen Carty announced that dues are payable
at any time and should be sent
1o her.
Refreshments were served
by the board ·members (who
were in charge of this
meeUng ), before Mrs. Koby
began her .demonstration on
how to ·preserve summer
flowers for fall arrangements.
The next meeting will be
Monday, .October 15, and will
be handled bY, the International
Affairs Committee. The time
will be changed to 7:45p.m.
IH.o:«···~._v.~···&lt;:.······.-.-_.·.-..;.·······x•"-"'b."-"'•"•'•'•"o:.-::

~1-.t•'• .

or Mr•. Ray

name Ia jloiYII'•ph.
c,

.

·'

.., . ........, ................ ••••••••... ........·,y~.~-~·

~

•

.~

Addison ladies

Wanda Morris ond f•miiJ,
•ending gifts; Mrs. Joyce
Young, aa hosteu.
Jacob's Ladder in Christian
.art symbolizes the reunitl n1
of earth and heaven throu1h
Christ.

enjoy meeting

ADDISON - The AddisOn F•
W-B Ladles Aid held their
meeUng at the church Wednesday evening, Sept. 26.
In the absence of the
president and vice president,
secretary Shirley Martin
called the meeting to order.
. MarY Barcus was elected
president pro-tem for the
evening.
Mrs. Barcus called on Effie
Martin for the opening prayer . .
Secretary and treas~ r er
reports were read and ac·
cepted with 17 members answering roil call.
Nancy Taylor, Eva Gardner
and Dawn Martin won door
prizes.
Effie Martin, program
director, gave a Bible quiz with
Mary Barcus and Loretta
Clark winning the prizes.
Eva Gardner closed the
meeting with prayer.

MIDDLEPORT - Miss and Fred Dotzel, Wilkes-Barre,
Remalee Anne Nierl, dalll!hter Pa.
of. Mrs. Dorothy Nieri Rife,
For her daughter's wedding,
Middleport, and Myron S. Mrs. Rife wore a turquoise
Franckowiak, son of Mr . and gown of polyester and chiffon
Mrs. Matthew W. Fran- with white accessories, and a
5
5
ckowiak, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., corsage of sweetheart roses
exchanged wedding vows at a Unted to match her dress. The
Mi sses , Ha lf Size.s
Nuptial High Mass In St. groom's mother wore a pink
Joseph's Monastery, Wilkes- polyester and chiffon gown
Barre June 30 at 10 a.m.
with white accessories and a
The double ring ceremony pink sweetheart rose corsage.
· Main at Sycamore
wassolemnizedbytheRev. Fr.
Guests were regist.red by
POMEROY, OHIO
Neal Patton before an allar Miss Mary Ellen Franckowiak,
decorated with vases of white sister o! the groom.
gladioli and pink carnations. A For the procession of the
half-hour of nuptial music bridal party to the Cozy K.
preceded the meeting.
· Lounge where a dinner and
Given in marriage by her dance was held from 12 noon
mother, the bride was attired until 5 p.m., the cars were
in a gown ol silk organza and de cora ted
with
white
venice lace. II was fashioned streamers. Three white doves
with a high neckline, cap adorned the hood of the car
sleeves, and a full A-line skirt transporting the newlyweds. It
which fell Into a chapel train was driven by Paul Rollman,
edged in lace. The chapel Wilkes-Barre. Drivers of the
length veil of silk illusion was bridesmaids and mothers' cars
!rimmed with Venice lace and were . George Zaleski; Scranlell from a pillbox hat. The ton, Pa.; Gene Basham and
bride carried a bouquet of pink Louie Werniez, Wilkes-Barre.
sweetheart roses sw-rounded
The dinner · and dance was
by daisies and baby's breath. followed by a garden party at
Mrs. Zits Shuford served as the home of the groom's
matron of honor lor her sister, parents.
and Miss Tina · Marie Nlerl,
For her wedding trip to the
also a sister, was the maid of Pocono Mountains, the bride
honor. Bridesmaids were Miss wore a navy and white
· Heavy Gauge PlasticSandy Johnson, Middleport polkadot dress with white
and Miss Vickie Cassady, accessories and a corsage of
Colorful Plaids
Columbus, Their gowns were pink sweetheart roses.
Identically fashioned with
The couple. is residing in
draped necklines, lull cap Owensboro, Ky ., where
sleeves, gored skirts of chiffon Franckowiak is in the Coast
In pink, blue, yellow and mint Guard. Their address Is 2552
green. They wore picture hats, Apollo Ct., Apt. No. 1, Owensgloves, and shoes to match boro, Ky.
.
their gowns and carried
Out of town guests were Miss
bouquets of tinted daisies Sandy Johnson, Miss Teresa
matching their gowns. Each Casci, Middleport; Mr. and
one also wore a teardrop pearl Mrs . Charles Cassady,
necklace, gift from the bride. Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. W. A.
Matthew Franckowiak Yurke , Mr. and Mrs. Bill r----~~~~~~=-=-='~"'!'::-"'----,:
served as best man for his Ferrell, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew
brother, and the ushers were Zaleski, George Zaleski, Mark
Mark Zaleski, Scranton, Pa., Zaleski, all of Scra~ton, Pa.;
Makes IP ·
pllonces easy
to roll lor
clunlng or
moving.
Regular $1.57.

I

GALLIPOUS - Mr. and
Mrs. Larry M. Cox (Linda
Gardner), Eureka Star Rt., are
announcing the birth of their
first child, a daughter,
Satw-day, Sept. 22, at 8:34 p.ll).
Amanda Diane was born at the
Holzer Medical Center and
weighed 5 lbs., 121'1 ozs ,
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. George L. Gardner, Cheshire. Maternal greatgrandmother is Mrs. Harrison
N. Scott, South Zanesville.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Franklin (Pete) Cox,
Crown City.

ADDISON . - The Addison
United Methodist Women met
recently ai the home of Mrs.
Marvlr&gt; Glndlesberger with 13
adults and three children
present.
Mrs. Joe Drwnmond opened
the meetlnl with Mrs. Ray
Hughel giving the. aecretary's
report and· Mrs. Larry Hood
the lreaaurer's report. The
group discussed ways of
making money and agreed that
each member would make a
piedce to the, organization. A
donation will be sent to the
UMW World MlaiOIII. The
current slate of officers was
relalned.
AI · the next meeting Mrl.
Charla Shaver will bring the
my1tery packaae, with
procuill from the 1iale to ao to
the IOCiety,
At the clDH or the meeting, a
baby ~ower honortd Mr•· BID
Beell•· Refreahmenla, In·.
cludlnl a dec«ated cake, were

Tba lie d•tector'' ~tehnlcal

"

i~

UMWhas
meeting

at the borne
Hughll.

'LIMIT 6 QTS.

&lt;j

New ~e
IAmvals

eervtd.
Till Octaber meeUnl wiD be

CANS

·

Miss ThereSa Marglncage, Mr.
and Mrs. James Mlllham,
Mountaintop, Pa.; Mr . and
Mrs. Matthew Franckowiak,
Jr., Oliver Mills, Pa.; Mr. and
Mrs . Harold Lenahan,
Nuongola, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Bunslck, Mr. arid Mrs.
Paul Z8leskl, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Zaleski, Mrs. Richard Zaleski,
Parlin, Pa.; Mrs. Victoria
Bojar, Cataret, N. J. ; Mr. and.
Mrs. Steve Lukaslcek, Calaret,
N.J.; Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bojar,
Perth Amboy, N. J.; Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Wisniewski, Perth
Amboy, N. J.; Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Marchlnak, Woodbridge, N. J.: Mr. 811!1 Mrs.
RalphMocaln, Wlndaor, N. Y.;
Mrs . Betty Franckowiak,
Niagara Falls, N. Y.; Mr. and
Mrs. Clem Franckowiak, Inkster, Mich.

GALLIPOLIS - Omitted
from the report of the shower
each and every friend and for Miss Judy Young wve Mrs.
neighbor who so thoughtuRly Ella Burdell, attending; Mrs.
Ernestine Smith, Mrs. K.&amp;y
remembered her birthday.
Ervin, Mrs. Lois Stout and
Christy, Mr: and Mrs. Howard
H~tcher, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Elkins and Larry Jr., Mrs.

Chapman's Is Announcing

The Arrival of a New Line •••

,. -

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

l' ·

;

~

~. ' ~.

......... ' •'

~~.

.,.

THE

CLINIC

, . . ... ._. ..01

~

I Olf 1:11'' I

;.woo- -

Ill

~

lA

BUDGET
DRESSES
10 to 15

'

CHAPMAN'S '

lOLA'S

SHOES

. -.

96

On~!

SUNDAY
1 PM

ll

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

"'
In

... .

"'
"'

"

llbtt bMtd on lttlt 1"'«1dld to lllnilltlt home uno• under flt o utn tl ~ encou llltred cond!tlon1
and 11 tn tttctrlc l'llt ol3 W ill otr ~!lowatt ~r. Tut proetdurtt ,..,, adapttd trom .t.NSt
Sl8ndlfd 8 ·:11, Section t.l, wllh COI\IIOIIIItlng lo 11111/'0ieh 0" tfOf lrttrtrl t nd 31' trtftl61f'ttol'),

Aetu i!U¥Ifl01 ftll~ W
ltY beNd llpoti i0CIIti1Cifltftlll 1 cll llllllltl tondlll0111 tnd lndl'tldull UUQt.

Cam~lllt llll c~et~•rllllb!t uponj'"~r======::..__ _ _ _ __ ,

18.5 cu.lt. capacity Sh:le-by-Slde

ONLY 30" WIDE

.....................
llodll AT111811
ol ,.._ foodo

.

• No Frolt eyalem t1hnlnaltt dtfroatlna
• Automl11c lot Mtklr
• New S..Thru Clln dltPinHr, utility bin,

2 Plck-OtiiCIIIiliable olltl- In

lttthr-

PLASTIC
TUMBLERS

RAINBOW
RUG

Valued .to 19' - ·

¢

2

4

79

Each

'

Sunday On~!

111 ••• IIJ No PrMh&amp;lotfiJJ 1 r wl1ll

tor,_,

4 .................... • Ntw Quick COld control

111lrlgeretor cool.ctown
• loo- Ttuu bUlltr kHpor, Plck-Otl
tGO trNot
.

• 2 ICIIuolobltl Pick-Off ol\ol¥01 In
,.lrlgorolol door

SUNDAY ONLY
Entire Stock of
Flare Leg
'

BOYS PANTS
07_ off OUR LOW

0

/(

DISCOUNT
PRICES

·Regulars and slims . Size 6 to 11 .
Regular Values to $4.94. Many .
Fabrics &amp; colon.

Teens and

Entire
Fall
Stock!

FWE. Ull, OU FU Ull

IILO.S..fiLIEI1IIS-IIIT»

$ 00 OFF

PLASTIC TABLECLOTHS
Heavy Gauge
Quilted Plastic
Everyday Values to 1211

Size
52 X 52
and

52 X 70

Early Sunday ShoppeiS Bonus!

SWEATER DRYER
Mad&amp; of Nylon Mash on

covered vinyl frame .
Won't Rust
SmtiiLot

FOREMAN &amp; AB
•-------------.--=:- _______..
MIDDLEPORT, O.

A

•t•
Value

25~

,.

Visit Your
NHrest Slortl

5 HOURS -SUNDAY 1 P.M •.to 6 P.M.

Size 24"x45"

'..

"6PM

*COMPARE AND SAVE
l7
it

.".. ,.

..

TO

SUNDAY ONL
Regular 1147
ReveiSible

.. l

'
STOtES ·.
OPEN

The Regular,
Price

Given Away Value!
9 ounce

-~l-~-·

ALL 3 .,.

30
7.7¢
4

'

POMERO'I
~

WOMENS DRESS
MENS SUIT
TRAV.EL
BAGS

''•··

MAIN ST.

SUNDAY ONLY

or.

..

Pt. PlEASAIIT • MASOII • SlV£1 • • PlAJA

�- The Sunday Times· Senlln&lt;•l, ~unduy, Sept. 30, 1973

10- Tile SUndayThnes -sentil!"l.Sundny.Sept :Ill, 1973

The pro~ocution Friday did
not indicate whctlwr it would
ask for 11 new trial on the
charge that resulted in a hung
jury In Prall's CA!Ill.

Ex-G·uard at prison found innocent
PORTSMOU'I'H, &lt;lito (UPI)
-Former Southern Ohio Corl'.ctiOIII Faclllty guud Ronald
Pl'au, 2'1, Port11111oUth, was
foWid Innocent Friday night In
Scioto Co111ty common Pleas
Court of a charge of helping a

prisoner in an escape attempt.
The jury was WlBble to return a
verdict on an. ooer charge of
smuggling a pistol into the prison.
The jury of seven women and
five men deliberated more

than seven hours before mullIng its decisions known.
Prall, teslifylng In his own
defense, said he had not helped
irunatc Wayne Raney in an
e~ape atlernpl and denied
stn~gling the pistol into the

pri&amp;m.
, Rmwy, on Aug. IS, pleaded

guilty to first-&lt;l~ree murder in
the shoollng death or • guard
at the pl'ison. Friday, however,
Han~)" 1•ntered a motion· to
vacate th•t ulea. He said it was

nuode under !(urcss after his
court 11ppoh\lcd Bttorney
threatened him nnd misrepresented Uoe case.
ll&lt;oney used the smu~~led
pislol to kill ~uoord Arthur
~rolll!e. Another guard, Gary
Underwood. wa~ killed niter
Sak•. a ric~ beer and Ja .
being uoken hostage by Haney. pon 'i n~tional beverage. runs
Und~'rwood was killed by a shot to 18 pt•r ~entln alcoholic t:On·
tent.
fired at Raney.

MARSIIALLREIJIONS
OY..ADI.JN f: Nf.AR!l
COLUMBUS CUPI) - SecreWASHINGTON &lt;!JPI) lary of Slate Tt'd Brown said Donald M. Hwn, u. S. Mar·
Oct, 9 Willi the deadline for ahlll for the Soulhtrn Dlstrlcl
voter reglstrallon In e6 Ohio of Ohio, rul&amp;ned Friday, cllln&amp;
co~nues.
a pera0111l inJIII'l'· Horn, 116,
Brown said 62 counties was ,ppolnted by Pl'"'dent
require registration, four Nixon Au&amp;. I, l&amp;et. Nixon
others only partial registration accepted lilt real8lll Uon.
and 22 have no registration

Fire trac~d . to bad light fixture
111e blaze caused on ell.tnoatetl
t&amp;,llOOIO the building and minor
damage lo the building's
contents.
Fire Chief James A, Northup

requlremen~ .

'

I

·aDIIOUDCIDg a

AM rt'IIHIIrli'd

Rnld Llw blut.e dama~cd tlw Wlll'kt•ol nil day Frld11y
otution ' o transnoittt·r ~ rcpu irln~ th&lt;· (llomugcd trar••·
knocltin~ it off the ulr. (,1oief tnillt!r~ .
En~inecr ltandy Callihan und
W.ll-:11 FM r"turroed to lhe
station rnanuHer Bill Miller air late ~'riday evening . WJEtl

BETTY
ROCKER

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER
FOODLINER
.

,

orr

th&lt;'

w••

uir

Siolurrllly '!'here
minor
lilowkc ~nd w~ter darna~e lv
the station 'g t'ilntrol rooms and
hallway.
'l'ht• fire was dls&lt;:overt-d by
Mary l.oulllll Thornton, bookkeepe-r, untl Puul E. Wagner,
presiden\ of Wagner Broad-

vu s lon~

CAKE MIXES
&amp; FROSTING
.•

CAKE MIX

WHITE
YELLOW

GERMAN DiOCOLATE
FROSTINGS

CHOCOLATE MALT
CREAMY WHITE
CHOCOlATE FUDGE CARAMEL

••

MANHATTAN OVEN

I

YOUR CHOICE

WAGNER'S

ORANGE DRINK
POUND

I
Beef is directly related

The unique tenderness in

_,
to delicious tropical fruits, such as pineapple, papaya, and figs. Nature's
•
original tendering agents, already present in beef, are supplemented by pure
food protein derivatives of some of these fruits. Minute quantities are
used to create new tenderness grade for grade-cut for cut never before_...

32

oz.

BISCUITS

possible. This process is so natural it assures full beef flavor and ·
nutrition as well as adde'd tenderness;

POUND

8 OZ. CANS

DENVER OVEN ROAST

POP TARTS

00

BOXES

PILLSBURY

SHASTA

KELLOGG$

'CARNATION

.Coffee-Mate
16 OZ. JAR

RED APPLE

POP
12 OZ. CAN

.MA BROWN

APPlE
.

BUTTER
28 OZ. JAR

BONELESS ·

REGAL RUMP
ROAST
.POUND

$149LB.

I;·

.I l

BONELESS .

/

ROIL STEAK

ESSEX

( .j ·''.

J ..

LEAN &amp; TENDER

SWIFT PREMIUM

WIENERS
12 oz.

POUND

¢

PKG.

M&amp; RSHOPPING CENTER
. .

WHOLE

LB.

BOSTON BUTTS
.,

'I

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

7g~
,.

.

~'ifteen

fircwcn and three trucks
rcllj)Onded to the ularm.
F'ircmcn extinguished an
auto !Ire uti : ~ p.m.on l.ocust
St . whe-re a 1964 Ponliac owned
by l.lvyd D. Moore or Gallipolis
caught fire due to a short In lhe
car's voltage regulator.

DEVIL'S FOOD

BONELESS

Comp~ny .

tormance in ·•Deep Throat",
SANTA MONICA, Calif. cited " ireeconcllable difIUPI ) - Sex film star lJnda fereQCes." Her lawyer said the
Lovelace flied Thursday for a working partnership had
divorce from Charles Traynor, nothing Ill do with the breakup,
her husband of two years and but "They won't conUnue In
business manager. Miss their busines.• relaUonship, she
Lovelace, 24, who became a means this as a final
national figure for her per. separatiOQ ."
SUITFIU;D

�- The Sunday Times· Senlln&lt;•l, ~unduy, Sept. 30, 1973

10- Tile SUndayThnes -sentil!"l.Sundny.Sept :Ill, 1973

The pro~ocution Friday did
not indicate whctlwr it would
ask for 11 new trial on the
charge that resulted in a hung
jury In Prall's CA!Ill.

Ex-G·uard at prison found innocent
PORTSMOU'I'H, &lt;lito (UPI)
-Former Southern Ohio Corl'.ctiOIII Faclllty guud Ronald
Pl'au, 2'1, Port11111oUth, was
foWid Innocent Friday night In
Scioto Co111ty common Pleas
Court of a charge of helping a

prisoner in an escape attempt.
The jury was WlBble to return a
verdict on an. ooer charge of
smuggling a pistol into the prison.
The jury of seven women and
five men deliberated more

than seven hours before mullIng its decisions known.
Prall, teslifylng In his own
defense, said he had not helped
irunatc Wayne Raney in an
e~ape atlernpl and denied
stn~gling the pistol into the

pri&amp;m.
, Rmwy, on Aug. IS, pleaded

guilty to first-&lt;l~ree murder in
the shoollng death or • guard
at the pl'ison. Friday, however,
Han~)" 1•ntered a motion· to
vacate th•t ulea. He said it was

nuode under !(urcss after his
court 11ppoh\lcd Bttorney
threatened him nnd misrepresented Uoe case.
ll&lt;oney used the smu~~led
pislol to kill ~uoord Arthur
~rolll!e. Another guard, Gary
Underwood. wa~ killed niter
Sak•. a ric~ beer and Ja .
being uoken hostage by Haney. pon 'i n~tional beverage. runs
Und~'rwood was killed by a shot to 18 pt•r ~entln alcoholic t:On·
tent.
fired at Raney.

MARSIIALLREIJIONS
OY..ADI.JN f: Nf.AR!l
COLUMBUS CUPI) - SecreWASHINGTON &lt;!JPI) lary of Slate Tt'd Brown said Donald M. Hwn, u. S. Mar·
Oct, 9 Willi the deadline for ahlll for the Soulhtrn Dlstrlcl
voter reglstrallon In e6 Ohio of Ohio, rul&amp;ned Friday, cllln&amp;
co~nues.
a pera0111l inJIII'l'· Horn, 116,
Brown said 62 counties was ,ppolnted by Pl'"'dent
require registration, four Nixon Au&amp;. I, l&amp;et. Nixon
others only partial registration accepted lilt real8lll Uon.
and 22 have no registration

Fire trac~d . to bad light fixture
111e blaze caused on ell.tnoatetl
t&amp;,llOOIO the building and minor
damage lo the building's
contents.
Fire Chief James A, Northup

requlremen~ .

'

I

·aDIIOUDCIDg a

AM rt'IIHIIrli'd

Rnld Llw blut.e dama~cd tlw Wlll'kt•ol nil day Frld11y
otution ' o transnoittt·r ~ rcpu irln~ th&lt;· (llomugcd trar••·
knocltin~ it off the ulr. (,1oief tnillt!r~ .
En~inecr ltandy Callihan und
W.ll-:11 FM r"turroed to lhe
station rnanuHer Bill Miller air late ~'riday evening . WJEtl

BETTY
ROCKER

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER
FOODLINER
.

,

orr

th&lt;'

w••

uir

Siolurrllly '!'here
minor
lilowkc ~nd w~ter darna~e lv
the station 'g t'ilntrol rooms and
hallway.
'l'ht• fire was dls&lt;:overt-d by
Mary l.oulllll Thornton, bookkeepe-r, untl Puul E. Wagner,
presiden\ of Wagner Broad-

vu s lon~

CAKE MIXES
&amp; FROSTING
.•

CAKE MIX

WHITE
YELLOW

GERMAN DiOCOLATE
FROSTINGS

CHOCOLATE MALT
CREAMY WHITE
CHOCOlATE FUDGE CARAMEL

••

MANHATTAN OVEN

I

YOUR CHOICE

WAGNER'S

ORANGE DRINK
POUND

I
Beef is directly related

The unique tenderness in

_,
to delicious tropical fruits, such as pineapple, papaya, and figs. Nature's
•
original tendering agents, already present in beef, are supplemented by pure
food protein derivatives of some of these fruits. Minute quantities are
used to create new tenderness grade for grade-cut for cut never before_...

32

oz.

BISCUITS

possible. This process is so natural it assures full beef flavor and ·
nutrition as well as adde'd tenderness;

POUND

8 OZ. CANS

DENVER OVEN ROAST

POP TARTS

00

BOXES

PILLSBURY

SHASTA

KELLOGG$

'CARNATION

.Coffee-Mate
16 OZ. JAR

RED APPLE

POP
12 OZ. CAN

.MA BROWN

APPlE
.

BUTTER
28 OZ. JAR

BONELESS ·

REGAL RUMP
ROAST
.POUND

$149LB.

I;·

.I l

BONELESS .

/

ROIL STEAK

ESSEX

( .j ·''.

J ..

LEAN &amp; TENDER

SWIFT PREMIUM

WIENERS
12 oz.

POUND

¢

PKG.

M&amp; RSHOPPING CENTER
. .

WHOLE

LB.

BOSTON BUTTS
.,

'I

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

7g~
,.

.

~'ifteen

fircwcn and three trucks
rcllj)Onded to the ularm.
F'ircmcn extinguished an
auto !Ire uti : ~ p.m.on l.ocust
St . whe-re a 1964 Ponliac owned
by l.lvyd D. Moore or Gallipolis
caught fire due to a short In lhe
car's voltage regulator.

DEVIL'S FOOD

BONELESS

Comp~ny .

tormance in ·•Deep Throat",
SANTA MONICA, Calif. cited " ireeconcllable difIUPI ) - Sex film star lJnda fereQCes." Her lawyer said the
Lovelace flied Thursday for a working partnership had
divorce from Charles Traynor, nothing Ill do with the breakup,
her husband of two years and but "They won't conUnue In
business manager. Miss their busines.• relaUonship, she
Lovelace, 24, who became a means this as a final
national figure for her per. separatiOQ ."
SUITFIU;D

�~- ·-

V'""~~

1Social

Bonsai
is topic

I Calendar
SUNDAY
HYMN SING, Hue! Com•
munity Church, I :30 p.m.
.Public invited.
YOUTH Choir practice, 2 to
3:30 p.m. at the Bradbury
Church of Christ.
REVIVAL THROUGH Oct. I
at Bradford Church of Christ,
7:30 each evening with Dale
Wise as evangelist.
HAYRIDE by Trinity Church
Sunday School, 5:30 p.m. at
Royal Oak Park . Ail members
invited.
'
EAGLE RIDGE Community
Church homecoming Sunday;
besket dinner · at noon; afternoon program, 2 p.m.
Special singers, public invited.
MONDAY
KICKOFF MEETING for
half mill bond issue for retarded workshop and school, 7:30
p.m . Monday at Trinity
ANNOUNCEMENT ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs.
Church,
Pomeroy. Everyone
Thomas Holter, Rt . I, Racine, are announcing the
Invited.
engagement of their daughter, Sharon Elain, to I?aul Card,
POMEROY GARDEN Club,
. son of the Rev. and Mrs. Robert Card, Lima, formerly of
7:30p.m. Monday at home of
.Pomeroy. The bride-elect is a 1973 graduate of Southern High
Mrs. Fred Blaettnar, Spring
School and is employed at Adolph's Dairy Valley of Pomeroy.
Ave. Roll caU, verse pertaining
Her fiance is a 1971 graduate of Meigs High School and is
to
fall.
employed at Rich Valley Dairy of Middleport. Wedding plans
are incomplete.
EASTERN Athletic Boosters
, ':~--==-'X:::.-:::::::::::::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;t,;:;-;:::~~:s-.~~;::-:~~=~s;:;~:~:?.;:~~::::;:::=*NX~ 8 p.m. at the high school.
Pictures of Federal-Hocking
game to he shown. Everyone
CLEVELAND HEIGHTS,
welcome.
Ohio
- Susan Kathleen
MEIGS County Salon 8 and 40
....
Waychoff, daughter Of Mr. and
~~ wiUmeet at 7:30 ill the home of
Mrs.
Roy Johnson Waychoff,
Julia Hysell.
Cleveland Heights, and Harris
MIDDLEPORT Garden Hayman Crow, son of Mr. and
Club, 7:30 p.m. at Columbus Mrs . Alfred E. H. Crow,
.~ POMEROY - Fifty-four years of teaching Sunday School! Blld Southern Ohio Electric Co . Racine, were married Aug. 25
That's quite a record and one held by Mrs. Erances Reibel of social room.
in a garden ceremony at the
MASON MOTHERS Club wiU home Of 1/ie bride's parents.
Trinity Church, Pomeroy.
A surprise tribute to this gracious illdy so dedicated to her sponsor an American Red Dr. John 0 . Humbert, of the
church was planned for this morning during the Sunday school Cross blOOdmobile from I to 6 Euclid Avenue Christian
p.m . .at· Mason City Fire Church, officiated.
holir.
We add our congratulations tQ those from the congreg~tion Station. Public, please report
to be donors.
there.
MEIGS County Agricultural
Society,
this . evening,
SURE TO BE missed from the local scene are the active,
secretary's office, Rock
SON BORN
ambitious Carters of Bradbury.
Springs
Fairgrounds.
POMEROYMr. an&lt;\ Mrs.
Bill Carter, pasto1 of the Bradbury.Church of Christ, and his
TUESDAY
Jerry ~ter, Rocky Mount, N.
· family wil1 he leaving tomorrow morning for Pine Town, N. C.,
REVIVAL
at
Syracuse
·
C.,
announce the birth of a son,
where the minister has accepted a pastorate at the Everett
Church of the Nazarene Sept. 13, at the Nash General
anrcb of Christ.
But not only will Meigs County be losing one pastor, but two. through Oct. 7 with Rev. 0 . G. Hospital at Rocky Mount. The 9
His son, Scott, is also leaving the Rutland Church of Christ so that McKinney, Charleston, W. Va., ib. boy has been named Jon
. he can accompany his family to North Carolin.a .and begin evangelist. Special singing . · Barham. Maternal grandServices at 7:30 each evening· parents are Mr. and Mrs: Cecil
graduate work at a university there. . .
.
·Caldwell; Reedsville, and the
The Carters' son, Rick, stationed with the Navy at Orl~ndo, open to public.
REVIVAL at 7:30 each paternal 'grandmother is Mrs.
Fla., is home on leave now and will he lending a hand with the
move. Brett had his final day at Meigs Junior High Friday.
evening through Oct. 6 at Beatrice Carter of Wake
BradfordChurchofChristwith Forest, N. C. Mrs . Edna
JEAN PARKE!Us back in the Holzer Medical Center after Dale Wise, evBllgelist. · I?ublic Summerfield, Long Bottom, is
having some treabnents at University Haspital and is having in vi~.
·
the great-grandmother. · Mr.
IDIJl'8 than her share of dilamfort and despair. Jean, always so
REVIVAL, through Oct. 7, and Mrs. Carter have another
faithful with cards and Bowers for her friends, is in Room 232. 7:30 each evening at Lebenon son, Jeffrey, five.
Remember ber.
Community Church; John Elswick, speaking.
IF YOUR group voted to make a contribution to the
. TUESDAY
promotion fund for tbe Meigs Community School one-l!alf mill .
CHESTER COUNCIL 323,
bondiuue, andhasn't as yet sentit in, here's the information you Daughters Of America, 7:30
may need.
p.m. at the hall. Practice for
Olecks are to be made out to Mrs. Harold Sauer, chair- inspection.
pel lUI, finan~-e committee, and mailed to her at Rt. I, Middleport. The committee is hard at work trying to come up With
POMEROY CHAPTER 186,
adequate funds to stage a gond promotion in the hope of getting OES regular meeting, 7:4~
Ule bond Issue passed. If It is passed the money will go toward p.m. Past matrons ami past
constructing a building for the school for retarded children and a patrons to he honored. Dues
workshop for the retarded adults of the county.
payable,.
Mrs. Jeanette Thomas, school administrator, advises us that
the State has assured her of matching funds.

Mis-s Sharon Elain Holter

Mrs. Harris Hayman Crow

Garden wedding unites
Miss Waychoff, Mr. ·Crow

Community

~Corner By Charlene Hoeflich

I

.

~

1
•

The bride, given in marriage
by her father, wore a candlelight Ivory aiencon lace
gown with a short matching
veil. She carried a bouquet of
daisies and baby breath.
The maid Of honor was Miss
Kathleen O'DonneU, Beachwood. Bridesmaids were Miss
Becky WaychOff, sister of the
bride, and Miss Polly Schaffner, Cleveland Heights. The
attendants wore gowns of pink,
yellow and lavender.
William Higginbotham,
Atlanta, served as best man.
Usher was John Parrish,
Havelock, N. C.
Foilowing a recepUon held
after the ceremony the couple
left for a wedding trip to
Toronto, Canada. They are
residing in AUanta, Ga.

Committees named for carnival

POMEROY - A program on
"Bonsai" whlch mea!\11 tray
tree was presented by Mrs.
Robert Thompson at • meQUns
of the Winding Trail Garden
Club Wednesday nisht at the
home of Charles Riffle with
Mrs. Faye Pratt as hoptess.
Mrs. Thompson e1plalned
the tray tree u a gnarled,
twisted, stunted, miniature
tree or shrub which can be
found growing on a rocky cliff.
Sbe suggested that once a
bonsai is found then several
trips shoul~ he made 10 ita
locaUon in the wilds to root,
prune and trim it so that it will
he more naturalized and :he
shock cl digging it up won't
cause it to die.
A bonsai, she said, must
epend a major porUon of ita life
outdoors with protection (rom
extremes. It was explained
that some houseplants make a
Hood "quick" bonsai mentioning the jade plant, azalea,
mogo pine and dwarf balllbOO.
The illusion of age Is typical of
the bonsai which comes in
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT- Mr. and Mrs. William
three categories, the upright,
Pullins, Rt. 2, Coolville, are announcing the engagement of
the slanting and the cascade. their daugl!ter; EUzabeth Joann, to Robert Allen C&amp;laway,
She said that it Is Important · son of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Calaway, Rt. 1, Reedsville. Miss
that they get daUy care since Pullins Is a junior at EBBtem High School. Mr. Calaway is
they are grown in a minimal employed by .Union Carbide Corp., Marietta. Wedding plans
amount of soil.
are incomplete.
Mrs. Ruth Moore presided at
the meeting with Mrs. Pratt ·
FIRST CHILD BORN
PLAN SALE
giving a poem, "A Mother's
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
MIDDLEPORT - The Af- Terry Wyatt, Pomeroy, are
Recipe for a Happy Home." It
ternoon
Circle of the Heath announcing the birth of their
was announced that the tour Of
Mrs. Hiram Fisher's garden United Methodist Church wUI first child, a son, Robby
has been canceUed a~d wlU be hold a rummage sale, Oct. :}5, Wayne, Sept. 22, at Pleasant
in the basement of the church, Valley Hospital. The infant
rescheduled next year.
corner
Of Third and Main, 9 weighed 5lbs., 9 OZII. Maternal
Ameeting Of the Bend 0' \he
River Garden Club was an- a.m: to 4 p.m.
grandparents are Robert
nounced and attended by Mrs.
Barton, Chester and Mrs. Nelia
Thompson and Mrs. Robert Terrell is 111 and a card was Seyler, ,Pomeroy. Paternal
Lewis who instaUed the new signed by the members for her. · grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
officers. The two will also Mrs. Richard Collins judged Charlea Wyatt, Letart, W. Va.
judge the Chester Garden Club · the ·arrangements awarding a Great-grandparents are Mr.
home flower show Qct. 3 at the blue ribbon to Mrs. Pratt, a red and Mrs. Ardith Barton,
home Of Mrs. Horace Karr.
to Mrs. Lewis, and a white to Pomeroy; Mrs. Lydia 'Hysell,
New program books were Mrs. Aaron Kelton. Mrs. Earl Pomeroy, and Steve Eblin,
distributed to the members. It Thoma won a blue ribbon for a Pomeroy is the great-greatwas repOrted that Mrs. John firethor.n specimen.
grandfather.

held at the home Of Mrs. W. A.
Morgan.
Mrs. Mark Grueser provided
material for the program
which inCluded the following
readings: "It's in the Hair" by
Mrs. Opha Offutt; "Memory is
a Chemical" by Mrs. Hugh
Bearhs; "Carrying a Load" by
Mrs. Scott Folmer; "Nation Of
Drunks" by Mrs. William
Grueser; "Low Cholesterol
Lamb Chops" by Mrs. WiUiam
Fol'mer, and "Electronic
Speech Clarifier" by Mrs. Fred
Goeglein.
The contest by Mrs. WiUiam
Grueser was won by Mrs. Scott
Folmer.
Refreslunenta were served
by Mrs. Leonard and Mrs.
James COnkle to those named
and Mrs. Homer Radford and
Mrs. William Radford.

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has been setfor Oct. 30, 6:30 to
7.:30 p.m. and is for young
people 14 and under. RuUand
firemen will assist in handling
traffic during the hoilr of the
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Needlepoint is 'Izn 'I.

MOHE THAN 33,000 OHIO FAMILIES will rec-eive
questionnaires asking that they evaluate 31ld suggest ways of
Improving the state's outdoor recreation facilities. This Is the
first time citizens are being asked what they want in the way of
. new recreational opportunities.
Natural Resources Director William B. Nye said the survey
results will be used in developing · the 1975-&amp;l Ohio Outdoor
POMEROY - A rummage
Recreation Plan, which is required by the federal government sale to raise funds to promote
for the state to continue to receive federal aid for recreational passage of the one-half mill
development.
,
bond issue for buliding conNye stressed that ali responses will be anonymous. He said struction funds for the Meigs
the forms are not coded in any way to identify citizens by name COmmunity School will be held
or address.
Thursday, . Friday
and
Saturday in the Hughes
building across from the

new agent.
and books helpful In creative
With needle, yarn Blld a piece canvas work. Sheets with
of canvas each of the women d'etailed instruction were
learned the three basic stitches provided to each of the
of needlepoint -the baH cross- homemakers.
stitch, the continental stitch,
The extension· agent also
and the diagonal or basket- displayed a number of kits on
weave stitch.
the market for piUow covers,
To. most of the women at- seats, Christmas cards, and
tending
the
workshop, pictures, along with the
needlepoint was a new ex- finlshed .products.
perience, but to a few present it
She described the fascinating
was one cif learning an easier combinations of individual
or heUer way.
-~ lines, colorful masses and . MIDDLEPORT - Assisting
Miss Glass displayed for the tactile forms poSSible to create the Men's Fellowship of the
group a variety of materisis 411 needlepoint and en~uraged Meigs County Churches of
the women to ·go creative w1th Christ with the project of
yam.
gathering clothl'!g for the
Friday's workshop in Grundy Mountain School at
needlepoint was the first of Grundy, Va., was taken on as a
several fall events being project by the Women 's
POMEROY - Max and Houdashelt, Racine; Mr. Blld planned by Miss Guilkey.
Feilowshipat a meeting ThursMary Thoma Reider, Denver, Mrs. Leo King, Columbus; Mr.
The next will be a pants day night at the Bradbury
Colo., were honored recently and ' Mrs. BUI Turner Blld fitting workshop held in .two Church of Christ.
with a family gathering at the Megan, Dayton; Mr. and Mrs. sessions by Mrs. Norma Deyo,
The group also · voted to
Rock Springs Grange hall.
Earl Thoma, Kelly Blld Suzan, extension clothing specialist of endorse the one-half mill bond
A dinner was held at noon Mr. and Mrs. George Zeigler Ohio State University.
issue for the retarded school
Both sessions wUJ be held in and to give a donation toward
and pictures were taken during and Roger, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
the afternoon.
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Walter the Columbus and Southern promotion of il$ passage. It
Attending were Mrs. Georgia Schreiber, Bert HeUman, Mr. Ohio Electric Co. social room was also decided to send a
Thoma, Mrs. Wilhelmina and Mrs. Homer Wiliard, Mrs. in'Middleport, the first on Oct. contribution to the American
Thoma, Mr. and. Ml'B. ·Glenn . Amber Lohn, Pomeroy; and 10 and the second on Oct. 17 Bible Society for Bibles for
Thoma, Gail · and Linda, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Thoma, with a morrung class from 9 missionaries . .The women's
a.m. to 12 noon and an af- . retreat to be held at the Ohio
Chester; Roy Thoma and Terri and Kevin, Rutland.
temoon class from I to 4 p.m. VaHey Christian Assembly
Danny, and Mrs. Margaret
Registrations are now being camp this month was Bll·
taken at the Extension Office, _nounced.
992-3895.
A report was given on the

POMEROY - Needlepoint
- the most challenging and
versatUe of all forms of embroidery - is definitely the
"in" thing now as response to a
Meigs Extension Service
workshop proved.
Twenty-seven Meigs County
women assembled together
Friday in the fellowship hall of
the St. Paul's Lutheran Church
for a fu1J four hours of instruction by capable Patsy
Glass, area extension agent,
home economics, assisted by
Marta Guilkey, Meigs County's

Family honored

Sunday school attendance on visit Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Sept. 23 was 35, the offering Swartt and family at
$14.10. A contribution of $25 Hockingport, 0., last Thursday
was made to the Retarded evening. · Mr. Bibbee stayed
School program, or "I Care". with Mr. Swartz while Mrs.
Worship services were held at Swartz visited at their son's
11, with Rev. Meece speaking home.
on "Tbe LoneUness of Christ."
Attendance was 32, Offering
was $17, pledges $17.
Recent guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Atherton were her
brother, Everett Taylor of
Mrs. Mirna Walker and Miss
Pomeroy, R.D., and another Terry . Curtis of Chester atbrother, Payton Taylor of · tended the Apple Festival at
Barberton, 0., and a sister · Jackson Saturday.
Evelyn Barr of Belpre, 0.
Mrs. Freda Mlller and Miss
Payton took the group out to Lenora Betzing of Chester and
dinner and to visit friends in Rev. and Mrs. Robert Meece
the area.
were Sunday dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Swartz Mrs. Edith Betzlng.
and family of Marietta, 0., · Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gutheil
visited Nina Robinson, Clara and son John of COlumbus were
Folll'od and Mr. and Mrs. Sunday guests of Mrs. Neisel
Hobart Swartz Sunday af- WeathennBll.
temoon.
Homer Cole Is a medical
The Orange Christian patient at a Lancaster hospital
Church will have its annual after he became quite iU on his
homecoming Sunday, Sept. 30 way home from a horse show
with usual morning services. A near Lancaster Sunday.
basket dinner wiil he at noon.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Tbe afternoon program hegins Honeycutt who moved to the
at 1:30 with special singers Arba_ugh addition here ·1!1'0
from Chester, 0.
Bllnouncinil the birth of a
Mary Carr spent several daughter, Wednesday at the
days last week with Mr. and Marietta Hospital. Tbe couple
Mrs. Russel! Collums and have two sons, one five and one
called on tinnie Leifheit at two.
Burlingham. ·
Keno Ridge
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost of
Mrs. Allee Dodson returned
Sugar Grove, Ohio, came
home
Saturday after spending
Saturday and took G~nevieve
Guthrie to the Band-o-Rama at two weeks with her son and
Marietta. Their daulihter and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
granddaughter, Beth Yost, is a Jack Conroy.
Paul Osborne · and family
member of Bern-Union band of
Sugar Grov~ which won first In visited the weekend with his
parade and formaUon on field mother, Mrs. Edith · Osborne.
and play Blld performance, out
Veteralll Memorial Hoapltal
of the 31 bands participating·
ADMITTED - Lori Ann
Around 5,000 tickets were sold
McDaniel,
Fort Benning, Ga.;
and 3,600 numbered in the 31
Howard Largent, Syracuse;·
bands.
Everett
Ervin, Middleport;
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mn. Vere Swartz were : Mr. Gertrude Rickard, Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Thomas
and Mn. Wald Swartz ol
Athe111, Maxine Spurlock and Sarver, Jr., Tyllis Roush, Roy
daughter ol Glouster, Mr. and Finch, Betty Eynon.
Mrs. Hobart Swartz, Kate
Honacher, and Mr. and Mrs.
VISITS MADE
Elmer Bibbee and Dorael. Mr.
LONG BOTTOM - Mra.
llwartz ill improving at this
Ruth Thornton and Mn. ~o
writing.
Mra. Genevieve Guthrie Ann Lawrence and family
called on her · lilter~n-law, recently villted relaUvea In
Bertine Story, near · Athena, Galllpolia. Mr. and Mrs.
Sunday afternoon.
. Howard Lal'n'ence and family
Mfl. Elmer Bibbee and recently 1pent a day at
Doi'IMII look Once Swartz to Camdeh Park, Huntlnston.

.i

Auxiliary sets dinner
RACINE - An election day
dinner and bazaar will be held
at the American Legion hall in
Racine by the Auxiliary of
Racine Post 602.
Plans for the activities were
made at a meeting Tuesday
night presided over by Mrs.
Frances Roberts. Members
were asked to contribute
homemade items for the
bezaar table.
Tbe Oct. 4 fall conference at
Jackson was Bllnounced. Mrs .
Henry Patro, department
treasurer, will he the guest
speaker. Also announced was
AuxiUary Day at the Xenia
Home, Qcl. 24. Members were
asked to contribute to the
country fair Oct. II at the
Athens Menial Health Center.
Mrs. Virgil Walker also

asked for jewelry, pocketbooks, and other miscellaneous
items to be ijsed as game prizes
for the veterans parties staged
monthly at the Mental Health
Center.
It was noted that two boxes of
ribbons are ready for mailing
to the Dayton Veterans
Hospital where they are made
into rugs.
.
Members were urged to get
their dues in before next
. Thursday's district conterence. A donation was made
for a gift for the Deparbnent
president and the District 8
president.
Mrs. Margaret Yost, music
chairwoman, presented a
program, Blld refreshments
were served by Mrs. Waiker.

During the uecuUve committee meetlns a "baktleu"
bake sale was planned for Oct.
&amp;. Tbe next PTA meettns will
he Oct. 9, 7:30 p.m.

Party honors
Miss ·Fields

HARTFORD, W. Va. Rebecca Fields, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Fielde, wa1
honored at a birthday party,
Saturday,September22, on her
eighth birthday. Attending
were Debbie, Cindy imd Tina
Smith of Middleport; Audrty
Fields, Mason; Ellen Mc,Dennilt, West COlumbia; Mrs.
Harold E. Smith, Middleport;
Jeffery Blld Stacy Rouali, Mrs.
Danny Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
William Gibbs and Tim Gibbs,
Mrs. Melvin Fields and Deidra
Fields, Debra Blld Lyndon
Fields, Charles and Cheryl
Fields, 'Mrs. Frances Johnson,
Mra. Betty Love, Mrs. WiiUam
Hinkle, all of Hartford, and the
host Blld hostess, Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Fields.
A clown motif was carried
outln the decorations, cake, ice
cream, Pl!neh and favors.
Games were played and pHzes
were aw.arded each chll~.
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Middleport Library. Tbe sale Mrs. David Fields, Sr. of
will begin at 9 a.m. all three Hartford.
days .
Caa 'I Bear II
Items for the rummage sale
Hikers on the Great Divide
may he left with Mrs. Paul
Karr, Chester, Mrs. Hugh Trail in the Canadian RocMies
Roush, Monkey Run, Mrs. sometimes tie sniali hells on
their packs so grizzly bears
George Skinner, ROck Springs will hear them coming. Most
Rd., or Mrs. Harold Sauer, Rt. hears avoid humans, and the
I, Middleport.
hell serves as a warning.

establisbment of "His Place"
and the organization of a youth
choir which rehearses each
Sunday from 2 to 3:30p.m. al
the Bradbury Church of Christ.
Mrs. Bonnie Pickens
presided at the meeting with
the Fellowship giving a
commendation to Mrs. Bill
Carter who was instrumimljliin organizing the troup. Tbe
Carter family will move
Monday to North Ca•olina.
Speaker at the meeting was
Mrs. Pearl Welker, Retired
Senior Citizen Volunteer
project director in Meigs
County. She explained the
program Blld showed slides of
work being done in the county ..
Miss Beverly Wilcox opened
the meeting with a song, Mrs.
Wilma
Davidson
gave
devotions and Mrs. Betty Cline
had the prayer.
A report was given on the
Gideon dinner served recently
by the women.
Refreshments were served.
RETURN HOME
POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Salhaney. returned
Friday to their home at Yarmouth, Mass., after visiting
here two week5 with Mrs.
Jessie Reeves, the Arthur
Reeves, and Mr. and Mrs.
Jacob Johnson and family.
IS IN HOSPITAL
POMEROY - Mila Jean
Siders, a senior at Reynoldsburg High School is confined to
Childre.n's Hospital, COlumbus.
She Is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Siders, Reynoldsburg, and grBJlddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs. George Batey,
Five Points, Pomeroy, and Mr.
and Mrs. Leslie Siders, Middleport. Her room number is
509.

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heritage house
Your THOM MeAN Store

·run house: Judy Flagg, Judy
Gibbs, Jpyce Thoren, o~d
Helen Hubbard.
Basketball throw : BiD Baer,
Gerald Mlchllel, and Dave
Moorehead.
P~ndulum : Pauline Hill,
Nancy Patterson.
Balloons: Darlene Jeffers;
Janice Deem, Jane Barnett.
Cotton Cundy: Charlotte
Nease, Janice Lawson, and
Mildred Pierce.
Popcorn: Mi.nnie Harris,
Irene Dill, Janet Nease.
Cider, donuts and coffee:
Barbara Chapman, Gloria
Michael, Dorothy Amber~er .
Pop : Louise Frank, Betty
Hayes, Mary Guinther, and
Shirley Hubberd.
Country kitchen: Jeannette
Duffy, Opal Zerkle, Suzie
Grueser, Rhonda Dempsey.
Morley tree: Gloria Michael,
Dorothy Amberger, Mary
Chancey.
Tickets: Ellamay Norton,
Terri Michael.
Cake Walk: Susie Grueser,
Mary Chancey, Hugh McPhail.
Announcer: Susie Grueser.
Door: Elma Louks, Sandra
Hill, Ruth Steams. ·
Piano: Mrs. Steams.
Marshall: Jack Slavin.

Slate rummage sale

Church women meet

Tuppers Plains
Society News

fashion Lift
in Jarmon's

MIDDLE OF UPPER BLOCK
IN POMEROY
OPEN ALL DAY
THURSDAY

NEEDLEPOINT - Misa Patsy Glass, center, Area Extension Agent, Home Economics,
instructed a class in needlepoint Friday at the St. Paul's Latheran Church. She is shown here
working with Mrs. Jean Wright, left, and Mrs. Maxine Moore, both of Pomeroy.

MRS. RALPH HARVEY, matron at the Children's Home,
reports that more donations at the hom¢ have been received.
Recently donated were pillow cases from East Letart WSCS,
Mrs. Ivan Walker, clothing, Racine Grange two n~w toasters,
and money for the children on their birthdays from various
churches and organizations in the county.

Alfred Social Notes

Get a

Hartley 's Shoes

SPEAKING OF TRAVEUNG, Mrs. Dick (Mildred) Karr,
Jr., and Mrs. Richard (Martha) Chambers, both of Middleport,
will leave by jet from Columbus, on Oct. ~ for Ki.'liJimmee, Fla.
They will visit 10 days with Mrs. Chambers' son, Eric, who now
resides in Florida. 11)ey are going especially for Eric'~ birthday
on Oct. 9.

Miss Elizabeth J Pullins

Health club donates

POMEROY - A donation
toward expense Of promoting
· the one-half miU bond issue for
the building of a school for the
mentaUy retarded was made
by the Rock Springs Better
Heallh Club at a meeting
Thursday at the home Of Mrs.
Amos Leonard. Acheck for the
amount is being sent to Mrs.
Har.old Sauer, Middleport,
chairwoman Of the finance
committee.
Mrs. Lewis Grueser, Mrs.
Hugh Bearhs, and Mrs. Grace
Drake were appointed to take
care of the treat for the Meigs
.County Infirmary in October.
Mrs. Harold Blackston·
opened the meeting with the
L&lt;rd'a Prayer and the pledge.
Devotions were by Mrs.
George Skinner who read
scripture from Psalma 37:3.
wiD

POMEHOY - My huB blind und I spent lust Wl&gt;ekend with our
son Bob and family of New Phiiadelphia. On Sunday we were at
the •' Irs! Baptist Gburch where our liOn !lob and hi! wife, Cheryl,
go regularly, and I was amazed at the allen dance.
There were 1278 persons in Sunduy School, Including 584
children. 'fhe church OW!UI 12 buses that bring children In from
outlying arellli.
W~had to he at the church at!Ou .m: for services at 10:30 a.m.
in order to gel a seat. The church had standing room only, and I
add that It is a rather large church.
Anew church is presently under construction. Attendance at
the church has tripled in the past year. A very rewarding and
refreshing experience.
OUr granddaughter Lori joined the nursery set during the
worship hour.

SYilACUSE - Committees
for the annual Halloween
(arnival of the Syracuse
Elementary School . were appoln\00 Thursday afternoon at
an executive committee
meeting of the P'i'A held at the
home of Hugh McPhail ,
president.
The carnival has been set for
Oct. 25 at the school with the
president servi~g as general
chal
person .
, The committees are as
follows :
Fish pOI)lj: Glnna Arnott, Pat
Houdashelt, Jonella Davis, Jo
Ellen Roush, Sally Ebersbach.
Coke can loss: Carolyn
Roush, Karen Connolly, Mary
Jane Arms and Pat Philson.
Clown toss : Martha Me·
Phall, Marybell Warner.
Penny Drop: Emmagene
Holstein, Faye Cll!.ford,
Jeannie Allen.
Can toss: Linda Hubbard,
Bessie Sylvester, and Bob
Sylvester.
'R. C. Toss: Tom Chapman,
Bob Gibbs, Pete Michael, and
John Philson.
Dart board : David Flagg,
John Arnott, Bob Davis, Bob
Solstein.
'

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1Social

Bonsai
is topic

I Calendar
SUNDAY
HYMN SING, Hue! Com•
munity Church, I :30 p.m.
.Public invited.
YOUTH Choir practice, 2 to
3:30 p.m. at the Bradbury
Church of Christ.
REVIVAL THROUGH Oct. I
at Bradford Church of Christ,
7:30 each evening with Dale
Wise as evangelist.
HAYRIDE by Trinity Church
Sunday School, 5:30 p.m. at
Royal Oak Park . Ail members
invited.
'
EAGLE RIDGE Community
Church homecoming Sunday;
besket dinner · at noon; afternoon program, 2 p.m.
Special singers, public invited.
MONDAY
KICKOFF MEETING for
half mill bond issue for retarded workshop and school, 7:30
p.m . Monday at Trinity
ANNOUNCEMENT ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs.
Church,
Pomeroy. Everyone
Thomas Holter, Rt . I, Racine, are announcing the
Invited.
engagement of their daughter, Sharon Elain, to I?aul Card,
POMEROY GARDEN Club,
. son of the Rev. and Mrs. Robert Card, Lima, formerly of
7:30p.m. Monday at home of
.Pomeroy. The bride-elect is a 1973 graduate of Southern High
Mrs. Fred Blaettnar, Spring
School and is employed at Adolph's Dairy Valley of Pomeroy.
Ave. Roll caU, verse pertaining
Her fiance is a 1971 graduate of Meigs High School and is
to
fall.
employed at Rich Valley Dairy of Middleport. Wedding plans
are incomplete.
EASTERN Athletic Boosters
, ':~--==-'X:::.-:::::::::::::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;t,;:;-;:::~~:s-.~~;::-:~~=~s;:;~:~:?.;:~~::::;:::=*NX~ 8 p.m. at the high school.
Pictures of Federal-Hocking
game to he shown. Everyone
CLEVELAND HEIGHTS,
welcome.
Ohio
- Susan Kathleen
MEIGS County Salon 8 and 40
....
Waychoff, daughter Of Mr. and
~~ wiUmeet at 7:30 ill the home of
Mrs.
Roy Johnson Waychoff,
Julia Hysell.
Cleveland Heights, and Harris
MIDDLEPORT Garden Hayman Crow, son of Mr. and
Club, 7:30 p.m. at Columbus Mrs . Alfred E. H. Crow,
.~ POMEROY - Fifty-four years of teaching Sunday School! Blld Southern Ohio Electric Co . Racine, were married Aug. 25
That's quite a record and one held by Mrs. Erances Reibel of social room.
in a garden ceremony at the
MASON MOTHERS Club wiU home Of 1/ie bride's parents.
Trinity Church, Pomeroy.
A surprise tribute to this gracious illdy so dedicated to her sponsor an American Red Dr. John 0 . Humbert, of the
church was planned for this morning during the Sunday school Cross blOOdmobile from I to 6 Euclid Avenue Christian
p.m . .at· Mason City Fire Church, officiated.
holir.
We add our congratulations tQ those from the congreg~tion Station. Public, please report
to be donors.
there.
MEIGS County Agricultural
Society,
this . evening,
SURE TO BE missed from the local scene are the active,
secretary's office, Rock
SON BORN
ambitious Carters of Bradbury.
Springs
Fairgrounds.
POMEROYMr. an&lt;\ Mrs.
Bill Carter, pasto1 of the Bradbury.Church of Christ, and his
TUESDAY
Jerry ~ter, Rocky Mount, N.
· family wil1 he leaving tomorrow morning for Pine Town, N. C.,
REVIVAL
at
Syracuse
·
C.,
announce the birth of a son,
where the minister has accepted a pastorate at the Everett
Church of the Nazarene Sept. 13, at the Nash General
anrcb of Christ.
But not only will Meigs County be losing one pastor, but two. through Oct. 7 with Rev. 0 . G. Hospital at Rocky Mount. The 9
His son, Scott, is also leaving the Rutland Church of Christ so that McKinney, Charleston, W. Va., ib. boy has been named Jon
. he can accompany his family to North Carolin.a .and begin evangelist. Special singing . · Barham. Maternal grandServices at 7:30 each evening· parents are Mr. and Mrs: Cecil
graduate work at a university there. . .
.
·Caldwell; Reedsville, and the
The Carters' son, Rick, stationed with the Navy at Orl~ndo, open to public.
REVIVAL at 7:30 each paternal 'grandmother is Mrs.
Fla., is home on leave now and will he lending a hand with the
move. Brett had his final day at Meigs Junior High Friday.
evening through Oct. 6 at Beatrice Carter of Wake
BradfordChurchofChristwith Forest, N. C. Mrs . Edna
JEAN PARKE!Us back in the Holzer Medical Center after Dale Wise, evBllgelist. · I?ublic Summerfield, Long Bottom, is
having some treabnents at University Haspital and is having in vi~.
·
the great-grandmother. · Mr.
IDIJl'8 than her share of dilamfort and despair. Jean, always so
REVIVAL, through Oct. 7, and Mrs. Carter have another
faithful with cards and Bowers for her friends, is in Room 232. 7:30 each evening at Lebenon son, Jeffrey, five.
Remember ber.
Community Church; John Elswick, speaking.
IF YOUR group voted to make a contribution to the
. TUESDAY
promotion fund for tbe Meigs Community School one-l!alf mill .
CHESTER COUNCIL 323,
bondiuue, andhasn't as yet sentit in, here's the information you Daughters Of America, 7:30
may need.
p.m. at the hall. Practice for
Olecks are to be made out to Mrs. Harold Sauer, chair- inspection.
pel lUI, finan~-e committee, and mailed to her at Rt. I, Middleport. The committee is hard at work trying to come up With
POMEROY CHAPTER 186,
adequate funds to stage a gond promotion in the hope of getting OES regular meeting, 7:4~
Ule bond Issue passed. If It is passed the money will go toward p.m. Past matrons ami past
constructing a building for the school for retarded children and a patrons to he honored. Dues
workshop for the retarded adults of the county.
payable,.
Mrs. Jeanette Thomas, school administrator, advises us that
the State has assured her of matching funds.

Mis-s Sharon Elain Holter

Mrs. Harris Hayman Crow

Garden wedding unites
Miss Waychoff, Mr. ·Crow

Community

~Corner By Charlene Hoeflich

I

.

~

1
•

The bride, given in marriage
by her father, wore a candlelight Ivory aiencon lace
gown with a short matching
veil. She carried a bouquet of
daisies and baby breath.
The maid Of honor was Miss
Kathleen O'DonneU, Beachwood. Bridesmaids were Miss
Becky WaychOff, sister of the
bride, and Miss Polly Schaffner, Cleveland Heights. The
attendants wore gowns of pink,
yellow and lavender.
William Higginbotham,
Atlanta, served as best man.
Usher was John Parrish,
Havelock, N. C.
Foilowing a recepUon held
after the ceremony the couple
left for a wedding trip to
Toronto, Canada. They are
residing in AUanta, Ga.

Committees named for carnival

POMEROY - A program on
"Bonsai" whlch mea!\11 tray
tree was presented by Mrs.
Robert Thompson at • meQUns
of the Winding Trail Garden
Club Wednesday nisht at the
home of Charles Riffle with
Mrs. Faye Pratt as hoptess.
Mrs. Thompson e1plalned
the tray tree u a gnarled,
twisted, stunted, miniature
tree or shrub which can be
found growing on a rocky cliff.
Sbe suggested that once a
bonsai is found then several
trips shoul~ he made 10 ita
locaUon in the wilds to root,
prune and trim it so that it will
he more naturalized and :he
shock cl digging it up won't
cause it to die.
A bonsai, she said, must
epend a major porUon of ita life
outdoors with protection (rom
extremes. It was explained
that some houseplants make a
Hood "quick" bonsai mentioning the jade plant, azalea,
mogo pine and dwarf balllbOO.
The illusion of age Is typical of
the bonsai which comes in
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT- Mr. and Mrs. William
three categories, the upright,
Pullins, Rt. 2, Coolville, are announcing the engagement of
the slanting and the cascade. their daugl!ter; EUzabeth Joann, to Robert Allen C&amp;laway,
She said that it Is Important · son of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Calaway, Rt. 1, Reedsville. Miss
that they get daUy care since Pullins Is a junior at EBBtem High School. Mr. Calaway is
they are grown in a minimal employed by .Union Carbide Corp., Marietta. Wedding plans
amount of soil.
are incomplete.
Mrs. Ruth Moore presided at
the meeting with Mrs. Pratt ·
FIRST CHILD BORN
PLAN SALE
giving a poem, "A Mother's
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
MIDDLEPORT - The Af- Terry Wyatt, Pomeroy, are
Recipe for a Happy Home." It
ternoon
Circle of the Heath announcing the birth of their
was announced that the tour Of
Mrs. Hiram Fisher's garden United Methodist Church wUI first child, a son, Robby
has been canceUed a~d wlU be hold a rummage sale, Oct. :}5, Wayne, Sept. 22, at Pleasant
in the basement of the church, Valley Hospital. The infant
rescheduled next year.
corner
Of Third and Main, 9 weighed 5lbs., 9 OZII. Maternal
Ameeting Of the Bend 0' \he
River Garden Club was an- a.m: to 4 p.m.
grandparents are Robert
nounced and attended by Mrs.
Barton, Chester and Mrs. Nelia
Thompson and Mrs. Robert Terrell is 111 and a card was Seyler, ,Pomeroy. Paternal
Lewis who instaUed the new signed by the members for her. · grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
officers. The two will also Mrs. Richard Collins judged Charlea Wyatt, Letart, W. Va.
judge the Chester Garden Club · the ·arrangements awarding a Great-grandparents are Mr.
home flower show Qct. 3 at the blue ribbon to Mrs. Pratt, a red and Mrs. Ardith Barton,
home Of Mrs. Horace Karr.
to Mrs. Lewis, and a white to Pomeroy; Mrs. Lydia 'Hysell,
New program books were Mrs. Aaron Kelton. Mrs. Earl Pomeroy, and Steve Eblin,
distributed to the members. It Thoma won a blue ribbon for a Pomeroy is the great-greatwas repOrted that Mrs. John firethor.n specimen.
grandfather.

held at the home Of Mrs. W. A.
Morgan.
Mrs. Mark Grueser provided
material for the program
which inCluded the following
readings: "It's in the Hair" by
Mrs. Opha Offutt; "Memory is
a Chemical" by Mrs. Hugh
Bearhs; "Carrying a Load" by
Mrs. Scott Folmer; "Nation Of
Drunks" by Mrs. William
Grueser; "Low Cholesterol
Lamb Chops" by Mrs. WiUiam
Fol'mer, and "Electronic
Speech Clarifier" by Mrs. Fred
Goeglein.
The contest by Mrs. WiUiam
Grueser was won by Mrs. Scott
Folmer.
Refreslunenta were served
by Mrs. Leonard and Mrs.
James COnkle to those named
and Mrs. Homer Radford and
Mrs. William Radford.

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has been setfor Oct. 30, 6:30 to
7.:30 p.m. and is for young
people 14 and under. RuUand
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Needlepoint is 'Izn 'I.

MOHE THAN 33,000 OHIO FAMILIES will rec-eive
questionnaires asking that they evaluate 31ld suggest ways of
Improving the state's outdoor recreation facilities. This Is the
first time citizens are being asked what they want in the way of
. new recreational opportunities.
Natural Resources Director William B. Nye said the survey
results will be used in developing · the 1975-&amp;l Ohio Outdoor
POMEROY - A rummage
Recreation Plan, which is required by the federal government sale to raise funds to promote
for the state to continue to receive federal aid for recreational passage of the one-half mill
development.
,
bond issue for buliding conNye stressed that ali responses will be anonymous. He said struction funds for the Meigs
the forms are not coded in any way to identify citizens by name COmmunity School will be held
or address.
Thursday, . Friday
and
Saturday in the Hughes
building across from the

new agent.
and books helpful In creative
With needle, yarn Blld a piece canvas work. Sheets with
of canvas each of the women d'etailed instruction were
learned the three basic stitches provided to each of the
of needlepoint -the baH cross- homemakers.
stitch, the continental stitch,
The extension· agent also
and the diagonal or basket- displayed a number of kits on
weave stitch.
the market for piUow covers,
To. most of the women at- seats, Christmas cards, and
tending
the
workshop, pictures, along with the
needlepoint was a new ex- finlshed .products.
perience, but to a few present it
She described the fascinating
was one cif learning an easier combinations of individual
or heUer way.
-~ lines, colorful masses and . MIDDLEPORT - Assisting
Miss Glass displayed for the tactile forms poSSible to create the Men's Fellowship of the
group a variety of materisis 411 needlepoint and en~uraged Meigs County Churches of
the women to ·go creative w1th Christ with the project of
yam.
gathering clothl'!g for the
Friday's workshop in Grundy Mountain School at
needlepoint was the first of Grundy, Va., was taken on as a
several fall events being project by the Women 's
POMEROY - Max and Houdashelt, Racine; Mr. Blld planned by Miss Guilkey.
Feilowshipat a meeting ThursMary Thoma Reider, Denver, Mrs. Leo King, Columbus; Mr.
The next will be a pants day night at the Bradbury
Colo., were honored recently and ' Mrs. BUI Turner Blld fitting workshop held in .two Church of Christ.
with a family gathering at the Megan, Dayton; Mr. and Mrs. sessions by Mrs. Norma Deyo,
The group also · voted to
Rock Springs Grange hall.
Earl Thoma, Kelly Blld Suzan, extension clothing specialist of endorse the one-half mill bond
A dinner was held at noon Mr. and Mrs. George Zeigler Ohio State University.
issue for the retarded school
Both sessions wUJ be held in and to give a donation toward
and pictures were taken during and Roger, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
the afternoon.
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Walter the Columbus and Southern promotion of il$ passage. It
Attending were Mrs. Georgia Schreiber, Bert HeUman, Mr. Ohio Electric Co. social room was also decided to send a
Thoma, Mrs. Wilhelmina and Mrs. Homer Wiliard, Mrs. in'Middleport, the first on Oct. contribution to the American
Thoma, Mr. and. Ml'B. ·Glenn . Amber Lohn, Pomeroy; and 10 and the second on Oct. 17 Bible Society for Bibles for
Thoma, Gail · and Linda, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Thoma, with a morrung class from 9 missionaries . .The women's
a.m. to 12 noon and an af- . retreat to be held at the Ohio
Chester; Roy Thoma and Terri and Kevin, Rutland.
temoon class from I to 4 p.m. VaHey Christian Assembly
Danny, and Mrs. Margaret
Registrations are now being camp this month was Bll·
taken at the Extension Office, _nounced.
992-3895.
A report was given on the

POMEROY - Needlepoint
- the most challenging and
versatUe of all forms of embroidery - is definitely the
"in" thing now as response to a
Meigs Extension Service
workshop proved.
Twenty-seven Meigs County
women assembled together
Friday in the fellowship hall of
the St. Paul's Lutheran Church
for a fu1J four hours of instruction by capable Patsy
Glass, area extension agent,
home economics, assisted by
Marta Guilkey, Meigs County's

Family honored

Sunday school attendance on visit Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Sept. 23 was 35, the offering Swartt and family at
$14.10. A contribution of $25 Hockingport, 0., last Thursday
was made to the Retarded evening. · Mr. Bibbee stayed
School program, or "I Care". with Mr. Swartz while Mrs.
Worship services were held at Swartz visited at their son's
11, with Rev. Meece speaking home.
on "Tbe LoneUness of Christ."
Attendance was 32, Offering
was $17, pledges $17.
Recent guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Atherton were her
brother, Everett Taylor of
Mrs. Mirna Walker and Miss
Pomeroy, R.D., and another Terry . Curtis of Chester atbrother, Payton Taylor of · tended the Apple Festival at
Barberton, 0., and a sister · Jackson Saturday.
Evelyn Barr of Belpre, 0.
Mrs. Freda Mlller and Miss
Payton took the group out to Lenora Betzing of Chester and
dinner and to visit friends in Rev. and Mrs. Robert Meece
the area.
were Sunday dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Swartz Mrs. Edith Betzlng.
and family of Marietta, 0., · Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gutheil
visited Nina Robinson, Clara and son John of COlumbus were
Folll'od and Mr. and Mrs. Sunday guests of Mrs. Neisel
Hobart Swartz Sunday af- WeathennBll.
temoon.
Homer Cole Is a medical
The Orange Christian patient at a Lancaster hospital
Church will have its annual after he became quite iU on his
homecoming Sunday, Sept. 30 way home from a horse show
with usual morning services. A near Lancaster Sunday.
basket dinner wiil he at noon.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Tbe afternoon program hegins Honeycutt who moved to the
at 1:30 with special singers Arba_ugh addition here ·1!1'0
from Chester, 0.
Bllnouncinil the birth of a
Mary Carr spent several daughter, Wednesday at the
days last week with Mr. and Marietta Hospital. Tbe couple
Mrs. Russel! Collums and have two sons, one five and one
called on tinnie Leifheit at two.
Burlingham. ·
Keno Ridge
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost of
Mrs. Allee Dodson returned
Sugar Grove, Ohio, came
home
Saturday after spending
Saturday and took G~nevieve
Guthrie to the Band-o-Rama at two weeks with her son and
Marietta. Their daulihter and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
granddaughter, Beth Yost, is a Jack Conroy.
Paul Osborne · and family
member of Bern-Union band of
Sugar Grov~ which won first In visited the weekend with his
parade and formaUon on field mother, Mrs. Edith · Osborne.
and play Blld performance, out
Veteralll Memorial Hoapltal
of the 31 bands participating·
ADMITTED - Lori Ann
Around 5,000 tickets were sold
McDaniel,
Fort Benning, Ga.;
and 3,600 numbered in the 31
Howard Largent, Syracuse;·
bands.
Everett
Ervin, Middleport;
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mn. Vere Swartz were : Mr. Gertrude Rickard, Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Thomas
and Mn. Wald Swartz ol
Athe111, Maxine Spurlock and Sarver, Jr., Tyllis Roush, Roy
daughter ol Glouster, Mr. and Finch, Betty Eynon.
Mrs. Hobart Swartz, Kate
Honacher, and Mr. and Mrs.
VISITS MADE
Elmer Bibbee and Dorael. Mr.
LONG BOTTOM - Mra.
llwartz ill improving at this
Ruth Thornton and Mn. ~o
writing.
Mra. Genevieve Guthrie Ann Lawrence and family
called on her · lilter~n-law, recently villted relaUvea In
Bertine Story, near · Athena, Galllpolia. Mr. and Mrs.
Sunday afternoon.
. Howard Lal'n'ence and family
Mfl. Elmer Bibbee and recently 1pent a day at
Doi'IMII look Once Swartz to Camdeh Park, Huntlnston.

.i

Auxiliary sets dinner
RACINE - An election day
dinner and bazaar will be held
at the American Legion hall in
Racine by the Auxiliary of
Racine Post 602.
Plans for the activities were
made at a meeting Tuesday
night presided over by Mrs.
Frances Roberts. Members
were asked to contribute
homemade items for the
bezaar table.
Tbe Oct. 4 fall conference at
Jackson was Bllnounced. Mrs .
Henry Patro, department
treasurer, will he the guest
speaker. Also announced was
AuxiUary Day at the Xenia
Home, Qcl. 24. Members were
asked to contribute to the
country fair Oct. II at the
Athens Menial Health Center.
Mrs. Virgil Walker also

asked for jewelry, pocketbooks, and other miscellaneous
items to be ijsed as game prizes
for the veterans parties staged
monthly at the Mental Health
Center.
It was noted that two boxes of
ribbons are ready for mailing
to the Dayton Veterans
Hospital where they are made
into rugs.
.
Members were urged to get
their dues in before next
. Thursday's district conterence. A donation was made
for a gift for the Deparbnent
president and the District 8
president.
Mrs. Margaret Yost, music
chairwoman, presented a
program, Blld refreshments
were served by Mrs. Waiker.

During the uecuUve committee meetlns a "baktleu"
bake sale was planned for Oct.
&amp;. Tbe next PTA meettns will
he Oct. 9, 7:30 p.m.

Party honors
Miss ·Fields

HARTFORD, W. Va. Rebecca Fields, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Fielde, wa1
honored at a birthday party,
Saturday,September22, on her
eighth birthday. Attending
were Debbie, Cindy imd Tina
Smith of Middleport; Audrty
Fields, Mason; Ellen Mc,Dennilt, West COlumbia; Mrs.
Harold E. Smith, Middleport;
Jeffery Blld Stacy Rouali, Mrs.
Danny Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
William Gibbs and Tim Gibbs,
Mrs. Melvin Fields and Deidra
Fields, Debra Blld Lyndon
Fields, Charles and Cheryl
Fields, 'Mrs. Frances Johnson,
Mra. Betty Love, Mrs. WiiUam
Hinkle, all of Hartford, and the
host Blld hostess, Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Fields.
A clown motif was carried
outln the decorations, cake, ice
cream, Pl!neh and favors.
Games were played and pHzes
were aw.arded each chll~.
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Middleport Library. Tbe sale Mrs. David Fields, Sr. of
will begin at 9 a.m. all three Hartford.
days .
Caa 'I Bear II
Items for the rummage sale
Hikers on the Great Divide
may he left with Mrs. Paul
Karr, Chester, Mrs. Hugh Trail in the Canadian RocMies
Roush, Monkey Run, Mrs. sometimes tie sniali hells on
their packs so grizzly bears
George Skinner, ROck Springs will hear them coming. Most
Rd., or Mrs. Harold Sauer, Rt. hears avoid humans, and the
I, Middleport.
hell serves as a warning.

establisbment of "His Place"
and the organization of a youth
choir which rehearses each
Sunday from 2 to 3:30p.m. al
the Bradbury Church of Christ.
Mrs. Bonnie Pickens
presided at the meeting with
the Fellowship giving a
commendation to Mrs. Bill
Carter who was instrumimljliin organizing the troup. Tbe
Carter family will move
Monday to North Ca•olina.
Speaker at the meeting was
Mrs. Pearl Welker, Retired
Senior Citizen Volunteer
project director in Meigs
County. She explained the
program Blld showed slides of
work being done in the county ..
Miss Beverly Wilcox opened
the meeting with a song, Mrs.
Wilma
Davidson
gave
devotions and Mrs. Betty Cline
had the prayer.
A report was given on the
Gideon dinner served recently
by the women.
Refreshments were served.
RETURN HOME
POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Salhaney. returned
Friday to their home at Yarmouth, Mass., after visiting
here two week5 with Mrs.
Jessie Reeves, the Arthur
Reeves, and Mr. and Mrs.
Jacob Johnson and family.
IS IN HOSPITAL
POMEROY - Mila Jean
Siders, a senior at Reynoldsburg High School is confined to
Childre.n's Hospital, COlumbus.
She Is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Siders, Reynoldsburg, and grBJlddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs. George Batey,
Five Points, Pomeroy, and Mr.
and Mrs. Leslie Siders, Middleport. Her room number is
509.

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combinations; 2 agitate-spin speed combinations. Flowing Heat
Dryer handles' up to a lull18-pound load ... yet Is only 27"
wide. Automatic cool-down period. No-Heat cycle lor air fluffing.

heritage house
Your THOM MeAN Store

·run house: Judy Flagg, Judy
Gibbs, Jpyce Thoren, o~d
Helen Hubbard.
Basketball throw : BiD Baer,
Gerald Mlchllel, and Dave
Moorehead.
P~ndulum : Pauline Hill,
Nancy Patterson.
Balloons: Darlene Jeffers;
Janice Deem, Jane Barnett.
Cotton Cundy: Charlotte
Nease, Janice Lawson, and
Mildred Pierce.
Popcorn: Mi.nnie Harris,
Irene Dill, Janet Nease.
Cider, donuts and coffee:
Barbara Chapman, Gloria
Michael, Dorothy Amber~er .
Pop : Louise Frank, Betty
Hayes, Mary Guinther, and
Shirley Hubberd.
Country kitchen: Jeannette
Duffy, Opal Zerkle, Suzie
Grueser, Rhonda Dempsey.
Morley tree: Gloria Michael,
Dorothy Amberger, Mary
Chancey.
Tickets: Ellamay Norton,
Terri Michael.
Cake Walk: Susie Grueser,
Mary Chancey, Hugh McPhail.
Announcer: Susie Grueser.
Door: Elma Louks, Sandra
Hill, Ruth Steams. ·
Piano: Mrs. Steams.
Marshall: Jack Slavin.

Slate rummage sale

Church women meet

Tuppers Plains
Society News

fashion Lift
in Jarmon's

MIDDLE OF UPPER BLOCK
IN POMEROY
OPEN ALL DAY
THURSDAY

NEEDLEPOINT - Misa Patsy Glass, center, Area Extension Agent, Home Economics,
instructed a class in needlepoint Friday at the St. Paul's Latheran Church. She is shown here
working with Mrs. Jean Wright, left, and Mrs. Maxine Moore, both of Pomeroy.

MRS. RALPH HARVEY, matron at the Children's Home,
reports that more donations at the hom¢ have been received.
Recently donated were pillow cases from East Letart WSCS,
Mrs. Ivan Walker, clothing, Racine Grange two n~w toasters,
and money for the children on their birthdays from various
churches and organizations in the county.

Alfred Social Notes

Get a

Hartley 's Shoes

SPEAKING OF TRAVEUNG, Mrs. Dick (Mildred) Karr,
Jr., and Mrs. Richard (Martha) Chambers, both of Middleport,
will leave by jet from Columbus, on Oct. ~ for Ki.'liJimmee, Fla.
They will visit 10 days with Mrs. Chambers' son, Eric, who now
resides in Florida. 11)ey are going especially for Eric'~ birthday
on Oct. 9.

Miss Elizabeth J Pullins

Health club donates

POMEROY - A donation
toward expense Of promoting
· the one-half miU bond issue for
the building of a school for the
mentaUy retarded was made
by the Rock Springs Better
Heallh Club at a meeting
Thursday at the home Of Mrs.
Amos Leonard. Acheck for the
amount is being sent to Mrs.
Har.old Sauer, Middleport,
chairwoman Of the finance
committee.
Mrs. Lewis Grueser, Mrs.
Hugh Bearhs, and Mrs. Grace
Drake were appointed to take
care of the treat for the Meigs
.County Infirmary in October.
Mrs. Harold Blackston·
opened the meeting with the
L&lt;rd'a Prayer and the pledge.
Devotions were by Mrs.
George Skinner who read
scripture from Psalma 37:3.
wiD

POMEHOY - My huB blind und I spent lust Wl&gt;ekend with our
son Bob and family of New Phiiadelphia. On Sunday we were at
the •' Irs! Baptist Gburch where our liOn !lob and hi! wife, Cheryl,
go regularly, and I was amazed at the allen dance.
There were 1278 persons in Sunduy School, Including 584
children. 'fhe church OW!UI 12 buses that bring children In from
outlying arellli.
W~had to he at the church at!Ou .m: for services at 10:30 a.m.
in order to gel a seat. The church had standing room only, and I
add that It is a rather large church.
Anew church is presently under construction. Attendance at
the church has tripled in the past year. A very rewarding and
refreshing experience.
OUr granddaughter Lori joined the nursery set during the
worship hour.

SYilACUSE - Committees
for the annual Halloween
(arnival of the Syracuse
Elementary School . were appoln\00 Thursday afternoon at
an executive committee
meeting of the P'i'A held at the
home of Hugh McPhail ,
president.
The carnival has been set for
Oct. 25 at the school with the
president servi~g as general
chal
person .
, The committees are as
follows :
Fish pOI)lj: Glnna Arnott, Pat
Houdashelt, Jonella Davis, Jo
Ellen Roush, Sally Ebersbach.
Coke can loss: Carolyn
Roush, Karen Connolly, Mary
Jane Arms and Pat Philson.
Clown toss : Martha Me·
Phall, Marybell Warner.
Penny Drop: Emmagene
Holstein, Faye Cll!.ford,
Jeannie Allen.
Can toss: Linda Hubbard,
Bessie Sylvester, and Bob
Sylvester.
'R. C. Toss: Tom Chapman,
Bob Gibbs, Pete Michael, and
John Philson.
Dart board : David Flagg,
John Arnott, Bob Davis, Bob
Solstein.
'

Middleport, 0._

FRIGIDAIRE CLEAM UP OFFER
Bur 1 Fr\Qidaltt Lau~r:IIY P1lr tWCD3T Wn~ar 111d anr Oryn). 1 Frlgh:!tlrt Llundry
Canlet iLC3 · ~ or LCU· 120), or lha Fflgldal ra Wllhl[ IWC03T) btlwNn Saot. 23
and 0(;1 . 1( Mallll'lll cDupon, wit h 11 copy ot rour Nln al i pJ..~o ll'la ad.dr111 thown

oalcw . , . poalmtrkld no 11111 tl'lan rnldnlght,

~ondar ,

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,

Mall compleltd coupon and Nl•• allp to : Ftlgldll,. Clean Up Orttr, P.O.
Box 140A, Dth&lt;tlt, Mlchlg1n 41232,

0$10
cash 0$15 cash 0$20 cash
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Nott : C(Hipon mu11 bt reCII¥td . no l•t•r \han No'141mbtr 1, 1i73. Olltr J"ht whlll, pronlbiiH,
IUid, Dl rutriC\ Id by ltw, Allow IPPI G~Imtttly :l(l dW)'I. IIIII rtCI II)l 0 COIIPII" it 'lltlcfll,.
lor dlllver, o l chtck. .

id fashion enthusiasts
are lumping on the
bandwagon for Connie's
chain-link casual. Gold
give:&gt; just the right
dressed-up
touch I
Brown. ·

Just at the time of year when you're looking for washday capacity and Iabrie c1re,
Frigidaire is making it easier than ever to get. To prove It, just check the coupon
above a~d see how you can gat a $10. $.15 or $20 refund from Frigidaire when you
buy a dependable Frigidaire Washer, Laundry Center or Waeher/Dryer pair.

CONNIE
'

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

•

•

�1' - Tilt SUndllv TU.. • Se..WI. Sundlv. Seol. 30. 117~

~icycle

PRICES GOOD SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY SEPT. 30th ·&amp;OCT. 1st
LADIES
ROLL SLEEVE

12x90

MAXINE GRIFFTrll

Mrs. Griffith to
win scholarship
POMF;ROY - Mrs. Maxine Among her major responGriffith , cashier, Pomeroy slbillties are operations,
National Bank, will be honored reports, and student Joana. She
by the National Association of is also secretary to the bank's
Bank Women, Inc. as the Board of Directors.
recipient of the Lake Region's
Mrs. Griffith has been a
1973 Scholarship Award.
member of NABW since 1964.
· The scholarship will be She lierved the Ohio Group as
presented to her at an Oct. 2nd chainnan of the Scholarship
Awards Breakfast during Committee in 197().71, and is
NABW's 51st Annual Con- now chairman-elect of the
vention being held at the · Southeastern Ohio Group. Also
Fairmont Hotel, Dallas, Tex., electi!d 1973-74 vice president
Sept. 29 through Oct. 3.
of the Ohio Valley Chapter of
The scholarship tuition grant AlB, she Is the first woman to
will enable Mrs. Griffith to be an officer of the local
further her banking education. banking organization.
!ale has been attending the
Her htisband is. Cbarles E.
Ohio School of Banking, Ohio Griffith,
an
operating
Unlversity, and tak:, ~ the engineer.
·
eouraes necessary to earn !he
The National Aasoclation of
American Institute of Banking Bank is a professional
Basic, Standard and Advanced organization of more than
Certificates.
11,000 women bank officers.
The scholarship winner has Approximately 1,000 members
been with Pomeroy National are expected in Dallas for the
since 1942, beginning her Convention activities and to
career as a secretary. She was hear such speakers as fonner
named acting cashier in 1961 Secretary of the Treasury John
and appointed cashier in 1963. B. Connally.

SHIRTS

By United Press International
Represen! atives of the
striking Detroit teachers and
the Detroit School Board were
hopeful of reaching agreement
Saturday that would end the
month-long strike that has kept
the nation's fourth largest
school system's 270,000
children on extended vacation.
"We still have a shot at
settling," one board negotiator
said Friday.
Teacher strikes across the
nation left about 350,000
students out of school.
Michigan was the state hardest
hit by strikes with about 300,000
students out .
State Mediator Edmond
Phillips said both sides in the
Detroit strike have cooperated
in an effort to settle the strike.
"We're still trying to resolve
very many issUes that have to
be resolved but the partieS are
working very hard. "They're
·very cooperative," Phillips
said.. .
.
Six schools in strike-bound
McArthur, Ohio, remained
open Friday, but attendance
was light. McArthur School
Supt. Kenneth Christopher who
fired 87 striking teachers
rejected an offer from federal
mediators to assist In the weekold strike.
·

TV educational
kits available

1

TV Klta are now available for
, the program, "Your Future Is
Now" on Channel 33 starting
Tuesday, Oct. 2at6:30 to 7 p.m.
two nights a week (Tuesday &amp;
Thursday) until May . .
This Is a G.E.D. Preparation
program to help persons win
the Hlgh School Equivalency
Diploma. They study at home
using the TV Kita which contain three books.
These klta are free and
avatiable at the Mason County
Adult Leal'lllna Center located
Jn the Vocational . Technical
Centsr on the Ohio River Road,
Point Pleaunt. The school Is
Ol»'n from 1:30 to 3:30 Monday
lhtough Thursday and Monday
evenlnJirom8 to 9:30p.m. Call
the IICbool at 67W024 for any
addlUoilll inf9rmat1on.

t '

Officials of strlke-bouf\d
Catholic schools in Brooklyn
and Queens in New York City
were pessimistic about the
chances of an early settlement.
"Our offer has remained the
same. There is simply no place
for us to ·go. -we .took a
calculated risk and made our
final offer," said Brother
Medard !ilea, a spokesman for
the schools.
·The Indiana State Teachers
Association Friday said the
Highland School Board should
accept binding arbitration to
settle a teachers strike in the
community. ISTA President
Ronald Jensen said the
teachers had repeatedly tried
to get the board to sulnnlt to
arbitration, but the boud had
refused.
Elementary schools In
Yorktown, N. Y., and Harrison,
N. Y., serving 8,000 students,
were on modified schedules
due ,to the teachers' strike.
CAR CAUGIIT FIRE
RACI)IIE - The Racine E-R
squad at 11:54 a.m. Saturday
went to the Albert Hill
residence where a 1966 Merr.ury car caught fire when the
carburetor backfired. There
were no Injuries.
OPENS NEW CENTER
CUYAHOGA FAUS, Ohio
(UP!) - Mental Health and
Mental Retardation Director
Kenneth Gaver will pertlcipate
in Monday's dedication of a
comprehensive community
health center here . The
facUlty, the flrsl of its kind in
Ohio, will offer inpatient,
outpatient, emergency, partial
hospitalization and consul,l.iltion educational services.
FORMER BODY GUARD
FORMER GUARD DIES
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Funeral service• will he held
Monday for Jinunie D. Wolfe,
43, deputy direc~r of enforcement in the Liquor
Control Department and a
former State Highway
Patrolma!l, who dii!d of a
cerebral hemorrhage . He
formerly served as a
bodyguard for tonner Gov.
James A. Rhodes and Gov.
John J.'Gilligan.

BODY
SHIRTS

LOOM
WOVEN

BLANKETS

$366

HECK'S REG ..

$344

Heck's Reg.
.14.44

·. MEN'S
LONG SLEEVE

DRESS
SHIRTS
2 FOR
$500

HECK'S REG.
. 14.88

2.88

1

HECK'S REG. •3.99

CLASSIC

TIRE

WHITE WALLS

PUMP

HECK'S
REG.

$}22

... . .

~

'.

lA INCH
. BLACK
&amp;DECKER

PERSONAL Fl LE

.DRILL

9.97

1

HECK'S
HECK'S

REG.
1
2.66

· REG. •1.88

COLEMAN

JACK
;STANDS

STOVE

HECK'S ·
REG.
$17.99

Settlement near

in Detroit strike

LADIES
NYLON
RIB

3.99

·2 $·soo

$12''

FOR

MATIEL

7"

RAGGEDY ANN &amp;
ANDY
DOLLS

BEANS
DOLL

.$999
Hec/c's Reg. $14.99

CHECK FILE

CAR CREEPER

~1''

S566

HECK'S REG. •2.66

7 oz.
GlADE

HECK'S REG. •8.99

Heck's

son

AIR
"
FRESHENER

DRINKS
12 oz. cans
Asst. Flam

24 cans

Heck's Reg. 12.99
HECK'S REG •. 59'

300 Cl

BRUT
LOTION

HECK'S COTTON BALLS

SPARTUS SILHOUETTE

KITCHEN WAU CLOCK
A-lORE

KODAK

7 oz.

POcKE'I: INSTAMATIC

CAMERA KIT
0 '.

cosmehc
..:.... . . puffs

HECK'S
REG.

IM6

HECK'S REC
'1.99

58'

PING PONG SET
HECK'S REG.
16.99

HECK'S REG •
•4.29

REGINA
NO. 81025

RUG
SHAMPOOER
OFFICIAL

Smoll•tt, litht•lf podei modtl.
Shutter speed: 1/ 90 "cor~~ ...
1/&lt;10 Mcond for llooh. .
.

Heck's lleg. $21.26

'

$2599
HECK'S REG • .
'31.96

2 ONLY

NO. 572

SCREEN HOUSE

COLEMAN
11111111 ITI II.IIITIIU

HEATER

the most

cou

danger~us

tf

llrandt supports Nixon
plan for western allies

WASHINGTON (UP!) President Nixon met with West
WASHINGTON (UPI )- The Consumer
German Chancellor Willy
Product Safety Cornmi.ulon Saturday
Brandt Saturday and drew
singled out bicycles as the most hazardous
support for hi~ efforts to
product--Including automobiles--on the
'" establish ,a new relationship
American market.
with European allies.
It said the second highest rlak of injury
The While House, virtually
comes from Indoor an~ outdoor stairs,
ruled out until Novem~r, at
ramps and landings, and the third most
•
the earliest, any presidential
dangerous product area Is nonglass doors,
trip to Europe to formally set
•
. including IICI'een and garage doors.
up a new Atlantic alliance.
The agency, created. by Congress last
TELETHON SUCCESSFUL - Kenny Cremeans and Donna Misner, members
Presidential spokesman Geyear and in operation since May, released
of the Gallla County Civil Defense were among several volunteers working In the
raid L. Warren said plans for
list of the products over which it has
two day telethon this weekend for the Gallla County Volunteer Emergency Squad.
such
a trip-long hoped for by
jurisdiction, ranked numerically ln order
As of 2 p.m. Saturda~. the contrlb)ltlOns totaled $3,200. Federal Mogule Plant
Nixon
to cap hls "year of
of injury risk. The figures were based on
employees, union and the compeny donated $1,086 and challenged other plants to
Europe"- would await the outemergency room data from 119 hospitals- _ _:do:=_n_:a_te_a_slm
.:.._::il_ar_a_m_o:...u:...
nt:....- - - - - - -- - -- - - -- - - come of a visit to London and
about 2 per cent of the total-all over the
other capitals next month by
though there may be fewer actual ac- reqwrmg emergency room treatment Secretary of State Henry A.
country.
Data Ia fed dally into a computer to give cidents than with some other products, each year. Hazards include mechanical Kissinger,
the agency a quick idea of what people are because of the degree to which children !allures, feet caught in spokes or chain and
beillg injured by, and to !llert them to any are involved, or perhaps the severity of ac- loss of control resulting In collisions.
w..:::~.::::::&gt;.=:WP".«i7.f&amp;WA'~W.i.:&gt;.«
The agency said it expects to issue a
series of related injuries from one product cidents. Thus the "most hazardous" tag
Rebels held off
for bicycles reflects not only the risk of . mandatory safety regulation for bicycles
or type of product. ·
The list reflects not only the number of injury but whO might he injured and how before the year Is out. The Food and Drug
PQNOM PENH (UPI) Administration, which had prime
injuries but their severity and the degree badly.
Outnumbered Cambodian
responsibility for product safety before the
to which · chlldren under age 10 are introops halted advancing
volved. The last two factors were assigned The commission estimated that commission came into being, issued a
rebel forced on Phnom
higher numbers.
bicycles, and the equipment attached to proposed safety standafd for bikes before
Penh's southern deleue IJne
Thus bicycles came out on top, even them, are responsible for 372,000 injuries in relinquished responsibility.
Saturday but a battalion
commander said bls weary
soldiers need food, am·
400 Beagles for
munition
and
reinforcements If they were to
poisoning wanted
bold the line below the
capital.
_
WASHINGTON (UPI) In Phnom Penh, the United
The Army plans to buy up to
Statu
and C•mbodia slgaed
400 thoroughbred beagles for
CASPER, Wyo. (UP!) - A
an accord . Saturday under
testing polson gases and fire bombing prompted
which Washington boosted
developing a vaccine to deputies Saturday to begin
Its ecouomlc aid to Clim·
counteract a new binary guarding families of two men
bodla by another $5 million.
nerve gas, 8 spokesman said charged with assaulting two
So far during the current
Saturday.
young girls and throwing them
fiscal year, the United States
The Army will pey $80 for over a 25().foot-higb cliff where
has supplied $31.95 million in
each dog to be used In a ·one was killed .
economic assistance to
"Feelings are running very
testing
program
at
Cambodia.
The total
Edgewood Arsenal, Md., the high" said Natrona CoWttY
•
projected
aid
lor
the current
ATLANTA (UP!) _ Voters in ihis image ·spokesman said. He added Sheriff Bill Estes. "We're
fiscal year Is expected to
that the beagles are "a appealing for reason. I think if
conscious city , alarmed over a rising murder rate
standard laboratory we can keep everything on a
total more than $90 million.
and anxious to st.ill racial tensions, decide Tuesday
animal." Rep. Les Aspln, D- low key, it will help."
whether to put a black man in the mayor's office.
Wis., who earlier this year
The men, jailed under a
There are 206,270 persons eligible to vote attacked the Air Force's use $275,000 bond each, have been
about . 4,000 more whites than blacks. The
of beagles to study the effect charged with murder and rape
registration is about the same as four years ago in
of exhaust from jei engines in the death of Amy Burridge,
the last city election but the black voting strength
and poisons produced by 11, and the assault of her 18has increased sharply. In ' the closing days of the
burning aircraft com- year-old sister.
emotion-charged campaign, five candidates
ponents, described the
The girls were attacked last
Army's new plan as a Monday by two men who .VOL. 8 NO. 35
remal·ned as sert·ous contenders. Two, including
"outrage."
stopped to help them chB!Ige a

a

Brandt and NixDn emerged
smiling and joking from an
hour-long "informal review" of
U. S.-European relations.
Brandt was in the United
States for an address to the
Unlt,ed Nations. General
Assembly and other public
· appearancesm
Nixon, accompanied by his
wife Pat, went by helicopter to
Camp David, Md., shortly after
the midday meeting \1 ith
Brandt.
Warren said the two leaders

N. w c.lttn.~ . r "Cat " • TI'Pit mod.rit •IMI
•JIIcl.111 "-''" lltt tilth• f••l~ttl of lh bit
, llr•lhtr, tt. 0.'-'.,, I" 0 JOOQ I• ~ IT!J htCIIt

APPROX. lO'xlO'
HECK'S
165.88

·------------------1 ONLY

NO. 569

12'xl2'

CANOPY
HECK'S REG. 165.88

agreed that attempts to revise
the European alliance that has
guided relations since World
War II was a "subje&lt;.1 of importance." He said both expressed satisfaction with the
progress of preliminary
negotiations toward this end.
The President, trying to
emphasize the shift away from
preoccupation with Southeast
Asia, has designated 1973 as
"the year of Europe" In which
he hopes to establish a new set
of principles to replace Cold

War vintage relationships In
which the United States aaswned most of the defense
costs and gave European allies
a break In trade relations to
spur economic recovery.
His efforts so far have been
raiher coolly received, par·
tlcularly by France. Objections
stem chiefly from fears the
United States will use 'the
threat of pulling troops ·out of
NATO to wring too many
trading ·concessions from the
European Common Market.

Families
guarded

Atlanta may
elect Black
h
II
t 0 City. . a'
e ·

FORTY-FIFTH YF;AR - Friday morning when F;dlson Hobstetter unlocked the Pomeroy
National Bank, it marked his 45th year of association with that institution. Employed as a
bookkeeper 45 years ago, Hobstetter moved to assistant cashier and then to cashier on Jan. I,
1932, and was named to the board of directors that year. On May 28, 1941, ne was named
president of Pomeroy National and holds the record in years of service among the presidents of
the bank which is over 100 years old. Mr. Hobstetter also is chainnan of the hank's board of
directors. Saturday night he was guest of honor at a dinner held at the Meigs Inn.
'

...

'

f~~:!~::~n::r~~;r~ar~l~acc~:;n:f :~~teb~:~~~ ·Chief ~~::~z:~=;:~:;~=:~~==~~gx::~:; · ~~~ ::· :;~~e~a~;r:~~~!~~ VI. c'e

mayor, is counting on a str,ong
black voter turnout plus substantial white liberal support to
place him in an almost certain
run-off election.
The 35-year-old lawyer en_.
tered politics in 1966 in a,
"suicide mission" against U.S.
Sen. Herman Talmadge. He lost
overwhelmi••ly statewt.'de, but
..,
won Atlanta with 6,000 votes to
spare.
While he promotes biracial
solutions to the city's problems
in his campaign ads and In
speeches, some white voters
label him a "black racist"
·because of his rep~ated criti-

~imts .. itntintl

TUNIS (UP!) - Two Arab
guerrillas who hijacked an
Austrian train, took three
Soviet Jews hostage but freed
them after forcing Austria to
agree to stop aiding Israelibound Jewish refugees, landed
in Ubya Saturday night in a
lildlt olane, the Libyan news
agency reported,
, -The agency, in a dispatch
monitored here, said the twinengined Cessna landed at the
Okba Ibn Nafaa base at 6.30
p.m. (1:30 p.m. EDT). It said
· authorization for the l1111ding
was given by the libyan
govenunent "for humanitarian
· reasonll" after the two guerrillas threatened to blow up the
piane in ftlght.

OLE:VELAND (UPI) - Unda
G. Blaylock, 23, a Go-Go dancer
turned iron worker, said
Saturd•y she Intends to keep
her job even If It means
walldngsirders on multi-~tlorled
coDJtructlon projects.
Mrs. Blaylock, a divorcee
with two chlldren, satd some of
her coworkers want her fired
because abe Ia the city's first
female Ironworker. some coworkers have suggested that
she walk the girders on high
construction projects in hopes
ollrlghtenlng her Into quitting.
"II doean't matter to me how
h!Jh the glrden are, I like my
job and II climbing high girders
. Ia pll't of the job I JUIM I'll
have to do It," llhe IBid.
Accordl!IJ to officials of
lrunworkera Union Local17, the

•

Massell has put up a strong were raped and tossed over a
flght on both fronts, denying bridge into the North Platte .
allegations against his brother River.
,
andarguingthatthecrlme rate
A fishennan discovered the
Is not as bad as people seem to older girl early Tuesday sitting
think.
along a road in Fremont
State Sen. Leroy Johnson, the Canyon, 35 miles southwest of
other serious black contender, Casper. The body of her sister LOS ANGELES (UP!) _
The New York Times reportmakes his· strongest pitch to the was pulled · from the river
d Sp' T A
Vice
Pres!
ent
tro
.
gnew,
·
ed
Friday that Agnew decided
wh1·te communityn saying he is several hours later.
hn B k charging that he was the new , to ·ask the House of
a moderate who can beat
County Attorney Jo
ur
f J . De
t
target
or
usttce
partmen
ld
Ro
Jacksoninarunoffm
.
said the two men,
na
h b 1 d Representatives for a full
ed
dJ
prosecutors w o ung e investlgatiim of allegations of
The two other major conten-~roy Kenn y, 27• an erry Watergate, declared twice wrongdoing alter CBS quoted
ders, former U.S. Rep. Charles Ib&gt; Jenkins, 29, both of Casper • before cheering Republicans Assistant Attorney General
Wellner and retired Army Col. faced a mandatory death and a nationwide television
Harold Dye, draw support from penalt~ as a ~suit ~~ a new audience Saturday that "I will
opposite ends of the political Wyof!lmg law If co~~tcted;
not resign if indicted."
spectrum.
·
fie said the survt~g Sister
d th
f
was In good condillon at a Laying asi e e text 0 a
Casper hospital with a broken subdued prepared speech,
WASHINGTON (UP!) 'd
· 1 Agnew told 2,000 Republican Rep. William Harsha, R-Ohlo,
hip. Burk sw the younger gtr women that "I am clearly and said Saturday It would be
apparently
raped. sur- unequlvocably innocent ·of the "utterIy r1'd'1cu1ous " for th e
Estes saidwas
henot
ordered
There was no immediate through the counttry, .the veillance on the homes of charges" being investigated by House to undertake an inword of what happened to the hijackers released their three Kennedy and Jenkins because a federal .grand jury in his vestigation into the activities of
Jewish hostages and an Austri- of an attempt to fire bomb one native Baltimore, Md.
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew.
guerrillas.
·
an
customs
man
they
had
also
of
the
residences
Friday
night.
Although
he
did
not
mention
House Speaker Carl Albert
The plane apparently flew
He said the incendiary device names in his prepared speech last week rejected Agnew's redirectly to Llpya from been holding.
Italian
officials
in
Cagliari,
buried
at the house caused a when he spoke of "accusatory quest for such an investigation.
Cagliari, Sardinia despite
Sardinia,
had
announced
small
fire
but no one was in- stories maliciously supplied by
''While I am deeply concernearlier reports it would refuel
anonymous sources," Agnew ed that this most serious mat·
earlier they had word from the
ln Malta.
jured.
sw
· quIcklY reso1ved for th e
The fire bombing occurred 'd in h1's off-the-cuff remarks ter IS
The end of the guerrillas' Ubyan government of Col.
odyssey came 32 hours after Moammar Khadafy that Libya after private funeral services that "! am a big trophy" and a sake of both the vice president
victim of Justice Department and the country, I do not bethey seized hostages aboard an would let the Palestinians land. were held for the dead girl.
prosecutors who were trying to lleve that a congresslQnal
emigrant train bringing out
save
face because of Inept Investigation at this time
Jews from Russia and forced a
handling of the Watergate would be appropriate," Harsha
major political concession
case.
said.
from the Austrian government
Agnew vowed to .fight what
Harsha noted that the matter
in retlirn for their release.
he
called
"a
cruel
form
of
Is
already being Investigated
The Austrian move ,stirred a
kangaroo trio! in the media" by the Justice Department and
storm of criticism in Austria,.
inspired
QY anonymous new feels that the judicial branch is
Israel and other coilntr(es.
leaks .that threatened to the proper ann of the governAfter the Austrians agreed to
destroy his political career.
mentto deal with this matter at
MIDDLETOWN,
Ohio
(UPI)
stop letting Soviet jews transit - U. S. Supreme Court Justice
At Ute close of his speech, he this stage.
' William 0 . ' Douglas told a
brought the audience to Its feet
"!ilould the courts decide
lecture series audience at the
in arm-waving,thunderous ap- that the vice president Is inMiami University branch
WASHINGTON (UP[) - A plause when he said:
dlctible then the original
.
campus
here
Friday group of 260 book publishers
"Because of these tactics criminal allegations could then
Americans must ban together called Saturday for repeal of which have been employed
·
to "start back and reclaim the all laws which prohibit sale,
govern~ent through par· exhibition or distribution of
members want her fired tlclpatory democ1·acy ."
'sexually explicit printed ened into furnishing evidence
because she Is a woman and Douglas, who barred radio or material to adults.
against me - they have perMOSCOW (UP!) - The twothey feel ironwork Is strictly "a television newsmen from at- The Association of American jured. themselves in many man Soyuz-12 spacecraft
man's profession."
tending his speech, said his Publishers (AAP) said repeal cases, It's my understandiilg - bumped to a safe landing on the
Mrs. Blaylock entered the generation had politically of all such federal, state and I will not resign If Indicted .. .! plains of Central Asia Saturconstruction trade two weeks bankrupted the nation . He said local laws Is the only recourse wlll not resign If indicted! "
day, ending a t wCKiay mission
ago after dancing In a west side he hoped the present In light of a Supreme Court
Some ln the audience clam- that prepared the way for a
bar for six months.
generation would organize, be ~eclsion last June 21 which bered on top of their chairs, U.S..SOviet linkup in space in
"I had no Idea I could active and 'start back at the tightened the legal definition of stlll cheering, as the vice 1975.
become an Ironworker untll beginning.
obscenity. But the AAP said it president thanked the GOP . Cosmonauts Vaslly Lazarev
some men came Into Ute bar
Douglas crltl!ed the nation's would not oppose any "careful- women for "hearing me oul" and Oleg Makarov, making
l'here I worked and asked If I large business corporations for ly drawn " legislation prohibit- and declared : "I intend to stay their first flight, floated to
wanted a better job," she said. running the government. He lng commercial distribution or and fight."
earth In Utelr parachut~rne
"They clime back the next said they had been given the display of sexual materials to
The Justice Department, spacecraft at 2:34 p.m. (7:34
day and gave me a union power through legislation and young people. .
which had labeled "patently a.m edt), the Tass news agency
application to fill out and here I judicial decision. Douglas
The association, whose 260 ridiculous '' a charge by said.
am," ahe added.
charged lobbies and cor- members claim to publish M Agnew's lawyers Friday that
The soft landing took place in
After all of the particulars poratlons were really running per cent of all book&amp; in the he was the victim of a spersely settled territory 240
l'tre cleared up, she was hire~ the country; not the people.
United States, said that .after deliberate department cam· miles ~· uthwest of Karaganda
by Union Steel and Erectors
"If people would band three years of study It has. palgn to drive him out of office in SOviet Kazakhstanm
Co. and sent to a construction together, they could overcome decided lo endorse a 1970 and "assure his conviction,"
Space doctors pronounced
·project In s~burban Broadview this corporate power which . report by the Commission on had no comment on the vice the two crewmen fit after their
Heights.
now exists ," be said.
Obscenity and Pornography . president's speech.
47 hours and 16 minutes In

people could

band together '

Publishers

ask end of
porno bans

:!:.:~:~~~::~:~~~~~ . Soyuz

'

Henry E. Petersen a week ago
as saying he was confident the
government could get a conviction against Agnew.
CBS quoted Pe~ersen 1 who is
chief of the Justice Department's criminal division and

led the government's orlgl!tal
Watergate investigation, .as
saying of the Agnew case:
"We've got the evidence.
We've got it cold." ..
One day after his lawyers
filed suit in Baltimore, Md.,
seeking to halt his in- · ·
vestlgatlon and possible in- ,
dictment by a federal grand
jury in an alleged . political
be reviewed in the court and kickback scheme, Agnew went
resolved in the proper judicial before the National Federation
manner," said Harsha.
of Republican Women In a
"For almost a year now, the defiant mood and declared:
government has been tied up in
"I can assure you, contrary
the Watergate Circuis in Ute to all the rumor and speculaSenate, and as a result, the. tlon gushing out of Washington
vital domestic issues of this these days, .that this address
nation .have been neglected," before your group, my
said Harsha In his weekly Republican friend~. will not be
newsletter.
my last."
.
"Consequently, I think It is
Following convention aputterly ridiculous for the House pearances by two potential
to Involve Itself in such a poll- candidates for the 1976
tical and legal hassle at this Republican presidential
time," he said.
nomination, John B. Connally
"Now for the House to plunge and Ronald Reagan, the vice
into a similar investigation president
sought
to
would only compound the mas- disassociate himself from ''the
slve legislative backlog and tragedY of Watergate" whUe
Impede the proper judiciill praising President NixDn.
process in the courts of the • But the thrust of his speech,
United States," said the his first since he began his
Portsmouth legislator.
bettie of seU-defense in Con"The fairest hearing for the gress and the courts this week,
vice president of his case at was a declaration of a fight to
this time Is in the courts, not in the finish against "accusaiory
a political and partisan at- stories maliciously supplied by
mosphere of a Democrat con- anonymous sources."
trolled congress," he said.
(Continued on Page 22)

House not for Agnew

Douglas thinks

.

PAGE 15

PresI·de'nt ~gn..ew p·.' ro'mi· ses
to ri•d·e out storm ·a round h1·m.

John
Inman.
Mayor Sam Massell, heralded
after his ·1969 election as a
rising political star ina liberal,
progressive city, boasts of a
lengthy list of achievementsfinancing a proposed citywide
transit system, improving the
lot of women and blacks in city
governmentn · upgrading the
Police Department.
But he lives with two b.lotches
on his record of achievement.
·FBI ·statistics released this
summer placed Atlanta first in
the nation for homicides. And
reports that Massell's brother,
Howard, ls linked to organized

to walk highest project

-......-....-.,-......

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30. 1973

Ironworkeress willing
'

.

'

Guerrillas gain point

$1.99
HECK'S REG· •6.38

is

junltctJJ

HECK'S
REG.
1

Ul09

I

£

12 bumps down sale1y
earth orbit.
-It was. the first Soviet
manned flight· since three
cosmonauts died June 30, 1971,.
when their Soyuz -11 hatch
started leaking and depressurized during reentry. Since
then the Soyuz has been
redesigned and the purpose of
the SOyuz-12 mission was to
test the craft in preperatlon for
the Soyuz linkup with an
American Apollo craft In July,
1975.
'
A45-man delegation from the
'U.S. National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA)
Is scheduled to arrive In
Moscow Monday for a two·
week visit and may have an
. opportunity to tali wit~ the

•

Soyuz-12 crew, U.S, officials
said.
Astronaut Thomas P. Staf-. ·
ford, commander of the APollo
for the 1975 joint misslQII, and
lllitronaut Eugene Cernan will
Pe in the visltillg party.
Tass said Lazarev, 45, an &amp;W
force Ueutanant colonel, and
Makarov, 40, a Clvlllan coemonaut,
tested
the
maneuverability and stability
of the Soyuz and look pictures
of the earth.
.
Tau releam PhotoiJI'&amp;phl
indicating that Lllll'lv and
Makarov had trained tor 1
polllble lllltfitncY I~ II
sea. Soviet COIIIl(IIIIU\1, unUU
the Amll'loana, llwaya hllft
come down 1111 llad.

•

�1' - Tilt SUndllv TU.. • Se..WI. Sundlv. Seol. 30. 117~

~icycle

PRICES GOOD SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY SEPT. 30th ·&amp;OCT. 1st
LADIES
ROLL SLEEVE

12x90

MAXINE GRIFFTrll

Mrs. Griffith to
win scholarship
POMF;ROY - Mrs. Maxine Among her major responGriffith , cashier, Pomeroy slbillties are operations,
National Bank, will be honored reports, and student Joana. She
by the National Association of is also secretary to the bank's
Bank Women, Inc. as the Board of Directors.
recipient of the Lake Region's
Mrs. Griffith has been a
1973 Scholarship Award.
member of NABW since 1964.
· The scholarship will be She lierved the Ohio Group as
presented to her at an Oct. 2nd chainnan of the Scholarship
Awards Breakfast during Committee in 197().71, and is
NABW's 51st Annual Con- now chairman-elect of the
vention being held at the · Southeastern Ohio Group. Also
Fairmont Hotel, Dallas, Tex., electi!d 1973-74 vice president
Sept. 29 through Oct. 3.
of the Ohio Valley Chapter of
The scholarship tuition grant AlB, she Is the first woman to
will enable Mrs. Griffith to be an officer of the local
further her banking education. banking organization.
!ale has been attending the
Her htisband is. Cbarles E.
Ohio School of Banking, Ohio Griffith,
an
operating
Unlversity, and tak:, ~ the engineer.
·
eouraes necessary to earn !he
The National Aasoclation of
American Institute of Banking Bank is a professional
Basic, Standard and Advanced organization of more than
Certificates.
11,000 women bank officers.
The scholarship winner has Approximately 1,000 members
been with Pomeroy National are expected in Dallas for the
since 1942, beginning her Convention activities and to
career as a secretary. She was hear such speakers as fonner
named acting cashier in 1961 Secretary of the Treasury John
and appointed cashier in 1963. B. Connally.

SHIRTS

By United Press International
Represen! atives of the
striking Detroit teachers and
the Detroit School Board were
hopeful of reaching agreement
Saturday that would end the
month-long strike that has kept
the nation's fourth largest
school system's 270,000
children on extended vacation.
"We still have a shot at
settling," one board negotiator
said Friday.
Teacher strikes across the
nation left about 350,000
students out of school.
Michigan was the state hardest
hit by strikes with about 300,000
students out .
State Mediator Edmond
Phillips said both sides in the
Detroit strike have cooperated
in an effort to settle the strike.
"We're still trying to resolve
very many issUes that have to
be resolved but the partieS are
working very hard. "They're
·very cooperative," Phillips
said.. .
.
Six schools in strike-bound
McArthur, Ohio, remained
open Friday, but attendance
was light. McArthur School
Supt. Kenneth Christopher who
fired 87 striking teachers
rejected an offer from federal
mediators to assist In the weekold strike.
·

TV educational
kits available

1

TV Klta are now available for
, the program, "Your Future Is
Now" on Channel 33 starting
Tuesday, Oct. 2at6:30 to 7 p.m.
two nights a week (Tuesday &amp;
Thursday) until May . .
This Is a G.E.D. Preparation
program to help persons win
the Hlgh School Equivalency
Diploma. They study at home
using the TV Kita which contain three books.
These klta are free and
avatiable at the Mason County
Adult Leal'lllna Center located
Jn the Vocational . Technical
Centsr on the Ohio River Road,
Point Pleaunt. The school Is
Ol»'n from 1:30 to 3:30 Monday
lhtough Thursday and Monday
evenlnJirom8 to 9:30p.m. Call
the IICbool at 67W024 for any
addlUoilll inf9rmat1on.

t '

Officials of strlke-bouf\d
Catholic schools in Brooklyn
and Queens in New York City
were pessimistic about the
chances of an early settlement.
"Our offer has remained the
same. There is simply no place
for us to ·go. -we .took a
calculated risk and made our
final offer," said Brother
Medard !ilea, a spokesman for
the schools.
·The Indiana State Teachers
Association Friday said the
Highland School Board should
accept binding arbitration to
settle a teachers strike in the
community. ISTA President
Ronald Jensen said the
teachers had repeatedly tried
to get the board to sulnnlt to
arbitration, but the boud had
refused.
Elementary schools In
Yorktown, N. Y., and Harrison,
N. Y., serving 8,000 students,
were on modified schedules
due ,to the teachers' strike.
CAR CAUGIIT FIRE
RACI)IIE - The Racine E-R
squad at 11:54 a.m. Saturday
went to the Albert Hill
residence where a 1966 Merr.ury car caught fire when the
carburetor backfired. There
were no Injuries.
OPENS NEW CENTER
CUYAHOGA FAUS, Ohio
(UP!) - Mental Health and
Mental Retardation Director
Kenneth Gaver will pertlcipate
in Monday's dedication of a
comprehensive community
health center here . The
facUlty, the flrsl of its kind in
Ohio, will offer inpatient,
outpatient, emergency, partial
hospitalization and consul,l.iltion educational services.
FORMER BODY GUARD
FORMER GUARD DIES
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Funeral service• will he held
Monday for Jinunie D. Wolfe,
43, deputy direc~r of enforcement in the Liquor
Control Department and a
former State Highway
Patrolma!l, who dii!d of a
cerebral hemorrhage . He
formerly served as a
bodyguard for tonner Gov.
James A. Rhodes and Gov.
John J.'Gilligan.

BODY
SHIRTS

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COLEMAN
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danger~us

tf

llrandt supports Nixon
plan for western allies

WASHINGTON (UP!) President Nixon met with West
WASHINGTON (UPI )- The Consumer
German Chancellor Willy
Product Safety Cornmi.ulon Saturday
Brandt Saturday and drew
singled out bicycles as the most hazardous
support for hi~ efforts to
product--Including automobiles--on the
'" establish ,a new relationship
American market.
with European allies.
It said the second highest rlak of injury
The While House, virtually
comes from Indoor an~ outdoor stairs,
ruled out until Novem~r, at
ramps and landings, and the third most
•
the earliest, any presidential
dangerous product area Is nonglass doors,
trip to Europe to formally set
•
. including IICI'een and garage doors.
up a new Atlantic alliance.
The agency, created. by Congress last
TELETHON SUCCESSFUL - Kenny Cremeans and Donna Misner, members
Presidential spokesman Geyear and in operation since May, released
of the Gallla County Civil Defense were among several volunteers working In the
raid L. Warren said plans for
list of the products over which it has
two day telethon this weekend for the Gallla County Volunteer Emergency Squad.
such
a trip-long hoped for by
jurisdiction, ranked numerically ln order
As of 2 p.m. Saturda~. the contrlb)ltlOns totaled $3,200. Federal Mogule Plant
Nixon
to cap hls "year of
of injury risk. The figures were based on
employees, union and the compeny donated $1,086 and challenged other plants to
Europe"- would await the outemergency room data from 119 hospitals- _ _:do:=_n_:a_te_a_slm
.:.._::il_ar_a_m_o:...u:...
nt:....- - - - - - -- - -- - - -- - - come of a visit to London and
about 2 per cent of the total-all over the
other capitals next month by
though there may be fewer actual ac- reqwrmg emergency room treatment Secretary of State Henry A.
country.
Data Ia fed dally into a computer to give cidents than with some other products, each year. Hazards include mechanical Kissinger,
the agency a quick idea of what people are because of the degree to which children !allures, feet caught in spokes or chain and
beillg injured by, and to !llert them to any are involved, or perhaps the severity of ac- loss of control resulting In collisions.
w..:::~.::::::&gt;.=:WP".«i7.f&amp;WA'~W.i.:&gt;.«
The agency said it expects to issue a
series of related injuries from one product cidents. Thus the "most hazardous" tag
Rebels held off
for bicycles reflects not only the risk of . mandatory safety regulation for bicycles
or type of product. ·
The list reflects not only the number of injury but whO might he injured and how before the year Is out. The Food and Drug
PQNOM PENH (UPI) Administration, which had prime
injuries but their severity and the degree badly.
Outnumbered Cambodian
responsibility for product safety before the
to which · chlldren under age 10 are introops halted advancing
volved. The last two factors were assigned The commission estimated that commission came into being, issued a
rebel forced on Phnom
higher numbers.
bicycles, and the equipment attached to proposed safety standafd for bikes before
Penh's southern deleue IJne
Thus bicycles came out on top, even them, are responsible for 372,000 injuries in relinquished responsibility.
Saturday but a battalion
commander said bls weary
soldiers need food, am·
400 Beagles for
munition
and
reinforcements If they were to
poisoning wanted
bold the line below the
capital.
_
WASHINGTON (UPI) In Phnom Penh, the United
The Army plans to buy up to
Statu
and C•mbodia slgaed
400 thoroughbred beagles for
CASPER, Wyo. (UP!) - A
an accord . Saturday under
testing polson gases and fire bombing prompted
which Washington boosted
developing a vaccine to deputies Saturday to begin
Its ecouomlc aid to Clim·
counteract a new binary guarding families of two men
bodla by another $5 million.
nerve gas, 8 spokesman said charged with assaulting two
So far during the current
Saturday.
young girls and throwing them
fiscal year, the United States
The Army will pey $80 for over a 25().foot-higb cliff where
has supplied $31.95 million in
each dog to be used In a ·one was killed .
economic assistance to
"Feelings are running very
testing
program
at
Cambodia.
The total
Edgewood Arsenal, Md., the high" said Natrona CoWttY
•
projected
aid
lor
the current
ATLANTA (UP!) _ Voters in ihis image ·spokesman said. He added Sheriff Bill Estes. "We're
fiscal year Is expected to
that the beagles are "a appealing for reason. I think if
conscious city , alarmed over a rising murder rate
standard laboratory we can keep everything on a
total more than $90 million.
and anxious to st.ill racial tensions, decide Tuesday
animal." Rep. Les Aspln, D- low key, it will help."
whether to put a black man in the mayor's office.
Wis., who earlier this year
The men, jailed under a
There are 206,270 persons eligible to vote attacked the Air Force's use $275,000 bond each, have been
about . 4,000 more whites than blacks. The
of beagles to study the effect charged with murder and rape
registration is about the same as four years ago in
of exhaust from jei engines in the death of Amy Burridge,
the last city election but the black voting strength
and poisons produced by 11, and the assault of her 18has increased sharply. In ' the closing days of the
burning aircraft com- year-old sister.
emotion-charged campaign, five candidates
ponents, described the
The girls were attacked last
Army's new plan as a Monday by two men who .VOL. 8 NO. 35
remal·ned as sert·ous contenders. Two, including
"outrage."
stopped to help them chB!Ige a

a

Brandt and NixDn emerged
smiling and joking from an
hour-long "informal review" of
U. S.-European relations.
Brandt was in the United
States for an address to the
Unlt,ed Nations. General
Assembly and other public
· appearancesm
Nixon, accompanied by his
wife Pat, went by helicopter to
Camp David, Md., shortly after
the midday meeting \1 ith
Brandt.
Warren said the two leaders

N. w c.lttn.~ . r "Cat " • TI'Pit mod.rit •IMI
•JIIcl.111 "-''" lltt tilth• f••l~ttl of lh bit
, llr•lhtr, tt. 0.'-'.,, I" 0 JOOQ I• ~ IT!J htCIIt

APPROX. lO'xlO'
HECK'S
165.88

·------------------1 ONLY

NO. 569

12'xl2'

CANOPY
HECK'S REG. 165.88

agreed that attempts to revise
the European alliance that has
guided relations since World
War II was a "subje&lt;.1 of importance." He said both expressed satisfaction with the
progress of preliminary
negotiations toward this end.
The President, trying to
emphasize the shift away from
preoccupation with Southeast
Asia, has designated 1973 as
"the year of Europe" In which
he hopes to establish a new set
of principles to replace Cold

War vintage relationships In
which the United States aaswned most of the defense
costs and gave European allies
a break In trade relations to
spur economic recovery.
His efforts so far have been
raiher coolly received, par·
tlcularly by France. Objections
stem chiefly from fears the
United States will use 'the
threat of pulling troops ·out of
NATO to wring too many
trading ·concessions from the
European Common Market.

Families
guarded

Atlanta may
elect Black
h
II
t 0 City. . a'
e ·

FORTY-FIFTH YF;AR - Friday morning when F;dlson Hobstetter unlocked the Pomeroy
National Bank, it marked his 45th year of association with that institution. Employed as a
bookkeeper 45 years ago, Hobstetter moved to assistant cashier and then to cashier on Jan. I,
1932, and was named to the board of directors that year. On May 28, 1941, ne was named
president of Pomeroy National and holds the record in years of service among the presidents of
the bank which is over 100 years old. Mr. Hobstetter also is chainnan of the hank's board of
directors. Saturday night he was guest of honor at a dinner held at the Meigs Inn.
'

...

'

f~~:!~::~n::r~~;r~ar~l~acc~:;n:f :~~teb~:~~~ ·Chief ~~::~z:~=;:~:;~=:~~==~~gx::~:; · ~~~ ::· :;~~e~a~;r:~~~!~~ VI. c'e

mayor, is counting on a str,ong
black voter turnout plus substantial white liberal support to
place him in an almost certain
run-off election.
The 35-year-old lawyer en_.
tered politics in 1966 in a,
"suicide mission" against U.S.
Sen. Herman Talmadge. He lost
overwhelmi••ly statewt.'de, but
..,
won Atlanta with 6,000 votes to
spare.
While he promotes biracial
solutions to the city's problems
in his campaign ads and In
speeches, some white voters
label him a "black racist"
·because of his rep~ated criti-

~imts .. itntintl

TUNIS (UP!) - Two Arab
guerrillas who hijacked an
Austrian train, took three
Soviet Jews hostage but freed
them after forcing Austria to
agree to stop aiding Israelibound Jewish refugees, landed
in Ubya Saturday night in a
lildlt olane, the Libyan news
agency reported,
, -The agency, in a dispatch
monitored here, said the twinengined Cessna landed at the
Okba Ibn Nafaa base at 6.30
p.m. (1:30 p.m. EDT). It said
· authorization for the l1111ding
was given by the libyan
govenunent "for humanitarian
· reasonll" after the two guerrillas threatened to blow up the
piane in ftlght.

OLE:VELAND (UPI) - Unda
G. Blaylock, 23, a Go-Go dancer
turned iron worker, said
Saturd•y she Intends to keep
her job even If It means
walldngsirders on multi-~tlorled
coDJtructlon projects.
Mrs. Blaylock, a divorcee
with two chlldren, satd some of
her coworkers want her fired
because abe Ia the city's first
female Ironworker. some coworkers have suggested that
she walk the girders on high
construction projects in hopes
ollrlghtenlng her Into quitting.
"II doean't matter to me how
h!Jh the glrden are, I like my
job and II climbing high girders
. Ia pll't of the job I JUIM I'll
have to do It," llhe IBid.
Accordl!IJ to officials of
lrunworkera Union Local17, the

•

Massell has put up a strong were raped and tossed over a
flght on both fronts, denying bridge into the North Platte .
allegations against his brother River.
,
andarguingthatthecrlme rate
A fishennan discovered the
Is not as bad as people seem to older girl early Tuesday sitting
think.
along a road in Fremont
State Sen. Leroy Johnson, the Canyon, 35 miles southwest of
other serious black contender, Casper. The body of her sister LOS ANGELES (UP!) _
The New York Times reportmakes his· strongest pitch to the was pulled · from the river
d Sp' T A
Vice
Pres!
ent
tro
.
gnew,
·
ed
Friday that Agnew decided
wh1·te communityn saying he is several hours later.
hn B k charging that he was the new , to ·ask the House of
a moderate who can beat
County Attorney Jo
ur
f J . De
t
target
or
usttce
partmen
ld
Ro
Jacksoninarunoffm
.
said the two men,
na
h b 1 d Representatives for a full
ed
dJ
prosecutors w o ung e investlgatiim of allegations of
The two other major conten-~roy Kenn y, 27• an erry Watergate, declared twice wrongdoing alter CBS quoted
ders, former U.S. Rep. Charles Ib&gt; Jenkins, 29, both of Casper • before cheering Republicans Assistant Attorney General
Wellner and retired Army Col. faced a mandatory death and a nationwide television
Harold Dye, draw support from penalt~ as a ~suit ~~ a new audience Saturday that "I will
opposite ends of the political Wyof!lmg law If co~~tcted;
not resign if indicted."
spectrum.
·
fie said the survt~g Sister
d th
f
was In good condillon at a Laying asi e e text 0 a
Casper hospital with a broken subdued prepared speech,
WASHINGTON (UP!) 'd
· 1 Agnew told 2,000 Republican Rep. William Harsha, R-Ohlo,
hip. Burk sw the younger gtr women that "I am clearly and said Saturday It would be
apparently
raped. sur- unequlvocably innocent ·of the "utterIy r1'd'1cu1ous " for th e
Estes saidwas
henot
ordered
There was no immediate through the counttry, .the veillance on the homes of charges" being investigated by House to undertake an inword of what happened to the hijackers released their three Kennedy and Jenkins because a federal .grand jury in his vestigation into the activities of
Jewish hostages and an Austri- of an attempt to fire bomb one native Baltimore, Md.
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew.
guerrillas.
·
an
customs
man
they
had
also
of
the
residences
Friday
night.
Although
he
did
not
mention
House Speaker Carl Albert
The plane apparently flew
He said the incendiary device names in his prepared speech last week rejected Agnew's redirectly to Llpya from been holding.
Italian
officials
in
Cagliari,
buried
at the house caused a when he spoke of "accusatory quest for such an investigation.
Cagliari, Sardinia despite
Sardinia,
had
announced
small
fire
but no one was in- stories maliciously supplied by
''While I am deeply concernearlier reports it would refuel
anonymous sources," Agnew ed that this most serious mat·
earlier they had word from the
ln Malta.
jured.
sw
· quIcklY reso1ved for th e
The fire bombing occurred 'd in h1's off-the-cuff remarks ter IS
The end of the guerrillas' Ubyan government of Col.
odyssey came 32 hours after Moammar Khadafy that Libya after private funeral services that "! am a big trophy" and a sake of both the vice president
victim of Justice Department and the country, I do not bethey seized hostages aboard an would let the Palestinians land. were held for the dead girl.
prosecutors who were trying to lleve that a congresslQnal
emigrant train bringing out
save
face because of Inept Investigation at this time
Jews from Russia and forced a
handling of the Watergate would be appropriate," Harsha
major political concession
case.
said.
from the Austrian government
Agnew vowed to .fight what
Harsha noted that the matter
in retlirn for their release.
he
called
"a
cruel
form
of
Is
already being Investigated
The Austrian move ,stirred a
kangaroo trio! in the media" by the Justice Department and
storm of criticism in Austria,.
inspired
QY anonymous new feels that the judicial branch is
Israel and other coilntr(es.
leaks .that threatened to the proper ann of the governAfter the Austrians agreed to
destroy his political career.
mentto deal with this matter at
MIDDLETOWN,
Ohio
(UPI)
stop letting Soviet jews transit - U. S. Supreme Court Justice
At Ute close of his speech, he this stage.
' William 0 . ' Douglas told a
brought the audience to Its feet
"!ilould the courts decide
lecture series audience at the
in arm-waving,thunderous ap- that the vice president Is inMiami University branch
WASHINGTON (UP[) - A plause when he said:
dlctible then the original
.
campus
here
Friday group of 260 book publishers
"Because of these tactics criminal allegations could then
Americans must ban together called Saturday for repeal of which have been employed
·
to "start back and reclaim the all laws which prohibit sale,
govern~ent through par· exhibition or distribution of
members want her fired tlclpatory democ1·acy ."
'sexually explicit printed ened into furnishing evidence
because she Is a woman and Douglas, who barred radio or material to adults.
against me - they have perMOSCOW (UP!) - The twothey feel ironwork Is strictly "a television newsmen from at- The Association of American jured. themselves in many man Soyuz-12 spacecraft
man's profession."
tending his speech, said his Publishers (AAP) said repeal cases, It's my understandiilg - bumped to a safe landing on the
Mrs. Blaylock entered the generation had politically of all such federal, state and I will not resign If Indicted .. .! plains of Central Asia Saturconstruction trade two weeks bankrupted the nation . He said local laws Is the only recourse wlll not resign If indicted! "
day, ending a t wCKiay mission
ago after dancing In a west side he hoped the present In light of a Supreme Court
Some ln the audience clam- that prepared the way for a
bar for six months.
generation would organize, be ~eclsion last June 21 which bered on top of their chairs, U.S..SOviet linkup in space in
"I had no Idea I could active and 'start back at the tightened the legal definition of stlll cheering, as the vice 1975.
become an Ironworker untll beginning.
obscenity. But the AAP said it president thanked the GOP . Cosmonauts Vaslly Lazarev
some men came Into Ute bar
Douglas crltl!ed the nation's would not oppose any "careful- women for "hearing me oul" and Oleg Makarov, making
l'here I worked and asked If I large business corporations for ly drawn " legislation prohibit- and declared : "I intend to stay their first flight, floated to
wanted a better job," she said. running the government. He lng commercial distribution or and fight."
earth In Utelr parachut~rne
"They clime back the next said they had been given the display of sexual materials to
The Justice Department, spacecraft at 2:34 p.m. (7:34
day and gave me a union power through legislation and young people. .
which had labeled "patently a.m edt), the Tass news agency
application to fill out and here I judicial decision. Douglas
The association, whose 260 ridiculous '' a charge by said.
am," ahe added.
charged lobbies and cor- members claim to publish M Agnew's lawyers Friday that
The soft landing took place in
After all of the particulars poratlons were really running per cent of all book&amp; in the he was the victim of a spersely settled territory 240
l'tre cleared up, she was hire~ the country; not the people.
United States, said that .after deliberate department cam· miles ~· uthwest of Karaganda
by Union Steel and Erectors
"If people would band three years of study It has. palgn to drive him out of office in SOviet Kazakhstanm
Co. and sent to a construction together, they could overcome decided lo endorse a 1970 and "assure his conviction,"
Space doctors pronounced
·project In s~burban Broadview this corporate power which . report by the Commission on had no comment on the vice the two crewmen fit after their
Heights.
now exists ," be said.
Obscenity and Pornography . president's speech.
47 hours and 16 minutes In

people could

band together '

Publishers

ask end of
porno bans

:!:.:~:~~~::~:~~~~~ . Soyuz

'

Henry E. Petersen a week ago
as saying he was confident the
government could get a conviction against Agnew.
CBS quoted Pe~ersen 1 who is
chief of the Justice Department's criminal division and

led the government's orlgl!tal
Watergate investigation, .as
saying of the Agnew case:
"We've got the evidence.
We've got it cold." ..
One day after his lawyers
filed suit in Baltimore, Md.,
seeking to halt his in- · ·
vestlgatlon and possible in- ,
dictment by a federal grand
jury in an alleged . political
be reviewed in the court and kickback scheme, Agnew went
resolved in the proper judicial before the National Federation
manner," said Harsha.
of Republican Women In a
"For almost a year now, the defiant mood and declared:
government has been tied up in
"I can assure you, contrary
the Watergate Circuis in Ute to all the rumor and speculaSenate, and as a result, the. tlon gushing out of Washington
vital domestic issues of this these days, .that this address
nation .have been neglected," before your group, my
said Harsha In his weekly Republican friend~. will not be
newsletter.
my last."
.
"Consequently, I think It is
Following convention aputterly ridiculous for the House pearances by two potential
to Involve Itself in such a poll- candidates for the 1976
tical and legal hassle at this Republican presidential
time," he said.
nomination, John B. Connally
"Now for the House to plunge and Ronald Reagan, the vice
into a similar investigation president
sought
to
would only compound the mas- disassociate himself from ''the
slve legislative backlog and tragedY of Watergate" whUe
Impede the proper judiciill praising President NixDn.
process in the courts of the • But the thrust of his speech,
United States," said the his first since he began his
Portsmouth legislator.
bettie of seU-defense in Con"The fairest hearing for the gress and the courts this week,
vice president of his case at was a declaration of a fight to
this time Is in the courts, not in the finish against "accusaiory
a political and partisan at- stories maliciously supplied by
mosphere of a Democrat con- anonymous sources."
trolled congress," he said.
(Continued on Page 22)

House not for Agnew

Douglas thinks

.

PAGE 15

PresI·de'nt ~gn..ew p·.' ro'mi· ses
to ri•d·e out storm ·a round h1·m.

John
Inman.
Mayor Sam Massell, heralded
after his ·1969 election as a
rising political star ina liberal,
progressive city, boasts of a
lengthy list of achievementsfinancing a proposed citywide
transit system, improving the
lot of women and blacks in city
governmentn · upgrading the
Police Department.
But he lives with two b.lotches
on his record of achievement.
·FBI ·statistics released this
summer placed Atlanta first in
the nation for homicides. And
reports that Massell's brother,
Howard, ls linked to organized

to walk highest project

-......-....-.,-......

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30. 1973

Ironworkeress willing
'

.

'

Guerrillas gain point

$1.99
HECK'S REG· •6.38

is

junltctJJ

HECK'S
REG.
1

Ul09

I

£

12 bumps down sale1y
earth orbit.
-It was. the first Soviet
manned flight· since three
cosmonauts died June 30, 1971,.
when their Soyuz -11 hatch
started leaking and depressurized during reentry. Since
then the Soyuz has been
redesigned and the purpose of
the SOyuz-12 mission was to
test the craft in preperatlon for
the Soyuz linkup with an
American Apollo craft In July,
1975.
'
A45-man delegation from the
'U.S. National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA)
Is scheduled to arrive In
Moscow Monday for a two·
week visit and may have an
. opportunity to tali wit~ the

•

Soyuz-12 crew, U.S, officials
said.
Astronaut Thomas P. Staf-. ·
ford, commander of the APollo
for the 1975 joint misslQII, and
lllitronaut Eugene Cernan will
Pe in the visltillg party.
Tass said Lazarev, 45, an &amp;W
force Ueutanant colonel, and
Makarov, 40, a Clvlllan coemonaut,
tested
the
maneuverability and stability
of the Soyuz and look pictures
of the earth.
.
Tau releam PhotoiJI'&amp;phl
indicating that Lllll'lv and
Makarov had trained tor 1
polllble lllltfitncY I~ II
sea. Soviet COIIIl(IIIIU\1, unUU
the Amll'loana, llwaya hllft
come down 1111 llad.

•

�Tr~~ing

Gallia

~ By /lc)hllrt Wibmn
•

Oh"io ·to aid motorists
COLUMBUS - Governor
John J. Gilligan Friday annollllced plans for the Ohio
Department of Transportation
(ODOT) to construct seven
Motorist Information Centers
at key points of entry aro1111d
the State to promote Ohio
travel and tourism.
The new centers are an
expenslon of an ODOT
program to generally upgrade
all Interstate · rest area
facilities in Ohio. The centers
also represent a cooperative
effort between the departments of Natural Resources,
Economic anct Community
Development and the ODOT in
travel and tourist promotion.
According to Gilligan, Ohio
loses millions of tourist dollars
a year because travelers view
the State as one they must
cross on their way to vacation
areas i.n other parts of the
co1111try, rather than as a state
with vacation attractions of its
own.
"The purpose of Juilding
these new centers is to provide
the motoring public with
tourist literature, directions to
Ohio's parks and tourist attractions, general travel information, and information
about camping facilities and
motel and hotel
accllllllllodations in the state's
urban centers," ~id Gilligan.
"We hope that by providing
lhi5 service we will encourage
as many people as posSible to
spend more time in our State
and enjoy its wealth of places
to see and visit,
Bid proposals for the first
two centers are to be opened in
December of this year with
co~struction beginning as
early as January 1974. A
cOOtpletion date of fall 1974 is
planned. The remaining five
centers are scheduled for
cOOtplelion by fall of 1975.
II

All of the centers will be built
0n the sites of existing rest
area facilities. The estimated
cost of the new structures is
$200,000 each, not including the
cost of additional right of way,
parking facilities, expanded
lighting and landscaping .
According to Gilligan, the
cost .of an information center
building is only about $25,1)00
more than the cost of a new
rest area structure.
Gilligan said that the centers
will be constructed with 90 pet.
federal highway matching
funds with the State picking-up
the remaining 10 pet.
The location, completion
date and estimated total cost of
each center is as follows:
Belmont County I-70
(westbound lane), late fall
1975, $525,000.
.
Butler Co1111ty I-75,(northc
bo1111d lane), late fall · 1975,
$672,000.
Wood County I-75, .(two
centers, one each on the north
and southbound lanes), late fall
1974, $1,298,000.
Washington County I-77,
(northbo1111d lane), late fall
1975, $641,1)00.
Trumbull County I-80,
(westbolllld lane), . late fall
1975, $542,000.
Ashtabula County I-90,
(wstbound lane), late fall1975,
$462,000.
The ODOT, the Department
of Economic and Community
Development,
and
the
Department of Natural
Resources ope•ated three
temporary information centers
this summer in a pilot program
to determine the feasibility of
developing permanent
structures. The centers were
located on 1-90 in Ashtabula
County, 1-70 in Preble County
and 1-71 In Medina County. A
totai"of 27,00lpeople visited the
facilities during the time they

were open from July 9 through
U!bor Day weekend.
,
The ODOr has begun a longrange program to generally
upgrade all rest area facilities
on the interstate highway
system. Upgrading will include
new restroom buildings with
flush toilets, special ramps and
other improvements to aid the
handicapped and additional
parking and lighting.
The overall cost of the
upgrading will be $23,8 million
with the federal government
paying 90 pet. and the State 10
pet.
·

THJ&lt;: ANNUAL MUSICAL of the Big Bend Minstrel
Association has been set for the Saturday following Thanks·
giving, Nov. 24, at the Larry Morrison Auditorium in Meigs High
SchooL
Meigs Countians may be getting an introduction to Larry
Brogan, The Plains, through this year's show to be sponsored by
the Mefgs)land Boosters. Brogan wbo is residing at The Plains
~e". gets moved into Meigs Co1111ty was formerly a
professional entertainer in Detroit mtiy appear in this fall's
production. Brogan plays guitar and is a country-western singer.

POMEROY
Eleven Gallipolis, Paige Humphrey,
defencjants wete fined and 10 Jr., Gallipolis, $10 and costs
others forfeited bonds in Meigs each, intoxication, $15 and
WS ANGELES (UPI) costs each, disturbing the
Vice President Spiro Agnew County Court Friday. .
Fined by Judge Frank W. peace.
'
can be indicted, but not.
Porter
were
Jack
E.
King,
Forfeiting.
bonds
were
brought to trial, while jn office,
the president of the American Canal Fulton, and Roy E. Warren Stone, Dublin, $27.50,
Bar ASsociation said Friday. Rankin, Athens, $10 ana costs illegal parking; Richard K.
The federal grand jury now each, speeding; Donna Rae Mill, Philo, James C. Miller,
hearing evidence against Spencer, Pomeroy, $13 and Riverside, N. J., and Russell
speeding;
Judy Jackson, Syracuse, $27 .50
Agnew could return an indict- costs,
McHaffie,
Middleport,
$10
and each, speeding; Norman D.
ment,
ABA
President
Chesterfield Smith said, but costs, stop sign violation; Winslow, Uniontown, Pa .,
the prosecution Y{Ould have to EdwardR. Stana, Jr., Latrobe, $22.50, defective vehicle;
Buehl
Davis,
wait Until after Agnew .was Pa., . $15 and costs, speeding; James
Albany,
$5
Hurricane,
W.
Va.,
$34.55,
no
James
T.
Justice,
lmpeaclled, resigned or
and costs, no horn; Harold valfd hunting license ; Gerald
finished his term.
"I do not believe, as a per- UtUe, Middleport, $10 and M. Sigler, Rittman, $22.50, no
sonal opinion, that he can be costs, left of center; Donald B. · muffler; Robert K Bowen,
tried while in office," Smith Allen, Racine, Rt. 2, $150 and Pomeroy, Rt. 3, $350, driving
said, "But he wouldn't excape costs, three days confinement, while intoxicated; James M.
license suspended for six Suilivan, Lexington, Ky.,
pennanently."
He said he does not think months, restricted driving $32.50, speeding; Larry G.
Agnew's lawyers will suceed in privileges, driving while in- Robinson, Vinton, $27, stop sign
halting the grand jury in- toxicated; Oley E. Herdman, violation.
Pomeroy, $5 and costs, illegal
vestigation.
He also told a breakfast parking; Gene Canaday,
meeting here that he does not
think the Watergate tapes,
which the special prosecutor
and Senate committee are
trying to wrest from President
•
•
Nixon, would turn out to be so
important if they were
released.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
If the U. S. Supreme Court
state Department of Natural
orders Nixon to turn over the
Resources said Friday it plans
tapes, Smith said, "He should
to send out questionnaires to
obey.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The more than 33,o00 Ohio families
"The President Is equal to price of gasoline in central in hopes of getting suggestions
the court but the Constitution is Ohio was to go up, possibly as for improving Ohio's outdoor
above them all.
early as Saturday, following recreation facilities.
"I personally would favor the Cost of Living Co1111cil
Department director
impeachment if the Supreme relaxation of the retail gasoline William B. Nye said the poll is
Court orders him to release the ceiling price. The council probably the most comtapes and he disobeys."
Friday predicted prices would prehensive of its type ever
increase between one cent and attempted by any govern2'h cents.
mental agency. The survey will
Denny Smith, president of cost $60,1)00, half of which will
the Central Ohio Gasolfne be paid by the federal governDealers Association, said ment.
•
dealers would need an increase
Nye said the questionnaire
IS
of bet~een HI . cents and 2 seeks Information about family
cents to remain tn business.
members, citizen's views on
"We were looking for a existing facilities and the
larger increase than U:ey ·are popularity of various outdoor
giving," said Dave Pickney, recreation activities. Final
public relations director for the results of the poll are expected
Chillicothe District 5's forest COGDA. "If we can settle with to be in by next June. The in1111lts are ready for another 2'h cents on a gallon, we will be formation will be used in
autumn war against people's happy with II."
preparing a state outdoor
carelessness.
recreation plan for 1975-80.
Joe Hardesty, district
TAKEN TO HOSPJ'I'AL
forester, said forest units
MlDDLEPORT The
logged 391 fires that burned Middleport E·R ~uad anover 1,500 acres of for~t land swered a call to Beech and
in Ohio last spring. "Almost LocustSts., at 4:08p.m . Friday
one-hslf of these fires were for Shiela Martin, Middleport,
caused by careless trash or .who was injured In an auto·
debris burning," he said.
accident. She was taken to POMEROY - The Meigs
Beginning October 1, Ohio's Veterans Memorial Hospital High S&lt;:hool Band, directed by
seasonal burning permit law where she was treated and Dwight Goins, used a precision
goes into effect. The law released. The police depart- drill routine and music, "70
requires that anyone kindling a ment said details of the ac· Entrance" for illl halftime
fire in the open, outside a cldent would be available show al the Meigs-Gallipolis
municipality during the Monday.
game Friday night,
months of October and
The roUtine, used for the
November must have a permit.
· third week, was to be used at
Fire permits are available free
.West Jef!enon Saturday where
' MaiTiage License
of cost from ~ny state rarest
POMEROY - Danny Joe the band will take part In
office or local fire warden." All Hood, 21, Pomeroy, and Judith compeUUon of a band festival.
burning must be accomplished Lynn Sopher, 18, Pomeroy,
Last Saturday the band placed
between the hours of 4p.m. and
third In the parade dtvlltoo o1
midnight.
the bandorama beld at
Marietta. Followtnc the Friday
· Hardesty cautions Ohioans
that this !all's fire season Is Preserves will appreciate the ' night victory of the Melp
expected to be worse than the cooperation of all citizens In ' football team, the Meiga Band
1972 fall fire season which saw obtaining burning pefllllts and conducted victory marche1
record rainfall in Ohio. The keeping Ohio gree~. Hardesty through Middleport and
Division of Forests and said ,
Pomeroy .

33,()()(j Ohio

Price of gas

families will

gomg up.m

receive poll

central Ohio

retail value,
·1aoun,1e insulated
Has 0-45 "
insert.

OPEN DAILY 9 TIL 9 - CLOSED SUNDAY
252 THIRD AVENUE
ARMOUR* STAR BEEF

U.S.D.A. GRADED CHOICE-U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED
BONELESS

· CHU

.ROASTS
FLAT CUTS

19

FRIDAY, OCT. 12,marks theopeningof Ohio's deer longbow
season and with the increase in SoutheaStern Ohio's deer herd
excellent hunting opport1111ities should be provided this fall. The
longbow season will run through Jan. 5. A valid hunting and
trapping license and a special deer permit are required. The 1972
bow harvest for Southeastern Ohio was 294.

Agnew's
future
21 Cases settled
assessed

Fall fire

lb.

CHUCK ·STEAKS

~::;r

... . 51.15

PennJfare-U.S. Govt. lnap.

U.S.D.A. GRADED CHOICE
U.S. GOVT. INSP.
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BONELESS

FRESH

GROUND BEEF
family Pak- 's-li... or More

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or JONATHAN

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Ice Cream
1f2 Gallon Pkg.
COMSTOCK

_Cherry
Pie Filling

u.s.

Craftsman: amuch
better panel for a
l.@~!!~.money!
hardwood veneer for 22 years. J
decide what"s good enough to be
Craltsinan paneling and what isn"t.
Less than 40% of the veneer that ,
comes in here makes it. And that"s
only the beginning... :•

Glen Cause:v
Ll S Plywood s Gu111ord venee r Shoo
H1gh Po1nt. N G
• ••• J! N

Wood veneers from WAYFARER · $
alupecles, In ten
BIRCH·--- 1167
•
IUbtlelones.See MISTYELM $
1306
them all.
4'x81!4 ·~---·
•

Carolina Lumber &amp;Supply Co.
Phone 675-1160

Jl26th St.

,,

'

Point Pleasant
\

Show repeated

in Gallipolis

JOAN OF ARC

snLEa
KERIEL

Corn
for

17-oz. Cans
KEEBLER COOKIE FEATURES
...... 59c
Coconut Chocolate Drops ......
Rich 'N Chips ........ . .·~~· 59c
.....59 c
Pecan Sandies . , . . . . . . . . .•"-·
SMUCKER'S JELLIES
APPLI .................. . ..... IO·••· Jer 33c
CHIRRY . ·, ..••. ••.•••.•••.•.•••• 111·•'· J•~ 46c
GRAPE .... , •..... , , .•• , •.• , • , •• to·otl J•r 39C

STRAWIIRRY ............ , , , .. , .•,, .., 49c:

JOHN A. Epling, who received a copy or Comstock's paper
~containing the artie!~ about Gulli polls and Galtia County,
• oaned Dateline a cllpp!ng for reproduction hJ the local paper. It
follows:
. ITCHING FEET are as much a pa rt of tllis kind of news• paper as paper and l~k and coffee, and young editors, or rather
. neophyte reporters wtth a yen for country editorShip tell me with
. a sparkle in their eye that "on the go" Is Ute dessert ~i the meal, l
have news fo~ them, although 1dislike quenching their sparkle,
and the news tS that the itch scratches itself out as the years too
are on the go, and travel becomes not an anticipated thing, but
.more like the cold plunge in the old swimming hole, hard to make
but once made, hard to stop. What I mean is that each journey as
your eyes and ears is reluctanlty embarked upon , but once
•embarked, are always rewarding adventures.
~ Last week, fo• instance, I made a trip to Gallipolis as speaker
,,of the town's Chamber of Commerce semi-annual dinner, and
•that I encountered an interesting and pleasing fact that I never
knell', and that, to-wit, is that the people of the eastern rivercoast
, of that state like West Virginians very much and West Virginians
loved them right back. One thing about Gallipolis that I pride
, m~self on and where with ito many others, even Gallipolismen,
, mtss the mark, is knowing how to pronounce the name. That goes
back to the days when I worshipped at th e feet of that living saint
of American journalism, Oscar Odd Mcintyre, a native who told
"people the way to prono1111ce the town 's name correctly was to
•,memorize a bit of poetry which went thusly: "I know a gl.rl who is
: a niece -Of a man who lives in Gallipolis."
,
So it is police,like they say in Harlem, and not polise like
,;Your ':"other ?Sed to cure your croup. When I think of this town,!
lnvartably think of two of its people, 0 . 0 .; of such blessed chiidhood memories as I read him daily without fail, and Bob Evans,
the "Sausage King," who, you might say, facetiously, ground a
,fortune out of a pig . Years ago, right in the infancy of my paper, I
: went to the "Old French City" as the guest of Stanley Evans,
~who, at that time, had a chain of stores in West Virginia known as
~Evans Supermarket. I was there to do a story on the man, and it
. ~ was there and doing it that I met Bob. He was about my age, and
: he had about the same kind of dreams, that of establishing
=himself in the community , and helping to establish too th ~
oCOmmllllity.
! , There was a form, and there were buildings, and there was
: uvestock. Also , he had a small restaurant. Since then a flying
' word from here and there told me that Bob had struck it rich,
· that his name was so synonymous with sausage that people in
.'OI)io had Bob Evans for breakfast, and his enterprise went on the
: stock mafket at nine and stayed in recent years around twenty-

FOLGER'S
COFFEE
3-llo.
Can

'319

O&amp;C
•:::~H ONIONS

,. ,.,.35~
Can

PILLSBURY REFRIIERITED FEATURES

JIF

CreKent Dinner Roll• , .... , .. , .. , . ~:;: 37c:
Tentler Plake Reg, II Hults .. , , .... ~:;: 14c
TeiMier Plake luttermllk IIKultt . J:;:14c
Chocolate Chip Cookies . , .... , .... :.;::,57c

PEAIUT BmER
1·1... 2-.

J•r '

I •

.r

heavy trading marked by an
outpouring of institutional
funds.
The advance carried the Dow
Jones 1ndustrial Average
ahead by 19.20 points to 947.10.
That increase, coupled with
last week's jtimp of 41.54, gave·
the popular in.!lex of 30 Blue
Chips its biggest upswing of the
year.
Standard &amp; Poor's ~tock
index was ahead 1.23 to 108.43
for the week, and the NYSE
Index gained 0. 78 to 58.51.
Buying covered a wide
range, as it did the previous
week .
Steels,
motors,
chemicals and oils were the
favored issues, again at th·e
expense of the glamore issues.
Advances outpaced declines
by an almost 3-to-1 · margin,
1,356 stocks gaining and 478
declining in value. There were
1,991 issues traded.
Tradlng Volume Heavy
Trading volume continued
heavy, reflecting institutional
interest in adjusting portfolios
for the end-of-quarter report to
Shareholders. Turnover for the
week totaled 102,109,830
Shares, close to the previous
week's 105,783,060 that was the
heaviest trading in more than a
year and a half. The Slime
week last year, volume was

77~

I.:;;;;:;;:;;:;;:=;:;;:======;;:;;:;;;::.=::::::;::;:;:;:;;;:;:J

+++

CtlfH hrillt OctRII I, lin
1.. jtt l"lluilt IIIII

•

69,635,800.

There were 7'10 block trades;
one of them for 400,000 shares
of Coastal States Gas, compared wjth 816 block trades the
previous week,
"It's still an institutional
market,'' said Monte Gordon of
Dreyfus Corp. "It's not a speculative market.n
Gordon described the
market's upward momentum
as "ailticipatory action"
to\vard an eventual relaxation
of the Federal Reserve's
monetary restraints. Other
analysts agreed. Investors
were encouraged during the
week by a decline of about 1.5
percentage points in U.S.
treasury bills, a major indicator of the course of short
term interest ratea.
Asmall St. !Auis Bank and a
banking group in Michigan cut
into the prime rate category
late in the week, each chopping
fractions from the prevalent
record 10 per cent. None of the
major banks followed their
example, however, and both
analysts and leading bankers
generally described their
action as premature and in·
significant fo,... the time being.
Influenced by Other Factors
"But the major factors remain interest rates and federal
(monetary) policy," said Gordon. "The other complex
factors such as Watergate, the
money exchange rate and even
- to a degree - the inflation
rate have peeled off as major
influences.''
A6.17-point decline Friday in
the Dow, its first setback after
seven consecutive advances,
was attributed to profit taking
after the averages had hit
953.27 the previous day. That
weekly high marked the first
time the Dow had closed above
the 950 level since May 8.
The decline Friday, said ant
analyst, "should not be inter·
preted as meaning the markei
has ios( or is losing its mo·

Itt•• uti Prim IHtctln Drt let . I , 1171.
btttlty llf:~h ltll,.d. Ctltffll .. 11JI111t Kr11" Ct.

·

DISCOUNT
PRICES

t

:ever

...

travel in any area of the states
and become ill and need blood,
they will be entitled to use of
the blood bank free of charge
and without any issue in that
location."
G. A. Biggs, Mason County
Bloodmobile chairman, said
today it is the duty of all MilSOn
Countlans for the benefit of
themselves and lamiUes to
donate blood as there is always ·
someday the 1111known need of
blood that may occur.
In recent bloodmobile visits
in the co1111ty the response hiul
!Jecn pleasing but there is a
need of more donors to fill the
quota.

-Seafood
1d Lttal blu 111

1

••G Lu""; iiq;id
11C

,; ; .22·oz.49-'7'
Btl.

With Coupon

c' ..·sulljtc
'"' hfiru
om••r 1, 1tn .
lH1icalllt Slatt
ull LICtl Still Ttl

8-cu . Anti·Per5piront or 7-ol , Spray

Secret Deodorant
5~.59.
Stze 68-'
7'
CDipll h!liru OcttUr I, 11lS
S\llljtct ANIIUilt ~ttlt

;1"11 Ucal 114n Tu.

U.S. Govt. Inspected
Fres~ Frying
Ten Vari•tl11
htty Crock1r

Mixed _Fryer

Frosting Mix
14;:~z.
f.

~-1

39

With Coupon

cu,H b~tlru octMtr 1 1t1S
Slllljtcl It "(tlicnlt I1Ill

••• tHat "'" tu

U.S. Govt. Graded Choice People's Choice
Boneless Roast

Boston Roll

One-Quarter Pork loin Sliced Into

lb.

$159 Pork Chops
U.S. Govt, Graded Choice

Serve 'N Save Any Si;e Piece

Piece Bologna

lb.

99,. ch;d;osi;;it

ScoHies
200-Ct.$1
Boxes

4

Willi Ctlr.o
C•••• b'lrll Ot llltr 11 1t11
Sdint tt All•linlllt lutt
11C Ltetl $1111111

Nlarker
Basket Select

large
'Eggs

Doz.7J,.

As~rt1d

Yeirietle•

Regular or ·ltutant

Kroger Pudding

4:~::::39,
Pkgs.
WI.. CHf11
CH'" llrlrtl II llllf I, 1111
lllljlct I a,Hctltl tbll
... Ltul bltl Til

The p., rtha&amp;e of One Pkg.
.AI&amp;arted Vorieliu Royal Vikin~M~

Printed or A11orted

Kroger '

Fleece Tow~els

Hi•Nu 2"/o

4

Danish .Pastries
Rolls

'"I"lllljtchflrn
Omller I. 1171
AHIICI"I Sltll
·

IIIII LHtl hln Til

Low Fat

100Extra

fop Value ltampl
With

Co~o~pan

l

P1n· ~h•••

of

S11 ID, U If IH Witt
Srln•l•

Soft White Bulbs

mentum."

Regular Sr..

\1 AJax Cleanser

·i~c ~3 ~~~:· 4 7f.
J \ cn"'·•n••"''""
"'""'"""
"·"""'"
....

HOPES TO SETTLE
WASHINGTON,(UPI) - The
Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service has called the
striking Utility Workers Union
and the strikebound Ohio
Power Co. to th~. bargaining
table next Mon~ay.
FMCS Director W. J, Usery
Jr., said he cailed the meeting
In attempts to resolve a strike
which began July 1, tllfecting
electric generallng plants
along the Ohio River.
About 550 workers are affected at the plants in Philo and
Brililant, Ohio, and Kramer,
Mitchell and Windsor, W. Va.

COGktd and lrtadtd

c... ,hlljtc
.. ~~r''"
om11~r '· 1111
ANIIull\t Stitt

Freezer Beef St~le
Going On At
Kmge~: ••• NtJw!

w

PT, PLEASANT - Citizens
~ are asked to re111ember the
~ Bloodmobile Is scheduled
~ Monday at the Mason Fire
•• Station sponsored by the
• M11110n Mother's Club.
~ The hours will be from 12
: noon to 6 p. m. All persons
t willing to donate blpod are
urged to attend.
• Olle to the ever.ctemandlng ·
: need of blood for many Mason
: co1111Uans and replacement of
~ blood used, it Is imperative the
MillOn ColllltY Blood Bank be
ready to fill the need, Red
: erou officials said.
.
· Persons donating blood are
' gtven cards which lhoul they,...

2P •••. of

.

Tfleres •

;otoodmohile is coming Monday
:

Wjtk Coupon 0111d Purchtllt of

Plus The Xtr11 Bonus of Top V11ile St.,s!

..
•

Ltulhflll•

lop Voluoltamp•

.

DuPont, advancing on ex- ·
:
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune
: and weekly Gallia Times ... Gallia Countlans make plans for Old pectations of sharply higher
~ Home Day In connection with city's 163rd anniversary ... Wyoma ' earnings, recorded the biggest
Henderson wins Tribune's first weekly grid guess contest ... net gain oi the. week. It moved
• SEOAL scribes, casters predict Jackson will win 1953 cham- ahead 11 ¥• points to 183'h.
Monsanto gained 2'!8, Dow 2'1tt,
~ plonshlp ... Pt. Pleasant, GAHS battle to 12-12 · grid tie on
Allied Chemical 2 and Union
t Memorial. Field.
Carbide 1\1• In the sharply
higher chemical grotlp.

.,

\I

Wcckly stocks

Outside Gallipolis, and short of the Rio Grande College
: ~ampus, where I was to.speak that evening, was a Bob Evans
: Restaur!lflt and I went in for a sausage sandwich·, a cup of coffee,
.and a look around. The cars parked outside bore a geography
: book of license plates, and inside the place was crowded, I saw
~ that Bob Evans had pufa firm foundation 1111der those dreams he
: was dreaming back there not so long ago.
,,
The Chamber of Commerce dinner was held in the dining
". room of Rio (pronounced Rye.Oh) Grande College. I was greeted
: by Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wagner, radio. magnates in the town, and
~ wbo had me on their show one time, and in fact were to have me
. : thistime, only I arrived too late. Later I tried to think where I
• had ever had such a responsive audience as this, and I gave up. lt
~ is hard to describe the audience arid its reaction . I knew the
: speech was too long, but ppparently nobody was in a hurry, and
: they rather kept egging me on, and on and on I went. When I was
: through, I was made an honorary citizen of the town, a thing
• which isn't done here with a key to the city as is done in so many
: other places, but the presentation of a French beret, a very
: ja1111ty thing which I am trying to get up nerve enough to wear or
: at least to become a Sunday painter or open up an absinthe place.
:
At the close of the dinner, and while I was shaking hands, I
: got the scare of my life. Afellow, who was big enough to eat hay,
• came up to me quite menacingly and started giving me hell in a
: dialect yqu could have chopped with an ax; reminding me of an .
: inflated Rasputin. When the Red Menace saw thst he had me
: cowered, he started laughing from inside his barrel of a stomach,
: presented his card, demonstrated thst he could speak English
: and_! knew at ooce that if I had known that man was in my
• audience I would probably have frozen because he was none
: other, gentle readers, than Vladimir Koslov, alias Johri A.
~ Epling, who spoke at the recent WVJ&lt;:A convention in Charleston
=and sent a number of teachers from the meeting in protest to his
: communistic espousal which is his stock-in-store of a
• JX"Ofessional Russian commisar impersonator. '
: · This is one of the few nights on speaking engagements that I
: haven't made it in home. I tried, but I ran into opposition. Bob·
: Evans, and his staunch supporters, knew ninety-nine different
·= and distinct reasons why I shouldn't go home but should spend
" the night and as Bob Evans' guest . There might he fog, and it
~ could be miserable. The road was winding.lt was a long journey.
•
I surrendered and went to Bob's house. It isn't quite as big as
~ the Greenbrier, but it is nice. And well populated, especially by
: one son Steve, who, is a living example of what's enduringly good
• with the younger generation. (In an aside to Col. Benjamin, one• time faculty member of Greenbrier Military, I might tell you,
• sir, that your student Steve is getting on in the world, even if he
: didn'lfiniilh college. He is running his dad's canoe concession; is
~ a handsome, courteous, polished fellow, and esteems you, Ben,
as his hero.)
·
The next morning, Bcb and Steve, as per agreement, routed
me out at five , took me off to Bob's nearest restaurant, fed me,
: gave me a box of sausage to take home with me, and sent me on
• my way. I arrived home In mid-morning , went to work on the
~ paper, got it all in type and ready for me to take along and proof·
~ read on my next sashay.

"

Luncheon Meats

NEW YORK (UP! ) - Wall
Strwt, optimistic about the
continuing decline in, short•
term Interest rates, extended
an advance through a aecond
consecutive week on the. New
York Stock Exchange with

~

$109
lb.

!139

With Co...pon ond P'wrthoM of
One 8-ot . llkt. Kroger
Hont'1 laal, Ptpptr locd,
Ne• tnglond at Chopped Ham ·

exchange

! two.

season

upon Ohio

111

·Ht

ACAR WENT INTO the Ohio River of the Big Bend area for
the second time this week at MIIBDh. ll's always a bit difficult for
reporters during Utese things to determine wbo did what. Mrs.
Carolyn Charles reports that Bill Tiemeyer and Gary Pickens
were in front of the G. and G. Cafe in Pomeroy and saw the
vehicle going into the water at the Mason levee, They reported it
to Mrs. Chsrles who phoned the occurance to the local sheriff's
department . The two youths were joined by several others and
went to the scene where they pulled the driver from the water, .
Mrs. Charles said.
ATTEMPTS TO START a class in Meigs County for students
with hearing defects have been abandoned for the current school
year.
It became a problem to get students enrolled from a several
county area and transportation to the class which was to have
been located at Harrisonville also was a problem for parents of
such students. Rather than to get the class started on weak
ground, it was decided to study the problems further with the
id~a of getting the class onto good firm ground for another year.

Jr.

• ~~r ~lttstock, editor and publt·,!.er of the west Vlr~lnia
Se ~· SCUS.'!&lt;•d his rt'Ccnt visit to the Old French City.In th&lt;·
'd pt~ t-dttlon of lhc ilillbilly. Comsto~k wns ~ucst speaker
~r g the ~a lllpo lls Area of Commerce's first sctnl"tnnuul
nner meeting at llio Grande College on Sept. 6,

POMEROY - The Meigs County Tubet·cuJosls und llealth
Assn . ls inviting all interested residents to a meeting at Ule Math
building, Ohio University , East Green, Van Vorhes St., at 8
Wednesday evening to hear Dr. Edmund Casey. Dr. Casey will
show slides taken In Red China dealing with Bl'CUpllllture and will
speak oo the topic.

ARTIST'S CONCEPTION of new motoristlnformatlon centers. seven to
be completed along major highways by late lalll975.

heavy on

1, Jill

IIIII Ulllh.., Yll

lllgular

Mr. Juicy, Grape, Orange or Punch

9

.Flavored Drinks

8-az.$1
Ills.

Lux Bar Soap
Golden Oeliclou•- Woll Nome,d- 111'!

$279 A~;~;~&amp; Delicious

4'i~;:49;
.,... J
...,..... ,.

_

CHIOI lulfSS IIIIOM 1 Jill
IIO~tl li A!lllit ..lo 1111t
-~

I
\

\'

�Tr~~ing

Gallia

~ By /lc)hllrt Wibmn
•

Oh"io ·to aid motorists
COLUMBUS - Governor
John J. Gilligan Friday annollllced plans for the Ohio
Department of Transportation
(ODOT) to construct seven
Motorist Information Centers
at key points of entry aro1111d
the State to promote Ohio
travel and tourism.
The new centers are an
expenslon of an ODOT
program to generally upgrade
all Interstate · rest area
facilities in Ohio. The centers
also represent a cooperative
effort between the departments of Natural Resources,
Economic anct Community
Development and the ODOT in
travel and tourist promotion.
According to Gilligan, Ohio
loses millions of tourist dollars
a year because travelers view
the State as one they must
cross on their way to vacation
areas i.n other parts of the
co1111try, rather than as a state
with vacation attractions of its
own.
"The purpose of Juilding
these new centers is to provide
the motoring public with
tourist literature, directions to
Ohio's parks and tourist attractions, general travel information, and information
about camping facilities and
motel and hotel
accllllllllodations in the state's
urban centers," ~id Gilligan.
"We hope that by providing
lhi5 service we will encourage
as many people as posSible to
spend more time in our State
and enjoy its wealth of places
to see and visit,
Bid proposals for the first
two centers are to be opened in
December of this year with
co~struction beginning as
early as January 1974. A
cOOtpletion date of fall 1974 is
planned. The remaining five
centers are scheduled for
cOOtplelion by fall of 1975.
II

All of the centers will be built
0n the sites of existing rest
area facilities. The estimated
cost of the new structures is
$200,000 each, not including the
cost of additional right of way,
parking facilities, expanded
lighting and landscaping .
According to Gilligan, the
cost .of an information center
building is only about $25,1)00
more than the cost of a new
rest area structure.
Gilligan said that the centers
will be constructed with 90 pet.
federal highway matching
funds with the State picking-up
the remaining 10 pet.
The location, completion
date and estimated total cost of
each center is as follows:
Belmont County I-70
(westbound lane), late fall
1975, $525,000.
.
Butler Co1111ty I-75,(northc
bo1111d lane), late fall · 1975,
$672,000.
Wood County I-75, .(two
centers, one each on the north
and southbound lanes), late fall
1974, $1,298,000.
Washington County I-77,
(northbo1111d lane), late fall
1975, $641,1)00.
Trumbull County I-80,
(westbolllld lane), . late fall
1975, $542,000.
Ashtabula County I-90,
(wstbound lane), late fall1975,
$462,000.
The ODOT, the Department
of Economic and Community
Development,
and
the
Department of Natural
Resources ope•ated three
temporary information centers
this summer in a pilot program
to determine the feasibility of
developing permanent
structures. The centers were
located on 1-90 in Ashtabula
County, 1-70 in Preble County
and 1-71 In Medina County. A
totai"of 27,00lpeople visited the
facilities during the time they

were open from July 9 through
U!bor Day weekend.
,
The ODOr has begun a longrange program to generally
upgrade all rest area facilities
on the interstate highway
system. Upgrading will include
new restroom buildings with
flush toilets, special ramps and
other improvements to aid the
handicapped and additional
parking and lighting.
The overall cost of the
upgrading will be $23,8 million
with the federal government
paying 90 pet. and the State 10
pet.
·

THJ&lt;: ANNUAL MUSICAL of the Big Bend Minstrel
Association has been set for the Saturday following Thanks·
giving, Nov. 24, at the Larry Morrison Auditorium in Meigs High
SchooL
Meigs Countians may be getting an introduction to Larry
Brogan, The Plains, through this year's show to be sponsored by
the Mefgs)land Boosters. Brogan wbo is residing at The Plains
~e". gets moved into Meigs Co1111ty was formerly a
professional entertainer in Detroit mtiy appear in this fall's
production. Brogan plays guitar and is a country-western singer.

POMEROY
Eleven Gallipolis, Paige Humphrey,
defencjants wete fined and 10 Jr., Gallipolis, $10 and costs
others forfeited bonds in Meigs each, intoxication, $15 and
WS ANGELES (UPI) costs each, disturbing the
Vice President Spiro Agnew County Court Friday. .
Fined by Judge Frank W. peace.
'
can be indicted, but not.
Porter
were
Jack
E.
King,
Forfeiting.
bonds
were
brought to trial, while jn office,
the president of the American Canal Fulton, and Roy E. Warren Stone, Dublin, $27.50,
Bar ASsociation said Friday. Rankin, Athens, $10 ana costs illegal parking; Richard K.
The federal grand jury now each, speeding; Donna Rae Mill, Philo, James C. Miller,
hearing evidence against Spencer, Pomeroy, $13 and Riverside, N. J., and Russell
speeding;
Judy Jackson, Syracuse, $27 .50
Agnew could return an indict- costs,
McHaffie,
Middleport,
$10
and each, speeding; Norman D.
ment,
ABA
President
Chesterfield Smith said, but costs, stop sign violation; Winslow, Uniontown, Pa .,
the prosecution Y{Ould have to EdwardR. Stana, Jr., Latrobe, $22.50, defective vehicle;
Buehl
Davis,
wait Until after Agnew .was Pa., . $15 and costs, speeding; James
Albany,
$5
Hurricane,
W.
Va.,
$34.55,
no
James
T.
Justice,
lmpeaclled, resigned or
and costs, no horn; Harold valfd hunting license ; Gerald
finished his term.
"I do not believe, as a per- UtUe, Middleport, $10 and M. Sigler, Rittman, $22.50, no
sonal opinion, that he can be costs, left of center; Donald B. · muffler; Robert K Bowen,
tried while in office," Smith Allen, Racine, Rt. 2, $150 and Pomeroy, Rt. 3, $350, driving
said, "But he wouldn't excape costs, three days confinement, while intoxicated; James M.
license suspended for six Suilivan, Lexington, Ky.,
pennanently."
He said he does not think months, restricted driving $32.50, speeding; Larry G.
Agnew's lawyers will suceed in privileges, driving while in- Robinson, Vinton, $27, stop sign
halting the grand jury in- toxicated; Oley E. Herdman, violation.
Pomeroy, $5 and costs, illegal
vestigation.
He also told a breakfast parking; Gene Canaday,
meeting here that he does not
think the Watergate tapes,
which the special prosecutor
and Senate committee are
trying to wrest from President
•
•
Nixon, would turn out to be so
important if they were
released.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
If the U. S. Supreme Court
state Department of Natural
orders Nixon to turn over the
Resources said Friday it plans
tapes, Smith said, "He should
to send out questionnaires to
obey.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The more than 33,o00 Ohio families
"The President Is equal to price of gasoline in central in hopes of getting suggestions
the court but the Constitution is Ohio was to go up, possibly as for improving Ohio's outdoor
above them all.
early as Saturday, following recreation facilities.
"I personally would favor the Cost of Living Co1111cil
Department director
impeachment if the Supreme relaxation of the retail gasoline William B. Nye said the poll is
Court orders him to release the ceiling price. The council probably the most comtapes and he disobeys."
Friday predicted prices would prehensive of its type ever
increase between one cent and attempted by any govern2'h cents.
mental agency. The survey will
Denny Smith, president of cost $60,1)00, half of which will
the Central Ohio Gasolfne be paid by the federal governDealers Association, said ment.
•
dealers would need an increase
Nye said the questionnaire
IS
of bet~een HI . cents and 2 seeks Information about family
cents to remain tn business.
members, citizen's views on
"We were looking for a existing facilities and the
larger increase than U:ey ·are popularity of various outdoor
giving," said Dave Pickney, recreation activities. Final
public relations director for the results of the poll are expected
Chillicothe District 5's forest COGDA. "If we can settle with to be in by next June. The in1111lts are ready for another 2'h cents on a gallon, we will be formation will be used in
autumn war against people's happy with II."
preparing a state outdoor
carelessness.
recreation plan for 1975-80.
Joe Hardesty, district
TAKEN TO HOSPJ'I'AL
forester, said forest units
MlDDLEPORT The
logged 391 fires that burned Middleport E·R ~uad anover 1,500 acres of for~t land swered a call to Beech and
in Ohio last spring. "Almost LocustSts., at 4:08p.m . Friday
one-hslf of these fires were for Shiela Martin, Middleport,
caused by careless trash or .who was injured In an auto·
debris burning," he said.
accident. She was taken to POMEROY - The Meigs
Beginning October 1, Ohio's Veterans Memorial Hospital High S&lt;:hool Band, directed by
seasonal burning permit law where she was treated and Dwight Goins, used a precision
goes into effect. The law released. The police depart- drill routine and music, "70
requires that anyone kindling a ment said details of the ac· Entrance" for illl halftime
fire in the open, outside a cldent would be available show al the Meigs-Gallipolis
municipality during the Monday.
game Friday night,
months of October and
The roUtine, used for the
November must have a permit.
· third week, was to be used at
Fire permits are available free
.West Jef!enon Saturday where
' MaiTiage License
of cost from ~ny state rarest
POMEROY - Danny Joe the band will take part In
office or local fire warden." All Hood, 21, Pomeroy, and Judith compeUUon of a band festival.
burning must be accomplished Lynn Sopher, 18, Pomeroy,
Last Saturday the band placed
between the hours of 4p.m. and
third In the parade dtvlltoo o1
midnight.
the bandorama beld at
Marietta. Followtnc the Friday
· Hardesty cautions Ohioans
that this !all's fire season Is Preserves will appreciate the ' night victory of the Melp
expected to be worse than the cooperation of all citizens In ' football team, the Meiga Band
1972 fall fire season which saw obtaining burning pefllllts and conducted victory marche1
record rainfall in Ohio. The keeping Ohio gree~. Hardesty through Middleport and
Division of Forests and said ,
Pomeroy .

33,()()(j Ohio

Price of gas

families will

gomg up.m

receive poll

central Ohio

retail value,
·1aoun,1e insulated
Has 0-45 "
insert.

OPEN DAILY 9 TIL 9 - CLOSED SUNDAY
252 THIRD AVENUE
ARMOUR* STAR BEEF

U.S.D.A. GRADED CHOICE-U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED
BONELESS

· CHU

.ROASTS
FLAT CUTS

19

FRIDAY, OCT. 12,marks theopeningof Ohio's deer longbow
season and with the increase in SoutheaStern Ohio's deer herd
excellent hunting opport1111ities should be provided this fall. The
longbow season will run through Jan. 5. A valid hunting and
trapping license and a special deer permit are required. The 1972
bow harvest for Southeastern Ohio was 294.

Agnew's
future
21 Cases settled
assessed

Fall fire

lb.

CHUCK ·STEAKS

~::;r

... . 51.15

PennJfare-U.S. Govt. lnap.

U.S.D.A. GRADED CHOICE
U.S. GOVT. INSP.
.
BONELESS

FRESH

GROUND BEEF
family Pak- 's-li... or More

NEWPORT
ROASTS
Heart of Chuck Rolled

ARMOUR STAR U.S. ~OVT.I,..SP.

SLICED

BACON

1-lb.

Pkg.

$109
.

$1.51- Umit One Pq. Por r.ufiOII
Sol, Oct.l,l97l

'

Llntl'l O!lo•Co•IPGII Per Customer

U.S. NO. 1 Grade NEW,CROP

RED DELICIOUS, GOLDEN DELICIOUS
or JONATHAN

APPL S. ·3 59c
·

Your
Choice

lb.
bag

·

7HOROFARE

Ice Cream
1f2 Gallon Pkg.
COMSTOCK

_Cherry
Pie Filling

u.s.

Craftsman: amuch
better panel for a
l.@~!!~.money!
hardwood veneer for 22 years. J
decide what"s good enough to be
Craltsinan paneling and what isn"t.
Less than 40% of the veneer that ,
comes in here makes it. And that"s
only the beginning... :•

Glen Cause:v
Ll S Plywood s Gu111ord venee r Shoo
H1gh Po1nt. N G
• ••• J! N

Wood veneers from WAYFARER · $
alupecles, In ten
BIRCH·--- 1167
•
IUbtlelones.See MISTYELM $
1306
them all.
4'x81!4 ·~---·
•

Carolina Lumber &amp;Supply Co.
Phone 675-1160

Jl26th St.

,,

'

Point Pleasant
\

Show repeated

in Gallipolis

JOAN OF ARC

snLEa
KERIEL

Corn
for

17-oz. Cans
KEEBLER COOKIE FEATURES
...... 59c
Coconut Chocolate Drops ......
Rich 'N Chips ........ . .·~~· 59c
.....59 c
Pecan Sandies . , . . . . . . . . .•"-·
SMUCKER'S JELLIES
APPLI .................. . ..... IO·••· Jer 33c
CHIRRY . ·, ..••. ••.•••.•••.•.•••• 111·•'· J•~ 46c
GRAPE .... , •..... , , .•• , •.• , • , •• to·otl J•r 39C

STRAWIIRRY ............ , , , .. , .•,, .., 49c:

JOHN A. Epling, who received a copy or Comstock's paper
~containing the artie!~ about Gulli polls and Galtia County,
• oaned Dateline a cllpp!ng for reproduction hJ the local paper. It
follows:
. ITCHING FEET are as much a pa rt of tllis kind of news• paper as paper and l~k and coffee, and young editors, or rather
. neophyte reporters wtth a yen for country editorShip tell me with
. a sparkle in their eye that "on the go" Is Ute dessert ~i the meal, l
have news fo~ them, although 1dislike quenching their sparkle,
and the news tS that the itch scratches itself out as the years too
are on the go, and travel becomes not an anticipated thing, but
.more like the cold plunge in the old swimming hole, hard to make
but once made, hard to stop. What I mean is that each journey as
your eyes and ears is reluctanlty embarked upon , but once
•embarked, are always rewarding adventures.
~ Last week, fo• instance, I made a trip to Gallipolis as speaker
,,of the town's Chamber of Commerce semi-annual dinner, and
•that I encountered an interesting and pleasing fact that I never
knell', and that, to-wit, is that the people of the eastern rivercoast
, of that state like West Virginians very much and West Virginians
loved them right back. One thing about Gallipolis that I pride
, m~self on and where with ito many others, even Gallipolismen,
, mtss the mark, is knowing how to pronounce the name. That goes
back to the days when I worshipped at th e feet of that living saint
of American journalism, Oscar Odd Mcintyre, a native who told
"people the way to prono1111ce the town 's name correctly was to
•,memorize a bit of poetry which went thusly: "I know a gl.rl who is
: a niece -Of a man who lives in Gallipolis."
,
So it is police,like they say in Harlem, and not polise like
,;Your ':"other ?Sed to cure your croup. When I think of this town,!
lnvartably think of two of its people, 0 . 0 .; of such blessed chiidhood memories as I read him daily without fail, and Bob Evans,
the "Sausage King," who, you might say, facetiously, ground a
,fortune out of a pig . Years ago, right in the infancy of my paper, I
: went to the "Old French City" as the guest of Stanley Evans,
~who, at that time, had a chain of stores in West Virginia known as
~Evans Supermarket. I was there to do a story on the man, and it
. ~ was there and doing it that I met Bob. He was about my age, and
: he had about the same kind of dreams, that of establishing
=himself in the community , and helping to establish too th ~
oCOmmllllity.
! , There was a form, and there were buildings, and there was
: uvestock. Also , he had a small restaurant. Since then a flying
' word from here and there told me that Bob had struck it rich,
· that his name was so synonymous with sausage that people in
.'OI)io had Bob Evans for breakfast, and his enterprise went on the
: stock mafket at nine and stayed in recent years around twenty-

FOLGER'S
COFFEE
3-llo.
Can

'319

O&amp;C
•:::~H ONIONS

,. ,.,.35~
Can

PILLSBURY REFRIIERITED FEATURES

JIF

CreKent Dinner Roll• , .... , .. , .. , . ~:;: 37c:
Tentler Plake Reg, II Hults .. , , .... ~:;: 14c
TeiMier Plake luttermllk IIKultt . J:;:14c
Chocolate Chip Cookies . , .... , .... :.;::,57c

PEAIUT BmER
1·1... 2-.

J•r '

I •

.r

heavy trading marked by an
outpouring of institutional
funds.
The advance carried the Dow
Jones 1ndustrial Average
ahead by 19.20 points to 947.10.
That increase, coupled with
last week's jtimp of 41.54, gave·
the popular in.!lex of 30 Blue
Chips its biggest upswing of the
year.
Standard &amp; Poor's ~tock
index was ahead 1.23 to 108.43
for the week, and the NYSE
Index gained 0. 78 to 58.51.
Buying covered a wide
range, as it did the previous
week .
Steels,
motors,
chemicals and oils were the
favored issues, again at th·e
expense of the glamore issues.
Advances outpaced declines
by an almost 3-to-1 · margin,
1,356 stocks gaining and 478
declining in value. There were
1,991 issues traded.
Tradlng Volume Heavy
Trading volume continued
heavy, reflecting institutional
interest in adjusting portfolios
for the end-of-quarter report to
Shareholders. Turnover for the
week totaled 102,109,830
Shares, close to the previous
week's 105,783,060 that was the
heaviest trading in more than a
year and a half. The Slime
week last year, volume was

77~

I.:;;;;:;;:;;:;;:=;:;;:======;;:;;:;;;::.=::::::;::;:;:;:;;;:;:J

+++

CtlfH hrillt OctRII I, lin
1.. jtt l"lluilt IIIII

•

69,635,800.

There were 7'10 block trades;
one of them for 400,000 shares
of Coastal States Gas, compared wjth 816 block trades the
previous week,
"It's still an institutional
market,'' said Monte Gordon of
Dreyfus Corp. "It's not a speculative market.n
Gordon described the
market's upward momentum
as "ailticipatory action"
to\vard an eventual relaxation
of the Federal Reserve's
monetary restraints. Other
analysts agreed. Investors
were encouraged during the
week by a decline of about 1.5
percentage points in U.S.
treasury bills, a major indicator of the course of short
term interest ratea.
Asmall St. !Auis Bank and a
banking group in Michigan cut
into the prime rate category
late in the week, each chopping
fractions from the prevalent
record 10 per cent. None of the
major banks followed their
example, however, and both
analysts and leading bankers
generally described their
action as premature and in·
significant fo,... the time being.
Influenced by Other Factors
"But the major factors remain interest rates and federal
(monetary) policy," said Gordon. "The other complex
factors such as Watergate, the
money exchange rate and even
- to a degree - the inflation
rate have peeled off as major
influences.''
A6.17-point decline Friday in
the Dow, its first setback after
seven consecutive advances,
was attributed to profit taking
after the averages had hit
953.27 the previous day. That
weekly high marked the first
time the Dow had closed above
the 950 level since May 8.
The decline Friday, said ant
analyst, "should not be inter·
preted as meaning the markei
has ios( or is losing its mo·

Itt•• uti Prim IHtctln Drt let . I , 1171.
btttlty llf:~h ltll,.d. Ctltffll .. 11JI111t Kr11" Ct.

·

DISCOUNT
PRICES

t

:ever

...

travel in any area of the states
and become ill and need blood,
they will be entitled to use of
the blood bank free of charge
and without any issue in that
location."
G. A. Biggs, Mason County
Bloodmobile chairman, said
today it is the duty of all MilSOn
Countlans for the benefit of
themselves and lamiUes to
donate blood as there is always ·
someday the 1111known need of
blood that may occur.
In recent bloodmobile visits
in the co1111ty the response hiul
!Jecn pleasing but there is a
need of more donors to fill the
quota.

-Seafood
1d Lttal blu 111

1

••G Lu""; iiq;id
11C

,; ; .22·oz.49-'7'
Btl.

With Coupon

c' ..·sulljtc
'"' hfiru
om••r 1, 1tn .
lH1icalllt Slatt
ull LICtl Still Ttl

8-cu . Anti·Per5piront or 7-ol , Spray

Secret Deodorant
5~.59.
Stze 68-'
7'
CDipll h!liru OcttUr I, 11lS
S\llljtct ANIIUilt ~ttlt

;1"11 Ucal 114n Tu.

U.S. Govt. Inspected
Fres~ Frying
Ten Vari•tl11
htty Crock1r

Mixed _Fryer

Frosting Mix
14;:~z.
f.

~-1

39

With Coupon

cu,H b~tlru octMtr 1 1t1S
Slllljtcl It "(tlicnlt I1Ill

••• tHat "'" tu

U.S. Govt. Graded Choice People's Choice
Boneless Roast

Boston Roll

One-Quarter Pork loin Sliced Into

lb.

$159 Pork Chops
U.S. Govt, Graded Choice

Serve 'N Save Any Si;e Piece

Piece Bologna

lb.

99,. ch;d;osi;;it

ScoHies
200-Ct.$1
Boxes

4

Willi Ctlr.o
C•••• b'lrll Ot llltr 11 1t11
Sdint tt All•linlllt lutt
11C Ltetl $1111111

Nlarker
Basket Select

large
'Eggs

Doz.7J,.

As~rt1d

Yeirietle•

Regular or ·ltutant

Kroger Pudding

4:~::::39,
Pkgs.
WI.. CHf11
CH'" llrlrtl II llllf I, 1111
lllljlct I a,Hctltl tbll
... Ltul bltl Til

The p., rtha&amp;e of One Pkg.
.AI&amp;arted Vorieliu Royal Vikin~M~

Printed or A11orted

Kroger '

Fleece Tow~els

Hi•Nu 2"/o

4

Danish .Pastries
Rolls

'"I"lllljtchflrn
Omller I. 1171
AHIICI"I Sltll
·

IIIII LHtl hln Til

Low Fat

100Extra

fop Value ltampl
With

Co~o~pan

l

P1n· ~h•••

of

S11 ID, U If IH Witt
Srln•l•

Soft White Bulbs

mentum."

Regular Sr..

\1 AJax Cleanser

·i~c ~3 ~~~:· 4 7f.
J \ cn"'·•n••"''""
"'""'"""
"·"""'"
....

HOPES TO SETTLE
WASHINGTON,(UPI) - The
Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service has called the
striking Utility Workers Union
and the strikebound Ohio
Power Co. to th~. bargaining
table next Mon~ay.
FMCS Director W. J, Usery
Jr., said he cailed the meeting
In attempts to resolve a strike
which began July 1, tllfecting
electric generallng plants
along the Ohio River.
About 550 workers are affected at the plants in Philo and
Brililant, Ohio, and Kramer,
Mitchell and Windsor, W. Va.

COGktd and lrtadtd

c... ,hlljtc
.. ~~r''"
om11~r '· 1111
ANIIull\t Stitt

Freezer Beef St~le
Going On At
Kmge~: ••• NtJw!

w

PT, PLEASANT - Citizens
~ are asked to re111ember the
~ Bloodmobile Is scheduled
~ Monday at the Mason Fire
•• Station sponsored by the
• M11110n Mother's Club.
~ The hours will be from 12
: noon to 6 p. m. All persons
t willing to donate blpod are
urged to attend.
• Olle to the ever.ctemandlng ·
: need of blood for many Mason
: co1111Uans and replacement of
~ blood used, it Is imperative the
MillOn ColllltY Blood Bank be
ready to fill the need, Red
: erou officials said.
.
· Persons donating blood are
' gtven cards which lhoul they,...

2P •••. of

.

Tfleres •

;otoodmohile is coming Monday
:

Wjtk Coupon 0111d Purchtllt of

Plus The Xtr11 Bonus of Top V11ile St.,s!

..
•

Ltulhflll•

lop Voluoltamp•

.

DuPont, advancing on ex- ·
:
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune
: and weekly Gallia Times ... Gallia Countlans make plans for Old pectations of sharply higher
~ Home Day In connection with city's 163rd anniversary ... Wyoma ' earnings, recorded the biggest
Henderson wins Tribune's first weekly grid guess contest ... net gain oi the. week. It moved
• SEOAL scribes, casters predict Jackson will win 1953 cham- ahead 11 ¥• points to 183'h.
Monsanto gained 2'!8, Dow 2'1tt,
~ plonshlp ... Pt. Pleasant, GAHS battle to 12-12 · grid tie on
Allied Chemical 2 and Union
t Memorial. Field.
Carbide 1\1• In the sharply
higher chemical grotlp.

.,

\I

Wcckly stocks

Outside Gallipolis, and short of the Rio Grande College
: ~ampus, where I was to.speak that evening, was a Bob Evans
: Restaur!lflt and I went in for a sausage sandwich·, a cup of coffee,
.and a look around. The cars parked outside bore a geography
: book of license plates, and inside the place was crowded, I saw
~ that Bob Evans had pufa firm foundation 1111der those dreams he
: was dreaming back there not so long ago.
,,
The Chamber of Commerce dinner was held in the dining
". room of Rio (pronounced Rye.Oh) Grande College. I was greeted
: by Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wagner, radio. magnates in the town, and
~ wbo had me on their show one time, and in fact were to have me
. : thistime, only I arrived too late. Later I tried to think where I
• had ever had such a responsive audience as this, and I gave up. lt
~ is hard to describe the audience arid its reaction . I knew the
: speech was too long, but ppparently nobody was in a hurry, and
: they rather kept egging me on, and on and on I went. When I was
: through, I was made an honorary citizen of the town, a thing
• which isn't done here with a key to the city as is done in so many
: other places, but the presentation of a French beret, a very
: ja1111ty thing which I am trying to get up nerve enough to wear or
: at least to become a Sunday painter or open up an absinthe place.
:
At the close of the dinner, and while I was shaking hands, I
: got the scare of my life. Afellow, who was big enough to eat hay,
• came up to me quite menacingly and started giving me hell in a
: dialect yqu could have chopped with an ax; reminding me of an .
: inflated Rasputin. When the Red Menace saw thst he had me
: cowered, he started laughing from inside his barrel of a stomach,
: presented his card, demonstrated thst he could speak English
: and_! knew at ooce that if I had known that man was in my
• audience I would probably have frozen because he was none
: other, gentle readers, than Vladimir Koslov, alias Johri A.
~ Epling, who spoke at the recent WVJ&lt;:A convention in Charleston
=and sent a number of teachers from the meeting in protest to his
: communistic espousal which is his stock-in-store of a
• JX"Ofessional Russian commisar impersonator. '
: · This is one of the few nights on speaking engagements that I
: haven't made it in home. I tried, but I ran into opposition. Bob·
: Evans, and his staunch supporters, knew ninety-nine different
·= and distinct reasons why I shouldn't go home but should spend
" the night and as Bob Evans' guest . There might he fog, and it
~ could be miserable. The road was winding.lt was a long journey.
•
I surrendered and went to Bob's house. It isn't quite as big as
~ the Greenbrier, but it is nice. And well populated, especially by
: one son Steve, who, is a living example of what's enduringly good
• with the younger generation. (In an aside to Col. Benjamin, one• time faculty member of Greenbrier Military, I might tell you,
• sir, that your student Steve is getting on in the world, even if he
: didn'lfiniilh college. He is running his dad's canoe concession; is
~ a handsome, courteous, polished fellow, and esteems you, Ben,
as his hero.)
·
The next morning, Bcb and Steve, as per agreement, routed
me out at five , took me off to Bob's nearest restaurant, fed me,
: gave me a box of sausage to take home with me, and sent me on
• my way. I arrived home In mid-morning , went to work on the
~ paper, got it all in type and ready for me to take along and proof·
~ read on my next sashay.

"

Luncheon Meats

NEW YORK (UP! ) - Wall
Strwt, optimistic about the
continuing decline in, short•
term Interest rates, extended
an advance through a aecond
consecutive week on the. New
York Stock Exchange with

~

$109
lb.

!139

With Co...pon ond P'wrthoM of
One 8-ot . llkt. Kroger
Hont'1 laal, Ptpptr locd,
Ne• tnglond at Chopped Ham ·

exchange

! two.

season

upon Ohio

111

·Ht

ACAR WENT INTO the Ohio River of the Big Bend area for
the second time this week at MIIBDh. ll's always a bit difficult for
reporters during Utese things to determine wbo did what. Mrs.
Carolyn Charles reports that Bill Tiemeyer and Gary Pickens
were in front of the G. and G. Cafe in Pomeroy and saw the
vehicle going into the water at the Mason levee, They reported it
to Mrs. Chsrles who phoned the occurance to the local sheriff's
department . The two youths were joined by several others and
went to the scene where they pulled the driver from the water, .
Mrs. Charles said.
ATTEMPTS TO START a class in Meigs County for students
with hearing defects have been abandoned for the current school
year.
It became a problem to get students enrolled from a several
county area and transportation to the class which was to have
been located at Harrisonville also was a problem for parents of
such students. Rather than to get the class started on weak
ground, it was decided to study the problems further with the
id~a of getting the class onto good firm ground for another year.

Jr.

• ~~r ~lttstock, editor and publt·,!.er of the west Vlr~lnia
Se ~· SCUS.'!&lt;•d his rt'Ccnt visit to the Old French City.In th&lt;·
'd pt~ t-dttlon of lhc ilillbilly. Comsto~k wns ~ucst speaker
~r g the ~a lllpo lls Area of Commerce's first sctnl"tnnuul
nner meeting at llio Grande College on Sept. 6,

POMEROY - The Meigs County Tubet·cuJosls und llealth
Assn . ls inviting all interested residents to a meeting at Ule Math
building, Ohio University , East Green, Van Vorhes St., at 8
Wednesday evening to hear Dr. Edmund Casey. Dr. Casey will
show slides taken In Red China dealing with Bl'CUpllllture and will
speak oo the topic.

ARTIST'S CONCEPTION of new motoristlnformatlon centers. seven to
be completed along major highways by late lalll975.

heavy on

1, Jill

IIIII Ulllh.., Yll

lllgular

Mr. Juicy, Grape, Orange or Punch

9

.Flavored Drinks

8-az.$1
Ills.

Lux Bar Soap
Golden Oeliclou•- Woll Nome,d- 111'!

$279 A~;~;~&amp; Delicious

4'i~;:49;
.,... J
...,..... ,.

_

CHIOI lulfSS IIIIOM 1 Jill
IIO~tl li A!lllit ..lo 1111t
-~

I
\

\'

�arau ers
•

Rees went for 3 and quarBY 'DENNY FOBES
to give Meigs a 6-0 le~d. Gary
terback
• halfback Ken Collier
GALUPOLIS - An Inspired George's ki(:k was good, and it
and confident Meigs Marauder stood 7-()the rest of the half, but added another 3 before Niday
football team Frlday night, did not before the Blue Devils threw for the left oorner of tlle
end zone. But Marauder umnie
what they do best, play threatened twice.
Gallipolis.
A bad punt off the foot of Coats picked off t)\e un·
And play they did, stunning Marauder Rnbbie Eason, who derthrown aerial and, needing
the Blue Devils, 14·7, before a kicked 7 times for Z55 yards, · just I good block to go all the
packed house at Memorial traveled only 7 yards, giving way, returned to the 33.
It didn't take long after the
Field.
GARS control on the Meigs 49
ll was the fourth time, early in the second quarter. teams came out of the locker
without a loss, that the . Gallipolis then went on the rooms after intermission for
Marauders have defeated march, with a 13 yard pass the Blue Devils to knot the
Galli&amp; on its own field.
!rom quarterback Jim Niday to count at 7·7.
llwasasee-t~awbattleallthe end Leon Briggs on a crucial . On the third play of the
way, with both teams third down at the Marauder 44 second hall Niday fired to
ha)!back Mike Berridge who
managing only 13 first downs. the key to the drive.
took
the ball around the Meigs
The Marauders won the toss,
The pilrsuit of Meigs tackle
and 'elected to receive, but Bill Slack then threw fullback 30 and somehOw managed to
quarterback Jay Warner Dean Rees for a yard loss, but slip past 3 Marauder defenders
fumbled on the second play a facemask penalty moved the enroute to a 62 yard touch·
down. Bill Lemley split the
from
scrimmage, with ball down to the Meigs 15.
Gallipolis' Winston Saunders
But the Marauder d!&gt;fense uprights to tie it at 7·7.
An exchange of punts,
recovering on the Meigs 45.
arose, throwing Niday for an 8
But Gallipolis couldn't move yard loss back to the 23. Niday coupled with an 11 yard return
the baU and was forced to punt, then threw an incomplete pass, by Whitlatch, gave Meigs a
with fullback Mlck Ash ran for II to the 12, and on first down on the Gallipolis 34.
returning 2 yards to the fourth and 7fired incomplete in Ash then carried for 5,
Magnotta for 4 and Ash for I
Marauder 21. Meigs also had the endzone.
··
trouble moving, and after an
Meigs again, this time ·giving the Marauders a first
exChange of punts and offside hampered by penalties, down at the GAHS 24. But the
penally against Meigs, Terry couldn't move the ball, and Gallia defense rose to the
holding
the
"-Bradbury" Whitlatch, freshly Niday went to work again, this occasion,
Marauders
on
'downs,
as
painted red-bottomed shoes time firing a 30 yarder to
and all, twisted through a hole Briggs, whO ran it down to the Warner carried for 6,
provided by the left side of the 16 with less than • minutes WhitlatCh twice for 2 and Ash
wu iMIIPed 011 fourtb dowu,
MeiCa llDe IIIII dllhed 78 yudl ~ In the ball.

Gallipolis never threatened
after that , with the Oevtls'
deepest penetration reaChing
the Meigs 44, where the
Marauder defense stopped
Niday for a 4 yard gain on a
fourth and 11.
One of the keys to the ball
game was the work of the
Marauder linea. The defensive
line, led by headhunter Bill
Slack, and consisting for the
most part o! Slack, Alan
McLaughlin, Rnbble Eason, J.
D. Story, Andy English, John
L¢tew, Tom Lowery, Rnbert
Qualls, Gary George, and
Charlie Neece, held the

picking up l yard .
The Marauders threate!llld
again early In the final period,
when Melvin Cremeans, out
the first 2 games with ankle
troubles, intercepted a Niday
pass on the Meigs 45 and
returned to the Gallipolis 31. A
3 yard loss by Warner, 10 yard
pass completion to Cremeans,
and 7 yarder by WhitlatCh, who
gained 111 yards on the nlg!Jt,
gave the Marauders a first
&lt;klwn on the 1'7 :
Magnotta then went for 2,
Whitlatch lost 3 and Warner
threw Incomplete, bringing up
fourth and 11 frofll the 18.
Warner then faded back to
pass, couldn 't find anyone
open, and took to the right
sidelines, but was stopped on
the 8 just shy of the first down.
But maybe It's just as well
that he was stopped, for on the
next play, with 7:56 remaining,
Niday faded back, was rushed
hard by the Meigs line, and the
bail slipped off his hand and
into the arms of Marauder
· defensive end Tom Lowery,
whO took it on the 8 yard line
and bolted In for the winning
score. George added the PAT
after Meigs was penalized 5
yarda for offside on the initial
eoovaiJIOD N"mp\.

HATISTICS
INDIVIDUAL RUSHING
MEIGS
Car. Yds. TD
Whillatch
12 111 1
12 33
Ash
Magnolia
5 17
6
13
Warner
GAHS
16 67
Niday
13 22
Rees
4
4
Collier
2
3
Fisher
Berridge
1
0
PA551NG
MEIGS
AI. Com Yds In! TD
Warner
7 1 10 0 0
GAHS
Niday
14 6 119 3
PASS RE~EIVING
MEIGS
Cal. Yds."
I
10
Cremeans
GAHS
Col Yds TD
3 52
Briggs
I 62
Berridge
1 ·1
Rees
; 1 4
Grymes
PUNTING
Punts Yds.
Meigs-Eason
7 255
. GAHS-Berrldge
5 182
PUNT RETURNS
MEIGS
Ret. Yds.
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Gallipolis running attack to
just 96 yards . Meanwhile, lhe
offensive line, consisting of
Slack, Lehew, 1'erry PickenS,
Ea$on, English, Mike Me·
Daniel, Lowery and Dave
Wolfe, opened up holes worth
174 yards in 3$ carries.
Another key to the game had
to be the mental attitude of the
Marauder players. All mentor
Ol&amp;l'ley OlanceY said after the
game, "We wanted it badly."
This statment was exem·
plifled by the work of that
defensive line, which threw
Gallla runners for losses 8
times, once on a pass Cl)lll·
pletlon, and held them to ~o
gainers 3 times.
Meanwhile, the Gallipolis
defense threw Marauders for
losses • times and also held
them 3 times for no gain.
Gallipolis Coach C. ·. L.
(Johnny) Ecker, following the
loss, praised the Marauders for
their aggressive play. "Our
defensive unit, with one ex·
ci:ption (WbiUatch's 7&amp;-yard
touchdown run) performed
well out there tonight. I was
really surprised they (Meigs)
stopped our running game like
they did."
Continued Ecker, "We'll
have to regroup our forces and
IX'epare for Jackson."
The Blue Devil mentor said
he was responsible for caUing
the pass play on first down in
the final period whiCh resulted

First Downs

. Fumbles
Fumbles lost
Yards Rushing
Yards Passing
Total Yards
Passes Int. by
Penalties
Punts

DANDY DEFENSE- Marauder linebacker John Lehew
( 6$) hauls down Gallipolis tailback Dean Rees following a
short gain in action Friday night on Memorial Field. Moving

5

3

0

17~

10

184

3

.

-Bruce Carter, Rick Massey
and Terry Mowery ripped lh~
Iron men delense In the second
ha.lf enroute to their fourth
consecutive win of the season.
Carter opened the scoring
with a 10 yard run in the· first
' quarter with Rick Massey
kicking the extra point.
Midway In the quarter
fullback Brad Thompson
slammed over from the four
and Randy Ridge ran the two
point conversion for an ~7lead
that stood until !he third
period.
In a matter of five minutes
Massey .drove over from the
three, ran the conversion,
· Carter roared 19 yards for
another TD with Massey's kick
making It 22-8.
Carter tallied his third touchdown of the contest on a seven

!Meigs)

WELlSTON - It was like
winning the Super Bowl in .
Wellston Friday night as the
Golden Rockets snapped a 16game SEOAL losing streak
with .a surprisillg 211-22 victory
over visiting Waverly.
On the evening of Oct. 23,
1970Wellston won a thrilling 3634 contest over the Tigers and
theri embarked on a Hi-game
. losing streak before snapping it
against the same team they
lasl-defeated.

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Meigs County Barber Association

215

0

8-52 2·10

Haymaker's 41 yard fieid ,goal
early in the se&lt;:ond stanza. The
boot was Jeff's fourth of the
season.
Another drive sent the
Falcons to paydirl with Lewis
going over from the three after
picking up most of the yardage
. along the way . .Wahama went
Into the dressing room at the
hall with a comfortable· 17.()
lead.
The White Falcons opened
the second half with two more
.Mike Lewis touchdowns from
one and two yards out within a
span of three minutes. The
latter score was a direct result
of a 47 yard punt return by
Danny Gardner to the Soulbern
two.

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in to help Lehew are Tom Lowery (81), Mick Ash (12) and J.
D. Story, behind Lehew. Meanwhile, Blue Devils blocking for
Rees are Jim Niday ( 16) and Pa!Boster, far right.

Eastern edged
out·by 1 point
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Eastern Eagles, suffering from
3 fumbles and a lack of of.
fenslve punch, were edged out
by Federal Hoelting, 7~, here
Friday night.
A PAT kick by Dennis Harris
following a first quarter 4 yard
touchdown paBS from Charlie
Jarvis to Dan Cogar, provided
the · winning margin for the
Lancers.
' The Eagles' score, in the
third stanza, came on a 19 yard
pau from quarterback Randy
Blake to end Mike Larkins.
Following the touchdown,
coach
Spike
Eastern
Berkhlmer elected to go for the
lead, and aent Blake on a
l'ollout to the rlt!ht. Hla pau In
the end zone feU Incomplete.
The Eaglea, outplned by
Federal 194 to 94 yarda, had a
chance to gain the lead wl\en
the lAncer punter was rushed
heavily and fumbled the ball
with Eastern recovering on the
Pual ~. The Green and
Willie moved the bill down to
tile 11 whert 1 penalty on
. . - lldllecl the lbrtal.

llltddmer ·-·t p!Need at

aU wilb tile ofttnllve output ol
1111- . . . . . •t.attna lhlt the
wae poor. Tbe

Ill_,

'II 11, Hdtd Berkhimtr,

The lhtrd and final score of
the quarter was the result of a
pass play. With the ball on the
hosts' 18 yard line; Terry
Smith rolled right, pump·
faked, and uncorked a strike to
Rick Hesson in ll)e end zone.
With reserves dominating
the lineup, Wahama managed
their final score early in the
fourth period with Lewis again
going over· from the one. All
.told, Mike totaled four touchdowns In the contest while
picking up 169 yards · on the
ground. He also pulled down
two aerials for 30 yards.
Leading the · defensive
charge in the contest was Mark
Mitchell with eight tackles.
Mike Lewis and Tim Roush
followed with six apiece. Scott
Keebler was next with five
individual tackles while
playing in only the first half.
Tim Roush also recovered two
enemy fumbles for the defense.

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Penalties
Top Rushers -

Nease 54.

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w s

196
146
342
10
6-13
0
2-1

101
o
101
3

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0-~

2
3-1

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89 52
Lewis 28 -169,

·

SCOR lNG
Smith, '70 yds. Hay .
Wah.

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Litchfield pass from

·The New
Models Are
In Town!

K.

Wah. Haymaker 41 yd . Field
Goal.
Wah. Lew is 3 yd. run , Jay . K.
Wah . Lewis 1 yd . run, Kick
Fall&amp;d .
·
Wah . Lewis 2 yd . run, Hay,

K.

Wah . Hesson pass from
Smith, 18 vds., Hay, K .
Wah. Lewis 1 yd. run, Hay,

K.

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High School Grid Scores

wasn't as good as It should By United Presstnternttlonal Cols. Eastmoor 3A Cots . Cen tral 8
have been. "They should have Newark 35 Portsmouth 7
Wheelersburg JA New Boston 0 Cols. Brookhaven 8 Co ts E:est 7
never gotten more than 1110 Lima Bath 19 van Wert 0 ·
Cols . Linden McK inley 1S Cots .
.
yards on our defense," says the Allen East 42 Columbus Grove North 0
0
Cols.
Northland
20
Mllflln o
first-year mentor.
M&amp;nsfleld Malabar 1.4 Wooster Gahanna 20 Westervlllt 1
"We weren't mentally 6
Reynoldsburg
28
Cols .
Westland 21
Shelby 18 Upper Sanduiky 0
ready," added Berkhlmer. Clearfork 28 Crestline 0
Urbana 6 Be~&lt;Jey o
Groveport 14 Grove City 12
"We were so flat the first hall it Zanesville 21 Cambridge 0
Massillon 2,3 Niles McKinley 7 Dublin 28 Olentangy 7
was ridiculous. After that; we Youngstown Urullne 20 Wes.t Jefferson 21 Grrmdvlew o
had to come out and fight the Boerdman 7
Teays Vall•v 1-4 Franklin
Warren Harding 21 Steuben · Helg~ts 12
odds the second half."
ville 6
'
{W . Vii . ) 7 Martins
The Eagles were penalized 4 Wheeling
F~rr ... n,
Cots. Wetnut Ridge 19 Colt.
times for 20 yards, while the .wapakoneta 2S Oeflanc&amp; 13
Hartley 6
Cois . Dooalos ;o Cols: Whol·
Lancers were caught 9 'times Elyria 28 Marion Harding o
Wheelersburg 34 New Boston o sto.ne 13
for 75 yards. ,
NorthweJt (Scioto County) 15 ~ew Albany 13 CoiS. Academ ·y
Don Eichinger was the
Porlsmouth Eost H
·
Parkersburg (W . va . ) lot Bloom Carroll 12 Lencester
leading rusher for Eastern, Marietta 6
Flaher ·6
Licking Valley 22 Youngltown Northridge 22 Utica 6
gaining 37 yarda in 10 carries. o
Lancuter 28 Ham II ton Taft 1
Blake hit on 3 of 9 passes for 30 Granville 29 Watkins Memorial Wtlllton 28 Wlvtrl'f 22
Meigs 10 Golllpoll• 7
yards, 2 to Eichinger for.a total u
Berne Union 13 Millersport 6 Worthington 21 Mount Vernon 0
of II to go with the 19 yard Dover 11 Coshacton o
Whitehall 12 Dtlewart 7
Corv-RIWIOn 1&lt; 1.11ps 1c 2
LOgin
15 Alhons 6
touchdown toss to Larkins.
Elyria 28 Warren Hardlno o
Federal Hocking collected 7 :~gcy~~~,~~ 3711~~~~h1~or
Clrcltvllle 21 Greentltld 6
M.rysvlll&amp;
13
Hamilton
first downs to only 3 for Netson\lllle York 60
Zanesville Rosecnnl 0 Townlhlp 6
Eastern, 2 rushing and I Well Muoklnoum il P~llo 7
Cin . Eldor 25 Cols. Wotteroon 0
passing.
New Lexln~ton 1.4 1Tri -ValleV 9 Cln . Princeton 21 Upl)tr
19 Crooksville 6
· Ai'llngton 13
.
H,ocking's 194 total yards MaysvHit
Morgan 33 Shotldan 0
C101 1
WI h11 t
25
Cois . Marion . Franklin Colt , Pickerington 0
nc:
tr
came on 140 rushing and 54 woot
passing, on 4 cqmpletlons in 6 Cols. 7soulh 0 Cois. Mohawk 0 May1vlllt
6
Chllllcotht 1921Crooksville
Mloml Trtco
1
(il.l
attempts.
.
Barberton 30 Lincoln 6
SCORING
:'*i!'o'W.U!H...: W'id::Si J lUI ~~~::;~~~KJ~ill~t~: ~jlltnco 6
F.·H. - 4 yard pue, Jarvll
GAME PHOTOS
Tlllln COiumDIIn t• 011101! o
ID Cocar. (Harris kick).
.
ho'f
Adt
26 Wovno
Trail 015
•
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MeIg,....a.......,. P ""' or Sonduoky
II Plndlly
E - 19 Yard pass, Blake to . the Timel-8entlnel are COlli'· Btavor l.ocal 1• Ook Olon IW.
LarkiN (pass failed).
,_of s•-·,e W""""
Vo.l 12 Konov1 (W . vo .l 0 Cool.
"""''·
Condo
Fed-Hoc
7 0 0 0-7
Grove 0 lilt I
Eutern
0 0 8 ~ te:::e:.. .OJ800JBI!0NWJIJVC:C:JJ} Btiprt 7 Ravtnswood (W . va, 0

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MERCERVILLE ~ Hannan
Tra~e·s Wildcats played their
best game of the 1973 football
season here Friday night but
went down to defeat for the .
folirth time, 6..j) to Green Twp.
of Lawrence County.
Coach Tom Belville's
Wildcats shoved the visiting
Bobcats all over the field but
just could not get the necessary
punch to push over a touch·
down. Hannan Trace bad 121
yards rushing to a ·mere 20 by
the visitors. The Wildcats also
complied more first downs and
passing yardage.
On defense, Hannan Trace
was led by John Cardwell who
had eight individual tackles
while Bill Hall had seven and
Don Wells, six.
Three lbnes the Wildcats
drove to the Bobcat 20 yard line
only to see the scoring op.portunilies wasted, twice by

g. ab r. h. pet.
Rose, Cln 158 672 113 229 .341
Cdeno. Hou 137 519 8A 165 .318
Madox. SF 142 579 79 183 .316
Wtsn, Hou 156 567 95 179 .3 16
Perez,Cin 150 562 72 176 .313
Smmns, SI.L
159 612 60 191 .312

Crdni ,Chl 142 511 SO 156 .305
Strgel , Pit 145 S1l lOS 154 .301

and you are going to like what you see.

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' THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS';

1111

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-·&gt; ..

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two point conversion pass to
Forrest Cox knotting the score
at 14·14.
On the ensuing kickoff
Wellston's Tony Hutchinson
fielded the ball at hiS own 28
yard liqe and dashed 72 yards
to score with Collins running
the conversion.
In the third period Hut·
chinson sprinted 90 yards from
scrimmage for another TD to
make the score 2~14.
On tjte first play of the fourth
period Arthurs get his second
TD of the contest on a three
yard run with Shoemaker's
pass to Jeff Rhoades closing
out the high-,jcor.ing contest.
Offensively: Wellston rolled
to 13 first downs, had 313 yards
rushing, and 30 passing from
HutChinson accounting for 167
yards in 15 attempts.
Waverly netted nine first
downs, had ·170 ya~ds on the
ground, ·and competed three of
10 passes for 9a yards.
Arthurs led the Tiger ground
gainer~ with 87 yards in eight
carries.
Score by quarters:
Waverly
6 8 0 S..,.22
Wellston ·
6 16 6 0-28

Mal or League Leaders
By Urilted Press International
Leading Batters
National League

Mthws , SF 148 540 74 162 ,300
Garr,Atl 148 668 94 200 .299
Amnlun League
g. ab r . h. pet .
Carw , Min HB 577 95 200 1 .3.47
Ovls. Ba l 136 5~8 53 169 .308

Otl•, KC 26.

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"110 YEARS OF SERVICE"
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the -Bobcat defense and once on
a fumble.
Green scored its only six·
pointer In the second period as
quarterback Lynn Barrett
passed 40 yards to Mike Kitchen. Arun for the extra points
was stopped.
The Wildcats now IH on the
year travel to Hannan, W. Va.
Friday night.
STATISTICS
G HT
Department
3 12
Firs I Downs
20 121
Yards Rushing
40 59
Yards Passing
8 12
Passes Attpt.
I
6
Passes Compt.
6
4
Fumbles
4
3
Fumbles Last
0

Interceptions

By Quarters:

Green

2

06011-6

·

0 00

HT

o-o

SEO
standings

1 0 0

14

m

meanwhile, conllnued its line Waller had 147. Hudson,._, the
contrlbullon by sacking !Awls nell ground gainer with 47
for a 211 yllt'd loss putUng the yards . 1\ waa the fourth
Highlanders In trouble at their straight \!me Tabor had rushed
five yllt'd llnol.
for over 1110 yarda.
Following a punt, Tabor
Bobcat Coach Jim Spr118U.
raced 27 yards to Increase the commendedhlsenlire team for
llcore to ~2. Lucas added the Its fine effort. Two lphomara,
conversion on a kick.
Tim Moles and Tommy Stump
KC later had a TO called were praised for their con·
back on a clipping penalty tributlona while filling In far
after Tabor returned a fumble. junior David Wise. Wise was
The final -Bobcai touchdown out with the nu.
came on a 98 yard drive
Friday night, Kyger Creek
highlighted by Tabor's 54 yard will host Eastern In a very
run with 11 : 12left In the game. Important . SV AC contest.
Southwestern's only other . Southwestern Will play Sym·
scoring threat came In the final · nies Valley.
STATISTICS
seconds as Terry Carter
completed a 25 yard pass to O.portmont
KC SW
1~
9
junior end Uoyd Wood who was First Downs
319 84
tackled at the 15 yard line by Yards Rushing
Yards Passing
32 25
sophomore Tbn Fife.
Passes Altpt.
•
4
Tabor and Waller each · Posses Compt.
3
1
2 2
scored two touchdowns and Fumbles
2. 2
Fumbles Lost
rushed for over 125 yards. lnlerceptlans
0 0
Tabor finished with 127 and Penalized
-45 so

Giants nip
Reds 5-3

0

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See It On Our Lot!
J

LOG MARK
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Built to last Until The Future

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See Jim Staats or Joe Giles

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sosa (8), Moff i tt
1101. McMahon 1&gt; 31. Wlllough ·

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Bradley ,

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE
LYNE CENTER SCHEDULE
October 1-7, 1973
POOL
DATE- GYMNASIUM
8.9
College
Swim
Oct.1- 7·9:30 College Recreation
8·9
Open
Swim
Oci. 2- 7·9:30 College Recreation
7·10 Lifesaving Class
Oct. 3- 7.9:30 College Recreation
7 p.m. Women's Swill' Meet
Ocl. 4- 7-9:30 College Recreation
Rl&lt;rvs. Capital
Los Ang
OOf 010 102- 5 15 0
sen Diego ooo 010 010~ 2 13 1 Oct. 5- 7.9:30 Ope.n Recreallon
8·10a.m. GSI Swim
John, Hough ( 7) and Yeager ;
7.9 Open Swim
Corkins. ca ldwell 171 , Ross 191 Oct. 6-1·3 Open Recreation
1·3Open Swim
and KendalL WP- John (16-7) .
1·3 Open Swim
Oct.
71·3
Open
Recreation
LP - Ce.ldwell (5 -81 . HR - Jo .
7·9
Open Swim
7·9Open Recreallan
shua [2nd ).

and Arnold , Rader ;
Gullett, Borbon (81 , Carroll [9).
Hall (121. Baney (13 ) , Tomlin
(1-4) and Bench. WPIMtMahon
(4-0) . LP- Tomlin { 1-2) . HR sMorgan ( 26th) , Rader (9th).
Geronimo (-4H·Il .
by

(14)

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I Only games schedul ed l

7

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American League

.

96

Mlnn
oCoillornlo

came with just 20 seconds left
In the first hall. Junior tailback
Mark. Waller raced 83 yards
down the sidelines for a six·
pointer whlch seemed to Ignite
the fire under the BobCats.
Lucaa' kick lor the conversion was wl de. On the
second play of the third
quarter, Waller brought the
crowd to Its feet once again
with a :iS yard romp down the
sidelines. &lt;\gain, the kick was
no good.
The
Bobcat defense,

CINCINNATI (UP]) - Don
McMahon·, the San Francisco
Giants' relief pitcher who
doubles as a coach, Is 43 years
old, but, as Dan Driessen says,
"he can still bring lt."
Cincinnati Reds CoaCh Alex
Grammas, hearing the 21·
yearoid Driessen ' remark,
laughed,
"You should have faced
McMahon when I did 15 years
ago," said Grammas. "He
really threw bullets them."
McMabon was the fourth of
. five Giant pitChers Frlday
night and picked up the victory
when San Francisco rallied for
two runs win 5-3 in 14 innings.
McMahon not only got the
victory but he also singled
home the se&lt;:ond run in the 14th
as the Giants won the opener of
a three-game series which
concludes the regular season
for both clubs. II was the first
trip to the plate this season for
McMahon.
After the game the veteran
Giant pitcher remembered
that it was back in 1957 against .
CREMEANS HAULED DOWN - Melvin Cremeans, Marauder defensive cornerback, is
the Reds that he got his first
hauled down by Gallipolis quarterback Jbn Niday after Cremeans intercepted a Niday aerial
major league hit. "It was a
on the Marauder 45 and returned it to the GallipOlis 31. Marauder Bill Slack (75), one of the
bases loaded double off Tom
defensive standouts for Meigs in the 14-7 Friday night victory, Is poised to block as Blue Devils
Acker," he said proudly.
Bob Nibert (63), Scott Epling (58), and Dean Ree's (6$) move in too late.
"McMahon pitches all 12
months of the year,'' said Reds
Manager Sparky Anderson.
"He lives near me in Callfornla
and he goes out and cranks up
three innings against the
college teams even before the
LOGAN - With quarterback the three with John Smart passes for 140 yards in a losing Giants begin spring training."
cause while Kemper hit four of
Jim Kemper wielding the big kicking the extra point.
A triple by Mike Phillips off
Jerry Cunningham returned seven for 35.
hatchet the Logan Chieftains
loser Dave Tomlin touChed off
Athens netted eight first the winning rally . Phillips
surprised the Athens Bulldogs the Logan kickoff 57 yards to
Friday night pulling off a la-6 the Chieftain 29 yard line and downs and 68 yards rushing scored on a single by Dave
on the first play Don. Skinner while Logan showed only six Rader, one of his three hits.
upset at Logan.
fired
a touchdown strike to first downs and 60 yards Rader went on to score the
Kemper, a 190 pound Junior,
. ran three yards for one toych- · Terry D. ·Hawk, but the con- rushing.
insurance run on McMahon's
Score by quarters :
down, passed 13 yards to Mike version kick failed ..
,single.
With 5:40 left in the contest Athens
6 0 0 0- 6
Fain for another, and then
Kemper
found
Fain
with
a
13
Logan
7 0 0 6-15
HORSE PURCHASED
slammed over for the two-point
GALUPOUS- T. G. Pete,
conversion ·that put the game yard strike and then added the
two point conversion.
driven by Robert Sayre, son·lfl.
away for the Chiefs.
In notching their first win
law of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
. Logan's first period TO was
over
Athens
since
1970
the
Hums, Gallip~~lls, was recently
set up when Steve Green
purChased for $30,0110 by Harry
fumbled the snap from center Chiefs pounced on three of six
Athens
fumbles
and
picked
off
Sprunger,
Ligonier, Ind. The
on a punt and UIS recovered
on the Bulldog six yard stripe. one pass.
, RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande harness race driver is ·married
Skinner
completed
eight
of
19
Kemper rammed over from
College's cross country team to the former Wilma Burns of
defeated visiting Cedarville 22- Gallipolis. They reside in
Lebanon, Ohio. The 3-yearo()!d
33 in a dual meet at Evans
Lines cores
Field here Saturday morning. gelding has won nve straigilt
Major League Results
Detroit
010 000 000- 1 A 0
Rio Grande had the top two races, three and Lebanon and
By United Press International
N .Y .
000 003 10)( - 4 1 1
the last two at Latonia where
Nl'tlonal League
Fryman , Hiller {7)
and Individual finishers in Jack T. G. Pete Is now racing.
New Yorlot at Chi , ppd ., rain .
Freehan ; Stottlemyre {16 -16) Finch who carne in first with a
and Dempsey . LP - Fryman (6 winning time of 28:15 and Ken
Montreal
000 000 300- 3 7 0 13) . HR - Murcer { 22nd) .
Pltlsbgh
ooo 020 ooo- 2 9 1
Sanders who finished in 29:~.
Renko , Caskey (6 J. Marshall Kan City
100 110 100- 4 4 2
Rio's dual meet record over
(61
and
eoccabetla ; Ellis , Texas
000 101 03x - 5 9 1
Giusti {8) and Sanguillen . WP Lltlell { 1-J) and Martinez ; the past two years now stands
Marshall (14· 11) . LP- EIIIs (12 - Bibby ( 9-101 and Billings . HR at six wins against no setbacks.
1-4) .
BIIItngs (3rd) .
Rio Grande will be idle until
Phlla
000000000- 0 20 Chlcaoo
ooo ooo 010- 1 s 1 Tuesday when the Redmen
St .LOUIS
010 000 02x - J 11 0 Oakland
000 031 OOx- 4 7 0
Brett, Wallace [6). Diorio (7},
McGiolhlln , Frailing (SL Gos - take part In the Taylor In·
Scar ce (8) and Boone; Thompd sage (7.) and Br inkman; Blue,
son , Segul (S l and Hill. WPLindblad (5). Pina (8) , Fingers vi Ia tiona! in Indiana . The
Segul (7 . 6). LP- Brett t 13-91.
{ 9) and Fosse . WP- LindbiBd Redmen placed second to
(1·SJ. LP- McGioth lin (0-11 .
'
Taylor In a multi-team meet
( 14 innings)
San Francisco
last year.
000 000 020 001 02- s u 2

ALL.GAMES
Team
W L T POP
lronlon
4 0 0 106 40
Wellston
2 I 0 54 65
Logan
2 1 1 ss 20
Jacksotl
2 2 0 62 61
Gallipolis
2 2 o 37 30
Athens
1 2 I 42 43
Waverly
1 2 1 56 78
Meigs
1 2 o 32 46
SEOAL ONLY
Team
W L T POP
Ironton
1 0 0 28 14
Logan
I 0 0 15 6
Wellslon
1 0 0 28 22
Meigs

wing offenae, moved the bu ll • nup to punier John Rwnley
well In the openin ~ minutes wa $ dow ned In the end •one for
before giving the ball away on a two polnt llll fely.
o punt.
The Bobcat offense began
The ut~ck was led by senior rllcking In the second qu arter~
Phil Lewis, Kevin Walker,
Following a Highlander punt
Mike Crouse and Bobby !luff . . Kyger Creek marched 61 yard~
Southwesl&lt;lrndrove from Its 24 In 10 plays as a senior quar·
to the Bobcat 47 before Terry lerback Clay Hudson bulled
Carter quick kicked the ball over from the one yard line on
away.
a fourth and goal situation. The
dr ive featured two clutch
Kyger Creek 's running game passes from Hudson to senior
was stopped cold after fullback end John Rumley.
Sophomor~ Tim Luc~s added
Lawrence Tabor was dropped
for a four yard loss by Chris the extra point on a kick.
Lewla and Keith Grate. A. bad . The 6Brne's turning . p~~lnl

Logan upsets Athens

Gallipolis
0 1 0 7 14
182 -.304 'Aihens
0 1 0 6 15
624 96 189 .303 Waverly
0 1 0 22 28
611 82 185 .303 Jackson
0 1 0 14 28
519 80 156 .301 TOTALS
4 4 0 134 134
S83 895175 .300
Results:
Friday's
$34 82 159 .298 Meigs 14 Galli polis 7
435 51 128 .294
567 62 166 ,293 Logon IS A lhens 6
539 99 158 .293 Ironton 28 Jackson 14
Home Runt
Wellston 28 Waverly 22
National League : . Sto!lrgelt .
Oct. 5 Gomes:
P jtt 44 ; J~;~hnson , All 43 : E ven s. Ironton at Waverly
Atl 40 ; Aaron. Atl 39 ; Bonds,
Jack•on at Goillpolls
SF 38.
AmtriCin L819UI: J11ckson , Logen al Meigs
OAk 12 1 Robinson , Cal end Wellston al Athens

Scoti ,Mii 156
Moy ,MII 156
Murcr, NY 158
Munsn, NY 1•7
Ol ls,KC ' 148
vaz. Bos 150
Holt,M in 131
Ollva , Min 145
Jcksn. Oak 151

Burrough&amp; , Tex 30 ; Benda . Oak
28 1- l=lik , Bos . Mayberry ~tnd

'

,

.

,,,

Receiving - Lltchfi~ld 1-70,
Hesson 2-40, Lewis 2-36.

·

Jackson picked up 10 first
downs, rushed for 173 yards,
and hit three of seven passes
for 37 yards with one In·
lerceplion.
Carter finished the evening
wl!)l157 yards on 14 tries while
Mowrey added 81 yards In 20
trips.
Score by quarters :
Jackson
8 o o 0-14
ironton
7 0 15 6-18

· Green edges 'Cats·

Haroid (Wild Man) Winnings
was credited with interception
with a [eaplng grab and a 17
yard run back, with Mike Lewis
grabbing the other stray pass.
Waharna's defense held South·
em to 101total yards. Southern
was unable to complete a pass
in five attempts.
Yd!i . Rushing
Yds. Passing
Net Yards
First Downs
Passes C-A
lrfterceptions
Fumbles lost

How sweet it was as the
Rnckets rolled to a 211-14 lead
after three periods and then
battled the Tigers to earn the
long-awaited victory.
Keith Henry tallied Uie first
of his two touchdowns for the
Rnckets in the first period on a
one yard run.
Following the kickoff
Waverly's Greg A1'1~urs raced
55 yards to tie the score.
Henry hit paydirt early in the
second · quarter with Doug
Collins getting tl)e. two point
conversion .
Three minutes later Jeff
Wells banged five yarda to
score with John Shoemaker's
1

Falcons crush Southern
The Southern
Tornadoes, withou~ the ser·
vices al qlllil'terback Vern Ord
ex- blllldoziug fullback Greg
Dunning, were crushed, ~.
Friday night here Frlday night
by the Wa1&gt;ama White Falcons.
Junior halfback Mitch Nease
led the Southern attack with 54
yards.
Wahama opened the scoring
early in the first quarter when
Terry Smith faded back and hit
Danny Litchfield near the left
sideline for a 70 yard touch·
dowri play. Jeff Haymaker
booted the PAT, his first of five
for the night, missing only one.
Near the end of the quarter
Waharna again managed a
sustained drive, capped off by

yard sprint early In the final
period but Massey ~s kick
failed.
Ridge picked up a touchdown
for Jackson late jn the contest.
The awesome Tiger offense
rolled up 14 first downs, netted
· 321 yards rushing, and hit two
of two passes for another 60
yards fo r a total of 381 tolal
yards.

Rockets triumph

HAIR CUTS
.......... ~2.50
.
SHA VES .......... ~ ... ~!2.00

119

PATIIIO'f - Kyijer Creek
spotk1l h011 t Southwestern a ~
lead In the first period here
Ftlduy night before Its offense
broke loose enroute to a 32-2
victory.
.
The win pushed the Bobcats
temporarily Into first place in
the SQuthern Valley Athletic
Conference standings with a J.O
mark. Southern, a 44~ loser
Frlduy to Wahama, is in
second place with a ~record .
Southwestern dropped to 1H
overall and G-2 in the SV AC.
Coach
Bob
Ashley 's
fUghlandera, using their single

. 1 .R0~1'0N - After spottin.~ visiting Ja ckson an
8·7 h,llfll~e lend the dafending SEOAJ. champion
~onton 1 tgers exploded for 21 points in the second
.alf to pos~ a 28·14 victory ~'rlday night.

ENDS - Dave Wolfe. Tom
Lowery, Robert Quails.
TACKLES- Robbie Eason.
Mike McDaniel, ·Bill Slack,
Gary George.
.
GUARDS - John Lehew,
Andy English, AI 'McLaughlin,
J. D. Story.
CENTER - Terr.y Pickens.
BACKS - Jay Warner,
Terry Whitlatch, Mlck Ash,
Melvin Cremeans. Lonnie
Coats, Mike · Magnotta, Joe
Rosenbaum, Mark Morris.
OFFICIAL$ - Gene James,
Ralph Davis, William Rapp,
Joe Swarts. Ironton Chepter.
seer• by quorters:
Gallipolis
0 0 7 Cf- 7
Meigs
7 0 0 7-14

.

Bobcats record fourth win

tops J:ackson

This Friday tile Blue Devil•,
With an G-1 league mark, ~2
overall, will host the JaekJOn
ironmen, wpo were ouUasted
by Ironton, 2&amp;-14, Friday night.
The Marauders, 1·2 over~l
and 1.() In the SEOAL, will
return to familiar turt for the
first time In a month, hosting
the Logan C~leftalns, 15~
victors Friday night over
Athens.
LINEUP$
I Gallipolis)
ENDS - Leon Briggs, Rick
Grymes. Bill Lemley, Bob
Nibert,
·
TACKLES - Rex Plymale,
Mike Evans, Dick Burdette,
David Kerns, Winston SaiJn.
ders, Doug Brown, Bob Wood .
GUARDS - Dan Woodward,
Pat Boster, Weldon Wahl.
CENTER - Scott Eplln_g .
BACKS - Jim Niday, Dean
Rees, Tom Valentine, Ken
Collier, Mike Berridge, Craig
Fisher , John Myers, John
Groth .
.

EFFECTIVE OCTOBER 1st

8

1

•

'

2

2

'

in &amp;n interception and winning
touchdown for Meigs. "Don't
criticize the kids for that call,"
Ecker concluded.
Despite a 174 to 96 rushing
edvantage for the Marauders,
the Blue !)j)vlls won the battle
of the Slats. Gallipolis added
119 aerial yards, on 6 com·
pletlons in 14 attmpts by Niday,
for a total of 21~, compared to
Meigs' 174 plus 10 yards
passing on I out of 7 for War·
ner.
Top receivers for the Blue
Devils were Briggs with 3
grabs for 52 yards, Berridge
with J for 62, and Reea and
Rick Grymes with I catCh each
for 1 and • yards respectively.
Cremeans had the only
Marauder reception, that one
good for 10 yards.
Gallipolis colle&lt;;ted 8 first
downs, 2 by penBltles, while
Meigs had 5. The Marauders
were penaltzed 8 times for 52
yards while the Blue Devils got
canghl twice for 10 yards. ·
AlthOugh Gallipolis fumbled
3 Ibn~, the Blue managed to
recover every time. The
Marauders on the other hand,
bobbled the oval twice, losing it
once.
WhitlatCh led all rushers
with lll yards in 12 carries,
followed by Niday with 67
. three-footers In 16 attempts.
.Next WBS.Meigs' Ash with 331n
12 carries and Rees with 22 in
13lugs.

Ironton rally

NOTICE

Whitlatch
1 11
KICKOFF RETURNS
MEIGS
Ret. Yds.
1
25
Whitlatch
1 21
Magnotta
GAHS
u
Fisher
TEAM STAT$
M G

RACINE -

,..

19 T ill' Sunday 'l'hu~R · S.ntinol, Sumluy •&amp;.1&gt;1. :IQ, 197:1

II-The Sunday Tbnes. Senllnel, Sunday, Sept. 30, 1973

t'1~~~f.~~~ ooo 201 210Baltimore

000 t20 010-

1
~

11 o
12 2

Tldrow , Hilgendorf (8 1. Sand ers (8) tand Duncan ; Palmer.
Walt 161 and E . Will iams ,

Robles I71 . wP- T ldrow I1~ ·
16 ). LP- Palmer 122 ·91. HRsDun can (17th) , w. Wil li ams
(81hl , ounv (81hl . Baylor
lllth l.
&lt;2nd Game)

·Cleve land
B&amp;lt lmre

ooo 012

100..... 4 9 1
000 703 26x- 18 14 2

W[lco&gt;t , Lamb

(4 ) , Johnson

171 , Bosman (61 and Ellis:

Alexander , Jeckson ( 8) and
Etchebarren . WP - A texllnder

020 000~ 7 B I 112-61. LP- Wilcox
000 100 .000- I 6 2 Boker llotl .

--

005

IS.,O I .

HR -

Runs Blfled In
Fife (3,21 end eoroamnn ;
Natlon•l Leiuu• : . St argell , Me v , Sg lls { ~ 1 . Lanoe 16 J, lh1Girt1t)
Pill liB I May , Hou 1041 Ben ch, M ont oa gu d o ('11 ~ n d Torborg , MIIW
000 100 001 - 2 S 1

Cln 103 1 Evon&amp;, All 101; ~ en ~;U l'il ) . LP - Mey 17 -17 ). HR
Singlelon, Mll'101 .
- Brv o (61h J.
American Lnuue 1 Jlllcl&lt;son ,
Ook
111 1 Scoll. Mil 1041
Mayberry , KC 1001 ~oblnson, CUAMPlON WINS
Cal 96 1 Yntr;em skl , BQs , MB'f,
BERLIN (UP!) - West .
Chi, Murcern NY ,.,and Ben do.
German middleweight chamOak 95.
.,._.
Pltcl'lln•
pion ll:ckhard Dasge knooked
Natlon•l LI•IUt t Brr,ent , SF out MaU Donovan of Trinidad
13 ·11 1' Blillnghom , c n 19·91
Gull oil, Cln 18 61 !utton. LA in the second round of a non·
and Suver, NY 111 -10.
American L••tUt l Wood , Clll title bout Friday night.
24 -20 ; Coleman , Det 2J, l5 J
Daggealso knocked Donovan
Pe~lrntr , &amp;•It 22 ·f l litvnter , Oak to the canvas In the first round .
. 31 .5 t Ryan , Cal 'l1.J6.

Bo01on

451010 Oox- 1110 0

Rodriguez ,

Velasquez (2),
Reynolds(~) and Po·rter : Tlant

120·131 ond Fisk . LP- RO•
dr lguez 19,71 , HRs- Yb&amp;lrWn ·
ak l 1191hl , Sm ith 121otl , Cooper
llrd 1, Scolll22od l.
Und Gamt)

----000 000-

Mliw
003
J 70
Bollen
00&lt; 000 Olx- 5 8 0
Kobtl.
Spr11gue
(7l
and
Moore; Pallln (15 .151 and
Montgomery . LP- Kobel (0 .1) .

HIU

-

II Oih I.

Scott

('2Jrdl , Evans

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''

'·

..

�arau ers
•

Rees went for 3 and quarBY 'DENNY FOBES
to give Meigs a 6-0 le~d. Gary
terback
• halfback Ken Collier
GALUPOLIS - An Inspired George's ki(:k was good, and it
and confident Meigs Marauder stood 7-()the rest of the half, but added another 3 before Niday
football team Frlday night, did not before the Blue Devils threw for the left oorner of tlle
end zone. But Marauder umnie
what they do best, play threatened twice.
Gallipolis.
A bad punt off the foot of Coats picked off t)\e un·
And play they did, stunning Marauder Rnbbie Eason, who derthrown aerial and, needing
the Blue Devils, 14·7, before a kicked 7 times for Z55 yards, · just I good block to go all the
packed house at Memorial traveled only 7 yards, giving way, returned to the 33.
It didn't take long after the
Field.
GARS control on the Meigs 49
ll was the fourth time, early in the second quarter. teams came out of the locker
without a loss, that the . Gallipolis then went on the rooms after intermission for
Marauders have defeated march, with a 13 yard pass the Blue Devils to knot the
Galli&amp; on its own field.
!rom quarterback Jim Niday to count at 7·7.
llwasasee-t~awbattleallthe end Leon Briggs on a crucial . On the third play of the
way, with both teams third down at the Marauder 44 second hall Niday fired to
ha)!back Mike Berridge who
managing only 13 first downs. the key to the drive.
took
the ball around the Meigs
The Marauders won the toss,
The pilrsuit of Meigs tackle
and 'elected to receive, but Bill Slack then threw fullback 30 and somehOw managed to
quarterback Jay Warner Dean Rees for a yard loss, but slip past 3 Marauder defenders
fumbled on the second play a facemask penalty moved the enroute to a 62 yard touch·
down. Bill Lemley split the
from
scrimmage, with ball down to the Meigs 15.
Gallipolis' Winston Saunders
But the Marauder d!&gt;fense uprights to tie it at 7·7.
An exchange of punts,
recovering on the Meigs 45.
arose, throwing Niday for an 8
But Gallipolis couldn't move yard loss back to the 23. Niday coupled with an 11 yard return
the baU and was forced to punt, then threw an incomplete pass, by Whitlatch, gave Meigs a
with fullback Mlck Ash ran for II to the 12, and on first down on the Gallipolis 34.
returning 2 yards to the fourth and 7fired incomplete in Ash then carried for 5,
Magnotta for 4 and Ash for I
Marauder 21. Meigs also had the endzone.
··
trouble moving, and after an
Meigs again, this time ·giving the Marauders a first
exChange of punts and offside hampered by penalties, down at the GAHS 24. But the
penally against Meigs, Terry couldn't move the ball, and Gallia defense rose to the
holding
the
"-Bradbury" Whitlatch, freshly Niday went to work again, this occasion,
Marauders
on
'downs,
as
painted red-bottomed shoes time firing a 30 yarder to
and all, twisted through a hole Briggs, whO ran it down to the Warner carried for 6,
provided by the left side of the 16 with less than • minutes WhitlatCh twice for 2 and Ash
wu iMIIPed 011 fourtb dowu,
MeiCa llDe IIIII dllhed 78 yudl ~ In the ball.

Gallipolis never threatened
after that , with the Oevtls'
deepest penetration reaChing
the Meigs 44, where the
Marauder defense stopped
Niday for a 4 yard gain on a
fourth and 11.
One of the keys to the ball
game was the work of the
Marauder linea. The defensive
line, led by headhunter Bill
Slack, and consisting for the
most part o! Slack, Alan
McLaughlin, Rnbble Eason, J.
D. Story, Andy English, John
L¢tew, Tom Lowery, Rnbert
Qualls, Gary George, and
Charlie Neece, held the

picking up l yard .
The Marauders threate!llld
again early In the final period,
when Melvin Cremeans, out
the first 2 games with ankle
troubles, intercepted a Niday
pass on the Meigs 45 and
returned to the Gallipolis 31. A
3 yard loss by Warner, 10 yard
pass completion to Cremeans,
and 7 yarder by WhitlatCh, who
gained 111 yards on the nlg!Jt,
gave the Marauders a first
&lt;klwn on the 1'7 :
Magnotta then went for 2,
Whitlatch lost 3 and Warner
threw Incomplete, bringing up
fourth and 11 frofll the 18.
Warner then faded back to
pass, couldn 't find anyone
open, and took to the right
sidelines, but was stopped on
the 8 just shy of the first down.
But maybe It's just as well
that he was stopped, for on the
next play, with 7:56 remaining,
Niday faded back, was rushed
hard by the Meigs line, and the
bail slipped off his hand and
into the arms of Marauder
· defensive end Tom Lowery,
whO took it on the 8 yard line
and bolted In for the winning
score. George added the PAT
after Meigs was penalized 5
yarda for offside on the initial
eoovaiJIOD N"mp\.

HATISTICS
INDIVIDUAL RUSHING
MEIGS
Car. Yds. TD
Whillatch
12 111 1
12 33
Ash
Magnolia
5 17
6
13
Warner
GAHS
16 67
Niday
13 22
Rees
4
4
Collier
2
3
Fisher
Berridge
1
0
PA551NG
MEIGS
AI. Com Yds In! TD
Warner
7 1 10 0 0
GAHS
Niday
14 6 119 3
PASS RE~EIVING
MEIGS
Cal. Yds."
I
10
Cremeans
GAHS
Col Yds TD
3 52
Briggs
I 62
Berridge
1 ·1
Rees
; 1 4
Grymes
PUNTING
Punts Yds.
Meigs-Eason
7 255
. GAHS-Berrldge
5 182
PUNT RETURNS
MEIGS
Ret. Yds.
. ~h

I

Gallipolis running attack to
just 96 yards . Meanwhile, lhe
offensive line, consisting of
Slack, Lehew, 1'erry PickenS,
Ea$on, English, Mike Me·
Daniel, Lowery and Dave
Wolfe, opened up holes worth
174 yards in 3$ carries.
Another key to the game had
to be the mental attitude of the
Marauder players. All mentor
Ol&amp;l'ley OlanceY said after the
game, "We wanted it badly."
This statment was exem·
plifled by the work of that
defensive line, which threw
Gallla runners for losses 8
times, once on a pass Cl)lll·
pletlon, and held them to ~o
gainers 3 times.
Meanwhile, the Gallipolis
defense threw Marauders for
losses • times and also held
them 3 times for no gain.
Gallipolis Coach C. ·. L.
(Johnny) Ecker, following the
loss, praised the Marauders for
their aggressive play. "Our
defensive unit, with one ex·
ci:ption (WbiUatch's 7&amp;-yard
touchdown run) performed
well out there tonight. I was
really surprised they (Meigs)
stopped our running game like
they did."
Continued Ecker, "We'll
have to regroup our forces and
IX'epare for Jackson."
The Blue Devil mentor said
he was responsible for caUing
the pass play on first down in
the final period whiCh resulted

First Downs

. Fumbles
Fumbles lost
Yards Rushing
Yards Passing
Total Yards
Passes Int. by
Penalties
Punts

DANDY DEFENSE- Marauder linebacker John Lehew
( 6$) hauls down Gallipolis tailback Dean Rees following a
short gain in action Friday night on Memorial Field. Moving

5

3

0

17~

10

184

3

.

-Bruce Carter, Rick Massey
and Terry Mowery ripped lh~
Iron men delense In the second
ha.lf enroute to their fourth
consecutive win of the season.
Carter opened the scoring
with a 10 yard run in the· first
' quarter with Rick Massey
kicking the extra point.
Midway In the quarter
fullback Brad Thompson
slammed over from the four
and Randy Ridge ran the two
point conversion for an ~7lead
that stood until !he third
period.
In a matter of five minutes
Massey .drove over from the
three, ran the conversion,
· Carter roared 19 yards for
another TD with Massey's kick
making It 22-8.
Carter tallied his third touchdown of the contest on a seven

!Meigs)

WELlSTON - It was like
winning the Super Bowl in .
Wellston Friday night as the
Golden Rockets snapped a 16game SEOAL losing streak
with .a surprisillg 211-22 victory
over visiting Waverly.
On the evening of Oct. 23,
1970Wellston won a thrilling 3634 contest over the Tigers and
theri embarked on a Hi-game
. losing streak before snapping it
against the same team they
lasl-defeated.

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Meigs County Barber Association

215

0

8-52 2·10

Haymaker's 41 yard fieid ,goal
early in the se&lt;:ond stanza. The
boot was Jeff's fourth of the
season.
Another drive sent the
Falcons to paydirl with Lewis
going over from the three after
picking up most of the yardage
. along the way . .Wahama went
Into the dressing room at the
hall with a comfortable· 17.()
lead.
The White Falcons opened
the second half with two more
.Mike Lewis touchdowns from
one and two yards out within a
span of three minutes. The
latter score was a direct result
of a 47 yard punt return by
Danny Gardner to the Soulbern
two.

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in to help Lehew are Tom Lowery (81), Mick Ash (12) and J.
D. Story, behind Lehew. Meanwhile, Blue Devils blocking for
Rees are Jim Niday ( 16) and Pa!Boster, far right.

Eastern edged
out·by 1 point
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Eastern Eagles, suffering from
3 fumbles and a lack of of.
fenslve punch, were edged out
by Federal Hoelting, 7~, here
Friday night.
A PAT kick by Dennis Harris
following a first quarter 4 yard
touchdown paBS from Charlie
Jarvis to Dan Cogar, provided
the · winning margin for the
Lancers.
' The Eagles' score, in the
third stanza, came on a 19 yard
pau from quarterback Randy
Blake to end Mike Larkins.
Following the touchdown,
coach
Spike
Eastern
Berkhlmer elected to go for the
lead, and aent Blake on a
l'ollout to the rlt!ht. Hla pau In
the end zone feU Incomplete.
The Eaglea, outplned by
Federal 194 to 94 yarda, had a
chance to gain the lead wl\en
the lAncer punter was rushed
heavily and fumbled the ball
with Eastern recovering on the
Pual ~. The Green and
Willie moved the bill down to
tile 11 whert 1 penalty on
. . - lldllecl the lbrtal.

llltddmer ·-·t p!Need at

aU wilb tile ofttnllve output ol
1111- . . . . . •t.attna lhlt the
wae poor. Tbe

Ill_,

'II 11, Hdtd Berkhimtr,

The lhtrd and final score of
the quarter was the result of a
pass play. With the ball on the
hosts' 18 yard line; Terry
Smith rolled right, pump·
faked, and uncorked a strike to
Rick Hesson in ll)e end zone.
With reserves dominating
the lineup, Wahama managed
their final score early in the
fourth period with Lewis again
going over· from the one. All
.told, Mike totaled four touchdowns In the contest while
picking up 169 yards · on the
ground. He also pulled down
two aerials for 30 yards.
Leading the · defensive
charge in the contest was Mark
Mitchell with eight tackles.
Mike Lewis and Tim Roush
followed with six apiece. Scott
Keebler was next with five
individual tackles while
playing in only the first half.
Tim Roush also recovered two
enemy fumbles for the defense.

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Penalties
Top Rushers -

Nease 54.

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-==-·--

w s

196
146
342
10
6-13
0
2-1

101
o
101
3

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0-~

2
3-1

"' '.

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89 52
Lewis 28 -169,

·

SCOR lNG
Smith, '70 yds. Hay .
Wah.

,,

Litchfield pass from

·The New
Models Are
In Town!

K.

Wah. Haymaker 41 yd . Field
Goal.
Wah. Lew is 3 yd. run , Jay . K.
Wah . Lewis 1 yd . run, Kick
Fall&amp;d .
·
Wah . Lewis 2 yd . run, Hay,

K.

Wah . Hesson pass from
Smith, 18 vds., Hay, K .
Wah. Lewis 1 yd. run, Hay,

K.

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High School Grid Scores

wasn't as good as It should By United Presstnternttlonal Cols. Eastmoor 3A Cots . Cen tral 8
have been. "They should have Newark 35 Portsmouth 7
Wheelersburg JA New Boston 0 Cols. Brookhaven 8 Co ts E:est 7
never gotten more than 1110 Lima Bath 19 van Wert 0 ·
Cols . Linden McK inley 1S Cots .
.
yards on our defense," says the Allen East 42 Columbus Grove North 0
0
Cols.
Northland
20
Mllflln o
first-year mentor.
M&amp;nsfleld Malabar 1.4 Wooster Gahanna 20 Westervlllt 1
"We weren't mentally 6
Reynoldsburg
28
Cols .
Westland 21
Shelby 18 Upper Sanduiky 0
ready," added Berkhlmer. Clearfork 28 Crestline 0
Urbana 6 Be~&lt;Jey o
Groveport 14 Grove City 12
"We were so flat the first hall it Zanesville 21 Cambridge 0
Massillon 2,3 Niles McKinley 7 Dublin 28 Olentangy 7
was ridiculous. After that; we Youngstown Urullne 20 Wes.t Jefferson 21 Grrmdvlew o
had to come out and fight the Boerdman 7
Teays Vall•v 1-4 Franklin
Warren Harding 21 Steuben · Helg~ts 12
odds the second half."
ville 6
'
{W . Vii . ) 7 Martins
The Eagles were penalized 4 Wheeling
F~rr ... n,
Cots. Wetnut Ridge 19 Colt.
times for 20 yards, while the .wapakoneta 2S Oeflanc&amp; 13
Hartley 6
Cois . Dooalos ;o Cols: Whol·
Lancers were caught 9 'times Elyria 28 Marion Harding o
Wheelersburg 34 New Boston o sto.ne 13
for 75 yards. ,
NorthweJt (Scioto County) 15 ~ew Albany 13 CoiS. Academ ·y
Don Eichinger was the
Porlsmouth Eost H
·
Parkersburg (W . va . ) lot Bloom Carroll 12 Lencester
leading rusher for Eastern, Marietta 6
Flaher ·6
Licking Valley 22 Youngltown Northridge 22 Utica 6
gaining 37 yarda in 10 carries. o
Lancuter 28 Ham II ton Taft 1
Blake hit on 3 of 9 passes for 30 Granville 29 Watkins Memorial Wtlllton 28 Wlvtrl'f 22
Meigs 10 Golllpoll• 7
yards, 2 to Eichinger for.a total u
Berne Union 13 Millersport 6 Worthington 21 Mount Vernon 0
of II to go with the 19 yard Dover 11 Coshacton o
Whitehall 12 Dtlewart 7
Corv-RIWIOn 1&lt; 1.11ps 1c 2
LOgin
15 Alhons 6
touchdown toss to Larkins.
Elyria 28 Warren Hardlno o
Federal Hocking collected 7 :~gcy~~~,~~ 3711~~~~h1~or
Clrcltvllle 21 Greentltld 6
M.rysvlll&amp;
13
Hamilton
first downs to only 3 for Netson\lllle York 60
Zanesville Rosecnnl 0 Townlhlp 6
Eastern, 2 rushing and I Well Muoklnoum il P~llo 7
Cin . Eldor 25 Cols. Wotteroon 0
passing.
New Lexln~ton 1.4 1Tri -ValleV 9 Cln . Princeton 21 Upl)tr
19 Crooksville 6
· Ai'llngton 13
.
H,ocking's 194 total yards MaysvHit
Morgan 33 Shotldan 0
C101 1
WI h11 t
25
Cois . Marion . Franklin Colt , Pickerington 0
nc:
tr
came on 140 rushing and 54 woot
passing, on 4 cqmpletlons in 6 Cols. 7soulh 0 Cois. Mohawk 0 May1vlllt
6
Chllllcotht 1921Crooksville
Mloml Trtco
1
(il.l
attempts.
.
Barberton 30 Lincoln 6
SCORING
:'*i!'o'W.U!H...: W'id::Si J lUI ~~~::;~~~KJ~ill~t~: ~jlltnco 6
F.·H. - 4 yard pue, Jarvll
GAME PHOTOS
Tlllln COiumDIIn t• 011101! o
ID Cocar. (Harris kick).
.
ho'f
Adt
26 Wovno
Trail 015
•
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"'"'"""
MeIg,....a.......,. P ""' or Sonduoky
II Plndlly
E - 19 Yard pass, Blake to . the Timel-8entlnel are COlli'· Btavor l.ocal 1• Ook Olon IW.
LarkiN (pass failed).
,_of s•-·,e W""""
Vo.l 12 Konov1 (W . vo .l 0 Cool.
"""''·
Condo
Fed-Hoc
7 0 0 0-7
Grove 0 lilt I
Eutern
0 0 8 ~ te:::e:.. .OJ800JBI!0NWJIJVC:C:JJ} Btiprt 7 Ravtnswood (W . va, 0

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MERCERVILLE ~ Hannan
Tra~e·s Wildcats played their
best game of the 1973 football
season here Friday night but
went down to defeat for the .
folirth time, 6..j) to Green Twp.
of Lawrence County.
Coach Tom Belville's
Wildcats shoved the visiting
Bobcats all over the field but
just could not get the necessary
punch to push over a touch·
down. Hannan Trace bad 121
yards rushing to a ·mere 20 by
the visitors. The Wildcats also
complied more first downs and
passing yardage.
On defense, Hannan Trace
was led by John Cardwell who
had eight individual tackles
while Bill Hall had seven and
Don Wells, six.
Three lbnes the Wildcats
drove to the Bobcat 20 yard line
only to see the scoring op.portunilies wasted, twice by

g. ab r. h. pet.
Rose, Cln 158 672 113 229 .341
Cdeno. Hou 137 519 8A 165 .318
Madox. SF 142 579 79 183 .316
Wtsn, Hou 156 567 95 179 .3 16
Perez,Cin 150 562 72 176 .313
Smmns, SI.L
159 612 60 191 .312

Crdni ,Chl 142 511 SO 156 .305
Strgel , Pit 145 S1l lOS 154 .301

and you are going to like what you see.

••

You're also going to like the low rates

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we have on the financing.

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' THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS';

1111

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-·&gt; ..

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two point conversion pass to
Forrest Cox knotting the score
at 14·14.
On the ensuing kickoff
Wellston's Tony Hutchinson
fielded the ball at hiS own 28
yard liqe and dashed 72 yards
to score with Collins running
the conversion.
In the third period Hut·
chinson sprinted 90 yards from
scrimmage for another TD to
make the score 2~14.
On tjte first play of the fourth
period Arthurs get his second
TD of the contest on a three
yard run with Shoemaker's
pass to Jeff Rhoades closing
out the high-,jcor.ing contest.
Offensively: Wellston rolled
to 13 first downs, had 313 yards
rushing, and 30 passing from
HutChinson accounting for 167
yards in 15 attempts.
Waverly netted nine first
downs, had ·170 ya~ds on the
ground, ·and competed three of
10 passes for 9a yards.
Arthurs led the Tiger ground
gainer~ with 87 yards in eight
carries.
Score by quarters:
Waverly
6 8 0 S..,.22
Wellston ·
6 16 6 0-28

Mal or League Leaders
By Urilted Press International
Leading Batters
National League

Mthws , SF 148 540 74 162 ,300
Garr,Atl 148 668 94 200 .299
Amnlun League
g. ab r . h. pet .
Carw , Min HB 577 95 200 1 .3.47
Ovls. Ba l 136 5~8 53 169 .308

Otl•, KC 26.

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"110 YEARS OF SERVICE"
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the -Bobcat defense and once on
a fumble.
Green scored its only six·
pointer In the second period as
quarterback Lynn Barrett
passed 40 yards to Mike Kitchen. Arun for the extra points
was stopped.
The Wildcats now IH on the
year travel to Hannan, W. Va.
Friday night.
STATISTICS
G HT
Department
3 12
Firs I Downs
20 121
Yards Rushing
40 59
Yards Passing
8 12
Passes Attpt.
I
6
Passes Compt.
6
4
Fumbles
4
3
Fumbles Last
0

Interceptions

By Quarters:

Green

2

06011-6

·

0 00

HT

o-o

SEO
standings

1 0 0

14

m

meanwhile, conllnued its line Waller had 147. Hudson,._, the
contrlbullon by sacking !Awls nell ground gainer with 47
for a 211 yllt'd loss putUng the yards . 1\ waa the fourth
Highlanders In trouble at their straight \!me Tabor had rushed
five yllt'd llnol.
for over 1110 yarda.
Following a punt, Tabor
Bobcat Coach Jim Spr118U.
raced 27 yards to Increase the commendedhlsenlire team for
llcore to ~2. Lucas added the Its fine effort. Two lphomara,
conversion on a kick.
Tim Moles and Tommy Stump
KC later had a TO called were praised for their con·
back on a clipping penalty tributlona while filling In far
after Tabor returned a fumble. junior David Wise. Wise was
The final -Bobcai touchdown out with the nu.
came on a 98 yard drive
Friday night, Kyger Creek
highlighted by Tabor's 54 yard will host Eastern In a very
run with 11 : 12left In the game. Important . SV AC contest.
Southwestern's only other . Southwestern Will play Sym·
scoring threat came In the final · nies Valley.
STATISTICS
seconds as Terry Carter
completed a 25 yard pass to O.portmont
KC SW
1~
9
junior end Uoyd Wood who was First Downs
319 84
tackled at the 15 yard line by Yards Rushing
Yards Passing
32 25
sophomore Tbn Fife.
Passes Altpt.
•
4
Tabor and Waller each · Posses Compt.
3
1
2 2
scored two touchdowns and Fumbles
2. 2
Fumbles Lost
rushed for over 125 yards. lnlerceptlans
0 0
Tabor finished with 127 and Penalized
-45 so

Giants nip
Reds 5-3

0

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See It On Our Lot!
J

LOG MARK
'1&amp;'\'EJa.

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Built to last Until The Future

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House Type Siding. Windows, Doors· Washer·
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Hallway · Carpet in Living Room • Curtains &amp;
Drapes Throughout · Shutters · 1'\14 Baths • 14
Cu. Ft. Refrigerator. Front Gable, Basement
Option · Other Options Available. This Model
has aluminum horizontal siding.

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Farmere Home Ap~
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HOURS: 910 8 MONDAY THRU FRIDAY,
9 TO 5 SATURDAY-CLOSED SUNDAY

Redmen top

Cedarville

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MOBILE
HOME
SALES
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles

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C Wpala, Ohio

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Cincinnati

ooo 101 ooo oo1 oo- 3 8 1
sosa (8), Moff i tt
1101. McMahon 1&gt; 31. Wlllough ·

,,

Bradley ,

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE
LYNE CENTER SCHEDULE
October 1-7, 1973
POOL
DATE- GYMNASIUM
8.9
College
Swim
Oct.1- 7·9:30 College Recreation
8·9
Open
Swim
Oci. 2- 7·9:30 College Recreation
7·10 Lifesaving Class
Oct. 3- 7.9:30 College Recreation
7 p.m. Women's Swill' Meet
Ocl. 4- 7-9:30 College Recreation
Rl&lt;rvs. Capital
Los Ang
OOf 010 102- 5 15 0
sen Diego ooo 010 010~ 2 13 1 Oct. 5- 7.9:30 Ope.n Recreallon
8·10a.m. GSI Swim
John, Hough ( 7) and Yeager ;
7.9 Open Swim
Corkins. ca ldwell 171 , Ross 191 Oct. 6-1·3 Open Recreation
1·3Open Swim
and KendalL WP- John (16-7) .
1·3 Open Swim
Oct.
71·3
Open
Recreation
LP - Ce.ldwell (5 -81 . HR - Jo .
7·9
Open Swim
7·9Open Recreallan
shua [2nd ).

and Arnold , Rader ;
Gullett, Borbon (81 , Carroll [9).
Hall (121. Baney (13 ) , Tomlin
(1-4) and Bench. WPIMtMahon
(4-0) . LP- Tomlin { 1-2) . HR sMorgan ( 26th) , Rader (9th).
Geronimo (-4H·Il .
by

(14)

'd'

I Only games schedul ed l

7

..

American League

.

96

Mlnn
oCoillornlo

came with just 20 seconds left
In the first hall. Junior tailback
Mark. Waller raced 83 yards
down the sidelines for a six·
pointer whlch seemed to Ignite
the fire under the BobCats.
Lucaa' kick lor the conversion was wl de. On the
second play of the third
quarter, Waller brought the
crowd to Its feet once again
with a :iS yard romp down the
sidelines. &lt;\gain, the kick was
no good.
The
Bobcat defense,

CINCINNATI (UP]) - Don
McMahon·, the San Francisco
Giants' relief pitcher who
doubles as a coach, Is 43 years
old, but, as Dan Driessen says,
"he can still bring lt."
Cincinnati Reds CoaCh Alex
Grammas, hearing the 21·
yearoid Driessen ' remark,
laughed,
"You should have faced
McMahon when I did 15 years
ago," said Grammas. "He
really threw bullets them."
McMabon was the fourth of
. five Giant pitChers Frlday
night and picked up the victory
when San Francisco rallied for
two runs win 5-3 in 14 innings.
McMahon not only got the
victory but he also singled
home the se&lt;:ond run in the 14th
as the Giants won the opener of
a three-game series which
concludes the regular season
for both clubs. II was the first
trip to the plate this season for
McMahon.
After the game the veteran
Giant pitcher remembered
that it was back in 1957 against .
CREMEANS HAULED DOWN - Melvin Cremeans, Marauder defensive cornerback, is
the Reds that he got his first
hauled down by Gallipolis quarterback Jbn Niday after Cremeans intercepted a Niday aerial
major league hit. "It was a
on the Marauder 45 and returned it to the GallipOlis 31. Marauder Bill Slack (75), one of the
bases loaded double off Tom
defensive standouts for Meigs in the 14-7 Friday night victory, Is poised to block as Blue Devils
Acker," he said proudly.
Bob Nibert (63), Scott Epling (58), and Dean Ree's (6$) move in too late.
"McMahon pitches all 12
months of the year,'' said Reds
Manager Sparky Anderson.
"He lives near me in Callfornla
and he goes out and cranks up
three innings against the
college teams even before the
LOGAN - With quarterback the three with John Smart passes for 140 yards in a losing Giants begin spring training."
cause while Kemper hit four of
Jim Kemper wielding the big kicking the extra point.
A triple by Mike Phillips off
Jerry Cunningham returned seven for 35.
hatchet the Logan Chieftains
loser Dave Tomlin touChed off
Athens netted eight first the winning rally . Phillips
surprised the Athens Bulldogs the Logan kickoff 57 yards to
Friday night pulling off a la-6 the Chieftain 29 yard line and downs and 68 yards rushing scored on a single by Dave
on the first play Don. Skinner while Logan showed only six Rader, one of his three hits.
upset at Logan.
fired
a touchdown strike to first downs and 60 yards Rader went on to score the
Kemper, a 190 pound Junior,
. ran three yards for one toych- · Terry D. ·Hawk, but the con- rushing.
insurance run on McMahon's
Score by quarters :
down, passed 13 yards to Mike version kick failed ..
,single.
With 5:40 left in the contest Athens
6 0 0 0- 6
Fain for another, and then
Kemper
found
Fain
with
a
13
Logan
7 0 0 6-15
HORSE PURCHASED
slammed over for the two-point
GALUPOUS- T. G. Pete,
conversion ·that put the game yard strike and then added the
two point conversion.
driven by Robert Sayre, son·lfl.
away for the Chiefs.
In notching their first win
law of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
. Logan's first period TO was
over
Athens
since
1970
the
Hums, Gallip~~lls, was recently
set up when Steve Green
purChased for $30,0110 by Harry
fumbled the snap from center Chiefs pounced on three of six
Athens
fumbles
and
picked
off
Sprunger,
Ligonier, Ind. The
on a punt and UIS recovered
on the Bulldog six yard stripe. one pass.
, RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande harness race driver is ·married
Skinner
completed
eight
of
19
Kemper rammed over from
College's cross country team to the former Wilma Burns of
defeated visiting Cedarville 22- Gallipolis. They reside in
Lebanon, Ohio. The 3-yearo()!d
33 in a dual meet at Evans
Lines cores
Field here Saturday morning. gelding has won nve straigilt
Major League Results
Detroit
010 000 000- 1 A 0
Rio Grande had the top two races, three and Lebanon and
By United Press International
N .Y .
000 003 10)( - 4 1 1
the last two at Latonia where
Nl'tlonal League
Fryman , Hiller {7)
and Individual finishers in Jack T. G. Pete Is now racing.
New Yorlot at Chi , ppd ., rain .
Freehan ; Stottlemyre {16 -16) Finch who carne in first with a
and Dempsey . LP - Fryman (6 winning time of 28:15 and Ken
Montreal
000 000 300- 3 7 0 13) . HR - Murcer { 22nd) .
Pltlsbgh
ooo 020 ooo- 2 9 1
Sanders who finished in 29:~.
Renko , Caskey (6 J. Marshall Kan City
100 110 100- 4 4 2
Rio's dual meet record over
(61
and
eoccabetla ; Ellis , Texas
000 101 03x - 5 9 1
Giusti {8) and Sanguillen . WP Lltlell { 1-J) and Martinez ; the past two years now stands
Marshall (14· 11) . LP- EIIIs (12 - Bibby ( 9-101 and Billings . HR at six wins against no setbacks.
1-4) .
BIIItngs (3rd) .
Rio Grande will be idle until
Phlla
000000000- 0 20 Chlcaoo
ooo ooo 010- 1 s 1 Tuesday when the Redmen
St .LOUIS
010 000 02x - J 11 0 Oakland
000 031 OOx- 4 7 0
Brett, Wallace [6). Diorio (7},
McGiolhlln , Frailing (SL Gos - take part In the Taylor In·
Scar ce (8) and Boone; Thompd sage (7.) and Br inkman; Blue,
son , Segul (S l and Hill. WPLindblad (5). Pina (8) , Fingers vi Ia tiona! in Indiana . The
Segul (7 . 6). LP- Brett t 13-91.
{ 9) and Fosse . WP- LindbiBd Redmen placed second to
(1·SJ. LP- McGioth lin (0-11 .
'
Taylor In a multi-team meet
( 14 innings)
San Francisco
last year.
000 000 020 001 02- s u 2

ALL.GAMES
Team
W L T POP
lronlon
4 0 0 106 40
Wellston
2 I 0 54 65
Logan
2 1 1 ss 20
Jacksotl
2 2 0 62 61
Gallipolis
2 2 o 37 30
Athens
1 2 I 42 43
Waverly
1 2 1 56 78
Meigs
1 2 o 32 46
SEOAL ONLY
Team
W L T POP
Ironton
1 0 0 28 14
Logan
I 0 0 15 6
Wellslon
1 0 0 28 22
Meigs

wing offenae, moved the bu ll • nup to punier John Rwnley
well In the openin ~ minutes wa $ dow ned In the end •one for
before giving the ball away on a two polnt llll fely.
o punt.
The Bobcat offense began
The ut~ck was led by senior rllcking In the second qu arter~
Phil Lewis, Kevin Walker,
Following a Highlander punt
Mike Crouse and Bobby !luff . . Kyger Creek marched 61 yard~
Southwesl&lt;lrndrove from Its 24 In 10 plays as a senior quar·
to the Bobcat 47 before Terry lerback Clay Hudson bulled
Carter quick kicked the ball over from the one yard line on
away.
a fourth and goal situation. The
dr ive featured two clutch
Kyger Creek 's running game passes from Hudson to senior
was stopped cold after fullback end John Rumley.
Sophomor~ Tim Luc~s added
Lawrence Tabor was dropped
for a four yard loss by Chris the extra point on a kick.
Lewla and Keith Grate. A. bad . The 6Brne's turning . p~~lnl

Logan upsets Athens

Gallipolis
0 1 0 7 14
182 -.304 'Aihens
0 1 0 6 15
624 96 189 .303 Waverly
0 1 0 22 28
611 82 185 .303 Jackson
0 1 0 14 28
519 80 156 .301 TOTALS
4 4 0 134 134
S83 895175 .300
Results:
Friday's
$34 82 159 .298 Meigs 14 Galli polis 7
435 51 128 .294
567 62 166 ,293 Logon IS A lhens 6
539 99 158 .293 Ironton 28 Jackson 14
Home Runt
Wellston 28 Waverly 22
National League : . Sto!lrgelt .
Oct. 5 Gomes:
P jtt 44 ; J~;~hnson , All 43 : E ven s. Ironton at Waverly
Atl 40 ; Aaron. Atl 39 ; Bonds,
Jack•on at Goillpolls
SF 38.
AmtriCin L819UI: J11ckson , Logen al Meigs
OAk 12 1 Robinson , Cal end Wellston al Athens

Scoti ,Mii 156
Moy ,MII 156
Murcr, NY 158
Munsn, NY 1•7
Ol ls,KC ' 148
vaz. Bos 150
Holt,M in 131
Ollva , Min 145
Jcksn. Oak 151

Burrough&amp; , Tex 30 ; Benda . Oak
28 1- l=lik , Bos . Mayberry ~tnd

'

,

.

,,,

Receiving - Lltchfi~ld 1-70,
Hesson 2-40, Lewis 2-36.

·

Jackson picked up 10 first
downs, rushed for 173 yards,
and hit three of seven passes
for 37 yards with one In·
lerceplion.
Carter finished the evening
wl!)l157 yards on 14 tries while
Mowrey added 81 yards In 20
trips.
Score by quarters :
Jackson
8 o o 0-14
ironton
7 0 15 6-18

· Green edges 'Cats·

Haroid (Wild Man) Winnings
was credited with interception
with a [eaplng grab and a 17
yard run back, with Mike Lewis
grabbing the other stray pass.
Waharna's defense held South·
em to 101total yards. Southern
was unable to complete a pass
in five attempts.
Yd!i . Rushing
Yds. Passing
Net Yards
First Downs
Passes C-A
lrfterceptions
Fumbles lost

How sweet it was as the
Rnckets rolled to a 211-14 lead
after three periods and then
battled the Tigers to earn the
long-awaited victory.
Keith Henry tallied Uie first
of his two touchdowns for the
Rnckets in the first period on a
one yard run.
Following the kickoff
Waverly's Greg A1'1~urs raced
55 yards to tie the score.
Henry hit paydirt early in the
second · quarter with Doug
Collins getting tl)e. two point
conversion .
Three minutes later Jeff
Wells banged five yarda to
score with John Shoemaker's
1

Falcons crush Southern
The Southern
Tornadoes, withou~ the ser·
vices al qlllil'terback Vern Ord
ex- blllldoziug fullback Greg
Dunning, were crushed, ~.
Friday night here Frlday night
by the Wa1&gt;ama White Falcons.
Junior halfback Mitch Nease
led the Southern attack with 54
yards.
Wahama opened the scoring
early in the first quarter when
Terry Smith faded back and hit
Danny Litchfield near the left
sideline for a 70 yard touch·
dowri play. Jeff Haymaker
booted the PAT, his first of five
for the night, missing only one.
Near the end of the quarter
Waharna again managed a
sustained drive, capped off by

yard sprint early In the final
period but Massey ~s kick
failed.
Ridge picked up a touchdown
for Jackson late jn the contest.
The awesome Tiger offense
rolled up 14 first downs, netted
· 321 yards rushing, and hit two
of two passes for another 60
yards fo r a total of 381 tolal
yards.

Rockets triumph

HAIR CUTS
.......... ~2.50
.
SHA VES .......... ~ ... ~!2.00

119

PATIIIO'f - Kyijer Creek
spotk1l h011 t Southwestern a ~
lead In the first period here
Ftlduy night before Its offense
broke loose enroute to a 32-2
victory.
.
The win pushed the Bobcats
temporarily Into first place in
the SQuthern Valley Athletic
Conference standings with a J.O
mark. Southern, a 44~ loser
Frlduy to Wahama, is in
second place with a ~record .
Southwestern dropped to 1H
overall and G-2 in the SV AC.
Coach
Bob
Ashley 's
fUghlandera, using their single

. 1 .R0~1'0N - After spottin.~ visiting Ja ckson an
8·7 h,llfll~e lend the dafending SEOAJ. champion
~onton 1 tgers exploded for 21 points in the second
.alf to pos~ a 28·14 victory ~'rlday night.

ENDS - Dave Wolfe. Tom
Lowery, Robert Quails.
TACKLES- Robbie Eason.
Mike McDaniel, ·Bill Slack,
Gary George.
.
GUARDS - John Lehew,
Andy English, AI 'McLaughlin,
J. D. Story.
CENTER - Terr.y Pickens.
BACKS - Jay Warner,
Terry Whitlatch, Mlck Ash,
Melvin Cremeans. Lonnie
Coats, Mike · Magnotta, Joe
Rosenbaum, Mark Morris.
OFFICIAL$ - Gene James,
Ralph Davis, William Rapp,
Joe Swarts. Ironton Chepter.
seer• by quorters:
Gallipolis
0 0 7 Cf- 7
Meigs
7 0 0 7-14

.

Bobcats record fourth win

tops J:ackson

This Friday tile Blue Devil•,
With an G-1 league mark, ~2
overall, will host the JaekJOn
ironmen, wpo were ouUasted
by Ironton, 2&amp;-14, Friday night.
The Marauders, 1·2 over~l
and 1.() In the SEOAL, will
return to familiar turt for the
first time In a month, hosting
the Logan C~leftalns, 15~
victors Friday night over
Athens.
LINEUP$
I Gallipolis)
ENDS - Leon Briggs, Rick
Grymes. Bill Lemley, Bob
Nibert,
·
TACKLES - Rex Plymale,
Mike Evans, Dick Burdette,
David Kerns, Winston SaiJn.
ders, Doug Brown, Bob Wood .
GUARDS - Dan Woodward,
Pat Boster, Weldon Wahl.
CENTER - Scott Eplln_g .
BACKS - Jim Niday, Dean
Rees, Tom Valentine, Ken
Collier, Mike Berridge, Craig
Fisher , John Myers, John
Groth .
.

EFFECTIVE OCTOBER 1st

8

1

•

'

2

2

'

in &amp;n interception and winning
touchdown for Meigs. "Don't
criticize the kids for that call,"
Ecker concluded.
Despite a 174 to 96 rushing
edvantage for the Marauders,
the Blue !)j)vlls won the battle
of the Slats. Gallipolis added
119 aerial yards, on 6 com·
pletlons in 14 attmpts by Niday,
for a total of 21~, compared to
Meigs' 174 plus 10 yards
passing on I out of 7 for War·
ner.
Top receivers for the Blue
Devils were Briggs with 3
grabs for 52 yards, Berridge
with J for 62, and Reea and
Rick Grymes with I catCh each
for 1 and • yards respectively.
Cremeans had the only
Marauder reception, that one
good for 10 yards.
Gallipolis colle&lt;;ted 8 first
downs, 2 by penBltles, while
Meigs had 5. The Marauders
were penaltzed 8 times for 52
yards while the Blue Devils got
canghl twice for 10 yards. ·
AlthOugh Gallipolis fumbled
3 Ibn~, the Blue managed to
recover every time. The
Marauders on the other hand,
bobbled the oval twice, losing it
once.
WhitlatCh led all rushers
with lll yards in 12 carries,
followed by Niday with 67
. three-footers In 16 attempts.
.Next WBS.Meigs' Ash with 331n
12 carries and Rees with 22 in
13lugs.

Ironton rally

NOTICE

Whitlatch
1 11
KICKOFF RETURNS
MEIGS
Ret. Yds.
1
25
Whitlatch
1 21
Magnotta
GAHS
u
Fisher
TEAM STAT$
M G

RACINE -

,..

19 T ill' Sunday 'l'hu~R · S.ntinol, Sumluy •&amp;.1&gt;1. :IQ, 197:1

II-The Sunday Tbnes. Senllnel, Sunday, Sept. 30, 1973

t'1~~~f.~~~ ooo 201 210Baltimore

000 t20 010-

1
~

11 o
12 2

Tldrow , Hilgendorf (8 1. Sand ers (8) tand Duncan ; Palmer.
Walt 161 and E . Will iams ,

Robles I71 . wP- T ldrow I1~ ·
16 ). LP- Palmer 122 ·91. HRsDun can (17th) , w. Wil li ams
(81hl , ounv (81hl . Baylor
lllth l.
&lt;2nd Game)

·Cleve land
B&amp;lt lmre

ooo 012

100..... 4 9 1
000 703 26x- 18 14 2

W[lco&gt;t , Lamb

(4 ) , Johnson

171 , Bosman (61 and Ellis:

Alexander , Jeckson ( 8) and
Etchebarren . WP - A texllnder

020 000~ 7 B I 112-61. LP- Wilcox
000 100 .000- I 6 2 Boker llotl .

--

005

IS.,O I .

HR -

Runs Blfled In
Fife (3,21 end eoroamnn ;
Natlon•l Leiuu• : . St argell , Me v , Sg lls { ~ 1 . Lanoe 16 J, lh1Girt1t)
Pill liB I May , Hou 1041 Ben ch, M ont oa gu d o ('11 ~ n d Torborg , MIIW
000 100 001 - 2 S 1

Cln 103 1 Evon&amp;, All 101; ~ en ~;U l'il ) . LP - Mey 17 -17 ). HR
Singlelon, Mll'101 .
- Brv o (61h J.
American Lnuue 1 Jlllcl&lt;son ,
Ook
111 1 Scoll. Mil 1041
Mayberry , KC 1001 ~oblnson, CUAMPlON WINS
Cal 96 1 Yntr;em skl , BQs , MB'f,
BERLIN (UP!) - West .
Chi, Murcern NY ,.,and Ben do.
German middleweight chamOak 95.
.,._.
Pltcl'lln•
pion ll:ckhard Dasge knooked
Natlon•l LI•IUt t Brr,ent , SF out MaU Donovan of Trinidad
13 ·11 1' Blillnghom , c n 19·91
Gull oil, Cln 18 61 !utton. LA in the second round of a non·
and Suver, NY 111 -10.
American L••tUt l Wood , Clll title bout Friday night.
24 -20 ; Coleman , Det 2J, l5 J
Daggealso knocked Donovan
Pe~lrntr , &amp;•It 22 ·f l litvnter , Oak to the canvas In the first round .
. 31 .5 t Ryan , Cal 'l1.J6.

Bo01on

451010 Oox- 1110 0

Rodriguez ,

Velasquez (2),
Reynolds(~) and Po·rter : Tlant

120·131 ond Fisk . LP- RO•
dr lguez 19,71 , HRs- Yb&amp;lrWn ·
ak l 1191hl , Sm ith 121otl , Cooper
llrd 1, Scolll22od l.
Und Gamt)

----000 000-

Mliw
003
J 70
Bollen
00&lt; 000 Olx- 5 8 0
Kobtl.
Spr11gue
(7l
and
Moore; Pallln (15 .151 and
Montgomery . LP- Kobel (0 .1) .

HIU

-

II Oih I.

Scott

('2Jrdl , Evans

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'·

..

�z1- Tho liundar,rtmoa ·Sentlnei,Sunday,Sept. ao, 1973

Bucks romp, Henson injured
G'O!.UMBUS, Ohio (UP!J - sophomore, rolied to his right quarter after Elmer Uppert
Tailback Arrhle Griffin ran 68 snd meed 72 yards for a touch· recovered a fumbled punt by
yards for a touchdown on Ohio down to moke the score 21-3. TCU's Steve Putlerson on the
State's second play of the game
The Buckeyes. nQw 2-0, made Horned F'rugs 16 ya rd line.
to spar k the th ird-ranked It 28-3 late in the second Qreene passed eight yurds to
Buckeyes to a 37-3 romp over
Brian Baschnagel and then sUd
Texas Christian University
Saturday.
The Buckeyes' other touehdowns came on a one-yard run
by fullback Champ Henson,
who was lost for the season
later in the game with a knee
1\NN ARBOR, Mich. (UP!) artificial playing surface.
injury; 72 and eight-yard runs - Uninspired Michigan got Michigan did not get a first
by quarte rback Cor nelius touchdowns fr om Chu.ck down until' the second quarter
Green, a 13-yard pass from Heater and Ed Shuttlesworth and did not muster a sustained
Greg )lare to Fred Pagac and a Saturday but did not enhance ·drive until ShUttlesworth ended
PILE-UP - 'Ibis photuby Times-Senlinellitotographer Katie Crow shows the ,storr of la ~t
37•yard field goat by Blair its No. 4 National ranking with a 54-yard march in the third
night's Wahama.SOulhern football game at Racine, won by Wahama, 44-!J. Players vtsible '.n
a mere 1H victory over heavy quarter with a 1-yard plunge.
Conway .
this pile of hwnanity are Wahama's Mike Lewis (22) and Mark Mttchell (86 ), wtth Southern s
underdog Navy.
The
Horned
Frogs
only
score
A crowd of 88,042 saw Na •Y
Dave Clark ( 22) on top in the back. Tornado Randy Dudding (52) hils the ground on the left as
But
the
Wol
ve
rines
'
excame
in
the
second
period
on
a
fumble
five times but lose the
White Falcon Terry Smith looks on in background.
. .
23-yard field goal by Berl p1osive offense was hampered ballonly once. Quarterback AI
by a wet field that made outSimmons.
Most of the second half of the side runnin g difficult on the
ga me before a record crowd of
NEW YORK (UPI ) · 87,439 was played In a steady Pioneers top
downpour and the Hare to
George Medich pitched a fiveWILLOW WOOD - Led by Runyon, 238 pound sophomore defense, the Pirates were Pagac pass was the only Hiram, 14·7
hit shutout and won his 14th
senior quarterback Ralph fullback, ran the extra points. paced by Dobbins . who scoring in the final two periods.
game as the Ne w York
Smith and junior tallback
The Pirates pushed across collected three interceptions. . The 6-foot'4, 225-pound
MARIE'ITA, Ohio (UPI) Yanke es beat the Detroit
North Galiia now 2-2 overall ·
d th
Sterling . Logan, Coach John their second silt:..pointer with
Henson, a junior, an
e Senior quarterback Steve tigers, 3-0, Saturday.
Blake's North Gallia Pirates 9:38 left in the third stanza as and 2-1 in the Southern Valley nation 's leading scorer last Morris scored from the two to
The victory put the Yankees
·
posted a 24-6 victory here Logan sliced in over his center Athletic Conference will battle season with 120 po1nts, ts
break a ·tie game and give one game under .500 with the
Friday night over Coach John on a one-yard plunge. Dave Southern Friday night. The schedule.d to undergo surgery Marietta a 14-7 win over Hirarn ~ Yankee Stadium finale set for
·
move
into
Patton 's· Symmes Valley Dobbins added the extra points Tornadoes
1igaments tn
Sunday.
Sunday
for
torn
Saturday.
Pirateland wilh a 2-0 league
Vikings.
on a run .
Mike Hegan drove in two
left kn ee.
Marietta fullba ck Dave
Smith rushed for 109 yards in
North Gailia made it 24-0 record and 3-1 overall mark. hisGriffin,
who rushed for 107 Pettit recovered a fumble on runs for the Yankees,
13 carries and scored one with 11 :12 lefl in the game as
Symmes Valley tJ.4 will play yards in 13 carries, most of it the Hiram 25 after teammate homering to lead off the third
1
k
touchdown. Logan, enjoying Logan streaked over from the at Southwestern.
coming in the first ha f, bro e Jim Crowley lost the ball. Don inning and driving in another
another fine offensive game, two. A pass from Smith to
STATISTICS NG SV over center on the second play Settle threw ~3 Yl!fdS to wing- · run in the seventh with a
put 12 points on the scoreboard !Ienior end Keith Weddington Fi rSt Downs
10
6 after the Horned Frogs punted back Mike Mitchell on the two, groandout. Ron Blomberg
while collecting i03 yards on was good for the two point Yards Rush ing
231
55 lotheOhioState31. The swift S- setting up Morris' score .
singled home theJirst Yankee
9'
30
Yards Passing
the ground.
conversion .
Both teams scored the first run with a base hit in lhe first
19 foot-9, 180-pound sophomore
5
Passes Atot.
North Gailia broke into the
With 2:59 remaining, Passes
inning.
5
1
~
broke
a
tackle
at
the
line
of
time
they had the ball.
Alp .
scoring column with 1:19 Symmes Valley reached ~umbles
3
1 scrimmage and outraced the
Hiram marched 60 yards in . ~edich, who has an earned
remaining in the first. half on a paydirt on a 63 yard run by Fumbles Lost
~ · TCU defenders.
nine plays, \Vith Angelo Wilson
three yard run by Smith. Bruce junior halfback Terry Pine. On ln1erceptions
10
TCU, now 1-1, put together a ·scoring on a four-yard run.
65
Penalized
Long Road to Travel
15-play . 74-yard march, Marietia matched the touchInterstate 80 has the distinc·
resulting in Simmons' 23-yard down when Mitchell took a lion
of being the longest of
field goal. On the first play seven-yard pass from Morris, interstate routes, stretching
following the kickoff, however, climaxing a 74-yard drive in 11 2.910 miles from New York to
Greene, a 6-foot, 170-pound plays.
California.
ATLANTA (UP!) - Hank made from baseball in the hist
His role as an entertainer,
Aaron was assured of making 20 years.
however, will not force him to
more money from outside
"We wiU make more money do any singing or dancing a Ia.
endorsements than · Babe Ruth for Hank Aeron in a year 9r a Joe Frazier.
ever made, even thop.:l·; he has year and a half than he's made
"I can't sing and I can't
yet to become baseball's ail- in his entire career in dance , ' ~ said ·Aaron, ~~and. I
time home run king, when he base~," said Berle Adams, wouldn't want to make a fool of
became a client of WMA Sports president 'If WMA Sports at a myself. I don't think Mr.
Inc. Saturday.
news coni 1rence Saturday. Adams was talking about that
The Atlanta Braves' slugger, "We estimal ' tbe figure at be- sort of stuff when he said he
who still needs three home runs tween $1.5 m' n million."
was representing me in ento break Ruth's career record
In sigriing wt.~ WMA Sports tertainment. At least, I hope
of 714, joins swimmer Mark Inc., a substdlar, of the famed not."
Spitz and wonder horse William Morria , ~ency Inc.,
Adams made it clear that
Secretariat in the . newly- Aaron will be·repl'\ ·ented in a what they planned for Aaron on
organized WMA Sports Inc., tolal entertainment . 'leCtrwn, an entertainment level would
stable and has been practically including films, te. ·vision, cause him no embarrassment
gu!ll'anteed more money·in the advertlsements, .testi1 onlals whatsoever ..
next 18 months than he has and books.
"He won't have to do
anything like that" said
Adams. "What we have in
mindforhimasfarasTVgoes
is guest shots with Flip Wilson,
Dean Martin, Sonny and Cher,
and shows like that."
1- 1
.
Ruth, whO!!e magical name is
practically synonomous with
KANSAS CITY (UP!) -The • Both teams are 1-1 in NFL play · baseball, never had the opOaldand Raiders are not about this time around, as are portunity of working with such
to get overconfident as they Denver and San Diego, the an organization as WMA Sports
ready for today's meeting with other t?a.~s in 'the National Inc. The Babe, who hit his last
arch rival Kansas City here. West DiVJSJon.
home run in 1935, was
Although Kailsas City lost to
Running bac~ for ~e Chiefs represented by Christy Walsh
Los Angeles 23-13 in the opener, are ex-Ram Wiilie Eilison, who and earned wbal little outside
they know that quarterback went for 90 yards on 20 carries money he made from a movie
Lenny Dawson missed that against the Patriots, and Ed about his life, a bouk, some
contest with a jammed thumb. Podolak. Nine-year pro Oils ghost-written magazine arHe returned last Sunday with Taylor, who pulled in ~ive ticies and the endorsement of a
an 11-for-14 performance in the passes for 115 yards agamst cereal and a candy bar known
win over New England.
New England, is one of foot- as "Baby Ruth." The candy
In addition the Raiders, ball's best.
bar was his greatest source of
WHIT~
favored by about a touchdown,
But Oakland has a g~eat outside income .
Self-Storin~
The plans call for Aeron to
recall last year's journey to the receiver, too, in Fred Bile!Doors
midwest, when an in- nikoff. He has always been travel a great deal abroad as
jury riddled and underdog especially effective against the representative of WMA Sports
TEMPERE D
Chlefs team belted them 27-14. Chiefs' Jim Marsalis, who .is Inc. He will go to practically
SAF ETY
GLASS
&gt;
Although the Raiders are eJther hurt or benched and will every country where baseball
i'lff•,·d If N,.".
c
fresh from a 12-7 win over yield to third-year man Nate . is played, including Japan,
/\. itf'IH'II ;1 ."it' f'
Super Bowl king Miami, they Allen Sunday. This still could Mexico and other Latin
l 11o~ ,Vmf, ·
sUU have yet to get a touch- be an area for the Raiders to American countries.
down from their offensive probe.
"Hank wJU be the home run
unit The series between old
Both teams have superb king for a long, long time, and
CEILING TilLE
rlvab Olkland and Kansas kicking games, Rookie punter as the king he wUI be the toast
City staJ* at 12-12-Z after 13 Ray Guy haa been a sensation of the world. In Japan he Ia
All Ceiling Tile
years although the Raiders are for the Raiders and ageless already considered the world
7-3-2 over the lut six years. 5iforge.Blanda Ia 7-for-7 in the home run king, even though be
1 Stock on S.le 1111
field goal department. But hasn't broken the record yet,"
S.ve Now.
ISIIMllll
Kansas City has Jan Stenerud said Adams.
and punter Jerrell Wiiaon may
Aaron said his deal \Vith
Ca .
Evans , Inc. " Building Supplies" . A
be the only NFL hooter who WMA Sports Inc. was a tong.
Nan,
miliar To All. Stop and See the Fri endly
Ones, 1ey Will WelcOm e You .
can stay even with Guy.
awaited dream come true.
"I've waited very patiently
for !his day," said Aeron. "I
BALTIMORE (UPI)- Dave
218 X6/8 sat quietly aside while others
Duncan's baaea' loaded three·
3/0 X6/8
· run double In lite sixth inning
got their share. I hoped one day
LEFT &amp; RIGHT
backed up the three-hit pitsomething like !his would come
REGUlAR
'49.95
WATERFORD
The along. I kept the faith. Com·
ching of Torn Tlnunennan as
'29.95
the Cleveland llldlans defeated Southern Junior High foolbail pared to some olher players,
the Baltimores 11-2 Saturday in team defeated Waterford, 21J.8, my outside income bas been
Prices Good While
the first gam~ ·of a · here Thursday.
very tittle over the years. "
Jim Lawrence, head coach,
doubleheader.
Quantities Last!
Aaron continued his pursuit
and
his
assiatant,
Mike
Nease,
Dave McNally (17·17) auf.
of Ruth's home run record
Oue To Increasing Prkes
said
that
the
team
looked
very
feJ'ed the 1088 white 'rim·
Saturday night when the
We Will Not S. Able To
mennan, who at one point gOOd, wilh the exception of Braves hosted the Houston
Re4rdo&gt; AI Site Pr~es
retired 13 straight bailers," some penalties.
Aatros. Aaron had only two
On AI Silo llemsl
Richard Tesford opened the games remaining this season
railed hl1 record to lh'l.
Terry Crowley's two-run SC&lt;II'ing for Southern late in the in which to bresk the record,
hCIIItr In the second gave the second period on a 50 yard and his chances of doing it
Orlles a 2-0 lead by Buddy sweep around end.
before next season are doubtButch Shane added the ful .
BeU'a 14111 home run 1!1 the
.
lourth after John EULI had 11econd score, in the. third
"Naturally it would be better
dOubled t1ec1 the gllllU! at 2-2. stanza , and Mike Warner if he couidset the record before
After Ted Ford alngled In the concluded Southern's scoring;
season is over," said
sllth; MeNally wa1Ud E1111 . intercepting a pass and run- the
Adams. "But I doubt that it will
111d Bell. Buncan !hen bounced ning 30 yBI'ds fOI' ,the touch- hurt him that much in terms of
hll daub1e down the lefttield down.
future endorsements. It's hard
liRe, clelrtq the bull, but he
The jWtior high's next game to aay.''
... •uwu aut 1n a nm4own. Ia Thunday, at 5 p, m., at In 1972, President Nixon
a., Tiler• IIIIer ~~~~~~ and Federal Hockin&amp;.
signed a congreeional resolullllt: Dalfy'a triple , The 1eventh grade will play tion approving an interim
1111 fourof'UII llzth Melea' 7 B team, Wednetday,
Soviet-American offensive erma
4:30 p. m., at Meiga.
develand.
agreement.

by Greene, who finisMd the

of! tackle on the next play for

•
•

'

1

day with 114 yards in 14

ei~ht

more yurds and his
carries, and a 23-yar~ pa111
second touchdown.
from
Greene to tight ei)d Ted
Conway's field goal came on
the last play of the first half Powell to Ute TCU 28.
and wassel up by a 21-yard run

Michigan hardpressed in win
Glenny threw three· interceptions and saw a first
quarter scoring chance
ev~pora t ~ on an offensive
interference can inside the 1~ .
Glenny C&lt;Jnnected often witii"
wide receiver Bert Calland and
infrequently with tight ertd Bill
Smyth. But despite moving the
midshipmen well, he was

Yanks blank Tigers, ·3-0

Pirates sink Vikings

!

Aaron's dream comes true

run average of 2.91 for his
rookie season, didn't allow a hit
after the sixth inning. He
struck out four batters and.
walked five in stretching his
record to 14'9.
Lerrin Lagrow started for
Detroit and suffered his fifth
loss in six decisions.

unable to get his team inside
the Michigan 20 except for one
third quarter thrust.
Na vy reached the )6, was
thrown back lhree straight
times, and a 34-yard field goal
attempt by Steve Dyk~s was
short and wide.
,
Michigan eschewed the \Vide
game after discovering esrly
that its backs could not cut on
the wet surface . Quarterback
Dennis Frankliii stayed away
.from the pass until the l!OCOnd
half.
Michigan did not display the
ferocious offense that carried it
to wins in the first two games ol
the season . Navy now has
dropped two consecutive ·
games to top 10 teams after
winning its opener .

..

.·

Bosox 9-4 winner
BOSTON (UP! ) - Rick
Mliler drove in three runs and
Carlton Fisk and Cecil Cooper
knocked in two apiece
Saturday as the Boston Red
Sox defeated the Milwaukee
Brewers, 9-4.
The Red Sox won the game
with six runs in the second
inning as Cooper, Miller and
Fish ail drove in two runs with
singles.
Boston added three more
runs in the eighth inning, one

on Miller's sacrifice fly . In that
inning Tommy Harper stole
third ba!!e for his 54111 swipe of
the seaeon to take' the
American I,eague lead.
Milwaukee scored three runs
in the first inning and a~ded
another in the third on Bobby
J\1itcbell's fifth homer.
Rogelio Moret went the
distance for the Red Sox and
raised his record to 14-2. Si!lp
Lockwood, .f&gt;.9, took the toss.
.

't

.' '

.,

I;'

W, L. Pel . G. B.

80 78
19 80
80 8 1
78 82
16 82
71 90

.506
.497 H1
,A91 1111
.488 J
..481 •
,.&amp;A I 10' '~

Welt
W. L . Pc1 . G.8 .
I( Cinclnnetl
99 62 .515
Los Angeles 9A 66 .588 41h
San Franclsco87 7A .5Al 12
Hous lon
B1 79 .500 171/'
Atlanta
75 1111 ..472 23
San Diego
59 101 .369 39 1h
• ·Clinched d ivisio n tl ll e
h tu r dly ' s R..uth
New York at Chfcaoo . ppnd .,

tore cartilage in his knee while
rWtning the bases. During the
two months that Gibson was
out of the lineup, the Cards !eli
out of first place.
The Cardinals teed off on
.Carlton, a former teammate,
getting 11 hits off the southpaw
in the six innings he worked.
Lou Brock tripled and scored
twice and Ted Sizemore and
Tim McCarver each had two
runs batted in .

ra in
St. Lou i s 7 Phi ladelph ia I
Ci n cin n ati 13 San Fr an cisco 6
M on treal -Pittsbur gh , dela y ed
by r ain .
TOdfV 'I Gime s
New Y ork at Ch lcago . 2
Mon t reo l at P l n sb ur ~ h
Philad elp hia at St. Louis
H o~st on at At lanflllli
San F r ari clsc o at Cinci nn at i
(on ly gam es schedul ed J
American League ·

East
W. L. Pet. G.B.
• -B a ll lmor e
Boston
Detro it
New York

Carlton, winner of 27 games
last !Ieason, has a 13-20 record
this year.
The Phillies scored off
Gibson in lhe sixth, breaking a
string of 32 scoreless innings by
Cardinal pitching. Del Unser
doubled to lead off the inning,
advanced on an infield out al)d
scored on a single by Greg
Luztnskl.

M ilwauKee
Cle velan d

•·Ooklond

97
·~

65

84

73 .5.47 81111

.600

77

.523 12 h

BO
74

81
87

.497 161h
.460 22 1/2

71 91 .• 38 26
West
W. L . Pet . G.8 .

93 67

.581

Minnesota

87
81

73
79

. SAA 6
.506 12

83

481 16

Chlcego

76 84 ,47 5 17
56 105 . . 350 37

Kansas Cit y

Coll1orn lo
'fexas

77

K-CIInched i:H~Is l on t it le .
saturday's Results
Cl eveland 6 Balt imore 2 {l s i)
New York J Detro it o
Boston 9 Milwaukee 4
Blltlmore 7 Cleveland 3 {2nd J
Today ' s Games
Ch lc eoo at Oak land ·
M innesota at Ca li fornia
Detroll at New York
M ilwau kee at Bostol'l
Kan Cit y 't Texas , nig h t
( Only games schedu l ed )

GalliaPPK
wmners are

TURNBERRY, Scotland
(UP!) -Texan Charles Coody
won the •146,375 John Player
Classic at Turnberry Saturday
by three strokes after holding
off a strong challenge lly
Britain's Tony Ja~klln.
The 38-year-old American,
carded a 77 today and earned
l37,500 with · a 72-hole
aggregate of 239, five-over-par'
Jacldyn carded a 76 to finish
at 292, two strokes ahead of
third-place Tom Weiskopf,
American hoider of the British
Open Title, who had a 78.
Weiskopf, who collected
$12,500 for his third place
finish, picked up another
$20,750 for winning the Grand
Masters Award for the best
aggregate sc·ore, from the U.
S. and Bl'itish Open Championshlp8, the•)llasters and the
John Player, Classic.
· The 31-yesr-old American
from ColumbUs, Ohio, had an
aggregate of i,l40 for the four

Reds rout Giants 13-6
Rookie Dan Driessen pace the Reds' attack.
CINCINN ATI (UP!) - '!'he &amp;in •' ranctsco Giant pi tchers
Fred Norman, the first of
Cincinnati Reds banged out It Saturday to roll 1&lt;1 a 13-6 kn ocked in three runs and
hits, live of them doubles and victor y in a rain-marred Ce1111 r Geronimo and Dents three Red pitcMrs, gained his
capitail1.ed on the wildness of contest.
Menke each drove horne two to 13th victory against 13 losses
but needed relief help from
Roger Nelson and Dick Baney
when the Giants scored their
final three runs in the sixth

Prove Out cops
Woodward Stakes

NEW YORK (UPI ) - Prove
Out, owned by the same
Hobeau Stable that beat
Secretariat with Onion in the
Whitney Stakes, hwnbied the
Triple Crown winner at
Belmont Park Saturday as he
overtook the champion in the
stretch and pulled away to win
the $108,200 Woodward Stakes
by four and a half iengtba.
Secrelarlat, starting for the
first time since he set a world
recQrd. in winning the $~50,000
Marlboro Cup two weeks ago,
toQk the lead from Prove Out
shortly after reaching the back
stretch. It was at about the
same spot that Secretariat
wen!to the front in the Belmont
Stakes and went on to become
the first Triple Crown winner
in 25 years. ·
Once in front Secretariat
appeared to have the race at
his mercy, He had been bet
down to 3 to 10 and coasted
along in front until the field
swept around the fin~l bend

events to finish four strokes
ahead of United States Open
champion Johnny Miller, who
had a 77 today for 298.
This was Coody's second big
win in Britain recently. The
powerfully-built .Texan from
'GALUPOLIS .c. Winners of
Abilene captured the Wills the 1973 Gailia County PUnt,
Open title three weeks ago- Pass and Kick Contest sponwhichenabled him to be among sored locally by the Gal!ipolis
the 36 qualifiers for this Area Jay~es and Martin Ford·
"Champion of Champions" were determined following
tournament,
nearly three hours of competition on Memorial Field
Coody had to battle hard for Saturday afternoon.
his victory and had his overOf the 209 youngsters
night four..troke lead cut to registered this year, apone by Jacklin after the first proximately 200 showed up for
nine holes.
Saturday's event. Six of the
But Jacklin was unable to · tads who captured first. place
sustain his challenge coming honors tn various age groups
back and .had io settle for the \Vill now take part in the Tri$18,750 second prize.
State contest, to be held at
South African Gary Player Marshail University on
shared fourth place at 295 with. Saturday.
-kish veteran Christy O'Connor ' Listed below are the !Qp
and former British Match Play three winners in each age
champion Tommy Horton.
group:
8-YEAR OLDS - Steve
Bennett, Philip Mitchell and
Lynn ~eets.
9-YEAR OLDS - Willie
Wood, Phllilp King and Jerry
Eutsler.
10-YEAR OLDS - Chuck
Sanders, Mike Burger and Jay
Burleson.
CLEVELAND (UPI} - UPI)
Snead Jed the league with a
11·YEAR OLDS - Tony
- Cleveland 'Coach Nick Skor- 60.3 per centC&lt;Jiilpletion figure Weiher, · Mark Weaver and
tell said today the New York last year and is just as effec· · Jeffery Davis.
Giants are a much improved tive no\V in throwing to Don
12-YEAR OLDS - Mark
football team this season Hermann, Bob Grim, Bob Smith, David Kent and Jim
largely because they have it Tucker, Gary Ballman and the Johnson.
''more solld defense" \Vith Giants running backs.
13-VEAR ows· - Terry
good lined bacl!ers and a solid
Heading the rushing attack is Wall, Mickie Graham and
secondary,
Ron Johnson whom the Giants Kevin Hawks.
The Browns, who lost to the obtained from Cleveland in a
Giants 21-20 in an exhibition trade.
game, meet New York here
Both teams give up yardage
with the kickoff scheduled for grudgingly but sometimes too .
By United Press International
1:06 p.m. and some 75,000 fans · Consistently.
Drexel 27 Fordham 0
.
expected.
"Webendinthewind,butwe Penn 51. 27 low• 8
'"!be Giants don't rip off big don't break.," said Giant fr"" · Geuysburg
24 Kings Point 22
FrankHn &amp; Marshall 28 Johns
plays very oflen, but they con· safety ~rl LOCkhart.
~~\',;~~. 7" Hiram 7
trol the ball' very well," said
"TheGtantshave a more so~; Ohio st. 37 rcu 1
Skorich, "I tllink it's their run· iddefense than in a long time.
Horvard 2~ Massachusetts 7
a
game
!hat
has
brought
he
said.
"A
very
active
line
Newark S1. 3 F. Dickinson 0
nin~
Cal/fornle 51 Army 6
(Norm) Snead of age, He's with good linebackers .. Their Rhode lslond 20 Brown 20
!.-,
Temple 63 Holy Cross 34
been very effecuve
wilh the forte 1s st rong lateral pursuit•. cen1rol
conn . 6 Ma ine 3
lay
action
pasa
that
goes
so
And
everybody
Is
afraid
to
Rutgers
39 Princeton "
P
Lockhart
back
Yale 27 Connecticut 13
'th
d
th
well for a running tesm."
row eepWI
New Hampsh ire 10 Dartmouth ·
there. He covers so much of the 9
field."
Georgetown 7 Boston St. 6
The Giants will be without rrrglo 31 No'rth Carolina St.
strong safety Richmond Maryland 31 Vlllonov• 3
TennesSee 21 Auburn 0
Flowers for this game.
No1re Dome 20 Purdue 7
Char~ers
Flowers sprained Ugaments Bowling Green 31 Western
,
Mich . 20
in a knee in last Sun daYS t1e Michigan U Navy 0
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Isaac
with Philadelphia and filling in ~~:i~11 : fe~~k:l'9 3c1emson 21
Clirtis, the No. I draft choice of willbesecond-yearmanChuck
NlcholsSt, t4AibonySt. IN.Y.J
the etncinnaU Bengals is going
from Penn State.
~merlcen tnt. 22 Norwich u
to be the long ball target for Crist
DefensiveendJackGregory, sou1hern conn . 38 Maine
quarterback Ken Anderson this a former Brown, leads the Gi- Morlllme o
24 Ashland 7
season, according to assistant ants rushiog attack along with · Wittenberg
John carroll 14 Th iel 14 Itiel
coach Jack Donaldson.
tackle George Mendenhall.
Wash ington S. Jefferson IS
Case Western 14
So far Donaldson said, Isaac
The key to the Browns attac k Mtssou,; 2• North Cerollno u
Jll• not uvect to expectations may be Greg Pruitt, the Okla- Nebrosks ~0 Wisconsin 16
•because be waa inJured on the boma star whO has onlY seen
first day of training camp and limited action because of an
VOIBBLANK FOE
"it aet him back conalderably. ankle injury but will get more
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UP!)
"We're making a sincere ef. :playing time against the Gi- - Unebacker Hank Walter
fort to throw the bali down field ants,
rambled 38 yards with a pass
on long 10 patterns to Isaac,"
Pruitl's quickness could get inter~ption and safety Eddie
said DonaldiOII, "and It's going him Into the Giants secondary Brown intercepted another toss
to be included in every game better than any other Brown to set up a Tennessee score as
plan."
with maybe the exception of the ninth-ranked Vols beat
And that include• the game Leroy Kelly.
Auburn 21-0 Saturday in a
•••lnat , the San Diego
batue of Southeastern ConOJaraen at San Diego, Calif.,
ference
contenders.
TECH WINS FIRST
' SUnday. '
ATLANTA (UP!) - Quar, "The more the other teamJ
· lOW ASTILL WINLESS
· know lt 1 1he more they're going terback Jim Stevens com•
UNIVERSITY PARk, Pa.
, to lay ofl him,'' ~ld Donald· pleted 18 of 24 paues lor 194 (UP I) - Tailback John
yard• and a touchdown and
IIJII "I IIUitllltet we're going
sneaked
a yard lor another Cappeletti ran for one score
, to
tho b&amp;U downlleld."
Saturday to lead the and quarterback Tom Shuman
Tht Btnealll•arnecl Frld~y score
Georgia Tetih Yellow Jackeia threw two of hia three touch,DoUI Or.!II'' )he ltMI I to
1 :z&amp;-21 victory over the down (IUIIelln a rainy 21 point
lelcllnl 1'\111111' lh the pr&amp;flnt period Saturday t.o lead
Tlsera.
1111an lltlllbltlon IINIIII, Will Clemaon
The victory was the first In sixth-ranked Penn State to a 27·hlvelo Jlldii'IO llll'cery on an lhree gamu for Georgia Tech, 8 rout of wlnlee Iowa .

announced

Improved Giants take
on Cleveland Browns

and into the home stretch.
There Prove Out, responding
to the urging of Jockey Jorge
Velasquez, ranged up to
challenge Secretariat on the
inside and
Secretariat
gradually fell back in the run
for- the wire,
Prove Out, a ~-year-old son of
Graustark , steadily pulled
away to finish the 1'h mites in
2:254-5 over a sloppy track.
His time failed to threaten

the track record of 2:24 set by
Secretari at in winning the
Belmont Stakes by 31-lengths
but it was fast enough to gel the
job done and reward his
backers with a 34,40 payoff.
There was only win betting.
Amber is a yellowish·brown
substance formed by the sap,
or resin , in the pine trees of
northe rn Europe millions of
years ago.

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind.
(UP!) - Sophomore Art Best
ran 84 yards on the first play
from scrimmage to set up a
Notre Dame field goal and then
rushed for 126 yards more and
a l&lt;luchdown Saturday to lead
the No. 7-ranked fighting Irish
to a 20-7 trlwnph over Purdue.

.
'

''
STOR E HOURS
Mtr~ . flrlcl•v r • ·"'· toJ p,m,
h turdn7• . ttl tt~ll . m .

PHON E 446 44•4

CASH &amp; CARRY

B :~r l ®l[

cancelled if the first place Meta
are able to clinch the National
League East title tomorrow. If ·
it is n ~cessary , the Mets and
Cubs- would play a makeup
twinbill on Monday, a day after
the regular season was
scheduled to end.
Any combination of three
Met victories or Pittsburgh
Pirate tosses would clinch the
title for New York.

For airline reservations around the corner ...

or around the world ... .

J3 Court Street

'74 MONACO ...
UNMISTAKABLY
NEW.
For 1974, :there are three totally new Dodge Monacos. Come in and
let us ·show you our three lines of new full-sized cars for '74,-Monacp,
Monaco Custom, and the luxurious top-of-the-line Monaco Brougham.
Unmistakably new Monaco: the Dodge to see before you do ~my new car
shopping this year.

WHAT ABOUT OUR COMPACT DODGE DART?
ASK THE MILLION WHO OWN ONE.
.....-..
Depend on Dart. A lot of .o ther people have.
We've got over a million Darts on the road in
models ranging from the handy four-door sedan
to Dart Swinger (just about the only new .
compact hardtop around for 1974) to the everversatile Dart Sport. Ask a friend about Dart
(with over a million on the road, you have
to know someone who owns one).

THE DODGE CLUB CAB. (STILL A DODGE EXCLUSIVE.)
·

The Club Cab is still a Dodge exclusive this
year, offering 34 cubic feet of storage apace
behind the front seat, letting you keep thin1s
safe and out of the weather under lock and key.
And new for this year is the addition of many
four-wheel-drive Club Cab models. See the
Club Cab and all the fine Dod1e pickupa
at the Dodge Boys'.

'

Depend · on the Dodge Boys.

I

I

·'

AMERICA'S LARGEST TRAVEL AGENCY

great buys mevery SIZe for.74.

throw

'

1

Caii446-0699

up

.I

/

Today: the Qodge Boys P.~ent

lnjlftd lutH • .

\

WOOSTER BEATEN
· · WOOSTER, Ohio (UP!)
Giovanni DiLalla kicked three
field goals and one extra point
and George Letts ran for
Kenyon's only touchdown ae
the Lords beat Wooater Ia.&amp;
Saturday by taking advantage
of fumbles and interceptions.
.

today

''

inning.
Giant starter Jim Barr lallec;l
to survive the ~eeond lnnlnc·
The Reds bunched four ~inC*
with a walk and a IIACiilll.'l fly
to score three rUM in the llrlt
inning and added three more in
the second to knock out Barr,
who suffered hia 17111 lclll
against 11 victoriea.
The Reds added two more
runs in the third, one in the
fourth, and then scored their
final four In the sixth Inning,
bunching four-hits, Jncludinl
doubles by Denis Menke and
Parrel Chaney.
Garry Maddox biaated two
home runs for the Giants, hia
lOth and 11111 of the season.

IRISH TRIUMPH

Tilts p~stponed by rain Saturday·
CHICAGO (UP! ) ~ The
scheduled doubleheader
between the New York Mets
and the Chicago Cubs was
postponed after a 2\2 hour wait
Saturday because of drenching
rains.
It was the !!econd straight I
day that the two teams had
been rained out.
The two teams are scheduled
to play a doubleheader Sunday
and Saturday's games \Viii be

WILDCATS UPSET
EVANSTON, Ul. (UPI)
Tony Dorsett, a 170-pound
freshman tailback, pierced
Northwestern's line for 26~
yards and ~ut loose on touchdown runs of 6 and 79 yarda
Saturday to lead Pittsburgh to
a 21-14 victory over the Big Ten
Wildcats.

Bengals meet

'

I

Southern junior
high wins, 20-6

\

New York
F'ltttbUrgh
SL LOUII
Mon t real
Chicago
P hlledelphl!l

College results

Indians cop
opener, 6-2

I'

E111

0

FIRST PRIZE - 10

.

I

N• tlon• l L.faa ue

captures
Player Clas'sic ·

..

=..

ST. LOUIS! (UPI) - Bob
Gibson, pitching for the first
time since Injuring hla right
knee eight w~ks ago, got help
from a 17-hlt attack Saturday
to earn a 6-1 1victory over the
Phiiadelphla Phillies in a game
that coet Steve Car.!ton his 20!)1•
defeat.
! •
The triumph· was the fourth
straight for the Cardll and kept
alive their tiUe hopes in the
Nalional League East. They
are only I~ games behind the
division-leading Mets; who
were rained out again at
Chicago. St. Louis closes its
season Sunday with a single
game against the Phlllies.
Gibson tired after six innings
and was replaced by Orlando
Pena. Glbso~ gave up one run
on five hits and. three walks,
striking out two, and raised his
record to 12-io. He last pitched
on Aug. 4 in l'!ew York when he

• v United Preu lnJetn• lto " ,al

Co~dy

.-

. d.
'Raz'ders fiavore
by One ..ouchdown

Gibson tops
Phils, 6-1

Stmulin~~

�z1- Tho liundar,rtmoa ·Sentlnei,Sunday,Sept. ao, 1973

Bucks romp, Henson injured
G'O!.UMBUS, Ohio (UP!J - sophomore, rolied to his right quarter after Elmer Uppert
Tailback Arrhle Griffin ran 68 snd meed 72 yards for a touch· recovered a fumbled punt by
yards for a touchdown on Ohio down to moke the score 21-3. TCU's Steve Putlerson on the
State's second play of the game
The Buckeyes. nQw 2-0, made Horned F'rugs 16 ya rd line.
to spar k the th ird-ranked It 28-3 late in the second Qreene passed eight yurds to
Buckeyes to a 37-3 romp over
Brian Baschnagel and then sUd
Texas Christian University
Saturday.
The Buckeyes' other touehdowns came on a one-yard run
by fullback Champ Henson,
who was lost for the season
later in the game with a knee
1\NN ARBOR, Mich. (UP!) artificial playing surface.
injury; 72 and eight-yard runs - Uninspired Michigan got Michigan did not get a first
by quarte rback Cor nelius touchdowns fr om Chu.ck down until' the second quarter
Green, a 13-yard pass from Heater and Ed Shuttlesworth and did not muster a sustained
Greg )lare to Fred Pagac and a Saturday but did not enhance ·drive until ShUttlesworth ended
PILE-UP - 'Ibis photuby Times-Senlinellitotographer Katie Crow shows the ,storr of la ~t
37•yard field goat by Blair its No. 4 National ranking with a 54-yard march in the third
night's Wahama.SOulhern football game at Racine, won by Wahama, 44-!J. Players vtsible '.n
a mere 1H victory over heavy quarter with a 1-yard plunge.
Conway .
this pile of hwnanity are Wahama's Mike Lewis (22) and Mark Mttchell (86 ), wtth Southern s
underdog Navy.
The
Horned
Frogs
only
score
A crowd of 88,042 saw Na •Y
Dave Clark ( 22) on top in the back. Tornado Randy Dudding (52) hils the ground on the left as
But
the
Wol
ve
rines
'
excame
in
the
second
period
on
a
fumble
five times but lose the
White Falcon Terry Smith looks on in background.
. .
23-yard field goal by Berl p1osive offense was hampered ballonly once. Quarterback AI
by a wet field that made outSimmons.
Most of the second half of the side runnin g difficult on the
ga me before a record crowd of
NEW YORK (UPI ) · 87,439 was played In a steady Pioneers top
downpour and the Hare to
George Medich pitched a fiveWILLOW WOOD - Led by Runyon, 238 pound sophomore defense, the Pirates were Pagac pass was the only Hiram, 14·7
hit shutout and won his 14th
senior quarterback Ralph fullback, ran the extra points. paced by Dobbins . who scoring in the final two periods.
game as the Ne w York
Smith and junior tallback
The Pirates pushed across collected three interceptions. . The 6-foot'4, 225-pound
MARIE'ITA, Ohio (UPI) Yanke es beat the Detroit
North Galiia now 2-2 overall ·
d th
Sterling . Logan, Coach John their second silt:..pointer with
Henson, a junior, an
e Senior quarterback Steve tigers, 3-0, Saturday.
Blake's North Gallia Pirates 9:38 left in the third stanza as and 2-1 in the Southern Valley nation 's leading scorer last Morris scored from the two to
The victory put the Yankees
·
posted a 24-6 victory here Logan sliced in over his center Athletic Conference will battle season with 120 po1nts, ts
break a ·tie game and give one game under .500 with the
Friday night over Coach John on a one-yard plunge. Dave Southern Friday night. The schedule.d to undergo surgery Marietta a 14-7 win over Hirarn ~ Yankee Stadium finale set for
·
move
into
Patton 's· Symmes Valley Dobbins added the extra points Tornadoes
1igaments tn
Sunday.
Sunday
for
torn
Saturday.
Pirateland wilh a 2-0 league
Vikings.
on a run .
Mike Hegan drove in two
left kn ee.
Marietta fullba ck Dave
Smith rushed for 109 yards in
North Gailia made it 24-0 record and 3-1 overall mark. hisGriffin,
who rushed for 107 Pettit recovered a fumble on runs for the Yankees,
13 carries and scored one with 11 :12 lefl in the game as
Symmes Valley tJ.4 will play yards in 13 carries, most of it the Hiram 25 after teammate homering to lead off the third
1
k
touchdown. Logan, enjoying Logan streaked over from the at Southwestern.
coming in the first ha f, bro e Jim Crowley lost the ball. Don inning and driving in another
another fine offensive game, two. A pass from Smith to
STATISTICS NG SV over center on the second play Settle threw ~3 Yl!fdS to wing- · run in the seventh with a
put 12 points on the scoreboard !Ienior end Keith Weddington Fi rSt Downs
10
6 after the Horned Frogs punted back Mike Mitchell on the two, groandout. Ron Blomberg
while collecting i03 yards on was good for the two point Yards Rush ing
231
55 lotheOhioState31. The swift S- setting up Morris' score .
singled home theJirst Yankee
9'
30
Yards Passing
the ground.
conversion .
Both teams scored the first run with a base hit in lhe first
19 foot-9, 180-pound sophomore
5
Passes Atot.
North Gailia broke into the
With 2:59 remaining, Passes
inning.
5
1
~
broke
a
tackle
at
the
line
of
time
they had the ball.
Alp .
scoring column with 1:19 Symmes Valley reached ~umbles
3
1 scrimmage and outraced the
Hiram marched 60 yards in . ~edich, who has an earned
remaining in the first. half on a paydirt on a 63 yard run by Fumbles Lost
~ · TCU defenders.
nine plays, \Vith Angelo Wilson
three yard run by Smith. Bruce junior halfback Terry Pine. On ln1erceptions
10
TCU, now 1-1, put together a ·scoring on a four-yard run.
65
Penalized
Long Road to Travel
15-play . 74-yard march, Marietia matched the touchInterstate 80 has the distinc·
resulting in Simmons' 23-yard down when Mitchell took a lion
of being the longest of
field goal. On the first play seven-yard pass from Morris, interstate routes, stretching
following the kickoff, however, climaxing a 74-yard drive in 11 2.910 miles from New York to
Greene, a 6-foot, 170-pound plays.
California.
ATLANTA (UP!) - Hank made from baseball in the hist
His role as an entertainer,
Aaron was assured of making 20 years.
however, will not force him to
more money from outside
"We wiU make more money do any singing or dancing a Ia.
endorsements than · Babe Ruth for Hank Aeron in a year 9r a Joe Frazier.
ever made, even thop.:l·; he has year and a half than he's made
"I can't sing and I can't
yet to become baseball's ail- in his entire career in dance , ' ~ said ·Aaron, ~~and. I
time home run king, when he base~," said Berle Adams, wouldn't want to make a fool of
became a client of WMA Sports president 'If WMA Sports at a myself. I don't think Mr.
Inc. Saturday.
news coni 1rence Saturday. Adams was talking about that
The Atlanta Braves' slugger, "We estimal ' tbe figure at be- sort of stuff when he said he
who still needs three home runs tween $1.5 m' n million."
was representing me in ento break Ruth's career record
In sigriing wt.~ WMA Sports tertainment. At least, I hope
of 714, joins swimmer Mark Inc., a substdlar, of the famed not."
Spitz and wonder horse William Morria , ~ency Inc.,
Adams made it clear that
Secretariat in the . newly- Aaron will be·repl'\ ·ented in a what they planned for Aaron on
organized WMA Sports Inc., tolal entertainment . 'leCtrwn, an entertainment level would
stable and has been practically including films, te. ·vision, cause him no embarrassment
gu!ll'anteed more money·in the advertlsements, .testi1 onlals whatsoever ..
next 18 months than he has and books.
"He won't have to do
anything like that" said
Adams. "What we have in
mindforhimasfarasTVgoes
is guest shots with Flip Wilson,
Dean Martin, Sonny and Cher,
and shows like that."
1- 1
.
Ruth, whO!!e magical name is
practically synonomous with
KANSAS CITY (UP!) -The • Both teams are 1-1 in NFL play · baseball, never had the opOaldand Raiders are not about this time around, as are portunity of working with such
to get overconfident as they Denver and San Diego, the an organization as WMA Sports
ready for today's meeting with other t?a.~s in 'the National Inc. The Babe, who hit his last
arch rival Kansas City here. West DiVJSJon.
home run in 1935, was
Although Kailsas City lost to
Running bac~ for ~e Chiefs represented by Christy Walsh
Los Angeles 23-13 in the opener, are ex-Ram Wiilie Eilison, who and earned wbal little outside
they know that quarterback went for 90 yards on 20 carries money he made from a movie
Lenny Dawson missed that against the Patriots, and Ed about his life, a bouk, some
contest with a jammed thumb. Podolak. Nine-year pro Oils ghost-written magazine arHe returned last Sunday with Taylor, who pulled in ~ive ticies and the endorsement of a
an 11-for-14 performance in the passes for 115 yards agamst cereal and a candy bar known
win over New England.
New England, is one of foot- as "Baby Ruth." The candy
In addition the Raiders, ball's best.
bar was his greatest source of
WHIT~
favored by about a touchdown,
But Oakland has a g~eat outside income .
Self-Storin~
The plans call for Aeron to
recall last year's journey to the receiver, too, in Fred Bile!Doors
midwest, when an in- nikoff. He has always been travel a great deal abroad as
jury riddled and underdog especially effective against the representative of WMA Sports
TEMPERE D
Chlefs team belted them 27-14. Chiefs' Jim Marsalis, who .is Inc. He will go to practically
SAF ETY
GLASS
&gt;
Although the Raiders are eJther hurt or benched and will every country where baseball
i'lff•,·d If N,.".
c
fresh from a 12-7 win over yield to third-year man Nate . is played, including Japan,
/\. itf'IH'II ;1 ."it' f'
Super Bowl king Miami, they Allen Sunday. This still could Mexico and other Latin
l 11o~ ,Vmf, ·
sUU have yet to get a touch- be an area for the Raiders to American countries.
down from their offensive probe.
"Hank wJU be the home run
unit The series between old
Both teams have superb king for a long, long time, and
CEILING TilLE
rlvab Olkland and Kansas kicking games, Rookie punter as the king he wUI be the toast
City staJ* at 12-12-Z after 13 Ray Guy haa been a sensation of the world. In Japan he Ia
All Ceiling Tile
years although the Raiders are for the Raiders and ageless already considered the world
7-3-2 over the lut six years. 5iforge.Blanda Ia 7-for-7 in the home run king, even though be
1 Stock on S.le 1111
field goal department. But hasn't broken the record yet,"
S.ve Now.
ISIIMllll
Kansas City has Jan Stenerud said Adams.
and punter Jerrell Wiiaon may
Aaron said his deal \Vith
Ca .
Evans , Inc. " Building Supplies" . A
be the only NFL hooter who WMA Sports Inc. was a tong.
Nan,
miliar To All. Stop and See the Fri endly
Ones, 1ey Will WelcOm e You .
can stay even with Guy.
awaited dream come true.
"I've waited very patiently
for !his day," said Aeron. "I
BALTIMORE (UPI)- Dave
218 X6/8 sat quietly aside while others
Duncan's baaea' loaded three·
3/0 X6/8
· run double In lite sixth inning
got their share. I hoped one day
LEFT &amp; RIGHT
backed up the three-hit pitsomething like !his would come
REGUlAR
'49.95
WATERFORD
The along. I kept the faith. Com·
ching of Torn Tlnunennan as
'29.95
the Cleveland llldlans defeated Southern Junior High foolbail pared to some olher players,
the Baltimores 11-2 Saturday in team defeated Waterford, 21J.8, my outside income bas been
Prices Good While
the first gam~ ·of a · here Thursday.
very tittle over the years. "
Jim Lawrence, head coach,
doubleheader.
Quantities Last!
Aaron continued his pursuit
and
his
assiatant,
Mike
Nease,
Dave McNally (17·17) auf.
of Ruth's home run record
Oue To Increasing Prkes
said
that
the
team
looked
very
feJ'ed the 1088 white 'rim·
Saturday night when the
We Will Not S. Able To
mennan, who at one point gOOd, wilh the exception of Braves hosted the Houston
Re4rdo&gt; AI Site Pr~es
retired 13 straight bailers," some penalties.
Aatros. Aaron had only two
On AI Silo llemsl
Richard Tesford opened the games remaining this season
railed hl1 record to lh'l.
Terry Crowley's two-run SC&lt;II'ing for Southern late in the in which to bresk the record,
hCIIItr In the second gave the second period on a 50 yard and his chances of doing it
Orlles a 2-0 lead by Buddy sweep around end.
before next season are doubtButch Shane added the ful .
BeU'a 14111 home run 1!1 the
.
lourth after John EULI had 11econd score, in the. third
"Naturally it would be better
dOubled t1ec1 the gllllU! at 2-2. stanza , and Mike Warner if he couidset the record before
After Ted Ford alngled In the concluded Southern's scoring;
season is over," said
sllth; MeNally wa1Ud E1111 . intercepting a pass and run- the
Adams. "But I doubt that it will
111d Bell. Buncan !hen bounced ning 30 yBI'ds fOI' ,the touch- hurt him that much in terms of
hll daub1e down the lefttield down.
future endorsements. It's hard
liRe, clelrtq the bull, but he
The jWtior high's next game to aay.''
... •uwu aut 1n a nm4own. Ia Thunday, at 5 p, m., at In 1972, President Nixon
a., Tiler• IIIIer ~~~~~~ and Federal Hockin&amp;.
signed a congreeional resolullllt: Dalfy'a triple , The 1eventh grade will play tion approving an interim
1111 fourof'UII llzth Melea' 7 B team, Wednetday,
Soviet-American offensive erma
4:30 p. m., at Meiga.
develand.
agreement.

by Greene, who finisMd the

of! tackle on the next play for

•
•

'

1

day with 114 yards in 14

ei~ht

more yurds and his
carries, and a 23-yar~ pa111
second touchdown.
from
Greene to tight ei)d Ted
Conway's field goal came on
the last play of the first half Powell to Ute TCU 28.
and wassel up by a 21-yard run

Michigan hardpressed in win
Glenny threw three· interceptions and saw a first
quarter scoring chance
ev~pora t ~ on an offensive
interference can inside the 1~ .
Glenny C&lt;Jnnected often witii"
wide receiver Bert Calland and
infrequently with tight ertd Bill
Smyth. But despite moving the
midshipmen well, he was

Yanks blank Tigers, ·3-0

Pirates sink Vikings

!

Aaron's dream comes true

run average of 2.91 for his
rookie season, didn't allow a hit
after the sixth inning. He
struck out four batters and.
walked five in stretching his
record to 14'9.
Lerrin Lagrow started for
Detroit and suffered his fifth
loss in six decisions.

unable to get his team inside
the Michigan 20 except for one
third quarter thrust.
Na vy reached the )6, was
thrown back lhree straight
times, and a 34-yard field goal
attempt by Steve Dyk~s was
short and wide.
,
Michigan eschewed the \Vide
game after discovering esrly
that its backs could not cut on
the wet surface . Quarterback
Dennis Frankliii stayed away
.from the pass until the l!OCOnd
half.
Michigan did not display the
ferocious offense that carried it
to wins in the first two games ol
the season . Navy now has
dropped two consecutive ·
games to top 10 teams after
winning its opener .

..

.·

Bosox 9-4 winner
BOSTON (UP! ) - Rick
Mliler drove in three runs and
Carlton Fisk and Cecil Cooper
knocked in two apiece
Saturday as the Boston Red
Sox defeated the Milwaukee
Brewers, 9-4.
The Red Sox won the game
with six runs in the second
inning as Cooper, Miller and
Fish ail drove in two runs with
singles.
Boston added three more
runs in the eighth inning, one

on Miller's sacrifice fly . In that
inning Tommy Harper stole
third ba!!e for his 54111 swipe of
the seaeon to take' the
American I,eague lead.
Milwaukee scored three runs
in the first inning and a~ded
another in the third on Bobby
J\1itcbell's fifth homer.
Rogelio Moret went the
distance for the Red Sox and
raised his record to 14-2. Si!lp
Lockwood, .f&gt;.9, took the toss.
.

't

.' '

.,

I;'

W, L. Pel . G. B.

80 78
19 80
80 8 1
78 82
16 82
71 90

.506
.497 H1
,A91 1111
.488 J
..481 •
,.&amp;A I 10' '~

Welt
W. L . Pc1 . G.8 .
I( Cinclnnetl
99 62 .515
Los Angeles 9A 66 .588 41h
San Franclsco87 7A .5Al 12
Hous lon
B1 79 .500 171/'
Atlanta
75 1111 ..472 23
San Diego
59 101 .369 39 1h
• ·Clinched d ivisio n tl ll e
h tu r dly ' s R..uth
New York at Chfcaoo . ppnd .,

tore cartilage in his knee while
rWtning the bases. During the
two months that Gibson was
out of the lineup, the Cards !eli
out of first place.
The Cardinals teed off on
.Carlton, a former teammate,
getting 11 hits off the southpaw
in the six innings he worked.
Lou Brock tripled and scored
twice and Ted Sizemore and
Tim McCarver each had two
runs batted in .

ra in
St. Lou i s 7 Phi ladelph ia I
Ci n cin n ati 13 San Fr an cisco 6
M on treal -Pittsbur gh , dela y ed
by r ain .
TOdfV 'I Gime s
New Y ork at Ch lcago . 2
Mon t reo l at P l n sb ur ~ h
Philad elp hia at St. Louis
H o~st on at At lanflllli
San F r ari clsc o at Cinci nn at i
(on ly gam es schedul ed J
American League ·

East
W. L. Pet. G.B.
• -B a ll lmor e
Boston
Detro it
New York

Carlton, winner of 27 games
last !Ieason, has a 13-20 record
this year.
The Phillies scored off
Gibson in lhe sixth, breaking a
string of 32 scoreless innings by
Cardinal pitching. Del Unser
doubled to lead off the inning,
advanced on an infield out al)d
scored on a single by Greg
Luztnskl.

M ilwauKee
Cle velan d

•·Ooklond

97
·~

65

84

73 .5.47 81111

.600

77

.523 12 h

BO
74

81
87

.497 161h
.460 22 1/2

71 91 .• 38 26
West
W. L . Pet . G.8 .

93 67

.581

Minnesota

87
81

73
79

. SAA 6
.506 12

83

481 16

Chlcego

76 84 ,47 5 17
56 105 . . 350 37

Kansas Cit y

Coll1orn lo
'fexas

77

K-CIInched i:H~Is l on t it le .
saturday's Results
Cl eveland 6 Balt imore 2 {l s i)
New York J Detro it o
Boston 9 Milwaukee 4
Blltlmore 7 Cleveland 3 {2nd J
Today ' s Games
Ch lc eoo at Oak land ·
M innesota at Ca li fornia
Detroll at New York
M ilwau kee at Bostol'l
Kan Cit y 't Texas , nig h t
( Only games schedu l ed )

GalliaPPK
wmners are

TURNBERRY, Scotland
(UP!) -Texan Charles Coody
won the •146,375 John Player
Classic at Turnberry Saturday
by three strokes after holding
off a strong challenge lly
Britain's Tony Ja~klln.
The 38-year-old American,
carded a 77 today and earned
l37,500 with · a 72-hole
aggregate of 239, five-over-par'
Jacldyn carded a 76 to finish
at 292, two strokes ahead of
third-place Tom Weiskopf,
American hoider of the British
Open Title, who had a 78.
Weiskopf, who collected
$12,500 for his third place
finish, picked up another
$20,750 for winning the Grand
Masters Award for the best
aggregate sc·ore, from the U.
S. and Bl'itish Open Championshlp8, the•)llasters and the
John Player, Classic.
· The 31-yesr-old American
from ColumbUs, Ohio, had an
aggregate of i,l40 for the four

Reds rout Giants 13-6
Rookie Dan Driessen pace the Reds' attack.
CINCINN ATI (UP!) - '!'he &amp;in •' ranctsco Giant pi tchers
Fred Norman, the first of
Cincinnati Reds banged out It Saturday to roll 1&lt;1 a 13-6 kn ocked in three runs and
hits, live of them doubles and victor y in a rain-marred Ce1111 r Geronimo and Dents three Red pitcMrs, gained his
capitail1.ed on the wildness of contest.
Menke each drove horne two to 13th victory against 13 losses
but needed relief help from
Roger Nelson and Dick Baney
when the Giants scored their
final three runs in the sixth

Prove Out cops
Woodward Stakes

NEW YORK (UPI ) - Prove
Out, owned by the same
Hobeau Stable that beat
Secretariat with Onion in the
Whitney Stakes, hwnbied the
Triple Crown winner at
Belmont Park Saturday as he
overtook the champion in the
stretch and pulled away to win
the $108,200 Woodward Stakes
by four and a half iengtba.
Secrelarlat, starting for the
first time since he set a world
recQrd. in winning the $~50,000
Marlboro Cup two weeks ago,
toQk the lead from Prove Out
shortly after reaching the back
stretch. It was at about the
same spot that Secretariat
wen!to the front in the Belmont
Stakes and went on to become
the first Triple Crown winner
in 25 years. ·
Once in front Secretariat
appeared to have the race at
his mercy, He had been bet
down to 3 to 10 and coasted
along in front until the field
swept around the fin~l bend

events to finish four strokes
ahead of United States Open
champion Johnny Miller, who
had a 77 today for 298.
This was Coody's second big
win in Britain recently. The
powerfully-built .Texan from
'GALUPOLIS .c. Winners of
Abilene captured the Wills the 1973 Gailia County PUnt,
Open title three weeks ago- Pass and Kick Contest sponwhichenabled him to be among sored locally by the Gal!ipolis
the 36 qualifiers for this Area Jay~es and Martin Ford·
"Champion of Champions" were determined following
tournament,
nearly three hours of competition on Memorial Field
Coody had to battle hard for Saturday afternoon.
his victory and had his overOf the 209 youngsters
night four..troke lead cut to registered this year, apone by Jacklin after the first proximately 200 showed up for
nine holes.
Saturday's event. Six of the
But Jacklin was unable to · tads who captured first. place
sustain his challenge coming honors tn various age groups
back and .had io settle for the \Vill now take part in the Tri$18,750 second prize.
State contest, to be held at
South African Gary Player Marshail University on
shared fourth place at 295 with. Saturday.
-kish veteran Christy O'Connor ' Listed below are the !Qp
and former British Match Play three winners in each age
champion Tommy Horton.
group:
8-YEAR OLDS - Steve
Bennett, Philip Mitchell and
Lynn ~eets.
9-YEAR OLDS - Willie
Wood, Phllilp King and Jerry
Eutsler.
10-YEAR OLDS - Chuck
Sanders, Mike Burger and Jay
Burleson.
CLEVELAND (UPI} - UPI)
Snead Jed the league with a
11·YEAR OLDS - Tony
- Cleveland 'Coach Nick Skor- 60.3 per centC&lt;Jiilpletion figure Weiher, · Mark Weaver and
tell said today the New York last year and is just as effec· · Jeffery Davis.
Giants are a much improved tive no\V in throwing to Don
12-YEAR OLDS - Mark
football team this season Hermann, Bob Grim, Bob Smith, David Kent and Jim
largely because they have it Tucker, Gary Ballman and the Johnson.
''more solld defense" \Vith Giants running backs.
13-VEAR ows· - Terry
good lined bacl!ers and a solid
Heading the rushing attack is Wall, Mickie Graham and
secondary,
Ron Johnson whom the Giants Kevin Hawks.
The Browns, who lost to the obtained from Cleveland in a
Giants 21-20 in an exhibition trade.
game, meet New York here
Both teams give up yardage
with the kickoff scheduled for grudgingly but sometimes too .
By United Press International
1:06 p.m. and some 75,000 fans · Consistently.
Drexel 27 Fordham 0
.
expected.
"Webendinthewind,butwe Penn 51. 27 low• 8
'"!be Giants don't rip off big don't break.," said Giant fr"" · Geuysburg
24 Kings Point 22
FrankHn &amp; Marshall 28 Johns
plays very oflen, but they con· safety ~rl LOCkhart.
~~\',;~~. 7" Hiram 7
trol the ball' very well," said
"TheGtantshave a more so~; Ohio st. 37 rcu 1
Skorich, "I tllink it's their run· iddefense than in a long time.
Horvard 2~ Massachusetts 7
a
game
!hat
has
brought
he
said.
"A
very
active
line
Newark S1. 3 F. Dickinson 0
nin~
Cal/fornle 51 Army 6
(Norm) Snead of age, He's with good linebackers .. Their Rhode lslond 20 Brown 20
!.-,
Temple 63 Holy Cross 34
been very effecuve
wilh the forte 1s st rong lateral pursuit•. cen1rol
conn . 6 Ma ine 3
lay
action
pasa
that
goes
so
And
everybody
Is
afraid
to
Rutgers
39 Princeton "
P
Lockhart
back
Yale 27 Connecticut 13
'th
d
th
well for a running tesm."
row eepWI
New Hampsh ire 10 Dartmouth ·
there. He covers so much of the 9
field."
Georgetown 7 Boston St. 6
The Giants will be without rrrglo 31 No'rth Carolina St.
strong safety Richmond Maryland 31 Vlllonov• 3
TennesSee 21 Auburn 0
Flowers for this game.
No1re Dome 20 Purdue 7
Char~ers
Flowers sprained Ugaments Bowling Green 31 Western
,
Mich . 20
in a knee in last Sun daYS t1e Michigan U Navy 0
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Isaac
with Philadelphia and filling in ~~:i~11 : fe~~k:l'9 3c1emson 21
Clirtis, the No. I draft choice of willbesecond-yearmanChuck
NlcholsSt, t4AibonySt. IN.Y.J
the etncinnaU Bengals is going
from Penn State.
~merlcen tnt. 22 Norwich u
to be the long ball target for Crist
DefensiveendJackGregory, sou1hern conn . 38 Maine
quarterback Ken Anderson this a former Brown, leads the Gi- Morlllme o
24 Ashland 7
season, according to assistant ants rushiog attack along with · Wittenberg
John carroll 14 Th iel 14 Itiel
coach Jack Donaldson.
tackle George Mendenhall.
Wash ington S. Jefferson IS
Case Western 14
So far Donaldson said, Isaac
The key to the Browns attac k Mtssou,; 2• North Cerollno u
Jll• not uvect to expectations may be Greg Pruitt, the Okla- Nebrosks ~0 Wisconsin 16
•because be waa inJured on the boma star whO has onlY seen
first day of training camp and limited action because of an
VOIBBLANK FOE
"it aet him back conalderably. ankle injury but will get more
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UP!)
"We're making a sincere ef. :playing time against the Gi- - Unebacker Hank Walter
fort to throw the bali down field ants,
rambled 38 yards with a pass
on long 10 patterns to Isaac,"
Pruitl's quickness could get inter~ption and safety Eddie
said DonaldiOII, "and It's going him Into the Giants secondary Brown intercepted another toss
to be included in every game better than any other Brown to set up a Tennessee score as
plan."
with maybe the exception of the ninth-ranked Vols beat
And that include• the game Leroy Kelly.
Auburn 21-0 Saturday in a
•••lnat , the San Diego
batue of Southeastern ConOJaraen at San Diego, Calif.,
ference
contenders.
TECH WINS FIRST
' SUnday. '
ATLANTA (UP!) - Quar, "The more the other teamJ
· lOW ASTILL WINLESS
· know lt 1 1he more they're going terback Jim Stevens com•
UNIVERSITY PARk, Pa.
, to lay ofl him,'' ~ld Donald· pleted 18 of 24 paues lor 194 (UP I) - Tailback John
yard• and a touchdown and
IIJII "I IIUitllltet we're going
sneaked
a yard lor another Cappeletti ran for one score
, to
tho b&amp;U downlleld."
Saturday to lead the and quarterback Tom Shuman
Tht Btnealll•arnecl Frld~y score
Georgia Tetih Yellow Jackeia threw two of hia three touch,DoUI Or.!II'' )he ltMI I to
1 :z&amp;-21 victory over the down (IUIIelln a rainy 21 point
lelcllnl 1'\111111' lh the pr&amp;flnt period Saturday t.o lead
Tlsera.
1111an lltlllbltlon IINIIII, Will Clemaon
The victory was the first In sixth-ranked Penn State to a 27·hlvelo Jlldii'IO llll'cery on an lhree gamu for Georgia Tech, 8 rout of wlnlee Iowa .

announced

Improved Giants take
on Cleveland Browns

and into the home stretch.
There Prove Out, responding
to the urging of Jockey Jorge
Velasquez, ranged up to
challenge Secretariat on the
inside and
Secretariat
gradually fell back in the run
for- the wire,
Prove Out, a ~-year-old son of
Graustark , steadily pulled
away to finish the 1'h mites in
2:254-5 over a sloppy track.
His time failed to threaten

the track record of 2:24 set by
Secretari at in winning the
Belmont Stakes by 31-lengths
but it was fast enough to gel the
job done and reward his
backers with a 34,40 payoff.
There was only win betting.
Amber is a yellowish·brown
substance formed by the sap,
or resin , in the pine trees of
northe rn Europe millions of
years ago.

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind.
(UP!) - Sophomore Art Best
ran 84 yards on the first play
from scrimmage to set up a
Notre Dame field goal and then
rushed for 126 yards more and
a l&lt;luchdown Saturday to lead
the No. 7-ranked fighting Irish
to a 20-7 trlwnph over Purdue.

.
'

''
STOR E HOURS
Mtr~ . flrlcl•v r • ·"'· toJ p,m,
h turdn7• . ttl tt~ll . m .

PHON E 446 44•4

CASH &amp; CARRY

B :~r l ®l[

cancelled if the first place Meta
are able to clinch the National
League East title tomorrow. If ·
it is n ~cessary , the Mets and
Cubs- would play a makeup
twinbill on Monday, a day after
the regular season was
scheduled to end.
Any combination of three
Met victories or Pittsburgh
Pirate tosses would clinch the
title for New York.

For airline reservations around the corner ...

or around the world ... .

J3 Court Street

'74 MONACO ...
UNMISTAKABLY
NEW.
For 1974, :there are three totally new Dodge Monacos. Come in and
let us ·show you our three lines of new full-sized cars for '74,-Monacp,
Monaco Custom, and the luxurious top-of-the-line Monaco Brougham.
Unmistakably new Monaco: the Dodge to see before you do ~my new car
shopping this year.

WHAT ABOUT OUR COMPACT DODGE DART?
ASK THE MILLION WHO OWN ONE.
.....-..
Depend on Dart. A lot of .o ther people have.
We've got over a million Darts on the road in
models ranging from the handy four-door sedan
to Dart Swinger (just about the only new .
compact hardtop around for 1974) to the everversatile Dart Sport. Ask a friend about Dart
(with over a million on the road, you have
to know someone who owns one).

THE DODGE CLUB CAB. (STILL A DODGE EXCLUSIVE.)
·

The Club Cab is still a Dodge exclusive this
year, offering 34 cubic feet of storage apace
behind the front seat, letting you keep thin1s
safe and out of the weather under lock and key.
And new for this year is the addition of many
four-wheel-drive Club Cab models. See the
Club Cab and all the fine Dod1e pickupa
at the Dodge Boys'.

'

Depend · on the Dodge Boys.

I

I

·'

AMERICA'S LARGEST TRAVEL AGENCY

great buys mevery SIZe for.74.

throw

'

1

Caii446-0699

up

.I

/

Today: the Qodge Boys P.~ent

lnjlftd lutH • .

\

WOOSTER BEATEN
· · WOOSTER, Ohio (UP!)
Giovanni DiLalla kicked three
field goals and one extra point
and George Letts ran for
Kenyon's only touchdown ae
the Lords beat Wooater Ia.&amp;
Saturday by taking advantage
of fumbles and interceptions.
.

today

''

inning.
Giant starter Jim Barr lallec;l
to survive the ~eeond lnnlnc·
The Reds bunched four ~inC*
with a walk and a IIACiilll.'l fly
to score three rUM in the llrlt
inning and added three more in
the second to knock out Barr,
who suffered hia 17111 lclll
against 11 victoriea.
The Reds added two more
runs in the third, one in the
fourth, and then scored their
final four In the sixth Inning,
bunching four-hits, Jncludinl
doubles by Denis Menke and
Parrel Chaney.
Garry Maddox biaated two
home runs for the Giants, hia
lOth and 11111 of the season.

IRISH TRIUMPH

Tilts p~stponed by rain Saturday·
CHICAGO (UP! ) ~ The
scheduled doubleheader
between the New York Mets
and the Chicago Cubs was
postponed after a 2\2 hour wait
Saturday because of drenching
rains.
It was the !!econd straight I
day that the two teams had
been rained out.
The two teams are scheduled
to play a doubleheader Sunday
and Saturday's games \Viii be

WILDCATS UPSET
EVANSTON, Ul. (UPI)
Tony Dorsett, a 170-pound
freshman tailback, pierced
Northwestern's line for 26~
yards and ~ut loose on touchdown runs of 6 and 79 yarda
Saturday to lead Pittsburgh to
a 21-14 victory over the Big Ten
Wildcats.

Bengals meet

'

I

Southern junior
high wins, 20-6

\

New York
F'ltttbUrgh
SL LOUII
Mon t real
Chicago
P hlledelphl!l

College results

Indians cop
opener, 6-2

I'

E111

0

FIRST PRIZE - 10

.

I

N• tlon• l L.faa ue

captures
Player Clas'sic ·

..

=..

ST. LOUIS! (UPI) - Bob
Gibson, pitching for the first
time since Injuring hla right
knee eight w~ks ago, got help
from a 17-hlt attack Saturday
to earn a 6-1 1victory over the
Phiiadelphla Phillies in a game
that coet Steve Car.!ton his 20!)1•
defeat.
! •
The triumph· was the fourth
straight for the Cardll and kept
alive their tiUe hopes in the
Nalional League East. They
are only I~ games behind the
division-leading Mets; who
were rained out again at
Chicago. St. Louis closes its
season Sunday with a single
game against the Phlllies.
Gibson tired after six innings
and was replaced by Orlando
Pena. Glbso~ gave up one run
on five hits and. three walks,
striking out two, and raised his
record to 12-io. He last pitched
on Aug. 4 in l'!ew York when he

• v United Preu lnJetn• lto " ,al

Co~dy

.-

. d.
'Raz'ders fiavore
by One ..ouchdown

Gibson tops
Phils, 6-1

Stmulin~~

�23 - The Sllnd!tvTin~H · Stontl~l.Sunda~. Sept. Jo, t9'13

22- The Sunday Times ·Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 30, 197l

Vice president .
(Continued from Page 1~)
Agnew did not finger his
accusers Saturday, but the suit
his lawyers filed Friday
specifica lly alleged that
Justice Department officials
were deliberately leaking
stories about the grand jury
investigation in an attempt to
drive Agnew from olflce and
assure his conviction . The
grand jury Thursday began
hearing evidence allegedly
linking Agnew to political kick·
backs -during his years as
Maryland govemor and an
official in Baltimore County.
"During the past few months
we have witnessed a cavalier
attitude toward such violations
of the essential principle of
secrecy in investigations relat·
ed to grand jury proceedings,"
Agnew told · the Republican
women.
"Leaks have sprung in un·
Jrecedented quantities, and
the resultant publication of
distortions and half-truths has
led to a cruel form of kangaroo

~~~~~~E:~~;~
, ~~~~

r

{!

trial in the . media, the ac. cusatory stories maliciously
supplied by anonymous sour·

ces."

\n.t ycnr with 12tl points and
hud nlroady (lUI ft&gt;Ur TDs on
the ljoard this sC3SOn before
heing injured late in the first
&lt;IUIItler .
'")'hut was rut expensive vit'
tory ," Hayes SHid. "We lost
0\unlp. 'Ihey'll operate tomor·
row morning. "He's a great
fullback. He gave our attack
power on the inside."
Hayes said he'll have to do a
"lot of hard thinking between
now and Monday" to see who
replaces Henson.
"We'll come up with a good
one," Hayes promised, adding
that OSU doesn 't "get many
players as good as Henson."
Hayes, though saddened by
Henson's loss, was pleased
with the work of the rest of his
backfield.
His G-boys - tailback Archie
Griffin and quarterback Corn·
elius Greene - once again pr&lt;r
vided the offensive fireworks to
win.

Griffin scored on a 68-yard
TD gallop on Ohio State's sec:
·ond play of the game, whUe
Greene tallied twice on runs of
72 and 8 yards.
Hayes gave his defense a pat
on the back for its effort In
stiffling the Homed Frogs' at·
tack.
"Dur defense played well ex·
cept for that one long drive,"
he said. The drive resulted in a
23-yard field goal for the
visitors.
"Our defense is getting
tougher," he continped. "It's
getting better. When you have
three healthY linebackers like
SENATORS VOTE
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Sen. William B. Saxbe, R.Ohio,
was one of the 16 Republicans
who cast negative votes on a 12·
16 roil call Friday as the Senate
blocked the President's
proposed tw&lt;rmonth delay In
pay raises for federal while·
collar workers and military
personnel. Sen. Robert Taft
Jr., R.()hio, was listed as being
paired against.

Agnew said grand jury
secrecy and other procedural
safeguards in the American
judicial system were intended
to assure that ''every American, whether businessman,
r _!.:__ _ _~..::::.::::.:J factory worker or vice preSi·
· dent;• is presumed innocent
tmtil proved otherwise.
"These · principles are designed to prevent a person
from being wrongly convicted,
TWO KILLED
as well as to protect a person
from more intangible forms of COLUMBUS (UP!) - Mrs.
abuse, such as the destruction Beulah Blanton, 40, and her
of a chosen career of public daughter Venita, 14, Columbus,
were killed early Saturday
service," he said.
"Th~dless 'leaks' must when their car was struck
inevitallly violate not only the broadside by a man driving a
rights of an individual, but the stolen car and being chase&lt;! by
right of every American. · police, · authorities said. Tbe ·
"Given the current climate driver of the car was identified
of wild overreaction, it will not as William Holland, 23, who
be an easy fight. But those of us was already free on bond
who believe fervently in the resulting from charges filed in
values and · institutions that another police case.
form the very core of our
system must continue to repel
every assault against them."

f"'....,......,..........,.......,......,............,..,.,..........,..._..,.........,....

COMSTOCK REALTY
ANNOUNCES:

OPENING OF
MEADOWGREEN ESTATES
NOW SHOWING

MRS. MURPHY DIES
BEVERLY HILLS , Calif.
(UP!) - The wife of former
Sen. George Murphy died
Friday night at the couple's
home here. She was 71.
A family spokesman said
Julie Murphy's death was the
result of a lingering heart
ailment. Murphy was at his
wife's side when she died:

''11le)' do have a real fine
ours thoy lotiPOIIL1llSI can't
~enk tl1e long ones."
outfit, "1'ohlll said. "They It ave
" I don't know whu\ the game weal depth, ability and"tulent.
troved," ll!ly ·~ snld. "We 'l'hey piBY d real good.
hnvc to regroup and go' on.
"We helped thCIO," he said
With HenSon In lhore (tho referring to two fumbles the
backfield) we hnd lhree out· Bucks re,vvered; turning one
standing backs ."
of them into a touchdown.
flayes admitted that he liked
When asked about Greene,
to see the long runs and added TohUI said : ''He's damn good.
that Ute defense employed by He has so much speed."
1'CU 11\•de It easier for such
Tohill blamed stunting -for
occurrences.
contributing to the "long runs"
"When you play so many that led to two of the m•s for
people up front, that (long the wionlng Bucks.
runs) is the problem," Hayes
"We had the stunts, bull! is
said. "Our offense dldn 't have dangerous especially II they hit
the consistency it had two the whole," he said. "Then
weeks ago (when It started the · they'll break.".
season by. shelling Min·
"!think WI) can regroup our
nesola )."
troops and get out after Ar·
TCU Coach Billy Tohlll also kansas," Tohill said. " We
was subdued, but a gr~clous played better defense in the
second hall. We have a good
loser.
defense. We have a better
&gt;ffense than we showed out

. Feeder-Calf sales attracting great Interest

uvailahle for

By. C• E. Bill Ileal..,
POMEROY E~~teulon Agent, Al!rl&lt;'lllture
In the Melga, Athens~!r ~al~producers and (t:!eder cnlf buyel'!l
ire awaliins with l~ttirest •1 ~n~no a~ ,\:wrence County area
Tueaday, Oc!IJiJ!!r 9. The flral will be~~ ~~c~~he~~.l~:!~

Grover retums
to R.otary club

guides
son's lst hunt

We show you how to build your own home t o save thousends, We precut )"otJ r
home to save you high labor cost s. 8uil d in spare hour s and pay yours elf $12 per
hour, We fu rmsh everything and help pay lor your foundation. Ste p by step rn.

stn.1ction s. Save on time, lllbOr, end materials. Build anywh ere ... city or country.
land need not be paid In lu ll. A down payment is not important.
NO
PLA N LIK E THIS,

•J

Central Operating Company's
S~orn .· Plant

Philip

,,

New Haven, W.Va.

FEES RAISED
OXFORD, Ohio (UP! ) - The
board of trustees at Miami
University Saturday approved
a $10 per quarter increase In
boarding fees beginning in the
· winter quarter which will bring
the total to $245 for boarding.
Room fees will remain at $200
per quarter.

has job openings for petmanent employment in the following !WIIs:
,.

Cerical
warehousemen
Welders
Machinists
Electricians
Mechanics
lab Technicians

.r

'Instrument Repairmen
By
.

e QUALITY CONSTRUCTION e CONVENTIONALLY BUILT
e RESTRICTED
e ULTIMATE PRIVACY

GRAND OPENING
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30th
1 PM TIL DUSK
W. T. Watson Road, S Miles West of Gallipolis
On Route 35

. .TERRY
;JOHNSON
..

·

you are missing out on the
finer things In modern
living, because a m obi le
home comb ines spacious

living area, modern fur ni shing s and decor and
sturdy

co nstruction · fr om

top to bottom and end to
end, along with style and
· beau t y .

No

energy

Is

wasted In It s upkeep,
because with a mobile

home there Is practlc•lly

Decorated By Virginia White

no maintenance to worry

Furnished By Larry 's Wayside Furniture

disp lay of medern mobile

.

.

DIVERSIFIED, INC.
BUILDERS
PHONE 446-7364

about. So lose no lime In
comi ng In to see our vast
homes , In m anv

Crane ()peiahd
·
. Bulldmer ()peratOis
laborers .
OperafDB
Boat Operator Ucense

We Will Train Unskilled Applic:anls.
·
. . These jobs ~nwi~ excellent ~ and a benefils propn which indUd•
life 1~11nce, medical Insurance, disability insurance, sick leave; vac:atiute, .holidl)s,
and 'retirement.
·
·
.
the pla:_-'41 a strike is in pmg~ess, the company continue to opa•

Without a -mobile home,

I

APPLICANTS MAY CALL- 675-2913 TO .
ARRANGE AN INTERVIEW.
..

sizes.

makes and models, and
join the r•nks of proud,
happy, sa ti sfied mobile
home owners.

CENT.

~l

OPERATING COMPANY

PDM: Offin Ya• 381, New HIMn, Will Virekt61

·

212•

Teli;hoi•l .,.. codl :»t- MI-:1111

An Equel OpportunitJ Enlpllflr

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

lo
I

•

PHILIP SPORN PLANT

JOHNSON'S MOBILE
HOME SALES
2110 Eutern Ave.
G•llipolls, Ohio
Phone 641 -446.JS47

Hamm

Hamm, l A., Sutton.
Glenroy H. Ewing, Frar,;, K.
Ewing to Dan Rl%er, Lot,
Pomeroy.
Dan S. Rizer, dec., to
Franklin M. Rizer, Cerl. for
Trans., Pomeroy.
Pat E. Mitchell, Marcella
aa It Is used for farming. It SUe Mitchell to Ray Lambert,
maintains that passage of this
measure could moderate the major factor In tile upsurge of
land values. Also cited were
impending Lax Impact.
The September Issue of rising cpmmodi(y prices,
Farm Index, published by the readily available credit, and
USDA's Economic Research pressure from Investors
Service, cited strong non.farm seeking to hedge against Indemand for land as being a Ration.

Juanita Lambert, Deed of
Correction, Rulland.
Arnold Byrge, Blr~ra
Byrge to Harry J. Denllon,
Kathryn Denl!on, Lot, Middleport.
Charles H. Cornell, All*
Comell to Samuel H. Slmondl,
Bertha D. Slmonda, Lot,
Chester.
Raymond F. H1tlleld,
Bertha Elllen Hatfield to
Bradford Lewis, Hue! J .
Lewis, 3 A., RuUand.
Rosa Hayward, dec. to
Georgia Mae Hayman, Aft. lor
Trans., Racine.

WE HAVE SOME
EXCEPTIONAL BUYS NOWI

-

·

F~ther

beeome home owners ...theMiles way ,

SPIDERS ROMP
RICHMOND, Va. (UP!)
Rtmning backs Barty Smith
and Bob Allen scored · two
touchdowns each Saturday and
Richmond's defense remained
unscored upon as the Spiders
demolished Wake Forest 41~.

Virgil Hamm, Mary

to Edgar R. Harnrn, Shirley J,

Explosion of land
values dangerous

1

annual dinner

Mcig~ PropertyTransfers

•

•

swnmer, SUUIeeder prJres wlllaverug the hiKhest on record for
lust hall olthe year.
A week later the same publication reported meat consumption oo a per c•plts basis dropped 5 pet. below the yeljl'
earll~r level durin~ the first hall of 1973, und the trend i• ex·
peeled to ~onllnue throU~Chout the second l111lf as reduced supplies and high prices have altered the traditional pattern of In'
the NEW in l·'ARMING
creasing consumption .
During the first six months of this year, per capita con·
COLUMBUS - The Oh1o
~lies Yard at I p.m. and the 11econd at the Ohio Valley Livestock
sumption
adjusted
to
an
annual
rAte
was
down
to
180pounds,
the
Farm
Bureau's Board ~f
"" eo! Yard In Oalllpolla at a p.m.
A thlrd1!f0up of people interestad in the sales butelgbt to ten loweat since 11187. Recent we~lrness In live cattle and hog prices Directors Friday said rising
montlu later, will be the consumers who will be buying the meat generally has not been reflected al retail and meat sales are land values could produce
continuing at a slow pace.
JX"Operty tax increases of 8.1
produced by these feeder calves.
CatOe on feed on Sepl. tin lite seven maJor feeding states much as 50 per cent over the
The Athens sales, according to Paul Baer, secrelary, has
~er 500 calves already consigned but more will be accepted totaled 9,t66,1lt10 head, 8 pet. more than a year ago but up only next three years.
"These paper increases In
· rough Mr. Baer, W, S, Michael, or Earl Knight Metgs County slightly over a month earlier. August placementa were down ~
pet.
to
1,464,1lt10
head
while
fed
cattle
marketings
during
1\ugust
JX"Oper!y
values don't put any
directors: or througb tbe sales yards at either Athens or
Galllpolla, or lllrough the directors or Extension Office in the were down 20 pet. Indicating the gain In cattle on feed Is due to money in farmers' pockets,"
cattle betng held ,back from the market rather than from ex· said Leonard Schnell, Farm
other counties.
·
panded production.
Bureau 's president. "They
As always happens at this lime of year, feeder cattle buyers
Heavier cattle are already showing up at markets. During can, however, increase his
are out sc~ the countrysides trying to pick up the calves
August,
the average steer weight was up 39 pounds and heifers taXI'S to the point where he
belpre the lllllea1hopefully at a lower price than they will bring at
the sales which are annually spon110red by the Southeastern Ohio was up 25 pounds. With larger number of heavy cattle In feedlots may either be forced to try to
and coming to market combined with reduced consumer meat increase his returns for the
Beef Cattle Improvement Associatloo (SOBCJ.A) .
A third sale will be held this year In November at the Ohio purchased, current cattle price weakness Is likely to be amplified crops and food he produces, or
in the next two or three weeks.
sell out If he caMot pay the
ValleyUvestockYardsonNov. lat 8p.m.
REGARDLESS OF ECONOMIC conditions and 'meat sup. inflated ..taxes from farm
For the last sevefal months all three of t~ groups feeder
earnings.
calf .protlucers, cattle feeders, and the consumers, as 'well as Pli es and consumpt lon, be tween 800 and 1,200 feeder calves will
middlemen (truckers, packers, processors, and retailers) have be sold at the Athens Livestock Company Barn at 1 p.m., October . The organization clted a
and the Ohio Valley Livestock Barn at Gallipolis the evening of recent t.JSDA publlcatlon which
been lamenting the high cost of meat, the high cost of feed, the 9October
9.
·
reported Dhlo farm real estate
costi!rlce squeeze, and the total economics of the beef cattle
Prpducers know that all calves consigned must weigh over values had increased 16 per
business. ·
.
27~ pounds and show calf characteristics. Bull calves will not be cent for the year ending March
No one seems to know why the present situation in catq, and accepted. .
.
I, 1973. The range of increases
meat prices exlats or what the future will bring, If one knew how
The calves will be graded Into uniform lots according to in farmland values went from a
many people are going to conUnue eating T-bone steak or how
breed, sex, quality, weight and color by the Grader appointed, by low of 2per eent in California to
many pounds of meat the consumer had in the freezer, then some the Executive Committee.
a high of 21 per cent in
o! the questions could be answered.
Aproducer having any quesilon about the suitability of a calf Wisconsin.
ON SEPI'EMBER 18 TilE weekly Econogram, published by for the
sale should request on-the-farm inspection. The Directors
''We have no assurance that
Ohio State University agricultural Extensloo ecooomlsts
reserve the right for on-the-farm Inspection for all calves. The the rate of Increase in Ohio will
reported feeder cattle supplies, placements, prices and Executive Committee of the Southeastern Ohio Beef cattle stay as low as 16 per cent anmarketings are and have been ina state of uncertainty,
Improvement Association· is authorized to make all decisions nually," Schnell said.
Clanging factors involve rapid increase in herd size, more necessary in the receiving of tbe calves and the operation of llle
He also pointed out that, in
calves and yearlings available, grass is excellent In most areas, sale.
View of recent State SUpreme
prices of feedatuffs are relatively high, uncertainty about .
All calves are to be. at the Athens sale stockyards before 1 Court rulings, land tax
availability of feedstuffs due to large exports, declinlllg feed p.n\. the day before tl)e feeder calf sale. Tagging and in-weighing valuation adjustments must he
caltle prlces, .consumer boycotts, price ceilings, bant)ing of DES, will start at 6 a.m. No calves will be welghect from l1 a.m. to made on an annual basis.
surge in consumer demand highlighted by hoarding, etc.
11:30 a.m. because of lun~h hour.
Farm Bureau has been a
The uncertilmtles reflect higher .risk that gets reflected in
Due to the evening sales at Gallipolis on October 9, calves major proponent of Issue I, the
prices. Tbe result appears to be later placement in feedlots at may be delivered after 3 p.m. the day before the sale and before proposed constitutional
heavier weights and somewhat lower·feeder prices than in the 11 a.m. the day of the sale. In-weighing and tagging will be done amendment which could
when they are delivered.
permit farmland to·be taxes·at
Its agricultural value, 110 long

GALUPOUS - Tlckel'l for
the Ga llla county FQrm
Bureau's annua l dinner
meeting Thursday niRhl at
Green Elementary school are
still available, &amp; farm bureau
spokesman an noun ce d
Saturday.
Tickets may be purchased at
the farm bureau of/ice In
Gallipolis, or from one of the
following board members for
f2 .50 : Maurice . Thom~s ,
Howard Childers, Norris
Carter, Mrs. · C. W. Shaver,
Mrs . Lawrence Hinerman,
Mrs. Verlln Swain, Fr~nk Mills
III, Ed Buller or Norm Swlnd·
ler.
Robert Scherer, Columbus,
poullry and egg marketing
there."
manager and manager of
TWO KILLED
Conklin Farm 'N Dairy S!&lt;Jres
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!)
for Landmark, Inc., Columbus,
MlDDLEPORT Ken Twyla Bailey, 39, Nelsonville, will ~e the guest speaker.
Grover, local photographer, and a passenger in her car,
En!ertainment wlll be
was "re-inducted'' into · the Kay Kuhn, 35, also of provided by winners of the !973
Middleport • Pomeroy Rotary Nelsonville, were killed early Gallla County Junior Fair
Club Friday evening !ollowing Saturday in a tw~ar accident Talent Contest.
dinner at Heath United on Ohio 33 about 10 miles north
New directors will be ~lected
Methodist Church. Paul Smart of here. Benjamin Raymond, during the evening's activities.
welcomed Grover, who had 24, Columbus, In the other car
resigned about two years ago was lreated and released at
because of the demands on his Mount St. Mary's Hospital in
ASHLAND UPSET .
Nelsonville. The accident Is
time by his business.
·
SPRINGFIELD,
Ohio (UP!)
Chet Tannehill led a brief still under investigation.
- Junior tailback Glenn
program of member parHendrix rushed for 128 yards
ACCEPTS
POSITION
ticipation.
CHICAGO (UP! ) -Chicago and one touchdown Saturday to
Guests were the Rev. E.
multimillionaire . insurance lead Wittenberg University to a
Fischer, John Reece and Jack
24·7 upset of previously un·
Bacon. Lad.les of the church executive W. Clement Stone defeate(! Ashland College,
said
Friday
he
had
accepted
served dinner.
with "honor" a trustee position ninth-ranked small college.
with the Agnew Defense Fund
SUPPORT GILLIGAN
and urged others to help pay
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The for the vice president's legal
·ARMY DEMOLISHED
Ohio AFUIO Saturday issued expenses. "I feel it an honor to
WEST POINT, N. Y.i (tlPI)
a statement in slrong support accept the position of trustee," - California, with a host of
of a series of dinners to be said Stone. Other trustees are goOd running backs and a cool·
conducted in the near future Sen. Barry M. ·Goldwater, R· cat quarterback named Vince .
saluting Gov. John J. Gilligan Ariz. and former Gov. Warren Ferragamo, demolished Army
because he has been "a E. Hearnes of Missouri.
~1-6 Saturday before a crowd of
governor of the people."
40,982.

GAME ENDS IJoO
NEW YORK (UP!)
Unable to convert on three
early scoring opportunities,
Bucknell battled Columbia to a
IJoOdeadlock Saturday, the first
scoreless tie fo. the Bisons
since 1940.

.

•

Ha.yes subdued at' Henson's loss Ti·kctsstru '
CO I.UMBUS (UP! l- It w.s"
sub&lt;lurd Woody llayes who
greeted newsmen Sat ur day
alter the But·keyc's 37-3 victory
over Texas Christian.
.
But Httyes !md u reason to be
concet·netl b•cauij• in the
JX"OCess. the Buckeyes lost lull·
back Champ Henson for the
remainder of the year with a
knee iniiU'Y.
Henson, a tH , !!Z-pound
junior , led the nation in scoring

\

''

Now we are sllrplng quietly
ByT.A. Wolter •
down
an old tral straining to
Dlatrlet Manager
see or orear old bushy tall, A
IRoNTON - It was dark. few days before I had rather
The headllghts revealed an foolishly said to Jeff that I
would guarantee him at least
qnbroken view of weeds and one
shot. Now I was really
tall grass aa the car proceeded under pressure of having to
gingerly down the old logging produce that squirrel. not only
road. The vegetation made a from .the standpoint of being
his father but the •11-knowlng
soft swiahlng sound, yielding Forest Ranger as well.
We
tried everything .
and springing back to leave
only the wheel marks as Stalking, sneaking, still hunling, separating but .not a
evlilence of passage.
glimpse, not a flash - nothing.
Inside, a young man and his An · occasional bird or the
11-year-old son were speaking hammering of a woodpel;,ker or
Its call that sounds suspiciously'
quietly. In the rear a slightly like
a barking squirrel under
older man aat engrossed in the right coodltlons was all we
private thought. The car came saw or heard.
The time had come to meet
to a stop at a point where the Russ
at. our predetermined
old logging road had slipped spot ond my stock had fallen to
away .leaving an Impassable rock bottom. Jeff had ~lven up
secretly I dldn t have
gorge in the roadway. The first and
much hope either but we
visible indications of ~awn continued to hunt our way back
could be seen through the tree down the logging road to Russ.
Russ spoke quietly to us just
tops to the east as the OC·
off the edge of the old trail
cupants got out of the car. "There's one up this tree. but I
From far away came the can'tspot him. Come over here
lonesome notes of a coon hound Jeff and I'll try to g~t you a ·
shot." Instant reaction I Jeff
baying the last few times got
careful ly Into position
before sunrise called an end to under the tree while Russ fired
tile hunt. Nearby blrda started
(Continued on Page 28)
twittering and nutterlng aa
IIley began the day's seardt for
food.
'
The car doors were dosed 1
softly and the trunk opened.
Gtm caaes and shell boxes were
opened. The odor of gun oil and
Hoppe's No. 9 hung brleny in
the still morning air. The trio
moved quleUy down the trail
with only an occasional muttering as they encountered the
large wood's spider webs
lltretched across the roadway.
BooiB and pant legs became
soaked in the heavy morning
dew. Another half mile down
the traU IIley spilt up, the man
atd his aon continued further
down what waa now only a
traU, the other man stayed
behind. It was llghter now.
From the next hollow over
came the muffled · boom of a
COMPACT
ttltotgun. The second day of
atlo's19'13 squirrel seaaon had
PORTABLE
begun.
WASHER
If you haven't guessed by
MODEL WLP 1010N
now, I'm llle fatlter of lllat 11·
yelll'-old boy and the other nian
referred to II Russ Mallow,
• Por11ble - roll• to elnk when
resident manager of Lake·
you w1n1 to w .. h. roll• out of
WIY when Wllhfng II done.
Vesuvius. We were hunting a
.
mile north of Lake VesuviUI.
• Campoct - only 21" wldt, 21"
'l,'hls was a very special hWit ·
dup, 38" high OVtr·ILf.
for me, or I should aay Jeff,
• No opeolel wiring nudtd beca~~~e !hilt waa hla first hWit
oper1t11 on reguler. properly
where he was allowed to carry
grounded, 115-vott houllhold
biJ 01111 gun, a .410 guage single
current.
lhot.
.
• No apecltt plumbing nudod After several years of
h1ndy faucet conneotor 1n1p1
pondering the con:ect age to let
onto foucet odapttr (lurnlthtd
him bellin hWitlng, I finally
with waoher) qulokty and ooally.,
cleclded thl• wu the year.
• Big copooity - woahtt up to
Gttllng ready for our flr~t
i1 poundo of ml•td lobrtoo.
hunt Wll fun . Firat thtro wu
lht llctrllt to buy and I got
• Two w•ttr·ltvel••feotlona.
quilt 1 kick out of tttlng his
big grin whtn he aigfl4~ hll
namt on lht llctnlt. Ht think•
he'• a prelty cool cat tnd ht
knew that' II wlln't caol for tn
tltvtil yllr old to grin whtn ht
ONLY
algntd hll name but ht couldn't
ht!P trlnnlnt.
Ttttn wt h41d to twitch from
No, Uhollo No, 7112 ahot al tht
1111 mlnult far aomt un·
ltlhomable rHIOII w• hardly
know our1tlve1 . Flntlly thtrt
waalh41 chtcklng tnd cltanlng
Df gun1 the night btfart.

NEW Master Mi~

Calflacn

... your calves will love ill

3 Used International Forage Harvesters
In Excellent Condition
and •
3 Used Tractors to pull Them

1. High Digestibility
2. Palatability

I

3. Rap/d. Mixing Qualities

4. Suspension Quality

GENERAL DESCRIPTION:
2-NO. 50 INTERNATIONAL QtOPPERS
1-NO. 350 INTERNATIONAL QtOPPER
1-NO. 706 INTERNATIONAL DIESEL (75 HP)
1-NO. 656 INTERNATIONAL DIESEL (65 HP)
1-NO. 544 INTERNATIONAL DIESEL (55 HP)

· Your young newborn calt,
it she is to become a top herd rep/acemenranimal,
needs to.be started on a high quality milk replacer.

CENTRAL SOY A
OF OHIO

'r
~
I

I

Priced To Sell - Excellent Condition ·

lrd &amp; Sycamore Streets
Gallipolis~

I

Ohio

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.

...

"Your Farm Supply Super Mkt."

PHONE 992-2176

c

POMEROY

"
~

......,,
·~•

...

Hotpoint

A NEW NAME AT LANDMARK

POMEROY LANDMARK

SCC)RE BIG
Again tltis year our No. 1
goal is to mlike Hotpolnt
quality, service end value
your ~est Buy I

...~

YOU CAN IUY AT

LANOMA~K -

Everyone Can!

They
· Stack!

. JACK W. CARSEY, Mgr.
Serving Meigs, Gallla, Mason Counties

Open Mon.-Sat, Til 6100 P.M.

PHONE 992-2111

COMPACT
PORTABLE
ELECTRIC DRYER
MODEL DLP 1050P
• Flta 1lma1t lnywhere - on a wall,
under 1 oaunter.ln a corner
or olo11t .

• Only 211-3/8" high, 21 " wldt,
1.8-314" dup.
• No ext., nil txh1u1ting required ,

• No apeotot wtrtng nudtd operottt on reguttr houoohold
current.
• ThrH eye:.. eelectlone -

JMrmenent preA, normal and

fluff dry.

• Tlmtd oontrol - up to 2\', hourt
ol drying tlmo.
• Seper1t1 atert 1wltch

• Up-front lint llltor
• Opttonot watt mounting ~It
IVIIIIbfe It extrl coat.

ONLY

MODEL OLP 10IQIIII

• C11ten provided far 111eln

portability.
PIIODELS WLP 1010N
DLP IO&amp;OP
MODEL WLP 1_0 10N

.,

I

�23 - The Sllnd!tvTin~H · Stontl~l.Sunda~. Sept. Jo, t9'13

22- The Sunday Times ·Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 30, 197l

Vice president .
(Continued from Page 1~)
Agnew did not finger his
accusers Saturday, but the suit
his lawyers filed Friday
specifica lly alleged that
Justice Department officials
were deliberately leaking
stories about the grand jury
investigation in an attempt to
drive Agnew from olflce and
assure his conviction . The
grand jury Thursday began
hearing evidence allegedly
linking Agnew to political kick·
backs -during his years as
Maryland govemor and an
official in Baltimore County.
"During the past few months
we have witnessed a cavalier
attitude toward such violations
of the essential principle of
secrecy in investigations relat·
ed to grand jury proceedings,"
Agnew told · the Republican
women.
"Leaks have sprung in un·
Jrecedented quantities, and
the resultant publication of
distortions and half-truths has
led to a cruel form of kangaroo

~~~~~~E:~~;~
, ~~~~

r

{!

trial in the . media, the ac. cusatory stories maliciously
supplied by anonymous sour·

ces."

\n.t ycnr with 12tl points and
hud nlroady (lUI ft&gt;Ur TDs on
the ljoard this sC3SOn before
heing injured late in the first
&lt;IUIItler .
'")'hut was rut expensive vit'
tory ," Hayes SHid. "We lost
0\unlp. 'Ihey'll operate tomor·
row morning. "He's a great
fullback. He gave our attack
power on the inside."
Hayes said he'll have to do a
"lot of hard thinking between
now and Monday" to see who
replaces Henson.
"We'll come up with a good
one," Hayes promised, adding
that OSU doesn 't "get many
players as good as Henson."
Hayes, though saddened by
Henson's loss, was pleased
with the work of the rest of his
backfield.
His G-boys - tailback Archie
Griffin and quarterback Corn·
elius Greene - once again pr&lt;r
vided the offensive fireworks to
win.

Griffin scored on a 68-yard
TD gallop on Ohio State's sec:
·ond play of the game, whUe
Greene tallied twice on runs of
72 and 8 yards.
Hayes gave his defense a pat
on the back for its effort In
stiffling the Homed Frogs' at·
tack.
"Dur defense played well ex·
cept for that one long drive,"
he said. The drive resulted in a
23-yard field goal for the
visitors.
"Our defense is getting
tougher," he continped. "It's
getting better. When you have
three healthY linebackers like
SENATORS VOTE
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Sen. William B. Saxbe, R.Ohio,
was one of the 16 Republicans
who cast negative votes on a 12·
16 roil call Friday as the Senate
blocked the President's
proposed tw&lt;rmonth delay In
pay raises for federal while·
collar workers and military
personnel. Sen. Robert Taft
Jr., R.()hio, was listed as being
paired against.

Agnew said grand jury
secrecy and other procedural
safeguards in the American
judicial system were intended
to assure that ''every American, whether businessman,
r _!.:__ _ _~..::::.::::.:J factory worker or vice preSi·
· dent;• is presumed innocent
tmtil proved otherwise.
"These · principles are designed to prevent a person
from being wrongly convicted,
TWO KILLED
as well as to protect a person
from more intangible forms of COLUMBUS (UP!) - Mrs.
abuse, such as the destruction Beulah Blanton, 40, and her
of a chosen career of public daughter Venita, 14, Columbus,
were killed early Saturday
service," he said.
"Th~dless 'leaks' must when their car was struck
inevitallly violate not only the broadside by a man driving a
rights of an individual, but the stolen car and being chase&lt;! by
right of every American. · police, · authorities said. Tbe ·
"Given the current climate driver of the car was identified
of wild overreaction, it will not as William Holland, 23, who
be an easy fight. But those of us was already free on bond
who believe fervently in the resulting from charges filed in
values and · institutions that another police case.
form the very core of our
system must continue to repel
every assault against them."

f"'....,......,..........,.......,......,............,..,.,..........,..._..,.........,....

COMSTOCK REALTY
ANNOUNCES:

OPENING OF
MEADOWGREEN ESTATES
NOW SHOWING

MRS. MURPHY DIES
BEVERLY HILLS , Calif.
(UP!) - The wife of former
Sen. George Murphy died
Friday night at the couple's
home here. She was 71.
A family spokesman said
Julie Murphy's death was the
result of a lingering heart
ailment. Murphy was at his
wife's side when she died:

''11le)' do have a real fine
ours thoy lotiPOIIL1llSI can't
~enk tl1e long ones."
outfit, "1'ohlll said. "They It ave
" I don't know whu\ the game weal depth, ability and"tulent.
troved," ll!ly ·~ snld. "We 'l'hey piBY d real good.
hnvc to regroup and go' on.
"We helped thCIO," he said
With HenSon In lhore (tho referring to two fumbles the
backfield) we hnd lhree out· Bucks re,vvered; turning one
standing backs ."
of them into a touchdown.
flayes admitted that he liked
When asked about Greene,
to see the long runs and added TohUI said : ''He's damn good.
that Ute defense employed by He has so much speed."
1'CU 11\•de It easier for such
Tohill blamed stunting -for
occurrences.
contributing to the "long runs"
"When you play so many that led to two of the m•s for
people up front, that (long the wionlng Bucks.
runs) is the problem," Hayes
"We had the stunts, bull! is
said. "Our offense dldn 't have dangerous especially II they hit
the consistency it had two the whole," he said. "Then
weeks ago (when It started the · they'll break.".
season by. shelling Min·
"!think WI) can regroup our
nesola )."
troops and get out after Ar·
TCU Coach Billy Tohlll also kansas," Tohill said. " We
was subdued, but a gr~clous played better defense in the
second hall. We have a good
loser.
defense. We have a better
&gt;ffense than we showed out

. Feeder-Calf sales attracting great Interest

uvailahle for

By. C• E. Bill Ileal..,
POMEROY E~~teulon Agent, Al!rl&lt;'lllture
In the Melga, Athens~!r ~al~producers and (t:!eder cnlf buyel'!l
ire awaliins with l~ttirest •1 ~n~no a~ ,\:wrence County area
Tueaday, Oc!IJiJ!!r 9. The flral will be~~ ~~c~~he~~.l~:!~

Grover retums
to R.otary club

guides
son's lst hunt

We show you how to build your own home t o save thousends, We precut )"otJ r
home to save you high labor cost s. 8uil d in spare hour s and pay yours elf $12 per
hour, We fu rmsh everything and help pay lor your foundation. Ste p by step rn.

stn.1ction s. Save on time, lllbOr, end materials. Build anywh ere ... city or country.
land need not be paid In lu ll. A down payment is not important.
NO
PLA N LIK E THIS,

•J

Central Operating Company's
S~orn .· Plant

Philip

,,

New Haven, W.Va.

FEES RAISED
OXFORD, Ohio (UP! ) - The
board of trustees at Miami
University Saturday approved
a $10 per quarter increase In
boarding fees beginning in the
· winter quarter which will bring
the total to $245 for boarding.
Room fees will remain at $200
per quarter.

has job openings for petmanent employment in the following !WIIs:
,.

Cerical
warehousemen
Welders
Machinists
Electricians
Mechanics
lab Technicians

.r

'Instrument Repairmen
By
.

e QUALITY CONSTRUCTION e CONVENTIONALLY BUILT
e RESTRICTED
e ULTIMATE PRIVACY

GRAND OPENING
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30th
1 PM TIL DUSK
W. T. Watson Road, S Miles West of Gallipolis
On Route 35

. .TERRY
;JOHNSON
..

·

you are missing out on the
finer things In modern
living, because a m obi le
home comb ines spacious

living area, modern fur ni shing s and decor and
sturdy

co nstruction · fr om

top to bottom and end to
end, along with style and
· beau t y .

No

energy

Is

wasted In It s upkeep,
because with a mobile

home there Is practlc•lly

Decorated By Virginia White

no maintenance to worry

Furnished By Larry 's Wayside Furniture

disp lay of medern mobile

.

.

DIVERSIFIED, INC.
BUILDERS
PHONE 446-7364

about. So lose no lime In
comi ng In to see our vast
homes , In m anv

Crane ()peiahd
·
. Bulldmer ()peratOis
laborers .
OperafDB
Boat Operator Ucense

We Will Train Unskilled Applic:anls.
·
. . These jobs ~nwi~ excellent ~ and a benefils propn which indUd•
life 1~11nce, medical Insurance, disability insurance, sick leave; vac:atiute, .holidl)s,
and 'retirement.
·
·
.
the pla:_-'41 a strike is in pmg~ess, the company continue to opa•

Without a -mobile home,

I

APPLICANTS MAY CALL- 675-2913 TO .
ARRANGE AN INTERVIEW.
..

sizes.

makes and models, and
join the r•nks of proud,
happy, sa ti sfied mobile
home owners.

CENT.

~l

OPERATING COMPANY

PDM: Offin Ya• 381, New HIMn, Will Virekt61

·

212•

Teli;hoi•l .,.. codl :»t- MI-:1111

An Equel OpportunitJ Enlpllflr

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

lo
I

•

PHILIP SPORN PLANT

JOHNSON'S MOBILE
HOME SALES
2110 Eutern Ave.
G•llipolls, Ohio
Phone 641 -446.JS47

Hamm

Hamm, l A., Sutton.
Glenroy H. Ewing, Frar,;, K.
Ewing to Dan Rl%er, Lot,
Pomeroy.
Dan S. Rizer, dec., to
Franklin M. Rizer, Cerl. for
Trans., Pomeroy.
Pat E. Mitchell, Marcella
aa It Is used for farming. It SUe Mitchell to Ray Lambert,
maintains that passage of this
measure could moderate the major factor In tile upsurge of
land values. Also cited were
impending Lax Impact.
The September Issue of rising cpmmodi(y prices,
Farm Index, published by the readily available credit, and
USDA's Economic Research pressure from Investors
Service, cited strong non.farm seeking to hedge against Indemand for land as being a Ration.

Juanita Lambert, Deed of
Correction, Rulland.
Arnold Byrge, Blr~ra
Byrge to Harry J. Denllon,
Kathryn Denl!on, Lot, Middleport.
Charles H. Cornell, All*
Comell to Samuel H. Slmondl,
Bertha D. Slmonda, Lot,
Chester.
Raymond F. H1tlleld,
Bertha Elllen Hatfield to
Bradford Lewis, Hue! J .
Lewis, 3 A., RuUand.
Rosa Hayward, dec. to
Georgia Mae Hayman, Aft. lor
Trans., Racine.

WE HAVE SOME
EXCEPTIONAL BUYS NOWI

-

·

F~ther

beeome home owners ...theMiles way ,

SPIDERS ROMP
RICHMOND, Va. (UP!)
Rtmning backs Barty Smith
and Bob Allen scored · two
touchdowns each Saturday and
Richmond's defense remained
unscored upon as the Spiders
demolished Wake Forest 41~.

Virgil Hamm, Mary

to Edgar R. Harnrn, Shirley J,

Explosion of land
values dangerous

1

annual dinner

Mcig~ PropertyTransfers

•

•

swnmer, SUUIeeder prJres wlllaverug the hiKhest on record for
lust hall olthe year.
A week later the same publication reported meat consumption oo a per c•plts basis dropped 5 pet. below the yeljl'
earll~r level durin~ the first hall of 1973, und the trend i• ex·
peeled to ~onllnue throU~Chout the second l111lf as reduced supplies and high prices have altered the traditional pattern of In'
the NEW in l·'ARMING
creasing consumption .
During the first six months of this year, per capita con·
COLUMBUS - The Oh1o
~lies Yard at I p.m. and the 11econd at the Ohio Valley Livestock
sumption
adjusted
to
an
annual
rAte
was
down
to
180pounds,
the
Farm
Bureau's Board ~f
"" eo! Yard In Oalllpolla at a p.m.
A thlrd1!f0up of people interestad in the sales butelgbt to ten loweat since 11187. Recent we~lrness In live cattle and hog prices Directors Friday said rising
montlu later, will be the consumers who will be buying the meat generally has not been reflected al retail and meat sales are land values could produce
continuing at a slow pace.
JX"Operty tax increases of 8.1
produced by these feeder calves.
CatOe on feed on Sepl. tin lite seven maJor feeding states much as 50 per cent over the
The Athens sales, according to Paul Baer, secrelary, has
~er 500 calves already consigned but more will be accepted totaled 9,t66,1lt10 head, 8 pet. more than a year ago but up only next three years.
"These paper increases In
· rough Mr. Baer, W, S, Michael, or Earl Knight Metgs County slightly over a month earlier. August placementa were down ~
pet.
to
1,464,1lt10
head
while
fed
cattle
marketings
during
1\ugust
JX"Oper!y
values don't put any
directors: or througb tbe sales yards at either Athens or
Galllpolla, or lllrough the directors or Extension Office in the were down 20 pet. Indicating the gain In cattle on feed Is due to money in farmers' pockets,"
cattle betng held ,back from the market rather than from ex· said Leonard Schnell, Farm
other counties.
·
panded production.
Bureau 's president. "They
As always happens at this lime of year, feeder cattle buyers
Heavier cattle are already showing up at markets. During can, however, increase his
are out sc~ the countrysides trying to pick up the calves
August,
the average steer weight was up 39 pounds and heifers taXI'S to the point where he
belpre the lllllea1hopefully at a lower price than they will bring at
the sales which are annually spon110red by the Southeastern Ohio was up 25 pounds. With larger number of heavy cattle In feedlots may either be forced to try to
and coming to market combined with reduced consumer meat increase his returns for the
Beef Cattle Improvement Associatloo (SOBCJ.A) .
A third sale will be held this year In November at the Ohio purchased, current cattle price weakness Is likely to be amplified crops and food he produces, or
in the next two or three weeks.
sell out If he caMot pay the
ValleyUvestockYardsonNov. lat 8p.m.
REGARDLESS OF ECONOMIC conditions and 'meat sup. inflated ..taxes from farm
For the last sevefal months all three of t~ groups feeder
earnings.
calf .protlucers, cattle feeders, and the consumers, as 'well as Pli es and consumpt lon, be tween 800 and 1,200 feeder calves will
middlemen (truckers, packers, processors, and retailers) have be sold at the Athens Livestock Company Barn at 1 p.m., October . The organization clted a
and the Ohio Valley Livestock Barn at Gallipolis the evening of recent t.JSDA publlcatlon which
been lamenting the high cost of meat, the high cost of feed, the 9October
9.
·
reported Dhlo farm real estate
costi!rlce squeeze, and the total economics of the beef cattle
Prpducers know that all calves consigned must weigh over values had increased 16 per
business. ·
.
27~ pounds and show calf characteristics. Bull calves will not be cent for the year ending March
No one seems to know why the present situation in catq, and accepted. .
.
I, 1973. The range of increases
meat prices exlats or what the future will bring, If one knew how
The calves will be graded Into uniform lots according to in farmland values went from a
many people are going to conUnue eating T-bone steak or how
breed, sex, quality, weight and color by the Grader appointed, by low of 2per eent in California to
many pounds of meat the consumer had in the freezer, then some the Executive Committee.
a high of 21 per cent in
o! the questions could be answered.
Aproducer having any quesilon about the suitability of a calf Wisconsin.
ON SEPI'EMBER 18 TilE weekly Econogram, published by for the
sale should request on-the-farm inspection. The Directors
''We have no assurance that
Ohio State University agricultural Extensloo ecooomlsts
reserve the right for on-the-farm Inspection for all calves. The the rate of Increase in Ohio will
reported feeder cattle supplies, placements, prices and Executive Committee of the Southeastern Ohio Beef cattle stay as low as 16 per cent anmarketings are and have been ina state of uncertainty,
Improvement Association· is authorized to make all decisions nually," Schnell said.
Clanging factors involve rapid increase in herd size, more necessary in the receiving of tbe calves and the operation of llle
He also pointed out that, in
calves and yearlings available, grass is excellent In most areas, sale.
View of recent State SUpreme
prices of feedatuffs are relatively high, uncertainty about .
All calves are to be. at the Athens sale stockyards before 1 Court rulings, land tax
availability of feedstuffs due to large exports, declinlllg feed p.n\. the day before tl)e feeder calf sale. Tagging and in-weighing valuation adjustments must he
caltle prlces, .consumer boycotts, price ceilings, bant)ing of DES, will start at 6 a.m. No calves will be welghect from l1 a.m. to made on an annual basis.
surge in consumer demand highlighted by hoarding, etc.
11:30 a.m. because of lun~h hour.
Farm Bureau has been a
The uncertilmtles reflect higher .risk that gets reflected in
Due to the evening sales at Gallipolis on October 9, calves major proponent of Issue I, the
prices. Tbe result appears to be later placement in feedlots at may be delivered after 3 p.m. the day before the sale and before proposed constitutional
heavier weights and somewhat lower·feeder prices than in the 11 a.m. the day of the sale. In-weighing and tagging will be done amendment which could
when they are delivered.
permit farmland to·be taxes·at
Its agricultural value, 110 long

GALUPOUS - Tlckel'l for
the Ga llla county FQrm
Bureau's annua l dinner
meeting Thursday niRhl at
Green Elementary school are
still available, &amp; farm bureau
spokesman an noun ce d
Saturday.
Tickets may be purchased at
the farm bureau of/ice In
Gallipolis, or from one of the
following board members for
f2 .50 : Maurice . Thom~s ,
Howard Childers, Norris
Carter, Mrs. · C. W. Shaver,
Mrs . Lawrence Hinerman,
Mrs. Verlln Swain, Fr~nk Mills
III, Ed Buller or Norm Swlnd·
ler.
Robert Scherer, Columbus,
poullry and egg marketing
there."
manager and manager of
TWO KILLED
Conklin Farm 'N Dairy S!&lt;Jres
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!)
for Landmark, Inc., Columbus,
MlDDLEPORT Ken Twyla Bailey, 39, Nelsonville, will ~e the guest speaker.
Grover, local photographer, and a passenger in her car,
En!ertainment wlll be
was "re-inducted'' into · the Kay Kuhn, 35, also of provided by winners of the !973
Middleport • Pomeroy Rotary Nelsonville, were killed early Gallla County Junior Fair
Club Friday evening !ollowing Saturday in a tw~ar accident Talent Contest.
dinner at Heath United on Ohio 33 about 10 miles north
New directors will be ~lected
Methodist Church. Paul Smart of here. Benjamin Raymond, during the evening's activities.
welcomed Grover, who had 24, Columbus, In the other car
resigned about two years ago was lreated and released at
because of the demands on his Mount St. Mary's Hospital in
ASHLAND UPSET .
Nelsonville. The accident Is
time by his business.
·
SPRINGFIELD,
Ohio (UP!)
Chet Tannehill led a brief still under investigation.
- Junior tailback Glenn
program of member parHendrix rushed for 128 yards
ACCEPTS
POSITION
ticipation.
CHICAGO (UP! ) -Chicago and one touchdown Saturday to
Guests were the Rev. E.
multimillionaire . insurance lead Wittenberg University to a
Fischer, John Reece and Jack
24·7 upset of previously un·
Bacon. Lad.les of the church executive W. Clement Stone defeate(! Ashland College,
said
Friday
he
had
accepted
served dinner.
with "honor" a trustee position ninth-ranked small college.
with the Agnew Defense Fund
SUPPORT GILLIGAN
and urged others to help pay
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The for the vice president's legal
·ARMY DEMOLISHED
Ohio AFUIO Saturday issued expenses. "I feel it an honor to
WEST POINT, N. Y.i (tlPI)
a statement in slrong support accept the position of trustee," - California, with a host of
of a series of dinners to be said Stone. Other trustees are goOd running backs and a cool·
conducted in the near future Sen. Barry M. ·Goldwater, R· cat quarterback named Vince .
saluting Gov. John J. Gilligan Ariz. and former Gov. Warren Ferragamo, demolished Army
because he has been "a E. Hearnes of Missouri.
~1-6 Saturday before a crowd of
governor of the people."
40,982.

GAME ENDS IJoO
NEW YORK (UP!)
Unable to convert on three
early scoring opportunities,
Bucknell battled Columbia to a
IJoOdeadlock Saturday, the first
scoreless tie fo. the Bisons
since 1940.

.

•

Ha.yes subdued at' Henson's loss Ti·kctsstru '
CO I.UMBUS (UP! l- It w.s"
sub&lt;lurd Woody llayes who
greeted newsmen Sat ur day
alter the But·keyc's 37-3 victory
over Texas Christian.
.
But Httyes !md u reason to be
concet·netl b•cauij• in the
JX"OCess. the Buckeyes lost lull·
back Champ Henson for the
remainder of the year with a
knee iniiU'Y.
Henson, a tH , !!Z-pound
junior , led the nation in scoring

\

''

Now we are sllrplng quietly
ByT.A. Wolter •
down
an old tral straining to
Dlatrlet Manager
see or orear old bushy tall, A
IRoNTON - It was dark. few days before I had rather
The headllghts revealed an foolishly said to Jeff that I
would guarantee him at least
qnbroken view of weeds and one
shot. Now I was really
tall grass aa the car proceeded under pressure of having to
gingerly down the old logging produce that squirrel. not only
road. The vegetation made a from .the standpoint of being
his father but the •11-knowlng
soft swiahlng sound, yielding Forest Ranger as well.
We
tried everything .
and springing back to leave
only the wheel marks as Stalking, sneaking, still hunling, separating but .not a
evlilence of passage.
glimpse, not a flash - nothing.
Inside, a young man and his An · occasional bird or the
11-year-old son were speaking hammering of a woodpel;,ker or
Its call that sounds suspiciously'
quietly. In the rear a slightly like
a barking squirrel under
older man aat engrossed in the right coodltlons was all we
private thought. The car came saw or heard.
The time had come to meet
to a stop at a point where the Russ
at. our predetermined
old logging road had slipped spot ond my stock had fallen to
away .leaving an Impassable rock bottom. Jeff had ~lven up
secretly I dldn t have
gorge in the roadway. The first and
much hope either but we
visible indications of ~awn continued to hunt our way back
could be seen through the tree down the logging road to Russ.
Russ spoke quietly to us just
tops to the east as the OC·
off the edge of the old trail
cupants got out of the car. "There's one up this tree. but I
From far away came the can'tspot him. Come over here
lonesome notes of a coon hound Jeff and I'll try to g~t you a ·
shot." Instant reaction I Jeff
baying the last few times got
careful ly Into position
before sunrise called an end to under the tree while Russ fired
tile hunt. Nearby blrda started
(Continued on Page 28)
twittering and nutterlng aa
IIley began the day's seardt for
food.
'
The car doors were dosed 1
softly and the trunk opened.
Gtm caaes and shell boxes were
opened. The odor of gun oil and
Hoppe's No. 9 hung brleny in
the still morning air. The trio
moved quleUy down the trail
with only an occasional muttering as they encountered the
large wood's spider webs
lltretched across the roadway.
BooiB and pant legs became
soaked in the heavy morning
dew. Another half mile down
the traU IIley spilt up, the man
atd his aon continued further
down what waa now only a
traU, the other man stayed
behind. It was llghter now.
From the next hollow over
came the muffled · boom of a
COMPACT
ttltotgun. The second day of
atlo's19'13 squirrel seaaon had
PORTABLE
begun.
WASHER
If you haven't guessed by
MODEL WLP 1010N
now, I'm llle fatlter of lllat 11·
yelll'-old boy and the other nian
referred to II Russ Mallow,
• Por11ble - roll• to elnk when
resident manager of Lake·
you w1n1 to w .. h. roll• out of
WIY when Wllhfng II done.
Vesuvius. We were hunting a
.
mile north of Lake VesuviUI.
• Campoct - only 21" wldt, 21"
'l,'hls was a very special hWit ·
dup, 38" high OVtr·ILf.
for me, or I should aay Jeff,
• No opeolel wiring nudtd beca~~~e !hilt waa hla first hWit
oper1t11 on reguler. properly
where he was allowed to carry
grounded, 115-vott houllhold
biJ 01111 gun, a .410 guage single
current.
lhot.
.
• No apecltt plumbing nudod After several years of
h1ndy faucet conneotor 1n1p1
pondering the con:ect age to let
onto foucet odapttr (lurnlthtd
him bellin hWitlng, I finally
with waoher) qulokty and ooally.,
cleclded thl• wu the year.
• Big copooity - woahtt up to
Gttllng ready for our flr~t
i1 poundo of ml•td lobrtoo.
hunt Wll fun . Firat thtro wu
lht llctrllt to buy and I got
• Two w•ttr·ltvel••feotlona.
quilt 1 kick out of tttlng his
big grin whtn he aigfl4~ hll
namt on lht llctnlt. Ht think•
he'• a prelty cool cat tnd ht
knew that' II wlln't caol for tn
tltvtil yllr old to grin whtn ht
ONLY
algntd hll name but ht couldn't
ht!P trlnnlnt.
Ttttn wt h41d to twitch from
No, Uhollo No, 7112 ahot al tht
1111 mlnult far aomt un·
ltlhomable rHIOII w• hardly
know our1tlve1 . Flntlly thtrt
waalh41 chtcklng tnd cltanlng
Df gun1 the night btfart.

NEW Master Mi~

Calflacn

... your calves will love ill

3 Used International Forage Harvesters
In Excellent Condition
and •
3 Used Tractors to pull Them

1. High Digestibility
2. Palatability

I

3. Rap/d. Mixing Qualities

4. Suspension Quality

GENERAL DESCRIPTION:
2-NO. 50 INTERNATIONAL QtOPPERS
1-NO. 350 INTERNATIONAL QtOPPER
1-NO. 706 INTERNATIONAL DIESEL (75 HP)
1-NO. 656 INTERNATIONAL DIESEL (65 HP)
1-NO. 544 INTERNATIONAL DIESEL (55 HP)

· Your young newborn calt,
it she is to become a top herd rep/acemenranimal,
needs to.be started on a high quality milk replacer.

CENTRAL SOY A
OF OHIO

'r
~
I

I

Priced To Sell - Excellent Condition ·

lrd &amp; Sycamore Streets
Gallipolis~

I

Ohio

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.

...

"Your Farm Supply Super Mkt."

PHONE 992-2176

c

POMEROY

"
~

......,,
·~•

...

Hotpoint

A NEW NAME AT LANDMARK

POMEROY LANDMARK

SCC)RE BIG
Again tltis year our No. 1
goal is to mlike Hotpolnt
quality, service end value
your ~est Buy I

...~

YOU CAN IUY AT

LANOMA~K -

Everyone Can!

They
· Stack!

. JACK W. CARSEY, Mgr.
Serving Meigs, Gallla, Mason Counties

Open Mon.-Sat, Til 6100 P.M.

PHONE 992-2111

COMPACT
PORTABLE
ELECTRIC DRYER
MODEL DLP 1050P
• Flta 1lma1t lnywhere - on a wall,
under 1 oaunter.ln a corner
or olo11t .

• Only 211-3/8" high, 21 " wldt,
1.8-314" dup.
• No ext., nil txh1u1ting required ,

• No apeotot wtrtng nudtd operottt on reguttr houoohold
current.
• ThrH eye:.. eelectlone -

JMrmenent preA, normal and

fluff dry.

• Tlmtd oontrol - up to 2\', hourt
ol drying tlmo.
• Seper1t1 atert 1wltch

• Up-front lint llltor
• Opttonot watt mounting ~It
IVIIIIbfe It extrl coat.

ONLY

MODEL OLP 10IQIIII

• C11ten provided far 111eln

portability.
PIIODELS WLP 1010N
DLP IO&amp;OP
MODEL WLP 1_0 10N

.,

I

�16- The Sunday 'l'lmn · Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 30, 1971

:H- TbrSundayTinlf ·S&lt;ontlnel,Sunday,sepl 30, 1973

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE c~~n;~~T~os~,u!,
Ca ll

Ollie

Wanted To Buy

Connollv

Lo ng

Bottom Oh•o !iSS 4190

SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 30, 1973
ACROSS

l -CI1ns
6-Saucy
10-Mtahtander
14- Urslne uumals
19-Eieles nnts
21-At 1 dtstan~e
22-Drlnk heavily
23--co lorful bad
24-Sh•m
26-Sura•ct~l
28--S~elest

uws

29-Frult seed
30-Tttle of ru pect

(pi)

-

32- Growlna out of
33-Pin()(hte te rm
14-Sou~hwl!!stern

Indian

35-Petlod of time
37-Tht pineapple
39-cravat
4Q-Harse s neck
hair

41 - Emptoyed
42-Disturbance
44-.Paleneu
46-Vthlcle
47-Man s name
48-Girls name
~0 -Pertalnlne to
huvenly
bodl•s
52- Hurries
53-Rupees (abbr J
55-Tirplulln
57-Symbol for
yttrium

58-European
59-Army meal
60-Partnt (colloq)
62-f'OISUSIVII

pronoun
64- Ptll
66-Babylon1an
deity
68-Symbol for
tant1lum
69-Confront
7G-Transaress

135- Appronch

71-Natl ... e
Egypt•an
73-Negllgent
75-Each

1J7- Harbor
139- NhJSu: as

77 - Dep~tnlon

78- Mustcal drl'lmA
80- Worker tn
metals
!U - Ttnlg!i In Jaw
86--Vtstons
87-Gre;,t
89- Poem
92- Let 11
95- Protect• ve
d

tche~

120-Adventuroui
121-Noblewomen
124-Anlmal s feel
126-Siave
127-Dtfflcult
wolf

130- Man s
mck name

132-Gull hke bird
133-Ntmbus

134-Untt of
Stamese
currency

tree

51 - Mongolia n

52- Retrograde
53-Puerto
56-Gave
59-Five star
g~neral

60-lntellect
6J- PIIaster

1-.-Ptthy
2-WP. Irde r

63- Dtstlnc l class

3- Pa •d tn
advance
4- Smatl bird
S-Observes
&amp;-Parent (colloq )
7-Ntwt

65-G rl s name
67-Res tdue
69-Sy mbol for Iron
70-Felt through
senses
72-Jogs
74-Two (Roman
number)

a-unusual
9-Cap tla l o f

New Jersey
10- 0ecla re
11-Frutt of pme
12- Har..,est
goddess
13-Symbol for
tellunum
14-M ustcal
orsan tzat ton
15-S ea eagle
16-0isturbs
17-Decayed
18-Sptrtled horse
20-Cut

76---EKISIS

WANTED
tor
"uctlon.
househOld
ooods
TooiJ
nwst
NO 1 Copper 60c . rad1&amp;tor!.
anv th mg Ql value Will buy or
30c brass 20c, batteries 90c,
sell oo comml,slon W tlt hau l
c lean dry Ginseng roots 560
Call 992 3354 or 99 2 27Y'J
lb
yellow root S4 50 Mav
Havmans
725tfc
apple 60c M A II all R:eeds.
v l tte Phone J78 6?-49
OLD furnlfure oak tables
9 23 ttc
clocks Ice bOJCeS brass beds
dishes
or
con1plete
CORNER cupboards
wall
households Wrlle M
o
c;upbo&amp;rds chests old ouns
M i ller Rl 4 Pomeroy Ohto
any C01ldi11on A l so blue
call 9926271
decorated stoneware Write
5 13 tfc
p 0 Box 44 Martinsburg
-~------Ohio ~)93S or call 1 484 4·HO
after7pm
For
Sale
or Trade
9 a.9Jtc
MILLING machi ne tor meta( wdt tra d~ fol' dr i ll press or
Help Wanted
would like to buy drill press
any srze Phone 992 74 94
__._
9 30 !tc

- -------

element
118- Trade
120-C ha5ottsed
121- Wan
122-Dolttsh
123-let tt stand
125-Piug
126-Couch
127- Chapea.us
129-0rgans of
hea r!!)g
131-Town m Ireland
132- Former
Russli'l n rul ers
133-Work.man
134-A month
136-Decays
138- l ncllna tion

1$5-P•nched

86-E)(cavates
87-Sounded a
horn
88-Hoatfrost
89- Bone
90-Ate to lose

Dai~

Sentinel

II Mus1

• 4 JO Datlv
ti nldttlQ
9911101

61&lt;

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO
77l-5SS4
Mooon, W

a 12 Sat

Mtddteport 0

992 2094
606 E Matn Pomeroy

ALL WEATHER
ROOFING CO.

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and
FURNITURE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Phone 992-2550

Stop In and See Our
Floor Dtsplay.

9 21 6tc

V•

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED

144-lt feless
147-A state
(abb r )
148-Sa •lo r (colloq)

J

'

Ph. 742-6271

Gene's
Body Shop

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

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

I

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

Notice

by

!Jn lltd tuturt

NOTICE

Public Sale Estate Auction

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

11t

~}ndle :u~

For Rent

Wanted

423 7521

Phone 992 5858

BELPRE 0

SHOOTING Match, Forked Run

FURN ISHED
2 bedroom
FABRICS - Biggest little shop
double w1de trai le r
m
1n the area Guaranteed all
Syra cuse Call992 2&lt;141 after s
first quality polyester double
p m Monday through Frtdey
knIts no seconds
W tde
No weekend tails
9 27 3tc setectton of coordtnated
9 30 lfc
colors tor fall and wmter We
SHOOTING
Match
Corn
keep over 1 500 yds m stock
BEDROO M small house
Hollow Gun Club Turn f~rsf
and get new cloth every three
furn ished or unfurntShed
rtght after Mites Cemetery
weeks 54 98 to S7 98 values
POLES
Ra11road Sf
M i ddleport
Rutland Factory choked
pnced at 52 98 to $3 98 nothtng
Phone 992 7494
gun1 only Sunday Sep1 30 1
higher 10 pet discount to
MAXIMUM
pm
home economics students
9 21 3tc Carolina Fabr1cs Route 7
DIAMETER
one half m tie north ot Chester
12 lC. SO MOBILE home 2
Ohio
at Henry Hunter
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp;WIGS
bedrooms Ultl tt1es turnt sl'1ed
ON
residence Drive a little Call H2 5980
September Spec1ttls are
Lemon Facial Bath Bath &amp;
Save a lot •
9 30 61c
LARGEST END
Shower Gel. Jr Fac1a1 Mask
9 30 tip
Kover Kotes LIQUid Rouge
TRAILER
FOR
RENT
Hair Sprays Shampoos
K
ANTIQUE Auct •on Frtdey
marr 1ed couples one chtl d
Oct
5 at 11 a m
on
Beautv Bars Suntan Spray
permitted No pets depos 1t
and others Phone Helen Jane
Washingtoll Co fairgrounds
required Bob s Mob i le Co urt
Brown 992 5113 Many thanks
Marietta Ohio Fine turn1ture
Syracuse 992 295 1
BUNDLED SLABS
to our new and regular
as follows very old pine dry
9 30 lfc
customers
stnk round marble top stand
1
on ornate Iron base Ch1P
9 11 tfc
MOBILE home adults only
penda\e style Governor
Call 992 5592
Turnthrop
desk
f i nge r
DELIVERED
9 28 He
carved love seet, mat c htng
cha ir French loveseat 3 pc
TO
cher r y parlor suite ftres1de
unfurn i Shed
4
HOU SE
bench with ptpe holders
bedrooms nice yard wall to
Mtcro Fide Arrows 19 95 doz
rosewood P•neapple poste r
W.!lll carpe ting
air c on
bed match ing dresser brass
dittOnlnljl 1 f ... rn iSht:d Clpert
Dura . F•bre Arrows 17 95 doz
marble top stand bed sewmg
men t with 3 rooms. bath 1
Bear&amp; Indian Bows
ma c ~lne with teardrop pulls
dupleK Phone 992 2780 or 992
lndlon wolh Ltfetome
34]2
marble top walnut dresser On Old Rt. 33
Gu•rentee
3pc marble - full marble top
9 2J ttc
dresser 2 nlce swivet top card
- - - - -- - - - - - - - Phone
992-2689
INDOOR SHOOTING
tables Bentwood rocker with
3 AND 4 ROOM furni~ H~d and
zo Pet of Accessoron
Pomeroy, Ohto
cane beck and seat . 4 drop
unfurnished
ap.,rtments
Open Evenn~gs 6 30 to 10
leaf walnut table marb l e top
Phone
992
5m
washstand 2 nice walnut
- Closed Mondon4 12 lfc
bedJ dresser base 6 cane NotiCe
-bottom
chairs
Other
BOW HUNTER
ROOM S by th e w eek, $18 up
SWEEPER
R:epatrs
Parts
dressers 6 drawer cherry
Me tgs Inn Pom eroy
Coolvolle
Main St
Suppl tes Drscount prices on
chest wrlt lng desk and book
General merchandtSe fhru - - - -------.l..._ .!._.!._'l...!_fc
case marble top credenza
our ca talog department PRIVATE meeting room for
oak washstand sp tnet desk
INFORMATION ABOUT:
Phone
367 77 36
Da vis
any organiza tion phone 992
wi cker baby buggy hall tree
397S
Vacuum Clea n er Store 10
ctawfoot butters chest and
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
5 p m Add ison Ohio
a m
bookcue pett1toat m~rror
3 11 lfc
__,
9 23 301&lt;
SOCIAL SECURITY
mahogany pedestal stand 6
Queen Ann chairs maple
CONSUMER PROTECTION
TRA IL ER at Sy n1 cuse adults
ctaw toot ped!Stal
round
only Call 992 35 25
RUMMAGE
Sale
Will
be
held
at
table 4 maple cha•rs patr
.__
9 18 lf c
th
e
Sacred
Heart
Church
AND
G w w lamps - not old ~ 3
Pomeroy
basement
Oct
4
pc marble clock set 2 brass
and S Thursday and Frtday 9 MOBILE l']om~ Splt ce Baer schandel iers r~d satin glass
hll 3
GREAT COUNTRY
Mar ket Svra cuse
parlor lamps brass parlor
__,_
9 25 9tc
a 26 lfc
lamp nice Chinese room stze
Oriental rugs n1ce roorn size
Pers ian rug tapestnes some
Stiver ch1na bed crocheted
work linens glass copper
Iars pewter candelabra and
many other nice ttems Very
fine sale of beautiful mer
chand lse Open 8 a m day of
Mlddlepot1 Pomeroy
sale
Brtng a undw l ch
On Tuesday, Oct.
at
Haro ld Goddard tnc
9 30 2tc
o'clock p.m., a rea estate me&amp;ting will
Sportsman Club noon Sun
day Factory choked guns
only

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

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

10"

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

$8.00 Per Ton

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

6.00 Per Ton

AnENTION

BOW HUNTERS

OHIO
PALLET CO.

THE

______ _______

_________ ___ _

___ ________ _

STEREO
92.1 FM
WMPO

REAL ESTATE MEETING
2, 1973,

I

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

YARD Sate at JoAnn S!ewart s
Depot
Street
Rutland
Se ptetT~ber 30 Beginnmg 11

am

9

30

2:00

1tc

YARD Sa le 120 State Street
Pomeroy Monday Tuesday
end Wednesdav 12 t11l S
__.
9 30 3tc

_________ ___ _

FLEA MAR:KET at Addtson
Ohlo, Sunday 1111 1 Dealers
welcomt P &amp; J Odds and
Ends

be held at Southern Oh1o Coal Com .
pany's mam off1ce localed on Rt. 689
near Point Rock, Ohto, for the purpose
of establishing procedures to advertise
rea I estate listings for new and
prospective Southern Ohio Co a I
Company Employees. All realtors and
other concerned persons are urged to
attend.

Auto Sales

--------------SE PTIC TANKS AROBIC

Thefollowtng wtll be sold at the residence loc.ated approx
1 mtle east of Syrac:use, Ohto on S R 124
Tractor &amp; equtpment 9N Ford Fergusen new tires 3 pt
bush hog 3 pt cullovators, J pi blade 1 foot disk, John
Deere garden tractor wi th 48 Inch mower and culttvators

SEWAGE SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPAIRED
MILLER SANITAT ION
STEWART OHIO PH 662
3035
10 4 tfc
NEIGLERS FOR HOUSE
BUILOERS CALL GUY
NEIGLER RAC IN E OHIO

cars &amp; truck 1967 Mustang 1965 Cadillac 1962 Dodge
lru&lt;k for parts only boal &amp; trailer, 17 foot Starer aft
Ioberg Iass boat with 60 HP Johnson motor and lraller will
be sold as one unll tools 'I' Thor Impact wrench B&amp;O

FOR: SALE by the Citi Zens
9 11 30tp
Nat1onal Bank 1971 Chevrolet
Klngswood Statlon wagon
$\ ,~95 1971 Gremlin 2 door 4 WILL TRIM or cut trees and
sh rubbery al so cleQn out
passenger
basements atti cs and etc
9 30 31t
Call 949 322 1 or 742 4&lt;141
83130tc
1969 FORD XL Deluxe Interior
convertible ltgh t ye llow saoo
AUTOMOBILE msurance been
A lot of ca r for the money 327
cancelled?
Lost
your
Mechanic Street Pome roy
operators license Call 992
9 30 3tc
7428

------------.--

98 OLDSMOBI L E1 &lt;1 dr hard
lop v1nyl top full power and
a1r cond1t1onmg 7 way ad
iustable steer tng wheel low
mileage Ca ll 992 5510
9' 28 4t c

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

1968 OLDSMOBILE 98 Wh ite
n l th black Inferior
air
cond 1t1oned new tires i!lnCl (iiie
owner
Show room clean

$1 195 Call 742 5869

9 28
- - - -- - - - - - - " - - -

6

mist ytng yangs guns 410 shot gun and 22 rille,
camper 16 It Shasta camper wi th awning, '' very good'
Also Mls , meat black fan gas refngerator, water skis
porch swJng, wooden barrels sca les bridles, go cart &amp;

parts, jacks and mise From the estate of Sara Woode
glassware tntludmg oil lamp Oxford sllverplate Vtclrola
&amp;old records, new quills rocker, trunk table
ESTATE OF WILLIAM HARDEN, O..t
DOROTHY HARDEN, Admx
TERMS CASH
Not responslbleforatttdenlsor loss of
property
CARNAHAN AUCTION SERVICE,
J Carnahan, D Smtih Racine, Ohio 949-2708 or 949 ZOJJ

151f&lt;

BRU SH HOG S 4x5 If , phone
992 5858
7 15 trc

--------------LOTS of cMrysanthemums for

1970 DODGE POLARA ............. }1395
&lt;1 door lactory air automatic transm iss ion power
steering &amp; brakes good wh•te wall t ires whlle f lnlsh
vinyl root radio heavv duty suspension

&lt;1 door 6 cyiinder automati c transm1ss lon good tires
clea n 1ntenQr, beige flntsh radto &amp; heater, real economy
&amp; a popular model

SPECIAL

1968 FORD FAIRLANE ST. WAGON 695
1

v 8 automatic trans, P steering &amp; brakes air con
dltloned rad1o good t ires I owner less than 60 000 mdes

Shop Mason W 1/a Call 773
SU7
9 26 ttc

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

U PHOL STER: you r own fur
nlture we ha~Je ell the su p
1965 CHEVY
&lt;I speed
Mag
plies
you
will
n ee d
wheels r ebuil t 327 engine
new pa int mus1 sell 992 2392
Uphol s.tc-ry Fabrics a very
915 61p
large se l ection or nylons
ve lv et s Her cu lon vinyls - In
EXCELSIOR Sa lt Works, E
cotton prints also re mm~n t s
Ma ln St Pomeroy All kinds
Foam for ClUShlons and
or salt water pellets water
padd ng Burl&amp;p denims
nugge ts block salt and own
cambr ic roam Qhie zippers
Ohio River Sell Phone 992
sprmgs and cli ps chip boards
3891
l egs sewing thread dfi CI"On
,_,
6 5 1ft
ta cks, webb ing welt cord
cotton swivel b&amp;SOII and all
other sup plie s you will need GROCERY business for sale
New furniture- at low low
Building for sa l e or lease
prices Pomeroy Rec overy
Phone 773 56 18 from 8 30 p m
622 E. Meln 992 755.t
to 10 p m for appolntrpent
II 31 301 c
3·20 tfc

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

_______ _______

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

,..--· ....o.tt_""'
/ otck

__ ._.,
&amp;

, .• i_

really
how

know

WALNUTS
TO OUR MECHANICAL HULLER

·Your Walnuts will be
Hulled Free of Charge
And We Will Pay You

$500

"custom meat cutting"
1

BRING YOUR UNHULLED

!

_

Per Hundrtd Pounct 1
Aft« They Are Hulled

START BUYING OCTOBER 1, 1973

to cut vp... ..1

Dick Vaugh1n
992-3374

H T Cpe good I .res clean v1nv l tnm maroon fln1sh
power steering &amp; brakes. automatic trans radio

Up to 12 Year Fmancmg- We Serv1ce What
We Sell.

1971 OiEVROLET Vz TON ..... .!2195

1967 CHEVROLET

H&amp;N day old or started l:.eghorn QUARTER horse mare very
gentle good with chtldren
pullets Both floor or cage
grown available Poultry
$75
9 28 12tp
..._
houslng
&amp;
automat10n
Modern Poultry 399 w Main
1965 CLASSIC Rambler e)(
Pomeroy 992 2164
celtent co nd ition Maytag
9 30 ltc
wrmger type wasMer dog
house- well butlt 2 btkes- 20
NEW SWIVEL rockers and
inch each tricycle boys &amp;nd
recliners In velvet and 100
g1rts cloth (ng- slze 8 to 10
percent nylon with scotch
Cal l 992 3373 after 5 p m
guard and vinyl at the low
9 28 61&lt;
low cash and carry price of
$69 95
each
Pome roy
Recovery
622 E Main GOOD dry ear corn Phone 985
3538 Call after s p m Paul
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
Karr Chester Oh10
9 30 6tc
9 28 31p
LARGE yard sate Wednesday
Thursday Oct 3 and 4 131
Lew1s St , New Haven W Va
New G E sweeper new bunk Real Estate For Sale
camp cot Fenton glassware
3 years old
3
Other glassware , Jewel ry HOUSE bedroom
wal
to
wall
car
men, women and children s
pettng refr igera tor and stov e
clothing All s1zes Numerous
inc luded , llvl ng room ktt
merchandise not mentioned
chen uttl•ty ro om bl!lth
9 30 3tp
outstde
utI tt y
storage
M!ddleport Phone 992 506-4
CARPORT sate Oct 3 and 4
after6pm
from 9 a m till S p m Avons
9 21 12tp
toys and mise 918 S Thtrd
---~- --------M iddleport
9 30 3tc 10 ACRES - 7 acres bottom House that needs repairs end
YARD SALE Oct 4 and 5 10
outbuildings
Located on
a m fill 6 p m New and used
Lengsville Dexter Road Call
clothtng, men women and
992 7791 after 5 p m
chJidren s
Cloth ing
2
9 27 31&lt;
a1um1num storm 3 trac k
wmdows size 29 wide 6 feet
71J&lt;J 1n long 1 outside door NEW br1ck three bedroom
with glass s1ze 6 feet 10
home tn Racme batn 1tv 1ng
Inches long 2 feet 9 In width
room k1tchen full basement,
Other odds &amp; ends Utah
garage attached hot air
Swan Tuppers Plains Ohio
furnace. all utilities ALSO
on State Rt 7 Not responsible
two room &amp; bath cement
1or accidents
block house 10 acres Shown
by appo1ntment
Rodney
Downmg
Broker
M•d
J FAMILY rummage sa te tn
dleport Ohio Phone 992 J731
930 21c
Coats bulldlno next to
Firestone Sto re In Mid
dleport 9 a m ttlt 6 p m
SMurday, Oct 6
9 30 ltc

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

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

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

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

-------------NEW 1973 ZIGZAG sew ing

mach1nes In orig inal fa ctory
carton
Zig zag to make
buttonholes sew on buttons
monograms and make fancy
des1gns with Just the tw ist of
a stngle dial Lefl ln laY a way
and never been used Wi ll sell
tor only S47 cash or term s
available Phone 992 2984

OLIVER 60 tractor With six loot
nmt mounted mower all
good rubber and tn aood
Shipe, S600 Nate Vanaman
phOne 7A2 5322
9 30 6tc

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

1972 YAMAHA Enduro 250,
exceltenr condit ion $A75

____________30 6tp
Tuppers Plein• 667 ll36
9

......

R:EOUCE excess fluids with
FluldtX - Lose weight with
Oex A Oltf c::apsutel
at
Nelson Orugl

lip
REGISTERED flvo yeer Ap
9 lO

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

paloOSI mare well broke
oentit e-.ce ll enl pteuure
mare Make nice show horn
or brood mare Call 667 3723
9 ]0 Jtc

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

QUARTER horn mare v1ry
9entlt. good with children

$75 Ph Coolville

621A
28 121P
1973 IAK70 MO&amp;!LE homo
667

.,.,d

wnher
drytr. dtll'l
wur.tr, stalntets tteti tl nk ,
llrbi!IJI diiPOIII IVt level
OVIft, r•n01 1decrOr'l poly .. tlr
urpt , lerve 101 Phone 742
3013.
7 ll•lf

steREORA DiO-t.;;-z,;-m

POMEROY, OHIO

9 U SIC

-------------1971 DAT SUN,· 1200 Good
condlflon. rtiiOOiblt prlc1

Colt

2~7

3t2A

9 26 Otp

Real Estate For S31e

Pomeroy

In Memory

TEAFORD

Full

Baseme nt

$19,500 00

2 NEW HOMES
Loca ted In the new Hickory

Htlls addllton at Tuppers

lur~:~u~:o~~Sbath ~~~~ d~~

Plams J nice bedrooms with

back por&lt;hes Only $8900 00
ONLY 3 YEARS OLD - 2

colored fixtures ceram1c
hie Lo11elv kitchen wtth 12

bedrooms gas F A furna ce
Cook and .bake untts Dlnmg
room enc lo sed porch and

balh

base cabinets and 14 ft
upper cabtnels Ullllty room
Garage IS finished on the
Inside Aboul 1 acre ol
grou nd 100•400 Good

It

on

these

$18 900 00
RUTLAND
1

stor y

frame,

garage $16 000 00
10 ROOMS
renova1ed

Recently
11h

5 bedrooms

baths modern

gas

kllc~en

J

n l ce

Full basement with

shower All Ele&lt;lrlc
acre Sli.SOO 00
MINERSVILLE

Da-1 2 dr H T, auto , atr

•I

•t
'I

Le Man s 2 dr H T , atr, cl ean

("

I'

'h Ton Ptckup Real ntce
3/•

.I
II

Ton Ptckup Sharp !ruck

~.

Newport Royal Ltke new
New Yorker Extra nice
Imp 2 dr H T Clean

. ••.,

51

story frame 3 bedrooms

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

212

II

--~----

at Addison
every Sunday 9 a m ttll '
Dealers welcome

230 12

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

Real Estate For Sale
POMEROY custom built brtck
ho me, four bed rooms two
baths
ful l
basement ,
fireplace
formal d i ning
room Write J E Bayliff 310
W High Str eet, Cridersville

Ohio •5806

-------------e

LET US KNOW WHAT
YOUR NEE DS ARE IN
REAL ESTATE AS WE
HAV E SEVERAL
PROPERTIES TO CHOOSE
FROM IF WE OONT
HAVE IT WE WILL TRY TO
FINO 1'1' FOR YOU

111 ACRE loU Oarw 1n area
'Tupper•
Pla ins
water
Cont ac t Hen.Mel McClure
Da ir y Isle until 3 p m 992
5248 alter 3 992 3-436
9 28 121c

HENRY E CleLAND
BROKER
9?22211
II no on1wer 992-2561

ctrpettd , gu turn•c:a dllh
wtlhtr. doublt ovtn. r1nge
doubll gartQt ltrge c•rport
4 acrtl cltlrtd end ftn ctd.
''"'" barn •na oth•r

Phone 61A Hl.m•
5 30 lfc

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

9 28 6tp

ROOM S and balM In town
$11 ,000 Call 992 3975 or 992
2571
_..
9 28 lfc

_____ ______ _

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

5 ROOM house on J acres ot
land
Tuppers Pla ins
2 8EOROOM hou!.e 3 years old
Chester water
all new
tllf pet ing big ~ l tchen with
plumbi ng alum in um i ldfno
Ioiii or cabinets t &gt; ec:re of
tlltl oil furna ce Call 98S 3.539
ground Racine Ohro C~lill

9 30

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

l?tp

949 4998

9_
12 tfc
- i r ' - - w _ _ _ _ _ _ ...., _
NEW BRICK 3 bt dr(lom home
on 1 Acre of Janet Laroe HOUSE for sate loca ted ln
modern klfc:hen
t utl car
Bradbury Call 992 1363 &amp;Iter
peted , locateQ clo!e to the
!Pm
9S30tc
high and elemtnta ry ~chOOIS

Call 9927•86

u,

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

12tc LARGE convenient buil dlf'tg
to ts at Roc k Springs Area
HOUSE 5 rcoms. 5 acres
restr ic ted lor houS ~"S only
ground Rl 124 Great Bend
Tuppers Plfl lns end Ches ter
C B Shahen RI )31 Gftel
Water avlllable Call or see
Bend
Bill Wille 992 2789
9 30 Jtp
9 30 IIC
--------~----9

Noon on Saturday

E Ma m St.. Po!IU!rov, OhiO

I P

..

rc
•

------------------------71 CADILLAC
SEDAN DeVILLE

'4500
69 CADILLAC
FLEETWOOD BROUGHAM
Stiver ftntsh, black vtnyl top. black tnt • 60 40
seat, tilt &amp; tel wheel, full power. atr
J

•1795

wILL not be respons ible l or
any debts other fhan my own
as of th is day Sept JO 1973
Charle! 0 Prun ty
2313

AUCTION

MR
DOT SO N has sold P'1 1S
r enta l property and h is doctor
to ld h tm t o cu rra lt h i s
bus1ne!.s act1v 111es so w!H sell
the follow tng at res iden ce
located on State Rou te 7 below
M iddleport Ohto co ne half
mile above Me1QS Gallta
Coun ty
li ne )
So!lturd.!ly
October 6 10 31 am Spil l
hickory wove n um br ella
stand ,
mi!IPie
ch ai r
m ahog!l! nY chai r huso ck
pla tform ro c;;ker occ as ional
chairs oak rock er wash
boerd , !ad 1ron depress ion
gins royal ruby shadow
gins can dy dis h coi n goblet
punch bowl Avon bottles
Lombar d i Gondola bowls
po ts and pans
dtshes
ce ram tu. electr ic appliances
(sm at D lanterns and lemps,
plcture frame-s
Hollywood
bed 1 Mlde a bed S band radtO
new clothing otUce chair
dresser plano ben ch , new
Die tz lan tern, record cab lnel
5 good un lweld c:utllno tor
chU, Sears chain saw a
Mercury oas oaoe a Freon
gage two block end ta ckle
u ts,
wash ing
machine
motors
go cart
motor
Ra~ l ant 'IJ&amp;S hea te'rs, console
rad io bous of small hind
tool , sprayers
dusters
lewllry wrllt watch W A
Dot !Iron Bradford Auction co •
C C Bradford Auc t ioneer
Box 116 Racine . Oh io

NOW TAKING

P'

Full power equipment, ttl! &amp; tel wheel, fa c
tory atr condtltomng

FOR

KITCHEN

'1495

PREPARATION

~

I

AND GRILL COOKS
Apply rn person at Bob
Evans Steak House
A Bob Evans Farms
Restaurant

74

CADIUACS

I

&amp; OLDS ON DISPLAY

'

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

SU PPLEMENT vour present

income by dellvermg Hera ld
Ol spa;tch
ntwsp~per
In
Gallipolis and New Haven
area Immediate openlno
Cornm tssl on
pl us
car
allowance Contac l Ernest

Cadttlac Oldsmobtle
Pom eroy
GMAC Ftnanctng Available
Open- Eves Tti6- Tti5P M.Sat
You II Like Our Ova !tty Way of Doing Business

992 1342

Maxwell U6 2790

2275

Wanted To

&gt;

I

68 CADILLAC
SEDAN DeVILLE

m 12

APPLICATION

. ''

Tan ftntsh, brown vmyl top, matchtng mterlor,
full power equtpment, AM FM radto, Cltmate
Control atr condtllontng, !tit &amp; tel steenng
wheel

RELIABLE babyS itter for 3
mos old child Cell 446 9JB8

___________ __

Only S4 000 00
IN TOWN - 2 bedrooms bath
Only $5 000 00
'
BUY IT TODAY TOMORROW
llE TOO LATE GOOD

soo

An equal opportunity employer

RU SS s GLASS ServiCe g lass
for all needs spec,altZtnQ tn
Wi nd shiel ds
m1rrors
OAY CARE
ple)(IQI&amp;Ss
rescreen
704 Ptne
SU N VALLEY Nursery Sc hool
Jo
Grande
245
5048
R
licensed by State of Ohio l V2
100 tf
m11es west of new hosptfat
571 Sun \JJIIey Or Ph &lt;146 3657
Day ca re tha t says
we TWO WAY RadiOS Seles &amp;
care
Madge Hau ldren
Se rv 1ce New and used CBs
Owner Loredtth and John
po llee mon it ors antennas
etc Bob s Clltzen Band Radio
Hautdren Operators
...... 114 tf
Equip
Gorges Creek. Rd
Gal lt pol ts Oh1o 446 4511
212 If
SW EEPER: Repairs, Parts
Suppl ies
Phon e 367 1736
Da v1s Va cu um Cleaner Store Contract
10 a m S p m Addtson Oh•o WE BUY gold coins and sdver
11.4 If
dollars
elso old c o tns
Tawney s Jewe lers
DEAD STOCK
22• It
WILL remove at a re.asoMble
charge Ca ll 245 5514

bath F A furnace T P water

oak fl oor s Large dintng
Basement and sm all garden

"'

7 p.m. &amp;
Sat. 'til 5 p.m.
Service 'Til 12

992·2174

Not1ce

------ ......
NEW - l bedrooms, large bath FLEA MARKET

lol Askmg 1us! S18 000 00
COUNTRY - 2 bedrooms

'"

'Til

BILL. BEARDSLEY
GOODYEAR AEROSPACE
CORPORATION
JACKSON, OHIO
Not1ce

Bath Kitchen has tots ol
base cabinets Porches and
lois ol ground $6 500 00

bu l tdln~•

,L

Tool, J1g, ftxture builder. Work consists of layout, fabrtcatton and
mamtenance of d1es, jigs and fixtures.
Mu st be able to work from blueprints
and models to build and maintain
tools Work may involve welding,
carpentry, prec1s1on instruments,
mathematics.
Excellent frtnge benefit program
mcludmg
paid
hospitalization,
retirement plan, hfe insurance and
vacatton. Interested individuals
should contact

23 1

F A fu rna ce L erge corne r lot

w1th laundry on nt ce corner

bedrooms with closels Bath
Nice kllchen and dlntng
area

Pmlo 2 dr au to

WANTED

IN LOVING memo ry of my
hu sband and our fath er and
grandfather
Wtlltam c
Board who went away Oct 1
1971 Th e world may change
from year to year
And
tnends from day to day but
Juqti H Tt',lfnrd. S1
never will tMe one we love
Brok;·l
fro m memory pass away we
often stt and tht nk of you
111.1 ,'v\p(h,ll11( )hi•(''
When we are alone
Fo r
JlllllH'rny, OhiO 1)16\f
memnr v ts the on l y frtend
that gr ef can ca ll 1IS own
Uke 1vy on the wtlhered oak
wh en all other lhtngs decay
Our love for vou will sh ll keep
DOWNTOWN - 4 bedrooms
green
and Never fade away
balh gas F A furnace All
We know your soul tS rest ing
ul tltlles SlO 500 00
Well guarded by Hts love And
ttl ACRES - Lots of brush for
we are wa rt 1ng to !Otn yo u
agam Some hme m th at
good huntmg 6 room house
Heaven ly home above Sad ly
barn and other bu !l dmg s All
miSSed
by
wt fe
so n
m lnerCJi s $16~ 00 per acre
daughter grandchtldr en

un1ts

dock 8otonco 1J9 ll or
ROOM nou•• wtm bfth In
"" our b•dull lorm• Colt 1 Rutland
air condlt oru a
,., 3965

"Your Chevy Dealer"
992·2126
Open Eves Till 8

1ct161l£:!1 wtlh S S &lt;ook and bake

financing

t"..
h

Help Wanted

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

NEW ....... 3 n1ce size bedrooms
wtth large closets E x tra nice

9 30 Sic

3 YEAR OLD
Kelv i nator
automati c washer
Good
condition Call 992 2967 alter
5
p

''

We Want To Mal\e You Happy

El Cammo, Blazers, Step Van, and '12 TON
PICKUPS
THEY'LL NEVER BE CHEAPER

$6500 00

-------------ELECTROLUX
vacu um

------------30 m
___________
__30 3tc

'.

Open Evenings

OUR WORD IS
OUR BOND

NEW 1973 CHEVROt.ET
CLOSE-OUTI

mce oak lloors
ga s fl oor
furnace, a nd basemen t Only

IIPO

Salt Works, Inc.

TON .......... ~595

BUNGALOW - 2 bedrooms

btnttlon , am tm rldlo , a tr•ek

Exc~lsior

1Jz

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

Modern

II

G T auto One red &amp; one yellow

We Servic2
What We Sell

B ft Fl eets1de 6 cy l sta nd tran s good ltr es m1rror s
stop bumper

__________ _

closets

' I

REMEMBER

350 cu m V 8 engtne 15 000 lb 2 speed rear axle good
82Sx20 10 ply tires heavy duty front &amp; rear sprmgs 108
cab to ax le clean cab Mechanically sound &amp; been
regularly ser'll-'ed

For Sale

cleaner A 1 condition uses
paper bags, has cordw lnder
and many attachments also
shampooe r attachment In
eluded Only 4 ava llablt, tt
S37 70
cash,
or
terms
available Phone 992 2984
9 JO 6tc

Cougar Like new

Not Because The Job Was Done Wrong

1970 CHEVROLET 2-TON ......... ,.$2495

Appomtment Contact Dan Thompson or Tom Lavender

__

•4495
"
•3895
•3295 .•'
•2295 ,,'"
•2795 "
•3495
•1995 ""
'1595 .,
•3495
.
..••-,.
•4495
•2395

Sa fart Wagon Sharp

We Want You Back Because The Job Was Done Right

8 Fleetslde V 8 engine sld trans cus tom cab foam
seats, radio H duly rear sprmg w w ftres R sfep
bumper A sharp truck local 1 owner

586 Locust St
992 -7004
Mtddleport
Open8to 6 Mon. thru Sat
Open Dally 8 to 6, !Closed Sundaysl Open Anytime by

For Sale

Gr~nd

See Ceward Calvert, Ron Hester or Peggy Story

Goble Mobile Homes

--------- 9

The Shop
~'

I

1966 PONTIAC BONNEVIU£ ....... 1595

ATTENTION VETERANS -Giloansavallable no down
payment wolh approved credit

...... 9

sete fie ld grown We only
ha ve one color - vetlow 10
bunches tor S5 We hav~ ~Om'!
out in full bloom tome 1ust
budding Reynolds. Flower

3tc

For Sale

surface grinder battery charger chain saw socket sets
hand tools pipe wrenches. come along chai n fall , atr
compressor, hand truck bench grinder lawn mowers and

For Sale

TO YOUR SPECIFICATION

I

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1973
at 12:30 P.M.

7 15 tfc

CUT • WRAPPED • FROZEN

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

'

14x.64 3BEDROOM l112ba th
on pnvate lot 10 Rutland
Sav e Sl 000 Call weekdays
after 6 anytime on Saturday
and Sunday 742 5703
9 26 tf C

Pleasant Rtdge Road
POMEROY, OHIO

9 25 6tc

4 door V 8 automatic power steeri ng rad io good fires
blue fin ish spotless ln l erlor

1967 OiEVELLE. .......................1995

JOHN TUCKER
Rl 4, Pomeroy, 0
992 3954 or 992 7349

PRICE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

DIHrlbuttd

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY 111. ........11395

BeautifuL new total electri c home
Three door model with prtvate front
dtnlng. house type door , storms &amp;
screens, 30 gal water heater , UL
approved All modern decor . Now at a
special lower price

MODERN
SANITATION

&amp;

151--Greek lette r
153-Rtve r tn Italy
155-Pronoun

&lt;1 door gold fmlsh, spotless c:le ... n Inter ior V 8 engine
automatic. power steer ing radio A honey of a buy

.---------------lost

14 2-Brls tle

1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU............11695

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
24 HOUR SERVICE

FUEL Truck Drt ver needed
P AND HOME
Ref ere nces requ r ed
Sen d
repl teS to BO)( 72~ E co Th e YOU can help a former Fes tden t
Datly Sen ttnel Pomeroy
MAINTENANCE
past 92 years of age lo ca le a
OhtO
CONSTRUCTION
case wat c h w1th the 1mt lals
9 27 6tc
REPAIR
M L F P
on back l1d
Phone Mrs woods 992 3489
Healing
Air Cond .
Rooftng.
Spouting,
9 30 ltc
HURR'I'- HURRY Ttme ts
From the laroest
Refr~gerafton
Plumbmg •
r unn ng out Hinng now until
Porch
Repair,
Com
Bulldoz.er
Rad1ator
to
Eleclrtcal
Appliances
Aulo
Oc t 5 Earn $100 week tor 3
::.ma nest Heater Lore
Atr
Cond
•
Restdentl,l
or
plete
Home
nights sell ng brand toys and MALE fo x hound color B W T
Emory Gordon I f found call
Nathan Btggs
gtfts no del 11er l ng
no
Commercial
Remodeltng
co ll ect
Robert
Gordon
Radtator Spectahst
collect tn g For more In
Chesh1re Ohto 3677 11 2
fOrfl'latton write to R t 2 Box
215N Second
9 25 Stc
23 Ra ct ne OhiO 45771
For
Free
Esltmate
-----~----.......
-~
Phone 992-3509
9 25 10tc
GRAY MALE cat lost nea r
t
24
Hour Servtce
A LOCAL compa ny has •m
Pomeroy Elementary Sc hool
[ Ph 1992 2174
Pomeroy
All work guaranteed
med1a 1e ope nmg s lor th e
Rewa rd Call 992 2664
foltowmg post ttons
9 28 3tc
1
Accounting Cl erk
CONCRETE
0 DELL WHEEL Altgnmenf READY MIX
Knowledge and expertence 1n
delivered
r
1
ghf
to your
toea
ted
at
Crossroads
Rt
124
cos t accountmg or payro l l GER MAN
Shep her d Dog ,
protect Fest and easy Free
now back to work Complete
essent tal Open •ngs on the
Smokey mostly black wtlh
estimates Phone 992 328&lt;1
front end service tune up and
followtng sh tfts 8 a m ttl l 4
tan markmgs Lost between
Goeglem
Ready Mix Co
brake
service
Wheels
p m -4 p m til 12 midnight
Langsville and Dexter S20
Middleport Oh10
balanced electron•cally All
12 01 t II 8 a m
Reward Call 992 6379 or 742
6 30 If&lt;
work guaran teed Reasonable
2 Offt ce sec retar res- DutteS
3664
rates
Phone
7&lt;12
3232
tnclude typ ing d tc tatlon
9 25 6fc
Ph 992·5271
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
2 18 tfc
Ill ng Openmg on same Sh1ft s
REASONABLE
rates
Ph
446
l tsted above
Ltntoln Htll Pomeroy, 0
4782 Gallipolis John Russell
RON SHEPARD Floor Wall
3 Personn el Ass tst ant 0Yot:ner and Operator
Remodeltng Ceramtc tl le
ResponSib l e for rec ru tf lng Auto Sales
5 12 lfc
ba ths Box 28D Rutland 742
and sc:reentng of emp loyees 1956 THREE QUARTER ton
3664
Desi r e
ntervt ewtn g
or
Pambng A Specialty
ptcKup Good cond 1t 10n $295
C BRADFORD Auctioneer
6 26 lfc
counseltng experi ence
Call 949 3746 affer 6 week
Complete
Serv1ce
Excellent sa lan es and fr nge
days anyt1 me weekends
Phone 949 3821
FOR FREE est1mates on
Area ' s Most
benef ts Send br 1ef resum e of.
9 28 3tc
Raclne , Oh•o
alum 1num Stdn1g
Storm
work hlstary and educat10n
Reasonable Pnces
Cntt Bradford
Doors and Wmdows Car
Send all repl1esfo Box 129 s'"
ports
Marquees
and
Railing
,
5 1 ftc
care of The Datly Sen tme l
All work guaranteed
Phone
Charles
Lisle
Mobile Homes For Sale
Pomeroy Oh10
EXCAVATING
dozer
loader
Syracuse, Ohio Car l Jacob
9 2 tfc
CASH pa1d for all makes and
and backhoe work
septic DOZER and back hoe work
Sa les Representative V V
models of mobile homes
tank s Installed dump trucks
Johnson and Son In c
ponds and sept1c t"nks dlt
CENTRAL DIVISION CON
Phone area code 614 423 9'531
and to bovs for hire wilt haul
6 22 tfc
chmg service top soli fill
SOLIOATION COAL COM
4 13 tfc
fill dirt top soli li mestone
dirt,
limestone
B&amp;K
PANY Immediate open.ngs
and gravel Call BQb or Roger
EXCAVATING Dozers large
Escavatlng Phone 992 5367 or
are ava1labte n fh e followmg
Jeffers dav phone 992 7089
and sma ll
Backhoes and
992 3861
POSi tiOn S
Maintenan ce 14 x 65 TRA ILER 2 bedroom
night phone 992 3525 or 992
loaders on track and tires
9 1 tfc
very
good
cond1t10
Phone
773
Fo reman { und erground )
5232
Dump tru ck - Lo boy ser
5805
Assistant M l ne Foreman
2 11 ttc
v1ce Septtc tanks 1nstalled
a 22 tf c
(u n derground)
Sect on
George (Bill) Pull1ns phone
OPEN
Roge r Hyse ll s
Forem~n
Su rface M1n e
992 2478 or 992 7&lt;102
Garage near Cross ro ads on
HARRISON S TV service and
F oreman
Rec l amation
H lfc
St Rt 124 all mechanical
service ca lls Phone 992 2522
Foreman Per so ns apptymg
Atr
Condtltoners
work tn ctud tng automati c
2 9 tfc
should hold val1d foreman
SEWI NG MACH IN ES Repair
transm 1Ss tons
Monday
certi f ication papers ( OhtO ) or
Awntng s
se r vice all makes 992 228&lt;1
Fnday B 30 a m till .5 p m
have sulfte1ent exper ience to
The Fabric Shop Pomeroy DEAD SlOCK. - W1ll remn v,..
Saturday - 8 30 to 12 noon
Underptnntng
apply for State exam •nat1on
at a reasonable chan~e Call
Unless by appt Phone 992
Author1zed Smger Sates and
Salary Commensurate wtth
245 S514
ServiCe We Sharpen Scissors
5682 or 992 712 1
Exper te nce
Excellent
Comple te m obil e hom e
a
23
9Ptc
9 16 JOtc
3
29
tfc
Benefi ts TO APPLY Wnte se r v 1ce plu s gtg antt c
or
Phone
Personne l
Department
Central d1splay of mobil e homes
ELNA and White Sewl ng
Machines
Serv1ce on all
D i vision consolidat ion coa l always available at
makes Reasonable ra tes
Company CadiZ Ohto 43907
The Sew1ng Center Mid
Te lephone 614 9&lt;12 4512 AN
dleport OhiO
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
11 16 tfc
EMPLOYER
8 21 tfc
MOBILE home repair Elec
1220 Wa shmgton Blvd
trl cal plumbing and heeting

141-Transaction

•

1973 PONTIAC
1973 MERCURY
(2) 1973 OPEL
1972 FORD
1972 DODGE
1972 PONTIAC
1970 FORD
1968 FORD
1972 CHRYSLER
1972 CHRYSLER
1971 CHEV.

Coupe 1 owner car tess than JJ 000 miles t)rown flmsh
with matching vln';'l root ttnd vinyl Interior 307 V 8
Mglne standard transm11slon, power s t ~:e r tng end
brakes rad io reallv shar p

3 BEDROOM

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open 8 Till
Monday thru Saturday
A06 E. Maon , Pomeroy, 0 . I ·

WE HAVE THE REAL BUYS ON SOME
GREAT USED CARS.

1971 FORD TORINO 500 . .........S2095

Hillcrest 70x14

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992·2094

ROOFING,
FUR ·
NACE
CLEANING
AND REPAIR AND
PLUMBING.

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

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

3915

Built to Your •Speu
Delivered to Job Slit

H ~awilngs Sons

r1. Q

SPECIAL

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
•5.55

500 E. MAIN POMEROY, OHIO PH. 992·2.174

We 'fc clearmg out lot for new models,
s o we're sacrtficmg the old. Come take
advantage wh1le prtces are down. You
won't beheve our bargams unt1t you
buy one .

i1il

I

On Most America n Ca rs

Makett Rtghl

992·2156
grooming
no ap
L----------.1 POODLE
potnt111ent necess ary ss M~y
stay with dog CQolvtlle 661
SO MEONE to do house
c teantrJQ Phone 992 2677

WOOD TRUSSES

B• RIQhl
or we Wlll

PARKVIEW Kennels Poodles
I toy male and 1 female
Phone 99 2 5443
7 15 tfc

PHONE

9 30

property

149-Piac e

wulght

-

PAPER CARRIERS Employment Wanted
WILL do coal or m ise h~ ullng
IN
!Obs also body work and pa int
to b s on &amp;utos Phone 992 7597
POMEROY AND
9 27 6t c
SYRACUSE
Pels For Sale

The

ASK US ABOUT
PRe FABRICATED

Alignment

_____ ______ _

WANTED

140- Hold on

77- The populace
79-Macaw
83-0bstruct

Spectalht
Whoet

-----

11 2- Had on one s
person
113- D&lt;tnlsh, tsli'lnd
I 14- Drll11o. of
the gods
11 6-Gneous

54-C~as~

106--Latm

119- Compass pomt

109-K•n c:l of chene

49-S andar.~c

DOWN

Ioree
102-Stumble
IOS-Pe rsonl'll
1\ttretf

sandw ic h
47- Joln

160-Chal tenged

96-Twlst
97- 0 ok

JOQ-HyJJQIIHtltCi\1

45- Newest
46-Coc ktall

158-C•ty In Rus s a
!59-Detes t

conttmctlon
107-0iphthong
108- Cert am
110-Before
111-Pronoun
11 2-Unwanted
plant
11 3-Sotar disk
115-Symbol for trn
11 7- Frees of

93- Snuu1 lcoiiQQ )
94 - Note of scale

40 ....... Female horse

156-Giossy fabnc
157-Style of
au tomobile

t hemt~e~l
co 1 1&gt;01 nd

il"'mt;nl

41-Vases
4J- Snare

mei'lsure (p i )

1 2 8-Pralm~

9 2'_.:A, tbtan

pari ol pll'nt
38- Partner

1"5-Equah t)'

105-Humed

:&gt;7-Coupled

36- U 1de r.:rounc1

0 11

15 4- Stalk

98-Falsehoods
99-0.rooptng
of eyellci
l Ot- Brill ar11
103- Stupefy
104-Pt nl er s

91 -

~tuddflnly

146-Aeachas
148- LinRers
150-Spl re
152- Walked
unstn dl ly
153 - Buctdhi!i l
d•alec t

Ult-Appendlch
84- Part o l eye

23-Europe!l n
2 5- fttll m dropt

33 - G II 'S n,.me

co~o~enngs

143-W;.! .. ed

9 &gt;I 6t&lt;

~ R -C mn
31 - Srt&gt; 111.

wr Uf! 11
14Q._ T Mdy
141 - Ankle

Business Services

NEW OR GOOD used drop
SIC'Iulg Ca ll 992 1969
9 30 lt c

bun• ., 0 ,

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

Everything Goes!

BUY

'

'I

Do

I I

BA BYSITTING in my home
Ph 446 7496
229 l

For Rent

or Lease

For Sale

OF FTCE space tor lease. 2nd AK c reg lstered 1rlsh setters
Male and female
adv!t
Ave 6cross from City Perk
female
,
Gerrn&amp;n
snorthalred
J&amp;WMOUNT
Call .u6 1819 or see John
Pointer fiel d tra ined 446
CLEANING SERVICE
Ecker
4191
_..
GE NERAL. hOuse cleaning We
Ill If
lJI 3
$Upply all the cleaning sup
ptles JB8 8875 affer 6 p l'n call DOWNTOWN bus in ess !ipltlce
Trl St•te Motl!le
3118 8865 weekly or monthly
for lease 2nd Ave across
Ham a S.les
clean tng bV appo intment
from Cttv Pork, Appro 2.800
Ph ·~~WI
91 If
Sq Ft Call 4.t6 18'19 or 446
1220 Eu1ern Av e, GJII i po ll~
1126 or see John Ecker
12 • 52 Fleetwood
TOOL
sharpening
taws
131 If 1970
1957 8 )( 45 Marlette
sc issors sheers home and
1959 10 x 51 Elcar
garden ools Sh arp Shop ,
l96J 10 x. -45 Kavwood
Alley rear, 147 Second
1959 10 x AO G~neral
216 If
Sale
1t56 8 x 47 Ponttec Chief
'WALlPAP'E RING-;nd-paln WANT EO to sell to gtod home 1962 10 • 52 Windsor
1966 12 x 46 Pontiac Chief
ll nO Pr.one .u 6 9865 or 379
very Qflntlt snettand pony
231 II
2A71
Contact Keith Moort U6

_________ ___

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

For

83 If

RO OFI NG and ;utter work
AlSO oullt up roof ing 388 8507

3925

-------- l•; Sowtn; ' 1
In or,vfnal factor,.
c:1rton l l g zao to matlit
buoonho ln ••w on butron'
monoorams , and rnll(e

1973
231 3 NEW
Macl'l lntl

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

Z l~

ELECTROLUX
vacuum
cleaner A 1 cond1rlon . uses
flr1~Y'
........ ..-paper bags, hU cord w lnder
dei iQnl W1fh futt ll'lt rWhf of•
BABY SITTING In my hom e
.and many atta chments Also
sl nO I't! dfal L'ft In I•Y ltWIV
Phone •46 4661
shtmpooer attachmenr In
and never bUn V!it~ W111 nil
230 6
cludld COnf¥ • a f"&amp;ll able} at
for only \41 cut!, or ltrm•
U7 70
cnh
or
terms
JValllblt Phon e- 446 '1.460
7311
IVIillblt Phone .446 2.t60
2~1 6
BABYSITTER In my home 5
M081LE home 10 "
days • wuk on Rt 3.5 4~6 21t1 --~---------G E refr l ~e re tor Call .. 6 mo condition 12,300 Ph
aftrr 4 p m
2)1 l
230 3

- --------_.
Wan'l!d

22011

I

________

------------....-

------

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

'

1

~.

�16- The Sunday 'l'lmn · Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 30, 1971

:H- TbrSundayTinlf ·S&lt;ontlnel,Sunday,sepl 30, 1973

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE c~~n;~~T~os~,u!,
Ca ll

Ollie

Wanted To Buy

Connollv

Lo ng

Bottom Oh•o !iSS 4190

SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 30, 1973
ACROSS

l -CI1ns
6-Saucy
10-Mtahtander
14- Urslne uumals
19-Eieles nnts
21-At 1 dtstan~e
22-Drlnk heavily
23--co lorful bad
24-Sh•m
26-Sura•ct~l
28--S~elest

uws

29-Frult seed
30-Tttle of ru pect

(pi)

-

32- Growlna out of
33-Pin()(hte te rm
14-Sou~hwl!!stern

Indian

35-Petlod of time
37-Tht pineapple
39-cravat
4Q-Harse s neck
hair

41 - Emptoyed
42-Disturbance
44-.Paleneu
46-Vthlcle
47-Man s name
48-Girls name
~0 -Pertalnlne to
huvenly
bodl•s
52- Hurries
53-Rupees (abbr J
55-Tirplulln
57-Symbol for
yttrium

58-European
59-Army meal
60-Partnt (colloq)
62-f'OISUSIVII

pronoun
64- Ptll
66-Babylon1an
deity
68-Symbol for
tant1lum
69-Confront
7G-Transaress

135- Appronch

71-Natl ... e
Egypt•an
73-Negllgent
75-Each

1J7- Harbor
139- NhJSu: as

77 - Dep~tnlon

78- Mustcal drl'lmA
80- Worker tn
metals
!U - Ttnlg!i In Jaw
86--Vtstons
87-Gre;,t
89- Poem
92- Let 11
95- Protect• ve
d

tche~

120-Adventuroui
121-Noblewomen
124-Anlmal s feel
126-Siave
127-Dtfflcult
wolf

130- Man s
mck name

132-Gull hke bird
133-Ntmbus

134-Untt of
Stamese
currency

tree

51 - Mongolia n

52- Retrograde
53-Puerto
56-Gave
59-Five star
g~neral

60-lntellect
6J- PIIaster

1-.-Ptthy
2-WP. Irde r

63- Dtstlnc l class

3- Pa •d tn
advance
4- Smatl bird
S-Observes
&amp;-Parent (colloq )
7-Ntwt

65-G rl s name
67-Res tdue
69-Sy mbol for Iron
70-Felt through
senses
72-Jogs
74-Two (Roman
number)

a-unusual
9-Cap tla l o f

New Jersey
10- 0ecla re
11-Frutt of pme
12- Har..,est
goddess
13-Symbol for
tellunum
14-M ustcal
orsan tzat ton
15-S ea eagle
16-0isturbs
17-Decayed
18-Sptrtled horse
20-Cut

76---EKISIS

WANTED
tor
"uctlon.
househOld
ooods
TooiJ
nwst
NO 1 Copper 60c . rad1&amp;tor!.
anv th mg Ql value Will buy or
30c brass 20c, batteries 90c,
sell oo comml,slon W tlt hau l
c lean dry Ginseng roots 560
Call 992 3354 or 99 2 27Y'J
lb
yellow root S4 50 Mav
Havmans
725tfc
apple 60c M A II all R:eeds.
v l tte Phone J78 6?-49
OLD furnlfure oak tables
9 23 ttc
clocks Ice bOJCeS brass beds
dishes
or
con1plete
CORNER cupboards
wall
households Wrlle M
o
c;upbo&amp;rds chests old ouns
M i ller Rl 4 Pomeroy Ohto
any C01ldi11on A l so blue
call 9926271
decorated stoneware Write
5 13 tfc
p 0 Box 44 Martinsburg
-~------Ohio ~)93S or call 1 484 4·HO
after7pm
For
Sale
or Trade
9 a.9Jtc
MILLING machi ne tor meta( wdt tra d~ fol' dr i ll press or
Help Wanted
would like to buy drill press
any srze Phone 992 74 94
__._
9 30 !tc

- -------

element
118- Trade
120-C ha5ottsed
121- Wan
122-Dolttsh
123-let tt stand
125-Piug
126-Couch
127- Chapea.us
129-0rgans of
hea r!!)g
131-Town m Ireland
132- Former
Russli'l n rul ers
133-Work.man
134-A month
136-Decays
138- l ncllna tion

1$5-P•nched

86-E)(cavates
87-Sounded a
horn
88-Hoatfrost
89- Bone
90-Ate to lose

Dai~

Sentinel

II Mus1

• 4 JO Datlv
ti nldttlQ
9911101

61&lt;

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO
77l-5SS4
Mooon, W

a 12 Sat

Mtddteport 0

992 2094
606 E Matn Pomeroy

ALL WEATHER
ROOFING CO.

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and
FURNITURE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Phone 992-2550

Stop In and See Our
Floor Dtsplay.

9 21 6tc

V•

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED

144-lt feless
147-A state
(abb r )
148-Sa •lo r (colloq)

J

'

Ph. 742-6271

Gene's
Body Shop

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

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

I

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

Notice

by

!Jn lltd tuturt

NOTICE

Public Sale Estate Auction

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

11t

~}ndle :u~

For Rent

Wanted

423 7521

Phone 992 5858

BELPRE 0

SHOOTING Match, Forked Run

FURN ISHED
2 bedroom
FABRICS - Biggest little shop
double w1de trai le r
m
1n the area Guaranteed all
Syra cuse Call992 2&lt;141 after s
first quality polyester double
p m Monday through Frtdey
knIts no seconds
W tde
No weekend tails
9 27 3tc setectton of coordtnated
9 30 lfc
colors tor fall and wmter We
SHOOTING
Match
Corn
keep over 1 500 yds m stock
BEDROO M small house
Hollow Gun Club Turn f~rsf
and get new cloth every three
furn ished or unfurntShed
rtght after Mites Cemetery
weeks 54 98 to S7 98 values
POLES
Ra11road Sf
M i ddleport
Rutland Factory choked
pnced at 52 98 to $3 98 nothtng
Phone 992 7494
gun1 only Sunday Sep1 30 1
higher 10 pet discount to
MAXIMUM
pm
home economics students
9 21 3tc Carolina Fabr1cs Route 7
DIAMETER
one half m tie north ot Chester
12 lC. SO MOBILE home 2
Ohio
at Henry Hunter
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp;WIGS
bedrooms Ultl tt1es turnt sl'1ed
ON
residence Drive a little Call H2 5980
September Spec1ttls are
Lemon Facial Bath Bath &amp;
Save a lot •
9 30 61c
LARGEST END
Shower Gel. Jr Fac1a1 Mask
9 30 tip
Kover Kotes LIQUid Rouge
TRAILER
FOR
RENT
Hair Sprays Shampoos
K
ANTIQUE Auct •on Frtdey
marr 1ed couples one chtl d
Oct
5 at 11 a m
on
Beautv Bars Suntan Spray
permitted No pets depos 1t
and others Phone Helen Jane
Washingtoll Co fairgrounds
required Bob s Mob i le Co urt
Brown 992 5113 Many thanks
Marietta Ohio Fine turn1ture
Syracuse 992 295 1
BUNDLED SLABS
to our new and regular
as follows very old pine dry
9 30 lfc
customers
stnk round marble top stand
1
on ornate Iron base Ch1P
9 11 tfc
MOBILE home adults only
penda\e style Governor
Call 992 5592
Turnthrop
desk
f i nge r
DELIVERED
9 28 He
carved love seet, mat c htng
cha ir French loveseat 3 pc
TO
cher r y parlor suite ftres1de
unfurn i Shed
4
HOU SE
bench with ptpe holders
bedrooms nice yard wall to
Mtcro Fide Arrows 19 95 doz
rosewood P•neapple poste r
W.!lll carpe ting
air c on
bed match ing dresser brass
dittOnlnljl 1 f ... rn iSht:d Clpert
Dura . F•bre Arrows 17 95 doz
marble top stand bed sewmg
men t with 3 rooms. bath 1
Bear&amp; Indian Bows
ma c ~lne with teardrop pulls
dupleK Phone 992 2780 or 992
lndlon wolh Ltfetome
34]2
marble top walnut dresser On Old Rt. 33
Gu•rentee
3pc marble - full marble top
9 2J ttc
dresser 2 nlce swivet top card
- - - - -- - - - - - - - Phone
992-2689
INDOOR SHOOTING
tables Bentwood rocker with
3 AND 4 ROOM furni~ H~d and
zo Pet of Accessoron
Pomeroy, Ohto
cane beck and seat . 4 drop
unfurnished
ap.,rtments
Open Evenn~gs 6 30 to 10
leaf walnut table marb l e top
Phone
992
5m
washstand 2 nice walnut
- Closed Mondon4 12 lfc
bedJ dresser base 6 cane NotiCe
-bottom
chairs
Other
BOW HUNTER
ROOM S by th e w eek, $18 up
SWEEPER
R:epatrs
Parts
dressers 6 drawer cherry
Me tgs Inn Pom eroy
Coolvolle
Main St
Suppl tes Drscount prices on
chest wrlt lng desk and book
General merchandtSe fhru - - - -------.l..._ .!._.!._'l...!_fc
case marble top credenza
our ca talog department PRIVATE meeting room for
oak washstand sp tnet desk
INFORMATION ABOUT:
Phone
367 77 36
Da vis
any organiza tion phone 992
wi cker baby buggy hall tree
397S
Vacuum Clea n er Store 10
ctawfoot butters chest and
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
5 p m Add ison Ohio
a m
bookcue pett1toat m~rror
3 11 lfc
__,
9 23 301&lt;
SOCIAL SECURITY
mahogany pedestal stand 6
Queen Ann chairs maple
CONSUMER PROTECTION
TRA IL ER at Sy n1 cuse adults
ctaw toot ped!Stal
round
only Call 992 35 25
RUMMAGE
Sale
Will
be
held
at
table 4 maple cha•rs patr
.__
9 18 lf c
th
e
Sacred
Heart
Church
AND
G w w lamps - not old ~ 3
Pomeroy
basement
Oct
4
pc marble clock set 2 brass
and S Thursday and Frtday 9 MOBILE l']om~ Splt ce Baer schandel iers r~d satin glass
hll 3
GREAT COUNTRY
Mar ket Svra cuse
parlor lamps brass parlor
__,_
9 25 9tc
a 26 lfc
lamp nice Chinese room stze
Oriental rugs n1ce roorn size
Pers ian rug tapestnes some
Stiver ch1na bed crocheted
work linens glass copper
Iars pewter candelabra and
many other nice ttems Very
fine sale of beautiful mer
chand lse Open 8 a m day of
Mlddlepot1 Pomeroy
sale
Brtng a undw l ch
On Tuesday, Oct.
at
Haro ld Goddard tnc
9 30 2tc
o'clock p.m., a rea estate me&amp;ting will
Sportsman Club noon Sun
day Factory choked guns
only

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

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

10"

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

$8.00 Per Ton

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

6.00 Per Ton

AnENTION

BOW HUNTERS

OHIO
PALLET CO.

THE

______ _______

_________ ___ _

___ ________ _

STEREO
92.1 FM
WMPO

REAL ESTATE MEETING
2, 1973,

I

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

YARD Sate at JoAnn S!ewart s
Depot
Street
Rutland
Se ptetT~ber 30 Beginnmg 11

am

9

30

2:00

1tc

YARD Sa le 120 State Street
Pomeroy Monday Tuesday
end Wednesdav 12 t11l S
__.
9 30 3tc

_________ ___ _

FLEA MAR:KET at Addtson
Ohlo, Sunday 1111 1 Dealers
welcomt P &amp; J Odds and
Ends

be held at Southern Oh1o Coal Com .
pany's mam off1ce localed on Rt. 689
near Point Rock, Ohto, for the purpose
of establishing procedures to advertise
rea I estate listings for new and
prospective Southern Ohio Co a I
Company Employees. All realtors and
other concerned persons are urged to
attend.

Auto Sales

--------------SE PTIC TANKS AROBIC

Thefollowtng wtll be sold at the residence loc.ated approx
1 mtle east of Syrac:use, Ohto on S R 124
Tractor &amp; equtpment 9N Ford Fergusen new tires 3 pt
bush hog 3 pt cullovators, J pi blade 1 foot disk, John
Deere garden tractor wi th 48 Inch mower and culttvators

SEWAGE SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPAIRED
MILLER SANITAT ION
STEWART OHIO PH 662
3035
10 4 tfc
NEIGLERS FOR HOUSE
BUILOERS CALL GUY
NEIGLER RAC IN E OHIO

cars &amp; truck 1967 Mustang 1965 Cadillac 1962 Dodge
lru&lt;k for parts only boal &amp; trailer, 17 foot Starer aft
Ioberg Iass boat with 60 HP Johnson motor and lraller will
be sold as one unll tools 'I' Thor Impact wrench B&amp;O

FOR: SALE by the Citi Zens
9 11 30tp
Nat1onal Bank 1971 Chevrolet
Klngswood Statlon wagon
$\ ,~95 1971 Gremlin 2 door 4 WILL TRIM or cut trees and
sh rubbery al so cleQn out
passenger
basements atti cs and etc
9 30 31t
Call 949 322 1 or 742 4&lt;141
83130tc
1969 FORD XL Deluxe Interior
convertible ltgh t ye llow saoo
AUTOMOBILE msurance been
A lot of ca r for the money 327
cancelled?
Lost
your
Mechanic Street Pome roy
operators license Call 992
9 30 3tc
7428

------------.--

98 OLDSMOBI L E1 &lt;1 dr hard
lop v1nyl top full power and
a1r cond1t1onmg 7 way ad
iustable steer tng wheel low
mileage Ca ll 992 5510
9' 28 4t c

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

1968 OLDSMOBILE 98 Wh ite
n l th black Inferior
air
cond 1t1oned new tires i!lnCl (iiie
owner
Show room clean

$1 195 Call 742 5869

9 28
- - - -- - - - - - - " - - -

6

mist ytng yangs guns 410 shot gun and 22 rille,
camper 16 It Shasta camper wi th awning, '' very good'
Also Mls , meat black fan gas refngerator, water skis
porch swJng, wooden barrels sca les bridles, go cart &amp;

parts, jacks and mise From the estate of Sara Woode
glassware tntludmg oil lamp Oxford sllverplate Vtclrola
&amp;old records, new quills rocker, trunk table
ESTATE OF WILLIAM HARDEN, O..t
DOROTHY HARDEN, Admx
TERMS CASH
Not responslbleforatttdenlsor loss of
property
CARNAHAN AUCTION SERVICE,
J Carnahan, D Smtih Racine, Ohio 949-2708 or 949 ZOJJ

151f&lt;

BRU SH HOG S 4x5 If , phone
992 5858
7 15 trc

--------------LOTS of cMrysanthemums for

1970 DODGE POLARA ............. }1395
&lt;1 door lactory air automatic transm iss ion power
steering &amp; brakes good wh•te wall t ires whlle f lnlsh
vinyl root radio heavv duty suspension

&lt;1 door 6 cyiinder automati c transm1ss lon good tires
clea n 1ntenQr, beige flntsh radto &amp; heater, real economy
&amp; a popular model

SPECIAL

1968 FORD FAIRLANE ST. WAGON 695
1

v 8 automatic trans, P steering &amp; brakes air con
dltloned rad1o good t ires I owner less than 60 000 mdes

Shop Mason W 1/a Call 773
SU7
9 26 ttc

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

U PHOL STER: you r own fur
nlture we ha~Je ell the su p
1965 CHEVY
&lt;I speed
Mag
plies
you
will
n ee d
wheels r ebuil t 327 engine
new pa int mus1 sell 992 2392
Uphol s.tc-ry Fabrics a very
915 61p
large se l ection or nylons
ve lv et s Her cu lon vinyls - In
EXCELSIOR Sa lt Works, E
cotton prints also re mm~n t s
Ma ln St Pomeroy All kinds
Foam for ClUShlons and
or salt water pellets water
padd ng Burl&amp;p denims
nugge ts block salt and own
cambr ic roam Qhie zippers
Ohio River Sell Phone 992
sprmgs and cli ps chip boards
3891
l egs sewing thread dfi CI"On
,_,
6 5 1ft
ta cks, webb ing welt cord
cotton swivel b&amp;SOII and all
other sup plie s you will need GROCERY business for sale
New furniture- at low low
Building for sa l e or lease
prices Pomeroy Rec overy
Phone 773 56 18 from 8 30 p m
622 E. Meln 992 755.t
to 10 p m for appolntrpent
II 31 301 c
3·20 tfc

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

_______ _______

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

,..--· ....o.tt_""'
/ otck

__ ._.,
&amp;

, .• i_

really
how

know

WALNUTS
TO OUR MECHANICAL HULLER

·Your Walnuts will be
Hulled Free of Charge
And We Will Pay You

$500

"custom meat cutting"
1

BRING YOUR UNHULLED

!

_

Per Hundrtd Pounct 1
Aft« They Are Hulled

START BUYING OCTOBER 1, 1973

to cut vp... ..1

Dick Vaugh1n
992-3374

H T Cpe good I .res clean v1nv l tnm maroon fln1sh
power steering &amp; brakes. automatic trans radio

Up to 12 Year Fmancmg- We Serv1ce What
We Sell.

1971 OiEVROLET Vz TON ..... .!2195

1967 CHEVROLET

H&amp;N day old or started l:.eghorn QUARTER horse mare very
gentle good with chtldren
pullets Both floor or cage
grown available Poultry
$75
9 28 12tp
..._
houslng
&amp;
automat10n
Modern Poultry 399 w Main
1965 CLASSIC Rambler e)(
Pomeroy 992 2164
celtent co nd ition Maytag
9 30 ltc
wrmger type wasMer dog
house- well butlt 2 btkes- 20
NEW SWIVEL rockers and
inch each tricycle boys &amp;nd
recliners In velvet and 100
g1rts cloth (ng- slze 8 to 10
percent nylon with scotch
Cal l 992 3373 after 5 p m
guard and vinyl at the low
9 28 61&lt;
low cash and carry price of
$69 95
each
Pome roy
Recovery
622 E Main GOOD dry ear corn Phone 985
3538 Call after s p m Paul
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
Karr Chester Oh10
9 30 6tc
9 28 31p
LARGE yard sate Wednesday
Thursday Oct 3 and 4 131
Lew1s St , New Haven W Va
New G E sweeper new bunk Real Estate For Sale
camp cot Fenton glassware
3 years old
3
Other glassware , Jewel ry HOUSE bedroom
wal
to
wall
car
men, women and children s
pettng refr igera tor and stov e
clothing All s1zes Numerous
inc luded , llvl ng room ktt
merchandise not mentioned
chen uttl•ty ro om bl!lth
9 30 3tp
outstde
utI tt y
storage
M!ddleport Phone 992 506-4
CARPORT sate Oct 3 and 4
after6pm
from 9 a m till S p m Avons
9 21 12tp
toys and mise 918 S Thtrd
---~- --------M iddleport
9 30 3tc 10 ACRES - 7 acres bottom House that needs repairs end
YARD SALE Oct 4 and 5 10
outbuildings
Located on
a m fill 6 p m New and used
Lengsville Dexter Road Call
clothtng, men women and
992 7791 after 5 p m
chJidren s
Cloth ing
2
9 27 31&lt;
a1um1num storm 3 trac k
wmdows size 29 wide 6 feet
71J&lt;J 1n long 1 outside door NEW br1ck three bedroom
with glass s1ze 6 feet 10
home tn Racme batn 1tv 1ng
Inches long 2 feet 9 In width
room k1tchen full basement,
Other odds &amp; ends Utah
garage attached hot air
Swan Tuppers Plains Ohio
furnace. all utilities ALSO
on State Rt 7 Not responsible
two room &amp; bath cement
1or accidents
block house 10 acres Shown
by appo1ntment
Rodney
Downmg
Broker
M•d
J FAMILY rummage sa te tn
dleport Ohio Phone 992 J731
930 21c
Coats bulldlno next to
Firestone Sto re In Mid
dleport 9 a m ttlt 6 p m
SMurday, Oct 6
9 30 ltc

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

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

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

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

-------------NEW 1973 ZIGZAG sew ing

mach1nes In orig inal fa ctory
carton
Zig zag to make
buttonholes sew on buttons
monograms and make fancy
des1gns with Just the tw ist of
a stngle dial Lefl ln laY a way
and never been used Wi ll sell
tor only S47 cash or term s
available Phone 992 2984

OLIVER 60 tractor With six loot
nmt mounted mower all
good rubber and tn aood
Shipe, S600 Nate Vanaman
phOne 7A2 5322
9 30 6tc

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

1972 YAMAHA Enduro 250,
exceltenr condit ion $A75

____________30 6tp
Tuppers Plein• 667 ll36
9

......

R:EOUCE excess fluids with
FluldtX - Lose weight with
Oex A Oltf c::apsutel
at
Nelson Orugl

lip
REGISTERED flvo yeer Ap
9 lO

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

paloOSI mare well broke
oentit e-.ce ll enl pteuure
mare Make nice show horn
or brood mare Call 667 3723
9 ]0 Jtc

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

QUARTER horn mare v1ry
9entlt. good with children

$75 Ph Coolville

621A
28 121P
1973 IAK70 MO&amp;!LE homo
667

.,.,d

wnher
drytr. dtll'l
wur.tr, stalntets tteti tl nk ,
llrbi!IJI diiPOIII IVt level
OVIft, r•n01 1decrOr'l poly .. tlr
urpt , lerve 101 Phone 742
3013.
7 ll•lf

steREORA DiO-t.;;-z,;-m

POMEROY, OHIO

9 U SIC

-------------1971 DAT SUN,· 1200 Good
condlflon. rtiiOOiblt prlc1

Colt

2~7

3t2A

9 26 Otp

Real Estate For S31e

Pomeroy

In Memory

TEAFORD

Full

Baseme nt

$19,500 00

2 NEW HOMES
Loca ted In the new Hickory

Htlls addllton at Tuppers

lur~:~u~:o~~Sbath ~~~~ d~~

Plams J nice bedrooms with

back por&lt;hes Only $8900 00
ONLY 3 YEARS OLD - 2

colored fixtures ceram1c
hie Lo11elv kitchen wtth 12

bedrooms gas F A furna ce
Cook and .bake untts Dlnmg
room enc lo sed porch and

balh

base cabinets and 14 ft
upper cabtnels Ullllty room
Garage IS finished on the
Inside Aboul 1 acre ol
grou nd 100•400 Good

It

on

these

$18 900 00
RUTLAND
1

stor y

frame,

garage $16 000 00
10 ROOMS
renova1ed

Recently
11h

5 bedrooms

baths modern

gas

kllc~en

J

n l ce

Full basement with

shower All Ele&lt;lrlc
acre Sli.SOO 00
MINERSVILLE

Da-1 2 dr H T, auto , atr

•I

•t
'I

Le Man s 2 dr H T , atr, cl ean

("

I'

'h Ton Ptckup Real ntce
3/•

.I
II

Ton Ptckup Sharp !ruck

~.

Newport Royal Ltke new
New Yorker Extra nice
Imp 2 dr H T Clean

. ••.,

51

story frame 3 bedrooms

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

212

II

--~----

at Addison
every Sunday 9 a m ttll '
Dealers welcome

230 12

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

Real Estate For Sale
POMEROY custom built brtck
ho me, four bed rooms two
baths
ful l
basement ,
fireplace
formal d i ning
room Write J E Bayliff 310
W High Str eet, Cridersville

Ohio •5806

-------------e

LET US KNOW WHAT
YOUR NEE DS ARE IN
REAL ESTATE AS WE
HAV E SEVERAL
PROPERTIES TO CHOOSE
FROM IF WE OONT
HAVE IT WE WILL TRY TO
FINO 1'1' FOR YOU

111 ACRE loU Oarw 1n area
'Tupper•
Pla ins
water
Cont ac t Hen.Mel McClure
Da ir y Isle until 3 p m 992
5248 alter 3 992 3-436
9 28 121c

HENRY E CleLAND
BROKER
9?22211
II no on1wer 992-2561

ctrpettd , gu turn•c:a dllh
wtlhtr. doublt ovtn. r1nge
doubll gartQt ltrge c•rport
4 acrtl cltlrtd end ftn ctd.
''"'" barn •na oth•r

Phone 61A Hl.m•
5 30 lfc

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

9 28 6tp

ROOM S and balM In town
$11 ,000 Call 992 3975 or 992
2571
_..
9 28 lfc

_____ ______ _

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

5 ROOM house on J acres ot
land
Tuppers Pla ins
2 8EOROOM hou!.e 3 years old
Chester water
all new
tllf pet ing big ~ l tchen with
plumbi ng alum in um i ldfno
Ioiii or cabinets t &gt; ec:re of
tlltl oil furna ce Call 98S 3.539
ground Racine Ohro C~lill

9 30

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

l?tp

949 4998

9_
12 tfc
- i r ' - - w _ _ _ _ _ _ ...., _
NEW BRICK 3 bt dr(lom home
on 1 Acre of Janet Laroe HOUSE for sate loca ted ln
modern klfc:hen
t utl car
Bradbury Call 992 1363 &amp;Iter
peted , locateQ clo!e to the
!Pm
9S30tc
high and elemtnta ry ~chOOIS

Call 9927•86

u,

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

12tc LARGE convenient buil dlf'tg
to ts at Roc k Springs Area
HOUSE 5 rcoms. 5 acres
restr ic ted lor houS ~"S only
ground Rl 124 Great Bend
Tuppers Plfl lns end Ches ter
C B Shahen RI )31 Gftel
Water avlllable Call or see
Bend
Bill Wille 992 2789
9 30 Jtp
9 30 IIC
--------~----9

Noon on Saturday

E Ma m St.. Po!IU!rov, OhiO

I P

..

rc
•

------------------------71 CADILLAC
SEDAN DeVILLE

'4500
69 CADILLAC
FLEETWOOD BROUGHAM
Stiver ftntsh, black vtnyl top. black tnt • 60 40
seat, tilt &amp; tel wheel, full power. atr
J

•1795

wILL not be respons ible l or
any debts other fhan my own
as of th is day Sept JO 1973
Charle! 0 Prun ty
2313

AUCTION

MR
DOT SO N has sold P'1 1S
r enta l property and h is doctor
to ld h tm t o cu rra lt h i s
bus1ne!.s act1v 111es so w!H sell
the follow tng at res iden ce
located on State Rou te 7 below
M iddleport Ohto co ne half
mile above Me1QS Gallta
Coun ty
li ne )
So!lturd.!ly
October 6 10 31 am Spil l
hickory wove n um br ella
stand ,
mi!IPie
ch ai r
m ahog!l! nY chai r huso ck
pla tform ro c;;ker occ as ional
chairs oak rock er wash
boerd , !ad 1ron depress ion
gins royal ruby shadow
gins can dy dis h coi n goblet
punch bowl Avon bottles
Lombar d i Gondola bowls
po ts and pans
dtshes
ce ram tu. electr ic appliances
(sm at D lanterns and lemps,
plcture frame-s
Hollywood
bed 1 Mlde a bed S band radtO
new clothing otUce chair
dresser plano ben ch , new
Die tz lan tern, record cab lnel
5 good un lweld c:utllno tor
chU, Sears chain saw a
Mercury oas oaoe a Freon
gage two block end ta ckle
u ts,
wash ing
machine
motors
go cart
motor
Ra~ l ant 'IJ&amp;S hea te'rs, console
rad io bous of small hind
tool , sprayers
dusters
lewllry wrllt watch W A
Dot !Iron Bradford Auction co •
C C Bradford Auc t ioneer
Box 116 Racine . Oh io

NOW TAKING

P'

Full power equipment, ttl! &amp; tel wheel, fa c
tory atr condtltomng

FOR

KITCHEN

'1495

PREPARATION

~

I

AND GRILL COOKS
Apply rn person at Bob
Evans Steak House
A Bob Evans Farms
Restaurant

74

CADIUACS

I

&amp; OLDS ON DISPLAY

'

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

SU PPLEMENT vour present

income by dellvermg Hera ld
Ol spa;tch
ntwsp~per
In
Gallipolis and New Haven
area Immediate openlno
Cornm tssl on
pl us
car
allowance Contac l Ernest

Cadttlac Oldsmobtle
Pom eroy
GMAC Ftnanctng Available
Open- Eves Tti6- Tti5P M.Sat
You II Like Our Ova !tty Way of Doing Business

992 1342

Maxwell U6 2790

2275

Wanted To

&gt;

I

68 CADILLAC
SEDAN DeVILLE

m 12

APPLICATION

. ''

Tan ftntsh, brown vmyl top, matchtng mterlor,
full power equtpment, AM FM radto, Cltmate
Control atr condtllontng, !tit &amp; tel steenng
wheel

RELIABLE babyS itter for 3
mos old child Cell 446 9JB8

___________ __

Only S4 000 00
IN TOWN - 2 bedrooms bath
Only $5 000 00
'
BUY IT TODAY TOMORROW
llE TOO LATE GOOD

soo

An equal opportunity employer

RU SS s GLASS ServiCe g lass
for all needs spec,altZtnQ tn
Wi nd shiel ds
m1rrors
OAY CARE
ple)(IQI&amp;Ss
rescreen
704 Ptne
SU N VALLEY Nursery Sc hool
Jo
Grande
245
5048
R
licensed by State of Ohio l V2
100 tf
m11es west of new hosptfat
571 Sun \JJIIey Or Ph &lt;146 3657
Day ca re tha t says
we TWO WAY RadiOS Seles &amp;
care
Madge Hau ldren
Se rv 1ce New and used CBs
Owner Loredtth and John
po llee mon it ors antennas
etc Bob s Clltzen Band Radio
Hautdren Operators
...... 114 tf
Equip
Gorges Creek. Rd
Gal lt pol ts Oh1o 446 4511
212 If
SW EEPER: Repairs, Parts
Suppl ies
Phon e 367 1736
Da v1s Va cu um Cleaner Store Contract
10 a m S p m Addtson Oh•o WE BUY gold coins and sdver
11.4 If
dollars
elso old c o tns
Tawney s Jewe lers
DEAD STOCK
22• It
WILL remove at a re.asoMble
charge Ca ll 245 5514

bath F A furnace T P water

oak fl oor s Large dintng
Basement and sm all garden

"'

7 p.m. &amp;
Sat. 'til 5 p.m.
Service 'Til 12

992·2174

Not1ce

------ ......
NEW - l bedrooms, large bath FLEA MARKET

lol Askmg 1us! S18 000 00
COUNTRY - 2 bedrooms

'"

'Til

BILL. BEARDSLEY
GOODYEAR AEROSPACE
CORPORATION
JACKSON, OHIO
Not1ce

Bath Kitchen has tots ol
base cabinets Porches and
lois ol ground $6 500 00

bu l tdln~•

,L

Tool, J1g, ftxture builder. Work consists of layout, fabrtcatton and
mamtenance of d1es, jigs and fixtures.
Mu st be able to work from blueprints
and models to build and maintain
tools Work may involve welding,
carpentry, prec1s1on instruments,
mathematics.
Excellent frtnge benefit program
mcludmg
paid
hospitalization,
retirement plan, hfe insurance and
vacatton. Interested individuals
should contact

23 1

F A fu rna ce L erge corne r lot

w1th laundry on nt ce corner

bedrooms with closels Bath
Nice kllchen and dlntng
area

Pmlo 2 dr au to

WANTED

IN LOVING memo ry of my
hu sband and our fath er and
grandfather
Wtlltam c
Board who went away Oct 1
1971 Th e world may change
from year to year
And
tnends from day to day but
Juqti H Tt',lfnrd. S1
never will tMe one we love
Brok;·l
fro m memory pass away we
often stt and tht nk of you
111.1 ,'v\p(h,ll11( )hi•(''
When we are alone
Fo r
JlllllH'rny, OhiO 1)16\f
memnr v ts the on l y frtend
that gr ef can ca ll 1IS own
Uke 1vy on the wtlhered oak
wh en all other lhtngs decay
Our love for vou will sh ll keep
DOWNTOWN - 4 bedrooms
green
and Never fade away
balh gas F A furnace All
We know your soul tS rest ing
ul tltlles SlO 500 00
Well guarded by Hts love And
ttl ACRES - Lots of brush for
we are wa rt 1ng to !Otn yo u
agam Some hme m th at
good huntmg 6 room house
Heaven ly home above Sad ly
barn and other bu !l dmg s All
miSSed
by
wt fe
so n
m lnerCJi s $16~ 00 per acre
daughter grandchtldr en

un1ts

dock 8otonco 1J9 ll or
ROOM nou•• wtm bfth In
"" our b•dull lorm• Colt 1 Rutland
air condlt oru a
,., 3965

"Your Chevy Dealer"
992·2126
Open Eves Till 8

1ct161l£:!1 wtlh S S &lt;ook and bake

financing

t"..
h

Help Wanted

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

NEW ....... 3 n1ce size bedrooms
wtth large closets E x tra nice

9 30 Sic

3 YEAR OLD
Kelv i nator
automati c washer
Good
condition Call 992 2967 alter
5
p

''

We Want To Mal\e You Happy

El Cammo, Blazers, Step Van, and '12 TON
PICKUPS
THEY'LL NEVER BE CHEAPER

$6500 00

-------------ELECTROLUX
vacu um

------------30 m
___________
__30 3tc

'.

Open Evenings

OUR WORD IS
OUR BOND

NEW 1973 CHEVROt.ET
CLOSE-OUTI

mce oak lloors
ga s fl oor
furnace, a nd basemen t Only

IIPO

Salt Works, Inc.

TON .......... ~595

BUNGALOW - 2 bedrooms

btnttlon , am tm rldlo , a tr•ek

Exc~lsior

1Jz

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

Modern

II

G T auto One red &amp; one yellow

We Servic2
What We Sell

B ft Fl eets1de 6 cy l sta nd tran s good ltr es m1rror s
stop bumper

__________ _

closets

' I

REMEMBER

350 cu m V 8 engtne 15 000 lb 2 speed rear axle good
82Sx20 10 ply tires heavy duty front &amp; rear sprmgs 108
cab to ax le clean cab Mechanically sound &amp; been
regularly ser'll-'ed

For Sale

cleaner A 1 condition uses
paper bags, has cordw lnder
and many attachments also
shampooe r attachment In
eluded Only 4 ava llablt, tt
S37 70
cash,
or
terms
available Phone 992 2984
9 JO 6tc

Cougar Like new

Not Because The Job Was Done Wrong

1970 CHEVROLET 2-TON ......... ,.$2495

Appomtment Contact Dan Thompson or Tom Lavender

__

•4495
"
•3895
•3295 .•'
•2295 ,,'"
•2795 "
•3495
•1995 ""
'1595 .,
•3495
.
..••-,.
•4495
•2395

Sa fart Wagon Sharp

We Want You Back Because The Job Was Done Right

8 Fleetslde V 8 engine sld trans cus tom cab foam
seats, radio H duly rear sprmg w w ftres R sfep
bumper A sharp truck local 1 owner

586 Locust St
992 -7004
Mtddleport
Open8to 6 Mon. thru Sat
Open Dally 8 to 6, !Closed Sundaysl Open Anytime by

For Sale

Gr~nd

See Ceward Calvert, Ron Hester or Peggy Story

Goble Mobile Homes

--------- 9

The Shop
~'

I

1966 PONTIAC BONNEVIU£ ....... 1595

ATTENTION VETERANS -Giloansavallable no down
payment wolh approved credit

...... 9

sete fie ld grown We only
ha ve one color - vetlow 10
bunches tor S5 We hav~ ~Om'!
out in full bloom tome 1ust
budding Reynolds. Flower

3tc

For Sale

surface grinder battery charger chain saw socket sets
hand tools pipe wrenches. come along chai n fall , atr
compressor, hand truck bench grinder lawn mowers and

For Sale

TO YOUR SPECIFICATION

I

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1973
at 12:30 P.M.

7 15 tfc

CUT • WRAPPED • FROZEN

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

'

14x.64 3BEDROOM l112ba th
on pnvate lot 10 Rutland
Sav e Sl 000 Call weekdays
after 6 anytime on Saturday
and Sunday 742 5703
9 26 tf C

Pleasant Rtdge Road
POMEROY, OHIO

9 25 6tc

4 door V 8 automatic power steeri ng rad io good fires
blue fin ish spotless ln l erlor

1967 OiEVELLE. .......................1995

JOHN TUCKER
Rl 4, Pomeroy, 0
992 3954 or 992 7349

PRICE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

DIHrlbuttd

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY 111. ........11395

BeautifuL new total electri c home
Three door model with prtvate front
dtnlng. house type door , storms &amp;
screens, 30 gal water heater , UL
approved All modern decor . Now at a
special lower price

MODERN
SANITATION

&amp;

151--Greek lette r
153-Rtve r tn Italy
155-Pronoun

&lt;1 door gold fmlsh, spotless c:le ... n Inter ior V 8 engine
automatic. power steer ing radio A honey of a buy

.---------------lost

14 2-Brls tle

1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU............11695

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
24 HOUR SERVICE

FUEL Truck Drt ver needed
P AND HOME
Ref ere nces requ r ed
Sen d
repl teS to BO)( 72~ E co Th e YOU can help a former Fes tden t
Datly Sen ttnel Pomeroy
MAINTENANCE
past 92 years of age lo ca le a
OhtO
CONSTRUCTION
case wat c h w1th the 1mt lals
9 27 6tc
REPAIR
M L F P
on back l1d
Phone Mrs woods 992 3489
Healing
Air Cond .
Rooftng.
Spouting,
9 30 ltc
HURR'I'- HURRY Ttme ts
From the laroest
Refr~gerafton
Plumbmg •
r unn ng out Hinng now until
Porch
Repair,
Com
Bulldoz.er
Rad1ator
to
Eleclrtcal
Appliances
Aulo
Oc t 5 Earn $100 week tor 3
::.ma nest Heater Lore
Atr
Cond
•
Restdentl,l
or
plete
Home
nights sell ng brand toys and MALE fo x hound color B W T
Emory Gordon I f found call
Nathan Btggs
gtfts no del 11er l ng
no
Commercial
Remodeltng
co ll ect
Robert
Gordon
Radtator Spectahst
collect tn g For more In
Chesh1re Ohto 3677 11 2
fOrfl'latton write to R t 2 Box
215N Second
9 25 Stc
23 Ra ct ne OhiO 45771
For
Free
Esltmate
-----~----.......
-~
Phone 992-3509
9 25 10tc
GRAY MALE cat lost nea r
t
24
Hour Servtce
A LOCAL compa ny has •m
Pomeroy Elementary Sc hool
[ Ph 1992 2174
Pomeroy
All work guaranteed
med1a 1e ope nmg s lor th e
Rewa rd Call 992 2664
foltowmg post ttons
9 28 3tc
1
Accounting Cl erk
CONCRETE
0 DELL WHEEL Altgnmenf READY MIX
Knowledge and expertence 1n
delivered
r
1
ghf
to your
toea
ted
at
Crossroads
Rt
124
cos t accountmg or payro l l GER MAN
Shep her d Dog ,
protect Fest and easy Free
now back to work Complete
essent tal Open •ngs on the
Smokey mostly black wtlh
estimates Phone 992 328&lt;1
front end service tune up and
followtng sh tfts 8 a m ttl l 4
tan markmgs Lost between
Goeglem
Ready Mix Co
brake
service
Wheels
p m -4 p m til 12 midnight
Langsville and Dexter S20
Middleport Oh10
balanced electron•cally All
12 01 t II 8 a m
Reward Call 992 6379 or 742
6 30 If&lt;
work guaran teed Reasonable
2 Offt ce sec retar res- DutteS
3664
rates
Phone
7&lt;12
3232
tnclude typ ing d tc tatlon
9 25 6fc
Ph 992·5271
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
2 18 tfc
Ill ng Openmg on same Sh1ft s
REASONABLE
rates
Ph
446
l tsted above
Ltntoln Htll Pomeroy, 0
4782 Gallipolis John Russell
RON SHEPARD Floor Wall
3 Personn el Ass tst ant 0Yot:ner and Operator
Remodeltng Ceramtc tl le
ResponSib l e for rec ru tf lng Auto Sales
5 12 lfc
ba ths Box 28D Rutland 742
and sc:reentng of emp loyees 1956 THREE QUARTER ton
3664
Desi r e
ntervt ewtn g
or
Pambng A Specialty
ptcKup Good cond 1t 10n $295
C BRADFORD Auctioneer
6 26 lfc
counseltng experi ence
Call 949 3746 affer 6 week
Complete
Serv1ce
Excellent sa lan es and fr nge
days anyt1 me weekends
Phone 949 3821
FOR FREE est1mates on
Area ' s Most
benef ts Send br 1ef resum e of.
9 28 3tc
Raclne , Oh•o
alum 1num Stdn1g
Storm
work hlstary and educat10n
Reasonable Pnces
Cntt Bradford
Doors and Wmdows Car
Send all repl1esfo Box 129 s'"
ports
Marquees
and
Railing
,
5 1 ftc
care of The Datly Sen tme l
All work guaranteed
Phone
Charles
Lisle
Mobile Homes For Sale
Pomeroy Oh10
EXCAVATING
dozer
loader
Syracuse, Ohio Car l Jacob
9 2 tfc
CASH pa1d for all makes and
and backhoe work
septic DOZER and back hoe work
Sa les Representative V V
models of mobile homes
tank s Installed dump trucks
Johnson and Son In c
ponds and sept1c t"nks dlt
CENTRAL DIVISION CON
Phone area code 614 423 9'531
and to bovs for hire wilt haul
6 22 tfc
chmg service top soli fill
SOLIOATION COAL COM
4 13 tfc
fill dirt top soli li mestone
dirt,
limestone
B&amp;K
PANY Immediate open.ngs
and gravel Call BQb or Roger
EXCAVATING Dozers large
Escavatlng Phone 992 5367 or
are ava1labte n fh e followmg
Jeffers dav phone 992 7089
and sma ll
Backhoes and
992 3861
POSi tiOn S
Maintenan ce 14 x 65 TRA ILER 2 bedroom
night phone 992 3525 or 992
loaders on track and tires
9 1 tfc
very
good
cond1t10
Phone
773
Fo reman { und erground )
5232
Dump tru ck - Lo boy ser
5805
Assistant M l ne Foreman
2 11 ttc
v1ce Septtc tanks 1nstalled
a 22 tf c
(u n derground)
Sect on
George (Bill) Pull1ns phone
OPEN
Roge r Hyse ll s
Forem~n
Su rface M1n e
992 2478 or 992 7&lt;102
Garage near Cross ro ads on
HARRISON S TV service and
F oreman
Rec l amation
H lfc
St Rt 124 all mechanical
service ca lls Phone 992 2522
Foreman Per so ns apptymg
Atr
Condtltoners
work tn ctud tng automati c
2 9 tfc
should hold val1d foreman
SEWI NG MACH IN ES Repair
transm 1Ss tons
Monday
certi f ication papers ( OhtO ) or
Awntng s
se r vice all makes 992 228&lt;1
Fnday B 30 a m till .5 p m
have sulfte1ent exper ience to
The Fabric Shop Pomeroy DEAD SlOCK. - W1ll remn v,..
Saturday - 8 30 to 12 noon
Underptnntng
apply for State exam •nat1on
at a reasonable chan~e Call
Unless by appt Phone 992
Author1zed Smger Sates and
Salary Commensurate wtth
245 S514
ServiCe We Sharpen Scissors
5682 or 992 712 1
Exper te nce
Excellent
Comple te m obil e hom e
a
23
9Ptc
9 16 JOtc
3
29
tfc
Benefi ts TO APPLY Wnte se r v 1ce plu s gtg antt c
or
Phone
Personne l
Department
Central d1splay of mobil e homes
ELNA and White Sewl ng
Machines
Serv1ce on all
D i vision consolidat ion coa l always available at
makes Reasonable ra tes
Company CadiZ Ohto 43907
The Sew1ng Center Mid
Te lephone 614 9&lt;12 4512 AN
dleport OhiO
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
11 16 tfc
EMPLOYER
8 21 tfc
MOBILE home repair Elec
1220 Wa shmgton Blvd
trl cal plumbing and heeting

141-Transaction

•

1973 PONTIAC
1973 MERCURY
(2) 1973 OPEL
1972 FORD
1972 DODGE
1972 PONTIAC
1970 FORD
1968 FORD
1972 CHRYSLER
1972 CHRYSLER
1971 CHEV.

Coupe 1 owner car tess than JJ 000 miles t)rown flmsh
with matching vln';'l root ttnd vinyl Interior 307 V 8
Mglne standard transm11slon, power s t ~:e r tng end
brakes rad io reallv shar p

3 BEDROOM

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open 8 Till
Monday thru Saturday
A06 E. Maon , Pomeroy, 0 . I ·

WE HAVE THE REAL BUYS ON SOME
GREAT USED CARS.

1971 FORD TORINO 500 . .........S2095

Hillcrest 70x14

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992·2094

ROOFING,
FUR ·
NACE
CLEANING
AND REPAIR AND
PLUMBING.

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

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

3915

Built to Your •Speu
Delivered to Job Slit

H ~awilngs Sons

r1. Q

SPECIAL

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
•5.55

500 E. MAIN POMEROY, OHIO PH. 992·2.174

We 'fc clearmg out lot for new models,
s o we're sacrtficmg the old. Come take
advantage wh1le prtces are down. You
won't beheve our bargams unt1t you
buy one .

i1il

I

On Most America n Ca rs

Makett Rtghl

992·2156
grooming
no ap
L----------.1 POODLE
potnt111ent necess ary ss M~y
stay with dog CQolvtlle 661
SO MEONE to do house
c teantrJQ Phone 992 2677

WOOD TRUSSES

B• RIQhl
or we Wlll

PARKVIEW Kennels Poodles
I toy male and 1 female
Phone 99 2 5443
7 15 tfc

PHONE

9 30

property

149-Piac e

wulght

-

PAPER CARRIERS Employment Wanted
WILL do coal or m ise h~ ullng
IN
!Obs also body work and pa int
to b s on &amp;utos Phone 992 7597
POMEROY AND
9 27 6t c
SYRACUSE
Pels For Sale

The

ASK US ABOUT
PRe FABRICATED

Alignment

_____ ______ _

WANTED

140- Hold on

77- The populace
79-Macaw
83-0bstruct

Spectalht
Whoet

-----

11 2- Had on one s
person
113- D&lt;tnlsh, tsli'lnd
I 14- Drll11o. of
the gods
11 6-Gneous

54-C~as~

106--Latm

119- Compass pomt

109-K•n c:l of chene

49-S andar.~c

DOWN

Ioree
102-Stumble
IOS-Pe rsonl'll
1\ttretf

sandw ic h
47- Joln

160-Chal tenged

96-Twlst
97- 0 ok

JOQ-HyJJQIIHtltCi\1

45- Newest
46-Coc ktall

158-C•ty In Rus s a
!59-Detes t

conttmctlon
107-0iphthong
108- Cert am
110-Before
111-Pronoun
11 2-Unwanted
plant
11 3-Sotar disk
115-Symbol for trn
11 7- Frees of

93- Snuu1 lcoiiQQ )
94 - Note of scale

40 ....... Female horse

156-Giossy fabnc
157-Style of
au tomobile

t hemt~e~l
co 1 1&gt;01 nd

il"'mt;nl

41-Vases
4J- Snare

mei'lsure (p i )

1 2 8-Pralm~

9 2'_.:A, tbtan

pari ol pll'nt
38- Partner

1"5-Equah t)'

105-Humed

:&gt;7-Coupled

36- U 1de r.:rounc1

0 11

15 4- Stalk

98-Falsehoods
99-0.rooptng
of eyellci
l Ot- Brill ar11
103- Stupefy
104-Pt nl er s

91 -

~tuddflnly

146-Aeachas
148- LinRers
150-Spl re
152- Walked
unstn dl ly
153 - Buctdhi!i l
d•alec t

Ult-Appendlch
84- Part o l eye

23-Europe!l n
2 5- fttll m dropt

33 - G II 'S n,.me

co~o~enngs

143-W;.! .. ed

9 &gt;I 6t&lt;

~ R -C mn
31 - Srt&gt; 111.

wr Uf! 11
14Q._ T Mdy
141 - Ankle

Business Services

NEW OR GOOD used drop
SIC'Iulg Ca ll 992 1969
9 30 lt c

bun• ., 0 ,

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

Everything Goes!

BUY

'

'I

Do

I I

BA BYSITTING in my home
Ph 446 7496
229 l

For Rent

or Lease

For Sale

OF FTCE space tor lease. 2nd AK c reg lstered 1rlsh setters
Male and female
adv!t
Ave 6cross from City Perk
female
,
Gerrn&amp;n
snorthalred
J&amp;WMOUNT
Call .u6 1819 or see John
Pointer fiel d tra ined 446
CLEANING SERVICE
Ecker
4191
_..
GE NERAL. hOuse cleaning We
Ill If
lJI 3
$Upply all the cleaning sup
ptles JB8 8875 affer 6 p l'n call DOWNTOWN bus in ess !ipltlce
Trl St•te Motl!le
3118 8865 weekly or monthly
for lease 2nd Ave across
Ham a S.les
clean tng bV appo intment
from Cttv Pork, Appro 2.800
Ph ·~~WI
91 If
Sq Ft Call 4.t6 18'19 or 446
1220 Eu1ern Av e, GJII i po ll~
1126 or see John Ecker
12 • 52 Fleetwood
TOOL
sharpening
taws
131 If 1970
1957 8 )( 45 Marlette
sc issors sheers home and
1959 10 x 51 Elcar
garden ools Sh arp Shop ,
l96J 10 x. -45 Kavwood
Alley rear, 147 Second
1959 10 x AO G~neral
216 If
Sale
1t56 8 x 47 Ponttec Chief
'WALlPAP'E RING-;nd-paln WANT EO to sell to gtod home 1962 10 • 52 Windsor
1966 12 x 46 Pontiac Chief
ll nO Pr.one .u 6 9865 or 379
very Qflntlt snettand pony
231 II
2A71
Contact Keith Moort U6

_________ ___

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

For

83 If

RO OFI NG and ;utter work
AlSO oullt up roof ing 388 8507

3925

-------- l•; Sowtn; ' 1
In or,vfnal factor,.
c:1rton l l g zao to matlit
buoonho ln ••w on butron'
monoorams , and rnll(e

1973
231 3 NEW
Macl'l lntl

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

Z l~

ELECTROLUX
vacuum
cleaner A 1 cond1rlon . uses
flr1~Y'
........ ..-paper bags, hU cord w lnder
dei iQnl W1fh futt ll'lt rWhf of•
BABY SITTING In my hom e
.and many atta chments Also
sl nO I't! dfal L'ft In I•Y ltWIV
Phone •46 4661
shtmpooer attachmenr In
and never bUn V!it~ W111 nil
230 6
cludld COnf¥ • a f"&amp;ll able} at
for only \41 cut!, or ltrm•
U7 70
cnh
or
terms
JValllblt Phon e- 446 '1.460
7311
IVIillblt Phone .446 2.t60
2~1 6
BABYSITTER In my home 5
M081LE home 10 "
days • wuk on Rt 3.5 4~6 21t1 --~---------G E refr l ~e re tor Call .. 6 mo condition 12,300 Ph
aftrr 4 p m
2)1 l
230 3

- --------_.
Wan'l!d

22011

I

________

------------....-

------

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

'

1

~.

�""j;~;·F;t"ii~sults Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

26

Real Es!ate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

For Rent
APAA:fMENT tor construction
men Ph U6 0756

MASSIE

261 .,

---------------.

SLEEPING ROOM S weekly
ntea Park Central Hotel
306 If

'

TARA
Townhouse
Apartments

9 Ml DOWN RIVER
7 big
rna 1 story all bnc k, w i th

base , all carpet (most new)
formal din rm • btaut•ful
equ,ppet:t k1tchen . liv rm 1.5
x J6' w1th F P and bockcue
Seau tr ful oak trtm and
statrcue Also has a 4 r m
tenant house tn good con
dll•on a barn a storage bldg
12' x. 24 and located on a 1 A
nver v iew lot Prrc e m •d
lort•es

P"y Only One
Ut1hty

------For Information
Ca II Shirley Adkins

367-7250
NEW mob1le home. e~e.cellent
locat ion adults only Phone

225 tf

--:----"")

lilokmg far a mob1le home
1o1 or ·• quality mobile home?
Wo ha~ve both at

QUAIL CRE~K
MOBILE
COMMUNITY
&amp; SAlES

SLEEPING

94 tf

3 BEDROOM 1972 Mobile home
linen, cookware air con

dttloned, television. furnished
W111 renl to 3 men S20 a week

each, SSO deposit requ1red
Reody 992 3509. Middleport
Ohio
146 If
rooms

SLEEPING

weekly
rates. free garage parkmg

Libby Hotel

241 If

------------VERY ntce tour room and bath

apt located at l27 Lincoln H tll
Rd , Pomeroy. Ohio
Gas
heat, vety low gas bill
Garage underneath
For
merly the Weed apartments

Call Pomeroy 992 305&lt; Tracy
Whaley

2266
2 BR: 11!2 batt'l mobile home
Couples only No pets Call t1ll
10 a m then a-ter 9 p m 256

6470

2276

------------Men
2 BR furntshed apt
preferred Apply at Shep
parc;l s Sales and Service
Ftrst and Oltve Street
Gaii•POIIS
227 tf

2 BR 10

n Ished

x

50 tratler l fully fur

3~7

7539

227 6

RENT A MOTOR HOME
FOR YOUR VACATION
Sleeps 6, complete pnmary
Insurance proy 1ded Rates 520
per day on weekly bas1s First
300 m1les free

CLOSE OUT SPECIALS
Several Travel Tratlers

12&amp;13Ft
Pr.ced 5595 &amp; Up
1972 Motor Home Exc Cond
Economy Motor Sales
&amp; Rentals

WOOOL:.AND DR - 6 rms all
new carpet over H W Rec
Rm
12 'x26
Plenty nice
cabinets built cn oven and
stove 1n kttchen
plenty
storage closets , cnter com in
1111 rms Cen atr It has a gar
and workshop 28'x.28 ' and
located on 1/~ A lot Must see
to apprec1ate $28 500

Beautiful

BECK

231 1
MOBILE home 'I• mile off Rt 7
on Georges Creek Rd Adults
only Call before noon or after
8 p m 446 4571

2293
'fRAILER space on Bob Me
Cormick Rd S35 per mo 446

3617

229 3

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

6R apt In R10 Grande
Utilities furn ished SlOO per

mo 245 5535

230 3

and brock 3 bid bdrms

BUHL MORTON R D - 1 year
old frame With bnck_ lnm , all
elec all good grade car pet
Ph ceram1c 111e baths alum
covered pat10 porch across
front double con dnveway
Lot Is 100 Jt 125' flat and
landscaped Must see to
apprec 1ate Pnf;e 526 900

WHI TE AVE - 4 rms and bath
'" good repa•r Lot ts 100 x

100

S7 000

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY Never worry about a lob
Ret.re 10 10 yrs N1ce famtly
deal Come 1n and d1scuss
Wtth US

MOBILE HOMES

x 52 .

72 MODEL Toronado 12
fully furniShed Lo ca ted on
two eo lots ,S 13 soo tor all o r
w i ll sell separate

2m lies from town all utilities

paid Phone 379 2380

230 3
SMALL furniSh ed house In
Thurmo!ln, Ohio New Cllrpet
and new paneling t hrouhouf.

353 3550.
230 3

-------------SUPER stuff
surfe nuf?!

That s Blue Lustre tor
cleaning
carpets
Rent
electric shampooer Sl lit G C
Murphy Co lower store

231 II

-HOUSE
........-----------located on old St Rl
160, 7 rm
arid
bath
References required 4~6

0161

231 3

2 BR 12 x 50 rnob11e home
Located In Addison
••6
0294 or 361 7736

Phone

FURNISHED house for rent In
Golllpail&amp; Adults only

••6

•507

231 3

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

·----------For Information
Or Appointment

PHONE

367-7250

FARMS
VINTON - 40 A All tracto r

Addison, 0.

land Frontage on 2 roads 7
rm house barn and poultry
house Price S35 000
fences , most clean and
tractor land Frontage on St
Rt 12.4 and County Rd 20
Mob1le home and barns

ST RT 141 - 27 A most clean
and tra c tor land 2 houses and
barn Price recued to S16 000

VACANT LAND
9 A NEAR Shrine Club
14 A on Kerr Rd

sa

ooo

Neal Realty
Corner of Th1rd and Sta1e
Gallipolis, Oh10 45631

INVESTMENT

4 DWELLINGS on one lot All
have new aluminum sldmg
Annual renta l S2,520 All are
rented If Interested tn a good
mvestment call today

FOR SALE DR RENT

5 YEAR old bri ck home on 1
acre of ground
Full
basement 2 baths Ll.fcated
seve11 m lies south of town

LOOK!

2 BR - Concrete block home on
three acres of ground Has
furnace carpet and bath Full

price 19 500

Charles M Neal444 1694
J Mcchaet Neal
------------~-

Wanted To Buy
OLD t oy tra.ns
parts or
anyth.ng connected wtth toy
tram s Ca ll 446 4843 after 4 30
p m and weekends
216 tf

foliage month
Raccoon
Valley The Longest Creek In
The World has a not of
Autumn colors Cruise the
valley from the beaut1fUI Ohio
R •ver up the valley to
Yellowtown In larQe crafts,
and on to Northup town '"
smaller crafts You can tour
the valley begmnlng at State
Route No Seven and Raccoon
Road then three m des north
on Ra ccoon Road to State
Route No 218, then lett on No
218 one mtle to Ingalls Rd
tur n fight and follow Ingalls
Road north to Northup Falls
then keep on the r1ght hand
bank of the 'lflaltey on
Blessings Road. follow the
roads along the creek to Cora
Falls on to Adamsville,
Tycoon Lake 1 V1nton and
Ewlngton, all lhts is 1n Ga111a
County Don t forget your
camera, you will be glad you
brought It
Loc ated two
miles
north
of
St
Rt 7 and one ml
South

of

St

Rt

No 218

YOU

will see Raccoon Valley Camp
Sites tor sate, view the
beautiful camps and mobile
homes that are there and see
how the nice people are en
Joy ing living In the valley We
offer for sale sites One (1) A
or more with most, &amp;II
modern conveniences, pn ce
sta rts at Five Hundred
Dollars on E 2 terms Hobart
Dillon Real Estate Brokl!'r,
Gallipo lis o Phone 4.46 2730

230 10

For Rent or Sale
NICE 60x.l2 mobile home for
sale or rent .4 mites on
Bulavllle Road on the left
Key I sat the trailer next door

230 3

For1ease --------

SMALL tobacco allotment to r
lease 1973 Call .446 0871

230 3

COR N E A cupboards
wall
cupboards chests old guns
any conclitlon
Also blu!
decorated sloneware Write
P 0 Box 44, Martin s Ferry 1

Ohoo 43935 or coli 484 4440

after 7

187 tf

-------------For Rent

to wall carpet Keep It new
with Blue lustre
Rent
electric shampooer Sl at

Central Supply Co

231 6

---------------.--

COULD be used for datry or
stock
Fenced and cross
fenced 3 large barns cattle
stanchions 2 car garage tool
shed p lenty outbulidtngs
Located north of Gav•n plant
on 8 T R:oad wtth 2 000 ft
frontage on Rd
Ideal for
development Rural water,
ctstern. wells creeks and
spnngs 60 A f1llable 60 A
extra good timber 21arge two
•
story homes One 4 BR &amp;
bath storm windows, doors~
arum tnum sldmg, furnace
One 3 BR &amp; bath home on good
cond •tton n tce for rental This
•s a lot In today s market lor
$.57 500 Owner wants to

-------------PUBLIC
NOTICE

We sell anylhlng for
anybody Br.ng your
11ems to Knotts Com
mun1ty Auction Born
Corner Th~rd &amp; Ohve
For apPotntment &lt;all
256 6961 afler S p m
Sate every Saturdoy
evemng at 1 O'Clock .

N1ce bu lldtn Q s1te on

ONE story home •n A 1 con
d1t1on N 1ce kitchen , fo rced
atr furnace. carport, concrete
dnve locat ed on a large lot
Also, a Small house on rear of
lot w1fh nt ce 1ncome
2 ACRES
3 BR - One story c lose to city,
cen tral a1r extra n ice k1t
chen, garage Pr i ce 121 000

BUSINESS
GOOD BUSINESS lot In coty

Extra good restaurant doing
good bus1ness , Frosty Freeze
and Grocery Store

COUNTRY LIVING

JUST m in utes from town large level lo t 100 x 185 3 BR
rancher , centra l a1r, ce dar
closets, w w carpet, garage
greatly reducecl
PEACE &amp; QUIET

NEARTOWN - 3 BR lwostory
home , carpeted, forma l OR
eat •n kitchen. patio doors
lead to covered pat to carport
Reduced for qu ick sale

CHARMING

3 BR - centr111 air, large eat m
kitchen ut ility room, carport
and !.torage room , Iorge level

lot 121,000

Nice bu 1ldmg Site

we

BUY sell or trade 1f you
have a home or acreage to sell
or tr ade ca ll Ohio R1ver
Realty toda~t we II be glad to
help you
Eventngs Call446 4244
Steven Bet2 446 9583
John Fuller446 4327

THE LEAD!OR SINCE 1f00 IN
SERVING THE NATION'S
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
Ph 446 0001
NEW

LISTING

-

LOVELY

WILL

NEW LISTING - BEAUTIFUL
SPLIT FOYER with alovely
htllside setting close to town 3
BR, 2 baths~ complete kit
chen, large dlnmg area with
pat1o doors, separate laundry
rm targe famlty rm with
ftreplace cent air &amp; garage
Be the first to see this one

at Sl4.700 and 115,500

ENO- Over an acre of rolling
land with a modern 6 rm
home and basement Only

NEAR MEDICAL CENTER This t yr old ranch features a
bnck front. garage, 3 BR ,
factory kitchen. &amp; 100 It
frontage of the 0 J White Rd

4

Bedrooms, bath

rm home w 1th u A close to
NGHS Owner anxious to sell
at 141900

EUREKA N 1c EST

-

sol1d built house, w w
carpet1ng

ltvtng

room,

dnlled well Plenty of
water. t1mber tobacco
N1ce barn 38 xl6
1s farm won't last long

See 11 now
3 BEOROOM (Large)
Large living room. modern
k1fchen wcth electnc stove
refrigerator
with
1ce

maker, garbage disposal,
dtshwa s her

copper

plumb1ng, ce ntral air,
modern ranch type brick
w1th stove

Front~

large lot

One block off 35 close to
HMC A beauty See 11 now
VACANT LAND
acres more or less 400 It
on State Rt 160 with 2 1nch
Rural water line Ideal lor
housing pro1ect or trailer
courts or other busi ness

Nicely

4 443 Acres -

304 71 ft

frontag e on

Rio Center

Poont Rd Approx 1'/,
m1les lrom R1o Grande
Good locahon for a home 1n
the Ptnes See lh1s
We Need Properly to Sell
Ltsl w1th us for best
results

ONE OF THE
remodeled older

will

find

anywhere Special features
are a large open foyer leading
to the w•ndlng stairway
f1replace In LR, large formal
dining rm , a BR &amp; a large lot
wttl'l an Ohio River view
BR ranch with over an acre of
land Th•s 5 yr old beauty
offers a 2 car garage, l:V"
baths,
alr
cond,
fu
basement with fa,m lly rm,
laundry and large stone
ftreplace
BIDWELL - 2 story 5 BR homem good condctlon Is located on
a 1 acre corner lot Owner Is
moving &amp; Is anxious to S!ll

large
commercial
garage

2 BR home with large Hvlng
room b11lh and gas lllrno ce
Also outbuilding Located at
south side w Va 16,500 Ca ll

675 3489 or 675 3488

230 6

AUCTION
SERVICE
"SEU TlfE AUCTION.
WAY"

JIMME SAYRE
AUCTIONEER

PH. 446-3444

AUCTIONEERS
BOATERS - Improved Real
Estate on the Ohio
Choice of three

FARMS
NEAR TYCOON LAKE - 45 A,
mostllf tractor land,
Mob1le home , S28 ,000

u

X 70

GREENFIELD TWP - 128 A,
log cabin, 113 000
NEAR RIO - 40 A, I rm home

R1ver

COMMERCIAL Property on Rt
1. Rl 160 and Rt 35
BUILDING sites In Green 1
Perry and Addison Twps

type

Second AVe

~nd Lot on

Crown City

2 BR

516.500
PERRY TWP

-

Excellent

ADDISON TWP -

60 A, 20 A

da iry farm , $75 ,000

FA EE County maps
Free
listing brochures Free coffee
and parking at Rancho
Realtors

NOT ANOTHER ONE ON
THE II•RKET FOR THIS
KINO
.r.''ONEY BATH ,
MOD~
'(}J 0 URNACE
LARGE b, &lt;.'/)'~RAGE ,
SHOP TOBA~
.ASE 1
MILES OUT 1
CITY
SCHOOL DISTRICT 1ST
BUYER WITH 125 ,000
TAKES IT

e

-

FALL VALUE DAYS!
1973 DODGE PICKUP

CARS

With camper lop, 3,20() miles, It's brand new

1972
MERCURY
MONTEGO
2

miles, good as new

1971
PONTIAC
VENTURA
One

THE OWNER WILL LET
YOU STEEL THIS 4 YR
OLD BRICK ON 2'12 A
LOT , LOWER RIVER RD
CALL FOR DETAILS IT'S
WORTH YOUR TIME TO
FIND OUT ABOUT THIS

VANS

STOCK

1971 33.000
RAMBLER MATADOR
1970 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE

1969 DODGE 1h TON PICKUP

R1ce

854 Second , 446 9523

NEV'.. and used Instruments,
8run1card 1 House of Mus1c, 54
State Stree t Phone 4.46 0687

600 E. STATE ST.
&amp; 1200 E. STATE ST.
ATHENS, OHIO

tlllabte , batBnce

in

eLINCOLN CONTINENTAL eMARK IV

peted, 2V2 baths 2 car garage,
Lake Dr , Rio Grande, price

mid

lhlrtles.

7 pet

ter!st Pl'l 245 5A39

In
2DI If

SeJVJces Offered
PROTECT
with TIE
Call Ron
oner J p

your mobile home
DOWN ANCHORS
Skidmore 4•6 1156
m
221 tf

SATURDA'Y, OCTOBER 6, 1973
Starling At 10:30 A.M.
Conslst1ng of everyth lng found In a used
furn1ture store Heatrolas, Desks. Chairs,
Beds. Dressers, Newly Upholstered Items,
Electrical Appliances, Chests, Miscellaneous,
Antiques &amp; Collector's Items Truly a good
VARIETY Sale
TERMS: CASH
TERMS: CASH
MR. and MRS. C. W. EXLINE, OWNER
- AUCTIONEERS-

Ktnntlh Swotn
Golllpollo, Ohio

Not Responsible For Accidents

IN

HOUSE FOR SALE
EUREKA across from

Gallipolis Locks on a 117 acre
tot -4 rooms end bath / alum
siding, storm doors and
windows Wall to well carpet
In all rooms bUt one Drilled

with

water

plenty

Fuel

oil

of

good

furnace

Choice of Gallipolis Clly

School Oist or Hannan Trace
School Olst For further In
formation call 256 1124 br
tween 6 and 10 p m Price

woods.

NEW 3 bedroom house , Green

Acres Sub Dlv Phone 446 1900

or

446 2890

212 II

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

BR brick home with 17 acres

of land , 2 m lies from Holler

Medical Centar on Kemper

Hollow Road Phone

~•6

2909
228 6

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

113.500

-------228 4
MALE fox hound/ color B w T
Emory Gordon If found call

COIIOCI
Robtrt
Gordon,
Cheshire, Ohio 367 7112
221 5

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

MALE grey Toy Schnauzer in
AddiSon vicinity Reward

Phone 367 7734

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

230 3

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, OCT. 6 AT 11:00 A.M.
Louted from Eurok• toko tho Bl•don-Merctrvltlt Rood,
go two mll01 then turn left onto Swon Cnok Wotch tor
Sale Signs
Llatlng In part 12'x20' tarp, wheat cradle, ••usage mill,
porch swing, work horM, horne.. , hames. Insulators .
sawo, log chains, horse drawn farm equipment In cluding
disk. cultivators. layolf plow, sled, laundry otove, 2- 20
gal atone jars, ocoles, sausage mill , fruit jaro. lawn
mower, Iron keltle, aad Irons, McCullough chain saw with
original chain, victrola, cream cans, lantern s, 5 piece
dinette set.stand tableo , Hotpoln! refrlgeralor •nd frttzer
comblnallon. olmott new . kitchen cabinet, Tappan got
range, gla'l door cupboard, living room Iuiie, coffee &amp;
end tables, recliner, rocker, 3 piece bedroom suite,
sideboard with mirror, &amp;ewing machine, chalr1.
Not Respanalblt far Acchltnts
Lunch Willie llrvlld
TERMS 1 CASH

Gallipolis, 0.

AUCriONEERS

New GMC

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

1963 :v, ton GMC plc~up
1968 3 Ton Chevv dump
l96B GMC 34 ton pickup
1967
T GMC PU
1969 '12 T GMC PU

'I•

1969
1967
1966
1969
1969

Chevrolet ~~~ ton pick up
1!1 ton Chev
GMC If? ton r u
1;7 T Ford PU
Dodge Stettlon Wagon

1959
1967
1966
1970

Ford Galaxle
'12 10~ Chevy pickup
,.., fon GMC pickup
'lo T Chev PU

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

Olk Hilt, o.

outboard S950

1956 8 x 47 Pontloc Chief

Golf

MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE
RECONDITIONED
MOBILE HOM CS
1954 8 x 27 Palace

825 Third Ave
Galllpalls, 0 .

1953 8 x 35 Peerless
1964 12 x 60 RoycraH

S384
sllghlly blemished Choice of
218 If
ct~rrylng can or sewing
stend , S•9 80 cash or terms
i973
ACK- ;t"e7;1n- l;vely
available..._ Phone 446,._2•60227 6 hand rubbed Walnut conaote

1961 12 x 50 Sc hult

1968 1'2 x 50 Marlette
19SS 8 x 42 Landola

_____ _____ __

ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxo
model Completo with all
c leaning atte ch mtnll end

uses poper bogo Slightly used
but cleans end looks I lite new
Will oell for S37 25 cuh or
Phone .tA6

227 6

Pay balan ce of S101 50 or
payments ca n be arranged
coli 146 0255
tf

218

JUsTtok-;;!n- i;iJ-;!'g- zag
sewlnO
machine
ThiS
machine is a oressmaker
model Pa y balance Of SJ8 SO
or pay ss per month Call 446

-------------- _____________
0255

1f YOU are building a now

_.
218

210 II
1971 CUSTOM Shultz 12 X 65 3
BR large expando, washer
and dryer , many extras
exc ellent cohdlt1on
See to
appreciate
New
loan
avellabte
Owners trans

Ph 388 8436
230 3

Pri ced right 304 882

------------Travel Trailer ,

Smith COAC HMAN

Corona
Olivett•
RoyaL
Standard or Electnc Por
tables Stmmons Prln tlnA !ind
Office Equ1pment

Motor Homes , 5th Wheel.
Truck Campers, Apple City
Auto Sates, Rt 35 N Jackson.

OhiO Phon• 286 5700

206 If

i

Willard

4954

ss oo ServIce Charge
Will remove your dead
horse and cows
t;all Jackson 286-oiSJI

Bosley, A.t6

282 If
TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FREE Inspection Coll••6 32•5
Merrill O'Dell Operator by
Ex.termlnal Trmlte Service,
10 Betmong Or

1-tOLLEY Broa Construct ion,
bulldozing, back hoe work1
ditching, under roads, boring

Phone 245 5011 or 2•5 5006
18 If
Centro I Air Conditioning
&amp; Hooting
Free Estlmltll

267 If
STEWART Electrical Service
Repair house wiring,
electric heating Phone ,fA6
~561

211 tf

SEPTIC TANKS
Cleaned and Installed

Russell • Plumbing , 4•6 •782
297 If

St•wart'l Hardware
VInton, Ohio

_________ "t"" ___ _to•

o

1965 10 x 50 Monarch

1961 12 x 60 Topper
BioS MOBILE HOMES
Second &amp; VIand St
Pt Pleasant
(Nul to Heck 1s)

P Martin &amp; Son Water
OeHvery
Service
Your
patronage will
be ap
preclatea Ph 446 0463

t

21!

GILLENWATER'S SEPTIC
THOMA I FAIN
TANK CLEANING AND
EXTERMINATING CO
REPAIR
ALSO HOUSE
Termite"&amp; Pest Control
WRECKING Ph 4469~99 .
Wheelersburg, Ohio
Established In 1940
169 tt AGRICULTURAL Lime for
sale and will spread H &amp; s
ALBERT EHMAN
Lime Co , 2455316
Water Delivery Service
219 26
Potrtot Star Rt , Gallipolis
Ph 319 2133
SEPTIC tanks c laanod- serving
243 tf
Gall la and Meson counli'l

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

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

'

__ __________ _

149 tf

Corbin &amp; Snyder __________ ___ _
Furniture
..._

furniture
antiques
a~pliances P&amp; J Addison ,

0 lo

co m per woter tanks ond other

Wt ore bulldtrt Olllrlbutor 1910 vw Good condition Ph
256 1!04
221 6 NEW sorta end Bamco mat
fo r Hotpolnl Appllancth ,
Alllaon Eleotrlc ,
troll and box sprl~oa Lerge
15~ If
selection In stock - firm
JBR- HOusE'o-;e;,o;-H;,ghts
meltnllll sterling et 539 00
1971 Ford LTO Call 446 9373
AL L TVPES of building
221 12
tiS Stcond Avonuo
materlall, block br lc: k1 ltwtr

IIWTTE

230 30

283 CHEVY
engine
n ew
Bathtubs Gas wan furnace

II

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

230 3

USED

horne or remodeling ~ ue ua

II ems C&amp;ll 245 5535 or see
next door to the Rio Gr~tnde

Borber Shop

230 3
----~~--------

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

M&amp;M
ROOF lNG I. Spouting, Shingle
&amp; Buildup roof Hot &amp; cold

tJ

I

I
I J
III

tEVJTLY
~.

[tEGOTH~

process. Hom e Improvement
In
gener.at 1
For
free
est i mates Phone 388 8114,

Bidwell , Oh iO

230 tf

-------------..-M S CONSTRUCTION
&amp;

ONCe 'TAI&lt;EN YOU'Re
E!IOUNP 10 50 UNPER.

EXC'AVATION an d general
remodeling Backhoe dozer
and tren ching Sept•( tanks
and footers All phasn of
plumbing / vlrlno
new In

stollo tlon Ca ll 388 9986

Plumbing &amp;Heating

GENE PLANTS &amp; SON
PLUMBING - Heating - Air
Condlllonlng 300 Fourth 1\Vo
Ph 4~6 1637 .

•• If

CARTER'S P~UMBING
AND Ht!ATING
Cor Fourth &amp; Pint
Phono ,.6 38Uor 446-4471
16.1-11

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

RUSIILL'I
PLUMitNG&amp; MUTING
Goltlpollo, 446·4712
297 If

Corbin &amp; Snyder ( I ) ( J I ~~::!~.:r;;~h:'~::::~~
-------------.,
••
,111
-------------- ___________ ...___
I I I)
1~
o
:.frfge~~~~r~"~
w~~~
[iri.I
..
I!IIIISUIISWIIItnj
UJ.
)
[
II
11
123
_____________.....
-------------- -----------------------oren
___ __________
_ _________ _ ----------------------------- -·.
2~1-5121

otter 5

If

176 tf

MINI BIKE , In good condlllon
146 95IJ ,or ••6 IO&lt;J
If
209

If

110 tf
1969 PLYM OUTH Fu r y 3 fully
equipped, S600 446 3242
, no trespass ing PIPES Pipes
Pipes GBD
__.
230 6 NOsigHUNTING
ns Signs of all kinds
Chera tan BBB Jobey l Hilson
Simmons Pig
and Office
and others Tawney 's Pipe and
1969 PLYMOUTH Road Run
Eu!pment
Trophy House 422 Second
ner good conditiOn 383, 4 sp
206 If
Ave
Fnt dependable urvlcts
extras 446 2775 aft er 5
BANKS TREE SERVICE
George Plants owner Phone
199 If
230 3 36 tN GIBSON Electric Stove
FREE estimates, lloblllty In
615 50•9
--- ------~---151 11
Cutting board on side S35
surance Pruning, trimming
FRESH 2 ~tear old Holstein
1961 DODGE Mon aco SW 9
and cavity work, tree end
446 9490 after 4 p m
Heifers
Also bred and
pass alr1 P a , P s, R&amp;H.
229 3
stump removal Ph ,f46 49.53
springing he1fers Brookdale
Shop all types of
tint glass v!nyl •nt Can be
13 tf CABINET
Farm 614 286 2496
wood work 101 Court Str11t
seen at Elliott s Union 76
SIAMESE and H1malayan
230 3
187 If
Own-er 446 961 1
ktltens 4A6, 3844 after 1 p m
MOTORIST MUTUAL
225
tf
226 6
INSURANCE
6 PC BREAKFAST •et S25
THE best Insurance at the best
li ving room sulfe $25 ' o ld
pr 1ce
For auto . home ,
china cabinet no pr1ce, baby
business and life Ray Hawk ,
bed SI S old bedroom su1 1e no
ogent, •46 2300 S41 4th Ave
O~MONSTRATOR SALt!
price refrigerator autom l'l t •c
150
If APACHE camp trallol, 13
delrost SlOO other m1sc
Unocramblelhese f011r Jumble!,
Eagle 41 73 Eagle 81 73 Mtll,
furn 11 ure and antiques P&amp;J ,
Savings up to 1600 1 used
one letter to each square, to
ROOFING
ond
Spouting ,
Addison Oh10
camper only 1175 Amtbarr
..._
Shi ngles
end
Buildup
form four ordinary words.
2305
Apache Trener Saln, 631
Hotroots Free estimate - 26
Fourth Ave, Gallipolis OhiO
yr
experience
James
1967 MUSTANG 6 cyl a uto
230 3
Marcum
Vlnton,
Ohio,
388
67 OOOmll~s wttl s~ll or tn1de
8114
See Dave In tr etrer at 309
228 If
Centra l Ave Rio Gr&amp;nde

1972 HONDA 350 Excellenl
1910 GMC I ton true~. duel GOOD CLEAN LUMP ond
cond 1,500 miles 1650 Can be
whooll with Mldwnt grain
Slln It Trl ~OUn1y MObile
stokor
cool
Carl
Wlnttro
Rio
bad with coltle rock&amp; 388 999l
Homea A06 Dill
Grlndo
PhoM HI 5115
_..
227 6
8 tf
367 1411
231 3

Now arronre the circled 1ollen

211 If

----~·---- -----

LAYNE ·s

USED - 2pc llylngroon&gt; suite
se,tlze

springs , 1m all coffee table
occasional cha ir lttble lamp
?55 Second Avenua
.4, t171
Frida I 1118
Plont~t o free pArk lng

21ltt

'

Portable

Welding,

cer tified prusure piping,
ctr tlf le d structural ltttl
welding, aluminum Hellarc

Ph ••6 3•10 2• hour strvlce
191 If

("-"•" Moad•l)

'htlftd•r'•

Jumbl~·~ LUIID OAVII. ACTING 'AOOOA

SE PTIC tank' lnstiolled, ttso 111
kinds of backhoe work C U

4ntwerl Thb hnrv ap~a,. lo havt Hlfte COI'IIJtdlM

Miller~

IIIIAtft&lt;lnciiJ-API.UG

.._

.....

I

tract

DEAD STOCK

Camping Equipment

1964 10 x 55 Consort

8TR

BUY d ire ct from owner, lots In
the city or coun ty or acreage
Look at lhe rest then buy the
best Robert A Queen 1026
Second Ave 446 0168

TWIN maple beds complete
229 6
w1th box. springs and In
nerspnng mattress Can be JO HN Deere dozer 1970 Chevy
used as bunk beds '570 446
P ick up 67 Pont1ac Tempest
4711
446 1502
229 3
225 8

Crafl TYPEWRITERS

-------------_ ____________

10 x 52 Windsor
12 x 46 Pontiac Chief
12 x 52 Fleetwood
8 x .tS Mertette

1959 10 x 52 Elcar
1963 10 x •5 Kaywood

SEE the 1974 Storcraft Astro
406 2532
Star tra ilers and fold down&amp;
267 tf
All 197 3 trellers deater s
cost
--------- --~camp Conley
CLOSE OUT on now Zig Zag
Starcnft
Sllu
Sewing Machines For aewlng
slr&amp;tch tabrlcs, buttonholes ~ Rt 62 N of Pt Pleasant beh in d
Red Carpet Inn Phone 675
fancy designs etc Paint

2460

ft

Gallipolis
--------------------------Daily Tribun&amp;

T GMC PU
T GMC PU
'12 T GMC PU
112 T GMC PU
y, T GMC PU
112 ron GMC PU
SOMMERSGMC
TRUCKS, INC
133 Pine St
If,

PhOflt

DAIIYL ALlAN

Golllpolls

1962
1966
1970
1957

18

230 :;

f i berg la ss Gaiter brake down
trailer so HP Chrysler eng me

22 t tf

:v,

terms a¥&amp;11able

BOA T

195411 10 x 40 General

8 tor St.OO

1969 lh T Chev PU

1969
1966
1968
1961
1967
1969

HOR SE for sa l e, 388 8737

Trl State Mob1le
Home Sales
Phone 446-7572
1220 Eastern Ave ,

1972 KAWASAKI 350 cc Dirt Complete Bookkeeping and Tax
boke 446 0832
Service . 424V4 Fourth Ave ,
228 4
Kanauga Business by appointment
Ph
~46-1041.
1961 CHRYSLER New Yorker
Pleav
call
ofter
6
p
m
A 1 condlllon Only 5650 245
278 If
5593
228 II DRY WALl serVICe by can

208 If

ferred
24iB

For 5ale·

For Sale

Se!vices Offered

BOB LANE'S

These ca rs are m top con
dlt lon
They Must Be Sold
Bob Rees Pontia c Inc
Thord &amp; Court 51 Gallipolis

36"x23"x 009

· SeJVICes Offered

For Sale

c

Gallipolis, Ohio

Eastern Ave.

FUR NITURE

SPECIAL - 2 pc l1vmg room
su te Reg $239 95 Now Only
1199 95

4 Used Cars Left at Sob Rees
Pont 1ac Inc Come In, look
these cars over Make us a
reasonable pffer If poss1ble
you may own that car
1972 Ponttac Catalina 2 dr
hardtop A C 1970 Ford V 8
135 1) engine. R &amp; H
automatrc
1969 Pont 1ac
Catalma 4 dr sedan, R&amp;H
automatic
1967 Pont1ac
Bonneville 4 dr hardtop A

$2995
WOOD MOTOR SALES

For Sale

Truck Headquartars
1965 lf2 ton Chevy Pickup
1968 lf? ton GMC pickup
1'169 3(,. ton Chevy pickup
1972 34 Chavv DICkUD
1963 2 ton Ford

NEW

auto. trans., P. steering, P. brakes,
gold metallic finish with white vinyl
roof, w-s-w tires, fact. air cDnd., low
mileage in excellent cond .

DATSON Phone 592-4463

1900 EASTERN AVENUE

FURNITURE

Bedroom suctes
rocktng
chatrs 2 pc
ltvmg room
suites
stoves
gas and
electr1 c beds, chairs , other
m 1scellaneous
•tems
at
reasonable pnce

2 Dr. hardtop, AM-FM stereo radio, ,

L&amp;M Phone 592-4491

Parsons

USED

72 PONTIAC CATALINA

eCAPRI eDATSUN eSUBARU eCOUGAR

plpu, WlndOWI1 tlnttll, tfC
Claude Winters Rio Grandt,

OWNER:'MR. &amp; MRS. CLARENCE SIBlEY
KENN!TH SWAIN
Gelllpolla, 0

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

Smith Honda Sales
Upper River Rd.

SMITH BUICKPONTIAC, INC.

190 tf

PHONE 446-2240

YOUR DEALER FOR

For Sale

COME IN SUNDAY AND
BROWSE AROUND

WE CARRY complete l1ne of
Protection bulbs Tawney
Stud1o, .424 Second Ave
224 tf

Evenings Call
E M. "Ike" Wlstmln

NI;W3BR
BRICK HOME
l'h bath, fully carpeted,
central atr, plenty of
cab1nets, electrtc range,
dishwasher, disposal, noce
level lot located 6 moles up
Route 7 In Country Alre
Estates .
Good
school
dostrlct, Kyger Creek low tax
d1stroct Can help fonance.
tnquore at Corbon &amp; Snyder
Furniture Co 446-1171 after 5
446 2573.

BUICKS AND
NTIACS IN STOCK!

~s"e~ FURNITURE

DALE R. SANDERS INC.

Office 446·36~3

~-1974

446-32n

Gallipolis

Glllla Co's Largest Real
Est1te Sal11 Agency

our Policy Is To Sell All 1973 Models 30 Days Alter '74 Show Date. Now Is

RICE'S

Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth

WE NEED LISTINGS
ANY
PROPERTY
ANYWHERE-CALL
THE WISEMAN
AGENCY

12 NEW 1973 BUICK
ELECTRAS &amp; LeSABRES LEFT.

s

TWO pc llvmg room sutte hk e
brand new - three 3 pc end
table
sets
French
Prov.ncial co uch Earl)~
Ame ncan couch - nice desk
wrmger washer gas
range - two 9x12 wool and
nylon rugs full lenyth
m •rror - n1ght stand- hvtng
room chatr wtth stool - 7 pc
d1nette set

Only A
Few Left To Sell

LIST PRICE '5576.00
DISCOUNT 1141,00

YOUR
PRICE

A1r cond, 6 40 sea ts, AM FM stereo

USED FURNITURE

NOW IN FULL SWING

$1295

1639 Eastern Av,.

Factory officia l

1973 BUICK LeSABRE
4 DR HT CUSTOM SMITH
"

For Sale

IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR ANICE CAR
COME IN AND CHECK THESE

441·3791
E N Wiseman, 446-4500
Bud McGhee, 446·1255

Many more extras

car

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Clearance Sale

Both In good cond1tion

PRICE AT

YOUR .
PRICE

Cascade blue wcth blue vmyi top

With air conditioning .

S~ECIAL

YOUR
PRICE

Air cond, P wind P sea t. AM FM
stereo, Radial tires Cru1se Control

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

1970 DODGE SWINGER 2 PR.
2· 1970 MAVERICKS 2 DOORS

LIST PRICE '7065.00
DISCOUNT 1377,00

1973 BUICK ELECTRA
LIMITED 4 DR HT

m1les, sharp

50 STATE STREET

P~ICE

Air cond P wmd P seat, AM FM
stereo, R~dlal steel belted tires. Cruise
Control Dot's car

EVERETT SAUNDERS - TOM NORRIS - JERRY BROWN

STATION WAGON, 6 passenger. P S, a1r
condition, sharp.

$5688

YOUR

1973 BUICK ELECTRA
SMITH
LIMITED 4 DR. HT

MEET THE DODGE BOYS...

owner. like new

SMITH DISCOUNT 1508.00

White, burgundy v1nyl top air cond. P
wmd • P seat AM. F M Iape stereo
Radial steel belted tires

30 OF THE SHARPEST USED
CARS IN THE AREA.
1963 THRU 1972 MODELS

1971
COMET 2 DOOR SEDAN
32,000

LIST PRICE 7196,00

~IVIERA

HURRY I THEY ARE GOING FAST!

SHARP. one owner, we sold th1s car new.

4 Door,

1973 BUICK

TRUCKS
NOW~ IN

1971 VALIANT 4 DOOR SEDAN

House Needs
Work

well

$15,000
NEAR VINTON - 115 A, mostly
woods, 115.000
MORGAN TWP - 8~ A vaconl - - - -.. - - - - - - - - -

Located on State Roule 93 In Coolton, Ohio, ot what Is now
known a• Ex lines' Swap Shop Walch for Auction Signs.

'

79 Acres
Good House

dlson and Green Twps

tractor land, large tob base ,

r-----....
-.
.
•••••••••••.iii.'l
PUBLIC AUCTION

Oarvl Alban
Oak Hill, Ohio

DAD , HERE'S A REAL
DANDY
FOR
THE
MONEY ,
4
OR
5
BEDROOMS.
COM
PLETELY REMODELED
THIS IS A HECK OF A
GOOD BUY IT 'S LIKE
NEW
INSIDE,
NEW
WALLS
CEILINGS ,
WALL TO WALL CAR
PET 1\LL LAND IS FLAT
PLENTY OF SHADE
TREES

HOMES Ond Acreage In Ad

NEAR LECTA- 135 A, 35 A

NEW 4 bedroom brick. car

LIVING" - - - - - -- - - - - - - -

-~~:~~:~:~:~- 222 1 2

REALTORS

~

living room carpet!d with
fireplace, built In kitchen
with diShwasher r lv!r view
F&gt;rice S14,000 Ph 256 6552
224 6

NOW GOING ON

DOOR HARDTOP, sharp as a tack .

Older Home
6 Acres

SALE

1

eMERCURY MONTEGO eCOMET

KANAUGA - Owner will help
finance this 5 rm home with LARGE Brick Home

86 A, 7 rm
home barn pond $32,000
R1nny Bllckburn
Branch Managtr

OUSE

We Have&amp;
New lor 4
Bedroom

DEMONSTRATOR

SAY.~

STATE ROUTE 588 - Modern 4

tand , S20 000

- - - - -- - - - - - - - NEW HOME, 3 BR w to w
3 BR brick home m Pleasant
carpe t Financing available
Valley Rt 35, has central a ir
446 t900 446 2890
fully c arpeted 2 car ga ra ge,
219 If
ref washer clr~ter and stove ____ _,_ ________....._

2 bath$

BEAUTIFUL
NEW
LARGE 3 BEDROOM
HOME WITH FORMAL
DINING.
COMPLETE
BUILT IN KITCHEN,
LARGE FAMILY ROOM,
ENTIRE HOUSE CAR
PETED. CENTRAL AIR, 2
CAR
GARAGE,
AUTOMATIC DOOR ALL
ON ONE FLOOR AND 1/1
A LOT ON U S 35 WEST
PRICE 535,500 MAKE ME
AN OFFER OWNER IS
VERY
ANXIOUS
TO
SELL

$3 ,000 down, 5100 per month

Fully carpeted , de Hghtf ul

BUY NOW!
GIVE your famlty th e gift that
keeps on gtving
Call for
appointment to see our
complete lis t of homes "WE

Brand New-1st
Quality
Construction

Two 1972 oil

hom.. that you

mce

SMITH

______..

---~----

BIG BWCK1.·~

DOC

STATE ROUTE 160 - Lorge I

MORGAN TWP -

$20 ,500

LOVELY 3 BEDROOM
HOME WITH FAMILY
ROOM ,
COMPLETELY
REDECORATED
IN
GOOD QUIET NEIGH
BORHOOD

proced ot S15,000

Vacant Land
WE HAVE 'EM
29'1' ACRE FARM

IN ALL STAGES OF
COMPLETION.
ALL
HAVE
RANGES,DISH
WASHER . CENTRAL AIR .
GARAGES,
FAMILY
ROOMS AND YOU CAN
DO
YOUR
OWN
DECORATING
PICK
YOUR OWN PAINT AND
CAR PET NOW IS THE
TIME TO BUY WHILE WE;
HAVE A GOOD SELEC
TION

6 FOR SALE OR LEAVE

$16,900

electric
mobile
homes
completely furnished
Ren
ling for over $4,000 per yr
Located m Add•son Twp and
Farm Res1dences

2 LARGE t~ ROOM
HOME
COMPLETELY
REMODELED
ON A
LARGE LOT IN EX
CELLENT
NEIGH
' BOR HOOD ON LOWER
2ND AVE - LOTS OF
WALL TO WALL CAR
PET LARGE LIVING
DINING AND FAMILY
ROOMS PLUS A MODERN
KITCHEN PLENTY OF
CLOSETS AND PRICED
RIGHT

5 2 LOTS AND MODERN
CLEAN 3 BEDROOM
HOME, READY TO MOVE
INTO LARGE ROOMS
THROUGHOUT PLUS A
FAMILY ROOM NICE
GARDEN SPOT AT END
OF STREET

homes at this location Both
are In good repa1r, have small
acreage and are priced to sell

Older Home
3 Acres
AT EWINGTON
5
BEDROOMS, 2 STORY
BEST PLACE I KNOW OF
TO RAISE CHILDREN STAIRS
ALL
DOWN
BEEN
REMODELED
PRICE AT 512,000 ITS A
BARGAIN

• NEW LISTING NEAR
GOLF COURSE IN AN
EXCELLENT
NEIGH
BORHOOD VERY WELL
BUILT
MODERN
3
BEDROOM
HOME
LARGE BUILTIN KIT
CHEN PLUS GARAGE
AND NICE YARD WE
DON'T THINK YOU CAN
BEAT THE PRICE ON
THIS ONE

HELP

FINANCE Remodeled 7 rm
2 story hom e w•th 2 acres of
land offers good llv1ng for
some lucky person

·~·

I SECLUDED AND IN
TOWN
WONDERFUL
SHAOY
LOCATION,
CLOSE TO SCHOOLS,
MODERN 3 BEDROOM
HOME
WITH
BASEMENT.
NICE
KITCHEN, LOTS OF
CLOSETS LARGE LOT
PLU S GARAGE AND
SHOP YOU WON'T BE
BOTHERED HERE YET
YOU'RE ONLY • BLOCKS
FROM SCHOOL

3 NEW PAINT JOB VERY
PLEASANT
NEIGHBORHOOD,
LARGE 3 BEDROOM
HOME WITH DINING
AND FAMILY ROOM lh
MILE OUT ON LARGE
SHADY LOT

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLER·
PLYMOUTH
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S LARGEST
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
DEALER
..............
.......--- -. .
_,... --..

Check These If You're Looking For A
Home In Or Close To Town.

RANCH offers many extras
lo r onl'r' U6 900 The mo.;Jern
k1t chen lnducles ranpe , hood,
gar d lsp , ret • dlshwnsher
end lois of cabinets Other
reatures are patio doors . den
with
etectrlc
lireplace
laundry rm anct a love ly
hillside se ll ing on State route
160 Be the first to see +his
one
Fmanclng can be
arranged

INVESTMENT -

kitchen and dining area
Owner leav ing this area to be
near hiS business Price

Plenty cabinets

AGENCY

remodeled 6 rm home has
atummum S1d1ng
storm
windows carport and large
back yard

TENDER Loving Care $hows In
this 3 SR. home near clly

BETTER

WISEMAN"

Largo~st

EASTERN AVE

T LC

SELL

iHE

WOOOS MILL RD - We have 2

222 ACRES - Top dairy farm
owner must sell due to health
Large barn 529 ton silo new
Grade A m likmg parlor, herd
can be purchased w th the
fa rm 1f des1red Home Is very
liv abl e w1lh lots of room
Plenty or water pa sture1 and
crop land

WANTED

A FAMILY WhO would love a
charm mg .4 B R - ll.~ bath
home •n R 1o Grande This 1S a
value packed home W1fh a
charmmg LR well des1gned
all built m kitchen vtd1ty
room w w car pet m lam cly
room w 1th patlo doors leadmg
to a natural stone pat1o a
large den or office room one
room basement with near new
furnace
attached overstze
garage All this set on a
beautiful well landscaped
lawn 94 x 140' Priced for a
quick sale

-

on Rt 775

ret~re

CROWN CtTY

JACKSON County- 73 A good OCTOBER Is beaut tfu l color

231 If YOU SAVE and slaved for wall

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

OUTSTANDING FARM
220 ACRES

'

all elec 135 frontage on Rt 7
and nver Lot IS 8 A $14 000J.

231 6

3 BR house, n1ce toca t10n 2
children llm1f. no pf!ts Ph
446 2852

Off 446 2674

Luctlle Brannon
Eve 446 1226 or 446 2674

I

land

2 ACRES - N1ce bul ldmg Sit e
on Rl 775

25 Locust St
Howard Brannon, Broker

Building
Sites
Available K1ngsberry
Homes bu1lt to f1t any
All
spec1f1cations.
Underground Ut1l1ties
Prov1ded.

12 MODEL Granville 12 x 60 ';

BARGAIN PRICED

HOUSETRAILER 1 BR located

NEW
HOMES
FOR SALE

.

S14,000

ACRES Vacant
located on St Rt 160

St Rt 160

REALTY

DEVELOPMENT
CORP.

rm IS x 25' kitchen and din
rm 12' x 2S' Ph baths H W
floors Located 21h m1 from
town on a lh A flllt lot Lots of
house for $32 000

EVERGREEN - 5 rms and
bath In good repa•r on rura I
water Has alum s1d1ng
storm drs and wm fur heat
lh base an~ storage bldg

2 ACRES - F tv ~ r oom house
cou nty water loca ted on
L1 tll e Kyger Rd

1 ACRE -

$/liUifi/JIL

World's

OWNER

,L - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- , 3 ACRES

TARA

BEAUTY

.---...TROUT
ALTY

Pnv11cy w•lh 11 delightful 1new
overlooking Gaii•POI IS CiJI'I be
yours w ith thi s to~o~ e ty tt'lr ee
bedroom home with pitJsh
tacillt1es
Formal d1nlnq
room c1ty wat er and schools1
ce ntral au· one l!lnd hlltl bath s
plus a powder room . c&amp;r
petmg locat ed on a la rge lot
Owner w111 tr&amp;de for a ADDISON TWP - LIKE NEW
cheaper farm or house
total electnc home Is priced
to se ll at $17 900 Th1s l BR
I:UREKA - Ni ce Vtew Of the
beauty IS located on 11 large
river with th•s three bedroom
lot on Georges Creek RQ
home
n1ce oath 1 furnace
heat lovetv dining and l1v1ng NEW LIST ING - $23.900 - 3
BR ranch less than 1 vr old
room w1th firep lace garage
offers a factory k.1tC:hen with
and a b1g lot
breakfast bar , patio doors. In
the d10lng area, garage and
NEIGHBORHOOD ROAD large corner lot cl ose to
N1ce three bedroom sectional
Centenary
home in city schoo l d•strlct
forced al r furn ace wtndow
air conditioner and a n1ce lot VINTON - Ni cely remodeled 8
rm homeonacornerlot ThiS
pnce r educed to S12 200
beauty 1S like new in!.1de and
tS tullv ca rpeted
ADELAIDE DR - Three
bedroom home W1th bath
IM
furnace, ndw carpet m llvmg MILLS VILLAGE
MEDIATE PO SSESS ION room and hallWay located
Owner moved to a farm and
close to town on a n•Ce level
agreed to sell th 1s lovetv 3 B R
lot
home at a pr1ce so reasonable
you won t bel1eve It Before
CHATHAM AVE - Good two
you buy
make an ap
bedroom homt'w•th ba th n1ce
po 1ntment to see this beauty
deep lot , room tor a garden
With a large 100 x 300 tot
ACREAGE
formal d ln1ng rm
tam lly
5 ACRES - Th1s property has a
rm , 2 f1replaces and garage
n1ce 14.:64 mobile home three
room house and two storage
MAKE
US AN OFFER
bulldmgs

60

OFFICE: 446-1066
EVENINGS
Russell D. Wood-446-4618
Ron Canaday-446·3636
John 1. Rlchards-446-0280

llv

MOBILE HOME 10 x 41 1n LOOKING for a summer home
We have a new 2 BR wlth
trailer park
Galltpolis
1
bath, sepf•c tank , well water
bedroom
5125 per mo
and loca t ed on Raccoon
UtilitieS pa1d
Ph 446 3844
Creek Ca ll todoy for an
after 1 p m
appomtment to see ttus one
230 tf

evenln(is 353 6928

All Electric Home. 2 miles lrom Gall1pohs, 3 bedroom s
bath n1ce modern kttchen, garage on lot 95 1xl65' pnce
$21 000

frame

ANY HR 446 1998

Ph 446 1425

Phone dav

Bnck home on Lower R1ver Road in excellent condc t 1on 1
fireplaces modern k1tchen plus a summer kitchen m
basement. all hardwood floors, 3 porches, centra l a~r new
drapes Too many extras to name, let us show you lhts
home for grac1ous 1tv10g

RD

Tn Level

4 A on Smtth Rd , $10,000

1401 Eastern Ave

$85

On Lower River Road modern Ira me dwelling wilh 2 or 3
bedrooms overlookmg the Ohio River This home has new
c:arpetmg and new drapes modern kitchen also ver y
large llvtng room 2 car garage, on a large lot

LOWER RIVER RD - 5 rms
and batll m good repa1r, 2
storage bldgs , and located on
1 A level lot Ideal for the
gardener or a trail er park
Price redllced to S12 900

CROUSE

Galllo

Hotel

Seelhls lovely one year old home, has 3 bedrooms. lully
carpeted central a~r , beaulllul kitchen plus dining area
wi th a ll conventence built tn flntshed family room in
basement 2 car garage with automat ic door level lot
located on ~~ 35 close to hosp ital

bought for S22.500

ra2,

rooms

TRI LEVEL

NORTH OF HMC -

GREEN ACRES- 6 rm frame
home, new carpet over H W
floors nice built In kitchen/
ce n air, llat lot , and can be

l!odney Cora Rd
Rodney , Oh1o
Hou• .. 9 ,1 rn to 9 P m
Monday lhru Saturday
9374-24 ~

..

LUXURY LIVING Lower
R tver Rd - 8 big rms all
bnck 1 f1r 21h baths 2 F P
deep closets l tned wcth cedar
all carpet dream k1tchen has
d isposal double steel sink
dishwasher blender gnnder
and lt)hcer . built In oven
refngerator and freezer Th1s
home has quality plus Walk
out of the master bdrm and
take a d1ve •n the pool 20 xSO
Locateel on 1 A level tot W1th
rcver v1ew

Acld1son, Ohio

Ph 245

Mummy that denttst wasn' t pa inless like he sa1d
• Why, did he hurt you' "
:• No• but he yelled just hke any other dentist when I bit his
linger"

New 6 rms
11 7 baths all
brtck all elec
al l carpet,
1 450 sq ft hvmg area plus 24'
x 28 atta ched gar , l1v rm 12
.: 24 ' EKtra ntce equipped
k1tchen wtth bar Located on
better than 11 A flat lot Th is
1S a good buy tor 534 000

Ph Baths

.. ---

Oscat Saud
Doug WC! fhCrholt
&amp;rokers
Olhce 446 l4l4
MILL S Vtll. A OE
V erv
lovely lhree bedroom hom e
w1tn lamllv roon1 ftnd den on
m11ln tloor , bnutllul cupet
throughout two bath S. 1WO
t lrepli.l ce$ , ce nua1 a ir con •
full basement and rec room
and ~ltached garag e_ Large
(luatlt'; hOme With ChO IC e
IOCtttiOr'l

only 531500
I'' Ml

446 0338

Realty

REALTOR 446-1066

Tel 446 l S98

MT ZION RO 819 ram
bl 1ng 6 rm bn ck 3 large
bdrms, l!v rm 18 x 23 with
F P dtn rm 10 .: 12 • 1',
bBths all ca rpel copper
plumb1ng marble wmdow
Sills and al um wmdows It
has a huge carport Ideal
location '48 A flat lot Pnce

2 Bedroom
Townhouses

OHIO RIVER

RUSSELL WOOD

Realty. 32 State St

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

fl - Tilt' SIUldlty Tim•• • S.nlltk•l, SIUlday, Sept 30, 11J7.t

•

'

_,....._

Rio Grande, 2115 5535

198 30

DEWITT'S P~UMIINO.,.
ANO H!.f\TING
Routt 16U ot Evtrlrttn
Pnono ••• 2731

Ill If

STANDARD
Plumbing &amp; Hottlftl
214 Third A¥t , ... 31l~l1-lt

�""j;~;·F;t"ii~sults Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

26

Real Es!ate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

For Rent
APAA:fMENT tor construction
men Ph U6 0756

MASSIE

261 .,

---------------.

SLEEPING ROOM S weekly
ntea Park Central Hotel
306 If

'

TARA
Townhouse
Apartments

9 Ml DOWN RIVER
7 big
rna 1 story all bnc k, w i th

base , all carpet (most new)
formal din rm • btaut•ful
equ,ppet:t k1tchen . liv rm 1.5
x J6' w1th F P and bockcue
Seau tr ful oak trtm and
statrcue Also has a 4 r m
tenant house tn good con
dll•on a barn a storage bldg
12' x. 24 and located on a 1 A
nver v iew lot Prrc e m •d
lort•es

P"y Only One
Ut1hty

------For Information
Ca II Shirley Adkins

367-7250
NEW mob1le home. e~e.cellent
locat ion adults only Phone

225 tf

--:----"")

lilokmg far a mob1le home
1o1 or ·• quality mobile home?
Wo ha~ve both at

QUAIL CRE~K
MOBILE
COMMUNITY
&amp; SAlES

SLEEPING

94 tf

3 BEDROOM 1972 Mobile home
linen, cookware air con

dttloned, television. furnished
W111 renl to 3 men S20 a week

each, SSO deposit requ1red
Reody 992 3509. Middleport
Ohio
146 If
rooms

SLEEPING

weekly
rates. free garage parkmg

Libby Hotel

241 If

------------VERY ntce tour room and bath

apt located at l27 Lincoln H tll
Rd , Pomeroy. Ohio
Gas
heat, vety low gas bill
Garage underneath
For
merly the Weed apartments

Call Pomeroy 992 305&lt; Tracy
Whaley

2266
2 BR: 11!2 batt'l mobile home
Couples only No pets Call t1ll
10 a m then a-ter 9 p m 256

6470

2276

------------Men
2 BR furntshed apt
preferred Apply at Shep
parc;l s Sales and Service
Ftrst and Oltve Street
Gaii•POIIS
227 tf

2 BR 10

n Ished

x

50 tratler l fully fur

3~7

7539

227 6

RENT A MOTOR HOME
FOR YOUR VACATION
Sleeps 6, complete pnmary
Insurance proy 1ded Rates 520
per day on weekly bas1s First
300 m1les free

CLOSE OUT SPECIALS
Several Travel Tratlers

12&amp;13Ft
Pr.ced 5595 &amp; Up
1972 Motor Home Exc Cond
Economy Motor Sales
&amp; Rentals

WOOOL:.AND DR - 6 rms all
new carpet over H W Rec
Rm
12 'x26
Plenty nice
cabinets built cn oven and
stove 1n kttchen
plenty
storage closets , cnter com in
1111 rms Cen atr It has a gar
and workshop 28'x.28 ' and
located on 1/~ A lot Must see
to apprec1ate $28 500

Beautiful

BECK

231 1
MOBILE home 'I• mile off Rt 7
on Georges Creek Rd Adults
only Call before noon or after
8 p m 446 4571

2293
'fRAILER space on Bob Me
Cormick Rd S35 per mo 446

3617

229 3

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

6R apt In R10 Grande
Utilities furn ished SlOO per

mo 245 5535

230 3

and brock 3 bid bdrms

BUHL MORTON R D - 1 year
old frame With bnck_ lnm , all
elec all good grade car pet
Ph ceram1c 111e baths alum
covered pat10 porch across
front double con dnveway
Lot Is 100 Jt 125' flat and
landscaped Must see to
apprec 1ate Pnf;e 526 900

WHI TE AVE - 4 rms and bath
'" good repa•r Lot ts 100 x

100

S7 000

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY Never worry about a lob
Ret.re 10 10 yrs N1ce famtly
deal Come 1n and d1scuss
Wtth US

MOBILE HOMES

x 52 .

72 MODEL Toronado 12
fully furniShed Lo ca ted on
two eo lots ,S 13 soo tor all o r
w i ll sell separate

2m lies from town all utilities

paid Phone 379 2380

230 3
SMALL furniSh ed house In
Thurmo!ln, Ohio New Cllrpet
and new paneling t hrouhouf.

353 3550.
230 3

-------------SUPER stuff
surfe nuf?!

That s Blue Lustre tor
cleaning
carpets
Rent
electric shampooer Sl lit G C
Murphy Co lower store

231 II

-HOUSE
........-----------located on old St Rl
160, 7 rm
arid
bath
References required 4~6

0161

231 3

2 BR 12 x 50 rnob11e home
Located In Addison
••6
0294 or 361 7736

Phone

FURNISHED house for rent In
Golllpail&amp; Adults only

••6

•507

231 3

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

·----------For Information
Or Appointment

PHONE

367-7250

FARMS
VINTON - 40 A All tracto r

Addison, 0.

land Frontage on 2 roads 7
rm house barn and poultry
house Price S35 000
fences , most clean and
tractor land Frontage on St
Rt 12.4 and County Rd 20
Mob1le home and barns

ST RT 141 - 27 A most clean
and tra c tor land 2 houses and
barn Price recued to S16 000

VACANT LAND
9 A NEAR Shrine Club
14 A on Kerr Rd

sa

ooo

Neal Realty
Corner of Th1rd and Sta1e
Gallipolis, Oh10 45631

INVESTMENT

4 DWELLINGS on one lot All
have new aluminum sldmg
Annual renta l S2,520 All are
rented If Interested tn a good
mvestment call today

FOR SALE DR RENT

5 YEAR old bri ck home on 1
acre of ground
Full
basement 2 baths Ll.fcated
seve11 m lies south of town

LOOK!

2 BR - Concrete block home on
three acres of ground Has
furnace carpet and bath Full

price 19 500

Charles M Neal444 1694
J Mcchaet Neal
------------~-

Wanted To Buy
OLD t oy tra.ns
parts or
anyth.ng connected wtth toy
tram s Ca ll 446 4843 after 4 30
p m and weekends
216 tf

foliage month
Raccoon
Valley The Longest Creek In
The World has a not of
Autumn colors Cruise the
valley from the beaut1fUI Ohio
R •ver up the valley to
Yellowtown In larQe crafts,
and on to Northup town '"
smaller crafts You can tour
the valley begmnlng at State
Route No Seven and Raccoon
Road then three m des north
on Ra ccoon Road to State
Route No 218, then lett on No
218 one mtle to Ingalls Rd
tur n fight and follow Ingalls
Road north to Northup Falls
then keep on the r1ght hand
bank of the 'lflaltey on
Blessings Road. follow the
roads along the creek to Cora
Falls on to Adamsville,
Tycoon Lake 1 V1nton and
Ewlngton, all lhts is 1n Ga111a
County Don t forget your
camera, you will be glad you
brought It
Loc ated two
miles
north
of
St
Rt 7 and one ml
South

of

St

Rt

No 218

YOU

will see Raccoon Valley Camp
Sites tor sate, view the
beautiful camps and mobile
homes that are there and see
how the nice people are en
Joy ing living In the valley We
offer for sale sites One (1) A
or more with most, &amp;II
modern conveniences, pn ce
sta rts at Five Hundred
Dollars on E 2 terms Hobart
Dillon Real Estate Brokl!'r,
Gallipo lis o Phone 4.46 2730

230 10

For Rent or Sale
NICE 60x.l2 mobile home for
sale or rent .4 mites on
Bulavllle Road on the left
Key I sat the trailer next door

230 3

For1ease --------

SMALL tobacco allotment to r
lease 1973 Call .446 0871

230 3

COR N E A cupboards
wall
cupboards chests old guns
any conclitlon
Also blu!
decorated sloneware Write
P 0 Box 44, Martin s Ferry 1

Ohoo 43935 or coli 484 4440

after 7

187 tf

-------------For Rent

to wall carpet Keep It new
with Blue lustre
Rent
electric shampooer Sl at

Central Supply Co

231 6

---------------.--

COULD be used for datry or
stock
Fenced and cross
fenced 3 large barns cattle
stanchions 2 car garage tool
shed p lenty outbulidtngs
Located north of Gav•n plant
on 8 T R:oad wtth 2 000 ft
frontage on Rd
Ideal for
development Rural water,
ctstern. wells creeks and
spnngs 60 A f1llable 60 A
extra good timber 21arge two
•
story homes One 4 BR &amp;
bath storm windows, doors~
arum tnum sldmg, furnace
One 3 BR &amp; bath home on good
cond •tton n tce for rental This
•s a lot In today s market lor
$.57 500 Owner wants to

-------------PUBLIC
NOTICE

We sell anylhlng for
anybody Br.ng your
11ems to Knotts Com
mun1ty Auction Born
Corner Th~rd &amp; Ohve
For apPotntment &lt;all
256 6961 afler S p m
Sate every Saturdoy
evemng at 1 O'Clock .

N1ce bu lldtn Q s1te on

ONE story home •n A 1 con
d1t1on N 1ce kitchen , fo rced
atr furnace. carport, concrete
dnve locat ed on a large lot
Also, a Small house on rear of
lot w1fh nt ce 1ncome
2 ACRES
3 BR - One story c lose to city,
cen tral a1r extra n ice k1t
chen, garage Pr i ce 121 000

BUSINESS
GOOD BUSINESS lot In coty

Extra good restaurant doing
good bus1ness , Frosty Freeze
and Grocery Store

COUNTRY LIVING

JUST m in utes from town large level lo t 100 x 185 3 BR
rancher , centra l a1r, ce dar
closets, w w carpet, garage
greatly reducecl
PEACE &amp; QUIET

NEARTOWN - 3 BR lwostory
home , carpeted, forma l OR
eat •n kitchen. patio doors
lead to covered pat to carport
Reduced for qu ick sale

CHARMING

3 BR - centr111 air, large eat m
kitchen ut ility room, carport
and !.torage room , Iorge level

lot 121,000

Nice bu 1ldmg Site

we

BUY sell or trade 1f you
have a home or acreage to sell
or tr ade ca ll Ohio R1ver
Realty toda~t we II be glad to
help you
Eventngs Call446 4244
Steven Bet2 446 9583
John Fuller446 4327

THE LEAD!OR SINCE 1f00 IN
SERVING THE NATION'S
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
Ph 446 0001
NEW

LISTING

-

LOVELY

WILL

NEW LISTING - BEAUTIFUL
SPLIT FOYER with alovely
htllside setting close to town 3
BR, 2 baths~ complete kit
chen, large dlnmg area with
pat1o doors, separate laundry
rm targe famlty rm with
ftreplace cent air &amp; garage
Be the first to see this one

at Sl4.700 and 115,500

ENO- Over an acre of rolling
land with a modern 6 rm
home and basement Only

NEAR MEDICAL CENTER This t yr old ranch features a
bnck front. garage, 3 BR ,
factory kitchen. &amp; 100 It
frontage of the 0 J White Rd

4

Bedrooms, bath

rm home w 1th u A close to
NGHS Owner anxious to sell
at 141900

EUREKA N 1c EST

-

sol1d built house, w w
carpet1ng

ltvtng

room,

dnlled well Plenty of
water. t1mber tobacco
N1ce barn 38 xl6
1s farm won't last long

See 11 now
3 BEOROOM (Large)
Large living room. modern
k1fchen wcth electnc stove
refrigerator
with
1ce

maker, garbage disposal,
dtshwa s her

copper

plumb1ng, ce ntral air,
modern ranch type brick
w1th stove

Front~

large lot

One block off 35 close to
HMC A beauty See 11 now
VACANT LAND
acres more or less 400 It
on State Rt 160 with 2 1nch
Rural water line Ideal lor
housing pro1ect or trailer
courts or other busi ness

Nicely

4 443 Acres -

304 71 ft

frontag e on

Rio Center

Poont Rd Approx 1'/,
m1les lrom R1o Grande
Good locahon for a home 1n
the Ptnes See lh1s
We Need Properly to Sell
Ltsl w1th us for best
results

ONE OF THE
remodeled older

will

find

anywhere Special features
are a large open foyer leading
to the w•ndlng stairway
f1replace In LR, large formal
dining rm , a BR &amp; a large lot
wttl'l an Ohio River view
BR ranch with over an acre of
land Th•s 5 yr old beauty
offers a 2 car garage, l:V"
baths,
alr
cond,
fu
basement with fa,m lly rm,
laundry and large stone
ftreplace
BIDWELL - 2 story 5 BR homem good condctlon Is located on
a 1 acre corner lot Owner Is
moving &amp; Is anxious to S!ll

large
commercial
garage

2 BR home with large Hvlng
room b11lh and gas lllrno ce
Also outbuilding Located at
south side w Va 16,500 Ca ll

675 3489 or 675 3488

230 6

AUCTION
SERVICE
"SEU TlfE AUCTION.
WAY"

JIMME SAYRE
AUCTIONEER

PH. 446-3444

AUCTIONEERS
BOATERS - Improved Real
Estate on the Ohio
Choice of three

FARMS
NEAR TYCOON LAKE - 45 A,
mostllf tractor land,
Mob1le home , S28 ,000

u

X 70

GREENFIELD TWP - 128 A,
log cabin, 113 000
NEAR RIO - 40 A, I rm home

R1ver

COMMERCIAL Property on Rt
1. Rl 160 and Rt 35
BUILDING sites In Green 1
Perry and Addison Twps

type

Second AVe

~nd Lot on

Crown City

2 BR

516.500
PERRY TWP

-

Excellent

ADDISON TWP -

60 A, 20 A

da iry farm , $75 ,000

FA EE County maps
Free
listing brochures Free coffee
and parking at Rancho
Realtors

NOT ANOTHER ONE ON
THE II•RKET FOR THIS
KINO
.r.''ONEY BATH ,
MOD~
'(}J 0 URNACE
LARGE b, &lt;.'/)'~RAGE ,
SHOP TOBA~
.ASE 1
MILES OUT 1
CITY
SCHOOL DISTRICT 1ST
BUYER WITH 125 ,000
TAKES IT

e

-

FALL VALUE DAYS!
1973 DODGE PICKUP

CARS

With camper lop, 3,20() miles, It's brand new

1972
MERCURY
MONTEGO
2

miles, good as new

1971
PONTIAC
VENTURA
One

THE OWNER WILL LET
YOU STEEL THIS 4 YR
OLD BRICK ON 2'12 A
LOT , LOWER RIVER RD
CALL FOR DETAILS IT'S
WORTH YOUR TIME TO
FIND OUT ABOUT THIS

VANS

STOCK

1971 33.000
RAMBLER MATADOR
1970 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE

1969 DODGE 1h TON PICKUP

R1ce

854 Second , 446 9523

NEV'.. and used Instruments,
8run1card 1 House of Mus1c, 54
State Stree t Phone 4.46 0687

600 E. STATE ST.
&amp; 1200 E. STATE ST.
ATHENS, OHIO

tlllabte , batBnce

in

eLINCOLN CONTINENTAL eMARK IV

peted, 2V2 baths 2 car garage,
Lake Dr , Rio Grande, price

mid

lhlrtles.

7 pet

ter!st Pl'l 245 5A39

In
2DI If

SeJVJces Offered
PROTECT
with TIE
Call Ron
oner J p

your mobile home
DOWN ANCHORS
Skidmore 4•6 1156
m
221 tf

SATURDA'Y, OCTOBER 6, 1973
Starling At 10:30 A.M.
Conslst1ng of everyth lng found In a used
furn1ture store Heatrolas, Desks. Chairs,
Beds. Dressers, Newly Upholstered Items,
Electrical Appliances, Chests, Miscellaneous,
Antiques &amp; Collector's Items Truly a good
VARIETY Sale
TERMS: CASH
TERMS: CASH
MR. and MRS. C. W. EXLINE, OWNER
- AUCTIONEERS-

Ktnntlh Swotn
Golllpollo, Ohio

Not Responsible For Accidents

IN

HOUSE FOR SALE
EUREKA across from

Gallipolis Locks on a 117 acre
tot -4 rooms end bath / alum
siding, storm doors and
windows Wall to well carpet
In all rooms bUt one Drilled

with

water

plenty

Fuel

oil

of

good

furnace

Choice of Gallipolis Clly

School Oist or Hannan Trace
School Olst For further In
formation call 256 1124 br
tween 6 and 10 p m Price

woods.

NEW 3 bedroom house , Green

Acres Sub Dlv Phone 446 1900

or

446 2890

212 II

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

BR brick home with 17 acres

of land , 2 m lies from Holler

Medical Centar on Kemper

Hollow Road Phone

~•6

2909
228 6

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

113.500

-------228 4
MALE fox hound/ color B w T
Emory Gordon If found call

COIIOCI
Robtrt
Gordon,
Cheshire, Ohio 367 7112
221 5

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

MALE grey Toy Schnauzer in
AddiSon vicinity Reward

Phone 367 7734

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

230 3

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, OCT. 6 AT 11:00 A.M.
Louted from Eurok• toko tho Bl•don-Merctrvltlt Rood,
go two mll01 then turn left onto Swon Cnok Wotch tor
Sale Signs
Llatlng In part 12'x20' tarp, wheat cradle, ••usage mill,
porch swing, work horM, horne.. , hames. Insulators .
sawo, log chains, horse drawn farm equipment In cluding
disk. cultivators. layolf plow, sled, laundry otove, 2- 20
gal atone jars, ocoles, sausage mill , fruit jaro. lawn
mower, Iron keltle, aad Irons, McCullough chain saw with
original chain, victrola, cream cans, lantern s, 5 piece
dinette set.stand tableo , Hotpoln! refrlgeralor •nd frttzer
comblnallon. olmott new . kitchen cabinet, Tappan got
range, gla'l door cupboard, living room Iuiie, coffee &amp;
end tables, recliner, rocker, 3 piece bedroom suite,
sideboard with mirror, &amp;ewing machine, chalr1.
Not Respanalblt far Acchltnts
Lunch Willie llrvlld
TERMS 1 CASH

Gallipolis, 0.

AUCriONEERS

New GMC

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

1963 :v, ton GMC plc~up
1968 3 Ton Chevv dump
l96B GMC 34 ton pickup
1967
T GMC PU
1969 '12 T GMC PU

'I•

1969
1967
1966
1969
1969

Chevrolet ~~~ ton pick up
1!1 ton Chev
GMC If? ton r u
1;7 T Ford PU
Dodge Stettlon Wagon

1959
1967
1966
1970

Ford Galaxle
'12 10~ Chevy pickup
,.., fon GMC pickup
'lo T Chev PU

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

Olk Hilt, o.

outboard S950

1956 8 x 47 Pontloc Chief

Golf

MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE
RECONDITIONED
MOBILE HOM CS
1954 8 x 27 Palace

825 Third Ave
Galllpalls, 0 .

1953 8 x 35 Peerless
1964 12 x 60 RoycraH

S384
sllghlly blemished Choice of
218 If
ct~rrylng can or sewing
stend , S•9 80 cash or terms
i973
ACK- ;t"e7;1n- l;vely
available..._ Phone 446,._2•60227 6 hand rubbed Walnut conaote

1961 12 x 50 Sc hult

1968 1'2 x 50 Marlette
19SS 8 x 42 Landola

_____ _____ __

ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxo
model Completo with all
c leaning atte ch mtnll end

uses poper bogo Slightly used
but cleans end looks I lite new
Will oell for S37 25 cuh or
Phone .tA6

227 6

Pay balan ce of S101 50 or
payments ca n be arranged
coli 146 0255
tf

218

JUsTtok-;;!n- i;iJ-;!'g- zag
sewlnO
machine
ThiS
machine is a oressmaker
model Pa y balance Of SJ8 SO
or pay ss per month Call 446

-------------- _____________
0255

1f YOU are building a now

_.
218

210 II
1971 CUSTOM Shultz 12 X 65 3
BR large expando, washer
and dryer , many extras
exc ellent cohdlt1on
See to
appreciate
New
loan
avellabte
Owners trans

Ph 388 8436
230 3

Pri ced right 304 882

------------Travel Trailer ,

Smith COAC HMAN

Corona
Olivett•
RoyaL
Standard or Electnc Por
tables Stmmons Prln tlnA !ind
Office Equ1pment

Motor Homes , 5th Wheel.
Truck Campers, Apple City
Auto Sates, Rt 35 N Jackson.

OhiO Phon• 286 5700

206 If

i

Willard

4954

ss oo ServIce Charge
Will remove your dead
horse and cows
t;all Jackson 286-oiSJI

Bosley, A.t6

282 If
TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FREE Inspection Coll••6 32•5
Merrill O'Dell Operator by
Ex.termlnal Trmlte Service,
10 Betmong Or

1-tOLLEY Broa Construct ion,
bulldozing, back hoe work1
ditching, under roads, boring

Phone 245 5011 or 2•5 5006
18 If
Centro I Air Conditioning
&amp; Hooting
Free Estlmltll

267 If
STEWART Electrical Service
Repair house wiring,
electric heating Phone ,fA6
~561

211 tf

SEPTIC TANKS
Cleaned and Installed

Russell • Plumbing , 4•6 •782
297 If

St•wart'l Hardware
VInton, Ohio

_________ "t"" ___ _to•

o

1965 10 x 50 Monarch

1961 12 x 60 Topper
BioS MOBILE HOMES
Second &amp; VIand St
Pt Pleasant
(Nul to Heck 1s)

P Martin &amp; Son Water
OeHvery
Service
Your
patronage will
be ap
preclatea Ph 446 0463

t

21!

GILLENWATER'S SEPTIC
THOMA I FAIN
TANK CLEANING AND
EXTERMINATING CO
REPAIR
ALSO HOUSE
Termite"&amp; Pest Control
WRECKING Ph 4469~99 .
Wheelersburg, Ohio
Established In 1940
169 tt AGRICULTURAL Lime for
sale and will spread H &amp; s
ALBERT EHMAN
Lime Co , 2455316
Water Delivery Service
219 26
Potrtot Star Rt , Gallipolis
Ph 319 2133
SEPTIC tanks c laanod- serving
243 tf
Gall la and Meson counli'l

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

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

'

__ __________ _

149 tf

Corbin &amp; Snyder __________ ___ _
Furniture
..._

furniture
antiques
a~pliances P&amp; J Addison ,

0 lo

co m per woter tanks ond other

Wt ore bulldtrt Olllrlbutor 1910 vw Good condition Ph
256 1!04
221 6 NEW sorta end Bamco mat
fo r Hotpolnl Appllancth ,
Alllaon Eleotrlc ,
troll and box sprl~oa Lerge
15~ If
selection In stock - firm
JBR- HOusE'o-;e;,o;-H;,ghts
meltnllll sterling et 539 00
1971 Ford LTO Call 446 9373
AL L TVPES of building
221 12
tiS Stcond Avonuo
materlall, block br lc: k1 ltwtr

IIWTTE

230 30

283 CHEVY
engine
n ew
Bathtubs Gas wan furnace

II

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

230 3

USED

horne or remodeling ~ ue ua

II ems C&amp;ll 245 5535 or see
next door to the Rio Gr~tnde

Borber Shop

230 3
----~~--------

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

M&amp;M
ROOF lNG I. Spouting, Shingle
&amp; Buildup roof Hot &amp; cold

tJ

I

I
I J
III

tEVJTLY
~.

[tEGOTH~

process. Hom e Improvement
In
gener.at 1
For
free
est i mates Phone 388 8114,

Bidwell , Oh iO

230 tf

-------------..-M S CONSTRUCTION
&amp;

ONCe 'TAI&lt;EN YOU'Re
E!IOUNP 10 50 UNPER.

EXC'AVATION an d general
remodeling Backhoe dozer
and tren ching Sept•( tanks
and footers All phasn of
plumbing / vlrlno
new In

stollo tlon Ca ll 388 9986

Plumbing &amp;Heating

GENE PLANTS &amp; SON
PLUMBING - Heating - Air
Condlllonlng 300 Fourth 1\Vo
Ph 4~6 1637 .

•• If

CARTER'S P~UMBING
AND Ht!ATING
Cor Fourth &amp; Pint
Phono ,.6 38Uor 446-4471
16.1-11

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

RUSIILL'I
PLUMitNG&amp; MUTING
Goltlpollo, 446·4712
297 If

Corbin &amp; Snyder ( I ) ( J I ~~::!~.:r;;~h:'~::::~~
-------------.,
••
,111
-------------- ___________ ...___
I I I)
1~
o
:.frfge~~~~r~"~
w~~~
[iri.I
..
I!IIIISUIISWIIItnj
UJ.
)
[
II
11
123
_____________.....
-------------- -----------------------oren
___ __________
_ _________ _ ----------------------------- -·.
2~1-5121

otter 5

If

176 tf

MINI BIKE , In good condlllon
146 95IJ ,or ••6 IO&lt;J
If
209

If

110 tf
1969 PLYM OUTH Fu r y 3 fully
equipped, S600 446 3242
, no trespass ing PIPES Pipes
Pipes GBD
__.
230 6 NOsigHUNTING
ns Signs of all kinds
Chera tan BBB Jobey l Hilson
Simmons Pig
and Office
and others Tawney 's Pipe and
1969 PLYMOUTH Road Run
Eu!pment
Trophy House 422 Second
ner good conditiOn 383, 4 sp
206 If
Ave
Fnt dependable urvlcts
extras 446 2775 aft er 5
BANKS TREE SERVICE
George Plants owner Phone
199 If
230 3 36 tN GIBSON Electric Stove
FREE estimates, lloblllty In
615 50•9
--- ------~---151 11
Cutting board on side S35
surance Pruning, trimming
FRESH 2 ~tear old Holstein
1961 DODGE Mon aco SW 9
and cavity work, tree end
446 9490 after 4 p m
Heifers
Also bred and
pass alr1 P a , P s, R&amp;H.
229 3
stump removal Ph ,f46 49.53
springing he1fers Brookdale
Shop all types of
tint glass v!nyl •nt Can be
13 tf CABINET
Farm 614 286 2496
wood work 101 Court Str11t
seen at Elliott s Union 76
SIAMESE and H1malayan
230 3
187 If
Own-er 446 961 1
ktltens 4A6, 3844 after 1 p m
MOTORIST MUTUAL
225
tf
226 6
INSURANCE
6 PC BREAKFAST •et S25
THE best Insurance at the best
li ving room sulfe $25 ' o ld
pr 1ce
For auto . home ,
china cabinet no pr1ce, baby
business and life Ray Hawk ,
bed SI S old bedroom su1 1e no
ogent, •46 2300 S41 4th Ave
O~MONSTRATOR SALt!
price refrigerator autom l'l t •c
150
If APACHE camp trallol, 13
delrost SlOO other m1sc
Unocramblelhese f011r Jumble!,
Eagle 41 73 Eagle 81 73 Mtll,
furn 11 ure and antiques P&amp;J ,
Savings up to 1600 1 used
one letter to each square, to
ROOFING
ond
Spouting ,
Addison Oh10
camper only 1175 Amtbarr
..._
Shi ngles
end
Buildup
form four ordinary words.
2305
Apache Trener Saln, 631
Hotroots Free estimate - 26
Fourth Ave, Gallipolis OhiO
yr
experience
James
1967 MUSTANG 6 cyl a uto
230 3
Marcum
Vlnton,
Ohio,
388
67 OOOmll~s wttl s~ll or tn1de
8114
See Dave In tr etrer at 309
228 If
Centra l Ave Rio Gr&amp;nde

1972 HONDA 350 Excellenl
1910 GMC I ton true~. duel GOOD CLEAN LUMP ond
cond 1,500 miles 1650 Can be
whooll with Mldwnt grain
Slln It Trl ~OUn1y MObile
stokor
cool
Carl
Wlnttro
Rio
bad with coltle rock&amp; 388 999l
Homea A06 Dill
Grlndo
PhoM HI 5115
_..
227 6
8 tf
367 1411
231 3

Now arronre the circled 1ollen

211 If

----~·---- -----

LAYNE ·s

USED - 2pc llylngroon&gt; suite
se,tlze

springs , 1m all coffee table
occasional cha ir lttble lamp
?55 Second Avenua
.4, t171
Frida I 1118
Plont~t o free pArk lng

21ltt

'

Portable

Welding,

cer tified prusure piping,
ctr tlf le d structural ltttl
welding, aluminum Hellarc

Ph ••6 3•10 2• hour strvlce
191 If

("-"•" Moad•l)

'htlftd•r'•

Jumbl~·~ LUIID OAVII. ACTING 'AOOOA

SE PTIC tank' lnstiolled, ttso 111
kinds of backhoe work C U

4ntwerl Thb hnrv ap~a,. lo havt Hlfte COI'IIJtdlM

Miller~

IIIIAtft&lt;lnciiJ-API.UG

.._

.....

I

tract

DEAD STOCK

Camping Equipment

1964 10 x 55 Consort

8TR

BUY d ire ct from owner, lots In
the city or coun ty or acreage
Look at lhe rest then buy the
best Robert A Queen 1026
Second Ave 446 0168

TWIN maple beds complete
229 6
w1th box. springs and In
nerspnng mattress Can be JO HN Deere dozer 1970 Chevy
used as bunk beds '570 446
P ick up 67 Pont1ac Tempest
4711
446 1502
229 3
225 8

Crafl TYPEWRITERS

-------------_ ____________

10 x 52 Windsor
12 x 46 Pontiac Chief
12 x 52 Fleetwood
8 x .tS Mertette

1959 10 x 52 Elcar
1963 10 x •5 Kaywood

SEE the 1974 Storcraft Astro
406 2532
Star tra ilers and fold down&amp;
267 tf
All 197 3 trellers deater s
cost
--------- --~camp Conley
CLOSE OUT on now Zig Zag
Starcnft
Sllu
Sewing Machines For aewlng
slr&amp;tch tabrlcs, buttonholes ~ Rt 62 N of Pt Pleasant beh in d
Red Carpet Inn Phone 675
fancy designs etc Paint

2460

ft

Gallipolis
--------------------------Daily Tribun&amp;

T GMC PU
T GMC PU
'12 T GMC PU
112 T GMC PU
y, T GMC PU
112 ron GMC PU
SOMMERSGMC
TRUCKS, INC
133 Pine St
If,

PhOflt

DAIIYL ALlAN

Golllpolls

1962
1966
1970
1957

18

230 :;

f i berg la ss Gaiter brake down
trailer so HP Chrysler eng me

22 t tf

:v,

terms a¥&amp;11able

BOA T

195411 10 x 40 General

8 tor St.OO

1969 lh T Chev PU

1969
1966
1968
1961
1967
1969

HOR SE for sa l e, 388 8737

Trl State Mob1le
Home Sales
Phone 446-7572
1220 Eastern Ave ,

1972 KAWASAKI 350 cc Dirt Complete Bookkeeping and Tax
boke 446 0832
Service . 424V4 Fourth Ave ,
228 4
Kanauga Business by appointment
Ph
~46-1041.
1961 CHRYSLER New Yorker
Pleav
call
ofter
6
p
m
A 1 condlllon Only 5650 245
278 If
5593
228 II DRY WALl serVICe by can

208 If

ferred
24iB

For 5ale·

For Sale

Se!vices Offered

BOB LANE'S

These ca rs are m top con
dlt lon
They Must Be Sold
Bob Rees Pontia c Inc
Thord &amp; Court 51 Gallipolis

36"x23"x 009

· SeJVICes Offered

For Sale

c

Gallipolis, Ohio

Eastern Ave.

FUR NITURE

SPECIAL - 2 pc l1vmg room
su te Reg $239 95 Now Only
1199 95

4 Used Cars Left at Sob Rees
Pont 1ac Inc Come In, look
these cars over Make us a
reasonable pffer If poss1ble
you may own that car
1972 Ponttac Catalina 2 dr
hardtop A C 1970 Ford V 8
135 1) engine. R &amp; H
automatrc
1969 Pont 1ac
Catalma 4 dr sedan, R&amp;H
automatic
1967 Pont1ac
Bonneville 4 dr hardtop A

$2995
WOOD MOTOR SALES

For Sale

Truck Headquartars
1965 lf2 ton Chevy Pickup
1968 lf? ton GMC pickup
1'169 3(,. ton Chevy pickup
1972 34 Chavv DICkUD
1963 2 ton Ford

NEW

auto. trans., P. steering, P. brakes,
gold metallic finish with white vinyl
roof, w-s-w tires, fact. air cDnd., low
mileage in excellent cond .

DATSON Phone 592-4463

1900 EASTERN AVENUE

FURNITURE

Bedroom suctes
rocktng
chatrs 2 pc
ltvmg room
suites
stoves
gas and
electr1 c beds, chairs , other
m 1scellaneous
•tems
at
reasonable pnce

2 Dr. hardtop, AM-FM stereo radio, ,

L&amp;M Phone 592-4491

Parsons

USED

72 PONTIAC CATALINA

eCAPRI eDATSUN eSUBARU eCOUGAR

plpu, WlndOWI1 tlnttll, tfC
Claude Winters Rio Grandt,

OWNER:'MR. &amp; MRS. CLARENCE SIBlEY
KENN!TH SWAIN
Gelllpolla, 0

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

Smith Honda Sales
Upper River Rd.

SMITH BUICKPONTIAC, INC.

190 tf

PHONE 446-2240

YOUR DEALER FOR

For Sale

COME IN SUNDAY AND
BROWSE AROUND

WE CARRY complete l1ne of
Protection bulbs Tawney
Stud1o, .424 Second Ave
224 tf

Evenings Call
E M. "Ike" Wlstmln

NI;W3BR
BRICK HOME
l'h bath, fully carpeted,
central atr, plenty of
cab1nets, electrtc range,
dishwasher, disposal, noce
level lot located 6 moles up
Route 7 In Country Alre
Estates .
Good
school
dostrlct, Kyger Creek low tax
d1stroct Can help fonance.
tnquore at Corbon &amp; Snyder
Furniture Co 446-1171 after 5
446 2573.

BUICKS AND
NTIACS IN STOCK!

~s"e~ FURNITURE

DALE R. SANDERS INC.

Office 446·36~3

~-1974

446-32n

Gallipolis

Glllla Co's Largest Real
Est1te Sal11 Agency

our Policy Is To Sell All 1973 Models 30 Days Alter '74 Show Date. Now Is

RICE'S

Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth

WE NEED LISTINGS
ANY
PROPERTY
ANYWHERE-CALL
THE WISEMAN
AGENCY

12 NEW 1973 BUICK
ELECTRAS &amp; LeSABRES LEFT.

s

TWO pc llvmg room sutte hk e
brand new - three 3 pc end
table
sets
French
Prov.ncial co uch Earl)~
Ame ncan couch - nice desk
wrmger washer gas
range - two 9x12 wool and
nylon rugs full lenyth
m •rror - n1ght stand- hvtng
room chatr wtth stool - 7 pc
d1nette set

Only A
Few Left To Sell

LIST PRICE '5576.00
DISCOUNT 1141,00

YOUR
PRICE

A1r cond, 6 40 sea ts, AM FM stereo

USED FURNITURE

NOW IN FULL SWING

$1295

1639 Eastern Av,.

Factory officia l

1973 BUICK LeSABRE
4 DR HT CUSTOM SMITH
"

For Sale

IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR ANICE CAR
COME IN AND CHECK THESE

441·3791
E N Wiseman, 446-4500
Bud McGhee, 446·1255

Many more extras

car

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Clearance Sale

Both In good cond1tion

PRICE AT

YOUR .
PRICE

Cascade blue wcth blue vmyi top

With air conditioning .

S~ECIAL

YOUR
PRICE

Air cond, P wind P sea t. AM FM
stereo, Radial tires Cru1se Control

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

1970 DODGE SWINGER 2 PR.
2· 1970 MAVERICKS 2 DOORS

LIST PRICE '7065.00
DISCOUNT 1377,00

1973 BUICK ELECTRA
LIMITED 4 DR HT

m1les, sharp

50 STATE STREET

P~ICE

Air cond P wmd P seat, AM FM
stereo, R~dlal steel belted tires. Cruise
Control Dot's car

EVERETT SAUNDERS - TOM NORRIS - JERRY BROWN

STATION WAGON, 6 passenger. P S, a1r
condition, sharp.

$5688

YOUR

1973 BUICK ELECTRA
SMITH
LIMITED 4 DR. HT

MEET THE DODGE BOYS...

owner. like new

SMITH DISCOUNT 1508.00

White, burgundy v1nyl top air cond. P
wmd • P seat AM. F M Iape stereo
Radial steel belted tires

30 OF THE SHARPEST USED
CARS IN THE AREA.
1963 THRU 1972 MODELS

1971
COMET 2 DOOR SEDAN
32,000

LIST PRICE 7196,00

~IVIERA

HURRY I THEY ARE GOING FAST!

SHARP. one owner, we sold th1s car new.

4 Door,

1973 BUICK

TRUCKS
NOW~ IN

1971 VALIANT 4 DOOR SEDAN

House Needs
Work

well

$15,000
NEAR VINTON - 115 A, mostly
woods, 115.000
MORGAN TWP - 8~ A vaconl - - - -.. - - - - - - - - -

Located on State Roule 93 In Coolton, Ohio, ot what Is now
known a• Ex lines' Swap Shop Walch for Auction Signs.

'

79 Acres
Good House

dlson and Green Twps

tractor land, large tob base ,

r-----....
-.
.
•••••••••••.iii.'l
PUBLIC AUCTION

Oarvl Alban
Oak Hill, Ohio

DAD , HERE'S A REAL
DANDY
FOR
THE
MONEY ,
4
OR
5
BEDROOMS.
COM
PLETELY REMODELED
THIS IS A HECK OF A
GOOD BUY IT 'S LIKE
NEW
INSIDE,
NEW
WALLS
CEILINGS ,
WALL TO WALL CAR
PET 1\LL LAND IS FLAT
PLENTY OF SHADE
TREES

HOMES Ond Acreage In Ad

NEAR LECTA- 135 A, 35 A

NEW 4 bedroom brick. car

LIVING" - - - - - -- - - - - - - -

-~~:~~:~:~:~- 222 1 2

REALTORS

~

living room carpet!d with
fireplace, built In kitchen
with diShwasher r lv!r view
F&gt;rice S14,000 Ph 256 6552
224 6

NOW GOING ON

DOOR HARDTOP, sharp as a tack .

Older Home
6 Acres

SALE

1

eMERCURY MONTEGO eCOMET

KANAUGA - Owner will help
finance this 5 rm home with LARGE Brick Home

86 A, 7 rm
home barn pond $32,000
R1nny Bllckburn
Branch Managtr

OUSE

We Have&amp;
New lor 4
Bedroom

DEMONSTRATOR

SAY.~

STATE ROUTE 588 - Modern 4

tand , S20 000

- - - - -- - - - - - - - NEW HOME, 3 BR w to w
3 BR brick home m Pleasant
carpe t Financing available
Valley Rt 35, has central a ir
446 t900 446 2890
fully c arpeted 2 car ga ra ge,
219 If
ref washer clr~ter and stove ____ _,_ ________....._

2 bath$

BEAUTIFUL
NEW
LARGE 3 BEDROOM
HOME WITH FORMAL
DINING.
COMPLETE
BUILT IN KITCHEN,
LARGE FAMILY ROOM,
ENTIRE HOUSE CAR
PETED. CENTRAL AIR, 2
CAR
GARAGE,
AUTOMATIC DOOR ALL
ON ONE FLOOR AND 1/1
A LOT ON U S 35 WEST
PRICE 535,500 MAKE ME
AN OFFER OWNER IS
VERY
ANXIOUS
TO
SELL

$3 ,000 down, 5100 per month

Fully carpeted , de Hghtf ul

BUY NOW!
GIVE your famlty th e gift that
keeps on gtving
Call for
appointment to see our
complete lis t of homes "WE

Brand New-1st
Quality
Construction

Two 1972 oil

hom.. that you

mce

SMITH

______..

---~----

BIG BWCK1.·~

DOC

STATE ROUTE 160 - Lorge I

MORGAN TWP -

$20 ,500

LOVELY 3 BEDROOM
HOME WITH FAMILY
ROOM ,
COMPLETELY
REDECORATED
IN
GOOD QUIET NEIGH
BORHOOD

proced ot S15,000

Vacant Land
WE HAVE 'EM
29'1' ACRE FARM

IN ALL STAGES OF
COMPLETION.
ALL
HAVE
RANGES,DISH
WASHER . CENTRAL AIR .
GARAGES,
FAMILY
ROOMS AND YOU CAN
DO
YOUR
OWN
DECORATING
PICK
YOUR OWN PAINT AND
CAR PET NOW IS THE
TIME TO BUY WHILE WE;
HAVE A GOOD SELEC
TION

6 FOR SALE OR LEAVE

$16,900

electric
mobile
homes
completely furnished
Ren
ling for over $4,000 per yr
Located m Add•son Twp and
Farm Res1dences

2 LARGE t~ ROOM
HOME
COMPLETELY
REMODELED
ON A
LARGE LOT IN EX
CELLENT
NEIGH
' BOR HOOD ON LOWER
2ND AVE - LOTS OF
WALL TO WALL CAR
PET LARGE LIVING
DINING AND FAMILY
ROOMS PLUS A MODERN
KITCHEN PLENTY OF
CLOSETS AND PRICED
RIGHT

5 2 LOTS AND MODERN
CLEAN 3 BEDROOM
HOME, READY TO MOVE
INTO LARGE ROOMS
THROUGHOUT PLUS A
FAMILY ROOM NICE
GARDEN SPOT AT END
OF STREET

homes at this location Both
are In good repa1r, have small
acreage and are priced to sell

Older Home
3 Acres
AT EWINGTON
5
BEDROOMS, 2 STORY
BEST PLACE I KNOW OF
TO RAISE CHILDREN STAIRS
ALL
DOWN
BEEN
REMODELED
PRICE AT 512,000 ITS A
BARGAIN

• NEW LISTING NEAR
GOLF COURSE IN AN
EXCELLENT
NEIGH
BORHOOD VERY WELL
BUILT
MODERN
3
BEDROOM
HOME
LARGE BUILTIN KIT
CHEN PLUS GARAGE
AND NICE YARD WE
DON'T THINK YOU CAN
BEAT THE PRICE ON
THIS ONE

HELP

FINANCE Remodeled 7 rm
2 story hom e w•th 2 acres of
land offers good llv1ng for
some lucky person

·~·

I SECLUDED AND IN
TOWN
WONDERFUL
SHAOY
LOCATION,
CLOSE TO SCHOOLS,
MODERN 3 BEDROOM
HOME
WITH
BASEMENT.
NICE
KITCHEN, LOTS OF
CLOSETS LARGE LOT
PLU S GARAGE AND
SHOP YOU WON'T BE
BOTHERED HERE YET
YOU'RE ONLY • BLOCKS
FROM SCHOOL

3 NEW PAINT JOB VERY
PLEASANT
NEIGHBORHOOD,
LARGE 3 BEDROOM
HOME WITH DINING
AND FAMILY ROOM lh
MILE OUT ON LARGE
SHADY LOT

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLER·
PLYMOUTH
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S LARGEST
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
DEALER
..............
.......--- -. .
_,... --..

Check These If You're Looking For A
Home In Or Close To Town.

RANCH offers many extras
lo r onl'r' U6 900 The mo.;Jern
k1t chen lnducles ranpe , hood,
gar d lsp , ret • dlshwnsher
end lois of cabinets Other
reatures are patio doors . den
with
etectrlc
lireplace
laundry rm anct a love ly
hillside se ll ing on State route
160 Be the first to see +his
one
Fmanclng can be
arranged

INVESTMENT -

kitchen and dining area
Owner leav ing this area to be
near hiS business Price

Plenty cabinets

AGENCY

remodeled 6 rm home has
atummum S1d1ng
storm
windows carport and large
back yard

TENDER Loving Care $hows In
this 3 SR. home near clly

BETTER

WISEMAN"

Largo~st

EASTERN AVE

T LC

SELL

iHE

WOOOS MILL RD - We have 2

222 ACRES - Top dairy farm
owner must sell due to health
Large barn 529 ton silo new
Grade A m likmg parlor, herd
can be purchased w th the
fa rm 1f des1red Home Is very
liv abl e w1lh lots of room
Plenty or water pa sture1 and
crop land

WANTED

A FAMILY WhO would love a
charm mg .4 B R - ll.~ bath
home •n R 1o Grande This 1S a
value packed home W1fh a
charmmg LR well des1gned
all built m kitchen vtd1ty
room w w car pet m lam cly
room w 1th patlo doors leadmg
to a natural stone pat1o a
large den or office room one
room basement with near new
furnace
attached overstze
garage All this set on a
beautiful well landscaped
lawn 94 x 140' Priced for a
quick sale

-

on Rt 775

ret~re

CROWN CtTY

JACKSON County- 73 A good OCTOBER Is beaut tfu l color

231 If YOU SAVE and slaved for wall

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

OUTSTANDING FARM
220 ACRES

'

all elec 135 frontage on Rt 7
and nver Lot IS 8 A $14 000J.

231 6

3 BR house, n1ce toca t10n 2
children llm1f. no pf!ts Ph
446 2852

Off 446 2674

Luctlle Brannon
Eve 446 1226 or 446 2674

I

land

2 ACRES - N1ce bul ldmg Sit e
on Rl 775

25 Locust St
Howard Brannon, Broker

Building
Sites
Available K1ngsberry
Homes bu1lt to f1t any
All
spec1f1cations.
Underground Ut1l1ties
Prov1ded.

12 MODEL Granville 12 x 60 ';

BARGAIN PRICED

HOUSETRAILER 1 BR located

NEW
HOMES
FOR SALE

.

S14,000

ACRES Vacant
located on St Rt 160

St Rt 160

REALTY

DEVELOPMENT
CORP.

rm IS x 25' kitchen and din
rm 12' x 2S' Ph baths H W
floors Located 21h m1 from
town on a lh A flllt lot Lots of
house for $32 000

EVERGREEN - 5 rms and
bath In good repa•r on rura I
water Has alum s1d1ng
storm drs and wm fur heat
lh base an~ storage bldg

2 ACRES - F tv ~ r oom house
cou nty water loca ted on
L1 tll e Kyger Rd

1 ACRE -

$/liUifi/JIL

World's

OWNER

,L - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- , 3 ACRES

TARA

BEAUTY

.---...TROUT
ALTY

Pnv11cy w•lh 11 delightful 1new
overlooking Gaii•POI IS CiJI'I be
yours w ith thi s to~o~ e ty tt'lr ee
bedroom home with pitJsh
tacillt1es
Formal d1nlnq
room c1ty wat er and schools1
ce ntral au· one l!lnd hlltl bath s
plus a powder room . c&amp;r
petmg locat ed on a la rge lot
Owner w111 tr&amp;de for a ADDISON TWP - LIKE NEW
cheaper farm or house
total electnc home Is priced
to se ll at $17 900 Th1s l BR
I:UREKA - Ni ce Vtew Of the
beauty IS located on 11 large
river with th•s three bedroom
lot on Georges Creek RQ
home
n1ce oath 1 furnace
heat lovetv dining and l1v1ng NEW LIST ING - $23.900 - 3
BR ranch less than 1 vr old
room w1th firep lace garage
offers a factory k.1tC:hen with
and a b1g lot
breakfast bar , patio doors. In
the d10lng area, garage and
NEIGHBORHOOD ROAD large corner lot cl ose to
N1ce three bedroom sectional
Centenary
home in city schoo l d•strlct
forced al r furn ace wtndow
air conditioner and a n1ce lot VINTON - Ni cely remodeled 8
rm homeonacornerlot ThiS
pnce r educed to S12 200
beauty 1S like new in!.1de and
tS tullv ca rpeted
ADELAIDE DR - Three
bedroom home W1th bath
IM
furnace, ndw carpet m llvmg MILLS VILLAGE
MEDIATE PO SSESS ION room and hallWay located
Owner moved to a farm and
close to town on a n•Ce level
agreed to sell th 1s lovetv 3 B R
lot
home at a pr1ce so reasonable
you won t bel1eve It Before
CHATHAM AVE - Good two
you buy
make an ap
bedroom homt'w•th ba th n1ce
po 1ntment to see this beauty
deep lot , room tor a garden
With a large 100 x 300 tot
ACREAGE
formal d ln1ng rm
tam lly
5 ACRES - Th1s property has a
rm , 2 f1replaces and garage
n1ce 14.:64 mobile home three
room house and two storage
MAKE
US AN OFFER
bulldmgs

60

OFFICE: 446-1066
EVENINGS
Russell D. Wood-446-4618
Ron Canaday-446·3636
John 1. Rlchards-446-0280

llv

MOBILE HOME 10 x 41 1n LOOKING for a summer home
We have a new 2 BR wlth
trailer park
Galltpolis
1
bath, sepf•c tank , well water
bedroom
5125 per mo
and loca t ed on Raccoon
UtilitieS pa1d
Ph 446 3844
Creek Ca ll todoy for an
after 1 p m
appomtment to see ttus one
230 tf

evenln(is 353 6928

All Electric Home. 2 miles lrom Gall1pohs, 3 bedroom s
bath n1ce modern kttchen, garage on lot 95 1xl65' pnce
$21 000

frame

ANY HR 446 1998

Ph 446 1425

Phone dav

Bnck home on Lower R1ver Road in excellent condc t 1on 1
fireplaces modern k1tchen plus a summer kitchen m
basement. all hardwood floors, 3 porches, centra l a~r new
drapes Too many extras to name, let us show you lhts
home for grac1ous 1tv10g

RD

Tn Level

4 A on Smtth Rd , $10,000

1401 Eastern Ave

$85

On Lower River Road modern Ira me dwelling wilh 2 or 3
bedrooms overlookmg the Ohio River This home has new
c:arpetmg and new drapes modern kitchen also ver y
large llvtng room 2 car garage, on a large lot

LOWER RIVER RD - 5 rms
and batll m good repa1r, 2
storage bldgs , and located on
1 A level lot Ideal for the
gardener or a trail er park
Price redllced to S12 900

CROUSE

Galllo

Hotel

Seelhls lovely one year old home, has 3 bedrooms. lully
carpeted central a~r , beaulllul kitchen plus dining area
wi th a ll conventence built tn flntshed family room in
basement 2 car garage with automat ic door level lot
located on ~~ 35 close to hosp ital

bought for S22.500

ra2,

rooms

TRI LEVEL

NORTH OF HMC -

GREEN ACRES- 6 rm frame
home, new carpet over H W
floors nice built In kitchen/
ce n air, llat lot , and can be

l!odney Cora Rd
Rodney , Oh1o
Hou• .. 9 ,1 rn to 9 P m
Monday lhru Saturday
9374-24 ~

..

LUXURY LIVING Lower
R tver Rd - 8 big rms all
bnck 1 f1r 21h baths 2 F P
deep closets l tned wcth cedar
all carpet dream k1tchen has
d isposal double steel sink
dishwasher blender gnnder
and lt)hcer . built In oven
refngerator and freezer Th1s
home has quality plus Walk
out of the master bdrm and
take a d1ve •n the pool 20 xSO
Locateel on 1 A level tot W1th
rcver v1ew

Acld1son, Ohio

Ph 245

Mummy that denttst wasn' t pa inless like he sa1d
• Why, did he hurt you' "
:• No• but he yelled just hke any other dentist when I bit his
linger"

New 6 rms
11 7 baths all
brtck all elec
al l carpet,
1 450 sq ft hvmg area plus 24'
x 28 atta ched gar , l1v rm 12
.: 24 ' EKtra ntce equipped
k1tchen wtth bar Located on
better than 11 A flat lot Th is
1S a good buy tor 534 000

Ph Baths

.. ---

Oscat Saud
Doug WC! fhCrholt
&amp;rokers
Olhce 446 l4l4
MILL S Vtll. A OE
V erv
lovely lhree bedroom hom e
w1tn lamllv roon1 ftnd den on
m11ln tloor , bnutllul cupet
throughout two bath S. 1WO
t lrepli.l ce$ , ce nua1 a ir con •
full basement and rec room
and ~ltached garag e_ Large
(luatlt'; hOme With ChO IC e
IOCtttiOr'l

only 531500
I'' Ml

446 0338

Realty

REALTOR 446-1066

Tel 446 l S98

MT ZION RO 819 ram
bl 1ng 6 rm bn ck 3 large
bdrms, l!v rm 18 x 23 with
F P dtn rm 10 .: 12 • 1',
bBths all ca rpel copper
plumb1ng marble wmdow
Sills and al um wmdows It
has a huge carport Ideal
location '48 A flat lot Pnce

2 Bedroom
Townhouses

OHIO RIVER

RUSSELL WOOD

Realty. 32 State St

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

fl - Tilt' SIUldlty Tim•• • S.nlltk•l, SIUlday, Sept 30, 11J7.t

•

'

_,....._

Rio Grande, 2115 5535

198 30

DEWITT'S P~UMIINO.,.
ANO H!.f\TING
Routt 16U ot Evtrlrttn
Pnono ••• 2731

Ill If

STANDARD
Plumbing &amp; Hottlftl
214 Third A¥t , ... 31l~l1-lt

�•
28 - Thf SWiday T1me • Sentinel, SWtday, Sept. 30,1973

...

Wag r to lead trip to Old West

Freshman nurses welcomed
.....

:::::.-::~::~::~!:*::::.~~ ~~~~~$

Extended Outlook
A chance of showers

Monday and Tuesday. Fair
Wednesday. High In the 70s ·
and lows mostly In the 501.
Helium is both odorless and
tasteless.
GIVES "NO THOUGHT"
CHICAGO (UPI) - Gov.
Nelson A. Rockefeller of New
York said Friday he has given
"absolutely no thought" to
replacing Vice President Spiro
Agnew.
:~~::;:~~::~::::=:~::~~~~~%~~~!!=~::~:~:::::::~::::~::~~~:::~::::::::::::::::::::::::;.-:.-::::::::~:::;:~~:::~:~:=:!::=::::!::::::~::::~~~~:·:

~

~
GALLIPOLIS - Not a candle went out as the freshman
~ student nurses of the Holzer Medical Center School of Nur·

i

~

~

~
~

~

~
~
~
~

::;:

:il
:§
ful
~::

~~

::::
:·:::::
:l:l
~
~

sing, above, left, and below, .made th~i.r trip aroun~ the
Medical Center Thursday evenmg. Trad1bon says that 1f the
candle goes out during the ".~alk around the block," the
student will not complete trammg.
Tradition also has the junior students serving as "big sis"
to the frosh and the week prior to class is full of activities,
including a party and the making of Ihats which the freshman
wear all week.
Patients gathered at the hospital windows to watch the
candlelit procession from 7:30 to 8 p.m. The trip was marked
by singing, occasional shrieks and myriad facial ex·
pressions, as the pictures show.
This week the girls and one fello\v in the class of 53 will
settle down to their .studies on the way to the diploma the
. d
candles have promise .
Photos by Jan Countryman.

·

~:

~

~::

~l:

:l:!
::::
»
::::

l:l:
::~
llll

~~:

M
::~

•!•!

::::
i:i:
N

N

:*:$.~~-.:::.-::::::::~::::::~-::~~::::::::~::::::::~::~:;:~:!:~:!~:!:::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::~::;:;~:;:;:~:~:~~:::::~~::::::::::::".$.~'

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. Jim Wagers of HunUngton,
active Scout r and Executive
Board member of th Tri.State
Area Council, Boy Scouts of
America, has been selectod to
be the Council's High Ad·
venture Promotion Chairman
for the coming year. Wagers
wllllead the "Big One," which
is a trip to the Philmont Ranch
located near Cimarron, N. M.
"Older Scouts and Explorers
who want 12 days of rugged
high mQun Ia ins and hiking and
camping over historic sites
which are part of the west will
take part in the trip _to the
137,000 acre camp," Wagers
said:

The Council contingent
expecta to have 20 or mor
Scouts and Explorers going to
Philmont In August of next
year. Individual Troops or
Explorer Posts may go as a
Wtlt and Mr. Wagers wlllasslst
them in their planning.
Because of the high stan·
dards set for those who make
the Philmont trip, applications
will be screened by the Council
Philmont leadership. Ap·
plicants must be 14 years old or
older, a registered Scout or
Explorer and an able-bodied
red blooded young American.
Inquiries can be made at the
Scout Service Center, 11~
Third Ave. in Huntington.

The Boys Scouta of Am rica
also operatea the Northern
Wisconsin National Canoe
Base, the Charles L. SOmmers
Wilderneas Canoe Due In
Minnesota, National Hl&amp;h
Adventure area in Maine,
Bahama Treasure Hunt un·
derwater Exploring and the
Washington Cruaade - Mt.
Rainier climbs. Information
and assistance on these
programs is available from
Mr. Wagers through contact
with the Scout Service Center.
The last surviving signer of .
the Constitution was James
Madison.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
FURNITURE DEPARTMENT ON THE· THIRD FLOOR
---------------~-----------~------------

ttudenf tfudy Center
Desk • Chair • Bookcase
Hutch • Record ,Cabinet
Your choice of
Colonial or Modern

See aII the fine new furniture
now on display on the Jrd
floor. Bedroom suites • living
room suites - chairs · springs
and mattresses · desks - IIITIPS
- pictures . tables - dinette sets
. dining r 0om suites - wall-to.
wall carpeting.

Your child will welcome this·study center where homework assignments
will be a lot easier in a well organized comfortable atmosphere. You will
appreciate a neater room and better looking report card. All four pieces
-Bookcase hutch, glass door cabinet, 3-drawer desk with matching
chair- at this sincle low price.

NOW )'OU KNOW
Fish can get seasick· if
caught In heavy waves for an
extended period· of time.

NEIGHBOR
OF YOURS
SH

,,,

hill

,,.,
your

ftllllflfiCI

IIIJdl.

.

Carrol

Park Central Hotel Bldg. ·
Ph. 446·4190 Jofome 446·4518

·

Gallipolis

......

tfAII , . . .

..........
- ,\

,..,....,

."""·
,.'

IIIII '""

State '"'" lnaurence CompaniH
Home OlllcH: lloomlncton. llllnola
------- p

7305 ~

Chavez jubilant over teamster deal ·
SAN BERNARDINO, Calif.
(UPI).- Cesar Chavez, whose
fann · labor movement was
fighting for·its life only months
ago, is jubilant over his set·
tlement with the Teamsters
Union, seeing It as freeing him
from inter-union strife to put
more pressure on the ·fanners.
"The Teamsters are getting
out of the fields so we and the
growers can fight it out,"
Chavez said Friday.
"On those tenns, we can win
much sdoner."
"Until 24 hours ago we were
fighting two giants, but now we
are fighting only one," he told a
gathering of 200 supporters. He
desert~ himself as "elated"
over the settlement with the
Teamsters, which ended
months of bitter, often bloody,
struggles for control of Ciill·
fomia crop pickers.
He Credita PubUe Support
He credited the public SUi&gt;'
port given his United Farm
Workers Union for gaining the
victory.

J

The Teamsters pulled out listening to his priest preach
because the issue "was getting against the Teamsters."
to be a big headache," he
Many priests, nuns, and
saldm "There was so much Protestant clergymen joined
pressure on the Teamsters . liberal activists on the UFWU's
they had to call it quits." . picket lines at Central and
He said one Teamster told , Southern California vineyards.
him he was tired of "going to
The battle began when grape
church ev.ery Sunday and growers, whose contracts wi~h
the UFWU expired, signed new
contracts with the Teamsters.
Center activities
Settlement Announced
POMEROY _ Oct. 1 • Chair
The peace settlement ancaning 10 • 2 p m'
noWiced in Washington Friday
'
· ·
· generally left the UFWU
Ocm t. 2 - Crafts, cards and jurisdiction over field workers,
ga es, 1 . 3.
d h T
Oct 3 _ Quiltln al) d , an t e eamsters over non·
croc~Ung.
g
ay, field work, such as at can·
neries.
Oct. 4 - Ceramics, 10 · noon;
It was understood that the
hayride and wiener roast 11 Teamsters agreed to back out
a.m .• 3 p.m,
Oct. 5' - Rug hooking,
Resurfacing
bowling, 1 • 3 p.m.
· Farmers araund the world
Horse shoes, cards, games, often stop plowing to remove
·shu(fleboard, quilting, etc. rocks. Dutch farmers stop to
practically anytime you like. remove shipwrecks . Recent
Contact the office if you want to news reports told how downed
aircraf.t from World War II
go on the ha yride by Tuesday, are surfacing as land is reOct. 2.
·
claimed from the Zuider Zee.

of the contracts they hold with
vineyard owners to provide
grape pickers.
But 0. W. Flllerup, executive
vice president of the Council of
California Growers, Indicated
that the fanners that have
Teamster contracts will try to
hold on to them.
The growers "feel they
negotiated contracts with the
Teamsters in good faith and
those contracts are still legal
and binding," Flllerup said.

First hunt
(Continued from Page" 23)
a shot to get the squirrel
moving. Nothing . Another shot
and out he came to give Jeff a
clear shot. That squirrel Is In
our freezer now. Jell Is happy
that he has bagged his first
wild game ever. He has a
mighty proud father who Is
working on getting his stock
back up a few points. In fact
last night I received a hot tip
about a stand of hickory back
up a hollow where the oround Is
IYhlte with hickory cut .
lings ... .. ....

Available In either Colonial or Modern with Maple and Walnut finishes
on select tempered hardboard . Desk and cabinet tops are treated with
plastic to resist scratches and stains, retain their fresh appearance for
years. Desk drawers carry the manufacturer's famous
guarantee
'
against sticking. Come in now while the school year is just beginning.

Also a fine open stock selection of Single Dressers, Bookcase Beds • single and do~ble bed size.

FURNITURE DEPARTMENT THIRD FLOOR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

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