<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="18020" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/18020?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-07T09:58:15+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="51183">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/5e22b90936de643921acaf267f096387.pdf</src>
      <authentication>f8e2a8c97c15d863dda0b4b19e6b9c86</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="57328">
                  <text>..
•
•

12 - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Nov. 16, 1973

Oothing lost
in house fire

Loser turned into
•
a wznner, finally

Arson probe
is opened

An appeal for clothing was
RACINE -Arson may have
made today for the family of caused a fire that destroyed an
Frances Imboden whose one- unoccupied house, an old barn
story frame home in Rutland and another outbuilding on the
was gutted by lire Wednesday. Edgar Brewer property at
The only person home at the Stiversville Thursday, officials
time was Mrs. Imboden's son, said today.
Robe r t.
All
personal
The Racine Fire Dept. was
belongings were lost.
called to the Brewer house at 10
cause of the fire is un- a.m. to figh t a brush fire. They
determined . Living in the home no sooner had returned to their
were Mrs. Imboden and her station than they were called
son Robert and his family.
again at 1:15 p.m. to the sa me
Seeded are women's dresses location when the dweUlng was
size 16, girls d resses size 6X, on fire .
boys pants size 3 and boys
The incident is still under
s hirts size 5, men's shirts size investigation, it was reported .
15 and men's plants size 32-30.
The Raci ne E-R un it made
Those who have clothing to two runs Thursday, at 11:15
dona te may call 742-3972 or 742· a.m. to transport Mile Pickens,
4627.
22, Ra ci ne to Ve tera ns

·-

PIPE-SMOKERS SEXY
SAN FRANCISCO (UP! ) A woman researcher says
male pipe smokers may not
think so, but many women
believe they 're sexy.

)

event were Jake Jarvis and
Odie O'Donnell, Gallipolis and
George Morrow, Pt. Pleasant.
Employes of the auto parts
firms assisted during the
evening's activities.
One of Thursday's big at·
tractions was the appearance
of star Cincinnati Reds
baseball
pitcher
Ja ck
Billingham, who conducted an
autograph session at the armory. Several hundred area
y.o ungsters
obtained
autographs of this year's 19·
game winner of the Reds.

..Wallace comes to
ItS a family affair.
locru patrol post
If you 'd like to see a wagon in you dam i!y's future.
see us about an Aula Loa n.
An d we'll go one step further for you.
With low ·bank rates. And prompt. pe rsonal attention .

pomeroy
national
bank

Bruc~

D. Wallace, Middleport; was one of 52 cadets
receiving commissions and
certificates of training at the
98th
Academy
!:lass
Graduation of the Ohio State
Highway Patrol in Columbus
Thursday. He has been
assigned to the Gallia-Meigs
Post.
In commemoratipn of the
Patrol's 40th anniversary,
guest speaker for
the
ceremonies was 0. W.
(Whitey) Merrell, Director of
the Ohio Department of Highways in 1933 when the patrol
was created and placed under
his jurisdic~on. During the
ceremonies, he presented the
Patrol's highest award for
valor to the 1972 and 1973
recipients.

Commencement greetings
were given by Director Eugene
P O'Grady, Department of
Highway Safety . Certificates
were presented by Merrell,
Director O'Grady and Colonel
Robert M. Chiaramonte,
Patrol superintendent.
Wallace is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Dwight Wallace of
Middleport. Mrs . Wallace , is
the former Gloria Buck. Mr.
and Mrs. Wallace have an
infant son, Buck.

th e c entu r y

establi shed !872

Mombor

FDIC
MAIN OFFICE
M on ., Tu es., Wed ., Thurs . 9 a .m .-3 p .m .

F riday9a .m. t o7 p.m .
Saturday 9 a.m . to 12 Noon
RUTLAND BRANCH

Mon ., T ues ., Wed . , Sat ., 9 a.m ..J p .m .
Thursday 9 a .m. to 12 Noo'n
,Friday 9 a .m. to 7 p.m .

"Going one step further"

WASHINGTON (UP! )- The raised "solely because we
board chairman of Goodyear thought the re-elec tion of the
Tire &amp; Rubber Co., Ak· President was in the best inter·
r on'
said t hat $40 ,000 est of the country."
•
Russell De Young made the
in illegal co rp or ate cam·
paign contribu tio ns was statement in testimony Thursday before the Senate Watergate corrunittee.
·
DeYoung said when Maurice
Stans, Preside nt Nixon's
former chief fund raiser, asked
him for the money he "did not
state or imply that any
pressure would be brought if a
larger contribution than an
original $20,000 donation was
The Meigs Marauders join 2 not forthcoming. "
other SEOAL teams, 3 fr om the
However , DeYoung did say
Tri-Valley Conference and I the original contribution was
independent squad tonight in doubled and the $40,000 was
the Athens County Shrine Club delivered to Stans by Arden
Previ ew a t Athens High Firestone, a Goodyear vice
School, b eginning at 7 p.m .
president .
Starting for the Marauders,
DeYoung said the money
wh o will take on Federa l came from a corporate accoWlt
Hocking at 7: 45, will be 5-9 originally chaunelled into the
junior Lonnie Coats and 5-7 country through a Swiss blink
junior Steve Price at the account.
guards, 6-2 senior Bill Myers
and 5-11 s ophomore Terry MCCUNE LEADS
Qualls al the forwards and 6-3
AKRON , Ohio (UP! )- With
junior Dan Dodson at the pivot. two tournaments remaining
Each team in the preview this year, Don McCune of
will play 2 quarters, with the Munster, Ind., holds the lead on
fir s t enc ounter mat chin g th e Professional Bowlers
Ne lsonville -York a gain s t Association tour with earnings
Glouster .
At 7: 45
th e of $U,550 in 32 tournaments.
Marauders make their debut,
Barry Asher of Costa Mesa,
followed by Alexander vs. Calif. is second with $56,63fi in
Logan at 8:30 and Athens . vs . 29 events while Dick Ritger of
Celina. at 9:15.
·Hartford, Wis. · is third with
Tickets are 75 cents for $49,293 in 26 tournaments.
students and $1.50 for adults,
with ducats avallable from
Independent Wi nter Cage
Leagu e St andings •. Nov. 12
Athens . County Shrine Club
Op .
members. Tickets also will be
W . L. Pts . Pts .
L uig i's
2 0 219 163
Sold at the door tonight.
Cit . Nat I. Ba nk
1 1 173 152
All proceeds will go towards Pullins
1 1 121 132
1 1 164" 18&lt;1
the Shrine Club's charity Goodyear
Elberf el ds
1 1 153 17&lt;1
program .
Ne t s
0 2 130 155

A CHINESE BOY visiting the Peking Zoo seems to be
ready for any big game he might enc ounter.

Another deer is
killed by auto
Another deer died in a Meigs
County highway Thursday
evening, according to Sheriff
Robert. C. Hartenbach's Dept.
An auto driven by lla J .
Wiseman, Rt. 2, Sardis, on SR
7, v,. mile west of the jl!Jlction
of SR 124 and·7, hit a deer when
it jumped into the path of her
auto . Wiseman ' s auto had
heavy damage. No personal
injuries were reported.

FLUSHING, MAYBE
Charles Legar, a member of
Pomeroy Board of Public
Affairs, said today if conditions
are suitable Saturday evening
a few of the fire hydrants m ay
be flushed in order to clear up
the water. Water may be a
little dirty followin g th e
flushing , Legar said.
LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
P omeroy Friday at II a .m. was
43 degrees under cloudy skies.

Property

OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 9 PM

•, I' .

Just Received

Lustrous, durable finish
wood inlays.

.NOW AT
~~

..

.,,

25" CREDENZA COLOR TV

Dl.t.GOMAl

THE MEIGS INN
992-3629

.

8TAR CHA•ea•

'

•

'.

(Continued on Page 8)

I

Your Invited Gut•st
H. e11ching More
Th1111 12,0(}()
F11 m i li"e.~
FOUR SECTIONS
PRICE 20 CENTS

Pomeroy-Middleport

.J

HELPING PREPARE FOOD WERE, !..-, Julie Roush , Sherri Hall, Otillia
Mullins, and Trent Nash of the morning class.ln back is their teacher, Mrs. Rose.

U::,

tern oon classes prepared chickens for
roasting, then baked the birds, buttered
and wrapped potatoes in foil for baking,
ground cranberries for salad, cut and
(Continued on page 16)

U:Uck·

·~cine.

.

2, Cuttwo new t1re11 and two ~sed tLTes on a
1957 Cbevrolet in CumminS barn.
Caused ·other damage to the property
belooglng to cuinmtns. ·
,
Br ke out wtmows in a Jarge brick house
· on
338 above AnUqulty on Burllngbllm
Road owned by Jay Hall.

S:

I

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

J

iour

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
•

school district is created, all teaching and
non-teaching ·personnel in the distric ts
affected must be under the same sala r y
schedule.
Currently, Kyger Cree k Dis tri ct
~chers are getting $~00 over the state
minimum teachers' salary of $6,400.
Beginning in January, the Kyger Creek
teaching staff will be increased another
$300, raising the distriCt's starting pay at
$6,900 per year.
In addition, the non-teaching employees in the Kyger Creek District will
also get salary increases.
Kyger Creek's Teacher Association
has been in negotiations with its board
since last April. All r~ises in the Kyger
Creek District are made the ftrst of the
calendar year and not the teaching year .
Bradbury said teachers in the other

Fife out of job

POMEROY _ Sheriff Robert c.
Hartenbach's Dept. said Friday deputies
apprehended four juveniles Thursday on
suspicion of vandalism, three of whom
reside at Rt. 2, Racine, and the fourth on
Lower River j{oad, GaUipolls.
A spokesman said that after being ad·
v1 d of their rtghts the youtha admitted:
~ey punctured
tires on a 1973
pickup truck belonging to Phil Baldwin,
Rt 3 Pomeroy· JXlnctured a spare tire on
th ·
brok~ into the truck and stole a
guaSe; brol&lt;e 1into a 1965 Hillcrest
tr "1 be!OJ1glng to Russell Cununins, Rt.

i

WERNER RADIO &amp; T.V.

BY DALE ROTHGEB JR.
GALLIPOLIS - The coming consolidation of four Gallia County schools
remained in confusion Saturday following
the November meeting of the County
Boa rd of Education.
County Supt. C. Comer Bradbury said
he had discussed the problem with Thomas
Quick, Assis tant State Supt. of Public
Ins truction, but had received no answer as
to what effective date the consolidation
should occur.
An other big question s till Wlanswered
is, if the consolidation becomes effective in
January, where will !he board get approximately 1150,000 needed to update the
teaching and non certified employees'
salaries m the Southwestern-North Gallia
and Hannan Trace Districts.
According to the s tate Law, once a new

•

Modet'WU9! 46KP

I

HOBERT GOGGINS of Middleport is the proud owner of this 1958 Edsel
Pacer considered by many as " th e only true Edsel."

:;:::::

Consolidation when?

Four juveniles
admit va nda lzsm

\oieditarranaan sly/a credan ZB

POMEROY

""

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1973

Ga llipolis-Point Pleasant

'

Save · during our
Friday
and
Saturday Sale .Girls dresses •
Junior jeans and
tops
womens
dresses
no-iron
sheets · mens sport
shirts - . mens and
boys sweaters
Wintuk
yarn
Bicycles • Luggage •
Fabrics
mens
Flare
Jeans
Handbags . Scarfs.

I

100 % Solid State Chassis!
lnsta-Malic Color Tuning
Plug-i n Circuit Modu les
Matrix-Bright Picture Tube
Pushbutton UHF Tuning
In stan! Picture and Sound
Hidden controls

superb

SALE PRICES

WORKS IN A DRAWER

•'

VOL. 8 N0._42

. POMEROY - Judge Frank W. Porter
Jr. Friday fined five area hunters in excess of $3,300; ordered them to jail to serve
combined sentences of 220 days, and
revoked their hunting licenses for 21 years
upon conviction in Meigs County Court of
illegally hunting deer. Part of all the fines
and jail sentences were suspended pending
probationary behavior.
·
All 'rive were apprehended by state
game protectors in Meigs County during
an investigation conducted by Ohio
Division of Wildlife officers.
Convicted were :
Harvey Bartimus, Reedsville,
charged with ·taking two deer by use of a
spotlight and gun. Fined $1,000 plus costs
and given a 60-day jail sentence and loss of
hunting rights for six years; $600 of fine
suspended, 50 days of jail sentence
suspended on condition that he not violate
any wildlife Jaws in Ohio for six years.
Teddy R. Osborne, Tuppers Plains,
aiding in illegal iaking of .two deer by use

Big selection of Folk , 12 string and
Acoustic Electric models.

Quasar.:.

NIGHT 10 TIL 2

·!·:·:·v
....

..

GALLIPOLIS - Ivan Fife, veteran.
lawman and GaUia County Sheriff James
W. Sa•mders ' chief deputy, sald Saturday
he ha s been laid off from the sheriff's
offi ce despite having lawful sick leave
coming to him.
Fife underwent surgery two weeks ago
at the Holzer Medical . Center and is
recuperating at home in Eureka.
Fife said he plans to meet with Gallia
County Commissioners Monday to discuss
the situation . Earlier this week, Sheriff
Saunders reported he had reached an
agreement with the commissioners ending
a one day shutdown of operations at the
sheriff's office. ConuniSsioners had offered to pay for six deputies. Their appropriation included Chief Deputy Fife,
who was on the disabled list.

•

•

+

•
•
•
•
•
•
•

@::

::::;~
.....·.

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohw Vallev

5 Hunters hit with fines, jail ·

YAMAHA
GUITARS

MOTOROLA'

SATURDAY

@~~
r ' ·.-

In August, 1957, medium priced auto
sales slipped. There was a near record
number of 1957 cars in dealers '
showrooms. Rambler, the only compact as
such - unbelievably - was enjoying
r ising sales! The 1957 Mercury was going
at a price under that of the yet-to-come-&lt;lut
Edsel to be priced at $2,300 to $5,000.
By the end of September sales were
one-llalf of the minimum profit rate.
By December , price cuts, model cars
offered for test rides, huge Edsel shows
and price emphasis were to no avail. The
Edsel was so near death only major

46 PAGES

.

• ,.

The Fabric Shop

t00~80LID

'

MIDDLI;:PORT - The kindergarten
classes of Mrs. Mary Francis Rose went
all out Friday to prepare and serve a royal
Thanksgiving dinner.
Members of the morning and af-

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 PM

Sewing Machine

They Play It All!!

. ~f:ft

tmts

Children's hands do
Thanksgiving dinner

ELBERFELDS ·IN POMEROY

Transfers

SINGER

WITH VOCALIST

::§:::

+

Mos tly sunny anct clear today
central and southern Ohio.
High in the 40s. Cold tonight in
20s. MDnday clear and cool.

!n

~:-: •'

Preview with

L: C. Swearingen, dec., to
Mildred Chapman, Fred
Swearinger, Cert. of Trans.,
GRANGES TO MEET
Olive.
The aunual Awards and·
Mark Anthony Grueser,
Conference Night for all Meigs Nancy Sue Grueser to Mathew
County Granges will be Paul Grueser, 3.508 A., BedMonday at Rock Springs ford.
. ~· ~
Grange Hall with a potluck
William G. Beal to Bobby W.
supper at 6:30p.m. A business Vance, Drexel Vance, Parcels,
meeting to pian the year's Bedford.
work will be held following
Herschel McClure, Rhojean
dinner.
All
members
are
ur~ed
M. McClure to R. E. Parcell,
For Rent ··
FURNISHED apartmen t, 5 to attend
Parcels, Bedford.
large rooms and bath wit h
Thomas Burke, Ruby Burke
en c losed ba ck por ch and n i ce
AID MEN CALLED
yard. Pomeroy , Oh io. phone
t
o
Roger Riebel, Hazilee
992 -293 7.
The
Pomeroy
E-R
squad·
was
11 -16-J tp
Riebel, I I&gt; . 1&gt; A., Chester.
called Thursday at 4:23 p.m.
-------------Clyde J. Morian, Ethel Ma~ie
Help wanted
for Mrs . Sam Damron,
BEAUTICIAN want ed , full or
Morlan to Sam Baias, Neva L.
parttime . Helen 's Beauty Harrisonville, who was taken Baias, .92 A., Orange.
Shop .
to Holzer Medical Center. At
l l -l6 -5t c
Charles E : Hall, Stella Hall,
6:31a.m. today Leland Saxton,
---------Russell D. Hall, Pauline Hall to
Pomeroy, ·was taken ~ to
Terry C. Proffitt, Pamela
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Proffitt, 5 A., Lebanon.
Robert Welsh, Mary Welsh to
.. .. . .. ·' . . .
Robert
Hall, Lorene Hall, 1.08
Now! Lay It Away
A., Scipio.
James Homer Phillips,
Josephine Phillips to Parks E ..
Gaultney, Emma Gaultney, 46
· 20 A., Salem.
Lillie Groppenbacher,
For Christmas '73
Samuel carr Winters to J:.loyd
sm ~ll deposit will hold
D. Johnson, Ardella M.
Johnson, Lot, Middleport.
Leonard F. Erwin, Georgia .
·115 W. Second
992-2284 .
Ruth
Erwin to Leonard Steven
POMEROY, OHIO
Erwin, carol Marie Erwin, I
A., Chester.

the bonk of

6,649 J::&lt;LselS were either ordered or
delivered on the first day. But the
beginning was really the end. Sales
dropped sharply, the big complaint being
the styling.
·
Why did Ford 's massive promotion of
the Edsel fail ? Marketing experts with Ph.
D's had studied the sales potential and
designed the hard sell advertisements in
mass circulation media. Indeed, those
6,000 plus orders on E-Day verified their
expertise.
Now keep these dates in mind :
E-Day was Sept. 4, 1957.
In July, 1957, the stock market began
to falter.

Weather

Marauders in

I

dist inctively different Edsels.
For those who do pot remember,
Edsels were introduced on E-Day, Sep!ember 4, 1957. At first all seemed well as

seven teams

•

•utlond

-~~
.. p ,

Auto parts show
is big.success
Tri-county 'area residents
viewed soine of the nation's
leading · automotive .
manufacturing wares which
were on display Thursday at
the National Guard Armory,
Pt. Pleasant. Attendance was
estimated around 1,600 persons.
The display was spon.
sored
by
area
service stations, car dealers and independent garages in cooperation with G
· &amp; J Auto and the Pt. Pleasant
Auto Parts.
Tri-chairmen for the big

p o memy

.... 'il.

CINCINNATI STAR righthander ~ack Billingham,
(center ) was one of many attractions Thursday at the
Automotive Parts Show held at the National Guard Armory
above Point Pleasant. Billingham, the top wiruler on the
Cincirmati Reds staff this season , is chatting with Odie
O'Dormell, one of the tri-chainnen for Thursday's event.
More than 1,600 persons attended.

PAPER MOON

Colorcartoons:
It Ain' t Easv
Rolling Along
Hitch -Hikers
Adults: S I.SO
Childr en, 7Sc
Show Starts 7 p.m .

Meigs County claims its share and
perhaps some other counties' shares as
well. A quick "windshield trip" around
Meigs County revealed seven of the

on Nixon as 'the best'

MEIGS lHEATRE

GP

Martie Caldwell, Tonya Keebaugh, Crystal Erwin , Katrina
Batey and U&gt;ia Walker.

Goodyear put $40,000

Memorial, and at 7: 30p.m. jO
p--------~, the Racine Baptist Church for
Vera Beegle who had ap.
parently fallen and sustained a
laceration of her leg. She was
Tonight th ru Tuesda y
taken to Veterans Memorial
November 16-20
Hospital and admitted.
Ryan O' Neal
Tatum 0' Neal

In Collaboration with John Heece
.
POMEI,WY- Death pf a ca r, or birth of a legend.
A htle for a novel, or a play, or a movie, this could be. But it isn't.
~t's the story of how the Edsel automobile was born, tfte high hopes for
11 by the Ford Motor Company, a nd its early demise 14 years ago
tomorrow, Nov. 19, 1959.
Over the course of their short lifespan, l!O,B47 Edsels were
produced. A recent estimate indicates, however, that about 20,000
running, stored or in junk yards, or garaged Edsels are now accountable.
·

~

-

tht&gt; last t-'dsel made Nov. 19, 1959,
came uff assembly line three years
to th_e day after production began

By Chet Tannehill

PEPPY EAGLES - Leading ch eers this winter for the
Eastern E agle basketball team are, (1..- ), Becky Ebersbach.

I

'

of a spotlight and gun. Fined ,1,000 and
costs; 60 day jail sentence , six year loss of
hunting rights ; $600 of fine suspended
a)ong with 50 days of the jail sentence on
condition he not violate any wildlife laws in
Ohio for six years.
Donald Bartimus, Belpre, two counts
of aiding and illegal taking of deer with
gun and spotlight. Fined $400 and costs, 40
day jail sentence, four year loss of hunting
rights; $200 of fine suspended along with 30
days of the jail sentence on condition he
violate no hunting Jaws for four years.
Charles D. Wilson, Reedsville, attempting to take deer and aiding in attempting to take deer with spotlight and
gun . Fined $400 and costs, given a 40 day
jail sentence and a four year loss of hunling rights; $200 of fine suspended along
with 30 days of the jail sentence on condltion he violate no Ohio hunting laws for
four years.
· Dale [,ockhart, Reedsville, aiding and
taking two peer with spotlight and gun;
$400 fine and costs, 20 day jail sentence and
four year loss of hunting rights; $200 of fine
suspended along with the 20 day jail
sentence on condition he violate no Ohio
hunting laws for four years.
In other Wildlife cases heard by Judge
Porter Charles Spires, Vinton, and Ronald
Spires, Columbus, were charged ~ith
spotlighting after 10 p.m. Charles Sp1:es
was fmed $200 and costs, _$50 of the fme
suspended and Ronald Spires was fmed
$150 and costs with_$50 suspended.
Also charged w1th spotlighting, R~~ger
Stobart of Racme, was assessed costs only
and was placed on probatiOn one year, and
Donald Stobart, Racine, was assessed
coslS only and placed on probation for 90
days.
The WilliamsOn Shaft and Slo~ Co.,
Athens_, charged b~ Division of Wildlife
With d1sposlng of ml mto a stream, was
fined . $25 and ~osts and has condu?ted a
· cleanup operation of the stream, 1t was
reported.
TRAFFIC CASES
Others· fined ·and forfeiting bonds
were, Billy S. Randall, Cheshire, $13 and
costs, speeding; Thomas E. Smith,
Pomeroy, Gary P . Norris, Raci"f· Charles

•

'

\

I

)

..

M. Mathews, Racine, and Gary S. Aspin,
Dexter, $10 and costs each, speeding; Don
Mullins , Middleport, $15 and costs,
speeding; David Lee Hudnall, Athens, $10
and costs, no license plates; Lonnie E.
Hapney, Belpre, $150 and costs, three days
confinement, license suspended for six
months, driving while intoxicated; John H.
Ridgway, Jr ., New Haven, $100 and costs,
reckless operation, driver's license
suspended 1n Ohio for 30 days; Shirley
Landers, Minersville, $150 and costs, three
days confinement, license suspended for
one year, driving while intoxicated.
Forfeiting bonds were Anderson B.
Kibble, Reedsville, $150, failure to stop
after accident; Jack D. Phillips,
Nelsonville, $27.50, crossing yellow line ;
Harold W. Rickard, Clifton, W. Va.,
$357.50, driving while intoxicated; James
F. Tompert, Ironton, Thomas J. Marcinko,
Reedsville, John· W. Morrison, Pt.
Pleasant, Wayne Peyton, Dexter, Mark C.
Cundiff, Huntington, and . Willis D. Starcher, Parkersburg, $27.50 each, speeding;
Robert A. Walker, Jeffersonville, $27.50,
expired Hcensei Benny H. Lon'g, Tempe,
Arizona , $31.50, speeding; Dale C.
Teaford, Racine, $27 .50, insecure load.

ATHENS STUDENT WINS
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) - Justin
Klimko , Athens, won the 27th American
History essay contest held at Ohio
University and received $100 in cash and a
tuition free scholarship to OU, it was
announced Saturday. Alan Reid of
Wickliffe was second and won $75 while
George Fabian, Struthers, was third and
won $50.

RELIEF ASSURED
CO!..UMBUS (UP!) - Ohio iridustries
ca n forget their pollution ablltement
schedules for the duration of the current
energy ~risls, possibly until 1977, Ira
Whitman, Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency director, told newsmen here
Friday.

Sheriff Saunders said the commissioners had agreed to pay for six men,
thus seemingly, Fife was dropped since he
was unable to perform his duties. Fife is
planning to ask the commissioners for his
sick leave benefits·.
In recent -weeks, the commissioner
and Sheriff Saunders have been feuding
over the number of deputies the county can
afford to keep 0!1 the payroll. The issue
Oared when Saunders overspent his 1973
appropriations.

dis tricts " are upset" because they will not
get a $500 raise as expected in Janua ry
should consolida tion be delayed .
Supt. Br adbur y di,sclosed he is
working on a detailed salary schedule for
· both teachers and non-certified employees
which will be prese nted to the State
Department of Education.
"It looks like at least $90,000 would
have to be ra ised to increase just the
teachers' salaries; overall jt will be b~.­
tween $140,000 and $150,000," Bradbury
said. ·
As of today, the State Department of
Education has ri o solution . nor does Ray
Simms, Assistanl Secretary and Tax
Consultant for the Ohio Valley Electric
Corporation or Donn Lewis, Tax Consultan t for Ohio E lectric Company .
The board will make its fi nal
GORDON CALDWELL
resolution placing the effective date of
POMEROY - Gordon ca!dweU,
consolidation on Dec. 15.
Tuppers Plains, serving his fourth term
In other matters, Vivian Grant was_·- · 3$ Meigs County Auditor bas resigned
. approved as a substi tute bus driver in the · eff ective Dec. 1. Caldwell gave poor
North Gallia Dis trict.
health, lack of funds to hire efficient
help and higher real estate taxes next
STATEMENTS NEEDED
year as the result of a reappraisal as
GALLIPOLIS - A spokesman for
reasons for his resignation. The Meigs
the GalUa County Board of ElecdoD]j
County Democratic Central Committee
Saturday urged aU candidates In th e
will name a replacement to the term
November General Election to fJJe
which expires In March, 1975.
expense statements as soon as possible.
Persons with no e&lt;penses still must file
a statement:
Voter regis tration
resumed ·
Saiurday morning at the board of
elections located on the third floor of
the Gall!a County Courthouse . .

Decorations
lighted 10%

Opinion survey set
GALLiPOLIS - A health survey will
be conducted by The Ohio State University
in cooperation with The Ohio Valley Health
Services Foundation starting at the end of
November. The survey .will attempt to
determine how the residents of this area
value their emergency ·health care services and their opinions of how these
services are being used.
A sample of 1,200 households in the
counties of Athens, Hocking, Meigs,
Vinton,. Jackson, Gallia, and Lawrence
will participate in the survey. These
households bllve been selected at random
to be representative ·of the 2.17,000

l

residents in the 3,500 square miles of these
seven counties.
Intei;"\iewers are residents of this area
who have been specially trained. AU the
information obtained will be kept in strict
confidence; that is, no information will be
given out in any way that could identify the
persons interviewed.
The results of the survey will be used
in future planning of emergency health
services in Southeastern Ohio. By th eir
participation, the residents of the region
will have a chance to express their views
and influence the future of emergency
health care in this area ..

E ne....ny. supply may
• ·

e,

be under estimate
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The United "because oil that was shipped befofe the
States could fall 35 per cent short of its embargo is still in transit," and the peak
energy needs this winter-twice what the domestic demand for heat will not be
administration estimates- if the weather reachejl untillate.December .
Nevertheless, It said, ''the.shortage will
is severe and the Arab oil embargq con·
.tinues, the Library of Congress said be the most severe since World War IT and
Saturday.
will affect every energy.Wnsuming phase
Rep. Les Aspin, D-Wis., who requested of American life.
"At the worst, some factories, schools
the Study by the library's Congressional
Research Service, said the administration and businesses may have to close or limit
might have underestimated the impact of operations and many personal activities
may bave to be curtailed.
this winter's expected shortages.
"Many hom.es may be cold and many
"Apparently this nation could be
electric
utilities may have to limit output
heading for a major economic nose dive if
because of fuel restrictions. ''H the shortthis winter is very cold," he sald.
Administration and petroleum industry age is as severe and protracted, serious
estimates have put the shortfall at be- strains could develop in th e U.S .
tween 10 to .17 pet. this winter . But the ec:;:onomy .ll
The report said U.S. demand for oil is
library study sald it was ''unlikely that
even an end to the Arab oil embargo and a 17.5 million barrels a day . Direct imports
relatively mild winter could reduce the from Arab nations have totaled 1.1 million
barrels a day, and indirect imports- via
shortage to 20 per~~t or less."
" H the shortages resulting from normal European and Caribbean refineries - add
demand growth, natural gas curtailments, another 1.9 million bllrrels dally.
H both direct and indirect shipments of
low inventories and an exceptionally cold
Arab
oil are cut off, it said, ''the reduction
· winter are added (to the embargo), the
total shortfall could be as much as 35 per in supply may amount to 3 million barrefs
a day , or 18 per cent of the U.S. daily
cent/' the ~dy said.
· But the report tbat would be " the worst demand."
In addition, it said, canadian exports to
P.ssible case." The National Weather
the
United States are threatened because
Service has said an unuSually harsh winter
.. of canada's
Import problems, and
was not likely this year,
· The library 's study said the real effects could mean an additional loss of ·' soo,ooo
of the Arab embargo are yet to be felt barrels a day ,

o\vn

GALLIPOLIS - As a result of the
energy crisis, it will be a " dark Christmas" most of the holiday season in the Old
French City.
A Gallipolis Chamber of Commerce
spok ~ sman announ ced Saturday that
downtown decora tions are being erected
this winter, but tl\at. lights on the
decorations will be turned on only 10 pet. of
the time. .
The 90 pet. cutback will help save
electricity betwee n now and the· fu:st ·or
January, Lights will be turned on two
hours a night this year .
John Foster and members of the
Gallipolis city maintenance department
began erecting the decorations last week.
The lights will be turned on Dec . 8. The
annual Gallipolis Area Christmas Parade
is scheduled on that date . Deadline for
submitting parade entries is Monday, Dec.

3.
A chamber spokesman added that
church and school choirs are still being
sought to sing carols in the Public Square
next month. Choir leaders should contact
the chamber office. on this matter . .
Area re sidents wer e remind ed
Saturday that a JX!blic meeting is
scheduled at the Holiday Inn at 11 a.m.
Wednesday . Topics include highway
improvements. Cong. Clarence Miller will
be on hand for the session.
Lloyd Roth, a representative for
Division 10, Ohio Department of Highways , will also attend · Wednesday 's
meeting. Reservations for this event are
due by 3 p .m. Tuesday.

Ohio plaintiffs
remain in court
CHARLESTON, W. Va. ( UP!) - U. S.
District Judge Frank A. Kaufman of
Maryland Friday dismissed about twothirds of the civil suits filed in the aftermath of the 1967 Silver Bridge collapse
near Pt. Pleasant.
Judge ·Kaufman sald only 13 cases
remained on the docket , all of them in·
vol ving Ohio plaintiffs . The bridge
crumbled into the Ohio River Dec. 15, 1967,
killing 46 persons.
The state of West Virginia is also in·
volved in separate litigation before the
state Court of Claims. A total or 59
plaintiffs have filed claims amounting to
$6.4 million . The state filed its pollitioo on
the m atter in the court, discla iming
liability or negligence. It said · the
"claimants have settled their claims with
those persons, firms , corporations,
associations or partnerships who . were
r esponsible for the &lt;lesign and construction
of the Silver Br;dge."

•

I

I .

.I

•

l

1

�•

2- The Sunday Times. Sent in&lt; I. Sundav. Nov. 18. J97J

Board explains sewerageaction i_,,,,,,,,.,,G·;~=:;;;=i~:='··ii';;·,.,,,,.,.,._,.,"' .'j~
~~

•

POMEROY _ The Meigs regulat;ons of a type at lea&gt;t
· ·
Fr 'd· , equivalenttothosenowintorce
Count}., Co mmiSSioners
1. a} 1n fl/\e igs County . The obvious
has d1rected thl(.l followm g reason for this concern is the

CeMer &gt;•P• ""'" '"'" be
somewhil t .nv•• · ''-·•" '!.lMI,OOO

letter to Ja ck Crisp of the

dilut i nQettectwhichthetackof

portion of

Leading Creek Conservancy
. . .
D1str1ct tn regard to a proposal
to ~"'onslruct a sewage system
from Salt&gt;m Center to WilJr;es\filJ
e.
"We~ J\S Meigs County
Commissibners, have considered your. request for endo rsement of your proposal to
construct a sewer line from the
area of Salem Center to
. v·
C
W1"lkeSVl.11e, m
mton ounty.
As we understand it , the
construction or u1is line rs
.. ed
"al
con dItion
upon a potent!
grant from the Federal
Government of approximately
$300,000 and further conditioned upon the anticipation
that American Electric Power
will construct the first phase of
a sewage plant in the Salem
~nter area , which would have
a cost of some $150,000 or more.
Revenue honds would need to
be I;Old to raise the balance or
the cost of the project.
"We have met with the
representat ives
of
the
American Electric Power and
have been adv ised by them
that the company Is not
unalterably commitied to the
construction of a sewage plant
on any part icular time table.
They have plans for a housing
development, but the im plementation of these plans
will be dependent upon de mand
for housing . They advise that
presently the d~mand for
housing does not dictate immediate construction of a
sewage plant
no r the
scheduling of the construction
of such a plant. They simply
cannot at this time indicate
when they believe this demand
may present itself. Therefore,
since there is no time table for
the constructiOn of th is sewage
plant. we feel that it would be
presumptuous to make a
commitment qf the magnitude
envisioned in your request
without a definite time tab"le
tor the cons truct;on and
utilization of the line.
" Another matter which has
9iveri us con si d ~rable concern
ts the fa ct that, as we un·
derstand it, Vinton County does
not at this time have subdivision regulations com parabl e to those now in effect
in Meigs Coun ty:. We wou ld not
look with favor Upon extending
sewer lines from Meigs. County
into any county which has not
implemented subdivision

such regulations would have on
the effor'ts which Meigs County
has made. Also. a matter of
vi1al concern to us is that fact
that mos t of Meigs County is
without sewage fac illtJes .
Therefore, we would prefer a
program which would extend
the proposed sewer line from
Salem Center easterly to serve
the Rutland . Salisbury a!"ea..
as apposed to extending i1
westerly. Our observation is
thai the pollution problems ·of
Meigs County would be much
more greatly served by an
effort In the easterly direction
than the westerly direction .
" From our conversation with
the representatives of the
American Electric Power, it
appears that the estimated cost
of a sewage disposal plant to
serve approximately two
hundred houses in the Salem

It would, theret orp, s,eem to us

their -pro jected

moneys to~ the con:.truction of
a sewage dis posal plaM in
Salem Center, a portion tor the
constru("tion of a plant In the
Wilkesville area. and perhaps
there (;Ould be some allocated
for the Rutland area . We would
ur~e that the EDA modify Its
gu1delines to permit such an
allocation .
" We believe tlla1 the Leading
Creek Conservancy District
has authority to construct
sewers equivalent to its
author ity to construct the
water system, and we do not
believe that our endorsement
to this project Is necessary.
Further, we are not. by the
position taken in this letter,
denying an endorsement of
your proposal. Rather, we
pre_sent these ideas as what we
bell eve to be important and
realistic alternatives to the
proposal. "

HONORED - Vic Wipple, l'&lt;lmeroy, Rt. 3, was honored
recently on his birthday with a surprise party by members or
the Early Wednesday Mixed Bowling League at the Pomeroy
Lanes. League members presented him with girts and
Delores Tyree and Maxine Dugan presented him with an
attractively decorated cake.

Miss Wolfe wins Supervisor award
COLUMBUS - Frank D.
Ray, Director o£ the .Columbus .
District O££ice o£ the U. S.
Small
Business
Administration, has announced
the 1973 SBA Honor Award.
Miss Janice E . Wolfe, a native
or Racine, Ohio, has been
honored with the ••supervisor

of the Year Award" for Region
v which includes the states or
Ohio, Michiga n, Indiana,
Illinois, Wisconsin and Minnesota .
Miss Wolfe's citation was in
recognition ·of increasing
productivity and the quality or
legal services provided SBA

G~POLIS'

NEWEST STORE .

FEATURING FASHIONS FOR MENl

FREEl FREEl

Be sure to register for a 120.00 Gift
Certificate and two $10.00 Gift
Certificates to be given away Sat. ,
Nov . 17 &amp; Sat., Nov. 24. No purchase
necessa ry.
INTRODUCING
For The First
Time In The
Area

MEN'S .
TOILETRIES

by
Aramis Estee
Lauder Exclusively
For The
Bastille
3 Pie(:e

SUITS
In Plaids &amp; Solids

by: Clubman
Joseph Cohen

.

SPORT COATS
.

.

____

.

by:
Cluhman, Joseph Cohen,
.
.
Cilia and Fashion l'ark

.
JS
I
R
_,_..-;_;-

PANT
VAULT

•

t

•I

=~;

·.·.

ThoseElusive.CreditCards
Rap :

.

Hang Ln there, Sue! Hope you keep after that gas company
(
) til
(" II
t
ed"t ard
th h
or a new one W1 you ma y ge your cr 1 c
even oug
you have three strikes against you - you're young, a student,
and female .
lhaven'thadmuchluck. Iappliedforagascreditcardattbe
same time an older friend applied. He got his. I was refused. He
is married and has a baby. He owes installment payments on a
car, furniture, and hasn't paid the doctor yet. He just barely
makes .,1 £rom momth to month and someilmes lets hlS
" bt"· go.
J..L:i
But because he had ;'established credit'' there was no problem .
~
Me? I'm 18, earn as much as my friend does a month, and
_pay for everything in cash. 1 even saved up the money to buy a
car so I wouldn't have any payments hanging over me. So I
haven't any credit references, and evidently character
references don't count.
Seems to me these gasoline companies are pretty shortsighted. - C.T .G.

Dear C:
Here's a· letter that may help all us under-21 credit card
seekers: (SUE )
Rap:
When I was 181 had a lot of trouble obtaining credit, so I can
offer pointers on how-to :
The best way - and it may take six months even so- is to
apply £irs! for a department store credit card. They may refuse
you, but you are entitled to write the company within 30 days and
ask why. This usually stirs them up, and you get your card soon
afterwards, if your re£erences are good. Once you have a
department store account, gas companies will recognize you.
Another thing I found helpful was to enclose a letter with
your application and resume. Under tbe "status" box, write
"special." Whenever there isn't enough space to write your
qualifications, put them in your letter. If you present a good
enough case for your side, the company wlll ltsually come
through.
or course it goes without saying that the first thing to do is to
establish a checking account. - J . L.

The Bastille

•

II
()J

.:·:

I'OMEROY - Membership
rategori% have been opened
by the Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society to
everyone with a genuine in·
teres! in the preservation and
dissemination ol Meigs
County's. history.
.
0£1icers said membership
carries with it a vote in all
society matters, a copy ol the
periodic newsletter and the
opportunity to take part in

Devoted To Nothing
But Pants.
· Sizes 28 to 40

oBAGGlES • DENIMS

.CORDS
by Male, JIAetro, Spotwoodo
Lee, landl ubber. also
Bas.eb&amp;ll shirts in flanne l
and gabardine , perfect
wl1h tode~y's look !

By Eagle, Career Club,
Mr. DeWit!, Accent of Cali!.

'

SWEATERS

borrowers. She also received a
Special Achievement Award.
Miss Wolle is District
Counsel at the SBA Columbus
O£rice, and has been with the
Agency since March, 1972. She
received her J . D. degree from
Ohio State University College
of Law in 1964, and was
Assistant Attorney General of
Ohio £rom 1965 to 1972. She is a
member and past president of
. Kappa Beta Pi Legal Sorority
·and Women Lawyers of
Columbus.

.. SENIOR CITIZEN CENTER
POMEROY The Sr .
Citizen Center located In the
former Junior High Bid. in
Pomeroy, open 8: 30 · 4: 30,
phone 992-7886 or 992·7884.
Nov . 19 - thalr caning,
Crafts and Quilting, Square
Dance, 1·3.
Nov . 20 - Crocheting, Crafts
!lnd Qui ltlng, Cards and games
· 1-3, ChorUs practice 1-3.
Nov . 21 - Quilling all day,
Candle mak ing, Crafts.
Nov. 22 - Closed.
Nov. 23 - Bowling 1-3,
Quilting.

by:

~mplighler, E~rope

METCALF

::raft, For Mike's
Friends

AND

SUNDAY
TJMES.SENTINEL
Publishe-d

by
The
Publ ishing

d

· JURLINGTON &amp;
GOLD CUP

by:
"Jockey

OUJERWEAR
BY tiJROPI CRAFT, PnERS
AND CASUAL CRAFT.

.MODEL 35
•88 5
PECAN - - -

MODEL 53

co.

Velley

,

MAll..

wtek .

SUBSCRtPTION RAT!S
The Gellipollt TrlbiHie In
Oh io end Wett V!rglnla Of'•
Y"r 115, t lx month a sa, thret
months 15, •"•when 111 per

•

PECAN --~

ternational Ia uclvl lv ely

entitled

Galli polio

·_f';
'

..

to the uae tor
publication ot ell newt
dispatch" crltdlted fo thll
nawapipar and alto the lout
newa publll hlld here in .

••
I

•
'
;:
•

PIANOS------.

REEDSVILLE - The New
Me Club met at the · home ol
Ruth
Putman,
Tuesday
.evening £or their weekly
,m eetlhg. Members were
.weighed . There was a · tie lor
,queen, Marlene Putman and
Linda Well, with the loss ol 2
· ,pounds. The pig was also given
1to one of the members .
' Bingo was played with all
members winning. Door prize

•610
$649
$635

•

PLUS KIT

'

RACINE - Prayer Break:ras t was held at Racine
•Wesleyan United Methodist
: Church Wednesday with 16
&lt;youth in attendance.

'

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

:•

'...

i MEIGS THEATRE
•

PLUS KIT

•

NICE SELECTION OF

.eELECTRIC &amp; ACCOUSTIC GUITARS
eCLASSICAL GUITARS &amp;AMPLIFIERS
--.-;....__ 4

Tonight, Mon . &amp; Tues.
November .18-20
PAPER MOON
Ryan O' Neal
Tatum O' Neal

GP

Colorca rtoons:
It Ain't Easy
Rolling Along
Hitch· Hikers

Adults : Sl.SO ' Children, 7Sc

· · . ·~··--

Show Starts 7 p.m.

''

BRUNICARDI
HOUSE OF MUSIC

54 State Street

446-0687

'

'

..,.u

~

•""•• '

,,

Tonight thru
Wednesd~

••
'
.'
•
•

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA ONLY

'"'•
,"'

,.

OPEN 12:00 NOON TIL 5:00 P.M . .

,\

ENJOY SUNDAY LUNCH WITH ,US!

- ,,
~

--SUNDAY SPECIALs==
NOVEMBER 18TH ONLY
"YOU'LL ENJOY THE

VH",n.,

POLITE SERVICE HERE" .

RIB EYE
STEAK PlAmR
Tender grilled rib eye,
golden fries, cole slaw,
warm roll and butter.

LIVER AND
HAM STEAK DINNER
ONIONS PLATTER
Grilled ham steak
served with raisl n
sauce,
mash.ed:
Potatoes, brown gravy,
. cole slaw, warm roll
and butter .

Tender . baked beef
Iiver smothered with
onions, rich brown
gravy ,
creamy
mashed
potatoes ,
buttered vegetable,
warm roll and butter.

$1.69

atiCKEN AND
DRESSING DINNER
Old fashioned tender
boned chicken and
dressing,
chicken
grl!vy,
creamy
whipped
potatoes,
cranberry
sauce,
buttered vegetable,
warm roll and butter.

...."
....

GENE
AL
•• HACKMAN PIJDNO
...'
:1
SC.fRI!CROW
,."'
A

...,

!•

"...*·~ ...._
...••,,

. ..
~

~

., ·-

.IIi •..,

Devotions were opened with
the singing ol two hymns with
Roma Nease at the piano and
Rev, Howard Shiveley leading
in prayer.
Mrs . Ronald Sa lser, coowner or the Middleport Book
Store, gave the morning
meditation. She spoke on the
beatitudes and their meaning
in this era.
Break£ast consisting of
scrambled
eggs,
toast,
blueberry muf£ins and orange
jui.ce was served by Mrs.
~ames Rees, Sr., Mrs. Randall
Reiber, and Mrs. Howard
Shiveley.
Those present were BIJI
Shiveley, Mike Warner, Chris
Hill, Gene Shiveley, David
Theiss, Randy Warner ,
Beverly Hart, Debbie Harden,
Connie Roush, Helen Wilcoxen,
Becky Kouns, Vicki Wolfe,
Stephanie Ord, Roma Nease,
Stephen Nease, Tim Hill and
Tonja Salser.

:·:::.
.~ ·'"·

FLOWER
PICTURES

.,

HO SCALE ELECTRIC TRAIN SET

1688

REGULAR $17.86

BOWL-:-A·MATIC 300

1486

Aim
ball.
shoot!
Automalic pinsetter , ball
r e turn . Hours of fun! Try
your skill now .

REGULAR
$19 .88

Set of six cars, dummy , working ,8
wheel drive lOcomotive . 16-piece
ova l track layout.

DOZENS TO CHOOSE FROM

PLASTIC
HOBBY KITS
Regular NOW
FOR

.

·~ Reg. s3.99

Army Style SECURITY PATROL
Action set inc ludes real army style holste r and
belt w ith ammo pouch and field canteen, 45
'clicker' sound pistol and chopper tommy gun
with mechonicol oction trigg Er for reo.!istic
sound! Mode of high impact plastic.

•1.57 EACH

•

Fun-to-build authentic.
models. Selection
includes stock: cars ~ ships,
planes, military kits, fun
cars, classics, dragsters,
dune buggies, much morel

GAMES - GAMES
GAMES

..,

'

J...J '

~~ ~

'\

~o"' &lt;t\\"'
·~
r,"V'I; "'~

SNAP BOWLING

~#

Many, Many

For Junior Road Builder
REG. sg,gg
Bucket Loads and Unloads

r

$

Fun for the entire family - Live pin
action. Real bowling ln your own
home.
·

Mor~

Regular Price

NOW ONLY

All Steel Construction

ONLY
scale

I

.

$1.86

$300
'2

99

$399 Values

Reg.
NOW

$13.88

Mattei
New Born

DISCOUNT PRICED

Baby
t

Tender Love
NOW
ONLY

$

\SA\IE $4.00\

t

LOOKS AND FEELS SO REAL
JUST LIKE A BRAND
NEW BABY 13" TALL

20"x30" FOLDING

TABLE/ CHAIR SET

• 2 SAFETY FOLDING CHAIRS

• FLORAL PRINT TABLE TOP

Perfect for teo party .fun!
Sturdy table has multi -color
floral prinl lominoted too .
Chairs hove matching podded
vinyl seats. \Big saving now!

REG.
$13.44

a

.•

As seen at the Gallia County
Fair.

~

'-

Order now for Christmas
Gifts. A~y ' color scheme:

•••

f

SON BORN
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs .
Paul
(Bill )
McElroy,
Columbus, are announcing the
bitth or a son, Joseph Paul, 8
lbs., 5 OZ$. Oct. 25th at MI. .
Carmel HospitaL Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Paul
McElroy and Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon Bing, Pomeroy .
Paternal great-grandparent is
Mrs. Mabel Wood. Maternal
great"grandparents are Mrs.
Pearl HoHman, Middleport
and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Baer,
Minersville. The McElroys
also have a son, Jef£rey Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bing and
Sharon visited with the
McEiroys. Mrs. Bing remained
with her daughter and ramily
lor a rew days.
...

..--....~~~~;;
DRIED......1

tY

•

DURABLE AND COOL RUNNING

was won by Linda Well.
Members present · were
Flossie Maxson, Judy Limbach, Marlene Putman, Ruth
Putman, Linda Well, Barbara
Well, Carol and Cindy Scyoc ,
Connie Putman. Anyone interested in the club may call
Ruth
Putman
667-3396 ,
Coolville, or call Marlene
Putman 378-6371, Reedsville.

••~~t'l~;;~~~~~~~
~~r·

"

$1.35
,,

r

..

•

'

~

MAKE SOME BOY FROM
2 YEARS TO• 82 YEARS HAPPY.

Students have breakfast

~~~~~~ALNUT_$949 ~~~~;·_ _$_ 1 2 4 9
VENUS --'---$ 1 9 9 5 :~~D~~NIE$2395 :

•••••••••••

f

ov
TOY TOWN GRAND OPENING

Ne.w Me club meets

.'

.

year, ' '" . montna tf, three

rnontht 15.SO.
The Da lly Sentinel , on•
Y"r 116.00, at.: month a 11.50,
three rnontht 15 .00.
·
The Unt,act Prut In -

·:
'

$749

---LOWREY ORGANS__,..-_....
•,

A large receptive audience
was on hand to hear Miss
Sprague, a student or Frank L.
Jiussey, who presented a lourpart recital. She is a member
ol Phi Chapter, Phi · Beta
•F raternity . Mr . and Mrs .
Sprague attended the recital.
; Selections included J . S.
Bach's "French Suite No. 6 in
,E Major Allemande,
Courante, Sarabande, Gavotte,
Polonaisei Bourre, Menuet ,
and Gigue." She played
"Sonata in C Minor, Op. 10, No.

,,,.'

.£5169. Publlthld every wetk ·

sse p.,.

'

WAL~UT ---

MODEL 36L
• 5 9 5 WALNUT
MODEL 42L
• 6 2 5 FRUilWOOD
MODEl 38L
• 6 3 9 WALNUT

3 DAYS ONLY!

1" by Ludwig Van Beethoven
including Allegro motto e con
brio, Adagio molto, and
Prestissimo.
The third segment or the
program featured Johannes
Brahms' "Intermezzo, Op. 118,
No. 1" and ;.Intermezzo, Op.
118 , No. 2"; and Dmitri
Shostakovich's "Twenty-Four
Preludes, Op. 34, No. 14'' in EOat Minor, No. 15 in D-flat and
No. 5 in D Major.
Miss Sprague concluded the
recital with "Concerto in D
Major, Vivace,'' by Franz
Joseph Haydn .
Mrs. Sprague is a junior at
Ca pital University. ·She
graduated !rom Meigs High
School and was a piano student
ol Mrs. W. P. Lochary.

.; f

111 Cour1 St ., Pom•roy , 0 .

~vndav.

"" Nov. 5.

$849

CURRIER PIANOS

to area hospital

THE DAILY SENTINEL

dey evtrtng txctpt Satur diV - Entered at second ctut
mailing m1111tr tl Pomeroy ,
Oh io Pos.1 Offici.
By cerrler dally and

MIDDLEPORT - capital
University Conservatory of
Music presented Miss Glenna
Sprague, dau ghter or Mr. and
Mrs. William Sprague o£
Middleport, in a piano recital,

•
"
~
:,

MODEL J-115
$ 7 4 9 MODEL J-115
$71 5
PECAN- WALNUT- - MODEL DF-115
•649
WALNUT

MODEL 35-L
WALNUT
MODEL 39L
WALNUT
MODEL75L
PECAN

,U MV.PH

SHOP EARLY WHILE
QUANTITIES LAST

~- Miss Sprague in recital

$749
MODEL 95
• 9 9 5 MODEL43
WALNUT- - MAPLE ----:MODEL 54
$795
WALNUT

~------LOWREY

LAY-AWAY

IU,T UoT

.(H.liGI IT

•

~

MODEL 33

CASH, CHARGE,

~-

--~ STORY &amp; a.ARK PIANOS
MODEL 77
•949
PECAN - - -

EASY WAYS TO BUY ••

The students signed a roundrobin card £or Don Stivers,
math teacher, who is a patient
at the Holzer"Medical Center.
Another party was planned £or
February.
Chaperoning the party and
assisting with the refresh·
ments were Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Moore, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Sims, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Dlllard, Mr. and Mrs.
Neuman Burdette, Mrs.
Gemma Casci, Mrs. Nancy
Beaver, Mrs. Clarice Krautter,
Mrs. Mary Wise. Contributing
re£reshments were Mrs. Billy
Jo Krawsczyn, Mrs. Norma
Wi1cox, Mrs. Janet Lewis, Mrs.
Sally Walters, Mrs. Jane
Miller, Mrs. Anna Radford,
Mrs. Edith Sisson, Mrs. Iris
Payne, Mrs. Donna Byer and
Mrs . Jane Hess.

•

CHRISTMAS
SAVE
$$$$

Sundey

GALLIPOLIS
DA.IL 'f TRIBUNE
815 Third Av e., Gallipolis,
Oh lo .£563 I.
Published nerv weekday
•venlng except Saturdal .
Second C!nt Po"'"' Pa d
e1 Gelllpolll , Ohio d631.

BRAGG

UNDERWEAR

by:

every
Oh io

• MIDDLEPORT - -Over 100
students attended a Meigs
. Junior High School party held
tn the auditorium there
recently.
Mrs. Dale Walburn was
8eneral chairwoman lor the
party which was held from 7:30
. 1-" 11 p.m. Jill Anne Walburn,
: assisted by her lather, Dale
Walburn, had charge ol the
: recorded music during the
~ evening and refreshments
, were provided and served by
the parents.
Door prizes or record
albums, tapes, bracelets and
· pen and pencil sets were
_ donated by Village Pharmacy,
• · K and C· Jewelers, Dutton
· Drugs, and the Village Gun
• "Shop, Winning door prizes were
' Rhonda HudiiOn, Gicky Neff, .
" Valerie Lewis, Pam Powers
,: and Melinda Barnett.

FOR

Four transferred

GALLIPOLIS Gallia
County's
Volunteer
Emergency· Squad transferred
£our persons to the Holzer
Medical Center Friday.
Edmund Harrington, 62,
Cheshire, was taken to the
hospital alter surrering severe
chest pains and breathing
di£1iculties. He was given
'oxygen enroute.
Cochran charged
Eimer Rose, 58, ol1271&gt; Pine
GALLIPOLIS _ Gallia St, was taken to the hospital
treaiment or leg pams;
Cod un ty s hen·rf •s .. depu 1.tes lor
James Ball 60 Rt. I
charged
Carl
Herman
. .
•
'
. •
. t
"th Galltpohs, also had chest pams
Coc hran, 49 ' Rt · I ' Vm
on, Wl
d b th"
cliff ult Th
DWI following a single car· a_n
rea mg
tc Y• e
E Rd . lmalcallcameal7:55p.m. to
"d tF "d
aMcct en " ay on no
· m Meigs County Road 33 in Salem
organ .Twp. .
·
Twp. from
where Deanna
Depultes satd Cochran lost Bl k
tak · to the
~ 1_
ac . son was
.conuo
or h"lS car w hi c h went
. en. - ..
hospital as a medical patten!.
orr the hi hwa strikin
g
Y
g a The call came from the
p ·li
De 1m t
renee. One other arrest was of W "·t
W"ll"
L . S 1
euo on o ce
par en
48
1 1 ~m
ewls ay er'
' ·which reported the Wellston
Cheshrre, £or DWI.
SEOEMS unit was on another
call.
.PROCLAIM WEEK
The squad answered five
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Gov. calls on Thursday and has
John
J.
Gilligan
has responded to 50 emergency
proclaimed the week ol Nov. runs thus rar this month.
16-22 as Ohio Farm-City Week,
urging citizens to set aside that
time to "£amiliariz.e themselves with their neighbors in
cities and rural areas.

.Jr. High has party

PIANOS &amp; ORGANS

D.C.:
Unless papers were signed, you haven't much of alegalleg to
stand on. But if you two were to visit this gal together, you might
ge t a rebate. Especially if you suggested the police will be interested in her little shake.&lt;Jown operation,
Moral: don't believe a sob story unless y0 u're sure she isn't a
£eiijale SOB. - HELEN AND SUE

NECKWEAR

by:

SOCKS

Rap:
I dated this gp-l £or a month. Then we cooled off. Two weeks
ago she told he she had to see me, and broke the news she was
pregnant. She said she had hall the money for an abortion, but
could I raise the other hall - $150. I did. That's the last I heard
from her.
This week I was talking to a guy and it came out we had
similar experiences. So we checked names. Yeah - same girl!
Even the same month, but HE paid the£ull $300!
Either she collected twice for the same abortion, or else she
was never preguant and. is running a nice little racket. Any way
to get our money back ? -DOUBLE-CROSSED

3 - The Sunday Times- Senlinei,Sunday. Nov. 13, 1973

developmcnl ol t~e Me,gs participating contribution, S'l
C&lt;lUJity Museum.
.
. to $25; supporting contribution,
Memhershtp categones are : $50 and $74; Endowment
Junior member (under !3) II , contribution $75 to $100, and
senior member (over age 62 ~ honorary c~ntribution , over
$1; regular member, 13: SIOO.
supporting member , _15
11 is also possible lor a
contributing member, SlO, and person
organizaUon or
sustaining member, $!5 an
busines~ to pay lor an entire
up.
.
display or area with the
The categortes £or con· · benefactor's name given credit
tribiltions to the Museum in the lorm ora plaque .
Development Fund recently

+++

START OF A CLOTHING REVOLUTION

....._.

.::.

logical tor EDA to allocate a

··· ~----------------------~~~

OF

!', ,

;:;:

.•I , , 1 S , I'
LJ
I C C II diiC • lit

Six kinds ~+membership
in Meigs
Society . .
'1
.
adopted by the Soctety mclude:

SUSIE'S GREENHOOUISE
St.teROut•~

446-4610

TOY TOWN OPEN IN ALL FOUR STORES
ALL STORES OPEN SUNDAYS 1 PM TO 6 PM

SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA - BOTH IXMNllMN GALli
'

STORES - PT. PLEASANT STORE
'

�•

2- The Sunday Times. Sent in&lt; I. Sundav. Nov. 18. J97J

Board explains sewerageaction i_,,,,,,,,.,,G·;~=:;;;=i~:='··ii';;·,.,,,,.,.,._,.,"' .'j~
~~

•

POMEROY _ The Meigs regulat;ons of a type at lea&gt;t
· ·
Fr 'd· , equivalenttothosenowintorce
Count}., Co mmiSSioners
1. a} 1n fl/\e igs County . The obvious
has d1rected thl(.l followm g reason for this concern is the

CeMer &gt;•P• ""'" '"'" be
somewhil t .nv•• · ''-·•" '!.lMI,OOO

letter to Ja ck Crisp of the

dilut i nQettectwhichthetackof

portion of

Leading Creek Conservancy
. . .
D1str1ct tn regard to a proposal
to ~"'onslruct a sewage system
from Salt&gt;m Center to WilJr;es\filJ
e.
"We~ J\S Meigs County
Commissibners, have considered your. request for endo rsement of your proposal to
construct a sewer line from the
area of Salem Center to
. v·
C
W1"lkeSVl.11e, m
mton ounty.
As we understand it , the
construction or u1is line rs
.. ed
"al
con dItion
upon a potent!
grant from the Federal
Government of approximately
$300,000 and further conditioned upon the anticipation
that American Electric Power
will construct the first phase of
a sewage plant in the Salem
~nter area , which would have
a cost of some $150,000 or more.
Revenue honds would need to
be I;Old to raise the balance or
the cost of the project.
"We have met with the
representat ives
of
the
American Electric Power and
have been adv ised by them
that the company Is not
unalterably commitied to the
construction of a sewage plant
on any part icular time table.
They have plans for a housing
development, but the im plementation of these plans
will be dependent upon de mand
for housing . They advise that
presently the d~mand for
housing does not dictate immediate construction of a
sewage plant
no r the
scheduling of the construction
of such a plant. They simply
cannot at this time indicate
when they believe this demand
may present itself. Therefore,
since there is no time table for
the constructiOn of th is sewage
plant. we feel that it would be
presumptuous to make a
commitment qf the magnitude
envisioned in your request
without a definite time tab"le
tor the cons truct;on and
utilization of the line.
" Another matter which has
9iveri us con si d ~rable concern
ts the fa ct that, as we un·
derstand it, Vinton County does
not at this time have subdivision regulations com parabl e to those now in effect
in Meigs Coun ty:. We wou ld not
look with favor Upon extending
sewer lines from Meigs. County
into any county which has not
implemented subdivision

such regulations would have on
the effor'ts which Meigs County
has made. Also. a matter of
vi1al concern to us is that fact
that mos t of Meigs County is
without sewage fac illtJes .
Therefore, we would prefer a
program which would extend
the proposed sewer line from
Salem Center easterly to serve
the Rutland . Salisbury a!"ea..
as apposed to extending i1
westerly. Our observation is
thai the pollution problems ·of
Meigs County would be much
more greatly served by an
effort In the easterly direction
than the westerly direction .
" From our conversation with
the representatives of the
American Electric Power, it
appears that the estimated cost
of a sewage disposal plant to
serve approximately two
hundred houses in the Salem

It would, theret orp, s,eem to us

their -pro jected

moneys to~ the con:.truction of
a sewage dis posal plaM in
Salem Center, a portion tor the
constru("tion of a plant In the
Wilkesville area. and perhaps
there (;Ould be some allocated
for the Rutland area . We would
ur~e that the EDA modify Its
gu1delines to permit such an
allocation .
" We believe tlla1 the Leading
Creek Conservancy District
has authority to construct
sewers equivalent to its
author ity to construct the
water system, and we do not
believe that our endorsement
to this project Is necessary.
Further, we are not. by the
position taken in this letter,
denying an endorsement of
your proposal. Rather, we
pre_sent these ideas as what we
bell eve to be important and
realistic alternatives to the
proposal. "

HONORED - Vic Wipple, l'&lt;lmeroy, Rt. 3, was honored
recently on his birthday with a surprise party by members or
the Early Wednesday Mixed Bowling League at the Pomeroy
Lanes. League members presented him with girts and
Delores Tyree and Maxine Dugan presented him with an
attractively decorated cake.

Miss Wolfe wins Supervisor award
COLUMBUS - Frank D.
Ray, Director o£ the .Columbus .
District O££ice o£ the U. S.
Small
Business
Administration, has announced
the 1973 SBA Honor Award.
Miss Janice E . Wolfe, a native
or Racine, Ohio, has been
honored with the ••supervisor

of the Year Award" for Region
v which includes the states or
Ohio, Michiga n, Indiana,
Illinois, Wisconsin and Minnesota .
Miss Wolfe's citation was in
recognition ·of increasing
productivity and the quality or
legal services provided SBA

G~POLIS'

NEWEST STORE .

FEATURING FASHIONS FOR MENl

FREEl FREEl

Be sure to register for a 120.00 Gift
Certificate and two $10.00 Gift
Certificates to be given away Sat. ,
Nov . 17 &amp; Sat., Nov. 24. No purchase
necessa ry.
INTRODUCING
For The First
Time In The
Area

MEN'S .
TOILETRIES

by
Aramis Estee
Lauder Exclusively
For The
Bastille
3 Pie(:e

SUITS
In Plaids &amp; Solids

by: Clubman
Joseph Cohen

.

SPORT COATS
.

.

____

.

by:
Cluhman, Joseph Cohen,
.
.
Cilia and Fashion l'ark

.
JS
I
R
_,_..-;_;-

PANT
VAULT

•

t

•I

=~;

·.·.

ThoseElusive.CreditCards
Rap :

.

Hang Ln there, Sue! Hope you keep after that gas company
(
) til
(" II
t
ed"t ard
th h
or a new one W1 you ma y ge your cr 1 c
even oug
you have three strikes against you - you're young, a student,
and female .
lhaven'thadmuchluck. Iappliedforagascreditcardattbe
same time an older friend applied. He got his. I was refused. He
is married and has a baby. He owes installment payments on a
car, furniture, and hasn't paid the doctor yet. He just barely
makes .,1 £rom momth to month and someilmes lets hlS
" bt"· go.
J..L:i
But because he had ;'established credit'' there was no problem .
~
Me? I'm 18, earn as much as my friend does a month, and
_pay for everything in cash. 1 even saved up the money to buy a
car so I wouldn't have any payments hanging over me. So I
haven't any credit references, and evidently character
references don't count.
Seems to me these gasoline companies are pretty shortsighted. - C.T .G.

Dear C:
Here's a· letter that may help all us under-21 credit card
seekers: (SUE )
Rap:
When I was 181 had a lot of trouble obtaining credit, so I can
offer pointers on how-to :
The best way - and it may take six months even so- is to
apply £irs! for a department store credit card. They may refuse
you, but you are entitled to write the company within 30 days and
ask why. This usually stirs them up, and you get your card soon
afterwards, if your re£erences are good. Once you have a
department store account, gas companies will recognize you.
Another thing I found helpful was to enclose a letter with
your application and resume. Under tbe "status" box, write
"special." Whenever there isn't enough space to write your
qualifications, put them in your letter. If you present a good
enough case for your side, the company wlll ltsually come
through.
or course it goes without saying that the first thing to do is to
establish a checking account. - J . L.

The Bastille

•

II
()J

.:·:

I'OMEROY - Membership
rategori% have been opened
by the Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society to
everyone with a genuine in·
teres! in the preservation and
dissemination ol Meigs
County's. history.
.
0£1icers said membership
carries with it a vote in all
society matters, a copy ol the
periodic newsletter and the
opportunity to take part in

Devoted To Nothing
But Pants.
· Sizes 28 to 40

oBAGGlES • DENIMS

.CORDS
by Male, JIAetro, Spotwoodo
Lee, landl ubber. also
Bas.eb&amp;ll shirts in flanne l
and gabardine , perfect
wl1h tode~y's look !

By Eagle, Career Club,
Mr. DeWit!, Accent of Cali!.

'

SWEATERS

borrowers. She also received a
Special Achievement Award.
Miss Wolle is District
Counsel at the SBA Columbus
O£rice, and has been with the
Agency since March, 1972. She
received her J . D. degree from
Ohio State University College
of Law in 1964, and was
Assistant Attorney General of
Ohio £rom 1965 to 1972. She is a
member and past president of
. Kappa Beta Pi Legal Sorority
·and Women Lawyers of
Columbus.

.. SENIOR CITIZEN CENTER
POMEROY The Sr .
Citizen Center located In the
former Junior High Bid. in
Pomeroy, open 8: 30 · 4: 30,
phone 992-7886 or 992·7884.
Nov . 19 - thalr caning,
Crafts and Quilting, Square
Dance, 1·3.
Nov . 20 - Crocheting, Crafts
!lnd Qui ltlng, Cards and games
· 1-3, ChorUs practice 1-3.
Nov . 21 - Quilling all day,
Candle mak ing, Crafts.
Nov. 22 - Closed.
Nov. 23 - Bowling 1-3,
Quilting.

by:

~mplighler, E~rope

METCALF

::raft, For Mike's
Friends

AND

SUNDAY
TJMES.SENTINEL
Publishe-d

by
The
Publ ishing

d

· JURLINGTON &amp;
GOLD CUP

by:
"Jockey

OUJERWEAR
BY tiJROPI CRAFT, PnERS
AND CASUAL CRAFT.

.MODEL 35
•88 5
PECAN - - -

MODEL 53

co.

Velley

,

MAll..

wtek .

SUBSCRtPTION RAT!S
The Gellipollt TrlbiHie In
Oh io end Wett V!rglnla Of'•
Y"r 115, t lx month a sa, thret
months 15, •"•when 111 per

•

PECAN --~

ternational Ia uclvl lv ely

entitled

Galli polio

·_f';
'

..

to the uae tor
publication ot ell newt
dispatch" crltdlted fo thll
nawapipar and alto the lout
newa publll hlld here in .

••
I

•
'
;:
•

PIANOS------.

REEDSVILLE - The New
Me Club met at the · home ol
Ruth
Putman,
Tuesday
.evening £or their weekly
,m eetlhg. Members were
.weighed . There was a · tie lor
,queen, Marlene Putman and
Linda Well, with the loss ol 2
· ,pounds. The pig was also given
1to one of the members .
' Bingo was played with all
members winning. Door prize

•610
$649
$635

•

PLUS KIT

'

RACINE - Prayer Break:ras t was held at Racine
•Wesleyan United Methodist
: Church Wednesday with 16
&lt;youth in attendance.

'

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

:•

'...

i MEIGS THEATRE
•

PLUS KIT

•

NICE SELECTION OF

.eELECTRIC &amp; ACCOUSTIC GUITARS
eCLASSICAL GUITARS &amp;AMPLIFIERS
--.-;....__ 4

Tonight, Mon . &amp; Tues.
November .18-20
PAPER MOON
Ryan O' Neal
Tatum O' Neal

GP

Colorca rtoons:
It Ain't Easy
Rolling Along
Hitch· Hikers

Adults : Sl.SO ' Children, 7Sc

· · . ·~··--

Show Starts 7 p.m.

''

BRUNICARDI
HOUSE OF MUSIC

54 State Street

446-0687

'

'

..,.u

~

•""•• '

,,

Tonight thru
Wednesd~

••
'
.'
•
•

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA ONLY

'"'•
,"'

,.

OPEN 12:00 NOON TIL 5:00 P.M . .

,\

ENJOY SUNDAY LUNCH WITH ,US!

- ,,
~

--SUNDAY SPECIALs==
NOVEMBER 18TH ONLY
"YOU'LL ENJOY THE

VH",n.,

POLITE SERVICE HERE" .

RIB EYE
STEAK PlAmR
Tender grilled rib eye,
golden fries, cole slaw,
warm roll and butter.

LIVER AND
HAM STEAK DINNER
ONIONS PLATTER
Grilled ham steak
served with raisl n
sauce,
mash.ed:
Potatoes, brown gravy,
. cole slaw, warm roll
and butter .

Tender . baked beef
Iiver smothered with
onions, rich brown
gravy ,
creamy
mashed
potatoes ,
buttered vegetable,
warm roll and butter.

$1.69

atiCKEN AND
DRESSING DINNER
Old fashioned tender
boned chicken and
dressing,
chicken
grl!vy,
creamy
whipped
potatoes,
cranberry
sauce,
buttered vegetable,
warm roll and butter.

...."
....

GENE
AL
•• HACKMAN PIJDNO
...'
:1
SC.fRI!CROW
,."'
A

...,

!•

"...*·~ ...._
...••,,

. ..
~

~

., ·-

.IIi •..,

Devotions were opened with
the singing ol two hymns with
Roma Nease at the piano and
Rev, Howard Shiveley leading
in prayer.
Mrs . Ronald Sa lser, coowner or the Middleport Book
Store, gave the morning
meditation. She spoke on the
beatitudes and their meaning
in this era.
Break£ast consisting of
scrambled
eggs,
toast,
blueberry muf£ins and orange
jui.ce was served by Mrs.
~ames Rees, Sr., Mrs. Randall
Reiber, and Mrs. Howard
Shiveley.
Those present were BIJI
Shiveley, Mike Warner, Chris
Hill, Gene Shiveley, David
Theiss, Randy Warner ,
Beverly Hart, Debbie Harden,
Connie Roush, Helen Wilcoxen,
Becky Kouns, Vicki Wolfe,
Stephanie Ord, Roma Nease,
Stephen Nease, Tim Hill and
Tonja Salser.

:·:::.
.~ ·'"·

FLOWER
PICTURES

.,

HO SCALE ELECTRIC TRAIN SET

1688

REGULAR $17.86

BOWL-:-A·MATIC 300

1486

Aim
ball.
shoot!
Automalic pinsetter , ball
r e turn . Hours of fun! Try
your skill now .

REGULAR
$19 .88

Set of six cars, dummy , working ,8
wheel drive lOcomotive . 16-piece
ova l track layout.

DOZENS TO CHOOSE FROM

PLASTIC
HOBBY KITS
Regular NOW
FOR

.

·~ Reg. s3.99

Army Style SECURITY PATROL
Action set inc ludes real army style holste r and
belt w ith ammo pouch and field canteen, 45
'clicker' sound pistol and chopper tommy gun
with mechonicol oction trigg Er for reo.!istic
sound! Mode of high impact plastic.

•1.57 EACH

•

Fun-to-build authentic.
models. Selection
includes stock: cars ~ ships,
planes, military kits, fun
cars, classics, dragsters,
dune buggies, much morel

GAMES - GAMES
GAMES

..,

'

J...J '

~~ ~

'\

~o"' &lt;t\\"'
·~
r,"V'I; "'~

SNAP BOWLING

~#

Many, Many

For Junior Road Builder
REG. sg,gg
Bucket Loads and Unloads

r

$

Fun for the entire family - Live pin
action. Real bowling ln your own
home.
·

Mor~

Regular Price

NOW ONLY

All Steel Construction

ONLY
scale

I

.

$1.86

$300
'2

99

$399 Values

Reg.
NOW

$13.88

Mattei
New Born

DISCOUNT PRICED

Baby
t

Tender Love
NOW
ONLY

$

\SA\IE $4.00\

t

LOOKS AND FEELS SO REAL
JUST LIKE A BRAND
NEW BABY 13" TALL

20"x30" FOLDING

TABLE/ CHAIR SET

• 2 SAFETY FOLDING CHAIRS

• FLORAL PRINT TABLE TOP

Perfect for teo party .fun!
Sturdy table has multi -color
floral prinl lominoted too .
Chairs hove matching podded
vinyl seats. \Big saving now!

REG.
$13.44

a

.•

As seen at the Gallia County
Fair.

~

'-

Order now for Christmas
Gifts. A~y ' color scheme:

•••

f

SON BORN
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs .
Paul
(Bill )
McElroy,
Columbus, are announcing the
bitth or a son, Joseph Paul, 8
lbs., 5 OZ$. Oct. 25th at MI. .
Carmel HospitaL Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Paul
McElroy and Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon Bing, Pomeroy .
Paternal great-grandparent is
Mrs. Mabel Wood. Maternal
great"grandparents are Mrs.
Pearl HoHman, Middleport
and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Baer,
Minersville. The McElroys
also have a son, Jef£rey Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bing and
Sharon visited with the
McEiroys. Mrs. Bing remained
with her daughter and ramily
lor a rew days.
...

..--....~~~~;;
DRIED......1

tY

•

DURABLE AND COOL RUNNING

was won by Linda Well.
Members present · were
Flossie Maxson, Judy Limbach, Marlene Putman, Ruth
Putman, Linda Well, Barbara
Well, Carol and Cindy Scyoc ,
Connie Putman. Anyone interested in the club may call
Ruth
Putman
667-3396 ,
Coolville, or call Marlene
Putman 378-6371, Reedsville.

••~~t'l~;;~~~~~~~
~~r·

"

$1.35
,,

r

..

•

'

~

MAKE SOME BOY FROM
2 YEARS TO• 82 YEARS HAPPY.

Students have breakfast

~~~~~~ALNUT_$949 ~~~~;·_ _$_ 1 2 4 9
VENUS --'---$ 1 9 9 5 :~~D~~NIE$2395 :

•••••••••••

f

ov
TOY TOWN GRAND OPENING

Ne.w Me club meets

.'

.

year, ' '" . montna tf, three

rnontht 15.SO.
The Da lly Sentinel , on•
Y"r 116.00, at.: month a 11.50,
three rnontht 15 .00.
·
The Unt,act Prut In -

·:
'

$749

---LOWREY ORGANS__,..-_....
•,

A large receptive audience
was on hand to hear Miss
Sprague, a student or Frank L.
Jiussey, who presented a lourpart recital. She is a member
ol Phi Chapter, Phi · Beta
•F raternity . Mr . and Mrs .
Sprague attended the recital.
; Selections included J . S.
Bach's "French Suite No. 6 in
,E Major Allemande,
Courante, Sarabande, Gavotte,
Polonaisei Bourre, Menuet ,
and Gigue." She played
"Sonata in C Minor, Op. 10, No.

,,,.'

.£5169. Publlthld every wetk ·

sse p.,.

'

WAL~UT ---

MODEL 36L
• 5 9 5 WALNUT
MODEL 42L
• 6 2 5 FRUilWOOD
MODEl 38L
• 6 3 9 WALNUT

3 DAYS ONLY!

1" by Ludwig Van Beethoven
including Allegro motto e con
brio, Adagio molto, and
Prestissimo.
The third segment or the
program featured Johannes
Brahms' "Intermezzo, Op. 118,
No. 1" and ;.Intermezzo, Op.
118 , No. 2"; and Dmitri
Shostakovich's "Twenty-Four
Preludes, Op. 34, No. 14'' in EOat Minor, No. 15 in D-flat and
No. 5 in D Major.
Miss Sprague concluded the
recital with "Concerto in D
Major, Vivace,'' by Franz
Joseph Haydn .
Mrs. Sprague is a junior at
Ca pital University. ·She
graduated !rom Meigs High
School and was a piano student
ol Mrs. W. P. Lochary.

.; f

111 Cour1 St ., Pom•roy , 0 .

~vndav.

"" Nov. 5.

$849

CURRIER PIANOS

to area hospital

THE DAILY SENTINEL

dey evtrtng txctpt Satur diV - Entered at second ctut
mailing m1111tr tl Pomeroy ,
Oh io Pos.1 Offici.
By cerrler dally and

MIDDLEPORT - capital
University Conservatory of
Music presented Miss Glenna
Sprague, dau ghter or Mr. and
Mrs. William Sprague o£
Middleport, in a piano recital,

•
"
~
:,

MODEL J-115
$ 7 4 9 MODEL J-115
$71 5
PECAN- WALNUT- - MODEL DF-115
•649
WALNUT

MODEL 35-L
WALNUT
MODEL 39L
WALNUT
MODEL75L
PECAN

,U MV.PH

SHOP EARLY WHILE
QUANTITIES LAST

~- Miss Sprague in recital

$749
MODEL 95
• 9 9 5 MODEL43
WALNUT- - MAPLE ----:MODEL 54
$795
WALNUT

~------LOWREY

LAY-AWAY

IU,T UoT

.(H.liGI IT

•

~

MODEL 33

CASH, CHARGE,

~-

--~ STORY &amp; a.ARK PIANOS
MODEL 77
•949
PECAN - - -

EASY WAYS TO BUY ••

The students signed a roundrobin card £or Don Stivers,
math teacher, who is a patient
at the Holzer"Medical Center.
Another party was planned £or
February.
Chaperoning the party and
assisting with the refresh·
ments were Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Moore, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Sims, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Dlllard, Mr. and Mrs.
Neuman Burdette, Mrs.
Gemma Casci, Mrs. Nancy
Beaver, Mrs. Clarice Krautter,
Mrs. Mary Wise. Contributing
re£reshments were Mrs. Billy
Jo Krawsczyn, Mrs. Norma
Wi1cox, Mrs. Janet Lewis, Mrs.
Sally Walters, Mrs. Jane
Miller, Mrs. Anna Radford,
Mrs. Edith Sisson, Mrs. Iris
Payne, Mrs. Donna Byer and
Mrs . Jane Hess.

•

CHRISTMAS
SAVE
$$$$

Sundey

GALLIPOLIS
DA.IL 'f TRIBUNE
815 Third Av e., Gallipolis,
Oh lo .£563 I.
Published nerv weekday
•venlng except Saturdal .
Second C!nt Po"'"' Pa d
e1 Gelllpolll , Ohio d631.

BRAGG

UNDERWEAR

by:

every
Oh io

• MIDDLEPORT - -Over 100
students attended a Meigs
. Junior High School party held
tn the auditorium there
recently.
Mrs. Dale Walburn was
8eneral chairwoman lor the
party which was held from 7:30
. 1-" 11 p.m. Jill Anne Walburn,
: assisted by her lather, Dale
Walburn, had charge ol the
: recorded music during the
~ evening and refreshments
, were provided and served by
the parents.
Door prizes or record
albums, tapes, bracelets and
· pen and pencil sets were
_ donated by Village Pharmacy,
• · K and C· Jewelers, Dutton
· Drugs, and the Village Gun
• "Shop, Winning door prizes were
' Rhonda HudiiOn, Gicky Neff, .
" Valerie Lewis, Pam Powers
,: and Melinda Barnett.

FOR

Four transferred

GALLIPOLIS Gallia
County's
Volunteer
Emergency· Squad transferred
£our persons to the Holzer
Medical Center Friday.
Edmund Harrington, 62,
Cheshire, was taken to the
hospital alter surrering severe
chest pains and breathing
di£1iculties. He was given
'oxygen enroute.
Cochran charged
Eimer Rose, 58, ol1271&gt; Pine
GALLIPOLIS _ Gallia St, was taken to the hospital
treaiment or leg pams;
Cod un ty s hen·rf •s .. depu 1.tes lor
James Ball 60 Rt. I
charged
Carl
Herman
. .
•
'
. •
. t
"th Galltpohs, also had chest pams
Coc hran, 49 ' Rt · I ' Vm
on, Wl
d b th"
cliff ult Th
DWI following a single car· a_n
rea mg
tc Y• e
E Rd . lmalcallcameal7:55p.m. to
"d tF "d
aMcct en " ay on no
· m Meigs County Road 33 in Salem
organ .Twp. .
·
Twp. from
where Deanna
Depultes satd Cochran lost Bl k
tak · to the
~ 1_
ac . son was
.conuo
or h"lS car w hi c h went
. en. - ..
hospital as a medical patten!.
orr the hi hwa strikin
g
Y
g a The call came from the
p ·li
De 1m t
renee. One other arrest was of W "·t
W"ll"
L . S 1
euo on o ce
par en
48
1 1 ~m
ewls ay er'
' ·which reported the Wellston
Cheshrre, £or DWI.
SEOEMS unit was on another
call.
.PROCLAIM WEEK
The squad answered five
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Gov. calls on Thursday and has
John
J.
Gilligan
has responded to 50 emergency
proclaimed the week ol Nov. runs thus rar this month.
16-22 as Ohio Farm-City Week,
urging citizens to set aside that
time to "£amiliariz.e themselves with their neighbors in
cities and rural areas.

.Jr. High has party

PIANOS &amp; ORGANS

D.C.:
Unless papers were signed, you haven't much of alegalleg to
stand on. But if you two were to visit this gal together, you might
ge t a rebate. Especially if you suggested the police will be interested in her little shake.&lt;Jown operation,
Moral: don't believe a sob story unless y0 u're sure she isn't a
£eiijale SOB. - HELEN AND SUE

NECKWEAR

by:

SOCKS

Rap:
I dated this gp-l £or a month. Then we cooled off. Two weeks
ago she told he she had to see me, and broke the news she was
pregnant. She said she had hall the money for an abortion, but
could I raise the other hall - $150. I did. That's the last I heard
from her.
This week I was talking to a guy and it came out we had
similar experiences. So we checked names. Yeah - same girl!
Even the same month, but HE paid the£ull $300!
Either she collected twice for the same abortion, or else she
was never preguant and. is running a nice little racket. Any way
to get our money back ? -DOUBLE-CROSSED

3 - The Sunday Times- Senlinei,Sunday. Nov. 13, 1973

developmcnl ol t~e Me,gs participating contribution, S'l
C&lt;lUJity Museum.
.
. to $25; supporting contribution,
Memhershtp categones are : $50 and $74; Endowment
Junior member (under !3) II , contribution $75 to $100, and
senior member (over age 62 ~ honorary c~ntribution , over
$1; regular member, 13: SIOO.
supporting member , _15
11 is also possible lor a
contributing member, SlO, and person
organizaUon or
sustaining member, $!5 an
busines~ to pay lor an entire
up.
.
display or area with the
The categortes £or con· · benefactor's name given credit
tribiltions to the Museum in the lorm ora plaque .
Development Fund recently

+++

START OF A CLOTHING REVOLUTION

....._.

.::.

logical tor EDA to allocate a

··· ~----------------------~~~

OF

!', ,

;:;:

.•I , , 1 S , I'
LJ
I C C II diiC • lit

Six kinds ~+membership
in Meigs
Society . .
'1
.
adopted by the Soctety mclude:

SUSIE'S GREENHOOUISE
St.teROut•~

446-4610

TOY TOWN OPEN IN ALL FOUR STORES
ALL STORES OPEN SUNDAYS 1 PM TO 6 PM

SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA - BOTH IXMNllMN GALli
'

STORES - PT. PLEASANT STORE
'

�-·
.'

:~

'f''

were James KcnJper , brother
of the bride, Kerr, and John
Skidmore , Gallipolis . Rin gbearer .was Matt Kemper,
C(lusin of the bride.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Kemper chose a pink
princess-style dress, featuring
a round neckline and long open
lace sleeves. She wore a cor·
sage of white sweetheart roses
and carried a lace-edged handkerchief. The mother of the
groom chose a blue knit dress
with long sleeves and a peter
pan collar. A chain hell ac·
cented the waistline , She also
wo re a corsage of white
sweet heart roses and carried a
lace-&lt;!dged handkerchief.
The bridal table was
decorated in orange and gold
fo r the reception following the
ceremony at the church. The
four-tiered cake was trimmed
with orange and yellow roses
and circled by the flowers of
the attendant,;. Ser ving as
hostesses for the reception
were Mrs. Lowell Fish and
Mrs . Rex Toms. Mrs. William
Bahr registered guests.
For a wedding trip to West
Virginia, Virginia and Pennsylvania , the bride. cha nged to.
a burgundy A-line knit dress
1Uld wore the corsage from her

-:.:&lt;:6:0:·;.··:··-:·:.:·:·:·:.:"..-,
·:....;•:• -:•;..
•:..:•.,•,•FJ-•
;.···.•J' .;.•-•,•.·.•,;
.....• ,,•,

• ' ,.-, o'o o'l f'o • ' • •

I.;:; .

.~

1Coming 1
I Events
MONDAY
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio Gospel
Musi c Association meets for
election of officers and to
accept new members, 7:30
p.m . at Allen Hall, Rio Grande
College.
ST. LOUIS Catholic Church
Catholic Woman 's Club meet,;
in the church basement at 7:45
p.m. Banners for the church
and Christmas door banners
for homes will be made. Bring
scissors, Elmer's Glue and 35
cents for felt. Altar services
committee jn charge.
TUESDAY
TODDLERS
to
Tassels
Mothers League will meet at
the ho m e of Mrs. Les ter
Plymale at 8 p.m. The program
will be on " Newborns."
OPEN GATE Gard en Club
meets with Mrs. Audrey Wick·
line at 7:30p.m.
LAF AY ETTE S hr ine
ceremonial at 7:30.p.m. at the
Masonic Temple.
Bri ng
covered dish for potluck.
AODAVILLE PTO meets at
7:30 p .m. in th e sc hool
cafete ri a.
Father
Al
MacKe nzi e will s pea k on
''Special Thanksgiving.''
RIO
GRANDE
Mothers
League monthly meeting, 7:30
p.m., at the home of Mrs.
Shar on Morga n. Rev. Cha rtes
Lusher will spea k on the Holy
Land .

Miss !ilia Maria Rocchi
ANNOUNCE PLANS- Mr. and Mrs. Remo Rocchi, 102
Mahelene Drive, Gallipolis, are announcing the wedding
pla ns of their daughter , Lilia Mar ia, who will ma rry Roher!
Earnest Metzger , son of Mr. and Mrs. Joh n Metzger , Middleport. The wedding will take place at the St. Louis Catholic
Church Friday, Dec. 7, at 6 p.m. It will be an open chu rch
wedding with Father A. Golubiewski officiating.

I
,f
•

•

Mr. and Mrs..Philip E. Powell

Candlelight wedding
read at Evergreen

KERR - Two seven branch
candela bra
ligh ted
the
Westerman United Methodist
Ch urch a t Evergreen for the
weddin g of Miss Ca rol Kemper
and Phillip Eugene Powell at
7:30p.m . Oct. 6.
Rev. J ohn Bryant pe rformed
the double ring ceremony for
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
Walla ce E dwa rd Ke mp er ,
JACKSON - Miss Marga ret
Mrs. Evans is a for me r
Kerr
, and the son of Mr. and
P . J ones, 2359 Ma yfair Road , resident and teacher fr om Rio
'
Mrs .
Delber t
P owell,
Dayton, and Ben R. Evans, 238 Grande. Mr . Eva ns resided in
Gallipolis.
Br oa~ St. , Jac kson, were Gallipolis, and was principa l of
Mrs . Gl ori a Salisbury,
married in Veni ce, Fla . the Washington School for 10
organist
, presented one half
&amp;jturday, Nov. !Oa t 10:30 a .m . yea r s be f ore m ov in g to
GALI..IPOLIS - The Senior hour of nuptial music prior to
The wedding ceremony was Jackson.
Citizens Center, located in the
performed by Or . Fay Le
Those in attendance fr om the Holze r H os pita l Building , the ceremony. Carl Huntley
served as soloist presenting
Meadows at the home of Or. a,rea we re Mr . and Mrs.
Cedar Street e ntrance is open " The Theme fr om Love
and Mrs. Le Meadows in Emerson E . Eva ns, Mr . and
Monday thr ough Friday from 9 Stor y," " More," 41 Whither
Venice. Dr. ' Ce Meadows is Mrs. Harland T. Marti n ..
a. m. to 3 p.m . and a lso one Thou Goest " and "The Lord's
minister emeri tus of the Shiloh Ga l lipo lis, Mr . and Mr s.
night each week. The sc hedule Prayer ."
·
Congr egationa l Church of Herman Martin, Xenia, and
for this week is. as follows :
Church decora~included
. Dayton, and he was Mr:s. Mr. and Mrs. Loyal Folden,
Mon., Nov. 19, Y~rn , Burlap, two basket,; for gladioli, carEvans' minister fo r a number now living in Venice, but
F a bri c Fl owers, 1-3 p .m., nations and fall foliage in
of years before he retired a nd for mer Gallipolis residents.
Teacher,·· Florence McDaniel orange and gold. Each window
moved to Florida. The bride
TUesday, Nov. 20, Physical of the chuich held a single
and groom were attended by :~::::;:;:::::::::::::::-:::::::=::::::::::s:::;:::::::::::::::::::~=~
Fitness 10·11 a .m .; Rug orange or gold candle.
Mr' . and Mrs. David P. J ones 1 0:·:
~~
:;:;
·.•. Lessons' 1·3 p.m .; Teacher, Bill
Given in marriage by her
Mens house.
father, the bride wore a gown
the twin .
r.'.:.i,'
Wednesday , Nov. 21, Christ- made for her by her sister,
A reception and luncheon ,
·
mas f.?ecorations 1-3 p.m. ; Gloria. It featured an empire
was held at the F orest Lake ' ''
· :.~
Teacher, Lora Byers.
waistline with chiffon over
Countr y Club in Saras ota
Thursday , Nov. 22, Thanks- ivory satin in the skirt. The
followin g
th e
weddin g ;:&gt;.
:~~
giving Day - CLOSED
scoop neckline and long sleeves
ceremony.
Friday.
Nov.
23,
All
crafts,
were trimmed with handmade
SPRINGFIEI..O - Cora V.
After a short wedding trip
Pa~hw
ork,
Quilting,
9
a.m.-3
lace, crocheted by the bride's
Mr. and Mrs. Evans will be at Dunsmore, daughter of Mr,
p.m.;
Cards,
games,
etc.,
6:30grandmother
, Mrs. Gracie
home for the winter at 200 The and Mrs. Thomas Dunsmore,
9
p.m.
McCormick. The back hem fell
848 Fourth, GaUipolis, has been
Esplanade N., Venice, Fla.
•,
into
train and her waistselected as a resident advisor
length veil was gathered at the
at Wittenherg University for
crown
with a juliet cap. She
KROGER
SLOWS
IT
the 1973-74 school year.
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The carried· a cascade bouquet of
COLUMBUS - Among the
students listed on the honor roll nation's third largest food store orange and gold pompons, and
at Ohio State University for the chain , the Kroger Co., has white sweetheart roses backed
summer term were Susan announced an energy Con- with ·lace and tied with long
Frances Clarke. 108 Spruce servation. program that in~ white ribbons. Her jewelry
Knoll , Gallipolis ; Thomas Paul eludes 50 miles per hour speed included opal earrings given to ·
Price, Ill, 148 Portsmouth, limits for its trucks and her by her groom, and a cross
reduCed· temperatures in its necklace with interlocked
G ~ llipolis ; John Bradford
miniature wedding rings.
Lohse , . 100 Wolfe Or., stores .
Pomeroy; Randolph Scott , 1514
Nye Ave., Pomeroy.
· GAI..IJPOIJS - Mrs. Diann
Grant Browning, 335 Clark Or. ,
Gallipolis , has been accepted
at the Gallipolis Business
College for the winter quarter
beginning Dec . 10. Mrs .
Browning is a 1972 graduate of
19 "BIG " DIAMONDS
North Gallia High School and is
IN THIS MISSING
.enrolled in the executive
GENTS CLUSTER
secretarial COW"se .
50
TREATY SIGNED
LONDON (UP!) - Britain
and Fran ce put th e ir
REG.
signatures today to a treaty
1
pledging their governments'
intention tocbuild a $1.2 billion
422 Second Ave.
257
tunnel under the En g lish
Gallipolis, Ohio
channel to link Britain with the

Wedding solemnized

Sr. Citizens
·Calendar

~:!t~~~· o/;~:~r~~e.

'·.~ '=.!:

Colleg~

.

:~l

NeWS

~

Mai d of honor was Miss
Gloria Kemper , Kerr . She wore
an ora nge knit featuring fluffy
ga thered skirts and an empire
waist , with scoop neckline and
short puffy sleeves. Bridesma ids were Miss Viv ian
Hanson , Rio Grande , and Miss
Beverly Harrison , Gallipolis.
Their dresses were gold knit
and wer e styled in the same
fashion a s the maid of honor's.
The bodice of each dress was
overlaid with a diagonal knit in
the fall colors of orange, gold,
brown and yellow . Miss Kelly
Ann Miller, cousin of the bride,
was flower girl. Her dress was
identical to the senior attendant's .' She carried a
miniature basket of white and
yellow rose petals, The senior
attendants earried a single .
long.,stenuned yellow rose with
gold and yellow ribbon and a
linen handkerchief decorated
with hand.fllllde lace. Their
cross !ifcklaces were gifts .
from the bride.
Michae l Powell, Gallipolis,
served as hest man. Ushers

-

Notte, CoMeau!; Miss Pamela
Smith, Tallmadge; George
Pamboukis, Akron; Miss Gina
Chambers, Gary T urn er,
Baltimore: Mrs. Harry Ben·
nett, Mr, and Mrs . Henry E .
McCormick a nd children ,
Colum biJs ; Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Doll, Mt. Vernon; Ron Staker,
Springfield,

bouquet.
The new Mrs. Powell
received her bachelor or
scien~ degree in education
from Ohio University and
attended North Gallia High
School. She is employed as a
specia I education teacher at
the Gallipolis State Institute.
The groom attended Gallia
Academy High School and is in
business with his father at
Powell's Transmission Service.
The couple resides at 510'h
Third Ave ., GalUpolis.
Out-&lt;Jf-town guests for the
wedding were Mrs. Roher!
Zimmerman, Mrs. James

POST DEDICATED
CIRCLEVILLE, Ohio (UP! )
- The Ohio Highway Pa trol's
Circleville post was dedica ted
Friday to the pa trol's third
supe rintendent, Col. Fred
Moritz.

HANDPAINTED

Tole'
by

Dt

•

AT

Peddler ~s Pantry
_ STATE &amp; THIRD _ _ _ __ _ GALLIPOLIS. OHIO ·-

,...---f?orrP/ft
BETTEA FOOTW EAR FOR THE FAMILY

Siller Bridge Plaza

REGROUPED .
LADIES

SHOES
HERE'S ·YOUR CHANCE TO
SAVE LOTS OF MONEY
'

VALUES
TO '15.99

•4.97

A FESTIVE

Thursday
club meets
GA],.IJPOLIS - The Thursday Club met at the home of
Mrs . James Orr Nov. 15.
" Diary ur a Genius" by
Salvador Dati was the report
given by Mrs. Herman Koby.
1
' Diary of a Genius" is
a
record' of Dali's life from 1952~
1963 kept at his summer home
in Port !Jigat, Spain . lt is not
wholly a confession nor an
autobiography, but a grab-bag
of fragments, impressions,
experiences, theories, dreams,
nightmares, jokes, fused into a
work of " Da1i nian " art. Dali
was born in 1904 in Spain and
studied art in Madrid. He is
often categorized as a
sur reali st painter, most
famous for his limp watches
with dream-like vistas.
Two guests were present a t
CROWN CITY - Wedding ah;o carried a pink rose.
the review . Mrs. J ohn Winfield ,
vows were excha nged Nov. 3
A recep tion was held at the mother of Mrs. Wilson Bowers,
by Na ncy May Swindl er, home of the bride's parents. and Mrs . Thom as Ge ra ld
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. The bridal table reatured a Ar nold , mother of Mrs. Nea l
Geor ge Swindler , Scottown, three layer cake topped by a Prendergast.
and Donald Lee Phillips, son of miniature bride and groom and
Coff ee a nd desser t wer e
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Phillips, baked by the bride's mother . served by Mrs. Orr wi th Mrs .
Crown City .
The couple was honored with Charl es Holzer pouring at th e
The Rev. Earl Hinkle per- a shower given by Mrs. Betty refreshment table, The next
form ed the doubl e ring Payne, Mrs. Floyd Fulks and mee ting will be Nov. 29 at the
ceremony in the Good Hope Mrs. Ruttr Adkins. The bride . home of Mrs . Gene Wetherh olt.
Church. MiS. Sharon Waugh was also honored with a per- Mrs . William J enkins will be in
provided nuptial music.
sona l shower given by Cor- charge of the program .
Glven in marriage by her bin's.
father , the bride wore a long·
Mrs. P hillips gr ad uated
sleeved gown of white fr om Fairland High School and
MAN KILLED
lace
over satin . Her is e mpl oye d by Co rbin 's .
MASSILLON, Ohio (UP! ) lace veil was held by Phillips a ttende d Han nan E va n Williams, 30, Massillon ,
a cluster of di isTes. She carried Trace High School and is was killed early today when h e
a white Bible covered with empl oyed by Associated los t c~m tr ol or his car on a
daisies and yeJlow rosebuds Groce r 's Inc.
s lippery city s tree t and
They reside at Daisy Lane, crashed into several trees,
which were tied with ribbon
Proctorville.
streamers.
police said.
Mrs. Ronald Payne and Mrs.
'
David Adkins served as attendant,; , They wore peach gowns
with white accessories. Their
bouquets we re of yellow
Frid ay
evening
was accompanied to the meeting by
rosebuds with yellow and white
Friendship Night for Dis tri ct her son, Allen, and husband.
streamers.
At the conclusion of the
Rona ld Payne served as bes t no. 14 , Daughters of America
at the Belpre Lions Club .
meeting, Mary Aus tin anman .
The
evening
opened
with
a
nounced that the District 13
The bride's mother chose a
ic
t
of·
ra lly will be April 18 at the
potluck
supper
.
Distr
pink and white polyester gown .
fi
cers
met
with
Mary
Austin
,
Gra ce United Methodist
She carried a single pink rose.
district
coun
cilor,
condu
cting.
Church in Gallipolis, beginning
The mother of the groom wore
Dis tri ct Dep uty,
F aye a bout 2 p.m . A banquet will be
a long-sleeved blue dress and
Hoselton, was honored d_uri ng se rv'!'f that evening by the
the session. She was presented iadi e!T of the church.
WANTS fORGIVENESS
gifts fr om the councils. Ed ith
Edith Wakely served as team
. WASHINGTON ( UP! ) Wak ely was in charge of the ca pt ain for the di s trict
BRig , Gen. Samuel Koster , honors ceremony.
initiation team as two canwho was stripped of his second
Mrs. Hoselton stood a t the didates were welcomed into the
star and his di s tin gui s hed side of a decorated box and ord er.
service medal in 1971 for memb ers . of each co un·ciJ
Those attending fr om the
railUre to investigate the My present marched around and Ga llia Coun cil were Edith
I..ai massacre, has asked the presented gifts to her.
Wa kely, Mari etta , Faye
Army to clear his record and
Special gues t for the mee ting P arlin, Marietta, Elizabeth
let him retire ' Dec. I with his was state councilor . Marge White, Anna Williams and
old rank restored .
Leva n. Willoughby. She was Mary Austin.

Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Phillips

Pat Bastiani - Carolyn Roth

SUNDAY SPECIAL

~ - The Sunday Times· Sentinel, !Iunday, Nov. 18, 1973

:
:
•
:

••
:

•

1

Vows exchanged

Friendship night held

a

'189

HOLIDAY SALE!

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

$88

European continent.

'

Mr. and Mrs. Dean Baesman
request the pleasure
of your company
at a Christmas Opening
on Saturday, 24th of November

FASHION MATE*
ZIG-ZAG
sewing machine
with carrying case

wi nd preYcn tion, fabri c se tt i ng dial.

LAY-A-WAY TODAY!
. , FREE DELIVERY

SERVICE GUARANTEED

C:ANDI.ELIGHT
RAYON/POl. YESTER

FRENCH CITY
FABRIC SHOPPE
58 Court St.

Ph. 446-9255

Dorotby }. Co-untry man

•

DINNER CLOTHS

IN DECORATIVE COLORS
PERMANENT PRESS

WHITE PERMANENT PRESS SOIL RELEASE

60x83 OVAL •12.00
60 x83;. 0BLONG •12.00
,•18.00

'•

52x52 ----------· •400
.52x70 ·--------... - tJfe

60x83 ----------•10"

MACHINE WASHABLE RAYON

WOVEN PLACE MATS
GREEN, GOLD, RED .. WHITE, BLUE

•1 00

EA.

OVAL

60x83 ·----------•10"
'10~102 --------- •12"1
66" ROUND --·--·•10"

WIDE SELECfiON .IN RANNEL BACKED a.mHS, atRJSTMAS Q.OTHS, VELVET
ROUNDS, PLACE MAT·SETS, WNatEON SETS, LACE CLOTHS.

•
V£1.~

A Time to Remember
·who WeAre
Let us be grateful tor our heritage. For a little
pride in the wellspring of courage. let us endure
unflinchingly whatever sacrifices we are called
upon to make to defend our free institutions from
the night ' of. communism, which is bent on the
undermining of our faith in ourselves. Let us rely
not only on the gold in our vaults, but the iron
in our blood. And .let us cling like ivy to' the
faith of our fathers until, in God's . good time
all men are free.
· '

fine STOREs··
•, (jall;ppli6, 0/uo

"ONE OF OHIO'S

Ju(ly Cole were the girls
select.ed on the basis of their
academic scholarship, their
dependability. service,
leadership and patriotism,.
Each year the National
Society, Daughters of the
American Revolution presents
the Good Citizens Con test to all
accredited senior hlgh schools.
Six students receiving the
highest grades in the state will
be awarded U, S. Savings
Bonds and the top three win·
ners will be the guest,; of the
Ohio State OAR Conference to
be held in March. The state
winner may compete for the
Nationa l Society 's $1,000
Scholarship to the college or
univ~s ity of her choice;.

UALI..IPOL!S - Two senior
girls from Gallia Academy
High School were selected by a
faculty committee and the high
school counselors to represent
'their high school in the annual
Daughters of the American
Revoluti on Good Citizens
Contest.
Patricia Wetherholt and

~~~~

GAI..lJPOilS - Well, the princess got married and
bopefuUy she'll live happily ever after.
.
That was probably the biggest happening on my side of the
editorial room this week . Here we a re in the age of li beration a nd
the biggest news is still a wedding.
But that's oka y by me, and I'm sure it was okay wi th Mark
snd Anne, who probably aren't thinking m uch about liheration
anyway.
SENDING OUT Chr istmas gift,;? Now's the time to get tbat
project underway and pretty much don e. The US Postal Service
has a little booklet called "How to Pack and Wra p Parcels for
Mailing" which yoo can get for the price of a stamp on a letter of
request. To get single copies wr ite "Consumer Infor mation,
Pueblo, Colo., 81009.
I HATE TQ, SAY it , but we had a pretty disappointing crowd
for last week 's three night session with the leFevres. Tbose of
yo u who didn't go really missed an event. Saturday night in
Washington C. H. was probably the besi of their excellent sings.
In Oecemher we have the Rambos again for what they leU us
is a "Christmas Specia l." It's w special that Dottie and Nadine
refuse to even really tell us anything about it other than we'll
enjoy it. We'd like to see a real good crowd for this. lt will he the
last sing of the year (gee, 1973 went fast !) and we hope it will he
the best. With that in mind, I extend you an invitation .from the
Southeastern GOSpel Music Association to join us Dec. !3 and the
weekend following for something special with the Rambos,

ESTEE LAUDER

Bernadine .'s
will offer
Estee Lauder
cosmetics

GALI..IPOLIS - The world
famous line of E stee Lauder
cosmetics wiU come to Bernadine 's Monday when the
store
will offer the complete
I TOOK a brief spin through Riverby TUesday and I think it
was well worth it. The current show is one of the most heautiful line of treatment and cosme tic
ones I've ever seen. The galleries are filled with the works of preparations as well as Mrs.
Lauder 's fragrances.
wildlife artist John Ruthven.
•
Mrs . Lauder is a woman .of
Among his other credjts, Ruthven has served as comenormous
vitality who s peaks
missioned artist for Colonial Williamsburg. lf you have a cbance
stop by and see the pictures. The gallery is open from 1 to 5 p.m . with quick urgent gestures and
on Saturday and Sunday and from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on TUesqay. radia,!is a belief in being
comP'ft!tely involved in life, Her
There is no admission charge and the prints are for sale.
beauty career began right in
THE RNA is having its Country Pantry Wednesday at the · her own backyard . She
Episcopal Church in Gallipolis. I was over at Dorothy Frazier's dreamed of being a skin doctor
Friday and saw her candles. About 100 lbs. of candle wax sitting when a child, but following
all over the dining room in its prettiest fonn. If you get the marriage ·. went · into the
of
beauty
chance, do stop by the Pantry and help the gals (and guys - we development
treatment,;. Her first products
do have male nurses) collect some money for Resusianne.
Resusianne is an educational teaching aid that is used by were based on her Viennese
community organizations to teach first:.Sid. The old one is family's formulas for an ali-incompletely worn out and needs to be replaced. The idea behind one cream, cleansing oil and
this is to sort of thank the community for helping with the chapel herbal creme pack.
Her first overwhelming
at the Medical eenter.
.
success was Youth-Dew Bath
I AM WELL aware that many people are probably won- Oil. Fr~m then on, it was one
dering what it is we have to be thankful for during this year's make-up preparation after
another. Estee Lauder Inc. is
holiday.
.
We have Watergate, an energy crisis and the continual one of the largest sellers of
bath oil In the United States
threat of another war.
and one of the largest sellers of
It's true we have problems.
There's a gasoline shortage that will probably put our cars fragrance in the world.
Now there are 20 ways for
off the road within another month . There's a newsprint shortage
that may stop presses rolling all over the country. There's a · women to enjoy Estee 's Youth
power shortage that may soon leave us With cold, datk homes. Dew and Estee has a new
There is also a political confusion that threatens to leave the fragrance called Estee Super
Perfume, whic.h is exactly
strongest nation in the world crippled.
Somehow I don't think America will let all this defeat the what its nanie 'implies.
ultimate goals of the Pilgrims. Always in times of crisis, history
In 1968 Clinique was introduced
as the first .~;omp)ete
:mows !bat the people of this country have risen to the challenge
with a power and zeal that is positively appalling. There is in line of allergy-tested, fashionevery American, it seems, a thread of grea!ness that keeps the oriented and fragrance-free
country moving in the darkest hour.
·
Just 10 years ago Wednesday, a man I admired very much
was assassinated ioo Dallas, Tex. Regardless of what you may
have tbougl;ltof John KeMedy's politics, you'll have to agree that
the vitality •of the man embodied the truth about America . That
she is a strong, ·a vigorous nation.
For that I am thankful. I think we all should he.

GAI..IJPOUS - Mrs, Leo cultural program at the home
Mossman entertained the of Mrs. Robert Richards.
Emanon Club at a social
meeting Thursday evening.
There were 14 members
present. Three tables of bridge
were at play. Mrs. Kimball
Suiter earned high score with
Mrs. Roher! Richards earning
second high,
Those
assisting
Mrs,
Mossman were Mrs. M. Harold
Brown, Mrs. Kimball Suiter,
Mrs. Hoyt Mullins and Mrs.
Kenneth Frazer.
The next meeting will he a

an1uN
DINNER CLOTHS

90 DAYS TO PAY

MANY HOLIDAY FABRICS
AT GREAT SAVINGS!
STOP IN AND SEEI

~

by

Emanon club has meeting

ALL MODELS IN STOCK!

FREE LESSONS

jan's Side

Happy Thanksgiving.

60x102 OBLONG

A mac hine that perfo rms
s_o many important sewing feats:
sews bu tto nholes, buttons, overedgcs, monograms,
eve n men ds ... all wit houl attachments! And has th e
excl usive 1l!:!&amp;~* fro nt drop-in bobb in, bo bbi n over-

from 10:00 a. m.

The

109.95

Two participate
in DAR contest

.The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is ~unday~ Nov. 18, the
322nd day of 1973 with 43 to
follow .
Rite Rings
The moon is between its last
quarter and new phase.
The morning stars are
Meieury and Saturn.
· The evening stars are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter.
,.. '~ Those born on this date are
" ••,;-~;;;;-;.-;;
under the sign of Scorpio.
American astronaut Alan
Shepard was born Nov. 18, 1923.
On this day in history :
In 1883, the United States
342 Second Ave.
adopted Standard Time and set
up four zones- Eastern, Cen·Gallipolis, Ohio
tral, Mountain and Pacific.
!--------~--'

cosmetics.
Since 1965 the Aramis Master
Plan for men has offered a
c?mplete range of grooming
atds for men including the new
Aramis 900 collection.
The public is invited to visit
Bernadine's during the opening
Monday to get acquainted with
all the efforts of Estee Lauder.

WOMEN'S FASHION

BOOTS
For dress or spo r t It ' s savi ngs to boot !
High &amp; low hee ls.
Bl ac k. bro wn, tan &amp;
white. Not all sizes
but all good bu ys.

••

Y tHOII :nollE
'

Where the family !hopS 1ocether
328 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, 0.
MQnday &amp; Friday

· 9:30til8p .m.
Tues. Wed . &amp; Sat.
9:30ti1Sp.m .
Thursday

9:30fll12noon

Does Travel Louhgewear- ·
LORRAINE THE
FLY·DY·NIGHTS

.

Lorrai ne selects creamy nylon tricot and then adds
a generous frost ing 'ot glea ming satin floral appli ques and brai d, al l ·c.o lor coO rdi nated. The comfort
laden robe cove rs a provocative shift gOw n or fitted
pajamas so beautiful ly. With a.pai r of matching scuffs, the
scene is all yciurs! Choose from a rainbow selection of colors. ·

Gown at $6.00 in S·M·L,
XL at $7.00 .Robe at $9.00,
XL at $10 .00.Pajamas at
$9.00 in 3-2-40,$10.00 in
42-44, Matc hing scuffs at
$4.00 in S·M ·L·Xl.

Lay-Away AGift
For Christmas

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE

Need AGift?'
COME ON
IN

'

We have great things
unlimited! _......, AT

Peddler's Pantry
"The Store with More"
STATE &amp; THIRD _ _ _ _ _ _ GALLIPOLtS, OHIO _

Gallipolis

,

'

•

I.

�-·
.'

:~

'f''

were James KcnJper , brother
of the bride, Kerr, and John
Skidmore , Gallipolis . Rin gbearer .was Matt Kemper,
C(lusin of the bride.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Kemper chose a pink
princess-style dress, featuring
a round neckline and long open
lace sleeves. She wore a cor·
sage of white sweetheart roses
and carried a lace-edged handkerchief. The mother of the
groom chose a blue knit dress
with long sleeves and a peter
pan collar. A chain hell ac·
cented the waistline , She also
wo re a corsage of white
sweet heart roses and carried a
lace-&lt;!dged handkerchief.
The bridal table was
decorated in orange and gold
fo r the reception following the
ceremony at the church. The
four-tiered cake was trimmed
with orange and yellow roses
and circled by the flowers of
the attendant,;. Ser ving as
hostesses for the reception
were Mrs. Lowell Fish and
Mrs . Rex Toms. Mrs. William
Bahr registered guests.
For a wedding trip to West
Virginia, Virginia and Pennsylvania , the bride. cha nged to.
a burgundy A-line knit dress
1Uld wore the corsage from her

-:.:&lt;:6:0:·;.··:··-:·:.:·:·:·:.:"..-,
·:....;•:• -:•;..
•:..:•.,•,•FJ-•
;.···.•J' .;.•-•,•.·.•,;
.....• ,,•,

• ' ,.-, o'o o'l f'o • ' • •

I.;:; .

.~

1Coming 1
I Events
MONDAY
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio Gospel
Musi c Association meets for
election of officers and to
accept new members, 7:30
p.m . at Allen Hall, Rio Grande
College.
ST. LOUIS Catholic Church
Catholic Woman 's Club meet,;
in the church basement at 7:45
p.m. Banners for the church
and Christmas door banners
for homes will be made. Bring
scissors, Elmer's Glue and 35
cents for felt. Altar services
committee jn charge.
TUESDAY
TODDLERS
to
Tassels
Mothers League will meet at
the ho m e of Mrs. Les ter
Plymale at 8 p.m. The program
will be on " Newborns."
OPEN GATE Gard en Club
meets with Mrs. Audrey Wick·
line at 7:30p.m.
LAF AY ETTE S hr ine
ceremonial at 7:30.p.m. at the
Masonic Temple.
Bri ng
covered dish for potluck.
AODAVILLE PTO meets at
7:30 p .m. in th e sc hool
cafete ri a.
Father
Al
MacKe nzi e will s pea k on
''Special Thanksgiving.''
RIO
GRANDE
Mothers
League monthly meeting, 7:30
p.m., at the home of Mrs.
Shar on Morga n. Rev. Cha rtes
Lusher will spea k on the Holy
Land .

Miss !ilia Maria Rocchi
ANNOUNCE PLANS- Mr. and Mrs. Remo Rocchi, 102
Mahelene Drive, Gallipolis, are announcing the wedding
pla ns of their daughter , Lilia Mar ia, who will ma rry Roher!
Earnest Metzger , son of Mr. and Mrs. Joh n Metzger , Middleport. The wedding will take place at the St. Louis Catholic
Church Friday, Dec. 7, at 6 p.m. It will be an open chu rch
wedding with Father A. Golubiewski officiating.

I
,f
•

•

Mr. and Mrs..Philip E. Powell

Candlelight wedding
read at Evergreen

KERR - Two seven branch
candela bra
ligh ted
the
Westerman United Methodist
Ch urch a t Evergreen for the
weddin g of Miss Ca rol Kemper
and Phillip Eugene Powell at
7:30p.m . Oct. 6.
Rev. J ohn Bryant pe rformed
the double ring ceremony for
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
Walla ce E dwa rd Ke mp er ,
JACKSON - Miss Marga ret
Mrs. Evans is a for me r
Kerr
, and the son of Mr. and
P . J ones, 2359 Ma yfair Road , resident and teacher fr om Rio
'
Mrs .
Delber t
P owell,
Dayton, and Ben R. Evans, 238 Grande. Mr . Eva ns resided in
Gallipolis.
Br oa~ St. , Jac kson, were Gallipolis, and was principa l of
Mrs . Gl ori a Salisbury,
married in Veni ce, Fla . the Washington School for 10
organist
, presented one half
&amp;jturday, Nov. !Oa t 10:30 a .m . yea r s be f ore m ov in g to
GALI..IPOLIS - The Senior hour of nuptial music prior to
The wedding ceremony was Jackson.
Citizens Center, located in the
performed by Or . Fay Le
Those in attendance fr om the Holze r H os pita l Building , the ceremony. Carl Huntley
served as soloist presenting
Meadows at the home of Or. a,rea we re Mr . and Mrs.
Cedar Street e ntrance is open " The Theme fr om Love
and Mrs. Le Meadows in Emerson E . Eva ns, Mr . and
Monday thr ough Friday from 9 Stor y," " More," 41 Whither
Venice. Dr. ' Ce Meadows is Mrs. Harland T. Marti n ..
a. m. to 3 p.m . and a lso one Thou Goest " and "The Lord's
minister emeri tus of the Shiloh Ga l lipo lis, Mr . and Mr s.
night each week. The sc hedule Prayer ."
·
Congr egationa l Church of Herman Martin, Xenia, and
for this week is. as follows :
Church decora~included
. Dayton, and he was Mr:s. Mr. and Mrs. Loyal Folden,
Mon., Nov. 19, Y~rn , Burlap, two basket,; for gladioli, carEvans' minister fo r a number now living in Venice, but
F a bri c Fl owers, 1-3 p .m., nations and fall foliage in
of years before he retired a nd for mer Gallipolis residents.
Teacher,·· Florence McDaniel orange and gold. Each window
moved to Florida. The bride
TUesday, Nov. 20, Physical of the chuich held a single
and groom were attended by :~::::;:;:::::::::::::::-:::::::=::::::::::s:::;:::::::::::::::::::~=~
Fitness 10·11 a .m .; Rug orange or gold candle.
Mr' . and Mrs. David P. J ones 1 0:·:
~~
:;:;
·.•. Lessons' 1·3 p.m .; Teacher, Bill
Given in marriage by her
Mens house.
father, the bride wore a gown
the twin .
r.'.:.i,'
Wednesday , Nov. 21, Christ- made for her by her sister,
A reception and luncheon ,
·
mas f.?ecorations 1-3 p.m. ; Gloria. It featured an empire
was held at the F orest Lake ' ''
· :.~
Teacher, Lora Byers.
waistline with chiffon over
Countr y Club in Saras ota
Thursday , Nov. 22, Thanks- ivory satin in the skirt. The
followin g
th e
weddin g ;:&gt;.
:~~
giving Day - CLOSED
scoop neckline and long sleeves
ceremony.
Friday.
Nov.
23,
All
crafts,
were trimmed with handmade
SPRINGFIEI..O - Cora V.
After a short wedding trip
Pa~hw
ork,
Quilting,
9
a.m.-3
lace, crocheted by the bride's
Mr. and Mrs. Evans will be at Dunsmore, daughter of Mr,
p.m.;
Cards,
games,
etc.,
6:30grandmother
, Mrs. Gracie
home for the winter at 200 The and Mrs. Thomas Dunsmore,
9
p.m.
McCormick. The back hem fell
848 Fourth, GaUipolis, has been
Esplanade N., Venice, Fla.
•,
into
train and her waistselected as a resident advisor
length veil was gathered at the
at Wittenherg University for
crown
with a juliet cap. She
KROGER
SLOWS
IT
the 1973-74 school year.
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The carried· a cascade bouquet of
COLUMBUS - Among the
students listed on the honor roll nation's third largest food store orange and gold pompons, and
at Ohio State University for the chain , the Kroger Co., has white sweetheart roses backed
summer term were Susan announced an energy Con- with ·lace and tied with long
Frances Clarke. 108 Spruce servation. program that in~ white ribbons. Her jewelry
Knoll , Gallipolis ; Thomas Paul eludes 50 miles per hour speed included opal earrings given to ·
Price, Ill, 148 Portsmouth, limits for its trucks and her by her groom, and a cross
reduCed· temperatures in its necklace with interlocked
G ~ llipolis ; John Bradford
miniature wedding rings.
Lohse , . 100 Wolfe Or., stores .
Pomeroy; Randolph Scott , 1514
Nye Ave., Pomeroy.
· GAI..IJPOIJS - Mrs. Diann
Grant Browning, 335 Clark Or. ,
Gallipolis , has been accepted
at the Gallipolis Business
College for the winter quarter
beginning Dec . 10. Mrs .
Browning is a 1972 graduate of
19 "BIG " DIAMONDS
North Gallia High School and is
IN THIS MISSING
.enrolled in the executive
GENTS CLUSTER
secretarial COW"se .
50
TREATY SIGNED
LONDON (UP!) - Britain
and Fran ce put th e ir
REG.
signatures today to a treaty
1
pledging their governments'
intention tocbuild a $1.2 billion
422 Second Ave.
257
tunnel under the En g lish
Gallipolis, Ohio
channel to link Britain with the

Wedding solemnized

Sr. Citizens
·Calendar

~:!t~~~· o/;~:~r~~e.

'·.~ '=.!:

Colleg~

.

:~l

NeWS

~

Mai d of honor was Miss
Gloria Kemper , Kerr . She wore
an ora nge knit featuring fluffy
ga thered skirts and an empire
waist , with scoop neckline and
short puffy sleeves. Bridesma ids were Miss Viv ian
Hanson , Rio Grande , and Miss
Beverly Harrison , Gallipolis.
Their dresses were gold knit
and wer e styled in the same
fashion a s the maid of honor's.
The bodice of each dress was
overlaid with a diagonal knit in
the fall colors of orange, gold,
brown and yellow . Miss Kelly
Ann Miller, cousin of the bride,
was flower girl. Her dress was
identical to the senior attendant's .' She carried a
miniature basket of white and
yellow rose petals, The senior
attendants earried a single .
long.,stenuned yellow rose with
gold and yellow ribbon and a
linen handkerchief decorated
with hand.fllllde lace. Their
cross !ifcklaces were gifts .
from the bride.
Michae l Powell, Gallipolis,
served as hest man. Ushers

-

Notte, CoMeau!; Miss Pamela
Smith, Tallmadge; George
Pamboukis, Akron; Miss Gina
Chambers, Gary T urn er,
Baltimore: Mrs. Harry Ben·
nett, Mr, and Mrs . Henry E .
McCormick a nd children ,
Colum biJs ; Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Doll, Mt. Vernon; Ron Staker,
Springfield,

bouquet.
The new Mrs. Powell
received her bachelor or
scien~ degree in education
from Ohio University and
attended North Gallia High
School. She is employed as a
specia I education teacher at
the Gallipolis State Institute.
The groom attended Gallia
Academy High School and is in
business with his father at
Powell's Transmission Service.
The couple resides at 510'h
Third Ave ., GalUpolis.
Out-&lt;Jf-town guests for the
wedding were Mrs. Roher!
Zimmerman, Mrs. James

POST DEDICATED
CIRCLEVILLE, Ohio (UP! )
- The Ohio Highway Pa trol's
Circleville post was dedica ted
Friday to the pa trol's third
supe rintendent, Col. Fred
Moritz.

HANDPAINTED

Tole'
by

Dt

•

AT

Peddler ~s Pantry
_ STATE &amp; THIRD _ _ _ __ _ GALLIPOLIS. OHIO ·-

,...---f?orrP/ft
BETTEA FOOTW EAR FOR THE FAMILY

Siller Bridge Plaza

REGROUPED .
LADIES

SHOES
HERE'S ·YOUR CHANCE TO
SAVE LOTS OF MONEY
'

VALUES
TO '15.99

•4.97

A FESTIVE

Thursday
club meets
GA],.IJPOLIS - The Thursday Club met at the home of
Mrs . James Orr Nov. 15.
" Diary ur a Genius" by
Salvador Dati was the report
given by Mrs. Herman Koby.
1
' Diary of a Genius" is
a
record' of Dali's life from 1952~
1963 kept at his summer home
in Port !Jigat, Spain . lt is not
wholly a confession nor an
autobiography, but a grab-bag
of fragments, impressions,
experiences, theories, dreams,
nightmares, jokes, fused into a
work of " Da1i nian " art. Dali
was born in 1904 in Spain and
studied art in Madrid. He is
often categorized as a
sur reali st painter, most
famous for his limp watches
with dream-like vistas.
Two guests were present a t
CROWN CITY - Wedding ah;o carried a pink rose.
the review . Mrs. J ohn Winfield ,
vows were excha nged Nov. 3
A recep tion was held at the mother of Mrs. Wilson Bowers,
by Na ncy May Swindl er, home of the bride's parents. and Mrs . Thom as Ge ra ld
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. The bridal table reatured a Ar nold , mother of Mrs. Nea l
Geor ge Swindler , Scottown, three layer cake topped by a Prendergast.
and Donald Lee Phillips, son of miniature bride and groom and
Coff ee a nd desser t wer e
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Phillips, baked by the bride's mother . served by Mrs. Orr wi th Mrs .
Crown City .
The couple was honored with Charl es Holzer pouring at th e
The Rev. Earl Hinkle per- a shower given by Mrs. Betty refreshment table, The next
form ed the doubl e ring Payne, Mrs. Floyd Fulks and mee ting will be Nov. 29 at the
ceremony in the Good Hope Mrs. Ruttr Adkins. The bride . home of Mrs . Gene Wetherh olt.
Church. MiS. Sharon Waugh was also honored with a per- Mrs . William J enkins will be in
provided nuptial music.
sona l shower given by Cor- charge of the program .
Glven in marriage by her bin's.
father , the bride wore a long·
Mrs. P hillips gr ad uated
sleeved gown of white fr om Fairland High School and
MAN KILLED
lace
over satin . Her is e mpl oye d by Co rbin 's .
MASSILLON, Ohio (UP! ) lace veil was held by Phillips a ttende d Han nan E va n Williams, 30, Massillon ,
a cluster of di isTes. She carried Trace High School and is was killed early today when h e
a white Bible covered with empl oyed by Associated los t c~m tr ol or his car on a
daisies and yeJlow rosebuds Groce r 's Inc.
s lippery city s tree t and
They reside at Daisy Lane, crashed into several trees,
which were tied with ribbon
Proctorville.
streamers.
police said.
Mrs. Ronald Payne and Mrs.
'
David Adkins served as attendant,; , They wore peach gowns
with white accessories. Their
bouquets we re of yellow
Frid ay
evening
was accompanied to the meeting by
rosebuds with yellow and white
Friendship Night for Dis tri ct her son, Allen, and husband.
streamers.
At the conclusion of the
Rona ld Payne served as bes t no. 14 , Daughters of America
at the Belpre Lions Club .
meeting, Mary Aus tin anman .
The
evening
opened
with
a
nounced that the District 13
The bride's mother chose a
ic
t
of·
ra lly will be April 18 at the
potluck
supper
.
Distr
pink and white polyester gown .
fi
cers
met
with
Mary
Austin
,
Gra ce United Methodist
She carried a single pink rose.
district
coun
cilor,
condu
cting.
Church in Gallipolis, beginning
The mother of the groom wore
Dis tri ct Dep uty,
F aye a bout 2 p.m . A banquet will be
a long-sleeved blue dress and
Hoselton, was honored d_uri ng se rv'!'f that evening by the
the session. She was presented iadi e!T of the church.
WANTS fORGIVENESS
gifts fr om the councils. Ed ith
Edith Wakely served as team
. WASHINGTON ( UP! ) Wak ely was in charge of the ca pt ain for the di s trict
BRig , Gen. Samuel Koster , honors ceremony.
initiation team as two canwho was stripped of his second
Mrs. Hoselton stood a t the didates were welcomed into the
star and his di s tin gui s hed side of a decorated box and ord er.
service medal in 1971 for memb ers . of each co un·ciJ
Those attending fr om the
railUre to investigate the My present marched around and Ga llia Coun cil were Edith
I..ai massacre, has asked the presented gifts to her.
Wa kely, Mari etta , Faye
Army to clear his record and
Special gues t for the mee ting P arlin, Marietta, Elizabeth
let him retire ' Dec. I with his was state councilor . Marge White, Anna Williams and
old rank restored .
Leva n. Willoughby. She was Mary Austin.

Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Phillips

Pat Bastiani - Carolyn Roth

SUNDAY SPECIAL

~ - The Sunday Times· Sentinel, !Iunday, Nov. 18, 1973

:
:
•
:

••
:

•

1

Vows exchanged

Friendship night held

a

'189

HOLIDAY SALE!

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

$88

European continent.

'

Mr. and Mrs. Dean Baesman
request the pleasure
of your company
at a Christmas Opening
on Saturday, 24th of November

FASHION MATE*
ZIG-ZAG
sewing machine
with carrying case

wi nd preYcn tion, fabri c se tt i ng dial.

LAY-A-WAY TODAY!
. , FREE DELIVERY

SERVICE GUARANTEED

C:ANDI.ELIGHT
RAYON/POl. YESTER

FRENCH CITY
FABRIC SHOPPE
58 Court St.

Ph. 446-9255

Dorotby }. Co-untry man

•

DINNER CLOTHS

IN DECORATIVE COLORS
PERMANENT PRESS

WHITE PERMANENT PRESS SOIL RELEASE

60x83 OVAL •12.00
60 x83;. 0BLONG •12.00
,•18.00

'•

52x52 ----------· •400
.52x70 ·--------... - tJfe

60x83 ----------•10"

MACHINE WASHABLE RAYON

WOVEN PLACE MATS
GREEN, GOLD, RED .. WHITE, BLUE

•1 00

EA.

OVAL

60x83 ·----------•10"
'10~102 --------- •12"1
66" ROUND --·--·•10"

WIDE SELECfiON .IN RANNEL BACKED a.mHS, atRJSTMAS Q.OTHS, VELVET
ROUNDS, PLACE MAT·SETS, WNatEON SETS, LACE CLOTHS.

•
V£1.~

A Time to Remember
·who WeAre
Let us be grateful tor our heritage. For a little
pride in the wellspring of courage. let us endure
unflinchingly whatever sacrifices we are called
upon to make to defend our free institutions from
the night ' of. communism, which is bent on the
undermining of our faith in ourselves. Let us rely
not only on the gold in our vaults, but the iron
in our blood. And .let us cling like ivy to' the
faith of our fathers until, in God's . good time
all men are free.
· '

fine STOREs··
•, (jall;ppli6, 0/uo

"ONE OF OHIO'S

Ju(ly Cole were the girls
select.ed on the basis of their
academic scholarship, their
dependability. service,
leadership and patriotism,.
Each year the National
Society, Daughters of the
American Revolution presents
the Good Citizens Con test to all
accredited senior hlgh schools.
Six students receiving the
highest grades in the state will
be awarded U, S. Savings
Bonds and the top three win·
ners will be the guest,; of the
Ohio State OAR Conference to
be held in March. The state
winner may compete for the
Nationa l Society 's $1,000
Scholarship to the college or
univ~s ity of her choice;.

UALI..IPOL!S - Two senior
girls from Gallia Academy
High School were selected by a
faculty committee and the high
school counselors to represent
'their high school in the annual
Daughters of the American
Revoluti on Good Citizens
Contest.
Patricia Wetherholt and

~~~~

GAI..lJPOilS - Well, the princess got married and
bopefuUy she'll live happily ever after.
.
That was probably the biggest happening on my side of the
editorial room this week . Here we a re in the age of li beration a nd
the biggest news is still a wedding.
But that's oka y by me, and I'm sure it was okay wi th Mark
snd Anne, who probably aren't thinking m uch about liheration
anyway.
SENDING OUT Chr istmas gift,;? Now's the time to get tbat
project underway and pretty much don e. The US Postal Service
has a little booklet called "How to Pack and Wra p Parcels for
Mailing" which yoo can get for the price of a stamp on a letter of
request. To get single copies wr ite "Consumer Infor mation,
Pueblo, Colo., 81009.
I HATE TQ, SAY it , but we had a pretty disappointing crowd
for last week 's three night session with the leFevres. Tbose of
yo u who didn't go really missed an event. Saturday night in
Washington C. H. was probably the besi of their excellent sings.
In Oecemher we have the Rambos again for what they leU us
is a "Christmas Specia l." It's w special that Dottie and Nadine
refuse to even really tell us anything about it other than we'll
enjoy it. We'd like to see a real good crowd for this. lt will he the
last sing of the year (gee, 1973 went fast !) and we hope it will he
the best. With that in mind, I extend you an invitation .from the
Southeastern GOSpel Music Association to join us Dec. !3 and the
weekend following for something special with the Rambos,

ESTEE LAUDER

Bernadine .'s
will offer
Estee Lauder
cosmetics

GALI..IPOLIS - The world
famous line of E stee Lauder
cosmetics wiU come to Bernadine 's Monday when the
store
will offer the complete
I TOOK a brief spin through Riverby TUesday and I think it
was well worth it. The current show is one of the most heautiful line of treatment and cosme tic
ones I've ever seen. The galleries are filled with the works of preparations as well as Mrs.
Lauder 's fragrances.
wildlife artist John Ruthven.
•
Mrs . Lauder is a woman .of
Among his other credjts, Ruthven has served as comenormous
vitality who s peaks
missioned artist for Colonial Williamsburg. lf you have a cbance
stop by and see the pictures. The gallery is open from 1 to 5 p.m . with quick urgent gestures and
on Saturday and Sunday and from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on TUesqay. radia,!is a belief in being
comP'ft!tely involved in life, Her
There is no admission charge and the prints are for sale.
beauty career began right in
THE RNA is having its Country Pantry Wednesday at the · her own backyard . She
Episcopal Church in Gallipolis. I was over at Dorothy Frazier's dreamed of being a skin doctor
Friday and saw her candles. About 100 lbs. of candle wax sitting when a child, but following
all over the dining room in its prettiest fonn. If you get the marriage ·. went · into the
of
beauty
chance, do stop by the Pantry and help the gals (and guys - we development
treatment,;. Her first products
do have male nurses) collect some money for Resusianne.
Resusianne is an educational teaching aid that is used by were based on her Viennese
community organizations to teach first:.Sid. The old one is family's formulas for an ali-incompletely worn out and needs to be replaced. The idea behind one cream, cleansing oil and
this is to sort of thank the community for helping with the chapel herbal creme pack.
Her first overwhelming
at the Medical eenter.
.
success was Youth-Dew Bath
I AM WELL aware that many people are probably won- Oil. Fr~m then on, it was one
dering what it is we have to be thankful for during this year's make-up preparation after
another. Estee Lauder Inc. is
holiday.
.
We have Watergate, an energy crisis and the continual one of the largest sellers of
bath oil In the United States
threat of another war.
and one of the largest sellers of
It's true we have problems.
There's a gasoline shortage that will probably put our cars fragrance in the world.
Now there are 20 ways for
off the road within another month . There's a newsprint shortage
that may stop presses rolling all over the country. There's a · women to enjoy Estee 's Youth
power shortage that may soon leave us With cold, datk homes. Dew and Estee has a new
There is also a political confusion that threatens to leave the fragrance called Estee Super
Perfume, whic.h is exactly
strongest nation in the world crippled.
Somehow I don't think America will let all this defeat the what its nanie 'implies.
ultimate goals of the Pilgrims. Always in times of crisis, history
In 1968 Clinique was introduced
as the first .~;omp)ete
:mows !bat the people of this country have risen to the challenge
with a power and zeal that is positively appalling. There is in line of allergy-tested, fashionevery American, it seems, a thread of grea!ness that keeps the oriented and fragrance-free
country moving in the darkest hour.
·
Just 10 years ago Wednesday, a man I admired very much
was assassinated ioo Dallas, Tex. Regardless of what you may
have tbougl;ltof John KeMedy's politics, you'll have to agree that
the vitality •of the man embodied the truth about America . That
she is a strong, ·a vigorous nation.
For that I am thankful. I think we all should he.

GAI..IJPOUS - Mrs, Leo cultural program at the home
Mossman entertained the of Mrs. Robert Richards.
Emanon Club at a social
meeting Thursday evening.
There were 14 members
present. Three tables of bridge
were at play. Mrs. Kimball
Suiter earned high score with
Mrs. Roher! Richards earning
second high,
Those
assisting
Mrs,
Mossman were Mrs. M. Harold
Brown, Mrs. Kimball Suiter,
Mrs. Hoyt Mullins and Mrs.
Kenneth Frazer.
The next meeting will he a

an1uN
DINNER CLOTHS

90 DAYS TO PAY

MANY HOLIDAY FABRICS
AT GREAT SAVINGS!
STOP IN AND SEEI

~

by

Emanon club has meeting

ALL MODELS IN STOCK!

FREE LESSONS

jan's Side

Happy Thanksgiving.

60x102 OBLONG

A mac hine that perfo rms
s_o many important sewing feats:
sews bu tto nholes, buttons, overedgcs, monograms,
eve n men ds ... all wit houl attachments! And has th e
excl usive 1l!:!&amp;~* fro nt drop-in bobb in, bo bbi n over-

from 10:00 a. m.

The

109.95

Two participate
in DAR contest

.The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is ~unday~ Nov. 18, the
322nd day of 1973 with 43 to
follow .
Rite Rings
The moon is between its last
quarter and new phase.
The morning stars are
Meieury and Saturn.
· The evening stars are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter.
,.. '~ Those born on this date are
" ••,;-~;;;;-;.-;;
under the sign of Scorpio.
American astronaut Alan
Shepard was born Nov. 18, 1923.
On this day in history :
In 1883, the United States
342 Second Ave.
adopted Standard Time and set
up four zones- Eastern, Cen·Gallipolis, Ohio
tral, Mountain and Pacific.
!--------~--'

cosmetics.
Since 1965 the Aramis Master
Plan for men has offered a
c?mplete range of grooming
atds for men including the new
Aramis 900 collection.
The public is invited to visit
Bernadine's during the opening
Monday to get acquainted with
all the efforts of Estee Lauder.

WOMEN'S FASHION

BOOTS
For dress or spo r t It ' s savi ngs to boot !
High &amp; low hee ls.
Bl ac k. bro wn, tan &amp;
white. Not all sizes
but all good bu ys.

••

Y tHOII :nollE
'

Where the family !hopS 1ocether
328 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, 0.
MQnday &amp; Friday

· 9:30til8p .m.
Tues. Wed . &amp; Sat.
9:30ti1Sp.m .
Thursday

9:30fll12noon

Does Travel Louhgewear- ·
LORRAINE THE
FLY·DY·NIGHTS

.

Lorrai ne selects creamy nylon tricot and then adds
a generous frost ing 'ot glea ming satin floral appli ques and brai d, al l ·c.o lor coO rdi nated. The comfort
laden robe cove rs a provocative shift gOw n or fitted
pajamas so beautiful ly. With a.pai r of matching scuffs, the
scene is all yciurs! Choose from a rainbow selection of colors. ·

Gown at $6.00 in S·M·L,
XL at $7.00 .Robe at $9.00,
XL at $10 .00.Pajamas at
$9.00 in 3-2-40,$10.00 in
42-44, Matc hing scuffs at
$4.00 in S·M ·L·Xl.

Lay-Away AGift
For Christmas

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE

Need AGift?'
COME ON
IN

'

We have great things
unlimited! _......, AT

Peddler's Pantry
"The Store with More"
STATE &amp; THIRD _ _ _ _ _ _ GALLIPOLtS, OHIO _

Gallipolis

,

'

•

I.

�•

-

•

7-TbeSundayTimes -Sentinel, Sunday,Nov. 18, 197~
6- The Sunday Times. Sentmel. Sunda•· ""'' ,. ••-~

Philathea Society meets

Prpsbyters wiLl meet
I

CJRC'l .EVII.I.E

('h;1.1, .

i\~~

I('Htllun lwl ill t '

f '4JI!lin~

tu

Uh1" as \H'lf~t..: l'l reci•Jr 111
1972. Prwr to th&lt;Jl llt' was
rx:~·utl\'l~ diredor uf thr Child
Care
Cen ter
I nc.,
or
stx[h stated meeting of
Presbytery of Scwto Valley Milwaukee. W1s
Bates is an actl\•e Lutheran
when the orJlanization meets
Tuesday', Nov . 20, at the First l;,1yrn.an, attended high school
Presbyterian Church, 134 C:tnd college m Minneapolis and
recei~ed h1s master's degree
Mound St., Circleville.
fr
om ·
Louis iana
State
Presbytery of Scioto Valley
will convent at 4 p.m. Bates Untversity, and now lives in
will speak briefly and then Wol'thington with his wife,
enter into discUssion with Ruth , and three sons.
The Nov . 20 meeting will
Presbytery members regarding the major i ss ue~ fa cing include a dinner at the Ci rboth church and stale today. cleville Church, and after the
According to Rev . Hu gh dinner "'the Presbylery business
Bean
Evans ,
exec uti ve will continue until all regular
presby ter " the Presbytery of business is concluded .
W. lidle!" , Ext"&lt;'Uil\'{1 Ptn'('~ol
of tht&gt; Ohw n... partment of
Public Welfare will address the

( ·· ~·

./

Scioto Valley has major con-

RNA President Dorothy Frazier is shown with some of
the articles the group will have for sale at the Country Pantry
Wednesday.

Nurses to hold bazaar
project which is a way of
saying " Thank·you" for the
support given in the purchase
and furnishing of the Holzer
Medical Center Chapel.
!terns for the sale have been
made by members of RNA and
their famili es. Numerous
candles in Christmas colors
and scents, stuffed animals,
ceramics, baked goods, old
fashioned bonnets with aprons
to match, various knitted and
crocheted items, bulletin
boards, corn hus k dolls,
Chri ~ tma s decorations including
ornaments
and
wreaths, homemade candy,
DAUGHTER BORN
wine and mint jellies, aprons,
Mr. and Mrs. Benton Eblin, yardstick
covers
and
Troy, formerly of Pomeroy, terrariums will be offered.
announce the birth of a
daughter, Amanda Dawn, Oct.
29, weighing 81bs. 12\\ ozs. The
newborn's grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wears,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Nellie
Eblin,
Pomeroy . Greatgrandmother is Mrs. Edith
Abbott, Middleport. The
Eblins' also have a son, age 8.

cerns for public welfare, and
also for the many institutions
of the State of Ohio. The iss ues
of mutual concern are great
and Bates' willingnes s to
dist"uss these issues makes the
Circleville Presbytery meeting
of great importance for our
under s tanding
and
awareness. "
Bates was executive director
of
the
Boston, Mass . ,
Chi ldl'en ' s
Services

Winn, Mrs. Thelma Hysell,
Miss Mabel Hysell and Mrs.
Nelle DeWeese.

AIDMEN CAUED
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Emergency squad was called
at 4:18 a.m. Saturday to 144
Mulberry Ave . for Ruth Dailey,
a maternal patient , who was
taken to Pleasant Vall e y
Hospital. At 8:14 a.m. the
squad went to the Flatwoods
Road for Paul Pullins who was
dead upon the squad's arrival .

'111&gt;1JLEPOt!T
Partie&gt; Sl lo\'e ~1H nfferin~ . Mrs&lt;
ff·r llw J&gt;atienL'i ai the Athen.'&gt; Cra('e Haw ley" ope ned the
Ml'ntal Jlc&lt;Jlth Crnler were m(I'CtJilg with pra yer and Mrs.
Heynulds
gave
J,!Jven ::. fman cutl bwst b~ the EdgCir
Ph•tathea Society of the devotions using Psalm 100.
Middleport Church of Christ There were readin gs, " One
~atiun Under God" by Mrs.
Thur sday night.
Martha
Childs, " An Old
The society voled to give 120
to the Homebuilders Clas.~ Fashioned Thanksgiving" by
which s tages m on thly parties Mrs. Etta Mae Norton; and
at the Health Center . An. ·' Au tumn Altar' ' by Mrs.
nounced at the meeting was the Reynolds .
Miss Mildred Hawley read
Thanksgiving serv1ce at the
Middl eport first United Norman Vincent Peale's
Presbyterian Church Nov. 21 1 'Thank s for Eve rything . "
as a project of the Ministerial Reported ill were Mrs. Ella
Reu ter , Beth Wolfe, Don
Associa tion.
Mrs . Martha Childs reported Gosney, Leslie Erwin, Mrs.
on tables to be purchased by Fl oyd Boyer, Mrs. Carrie
the group, and plans were Smith, Marion Francis, Miss
made for a brunch to be served Freddie Houdashelt, Paul
Dec. 8 in the fellowship ha ll .
For roll ca ll members gave a

MR. HUNT DI ES
RACINE - The Racine ER
unit wa s called Saturday at 8
a .m. to the James 0 . Hunt
residen ce at Leta rt Falls here.
Mr. Hunt was dead on arrival
of the squad. The body was
taken to Ewing Funeral Horne.

relatives, was welcomed as
was Mrs. Clara Conroy, a

Baptist women meet Attend meeting

Ruest.

UE£•ARTMENT

STORE
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

WE ARE CLOSED TODAY
BUT•••WILL BE OPEN FROM 1 TO
6 PM ON SUNDAYS STARTING
SUNDAY NOV. 25TH

you've gOt 1t.

GALLIPOLIS
The
Registered Nurses AssoCiation
will hold its Country Pantry
Bazaar at the Episcooal
Church from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 21.
Proceeds from the bazaar
wiU go toward the purchase of
Resusianne. This doll is used
by
various
community
organizations for teac hing first
aid. The old one at the Holzer
Medical Center has needed
replacement for some time.
The RNA requests that the
community help with this

The orchid, blooms of
whi ch may remain open for
five weeks . ha s the longest
flowering period.

Mrs . Clara Dih;ard , an

in;tct.lvt member here visi~g

RIO GRANDE The on Het.-ews 10:23-24.
American Baptist Women of
The
business
meeting
Calvary Baptist Clmrch met followed.
TUesday, Nov. 13, at 7:30p.m.
The social committee, Mrs.
in the Fellowship Room at the Mildred Winters a~d Mrs .
Church.
Alice Rainey, served a dessert
Mrs. Sadie Williams had course around a table covered
charge of the program titled witb a white cloth and Thanks••vouth Is Hope." Mrs. Jermie giving candle and napkins to 13
Myers read the opening members and five children.
worship
thought.
Mrs.
Williams passed out a list of
questions based on the world's
future; which way, America ?i
ATTEND CEREMONY
the Cbrlstian Church ; Roles of
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
men and women.
Mrs . Dwight Wallace and
There were four or five
daughter, Nancy, Mrs. Bruce
questions on each topic. An
Wallace and son, Buck, Mrs .
interesting discussion ensued.
Gail Buck and son, Jon, were in
All read from a pamphlet, "We
Columbus, Thursday for the
Must Listen" from the
grad uati on of Bruce D.
ministers and missionaries
llenefit Board of the American Wallace from the State HighBaptist Convention. The topics, way Patrol Academy. They
''How Do We listen ?," HThe were joined lbere by Mr. and·
Listening Ear," " Take Heed Mrs. Alan Wallace, Alison,
How You Hear ! '' and The Mrs. Putnam Bragg, and Mrs.
Randy Bragg, Me ConnelsviUe.
Eternal
Listener
were
They attended the reception
discussed. Mrs. Irene Brannon
honoring the graduates.
closed with the worship basert

Master Charge, the card used to help rnanage your
money and keep track of purchases with one
itemized monthly statement. H you've got it, you've
probably got Master Charge, too. So . . use it!

,.,_·:'- . '

The Commercial
&amp; Sav
Bank

"Serving you since 1936"
\
-:- J !lipo li s. Ohio

Court St.
Gallipolis

Silver Bridge
Sh.opping Plar~

Your1Choice of 2 styles
· Model 4726-

$529!15

Mediterranean styling
, .. Contemporary also
avai lable .

(

Simulated TV picture

THE EMPIRE 5 • • •

25" diagonal
Solid-State COLOR Console

1

I u
.the st of microwave+
conve

PRE

lnlrodu cing th e las les t coo ki ng . eas iesl c lea nmg microwave range
The al l-new Litt on Microma tic range grves
you the best of bolh wo rlds : th e coo 1: cook1ng
speed of the microwave o ven - that saves 75%
of your cooking ti me: plus th e versat ility of conventional cook ing in I he ullima le rang e.
Cooks everylhmg from comp lete gou rmet
meals Ia snacks - with b etter tas te - lasler a nd
easier.
Prepare a ma in d 1Sh q uic kly in th e eye- level
mi crowave o ven . Cook comp lementary loads in
th e ele ctric oven . Add fun foods prepared on
th e- ve rsalrle ce'ra mi c coo k lop . Eve ry type and
s lyle of cooking a t your command.
.
The L1 1ton Micromal ic range does it a ll II
will even def rosl a 16 oz . steak in lour minutes
lor any unexpecled dinner guests

100% Solid-State reliability and modular chassis
design for easy ~erviceability .. . the Super BrightrM
Matrix picture· tube to give you great co ntrast and
brightness . .. Automatic Fine Tun ing to keep station
signals locked in ... Automatic Color to reduce ·

'•

Ill

variations in color intensity from station to station and
to enhance the fidelity of flesh tones ... and a modest

WE JUST RECEIVED OUR ANNUAL
CHRISTMAS BOXCAR LOAD OF CHAIRS!

pric6 ta9 to please your pocketbook I How can you miss?

moomooooooomooooomoo·mom-m
· 1 FULL YEAR WARRANTY ON
ALL 1974 Magnavox ~olor TV

Stratolounger

The Litton Micromatic'"
m1crowave range

ONE FULL YEAR PARTS AND SERVICE I If
anything goes wrong with your TV durin,g the
first year and it's the f ault of Magnavox, it will
be repaired - with no charge for labor, parts .

RECLINING
CHAIRS
OCCASIONAL
CHAIRS
BEAUTIFY YOUR DINING
ROOM FOR THE HOLIDAYS
AND SAVE $ $ $TOOl

As seen on _"Magnavox presents Frank Sinatra"
Sunday, Nov. 18on NBC-TV, 8:30-9:30 p.m. E.S.T.

CHILDERS MUSIC CENTER
'

Spring Valley Plaza
Ph.446-1616
Gallipolis,Ohio
"Full Line Music Store"

$AVE NOW ON. • •

announces

News~ Events

Extension council meets

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE

r . .... .-..
{'··--="·

1

featuring dried materials Wilson .
suitable for fall .
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Bass
Mrs.
Randolph
Hand, and children o.f Columbus were
program chairwoman, an- weekend guests of Mr. and
nounced
the
December Mrs. Arnold Hupp and Mrs . .
meeting ·would be held at Katie Bass at Clifton.

Microwave Ranges

BEDROOM SUITES

DINING ROOM
FURNITURE
NOW REDUCED!

One of the finest sportswear lines in the Tri·State area.
Sizes 6-18

workshop helping the children
. to make ornaments and ar-

children Jimmy, Linda and
Carol, spent Friday night and

lCaicles1for thdeirfChrhistmatss lree11. Saturday with Mr. and Mrs .
ro s an re res men WI
Vernon Cady at West Jef.
follow the workshop and ferson.
decorating of the Christmas . Mrs . Bob Cornwell of
tree.

Vinton
Mr. an d Mrs. B1.11 Ma tth ews,
Gallipolis, Professor and Mrs .
.1 R'
Cl ye
d E vansan d fam1y
, 10
Grande and house guests Mr.
and Mrs . Ken Maire, Ft.
Worth, Texas were Wednesday
evening guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Dan Evans .
Mrs. Tracey DeLiu e, B1'd •
well, called on Anna Higgins
recently .
Mrs. Oscar Steele and Mr.
Charlie Barnett received word
Friday of the death of their
sister, Mrs. Mabel Stone ,
Hometown; W. Va. Funeral
services were Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs . Paul Waites,
Canal Winchester, were
Sunday guests of her paren ts ,
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Bobo.
Florence Quickie, Neta
Alexander and G. V. Quickie
visited Mrs. Rose Glas!burn,
Bidwell
and
Margaret
Coughenour, Cheshire, Sunday.
Mrs. C. V. Casto attended the

Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mrs.
Iva Orr visited Mrs. Freda
Manuel, Mrs. Ruth Parsons,
Mrs . Emma Hayman at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday evening.

£tC.
GAWPOUS. OHIO

1

I n.e

·

.

:·

:·

.•_:~·,.:.~.

,:.,::1:.

ESTEE LAUDER

'....

IN OUR MOST BEAUTIFUL STORE

I

,.
;:.:
;:::
:;:;
'•'·
.,&lt;.::,

•

:.:::
-=&lt;
~;~

~:

'•

WE ARE PROUD TO
ANNOUNCE THE NEW
COMPLETE LINE OF

·'·.=:_:· , .

~&lt;

•,

..:-

~

IN THE BEAUTIFUL LAFAYETTE MALL

:;:;

}.;
•

GALliPOLIS, OHIO

300 SECOND AVE.

with~.•::.·:,.:.:

Gallipolis spent Sunday
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Miller.
Mrs. Vashti Grimm, Mrs .
Erma Wilson called on Mr. and
Mrs. Gordon Wolfe Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. David Sayre,
. Mrs . Brian Harris , Mrs .
Bertha Wolfe were vis iting in
Marietta Sunday.

f

\;'I 1\.~

:!:·

.
1~

~
.

r

&gt;:·

~i

%..
~:

i

...~· &gt;,
.

~~

w

&lt;':

'• ':

:t

:· .
..

:~i

...

*;

-~!
A thoughtfor the day : British :~
playwright George Bernard :~.
Shaw said, " The test of a man
or woman's . breeding is how ;:;:
they behave in a quarrel. "
....
\\\\
funeral of her brother-in-law :&lt;;
•},
Tommy Forsythe in Cleveland, 'f•
Sunday. .
Mr. and Mrs. C. E . ~
Alexander left for their winter ~~;
home in Florida Monday.
~~

t

...

1:

...
:'1'
;;:::
C-::~~~~-.
~
·X·

KENTUCKY MOUNTAIN

~

w
.....

l;::::
.,•,•••.

BlACK WALNUT

..'.-!••
;:=-

·:~

~::

AJDGE CANDY

From Aunt Mary.'s Kitchen
Post Office Box 467, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653
It's so delicious it melts in your mouth . If you
like good quality candy, you'll love this. Try a
box for yourself, today!

MAKES AN EXCELLENT
GIFT FOR ALL occAsioNs
This Delicious Candy can be purchased at the
following fine stores:
G.
Murphy Company Store, Silver Bridge
Plaza, Gallipolis.
,
Both G. C. Murphy Company Stores, Second
Ave., Gallipolis.

c.

, 842
Av• .
Phone 446-t40S
Gallipolis

nJ" n

;:,!:
:\.::.
:-:·
:~:

:..

by Dalton
Ours Exclusively I

f

~~~~~ T;;~';;:!~tin;~t~r~~·= A~:;;s, a~~s. M~~ry M;.~r~:~: :.~' :.=

{(~

knows more Beotll m,crowh&amp; cook in g lh ;m Li tton NobodY.

841 ie&lt;ond
"PhQ,. 446·
Collipolis

Apple Grove

IT'S OLD-TIME

[E LITTON
N obo d ~

GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis Garden Club mel
Thursday evening at the home
of Mrs. Robert Adams, 362
Debby Dr. Co-hostess for the
evening was Mrs. Bernard
Niehrn.
The meeting was called to
order by the president, Mrs.
Keith Brown, with members
repeating the club pledge.
"A Child's Faith" by Helen
Steiner Rice was read by Mrs.
Howard Samples as part of the
devotions. Roll call was answered by each member giving
the botanical name of , her
favorite winter shrub. The
minutes of the last meeting
were approved as read by Mrs.
·
Wilson Rush, secretary.
The
public
education
c~airwoman announced that
the last TUesday of each month
at 10 :15 p.m . would be the time
our radio articles would _be
aired. Mrs. Frazier will be
responsible for the program in
November,
her
subject
" Choosing and Planting a
Spring Bulb garden." ·Mrs.
Albert Durose will have the
December
program
on
"Special gardens (Rock,
Terrariwns, etc.) ..
Mrs. Gomer Phillips, garden
. ther~_I?Y. chairw~.J?lan, reported
that
at
the
November
meeting
at
the
GSI the
members
of
Nature's Garden Club will be
making hedge apples. She
explained the necessary steps
in the preparation lor this
project. She also asked that
members bring gifts for the
Christmas party at the In·
stitute in January. Scarves,
gloves, perfume, powder ,
costume jewelry and trinkets
are espeCially appreciated.
Mrs.
Nellie Scarberry
displayed an . arrangement of
evergreen, roses and snapdragons.
A report of the recent
rwnmage and craft sales held
by the club, was made by Mrs.
Howard Samples, ways and
means chairwoman . Plans
were made for another craft
sale to be held next year with
the members starting now to
work on articles to be sold. The
members agreed this was a

330 SEOOND AVENUE

CLEANS AS EASILY AS IT COOKS
Just a qu rc k wip e cleans the microwave oven
and smoo th ce ram ic coo kt o p Electric ove n ·
clean s itself during baking and br oiling; other
ovens bake s1a 1ns a way a l hrg h tempe ra lu res ,
bake you ou l of the kitchen. too'
Try th'e Litto n Mi cro ma lic microwave range
and save l1me lor the re st of" your life . Come 1n
for a demo ns tration .

Litton

was one ot g roup partJeJpation;
GALU POUS - The Gallia stration on the making of bre'ld
the Ull;'mbcrs brought various County Garden Clubs met Nov. dough nowers . The recipe for
t rafl items for display and 7 at the Grace United 1:.-ead dough flowers is lhre&lt;&gt;
instructional purpo~es . Vari~ty Methodist Church for their slices of plain white bread
was the theme for the even ing. annual fall meeting . The (remove crusts), t.-eak into
Items displayed were a Gallipolis Garden Club was small pieces; add three drops
glycerin; poster paint may be
Flemish fruit baskf't rnnc:ifl.ti ng hostess for the meeting .
or artificial fruit arranged in a Mrs . Katie Shoemaker, added for coloring, one must
wicker basket. brushed with a county contact chairwoman, judge color for yourself; three
varnish s tain and gold powder presided over the meeting. lbsp. of Elmer's Glue; mix,
paint mixture ( this technique Phyllis Brown of the Gallipolis knead with hands like you do
ca n also be applied to artificial Garden Club gave the regular bread dough ; when
refrigerated can use up to two
flower
and
vegetable welcome.
later.
weeks
arrangements ); styrofoam
Reports were heard from the
To give flowers a glazed look
and
construction
paper county chairwomen, Mrs.
after
you have made them use
Pilgrims; crocheted Christmas Gomer Phillips, of the
tree ornaments made from Gallipolis Garden Club, l'l water, 1h Elmer's Glue and
plastic Pringles lids; yarn chairwoman of
therapy 1:.-ush on nowers.
Mrs. Baines demonstrated
flowers; afghan s; Pringle reported that there were still
co ntainers covered with open meetings left to be how to make centers by use of
upholstery fabric; paper tole scheduled. Clubs that had not hose and nylon net. Roses,
plaques; crocheted jewelry, signed to help were urged to do daisies, iris, daffodils and
others were shown .
featuring necklaces and 1 so.
Mrs. Katie Shoemaker stated
rings; and decorative bar soap'"~
Special recognition wa s
\hal
the Vinton Club will be
baskets made from beads, pins given to guests, ·Jan et Bolen,
and artificial flowers . Mrs . regional director , and Estelle hostess for the Spring meeting .
Conkle, Mrs. Perry Bradbury , Rees, past regional director . Ye Ole Village Garden Club •
and Mrs. Dale Mulford gave
Mrs. Janet Bolen reported will provide the speaker.
Mrs. Shoemaker closed with
demonstrations on crocheted that the regional was to be held
Thanksgiving
prayer .
rope bead necklaces and the Nov . 10 at Eastern High School a
Refreshments
we
r
e
served
by
ladder bead necklaces, using and urged all to attend. She
two needles.
presented a questionnaire on the Ga llipolis Garden Club to
approximately 50 members
Following the interesting and O.A.G .C.
informative program , the
The Vinton Friendship and guests.
hostess served delicious Garden Club was introduced.
refreshments, featuring a new Many beautiful Christmas
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
dessert, " Western Pie."
decora tions were displayed by
•
Mr. and Mrs . Gerald
The next club meeting will be the various members. Mrs.
Hayman and son, Keith, Mary Dec. ·4 at the Meigs Inn in ~ Downard, president, in·Ann Walker spent Thursday Pom eroy. The dinner will troduced the members. Mrs.
evening with Mr. and Mrs . begi n at 6:30 p.m.
Max Barnes gave a demonRobert Hart and family at
successful way to raise money Racine and helped Brice Hart
for the club's civic projects.
celebrate his birthday.
Mrs .
Randolph
Hand
Mrs . Virgil Roush spent
displayed a book titled " The Sunday with her father Fred
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia be at the church Dec. 12.
Mrs . Margaret Blazer gave
Gardener's Bug Book " by Shain at Racine.
County Homemakers Ex·
Cynthia Westcott. This book
Mr. a nd Mrs. Lester Roush tension Council met at the some safety hints on b,uying
will be presented to the and sons Gary and Mike, Terri Grace United Methodist Chrisbnas lights with U. L.
Gallipolis Public Library in Findley, Mrs. Edith Manuel Church Wedne sday, Nov. 14 , cords and putting lights on the
honor of Mrs. Robert Adams, spent Friday with Mr . and Mrs. for the re g ular monthly proper kind of trees.
The hobby table of rugs,
the past president of the Don Riffle at Waverly and meeting with several ladies in
crocheted
articles and Christassisted them in moving to attendance.
Gallipolis Garden Club.
Mrs . Kenneth Frazier had Lucasville, 0.
The meeting was opened ma s gift s uggesti ons was
Keepsake Diamond Sol~aires
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Lewis, Pt. with the singing of " Sweet supplied by Mrs. Maude
charge of the program
The ultim ate in beaut~ and bril·
" Identifying a Gallipolis Pleasant, Mrs. Eula Wolfe Hour of Prayer ." Devotions on Persinger, Louise Dennis,
liance . , . Keepsake Solitaires,
guaranteed, regi stered, perfect.
Garden Club Member's Door ." spent a week with Mr. and Mrs . Thanksgiving were given by Dorothy Steger, Elsie Lakin,
She made a number of dif- r Gleon Swartz at Dixon , Ill.
Mrs. Louise Dennis. Pledge to Gladys Watts, Roberta Fisher
ferent arrangements,
Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence theflagwasledbyMrs.Maude and Helena Lear.
Potluck dinner was served at
demonstrating how the baskets Balser and family of Tupper s Persinger. Sec retary and
could be changed for the dif- Plains were Sunday dinner trea surer 's reports were given. noon.
During t he a fterno on Mrs.
ferenl seasons, one that could guests of Mrs . Alice Balse r .
Mrs. Betty J ean Lamphier
Dale
Stoll of Vinton County
Mrs. Roger Manuel and gave a report on the Chris bnas
be used now or at Christmas
was made with. fresh treated daughter Angie of Racine were Bazaar at Rio Grande, Dec . 7 spoke on Spin Cookery . She told
evergreen and artificial fruits dinoer guesls of Mr. and Mrs. from 1 to 9 p .m . at the Com- what to look for when buying a
blender and several uses for
and
vegetables.
An Lester Roush . Mr. and Mrs. munity Center.
arrangement, sure to attract a Jim Connally, children Brian
Mrs . Betty Clark read blenders and demonstrated use
small child, was a green basket and Shelly of Syracuse, spent · several interesting remarks of a blender in making several
J42 Second Ave.
foods.
filled with evergreens and a Sunday afternoon with the ·concerning Horne Council.
Gallipolis , Ohio
hand crocheted Santa, filled Roushes.
The December meeting will
with candy and goodies for the
Chester Van Meter of
~~~-.·.--:«"''..:«(«o;.;.:'"~·X"~*···;.;·~·~~iK"~·····~·~·~~~
-.
~~~~~~ old. ~:~ral ~=~~~~ ~i~ni~~ s:te~~·~r~hu~~~~
'"'"':&lt; . ......... » ...............·&gt;............ ..&lt;."0 .. ·*··•~..
· · -----·'::

RIO GRANDE The
~ .. \·r rnb{'r ml•('ling of t he
given by Mrs . "'arilyn
Wayside Garden Club was held
Thomas, of the Wes t Virginia
at the home of Mrs . Huber
Career College, Huntington .
Fulton. The meeting was
She illustrared her talk with
opened with the dub 's prayer,
five words : "Cleanliness,
·'The Garde n Collect. " In
Health, Animation. Radiance
keepiug with the theme of
and Manners." Taking the first
Thanksgiving, Mrs . Hortie
letter of the above five and
spelling out CHARM, the Roush read Psalm 118 as U1e
opening thought. Roll call was
program ended ended with a
question and answer period. answered by each of the
thirteen members present
Relaxers · was led by Rita
Wilson, name t.lgs by Kyger describing her favorite hobby .
civic
committee
The
Creek , programs made by
chairpe rson, Mrs. Roush,
Hannan Trace, and the FHA
related that the committee had
mothers of the host school
continued the patio garden
prepared and served refresh- .
project at the Cheshire - Kyger
ments. One hundred seventy.
Elementary
Sc hool
by
eight attended the meeting.
replacing and adding spring
District offi cers are president,
bulbs. The pres ident, Mrs.
Carolyn Nibert, Kyger Creek;
James Conkle , reported that
vice-president , Carol
the club had submitted its first
Bosworth, Gallia Academy ;
article in the 'jFrom Our
sec retary , Connie Dailey,
Garden" weekly feature of the
Eastern ; parliamentarian,
Gallia Coun ty Garde n Clubs.
Bre nda Petrie, North Gallia;
The program for the evening
his torian , Carolyn Baker,
Southwes tern; song leade r ,
Marsha Cox, Hannan Trace i
recreation leader, Rita Wilson,
Meigs.

Mrs. Adams hosts
-garden club meet

(USE IT.)

DAN THOMAS .
AND SON

Mt::RCERVILLE - Ti(/rly·
three from the Hannan Trace
Future
Homemakers
of
Ameriea attended the fall
district meeting of the Future
Homemakers of America
Thursday night, Nov. 15, at
North Gallia High School.
Carolyn Nibert, district
president, Kyger Creek High
School ~resided . A formal
opening ceremony was given
by the district officer s.
Greetings were extended by
Eastern and devotions by
Southwestern. Group singing
was led by Hannan Trace,
assisted by a real live Winniethe-Pooh carrying his honey
pot, portrayed by Julie Roa ch.
Connie Dailey, secretary, gave
ber report. Roll was called by
Galli a Academy. Debbie
Graham gave a report on the
national convention she attended in July in Texas. An
invitation to the spring rally
was .extended by Gallia
Academy .
The program, ' 1Charm." was

Garden clubs meet

Wayside club has meet

!~:

!•.·

.l~.•.
~::

_~

~
~l

ss,,

.~ .
~

~

I

A Representative From

,.

~

~

~..'.
S:

,·

·• _ _ .

Lauder

Will~

In Our
Store Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesdav~ for
.
Free Demonstrations ·
Estee

OPEN MON. &amp; FRI. 'T.Il 8 P.M.

L;~i~•a~~~~·~o~i~n~~~·t'~"!:l~inJ~~t·~~~~~;i:~~~in~th~e~TG;~~~:~~~~~·~-_J .~~U~R~:.~.~~~::oi...i:o:.. ~'iiii.iiiiiiiiiilfl
l:l:
..!!l
.•

•
I '

I

I

..

�•

-

•

7-TbeSundayTimes -Sentinel, Sunday,Nov. 18, 197~
6- The Sunday Times. Sentmel. Sunda•· ""'' ,. ••-~

Philathea Society meets

Prpsbyters wiLl meet
I

CJRC'l .EVII.I.E

('h;1.1, .

i\~~

I('Htllun lwl ill t '

f '4JI!lin~

tu

Uh1" as \H'lf~t..: l'l reci•Jr 111
1972. Prwr to th&lt;Jl llt' was
rx:~·utl\'l~ diredor uf thr Child
Care
Cen ter
I nc.,
or
stx[h stated meeting of
Presbytery of Scwto Valley Milwaukee. W1s
Bates is an actl\•e Lutheran
when the orJlanization meets
Tuesday', Nov . 20, at the First l;,1yrn.an, attended high school
Presbyterian Church, 134 C:tnd college m Minneapolis and
recei~ed h1s master's degree
Mound St., Circleville.
fr
om ·
Louis iana
State
Presbytery of Scioto Valley
will convent at 4 p.m. Bates Untversity, and now lives in
will speak briefly and then Wol'thington with his wife,
enter into discUssion with Ruth , and three sons.
The Nov . 20 meeting will
Presbytery members regarding the major i ss ue~ fa cing include a dinner at the Ci rboth church and stale today. cleville Church, and after the
According to Rev . Hu gh dinner "'the Presbylery business
Bean
Evans ,
exec uti ve will continue until all regular
presby ter " the Presbytery of business is concluded .
W. lidle!" , Ext"&lt;'Uil\'{1 Ptn'('~ol
of tht&gt; Ohw n... partment of
Public Welfare will address the

( ·· ~·

./

Scioto Valley has major con-

RNA President Dorothy Frazier is shown with some of
the articles the group will have for sale at the Country Pantry
Wednesday.

Nurses to hold bazaar
project which is a way of
saying " Thank·you" for the
support given in the purchase
and furnishing of the Holzer
Medical Center Chapel.
!terns for the sale have been
made by members of RNA and
their famili es. Numerous
candles in Christmas colors
and scents, stuffed animals,
ceramics, baked goods, old
fashioned bonnets with aprons
to match, various knitted and
crocheted items, bulletin
boards, corn hus k dolls,
Chri ~ tma s decorations including
ornaments
and
wreaths, homemade candy,
DAUGHTER BORN
wine and mint jellies, aprons,
Mr. and Mrs. Benton Eblin, yardstick
covers
and
Troy, formerly of Pomeroy, terrariums will be offered.
announce the birth of a
daughter, Amanda Dawn, Oct.
29, weighing 81bs. 12\\ ozs. The
newborn's grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wears,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Nellie
Eblin,
Pomeroy . Greatgrandmother is Mrs. Edith
Abbott, Middleport. The
Eblins' also have a son, age 8.

cerns for public welfare, and
also for the many institutions
of the State of Ohio. The iss ues
of mutual concern are great
and Bates' willingnes s to
dist"uss these issues makes the
Circleville Presbytery meeting
of great importance for our
under s tanding
and
awareness. "
Bates was executive director
of
the
Boston, Mass . ,
Chi ldl'en ' s
Services

Winn, Mrs. Thelma Hysell,
Miss Mabel Hysell and Mrs.
Nelle DeWeese.

AIDMEN CAUED
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Emergency squad was called
at 4:18 a.m. Saturday to 144
Mulberry Ave . for Ruth Dailey,
a maternal patient , who was
taken to Pleasant Vall e y
Hospital. At 8:14 a.m. the
squad went to the Flatwoods
Road for Paul Pullins who was
dead upon the squad's arrival .

'111&gt;1JLEPOt!T
Partie&gt; Sl lo\'e ~1H nfferin~ . Mrs&lt;
ff·r llw J&gt;atienL'i ai the Athen.'&gt; Cra('e Haw ley" ope ned the
Ml'ntal Jlc&lt;Jlth Crnler were m(I'CtJilg with pra yer and Mrs.
Heynulds
gave
J,!Jven ::. fman cutl bwst b~ the EdgCir
Ph•tathea Society of the devotions using Psalm 100.
Middleport Church of Christ There were readin gs, " One
~atiun Under God" by Mrs.
Thur sday night.
Martha
Childs, " An Old
The society voled to give 120
to the Homebuilders Clas.~ Fashioned Thanksgiving" by
which s tages m on thly parties Mrs. Etta Mae Norton; and
at the Health Center . An. ·' Au tumn Altar' ' by Mrs.
nounced at the meeting was the Reynolds .
Miss Mildred Hawley read
Thanksgiving serv1ce at the
Middl eport first United Norman Vincent Peale's
Presbyterian Church Nov. 21 1 'Thank s for Eve rything . "
as a project of the Ministerial Reported ill were Mrs. Ella
Reu ter , Beth Wolfe, Don
Associa tion.
Mrs . Martha Childs reported Gosney, Leslie Erwin, Mrs.
on tables to be purchased by Fl oyd Boyer, Mrs. Carrie
the group, and plans were Smith, Marion Francis, Miss
made for a brunch to be served Freddie Houdashelt, Paul
Dec. 8 in the fellowship ha ll .
For roll ca ll members gave a

MR. HUNT DI ES
RACINE - The Racine ER
unit wa s called Saturday at 8
a .m. to the James 0 . Hunt
residen ce at Leta rt Falls here.
Mr. Hunt was dead on arrival
of the squad. The body was
taken to Ewing Funeral Horne.

relatives, was welcomed as
was Mrs. Clara Conroy, a

Baptist women meet Attend meeting

Ruest.

UE£•ARTMENT

STORE
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

WE ARE CLOSED TODAY
BUT•••WILL BE OPEN FROM 1 TO
6 PM ON SUNDAYS STARTING
SUNDAY NOV. 25TH

you've gOt 1t.

GALLIPOLIS
The
Registered Nurses AssoCiation
will hold its Country Pantry
Bazaar at the Episcooal
Church from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 21.
Proceeds from the bazaar
wiU go toward the purchase of
Resusianne. This doll is used
by
various
community
organizations for teac hing first
aid. The old one at the Holzer
Medical Center has needed
replacement for some time.
The RNA requests that the
community help with this

The orchid, blooms of
whi ch may remain open for
five weeks . ha s the longest
flowering period.

Mrs . Clara Dih;ard , an

in;tct.lvt member here visi~g

RIO GRANDE The on Het.-ews 10:23-24.
American Baptist Women of
The
business
meeting
Calvary Baptist Clmrch met followed.
TUesday, Nov. 13, at 7:30p.m.
The social committee, Mrs.
in the Fellowship Room at the Mildred Winters a~d Mrs .
Church.
Alice Rainey, served a dessert
Mrs. Sadie Williams had course around a table covered
charge of the program titled witb a white cloth and Thanks••vouth Is Hope." Mrs. Jermie giving candle and napkins to 13
Myers read the opening members and five children.
worship
thought.
Mrs.
Williams passed out a list of
questions based on the world's
future; which way, America ?i
ATTEND CEREMONY
the Cbrlstian Church ; Roles of
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
men and women.
Mrs . Dwight Wallace and
There were four or five
daughter, Nancy, Mrs. Bruce
questions on each topic. An
Wallace and son, Buck, Mrs .
interesting discussion ensued.
Gail Buck and son, Jon, were in
All read from a pamphlet, "We
Columbus, Thursday for the
Must Listen" from the
grad uati on of Bruce D.
ministers and missionaries
llenefit Board of the American Wallace from the State HighBaptist Convention. The topics, way Patrol Academy. They
''How Do We listen ?," HThe were joined lbere by Mr. and·
Listening Ear," " Take Heed Mrs. Alan Wallace, Alison,
How You Hear ! '' and The Mrs. Putnam Bragg, and Mrs.
Randy Bragg, Me ConnelsviUe.
Eternal
Listener
were
They attended the reception
discussed. Mrs. Irene Brannon
honoring the graduates.
closed with the worship basert

Master Charge, the card used to help rnanage your
money and keep track of purchases with one
itemized monthly statement. H you've got it, you've
probably got Master Charge, too. So . . use it!

,.,_·:'- . '

The Commercial
&amp; Sav
Bank

"Serving you since 1936"
\
-:- J !lipo li s. Ohio

Court St.
Gallipolis

Silver Bridge
Sh.opping Plar~

Your1Choice of 2 styles
· Model 4726-

$529!15

Mediterranean styling
, .. Contemporary also
avai lable .

(

Simulated TV picture

THE EMPIRE 5 • • •

25" diagonal
Solid-State COLOR Console

1

I u
.the st of microwave+
conve

PRE

lnlrodu cing th e las les t coo ki ng . eas iesl c lea nmg microwave range
The al l-new Litt on Microma tic range grves
you the best of bolh wo rlds : th e coo 1: cook1ng
speed of the microwave o ven - that saves 75%
of your cooking ti me: plus th e versat ility of conventional cook ing in I he ullima le rang e.
Cooks everylhmg from comp lete gou rmet
meals Ia snacks - with b etter tas te - lasler a nd
easier.
Prepare a ma in d 1Sh q uic kly in th e eye- level
mi crowave o ven . Cook comp lementary loads in
th e ele ctric oven . Add fun foods prepared on
th e- ve rsalrle ce'ra mi c coo k lop . Eve ry type and
s lyle of cooking a t your command.
.
The L1 1ton Micromal ic range does it a ll II
will even def rosl a 16 oz . steak in lour minutes
lor any unexpecled dinner guests

100% Solid-State reliability and modular chassis
design for easy ~erviceability .. . the Super BrightrM
Matrix picture· tube to give you great co ntrast and
brightness . .. Automatic Fine Tun ing to keep station
signals locked in ... Automatic Color to reduce ·

'•

Ill

variations in color intensity from station to station and
to enhance the fidelity of flesh tones ... and a modest

WE JUST RECEIVED OUR ANNUAL
CHRISTMAS BOXCAR LOAD OF CHAIRS!

pric6 ta9 to please your pocketbook I How can you miss?

moomooooooomooooomoo·mom-m
· 1 FULL YEAR WARRANTY ON
ALL 1974 Magnavox ~olor TV

Stratolounger

The Litton Micromatic'"
m1crowave range

ONE FULL YEAR PARTS AND SERVICE I If
anything goes wrong with your TV durin,g the
first year and it's the f ault of Magnavox, it will
be repaired - with no charge for labor, parts .

RECLINING
CHAIRS
OCCASIONAL
CHAIRS
BEAUTIFY YOUR DINING
ROOM FOR THE HOLIDAYS
AND SAVE $ $ $TOOl

As seen on _"Magnavox presents Frank Sinatra"
Sunday, Nov. 18on NBC-TV, 8:30-9:30 p.m. E.S.T.

CHILDERS MUSIC CENTER
'

Spring Valley Plaza
Ph.446-1616
Gallipolis,Ohio
"Full Line Music Store"

$AVE NOW ON. • •

announces

News~ Events

Extension council meets

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE

r . .... .-..
{'··--="·

1

featuring dried materials Wilson .
suitable for fall .
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Bass
Mrs.
Randolph
Hand, and children o.f Columbus were
program chairwoman, an- weekend guests of Mr. and
nounced
the
December Mrs. Arnold Hupp and Mrs . .
meeting ·would be held at Katie Bass at Clifton.

Microwave Ranges

BEDROOM SUITES

DINING ROOM
FURNITURE
NOW REDUCED!

One of the finest sportswear lines in the Tri·State area.
Sizes 6-18

workshop helping the children
. to make ornaments and ar-

children Jimmy, Linda and
Carol, spent Friday night and

lCaicles1for thdeirfChrhistmatss lree11. Saturday with Mr. and Mrs .
ro s an re res men WI
Vernon Cady at West Jef.
follow the workshop and ferson.
decorating of the Christmas . Mrs . Bob Cornwell of
tree.

Vinton
Mr. an d Mrs. B1.11 Ma tth ews,
Gallipolis, Professor and Mrs .
.1 R'
Cl ye
d E vansan d fam1y
, 10
Grande and house guests Mr.
and Mrs . Ken Maire, Ft.
Worth, Texas were Wednesday
evening guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Dan Evans .
Mrs. Tracey DeLiu e, B1'd •
well, called on Anna Higgins
recently .
Mrs. Oscar Steele and Mr.
Charlie Barnett received word
Friday of the death of their
sister, Mrs. Mabel Stone ,
Hometown; W. Va. Funeral
services were Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs . Paul Waites,
Canal Winchester, were
Sunday guests of her paren ts ,
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Bobo.
Florence Quickie, Neta
Alexander and G. V. Quickie
visited Mrs. Rose Glas!burn,
Bidwell
and
Margaret
Coughenour, Cheshire, Sunday.
Mrs. C. V. Casto attended the

Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mrs.
Iva Orr visited Mrs. Freda
Manuel, Mrs. Ruth Parsons,
Mrs . Emma Hayman at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday evening.

£tC.
GAWPOUS. OHIO

1

I n.e

·

.

:·

:·

.•_:~·,.:.~.

,:.,::1:.

ESTEE LAUDER

'....

IN OUR MOST BEAUTIFUL STORE

I

,.
;:.:
;:::
:;:;
'•'·
.,&lt;.::,

•

:.:::
-=&lt;
~;~

~:

'•

WE ARE PROUD TO
ANNOUNCE THE NEW
COMPLETE LINE OF

·'·.=:_:· , .

~&lt;

•,

..:-

~

IN THE BEAUTIFUL LAFAYETTE MALL

:;:;

}.;
•

GALliPOLIS, OHIO

300 SECOND AVE.

with~.•::.·:,.:.:

Gallipolis spent Sunday
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Miller.
Mrs. Vashti Grimm, Mrs .
Erma Wilson called on Mr. and
Mrs. Gordon Wolfe Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. David Sayre,
. Mrs . Brian Harris , Mrs .
Bertha Wolfe were vis iting in
Marietta Sunday.

f

\;'I 1\.~

:!:·

.
1~

~
.

r

&gt;:·

~i

%..
~:

i

...~· &gt;,
.

~~

w

&lt;':

'• ':

:t

:· .
..

:~i

...

*;

-~!
A thoughtfor the day : British :~
playwright George Bernard :~.
Shaw said, " The test of a man
or woman's . breeding is how ;:;:
they behave in a quarrel. "
....
\\\\
funeral of her brother-in-law :&lt;;
•},
Tommy Forsythe in Cleveland, 'f•
Sunday. .
Mr. and Mrs. C. E . ~
Alexander left for their winter ~~;
home in Florida Monday.
~~

t

...

1:

...
:'1'
;;:::
C-::~~~~-.
~
·X·

KENTUCKY MOUNTAIN

~

w
.....

l;::::
.,•,•••.

BlACK WALNUT

..'.-!••
;:=-

·:~

~::

AJDGE CANDY

From Aunt Mary.'s Kitchen
Post Office Box 467, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653
It's so delicious it melts in your mouth . If you
like good quality candy, you'll love this. Try a
box for yourself, today!

MAKES AN EXCELLENT
GIFT FOR ALL occAsioNs
This Delicious Candy can be purchased at the
following fine stores:
G.
Murphy Company Store, Silver Bridge
Plaza, Gallipolis.
,
Both G. C. Murphy Company Stores, Second
Ave., Gallipolis.

c.

, 842
Av• .
Phone 446-t40S
Gallipolis

nJ" n

;:,!:
:\.::.
:-:·
:~:

:..

by Dalton
Ours Exclusively I

f

~~~~~ T;;~';;:!~tin;~t~r~~·= A~:;;s, a~~s. M~~ry M;.~r~:~: :.~' :.=

{(~

knows more Beotll m,crowh&amp; cook in g lh ;m Li tton NobodY.

841 ie&lt;ond
"PhQ,. 446·
Collipolis

Apple Grove

IT'S OLD-TIME

[E LITTON
N obo d ~

GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis Garden Club mel
Thursday evening at the home
of Mrs. Robert Adams, 362
Debby Dr. Co-hostess for the
evening was Mrs. Bernard
Niehrn.
The meeting was called to
order by the president, Mrs.
Keith Brown, with members
repeating the club pledge.
"A Child's Faith" by Helen
Steiner Rice was read by Mrs.
Howard Samples as part of the
devotions. Roll call was answered by each member giving
the botanical name of , her
favorite winter shrub. The
minutes of the last meeting
were approved as read by Mrs.
·
Wilson Rush, secretary.
The
public
education
c~airwoman announced that
the last TUesday of each month
at 10 :15 p.m . would be the time
our radio articles would _be
aired. Mrs. Frazier will be
responsible for the program in
November,
her
subject
" Choosing and Planting a
Spring Bulb garden." ·Mrs.
Albert Durose will have the
December
program
on
"Special gardens (Rock,
Terrariwns, etc.) ..
Mrs. Gomer Phillips, garden
. ther~_I?Y. chairw~.J?lan, reported
that
at
the
November
meeting
at
the
GSI the
members
of
Nature's Garden Club will be
making hedge apples. She
explained the necessary steps
in the preparation lor this
project. She also asked that
members bring gifts for the
Christmas party at the In·
stitute in January. Scarves,
gloves, perfume, powder ,
costume jewelry and trinkets
are espeCially appreciated.
Mrs.
Nellie Scarberry
displayed an . arrangement of
evergreen, roses and snapdragons.
A report of the recent
rwnmage and craft sales held
by the club, was made by Mrs.
Howard Samples, ways and
means chairwoman . Plans
were made for another craft
sale to be held next year with
the members starting now to
work on articles to be sold. The
members agreed this was a

330 SEOOND AVENUE

CLEANS AS EASILY AS IT COOKS
Just a qu rc k wip e cleans the microwave oven
and smoo th ce ram ic coo kt o p Electric ove n ·
clean s itself during baking and br oiling; other
ovens bake s1a 1ns a way a l hrg h tempe ra lu res ,
bake you ou l of the kitchen. too'
Try th'e Litto n Mi cro ma lic microwave range
and save l1me lor the re st of" your life . Come 1n
for a demo ns tration .

Litton

was one ot g roup partJeJpation;
GALU POUS - The Gallia stration on the making of bre'ld
the Ull;'mbcrs brought various County Garden Clubs met Nov. dough nowers . The recipe for
t rafl items for display and 7 at the Grace United 1:.-ead dough flowers is lhre&lt;&gt;
instructional purpo~es . Vari~ty Methodist Church for their slices of plain white bread
was the theme for the even ing. annual fall meeting . The (remove crusts), t.-eak into
Items displayed were a Gallipolis Garden Club was small pieces; add three drops
glycerin; poster paint may be
Flemish fruit baskf't rnnc:ifl.ti ng hostess for the meeting .
or artificial fruit arranged in a Mrs . Katie Shoemaker, added for coloring, one must
wicker basket. brushed with a county contact chairwoman, judge color for yourself; three
varnish s tain and gold powder presided over the meeting. lbsp. of Elmer's Glue; mix,
paint mixture ( this technique Phyllis Brown of the Gallipolis knead with hands like you do
ca n also be applied to artificial Garden Club gave the regular bread dough ; when
refrigerated can use up to two
flower
and
vegetable welcome.
later.
weeks
arrangements ); styrofoam
Reports were heard from the
To give flowers a glazed look
and
construction
paper county chairwomen, Mrs.
after
you have made them use
Pilgrims; crocheted Christmas Gomer Phillips, of the
tree ornaments made from Gallipolis Garden Club, l'l water, 1h Elmer's Glue and
plastic Pringles lids; yarn chairwoman of
therapy 1:.-ush on nowers.
Mrs. Baines demonstrated
flowers; afghan s; Pringle reported that there were still
co ntainers covered with open meetings left to be how to make centers by use of
upholstery fabric; paper tole scheduled. Clubs that had not hose and nylon net. Roses,
plaques; crocheted jewelry, signed to help were urged to do daisies, iris, daffodils and
others were shown .
featuring necklaces and 1 so.
Mrs. Katie Shoemaker stated
rings; and decorative bar soap'"~
Special recognition wa s
\hal
the Vinton Club will be
baskets made from beads, pins given to guests, ·Jan et Bolen,
and artificial flowers . Mrs . regional director , and Estelle hostess for the Spring meeting .
Conkle, Mrs. Perry Bradbury , Rees, past regional director . Ye Ole Village Garden Club •
and Mrs. Dale Mulford gave
Mrs. Janet Bolen reported will provide the speaker.
Mrs. Shoemaker closed with
demonstrations on crocheted that the regional was to be held
Thanksgiving
prayer .
rope bead necklaces and the Nov . 10 at Eastern High School a
Refreshments
we
r
e
served
by
ladder bead necklaces, using and urged all to attend. She
two needles.
presented a questionnaire on the Ga llipolis Garden Club to
approximately 50 members
Following the interesting and O.A.G .C.
informative program , the
The Vinton Friendship and guests.
hostess served delicious Garden Club was introduced.
refreshments, featuring a new Many beautiful Christmas
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
dessert, " Western Pie."
decora tions were displayed by
•
Mr. and Mrs . Gerald
The next club meeting will be the various members. Mrs.
Hayman and son, Keith, Mary Dec. ·4 at the Meigs Inn in ~ Downard, president, in·Ann Walker spent Thursday Pom eroy. The dinner will troduced the members. Mrs.
evening with Mr. and Mrs . begi n at 6:30 p.m.
Max Barnes gave a demonRobert Hart and family at
successful way to raise money Racine and helped Brice Hart
for the club's civic projects.
celebrate his birthday.
Mrs .
Randolph
Hand
Mrs . Virgil Roush spent
displayed a book titled " The Sunday with her father Fred
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia be at the church Dec. 12.
Mrs . Margaret Blazer gave
Gardener's Bug Book " by Shain at Racine.
County Homemakers Ex·
Cynthia Westcott. This book
Mr. a nd Mrs. Lester Roush tension Council met at the some safety hints on b,uying
will be presented to the and sons Gary and Mike, Terri Grace United Methodist Chrisbnas lights with U. L.
Gallipolis Public Library in Findley, Mrs. Edith Manuel Church Wedne sday, Nov. 14 , cords and putting lights on the
honor of Mrs. Robert Adams, spent Friday with Mr . and Mrs. for the re g ular monthly proper kind of trees.
The hobby table of rugs,
the past president of the Don Riffle at Waverly and meeting with several ladies in
crocheted
articles and Christassisted them in moving to attendance.
Gallipolis Garden Club.
Mrs . Kenneth Frazier had Lucasville, 0.
The meeting was opened ma s gift s uggesti ons was
Keepsake Diamond Sol~aires
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Lewis, Pt. with the singing of " Sweet supplied by Mrs. Maude
charge of the program
The ultim ate in beaut~ and bril·
" Identifying a Gallipolis Pleasant, Mrs. Eula Wolfe Hour of Prayer ." Devotions on Persinger, Louise Dennis,
liance . , . Keepsake Solitaires,
guaranteed, regi stered, perfect.
Garden Club Member's Door ." spent a week with Mr. and Mrs . Thanksgiving were given by Dorothy Steger, Elsie Lakin,
She made a number of dif- r Gleon Swartz at Dixon , Ill.
Mrs. Louise Dennis. Pledge to Gladys Watts, Roberta Fisher
ferent arrangements,
Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence theflagwasledbyMrs.Maude and Helena Lear.
Potluck dinner was served at
demonstrating how the baskets Balser and family of Tupper s Persinger. Sec retary and
could be changed for the dif- Plains were Sunday dinner trea surer 's reports were given. noon.
During t he a fterno on Mrs.
ferenl seasons, one that could guests of Mrs . Alice Balse r .
Mrs. Betty J ean Lamphier
Dale
Stoll of Vinton County
Mrs. Roger Manuel and gave a report on the Chris bnas
be used now or at Christmas
was made with. fresh treated daughter Angie of Racine were Bazaar at Rio Grande, Dec . 7 spoke on Spin Cookery . She told
evergreen and artificial fruits dinoer guesls of Mr. and Mrs. from 1 to 9 p .m . at the Com- what to look for when buying a
blender and several uses for
and
vegetables.
An Lester Roush . Mr. and Mrs. munity Center.
arrangement, sure to attract a Jim Connally, children Brian
Mrs . Betty Clark read blenders and demonstrated use
small child, was a green basket and Shelly of Syracuse, spent · several interesting remarks of a blender in making several
J42 Second Ave.
foods.
filled with evergreens and a Sunday afternoon with the ·concerning Horne Council.
Gallipolis , Ohio
hand crocheted Santa, filled Roushes.
The December meeting will
with candy and goodies for the
Chester Van Meter of
~~~-.·.--:«"''..:«(«o;.;.:'"~·X"~*···;.;·~·~~iK"~·····~·~·~~~
-.
~~~~~~ old. ~:~ral ~=~~~~ ~i~ni~~ s:te~~·~r~hu~~~~
'"'"':&lt; . ......... » ...............·&gt;............ ..&lt;."0 .. ·*··•~..
· · -----·'::

RIO GRANDE The
~ .. \·r rnb{'r ml•('ling of t he
given by Mrs . "'arilyn
Wayside Garden Club was held
Thomas, of the Wes t Virginia
at the home of Mrs . Huber
Career College, Huntington .
Fulton. The meeting was
She illustrared her talk with
opened with the dub 's prayer,
five words : "Cleanliness,
·'The Garde n Collect. " In
Health, Animation. Radiance
keepiug with the theme of
and Manners." Taking the first
Thanksgiving, Mrs . Hortie
letter of the above five and
spelling out CHARM, the Roush read Psalm 118 as U1e
opening thought. Roll call was
program ended ended with a
question and answer period. answered by each of the
thirteen members present
Relaxers · was led by Rita
Wilson, name t.lgs by Kyger describing her favorite hobby .
civic
committee
The
Creek , programs made by
chairpe rson, Mrs. Roush,
Hannan Trace, and the FHA
related that the committee had
mothers of the host school
continued the patio garden
prepared and served refresh- .
project at the Cheshire - Kyger
ments. One hundred seventy.
Elementary
Sc hool
by
eight attended the meeting.
replacing and adding spring
District offi cers are president,
bulbs. The pres ident, Mrs.
Carolyn Nibert, Kyger Creek;
James Conkle , reported that
vice-president , Carol
the club had submitted its first
Bosworth, Gallia Academy ;
article in the 'jFrom Our
sec retary , Connie Dailey,
Garden" weekly feature of the
Eastern ; parliamentarian,
Gallia Coun ty Garde n Clubs.
Bre nda Petrie, North Gallia;
The program for the evening
his torian , Carolyn Baker,
Southwes tern; song leade r ,
Marsha Cox, Hannan Trace i
recreation leader, Rita Wilson,
Meigs.

Mrs. Adams hosts
-garden club meet

(USE IT.)

DAN THOMAS .
AND SON

Mt::RCERVILLE - Ti(/rly·
three from the Hannan Trace
Future
Homemakers
of
Ameriea attended the fall
district meeting of the Future
Homemakers of America
Thursday night, Nov. 15, at
North Gallia High School.
Carolyn Nibert, district
president, Kyger Creek High
School ~resided . A formal
opening ceremony was given
by the district officer s.
Greetings were extended by
Eastern and devotions by
Southwestern. Group singing
was led by Hannan Trace,
assisted by a real live Winniethe-Pooh carrying his honey
pot, portrayed by Julie Roa ch.
Connie Dailey, secretary, gave
ber report. Roll was called by
Galli a Academy. Debbie
Graham gave a report on the
national convention she attended in July in Texas. An
invitation to the spring rally
was .extended by Gallia
Academy .
The program, ' 1Charm." was

Garden clubs meet

Wayside club has meet

!~:

!•.·

.l~.•.
~::

_~

~
~l

ss,,

.~ .
~

~

I

A Representative From

,.

~

~

~..'.
S:

,·

·• _ _ .

Lauder

Will~

In Our
Store Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesdav~ for
.
Free Demonstrations ·
Estee

OPEN MON. &amp; FRI. 'T.Il 8 P.M.

L;~i~•a~~~~·~o~i~n~~~·t'~"!:l~inJ~~t·~~~~~;i:~~~in~th~e~TG;~~~:~~~~~·~-_J .~~U~R~:.~.~~~::oi...i:o:.. ~'iiii.iiiiiiiiiilfl
l:l:
..!!l
.•

•
I '

I

I

..

�.

.

.

Scouting supporters appreciated
HUNTINGTON - In the
tradition of Thanksgiving,
appreciation was extended this
week by Bob E. Myers,
president of the Tri.State Area
Council, Boy Scouts ol
America, to those who support
Scouting in the council area.
"We are most thankful to the
thousands of men and women

in the tri-state area who make
it possible for our youth to have
the advantages of Scouting,"
he said.
" More than 170 chartered
partners sponsor BSA units so
that over 7,500 youth have
experienced scouting in their
own neighborhOods.
11
At this significant time of

year, we pause to give grateful

JOHN REECE , POMEitOY , owns one of the 2,846 1960 Edsels produced wltlch mre described as ' 'Wam•ed-&lt;&gt;ver
Fords." It's in mint condition, ready for the road.

GOODY IN FORGER V
MIDDLEPORT - Army Sgt.
JameS A. Goody, 21, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Paul J. Goody, 181
Beech st., participated with
other American and Allied
troops in Exercise Reforger V
in Germany in October. Sgt.
Goody is regularly assigned as
a radar team leader with Troop
C, 3rd Squadron of the 3rd
Infantry Division .
NOW YOU KNOW
One year on the planet
Jupiter equals 11.96 years on
· earth.

•

·Loser to wznner
(Continued from Page I )

surgery might save it.
Ttie infamous "horse-collar" planted
IQWlrely in the grille already was the
symbol of a loser.
There was major surgery ordered on
the Edsel. Merged in February of 1958 with
the lincoln-Mercury Division, a totally
redesigned Edsel was on hand in 1959. This
new Edsel was trumpeted as a "premium
quality low-priced car." It didn 't wash;
the loser image stuck.
In late 1959 the 1960 Edsel was in·
troduced. Mechanics knew it was a
wanned over Ford, of which 2,846 models
were turned off the production line in two
montha. Sales slipped even fa ste r .
On Nov. 19, 1959 the announcement
was made that production had stopped,
l!l&lt;actly three years to the day the 'Edsel
Division was formed back in 1956.
Time Magazine once recalled the
Edsel as the "wrong car for the wrong
market at the wrong time. 1'
'
Three '58 Models
Tbere are three 1958 models in Meigs
County. Two are owned by employees of
the Middleport division of the Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio Electric Company , Bill
Thomas and Hobert Goggins. Each of
these men own two door hardtops and plan
to restore them to original condition. The
third is a station wagon in Rutland that
was recently sold to a ma n in Charleston,
W.Va.
Tbere are also three 1959 models. Two
ol them are owned by Clarence Baker who
lives just outside Reedsville on S. H. 681.
Mr. Baker said that Edsels were " the best
cars I ever owned.'' The other 1959 is
owned by Jim Frecker of Pomeroy who
has invested many hours a nd dollars in its
restoration.
Tbe only 1960 modei found was just
purchased by John Reece of Pomeroy.
·~e·s car, which is in excclJeut con~

clition, is the only one of the seven
presently in running condition .
.
Heece admitted that his restoration
project was very easy as the previous
owner had kept the car in fine condition .
" All I needed to do was have the title
changed," Heece said. ·
The Edsel Clubs
In recent ·years as Edsels became
progre~~ively scarce chapters of Edsel
Cl ub s have bloomed everywhere,

especially in California. There are two
known clubs in America. One is the International Edsel Club, P. 0. Box 304,
Bellevue, Ohio 44811 with affiliated
chapters.
1'oday's prices range anywhere from

$25 for a real junker to whatever some nut
with dreams of investiJ1,g in the future will
pay,
·
Many people who own Edsels to&lt;lay
are frustrated or mnatellr mechan ics who .

Jove to tinker; to search out original parts
for Uleir battered, beloved Edsel which
may he sitting among high weeds in the
back yard or in a barn, or in one side of a
two-car garage. It may run or it may not
run; be jacked up off its aging tires or
settling slowly into the ground.
During U1e 60s most Edsel owners let
their cars go to the junk yard when miles
inevitably had taken their toll of metal,
wood and rubber.
Down to about 20,000 in number of the
originai 100,000 plus Edsels, junk yards
will get few of those remaining. From here
on in one decrepit Edsel will be joined into
another of the ~arne vintage to create one
"mint" Edsel a Ia 1958, 1959, or 1960.
Yes there
was the death of a car in
.
1959 when Edsel production stopped. But
now , 14 years later, perhaps the loser has
become a wirmer. Perhaps!

.

Social · II Books reviewed
· Calendad

numbers, public invited.
WOMEN ' S
Mis sio nary
Convention, Hocking• District,
. Naomi Baptist Church, 2 p.m.
Mrs . Campbell
HDrper,
president.
.. -·MONDAY
ANNUAL Meigs County

grange officers conference at
Rock Springs Grange Hall.
Conference follows 6:30 p.m.
potluck supper. Those Dttending take covered dish and.
own table service.
61st ANNIVERSAHY dinner
at Theodorus Council I 7,
Daughters of America, 6:30
p.m. at IOOF Hail. All charter

MIDDLEPOHT Two
books, one relatin g to
maternity c~re for unmarried
teenage girls, and the other to
the freedom of living without
fea r , guilt, or inhibitions, were
reviewed at the Wednesd~y
meeting of the Middleport
l,itel'ary Club at the home of
Mrs. Rooney Downing.

Mrs. Richard Owen reviewed
" The Gir ls of Huntin gton

•ttend.
. ANNUAL
Thanksgiving
. . . _ for members of Drew
Weblltr f&gt;Git :IV ~ p.m. at post

inVolved in operating such a
home and the sympathetic
approach to so lving the
problems.
"Feel Free" by David S.
Biscott, M.D., a psychiatrist,

citizenship."

•

9- The Sunday Times -Sentinel, SUnday, Nov. 18,1973

••

I~A TASTit~ !!I'

·-

uviNG ROOM SALE

'

-·
:=.
z:
0

:e
j::

Monday thru Wednesday 9 to 9

Cl

Prices Effective Thru Wed ., Nov . 21
These prices good in Gallipolis a·nd Middleport Stores only.

.~

:e
.......

CLOSED THANKSGIVING DAY

ONLY
3 TO SELL

COMPARE AT •595.00

$349

1st Thru 4th Rib

Smoked Shank Half

HAYMAN'S STORE
AT 104 W. MAIN

POMEROY

( Foo•m•orlv Big Bend Bargain Store · ·

trade center.

•

GOOD
SELECTION

Pork Ch ops ., to'1~" • • •
• •
Ham Steak or Roast ·m~w lb. 5149 Delmonico Steaks
• lb. 5249
Boneless Beef Roast J~g~. lb. 5129 Semi~Boneless Ham o'c?¥t'fr • lb. S149
4Sc:
Ground Chuck 'o'f·,J~~ • • lb.s119 A&amp;P Cranberry Delight
• lb.99c: A&amp;P Cranberry Relish ...... 59c:
Sliced Bacon /r'?t~
Ham
lb. 5159 Turbot Fillets
SLICEO

• lb. 99c

19-lb.
And

I

Over

Hold!

Berklin~

39

SUPER-RIGHT 9UALITY!

.LAY THEM AWAY NOW!
Small
Depclit
Will
THE

the Store.

Great Thanksgiv:119 Day Specials

Ll.l

INtOATaS

·

CUT

13oOI·
...

I

oup

I

1

WHOLE OR.

PORTION

e

10 to

lb.

Turkey Halves
Capons

Comfort Action Chairs

'

U.S.D.A. Grade "A"

18-lb.

I

•

81o

U.lb.
Avr.

•

• •

lb.73C/'

•

• lb.5109

10 to
18-lb.

Geese
Ducks

lb.
• • • • • •
• • • • • •

ALSO AVAILABLE: Swift's Butterball,
Honeysuckle or Armour BuHerbasted Turkeys.
(

and inhibitions and break the
shackles of self-denial.
Mebers in response to roll
call gave a comment on the

I

I

e.,.oa.a,
y.....,

1

•

California Broccoli •
Fresh Cranberries
Florida Taligeloes ~~'i·
I

... 29c

1·1b.

I

• .... 79e

.

8ror5100

I

I

Acorn Squash • • • • .... 19c:
Navel OrangeS

.

I

I

books. Mrs. Emerson Jones
presided and the hos tess
served candy. The goods for
the blind were on display at the
mee tin g.

Check Our Prices!

FORD RESIGNS
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!)
Frederick S. Ford Jr ., has
was reviewed by Mrs. Arthur · resigned from the board of .
Strauss. He gave in the book a directors of the Libbey.Qwensmaster plan to responsibility Ford Co., offh:'ials announced
without guilt, and a s t~p to step Friday. Ford's resignation was

Turkey Fixins'

Stuffing Mix

*
', .

I

~'\) (IR P[UORMA~C! 'Dt.

; Good Housekeeping.,.•
~ ,

-(ifCt

termed for personal reasons.

GUo\RA NIH S

Eft'.-}.

,,._~

~':.'"

f,f£111 OR IIHIJND HI(.~

.Croutons

I

I

•

QE;p Sf.i.ee.d.,

pkl'·
Stuffi1g Bread • tt-••·49c
STOVE TOP
.
Ctrnbread Stuffln' • pk
COUNTRY TREAT
$119 .
roll
·Sausage W:E • • 1-lb.

Jan• Park•r Cube•

324 SECOND AVE.
DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS
OPPOSITE THE PARK

STANDARD FRESH

Opten •
I

I

•

• •

'P.....eapp~ .

. =- 35c:

49C

I

NOW AT NEW LOCATION!

.=

$139

each

$
ZO-oz.

00

cans

DEL MONTE SALE!

Fruit Cocktail • 3~;: age:
Stewed Tomatoes 3=·agc:
corn • 4::st

A&amp;P JELLIED OR WHOLE

Cntu.heNtg
s~

Nog A., Rolls .~~~~~E 3pkg•
Tomato Paste
3=at
• soFT • •
39c:
Margar10e
Dry Yeast~~~~~- • 3~•1r
Cornbread Stuffins~g;E~;;.4t
Handi Whip FR~lEN.
CANNED

·-

HUNT'S

AlP

l·lb.

bOwl

CRISCO
SHORTENING

YAC
PACK

3.:;.$125

---------"-'"~-----· ------ ·

GIRLS

7-14
Russ Girl Co·ordinates

,...~

"•'ie\ie'6 1i &gt;•OL

----~'$12.00-$14.00

Slacks

Skirts ~ ·. , . · - ~

Blazers
Sweaters
Blouses

INSTANT

· .. _ $9.00-$10.00
$18.00-$22.00
$6.50-$9.00
$8.00

l=oot£ . ••••

'i:"$127

Taster's Choice • •
~$112
Maxwell House •
2!;.$218
Maxwell Houst
Maxwell House
1-5209
Instant Coffee
....,.,5219
Maxim ·Coffee • •.~or.
Keebler Zesta Saltines ..... ~ 48c
Aunt Nellie's Pickled m~t•
:::·354;
Aunt Nellie's Red Cabbage . . - · 37c
GROUND COFFEE

I

TODDLERS

Pants
2·7. $4 :50 . $8.00
8.14, $5.50.$10.50
Shirts 2·14
$3.00 . $6.50
Swea.t er Vests
2·12, $5.00 - $8.00
Coats2-12
$8.50 . $38.00

liii&lt;LS &amp; BOYS

GIRLS

PANT SETS

4 • 6X

Doe Spun. Thomas,
Wonderall, $5.00·$22.00
Pajamas
$5.00·$6.50
Co·ordinates
'
Slacks
$3.00·$6.00
Tops
$3.00.$4.50

Playmore &amp;. Coming Thing

Coordinates. '

Slacks
$5.50-$8.00
. $5.50-$9.00
Tops
Pants Sets
$10.00 - $18.00

•USE OUR LAY-AWAY
. eFREE GIFT WRAPPING

,_,

.........

"fashions lor tile young•

1

446-4343

•

•
•

Stylish Recliners have Deluxe 3-Way Action Mechanism
for sitting, lounging or full reclining. The ultimate in
comfort!
Roi:k ·A-Lounger has same 3-Way Action ... plus it rocks!
Superior Berkline constructiQn ... choice of handsome
vinyl, vinyl -fabric combination or decorator fabric.

mast:-hargr

JACK&amp; ]ILl'S
P~'lRe

.

GROUND COFFEE

Bershlre &amp; . Debby Dare

326 Second Ave.

.

GROUND COFFEE

BOYS

' - · MeeUM to follow
I

the story of a maternity home
for teenage girls, the troubles

House" by Blossom Elfman, ' outline on how to confront fears

members requested to be
present. The dinner will be
potluck .
. MEIGS Chapter DeMolay,
Middleport Masonjc Temple,
7:30p.m. Also Mothers Club in
dining room at same time.
MONDAY
MIDDLEPOHT BPW meel'
at 7:30 p.m. at the Columbia
Gas Company . Mrs. Edgar
ReynoldS , chairwoman of
Foundation , Emble m and
Federation to have the
program.
CHESTER Pl'A meets at
7:30 p .m . in the elementary
school. Open house.
CANDYSTRIPERS, 7 p.m .
capping ceremony. Veterans
Memorial Hospital cafeteria.
• Thanksgiving tray favors to be
made for the patients.
RACINE PI'A 7:30 p.m. at
. "' · school. Cyu Lee, ch ild
psychologist will be the
, speaker. Fifth grade students
to serve refreshments.
TUESDAY
FRIENDLY Circle, Trinity ·
Church, 7:30 p.m . Mrs. Hoy
Mayer, program lead&lt;r.
SYRACUSE - · MINERSVILLE baseball boosters 7:30
p.m. at Municipal building .
~ for rwnmage sale to be
, IUde. All persona urged to

. CLEVELAND HOSTS
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
American Revolution Bicen·
tennial celebratioo will be held
here in 1976, May.or Halph J.
Perk announced Friday. Perk
sa id Cleveland may receive as
much as $25 million in federal
funds to act as a host city. The
mayor said at least half·of the
federal money would be spent
on construction of a world

GIFT

M

each eyening; special musical

support Scouting in the tristate area with their time and
money."
He also expressed heartfelt
appreciation to the 216 leaders
of BSA units who deeply involve youth in a quality
program." This is one of the
objectives of BOYPOWER '76,
the Council 's long-range
program. ,
" We say that Scouting
today 's a lot more than you
think, and it is only through the
devoted attention of parents,
adult volunteer leaders, and
, those who support the Tri.State
Area Council financially that
we can do our share to help
boys be mentally and
physically fit and to become

ONE OF THE TWO 1959 models owned by Clarence Baker of Hcedsvllle
who said that Edsels were the best cars he ever owned.

. ~~.:::::::::::::~:::::::::;::::::::::~~~

SUNDAY
REVIVAL at Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene, Nov .
IS through Nov. · 25 with the
· Rev. Edward J . Hundl ey,
Columbus, evangelist, 7:30

U&gt;anks to so many people who men of character trained for

The Tri.StBte Area Council is
a member agency of the Umted
Community ,service In Huntington and the Boyd County, ~
Kentucky, Community Chest. •

GaHipolis.

•

Mason Furniture
HERMAN GRATE
PH. 773-5592
MASON, W.VA.

o.

FREE DEUVERY

UNnL DECEMBER

MAXWELL HOUSE

. Jar

I

I

I

.

FREEZE DRIED

Van Camp Beanee Weenees . "::"'33c
Big John's Home Style•oooLu '·~~'61c
Big John's Woodsman's Stew'·-"":""s7c
Pillsbury Ricti 'n Easy ••osr'""
49c
1
Stokely Fruit Cocktail . . . . . ~ 32c
Stokely Whole Kernel Corn . ~~ 25c
Stokely Cut Green Beans . . .11 ~'":28c

=-

�.

.

.

Scouting supporters appreciated
HUNTINGTON - In the
tradition of Thanksgiving,
appreciation was extended this
week by Bob E. Myers,
president of the Tri.State Area
Council, Boy Scouts ol
America, to those who support
Scouting in the council area.
"We are most thankful to the
thousands of men and women

in the tri-state area who make
it possible for our youth to have
the advantages of Scouting,"
he said.
" More than 170 chartered
partners sponsor BSA units so
that over 7,500 youth have
experienced scouting in their
own neighborhOods.
11
At this significant time of

year, we pause to give grateful

JOHN REECE , POMEitOY , owns one of the 2,846 1960 Edsels produced wltlch mre described as ' 'Wam•ed-&lt;&gt;ver
Fords." It's in mint condition, ready for the road.

GOODY IN FORGER V
MIDDLEPORT - Army Sgt.
JameS A. Goody, 21, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Paul J. Goody, 181
Beech st., participated with
other American and Allied
troops in Exercise Reforger V
in Germany in October. Sgt.
Goody is regularly assigned as
a radar team leader with Troop
C, 3rd Squadron of the 3rd
Infantry Division .
NOW YOU KNOW
One year on the planet
Jupiter equals 11.96 years on
· earth.

•

·Loser to wznner
(Continued from Page I )

surgery might save it.
Ttie infamous "horse-collar" planted
IQWlrely in the grille already was the
symbol of a loser.
There was major surgery ordered on
the Edsel. Merged in February of 1958 with
the lincoln-Mercury Division, a totally
redesigned Edsel was on hand in 1959. This
new Edsel was trumpeted as a "premium
quality low-priced car." It didn 't wash;
the loser image stuck.
In late 1959 the 1960 Edsel was in·
troduced. Mechanics knew it was a
wanned over Ford, of which 2,846 models
were turned off the production line in two
montha. Sales slipped even fa ste r .
On Nov. 19, 1959 the announcement
was made that production had stopped,
l!l&lt;actly three years to the day the 'Edsel
Division was formed back in 1956.
Time Magazine once recalled the
Edsel as the "wrong car for the wrong
market at the wrong time. 1'
'
Three '58 Models
Tbere are three 1958 models in Meigs
County. Two are owned by employees of
the Middleport division of the Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio Electric Company , Bill
Thomas and Hobert Goggins. Each of
these men own two door hardtops and plan
to restore them to original condition. The
third is a station wagon in Rutland that
was recently sold to a ma n in Charleston,
W.Va.
Tbere are also three 1959 models. Two
ol them are owned by Clarence Baker who
lives just outside Reedsville on S. H. 681.
Mr. Baker said that Edsels were " the best
cars I ever owned.'' The other 1959 is
owned by Jim Frecker of Pomeroy who
has invested many hours a nd dollars in its
restoration.
Tbe only 1960 modei found was just
purchased by John Reece of Pomeroy.
·~e·s car, which is in excclJeut con~

clition, is the only one of the seven
presently in running condition .
.
Heece admitted that his restoration
project was very easy as the previous
owner had kept the car in fine condition .
" All I needed to do was have the title
changed," Heece said. ·
The Edsel Clubs
In recent ·years as Edsels became
progre~~ively scarce chapters of Edsel
Cl ub s have bloomed everywhere,

especially in California. There are two
known clubs in America. One is the International Edsel Club, P. 0. Box 304,
Bellevue, Ohio 44811 with affiliated
chapters.
1'oday's prices range anywhere from

$25 for a real junker to whatever some nut
with dreams of investiJ1,g in the future will
pay,
·
Many people who own Edsels to&lt;lay
are frustrated or mnatellr mechan ics who .

Jove to tinker; to search out original parts
for Uleir battered, beloved Edsel which
may he sitting among high weeds in the
back yard or in a barn, or in one side of a
two-car garage. It may run or it may not
run; be jacked up off its aging tires or
settling slowly into the ground.
During U1e 60s most Edsel owners let
their cars go to the junk yard when miles
inevitably had taken their toll of metal,
wood and rubber.
Down to about 20,000 in number of the
originai 100,000 plus Edsels, junk yards
will get few of those remaining. From here
on in one decrepit Edsel will be joined into
another of the ~arne vintage to create one
"mint" Edsel a Ia 1958, 1959, or 1960.
Yes there
was the death of a car in
.
1959 when Edsel production stopped. But
now , 14 years later, perhaps the loser has
become a wirmer. Perhaps!

.

Social · II Books reviewed
· Calendad

numbers, public invited.
WOMEN ' S
Mis sio nary
Convention, Hocking• District,
. Naomi Baptist Church, 2 p.m.
Mrs . Campbell
HDrper,
president.
.. -·MONDAY
ANNUAL Meigs County

grange officers conference at
Rock Springs Grange Hall.
Conference follows 6:30 p.m.
potluck supper. Those Dttending take covered dish and.
own table service.
61st ANNIVERSAHY dinner
at Theodorus Council I 7,
Daughters of America, 6:30
p.m. at IOOF Hail. All charter

MIDDLEPOHT Two
books, one relatin g to
maternity c~re for unmarried
teenage girls, and the other to
the freedom of living without
fea r , guilt, or inhibitions, were
reviewed at the Wednesd~y
meeting of the Middleport
l,itel'ary Club at the home of
Mrs. Rooney Downing.

Mrs. Richard Owen reviewed
" The Gir ls of Huntin gton

•ttend.
. ANNUAL
Thanksgiving
. . . _ for members of Drew
Weblltr f&gt;Git :IV ~ p.m. at post

inVolved in operating such a
home and the sympathetic
approach to so lving the
problems.
"Feel Free" by David S.
Biscott, M.D., a psychiatrist,

citizenship."

•

9- The Sunday Times -Sentinel, SUnday, Nov. 18,1973

••

I~A TASTit~ !!I'

·-

uviNG ROOM SALE

'

-·
:=.
z:
0

:e
j::

Monday thru Wednesday 9 to 9

Cl

Prices Effective Thru Wed ., Nov . 21
These prices good in Gallipolis a·nd Middleport Stores only.

.~

:e
.......

CLOSED THANKSGIVING DAY

ONLY
3 TO SELL

COMPARE AT •595.00

$349

1st Thru 4th Rib

Smoked Shank Half

HAYMAN'S STORE
AT 104 W. MAIN

POMEROY

( Foo•m•orlv Big Bend Bargain Store · ·

trade center.

•

GOOD
SELECTION

Pork Ch ops ., to'1~" • • •
• •
Ham Steak or Roast ·m~w lb. 5149 Delmonico Steaks
• lb. 5249
Boneless Beef Roast J~g~. lb. 5129 Semi~Boneless Ham o'c?¥t'fr • lb. S149
4Sc:
Ground Chuck 'o'f·,J~~ • • lb.s119 A&amp;P Cranberry Delight
• lb.99c: A&amp;P Cranberry Relish ...... 59c:
Sliced Bacon /r'?t~
Ham
lb. 5159 Turbot Fillets
SLICEO

• lb. 99c

19-lb.
And

I

Over

Hold!

Berklin~

39

SUPER-RIGHT 9UALITY!

.LAY THEM AWAY NOW!
Small
Depclit
Will
THE

the Store.

Great Thanksgiv:119 Day Specials

Ll.l

INtOATaS

·

CUT

13oOI·
...

I

oup

I

1

WHOLE OR.

PORTION

e

10 to

lb.

Turkey Halves
Capons

Comfort Action Chairs

'

U.S.D.A. Grade "A"

18-lb.

I

•

81o

U.lb.
Avr.

•

• •

lb.73C/'

•

• lb.5109

10 to
18-lb.

Geese
Ducks

lb.
• • • • • •
• • • • • •

ALSO AVAILABLE: Swift's Butterball,
Honeysuckle or Armour BuHerbasted Turkeys.
(

and inhibitions and break the
shackles of self-denial.
Mebers in response to roll
call gave a comment on the

I

I

e.,.oa.a,
y.....,

1

•

California Broccoli •
Fresh Cranberries
Florida Taligeloes ~~'i·
I

... 29c

1·1b.

I

• .... 79e

.

8ror5100

I

I

Acorn Squash • • • • .... 19c:
Navel OrangeS

.

I

I

books. Mrs. Emerson Jones
presided and the hos tess
served candy. The goods for
the blind were on display at the
mee tin g.

Check Our Prices!

FORD RESIGNS
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!)
Frederick S. Ford Jr ., has
was reviewed by Mrs. Arthur · resigned from the board of .
Strauss. He gave in the book a directors of the Libbey.Qwensmaster plan to responsibility Ford Co., offh:'ials announced
without guilt, and a s t~p to step Friday. Ford's resignation was

Turkey Fixins'

Stuffing Mix

*
', .

I

~'\) (IR P[UORMA~C! 'Dt.

; Good Housekeeping.,.•
~ ,

-(ifCt

termed for personal reasons.

GUo\RA NIH S

Eft'.-}.

,,._~

~':.'"

f,f£111 OR IIHIJND HI(.~

.Croutons

I

I

•

QE;p Sf.i.ee.d.,

pkl'·
Stuffi1g Bread • tt-••·49c
STOVE TOP
.
Ctrnbread Stuffln' • pk
COUNTRY TREAT
$119 .
roll
·Sausage W:E • • 1-lb.

Jan• Park•r Cube•

324 SECOND AVE.
DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS
OPPOSITE THE PARK

STANDARD FRESH

Opten •
I

I

•

• •

'P.....eapp~ .

. =- 35c:

49C

I

NOW AT NEW LOCATION!

.=

$139

each

$
ZO-oz.

00

cans

DEL MONTE SALE!

Fruit Cocktail • 3~;: age:
Stewed Tomatoes 3=·agc:
corn • 4::st

A&amp;P JELLIED OR WHOLE

Cntu.heNtg
s~

Nog A., Rolls .~~~~~E 3pkg•
Tomato Paste
3=at
• soFT • •
39c:
Margar10e
Dry Yeast~~~~~- • 3~•1r
Cornbread Stuffins~g;E~;;.4t
Handi Whip FR~lEN.
CANNED

·-

HUNT'S

AlP

l·lb.

bOwl

CRISCO
SHORTENING

YAC
PACK

3.:;.$125

---------"-'"~-----· ------ ·

GIRLS

7-14
Russ Girl Co·ordinates

,...~

"•'ie\ie'6 1i &gt;•OL

----~'$12.00-$14.00

Slacks

Skirts ~ ·. , . · - ~

Blazers
Sweaters
Blouses

INSTANT

· .. _ $9.00-$10.00
$18.00-$22.00
$6.50-$9.00
$8.00

l=oot£ . ••••

'i:"$127

Taster's Choice • •
~$112
Maxwell House •
2!;.$218
Maxwell Houst
Maxwell House
1-5209
Instant Coffee
....,.,5219
Maxim ·Coffee • •.~or.
Keebler Zesta Saltines ..... ~ 48c
Aunt Nellie's Pickled m~t•
:::·354;
Aunt Nellie's Red Cabbage . . - · 37c
GROUND COFFEE

I

TODDLERS

Pants
2·7. $4 :50 . $8.00
8.14, $5.50.$10.50
Shirts 2·14
$3.00 . $6.50
Swea.t er Vests
2·12, $5.00 - $8.00
Coats2-12
$8.50 . $38.00

liii&lt;LS &amp; BOYS

GIRLS

PANT SETS

4 • 6X

Doe Spun. Thomas,
Wonderall, $5.00·$22.00
Pajamas
$5.00·$6.50
Co·ordinates
'
Slacks
$3.00·$6.00
Tops
$3.00.$4.50

Playmore &amp;. Coming Thing

Coordinates. '

Slacks
$5.50-$8.00
. $5.50-$9.00
Tops
Pants Sets
$10.00 - $18.00

•USE OUR LAY-AWAY
. eFREE GIFT WRAPPING

,_,

.........

"fashions lor tile young•

1

446-4343

•

•
•

Stylish Recliners have Deluxe 3-Way Action Mechanism
for sitting, lounging or full reclining. The ultimate in
comfort!
Roi:k ·A-Lounger has same 3-Way Action ... plus it rocks!
Superior Berkline constructiQn ... choice of handsome
vinyl, vinyl -fabric combination or decorator fabric.

mast:-hargr

JACK&amp; ]ILl'S
P~'lRe

.

GROUND COFFEE

Bershlre &amp; . Debby Dare

326 Second Ave.

.

GROUND COFFEE

BOYS

' - · MeeUM to follow
I

the story of a maternity home
for teenage girls, the troubles

House" by Blossom Elfman, ' outline on how to confront fears

members requested to be
present. The dinner will be
potluck .
. MEIGS Chapter DeMolay,
Middleport Masonjc Temple,
7:30p.m. Also Mothers Club in
dining room at same time.
MONDAY
MIDDLEPOHT BPW meel'
at 7:30 p.m. at the Columbia
Gas Company . Mrs. Edgar
ReynoldS , chairwoman of
Foundation , Emble m and
Federation to have the
program.
CHESTER Pl'A meets at
7:30 p .m . in the elementary
school. Open house.
CANDYSTRIPERS, 7 p.m .
capping ceremony. Veterans
Memorial Hospital cafeteria.
• Thanksgiving tray favors to be
made for the patients.
RACINE PI'A 7:30 p.m. at
. "' · school. Cyu Lee, ch ild
psychologist will be the
, speaker. Fifth grade students
to serve refreshments.
TUESDAY
FRIENDLY Circle, Trinity ·
Church, 7:30 p.m . Mrs. Hoy
Mayer, program lead&lt;r.
SYRACUSE - · MINERSVILLE baseball boosters 7:30
p.m. at Municipal building .
~ for rwnmage sale to be
, IUde. All persona urged to

. CLEVELAND HOSTS
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
American Revolution Bicen·
tennial celebratioo will be held
here in 1976, May.or Halph J.
Perk announced Friday. Perk
sa id Cleveland may receive as
much as $25 million in federal
funds to act as a host city. The
mayor said at least half·of the
federal money would be spent
on construction of a world

GIFT

M

each eyening; special musical

support Scouting in the tristate area with their time and
money."
He also expressed heartfelt
appreciation to the 216 leaders
of BSA units who deeply involve youth in a quality
program." This is one of the
objectives of BOYPOWER '76,
the Council 's long-range
program. ,
" We say that Scouting
today 's a lot more than you
think, and it is only through the
devoted attention of parents,
adult volunteer leaders, and
, those who support the Tri.State
Area Council financially that
we can do our share to help
boys be mentally and
physically fit and to become

ONE OF THE TWO 1959 models owned by Clarence Baker of Hcedsvllle
who said that Edsels were the best cars he ever owned.

. ~~.:::::::::::::~:::::::::;::::::::::~~~

SUNDAY
REVIVAL at Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene, Nov .
IS through Nov. · 25 with the
· Rev. Edward J . Hundl ey,
Columbus, evangelist, 7:30

U&gt;anks to so many people who men of character trained for

The Tri.StBte Area Council is
a member agency of the Umted
Community ,service In Huntington and the Boyd County, ~
Kentucky, Community Chest. •

GaHipolis.

•

Mason Furniture
HERMAN GRATE
PH. 773-5592
MASON, W.VA.

o.

FREE DEUVERY

UNnL DECEMBER

MAXWELL HOUSE

. Jar

I

I

I

.

FREEZE DRIED

Van Camp Beanee Weenees . "::"'33c
Big John's Home Style•oooLu '·~~'61c
Big John's Woodsman's Stew'·-"":""s7c
Pillsbury Ricti 'n Easy ••osr'""
49c
1
Stokely Fruit Cocktail . . . . . ~ 32c
Stokely Whole Kernel Corn . ~~ 25c
Stokely Cut Green Beans . . .11 ~'":28c

=-

�10 - The Sunday Times-SentineL

11 -TheSunday Times -Sentinel,Sw:day, Nov. 18,!97J

No''·

fythian Sisters hold convention
••
•• WILKESVILI, E

The were : grand senior, Helen
"'nual Convention and School Contiulno, Columbus; grand
f Instruction of Pythian junior, Arline Wenzel, Fair·
.SSters, District No. II was view Park; past grand chief,
ield at the new Pythian Garnet Reichelderfer, CirAsters' Hall of Wilkesville cleville; district deputy grand
1emple No. 59!, Wilkesville, chiefs, Eleanor Cholensky
'fednesday,
Nov.
7. District 13 Cleveland, and
egistraUon and coffee bour Elma Rains, District No. 11,
r the afternoon session was Cclumbus.
om 12;31)-1:30 p.m.
Roll call and report of
: Ccnvention was called to temples were given by the
{tder by Robbi.e Good, acting following: Nelsonville No. 137
tstrict deputy grand chief, bY Nelle Patton; Gallipolis No.
IInce Thebma Campbell, 76 by Pearl Bowen of Wilkes3istrict deputy grand chief was ville Temple in the absence of
Unable to perform her duties their secretary, and Wilkesliecause of illness.
ville No. 591 by Pearl Bowen.
: Invocation was given by
The charter was draped for
tJeva Metz, Wilkesville, Sister Eliza Steele, East
ll'emple No. 591, after which the Palestine, bY Mae Delaney,
llible was opened and the flag Mable Wood and Shirley
1\resented by Shirley Peters, Peters.
(llanager for the session.
The memorial service was
; _The welcome was given by exemplified by Nelle Patton,
t:torner Wells, councilman of Sylvia Bownes, Flossie Cepe,
»&gt;'ilkesville, with response by and Erma Pierce, from Valley
Jr'line Wenzel, grand junior of Temple No. 137.
The convention officers were
It• state of Ohio.
~ Robbie Good conducted the installed by grand chief, Anna
rnformal introductions of Ogdin, grand manager, Gladys
C:rand Temple Officers who Major, and grand senior,

r
With The Christmas
••

•

•

Miss Beverly Raye Ervin

Mr. and Mrs. Curtis B. Smith

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Ervin, _Racine, are announcing the ehgagement of their
daughter, Beverly Raye, to Roger G. Willford, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Willford, Portland. Miss Ervin is a 1973 graduate
of Southern High School and is presently employed by the
Kroger Company. Willford, a 1972 graduate of Southern High
School, is a student at the Ohio Institute of Technology,
Columbus. He is employed part-time at the Sears
Pistribution Center. A 's ummer wedding is being planned.

Woman 's Missionary Society of

RACINE - In a double ring
ceremony at the Harmony
United Methodist Church of
Jane Lew, W. Va ., Miss Sandy
L. DePoy and Curtis B. Smith

exchanged wedding vows .

bring a guest and they will hold
a gift exchange. Bonnie Fields
and Roberta Maynard will
serve on the decoratin g
committee and Sarah Gibbs
will be in charge of the gift
. exchange. ·
The program presented by
Orpha Fields was on "Indians
and the Church". The Objectives : To come to an· ~un­
derstanding and participate io

the New Haven First Church
of God held their November
meeting in the Missionary
Building with Bonnie Fields
and Sue Erwin hostesses .
Devotions were given by Sarah
Gibbs using the 19th Psalm,
Indian Version. Viola Roush
led in prayer.
· The members voted to send
money for·Christmas gifts to be an over-view of the waY in
bought' for Dora Champion which
the church has
Mission Station in Pittsburgh, ministered to the Indian
Pa .
American in the past; To
The theme for the Christ's gather an awareness and some
Birthday Observance in- Wlderstanding of the manner in
1xoduced was, "B~ Born in Us which the Church of God is
Today" . The state goal this · ministering to the Indian
year is $25,000. It was an- American in the present; To
nounced that December 25 will sense the importance of
be West Virginia's day to ministering to the Indian
participate in the Pre- American in new ways in the
Christmas Prayer. Vigil. The immediate future .
local society's hour will be 8 - 9
A letter was read from Orp.m . and will be held at the ville and Emma Lansberry
church.
about their work in Wounded
A demonstration party will Knee, S. D. Bonnie Fields had a
be held next Tuesday and will display of several Indian
be conducted by Roberta pictures and articles. She also
· Maynard. Orders are being showed an Indian AineriC:an
taken by members. · Me.m- Bible . These items were loaned
bership numbers 27.
to Bonnie from an Indian
Plans were made to visit American in Lincoln Park.
patients at Lakin State Mi chigan. The program
Hospital . Gifts and refresh- closed with Mrs. Orpha Fields
ments will be taken . This is a presenting a "Ceremony of
project that the society has Wearing Mo ~cas ins ". Each
been doing annually.
one present received a
It was announced that Dora miniature pair of moccasins to
Wood had been presented an wear to remind them to have a
· Honorary Gift Certificate new sense of fellowship with
during the Wednesday Prayer Indian Americans and with
· Meeting service. The sum of each other. Some may wish to

bouffant veil of illusion and
carried a white Bible topped
with a bouquet of gold mums
The bride's attendants were
Susan Sinnette and Phyllis
Ord, Jane Lew. Best man for
the bridegroom was Lyle

APPLE GROVE, Ohio - A
Thanksgiving service
highlighted a fellowship dinner
hosted by the United Methodist
Women of the Apple Grove
Church last Saturday evening
at the Letart Falls Community
Center.
Dallas Hill led in the song

Darrell Norris, Tracy Norris,

closed with prayer led by
Roberta Maynard.

Mrs. Bertha Robinson, the
Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Shiveley,
and Dolly Wolfe.

Each one present were given

The tables, covered in white,

Indian napkins as the hostesses
se rved the refreshments. Each
symbol on the napkin was
narq~s and given its meailing.

featured flower arrangements

Attending . .wert:

•

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

I
I

of miniature chrysanthemums.

I
I

HERE'S MY APPLICATION WITH 'MY
FIRST DEPOSIT TO THE CLUB CHECKED:

I

1 . 49 Weekly Deposits@ . . .
Check (with Bonus) .

11974

0
50'
'25

0
'1
•so

0
•2
'100

0

•s

'250

0
'10
•soo

The degree work was conferred on Maxine Wells.
Martha Ward was transferred
from Gallipolis Temple No. 76,
Music was presented - by
Nelle Patton, pasf grand
trustee, from Valley Temple
No. 137, Nelsonville.
Director of works was
Evelyn DeVault, Wilkesville.
The silver offering was given to
grand senior for the grand
chief's " labor of Love." -

aclmowledgt.-d

C:l

contribution.

Plans were made for the annual Christmas party to be held
at the home of Mrs. Louis
Osborne.
Refreshments were served
following the meeting to those
named and Mrs . Conrad
Ohlinger',
Mrs.
Elwood
Bowers, Mrs. Stanley Bass and
Mrs. Denver Kapple.

WOMEN TO MEET
DEXTER - The Meigs
County Women's Fellowship
will meet in Dexter, Friday,
Nov. 23, at 7:30p.m. A love gift
'
will be accepted for children of
Corrections and remarks the Wooster Children's home .
were given by the grand senior.
Those who cannot attend are to
Resolution report was read send their gifts to -Bonnie
bY committee from Nelson- Pickons, Pomeroy, Rt. 4.
ville. Tickets were sold on an
afghan which was won by Nora
AT CAPITAL BASE
Cox, Nelsonville.
POMEROY - Marine PFC.
District Deputy Grand Chief, ·Alvin R. Smith, son of Mr. and
Thelma Campbell wishes to Mrs. Elmo F. Smith of Route
thank everyone who helped to 2, Pomeroy, has reported for
make the convention a success. duty at the Marine Base at

MlDDLEPORT -'- Members
of the Golden Rule Class of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church enjoyed a bean and
cornbread din9er rece"tly at
the church. The Thanksgiving

motif was carried out in the
decorations . Relish trays,
pumpkin pie and cherry
cheesecake completed the

menu .
Mrs. Don Wilson, president
of the group, handled the
arrangements with the assistWashington, D.C. He joined the
Marine Corps in July 1972.

lliiCe of Mrs. Gerald Anthony
and Mrs. Tony Fowler.
·Plans were made for a
Christmas dinner at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Tony Fowler
next month.
Attending were the Rev.
Stephen Scaggs, who had
grace, and his wife, Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Walburn, Mr. and
Mrs. Tony Fowler and grandson, Michl King, Mr. and Mrs.
Don Wilson, Darrell Scaggs,
and Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Wells. Contributing a dessert
for the dinner, but unable to
attend were Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Lewis.

VOTERS OF SALISBURY
My sincere thanks to my many friends
and supporters who helped to elect me
as trustee.

Bernard D. Gilkey
PD. POLITICAL ADV.

Carpenter, Orpha Fields,
Pansy Fry, Becky Reed, Rena
Johnson, Sarah Gibbs, Roberta
Maynard and Grace Cunningham.

SATURDAY AND SUNDAY ONLY
NOVEMBER 17th &amp; 18th

15 PIECE CHICKEN
DINNER
FEED AFAMILY OF 5

$

745

14 OZ. PKG.

I
I

~

GAU.lPOliS. OHIO

FOR

WHIPPED
TOPPING

DEVILS
FOOD

TURKE

14~

29~

City • - ••••••..•••. ~ State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Zip Code . . . • • . . • • .

13 oz.

I
I

49~

Signature. . . • • • • . • • . . • • . . • . • . . • . . . • . • . . • • • . • . . • . . . • • • • • • • • . ·:

~--------------- ----~----------------- J

Join Now

I

For
.. 1974

'

I

••

:
••

NONE-SUCH

•~

MINCE
MEAT
I ••
••
••
••

No other color TV American-made or importedgives you this kind of
owner protection

POINT
PROTECTION
PACKAGE

1

A quality product- if's the best kind of protection

2
3
4
5

One-ye.ar free parts and labor warranty on all
1974 Admiral color sets.

we can grve you.

pe

SUPER-SOLARCOLOR TV

... 280Z. 79~
..•
.." CHARMIN
•"

5rOILET
..
"
S
"'TISSUE
~

.

HART'S
SLICED

PEACHES

STOKELY
PEARS

STOKELY

GREEN
BEANS

OR

FRUIT ·
COCKTAIL

·303

303 CAN

$ 00

~

FOR

'

4 ROU.S

Th.e CaiMOn(5L5701. A .unique furniture design InBrass corner fit-

spired by mli rtary campa1gn chests.

tings, swivel casters. Walnut veneers on selected

hardwoods.

W, 17W" D.

Five-year picture tub:e protection . ·
Free service loaners for color TV's.

Coast-to-coast toll-free owner hot line.

The Nouvellu/5L.5704. A showpiece cabinet designed

Look a little closer ...
you get a: lot more from ·

dramaticalfy' 1Nith walnut veneers.
2BV•"" H, 32¥1~ W, 18V4 .. D.

Adn.iral

...Color Maaterr•. Five-In-one touch !~ ar control auto-

for avant-garde decors. Wh ite vinyl .sides contrast

Those

. ·

.

Tile Sevlfle/lll5718. Opulent Mediterranean '":~.~~~~~~~
piece with concealed, swivel casters. Pecan v1
on.selecteC!_ hardw~o..ds; non-wood panels.
29 H, 431&gt; W, 19~ D.
.

fl•• Super-Sol•rcolor mc•delo leelure:

matically locks In Automatic Fine Tuning (AFC) and
adjusts color, tint. brightness and contrast to pre-set
levels.

KELLOGGS

black matrix design assures brilliar.1t, high-contrast
color-Admiral's brightest picture.

For Easy Pickup Call 446-2682
Your Order Wtll Be Waiting.

~qnppE

I

YELLOW

CREME

Super-Sofarcolor black m.trlx picture tube. Negative

"THAT OLD FASHIONED GOODNESS"

FINEST

I
I
1 Mr. Mrs. Miss .....••.••.••............•..........•. Please Print 1
II Street • • • • • • • . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I

The Rev. Mr. Shiveley had
prayer preceding the meeting.

'

'.

SAVE

IGA

WHITE

I

Fields, Sue Erwin, Viola

while as a rerhinder of the
Indian prayer . .. "Forbid that
I judge any man until I have
walked two moons in his
moccas_ins". The meeting

·

Hoy ; manager, Mary Helm;
protector, Mable Wood ; and
guard, Mae Delaney.
Formal introductions of
grand and imporUlnt officers
by the most excellent chief was
followed by a report of investigating committee, action
and balloting of candidates.
The degree staff captain,
Gladys Major , initiated
Maxine Wells, Betty Biggs,
Opal Biggs, Erna Jesse, Joan
Hensley , Irene Jackson, Karen
Sue Hoy, Joan Wood, Jennie
Maddy, Kathy Douglas, Connie
Graves and Clara Shenefield.

Canada, par 1ially supported by
tlw society . The letter

01
'70 I
'1,000

Bonnie ·

wear them every day for a

1

Pearl

Bowen ; treasurer, Loisene

can
I

group with Jan Norris and

Shiveley at the piano: A film,
"Grandfather's Thanksgiving"
was shown by the minister.
Attending were Mr . and Mrs.
James Riffle, Jimmy, Dale,
Steve, Kathy, Tony and
Johnny, Mr. and Mrs. Dallas ·
Hill and Dean, Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest
Clark, Mrs . Stella
service and there were poems
by Mrs. Donna Hill and Mrs . . Jarrell, John Hill, Greg Huff.
Betty Shiveley. Scripture and man, Mr. and Mfs, Dorsey
prayer was by the Rev. Parsons, Mr. and Mrs. Russel1
Howard Shiveley alid there Roush, Sharon, Cindy·, David
were several hymns by the and Eddie, Mr. and Mrs.

honor .
A "potluck" dinner at6 p .m.
will be held for the December
meeting in the Missionary
Building, Each member is to

2nd &amp; OUVE ST.

secretary ,

29 oz.

Plus Free Favors When You Open Your Account At Our Office

UMW enjoys dinner

Roush, Eleanor Davis, Faye

iqukt

There's an extra Christmas gift tu.cked into your 1974 Christmas
Club at the Meigs Branch of the Athens County Savings and Loan.
It's~ free- 50th payment . .No gimmicks! Nothing to buy! To
qualify for your "bonus" all you need to do is make all the first 49
of the scheduled payments in your Christmas Club coupon book.
We will then add the 50th payment asa "bonus." It's our way of
saying "thank you" for compl·eting the first 49 payments.

and marigolds.

The wedding was an even t of
Sept. , .8. The bride is the
daughter of Mr. and · Mrs. .Nesselroad, Ravenswood, and
Walter Hicks of Jane Lew, W. the ushers were Roger Hicks
Va ., cmd the groom is the son of and Douglas Hicks.
Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Smith,
A · reception honoring the
Rt. I , Racine.
couple was held in the Legion
Given in marriage by her Hall at Jane Lew.
b~other-in-law,
Frederick
For a wedding trip to Black
Bleigh, she wore a gown of Water Falls, W.Va., the bride
white satin and taffeta with changed in to a cream colored
accents of white lace and pants suit.
pearls. The skirt terminated in
The couple resides on a rural
a tl'ain at the baCk . She wore a route near Weston, W.Va.

$25 was given to Missions in her

No Coupons - No Limit
PINT OF COLE SLAW
PINT OF RAKFn BEANS
6 ROLLS. N0 SUBSTITUTES

grand senior, Helen Contizano
in the absen ce of the grand
chief of Ohio, Bonna Sctumder,
Rt. 13, Box 351, Huron , 0. who
had just been released from the
hospital. Also remarks were
made by other guests.
A delicious dinner was
served at "The Blg Dipper" for
all who wished to partake. The
table
arrangement
was
presented by Bob Will of the
Vinton County Bank, favors
were from The Pomeroy
National Bank, and Clair
Ponn 's Service Station.
The evening session was
opened in ritualistic form with
the most excellent. chief of
Wilkesville Temple, Anna
Ogdin presiding. She presented
beautiful corsages to the grand
temple officers, past chief,
Shirley Peters, and pianist,
Nelle Patton.
CXJnvention officers in their
chairs were past chief, Shirley
Peters; excellent senior, Neva
Metz; excellent junior, Pam

Ogdin ;

I'UMt::IWY - Bar.dages for
the leprosy hospital in South
India were rolled following a
meeting of the Evangeline
Missionary Society of the
Pomeroy Church of Christ
Tuesday.
The meeting was held at the
home of Mrs. Betty Spencer
and members in response to
roll call gave thoughts on
Thanksgiving. Mrs. Spencer
read " Little Things" and Mrs.
Edward Venoy told the story of
tl1e first Thanksgiving.
Read at the meeting by Mrs .
Clyde Andrews was a letter
from the Clemens Christian
Children's Cottage in Ontario,

Miss DePoy, Mr. Smith
marry in W Va. church

Missionary ladies meet ,
NEW HAVEN, W. Va.- The

Shirley Peters, Wilk esville
Temple No. 591.
Remarks were given by

Golden Rule class meet's

Ladi'es roll bandages

CROUTETTES

90% IOIId Illite SS900 chaula features 27 transistors

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT,

OHIO
j

~diodes, rour Integrated circuits andi seven receiving
tubes . Modular circuit boards tor easoy servicing.
"lnatant Play" - lnstant sound ar:,d a picture In
seconds.

·
70-poalllon· UHF channel aalector. t.'vtakes Channels
14-83 as easy to tune as VHF.
Quality eound aystam. Dorian, Sevllle1.and Jame'Stown
.models feature two 4• Alnico V speakers for high
fidelity' TV sound; others have a sing lo 4" speaker.

!
I

The JameaiOWn/51.5715. An Early American reproduction with concealed swivel casters. Maple veneera
on hardwooda; non-wood panels.
·
29" H, 42W W, 19W D. ·

t

..~

16 LB.
AND UP

••

7 oz.

¢

JACK-o-LANTERN

SWEET
POTATOES
.

·-

BETSY ROSS

PAN ROLLS

3

PKGS.

$}00

IGA

TOMATO JUICE
460Z.CAN 39~

�10 - The Sunday Times-SentineL

11 -TheSunday Times -Sentinel,Sw:day, Nov. 18,!97J

No''·

fythian Sisters hold convention
••
•• WILKESVILI, E

The were : grand senior, Helen
"'nual Convention and School Contiulno, Columbus; grand
f Instruction of Pythian junior, Arline Wenzel, Fair·
.SSters, District No. II was view Park; past grand chief,
ield at the new Pythian Garnet Reichelderfer, CirAsters' Hall of Wilkesville cleville; district deputy grand
1emple No. 59!, Wilkesville, chiefs, Eleanor Cholensky
'fednesday,
Nov.
7. District 13 Cleveland, and
egistraUon and coffee bour Elma Rains, District No. 11,
r the afternoon session was Cclumbus.
om 12;31)-1:30 p.m.
Roll call and report of
: Ccnvention was called to temples were given by the
{tder by Robbi.e Good, acting following: Nelsonville No. 137
tstrict deputy grand chief, bY Nelle Patton; Gallipolis No.
IInce Thebma Campbell, 76 by Pearl Bowen of Wilkes3istrict deputy grand chief was ville Temple in the absence of
Unable to perform her duties their secretary, and Wilkesliecause of illness.
ville No. 591 by Pearl Bowen.
: Invocation was given by
The charter was draped for
tJeva Metz, Wilkesville, Sister Eliza Steele, East
ll'emple No. 591, after which the Palestine, bY Mae Delaney,
llible was opened and the flag Mable Wood and Shirley
1\resented by Shirley Peters, Peters.
(llanager for the session.
The memorial service was
; _The welcome was given by exemplified by Nelle Patton,
t:torner Wells, councilman of Sylvia Bownes, Flossie Cepe,
»&gt;'ilkesville, with response by and Erma Pierce, from Valley
Jr'line Wenzel, grand junior of Temple No. 137.
The convention officers were
It• state of Ohio.
~ Robbie Good conducted the installed by grand chief, Anna
rnformal introductions of Ogdin, grand manager, Gladys
C:rand Temple Officers who Major, and grand senior,

r
With The Christmas
••

•

•

Miss Beverly Raye Ervin

Mr. and Mrs. Curtis B. Smith

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Ervin, _Racine, are announcing the ehgagement of their
daughter, Beverly Raye, to Roger G. Willford, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Willford, Portland. Miss Ervin is a 1973 graduate
of Southern High School and is presently employed by the
Kroger Company. Willford, a 1972 graduate of Southern High
School, is a student at the Ohio Institute of Technology,
Columbus. He is employed part-time at the Sears
Pistribution Center. A 's ummer wedding is being planned.

Woman 's Missionary Society of

RACINE - In a double ring
ceremony at the Harmony
United Methodist Church of
Jane Lew, W. Va ., Miss Sandy
L. DePoy and Curtis B. Smith

exchanged wedding vows .

bring a guest and they will hold
a gift exchange. Bonnie Fields
and Roberta Maynard will
serve on the decoratin g
committee and Sarah Gibbs
will be in charge of the gift
. exchange. ·
The program presented by
Orpha Fields was on "Indians
and the Church". The Objectives : To come to an· ~un­
derstanding and participate io

the New Haven First Church
of God held their November
meeting in the Missionary
Building with Bonnie Fields
and Sue Erwin hostesses .
Devotions were given by Sarah
Gibbs using the 19th Psalm,
Indian Version. Viola Roush
led in prayer.
· The members voted to send
money for·Christmas gifts to be an over-view of the waY in
bought' for Dora Champion which
the church has
Mission Station in Pittsburgh, ministered to the Indian
Pa .
American in the past; To
The theme for the Christ's gather an awareness and some
Birthday Observance in- Wlderstanding of the manner in
1xoduced was, "B~ Born in Us which the Church of God is
Today" . The state goal this · ministering to the Indian
year is $25,000. It was an- American in the present; To
nounced that December 25 will sense the importance of
be West Virginia's day to ministering to the Indian
participate in the Pre- American in new ways in the
Christmas Prayer. Vigil. The immediate future .
local society's hour will be 8 - 9
A letter was read from Orp.m . and will be held at the ville and Emma Lansberry
church.
about their work in Wounded
A demonstration party will Knee, S. D. Bonnie Fields had a
be held next Tuesday and will display of several Indian
be conducted by Roberta pictures and articles. She also
· Maynard. Orders are being showed an Indian AineriC:an
taken by members. · Me.m- Bible . These items were loaned
bership numbers 27.
to Bonnie from an Indian
Plans were made to visit American in Lincoln Park.
patients at Lakin State Mi chigan. The program
Hospital . Gifts and refresh- closed with Mrs. Orpha Fields
ments will be taken . This is a presenting a "Ceremony of
project that the society has Wearing Mo ~cas ins ". Each
been doing annually.
one present received a
It was announced that Dora miniature pair of moccasins to
Wood had been presented an wear to remind them to have a
· Honorary Gift Certificate new sense of fellowship with
during the Wednesday Prayer Indian Americans and with
· Meeting service. The sum of each other. Some may wish to

bouffant veil of illusion and
carried a white Bible topped
with a bouquet of gold mums
The bride's attendants were
Susan Sinnette and Phyllis
Ord, Jane Lew. Best man for
the bridegroom was Lyle

APPLE GROVE, Ohio - A
Thanksgiving service
highlighted a fellowship dinner
hosted by the United Methodist
Women of the Apple Grove
Church last Saturday evening
at the Letart Falls Community
Center.
Dallas Hill led in the song

Darrell Norris, Tracy Norris,

closed with prayer led by
Roberta Maynard.

Mrs. Bertha Robinson, the
Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Shiveley,
and Dolly Wolfe.

Each one present were given

The tables, covered in white,

Indian napkins as the hostesses
se rved the refreshments. Each
symbol on the napkin was
narq~s and given its meailing.

featured flower arrangements

Attending . .wert:

•

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

I
I

of miniature chrysanthemums.

I
I

HERE'S MY APPLICATION WITH 'MY
FIRST DEPOSIT TO THE CLUB CHECKED:

I

1 . 49 Weekly Deposits@ . . .
Check (with Bonus) .

11974

0
50'
'25

0
'1
•so

0
•2
'100

0

•s

'250

0
'10
•soo

The degree work was conferred on Maxine Wells.
Martha Ward was transferred
from Gallipolis Temple No. 76,
Music was presented - by
Nelle Patton, pasf grand
trustee, from Valley Temple
No. 137, Nelsonville.
Director of works was
Evelyn DeVault, Wilkesville.
The silver offering was given to
grand senior for the grand
chief's " labor of Love." -

aclmowledgt.-d

C:l

contribution.

Plans were made for the annual Christmas party to be held
at the home of Mrs. Louis
Osborne.
Refreshments were served
following the meeting to those
named and Mrs . Conrad
Ohlinger',
Mrs.
Elwood
Bowers, Mrs. Stanley Bass and
Mrs. Denver Kapple.

WOMEN TO MEET
DEXTER - The Meigs
County Women's Fellowship
will meet in Dexter, Friday,
Nov. 23, at 7:30p.m. A love gift
'
will be accepted for children of
Corrections and remarks the Wooster Children's home .
were given by the grand senior.
Those who cannot attend are to
Resolution report was read send their gifts to -Bonnie
bY committee from Nelson- Pickons, Pomeroy, Rt. 4.
ville. Tickets were sold on an
afghan which was won by Nora
AT CAPITAL BASE
Cox, Nelsonville.
POMEROY - Marine PFC.
District Deputy Grand Chief, ·Alvin R. Smith, son of Mr. and
Thelma Campbell wishes to Mrs. Elmo F. Smith of Route
thank everyone who helped to 2, Pomeroy, has reported for
make the convention a success. duty at the Marine Base at

MlDDLEPORT -'- Members
of the Golden Rule Class of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church enjoyed a bean and
cornbread din9er rece"tly at
the church. The Thanksgiving

motif was carried out in the
decorations . Relish trays,
pumpkin pie and cherry
cheesecake completed the

menu .
Mrs. Don Wilson, president
of the group, handled the
arrangements with the assistWashington, D.C. He joined the
Marine Corps in July 1972.

lliiCe of Mrs. Gerald Anthony
and Mrs. Tony Fowler.
·Plans were made for a
Christmas dinner at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Tony Fowler
next month.
Attending were the Rev.
Stephen Scaggs, who had
grace, and his wife, Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Walburn, Mr. and
Mrs. Tony Fowler and grandson, Michl King, Mr. and Mrs.
Don Wilson, Darrell Scaggs,
and Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Wells. Contributing a dessert
for the dinner, but unable to
attend were Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Lewis.

VOTERS OF SALISBURY
My sincere thanks to my many friends
and supporters who helped to elect me
as trustee.

Bernard D. Gilkey
PD. POLITICAL ADV.

Carpenter, Orpha Fields,
Pansy Fry, Becky Reed, Rena
Johnson, Sarah Gibbs, Roberta
Maynard and Grace Cunningham.

SATURDAY AND SUNDAY ONLY
NOVEMBER 17th &amp; 18th

15 PIECE CHICKEN
DINNER
FEED AFAMILY OF 5

$

745

14 OZ. PKG.

I
I

~

GAU.lPOliS. OHIO

FOR

WHIPPED
TOPPING

DEVILS
FOOD

TURKE

14~

29~

City • - ••••••..•••. ~ State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Zip Code . . . • • . . • • .

13 oz.

I
I

49~

Signature. . . • • • • . • • . . • • . . • . • . . • . . . • . • . . • • • . • . . • . . . • • • • • • • • . ·:

~--------------- ----~----------------- J

Join Now

I

For
.. 1974

'

I

••

:
••

NONE-SUCH

•~

MINCE
MEAT
I ••
••
••
••

No other color TV American-made or importedgives you this kind of
owner protection

POINT
PROTECTION
PACKAGE

1

A quality product- if's the best kind of protection

2
3
4
5

One-ye.ar free parts and labor warranty on all
1974 Admiral color sets.

we can grve you.

pe

SUPER-SOLARCOLOR TV

... 280Z. 79~
..•
.." CHARMIN
•"

5rOILET
..
"
S
"'TISSUE
~

.

HART'S
SLICED

PEACHES

STOKELY
PEARS

STOKELY

GREEN
BEANS

OR

FRUIT ·
COCKTAIL

·303

303 CAN

$ 00

~

FOR

'

4 ROU.S

Th.e CaiMOn(5L5701. A .unique furniture design InBrass corner fit-

spired by mli rtary campa1gn chests.

tings, swivel casters. Walnut veneers on selected

hardwoods.

W, 17W" D.

Five-year picture tub:e protection . ·
Free service loaners for color TV's.

Coast-to-coast toll-free owner hot line.

The Nouvellu/5L.5704. A showpiece cabinet designed

Look a little closer ...
you get a: lot more from ·

dramaticalfy' 1Nith walnut veneers.
2BV•"" H, 32¥1~ W, 18V4 .. D.

Adn.iral

...Color Maaterr•. Five-In-one touch !~ ar control auto-

for avant-garde decors. Wh ite vinyl .sides contrast

Those

. ·

.

Tile Sevlfle/lll5718. Opulent Mediterranean '":~.~~~~~~~
piece with concealed, swivel casters. Pecan v1
on.selecteC!_ hardw~o..ds; non-wood panels.
29 H, 431&gt; W, 19~ D.
.

fl•• Super-Sol•rcolor mc•delo leelure:

matically locks In Automatic Fine Tuning (AFC) and
adjusts color, tint. brightness and contrast to pre-set
levels.

KELLOGGS

black matrix design assures brilliar.1t, high-contrast
color-Admiral's brightest picture.

For Easy Pickup Call 446-2682
Your Order Wtll Be Waiting.

~qnppE

I

YELLOW

CREME

Super-Sofarcolor black m.trlx picture tube. Negative

"THAT OLD FASHIONED GOODNESS"

FINEST

I
I
1 Mr. Mrs. Miss .....••.••.••............•..........•. Please Print 1
II Street • • • • • • • . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I

The Rev. Mr. Shiveley had
prayer preceding the meeting.

'

'.

SAVE

IGA

WHITE

I

Fields, Sue Erwin, Viola

while as a rerhinder of the
Indian prayer . .. "Forbid that
I judge any man until I have
walked two moons in his
moccas_ins". The meeting

·

Hoy ; manager, Mary Helm;
protector, Mable Wood ; and
guard, Mae Delaney.
Formal introductions of
grand and imporUlnt officers
by the most excellent chief was
followed by a report of investigating committee, action
and balloting of candidates.
The degree staff captain,
Gladys Major , initiated
Maxine Wells, Betty Biggs,
Opal Biggs, Erna Jesse, Joan
Hensley , Irene Jackson, Karen
Sue Hoy, Joan Wood, Jennie
Maddy, Kathy Douglas, Connie
Graves and Clara Shenefield.

Canada, par 1ially supported by
tlw society . The letter

01
'70 I
'1,000

Bonnie ·

wear them every day for a

1

Pearl

Bowen ; treasurer, Loisene

can
I

group with Jan Norris and

Shiveley at the piano: A film,
"Grandfather's Thanksgiving"
was shown by the minister.
Attending were Mr . and Mrs.
James Riffle, Jimmy, Dale,
Steve, Kathy, Tony and
Johnny, Mr. and Mrs. Dallas ·
Hill and Dean, Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest
Clark, Mrs . Stella
service and there were poems
by Mrs. Donna Hill and Mrs . . Jarrell, John Hill, Greg Huff.
Betty Shiveley. Scripture and man, Mr. and Mfs, Dorsey
prayer was by the Rev. Parsons, Mr. and Mrs. Russel1
Howard Shiveley alid there Roush, Sharon, Cindy·, David
were several hymns by the and Eddie, Mr. and Mrs.

honor .
A "potluck" dinner at6 p .m.
will be held for the December
meeting in the Missionary
Building, Each member is to

2nd &amp; OUVE ST.

secretary ,

29 oz.

Plus Free Favors When You Open Your Account At Our Office

UMW enjoys dinner

Roush, Eleanor Davis, Faye

iqukt

There's an extra Christmas gift tu.cked into your 1974 Christmas
Club at the Meigs Branch of the Athens County Savings and Loan.
It's~ free- 50th payment . .No gimmicks! Nothing to buy! To
qualify for your "bonus" all you need to do is make all the first 49
of the scheduled payments in your Christmas Club coupon book.
We will then add the 50th payment asa "bonus." It's our way of
saying "thank you" for compl·eting the first 49 payments.

and marigolds.

The wedding was an even t of
Sept. , .8. The bride is the
daughter of Mr. and · Mrs. .Nesselroad, Ravenswood, and
Walter Hicks of Jane Lew, W. the ushers were Roger Hicks
Va ., cmd the groom is the son of and Douglas Hicks.
Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Smith,
A · reception honoring the
Rt. I , Racine.
couple was held in the Legion
Given in marriage by her Hall at Jane Lew.
b~other-in-law,
Frederick
For a wedding trip to Black
Bleigh, she wore a gown of Water Falls, W.Va., the bride
white satin and taffeta with changed in to a cream colored
accents of white lace and pants suit.
pearls. The skirt terminated in
The couple resides on a rural
a tl'ain at the baCk . She wore a route near Weston, W.Va.

$25 was given to Missions in her

No Coupons - No Limit
PINT OF COLE SLAW
PINT OF RAKFn BEANS
6 ROLLS. N0 SUBSTITUTES

grand senior, Helen Contizano
in the absen ce of the grand
chief of Ohio, Bonna Sctumder,
Rt. 13, Box 351, Huron , 0. who
had just been released from the
hospital. Also remarks were
made by other guests.
A delicious dinner was
served at "The Blg Dipper" for
all who wished to partake. The
table
arrangement
was
presented by Bob Will of the
Vinton County Bank, favors
were from The Pomeroy
National Bank, and Clair
Ponn 's Service Station.
The evening session was
opened in ritualistic form with
the most excellent. chief of
Wilkesville Temple, Anna
Ogdin presiding. She presented
beautiful corsages to the grand
temple officers, past chief,
Shirley Peters, and pianist,
Nelle Patton.
CXJnvention officers in their
chairs were past chief, Shirley
Peters; excellent senior, Neva
Metz; excellent junior, Pam

Ogdin ;

I'UMt::IWY - Bar.dages for
the leprosy hospital in South
India were rolled following a
meeting of the Evangeline
Missionary Society of the
Pomeroy Church of Christ
Tuesday.
The meeting was held at the
home of Mrs. Betty Spencer
and members in response to
roll call gave thoughts on
Thanksgiving. Mrs. Spencer
read " Little Things" and Mrs.
Edward Venoy told the story of
tl1e first Thanksgiving.
Read at the meeting by Mrs .
Clyde Andrews was a letter
from the Clemens Christian
Children's Cottage in Ontario,

Miss DePoy, Mr. Smith
marry in W Va. church

Missionary ladies meet ,
NEW HAVEN, W. Va.- The

Shirley Peters, Wilk esville
Temple No. 591.
Remarks were given by

Golden Rule class meet's

Ladi'es roll bandages

CROUTETTES

90% IOIId Illite SS900 chaula features 27 transistors

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT,

OHIO
j

~diodes, rour Integrated circuits andi seven receiving
tubes . Modular circuit boards tor easoy servicing.
"lnatant Play" - lnstant sound ar:,d a picture In
seconds.

·
70-poalllon· UHF channel aalector. t.'vtakes Channels
14-83 as easy to tune as VHF.
Quality eound aystam. Dorian, Sevllle1.and Jame'Stown
.models feature two 4• Alnico V speakers for high
fidelity' TV sound; others have a sing lo 4" speaker.

!
I

The JameaiOWn/51.5715. An Early American reproduction with concealed swivel casters. Maple veneera
on hardwooda; non-wood panels.
·
29" H, 42W W, 19W D. ·

t

..~

16 LB.
AND UP

••

7 oz.

¢

JACK-o-LANTERN

SWEET
POTATOES
.

·-

BETSY ROSS

PAN ROLLS

3

PKGS.

$}00

IGA

TOMATO JUICE
460Z.CAN 39~

�'

'

.
::::

•..:·:

}:0

;::

Sunshine Makers meet

IJevotions
-;:: from "These Days'' followed

S\'ttAl'USE -

~jl ~~~

prayer lly Linda Hubbard
opt•llt.~l the NuYcmber m~ting

By Katie Crow

r:..
~:: of the Sunshine Makers Class
:::·

of thr Syracuse Presbyterian
t:burd1. Thirken members
answered roll call with a
Thanksgiving:
verse
or

POMEROY - Students at Racine Elementary S{ huol have
been saving campbell Soup labels so they may rt'&lt;:Oive audiO·
visual equipment from the Campbell Company .
Robert Beegle, principal. reported that U1e students would
like to send their Utanks to the perS&lt;m from Ute Rutland ;u·ea,
name tmknown, for the two bundles of labels they received
recently.
Students are still accepting labels. The campaign ends Dec.
8.
.
THE TEEN-AGE Youth t;roup ot tne !{eno Church of Christ
will have a wiener roast Tuesday at 7 p.m . at the honll.' of Kenneth Davis on Rt. 248 near Chester.
.Members are invited to bring a guest.
DON'T FORGET the showing of the " Fall Follies" to be
staged Saturday following Thanksgiving at Meigs Hi~h School.
Rock Springs, by the Big Bend Minstrel Association .
This will be a great Thanksgiving treat where you can meet
your friends and enjoy a really good show.
Advance sale of tickets to the annual production are moving
very well . CUrtain time is 8 p.m. The show is under the direction
of Bob Hoelflch.
MRS. RALPH HARVEY, matron at the Meigs County
Children's Home sends her thank.• to the following for their

Couple wed in Chester
CHESTER - Two baskets of
white gladioli and mums
flanked by seven-branch
candelabra decorated the altar
of the Chester United
Methodist Church for the
wedding of Miss . Linda Lee
Baer to Revna C.. King, III.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Baer, Rt. I,
Minersville, and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Revna C. King, Jr ., New

•,

-••

Haven.

" The - Lord 's Prayer " and

••
..

.

...•... ·'
•

' ·
:: ·

..

''Because.''
Escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride wore a gown

highlighted by juliet 'sleeves of
. pylon. Acetate and nylon lace
·appliques trimmed the A-line
skirt !ron t and sheer illusion
yoke. Ribbon, trimmed with
lace daisies, accented the
waistline and sleeves. The fUll
chapel length train was converted into a butier!ly bustle.
The bride's veil of illusion was
a camelot ·style cap in nylon

., · sheer

•

•

and

trimmed

in

simulated pearl beading. Her
bouquet contained white
carnations and pink rosebuds
with pink ribbons tied in lovers'
kl)ots.
Mrs. Diana Ruth McCune ,
Columbus, sister of the bride ,
was the matron of horior, and
Miss Donna Weber, Rutland, a
cousin, and Mrs . Debbi Buck,
Pomeroy, a former classmate,

were the attendants.
All of the attendants wore
identical gowns of rose pin.k
acetate crepe trimmed with
lace. T,he gowns featured juliet
sleeves, yokes of illusion with
r osebud trim and sta ndup

collars . The princess style
skirts fe ll from ga thered
empire bodices . They wore

floppy brimmed hats and
·carried white baskets of whlte
and pink carnations with pink
ribbon streamers.

••
•
•

Dick Ord, New Haven ,
~ed as best man, and the
ushers were Greg Gibbs and
Don King, both of New Haven.
f'or her daughter 's wedding,
Mrs. Baer wore a coral pink
polyester lrnit gown with white
accessories and a corsage of
one pink rosebud and one white

~·

carna tion.

•

Mrs. King was in a pink A·
line knit dress with black ac-

•

cessorie s

and

a

'identical to Ute one worn by

...

Mrs. Baer.

The reception was held at the
:; church immediately following ,
•·
,, the ceremony. Due to the
, .•. illness of Ute bride's mother,
:: Ute reception was planned by
•• Mrs. Horace Karr and Mrs .
•.
George Wolfe , friends of the
•••l ' family.
The bride's table
::
featured a three tiered ·wed- ·
v
"
ding cake topped with . the
::
traditional miniature bride and
::
groom . Pink rosebuds and
:·; white wedding bells completed
...
the decorations.
•~;
Miss
Kenda
Chaney
"'
registered the guests and
~;
presiding at the table were
:;:
Mrs. Nancy Burns , Mrs. Twila
~
Buckley, Pat Wolfe. Mrs .
Jenny Machier, and Mrs. Pat
"•.•. Love.
For a wedding trip through
~; Virginia and Weat Virginia , the
~:
bride changed into a pink ·
•·
poly•ter knit auit. She wore
i- white accesiories and the

::

corp1e from her .bridal

"'

bouqtll!l
A 1raduate

:'

Market in New Haven, W. Va .

Out.of.town guests at the
wedding were Mr. and Mrs, H.
Myers, Athens; Bill Nose, The
Plains; Mr. and Mrs. Ed Love,
Athens ; and Mrs. R. C. King,
Sr., Point Pleasant, W. Va.

of Eastern High
SdiGol 1ft lml, Mn. King
completed·

the

Riverview PTA
holds meeting

training

, Jll\lltranl 11 , Ohio University

Prayer in unison .

det'orating committee

Tina

December. The class voted to
prepare and serve a· Christmas
dinner to the Missionary CirCle

"as read by Margaret Cottrill
and Ncwmi London read " What
Do You Give with Your Gift".
All reports were read and
accepted. All dues were paid
for the remainder of the year.
A freewill offering was taken .
A donation to the class was
made b)' Mr. Williams and
election dollars were collected
frum the members to be u$ed
toward the purchase of a new
refrige rator for the kitchen.
Plans were made for the
Chr is tmas supper Dec . 5 at
6~3 0 p.m. at Craw 's Steak

hippewa·
We feature a full line
of work shoes and
rubber goods in in·
sulated and steel toe
for the working man .

r
Mr. and Mrs. Alva Luckeydoo

~~anks~iPin~

OBSERVE ANNIVERSARY - Mr. and Mrs. Alva
Luckeydoo, New Haven, W. Va., celebrated their 32nd
wedding anniversary recently. Luckeydoo operated a CQO·
rtrliction and remodeling business. Mrs. Luckeydoo Is em·
ployed at Lakin State Hoapltal. They have two sons, Larry of
South Charleston, also in the building busin...,, and Roger of
Middleport, a federal auditor with the U. S. Department of
Agriculture. Mr. and Mrs. Luckeydoo have three grand·
children.

•

Genuine Goodyear welts .

•

WE 'VE RECENTLY reported so much about Meigs
residents serving on Federal Grand Juries in Columbus. Here's
another bit on Ute subject.
Mrs. Wayne (Jackie Adams) McLaughlin, d"ughter of Mr.
and Mrs . Earl Adams, Racine, se rved two days on such a jlll'y in
Columbus and may or may not be recalled. Mrs. McLaughlin is a
resident of Columbus.
~

.e

Cushion outsole, cushion insole.

e Steel shonh for arch support.

•

Mrs. Pauline Myers' room was
awarded th e attendance
banner and reading circle

book. Members voted to
purchase an. adding machine
and to help with the Christmas
treats for the 3tudents. It was
also decided to purchase
drapes for three class rooms.

Mrs. Grace . Weber , prin·
cipal, announced Thanksgiving
vacation will be Nov . 22
through Nov. 25. Candy sales
have been completed and
would be deliverEid to the
school soon.

For Ute program Mrs. Mary
Grace Cowdery read a poem
"Thanksgiving is for Sharing".
Two songs were sung by the
Jones triplets, Annie, Mark
and Mike and their brother,
Jeff. They were accompanied
by their mother, Mrs. Franklin
Jones on the piano.

During the social hour
refreshments were served by
Ute teachers. There will be no
PTA in December due to Ute
Christmas Operetta which will
be Dec. 13 ,under the direction
of Mrs. Maxine Whitehead.

PLAN SERVICE
MIDDLEPORT - A Com·
munity Thanksgiving Ev e
Service will be sponsored by
the Middleport Ministerial

• Astrolon ® and Poly·Ether combination im.ulotion ,
breathes but ~eeps cold outside, is non-wicking , odor
free , li'9 htweight.

Chapman's Shoes

MRS. MILLARD VAN METER
PH. 992-2039
POMEROY

POMEROY

MAIN ST.

Presbyteri~n

Church at 165 N.
4th Ave. Wednesday , Nov . 21 at
7:30p.m. The speaker for the
evening will be The Rev. Mr.
Thomas Weaver, pastor of the
Church of jthe Na~arene of
Middleport . The choir of the
Heath United . Methodist
Church directed by Ben
Philson, wi11 prese nt the an~
them, 11 Let There Be Music."

SPECIAL SALE!

'

•

extended to all.
MEETING CANCELLED
POMEROY - A .neeting of
the pas\ presidents of the
American Legion Auxiliary of
Drew Webster Post 39, has
been cancelled for November,

And Notions

falls on Thanksgiving Eve.
Members are urged to attend
the potluck supper at the post
home on the regular meeting

night.

Wesleyan Tour Presents
UA BIBLICAL ODYSSEY"
\

On All Purchases
~14.00

or More.

CHESTER ,.. Officers were
elected at a meeting of the Past
Councilors of Chester Council
323, Daughters of America,
held Wednesday night at the
hall.
\ Elected were MrS. Mary
Showalter, president; Mrs.
Goldie
Frederick,
vice
president; Mrs. El'ltl8 Cleland,
secretary; Mrs. Ethel Orr,
treasurer; Mrs. Pauline
Ridenour, sentlliel; Mrs. Betty

Shop
Tornorrow

r

Sale
Continues

Through

REG. '109

..

November

It's Our
Ann1lal

Choice-Of.The-House

.SALE!
·.·

" Here I Am . This Could Be You "

Buy For Yourself- For Gifts! !

On Ma,.ch 4, 1974 you are Invited to join us on an eleven day
tour of the Holy Land . Points Of interest ~Il l include The Holy
Land. Lost City of Petra, and Athens, Greece. Price from
New York is S772 .DD, meals, hotels, transportation and guides

Air transportation from Columbus fo New Yo'rk w ilt be
available S59.00.

Sews all th e new stretch and knit labncs , sews but·

Reservations musr be ma(.le oy Jan . I st. 1974. A pay later

tonhole s. bu uons . overed ges and mends Features
the exc lus1ve Sing.QJ ' front drop·in bobbl~ .

plan is available.

@j·

For Resemtion or ·Information

CALl SHERMAN CUNDIFF NOW
.~,.

.

'.,

Fashion Mate* zig-zag sewing
machine with carrying case

··

.

4L..

'

~

~~ ~ ~a~

The Fabric Shop
,_

Wt h,;~vf' A Cmd l1 Plan desrgncd iO f1 t your budget

"• ..

w,

~~: ~~; a~~;~';:•J·:,O•niYp·o~l ,clll vo!Yl
J
' A Tradernark ot

CO

PANY

Teaford ,

Jani ce

115 W. 2nd

Ph. 992-2284

POMEROY, OHIO

"An Old Fashioned Thanksgiving" by Mrs . William
Grueser ; " How to Keep
Nutritional Balance," Mrs .
William Folmer: " QUac k
Cures for Arthritis," Mrs.

Skinner; "Strain on Joints
Should be Cut in Osteoarthritis,"

Mrs .

Amos

Leonard ; " Early Warning
Signs of Heart Attack" by Mrs.
Scott Folmer ; " Grandma's
Home Remedies" by Mrs.
James Conkle;

and

...·.~

"On

Becoming Middle-Aged" by
Mrs. Wendell Jeffers.
The contest consisted of
using the letters in Thanks·
giving to make new words.
Mrs. Leonard conducted the
contest with Mrs. Jeffers and
Mrs. William Grueser winning.
Refreshments were served
by the hostess. Others lit·
tending were Mrs. William
Radiord, Mrs. Welby Whaley
and Mrs. Hugh Bearhs.

ASKS DIVORCE
GALLIPOLIS - Andree A.
Belville, Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
charged gross neglect of duty

Miss Barbara Ann Smith

and. extreme cruelty in her

petition for divorce against
Otho Belville, same address.
They were rparried July 12,
1968 and have no children.
CALL ANSWERED
MIDDLEPORT
. The
Middleport Emergency Squad
answered a call to 560 S.
Secon.,_ Ave., at 9:29 p.m .
Friday for L. D. Ervin, 75, who
was hemorrhaging. He was
taken to the Holzer Medical
Center.

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED -Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
R. Smith, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, are announcing the engagement of
their daughter, Barhara Ann, to JohnS. Burns, Rt. 2, Logan,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Harley A. Burns, Rt. 1, Point Pleasant,
W.Va. The bride-elect is a clerk typist at the Abex Corp. at
Athens. Her fiance is an installer with the Western Electric
Corp. in Columbus. Miss Smith graduated from Pomeroy
High School in 1965 and Burns graduated from Point Pleasant
High School in 1964. AMay wedding is being planned .
VISIT MAIL

Karr spent a day recently at

SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs.
C. B. Weese and Mias Marcia

the Grand Central Mall near
Parkersburg, W. Va .

Lawson

Charlotte Nease, Edith Hood,'
E tleen
Cla rk,
Pauhne
Morarity, Agnes Whi te,
read "Experiencing Faith " Elean or Boh;am , Esther
from "These Days" followed Harden, J ean Hall, Mildred
by prayer.
Pierce, Thelma Grueser and
Poems read were "Knees" Margaret Cottrill.
and "Remember" by Agnes
White; "Hey Didd.le, Diddle
Brought Up To Date" by
Thelma Grueser and " My
CROSS ASSIGNED
Hand in God's" by Eileen
TUPPERS PLAINS
Clark,
Airman Richard K. Cross, son
Thirteen members answered of Mrs. Williani Barg~loh,
roll call by naming something Reedsville Route I, and
they were thankful for. All Richard W. Cross of Walis·
reports read read and ap· burg, W.Va ., Route 1, has been
proved .
assigned to the Kesler Air
" A Holiday Happening" at Force Base in Biloxi , Miss., to
the St. Paul Lutheran Church, study ground radio .com·
Pomeroy, Nov. 30 was an- mooications . He is a 1973
nounced.
grad ua te of Eastern Hi gh
The club will hold a bazaar School.
Dec. 6 and 7 at the municipal
building with the proceeds to
.·. .· .
go toward the purch.asc of
shrubbery to be placed around
Now! lay It Away
the building. Each member is
to hring articles and baked
goods
to
the
bazaar.

Look What's Come ,

in Time for
Christmas

'

'

SINGER

Sewing Machine
For Christmas '73

annual Christmas dinner Dec,
12 at Crow's Steak House, 6
p.m. Others attending the
meeting were Mrs. Mabel Van
Meter, Mrs. Ada Morris, Mrs.
Hattie Frederick, Mrs. Zona
Biggs and Mrs. Letha Wood.

sma ll deposi t wi ll hold

The Fabric Shop

•ns w. Second
992 -2284 .
POMEROY, OHIO
. ,. . .. ..

We Have Just Completed

Mailing of Over ~100,000.00 In Cub Olecks;

GAY
GIBSON

Start Yours For
1974 NOW! •'

"FLICKS
ON THE

WHITES"

Officers elected

~
REG.
PRICES

the Red Carpe t Inn . All
members are urged to be at the
municipal building to be ready
to leave at 11 :15 a.m. The
program and gilt exchange will
be at the building at 7:30 p.m.
Refreshments will be served
by Jean Hall and Agnes White.
At the close of the next
meeting games will be played
with each member to bring
pnzes.
Final plans were discussed for
Those attending the meeting the country store which was
and dinner were Elva Dailey, held Saturday at the log cabin
Nancy Neutzling, Charlotte near the Salisbury School for
Nease, Elizabeth Rice, Marie Ute Pomeroy Fire Department.
Rize r , Ada Slack, Clara several members contributed
Lavender, Mary Pickens, items for the sale.
Janice Lawson, Jean Hall,
It was also noted that on Dec.
Eleanor Bohram, Thelma I the Meigs County Humane
Grueser, Mildred Pierce, Society wlll have a bazaar and
Adrienne Hubbard, Agnes luncheon at the Trinity Church
White and guests, Tina Pierce, and that donations are needed.
Eber Pickens, Jr., Sue Rice,
Mrs. Harold Blackston
David Lawson and Mary Beth presided at the meeting which
White.
opened with the pledge and
prayer. Mrs. George Skinner,
chaplain, read an article
"Count Your Blessings. 11
Guests at the meeting were
Donations would be ap~ Mrs. Roger Gillespie and
Timmy Jeffers.
preciated.
Mrs. Opha Offut will host the
Adelicious potluck lunch was
January
meeting with Mrs.
enjoyed by all at noon with
table grace by Edith Hood . Homer Radford and Mrs. G. J .
Hostesses
were
Jan ice Morgan to have the contest and
Lawson and · Jean Hall with the program.
Mrs. Radford presented the
Elva Dailey a contributing
program. It included readings,
hostess.
Those attending the meeting
and lun ch were Wanda

LOOKING To Thanksgiving, we're sure that many of you ·
will be having family get-togethers. Be sure to call us about your ·
guests- 992-5292. Remember· that Than)&lt;sgiving Is a time for
reflecting·on the good things of Ufe and a tbne for giving thanks
to the Giver of all good things.

- '~

992~5630

•

00 ... THERE MAY not be a Christmas lighting contest in
Middleport this year. Too bad since the contest has inspired
residents to go creative with their decorations, but then the .
energy crisis isn't to be taken lightly either,
A1l yet there Is no !Inn decision as to whether the contest wlll
be held since three organlzatioos - the two garden clubs and the
Middleport Chamber of Commerce - CO-&lt;lponsor the event.
Perhapa the contest could be held, but residents could be ~n­
couraged to turn off the lights at an earlier hour.
That way the town could retain the festive air, have the
excitement of the competition, and continue a tradition that
started many years ago. .

•

since the regular meeting time

•,

I

MARY WALBURN TAYLOR (Mrs. Dave) is having a bad
time and cards from home might cheer her up. Thursday she
WJderwent surgery at the Blanchard Valley Hospital at Findlay
for a kidnev ailment. Her room number is 433 and she will be
there for a while yet. Mary had earlier been hospitalized in
Fostoria .
Mr . ~nd Mrs . Raymond Walburn, Middleport, have been
with the family for the past two weeks caring for their nro young
granddaughters, Crystal, four, and Julie two.

Other ministers and laymen
from the se ven churches
represented in the association
will participate. A welcome is

~

l

DAVID OIJVER and his wife, Ruth, · are due In this
weel&lt;•nrl from Pro•,ldence, R.I. - this ttme to stay.
~oaVlit has hiS discharge from the U. S. Navy and will be
returning to his employment at Foote Mineral. Just before
· boarding a jet In Spain for the trip home, he telephoned his wife.
. She took a plane from Columbus and the two were scheduled to
arrive in Rhode Island about the same time. That was Wednesday , The plan was to have a couple of days there and then on
to Ohio and Meigs County for a reunion witll the couple's two year
old daughter who has been staying with her grandparents.

th ANNIVERSARY

POMEROY, OHIO

Association at the First United

~

~Corner By Charlene Hoeflich

.

POMEROY -David Diles acted quite the celebrity handing
out autographs right and left when he visited the Racine
Elementary School last Monday before speaking at the Meigs
football banquet.
He was there especially to see Jonathan · and Jay Rees,
children of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Rees, who couldn 't have been more
delighted that their friend took the time to visit them at school.
What an impression that must have made on their classmates!
Anyway, Dave also came to Racine that day to visit Mrs.
Wllma Arnott Riggs who refers to hlm as "her boy," Seems she
worked for the late Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Diles when their children
were small and to Dave becwne abnost a second mother. Mrs.
Biggs is the great-aunt of the Rees children.

WE HONOR BANK AMERICARb

Pomeroy Flower Shop

The Fabric Shop •

v

~

!able with a beautiful
centerpiece of fall
fl owers and foliage .

SYRACUSE - "Guard what
has been entrusted to you.
Avoid the godless chatter and
contradictions of what is called
knowledge" was the thought
lor the day when the Third
Wednesday Homemakers Club
met at the Municipal building
for their November session.
The Lord's prayer and fla g
pledge in unison opened the ·
meeting conducted by th e
secretary, Mrs. Agnes White.
Pauline Morarity used I
Timothy 1: 7 lor devotions. She

IQ;;;;;;-writY · 1

'
e Nylon and Dacron funct ional stitching.

Grace your Tha nksgiving

The annual Christmas dinner
wa s announced for Dec. 14 at

l'OMEROY - Christmas
hoxes ·for community shut.ins
will be prepared at the
December meeting of the Rock
Springs Better Healtll C.1ub at
the Rock Springs United
Metllodist Church.
Meeting Thursday at the
home of Mrs. G. J . Morgan, the
dub made plans For Ute Dec, !8
holiday dinner at the church at
1J a.m. with a 50 cent grab bag
exchange and secret pal gifts.
The Christmas boxes will be
prepared following the dinner
and party. Members were
reminded to take cookies and
candy.
Welcomed into membership
was Mrs. Marcella Snowden.

Wednesday Club meets

'•X•:•'•'..•:•'·!o..:O:O:O;•'O:o!•~_.·,·-x~·· ...-.;o;o;~.:o:o:o:o:o::o:o;.:o:•;•;.;.;o;o:•:o:o:•·~·;9·•;(1'•~~.............~

4 Moe toe design .

A COUPLE visiting one of the garbage pickup points in
Meigs County recently founded a box containing 14 books
belonging to Ute Meigs Bookmobile Service.
The couple picked up Ute box and took it to the local book·
mobile headquarters where personnel were delighted to have
recovered the volumes apparently headed for the county landfill.
Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja, supervisor of the unit , stresses again
that there is no charge invoked for books overdue at the unit and
points out that not only can books be returned during the many
stops of the bookmobile but can also be placed in a slot in the
bookmobile headquarters buildin g in Pomeroy.
Please, please, don 't dispose of books that belong to
libraries, Mrs. Pikkoja says.

Nancy NeuLzlin~. Thelma
Grueser and F.lva Dailey to the
nominating committee which
will report al the next mee ting.

It was voted to treat the
children this year the Sunday
befbre Christmas at the
municipal building. This will
be for children 12 years and
younger
and
Syracuse
residents only. Appointed to
the candy committee Were
Jean Hall, Mildred Pierce and
Charlotte Nease.
Santa Ciaus was discussed
and Elva Dailey is to buy a gift .

Spacous Skies" was sung and

Thanksgiving in America
House with a program con· Today was read by Janice
dueled by Ruth Zavilz and a $2 Lawson. The Prayer of Con~i ll exchange to follow at the secration was read in unison
and the hymn "Thanksgiving
chnrch annex.

f•'r t&gt;1m .
The- president appointed

a success.

--

'

BIRTHDAY WISHES to Benny Ewing who c e lebr~ted his
"day" Saturday. He was all of30.
BIRTHDAY !

REEDSVILLE
The
Riverview PTA met at the
Riverview Elementary School
Monday evening. The meeting
was opened with members
repeating the Lord's Prayer.

included.

SYRACUSE - A poUuf' k
Thanksgivin~ dinner with all
the trimmings pre&lt;:eded the
regular meeting of the
Syracuse Ladies Auxiliary of
the Volunteer Fire Department
Monday evening at the
mwticipal building.
The meeting was opened
with the Lord's Prayer and the
Oag pledge in unison. Charlotte
Nease used I Timothy 4: l-5 for
devotions. Prayer followed ,
Fifteen members answered
roll call with a Thanksgiving
verse. All reports were read
and approved. $174 was cleared
on the election day dinner. The
auxiliary wishes to thank all
who made donations or helped
in any way to make the dinner

for

or the church.
Alter the meeting closed, a
Thanksgiving program
prepared by Rev. Zavitz and
narrated by Margaret Cottrill
was g ive n. " Traditions of
Tnanksgiving" was the title,
with Beatrice Blake reading
the Hebrew tradition followed
by the hymn "0 wo.. hip the
King". A Litany of Thanks·
giving was given by the
narrator and members. The
pilgrim tradition was read by
Helen Harris followed by the
Prayer of Thanksgiving by
Agnes White, "0 Beautiful for

Will prepare. boxes

Ladies nieet

Cottrill Agnes White, Jean
Hall, J~nlce Lawson, Mildred
Pierce Naomi· London, Unda
Hubba~d, Pauline Morarily.
Charlotte Nease, Thelma

ore.sident
IH&gt;Iicious refreshments were
~ 'hadutte
Nea~c,
J~ni ce served by ttie hostesses, Helen
Lawson. Helen Diddle and Diddle and Helen Harris , to Grueser and guest,
Th elma Grueser to the Beatrice Blake, Margaret Pierce.

poem. ·'Thanksgivi ng Prayer"

Bradbury PTA and the Williams family for clothing; Vernon
Nease for games; Hazel CUrry lor dpminocs; th e Electa Circle
for fruit and candy ; Horak Carry Out and Les Fultz, tickets to
Santa's Musical Workshop ; membership to Tri-County Concert
from Ewing 's Funera l Home, Capital Financial Services, Athens
County Savings and Loan, Pomeroy Branch, City LQan, Swisher
and Lohse Phannacy, G&amp;J Auto Parts, George Hobstctter and
Theo Smith.
'

co rsage

~

~

Vision Speech and Hearing
Project and works as a speech
Uterapist aide.
King graduated
from
Wahama in 1967 and from the
United Electronics Institute .at
Louisville, Ky., in 1969. He is
employed as the assistant
manager of Miller's Super

Horace Karr was organist, and ·
soloist was Vernon Weber,

uncle of the bride. He sang

'

Comprehensive

H. McCune, Columbus; Jean

The wedding was an even I of
•
:· April. 8 at 2:30 p.m. and the
Rev , Robert Card officiated at
" the double ring ceremony. Mrs.
"

"

under the

program closed with the Lord's

The

something to be thankful for. A

recent donations.

Mr. and Mrs. Revtl(J C King III

an~ Harvest" was sung . The

MAKE 49 PAYMENTS AND

The 50th Is FREE I

'

Roush, reporter; Mrs. Dorothy
Myers, flower chairwoman.
Mrs. Dorothy Lawson
poesided at Ute meeting which
opened with the Lord's Prayer
and scripture. Members
named their favorite bird for
roll call. Mrs. Lawson, Mrs.
Opal Hollon, and Mrs. Ihzy
Newell were appointed to
prepare the programs for the
coming year,
Plans were made for the

KLY
PAY MINI' 50' 11
'·

•
'

.
•

•'

•

AMOUNT

OFQ.UI

S2 S3 \5 SJO
'

25 150 SJDQ 1150 suo 1580

1

.

Been dreaming of seasonal
greenery and find yourself in the red?
Why didn't you plan ahead! Open up a
Christmas Club like these folks did.
One weekly payment adds up to
happier hoi idays.

'

for terrific girls

THANKS

who swing with
fashion. Turn·on to
the exc item ent of a

TO 1HE VOTERS OF
SOUTHERN LOCAL SCHOOL
DISTRICf FOR THEm
SUPPORT IN THE NOV. 6,
1973 ELECTION.

brigh t new season wi th
th is terrif ic turn·out in Snow

Powder, color flecked with
bits of Red/Yellow/ Green. The
dress7 1ong-waisted ... th e jacket
-ribby, wrapped in a matchin g
sash. Doubleknitted Encronl' poly·
ester in sizes 5 to 15. Seen here and
in November Mademoiselle, $58 .00

BAHR

Jack L. ·'Bostic·

The Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.
'

POMEROY, OHIO
~ Member of Federal Reserve System

s2o,ooo Maximum

Insurance
For Each Depositor

CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Pd. Pol. Adv.

•

A FULL
·SERVICE
BANK

On Fridays Our Drive-In Window is
Open 9a.m. to 7 p.m. (Continuously l.

•
•

''
•

.

�'

'

.
::::

•..:·:

}:0

;::

Sunshine Makers meet

IJevotions
-;:: from "These Days'' followed

S\'ttAl'USE -

~jl ~~~

prayer lly Linda Hubbard
opt•llt.~l the NuYcmber m~ting

By Katie Crow

r:..
~:: of the Sunshine Makers Class
:::·

of thr Syracuse Presbyterian
t:burd1. Thirken members
answered roll call with a
Thanksgiving:
verse
or

POMEROY - Students at Racine Elementary S{ huol have
been saving campbell Soup labels so they may rt'&lt;:Oive audiO·
visual equipment from the Campbell Company .
Robert Beegle, principal. reported that U1e students would
like to send their Utanks to the perS&lt;m from Ute Rutland ;u·ea,
name tmknown, for the two bundles of labels they received
recently.
Students are still accepting labels. The campaign ends Dec.
8.
.
THE TEEN-AGE Youth t;roup ot tne !{eno Church of Christ
will have a wiener roast Tuesday at 7 p.m . at the honll.' of Kenneth Davis on Rt. 248 near Chester.
.Members are invited to bring a guest.
DON'T FORGET the showing of the " Fall Follies" to be
staged Saturday following Thanksgiving at Meigs Hi~h School.
Rock Springs, by the Big Bend Minstrel Association .
This will be a great Thanksgiving treat where you can meet
your friends and enjoy a really good show.
Advance sale of tickets to the annual production are moving
very well . CUrtain time is 8 p.m. The show is under the direction
of Bob Hoelflch.
MRS. RALPH HARVEY, matron at the Meigs County
Children's Home sends her thank.• to the following for their

Couple wed in Chester
CHESTER - Two baskets of
white gladioli and mums
flanked by seven-branch
candelabra decorated the altar
of the Chester United
Methodist Church for the
wedding of Miss . Linda Lee
Baer to Revna C.. King, III.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Baer, Rt. I,
Minersville, and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Revna C. King, Jr ., New

•,

-••

Haven.

" The - Lord 's Prayer " and

••
..

.

...•... ·'
•

' ·
:: ·

..

''Because.''
Escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride wore a gown

highlighted by juliet 'sleeves of
. pylon. Acetate and nylon lace
·appliques trimmed the A-line
skirt !ron t and sheer illusion
yoke. Ribbon, trimmed with
lace daisies, accented the
waistline and sleeves. The fUll
chapel length train was converted into a butier!ly bustle.
The bride's veil of illusion was
a camelot ·style cap in nylon

., · sheer

•

•

and

trimmed

in

simulated pearl beading. Her
bouquet contained white
carnations and pink rosebuds
with pink ribbons tied in lovers'
kl)ots.
Mrs. Diana Ruth McCune ,
Columbus, sister of the bride ,
was the matron of horior, and
Miss Donna Weber, Rutland, a
cousin, and Mrs . Debbi Buck,
Pomeroy, a former classmate,

were the attendants.
All of the attendants wore
identical gowns of rose pin.k
acetate crepe trimmed with
lace. T,he gowns featured juliet
sleeves, yokes of illusion with
r osebud trim and sta ndup

collars . The princess style
skirts fe ll from ga thered
empire bodices . They wore

floppy brimmed hats and
·carried white baskets of whlte
and pink carnations with pink
ribbon streamers.

••
•
•

Dick Ord, New Haven ,
~ed as best man, and the
ushers were Greg Gibbs and
Don King, both of New Haven.
f'or her daughter 's wedding,
Mrs. Baer wore a coral pink
polyester lrnit gown with white
accessories and a corsage of
one pink rosebud and one white

~·

carna tion.

•

Mrs. King was in a pink A·
line knit dress with black ac-

•

cessorie s

and

a

'identical to Ute one worn by

...

Mrs. Baer.

The reception was held at the
:; church immediately following ,
•·
,, the ceremony. Due to the
, .•. illness of Ute bride's mother,
:: Ute reception was planned by
•• Mrs. Horace Karr and Mrs .
•.
George Wolfe , friends of the
•••l ' family.
The bride's table
::
featured a three tiered ·wed- ·
v
"
ding cake topped with . the
::
traditional miniature bride and
::
groom . Pink rosebuds and
:·; white wedding bells completed
...
the decorations.
•~;
Miss
Kenda
Chaney
"'
registered the guests and
~;
presiding at the table were
:;:
Mrs. Nancy Burns , Mrs. Twila
~
Buckley, Pat Wolfe. Mrs .
Jenny Machier, and Mrs. Pat
"•.•. Love.
For a wedding trip through
~; Virginia and Weat Virginia , the
~:
bride changed into a pink ·
•·
poly•ter knit auit. She wore
i- white accesiories and the

::

corp1e from her .bridal

"'

bouqtll!l
A 1raduate

:'

Market in New Haven, W. Va .

Out.of.town guests at the
wedding were Mr. and Mrs, H.
Myers, Athens; Bill Nose, The
Plains; Mr. and Mrs. Ed Love,
Athens ; and Mrs. R. C. King,
Sr., Point Pleasant, W. Va.

of Eastern High
SdiGol 1ft lml, Mn. King
completed·

the

Riverview PTA
holds meeting

training

, Jll\lltranl 11 , Ohio University

Prayer in unison .

det'orating committee

Tina

December. The class voted to
prepare and serve a· Christmas
dinner to the Missionary CirCle

"as read by Margaret Cottrill
and Ncwmi London read " What
Do You Give with Your Gift".
All reports were read and
accepted. All dues were paid
for the remainder of the year.
A freewill offering was taken .
A donation to the class was
made b)' Mr. Williams and
election dollars were collected
frum the members to be u$ed
toward the purchase of a new
refrige rator for the kitchen.
Plans were made for the
Chr is tmas supper Dec . 5 at
6~3 0 p.m. at Craw 's Steak

hippewa·
We feature a full line
of work shoes and
rubber goods in in·
sulated and steel toe
for the working man .

r
Mr. and Mrs. Alva Luckeydoo

~~anks~iPin~

OBSERVE ANNIVERSARY - Mr. and Mrs. Alva
Luckeydoo, New Haven, W. Va., celebrated their 32nd
wedding anniversary recently. Luckeydoo operated a CQO·
rtrliction and remodeling business. Mrs. Luckeydoo Is em·
ployed at Lakin State Hoapltal. They have two sons, Larry of
South Charleston, also in the building busin...,, and Roger of
Middleport, a federal auditor with the U. S. Department of
Agriculture. Mr. and Mrs. Luckeydoo have three grand·
children.

•

Genuine Goodyear welts .

•

WE 'VE RECENTLY reported so much about Meigs
residents serving on Federal Grand Juries in Columbus. Here's
another bit on Ute subject.
Mrs. Wayne (Jackie Adams) McLaughlin, d"ughter of Mr.
and Mrs . Earl Adams, Racine, se rved two days on such a jlll'y in
Columbus and may or may not be recalled. Mrs. McLaughlin is a
resident of Columbus.
~

.e

Cushion outsole, cushion insole.

e Steel shonh for arch support.

•

Mrs. Pauline Myers' room was
awarded th e attendance
banner and reading circle

book. Members voted to
purchase an. adding machine
and to help with the Christmas
treats for the 3tudents. It was
also decided to purchase
drapes for three class rooms.

Mrs. Grace . Weber , prin·
cipal, announced Thanksgiving
vacation will be Nov . 22
through Nov. 25. Candy sales
have been completed and
would be deliverEid to the
school soon.

For Ute program Mrs. Mary
Grace Cowdery read a poem
"Thanksgiving is for Sharing".
Two songs were sung by the
Jones triplets, Annie, Mark
and Mike and their brother,
Jeff. They were accompanied
by their mother, Mrs. Franklin
Jones on the piano.

During the social hour
refreshments were served by
Ute teachers. There will be no
PTA in December due to Ute
Christmas Operetta which will
be Dec. 13 ,under the direction
of Mrs. Maxine Whitehead.

PLAN SERVICE
MIDDLEPORT - A Com·
munity Thanksgiving Ev e
Service will be sponsored by
the Middleport Ministerial

• Astrolon ® and Poly·Ether combination im.ulotion ,
breathes but ~eeps cold outside, is non-wicking , odor
free , li'9 htweight.

Chapman's Shoes

MRS. MILLARD VAN METER
PH. 992-2039
POMEROY

POMEROY

MAIN ST.

Presbyteri~n

Church at 165 N.
4th Ave. Wednesday , Nov . 21 at
7:30p.m. The speaker for the
evening will be The Rev. Mr.
Thomas Weaver, pastor of the
Church of jthe Na~arene of
Middleport . The choir of the
Heath United . Methodist
Church directed by Ben
Philson, wi11 prese nt the an~
them, 11 Let There Be Music."

SPECIAL SALE!

'

•

extended to all.
MEETING CANCELLED
POMEROY - A .neeting of
the pas\ presidents of the
American Legion Auxiliary of
Drew Webster Post 39, has
been cancelled for November,

And Notions

falls on Thanksgiving Eve.
Members are urged to attend
the potluck supper at the post
home on the regular meeting

night.

Wesleyan Tour Presents
UA BIBLICAL ODYSSEY"
\

On All Purchases
~14.00

or More.

CHESTER ,.. Officers were
elected at a meeting of the Past
Councilors of Chester Council
323, Daughters of America,
held Wednesday night at the
hall.
\ Elected were MrS. Mary
Showalter, president; Mrs.
Goldie
Frederick,
vice
president; Mrs. El'ltl8 Cleland,
secretary; Mrs. Ethel Orr,
treasurer; Mrs. Pauline
Ridenour, sentlliel; Mrs. Betty

Shop
Tornorrow

r

Sale
Continues

Through

REG. '109

..

November

It's Our
Ann1lal

Choice-Of.The-House

.SALE!
·.·

" Here I Am . This Could Be You "

Buy For Yourself- For Gifts! !

On Ma,.ch 4, 1974 you are Invited to join us on an eleven day
tour of the Holy Land . Points Of interest ~Il l include The Holy
Land. Lost City of Petra, and Athens, Greece. Price from
New York is S772 .DD, meals, hotels, transportation and guides

Air transportation from Columbus fo New Yo'rk w ilt be
available S59.00.

Sews all th e new stretch and knit labncs , sews but·

Reservations musr be ma(.le oy Jan . I st. 1974. A pay later

tonhole s. bu uons . overed ges and mends Features
the exc lus1ve Sing.QJ ' front drop·in bobbl~ .

plan is available.

@j·

For Resemtion or ·Information

CALl SHERMAN CUNDIFF NOW
.~,.

.

'.,

Fashion Mate* zig-zag sewing
machine with carrying case

··

.

4L..

'

~

~~ ~ ~a~

The Fabric Shop
,_

Wt h,;~vf' A Cmd l1 Plan desrgncd iO f1 t your budget

"• ..

w,

~~: ~~; a~~;~';:•J·:,O•niYp·o~l ,clll vo!Yl
J
' A Tradernark ot

CO

PANY

Teaford ,

Jani ce

115 W. 2nd

Ph. 992-2284

POMEROY, OHIO

"An Old Fashioned Thanksgiving" by Mrs . William
Grueser ; " How to Keep
Nutritional Balance," Mrs .
William Folmer: " QUac k
Cures for Arthritis," Mrs.

Skinner; "Strain on Joints
Should be Cut in Osteoarthritis,"

Mrs .

Amos

Leonard ; " Early Warning
Signs of Heart Attack" by Mrs.
Scott Folmer ; " Grandma's
Home Remedies" by Mrs.
James Conkle;

and

...·.~

"On

Becoming Middle-Aged" by
Mrs. Wendell Jeffers.
The contest consisted of
using the letters in Thanks·
giving to make new words.
Mrs. Leonard conducted the
contest with Mrs. Jeffers and
Mrs. William Grueser winning.
Refreshments were served
by the hostess. Others lit·
tending were Mrs. William
Radiord, Mrs. Welby Whaley
and Mrs. Hugh Bearhs.

ASKS DIVORCE
GALLIPOLIS - Andree A.
Belville, Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
charged gross neglect of duty

Miss Barbara Ann Smith

and. extreme cruelty in her

petition for divorce against
Otho Belville, same address.
They were rparried July 12,
1968 and have no children.
CALL ANSWERED
MIDDLEPORT
. The
Middleport Emergency Squad
answered a call to 560 S.
Secon.,_ Ave., at 9:29 p.m .
Friday for L. D. Ervin, 75, who
was hemorrhaging. He was
taken to the Holzer Medical
Center.

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED -Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
R. Smith, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, are announcing the engagement of
their daughter, Barhara Ann, to JohnS. Burns, Rt. 2, Logan,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Harley A. Burns, Rt. 1, Point Pleasant,
W.Va. The bride-elect is a clerk typist at the Abex Corp. at
Athens. Her fiance is an installer with the Western Electric
Corp. in Columbus. Miss Smith graduated from Pomeroy
High School in 1965 and Burns graduated from Point Pleasant
High School in 1964. AMay wedding is being planned .
VISIT MAIL

Karr spent a day recently at

SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs.
C. B. Weese and Mias Marcia

the Grand Central Mall near
Parkersburg, W. Va .

Lawson

Charlotte Nease, Edith Hood,'
E tleen
Cla rk,
Pauhne
Morarity, Agnes Whi te,
read "Experiencing Faith " Elean or Boh;am , Esther
from "These Days" followed Harden, J ean Hall, Mildred
by prayer.
Pierce, Thelma Grueser and
Poems read were "Knees" Margaret Cottrill.
and "Remember" by Agnes
White; "Hey Didd.le, Diddle
Brought Up To Date" by
Thelma Grueser and " My
CROSS ASSIGNED
Hand in God's" by Eileen
TUPPERS PLAINS
Clark,
Airman Richard K. Cross, son
Thirteen members answered of Mrs. Williani Barg~loh,
roll call by naming something Reedsville Route I, and
they were thankful for. All Richard W. Cross of Walis·
reports read read and ap· burg, W.Va ., Route 1, has been
proved .
assigned to the Kesler Air
" A Holiday Happening" at Force Base in Biloxi , Miss., to
the St. Paul Lutheran Church, study ground radio .com·
Pomeroy, Nov. 30 was an- mooications . He is a 1973
nounced.
grad ua te of Eastern Hi gh
The club will hold a bazaar School.
Dec. 6 and 7 at the municipal
building with the proceeds to
.·. .· .
go toward the purch.asc of
shrubbery to be placed around
Now! lay It Away
the building. Each member is
to hring articles and baked
goods
to
the
bazaar.

Look What's Come ,

in Time for
Christmas

'

'

SINGER

Sewing Machine
For Christmas '73

annual Christmas dinner Dec,
12 at Crow's Steak House, 6
p.m. Others attending the
meeting were Mrs. Mabel Van
Meter, Mrs. Ada Morris, Mrs.
Hattie Frederick, Mrs. Zona
Biggs and Mrs. Letha Wood.

sma ll deposi t wi ll hold

The Fabric Shop

•ns w. Second
992 -2284 .
POMEROY, OHIO
. ,. . .. ..

We Have Just Completed

Mailing of Over ~100,000.00 In Cub Olecks;

GAY
GIBSON

Start Yours For
1974 NOW! •'

"FLICKS
ON THE

WHITES"

Officers elected

~
REG.
PRICES

the Red Carpe t Inn . All
members are urged to be at the
municipal building to be ready
to leave at 11 :15 a.m. The
program and gilt exchange will
be at the building at 7:30 p.m.
Refreshments will be served
by Jean Hall and Agnes White.
At the close of the next
meeting games will be played
with each member to bring
pnzes.
Final plans were discussed for
Those attending the meeting the country store which was
and dinner were Elva Dailey, held Saturday at the log cabin
Nancy Neutzling, Charlotte near the Salisbury School for
Nease, Elizabeth Rice, Marie Ute Pomeroy Fire Department.
Rize r , Ada Slack, Clara several members contributed
Lavender, Mary Pickens, items for the sale.
Janice Lawson, Jean Hall,
It was also noted that on Dec.
Eleanor Bohram, Thelma I the Meigs County Humane
Grueser, Mildred Pierce, Society wlll have a bazaar and
Adrienne Hubbard, Agnes luncheon at the Trinity Church
White and guests, Tina Pierce, and that donations are needed.
Eber Pickens, Jr., Sue Rice,
Mrs. Harold Blackston
David Lawson and Mary Beth presided at the meeting which
White.
opened with the pledge and
prayer. Mrs. George Skinner,
chaplain, read an article
"Count Your Blessings. 11
Guests at the meeting were
Donations would be ap~ Mrs. Roger Gillespie and
Timmy Jeffers.
preciated.
Mrs. Opha Offut will host the
Adelicious potluck lunch was
January
meeting with Mrs.
enjoyed by all at noon with
table grace by Edith Hood . Homer Radford and Mrs. G. J .
Hostesses
were
Jan ice Morgan to have the contest and
Lawson and · Jean Hall with the program.
Mrs. Radford presented the
Elva Dailey a contributing
program. It included readings,
hostess.
Those attending the meeting
and lun ch were Wanda

LOOKING To Thanksgiving, we're sure that many of you ·
will be having family get-togethers. Be sure to call us about your ·
guests- 992-5292. Remember· that Than)&lt;sgiving Is a time for
reflecting·on the good things of Ufe and a tbne for giving thanks
to the Giver of all good things.

- '~

992~5630

•

00 ... THERE MAY not be a Christmas lighting contest in
Middleport this year. Too bad since the contest has inspired
residents to go creative with their decorations, but then the .
energy crisis isn't to be taken lightly either,
A1l yet there Is no !Inn decision as to whether the contest wlll
be held since three organlzatioos - the two garden clubs and the
Middleport Chamber of Commerce - CO-&lt;lponsor the event.
Perhapa the contest could be held, but residents could be ~n­
couraged to turn off the lights at an earlier hour.
That way the town could retain the festive air, have the
excitement of the competition, and continue a tradition that
started many years ago. .

•

since the regular meeting time

•,

I

MARY WALBURN TAYLOR (Mrs. Dave) is having a bad
time and cards from home might cheer her up. Thursday she
WJderwent surgery at the Blanchard Valley Hospital at Findlay
for a kidnev ailment. Her room number is 433 and she will be
there for a while yet. Mary had earlier been hospitalized in
Fostoria .
Mr . ~nd Mrs . Raymond Walburn, Middleport, have been
with the family for the past two weeks caring for their nro young
granddaughters, Crystal, four, and Julie two.

Other ministers and laymen
from the se ven churches
represented in the association
will participate. A welcome is

~

l

DAVID OIJVER and his wife, Ruth, · are due In this
weel&lt;•nrl from Pro•,ldence, R.I. - this ttme to stay.
~oaVlit has hiS discharge from the U. S. Navy and will be
returning to his employment at Foote Mineral. Just before
· boarding a jet In Spain for the trip home, he telephoned his wife.
. She took a plane from Columbus and the two were scheduled to
arrive in Rhode Island about the same time. That was Wednesday , The plan was to have a couple of days there and then on
to Ohio and Meigs County for a reunion witll the couple's two year
old daughter who has been staying with her grandparents.

th ANNIVERSARY

POMEROY, OHIO

Association at the First United

~

~Corner By Charlene Hoeflich

.

POMEROY -David Diles acted quite the celebrity handing
out autographs right and left when he visited the Racine
Elementary School last Monday before speaking at the Meigs
football banquet.
He was there especially to see Jonathan · and Jay Rees,
children of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Rees, who couldn 't have been more
delighted that their friend took the time to visit them at school.
What an impression that must have made on their classmates!
Anyway, Dave also came to Racine that day to visit Mrs.
Wllma Arnott Riggs who refers to hlm as "her boy," Seems she
worked for the late Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Diles when their children
were small and to Dave becwne abnost a second mother. Mrs.
Biggs is the great-aunt of the Rees children.

WE HONOR BANK AMERICARb

Pomeroy Flower Shop

The Fabric Shop •

v

~

!able with a beautiful
centerpiece of fall
fl owers and foliage .

SYRACUSE - "Guard what
has been entrusted to you.
Avoid the godless chatter and
contradictions of what is called
knowledge" was the thought
lor the day when the Third
Wednesday Homemakers Club
met at the Municipal building
for their November session.
The Lord's prayer and fla g
pledge in unison opened the ·
meeting conducted by th e
secretary, Mrs. Agnes White.
Pauline Morarity used I
Timothy 1: 7 lor devotions. She

IQ;;;;;;-writY · 1

'
e Nylon and Dacron funct ional stitching.

Grace your Tha nksgiving

The annual Christmas dinner
wa s announced for Dec. 14 at

l'OMEROY - Christmas
hoxes ·for community shut.ins
will be prepared at the
December meeting of the Rock
Springs Better Healtll C.1ub at
the Rock Springs United
Metllodist Church.
Meeting Thursday at the
home of Mrs. G. J . Morgan, the
dub made plans For Ute Dec, !8
holiday dinner at the church at
1J a.m. with a 50 cent grab bag
exchange and secret pal gifts.
The Christmas boxes will be
prepared following the dinner
and party. Members were
reminded to take cookies and
candy.
Welcomed into membership
was Mrs. Marcella Snowden.

Wednesday Club meets

'•X•:•'•'..•:•'·!o..:O:O:O;•'O:o!•~_.·,·-x~·· ...-.;o;o;~.:o:o:o:o:o::o:o;.:o:•;•;.;.;o;o:•:o:o:•·~·;9·•;(1'•~~.............~

4 Moe toe design .

A COUPLE visiting one of the garbage pickup points in
Meigs County recently founded a box containing 14 books
belonging to Ute Meigs Bookmobile Service.
The couple picked up Ute box and took it to the local book·
mobile headquarters where personnel were delighted to have
recovered the volumes apparently headed for the county landfill.
Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja, supervisor of the unit , stresses again
that there is no charge invoked for books overdue at the unit and
points out that not only can books be returned during the many
stops of the bookmobile but can also be placed in a slot in the
bookmobile headquarters buildin g in Pomeroy.
Please, please, don 't dispose of books that belong to
libraries, Mrs. Pikkoja says.

Nancy NeuLzlin~. Thelma
Grueser and F.lva Dailey to the
nominating committee which
will report al the next mee ting.

It was voted to treat the
children this year the Sunday
befbre Christmas at the
municipal building. This will
be for children 12 years and
younger
and
Syracuse
residents only. Appointed to
the candy committee Were
Jean Hall, Mildred Pierce and
Charlotte Nease.
Santa Ciaus was discussed
and Elva Dailey is to buy a gift .

Spacous Skies" was sung and

Thanksgiving in America
House with a program con· Today was read by Janice
dueled by Ruth Zavilz and a $2 Lawson. The Prayer of Con~i ll exchange to follow at the secration was read in unison
and the hymn "Thanksgiving
chnrch annex.

f•'r t&gt;1m .
The- president appointed

a success.

--

'

BIRTHDAY WISHES to Benny Ewing who c e lebr~ted his
"day" Saturday. He was all of30.
BIRTHDAY !

REEDSVILLE
The
Riverview PTA met at the
Riverview Elementary School
Monday evening. The meeting
was opened with members
repeating the Lord's Prayer.

included.

SYRACUSE - A poUuf' k
Thanksgivin~ dinner with all
the trimmings pre&lt;:eded the
regular meeting of the
Syracuse Ladies Auxiliary of
the Volunteer Fire Department
Monday evening at the
mwticipal building.
The meeting was opened
with the Lord's Prayer and the
Oag pledge in unison. Charlotte
Nease used I Timothy 4: l-5 for
devotions. Prayer followed ,
Fifteen members answered
roll call with a Thanksgiving
verse. All reports were read
and approved. $174 was cleared
on the election day dinner. The
auxiliary wishes to thank all
who made donations or helped
in any way to make the dinner

for

or the church.
Alter the meeting closed, a
Thanksgiving program
prepared by Rev. Zavitz and
narrated by Margaret Cottrill
was g ive n. " Traditions of
Tnanksgiving" was the title,
with Beatrice Blake reading
the Hebrew tradition followed
by the hymn "0 wo.. hip the
King". A Litany of Thanks·
giving was given by the
narrator and members. The
pilgrim tradition was read by
Helen Harris followed by the
Prayer of Thanksgiving by
Agnes White, "0 Beautiful for

Will prepare. boxes

Ladies nieet

Cottrill Agnes White, Jean
Hall, J~nlce Lawson, Mildred
Pierce Naomi· London, Unda
Hubba~d, Pauline Morarily.
Charlotte Nease, Thelma

ore.sident
IH&gt;Iicious refreshments were
~ 'hadutte
Nea~c,
J~ni ce served by ttie hostesses, Helen
Lawson. Helen Diddle and Diddle and Helen Harris , to Grueser and guest,
Th elma Grueser to the Beatrice Blake, Margaret Pierce.

poem. ·'Thanksgivi ng Prayer"

Bradbury PTA and the Williams family for clothing; Vernon
Nease for games; Hazel CUrry lor dpminocs; th e Electa Circle
for fruit and candy ; Horak Carry Out and Les Fultz, tickets to
Santa's Musical Workshop ; membership to Tri-County Concert
from Ewing 's Funera l Home, Capital Financial Services, Athens
County Savings and Loan, Pomeroy Branch, City LQan, Swisher
and Lohse Phannacy, G&amp;J Auto Parts, George Hobstctter and
Theo Smith.
'

co rsage

~

~

Vision Speech and Hearing
Project and works as a speech
Uterapist aide.
King graduated
from
Wahama in 1967 and from the
United Electronics Institute .at
Louisville, Ky., in 1969. He is
employed as the assistant
manager of Miller's Super

Horace Karr was organist, and ·
soloist was Vernon Weber,

uncle of the bride. He sang

'

Comprehensive

H. McCune, Columbus; Jean

The wedding was an even I of
•
:· April. 8 at 2:30 p.m. and the
Rev , Robert Card officiated at
" the double ring ceremony. Mrs.
"

"

under the

program closed with the Lord's

The

something to be thankful for. A

recent donations.

Mr. and Mrs. Revtl(J C King III

an~ Harvest" was sung . The

MAKE 49 PAYMENTS AND

The 50th Is FREE I

'

Roush, reporter; Mrs. Dorothy
Myers, flower chairwoman.
Mrs. Dorothy Lawson
poesided at Ute meeting which
opened with the Lord's Prayer
and scripture. Members
named their favorite bird for
roll call. Mrs. Lawson, Mrs.
Opal Hollon, and Mrs. Ihzy
Newell were appointed to
prepare the programs for the
coming year,
Plans were made for the

KLY
PAY MINI' 50' 11
'·

•
'

.
•

•'

•

AMOUNT

OFQ.UI

S2 S3 \5 SJO
'

25 150 SJDQ 1150 suo 1580

1

.

Been dreaming of seasonal
greenery and find yourself in the red?
Why didn't you plan ahead! Open up a
Christmas Club like these folks did.
One weekly payment adds up to
happier hoi idays.

'

for terrific girls

THANKS

who swing with
fashion. Turn·on to
the exc item ent of a

TO 1HE VOTERS OF
SOUTHERN LOCAL SCHOOL
DISTRICf FOR THEm
SUPPORT IN THE NOV. 6,
1973 ELECTION.

brigh t new season wi th
th is terrif ic turn·out in Snow

Powder, color flecked with
bits of Red/Yellow/ Green. The
dress7 1ong-waisted ... th e jacket
-ribby, wrapped in a matchin g
sash. Doubleknitted Encronl' poly·
ester in sizes 5 to 15. Seen here and
in November Mademoiselle, $58 .00

BAHR

Jack L. ·'Bostic·

The Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.
'

POMEROY, OHIO
~ Member of Federal Reserve System

s2o,ooo Maximum

Insurance
For Each Depositor

CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Pd. Pol. Adv.

•

A FULL
·SERVICE
BANK

On Fridays Our Drive-In Window is
Open 9a.m. to 7 p.m. (Continuously l.

•
•

''
•

.

�I

'l

..

Wage-price controls ·hit

Follies to
offer new
production

By Jan Countryman
GALI.I POLIS - Hospitals
all over the country will have to
close tlleir doors if something
is not done about wage and
prlce controls a prominent.

POMEROY - New costuming and
new talent will be ·featured in the 20th
annual musical of the Big Bend Minstrel
Association to be staged at the Meigs High
School at 8:10 p.m. Saturday.
Sponsored by the Meigs Band Boosters,
the show, enUUed "Fall Follies," will be
emceed by a veteran of the Big Bend
Minstrel, Joe Struble.
Nineteen dances will be featured on
the opening segment which will include the
songs HAnything Goes," 11 Thoroughly
Modem Mlllie" and "Joy to the World"

OPEN DAILY

OPEN DAILY
10 TO 9
SUNDAY
I TO 7

-

with Jayne Lee Hoeflich featured vocally
on the latter number. The 19 dancers include Anita King, Sandy Curtis, Jeanie
Harrison, Judy Owen, Debbie Osborne,
Theresa Taylor, Tonya Keebaugh, Bar·
bara Fultz, Vicki Manley, Sheryl Lefebre,
Esther Lowery, Rhonda Hudson, Becky

10 TO 9
SUNDAY

1 TO 7

Thomas, Debbie Hartenbach, Marcia

PRICES IN EFFECT AT CHARLESTON
ST. ALBANS &amp; KANAWHA CITY STORES

OVAL ROASTERS

SUNBEAM

3 SPEED
MIXER

Choose from 4 pound, 9 pound. or 15 pound
roos1ers.

HECK'S REG. TO
$3.76

ONE BURNER

MIRROR

ELECTRIC HOT PLATE

4QT. PRESSURE PAN

Cassette Recorder

CAMERA

Nixon faces AP editors

HECK'S REG.
260

'34.96
. JEWElRY /JEPT.

KEY BISCAYNE, Fla.
(UP!) - President Nixon
pressed a major campaign to
clear his name of Watergate ·
and restore confidence in his
leadership Saturday night with
an hour.long televised news
conference before about 400
newspaper editors meeting at
Disney World.
Nixon headed by plane at
mid-afternoon for McCoy Air
Force Base at Orlando, Fla.,
about 240 miles to the north,
and a motorcade to Disney
World, convention site of The
· Associated Press Managing
Editors Association.
The nationally broadcast appearance was part of a
determined Nixon effort to
convince the public that he is
innocen1 of complicity in the
Water~-ate coverup and a
variety{of other allegations of
wrongdoing against him and

21 PC. SOCKET SET

G l ~aming white , ov en - bo k ~ d .

welded . Keyhole slots for q uic; k
and ea Sy wa ll mou nt ing.

HECK'S
REG.

$27.94

MARSHAL LAN

3- TIER UTILITY TABLE
STOW RACK
HECK'S
. REG.

HECK'S
REG.

$1.38

CONTAC 10' s

'

'13

'17.88

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

Three spacious shelves. Receptacle attached. Rugged and
durable construction .

$466.

66

$344

HECK'S
REG.

.· •s·•

15

STAINLESS STEEL BLADES
5's

59'

MAGIC "8" BALL

6 styles to choose from

Ask Mag ic " 8" a question , turn it over and the an swer is in
the botto m win dow.

$144

66c
'

TOY DEPT. ·,,'

20GAL TRASH
CAN

$1''
HECK'S REG.

Kennedy and his wife, Joan,
were waiting when their blond,
blue-eyed son, 12-year-old Edward Jr., was wheeled back

FLIP-OVER DOG

private, hair-down meeting

with President Nixon.

r·~

HECK'S REG. 99'

TOY DEPT.
FESCO PLASTIC

.

.

PHOTO ALBUMS LAU

44 QT. WASTE BIN

HECK'S REG.

$3.99

$3.44

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

MEMPIDS, Tenn. (UP!) Republican governors, a
diminishing clan, gather in this
Mississippi River town Sunday
for three days of crisis talks to
be climaxed Tuesday with a

Assorted Winter Scenes

HECK'S REG.

84'

FESCO PLASTIC

RY BASKET

$ 66

$199

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

$2.99

NOUSEWARE DEPT.

aoJi1WAM
DEPT.

The l!knember Republican
Governors Association loses
one of its members early next
year when the New Jersey
state house returns to
Democratic control as a result
. of the Nov. 6 election. Eleven of
the remaining 18 GOP
govemorshlps will be up for re·
election in 1974.
Governors'
conferences
usually are highly political ga.
therings, and the siill hazy
effects of the Watergate scandal and the Agnew resignation
are likely to be the commonest
subjects of corridor and cocktaU discussion at the three-day
meeting,
Republican
National
Committee Olairman George
President·
Bush, ' Vice
designate Gerald R. Ford and
-after the formal close of the
conference Tuesday afternoon
-Nixon will be on hand to
counsel with the governors.
The President's appearance
was a late addition to the
agenda, scheduled last week as
part .of his new policy of
opening himself to the advice
and complaints of fellow
Republican office-holders.
Tennessee Gov. Winfield
~· the conference hos( and
incoming GOP governors'
j

'

.

•

conrerence,

Biscayne vacation retrept

carried live by all major radio

The

news

again SlUlday for Macon, Ga.,
to take part in a 90th birthday
celebration for former Rep.
Carl M. Vinson, D-Ga., and a
ceremony . marking the looth
anniversary of the founding of

and television networks, was
the first Nixon has held since
Oct. 26, and his first speaking
engagement

outside

Washington in nearly three
months. He passed up the
White House press corps
traveling with him in favor of

questioning by the newspaper
editors from throughout the
c:ountry.
After a full week of lengthy
private White House confer·
ences with Republican mem·
hers of Congress and selected
Democratic legislators in an
apparent attempt to defuse a
drive for
impeachment
proceedings in the House, the
Presidept embarked Friday on
a series of campaign ..tyle
public appearances that will

Mercer
schooL

demonstrate S\Ulday.
The Pentagon will fly two
planeloads of V!Ps to Georgia
Sunday for the festivities,
including
members
of
Congress, military officials,

and employes of the House
Armed Services Committee,
which Vinson served as
University's . law . chairman Wltil his retirement
in 1965. · ·

In Georgia, which gave

After a day of rest Monday at
Nixon one of the biggest his bayside home, Nixon
statewide majorities of his planned to fly Tuesday to the
election landslide a year ago, Republican Governors Confer·
Republicans are coordinating a ence in Memphis, Tenn., for a
mass petition campaign in private meeting similar to the
support of the beleaguered ones he held last week with
President, with the results to virtually every GOP member
· be presented to him when he
of the House and Senate, along
arriVes Sunday afternoon.
with about 60 Democrats, most
of
them
conservative
A group of Mercer students Southerners
who
have
sent a telegram to· the White generally supported him in the
House protesting the visit, and past.
.
said they were pia!Uling to

into his room at Georgetown
University Hospital about 10
a.m . after successf.uJ, hourlong surgery for removal of his
right leg above \he knee.
A hospital spokesman said
yo\Ulg Teddy, wbo was diagnosed a week ago as having
bone cancer in the lower
portion · of the leg, ·was in
satisfactory condition. Four

hours after the operation, the
hospital said he was ''making•
an uneventful recovery." ·

Crisis talks set

5" SANTA WATERBALL

TOY DEPT.
FESCO PLASTIC

Smiling.''

HECK'S REG. 79'

S]44

HECK'S REG.

$1.99

REMOTE CONTROLLED
REMOTE CONTROLLED ACTION .
BARKS," OPENS AND CLOSES HI S
MOUTH AND DOES FLIP AFTER FliP
WITHO UT TIRING. DARK BROWN
PLUSH IN COLOR. 6'.' LONG. USES
2" 0 " BATTERIES (NOT INCLUDED).

CHOICE

HECK'S REG.

niece away in marri~ge to a

. chorus of "Irish Eyes Are

~~COSMETICD~E.-~r.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~.OS.•M•f•U•C•DE.•P•T.----

BAGGED TOYS .

FORTUNE TELLING

oz.

c

HECK'S REG. $1.38

COSMETIC

COSMETIC DEPT.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - In a
. morning of tragedy and muted ·
joy, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy,
!).Mass., comforted his cancer-stricken son after his right
leg was amputated Saturday,
and wihln an hour gave his

.RIGHT GUARD
DEODORANT

·88&lt;

HECK'S REG.

99'

4

VASELINE
INTENSIVE
CARE
LOTION

c

HECK'S REG.

oz ..

last through Tuesday.
He will leave his Key

his administration .

•

e

made several giant strides in
this field .
He noted that the Volunteer
Se.-vice League is now
operating in 10 separate areas
of the Medical Center and that
the volunteers, including the
R'ld Cross Grey Ladies, have
donated over 7,000 total hours
to patient care.
In other areas a medical
social service plan to develop
casework services and make
referral to proper agencies in
(Continued on page 16)

By United Press International be taxed heavily."
To ration gasoline or not to
In Washington, howeve r,
ration gasolin e was t he Ca spa r Weinberge r said
question Saturday.
Saturday,"! don't know that at
While rationing was being this point it is necessary to
debated by top government increase taxes or to ration. The
· officials, local au thorities, pr incipal thing ... that iS
firms and ordinary citizens required at this moment is
were figuring out ways to save conservation of existing
all forms of energy.
supplies at the same time we
In Dallas, U.S. Interior .are making every effort to
Undersecretary John Whitaker increase the supply.' '
said Friday "it seems definite"
Weinberger also said the
that some kind of gasoline United States should be deverationing or taxation wou1d be loping new sources of supply,
but added that negotiations
necessary .
CLOUD 'f() TEST
"We could make sure a car with the Arab oil producing
COLUMBUS (UP! l . Roger Cloud, the un· owner gets 10 to 15 gallons a countries might be fruitful .
"I don't see any reason to
successful Republican week, [or ex~ple, out. of a
suppose
that negotiations can 't
gubernatoria1 ·nomineie' ·in guaranteed supply," he told
1970, Friday took out officials from Texas, Ok- increase the flow of oil from the
petitions of candidacy for the . lahoma, Louisiana, Arkansas Middle East''
11
office of lieutenant governor and New Mexico. A person · If gasoline rationing does
who used more than that would come , however, it won 't bother
In 1974.
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown, who issued the
petiilons, said Cloud told him
he wanted to circulate the
petitions to determine
possible support for his
candidacy.
"He said he might run or
he might not, depending on ·
the outcome," Brown said.
By United Press International
In Tel Aviv, government
Egypt Saturday flatly reject- sources said Saturday, the
ed an I~raeli pe.ace proposal Israeli goVernment is seriOusly
calling for mutual troop .with- concerned the United States
drawals on the Sinai front and may try to railroad it into
the creation of a U.N . buffer surrendering most of the
zone along the Suez Canal. conquered Arab territory it has
President Kennedy's Egypt also charged that Israel held since the 1967 war ,
assassination in Dallas.
seriously violated the week-&lt;&gt;ld
They said Israel is deterThe Edward Kennedys and a cease.fire agreement by con- mined to resist any such
physician broke the news to structing a causeway across pressure, either at the planned
young Teddy at midday Friday the Suez CanaL
· Middle East peace conference
Despite the emphatic Egyp- or outside it.
about the decision to amputate.
The boy was wken into tian rejection and the cease·
Prime Minister Golda Meir
surgery at about 8:30 a.m. fire
violation
charges, voiced the government's
Saturday, and was wheeled out measures for carrying out the anxiety in a televised interview
at 10 a.m. The· hour·long six-point cease·fire agreement Friday night.
operation was performed by between Israel and Egypi
Withput mentioning the Unit·
Dr. George Hyatt, chief of proceeded smoothly Saturday. ed Stales by name , Mrs. Meir
orthopedic surgery at the
POW exchanges continued predicted a possible dispute
hospital.
without a hitch In Tel Aviv and wlth "Israel's great, good and
A malignant growth discov- Cairo, relief supplies kept faithful friends that might
ered in diagnostic tests that rolling into Israeli ..urrounded attempt to pressure her during
began Nov. 9 was described as SUez Citiat the southern end of peace negotiations with the
a cartilage tissue tumor, less the canal and the International Arabs."
serious than primary bone Red Cross evacuated more
The Israeli military disen·
cancer.
wounded civilians from the gagement plan.. officially
proposed by Mrs. Meir Friday,
The National Cancer In· · SUez City.
A U.N. spokesman in Cairo . calls for all Egyptian forces to
stitute said the IO.year survival
rate for Teddy's form of bone said the implementation of the pull back to the West Bank of
cancer is 69 per cent. Most cease.fire was "satisfactory." the Canal and Israeli troopa to
bone cancers are difficult to Egypt and Israel began carry. withdraw to the East Bankcure, it said, because the ing out the cease.fire agree· the 1967 cease-fire lines. U.N.
spreading tumor is usually· at men\ Wednesd'!y. The U.S. peace keeping troops would act
an advanced stage when sponsored agreement was as buffer between them.
discovered.
signed last Sunday.

Israeli peace .
plan rejected

Kennedys co]ftlfort son, give niece away

HOUSIWARI DEPT.

WILKINSON

.

•

HECK'S REG. $5.33

AUTOMOTIVE .
DEPT.

PAGE If

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1973

.

MEDICINE
CABINET

HANDY HANGERS

R t · . .
itntintl ~~~!n~r~!c~~:t~~~~r :~ a I 0 ning debated

VOl 8 NO. 42

heavy gauge stee l co nstruc tion , all

8 FT.

.

.

IOI!If p roCf 0 1 pj&lt;lutel you wool da yI to ~ · t lo&gt;ru th r l olA'
la &lt;!o rr . So .., joy tr.. g&lt;&gt;l&gt;d ' ""'" uhtanoly Q" d o&lt;oJoom•
c a t t y"" ~ Polaroid'" "'., S~""'" Shoot-.• 1 II'&lt; &gt;h.ctly Ia•
eco no mocal 1quore J '• "~ 3 '• " to lm U.o11

99

annual musical of the Big Bend Minstrel Assodation·at 8:10p.m. Saturday at the
Meigs High School Auditorium.
'

e

Polmood 'o n ~ .. Sqvo&lt;e Slloo&gt;or 2 land come•o ' ' 1M
lo ..tl t puc td all w•~•e onno n! cojor camera e.er o l
le red Yov ~~ 60 ·wtond colo&lt;ed pi&lt; Tut e&gt; lo, ab&lt;tut of.o

'9.96

Heck's

"WITH A STRAW HAT AND A CANE," these dancers, Peggy O'Brien, Jayne
Lee Hoeflich and Jeanie Schneider, I tor, will present the old soft shoe in the 20th

SOUNDESIGN

POLAROID
SQUARE SHOOTER 2

99

MODEL$
·H

$288

Dillard, Trudy Roach, June Ann Wamsley,
Theresa Wildermuth and Merri Ault.
Sherry King, a sophomore at Malone
College, will be participating in the show
with the vocal ''Top of the World" ac(Continued on page 16)

WHILE.QUANTITIES LAST

SUNDAY &amp;MONDAY NOV. 18 &amp;19 ONLY

health care executive said here
Friday.
Hugh Kirkel, executive vice
president of Holzer Medical
Center, speaking at the first
Volunteer Awards Luncheon at
Ute medical center near here,
said, however , he is not
worried about fuel " because I
can't imagine the government
will not provide for hospitals."
Earlier at the luncheon Mrs.
Ellabelle McDonald, chair- ,woman or the Red Cross Grey
Ladies, was honored for
,
.
•
having contributed countless
J
hours to the volunteer care of ;"
patients in the medical center.
- ·
She has refused to keep track
of her · hours. The award, a
~-- .
specially designed pin , was
L , ·. '
presented by Robert Fanning,
vice president of professiona1
MRS. EILABEUE McOONALU, ctJarrwoman ot uray LaCUc::., !~H, rt."Ctnves ner volunservices at the Medical Center.
teer service pih from Robert Fanning, vice president of professional servic;es, Holzer Medical
Approximately 65 persons
Center, during awards presentations Friday . Seated are Hugh K.lrKeL, executive vice
attended.
president, Holzer Medical Center , and Mary Jeanne Walker, mistress of ceremonies for the
In a wide·ranging review of
1\Ulcheon.
the · medical
center's
achievements and pro~lems ,
Kirkei noted that Holzer
Medical Center is constantly
striving to improve Its patient

•

chairman, hopes for some
expression of support for
Nixon, but it was uncertain if a
formal resolution would be
adopied.
At their conference last
spring in New York, the
Republican governors issued a
statement on .the Watergate
affair. It had a lukewarm tone
that some members felt was
damaging instead of being a
vote of confidence.
Two association members,
Govs. Francis Sargent of
Massachusetts and Robert Ray
of Iowa, milde clear at last
week's meeting of the Republican National Committee's
Coordinating Committee that
they were highly reluctant to
join in any specific resolution
endorsing Nixon's course in the
recent past. A statem•nt
simply "welcoming" the
President's pledges to disclose
all Watergate facts came out of
that session.
The fact that Nixon was to
meet with the governors in
private after adjournment of
the conference also diminished
any potential embarrassment
if no resolution is adopted.
At least two potential 1976
Republican presidential nominees
-Govs. Ronald
Reagan of California and
Nelson Rockefeller of New
York -planned to attend,
heightening the political nature
of the meeting.
The main issue to be
discussed at the conference
was the energy crisis, and even
that has political overtones.

While his wife remained
behind, the distraught senator
left the hospital 20 minutes
later for Holy Trinity Church in
Geofgetown, one block · from
the' university campus, for the
wedding of Kathleen Kennedy,
22, the oldest of the 11 c)tildren
of his slain brother, Robert F.
Kennedy.
Looking pained as he tried to
smile reassuringly, tile senator
arrived . with the bride in a
limousine and escorted her up
the steps of the red stone
church only minutes before the
Roman catholiC service was to
begin at 11 a.m.
The church was j8llUiled
with friends and relatives of
the Kennedys and the groom,
David Lee Townsend, 25, a
long-haired, bearded Harvard
doctoral student. Among the
wedding guests, whom singer
Andy Williams led in a rousing
chorus of "Irish Eyes Are
Smiling" after the nuptial vows
were exchanged, were Sen.

George S. McGovern, D..S.D:,
Boston Mayor Kevin White and
Sargent Shriver, the bride's
uncle and McGovern's vice
presidential running mate last
year.
The bridesmaids, who wore
long dark green velvet gowns,
inclUded Caroline Kennedy, 16year-old daughter of President
John F. Kennedy. Her mother,
~ackie Onassis, did not attend.
A crowd of 500 well-wishers
outside the c)turch cheered
when Kennedy and McGovern
emerged after the service.
Kennedy returned to the
hospital and McGovern joined
the others at a wedding
reception at Hickory Hill,
Ethel Kennedy's suburban
estate in McLean, Va.
The morning ·of heavy emotion came just three days
before Robert Kennedy, assas·
sinated in Los Angeles in J\Ule,
1968, would have celebrated his
48th birthday, and five days
before the loth anniversary of

the women who work at the
Draper Bank and Trust in
Draper , Utah.
They '11 be riding to and from
work each day in a bus-{)wned
by the hank-for free .
Bank President Dewey Bluth
says gasoline shortages and
possible rationing gave him the
idea to put an 18-passenger
van·type bus to transport the
· female employes at the bank to
and from work .
" It worked out that the two
girls who live the farthest fro!Jl
the bank can drive the bus and
pick up the others on the way to
work ," he said.
Five of the employes, who
live within three blocks of the
hank, will walk to work.
In other developments:
- Tacoma., Wash. , residents
won't be able to take a bus to
Thanksgiving dinner Thursday. The Tacoma Transit
Service says the fuel shortage
has forced it to cancel service
on Thanksgiving Day as well as
weekends beginning Nov. 24
and running at least through .
January.
- Four hundred fifty workers
at the Firestone Synthetic
Fibers Co. in Hopewell, Va .,
may be laid off as a result of
the fuel shortage, a firm
spokesman said.

Authority
says Saxhe
can't serve

CHICAGO (UP!) - An
authority on constitutional law,
responding to an inquiry by the
Senate Judiciary Committee,
said Sen. William Saxbe's
appointment as attorney
general is unconstitutional.
B.
Kurland,
Philip
University
of
Chicago
professor law, wrote in a letter
dated Nov : 14, but released
Friday, " In response to ynur
inquiry as to whether Sena tor
Saxbe may constitutionally be
aj)pointed attorney ger.era l
during his present senatoria1
term, my answer is that h"e
caru10t.''
Kurland said the ap·
pointment violated Article I,
Section 6, Paragraph 2 which
states no elected senator or
Giant Cat Seen
representative may be apSALEM CENTER pointed \0 a civil office that has
Guards at Mine No. 1 near
a salary Which was increased
here last week confirmed
during his present term. Saxbe
two earlier reports tbe past
was in Congress when the
two weeks of seeing a black . attorney general's salary was
ca.t
standlng
''apincreased.
11
proximately" two·leet high.
The question is then raised
Meigs County Sheriff
whether, if Congress were now
Robert C. Hartelibach's
to reduce the emoluments of
Dept. said Thursday the
the attorney general's office to
guards reported to
office
those which were available
seeing the cat, but gave no
before the legislation · that
further details.
· caused $en. Saxbe's disqualifi·
cation, that disqualification
would be eliminated," Kurland
DAMAGE HEAVY
said. "My answer is that it
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio would not''
(UP!) - Sen. C~aries H.
He said, "Clearly a statute
Percy, R·III., said here the reducing the salary of the
Watergate scandals represent attorney general would have no
not only damage done to the function or purpose except to
Republican party but a qualify a particular member of
"serious defeat for our entire Congress for an office for
nation and · its elec toral which he . could not qualify
processes." He added, ''The otherwise." Kurland said this
people's distrust of politicians would "fly in the face of the
now outweighs the public's reasons behind the con·
confidence in the ability of our stitutional prohibition.'' "'
political system to produce
All criminal prosecutions
much .needed change/' in while Saxbe was attorney
reference to the low voter general, he said, could be in
turnout for last week's general danger "of constitutional inelections across the nation.
validity."

his

ONE OF THE MOST A'ITRACTIVE and popular exhibits
at the G&amp;J Parts Show Thursday in PI_. Pleasant was the AC
Division of General Motors. Over 1,400 persons saw this

display as they entered the National Guard Armory. Hosting
the visitors to the booth were left, Bill Fischer, former Ohio
State footballer of the 1960's, and Alex Gray, on ri ght.

•

•

I

�I

'l

..

Wage-price controls ·hit

Follies to
offer new
production

By Jan Countryman
GALI.I POLIS - Hospitals
all over the country will have to
close tlleir doors if something
is not done about wage and
prlce controls a prominent.

POMEROY - New costuming and
new talent will be ·featured in the 20th
annual musical of the Big Bend Minstrel
Association to be staged at the Meigs High
School at 8:10 p.m. Saturday.
Sponsored by the Meigs Band Boosters,
the show, enUUed "Fall Follies," will be
emceed by a veteran of the Big Bend
Minstrel, Joe Struble.
Nineteen dances will be featured on
the opening segment which will include the
songs HAnything Goes," 11 Thoroughly
Modem Mlllie" and "Joy to the World"

OPEN DAILY

OPEN DAILY
10 TO 9
SUNDAY
I TO 7

-

with Jayne Lee Hoeflich featured vocally
on the latter number. The 19 dancers include Anita King, Sandy Curtis, Jeanie
Harrison, Judy Owen, Debbie Osborne,
Theresa Taylor, Tonya Keebaugh, Bar·
bara Fultz, Vicki Manley, Sheryl Lefebre,
Esther Lowery, Rhonda Hudson, Becky

10 TO 9
SUNDAY

1 TO 7

Thomas, Debbie Hartenbach, Marcia

PRICES IN EFFECT AT CHARLESTON
ST. ALBANS &amp; KANAWHA CITY STORES

OVAL ROASTERS

SUNBEAM

3 SPEED
MIXER

Choose from 4 pound, 9 pound. or 15 pound
roos1ers.

HECK'S REG. TO
$3.76

ONE BURNER

MIRROR

ELECTRIC HOT PLATE

4QT. PRESSURE PAN

Cassette Recorder

CAMERA

Nixon faces AP editors

HECK'S REG.
260

'34.96
. JEWElRY /JEPT.

KEY BISCAYNE, Fla.
(UP!) - President Nixon
pressed a major campaign to
clear his name of Watergate ·
and restore confidence in his
leadership Saturday night with
an hour.long televised news
conference before about 400
newspaper editors meeting at
Disney World.
Nixon headed by plane at
mid-afternoon for McCoy Air
Force Base at Orlando, Fla.,
about 240 miles to the north,
and a motorcade to Disney
World, convention site of The
· Associated Press Managing
Editors Association.
The nationally broadcast appearance was part of a
determined Nixon effort to
convince the public that he is
innocen1 of complicity in the
Water~-ate coverup and a
variety{of other allegations of
wrongdoing against him and

21 PC. SOCKET SET

G l ~aming white , ov en - bo k ~ d .

welded . Keyhole slots for q uic; k
and ea Sy wa ll mou nt ing.

HECK'S
REG.

$27.94

MARSHAL LAN

3- TIER UTILITY TABLE
STOW RACK
HECK'S
. REG.

HECK'S
REG.

$1.38

CONTAC 10' s

'

'13

'17.88

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

Three spacious shelves. Receptacle attached. Rugged and
durable construction .

$466.

66

$344

HECK'S
REG.

.· •s·•

15

STAINLESS STEEL BLADES
5's

59'

MAGIC "8" BALL

6 styles to choose from

Ask Mag ic " 8" a question , turn it over and the an swer is in
the botto m win dow.

$144

66c
'

TOY DEPT. ·,,'

20GAL TRASH
CAN

$1''
HECK'S REG.

Kennedy and his wife, Joan,
were waiting when their blond,
blue-eyed son, 12-year-old Edward Jr., was wheeled back

FLIP-OVER DOG

private, hair-down meeting

with President Nixon.

r·~

HECK'S REG. 99'

TOY DEPT.
FESCO PLASTIC

.

.

PHOTO ALBUMS LAU

44 QT. WASTE BIN

HECK'S REG.

$3.99

$3.44

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

MEMPIDS, Tenn. (UP!) Republican governors, a
diminishing clan, gather in this
Mississippi River town Sunday
for three days of crisis talks to
be climaxed Tuesday with a

Assorted Winter Scenes

HECK'S REG.

84'

FESCO PLASTIC

RY BASKET

$ 66

$199

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

$2.99

NOUSEWARE DEPT.

aoJi1WAM
DEPT.

The l!knember Republican
Governors Association loses
one of its members early next
year when the New Jersey
state house returns to
Democratic control as a result
. of the Nov. 6 election. Eleven of
the remaining 18 GOP
govemorshlps will be up for re·
election in 1974.
Governors'
conferences
usually are highly political ga.
therings, and the siill hazy
effects of the Watergate scandal and the Agnew resignation
are likely to be the commonest
subjects of corridor and cocktaU discussion at the three-day
meeting,
Republican
National
Committee Olairman George
President·
Bush, ' Vice
designate Gerald R. Ford and
-after the formal close of the
conference Tuesday afternoon
-Nixon will be on hand to
counsel with the governors.
The President's appearance
was a late addition to the
agenda, scheduled last week as
part .of his new policy of
opening himself to the advice
and complaints of fellow
Republican office-holders.
Tennessee Gov. Winfield
~· the conference hos( and
incoming GOP governors'
j

'

.

•

conrerence,

Biscayne vacation retrept

carried live by all major radio

The

news

again SlUlday for Macon, Ga.,
to take part in a 90th birthday
celebration for former Rep.
Carl M. Vinson, D-Ga., and a
ceremony . marking the looth
anniversary of the founding of

and television networks, was
the first Nixon has held since
Oct. 26, and his first speaking
engagement

outside

Washington in nearly three
months. He passed up the
White House press corps
traveling with him in favor of

questioning by the newspaper
editors from throughout the
c:ountry.
After a full week of lengthy
private White House confer·
ences with Republican mem·
hers of Congress and selected
Democratic legislators in an
apparent attempt to defuse a
drive for
impeachment
proceedings in the House, the
Presidept embarked Friday on
a series of campaign ..tyle
public appearances that will

Mercer
schooL

demonstrate S\Ulday.
The Pentagon will fly two
planeloads of V!Ps to Georgia
Sunday for the festivities,
including
members
of
Congress, military officials,

and employes of the House
Armed Services Committee,
which Vinson served as
University's . law . chairman Wltil his retirement
in 1965. · ·

In Georgia, which gave

After a day of rest Monday at
Nixon one of the biggest his bayside home, Nixon
statewide majorities of his planned to fly Tuesday to the
election landslide a year ago, Republican Governors Confer·
Republicans are coordinating a ence in Memphis, Tenn., for a
mass petition campaign in private meeting similar to the
support of the beleaguered ones he held last week with
President, with the results to virtually every GOP member
· be presented to him when he
of the House and Senate, along
arriVes Sunday afternoon.
with about 60 Democrats, most
of
them
conservative
A group of Mercer students Southerners
who
have
sent a telegram to· the White generally supported him in the
House protesting the visit, and past.
.
said they were pia!Uling to

into his room at Georgetown
University Hospital about 10
a.m . after successf.uJ, hourlong surgery for removal of his
right leg above \he knee.
A hospital spokesman said
yo\Ulg Teddy, wbo was diagnosed a week ago as having
bone cancer in the lower
portion · of the leg, ·was in
satisfactory condition. Four

hours after the operation, the
hospital said he was ''making•
an uneventful recovery." ·

Crisis talks set

5" SANTA WATERBALL

TOY DEPT.
FESCO PLASTIC

Smiling.''

HECK'S REG. 79'

S]44

HECK'S REG.

$1.99

REMOTE CONTROLLED
REMOTE CONTROLLED ACTION .
BARKS," OPENS AND CLOSES HI S
MOUTH AND DOES FLIP AFTER FliP
WITHO UT TIRING. DARK BROWN
PLUSH IN COLOR. 6'.' LONG. USES
2" 0 " BATTERIES (NOT INCLUDED).

CHOICE

HECK'S REG.

niece away in marri~ge to a

. chorus of "Irish Eyes Are

~~COSMETICD~E.-~r.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~.OS.•M•f•U•C•DE.•P•T.----

BAGGED TOYS .

FORTUNE TELLING

oz.

c

HECK'S REG. $1.38

COSMETIC

COSMETIC DEPT.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - In a
. morning of tragedy and muted ·
joy, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy,
!).Mass., comforted his cancer-stricken son after his right
leg was amputated Saturday,
and wihln an hour gave his

.RIGHT GUARD
DEODORANT

·88&lt;

HECK'S REG.

99'

4

VASELINE
INTENSIVE
CARE
LOTION

c

HECK'S REG.

oz ..

last through Tuesday.
He will leave his Key

his administration .

•

e

made several giant strides in
this field .
He noted that the Volunteer
Se.-vice League is now
operating in 10 separate areas
of the Medical Center and that
the volunteers, including the
R'ld Cross Grey Ladies, have
donated over 7,000 total hours
to patient care.
In other areas a medical
social service plan to develop
casework services and make
referral to proper agencies in
(Continued on page 16)

By United Press International be taxed heavily."
To ration gasoline or not to
In Washington, howeve r,
ration gasolin e was t he Ca spa r Weinberge r said
question Saturday.
Saturday,"! don't know that at
While rationing was being this point it is necessary to
debated by top government increase taxes or to ration. The
· officials, local au thorities, pr incipal thing ... that iS
firms and ordinary citizens required at this moment is
were figuring out ways to save conservation of existing
all forms of energy.
supplies at the same time we
In Dallas, U.S. Interior .are making every effort to
Undersecretary John Whitaker increase the supply.' '
said Friday "it seems definite"
Weinberger also said the
that some kind of gasoline United States should be deverationing or taxation wou1d be loping new sources of supply,
but added that negotiations
necessary .
CLOUD 'f() TEST
"We could make sure a car with the Arab oil producing
COLUMBUS (UP! l . Roger Cloud, the un· owner gets 10 to 15 gallons a countries might be fruitful .
"I don't see any reason to
successful Republican week, [or ex~ple, out. of a
suppose
that negotiations can 't
gubernatoria1 ·nomineie' ·in guaranteed supply," he told
1970, Friday took out officials from Texas, Ok- increase the flow of oil from the
petitions of candidacy for the . lahoma, Louisiana, Arkansas Middle East''
11
office of lieutenant governor and New Mexico. A person · If gasoline rationing does
who used more than that would come , however, it won 't bother
In 1974.
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown, who issued the
petiilons, said Cloud told him
he wanted to circulate the
petitions to determine
possible support for his
candidacy.
"He said he might run or
he might not, depending on ·
the outcome," Brown said.
By United Press International
In Tel Aviv, government
Egypt Saturday flatly reject- sources said Saturday, the
ed an I~raeli pe.ace proposal Israeli goVernment is seriOusly
calling for mutual troop .with- concerned the United States
drawals on the Sinai front and may try to railroad it into
the creation of a U.N . buffer surrendering most of the
zone along the Suez Canal. conquered Arab territory it has
President Kennedy's Egypt also charged that Israel held since the 1967 war ,
assassination in Dallas.
seriously violated the week-&lt;&gt;ld
They said Israel is deterThe Edward Kennedys and a cease.fire agreement by con- mined to resist any such
physician broke the news to structing a causeway across pressure, either at the planned
young Teddy at midday Friday the Suez CanaL
· Middle East peace conference
Despite the emphatic Egyp- or outside it.
about the decision to amputate.
The boy was wken into tian rejection and the cease·
Prime Minister Golda Meir
surgery at about 8:30 a.m. fire
violation
charges, voiced the government's
Saturday, and was wheeled out measures for carrying out the anxiety in a televised interview
at 10 a.m. The· hour·long six-point cease·fire agreement Friday night.
operation was performed by between Israel and Egypi
Withput mentioning the Unit·
Dr. George Hyatt, chief of proceeded smoothly Saturday. ed Stales by name , Mrs. Meir
orthopedic surgery at the
POW exchanges continued predicted a possible dispute
hospital.
without a hitch In Tel Aviv and wlth "Israel's great, good and
A malignant growth discov- Cairo, relief supplies kept faithful friends that might
ered in diagnostic tests that rolling into Israeli ..urrounded attempt to pressure her during
began Nov. 9 was described as SUez Citiat the southern end of peace negotiations with the
a cartilage tissue tumor, less the canal and the International Arabs."
serious than primary bone Red Cross evacuated more
The Israeli military disen·
cancer.
wounded civilians from the gagement plan.. officially
proposed by Mrs. Meir Friday,
The National Cancer In· · SUez City.
A U.N. spokesman in Cairo . calls for all Egyptian forces to
stitute said the IO.year survival
rate for Teddy's form of bone said the implementation of the pull back to the West Bank of
cancer is 69 per cent. Most cease.fire was "satisfactory." the Canal and Israeli troopa to
bone cancers are difficult to Egypt and Israel began carry. withdraw to the East Bankcure, it said, because the ing out the cease.fire agree· the 1967 cease-fire lines. U.N.
spreading tumor is usually· at men\ Wednesd'!y. The U.S. peace keeping troops would act
an advanced stage when sponsored agreement was as buffer between them.
discovered.
signed last Sunday.

Israeli peace .
plan rejected

Kennedys co]ftlfort son, give niece away

HOUSIWARI DEPT.

WILKINSON

.

•

HECK'S REG. $5.33

AUTOMOTIVE .
DEPT.

PAGE If

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1973

.

MEDICINE
CABINET

HANDY HANGERS

R t · . .
itntintl ~~~!n~r~!c~~:t~~~~r :~ a I 0 ning debated

VOl 8 NO. 42

heavy gauge stee l co nstruc tion , all

8 FT.

.

.

IOI!If p roCf 0 1 pj&lt;lutel you wool da yI to ~ · t lo&gt;ru th r l olA'
la &lt;!o rr . So .., joy tr.. g&lt;&gt;l&gt;d ' ""'" uhtanoly Q" d o&lt;oJoom•
c a t t y"" ~ Polaroid'" "'., S~""'" Shoot-.• 1 II'&lt; &gt;h.ctly Ia•
eco no mocal 1quore J '• "~ 3 '• " to lm U.o11

99

annual musical of the Big Bend Minstrel Assodation·at 8:10p.m. Saturday at the
Meigs High School Auditorium.
'

e

Polmood 'o n ~ .. Sqvo&lt;e Slloo&gt;or 2 land come•o ' ' 1M
lo ..tl t puc td all w•~•e onno n! cojor camera e.er o l
le red Yov ~~ 60 ·wtond colo&lt;ed pi&lt; Tut e&gt; lo, ab&lt;tut of.o

'9.96

Heck's

"WITH A STRAW HAT AND A CANE," these dancers, Peggy O'Brien, Jayne
Lee Hoeflich and Jeanie Schneider, I tor, will present the old soft shoe in the 20th

SOUNDESIGN

POLAROID
SQUARE SHOOTER 2

99

MODEL$
·H

$288

Dillard, Trudy Roach, June Ann Wamsley,
Theresa Wildermuth and Merri Ault.
Sherry King, a sophomore at Malone
College, will be participating in the show
with the vocal ''Top of the World" ac(Continued on page 16)

WHILE.QUANTITIES LAST

SUNDAY &amp;MONDAY NOV. 18 &amp;19 ONLY

health care executive said here
Friday.
Hugh Kirkel, executive vice
president of Holzer Medical
Center, speaking at the first
Volunteer Awards Luncheon at
Ute medical center near here,
said, however , he is not
worried about fuel " because I
can't imagine the government
will not provide for hospitals."
Earlier at the luncheon Mrs.
Ellabelle McDonald, chair- ,woman or the Red Cross Grey
Ladies, was honored for
,
.
•
having contributed countless
J
hours to the volunteer care of ;"
patients in the medical center.
- ·
She has refused to keep track
of her · hours. The award, a
~-- .
specially designed pin , was
L , ·. '
presented by Robert Fanning,
vice president of professiona1
MRS. EILABEUE McOONALU, ctJarrwoman ot uray LaCUc::., !~H, rt."Ctnves ner volunservices at the Medical Center.
teer service pih from Robert Fanning, vice president of professional servic;es, Holzer Medical
Approximately 65 persons
Center, during awards presentations Friday . Seated are Hugh K.lrKeL, executive vice
attended.
president, Holzer Medical Center , and Mary Jeanne Walker, mistress of ceremonies for the
In a wide·ranging review of
1\Ulcheon.
the · medical
center's
achievements and pro~lems ,
Kirkei noted that Holzer
Medical Center is constantly
striving to improve Its patient

•

chairman, hopes for some
expression of support for
Nixon, but it was uncertain if a
formal resolution would be
adopied.
At their conference last
spring in New York, the
Republican governors issued a
statement on .the Watergate
affair. It had a lukewarm tone
that some members felt was
damaging instead of being a
vote of confidence.
Two association members,
Govs. Francis Sargent of
Massachusetts and Robert Ray
of Iowa, milde clear at last
week's meeting of the Republican National Committee's
Coordinating Committee that
they were highly reluctant to
join in any specific resolution
endorsing Nixon's course in the
recent past. A statem•nt
simply "welcoming" the
President's pledges to disclose
all Watergate facts came out of
that session.
The fact that Nixon was to
meet with the governors in
private after adjournment of
the conference also diminished
any potential embarrassment
if no resolution is adopted.
At least two potential 1976
Republican presidential nominees
-Govs. Ronald
Reagan of California and
Nelson Rockefeller of New
York -planned to attend,
heightening the political nature
of the meeting.
The main issue to be
discussed at the conference
was the energy crisis, and even
that has political overtones.

While his wife remained
behind, the distraught senator
left the hospital 20 minutes
later for Holy Trinity Church in
Geofgetown, one block · from
the' university campus, for the
wedding of Kathleen Kennedy,
22, the oldest of the 11 c)tildren
of his slain brother, Robert F.
Kennedy.
Looking pained as he tried to
smile reassuringly, tile senator
arrived . with the bride in a
limousine and escorted her up
the steps of the red stone
church only minutes before the
Roman catholiC service was to
begin at 11 a.m.
The church was j8llUiled
with friends and relatives of
the Kennedys and the groom,
David Lee Townsend, 25, a
long-haired, bearded Harvard
doctoral student. Among the
wedding guests, whom singer
Andy Williams led in a rousing
chorus of "Irish Eyes Are
Smiling" after the nuptial vows
were exchanged, were Sen.

George S. McGovern, D..S.D:,
Boston Mayor Kevin White and
Sargent Shriver, the bride's
uncle and McGovern's vice
presidential running mate last
year.
The bridesmaids, who wore
long dark green velvet gowns,
inclUded Caroline Kennedy, 16year-old daughter of President
John F. Kennedy. Her mother,
~ackie Onassis, did not attend.
A crowd of 500 well-wishers
outside the c)turch cheered
when Kennedy and McGovern
emerged after the service.
Kennedy returned to the
hospital and McGovern joined
the others at a wedding
reception at Hickory Hill,
Ethel Kennedy's suburban
estate in McLean, Va.
The morning ·of heavy emotion came just three days
before Robert Kennedy, assas·
sinated in Los Angeles in J\Ule,
1968, would have celebrated his
48th birthday, and five days
before the loth anniversary of

the women who work at the
Draper Bank and Trust in
Draper , Utah.
They '11 be riding to and from
work each day in a bus-{)wned
by the hank-for free .
Bank President Dewey Bluth
says gasoline shortages and
possible rationing gave him the
idea to put an 18-passenger
van·type bus to transport the
· female employes at the bank to
and from work .
" It worked out that the two
girls who live the farthest fro!Jl
the bank can drive the bus and
pick up the others on the way to
work ," he said.
Five of the employes, who
live within three blocks of the
hank, will walk to work.
In other developments:
- Tacoma., Wash. , residents
won't be able to take a bus to
Thanksgiving dinner Thursday. The Tacoma Transit
Service says the fuel shortage
has forced it to cancel service
on Thanksgiving Day as well as
weekends beginning Nov. 24
and running at least through .
January.
- Four hundred fifty workers
at the Firestone Synthetic
Fibers Co. in Hopewell, Va .,
may be laid off as a result of
the fuel shortage, a firm
spokesman said.

Authority
says Saxhe
can't serve

CHICAGO (UP!) - An
authority on constitutional law,
responding to an inquiry by the
Senate Judiciary Committee,
said Sen. William Saxbe's
appointment as attorney
general is unconstitutional.
B.
Kurland,
Philip
University
of
Chicago
professor law, wrote in a letter
dated Nov : 14, but released
Friday, " In response to ynur
inquiry as to whether Sena tor
Saxbe may constitutionally be
aj)pointed attorney ger.era l
during his present senatoria1
term, my answer is that h"e
caru10t.''
Kurland said the ap·
pointment violated Article I,
Section 6, Paragraph 2 which
states no elected senator or
Giant Cat Seen
representative may be apSALEM CENTER pointed \0 a civil office that has
Guards at Mine No. 1 near
a salary Which was increased
here last week confirmed
during his present term. Saxbe
two earlier reports tbe past
was in Congress when the
two weeks of seeing a black . attorney general's salary was
ca.t
standlng
''apincreased.
11
proximately" two·leet high.
The question is then raised
Meigs County Sheriff
whether, if Congress were now
Robert C. Hartelibach's
to reduce the emoluments of
Dept. said Thursday the
the attorney general's office to
guards reported to
office
those which were available
seeing the cat, but gave no
before the legislation · that
further details.
· caused $en. Saxbe's disqualifi·
cation, that disqualification
would be eliminated," Kurland
DAMAGE HEAVY
said. "My answer is that it
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio would not''
(UP!) - Sen. C~aries H.
He said, "Clearly a statute
Percy, R·III., said here the reducing the salary of the
Watergate scandals represent attorney general would have no
not only damage done to the function or purpose except to
Republican party but a qualify a particular member of
"serious defeat for our entire Congress for an office for
nation and · its elec toral which he . could not qualify
processes." He added, ''The otherwise." Kurland said this
people's distrust of politicians would "fly in the face of the
now outweighs the public's reasons behind the con·
confidence in the ability of our stitutional prohibition.'' "'
political system to produce
All criminal prosecutions
much .needed change/' in while Saxbe was attorney
reference to the low voter general, he said, could be in
turnout for last week's general danger "of constitutional inelections across the nation.
validity."

his

ONE OF THE MOST A'ITRACTIVE and popular exhibits
at the G&amp;J Parts Show Thursday in PI_. Pleasant was the AC
Division of General Motors. Over 1,400 persons saw this

display as they entered the National Guard Armory. Hosting
the visitors to the booth were left, Bill Fischer, former Ohio
State footballer of the 1960's, and Alex Gray, on ri ght.

•

•

I

�'

16 - The Sunday Tunes -Sentmel, Sunday, Nov. 18, 1973

r------------------------------------------------------ . .

I

.

Dateline
Gallia
By Hobart Wilson Jr.

.

I .t

Lefty Dave Rober.ts of !
I
Houston Astros came . II
I
home to huge welcome II

·It was a great expenence for Dave Roberts. Likewise, it was
an event many Gallipolitans and tri-county residents will
remember for yea rs to come.
Dave Roberts Day activities in the Old French City last week

was a huge success. Roberts, a native of GallipoUs, is currently a

star lefthanded pitcher for the Houston Astros of the National
League's West Division. Now 29years old, Roberts stands 6-3. He
tips the scales "a t 195 pounds.
A tip of the hat must go to Dr. William (Bill ) Thomas,
teammate of Roberts on the Blue Devils basketball team during
the 1~1 campaign, along with Atty. R. William Jenkins,
Richard Mackenzie, Bill Gray and many others for the time and
effort they spent in organizing last week's festivities.
It wasn't all fun or easy. Success of the entire event required
lots of hard work on the part of many individuals. If just one area
youngster benefits from last week 's activities, it will more than
pay for itself in the future.
,
Although baseball is Roberts' main love, he was also a darn
good high School basketball player. As a 6-3 sophomore (135
pounds I at GAHS, Roberts played forward for Coach Clyde
Evans' 1961).61 Blue Devils .
In 10 of Gallipolis' 19 games that year, Roberts scored 100
points. His career high as a varsity eager (he transferred to
Columbus Central between his sophomore and junior year ) was
25 points against the old Middleport Yellow Jackets. GAHS won
that game 55..10.
Roberts' most outstanding game as a GAHS eager was against
Coach Russ Moore's Pomeroy Purple Panthers on the GAHS
planks on Friday, Jan. 6, 1961. That was the night the lanky Blue
Devil ·sophomore hit a short jumper with 3:01left, then added a
free throw with 10 secondo remaining to give the Gallians a 52-49
upset victory over the defending league champion Panthers.
The victory was not only Gallia's first of the year, It was the
Devils' first regular season hardwood win in 30 starts, snapping
Gallipolis' three-year losing streak! Too, the win prevented
GAHS from establishing an all-time Southeastern Ohio League
losing streak. The Devils had lost 21 in a row. The record is 23
straight losses, held by the old Pomeroy Panthers back in the 50s.
Roberts' final game as a GAHS eager was against Wellston.
Roberts tallied eight points in a 67-62 setback. With five games
remaining of the Devils' schedule, Roberts was sidelined for the
season after suffering a broken finger on his right hand Feb. 7,
1961. .
Roberts' teammates that year were Brian Lanier, Dick
Smith, Joe Duncan, Bill Conley, Chuck Webster, Kent Evans,
George Pope, Bill Thomas, Ira Crawley, a~&lt;! Dave Porter. Jim
O'Dell and Pat Skidmore . were team managers . The 1961).61
squad posted a 3-16 season record.

.

•u

•

GOLD BAND-U.S.D.A.INSPECTED

I•

G
TUR
EYS
PLU P YOU
10 to 22-lb.

Wt rutrwt thl rilhl
to limit qu•ntitie'

I

AVG.

on .JII iliiTIS in this
ad. None lOki to

AT THE TABlE WITH SOME of the prepared foods are,
I..-, Ricky Mohler, Laura Smith, Usa Manley, Anita Ed-

~.Jift'l .

wards, Carrie Karr and Shawn Baker, also of the morning
' class.

LIMITED QUANTITIES OF SOME SIZES
with

CINCINNATI Reds' pitcher Don Gullett, left, and
Houston Astro pitcher Dave Roberts try out their French
Berets during Reds Appreciation Banquet at Oscar's Wednesday night. Looking on~ background is Bill Gray.

IDGH SCHOOL TEAMMATES Dave Roberts, Dave
Tawney and Joe Duncan talked about "old times" during a
speclal dil)ner honoring Roberts at the Galtia County Gun
Club Tuesday night.

+++

h

•

• ••

LEFT-OVER NOTES - Dave Roberts has never had much
. success against the hard-hitting Cincinnati Reds. He did,
however , stop the Rhinelanders 5-2 on a seven-hitter last Sept. 17,
at Riverfront Stadium. The loss snapped Cincinnati's sevengame winning streak.

SUPER MARKETS

., .

252 THIRD AVE.,
GALLIPOLIS

Houston's 17..game winner in 1973 tried

to get around town to see as many of his old friends as possible. In
between speaking engagements, guest appearances and
autograph sessions, Roberts found time to visit a reserve
basketball teammate, Don Call, 29, Rio Grande, who is home now
recovering froin severe injuries suffered in a 6().foot fall from a
tower scaffold at the Gavin Plant construction site last Sept. 14
.. . Roberts also visited Lester Thompson, former summer
league umpire in the city recreation program. Thompson is a
patient at Holzer Medical Center .. . Dave'slnitial goal, when he
began playing pro ball in the minor leagues in 1963 was to rea~h
the majors in four years. Illnesses and injuries extended that
dreann 2'h years. He said life in the minors was rougher 10 years
ago than it is today. The thought of giving up baseball entered his
mind many times, but he stayed with it, thus becoming Gallia's
first big league player since the late John Singleton, who played
for the St. L(Juis Cardinals in the 1925-30 era ... Roberts said if he ·
had a choice, he would like to play for the L!Js Angeles Dodgers.
"They lake good care of their players wben their playing days
are (lVer,'' he said, and added, 11There are many more oPenings
available for ex-ball players in the LA area'' . .. The Gallipolis
native said he wouldn't mind playing for a team like Cincinnati.
"With their power and speed, you're bound to win several ball
games," he continued ... Roberts told a GAHS assembly
Tuesday morning that physical errors are permitted once in a
while in the majors, but no way will the biggies tolerate mental
errors .. . When Roberts faced Hank Aaron late in the season, he
"held" the Atlanta Braves slugger to three ·singles. "I wasn't
worried about pitching to Aaron. He's going to hit you, no matter
what.! was worried, though, because Commissioner Bowie Kuhn
had warned all pitchers about 'grooving' one for Aaron. Heck, I
didn't want !llY name in the record book as being the pitcher
giving up number 714 or 715."

Children
(Con tinned from Page I)
prepared pumpkins for pies,
stuffed celery, and buttered
bread.
The morning class served
one of the dinners Friday and
the afternoon class will serve
another Monday. Invited
guests
were
George
Hargraves, superintendent of
Meigs High School, and Bob
. Morris, principal of POmeroy,
Middleport and Bradbury
Grade Schools.
Mothers assisting with the
serving Friday were Mrs.
Mary Morris, Mrs. Dolly
Mowery and Mrs. Norma
Curtis. Assisting Monday will
be Mrs. Kathy Chadwell, Mrs.
Anna Aeiker and Mrs. Curtis.
Members of the afternoon
class who are not in these
pictures are Althea Aeiker,
Carole
Bailey,
Ronnie
GOING OVER THE MENU were, front row, 1-r, Richard Stewart, Terry Johnson, Cindy
Callahan, Kathy Clonch,
Holley, Carol Smith, Judy Mowery; back row, Craig Morris, George Justice, David Hendricks,
Melissa Downing, John Epple,
Scott Frazier, and Lori Thomas, morning class students. Absent was Darin Wolfe .
David George, Derrick
Jackson, Eric Johnson, Pam
Lawrence, Cindy Little, Sam
McCloud, Jeff McMahon, Holly Roush, Teresa Burnside, and Pollie Chadwell . The Street Elementary in
Miller, Anna Mohler, Terry Laura Roush, Darrell Skaggs pupils attend school at Pearl dleport.

SOUND RIPE

volunteers' community
steering · committe.e · are
Thelma Elliott, Ellabelle
McDonald, Susie Frazee,
Miriam Persinger, Martha
MacKenzie, Jane Littlepage,
Jl,ev. Elbert McGhee, who gave
the invocation, Earl Neff,
Malcolm Orebaugh and Sam
Neal.
Advisory council members
are Hugh P. Kirkel, Robert J.
Fanning, Charles I. Adkins,
. vice president general services; . James D. Walker
.
'
director of personnel; Jean
Neal, R. N., director, home
health service; Dr. Louis Schmidt, surgeon, HIIIC Clinic
staff; Beulah Ward, R.N.,
director of nursing services;
Del Gingerich, R.N ., MAl
nurse co ..ordinator; Lenore
Rogers, assistant director,
community relations; and Lois
Thomas, clinic reservation

lb.
WITHOUT REQUIRED PURCHASES ••• lb. 69C

Avg.

SUPERIOR-U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED

lb.
HEN TURKEYS 6 to 14-lb. A•l· lb.89

• ' j.

FULLY

ED H

SHANK
PORTION

1

fixture

"

C
Size

STOKELY

STATE FARE

FRUIT
COCKTAIL

CROUTONS
9-oz. Pkg.

·-•'

STRAINED &amp; WHOLE

VANILLA

..
••.

SAUCE

•

ED HA

$
3-lb.

THOROFARE

..

'

ICE CR
Gallon Pkg.

"

•
"
"•
•

-

•

•"
•••
•
0

••

•••
••
••
•
"••
•

s2.99

PO-RITZ Frozen

PO WHIP

LIBBY'S

PUMPKIN &amp; MINCE
MEAT PIES

TOPPING

PUMPKIN

10-oz. Bowl

· 29-oz. Cans

2D-oz. Pkg.

•.•
••

•••
•
••
••
••,.
..
••
•

$ 59

CORN, .PEAS,
MIXED
VEGETABLES .

DOG CHOW

•

•

NU~MAID

MAXWILL HOUSl
INSTANT

COFFEE
,.......
229
Jar

~

25-lb. Bag

Qt. Jar

2D-oz. Pkgs.

L~mber .&amp; Supply .Co.

I

FULLY .COOKED

OCEAN SPRAY

i

sy.

't

39c .

17-oz. Can

g white.

CILEiAN-•

lb.

SUPERIOR-U.S. 'GOVT.
CENTER CUT

YAMS

24b.

Devoe Ceiling WhileFlat Latex Paint

Carolina

U.S. NO. 1 GRADE

..

IRISH OR AGAR
U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED

FULLY COOKED HAM Bull Po.rtion, •• ,lb.95~
FULLY COOKED HAM~;-~~~~~: ••• ,lb.95~
FULLY COOKED HAM Shonk Hall, • • olb.95~

..,

. 3·1b.

Area .Deaths ·

'1.69

,,
.'

a gallon

.@ . TH~

- :..~:29c

I'

Buy

Buy a

•

YOUNG
TURKEYS
26-lb.

Fall Follies

'

U.S.D.A. Inspected

18 to

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

(Con tinned from page 15) ·
·J
the community has been ad·
ded. The LPN school, recently
Mr. Pullins dies
Mr. Hunt dies
transferred from the Gallipolla
Funeral services for Car l
City Board of Education to the
RACINE - James 0 . H
Victor Pull ins , Sr ., 68, whO died
Sat!Jrday morn ing at h is •52, Racine Route 2, di
Buckeye Hilla Career Center,
residence will be held at 10 unexpectedly Saturd
is developing well, according
morning at h is Letart F 11
a .m . Tuesday at the Ew i ng
Funeral Home with the Rev . res i den c e. Mr . HUnt
to Kirkel. He reported that 14
iron worker for the.
W . H . Perrin off iCiat ing . The
members . of the first
Construction Co . and was
son Of the late George and
Susie Bailey Pui U n~ . Mr . member of Local 787 . He was
graduating class •are now
member of the R
Pullins was also preceded• in
employed at the Holzer
Lodge, a 32nd degree
death by his wife , Helen Young
member of Aladin
Pullin~ .
Medical Center.
Temple , the Twtn City
Surviying are a son , · Carl
Kirkel added that SEOEMS
Club , Racine American
VIctor , Jr ., Dayton ; four
Post 602 ,· and a
daughters ,
Lo i s
Musser ,
is developing "beautifully"
member
of
the
Reynoldsburg ;
Mildred
and that seven. additional
Memorial VFW Post
Pullins , Balt i more , Ohio ;
Alberta Smith , and Anna
Surviving are 'his
physicians have heen added to
Bert and Margie
Margaret Searles , both of
. the medical staff in the past
Pomeroy Route 3; 12 grand . R·o vte 2; h is wife ,
children, and severa l n ieces Wilson Hunt ; a daug
year. All of these physicians
and nephews . Bur ial will be i n Beverlee Hunt Wicklim~· ; a
are specialists except for one in
Beech
Grove
Cemetery . grandson, Scoff Alan W ickline ;
MORE THAN 300 youngsters obtained autographs from
Friends may cal l at the funeral a son -in · law, William Wickline,
family practice.
home anytime .
and
sever·a l
nieces
and
·Dave Roberts at Gillingham Drug Store last Tuesday afOn the opposite side of the
nephews . A half .brother
ternoon. Shaking hands with the Houston Astro pitcher is J().
Willington Lee preceded him In
fence, Kirkel noted that he
death .
MR . LARGENT DIES
year-&lt;Jld Keith Wilson, Gallipolis.
probably did not "need to
SYRACUSE
Howard
Funeral services will be held
Franc is Largent, 72 , Syracuse , at 3 :!)0 p .m . Mondliy at the
• remind you of our parking
died Sa turday at Veterans Ewing Funeral Home with the
problem." In this area a bus supervisor.
Memor ial Hosp i ta l following a Rev . Free land Norris and the
lingering illness . · Funerar ~ev . . Howar.d Shiveley of . ·
service is being contemplated
services will be held at 2 p .m . f1 Ciat1ng . Bur1al will be in the ~
Author
.Robert
Louis
Ste·
625MAY DIE
for Gallia County that will
at the Ewfng Fune ra l Letart
Falls . Cemetery .
WASHINGTON (UPI) venson is buried on a hill Monday
The four-day visit in Roberts' home town ended Thursday
CHICAGO (UP!) - Between
Home . Burial will be in the Friends may ca ll at the funeral
include
the
Medical
Center
as
near Ania, Western Samoa. Svr,..-u~p Hill Cemetery.
home anyt ime.
evening. Those who had a chance to talk with him know he's still 625 and 725 persons will be Secretary of State Henry A. one of its stops.
the quality individual and excellent athlete he was when he left killed in traffic accidents Kissinger swung Into a series
The vice president said that
Gallipolis nearly 15 years ago. Success has not spoiled Dave during the four-day Thanks- of follow-up strategy con- while he is not worried about
Roberts ... We wish Dave and his wife stella (whom he married
giving weekend, although as ferences on his Middle East getting fuel, he is concerned
in Columbus after graduating from Colwnbus Central High
many as 125 · lives could be and Chlllll missions Satur- over the availability of transSchool ) and sons Chris and Rick continued success and good luck
saved if travelers wore seat day, including a meeting portation for the staff and
in the years to come.
belts, the National Safety with Soviet Ambassador patients to reach the hospital.
Council estimated Saturday. Ana_toly F. Dohrynln.
Related to the problem Of
.:::::;:::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::.~:::::::::::::
conlrols, Kirkel said rising
costs have placed .the Holzer
Medical Center in a (osition
"to operate in !he red" ·for the
"Three O'Clock in the MOrning," with pfesent an acrobatic number of ~~M8me." coming year. He also noted
blacklighting to be used to add to the effectiveness of the movement. Powell is a
Association veteran Danny Thompson that nurses were badly needed
former professional dance instructor. will present the vocal on "Let's Go to at the hospital.
(Continued from page 15)
Kirkel concluded by saying
Young Kim Batey of near Chester Church" and another performer of several
companied by her sister, Kathy King. A providing her own guitar accompaniment years, Jim Soulsby, will be doing that the officials of the Medical
newcomer to the annual musical is Larry will be doing "I Believe in Music" and "HawaiianWeddingSong."Debbiand Bob Center are aware of their
Brogan, The Plains, who is associated with another Of the younger cast members will Buck will team on "You're Just In Love" problems and are trying to face
the Reuter Insurance Agency . Brogan, be Tammy Eichinger, Pomeroy, winner of and Alice Nease will present the vocal to them one at a time in an effort
providing his own guitar accompaniment, many . trophies in baton competition, "I Ain't Got Nobody" along with a comedy to make improvements.
will present vocally "Your Cheatin' Heat' performing to "Seventy..Six Trombones." routine. Dick Nease will provide the vocal
Ella Candee was presented a
and. "These Are Not My People."
Taking part from the Mid-Porn School · inlroduction to a dance line, Mary Jones, volunteer pin set with three
· A vocal group composed of Alice of Dance of Mrs. Judy Fraser will be April Martha Jon&lt;\s, Denise Werry, Teresa Van rubies to designate her con-·
Nease, Debbi Buck, Charlene Hoeflich, Fraser and Teresa Buckley in a fast tap, Meter, Merri Ault, Debbie Hartenbach, lribution · of 513¥z hours of
Sharon Wilson, Susie Souls by, James ·. "Unsquare Dance" and these two dancers Becky Thomas and Trudy Roach doing service.
Pins for 100 to 500 hours went
Soulsby, Bob Buck, Dick Nease and Bob will be joined by Danny Schultz for a mod "Way Down Younder in New Orleans."
to Judy Fulks, Helen Galloway,
Hoeflich will provide vocal introductions
routine
to
the
1:/leme
from
Shaft.
The
Meigs
majorette
line
and
Betty
Janko, Marcelline
for two dance numbers, "By the Sea" with
The
old
softshoe
will
be
introduced
into
blacklight
nwnbers
will
make
up
the
finale
Kerns, Mirriam Persinger,
Babs Witte, Shelly Mankin, Tina Nieri,
the
production
vocally
by
Jayne
H&lt;Jellich
for
this
year's
show.
Accompanist
is
Mrs.
Roberta Holzer, ~I Baker, ·
Kathy Werry and Valerie Johnson and backed by dancers, Peg O'Brien and Olive Weber.
'' Long-Haired Lover from Liverpool" with Jeanie Schneider and a Gay 90's number
Nat Radeker, Allx Harder,
dancers to include Beth Perrin, Andrea will feature period costumed dancers,
Tickets are being sold at a reduced Beverly Elberfeld, Kate
Riggs, Jayne Hoeflich, Lori Rupe, Linda
Sonya Ohlinger, Trudy Roach, Kathy price at the New York Clqthing House, Dobbins, Polly Darnbrough,
Kovalchik. Sue Taylor, Vicki Morrison and
Werry, Jenny Chapman, Nancy Crow, Nelson's Drugs, Swisher-Lohse Phar- Jake Ramsay, Olene Burdette,
Kenda Braun. The vocal group will also do Vale.rie Johnson, Shelly Mankin, Tina macy, Dutton's Drug Store and . Village Betty Lue Moore, Betty
"Cigareels and Whuskey ."
Nieri, Debbie Bailey, Iiabs Witte, Anita Pharmacy and by members of the Meigs McGinness, Virginia Blowers, ·
A mOd dance line composed of Judy King, Barbara Fultz, Peggy O'Brien, High School Band. Advance tickets are $1 Gloria Adams, Jean LitStarlight Model 123 ·
Owen, Jeanie Schneider, Peggy O'Brien,
tlepage, Ann Saunders, Jessie
Jeanie
Schneider,
Jeanie
Harrison
and
each
for
both
children
and
adults
while
the
Jan Holter, Jeliny Chapman, Tina Nieri,
Payne, Lee Bradshaw, Evelyn
leafy pattern on white
Maureen
Hennessy
.
price
at
the
door
SaCurday
.night
will
be
Shelly .Mankin, Valerie Johnson, Sonya
Brandeberry, Edna Cook,
In contrast will be a modern jazz $1.25.
bent glass. 12" square,
Ohlinger, Kathy Werry, Maureen Hen- dance to "Fever" by young Cindy PatMary Allen, Ruth Drew,
• easy application • no solvent
nessy, Debbie Bailey, Babs Witte, Nancy terson of Syracuse. Making up the teen
Palmer,
Mae
Gladys
II deep~ Takes two
odors • easy clean uD l'mn water
Crow and Tanya Keebaugh will do "You tap line this year dancing to "Everybody
Law~ence,
elen Trotter,
60 watt bulbs.
Won't Be Satisfied."
• good hiding and sheen
Florence Trainer, Alice
Step" are Tonya Keebaugh, Nancy Crow,
Another newcomer to the association June Ann Wamsley, Esther L!Jwery, Kathy
Wiseman, Florence Lintala,
shows, Sharon Wilson of Middleport, will Werry, Jenny Chapman, Jan Holter and
Reva
Evans, Eloise Mills,
VOTE SET TODAY
smg "As Long As You're Not In Love With Sonya Ohlinger. Susie Soulsby Abbott and
Alice Saunders and Esther
COLUMBUS
(UPI)
-A
ratification
vote
Anyone Else " and "Love" will be the vocal ·Dick Nease will again team in the fo.llies on
Davis.
will be taken Sunday on a new contract
Of Jelln Burnside, veteran with the show
Mary Jeanne Walker,
312 611l ST.
a Charleston routine. Newcomer . to the · agreement designed to end a strike against
PHONE 675-1160
POINT PLEASANT .
Gerald Powell and daughter, Mila: show Mary Agnes Roy of Gallipolis a
director of volunteer services,
the Columbus Transit Co. by members of was mistress of ceremonies for
'
will be performing an English waltz to student. of Gloria Buck Wallace. will
ltNplnMiotJ trOm
Transport Workers Union Local 208.
the event. Members of the

I

STAR -

.

Wage, price

I

purchase of
$10.00 or more excluding
turkey.
LIMIT ONE PER CUSTOMER WHILE SUPPLY LASTS. Sorry No
Rain Checks.

SOFT·MARGARINE
...... 28C
1-llo.

llowl

Mut

sse
.

PURINA

CAT CHOW

...

10-111.$295

.,

R:;~~!:~:~ED COOKIE
Chocolate Chip

11o-oz. Pka.

Peanut •utter 1 S-oL Pili.
Fud. . . .ownle 211-ol. Pk1-

'

•

MIXES

II

COFFEE

c
..

l

CHARI. IANIIOtlN

~·107

'

\

I

-.

�'

16 - The Sunday Tunes -Sentmel, Sunday, Nov. 18, 1973

r------------------------------------------------------ . .

I

.

Dateline
Gallia
By Hobart Wilson Jr.

.

I .t

Lefty Dave Rober.ts of !
I
Houston Astros came . II
I
home to huge welcome II

·It was a great expenence for Dave Roberts. Likewise, it was
an event many Gallipolitans and tri-county residents will
remember for yea rs to come.
Dave Roberts Day activities in the Old French City last week

was a huge success. Roberts, a native of GallipoUs, is currently a

star lefthanded pitcher for the Houston Astros of the National
League's West Division. Now 29years old, Roberts stands 6-3. He
tips the scales "a t 195 pounds.
A tip of the hat must go to Dr. William (Bill ) Thomas,
teammate of Roberts on the Blue Devils basketball team during
the 1~1 campaign, along with Atty. R. William Jenkins,
Richard Mackenzie, Bill Gray and many others for the time and
effort they spent in organizing last week's festivities.
It wasn't all fun or easy. Success of the entire event required
lots of hard work on the part of many individuals. If just one area
youngster benefits from last week 's activities, it will more than
pay for itself in the future.
,
Although baseball is Roberts' main love, he was also a darn
good high School basketball player. As a 6-3 sophomore (135
pounds I at GAHS, Roberts played forward for Coach Clyde
Evans' 1961).61 Blue Devils .
In 10 of Gallipolis' 19 games that year, Roberts scored 100
points. His career high as a varsity eager (he transferred to
Columbus Central between his sophomore and junior year ) was
25 points against the old Middleport Yellow Jackets. GAHS won
that game 55..10.
Roberts' most outstanding game as a GAHS eager was against
Coach Russ Moore's Pomeroy Purple Panthers on the GAHS
planks on Friday, Jan. 6, 1961. That was the night the lanky Blue
Devil ·sophomore hit a short jumper with 3:01left, then added a
free throw with 10 secondo remaining to give the Gallians a 52-49
upset victory over the defending league champion Panthers.
The victory was not only Gallia's first of the year, It was the
Devils' first regular season hardwood win in 30 starts, snapping
Gallipolis' three-year losing streak! Too, the win prevented
GAHS from establishing an all-time Southeastern Ohio League
losing streak. The Devils had lost 21 in a row. The record is 23
straight losses, held by the old Pomeroy Panthers back in the 50s.
Roberts' final game as a GAHS eager was against Wellston.
Roberts tallied eight points in a 67-62 setback. With five games
remaining of the Devils' schedule, Roberts was sidelined for the
season after suffering a broken finger on his right hand Feb. 7,
1961. .
Roberts' teammates that year were Brian Lanier, Dick
Smith, Joe Duncan, Bill Conley, Chuck Webster, Kent Evans,
George Pope, Bill Thomas, Ira Crawley, a~&lt;! Dave Porter. Jim
O'Dell and Pat Skidmore . were team managers . The 1961).61
squad posted a 3-16 season record.

.

•u

•

GOLD BAND-U.S.D.A.INSPECTED

I•

G
TUR
EYS
PLU P YOU
10 to 22-lb.

Wt rutrwt thl rilhl
to limit qu•ntitie'

I

AVG.

on .JII iliiTIS in this
ad. None lOki to

AT THE TABlE WITH SOME of the prepared foods are,
I..-, Ricky Mohler, Laura Smith, Usa Manley, Anita Ed-

~.Jift'l .

wards, Carrie Karr and Shawn Baker, also of the morning
' class.

LIMITED QUANTITIES OF SOME SIZES
with

CINCINNATI Reds' pitcher Don Gullett, left, and
Houston Astro pitcher Dave Roberts try out their French
Berets during Reds Appreciation Banquet at Oscar's Wednesday night. Looking on~ background is Bill Gray.

IDGH SCHOOL TEAMMATES Dave Roberts, Dave
Tawney and Joe Duncan talked about "old times" during a
speclal dil)ner honoring Roberts at the Galtia County Gun
Club Tuesday night.

+++

h

•

• ••

LEFT-OVER NOTES - Dave Roberts has never had much
. success against the hard-hitting Cincinnati Reds. He did,
however , stop the Rhinelanders 5-2 on a seven-hitter last Sept. 17,
at Riverfront Stadium. The loss snapped Cincinnati's sevengame winning streak.

SUPER MARKETS

., .

252 THIRD AVE.,
GALLIPOLIS

Houston's 17..game winner in 1973 tried

to get around town to see as many of his old friends as possible. In
between speaking engagements, guest appearances and
autograph sessions, Roberts found time to visit a reserve
basketball teammate, Don Call, 29, Rio Grande, who is home now
recovering froin severe injuries suffered in a 6().foot fall from a
tower scaffold at the Gavin Plant construction site last Sept. 14
.. . Roberts also visited Lester Thompson, former summer
league umpire in the city recreation program. Thompson is a
patient at Holzer Medical Center .. . Dave'slnitial goal, when he
began playing pro ball in the minor leagues in 1963 was to rea~h
the majors in four years. Illnesses and injuries extended that
dreann 2'h years. He said life in the minors was rougher 10 years
ago than it is today. The thought of giving up baseball entered his
mind many times, but he stayed with it, thus becoming Gallia's
first big league player since the late John Singleton, who played
for the St. L(Juis Cardinals in the 1925-30 era ... Roberts said if he ·
had a choice, he would like to play for the L!Js Angeles Dodgers.
"They lake good care of their players wben their playing days
are (lVer,'' he said, and added, 11There are many more oPenings
available for ex-ball players in the LA area'' . .. The Gallipolis
native said he wouldn't mind playing for a team like Cincinnati.
"With their power and speed, you're bound to win several ball
games," he continued ... Roberts told a GAHS assembly
Tuesday morning that physical errors are permitted once in a
while in the majors, but no way will the biggies tolerate mental
errors .. . When Roberts faced Hank Aaron late in the season, he
"held" the Atlanta Braves slugger to three ·singles. "I wasn't
worried about pitching to Aaron. He's going to hit you, no matter
what.! was worried, though, because Commissioner Bowie Kuhn
had warned all pitchers about 'grooving' one for Aaron. Heck, I
didn't want !llY name in the record book as being the pitcher
giving up number 714 or 715."

Children
(Con tinned from Page I)
prepared pumpkins for pies,
stuffed celery, and buttered
bread.
The morning class served
one of the dinners Friday and
the afternoon class will serve
another Monday. Invited
guests
were
George
Hargraves, superintendent of
Meigs High School, and Bob
. Morris, principal of POmeroy,
Middleport and Bradbury
Grade Schools.
Mothers assisting with the
serving Friday were Mrs.
Mary Morris, Mrs. Dolly
Mowery and Mrs. Norma
Curtis. Assisting Monday will
be Mrs. Kathy Chadwell, Mrs.
Anna Aeiker and Mrs. Curtis.
Members of the afternoon
class who are not in these
pictures are Althea Aeiker,
Carole
Bailey,
Ronnie
GOING OVER THE MENU were, front row, 1-r, Richard Stewart, Terry Johnson, Cindy
Callahan, Kathy Clonch,
Holley, Carol Smith, Judy Mowery; back row, Craig Morris, George Justice, David Hendricks,
Melissa Downing, John Epple,
Scott Frazier, and Lori Thomas, morning class students. Absent was Darin Wolfe .
David George, Derrick
Jackson, Eric Johnson, Pam
Lawrence, Cindy Little, Sam
McCloud, Jeff McMahon, Holly Roush, Teresa Burnside, and Pollie Chadwell . The Street Elementary in
Miller, Anna Mohler, Terry Laura Roush, Darrell Skaggs pupils attend school at Pearl dleport.

SOUND RIPE

volunteers' community
steering · committe.e · are
Thelma Elliott, Ellabelle
McDonald, Susie Frazee,
Miriam Persinger, Martha
MacKenzie, Jane Littlepage,
Jl,ev. Elbert McGhee, who gave
the invocation, Earl Neff,
Malcolm Orebaugh and Sam
Neal.
Advisory council members
are Hugh P. Kirkel, Robert J.
Fanning, Charles I. Adkins,
. vice president general services; . James D. Walker
.
'
director of personnel; Jean
Neal, R. N., director, home
health service; Dr. Louis Schmidt, surgeon, HIIIC Clinic
staff; Beulah Ward, R.N.,
director of nursing services;
Del Gingerich, R.N ., MAl
nurse co ..ordinator; Lenore
Rogers, assistant director,
community relations; and Lois
Thomas, clinic reservation

lb.
WITHOUT REQUIRED PURCHASES ••• lb. 69C

Avg.

SUPERIOR-U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED

lb.
HEN TURKEYS 6 to 14-lb. A•l· lb.89

• ' j.

FULLY

ED H

SHANK
PORTION

1

fixture

"

C
Size

STOKELY

STATE FARE

FRUIT
COCKTAIL

CROUTONS
9-oz. Pkg.

·-•'

STRAINED &amp; WHOLE

VANILLA

..
••.

SAUCE

•

ED HA

$
3-lb.

THOROFARE

..

'

ICE CR
Gallon Pkg.

"

•
"
"•
•

-

•

•"
•••
•
0

••

•••
••
••
•
"••
•

s2.99

PO-RITZ Frozen

PO WHIP

LIBBY'S

PUMPKIN &amp; MINCE
MEAT PIES

TOPPING

PUMPKIN

10-oz. Bowl

· 29-oz. Cans

2D-oz. Pkg.

•.•
••

•••
•
••
••
••,.
..
••
•

$ 59

CORN, .PEAS,
MIXED
VEGETABLES .

DOG CHOW

•

•

NU~MAID

MAXWILL HOUSl
INSTANT

COFFEE
,.......
229
Jar

~

25-lb. Bag

Qt. Jar

2D-oz. Pkgs.

L~mber .&amp; Supply .Co.

I

FULLY .COOKED

OCEAN SPRAY

i

sy.

't

39c .

17-oz. Can

g white.

CILEiAN-•

lb.

SUPERIOR-U.S. 'GOVT.
CENTER CUT

YAMS

24b.

Devoe Ceiling WhileFlat Latex Paint

Carolina

U.S. NO. 1 GRADE

..

IRISH OR AGAR
U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED

FULLY COOKED HAM Bull Po.rtion, •• ,lb.95~
FULLY COOKED HAM~;-~~~~~: ••• ,lb.95~
FULLY COOKED HAM Shonk Hall, • • olb.95~

..,

. 3·1b.

Area .Deaths ·

'1.69

,,
.'

a gallon

.@ . TH~

- :..~:29c

I'

Buy

Buy a

•

YOUNG
TURKEYS
26-lb.

Fall Follies

'

U.S.D.A. Inspected

18 to

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

(Con tinned from page 15) ·
·J
the community has been ad·
ded. The LPN school, recently
Mr. Pullins dies
Mr. Hunt dies
transferred from the Gallipolla
Funeral services for Car l
City Board of Education to the
RACINE - James 0 . H
Victor Pull ins , Sr ., 68, whO died
Sat!Jrday morn ing at h is •52, Racine Route 2, di
Buckeye Hilla Career Center,
residence will be held at 10 unexpectedly Saturd
is developing well, according
morning at h is Letart F 11
a .m . Tuesday at the Ew i ng
Funeral Home with the Rev . res i den c e. Mr . HUnt
to Kirkel. He reported that 14
iron worker for the.
W . H . Perrin off iCiat ing . The
members . of the first
Construction Co . and was
son Of the late George and
Susie Bailey Pui U n~ . Mr . member of Local 787 . He was
graduating class •are now
member of the R
Pullins was also preceded• in
employed at the Holzer
Lodge, a 32nd degree
death by his wife , Helen Young
member of Aladin
Pullin~ .
Medical Center.
Temple , the Twtn City
Surviying are a son , · Carl
Kirkel added that SEOEMS
Club , Racine American
VIctor , Jr ., Dayton ; four
Post 602 ,· and a
daughters ,
Lo i s
Musser ,
is developing "beautifully"
member
of
the
Reynoldsburg ;
Mildred
and that seven. additional
Memorial VFW Post
Pullins , Balt i more , Ohio ;
Alberta Smith , and Anna
Surviving are 'his
physicians have heen added to
Bert and Margie
Margaret Searles , both of
. the medical staff in the past
Pomeroy Route 3; 12 grand . R·o vte 2; h is wife ,
children, and severa l n ieces Wilson Hunt ; a daug
year. All of these physicians
and nephews . Bur ial will be i n Beverlee Hunt Wicklim~· ; a
are specialists except for one in
Beech
Grove
Cemetery . grandson, Scoff Alan W ickline ;
MORE THAN 300 youngsters obtained autographs from
Friends may cal l at the funeral a son -in · law, William Wickline,
family practice.
home anytime .
and
sever·a l
nieces
and
·Dave Roberts at Gillingham Drug Store last Tuesday afOn the opposite side of the
nephews . A half .brother
ternoon. Shaking hands with the Houston Astro pitcher is J().
Willington Lee preceded him In
fence, Kirkel noted that he
death .
MR . LARGENT DIES
year-&lt;Jld Keith Wilson, Gallipolis.
probably did not "need to
SYRACUSE
Howard
Funeral services will be held
Franc is Largent, 72 , Syracuse , at 3 :!)0 p .m . Mondliy at the
• remind you of our parking
died Sa turday at Veterans Ewing Funeral Home with the
problem." In this area a bus supervisor.
Memor ial Hosp i ta l following a Rev . Free land Norris and the
lingering illness . · Funerar ~ev . . Howar.d Shiveley of . ·
service is being contemplated
services will be held at 2 p .m . f1 Ciat1ng . Bur1al will be in the ~
Author
.Robert
Louis
Ste·
625MAY DIE
for Gallia County that will
at the Ewfng Fune ra l Letart
Falls . Cemetery .
WASHINGTON (UPI) venson is buried on a hill Monday
The four-day visit in Roberts' home town ended Thursday
CHICAGO (UP!) - Between
Home . Burial will be in the Friends may ca ll at the funeral
include
the
Medical
Center
as
near Ania, Western Samoa. Svr,..-u~p Hill Cemetery.
home anyt ime.
evening. Those who had a chance to talk with him know he's still 625 and 725 persons will be Secretary of State Henry A. one of its stops.
the quality individual and excellent athlete he was when he left killed in traffic accidents Kissinger swung Into a series
The vice president said that
Gallipolis nearly 15 years ago. Success has not spoiled Dave during the four-day Thanks- of follow-up strategy con- while he is not worried about
Roberts ... We wish Dave and his wife stella (whom he married
giving weekend, although as ferences on his Middle East getting fuel, he is concerned
in Columbus after graduating from Colwnbus Central High
many as 125 · lives could be and Chlllll missions Satur- over the availability of transSchool ) and sons Chris and Rick continued success and good luck
saved if travelers wore seat day, including a meeting portation for the staff and
in the years to come.
belts, the National Safety with Soviet Ambassador patients to reach the hospital.
Council estimated Saturday. Ana_toly F. Dohrynln.
Related to the problem Of
.:::::;:::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::.~:::::::::::::
conlrols, Kirkel said rising
costs have placed .the Holzer
Medical Center in a (osition
"to operate in !he red" ·for the
"Three O'Clock in the MOrning," with pfesent an acrobatic number of ~~M8me." coming year. He also noted
blacklighting to be used to add to the effectiveness of the movement. Powell is a
Association veteran Danny Thompson that nurses were badly needed
former professional dance instructor. will present the vocal on "Let's Go to at the hospital.
(Continued from page 15)
Kirkel concluded by saying
Young Kim Batey of near Chester Church" and another performer of several
companied by her sister, Kathy King. A providing her own guitar accompaniment years, Jim Soulsby, will be doing that the officials of the Medical
newcomer to the annual musical is Larry will be doing "I Believe in Music" and "HawaiianWeddingSong."Debbiand Bob Center are aware of their
Brogan, The Plains, who is associated with another Of the younger cast members will Buck will team on "You're Just In Love" problems and are trying to face
the Reuter Insurance Agency . Brogan, be Tammy Eichinger, Pomeroy, winner of and Alice Nease will present the vocal to them one at a time in an effort
providing his own guitar accompaniment, many . trophies in baton competition, "I Ain't Got Nobody" along with a comedy to make improvements.
will present vocally "Your Cheatin' Heat' performing to "Seventy..Six Trombones." routine. Dick Nease will provide the vocal
Ella Candee was presented a
and. "These Are Not My People."
Taking part from the Mid-Porn School · inlroduction to a dance line, Mary Jones, volunteer pin set with three
· A vocal group composed of Alice of Dance of Mrs. Judy Fraser will be April Martha Jon&lt;\s, Denise Werry, Teresa Van rubies to designate her con-·
Nease, Debbi Buck, Charlene Hoeflich, Fraser and Teresa Buckley in a fast tap, Meter, Merri Ault, Debbie Hartenbach, lribution · of 513¥z hours of
Sharon Wilson, Susie Souls by, James ·. "Unsquare Dance" and these two dancers Becky Thomas and Trudy Roach doing service.
Pins for 100 to 500 hours went
Soulsby, Bob Buck, Dick Nease and Bob will be joined by Danny Schultz for a mod "Way Down Younder in New Orleans."
to Judy Fulks, Helen Galloway,
Hoeflich will provide vocal introductions
routine
to
the
1:/leme
from
Shaft.
The
Meigs
majorette
line
and
Betty
Janko, Marcelline
for two dance numbers, "By the Sea" with
The
old
softshoe
will
be
introduced
into
blacklight
nwnbers
will
make
up
the
finale
Kerns, Mirriam Persinger,
Babs Witte, Shelly Mankin, Tina Nieri,
the
production
vocally
by
Jayne
H&lt;Jellich
for
this
year's
show.
Accompanist
is
Mrs.
Roberta Holzer, ~I Baker, ·
Kathy Werry and Valerie Johnson and backed by dancers, Peg O'Brien and Olive Weber.
'' Long-Haired Lover from Liverpool" with Jeanie Schneider and a Gay 90's number
Nat Radeker, Allx Harder,
dancers to include Beth Perrin, Andrea will feature period costumed dancers,
Tickets are being sold at a reduced Beverly Elberfeld, Kate
Riggs, Jayne Hoeflich, Lori Rupe, Linda
Sonya Ohlinger, Trudy Roach, Kathy price at the New York Clqthing House, Dobbins, Polly Darnbrough,
Kovalchik. Sue Taylor, Vicki Morrison and
Werry, Jenny Chapman, Nancy Crow, Nelson's Drugs, Swisher-Lohse Phar- Jake Ramsay, Olene Burdette,
Kenda Braun. The vocal group will also do Vale.rie Johnson, Shelly Mankin, Tina macy, Dutton's Drug Store and . Village Betty Lue Moore, Betty
"Cigareels and Whuskey ."
Nieri, Debbie Bailey, Iiabs Witte, Anita Pharmacy and by members of the Meigs McGinness, Virginia Blowers, ·
A mOd dance line composed of Judy King, Barbara Fultz, Peggy O'Brien, High School Band. Advance tickets are $1 Gloria Adams, Jean LitStarlight Model 123 ·
Owen, Jeanie Schneider, Peggy O'Brien,
tlepage, Ann Saunders, Jessie
Jeanie
Schneider,
Jeanie
Harrison
and
each
for
both
children
and
adults
while
the
Jan Holter, Jeliny Chapman, Tina Nieri,
Payne, Lee Bradshaw, Evelyn
leafy pattern on white
Maureen
Hennessy
.
price
at
the
door
SaCurday
.night
will
be
Shelly .Mankin, Valerie Johnson, Sonya
Brandeberry, Edna Cook,
In contrast will be a modern jazz $1.25.
bent glass. 12" square,
Ohlinger, Kathy Werry, Maureen Hen- dance to "Fever" by young Cindy PatMary Allen, Ruth Drew,
• easy application • no solvent
nessy, Debbie Bailey, Babs Witte, Nancy terson of Syracuse. Making up the teen
Palmer,
Mae
Gladys
II deep~ Takes two
odors • easy clean uD l'mn water
Crow and Tanya Keebaugh will do "You tap line this year dancing to "Everybody
Law~ence,
elen Trotter,
60 watt bulbs.
Won't Be Satisfied."
• good hiding and sheen
Florence Trainer, Alice
Step" are Tonya Keebaugh, Nancy Crow,
Another newcomer to the association June Ann Wamsley, Esther L!Jwery, Kathy
Wiseman, Florence Lintala,
shows, Sharon Wilson of Middleport, will Werry, Jenny Chapman, Jan Holter and
Reva
Evans, Eloise Mills,
VOTE SET TODAY
smg "As Long As You're Not In Love With Sonya Ohlinger. Susie Soulsby Abbott and
Alice Saunders and Esther
COLUMBUS
(UPI)
-A
ratification
vote
Anyone Else " and "Love" will be the vocal ·Dick Nease will again team in the fo.llies on
Davis.
will be taken Sunday on a new contract
Of Jelln Burnside, veteran with the show
Mary Jeanne Walker,
312 611l ST.
a Charleston routine. Newcomer . to the · agreement designed to end a strike against
PHONE 675-1160
POINT PLEASANT .
Gerald Powell and daughter, Mila: show Mary Agnes Roy of Gallipolis a
director of volunteer services,
the Columbus Transit Co. by members of was mistress of ceremonies for
'
will be performing an English waltz to student. of Gloria Buck Wallace. will
ltNplnMiotJ trOm
Transport Workers Union Local 208.
the event. Members of the

I

STAR -

.

Wage, price

I

purchase of
$10.00 or more excluding
turkey.
LIMIT ONE PER CUSTOMER WHILE SUPPLY LASTS. Sorry No
Rain Checks.

SOFT·MARGARINE
...... 28C
1-llo.

llowl

Mut

sse
.

PURINA

CAT CHOW

...

10-111.$295

.,

R:;~~!:~:~ED COOKIE
Chocolate Chip

11o-oz. Pka.

Peanut •utter 1 S-oL Pili.
Fud. . . .ownle 211-ol. Pk1-

'

•

MIXES

II

COFFEE

c
..

l

CHARI. IANIIOtlN

~·107

'

\

I

-.

�.'

'

18 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel,Sunda)', No\•. 18, 19:3

Redmen
Bucks ruri
cop opener
CO LUMBUS, Ohio ( UP! ) Tailba ck Archie Griffin rushed
for a record 246 yards and
fullback Bruce Elia scored four
touchdowns to . power topranked Ohio State to a 5:&gt;-13
victory over winless Iowa
Saturday.
/
Griffin, a 5-9, 180-pound
sophomore, not only broke his
own single ga me r ushing

RICHMONDALE - Led by Dan Bollinger's
second half outburst, Coach Art Lanham 's Rio
Grande College Redmen knocked off Lander
College of Greenwood, S. C., 87-71 here Saturday
afternoon. It was the !973-74 season opener for both
quintets.
Bollinger, a 6-5 junior from
Zanesville, spli t the cords with
10 field goals in the second half
after being held scoreless from
the field during the first 20
minutes of play.
·
Lambert finished the
game with 24 markers, high
for th e game.
Mter Rio jumped off to a
quick 6-0 lead, the Redmen
held a 19-9 advant.age with
12:27 left in the first half.
Lander, howeve r , sto rm ed
back to knot the count 27-all
with a three-point play by
Gabby Smith at the 6:26 mark.
Dean Fau sna ugh's goa l with
five seconds on the clock gave
Rio a 40-39 halftime advantage .
Lander led 45-44 with 16:10
left in the game when Bollinger
hit a twin-pointer to put the
Redmen ahead for keeps.
Gallipolis ' Jimmy Noe,
making his first start as a
college eager, placed second
In the scoring column for Rio
as the ••·Blue Devil pumped
In 21 points. Others finishing
In the double figures for Rio
were Dean Fausnaugh, with

record set last season as a
freshman but also est.ablished

14 and Ste\•e Bartram, 10.
Gabby Smith and Tom
Graham each had !8 points for
the Senators. John St.acy added
15.
Ri o outscored Lander 39-24
from the field. The Redmcn hit
nine of 13 free throws while
Lander canned 23 bf 31 attempts. No other statisti cs
were available .
Rio will open its home season
Monday at Lyne Center.against
the Senators. Tipoff time is 8
p.m .
The Redmen played
Saturday's opener without ·
the services of all-MOC
forward Ron Lambert .
Lambert is still nursing an
Injury re ceived In a pre-

a new single season Ohio State
~'lark of 1,265 yards, breaking
the old record of 1,142 set by
John Brockington in 1970.

Elia scored twice from the

Saturday's box :
RIO
GRANDE
(87)
Fausnaugh , 7-0-14 ; Bartram, 50 -10 ; Bo l l ing er , 10-4-24 ; Noe , 9 J -21 ; Stewart , 2-Q-4; Sw inehart.
3-2 -8 ; Hart, l -0-2 ; Sm ith , 1-0-2 ;
Morgan , 1-0-2. TOTALS 39-9-87 .
LANDER (71) - Hu rst , 3-"39 ; Dudley , 3-3 -9 ; Stacy . 4-7-15 ;
S m i th , 5-8- 16 ; G raham . 82 -18 ;
Goodwin , 1-0-2; TOTAL S 24-2 171.
Score at half - Rio 40 Lander
39 .

l.

·PINEH URS T , N . C. tuPi l Rotund M i ller Barb er , who
admits that he' s " Blown j ust
about everything there is t o
blow in gold," f inally won t he
big one after 16 years of trying
when he f ired a study two
under -par 70 Satur day to walk
away with golf ' s r ic h es t jackpot ever , the S500 ,000 World
Open .
MARIETTA , Oh io (UPI ) Fullback Doug Jat;:obs cha rg ed
for three t ouchdown s Sa turda y
t o lead undefeated Wittenberg
to a 35 -7 vic tory ove r Ma'r ietta
and the O.hio Conference
championship.

--- .

CHAMPAIGN , Ill. ( UPI) M i nnesota
rec ove r ed
six
Illinois fumbles Saturday and
wiped out a 10-po i nt l ead in the
final . five minutes to tr i p the
Figh t ing ll l ini 19-16.

WE ST LAFAYETTE , Ind .
( UPI)
Fourth -ranked
Michigan . playing under wra ps
most of the w.ay , tun ed up for
No . 1 Ohio State by Saturday
ov~rwhe lmi ng
Purd ue , 34 -9,
with four second -half touch downs .
Th e Wov l erines , runn i ng
their unbeaten st r ing to 10
game-S, fa ce Oh io Stat e ' s
powerh ouse at Ann Arbor , next
Saturday for the B ig Ten Titl e·
and th e Rose Bowl trip .
EAST

LANSING ,

M ic h .

( UPI ) - Tailb a ck M i ke Holt
ra n for a 54-yard to uc hd own
and Dirk Kryt conn ected on a
33 -ya r d f ield goa l saturday as
Mi c t"ligan State defeat ed a
gambl ing Ind ia na team, 10 -9 .

Saturday's results
Saturday's College
Footba II R esu Its
By United Press International
Co at G'-lar d 9 Drexel 0
Dartmouth 17 Corn ell 0
Harvard 35 Brown 32
Mass . 28 New Hamp shire 7
Penn .&lt;12 Co lumbi a B
Penn St . 49 Oh i o U 10
Pittsburgh 34 Army 0
Ru t gers 27 Holy Cross 7
Sy ra cuse 24 Boston Coli. 13
West Virg inia 42 Virginia 17
Williams 30 Am her st 1&lt;1
Yale 30 Prin ce ton 13
"Flor ida 20 Kentu c ky 18
Geo r g ia 28 Aubu rn 14
Maryland 28 Clemson 13
North Caroli na 42 Wake Forest
0
North Caro lina St . 21 Duke 3
R ic hmond 31 William &amp; M a r y 0
South Ca rol i na 52 F lo r ida St . 12
VMI 22 Virginia Tech 21
· Bowling Green 21 North er n I ll .
20
.
Ce n t ra l Mich. 30 Northern
M ic h . 7
M i am i- 0 . 6 Cincinnati 0
M ic h igan 34 Purdue 9
M ic higan Sf. 10 Ind iana 9
M inneso ta 19 I llin ois 16
Oh i o St . 55 Io wa 13
W isc onsin 36 Northwes t ern 34·
W i tt enberg 35 Marietta 7

. SOONERS ROMP
NORMAN, Okla . (UP! )
Oklahoma quarterback Steve
:navis scored twice on goal line
dive s and halfba c k J oe
Washington added. two touchdowns on short runs Saturday

GALLIPOLIS - " We must
be more consistent shooters,
rebounders and ball handlers.
Our defen s ive play wa s

scoreless

steady."

quarters, when

Hawkeye 41. Nine plays later
Elia again scored from the one.
Ohio State scored twice in the
final two and a half minutes of
the second quarter wilh
Greene's one-yard run capping
a 76-ya rd drive in 14 plays.
After the Hawkeyes wer e
stopped on the Buckeye 39,
Griffin ran for 20 yards and
then Greene hit Hazel in the
corner of Lite end zone wlth a
41-yard touchdown toss.
Griffin's touchdown came
after a 36-yard punt return by
Colzie to the Iowa 38 and Elia's
final score followed a fumble
by Wellington on the Hawkeye

12. The last Uluo State score,
Lippert's 12-yard scamper,
was set up by a &amp;l-yard dash by
reserve tailback Woody Roac h.

touchdowns in the first half,
became Penn State's second
leading aU-time rusher with a
2,476-yard career chart and
strengthened his bid for a
possible He is man trophy .
Lydell Mitchell holds the all
lime rushing record with 2,934
yards . .
The victory was the loth
straight for the unbeaten sixthranked Lions and their 2oth

BOBCATS WALLOPED
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.
(UP!) Tailback John
Cappelletti delivered his
second
straight
fourtouchdown performan&lt;:e and
piled up 204 yards rushing in
less than 30 minutes of play consecutive win i.n regular
Saturday to lead Orange Bowl season play.
Ohio, 4-S on the season •.
bound Penn State to a 49-10
victory over awesomely out·
manned Ohio University.
Cappelletti, scor ing all his

'

. That's · how
GAHS
Basketball Coach Jim
Osborne
summed
up
Saturday's
three-way
scrimmage between the Blue
Devils
and
visiting
Alexander and Portsmouth
West on the GARS planks.

guards. Second unit included
J ohn Groth and Mike Berridge,
guards; David Brown, center;
Bill Lemley and Roger Dailey,
forwards.
The third unit consisted of
Paul Taylor , John Chang,
Kenny Will and Jim Warren.
Thumper Johnson, 15th man on
the squad, did not dress for
Saturday's scrimmage.
During the eight sessions,
GARS hit .42 of 106 field goal
attempts t40 pet.) and
hauled down 66 rebounds.
The Devils were guilty of 36
turnovers, au average of 4.5
miscues per eight-minute
session.
Senior center Gil Prioe hit 14
of 31 field goal attempts and
hauled down 12 rebounds. Jim
Niday was six of 16 from the
field , and Tom Valentine six of
nine. Mike Sickles was three of
11 . with nine rebounds .
Valentine had eight snags.
Coach Osborne's lads outscored Coach Ken Turner's
Alexander Sparl.ans in the first
session, and tied in the second

0- 1
1- 2

Plus
Valu Stamp

Ct~~ng~t

1

o

T~t

li7J

Bri'/' Krl'n Shrn. We rtnne th
rill! t1 hlllit llllllltitiu. NON[ SOLD
fO DU.UIIS.

e3 Pieces Chicken

eMashed Potatoes
&amp; Gravy
eSiaw
eRoll
Offer Ends November 21st

PERFORM Af GAlLIPOLIS TUESDAY - Among members of Marshall University's
1973-74 basketballsquad who will take part in an intrasquad scrimmage in the Gallia Academy
High School gym l'uesday evening are these six returning lettermen. Kneeling left to right are
Greg lmperi, Eri: Bachelor and Joe Hickman. Standing left to right are Bill Mannefeld, Wayne
Smith and Frank Austin. The scrimmage is slated to begin at 7:30p.m. Admission is $1. The
event is being s,onsored by the Blue Devil Boosters Club.
' '&lt; """I

lmperi, Smith named
Big Green co-captains
DRIVE-IN

o
1

Eastern Ave .

3
4
1- 2
1
1
2- 4
3
1
1- 3
3
o
42 -106 66 36

Gallipolis, Ohio

Closed Thanksgiving

o,v

HUNTINGTON - Seniors
Greg lmperi and Wayne Smith
• wiU serve as co--&lt;:aptains of ·
Marshall University's 1973-74
basketball team according to
· Coach Bob Daniels.
" They' re our most ex ~
-~erienced seniors 1_'_' _ said

Daniels, " We ' ve appointed
them as our captains on the
basis of their leadership both
on and off the floor ." Imperi is
a guard from Huntington and
Smith is a forward-center from
Milwaukee, Wis.
1he Marshall Department of

• •

o" • "

U" I"•

U.S.O.A. Grade A Honeysuckle
10~14 lb . Av.rOJJe

Hen lurkers .........

Top Value Stamps

Wftole o r Porhon

With Coupon anti Purchase of
Two or More Cons

Athletics reminded area fans
that Tuesday, Marshall will
play an intra squad game at
GBilipoUs, st.arting at 7:30p.m.
The Herd still has one more
week of practice before the
Dec. I opening game with
(Continued on page 20)

Fresh Oysters

~-~ a1111:·;;;; ~:;; ;;·~;;;;:;;~;;.;;;: ••
--11[:.~ · ~'~ ' : "'"&lt;::·' .. .

--

5

tli

Selec t lior ie l ie~

:

~Great American

Ham ...••..

Sho~k

Reg.

Ham ....•.

Cans

' " S ubt e~ l
J~d

I

Betty Crocker

•

•

Pie Crust Mix ·.
lle,\8.:::.4lt
~ £
Bo, es
)''t

IS YOUR
PRESENT CAR
USING TOO
MUCH GAS?

Plus tax
forlO

minutes.

t o pace the third-ranked
Sooners to a 4.8-20 thrashing of

• •

...

1 ~· 89¢

U.S.O.A . Grade A 16 lbs . and up
Kroger

.W"11hbone

..••. lb.

Any Siz e Piece

Serve 'n Save
Bologna .....

• • •

Plain or Self Rising

Gold Medal

S Flour

---c-=---

With Coupon

Coupon Expires S::tt., Nov. 24, 1973
' " S ~b~ ~ct to
an ~

Auul ·cdble
Sale~

l out

Stat e

hx ""

With Coupon
Coupon Expires Sat., Nov. 24, 1973

Br .,o ~ l o ; l o t C han•p•o" '

Wheaties

" Subject to applicable ~tote
and local solel lox"

=
~

-

Hi-C
t:z49¢ § Drinks
Select

Flav or~

With Coupon
COupon hpires Sat., Nov. 24, 1913
··swbw ct io

A~ot •u blf
S1 l~ s f~r

Statt
·

IF IT IS, IN ORDER TO CONSERVE FUEL DURING lHE
EMRGY CRISIS, YOU MAY BE lHINKING ABOUT
BUYING OR TRADING FOR A. .•

THE SIGN OF
SAFE SAVINGS

Pre-Basted lurkers •.. ,lb.

22-oz.89-'

Jnd local

Kansa~.

I

Folger's
Cryslbls

t oul

'

I

Instant Coffee

Apo h ubl ~ s t~lr
Sll~l TJr ··

h

I

Hall

Smoked

~

f

Rib
Roast ...... . ....lb.$139

;:\\

'/4 14'/o-oz.$1 00
f.23

Butterball lurkers .... ,lb

U.S. D.A. Grade A 16 lbs , and up
Kroger Wishbone

U.S. GoV1 . Graded tho•ttl
People's Choice .4th &amp; 5th Rib

Cry-0-Vac full

lb.

U.S.D.A . Grade A 16 lbs . and up
Swift"' Premium

~moktld

Semi-Boneless

Witt. Coupon
Coupon h~ires Sat., NoY, 24, 1973

Special.

BADGERS TRIUMPH
MADISON, Wis. (UP!)
Quarterback Gregg Bohlig hit
Rodney Rh odes with a five·
yard touchdown pass with 33
seconds left in the ·game
Saturday, to lead Wisconsin to
a 36-34 Big Ten victory over
Northwestern .

~" '"

100 Extra

-.

SMASHES RECORD
AUSTIN, Tex. (UP!) Fullback Roosevelt Leaks
smashed the Southwest Conference season rushing record
and quarterback Marty Akins
accounted for three touchdowns Saturday as 11th-ranked
Texas smothered Texas
Christian 52-7 for a share of its
sixth straight conference title
and the host spot in the Cotton
Bowl.

~t!W5 ~­1•.

1(/ogtl

Pntn Gou Noumhr 11t~rM Newtm~er
1112 In til . IJII!J', PAIIIItlf 111, SiiUr

DINNER BOX
INCLUDES

FG -A R 8 TO
14 -31 12
2
1- 4
2
6
6-16
0
2
2- 8
5
2
3-11
9
5
2- 6
2
1
2- 7 · 4
3
6· 9
8
8
1- 3

DISCOU
RICES.

Buy A Dinner Box at Regular Price of $1 .85
and Get the Second Box for Just 'h Price .

eight minute practice tilt.
The Gallians bombed Coach
Buddy Sayre's Senators in the
first session despite a· good
performance from 6--7 senior
Senator center Kelly Shy. Wes t
outscored the Devils in the
second session.
Tuesday,
GAHS
will
sc rimmage at Circleville .
Saturday, the Devils take on
Zanesville and Youngstown
Ursaline in a three-way meet
at Zanesville.
Coach Buddy Moore ' s
reserve squad defeated the
Alexander reserves to
conclude
Saturday 's
scrimmage sessions.
Varsity results follow:
_
Player
Gil Price
Mike Berridge
Jim N iday
Bill Lemley
Mike Sic kles
Roger Da i ley
Ji m Singer
Tom Va lent ine
David Brown
John Groth
Paul Tuy lor
John Chang
Kenny Will
J im Warren
TOTALS

scored on a 57-yard, thirdquarter field goal by Gary
Homer and quarterback Rich
Bevly's two-yard sprint, set up
when Jim Eaise fumbled a
Bobcat punt at the Lion 21 in
the first period.
Ohio's only other scoring
threat came in the second
period when Bevly passed 14,
20 and 22 yards to split end
Mike Green, but . Penn State
held with fourth and goal on ·the
four-yard line. The Lions were
leading, 21-7, at the lime.

BUY ONE. ••
GET ONE 1h PRICE

Gallipolis scrimmages
Spartans and Senators

" We looked good during the
first 1wo eight minute
sessions," Osborne continued,
ubut we were not consistent
from
the field or on the boards
OXFORD, Ohio (UPI) Larry Harp~ ran t~e during the final six eight
minute sessions. We must
opening kickoff back 95
e~ucate
our
yards for a touchdown as learn to
,.
quickness,"
he
added.
16th-ranked and Tangerine
The Blue Devil mentor used
Bowl-bound Miami of Ohio
14 players in the 64·minute
wrapped up regular season
Eight are seniors,
scrirDmage.
play with a perfect 10.0
record by edging Cincinnati six junlors.
Osborne st.arted with Gil
6.() Saturday.
Price, ·center; Jim Singer and
The 10-0 record represents
Jim
Niday , guards; Mike
the best season In Miami's 85
Sickles and Tom Valentine,
years of football

Sports summary
H U NTINGtON ,
W.
Va .
(UP I ) ~ Senior quarterback
Reggie Oliver set two passing
records Saturday as h e teamed
with freshman ta i lback Bob
T racey to lead M arshall to a 37 14 victory over Dayton .
The tr i umph gave Mar shall a
4 6 record and 11,5 best season
mark since 1965 . The Herd
plays Ohio Un iversi1y Thank sgiving Da y to close it$ season .
Dayton f i nished its season 5 -5·

one in the first half and went in
from the three for two third
period scores. Ohio State's
other touchdowns came on a
one-yard plunge by quar terback Cornelius Greene, a 41yard pass from Greene to split
end Dave Hazel , an eight-yard
run by Griffin and a 12-yard
run by Elmer Lippert.
The Hawkeyes, who went
down to their lOth straight loss
of the season, snapped the
Buckeyes' string of 15 straight
quarterback Butch Caldwell
hit flanker Bill Schultz with a
78-yard scoring pass on the
first play of the final period.
The Hawkeyes scored their
other touchdown on a 61-yard
drive with Rod Wellington
going over from the two.
The Buckeyes, who will take
a 9.() record into next week 's
Big Ten title showdown with
fourth..-anked Michigan, took

season scrimmage game.

the opening kickoff and
marched to the Iowa 22 "here a
39-yard field goal attempt by
Blair Conway feU short.
The Hawkeyes were unable
I&lt;J move and cornerback Tim
Fox blocked a Joe Heppner
punt with defensive end Larry
Kain recovering the ball on the
Iowa one yard line.
Elia blasted in on the fir st
play to make it 7.() with 10:21
left in the quarter.
· Neal Colzie, who set a career
'yardage total fol" punt returns
with 606 yards , put the
Buckeyes in business again
with a 24-yard return to the

\

~~g. ';Saran Wrap
/V"

Roll

Hi-Nu 2%
Lowfat Milk ·. •

• • • • •

16-o, .. 6ottl~ ,

Mrs. Smith

R.C.
Cola

Pumpkin
Custard Pie

• •

• • •

Villogl!- Bakery Premium

Ro·yvhu

36C,....
-.SO·Ft

Krog~:•

29

,1

White
Bread

20·oz.
Lvs.

$1

•

$1.6988

20-oz. Btl. Antiseptic

Listerine
Mouthwash

Size

I

I

I

I

¢

• • •

)1-

With Coupon
Coupon hpires Sat., Nov. 24, 1973

GALLIPOLIS I
SAVINGS
AND LOAN co.
•

' 'i'

· ·su ht Pc l t o Apul •i:J blr 5 1~1~
~ nd Loca l S1les ra~ '

WE'RE
NOW

P AYIN;;:::G=-=====

W oorlc ool to•o

\~urniture
I

HI#' ' '

·---~-

GUARAMTEED .SAYI.GS .

ON PASSBOOK SAVINGS
COMPOUNDED QUARTERLY
_ASII_U_S-ABO
- -UT-. ----.
EQUALS ANNUAL

THE HIGHEST YIELD

YIElD OF •••

%.

PAID ON SAVINGS
CERTJACATES
IN THIS AREA

about

•

THE GALLI POLIS SAVINGS
· and LOAN COMPANY
or~

rosr OFfiCE

Tempting, isn't it?
Our Thanksgiving
Special lets you make a 10
minute self-dialed call as far
as California for $2.60. (85r
for the first 3 minutes and 25 c
for each additional minute.l
If the call is closer, the cost
is less.

'WE SAVINGS SINCE 1186"
'.

'

PHONE 446-3832

1

have all day Thanksgiving
from 8 a,m. to II p.m. to call
out-of-state at our low holiday
rates.
What's more, our
Thanksgiving long distance
rates for calls made within
Ohio
are' pretty special, too.
'

@ .

·

The most a I0 minute selfdialed call could cost is $ 1.66.
(40 c for the first minute and
14 ¢for each additional minute.)
Jus~ place your call anytime
after II p.m. Thanksgiving eve
until 8 a.m. Friday morning.
So wherever you call
this holiday, relax, you've got
plenty of time to enjoy our
Thanksgiving Special.

!~~s;~:i~j i::h~~ you
0 Ohio Bell
Use your phone for all its worth.

All

14·oz.99
Can

~

" ' S ~bjH!
~M

IQ Apploc ~ b l~ Shte
l Qn l SJIU Tu ""

,,.,,•. _I

NEW CAR ·LOAN

~

Polish

With Coupon
Coupon hpires. Sat., NoY. 24, 1973

SO, GO MAKE YOUR DEAL WllH YOUR LOCAL NEW CAR
DEALER AND THEN COME IN AND
SEE HAROLD THOMP~N OR WU WTTON FOR A. ••
,

"'

Colorpak

/I

AT. ••

fPolaroid Film
108-R$3 88

Go Wi1h Your Holiday Dinner

Fresh
Pkg.
J.lb.
Cranberries . . . • •

"THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

35"
~

Mouth Wat•ring Goodnen

Tender
Yams •.•.•.

A lvnunvn&gt;

With Coupon

Snow Shovel
J'f'/ Ea. $199

20, Off

\ 11

'·

The IHirChall of
Y2-Gol. Kro1er 6 ~. or lowfat

Wilh Coupon ·
Cow,pon hpireJ Sat., Nov. 24, 14173

EggNog

··sub1 rct 111 "Anml u b't 5!~!t
1nd l oca l Sales l.u ·

CtUHO lxfiru

Now. 24

li1t Y111111 KJ. lttttl

rates plus tax.

Dial-it ~yourself rates aPply on self-dialed ca Hs (without_operator ·assista_nce) from residence
.
.
and busi ness phones anywhere in the U.S. (except Alaska) and on calls pl!lced w1th an operator where d1rect
dialing r~cilities are not available. Dial-it ~yourself rates do not apply to person-to-person,
coin. hotel gueSt. credit card. collect call5 and on calls charged ~o another number.

•

,.

"110 YEARS OF SERVICE"
•

GALliPOLIS, _OHIO •

I

'·

••

'

I "

lr

.

'

•

'

;t.

�.'

'

18 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel,Sunda)', No\•. 18, 19:3

Redmen
Bucks ruri
cop opener
CO LUMBUS, Ohio ( UP! ) Tailba ck Archie Griffin rushed
for a record 246 yards and
fullback Bruce Elia scored four
touchdowns to . power topranked Ohio State to a 5:&gt;-13
victory over winless Iowa
Saturday.
/
Griffin, a 5-9, 180-pound
sophomore, not only broke his
own single ga me r ushing

RICHMONDALE - Led by Dan Bollinger's
second half outburst, Coach Art Lanham 's Rio
Grande College Redmen knocked off Lander
College of Greenwood, S. C., 87-71 here Saturday
afternoon. It was the !973-74 season opener for both
quintets.
Bollinger, a 6-5 junior from
Zanesville, spli t the cords with
10 field goals in the second half
after being held scoreless from
the field during the first 20
minutes of play.
·
Lambert finished the
game with 24 markers, high
for th e game.
Mter Rio jumped off to a
quick 6-0 lead, the Redmen
held a 19-9 advant.age with
12:27 left in the first half.
Lander, howeve r , sto rm ed
back to knot the count 27-all
with a three-point play by
Gabby Smith at the 6:26 mark.
Dean Fau sna ugh's goa l with
five seconds on the clock gave
Rio a 40-39 halftime advantage .
Lander led 45-44 with 16:10
left in the game when Bollinger
hit a twin-pointer to put the
Redmen ahead for keeps.
Gallipolis ' Jimmy Noe,
making his first start as a
college eager, placed second
In the scoring column for Rio
as the ••·Blue Devil pumped
In 21 points. Others finishing
In the double figures for Rio
were Dean Fausnaugh, with

record set last season as a
freshman but also est.ablished

14 and Ste\•e Bartram, 10.
Gabby Smith and Tom
Graham each had !8 points for
the Senators. John St.acy added
15.
Ri o outscored Lander 39-24
from the field. The Redmcn hit
nine of 13 free throws while
Lander canned 23 bf 31 attempts. No other statisti cs
were available .
Rio will open its home season
Monday at Lyne Center.against
the Senators. Tipoff time is 8
p.m .
The Redmen played
Saturday's opener without ·
the services of all-MOC
forward Ron Lambert .
Lambert is still nursing an
Injury re ceived In a pre-

a new single season Ohio State
~'lark of 1,265 yards, breaking
the old record of 1,142 set by
John Brockington in 1970.

Elia scored twice from the

Saturday's box :
RIO
GRANDE
(87)
Fausnaugh , 7-0-14 ; Bartram, 50 -10 ; Bo l l ing er , 10-4-24 ; Noe , 9 J -21 ; Stewart , 2-Q-4; Sw inehart.
3-2 -8 ; Hart, l -0-2 ; Sm ith , 1-0-2 ;
Morgan , 1-0-2. TOTALS 39-9-87 .
LANDER (71) - Hu rst , 3-"39 ; Dudley , 3-3 -9 ; Stacy . 4-7-15 ;
S m i th , 5-8- 16 ; G raham . 82 -18 ;
Goodwin , 1-0-2; TOTAL S 24-2 171.
Score at half - Rio 40 Lander
39 .

l.

·PINEH URS T , N . C. tuPi l Rotund M i ller Barb er , who
admits that he' s " Blown j ust
about everything there is t o
blow in gold," f inally won t he
big one after 16 years of trying
when he f ired a study two
under -par 70 Satur day to walk
away with golf ' s r ic h es t jackpot ever , the S500 ,000 World
Open .
MARIETTA , Oh io (UPI ) Fullback Doug Jat;:obs cha rg ed
for three t ouchdown s Sa turda y
t o lead undefeated Wittenberg
to a 35 -7 vic tory ove r Ma'r ietta
and the O.hio Conference
championship.

--- .

CHAMPAIGN , Ill. ( UPI) M i nnesota
rec ove r ed
six
Illinois fumbles Saturday and
wiped out a 10-po i nt l ead in the
final . five minutes to tr i p the
Figh t ing ll l ini 19-16.

WE ST LAFAYETTE , Ind .
( UPI)
Fourth -ranked
Michigan . playing under wra ps
most of the w.ay , tun ed up for
No . 1 Ohio State by Saturday
ov~rwhe lmi ng
Purd ue , 34 -9,
with four second -half touch downs .
Th e Wov l erines , runn i ng
their unbeaten st r ing to 10
game-S, fa ce Oh io Stat e ' s
powerh ouse at Ann Arbor , next
Saturday for the B ig Ten Titl e·
and th e Rose Bowl trip .
EAST

LANSING ,

M ic h .

( UPI ) - Tailb a ck M i ke Holt
ra n for a 54-yard to uc hd own
and Dirk Kryt conn ected on a
33 -ya r d f ield goa l saturday as
Mi c t"ligan State defeat ed a
gambl ing Ind ia na team, 10 -9 .

Saturday's results
Saturday's College
Footba II R esu Its
By United Press International
Co at G'-lar d 9 Drexel 0
Dartmouth 17 Corn ell 0
Harvard 35 Brown 32
Mass . 28 New Hamp shire 7
Penn .&lt;12 Co lumbi a B
Penn St . 49 Oh i o U 10
Pittsburgh 34 Army 0
Ru t gers 27 Holy Cross 7
Sy ra cuse 24 Boston Coli. 13
West Virg inia 42 Virginia 17
Williams 30 Am her st 1&lt;1
Yale 30 Prin ce ton 13
"Flor ida 20 Kentu c ky 18
Geo r g ia 28 Aubu rn 14
Maryland 28 Clemson 13
North Caroli na 42 Wake Forest
0
North Caro lina St . 21 Duke 3
R ic hmond 31 William &amp; M a r y 0
South Ca rol i na 52 F lo r ida St . 12
VMI 22 Virginia Tech 21
· Bowling Green 21 North er n I ll .
20
.
Ce n t ra l Mich. 30 Northern
M ic h . 7
M i am i- 0 . 6 Cincinnati 0
M ic h igan 34 Purdue 9
M ic higan Sf. 10 Ind iana 9
M inneso ta 19 I llin ois 16
Oh i o St . 55 Io wa 13
W isc onsin 36 Northwes t ern 34·
W i tt enberg 35 Marietta 7

. SOONERS ROMP
NORMAN, Okla . (UP! )
Oklahoma quarterback Steve
:navis scored twice on goal line
dive s and halfba c k J oe
Washington added. two touchdowns on short runs Saturday

GALLIPOLIS - " We must
be more consistent shooters,
rebounders and ball handlers.
Our defen s ive play wa s

scoreless

steady."

quarters, when

Hawkeye 41. Nine plays later
Elia again scored from the one.
Ohio State scored twice in the
final two and a half minutes of
the second quarter wilh
Greene's one-yard run capping
a 76-ya rd drive in 14 plays.
After the Hawkeyes wer e
stopped on the Buckeye 39,
Griffin ran for 20 yards and
then Greene hit Hazel in the
corner of Lite end zone wlth a
41-yard touchdown toss.
Griffin's touchdown came
after a 36-yard punt return by
Colzie to the Iowa 38 and Elia's
final score followed a fumble
by Wellington on the Hawkeye

12. The last Uluo State score,
Lippert's 12-yard scamper,
was set up by a &amp;l-yard dash by
reserve tailback Woody Roac h.

touchdowns in the first half,
became Penn State's second
leading aU-time rusher with a
2,476-yard career chart and
strengthened his bid for a
possible He is man trophy .
Lydell Mitchell holds the all
lime rushing record with 2,934
yards . .
The victory was the loth
straight for the unbeaten sixthranked Lions and their 2oth

BOBCATS WALLOPED
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.
(UP!) Tailback John
Cappelletti delivered his
second
straight
fourtouchdown performan&lt;:e and
piled up 204 yards rushing in
less than 30 minutes of play consecutive win i.n regular
Saturday to lead Orange Bowl season play.
Ohio, 4-S on the season •.
bound Penn State to a 49-10
victory over awesomely out·
manned Ohio University.
Cappelletti, scor ing all his

'

. That's · how
GAHS
Basketball Coach Jim
Osborne
summed
up
Saturday's
three-way
scrimmage between the Blue
Devils
and
visiting
Alexander and Portsmouth
West on the GARS planks.

guards. Second unit included
J ohn Groth and Mike Berridge,
guards; David Brown, center;
Bill Lemley and Roger Dailey,
forwards.
The third unit consisted of
Paul Taylor , John Chang,
Kenny Will and Jim Warren.
Thumper Johnson, 15th man on
the squad, did not dress for
Saturday's scrimmage.
During the eight sessions,
GARS hit .42 of 106 field goal
attempts t40 pet.) and
hauled down 66 rebounds.
The Devils were guilty of 36
turnovers, au average of 4.5
miscues per eight-minute
session.
Senior center Gil Prioe hit 14
of 31 field goal attempts and
hauled down 12 rebounds. Jim
Niday was six of 16 from the
field , and Tom Valentine six of
nine. Mike Sickles was three of
11 . with nine rebounds .
Valentine had eight snags.
Coach Osborne's lads outscored Coach Ken Turner's
Alexander Sparl.ans in the first
session, and tied in the second

0- 1
1- 2

Plus
Valu Stamp

Ct~~ng~t

1

o

T~t

li7J

Bri'/' Krl'n Shrn. We rtnne th
rill! t1 hlllit llllllltitiu. NON[ SOLD
fO DU.UIIS.

e3 Pieces Chicken

eMashed Potatoes
&amp; Gravy
eSiaw
eRoll
Offer Ends November 21st

PERFORM Af GAlLIPOLIS TUESDAY - Among members of Marshall University's
1973-74 basketballsquad who will take part in an intrasquad scrimmage in the Gallia Academy
High School gym l'uesday evening are these six returning lettermen. Kneeling left to right are
Greg lmperi, Eri: Bachelor and Joe Hickman. Standing left to right are Bill Mannefeld, Wayne
Smith and Frank Austin. The scrimmage is slated to begin at 7:30p.m. Admission is $1. The
event is being s,onsored by the Blue Devil Boosters Club.
' '&lt; """I

lmperi, Smith named
Big Green co-captains
DRIVE-IN

o
1

Eastern Ave .

3
4
1- 2
1
1
2- 4
3
1
1- 3
3
o
42 -106 66 36

Gallipolis, Ohio

Closed Thanksgiving

o,v

HUNTINGTON - Seniors
Greg lmperi and Wayne Smith
• wiU serve as co--&lt;:aptains of ·
Marshall University's 1973-74
basketball team according to
· Coach Bob Daniels.
" They' re our most ex ~
-~erienced seniors 1_'_' _ said

Daniels, " We ' ve appointed
them as our captains on the
basis of their leadership both
on and off the floor ." Imperi is
a guard from Huntington and
Smith is a forward-center from
Milwaukee, Wis.
1he Marshall Department of

• •

o" • "

U" I"•

U.S.O.A. Grade A Honeysuckle
10~14 lb . Av.rOJJe

Hen lurkers .........

Top Value Stamps

Wftole o r Porhon

With Coupon anti Purchase of
Two or More Cons

Athletics reminded area fans
that Tuesday, Marshall will
play an intra squad game at
GBilipoUs, st.arting at 7:30p.m.
The Herd still has one more
week of practice before the
Dec. I opening game with
(Continued on page 20)

Fresh Oysters

~-~ a1111:·;;;; ~:;; ;;·~;;;;:;;~;;.;;;: ••
--11[:.~ · ~'~ ' : "'"&lt;::·' .. .

--

5

tli

Selec t lior ie l ie~

:

~Great American

Ham ...••..

Sho~k

Reg.

Ham ....•.

Cans

' " S ubt e~ l
J~d

I

Betty Crocker

•

•

Pie Crust Mix ·.
lle,\8.:::.4lt
~ £
Bo, es
)''t

IS YOUR
PRESENT CAR
USING TOO
MUCH GAS?

Plus tax
forlO

minutes.

t o pace the third-ranked
Sooners to a 4.8-20 thrashing of

• •

...

1 ~· 89¢

U.S.O.A . Grade A 16 lbs . and up
Kroger

.W"11hbone

..••. lb.

Any Siz e Piece

Serve 'n Save
Bologna .....

• • •

Plain or Self Rising

Gold Medal

S Flour

---c-=---

With Coupon

Coupon Expires S::tt., Nov. 24, 1973
' " S ~b~ ~ct to
an ~

Auul ·cdble
Sale~

l out

Stat e

hx ""

With Coupon
Coupon Expires Sat., Nov. 24, 1973

Br .,o ~ l o ; l o t C han•p•o" '

Wheaties

" Subject to applicable ~tote
and local solel lox"

=
~

-

Hi-C
t:z49¢ § Drinks
Select

Flav or~

With Coupon
COupon hpires Sat., Nov. 24, 1913
··swbw ct io

A~ot •u blf
S1 l~ s f~r

Statt
·

IF IT IS, IN ORDER TO CONSERVE FUEL DURING lHE
EMRGY CRISIS, YOU MAY BE lHINKING ABOUT
BUYING OR TRADING FOR A. .•

THE SIGN OF
SAFE SAVINGS

Pre-Basted lurkers •.. ,lb.

22-oz.89-'

Jnd local

Kansa~.

I

Folger's
Cryslbls

t oul

'

I

Instant Coffee

Apo h ubl ~ s t~lr
Sll~l TJr ··

h

I

Hall

Smoked

~

f

Rib
Roast ...... . ....lb.$139

;:\\

'/4 14'/o-oz.$1 00
f.23

Butterball lurkers .... ,lb

U.S. D.A. Grade A 16 lbs , and up
Kroger Wishbone

U.S. GoV1 . Graded tho•ttl
People's Choice .4th &amp; 5th Rib

Cry-0-Vac full

lb.

U.S.D.A . Grade A 16 lbs . and up
Swift"' Premium

~moktld

Semi-Boneless

Witt. Coupon
Coupon h~ires Sat., NoY, 24, 1973

Special.

BADGERS TRIUMPH
MADISON, Wis. (UP!)
Quarterback Gregg Bohlig hit
Rodney Rh odes with a five·
yard touchdown pass with 33
seconds left in the ·game
Saturday, to lead Wisconsin to
a 36-34 Big Ten victory over
Northwestern .

~" '"

100 Extra

-.

SMASHES RECORD
AUSTIN, Tex. (UP!) Fullback Roosevelt Leaks
smashed the Southwest Conference season rushing record
and quarterback Marty Akins
accounted for three touchdowns Saturday as 11th-ranked
Texas smothered Texas
Christian 52-7 for a share of its
sixth straight conference title
and the host spot in the Cotton
Bowl.

~t!W5 ~­1•.

1(/ogtl

Pntn Gou Noumhr 11t~rM Newtm~er
1112 In til . IJII!J', PAIIIItlf 111, SiiUr

DINNER BOX
INCLUDES

FG -A R 8 TO
14 -31 12
2
1- 4
2
6
6-16
0
2
2- 8
5
2
3-11
9
5
2- 6
2
1
2- 7 · 4
3
6· 9
8
8
1- 3

DISCOU
RICES.

Buy A Dinner Box at Regular Price of $1 .85
and Get the Second Box for Just 'h Price .

eight minute practice tilt.
The Gallians bombed Coach
Buddy Sayre's Senators in the
first session despite a· good
performance from 6--7 senior
Senator center Kelly Shy. Wes t
outscored the Devils in the
second session.
Tuesday,
GAHS
will
sc rimmage at Circleville .
Saturday, the Devils take on
Zanesville and Youngstown
Ursaline in a three-way meet
at Zanesville.
Coach Buddy Moore ' s
reserve squad defeated the
Alexander reserves to
conclude
Saturday 's
scrimmage sessions.
Varsity results follow:
_
Player
Gil Price
Mike Berridge
Jim N iday
Bill Lemley
Mike Sic kles
Roger Da i ley
Ji m Singer
Tom Va lent ine
David Brown
John Groth
Paul Tuy lor
John Chang
Kenny Will
J im Warren
TOTALS

scored on a 57-yard, thirdquarter field goal by Gary
Homer and quarterback Rich
Bevly's two-yard sprint, set up
when Jim Eaise fumbled a
Bobcat punt at the Lion 21 in
the first period.
Ohio's only other scoring
threat came in the second
period when Bevly passed 14,
20 and 22 yards to split end
Mike Green, but . Penn State
held with fourth and goal on ·the
four-yard line. The Lions were
leading, 21-7, at the lime.

BUY ONE. ••
GET ONE 1h PRICE

Gallipolis scrimmages
Spartans and Senators

" We looked good during the
first 1wo eight minute
sessions," Osborne continued,
ubut we were not consistent
from
the field or on the boards
OXFORD, Ohio (UPI) Larry Harp~ ran t~e during the final six eight
minute sessions. We must
opening kickoff back 95
e~ucate
our
yards for a touchdown as learn to
,.
quickness,"
he
added.
16th-ranked and Tangerine
The Blue Devil mentor used
Bowl-bound Miami of Ohio
14 players in the 64·minute
wrapped up regular season
Eight are seniors,
scrirDmage.
play with a perfect 10.0
record by edging Cincinnati six junlors.
Osborne st.arted with Gil
6.() Saturday.
Price, ·center; Jim Singer and
The 10-0 record represents
Jim
Niday , guards; Mike
the best season In Miami's 85
Sickles and Tom Valentine,
years of football

Sports summary
H U NTINGtON ,
W.
Va .
(UP I ) ~ Senior quarterback
Reggie Oliver set two passing
records Saturday as h e teamed
with freshman ta i lback Bob
T racey to lead M arshall to a 37 14 victory over Dayton .
The tr i umph gave Mar shall a
4 6 record and 11,5 best season
mark since 1965 . The Herd
plays Ohio Un iversi1y Thank sgiving Da y to close it$ season .
Dayton f i nished its season 5 -5·

one in the first half and went in
from the three for two third
period scores. Ohio State's
other touchdowns came on a
one-yard plunge by quar terback Cornelius Greene, a 41yard pass from Greene to split
end Dave Hazel , an eight-yard
run by Griffin and a 12-yard
run by Elmer Lippert.
The Hawkeyes, who went
down to their lOth straight loss
of the season, snapped the
Buckeyes' string of 15 straight
quarterback Butch Caldwell
hit flanker Bill Schultz with a
78-yard scoring pass on the
first play of the final period.
The Hawkeyes scored their
other touchdown on a 61-yard
drive with Rod Wellington
going over from the two.
The Buckeyes, who will take
a 9.() record into next week 's
Big Ten title showdown with
fourth..-anked Michigan, took

season scrimmage game.

the opening kickoff and
marched to the Iowa 22 "here a
39-yard field goal attempt by
Blair Conway feU short.
The Hawkeyes were unable
I&lt;J move and cornerback Tim
Fox blocked a Joe Heppner
punt with defensive end Larry
Kain recovering the ball on the
Iowa one yard line.
Elia blasted in on the fir st
play to make it 7.() with 10:21
left in the quarter.
· Neal Colzie, who set a career
'yardage total fol" punt returns
with 606 yards , put the
Buckeyes in business again
with a 24-yard return to the

\

~~g. ';Saran Wrap
/V"

Roll

Hi-Nu 2%
Lowfat Milk ·. •

• • • • •

16-o, .. 6ottl~ ,

Mrs. Smith

R.C.
Cola

Pumpkin
Custard Pie

• •

• • •

Villogl!- Bakery Premium

Ro·yvhu

36C,....
-.SO·Ft

Krog~:•

29

,1

White
Bread

20·oz.
Lvs.

$1

•

$1.6988

20-oz. Btl. Antiseptic

Listerine
Mouthwash

Size

I

I

I

I

¢

• • •

)1-

With Coupon
Coupon hpires Sat., Nov. 24, 1973

GALLIPOLIS I
SAVINGS
AND LOAN co.
•

' 'i'

· ·su ht Pc l t o Apul •i:J blr 5 1~1~
~ nd Loca l S1les ra~ '

WE'RE
NOW

P AYIN;;:::G=-=====

W oorlc ool to•o

\~urniture
I

HI#' ' '

·---~-

GUARAMTEED .SAYI.GS .

ON PASSBOOK SAVINGS
COMPOUNDED QUARTERLY
_ASII_U_S-ABO
- -UT-. ----.
EQUALS ANNUAL

THE HIGHEST YIELD

YIElD OF •••

%.

PAID ON SAVINGS
CERTJACATES
IN THIS AREA

about

•

THE GALLI POLIS SAVINGS
· and LOAN COMPANY
or~

rosr OFfiCE

Tempting, isn't it?
Our Thanksgiving
Special lets you make a 10
minute self-dialed call as far
as California for $2.60. (85r
for the first 3 minutes and 25 c
for each additional minute.l
If the call is closer, the cost
is less.

'WE SAVINGS SINCE 1186"
'.

'

PHONE 446-3832

1

have all day Thanksgiving
from 8 a,m. to II p.m. to call
out-of-state at our low holiday
rates.
What's more, our
Thanksgiving long distance
rates for calls made within
Ohio
are' pretty special, too.
'

@ .

·

The most a I0 minute selfdialed call could cost is $ 1.66.
(40 c for the first minute and
14 ¢for each additional minute.)
Jus~ place your call anytime
after II p.m. Thanksgiving eve
until 8 a.m. Friday morning.
So wherever you call
this holiday, relax, you've got
plenty of time to enjoy our
Thanksgiving Special.

!~~s;~:i~j i::h~~ you
0 Ohio Bell
Use your phone for all its worth.

All

14·oz.99
Can

~

" ' S ~bjH!
~M

IQ Apploc ~ b l~ Shte
l Qn l SJIU Tu ""

,,.,,•. _I

NEW CAR ·LOAN

~

Polish

With Coupon
Coupon hpires. Sat., NoY. 24, 1973

SO, GO MAKE YOUR DEAL WllH YOUR LOCAL NEW CAR
DEALER AND THEN COME IN AND
SEE HAROLD THOMP~N OR WU WTTON FOR A. ••
,

"'

Colorpak

/I

AT. ••

fPolaroid Film
108-R$3 88

Go Wi1h Your Holiday Dinner

Fresh
Pkg.
J.lb.
Cranberries . . . • •

"THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

35"
~

Mouth Wat•ring Goodnen

Tender
Yams •.•.•.

A lvnunvn&gt;

With Coupon

Snow Shovel
J'f'/ Ea. $199

20, Off

\ 11

'·

The IHirChall of
Y2-Gol. Kro1er 6 ~. or lowfat

Wilh Coupon ·
Cow,pon hpireJ Sat., Nov. 24, 14173

EggNog

··sub1 rct 111 "Anml u b't 5!~!t
1nd l oca l Sales l.u ·

CtUHO lxfiru

Now. 24

li1t Y111111 KJ. lttttl

rates plus tax.

Dial-it ~yourself rates aPply on self-dialed ca Hs (without_operator ·assista_nce) from residence
.
.
and busi ness phones anywhere in the U.S. (except Alaska) and on calls pl!lced w1th an operator where d1rect
dialing r~cilities are not available. Dial-it ~yourself rates do not apply to person-to-person,
coin. hotel gueSt. credit card. collect call5 and on calls charged ~o another number.

•

,.

"110 YEARS OF SERVICE"
•

GALliPOLIS, _OHIO •

I

'·

••

'

I "

lr

.

'

•

'

;t.

�Zl - The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 18, 197:

20- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday Nov. 18. 1973

Maroon better

~

Ironton ·in AA finals after _;
games close Friday

WALKER SCORES - Southwestern junior forward
Kevin Walker (24) led his team lo a 23-22 victory Friday in
the SW-southern preview game. Walker had eight points
during the two quarters of action. Southern's Dave Theiss is
guarding Walker. Other players are the Highlanders' Lloyd
Wood (30) and Phil lewis (40).

WHERE'S THAT BALL? Kyger Creek's David (Moby)
Clay and Terry Lucas corral Vinton County's Tony Timmons
in a search for the ball in the KC-Vinton County Preview
game which ended in a 32-32 tie. Marshall French Photo.
North Ceritral 60 Edgerton 53

Cage scores

lotl

Ohio High School

Basketball ScOres

By United Press Int ernational
Ft. Jenni ng s 82 "Ohio City 70
Houston 76 Botk i ns 58
Ft . Laramie 67 Russia 42
Anna 11 Jackson Center 57
Springfield Northwestern 66
Sp ringf ield Shawnee 47
New Mad ison Tri ·Vi l lage 83
Laurel (Ind . ) 75
Upper Scioto Valley 84 New
Knoxville 80
Lebanon 68 Mason 62
Cols Ready 57 Buckeye Valley
38
Cols Central 55 Co ts Hartley 44
·- ; R eyno ld sburg 70 Bexley 58 '
·
Hebron St . Peter &amp; Paul 54
Ohio Deaf 51
Pettisvil le 59 Stryker 35
Fayette 67 Spencer -Charles 39

Contental 81 Tinora 64
Holgate .76 Miller City 55
Bedford Chanel 71 North
Royalton 41
Delaware 61 Hill iard 53

Friday 's
Final Playoffs :
Mooney meets Warren at the
Akron Rubber Bowl Friday at
7 : 30p.m.
Ironton meets Benedict ine at
Massil lon Friday at 7 : 30p .m .
Montpelier
meets · M id dletown a t Ohio Wesleyan
Friday at 1: 30 p.m .

TO YOU WITH LOVE !

CLEA
KIT. ·\J r
I

RIO GRANDE -· Southern
Valley Athletic Conference
cage fans wer~ treated to four
good preview games here
Friday night.
Southwestern posted a one
point victory over Southern ;
Hannan Trace blitzed Eastern,
411-36 while North Gallia Symmes Valley and Kyger
Creek and Vint on Co unty
battled to 32-32 ties.
According to most observers,
the league seems to be wellbalanced with any team
capable of ~eati ng another on a
given night. ..
Approximately 2,000 fan s
watched the preview held for
the first time at the Paul R.
Lyne Center.
In the opener, Coach Jim
Foster's North Gallia Pirates
zoomed into a big lead going
into the final two minutes of
action only to see Symmes
Valley come ba ck to tie the
score with just five seconds left
on the clock. ·
Going into the last two
minutes, Foster pulled his five
starters, Tim Stout, Gre g
James, Mike Camden , Keith
Weddington
and
Dave
Robinette.
·Coach Ferrell Hesson's lads
caught fire behind the hot
shooting of senior Rodney
Bennett to cut the score to 32-30
before Bennett collected the
clutch tying bucket.
North Gallia, behind the
corner shooting of Stout and
the 15 foot jumpers by
sophomore Greg James took
an 111-12 lead at the end of the
first period. Both had 10 points
in the preview . Camden came
in next with four points .
Bennett led the Vikings with
18 points on six baskets and six
charity tosses. Jaye Myers was
the only other Viking with
m'ore than one basket.
Coach Keith Carter's debut
was a successful one as ihe
Highlanders of SouthWestern
edged Southern; 23-22 in the
night's second game of tl1e
preview .
Trailing lQ-.8 going into the
final period, the . Highlanders
ou tscored the Tornadoes of
Coach Carl Wolfe, 15-12.
Kevin Walker paced the
Southwestern scorers with
eight points. Lloyd Wood, 6-2
junior center, had six points;
Terry Carter, 6-0 juilior guard,
canned five points and big·Phil
Lewis added four.
Bobby Miller led · Southern
with 10 points on three baskets
and four ·free throws. Mitch
Nease, Norman Curfman, 6-1
senior forward and Buddy
Erwin had four points each.
A clutch basket by Joe
Stidham, 6·2 junior center,
gave the Kyger CreeK Bobcats
a 32-32 tie againsi the Vinton
Coun ty Vikings.
·
With Kyger Creek trailing,
32-29 with just five seconds left,
junior forward Dave Wfse
stepped to the line on the bonus
stituation. Wi!se canned the
first shot, but as the strategy
called for, missed the second.
The ball hit off the rim and
came down to Stidham who
turned around and put it in. He
was fouled on the play but was
Wlable to convert.
Coach Jim Arledge's Bobcats outscored Vinton County,
22-21 in the first period.
Kyger Creek moved into the
lead behind the hot-shooting of
junior guard Terry Lucas.
Lucas, the smallest player on

.TARA
DEVELOPMENf .
OORP.

NEW
HOMES
FOR SALE
Ano.t her first from ARAB! Producers of nationally known
and trusted pest Control Produ c ts and Service since 1929.
The ARAB Kitchen Clean Out Kit features· a PROFES·
SIONALLY-PROVEN SPRAY and FOG TECHNIOUE.
AlthOugh designed for the kilchen, il can be used in any
similar sized room where insects are or can be a problem.
3UARANTEED quick, lhorough kill or YOUR MONEY
3ACK • ..

CARTER &amp; EVANS INC.
BUILDING SUPPLIES

OM St

Gallipolis, Ohio

Building , Si t es
Available. Kingsberry
Home s b4ilt to fit any
specifications. _ All
Underground Utilities
Provided .

.·----------'
l-or mtormation
Or Appointment

PHONE
367-7250
""-OUI:)VII t U,

•t
Mezgs drops prevzew tz t

Reading falls 7 -0;
Oeveland next foe

SENIOR FORWARD - Rodney Bennett, for the Symmes
Valley Vikings fires an off.tialanced shot in action Friday
night against the North Gallia Pirates. Be!Uiett led his team
to a come-from-behind 32-32 tie in the first game of the SVAC
Preview at Rio Grande College. North Gallia's Keith Wed·
dington (25) is falling to the floor. Other players are Mike
Camden of North Gallia, Jaye Myers and Mike Burcham of
Symmes Valley and the Pirates' Tim Stout (12). Marshall
~
French Photo.

Gallipolis Elks Lodge to sponsor
RANDY HALLEY (13) Hannan Trace's senior guard attempts to drive on Eastern's Tim
Baum in action Friday nightin the finale ofthe SVAC Cage Prevlew. John Lusher (23) and Don
Wells (45) are shown at the rear . Marshall French Photo .

the court, dumped in 11 points
during the first five minutes.
He was joined in the scoring by
6-1 junior Clay Hudson and 5·7
sophomore guard Tom K€rn .
Hudson had five points in the
first period while Kern poured
in four.
Matching !heir effort for
Dave Wilcoxen's Vikings was
6-4 senior center, Harold
Caudill. Caudill ripped lhe
cords for 13 points in the first
period and 21 on the nigh!.
Hudson and Lucas paced the
Bobcats with 11 points each .
Keith Nice had 10 points for the
Vikings .
Coach Paul Dillon's ?annan
Trace Wildcats led by Mark
Swain 's 21 points rolled over
Coach Bill Phillips ' tall
Eastern Eagles, 411-36 in the
preview finale..
The Wildcats led 21·17 at the
end of the first period.
HT caught fire in the second
stanza rolling out into a 20 point
lead at one stage of the
quarter.
Randy Halley, 5-9 senior
guard, had 12 points.
Big steve Dill, 6-3 senior, led
the Eagl\,s with 15 points. John
Sheets, 6-1 senior ha:d six points
am~ Tim Spencer canned four .
Box Scores :
North Gallia (32) Wed dington , 1-0-2 ; Mayo , 0-0-0 ;
Logan , 0 -2-2 ; Smith , 1-0 -2 ;
Camden , 1-2-4 ; Justus, 0 ·0-0 ;
Robinette , 1' 0-2; Thomas 0-0-0 ;
Stout. 4-2-10 ; Garnes, 0-0-0 ;
James, 5-0-10 and Denney , 0 -00. Totals 13-6-32 .
Symmes Valley (321 ._...
Quensenberry, 1-0-2; J ones , 10-2; Burcham, 0-2-2 ; J. Myers.
2 - 2-4 ; - Jim Meyers , 1-0 -2 ;
Brown , 1-0-2 and Bennett. 6-618 . Totals 12 -8- 32.
Southwestern ( 231 K.
Walker , 4·0-8 ; Lewis, 2-0 -4;
Wood . 3-0 -6 ; Carter , 2- 1-5 .
Totals 11 -1-2 3.
·
So'-'lhern (221 - M iller , 3·4
10 ; Nease , 2-0-4 ; Curfman, 1-24 ; Ervin ; 2-0-4. Total s 8·6- 22 .
Kyger Creek (32) - Hudson ,
5-1 11 ; Rumley , 1-0-2; Tabor . 0

lmperi...
(Continued from page 19)
Western Carolina in Memorial
Field House, and practice thus
far for Daniels' squad has
concentrated · on the offensive
portion of the game. Work on
defense and rebounding will
come later .
11
1t's not a clear-cut case of
who will start," said Daniels of
this year's club, which has just
one · starter back from last
year's 20-7 team. "E verybOdy
thinks they've got a chance to
start and because of this we've
had a lot of enthusiasm.
"We're still just feeling our
way long, 11 explains Daniels.
"It'll be hard to tell much of
anything until the inlrasquad
sc rimmages .''
Big Green Notes - Season
tickets are on s~le to the public
on a first come, first serve
basis, according to Athletic
Ticket Manager Joe Wortham.
Season tickets are $52.50 for
15 fiome dates , including the
Herd's pre-seasori exhibition
with the Australian National
Team on Nov. 28 and the Dec .
29 meeting with East Carolina
in the Charleston Civic Center.
The ticket books do not include
the Marshall Memorial Invitational.
For ticket information,
applicants should call the
ticket office at 696,3190, or
address correspondence to
Athletic ·Ticket Office, Marshall University P.O. Box 1360,
Huntington, W. Va . 25715 .
•
I

Jets hope to keep
jinx over Bengals
By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - He
may be "Bro.adway Joe" to
many, but to the Cincinnati
Bengals Joe Namath is
"Tuxedo Joe."
Bengals defensive line coach
Chuck Studley explains the
special nickname for the New
York Jets' quarterback:
"Each of the last three times
he's played against us he could
h..'l ve worn a t'uxedo,"' Studley
says. "We didn't touch him.
"If Namath plays we must
get to him in order to win.
Without a doubt, when Namath
is healthy, he is the finest quarterback in pro football."
The Jets, who meet the Bengals here Sunday, have never
Lost a regular season game to
Cincinnati and Studley maintains the reason is the solid
pocket the Jets' line provides
Namath.
Namath is hopeful of making
his first appea rance here Sunday after being out of action
the past seven ·games with a
separated shoulder. Namath
D-0 : Clay , o.Q.O; Lawhon , 0-0-0 ;
Roush . 0-0 -0; Wi-se, 0 -1- 1;
Stidham , 1-1-:l; Lu c as . 5· 1-11;
Kern, 2-0-4; Icard , 0-0-0 and
Arnett , 0 Q-0. T otals 14-4-32,.
Vinton
County
(321
Caudil l, 9-3-21 ; Nice , 5-2-10;
Ti m m ons . 0-0-0; Gilliaflcl. 0-0-0 ;
Brown , 0-1: 1; La fferty . 0-0-0 ;
Abe le. and Hayes , o.o.o. Totals
14 -4· 32 .
Hannan
Trace
(48)
Lusher . 1-2·4 : Cremeans , 0·0-0:
He sson . 2-0 4 ; M cG uire, 0-0-0 ;
We lls, 1-0-2 ; Ha ll , 0-2-2; Swain .
9 -3-?.1 ; • Montgom e ry. 0 -0-0 ;
Hal\ey , 0-0 0 ; San d ers , 1-0-2; R .
Hal l ey, 3· 6-12 ; Sanders , 1-0-2;
R . Ha l ley , 3-6-12 ; Williams. 0 -00. Totals 18- 12-48 .
Eastern (36) ~ Dill. 5-5- 15 ;
Hal lan . 2 0-4; Baum, 0·0-0 ;
Atherton . 0·0,0; Batley ) 1-2·4 ;
Spenc er , 1·3-5; Weber , 1-0 -2;'
Orr, 0. 0-0 ; Sheets, · 1·4 -6 ;
GoebeL 0-0-0. Totals 11 - 14-3 6.

continued to suffer some pain
passing in practice this week
and his status for Sunday was
not expected to be determined
tmtil near game time .
Bengals defensive end Royce
Berry says football players
must differentiate between an
injury that pains them and an
injury that threatens their
career.
"Playing with pain is something we do everY week,'' he
said. "But it's foolish to play
with an injury that could
threaten your career or hurt
you later in life."
The Bengals are familiar

Pirate Boosters
planning events
VINTON - The North Gallia
Athletic Boosters are plaiming
a "Meet the T~am Night" on
Wedne·sday, Nov. 21.
Activities wifl begin with a
chili supper, starting at 6 p.m.
at the high school. Advance
ticket• may be purchased from
any football or basketball
player, or at Cottrell's Grocery
in Porter. Tickets will also be
sold at the door . Chili dinner
tickets are $1.25 for adults and
75 cents for children 10 and
under.
The meal will consi.s t oi chili,
hot dog:5, pie or cup cakes,
coffee ot pop.
· Meet the team night activities will star! at a p.m.
Members of the seventh,
eighth , ninth, reserve and
varsity teams will be in·
lroduced.
lntrasquad scrimmages will
conclude the · evening's ac.
tH·ities.

hoop shoot at GAHS on Dec. 15
GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis Elks Lodge No. I07
will sponsor Its annual hoop
shoot on Saturday, Dec. 15,
beginning at 1 p.m. in the
GAHS gym.
Carrol E. Waugh will serve
as chairman of the event again
this winter.
Last year's winners were
Je!f Call, Rio Grande ; Dan
Spencer, Coolville and Crenson
Pratt, Middleport.
The contestants must live ir.
the jurisdiction of the
Gallipolis Elks Lodge in Gallia,
Mason or Meigs County .
Parents ·do not have lo belong
to the Elks Lodge in order for
their children to participate .
Letters, alorig with application blanks have been sent
to all school principals in the
MGM area. The material also
includes rules and regulations
for the annual event.
Winners will be named in
three age groups- a: 9, and 10
with injuries and several
players will be sidelined
Sunday, including safety
Tommy Casa nova, runner
Doug Dressler, receiver Charlie Joiner and offensive tackle
Stan Wlaters. Essex Johnson
may sit out the g~ me with a
hairline wrist fracture.
The Jets, playing for the first
time in Cincinnati, bring a 3-6
record into the game, while the
Bengals with a good shot at a
wildcard playoff spot, is 5-4.
"It may take wins in all five
of our remaining games to
make the playoffs," Studley
says.
Cincinnati's next five opponents include the unbeaten
Minnesota Vikings and the
Cleveland BroWns, a team
always rough on the Bengals. ·

year-olds; 10 and 11, and 1:1year-olds (cannot reach age of
14 before March 1).
Local winners wm advance
to the district contest. District
winners will then advance to
the state and state winners will
participate in the national
contest.

Tune in NFL and NCAA
footba ll, brought to you
i n part by your St:1te

Farm agent .

Huddle with me.
For todais best value in
car. home. I ile and health
insurance.
Stephen c . Snowden

553 R us.selt St .
(G raY&amp;l Hill I
1--' iddleport, Ohio
PH . 992-71SS

IIATI !AIM

A

'"tUIA"(I ·

u~

a OOOd neiQhDor.

State f!'arm Is tt-n:a.

STATE FARM
INSURANCE COMPANIES
HC&gt;n-. Oflr»t, ~ 1lonotl

NEW 1974 ·

o

[?@rruw5IID®'
HOMES

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE
. LYNECENTERSCHEdULE
November 19-27,1973

DATE- GYMNAS IUM

POOL

Nov.

Closed

19- 6 : 00 J . V .'s v.s. OU, Chil l icothe
8:00- Rio vs. Lander
Nov. 20- Ciosed
Nov . 21 - Ciosed
Nov . 21- Ciosed

Closed
Closed

Closed

Nov. 23- Ciosed
Nov. 24- Ciosed
Nov . 25- Ciosed
Nov . 26- 6:00 JV s v·s. Ashland. Bus. Coli.
8: 00- Rio vs. Tiffin

Nov . 27 - 6-8 College

Recreation

Closed
Closed

14X65

Closed

Closed

·

8·9 Open Sw im

eNew Exterior
efront Kitchen
eEarly American Decor
e3 Bedroom

SKYLINE LANES
and PRO-SHOP

eBay Window

eDouble Oven Range
•Carpet Throughout

in

AMF

HOURS, 9 TO 8 MONDAY THRU fRIDAY,
9 TO 5 SATURDAY-ClOSED SUNDAY

&amp;·

Colombia Bowling Balls.

SPECIAL RATES TO,
CHURCH GROUPS,
PARTIES, STUDE~TS.

446-3362

· "A ll New AMF Equipment"

I

Upper Rt, 1 Kana':'ga, Ohio

By United Press loleraatlooal scoring three touchdowns and
.Warren Western Reserve adding a two-po)nt conversion
stretched its winning streak to as he ran for 185 yards in 33
28 Friday in a 3().1) shutout carries.
against Bowling Green, and
The previously unbeaten
Youngstown Cardinal Mooney Crusaders scored their only TD
upset Cincinnati Moeller 34-7 in on a 7:1-yard dash in the first
Class AAA high school semi- period by Gary McNeil, who
final football playoffs.
rolled up 131 yards in 14
Defending champion carries.
Warren, 11-0 this season and
Other Mooney scores came
rated No. I by the UP! board of on field goals by Bill McClure
coaches, will meel third· and a 36-yard pass to Bob Samranked Mooney, Ill-!, for the martino.
title battle 7:30p.m. Friday at
The No. 3 ranked Class AA
the Akron Rubber Bowl. Ironton
Tigers
ended
Mooney's only loss during lhe Reading's 25-game winning
season was to Western streak Friday night as it upset
Reserve, 6-0.
the top-rated club.
In Class AA semi-final action
After a .first quarter TD by
Friday, Ironton dumped Read- Terry Mowery, the sticky Ironing 7-0 In a game played at ton defense made the score
Lancaster, and Cleveland stand. The lone touchdown
Benedictine blanked Lima came after Reading quarCentral Catholic Z3-0 at terback Randy Christophel
Massillon. The victors will was halted a yard short of a
ctash for the AA title next first down on a lake punt. The
Friday nigh! at 7:30 on the Tiger's Rick Massey hit Ken
Massillon field . Ironton Green with a key 11-yard pass
matches its 11~ record against to the Reading 6 and Mowery
scored two plays later.
Benedictine's 7-2-2.
Reading who lost in the semiClass A semi-final winners,
Montpelier, 9-1, and Mid- finals last year to Columbus
dletown Fenwick, 10-1, will Watterson, gave the Tigers
fight lor the division's top only one serious threat,
honor Friday afternoon at 1:30 marching to the Ironton 5.
at Obio Wesleyan. Montpelier
Cleveland Benedictine, playdefeated Newark Catholic 19-8 ing one of the toughest schedFriday night at Mansfield, ules In the AA, won its victory
while Middletown drubbed over lima on a tenacious deAshtabula St. John 16-0.
fense that turned two pasS InNeal Hall went in from the 5 terceptions into touchdowns.
and the IO to score two touch·
The Bengals, limiting the
downs for Western Reserve Thunderbirds to a minus 10
and spark tbe win over Bowling yards rushing and 130 yards
Green, whO never got inside the passing, ran 72 plays and
Raiders' 40.
maintained possession of the
After a scoreless first perlod, ball for more than 32 minut.es.
the Raiders took a 1().1) halltlnie
. Benedictine's scoring came
lead on a 37-yard field goal by on an interception by Tim
Bill Williams and a five-yard Armelli toucMowris by Otis
TD by Marty Murray. Willard Merrill and Lloyd Derricoate,
Browner raced Ja yards for the and a field .soal by Tom Seres.
other tally .
Montpelier suprised No. 2
Western Reserve bad 20 first · ranked Newark, allowing the
downs while holding Bowling ground busting Class A team
Green to two. Hall was War- only 23 yards. As Newark went
ren's leading rusher with 158 to the air, the Locomotives
yards in 22 carries, while brought down one Interception
senior quarterback Craig · and took advantage of four
Cheetwood headed Bowling fumbles.
Green with' 14 yards in 14 atMontpelier ; led by Lynn
Oberlin
and Lee Richmond,
tempts.
The · tables were turned on gained 233 yardS total offense
Cincinnati Moeller as Youngs- and 12 first . downs. Newark
town Mooney scored more managed 188 yards and 11 first
polnts than ~e No. 2 ranked downs. The loss was Newark's
team 's opponents
have sixth since 1968.
Middletown Fenwick,
collected all year. Cincinnati's
stingy defense had allowed scoring its 16 points in the first
only 33 points in its 10 straight ball, beld Ashtabula St. John, to
60 yards and two first downs.
wins this season.
Senior tailback Ted Bell,
Mickey Roberts and Eugene
Lolli
scored TD's for Fenwick
Mooney's 190-pound sensation,
led his club to the victory, and Matt Clemens kicked a 39-

•

ATHENS - The Meigs
·Marauder basketball team,
hampered by .too many fouls
and not enough charity stripe
chances themselves, went
down to defeat at the hands of
Federal-Hocking, 31-27, Friday
night in the Athens Shrine Club
Prevlew at The Plains.
The Marauders outshot the
Lancers, making 13 out of 35

respectively.
The Marauders jumped off to
a quick 2-0 lead with 7:20 left in
the first quarter but lost the
lead for lhe first time at 6-7
with just over 4 minutes left in
the initial frame .
Meigs lhen regained the lead
at 11-7 with 3:35 left. The
Lancers then reeled off 7
straight points in a minute and
a half to take a 14-8 lead.
Marauder junior
Dan
Dodson, a 6-3 j\Ulior , pulled the
Marauders to within 2 at 12-14
with a 7 footer with a halfminute remaining in the first
7
6 11 .353
Memphis
V irg inia
5 10 .333 7
stanza.
West
The Marauders then took an
w. 1. pet . g . b .
Denver
9 6 .600
18-16 lead early in the second,
Utah
9
7 . 563
lf2
final period as junior
and
Ind i ana
8
8 .500
1112
San Antonio
8 12 .4011 3'h guard Perk Aul( found Price
San Diego
6 11 .353
4
lC · Games behind based on 1st- wide open under the: boards for

attempts from the field to 9 out
of 19 for Federal, but the
Lancers made 13 free throws
out of 20, while Meigs could net
just 1 in 4 attempts.
Jtu1ior guards Steve Price
and Lonnie Coats led the Meigs
attack, each hitting 4 from the
field, while Dan Bise and
Charles Jarvis paced the
Lancers with 10 and 9 points

Pro Standings
N BA Standings
By United Press International
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Divi.s ion

w.

1.

pet. g . b.

Boston
12
3 .800
New York
10
7 .588
Buttaro
· 7 11 .389
Ph i ladelphia
4 11 .267
Central Divi sion

J
61;,
8

w.- .1. pet. g .b.
JO
7 .588
1
7 6 . 538
5
5 12 .294
6lf2
4 U . 222
. Western Conference
Midw est Division
w. 1. pet. g.b.
Milwaukee
15
2 .882
Chicago
13 4 .765
2
Detro it
10
7 .588 5
KC -Omaha
6 ll .353
Pacific Division
w. I. pet . g . b.
Los Angeles
10
6 .625
lJ4
GoldenSfate
B
5 .615
l'h
Portland
B
7 .5 33
6
Seatt le
6 14 .300
6
Phoenix
4 12 .250
Friday's Results
Boston 105 Milwaukee 90
Detroit 125 K .C -Omaha 98
Los Angeles 11 8 Ch lcago 102
Sea ttl e 117 Cleveland 93
(Ontygames schedu l ed)
Atlanta
Capital
Houston
Cleveland

pla ce team
Friday's Results
Memphis lOB Utah 85
Carolina 118 New YOrk .100
Den ... er 130 San D iego 126, ot
!Only games sch~duledl

'

By
TERRY
JOHNSON

.. I

Many
sports cars have earned a
hi ghly
respected
repu tat ion , but not all o f
them for speed alone. For
.ins tance . the Brit is h made
car called the
Ben tley
had
all
the
ch aracteri stics of a sports
car bu ilt into it, but was
more a luxury car rather
than one to be used in
compet ition . It wa s ad ve rtised as th e ''si lent
sports car'', because '&gt;:Ol:J c ould hardly h ea r the
engi ne runni ng . On seei ng
this
ari s to cratic
automobile . you could
sense as well as see th e
quality workmanship and
materials that went into it.
When you step into a

into

mobile home, you step
a whole new world

of

luxu r ious liv i ng p lea su r e .
No liner d eco r. design or
furnishings could be found
In the interior of a home,
and the fine workma hsh i p
and qua lit y
material s
wh ic h goes into the con struction of a mobile home
makes i1 an ar istocrat in

durable living struc1ures.
If you are a prospective
home buyer, do yoursflf a
favor ; Stop in and take a
look at the fabulous mobile
homes on display and let us
show you all the fine ad·
van tages the se gorgeous
structures offer for better
living for the whole family.

JOHNSON 'S MOBt LE
HOME SALES
2110 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis , Ohio
Phone t-4 1-446-3547

yard field goal.
Fenwick, collecting 217 of its
294 yards on the ground, allowed the St. John team past the 50
· yard line only once.

SEO standings
W ·L T
11

0
7 2
6 3
5 3
5 4
5 4
5 4
5 4
4 5
3 6
1 8

5 10
5 11

Toronto
N ew York·

ALL GAMES
Team
Ironton
Coal Grove
MancheSter
Jackson
At h ens
Gailipolis·
South Point
Logan
Meigs
Wellston
Waverly

WHA Standings
By United Press Internatio nal
·
E a sl
w. 1. t. pts gf
New Englnd 11 6 1 23 69
Cl eveland 9 4 2 20 59
Chicago
9 .s
1 19 56
Quebec
9 9
1 19 10

West

P OP

0 254
I 245
0 195
2 196
' 137
1 160
I 275
1 147
0 134
1 91
1 130

73
97
89
162
98
91
126
9:1
104
212
348

SEOAL QNLY
(F inal)
Team
W L T
p OP
Ironton
7 0 0 169 47
Jackson
3 2 2 148 129
Meigs
4 3 0 116 63
Athens
4 3 0 101 70
Logan
4 3 o 107 79
Gallipo l is
3 3 1 130 75
Wellston
1 5 1 56 162
Wayerly
0 1 0 96 298
TOTALS
26 26 4 923 923
Friday's Results :
tronton 7 Cincinnati Reading o
Wellston 9 Vinton County 7
makeup
'

3 1'3. 58 67
21'24074

w . 1. t . pt s gf ga
69 37

Edmonton

13 2

0 26

Winnipeg .
Minnesota

8
6

2 18 63 60
117 -6152

8
7

H ouston
7 5
1 15 54 37
Vancouver 5 13
o 10 53 84
Los Angeles 5 14
0 10 47 75
Friday 's Re$ults
Winnipeg 3 Ed monton 1
Cleve land 4 Los Angeles 3
\On l y games scheduled)

SLATER SUSPENDED
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Los
Angeles Sharks' Coach Terry
Slater was suspended for one
game Friday night for
swinging at and shoving a
linesman after his club's 4-3
overtime loss t6 the Cleveland
Crusaders.

Central Operating Company's
Philip Sporn Plant
New Haven, W.Va.

Has Job Openings For Permanent Employment In The Followi
Skills
Mechanics
Instrument Repairmen
Laborers
.

These Jobs Provide Excellent Wages And A Be~efits Program Which Includes
Ute Insurance, Medical Insurance, Disabillity Insurance , Sick Leave, Vacations,
Holiday, And Retirement.
.

.

APPLICANTS MAY CALL (304) 882-2126 (collect)
·

BETWEEN THE HOURS OF 7:30 AM TO 4:30 PM ·

In Gallipolis, take 2nd Ave. East to

MR. AND MRS.
BILL ANGEL
CORDIALLY INVITE YOU
to ttend an open hou~e to celebrate
th: completion of thelr new home.

We Will Train Unskilied Applicants.
.

DIRECTIONS: .

ALL DAY TODAY
November 18, 1973

Spruce Street

Turn left to 4th Ave.

and ·follow the open house signs. ·
Register for FREE drawing.
A KODAK "INSTAMATIC 124" camera with film,
flash-cubes and batteries will be given to some
lucky person. Refreshments will be served. Gifts
for the kiddies, and Mom and Dad.

You, too, can own a new home, the easy, Jim Walter
way. INSTANT MORTGAGE FINANCING TO QUALIFIED PROPERTY OWNERS. If you can't attend but
would like information aboutbuilding on your
property, please mail the coupon or write today.

· .

TO ARRANGE AN INTERVIEW

r-;;

WALTER HOMES
Please send us your free
catalog of homes. We
would like to have more in·
formation about building a
home on our property.

CHESAPEAKE, OHIO 45619

.MOB.II.E HOME

P. 0. Box 250

PHILIP SPORN PLANT

See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
Phone 446-9340

The Marauders beat South.
ern 4 out of 4 quarters) while
spUtting with Warren in 4
quarters of action .
Meigs defeated Southern 12·
a. 11-10, 12·10, and 20-16, while
beating the Warriors 24-18 and
12-a. Warren topped the
an easy layup .
Marauders 111-15 and 21-12,
But Federal Hocking came while getting past the Torback to real off 5 unanswered nadoes twice in 4 tries. The
points before junior Bill Myers Tornadoes were victorious by
dropped in a free throw with 5 15-11 and 13-6 counts, while the
minutes left to make it 19-21, Warriors won 1:1-10 and 23-21.
Federal.
Aeain the Lancer s, went on a
In Reserve action, Meigs lost
binge, taking a 27-19lead with 3 to Southern 14-9 and then came
minutes remaining .
back to top the Tornadoes, 16-9.
After another Federal Warren then bounced Southern
Hocking basket and a Meigs 12-8 before Meigs came back to
time out, Lonnie Coats hit at top the Warriers 12-8. Southern
2: 12andaga in at the 1:32 mark defeated the Meigs Reserves in
to cut lhe Federal lead to 29-25. lhe Junior Varsity finale, 11-7.
Federal then made it 31-25,
The Marauders hit on just 55
before Price responded from out of 160 shots from the field,
long range, and stole the b£11 while cashing in on only 3 out of
on the ensuing trip down court. 21 foul shots.
However, with just over half a . Their opponents, meanwhile,
minute left, a Price jwnper connected 39 times in 115 atfrom the top of the key spun tempts from the floor, whlle
around in the hoop and popped sinking 26 out of 44 from the
out, with Federal Hocking then foul line.
putting the game away .
Leading scorers on .the day
In other action Friday night for Meigs were Dan Dodson
at Athens, Nelsonville-York with 20, Bill Myers with 16,
added Z7 second period points Steve Walburn with 16, Lonnie
to a 17-10 first quarter lead in ·Coats, Terry Qualls, Jerry
downing the Glouster Tomcats, Cremeans, and Perk Ault with
44-23.
10 apiece, Orrion Blanchard
Logan,
leading
16-14 with 9, Steve Price with 7 and
away from the Alexander Fred ·Burney with 5.
Spartans in the closing minute
Meigs now prepares for the
to win 311-33, and Athens lost in Nov. 23 season opener at home
the nightcap to Celina, 39-30. against South Point . That
opener will also mark the
Meigs (271 :_ cOats , 4-0-8;
dedication of the Larry
Pr ice , 4-018 ; Dodson , 3-0-6 ;
Myers, 1·1-3; Ault, 1-0 -2.
Morrison Memorial GymFedera l Hock ing (31 1 nasium.
Bise , 3-4 - 10 ; Jary i s, 3-3-9 ;
Bibbee , 1-1-3 ; Bowers . 0-3- 3;
Saturday, the Marauders are
Lackey, 0-2· 2; Harris ! 1-0 -2;
scheduled
to !ravel to Federal
Bowers , 1-0-2.

,

· cY~·

Jusi Sout,h pt Silv,_,.

Playoff results

Ohio High School
NHL Standings
Football Playoff Scores
By United Press Int ernational
By Uni t ed Press International
East
I Class A AA I
w . 1. t . pts gf ga
(A t Cincinnati)
12 4
1 25 82 50 Yngstwn Card Mooney ·34 Cin
Boston
9
5 1 19 50 47 Moeller 7
Buffalo
5 19 59 42
..
AI Akron)
Toronto
7 5
2
18
4&lt;i
36
Warren
W
es tern Reserve 30
Montreal
8 5
4 14 51 5.1 BG ?
NY Rangers 5 7
(Class AAI
Vancouver 5 8 2 12 39 51
(At Lancasferl
1
11
47
66
Detroit
5 9
NY lslandrs 2 6 7 11 34 46 Ironton 7 Reading 0
(AI Ma ss illon)
West
Cl
eve
Benedic
t ine 23 Lima CC 0
w . L . t. pt s gf ga
f Class A)
Ph i l a
12 5 0 24 53 27
(At Mansfield)
Atlanta
7
s 4 18 42 41 Montpelier 19 Newark Catholic
Chicago
6 4 6 18 46 28 8
St . Louis
7 5 3 17 45 36
(AtUpperAr lington)
ABA Standings
Pilt sbu rgh 5
7
3 13 40 61 M i ddltn FenWiCK 16 AShtbla SL
By United Press International
Los Angetes 5 9
2 12 41 54 John 0
East
w. 1. pet. g . b . M i nneso t a 3 7 6 12 ' 44 55
California ' 4 11
1
9 36 62
x -Kentucky
12
3 .800
Friday's Results
·Is 5 . 750
Carolina
Ch i cago 6 Atlanta 1
6 11 .353
New York
Toronto 3 Vancouver 3
Phi)adelphia 2 Calif 1
(On l y gamzs schedu l ed)

Although A Strike Is In Progress, The Company Continues To Operate The Plant.
This exciting new line of quality mobile homes
is an outstanding value when purchased from
our lot offerin9 the best in service and
dependability.

Specializing

•

Hocking lo scrimmage the
Lancers.

ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs Marauder Cagers hosted
Southern and Warren Local
Saturday in scrimmages at the
Meigs High Gym, with the
Maroon and Gold faring much
better than they did Friday
nigh! in the preview at Athens.

Po't ~flee Box Jd, N•w H•v•n, Wnt Ylrtilnll · 252'5

: Oh'o
. Ga 11 .Ipo 11s.
1

Old Hwy. 52 Phone 867-3153

Tolepllont: 1re1 eoole~- ·3111

Srldge Shopping Plaza ·

ZIP

Aft, Equal Opportunity Emp•r
'

•

. '

I

�Zl - The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 18, 197:

20- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday Nov. 18. 1973

Maroon better

~

Ironton ·in AA finals after _;
games close Friday

WALKER SCORES - Southwestern junior forward
Kevin Walker (24) led his team lo a 23-22 victory Friday in
the SW-southern preview game. Walker had eight points
during the two quarters of action. Southern's Dave Theiss is
guarding Walker. Other players are the Highlanders' Lloyd
Wood (30) and Phil lewis (40).

WHERE'S THAT BALL? Kyger Creek's David (Moby)
Clay and Terry Lucas corral Vinton County's Tony Timmons
in a search for the ball in the KC-Vinton County Preview
game which ended in a 32-32 tie. Marshall French Photo.
North Ceritral 60 Edgerton 53

Cage scores

lotl

Ohio High School

Basketball ScOres

By United Press Int ernational
Ft. Jenni ng s 82 "Ohio City 70
Houston 76 Botk i ns 58
Ft . Laramie 67 Russia 42
Anna 11 Jackson Center 57
Springfield Northwestern 66
Sp ringf ield Shawnee 47
New Mad ison Tri ·Vi l lage 83
Laurel (Ind . ) 75
Upper Scioto Valley 84 New
Knoxville 80
Lebanon 68 Mason 62
Cols Ready 57 Buckeye Valley
38
Cols Central 55 Co ts Hartley 44
·- ; R eyno ld sburg 70 Bexley 58 '
·
Hebron St . Peter &amp; Paul 54
Ohio Deaf 51
Pettisvil le 59 Stryker 35
Fayette 67 Spencer -Charles 39

Contental 81 Tinora 64
Holgate .76 Miller City 55
Bedford Chanel 71 North
Royalton 41
Delaware 61 Hill iard 53

Friday 's
Final Playoffs :
Mooney meets Warren at the
Akron Rubber Bowl Friday at
7 : 30p.m.
Ironton meets Benedict ine at
Massil lon Friday at 7 : 30p .m .
Montpelier
meets · M id dletown a t Ohio Wesleyan
Friday at 1: 30 p.m .

TO YOU WITH LOVE !

CLEA
KIT. ·\J r
I

RIO GRANDE -· Southern
Valley Athletic Conference
cage fans wer~ treated to four
good preview games here
Friday night.
Southwestern posted a one
point victory over Southern ;
Hannan Trace blitzed Eastern,
411-36 while North Gallia Symmes Valley and Kyger
Creek and Vint on Co unty
battled to 32-32 ties.
According to most observers,
the league seems to be wellbalanced with any team
capable of ~eati ng another on a
given night. ..
Approximately 2,000 fan s
watched the preview held for
the first time at the Paul R.
Lyne Center.
In the opener, Coach Jim
Foster's North Gallia Pirates
zoomed into a big lead going
into the final two minutes of
action only to see Symmes
Valley come ba ck to tie the
score with just five seconds left
on the clock. ·
Going into the last two
minutes, Foster pulled his five
starters, Tim Stout, Gre g
James, Mike Camden , Keith
Weddington
and
Dave
Robinette.
·Coach Ferrell Hesson's lads
caught fire behind the hot
shooting of senior Rodney
Bennett to cut the score to 32-30
before Bennett collected the
clutch tying bucket.
North Gallia, behind the
corner shooting of Stout and
the 15 foot jumpers by
sophomore Greg James took
an 111-12 lead at the end of the
first period. Both had 10 points
in the preview . Camden came
in next with four points .
Bennett led the Vikings with
18 points on six baskets and six
charity tosses. Jaye Myers was
the only other Viking with
m'ore than one basket.
Coach Keith Carter's debut
was a successful one as ihe
Highlanders of SouthWestern
edged Southern; 23-22 in the
night's second game of tl1e
preview .
Trailing lQ-.8 going into the
final period, the . Highlanders
ou tscored the Tornadoes of
Coach Carl Wolfe, 15-12.
Kevin Walker paced the
Southwestern scorers with
eight points. Lloyd Wood, 6-2
junior center, had six points;
Terry Carter, 6-0 juilior guard,
canned five points and big·Phil
Lewis added four.
Bobby Miller led · Southern
with 10 points on three baskets
and four ·free throws. Mitch
Nease, Norman Curfman, 6-1
senior forward and Buddy
Erwin had four points each.
A clutch basket by Joe
Stidham, 6·2 junior center,
gave the Kyger CreeK Bobcats
a 32-32 tie againsi the Vinton
Coun ty Vikings.
·
With Kyger Creek trailing,
32-29 with just five seconds left,
junior forward Dave Wfse
stepped to the line on the bonus
stituation. Wi!se canned the
first shot, but as the strategy
called for, missed the second.
The ball hit off the rim and
came down to Stidham who
turned around and put it in. He
was fouled on the play but was
Wlable to convert.
Coach Jim Arledge's Bobcats outscored Vinton County,
22-21 in the first period.
Kyger Creek moved into the
lead behind the hot-shooting of
junior guard Terry Lucas.
Lucas, the smallest player on

.TARA
DEVELOPMENf .
OORP.

NEW
HOMES
FOR SALE
Ano.t her first from ARAB! Producers of nationally known
and trusted pest Control Produ c ts and Service since 1929.
The ARAB Kitchen Clean Out Kit features· a PROFES·
SIONALLY-PROVEN SPRAY and FOG TECHNIOUE.
AlthOugh designed for the kilchen, il can be used in any
similar sized room where insects are or can be a problem.
3UARANTEED quick, lhorough kill or YOUR MONEY
3ACK • ..

CARTER &amp; EVANS INC.
BUILDING SUPPLIES

OM St

Gallipolis, Ohio

Building , Si t es
Available. Kingsberry
Home s b4ilt to fit any
specifications. _ All
Underground Utilities
Provided .

.·----------'
l-or mtormation
Or Appointment

PHONE
367-7250
""-OUI:)VII t U,

•t
Mezgs drops prevzew tz t

Reading falls 7 -0;
Oeveland next foe

SENIOR FORWARD - Rodney Bennett, for the Symmes
Valley Vikings fires an off.tialanced shot in action Friday
night against the North Gallia Pirates. Be!Uiett led his team
to a come-from-behind 32-32 tie in the first game of the SVAC
Preview at Rio Grande College. North Gallia's Keith Wed·
dington (25) is falling to the floor. Other players are Mike
Camden of North Gallia, Jaye Myers and Mike Burcham of
Symmes Valley and the Pirates' Tim Stout (12). Marshall
~
French Photo.

Gallipolis Elks Lodge to sponsor
RANDY HALLEY (13) Hannan Trace's senior guard attempts to drive on Eastern's Tim
Baum in action Friday nightin the finale ofthe SVAC Cage Prevlew. John Lusher (23) and Don
Wells (45) are shown at the rear . Marshall French Photo .

the court, dumped in 11 points
during the first five minutes.
He was joined in the scoring by
6-1 junior Clay Hudson and 5·7
sophomore guard Tom K€rn .
Hudson had five points in the
first period while Kern poured
in four.
Matching !heir effort for
Dave Wilcoxen's Vikings was
6-4 senior center, Harold
Caudill. Caudill ripped lhe
cords for 13 points in the first
period and 21 on the nigh!.
Hudson and Lucas paced the
Bobcats with 11 points each .
Keith Nice had 10 points for the
Vikings .
Coach Paul Dillon's ?annan
Trace Wildcats led by Mark
Swain 's 21 points rolled over
Coach Bill Phillips ' tall
Eastern Eagles, 411-36 in the
preview finale..
The Wildcats led 21·17 at the
end of the first period.
HT caught fire in the second
stanza rolling out into a 20 point
lead at one stage of the
quarter.
Randy Halley, 5-9 senior
guard, had 12 points.
Big steve Dill, 6-3 senior, led
the Eagl\,s with 15 points. John
Sheets, 6-1 senior ha:d six points
am~ Tim Spencer canned four .
Box Scores :
North Gallia (32) Wed dington , 1-0-2 ; Mayo , 0-0-0 ;
Logan , 0 -2-2 ; Smith , 1-0 -2 ;
Camden , 1-2-4 ; Justus, 0 ·0-0 ;
Robinette , 1' 0-2; Thomas 0-0-0 ;
Stout. 4-2-10 ; Garnes, 0-0-0 ;
James, 5-0-10 and Denney , 0 -00. Totals 13-6-32 .
Symmes Valley (321 ._...
Quensenberry, 1-0-2; J ones , 10-2; Burcham, 0-2-2 ; J. Myers.
2 - 2-4 ; - Jim Meyers , 1-0 -2 ;
Brown , 1-0-2 and Bennett. 6-618 . Totals 12 -8- 32.
Southwestern ( 231 K.
Walker , 4·0-8 ; Lewis, 2-0 -4;
Wood . 3-0 -6 ; Carter , 2- 1-5 .
Totals 11 -1-2 3.
·
So'-'lhern (221 - M iller , 3·4
10 ; Nease , 2-0-4 ; Curfman, 1-24 ; Ervin ; 2-0-4. Total s 8·6- 22 .
Kyger Creek (32) - Hudson ,
5-1 11 ; Rumley , 1-0-2; Tabor . 0

lmperi...
(Continued from page 19)
Western Carolina in Memorial
Field House, and practice thus
far for Daniels' squad has
concentrated · on the offensive
portion of the game. Work on
defense and rebounding will
come later .
11
1t's not a clear-cut case of
who will start," said Daniels of
this year's club, which has just
one · starter back from last
year's 20-7 team. "E verybOdy
thinks they've got a chance to
start and because of this we've
had a lot of enthusiasm.
"We're still just feeling our
way long, 11 explains Daniels.
"It'll be hard to tell much of
anything until the inlrasquad
sc rimmages .''
Big Green Notes - Season
tickets are on s~le to the public
on a first come, first serve
basis, according to Athletic
Ticket Manager Joe Wortham.
Season tickets are $52.50 for
15 fiome dates , including the
Herd's pre-seasori exhibition
with the Australian National
Team on Nov. 28 and the Dec .
29 meeting with East Carolina
in the Charleston Civic Center.
The ticket books do not include
the Marshall Memorial Invitational.
For ticket information,
applicants should call the
ticket office at 696,3190, or
address correspondence to
Athletic ·Ticket Office, Marshall University P.O. Box 1360,
Huntington, W. Va . 25715 .
•
I

Jets hope to keep
jinx over Bengals
By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - He
may be "Bro.adway Joe" to
many, but to the Cincinnati
Bengals Joe Namath is
"Tuxedo Joe."
Bengals defensive line coach
Chuck Studley explains the
special nickname for the New
York Jets' quarterback:
"Each of the last three times
he's played against us he could
h..'l ve worn a t'uxedo,"' Studley
says. "We didn't touch him.
"If Namath plays we must
get to him in order to win.
Without a doubt, when Namath
is healthy, he is the finest quarterback in pro football."
The Jets, who meet the Bengals here Sunday, have never
Lost a regular season game to
Cincinnati and Studley maintains the reason is the solid
pocket the Jets' line provides
Namath.
Namath is hopeful of making
his first appea rance here Sunday after being out of action
the past seven ·games with a
separated shoulder. Namath
D-0 : Clay , o.Q.O; Lawhon , 0-0-0 ;
Roush . 0-0 -0; Wi-se, 0 -1- 1;
Stidham , 1-1-:l; Lu c as . 5· 1-11;
Kern, 2-0-4; Icard , 0-0-0 and
Arnett , 0 Q-0. T otals 14-4-32,.
Vinton
County
(321
Caudil l, 9-3-21 ; Nice , 5-2-10;
Ti m m ons . 0-0-0; Gilliaflcl. 0-0-0 ;
Brown , 0-1: 1; La fferty . 0-0-0 ;
Abe le. and Hayes , o.o.o. Totals
14 -4· 32 .
Hannan
Trace
(48)
Lusher . 1-2·4 : Cremeans , 0·0-0:
He sson . 2-0 4 ; M cG uire, 0-0-0 ;
We lls, 1-0-2 ; Ha ll , 0-2-2; Swain .
9 -3-?.1 ; • Montgom e ry. 0 -0-0 ;
Hal\ey , 0-0 0 ; San d ers , 1-0-2; R .
Hal l ey, 3· 6-12 ; Sanders , 1-0-2;
R . Ha l ley , 3-6-12 ; Williams. 0 -00. Totals 18- 12-48 .
Eastern (36) ~ Dill. 5-5- 15 ;
Hal lan . 2 0-4; Baum, 0·0-0 ;
Atherton . 0·0,0; Batley ) 1-2·4 ;
Spenc er , 1·3-5; Weber , 1-0 -2;'
Orr, 0. 0-0 ; Sheets, · 1·4 -6 ;
GoebeL 0-0-0. Totals 11 - 14-3 6.

continued to suffer some pain
passing in practice this week
and his status for Sunday was
not expected to be determined
tmtil near game time .
Bengals defensive end Royce
Berry says football players
must differentiate between an
injury that pains them and an
injury that threatens their
career.
"Playing with pain is something we do everY week,'' he
said. "But it's foolish to play
with an injury that could
threaten your career or hurt
you later in life."
The Bengals are familiar

Pirate Boosters
planning events
VINTON - The North Gallia
Athletic Boosters are plaiming
a "Meet the T~am Night" on
Wedne·sday, Nov. 21.
Activities wifl begin with a
chili supper, starting at 6 p.m.
at the high school. Advance
ticket• may be purchased from
any football or basketball
player, or at Cottrell's Grocery
in Porter. Tickets will also be
sold at the door . Chili dinner
tickets are $1.25 for adults and
75 cents for children 10 and
under.
The meal will consi.s t oi chili,
hot dog:5, pie or cup cakes,
coffee ot pop.
· Meet the team night activities will star! at a p.m.
Members of the seventh,
eighth , ninth, reserve and
varsity teams will be in·
lroduced.
lntrasquad scrimmages will
conclude the · evening's ac.
tH·ities.

hoop shoot at GAHS on Dec. 15
GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis Elks Lodge No. I07
will sponsor Its annual hoop
shoot on Saturday, Dec. 15,
beginning at 1 p.m. in the
GAHS gym.
Carrol E. Waugh will serve
as chairman of the event again
this winter.
Last year's winners were
Je!f Call, Rio Grande ; Dan
Spencer, Coolville and Crenson
Pratt, Middleport.
The contestants must live ir.
the jurisdiction of the
Gallipolis Elks Lodge in Gallia,
Mason or Meigs County .
Parents ·do not have lo belong
to the Elks Lodge in order for
their children to participate .
Letters, alorig with application blanks have been sent
to all school principals in the
MGM area. The material also
includes rules and regulations
for the annual event.
Winners will be named in
three age groups- a: 9, and 10
with injuries and several
players will be sidelined
Sunday, including safety
Tommy Casa nova, runner
Doug Dressler, receiver Charlie Joiner and offensive tackle
Stan Wlaters. Essex Johnson
may sit out the g~ me with a
hairline wrist fracture.
The Jets, playing for the first
time in Cincinnati, bring a 3-6
record into the game, while the
Bengals with a good shot at a
wildcard playoff spot, is 5-4.
"It may take wins in all five
of our remaining games to
make the playoffs," Studley
says.
Cincinnati's next five opponents include the unbeaten
Minnesota Vikings and the
Cleveland BroWns, a team
always rough on the Bengals. ·

year-olds; 10 and 11, and 1:1year-olds (cannot reach age of
14 before March 1).
Local winners wm advance
to the district contest. District
winners will then advance to
the state and state winners will
participate in the national
contest.

Tune in NFL and NCAA
footba ll, brought to you
i n part by your St:1te

Farm agent .

Huddle with me.
For todais best value in
car. home. I ile and health
insurance.
Stephen c . Snowden

553 R us.selt St .
(G raY&amp;l Hill I
1--' iddleport, Ohio
PH . 992-71SS

IIATI !AIM

A

'"tUIA"(I ·

u~

a OOOd neiQhDor.

State f!'arm Is tt-n:a.

STATE FARM
INSURANCE COMPANIES
HC&gt;n-. Oflr»t, ~ 1lonotl

NEW 1974 ·

o

[?@rruw5IID®'
HOMES

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE
. LYNECENTERSCHEdULE
November 19-27,1973

DATE- GYMNAS IUM

POOL

Nov.

Closed

19- 6 : 00 J . V .'s v.s. OU, Chil l icothe
8:00- Rio vs. Lander
Nov. 20- Ciosed
Nov . 21 - Ciosed
Nov . 21- Ciosed

Closed
Closed

Closed

Nov. 23- Ciosed
Nov. 24- Ciosed
Nov . 25- Ciosed
Nov . 26- 6:00 JV s v·s. Ashland. Bus. Coli.
8: 00- Rio vs. Tiffin

Nov . 27 - 6-8 College

Recreation

Closed
Closed

14X65

Closed

Closed

·

8·9 Open Sw im

eNew Exterior
efront Kitchen
eEarly American Decor
e3 Bedroom

SKYLINE LANES
and PRO-SHOP

eBay Window

eDouble Oven Range
•Carpet Throughout

in

AMF

HOURS, 9 TO 8 MONDAY THRU fRIDAY,
9 TO 5 SATURDAY-ClOSED SUNDAY

&amp;·

Colombia Bowling Balls.

SPECIAL RATES TO,
CHURCH GROUPS,
PARTIES, STUDE~TS.

446-3362

· "A ll New AMF Equipment"

I

Upper Rt, 1 Kana':'ga, Ohio

By United Press loleraatlooal scoring three touchdowns and
.Warren Western Reserve adding a two-po)nt conversion
stretched its winning streak to as he ran for 185 yards in 33
28 Friday in a 3().1) shutout carries.
against Bowling Green, and
The previously unbeaten
Youngstown Cardinal Mooney Crusaders scored their only TD
upset Cincinnati Moeller 34-7 in on a 7:1-yard dash in the first
Class AAA high school semi- period by Gary McNeil, who
final football playoffs.
rolled up 131 yards in 14
Defending champion carries.
Warren, 11-0 this season and
Other Mooney scores came
rated No. I by the UP! board of on field goals by Bill McClure
coaches, will meel third· and a 36-yard pass to Bob Samranked Mooney, Ill-!, for the martino.
title battle 7:30p.m. Friday at
The No. 3 ranked Class AA
the Akron Rubber Bowl. Ironton
Tigers
ended
Mooney's only loss during lhe Reading's 25-game winning
season was to Western streak Friday night as it upset
Reserve, 6-0.
the top-rated club.
In Class AA semi-final action
After a .first quarter TD by
Friday, Ironton dumped Read- Terry Mowery, the sticky Ironing 7-0 In a game played at ton defense made the score
Lancaster, and Cleveland stand. The lone touchdown
Benedictine blanked Lima came after Reading quarCentral Catholic Z3-0 at terback Randy Christophel
Massillon. The victors will was halted a yard short of a
ctash for the AA title next first down on a lake punt. The
Friday nigh! at 7:30 on the Tiger's Rick Massey hit Ken
Massillon field . Ironton Green with a key 11-yard pass
matches its 11~ record against to the Reading 6 and Mowery
scored two plays later.
Benedictine's 7-2-2.
Reading who lost in the semiClass A semi-final winners,
Montpelier, 9-1, and Mid- finals last year to Columbus
dletown Fenwick, 10-1, will Watterson, gave the Tigers
fight lor the division's top only one serious threat,
honor Friday afternoon at 1:30 marching to the Ironton 5.
at Obio Wesleyan. Montpelier
Cleveland Benedictine, playdefeated Newark Catholic 19-8 ing one of the toughest schedFriday night at Mansfield, ules In the AA, won its victory
while Middletown drubbed over lima on a tenacious deAshtabula St. John 16-0.
fense that turned two pasS InNeal Hall went in from the 5 terceptions into touchdowns.
and the IO to score two touch·
The Bengals, limiting the
downs for Western Reserve Thunderbirds to a minus 10
and spark tbe win over Bowling yards rushing and 130 yards
Green, whO never got inside the passing, ran 72 plays and
Raiders' 40.
maintained possession of the
After a scoreless first perlod, ball for more than 32 minut.es.
the Raiders took a 1().1) halltlnie
. Benedictine's scoring came
lead on a 37-yard field goal by on an interception by Tim
Bill Williams and a five-yard Armelli toucMowris by Otis
TD by Marty Murray. Willard Merrill and Lloyd Derricoate,
Browner raced Ja yards for the and a field .soal by Tom Seres.
other tally .
Montpelier suprised No. 2
Western Reserve bad 20 first · ranked Newark, allowing the
downs while holding Bowling ground busting Class A team
Green to two. Hall was War- only 23 yards. As Newark went
ren's leading rusher with 158 to the air, the Locomotives
yards in 22 carries, while brought down one Interception
senior quarterback Craig · and took advantage of four
Cheetwood headed Bowling fumbles.
Green with' 14 yards in 14 atMontpelier ; led by Lynn
Oberlin
and Lee Richmond,
tempts.
The · tables were turned on gained 233 yardS total offense
Cincinnati Moeller as Youngs- and 12 first . downs. Newark
town Mooney scored more managed 188 yards and 11 first
polnts than ~e No. 2 ranked downs. The loss was Newark's
team 's opponents
have sixth since 1968.
Middletown Fenwick,
collected all year. Cincinnati's
stingy defense had allowed scoring its 16 points in the first
only 33 points in its 10 straight ball, beld Ashtabula St. John, to
60 yards and two first downs.
wins this season.
Senior tailback Ted Bell,
Mickey Roberts and Eugene
Lolli
scored TD's for Fenwick
Mooney's 190-pound sensation,
led his club to the victory, and Matt Clemens kicked a 39-

•

ATHENS - The Meigs
·Marauder basketball team,
hampered by .too many fouls
and not enough charity stripe
chances themselves, went
down to defeat at the hands of
Federal-Hocking, 31-27, Friday
night in the Athens Shrine Club
Prevlew at The Plains.
The Marauders outshot the
Lancers, making 13 out of 35

respectively.
The Marauders jumped off to
a quick 2-0 lead with 7:20 left in
the first quarter but lost the
lead for lhe first time at 6-7
with just over 4 minutes left in
the initial frame .
Meigs lhen regained the lead
at 11-7 with 3:35 left. The
Lancers then reeled off 7
straight points in a minute and
a half to take a 14-8 lead.
Marauder junior
Dan
Dodson, a 6-3 j\Ulior , pulled the
Marauders to within 2 at 12-14
with a 7 footer with a halfminute remaining in the first
7
6 11 .353
Memphis
V irg inia
5 10 .333 7
stanza.
West
The Marauders then took an
w. 1. pet . g . b .
Denver
9 6 .600
18-16 lead early in the second,
Utah
9
7 . 563
lf2
final period as junior
and
Ind i ana
8
8 .500
1112
San Antonio
8 12 .4011 3'h guard Perk Aul( found Price
San Diego
6 11 .353
4
lC · Games behind based on 1st- wide open under the: boards for

attempts from the field to 9 out
of 19 for Federal, but the
Lancers made 13 free throws
out of 20, while Meigs could net
just 1 in 4 attempts.
Jtu1ior guards Steve Price
and Lonnie Coats led the Meigs
attack, each hitting 4 from the
field, while Dan Bise and
Charles Jarvis paced the
Lancers with 10 and 9 points

Pro Standings
N BA Standings
By United Press International
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Divi.s ion

w.

1.

pet. g . b.

Boston
12
3 .800
New York
10
7 .588
Buttaro
· 7 11 .389
Ph i ladelphia
4 11 .267
Central Divi sion

J
61;,
8

w.- .1. pet. g .b.
JO
7 .588
1
7 6 . 538
5
5 12 .294
6lf2
4 U . 222
. Western Conference
Midw est Division
w. 1. pet. g.b.
Milwaukee
15
2 .882
Chicago
13 4 .765
2
Detro it
10
7 .588 5
KC -Omaha
6 ll .353
Pacific Division
w. I. pet . g . b.
Los Angeles
10
6 .625
lJ4
GoldenSfate
B
5 .615
l'h
Portland
B
7 .5 33
6
Seatt le
6 14 .300
6
Phoenix
4 12 .250
Friday's Results
Boston 105 Milwaukee 90
Detroit 125 K .C -Omaha 98
Los Angeles 11 8 Ch lcago 102
Sea ttl e 117 Cleveland 93
(Ontygames schedu l ed)
Atlanta
Capital
Houston
Cleveland

pla ce team
Friday's Results
Memphis lOB Utah 85
Carolina 118 New YOrk .100
Den ... er 130 San D iego 126, ot
!Only games sch~duledl

'

By
TERRY
JOHNSON

.. I

Many
sports cars have earned a
hi ghly
respected
repu tat ion , but not all o f
them for speed alone. For
.ins tance . the Brit is h made
car called the
Ben tley
had
all
the
ch aracteri stics of a sports
car bu ilt into it, but was
more a luxury car rather
than one to be used in
compet ition . It wa s ad ve rtised as th e ''si lent
sports car'', because '&gt;:Ol:J c ould hardly h ea r the
engi ne runni ng . On seei ng
this
ari s to cratic
automobile . you could
sense as well as see th e
quality workmanship and
materials that went into it.
When you step into a

into

mobile home, you step
a whole new world

of

luxu r ious liv i ng p lea su r e .
No liner d eco r. design or
furnishings could be found
In the interior of a home,
and the fine workma hsh i p
and qua lit y
material s
wh ic h goes into the con struction of a mobile home
makes i1 an ar istocrat in

durable living struc1ures.
If you are a prospective
home buyer, do yoursflf a
favor ; Stop in and take a
look at the fabulous mobile
homes on display and let us
show you all the fine ad·
van tages the se gorgeous
structures offer for better
living for the whole family.

JOHNSON 'S MOBt LE
HOME SALES
2110 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis , Ohio
Phone t-4 1-446-3547

yard field goal.
Fenwick, collecting 217 of its
294 yards on the ground, allowed the St. John team past the 50
· yard line only once.

SEO standings
W ·L T
11

0
7 2
6 3
5 3
5 4
5 4
5 4
5 4
4 5
3 6
1 8

5 10
5 11

Toronto
N ew York·

ALL GAMES
Team
Ironton
Coal Grove
MancheSter
Jackson
At h ens
Gailipolis·
South Point
Logan
Meigs
Wellston
Waverly

WHA Standings
By United Press Internatio nal
·
E a sl
w. 1. t. pts gf
New Englnd 11 6 1 23 69
Cl eveland 9 4 2 20 59
Chicago
9 .s
1 19 56
Quebec
9 9
1 19 10

West

P OP

0 254
I 245
0 195
2 196
' 137
1 160
I 275
1 147
0 134
1 91
1 130

73
97
89
162
98
91
126
9:1
104
212
348

SEOAL QNLY
(F inal)
Team
W L T
p OP
Ironton
7 0 0 169 47
Jackson
3 2 2 148 129
Meigs
4 3 0 116 63
Athens
4 3 0 101 70
Logan
4 3 o 107 79
Gallipo l is
3 3 1 130 75
Wellston
1 5 1 56 162
Wayerly
0 1 0 96 298
TOTALS
26 26 4 923 923
Friday's Results :
tronton 7 Cincinnati Reading o
Wellston 9 Vinton County 7
makeup
'

3 1'3. 58 67
21'24074

w . 1. t . pt s gf ga
69 37

Edmonton

13 2

0 26

Winnipeg .
Minnesota

8
6

2 18 63 60
117 -6152

8
7

H ouston
7 5
1 15 54 37
Vancouver 5 13
o 10 53 84
Los Angeles 5 14
0 10 47 75
Friday 's Re$ults
Winnipeg 3 Ed monton 1
Cleve land 4 Los Angeles 3
\On l y games scheduled)

SLATER SUSPENDED
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Los
Angeles Sharks' Coach Terry
Slater was suspended for one
game Friday night for
swinging at and shoving a
linesman after his club's 4-3
overtime loss t6 the Cleveland
Crusaders.

Central Operating Company's
Philip Sporn Plant
New Haven, W.Va.

Has Job Openings For Permanent Employment In The Followi
Skills
Mechanics
Instrument Repairmen
Laborers
.

These Jobs Provide Excellent Wages And A Be~efits Program Which Includes
Ute Insurance, Medical Insurance, Disabillity Insurance , Sick Leave, Vacations,
Holiday, And Retirement.
.

.

APPLICANTS MAY CALL (304) 882-2126 (collect)
·

BETWEEN THE HOURS OF 7:30 AM TO 4:30 PM ·

In Gallipolis, take 2nd Ave. East to

MR. AND MRS.
BILL ANGEL
CORDIALLY INVITE YOU
to ttend an open hou~e to celebrate
th: completion of thelr new home.

We Will Train Unskilied Applicants.
.

DIRECTIONS: .

ALL DAY TODAY
November 18, 1973

Spruce Street

Turn left to 4th Ave.

and ·follow the open house signs. ·
Register for FREE drawing.
A KODAK "INSTAMATIC 124" camera with film,
flash-cubes and batteries will be given to some
lucky person. Refreshments will be served. Gifts
for the kiddies, and Mom and Dad.

You, too, can own a new home, the easy, Jim Walter
way. INSTANT MORTGAGE FINANCING TO QUALIFIED PROPERTY OWNERS. If you can't attend but
would like information aboutbuilding on your
property, please mail the coupon or write today.

· .

TO ARRANGE AN INTERVIEW

r-;;

WALTER HOMES
Please send us your free
catalog of homes. We
would like to have more in·
formation about building a
home on our property.

CHESAPEAKE, OHIO 45619

.MOB.II.E HOME

P. 0. Box 250

PHILIP SPORN PLANT

See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
Phone 446-9340

The Marauders beat South.
ern 4 out of 4 quarters) while
spUtting with Warren in 4
quarters of action .
Meigs defeated Southern 12·
a. 11-10, 12·10, and 20-16, while
beating the Warriors 24-18 and
12-a. Warren topped the
an easy layup .
Marauders 111-15 and 21-12,
But Federal Hocking came while getting past the Torback to real off 5 unanswered nadoes twice in 4 tries. The
points before junior Bill Myers Tornadoes were victorious by
dropped in a free throw with 5 15-11 and 13-6 counts, while the
minutes left to make it 19-21, Warriors won 1:1-10 and 23-21.
Federal.
Aeain the Lancer s, went on a
In Reserve action, Meigs lost
binge, taking a 27-19lead with 3 to Southern 14-9 and then came
minutes remaining .
back to top the Tornadoes, 16-9.
After another Federal Warren then bounced Southern
Hocking basket and a Meigs 12-8 before Meigs came back to
time out, Lonnie Coats hit at top the Warriers 12-8. Southern
2: 12andaga in at the 1:32 mark defeated the Meigs Reserves in
to cut lhe Federal lead to 29-25. lhe Junior Varsity finale, 11-7.
Federal then made it 31-25,
The Marauders hit on just 55
before Price responded from out of 160 shots from the field,
long range, and stole the b£11 while cashing in on only 3 out of
on the ensuing trip down court. 21 foul shots.
However, with just over half a . Their opponents, meanwhile,
minute left, a Price jwnper connected 39 times in 115 atfrom the top of the key spun tempts from the floor, whlle
around in the hoop and popped sinking 26 out of 44 from the
out, with Federal Hocking then foul line.
putting the game away .
Leading scorers on .the day
In other action Friday night for Meigs were Dan Dodson
at Athens, Nelsonville-York with 20, Bill Myers with 16,
added Z7 second period points Steve Walburn with 16, Lonnie
to a 17-10 first quarter lead in ·Coats, Terry Qualls, Jerry
downing the Glouster Tomcats, Cremeans, and Perk Ault with
44-23.
10 apiece, Orrion Blanchard
Logan,
leading
16-14 with 9, Steve Price with 7 and
away from the Alexander Fred ·Burney with 5.
Spartans in the closing minute
Meigs now prepares for the
to win 311-33, and Athens lost in Nov. 23 season opener at home
the nightcap to Celina, 39-30. against South Point . That
opener will also mark the
Meigs (271 :_ cOats , 4-0-8;
dedication of the Larry
Pr ice , 4-018 ; Dodson , 3-0-6 ;
Myers, 1·1-3; Ault, 1-0 -2.
Morrison Memorial GymFedera l Hock ing (31 1 nasium.
Bise , 3-4 - 10 ; Jary i s, 3-3-9 ;
Bibbee , 1-1-3 ; Bowers . 0-3- 3;
Saturday, the Marauders are
Lackey, 0-2· 2; Harris ! 1-0 -2;
scheduled
to !ravel to Federal
Bowers , 1-0-2.

,

· cY~·

Jusi Sout,h pt Silv,_,.

Playoff results

Ohio High School
NHL Standings
Football Playoff Scores
By United Press Int ernational
By Uni t ed Press International
East
I Class A AA I
w . 1. t . pts gf ga
(A t Cincinnati)
12 4
1 25 82 50 Yngstwn Card Mooney ·34 Cin
Boston
9
5 1 19 50 47 Moeller 7
Buffalo
5 19 59 42
..
AI Akron)
Toronto
7 5
2
18
4&lt;i
36
Warren
W
es tern Reserve 30
Montreal
8 5
4 14 51 5.1 BG ?
NY Rangers 5 7
(Class AAI
Vancouver 5 8 2 12 39 51
(At Lancasferl
1
11
47
66
Detroit
5 9
NY lslandrs 2 6 7 11 34 46 Ironton 7 Reading 0
(AI Ma ss illon)
West
Cl
eve
Benedic
t ine 23 Lima CC 0
w . L . t. pt s gf ga
f Class A)
Ph i l a
12 5 0 24 53 27
(At Mansfield)
Atlanta
7
s 4 18 42 41 Montpelier 19 Newark Catholic
Chicago
6 4 6 18 46 28 8
St . Louis
7 5 3 17 45 36
(AtUpperAr lington)
ABA Standings
Pilt sbu rgh 5
7
3 13 40 61 M i ddltn FenWiCK 16 AShtbla SL
By United Press International
Los Angetes 5 9
2 12 41 54 John 0
East
w. 1. pet. g . b . M i nneso t a 3 7 6 12 ' 44 55
California ' 4 11
1
9 36 62
x -Kentucky
12
3 .800
Friday's Results
·Is 5 . 750
Carolina
Ch i cago 6 Atlanta 1
6 11 .353
New York
Toronto 3 Vancouver 3
Phi)adelphia 2 Calif 1
(On l y gamzs schedu l ed)

Although A Strike Is In Progress, The Company Continues To Operate The Plant.
This exciting new line of quality mobile homes
is an outstanding value when purchased from
our lot offerin9 the best in service and
dependability.

Specializing

•

Hocking lo scrimmage the
Lancers.

ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs Marauder Cagers hosted
Southern and Warren Local
Saturday in scrimmages at the
Meigs High Gym, with the
Maroon and Gold faring much
better than they did Friday
nigh! in the preview at Athens.

Po't ~flee Box Jd, N•w H•v•n, Wnt Ylrtilnll · 252'5

: Oh'o
. Ga 11 .Ipo 11s.
1

Old Hwy. 52 Phone 867-3153

Tolepllont: 1re1 eoole~- ·3111

Srldge Shopping Plaza ·

ZIP

Aft, Equal Opportunity Emp•r
'

•

. '

I

�(
•

22- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday. Nov. t8. t9"J

Last

~now-over

By C. E. Blakeslee
CoWJiy Ext. Agent, Agriculture
POMEROY - "Is it too late to mow our lawn for the last
time? ", was one or the questions coming into the Extension
Office last week. Most of us ha1•e already quit mowing , but in
IOI'Ile cases it may be desirable to mow one last time to remove
leaves and debris so the grass will not be smothered out over
winter.
It is important that the grass b~ mowed sufficiently high to

the NEW in FARMING

provide some protection for tile grass roots in winter. During the
summer bluegrass lawns should be mowed 2 to 21·, inches high,
so the same rule should apply if a home owner is going to make

a coat of new engine oil oo ali moving parts. .

t

According to one mai)Ufacturer, exhaustive tests show lha
transmission maintenance amounts to as much as 61'. pet. of the
total operating costs in tractors where the transmissi_on oil was
not drained seasonally. This was reduced to 11'. pet. m tractots
drained seasonally.
make and model of engine, he says.
Draining the fuel system is particularly important, be7ause
gum
tends to fcnn if i•r:••i'i fuel is l':!ft in the system over wmter.
With thf- great variety or tractor, lawo mower, and
Gwu makes the engine difficult to start at the end of the storage
a1.1xiliary engines -some air cooled, some water cooled - It
is very lmportaot to che&lt;!k the operator's manual for the
period .
Evaporating fuel can cause valve trouble. So once yoo have
proper steps in storage preparation.
drained the tank, leave the cap loose a few days to pemut all
A good place to begin is cleaning to remove grease and dirt
fumes
to escape. Then close the cap to prevent dust and dirt
which can cause rapid breakdown of insulation and rubber pariS.
getting into the engine. Remove, clean and replace the sediment
The usual good maintenance joi&gt;s includes cleaning the air
bowl and filler, too.
cleaner and refilling the oil cup with clean oil, or washing andreThe same is true for lawn mower engines. First, empty the
oiiing the filter or providing a new one . It's a good idea to warm
fuel
tank. Start the engine and let it run until it begins to sputter,
up the engine before changing the oil and replacing the filter .
then operate the choke to help drain all gasoline from the carOnce you have performed these jobs, run the engme agam to put
buretor. Next, clean and replace the carburetor fuel bowl. Third,
take out the spark plug and put in about a tesspoon of SAE low
crankcase
oil. Turn the engine several times with the spark plug
HUNTERS SUCCESSFUL
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The out to coat the cylinder walls and piston with the oil. Stop the
Ohio Natural Resources engine with the piston at the top of the stroke. Next, clean and
Department said Friday six of regap the spark plug and replace it, but do not connect the spark
every 10 hunters were suc- plug wire ,
Remove and store tbe battery (from battery equipped
cessful on opening day of the
in a cool place but not freeting temperatures.
•
engines)
Ohio upland game season. Bag
If your small engine needs an overhaul and you are not
checks on 1,496 hunters
capable
of doing it yourself, have · a reliable serviceman do it
produced 752 rabbits, 145
pheasants and 49 quail, of- during the winter. Next spring he will be very busy when
everyone wan IS work done on his lawn mower or tractor.
ficials said.

23 - The Swtdav Tifr.e!ll . fi:pptlJle) ••li:i•·""" ...,

still· rec011l1nended

one L'tst sweep to make the lawn more uniform and remove
surplus growth or leaves.
After U1e last mowing it ls time to wmterize the lawn mowers
and tractors. Small engines need proper preparation and storage
this winter, if you expect them to perform next spring.
Most tractor and smaU engine manufacturers reconunend
preparation for storage to reduce overhead ~ts ~d save time
in the spring, says carlton Johnson, ExtensiOn engmeer at The
Ohio State University. Preparing the engine for storage prevents
rormation of gwn in the fuel system and minimizes rust
deterioration of metal and rubber parts. Gwn can cause vaTyes.
rings, and pistons to stick, resulting in an engine overhaul Oext
spring. Check you r operator ·~ manual for procedures on each

Card of Thanks

president; Seldon Flemming, vice president of the Point Pleasant-Mason
County C of C; John Musgrave, Point Pleasant Mayor; John Reece, public
relations coordinator at Gavin Power plant and John Hanna, secretary of
COVlC. Reece showed slides on progress of the construction site at the
James M. Gavin Power plant near Cheshire, and its coal mines. ·

Area recognition dinners conducted
By John C..oper
Mr. Barker and his sons .munity with plans for
SoU Cons. Service
operate this farm in con- development of a spring. The
PT. PLEASANT - This has junction with their central area around his spring is an
been a week of Soil Con- operation a( Southside. Since extremely wet and seepy
servation District recognition they bought it a year or so ago, place, therefore the collection
dinners aroWJd our area . The they have spread lime on all system will consist of laying
Western Soil Conservation but 50 acres and have treated about 200 feet of drain tile to
District held i!S dinner at the 17 acres of pasture in addition intercept the water and collect
Vocational Center in Pt. · to their regular fertilization it to a central point. Because of
Pleasant.
program [or cropland.
the extremely wet condition,
The Meigs Soif Conservation
WE HELPED Lawrence Mr. Gerlach decided to wait
District dinner was held at the Ge rlac h of Rayburn Com- until next year at a drier time
Salisbury Elementary School
at Pomeroy and the Gallia Soil

lay of the land
Conservation District held its
awards dinner at the Green
Elementary School. We wer~
able to go to two of these dinners, but missed the Gallia
County ·one because o[ . a
duplication of dates.
Harold Carnahan and Roy E.
Miller of the Meigs SCD attended our local district affair.
It is too bad when a hungry
fellow only gets to attend two
out of three aWards dinners!
W.
A. BARKER, of
Southside, constructed a
concrete watering trough in a
barnlot at one of his farms
which is located at Beech Hill.
His farm is known as the
fanner John Cook farm . Mr.
Barker used the portable forms
belonging to the Western SCD.
The trough will hold 500 gallons
of water.
The source of water is a well.

to install this development.
DENVER YOHO OF SCS
was talking with Everett Gills,
84 years old, at his farm at
Gallipolis Ferry. Some readers
of this column will remember
that we wrote a feature story
about octogenarian farmers in
Mason County about two years
ago. Mr. Gills was one o[ those
district cooperators. Mr. Gills
is still actively managing the
farm. In addition to tlle one at

Grandmother injured in accident
daughter, Pennie, wen~ in·
jured. They were taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by private car. Mrs. Deem was
admitted, suffering a possible
fractured left wrist, abrasions
and contusions. Pennie was
treated and released. No
citation was issued.

POMEROY
Heavy Hollow Road in Orange Twp.,
property damages were Ronald Lee Deem, 22, Parkersreported and a grandmother burg, traveling south, took his
was hospitalized in two e1es off the road to remove a
automobiie accidents, the \ape fr om a player, and drove
Meigs County Sheriff's Dept. into a tree.
reported Saturaay.
Estella Deem, a passenger,
Friday at 11 :25 p.m. at the grandmother of the driver, and
intersection of Union Ave., and the dri ve r ' s two-year-old
SR 7, Roger E. Searles, 22,
Rutland, Rt. I, pulled from
Union Ave., onto Route 7 into
the path of a car traveling
north dri ve n by Jack Teaford,
38, Racine. Teaford's. vehicle
turned around in the road and
Searles' turned around . but
went into a ditch.
COLUMBUS (UPI )- A new
Searles was cited to court for open burning regulation which
failure to yield rig_ht of way. forbids the burning of on-site .
There were no personal in- construction waste material
juries.
will cause a price increase for
At2:30 a.m. Saturday on Owl home buyers, the Ohio Home

would like to thank Mrs.
Emma Ado~~~ms , Or . Murphv.

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

NORm&lt;Dl
• KQ83
'AJ3 2
• 10
.. 8532
WEST
• J 107

his farm at Gallipolis Ferry,
grassland
including
a
management program, water
management
arid
crop
rotation.

OF OHIO

In the recent discussion with
Mr. Yoho, Mr. Gills was proud
of the fact that he had been
able to get all of his
pastureland crlipped this past
swnmer.

AM

which the builder is now'forced
to use since enaclrnenl of the
regulations, are charging ..
anywhere from $300 to as high
as $1,000 per home to haul
building waste material away
£rom horne sites, according to
Association Chair1nan Howard
J. Barcus of Alliance.
"There has to be a compromising ground where the
environment is protected and
yet the cost for that protection
is not astronomical to Ohio's
citizens/' Barcus , saip. "To
adopt a regulation years ahead
or· technology is only goiug to
add to our · p~esent crisis in
Ohio. "

'CHAIN SAW

Veteraos Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Leland C.
Saxton, Pomeroy ; Jack King,
Pomeroy.
Discharged
Thomas
Hawley,, Tamara Tallente,
Kevin Hatfield, Sharon Riffle,
Ethel Mace, Beverly Faulkner,
Meadie Norvell, Elmer Norvell, DiAnn Dailey.

Power Mae 6 Automa1ic I n1 ~ •.., tiK uJlly !Jrofcssi Diul saw available in the 7 pound class.t

Its min iaturized aluminum ; mag nesiu m engine is the same design we Pllt in
our big ti mber saws. Ru g~1.'d, tough, fa st ~uning , it:'s a natural for uec scrv1ce work,

BLEVINS PROMOTED
MIDDLEPORT - Navy
Lieutenant J.G. Dallas Blevins.
Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
Blevins Sr, of 362 Lincoln St.,.
Middleport, was promoted to
his present rank while serving
with Patrol Squadron 24 at
Keflavik, Iceland recently.

'

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.
"

POMEROY, OHIO

•

dependable service.
Call Athens , Ohio

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

EAST

'K

.6 2 .
.Q 7

.. A98
SOUTH

... KQJIO

+QJ862

• 9543

_______

Ea~l

South

Pass

Pass

19

Pass
Double Pass
Pass
Opening lead - K+

yovr children and the ent ire
family , buy World Book
En c yclopedia . Easy terms .
For tree demon s tration , call
Eldon R. Kraeuter , Ra c ine ,
Ohio . Telephone 949 -2491 .
11 -13-Stp

llOO.

North

39

jumped to three hearts. -- ....
announces
Walter Avarelli, sitting East, SKATE -A-WAY
hol iday par ties : Thanks ·
passed , as did South . giving
, Novemb er 16th and
Belladonna doubled and the 11th , Christmas,
Dec. 21s t and
rest passed.
22nd , New Year's EVe ., Dec .
Belladonna opened the 31st. Available for privat e
ties , Monday , Tuesday,
king of diamonds and shifted par
Thursday eveni ng s. SaL and
to the five of hearts. South Sv nday afternoons . Open
could have escaped for a loS.s Wed .. Fr iday, and Sat urday
evenings. 7:30-10 :30. Call 985of 800 by iettinfi that trump 3929,
985·3803 or 985 -9996.
ride toward hiS nine, but
ll -l3 -12tc
.;.___..,_
South went up with the ace
and eventually was down FOR a r eal Christmas gift for

_____

'964

Pass

ABSOLUTELY no deer hunt 1.. g
or hunting or trespassing on
th ese farm s : Virgil Hamm ,
opments and they ca me with . Helen Baer , Walla ce ' Am berger , Charles Yost , Vern on
delightful speed.
Nea se. Iv an Well.
The American North
ll -15-6tp

Pass
Pass

To make matters worse,
East and West had no game.
A spade lead would beat
three notrump; almost any
defense would beat a minorPIANO tunina
suit game.
(NEWSPAPER E.'\lTEfl.PRISE ASSNJ

3rd &amp; Sycamore Streets .
Gallipolis, Ohio
"Your Farm Supply .Super Mkt."

Landmark Has Gifts For ·The.Family, For The Home.

•' One reason for the great
success of ltal~'s Blue team is
that they don t bid psychics
and ther seem to be able to
jake ful advantage of the opportunities given them when
,an opponent bids a psychic
JISainst them.
·
, Today's hand is taken from
'\he finals of the 1957 World's
championship.
~ The American South
decided the time was ripe to
'try · a psychic heart bid .
•Gwrgio Belladonna, sitting
'West, passed to await devel- .

The

bid~ing

t3l1!1Mill~®u..t -~t.J ..-1 , _
hy H{NIU ARNOtO oiiH I BOO tEE

Unoeranible th••• foor Jumbl•s.

.onl!" letter to each square. to

form four ordinary words.

West

North

East

I•

Pass

Pass

I[

You, South, hold :
• A 2 f5 +A Q J 8.1 .A K J 6 5
What do you do now?

I

A - Bid three clubs anyway.
You need very little rrom
partner to make a game.
TODAY'S QUESTION
You bid three c lu bs and

!

Antwer1

••'
•
•

·

•

•

~BUYA

••
•
••
•••
••
•

•"•
••
•
••
•

••

•"

••
•••
••
•

HOrtEUTE·xL2·

•

•

~SAW

•
•,.'

for only

•••

$119.95

••
•
••

"
•"
"

••"
MICROWAVE OVEN

Compresses household trash to less
than a fourth of original volume.
Mashes paper, cans, bottles, plastics,
boxes, wrappings, and sweepings.
Waterproof bags stay strong even
when wet Optional cutting board top
. .. unit can also be built in.

HOM ELITE ELECTRIC
MODEL 110-E

•69.95

..""
••
••
•
•

COI.NII

·

How a breadwinner U not apt

-

to •pend hil time- LOlliNG

8.

12:55 - Ted Mullins 10.

1: 00 - Lower Lighthouse 13 ; Pro Footba II 3, 4, 15 ; Pro Football

a. lO .

Issues &amp; Answers 6, 13 .

2: 00 - College Football l973 )3 ; Soul Train 6.
3: 00 - 0ther People, Other Places6 ; Survival13.
3: 30 - Odd Couple 6; Jimmy Dean Show 13.
4:00 - Pro FootballS, 10 ; Rookies 6 ; America 13 ; Fre n ch Chef
33; T BA 15; NFL Same of the Week 3; Star Trek 4.
4: 30 - Help Wanted 33 ; Perry Mason 3.
5: 00 .:__ Man and the Medic 33; Movie " The Comancheros" 13 ;
Film 4; Bill Daily 's Hocus Pocus Gang6 ; Holy Land 15.
5: 30- T' Aichi Ch ' uan 33 ; It Tak~s a Thief 3 ; Rose Kennedy's
Thanksgiving Special 4.
6:00 - Let 's Mak e A Deal6 ; Grand Master Chess 33 ; News 4:

TBA 15.

Open 9 to?

. GAUL'S

SHAKE HAVEN
SR 7

Chester; 0.

17- Small child
IS-Con ju nction
19-C iimbing plant
20-Ci ty in
Ge rmany
27-Goddess of
healing
29- Word of sorrow
31-Before
36-Young horse
37-Unlock
39-Poses for
portrait
40- Arabian. prince
41 -Caudal
appendage
42- lnvestigations
43-G rain
44- Juncture
46- A continent
(abbr.)
48- Ge nus of
holly family
49-Co nvlvial
50-Esca ped
51-Lasso
52-Go in
53-Japan
55-Breathes loudly
in steep
56-Bard
57- Chemical
com pound
58- Appears
61-Po litic&lt;'ll group
63-Di llseed
64-Eq ual
68-ln cricket,
kind of
pitch (pl.)
70-Guided
71-Portions
73- Pinched
74-Let it stand
75- Spear
77- Small twig
78 .......Stupefy
SO-Scorch
81-GoU mound
83-Mi re
84- Drunkards
87- Roman
officials

6: 30 -

World at War 6 ; VInce Lombardi : Science and Art of

Football33 ; NBCNews3, l5,4; TBAB.

7: 00 - -Zoom 20. 33 ; Wild Kingdom 15 ; Safari to Adventure 3;
Circus 4 ; Lassie B; In the Know 10 ; Untamed World 13.
7: 30 .,- World of Di sney 3, 4, 15 ; Mountain Scene 33; FBI6, 13 ;
The Thanksgiving Treasure 8. 10 : Godspell Goes to Plimoth
Plantation 20.
8: 00 - Men Who Made the Movies 20; A Session of Gilbert and
Sullivan For All 33.
B: 30 - Frank Sinat ra 3, 41 15; M~wie " The Hospital " 6. 13.
9:00 - Masterpiece Theater 33, 20 ; Once Upon A Mattress 8, 10 .
9:30- Dinah in Search of the Ideal Man 3, 4, 15.

10:00 - Firing Line 20, 33.
89- Bricklayer's
hammer
90-C rlpples
91-Egg·sha ped
92-Communists
93---Bad
95- Man·s name
96- Hindu guitar
97- Minute
pore in )eaf
99-Call
101-Join
105- Toll
106-Solar disk
107-0rgans of
he 21ring
11 1- Merry song
112- Palnful
113-Highway
11 5-Soa ks
116- Bone marrow
118-Rage
1lf}-Rabbit
121 - Highest
Buddhist
religious state
123- A state (abbr.)
125-Jmprisonment
126-- Macaws
127- Rent~

129- Lift
130- Downy duck
131 - Sodlum
chloride
132- Separate
134-Music:
as written
136--Apathetic
137- Protective
ditches
139-Tree 1tunk .
140- PintaH duck
i44-Dance step
145-Bishopric
1.46--Possesses
147-Conjui-.ction
148-Cut
149-Writing
Implement
151- Parent
(co lloq .)
153- Compass point
155-Beholdl
157- A state (abbr.)

10:30 ---:- News 6, 8; High Road to Adventur~ 10 ; Newsmaker '73
, 13 ; We Think You Should Know 3; Police Surgeon 15; Johnny
Mann ' s Stand Up and Cheer 4.

ll :OO - News3, 4, 6.8, 10, 13, 15.

11 : 15 -

Police Surgeon 6 ; CBS News 10, 13 ; Movie " Tobacco

Road" B.

11 : 30- Fa ce the Nation 10 ; Don Kirschner's ROCk Concert lJ ;
Movie " I' m No Angel " 3 ; Johnny Carson 4, 15.
ll : 45 - Goo.d News 6.
.
12 :00 - Urban League 10.

..

12: 15 - College Football1973 .6.
12 : 30 -

Movie " The Creeping Flesh" 10.

1:00- News 4. ·

MONDAY. NOV. 19, 1973
6:00 -

Sunrise Seminar" 4; Sacred Heart 10.

6: l5 - School Scene 10 .
6:20- Farm Report 13.

6:25 - Paul Harvey 13 .
6: 30- Bible Answers 8 ; Good News 13 ; News 5; Five M inutes to
Live By 4.
6:35 - Columbus Today 4.
6:45.:..... Corncob ReP9rf 3; FarmWne 10.
7:00 - Today 4, 3, 15 i CBS News 8, 10; Flintstones 13; Romper
Room 6.
7:30 - Rocky&amp; Bullwinkle 13 i New Zoo Revue6 .
8:00 - Capt. KangarooS, 10 ; Sesame St. 33; New Zoo Revue 13 ;
Timmy and Lassie 6.

8:30- Huck &amp; Yogi 6; Dick Van Dyke 13.
8: 55 -

News 13.

9:00 - Paul Dixon 4 ; Phil Donahue 15; Friendly Junction 10;
AM 3: Brady Bunch 6; Abbott and Costello B; Movie "Rally
'Round the Flag, Boys!" 13.
9:30 - To Tell the Tr"uth 3; Secret Storm 8; Michaels &amp; Co. 6.

9: 55 - Chuck White Report 10.
10:00- Dinah Shore 3, 15; Joker's Wild 8, 10.

10:30- Baffle 4, 3, 15; $10,000 Pyramid 8, 10; Mike Douglas 6.
11: 00 - Password 13; Gambit 8, 10 ; Wizard of Odds 4, 3, 15; Unto

the Hills 33 .
1l :30 - Hollywood Squares

4,

3, 15 ; Love of Life 8, 10; Brady

Bunch 13; Bowling 6; Sesame Street 33.
11 : 55 - News 8; Dan Imel's World. 10.

l2 :00 - Bob

Brau~ ' s50- 50

Club 4; Jeopardy 3, 15; News 8, 10, l3 ;

Password 6.
12 : 30-3 W's 3, 15 ; Search for Tomorrow B. 10; Split Second 6.
12:55- NBC News 15, 3.
1:00 - All My Children 6, 13 : Not for Women Only 15 ; News 3;
Concentration 8; What's My Line 10 .

1:30 - 3 On A Match 4, 3, 15;
Make A Deal 13, 6.

2:00 -

As

the World Turns 8, 10; Let's

Days of Our Lives 4, 3, 15 ; Newlywed Game 6, 13 ;

Guiding Light 8, 10.
2:30- Doctors4,3, l5 ; Edgeol NlghtB, 10 ; Girl in My Llfe6, l3 .
3:00- Another World 4, 3, 15; General Hospltal6, 13; Price Is

Per"sonallty and Behavioral Developme_nt 33.

••
"•
•
••"
••

6:30- NBC News 3,

4,

l5; ABC News 6; CBS News 8, lO ;

Hogan's Heroes 13.
7:00 - Tn~th or Consequences 3, 6 ; Circus 13 ; Bobby Bowden

15; Mulligan Stew 3; Beat the Clock 4; News 10; What's My

Line 8; Electric Co. 20.
7: 30- Bobby Goldsboro 3; Hollywood Squares .. ; To Tell the
Truth 6; Buck Owens 8; Municipal Court 10; Beat the Clpck
13; Episode Action 33 ; Wac;ky World of Jonathan Winters 15 ;
lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20 .
·
'
8:00 - B. C. Cartoon 3, 4, 15 ; Rookies 13 ; National Geographic
6; Gunsmoke 8, 10 ; The Killers 20. 33.
.

8:30 - Flip Wilson 3, 4, 15 . .
9:00 - Movie "Colton Comes to Harlem" 3, 4, l5 ; Pro Football6,
13 ; Here' s Lucy B. 10.

'

9:30 - Dick Van DykeB, 10 : Heart Dlsease20 ; Book Beat33.

APPLIANCES

10:00 - Medical Center a, 10 ; News 20; Paul Nuchlms 33.

11 :00 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15; Janak133.

11 :30- Johnny Carson 3, -.., 15 ; Movies :'All the Fine Young
Cannibals" B; "Of Human Bondage" 10.
12:00 - News 6, 13.
·
12:30 - Movie "The Leather Saint" 13.
1:00 - Tomorrow 3, 4.
·

POMEROY LANDMARK

2:00 - News 13, 4,

OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 8 TO 6
Phone 992·2181
I

•
'

PINCIL

Highlights

11 : 30 - Th is is the Answer 3; Make A Wish 6, 13; ln si ght1 5; OSU
Football Highl ights 4 .
12 :00 - At Issue 3; Bowling 6; Rev. Calvin Evans 13 ; West
Virgi nia Univers ity B; Colum~us TOINn Meeting 10 ; Open
Bible 15.
12: 30 - Revival Fires 13 ; Meet the Press 3, 4, 15; Pro Football
Pre-Game B.

1: 30 -

try Gaul's Turkey
SPECIAL

(Aiuwen Mund•r)

PAIAA

Together lO.

8: 55 - Black Cameo 4.
9: 00 - Singing Jubilee 3; Cadle Cha pel 4; Oral ~o berts 10 ; Rex
Humbard 6, 15 ; Hair Bear's Bunch 8.
9 : 30 - Church by Side of Road 4; Chr'ist is the Answer 13 ;
Amazing Chan .8; Popeye 10.
10: 00 - Church Services 4; This is the Life 3 ; Faith for Today 13 ;
• Ki d Power 6, 13 ; Rex Humbard 8; Movie " The Mountain " 10.
10 :30 - This is fhe Life IS; Vision ()') 6 ; Insight 4; Osmonds 13 ;
Captain Noah 3.
11 : 00 ~ Poi nt of View 6 ; TV Chapel J ; Focus on Co lumbus 4;
Across the Fe nce 15 ; H. R. Pufnstuf 13 ; Co llege Football

5:30 - Beverly Hillbillies 8; Gomer Pyle. USMC l3 ; Electric
Company 33; Trails West 15; Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
5:55- Earl Nightingale 15.
6:00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, l5: ABC News 13; Sesame St. 20 ;

•

Jack W. Caney, Mgr.

HEAVY truc.k mechanics ,
diesel ex per ien ce prefer"'ed
but not required . We are
looki ng tor heavy tru ck
mechanics w ith general
r epair exper ience necessa ry .
Must be able to overhaul
transmiss ion and rear ends
and be fam iliar with air brake
system . Wage and benef its
competit ive w ith Indust r y .
J OHN GIBSON MOTOR
CITY, INC ., Rt , 56 west.
Athens. Ohio . Contact Gordy
Gibson. 593-775 8.
1l -16-2tc

SU NDAY , NOV . 18, 1913
6: 00 - Travelogue 4.
6 : 30 - This Week 4 ; Newsmaker '73 13; Lamp Unto My Feet 10.
7:00 - Time for Timothy 4 ; Jenny Falwell 13 ; Commun ique 6;
Look Up and Live 10.
7: 30 - Faith for Today8 ; Re viva l Fires 6 ; Herald of Truth 3;
Yours for the As k.lng 4; Camera Three 10 .
8 :00 - Leonard Repass 8; Gospel Caravan 6 ; Church Service
13 ; Billy James Hargi s and his All -America n Kids 10 ; Mor mon Choir 3 ; Day of Discovery 4 .
8 :30 - Oral Roberts 3 ; Your Hea lth 4; Day of Discovery 8 ; Rex
Humbard 13; Revival Fires 15 ; Ka thryn Kuhlman 6; Get

Hazel 8; Gilligan's Island l3.

•
'

WOULD like someone to com e
in and stay w ith gr"andson ,
and Inval id husband 6 or 8
days during my stay at the
hospital. Phone 992 -7268 .
11 -l6 -4tc

orrrxxJ

1

Television Log

5:00 - Bonanza J ; MervGriffln4 ; Mission: lmposslble6 ; Andy
Griffith 8; Mister Rogers 20, 33 ; I Dream of Jeannie 13 .

"

TRASH COMPACTOR

'Free carry case also available when
you buy the 150 Automatic or Super EZ
Automatic with 16" bar, at the regular pnce.

EX PERIENCED beaut y
operator w ith . ,manager 's
l icense . Apply in person
Dorothy 's Beaut r Salon •
Syracuse, Ohio.
1115-3tc

- - - - -- - - - -

Right 8, 10; Know Your Antiques 20 ; Adlerian Counseling 33 .
3:30- Return to Peyton Place 3. 15; One Life to Live 13; Phil
Don·ahue 4; Secret Storm 10 : Match Game '73 8; Flintstones
6; French Chef 20.
·
4:00 - Mr . Cartoon and the Banana Splits 3: Love, American
Sty le 13; Movie "R hino!" 10; Somerset 15 ; Sesame Street 33,
20; Speedracer 6 ; LucY ·Show e.
4: 30 - Green Acres 3 ; Jeopardy 4; ·Bonanza 15 ; I Love Lucy 6 :

•

Imagine •. cooking a meat loaf in 18
minutes, a hamburger in two, or baking a whole chicken in only 24! No
special wiring needed, runs on 120
volt fiouse current, only 22" by 15%"
by 18'14", counter-to~ model.

[J l

71- Pronoun
131-Certain
72-Num ber
'132-Skil l
1-Secreting organ 74-Cylinder
133-Frock
76-Weight of India 135-P ronoun
6--Spanish fo r
··good. bye"
77- Let it stand
138- River Islan d
]] -Toward the
78-Son of Noah
139-Revea l
cen ter
79- Person of
140-Resort
16-Sca rf
nob le birth
141-Large tub
'21 - Part of step
82-AIIay
14 2- Neg&lt;~tive
22-Nips
84- Heavenly
143-Cyprinoid fish
23- Dis reputable
bodies
144- European
24-East Indi an
85- Point of
145-S h ~tter
lemur
hammer
147- Pertaining
25-Ronian bronze
86-Part of leg
to the nose
26-Pe riods of
88- Certain
149- Edible seed
time
89- Acid
150-Part of flower
28-Uquid
90- Former N .Y .
152-Scoff
30- Tidy.
Yankees
154- By oneself
3f-Conjunction
pitcher
156- 0pen to view
33- Symbol for
92- F'all back
158-Wipe ou t
tho ron
94- Straight159- Saccharine
34-Suffix:
forwardness
160-Rail birds
fo llower of
98-DecJa re
161 - Trousers
35-Conducted
99- At this place
36-Vehicle
100-Su ffix :
DOWN
37-N umber
rela.ting· to
38- Worm
102-S pecies
1- Grind with
40-Build
103-0ccupy chair
rasping sound
42-Equailty
104-lnsane
2-Hold on
43- Arrlve
105- Cus hions
property (pl .)
44-Rea ch ac ross
106-Piace in line
3-Beast of
45- Doctrine
108- Speck
burden
47-Fiight of steps 109-Preposition
4- Compass point
49- Philippine
110- Latin
5-Arid
knife
con junction
6- Les sens
50- Toll
111-Haw;,iian
7-Leads
51-K eep
wreaths
8- Po;sesslve
54-Storage pit
11 2-Pertaining to
pronou n
55--Classify
the stars
9-Faroe Islan ds
56--Carpenter's
114- Apothecary's
whirlwind
tools
'weight (abbr.)
tO-Compass point
S9- Those holding 116- Knave at cards
11- Chemical
office
1·17-Continued
compound
story
60- Bone of body
12-Want
62-State In Syria
119- Garden tools
13-Sai lor (co lloq .)
64- Verse
120-Metal
14- Part of "to be ''
65-Symbol for
122- Flight of
IS-Mach ine that
tellurium
Mohammed
converts
66-Near '
124- Everyone
mechanical
67-Work at
125-Mend with
energy Into
one's trade
cotton
electrical
126-Attack violently
69-Gaseous
energy
element
128-Make lace
16- Narrow,
129- Lease
70- Sow
flat board

••

WHEN

CARHOP and waitress wanted .
Apply in person at Crow 's
Steak House .
11 -13-10tc

SUNDAY , NOVEMBER 18, 1973

••
"•

Defrosting never needed un
this great side-by-side ... 6.8
cu. ft. freezer, 14.9 cu. ft.
fresh food section. Rolls on
wheels, has ali inside lea·
tures you want, plus unique
exterior ice service that
gives you cubes right
thru the door!

BEAUTICIAN wanted , fu ll or
parttlme . Helen 's Beauty
Shop.

If you want to get out

Now arrance the circled. letters
to form the surpriae aJ\IWer, u
ounesled b71be obove cartoon.

per, zinc and nickel.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Notice

II

cu pboards , wa ll ' WANTED old upr ight p ibnos.
cupboards, chests , old guns,
any conditi on . pay ing 110
any condltion . Also blue
each . Wr ite and g ive direc
decorated stoneware. Write
tions to Witten Piano Co. Box
P. 0 . Bo;,c .u, Mart itlsburg ,
188, Sard is , Ohio 43946.
ll -U -6tp
Ohlo, 43935 or call 1·484 -44.40
1
after p .m .
8_8 _901 ,, N O-'IcoPPER.70c,R"i~iators ,
- - - - - - - - - - - - -33c. brass , JOe . balfenes, 90c .
German siJver contains no M . A. Hall. Reedsville . Phone.
silver. It ls an alloy or cop- 378 ' 6249 ·
11 . 8 Iff;

The Dai~ Sentinel

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS

NO-FROST FOOD
CENTER WITH EXTERIOR
ICE SERVICE ·

Nei!ded al once lor !be
Racine-S yr a c use area.
Apply at

OPEN
lliANKSGIVING DAY

l'lilllil su•aiiiSWIIm

\'etloerd•y••

NO l.lfl.IOS

...

He IJ()t

II I

Jumblct t GAILY

your
partner bid s three diamonds.
What do you do now?

[

tjiE!

?

-

(r&lt;!'ll"""''_'_
...,.,.... ....

TACTINj

Serving Meigs, Gallia and Mason Counties
SLATE SERVICE
MASON - The teenage and
youth group will present a
Thanksgiving program at the
First- Baptist Church here at
7:30 p.m. Wednesday. The
public is invited .

Do

II

has been:

a

CHAIN
SAW

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

I GIRRO

MOTOR ROUTE
DRIVER

REGULATIONS

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

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

•

~

The Pub! is her reserves -the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed object ional.
The
publisher w ill not be respon HOLIDAY SPECIAL PRATT ' S Si ble for more than one • in ·
.
BEAUTY SALO N, November correc t insertion
RATES
12th tt1rou9h 24th . Realistic
For want Ad Service
Perm tor 11nt ed , blea ched . or 5 cents
per W.ord one insertion
hard to hold ha ir made w ith
Minimum Char geSl.OO
natural or9anic prote in .
u cents per word three
Regular S30 perm s tor $15 . consecut
ive inser1ions.
Regular S2S perms for Sl2 .50.
26 ce nts per word six con .
Call today tor appo intment secut
ive insertions.
ask for Mac or Oebb i. 99t 25
Per
Cent Discount on pa id
37S1.
and ads paid with in 10
ll -11 12tc ads
days .
-~----'--- - - -----CARD OF THANKS
BAND at the Ja ck's Club
&amp; OBITUARY
Friday and Saturday nights .
S2.00 for 50 word min ll -16·2tc lm um . Each addit ional word
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIGS . Jc .
BLIND ADS
Spec ials each mon th . We will
Additional
25c Charge per
gla dl y sh ow you our line of Advertisement.
Kosmet ic s in the privacy of
OFFICE HOURS
your home a t your co n ·
8; 30 a .m . to 5 :00 p .m . Dai ly,
ven ience , Rem em ber , Chris t a . m . to 12 :00 Noon
mas is not far away so phone 8Sa: 30
t!Jrday .
Helen Jane Brown, 992 -5113.
11 -9-ttc Wanted To
-------------FLETC HER P iano Service. WILL do paper nang1ng and
Tun ing &amp; Repl!l ir . Call 698pa inting . Call Ar th ur Musser ,
7731 .
742 -5223.
ll -6-261p
10 -21 -JOfp

WantP.II To Buy

~ CORNER

5 P .M . Day Before Publ ic-a:tion
Monday Deadline 9 a .m.
Cancella t ion - Corrections
will be accepted until 9 a .m . for
Day ot Publ ication

Run Sportsman Club. noon
Sunday , factory choke-d guns
only.
11 1S-31c

Wanted To Buy

Help Wanted

WANT ADS
•NFORMATION
DEADLINES

-------------SHOOTING MATCH , Forked

&amp;
repa iriM.
Lane Daniels, 259 Broadway ,
Middleport. Phone 992 -2082.
11 -18-12tp

'

sawrnilllimhing, con ~tr ucti on johs1 all -Mound farm cu tting. It oi ls its own 14~'
bar and chain autom !ltic.l ll y ,.:h Y~'u cut. Oeh!Xl' .~iJ;; ter- ~ l ip handle with

vinyJ covered handl cb:Jr.

You' ll like our competent,

(By Oswald &amp; Jametl Jacoby

CENTRAL SOY A

Builders Association said
Friday.
The new regulation, which
the builders assoeiation said
has placed a high financial
burden on the construction

Power Mac 6·

'

SIZES 7 to 12
SIZES 3 TO 6 16.49

good conservation program on

11

• A954

I

WELLINGTON BOOTS '6.95

B&amp;G Auc tion, Athens. 0 ..
will pay cash for your entire
household or · any good
miscellaneous items or wi:l
hold an auction for you a t
your residence, reasonable .

Blue Team psychicanalysis

West

cost of building

Id ' ·F

PHONE "2-2176

Gallipolis Ferry, he operates a
large farm near Circleville,
Ohio.
Mr. Gills has carried out a

Are You Moving?
Considering
An Auction?

593-5035 Collect

WIN AT BRIDGE

.. 74
Both vulnerable

INSUlATED BOOTS

Notice
•
Notice
LOST - 1 brown purse between , - -- - - - - - - - - - - , SHOOTI N G Match , Ra ci ne Gun
Club . Nov . 18, 1 p . m . assorted
Veterans
Hospita l
and
meats . Factory choked guns
Bill Wade, Auttioneer
Pomeroy . Thursday , Nov .
on tv .
ISth . Reward . Call (304) 882
11 15 3tc
2206 , after 1 p .m .
•

Or . Pickens and the s taff of
Veteran' Mernor iill Hospltal.
the Ewing Funeral Home .
pa;llbearers , Syracuse
11 -18-ltc
Emergency Squad , Rev .
Bellmont and Roy Bu!h , the
Notice
Svra cuse Ladies Au11: 1Uary , SHOOTI NG Mat ch,
Cornwho served the dinner , neigh Hollow Gun Club , turn first
bors , friends , and relatives
r ig ht after Miles Cemetery ,
who broug'ht in the food , those
Ruttand . Factory c hoked
who sent flow ers, money , and
guns only . Sunday . Nov . 18, I
sympat hy cards . Special
p .m .
than-.s to C.row 's Steak. House
and
employees.
Club
Restaurant and employees.
Match Horner Hi ll
Mrs . Mayme Custer and sons , SHOOTING
Gun Club, Rt. 143, Sun day ,
Melvin, Jerry , Bill , wives ;ind
Nov . 18, 12 noon . Fac tory
grandchildren .
cho'ked
gvns only .
11 · 18-ltp
l1 -15-31C

•
•

Trash rule hikes

r-~--~~~~~------~---------------------.,·
companies, was adopted by the
Mrs. Claus Says
Ohio Environmental Proteclion Agency Sept. 10, 1973.
Here's Great . . .
ea or
an
Most commercial haulers,

'

I

1!n3

Card of Thanks

THE FAMILY Of E&lt;i!irl Custer

t085
: + AK7

COVIC DINNER - Civic and Industrial leaders seated at the head table
at Thursday night's Central Ohio Valley Industrial Council meeting in Point
Pleasant at the Red carpet Inn, were William Rardin, Jr., County Court
president; Mike Shaw, Mason County delegate ; George Hervey, COVIC

11t

For Fast Results Use The Sunday 'T imes-Sentinel Classifieds

:

•INSUlATED JACKETS
.WORK GLOVES
•INSUlATED COVERAUS

1\t""

I

I

�(
•

22- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday. Nov. t8. t9"J

Last

~now-over

By C. E. Blakeslee
CoWJiy Ext. Agent, Agriculture
POMEROY - "Is it too late to mow our lawn for the last
time? ", was one or the questions coming into the Extension
Office last week. Most of us ha1•e already quit mowing , but in
IOI'Ile cases it may be desirable to mow one last time to remove
leaves and debris so the grass will not be smothered out over
winter.
It is important that the grass b~ mowed sufficiently high to

the NEW in FARMING

provide some protection for tile grass roots in winter. During the
summer bluegrass lawns should be mowed 2 to 21·, inches high,
so the same rule should apply if a home owner is going to make

a coat of new engine oil oo ali moving parts. .

t

According to one mai)Ufacturer, exhaustive tests show lha
transmission maintenance amounts to as much as 61'. pet. of the
total operating costs in tractors where the transmissi_on oil was
not drained seasonally. This was reduced to 11'. pet. m tractots
drained seasonally.
make and model of engine, he says.
Draining the fuel system is particularly important, be7ause
gum
tends to fcnn if i•r:••i'i fuel is l':!ft in the system over wmter.
With thf- great variety or tractor, lawo mower, and
Gwu makes the engine difficult to start at the end of the storage
a1.1xiliary engines -some air cooled, some water cooled - It
is very lmportaot to che&lt;!k the operator's manual for the
period .
Evaporating fuel can cause valve trouble. So once yoo have
proper steps in storage preparation.
drained the tank, leave the cap loose a few days to pemut all
A good place to begin is cleaning to remove grease and dirt
fumes
to escape. Then close the cap to prevent dust and dirt
which can cause rapid breakdown of insulation and rubber pariS.
getting into the engine. Remove, clean and replace the sediment
The usual good maintenance joi&gt;s includes cleaning the air
bowl and filler, too.
cleaner and refilling the oil cup with clean oil, or washing andreThe same is true for lawn mower engines. First, empty the
oiiing the filter or providing a new one . It's a good idea to warm
fuel
tank. Start the engine and let it run until it begins to sputter,
up the engine before changing the oil and replacing the filter .
then operate the choke to help drain all gasoline from the carOnce you have performed these jobs, run the engme agam to put
buretor. Next, clean and replace the carburetor fuel bowl. Third,
take out the spark plug and put in about a tesspoon of SAE low
crankcase
oil. Turn the engine several times with the spark plug
HUNTERS SUCCESSFUL
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The out to coat the cylinder walls and piston with the oil. Stop the
Ohio Natural Resources engine with the piston at the top of the stroke. Next, clean and
Department said Friday six of regap the spark plug and replace it, but do not connect the spark
every 10 hunters were suc- plug wire ,
Remove and store tbe battery (from battery equipped
cessful on opening day of the
in a cool place but not freeting temperatures.
•
engines)
Ohio upland game season. Bag
If your small engine needs an overhaul and you are not
checks on 1,496 hunters
capable
of doing it yourself, have · a reliable serviceman do it
produced 752 rabbits, 145
pheasants and 49 quail, of- during the winter. Next spring he will be very busy when
everyone wan IS work done on his lawn mower or tractor.
ficials said.

23 - The Swtdav Tifr.e!ll . fi:pptlJle) ••li:i•·""" ...,

still· rec011l1nended

one L'tst sweep to make the lawn more uniform and remove
surplus growth or leaves.
After U1e last mowing it ls time to wmterize the lawn mowers
and tractors. Small engines need proper preparation and storage
this winter, if you expect them to perform next spring.
Most tractor and smaU engine manufacturers reconunend
preparation for storage to reduce overhead ~ts ~d save time
in the spring, says carlton Johnson, ExtensiOn engmeer at The
Ohio State University. Preparing the engine for storage prevents
rormation of gwn in the fuel system and minimizes rust
deterioration of metal and rubber parts. Gwn can cause vaTyes.
rings, and pistons to stick, resulting in an engine overhaul Oext
spring. Check you r operator ·~ manual for procedures on each

Card of Thanks

president; Seldon Flemming, vice president of the Point Pleasant-Mason
County C of C; John Musgrave, Point Pleasant Mayor; John Reece, public
relations coordinator at Gavin Power plant and John Hanna, secretary of
COVlC. Reece showed slides on progress of the construction site at the
James M. Gavin Power plant near Cheshire, and its coal mines. ·

Area recognition dinners conducted
By John C..oper
Mr. Barker and his sons .munity with plans for
SoU Cons. Service
operate this farm in con- development of a spring. The
PT. PLEASANT - This has junction with their central area around his spring is an
been a week of Soil Con- operation a( Southside. Since extremely wet and seepy
servation District recognition they bought it a year or so ago, place, therefore the collection
dinners aroWJd our area . The they have spread lime on all system will consist of laying
Western Soil Conservation but 50 acres and have treated about 200 feet of drain tile to
District held i!S dinner at the 17 acres of pasture in addition intercept the water and collect
Vocational Center in Pt. · to their regular fertilization it to a central point. Because of
Pleasant.
program [or cropland.
the extremely wet condition,
The Meigs Soif Conservation
WE HELPED Lawrence Mr. Gerlach decided to wait
District dinner was held at the Ge rlac h of Rayburn Com- until next year at a drier time
Salisbury Elementary School
at Pomeroy and the Gallia Soil

lay of the land
Conservation District held its
awards dinner at the Green
Elementary School. We wer~
able to go to two of these dinners, but missed the Gallia
County ·one because o[ . a
duplication of dates.
Harold Carnahan and Roy E.
Miller of the Meigs SCD attended our local district affair.
It is too bad when a hungry
fellow only gets to attend two
out of three aWards dinners!
W.
A. BARKER, of
Southside, constructed a
concrete watering trough in a
barnlot at one of his farms
which is located at Beech Hill.
His farm is known as the
fanner John Cook farm . Mr.
Barker used the portable forms
belonging to the Western SCD.
The trough will hold 500 gallons
of water.
The source of water is a well.

to install this development.
DENVER YOHO OF SCS
was talking with Everett Gills,
84 years old, at his farm at
Gallipolis Ferry. Some readers
of this column will remember
that we wrote a feature story
about octogenarian farmers in
Mason County about two years
ago. Mr. Gills was one o[ those
district cooperators. Mr. Gills
is still actively managing the
farm. In addition to tlle one at

Grandmother injured in accident
daughter, Pennie, wen~ in·
jured. They were taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by private car. Mrs. Deem was
admitted, suffering a possible
fractured left wrist, abrasions
and contusions. Pennie was
treated and released. No
citation was issued.

POMEROY
Heavy Hollow Road in Orange Twp.,
property damages were Ronald Lee Deem, 22, Parkersreported and a grandmother burg, traveling south, took his
was hospitalized in two e1es off the road to remove a
automobiie accidents, the \ape fr om a player, and drove
Meigs County Sheriff's Dept. into a tree.
reported Saturaay.
Estella Deem, a passenger,
Friday at 11 :25 p.m. at the grandmother of the driver, and
intersection of Union Ave., and the dri ve r ' s two-year-old
SR 7, Roger E. Searles, 22,
Rutland, Rt. I, pulled from
Union Ave., onto Route 7 into
the path of a car traveling
north dri ve n by Jack Teaford,
38, Racine. Teaford's. vehicle
turned around in the road and
Searles' turned around . but
went into a ditch.
COLUMBUS (UPI )- A new
Searles was cited to court for open burning regulation which
failure to yield rig_ht of way. forbids the burning of on-site .
There were no personal in- construction waste material
juries.
will cause a price increase for
At2:30 a.m. Saturday on Owl home buyers, the Ohio Home

would like to thank Mrs.
Emma Ado~~~ms , Or . Murphv.

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

NORm&lt;Dl
• KQ83
'AJ3 2
• 10
.. 8532
WEST
• J 107

his farm at Gallipolis Ferry,
grassland
including
a
management program, water
management
arid
crop
rotation.

OF OHIO

In the recent discussion with
Mr. Yoho, Mr. Gills was proud
of the fact that he had been
able to get all of his
pastureland crlipped this past
swnmer.

AM

which the builder is now'forced
to use since enaclrnenl of the
regulations, are charging ..
anywhere from $300 to as high
as $1,000 per home to haul
building waste material away
£rom horne sites, according to
Association Chair1nan Howard
J. Barcus of Alliance.
"There has to be a compromising ground where the
environment is protected and
yet the cost for that protection
is not astronomical to Ohio's
citizens/' Barcus , saip. "To
adopt a regulation years ahead
or· technology is only goiug to
add to our · p~esent crisis in
Ohio. "

'CHAIN SAW

Veteraos Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Leland C.
Saxton, Pomeroy ; Jack King,
Pomeroy.
Discharged
Thomas
Hawley,, Tamara Tallente,
Kevin Hatfield, Sharon Riffle,
Ethel Mace, Beverly Faulkner,
Meadie Norvell, Elmer Norvell, DiAnn Dailey.

Power Mae 6 Automa1ic I n1 ~ •.., tiK uJlly !Jrofcssi Diul saw available in the 7 pound class.t

Its min iaturized aluminum ; mag nesiu m engine is the same design we Pllt in
our big ti mber saws. Ru g~1.'d, tough, fa st ~uning , it:'s a natural for uec scrv1ce work,

BLEVINS PROMOTED
MIDDLEPORT - Navy
Lieutenant J.G. Dallas Blevins.
Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
Blevins Sr, of 362 Lincoln St.,.
Middleport, was promoted to
his present rank while serving
with Patrol Squadron 24 at
Keflavik, Iceland recently.

'

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.
"

POMEROY, OHIO

•

dependable service.
Call Athens , Ohio

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

EAST

'K

.6 2 .
.Q 7

.. A98
SOUTH

... KQJIO

+QJ862

• 9543

_______

Ea~l

South

Pass

Pass

19

Pass
Double Pass
Pass
Opening lead - K+

yovr children and the ent ire
family , buy World Book
En c yclopedia . Easy terms .
For tree demon s tration , call
Eldon R. Kraeuter , Ra c ine ,
Ohio . Telephone 949 -2491 .
11 -13-Stp

llOO.

North

39

jumped to three hearts. -- ....
announces
Walter Avarelli, sitting East, SKATE -A-WAY
hol iday par ties : Thanks ·
passed , as did South . giving
, Novemb er 16th and
Belladonna doubled and the 11th , Christmas,
Dec. 21s t and
rest passed.
22nd , New Year's EVe ., Dec .
Belladonna opened the 31st. Available for privat e
ties , Monday , Tuesday,
king of diamonds and shifted par
Thursday eveni ng s. SaL and
to the five of hearts. South Sv nday afternoons . Open
could have escaped for a loS.s Wed .. Fr iday, and Sat urday
evenings. 7:30-10 :30. Call 985of 800 by iettinfi that trump 3929,
985·3803 or 985 -9996.
ride toward hiS nine, but
ll -l3 -12tc
.;.___..,_
South went up with the ace
and eventually was down FOR a r eal Christmas gift for

_____

'964

Pass

ABSOLUTELY no deer hunt 1.. g
or hunting or trespassing on
th ese farm s : Virgil Hamm ,
opments and they ca me with . Helen Baer , Walla ce ' Am berger , Charles Yost , Vern on
delightful speed.
Nea se. Iv an Well.
The American North
ll -15-6tp

Pass
Pass

To make matters worse,
East and West had no game.
A spade lead would beat
three notrump; almost any
defense would beat a minorPIANO tunina
suit game.
(NEWSPAPER E.'\lTEfl.PRISE ASSNJ

3rd &amp; Sycamore Streets .
Gallipolis, Ohio
"Your Farm Supply .Super Mkt."

Landmark Has Gifts For ·The.Family, For The Home.

•' One reason for the great
success of ltal~'s Blue team is
that they don t bid psychics
and ther seem to be able to
jake ful advantage of the opportunities given them when
,an opponent bids a psychic
JISainst them.
·
, Today's hand is taken from
'\he finals of the 1957 World's
championship.
~ The American South
decided the time was ripe to
'try · a psychic heart bid .
•Gwrgio Belladonna, sitting
'West, passed to await devel- .

The

bid~ing

t3l1!1Mill~®u..t -~t.J ..-1 , _
hy H{NIU ARNOtO oiiH I BOO tEE

Unoeranible th••• foor Jumbl•s.

.onl!" letter to each square. to

form four ordinary words.

West

North

East

I•

Pass

Pass

I[

You, South, hold :
• A 2 f5 +A Q J 8.1 .A K J 6 5
What do you do now?

I

A - Bid three clubs anyway.
You need very little rrom
partner to make a game.
TODAY'S QUESTION
You bid three c lu bs and

!

Antwer1

••'
•
•

·

•

•

~BUYA

••
•
••
•••
••
•

•"•
••
•
••
•

••

•"

••
•••
••
•

HOrtEUTE·xL2·

•

•

~SAW

•
•,.'

for only

•••

$119.95

••
•
••

"
•"
"

••"
MICROWAVE OVEN

Compresses household trash to less
than a fourth of original volume.
Mashes paper, cans, bottles, plastics,
boxes, wrappings, and sweepings.
Waterproof bags stay strong even
when wet Optional cutting board top
. .. unit can also be built in.

HOM ELITE ELECTRIC
MODEL 110-E

•69.95

..""
••
••
•
•

COI.NII

·

How a breadwinner U not apt

-

to •pend hil time- LOlliNG

8.

12:55 - Ted Mullins 10.

1: 00 - Lower Lighthouse 13 ; Pro Footba II 3, 4, 15 ; Pro Football

a. lO .

Issues &amp; Answers 6, 13 .

2: 00 - College Football l973 )3 ; Soul Train 6.
3: 00 - 0ther People, Other Places6 ; Survival13.
3: 30 - Odd Couple 6; Jimmy Dean Show 13.
4:00 - Pro FootballS, 10 ; Rookies 6 ; America 13 ; Fre n ch Chef
33; T BA 15; NFL Same of the Week 3; Star Trek 4.
4: 30 - Help Wanted 33 ; Perry Mason 3.
5: 00 .:__ Man and the Medic 33; Movie " The Comancheros" 13 ;
Film 4; Bill Daily 's Hocus Pocus Gang6 ; Holy Land 15.
5: 30- T' Aichi Ch ' uan 33 ; It Tak~s a Thief 3 ; Rose Kennedy's
Thanksgiving Special 4.
6:00 - Let 's Mak e A Deal6 ; Grand Master Chess 33 ; News 4:

TBA 15.

Open 9 to?

. GAUL'S

SHAKE HAVEN
SR 7

Chester; 0.

17- Small child
IS-Con ju nction
19-C iimbing plant
20-Ci ty in
Ge rmany
27-Goddess of
healing
29- Word of sorrow
31-Before
36-Young horse
37-Unlock
39-Poses for
portrait
40- Arabian. prince
41 -Caudal
appendage
42- lnvestigations
43-G rain
44- Juncture
46- A continent
(abbr.)
48- Ge nus of
holly family
49-Co nvlvial
50-Esca ped
51-Lasso
52-Go in
53-Japan
55-Breathes loudly
in steep
56-Bard
57- Chemical
com pound
58- Appears
61-Po litic&lt;'ll group
63-Di llseed
64-Eq ual
68-ln cricket,
kind of
pitch (pl.)
70-Guided
71-Portions
73- Pinched
74-Let it stand
75- Spear
77- Small twig
78 .......Stupefy
SO-Scorch
81-GoU mound
83-Mi re
84- Drunkards
87- Roman
officials

6: 30 -

World at War 6 ; VInce Lombardi : Science and Art of

Football33 ; NBCNews3, l5,4; TBAB.

7: 00 - -Zoom 20. 33 ; Wild Kingdom 15 ; Safari to Adventure 3;
Circus 4 ; Lassie B; In the Know 10 ; Untamed World 13.
7: 30 .,- World of Di sney 3, 4, 15 ; Mountain Scene 33; FBI6, 13 ;
The Thanksgiving Treasure 8. 10 : Godspell Goes to Plimoth
Plantation 20.
8: 00 - Men Who Made the Movies 20; A Session of Gilbert and
Sullivan For All 33.
B: 30 - Frank Sinat ra 3, 41 15; M~wie " The Hospital " 6. 13.
9:00 - Masterpiece Theater 33, 20 ; Once Upon A Mattress 8, 10 .
9:30- Dinah in Search of the Ideal Man 3, 4, 15.

10:00 - Firing Line 20, 33.
89- Bricklayer's
hammer
90-C rlpples
91-Egg·sha ped
92-Communists
93---Bad
95- Man·s name
96- Hindu guitar
97- Minute
pore in )eaf
99-Call
101-Join
105- Toll
106-Solar disk
107-0rgans of
he 21ring
11 1- Merry song
112- Palnful
113-Highway
11 5-Soa ks
116- Bone marrow
118-Rage
1lf}-Rabbit
121 - Highest
Buddhist
religious state
123- A state (abbr.)
125-Jmprisonment
126-- Macaws
127- Rent~

129- Lift
130- Downy duck
131 - Sodlum
chloride
132- Separate
134-Music:
as written
136--Apathetic
137- Protective
ditches
139-Tree 1tunk .
140- PintaH duck
i44-Dance step
145-Bishopric
1.46--Possesses
147-Conjui-.ction
148-Cut
149-Writing
Implement
151- Parent
(co lloq .)
153- Compass point
155-Beholdl
157- A state (abbr.)

10:30 ---:- News 6, 8; High Road to Adventur~ 10 ; Newsmaker '73
, 13 ; We Think You Should Know 3; Police Surgeon 15; Johnny
Mann ' s Stand Up and Cheer 4.

ll :OO - News3, 4, 6.8, 10, 13, 15.

11 : 15 -

Police Surgeon 6 ; CBS News 10, 13 ; Movie " Tobacco

Road" B.

11 : 30- Fa ce the Nation 10 ; Don Kirschner's ROCk Concert lJ ;
Movie " I' m No Angel " 3 ; Johnny Carson 4, 15.
ll : 45 - Goo.d News 6.
.
12 :00 - Urban League 10.

..

12: 15 - College Football1973 .6.
12 : 30 -

Movie " The Creeping Flesh" 10.

1:00- News 4. ·

MONDAY. NOV. 19, 1973
6:00 -

Sunrise Seminar" 4; Sacred Heart 10.

6: l5 - School Scene 10 .
6:20- Farm Report 13.

6:25 - Paul Harvey 13 .
6: 30- Bible Answers 8 ; Good News 13 ; News 5; Five M inutes to
Live By 4.
6:35 - Columbus Today 4.
6:45.:..... Corncob ReP9rf 3; FarmWne 10.
7:00 - Today 4, 3, 15 i CBS News 8, 10; Flintstones 13; Romper
Room 6.
7:30 - Rocky&amp; Bullwinkle 13 i New Zoo Revue6 .
8:00 - Capt. KangarooS, 10 ; Sesame St. 33; New Zoo Revue 13 ;
Timmy and Lassie 6.

8:30- Huck &amp; Yogi 6; Dick Van Dyke 13.
8: 55 -

News 13.

9:00 - Paul Dixon 4 ; Phil Donahue 15; Friendly Junction 10;
AM 3: Brady Bunch 6; Abbott and Costello B; Movie "Rally
'Round the Flag, Boys!" 13.
9:30 - To Tell the Tr"uth 3; Secret Storm 8; Michaels &amp; Co. 6.

9: 55 - Chuck White Report 10.
10:00- Dinah Shore 3, 15; Joker's Wild 8, 10.

10:30- Baffle 4, 3, 15; $10,000 Pyramid 8, 10; Mike Douglas 6.
11: 00 - Password 13; Gambit 8, 10 ; Wizard of Odds 4, 3, 15; Unto

the Hills 33 .
1l :30 - Hollywood Squares

4,

3, 15 ; Love of Life 8, 10; Brady

Bunch 13; Bowling 6; Sesame Street 33.
11 : 55 - News 8; Dan Imel's World. 10.

l2 :00 - Bob

Brau~ ' s50- 50

Club 4; Jeopardy 3, 15; News 8, 10, l3 ;

Password 6.
12 : 30-3 W's 3, 15 ; Search for Tomorrow B. 10; Split Second 6.
12:55- NBC News 15, 3.
1:00 - All My Children 6, 13 : Not for Women Only 15 ; News 3;
Concentration 8; What's My Line 10 .

1:30 - 3 On A Match 4, 3, 15;
Make A Deal 13, 6.

2:00 -

As

the World Turns 8, 10; Let's

Days of Our Lives 4, 3, 15 ; Newlywed Game 6, 13 ;

Guiding Light 8, 10.
2:30- Doctors4,3, l5 ; Edgeol NlghtB, 10 ; Girl in My Llfe6, l3 .
3:00- Another World 4, 3, 15; General Hospltal6, 13; Price Is

Per"sonallty and Behavioral Developme_nt 33.

••
"•
•
••"
••

6:30- NBC News 3,

4,

l5; ABC News 6; CBS News 8, lO ;

Hogan's Heroes 13.
7:00 - Tn~th or Consequences 3, 6 ; Circus 13 ; Bobby Bowden

15; Mulligan Stew 3; Beat the Clock 4; News 10; What's My

Line 8; Electric Co. 20.
7: 30- Bobby Goldsboro 3; Hollywood Squares .. ; To Tell the
Truth 6; Buck Owens 8; Municipal Court 10; Beat the Clpck
13; Episode Action 33 ; Wac;ky World of Jonathan Winters 15 ;
lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20 .
·
'
8:00 - B. C. Cartoon 3, 4, 15 ; Rookies 13 ; National Geographic
6; Gunsmoke 8, 10 ; The Killers 20. 33.
.

8:30 - Flip Wilson 3, 4, 15 . .
9:00 - Movie "Colton Comes to Harlem" 3, 4, l5 ; Pro Football6,
13 ; Here' s Lucy B. 10.

'

9:30 - Dick Van DykeB, 10 : Heart Dlsease20 ; Book Beat33.

APPLIANCES

10:00 - Medical Center a, 10 ; News 20; Paul Nuchlms 33.

11 :00 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15; Janak133.

11 :30- Johnny Carson 3, -.., 15 ; Movies :'All the Fine Young
Cannibals" B; "Of Human Bondage" 10.
12:00 - News 6, 13.
·
12:30 - Movie "The Leather Saint" 13.
1:00 - Tomorrow 3, 4.
·

POMEROY LANDMARK

2:00 - News 13, 4,

OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 8 TO 6
Phone 992·2181
I

•
'

PINCIL

Highlights

11 : 30 - Th is is the Answer 3; Make A Wish 6, 13; ln si ght1 5; OSU
Football Highl ights 4 .
12 :00 - At Issue 3; Bowling 6; Rev. Calvin Evans 13 ; West
Virgi nia Univers ity B; Colum~us TOINn Meeting 10 ; Open
Bible 15.
12: 30 - Revival Fires 13 ; Meet the Press 3, 4, 15; Pro Football
Pre-Game B.

1: 30 -

try Gaul's Turkey
SPECIAL

(Aiuwen Mund•r)

PAIAA

Together lO.

8: 55 - Black Cameo 4.
9: 00 - Singing Jubilee 3; Cadle Cha pel 4; Oral ~o berts 10 ; Rex
Humbard 6, 15 ; Hair Bear's Bunch 8.
9 : 30 - Church by Side of Road 4; Chr'ist is the Answer 13 ;
Amazing Chan .8; Popeye 10.
10: 00 - Church Services 4; This is the Life 3 ; Faith for Today 13 ;
• Ki d Power 6, 13 ; Rex Humbard 8; Movie " The Mountain " 10.
10 :30 - This is fhe Life IS; Vision ()') 6 ; Insight 4; Osmonds 13 ;
Captain Noah 3.
11 : 00 ~ Poi nt of View 6 ; TV Chapel J ; Focus on Co lumbus 4;
Across the Fe nce 15 ; H. R. Pufnstuf 13 ; Co llege Football

5:30 - Beverly Hillbillies 8; Gomer Pyle. USMC l3 ; Electric
Company 33; Trails West 15; Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
5:55- Earl Nightingale 15.
6:00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, l5: ABC News 13; Sesame St. 20 ;

•

Jack W. Caney, Mgr.

HEAVY truc.k mechanics ,
diesel ex per ien ce prefer"'ed
but not required . We are
looki ng tor heavy tru ck
mechanics w ith general
r epair exper ience necessa ry .
Must be able to overhaul
transmiss ion and rear ends
and be fam iliar with air brake
system . Wage and benef its
competit ive w ith Indust r y .
J OHN GIBSON MOTOR
CITY, INC ., Rt , 56 west.
Athens. Ohio . Contact Gordy
Gibson. 593-775 8.
1l -16-2tc

SU NDAY , NOV . 18, 1913
6: 00 - Travelogue 4.
6 : 30 - This Week 4 ; Newsmaker '73 13; Lamp Unto My Feet 10.
7:00 - Time for Timothy 4 ; Jenny Falwell 13 ; Commun ique 6;
Look Up and Live 10.
7: 30 - Faith for Today8 ; Re viva l Fires 6 ; Herald of Truth 3;
Yours for the As k.lng 4; Camera Three 10 .
8 :00 - Leonard Repass 8; Gospel Caravan 6 ; Church Service
13 ; Billy James Hargi s and his All -America n Kids 10 ; Mor mon Choir 3 ; Day of Discovery 4 .
8 :30 - Oral Roberts 3 ; Your Hea lth 4; Day of Discovery 8 ; Rex
Humbard 13; Revival Fires 15 ; Ka thryn Kuhlman 6; Get

Hazel 8; Gilligan's Island l3.

•
'

WOULD like someone to com e
in and stay w ith gr"andson ,
and Inval id husband 6 or 8
days during my stay at the
hospital. Phone 992 -7268 .
11 -l6 -4tc

orrrxxJ

1

Television Log

5:00 - Bonanza J ; MervGriffln4 ; Mission: lmposslble6 ; Andy
Griffith 8; Mister Rogers 20, 33 ; I Dream of Jeannie 13 .

"

TRASH COMPACTOR

'Free carry case also available when
you buy the 150 Automatic or Super EZ
Automatic with 16" bar, at the regular pnce.

EX PERIENCED beaut y
operator w ith . ,manager 's
l icense . Apply in person
Dorothy 's Beaut r Salon •
Syracuse, Ohio.
1115-3tc

- - - - -- - - - -

Right 8, 10; Know Your Antiques 20 ; Adlerian Counseling 33 .
3:30- Return to Peyton Place 3. 15; One Life to Live 13; Phil
Don·ahue 4; Secret Storm 10 : Match Game '73 8; Flintstones
6; French Chef 20.
·
4:00 - Mr . Cartoon and the Banana Splits 3: Love, American
Sty le 13; Movie "R hino!" 10; Somerset 15 ; Sesame Street 33,
20; Speedracer 6 ; LucY ·Show e.
4: 30 - Green Acres 3 ; Jeopardy 4; ·Bonanza 15 ; I Love Lucy 6 :

•

Imagine •. cooking a meat loaf in 18
minutes, a hamburger in two, or baking a whole chicken in only 24! No
special wiring needed, runs on 120
volt fiouse current, only 22" by 15%"
by 18'14", counter-to~ model.

[J l

71- Pronoun
131-Certain
72-Num ber
'132-Skil l
1-Secreting organ 74-Cylinder
133-Frock
76-Weight of India 135-P ronoun
6--Spanish fo r
··good. bye"
77- Let it stand
138- River Islan d
]] -Toward the
78-Son of Noah
139-Revea l
cen ter
79- Person of
140-Resort
16-Sca rf
nob le birth
141-Large tub
'21 - Part of step
82-AIIay
14 2- Neg&lt;~tive
22-Nips
84- Heavenly
143-Cyprinoid fish
23- Dis reputable
bodies
144- European
24-East Indi an
85- Point of
145-S h ~tter
lemur
hammer
147- Pertaining
25-Ronian bronze
86-Part of leg
to the nose
26-Pe riods of
88- Certain
149- Edible seed
time
89- Acid
150-Part of flower
28-Uquid
90- Former N .Y .
152-Scoff
30- Tidy.
Yankees
154- By oneself
3f-Conjunction
pitcher
156- 0pen to view
33- Symbol for
92- F'all back
158-Wipe ou t
tho ron
94- Straight159- Saccharine
34-Suffix:
forwardness
160-Rail birds
fo llower of
98-DecJa re
161 - Trousers
35-Conducted
99- At this place
36-Vehicle
100-Su ffix :
DOWN
37-N umber
rela.ting· to
38- Worm
102-S pecies
1- Grind with
40-Build
103-0ccupy chair
rasping sound
42-Equailty
104-lnsane
2-Hold on
43- Arrlve
105- Cus hions
property (pl .)
44-Rea ch ac ross
106-Piace in line
3-Beast of
45- Doctrine
108- Speck
burden
47-Fiight of steps 109-Preposition
4- Compass point
49- Philippine
110- Latin
5-Arid
knife
con junction
6- Les sens
50- Toll
111-Haw;,iian
7-Leads
51-K eep
wreaths
8- Po;sesslve
54-Storage pit
11 2-Pertaining to
pronou n
55--Classify
the stars
9-Faroe Islan ds
56--Carpenter's
114- Apothecary's
whirlwind
tools
'weight (abbr.)
tO-Compass point
S9- Those holding 116- Knave at cards
11- Chemical
office
1·17-Continued
compound
story
60- Bone of body
12-Want
62-State In Syria
119- Garden tools
13-Sai lor (co lloq .)
64- Verse
120-Metal
14- Part of "to be ''
65-Symbol for
122- Flight of
IS-Mach ine that
tellurium
Mohammed
converts
66-Near '
124- Everyone
mechanical
67-Work at
125-Mend with
energy Into
one's trade
cotton
electrical
126-Attack violently
69-Gaseous
energy
element
128-Make lace
16- Narrow,
129- Lease
70- Sow
flat board

••

WHEN

CARHOP and waitress wanted .
Apply in person at Crow 's
Steak House .
11 -13-10tc

SUNDAY , NOVEMBER 18, 1973

••
"•

Defrosting never needed un
this great side-by-side ... 6.8
cu. ft. freezer, 14.9 cu. ft.
fresh food section. Rolls on
wheels, has ali inside lea·
tures you want, plus unique
exterior ice service that
gives you cubes right
thru the door!

BEAUTICIAN wanted , fu ll or
parttlme . Helen 's Beauty
Shop.

If you want to get out

Now arrance the circled. letters
to form the surpriae aJ\IWer, u
ounesled b71be obove cartoon.

per, zinc and nickel.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Notice

II

cu pboards , wa ll ' WANTED old upr ight p ibnos.
cupboards, chests , old guns,
any conditi on . pay ing 110
any condltion . Also blue
each . Wr ite and g ive direc
decorated stoneware. Write
tions to Witten Piano Co. Box
P. 0 . Bo;,c .u, Mart itlsburg ,
188, Sard is , Ohio 43946.
ll -U -6tp
Ohlo, 43935 or call 1·484 -44.40
1
after p .m .
8_8 _901 ,, N O-'IcoPPER.70c,R"i~iators ,
- - - - - - - - - - - - -33c. brass , JOe . balfenes, 90c .
German siJver contains no M . A. Hall. Reedsville . Phone.
silver. It ls an alloy or cop- 378 ' 6249 ·
11 . 8 Iff;

The Dai~ Sentinel

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS

NO-FROST FOOD
CENTER WITH EXTERIOR
ICE SERVICE ·

Nei!ded al once lor !be
Racine-S yr a c use area.
Apply at

OPEN
lliANKSGIVING DAY

l'lilllil su•aiiiSWIIm

\'etloerd•y••

NO l.lfl.IOS

...

He IJ()t

II I

Jumblct t GAILY

your
partner bid s three diamonds.
What do you do now?

[

tjiE!

?

-

(r&lt;!'ll"""''_'_
...,.,.... ....

TACTINj

Serving Meigs, Gallia and Mason Counties
SLATE SERVICE
MASON - The teenage and
youth group will present a
Thanksgiving program at the
First- Baptist Church here at
7:30 p.m. Wednesday. The
public is invited .

Do

II

has been:

a

CHAIN
SAW

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

I GIRRO

MOTOR ROUTE
DRIVER

REGULATIONS

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

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

•

~

The Pub! is her reserves -the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed object ional.
The
publisher w ill not be respon HOLIDAY SPECIAL PRATT ' S Si ble for more than one • in ·
.
BEAUTY SALO N, November correc t insertion
RATES
12th tt1rou9h 24th . Realistic
For want Ad Service
Perm tor 11nt ed , blea ched . or 5 cents
per W.ord one insertion
hard to hold ha ir made w ith
Minimum Char geSl.OO
natural or9anic prote in .
u cents per word three
Regular S30 perm s tor $15 . consecut
ive inser1ions.
Regular S2S perms for Sl2 .50.
26 ce nts per word six con .
Call today tor appo intment secut
ive insertions.
ask for Mac or Oebb i. 99t 25
Per
Cent Discount on pa id
37S1.
and ads paid with in 10
ll -11 12tc ads
days .
-~----'--- - - -----CARD OF THANKS
BAND at the Ja ck's Club
&amp; OBITUARY
Friday and Saturday nights .
S2.00 for 50 word min ll -16·2tc lm um . Each addit ional word
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIGS . Jc .
BLIND ADS
Spec ials each mon th . We will
Additional
25c Charge per
gla dl y sh ow you our line of Advertisement.
Kosmet ic s in the privacy of
OFFICE HOURS
your home a t your co n ·
8; 30 a .m . to 5 :00 p .m . Dai ly,
ven ience , Rem em ber , Chris t a . m . to 12 :00 Noon
mas is not far away so phone 8Sa: 30
t!Jrday .
Helen Jane Brown, 992 -5113.
11 -9-ttc Wanted To
-------------FLETC HER P iano Service. WILL do paper nang1ng and
Tun ing &amp; Repl!l ir . Call 698pa inting . Call Ar th ur Musser ,
7731 .
742 -5223.
ll -6-261p
10 -21 -JOfp

WantP.II To Buy

~ CORNER

5 P .M . Day Before Publ ic-a:tion
Monday Deadline 9 a .m.
Cancella t ion - Corrections
will be accepted until 9 a .m . for
Day ot Publ ication

Run Sportsman Club. noon
Sunday , factory choke-d guns
only.
11 1S-31c

Wanted To Buy

Help Wanted

WANT ADS
•NFORMATION
DEADLINES

-------------SHOOTING MATCH , Forked

&amp;
repa iriM.
Lane Daniels, 259 Broadway ,
Middleport. Phone 992 -2082.
11 -18-12tp

'

sawrnilllimhing, con ~tr ucti on johs1 all -Mound farm cu tting. It oi ls its own 14~'
bar and chain autom !ltic.l ll y ,.:h Y~'u cut. Oeh!Xl' .~iJ;; ter- ~ l ip handle with

vinyJ covered handl cb:Jr.

You' ll like our competent,

(By Oswald &amp; Jametl Jacoby

CENTRAL SOY A

Builders Association said
Friday.
The new regulation, which
the builders assoeiation said
has placed a high financial
burden on the construction

Power Mac 6·

'

SIZES 7 to 12
SIZES 3 TO 6 16.49

good conservation program on

11

• A954

I

WELLINGTON BOOTS '6.95

B&amp;G Auc tion, Athens. 0 ..
will pay cash for your entire
household or · any good
miscellaneous items or wi:l
hold an auction for you a t
your residence, reasonable .

Blue Team psychicanalysis

West

cost of building

Id ' ·F

PHONE "2-2176

Gallipolis Ferry, he operates a
large farm near Circleville,
Ohio.
Mr. Gills has carried out a

Are You Moving?
Considering
An Auction?

593-5035 Collect

WIN AT BRIDGE

.. 74
Both vulnerable

INSUlATED BOOTS

Notice
•
Notice
LOST - 1 brown purse between , - -- - - - - - - - - - - , SHOOTI N G Match , Ra ci ne Gun
Club . Nov . 18, 1 p . m . assorted
Veterans
Hospita l
and
meats . Factory choked guns
Bill Wade, Auttioneer
Pomeroy . Thursday , Nov .
on tv .
ISth . Reward . Call (304) 882
11 15 3tc
2206 , after 1 p .m .
•

Or . Pickens and the s taff of
Veteran' Mernor iill Hospltal.
the Ewing Funeral Home .
pa;llbearers , Syracuse
11 -18-ltc
Emergency Squad , Rev .
Bellmont and Roy Bu!h , the
Notice
Svra cuse Ladies Au11: 1Uary , SHOOTI NG Mat ch,
Cornwho served the dinner , neigh Hollow Gun Club , turn first
bors , friends , and relatives
r ig ht after Miles Cemetery ,
who broug'ht in the food , those
Ruttand . Factory c hoked
who sent flow ers, money , and
guns only . Sunday . Nov . 18, I
sympat hy cards . Special
p .m .
than-.s to C.row 's Steak. House
and
employees.
Club
Restaurant and employees.
Match Horner Hi ll
Mrs . Mayme Custer and sons , SHOOTING
Gun Club, Rt. 143, Sun day ,
Melvin, Jerry , Bill , wives ;ind
Nov . 18, 12 noon . Fac tory
grandchildren .
cho'ked
gvns only .
11 · 18-ltp
l1 -15-31C

•
•

Trash rule hikes

r-~--~~~~~------~---------------------.,·
companies, was adopted by the
Mrs. Claus Says
Ohio Environmental Proteclion Agency Sept. 10, 1973.
Here's Great . . .
ea or
an
Most commercial haulers,

'

I

1!n3

Card of Thanks

THE FAMILY Of E&lt;i!irl Custer

t085
: + AK7

COVIC DINNER - Civic and Industrial leaders seated at the head table
at Thursday night's Central Ohio Valley Industrial Council meeting in Point
Pleasant at the Red carpet Inn, were William Rardin, Jr., County Court
president; Mike Shaw, Mason County delegate ; George Hervey, COVIC

11t

For Fast Results Use The Sunday 'T imes-Sentinel Classifieds

:

•INSUlATED JACKETS
.WORK GLOVES
•INSUlATED COVERAUS

1\t""

I

I

�25-The Sunday Tunes Sentinel Sundav Nov 18 1973

}:;;;lF~;~sunRo~~ults Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

l'or Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
~
0n'a'..:'! R~~~gNe~ SA~~9 ~~~~~~~~p
~.~~~~~:ve"~nda'~~."
OHIO RIVER
RUSSELL
STROUT
fHE
~ ~n95hem
~e
MASSIE
Realty
WOOD
REAlTY
AI'JOR
WISEMAN

For Sale
For Sale

Wanted To Buy
WANTED
o

Business Services

SEW N G

auc on

househo d goods Too s mos
any h ng o va ue w I buy o
hav
se on comm ss on W
ca
99 2' JJH o
992 2791
Hayman s

PRE FABR CATED

OLD

u n u e oak ab es
cocks ce bOllf!S b ass beds

dshes

o

househo ds
w e M D
M e R .t Pome oy Oh o
'" 992 617

5 3

-·------- ~

wo k. gene a

hou

o

on

WOOD TRUSSES

w:;;,

ELECTRO UX
Va uum
C eane
comp e e
a IT' en s co dw nde
ad
pan
p av Used b1.,1 n
k. c
new
ond Of'!
Pay S3 5
c a ~h o budqc p an a a abe
Phone 99'1 '198
86

compee

Employment Wanted
CARPENTER wo k miiSOn

F om he a oe s

KNAPP Shoes o de now o
nsu e p e Xmas de ve y
Phone 992 5324

y

Phone 993

H

For Rent
FURN SHED apa men
5
a ge oom s and ba h w h
enc osed back po ch and n e
ya d Pome oy Oh o phone

DEAL home o wo
seep ng ooms
n ce k
hen and
TV
ean and
week Mason

N

y

'

S T-R·E·T·C·H

CONSTRUCTION

YOUR BUILDING
D-0-L-L A R

Roofmg Spoutmg
K tchens &amp; Bathrooms
Complete Remodeling

PHONE
742-6273

OfFICE SUPPLIES

and
FURNITURE

Stop ln and See Our
Floor D1~lay

PH 992 6675

u

Adu

RUSSELL'S

- ----

8

BRUSH HO GS
992 5858

ROOMS by he week s B up
Me gs nn Pome oy

5

a k
ome

PR VAlE mee ng
any o gan za on
O_o 3975

phone

4x5

Req Ha

C BRADFORD Av onee
Com p e e Se v ce
Phone 949 382
Rae ne Oh o
c
B ad o d

hen w h

one

0

s

e o

0

WHEEL A gnmen
oca ed a c oss cads R 124
now back o wo k Comp e e
f on end se v ce une up and
brake
se
ce
Whee s
ba anced e ec ron ca y
A
wo k gua an teed Reasonab e
ales Phone 742 3232

EXCAVAT

Mason W Va
h ghway

Phone

2

New

3s 4

REG STEREO H ampsh
boa s Pho e 843 2 56

928

p
LARGE

bu d ng
gs A ea
es
ted o ho ses on y
Tuppe s Pans &amp; Ches e
wa e a a abe Ca
o see
B
w e 992 2 69

3 AND ill ROOM
un u n shed
Phone 992 5434

os a

4

2

LER
Mason w va
coup e on y phone 992 5693
6

"'fRA

E

Mobile Homes For Sale

chen

r

6J p

For ::.ale
APPROX MATE Y 20 a es o
and exce en bv d ng 5 e
ca
42 5223
0 2 30 p

9 3
G ZAG sew ng ma h ne
Th s mach ne da ns
em
b ode s
o e as s
and
monog ams a
w hou a
achme n s Pa
ba an e o
$4 50 a pay $6a mbn h Ca
992 533
(

EXCELS OR Sa
Wo KS t:.
Ma n s
Po me oy A k nds
sa
wa e pe e s wa e
0
nugge s bock sa
and own
Oh o R ve Sa
Phone 992
389

ysan hemums fo
We on y
have one coo
ye ow
0
bun hes o $5 we have some
ou
n u b oom some us
budd ng Reyno ds F owe
Shop Mason W va Ca 773
9 26

c:

SA
CE AND SNOW
Ro k sa
o
ownsh ps
ow s and bus nesses n
bu ks and bags o
ce and
snow Ex e o Sa
Wo k.s
Phone 992 3B9
(

MOB LE home
a p umbng
Phone 992 5856

MILLER
, MOBILE HOMES
220 Wa sh ngton B vd
423 752
BELPRE 0

E MAIN'---POMEROY

MIDDLEPORT

2 soy

a me

CASH pa .d o a makes and
modes o mob e homes
Phone a ea code 6 A 423 953

4 3

BERRY M L LE R Mob e Hom e
sa es has a o o o er when
yo sta
shopp ng o you
Mob e Home Yo
an bea
he h Qh dep e a on
ha e on
ou hom e o
he
wo yea s b shopp ng
s
sed Mob e
o a a e mode
Home He e a e som e e e y
day ow pr ces 60x 2 P M c
$4 995 00 60x 2 Champ on
$4 495 00 60x 2 Rem b ad
$3 995 00 4 bed oom s 50x 2
De o er $4 95 oo 4 x 2
Regen
$3 795 00
65x 2
De o er $8 295 00 60x 2
w ns on $5 495 00 60x 2
P M C $5 995 00
e y n e
60x 2
Beve y
Mano
SS 995 00
65x 2
be
S4 500 00
60x 2
Ba on
$5 995 00 sox 0 De o e w h
3 expandos $3 495 00 SOx 0
R cha dson $2 600 00 55x 0
V nda e
52 995 00
SOx 0
Hun ng on $2 995 00 SOx 2
$2 995 00
35x8
R
c a
D
o e
S 995 00
45X8
Ande son s 995 00
heSe
a e IT\ OS y a
a e mode
homes and the p
es n ude
you de ve y and com p e e
se up So o an hones
0
goodness good dea
s op n
oday a Be y M e Mob e
Home Sa es
05 Fa son
S ee
Be p e Oh o phone
423 953
osed Sundays
56

home 4 bed ooms
Ba h ga age Se e a o s
and pa I s o o s go w h h s
ASK NG $9 500 00 MAKE

AN OFFER
JUST OFF

RT

7

-

3

bed ooms New Ba h New
F A f u nace ut y oom
oom
o5 o
new
Rec
pane ng and t e new ou
ce a and s o age Large at

$8 000 00

MINERSVILLE -

soy

f arne 3 bed ooms ba h
Lo s of base cab nets n
k chen Gas s o es o hea
Po ches

Lo

s of ground

46 (

VA CUU M
973 Mode
c ean ng
damage n
S27 cash
ava abe

C eane s
Camp e e w
oo s Sma
sh pp ng W
o
budge
pan
Phone 992 2984
'6 (

·---,Z g Zag Sew ng

s NGER Au 0
Mach nes
n sew no abe
Makes bv onho es sews on
but ons b nd hems e c Top
no ch cond t on Pay S5 o
erms twa abe Phone 992
2984
14 6 c;

MIOD EPORT

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

usED Lumbe
bu d ngs
up o
poplar and p ne 2
6 2 1C 8 2 X 2
long used roof no
Ca t 992 5787 or s.ee
Ho ow nte s.ec::t on
33 W lbur Gr eSf

age
2 w de
x A 2 x
UP 0 :20
2 She~ s
t ,Jt Long
of Rou e

• 3p

N ce

bus ne ss
com
Love y
men I ave 3 bed ooms
ba th
D n ng
oom
N ce
k chen w h o s of cab nets
Gas
ho
wa e
hea
th oughou Ha dwood floo s
and ca pe ng 2 ga ages

AL MOST NEW

PROPERT ES
ARE
SELLING FAST ONE OF
THESE COULD HAVE
BEEN YOURS l ST WITH
US TODAY 9 YEARS
EX PER ENCE
HENRY E CLELAND
BROt&lt;E~

992 2259
If no answer 992 2568

TEAFORD
Vir-qd B. T\•,lford, Sr.
110 Mr-chilntc Street
Pomeroy. Ohto -l.S769

NEW LISTING

9 rooms '

one acre

NEW LISTING

- ---,--4 ---

Wanted To

......

---

RON NG S n home
"

------

B G

'

ROOM
HOUSE
emode ed Phone

new y
992 3162

PROF T

sALo N.

SMALL

COACHMAN Trave
Tra e
Moo
Homes
5 h Whee
Truck Campe s App e C ty
Au o Sa es R 35 N Jackson
Oh p Phone 286 5700
0

273

Ca II 446
Manager

ask

for

e exce en
NEW mob e
ocat on adu s on y Phone
4.46 0338
225 f
sma e
ency
apa men
No 6 f s
oor
adu s no pe s 729 Second

Ave

oLD
o
a ns
pa s o
any h ng onnec ed w th oy
a ns Ca 446 4B43 afte 4 30
f
p m and weekends
2 6

ef
bah
1

245

notice
2

WAGON WHEEL
ANTIQUES

BEDROOM dup ex
men
app ances fu
Phone -446 45 0

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

s Ph

TWO t ra e
446 3805

State Route 218
1 m1 S of Rt 7

'

264 tf

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

Open
Tuesday &amp; Thursdays
910 s

5 ROOM apa men on Second
AYe s 25 mon h a u t es
pa d excep elec c ca 446
1615 or 446 243
2733

Pt1one 446 2:467 even ngs and
weekends Phone 446 2:467 for
appointment

RVER FRONT apa ment
new turn sh ngs a u
t es
pa d bache or preferred $140
mon h ca
446 615 or A-46

DEAD STOCK
LL emove a a easonab e
cha ge Ca 245 55 4

243
5 ROOM hovse a
R o Grande a ea
requ red 446 2233

273 3

SUPER stuff sure nuf That s
8 ue Lus re for c ean ng rvgs.
and upho s ery Rent e ectr c
shampooe
$1 a
Cen a
supp
Co
273 6

GALLIPOLIS
CHAPTER
79R AM

v

YOU saved and slaved for wall
to wa
carpe t Keep t new
w th
B ue Lus re
Rent
e ec r c shampooer S1 at G C
Mu phy ower sore
273 6

Special Meet1ng
7 PM
November 19 1973
MK &amp; PM Degrees

-2 -BEDROOM
------12 x 50

Charles Wm Sibley E H P
Thomas E M1lls 5ecy
V s1tors Cord tally Welcome

home

n Add son

0294

--SEVERAL mob

mob le
Ca
446
273 tf

---------~--,

10

5 3 ( ________ .J. _________ _:::
272 ,

e

homes. total
c ec tr c at Kerr Oh o $125
per mo Ca 446 0175 o 4-46
1934
273 tf

1

II

1

3.57

U&gt;

Wa e De very Se v ce
Pa o S ar Rt Ga po s
Ph 379 2 33
243 f
_:_

____________

BANKS TREE SERVICE
FREE estma es
ab
y n
surance P un ng I mm ng
and cav y wo k t ee and
s ump rem ova Ph 446 4953

II

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

on

-ns and
A

For

Sale

Real Estate for Sale

o R

v

f

pan

ST

CAB NET Shop a I types of
wood work 101 Court Stree
Ph 446 7745
87 ,
&amp; S CONSTRUCTION
EXCAVAT ON and genera
emode ng Backhoe doze
and
ench ng Sept c anks
and oo e s A
phases of
p um b ng
w r ng
new n
s a a on Ca 388 9986

bu d ng

s e

New s ng agood
sma
a m w h a good ba n
o he
bu d ngs
ga age
oba co ba e Ha
a good
h ee bed oom home w h a
new ba h Good o a on and
he p ce s g

RT 7 5

00 A

SM TH RD

s0

S 0 000

- ------~-

and

a

4 A

000
Any hr 446

no
nd

998

----

Neal Realty
A DWELL NGS on one o A
have new a um num s d ng
Annua
enta $2 520 A a e
rented f n e es ed n a good
nves men ca
oday

LOOK NG fo a sum me home
We have a new 2 BR w h
bath sept c ank we wa e
and
oca ed on R a coo n
C ee-k
Ca
oday fo
an
appo n men
o see h s one

oa
gas
orc:ed
coppe
wood oo s

Off ce Phone 446 1694
Even ngs
Charles M Nea 446 1S46
J M chae Nea 446 503
Sam Nea 446 7358

s n c:e

see

oBEDROOMS
App ax

5 ac es

Seven
room house w h
a ge
mode n k chen w h bu
n b ch cab nets ba h w h
s howe
gas
u nace
24 x24 basemen pane ed
Ia s o shade t ees A real

buy a on y I B 900 00
9 ROOMS
Bedroom
bath
ep ace co ne at 50x 00
ft La s of nvestmen
poss b ty n th s prope ty

CLOSE TO HOSPITAL
.

.ATHENS OH 0 41570

SPECIAL THIS WEEK

Used Pants &amp;Shirts

.

99~

1

EACH

USED COVERALLS

•2'•

Unless you mean bus ness
We are now c;ons.1dertng
qualified applicants n your area to become a working
part of our Nat1onal Hot Food D str1butor System You
are not apply ng for a rob You are apply1ng for a very

PR

MEN'S IRREGUlAR DOUBLE KNIT

SLACKS • Reg. $395 pr.

h1gh proll busoness ol your own NO EXPERIENCE
NECESSARY NO SELLING INVOLVED This
bus ness can be started part time- no need to qutt your
tob Can be e-xpanded full t me with c:ompany ftnancn19
We need people we can depend on Our produds are
nationally famous Hot Food Items made by He1n1 We
have over 36 var ehes of Hot Soups and Hot Entrns such
as Beef Stew Ch cken &amp; Dumplings Chtli &amp; Beans and on
and on We have all of America s favor~tes All these
deltc1ous products are sold from the latest tn automattc
vending equipment Your route wtll be established and
nstalled by us Your age is not a fador tf you quahfy
Perfect for a n1ce couple to operate as a family business

SALE PRICE

2/'700

NEW SHIPMENT TAPES
ROCK

COUNTRY

CHRISTMAS

CASH INVESTMENT REQUIRED
PART TIME
PLAN ONE
$2 28S 00
PLAN TWO
$3161 00
PLAN THREE
$7 719 00
FULL TIME
PLAN FOUR
Sll 279 00
PLAN FIVE
$18 998 00
PLAN SIX
S36 791 00

RELIGIOUS

'298

For further mformatton or a personal interview sel'td
Name Address &amp; Phone number to North American

.,

'1795
•

FOR SALE By Owner 3 BR
b ck a
e ec c k chen
cen ra
a
baths
woodbu n ng
ep ace
m m ed a e
possess on
Fa v ew Subd v 245 53 2
272 3

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

FOR SALE by owne
3
bed oom house a l ca pe ed
f enced n ya d n Kanauga
Phone 446 2539

--·---~~---------'-=
264

.s

----------,-2:_-57 ,
ACRES 3 bed oom 2 bah
daub e w de 3 m es
om
town on M
C eek Road
S20 000 Ph 446 0126
26 tf

l'lumbmg

EACH

&amp; Healln

""

CARTERS PLUMB NG

Cor Fourth &amp; P nePhone 446 3888 or AA6 A477
65 tf

.

29 , ac e fa m 4 bed oom
home obacco base ba n
led wei s
T mber
d
m ne al gh s N ce fa m
n ce home

IN GALLIPOliS
2 Bedroom bu t n wa II
oven w th pul out 4 bvrne
rang e
gas fo ced a
fu ance
ca pet ng
throughout
of 160 x 3
On y
a r ~ond t on ng

Gall po s 4"6 "782

297
-·--·-----DEW TT S PLUMB NG

f

AND HEAT NG

s1

MADISON AVE
3 Bed oom home ot s ze40 x 3
n ce o
On y
$5 500 00

home us of
95 x 65 a
n ce ba h and
age
oun y

2 B R home n c y w h ba h w
se on and co n a
w h a
easonab e down paymen

9

A on Geo ges C eek Road
w
d
de o su buye has
ee na u a gas n dwe ng

2 BR home w th ba h sep c
ank. Wa m Mo n ng s ove
on Tabo Road $ 0 500
SEE h s o e
one vea
home has 3 BR
u y ca
pe ed ce n a a
beau u
k chen p s d n ng a ea w h
con en en es bu
n
a
am y
n shed
basement 2 ca ga
au oma
doo
oca ed oo R
35
hasp a

NEW L ST NG
NEW HOME
Befo e you buy be svre o
see h s ave v n ew anch on
he 0 J Wh te d c ose o he
new hasp a Th s b ck and
f arne beau v has a bu
n
k chen fo m a d n ng oom
u
y room 2 baths l4x 23 LR
and a a ge a o w h 25 f
f on age We a so have o hers
a he same oca on
MODERN
RANCH
W TH
BASEMENT
Ths ovey
home
s ocated on S a e
Rou e 554 nex o the B ctwe
g ade Schoo and ea u es 3
BR HWfoos 5x20LR 2
x 20 k tchen w h d shwashe
ange and o s of cab ne s
On y $23 000
BABY FARM
Th s a br ck
a e eel c home s ess han
y o d and offers o s of good
344
v ng or your am y
sq
ontheman oo w ha
basemen and garage
you
wan a n ce home and 4J,I,
ac es on s ate ou e 60 be
su e to see h s one
EASY TERMS
L KE NEW
3 BR ranch ess than y o d
o fe s a factory k chen w h
pa o doo s n
b eakfas ba
he d n ng a ea ga age and
a ge co ne
o
ose
o
Cen ena y
OW DOWN PAYMENT
VNTON
Compeey
em ode ed B m home of e s
o s of v ng space o some
ucky pe son Mob e home
pad s nc uded and w
he p
make he paymen s

ON LOWER
R ve
Road
mode n ame dwe ng w h 2
o 3 BR o e ook ng he Oh o
Th s home has new
R ve
a pe ng and new d apes
Mode n k. chen a so ve y
a ge
v ng
oom
2 car
ga age on a a ge o

tt

STANDARD
P umb ng &amp; Heat ng
214 Ttl rd Ave 446 3782
187 If

EUREKA
ONE OF THE
N CEST
em ode ed homes
ha you w
f nd anywhe e
Spec a ea u es a e a a ge
OP,en faye
ead ng
o
he
w nd ng sta way f ep ace n
R arge o ma d n ng m 4
BR and a arge o w h an
Oh o R ve v ew

KANAUGA

OWNER W l l

HELP F NANCE hs 5 m
home w h a ge com me c a
ype ga age

OH 0 R ve v ew 85
on age
and ex ends o he ve 3 BR
ng a ea 5 x 20 c arpe ed
modern k chen w h d sposa
ange w h hood ba h w th
showe gas fu -nace ga age
n basemen red woods d ng
y s hqo
shown by ap
po n men

M LLS V LLAGE
LOW
DOWN PAYMENT FOR THE
R GHT PERSON
before
you
buy
make an ap
po ntmen to see h s beauty
w h a arge 00 x 300 ot
o ma d n ng rm
u
basement 2 WB f ep aces
and ga age

BR CK home on Lowe R ve
Road n exce en cond ton 2
mode n k. hen
ep a
pus sum me k. hen n u
s zed basemen cen a a
3
po ches one car ga age
a !:1€ o
shown by ap
po n men

CLOSE TO B DWELL
N
m horne w h 3 ac es of
has 3 BR u basement
u nace and o s of p ne
on a BT d

t/JIIJIRlUNL
REALTY
25 Locust Sf
Howard Brannon B oker
Off 446 2674
Luc lie Brannon
Eve 446122.6 or446 2674
RED FLANNEL
WEATHER COMING
YOU CAN keep you oved ones
cozy and warm h s w n er n
h s we
nsu l a ted house
Lowe
ue b s oo Ranch
sty e 4 B R 1
ba h fam l y
oom
brary ga ra ge gas
fu n
a ge we
andscaped
awn and on y S26 500

HUGE

P~AYROOM

VERY n ce eat n k chen and
ove s ze aundry rm
com
fo abe LR
frepace n
spac ous p ayroom w th pat o
doo s ead ng to pat o and
extra a ge awn garage and
ou bu d ng $24 000
BR CK &amp; FRAME
3 YEAR o d home on 100 x 85
of 3 BR carpet n LR and 2
but n ktchen
BR
a
ga age s or age bu d ng Just
6 m f om own $22 000
EVERYBODY LOVES

'2 Bed oom
4 acres lots
of outbu d ngs n ce p c
ture v ew of the Oh o R ve
Pr ced on y s 4 900 00
47 ac es
m e of Rt 35
near Rodney 8 ac es pus
on Rt 60 nea Po te
4 443
acres
RIO
Centerpo n Rd nea R o

AGENCY
150 ACRE FARM

Located on L ncoln P ke n Harnson Twp
about 12 m from town 30 to 40 A tillable
balance 1n pasture and woods 1600 lb tobacco
base older 4 bedroom home Downst;;urs has
been remodeled Large barn 01wer anx ous
to sell Pnced at $27 000 oo
$12

Owner W11l Help
Fmance Very Very
Anx1ous To Sell
NEED
A
MODERN
l VEABLE HOME
TH S
ONE HAS A BEDROOMS
FAM L Y ROOM
0 N NG
ROOM
AND
FULL
BASEMENT
T S
A
MODERN
HOME
AND
OWNER W LL HELP YOU
F NANCE
T
CALL
US
FOR
FULL
DETA LS
WELL SHOW YOU TH S
HOME ANYT ME
T S
VACANT AND READY TO
MOVE NTO

Country Home On
Edge of
Bob Evans Farms

ce 5
and
new
rees

ENO
Ove an ac e of ro ng
and w h a mode n 6 m
home and basemen
On y

$16 900

0 d

9ACRESdeveopmen and R
4 and G aham Sc hoo Rd
8 ACRES n Po me oy
NEW homes out of town $26 500

up

NEAR HO SP TAL Love y one
f oo p an La ge eve ot
THE OUTCOME;
s ncome
when you buy
h s doub e
b ck on Second Avenue
LAN 0 &amp; LOTS Rt 141 and nea
R o G ande
BROCHURES

lol

POMEROY
NVESTMENT
2 bus ness ren als and 2
re s den a
enta s Large
corn e r o
Owne w
a ke

ade

FARMS

NEAR TYCOON LAKE- One
45 ac: e and wo 30 acre farms
A
are most y t ab e
F nanc ng ava abe
NEAR OAK H LL
28 A 40
A woods og cab n and tree
gas $13 000
LAWRENCE COUNTY
135
A 35 A t I abe ba ance n
woods arge tob base good
barn s 6 soo
ADD SON TWP -25A o ng
and most y woods coun ty
wa er ava lflb e u ooo
HUNT NGiON TWP
pasture and woods
beef ca e

dea

4A
for

ME GS (' fiit~TY 66 A
vacant
ne cut 4 500
ba es of ha
~A
2 we s
part a f nant. U
ava abe

RACCOON

CREEK

TAGE - 13 acre$
camps es $10 000

~46-0001
3 BEDROOM house ke new
Beaut fu kl chen w h d sh
washer p vs d n ng a ea a
cond
u
tv room and
carpe ting On Rt 35 P ced n
ow 20 s Phone 446 079 o
446 185-4
269 f

NEW 3 BR.
BRICK HOME
La ge I vlng room &amp; k chen

P enty of cab nets e ectr c:
range d Shwashe d sposa
fv y carf)eted 11'2 bath 2
ca
garage e ec c door
opener centrll
a r con
d ton
Located 6 m les up Rt 7 n
Country A r Estate
Can F nance
nqu re Corb n &amp; Snyder
Furniture
Cal446- 111
Affer 5-4"6 2573

fo

MORGAN TWP

83 A 84 A
5 A and 155 A P ces sta t
a S15000

DA RY FARMS
We have 2
Bo h are mode n and se
~ ade Am lk Bo h haves los
and good bu ld ngs
l you
THE COUNTRY
want a a m tha w
suppo t
220 ACRES 2 a ge barns 2
your tam l y ca us
a ge homes n ex a good
cond on good fence p enty L ST NGS NEEDED
wale
oca ed on BT oad
RAN NV BLACKBURN
l h. ACRES
BRANCH MANAGER
3 BR 2 bath module home a
e ect c 24 x 60 ba n and NE:,..,t&lt; completon al brck
outbu d ng $22 000
house w h f n shed fam y
IDEAL LOCATION
oom
n
basement
3
BUS NES S ot on Second Ave
bedrooms 1 2 baths
arge
o 190 x 60 w th ar:ge- bock
k tchen and d n ng .area w h
bu d ng
d shwashe d sp
ange and
S24 500
cab ne s o spare A e ec:tr c
W LL buy h s nea new br ck
w h central a
cond
car
and frame home beaut fu
pe ng 2 car garttoe w h
a Pf1
3 BR
modern as
Phone 4..6 079
e ectr c doo
om or ow k chen and d n ng
0 446 1854
a ea Ga age n ce o near
269 f
_:_
town

_________________

VERY

N CE

BEDROOM

MODERN

HOME

3

W TH

FAMLY
ROOM
NCE
K TCHEN
FORMAL
D N NG
LARGE
CAR
PETED L V NG ROOM
AND
LARGE
LAN D

LOT

PR CES

Brand New
Bnck Ranch
Lovely Location
JUST ACROSS THE OLD
M LL STREAM YOU LL
F NO
TH S
NEW
3
BEDROOM BR CK W TH A
BEAUT FUL K TCHEN
BATHS 0 N NG ROOM ON
A LARGE FLAT LOT ALL
ROOMS ARE LARGE AND
ALL ARE CARPETED
BU LOER HAS TAKEN
SPEC AL
CARE
N
DECORAT NG AND OF
FE RS A L TTLE MORE
FO R
THE
MONEY
PR CEO LOW TH RT ES
C TY SCHOOL D STR CT

Galt a Co s Large-if Rul
Estate sates Agency
Office""' 36"3
Evenings Call
e M Ike w s.em•n
446 3796

E N W seman 446 4500

Bud McGhee 446 1255
THIS br ck and frame beauty
has a bu I n k chen forma
d n ng room a fam y oom
w th a n ce f ~place 3 arge
bed oo m s w th close s to
spare wo arge bathrooms
ca pet ng
hrouohout
a
e ec
c w th central air
cond
arge two ca garage
w h an electr c doo Phone
446 1079 or AA6 1854
269 "
sMALL-fMm-w-t'l tobacco
base house 5 ooms and ba h
has coa l Ph 256 6930
167 6

TARA
Townhouse
Apartments
2 Bedroom
Townhouses
llh Baths
Pay Only One
Uhllty
AddiSOn OhiO

------..,

For lnformauon
t;,;all Shirley Adkms

367·7250

ANTIQUE AUCTION

FRON

dea

Seller Needs
A Buyer

BE H GHER TH S
SPR NG SO BUY NOW

NEAR HMC
Ths
y
od
ranch
featu es a b ck
font ga age 3 BR facto y
k chen and a arge carne
RODNEY
Moden A BR
anch w h pver an acre of
and Th s 5 y
o d beauty
of ers s 2 car garage hot
wa e
hea
P
baths a
cond
ful
basement w h
aundry and a ge
am ly rm
s one f replace

AL CE RD

W LL

YOUR
VERY
OWN
4
BEDROOM
CA PE COO
HOME
BRAND NEW AS
A MATTER OF FACT
F
YOU BUY NOW YOU CAN
DO
ALL
YOUR
DECORAT NG
NC UOES
A DEN
FAM LY ROOM
K TCHEN COMB NAT ON
W TH F REPLACE 2 CAR
GARAGE ON A LARGE
COUNTRY LOT
N C TY
SC HOOL 0 STR CT

FREE MAPS

TH S OLDER HOME HAS
BEEN
PART ALLY
REMODELED
NCLUDES
5 BEDROOMS
BATH
SHOP BLDG
CELLAR
ETC N CE LOCAT ON ON

SCAPEO

HERES AN OLDER HOME
THAT 5 MUCH BETTER
THAN AVERAGE T SA 2
STORY 3 BEDROOM HOME
W TH MODERN K TCHEN
MODERN HEAT NG AND
N CE WALL TO WALL
CARPET NG
EX
CELLENT
LOCAT ON
s 7 900 00

RANCHO COMPANY
THE HOME FOLKS
o ACRes obacco base
house Reasonab e

ooo Bargam

Large Home
3 Acres

Trad1t1onal
Amertcan Warmth

SAT NOV 24 10 OOA M
POMEROY OHIO
On Me1gs Co Fa1r grounds in lleated bldg (Just Off R 33
north of Pomeroy) Mr Martin 1s selling h1s collection of
glassware etc - many nice pieces in m nt condltton some have been tn storage smce 1910 Part •• ltsting

follows

ADD WILL RUN BUT ONCE

LAMPS rare tion tiead glass o I lamp oil lamp w tinted

base slag glass hall I ght other oil lamps CARNIVAL
Buiterfly &amp; Plume green water p tcher M Stippled Dot
Cusp dor p Floral &amp; D amond Point rose bowl b
Gar ands rose bow b Orange Tree mug
VIntage bowl

8

sev other pes (2 marked) PATTERN LASS. CHINA
POTTERY blue Stuben perfume red block pllcher

Vaseline powder jar w perfume bottle on lid 2 covered
butters 2 gold banded berry -sets Amber na fruit bowl
flashed Ruby souven r pes amber birds &amp; wheat mug birds
&amp; owt mug c:q,vered compote opalescent berry set blue
opalescent rose bowl sev other opalescent pieces In blue
&amp; green 2 syrup p tchers w glass lids 2 cranberry &amp; opal
sw rl vases cru t few pes m lk glass Dep G!a!is {Cherry
blossom pink sandw ch plate) Weller vase hair receiver
Copper lustre pitcher 6 china salts few pes b sque
Haviland tureen s gned &amp; dated) shaving scuttle
shav ng mug f o blue plate washbowt &amp; pitcher pair

f gurines efc ANTIQUE FURNITURE

2 nice china

cab nets - both w th curved glass - one w claw feet 3
round tabfes w ped bases ( 1 has claw feet) Frankl n
f replace playe plano 2 high headboard VIctorian beds
secretary bookcase (needs repa r} Wat parlor chelr
Jenny Lind bed bookca!.e w fold ng glas doors wash

I ,MILESSOOF
EUREKA ON RT 7

VACANT LAND

RUSSELL$
PLUMBING &amp; HEAT NG

Route 60 i!!t Eve g een
Phone 446 27~S

PR

3 Bed oom
ac e plus
N ce mode n 6 oom br ck
home
Lo s of t ees &amp;
sh rubb e y ga den space
u a wa er p us wo we Is
4 m le s from Ga po s See
h s one

$17 900 00

GENE PLANTS&amp; SON
?LUMB NG
Hea ng
A r
Cond on ng 300 Four h Ave
Ph 446 637

1

BULAVILLE RD

EUREKA

e on

ox
eek Rd
$2 500 ea
16 5

3 Bed ooms mode n home
w th
e ec
c
stove
~
ge a o
w h
ce
maker ga bage d sposa
d shwashe b ck &amp; s one
A n ce home

1 ,MILESFROM

2

AND HEATING

HIKEMASTER BOOTS
WITH VIBRAM SOLE

20 tf

LOTS
app
Geo ges c
f om R
984 0 446

3 BR new a e ec chouse a
ca pe ed w th wo ba hs and
enc osed f n shed ga age on
0 00 X 200 $27 000

a

tOny$890000

-

a! NOFITH COURT STREET

c homes

GRAC OUS town
v ng n a 3
BR home a r cond oned gas
u na ce
ep ace pane l ng
bath mode n
ca pe ed
k chen w cab ne s so m
doo s and
w ndows
basemen
shown by ap
po n ment
OFFICE 446 066
EVENINGS
Russe wood 446 46 a
Ron Canaday 446 3636
John R cha ds 446 0280

NVESTMENT

BILLS ARMY NAVY SALES

WEHAVE-4a eec
sedfosae

AT QUAL Ho ow 4 BR W h
bah
mode n k hen
a
e ec c home has u a
water and ga age $21 90U

J &amp; W MOUNT
3 BEDROOM
CLEANif(.G SERV CE
fu
ba hs
GENERAL hoUse c lean ng We
Cen ena y
svpp y a the c ean ng sup
p es 388 8875.afte 6 p m ca
388 886S Weekly o month y
HOUSE 2
c ean ng by eppo ntmen
bedrooms
c y
91 tf
d s c:t 2 m es ou
446 2323
TOOL
sharpen ng
saws
sc ssors sheers home ant;t
---------garden oo s Sharp Shop
BY
OWNER
Lots fo
A ey ear 1-47 Second
Pa
o Gage Road
216 tf
379 2 75 after 6 p m

Hr

e

a 28ACRES

5 m house p us
5 pc
eu n

83

233 f

s e

ST RT
4
2 A w h 2
houses and a ba n $ 6 000

379

ROOF NG &amp; Spo ut ng Sh ng e
&amp; Bu ldup oof Hot &amp; cod
p ocess Home mprovement
n
gene a
Fo
f ee
es mates
phone Robe
Meade 388 8 4 B dwe
Oh o
2JO tf

g

5

N
3 ACRE S
on R
5

cen a

NVE STMENT
4 m house
w h base
mode n a d 3
m ap
u n shed $ 8 000
CHESH RE
ra er pad
$8 000

N e bu d

2ACR E S

beau y

Central A r Cond ton ng
&amp; Heat ng
Free Est mates
Stewarts Hardware
Vinton Oh o

~=e=c==c'C

ACRES
Good
ou
e ba h
b ed oom home
y wa e ga age and o he
bu d ngs The and s ea
n ce and p en y o oom o a
ga den Lo a eo nea V n on

$ 7 500

has

WRONG NUMBER
m
sa d he e ephone
so y s
ope a o
but tha number
has been aken out
OH
s ha so
he man
ep ed
We
can you g ve
me any no ma on as o us
who
ook he out

World's Larg&lt;1st
THE LEADER SINCE 1900 I~
SERVING THE NATION'
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
Ph 446 0008

v

GARF E 0 AVE
S m
f ame w h base
A um
s d ng s o m d s and w n
u
P ce
Neil
new gas

on

--------,-----lili&amp;M

ADELA DE DR
Th ee
bed oom home w h ba h
o ed a
u na e new
a pe
n
ng
oom and
ha wu
oca ed c ose o own
on a n e e e
o
P
e
ed u ed o s 5 000

6
m
HW
s
A ba ga n

WOOD LA ND OR
fame 8ysod
equ pped k chen
at $20 000

NOT t...t:
To a
ea o s and people
wan ng a new b ck enee
an c h
ype
house
The
p ope 'i o
c aude and
Madg e Shahan us of R
60
s no
and ocked as wa~
epo ed We have he map
and pape sf om he h ghway
d son o p ave
See h s beau fu a e ec c
home 4 a ge
ooms and
ha way ca peed Fam y
oom s 5 x26
w h
Shown by appo n men
Wood Agency

3 BR a e e
c
S R 588 on ot
a pe ed w h
enc osed ga
wa e S2 000

Ony$350000
RT 35 WEST

DON'T READ THIS AD

Avenue Suite 419 Phoenix: Arizona 15012

and

COUNTRY A RE STATES
y o d b ck and a um 3 b g
bd ms
ba hS a ca pe
huge 2 ca ga
and a a ge
f a
o S36 900

----·--·-----------

man~ger

...

Orstrlbulmg Corp Hoi Food Oivlsion 3443 Norlll Centro I

S

-4461066

3 BR home w h summe k.
hen n basemen t has a
bed ooms ca pe ed F o da
oom ca pe ed 2 n e ba hs
and 08 ac e o and
ca po
$35 000

s o m d s and

so

or part time Calf 4460677 Ask for personnel

1

-Vmyl Tops

RoadS Bradbury
Anlhony Russell Owner

f

MOTORIST MUTUAL
INSURANCE
THEbes nsu ance at he bes
pr ce
For auto
home
bus ness and fe Ray Hawk
agen 446 2300 54 4 h Ave

Full

I

-Custom Tnm Work

PHONE 992-2839
Localed
Rl No 1M ddleporl

AlBERT EHMAN

We need young men &amp;
women for mmechate work
No expenses needed
Car
necessary

I

-Ong1nal UpholsteJY Repa1red or Replaced

ms

5

Ve y

M

CHATHAM AVE
5 ms and
ba h w h new
u n
e
$
500 W hou
u n u e
$ 6 000

----·------·------~69

DeliveJY Driver Sales

I
I
I

-Auto Carpe!Jng

ROUTE 'l 8
See h s a
ee
home w h
u
baseme n
bah b ee eway
and ga age N e home w h a
a ge beau u ands ape o

2 7 ,

I
I
I

-Custom Seat Covers

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

Personnel

I
I
I

1

BUSH MORT ON RD
y
o d fram e b ck
m 5 ms
ba hs a ca pe a e ec
pa o
ove ed
Th s s •
beau y On y $26 900

ST RT 35
6 m
a me an h
w h base H w
s pa
ca pe F P 2 a ga
w h
La ge 0
P ce
e ec d
$28 500

G LLENWATER S SEPT C
TANK CLEAN NG
AND
REPA R
ALSO
HOUSE
WRECK NG Ph 4-46 94~9
Es ab shed n 1940

--------·----------~73

E gh
FOUR TH AVE
oom
hou se w h bah ue o o gas
ed a
hea n e a ge 0 p
$ 5 000

6M DOWN RT
ba h 2 ou b dg
eve o $ 2 600

29

446-1209

1

h ee
Y one u
ba h s Qood
ange d s
room and a

CROUSE BECK RO T
Leve 6 ms
ba hs 2
ysodHWfoos
Ao
Th s sa good house and au d
no be bu
o
he ask ng
p Cl! oday S32 000

EVERGREEN
ba h u hea
wn$4000

SEPT C TANKS
C eaned and nsta ed
Rvsse s P umb ng 446 4782

s

I
I

Real Estate

11r
R~

N ce h ee bed oom
C TY
ho me na u a gas hea bah
a ge v ng oorn w h ove v
ca pe oca ed on wo en ed
n
o s
N ce
p ace
o
h d en

9M DOWN RVER
2soy
b c k base a c arpe
v
rm
5 X 36 W h F P A SO
has2ndhou se w h-4 ms ~A
R ve v ew o s 5 000

STEWART E ec ca
"Repa
house w r ng
e ec r c heat ng Phone 446
4561
27

2&lt;7

~--R~;;~r;-A~i;r~~---,

I

"
1
TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FREE nspect on Ca 446 3245
Me r
0 De
Ope a o by
Ex term na Trm e Se v ce
0 Be mong Dr

WALLPAPER NG and
ng Phone 446 9865 o

&amp; INSTAllER

d

w h
a...., v
'"
ov a ga age Good am y
home w han ce a ge o

M NORTH of HMC
New
6 ms &amp;
ba hs a ca pe
b ck a e ec 2 a a a hed
ga $34 000

PROTECT you mob e home
w th T E DOWN ANCHORS
Ca
Ron Sk dmore 4-46 756
af e 3 p m

"

SOUT HERN Oh o Coa Com
pany has an open no for an
expe enced e ephone n
sa er and repa man Must
be ab e
o troub e shoot
w hout supe v son
Know edge of sche-ma cs and
wo k ng e ect ca
p n s
essen a
Good
fr nge
benet s sa ng rae $620
pe hour Con ac t South ern
Oh o Coa Company R
3
Box 54 A bany Oh o 457 0
Phone
614 669 32 6 Ma n
off ce oca ed on Route 689
near A bany
AN EQUAL
OPPORTUN TY
EM
PLOVER
273

••

k chen
wa she

b ck a
A
of

HOLLEY

TELEPHONE REPA RMAN

OS&lt;O

Oouq"W •, he ho
0
5

6 ms a
new ca pe ave H W
s
Cen
a
ga age
and
WO kshop
28 X 28
P ce
S28 500

EVA'S BEAUTY SALON

Want

I

For Rent

MT Z ON Rd 6 m
ca pe
F P and
$3 500

Ma t n &amp; Son Wa er
De ve y
Serv ce
You
pa O(lage
w
be
ap
prec att&gt;d Ph 446 0-463

Beauticians

equ p you
new bus ness~
sons or
n e absen
es ed ee
n ,_.;.;.;,;;.;.;,;;,:;,;.;',.;.
· - - - • • • • • • • • - - - - -. .
fudea for
partpe me
managemen
Wr te
for
pe son a
n erv ew
L
W
Sm h Na onw de F gu am a
P o Box 304 Pa ke sburg
w Va 26 o
273

-

P

____ _;273 3

Car needed

0677

Real Estate For Sale

~T ~G 446 J~~~d

WATER

Full or Part Time

N:

---------

25 40 YEARS of age fema e
p efe ed
B 20 hours week
?a
me
h gh
SChOO
g adua e mus
own car
supe m a ke
expe enc:e
he p u
no
equ ed
Dspayng
sockng and
o de ng me cha nd se Ph one
446 AO 11 afte 5 p m

•3.57 an hour

FAMOUS

--·------·--------

days

necessarv

~o~~i~~~~.T w~ 0 '.".:'~~o'~no~

NEW

GOO D
N VESTM ENT
p ope ty 3 fu n shed apar
mens n come S2 0 month y
ou of s a e owne
Fo
n
o mat on phone 992 5 3
aay me

33

273

Help Wanted

We need young men and women for
1mmed1ate work
No expenence

OPPORTU~ITY
NAME

A

HEALTH cLue

~ -- ='·~------,----

acres of

----

NC

DELIVERY DRIVER SALES

446 ·

4

OPEN

Real Estate For Slile

home
ca pe ng
ga age ove an ac e g ound
on Fa woods Rd phone 992
2 35

MAY God bess a
my oved
ones ou pas or Rev Samue
Thompson and w fe n e gh
bo s and
ends fo
you
ness
k ndness n my ecen
A b g hanks o a
M s S an ey G assbu n

lUPneSt
446 2532

SLEEP NG ROOMS
weekly
a es Pa k Centra Hole
306 tf

Busmess OpportumtleS
UNUSUAl

2 2

TWO bed oom house a 4 J
Sycamore S ee
n M d
d epo
vacan Ca 992 53 0
4 3tc

Ca

-------------~----..::2

.;..

6 tfc

TRUCKS

--·--·--·-------~

POODLE

Wanted To Buy

w

fo ge no neve no fo
was not a one
God s ood
bes de me eve y day and
b ough me safe y home Now
as see he sun come uo and
se
c ose my
hen see
eyes and say a p aye (or
f ends
won fo ge

SOMMERS G M C

267 f

Do

254 f

LAYNE S Por abe Weld ng
cer f ed pressure p p n.g
cer f ed st uctu a
s ee
weld ng a urn num He a c
Ph 446 34 0 24 hour serv ce

D D

.

BRADBURY~

DV
'"" d u oack hoe wo k
ponds and sep c anks d
ch ng se v ce
op so
f
d
mes one
B&amp;K
Esc:ava ng Phone 992 5367 or
992 386

nea y eve and n meadow
w h a "fa r y good '2 bed oom
home at Down ngton

IF YDU WANT TO BUY OR
SEL SEE ONE OF US

$3495
$3995
$4195
$3895
$4295
$4695
$5495

446 0175

HARR SO N S TV ser ce ano
se v ce ca s Phone 99 2 2522
2 9 fc

'l:::LNr-and Wh e
Mach nes
serv ce
makes Reasonabfe
The Sew ng Cen e
d epo
Oh o

FURN SHED apa men
BR
adu s on y pa k ng
en t a
a and a cond Ph 446 0338

men

0 24 30 p

!)t: PT C
TANKS
AROB C
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPA RED
M LLER
SAN TAT ON
STEWART OH 0 PH 662
3035

New GMC
T uck Headquarters
968
on GMC p ck up
963 2 on Fo d
967 3 T GMC PU
969 h T GMC PU
969 Chevro e ~ on p ckup
96
on Chev
969
T Fo d PU
969 Dodge S a on Wagon
959FodGaaxe
967 n on Che\ly p ckup
966 h on GMC p c kup
969
T Chev PU
969
T GMC PU
968
T GMC PU
967
T GMC PU
96
T GMC PU
969
Ton GMC PU
968
T Fo d
9
T Fo d PU
968 :J., T GMC PU

•

FUR N SHE-D house 3 ooms
and bhth 640 5 h A e No
c h d en no pe s Ca af er 6
p m 446 60

Con ac
WE BUY god cons and s ve
do ars
a so o d co ns
Tawney s ewe e s
224 f

Gallipolis Oh1o

SE W NG MACH NE S Repa
makes 992 2284
se v ce a
The Fab c Sho p Pome oy
Au hor zed S nge Sa es and
e
, W~&gt; r. 11en Sc ssors
1 0

"

Hoe

o ge my oved ones ha
a e so good o me d d
o ge
my ttle chu ch and a
t s
meant o me
see hem
knee ng a a ound
hear a
s en p aye
God ook
from each ov ng hea
and
paced
w h me thee

GET 'YOUR MAN

2013 Eastern Ave

'"

SLEEP NU

tf

0 D

76 If

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

TRI COUNTY
MOBILE
HOMES

G S. E App ance Repa
P hone
a he ShOP 992 3802 0 949

24

THE K NO wo ds o
eac
ne ghbor and fr ends a ong
he way even some ca ds
rom across he sea o chee
me on my way D d fo ge o
hank you
ends
0 d
o ge o say a praye fo each
and eve y one That u ned
myngh oday

St

State

e
ROUTE 7 Sou h a b
k 8b g
ms 2
ba hs a ca pe
:2
F Ps sw mm ng poo
ve
v ew and A 0 Luxu Y Pus

-----~-----------_:_•8

forge
o hank you
ends D d
forget o say
How very much t mttan o
me When
was n despa
When
was s ck and one y
he
no n my bed o see
you cards and f owers he e
mean mo e han was sad

32

Rea tv 32 sa e s
T
446 99S

we
Ph

D d

NEW se a and Bemco ma
ress and box sp ngs Large
se ec on n s oc k
I rm
m a resses sta
ng at S39 00
955 Second Avenue
446 171

-'---~-·-----

Real Estate For Sale •

Tel 4461998

DID I FORGET

~-, -------

All homes are total
electnc
completely
furmshed quarter 1nch
panel1ng
storm
w1ndows &amp;
door
Delivered &amp; set up
free

ASK NG

$0 00000

p us of vacant and on Rt 7
nea Pome oy Only $ 800 00

36c

AUTOMOB LE nsu ance been
an e ed
Los
your
ope a o s cense Ca
992

apa

NEW LISTING

40 TO 50 a es and w h a ge
o d 2 story a me house needs
epa r
0
R
43 nea
Ha r son
e Ask ng $ 4 ooo
Ca 742 5435 even ngs o 592
9738 days

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASO NABLE ale s Ph -4-46
-4 82 Ga po s ohn Russe
Owne and Ope a o

428

bed ooms
baths
ga s
"fu nace Ga age and 3 po ches
no ap
n M ddlepo t $ 8 000 00
$5 00
NEW
LISTING
7 rooms 3
Phone
bed ooms bath natura gas
56 P heat and garage Near s o es
n Pomeroy s 000 00
MALE pood e puppy
back NEAR TOWN
N ce b ch
m n a u e Phone 992 585 8
3 c k tchen w th S S cook and bake
un s 3 bed ooms
fam 1¥
oom carpe ng and nat gas
Auto Sales
furnaces S 5 000 00
MOBILE HOME LOT
In
962 MERCURY
doo
e)(
Ha sonv I e w th water tap
ce en
ond on
a 000 ac
ua m es ex a snow
es pa d sept c tank and e ec
moun ed
Ha y
Sw an
f c y
Po and Oh o 843 2:123

Real Estate For Sale

READY M X
CONCRETE
de ve ed
gh
o you
p o eel Fas and easy F ee
es t ma es Phone 992 328-4
Goeg en Ready M x Co
M dd epo
Oh o
6 30 c

Fu n sh ed $6 500 00

Brok.;··r
YOU v E shopped ne es now
buy he bes a Showa e s
we Pe ShoP Ches e Oh o
New sh pmen n sock
4
c

0 3 30 c

10x39 2 Bdrm
10x512 Bdrm
10x56 2 Bdrm
12x412 Bdrm
15x512 Bdrm
12x563Bdrm
12x613 Bdrm

week v
pa k ng

-----------·Ga
ooms

-

6

269 6

a es

a~~

•

264
WR T NG Chapman Fam Y
STAR CRAFT
Hsory
Lookng
o
COMPARE
ou
9 Apr ces 25
desc:endan s o
F oyd TWO 2 bed ooms
o a
Wande s a con a ned
Chapman bo n 84
Ga a
e ec
c
mob e
homes
S3 599 20 f
7 As ro Star
coun y Son o sa ac and Sa a
oca ed a
Qua
c eek
$3 325
Fo d downs S. 350
Dawson Cha pman
Ga a
Con ac New ones 2J5 502
accesso es and f nanc ng
Coun y
Reco de
and
16
a ilnged we serv ce what
Treasu e
a e 800 s Rep Y
we se
Camp coney Star
Box No 296 co Ga po s
2X60 MOB LE Home
a
era fl Sa es R 62 N o Po nt
T bune
es pa d on
e ec
c u
P easan beh nd Red Carpe
2 33
Geo ges C eek Rd Ca 446
nn 6 5 5384
3468 af e 5
252 tf
SWEE PER Repa s pa s
26-4 f
supp es 446 0294 0 a m
S
p m Oav s Vacuum C eane
3 TRA LER spaces 36
438
S o e Geo ges C eek Road
266
nex o Bobs CB Rad o Sa es
26
uc on

MOBILE
HOMES

REALTY

6oa

KENNELS

L - -- -- - -- ---__j

WHOLESALE

Camp ete mob le hom e
pu s ggan
se
ce
d sp lay of mali' e hom es
a way s a a abe a

Pets For Sale

PA NT DAMAGE 9 "3 Z g Zag
sew ng Mach nes
S
n
a on s
No a
o g na
achmen s needed as ou
con o s a e bu
n Sews
w h
o 2 need es makes
bu onho es sews on bu ons
monog ams and b nd hem
s ch Fu
ash p ce S3B50
o
budge
p an a a abe
Phone 992 2964

FOR FREE es ma es on
a um num s d ng
So m
Doors and W ndows
Ca
po s Ma Quees and R a ng
Phone
Char es
L s e
Sy acuse Oh o Ca
:Jacob
Sa es Rep esen a ve V V
Johnson and Son nc
6 22 tf c

a e

pm

El(erc se runs
Warm sleep ng quarters
Cant nuous frestl water &amp;
food
Ca peted beds
Love and understand ng
AKC pupp es &amp; stud serv ce
Ca I 388 8274 for nspect on
and reservat on

--·--·--------------

A r Cond1t1oners
Awn ngs
Underpmn ng

2X60 R ha dson 2 bed oom
wa she and d ye spa e
o
k
hen po ch and shed n
uded fu n shed Ca
592
34JB

5 '

_:_ ___

(

4 ooms
o a ed
Y depos

L bby

RON SHE PARD F oo
Wa
Remade ng Ce am c
ba hs Box 280 Ru and 742
3664
6 26

e

P

K AND

2 8 tf c
FUR N S HED

MOB LE
Adu s

BOARD YOUR PETS AT

0 DELL

Ca

g ound
9 9 998

272 f

Adu s on y secur
equ ed Ca 446 0444

All work guaranteed

35

2 BEDROOM mob e home 60
Uppe R ve Road Ca
446
0008
269 f

2 2 I

Area s Most
Reasonable Pnces

FREE EST

Real Estate For Sale
OEDROOM o e 3 ea sod

s FLOOR 2 oom apa men
n Pome oy Ca 992 3026
53

Pamtmg A Specialty

992 7608

REPAIR

TRA
Pa

L ncoln H II Pomeroy 0

Johnson Masonry
&amp; (Remodeling)

COJ\IPLE rE
INTERIOR

TWO WAY RadOS Sa es &amp;
Serv ce New and used C B s
po ce mon ors antennas
e c Bobs C zen Band Rad o
Equ p
Go ges C eek Rd
Ga po s Oh o 446 451

R

TRA LER space ava abe
$35 permo 3m es om own
Phone 446 052 o 446 029
269 4

'

Ph 992 5271

992 7474

Bradbury

(

es w h
e e se

S8 50

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

992 2839
Co Road 5

Gene's
Body Shop

NOV SPEC
$12 50 Perm For

AUTO TRIM

62p

660

Johmes Beauty
Salon

onem e rom hosp a
AdU s 446 3605

DAY CARE
SUN VALLEY Nu se y SchoO
censed by S a e of Oh o
h
m es wes o new hosp a
577 Sun V. ey o Ph 446 36S7
Day ca e
ha
says
we
ca e
Madge Hau d en
Owne
Lo ed h and John
Hau dren opera ors

"J

e v

N CE 2 bed oom mob e home

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

Realtv

388

~ ---------·--

RooneY Cora Rd
Rodney Oh o
Hour s 9a m to9P m
Monday thrv Saturday
Ph 24 9174 ?45 502

BOB LANES
Compete Bookkeep ng and Tax
Serv ce 424
Fou th Ave
Kanauga
Bus ness by ap
po ntmenl
Ph
446 049
Please ca at1er 6 p m
278 f

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

D

Corbin &amp; Snyder
Furniture

&amp; SALES

606 E Mam Pomeroy

6
S P NET CO N SOLE P ANO
Waned ReSP.Ons b e pa y o
pu hase sp ne p a o on ow
mon h y pa m.en s Can be
seen o a y w e Manag e
P 0 Box 2 6 She by
e
nd ana 46 6

QUAIL CREEK
MOBIL£
COMMUNITY

992 2094

MOORE &amp; SONS

Tycoon

67VAL ANT6 cy Avo Rado
and W W
es 446 6 5 aUe
6 446 244
260 rt

PUBLIC NOT CE
The Ga a Boa d of Revs on
have comp e ed he wo k and
he books a e now open fo
nspe on
2 2 0

Oh 0

o
cha ge- fo se v ce ca
can f x you app ance
6 5 4242

273 3

Card of Thanks

For Rent

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AU10

D. L

h
h

Ca

2733

1,06 E Ma n Pomeroy 0

W1th Skilled
Craftsmanship

388 880 0
---

Found

Notice

v n on

______________________2_,__
_

~:~eo~~~ ~edonunRe~~~~ WAe~H~: a

----------

Monday th v Saturday

Pomeroy

Ph '992 2174

N V C N TY of Danv I e ma e
ck and fema e Red

COONHOUND nea
Lake Ca 388 8589

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open6TIS

~:ocum

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

ece ved a houseful ot
used fu n 1ure
Everyth ng
you m ght want Come f rst
get the bes
New urn ture
spec a Ea y Ame can :J ~c
v ng oom su e S299 95 h
446 926
213 tf

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992 2094

PRICE

6

REDUCE
F u d ex
Oex A D e
Ne son D ugs

must nave e e en es
992

day o d o
s a ed
L egho n pu e s Bo h oo o
g own
a a ab e
c age
Pou
"(
hou s ng
&amp;
au om a on Mode n Pou
399 w Ma n Pome oy 99'1
&amp;

2 64

992 293

Mu be

Mason W Va

713 S5S4

J Bp

26

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

&amp; ZUSPAN

HOGG

Real Estate For Sale

hot 00 s F
Es rna es 26
yea s exper ence
James

Reward Phone- • &lt;6
27 3 1

~

UST

i\ggress1ve md1v1dual wllhng to work to take
over established multi lme msurance agency
Salary to start and trammg mcluded Call
Galhpohs 446 4707 collect ror appomtment

Servlces Offered

0

On Most Amer can Cars

e

MATERIAlS CO

35

3 ROOMS and ba h

Bvl do~e
Rad a o
to
:,ma es Hea e Lo
Nil than B gg~
Rad ator Spec al st

Bu It to You Spec s
Oe vered to Job S te

emode ng by

ac

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
1 5.55

ASK US ABOUT

7 25 fc

Parson's

WANTED

o • asses be ween •oo

p

PUBLIC
NOTICE
W~ se I anythmg for
anybody
Br ng your
1tems to Knotts Com
mun ty Auc:hon Barn
Corne Th rd &amp; Oltve
For appotntment tall
256 6967 alter 5 p m
Sale every Saturday

even ng al 7 0 Clock

AUCTION
SERVICE
~sELL THE AlltTIOft

WAY

JIMME SAYWE
AUCfiOftEER

PH.I46-3444

stand. efc

MISC

ITEMS

Harpers Weokleys (1898)

many stone lids old boxes 11 thimb es 1 2 doz p cture

nal s few pollt cal !ems US Register bank nice S T
kltc:hen clock

g mirror tobacco humidor Avon boHies

old ones) 2 Iron tea kettles some old coins old iewolrr. 2

volume Howe s Ohio h story set of 10 Edgar Allen Poe
books other old books souven r spoons records counter
seal~ (200 lb ) Rad ant gas heater Kenmore washer
few m sc p etes household 9oods &amp; Items too numerous to

melltlon

NO VIEWING BEFORE DAY OF SALE
Terms Cash
Eoh Avolleble
Nol Responllblt for Acdclenls
Osby A M&lt;lrtm OwMr
C I SMrldon l01oc:l
Pomeroy ~ 7022
-'~Msvllle 411io'UI

�25-The Sunday Tunes Sentinel Sundav Nov 18 1973

}:;;;lF~;~sunRo~~ults Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

l'or Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
~
0n'a'..:'! R~~~gNe~ SA~~9 ~~~~~~~~p
~.~~~~~:ve"~nda'~~."
OHIO RIVER
RUSSELL
STROUT
fHE
~ ~n95hem
~e
MASSIE
Realty
WOOD
REAlTY
AI'JOR
WISEMAN

For Sale
For Sale

Wanted To Buy
WANTED
o

Business Services

SEW N G

auc on

househo d goods Too s mos
any h ng o va ue w I buy o
hav
se on comm ss on W
ca
99 2' JJH o
992 2791
Hayman s

PRE FABR CATED

OLD

u n u e oak ab es
cocks ce bOllf!S b ass beds

dshes

o

househo ds
w e M D
M e R .t Pome oy Oh o
'" 992 617

5 3

-·------- ~

wo k. gene a

hou

o

on

WOOD TRUSSES

w:;;,

ELECTRO UX
Va uum
C eane
comp e e
a IT' en s co dw nde
ad
pan
p av Used b1.,1 n
k. c
new
ond Of'!
Pay S3 5
c a ~h o budqc p an a a abe
Phone 99'1 '198
86

compee

Employment Wanted
CARPENTER wo k miiSOn

F om he a oe s

KNAPP Shoes o de now o
nsu e p e Xmas de ve y
Phone 992 5324

y

Phone 993

H

For Rent
FURN SHED apa men
5
a ge oom s and ba h w h
enc osed back po ch and n e
ya d Pome oy Oh o phone

DEAL home o wo
seep ng ooms
n ce k
hen and
TV
ean and
week Mason

N

y

'

S T-R·E·T·C·H

CONSTRUCTION

YOUR BUILDING
D-0-L-L A R

Roofmg Spoutmg
K tchens &amp; Bathrooms
Complete Remodeling

PHONE
742-6273

OfFICE SUPPLIES

and
FURNITURE

Stop ln and See Our
Floor D1~lay

PH 992 6675

u

Adu

RUSSELL'S

- ----

8

BRUSH HO GS
992 5858

ROOMS by he week s B up
Me gs nn Pome oy

5

a k
ome

PR VAlE mee ng
any o gan za on
O_o 3975

phone

4x5

Req Ha

C BRADFORD Av onee
Com p e e Se v ce
Phone 949 382
Rae ne Oh o
c
B ad o d

hen w h

one

0

s

e o

0

WHEEL A gnmen
oca ed a c oss cads R 124
now back o wo k Comp e e
f on end se v ce une up and
brake
se
ce
Whee s
ba anced e ec ron ca y
A
wo k gua an teed Reasonab e
ales Phone 742 3232

EXCAVAT

Mason W Va
h ghway

Phone

2

New

3s 4

REG STEREO H ampsh
boa s Pho e 843 2 56

928

p
LARGE

bu d ng
gs A ea
es
ted o ho ses on y
Tuppe s Pans &amp; Ches e
wa e a a abe Ca
o see
B
w e 992 2 69

3 AND ill ROOM
un u n shed
Phone 992 5434

os a

4

2

LER
Mason w va
coup e on y phone 992 5693
6

"'fRA

E

Mobile Homes For Sale

chen

r

6J p

For ::.ale
APPROX MATE Y 20 a es o
and exce en bv d ng 5 e
ca
42 5223
0 2 30 p

9 3
G ZAG sew ng ma h ne
Th s mach ne da ns
em
b ode s
o e as s
and
monog ams a
w hou a
achme n s Pa
ba an e o
$4 50 a pay $6a mbn h Ca
992 533
(

EXCELS OR Sa
Wo KS t:.
Ma n s
Po me oy A k nds
sa
wa e pe e s wa e
0
nugge s bock sa
and own
Oh o R ve Sa
Phone 992
389

ysan hemums fo
We on y
have one coo
ye ow
0
bun hes o $5 we have some
ou
n u b oom some us
budd ng Reyno ds F owe
Shop Mason W va Ca 773
9 26

c:

SA
CE AND SNOW
Ro k sa
o
ownsh ps
ow s and bus nesses n
bu ks and bags o
ce and
snow Ex e o Sa
Wo k.s
Phone 992 3B9
(

MOB LE home
a p umbng
Phone 992 5856

MILLER
, MOBILE HOMES
220 Wa sh ngton B vd
423 752
BELPRE 0

E MAIN'---POMEROY

MIDDLEPORT

2 soy

a me

CASH pa .d o a makes and
modes o mob e homes
Phone a ea code 6 A 423 953

4 3

BERRY M L LE R Mob e Hom e
sa es has a o o o er when
yo sta
shopp ng o you
Mob e Home Yo
an bea
he h Qh dep e a on
ha e on
ou hom e o
he
wo yea s b shopp ng
s
sed Mob e
o a a e mode
Home He e a e som e e e y
day ow pr ces 60x 2 P M c
$4 995 00 60x 2 Champ on
$4 495 00 60x 2 Rem b ad
$3 995 00 4 bed oom s 50x 2
De o er $4 95 oo 4 x 2
Regen
$3 795 00
65x 2
De o er $8 295 00 60x 2
w ns on $5 495 00 60x 2
P M C $5 995 00
e y n e
60x 2
Beve y
Mano
SS 995 00
65x 2
be
S4 500 00
60x 2
Ba on
$5 995 00 sox 0 De o e w h
3 expandos $3 495 00 SOx 0
R cha dson $2 600 00 55x 0
V nda e
52 995 00
SOx 0
Hun ng on $2 995 00 SOx 2
$2 995 00
35x8
R
c a
D
o e
S 995 00
45X8
Ande son s 995 00
heSe
a e IT\ OS y a
a e mode
homes and the p
es n ude
you de ve y and com p e e
se up So o an hones
0
goodness good dea
s op n
oday a Be y M e Mob e
Home Sa es
05 Fa son
S ee
Be p e Oh o phone
423 953
osed Sundays
56

home 4 bed ooms
Ba h ga age Se e a o s
and pa I s o o s go w h h s
ASK NG $9 500 00 MAKE

AN OFFER
JUST OFF

RT

7

-

3

bed ooms New Ba h New
F A f u nace ut y oom
oom
o5 o
new
Rec
pane ng and t e new ou
ce a and s o age Large at

$8 000 00

MINERSVILLE -

soy

f arne 3 bed ooms ba h
Lo s of base cab nets n
k chen Gas s o es o hea
Po ches

Lo

s of ground

46 (

VA CUU M
973 Mode
c ean ng
damage n
S27 cash
ava abe

C eane s
Camp e e w
oo s Sma
sh pp ng W
o
budge
pan
Phone 992 2984
'6 (

·---,Z g Zag Sew ng

s NGER Au 0
Mach nes
n sew no abe
Makes bv onho es sews on
but ons b nd hems e c Top
no ch cond t on Pay S5 o
erms twa abe Phone 992
2984
14 6 c;

MIOD EPORT

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

usED Lumbe
bu d ngs
up o
poplar and p ne 2
6 2 1C 8 2 X 2
long used roof no
Ca t 992 5787 or s.ee
Ho ow nte s.ec::t on
33 W lbur Gr eSf

age
2 w de
x A 2 x
UP 0 :20
2 She~ s
t ,Jt Long
of Rou e

• 3p

N ce

bus ne ss
com
Love y
men I ave 3 bed ooms
ba th
D n ng
oom
N ce
k chen w h o s of cab nets
Gas
ho
wa e
hea
th oughou Ha dwood floo s
and ca pe ng 2 ga ages

AL MOST NEW

PROPERT ES
ARE
SELLING FAST ONE OF
THESE COULD HAVE
BEEN YOURS l ST WITH
US TODAY 9 YEARS
EX PER ENCE
HENRY E CLELAND
BROt&lt;E~

992 2259
If no answer 992 2568

TEAFORD
Vir-qd B. T\•,lford, Sr.
110 Mr-chilntc Street
Pomeroy. Ohto -l.S769

NEW LISTING

9 rooms '

one acre

NEW LISTING

- ---,--4 ---

Wanted To

......

---

RON NG S n home
"

------

B G

'

ROOM
HOUSE
emode ed Phone

new y
992 3162

PROF T

sALo N.

SMALL

COACHMAN Trave
Tra e
Moo
Homes
5 h Whee
Truck Campe s App e C ty
Au o Sa es R 35 N Jackson
Oh p Phone 286 5700
0

273

Ca II 446
Manager

ask

for

e exce en
NEW mob e
ocat on adu s on y Phone
4.46 0338
225 f
sma e
ency
apa men
No 6 f s
oor
adu s no pe s 729 Second

Ave

oLD
o
a ns
pa s o
any h ng onnec ed w th oy
a ns Ca 446 4B43 afte 4 30
f
p m and weekends
2 6

ef
bah
1

245

notice
2

WAGON WHEEL
ANTIQUES

BEDROOM dup ex
men
app ances fu
Phone -446 45 0

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

s Ph

TWO t ra e
446 3805

State Route 218
1 m1 S of Rt 7

'

264 tf

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

Open
Tuesday &amp; Thursdays
910 s

5 ROOM apa men on Second
AYe s 25 mon h a u t es
pa d excep elec c ca 446
1615 or 446 243
2733

Pt1one 446 2:467 even ngs and
weekends Phone 446 2:467 for
appointment

RVER FRONT apa ment
new turn sh ngs a u
t es
pa d bache or preferred $140
mon h ca
446 615 or A-46

DEAD STOCK
LL emove a a easonab e
cha ge Ca 245 55 4

243
5 ROOM hovse a
R o Grande a ea
requ red 446 2233

273 3

SUPER stuff sure nuf That s
8 ue Lus re for c ean ng rvgs.
and upho s ery Rent e ectr c
shampooe
$1 a
Cen a
supp
Co
273 6

GALLIPOLIS
CHAPTER
79R AM

v

YOU saved and slaved for wall
to wa
carpe t Keep t new
w th
B ue Lus re
Rent
e ec r c shampooer S1 at G C
Mu phy ower sore
273 6

Special Meet1ng
7 PM
November 19 1973
MK &amp; PM Degrees

-2 -BEDROOM
------12 x 50

Charles Wm Sibley E H P
Thomas E M1lls 5ecy
V s1tors Cord tally Welcome

home

n Add son

0294

--SEVERAL mob

mob le
Ca
446
273 tf

---------~--,

10

5 3 ( ________ .J. _________ _:::
272 ,

e

homes. total
c ec tr c at Kerr Oh o $125
per mo Ca 446 0175 o 4-46
1934
273 tf

1

II

1

3.57

U&gt;

Wa e De very Se v ce
Pa o S ar Rt Ga po s
Ph 379 2 33
243 f
_:_

____________

BANKS TREE SERVICE
FREE estma es
ab
y n
surance P un ng I mm ng
and cav y wo k t ee and
s ump rem ova Ph 446 4953

II

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

on

-ns and
A

For

Sale

Real Estate for Sale

o R

v

f

pan

ST

CAB NET Shop a I types of
wood work 101 Court Stree
Ph 446 7745
87 ,
&amp; S CONSTRUCTION
EXCAVAT ON and genera
emode ng Backhoe doze
and
ench ng Sept c anks
and oo e s A
phases of
p um b ng
w r ng
new n
s a a on Ca 388 9986

bu d ng

s e

New s ng agood
sma
a m w h a good ba n
o he
bu d ngs
ga age
oba co ba e Ha
a good
h ee bed oom home w h a
new ba h Good o a on and
he p ce s g

RT 7 5

00 A

SM TH RD

s0

S 0 000

- ------~-

and

a

4 A

000
Any hr 446

no
nd

998

----

Neal Realty
A DWELL NGS on one o A
have new a um num s d ng
Annua
enta $2 520 A a e
rented f n e es ed n a good
nves men ca
oday

LOOK NG fo a sum me home
We have a new 2 BR w h
bath sept c ank we wa e
and
oca ed on R a coo n
C ee-k
Ca
oday fo
an
appo n men
o see h s one

oa
gas
orc:ed
coppe
wood oo s

Off ce Phone 446 1694
Even ngs
Charles M Nea 446 1S46
J M chae Nea 446 503
Sam Nea 446 7358

s n c:e

see

oBEDROOMS
App ax

5 ac es

Seven
room house w h
a ge
mode n k chen w h bu
n b ch cab nets ba h w h
s howe
gas
u nace
24 x24 basemen pane ed
Ia s o shade t ees A real

buy a on y I B 900 00
9 ROOMS
Bedroom
bath
ep ace co ne at 50x 00
ft La s of nvestmen
poss b ty n th s prope ty

CLOSE TO HOSPITAL
.

.ATHENS OH 0 41570

SPECIAL THIS WEEK

Used Pants &amp;Shirts

.

99~

1

EACH

USED COVERALLS

•2'•

Unless you mean bus ness
We are now c;ons.1dertng
qualified applicants n your area to become a working
part of our Nat1onal Hot Food D str1butor System You
are not apply ng for a rob You are apply1ng for a very

PR

MEN'S IRREGUlAR DOUBLE KNIT

SLACKS • Reg. $395 pr.

h1gh proll busoness ol your own NO EXPERIENCE
NECESSARY NO SELLING INVOLVED This
bus ness can be started part time- no need to qutt your
tob Can be e-xpanded full t me with c:ompany ftnancn19
We need people we can depend on Our produds are
nationally famous Hot Food Items made by He1n1 We
have over 36 var ehes of Hot Soups and Hot Entrns such
as Beef Stew Ch cken &amp; Dumplings Chtli &amp; Beans and on
and on We have all of America s favor~tes All these
deltc1ous products are sold from the latest tn automattc
vending equipment Your route wtll be established and
nstalled by us Your age is not a fador tf you quahfy
Perfect for a n1ce couple to operate as a family business

SALE PRICE

2/'700

NEW SHIPMENT TAPES
ROCK

COUNTRY

CHRISTMAS

CASH INVESTMENT REQUIRED
PART TIME
PLAN ONE
$2 28S 00
PLAN TWO
$3161 00
PLAN THREE
$7 719 00
FULL TIME
PLAN FOUR
Sll 279 00
PLAN FIVE
$18 998 00
PLAN SIX
S36 791 00

RELIGIOUS

'298

For further mformatton or a personal interview sel'td
Name Address &amp; Phone number to North American

.,

'1795
•

FOR SALE By Owner 3 BR
b ck a
e ec c k chen
cen ra
a
baths
woodbu n ng
ep ace
m m ed a e
possess on
Fa v ew Subd v 245 53 2
272 3

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

FOR SALE by owne
3
bed oom house a l ca pe ed
f enced n ya d n Kanauga
Phone 446 2539

--·---~~---------'-=
264

.s

----------,-2:_-57 ,
ACRES 3 bed oom 2 bah
daub e w de 3 m es
om
town on M
C eek Road
S20 000 Ph 446 0126
26 tf

l'lumbmg

EACH

&amp; Healln

""

CARTERS PLUMB NG

Cor Fourth &amp; P nePhone 446 3888 or AA6 A477
65 tf

.

29 , ac e fa m 4 bed oom
home obacco base ba n
led wei s
T mber
d
m ne al gh s N ce fa m
n ce home

IN GALLIPOliS
2 Bedroom bu t n wa II
oven w th pul out 4 bvrne
rang e
gas fo ced a
fu ance
ca pet ng
throughout
of 160 x 3
On y
a r ~ond t on ng

Gall po s 4"6 "782

297
-·--·-----DEW TT S PLUMB NG

f

AND HEAT NG

s1

MADISON AVE
3 Bed oom home ot s ze40 x 3
n ce o
On y
$5 500 00

home us of
95 x 65 a
n ce ba h and
age
oun y

2 B R home n c y w h ba h w
se on and co n a
w h a
easonab e down paymen

9

A on Geo ges C eek Road
w
d
de o su buye has
ee na u a gas n dwe ng

2 BR home w th ba h sep c
ank. Wa m Mo n ng s ove
on Tabo Road $ 0 500
SEE h s o e
one vea
home has 3 BR
u y ca
pe ed ce n a a
beau u
k chen p s d n ng a ea w h
con en en es bu
n
a
am y
n shed
basement 2 ca ga
au oma
doo
oca ed oo R
35
hasp a

NEW L ST NG
NEW HOME
Befo e you buy be svre o
see h s ave v n ew anch on
he 0 J Wh te d c ose o he
new hasp a Th s b ck and
f arne beau v has a bu
n
k chen fo m a d n ng oom
u
y room 2 baths l4x 23 LR
and a a ge a o w h 25 f
f on age We a so have o hers
a he same oca on
MODERN
RANCH
W TH
BASEMENT
Ths ovey
home
s ocated on S a e
Rou e 554 nex o the B ctwe
g ade Schoo and ea u es 3
BR HWfoos 5x20LR 2
x 20 k tchen w h d shwashe
ange and o s of cab ne s
On y $23 000
BABY FARM
Th s a br ck
a e eel c home s ess han
y o d and offers o s of good
344
v ng or your am y
sq
ontheman oo w ha
basemen and garage
you
wan a n ce home and 4J,I,
ac es on s ate ou e 60 be
su e to see h s one
EASY TERMS
L KE NEW
3 BR ranch ess than y o d
o fe s a factory k chen w h
pa o doo s n
b eakfas ba
he d n ng a ea ga age and
a ge co ne
o
ose
o
Cen ena y
OW DOWN PAYMENT
VNTON
Compeey
em ode ed B m home of e s
o s of v ng space o some
ucky pe son Mob e home
pad s nc uded and w
he p
make he paymen s

ON LOWER
R ve
Road
mode n ame dwe ng w h 2
o 3 BR o e ook ng he Oh o
Th s home has new
R ve
a pe ng and new d apes
Mode n k. chen a so ve y
a ge
v ng
oom
2 car
ga age on a a ge o

tt

STANDARD
P umb ng &amp; Heat ng
214 Ttl rd Ave 446 3782
187 If

EUREKA
ONE OF THE
N CEST
em ode ed homes
ha you w
f nd anywhe e
Spec a ea u es a e a a ge
OP,en faye
ead ng
o
he
w nd ng sta way f ep ace n
R arge o ma d n ng m 4
BR and a arge o w h an
Oh o R ve v ew

KANAUGA

OWNER W l l

HELP F NANCE hs 5 m
home w h a ge com me c a
ype ga age

OH 0 R ve v ew 85
on age
and ex ends o he ve 3 BR
ng a ea 5 x 20 c arpe ed
modern k chen w h d sposa
ange w h hood ba h w th
showe gas fu -nace ga age
n basemen red woods d ng
y s hqo
shown by ap
po n men

M LLS V LLAGE
LOW
DOWN PAYMENT FOR THE
R GHT PERSON
before
you
buy
make an ap
po ntmen to see h s beauty
w h a arge 00 x 300 ot
o ma d n ng rm
u
basement 2 WB f ep aces
and ga age

BR CK home on Lowe R ve
Road n exce en cond ton 2
mode n k. hen
ep a
pus sum me k. hen n u
s zed basemen cen a a
3
po ches one car ga age
a !:1€ o
shown by ap
po n men

CLOSE TO B DWELL
N
m horne w h 3 ac es of
has 3 BR u basement
u nace and o s of p ne
on a BT d

t/JIIJIRlUNL
REALTY
25 Locust Sf
Howard Brannon B oker
Off 446 2674
Luc lie Brannon
Eve 446122.6 or446 2674
RED FLANNEL
WEATHER COMING
YOU CAN keep you oved ones
cozy and warm h s w n er n
h s we
nsu l a ted house
Lowe
ue b s oo Ranch
sty e 4 B R 1
ba h fam l y
oom
brary ga ra ge gas
fu n
a ge we
andscaped
awn and on y S26 500

HUGE

P~AYROOM

VERY n ce eat n k chen and
ove s ze aundry rm
com
fo abe LR
frepace n
spac ous p ayroom w th pat o
doo s ead ng to pat o and
extra a ge awn garage and
ou bu d ng $24 000
BR CK &amp; FRAME
3 YEAR o d home on 100 x 85
of 3 BR carpet n LR and 2
but n ktchen
BR
a
ga age s or age bu d ng Just
6 m f om own $22 000
EVERYBODY LOVES

'2 Bed oom
4 acres lots
of outbu d ngs n ce p c
ture v ew of the Oh o R ve
Pr ced on y s 4 900 00
47 ac es
m e of Rt 35
near Rodney 8 ac es pus
on Rt 60 nea Po te
4 443
acres
RIO
Centerpo n Rd nea R o

AGENCY
150 ACRE FARM

Located on L ncoln P ke n Harnson Twp
about 12 m from town 30 to 40 A tillable
balance 1n pasture and woods 1600 lb tobacco
base older 4 bedroom home Downst;;urs has
been remodeled Large barn 01wer anx ous
to sell Pnced at $27 000 oo
$12

Owner W11l Help
Fmance Very Very
Anx1ous To Sell
NEED
A
MODERN
l VEABLE HOME
TH S
ONE HAS A BEDROOMS
FAM L Y ROOM
0 N NG
ROOM
AND
FULL
BASEMENT
T S
A
MODERN
HOME
AND
OWNER W LL HELP YOU
F NANCE
T
CALL
US
FOR
FULL
DETA LS
WELL SHOW YOU TH S
HOME ANYT ME
T S
VACANT AND READY TO
MOVE NTO

Country Home On
Edge of
Bob Evans Farms

ce 5
and
new
rees

ENO
Ove an ac e of ro ng
and w h a mode n 6 m
home and basemen
On y

$16 900

0 d

9ACRESdeveopmen and R
4 and G aham Sc hoo Rd
8 ACRES n Po me oy
NEW homes out of town $26 500

up

NEAR HO SP TAL Love y one
f oo p an La ge eve ot
THE OUTCOME;
s ncome
when you buy
h s doub e
b ck on Second Avenue
LAN 0 &amp; LOTS Rt 141 and nea
R o G ande
BROCHURES

lol

POMEROY
NVESTMENT
2 bus ness ren als and 2
re s den a
enta s Large
corn e r o
Owne w
a ke

ade

FARMS

NEAR TYCOON LAKE- One
45 ac: e and wo 30 acre farms
A
are most y t ab e
F nanc ng ava abe
NEAR OAK H LL
28 A 40
A woods og cab n and tree
gas $13 000
LAWRENCE COUNTY
135
A 35 A t I abe ba ance n
woods arge tob base good
barn s 6 soo
ADD SON TWP -25A o ng
and most y woods coun ty
wa er ava lflb e u ooo
HUNT NGiON TWP
pasture and woods
beef ca e

dea

4A
for

ME GS (' fiit~TY 66 A
vacant
ne cut 4 500
ba es of ha
~A
2 we s
part a f nant. U
ava abe

RACCOON

CREEK

TAGE - 13 acre$
camps es $10 000

~46-0001
3 BEDROOM house ke new
Beaut fu kl chen w h d sh
washer p vs d n ng a ea a
cond
u
tv room and
carpe ting On Rt 35 P ced n
ow 20 s Phone 446 079 o
446 185-4
269 f

NEW 3 BR.
BRICK HOME
La ge I vlng room &amp; k chen

P enty of cab nets e ectr c:
range d Shwashe d sposa
fv y carf)eted 11'2 bath 2
ca
garage e ec c door
opener centrll
a r con
d ton
Located 6 m les up Rt 7 n
Country A r Estate
Can F nance
nqu re Corb n &amp; Snyder
Furniture
Cal446- 111
Affer 5-4"6 2573

fo

MORGAN TWP

83 A 84 A
5 A and 155 A P ces sta t
a S15000

DA RY FARMS
We have 2
Bo h are mode n and se
~ ade Am lk Bo h haves los
and good bu ld ngs
l you
THE COUNTRY
want a a m tha w
suppo t
220 ACRES 2 a ge barns 2
your tam l y ca us
a ge homes n ex a good
cond on good fence p enty L ST NGS NEEDED
wale
oca ed on BT oad
RAN NV BLACKBURN
l h. ACRES
BRANCH MANAGER
3 BR 2 bath module home a
e ect c 24 x 60 ba n and NE:,..,t&lt; completon al brck
outbu d ng $22 000
house w h f n shed fam y
IDEAL LOCATION
oom
n
basement
3
BUS NES S ot on Second Ave
bedrooms 1 2 baths
arge
o 190 x 60 w th ar:ge- bock
k tchen and d n ng .area w h
bu d ng
d shwashe d sp
ange and
S24 500
cab ne s o spare A e ec:tr c
W LL buy h s nea new br ck
w h central a
cond
car
and frame home beaut fu
pe ng 2 car garttoe w h
a Pf1
3 BR
modern as
Phone 4..6 079
e ectr c doo
om or ow k chen and d n ng
0 446 1854
a ea Ga age n ce o near
269 f
_:_
town

_________________

VERY

N CE

BEDROOM

MODERN

HOME

3

W TH

FAMLY
ROOM
NCE
K TCHEN
FORMAL
D N NG
LARGE
CAR
PETED L V NG ROOM
AND
LARGE
LAN D

LOT

PR CES

Brand New
Bnck Ranch
Lovely Location
JUST ACROSS THE OLD
M LL STREAM YOU LL
F NO
TH S
NEW
3
BEDROOM BR CK W TH A
BEAUT FUL K TCHEN
BATHS 0 N NG ROOM ON
A LARGE FLAT LOT ALL
ROOMS ARE LARGE AND
ALL ARE CARPETED
BU LOER HAS TAKEN
SPEC AL
CARE
N
DECORAT NG AND OF
FE RS A L TTLE MORE
FO R
THE
MONEY
PR CEO LOW TH RT ES
C TY SCHOOL D STR CT

Galt a Co s Large-if Rul
Estate sates Agency
Office""' 36"3
Evenings Call
e M Ike w s.em•n
446 3796

E N W seman 446 4500

Bud McGhee 446 1255
THIS br ck and frame beauty
has a bu I n k chen forma
d n ng room a fam y oom
w th a n ce f ~place 3 arge
bed oo m s w th close s to
spare wo arge bathrooms
ca pet ng
hrouohout
a
e ec
c w th central air
cond
arge two ca garage
w h an electr c doo Phone
446 1079 or AA6 1854
269 "
sMALL-fMm-w-t'l tobacco
base house 5 ooms and ba h
has coa l Ph 256 6930
167 6

TARA
Townhouse
Apartments
2 Bedroom
Townhouses
llh Baths
Pay Only One
Uhllty
AddiSOn OhiO

------..,

For lnformauon
t;,;all Shirley Adkms

367·7250

ANTIQUE AUCTION

FRON

dea

Seller Needs
A Buyer

BE H GHER TH S
SPR NG SO BUY NOW

NEAR HMC
Ths
y
od
ranch
featu es a b ck
font ga age 3 BR facto y
k chen and a arge carne
RODNEY
Moden A BR
anch w h pver an acre of
and Th s 5 y
o d beauty
of ers s 2 car garage hot
wa e
hea
P
baths a
cond
ful
basement w h
aundry and a ge
am ly rm
s one f replace

AL CE RD

W LL

YOUR
VERY
OWN
4
BEDROOM
CA PE COO
HOME
BRAND NEW AS
A MATTER OF FACT
F
YOU BUY NOW YOU CAN
DO
ALL
YOUR
DECORAT NG
NC UOES
A DEN
FAM LY ROOM
K TCHEN COMB NAT ON
W TH F REPLACE 2 CAR
GARAGE ON A LARGE
COUNTRY LOT
N C TY
SC HOOL 0 STR CT

FREE MAPS

TH S OLDER HOME HAS
BEEN
PART ALLY
REMODELED
NCLUDES
5 BEDROOMS
BATH
SHOP BLDG
CELLAR
ETC N CE LOCAT ON ON

SCAPEO

HERES AN OLDER HOME
THAT 5 MUCH BETTER
THAN AVERAGE T SA 2
STORY 3 BEDROOM HOME
W TH MODERN K TCHEN
MODERN HEAT NG AND
N CE WALL TO WALL
CARPET NG
EX
CELLENT
LOCAT ON
s 7 900 00

RANCHO COMPANY
THE HOME FOLKS
o ACRes obacco base
house Reasonab e

ooo Bargam

Large Home
3 Acres

Trad1t1onal
Amertcan Warmth

SAT NOV 24 10 OOA M
POMEROY OHIO
On Me1gs Co Fa1r grounds in lleated bldg (Just Off R 33
north of Pomeroy) Mr Martin 1s selling h1s collection of
glassware etc - many nice pieces in m nt condltton some have been tn storage smce 1910 Part •• ltsting

follows

ADD WILL RUN BUT ONCE

LAMPS rare tion tiead glass o I lamp oil lamp w tinted

base slag glass hall I ght other oil lamps CARNIVAL
Buiterfly &amp; Plume green water p tcher M Stippled Dot
Cusp dor p Floral &amp; D amond Point rose bowl b
Gar ands rose bow b Orange Tree mug
VIntage bowl

8

sev other pes (2 marked) PATTERN LASS. CHINA
POTTERY blue Stuben perfume red block pllcher

Vaseline powder jar w perfume bottle on lid 2 covered
butters 2 gold banded berry -sets Amber na fruit bowl
flashed Ruby souven r pes amber birds &amp; wheat mug birds
&amp; owt mug c:q,vered compote opalescent berry set blue
opalescent rose bowl sev other opalescent pieces In blue
&amp; green 2 syrup p tchers w glass lids 2 cranberry &amp; opal
sw rl vases cru t few pes m lk glass Dep G!a!is {Cherry
blossom pink sandw ch plate) Weller vase hair receiver
Copper lustre pitcher 6 china salts few pes b sque
Haviland tureen s gned &amp; dated) shaving scuttle
shav ng mug f o blue plate washbowt &amp; pitcher pair

f gurines efc ANTIQUE FURNITURE

2 nice china

cab nets - both w th curved glass - one w claw feet 3
round tabfes w ped bases ( 1 has claw feet) Frankl n
f replace playe plano 2 high headboard VIctorian beds
secretary bookcase (needs repa r} Wat parlor chelr
Jenny Lind bed bookca!.e w fold ng glas doors wash

I ,MILESSOOF
EUREKA ON RT 7

VACANT LAND

RUSSELL$
PLUMBING &amp; HEAT NG

Route 60 i!!t Eve g een
Phone 446 27~S

PR

3 Bed oom
ac e plus
N ce mode n 6 oom br ck
home
Lo s of t ees &amp;
sh rubb e y ga den space
u a wa er p us wo we Is
4 m le s from Ga po s See
h s one

$17 900 00

GENE PLANTS&amp; SON
?LUMB NG
Hea ng
A r
Cond on ng 300 Four h Ave
Ph 446 637

1

BULAVILLE RD

EUREKA

e on

ox
eek Rd
$2 500 ea
16 5

3 Bed ooms mode n home
w th
e ec
c
stove
~
ge a o
w h
ce
maker ga bage d sposa
d shwashe b ck &amp; s one
A n ce home

1 ,MILESFROM

2

AND HEATING

HIKEMASTER BOOTS
WITH VIBRAM SOLE

20 tf

LOTS
app
Geo ges c
f om R
984 0 446

3 BR new a e ec chouse a
ca pe ed w th wo ba hs and
enc osed f n shed ga age on
0 00 X 200 $27 000

a

tOny$890000

-

a! NOFITH COURT STREET

c homes

GRAC OUS town
v ng n a 3
BR home a r cond oned gas
u na ce
ep ace pane l ng
bath mode n
ca pe ed
k chen w cab ne s so m
doo s and
w ndows
basemen
shown by ap
po n ment
OFFICE 446 066
EVENINGS
Russe wood 446 46 a
Ron Canaday 446 3636
John R cha ds 446 0280

NVESTMENT

BILLS ARMY NAVY SALES

WEHAVE-4a eec
sedfosae

AT QUAL Ho ow 4 BR W h
bah
mode n k hen
a
e ec c home has u a
water and ga age $21 90U

J &amp; W MOUNT
3 BEDROOM
CLEANif(.G SERV CE
fu
ba hs
GENERAL hoUse c lean ng We
Cen ena y
svpp y a the c ean ng sup
p es 388 8875.afte 6 p m ca
388 886S Weekly o month y
HOUSE 2
c ean ng by eppo ntmen
bedrooms
c y
91 tf
d s c:t 2 m es ou
446 2323
TOOL
sharpen ng
saws
sc ssors sheers home ant;t
---------garden oo s Sharp Shop
BY
OWNER
Lots fo
A ey ear 1-47 Second
Pa
o Gage Road
216 tf
379 2 75 after 6 p m

Hr

e

a 28ACRES

5 m house p us
5 pc
eu n

83

233 f

s e

ST RT
4
2 A w h 2
houses and a ba n $ 6 000

379

ROOF NG &amp; Spo ut ng Sh ng e
&amp; Bu ldup oof Hot &amp; cod
p ocess Home mprovement
n
gene a
Fo
f ee
es mates
phone Robe
Meade 388 8 4 B dwe
Oh o
2JO tf

g

5

N
3 ACRE S
on R
5

cen a

NVE STMENT
4 m house
w h base
mode n a d 3
m ap
u n shed $ 8 000
CHESH RE
ra er pad
$8 000

N e bu d

2ACR E S

beau y

Central A r Cond ton ng
&amp; Heat ng
Free Est mates
Stewarts Hardware
Vinton Oh o

~=e=c==c'C

ACRES
Good
ou
e ba h
b ed oom home
y wa e ga age and o he
bu d ngs The and s ea
n ce and p en y o oom o a
ga den Lo a eo nea V n on

$ 7 500

has

WRONG NUMBER
m
sa d he e ephone
so y s
ope a o
but tha number
has been aken out
OH
s ha so
he man
ep ed
We
can you g ve
me any no ma on as o us
who
ook he out

World's Larg&lt;1st
THE LEADER SINCE 1900 I~
SERVING THE NATION'
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
Ph 446 0008

v

GARF E 0 AVE
S m
f ame w h base
A um
s d ng s o m d s and w n
u
P ce
Neil
new gas

on

--------,-----lili&amp;M

ADELA DE DR
Th ee
bed oom home w h ba h
o ed a
u na e new
a pe
n
ng
oom and
ha wu
oca ed c ose o own
on a n e e e
o
P
e
ed u ed o s 5 000

6
m
HW
s
A ba ga n

WOOD LA ND OR
fame 8ysod
equ pped k chen
at $20 000

NOT t...t:
To a
ea o s and people
wan ng a new b ck enee
an c h
ype
house
The
p ope 'i o
c aude and
Madg e Shahan us of R
60
s no
and ocked as wa~
epo ed We have he map
and pape sf om he h ghway
d son o p ave
See h s beau fu a e ec c
home 4 a ge
ooms and
ha way ca peed Fam y
oom s 5 x26
w h
Shown by appo n men
Wood Agency

3 BR a e e
c
S R 588 on ot
a pe ed w h
enc osed ga
wa e S2 000

Ony$350000
RT 35 WEST

DON'T READ THIS AD

Avenue Suite 419 Phoenix: Arizona 15012

and

COUNTRY A RE STATES
y o d b ck and a um 3 b g
bd ms
ba hS a ca pe
huge 2 ca ga
and a a ge
f a
o S36 900

----·--·-----------

man~ger

...

Orstrlbulmg Corp Hoi Food Oivlsion 3443 Norlll Centro I

S

-4461066

3 BR home w h summe k.
hen n basemen t has a
bed ooms ca pe ed F o da
oom ca pe ed 2 n e ba hs
and 08 ac e o and
ca po
$35 000

s o m d s and

so

or part time Calf 4460677 Ask for personnel

1

-Vmyl Tops

RoadS Bradbury
Anlhony Russell Owner

f

MOTORIST MUTUAL
INSURANCE
THEbes nsu ance at he bes
pr ce
For auto
home
bus ness and fe Ray Hawk
agen 446 2300 54 4 h Ave

Full

I

-Custom Tnm Work

PHONE 992-2839
Localed
Rl No 1M ddleporl

AlBERT EHMAN

We need young men &amp;
women for mmechate work
No expenses needed
Car
necessary

I

-Ong1nal UpholsteJY Repa1red or Replaced

ms

5

Ve y

M

CHATHAM AVE
5 ms and
ba h w h new
u n
e
$
500 W hou
u n u e
$ 6 000

----·------·------~69

DeliveJY Driver Sales

I
I
I

-Auto Carpe!Jng

ROUTE 'l 8
See h s a
ee
home w h
u
baseme n
bah b ee eway
and ga age N e home w h a
a ge beau u ands ape o

2 7 ,

I
I
I

-Custom Seat Covers

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

Personnel

I
I
I

1

BUSH MORT ON RD
y
o d fram e b ck
m 5 ms
ba hs a ca pe a e ec
pa o
ove ed
Th s s •
beau y On y $26 900

ST RT 35
6 m
a me an h
w h base H w
s pa
ca pe F P 2 a ga
w h
La ge 0
P ce
e ec d
$28 500

G LLENWATER S SEPT C
TANK CLEAN NG
AND
REPA R
ALSO
HOUSE
WRECK NG Ph 4-46 94~9
Es ab shed n 1940

--------·----------~73

E gh
FOUR TH AVE
oom
hou se w h bah ue o o gas
ed a
hea n e a ge 0 p
$ 5 000

6M DOWN RT
ba h 2 ou b dg
eve o $ 2 600

29

446-1209

1

h ee
Y one u
ba h s Qood
ange d s
room and a

CROUSE BECK RO T
Leve 6 ms
ba hs 2
ysodHWfoos
Ao
Th s sa good house and au d
no be bu
o
he ask ng
p Cl! oday S32 000

EVERGREEN
ba h u hea
wn$4000

SEPT C TANKS
C eaned and nsta ed
Rvsse s P umb ng 446 4782

s

I
I

Real Estate

11r
R~

N ce h ee bed oom
C TY
ho me na u a gas hea bah
a ge v ng oorn w h ove v
ca pe oca ed on wo en ed
n
o s
N ce
p ace
o
h d en

9M DOWN RVER
2soy
b c k base a c arpe
v
rm
5 X 36 W h F P A SO
has2ndhou se w h-4 ms ~A
R ve v ew o s 5 000

STEWART E ec ca
"Repa
house w r ng
e ec r c heat ng Phone 446
4561
27

2&lt;7

~--R~;;~r;-A~i;r~~---,

I

"
1
TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FREE nspect on Ca 446 3245
Me r
0 De
Ope a o by
Ex term na Trm e Se v ce
0 Be mong Dr

WALLPAPER NG and
ng Phone 446 9865 o

&amp; INSTAllER

d

w h
a...., v
'"
ov a ga age Good am y
home w han ce a ge o

M NORTH of HMC
New
6 ms &amp;
ba hs a ca pe
b ck a e ec 2 a a a hed
ga $34 000

PROTECT you mob e home
w th T E DOWN ANCHORS
Ca
Ron Sk dmore 4-46 756
af e 3 p m

"

SOUT HERN Oh o Coa Com
pany has an open no for an
expe enced e ephone n
sa er and repa man Must
be ab e
o troub e shoot
w hout supe v son
Know edge of sche-ma cs and
wo k ng e ect ca
p n s
essen a
Good
fr nge
benet s sa ng rae $620
pe hour Con ac t South ern
Oh o Coa Company R
3
Box 54 A bany Oh o 457 0
Phone
614 669 32 6 Ma n
off ce oca ed on Route 689
near A bany
AN EQUAL
OPPORTUN TY
EM
PLOVER
273

••

k chen
wa she

b ck a
A
of

HOLLEY

TELEPHONE REPA RMAN

OS&lt;O

Oouq"W •, he ho
0
5

6 ms a
new ca pe ave H W
s
Cen
a
ga age
and
WO kshop
28 X 28
P ce
S28 500

EVA'S BEAUTY SALON

Want

I

For Rent

MT Z ON Rd 6 m
ca pe
F P and
$3 500

Ma t n &amp; Son Wa er
De ve y
Serv ce
You
pa O(lage
w
be
ap
prec att&gt;d Ph 446 0-463

Beauticians

equ p you
new bus ness~
sons or
n e absen
es ed ee
n ,_.;.;.;,;;.;.;,;;,:;,;.;',.;.
· - - - • • • • • • • • - - - - -. .
fudea for
partpe me
managemen
Wr te
for
pe son a
n erv ew
L
W
Sm h Na onw de F gu am a
P o Box 304 Pa ke sburg
w Va 26 o
273

-

P

____ _;273 3

Car needed

0677

Real Estate For Sale

~T ~G 446 J~~~d

WATER

Full or Part Time

N:

---------

25 40 YEARS of age fema e
p efe ed
B 20 hours week
?a
me
h gh
SChOO
g adua e mus
own car
supe m a ke
expe enc:e
he p u
no
equ ed
Dspayng
sockng and
o de ng me cha nd se Ph one
446 AO 11 afte 5 p m

•3.57 an hour

FAMOUS

--·------·--------

days

necessarv

~o~~i~~~~.T w~ 0 '.".:'~~o'~no~

NEW

GOO D
N VESTM ENT
p ope ty 3 fu n shed apar
mens n come S2 0 month y
ou of s a e owne
Fo
n
o mat on phone 992 5 3
aay me

33

273

Help Wanted

We need young men and women for
1mmed1ate work
No expenence

OPPORTU~ITY
NAME

A

HEALTH cLue

~ -- ='·~------,----

acres of

----

NC

DELIVERY DRIVER SALES

446 ·

4

OPEN

Real Estate For Slile

home
ca pe ng
ga age ove an ac e g ound
on Fa woods Rd phone 992
2 35

MAY God bess a
my oved
ones ou pas or Rev Samue
Thompson and w fe n e gh
bo s and
ends fo
you
ness
k ndness n my ecen
A b g hanks o a
M s S an ey G assbu n

lUPneSt
446 2532

SLEEP NG ROOMS
weekly
a es Pa k Centra Hole
306 tf

Busmess OpportumtleS
UNUSUAl

2 2

TWO bed oom house a 4 J
Sycamore S ee
n M d
d epo
vacan Ca 992 53 0
4 3tc

Ca

-------------~----..::2

.;..

6 tfc

TRUCKS

--·--·--·-------~

POODLE

Wanted To Buy

w

fo ge no neve no fo
was not a one
God s ood
bes de me eve y day and
b ough me safe y home Now
as see he sun come uo and
se
c ose my
hen see
eyes and say a p aye (or
f ends
won fo ge

SOMMERS G M C

267 f

Do

254 f

LAYNE S Por abe Weld ng
cer f ed pressure p p n.g
cer f ed st uctu a
s ee
weld ng a urn num He a c
Ph 446 34 0 24 hour serv ce

D D

.

BRADBURY~

DV
'"" d u oack hoe wo k
ponds and sep c anks d
ch ng se v ce
op so
f
d
mes one
B&amp;K
Esc:ava ng Phone 992 5367 or
992 386

nea y eve and n meadow
w h a "fa r y good '2 bed oom
home at Down ngton

IF YDU WANT TO BUY OR
SEL SEE ONE OF US

$3495
$3995
$4195
$3895
$4295
$4695
$5495

446 0175

HARR SO N S TV ser ce ano
se v ce ca s Phone 99 2 2522
2 9 fc

'l:::LNr-and Wh e
Mach nes
serv ce
makes Reasonabfe
The Sew ng Cen e
d epo
Oh o

FURN SHED apa men
BR
adu s on y pa k ng
en t a
a and a cond Ph 446 0338

men

0 24 30 p

!)t: PT C
TANKS
AROB C
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPA RED
M LLER
SAN TAT ON
STEWART OH 0 PH 662
3035

New GMC
T uck Headquarters
968
on GMC p ck up
963 2 on Fo d
967 3 T GMC PU
969 h T GMC PU
969 Chevro e ~ on p ckup
96
on Chev
969
T Fo d PU
969 Dodge S a on Wagon
959FodGaaxe
967 n on Che\ly p ckup
966 h on GMC p c kup
969
T Chev PU
969
T GMC PU
968
T GMC PU
967
T GMC PU
96
T GMC PU
969
Ton GMC PU
968
T Fo d
9
T Fo d PU
968 :J., T GMC PU

•

FUR N SHE-D house 3 ooms
and bhth 640 5 h A e No
c h d en no pe s Ca af er 6
p m 446 60

Con ac
WE BUY god cons and s ve
do ars
a so o d co ns
Tawney s ewe e s
224 f

Gallipolis Oh1o

SE W NG MACH NE S Repa
makes 992 2284
se v ce a
The Fab c Sho p Pome oy
Au hor zed S nge Sa es and
e
, W~&gt; r. 11en Sc ssors
1 0

"

Hoe

o ge my oved ones ha
a e so good o me d d
o ge
my ttle chu ch and a
t s
meant o me
see hem
knee ng a a ound
hear a
s en p aye
God ook
from each ov ng hea
and
paced
w h me thee

GET 'YOUR MAN

2013 Eastern Ave

'"

SLEEP NU

tf

0 D

76 If

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

TRI COUNTY
MOBILE
HOMES

G S. E App ance Repa
P hone
a he ShOP 992 3802 0 949

24

THE K NO wo ds o
eac
ne ghbor and fr ends a ong
he way even some ca ds
rom across he sea o chee
me on my way D d fo ge o
hank you
ends
0 d
o ge o say a praye fo each
and eve y one That u ned
myngh oday

St

State

e
ROUTE 7 Sou h a b
k 8b g
ms 2
ba hs a ca pe
:2
F Ps sw mm ng poo
ve
v ew and A 0 Luxu Y Pus

-----~-----------_:_•8

forge
o hank you
ends D d
forget o say
How very much t mttan o
me When
was n despa
When
was s ck and one y
he
no n my bed o see
you cards and f owers he e
mean mo e han was sad

32

Rea tv 32 sa e s
T
446 99S

we
Ph

D d

NEW se a and Bemco ma
ress and box sp ngs Large
se ec on n s oc k
I rm
m a resses sta
ng at S39 00
955 Second Avenue
446 171

-'---~-·-----

Real Estate For Sale •

Tel 4461998

DID I FORGET

~-, -------

All homes are total
electnc
completely
furmshed quarter 1nch
panel1ng
storm
w1ndows &amp;
door
Delivered &amp; set up
free

ASK NG

$0 00000

p us of vacant and on Rt 7
nea Pome oy Only $ 800 00

36c

AUTOMOB LE nsu ance been
an e ed
Los
your
ope a o s cense Ca
992

apa

NEW LISTING

40 TO 50 a es and w h a ge
o d 2 story a me house needs
epa r
0
R
43 nea
Ha r son
e Ask ng $ 4 ooo
Ca 742 5435 even ngs o 592
9738 days

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASO NABLE ale s Ph -4-46
-4 82 Ga po s ohn Russe
Owne and Ope a o

428

bed ooms
baths
ga s
"fu nace Ga age and 3 po ches
no ap
n M ddlepo t $ 8 000 00
$5 00
NEW
LISTING
7 rooms 3
Phone
bed ooms bath natura gas
56 P heat and garage Near s o es
n Pomeroy s 000 00
MALE pood e puppy
back NEAR TOWN
N ce b ch
m n a u e Phone 992 585 8
3 c k tchen w th S S cook and bake
un s 3 bed ooms
fam 1¥
oom carpe ng and nat gas
Auto Sales
furnaces S 5 000 00
MOBILE HOME LOT
In
962 MERCURY
doo
e)(
Ha sonv I e w th water tap
ce en
ond on
a 000 ac
ua m es ex a snow
es pa d sept c tank and e ec
moun ed
Ha y
Sw an
f c y
Po and Oh o 843 2:123

Real Estate For Sale

READY M X
CONCRETE
de ve ed
gh
o you
p o eel Fas and easy F ee
es t ma es Phone 992 328-4
Goeg en Ready M x Co
M dd epo
Oh o
6 30 c

Fu n sh ed $6 500 00

Brok.;··r
YOU v E shopped ne es now
buy he bes a Showa e s
we Pe ShoP Ches e Oh o
New sh pmen n sock
4
c

0 3 30 c

10x39 2 Bdrm
10x512 Bdrm
10x56 2 Bdrm
12x412 Bdrm
15x512 Bdrm
12x563Bdrm
12x613 Bdrm

week v
pa k ng

-----------·Ga
ooms

-

6

269 6

a es

a~~

•

264
WR T NG Chapman Fam Y
STAR CRAFT
Hsory
Lookng
o
COMPARE
ou
9 Apr ces 25
desc:endan s o
F oyd TWO 2 bed ooms
o a
Wande s a con a ned
Chapman bo n 84
Ga a
e ec
c
mob e
homes
S3 599 20 f
7 As ro Star
coun y Son o sa ac and Sa a
oca ed a
Qua
c eek
$3 325
Fo d downs S. 350
Dawson Cha pman
Ga a
Con ac New ones 2J5 502
accesso es and f nanc ng
Coun y
Reco de
and
16
a ilnged we serv ce what
Treasu e
a e 800 s Rep Y
we se
Camp coney Star
Box No 296 co Ga po s
2X60 MOB LE Home
a
era fl Sa es R 62 N o Po nt
T bune
es pa d on
e ec
c u
P easan beh nd Red Carpe
2 33
Geo ges C eek Rd Ca 446
nn 6 5 5384
3468 af e 5
252 tf
SWEE PER Repa s pa s
26-4 f
supp es 446 0294 0 a m
S
p m Oav s Vacuum C eane
3 TRA LER spaces 36
438
S o e Geo ges C eek Road
266
nex o Bobs CB Rad o Sa es
26
uc on

MOBILE
HOMES

REALTY

6oa

KENNELS

L - -- -- - -- ---__j

WHOLESALE

Camp ete mob le hom e
pu s ggan
se
ce
d sp lay of mali' e hom es
a way s a a abe a

Pets For Sale

PA NT DAMAGE 9 "3 Z g Zag
sew ng Mach nes
S
n
a on s
No a
o g na
achmen s needed as ou
con o s a e bu
n Sews
w h
o 2 need es makes
bu onho es sews on bu ons
monog ams and b nd hem
s ch Fu
ash p ce S3B50
o
budge
p an a a abe
Phone 992 2964

FOR FREE es ma es on
a um num s d ng
So m
Doors and W ndows
Ca
po s Ma Quees and R a ng
Phone
Char es
L s e
Sy acuse Oh o Ca
:Jacob
Sa es Rep esen a ve V V
Johnson and Son nc
6 22 tf c

a e

pm

El(erc se runs
Warm sleep ng quarters
Cant nuous frestl water &amp;
food
Ca peted beds
Love and understand ng
AKC pupp es &amp; stud serv ce
Ca I 388 8274 for nspect on
and reservat on

--·--·--------------

A r Cond1t1oners
Awn ngs
Underpmn ng

2X60 R ha dson 2 bed oom
wa she and d ye spa e
o
k
hen po ch and shed n
uded fu n shed Ca
592
34JB

5 '

_:_ ___

(

4 ooms
o a ed
Y depos

L bby

RON SHE PARD F oo
Wa
Remade ng Ce am c
ba hs Box 280 Ru and 742
3664
6 26

e

P

K AND

2 8 tf c
FUR N S HED

MOB LE
Adu s

BOARD YOUR PETS AT

0 DELL

Ca

g ound
9 9 998

272 f

Adu s on y secur
equ ed Ca 446 0444

All work guaranteed

35

2 BEDROOM mob e home 60
Uppe R ve Road Ca
446
0008
269 f

2 2 I

Area s Most
Reasonable Pnces

FREE EST

Real Estate For Sale
OEDROOM o e 3 ea sod

s FLOOR 2 oom apa men
n Pome oy Ca 992 3026
53

Pamtmg A Specialty

992 7608

REPAIR

TRA
Pa

L ncoln H II Pomeroy 0

Johnson Masonry
&amp; (Remodeling)

COJ\IPLE rE
INTERIOR

TWO WAY RadOS Sa es &amp;
Serv ce New and used C B s
po ce mon ors antennas
e c Bobs C zen Band Rad o
Equ p
Go ges C eek Rd
Ga po s Oh o 446 451

R

TRA LER space ava abe
$35 permo 3m es om own
Phone 446 052 o 446 029
269 4

'

Ph 992 5271

992 7474

Bradbury

(

es w h
e e se

S8 50

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

992 2839
Co Road 5

Gene's
Body Shop

NOV SPEC
$12 50 Perm For

AUTO TRIM

62p

660

Johmes Beauty
Salon

onem e rom hosp a
AdU s 446 3605

DAY CARE
SUN VALLEY Nu se y SchoO
censed by S a e of Oh o
h
m es wes o new hosp a
577 Sun V. ey o Ph 446 36S7
Day ca e
ha
says
we
ca e
Madge Hau d en
Owne
Lo ed h and John
Hau dren opera ors

"J

e v

N CE 2 bed oom mob e home

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

Realtv

388

~ ---------·--

RooneY Cora Rd
Rodney Oh o
Hour s 9a m to9P m
Monday thrv Saturday
Ph 24 9174 ?45 502

BOB LANES
Compete Bookkeep ng and Tax
Serv ce 424
Fou th Ave
Kanauga
Bus ness by ap
po ntmenl
Ph
446 049
Please ca at1er 6 p m
278 f

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

D

Corbin &amp; Snyder
Furniture

&amp; SALES

606 E Mam Pomeroy

6
S P NET CO N SOLE P ANO
Waned ReSP.Ons b e pa y o
pu hase sp ne p a o on ow
mon h y pa m.en s Can be
seen o a y w e Manag e
P 0 Box 2 6 She by
e
nd ana 46 6

QUAIL CREEK
MOBIL£
COMMUNITY

992 2094

MOORE &amp; SONS

Tycoon

67VAL ANT6 cy Avo Rado
and W W
es 446 6 5 aUe
6 446 244
260 rt

PUBLIC NOT CE
The Ga a Boa d of Revs on
have comp e ed he wo k and
he books a e now open fo
nspe on
2 2 0

Oh 0

o
cha ge- fo se v ce ca
can f x you app ance
6 5 4242

273 3

Card of Thanks

For Rent

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AU10

D. L

h
h

Ca

2733

1,06 E Ma n Pomeroy 0

W1th Skilled
Craftsmanship

388 880 0
---

Found

Notice

v n on

______________________2_,__
_

~:~eo~~~ ~edonunRe~~~~ WAe~H~: a

----------

Monday th v Saturday

Pomeroy

Ph '992 2174

N V C N TY of Danv I e ma e
ck and fema e Red

COONHOUND nea
Lake Ca 388 8589

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open6TIS

~:ocum

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

ece ved a houseful ot
used fu n 1ure
Everyth ng
you m ght want Come f rst
get the bes
New urn ture
spec a Ea y Ame can :J ~c
v ng oom su e S299 95 h
446 926
213 tf

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992 2094

PRICE

6

REDUCE
F u d ex
Oex A D e
Ne son D ugs

must nave e e en es
992

day o d o
s a ed
L egho n pu e s Bo h oo o
g own
a a ab e
c age
Pou
"(
hou s ng
&amp;
au om a on Mode n Pou
399 w Ma n Pome oy 99'1
&amp;

2 64

992 293

Mu be

Mason W Va

713 S5S4

J Bp

26

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

&amp; ZUSPAN

HOGG

Real Estate For Sale

hot 00 s F
Es rna es 26
yea s exper ence
James

Reward Phone- • &lt;6
27 3 1

~

UST

i\ggress1ve md1v1dual wllhng to work to take
over established multi lme msurance agency
Salary to start and trammg mcluded Call
Galhpohs 446 4707 collect ror appomtment

Servlces Offered

0

On Most Amer can Cars

e

MATERIAlS CO

35

3 ROOMS and ba h

Bvl do~e
Rad a o
to
:,ma es Hea e Lo
Nil than B gg~
Rad ator Spec al st

Bu It to You Spec s
Oe vered to Job S te

emode ng by

ac

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
1 5.55

ASK US ABOUT

7 25 fc

Parson's

WANTED

o • asses be ween •oo

p

PUBLIC
NOTICE
W~ se I anythmg for
anybody
Br ng your
1tems to Knotts Com
mun ty Auc:hon Barn
Corne Th rd &amp; Oltve
For appotntment tall
256 6967 alter 5 p m
Sale every Saturday

even ng al 7 0 Clock

AUCTION
SERVICE
~sELL THE AlltTIOft

WAY

JIMME SAYWE
AUCfiOftEER

PH.I46-3444

stand. efc

MISC

ITEMS

Harpers Weokleys (1898)

many stone lids old boxes 11 thimb es 1 2 doz p cture

nal s few pollt cal !ems US Register bank nice S T
kltc:hen clock

g mirror tobacco humidor Avon boHies

old ones) 2 Iron tea kettles some old coins old iewolrr. 2

volume Howe s Ohio h story set of 10 Edgar Allen Poe
books other old books souven r spoons records counter
seal~ (200 lb ) Rad ant gas heater Kenmore washer
few m sc p etes household 9oods &amp; Items too numerous to

melltlon

NO VIEWING BEFORE DAY OF SALE
Terms Cash
Eoh Avolleble
Nol Responllblt for Acdclenls
Osby A M&lt;lrtm OwMr
C I SMrldon l01oc:l
Pomeroy ~ 7022
-'~Msvllle 411io'UI

�•
2'1 - 'n1e Sw1day 'Times· Se1ntinel •

.,.
•

~

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

MARTIN FORD XTRA SPECIAL!

..••••

500 E. MAIN

•

••
••

,.•••,

'

..
.....·
,,..

1973 PONTIAC
1972 BUICK
1972 BUICK
1972 CHRYSLER
1972 CHRYSLER
1972 DODGE
1972 OPEL
1972 FORD
1971 FORD
197l GREMLIN
1970 BUICK 2
1969 PONTIAC
1969 FORD

•

..

....
..' .
.

..
,..

Skylark 2 dr. H. T. Only 12,896 miles.

1973 GRAN TORINO

4 dr., 351 2 V engine. vinyl seat trim,
vinyl roof, radio, auto. trans., G-78
W·S·W tires, P. steering, P. brakes,
front and rear bumper guards , air
cond., vinyl insert side molding,
tinted glass, wheel covers.

Newport Roval 4 dr .•
air. low mileage.
New Yorker, 2 cir . H.T .
Real nice car.
Cornet, 6 cyl., auto., P.S .•
P. B.• · one owner ..

$3,480

SPECIAllY
PRICED

•

•

•

Grand Prix. This car
is fully equipped.

Elc . 225, 4 dr . H.T .• P. W.. P. S., Cruise
Control . Sharp.

••'

•

Wagon, auto. Real nice small wagon.

•

T-Bird , 16,786
everything .

miles.

This

car

has

L.T.D. Brougham , 4 dr. H.T.,
i!ir. AMFM. tape. Nice.

..•

2 dr., stand. trans., low mileage.

•

•

;,

.

G.S.

'·

SUPER SPECIALS
1971 DODGE CORONET.. ,.......... 11595
•

4-Door , V-8, automa t ic, power stee r ing &amp; brakes, fa c tory

66 CADILLAC
Hard Top SedQn

air, radio, good 1st line tires, vinyl interior. Book Price

1968 DiEV. BELAIR .................. 895
1

4-0oor \t -u, auromatic , power steering, factory air, ra dio,
good t ires, real clean interior, sharp blue fin ish . Retail
$990 .

1968 DiEVELlE 4 DR................ 595
Automatic trans ., V-8 engine, good tires. blue finish.
radio.

•••

••
.,..
,'.

"'

1971 CHEVROLET BLAZER .~ ....... ~2895
m ission. power ste ering &amp; brakes. radio} good tires,
vehicle Of many uses, c ustom trim, white top over' blue . A
sharp 1-owner trade.

v:a

,(,
~it.

"w.·
•

...;·"
~ ·

.,.

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY lfl ......... $1295
v.a

4-door,
automatic, power steering, radio, good tires,
blue fin ish, spotl ess interior .

••
..;.
,__ !. '

.,.
,.
•

.........
......
"·
'\

••
•.

·.
~.

1970 DODGE POLARA ............... 11195
4-door factory air, automa t ic transmi ss ion, power
st ee r i ng &amp; bra·kes , good wh ite wal l 1ires. ·w hite finish ,
vinyl roof, r adio, heavy duty ~us pens i?h .

w,

•

H

.,•

--

WE SUL &amp; SERVICE CHEVROLET CARS &amp; TRUCKS.

POMEROY MOTOR CO.·
"Your (.;hevy Dealer"
992·2126 Op,nJ-~~ Till 8 Pomeroy

•2,795

•

8-lf

-Pa-rsons
ito

SALE this week on ly at
Parson 's New &amp; Used Fur niture Store i n Gal li po l is • on
following Items : Cook stove ,
gas and electric , couches and
cha ir s, dinette sets , dressers ,
mattress and box springs and
other good used furniture .
Come first and get b est
chOice.
1415 Eastern IJ.ve .
446 -4682
254 -tf

For Sale

MOBILE HQMI:: ::~
FOR SALE
RECONDITIONE D ·
MOBIL f; HOMF ~
1'154 a x 27 Palace
1953 a x 35 P eerless
, 1964 12 x 60 R ayc raft
1967 12 x 50 Schu l l
1968 1? x SO Mar l ette
1955 8 x 42 L ando! a
1964 10 x 55 Con se r t
1965 10 x so Monar ch
1967 12 x 60 Topper
B&amp;S MOBILE HOM ES
Second &amp; V iand Sl.
Pt. Pl easa nt
( Nex t1 0'Heck 'sl
149 -11

WOOD MOTOR SALES
EASTERN AVE.

GALLI

OHIO

AM-FM . Tape stereo, P. windows, P. seat. air cond .. Cruise Control ..
Radial tires, plus many more extras .

LIST s7196.00
DISCOUNT PRICE

'5700

'73 Buick LeSabre Custom
4 Dr . Hdtp., AM-F M stereo, air cond., 60-40 seat, vinyl top , plus many
more extri\S-

LIST s5596
DISCOUNT PRICE

'4400

'73 Buick Century
single lady.

'3700

GMAC &amp;BANK FINANCING AVAILABLE
SUNDAY SHOPPERS WELCOME,
·coME IN &amp; BROWSE AROUND

Dan Thompsor.

'

Tri-State Mobiie
WE CARRY comPlete l ine Of
Home Sales
Proje ctio n bulbs . Tawney
Ptt . 446-7572 st ud io, 424 Second Ave .
.224-tf ' 12 x SO 1966 Liberty
-~------------- - 12 x 50 1963 Lakewood
PIPES , Pipes
P ipes, GBD , 12 x 52 1970 Fleetwood
&lt;;heratan, BBB , Jobey, Hilson 8 x 35 195.7 Marlette
al)d others. Tawney's Pipe and 10 x 54 1959 Etcar
NO HUNTING , no t respassing .
T.rophy House, 422 Second 10 x 50 1965 Star All Electr ic
signs . Signs of all kinds .'
Ave .
8 x 45 1954 Vagabond
Simmons Ptg: and Office
199-tf 10 x 45 1960 Magnolia
E uipment.
8 x 27 1953 Trotwood
206 -tf

1973 PONTIAC Gra nd Pr ix, . EU;cfRb N.Ic calculators , non
8.000 gc tual m·iles . Se ll
printers &amp; pr inters .· S89 .50 to
r easonable . Call446 ·76 15 after
$19 9.50 up . Ph . 446 - 1397 .
&lt;1 p .m .
Sim mons Ptg . &amp; Office
Supplies .
·
270 -6
244 -tt
,...--- -·---------

~~~.~~~

PRICES!!
r---._...
__. ________
.,,ooo OFF
l

3 MALE loy poodles , 7 and 8 mo .
old, $60 .$75 . Also 2 mci l e
Siame5e kitte ns , $15 each . Ph .
256 ·62 47.
261 - 12

GOLDEN EMPRESS 68xl4-2 .BR

9 '73 Models In Stock

II

Deluxe a·ll thru. Spanish decor . req sh Qg carpet ing t
throughout, bath &amp; 11:2, house type door, Jal door , bow · l
window, 1,-4" paneling , 30 gal. Water heater; Strictly
deluxe.
•

__

i
\

W/15 58995 NOW

_...._____....-.-.,

•

CARS, TRUCKS AND.
DEMONSTRATORS

7995_____ I

_..._...._~..__.._.

...,~.

WAS •6895

WE ARE .

NOW 5 5995

ATTENTION VETERANS - Gl .loan s availa ble, no down
payment with approved credit .

Up to 12 Year Financing We Sell.

We Service What

586 Locust St.
992 -7004
Middleport
Open 8 to 6 Mon . thru Sat .
~en . Daily 8 to 6, (Closed Surldaysl . Open Anytime by
ppotnh:rent. Contact Thompson or Tom La vender .·

,.

·

THE FINEST
SELECTION OF
USED CARS YOU
WILL FIND ANYWHERE.
STOP IN AND lOOK!

THESE OUT .
We Have A Nice
Selection of 74 Models
To

AT COST OR
BELOW

Carroll N_or~is Dodge Inc.
50 STATE STREET

OHIO

2 dr . hardtop , fullY equipped , includ ing
fac . air cond ., red w ith blk . vinyl roof .
Locally owned .

$1595

69 LTD FORD
4 dr , ~ardtop, fully equ i pped including
fac . a1r con d .. gold with black vinyl roof
&amp; gold Int er ior .

1970 ·------------·$1495110
1968 ·------------~1195., .
1967 -------------· $995110
4 Sp. Nice Car

'1595110
1969 Nova

$395

Sharp. 2 Dl Coupe

$795

1595110
1972 Nova
1

Air And All The Extras Like New

% TON PICKUP.

For Sale

3 YEAR old reg. Angus Bull, 8 1966 MUSTANG , 6 cylinder , 3
.TYPEW .RITER:S ,
Smith
speed. Ca ll 446 ·3720 .
weeks old , Border Collie pups ,
. 273 ·3
Corona , Olivetti
Royal.
21" Zenith color TV . Call 256Standard or Electric: Por -- ------""""-- - - - 1373 .
tabJe$ . Simmons Prlntlno and..
273 -3
Off ice Equipment.
.206-tf CO MPLETE
barbers hoP
-----------equipment , good cond i1 ion .
Call 446-4225 afte r 5 p .m.
ANTIQUE
oak
furniture ,
273 -3 •
Plenty of .free parking
secretary desk , library tftble ,
261 -tf
end
oak
and
walnut
- ---- - - - - -- - - - washs1and . Call 446 ·1407 or 1967 PONTIAC lem ans , 6 cyl. ALL PRICES red uced on all
, Call 446-2596.
1973 ZIG -ZAG sewing mach ine .
116-91_12 .
furniture . We must sel l our
273 -3
This machine derns, em ·
271 -3
merchandise in order to make
broiders,
overcasts
and - - - - - - - -- - -- - room tor remodeling, so that
monogramS atl without at . ONE CIGARETTE machine, AKC registered m iniature
we can serve vou bii!lter . We
Schnauzer.
Bassets
and
tachments . Pay balance of
good condition . Phone 245are cutting our pr ices tor
Cocker Spaniel PUppies. Will
$11 .50 or pay $6 per month .
5536 .
quick sale ,
be
readr
for
Christmas
K
Call 41~ · 0255 .
271 -3
and P Kennels , 388 -8274 .
269 -tf
27J .tf
10x50 2 BR TRAILER: . C11t1 367 ..
1973 STEREO - RADIO com .
7539 anytime .
blnatton w ith 8-track built -l n .
271 -tf AKC reg .. Cocker Spaniel
Take over payments of S7 .5.5
Pupp ies , c..olors blond e and
per month or pay $101 .50 . Call 1969 TORINO GT 2 dr hdtp .
silver. Centenary woods
Kennels . Ph . 446 -0231.
446-0255.
Phone 367 -7135 or 367 -7329
.
269 -tl
after 5 p . m.
271-6 -------------~731 ~~.fo
854 second,
..,__ 446-9523
1973 MONTE Carlo , na vy blue .
DA CHSHUND puppi-es , small,
with while vinyl top . Call 446·
standard , AKC reg . , reci. ' 1973 CHAMPION mobile home- ,
Phone 446-4999 .
12x65, 3 BR , Phone 367 -7106 . ' 7357 .
PAt NT DAMAGE - 1973 zi g 273 -3
237-tf
zag Sewing. Ma chines . Still in
211 ·3
original cartons . No at .
ADVEA.T.I SINI.i r;ov i!ittes, 0001&lt;. REG . EngliSh Setter pups , HAY . 7.42 -5384 .
273 ; 12
tachtrols
m entsareneeded
our
hunting .stock , sired .bY Bob
matches , pens and pencils
con
built -in as
. Sews
Evans ' setter {Sam ' s Com i mprinted w i th lour ad .
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
RE -UPHOL STERED chair ,
mand), Phone 256 .6278 . Simm ons Ptg .
Office
buttonho les, sews on buttons ,
never
used
,
din
ette
se.t
,
small
271 ·5
supplies .
monograms, and blind hem
radi11nt gas heater, coffee
244-tf
S1itch . Full cash pr i ce $38.50
table. end rabies , d avenpor t.
1966
PONTIAC
Cataline
2
dr
.
or budge.t pl an available .
FOUR
::,prlnger
Holstein
Call 367 -0147 .
white, good condition . $325 .
Phone 446 -2460 .
Heifers . Contact Lee Johnson .
273 -2
Coil
&lt;46-9506.
269 -6
Phone 256 -6740 after 3 p.m .
273-3

REMODELING
SALE

RICE'S
FURNITURE

_______ _____ _

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

..... Yolks Wagens

DODGE CORONET

Ranger Pa cka ge, 360 v .s, Cruise -0 Mat ic t ran s. , P . brakes, P. steer i ng ,
radio, 75 0x16 8 olv tires, western
mirrors. rear step bumper , 4,000 act.
m i les. One owner.

For Sale

SOUlHEASrERN OHIO'S LARGEST
OiRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER

$595

73 FORD F-250

For Sale

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSlER·
PLYMOUTH

67 FORD THUNDERBIRD

67

SPINET-CONSOLE
PIANO
WANTED :. Respons'lble party
to purchase spinet plano on
tow monthly. payments . Can
be
seen
locelly . Write
Menager , P . 0 . Box 276,
She lbyv ille, Ind iana 16176 .

67 FORD F"350
1 TON TRUCK
With dump body , o CY-1. engine , 4 sp .
transmission, 26,000 act. miles .

$3995
$1695

·---------~- ~ --~---------Our Used Car Warranty is 5_~·50 ·for 30 days.
Includes everything but tires· &amp; normal
mai'ntenance items .

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

$2695110
1973 Nova
11,000 Act. Miles
$2795110
. 1972 Chevelle Malibu
2dr. h.t. Air &amp; All The Extras
'2795110
l973 Grand Prix
Air. Stereo, TiH Wheel All The Work
!,OOOmi. 4495110

1973 Chevelle Malibu
15,000mi.

$2895.,
Week -End Special
1970 Chevelle
2dr. H.T•

----$1595__ _ _ __
GallipOlis Chi}Sier Plymouth
For Sale

For Sale

Phone 446-3273
1639 Eastern Ave.

VACUU M
Cleaner s
new SINGER Automatic Zig -Zag
19'73 ModeL Comp lete wlfh all
Sewing Machines, in sewing
c lean i ng tool s. Small paint
table . Makes buttonholes, ·ALL
TYPE S · of · build I n·~
damage i n shippi ng . Will take
sews on bu11ons, blind hems,
materials, block , brick , sewer
S27 cash or budge t plan
etc . Top notch tond itlon . Pay
pipes, windows , lintels, etc .
availabl e. Phone 446 -2460 .
$.51 or terms available . Phone
Claude W inters, R io Granrt• ~
269-6
:.t46 -2460 .
0 . Phone 215 -.5121 after: -~· .. .
- - -- - - - - - - - - 269 -6
.
123-tf

Gallipolis

. IF YOU are bui\dlnsi a !ifw_;
h
d 11
orne or remo e ng, see us-. ·
We.arebuiJ.ders,
Distributor
for. Hotpo lnt A,ppliances,
All•son Electric.
..
1
S•· tf

I

lr-••••••••••liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliji;.l.iiiiiiiiiiiliiiliiiliiiiiiilliiiili:~-

MARTIN FORD XTRA SPECIAL!

273 -3

~

DALE R. SANDERS INC.
600 E. STATE ST.
&amp; 1200 E. STATE ST.

•

ATHENS, OHIO
YOUR DEALER FOR
"••

CLOSING

Delivered , :liocke'd. Hookup .

70 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS

V -8, auto ., P . steering, luggage racl&lt;. .

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

248-tf

$1495

68 PLYMOUTH
CUSTOM WAGON

------------:------

November At ·These

70 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE

2 dr . hardtop. fully equipped Including
fa c. a i r co.nd .
·

1970 MOBILE home 12 x 60, 2
B R , 2 baths. very nIce, fuel
tank w ith o il. Ph . 416-2615 .

USED FURNITURE
GAS range , automat i c dryer,
full Size coli spr ings . Couch
and chair , coffee table .
95S 'Second Ave .
446-1171
'
Open Fridays 6 till 8

'3,890

I
I
I

•695
l------------------------J

2dr . hard top , small v .a, standflrd shi ft ,
rad io , locally owned, h ig h mileage but
in exce llent cond .

Corbin &amp;Snyder
SPECIALLY PRICED

2 dr. hardtop, V-B, .a,uto., radio. Sharp.

•

66 PONTIAC -CATALINA

-272-2

8 Passenger wagon, 4 dr ., 351 V-8· engine, Crulse·O· Matic
trans .• H-78x14 w -s-w tires . Elec. clock, P. steering, P.
brake~, Deluxe bumper group. radio, Deluxe luggage rack,
fa c. aw cond., body side moldings appearance group, tinted
glass, Power tailgate window, wheel covers. This is the last
one at these we have to sell.
·

I
I
I

4 dr , fac. air cond ., fac . tape system. a
real cream puff ..

.

272 -3

1973 GRAN TORINO WAGON

•

li WEEKLY SPECIAL
I,I
l 68 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE l

4 dr . hardtop , fu l ly equipped , fa c. a ir
cond ., loca l ly owned in excellent cond .
Med . green finish with b1k . in ter ior .

2 Dr. Hdtp ., air cond .• P. windows, power door locks . Excellent for a

LIST ·s4627.00
DISCOUNT PRICE

A-1 SPECIALS

·---------------------- --~

72 C HEV . Impal a 4 dr ., P .S.,
P . B . Auto . vinyl top , .air
con d .. exc . con ., S2.750 or best
Offer. Call 446-4327.

.,

We Have A Real Nice Selection of Small
Economy Type Cars.

'73 Buick Riviera

LUMP Coa l, Jaymar l,Oat Lo ,,
Meigs and Gallia l ine, St . Rt . 7
at Chesh ire, 7 ·a .m . to 6: 30
p .m . 5 days 1!1 week: 992 -5693.
272- tf

NEW and us ed ins truments ,
Brunicardi Hou s~ of Music, 54
State Str ee l. Phone ·146 0687 . ·
190 :11

Goble Mobile Homes

•

••••
•...

GOOD CLEAN LUMP and
stpker coal . Carl Winters, Rjo
Grande. Phone 245 -5115 .

With glass slidi ng pat io door s on front, Spani sh decor,
house type door. rear Jal door, tully carpeted , red shag;
30 gal. water heater .

·350 cu. in . V-8, 4 dr., hardtop, blue metallic
finisn with matching vinyl inter :vr . vinyl roof,
w·s-w tires, P. steering, P. Jrakes, lac. air
cond . Excellent condition .

'5700

272-3

-For Sale

$900 Off Now 60x12 Van Dyke 2 Bedroom s

'72 CHEVROLET IMPALA

LIST s7100.00
DISCOUNT PRICE

For Sale

Ohio

~----

•

•
•

500 E. Main St. ,

e

2 dr. hardtop. 4-sp .• bucket
se ats, VR-78 Radial w -s·w
tires. Cut pile carpeting , all
vinyl
Seats.
full
in strumentation, white with
avocado interior.

4 Dr. hdtp., P. windows, P. seat, air cond ., Cruise Cont. , Radial steel
tires, AM,FM stereo. Plus many more extras.

By EO Malek
Attorney at Law
1227 South High Street
Co lum bul, Ohio 43206
Nov . 4, 11. 18, 25 , Dec . 2, 9

•

Before The End of

•••

...

OUR WORD IS
OUR BOND

" You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business "

CLOSE-OUT!

Caprice 4 Door. Caprice Estate Wagon,
Impala 4 Door, Impala Cqe.

992-2174

'73 Buick Electra Limited

Ed Malek
WOLER:YA NDMA LEK

MAR TIN FORD XTRA SPECIAL!

r -·-·-NEW ··-~·9-73-·CH-E-VR-0-·LEt_;...._....,l

"•.

.~ '

We Service
What We Sell

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, . INC.

Open Evenings
'Til 7 p.m. &amp;
Sat. 'til 5 p.m.
,.lervice 'Til 12 ·

Pome 1•oy

We Must
Move These

•

...'••··

REMEMBER

Open Eves. Tii6- Tii ·S P. M. Sat.

4-door, loca l owner and less than 36.000 miles. Blue finish ,
white top, spo.t l ess clean blue in f ei- ior , V-B engine,
automatic transmission, radio, tinted glass, good white
wall t ires.

"We run-.,a
• srmp
· 1ebusmess"
•·
very
•••

WE WANT YOU BACK CAUSE THE JOB WAS DONE RIGHT
NOT BECAUSE THE JOB WAS WRONG

967 DiEVROLET BEL AIR ..........11095

'.
•

..

Cadillac - Old smobile
GMAC Financing Avi!ilable

992 -SJ42

1971 FORD TORINO 500 ·.......... $1995

4-door gold finish, spotless clea n interior,
engine
automatic, power. st eering, radio. A honey Of a .buy .

"66 CHRYSLER '295
'68 BUICK 225 •895
'68 PONT. CAT. '695

WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

4-w heel drive. V-8. locking front hubs, automatic trans-

1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU ............11695

SOME CHEAPIES

DON'T FORGET

See one of these courteous salesmen:
Pete Burris
Lloyd Me Laughlin
Marvin Keebaugh

••

Coupe. 1-owner car , les~ than 33,000 m iles, brown fini sh
with matching viny l roof , and vinyl interior, 302 V-8
engin e, stand.a rd transmi ssion, j)Ower steer ing, and
brakes, radi o, really sharp.

350 auto., P.S., P. B.

•4495
$4195
•2995
•3195
•3695
•2295
•2295
S449_5
•2295
'1695
•229.5
•1795
5 1895

See Ceward Calvert, Ron. Hester or Peggy StoiY

1968 DiEVROLET PICKUP
Fleetside, loca l 1 owner trk ., V-8 engine,

custom cab, automatic tran s., radio .

.' '

'67 FORD
*595
'67 PONTIAC '695
'63 CHEV.
•295

White finish , ni ce interior, all power equip·
ment , Climate Control air conditioning.

1

8'

dr. H.T. Local. one owner. Sharp.
Firebird 2 dr . H.T.,

'12 Ton pickup. long bed. low mileage.

11 BOO.

..."'

Trainer , et ill,
Defendants
The unknown heir5, dev isees ,
legatees, and tss igns. If any , of
Tipton Tra i ner . deceased upon
au of whom service ot summons
Cilnnot be made, because their
respective names and places of
residence are unknown to 1he
aff i ant and
cannot
with
reasonable
d ili gence·b e
ascerta ined , are hereby notified
th.B~t on Nov . 1. 1913, M erm 11 L.
TroJ i ner. Lola Tra iner , Jessie
T :- a i ner, Luelll Jones. Edith
Larsen , Harold Tra iner and
S';'lvia Humphrey filed a
complaint as pla intiffs In the
Court pf Common Pleu of
Gall Ia County, Ohio , In Case No.
11 -73 .CL 253, against th•m and
others I!IS defendants. alleging
that the plaintiffs Hermit L.
Trainer . a brother , Lola
Trainer , a sister , Jenle
Tra i ner , a brother. Luella
Jones, a sister , Edith Larsen , a
s i ster , Harold Trainer , a
brother and Sylvia Humphrey,
a sis ter , are each , an heir at law
and ne)(t of k i n of Tipton
Trainer. deceased ; that Tipton
Trainer died a resident of Game
Coonty, Ohio on Af.rll 4, 1973,
leav ing a documen , purported
to be h i s last Witt and
Testament ; that said purported
last Will and Testament was
admitted to probate on May 4,
1973, and defendant Florence
Roush Trainer was appointed
Executrix of the Estate of
T lpton Tra lner. by the Probate
D iv ision of the Ga tl la County
Court. of Common Pleas ; that
said defendant. Florence Roush
Trainer , Is a sister -In -law of the
decedent, Tipton Trainer 11nd Is
a devisee or legatee under said
purported Last Will
and
Testament ; that defendants,
R:ichal"d Tra iner , a brother , and
Etma Trainer, a sisten are each
an heir -at -la w and nex.f of kin of
Tipton Trainer, deceased ; that
there are no persons , other than
pla in tiffs
and
defendants
named there i n, who have any
interests In said document, as
the Last Will and Testament of
Tipton Trainer; that the pur ported will ad'mitted to probate ,
1S not the Last Wilt and
Testament of T ipton Trainer ;
that Tipton Trainer was not of
sound m lnd, and was under
undue Influence on the date of
execution of the purported Lest
Will and Testament ; that by
reason of the Inva li dit y of said
purported wilt , t he plaintiffs as
heirs at law and next of kin of
sa i d decedent. are entitled to a
portion of th e Estate of Tipton
Trainer, d·eceased ; therefore ,
plaintiffs demand that the
purported Las t Will
and
Testamenf of TiptQn Tralnfir ,
~eceased , be determ ined to b,
mvalld, ,and that they recover
their cos ts therein .
Defendants , first hereinabove
mentioned are further notified
that the y are required to 11nswer
said com pla int on or before
January 6, 1974, whi c h Includes
28
day·s· from
the
last
publication or judgment m.ay be
rendered as demanded there in.

ON ALL USED CARS IN STOCK WE WOULD LIKE TO GET
INVENTORY DOWN BEFORE 1st OF YEAR.

,.'

74 MUSTANG II

· VS·

PH . 992-2174

POMEROY, OHIO

SEE THE ALL NEW

Rictt~rd

TAX REDUCTION SALE

.,"..'·

~-

PUBLIC NOTICE
'"the court of common Pleu,
Go~~lliJt County. Otlht
Can No. 11 -73-CL 'Ul Hermit
L . Tr•iner, et Jtl., PtlintiUs

•

....'
..••

••
•
••
"

•

SEE THE ALL NEW ·

'74 HONDA
HUGE STOCK IN OUR SHOWROOM .
Lay-Away
One For Christmas
Today!

4 dr., 351 v.a engine, vinyl roof,
radio, H-78x15 W·S·W tires, convenience group, Deluxe llumper
guards, air cond., tinted glass, W·
covers, P. steering, P. brakes. This
is the last 73 L TO that we have.

•LINCOLN CONTINENTAL eMARK IV

••

.

•
•

•MERCURY MONTEGO •COMET

••

eCAPRI eDATSUN eSUBARU eCOUGAR

...••
..

·~·

..
...
'

'~
~

Smith Honda Sales

'

Upper Riwlr Rt .

DA TSON Phone 592-4463

~

.

•

1973 FORD LTD

I

Gallipolis,

o.

•
.•

SPECIALLY PRICED AT

•3,890

•

�•
2'1 - 'n1e Sw1day 'Times· Se1ntinel •

.,.
•

~

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

MARTIN FORD XTRA SPECIAL!

..••••

500 E. MAIN

•

••
••

,.•••,

'

..
.....·
,,..

1973 PONTIAC
1972 BUICK
1972 BUICK
1972 CHRYSLER
1972 CHRYSLER
1972 DODGE
1972 OPEL
1972 FORD
1971 FORD
197l GREMLIN
1970 BUICK 2
1969 PONTIAC
1969 FORD

•

..

....
..' .
.

..
,..

Skylark 2 dr. H. T. Only 12,896 miles.

1973 GRAN TORINO

4 dr., 351 2 V engine. vinyl seat trim,
vinyl roof, radio, auto. trans., G-78
W·S·W tires, P. steering, P. brakes,
front and rear bumper guards , air
cond., vinyl insert side molding,
tinted glass, wheel covers.

Newport Roval 4 dr .•
air. low mileage.
New Yorker, 2 cir . H.T .
Real nice car.
Cornet, 6 cyl., auto., P.S .•
P. B.• · one owner ..

$3,480

SPECIAllY
PRICED

•

•

•

Grand Prix. This car
is fully equipped.

Elc . 225, 4 dr . H.T .• P. W.. P. S., Cruise
Control . Sharp.

••'

•

Wagon, auto. Real nice small wagon.

•

T-Bird , 16,786
everything .

miles.

This

car

has

L.T.D. Brougham , 4 dr. H.T.,
i!ir. AMFM. tape. Nice.

..•

2 dr., stand. trans., low mileage.

•

•

;,

.

G.S.

'·

SUPER SPECIALS
1971 DODGE CORONET.. ,.......... 11595
•

4-Door , V-8, automa t ic, power stee r ing &amp; brakes, fa c tory

66 CADILLAC
Hard Top SedQn

air, radio, good 1st line tires, vinyl interior. Book Price

1968 DiEV. BELAIR .................. 895
1

4-0oor \t -u, auromatic , power steering, factory air, ra dio,
good t ires, real clean interior, sharp blue fin ish . Retail
$990 .

1968 DiEVELlE 4 DR................ 595
Automatic trans ., V-8 engine, good tires. blue finish.
radio.

•••

••
.,..
,'.

"'

1971 CHEVROLET BLAZER .~ ....... ~2895
m ission. power ste ering &amp; brakes. radio} good tires,
vehicle Of many uses, c ustom trim, white top over' blue . A
sharp 1-owner trade.

v:a

,(,
~it.

"w.·
•

...;·"
~ ·

.,.

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY lfl ......... $1295
v.a

4-door,
automatic, power steering, radio, good tires,
blue fin ish, spotl ess interior .

••
..;.
,__ !. '

.,.
,.
•

.........
......
"·
'\

••
•.

·.
~.

1970 DODGE POLARA ............... 11195
4-door factory air, automa t ic transmi ss ion, power
st ee r i ng &amp; bra·kes , good wh ite wal l 1ires. ·w hite finish ,
vinyl roof, r adio, heavy duty ~us pens i?h .

w,

•

H

.,•

--

WE SUL &amp; SERVICE CHEVROLET CARS &amp; TRUCKS.

POMEROY MOTOR CO.·
"Your (.;hevy Dealer"
992·2126 Op,nJ-~~ Till 8 Pomeroy

•2,795

•

8-lf

-Pa-rsons
ito

SALE this week on ly at
Parson 's New &amp; Used Fur niture Store i n Gal li po l is • on
following Items : Cook stove ,
gas and electric , couches and
cha ir s, dinette sets , dressers ,
mattress and box springs and
other good used furniture .
Come first and get b est
chOice.
1415 Eastern IJ.ve .
446 -4682
254 -tf

For Sale

MOBILE HQMI:: ::~
FOR SALE
RECONDITIONE D ·
MOBIL f; HOMF ~
1'154 a x 27 Palace
1953 a x 35 P eerless
, 1964 12 x 60 R ayc raft
1967 12 x 50 Schu l l
1968 1? x SO Mar l ette
1955 8 x 42 L ando! a
1964 10 x 55 Con se r t
1965 10 x so Monar ch
1967 12 x 60 Topper
B&amp;S MOBILE HOM ES
Second &amp; V iand Sl.
Pt. Pl easa nt
( Nex t1 0'Heck 'sl
149 -11

WOOD MOTOR SALES
EASTERN AVE.

GALLI

OHIO

AM-FM . Tape stereo, P. windows, P. seat. air cond .. Cruise Control ..
Radial tires, plus many more extras .

LIST s7196.00
DISCOUNT PRICE

'5700

'73 Buick LeSabre Custom
4 Dr . Hdtp., AM-F M stereo, air cond., 60-40 seat, vinyl top , plus many
more extri\S-

LIST s5596
DISCOUNT PRICE

'4400

'73 Buick Century
single lady.

'3700

GMAC &amp;BANK FINANCING AVAILABLE
SUNDAY SHOPPERS WELCOME,
·coME IN &amp; BROWSE AROUND

Dan Thompsor.

'

Tri-State Mobiie
WE CARRY comPlete l ine Of
Home Sales
Proje ctio n bulbs . Tawney
Ptt . 446-7572 st ud io, 424 Second Ave .
.224-tf ' 12 x SO 1966 Liberty
-~------------- - 12 x 50 1963 Lakewood
PIPES , Pipes
P ipes, GBD , 12 x 52 1970 Fleetwood
&lt;;heratan, BBB , Jobey, Hilson 8 x 35 195.7 Marlette
al)d others. Tawney's Pipe and 10 x 54 1959 Etcar
NO HUNTING , no t respassing .
T.rophy House, 422 Second 10 x 50 1965 Star All Electr ic
signs . Signs of all kinds .'
Ave .
8 x 45 1954 Vagabond
Simmons Ptg: and Office
199-tf 10 x 45 1960 Magnolia
E uipment.
8 x 27 1953 Trotwood
206 -tf

1973 PONTIAC Gra nd Pr ix, . EU;cfRb N.Ic calculators , non
8.000 gc tual m·iles . Se ll
printers &amp; pr inters .· S89 .50 to
r easonable . Call446 ·76 15 after
$19 9.50 up . Ph . 446 - 1397 .
&lt;1 p .m .
Sim mons Ptg . &amp; Office
Supplies .
·
270 -6
244 -tt
,...--- -·---------

~~~.~~~

PRICES!!
r---._...
__. ________
.,,ooo OFF
l

3 MALE loy poodles , 7 and 8 mo .
old, $60 .$75 . Also 2 mci l e
Siame5e kitte ns , $15 each . Ph .
256 ·62 47.
261 - 12

GOLDEN EMPRESS 68xl4-2 .BR

9 '73 Models In Stock

II

Deluxe a·ll thru. Spanish decor . req sh Qg carpet ing t
throughout, bath &amp; 11:2, house type door, Jal door , bow · l
window, 1,-4" paneling , 30 gal. Water heater; Strictly
deluxe.
•

__

i
\

W/15 58995 NOW

_...._____....-.-.,

•

CARS, TRUCKS AND.
DEMONSTRATORS

7995_____ I

_..._...._~..__.._.

...,~.

WAS •6895

WE ARE .

NOW 5 5995

ATTENTION VETERANS - Gl .loan s availa ble, no down
payment with approved credit .

Up to 12 Year Financing We Sell.

We Service What

586 Locust St.
992 -7004
Middleport
Open 8 to 6 Mon . thru Sat .
~en . Daily 8 to 6, (Closed Surldaysl . Open Anytime by
ppotnh:rent. Contact Thompson or Tom La vender .·

,.

·

THE FINEST
SELECTION OF
USED CARS YOU
WILL FIND ANYWHERE.
STOP IN AND lOOK!

THESE OUT .
We Have A Nice
Selection of 74 Models
To

AT COST OR
BELOW

Carroll N_or~is Dodge Inc.
50 STATE STREET

OHIO

2 dr . hardtop , fullY equipped , includ ing
fac . air cond ., red w ith blk . vinyl roof .
Locally owned .

$1595

69 LTD FORD
4 dr , ~ardtop, fully equ i pped including
fac . a1r con d .. gold with black vinyl roof
&amp; gold Int er ior .

1970 ·------------·$1495110
1968 ·------------~1195., .
1967 -------------· $995110
4 Sp. Nice Car

'1595110
1969 Nova

$395

Sharp. 2 Dl Coupe

$795

1595110
1972 Nova
1

Air And All The Extras Like New

% TON PICKUP.

For Sale

3 YEAR old reg. Angus Bull, 8 1966 MUSTANG , 6 cylinder , 3
.TYPEW .RITER:S ,
Smith
speed. Ca ll 446 ·3720 .
weeks old , Border Collie pups ,
. 273 ·3
Corona , Olivetti
Royal.
21" Zenith color TV . Call 256Standard or Electric: Por -- ------""""-- - - - 1373 .
tabJe$ . Simmons Prlntlno and..
273 -3
Off ice Equipment.
.206-tf CO MPLETE
barbers hoP
-----------equipment , good cond i1 ion .
Call 446-4225 afte r 5 p .m.
ANTIQUE
oak
furniture ,
273 -3 •
Plenty of .free parking
secretary desk , library tftble ,
261 -tf
end
oak
and
walnut
- ---- - - - - -- - - - washs1and . Call 446 ·1407 or 1967 PONTIAC lem ans , 6 cyl. ALL PRICES red uced on all
, Call 446-2596.
1973 ZIG -ZAG sewing mach ine .
116-91_12 .
furniture . We must sel l our
273 -3
This machine derns, em ·
271 -3
merchandise in order to make
broiders,
overcasts
and - - - - - - - -- - -- - room tor remodeling, so that
monogramS atl without at . ONE CIGARETTE machine, AKC registered m iniature
we can serve vou bii!lter . We
Schnauzer.
Bassets
and
tachments . Pay balance of
good condition . Phone 245are cutting our pr ices tor
Cocker Spaniel PUppies. Will
$11 .50 or pay $6 per month .
5536 .
quick sale ,
be
readr
for
Christmas
K
Call 41~ · 0255 .
271 -3
and P Kennels , 388 -8274 .
269 -tf
27J .tf
10x50 2 BR TRAILER: . C11t1 367 ..
1973 STEREO - RADIO com .
7539 anytime .
blnatton w ith 8-track built -l n .
271 -tf AKC reg .. Cocker Spaniel
Take over payments of S7 .5.5
Pupp ies , c..olors blond e and
per month or pay $101 .50 . Call 1969 TORINO GT 2 dr hdtp .
silver. Centenary woods
Kennels . Ph . 446 -0231.
446-0255.
Phone 367 -7135 or 367 -7329
.
269 -tl
after 5 p . m.
271-6 -------------~731 ~~.fo
854 second,
..,__ 446-9523
1973 MONTE Carlo , na vy blue .
DA CHSHUND puppi-es , small,
with while vinyl top . Call 446·
standard , AKC reg . , reci. ' 1973 CHAMPION mobile home- ,
Phone 446-4999 .
12x65, 3 BR , Phone 367 -7106 . ' 7357 .
PAt NT DAMAGE - 1973 zi g 273 -3
237-tf
zag Sewing. Ma chines . Still in
211 ·3
original cartons . No at .
ADVEA.T.I SINI.i r;ov i!ittes, 0001&lt;. REG . EngliSh Setter pups , HAY . 7.42 -5384 .
273 ; 12
tachtrols
m entsareneeded
our
hunting .stock , sired .bY Bob
matches , pens and pencils
con
built -in as
. Sews
Evans ' setter {Sam ' s Com i mprinted w i th lour ad .
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
RE -UPHOL STERED chair ,
mand), Phone 256 .6278 . Simm ons Ptg .
Office
buttonho les, sews on buttons ,
never
used
,
din
ette
se.t
,
small
271 ·5
supplies .
monograms, and blind hem
radi11nt gas heater, coffee
244-tf
S1itch . Full cash pr i ce $38.50
table. end rabies , d avenpor t.
1966
PONTIAC
Cataline
2
dr
.
or budge.t pl an available .
FOUR
::,prlnger
Holstein
Call 367 -0147 .
white, good condition . $325 .
Phone 446 -2460 .
Heifers . Contact Lee Johnson .
273 -2
Coil
&lt;46-9506.
269 -6
Phone 256 -6740 after 3 p.m .
273-3

REMODELING
SALE

RICE'S
FURNITURE

_______ _____ _

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

..... Yolks Wagens

DODGE CORONET

Ranger Pa cka ge, 360 v .s, Cruise -0 Mat ic t ran s. , P . brakes, P. steer i ng ,
radio, 75 0x16 8 olv tires, western
mirrors. rear step bumper , 4,000 act.
m i les. One owner.

For Sale

SOUlHEASrERN OHIO'S LARGEST
OiRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER

$595

73 FORD F-250

For Sale

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSlER·
PLYMOUTH

67 FORD THUNDERBIRD

67

SPINET-CONSOLE
PIANO
WANTED :. Respons'lble party
to purchase spinet plano on
tow monthly. payments . Can
be
seen
locelly . Write
Menager , P . 0 . Box 276,
She lbyv ille, Ind iana 16176 .

67 FORD F"350
1 TON TRUCK
With dump body , o CY-1. engine , 4 sp .
transmission, 26,000 act. miles .

$3995
$1695

·---------~- ~ --~---------Our Used Car Warranty is 5_~·50 ·for 30 days.
Includes everything but tires· &amp; normal
mai'ntenance items .

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

$2695110
1973 Nova
11,000 Act. Miles
$2795110
. 1972 Chevelle Malibu
2dr. h.t. Air &amp; All The Extras
'2795110
l973 Grand Prix
Air. Stereo, TiH Wheel All The Work
!,OOOmi. 4495110

1973 Chevelle Malibu
15,000mi.

$2895.,
Week -End Special
1970 Chevelle
2dr. H.T•

----$1595__ _ _ __
GallipOlis Chi}Sier Plymouth
For Sale

For Sale

Phone 446-3273
1639 Eastern Ave.

VACUU M
Cleaner s
new SINGER Automatic Zig -Zag
19'73 ModeL Comp lete wlfh all
Sewing Machines, in sewing
c lean i ng tool s. Small paint
table . Makes buttonholes, ·ALL
TYPE S · of · build I n·~
damage i n shippi ng . Will take
sews on bu11ons, blind hems,
materials, block , brick , sewer
S27 cash or budge t plan
etc . Top notch tond itlon . Pay
pipes, windows , lintels, etc .
availabl e. Phone 446 -2460 .
$.51 or terms available . Phone
Claude W inters, R io Granrt• ~
269-6
:.t46 -2460 .
0 . Phone 215 -.5121 after: -~· .. .
- - -- - - - - - - - - 269 -6
.
123-tf

Gallipolis

. IF YOU are bui\dlnsi a !ifw_;
h
d 11
orne or remo e ng, see us-. ·
We.arebuiJ.ders,
Distributor
for. Hotpo lnt A,ppliances,
All•son Electric.
..
1
S•· tf

I

lr-••••••••••liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliji;.l.iiiiiiiiiiiliiiliiiliiiiiiilliiiili:~-

MARTIN FORD XTRA SPECIAL!

273 -3

~

DALE R. SANDERS INC.
600 E. STATE ST.
&amp; 1200 E. STATE ST.

•

ATHENS, OHIO
YOUR DEALER FOR
"••

CLOSING

Delivered , :liocke'd. Hookup .

70 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS

V -8, auto ., P . steering, luggage racl&lt;. .

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

248-tf

$1495

68 PLYMOUTH
CUSTOM WAGON

------------:------

November At ·These

70 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE

2 dr . hardtop. fully equipped Including
fa c. a i r co.nd .
·

1970 MOBILE home 12 x 60, 2
B R , 2 baths. very nIce, fuel
tank w ith o il. Ph . 416-2615 .

USED FURNITURE
GAS range , automat i c dryer,
full Size coli spr ings . Couch
and chair , coffee table .
95S 'Second Ave .
446-1171
'
Open Fridays 6 till 8

'3,890

I
I
I

•695
l------------------------J

2dr . hard top , small v .a, standflrd shi ft ,
rad io , locally owned, h ig h mileage but
in exce llent cond .

Corbin &amp;Snyder
SPECIALLY PRICED

2 dr. hardtop, V-B, .a,uto., radio. Sharp.

•

66 PONTIAC -CATALINA

-272-2

8 Passenger wagon, 4 dr ., 351 V-8· engine, Crulse·O· Matic
trans .• H-78x14 w -s-w tires . Elec. clock, P. steering, P.
brake~, Deluxe bumper group. radio, Deluxe luggage rack,
fa c. aw cond., body side moldings appearance group, tinted
glass, Power tailgate window, wheel covers. This is the last
one at these we have to sell.
·

I
I
I

4 dr , fac. air cond ., fac . tape system. a
real cream puff ..

.

272 -3

1973 GRAN TORINO WAGON

•

li WEEKLY SPECIAL
I,I
l 68 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE l

4 dr . hardtop , fu l ly equipped , fa c. a ir
cond ., loca l ly owned in excellent cond .
Med . green finish with b1k . in ter ior .

2 Dr. Hdtp ., air cond .• P. windows, power door locks . Excellent for a

LIST ·s4627.00
DISCOUNT PRICE

A-1 SPECIALS

·---------------------- --~

72 C HEV . Impal a 4 dr ., P .S.,
P . B . Auto . vinyl top , .air
con d .. exc . con ., S2.750 or best
Offer. Call 446-4327.

.,

We Have A Real Nice Selection of Small
Economy Type Cars.

'73 Buick Riviera

LUMP Coa l, Jaymar l,Oat Lo ,,
Meigs and Gallia l ine, St . Rt . 7
at Chesh ire, 7 ·a .m . to 6: 30
p .m . 5 days 1!1 week: 992 -5693.
272- tf

NEW and us ed ins truments ,
Brunicardi Hou s~ of Music, 54
State Str ee l. Phone ·146 0687 . ·
190 :11

Goble Mobile Homes

•

••••
•...

GOOD CLEAN LUMP and
stpker coal . Carl Winters, Rjo
Grande. Phone 245 -5115 .

With glass slidi ng pat io door s on front, Spani sh decor,
house type door. rear Jal door, tully carpeted , red shag;
30 gal. water heater .

·350 cu. in . V-8, 4 dr., hardtop, blue metallic
finisn with matching vinyl inter :vr . vinyl roof,
w·s-w tires, P. steering, P. Jrakes, lac. air
cond . Excellent condition .

'5700

272-3

-For Sale

$900 Off Now 60x12 Van Dyke 2 Bedroom s

'72 CHEVROLET IMPALA

LIST s7100.00
DISCOUNT PRICE

For Sale

Ohio

~----

•

•
•

500 E. Main St. ,

e

2 dr. hardtop. 4-sp .• bucket
se ats, VR-78 Radial w -s·w
tires. Cut pile carpeting , all
vinyl
Seats.
full
in strumentation, white with
avocado interior.

4 Dr. hdtp., P. windows, P. seat, air cond ., Cruise Cont. , Radial steel
tires, AM,FM stereo. Plus many more extras.

By EO Malek
Attorney at Law
1227 South High Street
Co lum bul, Ohio 43206
Nov . 4, 11. 18, 25 , Dec . 2, 9

•

Before The End of

•••

...

OUR WORD IS
OUR BOND

" You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business "

CLOSE-OUT!

Caprice 4 Door. Caprice Estate Wagon,
Impala 4 Door, Impala Cqe.

992-2174

'73 Buick Electra Limited

Ed Malek
WOLER:YA NDMA LEK

MAR TIN FORD XTRA SPECIAL!

r -·-·-NEW ··-~·9-73-·CH-E-VR-0-·LEt_;...._....,l

"•.

.~ '

We Service
What We Sell

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, . INC.

Open Evenings
'Til 7 p.m. &amp;
Sat. 'til 5 p.m.
,.lervice 'Til 12 ·

Pome 1•oy

We Must
Move These

•

...'••··

REMEMBER

Open Eves. Tii6- Tii ·S P. M. Sat.

4-door, loca l owner and less than 36.000 miles. Blue finish ,
white top, spo.t l ess clean blue in f ei- ior , V-B engine,
automatic transmission, radio, tinted glass, good white
wall t ires.

"We run-.,a
• srmp
· 1ebusmess"
•·
very
•••

WE WANT YOU BACK CAUSE THE JOB WAS DONE RIGHT
NOT BECAUSE THE JOB WAS WRONG

967 DiEVROLET BEL AIR ..........11095

'.
•

..

Cadillac - Old smobile
GMAC Financing Avi!ilable

992 -SJ42

1971 FORD TORINO 500 ·.......... $1995

4-door gold finish, spotless clea n interior,
engine
automatic, power. st eering, radio. A honey Of a .buy .

"66 CHRYSLER '295
'68 BUICK 225 •895
'68 PONT. CAT. '695

WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

4-w heel drive. V-8. locking front hubs, automatic trans-

1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU ............11695

SOME CHEAPIES

DON'T FORGET

See one of these courteous salesmen:
Pete Burris
Lloyd Me Laughlin
Marvin Keebaugh

••

Coupe. 1-owner car , les~ than 33,000 m iles, brown fini sh
with matching viny l roof , and vinyl interior, 302 V-8
engin e, stand.a rd transmi ssion, j)Ower steer ing, and
brakes, radi o, really sharp.

350 auto., P.S., P. B.

•4495
$4195
•2995
•3195
•3695
•2295
•2295
S449_5
•2295
'1695
•229.5
•1795
5 1895

See Ceward Calvert, Ron. Hester or Peggy StoiY

1968 DiEVROLET PICKUP
Fleetside, loca l 1 owner trk ., V-8 engine,

custom cab, automatic tran s., radio .

.' '

'67 FORD
*595
'67 PONTIAC '695
'63 CHEV.
•295

White finish , ni ce interior, all power equip·
ment , Climate Control air conditioning.

1

8'

dr. H.T. Local. one owner. Sharp.
Firebird 2 dr . H.T.,

'12 Ton pickup. long bed. low mileage.

11 BOO.

..."'

Trainer , et ill,
Defendants
The unknown heir5, dev isees ,
legatees, and tss igns. If any , of
Tipton Tra i ner . deceased upon
au of whom service ot summons
Cilnnot be made, because their
respective names and places of
residence are unknown to 1he
aff i ant and
cannot
with
reasonable
d ili gence·b e
ascerta ined , are hereby notified
th.B~t on Nov . 1. 1913, M erm 11 L.
TroJ i ner. Lola Tra iner , Jessie
T :- a i ner, Luelll Jones. Edith
Larsen , Harold Tra iner and
S';'lvia Humphrey filed a
complaint as pla intiffs In the
Court pf Common Pleu of
Gall Ia County, Ohio , In Case No.
11 -73 .CL 253, against th•m and
others I!IS defendants. alleging
that the plaintiffs Hermit L.
Trainer . a brother , Lola
Trainer , a sister , Jenle
Tra i ner , a brother. Luella
Jones, a sister , Edith Larsen , a
s i ster , Harold Trainer , a
brother and Sylvia Humphrey,
a sis ter , are each , an heir at law
and ne)(t of k i n of Tipton
Trainer. deceased ; that Tipton
Trainer died a resident of Game
Coonty, Ohio on Af.rll 4, 1973,
leav ing a documen , purported
to be h i s last Witt and
Testament ; that said purported
last Will and Testament was
admitted to probate on May 4,
1973, and defendant Florence
Roush Trainer was appointed
Executrix of the Estate of
T lpton Tra lner. by the Probate
D iv ision of the Ga tl la County
Court. of Common Pleas ; that
said defendant. Florence Roush
Trainer , Is a sister -In -law of the
decedent, Tipton Trainer 11nd Is
a devisee or legatee under said
purported Last Will
and
Testament ; that defendants,
R:ichal"d Tra iner , a brother , and
Etma Trainer, a sisten are each
an heir -at -la w and nex.f of kin of
Tipton Trainer, deceased ; that
there are no persons , other than
pla in tiffs
and
defendants
named there i n, who have any
interests In said document, as
the Last Will and Testament of
Tipton Trainer; that the pur ported will ad'mitted to probate ,
1S not the Last Wilt and
Testament of T ipton Trainer ;
that Tipton Trainer was not of
sound m lnd, and was under
undue Influence on the date of
execution of the purported Lest
Will and Testament ; that by
reason of the Inva li dit y of said
purported wilt , t he plaintiffs as
heirs at law and next of kin of
sa i d decedent. are entitled to a
portion of th e Estate of Tipton
Trainer, d·eceased ; therefore ,
plaintiffs demand that the
purported Las t Will
and
Testamenf of TiptQn Tralnfir ,
~eceased , be determ ined to b,
mvalld, ,and that they recover
their cos ts therein .
Defendants , first hereinabove
mentioned are further notified
that the y are required to 11nswer
said com pla int on or before
January 6, 1974, whi c h Includes
28
day·s· from
the
last
publication or judgment m.ay be
rendered as demanded there in.

ON ALL USED CARS IN STOCK WE WOULD LIKE TO GET
INVENTORY DOWN BEFORE 1st OF YEAR.

,.'

74 MUSTANG II

· VS·

PH . 992-2174

POMEROY, OHIO

SEE THE ALL NEW

Rictt~rd

TAX REDUCTION SALE

.,"..'·

~-

PUBLIC NOTICE
'"the court of common Pleu,
Go~~lliJt County. Otlht
Can No. 11 -73-CL 'Ul Hermit
L . Tr•iner, et Jtl., PtlintiUs

•

....'
..••

••
•
••
"

•

SEE THE ALL NEW ·

'74 HONDA
HUGE STOCK IN OUR SHOWROOM .
Lay-Away
One For Christmas
Today!

4 dr., 351 v.a engine, vinyl roof,
radio, H-78x15 W·S·W tires, convenience group, Deluxe llumper
guards, air cond., tinted glass, W·
covers, P. steering, P. brakes. This
is the last 73 L TO that we have.

•LINCOLN CONTINENTAL eMARK IV

••

.

•
•

•MERCURY MONTEGO •COMET

••

eCAPRI eDATSUN eSUBARU eCOUGAR

...••
..

·~·

..
...
'

'~
~

Smith Honda Sales

'

Upper Riwlr Rt .

DA TSON Phone 592-4463

~

.

•

1973 FORD LTD

I

Gallipolis,

o.

•
.•

SPECIALLY PRICED AT

•3,890

•

�28 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday. Nov. JS. J9i'

3 More deer killed by automobiles a .

GALUPOUS - Three more
deer were killed in traffic

accidents Friday in the GalliaMeigs area . According to the
Ohio State Highway Patrol, 20
deer have been dilled on highways already this month in
Your "Good
incidents reported by the
Neighbor"
patrol.
for
The first deer accident occurred at 7 a.m. on Rt. 124 near
County Road 13 where the
animal ran into the path of a
car operated by George Perry,
66, or Rt. I, Dexter.
At 3:35p.m. on ,Rt. 7 near
Your home ... probablr rour big.
Addison, a deer was struck and
gest fioenciel investment .. . de·
by a car driven by Keith
killed
serves the best protection. A low·
Callieoat, 49, of Rt. 2, Proccost State farm Homeowneu
torville, and at 6:25p.m. on Rt.
Policy with automatic tnlletion
Coverage can pro11ide all the up·
35, a deer ran into the path of a
to·date coverage you'll probably
car operated by Charles Price1
ever need. And by offering on I¥ the
44, of Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.
best in proteeffon. service and
The patrol also investigated
economy, Stale farm's become the
two single car accidents
world's leading homeowners in·
Friday.
surer. Cell me lor all the details.
No one was injured or cited
in
an accident on Bob McCAI!ROL K.
Cormick Rd., six tenths of a
SNOWD~N
~!!~~!\'.!~••II mile south of Rt. 160. Officers

Jeome

proleelion

/

said Lewis McBride, Tl, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, lost control of his
car which left• the highway
striking a fence.
The final accident OCCW'red
at 11 :o:i p.m. on N•i~hhorhood

State Farm Fire 1nd CatuBity Compny

Home Othce:

!lloomin~1on .

l•inois

GALLIPOLIS Three
minor traffic accidents were
investigated here Friday.
The first occurred in the 200
block of Third Ave . where an
auto driven by Mildred Fay
Swain, 62, or Gallipolis, pulled
from the curb striking a car
operated by Mason Wolfenbarger , 65, of Rt. I, Vinton.
A second mishap occurred on
Vine St. where an auto making

Elberfelds Men's and Boys' Department
On The 1st Floor
We invite you to stop in the busy mens and boys department 1st
floor and see the excellent selection of clothing and accessories
including shirts. ties, belts, socks - trousers • coats · jackets - underwear - work clothes - headwear.

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

! Area Deaths I
MILDRED KERR
GALLI POLIS - Mildred

Methodist Church.

Holzer Medical Center . She :
had been in fa illng health the
past six months.
She was born Aug . 15, 1907, In
Lawrence County , daughter of
the laie Charles and Roma
Hively Hutchinson . ·
She is survived by her
husband, Edward Kerr ; one
daughier, Mrs . Russell (Jane)
Young , Gallipolis ; four 9.rand,
and three 9reat ·grandch1ldren,
and iwo s1siers, Mrs. Thelma
Boswell, Gallipol is, and Mrs.
Paulene Patton, Ironton .
One brother preceded her In
death. She spent most of her

10:30 a.m. Monday at the
Waugh-Halley.Wood Funeral
Home with burial In Woodland

a left turn into' the Ashland
Service Station driven by
Robert Baxter, Jr., 21, Lower
River Rd., was struck ~Y a car
operated by Nancy Lee
Tawney, 27, 104 First Ave.
A final accident occurred on
Portsmouth Rd. where Nancy
Sager, 17, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, lost
control of her car which struck
a guardrail and rolled over an
embankment.

•

Funeral services will be held

You'll like the way everything is arranged for your easy selection.
You'll like the fine quality of the mens and boys wear and you'll like
the many values you'll find.

Cemetery , Ironton . Fr ie nds
may call at the funeral home

between 3-5 and 7-9 p.m. on

Sunday.

NORA E. FELLURE
GALLIPOLIS - Nora E.

Fellure, 86, former resident of
Patriot Star Route, Northup

Communlly , died at 10:30 a.m.
Friday at M.oggle Walker•s

residence , Centerpoint. She

had been In falling health

several years. She Was born

May 9, i887, In Guyan Twp.,
daughter of the late James H.
and M.ary Grosecolse Sheets.

She married Clyde Fellure
on May 7, i904, In Gallipolis. He
died in August of 1965.

She Is sUrvived by three sons
and one daughter, Howard

TIED FOR MISS PERSONAIJTY - Miss Tony a Keebaugh, left, and Miss Sanya Ohlinger,
right, tied for the honor of Miss Personality at the annual Southeast Ohio Junior Miss Pageant
held Saturday night at Meigs Junior High School in Middleport. In the center is last year's
Junior Miss, Miss Julia Hutchison.

Fellure, Gallipolis ; Heber and
Homer, both of Columbus;
Mrs . Raymond (HIIdredl
Scott, Columbus; seven
grandchildren; three step
grandchildren; l4 great -

be held 1:30 p.m . Monday at

' is on us!"
the last one

RAY K. LARKIN
PORTLAND - Mrs. Hubert

Price, Portland, received word

last week ot the death of her

father , Ray K. Larkin, Paw
Paw, W. Va. Mr. Larkin was a
well known leader in politics,
being mayor of Paw Paw iwo
terms and Democratic Pariy
Chairman of Morgan County.
He was known by many Meigs
County residents.
. Mr. Larkin is survived by his
wife, Beulah ; two' daughters,
Mrs. Carolyn Price, Portland, ·
and Mrs. LOis Goede, Paw
Paw, West Yirginia ; one son,
Ray
" Mike"
Larkin,
Washington, D.C. He is survived al·so by nine grandchildren includ i ng Samuel ,
Larry and Bev Price. He is
survived by two great.
grandchildren .

MEN'S LONG SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS
Thousands of shirts for you to select
from - including solid colors in light
and dark shades - neat stripes plaids - novelty patterns .
Sizes are small (fit 14-14V&gt; L medium
(fit 15-151hl. large (fit 16-16 112 ) and
extra large f it size (17-17 1/z).
All are permanent press . Buy
several shirts now for Christmas
giving while selections are best.

MEN'S LONG SLEEVE KNIT SHIRTS

MRS. KATE PRICE ·
PORTLAND - Mrs. Kote
Prir;::e, 78, of here died Saturday
mOrning at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. A former resident of
Charleston , she was preceded
in death by her ·parents, Robert
K. and Mary I. Andersqn
Prince, and her husband, Joe,

You' ll like ·the selection of these popular
shirts In sizes. small. medium, large and ex tra
large. Can be worn wi th a tie or as a sport
shirt.
Solid colors , str ipes and beautiful patterns.
Select you r s now!

Mrs. Price was a .charter
member of ihe WSCS of the
Reynolds Memorial . United
Methodist Church of Marme-t,
W. Va. She is survived by two
daughters, Isabel I.e . Wolfe,
Portland, and Adallne Sum·
mers of Hun-tington.
Funeral services will be

BOYS CLOTHING SIZES 6 TO 20 .

on May 20, 1972.

CHRISTMAS ClUB

Select shirts . ties · belts · knit slacks - fashion
flare leg jeans . Wrangler blue jeans . jackets
. Hanes underwear including boys thermal
shids and dra wers . sweaters - sweater vests.
Ma~e Elberfelds Boy s Department your
clothing
gifts
th is
headquarters
for
Christmas. There's· a tremendous selec tion
for you .

Monday at 10 a .m. at Ewing
Chapel with the Rev. Freeland
Norris officiating. Burial will
be in 1.0.0. F. Cemetery at

JACKETS FOR MEN AND FOR BOYS

Parkersburg . Friends may call
ai the funeral home at
anyiime.

. Juvenile Boys sizes 2 to 12 . Regular boys
sizes 8 to 20 - Mens sizes 36 to 50.
Choose w()QI pla ids · nylons . nylon ql!ilted
. jackets .. coruroy.
In waist · length sty les and lohger ca r coat

KC Chess
Join NOW • •• we make
your last payment FREE!

lenglhs

.

Stop in righ t away and buy the jackets you
need .

toumament

CLOTHES FOR THE SMALl FRY

set Dec. 15
CHESHIRE - Registration
opens at 8:30 a.m. and play
begins at 9:45 the same day in
the Kyger Creek High School
Pre-Holiday Chess · Tournament on Dec. 15.
Bertram G. Moshier, tournament director' said play will
be organized in four rounds or
the SWiss System expecting to
end by 9:40p.m. that day with
pri2es awarded at 10 p.m.
' Entry fees are $3.50, juniors,
and $4, seniors. Prizes will be
2il pet. of all profit to first
place ; 16 pet. to the second
place and 14 pet. to third place.
Profit will be money from the
entry fees less the amount. paid
to the United States CheSii
Federation to rate the tournament. .
Time limits on matches will
be 45 moves in 90 minutes, then
40 moves in 60 minutes.
Any USCF member is
eligible to enter. Membershipswill be available at the tournament for $5, jwrior; $10,
senior, or $200, payable in 10
annual
installments,
sustaining life membership..
Moshier fs inviting any
member w!Uing to help to
volunteer as assistants .

'

For Boys sizes 2 to 7. You can buy blue denim jeans flare leg slacks - knit slacks - Hanes underwear . knit
or cut and sewn shirts - sweaters - sweater vests jackets - hosiery - sweat shirts.

MEN'S DOUBLE KNIT SlACKS
Sizes 29 waist to 50 waist with lengths from 29 to 36.
Solids . plaid s . checks - stripes.
There's hUndreds of pairs to see and you can easi ly f ind
the size that's right for you. Try on a pair or iwo ~
you' I! like the sty le - the colors and the ·neat fit .

WORK CLOTHES FOR MEN
You should see Elberfeld s co~plete line of Carhartt
Brown Duck work clothes · Lee blue denim bib overalls
· Lee Tech Tw ill pants and shirts to match . Hanes
underwear · work fackefs - We.st"ern wear titUe denim
jackets · flannel shirts. Complete se lection of. sizes . all
nationally known makes.

Visit Elberfelds Toy Store in the Middle block- open same hours
as the main store. Toys and gifts for boys and girls of all ages.
Drive to Elberfelds Wareho1.1se on Mechanic Street- Washers _
Dryers - Magic Chef Gas and Electric · Ranges - Humidifiers •
Carpet by the yard - Linoleum - Rug padding - Steel Cabinets and
Wardrobes • Circulating Heaters- Hot Water Heaters. You'll enjoy
a trip ~o the warehouse- look around - You'll find lots of good
buys. Plenty of free parking.

By United Press International
WASHINGTON - THERE WERE differences of opinion
both within Congress and within the administration today on
whether and how soon it will be necessary to ration gasoline.
President Nixon says he has asked Congress only for "contingency" authority to ration gasoline if that becomes necessary.
He told a televised news . conference with Associated Press
managing editors in Orlando. Fla., Saturday that "our goal is to
make it not necessary ."
Two Democratic senators disagreed with the President's
assessment Sunday . Sen. William Proxmire, Wis., said:
"Gasoline rationing is essential. We have to have it no matter
what happens. As it looks now we 're going to have gasoline
rationing for at least a year or so.". Senate Democratic !JJader
Mike Mansfield, Mont., said rationing "is the only way that I can
see, hard though it may be."

f

•

I

• .I

LANDFILL CLOSING
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Landfill will be cloaed
Thankogivlng day.

'

·

·,

....

,_ ,.

~.

• •

•

•

.

ner·up, is a senior at Southern
High School aild is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Johnson, Racine.
Miss Keebaugh, who tied
with Miss Ohlinger for the
personality award , is a senior
at Eastern High School and

daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin Keebaugh, Pomeroy
Rt. 3. Miss Ohlinger is a
senior at Meigs High School
and is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. David Ohlinger, Middleport.
(Continued on Page 2)

WINNERS - Miss Peggy O'Brien, third from left, was
crowned Meigs County Junior Miss and Miss Jan Holter,
second left, Southeast Ohio Junior Miss Saturday night at the
annual Meigs County Junior Miss Pageant Miss Nancy·
Crow, left, was named first runner-up and Miss Valerie ,
Johnson, right, second ruMer-up.

DAVID ROCKEFEil..ER. THE HEAD OF THE Chase
Manhatt.an Bank, warned Sunday that the fuel crisis could halt
the nation's economic growth. He also said it could mean an
unemployment rate of over 6 pet. and a 6 pet . drop in the rate of
industrial production.
In an interview on the ABC television network, Rockefeller,
who heads the nation's second largest bank (the largest is the
Bank of America), said he favored gasoline rationlng " in the
relatively near future." The administration says unemployment
is now 4.5 pet.
·
Dixie Lee Ray, chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission
Chairman, meanwhile said the nation is wasting oil aod natural
gas by using it to produce electricity. ''There is, I believe, a
growing recognition that fossile fuel supplies are limited, that
nuclear power can be used to produce electricity," she said in an
interview with U. S. News and World Report. "It is a waste to use
either natural gas· or oil ... to burn under a boiler to produce
elecU'icity when one has alternatives."
WASHINGTON - THE HOUSE JUDICIARY Committee
stays in Washington this week to discuss Gerald P. Ford's
oomination as vice president while the rest of the House goes
home for Thanksgiving recess. The Senate Judiciary Committee
is ai.O busy with Ford and the nomination of Sen. William Saxbe
as attorney general while the full Senate set aside eight hours
today on the bill to give President Nixon emergency powers to
deal with the energy crisis. The Senate planned to vote on it by
tonight. It is expected to take its recess Wednesday and return
Nov . 26.
Most House members left Washington on Thursday, but the
Judiciary Committee stayed to discuss the Ford nomination:
"Hostile witnesses•• were scheduled to testify today represent.atives of the liberal Americans for Democratic Action
and the National Association for the Advanct!ment of Colored
People, who told the Senate Rules Committee they do not like
Ford's record on civil rights .
ISRAEL AND EGYPT CALlED crucial truce taiks today to
discuss the most controversial point of the Middle East cease-fire
agreement and the only issue still standing in the way of fullscale peace talks.
Officials on both sides said the talks between Egyptian Maj .
Gen. Mohammed Gemassy and Israeli Maj . Q.,n . Aharon Yariv
were aimed at solving the touchy issue of troop pullbacks !ilong
the Suez Canal. The make-or-break negotiations at the Kilometer
101 desert outpost along tbe Cairo-Suez highway came with both
countries arguing over Israel's move to build an earthen bridge
(Conllnued on Page 10)

VOL. XXV NO. 153

'

.

~

PHONE 992-2156
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1973
TEN CENTS
- ··- ---------------~-"-----

~=::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;::;:;;;;;&gt;.-:!:!:i!!!!:i:!:?.~!*.!0&gt;.~~~~::::::~::~:~~;~;:;:os:::::::::;:::-=::::::::::;;,-;,..::;.::;~!'&amp;.:?.!:~

»

~~j

Parade is Friday

•

~~~

::&gt;.

The annual Pomeroy Christmas Parade featuring the

*'

:t.

All persons taking part are to form at the old Kroger

;i!

!1; parking lot on Second St.
!t Following the parade, a two hour cartoon will be shown
§( at the Meigs Theatre free to all chUdren under n years of
r:l age. Santa Will distribute treats following the movie.
?:l.
Those wishing to take part In the parade are to notUy
~~
~:; Carolyn Thomas, secretary of the Pomeroy Chamber of
\i; Commerce,
at phone 992--5005, or just be at tbe Kroger lot
.
:~: Friday by 1 p. m.
A
.

:f:i

0:•'

••••

~; arrival of Santa Claus will be Friday, beginning at l:i5 p. !f:;
:=::
::::
f m.
~

~

'ii'

f:l.
~l

:i:l
»
:~
i~

0 ••• ,•.' • .••••• .•. •••••· '•• ••: · · ' " ' · ·.•• •••••• • • • •

Fund is richer
The Pomeroy Fire Dept.
building fund today is $384
richer, thanks to a "coWl try
store" operated Saturday by
residents of Rock Springs.
Citi!:ens of the conununity
conducted the store in the log
.cabin of Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Goeglein throughout the day,
selling baked goods, apple
butter and handmade items.
The profit of $384 was sent to
the fire department for its
building fund .
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles
--" Legar expressed his thanks to
the residents for the excellent
effort. The fire department has
BURNING TO STOP ·
Charles !JJgar, Pomeroy
Fire Chief, acting under
orders of the Obio En·
vironmental
Protection
Agency !EPA), announced
today no more burning will
be allowed in tbe v!Uage of
Pomeroy of any kind.
Burning permits will no
longer be issued, he said.

committed itself in the amount
of approximately $30,000 in its
building project. The new fire
st.ation on Butternut Ave. is
nearing completion and all
contributions wiU be welcome,
Chief Legar said. Agnes Dixon
won a door prize Saturday att
the store. Ii was a box of
homemade canned goods.

Three SEO teams
open cage season

Big oil irms draw
blame or shortage

~

~i
~
."i;.
·
.
•
•••
,_
........
.v.x;-~~...•..~.y_.· ••••••••-.;,. '0:•"'...............·.-.·.·,•••0:·•••••••••••••••'&lt;!•'•'•·-:···.-:~t
1:.·!&lt;?.•:-...:.: ...:·:·:•.•...•..~~...............•:•.......•• ••• •................

Open to the public, the event
was sponsored by the local
York
Cross
of
Honour in tribute to Struble having been elected
to SU'uble having been elected

eminent prior of the Ohio York
Cross of Honour earlier this
month. The Ohio York Cross of
Honour is the largest in the
world and SU'uble is the first
MeiRS resident in about 60

Visit ~lberfelds ~urnifure Department on the Jrd floor. Com lete
selections of furmture for every room in your home - Bed P
Suites · Living Room Suites and Tables . Dinette Sets Mir room
• Drors
. t ures ·Lamps· wa 1I to Wall CarpetmgP•c
Gun Cabinets.
k .
Lane Cedar Chests.
·
ec s •

ELBERFELDS IN PO-MEROY

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT., OHIO

the trust of the Amencan
people."
The Senate set aside eight
hours today for debate on the
energy bill that would give
President Nixon wide powers
to meet the crisis, including
rationing gasoline. A vote was
Mcintyre, in the opening expected before the day was
·
·
Senate debate on the emergen- out. ·
cy energy bill; said the oil . The Senate hoped to recess
companies, with the Nixon Wednesday for Thanksgiving
administration a " willing and return Nov. 26. Most House
accessory," have ''betrayed members, except those on the
WASHINGTON (UP!) Sen. Thomas J . Mcintyre , ON .H., charged the major
American oil companies today
with incompetence and
selfishnoodor failing to see the
coming of the energy crisis.

DALE SMITH, left, mayor-elect of Pomeroy thb monih and a member of tbe York Cross of
Honour, presented Mr. and Mrs. Clarence J. struble with an official fl'amed proclamation from
Gov. John Gllllaan declaring Saturday "Clarence J. Struble Day" as a part of a public dinner
1111.4 reception hCIIH1I'tllcSiruble Saturday night at Meigs HliiiiSchool. .
•

•

that an emergency wa•
coming, had 0p119sed repeal of
oll· Import quotes, had urged
the American public to use
more oil, had built too few new
refineries, and had turned their
profits into fields other than
-·
energy.
•'I still cannot iind it in me to
EXTENDED 00TL001'
believe
that the . industry
Mild wltb showers -Wednesday. Colder Thursday contrived the oil shortage to
and Friday with showers drive prices up," he said.
"But, I can find it in nie to
.~nding on Friday. High
believe
that today's fuel critempera!ures in tbe upper
50s and low 60s Wednesday sis ...can be laid directly to the
dropping to tbe middle and betrayal of the public trust by
lower 40s Friday. Lowo early the major American. oll COffi·
ponies. I am charging these
Wednesday 41! to 45 and in the ·
giants of the industry with
upper 30s early Friday
gross
incompetence, stubborn
into second spot.
morning.
blindness, with selfishness and
Celeste said he plans a vigorwith a lack of foresight that
·ous campaign for the No. 2 slot
seems totally incredible ... "
starting immediately_
"This office has never been
He said the administration
campaigned for," he told
bas accepted industry's word
United Press International. ~ed
without questioning_
"People have been tapped for
''While the crisis is hurting,''
Following several weeks of he said, " ... the major oil
it, or inherited it, but they have
never run for it. I plan to run . individual rehearsal sessions, companies are reaping windthe entire cast of the Fall fall profits of historic
for it."
Follies
of the Big Bend Min- dimensions."
Celeste said that within 48
hours, a mailing will be sent su-e! Assn. will meet for the
Sen. Henry Jackson, Dfirst
full
rehearsal
at
7:15
out to 10,000 precinct commitWash., said, "There is a great
teemen who will be asked to o'clock this evening at Meigs need in this country to get off
circulate petitions in his behalf High School.
the energy binge." He said the
Full dress rehearsal will be two new trade towers in New
and encourage their county
held at the high school at 7:15 York City use enough elecchainnen to support him.
Celeste said he already has a p. m. Wednesday and on tricity to light and hea(
headquarters in Worthington, a Saturday · at 1 p. m., a run- Syracuse.
network or supporters through- through rehearsal will precede
Sen. Olarles McC. Mathias
out the st.ate and $5,800 bud2et- the show at 8:10 p. m. Satur- Jr., R-Md., said, "I am a little
(Conttiiued on Page 10)
day.
distressed that we've .heard so
Advance tickets for the 20th little from Detroit on this
annual musical will he taken debate . It would have been a
off sale at noon on Friday. The help if we heard from the auto
Considerable cloudiness tickets may be purchased at manufacturers that an eftoday with a high of 45-50 north ·the New York Clothing House, ficient small car would be
to the mid 50s south. Paruy· Nelson's Drugs and Swisher developed- that instead of
cloudy IQ clear tonight. Low in · and Lohse Pharmacy in building bigger autos, they will
the upper 30s and low 40s. Pomeroy and at Village soon be building more efficient
Tuesday, increasing cloudiness Pbannacy and Dutton's Drug autos and give Americans the
and a liiUe warmer. High ~. Store in Middleport.
greatest mileage per gallon."
Judiciary Committee studying
the
vice
presidential
nomination of Gerald R. Ford, ·
left Washington Thursday.
Mcintyre contended the oil
industry had denied for years

·Celeste to file

COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
Rep. Richard F _ Celeste, DThree Southeastern Ohio Cleveland, now in his second
League basketball teams will tenn in the Ohio House, was to
open their 1973-74 campaigns announce his candidacy today
this week. On Wednesday, for lieutenant governor, fur·
Logan plays at Hilliard and Dishing Gov. John J. Gilligan
Athens plays at Nelsonville- with an energetic 1974 ruming
mate.
York.
Although the top two state
: On Friday, South Point is at
Meigs and on Saturday, Athens government posts are elected
will play at Columbus East- separately, it bas been no secret in the Statehouse that Gilmoor.
Play in the SEOAL will begin ligan has been looking for a
winning aspirant for the Demoon Friday, Nov. 30.
cratic nomination meeting his
own political standards.
WCAL~PS
The 35-year-old Celeste ~
Temperature m downtown just the man for Gilligan - will
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Monday be in a crowded field that inwas 55 degrees under cloudy cludes Senate Minority !JJader
skies.
Anthony 0. Calabrese, also a
Cleveland Democrat.
Calabrese was the nominee in
1970 defeated by incumbent
Republican Lieutenant Gov .years to be named st.ate head of John W. Brown.
a Masonic organization.
Gilligan and Calabrese have
Well over 200 persons heard long been at odds, and when
the high praise for SU'uble Brown chose to run for the U.S.
during the evening, not only in Senate next year, Gilligan prirecognition of his work in the vately hoped he could bead off
~asonic organizations, but
a move by Calabrese to move
also for service in his church,
the United Methodist · at
Pomeroy; · the Pomeroy • .
Middleport Lions Club, and the
senior citizens organization in
Meigs County,
Mrs. Lois Burt sang "The
Lord's Prayer" following the
assembly after which the
dinner was served by Pomeroy
Chapter, Order of Eastern
St.ar. Mrs. Margaret Neunnan
at the piano provided music.
Jayne Lee Hoeflich opened
the program with a medley of
old-time favorites introduced
by ·a parody, "Hey, Mr.
Struble.' ' Paul Darnell gave
the address of welcome with
Thomas Edwards giving
recognition to distinguished
Masons who attended from the
area as well as locally.
Both Darnell and Edwards
· congratulated Struble as did
Robert King, District Governor
. of DeMolay, Bill Quickie, a
TIJESE FIVE MEN PLAYED prominent roles in a
past master councilor; Jon
pubiic dinner and reception honoring Clarence J. S~ble,
Bunce, present master counfourth from .the left, at the Meigs High School Saturday rught.
cilor and Don Vaughan, master
The affair was stage!\ by the York Cross of Hono~ in tribute
councllor elect, presented a
to Mr. Struble who has been ·named eminent pr10r of Oh10
-( Continued on ~'~til• 2) {
Priory, 18, the largest in the world. Froll"ithe left are Fred

Honors accorded Clarence Struble
BY BOB HOEFLICH
Highest tributes were paid
Clarence J . Struble, Pomeroy,
at a public dinner and reception at the Meigs High School
Saturday night.

•

Devoted To The Interest. Of7Jae.Meigi·MOMJn Area

Stop in took around - .lise our sensible credit service to make your purchases.

Member: FDIC

BY KATIE t:ROW
Miss Peggy O'Brien was
crowned Meigs County Junior
Miss and Miss Jan Holter Miss
Southeast Ohio Junior Miss at
the annual Southeast Ohio
Junior Miss Pageant st.aged at
Meigs Junior High School in
Middleport, Saturday night.
Miss O'Brien, a senior at
Meigs High School and the
daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
James B. O'Brien, Lincoln
Drive , Pomeroy, was also
presented the youth fitness
award.
Miss Holter, also a senior at
Meigs High School and the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Holter, Five Points, was
presented the scholastic award
and the poise and appearance
award.
Miss Crow, a senior at
Southern High School, and the
daughter or Mr. and Mrs.
Alfred Crow, Racine, in ad·
dition to being named first
runner-up won the talent
award.
Miss Johnson,. second run·

•

grandchildren, and a brother
and two sisters, Gar rail Sheets,
Newport Ritchie, Fla. ; Mrs.
Pearl Graham, Northup, and
Mrs . Myra Daniels, Gallipolis.
Three slsiers and two
brothers preceded her in death.
M.rs. Fellure was a charter
member of the Northup Baptist
· Church . Funeral services will
the
Waugh . Halley . Wood
Funeral Home with Rev.
Alfred Holley officiating.
Burial will be in Mound Hill
Cemeiery .
Friends may call at the
funeral home between 2·.4 and
7.9 p.m . on SUnday.

"at OV

2 Junior Misses named

life In Gallla County. She was a
member of Grace United

Kerr, 66, of 1008 Fourth Ave .,

died at 8: 15 p.m. Fr iday In

Three accidents probed
like a goad neighbor.
Stare Farm is There.

Rd. fo~r tenths of nule --:est
of Rt. .18 ~he~e Richard Prlct!,
19, of Galhpohs, lost control of
his car on a curve. The car ran
off the road and overturned.

Full rehearsal
tonight

Weather

I

Blaettnar, general chalnnan ci the o~rvance; Thomas
·Edwards, who lniX'oduced distinguished Muons; Artlllf
Craft, Lima, junior eminent prior, who was guest speaker;
Mr. Struble, Ralph Graves who served aa 1111111ter of
ceremonies and Paul Darnell who gave the I1Cidreu of
welcome.
1
'1
•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="744">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11144">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="57330">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="57329">
              <text>November 18, 1973</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="859">
      <name>fellure</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="220">
      <name>hunt</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1173">
      <name>kerr</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5469">
      <name>largent</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1209">
      <name>larkin</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="260">
      <name>price</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1207">
      <name>pullins</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
