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10 _

Tllo lll.l)y SenUnel, MldcD~~~~!!::

Candidates Sharpen Barbs

Colnuge Melal
;,..

A total of 31 denominatio~s
of pure nickel coins w:as 10
circulation in 17 countrtes at
the end of 1967, and 228 denQminatlons of cupro:nick~l
coins were in circulahon m
79 countries.

On Wall Street, coneldered a
baaUon o1. tda
Republ.l.can
OJ&gt;PCHIOnl, Huber! H. HIIIRPhrey
slid 11 !ook Who's here."
In Moline, a placid Nlosiooijlpl
Rlwr town when&gt; H""*'hrey
would be more at !Kine,
Richard M. Nixon warmed to an
enthuslaltl.c crowd, tellini: them
he'a "'not taldng anythilw tor

TONIGHT, SATIJRDAY
AND SUNDAY
OCT. II· 12- 13

"WHO'S MINDING

grarted."

TilE MINT"

A

-Colorood
"IN COLD BLOOD"
With Richard Brooks

MDGS THEATRE.
TONIGHT AND SATURDAY

OCT. 11- 12

ANGELS FROM HELL
(Color)
Tom Stern, Arlene Martel
Ted Morl.lond, Stephen
0 liver

COP·OUT

I

(Color)
&amp;obby Dorin , Geroldine
Choplin, Jo! . Moson

. R TARY BAKEH MAKES POINT ~ John Baker, assistant secretary of ~icul~e,
SEC E .
"G out U1e Vote" workshop in Rutlan:i Thursday night pnor
stresses a pomt at the Democrat
et.
k aile the dinner Behind Baker here are Betty

to a district-wide meeting.. Baker was m;t~hs_p~a ~~rton r Neipp, fo~er state chairman aOO state
Gaffney, National. Comrm~teewom~n o .. tO;ewson candidate for congress; Jack Crisp, Meigs
bloek.-workcr cha_Jrman ll'u~ year, .Han}' Clld Mr. 'wittinger of State Democrat headquarters.
Ucmo;:rat executive commtttee chairman, a

ADMISSlON: 85c aTKI 50c

SHOW STARTS 1 P.M.

Democrats
(Continued !rom page 1)
ad lhe expansion of Social Security a'ld Medicare; Crew son's OP·
ponont voted for measures to
raise interest rates oo rarm

loans.
"Their record in dealing wUh
problems of the city is equally
sad and sorry.
"By insisting upon a $6 billion cut in program funds, Re-

Joe Postlewait

Dies Thursday

.

Joseph J. Posllewait, 67, £1m
St., Middleport, dJed Thursda..Y
night at the Gallipolis Cllnlc.
lie formerly operated Joe's
Carryout in Middleport.
Bom in Marietta, the son of
the late John and Ella. Sharpes
Postlewait, he is survived by

THE
EXQUISITE
GIFT

j

Keepsake is !he most
complimenl
or receive.

!Ele,~an,t

and fine qualily
nf !Rstin~ pride a
""''' .,j.,,,J '" ,,.. ~ ,,
r •••• .,.,,R.,

.•'I';

'

~J2S"B.ke~
Q O""&lt;.'"U

'i.

..

N CS

NOIVl

Holds'

"

hundred

mile! away, in

Peoria, thlrd ~ candidate
GOOJ'ile C. Wallace brlotled at
augpstl.ms he and hJa running
m11te, Gen. CUrtis E. LeMay,
disagreed whether alii when to
use nuclear weapons.
So went the 1968 presidential
campaign Thursday,

Jim Hutton, Dorothy Provine
and Milton Serle

'

HUDi~hreY,

11)' United Preas lnlenlatlonol

his wife, Marie; a stepdaughter,
Mrs. Joseph (Pauline) Bowland,
Columbus; a sister, Mrs. Helen
Faruolo, St. Clalr Shore s,
h
Co
Mich.; a brother, Art ur,
lumbus · a step-grandson, George
Willi~ 11iller of Columbus, and
four grandchildren.
Mr . Postlewait was a veteran
of World War I Reserves.
FWleral services will be held
at Ill a.m. Monday at the Rawlings-Coats FWleral home with
the Rev. Raullin Moyer officiating. Burial will be in the Riverview cemetery. Friends ma.v
call at the Funeral home Saturday rrom 2 to 4 and from 7 to
9 p.m ., &amp;mday from 4 to 9 p.m.
and on Monday until time of services.

publican 5 have stopped the Sma:l
Watershed Projects program m
it.!l tracks and greatly reduced
funds for farm operating, farm
development, rural electrifica.
tion and oommunit.y development
loans.
"The incumbent, a freshman
Republican, has learned quickly and well the old Republican
lessons of regression, relreat
and retrenchment lie voted against Food Stamps for hungry
people; againsl adequate funds

Car Leaves Road
f\ minor one-car accident on

township road IIi~, 2.8 miles
north of Route 124, was inves·
tigated Thursda,y at JO a.m. by
Meigs County ~eriff Hobert C.
Hartcnbach.
Sheriff Ha 1ienbach said a car
driven by William Joseph ReitmJre, 22, Pomeroy, traveling
aooth went off the left side of
the ~wa.,v into a crook bed.
There was damage to the left
front render and hood and no
injuries or arrests were reported.
KROGER BARRED
ClNCINN."'l (UPO - Kroger
Co. caiUlOt bar ils union employes from its profit - sharing
plan, tile l.i. S, 6th Circuit Court
of Appeals ruled Thursday.
DJUVER KILLED
ZANESVILLE, Ohio (UPO Walter Harvey, 55, of Zanes~
ville, was killed Thursday when
a semi-tractor he was driving
struck another vehicle on Ohio
60, about fi\·~: miles north or
here.

Storage batteries take more
than one-fourth of a ll lead
smelted in the United States.

Cor farm programs; against rural community development legislation.
"This LOth District's counties
are the very places where the
Nation ought to be encouraging
development and new jobs."
Already underwas are new programs such as "Operation Mainstream" that are helping meet
this area's problems heatHln for
Ulc first time .
"Operation :Mainstream h a 8
pumped more tban $100,000 into
t,t1e local ecooomy, resulting in
mOre jobs for people, more ln.
come' 1 for Main stroot, better
parks and flood protection. n will
help prevent devastating Ooods along Big and Little Leading
Creeks. The project is providing jobs for about 30 persons.
The Leading Creek Conservancy District, which administers
the project, also has a rural
water supply program underway
and is attracting inWstry to the
area. We have just recently announced that $1.8 million in
home-building loans would be
made available in the area. Tbh,
too, ts adding jobs and business
activity.
"On JW1e 6, 1967, Crewson's
opponent voted to slash deeply
all farm and resource development programs and important
credit programs; fortwlately, his
point of view did not prevail.
"Hubert Humphrey has been
[ighUng for two decades for a
revitalized rural America. He
knows the goal, and he knows
how to reach it. Crewson supports that kind or aggressive er-

Cort."
In closing, Baker predicted
that voters "will reject the Republican appeal to passioo, because hard thinldng people seek
conunon sense answers Cor the
complex problems of today. Hubert Humphrey has those an.
swers."

Launch
EYes rJ or
Need y PIan

some

to the cheers anc1

jeers

o!

I

crowd

eatJ.mated u hJih •• 40,000-- the
l a r p l l _ . r0«111tlon ofhlo
c._lcn- angrll)' challelwed
both demonoltatoro aplnot the
war m:! s~s ot WallacL
Tllrowing aolde hlo
text, the .tee president deelared
the natl.on'l problems ucannot
be oolwd by the noisy left or
tt..e crllie aDd radical right."
In hla formal remarks,
Humphrey credited the men or
Wall Stroot 11'1Ill buDding the

P,..,......

incendve system ln this country
and criUclzed Nixoo ror encoura~ policies which might lead

to "those same apeculatl ve
excesseS which once before
plunpd
this
coontry
IIllO
chaotic economic depreasion

..

' •Ntxon,

meanwhile, lashed out

at the dcmeattc policies ot the
JohnsoJ&gt;.IIUIRPhrey admlnlstn.tlon. He also met with foreign
policy ad\1ser William Scranton,
former governor of Pemsyhanla, who recent]y returned frmn
1

~':'~~lour~

weaonn·_ ~'

In

other pollllcol develop.

:.

'

A sailor aboard the "Pinla" sighted land
for the first lime since Christopher Columbus' caravan of three tiny ships had sailed
from Spain. Thus, our new world of vast
wealth and opportunity was discovered!
To honor Christopher Columbus this
bank will not conduct busineos on

COLUMBUS DAY
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12

POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK
RUTLAND

POMEROY
Serving Meigs C9unty for over 96 yeors
Member Federol Reser ... e System

Open Friday

Nishls

5:00 to 7:00

SOLID -STATE STEREOPHONIC HIGH
FIDELITY with POWERFUL
"BULL HORN"'
Stereo Sound Syst~m
All TRANSISTOR CHASSIS

The RAMSEY • Model Yl951SA
• Precil!lion miKI-11t&amp;te 20 watt peek mulic power tiutJ ebannel
amplifier
·
• New Admirai"Bull Horn" SUffi) Sound 8y1Lern
with two powerful qut~r ier wave·leltlt.h tuned endoaW'ftl
• &amp;lid·St&amp;te FM /A M . FM Stereo Multipla Radio
• Illuminated Control C..nt.Pr ... Slide-Rul"' Vernier Tuainr
• FM Stereo Sentry Lirhl glow• t.o indicate Mu.Jtiplu ~rc..dcut.
• AFC " locks in'" FM st.atiDTW-no "driftin1," no retunlDf
• Cu 1 t.om Record Ch11 nger with heevy-duly m'?tor · · '"H Oil t'Ulf,.
h i1h-inert1a turnt.abl ..... indOO~ -45 rpm 1pmdle.
1 Admiral Low M1uw• Tone Arm Wlth Ceramic C.rtndge · • ·
SeMitive "'FI011ting" Diamond StyiWI
• 1-' uiJ "Lifetime" Warranty oa dlamo_nd ttylut ild~reetlve or wcwa
oul &lt;:lurinr life oC ttereo ($1.&amp;0 MrVtce and handh"l charge)
• Aut.om~rtic cumplete ·~m ahut-otr after Lnt. record ill pt.yed
• Separate bau, treble, loudne. and blllan~e IXlntrols
• Eateru.l•paalter terminall

• Built..jn rtCOrd 1torap compuimeDt.
Crmtemporary •tylinii'-Genuilw Walnut Veaeett
Dimena~on11-U' h. , -48' w., 17~" d.

S299·95

BAKER

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

the three major caN1ldateo 1114
.lab In wlmlqr
votes over the week. Dooplte
their opinions on Wlll&lt;h eandl·

done the boat

ments:
Debllte- Nlmn and HU111Phrey
will meet fa-face for the
llrat time ln the ~ next
week at the 11111111 Alfred E.
Smith Mamorlll II the Waldorf·
Allorll In New Yark, UPI
learned. Both c...Udates ha..
qreed to addres• the charity
evert and will share the dais
with other dlinltarleo.
President Johnson-Johnion,
steppl~ llrml,y Into the presldentlal campalcn, hailed H..,.
phrey ond Sen. FAmund S.
Muskie .as two ot the ••tew men

that •• , have understood our
urgent natlonal needs." In
c:oatrast, Johnaoo Hid on a
utionwlde radio broadcast paid
for by the brternatlonal Ladles
G a r m e n t Workers Union.
11 There Is all the differen~ of a
daylight and derkness between
the
Ni&gt;ro-Agnew Republican
record ot reaction and recession
and the kind of lorward-looklll(!
leaclerohl» that the HUIIll)hreyMusld.e Ucket offers to you
Americans."
PoU- The Slndlll1!er &amp; Co.

'VOL. 3 NO 37

otw preferred Nixon for thO
presidency.
Muatde- The Democratic vice
preatdentlal oomtnee canceled a
scheduled talk at Ruteers to 10•
to New York to conf8r ll'lth '
HllllWbrey. After hlo conferewlth Hlllllj&gt;hrey, Muolde

w··

the
greatest Issue racl.q
Americana Ia whether they HC&amp;I

trust each other~"

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 13,

Thursday abllley or the poor to
pay for decent howling, not
more ln'IOlvanent by private
business, Ia the real need In
urban housirv,
Another HIDDJihrey backer,
former IIAip. Harold Harold D. .
Cooley JJ.N.C., oeJd Wallace's
proposal to end economic
aanctiOOJ a g a I D ~ t Rhode~
could coat the United st.tes UJ
to $100 mlllloo yearly,
.. ,

J¥:GIIISDEmCATION- Remarko by Leslie Fultz, emcee
dedication ceremonies of the new section or four-lane U.
bepn the activities Friday rnornifl6, Mr. Fultz's comfollowed by those of a number of area am state
including Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes. Rhodes, sealed
trom left, shown going over notes as Fultz talks.
Lett to right, behiOO Fultz, are Rep, Ralph Welker, GO\',

LEGAL NOTICE
FOR SALE
Ninety-two shares of Pomeroy
Nationel Bank stock will be oold
to the highest bidder tor not leas
than $DO. 00 per share, the ep.
praised value, at the office ol
O'Brien and O'Brien. attorneys,
LO()Ih Court street. Pomeroy,
Ohio at 10:00 a.m. Saturdty,
October 26, 1968. For further
information caU 092-2720.
William E. Stivers
Administrator of the estote of Claude E. GWlan,
dec.

October Sales

Big SelectlonsDependa.le Quality·
and Lots of
Bargains In
Every Department
On All 3 Floors.
Wearing Apparel
For Your fa11lly
and Furnishings For
Your HoNe.

Open Both Frl•ay ••• S.tur.., fll1hts Ulltll 9

ELBERFILDIIN

Rhodes, state Sen. Oakley C. Collins, P. E. Masheter, Ohio
Director of Highways, Charles Alley, a blacktop contractor,
and Vernon H&lt;J':dermnn. president or the V. N. Holderman Co.,
general r.:ontractors for the project. (Other dedication ceremony pictures, in addition to the or~ below, can be found on
Page lO and in the new magazine supplement_}

I

Ca dy Sale

w· I Begin

.oJ Monday
CU\tLJPO~ -

The second
Klwanlo Club Halloween
~....,.,... Sal~wllt ' he ""ftducted
Morjclo.J llld-Wodneodsy evening
In _llle Old Jirench City between
610jd 9 p.m.
Pi-oceeu. will go toward lhe
l.rnDrovement of the club's J'OUth
CIU1lp- Rio Grande.
Kiwanllns are to meet at tfle
~)ark rrcnt at 6 each evening
Where they will receive their
auwlles Cor the sale,
Trick or Treat bags will be
aold at $1 a sack by the Klwan-

-1oJ

or

For Our
Store Wide

Variable cloudlao" ond aU~
tie warmer with 1 few scattered
ohowers SundaJ! thrOUI!h Mondo¥.
High Sundajlln the 14&gt;Per llllo ond
70&amp;.

GALLIPOLIS.I'I'. PLEASANT

PRICE 10 CENTS

Large Attendance

150 Absentee

Views Dedication

Ballots Cast

POMEROY - Ohio Gov. James 1\. llhodes, w!lo cune to Meigs
County Friday morning to help dedicate th~: new four~lane section of
U. S, Route 33,pledged completion of the highway to AU1ens if the $759
million slate-wide Bond Issue No. 1 is approved by OhJo ,..ot.ers this
November 5.
Gov. Hhodes. who talked emphatically before a large crowd
present for the dedication and ribbon-cutting activities, also ca11ed
on the area to push for a VocaUonal Technical Training Center and
urged Meigs Countian~ not to give up luJPe of buiJding an airport or
their own.
The governor, while on the sub. attract industry. Look what's now
ject of completing the Route 33 around thatnewGallia-Meigs 1\lrre location on to ,\thens, said Ohio port built in Gallla Count;}'."
DR. W. T. SAWYER
has almost 90 per cent of its InGov . Rhodes, though obviousterMate construction program ly pleased Meigs CoWltians now
completed while the nationaJ av- have a sedion of highway that is
erage for states if 54 per cent. a link in the goal to have an
RIHKies, returning his remarks
al l four-lane freeway from Coto Meigs Cou nty , said: "There is lumbus to the Ohio River, apnothing wrong here tllat 5,000 peared to believe there is a need
GALLIPOLIS - The addition
jobs wouldn't cure, but when the for additional internal effort on
population of a munty today is the part of residents when he of Doctor William T. Sawyer,
Otolaryngologist, to the staff of
less than in 1900, something is said, "We want to help you, but
physicians and surgeons was anwrong."
we can't do It all."
nounced today by the Holzer MedRhodes suggested that a priThe Ohio Department of Highmary need, in order fo; Meigs ways also disclosed yesterday ical Center Clinic.
Dr. Sawyer specializes in the
CoWlt;y to get industry, is that it plans to spend $11 . .5 million
a Vocational Technical Training ror upgrading and imprO\'ing high~ diagnosis, treatment, and sur.
Center be provided so the young ways in Meigs CoWlty through gery of diseases of the ear, nose
and throat. Ills offices will be
people will have more than "two 1972.
located in the Cedar street (aa
arms and a strong back when
In other activity of the dedicathey gel out of high school." tion ceremony, which w a s em- cllity of the Holzer Medical CenGov. Rhodes, adding "this is ceed by Leslie Fultz and organ- ter Clinic.
Dr. Sawyer is a native of AkU1e sixth or seventh time J have ized by the Pomeroy Chamber of
ron,
Ohio, received his M. D.
been here to deliver a sermon Commerce in cooperation with
from
the Ohio ~te University
since I was first elected gover - the Middleport C of C and t he
Medjcal
College in 1956 and sernor/' remarked: "the state v.ill Southern Development Corporaprovide half of the money to put tion, general contractor V e r n ved his internship at St. Rita's
a Vocational Training Center Holderman was praised for get- Hospital in Uma, Ohlo. He received his postgraduate training
ln operation in the are.a.
ting the .'J.3 miles or new high.
at
the UnJversit_y Hospital, ContJOdes said the new stretch way finished nine months ahead
of four
lane Rt. 33 in Meigs of schedule.
lumbus, Ohio.
Dr. Sawyer is a Diplomate
County "all goes for naught tmHolderman spoke briefly acof
the American Board of Oto.
less the people have local jobs knowledging lhe prHiseandthanklaryngology
and a member of
to g-o to ."
ing Meigs County people for their
\\..-hile on lhe topic of an air- cooperation. Others introduced the Ohio &amp;ate Medical Associ•pori, Rhodes said: "You need an were Division 10 Engineer John tion and the American Medical
Association. The new doctor is
airport in Meigs County to help
(Continued on Page 2)
unmarried and is residing at
114 VInton Court, Galllpoli s.

POMEHOY - A total ci 150
absentee ballots were cast as
()f Friday evening for the forthcoming Nov. 5 election at the
Meigs County Board ot Elee.
tions office here.
Of the total 150,. 134 are aerv.
ioomen's baJiots while the others are disabled or straight abr:,entee ballots.
Residents may cast absentee
ballots at tfle board office located in the Masonic Temple
from 1 to 4 p.m., Monday through
Saturday, untiJ 4 p.m. on Oct. 31.

Dr. Sawyer

a,·nst

Elberfelth

Weather

HUD Secretary

Robert c. Weaver, reiiPOOdlnJ:
to recent NIJOOatatemelis, said

JT7oman

The Pomeroy United Y o u t h
Fellowship wUl meet at 7 p.m.
Sunday at the United Methodist
Church in Pomeroy.
All young peqJle or the Methodist, ~lscopel, Trinity United
Church of Chrlot and First Baptist Churches ot Pomeroy are fn..
vited lo atten:l with their parents. U parents are urable to
attend they were requested to
send a note indicat.lrw their willIngness to help with the foUowshJp's projects.

.

Gov. Rhodes Pledges Route 33
lpletion to Athens
H $759 Million Bond Issue Approved by Ohio Voters

11wo Char!Yes

Drive To

__

ey

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

News•.. in Briefs

v;led

,.

FIVE SECTIONS

POME IIOY-MIDDLEPORT

date was mott aucceaatul It
vote winning, the polled wtoro

Weever -

IJ,.,.,,,.tl r, The (;r,.,ter Mi..,-

48 PAGES

...

tntint

tmt~

o~ :

at crime In
A two-week program to col- America ln 1 !Peech in Maline,
Iect discarded eyeglasses for IlL, then went to Akron. Ohio,
the • 'New Eyes for the Needy'" to accuae the Democrats of
program wlll get underway Mull- bei11t a 11 false frlend of labor."
day, oct. 21, by the Pomeroy
Wallace, aMOUncing he was
Lions Club.
'
sending LeMay to Vie~,
.. ,.
Dr. N, w. Compton is chair· brusquely denied newsmen s
,·
man oC the club's drive to col. suggestions that he was dia'
lect the eyeglasses. This ia the patching the former Air Force
first time the local group has chief of sta.a because of a
'·
taken part in such a program dlsagreemellt between the two
ror rive years.
over use of nuclear weapOilll,
By United Pn1ss International
. ; :·
Boxeo wUI be placed In 10
"I'm gol~
to be the
SAIGON
U.S.
INFANTRYMEN
FLOWN
Into
bottle
by
hell:":
business houses of Pomero.r, president," Wallace said. "He's
copter i.rU:rcepted a 400--man Commurdat battallm northwest of Sat;
Middleport, &amp;Yracuse, Harrigon Thursday and killed 26 In a sharp bottle. But the remainder &lt;'.
!I()IWUlo, Cheller and Racine lor
the Communlsto escljled Into the jungle.
.:
the cmvenlence or residents
0 ·
The
tlght
26
miles
northwest
ol.
Sligon
on
one
of
the
invaat~
throughoot the count;y who wish
routea to the city began early Thursday and continued until almoetc
to give their ootdated eyeglass,4 ...
noon
today when the enelll)' force melted away trto the thick JWW]e
es to the program. The boxes C._,
./"1f5'
cover.
The Americans lost six ldlled and 16 wounded, a spoke~
will be in place on Oct, 21 and
eald.
will remain In the varlooo lo- llei.u.~&gt;
cations until Nov. 4.
1J~~ .. o W 4
0
MOWCOW - THE SOVIET UNION HAS AGREED to withdraw
"New Eyes for the Needy,
all
but
about 23,500 or Ita occupation forces bun Czechoalovaldl
Inc., at ~rt HUla, N. J., where
A Meigs County woman was
by Oct 28, diplomatic sources oeJd today.
the local collection will be sent, lodged In tho Gallipolis C l I Y
Oct. 28 h the 5oth arudversary or the Cowdlng ot the Czechoslosends simple non - astigmatic jail on charges ot. driving whlle
vak republic which waa invaded by armies of nve Warsaw Pact
gtasses to medical mluions all intoxicated and left r1 center atpowers the night or Aug. 21-22. The diplomatic aourceo olld the
over the world. Good plastic ter an accident at 2:10 a.m.
occupying Cor~• are eollmated at 235,000 men and thot 90 per
frames are resued and all the today 011 Rt. 7, two and one cent woold be Withdrawn betore the Czechos!Ol'ak holiday. leavt.qr
metal frames and gold and sil. tenth mUes north of Galllpolla.
23,500 lndellnite)y.
about
ver go to a refinery. DlstrlbuThe state Highway Patrol eald
tlon of new prescription glasses that Mable L. Niemeyer, 63,
AKRON omo - A PARTY RALLY AT MEMORIAL Hall on
is arranged through hospitals Pomeroy, headed north ln a boa·
the Akroo unt..rolty Cliq)us here Thursday, pro.tded Richard
and welfare agencies who are vy fog, was driving in the south·
M. Nlxoo ll'lth one of hlo most enlhuolootlc rectl&gt;llons to date ln
given funds lor the purpose, Any bound lUie and her car met a
Ohlo.
About 4,500 perOOO&amp; jammed the hall to hear the GOP ~~~1!:
hospital or accredited asoncy lank truck driven south by Doodential nmninee predict victory tn the Nov. 5 election. Andtlilr 2,..
wlll be conoldered for assist- aid L, Hammond, 36, Rl 2 Pal·
000 who couldn't get into the ball, listened to Nixon over a public
ance in the purchase
glasses. rlot.
address aystem outside.
AnY deserving lndlvlcllal may
Hammond, acrordlng to the paIn hls only public appoarance or • six-hour visit to Summit
apply directly to New Eyes ror trol, drove Into the other lane
Col.mt;y, Nixon predicted he would carry Ohio as he~ i,~ 1980.
the Needy. After their need has d. travel to avoid a oolllsion.
"And when we carry Ohio this tlme, we'll carry America, Nixon
been certtned, the proscribed But, at the same time, the Nie·
eald.
glasses are provided.
meyer car swerved back to fts
"New ~es" volunteers have own aidS of the higbwa,y and col·
WASIIJNGTON - IT APPEARS NOW THE NEXT preoldonl wlU
helped morethanhalfmilltonpeo. llded with the rlghl rear of the
Select the next chler justice or the United States - subject to ~
ple to better sight. The work of truch-lraUer.
ate approW, of course. President Johnson, thwarted ln his effort
sorting, testing, packaging and
No one woo Injured. There
to elevate Justice Abe Fortis to the post, announced Thursday he
achnowled81J18 the thouaancle of ""' minor damage to the truckwould have no 6uther part in the matter.
glasses received yearly is car- traDer. Moderate damage was
"ln ordlrary times I would feel It my ducy now to send a.
ried on entirely by 250 vol- done to the car, a 1962 Pon~
other name to the Se~te ror this hJgh offtce. 1 shill not do so."
unteer workers in the New Jer- dac.
So
Earl Warren preswnably wW carry &lt;U his _premise. made when
oey headquarters.
he announced his desire to retire, to stay on aa chief jusUce unuNew f4-es'" has never IOI.lctil a successor is conftrmed by the Se.-.te.
lted money. Besides the discardCONTRACTS RENEWED
ed glasses, the only other help
!irtton and Letart Township
MONTGOMERY, ALA. - A STATE LEGISLATOR !lied a fed.
the organization accepts is pre- truiJtees have renewed their fire
ere! court ault Thursday charllln&amp; George Wallece ond otherB ll'lth
cious metal scrap, Rilverware, contracts with Racine village lor
"unlawtully Ioot.irc'' Alabama's treasury of 11 enonnou&amp; amourta
and discarded jewelry. These the coming year, 1t waa announcot public monies. properties and state employees" for use in hla
are melted down and the money ed today.
presldentlal campaign.
(rom the reclamation is used to
The suit charged that Wallace, former state tlrance director
oat 14&gt; funds In 88 hospitals loSeymour Trammell and fnrmer goveroor'a aide Cecll Jackson
cated in 48 states. These pay ror
MARRIAGE APPLICATION
"conspired and _plotted amorw themselves and between each other
new prescription glasses, or lC
Charles Edward Friley, Sr., with the then governor of. the state. Lurleen B. Wallace, to use, e.
needed, artlllclal eyeo.
62, Pomeroy, custodlan,arldGar- perxl and convert" state monies to Wallace's tbtrd party _preeidenThe Pomeroy Lima Clubplans nett Evelyn Moore, 55, Racine.
Uel cam,palgn.
wmake the collection ol the discarded glasses an amual local
project. Locations where t h e
glasses m.a.y be lett will be anoounced later.

Will Meet Sunday

Ad•••lral

asked their oplniOD or whldl

-· ·· - ~ · -··~- · -~·· ·

+

Thomas PaJne laid, "suspi cion is the COh\liWon or mean
!lOUis - and the bane of all good
society,"

going to be .teo preoldent, ond poll ohowed Wallace moldng • ·
we• re DOt golnc to UJe nuclear marked gain amoqr &gt;Otero ..

Youth Fellowship

It was 2 a.m. on
October 12,1492 ...

Thought"

...

- ·~

School Night For Scouting
Will Be Observed Tuesday

lans.
The wiMing sales team wUI
tat a steak dinner at the next
Kiwanis meeting. The losers will
·~beans.

. Bill Northup and Bruce Malcolm are CO&lt;haf.rmen or t h e
project.

Hamihon is

In Gallia's
Central Soya

CUTTING RIBBON - Gov. James A. Rhodes selected these nve y~sters to cut the ribbm
to officially open the first two lanes or the new four..Jane section or U, S. Rt. 33 in Meigs County
after dedication ceremonies on rriday, Behind the younsters are Rep, Ralph w.':lker, .State Sen.
Oakley C. Collins and Gov. Rhodes. Tile youngsters cutting the ribbon include twins Michael a."ld
Mark Goeglein, Darlene Hooper and Peggy Smith.

Three Persons Will Open Bids Tuesday
Are Injured

On New Bridge Approach

GALLIPOLIS - John HamilCOLUMIJUS (UpO - B i d s
ton, formerly ot this area, has
will be opened Tuesday by the
returned w accept a pooltlon
state llighway Department ror
with Central Soya of Oblo accordconstruction of an lnterch&amp;ngt:
In&amp; to Earl Durham, local manGALLIPOLIS- Three persons
and approaches for a n e w
ager.
were admitted to Holzer Medical
bridge to be built to replace the
Mr. Hamilton will serve as Center, First Ave,, after treat~laam•s aas!Jtant. He succeeds
ment in the emergency room,
Blll Minshall, who was recently with fractures after rau S,
translarred to Sellobury, Mo.,
Brenda G. Lanier, 6, daughas manager 11 Central Soya or ter ol Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Lao.
Missouri, Inc.
ier, Rt. 2 Bidwell, was admit~
Mr. llamllton • - Gel IIa 'ted to the hoopltal at 2 p.m.
, Acadomy High School and Oblo Friday with a fractured right
GALLIPOLIS James D.
state University, and hao been leg. 9Je was injured when she Wos~ 38, GaUlpolla, now serving
active in feed and farm s.upply fell olf a merry .go-round at Rio sentences in the Ohio Penitentiary, will be returned this week
sales in Ohio and lndiana Cor Grande Elementary School.
w
stand lrlal ln Gallla County
many years.
Jackie L. Brumfield, 10, smor
Mr. HamUton and his wile Mr. and Mrs. llollls Brwntlold, Conunon Pleas Court on various
are ln the process
mov- RL 1 Crown City, was admit- charges lncltiding being an ha.
" In&amp; on the Wendell Rouoh farm ted w lhe hospltsl at 6 p.m. blruel crlminel.
Judge Warren s. Earhart sen' wblch they purchased recently. Frldas with a fractured rlgtrt
' The Hamiltoos formerly resid- leg. He was f.niured when he fell tenced West to terms of 5 - 20
years ror breaking and enter.
ed ln Greenville, Ohio before re- oot or a tree.
. turning to thla conununlcy·.
Mrs. L. Noah JohnllOil, Rt, 2 lng and 1-7 Cor grand larceny
Vinton, suffered a fractured knee in Aprll 1967. West was found
when she fell at Holley's Gro- guilty of breaklll8 Into Charles
• TRAIN·TRUCK CRASH
cery store at Vinton. She was Ehrman's residence at 44 VIn·· SAPORRO, Japan (UP0 - An admitted to the hospital at 9:45 ton Ave., and the theft of $241 .
The jury was oot 33 minutes,
: expren passenger train bar- a.m.
reled into a dump truck at a
West is also facing charges
railway crossirw Saturcta.Y, i~
al breaking and entering at Nas~
.. Juring 29 persons. Investigators
key's Ashland Station, also grand
said the train faDed to make a
CAll KILLS DEER
larce~zy in the 8 &amp; E; grand
' · scheduled stop at Naie station
PT, PLEASANT - VIrginia larcuny In the theft or a .PUrse
·• on 'HokkaidO loland and the gale B. Hill, 40, ci 111aoon reported ll'om Martha Lou Fox; and three
at Ute road crossing subsequent~ to the aherurs department Fri- Indictments or Is suing checks
· 1y flUid to l'""er. Pollee day evanlng that she Btruck and with lnsuftlclent funds, group.
-. arreattd the train' &amp; engineer killed a deer while traveling on eel as one charae.
:.: and Ida Uolltont on suspicion ol Route 17 al 7:30 p.m . Damage
Judge Earhart will be .on the
was $150 to her car.
bench at Thuroii&amp;Y's'trlal.

In Accidents

Will Return

Man Here

·:rv.

'•"""-"·

·-·
"'( '

or

Joins Staff

SUver Bridge.
The Sll ver Bridge, owned and
maintained by West Virginia,
collapsed last Dec. 15, drq,ping
some 46 persons t.o their death
in the Ohio River.
Highway Director P. E. Masheter said the interchange and
approaches would be built at
Kanagua, the location of t h e
new bridge to be constructed by
West Virginia.
The four..tane Ohio approach,
with an estimated cost of $1
million, wlll be CIIIRPleted by
Aug. 31, 1969, Masheter said.
The bridge, at an estimated
cost of $12 million, was e)Q)ect-ed to be completed by late

1969.
Masheter

GALLIPOLIS - ,\lmost 200
Cub Scout Packs and Boy Scout
Troops will take part in School
Night for Scouting in the TriState Area Council beginning at
i :30 p.m., Tuesday .

Parents of the area scouters,
and sons who are eight years of

age or older arc invited to attend one of the sessions In the
neighborhood to meet With scout
lllit loaders. The events will be
conducted in the following schools
in Meigs, Gallia and Mason Coon-

::w:r'' '''''')'')'

::::,::::::::::::::= ;=;,,,, , ,,, :::, , , , '')"

{( INSIDE TODAY. . .

U

include~

f{

Today's Sunday Times-Sentinel
a 12.page Car-Care)\:
;;;;::;:Supplement, and a 12.page magazine section featuring In Our ;:;:;:;:
::::;::: Town, Dateline, Just Between Us, farm page aaJ TV-Radio ;:;:;:;:
::::::; news, Katie's Korner, a wr~ on Friday's Rt. 33 dedication}:;:;·
{;:; ceremonies. Helen Help Us, plus OCher features.
;:::;:;.

i!ii=~t::;:~:i:r~=~~~~{i!t!;:!~!m~:::t!:i:~:~=~=)~}!;{!\ii=i=t=i=r~:;:~:;:;:i:i=~=i=!~!}::!!~~~~!;~;~~;;;(~;;{!~f:·
Driver Escapes
Injury When
Truck Wrecks

n. PLEASANT - WUmer
Halfhill, 24, :Middleport, was Wlinjured when he wrecked a l'uel
tank truck at I p.m. Friday on
Route 62,
Mr. Hal!lllll waa driving a
!ruck lllled with luelanditceught
rire within seconds after it over •
turned ln the highway.
state Police reported the driver saJd another vehicle crowded him ore the blghws.y and when
he tried to pull back on to the
highway he lost control and turnMEIGS MARRIAGE LICENSE
ed over on its top.
Roger Kathley Justice, 21, VinDamage was estimated at$10,ton, and Sally Dorian PoweU, 000. The vehicle was complete16, Pomeroy,
ly destroyed by lire. Point PleasLawrence Ralph Davis, 21, ant Fire Department and the Pom.
Suitland, Md., and Janice Joyce
01'0¥ E!Mrpncy 5cJ~ad MIJWered
-- c k , 20, Racine Route L
the elarm.
i.fso announced the
inspection oo an armual basis
by engineers using inspection
procedures established in a
manuaL The manual was ordered
prepared
by the department by an act ol the General Assem~ly lollowlng lhe Sliver Bridge disaster.
Mastleter said the manual
was the first in the nation to
establish ~dellnes for aMual
bridge inspections.

ties:
Meigs - Middleport and Porn .
eroy elementary school; Gallia
- Rio, Green and Washington elementary; Mason - Pt. Pleasant
Junior lligh School .
School coordinators for these
respective schools are Dr. Robert Mussman, Garland Parsons,
Carl Cameron, John Fultz, Pat
Wood and George Lamp.
Applications to join the scouts
have been delivered to t h e s e
schools. Boys who are 8, 9 or

GALLIPOLIS - Senior members or the American Government Class OC Kyger Creek High
School will stage a special assembly Tuesday, Oct. 15, with a
political campaign rally featurIng candidates ol lhe 1968 presidential election.
This assembl._o,.· will serve to
enlighten the student body by
showing them , the views oC the
political candidates. Members of
the class were selected to speak
for each candidate . This assembly was plamed to inform the
class or today's world, according to Maurice Mayes, American Government Class instructor,

ANNOUNCE SUPPER
CARP ENTER - The Columbia Chepel 0\urch will hold a
homecoming Slt)~er Saturday,
Oct. 26, with servJne bo&amp;lnnllll!
at 5;30 p. m. The llUbl4' Ia lnvl~

. ed.

.

W years of age are invited to
become Cub Scouts and boys 11
or over are potential Boy Scouts.
Clarence Thompson, district
coordinator, said Saturday, "We
want to see more boys have the
opportunity to take part in scout.
log, educational and recreational programs.
"We expect that school night
scouting will make it possible
for nearly 1,500 new t.oys to
become scouts in the 1'ri.state
Area Council."
Each pack and troop will have
.a d.lspla,y or demonstration at respective neighborhood schools,
and wUI meet boys and tlleir par ents as part of the major recr uit.
ing program.
The event provides an Oftportunity for hlt.ert!sted adults to
help more boys become involved in scouting activities.

8 &amp; E Probed By

Gallia Sheriff

GEORGE HOLMAN

Narne H0 Jffian

FOr DistrJct
•
Scout Honor

SYRACUSE- George Holman,
has been named
"Scouter of the Week" in t h e
MGM Boy Scout Dlotrlcl.
E...'Jlt)loyed as an auxiliary
e&lt;Jiipment operator a.t the Philip
Sporn plant, Holman began his
work as assistant scoutmaster
ror Troop 243 in ~racuse in
1963, ass1Bting scoutmaster John
Sauvage. Before this lime, Hol man helped with the ~racuse
cub pack.
Holman has given a part of his
vacation annually to attend Camp
Arrowllead with the scouts and
has helped some financially so
tllat they could attend. Last year
Troop 243 was chosen as "Camp..
ers of the Week." The troop has
21 boys.
Holman took training ln wood
badge work for one week at Ar rowhead and attends the MGM
round table sessions nearly ev.
ery month. He assisted in forming Racine cub scout pack and
is a committeeman .in the cW
scout pack of Syracuse-Minersville at the pt·esent time. He
was awarded the scouter's tratnhtg award for 1.:ompleting t h e
training recognition plan at a
rOWld lable this week.
He is married and he and his
wife, Ruth, have three children.
including Rrenda, a jwlior at
Southern High School ln Raclne,
Rodney, Racine Junior H i g h
School student, who Is a star
scout and an assistant patrol
leader , and Kentoo, Syracuseele~
ment.ary student, who belonp to
the Webelos.
~racuse,

GALUPOLIS - The Galiia
County Sheriff"s Department
investigated a breaking a n d
entering and case of vandalism
Friday at a house on Roush Rd.; DISARM SOLDIER
In Perry Twp., owned by 11.
SEOUL (UPO A South
W. Walter, Gallipolis.
Korean soldier, who became
Burglars stole a garden plow
angered when he returned homo
and double pulley, according to
trom the VIetnam Wv .,..
deputies. They also turned over
discovered his· sister lWei been
a privy, broke a window rut of
entertaining American soldiers,
the house and broke two spin~
held police at boy for ,13 houra
dies out or a .!ltaircase. Depusaturday threatenhw to blow l.p
ties are Investigating.
six members or his flnrlly Mth
a hand grenode. Reporto !ran
Taogu, 150 miles aout11 ci Sooul,
TWO ARRES!'ED
said Cp' Kim Yang Toe lockld
Pf. PLEASANT - Two Leon his parents, brothers and si1ter1
men were arrested by the Cit;y in one room or the hcNae ana
~lice on drunk charges Fridlu' threatened to blow them ,.,
night. Arrested were 0 w e n Police finally dl...._ Kiln
Frankllo !lephens, 21. and Er- when he leU asleop 13 lioWa
vin Ruy Slepbens, 34.
later,

�. ~-

..•

Gov. Rhodes

The s.ntay Time!l • Sentinrl, ~!!!::

~

CHOLERA AND FLOODS
NEW
llEUU
(ll Pll- The
Preaa ..~at of lnila reported
s.tuntaY that 50 persons were
killed during the past week by
1loodlna: In the Goalpara distrkt
,,.,of Assam and that cholera had
! . . - broken
ou~ in the dlstricl
Emergenc)' medical teams were
) en route to Goalpara and local
authorities said about :?00,000
persons had already been
j

reootinued trmi Pqe ll
Dowler, J, w. •'Dyke'' Wilson,
deput,y director ot the Ohio Department of llighwa,y s, P. E,
Masheter, director of highwa.vs,
State Sen. Oakley c. Collins,
Rep. Ral.Ph Welker,. Project En·
glneer Lloyd Gibbons, member•
or the wagon train group that
traveled lo Columbus In horse
drawn carriages in support of
the 1964 bond Issue tllat provided fwlds for the lllgllwa,y, representatives o( the Athens Retail Mcrcllants Association, headed by Ma,yor Ra,ymofR! Shepherd.
The group or dignitaries enjoyed a h.mcheon at the Salisbury Elementary School ancr
the dedication and ribbon cut-

infM&gt;Culate(L

I
,}

Tatoo for Burt
HOLLYWOOD tUP I) Burt Lancaster will havt his
right arm "tatooed" with the
lOlst Alrbome Dtvlslon insig·
nla for his role In .. T he Gypsy
Moth:s"-a sperial dye which
should last for thP dura ti on or

SL:\UAY
TIMES-SENTINEL

urged tho members or the group
tbat traveled to Columbus In
1963, to 11gct back In t h e
'f3gon" ln support of Issue No.
1 this November.

~~~

'no&gt;nJ ,\ ,..,1,•1'• &gt;"•1 .. , /lllol&gt;,

l~•;ll

PT. PLEASANT- 1\fembersol
Schuler, was pastor at t h e
st. Paul United lllelhodlot Church church. Rev. Schuler and hi a
on Jack10n Ave. will gather tolamlly are oow at Man. W.
~ 1o observe the dedication ot Va.
tile church. The guest speaker
From 1957 unW 1980 R e v.
lor the ~ ot lellowshlj&gt; will be
George Porter auided !he elforls
D, Frederick Wertz, Resident
ol the members In their cooatant
Bishop or lhe West Virginia Area
plans tal a better church a n d
ol United Methodist Churches. ministered to their apirllual
In addillon, the group will hear
neoda. Rev. Porter and hlaiJun.
Connie Dickens. lq)er!n..,-.
ily are oow at the Barboursville,
ot the Huntington District, •• well W. Va. claarch and have been Inas the church's present da,y Pill-

1'111&gt;-

l"h'-'d •wr.' ""•""'·· "' ""'"'' "''''"PI 'oa1uro.; .
....' '"''' U•" l 'u • ~ao· " Pa id . ,l,all•l-"''''· ( Jio,...

1~e

SOUthern, Eastern a n d
Meigs lligh School bands provi&lt;Ed

j .;i, J j

1111 . IIAII. \ .'\1-.\T I:\U
\Ill Mt&lt; h o~ i\ '&gt;!r... l, l'umiUPJ, ()h... J.&gt;71f.
l'&lt;lhl"l'cd o•·rr.• ~ L'I.•I-.•J;J', ~ ~ l'llon, Ufttlo 'iltlwcla •. l .ntvo·W " ' '"" "'"' d~ • : • on~ohn11 m• -· M

music for U1e dedication held at
one of tile two roadside rest
areas along tile new highway.
The highway was opened to
traffic after the dedication.

r..,m~.

"' . 1•1""·

, .,.,_, • ~'""·

H)' ~ '''~' .J~, l ''"" 'oJ•.cJ• ~· :llt· pw-o.
M .\1 1. ~ 11 1•1 lOt' II(!\ ll oH'l~

iht l o l ll o j&gt;o~ '' I I ol"" " on (~ li&lt;&gt; I ... ~UI \ Jr11:11111 , " ' "' . ... , ~·· ; " ' ..... ......... ~;; ,~ . . . . . . . . .
$J; ~~o
~.
~·•1111 " , .. ~ monthV.; •IIA~
11'1011!/" /jl:t ~IJ
\

...- ••• "'"' •

Give Pop a Break
NEW YORK &lt;UPII - Mothcr
should not be the only one
coddled a bit after baby's birth.
RN, the nurses' magazine.
sugge"ts tha~ t.he father "merits a two-week paternity leave
from his work so he can be
with his wife during childbirth and h elp later with the

BAIRD

Pt. Pleasant Church Dedi.cation Scheduled for Today .

1

l1ub lo&gt;J ,o;fl •lor,&gt; ~no:J~.· b l 111~ IJI"I&gt; \.-'~1•1
l' ul•l"l""" L...
f,\ J.r.lt'/11.1.\ 1 ~ 11.\ 1 Hl" l \1

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"* '" "'"'·or"· c••

..... ! •• ,,, ...... ''"""' - ~ J.

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" ~ I ''"'" '~" "' '' "' ""' '"' i"·'''''''4UQn ct all
n~" ' '""'" " "~ • • n..;1 o~oo '" ''"7 ''~"' &gt;Paper on
~ • "• tl· ~ loo •• 1 "~" ' l" "'''""o:d hPr~ln

The first signer
ration of
John Hancock.

housework."

ting.

ftlminM.

3 - The Sunday Times. Sentinel, Suncll,v, October 13, 1968

Gov, Rhodes, early In bls talk,

Behind the ~ ol celebration
lies tnariJ' years of dedicated labor by the faithful few who have
seen the progreaa of the church
since Us origin In 1950. lnvliatlons have been mailed to Cormer members who have moved
away and to all rormet minJsten of tile church and theJr Cammea.
Land ror tile church was first
purchased in 1942, but a sunray
at that time dlscloJed it wuuld
not be feasible for a church and
It was not until 1950 that It was
felt thai the last.growlng residential section ot the northern
part of Ute clt;y was in need ol
8 church.
A8 a result the Saint
Paul Methodist Church waalound.
ed by lhe District &amp;IJ&gt;erlnlen-

oJthe Declawas

"A II'ORD TO THE 1\'ISE"

BROS
Auto

Wrecking
446-4060
367-7598
';

NOW!!

I

\

FREE TELETYPE
SER \ICE TO
7 ST ..If£5

;

dent Dr. J. M. Helm. Only five
charter members made up the
memberahlj&gt;. Three 0( the orlgi.
nal five will be present Cor the
dedicatloo Sundoy. They are Mrs.
Elwanda Icard, her husband, Millord Icard and Mrs. Emogene
Vaughn.
Before the actual church was
begun, meetings were held in a
small, one--lloor building located at the rear ~ the presentday silo or the church. The !!rot
pastor at the new church was
Rev. Charles Lewis. His tenure
aa paltor was from 1950 wtW
19U
In 1952, the residence was remodeled to accommodate t h e
growing membership and the
same year the basement for the
present church was begun. In
November ot the same year members ot the church begru1 lo hold
meetings In the basemert portion of the 4new• churcll.
In February of 1953thechurch
had 44 members, but the small
group took on !he huge iaok ot
beDding the $18,000 sanctuary.
At this Ume the old building waa
utUized as the church• a parson:· · ap and often the •social rooms•
~- · ~ the new church.
At this time, Rev. Ross Marrs
was J)lltor at the church. He accepted lho challenae altho huge
iaok ahead. Precedlng R e v.
Marrs was Rev. Lon Harmon of
Parsons, who was pastor f o r
three months at the church un-

-

, ~ :.

,:;:c,~-:r
/'

GUARANTEED
USED AND
REBUILT
PARTS

'•

.

'

Our Christmas
Selection Is

OWNERS:
Henry , Don,

Paul Baird

Complete and Now
The ~taff of the hospital ship SS HOPE is now offerin_g the
people of Ceylon a wide variety of medi&lt;:ol cducahonalexchange programs . In the hosp1tols and elsewhere through out the islond nation, the medical profess ionals of Ceylon
and those of HOPE are worki11g hand -in -hand to help malu~
the life of the people healthier and happier. Teaching IS
HOPE's primary purpose .

Another
unfair offer
from
U.S. Plywood

1

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{The richer you are. the
more money you save .)

I.

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A Good Time
To Select Yours.

Road master
and Murray

·f..,···
}i'': . ,,.~·
:·

, .. ,

From now until Nov 1.
you can buy beauttfu l
Wel dwood" Ruslic Black
Walnut pane ling al up IO

• ' ../-.:.&gt;' ,~~ '' '

A DEPOSIT WILL HOLD IT

$7 51 off the regular pnce

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If you want to make a

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you

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up to $135 18 And the
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Rich people have btg
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today and see how the
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Ajii U.S. Plywood
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and Supply

.,

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PT . PLEASANT
675-1160

''

I

Dr. Robert Nixon ot Detroit, Mic h ., examines 0 patient aboard the SS HOPE. Dr.
N ixon, a veteran o f t wo previous HOPE
voyages, is one of 160 U.S. physicians,
surveons and dentists who will volunteer
two months "'f their time to serve in Ceylon

•:· •I

Barbaro Kushwara, right, operating room
nurse from frankville, Pa .,checks the day's
schedule with her Ceylonese
h- M ' counterpart
K h
aboard the hospito 1 s 1p.
1ss us waro
is one ot the 130 full -time staff members
on the voyage this year.

Unico 30" Electric RangeOnly $28.90 Down
Pocked with high performance featu res.
Clock -contro lled automatic oven Automatic pre -heat . Removable infi n ite heat
lop e l eme,-,t~. $igno l lights fo r oven and
lop units . Plus many more
No . P880 -JPW .

IS YOUR

PT. PLEASANT
SOUTHERN STATES
••

CO-OPERA liVE

.

·t_

. ..

• EASY PAYMENT PLAN
• EXPERT SERVICING

Easy To Own
Greal To Wear
BENRUS
TODAY

• Yellow or White

PERFECT
25.00 --+ -KEEPSAKE
- - -- -

CARPENTER
BATONS

BUXTON
LINE
HIS &amp; HER$

Billfolds
&amp;
Enseidlles

Unico Portable Formica-Top
Automatic DishwasherOnly $21.70 Down

• QUALITY PRODUCTS

GIBSON
GRETSCH
HARMONY
KAY
GUITARS

AND
AMPS
OH
CREDIT

SOUTHERN STATES POINT PLEASANT
CO-OPERATIVE INC.
1519 Kanawha St.

675-2780

"WHO ' S MINDING
TltE MINT"

LES WILLIAMSON
416

-

- - - - - - - - --

·

..

impreuive •a.ri.stmas Card'
look !hat will be WOJtb rnaltln&amp;
an ellort to go by and see. &amp;.
hind that 'Chrlstmu Card' liPpearaneo Ilea rnoey memories,
many houra ot hard~. lllanJ'
pr&lt;lbiemo and moot of all much
love and dedlcatinn.

-ColorJim Hutton, Dgrgthy Pro vi"•
and Milton Bert•
ood

"'IN COLD BLOOD '"
With Richard

Broo~s

Newt A toothpaste
aDd mouthwash
-both In ouel

New! A shampoo,
condlUoner, and

rinse,

au In one!

New! A lodak Camera
with Instant drop·ln
loading. Notbtng to set!

MIIGS THEATRI
TO~lGHT·MON. ·TUES.

OCT. 13-14·15
FAR FROM THE
MADDING CROWD
Julie Christie-Terence ~

Color C&amp;rtoona:

Mutiny in the Bumy
Show Starts 7 p.m•
ADIIIISS10N: S5c aod liOc
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

PLUS WM'I'B PLUS
3.25az.
Helps remove tobacco, foocl,
other ouporflcl1l stains. WDfks

mouthwash, too.

I.ODAIINSTAMATJC 124 OUTFIT

ond

as •

takoa black l whlto or colci.t

=:::...

TONIGHT

Dlseounl

.....
Robert Mitchum
in

THUNDER
ROAD

t:omparo ot $1.19

Newt A spray that
belps atop
persplraUon wetn8881

and

iE::r 83•

7az.
New _
convenience for your hair -

•ta 11
•

t:ompa.... $19.!15

Everythlna you need for picture memories ___ the usy way. Outfit includes 124 cam.,. plua KODACOlOR X film tor 12 colo&lt;
snaps, flashcubl, batteries, wrist st111p and instructions.

a
1reat now 1h1mpoo w~h conditiOIIor
and rinse built riaht in!

Tom Kirk
in

Track of
Thunder

Newt .&amp; balr aettlnl

New! An aid
to appeUte
contmll

Newt A tootbbroab
that cleana JOUI'

teeth better ...
automatically!

pndact tbat giVIII

CARTOON

ftrmer body, laatlnl aetsl

lanauga Drive-In

For The
Seaun Oct. 14

·MONDAY
TUESDAY &amp; WEDNESDAY

•••
_... ......

TAPES?

3"·5"·7"
REELS AT

TIFFINS

.•

Can..,. Ill $1.71

iffij::t

'1.29

Uar.

•
•
•
••

••

.,

•

~

CARTOON

BIYC:O Quallt)' Brand
PUP 1f 80Balr Bettini &amp;el

ft80REAJD

Tootbbruah

CDm.... .t$1.37

~:r

il;Fr

ir= 69•

16oL

For flrmar botly, •Iller styt1111. lana·
or·lastlnc at Rwco low price.
Racular or hat&lt;l·to-hold.

•2.29
1..0

Tho modem way to
weilht -

FiiUre Aid

capsules help tame
your appetite. help you
drop poundo l lnchoa.

t:ompa .. at $19.75

'11.99

Convenient and easr to
use . Desianed for the
whole family. FDir·bruah
unit with bruahel In cleo·
..tor colon. Complotawilll

selt-odhnivewallbraekot.

Day is Savings Day on Everything at REVCO/

.DISCOUNT

.•••

IILL WI!LLMAN
• POINT PLEASA::;N;;T:.:..,;W,;,;·.,;V;,;A.,;;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . ,

ponpltant lptay holpa stop parapltalion rra, all dayl

co

..
•

••

TIFFIN CREDITJEWELERS

Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.

ram.

Is 1 IJ(It of the f'lul&gt;aull1
11y, 111any have ...,eluded f111t
with the coming o1 tho ftrat
IIIIOW St. Paul'a will .., 10

Automauc Action

-n-!E HOME OF INSTANT CREDIT-OPEN AN ACCOUNT IN JUST 3 MINUTES..,._""

Your Southern States Cooperative Agency
--

eacll
at TIFFIN'S

bulletin boortl m tho frcollalm
ot !he elllreh, A new roof baa
beon addotl and «&gt;lldoor 1~

Squibb's BROIODDT

TERMS

Singles &amp; Doubles
410·12-16 Guage
Sure-Shot for Credit

l!Chool rooms In tho bettemenl
II olso boasts a modem kltch111
lor the dlmera and Ice cream
soclats, for which &amp;. Paul io
known by all the commenlt,y.
Carpotjng, tiling and lurnlahlngs
heve been added by diatall aldo
wherever needed wlth labor and
financing shared by tile men ot
the church.
The tall graceful spire which is
bathed In radian! light each n1g1rt
!rom dusk until II p.m., is the
gift of tile late Mr. and Mrs.

TIFFINS

WE HAVE
THEM

99t

clllrch has an onlargad san&lt;tu. Harrr Chlldlra. !ihnlbbor)", do.
ary, mlniater•a llfu&lt;ly. emir loll, natod b:Y tho Jlvidon lamll,y, aur•
ttOclal rooms and elglrt clllrch r&lt;J1111t1a tho ,_ey eraolotl brlt:ll

KEEPSAKE

.1. CASH 2. LAY·A-WAY
3. 30 DAY CHARGE
4. EXTEMDI!D BUDGET

SIIOT(;t \S

OVER 400
HOUSEHOLD
TOOLS

Wldte, Mra. Lu1a Jividen and
Roy Ambur(:ey. Other devoted
member• t18rvlnglnvarlooawaya
to aid In the IUnctlonlng ot the
,..ey remodolotlclllrdiareMrs.
Rulli Tygrell, Mra. Vada Dunlap,
Mrs. Belcy Irvin, Mra. Kathleen
Childers, and Mro. Edllh Grlbble.
This Ia only 1 lew ot the dovoted membersldp, now around
200, who have watched the eroct1oo or the preaeat clllrdi. ft
grew from a mere handful holdinJ meellnp In a ramshackle
buUdlng to a beN..ftll -.tree
memorial to God. Today the

(They're coming to REVCO for whafs ew, whafs now,
what's exclUng and worth trying ••• at REVCO prices, naturally)

TONIGIIT OCT. 13

4 WAYS to IUY

SILVER STREAK
BALANCED-SHOCK
ABSORBER TIPS
)\ in. 18" to 28" long

tlural, Joaep11 Flerbau&amp;fl,
Mrs. Karen Flerbausb, M r a.
Everotle Grimm, Mrs. WOllam
Hulllnan, D. B. 1\lorpn, Mrl. D.
B. Morsan. Bennie Sllaler, AIbert Slephona. Patricia Hultman
and Mrs. Howard SWann.
Aeolyteo aorviDg at all serv!Clio are Junior Morgan and Ranely Lowe.
Ushers at the church are Gary
Collen, Allen Durst and L e •
Grimm.
The committee tn charge ot
the dedicatinn lneludea H. E. Berlalord, Mrs. Elwanda Icard, DrCarl Irvin, D. W, Browning, Rev.
!h)'

at is today's'
generation coming to?

Whon IIIOd dolly. Arrtd Extta Dty Inti·

Saves 11me fo r h omemakers. Gets a service fa r 14 spot le ss. Automatic detergent
d1~penser 8uilt -1n water heating booste r.
Plat e war mer . Rolls easily. No . HFD .

\

II LC

• Dress Watch

COMPLETE

"Burner with o brain" makes oil utensils
outomotid Automatic cook-and -kee p worm oven Fifth burner doubl es as
gnddle . Illuminated bockgvard . Clock
wit h one -hour timer . Appliance outlet
Plus many more outs tanding features.
No . P2070 -3EGPW.

PERFECT
RING
PERFECT
CREDIT

• 17 jewels

25.00

Unico 36 " Gas RangeOnly $27.90 Down

A

w.

waa the first to occupy the new
five-room pareonap, followed by
the I'Orter lamll,y. A great part
ot the par110J18ge labor woa dooe
by the members of the church.
Rev. Prince served the church
!rom 1960 until 1963. He is liOIV
at Chesler, W. Va.FollowlngRev.
Prince waa Rev. Dale Childers.
Rev. Childers, oow a Chaplain
with the U. S. Arm.y, served at
1he church from 1963 untll 1965,
Rev- Gerald Daniel, who resides row at Howard Ave. ln pt,

$3_98

• MODERATE PRICES

. .

assigned. Rev. Marrs Is now
Diotrlct 9Jporlntondent al Lebanon. Indiana, bul many or the
church's 1 old.tlmers' will remember seeing him In shlrt
sleeves working aa hard aa
any of the dedicated members
or !he laborers lolling at t h e
dalJ.y !alii&lt; of making a dream
come true. II was a Uglrt-lmll
lollowshlp !hal seemed 1o Inspire the small group who had
such vislona 0( a line church.
Today, tnaiJ¥ of them will see
the reiRllts of the years ot work.
Many who alded In the COIIIJIIetloo ot the edifice will not be
present for they are deceased, but there Ia no doubt that
they will be preoenl In t h e
thoughts ot those who remember their elforts and their gifts
that helped make !he llnal rooult that Ia st. Paul's United
Methodist Church.
Rev. Kenneth Wayne waa the
mlnllller Ill the church In 1955.
IUa widow, Mary, ls a resident
ot Valley Fork, Wesl Virginia.
ln 1956, unUI 1957, T. W. -Tom'

TIFFIN
AT CREDIT
JEWELERS
TODAY
TIFFIN
CREDIT
Benrus
Today
Waterproof

church' a formerpastoratoatt&amp;ld
the church -catioo today.
Following Rev. I'Ortor was
Rev. Randall Prlnca. Rev. Prince
and hla lamll,y were the third
ramUy to occupy the church's
new J)lr1Kl118ge at 2513 Jetleraon Ave. nearby. Rev, Schuler,
8 bachelor at the ti."lle he senred aa minJiter at st. Paul's,

UJ a permanent minister was

Jubilant youngster is one ot
thousands to receive fresh
milk as port of Project
HOPE's demonstration program in nutrition.

Aw.-~::1-"F:=::s·.~::;:;t: : :~.:; : : : : : : : : -: : :·: :•: :::~': : : : : : : : : :·. .: : : : ·l: : :.: :.:·::.:: l: :·:·:,'!=: : .:.: : ~;: : :~: : :.:-: :·:·: :·:::·:x.............. ···':·~·:·:'·:· · ........ ,..·..·:·:·:·:~: : : ;·:. ·:;.:,:;:r:.:;:::x::;:;.: : :.: -,:.:i.:·:::.:::: !~ .: :-: ·::.;: : : : : .:;:~ ·.: :;: : : :~?~·.:.: : .: : ·:

Opp . B&amp;O Depot

THE LOGICAL PLACE
TO BUY APPLIANCES

.. ' '

44.~~. up

-----~----···-·------

..·

vited, along with all of I h e

tor, Rev, Norville White.

Pleasant, aerved aa palltor at tdll take an acttve part In the
the church !rom 1965 until 1966. service aa will the Loy oftlclala
The present mlnisler at tile andTru-a.
church Js Rev. Norvllle White
Lay Ot!Iclala are It D. Ty.
...., wiD act 1a mot mlnlsler 1o srett, llllllord Icard, Dr. carl
tho viattlng dlsnhariea and the Irvin, Mr a. Lula Jividen, PaIormor mlnilllers who plan 1o be tricia Hultman. James Ph!Uij&gt;s
present todll,y.
and Mrs. Helm CWIIIInalwn.
An lmpreaalve program otmu- Trustees are Melvin Bordman,
lllc and rllual ot -cattoo baa Clarenca -.o, WOllam Hull·
been p1amed lor the occaaton man, Mrs. Kathleen McDermitt,
~ with Mrs. VIckie Hum.Ph· Miltord Icard, Howard Schultz
riel at the organ. The Clnarch and Everette Grimm.
Chelr and Rev. White wiD asstewards at St. Paul a r e
slat Blahop Wertz and Dr. Dick- Roy Ari&gt;urgey, Mra. IL E. Beren in maldng the dedlcatlon aenr. lalord, Mrs. D.
Browning,
Ice compiOio. The congregation Glom CUnningham, Mrs. Doro.

CENTERS

314 SECOND AVENUE

Gallipolis, Ohio
OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. 11L 9 P.M.-SUNDAYS 1
· AMERICA'S FASTEST GROWING CHAIN

IX

�. ~-

..•

Gov. Rhodes

The s.ntay Time!l • Sentinrl, ~!!!::

~

CHOLERA AND FLOODS
NEW
llEUU
(ll Pll- The
Preaa ..~at of lnila reported
s.tuntaY that 50 persons were
killed during the past week by
1loodlna: In the Goalpara distrkt
,,.,of Assam and that cholera had
! . . - broken
ou~ in the dlstricl
Emergenc)' medical teams were
) en route to Goalpara and local
authorities said about :?00,000
persons had already been
j

reootinued trmi Pqe ll
Dowler, J, w. •'Dyke'' Wilson,
deput,y director ot the Ohio Department of llighwa,y s, P. E,
Masheter, director of highwa.vs,
State Sen. Oakley c. Collins,
Rep. Ral.Ph Welker,. Project En·
glneer Lloyd Gibbons, member•
or the wagon train group that
traveled lo Columbus In horse
drawn carriages in support of
the 1964 bond Issue tllat provided fwlds for the lllgllwa,y, representatives o( the Athens Retail Mcrcllants Association, headed by Ma,yor Ra,ymofR! Shepherd.
The group or dignitaries enjoyed a h.mcheon at the Salisbury Elementary School ancr
the dedication and ribbon cut-

infM&gt;Culate(L

I
,}

Tatoo for Burt
HOLLYWOOD tUP I) Burt Lancaster will havt his
right arm "tatooed" with the
lOlst Alrbome Dtvlslon insig·
nla for his role In .. T he Gypsy
Moth:s"-a sperial dye which
should last for thP dura ti on or

SL:\UAY
TIMES-SENTINEL

urged tho members or the group
tbat traveled to Columbus In
1963, to 11gct back In t h e
'f3gon" ln support of Issue No.
1 this November.

~~~

'no&gt;nJ ,\ ,..,1,•1'• &gt;"•1 .. , /lllol&gt;,

l~•;ll

PT. PLEASANT- 1\fembersol
Schuler, was pastor at t h e
st. Paul United lllelhodlot Church church. Rev. Schuler and hi a
on Jack10n Ave. will gather tolamlly are oow at Man. W.
~ 1o observe the dedication ot Va.
tile church. The guest speaker
From 1957 unW 1980 R e v.
lor the ~ ot lellowshlj&gt; will be
George Porter auided !he elforls
D, Frederick Wertz, Resident
ol the members In their cooatant
Bishop or lhe West Virginia Area
plans tal a better church a n d
ol United Methodist Churches. ministered to their apirllual
In addillon, the group will hear
neoda. Rev. Porter and hlaiJun.
Connie Dickens. lq)er!n..,-.
ily are oow at the Barboursville,
ot the Huntington District, •• well W. Va. claarch and have been Inas the church's present da,y Pill-

1'111&gt;-

l"h'-'d •wr.' ""•""'·· "' ""'"'' "''''"PI 'oa1uro.; .
....' '"''' U•" l 'u • ~ao· " Pa id . ,l,all•l-"''''· ( Jio,...

1~e

SOUthern, Eastern a n d
Meigs lligh School bands provi&lt;Ed

j .;i, J j

1111 . IIAII. \ .'\1-.\T I:\U
\Ill Mt&lt; h o~ i\ '&gt;!r... l, l'umiUPJ, ()h... J.&gt;71f.
l'&lt;lhl"l'cd o•·rr.• ~ L'I.•I-.•J;J', ~ ~ l'llon, Ufttlo 'iltlwcla •. l .ntvo·W " ' '"" "'"' d~ • : • on~ohn11 m• -· M

music for U1e dedication held at
one of tile two roadside rest
areas along tile new highway.
The highway was opened to
traffic after the dedication.

r..,m~.

"' . 1•1""·

, .,.,_, • ~'""·

H)' ~ '''~' .J~, l ''"" 'oJ•.cJ• ~· :llt· pw-o.
M .\1 1. ~ 11 1•1 lOt' II(!\ ll oH'l~

iht l o l ll o j&gt;o~ '' I I ol"" " on (~ li&lt;&gt; I ... ~UI \ Jr11:11111 , " ' "' . ... , ~·· ; " ' ..... ......... ~;; ,~ . . . . . . . . .
$J; ~~o
~.
~·•1111 " , .. ~ monthV.; •IIA~
11'1011!/" /jl:t ~IJ
\

...- ••• "'"' •

Give Pop a Break
NEW YORK &lt;UPII - Mothcr
should not be the only one
coddled a bit after baby's birth.
RN, the nurses' magazine.
sugge"ts tha~ t.he father "merits a two-week paternity leave
from his work so he can be
with his wife during childbirth and h elp later with the

BAIRD

Pt. Pleasant Church Dedi.cation Scheduled for Today .

1

l1ub lo&gt;J ,o;fl •lor,&gt; ~no:J~.· b l 111~ IJI"I&gt; \.-'~1•1
l' ul•l"l""" L...
f,\ J.r.lt'/11.1.\ 1 ~ 11.\ 1 Hl" l \1

·r''"

J!iod )

"* '" "'"'·or"· c••

..... ! •• ,,, ...... ''"""' - ~ J.

I••· 1 11 ,, ,.,1 l' r•·•

j,,. ~rn.. l

'\ HI; ' "

-·~ •

,,,,.I,,

~"j,,.,..

" ~ I ''"'" '~" "' '' "' ""' '"' i"·'''''''4UQn ct all
n~" ' '""'" " "~ • • n..;1 o~oo '" ''"7 ''~"' &gt;Paper on
~ • "• tl· ~ loo •• 1 "~" ' l" "'''""o:d hPr~ln

The first signer
ration of
John Hancock.

housework."

ting.

ftlminM.

3 - The Sunday Times. Sentinel, Suncll,v, October 13, 1968

Gov, Rhodes, early In bls talk,

Behind the ~ ol celebration
lies tnariJ' years of dedicated labor by the faithful few who have
seen the progreaa of the church
since Us origin In 1950. lnvliatlons have been mailed to Cormer members who have moved
away and to all rormet minJsten of tile church and theJr Cammea.
Land ror tile church was first
purchased in 1942, but a sunray
at that time dlscloJed it wuuld
not be feasible for a church and
It was not until 1950 that It was
felt thai the last.growlng residential section ot the northern
part of Ute clt;y was in need ol
8 church.
A8 a result the Saint
Paul Methodist Church waalound.
ed by lhe District &amp;IJ&gt;erlnlen-

oJthe Declawas

"A II'ORD TO THE 1\'ISE"

BROS
Auto

Wrecking
446-4060
367-7598
';

NOW!!

I

\

FREE TELETYPE
SER \ICE TO
7 ST ..If£5

;

dent Dr. J. M. Helm. Only five
charter members made up the
memberahlj&gt;. Three 0( the orlgi.
nal five will be present Cor the
dedicatloo Sundoy. They are Mrs.
Elwanda Icard, her husband, Millord Icard and Mrs. Emogene
Vaughn.
Before the actual church was
begun, meetings were held in a
small, one--lloor building located at the rear ~ the presentday silo or the church. The !!rot
pastor at the new church was
Rev. Charles Lewis. His tenure
aa paltor was from 1950 wtW
19U
In 1952, the residence was remodeled to accommodate t h e
growing membership and the
same year the basement for the
present church was begun. In
November ot the same year members ot the church begru1 lo hold
meetings In the basemert portion of the 4new• churcll.
In February of 1953thechurch
had 44 members, but the small
group took on !he huge iaok ot
beDding the $18,000 sanctuary.
At this Ume the old building waa
utUized as the church• a parson:· · ap and often the •social rooms•
~- · ~ the new church.
At this time, Rev. Ross Marrs
was J)lltor at the church. He accepted lho challenae altho huge
iaok ahead. Precedlng R e v.
Marrs was Rev. Lon Harmon of
Parsons, who was pastor f o r
three months at the church un-

-

, ~ :.

,:;:c,~-:r
/'

GUARANTEED
USED AND
REBUILT
PARTS

'•

.

'

Our Christmas
Selection Is

OWNERS:
Henry , Don,

Paul Baird

Complete and Now
The ~taff of the hospital ship SS HOPE is now offerin_g the
people of Ceylon a wide variety of medi&lt;:ol cducahonalexchange programs . In the hosp1tols and elsewhere through out the islond nation, the medical profess ionals of Ceylon
and those of HOPE are worki11g hand -in -hand to help malu~
the life of the people healthier and happier. Teaching IS
HOPE's primary purpose .

Another
unfair offer
from
U.S. Plywood

1

"

{The richer you are. the
more money you save .)

I.

I~

A Good Time
To Select Yours.

Road master
and Murray

·f..,···
}i'': . ,,.~·
:·

, .. ,

From now until Nov 1.
you can buy beauttfu l
Wel dwood" Ruslic Black
Walnut pane ling al up IO

• ' ../-.:.&gt;' ,~~ '' '

A DEPOSIT WILL HOLD IT

$7 51 off the regular pnce

per panel

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

If you want to make a

masterp iece out ot a 14
x 22' room. fo r e~~:ample

You'll eliminate the possibility of not getting
what you want if you choose now. Wide choice
of boys and girls models.

you

ca n do so and save
up to $135 18 And the
bigger you r rooms are
the more money you save
Rich people have btg
rooms . right? So c ome 1n
today and see how the
rtch get ri c her

,,'·

~~

Ajii U.S. Plywood
V Carolina Lumber
and Supply

.,

fJ€?

~
~

PT . PLEASANT
675-1160

''

I

Dr. Robert Nixon ot Detroit, Mic h ., examines 0 patient aboard the SS HOPE. Dr.
N ixon, a veteran o f t wo previous HOPE
voyages, is one of 160 U.S. physicians,
surveons and dentists who will volunteer
two months "'f their time to serve in Ceylon

•:· •I

Barbaro Kushwara, right, operating room
nurse from frankville, Pa .,checks the day's
schedule with her Ceylonese
h- M ' counterpart
K h
aboard the hospito 1 s 1p.
1ss us waro
is one ot the 130 full -time staff members
on the voyage this year.

Unico 30" Electric RangeOnly $28.90 Down
Pocked with high performance featu res.
Clock -contro lled automatic oven Automatic pre -heat . Removable infi n ite heat
lop e l eme,-,t~. $igno l lights fo r oven and
lop units . Plus many more
No . P880 -JPW .

IS YOUR

PT. PLEASANT
SOUTHERN STATES
••

CO-OPERA liVE

.

·t_

. ..

• EASY PAYMENT PLAN
• EXPERT SERVICING

Easy To Own
Greal To Wear
BENRUS
TODAY

• Yellow or White

PERFECT
25.00 --+ -KEEPSAKE
- - -- -

CARPENTER
BATONS

BUXTON
LINE
HIS &amp; HER$

Billfolds
&amp;
Enseidlles

Unico Portable Formica-Top
Automatic DishwasherOnly $21.70 Down

• QUALITY PRODUCTS

GIBSON
GRETSCH
HARMONY
KAY
GUITARS

AND
AMPS
OH
CREDIT

SOUTHERN STATES POINT PLEASANT
CO-OPERATIVE INC.
1519 Kanawha St.

675-2780

"WHO ' S MINDING
TltE MINT"

LES WILLIAMSON
416

-

- - - - - - - - --

·

..

impreuive •a.ri.stmas Card'
look !hat will be WOJtb rnaltln&amp;
an ellort to go by and see. &amp;.
hind that 'Chrlstmu Card' liPpearaneo Ilea rnoey memories,
many houra ot hard~. lllanJ'
pr&lt;lbiemo and moot of all much
love and dedlcatinn.

-ColorJim Hutton, Dgrgthy Pro vi"•
and Milton Bert•
ood

"'IN COLD BLOOD '"
With Richard

Broo~s

Newt A toothpaste
aDd mouthwash
-both In ouel

New! A shampoo,
condlUoner, and

rinse,

au In one!

New! A lodak Camera
with Instant drop·ln
loading. Notbtng to set!

MIIGS THEATRI
TO~lGHT·MON. ·TUES.

OCT. 13-14·15
FAR FROM THE
MADDING CROWD
Julie Christie-Terence ~

Color C&amp;rtoona:

Mutiny in the Bumy
Show Starts 7 p.m•
ADIIIISS10N: S5c aod liOc
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

PLUS WM'I'B PLUS
3.25az.
Helps remove tobacco, foocl,
other ouporflcl1l stains. WDfks

mouthwash, too.

I.ODAIINSTAMATJC 124 OUTFIT

ond

as •

takoa black l whlto or colci.t

=:::...

TONIGHT

Dlseounl

.....
Robert Mitchum
in

THUNDER
ROAD

t:omparo ot $1.19

Newt A spray that
belps atop
persplraUon wetn8881

and

iE::r 83•

7az.
New _
convenience for your hair -

•ta 11
•

t:ompa.... $19.!15

Everythlna you need for picture memories ___ the usy way. Outfit includes 124 cam.,. plua KODACOlOR X film tor 12 colo&lt;
snaps, flashcubl, batteries, wrist st111p and instructions.

a
1reat now 1h1mpoo w~h conditiOIIor
and rinse built riaht in!

Tom Kirk
in

Track of
Thunder

Newt .&amp; balr aettlnl

New! An aid
to appeUte
contmll

Newt A tootbbroab
that cleana JOUI'

teeth better ...
automatically!

pndact tbat giVIII

CARTOON

ftrmer body, laatlnl aetsl

lanauga Drive-In

For The
Seaun Oct. 14

·MONDAY
TUESDAY &amp; WEDNESDAY

•••
_... ......

TAPES?

3"·5"·7"
REELS AT

TIFFINS

.•

Can..,. Ill $1.71

iffij::t

'1.29

Uar.

•
•
•
••

••

.,

•

~

CARTOON

BIYC:O Quallt)' Brand
PUP 1f 80Balr Bettini &amp;el

ft80REAJD

Tootbbruah

CDm.... .t$1.37

~:r

il;Fr

ir= 69•

16oL

For flrmar botly, •Iller styt1111. lana·
or·lastlnc at Rwco low price.
Racular or hat&lt;l·to-hold.

•2.29
1..0

Tho modem way to
weilht -

FiiUre Aid

capsules help tame
your appetite. help you
drop poundo l lnchoa.

t:ompa .. at $19.75

'11.99

Convenient and easr to
use . Desianed for the
whole family. FDir·bruah
unit with bruahel In cleo·
..tor colon. Complotawilll

selt-odhnivewallbraekot.

Day is Savings Day on Everything at REVCO/

.DISCOUNT

.•••

IILL WI!LLMAN
• POINT PLEASA::;N;;T:.:..,;W,;,;·.,;V;,;A.,;;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . ,

ponpltant lptay holpa stop parapltalion rra, all dayl

co

..
•

••

TIFFIN CREDITJEWELERS

Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.

ram.

Is 1 IJ(It of the f'lul&gt;aull1
11y, 111any have ...,eluded f111t
with the coming o1 tho ftrat
IIIIOW St. Paul'a will .., 10

Automauc Action

-n-!E HOME OF INSTANT CREDIT-OPEN AN ACCOUNT IN JUST 3 MINUTES..,._""

Your Southern States Cooperative Agency
--

eacll
at TIFFIN'S

bulletin boortl m tho frcollalm
ot !he elllreh, A new roof baa
beon addotl and «&gt;lldoor 1~

Squibb's BROIODDT

TERMS

Singles &amp; Doubles
410·12-16 Guage
Sure-Shot for Credit

l!Chool rooms In tho bettemenl
II olso boasts a modem kltch111
lor the dlmera and Ice cream
soclats, for which &amp;. Paul io
known by all the commenlt,y.
Carpotjng, tiling and lurnlahlngs
heve been added by diatall aldo
wherever needed wlth labor and
financing shared by tile men ot
the church.
The tall graceful spire which is
bathed In radian! light each n1g1rt
!rom dusk until II p.m., is the
gift of tile late Mr. and Mrs.

TIFFINS

WE HAVE
THEM

99t

clllrch has an onlargad san&lt;tu. Harrr Chlldlra. !ihnlbbor)", do.
ary, mlniater•a llfu&lt;ly. emir loll, natod b:Y tho Jlvidon lamll,y, aur•
ttOclal rooms and elglrt clllrch r&lt;J1111t1a tho ,_ey eraolotl brlt:ll

KEEPSAKE

.1. CASH 2. LAY·A-WAY
3. 30 DAY CHARGE
4. EXTEMDI!D BUDGET

SIIOT(;t \S

OVER 400
HOUSEHOLD
TOOLS

Wldte, Mra. Lu1a Jividen and
Roy Ambur(:ey. Other devoted
member• t18rvlnglnvarlooawaya
to aid In the IUnctlonlng ot the
,..ey remodolotlclllrdiareMrs.
Rulli Tygrell, Mra. Vada Dunlap,
Mrs. Belcy Irvin, Mra. Kathleen
Childers, and Mro. Edllh Grlbble.
This Ia only 1 lew ot the dovoted membersldp, now around
200, who have watched the eroct1oo or the preaeat clllrdi. ft
grew from a mere handful holdinJ meellnp In a ramshackle
buUdlng to a beN..ftll -.tree
memorial to God. Today the

(They're coming to REVCO for whafs ew, whafs now,
what's exclUng and worth trying ••• at REVCO prices, naturally)

TONIGIIT OCT. 13

4 WAYS to IUY

SILVER STREAK
BALANCED-SHOCK
ABSORBER TIPS
)\ in. 18" to 28" long

tlural, Joaep11 Flerbau&amp;fl,
Mrs. Karen Flerbausb, M r a.
Everotle Grimm, Mrs. WOllam
Hulllnan, D. B. 1\lorpn, Mrl. D.
B. Morsan. Bennie Sllaler, AIbert Slephona. Patricia Hultman
and Mrs. Howard SWann.
Aeolyteo aorviDg at all serv!Clio are Junior Morgan and Ranely Lowe.
Ushers at the church are Gary
Collen, Allen Durst and L e •
Grimm.
The committee tn charge ot
the dedicatinn lneludea H. E. Berlalord, Mrs. Elwanda Icard, DrCarl Irvin, D. W, Browning, Rev.
!h)'

at is today's'
generation coming to?

Whon IIIOd dolly. Arrtd Extta Dty Inti·

Saves 11me fo r h omemakers. Gets a service fa r 14 spot le ss. Automatic detergent
d1~penser 8uilt -1n water heating booste r.
Plat e war mer . Rolls easily. No . HFD .

\

II LC

• Dress Watch

COMPLETE

"Burner with o brain" makes oil utensils
outomotid Automatic cook-and -kee p worm oven Fifth burner doubl es as
gnddle . Illuminated bockgvard . Clock
wit h one -hour timer . Appliance outlet
Plus many more outs tanding features.
No . P2070 -3EGPW.

PERFECT
RING
PERFECT
CREDIT

• 17 jewels

25.00

Unico 36 " Gas RangeOnly $27.90 Down

A

w.

waa the first to occupy the new
five-room pareonap, followed by
the I'Orter lamll,y. A great part
ot the par110J18ge labor woa dooe
by the members of the church.
Rev. Prince served the church
!rom 1960 until 1963. He is liOIV
at Chesler, W. Va.FollowlngRev.
Prince waa Rev. Dale Childers.
Rev. Childers, oow a Chaplain
with the U. S. Arm.y, served at
1he church from 1963 untll 1965,
Rev- Gerald Daniel, who resides row at Howard Ave. ln pt,

$3_98

• MODERATE PRICES

. .

assigned. Rev. Marrs Is now
Diotrlct 9Jporlntondent al Lebanon. Indiana, bul many or the
church's 1 old.tlmers' will remember seeing him In shlrt
sleeves working aa hard aa
any of the dedicated members
or !he laborers lolling at t h e
dalJ.y !alii&lt; of making a dream
come true. II was a Uglrt-lmll
lollowshlp !hal seemed 1o Inspire the small group who had
such vislona 0( a line church.
Today, tnaiJ¥ of them will see
the reiRllts of the years ot work.
Many who alded In the COIIIJIIetloo ot the edifice will not be
present for they are deceased, but there Ia no doubt that
they will be preoenl In t h e
thoughts ot those who remember their elforts and their gifts
that helped make !he llnal rooult that Ia st. Paul's United
Methodist Church.
Rev. Kenneth Wayne waa the
mlnllller Ill the church In 1955.
IUa widow, Mary, ls a resident
ot Valley Fork, Wesl Virginia.
ln 1956, unUI 1957, T. W. -Tom'

TIFFIN
AT CREDIT
JEWELERS
TODAY
TIFFIN
CREDIT
Benrus
Today
Waterproof

church' a formerpastoratoatt&amp;ld
the church -catioo today.
Following Rev. I'Ortor was
Rev. Randall Prlnca. Rev. Prince
and hla lamll,y were the third
ramUy to occupy the church's
new J)lr1Kl118ge at 2513 Jetleraon Ave. nearby. Rev, Schuler,
8 bachelor at the ti."lle he senred aa minJiter at st. Paul's,

UJ a permanent minister was

Jubilant youngster is one ot
thousands to receive fresh
milk as port of Project
HOPE's demonstration program in nutrition.

Aw.-~::1-"F:=::s·.~::;:;t: : :~.:; : : : : : : : : -: : :·: :•: :::~': : : : : : : : : :·. .: : : : ·l: : :.: :.:·::.:: l: :·:·:,'!=: : .:.: : ~;: : :~: : :.:-: :·:·: :·:::·:x.............. ···':·~·:·:'·:· · ........ ,..·..·:·:·:·:~: : : ;·:. ·:;.:,:;:r:.:;:::x::;:;.: : :.: -,:.:i.:·:::.:::: !~ .: :-: ·::.;: : : : : .:;:~ ·.: :;: : : :~?~·.:.: : .: : ·:

Opp . B&amp;O Depot

THE LOGICAL PLACE
TO BUY APPLIANCES

.. ' '

44.~~. up

-----~----···-·------

..·

vited, along with all of I h e

tor, Rev, Norville White.

Pleasant, aerved aa palltor at tdll take an acttve part In the
the church !rom 1965 until 1966. service aa will the Loy oftlclala
The present mlnisler at tile andTru-a.
church Js Rev. Norvllle White
Lay Ot!Iclala are It D. Ty.
...., wiD act 1a mot mlnlsler 1o srett, llllllord Icard, Dr. carl
tho viattlng dlsnhariea and the Irvin, Mr a. Lula Jividen, PaIormor mlnilllers who plan 1o be tricia Hultman. James Ph!Uij&gt;s
present todll,y.
and Mrs. Helm CWIIIInalwn.
An lmpreaalve program otmu- Trustees are Melvin Bordman,
lllc and rllual ot -cattoo baa Clarenca -.o, WOllam Hull·
been p1amed lor the occaaton man, Mrs. Kathleen McDermitt,
~ with Mrs. VIckie Hum.Ph· Miltord Icard, Howard Schultz
riel at the organ. The Clnarch and Everette Grimm.
Chelr and Rev. White wiD asstewards at St. Paul a r e
slat Blahop Wertz and Dr. Dick- Roy Ari&gt;urgey, Mra. IL E. Beren in maldng the dedlcatlon aenr. lalord, Mrs. D.
Browning,
Ice compiOio. The congregation Glom CUnningham, Mrs. Doro.

CENTERS

314 SECOND AVENUE

Gallipolis, Ohio
OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. 11L 9 P.M.-SUNDAYS 1
· AMERICA'S FASTEST GROWING CHAIN

IX

�.;fll'"

~ a.111u Tbllll. -nol, SUD&amp;~~¥, Oc!GIIor IS, 1968

onor Halls with Showers
-

Two shower•

recently -lov Mr.
Joseph c. Hill, tho
Goodwin.
·:c-·- ---ca.,-thY ond Donna Hill
holteues lor one ol the
hold It tho Cor! Hill
A pink and white color
\~~" was carried out. A
bell centerpiece wu used

Shirley Jordan, ant Patty Cllltt-

hart.
Mro. Ruth GooiiiJI ant Mrs.
MOdred Mlller wore hooteeooo
(01'

anoeher shower honorlrw the

c&lt;q&gt;Io. '!lie periJ' was held at tho
M. D. Mlller h11118 on tho Horrisonville .Reid, and a blue an::l
whJte color scheme waa carrl.ed
out In tho weddlov boD motlL
CUpc:akoo decorated wllh blue
table with a cake Insert~
bells.
Ice cream, punch, mlnta
•id uBist Wishes Leta and Joe."
and
null
were served to the
._ Games were pl&amp;yedwithprt:r.es
guelts.
~awarded to the willlen. Refresh·
Guests were Mra. Carl Hall,
·menu ot cake, punch, JUts, and
Mr.
and Mrs, Homer Goodwin.
JrJlDtl were served. Guests were
Mrs.
James Hall, Mrs. James
Jo Smith, Sm:tra, Lhxla, and
Bragg,
Mrs. George Warner,
!W'la Boa!, Evallne Arnold, Rh•
Mrs.
Charles
Sayre, Mn. Wayne
bl and carolyn Brickels, GuolZiegler,
Mrs.
Homer Bailey,
dlne Hayel, and Paula FrfcR.

w-.

Others presenting gifts to Mrs.
Hall were Janie Byers, Brenda

Mrs. Wayne Beal, Mrs. Albert

Heilman, Mn. John Dean, Maury
Smith, EWne Mun&gt;h&gt;, Chm and MOler, Janie and Sandi Miller.

Community
ByChorlene
Corner •••

" 'I,
I

Hoeflich

AGAIN TillS y81r, Leglonalres of Feeney~Bennttt Post 128 will
be 1LI(:l~W a community Halloween party for the chUdren.
Tentatively, the parade of the masked has been set for 7 p. m. at
tbe )1\ddleport stadium on ()ct 31. As in previous years, costume
prlzes will be awarded in three places in several categories accordlOll to age gr&lt;q&gt;lngs.

' iI

SGT. JOE Gilmore surprised will conclude in another week at
everyone when he walked in W~ Grand Chapter session in Clncirlne.dlly. He has spent the past 18 natl.
months in Okinawa ard Korea
Meantime she keeps her traveland wasn't eJpeCLed home until
ing shoes on.
later this month.
Yesterda.y, Naomi and herhus·
Joe received his discharge band, BUI,wenttoToledoforar~
from the Air Force, nine months cepdon honoring grand warder.
early, when he arriv~ at Tr1vis Last weeken::l they attended a reAir ·Force Base in eaurornia aft.. ception forJ. Lester Durst, grand
er advisirc his su,perlors that he sentinel at Dayton, and then went
did not plan to re-enlist He Is the on to Mowt Vernon for the dedi·
IOD. of Mr. and Mrs. Elza Gilmore cation of. the new O.E.S. chapel
Jr., Lincoln Heights.
And the week before that the
K~ were In Olarleston [or the
SHERYL FRY lo counting the Grilli Qllllter ol West Vlrtllllia
tllys. Her husban:J, S.Scl Jerry session.
Fry, will be home from Thailand juat two week!l rrom today.
THE M. D. AUenoworths ol st.
With eight years of service in Albans, formorly ol Middleport.
tho Air Force behind him, Sit. have a grandchild. Their daugll·
Fry hill re-enlisted for four years ter, Becky, aiXl husband, SP4
and the IJunlly will be locattov Lewis H. Clark, have a son, born
in Avon Park, F1a., after Jer- last Sunday in Furth, Germany.
ry' a leave. The couple's son, The C()ll)le have been In Germany
Marc, tw"ned three last week. since last December. They have
Sheryl wlll be leo\'lng her em- named their seven po~, 10
ployment at WMPO on Oct 2S. ounce son, Davtd Lewis. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
CARRYING OUT tradition. the
Mrs, H. D. Clark of St. Albons.
llremen's beD at hllddleport Vlllaae Hall was tolled in tribute
to the late B. F. Parmelee Tues
day 11 the funeral procession
moved trcxn Rlwlillta-Coats FuMnl Hcme to Riverview Cemetery, Mr. Pannelee was a long.
time active member or the MidGALLIPOLIS - The Amerl~
dleport Fire Doper bnent.
can Red Cross volunteer Gray
Ladles group held their IW&gt;Ch·
FRANK an! Ruth Powers had

Sondlov wedding llitla to tho ThOIIIPIUI; Mr. ant MrL Clarc""'le wore Mr. and 1llrl; Lor- ence Hall, Mr. 1nd Mrs. Jack
enzo DaVis, Mr. and Mr1. Hab- Keirns, Rev. an:! Mra. Eqene
ert Jone1, Mrl. S. C. Mobler, Garlow, Mr. and Mrs. John MarMr. ant Mro. Fnnk Doulla•. ris, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ltac:h,
Mr. ant Mra. RcJeor YOIII1l, Mr. Mr. and lllrL Da\'ld Leach, Mr.
and Mrs. Donlld Par1011s, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Leach, Mr.
and Mr1. Maming Mohler, Mr. and Mro. Robert Eblln, Mr. and
and Mra. Jack Barnhart, Mr. and Mrs. cart caato, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Sun Seals, Mr. and Mrs. WUUe Ma,ynanJ and Mra. How·
Earl Goodin, Mr. ant Mro. Her- ard Gardner.
man Warner, Nr. and Mrs. Gene

Willing Workers Closs
Plans Parsonage Work
MIDDLEPORT - Readlnesa
of the parsonage for Mr. Ted
('.adwallader, new pastor of the
Church of Christ at Bradbury,
and his wife, Loretta, was plarP
ned when the Willing Wockers
Clan met recently at the church.
Mr. Cadwallader comes to the
Brldbury church trom the Kenlucky Christian College at Gray·
son, KJI,
Mrs. Oleva Cotterill presided

Cultural
Program
·Presented

at the meeting during whlch time
the class voted to donate $100
toward the church Improvement
fulll. The reslgnation of Mrs.
Eve)Jon Mur~ as secretary was
read, and Mrs. Arlene Davis was
appointed to Ill! the omce.
The ~ decided to order
more dish clothes, Mrs. Elsie
BarMirl wtU be In chirp oC
the oole oC the clothes.
Devotlono were given by Mrs.
Davis and a program was conducted by Mra. CotterDl Refreshments were served to the
13 members atterding at the
conclusion of the meeUng.

Round-Robin
Card is Signed
For Mrs. Wolfe

5 - The Sundi.Y Times· Santino!, Sunday, October 13, 1968

Mrs. Smith Honored
By Eleanor Circle
MIDDLEPORT - MrL L e e
Smlth, Immediate paot preoldent
of Eleanor Circle, Heatll Methodist Church, waa gue1t or honor
at the circle's meeting ThUrsday
nlgl&gt;t at the church.
Mrs. Charles Bradbury presented Mrs. Smith wUh a cor·
sage ant abe was Qlven a gll't
from tho ~ by Mro. Ernlo
Fraser. Mra. Smith 11'11 her Jam..
l.l,y IKJIIIf reside Jn Potnt Pleasant.
Site was aeCOJI1)8nied to the meetlov b.Y Mrs. Betty Ervin of Point
Ploolllll.
Plan~ for 1 bazaar work day
were made and members were
asked to meet at the church next
Thursday from 10 o.m. to 2 p.
m. to work on projecta. Those
atterding are totakeaaacklunch..
Colfee and Kool-«&lt;d wtU boiVIil·
able. The boz11r wUl bo held

UNTIL 9:00 P.M.

MIDDLEPORT- Grave marki.ngl for a Revolutionary War soldier and a long.time member of
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
~a'ften ol the American Rev.
u on. were piamed during a
~ chapter Friday af.
a e home ol. Mr1.Naney Reecl.
Anothor hlilhllsht of the meet.
lng wao a talk on "Amerlc1111
Be on Guard" hy Mrs. Emer-

ALSO OPEN ALL DAY THURSDAYS

On the first ThurlaiY In Dec:em-

:= :•

bor,

Mrs. ClW"le1 Dyer presented
devotions ant the prosram lea·
tured 1 stud.)' of the Melhodill
Church heritage. Mrs. Max
Donahue, leader, gave • quiz on
church h11tory and then showed
a 4lm narrlted tzy LoweD Thomas and the Mothodlat Olur&lt;h
and lte botllnning ln America.
Mrs. Bradbw'y and MrL Wol·
lace Powers served refreshmenta followtov t h o meetiov.
Mrs. Bernard Fultz. president,
ontertalllfd earlier with • luncheon aDd work session on th,e
program books for the year.
Her luncheon guesta were Mrs.
Donahue, Mrs. Bob Byer, Mrs.
Galen Brown, and Mrs. Steve

Middleport ...
: Personal Notes ..,..

Presented at

~

Mn. Garen Stansbury accom·
panted her nieces, Mrs. L C.

Grange Event

Roush and Mrs. Kathryn ThoJr1)son or Mason, W. Va., to Colum~
POM.EROY - A wedding gift bus for a visit with Mrs. Stanswas presented to Mr. 111:1 Mrs.
bury's sister, Mrs. H. C. HorRobert COnkle, the fonner Bet- den who is hospitalh:ed.
t;y Leonard, at a meetlrw or the
Mrs. Bertha Amos is ill with
Rock Sj&gt;rlngs Grange Thuroday pleurisy at her home in Rutllud.
night at the hall.
Mr. and Mra. Dwight Wallace
Fred Goeglein, master, pre- and daughter, Nancy, were at Cin-slded at the meeting. Mrs. W. cirmati for the Marshall·Xavier
A. Morgan, lecturer, pre1ented game. The Wallace's son, Bruce,
the program using .,Thil am plays on the Marshall team.
That" as her U.eme. Members
Kevin aOO Christi Smith. who
respollled to roll call by relat· are livif¥ here with their graJld..
ing news of the day.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Readings Included "Fire Pre- Roush, are ln Columbus for the
vention" by William Grueser; weekend with their parents. Clyde
"Our World Heritage, •• Mrs. Smith, their father, came !or the
William Grueseri uiDdian Sum· children Friday night and will
mer," Mrs. Frank Gruoser; take them to Mount Carmel Hos·
"That Man, Colwnbua", Mrs. pltal to
their mother, tho
Robert Louksi "October For- former Kathern Roush. Mrs.
ests" by Mrs. Fred GoegleJn; SmJth js schedul~ for her sec-"Comrorts and Remedies," Mrs. ond hip surgery Tuesday, Her
Morgan; ' 1 Housewife's Prayer," room munber is 753.
Mrs. Homer Radford.
Mrs. Morgan asked members
to toke McGully Holders to the
November meeting. Refresh·
ments of pie and coffee were
served.

recently. 'IIIey stayed at the
cilrlolopher Inn alii on Saturday
mpt took ln the Frank Sinatra,
Jr. lhow at Marty's LaMancha,
1 ""'per club; Ruth hap;&gt;ened to
lllHI the sliver ln the hall followl.aa the 1haw IIXI managed an
utop'lph for daughter Debbie.

NAOMI K.lq's reign as Grand
Rlrth of the Grand Chapter of
Ohio, Order of the Eastern Star,

eon and meeting on Monck,y 1 October 7 at Holzer Hospital cafeteria. There were eight members present. They were Mrs.

Allee Wileman, Sadie Runim,
Ellabelle McDonald, ThelmaSbaver, Louise Brown, Allx Harder, G o 1 d i e Gothard, Mae
Barnes. Julia Ltemann waa oot
able to be present as she hal
suf'fered a broken wrist. A card
was sent from the group.
"Ditty Bags" wUl be pocked

JOyCE pRiNTS TilE fASIJiON NEM-liZAGATOR
TEXTURE - ON SOh CAlfskiN fOR A GREAT

puMp. ToucliEd whli Gold!
MidAS 20.00

MONDAY
flEA11l M.ETIIODIST Church
Women's Society or Christian
Service, charter meeting ani
service or celebration. 7:30 ~
IN W ASIIINGTON - Theoo three Melgs County 4-H looders Jell-., R WaotWwton, D. C.,
day night at the church. The
where
they will spend the week attending the Natlonal 4-H Leaders Forum. From lett to right are
charter for the new organization
Mrs.
Donald
Mora, Mrs. Earl Dean, and Mrs. Roy Holter. The trio was selected on the basis of
will be signed and membership
outstanding
leadership,
cards dlstributedi Mrs. J a c k
BechUe ant Mrs. Dovld Enls·
minger, program chairmenj Mrs.
Nan Moore, leader,
DAUGHTERS OF RUTH Class,
Unlted Motlrcdlat Church, Porn·
eroy, 2 p. m. Monday at the home
POMEROY - Three Melg1 Dean. They left today~l• bus Vernon, Smithsonian Institute and
of Mrs. Desale Patterson. 117
North Fourth St., Middleport. County women are among the 41 for Washington.
other points or interest.
Obloans
who
have
been
aelected
The
training
program
conductSponsoring the trip are the
TUPFERS PLAINS· A l fro d
Community Women's Club spe- to attend the National 4-H Lead- ed at the forum ls college type Buckeye Rural Electric Co-Op,
cial meeti•, 2 p.m., home of ers Forum to be held next week training for the development of Gallipolis; Jackson Production
Mrs. Clarence Headleyj J o h n at tho Notlooal 4.H Center In better 4-H leadership. In addi- Credit. Jackson; the Henry SWirt
tion, the group wlll &amp;&lt;J oo field Foundation and the Meigs CounPrichard, Seico Co., will di&amp;- Waohlngton, D, c.
They
are Mrs. Donald Mora, trips to the Department ol Ag- ty 4-H Advlsory CounciL
CUBI phases ol preliminary planning (or construction of a com- Mrs, Roy Holter and Mrs. Earl riculture, the White Hou!e, Mt.
munlty bulldlrw.
POMEROY PTA. Pomeroy

Complete
Selection of
Joyce Shoes
14.00 to 20.00

3 Meigs Women at Forum

Elementary School, 7:30 p.m.
Mondo),

MEIGS LOGAL ·&amp;drool District 110Mei1Chq e~DJ)io)&gt;es or·
ganlzation of bus drivers, cooks
and cu1tocllans, meet at 7:30
p.m. Monday at Rutland Eleme,..
tary School. All members of new
gro'l) urged to attend.
BEmEL 62, lnternatiorw.l Or~
der of Job's Daughters, 7:30p.m.
Monday at the Pomeroy Maaonlc
TOJillle. Inspection will bo held.
Inspecting omcer will be Mrs.
Chrlatlne Jenkins ot Columbus,
grand lfUOrdlan.
AUXIIJARY ofRiclne Firemen
will hold a Christmas Bazaar
workshop, 7 p. m. Monday at the
home ot Mro. Jean Cleland, Racine.
RUTLAND PTA meeting, 7:30
p. m. Monday, at Rutland Grade
School Amos Tillis,.Pastororthe
Rutland Communicy Church, will

Birrh of Firsr Son

Gift Certificate Purchase
•. 1

Dudleys Florist

Services Held

Approved by Trinity Circle
Purcha1e ot a
_, 11ft certificate for Ule World
project was aplnlty Circle mot
at the Trtnlty
Qdted Church ol Christ, l'olnPOMEROY -

11'0,)' 0

The ITOUP aiaodiacus..Splana

.

'

l'l&gt;r tilt! World Communlty Day
._rvance which wlll be held
.;, Friday, Nov. 1, at the Trln·
lv Church. Mra. Ben Neutzllng
wiD be Installed at thlt limo as
JHiident oC Churth Women Unlted ol Milas County, and a reception honoring her wlll bo held
lbllowlog tho obaervance. Trln111 Circle wlll ~rovlde oooldeo
l'l&gt;r tho atralr.
A tiS cootrlbutlon from I h e
Trtnlt,y Gulld toward the llllrt
bill on the hup croos oo Llntoln Hill wu ackmwledged.
II wso reported 1bat the fruit
eakoo hive bem ohliJI&gt;ed and

wiD be rood) lor delivery on
No¥. 1. Christma1 cardJ are
alto belnl 10ld by the circle
Mttl anyone deoirlng to make a
ji!r&lt;haoe 11 asked to contoct
JlrL stella Kloos.
..-l'r•· Louis Reibel presided
~which
with
a pr-,er ''The Little Thlnal."
Jlevodons were pnsented by
ifio. Phil wnuanuoon. Sba read
fran llltthow 12, ant had two
JNd!t-1 ''The Rlch Mon·lnd
tbl Friend,"' and UMIJ,akNry
Rlilatu to a Chbtete COnvert."

ope..,.

.

"People judge us not on lntentioos, but on the good which we
do," Mrs. Wllliamem said, and
then urged her listeners to give
"hHe you can tee the joy It

brings rather !hall alter delth.
Group slnglng ol "DweD In
Me, 0 HOl.x~rit'' audthe Lord' a
Pra.yer concluded the meetlng.
Pumpkin pie and coffee were
aened by Mrs. Clarence Mas-

sar

and Mrs. Norman Kloes.

For Mr. Davis

were~

the IP'~arents.

A

lhougl1t

for

the

day-

Scottllh ploywrJpt R o b o r t
Loula Seven1011. once llid: "l

om In the habll oC looking rot
10 mucb a1 to the nature ol the
lltl, 11 to tho oplrlt In which lt
11 oltered."

Write or call for catolot
anti infarmation.

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS
COLLEGE
36 Loculi Sft.••t

Golllpoli•

Stevens Gulislan 'Plaza Suite'
100% cont. filamet~t Nylon·SDI• pile
yarns, lip.sheared lo form a most
pleasing pattern. Outstandinl value.
·ouP ont

Superb carpet of cont. filament Nylon·501 " pile; multi·level loop sur·
face to make rooms colorfu l and alive .

Stevens Gulistan Bramplon;

..,
~~

'l M. of Htreulu , tnt .

]
New Zenitfl "Zene11e" (an mah· ltfe fun agJm_ Preci~ion o~mp lifl·
cation from 1 Micro-Litfl1ce circuits . WC'igfl s only 116 ouncl! and

FRIENDLY CIRCLE at Trlnl·
~ Unlted Orurch of Christ. 8 p .
m. Tuesday. Mlu Ellzaboth Flck
wUl be ProtP'IID leader ant Mrs,
Elza Gilmore ant Mro. Leonor&lt;l
Jewell, bolteuea.
POMEROY WOMEN'S Golf Association, Wflldnesdl,y, special
1: meotlng, 7:30 p. m., II clubhouse.
',
REVlV AL It Aobury United
Methodist Cturch in Syracu1e,
Oct. 13 thnJush Oct. 20 wlth
\
Rev. Charlet Norris, evanael·
lat. Syracuae (lurch choir will
j \ present selections each evening.
Other ope&lt;lal muolc llrroqhout
,'
week. Rev. WerxleU StuUer. pas.
tor.
I
GROUP D ot tho WIHDen'o Ao.
j ~-', aoclatlon, F!rot United Preoby·
1 · 1ter!U Church, Mldtlleport, 7:30
Tuesday nlghtat tho home ot MrL
, Donald Lowery.

St.,ens Gulistan 'Magic Island'
High-low paHerned broadloom with a
hsnd·woven look. Creslan" acrylic
pile is luKurious; resilient underfoot .

"'

.7"'-~f/1

I

4"'"' I~''" bolo"'"'" "'m' '"" '""

••

.

r,..

I 1111 Udtfllttd lA

.

JU.Mf - - - - - - - - - - -

FREE

Sllr((1

CIT'

INFORMATION

~~

l.,,.,.i

.

,
I
on
. .
"Hurlng
ielfni"' lbGLII ltnltfl """"'Akfs.
MAll COUPON
~ Pllnl mall lull dlt11l1 111d lrn lillfi1Urt
lor
:J"'"'
ttllphoM 1111 11 homt to •rtnrt lot 1 '""
onllrllion.
COMPLETE

TEAR

STAll

:::::

.\:\

!
:
~

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

·.·:.·_- -------------'

'

Stevefls Gulistan 'Grand Prix'

Stevens

Posh plush carpel to cherish for a
long time . Orlon·JJ• acrylic pile Is
ilurdy and dependable; easy to clean.

l

liulistan®Carpet

•T.M. ol DuPont

MOOd for mm~ m1ld lo sses. (omt' m fo r a dl'mon"&gt;hJium of Zenith' s
n~w Ze ndle I I mJy be ru ~ l li ght l or you I

888 Values

Proor positive thn• .. r"'
are tremendous. Come see them. Come see how much
greater, truer carpet value you continually gel !rom us .

Feel Values

during the winter.
Mr1. Eatber Bowen Kissell,
Iiiier ol Mrs. Brewington, IUid
Mr1. J. E. D. Hartinger were
guests at the meeting. The re110111 amounced that the November mootlns will be held at tho
home o1 Mrl. Lochary. Mrl. Wallace B. He!Hr, state regent, will

a Christ-

Parmelee
Funeral
Is Held

Zllr

4:30 p.m. and continue Wltll the
start ol the dance.
A new member was welcomed into the group. Attending were

Beulah Autbenon, Ann R o s e,

Mildred Housh, Emma Lyons,
Chick Nease, Ama Nease, Gene
Lyona, Mae Cleland, Jean Cleland, and Mary Baldwin.

MIDDLEPORT - Many friends
and relatives were here for the

rWleral services or B. F. Parmelee held TUesday at 2 p.m. at the

l

Just run your hsnd s'"'"

·'

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Garden Club, 8
p. m. Tueoday nlght1t tho Columbus ant Southern Ohio Electric
•~i Co. ooclol room.
SOUP SUPPER Wednesday 11
Raelna Methodist Church annex
f.' lllutllrwlt4:30p, m. Scqr,llllllwlcheo, pie ant corree. Sllonsored
wamon ·ot church.

ttlese beauliM Stevens Gulistsn Carpets. And dil your
fin1en into their thicker, deepet and more bouncy pile.

Compare Values
judie'

Shop oreund and
check prices. Then
You won't find brotdlooms
like these priced so low. And, in such 1 color arra,.

BAKER

Gel our unbeatable
low, low elllmall.

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPQRT, OHIO

..

J.

··:·:::;;::;;;;;:: - :·: ·:::;:;:;;::;.;;::;.:·:·~:::::::::::::::::::~:::::::--::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::~::~:.

111URSDAY
GRACE EPISCOP AI. Church
~;:::.:oneothw II 12:30 p. m.
:~

,... !unO- followed

PURE

VIRGIN

Rawlings Coats Funeral Home.

Surprise Dinner is

WOOL

Given Mrs. Whire

Glittering· N~;;'""~~"~i.

. . .:: ..::::. . .·.·. :·.·. .·.·:·:·:·.·!· .·...·.-.·.·.·.·

·..•.. . .·.·.. ·.·· ···.·.·.·

: DUTTON'S·--------·

l
~AY
EAST LETART WSCS wlUmil&lt;io
butter, Tuesday II home
Pete Shields. Orders may be
~:~~,~~at 247-2693, 247-2289 or

Certifi cation Mdflr.

Amllingly stainproof. Hertuton• ole·
fin pile fibers are practically nonabsorbent. Colorful tweed mixtures.

:$:
....

be the speaker. served by Mrs. Reed, M 111
Members answered roll call by Frieda Faehnle, and Mrs. C. M.
naming an American writer on Hemesy, with Mrs. Wayne Glb-.
patriotism. Refreahmentl were bons assisting.

FASHION TIPS

STITCHI.N' TIME

of their eJPertences as mtsalonries 1n Africa. Special entertain. en! by sixth grade students.
'r ealdert ls Charles King.

Mark

Stevens Gulistan 'Double Date'

'DuPont

il.

Ctrlifico~tion

ttveral weeks 1&amp;0. w::lll be te-

malnl.ni In Akron w:lth a sister

The Rev. Charles Simons otn~
elated at the service and burlal
was in the Riverview Cemetery,
Masonic rites were conducted at
the funeral home Monday nighl
MIDDLEPORT - A swprise
Coming from out of town for
dinner party at the home of
the services were Mr. and Mrs,
Mrs. Betty Darst honored Mrs.
Bruce Kauff, Mrs. Clarence fUll.
Beulah
White on her birthda)·
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Chrlstlan, and
anniversary.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Meadows, all
Gifts were presented to the
oC Huntlngton, W, Va.; Mr. and
honoree. Attending were Mrs.
Mrs. Wesley Meadows, GlenDerat and son. Jetl', Mr. and Mrs.
WQOd, W. Va.; C, W. Caldwell,
Charles White anddaughter, TexProctorville; Mr. and Mrs. Tom
anna, MrL Pearl Hoffman, Mrs.
Agee, Gallipolis; Edward Towk•Lillian McGhee an::l Mrs. Tony
bary, ··Wellston; John Gregory,
Fowler.
Ko• Cob, Conn.; Mr. and Mrs.
Delight on Lazy Days
L i g h,lw al gh.l, r~ a ,m, William Dublin, Columlruo.
cushioned, fold-up · slipPers ~ Arrlvlng trom Florida followfrom the notion department ing the IWleral senrices were
Delight t~ Shop Far
of your favorite store look the brothers and sister-in-law
Men's ties are wild and wide
smart in t e x t u r e d cotton of Mr. Parmelee, Mr. and Mrs. this year- in fact, men's fashsplashed with jungle prints or Daniel Parmelee of Fort Pierce ions are so wild, so "arty"
granny prints. Corduroy and and Clarence Parmelee, St. Pet- they're a girl's delight to shop
velour are also popular for at·
for when she's looking for a
home entertainmg. Most are ersburg.
"special
gift." Male fashion
washable, I i n e d and handaccessories
run quite a gamut
lasted. Gay scuffs with a
-from
fake
to his·
floral motif embroidered on
'Bold and Chunky' Shoes toric chains sideburns
and
medallions,
orion pile or frilly nylon
"Bold and chunky" used to lo Nehru jackets.
flower on lace are a delight to
wear on lazy days. All are be an uncomplimentary de·
.•: .·&gt;:·: :·: . ::·.
great to receive as gifts and scription for fashion- but not ::
any more. The current scene
fun to give.
~
features "bold and chunky"
Buckles, Rings, Chokers
shoes in copper and pewter
YSL makes the Pans look
patents and antique leather
. . . eight-inch suede belts
and pale fabric party pumps.
with huge, square, gilt buckThe shoes come in mensles; African rings; bracelets
wear styles-ties, high-riding
and c h o k e r s close to the
tongues and wing tips-and
neck. Jeweled chains-long
are color co-ordinated with
and dangling. Saint Laurent
patterned stockings and knee
goes for the contemporary
·:
socks with vertical designs.
:·
look !lf lucite. It's clear as
·:
:·
glar., ' nd great looking when
:
Robert H. Oodd&amp;rd launched
con. _• ed with colored cobra.
the
r
Irs
t
Uquid
-propellant
His and hers watches, squared
rocket March 16, 1926, 1n Auoff in gold and wafer-thin,
burn, Mass.
sport a sapphire in the stem.

have del'Otions and Mr. and Mrs.
Tlllls wtU show sUde1 ant ten

l.,,l

"&lt;.IJT'iOIIIlfO ZEN IT H DEALER

(New Quarter Beelns
December 10)

{

~~~

lnel protralll.

GBC GRADUATES
GET THE BETTER
JOBS!

::::

::::

Son is Born to

pital, the baby welshed ftve
pounds, 12 ouncea. Gnr.Jpuenta
are Mr. and MrL NorbertNeltz.
lin,, Sr., Pomeroy, and Mr. and
Mra• .fiuman Hutsell, Pomeroy.
Herbert ~ncer or GaUfpolia,
and Mary Hawk ot Pomeroy are

·:·.

t

Jolt.

Pat Neutzlings

:::·

~~

Rawlings- Coats
Funeral home with the Rev. A.
N. Grueser, Grove ClQI, and 1be
Rev. Wllllam AlrllOII oCrlciatlag.
Pallbearers were Edgar Mitch,
Norman Grueser, Paul Frick and
DwiBht Porker, all laundrymen,
and Geoffrey Wilson and D o n
conducted at the

Attencllng from out of town, in
addition to tho Rev. Mr. Grueser, were Mrs. Ernest carpen.
ter, Mr. IUid Mrs. Paul Sow!dero lind Patti, Mr1. Michael
McDonald, all ol BI-ll; Mr.
and
Mro. WUI Maoon WaterPOM.EROY - Mr. ant Mro.
Pat Neutzling o( Pomeroy are
Professional Busineu
anh0Unc1ng the birth of a son,
Tralnlnt can b• obtained
Jay Anthony.
only through a collet...
Born Thursday at Holzer Hos--

We offer these low. low prices' ' mada possible by Stevens Gulislan

~=­
~~
~~

MIDDLEPORT- Funeral aer- ,

vtcea for Verne V. Davis

::::

::::
::::

=·=·

~erloualytn.

wore dloplayed IUid ouggeomal bazaar to be held the first Ums on other Items were preweekend oC Dacember were dJs. sented at the meeting. A workcussed when the Auxllluy o1 shop wao pl11111od for Monday
doe Racine Fire Deportment mot nlsht It 7 ~.m. at the home ol
recently at the firehouse,
Mrs. F.arl Cleland tn Racine.
b.ema to be made for the baMro. Mae Cleland, newly elected prelident, conducted the meeting. The group decided to serve
chUI, flab, sandwiches, ootree
and iC41 cream at the Fall Festival to be 1taged oo Oct. 26
at the firehouse by the Racine
firemen and emergency squad
members. Serving wUl begin al
ItA CINE- Planlfor

Oct. 20.

"'"lt

~r-

M111 Lucille Smith,

Jured 1n an automobtle accident

Auxiliary Plans
Christmas Bazaar

SUNDAY
CHICKEN BARBECUE, ba8Jn.
nlng lla.m.&amp;ndayonrlverporklng lot aponsored by Pomeroy
Fire Department.
MEIGS COUNIT Rldlow Club
trail ride Sunday- 1 p. m.; members and guests to meet at Roek
Springs Falrgroundsj brlrw cov·
ered dish, table servtce and beY..
erage; meat dish provided. RlcJ..
ers wUJ return to fairgrounds at
5 p. m. for evening meaL In
case o! rain, ride will be held

Smirhs Announcing

ina
"Get Well"
Flowers

opinion as a ti'U\)or force in se. cited the American creed ll1d
curity. h spoke of organized gave the pledge to the nas. A
crime and riots In cities acrou standing vote of~~J~~reclatlonwal
the country, man,y ot whlcb, ac- given Mrs. 0. P. Klein for her
cordJni to the FBI report are Jn. Conotltutloo Wetk -am. '!lie
stigated by communllta. Mrs. president general's measqe was
Jones cooclOOed her program read by Mrs. Patrick Loclrary.
by reading a letter from a VietMn. George Sdmter, wa,yaand
nam veteran, now deceased.
meant cha.lrman, reported thlt a
Ml10 Be•• - . _ chaplaln, onent auction o1 baked goodawtU
11sllted Mrs. Brewlnaton In the bo held ln the near future. II Wll
rltuallstlc _.tog. Members re. noted &lt;luing tho mootlns that

...

Planned by Gray Ladies

the a.icest weekend In Columbus

Mrs. Edward Foster reported
on plana for marking the grave
of her ancestor, Truman Hecox,
a Revoludonary War soldier, who
lo buried 11 Mound Cemetery neor
Chester, The marking wu tentatively scheduled for the firll
&amp;mda.y 1n Nonmber,
In her oommenta pertaining
to the clefon10 o1 America, Mrs.
Jones quoted from Charles Evans Hualles who lilted J&gt;ll&gt;llc

'··Social' ., &lt;.:·
!calendar!

Projects For Servicemen

.,,

son Jonea, D,A,R, chairman ot
national defense, who gave excerpta from a report by J. Ed.
gar Hoover.
Mr1. James Brewington, regent, amoonced that the grave
ol Mrs. Bertha Rathburn at jhe
MJles Cemetery In Rutland wfll
be marked at 2 p.m. thJs afternoon. D,A.R. membero and
lrlendo of Mr1. Rothbum arolnvlted to • - tho coremon,y.

&gt;:-:·:·:·····:·:··.·.·:;.::;.. :·:····· . . ....•....•

Hoochins.

Wedding Gift

POM.EROY - A round • robin
MIDDLEPORT - A cultural card was signed for Mrs. Mabel
progam on "Being Alive" fe&amp;- WoHe, a patient at Holzer Hoslurlng poetry lzy R~Q&gt;ert Brooke pital, when the Past Councilors
was presented by Shirley Bee- ol Thec:dorus Council 17, Daugh·
gle at Thunday night'• meet- ters of America, met Thursday
Ing of Xi Gamma Mu Chapter nisht at the home of Mrs. Adria
Sayre, Racine.
of Beta Slgmo Phl Sorority,
Mrs, l.dtle Cohen was re·
The meeting, held in the soported
lm,proved from a recent
ciiJ. room ol the Columbus and
Ulnen.
Plans were discussed
Southern Ohio Electric Co., was
for
the
annual
Christmas dinCollowed by refreshments at
ner.
Mrs.
5arah
Diddle will be
Craw's Steak House. Hostesaes
hostess
for
the
November
meetwere Mary Morris, Velma Rue,
ing.
Mrs.
Errm.
Jesse
presided
and Yvonne Scally.
Others attendlr:t!!: were Barbara at the meeting whtcll opened with
Betzlng, Eleanor Blaettn&amp;r, June scripture from the 10001 Psalm
Van Vranken, Phlllis Mullen, Mil· by Mrs. Nettie Ha.yes, the Lord's
dred Karr, Norma Amsbary, Prayer and tho pledge to the llag
Mary Wiley, Margaret Follrod, in unison.
Games were played with Mrs.
Teresa Swatzel, Ann Rl.l)e, and
Edna Rel.bel, Mrs. Wlmna COOk,
Shirley Cu!lter.
Mu, Hayes winning prizes. Mrs.
Eva Dessauer wonthedoorprlze.
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Ret'reshments were served by the D o n Roger Smith, Lincoln
hostess. Brerxla Sayre was a Heights, Pomeroy, are announc.
guest.
ing the birth ol their tlrst child,
a son. Don Roger, Jr.
The baby, born Sept. 6 at Hoi·
POPE UPSET
zer
Hospital, weighed sixpounds,
VATICAN CITY (UPI)-. Pope
at the Grace Metbodl.st Church
nve ounces. Grarq,&amp;I'ente. are
VI lo dllllurbod by
in the dining room on Friday. Paul
challenges
to his authority and Mr. and Mrs. Sherman TUUa,
The Red Cross Volunteers are
Rutland, and Mr. and Mr1. Arbeing aulsted by some ol tho Intends to make a public dell Smith, Gallipolis. The greatGlrl Scouts. The bags are be- declaration 110011 to streas his grandparents are William Haley,
leadership In the Roman
Ing sent to Gallla County soldiers
Rutland; Mrs. 1!0)' Tlllla, Chll·
in Vietnam . They were also ask- Catholic Church, a high Vatican Ucothe, and stella Brewer, Jack·
source aaid Fridll,y.
ed to bake and dooate cookies
son.
SALAZAR
IMPROVES
to be taken to the post ofrtce,
LISBON (UPI)-. Doctors laid
where they wUl be pocked and
former Premier Antonio Salazar
shipped overseas.
Give Cheer
The Bloodmobile wUl be at showed oontinued allgtrt improvement
Friday
from
the
Grace Methodlst Church the last
Thursday in OctOOer, which will o«ecto or a atroke Sept. 16. A
medical bulletin said the
be October 31. mood is needed
prognonis
waa 40 res&amp;rved. ''
badly, 10 a good turnout ls hoped
for .
ford, 0.; Mr. and Mrs. R. L.
From
Genhelmer, Mrs. Geneva Joachim, Belpre; Mrs. Hortense
Frankel, Parkersburg, W, Va.j
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Moore,
MIDDLEPORT &amp;
Fllrborn; Mro. Beulah Krantz,
GALLIPOLIS, 0.
Charteaoo, W, Va. and Vlrgll
Wood, Poca, W, VL

DAR Will Mark Grave of Revolutionary War Soldier

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS

By JUDY LOVE
Baubles, bangles and beads
make beautiful music- and

for making the sequined
checkerboard design are in
fit and flatter sizes 8-18.

great fashion looks as well.
Especlally for knitters, beaded
elects can turn the simplest
styles into amashing evening
fashions lor the boDe of the
ball.

For your copy of knllllag dlredloDI, send SO eeot1 to
Stltebln' Time, e/o of your
loeal oewapaper. P. 0. Box
509, Radio Cfty Slatltb, Now

Women through the ages

lei SIS3 a ad e a elo 1 e your
name, address aod Up code.

have known the dazzling effect
of glittering fashions, and the
ladles of the e a r l y 20th
century were especially ramous for sparkle.
Today, there's still sparkle
plenty for special occasions,
and the shells I'm featuring
today s h o u I d make any
occa11ion quite special.
Any one of the three party
shells will m a k e a good
fashion companion for either
short or long skirts.

Knitting directtons for the
shells decorated with palllettes

and plexibeads are available

York, N.Y. 111019.

fhere' s a wonderful beauty treat·
men! especially for you in this
sale • • • a special formulation to
help smooth yoll' face and throat.

~e

KNIT NEW GLAMOR into party fashions with a
Bernat yarn, shimmering beads, sequins and poillettes.

FAMILY

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE GREAT VALUES AND STOCK UP!

THE SHOE BOX

/";;;;:;:;:~'}
f!£.···
..·
- -,"'-~

Whore Shoeo..A,. S.nolbly Priced

/~-

MIODLEPORT. 0.

Au for loaf·

'\,~

!

SEWNOWFOR
CHRISTMAS

% \

G,.,, _..,.

T

IN MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

-. ['"" '-',.-. _-

I•2Z5
I

• HOLIDAY FABRICS!

ON THE

•

i:&lt;MOISTURE ltOTlON
;:, MOISTURE CREAM
ooch
;:, BEAUTY PLUS
[ REG . $5.00
HORMONE CREAM
4 01. SIZES
Wonderful creams or lotion for normal, oily, dry or e~r.tra-dry skin.
Also MOISTURE CREAM (2 oz,J reg.$3.00 NOW $1.15
EYE CREAM 1 oz. reg. $2.00 NDW $1.25

•wASHABLE ORLON FLEECE!

THE SEWIMG CENTER

~.i
l'
+_le!

. .· ·&lt;~eti·;
'

• QUILTED FABRICS FOR ROBES!

ASK TO .SEE THE NEW ELECTRONIC
WHITE SEWING MACHINE. PRICES START AT $99.50.

. ,~, \"~\

~\\\\A\\\ I)

for sizes 10 to 14; Instructions

--------by PI CJCi am. Mr1. A. R. Knight
will bo devotlOIIII - r . Mrs.
Everett llayeo wtU Qlve report.
lo Mro. Jomeo
Slllllnp, diocese chaii'IIIIJI of
Ctrlotlan F.cluc:allan. MrL J.E.D.
Hlrlllwer to luncheoo chairman.

WHATEVER YOUR SKIN
TYPE----

·: . OPEN:
9 to 10 Week Days
:·

10 to 1-.6 to 9

Sundays ·

Colle To

DUIIONS
MIDDLEPORT. 0.
......

.:·.:.

�.;fll'"

~ a.111u Tbllll. -nol, SUD&amp;~~¥, Oc!GIIor IS, 1968

onor Halls with Showers
-

Two shower•

recently -lov Mr.
Joseph c. Hill, tho
Goodwin.
·:c-·- ---ca.,-thY ond Donna Hill
holteues lor one ol the
hold It tho Cor! Hill
A pink and white color
\~~" was carried out. A
bell centerpiece wu used

Shirley Jordan, ant Patty Cllltt-

hart.
Mro. Ruth GooiiiJI ant Mrs.
MOdred Mlller wore hooteeooo
(01'

anoeher shower honorlrw the

c&lt;q&gt;Io. '!lie periJ' was held at tho
M. D. Mlller h11118 on tho Horrisonville .Reid, and a blue an::l
whJte color scheme waa carrl.ed
out In tho weddlov boD motlL
CUpc:akoo decorated wllh blue
table with a cake Insert~
bells.
Ice cream, punch, mlnta
•id uBist Wishes Leta and Joe."
and
null
were served to the
._ Games were pl&amp;yedwithprt:r.es
guelts.
~awarded to the willlen. Refresh·
Guests were Mra. Carl Hall,
·menu ot cake, punch, JUts, and
Mr.
and Mrs, Homer Goodwin.
JrJlDtl were served. Guests were
Mrs.
James Hall, Mrs. James
Jo Smith, Sm:tra, Lhxla, and
Bragg,
Mrs. George Warner,
!W'la Boa!, Evallne Arnold, Rh•
Mrs.
Charles
Sayre, Mn. Wayne
bl and carolyn Brickels, GuolZiegler,
Mrs.
Homer Bailey,
dlne Hayel, and Paula FrfcR.

w-.

Others presenting gifts to Mrs.
Hall were Janie Byers, Brenda

Mrs. Wayne Beal, Mrs. Albert

Heilman, Mn. John Dean, Maury
Smith, EWne Mun&gt;h&gt;, Chm and MOler, Janie and Sandi Miller.

Community
ByChorlene
Corner •••

" 'I,
I

Hoeflich

AGAIN TillS y81r, Leglonalres of Feeney~Bennttt Post 128 will
be 1LI(:l~W a community Halloween party for the chUdren.
Tentatively, the parade of the masked has been set for 7 p. m. at
tbe )1\ddleport stadium on ()ct 31. As in previous years, costume
prlzes will be awarded in three places in several categories accordlOll to age gr&lt;q&gt;lngs.

' iI

SGT. JOE Gilmore surprised will conclude in another week at
everyone when he walked in W~ Grand Chapter session in Clncirlne.dlly. He has spent the past 18 natl.
months in Okinawa ard Korea
Meantime she keeps her traveland wasn't eJpeCLed home until
ing shoes on.
later this month.
Yesterda.y, Naomi and herhus·
Joe received his discharge band, BUI,wenttoToledoforar~
from the Air Force, nine months cepdon honoring grand warder.
early, when he arriv~ at Tr1vis Last weeken::l they attended a reAir ·Force Base in eaurornia aft.. ception forJ. Lester Durst, grand
er advisirc his su,perlors that he sentinel at Dayton, and then went
did not plan to re-enlist He Is the on to Mowt Vernon for the dedi·
IOD. of Mr. and Mrs. Elza Gilmore cation of. the new O.E.S. chapel
Jr., Lincoln Heights.
And the week before that the
K~ were In Olarleston [or the
SHERYL FRY lo counting the Grilli Qllllter ol West Vlrtllllia
tllys. Her husban:J, S.Scl Jerry session.
Fry, will be home from Thailand juat two week!l rrom today.
THE M. D. AUenoworths ol st.
With eight years of service in Albans, formorly ol Middleport.
tho Air Force behind him, Sit. have a grandchild. Their daugll·
Fry hill re-enlisted for four years ter, Becky, aiXl husband, SP4
and the IJunlly will be locattov Lewis H. Clark, have a son, born
in Avon Park, F1a., after Jer- last Sunday in Furth, Germany.
ry' a leave. The couple's son, The C()ll)le have been In Germany
Marc, tw"ned three last week. since last December. They have
Sheryl wlll be leo\'lng her em- named their seven po~, 10
ployment at WMPO on Oct 2S. ounce son, Davtd Lewis. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
CARRYING OUT tradition. the
Mrs, H. D. Clark of St. Albons.
llremen's beD at hllddleport Vlllaae Hall was tolled in tribute
to the late B. F. Parmelee Tues
day 11 the funeral procession
moved trcxn Rlwlillta-Coats FuMnl Hcme to Riverview Cemetery, Mr. Pannelee was a long.
time active member or the MidGALLIPOLIS - The Amerl~
dleport Fire Doper bnent.
can Red Cross volunteer Gray
Ladles group held their IW&gt;Ch·
FRANK an! Ruth Powers had

Sondlov wedding llitla to tho ThOIIIPIUI; Mr. ant MrL Clarc""'le wore Mr. and 1llrl; Lor- ence Hall, Mr. 1nd Mrs. Jack
enzo DaVis, Mr. and Mr1. Hab- Keirns, Rev. an:! Mra. Eqene
ert Jone1, Mrl. S. C. Mobler, Garlow, Mr. and Mrs. John MarMr. ant Mro. Fnnk Doulla•. ris, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ltac:h,
Mr. ant Mra. RcJeor YOIII1l, Mr. Mr. and lllrL Da\'ld Leach, Mr.
and Mrs. Donlld Par1011s, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Leach, Mr.
and Mr1. Maming Mohler, Mr. and Mro. Robert Eblln, Mr. and
and Mra. Jack Barnhart, Mr. and Mrs. cart caato, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Sun Seals, Mr. and Mrs. WUUe Ma,ynanJ and Mra. How·
Earl Goodin, Mr. ant Mro. Her- ard Gardner.
man Warner, Nr. and Mrs. Gene

Willing Workers Closs
Plans Parsonage Work
MIDDLEPORT - Readlnesa
of the parsonage for Mr. Ted
('.adwallader, new pastor of the
Church of Christ at Bradbury,
and his wife, Loretta, was plarP
ned when the Willing Wockers
Clan met recently at the church.
Mr. Cadwallader comes to the
Brldbury church trom the Kenlucky Christian College at Gray·
son, KJI,
Mrs. Oleva Cotterill presided

Cultural
Program
·Presented

at the meeting during whlch time
the class voted to donate $100
toward the church Improvement
fulll. The reslgnation of Mrs.
Eve)Jon Mur~ as secretary was
read, and Mrs. Arlene Davis was
appointed to Ill! the omce.
The ~ decided to order
more dish clothes, Mrs. Elsie
BarMirl wtU be In chirp oC
the oole oC the clothes.
Devotlono were given by Mrs.
Davis and a program was conducted by Mra. CotterDl Refreshments were served to the
13 members atterding at the
conclusion of the meeUng.

Round-Robin
Card is Signed
For Mrs. Wolfe

5 - The Sundi.Y Times· Santino!, Sunday, October 13, 1968

Mrs. Smith Honored
By Eleanor Circle
MIDDLEPORT - MrL L e e
Smlth, Immediate paot preoldent
of Eleanor Circle, Heatll Methodist Church, waa gue1t or honor
at the circle's meeting ThUrsday
nlgl&gt;t at the church.
Mrs. Charles Bradbury presented Mrs. Smith wUh a cor·
sage ant abe was Qlven a gll't
from tho ~ by Mro. Ernlo
Fraser. Mra. Smith 11'11 her Jam..
l.l,y IKJIIIf reside Jn Potnt Pleasant.
Site was aeCOJI1)8nied to the meetlov b.Y Mrs. Betty Ervin of Point
Ploolllll.
Plan~ for 1 bazaar work day
were made and members were
asked to meet at the church next
Thursday from 10 o.m. to 2 p.
m. to work on projecta. Those
atterding are totakeaaacklunch..
Colfee and Kool-«&lt;d wtU boiVIil·
able. The boz11r wUl bo held

UNTIL 9:00 P.M.

MIDDLEPORT- Grave marki.ngl for a Revolutionary War soldier and a long.time member of
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
~a'ften ol the American Rev.
u on. were piamed during a
~ chapter Friday af.
a e home ol. Mr1.Naney Reecl.
Anothor hlilhllsht of the meet.
lng wao a talk on "Amerlc1111
Be on Guard" hy Mrs. Emer-

ALSO OPEN ALL DAY THURSDAYS

On the first ThurlaiY In Dec:em-

:= :•

bor,

Mrs. ClW"le1 Dyer presented
devotions ant the prosram lea·
tured 1 stud.)' of the Melhodill
Church heritage. Mrs. Max
Donahue, leader, gave • quiz on
church h11tory and then showed
a 4lm narrlted tzy LoweD Thomas and the Mothodlat Olur&lt;h
and lte botllnning ln America.
Mrs. Bradbw'y and MrL Wol·
lace Powers served refreshmenta followtov t h o meetiov.
Mrs. Bernard Fultz. president,
ontertalllfd earlier with • luncheon aDd work session on th,e
program books for the year.
Her luncheon guesta were Mrs.
Donahue, Mrs. Bob Byer, Mrs.
Galen Brown, and Mrs. Steve

Middleport ...
: Personal Notes ..,..

Presented at

~

Mn. Garen Stansbury accom·
panted her nieces, Mrs. L C.

Grange Event

Roush and Mrs. Kathryn ThoJr1)son or Mason, W. Va., to Colum~
POM.EROY - A wedding gift bus for a visit with Mrs. Stanswas presented to Mr. 111:1 Mrs.
bury's sister, Mrs. H. C. HorRobert COnkle, the fonner Bet- den who is hospitalh:ed.
t;y Leonard, at a meetlrw or the
Mrs. Bertha Amos is ill with
Rock Sj&gt;rlngs Grange Thuroday pleurisy at her home in Rutllud.
night at the hall.
Mr. and Mra. Dwight Wallace
Fred Goeglein, master, pre- and daughter, Nancy, were at Cin-slded at the meeting. Mrs. W. cirmati for the Marshall·Xavier
A. Morgan, lecturer, pre1ented game. The Wallace's son, Bruce,
the program using .,Thil am plays on the Marshall team.
That" as her U.eme. Members
Kevin aOO Christi Smith. who
respollled to roll call by relat· are livif¥ here with their graJld..
ing news of the day.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Readings Included "Fire Pre- Roush, are ln Columbus for the
vention" by William Grueser; weekend with their parents. Clyde
"Our World Heritage, •• Mrs. Smith, their father, came !or the
William Grueseri uiDdian Sum· children Friday night and will
mer," Mrs. Frank Gruoser; take them to Mount Carmel Hos·
"That Man, Colwnbua", Mrs. pltal to
their mother, tho
Robert Louksi "October For- former Kathern Roush. Mrs.
ests" by Mrs. Fred GoegleJn; SmJth js schedul~ for her sec-"Comrorts and Remedies," Mrs. ond hip surgery Tuesday, Her
Morgan; ' 1 Housewife's Prayer," room munber is 753.
Mrs. Homer Radford.
Mrs. Morgan asked members
to toke McGully Holders to the
November meeting. Refresh·
ments of pie and coffee were
served.

recently. 'IIIey stayed at the
cilrlolopher Inn alii on Saturday
mpt took ln the Frank Sinatra,
Jr. lhow at Marty's LaMancha,
1 ""'per club; Ruth hap;&gt;ened to
lllHI the sliver ln the hall followl.aa the 1haw IIXI managed an
utop'lph for daughter Debbie.

NAOMI K.lq's reign as Grand
Rlrth of the Grand Chapter of
Ohio, Order of the Eastern Star,

eon and meeting on Monck,y 1 October 7 at Holzer Hospital cafeteria. There were eight members present. They were Mrs.

Allee Wileman, Sadie Runim,
Ellabelle McDonald, ThelmaSbaver, Louise Brown, Allx Harder, G o 1 d i e Gothard, Mae
Barnes. Julia Ltemann waa oot
able to be present as she hal
suf'fered a broken wrist. A card
was sent from the group.
"Ditty Bags" wUl be pocked

JOyCE pRiNTS TilE fASIJiON NEM-liZAGATOR
TEXTURE - ON SOh CAlfskiN fOR A GREAT

puMp. ToucliEd whli Gold!
MidAS 20.00

MONDAY
flEA11l M.ETIIODIST Church
Women's Society or Christian
Service, charter meeting ani
service or celebration. 7:30 ~
IN W ASIIINGTON - Theoo three Melgs County 4-H looders Jell-., R WaotWwton, D. C.,
day night at the church. The
where
they will spend the week attending the Natlonal 4-H Leaders Forum. From lett to right are
charter for the new organization
Mrs.
Donald
Mora, Mrs. Earl Dean, and Mrs. Roy Holter. The trio was selected on the basis of
will be signed and membership
outstanding
leadership,
cards dlstributedi Mrs. J a c k
BechUe ant Mrs. Dovld Enls·
minger, program chairmenj Mrs.
Nan Moore, leader,
DAUGHTERS OF RUTH Class,
Unlted Motlrcdlat Church, Porn·
eroy, 2 p. m. Monday at the home
POMEROY - Three Melg1 Dean. They left today~l• bus Vernon, Smithsonian Institute and
of Mrs. Desale Patterson. 117
North Fourth St., Middleport. County women are among the 41 for Washington.
other points or interest.
Obloans
who
have
been
aelected
The
training
program
conductSponsoring the trip are the
TUPFERS PLAINS· A l fro d
Community Women's Club spe- to attend the National 4-H Lead- ed at the forum ls college type Buckeye Rural Electric Co-Op,
cial meeti•, 2 p.m., home of ers Forum to be held next week training for the development of Gallipolis; Jackson Production
Mrs. Clarence Headleyj J o h n at tho Notlooal 4.H Center In better 4-H leadership. In addi- Credit. Jackson; the Henry SWirt
tion, the group wlll &amp;&lt;J oo field Foundation and the Meigs CounPrichard, Seico Co., will di&amp;- Waohlngton, D, c.
They
are Mrs. Donald Mora, trips to the Department ol Ag- ty 4-H Advlsory CounciL
CUBI phases ol preliminary planning (or construction of a com- Mrs, Roy Holter and Mrs. Earl riculture, the White Hou!e, Mt.
munlty bulldlrw.
POMEROY PTA. Pomeroy

Complete
Selection of
Joyce Shoes
14.00 to 20.00

3 Meigs Women at Forum

Elementary School, 7:30 p.m.
Mondo),

MEIGS LOGAL ·&amp;drool District 110Mei1Chq e~DJ)io)&gt;es or·
ganlzation of bus drivers, cooks
and cu1tocllans, meet at 7:30
p.m. Monday at Rutland Eleme,..
tary School. All members of new
gro'l) urged to attend.
BEmEL 62, lnternatiorw.l Or~
der of Job's Daughters, 7:30p.m.
Monday at the Pomeroy Maaonlc
TOJillle. Inspection will bo held.
Inspecting omcer will be Mrs.
Chrlatlne Jenkins ot Columbus,
grand lfUOrdlan.
AUXIIJARY ofRiclne Firemen
will hold a Christmas Bazaar
workshop, 7 p. m. Monday at the
home ot Mro. Jean Cleland, Racine.
RUTLAND PTA meeting, 7:30
p. m. Monday, at Rutland Grade
School Amos Tillis,.Pastororthe
Rutland Communicy Church, will

Birrh of Firsr Son

Gift Certificate Purchase
•. 1

Dudleys Florist

Services Held

Approved by Trinity Circle
Purcha1e ot a
_, 11ft certificate for Ule World
project was aplnlty Circle mot
at the Trtnlty
Qdted Church ol Christ, l'olnPOMEROY -

11'0,)' 0

The ITOUP aiaodiacus..Splana

.

'

l'l&gt;r tilt! World Communlty Day
._rvance which wlll be held
.;, Friday, Nov. 1, at the Trln·
lv Church. Mra. Ben Neutzllng
wiD be Installed at thlt limo as
JHiident oC Churth Women Unlted ol Milas County, and a reception honoring her wlll bo held
lbllowlog tho obaervance. Trln111 Circle wlll ~rovlde oooldeo
l'l&gt;r tho atralr.
A tiS cootrlbutlon from I h e
Trtnlt,y Gulld toward the llllrt
bill on the hup croos oo Llntoln Hill wu ackmwledged.
II wso reported 1bat the fruit
eakoo hive bem ohliJI&gt;ed and

wiD be rood) lor delivery on
No¥. 1. Christma1 cardJ are
alto belnl 10ld by the circle
Mttl anyone deoirlng to make a
ji!r&lt;haoe 11 asked to contoct
JlrL stella Kloos.
..-l'r•· Louis Reibel presided
~which
with
a pr-,er ''The Little Thlnal."
Jlevodons were pnsented by
ifio. Phil wnuanuoon. Sba read
fran llltthow 12, ant had two
JNd!t-1 ''The Rlch Mon·lnd
tbl Friend,"' and UMIJ,akNry
Rlilatu to a Chbtete COnvert."

ope..,.

.

"People judge us not on lntentioos, but on the good which we
do," Mrs. Wllliamem said, and
then urged her listeners to give
"hHe you can tee the joy It

brings rather !hall alter delth.
Group slnglng ol "DweD In
Me, 0 HOl.x~rit'' audthe Lord' a
Pra.yer concluded the meetlng.
Pumpkin pie and coffee were
aened by Mrs. Clarence Mas-

sar

and Mrs. Norman Kloes.

For Mr. Davis

were~

the IP'~arents.

A

lhougl1t

for

the

day-

Scottllh ploywrJpt R o b o r t
Loula Seven1011. once llid: "l

om In the habll oC looking rot
10 mucb a1 to the nature ol the
lltl, 11 to tho oplrlt In which lt
11 oltered."

Write or call for catolot
anti infarmation.

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS
COLLEGE
36 Loculi Sft.••t

Golllpoli•

Stevens Gulislan 'Plaza Suite'
100% cont. filamet~t Nylon·SDI• pile
yarns, lip.sheared lo form a most
pleasing pattern. Outstandinl value.
·ouP ont

Superb carpet of cont. filament Nylon·501 " pile; multi·level loop sur·
face to make rooms colorfu l and alive .

Stevens Gulistan Bramplon;

..,
~~

'l M. of Htreulu , tnt .

]
New Zenitfl "Zene11e" (an mah· ltfe fun agJm_ Preci~ion o~mp lifl·
cation from 1 Micro-Litfl1ce circuits . WC'igfl s only 116 ouncl! and

FRIENDLY CIRCLE at Trlnl·
~ Unlted Orurch of Christ. 8 p .
m. Tuesday. Mlu Ellzaboth Flck
wUl be ProtP'IID leader ant Mrs,
Elza Gilmore ant Mro. Leonor&lt;l
Jewell, bolteuea.
POMEROY WOMEN'S Golf Association, Wflldnesdl,y, special
1: meotlng, 7:30 p. m., II clubhouse.
',
REVlV AL It Aobury United
Methodist Cturch in Syracu1e,
Oct. 13 thnJush Oct. 20 wlth
\
Rev. Charlet Norris, evanael·
lat. Syracuae (lurch choir will
j \ present selections each evening.
Other ope&lt;lal muolc llrroqhout
,'
week. Rev. WerxleU StuUer. pas.
tor.
I
GROUP D ot tho WIHDen'o Ao.
j ~-', aoclatlon, F!rot United Preoby·
1 · 1ter!U Church, Mldtlleport, 7:30
Tuesday nlghtat tho home ot MrL
, Donald Lowery.

St.,ens Gulistan 'Magic Island'
High-low paHerned broadloom with a
hsnd·woven look. Creslan" acrylic
pile is luKurious; resilient underfoot .

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MAll COUPON
~ Pllnl mall lull dlt11l1 111d lrn lillfi1Urt
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Proor positive thn• .. r"'
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greater, truer carpet value you continually gel !rom us .

Feel Values

during the winter.
Mr1. Eatber Bowen Kissell,
Iiiier ol Mrs. Brewington, IUid
Mr1. J. E. D. Hartinger were
guests at the meeting. The re110111 amounced that the November mootlns will be held at tho
home o1 Mrl. Lochary. Mrl. Wallace B. He!Hr, state regent, will

a Christ-

Parmelee
Funeral
Is Held

Zllr

4:30 p.m. and continue Wltll the
start ol the dance.
A new member was welcomed into the group. Attending were

Beulah Autbenon, Ann R o s e,

Mildred Housh, Emma Lyons,
Chick Nease, Ama Nease, Gene
Lyona, Mae Cleland, Jean Cleland, and Mary Baldwin.

MIDDLEPORT - Many friends
and relatives were here for the

rWleral services or B. F. Parmelee held TUesday at 2 p.m. at the

l

Just run your hsnd s'"'"

·'

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Garden Club, 8
p. m. Tueoday nlght1t tho Columbus ant Southern Ohio Electric
•~i Co. ooclol room.
SOUP SUPPER Wednesday 11
Raelna Methodist Church annex
f.' lllutllrwlt4:30p, m. Scqr,llllllwlcheo, pie ant corree. Sllonsored
wamon ·ot church.

ttlese beauliM Stevens Gulistsn Carpets. And dil your
fin1en into their thicker, deepet and more bouncy pile.

Compare Values
judie'

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check prices. Then
You won't find brotdlooms
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111URSDAY
GRACE EPISCOP AI. Church
~;:::.:oneothw II 12:30 p. m.
:~

,... !unO- followed

PURE

VIRGIN

Rawlings Coats Funeral Home.

Surprise Dinner is

WOOL

Given Mrs. Whire

Glittering· N~;;'""~~"~i.

. . .:: ..::::. . .·.·. :·.·. .·.·:·:·:·.·!· .·...·.-.·.·.·.·

·..•.. . .·.·.. ·.·· ···.·.·.·

: DUTTON'S·--------·

l
~AY
EAST LETART WSCS wlUmil&lt;io
butter, Tuesday II home
Pete Shields. Orders may be
~:~~,~~at 247-2693, 247-2289 or

Certifi cation Mdflr.

Amllingly stainproof. Hertuton• ole·
fin pile fibers are practically nonabsorbent. Colorful tweed mixtures.

:$:
....

be the speaker. served by Mrs. Reed, M 111
Members answered roll call by Frieda Faehnle, and Mrs. C. M.
naming an American writer on Hemesy, with Mrs. Wayne Glb-.
patriotism. Refreahmentl were bons assisting.

FASHION TIPS

STITCHI.N' TIME

of their eJPertences as mtsalonries 1n Africa. Special entertain. en! by sixth grade students.
'r ealdert ls Charles King.

Mark

Stevens Gulistan 'Double Date'

'DuPont

il.

Ctrlifico~tion

ttveral weeks 1&amp;0. w::lll be te-

malnl.ni In Akron w:lth a sister

The Rev. Charles Simons otn~
elated at the service and burlal
was in the Riverview Cemetery,
Masonic rites were conducted at
the funeral home Monday nighl
MIDDLEPORT - A swprise
Coming from out of town for
dinner party at the home of
the services were Mr. and Mrs,
Mrs. Betty Darst honored Mrs.
Bruce Kauff, Mrs. Clarence fUll.
Beulah
White on her birthda)·
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Chrlstlan, and
anniversary.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Meadows, all
Gifts were presented to the
oC Huntlngton, W, Va.; Mr. and
honoree. Attending were Mrs.
Mrs. Wesley Meadows, GlenDerat and son. Jetl', Mr. and Mrs.
WQOd, W. Va.; C, W. Caldwell,
Charles White anddaughter, TexProctorville; Mr. and Mrs. Tom
anna, MrL Pearl Hoffman, Mrs.
Agee, Gallipolis; Edward Towk•Lillian McGhee an::l Mrs. Tony
bary, ··Wellston; John Gregory,
Fowler.
Ko• Cob, Conn.; Mr. and Mrs.
Delight on Lazy Days
L i g h,lw al gh.l, r~ a ,m, William Dublin, Columlruo.
cushioned, fold-up · slipPers ~ Arrlvlng trom Florida followfrom the notion department ing the IWleral senrices were
Delight t~ Shop Far
of your favorite store look the brothers and sister-in-law
Men's ties are wild and wide
smart in t e x t u r e d cotton of Mr. Parmelee, Mr. and Mrs. this year- in fact, men's fashsplashed with jungle prints or Daniel Parmelee of Fort Pierce ions are so wild, so "arty"
granny prints. Corduroy and and Clarence Parmelee, St. Pet- they're a girl's delight to shop
velour are also popular for at·
for when she's looking for a
home entertainmg. Most are ersburg.
"special
gift." Male fashion
washable, I i n e d and handaccessories
run quite a gamut
lasted. Gay scuffs with a
-from
fake
to his·
floral motif embroidered on
'Bold and Chunky' Shoes toric chains sideburns
and
medallions,
orion pile or frilly nylon
"Bold and chunky" used to lo Nehru jackets.
flower on lace are a delight to
wear on lazy days. All are be an uncomplimentary de·
.•: .·&gt;:·: :·: . ::·.
great to receive as gifts and scription for fashion- but not ::
any more. The current scene
fun to give.
~
features "bold and chunky"
Buckles, Rings, Chokers
shoes in copper and pewter
YSL makes the Pans look
patents and antique leather
. . . eight-inch suede belts
and pale fabric party pumps.
with huge, square, gilt buckThe shoes come in mensles; African rings; bracelets
wear styles-ties, high-riding
and c h o k e r s close to the
tongues and wing tips-and
neck. Jeweled chains-long
are color co-ordinated with
and dangling. Saint Laurent
patterned stockings and knee
goes for the contemporary
·:
socks with vertical designs.
:·
look !lf lucite. It's clear as
·:
:·
glar., ' nd great looking when
:
Robert H. Oodd&amp;rd launched
con. _• ed with colored cobra.
the
r
Irs
t
Uquid
-propellant
His and hers watches, squared
rocket March 16, 1926, 1n Auoff in gold and wafer-thin,
burn, Mass.
sport a sapphire in the stem.

have del'Otions and Mr. and Mrs.
Tlllls wtU show sUde1 ant ten

l.,,l

"&lt;.IJT'iOIIIlfO ZEN IT H DEALER

(New Quarter Beelns
December 10)

{

~~~

lnel protralll.

GBC GRADUATES
GET THE BETTER
JOBS!

::::

::::

Son is Born to

pital, the baby welshed ftve
pounds, 12 ouncea. Gnr.Jpuenta
are Mr. and MrL NorbertNeltz.
lin,, Sr., Pomeroy, and Mr. and
Mra• .fiuman Hutsell, Pomeroy.
Herbert ~ncer or GaUfpolia,
and Mary Hawk ot Pomeroy are

·:·.

t

Jolt.

Pat Neutzlings

:::·

~~

Rawlings- Coats
Funeral home with the Rev. A.
N. Grueser, Grove ClQI, and 1be
Rev. Wllllam AlrllOII oCrlciatlag.
Pallbearers were Edgar Mitch,
Norman Grueser, Paul Frick and
DwiBht Porker, all laundrymen,
and Geoffrey Wilson and D o n
conducted at the

Attencllng from out of town, in
addition to tho Rev. Mr. Grueser, were Mrs. Ernest carpen.
ter, Mr. IUid Mrs. Paul Sow!dero lind Patti, Mr1. Michael
McDonald, all ol BI-ll; Mr.
and
Mro. WUI Maoon WaterPOM.EROY - Mr. ant Mro.
Pat Neutzling o( Pomeroy are
Professional Busineu
anh0Unc1ng the birth of a son,
Tralnlnt can b• obtained
Jay Anthony.
only through a collet...
Born Thursday at Holzer Hos--

We offer these low. low prices' ' mada possible by Stevens Gulislan

~=­
~~
~~

MIDDLEPORT- Funeral aer- ,

vtcea for Verne V. Davis

::::

::::
::::

=·=·

~erloualytn.

wore dloplayed IUid ouggeomal bazaar to be held the first Ums on other Items were preweekend oC Dacember were dJs. sented at the meeting. A workcussed when the Auxllluy o1 shop wao pl11111od for Monday
doe Racine Fire Deportment mot nlsht It 7 ~.m. at the home ol
recently at the firehouse,
Mrs. F.arl Cleland tn Racine.
b.ema to be made for the baMro. Mae Cleland, newly elected prelident, conducted the meeting. The group decided to serve
chUI, flab, sandwiches, ootree
and iC41 cream at the Fall Festival to be 1taged oo Oct. 26
at the firehouse by the Racine
firemen and emergency squad
members. Serving wUl begin al
ItA CINE- Planlfor

Oct. 20.

"'"lt

~r-

M111 Lucille Smith,

Jured 1n an automobtle accident

Auxiliary Plans
Christmas Bazaar

SUNDAY
CHICKEN BARBECUE, ba8Jn.
nlng lla.m.&amp;ndayonrlverporklng lot aponsored by Pomeroy
Fire Department.
MEIGS COUNIT Rldlow Club
trail ride Sunday- 1 p. m.; members and guests to meet at Roek
Springs Falrgroundsj brlrw cov·
ered dish, table servtce and beY..
erage; meat dish provided. RlcJ..
ers wUJ return to fairgrounds at
5 p. m. for evening meaL In
case o! rain, ride will be held

Smirhs Announcing

ina
"Get Well"
Flowers

opinion as a ti'U\)or force in se. cited the American creed ll1d
curity. h spoke of organized gave the pledge to the nas. A
crime and riots In cities acrou standing vote of~~J~~reclatlonwal
the country, man,y ot whlcb, ac- given Mrs. 0. P. Klein for her
cordJni to the FBI report are Jn. Conotltutloo Wetk -am. '!lie
stigated by communllta. Mrs. president general's measqe was
Jones cooclOOed her program read by Mrs. Patrick Loclrary.
by reading a letter from a VietMn. George Sdmter, wa,yaand
nam veteran, now deceased.
meant cha.lrman, reported thlt a
Ml10 Be•• - . _ chaplaln, onent auction o1 baked goodawtU
11sllted Mrs. Brewlnaton In the bo held ln the near future. II Wll
rltuallstlc _.tog. Members re. noted &lt;luing tho mootlns that

...

Planned by Gray Ladies

the a.icest weekend In Columbus

Mrs. Edward Foster reported
on plana for marking the grave
of her ancestor, Truman Hecox,
a Revoludonary War soldier, who
lo buried 11 Mound Cemetery neor
Chester, The marking wu tentatively scheduled for the firll
&amp;mda.y 1n Nonmber,
In her oommenta pertaining
to the clefon10 o1 America, Mrs.
Jones quoted from Charles Evans Hualles who lilted J&gt;ll&gt;llc

'··Social' ., &lt;.:·
!calendar!

Projects For Servicemen

.,,

son Jonea, D,A,R, chairman ot
national defense, who gave excerpta from a report by J. Ed.
gar Hoover.
Mr1. James Brewington, regent, amoonced that the grave
ol Mrs. Bertha Rathburn at jhe
MJles Cemetery In Rutland wfll
be marked at 2 p.m. thJs afternoon. D,A.R. membero and
lrlendo of Mr1. Rothbum arolnvlted to • - tho coremon,y.

&gt;:-:·:·:·····:·:··.·.·:;.::;.. :·:····· . . ....•....•

Hoochins.

Wedding Gift

POM.EROY - A round • robin
MIDDLEPORT - A cultural card was signed for Mrs. Mabel
progam on "Being Alive" fe&amp;- WoHe, a patient at Holzer Hoslurlng poetry lzy R~Q&gt;ert Brooke pital, when the Past Councilors
was presented by Shirley Bee- ol Thec:dorus Council 17, Daugh·
gle at Thunday night'• meet- ters of America, met Thursday
Ing of Xi Gamma Mu Chapter nisht at the home of Mrs. Adria
Sayre, Racine.
of Beta Slgmo Phl Sorority,
Mrs, l.dtle Cohen was re·
The meeting, held in the soported
lm,proved from a recent
ciiJ. room ol the Columbus and
Ulnen.
Plans were discussed
Southern Ohio Electric Co., was
for
the
annual
Christmas dinCollowed by refreshments at
ner.
Mrs.
5arah
Diddle will be
Craw's Steak House. Hostesaes
hostess
for
the
November
meetwere Mary Morris, Velma Rue,
ing.
Mrs.
Errm.
Jesse
presided
and Yvonne Scally.
Others attendlr:t!!: were Barbara at the meeting whtcll opened with
Betzlng, Eleanor Blaettn&amp;r, June scripture from the 10001 Psalm
Van Vranken, Phlllis Mullen, Mil· by Mrs. Nettie Ha.yes, the Lord's
dred Karr, Norma Amsbary, Prayer and tho pledge to the llag
Mary Wiley, Margaret Follrod, in unison.
Games were played with Mrs.
Teresa Swatzel, Ann Rl.l)e, and
Edna Rel.bel, Mrs. Wlmna COOk,
Shirley Cu!lter.
Mu, Hayes winning prizes. Mrs.
Eva Dessauer wonthedoorprlze.
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Ret'reshments were served by the D o n Roger Smith, Lincoln
hostess. Brerxla Sayre was a Heights, Pomeroy, are announc.
guest.
ing the birth ol their tlrst child,
a son. Don Roger, Jr.
The baby, born Sept. 6 at Hoi·
POPE UPSET
zer
Hospital, weighed sixpounds,
VATICAN CITY (UPI)-. Pope
at the Grace Metbodl.st Church
nve ounces. Grarq,&amp;I'ente. are
VI lo dllllurbod by
in the dining room on Friday. Paul
challenges
to his authority and Mr. and Mrs. Sherman TUUa,
The Red Cross Volunteers are
Rutland, and Mr. and Mr1. Arbeing aulsted by some ol tho Intends to make a public dell Smith, Gallipolis. The greatGlrl Scouts. The bags are be- declaration 110011 to streas his grandparents are William Haley,
leadership In the Roman
Ing sent to Gallla County soldiers
Rutland; Mrs. 1!0)' Tlllla, Chll·
in Vietnam . They were also ask- Catholic Church, a high Vatican Ucothe, and stella Brewer, Jack·
source aaid Fridll,y.
ed to bake and dooate cookies
son.
SALAZAR
IMPROVES
to be taken to the post ofrtce,
LISBON (UPI)-. Doctors laid
where they wUl be pocked and
former Premier Antonio Salazar
shipped overseas.
Give Cheer
The Bloodmobile wUl be at showed oontinued allgtrt improvement
Friday
from
the
Grace Methodlst Church the last
Thursday in OctOOer, which will o«ecto or a atroke Sept. 16. A
medical bulletin said the
be October 31. mood is needed
prognonis
waa 40 res&amp;rved. ''
badly, 10 a good turnout ls hoped
for .
ford, 0.; Mr. and Mrs. R. L.
From
Genhelmer, Mrs. Geneva Joachim, Belpre; Mrs. Hortense
Frankel, Parkersburg, W, Va.j
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Moore,
MIDDLEPORT &amp;
Fllrborn; Mro. Beulah Krantz,
GALLIPOLIS, 0.
Charteaoo, W, Va. and Vlrgll
Wood, Poca, W, VL

DAR Will Mark Grave of Revolutionary War Soldier

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS

By JUDY LOVE
Baubles, bangles and beads
make beautiful music- and

for making the sequined
checkerboard design are in
fit and flatter sizes 8-18.

great fashion looks as well.
Especlally for knitters, beaded
elects can turn the simplest
styles into amashing evening
fashions lor the boDe of the
ball.

For your copy of knllllag dlredloDI, send SO eeot1 to
Stltebln' Time, e/o of your
loeal oewapaper. P. 0. Box
509, Radio Cfty Slatltb, Now

Women through the ages

lei SIS3 a ad e a elo 1 e your
name, address aod Up code.

have known the dazzling effect
of glittering fashions, and the
ladles of the e a r l y 20th
century were especially ramous for sparkle.
Today, there's still sparkle
plenty for special occasions,
and the shells I'm featuring
today s h o u I d make any
occa11ion quite special.
Any one of the three party
shells will m a k e a good
fashion companion for either
short or long skirts.

Knitting directtons for the
shells decorated with palllettes

and plexibeads are available

York, N.Y. 111019.

fhere' s a wonderful beauty treat·
men! especially for you in this
sale • • • a special formulation to
help smooth yoll' face and throat.

~e

KNIT NEW GLAMOR into party fashions with a
Bernat yarn, shimmering beads, sequins and poillettes.

FAMILY

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE GREAT VALUES AND STOCK UP!

THE SHOE BOX

/";;;;:;:;:~'}
f!£.···
..·
- -,"'-~

Whore Shoeo..A,. S.nolbly Priced

/~-

MIODLEPORT. 0.

Au for loaf·

'\,~

!

SEWNOWFOR
CHRISTMAS

% \

G,.,, _..,.

T

IN MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

-. ['"" '-',.-. _-

I•2Z5
I

• HOLIDAY FABRICS!

ON THE

•

i:&lt;MOISTURE ltOTlON
;:, MOISTURE CREAM
ooch
;:, BEAUTY PLUS
[ REG . $5.00
HORMONE CREAM
4 01. SIZES
Wonderful creams or lotion for normal, oily, dry or e~r.tra-dry skin.
Also MOISTURE CREAM (2 oz,J reg.$3.00 NOW $1.15
EYE CREAM 1 oz. reg. $2.00 NDW $1.25

•wASHABLE ORLON FLEECE!

THE SEWIMG CENTER

~.i
l'
+_le!

. .· ·&lt;~eti·;
'

• QUILTED FABRICS FOR ROBES!

ASK TO .SEE THE NEW ELECTRONIC
WHITE SEWING MACHINE. PRICES START AT $99.50.

. ,~, \"~\

~\\\\A\\\ I)

for sizes 10 to 14; Instructions

--------by PI CJCi am. Mr1. A. R. Knight
will bo devotlOIIII - r . Mrs.
Everett llayeo wtU Qlve report.
lo Mro. Jomeo
Slllllnp, diocese chaii'IIIIJI of
Ctrlotlan F.cluc:allan. MrL J.E.D.
Hlrlllwer to luncheoo chairman.

WHATEVER YOUR SKIN
TYPE----

·: . OPEN:
9 to 10 Week Days
:·

10 to 1-.6 to 9

Sundays ·

Colle To

DUIIONS
MIDDLEPORT. 0.
......

.:·.:.

�'
7 - TI1e Swlday Tlmes - Sertincl, Sunday, Oct.OOer 13, 1968

6 _ Tho Suroll,y Ttmea- Sentinel, Sundly, October 13, 1968

Newcomers Style Show is Held at Dr. Abel's New Home

Scioto Presbyterial Meet Held
..
0AJ( IIILL - nu~ Fall meet-

ing ol District IV of Scioto Pres-

b.J.1erial was held at the Oak
llill Presbyterian Church on
Wednellda.f, October9. The theme
of the meeUng was "Dare to be
Involved in a Mlnbtry of Recon.
clliatlon."
Mrs. Marlon Maloney of Jackaon, Presldert of Diatrivt IV
pres!""' at Ule meetlng. A cHn~
lc on DARE procedures and Mission Interpretation Atds were
presented by Presbyterial otrl cers.
The President of Scioto Pres-

GALLIPOLIS - Dr. and Mrs.
Gene H. Abels opened their lovely new contemporary styled home
for the October meeting ot the
Newcomers Club. Approximately
90 women attended the outstandIng event.

The program was a style show
featuring ''Fashions F rom
Bei1Uldine's"' Wring which Clothing from lounging wear to turs
were shown on attractive local
models.
Mn. Paul (Chatterbox) Wagner was the narrator with an
occasional assist from Mn. Hoyt

byterial, Mrs. Roy O, Druhot of

Charles Rathburn helped with the
models and the planning of t h e
show.

on the free-- stard.ing wrought iron trimmed steps of the Abels'
living room.

'Ohio Tree Beauty'
Topic For Program

Sardinia, was introduced.

Mullins, of Bernadine's. M r a.

PIECE-DE-RESIST ANC E - Miss Jan Tope, daugi)ter of
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Tope, models a beautiful lace wedding gown

Presbyterial will be held In ChU- Glen R, llueholl, Mrs. Wymond
Iicothe in :\pril, and the Fan Bradbury, Mrs. Jake Moore
District meettng will be in Iron- Mrs. Theodore Ehman, Mis~
ton in October, 1969.
MJidred Gilman, Mrs. Harold
The following members of the Black, MJ,:a. George M, Jones,
local church attenc:Jed: M r a. Mrs. John Allen, Mrs. sa m
Wayne Ogdln, Mrs. M, T. ~­ Railles, and Mrs. Donald n.
ling, Mra. Clayton Miller, Mro. Warehime.

The &lt;..-ommlttee for the da.y's
activities was Mrs. George TabIt, chairman, Mrs. 'Thomas Morgan, Mrs. Oscar Clarke, Mrs.
W. R. (Dick) Brown, Mrs. Norma Foose and Mrs. Max Avner.
The Jwrlor Women's Club served a dessert lwachOCil. Mrs. Robert E. Mead, Newcomer's presi dent , presided over the tea table.
The rolloVting slate oC officers
was presented, Mrs. James Beverly, president; Julie Swann, first
viceiJresident; Merna Klein, second vi ce-president; Jean Espen llcheid, secretary; Carol &amp;ein,
treasurer.
1l1c next meeting will be a
luncheon at Rio Grande and will
feature an " Afternoon of C u 1ture."

}

In the afternoon. the offering
of the Least Coin was dedicated.
The speakers for t~ after noon were Mr. and Mrs. William Boden, missionaries from
the MoWlt Zion Conference cen.
ter, Guatemala, Central America, They have been home on
furlough and are leaving next
Tuesday to return to Guatemala.
The aru1Ual meetbtg ot: t h e

GALLIPOLIS -

Mro. George do some plaming that we plant

Coones gave a program on Ohio
Tree Beauty for French Clly
Garden Club Tuesday evening
at the home of Mrs. Harley
G eo r g e with Mrs. Florence
Trainer as co-hostess.
Mrs. Coones stated, HgoocJ
treea lnfiuence our everyday living. ft would be ditficult to imagine a city without trees. SUch
a place would Indeed be drab and
lifeless. For thls reason we must

Green PTA Speaker
Is James A. Northup
GALLIPOLIS- The nrst Pf A
meeting of the year was held
Tuesday, October 8, at Green
Elementary School. Mr. Fred
Edelmann, presJdent, opened the
m9et.lng, and devotions were giv -

COMMITTEE ALL SMILES
- Mrs. Thomas Morgan, left.,

en by Wllllam Lorge, principal.
A ahort program was given by
lhe fifth srsde, consisting of
book re.IJ()rts given by three stu.
dents, each followed by an ap-

member of the October commiltce, and Mrs. Geo rge Tabit, chair man, express their
pleasure at the good turnout
or members for the Newcomer s' s~· J e show .

!

I
'·

ADMIRING LOOKS - Mrs. Douglas Kayser (Gwen Ewna) drew oh's and ah'a trorn the audience a11 she modeled thla lovely ooatofpale blue wool with tur collar. ShCMn left to right are Mrs.
Naomi Howell, Mrs. Howard Baker saunders, Mrs. DonaldLtntala, tn back of Mrs. Llntala is Mrs.
Dick Brown, seated on the floor, Mrs. Charles Holzer, Jr., unldentitled W&lt;m8l1 almost hidden by
the model, Mrs. Melvyn Rozen. Mrs. Bruce Hurison and Mrs. Donald O'Rwrke.

propriate song stmg by the class.
The minutes ol the last meeting were read by the secretary,
Mary Bryant, and the treasurer's report was given by Roma

Mrs . Swisher
Honored With

... Stork

I

Mrs. Paul
(Chatterbox&gt; Wagner of Radio
station WJEH pause s for a
brief chat with Mrs. Charles
Holzer, Jr., before taking over duties as narrator of the
style show.

GRAND FINALE- All the models tor the style sha.r reappear~ so the audience could have a
last ''drooli~" look at the new stv1es ranging from sport clothes to evening gowns. All shoes were
from Carl's Sloe Store {Jack Hudson, who owns CarPs also loaned his wtre and daughter for the
event). Standing in the front at Ule bottom is Mrs. Paul Wagner, narrstor ot lhe show. Behin:l her,
left to right are, Mrs. Madge Neal, Mrs. George Tabit, Mrs. Patrie McBride (Shelley Sarrett).
Mrs. James Walker, Miss Joyce Hudson, Mrs. Er~st Wiseman, Mrs. Douglas Kayser, Mrs. A.
Kimball Suiter and Mrs. Hoyt Mullins of Bernadine's. In the second rCIW, starting behild Joyc(
Hudson. is Mrs. Jack Hudson, Mrs. George Davis and Mrs. Oscar Clarke.

Day;

Finney's room .
The meeting was adjourned
and Mr. Edelmann Introduced
Jim Northup, Chief of the Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Department.
He spoke on the great Chicago
fire and how It led to the obsenanct~ of Fire PrevenUoo
Week. Mr. Edelmann, a volunteer fireman, told how an organ.
ized, practical escape plan is
necessary to insure the safety
of your ramtly in the event of a
fire. Most home rires occur at

Mrs. carlos
•: E. ~'wisher (the former Patricia
~ Kingery) was · honored with a
~ stork shower October 8 given by
night between midnight and 6
~ Mrs. Randy Rothgeb and Mrs.
a.m. when people are less alert.
~ Richard Vanco.
At the end of theprogrampamph .
~ Games were played and prizes
lets, showing how to organize an
~ awarded After the gifts were
escaJ)e plan, were handed out.
~- opened and gradously acknowRefreshments were served to
~ ledged, refreshments ot coffee,
those present.
: punrh, cake, ice cream, and
: mint&amp; were served.
On the guest list were Mrs.
r Floyd Klrwery, Mrs. Alice SWish-; er, Mrs. James Crace, Mrs.

QUIET CHAT -

Lilli While Wool and
Norwegian Blue Fox,
Lilli Ann's Young
Young Combination for
snowfalls. Unmistakeably chic semi-fit wrap
collar and double breasted closillt! ere·
aud in 100% yam
dyed wool. I ust one
of the flowers in gar·
den of Lilli Ann Coats
at Bernadine's.

Shower

Smith, treasurer. The new vicepresident Ralph Poetker, was absent .
New chairmen were introduced as follows: Hospitality, Leota Pope; Ways and Means, Reba
Wilcoxen and Thelma Woodward·
Membership and Magazine Sales'
Dona McGhee and ~lvia
PublicJt.y, Martha Edehnam, and
Devotions, Avonell Cobb.
It was announced that two din ners will be held at the school
in November.
The membership drive will
begin soon.
Room COlUlt was won by Mrs.

GALLIPOIJS -

best tree to fit the existing space

with results that the trees can
mature In beauty.
"Flrst we must plant out trees
where they will not give us pro·
blcms. Thought should be given
to the purpose of the tree to
be planted. A1so to the kind of
tree best suited for that purpose. No one tree is perfect for
all locations. Careful planni.ng
also results In creating beauty,
not problems. b is well to keep
in mind that you are plantJng for
Tomorrow . 1\ well - grown tree
not only increases in beauty and
Ullefulnes s over the years, but
it alao increases the value of
your property. "
Henry Van Dyke , the ramous
author, once remarked, "He that
plantelh a tree is a senant of
God, he provideth a kindness for
many generations, and faces that
he has not seen shall bless him."
Not many think of thi s.
Even older trees that were
planted unwisely years ago can,
with the right attentioo, be kept
from causing trouble to electric
wires by proper pruning. Mrs.
Coones then gave details or how
to do this.
"We must remember, that any
tree we plant will outlive not
only ourselves and our children
but also our grandchildren.,;
Mrs. Coones said.
These are some tree prOOlems
that can be prevented by selective planting : Damage to
House, by planting too close;
Broken SideWlllks, caused by tree
roots; Dangerous Screening, tree
limbs obscure street or traf!ic
llghts or signsj Clogged sewers
by tree roots; storm Damage,
Calling limbs cause interruptions
to eledric service.
Note: Fallen Wires are extremely dangerous and should
never be touched .

2.
Five good rules to remember
when planting a tree : 1. Look
Up Tree s need room for
growth, light and air.
2· Look Down - Tree root.8
prosper best In fertile soil with
good drainage; prererably not
in conflict with driveways, walk!
and sewer Jines.

WRAP Course

3. Look Arowtd- Trees grow

aldewa,ys as well as up.
4. Select hardy trees which are
• Melba Sheets, Mrs. Elise Kimrelatively
immune to disease and
ball, Mrs. Richard Sis eon and Aninsects
In
your
area.
nette, Mrs. Marion DarneD, Mrs,
5.
Buy
well
- grown nursery
Bob Drummond, Mrs. Stephen
It
is
not
advisable to get
stock.
• George, Mrs. Leona Drummond,
trees
from
the
"lVild.'• They
: Mrs. Melvin Green, Miss Connie
seldom
recover
from
tbe shock
- • Swisher, Mrs. Carl Morrow
GALLIPOLIS- WRAP, a lOIII'
•
•
o1
transplanting.
Lovely
trees
~ Mra. WUUarn Russell, Mrs. Paul h o u r State Highway Patrol
should
rrame
a
home,
not
conCourse In defensive driving is
Beaver, Mrs. EdmuOO Swisher,
ceal
it.
Trees
should
make
a
Mrs. Eugene Green. Mr!l. Gene streamlined for busy people. It
house
complete,
not
compete
with
is lively, stimulating and excitMoore and Mrs. Bob Waugh.
IL
\
Those unable to attend but ing because the audience partiMiss Marie Meal , president,
endirw gifts tnch~ed Mrs. Doug- cipates. It is designed to take the
guess work out of driving and called the meeting to order. De~
&amp; Hall, Mn. Joseph Roush,
s. Birdie Love, Miss Ruth STOP accidents BEFORE they votlons were by Mrs. Florence
Trainer . They were an inspirThcrnas, Mr. and Mrs. Ja.=k happen.
This course, sponsored by the ing presentation or the Lord's
Blazer and Mrs. Lester Ply~
Galllpolh Business and Profe!l· Prayer using candles. Eleven
male.
candles were used, each one a
sionaJ Women's Club which
be helpiqr at the St. Peter's dUI'erent color, representing Ule
Epl scopal Church on October 15 petitions in the prayer . Alter
and 22, is ror Prospective Driv- all the candles were lit the club
ers, Timid Drivers, Experienced repeated the Lord's Prayer in
Drivers, Teen Drivers and Back unlson.
Roll Call was answered by
Seat Driwrs.
The instructors have been se- naming a tree that can be grown
lected arxl all Is being readied from seed and giving its •ciror the Orst session which could entific name.
The secretary, Mra. Florence
prove to be u interesUng, exciting, end h1ghly benenctal safe Trainer read minutes of the last
driving course.
meeting, also a Jetter from Mrs.
All drivers wUI be inatruct- John H, Reese, Regional Direced on ho~ mu,~h to give and how tor, reminding us of the Regionmuch to take on today's modern al meeting November 16, 1n
highways in order to insure the Chester . Mrs. Lora Hackworth
read the Treasurer's report,
reality ol defensive driving.
Mrs. Charles Lanier was lnltalied as Vice - President by
Mrs. Earl Brown and was preI .
sented with a small arrange.
ment whlch signlt)ed the Club
and Mrs. Lanier's duties as Vice
President.
Mrs. Nelle Franklin reported
Mr. and Mrs. Justine Williams
j
of Rt. 1 Vinton are announcing
the birth of lhelr nrst chlJd, a
daughter, born Sopt. 24 at llol .
:r:er llospltal.
The baby weighed 1 pounds and
1
3 /j ounces and has been named
Camll.ynn,
Maternal granq,&amp;-cnts a r e
Mrs. VIolet Smith, lit. 1 and tile
late Aubra SmtUl. Paternal grand ~
parents arc Mr. and Mrs. Gar-

Designed For

Busy People

Coming
Events
SUNDAY
COMMUNITY Singers rehear·
sal Sunday, 2 p.m. in the vocal
room at GAHS.
MONDAY
RUMMAGE SALE at Judd's
Garage, 4th and Pine, by the
Church of God, Jackson Plke.
Continues through Tuesday.
CHESHIRE-KYGER PTA, Mrs,
Mosier, guest speaker. Filth
grade mothers bring cider and
doughll.lts.
CENTENARY GRANGE, 1:30
p.m. inst:allation of officers.
WASIIINGTON PTA 7:30p.m.
at Washington School cafeteria. Estiwun Matthews and
Beulah Jo~nson, teachers or
remedial reading, w I 11 be
speakers.
TUESDAY

SKI MEETING AT Tribune office. Mr. Brown of Middleport
will be the speaker.
ADDAVILLE PTA will meet at
7:30 p.m. Guest speaker will
be Dr. KeMeth Welker of
CivH Defense.
WEDNESDAY
WOMEN'S SOCIETY of Kyger
M~thodist

Church wtumeetfor
an all day meeting in home of
Mrs. Fred Si~son to tie comforts and sew rags for rugs.
Bring sack lunch.

Basil Evans
Honored With
Birthday Supper

Gallipolis DAR History Given

Seen and Heard

GALLIPOLIS - The Frsnch
Nancy ~kman, daughter ot
Colony
Chapter Daugllteroo!Am Glad,ys Sparkman, left Saturday
erlcan
Revolution
met with ho!ifor ML Vernon, Ohio where she
tesses
Mrs.
Jamea
L. Clark
will attend ML Vernon Nazarene
and
Mrs.
Arthur
Espenschied,
College.
at lhe home of Mrs. Clark, S.
Mr. and Mr8. t.wrence Gates College Ave., Rio Grande on
returned early this week trom
visiting Mr. Ind. Mrs. Lewis E.

Gates, Dayton.
Mr. am Mrs. Wayne

Ams-

bary were in Flint, Michigan
last week to attend the Apache
Seminar a1"11 the showi~ of the
1969 Apache travel trailers at
Lapeer, Michigan.

Meadows Announce
Birth of a Son
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Charles MeaOOws, Eureka Star
Route, arc announcing the birth
of their second child, a son, 1);-;.
tober I at 11:15 p.m. at Holzer
Hospital.
The baby weighed seven pounds
and 12 1h ounches and has been
named Charles Thomas. He is
being welcomed by a sister , Tamara Lynn, 3.
Maternal grandparents a r e
Mr. and Mrs. John Bostic, Gal lipolis, and paternal grandparents are Mr!!. Henry Meadow s,
Crown City, and tile late llenry
~1eadows .

Oct. 7.

Members present were Mrs.
Robb Hagen, Mn. Claude Mill .
er, Miss Margaret Ecker, Mrs.
Howard L Neal, Margaret A.
Bradbury, Miss Catherine Hay.
ward, Mrs. Frank 9!aw, Mrs. L.
H. Nelson, Miss Mary Virginia

O'Brien, Mrs. M. T. Epling, Sr •.
Mrs. Howard Brannon, Mrs.
James Clark, Mrs . Arthur Espenschied.
A delicious desert course was
served durlng a social hour pri or to the meeting.
French Colony Chapter was in.
stituted in 1926 with Mrs. Frank
Hell as organizing Hegent. Six teen Regents have sened the
chapter. Past regents were, Mrs.
Frank Bell, 1926 ~ 1928; Mrs.
Cabelle Walker . 1928 - 1930;
Mrs. c. Wayne Booth, 1~30 1932; Mrs. Hubert Carnes, 19321934 ; Mrs. W. N. Hayward, 1934 1936; Mrs. Harry Hum, 1936 1940 ; M.iss Anna Zlrrunerman,
1940 - 1946; Mrs. Frank Wetherholt , 1946 - 1948; Miss Anne G.
llill, 1948 - 1950; Mrs. D. H.

Richards, 1950 - 195J; Mrs. L.
H. Nelson, 1953 - 19.56; Mis s
Mary Cutler, 1956 - 1960; Mi ss
Ame G. 11111 , 1960 - 1962; Mrs.
Lawr ence Gates, 1962 - 1963;
Mrs. M, T, E{iling, 1963 - 1968
and ~rs . Robert W. Hagen, 1968.
or the 15 P'dst Regents the fol lowing n..·e still living are: Mrs.
Wayne Booth, Mrs. L . H. r..·el son, Mrs. F rank Wetherholt,
f\.lrs. Lawrence Gates and Mrs.

ANNOUNCE BIRTHS

Mr . and Mrs. Jack R, Crank
or Henderson, W. Va., aiUlounce
Ule birth of a son , Sept. 28 at
Holzer Hospital . The baby weighed 7 pounds and 4 Otmces and has
been named David Allen.
lie is being wei romed by a
two -.r ea r~ld brother, Billy Hay .
Maternal grandparent s are Mr.
and Mr s. Max Tawney, and paternal grandparents ar c Mr. and
Mr s. Ra.l-' Crai g, Dayton.

According

lo

the

Bible ,

Jubal invented the harp .

GALLU,OUS Basil Evans
was honored recently on his 64th
birthday wlth a special supper.
His children and grandchildren

M. T. £&lt;&gt;ling.

A birthday card waa sent

French Colony Chapter has
had a membership or 98, with
54 living and 44 deceased. The
chapter has had three real granddaughters of the Revolution, Mrs.
Mary Bratt, who died in 1940·
Mrs. Sarah Richards McDanJel'
who died in 1944, and Mrs. Au:
gusta Howe Keut, who died in

19.17.
The ch!Pter has had two Fiftyyear members. They are Mrs.
W. N. Hayward and Mrs. D. R.
Richards .
Locally an early project was
the gateway to Mound Hill Cemetery, where a bronze plaque
was placed listing the He"Yolu tionary soldiers buried there
there, the second bronze oo the
right side was taken by vandals.
The group is oow collecting flUids
to replace the pla(J.Ie.
Under the Regency of Miss
Arula Zimmerman a survey of
all Gall Ia County cemeteries was
made by name, location and size
of cemetery listing the Revolutionary soldiers buried in each
area.
A copy of this survey was given lhe American Legion Post
No. 27 for their project or compiling tile burial of soldiers or
all war s .
The DAR is interested in learning if there are other s in Gallia
C:Otmt;y who have anees ters who
served in the Hevolutionary War.
During the Oct. 7 meeting,
the president's message was gi ..·cn by Mr s . Arthur Espenschied,
It stressed, love of Cl&gt;untry,
The Ameri can Way of life, good
citi zenship, and reuniting Lo preserve and presenl loss of things
we hold dea r.
Get well cards were sent to
Mrs . Ethel Clark, Mrs. Harry
Mcl·lenry and Mrs. Elizabeth
Carnes Futch of Nashville, Ga.

Mrs. Ellao Wetherholt.
A round-robin letter was

M. T. Ej&gt;llng.

The next meetln.g wUl be at
the home of Mrs. Howard L
Neal on Nov. 4 at 2 p.m.
The guest speaker will be Mrs.
Florence Ecker. Her topic will
be, The American Indian.

Missionary
Group Works
On Quilts
GALLIPOLIS - The Nortlllp
Missionary Society spent the afternoon ol their October meeting working on quills. The meeting was held at the home of Miss
Bonnie Nibert . Ten members and
guests attended.
At 2:30 p, m. the meeting was
called to order by the president,
Bea £Hiott. The opening song
was, "Where He Leads Me.''
Scripture was read by Mrs. Wil liam Dailey, and verse prayer
was led by Mrs. Bruce Unroe.
Readings were given b~ Mrs.
Grover 9loemaker, "Some Definitions"; Mrs. Faye Rose,
••war and Peacen; Mrs. Bruce
Unroe, "Our &amp;!staining God.''
and Mrs, William Dalley, "Take
Time." Minutes were read and
awroved.
The groop voted to sot a gift
for Mrs. Inez Nedro. They were
dismissed with the Lord's Prayer .

MORE WOMEN WEAR
FAIRFIELD SHE SHELLS
TO MORE PLACES ON MORE
OCCASIONS THAN ANY
OTHER TOP IN THE WORLD

A.

oo the progress of plans for the
dub'"! Chri1tmu ·.flower show.
Mrs. William ' Minshall wM
given a gift tor her new home
in Missouri , to show appreciation of her work in this club.
Mrs. George Coones, last year's
president, was also presented
with a gift of three lovely wooden
bases for flower arrangements.
Refreshments we re served b\'
the hostesses in the Hallowe~
theme with a lovely arrangement in a pumpkin with mums,
birds and bees named, "October Skies" as the centerpiece.
Mrs. Harley George also had an
arrangement of asters.
The November meeting will
be held at the home or Mrs. Wy mond Bradbury.

~ll onweor
~

V .
•~•ut•

A.

CLASSIC CARDIGAN . Rob·Kn;r

All mau~ .rom
Monsanto Blue "C" Nylon:
wnnkleproot, stretchproof
completely madtine
'
w.nhable and dryable.

•

on top, cuff s end bottom . Sizes

34-42 .

B.

.JEWEL NECK SHORT SLIPDN .
With saddle shoulder ond z ip

$8
6

$

bock . s.,., 34-40 . - - - - - - -

C.

SUPER SMART LONG SLEE•V•E--$7
TURTLE HECK SLIPOVER
w1th zip-bock. Sizes 34 -42 .

wm

FREE PADDING

II

AND

INST ALLAliON

{

With The Purchase Of .. . .

CARPET

At Regular Price
PRFSIDES AT TEA TABLE - Mrs. ~rt E. Mead engaged ln : onversatlon with Mrs. E. M. Oke) Wiseman during
the deuert luncheon served by the Junior Wooten's Club before the style s how

As. Low Ao

eNYLON
eACRILAN

SEE OUR NICE SELECTION
leave it to the Girls
NEW YORK WPil - Pa per
cups do a lot a round the how.e
besides serving as a beverage
co.otalner
One manufacturer hi!.6 found
women are using the cups in
boundlcs5 ways. Samples : a.s
fruit salad cup, tn hold sh!!rbert , shrimp salad, instant
pudding , salad drebSing, as 11
cookJe cutter, pin cushion,
plant seedllng , button storage,
to hold Christmas orname nts,
measuring, and for practlclnl
101t putting.

DEPT. STORE

sq. yd.

•

•
J

eWOOL
eHERCULON

Ln

fi
l

Ovor 500 Colors and Polterno To Soled' From.
Co..,. In Today and Mako Your Solactlon

WOOLS, WOOL BLENDS
AND BONDED WOOLENS
$1.49 TO $4. 00 Y.t.RD

Darnbrough's

6. 95

•

e FREE ESTIMATES e EASY TERMS
OPEN MOND.hncl FRIDAY NIGHTS

Lilli Ann Coats, a bloom of Beauly ill arty srtow(all alld ·a
sign of quality from Bernadine's, Southeastern Ohio's Coat Closet.
9:00 to .5:00
Monday , Tu••dor ,
w.ctnudor. &amp;ot...,.doy
9· 12 Thur1 .

9:00 to 9:00

'

Friday

·GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'-

326 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, 0.

Green Hn.....
And
Cur Flowers
Flowers in perfect
taste for everyone
Weddings, funerals
Special Occasions
Corsages

-Ar~c~~

fc~,S'~.

Floral
Arran8ement1
ao Spe&lt;lfi&lt;d
We Deliver

~.

Daughter Born to

BOSWORTH'S FLOWERS

Williams Family

. Ph. «6-41114

NeighbOrhood Rd.

~
·,·•)

f,.~
-. ~... ··~·-':141:. 0
'~---' .... ..-t',- ~~

II

D.

CREW HECK, LONG SLEEVE
$ 7
SLIPDVER. Z;pp•..
•.bo•c•k•c•lo•s•
·-ure . Sizes 34-42 .

E.

MOCK TURTLE
OVER.
LONG SLEEVE$. Zip-

HECK•S•L•IP··--~$·7 .

per boc k. Sizes 34-42 . ·

CHOOSE FROM
15 NEW FALL COLORS

~onwear·

-·

•WHITE
• BLACK
•LT. PINK
•LT. BLUE
•LT. YELLOW
•NAVY
• DARK BROWN
• FAWN
• RED
• MOSS GREEN
0
MED. GREEN
• OLIVE
•MOCHIA
•BEIGE
•DUSTY BLUE

E.

\
'

land Williams, Crown Clt,y, and
one paternal great~grandfather,
Ralpll Albright.

\

./

sem

to Mrs. Osa Baird, 1062 Waverly Place, Schenectacly, N.Y.,
12308.
The new 1969 DAR year books
were dlslrlbutecl. Report of Na.
tiona! Delen!e waa efven by MrL

attended,
Present were Mr. and Mrs. Alli'ed Vallance, Jr. and Ssndra,
Mr. and !\.1rs. BiUy Gene Evans
and daughters, Kathy and Barbara. The e\'ent was planned by
Mrs. Basil Evans who wa s alsoJ
presenL
One grandson, Terry, was
missing. He is atlendingUleMRta
Drafting College in Colwnbus.

to

SHE SHELLS
AVAILABLE IN
16 DIFFERENT
STYLES.

�'
7 - TI1e Swlday Tlmes - Sertincl, Sunday, Oct.OOer 13, 1968

6 _ Tho Suroll,y Ttmea- Sentinel, Sundly, October 13, 1968

Newcomers Style Show is Held at Dr. Abel's New Home

Scioto Presbyterial Meet Held
..
0AJ( IIILL - nu~ Fall meet-

ing ol District IV of Scioto Pres-

b.J.1erial was held at the Oak
llill Presbyterian Church on
Wednellda.f, October9. The theme
of the meeUng was "Dare to be
Involved in a Mlnbtry of Recon.
clliatlon."
Mrs. Marlon Maloney of Jackaon, Presldert of Diatrivt IV
pres!""' at Ule meetlng. A cHn~
lc on DARE procedures and Mission Interpretation Atds were
presented by Presbyterial otrl cers.
The President of Scioto Pres-

GALLIPOLIS - Dr. and Mrs.
Gene H. Abels opened their lovely new contemporary styled home
for the October meeting ot the
Newcomers Club. Approximately
90 women attended the outstandIng event.

The program was a style show
featuring ''Fashions F rom
Bei1Uldine's"' Wring which Clothing from lounging wear to turs
were shown on attractive local
models.
Mn. Paul (Chatterbox) Wagner was the narrator with an
occasional assist from Mn. Hoyt

byterial, Mrs. Roy O, Druhot of

Charles Rathburn helped with the
models and the planning of t h e
show.

on the free-- stard.ing wrought iron trimmed steps of the Abels'
living room.

'Ohio Tree Beauty'
Topic For Program

Sardinia, was introduced.

Mullins, of Bernadine's. M r a.

PIECE-DE-RESIST ANC E - Miss Jan Tope, daugi)ter of
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Tope, models a beautiful lace wedding gown

Presbyterial will be held In ChU- Glen R, llueholl, Mrs. Wymond
Iicothe in :\pril, and the Fan Bradbury, Mrs. Jake Moore
District meettng will be in Iron- Mrs. Theodore Ehman, Mis~
ton in October, 1969.
MJidred Gilman, Mrs. Harold
The following members of the Black, MJ,:a. George M, Jones,
local church attenc:Jed: M r a. Mrs. John Allen, Mrs. sa m
Wayne Ogdln, Mrs. M, T. ~­ Railles, and Mrs. Donald n.
ling, Mra. Clayton Miller, Mro. Warehime.

The &lt;..-ommlttee for the da.y's
activities was Mrs. George TabIt, chairman, Mrs. 'Thomas Morgan, Mrs. Oscar Clarke, Mrs.
W. R. (Dick) Brown, Mrs. Norma Foose and Mrs. Max Avner.
The Jwrlor Women's Club served a dessert lwachOCil. Mrs. Robert E. Mead, Newcomer's presi dent , presided over the tea table.
The rolloVting slate oC officers
was presented, Mrs. James Beverly, president; Julie Swann, first
viceiJresident; Merna Klein, second vi ce-president; Jean Espen llcheid, secretary; Carol &amp;ein,
treasurer.
1l1c next meeting will be a
luncheon at Rio Grande and will
feature an " Afternoon of C u 1ture."

}

In the afternoon. the offering
of the Least Coin was dedicated.
The speakers for t~ after noon were Mr. and Mrs. William Boden, missionaries from
the MoWlt Zion Conference cen.
ter, Guatemala, Central America, They have been home on
furlough and are leaving next
Tuesday to return to Guatemala.
The aru1Ual meetbtg ot: t h e

GALLIPOLIS -

Mro. George do some plaming that we plant

Coones gave a program on Ohio
Tree Beauty for French Clly
Garden Club Tuesday evening
at the home of Mrs. Harley
G eo r g e with Mrs. Florence
Trainer as co-hostess.
Mrs. Coones stated, HgoocJ
treea lnfiuence our everyday living. ft would be ditficult to imagine a city without trees. SUch
a place would Indeed be drab and
lifeless. For thls reason we must

Green PTA Speaker
Is James A. Northup
GALLIPOLIS- The nrst Pf A
meeting of the year was held
Tuesday, October 8, at Green
Elementary School. Mr. Fred
Edelmann, presJdent, opened the
m9et.lng, and devotions were giv -

COMMITTEE ALL SMILES
- Mrs. Thomas Morgan, left.,

en by Wllllam Lorge, principal.
A ahort program was given by
lhe fifth srsde, consisting of
book re.IJ()rts given by three stu.
dents, each followed by an ap-

member of the October commiltce, and Mrs. Geo rge Tabit, chair man, express their
pleasure at the good turnout
or members for the Newcomer s' s~· J e show .

!

I
'·

ADMIRING LOOKS - Mrs. Douglas Kayser (Gwen Ewna) drew oh's and ah'a trorn the audience a11 she modeled thla lovely ooatofpale blue wool with tur collar. ShCMn left to right are Mrs.
Naomi Howell, Mrs. Howard Baker saunders, Mrs. DonaldLtntala, tn back of Mrs. Llntala is Mrs.
Dick Brown, seated on the floor, Mrs. Charles Holzer, Jr., unldentitled W&lt;m8l1 almost hidden by
the model, Mrs. Melvyn Rozen. Mrs. Bruce Hurison and Mrs. Donald O'Rwrke.

propriate song stmg by the class.
The minutes ol the last meeting were read by the secretary,
Mary Bryant, and the treasurer's report was given by Roma

Mrs . Swisher
Honored With

... Stork

I

Mrs. Paul
(Chatterbox&gt; Wagner of Radio
station WJEH pause s for a
brief chat with Mrs. Charles
Holzer, Jr., before taking over duties as narrator of the
style show.

GRAND FINALE- All the models tor the style sha.r reappear~ so the audience could have a
last ''drooli~" look at the new stv1es ranging from sport clothes to evening gowns. All shoes were
from Carl's Sloe Store {Jack Hudson, who owns CarPs also loaned his wtre and daughter for the
event). Standing in the front at Ule bottom is Mrs. Paul Wagner, narrstor ot lhe show. Behin:l her,
left to right are, Mrs. Madge Neal, Mrs. George Tabit, Mrs. Patrie McBride (Shelley Sarrett).
Mrs. James Walker, Miss Joyce Hudson, Mrs. Er~st Wiseman, Mrs. Douglas Kayser, Mrs. A.
Kimball Suiter and Mrs. Hoyt Mullins of Bernadine's. In the second rCIW, starting behild Joyc(
Hudson. is Mrs. Jack Hudson, Mrs. George Davis and Mrs. Oscar Clarke.

Day;

Finney's room .
The meeting was adjourned
and Mr. Edelmann Introduced
Jim Northup, Chief of the Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Department.
He spoke on the great Chicago
fire and how It led to the obsenanct~ of Fire PrevenUoo
Week. Mr. Edelmann, a volunteer fireman, told how an organ.
ized, practical escape plan is
necessary to insure the safety
of your ramtly in the event of a
fire. Most home rires occur at

Mrs. carlos
•: E. ~'wisher (the former Patricia
~ Kingery) was · honored with a
~ stork shower October 8 given by
night between midnight and 6
~ Mrs. Randy Rothgeb and Mrs.
a.m. when people are less alert.
~ Richard Vanco.
At the end of theprogrampamph .
~ Games were played and prizes
lets, showing how to organize an
~ awarded After the gifts were
escaJ)e plan, were handed out.
~- opened and gradously acknowRefreshments were served to
~ ledged, refreshments ot coffee,
those present.
: punrh, cake, ice cream, and
: mint&amp; were served.
On the guest list were Mrs.
r Floyd Klrwery, Mrs. Alice SWish-; er, Mrs. James Crace, Mrs.

QUIET CHAT -

Lilli While Wool and
Norwegian Blue Fox,
Lilli Ann's Young
Young Combination for
snowfalls. Unmistakeably chic semi-fit wrap
collar and double breasted closillt! ere·
aud in 100% yam
dyed wool. I ust one
of the flowers in gar·
den of Lilli Ann Coats
at Bernadine's.

Shower

Smith, treasurer. The new vicepresident Ralph Poetker, was absent .
New chairmen were introduced as follows: Hospitality, Leota Pope; Ways and Means, Reba
Wilcoxen and Thelma Woodward·
Membership and Magazine Sales'
Dona McGhee and ~lvia
PublicJt.y, Martha Edehnam, and
Devotions, Avonell Cobb.
It was announced that two din ners will be held at the school
in November.
The membership drive will
begin soon.
Room COlUlt was won by Mrs.

GALLIPOIJS -

best tree to fit the existing space

with results that the trees can
mature In beauty.
"Flrst we must plant out trees
where they will not give us pro·
blcms. Thought should be given
to the purpose of the tree to
be planted. A1so to the kind of
tree best suited for that purpose. No one tree is perfect for
all locations. Careful planni.ng
also results In creating beauty,
not problems. b is well to keep
in mind that you are plantJng for
Tomorrow . 1\ well - grown tree
not only increases in beauty and
Ullefulnes s over the years, but
it alao increases the value of
your property. "
Henry Van Dyke , the ramous
author, once remarked, "He that
plantelh a tree is a senant of
God, he provideth a kindness for
many generations, and faces that
he has not seen shall bless him."
Not many think of thi s.
Even older trees that were
planted unwisely years ago can,
with the right attentioo, be kept
from causing trouble to electric
wires by proper pruning. Mrs.
Coones then gave details or how
to do this.
"We must remember, that any
tree we plant will outlive not
only ourselves and our children
but also our grandchildren.,;
Mrs. Coones said.
These are some tree prOOlems
that can be prevented by selective planting : Damage to
House, by planting too close;
Broken SideWlllks, caused by tree
roots; Dangerous Screening, tree
limbs obscure street or traf!ic
llghts or signsj Clogged sewers
by tree roots; storm Damage,
Calling limbs cause interruptions
to eledric service.
Note: Fallen Wires are extremely dangerous and should
never be touched .

2.
Five good rules to remember
when planting a tree : 1. Look
Up Tree s need room for
growth, light and air.
2· Look Down - Tree root.8
prosper best In fertile soil with
good drainage; prererably not
in conflict with driveways, walk!
and sewer Jines.

WRAP Course

3. Look Arowtd- Trees grow

aldewa,ys as well as up.
4. Select hardy trees which are
• Melba Sheets, Mrs. Elise Kimrelatively
immune to disease and
ball, Mrs. Richard Sis eon and Aninsects
In
your
area.
nette, Mrs. Marion DarneD, Mrs,
5.
Buy
well
- grown nursery
Bob Drummond, Mrs. Stephen
It
is
not
advisable to get
stock.
• George, Mrs. Leona Drummond,
trees
from
the
"lVild.'• They
: Mrs. Melvin Green, Miss Connie
seldom
recover
from
tbe shock
- • Swisher, Mrs. Carl Morrow
GALLIPOLIS- WRAP, a lOIII'
•
•
o1
transplanting.
Lovely
trees
~ Mra. WUUarn Russell, Mrs. Paul h o u r State Highway Patrol
should
rrame
a
home,
not
conCourse In defensive driving is
Beaver, Mrs. EdmuOO Swisher,
ceal
it.
Trees
should
make
a
Mrs. Eugene Green. Mr!l. Gene streamlined for busy people. It
house
complete,
not
compete
with
is lively, stimulating and excitMoore and Mrs. Bob Waugh.
IL
\
Those unable to attend but ing because the audience partiMiss Marie Meal , president,
endirw gifts tnch~ed Mrs. Doug- cipates. It is designed to take the
guess work out of driving and called the meeting to order. De~
&amp; Hall, Mn. Joseph Roush,
s. Birdie Love, Miss Ruth STOP accidents BEFORE they votlons were by Mrs. Florence
Trainer . They were an inspirThcrnas, Mr. and Mrs. Ja.=k happen.
This course, sponsored by the ing presentation or the Lord's
Blazer and Mrs. Lester Ply~
Galllpolh Business and Profe!l· Prayer using candles. Eleven
male.
candles were used, each one a
sionaJ Women's Club which
be helpiqr at the St. Peter's dUI'erent color, representing Ule
Epl scopal Church on October 15 petitions in the prayer . Alter
and 22, is ror Prospective Driv- all the candles were lit the club
ers, Timid Drivers, Experienced repeated the Lord's Prayer in
Drivers, Teen Drivers and Back unlson.
Roll Call was answered by
Seat Driwrs.
The instructors have been se- naming a tree that can be grown
lected arxl all Is being readied from seed and giving its •ciror the Orst session which could entific name.
The secretary, Mra. Florence
prove to be u interesUng, exciting, end h1ghly benenctal safe Trainer read minutes of the last
driving course.
meeting, also a Jetter from Mrs.
All drivers wUI be inatruct- John H, Reese, Regional Direced on ho~ mu,~h to give and how tor, reminding us of the Regionmuch to take on today's modern al meeting November 16, 1n
highways in order to insure the Chester . Mrs. Lora Hackworth
read the Treasurer's report,
reality ol defensive driving.
Mrs. Charles Lanier was lnltalied as Vice - President by
Mrs. Earl Brown and was preI .
sented with a small arrange.
ment whlch signlt)ed the Club
and Mrs. Lanier's duties as Vice
President.
Mrs. Nelle Franklin reported
Mr. and Mrs. Justine Williams
j
of Rt. 1 Vinton are announcing
the birth of lhelr nrst chlJd, a
daughter, born Sopt. 24 at llol .
:r:er llospltal.
The baby weighed 1 pounds and
1
3 /j ounces and has been named
Camll.ynn,
Maternal granq,&amp;-cnts a r e
Mrs. VIolet Smith, lit. 1 and tile
late Aubra SmtUl. Paternal grand ~
parents arc Mr. and Mrs. Gar-

Designed For

Busy People

Coming
Events
SUNDAY
COMMUNITY Singers rehear·
sal Sunday, 2 p.m. in the vocal
room at GAHS.
MONDAY
RUMMAGE SALE at Judd's
Garage, 4th and Pine, by the
Church of God, Jackson Plke.
Continues through Tuesday.
CHESHIRE-KYGER PTA, Mrs,
Mosier, guest speaker. Filth
grade mothers bring cider and
doughll.lts.
CENTENARY GRANGE, 1:30
p.m. inst:allation of officers.
WASIIINGTON PTA 7:30p.m.
at Washington School cafeteria. Estiwun Matthews and
Beulah Jo~nson, teachers or
remedial reading, w I 11 be
speakers.
TUESDAY

SKI MEETING AT Tribune office. Mr. Brown of Middleport
will be the speaker.
ADDAVILLE PTA will meet at
7:30 p.m. Guest speaker will
be Dr. KeMeth Welker of
CivH Defense.
WEDNESDAY
WOMEN'S SOCIETY of Kyger
M~thodist

Church wtumeetfor
an all day meeting in home of
Mrs. Fred Si~son to tie comforts and sew rags for rugs.
Bring sack lunch.

Basil Evans
Honored With
Birthday Supper

Gallipolis DAR History Given

Seen and Heard

GALLIPOLIS - The Frsnch
Nancy ~kman, daughter ot
Colony
Chapter Daugllteroo!Am Glad,ys Sparkman, left Saturday
erlcan
Revolution
met with ho!ifor ML Vernon, Ohio where she
tesses
Mrs.
Jamea
L. Clark
will attend ML Vernon Nazarene
and
Mrs.
Arthur
Espenschied,
College.
at lhe home of Mrs. Clark, S.
Mr. and Mr8. t.wrence Gates College Ave., Rio Grande on
returned early this week trom
visiting Mr. Ind. Mrs. Lewis E.

Gates, Dayton.
Mr. am Mrs. Wayne

Ams-

bary were in Flint, Michigan
last week to attend the Apache
Seminar a1"11 the showi~ of the
1969 Apache travel trailers at
Lapeer, Michigan.

Meadows Announce
Birth of a Son
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Charles MeaOOws, Eureka Star
Route, arc announcing the birth
of their second child, a son, 1);-;.
tober I at 11:15 p.m. at Holzer
Hospital.
The baby weighed seven pounds
and 12 1h ounches and has been
named Charles Thomas. He is
being welcomed by a sister , Tamara Lynn, 3.
Maternal grandparents a r e
Mr. and Mrs. John Bostic, Gal lipolis, and paternal grandparents are Mr!!. Henry Meadow s,
Crown City, and tile late llenry
~1eadows .

Oct. 7.

Members present were Mrs.
Robb Hagen, Mn. Claude Mill .
er, Miss Margaret Ecker, Mrs.
Howard L Neal, Margaret A.
Bradbury, Miss Catherine Hay.
ward, Mrs. Frank 9!aw, Mrs. L.
H. Nelson, Miss Mary Virginia

O'Brien, Mrs. M. T. Epling, Sr •.
Mrs. Howard Brannon, Mrs.
James Clark, Mrs . Arthur Espenschied.
A delicious desert course was
served durlng a social hour pri or to the meeting.
French Colony Chapter was in.
stituted in 1926 with Mrs. Frank
Hell as organizing Hegent. Six teen Regents have sened the
chapter. Past regents were, Mrs.
Frank Bell, 1926 ~ 1928; Mrs.
Cabelle Walker . 1928 - 1930;
Mrs. c. Wayne Booth, 1~30 1932; Mrs. Hubert Carnes, 19321934 ; Mrs. W. N. Hayward, 1934 1936; Mrs. Harry Hum, 1936 1940 ; M.iss Anna Zlrrunerman,
1940 - 1946; Mrs. Frank Wetherholt , 1946 - 1948; Miss Anne G.
llill, 1948 - 1950; Mrs. D. H.

Richards, 1950 - 195J; Mrs. L.
H. Nelson, 1953 - 19.56; Mis s
Mary Cutler, 1956 - 1960; Mi ss
Ame G. 11111 , 1960 - 1962; Mrs.
Lawr ence Gates, 1962 - 1963;
Mrs. M, T, E{iling, 1963 - 1968
and ~rs . Robert W. Hagen, 1968.
or the 15 P'dst Regents the fol lowing n..·e still living are: Mrs.
Wayne Booth, Mrs. L . H. r..·el son, Mrs. F rank Wetherholt,
f\.lrs. Lawrence Gates and Mrs.

ANNOUNCE BIRTHS

Mr . and Mrs. Jack R, Crank
or Henderson, W. Va., aiUlounce
Ule birth of a son , Sept. 28 at
Holzer Hospital . The baby weighed 7 pounds and 4 Otmces and has
been named David Allen.
lie is being wei romed by a
two -.r ea r~ld brother, Billy Hay .
Maternal grandparent s are Mr.
and Mr s. Max Tawney, and paternal grandparents ar c Mr. and
Mr s. Ra.l-' Crai g, Dayton.

According

lo

the

Bible ,

Jubal invented the harp .

GALLU,OUS Basil Evans
was honored recently on his 64th
birthday wlth a special supper.
His children and grandchildren

M. T. £&lt;&gt;ling.

A birthday card waa sent

French Colony Chapter has
had a membership or 98, with
54 living and 44 deceased. The
chapter has had three real granddaughters of the Revolution, Mrs.
Mary Bratt, who died in 1940·
Mrs. Sarah Richards McDanJel'
who died in 1944, and Mrs. Au:
gusta Howe Keut, who died in

19.17.
The ch!Pter has had two Fiftyyear members. They are Mrs.
W. N. Hayward and Mrs. D. R.
Richards .
Locally an early project was
the gateway to Mound Hill Cemetery, where a bronze plaque
was placed listing the He"Yolu tionary soldiers buried there
there, the second bronze oo the
right side was taken by vandals.
The group is oow collecting flUids
to replace the pla(J.Ie.
Under the Regency of Miss
Arula Zimmerman a survey of
all Gall Ia County cemeteries was
made by name, location and size
of cemetery listing the Revolutionary soldiers buried in each
area.
A copy of this survey was given lhe American Legion Post
No. 27 for their project or compiling tile burial of soldiers or
all war s .
The DAR is interested in learning if there are other s in Gallia
C:Otmt;y who have anees ters who
served in the Hevolutionary War.
During the Oct. 7 meeting,
the president's message was gi ..·cn by Mr s . Arthur Espenschied,
It stressed, love of Cl&gt;untry,
The Ameri can Way of life, good
citi zenship, and reuniting Lo preserve and presenl loss of things
we hold dea r.
Get well cards were sent to
Mrs . Ethel Clark, Mrs. Harry
Mcl·lenry and Mrs. Elizabeth
Carnes Futch of Nashville, Ga.

Mrs. Ellao Wetherholt.
A round-robin letter was

M. T. Ej&gt;llng.

The next meetln.g wUl be at
the home of Mrs. Howard L
Neal on Nov. 4 at 2 p.m.
The guest speaker will be Mrs.
Florence Ecker. Her topic will
be, The American Indian.

Missionary
Group Works
On Quilts
GALLIPOLIS - The Nortlllp
Missionary Society spent the afternoon ol their October meeting working on quills. The meeting was held at the home of Miss
Bonnie Nibert . Ten members and
guests attended.
At 2:30 p, m. the meeting was
called to order by the president,
Bea £Hiott. The opening song
was, "Where He Leads Me.''
Scripture was read by Mrs. Wil liam Dailey, and verse prayer
was led by Mrs. Bruce Unroe.
Readings were given b~ Mrs.
Grover 9loemaker, "Some Definitions"; Mrs. Faye Rose,
••war and Peacen; Mrs. Bruce
Unroe, "Our &amp;!staining God.''
and Mrs, William Dalley, "Take
Time." Minutes were read and
awroved.
The groop voted to sot a gift
for Mrs. Inez Nedro. They were
dismissed with the Lord's Prayer .

MORE WOMEN WEAR
FAIRFIELD SHE SHELLS
TO MORE PLACES ON MORE
OCCASIONS THAN ANY
OTHER TOP IN THE WORLD

A.

oo the progress of plans for the
dub'"! Chri1tmu ·.flower show.
Mrs. William ' Minshall wM
given a gift tor her new home
in Missouri , to show appreciation of her work in this club.
Mrs. George Coones, last year's
president, was also presented
with a gift of three lovely wooden
bases for flower arrangements.
Refreshments we re served b\'
the hostesses in the Hallowe~
theme with a lovely arrangement in a pumpkin with mums,
birds and bees named, "October Skies" as the centerpiece.
Mrs. Harley George also had an
arrangement of asters.
The November meeting will
be held at the home or Mrs. Wy mond Bradbury.

~ll onweor
~

V .
•~•ut•

A.

CLASSIC CARDIGAN . Rob·Kn;r

All mau~ .rom
Monsanto Blue "C" Nylon:
wnnkleproot, stretchproof
completely madtine
'
w.nhable and dryable.

•

on top, cuff s end bottom . Sizes

34-42 .

B.

.JEWEL NECK SHORT SLIPDN .
With saddle shoulder ond z ip

$8
6

$

bock . s.,., 34-40 . - - - - - - -

C.

SUPER SMART LONG SLEE•V•E--$7
TURTLE HECK SLIPOVER
w1th zip-bock. Sizes 34 -42 .

wm

FREE PADDING

II

AND

INST ALLAliON

{

With The Purchase Of .. . .

CARPET

At Regular Price
PRFSIDES AT TEA TABLE - Mrs. ~rt E. Mead engaged ln : onversatlon with Mrs. E. M. Oke) Wiseman during
the deuert luncheon served by the Junior Wooten's Club before the style s how

As. Low Ao

eNYLON
eACRILAN

SEE OUR NICE SELECTION
leave it to the Girls
NEW YORK WPil - Pa per
cups do a lot a round the how.e
besides serving as a beverage
co.otalner
One manufacturer hi!.6 found
women are using the cups in
boundlcs5 ways. Samples : a.s
fruit salad cup, tn hold sh!!rbert , shrimp salad, instant
pudding , salad drebSing, as 11
cookJe cutter, pin cushion,
plant seedllng , button storage,
to hold Christmas orname nts,
measuring, and for practlclnl
101t putting.

DEPT. STORE

sq. yd.

•

•
J

eWOOL
eHERCULON

Ln

fi
l

Ovor 500 Colors and Polterno To Soled' From.
Co..,. In Today and Mako Your Solactlon

WOOLS, WOOL BLENDS
AND BONDED WOOLENS
$1.49 TO $4. 00 Y.t.RD

Darnbrough's

6. 95

•

e FREE ESTIMATES e EASY TERMS
OPEN MOND.hncl FRIDAY NIGHTS

Lilli Ann Coats, a bloom of Beauly ill arty srtow(all alld ·a
sign of quality from Bernadine's, Southeastern Ohio's Coat Closet.
9:00 to .5:00
Monday , Tu••dor ,
w.ctnudor. &amp;ot...,.doy
9· 12 Thur1 .

9:00 to 9:00

'

Friday

·GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'-

326 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, 0.

Green Hn.....
And
Cur Flowers
Flowers in perfect
taste for everyone
Weddings, funerals
Special Occasions
Corsages

-Ar~c~~

fc~,S'~.

Floral
Arran8ement1
ao Spe&lt;lfi&lt;d
We Deliver

~.

Daughter Born to

BOSWORTH'S FLOWERS

Williams Family

. Ph. «6-41114

NeighbOrhood Rd.

~
·,·•)

f,.~
-. ~... ··~·-':141:. 0
'~---' .... ..-t',- ~~

II

D.

CREW HECK, LONG SLEEVE
$ 7
SLIPDVER. Z;pp•..
•.bo•c•k•c•lo•s•
·-ure . Sizes 34-42 .

E.

MOCK TURTLE
OVER.
LONG SLEEVE$. Zip-

HECK•S•L•IP··--~$·7 .

per boc k. Sizes 34-42 . ·

CHOOSE FROM
15 NEW FALL COLORS

~onwear·

-·

•WHITE
• BLACK
•LT. PINK
•LT. BLUE
•LT. YELLOW
•NAVY
• DARK BROWN
• FAWN
• RED
• MOSS GREEN
0
MED. GREEN
• OLIVE
•MOCHIA
•BEIGE
•DUSTY BLUE

E.

\
'

land Williams, Crown Clt,y, and
one paternal great~grandfather,
Ralpll Albright.

\

./

sem

to Mrs. Osa Baird, 1062 Waverly Place, Schenectacly, N.Y.,
12308.
The new 1969 DAR year books
were dlslrlbutecl. Report of Na.
tiona! Delen!e waa efven by MrL

attended,
Present were Mr. and Mrs. Alli'ed Vallance, Jr. and Ssndra,
Mr. and !\.1rs. BiUy Gene Evans
and daughters, Kathy and Barbara. The e\'ent was planned by
Mrs. Basil Evans who wa s alsoJ
presenL
One grandson, Terry, was
missing. He is atlendingUleMRta
Drafting College in Colwnbus.

to

SHE SHELLS
AVAILABLE IN
16 DIFFERENT
STYLES.

�•

•

'•

I ....

'

.•.

•

. . ·-

8 _ The Sunday Tlmea - Sentinel • Sund..,
~' October 13, 1968

•

two highest income brackets for
t96i .
In the $0 to $2,999 income
bracket, 40.9 per cent were listed in !966, while in 1967 38.6
per cent were noted in this bracket. The number - or perc~ ­
agt! _ of wago earners rece1v i.ng $3,000 to $4,999 a year Wrin 1967 was tR .H per cent compared to l9. 7 per cent in 1966.
\bout one-fourth of the work ~rs _ or 25.6 per cent In 1967
_ earned S5,UUO to $7,999 a
year while in 1966 the percentage was 2,:. .4.
.
In 1966 , 8.8 per cent or Me1gs

pe;

....·•·

UTTl .E IILHT
DFN\'1:.:1! (l' PO- The Dem:er

•
•''
•• :1
.• •'
,••• •
•• •
• •

\f

Broncos will be . W1·thou t .t h ,e
senices of runmnt; bad, l- ~o)d
Little in 9..mdas·~ Amen_can
Football League game agawst
.
the 1\'ew York Jets.
l.itlle, who reinjured h~s ankle
during
a
light S(:nmmage
Thursda,y, has been placed on
the injur ed waiver list and
won't make the trip to 1\;ew
York.

.

.

•

NIGHTS =~·NY

t!urnln~e rtr lkhlnu urln&amp;~.llfln nlMhl
· and d&amp;~.y. St'i~IOdurlly, ytu1 may Jrolll.'
) Mll'\'11 und hav~ Helllluche, Ulitlcat:he
und lt"l'l uldu tired, r:lePrt'~Wed . Jn

~ur·h 1 :u~11 CYS:Tt;X UII.IBIIY brlnM~
rel&amp;~.xlnu ,,;mfort t)y eurb1nK lrrltutlnl( Merm' In iiCid urine- lind qult:kly
t•uMinl( (ouln I it•tf:YSTEX ul drugi( IIIUI

MEDAJ..Ci PRI&lt;St:NTiill - Major Jo~n Hol4 U. S. Maoclne
Corps., Charleston, W. Va., is pictured Thursday evt!ning presenting medaJs to Mr. and Mrs, Reina LiB.i, Pomeroy, whose
son, Marine Pte, Thomas R. Lind, was killed on Aug. 26 in

---------

PLEASANT POINT
RESORT
Two con ero p:oy foroe food , en!er·
loinmer&gt;l, mu•i c, dan~'"9 end
d 1 n 1n9 "' ine~pens ve ly oo Q• oe
"'hen you "'"Y ot !he

PLEASANT POINT
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FOR REHRVATIONS CALL
675·1611
begon5

at $9 .50

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SPECIAL BUFFET
EVERY SUNDAY

,.

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PLEASANT POINT
RESORT
Point Pleofoont

Victims

DITCH-DIGGING MACHINE Is turned Into a labor-savior
device h these Gls filling sandbags In Vietnam. Opera:
by a JoUr :!lan crew. the converted ditch digger can
four bags a mtnutt&gt;.

W. Vr1 .

·,.

..

Be kind
to YOU I' back
ana yom· budget
&amp;SA\E $:10 ~.~. .

Keep Up witll tile News •IHHit
S/liiJiping 111111 St~rinJs, 1• •••

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You'll see by the paper what's new, what's going on, what's to do. In your newspaper, your

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on w o sol! c m al!ress !ho s 'I The once on- a -lole11rm: • ' ~1-" " I " ' .' ~,
\fUU ·ve oeen ,;;ar!on g lo r Nu ,., lara loml!er1 tornfl on ll' iCc'' ' "'' t.-",
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'Nhrr ''~ll!lr r'latttess Y"'-' uec ode on '' h~ s tu llll goo c news lcr •'"'-"
t;a :. ~ an d nur outlg 11T /he Berrc o Sac rr•oeUu or Sacrooed •c h;p e· , ~l
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from your shopping dollars.

Hr """ Ia 10~

foe Wo&lt; ld 1 Ur talnt Slupo~q f1 i l 1

lhmto Q,.dlonm . l "'~"· ,al 189 )~ Bemcn Oud!OI.• ma S/9 /~

II
OPEN
MONDAY
AND
FRIDAY

'Wt Cf'R~ Y CJR OWN ACCOUNT5"

L._L NIG~!~------------::~·11:;,~~-

........_____._------.

Arias Ousted Third Time

Apollo Crew
Refuses TV
Appearance

Marietta Gets

Sscropedlc Imperial fllanresses.
Hurry I Limited Time Only I

than~s

SAIGON (UP0- South Vietna- expected to affect m1 litary
mese troops in a relief force operations in So~th Vietnam's made its northernmu·;t run and Infantry Uivision reported ldllorened up with ils big JG~inch
heading toward the Green Beret northern
quarter
a 1d
the
ing at least 41 Communists
camp at Thoong Due fought panhandle area of North Viet - guns against a North Vietna- Friday
with
Ule
help of
2,0110 North Vietnamese regu- nam for the next five months. mese truck convoy in the helh:opter gunships southwest of
panhandle. The New Jersey
lars Saturday ln combat deRa..ids Curtailed
Saigon nc&lt;tr Rarh Kien. Five
began
Hs first firi01t; missions
scribed as "eyeball to e}'eball."
Amnricans were killed.
Poor flying weather curtailed
The battle raged into the night 1\merlcan air raids against lhe ag-.Unst North Vietnam on Sept.
Ncllr Trang Bang, 28 miles
30.
al hand grenade range.
panhandle Friday, but the U.S.
northwes t or Saigm, men of the
rn other developments, scat - U.S.. 25th Infantry Division
A.lliod spokesmen reported al ~avy battleship New Jersey
least 54 North Vietnamese killed was ..mhampered by the weath - tered fighting erupted Friday whic/1 rctn into a ~mmunist
west of Saigm and in the for ce Thursday reported killing
in the big right two miles from cr.
Thuong Due, an outpost 25
The New Jersey, only battle· Mekong Delta where the shift- 26 l!eds Frida.,v at a cust of six
miles southwest of Da Nang s hip in action in the world, ing fT·" ·•SOOns were lettinfi up, Americans killed a1d 16 woundTroops of the U.S. 9ti ed.
which sits astride a main
Corrununlst infiltration route.
:i&gt;uth VietniiiDese losses were
four killed and 14 wounded,
spokesmen said.
Second Battle
It was the second battle oC the
PANAMA CITY (UP0-1'wo
day in the Thung Due area. national guard colonels Satw-- fanned out th rOUg h the capital have joined tlle movement and
Before dawn, a North VIetna- day established a military junta and ordered passersby on the that complete calm reigns
mese force stormed a night to ruJe Panama foJiowing an streel to "move along" or "go tllroughout tile COUnt!')·.''
i!ldoor s," The capital remained
defensive position marmed by
It further said all co1stitutionearly morning COl\) while troop~
calm
but Panamanians feared
U.S. Marines five miles north of
set up sand-bagged machine gun rioting Vw'ou.Jd erupt an.er sunset. a1 guarantees would relllrn
the camp, k.illing eight ,\ meri - nests at several key intersecfollowing
the departnre of
Traffic was
sparse
but "ambitious and uncontroJled
cans and wounding 20 before tions.
restricted in only three area s of
being driven off. The Marines
In lhe Canal Zone, only two the capital- around the pres- politicians," apparentJ) referreported
killing
31
North
miles from the presidential idential palace, Arias' private ring to the Arias' government
Vietnamese.
(In the canat Zone, the tJ.S.
palace, President Arnulfo Arias residence
aOO
around
the government warned all .4Jnerl~
Monsoon rain turned the met with his cabinet and issued
Thung
Due
area
into a a statement saying he would National Guard headqtwrters,
can
military
and
ci\i lian
The National Guard permitted personnel in Panama to be
quagmire as the 4,000-man soon be back in o!ficc.
only one newspaper to publish prepared
allied relief force tried to reach
to
evacuate the
Third Ouster
Saturd&amp;J morning and set up
the
camp and crush the
country
to
the
Canal
Zone, a
The c&lt;q&gt; was the third time
guards around
the
Commwtist thr{'at to it. LoBs of in his s tormy political career armed
territory under the administrabuildings of two other newspaThuong Due wm1ld open the Wa.Jo
Arias had been ousted as pers, refusing to allov.' workers tion of the IJnited States.)
to the possibility of a major president of Panama. He had
Police Protedion
Communist offen~ive on 11a j t.. s t taken otflce 12 days ago. to leav~.
(In
WashingtOn,
1 State
A guard
s tatement
wa3 Department spokesman said it
Nang, South Vietnam's second
The
National
Guard anlargest cil.Y and the site o! a nounced that a tw~an junta published in the one newspaper would be "premature" to say
allowed to print, El Mundo, the United States would break
major U.S, air base .
or Col. Bolivar Urrutia and Col.
U.S. commanders said rain, Jose Maria Inills would take which said the National Guard relations with Panama. The
"has control of all detachments spokesman said Arias had been
thick clouds and fog pr oduced (.' Onlrol of the country.
of the Republic, (and) that all given po]i&lt;.-e protection in the
by the winter m tHI!\1)1)0 can be
Troops in full battle dress
officials, classes and troops Canal Zone.)

KEY RISCANE, F'la. (UP0In the finaJ weeks of the
Richard
M.
Nixon had a campaign Nixon plans to stop in a sanctuary for aggressions and
promise for dollar-short citJes the big s tates where most pol ls a base for tfle export of terror
to other lands,"
and a warning ror Fidel Castro show him leading his DemocraSharing Proposal
Saturday as he settled In for a tic rival, Vire President Hubert
Nixon
proposed sharing fedcrweekend
or
SLUJshine and ll. Humphrey . Nixon returns to
aJ
tax
revenues
with cities to
strategy sessions,
the campaign trail Tuesday
help
combat
crime
and purge
The GOP presidential candi . \Vith a rally in Miami.
pollutants
from
the
nation's
air
date accused the JohnsonNixon said the admirtistration
and
water.
He
also
caJied
for
RUTLAND- "I am in favor of Humphrey
administration of has talked tough to Communist
a ceiling of $20,000 on farm sl&amp;- failures at home and abroad in Cuba's Castro but has ''walked new tax breaks Cor industry to
sidy payments," lOth District two separate statE:mcnts issued on egg shells'' in dealing wtU1 spur installation of pullution
control equipment.
Democrat COneres!llo:l&amp;.l candi- from his island headquarters. the dictator . lie promised that a
"We now pay a fearfUl price
date Harry
Crewson said Nixon was staying at the horne Nixon administration would do
for
the Qp,POrtunW.es
a nd
of Florida DemocratJc Sen. a better job conducting an
Thursday,
pleasures
of
city
livinga
price
George
Smathers.
Crewson, speaking at a special
economic boycott against Cuba.
we should not have to pay, ..
Meets With J\dvisers
dinner-meeting of the Democratic
"We do not seek a new crisis Nixon said.
With JO ,OOO miles of cam- or heightened tensions in the
Action Club In Rutland, saJd that
Nixon called the fight against
without thh limit a few large paigning behind him Nixon met C&lt;tribbean," 1\'h:on said. "But
pollution
a COOperative effort
farms are receiving enormous with top advisers to plan what the Comm tmist regime must be
with
local
government and said
payments which constitute need- he called ''the strongest finish made
to
understand
that
the
federal
government must
less waste of tax money. Crew- in American history.''
llavana cannot remain forever help p.a,y the bill .
son cited the United States Sugar
Corp. which received $1,275,000
in a one-year period and the South
Lake Farms in california which
received $2,863,000 In the same
period.
"As a member or the Agricultural Committee In the House JJl
.reaentaUves, Congressman
Miller has voted to continue this
wa!lteful and unfair expenditw-e
MA.I\IILA (lJPD - Philippine
of farm sOOsidy payments to a few
National
Police Saturday held
large
farm
organizations,"
the
skipper
of a sunken inter
Crewson told his supporters.
island
ferry
for
possible crimin"On JuJ.y 31 (1968) he voted
al
charges
as
an
air-sea search
ap.inst puttill£ a $20,000 limit on
was
pressed
for
more
survivors.
farm subsidy payments to an,y
Navy
authorities
said
about
one farm operation. This vote,"
100
passengers
of
the
ferry
Orewson cootinued, "was against
SPACE CEI\TEH,
Houston
the best interests of the farmers were missing. At least 286 (Upl)_ Tfle crew of the .&lt;\polio intricate maneuvers necessary
ia the 10th District and against the persons were rescued, The 7, bluntly refu.c;ing to appear on to rendezvous with the jetti ~
best interests of all laxpayers Pnilippine News Service said 16 television, blasted away on a soned se~o.1d stage of their
Saturn IB rocket, between 95
Who are (~)posed to need1ess bodies were recovered
100-miie space chase Saturday
and 115 miles away from them.
A radio report received by the
wasfe,"
in a maneuver necessary to
At 1:28 p.m., Sclllrra touched
Navy
from
the
scene
of
the
Crews on said the present farm
rescue moon explorers stranded
off
the spacecraft's 21,000-pound
disaster
off
Zamboanga
City
500
Pl'Ograms should be overhauled,
In space.
thrust
service propulsion engine
miles
south
of
Manila
said
some
"We must chan,ge these program!
" That's a real kick in the
first
time man has used
the
of
the
missing
persons
may
so that Qllce again maximum ben!ann)-,'' called Apollo 1 comsuch
a
rocket
in space.
eftt!l will go to the small and av- have been attacked b)' sharks. mander Walter Schirra a s the
"Abba
dabba
doo," gasped
"Ship captain Matildo Mall- spacecraft's big ro::-k'.!t fired
erage-si.ze ·farms, not to the few
CuMingharn
as
the mighty
giant corporate farms. We need .ion, one of the survivors, is now them into a new orbit to
rocket
kicked
them
upward.
programs that are concerned with under Constabulary (National rendezvous with their burned"Man,
that's
a
ride
and a
Carm Income parity rather than Police) inve st igation for possi- out rocke ~ 's second stage,
half,"
said
Schirra.
The
"burn"
price pa.rity,"theeoonomicspro- ble criminal charges," the Navy
The maueu\'er, e:.pected to
lasted for about nine secon:ls,
report said.
fessor stated.
ENGLISH SCORE,S. - Som-:mhere under the goal line pilelast for several hours, cam(.;
Initial findings Indicated a midway in the s mooth secord raising ApoJlo 7 into a higher
and was virtually ruled out of w:nn;.ngthe loop cr0\'1~ agam Lhjs
"" above, Meigs Ful lback Kenny Engli s h has picked 141 enough
crack In the foreward section of day or th e planned 11-d~· . 163- orbit than the booster arxf
yea.·. M~: : Ks players, from lett, indu:1e Mlk~ Barr (7fl . Jeff
yardage to score tlle final Marauder touchdown Friday night
giving it, in effect, greater
Werry ( II) and Jon Klee s (84),
the hull caused tl1e boat to urbit mission of Apollo 7.
against Logan. Meigs suffered a 16-14 loss ir~the 'iEOI\L das~
speed
to
allow
it
to
overtake
U1e
ca,Hi:te and sink as it was
No TV
dead booster,
carrying Filipinos to a religious
Earlier SctJirra, his dislike of
"That's a real kick in tbe
Cesth•al in Zambt)lln.ga.
!-ipacebornc television dimmed
fanny,"
said ScllirrL "That
It sank In a narrow strait further by the discomfor~ of U1e
beauty
really
SO('ks it to YOlL •·
about
15
miles east
or fi rst head cold in space, refused
HIRAM, Ohio (LTPO - Marlet. Zamboanga.
The rehlezvous with the
to turn on tele.,.ision cameras rocket booster is similar to a
ta bounced back from a deficit
A Navy spokesman told UPJ ins ide the spaceCraft.
In the second halt Saturday to the survivors claimed there
maneuver which later Apollo
"I refuse to foul I.Jl our time
turn back HJram 21 -7. in an were aOOut '100 persons aboard
crews might have to make in
lines that way," Schirra radioed case moon explorers, Q.ying In a
Ohio Conference game.
the ferr y when it left Cotabato,
The Pioneers got on t h e a cll.y 400 miles across the Mora to his boss, astronaut chief lunar lander, had to be rescued
Donald Slayton.
ICoreboard in the third period Gulf from Zamboanga,
NEW YORK (IJPI) - Hubert
In space, Normally, the lunar
Instead, Schirra and his
when ('J.Iarterback Bob Hauser
H.
Humphrey, recovering from
larder would be responsible for
The chief mate Of fne
crewmen, Donn Eisele and
scored on a one-yard plunge to motor
a
mild
case of intestinal au,
making contact witJJ the mother
vessel told authormes on.:
e•p a 17 -Yard drive set up by manifest Jlsted only 223 persons Walter Cumingham, , started the ship.
today planned to make a
halfback George Sauer's 31 - with a crew of 35 but additional
nationally televised policy acf..
yard punt
dre.c;s
on law a1r:l order but
pas se ngers were allowed
Marietta lallled again In the aboard, apparently because of
decided to limit his other
third stanza when halfback the good weather .
activities in New York City.
Chris Cortez pushed over from
Humphrey was reported "feelNavy officials said the nor.
WlLLIA.&gt;,t';BURG, VL (UP0 the two arter the Pioneers re- mally approved capacity Cor a
scored on a 7-yard run after di- ing better" after a goo.i night's
t,KJVered a fumble on theJr 24 · similar boat was 150 passen- Unbeate:. Ohio University pushed recting the BWcats on a 78-yard sleep. He got lJ) at 9:30 Lm to
·'yard line.
across 28 points in the second drive,
put tile Rnishing touches on his
gers.
period Saturday and went on to
Quarterback
P h I I Slpka
Defensive back Bruce Herrllon la" and order address.
humiliate William &amp; Mary 41-0 grabbed a fwnble out of the air
rounded out the scoring Co r FIND TWO GUlL TY
Hun!J)hrey canceled a tour or
before a disappointed homecomMarietta on a 13.yard run alter
Halem,
East Halem and the
a.._,
ran
13
yards
to
make
It
1~
SAIGON (UPD-A mUitary ing crowd of 12,500.
Sauer lnterr.epted a .\)ISS on the
ghetto
areas
of The Bronx and
and
begin
the
early
second
percourt Friday foural a Buddhist
The Ohioans frustrated the InfUram 49 and returned the ball university professor an::l a
Iod scoring.
h's starr announced he would
dians with a devastating ruMing
38 yards to llle 13.
Less than five minutes later rn.&gt;t participate in the Columbus
student gull ty of C001munisl
Sipka went 10 for 23 in t h e propaganda acthrities and sen- game led by workhorse tailback Conley scored frOITI n ve Yards Day parade. However, there
Dick Conley, who s~ two
paBslng department for 85 yarda.
tenced them to tw~year sus- touchdowns, and an alert defense out. Thirty secoOOs later defen- was a slight chance Hwnphre.r
Hiram quarterback AI Feldman
sive back Mike Schott intercept- would cha~ his mioo and
pended jail terms. The convic~
which converted a Cwnble and an ed a pass by William &amp; Mary's attend the annual march on
eompleted el!liJt. for 15 lor 138
tions brougttt to nine the Interception
into touchdowns Jim Leycock and ran 35 yards Firth Avenue.
yards.
number of students jailed or put
Marietta boosted Its confer- under suspeD:Ied sentence slll('e within one SO-second stand in the to make it 27-0.
ence record to :J-.0. The team the spate of trials for suspected secorkl period,
Ohio wrapped 1.11 its first half
co:lley, a pile driving senior scoring three mirwtes later when
Ia 3-1 overall. Hiram now is
Communist
afnliation began from Zanesville, Ohio, gained
WOOSTE;R BUMPED
11,3 In conference play and 0..1 three months ago.
Todd S~der returned a punt 44
DELAWARE,
Ohio (UP[)
162 yards on 29 carries during
overall.
yards to the Irdian!ll six and Bob
tht: game and scored on runs of Hownard dived ovj'r from one Defending 0 h i o ConferenL-e
champ Ohio We&amp;leyan trounced
nve
and i7 yards.
'Sar.ty•
Winton
hMltaJI
yard out four plays later to make
Wooster t«-7 Saturday as Bob
Ohio, unbeaten in tour games It 34-0 at halftlmo.
HOLLYWOOD ltJPii..lf'OK'YO (UPil - Woolla the
Badami scorec:t touchdowns on
mitn ln1redtent or a new base- Jonathan Winters has been and leaders in the Mld·Amerlcan
Cooley coq,ped a 58 yard drive
biD being developed tor use In named ]968 Amb&amp;&amp;88dor for conference, cot on lhe score- with a 17 yard touchdown dash runs Gf 73, six and 17 yards .
.J'pan's m11 .tnr hAMhA.ll leques. Safet.v b.v the National Safety board carl,y In the Drst period
The lmo Wooster marker came
around right end in the third
Coul}( :l.
on a It-yard pass pla,y
Tom
EFFORT - Delwds Ault, senior end Cor Meigs. 'urns in a :t!ce catch Cll1 thla
when quarterback Cleve Bryant period.
pass from Marauder Quarterback .Jeff. Werry. Ault is about to 00 rfotrned by Logarfs Chuek Col...
Doa.........,.t&lt;&gt; Rick Sollman.
rad.(40).

a

AT THE BEAUTIFUL

2

Vietnam. Major Holt presented the Purple Heart Medal with
Gold Star, the National Defense Ribbon, the Vietnam Service
Medal, the Vtetnam Ca.rnpaign Medal, and PoJrple Heart lapel
pins for Mr. and Mrs. Lind.

Crewson Nixon Meets With Advisers
Favors
Ceiling

·~

SU_N_DA_Y. OCTOBER 13, 1968~ ___ _ _ _ _ _P._~...;:.G_E_9

54 North Vietnamese
Die In Fierce Fighting

In the Paper

2 FOR 1 WEEKEND
Octoller &amp; November
SPECIAL

far

VOL. 3 NO. 37

Look. Sis, What's

I
I

'J

Rate •

~

C'tommun Kldnuy ur Bhulr:lt.'l' Irrlla·
tiu nM mr.lw muny ml'n 11nd wonwn
(t•l'l tcnK' und rn : rw,u~ fl'f,m frl'tjuenl.

Cotmty workers earned $8,0uo.
$9 999 compared to 7,3 per cent
e~nlng that amount in 1966.
1n llle highest wage groop, $!0,000 or aver, 8.2 per cent were
in this category in 1967 compared to s. 7 per cent receiving the
highest wages in 1966.
Populatloo of Meig.o C&lt;&gt;tJncy
In bolll 1966 and 1967 lo listed
at 20,800 - a stelUb' decrease
from 1959 and the number of
households in the county C 0 r
both years is Usted at 6,200.
In l959, the nwnber ot households was listed at 7,100.
Total retail sales in Melg11
County during 1967 amoonted to
$26 433 OOtl compared to $26,.
045, ooo' for l966 . Of the total
spe~t in the retail sales figure,
SG,GII7,1100 was spent for food;
SJ,J 42,000 for general rner~han,
d1se,
..-~ 1•094 • 000 for, rurmture
$
and household appliances; 5,0G2 000 for automotive expendit.ur~s and $ 1,08 1,000 for drugs
during 196';'. F[gures on the
amount spent for apparel, eating and drinking, gasoline station cxpcndih•res, and lumber,
building and hardware expendi tures are not listed for 1967.

,. ""'. &gt;' .

'. -" .... .. ' . ..

'

GmiNGUP

Purchasing Dollars Show
•
Increase In '67 Over '66
BY BOB IIOEFLICII
.
POMEROY _ The purchasmg
power of Meigs County people
Increased two and a hall ~ill ion
doUars from 1966 to 1961, according to a report pre~rcd b~
U!e Cooperative Extension Sc1vice at Meigs County here,
The figure for 1966 was $31, 502,000 and in 1967 it was $:14, 900 000. This averag('s S5. 498
household in l!J67 compared
to $5,081 in 1966.
The report indicates that Ulc
number of residents in the lowst income braekct decreased a :Out two per rent in 1967 compared to the previous yc~r. ,\
slight incn:asc was noted m the

·-· .. '.

I

NEWSPAPERS ...
THEINQEPENQENJ
MEDIUM

junbap 1rimts • jentintl
~

Humphrey
Activities

21-7 Victory

Limiting

2t-ton

_,rn.

OU Romps, 41-0

'1(1101

-

rrom

I

._,., • #.

TI!EimNDou~

�•

•

'•

I ....

'

.•.

•

. . ·-

8 _ The Sunday Tlmea - Sentinel • Sund..,
~' October 13, 1968

•

two highest income brackets for
t96i .
In the $0 to $2,999 income
bracket, 40.9 per cent were listed in !966, while in 1967 38.6
per cent were noted in this bracket. The number - or perc~ ­
agt! _ of wago earners rece1v i.ng $3,000 to $4,999 a year Wrin 1967 was tR .H per cent compared to l9. 7 per cent in 1966.
\bout one-fourth of the work ~rs _ or 25.6 per cent In 1967
_ earned S5,UUO to $7,999 a
year while in 1966 the percentage was 2,:. .4.
.
In 1966 , 8.8 per cent or Me1gs

pe;

....·•·

UTTl .E IILHT
DFN\'1:.:1! (l' PO- The Dem:er

•
•''
•• :1
.• •'
,••• •
•• •
• •

\f

Broncos will be . W1·thou t .t h ,e
senices of runmnt; bad, l- ~o)d
Little in 9..mdas·~ Amen_can
Football League game agawst
.
the 1\'ew York Jets.
l.itlle, who reinjured h~s ankle
during
a
light S(:nmmage
Thursda,y, has been placed on
the injur ed waiver list and
won't make the trip to 1\;ew
York.

.

.

•

NIGHTS =~·NY

t!urnln~e rtr lkhlnu urln&amp;~.llfln nlMhl
· and d&amp;~.y. St'i~IOdurlly, ytu1 may Jrolll.'
) Mll'\'11 und hav~ Helllluche, Ulitlcat:he
und lt"l'l uldu tired, r:lePrt'~Wed . Jn

~ur·h 1 :u~11 CYS:Tt;X UII.IBIIY brlnM~
rel&amp;~.xlnu ,,;mfort t)y eurb1nK lrrltutlnl( Merm' In iiCid urine- lind qult:kly
t•uMinl( (ouln I it•tf:YSTEX ul drugi( IIIUI

MEDAJ..Ci PRI&lt;St:NTiill - Major Jo~n Hol4 U. S. Maoclne
Corps., Charleston, W. Va., is pictured Thursday evt!ning presenting medaJs to Mr. and Mrs, Reina LiB.i, Pomeroy, whose
son, Marine Pte, Thomas R. Lind, was killed on Aug. 26 in

---------

PLEASANT POINT
RESORT
Two con ero p:oy foroe food , en!er·
loinmer&gt;l, mu•i c, dan~'"9 end
d 1 n 1n9 "' ine~pens ve ly oo Q• oe
"'hen you "'"Y ot !he

PLEASANT POINT
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FOR REHRVATIONS CALL
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begon5

at $9 .50

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Victims

DITCH-DIGGING MACHINE Is turned Into a labor-savior
device h these Gls filling sandbags In Vietnam. Opera:
by a JoUr :!lan crew. the converted ditch digger can
four bags a mtnutt&gt;.

W. Vr1 .

·,.

..

Be kind
to YOU I' back
ana yom· budget
&amp;SA\E $:10 ~.~. .

Keep Up witll tile News •IHHit
S/liiJiping 111111 St~rinJs, 1• •••

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You'll see by the paper what's new, what's going on, what's to do. In your newspaper, your

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on w o sol! c m al!ress !ho s 'I The once on- a -lole11rm: • ' ~1-" " I " ' .' ~,
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Hr """ Ia 10~

foe Wo&lt; ld 1 Ur talnt Slupo~q f1 i l 1

lhmto Q,.dlonm . l "'~"· ,al 189 )~ Bemcn Oud!OI.• ma S/9 /~

II
OPEN
MONDAY
AND
FRIDAY

'Wt Cf'R~ Y CJR OWN ACCOUNT5"

L._L NIG~!~------------::~·11:;,~~-

........_____._------.

Arias Ousted Third Time

Apollo Crew
Refuses TV
Appearance

Marietta Gets

Sscropedlc Imperial fllanresses.
Hurry I Limited Time Only I

than~s

SAIGON (UP0- South Vietna- expected to affect m1 litary
mese troops in a relief force operations in So~th Vietnam's made its northernmu·;t run and Infantry Uivision reported ldllorened up with ils big JG~inch
heading toward the Green Beret northern
quarter
a 1d
the
ing at least 41 Communists
camp at Thoong Due fought panhandle area of North Viet - guns against a North Vietna- Friday
with
Ule
help of
2,0110 North Vietnamese regu- nam for the next five months. mese truck convoy in the helh:opter gunships southwest of
panhandle. The New Jersey
lars Saturday ln combat deRa..ids Curtailed
Saigon nc&lt;tr Rarh Kien. Five
began
Hs first firi01t; missions
scribed as "eyeball to e}'eball."
Amnricans were killed.
Poor flying weather curtailed
The battle raged into the night 1\merlcan air raids against lhe ag-.Unst North Vietnam on Sept.
Ncllr Trang Bang, 28 miles
30.
al hand grenade range.
panhandle Friday, but the U.S.
northwes t or Saigm, men of the
rn other developments, scat - U.S.. 25th Infantry Division
A.lliod spokesmen reported al ~avy battleship New Jersey
least 54 North Vietnamese killed was ..mhampered by the weath - tered fighting erupted Friday whic/1 rctn into a ~mmunist
west of Saigm and in the for ce Thursday reported killing
in the big right two miles from cr.
Thuong Due, an outpost 25
The New Jersey, only battle· Mekong Delta where the shift- 26 l!eds Frida.,v at a cust of six
miles southwest of Da Nang s hip in action in the world, ing fT·" ·•SOOns were lettinfi up, Americans killed a1d 16 woundTroops of the U.S. 9ti ed.
which sits astride a main
Corrununlst infiltration route.
:i&gt;uth VietniiiDese losses were
four killed and 14 wounded,
spokesmen said.
Second Battle
It was the second battle oC the
PANAMA CITY (UP0-1'wo
day in the Thung Due area. national guard colonels Satw-- fanned out th rOUg h the capital have joined tlle movement and
Before dawn, a North VIetna- day established a military junta and ordered passersby on the that complete calm reigns
mese force stormed a night to ruJe Panama foJiowing an streel to "move along" or "go tllroughout tile COUnt!')·.''
i!ldoor s," The capital remained
defensive position marmed by
It further said all co1stitutionearly morning COl\) while troop~
calm
but Panamanians feared
U.S. Marines five miles north of
set up sand-bagged machine gun rioting Vw'ou.Jd erupt an.er sunset. a1 guarantees would relllrn
the camp, k.illing eight ,\ meri - nests at several key intersecfollowing
the departnre of
Traffic was
sparse
but "ambitious and uncontroJled
cans and wounding 20 before tions.
restricted in only three area s of
being driven off. The Marines
In lhe Canal Zone, only two the capital- around the pres- politicians," apparentJ) referreported
killing
31
North
miles from the presidential idential palace, Arias' private ring to the Arias' government
Vietnamese.
(In the canat Zone, the tJ.S.
palace, President Arnulfo Arias residence
aOO
around
the government warned all .4Jnerl~
Monsoon rain turned the met with his cabinet and issued
Thung
Due
area
into a a statement saying he would National Guard headqtwrters,
can
military
and
ci\i lian
The National Guard permitted personnel in Panama to be
quagmire as the 4,000-man soon be back in o!ficc.
only one newspaper to publish prepared
allied relief force tried to reach
to
evacuate the
Third Ouster
Saturd&amp;J morning and set up
the
camp and crush the
country
to
the
Canal
Zone, a
The c&lt;q&gt; was the third time
guards around
the
Commwtist thr{'at to it. LoBs of in his s tormy political career armed
territory under the administrabuildings of two other newspaThuong Due wm1ld open the Wa.Jo
Arias had been ousted as pers, refusing to allov.' workers tion of the IJnited States.)
to the possibility of a major president of Panama. He had
Police Protedion
Communist offen~ive on 11a j t.. s t taken otflce 12 days ago. to leav~.
(In
WashingtOn,
1 State
A guard
s tatement
wa3 Department spokesman said it
Nang, South Vietnam's second
The
National
Guard anlargest cil.Y and the site o! a nounced that a tw~an junta published in the one newspaper would be "premature" to say
allowed to print, El Mundo, the United States would break
major U.S, air base .
or Col. Bolivar Urrutia and Col.
U.S. commanders said rain, Jose Maria Inills would take which said the National Guard relations with Panama. The
"has control of all detachments spokesman said Arias had been
thick clouds and fog pr oduced (.' Onlrol of the country.
of the Republic, (and) that all given po]i&lt;.-e protection in the
by the winter m tHI!\1)1)0 can be
Troops in full battle dress
officials, classes and troops Canal Zone.)

KEY RISCANE, F'la. (UP0In the finaJ weeks of the
Richard
M.
Nixon had a campaign Nixon plans to stop in a sanctuary for aggressions and
promise for dollar-short citJes the big s tates where most pol ls a base for tfle export of terror
to other lands,"
and a warning ror Fidel Castro show him leading his DemocraSharing Proposal
Saturday as he settled In for a tic rival, Vire President Hubert
Nixon
proposed sharing fedcrweekend
or
SLUJshine and ll. Humphrey . Nixon returns to
aJ
tax
revenues
with cities to
strategy sessions,
the campaign trail Tuesday
help
combat
crime
and purge
The GOP presidential candi . \Vith a rally in Miami.
pollutants
from
the
nation's
air
date accused the JohnsonNixon said the admirtistration
and
water.
He
also
caJied
for
RUTLAND- "I am in favor of Humphrey
administration of has talked tough to Communist
a ceiling of $20,000 on farm sl&amp;- failures at home and abroad in Cuba's Castro but has ''walked new tax breaks Cor industry to
sidy payments," lOth District two separate statE:mcnts issued on egg shells'' in dealing wtU1 spur installation of pullution
control equipment.
Democrat COneres!llo:l&amp;.l candi- from his island headquarters. the dictator . lie promised that a
"We now pay a fearfUl price
date Harry
Crewson said Nixon was staying at the horne Nixon administration would do
for
the Qp,POrtunW.es
a nd
of Florida DemocratJc Sen. a better job conducting an
Thursday,
pleasures
of
city
livinga
price
George
Smathers.
Crewson, speaking at a special
economic boycott against Cuba.
we should not have to pay, ..
Meets With J\dvisers
dinner-meeting of the Democratic
"We do not seek a new crisis Nixon said.
With JO ,OOO miles of cam- or heightened tensions in the
Action Club In Rutland, saJd that
Nixon called the fight against
without thh limit a few large paigning behind him Nixon met C&lt;tribbean," 1\'h:on said. "But
pollution
a COOperative effort
farms are receiving enormous with top advisers to plan what the Comm tmist regime must be
with
local
government and said
payments which constitute need- he called ''the strongest finish made
to
understand
that
the
federal
government must
less waste of tax money. Crew- in American history.''
llavana cannot remain forever help p.a,y the bill .
son cited the United States Sugar
Corp. which received $1,275,000
in a one-year period and the South
Lake Farms in california which
received $2,863,000 In the same
period.
"As a member or the Agricultural Committee In the House JJl
.reaentaUves, Congressman
Miller has voted to continue this
wa!lteful and unfair expenditw-e
MA.I\IILA (lJPD - Philippine
of farm sOOsidy payments to a few
National
Police Saturday held
large
farm
organizations,"
the
skipper
of a sunken inter
Crewson told his supporters.
island
ferry
for
possible crimin"On JuJ.y 31 (1968) he voted
al
charges
as
an
air-sea search
ap.inst puttill£ a $20,000 limit on
was
pressed
for
more
survivors.
farm subsidy payments to an,y
Navy
authorities
said
about
one farm operation. This vote,"
100
passengers
of
the
ferry
Orewson cootinued, "was against
SPACE CEI\TEH,
Houston
the best interests of the farmers were missing. At least 286 (Upl)_ Tfle crew of the .&lt;\polio intricate maneuvers necessary
ia the 10th District and against the persons were rescued, The 7, bluntly refu.c;ing to appear on to rendezvous with the jetti ~
best interests of all laxpayers Pnilippine News Service said 16 television, blasted away on a soned se~o.1d stage of their
Saturn IB rocket, between 95
Who are (~)posed to need1ess bodies were recovered
100-miie space chase Saturday
and 115 miles away from them.
A radio report received by the
wasfe,"
in a maneuver necessary to
At 1:28 p.m., Sclllrra touched
Navy
from
the
scene
of
the
Crews on said the present farm
rescue moon explorers stranded
off
the spacecraft's 21,000-pound
disaster
off
Zamboanga
City
500
Pl'Ograms should be overhauled,
In space.
thrust
service propulsion engine
miles
south
of
Manila
said
some
"We must chan,ge these program!
" That's a real kick in the
first
time man has used
the
of
the
missing
persons
may
so that Qllce again maximum ben!ann)-,'' called Apollo 1 comsuch
a
rocket
in space.
eftt!l will go to the small and av- have been attacked b)' sharks. mander Walter Schirra a s the
"Abba
dabba
doo," gasped
"Ship captain Matildo Mall- spacecraft's big ro::-k'.!t fired
erage-si.ze ·farms, not to the few
CuMingharn
as
the mighty
giant corporate farms. We need .ion, one of the survivors, is now them into a new orbit to
rocket
kicked
them
upward.
programs that are concerned with under Constabulary (National rendezvous with their burned"Man,
that's
a
ride
and a
Carm Income parity rather than Police) inve st igation for possi- out rocke ~ 's second stage,
half,"
said
Schirra.
The
"burn"
price pa.rity,"theeoonomicspro- ble criminal charges," the Navy
The maueu\'er, e:.pected to
lasted for about nine secon:ls,
report said.
fessor stated.
ENGLISH SCORE,S. - Som-:mhere under the goal line pilelast for several hours, cam(.;
Initial findings Indicated a midway in the s mooth secord raising ApoJlo 7 into a higher
and was virtually ruled out of w:nn;.ngthe loop cr0\'1~ agam Lhjs
"" above, Meigs Ful lback Kenny Engli s h has picked 141 enough
crack In the foreward section of day or th e planned 11-d~· . 163- orbit than the booster arxf
yea.·. M~: : Ks players, from lett, indu:1e Mlk~ Barr (7fl . Jeff
yardage to score tlle final Marauder touchdown Friday night
giving it, in effect, greater
Werry ( II) and Jon Klee s (84),
the hull caused tl1e boat to urbit mission of Apollo 7.
against Logan. Meigs suffered a 16-14 loss ir~the 'iEOI\L das~
speed
to
allow
it
to
overtake
U1e
ca,Hi:te and sink as it was
No TV
dead booster,
carrying Filipinos to a religious
Earlier SctJirra, his dislike of
"That's a real kick in tbe
Cesth•al in Zambt)lln.ga.
!-ipacebornc television dimmed
fanny,"
said ScllirrL "That
It sank In a narrow strait further by the discomfor~ of U1e
beauty
really
SO('ks it to YOlL •·
about
15
miles east
or fi rst head cold in space, refused
HIRAM, Ohio (LTPO - Marlet. Zamboanga.
The rehlezvous with the
to turn on tele.,.ision cameras rocket booster is similar to a
ta bounced back from a deficit
A Navy spokesman told UPJ ins ide the spaceCraft.
In the second halt Saturday to the survivors claimed there
maneuver which later Apollo
"I refuse to foul I.Jl our time
turn back HJram 21 -7. in an were aOOut '100 persons aboard
crews might have to make in
lines that way," Schirra radioed case moon explorers, Q.ying In a
Ohio Conference game.
the ferr y when it left Cotabato,
The Pioneers got on t h e a cll.y 400 miles across the Mora to his boss, astronaut chief lunar lander, had to be rescued
Donald Slayton.
ICoreboard in the third period Gulf from Zamboanga,
NEW YORK (IJPI) - Hubert
In space, Normally, the lunar
Instead, Schirra and his
when ('J.Iarterback Bob Hauser
H.
Humphrey, recovering from
larder would be responsible for
The chief mate Of fne
crewmen, Donn Eisele and
scored on a one-yard plunge to motor
a
mild
case of intestinal au,
making contact witJJ the mother
vessel told authormes on.:
e•p a 17 -Yard drive set up by manifest Jlsted only 223 persons Walter Cumingham, , started the ship.
today planned to make a
halfback George Sauer's 31 - with a crew of 35 but additional
nationally televised policy acf..
yard punt
dre.c;s
on law a1r:l order but
pas se ngers were allowed
Marietta lallled again In the aboard, apparently because of
decided to limit his other
third stanza when halfback the good weather .
activities in New York City.
Chris Cortez pushed over from
Humphrey was reported "feelNavy officials said the nor.
WlLLIA.&gt;,t';BURG, VL (UP0 the two arter the Pioneers re- mally approved capacity Cor a
scored on a 7-yard run after di- ing better" after a goo.i night's
t,KJVered a fumble on theJr 24 · similar boat was 150 passen- Unbeate:. Ohio University pushed recting the BWcats on a 78-yard sleep. He got lJ) at 9:30 Lm to
·'yard line.
across 28 points in the second drive,
put tile Rnishing touches on his
gers.
period Saturday and went on to
Quarterback
P h I I Slpka
Defensive back Bruce Herrllon la" and order address.
humiliate William &amp; Mary 41-0 grabbed a fwnble out of the air
rounded out the scoring Co r FIND TWO GUlL TY
Hun!J)hrey canceled a tour or
before a disappointed homecomMarietta on a 13.yard run alter
Halem,
East Halem and the
a.._,
ran
13
yards
to
make
It
1~
SAIGON (UPD-A mUitary ing crowd of 12,500.
Sauer lnterr.epted a .\)ISS on the
ghetto
areas
of The Bronx and
and
begin
the
early
second
percourt Friday foural a Buddhist
The Ohioans frustrated the InfUram 49 and returned the ball university professor an::l a
Iod scoring.
h's starr announced he would
dians with a devastating ruMing
38 yards to llle 13.
Less than five minutes later rn.&gt;t participate in the Columbus
student gull ty of C001munisl
Sipka went 10 for 23 in t h e propaganda acthrities and sen- game led by workhorse tailback Conley scored frOITI n ve Yards Day parade. However, there
Dick Conley, who s~ two
paBslng department for 85 yarda.
tenced them to tw~year sus- touchdowns, and an alert defense out. Thirty secoOOs later defen- was a slight chance Hwnphre.r
Hiram quarterback AI Feldman
sive back Mike Schott intercept- would cha~ his mioo and
pended jail terms. The convic~
which converted a Cwnble and an ed a pass by William &amp; Mary's attend the annual march on
eompleted el!liJt. for 15 lor 138
tions brougttt to nine the Interception
into touchdowns Jim Leycock and ran 35 yards Firth Avenue.
yards.
number of students jailed or put
Marietta boosted Its confer- under suspeD:Ied sentence slll('e within one SO-second stand in the to make it 27-0.
ence record to :J-.0. The team the spate of trials for suspected secorkl period,
Ohio wrapped 1.11 its first half
co:lley, a pile driving senior scoring three mirwtes later when
Ia 3-1 overall. Hiram now is
Communist
afnliation began from Zanesville, Ohio, gained
WOOSTE;R BUMPED
11,3 In conference play and 0..1 three months ago.
Todd S~der returned a punt 44
DELAWARE,
Ohio (UP[)
162 yards on 29 carries during
overall.
yards to the Irdian!ll six and Bob
tht: game and scored on runs of Hownard dived ovj'r from one Defending 0 h i o ConferenL-e
champ Ohio We&amp;leyan trounced
nve
and i7 yards.
'Sar.ty•
Winton
hMltaJI
yard out four plays later to make
Wooster t«-7 Saturday as Bob
Ohio, unbeaten in tour games It 34-0 at halftlmo.
HOLLYWOOD ltJPii..lf'OK'YO (UPil - Woolla the
Badami scorec:t touchdowns on
mitn ln1redtent or a new base- Jonathan Winters has been and leaders in the Mld·Amerlcan
Cooley coq,ped a 58 yard drive
biD being developed tor use In named ]968 Amb&amp;&amp;88dor for conference, cot on lhe score- with a 17 yard touchdown dash runs Gf 73, six and 17 yards .
.J'pan's m11 .tnr hAMhA.ll leques. Safet.v b.v the National Safety board carl,y In the Drst period
The lmo Wooster marker came
around right end in the third
Coul}( :l.
on a It-yard pass pla,y
Tom
EFFORT - Delwds Ault, senior end Cor Meigs. 'urns in a :t!ce catch Cll1 thla
when quarterback Cleve Bryant period.
pass from Marauder Quarterback .Jeff. Werry. Ault is about to 00 rfotrned by Logarfs Chuek Col...
Doa.........,.t&lt;&gt; Rick Sollman.
rad.(40).

a

AT THE BEAUTIFUL

2

Vietnam. Major Holt presented the Purple Heart Medal with
Gold Star, the National Defense Ribbon, the Vietnam Service
Medal, the Vtetnam Ca.rnpaign Medal, and PoJrple Heart lapel
pins for Mr. and Mrs. Lind.

Crewson Nixon Meets With Advisers
Favors
Ceiling

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SU_N_DA_Y. OCTOBER 13, 1968~ ___ _ _ _ _ _P._~...;:.G_E_9

54 North Vietnamese
Die In Fierce Fighting

In the Paper

2 FOR 1 WEEKEND
Octoller &amp; November
SPECIAL

far

VOL. 3 NO. 37

Look. Sis, What's

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Rate •

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C'tommun Kldnuy ur Bhulr:lt.'l' Irrlla·
tiu nM mr.lw muny ml'n 11nd wonwn
(t•l'l tcnK' und rn : rw,u~ fl'f,m frl'tjuenl.

Cotmty workers earned $8,0uo.
$9 999 compared to 7,3 per cent
e~nlng that amount in 1966.
1n llle highest wage groop, $!0,000 or aver, 8.2 per cent were
in this category in 1967 compared to s. 7 per cent receiving the
highest wages in 1966.
Populatloo of Meig.o C&lt;&gt;tJncy
In bolll 1966 and 1967 lo listed
at 20,800 - a stelUb' decrease
from 1959 and the number of
households in the county C 0 r
both years is Usted at 6,200.
In l959, the nwnber ot households was listed at 7,100.
Total retail sales in Melg11
County during 1967 amoonted to
$26 433 OOtl compared to $26,.
045, ooo' for l966 . Of the total
spe~t in the retail sales figure,
SG,GII7,1100 was spent for food;
SJ,J 42,000 for general rner~han,
d1se,
..-~ 1•094 • 000 for, rurmture
$
and household appliances; 5,0G2 000 for automotive expendit.ur~s and $ 1,08 1,000 for drugs
during 196';'. F[gures on the
amount spent for apparel, eating and drinking, gasoline station cxpcndih•res, and lumber,
building and hardware expendi tures are not listed for 1967.

,. ""'. &gt;' .

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GmiNGUP

Purchasing Dollars Show
•
Increase In '67 Over '66
BY BOB IIOEFLICII
.
POMEROY _ The purchasmg
power of Meigs County people
Increased two and a hall ~ill ion
doUars from 1966 to 1961, according to a report pre~rcd b~
U!e Cooperative Extension Sc1vice at Meigs County here,
The figure for 1966 was $31, 502,000 and in 1967 it was $:14, 900 000. This averag('s S5. 498
household in l!J67 compared
to $5,081 in 1966.
The report indicates that Ulc
number of residents in the lowst income braekct decreased a :Out two per rent in 1967 compared to the previous yc~r. ,\
slight incn:asc was noted m the

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NEWSPAPERS ...
THEINQEPENQENJ
MEDIUM

junbap 1rimts • jentintl
~

Humphrey
Activities

21-7 Victory

Limiting

2t-ton

_,rn.

OU Romps, 41-0

'1(1101

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rrom

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TI!EimNDou~

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Dana Stephens is Crowned
PPHS Homecoming Queen
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GETS EAGLE AWARD - L a _ . Edward Wrlt!lrt, cer&gt;ter ts nanked by hh parents, Mr. aOO Mrs. Lawrence Wright,
~r he was presented scouting's highest honor, the Eagle
Award, recently. Larry is a Pt. Pleasant High School sopho-

'

more.

"'t·

~Lawrence

Wright
:Gets Eagle Award
~-

Pf. PLEASANT -

Lawrence
• Edward Wrlght, son of Mr. and

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at evening services held recent,
Ute Main Street Baptist

sented Mrs. Wright the Eagle

If at
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April of 1968, L a r r y

transferred to Explorer Post261
and three months later he comploted his Eagle requirements.
Several presentations were
made to the new Eagle Scout. Ken
Leikari, Post 261 Advisor, pre-

Mra. Lawrence Wright, cA l2U4
Meadowbrook Drive, Point Pleasant. W, \'a., was given scouting"!

·, N&amp;heBt honor, the Eagle Award,

\

In

PT. PLEASANT - The 196869 Homecoming ~een of Point
Pleasant High School is Dana
&amp;ephens.
Dana is the daughter ot Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Stephens,. of
Jericho Road. Her escort for
tile night was Roger Sl.inn, son
ot Mr. and Mrs. Bryon ~Inn,
d. Leon, W, Va.
Mr. C, R. Withers, Principal
of Point Pleasant High School,
placed the crown on her head.
For the evening she wore a
light blue two piece dress with
black accessories. ~e hi a member of lhe band, National Honor
Society and the secretary of the
Y-Teens. She was chosen to represent Point Pleasant at "Know
Your State Government Day" and
Rhododendron Girls state. H e r
hobbies include reading, sewing
and horseback riding.
others
vying
for
t he

medal who in turn pinned it on
Church.
...._.nt
her son. 'lben larry pJ'esented
Larry, a sophomore at rul
Pleasant High School and amem- each of his parents with tokens
bar of Po!lt 261, had many fine of his award. Mr. Guy Nash preachievements during his scouting sented l ,arry with a letter from
Jears. The followingisanabrldg - National Headquarters and his
eel Hst of some of them.
Eagle certificates. Garland ParIn 1961, Larry and five otller sons made a presentation of a
bc.J¥a formed local Pack 261. In neckerchief slide.
1963 he became a Webelo, after
Serving on the Court of Honor
wblch he joined Troop 261. By were Ken Leikari, Post Advis~ of 1964 he completed his or; Chadds Hall, M.G.M.District
TCildlrfoot, Life and Second Executive; Char les Barney,
Class and First Class ranks Chairman of Post Committee;
UKI became a Patrol Leader. George Roberts, Institutional
Dt October of 1966 he was Representative; John Whitley, M.
elected Senior Patrol Leader~ G.M. Comm11!1sioners Staff; Guy
hil ....._......, 1n early 1967 he ac - Nash Former Scout Executive;
w...,.
ce.pted
the position of Den Chief Rev.' Ted Wall, Ma.ln St. Baptist
r1 Pack 261. Seven m~mths !at- Church; Bill Knigllt, M,G.M. Diser 11 camp Arrowhead, Ona, W. trict Committeeman, George
Va. he was awardod the Sen- Lamp, M.G.M. Commissioners
lor' Patrol Leader Award and Staff· and Garland Parsons, M,
wu uta,pped out" into the OrdDistrict Training Direcder ol the Arrow.
tor.

G.M:

queenship were Miss Bee- and Mrs. Gus R, Douglass ol
key Nibert, daughter of Mr. and Grimms Landing. The crown
Mrs. Dale Nibert of Apple Grove. bearer ror the evening was Miss
Her escort for the evening was Regina Park; lhe nower girls
Jim Wilson, soo of Mr. and Mrs. were Miss Monica Park and Mary
J. N. Wilson, Point Pleasant, CUie Kingery. Regina and Monand Miss Brenda Hartley, ica arc the daughters of Dr. and
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Art Mrs. Nelson Park of Point PleasE. Hartley Sr., Point Pleasant, ant, and Mary Cllle is the daughHer escort for the evening was ter of Mr. and Mrs. DonaldKb-.g~
Jim Garr:ett, son of Mr. and ery of Point Pleasant also.
The Pep Club won first place
Mrs. William H. Garrett, of
In
the noat contest with "Knights
Point Pleasant.
Are
Top Dog," depleting a MilThe Sophomore class attendton
Greyhound
dog; KeyeUe Club
ant was Miss Mellnda Grosalfi,
won
second
place;
and the Fudaughter of Mrs. Evelyn Wiseture
Farmers
of
America
won
man oC Sand Hill Road. Her es~
lhird
place.
cort was Allan Underwood, son
The Future Farmers of Amerof Mr. and Mrs. William Underica
won first place in the car
wood of Pobrt Pleasant. The Juncontest;
the Apprentice Cheerior attendant was Miss Valerie
leaders
won second place and
Rainey, daughter of Mr. and
the
Pep
Club won third place.
Mrs. Douglas Rainey of GalUpolis Ferry. Her escort was Steve
Douglass, son of Commissioner

FFA Exchange Delegate Visits Gallia
GALLIPOLIS - Ray Wynne,
national FF A exchange delegate,
of Herefordshire, England has
spent this week in Gallia and
Jackson counties, visiting chapters and members of tile Future
Farmers of America, He also
has shown &lt;:olorcd slides and
talked to several school, community, and service clubs in the
area includi~ R3t.ary, Kiwanis,
rann Bureau, FUture Homemakers, and other high school youth.

RAY WYNNE

Ray spent two days at Ole Jackson high school, one day at Hannan Trace High School, and one
day at Gallia Academy High
School. He has been the house
guest of the Ral&amp;il Needs family, Cheshire. Mr. Needs is the
vocational teacher and rF h advisor at Jackson High School a00
his son Steve is a member of
the Jackson FFA.
Wynne will attend the National
FF A Convention in Kansas City
next .veek, continue west to California and return to England
early in November. The 23-yearold Wynne, representing the National Federation ofYoung Farmers Clubs of England is a field
representative for the English
government's M i I k Marketing
Board.
In this FFAexchangeprograrn,
one representative £rom EnglarKI
comes to this country, a.'1d one
£rom the United States goe:; to
England.
Since his arrival early in July,
Wynne has had a busy s('hedule.
One of the first stops on his
tour was Washington, D. C. where

he was a guest at a Congressional breakfast, met many tq, leaders including President Johrumn,
Gerald Ford, and General Wil·
ham Westmoreland, and visited places of interest including
Congress in session.
With Bill Rogers, State of Ohio
FF A President, and other state
officers, he then went on a tour
of New England and attended the
New England FFA Leadership
Conference. In Boston they visited Revolutionary War battle site
and Wyrme attended a "Boston
Tea Party."
From there the group went to
Blacksb.trg, Virginia, for the
American Institute of Cooperation. WyMe served as a member of the Ohio Delegation at the
gathering which brought together representatives from 17 dH·
ferent youth organizations all
over the countr:,.·,
The group returned to 0 h i o
throogh Kentucky andWyMe went
from Columbus to Wauseau,
where he spent two weeks oo two
cattle feeder (arms. He also
made short trips to Indians and

,.,

Terrorists Gun Down
S. Army Officer

I

The

consulate

said

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Are F'ded in Meigs
POMEROY - Two divorce ac·
tions were filed Friday in the
Meigs County Common Pleas
CourL
Charging gross neglect of duty,
Doris Jean Dailey, Portland
Route 1, seeks a divorce trom
Ora Leo Dailey, also of Portlard, and asks custody of two
mioor children.
Charles W, Curfman, Sr., near
Pomeroy, charges gross neglect
of dut.y and extreme cruelty in
his divorce action against Ellen
Curlinan, Pomeroy. The plaintiff asks custody of one minor
chUd.

Michigan where he visited with
4-H, Grange and other FF A or·
ganizatioos.
At Ohio state Fair he had the
happy assignment of acting as a
judge in the state FF A Queen
contest and the Ohio State Ju.
nior Fair Queen contest.
After the fair he spent some
time on a Hereford and Charolais
farm at Oxford near Cincinnati.
Clarence Brown, Jr., of Springfield, a Congressman he had met
in Washington, invited him to
sperd two da_ys with him and
Wynne says, "It really gave me
my best insight into American
politics. For two days I did ev~
erything he did, went everywhere he went.. It was quite an
experience.''

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Plan GOP Meeting
PT. PLEASANT - An important meeting of 11&gt;e Mason County Republican Womon'o Club will
bo held Mooday ai 7:30 •. m. at
the courthouse amex auditoriwn.
Mro. Sandra Nlchelo, president. urges the women to attend thi1 meeting aJmanytmpor11nt Juues are to be considered. Hootesseo will be. Mr. E.
Bartow Jonel', Mrs. Mary H.Yre,
,IIICI Mro. MaJdno Walters.

other and the Gingerich car.
Pollee dted Sayre to Gallla
County Juvenile Court on a
charge of reckless operation.
He posted a $33 bond for awear-

ance.
Roger L. Sweat, 21, of 241'1.!
Second Ave., was cited to Gallipolis Municipal Court Oct. 14
on a charge of improper back ing after an accident at 10:55
a.m. Friday in front of Ute Gal-

Defensive back Ted Provost
broke a scoreless deadlock
early in Ute Utlrd period when
he picked off a paos by Pur&lt;Ne
CJ1811&lt;&gt;rback Mike Phiw• and
1printed 35 yards for a
touchdown.
A few rnlliJtes later the
defense turned the trick again
when sophomore middle guard
Jim Stillwagon lnteroopted another pass by Phipps on the
Purdie 26, Five plays later
(Jlarlerback Bill Long, tilling in
for Injured sophomore starter
Rex Kern, faked to pass but
could not find a receiver than
r811 14 yards for the score.

Jim Roman, brought into Ute
gume to handle the place
klcklna choroo ofier OSU
missed three lleld goals, added
the extra point.
Pun:kle's deepest penetration
was to the Ohio State seven ill
the foorth period but that drive
second string
fallocl when
~rback Doo Klepert had a
pass Intended Cor Keyes batted
down at the goal line.
The Boilermakers twice dro\'e
to the Ohio .!late 14 during a
tense and scoreless first half
but both drives ended on a pair
of missed field goal tries.

Keyes was used mostly as a
nWlk.er and caught only four
passes, for 44 yards agalnlrt •
tough Ohio State secondary.
Keyes, a candidate for the
Ueisman tropll.Y, carried only
seven times for 19 yards.
Sophomore cornerback Jack
Tat.um was given the jOO oC
covering the eluaive Keyes and
batted down several passes and
harassed the 205..pound back all
afternoon.
Purdue entered the Big Ten
showdown averaging 41.3 points
and 437 yards per game In
winning its firrst three outings.

The Bollermakera II&lt;JUIId ,.
with ooly 57 yonlo rulhfor
agalnsl Olrlo Stale whieh Ia
rated rumber four In the 1J1:111M
in delenoe ogalnlt a l'llllllor
attack. - . added On!J• 12t
yards pooolng.
Ohio Stale flnMICI out 331
yardo niShinJr and 78 yardo UtrOUJII 11&gt;e air.
Purdue
0 0 0 0- 1
Ohio Slate
0 0 13 0-13,
OS!;- Provost 35 pass inter.
ceptlon ()dck falled)
OSU- Long 14 run (Rormn
kick)
A- 84.1134

ANN ARBOR. Mich. CUPilMichigan state abandoned Its
Michlgan quarterback Dennis nrst half fancy play attack in
Brown slipped the grasp of a favor of power sweeps and off- "You'¥e I'Ot enough equipment
Michigan State tackler in the tackle bursts, with sophomore there to 11upply all the team&amp;
in the Olympi("8 !"
middle or the fourth period tullback Earl AOOerson crunchSaturday and arched a 53-yard Ing over frm1 the three to give
scoring strike to end Jl.m the
Spartans
their second
Mandich to put the Wolverines touchdown.
Bowl.
F1ar*er
Charlie
ahead in a 2S...l4 victory over Wedemeyer 1 a former quartertheir cron-state rivals.
back, Jllllje a successful two-The diminutive Wolverine point conversion pass off a kick
signa] caller faded to his right formattoo to g1 ve Michigan
In a fake extra point try, and at State its brief, 14-13 lead.
the last moment, ftlpped a two-Brown connected with Oanker
point conversion pan to full- Joi.n Gabler for a 33-yard
step.
MEXICO CITY (UPO - Amid
A total of 7,886 athlete• from
back Garvie Cnw. The Spar- scoring pass pla,y in the razzlepomp and pageantry - and peace
"Today, (Oct. 12, 1968,) I de - 108 nations, both fliures Olym.
By United Press International
tans had opened the quarter by dazzle first period after halfclare open the Olympic Games pic records, marched into the
in a city which had been trouEast
completirw an 80-yard, 16.-pl.ay ba&lt;:k Ron Johnson became the
bled,
Prealdenl
Gustavo
Dlaz
Or
oC
Mexico, the 19th OlymDlad of stadium to ._, Ute big ollnr
touchdown march and used a fourth leadi~ rusher in Wolver· HArvard 21 Columbia 14
daz
formally
proclaimed
the
optbe
modern era," Diaz said as and the f811s, mostly MexiCIIll,
two-point conversion to take a
ine history with a 38-yard Army 10 California 7
ening or the XIX Olympic Games
the more than 80,000 fans in showed their emotions as well
14-13 lead.
scoring jaunt arourx! right end Princeton 34 Dartmouth 7
Saturday and Mexico City bethe saucer-like tnJverslty ot as their likes with responafn
WEST
POINT,
N.Y.
(UP0might
be
the
only
score
of
the
Craw then aasured Michigan on the fifth play or the game. Boston Coli 28 VUlanova 15
came
the
sports
capital
of
the
~arterba.ck Steve L i n d e I I game as neither team could
Mexico stadium cheered to their cheers.
Butralo 29 Delaware 17
ol ita third win In four games in
The ~artans countered with
world.
heart's
content and even stopthrew a 62-yard &amp;coring bomb to muster a scoring attack.
The Czechoslovakian dolep.
its initial Big Ten contest and their only first period score Penn 10 Cornell 8
While
10111e
political
overtones
ped
to
congratulate
one
anoth- doo received 11&gt;e blgpst hand
end
Gary
Steele
wllh
2:48
Lindell
moved
the
Black
Colgate 14 Holy Croos 6
the 11th-ranked ~artans their
when Wedemeyer made the
or.
remaining Saturday to I&gt;Ull Knights from the Cal 49 to the crept into the more than two of all, perhaps u a reminder
first loss. MSU Is now l-1 In first of his five end-round Syracuse 50 Plllliburgh 17
hour
ceremonial
parade,
which
The
skies
were
overcast
when
f1
that cowrtry•s recent polttiaroused
Army
from
the
brink
or
eight
early
in
Ute
third
period
Yale 35 Brown 13
conference play.
reverse plays good for 37 yards
ushered ln the quadremial
the
big
show
began
but
underdefeat
to
a
10-7
victory
aver
cal
problem•. 1be Hungarians,
but
throo
plays
netted
a
loss
or
Rutgero 29 Lehigh 26
Brown set up the go-ahead and a touchdown.
favored Calitornla.
games, It generally was a day
neath, on an approximately five - who su11ered Utrough a lllmllar
10
yards
and
Jensen
carne
ln
on
touchdown by dancing around in MSU
6 0 0 8-14 Montclair St. 6 Centra! ConThe Cadels, snapping a two - foorUt down to boot the field al rejoicing and brotherhood and
acre plot where the modernis- _political upheaval 12 years earnectlcut 3
his own back.Oeld before hitting Mich
13 0 0 15- 28
the host Mexicans, who had work- tic stadium sits on the rim of lier, received almost as warm
game
losing
streak
while
!»aa
wlUt
7:30
left
in
the
..
rlod.
end Jerry Imsland with an BMlch-Johnson 38 run (KHUan Bucknell 29 Temple 26
Randy Humphrey, the Cal ed hard for five years for this
one of Mexico City's largest a hand.
handing the Golden Bears their
Ithaca 21 &amp;.tsquehanna 6
yard pa5s. On the next play, he kick)
me big moment, didn't miss a
first
loss
oC
the
season,
moved
quarterback
who
threw
almost
U!oroughfares, all was brightThe American andRussiandeJ.
hit Mandich with a 16-yard pass MSU- Wedemeyer 37 run Ckick Lebanon Valley 39 Muhlenberg
ness.
77
yard•
in
four
pla,ys
for
the
also were warmly ap..
egation1
as
many
interceptions
as
he
did
29
betore coq&gt;leUng his third in a failed)
score
that
snatched
victory
Only
10
days
before
the
city,
•lauded.
The Yanks, 393 otroor,
pai!ISes,
redeemed
himself
in
the
row, on a broken play, to Mich-Gabler 33 paslii from Union 21 Rochester 7
from the visitors.
built
on
t.he
ashes
of
the
ancwere
led
Into the stadium by
Cal
scoring
drive
as
he
lone
Williams 48 Middlebury 14
Mandich Cor the score,
Brown (kick failed)
Steele,
who
this
l!leason
began
up
11
yards
on
a
rwrthient
Aztec
empire,
was
rocked
Mrs.
Jllllice
Rom&amp;ry, a 40 •
picked
Amherst 33 Bowdoin 3
Craw capped an 84-yard
MSU- AMerson 3 run (Foreto wear contact lenses because down situation to carry to the
by another round of student riots, year-old mother of two trom
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
Ct!PO
Worcester Tech 30 Bates 20
drive, with Brown ripping off man pass trom Wedemeyer)
of the m8liJI passe• he dropped Army one from where McGaf!le
StatisUcs of the Pw·due - Ohio which claimed the Uvea of at Woodland HUls, Calif., makina
huge chunks of yardage bn Mich- MaOOich 53 pass from Clarion 37 Edinboro 13
least 33 p.ersons.
It the first tlme that a woman
last year, took in Llndell'l!l pass plunged over.
State football game,
opdon plays, by bulllng his way
Brown (Craw pass from Brown) New Hampshire 42 Maine 17 oo the California 23 and fought
The moment all of Mexico had carried the ••stars a n d
Jim McCall, a junior from
Purdue
Ohio
St.
25 yards slowly up the micldle Mich- Craw 25 rWl (Killian Northeastern 30 American In.
his way to the goal as Bear Pittsburgh, harassed Hwnphrey
First dawns . . . . 16
22 had waited for came shortly af- stripes" ln tile Olympic par13
and veering right into the end kick)
defenders tried to foroo him out all afternoon and acoounted for Rushing Yds . • , 57
333 ter Diaz Ordaz had officially op- ade.
LafayettA! 27 Washington &amp; Lee
zone,
A-103,785,
of bounds.
Heavyweight welghtll.lllng ~J&gt;Id
three
or
the
interceptions.
The
Passing
Yds.
.
,
,
129
78 ened the Games. That was when
7
20-year-old
farmer's
daughmedalist
LeontdZhabotln•k;ycar.
a
California, making ita first Army
defensive
back who
Return Yds. . • , , 11
35
Midwest
visit to Michie Stadium, had caught Cal aerials as if he Passes ..... • 12-34-2 11-16-1! ter, Enrlqueta Basilio, came in - ried the fiag tortheRuulandeleWestern Michigan 14 Kent st. 0
taken a 7-3 lead wtth 4:07 lett belonged to their radar Wlit, Punts ..•.... , 6-36.0 4-31.2 to the stadiwn, took a lap a- gatlon, largest ln the pmea at
Michigan 28 Michigan Sl. 14
when Mlback John McGotrte saved a possible touchdown
Fumbles Lost , ... 0
2 round U1e track, ascended the 4!3. •\s he had clone at T&lt;icyo
Ohio St. 13 Purdue 0
plunged over from one yard out when he intercepted for the Yards Penalized .. 43
96 90 steps to the top of the stru c . four years earlier, Zbabotlnsky,
Mluourl 27 Colorado 14
as the Bears moved 44 yarda first time on the five. He later
lure and then lit the Olympic a huge man and perhaps the larMinnesota 17 Dllnolo 10
after
recovering 811 Army snapped
flame,
which will remain lit un- gest in Ute Games, carried his
a
Hwnphrey
pass
Unser Defeated
Utah St. 20 Wlscooaln 0
fumble.
til the Games come to a close nation' 8 nag in one hand 0 u tdeflected
by
teammate
Ken
Iowa st. 23 Kansas St. J 4
For Pole Post
It retched.
oo Oct. 27.
hrmy, stopping the Bears Johnson on the Army 23 and he
Notre
Dame
27
Northwestern
7
ATLANTA CUPO- The Ten. Tech tumble at the Tech 30.
capped his busy afternoon by
with
four
pass
interceptions
In
IRISH
HILLS,
Mich.
(UPD
nessee Vola, held in check unt:U This time, when the Vols were Indiana 38 Iowa 34
the first hal(, took a J..{) preventing another
Mario Aroretti edged lndial"VIpossible
. 11&gt;e lading mu..tes ol die llrst unable to move, Karl Krelllfier, Centre 6 Wa•hington (Mo.) o advantage early in the third toochdown at the seven.
polis champ Bobby Unser by a
SouUt
hall, C81&gt;lt&amp;llzed on two fwnble who also kicked three extra
perind on a 28-yard field goal by Calltornia
0 o 0 7- 7 fraction of a second Saturday lo
WE ARE PROUD TO SERVE
reeoverles by Nick Showalter points In the game, booted a 42- Virginia Tech 7 Wake Forest 6 Arden Jensen.
capture the pole position for SunArmy
0 0 3 7- 10
Maryland 33 North Carolina 24
COL . SANDERS KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN. iT iS
saturday arxl rode the passes of yard
field goal
to give
day's $75, 000 inaugtJral race at
The field goal •weared llko it
Auburn
21
Clemson
10
ALWAYS
EASY AND CDNVENlENT FOR MOTHER TO
Bubba Wyche to a 24-7 vlctol')· Tennessee a 10..0 halftime lead.
the new Michigan lnterational
Florida 24 Tulane 3
over Georgia Tech.
SERVE AT HOME.
Tennessee scored again early Miami (Ohio) 46 Marshall 0
~eedway.
The Vols and Yellowjackets
in the third period on a 24-yard
Aod.retti's sleek white rearFAMILY BOX 9 Pc. $2.45
were locked in a rugged pass from Wyche to McClain to Tennessee 24 Georgia Tech 7
BARREL 21 Pc.
engine machine shot around the
East
TeMeuee
14
Tennessee
BUCKET 15 Pc. $3.95
scoreless defensive dual when climax a 69-yard drive that
aspJa.lt oval at 183.67 mph - a
$5.25
Tech 6
Showalter made his first fumble featured two long runs by
record quallljring time for cars
recovery, one of five by fullback Richard Pickens who Western Maryland 37 Lycoming
of the championship class - to
AND
29
Tennessee in the first half, at played a.lmost oone of the tint
win
the
favored
position
in
SunVlrglnla 50 Duke 20
the Tech 48 yard line.
half because of an injury.
day's 26-car tleld
Alabama 31 Vanderbilt 7
Wyche, the quarterback who
Georgia Tech came stroiUng
GAINESVILLE, F1a. (UPO started as a third stringer last back after lhe second Wycheyear to lead 11&gt;e Vols to victory McClain touchdown pass on an
Ninth - ra;llred Florida, held to
over the Yellowjackets, quickly 83-yard drive for its only
three points in the first three
LAS VEGAS. Ne '· (UPO led his team the 52 yards to the touchdown or the afternoon.
quarters
by winless Tulane, exreceivers and made two inter- Jack Nicldaus, the long-hitting
l'l.rst score, picking up 21 yards
ploded
for
three toUchdowns SatThe score came oo a 10-yard, ceptions In the final period.
pro from Ohio who has lound
on a run of a busted pass play fourth down pass t'rom Larry
urday
to
win its fourth gLne
Pickens scored tile Vol&amp;' final
Las Vegas to his liking, goes
24-3.
and then throwing 12 yards to Good to Jolin Sias. Good broke toochdown, earl,y in the final
alter his third straight &lt;:hamThe Gators, who held Tulane
sophomore Oanker Lester Mc- several Tech passing records period after Richmond Flowers
pion.ship when the sahara Invithree
inches from a touchdown
Clain for the first score of the during
the
game
as
he their leading runner for the
tational golf tournament opens
1!11110.
in
the
final quarter 1 scored on a
completed 25 out of 61 passes got oCC a 34-yard run and Wyche Thursday,
43-yard pa.ss play from quarterLeu than a minute later for 267 yards but the Vols did COMected with Bill Baker on a
The prize money for the 11th
Showalter recovered another an ex&lt;:ellert job of covering his 42-yard pass.
back Jackie Eckdahl to end Jim
annual event at the Paradise
Yarbrougll and short runs by runValley Country Club has been
ning backs Tommy Christian and
in:reased frm1 $111,111.11 to
Larry Smith.
$122,222.22 with first place
Tulane took an early lead in
worth $20,000.
the first period with a 34-yard.
Nicklaus, 28, actually will be
tleld goal by Bart Brookat.z arwJ
seeking his lourdl Soh1ra lnvlJack Youngblood evened: it Lfl fo,tational title. In addition to winFlorida in the second quarter
nino in 1966 arc! 1967, he "" with a4i-yarder. Youngblood also
the 1963 cl"lan1)Ion.
scored .JOth of florida's extra
The four-day medal •lay tourpoints.
nament will be preceded by a
Detensi ve back Skip Albury
two-day pro-amateur,
kept Tulane from a touchdown
The sahara Invitational Is one
with Florida leading 10-3 ln the
of Ute lq&gt; professional Golfers'
third period when he tackled TuAssociation tournaments a n d
lane haltback Warren Bankston
draws most of the outstanding
on the F1orlcla goal line on fourth
pros.
down.
Last year's tournament. tor
Albury also started F1orlda
example, drew 19 of the leadirw
toward Its first touchdown when
• 5 channel cry1tol confrolled. Cll. 11 supplied.
20 money wimera lnd 38 of 11&gt;e
he recovered a Tulane tumble
* 12 tnmsilfora plus B diodes, zen•• volta9• regulcltor .
leading !0.
on the Florida 22 in the fourth
* S.n1itivity one microvolt for 10 db signal+ noiu/ noi1e .
Young Steve !;pray looked like period
* Pow.r input 5 wotts.
• winner cOming into the flmJ
Style 2338
* Po_, output 3 watts.
Florida drove 78 yards folnine holes a year ago. But he
81ec~ .
*High ord•r modulation.
lowing an Albury recovery an:!:
faltered arxl Nicklaus moved inC.tretan
*Current drain, 0.75 omp receive &amp; 1.4 omp transmit .
scored its first touchdown oo
to die lllld.
* 12 voh DC only.
121.15
Christian's four-yard spurt with
• Dimen•ions 7" • 6" • 2-1/8" LWH.
It wasn't an eaay win for
Olher /1/r.mn -Bu:Jil Stytu
14 minutes left to Dlay.
tram 1111 85
• Supplied with push·to·tolk ceramic microphone ot'ld cail•d
Ute hard • hitting 20~r,
Eckda..11 then threw to Yarcard, mounting brac:ket and instruc:tion1.
though. Nicklaus was only one
brough and Smith, who wound ~
Most men only worry about suits, shirts and ties. They buy
inch from 11&gt;e wl - of - bounds
with 117 yards rushing, put the
marker on the 18th hole.
from the top down. So by the time they get to the bottom,
icing on the cake with a one.
The difference between first
YardDI~
their feet are just an afterthought. And the shoes they buy
and secom was $8,000- $20,000
Tulane played the Gators on
for Nicklaus and $12,000 for
look like afterthoughts. If you buy a pair of Nunn-Bush shoes
even terms much of Lhe game.
!;pny,
•
you can start with your feet. Because you won't have to worry
Other wimers
the Sahara
lnvtlational were:
OFF INJURED LIST
about them not matching the suit you haven't
BUI John&amp;on, 1958; Doug Sor&gt;CLEVELAND (UPO - T h e
bought yet. They're styled so you won't
ders, 1959; Bob Duden. 1960;
Cleveland Browno Soturday toot&lt;
Phil Rodgeri~ 1961; the late fullback Ernie Green off the I~
have to change shoes every time you change
Ton,y Lema, 1962; Dick Sikes, jured reserve lisL
St•p up to ,..., n•w 8 &amp; K Cobra 91, tho now, 23-chonul, fully delt.uce CB that's built to out..
suits. And thai em s:n'l' vou a lot of cl~:m:.;:e.
1964; BUI ca~er, 1965.
~Mrfom and ouh•alua most othor rlt•· TM n•w triple .col• (•hown above) is only part of the
Green was eJII)ected to start
1tory · • · tho Cobra 98 looks lllco o Million! Tho hoa¥}' dl ... cost alun~inum front pDnel I• magniThe weather forecast Is tor It fullblck Sunday opinst t h e
ficently .ftnlshed In block ancf brUih•d aluminum.
perfect golf condltloos w it h SL Louis lardlmla. He inJured
OUili\Y daya lnd cool evenlncs. his knee All;l. 9 during 1 preLight breuoo also are Olfllected. SBiaoo contest wiUt the Loo fm.
A lleld of 300 1111ateurs lnd ploo Rima.
"Ewerythlng ill Two Wer Radios, A.nt... nas and Acceuorlea"
100 proo will play in 11&gt;e Del
To mike room for Gr...., 11&gt;e
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO ~I
PHONE 416-4517
GEORGE'S .CREEK ROAO
Webb PI'HIII bqlnnirw Tue.. Broom. put defenllve llckle BW
FAMILY SHOE STORE
•
day,
Subotino oo 11&gt;e - . . Uot.
,__ _ _ _ _..::3~28~S.~c::•~~·d~A~v•~•••
Gollip,lis, Qh:.cl•:...._..._.....,.,.,.

OlympicGames
Start
Army Stuns
California

OSU-Purdue
Statistics

Florida

Golden Bear Defeats
After Third Tulane

BOB EVANS STEAK HOUSE
BOB EVANS DRIVE-l

Title In Row

Start at the bottom and dress
your way up

day;

WAGON TRAIN GANG - Members of the wagon train
group that traveled from Pomeroy to Columbus in s~port of
the 1964 state bond issue which pro•,rided funds for the new
stretch o! Route 33 in Meigs Coonty were given t11e privilege of
cutting the ribbon officially ~ng twolanesofthe highway be-

tween Rock Springs and Darwin Friday. Pictured, from left,
are Fred Leifheit, State Sen. oakley C. Collins, Fred Crow,
Wayne Swisher, Leslie Fultz, Gov. Rhodes, State~· Ralph
Welker, Bill Childs and Carl Dahlberg, executive director of
the Southeastern Ohio Regional COUncil.

Upolis Motor Co. , Second Ave.
Police said SWeat backed out
of driveway across the street
and struck a parked car owned
by Mary L. Grl!!ln, !5, Rl. 1
Gallipolis. Mrs. Griffin was waiting for her car to be serviced
at the garage.
There was no damage to the
SWeat car but minor damage
was OOne to the Griffin car.
No one was Injured.

and costs, unsafe vehicle; David R. Arnold, Columbus, $10
and costs, failure to yield the
right-of-way; Charles A. Muser, Pomeroy Route 4, $10 arx1
costs, e"')ired driver's license;
David L. Hendricks, Middleport,
$5 am costs, defective exhaust
and Roger K. Blumenauer, Pcmeroy Route 4, $5 and costs, u~
safe vehicle.
Forfeiti~ boOOs were Don E.
Whitlock, Coolville Route 1; Tommy E. Small, Princeton, W. VL;
Henry Small, Pearisburg, VL;
Rufus P. Haynes, Chesapeake;
Stephen Morris Roby, Charleston, W. VL, $27.50 each on
speeding charges; Charles J.
Bell, Summersville, W. Va.,$27.50, oren flask, and Joseph C.
Pettey, Covington, Ky., $32.50.

HiT HARD - A Logan Chieftain player is abont to be
dropped hard here by Meigs' Rocky Wllllam.s (13) in the third
period of the Marauders' 1~14 loss to Logan Friday night.
Other Meigs players visible in the p~oto are John Smith (22)
and Larry Lemley (64).

Sponsorship

Pomeroy Flower

Of Interact

Shop Named Gold

Oub Postponed Medal Florist

21 Cases Handled
POMEROY - Thirteen defe~
dants were fined and eight others
forfeited bonds Friday in the
court of Meigs County Judge
Frank W. Porter.
Fined were John Avery sargent, Pomeroy Route 1, $5 aM
costs, Insecure load; Lawrence
L. Lowery, Chesapeake, $10 and
colts, speeding; Thomas M. Stewart, Cheshire Route 2, $5 and
costs, defective exhaust; David
0 . Michael, Pomeroy, $5 afKf
costs, defectl ve exhaust; Benny
L. Thivener, Gallipolis, speeding, $15 and costs; William How·
ard Gardner, $10 and costs, intoxicationj Dale Richard Herman.
Middleport, $10 and cofllts, failure to obtain title; Donald R.
Ma•dey, Middleport, $10 a1'11
costs, cpen Oask; Wesley L.
Wise, Middleport Route 1, $5

~PO­

Tech For 24-7 Win

.'•'it "•·.'''

Four Cars Damaged In Collision
GALLIPOLIS - No one was
injured but four cars were dam aged at 8:40 a.m. Friday when
a 17 -year-old youth lost control
d. his car and smashedintothree
parked cars lnfrontDC632Fourth
Ave.
City pollee said that Jeffery
L. Sayre, 17. RL 1 Galllpollo,
headed southwest onFourtb Ave.,
lolt control of his car. The car
Sl)rre was driving, owned by
Glen Wayan, struck a parked
car owned by Joann Layne, 632
Fourth Ave., that car hit another ear owned by Mrs. Layne
and it struck a parked car ownod by Delmar R. Gingerich, 628
Fourth Ave.
There was extensive damage
to the car Sayre was driving.
Moderate damage was done to
Che left rear at one of M r s.
Layne's cars and minor to the

i

OhW

Seventh ranked Ohio Stale,
magnificent .., delenoa Utroughout the game, sturmed top rated
Purdue 13-'J and slotlPed die
offensive magic ot AU-America
Leroy Keyes before a w11cD.y
cheering record crowd ot 84,834
here Saturday.
The Buckeye's alert secondary turned two pass interceptions
Into third fJI,arter touchdowns In
the biggesl up set of the young
college football seasm.
The win gave Ohio state an
irudde track for the Big Ten
title and a trlp to the Rose

Vols Tumble Georgia

anti -

ler's body, reading: "Revolutionary justice executes Vietnam War criminals and warns
all followers that one day they
will pay their debts to the
revolutionary court."
A consulate spokesman said
Chandler was not attached to
31\Y U.S. military advisory
group
in Brazil but was
studying Portuguese under a
private scholarship granted by
a retired Army general. The
spokesman said Chandler hoped
to teach the language to cadets
at West Point.
Pollee said ChandJer was hit
by six bullets. State and federal
police and Brazilian army
agents were investigating the
slaying,

COLUMBU~

Results

TO ENTERTAIN - Sleepy Jeft'ers, his wlte, Hopey, and
Roscoe of Channel 8 television, Charleston, W. Va., will entertain at the annual Meigs County Farm Bureau Federation meeting which has been set for Tuesday, Oct. 22, at 7:26 p, m. at
the Salisbury elemertary school allditoriwn. Old, new and
prospective members, as weU as friends, are invited to attend
the affair. Special door prizes will be awarded to some of
those who have paid 1969 memberships. AnyonewhohB!I notreceived a membership pin or who will fall into a new classification will be presented the pin during the evenillt. The Salisbury PTA wiU serve a ham dinner with the price of tickets
being $1.25 for adults and 75 cents for children. The organiution will pay the balance due fordiMers. Tickets can be purchased at the office in Pomeroy or trcm Roy Miller, Helen Williams, Pauline Atkins, John COlwell, Andrew Cross, Henry
Frank, Mrs. Garlarxl Clldwell, Mrs. Edison Hollon, Harold
Roush, Rex Shenefield, Don Wilson or Virgil King, president.

~

Buckeyes Jolt Purdue, 13-0

Football

U.S. Army officer was machine- Vietnam War pamphlets were
aumed to deatll as his son found 5cattered around Chand-

watched today by two terrorilf:s
who scattered leaflets denouncing the "criminal" war in
Vietnam before escaping.
The otlicer was identified by
U.S. military authorities as
Capt. Charles W, Chandler of
Arcadia, La. The U.S Consulate
l&amp;1d ChandJer was the father of
four children, including one
born ln Brazil where he was
.wdy1ng the Portuguese lanaua&amp;e under a private grant.
Chandler was shot down
cutslde his home in the
restdentlal suburb of A Sumare
as he was walking to hil!l car.
Pollee said his nine-:Year-old son
aaw hls father cut down by the
assassins who fled in a white
Volkswagen with no license
plates.

All-Stars@

Saturday's

....1 .

tr:,

SAO PAULO, Brazil (UP0- A

I •t '':

Two Divorce Suits

. . .. ...

The Sunda,r Times - Sentinel, Sunday, October 13, 1968

Spartans Are
Upset 28-14
By Michigan

Nine lorlller state highWIIY
directors whole tenure of of.
fl&lt;t goes back to 1929 today
called tor the passage of losue One in November.
Expresoing tholr vlewo to
Highway Director P. E, Masheter were Robert N, Waid,
Gen. Robert S. Beighller, II.
G. Sours, T. J. Kauer, S. O.
Linzell, George J. Thormyer,
and E. S. Preston, all of Colwnbuo, and Earl Reeb, Hicksville and Murray S. Sudler,
Mansfield.

-

. ·' . ..

ENJOYING LUNCHEON - The Salisbury Elementary Schoolwull&gt;e oceno oC I lund_, lcw
officials of the RL 33 dedication activities held Friday. Shown here at the info~ luncheon are,
from left arwnd the table, Athens Mayor Raymond Shepherd, Fred W. Crow, Mr. Wilson of Neba&amp;
ville, Gov. James Rhodes, P. E. Masheter, director of highWBJIS, and Jack Cowie, highway depart,..
ment public relatior~s director.

SEEKS DIVORrE
GALLIPOLIS - Llou E. Sanders, Gallipolis, filed a retlllon
Friday tn Ga.llia County Common Pleas Court against Maybell L. Saunders, Masslllon, for
divorce on grounds of gross neglect of dut;y and extreme cruelty. They were married Sept.
27, 1!127, and have no minor
children.

JUVENU.E COURT
51 EXAMINED
GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Henry B,
GALLIPOLIS - Gallla County Juvenile Judge John W. How- Lacey, COlumbus orthopedic surell fined Judy Ramsey, 17, Che- goon, examined s1 patients at
shire, $10 and costs Saturdiiy Frfday'a semi-aMual orthopedic
on a State mghway P a t r o I clinic at Grace United Methodist
charge of no operator's license. Church. There were tour referJeffery L. Sayre, 17, Rt. 1 Gal- rals. Dr. Lacey was assisted by
lipolis, forfeited a $33 bond on nurses of the Gallla County Health
a cit;y police charge or reckless Department.
operation.

MIDDLEPORT - It was decided to postpone for the time bei~
sponsorship :;~f a.1 Interact Chili
Friday night when the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club met
for its dinner meeting at Heath
Methodist Olurch
Dr. Jerry Metheney was pro-gram chah'man and reported o:-~
a meeting of the committee dealing with the proposed Interact
cluJ. Interact clubs are spon.
8 ored by Rotary clubs but work
closely with school and community. Their members .seek ways to
foster exchange students a n d
more trequent contacts with foreign youth.
The birthdays of John We.rner
and Dick Rosenbaum were observed. Serving the dinner were
Mrs. Everett Davis, Mrs. Alma
MUler, Mrs. Terri Bycr, Mrs.
Freda Mitch and Mrs. Emma
Wayland.

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Flower ShqJ, located at 200 W,
Main St., Pomeroy, has been
selected as a gold medal Oortst
by the National selection committiee of Gold Medal Florists.
Gold Medal florists are beilw:
selected throughout the country,
Selections are based on excellence in design and quality, outstanding aorist in the community and high business standards.
The Pomeroy Flower Shop is
owned by Mr. and Mrs. MWard
Van Meter and has been servilll
Pomeroy and Meigs COwtly for
eight years. The Van Meter• Ittend the Syracuse MeUtolllst
Chl.ll'ch and Mrs. Van Meter Ia a
member of tlle Order of Easten
Star, Chapter 186, Pomeroy.

ASK EXTRADmON
PARIS (UPO- France hU
a1ked West German)' to atrl·
TOP KNIGHT WINS
NEW York (UPO Top dlte former Nad SS Gen. Heinz
Knight un\eashed a strong stretch B. Lsmmerdlni to lace &lt;harP•
run at Belmont Park Saturday to of han8in8 French holtapo
win the $170,450 Champagne June 9, 1944. Depucy Forello
stakes by about three lengths Mlnlller Jean de Upkowlkl laid
and become the leading 2-year- Friday Lammerdlng Ia living in Duoseldorl.
old of the season.

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Dana Stephens is Crowned
PPHS Homecoming Queen
~

GETS EAGLE AWARD - L a _ . Edward Wrlt!lrt, cer&gt;ter ts nanked by hh parents, Mr. aOO Mrs. Lawrence Wright,
~r he was presented scouting's highest honor, the Eagle
Award, recently. Larry is a Pt. Pleasant High School sopho-

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more.

"'t·

~Lawrence

Wright
:Gets Eagle Award
~-

Pf. PLEASANT -

Lawrence
• Edward Wrlght, son of Mr. and

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I

at evening services held recent,
Ute Main Street Baptist

sented Mrs. Wright the Eagle

If at
,,

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'-

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April of 1968, L a r r y

transferred to Explorer Post261
and three months later he comploted his Eagle requirements.
Several presentations were
made to the new Eagle Scout. Ken
Leikari, Post 261 Advisor, pre-

Mra. Lawrence Wright, cA l2U4
Meadowbrook Drive, Point Pleasant. W, \'a., was given scouting"!

·, N&amp;heBt honor, the Eagle Award,

\

In

PT. PLEASANT - The 196869 Homecoming ~een of Point
Pleasant High School is Dana
&amp;ephens.
Dana is the daughter ot Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Stephens,. of
Jericho Road. Her escort for
tile night was Roger Sl.inn, son
ot Mr. and Mrs. Bryon ~Inn,
d. Leon, W, Va.
Mr. C, R. Withers, Principal
of Point Pleasant High School,
placed the crown on her head.
For the evening she wore a
light blue two piece dress with
black accessories. ~e hi a member of lhe band, National Honor
Society and the secretary of the
Y-Teens. She was chosen to represent Point Pleasant at "Know
Your State Government Day" and
Rhododendron Girls state. H e r
hobbies include reading, sewing
and horseback riding.
others
vying
for
t he

medal who in turn pinned it on
Church.
...._.nt
her son. 'lben larry pJ'esented
Larry, a sophomore at rul
Pleasant High School and amem- each of his parents with tokens
bar of Po!lt 261, had many fine of his award. Mr. Guy Nash preachievements during his scouting sented l ,arry with a letter from
Jears. The followingisanabrldg - National Headquarters and his
eel Hst of some of them.
Eagle certificates. Garland ParIn 1961, Larry and five otller sons made a presentation of a
bc.J¥a formed local Pack 261. In neckerchief slide.
1963 he became a Webelo, after
Serving on the Court of Honor
wblch he joined Troop 261. By were Ken Leikari, Post Advis~ of 1964 he completed his or; Chadds Hall, M.G.M.District
TCildlrfoot, Life and Second Executive; Char les Barney,
Class and First Class ranks Chairman of Post Committee;
UKI became a Patrol Leader. George Roberts, Institutional
Dt October of 1966 he was Representative; John Whitley, M.
elected Senior Patrol Leader~ G.M. Comm11!1sioners Staff; Guy
hil ....._......, 1n early 1967 he ac - Nash Former Scout Executive;
w...,.
ce.pted
the position of Den Chief Rev.' Ted Wall, Ma.ln St. Baptist
r1 Pack 261. Seven m~mths !at- Church; Bill Knigllt, M,G.M. Diser 11 camp Arrowhead, Ona, W. trict Committeeman, George
Va. he was awardod the Sen- Lamp, M.G.M. Commissioners
lor' Patrol Leader Award and Staff· and Garland Parsons, M,
wu uta,pped out" into the OrdDistrict Training Direcder ol the Arrow.
tor.

G.M:

queenship were Miss Bee- and Mrs. Gus R, Douglass ol
key Nibert, daughter of Mr. and Grimms Landing. The crown
Mrs. Dale Nibert of Apple Grove. bearer ror the evening was Miss
Her escort for the evening was Regina Park; lhe nower girls
Jim Wilson, soo of Mr. and Mrs. were Miss Monica Park and Mary
J. N. Wilson, Point Pleasant, CUie Kingery. Regina and Monand Miss Brenda Hartley, ica arc the daughters of Dr. and
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Art Mrs. Nelson Park of Point PleasE. Hartley Sr., Point Pleasant, ant, and Mary Cllle is the daughHer escort for the evening was ter of Mr. and Mrs. DonaldKb-.g~
Jim Garr:ett, son of Mr. and ery of Point Pleasant also.
The Pep Club won first place
Mrs. William H. Garrett, of
In
the noat contest with "Knights
Point Pleasant.
Are
Top Dog," depleting a MilThe Sophomore class attendton
Greyhound
dog; KeyeUe Club
ant was Miss Mellnda Grosalfi,
won
second
place;
and the Fudaughter of Mrs. Evelyn Wiseture
Farmers
of
America
won
man oC Sand Hill Road. Her es~
lhird
place.
cort was Allan Underwood, son
The Future Farmers of Amerof Mr. and Mrs. William Underica
won first place in the car
wood of Pobrt Pleasant. The Juncontest;
the Apprentice Cheerior attendant was Miss Valerie
leaders
won second place and
Rainey, daughter of Mr. and
the
Pep
Club won third place.
Mrs. Douglas Rainey of GalUpolis Ferry. Her escort was Steve
Douglass, son of Commissioner

FFA Exchange Delegate Visits Gallia
GALLIPOLIS - Ray Wynne,
national FF A exchange delegate,
of Herefordshire, England has
spent this week in Gallia and
Jackson counties, visiting chapters and members of tile Future
Farmers of America, He also
has shown &lt;:olorcd slides and
talked to several school, community, and service clubs in the
area includi~ R3t.ary, Kiwanis,
rann Bureau, FUture Homemakers, and other high school youth.

RAY WYNNE

Ray spent two days at Ole Jackson high school, one day at Hannan Trace High School, and one
day at Gallia Academy High
School. He has been the house
guest of the Ral&amp;il Needs family, Cheshire. Mr. Needs is the
vocational teacher and rF h advisor at Jackson High School a00
his son Steve is a member of
the Jackson FFA.
Wynne will attend the National
FF A Convention in Kansas City
next .veek, continue west to California and return to England
early in November. The 23-yearold Wynne, representing the National Federation ofYoung Farmers Clubs of England is a field
representative for the English
government's M i I k Marketing
Board.
In this FFAexchangeprograrn,
one representative £rom EnglarKI
comes to this country, a.'1d one
£rom the United States goe:; to
England.
Since his arrival early in July,
Wynne has had a busy s('hedule.
One of the first stops on his
tour was Washington, D. C. where

he was a guest at a Congressional breakfast, met many tq, leaders including President Johrumn,
Gerald Ford, and General Wil·
ham Westmoreland, and visited places of interest including
Congress in session.
With Bill Rogers, State of Ohio
FF A President, and other state
officers, he then went on a tour
of New England and attended the
New England FFA Leadership
Conference. In Boston they visited Revolutionary War battle site
and Wyrme attended a "Boston
Tea Party."
From there the group went to
Blacksb.trg, Virginia, for the
American Institute of Cooperation. WyMe served as a member of the Ohio Delegation at the
gathering which brought together representatives from 17 dH·
ferent youth organizations all
over the countr:,.·,
The group returned to 0 h i o
throogh Kentucky andWyMe went
from Columbus to Wauseau,
where he spent two weeks oo two
cattle feeder (arms. He also
made short trips to Indians and

,.,

Terrorists Gun Down
S. Army Officer

I

The

consulate

said

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Are F'ded in Meigs
POMEROY - Two divorce ac·
tions were filed Friday in the
Meigs County Common Pleas
CourL
Charging gross neglect of duty,
Doris Jean Dailey, Portland
Route 1, seeks a divorce trom
Ora Leo Dailey, also of Portlard, and asks custody of two
mioor children.
Charles W, Curfman, Sr., near
Pomeroy, charges gross neglect
of dut.y and extreme cruelty in
his divorce action against Ellen
Curlinan, Pomeroy. The plaintiff asks custody of one minor
chUd.

Michigan where he visited with
4-H, Grange and other FF A or·
ganizatioos.
At Ohio state Fair he had the
happy assignment of acting as a
judge in the state FF A Queen
contest and the Ohio State Ju.
nior Fair Queen contest.
After the fair he spent some
time on a Hereford and Charolais
farm at Oxford near Cincinnati.
Clarence Brown, Jr., of Springfield, a Congressman he had met
in Washington, invited him to
sperd two da_ys with him and
Wynne says, "It really gave me
my best insight into American
politics. For two days I did ev~
erything he did, went everywhere he went.. It was quite an
experience.''

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Plan GOP Meeting
PT. PLEASANT - An important meeting of 11&gt;e Mason County Republican Womon'o Club will
bo held Mooday ai 7:30 •. m. at
the courthouse amex auditoriwn.
Mro. Sandra Nlchelo, president. urges the women to attend thi1 meeting aJmanytmpor11nt Juues are to be considered. Hootesseo will be. Mr. E.
Bartow Jonel', Mrs. Mary H.Yre,
,IIICI Mro. MaJdno Walters.

other and the Gingerich car.
Pollee dted Sayre to Gallla
County Juvenile Court on a
charge of reckless operation.
He posted a $33 bond for awear-

ance.
Roger L. Sweat, 21, of 241'1.!
Second Ave., was cited to Gallipolis Municipal Court Oct. 14
on a charge of improper back ing after an accident at 10:55
a.m. Friday in front of Ute Gal-

Defensive back Ted Provost
broke a scoreless deadlock
early in Ute Utlrd period when
he picked off a paos by Pur&lt;Ne
CJ1811&lt;&gt;rback Mike Phiw• and
1printed 35 yards for a
touchdown.
A few rnlliJtes later the
defense turned the trick again
when sophomore middle guard
Jim Stillwagon lnteroopted another pass by Phipps on the
Purdie 26, Five plays later
(Jlarlerback Bill Long, tilling in
for Injured sophomore starter
Rex Kern, faked to pass but
could not find a receiver than
r811 14 yards for the score.

Jim Roman, brought into Ute
gume to handle the place
klcklna choroo ofier OSU
missed three lleld goals, added
the extra point.
Pun:kle's deepest penetration
was to the Ohio State seven ill
the foorth period but that drive
second string
fallocl when
~rback Doo Klepert had a
pass Intended Cor Keyes batted
down at the goal line.
The Boilermakers twice dro\'e
to the Ohio .!late 14 during a
tense and scoreless first half
but both drives ended on a pair
of missed field goal tries.

Keyes was used mostly as a
nWlk.er and caught only four
passes, for 44 yards agalnlrt •
tough Ohio State secondary.
Keyes, a candidate for the
Ueisman tropll.Y, carried only
seven times for 19 yards.
Sophomore cornerback Jack
Tat.um was given the jOO oC
covering the eluaive Keyes and
batted down several passes and
harassed the 205..pound back all
afternoon.
Purdue entered the Big Ten
showdown averaging 41.3 points
and 437 yards per game In
winning its firrst three outings.

The Bollermakera II&lt;JUIId ,.
with ooly 57 yonlo rulhfor
agalnsl Olrlo Stale whieh Ia
rated rumber four In the 1J1:111M
in delenoe ogalnlt a l'llllllor
attack. - . added On!J• 12t
yards pooolng.
Ohio Stale flnMICI out 331
yardo niShinJr and 78 yardo UtrOUJII 11&gt;e air.
Purdue
0 0 0 0- 1
Ohio Slate
0 0 13 0-13,
OS!;- Provost 35 pass inter.
ceptlon ()dck falled)
OSU- Long 14 run (Rormn
kick)
A- 84.1134

ANN ARBOR. Mich. CUPilMichigan state abandoned Its
Michlgan quarterback Dennis nrst half fancy play attack in
Brown slipped the grasp of a favor of power sweeps and off- "You'¥e I'Ot enough equipment
Michigan State tackler in the tackle bursts, with sophomore there to 11upply all the team&amp;
in the Olympi("8 !"
middle or the fourth period tullback Earl AOOerson crunchSaturday and arched a 53-yard Ing over frm1 the three to give
scoring strike to end Jl.m the
Spartans
their second
Mandich to put the Wolverines touchdown.
Bowl.
F1ar*er
Charlie
ahead in a 2S...l4 victory over Wedemeyer 1 a former quartertheir cron-state rivals.
back, Jllllje a successful two-The diminutive Wolverine point conversion pass off a kick
signa] caller faded to his right formattoo to g1 ve Michigan
In a fake extra point try, and at State its brief, 14-13 lead.
the last moment, ftlpped a two-Brown connected with Oanker
point conversion pan to full- Joi.n Gabler for a 33-yard
step.
MEXICO CITY (UPO - Amid
A total of 7,886 athlete• from
back Garvie Cnw. The Spar- scoring pass pla,y in the razzlepomp and pageantry - and peace
"Today, (Oct. 12, 1968,) I de - 108 nations, both fliures Olym.
By United Press International
tans had opened the quarter by dazzle first period after halfclare open the Olympic Games pic records, marched into the
in a city which had been trouEast
completirw an 80-yard, 16.-pl.ay ba&lt;:k Ron Johnson became the
bled,
Prealdenl
Gustavo
Dlaz
Or
oC
Mexico, the 19th OlymDlad of stadium to ._, Ute big ollnr
touchdown march and used a fourth leadi~ rusher in Wolver· HArvard 21 Columbia 14
daz
formally
proclaimed
the
optbe
modern era," Diaz said as and the f811s, mostly MexiCIIll,
two-point conversion to take a
ine history with a 38-yard Army 10 California 7
ening or the XIX Olympic Games
the more than 80,000 fans in showed their emotions as well
14-13 lead.
scoring jaunt arourx! right end Princeton 34 Dartmouth 7
Saturday and Mexico City bethe saucer-like tnJverslty ot as their likes with responafn
WEST
POINT,
N.Y.
(UP0might
be
the
only
score
of
the
Craw then aasured Michigan on the fifth play or the game. Boston Coli 28 VUlanova 15
came
the
sports
capital
of
the
~arterba.ck Steve L i n d e I I game as neither team could
Mexico stadium cheered to their cheers.
Butralo 29 Delaware 17
ol ita third win In four games in
The ~artans countered with
world.
heart's
content and even stopthrew a 62-yard &amp;coring bomb to muster a scoring attack.
The Czechoslovakian dolep.
its initial Big Ten contest and their only first period score Penn 10 Cornell 8
While
10111e
political
overtones
ped
to
congratulate
one
anoth- doo received 11&gt;e blgpst hand
end
Gary
Steele
wllh
2:48
Lindell
moved
the
Black
Colgate 14 Holy Croos 6
the 11th-ranked ~artans their
when Wedemeyer made the
or.
remaining Saturday to I&gt;Ull Knights from the Cal 49 to the crept into the more than two of all, perhaps u a reminder
first loss. MSU Is now l-1 In first of his five end-round Syracuse 50 Plllliburgh 17
hour
ceremonial
parade,
which
The
skies
were
overcast
when
f1
that cowrtry•s recent polttiaroused
Army
from
the
brink
or
eight
early
in
Ute
third
period
Yale 35 Brown 13
conference play.
reverse plays good for 37 yards
ushered ln the quadremial
the
big
show
began
but
underdefeat
to
a
10-7
victory
aver
cal
problem•. 1be Hungarians,
but
throo
plays
netted
a
loss
or
Rutgero 29 Lehigh 26
Brown set up the go-ahead and a touchdown.
favored Calitornla.
games, It generally was a day
neath, on an approximately five - who su11ered Utrough a lllmllar
10
yards
and
Jensen
carne
ln
on
touchdown by dancing around in MSU
6 0 0 8-14 Montclair St. 6 Centra! ConThe Cadels, snapping a two - foorUt down to boot the field al rejoicing and brotherhood and
acre plot where the modernis- _political upheaval 12 years earnectlcut 3
his own back.Oeld before hitting Mich
13 0 0 15- 28
the host Mexicans, who had work- tic stadium sits on the rim of lier, received almost as warm
game
losing
streak
while
!»aa
wlUt
7:30
left
in
the
..
rlod.
end Jerry Imsland with an BMlch-Johnson 38 run (KHUan Bucknell 29 Temple 26
Randy Humphrey, the Cal ed hard for five years for this
one of Mexico City's largest a hand.
handing the Golden Bears their
Ithaca 21 &amp;.tsquehanna 6
yard pa5s. On the next play, he kick)
me big moment, didn't miss a
first
loss
oC
the
season,
moved
quarterback
who
threw
almost
U!oroughfares, all was brightThe American andRussiandeJ.
hit Mandich with a 16-yard pass MSU- Wedemeyer 37 run Ckick Lebanon Valley 39 Muhlenberg
ness.
77
yard•
in
four
pla,ys
for
the
also were warmly ap..
egation1
as
many
interceptions
as
he
did
29
betore coq&gt;leUng his third in a failed)
score
that
snatched
victory
Only
10
days
before
the
city,
•lauded.
The Yanks, 393 otroor,
pai!ISes,
redeemed
himself
in
the
row, on a broken play, to Mich-Gabler 33 paslii from Union 21 Rochester 7
from the visitors.
built
on
t.he
ashes
of
the
ancwere
led
Into the stadium by
Cal
scoring
drive
as
he
lone
Williams 48 Middlebury 14
Mandich Cor the score,
Brown (kick failed)
Steele,
who
this
l!leason
began
up
11
yards
on
a
rwrthient
Aztec
empire,
was
rocked
Mrs.
Jllllice
Rom&amp;ry, a 40 •
picked
Amherst 33 Bowdoin 3
Craw capped an 84-yard
MSU- AMerson 3 run (Foreto wear contact lenses because down situation to carry to the
by another round of student riots, year-old mother of two trom
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
Ct!PO
Worcester Tech 30 Bates 20
drive, with Brown ripping off man pass trom Wedemeyer)
of the m8liJI passe• he dropped Army one from where McGaf!le
StatisUcs of the Pw·due - Ohio which claimed the Uvea of at Woodland HUls, Calif., makina
huge chunks of yardage bn Mich- MaOOich 53 pass from Clarion 37 Edinboro 13
least 33 p.ersons.
It the first tlme that a woman
last year, took in Llndell'l!l pass plunged over.
State football game,
opdon plays, by bulllng his way
Brown (Craw pass from Brown) New Hampshire 42 Maine 17 oo the California 23 and fought
The moment all of Mexico had carried the ••stars a n d
Jim McCall, a junior from
Purdue
Ohio
St.
25 yards slowly up the micldle Mich- Craw 25 rWl (Killian Northeastern 30 American In.
his way to the goal as Bear Pittsburgh, harassed Hwnphrey
First dawns . . . . 16
22 had waited for came shortly af- stripes" ln tile Olympic par13
and veering right into the end kick)
defenders tried to foroo him out all afternoon and acoounted for Rushing Yds . • , 57
333 ter Diaz Ordaz had officially op- ade.
LafayettA! 27 Washington &amp; Lee
zone,
A-103,785,
of bounds.
Heavyweight welghtll.lllng ~J&gt;Id
three
or
the
interceptions.
The
Passing
Yds.
.
,
,
129
78 ened the Games. That was when
7
20-year-old
farmer's
daughmedalist
LeontdZhabotln•k;ycar.
a
California, making ita first Army
defensive
back who
Return Yds. . • , , 11
35
Midwest
visit to Michie Stadium, had caught Cal aerials as if he Passes ..... • 12-34-2 11-16-1! ter, Enrlqueta Basilio, came in - ried the fiag tortheRuulandeleWestern Michigan 14 Kent st. 0
taken a 7-3 lead wtth 4:07 lett belonged to their radar Wlit, Punts ..•.... , 6-36.0 4-31.2 to the stadiwn, took a lap a- gatlon, largest ln the pmea at
Michigan 28 Michigan Sl. 14
when Mlback John McGotrte saved a possible touchdown
Fumbles Lost , ... 0
2 round U1e track, ascended the 4!3. •\s he had clone at T&lt;icyo
Ohio St. 13 Purdue 0
plunged over from one yard out when he intercepted for the Yards Penalized .. 43
96 90 steps to the top of the stru c . four years earlier, Zbabotlnsky,
Mluourl 27 Colorado 14
as the Bears moved 44 yarda first time on the five. He later
lure and then lit the Olympic a huge man and perhaps the larMinnesota 17 Dllnolo 10
after
recovering 811 Army snapped
flame,
which will remain lit un- gest in Ute Games, carried his
a
Hwnphrey
pass
Unser Defeated
Utah St. 20 Wlscooaln 0
fumble.
til the Games come to a close nation' 8 nag in one hand 0 u tdeflected
by
teammate
Ken
Iowa st. 23 Kansas St. J 4
For Pole Post
It retched.
oo Oct. 27.
hrmy, stopping the Bears Johnson on the Army 23 and he
Notre
Dame
27
Northwestern
7
ATLANTA CUPO- The Ten. Tech tumble at the Tech 30.
capped his busy afternoon by
with
four
pass
interceptions
In
IRISH
HILLS,
Mich.
(UPD
nessee Vola, held in check unt:U This time, when the Vols were Indiana 38 Iowa 34
the first hal(, took a J..{) preventing another
Mario Aroretti edged lndial"VIpossible
. 11&gt;e lading mu..tes ol die llrst unable to move, Karl Krelllfier, Centre 6 Wa•hington (Mo.) o advantage early in the third toochdown at the seven.
polis champ Bobby Unser by a
SouUt
hall, C81&gt;lt&amp;llzed on two fwnble who also kicked three extra
perind on a 28-yard field goal by Calltornia
0 o 0 7- 7 fraction of a second Saturday lo
WE ARE PROUD TO SERVE
reeoverles by Nick Showalter points In the game, booted a 42- Virginia Tech 7 Wake Forest 6 Arden Jensen.
capture the pole position for SunArmy
0 0 3 7- 10
Maryland 33 North Carolina 24
COL . SANDERS KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN. iT iS
saturday arxl rode the passes of yard
field goal
to give
day's $75, 000 inaugtJral race at
The field goal •weared llko it
Auburn
21
Clemson
10
ALWAYS
EASY AND CDNVENlENT FOR MOTHER TO
Bubba Wyche to a 24-7 vlctol')· Tennessee a 10..0 halftime lead.
the new Michigan lnterational
Florida 24 Tulane 3
over Georgia Tech.
SERVE AT HOME.
Tennessee scored again early Miami (Ohio) 46 Marshall 0
~eedway.
The Vols and Yellowjackets
in the third period on a 24-yard
Aod.retti's sleek white rearFAMILY BOX 9 Pc. $2.45
were locked in a rugged pass from Wyche to McClain to Tennessee 24 Georgia Tech 7
BARREL 21 Pc.
engine machine shot around the
East
TeMeuee
14
Tennessee
BUCKET 15 Pc. $3.95
scoreless defensive dual when climax a 69-yard drive that
aspJa.lt oval at 183.67 mph - a
$5.25
Tech 6
Showalter made his first fumble featured two long runs by
record quallljring time for cars
recovery, one of five by fullback Richard Pickens who Western Maryland 37 Lycoming
of the championship class - to
AND
29
Tennessee in the first half, at played a.lmost oone of the tint
win
the
favored
position
in
SunVlrglnla 50 Duke 20
the Tech 48 yard line.
half because of an injury.
day's 26-car tleld
Alabama 31 Vanderbilt 7
Wyche, the quarterback who
Georgia Tech came stroiUng
GAINESVILLE, F1a. (UPO started as a third stringer last back after lhe second Wycheyear to lead 11&gt;e Vols to victory McClain touchdown pass on an
Ninth - ra;llred Florida, held to
over the Yellowjackets, quickly 83-yard drive for its only
three points in the first three
LAS VEGAS. Ne '· (UPO led his team the 52 yards to the touchdown or the afternoon.
quarters
by winless Tulane, exreceivers and made two inter- Jack Nicldaus, the long-hitting
l'l.rst score, picking up 21 yards
ploded
for
three toUchdowns SatThe score came oo a 10-yard, ceptions In the final period.
pro from Ohio who has lound
on a run of a busted pass play fourth down pass t'rom Larry
urday
to
win its fourth gLne
Pickens scored tile Vol&amp;' final
Las Vegas to his liking, goes
24-3.
and then throwing 12 yards to Good to Jolin Sias. Good broke toochdown, earl,y in the final
alter his third straight &lt;:hamThe Gators, who held Tulane
sophomore Oanker Lester Mc- several Tech passing records period after Richmond Flowers
pion.ship when the sahara Invithree
inches from a touchdown
Clain for the first score of the during
the
game
as
he their leading runner for the
tational golf tournament opens
1!11110.
in
the
final quarter 1 scored on a
completed 25 out of 61 passes got oCC a 34-yard run and Wyche Thursday,
43-yard pa.ss play from quarterLeu than a minute later for 267 yards but the Vols did COMected with Bill Baker on a
The prize money for the 11th
Showalter recovered another an ex&lt;:ellert job of covering his 42-yard pass.
back Jackie Eckdahl to end Jim
annual event at the Paradise
Yarbrougll and short runs by runValley Country Club has been
ning backs Tommy Christian and
in:reased frm1 $111,111.11 to
Larry Smith.
$122,222.22 with first place
Tulane took an early lead in
worth $20,000.
the first period with a 34-yard.
Nicklaus, 28, actually will be
tleld goal by Bart Brookat.z arwJ
seeking his lourdl Soh1ra lnvlJack Youngblood evened: it Lfl fo,tational title. In addition to winFlorida in the second quarter
nino in 1966 arc! 1967, he "" with a4i-yarder. Youngblood also
the 1963 cl"lan1)Ion.
scored .JOth of florida's extra
The four-day medal •lay tourpoints.
nament will be preceded by a
Detensi ve back Skip Albury
two-day pro-amateur,
kept Tulane from a touchdown
The sahara Invitational Is one
with Florida leading 10-3 ln the
of Ute lq&gt; professional Golfers'
third period when he tackled TuAssociation tournaments a n d
lane haltback Warren Bankston
draws most of the outstanding
on the F1orlcla goal line on fourth
pros.
down.
Last year's tournament. tor
Albury also started F1orlda
example, drew 19 of the leadirw
toward Its first touchdown when
• 5 channel cry1tol confrolled. Cll. 11 supplied.
20 money wimera lnd 38 of 11&gt;e
he recovered a Tulane tumble
* 12 tnmsilfora plus B diodes, zen•• volta9• regulcltor .
leading !0.
on the Florida 22 in the fourth
* S.n1itivity one microvolt for 10 db signal+ noiu/ noi1e .
Young Steve !;pray looked like period
* Pow.r input 5 wotts.
• winner cOming into the flmJ
Style 2338
* Po_, output 3 watts.
Florida drove 78 yards folnine holes a year ago. But he
81ec~ .
*High ord•r modulation.
lowing an Albury recovery an:!:
faltered arxl Nicklaus moved inC.tretan
*Current drain, 0.75 omp receive &amp; 1.4 omp transmit .
scored its first touchdown oo
to die lllld.
* 12 voh DC only.
121.15
Christian's four-yard spurt with
• Dimen•ions 7" • 6" • 2-1/8" LWH.
It wasn't an eaay win for
Olher /1/r.mn -Bu:Jil Stytu
14 minutes left to Dlay.
tram 1111 85
• Supplied with push·to·tolk ceramic microphone ot'ld cail•d
Ute hard • hitting 20~r,
Eckda..11 then threw to Yarcard, mounting brac:ket and instruc:tion1.
though. Nicklaus was only one
brough and Smith, who wound ~
Most men only worry about suits, shirts and ties. They buy
inch from 11&gt;e wl - of - bounds
with 117 yards rushing, put the
marker on the 18th hole.
from the top down. So by the time they get to the bottom,
icing on the cake with a one.
The difference between first
YardDI~
their feet are just an afterthought. And the shoes they buy
and secom was $8,000- $20,000
Tulane played the Gators on
for Nicklaus and $12,000 for
look like afterthoughts. If you buy a pair of Nunn-Bush shoes
even terms much of Lhe game.
!;pny,
•
you can start with your feet. Because you won't have to worry
Other wimers
the Sahara
lnvtlational were:
OFF INJURED LIST
about them not matching the suit you haven't
BUI John&amp;on, 1958; Doug Sor&gt;CLEVELAND (UPO - T h e
bought yet. They're styled so you won't
ders, 1959; Bob Duden. 1960;
Cleveland Browno Soturday toot&lt;
Phil Rodgeri~ 1961; the late fullback Ernie Green off the I~
have to change shoes every time you change
Ton,y Lema, 1962; Dick Sikes, jured reserve lisL
St•p up to ,..., n•w 8 &amp; K Cobra 91, tho now, 23-chonul, fully delt.uce CB that's built to out..
suits. And thai em s:n'l' vou a lot of cl~:m:.;:e.
1964; BUI ca~er, 1965.
~Mrfom and ouh•alua most othor rlt•· TM n•w triple .col• (•hown above) is only part of the
Green was eJII)ected to start
1tory · • · tho Cobra 98 looks lllco o Million! Tho hoa¥}' dl ... cost alun~inum front pDnel I• magniThe weather forecast Is tor It fullblck Sunday opinst t h e
ficently .ftnlshed In block ancf brUih•d aluminum.
perfect golf condltloos w it h SL Louis lardlmla. He inJured
OUili\Y daya lnd cool evenlncs. his knee All;l. 9 during 1 preLight breuoo also are Olfllected. SBiaoo contest wiUt the Loo fm.
A lleld of 300 1111ateurs lnd ploo Rima.
"Ewerythlng ill Two Wer Radios, A.nt... nas and Acceuorlea"
100 proo will play in 11&gt;e Del
To mike room for Gr...., 11&gt;e
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO ~I
PHONE 416-4517
GEORGE'S .CREEK ROAO
Webb PI'HIII bqlnnirw Tue.. Broom. put defenllve llckle BW
FAMILY SHOE STORE
•
day,
Subotino oo 11&gt;e - . . Uot.
,__ _ _ _ _..::3~28~S.~c::•~~·d~A~v•~•••
Gollip,lis, Qh:.cl•:...._..._.....,.,.,.

OlympicGames
Start
Army Stuns
California

OSU-Purdue
Statistics

Florida

Golden Bear Defeats
After Third Tulane

BOB EVANS STEAK HOUSE
BOB EVANS DRIVE-l

Title In Row

Start at the bottom and dress
your way up

day;

WAGON TRAIN GANG - Members of the wagon train
group that traveled from Pomeroy to Columbus in s~port of
the 1964 state bond issue which pro•,rided funds for the new
stretch o! Route 33 in Meigs Coonty were given t11e privilege of
cutting the ribbon officially ~ng twolanesofthe highway be-

tween Rock Springs and Darwin Friday. Pictured, from left,
are Fred Leifheit, State Sen. oakley C. Collins, Fred Crow,
Wayne Swisher, Leslie Fultz, Gov. Rhodes, State~· Ralph
Welker, Bill Childs and Carl Dahlberg, executive director of
the Southeastern Ohio Regional COUncil.

Upolis Motor Co. , Second Ave.
Police said SWeat backed out
of driveway across the street
and struck a parked car owned
by Mary L. Grl!!ln, !5, Rl. 1
Gallipolis. Mrs. Griffin was waiting for her car to be serviced
at the garage.
There was no damage to the
SWeat car but minor damage
was OOne to the Griffin car.
No one was Injured.

and costs, unsafe vehicle; David R. Arnold, Columbus, $10
and costs, failure to yield the
right-of-way; Charles A. Muser, Pomeroy Route 4, $10 arx1
costs, e"')ired driver's license;
David L. Hendricks, Middleport,
$5 am costs, defective exhaust
and Roger K. Blumenauer, Pcmeroy Route 4, $5 and costs, u~
safe vehicle.
Forfeiti~ boOOs were Don E.
Whitlock, Coolville Route 1; Tommy E. Small, Princeton, W. VL;
Henry Small, Pearisburg, VL;
Rufus P. Haynes, Chesapeake;
Stephen Morris Roby, Charleston, W. VL, $27.50 each on
speeding charges; Charles J.
Bell, Summersville, W. Va.,$27.50, oren flask, and Joseph C.
Pettey, Covington, Ky., $32.50.

HiT HARD - A Logan Chieftain player is abont to be
dropped hard here by Meigs' Rocky Wllllam.s (13) in the third
period of the Marauders' 1~14 loss to Logan Friday night.
Other Meigs players visible in the p~oto are John Smith (22)
and Larry Lemley (64).

Sponsorship

Pomeroy Flower

Of Interact

Shop Named Gold

Oub Postponed Medal Florist

21 Cases Handled
POMEROY - Thirteen defe~
dants were fined and eight others
forfeited bonds Friday in the
court of Meigs County Judge
Frank W. Porter.
Fined were John Avery sargent, Pomeroy Route 1, $5 aM
costs, Insecure load; Lawrence
L. Lowery, Chesapeake, $10 and
colts, speeding; Thomas M. Stewart, Cheshire Route 2, $5 and
costs, defective exhaust; David
0 . Michael, Pomeroy, $5 afKf
costs, defectl ve exhaust; Benny
L. Thivener, Gallipolis, speeding, $15 and costs; William How·
ard Gardner, $10 and costs, intoxicationj Dale Richard Herman.
Middleport, $10 and cofllts, failure to obtain title; Donald R.
Ma•dey, Middleport, $10 a1'11
costs, cpen Oask; Wesley L.
Wise, Middleport Route 1, $5

~PO­

Tech For 24-7 Win

.'•'it "•·.'''

Four Cars Damaged In Collision
GALLIPOLIS - No one was
injured but four cars were dam aged at 8:40 a.m. Friday when
a 17 -year-old youth lost control
d. his car and smashedintothree
parked cars lnfrontDC632Fourth
Ave.
City pollee said that Jeffery
L. Sayre, 17. RL 1 Galllpollo,
headed southwest onFourtb Ave.,
lolt control of his car. The car
Sl)rre was driving, owned by
Glen Wayan, struck a parked
car owned by Joann Layne, 632
Fourth Ave., that car hit another ear owned by Mrs. Layne
and it struck a parked car ownod by Delmar R. Gingerich, 628
Fourth Ave.
There was extensive damage
to the car Sayre was driving.
Moderate damage was done to
Che left rear at one of M r s.
Layne's cars and minor to the

i

OhW

Seventh ranked Ohio Stale,
magnificent .., delenoa Utroughout the game, sturmed top rated
Purdue 13-'J and slotlPed die
offensive magic ot AU-America
Leroy Keyes before a w11cD.y
cheering record crowd ot 84,834
here Saturday.
The Buckeye's alert secondary turned two pass interceptions
Into third fJI,arter touchdowns In
the biggesl up set of the young
college football seasm.
The win gave Ohio state an
irudde track for the Big Ten
title and a trlp to the Rose

Vols Tumble Georgia

anti -

ler's body, reading: "Revolutionary justice executes Vietnam War criminals and warns
all followers that one day they
will pay their debts to the
revolutionary court."
A consulate spokesman said
Chandler was not attached to
31\Y U.S. military advisory
group
in Brazil but was
studying Portuguese under a
private scholarship granted by
a retired Army general. The
spokesman said Chandler hoped
to teach the language to cadets
at West Point.
Pollee said ChandJer was hit
by six bullets. State and federal
police and Brazilian army
agents were investigating the
slaying,

COLUMBU~

Results

TO ENTERTAIN - Sleepy Jeft'ers, his wlte, Hopey, and
Roscoe of Channel 8 television, Charleston, W. Va., will entertain at the annual Meigs County Farm Bureau Federation meeting which has been set for Tuesday, Oct. 22, at 7:26 p, m. at
the Salisbury elemertary school allditoriwn. Old, new and
prospective members, as weU as friends, are invited to attend
the affair. Special door prizes will be awarded to some of
those who have paid 1969 memberships. AnyonewhohB!I notreceived a membership pin or who will fall into a new classification will be presented the pin during the evenillt. The Salisbury PTA wiU serve a ham dinner with the price of tickets
being $1.25 for adults and 75 cents for children. The organiution will pay the balance due fordiMers. Tickets can be purchased at the office in Pomeroy or trcm Roy Miller, Helen Williams, Pauline Atkins, John COlwell, Andrew Cross, Henry
Frank, Mrs. Garlarxl Clldwell, Mrs. Edison Hollon, Harold
Roush, Rex Shenefield, Don Wilson or Virgil King, president.

~

Buckeyes Jolt Purdue, 13-0

Football

U.S. Army officer was machine- Vietnam War pamphlets were
aumed to deatll as his son found 5cattered around Chand-

watched today by two terrorilf:s
who scattered leaflets denouncing the "criminal" war in
Vietnam before escaping.
The otlicer was identified by
U.S. military authorities as
Capt. Charles W, Chandler of
Arcadia, La. The U.S Consulate
l&amp;1d ChandJer was the father of
four children, including one
born ln Brazil where he was
.wdy1ng the Portuguese lanaua&amp;e under a private grant.
Chandler was shot down
cutslde his home in the
restdentlal suburb of A Sumare
as he was walking to hil!l car.
Pollee said his nine-:Year-old son
aaw hls father cut down by the
assassins who fled in a white
Volkswagen with no license
plates.

All-Stars@

Saturday's

....1 .

tr:,

SAO PAULO, Brazil (UP0- A

I •t '':

Two Divorce Suits

. . .. ...

The Sunda,r Times - Sentinel, Sunday, October 13, 1968

Spartans Are
Upset 28-14
By Michigan

Nine lorlller state highWIIY
directors whole tenure of of.
fl&lt;t goes back to 1929 today
called tor the passage of losue One in November.
Expresoing tholr vlewo to
Highway Director P. E, Masheter were Robert N, Waid,
Gen. Robert S. Beighller, II.
G. Sours, T. J. Kauer, S. O.
Linzell, George J. Thormyer,
and E. S. Preston, all of Colwnbuo, and Earl Reeb, Hicksville and Murray S. Sudler,
Mansfield.

-

. ·' . ..

ENJOYING LUNCHEON - The Salisbury Elementary Schoolwull&gt;e oceno oC I lund_, lcw
officials of the RL 33 dedication activities held Friday. Shown here at the info~ luncheon are,
from left arwnd the table, Athens Mayor Raymond Shepherd, Fred W. Crow, Mr. Wilson of Neba&amp;
ville, Gov. James Rhodes, P. E. Masheter, director of highWBJIS, and Jack Cowie, highway depart,..
ment public relatior~s director.

SEEKS DIVORrE
GALLIPOLIS - Llou E. Sanders, Gallipolis, filed a retlllon
Friday tn Ga.llia County Common Pleas Court against Maybell L. Saunders, Masslllon, for
divorce on grounds of gross neglect of dut;y and extreme cruelty. They were married Sept.
27, 1!127, and have no minor
children.

JUVENU.E COURT
51 EXAMINED
GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Henry B,
GALLIPOLIS - Gallla County Juvenile Judge John W. How- Lacey, COlumbus orthopedic surell fined Judy Ramsey, 17, Che- goon, examined s1 patients at
shire, $10 and costs Saturdiiy Frfday'a semi-aMual orthopedic
on a State mghway P a t r o I clinic at Grace United Methodist
charge of no operator's license. Church. There were tour referJeffery L. Sayre, 17, Rt. 1 Gal- rals. Dr. Lacey was assisted by
lipolis, forfeited a $33 bond on nurses of the Gallla County Health
a cit;y police charge or reckless Department.
operation.

MIDDLEPORT - It was decided to postpone for the time bei~
sponsorship :;~f a.1 Interact Chili
Friday night when the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club met
for its dinner meeting at Heath
Methodist Olurch
Dr. Jerry Metheney was pro-gram chah'man and reported o:-~
a meeting of the committee dealing with the proposed Interact
cluJ. Interact clubs are spon.
8 ored by Rotary clubs but work
closely with school and community. Their members .seek ways to
foster exchange students a n d
more trequent contacts with foreign youth.
The birthdays of John We.rner
and Dick Rosenbaum were observed. Serving the dinner were
Mrs. Everett Davis, Mrs. Alma
MUler, Mrs. Terri Bycr, Mrs.
Freda Mitch and Mrs. Emma
Wayland.

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Flower ShqJ, located at 200 W,
Main St., Pomeroy, has been
selected as a gold medal Oortst
by the National selection committiee of Gold Medal Florists.
Gold Medal florists are beilw:
selected throughout the country,
Selections are based on excellence in design and quality, outstanding aorist in the community and high business standards.
The Pomeroy Flower Shop is
owned by Mr. and Mrs. MWard
Van Meter and has been servilll
Pomeroy and Meigs COwtly for
eight years. The Van Meter• Ittend the Syracuse MeUtolllst
Chl.ll'ch and Mrs. Van Meter Ia a
member of tlle Order of Easten
Star, Chapter 186, Pomeroy.

ASK EXTRADmON
PARIS (UPO- France hU
a1ked West German)' to atrl·
TOP KNIGHT WINS
NEW York (UPO Top dlte former Nad SS Gen. Heinz
Knight un\eashed a strong stretch B. Lsmmerdlni to lace &lt;harP•
run at Belmont Park Saturday to of han8in8 French holtapo
win the $170,450 Champagne June 9, 1944. Depucy Forello
stakes by about three lengths Mlnlller Jean de Upkowlkl laid
and become the leading 2-year- Friday Lammerdlng Ia living in Duoseldorl.
old of the season.

,•

OUTGROWN YOUR
PRESENT CB?

'•

HALLICRAFTER
CB 20

Regular $99.95

SALE PRICE

s

95

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WHAT AIUYII

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COBRA 98

or

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Bob's Citizens Band Radio Equipment
'

..

ctarl''

'

�.

•

.... ..

' ·~·

Times • Senllnel, ~. OeiGbor U, 1168

13 -

Olsen, ot the Los
Rams, and Aldridge, ol
Green Bey Packer1, both pit~¥
college ball at Uleh Stole. They
were guest• of honor at a
J.ea&amp;ue, were honored IOda.Y by brunch which preceded S.tur~
tho Uloh Stole University day' a Utah s t a t e.Wfaeonsln
game,
Alumni AoaoclaUon.

Humbles Gallipolis By 32-6 Count;~:.{¥£~:~~

- Jacl&lt;100 ~
4jwter here Frida.¥
pbiDg up a 32-l; SoothOhio League grid trlv!Blting Gallipolis.
fired.up Red and White
o1 Coach Ben Buckles
ijlY•IIIIaao of r111Derou1 Blue
'miatakeo" In the oecond
wiJ{ going away after
' olim 12-l; halftime lead
a lll'ge homeeomlng

:GAJIS took the third period
and marched 53 yards
nino plays, p~~ttlng the pigon the Jackson 21, but Tom
was hit hard and CUm·

blo&gt;:l. Tho lronmell recovered.
From that point on, it wU no
COII'..el!lt.

Two pooa Interceptions HI up
two Courth period Jackson touohdo~V~~s. Alter the dl.altroUI thlrd
period fumble, Jackeon marched 79 yards In 13 playa to put
the game out oC reach a1 tar
as GAHS was concerned.
h was JackiOII'S fourth win
In six outlngo thlo tall - tho
triumph assured the Jronmen of
U.e1r best sea1011 record In three
years. Inside the SEOAL, Jackson evened Its mark at 2-2.
It wa.s Gallia'1 ftrst lou to
Jackson in three years and the

GAHS-Jackson Statistics
INDIVIDUAL NET
YARDS RUSHJNG
(Gallipolis)

i
I

I

'.

'
~-

' ,.
~~-.

l'

SCORING: Jackaon- Osborne,

PLAYER- Poo.

TCB YG AVG.
aotuc, HB . .
. . 2 IS 7.S
HB . . . . . 12 83 6. 9
~melt. HB . . .. . 2 10 S.O
Jioi!niOil, HB .. . •. . I 6 6.0
~. FB . . . . . . . 10 Sl S.l
Jl!ab, HB . • . . . . . 1 5 S.O
W, Elliott, QB . . . . 6 IS 2.S
'*'cor, QB .• . ... 3 I .3
TOTALS ........ 37 186 5.2
(Jackson)
PLAYER- Poo. TCB YG AVG.
laton, FB .... .. .. 13 78 6.0
DtStophen, QB •.. • . . . 7 39 5.5
Mlrphy, FB ...... .. . 1 5 5.0
Volentine, HB...... . 17 69 4.5
Mooabarger, HB . . .. . 9 24 2.6
Band, QB • . ... . • . ' . 0 -1 -7
TOTALS ... .... ... 4H 208 4.3
- TEAM ST ATCS'I'JCS SCORE BY QUARTERS
Golllpolis .... . 0 6 0 0 6
Jack110n .. .. .. 6 6 8 12 - 32
FIRSTOOWNS
Galllpol!o .... 3 6 4 4- 11
~~· • :--·4 54 S- 18
!~Ell RUSHING
Go~JJ,ou ....\ 4!l47 53 ~- 201
J•dtoon .••.. s'N;o 61 s2- 220
YAIUlS LOST RUSHJNG
-· '
Oolll#ol!s .... 0 6 0 15- 21
JaekiOil ...... 0 o 21t- 12
NET YARDS RUSHING
. Golllpollo . ... 49 4153 43 - 186
Jaekeon ..... 57 50 59 42 - 208
PASSES ATTEMPTED
;Golll,polla . ... 0 8 0 7 IS
Jadt.......... l 4 0 1- 6
PASSES COMPLETED
-4illliJ&gt;Ollo ..... 0 2 0 2 4
' Jad&lt;am .. ... l 2 0 1 4
l'ASSFS INTERCEPTED
Golllpollo ..... o o o oo
JackP&gt; ...... o o o 2- 2
\'AIUlS GAINEIJ PASSING
IJtlllpoll.o ..... 024 o 14 - 38
Jackson .. .... 7 90 0 19 - 116
TOTAL YARDS (Rush-Pus)
Golllpolls .... 466S5357 - 224
iackP&gt; ..... 6414059 61- 324
RETURN YARDAGE
Galllpolll .... 20202123- 84
Adteon ..... II o 041-52
. 'fLAYS FROM SCRIMMAGE
tlonlpollo ... 919 9 15 - 52
~- . . . . IU413 13 - S4

Prose,

tlJMBLES
GoiJipolio .. .. 0 I 1 I -

7-yard pass fromDe~epheni Sexton, 2-yard nm; Valentine, 6-yard
run, PATS by DoStephen; Mossbarger, 2-yard runj Osborne, 19yard pass from DeS,eJJhen.

Gallipolis -

Prote, 11 -yard

run.
OFFICIALS -

Dole Hall, Jll.'

Stanley, Lloyd Peecher and Burhl

Jenkins, Ironton chapter.
LCNEUPS
(Jockoon)
Fnds - Jenldna, Wallace, Osborne.
Tackles Murphy.

Guards -

Woolum,

Colby,

Mapes, Taylor, Con-

ley.
Center5- Mitchell,

~ckmeis­

ter.
Backs - DeSlephen, Bond, Valentine, Cheek, Sexton, Murph.¥,
Moubarger, Slafl'er.
(Gallipollo)
Ends -

Craig, Acams, Paul-

ey, R, Elliott, G. Canada,y.
Tackles Mosley, Hemsworth, M. Davi11, Daniels, Clagg.
Guards - B. Davis, Cleland,

Baxter.
· Centers - Russell, RonJanol.
Backe - ·JohnBOn, Prose, ~en­
cer, W. Elliott, Bo11tic, Burnett,
C. Neal, Hueholt, P, Neal, M.
Conada,y, Bush.
NEXT GAHS G&gt;\ME - Oct,
18. LOgan, home.

SV AC Standings
SOUTHERN VALLEY
ATHLETIC CONFERENCE
(SVAC ONLY)
TEAM
W. L. T. P OP
Kyger Creek • • 4 0 0 134 22
North Gallla .. 2 2 0 38 42
Southern • • . .. 2 2 0 62 68
Southwestern •• 1 2 0 20 80
Eastern ... . .. 1 2 0 42 30
TOTALS .. ... 10 10 0 302 302
THIS WEEK'S RESULTS:
Kyger Creek 56 Southwestern 0
Southern Local (Racine) 24
Hannan Trace 0
NEXT WEEK'S SCHEDULE:
Southwestern at Hannan Trace

3

~:ERED B~

0 0 I-

I

Golllpolta .... 0

0 1-

2

I-

2

~"":'Tmi .. 0 0
,....

1-26.
Gallipolis - None.

Gilllpollo .... 0 0 20 30 - :;{)
iacklon ..... 0 31 0 0 - 31
PUNTS: Jacl&lt;aon - Rowl111d,

APPLY FOR LICENSE
GALLIPOLIS - One couple
applied ror a marriage license
S.turdey In the ol!lce of Gall!a
County Probate Courl They were
Jadde L. Berry, 21, Gallipolis,
and Catherine Elizabeth Hoock,
17, GalllpoUs, at home.

·and OLDS Eye-Poppers
;\J•
'-\

'

'

1968 Cadillac H.T. Sedan DeVille · ·.·· -$5600
Gray m•tollic finish with black interior, full power
equipment, radio, tinted glasa, w/s/w tir•s, Comfort
Control Air·Conditionint, 13,000 mil•• · On• owner
new Cadillac trod•.

1968 Olds 98 Luxury Sedan · · • • • • • · · · ·$4600
White ower turquoise meiallic finish with turquoiu
interior, full power equipment, tilt &amp; telescope steer·
ing wheel , rodia, tintH glau, w/s/w tires, Com·
fortron Air-Conditioning, anti-spin axle, 18,000 miles .
One awner new Olds trode. Just like n•w.

1967 Cadillac H.T. Sedan DeVille····· -$4600
Full power equip ., radio, t inted gloss , new w/ w
t iru . Auto . headlight control, comfort control air
cond., doe sil:in finish with matching interior . One
owner, new Cadillac trade .

See your authorized Cadillac dealer

1969's
NOW ON DISPLAY
KARl &amp; ,YAN ZlNDT
MOTOR SALES
OPEN EVES. TIL 1.00

POMEROY

•

worot GARS oell&gt;ack llulforod to
GAllS marched ~t yards In
the Ironmen In 13 yoarl, The II piau, advancing the pialldn
doCeat left Coach Gidl Trauto• to the Jackoon llx, but ""' held
boyo "Hb a 2-4 overall mark. Jn. on down1.
sWe tho league, GARS Ia 1-3.
SECOND PERIOD
LeBi lillie a Jscl&lt;eon teem
Tiro playo Jeter, lloStephen

pme _ by Jockoon'oKevin Row·
land - GAHS mard!od iii yardl
1n llxplqo. Tom 1'11&gt;0itaclllllpOI'-

FOURTH PERIOD
Valentino lntercopted • !lion·
cor peu on the Jackaon fll, ond

yards
....,...r
lollto end
ed
with 111:09
lett In
the hall
roduce the count to 12-8, Dan Murt&gt;liY blocked !l&gt;oncer'o kick from

returned
41 playololer,
yardo to tJorho
GAllS 19. II
Five
ry Moalbarger IICOred (rom the
two with 9:09 lett. II was 26-

swamped tho Gall!o CounUans hit Ooborne with a 79 • yard
woo 30-7 back In 195.1.
oorlal. Tom Spencer pushed Oo- plocoment.
Here'• a aurunary ot Frl- bomo Out of bounda on tho GAHS
THJRD PERIOD
dQy'a scoring:
With
Prose
and FS ChUck Neal
12.
fiRST PERIOD
altornatln&amp;
GAllS
drove to the
Two plt~¥1 taler, FB Gary So·
Ja~kJOn droVe 6t yarcll tn too bounced OYer from the two
Jackeon 21. Prooe!lunblod. Jack14 plays, with QB Ray DoSte- with 8:t3 !all In the hell, Apln 1011 recovered, thea marc:bed 79
phen throwtna a ..... • yard the PAT ottempt Called.
yards In 13 playa. 118 Darwin
strike to end Terry Osborne
Valentlpe
raced around riJ1!t end
GAHS drovo to tho Jaekson
to ciij) the drive. The clock lhow- 26 In 10 pto,ys, but aptn tho
with 0:25 ohowlng 011 the clooh.
ed ~:09 loll In the period. The Devils ollenae boaod down.
DeStophen ron tho polnto after,
PAT attempt Called,
Allor the onlj- punt ol tho giving .ms a 20-l; lead.

6.

Two ployo toter, Valantlne
otole another !pencer aerial, but
got oo return tldo Umo,
Boven playolaler, Jad&lt;am had
covered 53 yards. The aoore
como .., a 19.yaro peu from
DoStophen to Osborne with 3:37
left. Jocl&lt;oon led, 32-6.
tilotltutes Oooded the llold
following thelaot .mstouchdown.

WELLSTON _ An estimated
crmt'd of over 5,000 tans Jam.
med the WeUoton stodlumFrlday
night to view the "game ot the
year" in the SEOAL and ndnt,y
went home early as the two rug.
ged unbeatens battled to a 0-0
sl8ndofl.
Both teams played almost
unbelle·-ble de'enslv· ball, lore" to CO".~
lng the ••
-onent
un ...._~
116''..,. U11:'
pigskin ....,
at crucial situations
on
00 less than nine scoring drives.
Almost the entire first period
waa played in Wellston's terri~
to- but the Rockets were able
to.,
stave otr the Bulldog threats by
intercepting Athens passes on the
four yard line, 25 yard Jine, an::1
19 yard line, atlln the ftratper·
loci, In addition Welbton rumbled
to Athens on the 30butonthenext
play forced Athens to fumble the
ball back on the 25. The Rockets

were neYel' beyon.t their own 30
during the entire first quarter
of plq.
The best sustained drive otthe
contest came inthel8condperlocl
when Wellston puahed oU tr&lt;m
their awn 25 and in three pla.vs
arrived at the Bulldog 10 yard
line with a first down. Four
pJ•vs later Athena took over on
..., at the six inch line to kill
downs
the threat.
Late in the quarter linebacker
Steve West intercepted a Bob
Handley pass on the SO arxl r~
tw-ned lt to the Athens 30. Two
plays moved the ball to the Athens 19. With only 30 seconds lett
in the half Wellaton's TDby Via
attempted a field gol]tromtbe26
yard line that was straight down
the middle, but fell five yards
short of thE:! goal post crossbar.

In the third period Athens'
Rick Rutter pllllted 56 yards to
the Welloton 15 and lollowing I
WelJstonpunt m:1 an Athens fum..
ble, the Rockets started from
their own 40. 1Wo Rick Perdue
passes put Wellston at the Athens
IS yard stripe, but the Bulldog
defense again rorced Wellaton
to cough It) the ball on downs at
the eight yard 11ne. Thi s was 111e
final Utreat inside the 20 bY e1•
ther team.
With just 40 seconds left Athens took over on the Rocket 40
to
ya rd line and mo ved ~•tckly
the 30 on a pass 1rom H• nell ey
to Mike Goodwin, but on the final
play of the game halfback Jim
Hubbard Intercepted a Harxlley
pass on the 20 and returned it to
the 25.
Statistics bear out the rugged

defensive play as Athens attempted 23 passes, cOJqJleted just six
lor 69 yards, but had llveofthem
intercepted by Wellston.
The
Bulldogs showed 14 first downs
and 117 yards rushing.
The Rockets netted just nine
first downs, picked.., 115 yards
rushl.Jw, aoo Ri~k Perdue hit
eight ~C 11 passes tor 103 yards
with no interceptions. Total yard.
age favored WeUston 218 to 186,
The Bulldogs lost three ortour
tumbles while Wellston lost one
or two and in pereltles Athens
d rew -•--to
yards whlle the Roc•
.... ...,
kets lost 60 to the o!Ill
c als.
Both teams remained deacJ.
locked for first place in theSE().
AL with identical 3--0--1 records.
Score by quarters:
Athens
0 0 0 0-0
Wellston
0 0 0 0-0

LOGAN- l:oachLouParker's
Logan Chieftallll! hltpa,ydlrt twice
In the fttstperiod and scored both
points alter touchdowna, then held
otr a determined Meigs Marauder
eleven of Coach Charles Chancey
to win by 1 16-14 count at Huttop

••••••••••••••·~~~---­

THE
'P.ICK
:Of
THE
CROP IN FINE
·

-

StadiiDit.
The defeat left Meig1 wttha3-3
season record. lnalde the Souttttlstern Ohio Leaaue, Meirs is
2-2.
The triumph kept Logan In the
thick ol the 1968 chamglonohlp
race with a 3-1 conterence rec·
ord. Overall, the Chieftains are
i-2.
Alter the powerful LHS deren.se

66 Ponti a(
r-1

$2, 195

(

h
Catalina Station Wagon. We can
d gladly
A Jeer
b 1 you
f I to t is
local owner. New Pontiac: fro e- in.
eauti u wagon.

66 r-0
Dntl• ac
66 au·l(k

$1,895

VB Tempest 4 dr. Sedan . Power steering . Auto. trans.
This is a one owner low mileage cor .

$1,995

Custom Skylark 4 dr . Sedan. Extra clean. All vinyl seats.
Beautiful burgundy finish. Aulo. trans. Power steering .

'65 Chevrolet

$1,495
Save

9c,ll
10c,26
8c, l9
3c·19

The Marauders were forced to
punt spin after beiDa stopped by
the big Chieftain forward wall.
This time, the Chiefs moved
68 yards in 16 playa, With 38 oeconds lett in the period, Dana
Beougher slammed over from
the one, and again Conrad added
lhe PATS. That mode It 16-0.

LOGAN
lot
2m
Half Hall Total
10
3
13
165
~4
219
56
0
56
221
S4
27S
8
2
10
2
0
2
2
0
2
0
I
0
I
I
1-33 4-138 5-171
10
6
16

LOGAN
Conrad •• , • 8c,62

IRONTON - Sparked by the
running of Rick Boyktn, the lro~
ton Tigers broke into the victory
column ror the first time thi1 sea·
son Friday night with a smash·
ing 32-6 win over Nehonvill~
York.
Boykln, a 192-iloond treohman
fullback, scored Lhree touch·
dowm and rolled up Ill yards as
the Tigers moved out or theSEOAL collar.
The Tlgen grabbed the lead In
the tlrif ·period when Boykln
smuhed nve yards to score. A
conversion run taUed and It was
IHl at the 6:27 mark.
The big freshman tallied again
with just 10 secorxls remaining in
the first period on a one yard
bll!l to put the Tigers out O'ont

12-0.
Nelsonville-York's lone touchdown came with 7:29 left tn the

SEO Standings
ALL GAMES
TEAM
WLTPOP
Welloton . . • .. s 0 I 136 38
Athens .. .. .. 4 1 I 88 48
Lopn .. .. ... 420 84 63
Jsck!IOil . . . . .. 4 2 0 137 90
Meigs .. . . .• , 3 3 0 95 70
Gallipolis .. .. . 2 4 0 71 101
Nels--York . . .... 2 t 0 68 120
Ironton ...... .. 1 s 0 92 139
SEOAL ONLY
TEAM
W L T P OP
Wellston .. .•. • 3 0 1 60 20
Athena . ...• .. 3 o 1 34 21
Logan .. . .... 310 64 42
Jackaoo .. , .. • 2 2 0 81 70
Meigs . ... . .• 2 2 0 76 36
Ironton . . . . . . 1 3 0 78 75
Gallipolis . . ... I 3 0 37 74
Nolo-York . . . , , 0 4 0 22 114
TOTALS .... .. IS 15 2 452 452
FRIDAY'S RESULTS:
Welloton o Athena o
Jackson 32 Ga!llpoUs 6
lrootoo 32 Nelooovllle-York 6
Logan 16 Meigs 14
OCT. 18 GAMES,
Logan at Golllpolls
Jackson at Nell-York
Wellston at Meigs
Ironton at Athens

second period when quarterback
Larry Evans bootlegged around
eiJ:I for one yard to make the
score 12-6 at the haltime break.
With 2:36 left in the third perIod, Boyldn scored his third
touchdown of the contest on 1
tw~yard blast to run the count
to 18-6 after three periods.
The romp continued In the 0nal period as qlllrterback Greg
Sternaman hit BUIWashburnwlth
a three yard TD pass at the 3:08

Blanks HT
Squad 24-0

We have several new cars left . Stop in and make your
and registered 16 t1rst downs. selection. Save g bundle .
Boykin accowlted for lll yards,
Bob Bentley added 91, and Washburn 88 for the winners.
For the winless Buckeyes, Jer· Electra 4 dr. Sedan. Only 11,948 easy miles. Factory Air
ry Polley carried 19 times Cor 86 Conditioned. Power Seat. Courtesy Lights. New Buick
or the 113 total rushing yards. Trode .. in from locol merchant . Extra sharp.
The losers had 11drstdowuand
completed six of 15 passes Cor 58
yards.
Score by quarters:
"400" Firebird 2 dr . Hard Top . Low mileage, one owner
0 6 0 0- 6 cor . 4 speed shift. One of the besl performers on highway.
Nels.-York
12 0 6 14- 32
Ironton

8c,36 16c,98

Lowe, • • . Uc,37 5c,U 16c,48
Beougher .• 7c,J7 7c,9 J4c,26
Johnston. • l0c,41 lc-3 llc,38
Adair • • • • 0
1c,1
lc 1

•

P MN RECEIVING

TLPPERS PLAINS- The Fed eral-Hocking Lancera scored the
ooly toochdown ol the game In
the first period to deloot Eastern by a 6..0 score Friday night.
The Lancera, obiWVlng their
homecoming activities on the
Eagles' home field, grabbed the
teed lor keepo In the opening
minutes or the game when quarterback Larry Daughtery hit
Chuck Roblnooo with a 24 yard
1coring pass. Another Daughtery to Robinson aerial for the
extra points fell incomplete.
Coach Dan Hall's Lancers
scored their touchdown the sec.
ond Ume they got hold ol the
pigskin and following Eastern's

nrst aeries of downs.
Eastern, now 1-5 on the season, threatened late in the cootest when quarterback Ray Karr
passed deep to Bob Ritchie and
interference was ruled against
Federal • Hocking at the 12
yard line, Tho play eovored SO

yards, and gave the Eagles a
first down, but time ran out be~
[ore COach Billy Kincaid's boys
could score.
The game was a hard • fought

defensive clash throUghout with
the boll changing hands often In
the vlclnlt;y of mld..fleld.
Neither team, however, showed s potent ol!enslve thru8l and
the feault was a hard~ddng.

68 Pontia'
63 Ford

$3,195

63 Pontia'

$995
$795

Bonneville 4 dr. Hard Top. All vinyl upholstery . Beautiful
oil white finish.

62 Pontia'

MANY MORE
PONTIAC

PH. 992-2143

...:

..

6

:

g~~e ~~~28H~=t7 Ridge

ONLY

..::...

.::

.'

.~.

•

KEITH GOBLE FORD
KNOW

.;

J::::

London 28 Gronlvlew 6
Lancaster 25 Newark 8
Logan 16 Meigs 14
Washington C. H. 35 Gnenlle!d6
Paint Valley 19 Frank. Adora IS
WUmlngton 36 H111sboro 0
Colo. East 28 ColL Molawk 0
Cols. Eaoimoor iltl Colo. Cent. 0
Col&amp;. Linden 36 Colo, B..-v. 6
Cob. Mar. Frank. 28 Colo. West 0
Hamllton Twp. 14 Frank. Hgts, 6
Dublin 8 Teays Valley 8 (Ue)
Mt. Vernon 28 Ploaunt VIew 0
Jackaon 32 Galllpolla 6
Athena 0 Welloton 0 (Ue)
Morgan 32 New Concord 0
Colo. Norlhlam 6 Colo. Ready 6
West Jefferson 38 We1tfall 16
Waverly 60 Piketon 16
West MulkllliU!D 60 llDievllle 6
Mans. Ma1abor 26 Coshocton 0
ctn. xavier 14 ctn. ftos. Bacon 6
Cin. Purcelll7
Newport (Ky,) catholic 0
Ctn. Woodw'd 16 Cln. Wal. Hilla 6
Indian HilliS Lovelam 13
Cia. Hllihes 20 Cln. Withrow 0
Cln. Elder 26 Cln. LaSalle 0
Warren Harding 33 Alliance 0
Canton Aquinas 20 PIJ'm&amp; Padua 6
Can. South 6 Marllngton 6 (tie) '~:::,::'''' '''''''''

HOW YO MAKE
HE'P BIG DE•LS

ONUIEDCARI

SHARP

1965 FO~~STOM

SJJ9

LOCUST ST.

USED CAR LOT
·MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Kyger Creek's last touchdown
in the first period came with
1:20 left when Lewis attempted
another pass. Gary Saunders intercepted that pass on the Highlanders• 43 and raced over ror
the touchdown. The try for the

-.Bloody Blue Talk""""'"

Rac~ng recorda of entrants are posted and relate such vital

The Dot1 Uten ran two often.
&amp;lve pla,ya and toased a pau.
On the pass, David GUI!oplo ln-

I ~~~~}he occasions the horse came in first through fourth are
~- .~orst than fourth, he gets a zero. "That means," said

tereepted. On the next plq,
Dark tlirew a pass to GtlUiple
who made a boaulll\tl driYIDg

statistics as the number of stone the animals sport as well as
a £artial aummary of past performances. Partial because

~~~:{: ..

that he was nowhere, even if he missed fourth by a

be~erboeareb a

·'
,.

KEITH GOBLE FORD

ter.

f\)ca . . . , . . . . 0 7 6 7-20
Wahama • . ••• . o 6 0 0- 6
Wahama starting Lineups:
DEFENSIVE - Bob Redmond,

LE; &amp;eve Halstead, LT; DlckJe
Drd, MG; Larry Carpenter, RT;

Randy Smith, RE; Bobby Roush,
Bryant Hudson, Gary Fields,
linebackers; David Gillispie, De.
fensive back: Gary Clark, defensive back; Mel Fry, safety.
Off'ENSIVE - Gillispie, LE;
Randy Smith, LT; lloonle Wood,
LG; Redmond, center; Ord, RG;
Carpenter, RT; Halstead, RE;
Bobby Roush, WB; Fields, FB;
Clark, Tailback and Gary Burdette, QB.

•'

a ,

number of news clips about lucky Investors who

and strolled home wiUl several hundred pounds.

That, noted Tony, squinting above his eyeglasses "is the
sprat to catch tho mackerel."
'
Greyhound racing is also popuCar for speculatoro. And a
handwritten sign warns: "No bets taken on pups after the
hare has taken off."

Clients.·~~ or greatly disparate types. Tony recaUs one
old gent tn latty rig-out" who began showing up at the end
of every day to/.ull the papers off the walls. He sold them
for scrap. One ay he came in, bet 200 pounds, lost and was

never seen agaJn.

"We get a lot of elderly ladles, pensioners you know who
like a little llutter," said Tony. "One though wouldn't be
caught dead in a betting shop. She mails in ber bets.
"Each morning she pallors to her plllar box for !he
or 'Sporting Ufe.' That's her first reading of the
makes her selections and sends them off at about
are time-stamped at the post oJTict at abou1
The off at mo•t tracks Is 2 o'clock
.....Sb,~er wt..t
cosh me • or :'In pounds a wee.k ;,gularly sweet old
!!!
she, is. or
'

catch and landed on the Poca
live yard line.
The only thing wrong wao a
lllegal pro.....,_. pena11;y aplnot
Wahama that t111111led tho pit~¥,
Alter th11, Poca went to work,
but It waLm•t easy.
With 1:32 left In the Hoond
QUarter, the Dnlo gueaoed right
and caught Wallama blitziDg, -""'f
MeCianahan OIA&gt;edaacreenpell

BROWN BASKETBALL
PROVIDENCE, R.L I(UP0Brown Unlvorsl!J toda.Y announced • 28-camo baakotball
eohedulo lor tho 1868-49 ,....,
which ineludeo parU~on In
the Govtmor'a Claulc at

Trtnton, N.J., Dee. e.7.

..

The huge Chlefo picked 14113
first downs, and Dermittaleight.
Werry passed to Ault for the ex· !Apn ga1nod 219 ruohinr, and
tra points with 2:06 left am It permitted Meigs but 3t yanlo,
was 16-14.
Total yardap favored the h..,.
The final stanza saw both club, 275-116. Logan COJI!illeted
teams exchange ,punts on seven two of 10 pesoes lor ~6 yards.
different occasiona.
Melga eOIDPieted nine of 22 aerl..of!an'a defe111tve unit held ial a tor 82 yards.
John Smith to L1 yards in nine
Friday, the Chieftains travel to
carries. Conrad paced the O!lefs Gallipolis. Meigo wUI hoot Wellswith 98 yards in 16 at:t.empts. ton.

~7S.:I169 Opp. 8&amp;!)
~

fopot.
;

from

$21.95

Most men only worry about suits, shirts and
ties. They buy from the top down, So by the
time they get to the botto m, their feet are
just an aftt:rthought. And the shoes they buy
look like afterthoughts. If you buy a pair of
Nunn-Bush shoes, you can start with your feet.
Because you won't have ro worry about them

NUNN
BUSH

not marching the suit you haven't bought yet.
They're styled w you won't
have to change shoes eve f)• rime
you change suits. And th at

can save you a lot of change.

1964 ·THUNDERBIRD

,.,\

Factory Air Conditioner, One Local Owner, New Premium Tites. This Car
Is In Excellent Condition. A1969 Riviera Trade-ln.

$1995°0

Sun. Noon-9 p.11.... 9 ...

.• 9

,.m.

SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE OF EXOTIC FISH &amp; SUPPLIES SPECJ,\L PRICES ON fiSH DURING
OPEN HOUSE AND FOLLOWING WEEK .

REGISTER FOR . ...
1ST PRIZE - 10 GAL. AQUARIUM SET (COMPLETE)
2ND PRIZE - 5 GAL. AQUARIUM SET (COMPLETE)
10- 3RD PRIZES- TV FISH TANK (COMPLETE)
Prizes On Display - No Purchase Required - Drawmg Ocr. 14. 9 PM . Need Nor He PreHn!

To Win .

REFRESHMENTS
• Tetramln •longllfe • Miracle • Ohio
Sdentlflc Products • Jungle Brand

WALNUT

PT. PLEASANT

$26.95
Orfler Nunn-Buth Srylfl

SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY, OCTOBER 13 &amp; 14, 1968

\i~'itlc1

Carolina Lumber
.and Supply

81ow n
C11111n C1ll

Open House

special

REGULARLY UP TO
$20.50 VALUE

Start at the bottom
and dress
your
way up

Is having

Panel
•12~~.!,

later a 15-yard cllpplng penalty
gave Kypr Crook the ball oo the
South"eotern 10, Fisher passed
l1x yardo to Rothgol&gt; to make It
48-6 with 8:05 loft In tho third
period.
The fourth period wu leas
than a mlmlte old when Wade
HeniOn drove rwr yard11 for
the l1na1 Bobcat toochdown and
Gary Saundoro ran the P&gt;\T to
give KJoger Creek o 56-6 lead.
SoulhwellAirn threatened to
score midw13 the rourth period,
After an exchange of punts, lhe
Highlandero marched to the Ky.
ger Creek 29 where they loat the
ball on downa. Kypr Creek was
on the Southwestern 32 when the
game ended.
Kyger Crook led 14-7 In firat
downs. The Bobcats pined 347
yards on the ground and com.
pleted three of six passes for
27 ysrdo and a net of 37 4 yardo.
Southwestern picked up 61 yardo
ruthin.g and completed two of
8ix passu Cor 34 yards and a
net 95 yards lor the nll!hl
The Bobcats recovered two
rumbles and Southwestern picked up one. Kyger Creek drew
70 yardM in penalties and Southwestern had 60. The Bobcats
punted three times for 90 yards,
an average or 30 yards per kick
while the Highlanders booted rive
lor a total of 127 yards, an
average of 25,2 per kick,
Southwestern ... 0 0 0 0- 0
Kyger Creek.. 30 6 12 8- 56
Scoring: Kyger Creek- Fillher 2 (one yard and 64 yards);
Rothgeb 2 (23 yard nmback of
an intercepted pass and a six
yard paas rrom Fisher); ().Iii len (32 yard run)i G. Saunders
(43 yard runback or an inter cepted peos); Beebe (one yard);
and W. HeniOn (rour yards); PAT
- Floher C2); Beebe and Soun ders.

The House o Wilson

PREFINISHED

ON THI: SPOT FINANCING
SALESMEN ·• CEWARD CAL VERT
CLIFF PHILLIPS - EDDIE FIFE - DAN THOMPSON
YOU ALWAYS PAY LESS AT

or

PAT "ao no good. Tho! ended
the ocoriDg In the llrst period
with Kyger Creek ahead 30-6.
The IJighllltdero got their ollonoe going momentarily early
In the second period aod picked
up a first down at their ft. K,y.
ger Creek took over after a short
h1eh punt at their own 39. 'llle
Bobcall picked up a !!rot down
on the Southwestern t7, two
playa later a 15-yard periiOD.Il
fool penalty p~~ohed them back to
their 36. Then Fisher got his
oecond TD ol the night, raciDg
64 yards and eluding Charles
Wtlllams at the Highlander 2~
yard line. The try for the PAT
was oo good and the Bobcats
led 31Hl.
Kyger Creek' 1 next toochmwn
waa set up by Wade Henson who
recovered Scott Atha'll fumble
at the Soutllwestem 19. Perry
Beebe plunged for a yard and
tho toochdown with 10:5&gt; loll to
play In the third period. Again
the Bobcats missed the PAT. lt
was 42..0.
Southwestern's deepest penetration into Bobcat territory
came in the next set of downa,
Atha picked up four yarda to the
Kyger Creek 49. WUliama went
seven to the 42 but a 15-yard
peraonal foul penalty on Kyger
Creek moved the ball to the Bobcat 26. Atha lost 10 and then
made two, Atha made one and
tumbled with Jim Walker recovering at the Kyger Creek 35.
WHiiarns was tossed for a 10
yard loss and Kyger Creek took
over on their own 43.
Fisher picked up a first down
on the Sluthwestern 32 atter
taking a pitchout Crom quarter.
back Jack Henaoo. Three plays

Poca Drops Wahama, 20-6

"

Can ond Truck• To Choo•• froll'l

the Marauders on the scoreboard. ond atanza, but the TD waa ooJ.
The sttoqlt for the extra points ll!led by I penaltjo.
faDed.
MailS took over In the third
!Apn scored qa!n in the soc- period. The Marauders moved 53
yardo In 17 Dlo.VI. with Fullback

WElD W0 0 D'"

8 CYLINDER -- 2 DOOR.
STANDARD TRANSMISSION. RADIO
AND HEATER. WHITEWALL TIRES.

Many Mare

escorted by Jim

Beougher - 1 ft. rWl !or m
Score by ~ters:
Meigs • • • . • • 0 6 8 0-14
Logan • . . . • •16 0 o 0-16
STARTING LINEUPS- MEIGS: DeMio Ault, E; Jim Swotzel, T;
Max Whitlatch, G; Harry Slawter, C; Jim Crow, G; Mike Barr, T;
Jon KleurE; JetrWerry, QB; John Smith, HB; Elbert Wllliama HB·
Konn,; English, FB.
'
'
MASON - Coach Grant Bar - to Bailey who went 42 yards to
LOGAN - P. Johnaon, E; Mike CottrUI, T; Ron Rutter, G; nette and his gang gan a sparse
paydlrt. Bailey outran his screen
Jell Smith, C; Dale Brown, G; Mike Walker, T; BUl Show, E; Bob crowd at Wahama, a ball game
and everything else on the field
Johnson, QB; Oluck Conrad, LH; Dana Beougher RH· Chuck Lowe they will not soon forget as the
FB.
0
I
I
to get the TI&gt;, The extra point
White Falcons fought highly fa- by Bailey on a kick was good
vored Poca to a standsllll time and the Dots led 7-6 at halftime,
and time again, but finaJI,y went
The Dots came back in the
down to defeat by a 20-6 score third quarter and scored when
Friday night.
Allen Bailey, who seems to be
The Dots didn't wrap it up able to do it all on the grlduntil the fourth quarter with one lron, tossed a 25 yard pass to
mlnute and 59 seconds remain~ Terry Lott for another Poca
ing in the ball game.
score. Bailey missed the extra
Coach Dick Darby ol the Dots point this Ume and the score
had high praise Cor the Falcons was 13-6.
after the game, Coach Darby
Later In tlle third quarter, GU~
said that next toCharle~tooCath ­ Uspie brought the crowd to its
UVERPOOL, England-(NEAJ-A certain bloke, flipping
ollc, Wahama was the best de~ feet again when he lntercepted
mad as they say here, shook a fist at the "blower" on the
fenatve
team the DoUi had en • a Poca pass at the Wahama 25
ceUJng. From the speaker came the calling of the fourth race
countered all year, and Poca has and raced back to the nota 18
at .Ascot, and the result.
been playing In some pretty loot where a Pvca player mad~ a
"'At jock couldn't ride a clothes 'orse," growled the bloke.
company,
desperation dive and barely got
A handful of colleagues, otherwise absorbed, scanned form
There was no score in the him tripped up,
charts clipped from newspapers that serve as wallpaper at
this turf accountant's shop.
game unW the second quarter
The Falcons then fought their
when Wahama put six points on way against the tough Poca de A turf accountant is a haute couture tag for licensed bookthe scoreboard, Allen Bailey, the fense to the one foot line where
maker. Tony, a tweedy Uverpudlian with steel-rimmed spectacles tipped on his ruddy nose, is the shop settler. He handles
Dots' great fullback, started the drive was finally stopped •
and pays oft' wagers. Now, he stood before a huge wall list
aroond left end at about the WeJohnny Brown scored the fiof the horses running at six British tracks and explained the
homo
36.
The
Wild
Indian,
Brynal
TD lor Poca with I :S9 reoperation.
ant Hudson, put him in his sighta mainiDg In the game when he
"Bookmaking shops were illegal, as they are in America.
and pulled the trigger. The en- plunged over rrom the one yard
But it changed here in 1961," he said. "The punters-you
ouiDg oo!Uslon shook Bailey line.
chaps call 'em bettors-put so much pressure on Parliament
loose [rom the ball which took a
the system was legalized.
Fields, Hudson and B o b by
bounce
or
two
on
the
ground
Roush
led the Falcons in tackles,
"Before that, off-track betting was a bit of a soggy affair.
where Gary Clark, coming up but all the Wabama delenae was
You would have to nip into a grocery store or rock shop to
Crom his defenalve halfback .spot, prolsed for their outatandlng ef.
have a bet. You would backhand a piece of paper to your
book. and be slippy about It, I dare say.
was able to pick it up at full tort. Mel Fry and Gtlleapie each
speed and race 74 yards to a had two interceptions.
"Now most Britishers are rather delighted. But some get
touchdom.
a little barmy at times. I mean you hear a bloody lot of blue
Wahama entertains Eastern
language when runners don't conclude the way punters had
The extra point was no good Frlda,y nll!ht In the lilt home
bargained for."
and Wahama led IHJ,
game ot the season,
Tonr, handlea between 200 and 600 bets a day. "Bets," he
On the lollowlng klck-&lt;JI!, the
said, r~ge from thrupence to, well, 100 pounds is not un·
Doll looked like they woold gu
common. Tbrupence is equal to three cents a pound Is
all
the wa,y except ror a Utue
DOW Worih J2.39.
'
8UJ' nomad Gary Fields who put
Except for torn betting slips strewing the floor, the small
the stopper on the ball clUTier
wb1ood-pan,e!ed room Is ticfy and conducive to giving all possiat the 39 yard line.
e ass1SWIInce to punters.

-

GMC TRUCKS
POMEROY, OHIO'

.

Gro!:e,

Swisher, and Rosa.He ReeAe, eacorted by Roy Thompoon.
lt was the fourth consecutive
victory ror the Bobcats who lead
the SV AC with a 4-0 reoord and
have only Haman Trace to pla.y
beCore wrapping up the 1968
SV AC crown. Overall, Kyger
Creek Is 4~ .
The lou lert Coach steve Stiles
Southwestern Highlanders with
a 1-2 SV AC record, tied for
fourth place with Eastern of
Metge: County. The Highlanders
have an overall record
3-3.
Scoring in every quarter, the
Bobcats took a 30-0 lead at U.e
end of the first period. h was
36-0 at halftime and 48-0 at the
end or three periods.
Leading the touchdown parade
were Gary Fisher, 168.poundaen.

tor halfback, with two m•a, and
Jon Rothgeb, 200iJCMKI Junior
end, Ron Quillen, 150iJCMKI senior Mlback; Perry Beebe, !50pound oenlor hallbacl&lt;; Gary
Saunders, 135-poundl!lophornore,
and Wade HeniOn, 140 -pound
sophomore, e a c h scored one
touchdown.
The Bobcall took an 8-6 lead
with 9:55 left to play 1n the nut
period when Fisher plunged aver
from the one yard line and then
ran the extra points. On the nrst
ploy after the opening klckol!,
Ron Q.!Uien raced t4 yards trom
his own 46 to the Southwestern
10 to aet up the acore.
Big Dan Polcyn, 210 - pound
junior tackle, set up the Bobcats' second touchdown when he
pounced on Charles WWiB.ma'
fumble at the Southwestern 39.
Three plays later, Qufllen raced
32 yardo to J&gt;liY dirt with 2:32
left in the period. Beebe ran the
extra points to give Kyger Creek
a 16..0 lead.
Minus Dave Morgan, 155 pound senior quarterback, who
has a fractured arm, the Highlanders were in real trouble
with their passing game, With
Jack Lewis, 147 - pound )mlor
quarterback, doing the tossing,
big Jon Rothgeb intercepted a
stray aerial and returned It 23
yards for the Bobcats' third
touchdown. Fisher ran the extra
points and the Bobcats led 24~
with 1:45 left In the ltrst quar.

NEA Sports Colamalst

ARI,

~UICK

Conrad - 36 yd; 20 yd.

On the Chle(s' nrst play afterward, Demis Ault intercepted a
Johnstoo aerial, and returned it
38 yards on a beautirul run to put

IRA BERKOW

Catalina VB 4 dr. Sedan. Exceptional in every way.

Friday's High School Scores
Wheelersburg 28 New Boston 0
Ironton 32 Nelo.-York 6
OOk Hut 28 COOl Grove 22
Clark ~ Northeaatern 28
Sprltlllleld Sl&gt;awnee 18
Sandusky 12 Findlay 6
Elyria 26 Manolleld 8
Lorain Senior 35 Framont 7
Sendusky St. Mary's 22
Marpretta 8
Hamilton Garlleld 27 LlmaSr.12
Marietta 20 Chlllicolho 20 (lie)

-.:

. - . !• ,

LOGAN

SCOIUNG
MEIGS
LOGAN
Ault - IDL paso return, 38 yd; EP
Johnston - 1 ft. run tor TD
English - 'h yd. run lor TD
Conrad - Two EP' s

.,.

VB Goloxie "500" Sedan. We have three fine cars-all in
excellent condition .

close (ougllt battle.
The Eagles will travel to Wahama F rlda.y night for a nonleague game.
By QJarten:
6 0 0 0-6
Federal-Hocking
0 0 0 0-0
Eastern
EAST F-H
Yards Rush . . . . . . . •38 79
Yarda Pan . . . . . • • ,56 52
Paaseo Attempted • . . .22 8
Panea Completed . • . • 8 2
Paasea Intercepted • . • . 1 0
First Down• • • . . ...• 3 7
Fumbles . . . . . . . . . . . 2 2
Fumbles Lost .. ••• . • 1 1
.·.·.·:

MEIGS
10 yd'; 10 yd; 6 yd; 17 yd.
Ault 9 yd; 11 ydj 7 yd; 2 yd.
WUUams - 10 yd.

Kloes -

$4,195

68 Bui'k

Eastern Eagles Drop 6-0 Grid Battle

Ohio High School F - U Scores
By United Pren Irternattonal
Dayton Dwd:ar 52 Kaiser 0
Beavercreek 21 Xenia 14
Sprlngf'd Nortll21 Centervllle14
Chamlnade 52 Meadowdale 0
AllAir 36 Miamisburg 6
Lima Shawnee 34 Greenville 22
Sidooy 33 Piqua 6
Covington 14 Tecumseh 12
Miami East 14 Graham Local 8
Northwestern 22 Greenon 12
Delphoo St. John 30 Piq. cath. o
Cell,. 40 St. Marya 12
Valley Forge 20 Euclid 14
Barberton 34 Dayton llD80 28
Dover St. Jos. 24 Strasburg 6
Now PhliL 26 Ashland 23
Cin. Aiken 16 Cln. Courter Tech6
Nortll College Hut 36
Mt. Healthy 16
St. Clairsville 49 Cleymont 0
Barneovllle 32 Union Local 18
GALLIPOLIS - Coach Bob P-ut.an 8 Woodolleld 8 (lie)
Ashley's Southern Local Torna- Brutlant 12 Codb 8
does doWned the Haman Trace Boallavllle 27 Shenandoah 14
WUdcoto 24-6 Frlda,y night at Wintersville 74 Toronto 0
Mercerville to spoil the 1968 Jefferson Union 58
Haman Trace Homeeomlng,
Sprlnsfteld Local 6
Mlas Roaalea Davis, a aen- I..anaater 25 Newark 8
ior. ..a. named 1968 Haman Barnel't'Ule 32 Union 18
Trace Homecoming ~ at Danv!Ue 36 New AlboiQ' 6
halftlme ceremonies.
M1am1 Trace 21 Circleville 14
No details of the scorlna were Ll~klng Heights 60 Johnstown 0
available for the Tlm81-Sentlnel.
Toledo Whitmer 20 Fostoria 0
The win moved Southern Lo~ Arcadia 29 Liberty Benton 0
cal lnto a second place tie wt.tb Rooolord 52 Elmwood 0
North Gallla In the Southern Val- Upper Arllneton 42 ZoneovUie 20
ley Athletic Conrerenee, each
Tri·Valley 32 c.-a ville 2
team with a 2-2 record.
New Lex. 51 May1ville 6
Hannan Trace, sWl looking
Philo 30 Sheridan 10
Cor ita rlrst win or tile 881LIOn,
Fort Frye 40 Meadowbrook 8
Is 0-2 In SV AC ploy and 0-l;
Portomouth 30 Colo. south 18
In ell ,;ames. Southern hal a
Valley 22 Northwest 0
2-4 overall record.
Portsmouth East 14 Minford 2

Southern

mark.
With all substitutes playing the
final two minutes, Ironton's final
TO came on a tl.ne 43 yard run
by t'reshman quarterback Ha1
Spears with just 34 seconds remaining in the co~st. John M.Y·
ers rammed over the two-point
con ...ersion for the llnal score of
32--6.
Statistics show the Tigers with
416 yards rushing, completing
three of six passes for 29 yards,

68 Pontiacs

GALLIPOLIS - It "'' Homecoming Frida.¥ night at Kyger
Creek High School, Coach Howard Lee Miller's Bobcats cele·
brated with a 56-6 lacing ol tho
Southwestern llll!hlanders to remain wuSefeated in the Southern
Valley Athlttic Conference.
Halftime aetivtties featured
the crowning of Mill Mary Kall
•• 1-lomeoomlng &lt;;;!ueen. 9te was
escorted by Tom Reese. John
Hughea crowned the queen, pre.
sented her with red roses and
kissed tho queen In traditional
style.
Homeoom&amp;w ceremonies featured the Kyger Creek H I g h
School Marching Band playing
the theme, "May You Alwaya."
Other Queen candidates were~e
Grimm, escorted by Earl Thomas; Md Karen !ltamblln, escorted by Budcl,y Moore. Attendants were Connie Stidham, escorted by Chuck Bradburyi Emily

Malibu 2 dr. Hard Top. Automatic trans. 6 cyl. Extra s.horp

Boykin Unstoppable, Tigers Romp, 32-6

Meigs

Ken E_!lglhh .PIOWi~ over !rom
the one-half yard line, OB .Jetr

Bobcats Crush Highlanders, 56-0

after.

INDIVIDUAL YARDAGE
MEIGS
Smith •••••. 4c,5 Sc,6
English • .. 5c,16 5c,10
Wllliama .. 4c,7 4c,J2
Werry .. • , 0 3c,.J9

In the second canto,

talns drove56yardsinelghtplays 34 yards in II plays, But Logan
to lAike an 8-11 lead.
held qatn.
The score came with 7:11lert
In the period when QB BOB Johnston plunged over from the one.
Chuck Conrad added the points

MEIGS
1st
2nd
Hall Hall Total
lst downs •• • 2
6
8
Yds. Rush. • • 25
9
34
Yds. Pass .•. 27
55
82
Total Yds•. , 52
64
116
Att. Paues. •• 9
13
22
CoJ111. . . . . . - 3
6
7
Panes Int. .• • 0
0
0
Fumbles ..... 0
2
2
FIDitb. Loot .... 0
0
0
Punts .... 3-109 3-95 &amp;-204
, Penalties .••• , 0
10
10

Bonneville 2 Dr. Hard Top. One careful owner. Extra sharp
inside and out. PS, PB &amp; AT

66 Dontl•a

stopped the Marauders on their

Ont series or downs, the Chief. drove to !he Logan 21, coveriDg

Meigs-Logan Statistics

$2, 195

·

·

Logan Slips By Meigs, Remains In Race

USED CARS!

Wellston, Athens In 0-0 Deadlock

The Sunday Times • Sentinel, SuJKiay, October 13, 1968

Route 62
Ca11p

(oniiJ

Milton Roa•
Ptint PIHSIIit
llllla;;;;;;;;;a;•••llli'•'l'arch For Sign jus! Sourh of Pltasanl Poinl Resort"
'.

Re1111ar Store HallS

....

•'

9-9 Tues. Thru Sat.
Phone 675-1065

Rocer &amp; Janet Wilson

b

t
~

�.

•

.... ..

' ·~·

Times • Senllnel, ~. OeiGbor U, 1168

13 -

Olsen, ot the Los
Rams, and Aldridge, ol
Green Bey Packer1, both pit~¥
college ball at Uleh Stole. They
were guest• of honor at a
J.ea&amp;ue, were honored IOda.Y by brunch which preceded S.tur~
tho Uloh Stole University day' a Utah s t a t e.Wfaeonsln
game,
Alumni AoaoclaUon.

Humbles Gallipolis By 32-6 Count;~:.{¥£~:~~

- Jacl&lt;100 ~
4jwter here Frida.¥
pbiDg up a 32-l; SoothOhio League grid trlv!Blting Gallipolis.
fired.up Red and White
o1 Coach Ben Buckles
ijlY•IIIIaao of r111Derou1 Blue
'miatakeo" In the oecond
wiJ{ going away after
' olim 12-l; halftime lead
a lll'ge homeeomlng

:GAJIS took the third period
and marched 53 yards
nino plays, p~~ttlng the pigon the Jackson 21, but Tom
was hit hard and CUm·

blo&gt;:l. Tho lronmell recovered.
From that point on, it wU no
COII'..el!lt.

Two pooa Interceptions HI up
two Courth period Jackson touohdo~V~~s. Alter the dl.altroUI thlrd
period fumble, Jackeon marched 79 yards In 13 playa to put
the game out oC reach a1 tar
as GAHS was concerned.
h was JackiOII'S fourth win
In six outlngo thlo tall - tho
triumph assured the Jronmen of
U.e1r best sea1011 record In three
years. Inside the SEOAL, Jackson evened Its mark at 2-2.
It wa.s Gallia'1 ftrst lou to
Jackson in three years and the

GAHS-Jackson Statistics
INDIVIDUAL NET
YARDS RUSHJNG
(Gallipolis)

i
I

I

'.

'
~-

' ,.
~~-.

l'

SCORING: Jackaon- Osborne,

PLAYER- Poo.

TCB YG AVG.
aotuc, HB . .
. . 2 IS 7.S
HB . . . . . 12 83 6. 9
~melt. HB . . .. . 2 10 S.O
Jioi!niOil, HB .. . •. . I 6 6.0
~. FB . . . . . . . 10 Sl S.l
Jl!ab, HB . • . . . . . 1 5 S.O
W, Elliott, QB . . . . 6 IS 2.S
'*'cor, QB .• . ... 3 I .3
TOTALS ........ 37 186 5.2
(Jackson)
PLAYER- Poo. TCB YG AVG.
laton, FB .... .. .. 13 78 6.0
DtStophen, QB •.. • . . . 7 39 5.5
Mlrphy, FB ...... .. . 1 5 5.0
Volentine, HB...... . 17 69 4.5
Mooabarger, HB . . .. . 9 24 2.6
Band, QB • . ... . • . ' . 0 -1 -7
TOTALS ... .... ... 4H 208 4.3
- TEAM ST ATCS'I'JCS SCORE BY QUARTERS
Golllpolis .... . 0 6 0 0 6
Jack110n .. .. .. 6 6 8 12 - 32
FIRSTOOWNS
Galllpol!o .... 3 6 4 4- 11
~~· • :--·4 54 S- 18
!~Ell RUSHING
Go~JJ,ou ....\ 4!l47 53 ~- 201
J•dtoon .••.. s'N;o 61 s2- 220
YAIUlS LOST RUSHJNG
-· '
Oolll#ol!s .... 0 6 0 15- 21
JaekiOil ...... 0 o 21t- 12
NET YARDS RUSHING
. Golllpollo . ... 49 4153 43 - 186
Jaekeon ..... 57 50 59 42 - 208
PASSES ATTEMPTED
;Golll,polla . ... 0 8 0 7 IS
Jadt.......... l 4 0 1- 6
PASSES COMPLETED
-4illliJ&gt;Ollo ..... 0 2 0 2 4
' Jad&lt;am .. ... l 2 0 1 4
l'ASSFS INTERCEPTED
Golllpollo ..... o o o oo
JackP&gt; ...... o o o 2- 2
\'AIUlS GAINEIJ PASSING
IJtlllpoll.o ..... 024 o 14 - 38
Jackson .. .... 7 90 0 19 - 116
TOTAL YARDS (Rush-Pus)
Golllpolls .... 466S5357 - 224
iackP&gt; ..... 6414059 61- 324
RETURN YARDAGE
Galllpolll .... 20202123- 84
Adteon ..... II o 041-52
. 'fLAYS FROM SCRIMMAGE
tlonlpollo ... 919 9 15 - 52
~- . . . . IU413 13 - S4

Prose,

tlJMBLES
GoiJipolio .. .. 0 I 1 I -

7-yard pass fromDe~epheni Sexton, 2-yard nm; Valentine, 6-yard
run, PATS by DoStephen; Mossbarger, 2-yard runj Osborne, 19yard pass from DeS,eJJhen.

Gallipolis -

Prote, 11 -yard

run.
OFFICIALS -

Dole Hall, Jll.'

Stanley, Lloyd Peecher and Burhl

Jenkins, Ironton chapter.
LCNEUPS
(Jockoon)
Fnds - Jenldna, Wallace, Osborne.
Tackles Murphy.

Guards -

Woolum,

Colby,

Mapes, Taylor, Con-

ley.
Center5- Mitchell,

~ckmeis­

ter.
Backs - DeSlephen, Bond, Valentine, Cheek, Sexton, Murph.¥,
Moubarger, Slafl'er.
(Gallipollo)
Ends -

Craig, Acams, Paul-

ey, R, Elliott, G. Canada,y.
Tackles Mosley, Hemsworth, M. Davi11, Daniels, Clagg.
Guards - B. Davis, Cleland,

Baxter.
· Centers - Russell, RonJanol.
Backe - ·JohnBOn, Prose, ~en­
cer, W. Elliott, Bo11tic, Burnett,
C. Neal, Hueholt, P, Neal, M.
Conada,y, Bush.
NEXT GAHS G&gt;\ME - Oct,
18. LOgan, home.

SV AC Standings
SOUTHERN VALLEY
ATHLETIC CONFERENCE
(SVAC ONLY)
TEAM
W. L. T. P OP
Kyger Creek • • 4 0 0 134 22
North Gallla .. 2 2 0 38 42
Southern • • . .. 2 2 0 62 68
Southwestern •• 1 2 0 20 80
Eastern ... . .. 1 2 0 42 30
TOTALS .. ... 10 10 0 302 302
THIS WEEK'S RESULTS:
Kyger Creek 56 Southwestern 0
Southern Local (Racine) 24
Hannan Trace 0
NEXT WEEK'S SCHEDULE:
Southwestern at Hannan Trace

3

~:ERED B~

0 0 I-

I

Golllpolta .... 0

0 1-

2

I-

2

~"":'Tmi .. 0 0
,....

1-26.
Gallipolis - None.

Gilllpollo .... 0 0 20 30 - :;{)
iacklon ..... 0 31 0 0 - 31
PUNTS: Jacl&lt;aon - Rowl111d,

APPLY FOR LICENSE
GALLIPOLIS - One couple
applied ror a marriage license
S.turdey In the ol!lce of Gall!a
County Probate Courl They were
Jadde L. Berry, 21, Gallipolis,
and Catherine Elizabeth Hoock,
17, GalllpoUs, at home.

·and OLDS Eye-Poppers
;\J•
'-\

'

'

1968 Cadillac H.T. Sedan DeVille · ·.·· -$5600
Gray m•tollic finish with black interior, full power
equipment, radio, tinted glasa, w/s/w tir•s, Comfort
Control Air·Conditionint, 13,000 mil•• · On• owner
new Cadillac trod•.

1968 Olds 98 Luxury Sedan · · • • • • • · · · ·$4600
White ower turquoise meiallic finish with turquoiu
interior, full power equipment, tilt &amp; telescope steer·
ing wheel , rodia, tintH glau, w/s/w tires, Com·
fortron Air-Conditioning, anti-spin axle, 18,000 miles .
One awner new Olds trode. Just like n•w.

1967 Cadillac H.T. Sedan DeVille····· -$4600
Full power equip ., radio, t inted gloss , new w/ w
t iru . Auto . headlight control, comfort control air
cond., doe sil:in finish with matching interior . One
owner, new Cadillac trade .

See your authorized Cadillac dealer

1969's
NOW ON DISPLAY
KARl &amp; ,YAN ZlNDT
MOTOR SALES
OPEN EVES. TIL 1.00

POMEROY

•

worot GARS oell&gt;ack llulforod to
GAllS marched ~t yards In
the Ironmen In 13 yoarl, The II piau, advancing the pialldn
doCeat left Coach Gidl Trauto• to the Jackoon llx, but ""' held
boyo "Hb a 2-4 overall mark. Jn. on down1.
sWe tho league, GARS Ia 1-3.
SECOND PERIOD
LeBi lillie a Jscl&lt;eon teem
Tiro playo Jeter, lloStephen

pme _ by Jockoon'oKevin Row·
land - GAHS mard!od iii yardl
1n llxplqo. Tom 1'11&gt;0itaclllllpOI'-

FOURTH PERIOD
Valentino lntercopted • !lion·
cor peu on the Jackaon fll, ond

yards
....,...r
lollto end
ed
with 111:09
lett In
the hall
roduce the count to 12-8, Dan Murt&gt;liY blocked !l&gt;oncer'o kick from

returned
41 playololer,
yardo to tJorho
GAllS 19. II
Five
ry Moalbarger IICOred (rom the
two with 9:09 lett. II was 26-

swamped tho Gall!o CounUans hit Ooborne with a 79 • yard
woo 30-7 back In 195.1.
oorlal. Tom Spencer pushed Oo- plocoment.
Here'• a aurunary ot Frl- bomo Out of bounda on tho GAHS
THJRD PERIOD
dQy'a scoring:
With
Prose
and FS ChUck Neal
12.
fiRST PERIOD
altornatln&amp;
GAllS
drove to the
Two plt~¥1 taler, FB Gary So·
Ja~kJOn droVe 6t yarcll tn too bounced OYer from the two
Jackeon 21. Prooe!lunblod. Jack14 plays, with QB Ray DoSte- with 8:t3 !all In the hell, Apln 1011 recovered, thea marc:bed 79
phen throwtna a ..... • yard the PAT ottempt Called.
yards In 13 playa. 118 Darwin
strike to end Terry Osborne
Valentlpe
raced around riJ1!t end
GAHS drovo to tho Jaekson
to ciij) the drive. The clock lhow- 26 In 10 pto,ys, but aptn tho
with 0:25 ohowlng 011 the clooh.
ed ~:09 loll In the period. The Devils ollenae boaod down.
DeStophen ron tho polnto after,
PAT attempt Called,
Allor the onlj- punt ol tho giving .ms a 20-l; lead.

6.

Two ployo toter, Valantlne
otole another !pencer aerial, but
got oo return tldo Umo,
Boven playolaler, Jad&lt;am had
covered 53 yards. The aoore
como .., a 19.yaro peu from
DoStophen to Osborne with 3:37
left. Jocl&lt;oon led, 32-6.
tilotltutes Oooded the llold
following thelaot .mstouchdown.

WELLSTON _ An estimated
crmt'd of over 5,000 tans Jam.
med the WeUoton stodlumFrlday
night to view the "game ot the
year" in the SEOAL and ndnt,y
went home early as the two rug.
ged unbeatens battled to a 0-0
sl8ndofl.
Both teams played almost
unbelle·-ble de'enslv· ball, lore" to CO".~
lng the ••
-onent
un ...._~
116''..,. U11:'
pigskin ....,
at crucial situations
on
00 less than nine scoring drives.
Almost the entire first period
waa played in Wellston's terri~
to- but the Rockets were able
to.,
stave otr the Bulldog threats by
intercepting Athens passes on the
four yard line, 25 yard Jine, an::1
19 yard line, atlln the ftratper·
loci, In addition Welbton rumbled
to Athens on the 30butonthenext
play forced Athens to fumble the
ball back on the 25. The Rockets

were neYel' beyon.t their own 30
during the entire first quarter
of plq.
The best sustained drive otthe
contest came inthel8condperlocl
when Wellston puahed oU tr&lt;m
their awn 25 and in three pla.vs
arrived at the Bulldog 10 yard
line with a first down. Four
pJ•vs later Athena took over on
..., at the six inch line to kill
downs
the threat.
Late in the quarter linebacker
Steve West intercepted a Bob
Handley pass on the SO arxl r~
tw-ned lt to the Athens 30. Two
plays moved the ball to the Athens 19. With only 30 seconds lett
in the half Wellaton's TDby Via
attempted a field gol]tromtbe26
yard line that was straight down
the middle, but fell five yards
short of thE:! goal post crossbar.

In the third period Athens'
Rick Rutter pllllted 56 yards to
the Welloton 15 and lollowing I
WelJstonpunt m:1 an Athens fum..
ble, the Rockets started from
their own 40. 1Wo Rick Perdue
passes put Wellston at the Athens
IS yard stripe, but the Bulldog
defense again rorced Wellaton
to cough It) the ball on downs at
the eight yard 11ne. Thi s was 111e
final Utreat inside the 20 bY e1•
ther team.
With just 40 seconds left Athens took over on the Rocket 40
to
ya rd line and mo ved ~•tckly
the 30 on a pass 1rom H• nell ey
to Mike Goodwin, but on the final
play of the game halfback Jim
Hubbard Intercepted a Harxlley
pass on the 20 and returned it to
the 25.
Statistics bear out the rugged

defensive play as Athens attempted 23 passes, cOJqJleted just six
lor 69 yards, but had llveofthem
intercepted by Wellston.
The
Bulldogs showed 14 first downs
and 117 yards rushing.
The Rockets netted just nine
first downs, picked.., 115 yards
rushl.Jw, aoo Ri~k Perdue hit
eight ~C 11 passes tor 103 yards
with no interceptions. Total yard.
age favored WeUston 218 to 186,
The Bulldogs lost three ortour
tumbles while Wellston lost one
or two and in pereltles Athens
d rew -•--to
yards whlle the Roc•
.... ...,
kets lost 60 to the o!Ill
c als.
Both teams remained deacJ.
locked for first place in theSE().
AL with identical 3--0--1 records.
Score by quarters:
Athens
0 0 0 0-0
Wellston
0 0 0 0-0

LOGAN- l:oachLouParker's
Logan Chieftallll! hltpa,ydlrt twice
In the fttstperiod and scored both
points alter touchdowna, then held
otr a determined Meigs Marauder
eleven of Coach Charles Chancey
to win by 1 16-14 count at Huttop

••••••••••••••·~~~---­

THE
'P.ICK
:Of
THE
CROP IN FINE
·

-

StadiiDit.
The defeat left Meig1 wttha3-3
season record. lnalde the Souttttlstern Ohio Leaaue, Meirs is
2-2.
The triumph kept Logan In the
thick ol the 1968 chamglonohlp
race with a 3-1 conterence rec·
ord. Overall, the Chieftains are
i-2.
Alter the powerful LHS deren.se

66 Ponti a(
r-1

$2, 195

(

h
Catalina Station Wagon. We can
d gladly
A Jeer
b 1 you
f I to t is
local owner. New Pontiac: fro e- in.
eauti u wagon.

66 r-0
Dntl• ac
66 au·l(k

$1,895

VB Tempest 4 dr. Sedan . Power steering . Auto. trans.
This is a one owner low mileage cor .

$1,995

Custom Skylark 4 dr . Sedan. Extra clean. All vinyl seats.
Beautiful burgundy finish. Aulo. trans. Power steering .

'65 Chevrolet

$1,495
Save

9c,ll
10c,26
8c, l9
3c·19

The Marauders were forced to
punt spin after beiDa stopped by
the big Chieftain forward wall.
This time, the Chiefs moved
68 yards in 16 playa, With 38 oeconds lett in the period, Dana
Beougher slammed over from
the one, and again Conrad added
lhe PATS. That mode It 16-0.

LOGAN
lot
2m
Half Hall Total
10
3
13
165
~4
219
56
0
56
221
S4
27S
8
2
10
2
0
2
2
0
2
0
I
0
I
I
1-33 4-138 5-171
10
6
16

LOGAN
Conrad •• , • 8c,62

IRONTON - Sparked by the
running of Rick Boyktn, the lro~
ton Tigers broke into the victory
column ror the first time thi1 sea·
son Friday night with a smash·
ing 32-6 win over Nehonvill~
York.
Boykln, a 192-iloond treohman
fullback, scored Lhree touch·
dowm and rolled up Ill yards as
the Tigers moved out or theSEOAL collar.
The Tlgen grabbed the lead In
the tlrif ·period when Boykln
smuhed nve yards to score. A
conversion run taUed and It was
IHl at the 6:27 mark.
The big freshman tallied again
with just 10 secorxls remaining in
the first period on a one yard
bll!l to put the Tigers out O'ont

12-0.
Nelsonville-York's lone touchdown came with 7:29 left tn the

SEO Standings
ALL GAMES
TEAM
WLTPOP
Welloton . . • .. s 0 I 136 38
Athens .. .. .. 4 1 I 88 48
Lopn .. .. ... 420 84 63
Jsck!IOil . . . . .. 4 2 0 137 90
Meigs .. . . .• , 3 3 0 95 70
Gallipolis .. .. . 2 4 0 71 101
Nels--York . . .... 2 t 0 68 120
Ironton ...... .. 1 s 0 92 139
SEOAL ONLY
TEAM
W L T P OP
Wellston .. .•. • 3 0 1 60 20
Athena . ...• .. 3 o 1 34 21
Logan .. . .... 310 64 42
Jackaoo .. , .. • 2 2 0 81 70
Meigs . ... . .• 2 2 0 76 36
Ironton . . . . . . 1 3 0 78 75
Gallipolis . . ... I 3 0 37 74
Nolo-York . . . , , 0 4 0 22 114
TOTALS .... .. IS 15 2 452 452
FRIDAY'S RESULTS:
Welloton o Athena o
Jackson 32 Ga!llpoUs 6
lrootoo 32 Nelooovllle-York 6
Logan 16 Meigs 14
OCT. 18 GAMES,
Logan at Golllpolls
Jackson at Nell-York
Wellston at Meigs
Ironton at Athens

second period when quarterback
Larry Evans bootlegged around
eiJ:I for one yard to make the
score 12-6 at the haltime break.
With 2:36 left in the third perIod, Boyldn scored his third
touchdown of the contest on 1
tw~yard blast to run the count
to 18-6 after three periods.
The romp continued In the 0nal period as qlllrterback Greg
Sternaman hit BUIWashburnwlth
a three yard TD pass at the 3:08

Blanks HT
Squad 24-0

We have several new cars left . Stop in and make your
and registered 16 t1rst downs. selection. Save g bundle .
Boykin accowlted for lll yards,
Bob Bentley added 91, and Washburn 88 for the winners.
For the winless Buckeyes, Jer· Electra 4 dr. Sedan. Only 11,948 easy miles. Factory Air
ry Polley carried 19 times Cor 86 Conditioned. Power Seat. Courtesy Lights. New Buick
or the 113 total rushing yards. Trode .. in from locol merchant . Extra sharp.
The losers had 11drstdowuand
completed six of 15 passes Cor 58
yards.
Score by quarters:
"400" Firebird 2 dr . Hard Top . Low mileage, one owner
0 6 0 0- 6 cor . 4 speed shift. One of the besl performers on highway.
Nels.-York
12 0 6 14- 32
Ironton

8c,36 16c,98

Lowe, • • . Uc,37 5c,U 16c,48
Beougher .• 7c,J7 7c,9 J4c,26
Johnston. • l0c,41 lc-3 llc,38
Adair • • • • 0
1c,1
lc 1

•

P MN RECEIVING

TLPPERS PLAINS- The Fed eral-Hocking Lancera scored the
ooly toochdown ol the game In
the first period to deloot Eastern by a 6..0 score Friday night.
The Lancera, obiWVlng their
homecoming activities on the
Eagles' home field, grabbed the
teed lor keepo In the opening
minutes or the game when quarterback Larry Daughtery hit
Chuck Roblnooo with a 24 yard
1coring pass. Another Daughtery to Robinson aerial for the
extra points fell incomplete.
Coach Dan Hall's Lancers
scored their touchdown the sec.
ond Ume they got hold ol the
pigskin and following Eastern's

nrst aeries of downs.
Eastern, now 1-5 on the season, threatened late in the cootest when quarterback Ray Karr
passed deep to Bob Ritchie and
interference was ruled against
Federal • Hocking at the 12
yard line, Tho play eovored SO

yards, and gave the Eagles a
first down, but time ran out be~
[ore COach Billy Kincaid's boys
could score.
The game was a hard • fought

defensive clash throUghout with
the boll changing hands often In
the vlclnlt;y of mld..fleld.
Neither team, however, showed s potent ol!enslve thru8l and
the feault was a hard~ddng.

68 Pontia'
63 Ford

$3,195

63 Pontia'

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$795

Bonneville 4 dr. Hard Top. All vinyl upholstery . Beautiful
oil white finish.

62 Pontia'

MANY MORE
PONTIAC

PH. 992-2143

...:

..

6

:

g~~e ~~~28H~=t7 Ridge

ONLY

..::...

.::

.'

.~.

•

KEITH GOBLE FORD
KNOW

.;

J::::

London 28 Gronlvlew 6
Lancaster 25 Newark 8
Logan 16 Meigs 14
Washington C. H. 35 Gnenlle!d6
Paint Valley 19 Frank. Adora IS
WUmlngton 36 H111sboro 0
Colo. East 28 ColL Molawk 0
Cols. Eaoimoor iltl Colo. Cent. 0
Col&amp;. Linden 36 Colo, B..-v. 6
Cob. Mar. Frank. 28 Colo. West 0
Hamllton Twp. 14 Frank. Hgts, 6
Dublin 8 Teays Valley 8 (Ue)
Mt. Vernon 28 Ploaunt VIew 0
Jackaon 32 Galllpolla 6
Athena 0 Welloton 0 (Ue)
Morgan 32 New Concord 0
Colo. Norlhlam 6 Colo. Ready 6
West Jefferson 38 We1tfall 16
Waverly 60 Piketon 16
West MulkllliU!D 60 llDievllle 6
Mans. Ma1abor 26 Coshocton 0
ctn. xavier 14 ctn. ftos. Bacon 6
Cin. Purcelll7
Newport (Ky,) catholic 0
Ctn. Woodw'd 16 Cln. Wal. Hilla 6
Indian HilliS Lovelam 13
Cia. Hllihes 20 Cln. Withrow 0
Cln. Elder 26 Cln. LaSalle 0
Warren Harding 33 Alliance 0
Canton Aquinas 20 PIJ'm&amp; Padua 6
Can. South 6 Marllngton 6 (tie) '~:::,::'''' '''''''''

HOW YO MAKE
HE'P BIG DE•LS

ONUIEDCARI

SHARP

1965 FO~~STOM

SJJ9

LOCUST ST.

USED CAR LOT
·MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Kyger Creek's last touchdown
in the first period came with
1:20 left when Lewis attempted
another pass. Gary Saunders intercepted that pass on the Highlanders• 43 and raced over ror
the touchdown. The try for the

-.Bloody Blue Talk""""'"

Rac~ng recorda of entrants are posted and relate such vital

The Dot1 Uten ran two often.
&amp;lve pla,ya and toased a pau.
On the pass, David GUI!oplo ln-

I ~~~~}he occasions the horse came in first through fourth are
~- .~orst than fourth, he gets a zero. "That means," said

tereepted. On the next plq,
Dark tlirew a pass to GtlUiple
who made a boaulll\tl driYIDg

statistics as the number of stone the animals sport as well as
a £artial aummary of past performances. Partial because

~~~:{: ..

that he was nowhere, even if he missed fourth by a

be~erboeareb a

·'
,.

KEITH GOBLE FORD

ter.

f\)ca . . . , . . . . 0 7 6 7-20
Wahama • . ••• . o 6 0 0- 6
Wahama starting Lineups:
DEFENSIVE - Bob Redmond,

LE; &amp;eve Halstead, LT; DlckJe
Drd, MG; Larry Carpenter, RT;

Randy Smith, RE; Bobby Roush,
Bryant Hudson, Gary Fields,
linebackers; David Gillispie, De.
fensive back: Gary Clark, defensive back; Mel Fry, safety.
Off'ENSIVE - Gillispie, LE;
Randy Smith, LT; lloonle Wood,
LG; Redmond, center; Ord, RG;
Carpenter, RT; Halstead, RE;
Bobby Roush, WB; Fields, FB;
Clark, Tailback and Gary Burdette, QB.

•'

a ,

number of news clips about lucky Investors who

and strolled home wiUl several hundred pounds.

That, noted Tony, squinting above his eyeglasses "is the
sprat to catch tho mackerel."
'
Greyhound racing is also popuCar for speculatoro. And a
handwritten sign warns: "No bets taken on pups after the
hare has taken off."

Clients.·~~ or greatly disparate types. Tony recaUs one
old gent tn latty rig-out" who began showing up at the end
of every day to/.ull the papers off the walls. He sold them
for scrap. One ay he came in, bet 200 pounds, lost and was

never seen agaJn.

"We get a lot of elderly ladles, pensioners you know who
like a little llutter," said Tony. "One though wouldn't be
caught dead in a betting shop. She mails in ber bets.
"Each morning she pallors to her plllar box for !he
or 'Sporting Ufe.' That's her first reading of the
makes her selections and sends them off at about
are time-stamped at the post oJTict at abou1
The off at mo•t tracks Is 2 o'clock
.....Sb,~er wt..t
cosh me • or :'In pounds a wee.k ;,gularly sweet old
!!!
she, is. or
'

catch and landed on the Poca
live yard line.
The only thing wrong wao a
lllegal pro.....,_. pena11;y aplnot
Wahama that t111111led tho pit~¥,
Alter th11, Poca went to work,
but It waLm•t easy.
With 1:32 left In the Hoond
QUarter, the Dnlo gueaoed right
and caught Wallama blitziDg, -""'f
MeCianahan OIA&gt;edaacreenpell

BROWN BASKETBALL
PROVIDENCE, R.L I(UP0Brown Unlvorsl!J toda.Y announced • 28-camo baakotball
eohedulo lor tho 1868-49 ,....,
which ineludeo parU~on In
the Govtmor'a Claulc at

Trtnton, N.J., Dee. e.7.

..

The huge Chlefo picked 14113
first downs, and Dermittaleight.
Werry passed to Ault for the ex· !Apn ga1nod 219 ruohinr, and
tra points with 2:06 left am It permitted Meigs but 3t yanlo,
was 16-14.
Total yardap favored the h..,.
The final stanza saw both club, 275-116. Logan COJI!illeted
teams exchange ,punts on seven two of 10 pesoes lor ~6 yards.
different occasiona.
Melga eOIDPieted nine of 22 aerl..of!an'a defe111tve unit held ial a tor 82 yards.
John Smith to L1 yards in nine
Friday, the Chieftains travel to
carries. Conrad paced the O!lefs Gallipolis. Meigo wUI hoot Wellswith 98 yards in 16 at:t.empts. ton.

~7S.:I169 Opp. 8&amp;!)
~

fopot.
;

from

$21.95

Most men only worry about suits, shirts and
ties. They buy from the top down, So by the
time they get to the botto m, their feet are
just an aftt:rthought. And the shoes they buy
look like afterthoughts. If you buy a pair of
Nunn-Bush shoes, you can start with your feet.
Because you won't have ro worry about them

NUNN
BUSH

not marching the suit you haven't bought yet.
They're styled w you won't
have to change shoes eve f)• rime
you change suits. And th at

can save you a lot of change.

1964 ·THUNDERBIRD

,.,\

Factory Air Conditioner, One Local Owner, New Premium Tites. This Car
Is In Excellent Condition. A1969 Riviera Trade-ln.

$1995°0

Sun. Noon-9 p.11.... 9 ...

.• 9

,.m.

SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE OF EXOTIC FISH &amp; SUPPLIES SPECJ,\L PRICES ON fiSH DURING
OPEN HOUSE AND FOLLOWING WEEK .

REGISTER FOR . ...
1ST PRIZE - 10 GAL. AQUARIUM SET (COMPLETE)
2ND PRIZE - 5 GAL. AQUARIUM SET (COMPLETE)
10- 3RD PRIZES- TV FISH TANK (COMPLETE)
Prizes On Display - No Purchase Required - Drawmg Ocr. 14. 9 PM . Need Nor He PreHn!

To Win .

REFRESHMENTS
• Tetramln •longllfe • Miracle • Ohio
Sdentlflc Products • Jungle Brand

WALNUT

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SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY, OCTOBER 13 &amp; 14, 1968

\i~'itlc1

Carolina Lumber
.and Supply

81ow n
C11111n C1ll

Open House

special

REGULARLY UP TO
$20.50 VALUE

Start at the bottom
and dress
your
way up

Is having

Panel
•12~~.!,

later a 15-yard cllpplng penalty
gave Kypr Crook the ball oo the
South"eotern 10, Fisher passed
l1x yardo to Rothgol&gt; to make It
48-6 with 8:05 loft In tho third
period.
The fourth period wu leas
than a mlmlte old when Wade
HeniOn drove rwr yard11 for
the l1na1 Bobcat toochdown and
Gary Saundoro ran the P&gt;\T to
give KJoger Creek o 56-6 lead.
SoulhwellAirn threatened to
score midw13 the rourth period,
After an exchange of punts, lhe
Highlandero marched to the Ky.
ger Creek 29 where they loat the
ball on downa. Kypr Creek was
on the Southwestern 32 when the
game ended.
Kyger Crook led 14-7 In firat
downs. The Bobcats pined 347
yards on the ground and com.
pleted three of six passes for
27 ysrdo and a net of 37 4 yardo.
Southwestern picked up 61 yardo
ruthin.g and completed two of
8ix passu Cor 34 yards and a
net 95 yards lor the nll!hl
The Bobcats recovered two
rumbles and Southwestern picked up one. Kyger Creek drew
70 yardM in penalties and Southwestern had 60. The Bobcats
punted three times for 90 yards,
an average or 30 yards per kick
while the Highlanders booted rive
lor a total of 127 yards, an
average of 25,2 per kick,
Southwestern ... 0 0 0 0- 0
Kyger Creek.. 30 6 12 8- 56
Scoring: Kyger Creek- Fillher 2 (one yard and 64 yards);
Rothgeb 2 (23 yard nmback of
an intercepted pass and a six
yard paas rrom Fisher); ().Iii len (32 yard run)i G. Saunders
(43 yard runback or an inter cepted peos); Beebe (one yard);
and W. HeniOn (rour yards); PAT
- Floher C2); Beebe and Soun ders.

The House o Wilson

PREFINISHED

ON THI: SPOT FINANCING
SALESMEN ·• CEWARD CAL VERT
CLIFF PHILLIPS - EDDIE FIFE - DAN THOMPSON
YOU ALWAYS PAY LESS AT

or

PAT "ao no good. Tho! ended
the ocoriDg In the llrst period
with Kyger Creek ahead 30-6.
The IJighllltdero got their ollonoe going momentarily early
In the second period aod picked
up a first down at their ft. K,y.
ger Creek took over after a short
h1eh punt at their own 39. 'llle
Bobcall picked up a !!rot down
on the Southwestern t7, two
playa later a 15-yard periiOD.Il
fool penalty p~~ohed them back to
their 36. Then Fisher got his
oecond TD ol the night, raciDg
64 yards and eluding Charles
Wtlllams at the Highlander 2~
yard line. The try for the PAT
was oo good and the Bobcats
led 31Hl.
Kyger Creek' 1 next toochmwn
waa set up by Wade Henson who
recovered Scott Atha'll fumble
at the Soutllwestem 19. Perry
Beebe plunged for a yard and
tho toochdown with 10:5&gt; loll to
play In the third period. Again
the Bobcats missed the PAT. lt
was 42..0.
Southwestern's deepest penetration into Bobcat territory
came in the next set of downa,
Atha picked up four yarda to the
Kyger Creek 49. WUliama went
seven to the 42 but a 15-yard
peraonal foul penalty on Kyger
Creek moved the ball to the Bobcat 26. Atha lost 10 and then
made two, Atha made one and
tumbled with Jim Walker recovering at the Kyger Creek 35.
WHiiarns was tossed for a 10
yard loss and Kyger Creek took
over on their own 43.
Fisher picked up a first down
on the Sluthwestern 32 atter
taking a pitchout Crom quarter.
back Jack Henaoo. Three plays

Poca Drops Wahama, 20-6

"

Can ond Truck• To Choo•• froll'l

the Marauders on the scoreboard. ond atanza, but the TD waa ooJ.
The sttoqlt for the extra points ll!led by I penaltjo.
faDed.
MailS took over In the third
!Apn scored qa!n in the soc- period. The Marauders moved 53
yardo In 17 Dlo.VI. with Fullback

WElD W0 0 D'"

8 CYLINDER -- 2 DOOR.
STANDARD TRANSMISSION. RADIO
AND HEATER. WHITEWALL TIRES.

Many Mare

escorted by Jim

Beougher - 1 ft. rWl !or m
Score by ~ters:
Meigs • • • . • • 0 6 8 0-14
Logan • . . . • •16 0 o 0-16
STARTING LINEUPS- MEIGS: DeMio Ault, E; Jim Swotzel, T;
Max Whitlatch, G; Harry Slawter, C; Jim Crow, G; Mike Barr, T;
Jon KleurE; JetrWerry, QB; John Smith, HB; Elbert Wllliama HB·
Konn,; English, FB.
'
'
MASON - Coach Grant Bar - to Bailey who went 42 yards to
LOGAN - P. Johnaon, E; Mike CottrUI, T; Ron Rutter, G; nette and his gang gan a sparse
paydlrt. Bailey outran his screen
Jell Smith, C; Dale Brown, G; Mike Walker, T; BUl Show, E; Bob crowd at Wahama, a ball game
and everything else on the field
Johnson, QB; Oluck Conrad, LH; Dana Beougher RH· Chuck Lowe they will not soon forget as the
FB.
0
I
I
to get the TI&gt;, The extra point
White Falcons fought highly fa- by Bailey on a kick was good
vored Poca to a standsllll time and the Dots led 7-6 at halftime,
and time again, but finaJI,y went
The Dots came back in the
down to defeat by a 20-6 score third quarter and scored when
Friday night.
Allen Bailey, who seems to be
The Dots didn't wrap it up able to do it all on the grlduntil the fourth quarter with one lron, tossed a 25 yard pass to
mlnute and 59 seconds remain~ Terry Lott for another Poca
ing in the ball game.
score. Bailey missed the extra
Coach Dick Darby ol the Dots point this Ume and the score
had high praise Cor the Falcons was 13-6.
after the game, Coach Darby
Later In tlle third quarter, GU~
said that next toCharle~tooCath ­ Uspie brought the crowd to its
UVERPOOL, England-(NEAJ-A certain bloke, flipping
ollc, Wahama was the best de~ feet again when he lntercepted
mad as they say here, shook a fist at the "blower" on the
fenatve
team the DoUi had en • a Poca pass at the Wahama 25
ceUJng. From the speaker came the calling of the fourth race
countered all year, and Poca has and raced back to the nota 18
at .Ascot, and the result.
been playing In some pretty loot where a Pvca player mad~ a
"'At jock couldn't ride a clothes 'orse," growled the bloke.
company,
desperation dive and barely got
A handful of colleagues, otherwise absorbed, scanned form
There was no score in the him tripped up,
charts clipped from newspapers that serve as wallpaper at
this turf accountant's shop.
game unW the second quarter
The Falcons then fought their
when Wahama put six points on way against the tough Poca de A turf accountant is a haute couture tag for licensed bookthe scoreboard, Allen Bailey, the fense to the one foot line where
maker. Tony, a tweedy Uverpudlian with steel-rimmed spectacles tipped on his ruddy nose, is the shop settler. He handles
Dots' great fullback, started the drive was finally stopped •
and pays oft' wagers. Now, he stood before a huge wall list
aroond left end at about the WeJohnny Brown scored the fiof the horses running at six British tracks and explained the
homo
36.
The
Wild
Indian,
Brynal
TD lor Poca with I :S9 reoperation.
ant Hudson, put him in his sighta mainiDg In the game when he
"Bookmaking shops were illegal, as they are in America.
and pulled the trigger. The en- plunged over rrom the one yard
But it changed here in 1961," he said. "The punters-you
ouiDg oo!Uslon shook Bailey line.
chaps call 'em bettors-put so much pressure on Parliament
loose [rom the ball which took a
the system was legalized.
Fields, Hudson and B o b by
bounce
or
two
on
the
ground
Roush
led the Falcons in tackles,
"Before that, off-track betting was a bit of a soggy affair.
where Gary Clark, coming up but all the Wabama delenae was
You would have to nip into a grocery store or rock shop to
Crom his defenalve halfback .spot, prolsed for their outatandlng ef.
have a bet. You would backhand a piece of paper to your
book. and be slippy about It, I dare say.
was able to pick it up at full tort. Mel Fry and Gtlleapie each
speed and race 74 yards to a had two interceptions.
"Now most Britishers are rather delighted. But some get
touchdom.
a little barmy at times. I mean you hear a bloody lot of blue
Wahama entertains Eastern
language when runners don't conclude the way punters had
The extra point was no good Frlda,y nll!ht In the lilt home
bargained for."
and Wahama led IHJ,
game ot the season,
Tonr, handlea between 200 and 600 bets a day. "Bets," he
On the lollowlng klck-&lt;JI!, the
said, r~ge from thrupence to, well, 100 pounds is not un·
Doll looked like they woold gu
common. Tbrupence is equal to three cents a pound Is
all
the wa,y except ror a Utue
DOW Worih J2.39.
'
8UJ' nomad Gary Fields who put
Except for torn betting slips strewing the floor, the small
the stopper on the ball clUTier
wb1ood-pan,e!ed room Is ticfy and conducive to giving all possiat the 39 yard line.
e ass1SWIInce to punters.

-

GMC TRUCKS
POMEROY, OHIO'

.

Gro!:e,

Swisher, and Rosa.He ReeAe, eacorted by Roy Thompoon.
lt was the fourth consecutive
victory ror the Bobcats who lead
the SV AC with a 4-0 reoord and
have only Haman Trace to pla.y
beCore wrapping up the 1968
SV AC crown. Overall, Kyger
Creek Is 4~ .
The lou lert Coach steve Stiles
Southwestern Highlanders with
a 1-2 SV AC record, tied for
fourth place with Eastern of
Metge: County. The Highlanders
have an overall record
3-3.
Scoring in every quarter, the
Bobcats took a 30-0 lead at U.e
end of the first period. h was
36-0 at halftime and 48-0 at the
end or three periods.
Leading the touchdown parade
were Gary Fisher, 168.poundaen.

tor halfback, with two m•a, and
Jon Rothgeb, 200iJCMKI Junior
end, Ron Quillen, 150iJCMKI senior Mlback; Perry Beebe, !50pound oenlor hallbacl&lt;; Gary
Saunders, 135-poundl!lophornore,
and Wade HeniOn, 140 -pound
sophomore, e a c h scored one
touchdown.
The Bobcall took an 8-6 lead
with 9:55 left to play 1n the nut
period when Fisher plunged aver
from the one yard line and then
ran the extra points. On the nrst
ploy after the opening klckol!,
Ron Q.!Uien raced t4 yards trom
his own 46 to the Southwestern
10 to aet up the acore.
Big Dan Polcyn, 210 - pound
junior tackle, set up the Bobcats' second touchdown when he
pounced on Charles WWiB.ma'
fumble at the Southwestern 39.
Three plays later, Qufllen raced
32 yardo to J&gt;liY dirt with 2:32
left in the period. Beebe ran the
extra points to give Kyger Creek
a 16..0 lead.
Minus Dave Morgan, 155 pound senior quarterback, who
has a fractured arm, the Highlanders were in real trouble
with their passing game, With
Jack Lewis, 147 - pound )mlor
quarterback, doing the tossing,
big Jon Rothgeb intercepted a
stray aerial and returned It 23
yards for the Bobcats' third
touchdown. Fisher ran the extra
points and the Bobcats led 24~
with 1:45 left In the ltrst quar.

NEA Sports Colamalst

ARI,

~UICK

Conrad - 36 yd; 20 yd.

On the Chle(s' nrst play afterward, Demis Ault intercepted a
Johnstoo aerial, and returned it
38 yards on a beautirul run to put

IRA BERKOW

Catalina VB 4 dr. Sedan. Exceptional in every way.

Friday's High School Scores
Wheelersburg 28 New Boston 0
Ironton 32 Nelo.-York 6
OOk Hut 28 COOl Grove 22
Clark ~ Northeaatern 28
Sprltlllleld Sl&gt;awnee 18
Sandusky 12 Findlay 6
Elyria 26 Manolleld 8
Lorain Senior 35 Framont 7
Sendusky St. Mary's 22
Marpretta 8
Hamilton Garlleld 27 LlmaSr.12
Marietta 20 Chlllicolho 20 (lie)

-.:

. - . !• ,

LOGAN

SCOIUNG
MEIGS
LOGAN
Ault - IDL paso return, 38 yd; EP
Johnston - 1 ft. run tor TD
English - 'h yd. run lor TD
Conrad - Two EP' s

.,.

VB Goloxie "500" Sedan. We have three fine cars-all in
excellent condition .

close (ougllt battle.
The Eagles will travel to Wahama F rlda.y night for a nonleague game.
By QJarten:
6 0 0 0-6
Federal-Hocking
0 0 0 0-0
Eastern
EAST F-H
Yards Rush . . . . . . . •38 79
Yarda Pan . . . . . • • ,56 52
Paaseo Attempted • . . .22 8
Panea Completed . • . • 8 2
Paasea Intercepted • . • . 1 0
First Down• • • . . ...• 3 7
Fumbles . . . . . . . . . . . 2 2
Fumbles Lost .. ••• . • 1 1
.·.·.·:

MEIGS
10 yd'; 10 yd; 6 yd; 17 yd.
Ault 9 yd; 11 ydj 7 yd; 2 yd.
WUUams - 10 yd.

Kloes -

$4,195

68 Bui'k

Eastern Eagles Drop 6-0 Grid Battle

Ohio High School F - U Scores
By United Pren Irternattonal
Dayton Dwd:ar 52 Kaiser 0
Beavercreek 21 Xenia 14
Sprlngf'd Nortll21 Centervllle14
Chamlnade 52 Meadowdale 0
AllAir 36 Miamisburg 6
Lima Shawnee 34 Greenville 22
Sidooy 33 Piqua 6
Covington 14 Tecumseh 12
Miami East 14 Graham Local 8
Northwestern 22 Greenon 12
Delphoo St. John 30 Piq. cath. o
Cell,. 40 St. Marya 12
Valley Forge 20 Euclid 14
Barberton 34 Dayton llD80 28
Dover St. Jos. 24 Strasburg 6
Now PhliL 26 Ashland 23
Cin. Aiken 16 Cln. Courter Tech6
Nortll College Hut 36
Mt. Healthy 16
St. Clairsville 49 Cleymont 0
Barneovllle 32 Union Local 18
GALLIPOLIS - Coach Bob P-ut.an 8 Woodolleld 8 (lie)
Ashley's Southern Local Torna- Brutlant 12 Codb 8
does doWned the Haman Trace Boallavllle 27 Shenandoah 14
WUdcoto 24-6 Frlda,y night at Wintersville 74 Toronto 0
Mercerville to spoil the 1968 Jefferson Union 58
Haman Trace Homeeomlng,
Sprlnsfteld Local 6
Mlas Roaalea Davis, a aen- I..anaater 25 Newark 8
ior. ..a. named 1968 Haman Barnel't'Ule 32 Union 18
Trace Homecoming ~ at Danv!Ue 36 New AlboiQ' 6
halftlme ceremonies.
M1am1 Trace 21 Circleville 14
No details of the scorlna were Ll~klng Heights 60 Johnstown 0
available for the Tlm81-Sentlnel.
Toledo Whitmer 20 Fostoria 0
The win moved Southern Lo~ Arcadia 29 Liberty Benton 0
cal lnto a second place tie wt.tb Rooolord 52 Elmwood 0
North Gallla In the Southern Val- Upper Arllneton 42 ZoneovUie 20
ley Athletic Conrerenee, each
Tri·Valley 32 c.-a ville 2
team with a 2-2 record.
New Lex. 51 May1ville 6
Hannan Trace, sWl looking
Philo 30 Sheridan 10
Cor ita rlrst win or tile 881LIOn,
Fort Frye 40 Meadowbrook 8
Is 0-2 In SV AC ploy and 0-l;
Portomouth 30 Colo. south 18
In ell ,;ames. Southern hal a
Valley 22 Northwest 0
2-4 overall record.
Portsmouth East 14 Minford 2

Southern

mark.
With all substitutes playing the
final two minutes, Ironton's final
TO came on a tl.ne 43 yard run
by t'reshman quarterback Ha1
Spears with just 34 seconds remaining in the co~st. John M.Y·
ers rammed over the two-point
con ...ersion for the llnal score of
32--6.
Statistics show the Tigers with
416 yards rushing, completing
three of six passes for 29 yards,

68 Pontiacs

GALLIPOLIS - It "'' Homecoming Frida.¥ night at Kyger
Creek High School, Coach Howard Lee Miller's Bobcats cele·
brated with a 56-6 lacing ol tho
Southwestern llll!hlanders to remain wuSefeated in the Southern
Valley Athlttic Conference.
Halftime aetivtties featured
the crowning of Mill Mary Kall
•• 1-lomeoomlng &lt;;;!ueen. 9te was
escorted by Tom Reese. John
Hughea crowned the queen, pre.
sented her with red roses and
kissed tho queen In traditional
style.
Homeoom&amp;w ceremonies featured the Kyger Creek H I g h
School Marching Band playing
the theme, "May You Alwaya."
Other Queen candidates were~e
Grimm, escorted by Earl Thomas; Md Karen !ltamblln, escorted by Budcl,y Moore. Attendants were Connie Stidham, escorted by Chuck Bradburyi Emily

Malibu 2 dr. Hard Top. Automatic trans. 6 cyl. Extra s.horp

Boykin Unstoppable, Tigers Romp, 32-6

Meigs

Ken E_!lglhh .PIOWi~ over !rom
the one-half yard line, OB .Jetr

Bobcats Crush Highlanders, 56-0

after.

INDIVIDUAL YARDAGE
MEIGS
Smith •••••. 4c,5 Sc,6
English • .. 5c,16 5c,10
Wllliama .. 4c,7 4c,J2
Werry .. • , 0 3c,.J9

In the second canto,

talns drove56yardsinelghtplays 34 yards in II plays, But Logan
to lAike an 8-11 lead.
held qatn.
The score came with 7:11lert
In the period when QB BOB Johnston plunged over from the one.
Chuck Conrad added the points

MEIGS
1st
2nd
Hall Hall Total
lst downs •• • 2
6
8
Yds. Rush. • • 25
9
34
Yds. Pass .•. 27
55
82
Total Yds•. , 52
64
116
Att. Paues. •• 9
13
22
CoJ111. . . . . . - 3
6
7
Panes Int. .• • 0
0
0
Fumbles ..... 0
2
2
FIDitb. Loot .... 0
0
0
Punts .... 3-109 3-95 &amp;-204
, Penalties .••• , 0
10
10

Bonneville 2 Dr. Hard Top. One careful owner. Extra sharp
inside and out. PS, PB &amp; AT

66 Dontl•a

stopped the Marauders on their

Ont series or downs, the Chief. drove to !he Logan 21, coveriDg

Meigs-Logan Statistics

$2, 195

·

·

Logan Slips By Meigs, Remains In Race

USED CARS!

Wellston, Athens In 0-0 Deadlock

The Sunday Times • Sentinel, SuJKiay, October 13, 1968

Route 62
Ca11p

(oniiJ

Milton Roa•
Ptint PIHSIIit
llllla;;;;;;;;;a;•••llli'•'l'arch For Sign jus! Sourh of Pltasanl Poinl Resort"
'.

Re1111ar Store HallS

....

•'

9-9 Tues. Thru Sat.
Phone 675-1065

Rocer &amp; Janet Wilson

b

t
~

�The ~ Time• - Sentinel, Sunde,y, October 13, 1968

15 -· The Sunday Times - Senti..,!, SUnday, October 13, 1968

There's No Vacation For The Success Of Want Ads •.• They Work All TbP Time!
Notice
HAM'S DAffiY BAR, Rt. 35,
will close for season Sunday,
Oct. 13. Special I qt. of Ice
cream, all flavors, 45c qt.
Thank you for your patronage,
239-2
1 WILL NOT be resnonslble for
any debts other than my own
as of this date, October 11,
1968.
Signed,
Warren J . Salisbury 241)-3

In Memory

Fem&gt;le Help Wanted
•..VOMEN for n;ut time work in
Galli&lt;\ Co. Write Cort Cosmetics. 2437 so lOth ~t .. Ironton.
Ohio 456311
241)-l
TUPPERWARE HAS openings.
2 parllimc (135 to $75 weekly\
2 full time ($75 to 1150 weeklv. 354-2616 or write Radiant
Sales. 4490 Old Scioto Trail,
Portsmouth.
239-3

Wanted To Buy
~y

Wayne DeDD&lt;y

1~

LOVING memory of Stanle)l
Wayne Denney. who passed
away Oct. 13th, 1962.

BASSETT HOUND
441&gt;-1440.

pup. Ph.
241)-1

Wanted

FAMILY of five needs 2 or 3
bedroom furnished apartSb: vears have passed since
ment, house or trailer in or
th~l sad day.
near
town, Ph. 367-7128
The one we loved was called
238-3

away ,

God took him home, It was
His will,

But in our hearts he liveth
stilL
Sadly missed by his

Father. Mother, Wife
and Daughter
240· I

Notice

RETIRED gentleman would
like room and board in or
near Gallipolis. Write Box 92,
c-o Tribune.
238-6
WAITRESS, must be over 21,
no experience nec-essary. Apply in per!!lon at Green Ga~
les, St Rt. 7.
241)-3

For Rent

LAST

For Sale
36'' ·" 23"

ARTIST SUPPLIES

x.orm

WHITE'S DECORATOR
STORE

Aluminum
Sheets

260 S•cond Aw•.

•

fl.

..
I ,

·'

'

Used Offset Plates

lltmters and faD campers.
Low rental prices lor faD
on '88 model Apache Camp-

HAVE
MANY USES

2oe

ft.

Afoo a

2 BEDROOM housetrailer, all
utilities paid. Also 2 bedroom
block house built like a trailer, very nice. Inquire at
Green Gables, St. Rt. 7. 238-3

RUSS'S SWAP SHOP, 314 Main
Sl., Pl. Pleasant, Ph. 11'/S4455. Buy, .. n or trade. Over
1110 guns 1n stoek. OWner,
RIWiell Jenkins.
217-26

3 ROOM cottage . apartment,
unfurnished, all private. Reasonable. Ph. 446-3627 after 5.
James E. Danner, 13 Pine.
238-tl

a,EANING l•dy with own
transnortation . .eive referen- 2 LARGE apartments, located
011 Second Ave. Ph. 446-211110.
ces. Write 509 Maple Dr Gal238-3
Opolis, 0 .
240-1

Wanted

MANAGEMENT TRAINEE
The world's seco nd lorgnt company of its. kind needs
ambitious Sales RepreuntatiYe (21-40) to work in
revolutionary new division .

NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY .
Those selected will b4 fully troirn1d ol compa ny expenae,
then placed on guarantee. Compony·spontored, two-week
tra ining provrom . Fir s t Y"'ll' l!lorningt thould be $10,000$15,000 or more . Rapid no t ion-wide e.~~ponsiOf"l guarantees
mcmot;~ement

oppo,uniries . _Those selected must ho¥e 0
cor, be sport&amp; monded, ombttoou• and woll,ng to put forth
effort toward o management positoon . (Present management
11orning in ellceu of $20.000 . )

THIS IS A LiFETIME OPPORTUNITY

Can You Qualify?
CALL MR . MIKE HESTER FOR
APPOINTMENT AT GALLIPOLIS 446-4376

r..,. new and demon-

Bfor$1.00

strators at sale prices.

Gallipolis Daily
Tribune

AMSBARY
APACHE TRAILER
m - A...

125 Third Ave
Go IIi poll•

GalllpoUJ

For Sale

for Rent

2 BEDROOM houseu·ail ,:·l·, ev4 SPEED PORTABLE record
erything furni$hed . Call 446player $10.00, 421 1st Ave.
0893.
241)-3
239-.1
!'IRS'!' FLOOR furnished apart-

COUNTRY SORGHUMS can be
ment, 2 bedrooms . 631 Fourth
purchased at Barrs . Johnsons .
Ave.
246-tf
Sigler Prod. Market. Johnson
&amp; Johnson or Leslie McCombs
5 ROOM hou,., 2 bedrooms. 44
379-2166.
239-6
J.lncoln Ave . Ph. ~658
241)-3

MAIL ORDERS FILLED for
Merle Norman cosmetics. CaJJ
Point Pleasant 675-3040 for
your order.
239-3
'.IONDAYS AND Tuesdavs are
piece goods remnant davs at
Upper Murphy. 4 yd'. $1.00.
239-3
BEAUTIFUL MAPLE STEREORADTO Static-free FM. rich
AM rndio . FuJI-range volume .
base. treble and ball'IHCe controL Monthly payments of
$j; 50 or balance of $98.03. Ph.
&lt;46-1028.
246-3
MODERN WAtNUT S'rnREO
CONSOLE. Solid-state tuners
and amplifiers . Vernier sliderule tuning. Precision-built
record changer plays all
speeds . Pav only $5.00 per
month or $83.12. Ph. 446-1028.
24(h'l

EMPIRE r.oor furnace. Can be
seen at 613 5th Ave. Ph. 44t1826.

241)-3

r,As circulating heater. 40.1100
BT.U. Call Ht;-0570.
240-3

NEW---cmC TRUCK
HEADQUARTERS
1!1611 1&gt; T. GMC Pickup
1967 &gt;,; T. GMC Pickup
l958 1&gt; T. Ford Pickup
1957 2 T. GMC
1968 GMC Suburban
1956 2 T Studebaker
N"" 5 T Farm Wagons

$139.50

1982 m T. Chev.
llEEF FOR SALE for home 1958 \4o T. GMC plclrup
freezers . Earl Logan, Pb_ 11164 2 T. Internallonal
446-2893 after 6 p.m_
236-4 1955 14o T. Dodge pickup
!9611 1\!o T_ Dodge truck
ELECI'RIC guitar and am 11 _ 1956 2 T. Int. Tractor
~-3 1963 14o T. Chev, pickup
fler. Ph. 446-2221 .
1968 1 T. GMC
HAY BALER, new rake, Bush I Minneapolfl Moline PoHog, rototlller, elec. milkers, ! Unlt
elec. welder, Jeep pickup 4 New M" Rotary Cutters W.D. Ph_ 379-2424.
238-3 $299.50. New 8.25 • %11, 10 ply
nylon tire• $55. Inc. Federal

POOL TABLE, 9 fl . x 4\!o ft.
with all equipment_ Ph. 4464939.
238-3

tax.
•
Ollie Valley lmplomeat .
113 Pine St. Pl1. 441-W!.

140 If

THE MARION Angua AsaoclaGOOD CLEAN LUMP and stoktlon Sale, Saturday, October
er coal, Carl Winters, ltlo
19 at the Marion Fairgrow1ds.
Show at 10 AM, Sale at 1 PM_ Grande. Phon• 245-51l5. 6-tf
Selling 9() Jots as 4 Bulls, 36
IF YOU are building a new
Females, and 50 Steer club
borne or remodeling, see us.
calve!. For catalogs contact:
We
are bullde1'11. 1))atrlbutor
Larry Duprey, 113 Elm Street,
for Hotpolnt Appliances, AlliMarlon. Phone 614-383-6579.
son Electric.
1M t1
~
LOW, LOW, PRICES on Mat.
13 C1J. FT. chest type Frigitresses . Rice and Corbin Furdaire freezer . Ph. 3ti7-7482_
111 11
niture238-3

REAL COUNTRY SORGHUM
LESLIE McCombs, Rt. 775, Ph.
379-2166.
237-6

4M: . H'IH'I

- --

'""

ALL typeo of building materIals, btod&lt;. brick, aewer pipe,
windows, Untels, etc. Claude
Winters. Rio Grande, 0. CH
5-5121 after 5.
II II
1958 2 DR. Oldsmobile, auto.
trans. $125. Ph . 446-0973.

240-3

'

Off. 446 3643
he. 446-3796
446-4500

Magnificent View
4 Bedroom-Ranch

4 Bedroom. In Town

HOPES THIE NP:X1' FAMILY EN-

WE HAVE all the new models
~PACIOUS 00t1ntry borne locatin all types of cameras ed on Triple E Ranch, 0. J .
Pentax, Nikron , Komica, YaWhite Rclad. 4 bedrooms upshica, Mamlya and Koni
stairs plus storage room and
Omega.
Tawney "4Studio, 422
modem full bath. 5 rooms
Second Ave.
237-6
downst.1irs with modern bunt~
in kitchen plus half bath. New
SNACK BAR, formica top, like
fuel oil furnace. Rented only
new . Call 446-4442 , after 5 hy lease : S125 per mo. Shown
446-:Joro6.
239-3
by appointment. Phone 4462448, 9 to 5, or call Emerson
MILK ROUTE, !ale model G'.IC
E. Evans.
Z40-3
truck with milk van . Will
trade for farm machinery or
2 FURN. rooms. utilities paid
cattle and take over payment
Located on Addison-BulaviiiP
on truck if interested. 379Rd. Ph. 367-7295.
240-3
2191.
239-3

!!1611 FORD Ga1ol&lt;le

AGENCY
THIS J. OVEL Y LARGII:
Ji()JO
Wu.t. SATISFY VOUB EVERY
WISH, 4 HUGE BEDROOMS Ul ll
30 UVING ROOM, LARGE F.AM ·
WrfH
NATUllAL
ILY ROOM
STONE FLOOR, 3 BATtiS. FOR ·
MAL DINING
ROOM , WOOD
BURNING FIRE rLACE. AND 2
CAR GARAGE LOCATED ON A
LARGE FLAT TREE
SJIADED
LOT WITII ON'J!: 07 THE BEST
\'JEWS ALONG THE omo. OW ·
"'ER LEAV l.'IU
ST ATF.
AND

rtl. IH I !If

NII:W unfurnished apartment,
l bedrooms, adults only, 328
For Sale
Second Ave , Pb. 446-1126.
2 REFRIGERATORS, poriable
ABOUT TWO MONTHS ago we
2M-tl
rerord players, 2 gas rangeo,
ran an ad throughout t h e
3 breakfast sets, coil springs,
state for representatives. We OP'FICE opace for rent. CaD
hideaway bed, 2 utility cabiwere looking for people who
446-234J from 8 a.m- till S
nets
dresser. Rice &amp; Corbin
had a strong direct sales or
p.m.
FlJrclture Co. 953 Se&lt;t .;
public contact background in
their area (no travelin~) with FURNISHED opartment, oonAve. 446-II 71.
233-tf
the strongest leads (unlimited
tact Stella Arnold, Park Cenand all furnished by the Comtral Hotel.
76-lf STORM DOORS &amp; WINDOWS
Awnings, carports, ralllngs
~nrpany) and by appointment onLowe Brothers Paints
' Uty (no cold calls allowed) pre- SLEEPING rooms. weekly
senting a unique program on
Wallpaper,
Picture Framing
rates. Park Central Hotel,
MULUNEAUX
DECORATING
a prestige, low pressure basis.
~tf
Since 1911
446-2t10(1
We had 46 answers to this ad. BRADBURY efficiency apart258 Third Avenue. Galllpolfl
We interviewed thirty - three
ment, first Door, adults only.
and hired twenty-one of these.
729 Second Ave.
231-tf ZIG ZAG SEWING MACHINE
Only two had any previous ex!968 SALESMAN'S demonslr&amp;perience in our field. Nineteen FURNlSHED apartment -- 2
tor. Makes fancy stitches &amp;:
are still with us. In their
etc. Wlll sell for 9 payments
rooms and bath, adults. Ph.
first two months they have
of
$6 or $46 Cash. 675-3081.
446-4923.
239-tl
2!6-tl
averaged $481.00 a week in
commissions (High man aver~ FURNISHED APARTMENTS
aged $1107.00 a week - low
Gallia Hotel, 446-2306, 239-26 FILING cabinets, supplies,
man averaged $264.00 a
$33.50, $49.95 up. lmmedlatr
week) ,
deUvery, In stock. Simmons
SLEEPING ROOMS,
weekly
ptg. &amp; Office Equlp. 446-1397.
rates . 446-2206.
239-26
If the above earning! a n d
130-tf
activity interest ycu and you 1'11REE furnished apartments,
have the desire and initiative
2 one bedroom and I two bed- TYPEWRITERS, adding machto do something about it, then
Ines, new and used. Simmons
room, water, sewer and heat
do not pass up this truly once~. &amp; Office Equip_ 446-1397.
lumished. F1ve unfurnished
in-a-lifetime, ground - Door
230-tf
apartments, 1 one bedroom,
opportunity. This i-"~ our last
3 two bedroom, I three bedad so you will never h a v e
INS S'MmEO
rooms, water and sewer furthis chance again . For pernished_ Ph. 446-0265 9 to 4, LOVELY walnut console with
sonal interview in your area .
AM~
radio, automotir
after 4 p.m. 446-1203. 238-tf
send brief background to Difloating turn table. Take over
rector of Personnel, Suite 5. FOUR private trailer spa&lt;eB,
payments of $5.21 per month
11 West Cooke Road, Columor pay balance due, $109.43.
45'1100' each, 3 miles from
bus, Ohio 43214.
Try It In your home. Call 67S.
center of town . Call 3081.
236-tf
9 "' 4, after 4, 446-1203. Z36-tl
MASTER'S Auto Repair, auto.
trans.
repair,
reasonable
price at Ashland Station. Rt.
35, Jackson Pike.
238-3

446·2583

JOY IT AS
HAVE.

MUCH

AS

TIIBY

3 Bedroom Brick

LOCATED ON ROUTE :J~ . A FIN'!
UOME IN A FINI': LOC-'TION
wtt HAVE 3 TO CIIOOS~ FROM

For Rent
3 B~room !\rick
~f'F.LLI!:VT

RIVlo:J&lt;

vnrw .

LOCATION
MOD!fi.N

WITH
KOME

WITH FULL BASEMENT. PP TO
DATE KITCJIEN

2Bedroom
$8,200

BI':'I!:N
SUAPRMI!:D
LA.TELY~
\'Oll Wll.'l. HE WREN YOU ,;a
TR1S BRANn NKW MOORRN
JQTCRl!:N IN TillS OLDER ROME

(MONDAYS THRU FRIDAYS)
7:45 &amp;:hoes or Joy

8:00 Ohio Valley News
8:15 Talk of the T&lt;Mn
9:15 The Morning Show
I 0;30 Cllatterbox
il:OO The Morning Sh&lt;M'
11:45 World &amp; Mason CO. News
12:00 Com'nity and Market News
t2:15 Bulletin Board
12:30 Prosecutor Rpts. (Mon)
Wed, Thurs.&gt;

4:00 Interchange
5:00 Nev;rs, Weatller, Sports

Roundup

l:XCIU.•l.ENT
CA'RK
BT"«"!J: .
LOVF.LY
CARl'ln'I'!D
UVJN(:
llOOM' W1TR FIRE PLACE. P"A ·
'MILY ROOM AND GARAGE [.r •
i::ATED ON A LAROE LOT .JUST
OUT OP" 'TOWN 3 MILE.

New 3 Bedroon-.
Centenary
YOU WILL

~.JOY

A

(SATURDAY&gt;)
11:55 Washington Reports
12:00 News Roundup
12:15 BulleUn Board
12:30 The "In" Sound
12:35 Teen-Time '68
4:00 Intercllenge
:
5:00 News, Weather, Sports
5:30 Suriset Serenade (Unitl Sign

om

(SUNDAYS)
~

8:00 Sign On and The Singing

nnME 1'::\TDV ONE WTU. UJ.:

Vl'lRV ~Tf'F. 4 m:rrROO!af "ROME ,
ON I.ARGF. TREF. SHAnE'[) LOT
WlTIJ ROOM FOR A MOBILE
"ROME T,OC.Ir. TED ON E'f)GE Of'
TOWN ON 141.

Preacher
8:15 News
8:30 Herald of Truth
9:00 Protestant Hour
9:30 Aunt Bertha

YOII HOW L1JC'KV YOU ARB.
THiS ONP.: HAS A MODE'IN Kl'l' ·
C'REN.
ATI'ACHED
GARAOJ:
AND NICE l.OCATJON . FULL
PRlC!: 115.'1".50.

For Sale
APPLES - Red and Yellow
Delicio::s, Grimes, Romes,
Stayman, Sweet cider. Market hours: open 1 to 6 Monday lhru Friday, B to 6 Saturday, 12 to 6 Sunday. Wells
Orchards, Rt. 180, I mile
South of Wilkesvllle, 0.

m-Il

USED cash registers, National,
R. C. Allen, VIctor. Simmons
Pig. &amp; Office Equip. 446-1397.

230-tl

REALTOR
Farm, VDiap, Qty PPnropa-tyty
Phoao 116-0Zll

If You're Selective
This contemporary brick ranch
Is for you . . . Trimmed In redwood. It bas all the wanle!f
areas for living and entertain~.
ing. Custom bulll by Ky. bulld- .
er. Choose 1 to 15 acres. FJve
minutes from downtown. Gallipolis Schools. Low 30's.

Ftr Farmers
WITH

Four bedrootltll, room wide closets, maple - walnut floors,
THORN~
large bath wtth vanity, Utility
Thurman, Ohio
rm., electric kitchen. 30 x 15
3s years eJ~Perlenee
carpeted living room with beauPhone 241;-5269 or
tiju! fireplace, birch and Mahog,
Central Soya
44&amp;.2463
paneling, breezeway, 2 ear garege, all nestled In 5 acres of
~PPLES - Grimes. Red and
Golden Delicious, Jonathan, - pines ·with fann · pon&lt;t. Locattl
Real Estate For Sale
Mcintosh, Romes. Winesap· State Rt. 180, less than f:!O,IIIIO.
Sweet cider. pumpkins. SiS·
FOUR
ler's Produce Mkl., 742 Third
One noor plans. 4 to 5 !'OOIIIll
Land Contract
Ave ., Gallipolis, 0.
240-6 with bath. In town, all on same BEAUTIFUL 2 BR home, car!!lreet. Take your choice oo one pet in LR. nice kitchen. This
LOFTY pile, free from soil is
the carpet cleaned with Blue of these homes, priced from home has been redecorated
Lustre. Rent electric sham- $4,250. to 16,000. You wtll never and treated for termites, garage, a real good buy at
pooer $1. Central Supply Co. find a better buy!
BARGAIN
HUNTERS!
110.000.
240-3
Hood 7 room home with bath,
Large
fALLY'S in-laws coming. She large garage, nice big cement TILE block bollding, 8 rooms,
didn't Ouster, cleaned the rugs porch, good basement, shade located on a oorner lot In Adwith Blue Lustre. Rent elec- trees , frolt, drilled well wtth
dison, 0. Ample room lor
lric shampooer $1. Fanner's softener, on big % acre lot one commerdal use. Price $7,500.
Hardware Co.
240-6 mOe from Rio Grande, only
$13,500
13,500. New JLsllng, so hurry!
BUYS this 3 BR home In tl!e
CLEAN carpets with ease, Blue
20 ACRES
city of Galllnolts. Carpet and
Lustre makes the job a breeze
Just listed, good, clean 8 rooms
drapes In LR, near new furRent electric shampooer $1. &amp; bath country home, drilled
nace in part basement, launSheppard, 862 1st Ave. 210-11 well, cellar &amp; cellar house. F1ve
dry room on first floor, nice
minutes from town. Gallipolis
lot, will belp finanee.
NEW Ithaca shot I(Uns. field School District. $10,1100.
Small Down
·and trap models . AlS&lt;J 17 new
60 ACRES
PAYMENT &amp; assume an FHA
and used hand guns. H. CosFour room house, 1At acre Tob. loan at 5 per cent Int. Mo.
ten, Gallipolis. Ph. 446-0~
B, barn, spring, pasture, plenpayments $75, carpeted LR,
ty water, Green Twp., t6,500_
3 large BR, plenty cabinets in
TRYING TO SEILf
kltcben, carport,
sk&gt;rage
&amp;MALL restaurant doing good
CAU UBI
room,
lot
80'
x
150'.
Possession
business for sale. Same locaJay Sboppanl, t4M!II
on delivery of deed.
tion 7:1 vears . great opporBart
WIDters,
4H
Slll8
tunity . All flxlures and stock .
4Acres
Wl)'lto Amobary, 444f!31
low rent. For details I'll. 44tVACANT land, black top road.
29117 afler 8 p.m. Located al
natural gas &amp; city waler
454 Second Ave., Gallipolis.
available.

.ERNEST

a.•;;;;.;...;;.__,._...

Dillon Agency

~6

Real Estate For Sale
D. H. WOOD, Realtor
Phone 446-1 066
1 A., nice comfortable home,
two large bedrooms, bardwood Door, large kitchen, cabinets, aluminum siding, two
water systems, one on well
and another on large cistern,
10.000 gal., garage, fuel on
furnace, nice bath. Located
in VIllage. Price worth the
money,
LARGE lot, 3 bedroom brick,
part basement, bath, with
new decorating you could IDcrease the value of the property eonslder.ble. If you are
looking for value in a good location see this. Will finance
easily, $9000.
3 BEDROOM home in city, tot
1Mx42, parlly furnished, stove,
washing machine, breakfut
set, etc. Will sell on land C&lt;llttract. $4 750.
WE HAVE several nice homes.
See us. Always nice to talk
to you_
Evenings:
Rossell D. Wood-44t-461B
John I . Rlchanls Ill OZ8f
Ronald K_ Canoday 411 A

Real Est1te for Sale
BAIRD REALTY CO.
Oscar Baird, Reeltor
Beautiful View
TillS one floor plan home overlooks the Ohio River and bas
3 A., 3 bedrooms, garage,
bam, fruit trees, located on
blacktop road. LP! us show
you for only $5300_

Three Bedrooms
THIS nice 1\4o story home bas
llvlni - dining room, kitchen,
bath, divldod basement wtth
shower and gas furnace,
plenty closets, located In a
quiet resldenuaJ area. All
city oervlceo on blacttop

atreet.

Owner Anxious
LE."l' US show you this nice 0110

Door plan home with I A.,
new bath, natural gas beat,
drilled well, 3 bedrooms, located on blaclrtop rd. It can
be yours for the low price of'
$7000,
'I'E NEED farms and homes to
aell, any location. Coli us.
omee Pllone ••• !Ill It Bn.
en.tBp
Doll Wo6eltloll, Ph. 11c111ert L. BaH, A. lUll.

Want Your Own
BUSINESS? Well, we have two
good ones for sale. OWners
want to retire . Can be bought
reasonable.
HOBART DILLON, llealtor
446-Zfl4
LucDie or Howard Brannm
Evenings 441-mt
40 ACRES, new house and older house, plenty water, some
Umber, 10 miles out, $11500.
Ph. 379--2424.
238-3

IICHen11111e. T..e ,_,,....,

lncerrNt lntertllf'

.

12:15 Trinlt.r Hour
12:45 catholic Jnlormatloo

·

poem,

"The

New

Colouus,"

which can be seen on the ped~
estal of the Statue ot Liberty.

1:00 Church of God

.,.., want All . . ,.,,ce

"" ,....,......

1:30 Gospel ~~
2:00 Sunday Drive Time
Rou~

WJEH- FM LOG
except where Indicated)
6:00 Sign On and Early Bird
Show (except Sundays)
8:00 News Roundup
8:05 Music Unlimited
10:30 Chatterbox (except saturday and Sunday)
11:00 Music Unlimited
11:45 All the News
(Except Sundays)

Nottce

For Rent

WILL DO oewlng at boma
zippers,
pockets, pegging, ONE FURNISHED apartment,
hemming, alterallons, ete.
one two-bedroom
trailer.
Mro. Freddie Thabet, Mason,
Phone Mason 773-5147, MarPhone 773-5651.
4-10-tfe
ion Re)'llolds_
1~Uc

For Sale
FLOOR

tion rolf clubs, John Teaford.
9-2UO!p

---

,
It Clllfl ,_., We"' IIX f:enMCvthre
lnMrtiHt.
U ,., ..Itt Dllclltil"t . . (NIII M1
lnd. ad1 "lei wltt'lln It dlya.
CAIIP 01' TNANKI a OIITUAIY
II.H .., II wlf'd mllllnKIM. le.
IHitlefteT ...nil II.
ILIND API

8

---

1 35 Fr. 2 bedroom house
trailer. Brown's Trailer Court,
Phone 992-3324.
JI)-J0-61c

~-

Business Services

BACK HOE and Do.er Servfeo,
For Sale
EIPEIIENCEI
Call Pomeroy
New
pond, basement, water line, RATS, MICE 110ne forever 'Get NEW &amp;.room modem bom_e
h~llfer Stmce
CAR WASH
oeptlc tank, R. W_ Cowdery,
Star' 2\!o lb. $1.68, SUgar Run
with bath on State Route 124.
69's
Are
Here
(Hot A Driva• Thr\1)
'
614-992-2181
Long Bottom, Oblo. 9-27-311te ' Mill, Ebersbaeh Hdwe., PickGood location. A re)l) buy at
6- 9%-18
75~ c:ar
en's, Mason.
10-7-tltp
$13,500. See or call O'Dell
Remain
In
P.Grl1ed
.
._.,.._,, Uc ne,.. ,., Alhlr· WILL DO any kind of sewtng,
On Display
l . Sprayed
with worm lOOp
Manley, 742.5932,
11)-11)-fitc
Real
E111te
For
Sale
Phone
992-2271.
11)-1.41&lt;
and·
th.n
g high preuure
SOUP'S
ON
the
rug
!hal
Is,
so
OJII'ICI NOUII
115 Soon
ri""e of 1oft water to
I1JI l.tw. II Srlt '"""· Olltr
clean the spot with Blue Lus- UPRIGHT PIANO, love seat
moke cor 1hine
tiM I.M h 1I1M NMft ..... ...,.
To Arrive
~ VACANCY for two elderly peo.
3 Att•n&lt;lonf on duty
tre. Rent electric ohampooer
and
chair,
antique
crgan,
pie. Prefer private paid pa$1. Baker Furniture_ 11)-7-6te
C•rcl &lt;'f Thanlrt
M-F • - - - - • - - - -II to 6
washing machine and other
tients. Phone Mason, 7'13-5115.
From the Largest Truck or
Sot. • - - • • - • - -- -9 to 7
WE WISH to thank our friends,
Items. Anny Haines, PortHockingport,
Ohio
Bul.l&lt;bzer
Radiator To The
l~tlc
S.n. • • - - - • - - - -II to
19!16 SUZUKI, 150 CC, 11110
neighbors and relatives for
land, Ohio. 843-2602. 11)-11).4tp
~alles1 Heater Core.
GEO.
HOBSTE'ITER,
Broloer
Phone
667-3370
miles, one owner, phone 992their kindness during the Ill(llJN SHOOT, Broad Run Rod
5194.
)1)-9-ltp :W GAL., A. 0. Smith glass-lin- SYRACUSE - 8 room brick,
ness and death of our father
and
Gun
Club,
Sunday,
Ocl.
bath, basement, furnace. 3
~PERT
and
grandfather,
Verne
PH. 993-2143
ed gas water heater, factoryPomeroy
13
noon
til
S
p.m.
ll)-10-3tc
lois
near
schooL
$10,000.00
CliJHUAHUA puppleo, Phone
'Mooneye' Davts. Special
Wheel
Alignment
built all-steel utility trailer,
POMEROY - Storage building,
843-2641 Rt. 1, Purtlond.
!hanks to Dr. Boice, and the
FACTS
good tires; 14 cu. ft. Gibson
matica" were written by
.~UMMAGE
sale
Wed.
Ocl.
16,
2 Doors, 25 x 63. over 3,000
Rawlings Coats Funeral Kome
I0-9-6tp
2--dr.
refrigerator
freezer,
3
the
same man, Charles
square feet. $2500.00
Goldie Clendenin , Portlancifor their efficient service. Alyears
old.
1192-5871.
IH0-3tp
Lutwidge
Dodgson, The
Bashan Road, oil space heat- 1!1611 VOLKSWAGEN statk&gt;n wa!I ACRES - Next lo town. IS
so to the organist, Mrs. GasWorld Almanac notes . Al-GUARAJtii'EEDer and 270 gal. tank $75, reacres bottom, 2 barns, large
though Dodgson was known
gon, good condlti nn, one own- I'IVE ROOM house, bath, basekill, to Rev. A. N. Grueser
frigerator
$25, coal heater 120,
8
room house. Ph baths, full
as
a mathematician and
PHONE
992-2094
er. Very roomy. Reasonably
and Rev. Wm. Alrson for
ment, three lots, Slate Sl ., Pologkian , he is remembered
RCA
radio
and
record
player
basement,
2nd
house
5
rooms
.
their consoling words, to the
priced. can 992-7158. Jl)-11-6tp
meroy, 0. Phone 992-32119.
for his works of whimsy
$20, clothing misc. ll)-13-31p
Minerals. $20,000.00.
donors of flowers, all who
11)-13-ltp
written
under the pseudoPomeroy
Home
&amp;
Auto
IIELEN or VIRGIL TEAFORD
1957, %-TON CHEVY truck, long
sent food and those lendln~
nym
Lewis
Carroll "Alice"
1M E. Ma1b
mm!;
wheel base. In gOOd ohape_ DEAUTIFUL maple stereo ra- ASSOCIATEs
was inspired by and writ·
the use of their cars. Also WILL DO babysttung In my
home 5 days a week. Call 247Syraeuse
ten for Alice UddeU, a
many thanks to the pallbearNew paint, $3511. G. A. Deem.
dio. Static free FM, rich AM
child of a friend.
2302.
I0-13-31c
ll)-13-31p
ers. We are forever grateful.
Racine.
ll)-lJ-3tp
radio. FuJI range volume.
In 1958, U.S. &amp;tpreme Court
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Moore
base, treble and balance conREAL ESTATE, five rooms and
Wanted
Justice
Harold Burton rtJttred
INTERNATIONAL two . row
and Family.
11)-13-ltp
troL Monthly payments of
''Ailee in Wonderland"
bath
on
4
level
lolo:;;,
one
room
after
13
Yearl ci.Je to poor
RIDE TO ATHENS, must leove
mounted corn picker, Mndel
$6.50 or balance of $98.03
-~~d "Curiosa Mathecellar,
nice
lawn
and
some
llea.lth.
Pomeroy by 5 A.M. Phone
I WOULD like ro !bank those
2-M, $100, Roy E. Miller. Ph.
Phone 992-3218.
ll)-13-6tc
fruit trees. 300 yards from
992-2747_
11)-J3-6tc
Chesler, 98&gt;-3817.
Jl)-1!6tp
who aent cards during my
hiRhway, close lo school, pristay in the hospital. Your
MODERN walnut stereo conced
reasonable, contact Ben
• Free Estimates
kindness and thoughtfulness Is ANTIQUES, furniture, dlsbes. AKC DACHSHUND puppleo,
sole. Solid state tuners and
Quisenberry
in Syracuse.
deeply appreciated.
miacellaneouo. Mrs. Howard
good quality. Females $30.
amplifiers. Vernier slide rule
Phone 992-2954
I0-13-6tc
• Qua lily Concrete
Ce&lt;U, 8110 W. Main St., PomeSincerely, VIctor E. Gaul,
Males $40. Phone Ripley, W.
tuning. Precision built record
Wayne, Michigan
Va. 37U59tl.
11)-U~tc
"'1'·
1-:15-tfc
changer plays all speeds. Pay
• Cerli lied Strength
10-1S-ltp
only $S per month or $8.112.
POTATOES. will deliver, PurePhone 992-3218
ll)-13~1c
• Delivery
WE WISH to express our slnYork
boar,
Thomas
bred
Wanted To B11y
(HOSPiTAL
NEWS
·cere thanks and gratltode to GINSENG, $33 Jb. Golden Seal
Sayre. Phone evenings 843- ZTGLER-MAT1C fUel oil stove,
• Quick Service
•our many friends, neighbors
2436.
10-13-3tp
77,000 BTU. Doroth~· Glenn.
$2.50, Snake Root ".50, May
• Finishing
:. for their kladness, •ympa!fly,
Phone 949-3239.
!l)-13-3tp
Apple Root 40 cents. Bill
HOSPITAL NEWS
food, Dora! offerings and i Bailey, Reedsville_
• Sand &amp; Gravel
Holzer Medical Center, First
' cards extended 1o us during .
500 BALES straw, 1000 bales Ave., Gallipolis; Visiting hours
GUITARS
•: the IDness and death of oor '
hay, EdiMn Hollon, Miners- 2-4 and 7-8 p.m. Parents only on
DIAL 992-3284
Help
Wanhtd
3
PICK
UP
·husband and father. Special
ville , Phone 949-3679 ll)-13-31p Pediatrics Wanl.
ELECTRIC GUITAR -$59 95
·• thanks to the doctors at Vet- RELfABLE company wants WITH
CASE
.
1\dmissjon!l
five
ladies
for
part
time
:. erans Hospital, Dr. Tell, Dr.
HOLLOW BODY KAY
REFRIGERATOR. ~a&lt; stove.
Miss Martha A. Finnicum, 10
work. Earn $30 lo $40 weekly . ELECTRIC GUITAR -$79.95
:. Ridgeway and Dr. Heaton, alGOEGLEIN GRAVEL
misc.
Items. make offer. Ma ~ Grape St., Gallipolis; Mrs. L,
BEGINNER
Wtth
c.~u
For Interview caU 992-3211.
so the nurses, aide!! and orlila Shorn. Phone 992-2524.
Cecil Slleets, 41 Chlllicotlle Rd.,
407 PAGE
· li)-IS-3tc
GUIT-ARS, flot Top• • 119.95
del1)lll, Martin Funeral Home,
10-13-:!lc
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
;. Rutland, Rev. O&gt;ester LemAMPLIFIERS $49.95 &amp; SS9. 9S
Gallipolis; James A. Saxton, Rt.
·' ley, Mrs_ Ethel atapman, orFemale Help Wanted
2 Gallipolis; Mrs. L. Noah John- gants! and pallbearers_
Bryants Budret Shop
FEMALE HELP WANTED .
son, Rt. 2 Vinton; Brenda G. LaNext To Stiffler' • Stor•
Sadly miased by hls wtfe LADIES could you use extra
nier, Rt. 2 Bidwell; Mrs. Ethel
For Sale or Trade
108 W. Main
Nannle Radcllffe
money for Christmas. Supply
1967 INTERNATIONAL truck, 4 E. Amos, Rt. 2 Vinton; M r s.
and Daughters. 11)-13-Jtp, establlsbed customers with
Verne C, Blazer, Eureka Star
speed, % ton, 1964 Ch•vrofe~
@&gt;
Rt.;
Jackie L, Brumfield, IlL l
beautiful family Chrlatmas
GALLIPOLIS - T e m per.
11167 Mustang lkyllnder, 3Crown City; Mrs. Robert F. Da- atures, precipitation and weagifts In Mty of Pomeroy. AvLost
speed . Financing available.
vis,
Rt. 2 Pl. Pleasant; Mrs. ther conditions for each 24--hour
FIELD
GROWN
CHRYSANerage
S3
and
up
hourly,
spare
LADIES BLACK PURSE, valuPhone 9113-6647; after 5 p.m.
Dencll
R. Hudson, Syracuse; Mrs . per!Qtl as recorded by P e t e
time.
full
lime.
Write
Ruth
THEMUMs
and
mums
all
. able pai&gt;OI'S, please return,
Phone 992-5748.
9-29-lte
B, Mohler, R\, 1 Middle. McCormick, at the Fairfield WeaHarry
colors,
big
and
bealtby,
a110
Bergaus,
Watkins
Products,
pltone 992-'1251, 619 Pearl st.,
66 CHEVELLE Malibu H.T. Cpe.------ -$1695
port; Mrs. Joseph C, Roberts, ther station.
eannlng pears and potatoes,
fnr . Winona, Minnesota 5598.7..
Middleport_
Jl)-~
Rt
1
Langsville;
Mrs.
Roscoe
Reynolds
Flower
Shop,
M&amp;Day
I Ugh Low Prec.
11)-13-llc
Six cyl. wi_th_ Pow_erg!id11, 22,000 mil . . by locol owner,
0. Joaeph, CoaJ Grove; Charles &amp;mday
d_ark blue. f1n11h w1th 1potles1 c:lean interior, new w/ s/w
son City, just above Corp.
' 56 37 .61
t~res, radio &amp; heatar. Real nice one.
R. Cantrell, Ashland, 1\Y.; Les- Monday
lllle.
11)-4-tlc
' • • 60 50 .16
For Rent
Busl~~e~s Services
ter K, Bryant, South Point; Mrs. TueO&lt;ia,y , ,
• 70 40
IIEVIVAL at the llignlanu i.t.a-. FURNISHED and unlurnlsbed
lliTCH
DIGGING,
water
lines,
64 CHEVROLET - - - -- - - - - - -- - -- - - -$995
Gerald C, Eblin, Mitklleport; Wemesda,y . . .
77 40
POODLE
PUPPIES,
AKC
Toy
pel Chureh on Rt. t24 back of
apartments. Close to school.
leacb beds, PauJ AndenliNI,
Mrs.
Btlly
E.
Grueser,
Rt.
1
Bel_
Air 4 Door . Std. trans. Clean in terior . Good tire•
Thursdsy , . , , 69 59 , 14
miniature, f!S and up. Stud
Pomeroy on Laurel Cliff Road Phone 11112-6434,
rod1o. locol I owr~er co r.
'
1!1.'*'Uc
Mason, W. Va. Phone 773.- Minersville.
Frtda,y , , _ ., 70 45
service and sroomlng. PbODo
starting Oct. 17 7:30 p.m.
5788,
)l)-9-30tp
Births
Saturda,y , , _ . 65 52
ID-5443.
ll J Uc
. each evening, everyone w':'l· FURNISHED GARAGE apart63 CADILLAC - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - -$1795
Mrs, Dencll R. Hudson, ~a.
Average high temperature for
~Door HT. DeVille. Factory oir, full poweu, spotleu clean
' come, Rev. Robert Searlea ment on Lincoln HIU. Utllltleo
cuse, son, 2:06 a.m. Friday; the week this year - 66.5 deIJOZii:R,
BACKHOE,
trouc:her
lfltedor. Grey Finish . Full acceeeory group.
AKC
Golden
Retriever
puppies,
pastor will be the speaker.
paid; adults anly. Phone ti9J.
Mrs. Harry B. Mohler, Rt. 1 grees; last year - 69.5 de.
and
truck
service,
,.pile
I
m Alb St., Middleport. a
Speelal singing each evenlng.
M.
6-lfl.tlc
Middleport, 100, 9:57 a.m. Frl- grees,
tanks,
water
lines,
buements,
62
PONTIAC
- - - - - - - - - - - - - -$795
1441.
6-2Hfe
I0-13-4tc
Cotol•na 4 Door. htoJy over bl (•e finish . Good tir111. Auto•
also topsoti. Henry Bohr, da,y; Mrs. Gerald C, EI&gt;Iln, Mid Avr'!lrage low temperatures tor
matic troru . Rodio and he~ote1 .
·
'l'RAILER LOTS. Bob's Malllla
phone 985-39118 or Roger Bahr, dleport, son, 5:11 a.m. S.tur. dle week thb year - 45. 5 deda,y.
WILL PAY ver¥ good tor lot.Court, Syracuae, Ohlo on state POTATOES and sweet potatoes.
grees; last year - 46.3 de~
phone 985-.l858.
Jo.z.aotp
Phone 84S-2254. Clarence Profter M In the Blue Sunoco Rt. 124, Phone 992-JIIIIt
Discharges
62 CHEVY II - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - -$599
grees.
fitt, Portland.
lu.Uc
Hardtop Cpe. loo:a( owner cor. red finish, 1td. Irons., radio
Norman
c.
Ballard,
James
R,
game, phone 89U508. JO.U-31c
f.li-tre
Total precipitation ror the week
C. C. BRADFORD
Coleman,
Hayley
L.
Coy,
George
this year - 1.22 Inches; last
AUCTIONEER
F.
Dray,
Mrs.
Clarence
W,
COAL HAULING, phone 992- TRAILER SPACE, ready to VENETIAN BLINDS, aU kinds,
65 GMC PICKUP - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -$1195
yea.r
- 0.81 Inches.
Complete So......
and blind repair_ Dale Wip8 . h. Fleets• de, good I ires, 6 cyl. engir~e. Below morltet
Garne1, Bryan C, Marshall, WiJ .
2803_
11)-11-lltp
book up, privata, plenty of
TotaJ precipltatlon to date this
Pboae fjfWJ
pr~c:e .
pel Supply, 215 Union Ave.,
Uam
A,
Pierson,
Dale
D.
Roth
~
year - 38.45 inches; lalt yoar
room for ehlidren to play.
llaclDo, Oldo
Pomeroy.
11)-J.J2te
gob, Mrs, Edward 1\, Russell, - 28.57 inches.
ANYONE INTERESTED In an
Phone m.!90t
f.14-tle
Crill Bradford
65 CHEVELLE ----------------- -$1495
Carlton Simms, Michelle D.
Independent New Testament
Normal average precipitation
Malibu Conv. VB engine, P . G. trons . , radio, "•oter, new
• 1 Uc Wren, Sandra J. Layne, Mrs.
I'IVE
ROOMS
and
bath,
nice
amually - 38,40 Inches.
Baptist Church call IH9-3W. STORAGE SPACE: Storage for
W•I•W fire•,_ green l!t)(t('rior with while nylon top, vreen
Yard.
large
garden,
one
room
James
H,
Hollo,yandinfantdaughvinyl
inl. tum .
Frktay at 7 p.m.. Oct. 18, a
boats, trallen, cars. camp.
AIR
CONDmONING
RefrigerMrs.
Larry
L,
lAng
and
inter,
eeJiar, one balf block f!om
claaa on 'Soul Wlnnin&amp;' wUI
ers, etc. Write P. 0, Box 3211,
ation service. Jack's llefrlg- fant daughter, Mrs. Roger L,
Syracuse
schooL Contact Ben
be directed by Pastor DarPomeroy_ Phone 992-:mlll or Qullenberry,
erauon, New
bone
Manley, &amp;-., and inrant daugh.
Syracuse.
lee Diet Seyler_
1U.,.Utp
rington from the second Bap.
88Mt1711.
•
•
Uc ter, Mrs. Charles 0 , Neal and
l~'lte
list Church of Rsvenswood.
InCant 1011..
CHEAPIES -- CHEAPIES
18-11-'lte NEWLY DECORATED 4-5 room TWO coal stokers wttil con- READY - MIX ooncreta dellvapartment, phone 992-2'192.
ued rtcnt to Jour proJeet.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
trols. Arnold Brothers, Po~M 'SKINNY' LEIIEW,
)i)-IJ-81r
and easy_ Free eouFast
HOSPrrAL
•neru)',
Phone
992-1448.
1963 PONTIAC - - - - - - - - - - - - - -$389
new proprietor of the Hotel
mates. Poone 1192-3214, GoegADMITT'ED- Ella El&gt;erabach,
Cotolino HT Cpe. 4 on the~ floor. 389 e,.glne.
10-13-Uc
.: Martin Cocktail Lounge, New FOUR ROOM fumisl!ed apart~orne body damage. Ponibilitin.
leln Beady - MJJ: Co., Mlddle- Pomeroy; Cheater TamehiU,
,hours 9:30a.m. to 2:110 a.m.
ment, E. Main St., Pomeroy,
Middleport.
JIOI'I. OhiD.
0 10 ifc
COLD SPOT refrigerator and
'
JO.Utp
Phone 992-'1054.
l~tfe
1960 BUICK--------- ------ -$199
DISCHARGED - Laura Grant,
freezer, 14 cubic foot. $Sl).
LeSobre 4 Or. Check this one out. Only $199 .
Charles Chaffee, Silver Ridge BUDGET PRICE 1urnJtura on Thurston stone, Woodrow Kuhn.
our lhlrd Door budget llltop. Gertrude Drake, EUgene AriiUI,
Rood.
11)-13-atp
1959 RAMBLER - - -- - - - - - - - - - -$239
Baker Furniture, Mlllllleport Mary Searls.
Station Wagon . Block ond pretty, Worth more.
-------W,;;;:,;:•:;nl::ild:,.·
SWEET POTATOES, field run,
Olllo.
T :II ifc
.tl.SO buahel, bring container;
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
1960
OLDS 88 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -$199
ADMrrTED- Nooe.
SEWING MACHINES, repair
4 Door . Solid body. Ciood tiru
The, ~rid's second lort••t company of lh •ind needs
lo.&amp;-6te
DISCHARGED - Carl Thornse"lce, aU maket, WY Jambtttout Sal., R•presentative (21-40) to work In
2214. The Fabric Shop, Pom- as.
reYolutionarr fttw division.
eroy.
Authorized Singer Salea
UPRIGHT PIANO, love seat
and
Service. We Sharpen PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
and chair, antique organ,
Yes! Good Selection of '69
BffiTH - Mr. and Mra. HerSetsoors.
~tic
washing
machine
;
other
11Thou selec:ted will be fully troln1d ot company ••P•nll
bert Sayre, Letart, a aon.
Ann H
h
t 't 1pl~c·~ on guarantee. Company-sponsored, two·•••~
ems .
a
aines, Portland.
ADMmED - Gary Conley,
CHEVROLET CARS AND
prograM. First year eamlng1 1 hould be $10,000·
Phone lf3.2602,
10-l-6te CIGARE'ITE vendl!lg maeh!Mo Point Pleasanti Mrs. 0 a k e y
5
•
or more. Rapid notion-wide expansion guorontees
and se"ico. ABC Enter Pi luo, Keeter, Leon; Joaepll BuJring.
Keeping Meigs
monapement opportunltlu, Tho1e selec:tM •ust hove o
CONN Alto Qa•....Jton ' ood
TRUCKS - BEST DEALS, TOO.
Muon, W. Va. Phone 7'13-SMS. too, Point I'Ieasant; Mrs, Tl&lt;ld,y
cf{' be •port• Mhulalll, ambitious onJ willing to put forth
~ e, In I
towor-' o monovement position, (Pruent management
condJtion, phone 912·3182 days,
f.l.tfe Donoloew, Evans: VIctoria Lyrm
Gallic and
10
'" ng in eaceu of $20,000.)
m-3120 DJghts.
10-10-3tc
We S.rviCI'
PLEASING
1llomtoo, I'Ulnt Pleasant; JackMason
Area
Whot We Soli
THIS IS A LIFETIME OPPORTUNITY
TERMS!
Ie Thornton, I'Ulnt Pleaaant.
DI8MISSED - Mrs. Guy Say.
lnfa~med As
Insure nee
re, Charles Wamsley, Jolon Brillbuttonltolea, etc. Pay f4UO AUTOMOBILE insut'tlltel beo1 hart, Mra. David Koeblentz, Mrs.
Well As
CALL MR. MIKE HESTER FOR
or fU9 a month, Phone 7'13-Ued? Loot Your operat- Ra,y Herdman, Mra. !.lone! &amp;nilh,
308 -318 E. MAIN
992-2126
POMEROYr
or'• Dcenae? CaD IIII-211S8.
.•
IIHO.
IO-I0-3tp
Clinton Hfckmam, Mrs. Leonard
Entertained
OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8:00
stover, Mn, Cleo llolllll'.
8 II lfc

EYINRUDE

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

HOIST ETTER
REALTY

Schawarzel Marine

5.55

10:00 Firat National Final
t 0: t5 Music Until Sign Off

Real Estate For Sale

~NIBERT.;
NEW LOCATION
T1DRD &amp; STATE STREETS
YOU'LL like everything about
this 4 BR. I \4o story homo located on a large lot about ~
mUes from town_ Haa a two
car garage and Is priced be;
low the cost to replace. Call
today for an appolnimenl.
IF YOU can qualify you can
buy this 2 BR home with
basement. wall to wall carpet in living room, attached
garage for $500 down and
balance like rent. Located
near town ·on SR ·588. : ~ ...

MAKE US AN OFFER·
ON TJDS 53 acre !ann located
z mites from town, 2 BR
home with bath and base-

ment.

---

---

j

FAMILY PUnlll

THE BEE 01 YOU FOR

I SECOND CIR?

Week's

DON'T DELAY
&amp;BE SORRY
OWNER anllous to sell this
nearly new 3 BR home wltb
attached garage, Thermopane windows and outside
patio.
Office Ph. Ul DIBI
a.artes M. Neal 441-UH

A. A. Nllerl t4f4m
Carter Masde, 44M'lt1

Weather

0801 Dlllt RIIUZZ D11
over ror 8oe or fhlll lltiRIOdlf

Ulld Cll'l.

IIY8 • hiVe

or

t'olfc1

WRIGHT COACH
LOS ANGELES (UPO Wayne Wright, a gramato of
David Llpacomb College a1
Nashville, TeM., has been
appointed baoeball coach al
l'l!pperdine Coiie110, oucceading
Gall Hopkino.

USED
FURNITURE
ond
PROFESSIONAL
AUCTION SERVICE

Ha-.

---

NOTICE
An,one Interested in our

do • It • yOurself Upholmoy vl1it

the flnt .. uion without
doy Eve., Oct. 15-7:30 of
Knotts Uphol•terlng, 1163
Sec:ond Au., Gollipoll,.

----

----

MANAGEMENT TRAINEE

Gallipoll1, Ohio

:='C.:. ~'a; ~':ine~

NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY ·

Excavating and Buildi119 Contracton
BACKHOE, BULLDOZEl, CRANE,
GRADER AND DRAGLINE SERV1CE
Basements-Footers-leach BedsFarm Ponds-Septk Tanks-YardsDriveways;-land Clearing-fill Dirt
Top Soil-Ponds Cleaned-Parking Lot:.
•1F IT'S DIRT, WE'll NOVE ITI"
· Phone: 446-4905

.

WORLD ALMANAC

5:00 News
5:15 Dinner Serenade
7:00 Evening Serenade
9:45 Armed Forces Shows

llering Clan,

19611

record player, $114.00, $7.00
month. Phone 773-5940,
J0.11)-3tp

REPAIR, REFINISH, recondi- TRAILER,

Brown's TraDer
Put, Minersville. Phone 9923324.
l~tc

demonstrator,

stereo, AM and FM radio,

BLAETTNARS

12:00 News (Sunday Onl,\')
12:15 Music Unlimited

CARl1fl AND EVANS, INC.
.87 Olive Street

,..

will Bet

I Mfltt ,_, WIN _ . INtrtflll
Nlltlllllllllt Chi,.. 7Jc
It f:Mtl ' " ..,.... ""'" ........

c:horge or obllgotion, Tuel•

Emma Lazarus wrote the

1.111.

. '"""''.......,........ ... ....

11:30 Gospel of Christ
12:00 News

NEW LISTING

DREAM HOME

STEREO AND AMIFM
MODEL console stereo.
Will sell on payments of $5.40
per month or will sell for $86
cash. Try it in your home.
Call 675-3081.
238-11

,...rn,
••r

10:30 First Baptist Church

Sports Broadsupercede regular · programs w h e n
scheduled.)

CUSTOM SPRAY
t».AIMTING

t

cerrectftlll
Will IHo ICctJttM Ulltll t I.M, ....
D•r et Pvltllc•tt ...
RHULATIONI
Th• I'Ublllhr
the , 11,.1
te Mit ' ' rwlftt
He ....._. •

9:45 Chlldren's Chapel
10:00 Music for Sunday

5:00 News

INtdllnt

tenc.tt•tleftt •

(Notei Live
cuts will

8usine11 Servlm

0. D. PARSONS

1~68

Mtlftdly

(DaUy

12:45 CoWltry Go Rowll

C~'LLENT CoNDrnnN 1N OTHDt
RESPilCTS . L.MI:O'E LOT

THI!'i HOM!: WA.S WELL ButLT
TO BF.CIN Wmt AND HAS RAT&gt;

DIADLINII
J " ·"'· D•r MieN llv•Hc.t!.""

Farm and Home (Tues.,

ON UPP!R IND . INCLUDES A
1\lEW F111\N AC! AND IS IN ~X­

3Bedroom
Full Besement

WANT AD
INPGfiMATION

WJEH

THE WISEMAN

AnENTIO

CALL

I

Real Estate For Sele

COMPLETE LIHE-- .

A LIDLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Bring Top Grade Results

$'t '008

WMPO

INFORMATION
NEWS

presents
LOCAL REPORTS
DAILY
AT
7:50 A.M.
12 NOON
3 P.M.
AND
4:30 P.M.

• •7

Can You Qualify?·

"

~~IsZIG:!~,:~..:::::

~~~-A~P..;,P.;;O,;,;IH;,:T,:M:;,EN:;_T:.,:A,:.T,::G:AL:_;:L:!IP:;:O;::L;:,IS:,;4;.:46~-:·3~7:.6---~

•

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

�The ~ Time• - Sentinel, Sunde,y, October 13, 1968

15 -· The Sunday Times - Senti..,!, SUnday, October 13, 1968

There's No Vacation For The Success Of Want Ads •.• They Work All TbP Time!
Notice
HAM'S DAffiY BAR, Rt. 35,
will close for season Sunday,
Oct. 13. Special I qt. of Ice
cream, all flavors, 45c qt.
Thank you for your patronage,
239-2
1 WILL NOT be resnonslble for
any debts other than my own
as of this date, October 11,
1968.
Signed,
Warren J . Salisbury 241)-3

In Memory

Fem&gt;le Help Wanted
•..VOMEN for n;ut time work in
Galli&lt;\ Co. Write Cort Cosmetics. 2437 so lOth ~t .. Ironton.
Ohio 456311
241)-l
TUPPERWARE HAS openings.
2 parllimc (135 to $75 weekly\
2 full time ($75 to 1150 weeklv. 354-2616 or write Radiant
Sales. 4490 Old Scioto Trail,
Portsmouth.
239-3

Wanted To Buy
~y

Wayne DeDD&lt;y

1~

LOVING memory of Stanle)l
Wayne Denney. who passed
away Oct. 13th, 1962.

BASSETT HOUND
441&gt;-1440.

pup. Ph.
241)-1

Wanted

FAMILY of five needs 2 or 3
bedroom furnished apartSb: vears have passed since
ment, house or trailer in or
th~l sad day.
near
town, Ph. 367-7128
The one we loved was called
238-3

away ,

God took him home, It was
His will,

But in our hearts he liveth
stilL
Sadly missed by his

Father. Mother, Wife
and Daughter
240· I

Notice

RETIRED gentleman would
like room and board in or
near Gallipolis. Write Box 92,
c-o Tribune.
238-6
WAITRESS, must be over 21,
no experience nec-essary. Apply in per!!lon at Green Ga~
les, St Rt. 7.
241)-3

For Rent

LAST

For Sale
36'' ·" 23"

ARTIST SUPPLIES

x.orm

WHITE'S DECORATOR
STORE

Aluminum
Sheets

260 S•cond Aw•.

•

fl.

..
I ,

·'

'

Used Offset Plates

lltmters and faD campers.
Low rental prices lor faD
on '88 model Apache Camp-

HAVE
MANY USES

2oe

ft.

Afoo a

2 BEDROOM housetrailer, all
utilities paid. Also 2 bedroom
block house built like a trailer, very nice. Inquire at
Green Gables, St. Rt. 7. 238-3

RUSS'S SWAP SHOP, 314 Main
Sl., Pl. Pleasant, Ph. 11'/S4455. Buy, .. n or trade. Over
1110 guns 1n stoek. OWner,
RIWiell Jenkins.
217-26

3 ROOM cottage . apartment,
unfurnished, all private. Reasonable. Ph. 446-3627 after 5.
James E. Danner, 13 Pine.
238-tl

a,EANING l•dy with own
transnortation . .eive referen- 2 LARGE apartments, located
011 Second Ave. Ph. 446-211110.
ces. Write 509 Maple Dr Gal238-3
Opolis, 0 .
240-1

Wanted

MANAGEMENT TRAINEE
The world's seco nd lorgnt company of its. kind needs
ambitious Sales RepreuntatiYe (21-40) to work in
revolutionary new division .

NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY .
Those selected will b4 fully troirn1d ol compa ny expenae,
then placed on guarantee. Compony·spontored, two-week
tra ining provrom . Fir s t Y"'ll' l!lorningt thould be $10,000$15,000 or more . Rapid no t ion-wide e.~~ponsiOf"l guarantees
mcmot;~ement

oppo,uniries . _Those selected must ho¥e 0
cor, be sport&amp; monded, ombttoou• and woll,ng to put forth
effort toward o management positoon . (Present management
11orning in ellceu of $20.000 . )

THIS IS A LiFETIME OPPORTUNITY

Can You Qualify?
CALL MR . MIKE HESTER FOR
APPOINTMENT AT GALLIPOLIS 446-4376

r..,. new and demon-

Bfor$1.00

strators at sale prices.

Gallipolis Daily
Tribune

AMSBARY
APACHE TRAILER
m - A...

125 Third Ave
Go IIi poll•

GalllpoUJ

For Sale

for Rent

2 BEDROOM houseu·ail ,:·l·, ev4 SPEED PORTABLE record
erything furni$hed . Call 446player $10.00, 421 1st Ave.
0893.
241)-3
239-.1
!'IRS'!' FLOOR furnished apart-

COUNTRY SORGHUMS can be
ment, 2 bedrooms . 631 Fourth
purchased at Barrs . Johnsons .
Ave.
246-tf
Sigler Prod. Market. Johnson
&amp; Johnson or Leslie McCombs
5 ROOM hou,., 2 bedrooms. 44
379-2166.
239-6
J.lncoln Ave . Ph. ~658
241)-3

MAIL ORDERS FILLED for
Merle Norman cosmetics. CaJJ
Point Pleasant 675-3040 for
your order.
239-3
'.IONDAYS AND Tuesdavs are
piece goods remnant davs at
Upper Murphy. 4 yd'. $1.00.
239-3
BEAUTIFUL MAPLE STEREORADTO Static-free FM. rich
AM rndio . FuJI-range volume .
base. treble and ball'IHCe controL Monthly payments of
$j; 50 or balance of $98.03. Ph.
&lt;46-1028.
246-3
MODERN WAtNUT S'rnREO
CONSOLE. Solid-state tuners
and amplifiers . Vernier sliderule tuning. Precision-built
record changer plays all
speeds . Pav only $5.00 per
month or $83.12. Ph. 446-1028.
24(h'l

EMPIRE r.oor furnace. Can be
seen at 613 5th Ave. Ph. 44t1826.

241)-3

r,As circulating heater. 40.1100
BT.U. Call Ht;-0570.
240-3

NEW---cmC TRUCK
HEADQUARTERS
1!1611 1&gt; T. GMC Pickup
1967 &gt;,; T. GMC Pickup
l958 1&gt; T. Ford Pickup
1957 2 T. GMC
1968 GMC Suburban
1956 2 T Studebaker
N"" 5 T Farm Wagons

$139.50

1982 m T. Chev.
llEEF FOR SALE for home 1958 \4o T. GMC plclrup
freezers . Earl Logan, Pb_ 11164 2 T. Internallonal
446-2893 after 6 p.m_
236-4 1955 14o T. Dodge pickup
!9611 1\!o T_ Dodge truck
ELECI'RIC guitar and am 11 _ 1956 2 T. Int. Tractor
~-3 1963 14o T. Chev, pickup
fler. Ph. 446-2221 .
1968 1 T. GMC
HAY BALER, new rake, Bush I Minneapolfl Moline PoHog, rototlller, elec. milkers, ! Unlt
elec. welder, Jeep pickup 4 New M" Rotary Cutters W.D. Ph_ 379-2424.
238-3 $299.50. New 8.25 • %11, 10 ply
nylon tire• $55. Inc. Federal

POOL TABLE, 9 fl . x 4\!o ft.
with all equipment_ Ph. 4464939.
238-3

tax.
•
Ollie Valley lmplomeat .
113 Pine St. Pl1. 441-W!.

140 If

THE MARION Angua AsaoclaGOOD CLEAN LUMP and stoktlon Sale, Saturday, October
er coal, Carl Winters, ltlo
19 at the Marion Fairgrow1ds.
Show at 10 AM, Sale at 1 PM_ Grande. Phon• 245-51l5. 6-tf
Selling 9() Jots as 4 Bulls, 36
IF YOU are building a new
Females, and 50 Steer club
borne or remodeling, see us.
calve!. For catalogs contact:
We
are bullde1'11. 1))atrlbutor
Larry Duprey, 113 Elm Street,
for Hotpolnt Appliances, AlliMarlon. Phone 614-383-6579.
son Electric.
1M t1
~
LOW, LOW, PRICES on Mat.
13 C1J. FT. chest type Frigitresses . Rice and Corbin Furdaire freezer . Ph. 3ti7-7482_
111 11
niture238-3

REAL COUNTRY SORGHUM
LESLIE McCombs, Rt. 775, Ph.
379-2166.
237-6

4M: . H'IH'I

- --

'""

ALL typeo of building materIals, btod&lt;. brick, aewer pipe,
windows, Untels, etc. Claude
Winters. Rio Grande, 0. CH
5-5121 after 5.
II II
1958 2 DR. Oldsmobile, auto.
trans. $125. Ph . 446-0973.

240-3

'

Off. 446 3643
he. 446-3796
446-4500

Magnificent View
4 Bedroom-Ranch

4 Bedroom. In Town

HOPES THIE NP:X1' FAMILY EN-

WE HAVE all the new models
~PACIOUS 00t1ntry borne locatin all types of cameras ed on Triple E Ranch, 0. J .
Pentax, Nikron , Komica, YaWhite Rclad. 4 bedrooms upshica, Mamlya and Koni
stairs plus storage room and
Omega.
Tawney "4Studio, 422
modem full bath. 5 rooms
Second Ave.
237-6
downst.1irs with modern bunt~
in kitchen plus half bath. New
SNACK BAR, formica top, like
fuel oil furnace. Rented only
new . Call 446-4442 , after 5 hy lease : S125 per mo. Shown
446-:Joro6.
239-3
by appointment. Phone 4462448, 9 to 5, or call Emerson
MILK ROUTE, !ale model G'.IC
E. Evans.
Z40-3
truck with milk van . Will
trade for farm machinery or
2 FURN. rooms. utilities paid
cattle and take over payment
Located on Addison-BulaviiiP
on truck if interested. 379Rd. Ph. 367-7295.
240-3
2191.
239-3

!!1611 FORD Ga1ol&lt;le

AGENCY
THIS J. OVEL Y LARGII:
Ji()JO
Wu.t. SATISFY VOUB EVERY
WISH, 4 HUGE BEDROOMS Ul ll
30 UVING ROOM, LARGE F.AM ·
WrfH
NATUllAL
ILY ROOM
STONE FLOOR, 3 BATtiS. FOR ·
MAL DINING
ROOM , WOOD
BURNING FIRE rLACE. AND 2
CAR GARAGE LOCATED ON A
LARGE FLAT TREE
SJIADED
LOT WITII ON'J!: 07 THE BEST
\'JEWS ALONG THE omo. OW ·
"'ER LEAV l.'IU
ST ATF.
AND

rtl. IH I !If

NII:W unfurnished apartment,
l bedrooms, adults only, 328
For Sale
Second Ave , Pb. 446-1126.
2 REFRIGERATORS, poriable
ABOUT TWO MONTHS ago we
2M-tl
rerord players, 2 gas rangeo,
ran an ad throughout t h e
3 breakfast sets, coil springs,
state for representatives. We OP'FICE opace for rent. CaD
hideaway bed, 2 utility cabiwere looking for people who
446-234J from 8 a.m- till S
nets
dresser. Rice &amp; Corbin
had a strong direct sales or
p.m.
FlJrclture Co. 953 Se&lt;t .;
public contact background in
their area (no travelin~) with FURNISHED opartment, oonAve. 446-II 71.
233-tf
the strongest leads (unlimited
tact Stella Arnold, Park Cenand all furnished by the Comtral Hotel.
76-lf STORM DOORS &amp; WINDOWS
Awnings, carports, ralllngs
~nrpany) and by appointment onLowe Brothers Paints
' Uty (no cold calls allowed) pre- SLEEPING rooms. weekly
senting a unique program on
Wallpaper,
Picture Framing
rates. Park Central Hotel,
MULUNEAUX
DECORATING
a prestige, low pressure basis.
~tf
Since 1911
446-2t10(1
We had 46 answers to this ad. BRADBURY efficiency apart258 Third Avenue. Galllpolfl
We interviewed thirty - three
ment, first Door, adults only.
and hired twenty-one of these.
729 Second Ave.
231-tf ZIG ZAG SEWING MACHINE
Only two had any previous ex!968 SALESMAN'S demonslr&amp;perience in our field. Nineteen FURNlSHED apartment -- 2
tor. Makes fancy stitches &amp;:
are still with us. In their
etc. Wlll sell for 9 payments
rooms and bath, adults. Ph.
first two months they have
of
$6 or $46 Cash. 675-3081.
446-4923.
239-tl
2!6-tl
averaged $481.00 a week in
commissions (High man aver~ FURNISHED APARTMENTS
aged $1107.00 a week - low
Gallia Hotel, 446-2306, 239-26 FILING cabinets, supplies,
man averaged $264.00 a
$33.50, $49.95 up. lmmedlatr
week) ,
deUvery, In stock. Simmons
SLEEPING ROOMS,
weekly
ptg. &amp; Office Equlp. 446-1397.
rates . 446-2206.
239-26
If the above earning! a n d
130-tf
activity interest ycu and you 1'11REE furnished apartments,
have the desire and initiative
2 one bedroom and I two bed- TYPEWRITERS, adding machto do something about it, then
Ines, new and used. Simmons
room, water, sewer and heat
do not pass up this truly once~. &amp; Office Equip_ 446-1397.
lumished. F1ve unfurnished
in-a-lifetime, ground - Door
230-tf
apartments, 1 one bedroom,
opportunity. This i-"~ our last
3 two bedroom, I three bedad so you will never h a v e
INS S'MmEO
rooms, water and sewer furthis chance again . For pernished_ Ph. 446-0265 9 to 4, LOVELY walnut console with
sonal interview in your area .
AM~
radio, automotir
after 4 p.m. 446-1203. 238-tf
send brief background to Difloating turn table. Take over
rector of Personnel, Suite 5. FOUR private trailer spa&lt;eB,
payments of $5.21 per month
11 West Cooke Road, Columor pay balance due, $109.43.
45'1100' each, 3 miles from
bus, Ohio 43214.
Try It In your home. Call 67S.
center of town . Call 3081.
236-tf
9 "' 4, after 4, 446-1203. Z36-tl
MASTER'S Auto Repair, auto.
trans.
repair,
reasonable
price at Ashland Station. Rt.
35, Jackson Pike.
238-3

446·2583

JOY IT AS
HAVE.

MUCH

AS

TIIBY

3 Bedroom Brick

LOCATED ON ROUTE :J~ . A FIN'!
UOME IN A FINI': LOC-'TION
wtt HAVE 3 TO CIIOOS~ FROM

For Rent
3 B~room !\rick
~f'F.LLI!:VT

RIVlo:J&lt;

vnrw .

LOCATION
MOD!fi.N

WITH
KOME

WITH FULL BASEMENT. PP TO
DATE KITCJIEN

2Bedroom
$8,200

BI':'I!:N
SUAPRMI!:D
LA.TELY~
\'Oll Wll.'l. HE WREN YOU ,;a
TR1S BRANn NKW MOORRN
JQTCRl!:N IN TillS OLDER ROME

(MONDAYS THRU FRIDAYS)
7:45 &amp;:hoes or Joy

8:00 Ohio Valley News
8:15 Talk of the T&lt;Mn
9:15 The Morning Show
I 0;30 Cllatterbox
il:OO The Morning Sh&lt;M'
11:45 World &amp; Mason CO. News
12:00 Com'nity and Market News
t2:15 Bulletin Board
12:30 Prosecutor Rpts. (Mon)
Wed, Thurs.&gt;

4:00 Interchange
5:00 Nev;rs, Weatller, Sports

Roundup

l:XCIU.•l.ENT
CA'RK
BT"«"!J: .
LOVF.LY
CARl'ln'I'!D
UVJN(:
llOOM' W1TR FIRE PLACE. P"A ·
'MILY ROOM AND GARAGE [.r •
i::ATED ON A LAROE LOT .JUST
OUT OP" 'TOWN 3 MILE.

New 3 Bedroon-.
Centenary
YOU WILL

~.JOY

A

(SATURDAY&gt;)
11:55 Washington Reports
12:00 News Roundup
12:15 BulleUn Board
12:30 The "In" Sound
12:35 Teen-Time '68
4:00 Intercllenge
:
5:00 News, Weather, Sports
5:30 Suriset Serenade (Unitl Sign

om

(SUNDAYS)
~

8:00 Sign On and The Singing

nnME 1'::\TDV ONE WTU. UJ.:

Vl'lRV ~Tf'F. 4 m:rrROO!af "ROME ,
ON I.ARGF. TREF. SHAnE'[) LOT
WlTIJ ROOM FOR A MOBILE
"ROME T,OC.Ir. TED ON E'f)GE Of'
TOWN ON 141.

Preacher
8:15 News
8:30 Herald of Truth
9:00 Protestant Hour
9:30 Aunt Bertha

YOII HOW L1JC'KV YOU ARB.
THiS ONP.: HAS A MODE'IN Kl'l' ·
C'REN.
ATI'ACHED
GARAOJ:
AND NICE l.OCATJON . FULL
PRlC!: 115.'1".50.

For Sale
APPLES - Red and Yellow
Delicio::s, Grimes, Romes,
Stayman, Sweet cider. Market hours: open 1 to 6 Monday lhru Friday, B to 6 Saturday, 12 to 6 Sunday. Wells
Orchards, Rt. 180, I mile
South of Wilkesvllle, 0.

m-Il

USED cash registers, National,
R. C. Allen, VIctor. Simmons
Pig. &amp; Office Equip. 446-1397.

230-tl

REALTOR
Farm, VDiap, Qty PPnropa-tyty
Phoao 116-0Zll

If You're Selective
This contemporary brick ranch
Is for you . . . Trimmed In redwood. It bas all the wanle!f
areas for living and entertain~.
ing. Custom bulll by Ky. bulld- .
er. Choose 1 to 15 acres. FJve
minutes from downtown. Gallipolis Schools. Low 30's.

Ftr Farmers
WITH

Four bedrootltll, room wide closets, maple - walnut floors,
THORN~
large bath wtth vanity, Utility
Thurman, Ohio
rm., electric kitchen. 30 x 15
3s years eJ~Perlenee
carpeted living room with beauPhone 241;-5269 or
tiju! fireplace, birch and Mahog,
Central Soya
44&amp;.2463
paneling, breezeway, 2 ear garege, all nestled In 5 acres of
~PPLES - Grimes. Red and
Golden Delicious, Jonathan, - pines ·with fann · pon&lt;t. Locattl
Real Estate For Sale
Mcintosh, Romes. Winesap· State Rt. 180, less than f:!O,IIIIO.
Sweet cider. pumpkins. SiS·
FOUR
ler's Produce Mkl., 742 Third
One noor plans. 4 to 5 !'OOIIIll
Land Contract
Ave ., Gallipolis, 0.
240-6 with bath. In town, all on same BEAUTIFUL 2 BR home, car!!lreet. Take your choice oo one pet in LR. nice kitchen. This
LOFTY pile, free from soil is
the carpet cleaned with Blue of these homes, priced from home has been redecorated
Lustre. Rent electric sham- $4,250. to 16,000. You wtll never and treated for termites, garage, a real good buy at
pooer $1. Central Supply Co. find a better buy!
BARGAIN
HUNTERS!
110.000.
240-3
Hood 7 room home with bath,
Large
fALLY'S in-laws coming. She large garage, nice big cement TILE block bollding, 8 rooms,
didn't Ouster, cleaned the rugs porch, good basement, shade located on a oorner lot In Adwith Blue Lustre. Rent elec- trees , frolt, drilled well wtth
dison, 0. Ample room lor
lric shampooer $1. Fanner's softener, on big % acre lot one commerdal use. Price $7,500.
Hardware Co.
240-6 mOe from Rio Grande, only
$13,500
13,500. New JLsllng, so hurry!
BUYS this 3 BR home In tl!e
CLEAN carpets with ease, Blue
20 ACRES
city of Galllnolts. Carpet and
Lustre makes the job a breeze
Just listed, good, clean 8 rooms
drapes In LR, near new furRent electric shampooer $1. &amp; bath country home, drilled
nace in part basement, launSheppard, 862 1st Ave. 210-11 well, cellar &amp; cellar house. F1ve
dry room on first floor, nice
minutes from town. Gallipolis
lot, will belp finanee.
NEW Ithaca shot I(Uns. field School District. $10,1100.
Small Down
·and trap models . AlS&lt;J 17 new
60 ACRES
PAYMENT &amp; assume an FHA
and used hand guns. H. CosFour room house, 1At acre Tob. loan at 5 per cent Int. Mo.
ten, Gallipolis. Ph. 446-0~
B, barn, spring, pasture, plenpayments $75, carpeted LR,
ty water, Green Twp., t6,500_
3 large BR, plenty cabinets in
TRYING TO SEILf
kltcben, carport,
sk&gt;rage
&amp;MALL restaurant doing good
CAU UBI
room,
lot
80'
x
150'.
Possession
business for sale. Same locaJay Sboppanl, t4M!II
on delivery of deed.
tion 7:1 vears . great opporBart
WIDters,
4H
Slll8
tunity . All flxlures and stock .
4Acres
Wl)'lto Amobary, 444f!31
low rent. For details I'll. 44tVACANT land, black top road.
29117 afler 8 p.m. Located al
natural gas &amp; city waler
454 Second Ave., Gallipolis.
available.

.ERNEST

a.•;;;;.;...;;.__,._...

Dillon Agency

~6

Real Estate For Sale
D. H. WOOD, Realtor
Phone 446-1 066
1 A., nice comfortable home,
two large bedrooms, bardwood Door, large kitchen, cabinets, aluminum siding, two
water systems, one on well
and another on large cistern,
10.000 gal., garage, fuel on
furnace, nice bath. Located
in VIllage. Price worth the
money,
LARGE lot, 3 bedroom brick,
part basement, bath, with
new decorating you could IDcrease the value of the property eonslder.ble. If you are
looking for value in a good location see this. Will finance
easily, $9000.
3 BEDROOM home in city, tot
1Mx42, parlly furnished, stove,
washing machine, breakfut
set, etc. Will sell on land C&lt;llttract. $4 750.
WE HAVE several nice homes.
See us. Always nice to talk
to you_
Evenings:
Rossell D. Wood-44t-461B
John I . Rlchanls Ill OZ8f
Ronald K_ Canoday 411 A

Real Est1te for Sale
BAIRD REALTY CO.
Oscar Baird, Reeltor
Beautiful View
TillS one floor plan home overlooks the Ohio River and bas
3 A., 3 bedrooms, garage,
bam, fruit trees, located on
blacktop road. LP! us show
you for only $5300_

Three Bedrooms
THIS nice 1\4o story home bas
llvlni - dining room, kitchen,
bath, divldod basement wtth
shower and gas furnace,
plenty closets, located In a
quiet resldenuaJ area. All
city oervlceo on blacttop

atreet.

Owner Anxious
LE."l' US show you this nice 0110

Door plan home with I A.,
new bath, natural gas beat,
drilled well, 3 bedrooms, located on blaclrtop rd. It can
be yours for the low price of'
$7000,
'I'E NEED farms and homes to
aell, any location. Coli us.
omee Pllone ••• !Ill It Bn.
en.tBp
Doll Wo6eltloll, Ph. 11c111ert L. BaH, A. lUll.

Want Your Own
BUSINESS? Well, we have two
good ones for sale. OWners
want to retire . Can be bought
reasonable.
HOBART DILLON, llealtor
446-Zfl4
LucDie or Howard Brannm
Evenings 441-mt
40 ACRES, new house and older house, plenty water, some
Umber, 10 miles out, $11500.
Ph. 379--2424.
238-3

IICHen11111e. T..e ,_,,....,

lncerrNt lntertllf'

.

12:15 Trinlt.r Hour
12:45 catholic Jnlormatloo

·

poem,

"The

New

Colouus,"

which can be seen on the ped~
estal of the Statue ot Liberty.

1:00 Church of God

.,.., want All . . ,.,,ce

"" ,....,......

1:30 Gospel ~~
2:00 Sunday Drive Time
Rou~

WJEH- FM LOG
except where Indicated)
6:00 Sign On and Early Bird
Show (except Sundays)
8:00 News Roundup
8:05 Music Unlimited
10:30 Chatterbox (except saturday and Sunday)
11:00 Music Unlimited
11:45 All the News
(Except Sundays)

Nottce

For Rent

WILL DO oewlng at boma
zippers,
pockets, pegging, ONE FURNISHED apartment,
hemming, alterallons, ete.
one two-bedroom
trailer.
Mro. Freddie Thabet, Mason,
Phone Mason 773-5147, MarPhone 773-5651.
4-10-tfe
ion Re)'llolds_
1~Uc

For Sale
FLOOR

tion rolf clubs, John Teaford.
9-2UO!p

---

,
It Clllfl ,_., We"' IIX f:enMCvthre
lnMrtiHt.
U ,., ..Itt Dllclltil"t . . (NIII M1
lnd. ad1 "lei wltt'lln It dlya.
CAIIP 01' TNANKI a OIITUAIY
II.H .., II wlf'd mllllnKIM. le.
IHitlefteT ...nil II.
ILIND API

8

---

1 35 Fr. 2 bedroom house
trailer. Brown's Trailer Court,
Phone 992-3324.
JI)-J0-61c

~-

Business Services

BACK HOE and Do.er Servfeo,
For Sale
EIPEIIENCEI
Call Pomeroy
New
pond, basement, water line, RATS, MICE 110ne forever 'Get NEW &amp;.room modem bom_e
h~llfer Stmce
CAR WASH
oeptlc tank, R. W_ Cowdery,
Star' 2\!o lb. $1.68, SUgar Run
with bath on State Route 124.
69's
Are
Here
(Hot A Driva• Thr\1)
'
614-992-2181
Long Bottom, Oblo. 9-27-311te ' Mill, Ebersbaeh Hdwe., PickGood location. A re)l) buy at
6- 9%-18
75~ c:ar
en's, Mason.
10-7-tltp
$13,500. See or call O'Dell
Remain
In
P.Grl1ed
.
._.,.._,, Uc ne,.. ,., Alhlr· WILL DO any kind of sewtng,
On Display
l . Sprayed
with worm lOOp
Manley, 742.5932,
11)-11)-fitc
Real
E111te
For
Sale
Phone
992-2271.
11)-1.41&lt;
and·
th.n
g high preuure
SOUP'S
ON
the
rug
!hal
Is,
so
OJII'ICI NOUII
115 Soon
ri""e of 1oft water to
I1JI l.tw. II Srlt '"""· Olltr
clean the spot with Blue Lus- UPRIGHT PIANO, love seat
moke cor 1hine
tiM I.M h 1I1M NMft ..... ...,.
To Arrive
~ VACANCY for two elderly peo.
3 Att•n&lt;lonf on duty
tre. Rent electric ohampooer
and
chair,
antique
crgan,
pie. Prefer private paid pa$1. Baker Furniture_ 11)-7-6te
C•rcl &lt;'f Thanlrt
M-F • - - - - • - - - -II to 6
washing machine and other
tients. Phone Mason, 7'13-5115.
From the Largest Truck or
Sot. • - - • • - • - -- -9 to 7
WE WISH to thank our friends,
Items. Anny Haines, PortHockingport,
Ohio
Bul.l&lt;bzer
Radiator To The
l~tlc
S.n. • • - - - • - - - -II to
19!16 SUZUKI, 150 CC, 11110
neighbors and relatives for
land, Ohio. 843-2602. 11)-11).4tp
~alles1 Heater Core.
GEO.
HOBSTE'ITER,
Broloer
Phone
667-3370
miles, one owner, phone 992their kindness during the Ill(llJN SHOOT, Broad Run Rod
5194.
)1)-9-ltp :W GAL., A. 0. Smith glass-lin- SYRACUSE - 8 room brick,
ness and death of our father
and
Gun
Club,
Sunday,
Ocl.
bath, basement, furnace. 3
~PERT
and
grandfather,
Verne
PH. 993-2143
ed gas water heater, factoryPomeroy
13
noon
til
S
p.m.
ll)-10-3tc
lois
near
schooL
$10,000.00
CliJHUAHUA puppleo, Phone
'Mooneye' Davts. Special
Wheel
Alignment
built all-steel utility trailer,
POMEROY - Storage building,
843-2641 Rt. 1, Purtlond.
!hanks to Dr. Boice, and the
FACTS
good tires; 14 cu. ft. Gibson
matica" were written by
.~UMMAGE
sale
Wed.
Ocl.
16,
2 Doors, 25 x 63. over 3,000
Rawlings Coats Funeral Kome
I0-9-6tp
2--dr.
refrigerator
freezer,
3
the
same man, Charles
square feet. $2500.00
Goldie Clendenin , Portlancifor their efficient service. Alyears
old.
1192-5871.
IH0-3tp
Lutwidge
Dodgson, The
Bashan Road, oil space heat- 1!1611 VOLKSWAGEN statk&gt;n wa!I ACRES - Next lo town. IS
so to the organist, Mrs. GasWorld Almanac notes . Al-GUARAJtii'EEDer and 270 gal. tank $75, reacres bottom, 2 barns, large
though Dodgson was known
gon, good condlti nn, one own- I'IVE ROOM house, bath, basekill, to Rev. A. N. Grueser
frigerator
$25, coal heater 120,
8
room house. Ph baths, full
as
a mathematician and
PHONE
992-2094
er. Very roomy. Reasonably
and Rev. Wm. Alrson for
ment, three lots, Slate Sl ., Pologkian , he is remembered
RCA
radio
and
record
player
basement,
2nd
house
5
rooms
.
their consoling words, to the
priced. can 992-7158. Jl)-11-6tp
meroy, 0. Phone 992-32119.
for his works of whimsy
$20, clothing misc. ll)-13-31p
Minerals. $20,000.00.
donors of flowers, all who
11)-13-ltp
written
under the pseudoPomeroy
Home
&amp;
Auto
IIELEN or VIRGIL TEAFORD
1957, %-TON CHEVY truck, long
sent food and those lendln~
nym
Lewis
Carroll "Alice"
1M E. Ma1b
mm!;
wheel base. In gOOd ohape_ DEAUTIFUL maple stereo ra- ASSOCIATEs
was inspired by and writ·
the use of their cars. Also WILL DO babysttung In my
home 5 days a week. Call 247Syraeuse
ten for Alice UddeU, a
many thanks to the pallbearNew paint, $3511. G. A. Deem.
dio. Static free FM, rich AM
child of a friend.
2302.
I0-13-31c
ll)-13-31p
ers. We are forever grateful.
Racine.
ll)-lJ-3tp
radio. FuJI range volume.
In 1958, U.S. &amp;tpreme Court
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Moore
base, treble and balance conREAL ESTATE, five rooms and
Wanted
Justice
Harold Burton rtJttred
INTERNATIONAL two . row
and Family.
11)-13-ltp
troL Monthly payments of
''Ailee in Wonderland"
bath
on
4
level
lolo:;;,
one
room
after
13
Yearl ci.Je to poor
RIDE TO ATHENS, must leove
mounted corn picker, Mndel
$6.50 or balance of $98.03
-~~d "Curiosa Mathecellar,
nice
lawn
and
some
llea.lth.
Pomeroy by 5 A.M. Phone
I WOULD like ro !bank those
2-M, $100, Roy E. Miller. Ph.
Phone 992-3218.
ll)-13-6tc
fruit trees. 300 yards from
992-2747_
11)-J3-6tc
Chesler, 98&gt;-3817.
Jl)-1!6tp
who aent cards during my
hiRhway, close lo school, pristay in the hospital. Your
MODERN walnut stereo conced
reasonable, contact Ben
• Free Estimates
kindness and thoughtfulness Is ANTIQUES, furniture, dlsbes. AKC DACHSHUND puppleo,
sole. Solid state tuners and
Quisenberry
in Syracuse.
deeply appreciated.
miacellaneouo. Mrs. Howard
good quality. Females $30.
amplifiers. Vernier slide rule
Phone 992-2954
I0-13-6tc
• Qua lily Concrete
Ce&lt;U, 8110 W. Main St., PomeSincerely, VIctor E. Gaul,
Males $40. Phone Ripley, W.
tuning. Precision built record
Wayne, Michigan
Va. 37U59tl.
11)-U~tc
"'1'·
1-:15-tfc
changer plays all speeds. Pay
• Cerli lied Strength
10-1S-ltp
only $S per month or $8.112.
POTATOES. will deliver, PurePhone 992-3218
ll)-13~1c
• Delivery
WE WISH to express our slnYork
boar,
Thomas
bred
Wanted To B11y
(HOSPiTAL
NEWS
·cere thanks and gratltode to GINSENG, $33 Jb. Golden Seal
Sayre. Phone evenings 843- ZTGLER-MAT1C fUel oil stove,
• Quick Service
•our many friends, neighbors
2436.
10-13-3tp
77,000 BTU. Doroth~· Glenn.
$2.50, Snake Root ".50, May
• Finishing
:. for their kladness, •ympa!fly,
Phone 949-3239.
!l)-13-3tp
Apple Root 40 cents. Bill
HOSPITAL NEWS
food, Dora! offerings and i Bailey, Reedsville_
• Sand &amp; Gravel
Holzer Medical Center, First
' cards extended 1o us during .
500 BALES straw, 1000 bales Ave., Gallipolis; Visiting hours
GUITARS
•: the IDness and death of oor '
hay, EdiMn Hollon, Miners- 2-4 and 7-8 p.m. Parents only on
DIAL 992-3284
Help
Wanhtd
3
PICK
UP
·husband and father. Special
ville , Phone 949-3679 ll)-13-31p Pediatrics Wanl.
ELECTRIC GUITAR -$59 95
·• thanks to the doctors at Vet- RELfABLE company wants WITH
CASE
.
1\dmissjon!l
five
ladies
for
part
time
:. erans Hospital, Dr. Tell, Dr.
HOLLOW BODY KAY
REFRIGERATOR. ~a&lt; stove.
Miss Martha A. Finnicum, 10
work. Earn $30 lo $40 weekly . ELECTRIC GUITAR -$79.95
:. Ridgeway and Dr. Heaton, alGOEGLEIN GRAVEL
misc.
Items. make offer. Ma ~ Grape St., Gallipolis; Mrs. L,
BEGINNER
Wtth
c.~u
For Interview caU 992-3211.
so the nurses, aide!! and orlila Shorn. Phone 992-2524.
Cecil Slleets, 41 Chlllicotlle Rd.,
407 PAGE
· li)-IS-3tc
GUIT-ARS, flot Top• • 119.95
del1)lll, Martin Funeral Home,
10-13-:!lc
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
;. Rutland, Rev. O&gt;ester LemAMPLIFIERS $49.95 &amp; SS9. 9S
Gallipolis; James A. Saxton, Rt.
·' ley, Mrs_ Ethel atapman, orFemale Help Wanted
2 Gallipolis; Mrs. L. Noah John- gants! and pallbearers_
Bryants Budret Shop
FEMALE HELP WANTED .
son, Rt. 2 Vinton; Brenda G. LaNext To Stiffler' • Stor•
Sadly miased by hls wtfe LADIES could you use extra
nier, Rt. 2 Bidwell; Mrs. Ethel
For Sale or Trade
108 W. Main
Nannle Radcllffe
money for Christmas. Supply
1967 INTERNATIONAL truck, 4 E. Amos, Rt. 2 Vinton; M r s.
and Daughters. 11)-13-Jtp, establlsbed customers with
Verne C, Blazer, Eureka Star
speed, % ton, 1964 Ch•vrofe~
@&gt;
Rt.;
Jackie L, Brumfield, IlL l
beautiful family Chrlatmas
GALLIPOLIS - T e m per.
11167 Mustang lkyllnder, 3Crown City; Mrs. Robert F. Da- atures, precipitation and weagifts In Mty of Pomeroy. AvLost
speed . Financing available.
vis,
Rt. 2 Pl. Pleasant; Mrs. ther conditions for each 24--hour
FIELD
GROWN
CHRYSANerage
S3
and
up
hourly,
spare
LADIES BLACK PURSE, valuPhone 9113-6647; after 5 p.m.
Dencll
R. Hudson, Syracuse; Mrs . per!Qtl as recorded by P e t e
time.
full
lime.
Write
Ruth
THEMUMs
and
mums
all
. able pai&gt;OI'S, please return,
Phone 992-5748.
9-29-lte
B, Mohler, R\, 1 Middle. McCormick, at the Fairfield WeaHarry
colors,
big
and
bealtby,
a110
Bergaus,
Watkins
Products,
pltone 992-'1251, 619 Pearl st.,
66 CHEVELLE Malibu H.T. Cpe.------ -$1695
port; Mrs. Joseph C, Roberts, ther station.
eannlng pears and potatoes,
fnr . Winona, Minnesota 5598.7..
Middleport_
Jl)-~
Rt
1
Langsville;
Mrs.
Roscoe
Reynolds
Flower
Shop,
M&amp;Day
I Ugh Low Prec.
11)-13-llc
Six cyl. wi_th_ Pow_erg!id11, 22,000 mil . . by locol owner,
0. Joaeph, CoaJ Grove; Charles &amp;mday
d_ark blue. f1n11h w1th 1potles1 c:lean interior, new w/ s/w
son City, just above Corp.
' 56 37 .61
t~res, radio &amp; heatar. Real nice one.
R. Cantrell, Ashland, 1\Y.; Les- Monday
lllle.
11)-4-tlc
' • • 60 50 .16
For Rent
Busl~~e~s Services
ter K, Bryant, South Point; Mrs. TueO&lt;ia,y , ,
• 70 40
IIEVIVAL at the llignlanu i.t.a-. FURNISHED and unlurnlsbed
lliTCH
DIGGING,
water
lines,
64 CHEVROLET - - - -- - - - - - -- - -- - - -$995
Gerald C, Eblin, Mitklleport; Wemesda,y . . .
77 40
POODLE
PUPPIES,
AKC
Toy
pel Chureh on Rt. t24 back of
apartments. Close to school.
leacb beds, PauJ AndenliNI,
Mrs.
Btlly
E.
Grueser,
Rt.
1
Bel_
Air 4 Door . Std. trans. Clean in terior . Good tire•
Thursdsy , . , , 69 59 , 14
miniature, f!S and up. Stud
Pomeroy on Laurel Cliff Road Phone 11112-6434,
rod1o. locol I owr~er co r.
'
1!1.'*'Uc
Mason, W. Va. Phone 773.- Minersville.
Frtda,y , , _ ., 70 45
service and sroomlng. PbODo
starting Oct. 17 7:30 p.m.
5788,
)l)-9-30tp
Births
Saturda,y , , _ . 65 52
ID-5443.
ll J Uc
. each evening, everyone w':'l· FURNISHED GARAGE apart63 CADILLAC - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - -$1795
Mrs, Dencll R. Hudson, ~a.
Average high temperature for
~Door HT. DeVille. Factory oir, full poweu, spotleu clean
' come, Rev. Robert Searlea ment on Lincoln HIU. Utllltleo
cuse, son, 2:06 a.m. Friday; the week this year - 66.5 deIJOZii:R,
BACKHOE,
trouc:her
lfltedor. Grey Finish . Full acceeeory group.
AKC
Golden
Retriever
puppies,
pastor will be the speaker.
paid; adults anly. Phone ti9J.
Mrs. Harry B. Mohler, Rt. 1 grees; last year - 69.5 de.
and
truck
service,
,.pile
I
m Alb St., Middleport. a
Speelal singing each evenlng.
M.
6-lfl.tlc
Middleport, 100, 9:57 a.m. Frl- grees,
tanks,
water
lines,
buements,
62
PONTIAC
- - - - - - - - - - - - - -$795
1441.
6-2Hfe
I0-13-4tc
Cotol•na 4 Door. htoJy over bl (•e finish . Good tir111. Auto•
also topsoti. Henry Bohr, da,y; Mrs. Gerald C, EI&gt;Iln, Mid Avr'!lrage low temperatures tor
matic troru . Rodio and he~ote1 .
·
'l'RAILER LOTS. Bob's Malllla
phone 985-39118 or Roger Bahr, dleport, son, 5:11 a.m. S.tur. dle week thb year - 45. 5 deda,y.
WILL PAY ver¥ good tor lot.Court, Syracuae, Ohlo on state POTATOES and sweet potatoes.
grees; last year - 46.3 de~
phone 985-.l858.
Jo.z.aotp
Phone 84S-2254. Clarence Profter M In the Blue Sunoco Rt. 124, Phone 992-JIIIIt
Discharges
62 CHEVY II - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - -$599
grees.
fitt, Portland.
lu.Uc
Hardtop Cpe. loo:a( owner cor. red finish, 1td. Irons., radio
Norman
c.
Ballard,
James
R,
game, phone 89U508. JO.U-31c
f.li-tre
Total precipitation ror the week
C. C. BRADFORD
Coleman,
Hayley
L.
Coy,
George
this year - 1.22 Inches; last
AUCTIONEER
F.
Dray,
Mrs.
Clarence
W,
COAL HAULING, phone 992- TRAILER SPACE, ready to VENETIAN BLINDS, aU kinds,
65 GMC PICKUP - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -$1195
yea.r
- 0.81 Inches.
Complete So......
and blind repair_ Dale Wip8 . h. Fleets• de, good I ires, 6 cyl. engir~e. Below morltet
Garne1, Bryan C, Marshall, WiJ .
2803_
11)-11-lltp
book up, privata, plenty of
TotaJ precipltatlon to date this
Pboae fjfWJ
pr~c:e .
pel Supply, 215 Union Ave.,
Uam
A,
Pierson,
Dale
D.
Roth
~
year - 38.45 inches; lalt yoar
room for ehlidren to play.
llaclDo, Oldo
Pomeroy.
11)-J.J2te
gob, Mrs, Edward 1\, Russell, - 28.57 inches.
ANYONE INTERESTED In an
Phone m.!90t
f.14-tle
Crill Bradford
65 CHEVELLE ----------------- -$1495
Carlton Simms, Michelle D.
Independent New Testament
Normal average precipitation
Malibu Conv. VB engine, P . G. trons . , radio, "•oter, new
• 1 Uc Wren, Sandra J. Layne, Mrs.
I'IVE
ROOMS
and
bath,
nice
amually - 38,40 Inches.
Baptist Church call IH9-3W. STORAGE SPACE: Storage for
W•I•W fire•,_ green l!t)(t('rior with while nylon top, vreen
Yard.
large
garden,
one
room
James
H,
Hollo,yandinfantdaughvinyl
inl. tum .
Frktay at 7 p.m.. Oct. 18, a
boats, trallen, cars. camp.
AIR
CONDmONING
RefrigerMrs.
Larry
L,
lAng
and
inter,
eeJiar, one balf block f!om
claaa on 'Soul Wlnnin&amp;' wUI
ers, etc. Write P. 0, Box 3211,
ation service. Jack's llefrlg- fant daughter, Mrs. Roger L,
Syracuse
schooL Contact Ben
be directed by Pastor DarPomeroy_ Phone 992-:mlll or Qullenberry,
erauon, New
bone
Manley, &amp;-., and inrant daugh.
Syracuse.
lee Diet Seyler_
1U.,.Utp
rington from the second Bap.
88Mt1711.
•
•
Uc ter, Mrs. Charles 0 , Neal and
l~'lte
list Church of Rsvenswood.
InCant 1011..
CHEAPIES -- CHEAPIES
18-11-'lte NEWLY DECORATED 4-5 room TWO coal stokers wttil con- READY - MIX ooncreta dellvapartment, phone 992-2'192.
ued rtcnt to Jour proJeet.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
trols. Arnold Brothers, Po~M 'SKINNY' LEIIEW,
)i)-IJ-81r
and easy_ Free eouFast
HOSPrrAL
•neru)',
Phone
992-1448.
1963 PONTIAC - - - - - - - - - - - - - -$389
new proprietor of the Hotel
mates. Poone 1192-3214, GoegADMITT'ED- Ella El&gt;erabach,
Cotolino HT Cpe. 4 on the~ floor. 389 e,.glne.
10-13-Uc
.: Martin Cocktail Lounge, New FOUR ROOM fumisl!ed apart~orne body damage. Ponibilitin.
leln Beady - MJJ: Co., Mlddle- Pomeroy; Cheater TamehiU,
,hours 9:30a.m. to 2:110 a.m.
ment, E. Main St., Pomeroy,
Middleport.
JIOI'I. OhiD.
0 10 ifc
COLD SPOT refrigerator and
'
JO.Utp
Phone 992-'1054.
l~tfe
1960 BUICK--------- ------ -$199
DISCHARGED - Laura Grant,
freezer, 14 cubic foot. $Sl).
LeSobre 4 Or. Check this one out. Only $199 .
Charles Chaffee, Silver Ridge BUDGET PRICE 1urnJtura on Thurston stone, Woodrow Kuhn.
our lhlrd Door budget llltop. Gertrude Drake, EUgene AriiUI,
Rood.
11)-13-atp
1959 RAMBLER - - -- - - - - - - - - - -$239
Baker Furniture, Mlllllleport Mary Searls.
Station Wagon . Block ond pretty, Worth more.
-------W,;;;:,;:•:;nl::ild:,.·
SWEET POTATOES, field run,
Olllo.
T :II ifc
.tl.SO buahel, bring container;
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
1960
OLDS 88 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -$199
ADMrrTED- Nooe.
SEWING MACHINES, repair
4 Door . Solid body. Ciood tiru
The, ~rid's second lort••t company of lh •ind needs
lo.&amp;-6te
DISCHARGED - Carl Thornse"lce, aU maket, WY Jambtttout Sal., R•presentative (21-40) to work In
2214. The Fabric Shop, Pom- as.
reYolutionarr fttw division.
eroy.
Authorized Singer Salea
UPRIGHT PIANO, love seat
and
Service. We Sharpen PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
and chair, antique organ,
Yes! Good Selection of '69
BffiTH - Mr. and Mra. HerSetsoors.
~tic
washing
machine
;
other
11Thou selec:ted will be fully troln1d ot company ••P•nll
bert Sayre, Letart, a aon.
Ann H
h
t 't 1pl~c·~ on guarantee. Company-sponsored, two·•••~
ems .
a
aines, Portland.
ADMmED - Gary Conley,
CHEVROLET CARS AND
prograM. First year eamlng1 1 hould be $10,000·
Phone lf3.2602,
10-l-6te CIGARE'ITE vendl!lg maeh!Mo Point Pleasanti Mrs. 0 a k e y
5
•
or more. Rapid notion-wide expansion guorontees
and se"ico. ABC Enter Pi luo, Keeter, Leon; Joaepll BuJring.
Keeping Meigs
monapement opportunltlu, Tho1e selec:tM •ust hove o
CONN Alto Qa•....Jton ' ood
TRUCKS - BEST DEALS, TOO.
Muon, W. Va. Phone 7'13-SMS. too, Point I'Ieasant; Mrs, Tl&lt;ld,y
cf{' be •port• Mhulalll, ambitious onJ willing to put forth
~ e, In I
towor-' o monovement position, (Pruent management
condJtion, phone 912·3182 days,
f.l.tfe Donoloew, Evans: VIctoria Lyrm
Gallic and
10
'" ng in eaceu of $20,000.)
m-3120 DJghts.
10-10-3tc
We S.rviCI'
PLEASING
1llomtoo, I'Ulnt Pleasant; JackMason
Area
Whot We Soli
THIS IS A LIFETIME OPPORTUNITY
TERMS!
Ie Thornton, I'Ulnt Pleaaant.
DI8MISSED - Mrs. Guy Say.
lnfa~med As
Insure nee
re, Charles Wamsley, Jolon Brillbuttonltolea, etc. Pay f4UO AUTOMOBILE insut'tlltel beo1 hart, Mra. David Koeblentz, Mrs.
Well As
CALL MR. MIKE HESTER FOR
or fU9 a month, Phone 7'13-Ued? Loot Your operat- Ra,y Herdman, Mra. !.lone! &amp;nilh,
308 -318 E. MAIN
992-2126
POMEROYr
or'• Dcenae? CaD IIII-211S8.
.•
IIHO.
IO-I0-3tp
Clinton Hfckmam, Mrs. Leonard
Entertained
OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8:00
stover, Mn, Cleo llolllll'.
8 II lfc

EYINRUDE

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

HOIST ETTER
REALTY

Schawarzel Marine

5.55

10:00 Firat National Final
t 0: t5 Music Until Sign Off

Real Estate For Sale

~NIBERT.;
NEW LOCATION
T1DRD &amp; STATE STREETS
YOU'LL like everything about
this 4 BR. I \4o story homo located on a large lot about ~
mUes from town_ Haa a two
car garage and Is priced be;
low the cost to replace. Call
today for an appolnimenl.
IF YOU can qualify you can
buy this 2 BR home with
basement. wall to wall carpet in living room, attached
garage for $500 down and
balance like rent. Located
near town ·on SR ·588. : ~ ...

MAKE US AN OFFER·
ON TJDS 53 acre !ann located
z mites from town, 2 BR
home with bath and base-

ment.

---

---

j

FAMILY PUnlll

THE BEE 01 YOU FOR

I SECOND CIR?

Week's

DON'T DELAY
&amp;BE SORRY
OWNER anllous to sell this
nearly new 3 BR home wltb
attached garage, Thermopane windows and outside
patio.
Office Ph. Ul DIBI
a.artes M. Neal 441-UH

A. A. Nllerl t4f4m
Carter Masde, 44M'lt1

Weather

0801 Dlllt RIIUZZ D11
over ror 8oe or fhlll lltiRIOdlf

Ulld Cll'l.

IIY8 • hiVe

or

t'olfc1

WRIGHT COACH
LOS ANGELES (UPO Wayne Wright, a gramato of
David Llpacomb College a1
Nashville, TeM., has been
appointed baoeball coach al
l'l!pperdine Coiie110, oucceading
Gall Hopkino.

USED
FURNITURE
ond
PROFESSIONAL
AUCTION SERVICE

Ha-.

---

NOTICE
An,one Interested in our

do • It • yOurself Upholmoy vl1it

the flnt .. uion without
doy Eve., Oct. 15-7:30 of
Knotts Uphol•terlng, 1163
Sec:ond Au., Gollipoll,.

----

----

MANAGEMENT TRAINEE

Gallipoll1, Ohio

:='C.:. ~'a; ~':ine~

NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY ·

Excavating and Buildi119 Contracton
BACKHOE, BULLDOZEl, CRANE,
GRADER AND DRAGLINE SERV1CE
Basements-Footers-leach BedsFarm Ponds-Septk Tanks-YardsDriveways;-land Clearing-fill Dirt
Top Soil-Ponds Cleaned-Parking Lot:.
•1F IT'S DIRT, WE'll NOVE ITI"
· Phone: 446-4905

.

WORLD ALMANAC

5:00 News
5:15 Dinner Serenade
7:00 Evening Serenade
9:45 Armed Forces Shows

llering Clan,

19611

record player, $114.00, $7.00
month. Phone 773-5940,
J0.11)-3tp

REPAIR, REFINISH, recondi- TRAILER,

Brown's TraDer
Put, Minersville. Phone 9923324.
l~tc

demonstrator,

stereo, AM and FM radio,

BLAETTNARS

12:00 News (Sunday Onl,\')
12:15 Music Unlimited

CARl1fl AND EVANS, INC.
.87 Olive Street

,..

will Bet

I Mfltt ,_, WIN _ . INtrtflll
Nlltlllllllllt Chi,.. 7Jc
It f:Mtl ' " ..,.... ""'" ........

c:horge or obllgotion, Tuel•

Emma Lazarus wrote the

1.111.

. '"""''.......,........ ... ....

11:30 Gospel of Christ
12:00 News

NEW LISTING

DREAM HOME

STEREO AND AMIFM
MODEL console stereo.
Will sell on payments of $5.40
per month or will sell for $86
cash. Try it in your home.
Call 675-3081.
238-11

,...rn,
••r

10:30 First Baptist Church

Sports Broadsupercede regular · programs w h e n
scheduled.)

CUSTOM SPRAY
t».AIMTING

t

cerrectftlll
Will IHo ICctJttM Ulltll t I.M, ....
D•r et Pvltllc•tt ...
RHULATIONI
Th• I'Ublllhr
the , 11,.1
te Mit ' ' rwlftt
He ....._. •

9:45 Chlldren's Chapel
10:00 Music for Sunday

5:00 News

INtdllnt

tenc.tt•tleftt •

(Notei Live
cuts will

8usine11 Servlm

0. D. PARSONS

1~68

Mtlftdly

(DaUy

12:45 CoWltry Go Rowll

C~'LLENT CoNDrnnN 1N OTHDt
RESPilCTS . L.MI:O'E LOT

THI!'i HOM!: WA.S WELL ButLT
TO BF.CIN Wmt AND HAS RAT&gt;

DIADLINII
J " ·"'· D•r MieN llv•Hc.t!.""

Farm and Home (Tues.,

ON UPP!R IND . INCLUDES A
1\lEW F111\N AC! AND IS IN ~X­

3Bedroom
Full Besement

WANT AD
INPGfiMATION

WJEH

THE WISEMAN

AnENTIO

CALL

I

Real Estate For Sele

COMPLETE LIHE-- .

A LIDLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Bring Top Grade Results

$'t '008

WMPO

INFORMATION
NEWS

presents
LOCAL REPORTS
DAILY
AT
7:50 A.M.
12 NOON
3 P.M.
AND
4:30 P.M.

• •7

Can You Qualify?·

"

~~IsZIG:!~,:~..:::::

~~~-A~P..;,P.;;O,;,;IH;,:T,:M:;,EN:;_T:.,:A,:.T,::G:AL:_;:L:!IP:;:O;::L;:,IS:,;4;.:46~-:·3~7:.6---~

•

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

�..

..-'

~ ·.,:

.,

~

Times - Sentinel, Sunday, l~ctobcr 13, l!ltiX

....

Sessions
To Begin
MIDDLEPORT -

Four

.
,

.......

~uubuy

defensive driving Is held at the
study hall of the Meigs High
S&lt;hoolln Middleport.
'
Open to the public, the two-session course Is being sponsored

GALUPOLlS ~C IIOOL P ATHOL- ~1embe rs of the W'l';ilin;..:Wil l·:lcmcrl-

SINCE 1907

210-2

RANGES
DOUBLE OVEN EYE-LEVEL RANGES
SKM56G8
Charcomatil: in(ra- red broiler in
waist-high oven.
Data -Mali c cooking in both
oo.:ens.

Chr ome-framed control panel.
E let'lric clock with 4-hour timer.
Surfac~ work lighL
Recessed, lift-ttl Lop.
Up...angle, wood·grain accented
control panel and knobs.
Lift-Q(f lower oven door with
ehrome-framed "see-thru"
window.
Ligh ted oven interiors.
Deep~rawn base construcliOrL.
Lifetime porcelain finish.
All bw·ner s and oven
bottom, guaranteed for life.

GAS

MODEL

Choose The Gas or
Electric Model
For Only•••

95

.

Uate-Matic cookif€ in
both ovens.
Eye-level, chromeframed control center.
220 Volt electric broiler
in lower oven.
Automatic clock.
Recessed lift-Ltl tq&gt;.
Work surface light.
Timed appliance
convenience outlet.
Infinite Ileal control, top
elements.
Wood-grain accented
control panels.
Convenient waist-high
broiler.
Lift-o()ff lower oven door.
Large lighted oven.
Self-stop oven racks.
Llvetlme porcelain finish.
Deep--drawn base con-.
struction.

REYNOLD'S GAIJJPOIJ8 TV
439 Second Avenue

Across from Post Offlee

r:.~o~~er

TERMITE PES'f CONTROL
FREE Inspection. call - 5

year In the Meigs Local Schod
District what wltll the coDAollta.
tion ol the senior high schools~
dents.
For the Orst time, senior clus
Lrlps to Washingtonarebelngdlscontinued. Previously, each of tho
three high school senior classes
made this trip. However, the consolidation brought 189 seniors
1nto one bullding and lor monerous reasons the trip "tu not be

TERMITE &amp; PEST CONTROL
F A!N Extermination Co. Wheel-

ersburg, Ohio, Ph. 574-1112.
m.tf

lunar

r

Care for iunbau ~imts ientinti------,
Care for
Your Car
Devoted To 1'lu! Greater Middle Ohw Valley
Your Car
VOL. I NO 2

-

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1968

lence, work guaranteed . 7:30

a.m. til 10 p.m. 7 days a week.
Joe's Ashland Station, Bidwell, 0. 388-$81.
240-tf

?aris n.:gotiations.

I

PAGE ONE

ous high school teachers, admifloo
lsLrators and guidance people
miKie the deciaioo in the testing
matter.

For

·:·

=::

:::
·=·

:::
:::

rOFlHE

free
•
Inter

~j:

:-:
}
;~~

·.·

Plumbing &amp; Heating
PLUMBING 6

:::

BEATING, Ill 'l'lllrd Avene.

·:·:

H

jl

_,II )

Homeownen~,

unblin ls on the

&gt;an Stidham. junior
daugjlter ol Mr. and
r. and Mrs. Herman

:ce after the football
ats and door prizes.

171

u

needs,

~

) SET IHESE
IPLE 5TRAI6HT

MOTORING
GUIDE

:l:

hospital

~~:

~:n:::Ella=AN=

:·.

the upstairs window

emergency squadmen
Johnson was leaning
;1pstairs window shakli when she apparent·

her balance. 9le fell
' window and apparentM! a complete somer·
mdlng on her foot. Sl&gt;e
;en to Holzer Hospital
1rvation and treatment.

1a

In All The Popular Shades
)t.J'r WORRY BOSS ... liNEN
J6H ILl BE: REflli.'/~0 A5
LOYAL SEO&lt;.'HARY- YaJ
oLWAYS CALL ME: AT MY

Regularly 1.35 a pair

99~ a pair

1

IS

AGILON STRETCH
and CANTRECE

3 pairs for•••••• 2. 90
6pairs tor•••••••5.80

rly Johnson, 14, es-

doua ln)ury when she
ocust St. home In Mid~ aftemooo. Mid·

"R(.YHILL51W\$10N

1R CV/J51JLTATIDN!

Shiflet

s Sunday
al services ror Mrs. Allet, 75, RD 1, RutlaM,
s dead on arrival at Hoi·
pital Surday morning, will
Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the
Fureral Home with the
lvid Sleets officiating.
will be in the Gravel Hill
ry at Cheshire.
tsbornatShort Creek, W.

n' 1892, the daughe lateJacobandJosephine

Ma,y

1nd she had lived in the
,&amp;ant area until moving to
ln 1956 ard was a mem"' RuUand Church olGod
1 also preceded in death

Care or Yo

wsbaD:I, Lemuel
vors InclUde two sons,
~tart.

W. VLi Hue , Co-

; aix sisters, Mra. Mar·
leorlen, Ctwrlestoo, W.
""'Archer, Orchard Lake,
111; Mal')' Dleker- and
an Ml:call, lxlth ol Las
'\oio-; ·lfrL IDu Rol-

Storewide October Sales. Give your home a new
look this fall. Visit our 2nd and 3rd Floor Fur-

~:

l::

IT

:es A LA!r'MA~

+MASON

Your Favorite Kayser Sheer Styles

r.v

Her escort is Earl

Shop ever) departr.1ant in the store cllrine 011

Evergreen. Pb.

check with your Gronge og.
enls at the Neal Ins. Agency,
14 Slate St. Agents for outo,
fire,

MEIGS

SALE

HORSES AND COWS

AL~~=r~:Uee

lr. and Mrs. Oliver
me ceremonies Fri-

~ETIME5

i-'

:;:

I

GALLIA

.·.m:

CALL IACUON J8e.-4f1Sl

m-ms.

RUTLAND, 0.

In Washington, called
bombing and
Haiphong Harbor as a
arm twisting'' to get

.ased

take all tests. The SecoOO&amp;ry
School Councll made up of vari-

t~=~

U .OO SERVlCI: CRAROJ:
W1LL REMOVE YOUR DEAD

~~~udq

before

Altlo, previously, some of the
high schools permittee! students
with good schol.aatic staOOlngs to
skip six weeks tests. Under the
new set\CI, all students are to

·.·

DEAD STOCK

STANDARD

Orbit

for the return..

helcL

:·:
::-

WATER Anytime - Day ar
Night.
Daya-Pb. 388 86541,
Evenings - J. B. or Leo :~ ~:
King 446-41194 or Ronnie Skid- ~: ~
more 446-1756.
W-tf
CERTIFIED electric and gas
welding, mechanl&lt;, body and
fender w&lt;lrk. 12 years exper-

saoos.

~bate

1TREAK~

l:::,.i

'lAll Galloal'

White

dar PracUce
:nd radar was to try
an Apollo 7 Ln much
¥ay one on the moon
k an AWUo mother-

:;;:
Merrill O'Dell, Operator far :-:
Extermllal Termite !lefvloo '''·
10 Belmont Dr,
'J6I If }

ROUTE 1110 at

RUTLAND FURNITURE
'

811-11

KENNETH STEGER'S
WATER DELIVERY SERVICE
Ph. 44~347 .
'1$1 If

FOR

'

There is no fee Cor the course.

J at

'

:JATERFALL
~ COWNSORT

DEWII I 'S PLUMBING
AND IIBATJNO

You11 Alwars Do Better At Rutland
Furniture and Easr Tentls Are Available.

ARNOLD GRATE

Gibbs, driving training inatruct-or in tho Molgs Local Dlstrlc~

10c

LEE'S PLUMBING &amp; REMOJ).
EL!NG, Crown City, 0. Ph.
251&gt;6664.
12'1-11

300 4th Ave., 446-181'1.

742-4211

second session wiU be at 7:30 p.
m. on Tuesday, OcL 22, at the

:~~

30 Inch

-

class will begin &amp;t 7:30 1), m. The

DOLL HOU!e Nursery transpor.
tatlon available, reaoonablo :::
rates also lor shopping ar :::
working mothers, bourly, dally or weekly rates. Pb. 446U .
II II

ELECTRIC

:...-.----

hnts-~tutitttl

b,Y the Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club. The

same locaUon. Those cmn,pleting bd:h sessions will receive
cards. The lrtensl ve driving
training program ls prepared by
the Ohio Slate Patrol.
Instructors Tuesday will ifloo
elude Pomeroy Pollee Chief Jed
Webster, Mrs. Edith Sisson. dis-.
J)atcher tor the Pomeroy departmenti John Mora, mathematks
instructor of the Meigs Local
School Dtstrtct, and WUltam

tampe.rature.

FIVE CEfJTS

Services Offered

Your

30 Inch (u stom Imperio!

SEVERAL innovations t h 1 s

,qy and contfJ!ued

11

material tor the evening Tuesda)'

tary Sehool Safet} Patrol, ::. hown he re with Chief of Polh:e .John Ta)lor and
faculty sp oos;:,rs , Hoy Sprague and .Jotm l!olle, arc 0 tor ): Firq How - Chicr
Taylor, Cn.:l Fife , BiJIJ Tlare us, Rilly Williams, Joey Hubcuslahl, Jim Jus·
t.ice, Jim Wood, Keilh Sheet s, Tomm~' Young, Paul Walker, {I reg 'lllOmas,
John Salla:~:, James Cunningham, Bonald Cia ~' • nay Queen, Ma rk Poling, and
George llalTelt ; Set·ond row - Darn"~) ('ox, Bobby Candee, Ant11ony Heese,

~ ~- We~thcr

tn.

when the tlrst of two sessions on

Alan Eva.'ls, John (Iroth, Jim Niday, Joe O'Dell, A.ndy flout, Glen Woyan, Rog·
ger McClelland, Mike Watson, Jim Musgrove, Billy Schopis and Mike Woodall; T~ 1 ird How - Mr. Holl e, HudolphGordon, D~nni s Mitchell, l{oger Brandebe rry, Mike I::vans, SL· oll Epling, P-1ul Dingess, Tom Valentine, Robert Wood,
swu Cameron, Bert Moshier, Mike Sickels, Edwin Smith, Br uce Jami son,
Charl es Jamison and Mr. Sprague.

•

......

1CIIonlibt wltllllll&gt;thll even!Jw. Low
1&gt;e soo to the low
partly cloudY and

structors will present the study

INTERESTED In 1 Brazilian pen pal?
International Friends, made ..., of hundreds or Brazilian people
or both sexes or aU ages and professions, have formed an international correS(M)Idence club and are anxious to correspond with people or
other countries. The pUJPose, of cOW"se, is to get to know people of
other nations.
Jr Interested, you are to sen:l your name uxt complete addres.,,
sex, occlt)ation, hobbies to Amigos Interaciorw.ir, Cl.ixa Postal30827,
Seo Paulo, BraziL
MEIGS CounUans Interested in ing one or both of the courses,
adult business education may may report to the high school.
still enter classes which began Mrs. James Vennarl is instructthis week at Meigs High Scllool. or.
Typi;.g classes start at 7 p.m.
CONGRATULATIONS to Mr.
and shorthand at 8 Thursday eveand
Mrs. James Fugate who will
ning, Those interested in pw-su-observe their 45th wedding anni ..
versary at their Pomeroy home
Tuesday. Mr. Fugate retired 14
Business Opportunity
years ago from his employment
EXCELLENT buslnm oppor- with ttte Columbus and Soatbern
tunity for husband and wife
Ohio Electric Co.
team . Must have some capl·
tal. Will rinance right party.
THE POMEROY Lions Club is
Call or write Westinghouse seeking your help through contriLaundromat Distributor, 300 butions of discarded eyeglasses.
Troy Sl.. Dayton. 0 . 45404, A two week collection program
area code 513-461-5775.
will get underway on Oct. 21 wltll
237-24 boxes to be placed in lObustness
houses about the county for reSPARE TIME INCOME
ceiving the contributions. The
REF1LLINI} and collecting mo- glasses wlll be sent to ~&lt;New
ney from NEW TYPE high- Eyes for the Needy" for redistriquality coin-operated dispen- bution to those unable to afford
sers in your area . No selling. glaues. N. W. Compton is heal;l.
To qualify you must have car, lng the program on behalf ol the
Lions Club.
references, $600 to $2,900 cash.
Seven to twelve hours weekly
MRS. SHIRLEY Huston has cr~
can net excellent monthly ina
ted
one of the new dbne :uional
come. More run time. For
pictures
to be given for Ute Oct.
personal interview write UNI·
31
Halloween
Carnival of SyraTED DISTRIBUTING COMcuse
PTA.
The
attractive picture
PANY, 7tl1 ID) INVESTMENT
is
displayed
in
the wlnd.ow of the
BLDG .. PITI'SBURGH, PA ..
Davis-Warner Insurance Co.
15222. Include phone number.

.

.eetiJW. w. Va., and Mlos

nltura Department durine our flrniture sale.

..

$hlllel, 1Ddla, IDd 10 .....

Ids _. call at tile - . .
at aQ)' time.

'l

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

SESSION SLATED
l2 Clrde ot tho Htllll
Cburth vi. M'M d t

AUTO, fire. 11fe. 45 State St. :::·.·
Waldo F. BI'OWII, W. B. -:·
Brown. 448-1910,
114 " ·: ··-:-:·:-: :::::::::::::: :.:-:- : :::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::·:::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::::::::&gt;:::::&lt;:::::::::~~:::::::x:::::::::::::::::Y.

,i

-· . ........

·--·~

...,

�..

..-'

~ ·.,:

.,

~

Times - Sentinel, Sunday, l~ctobcr 13, l!ltiX

....

Sessions
To Begin
MIDDLEPORT -

Four

.
,

.......

~uubuy

defensive driving Is held at the
study hall of the Meigs High
S&lt;hoolln Middleport.
'
Open to the public, the two-session course Is being sponsored

GALUPOLlS ~C IIOOL P ATHOL- ~1embe rs of the W'l';ilin;..:Wil l·:lcmcrl-

SINCE 1907

210-2

RANGES
DOUBLE OVEN EYE-LEVEL RANGES
SKM56G8
Charcomatil: in(ra- red broiler in
waist-high oven.
Data -Mali c cooking in both
oo.:ens.

Chr ome-framed control panel.
E let'lric clock with 4-hour timer.
Surfac~ work lighL
Recessed, lift-ttl Lop.
Up...angle, wood·grain accented
control panel and knobs.
Lift-Q(f lower oven door with
ehrome-framed "see-thru"
window.
Ligh ted oven interiors.
Deep~rawn base construcliOrL.
Lifetime porcelain finish.
All bw·ner s and oven
bottom, guaranteed for life.

GAS

MODEL

Choose The Gas or
Electric Model
For Only•••

95

.

Uate-Matic cookif€ in
both ovens.
Eye-level, chromeframed control center.
220 Volt electric broiler
in lower oven.
Automatic clock.
Recessed lift-Ltl tq&gt;.
Work surface light.
Timed appliance
convenience outlet.
Infinite Ileal control, top
elements.
Wood-grain accented
control panels.
Convenient waist-high
broiler.
Lift-o()ff lower oven door.
Large lighted oven.
Self-stop oven racks.
Llvetlme porcelain finish.
Deep--drawn base con-.
struction.

REYNOLD'S GAIJJPOIJ8 TV
439 Second Avenue

Across from Post Offlee

r:.~o~~er

TERMITE PES'f CONTROL
FREE Inspection. call - 5

year In the Meigs Local Schod
District what wltll the coDAollta.
tion ol the senior high schools~
dents.
For the Orst time, senior clus
Lrlps to Washingtonarebelngdlscontinued. Previously, each of tho
three high school senior classes
made this trip. However, the consolidation brought 189 seniors
1nto one bullding and lor monerous reasons the trip "tu not be

TERMITE &amp; PEST CONTROL
F A!N Extermination Co. Wheel-

ersburg, Ohio, Ph. 574-1112.
m.tf

lunar

r

Care for iunbau ~imts ientinti------,
Care for
Your Car
Devoted To 1'lu! Greater Middle Ohw Valley
Your Car
VOL. I NO 2

-

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1968

lence, work guaranteed . 7:30

a.m. til 10 p.m. 7 days a week.
Joe's Ashland Station, Bidwell, 0. 388-$81.
240-tf

?aris n.:gotiations.

I

PAGE ONE

ous high school teachers, admifloo
lsLrators and guidance people
miKie the deciaioo in the testing
matter.

For

·:·

=::

:::
·=·

:::
:::

rOFlHE

free
•
Inter

~j:

:-:
}
;~~

·.·

Plumbing &amp; Heating
PLUMBING 6

:::

BEATING, Ill 'l'lllrd Avene.

·:·:

H

jl

_,II )

Homeownen~,

unblin ls on the

&gt;an Stidham. junior
daugjlter ol Mr. and
r. and Mrs. Herman

:ce after the football
ats and door prizes.

171

u

needs,

~

) SET IHESE
IPLE 5TRAI6HT

MOTORING
GUIDE

:l:

hospital

~~:

~:n:::Ella=AN=

:·.

the upstairs window

emergency squadmen
Johnson was leaning
;1pstairs window shakli when she apparent·

her balance. 9le fell
' window and apparentM! a complete somer·
mdlng on her foot. Sl&gt;e
;en to Holzer Hospital
1rvation and treatment.

1a

In All The Popular Shades
)t.J'r WORRY BOSS ... liNEN
J6H ILl BE: REflli.'/~0 A5
LOYAL SEO&lt;.'HARY- YaJ
oLWAYS CALL ME: AT MY

Regularly 1.35 a pair

99~ a pair

1

IS

AGILON STRETCH
and CANTRECE

3 pairs for•••••• 2. 90
6pairs tor•••••••5.80

rly Johnson, 14, es-

doua ln)ury when she
ocust St. home In Mid~ aftemooo. Mid·

"R(.YHILL51W\$10N

1R CV/J51JLTATIDN!

Shiflet

s Sunday
al services ror Mrs. Allet, 75, RD 1, RutlaM,
s dead on arrival at Hoi·
pital Surday morning, will
Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the
Fureral Home with the
lvid Sleets officiating.
will be in the Gravel Hill
ry at Cheshire.
tsbornatShort Creek, W.

n' 1892, the daughe lateJacobandJosephine

Ma,y

1nd she had lived in the
,&amp;ant area until moving to
ln 1956 ard was a mem"' RuUand Church olGod
1 also preceded in death

Care or Yo

wsbaD:I, Lemuel
vors InclUde two sons,
~tart.

W. VLi Hue , Co-

; aix sisters, Mra. Mar·
leorlen, Ctwrlestoo, W.
""'Archer, Orchard Lake,
111; Mal')' Dleker- and
an Ml:call, lxlth ol Las
'\oio-; ·lfrL IDu Rol-

Storewide October Sales. Give your home a new
look this fall. Visit our 2nd and 3rd Floor Fur-

~:

l::

IT

:es A LA!r'MA~

+MASON

Your Favorite Kayser Sheer Styles

r.v

Her escort is Earl

Shop ever) departr.1ant in the store cllrine 011

Evergreen. Pb.

check with your Gronge og.
enls at the Neal Ins. Agency,
14 Slate St. Agents for outo,
fire,

MEIGS

SALE

HORSES AND COWS

AL~~=r~:Uee

lr. and Mrs. Oliver
me ceremonies Fri-

~ETIME5

i-'

:;:

I

GALLIA

.·.m:

CALL IACUON J8e.-4f1Sl

m-ms.

RUTLAND, 0.

In Washington, called
bombing and
Haiphong Harbor as a
arm twisting'' to get

.ased

take all tests. The SecoOO&amp;ry
School Councll made up of vari-

t~=~

U .OO SERVlCI: CRAROJ:
W1LL REMOVE YOUR DEAD

~~~udq

before

Altlo, previously, some of the
high schools permittee! students
with good schol.aatic staOOlngs to
skip six weeks tests. Under the
new set\CI, all students are to

·.·

DEAD STOCK

STANDARD

Orbit

for the return..

helcL

:·:
::-

WATER Anytime - Day ar
Night.
Daya-Pb. 388 86541,
Evenings - J. B. or Leo :~ ~:
King 446-41194 or Ronnie Skid- ~: ~
more 446-1756.
W-tf
CERTIFIED electric and gas
welding, mechanl&lt;, body and
fender w&lt;lrk. 12 years exper-

saoos.

~bate

1TREAK~

l:::,.i

'lAll Galloal'

White

dar PracUce
:nd radar was to try
an Apollo 7 Ln much
¥ay one on the moon
k an AWUo mother-

:;;:
Merrill O'Dell, Operator far :-:
Extermllal Termite !lefvloo '''·
10 Belmont Dr,
'J6I If }

ROUTE 1110 at

RUTLAND FURNITURE
'

811-11

KENNETH STEGER'S
WATER DELIVERY SERVICE
Ph. 44~347 .
'1$1 If

FOR

'

There is no fee Cor the course.

J at

'

:JATERFALL
~ COWNSORT

DEWII I 'S PLUMBING
AND IIBATJNO

You11 Alwars Do Better At Rutland
Furniture and Easr Tentls Are Available.

ARNOLD GRATE

Gibbs, driving training inatruct-or in tho Molgs Local Dlstrlc~

10c

LEE'S PLUMBING &amp; REMOJ).
EL!NG, Crown City, 0. Ph.
251&gt;6664.
12'1-11

300 4th Ave., 446-181'1.

742-4211

second session wiU be at 7:30 p.
m. on Tuesday, OcL 22, at the

:~~

30 Inch

-

class will begin &amp;t 7:30 1), m. The

DOLL HOU!e Nursery transpor.
tatlon available, reaoonablo :::
rates also lor shopping ar :::
working mothers, bourly, dally or weekly rates. Pb. 446U .
II II

ELECTRIC

:...-.----

hnts-~tutitttl

b,Y the Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club. The

same locaUon. Those cmn,pleting bd:h sessions will receive
cards. The lrtensl ve driving
training program ls prepared by
the Ohio Slate Patrol.
Instructors Tuesday will ifloo
elude Pomeroy Pollee Chief Jed
Webster, Mrs. Edith Sisson. dis-.
J)atcher tor the Pomeroy departmenti John Mora, mathematks
instructor of the Meigs Local
School Dtstrtct, and WUltam

tampe.rature.

FIVE CEfJTS

Services Offered

Your

30 Inch (u stom Imperio!

SEVERAL innovations t h 1 s

,qy and contfJ!ued

11

material tor the evening Tuesda)'

tary Sehool Safet} Patrol, ::. hown he re with Chief of Polh:e .John Ta)lor and
faculty sp oos;:,rs , Hoy Sprague and .Jotm l!olle, arc 0 tor ): Firq How - Chicr
Taylor, Cn.:l Fife , BiJIJ Tlare us, Rilly Williams, Joey Hubcuslahl, Jim Jus·
t.ice, Jim Wood, Keilh Sheet s, Tomm~' Young, Paul Walker, {I reg 'lllOmas,
John Salla:~:, James Cunningham, Bonald Cia ~' • nay Queen, Ma rk Poling, and
George llalTelt ; Set·ond row - Darn"~) ('ox, Bobby Candee, Ant11ony Heese,

~ ~- We~thcr

tn.

when the tlrst of two sessions on

Alan Eva.'ls, John (Iroth, Jim Niday, Joe O'Dell, A.ndy flout, Glen Woyan, Rog·
ger McClelland, Mike Watson, Jim Musgrove, Billy Schopis and Mike Woodall; T~ 1 ird How - Mr. Holl e, HudolphGordon, D~nni s Mitchell, l{oger Brandebe rry, Mike I::vans, SL· oll Epling, P-1ul Dingess, Tom Valentine, Robert Wood,
swu Cameron, Bert Moshier, Mike Sickels, Edwin Smith, Br uce Jami son,
Charl es Jamison and Mr. Sprague.

•

......

1CIIonlibt wltllllll&gt;thll even!Jw. Low
1&gt;e soo to the low
partly cloudY and

structors will present the study

INTERESTED In 1 Brazilian pen pal?
International Friends, made ..., of hundreds or Brazilian people
or both sexes or aU ages and professions, have formed an international correS(M)Idence club and are anxious to correspond with people or
other countries. The pUJPose, of cOW"se, is to get to know people of
other nations.
Jr Interested, you are to sen:l your name uxt complete addres.,,
sex, occlt)ation, hobbies to Amigos Interaciorw.ir, Cl.ixa Postal30827,
Seo Paulo, BraziL
MEIGS CounUans Interested in ing one or both of the courses,
adult business education may may report to the high school.
still enter classes which began Mrs. James Vennarl is instructthis week at Meigs High Scllool. or.
Typi;.g classes start at 7 p.m.
CONGRATULATIONS to Mr.
and shorthand at 8 Thursday eveand
Mrs. James Fugate who will
ning, Those interested in pw-su-observe their 45th wedding anni ..
versary at their Pomeroy home
Tuesday. Mr. Fugate retired 14
Business Opportunity
years ago from his employment
EXCELLENT buslnm oppor- with ttte Columbus and Soatbern
tunity for husband and wife
Ohio Electric Co.
team . Must have some capl·
tal. Will rinance right party.
THE POMEROY Lions Club is
Call or write Westinghouse seeking your help through contriLaundromat Distributor, 300 butions of discarded eyeglasses.
Troy Sl.. Dayton. 0 . 45404, A two week collection program
area code 513-461-5775.
will get underway on Oct. 21 wltll
237-24 boxes to be placed in lObustness
houses about the county for reSPARE TIME INCOME
ceiving the contributions. The
REF1LLINI} and collecting mo- glasses wlll be sent to ~&lt;New
ney from NEW TYPE high- Eyes for the Needy" for redistriquality coin-operated dispen- bution to those unable to afford
sers in your area . No selling. glaues. N. W. Compton is heal;l.
To qualify you must have car, lng the program on behalf ol the
Lions Club.
references, $600 to $2,900 cash.
Seven to twelve hours weekly
MRS. SHIRLEY Huston has cr~
can net excellent monthly ina
ted
one of the new dbne :uional
come. More run time. For
pictures
to be given for Ute Oct.
personal interview write UNI·
31
Halloween
Carnival of SyraTED DISTRIBUTING COMcuse
PTA.
The
attractive picture
PANY, 7tl1 ID) INVESTMENT
is
displayed
in
the wlnd.ow of the
BLDG .. PITI'SBURGH, PA ..
Davis-Warner Insurance Co.
15222. Include phone number.

.

.eetiJW. w. Va., and Mlos

nltura Department durine our flrniture sale.

..

$hlllel, 1Ddla, IDd 10 .....

Ids _. call at tile - . .
at aQ)' time.

'l

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

SESSION SLATED
l2 Clrde ot tho Htllll
Cburth vi. M'M d t

AUTO, fire. 11fe. 45 State St. :::·.·
Waldo F. BI'OWII, W. B. -:·
Brown. 448-1910,
114 " ·: ··-:-:·:-: :::::::::::::: :.:-:- : :::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::·:::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::::::::&gt;:::::&lt;:::::::::~~:::::::x:::::::::::::::::Y.

,i

-· . ........

·--·~

...,

�.

'

'

-. .
'

-

Sessions
To Begin

~ Times • Sen1iool, SuOOay. October 13, 1%8

••

-

Opportunity
__Business
,._, ........
...
..........
'-··~·-

yean 11110

~-

from

·hi• - 1011J1011l

•

• 11

Weather
oil' and

tllla "'enllll!. Low
:he 501 to the low
partly cloucly and

'

I

~uullay

'

School In Middleport.
Open to lhe public, the two-session course is bei~ sponsored

iints-~tntitttl

by the Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club. The

class will begin at 7:30p.m. The
second aesalon will be at 7:30 p,
m. on Tueaday, Oct. 22, at the
same location. Those ccmpletlng both sessions will receive
cards. 1he Intensive driving
training program II prepared by
the Ohio State Patrol.
Instructors Tuesday wUI Include POO\eroy Police Chief Jed
Webster, Mrs. Edith Sisson. dis-patcher for the Pomeroy depart..
menti John Mora, mathematlcs
instructor ol the Meigs Local
School District, and WWiam

10c

FIVE CEI'ITS

t

gcr McC.

. faculty spons.:.rs, Hoy Sprague and .lol1n Holle, are(l tor): Fir s t llnw - Chief
Taylor, Crt.'~ Fife, Hilly Ban.· us , Billy Williams, Joey Hubcn stahl, .Jim Jus·
tice, Jim Wood, Keith Sheets, Tommy Young, Paul Walker, Gl·cg Thoma:s,
John Sa!laz, James Cunn ingham, Bonald Clay, Ray Queen. Mark Poling, ard
George HaiTelt; Second row - Danny Lox, Bobby Condcc, 1\nthony llet!sc,

berry, M
Scott Car
Cllarle s •

au;

T~ in ·

'

'

.\',

SKM56GB
30 lncfl Custom lmF
Charcomatlc infra-re•
waist-high oven.

Data-Matic cooking ir
ovens.
Chrome-framed contJ

Electric clock with 4·
Sur face work light.
Recessed, lift-~.V top.

l.Jp-a ngle, wood-grain
control panel afl(
Lift-off lower oven
chrome-framed
window.
Lighted m•en interior
Deep~rawn base c
Lifetime porcelain fi
All burners and oven
bottom, guaranll.

'!·'
., '
. V&lt;.

·!

GAS

MODEL

,.,_.,'

---

STARTING -That's Most
Frequent Cold Weather
Motoring Problem
Yet in the Province of Brit Next to the comm on cold,
automobile starting trouble is ish Columbia with mild but
the m ost rrequent winter-timf' wet winters, rate of starting
trouble was 32.2 percent and
m1srry.
According to Champion rate of tune- up purchasE" was
Spark Plug Company, more only 26.8 percent.
Quebec's starting experience
than one out of every fUl:r
motorists will have starting was better t han any U.S. area
trouble this v..:inter . Of those including the Southern States
who have troub le, three out of and the West Coast. Rate of
t&gt;vcry five will experience it starting failure and tune-up
purchase were;
more than once.
Tha t st arting trouble is
Troublf! Pllt('hast1 ruly the No_ I motoring ill i~
."ilorlinl( Tum•-Vp
demonstrat€'d by latest Amer'Yv
ican Automobile Association ~ew England
31.9
22.3
figure s. AAA reported that Midtllt· Allanlil· 21.1
28.7
30.000,000 U.S. motorists called ("l.Y., JJu., ~.J.,
for starting assistance in 1967.
l)pl.)
That was a 20 perce nt increase Soulh Allanli~· 21.0
19,9
over the previous year's total E. North (:f!nlral 21 .0
29.1
In ract, the AAA said, 43 (Ohio, Mirl1.,
percent of all road service calls
Ind., Ill.,
resulted from starting failWi&gt;~I'Un!lin)
ure. This percentage was more t:. ,l;oulh 4:t-ntral 2.1.4
19.4
than double t he rate of flat (K,-., Tt"tm.,
tires and almost triple the inMi .. ~ .• Ala.)
cidence of motorist.s stuck in W. Norlh Cenrrul26. I
24.7
snow or mud .
(Minn., Th.George M . Galster, manager
Hakota .. , Mo..
of Cha.mpion' .o. automotive
Iowa, Kan ... ,
tec hnical services department,
Nf"b.)
says that lack of engine and U1.Su11fl• (Aonlrai23.U
18.7
ignition system maintenance (I.a •• Tt•x ..
is the primary cause of startOkla.)
ing troubles.
20.0
Mnunll•in Shtll"" 2(,.0
Galster quoted a survey con- 1--'~tdfir St•le" 25.0
21.3
ducted by the Missouri Auto A,,·t"rH,re LI.S,
25.2
24.7
Club In St. Louis. The auto M11rilimf'~
31.9
22.7
club studied tests on more t)ut-lll"t'
19.5
43.0
than I ,600 cars run through Onlltriu
33.3
24.3
its diagnostic center, Galster t•ruirie"
33.4
31.3
said . Ignition defects were the Ur. Columbiu 32.2
26.8
most frequently found faults C~tnada ,A,,·t-r. 25.8
34.2
with an average of .94 defects
" It Is obvious," Galster re per car tested
marked, "that motorists who
EtTects of engine condition
live in warm weather areas
on starli ng were shown in a don't feel they need tune-ups.
five-year. 50,000 car study of
Yet the fact that they have
hard starting cond ucted by as much starting trouble as
Champion. This year figures
their cold climate neighbors
revealed that 27c;.. of the nashows they are mistaken."
t ion's motorists experienced
Galster remarked that while
starting trouble.
no one has come up with a
Maintenance, rather than
cure for our leading wlnte1
severity of weather, is the key problem - the cold - there is
to wintertime starting, Galster a cure for the No. 2 ailment.
reported .
Tune-ups do help eliminate
The Champion study found "can't starts.''
that where engine maintenance was neglected Incidence
of starting problems was high
DON'T PUY PEEKABOO
Conve rsely, where mainteAre you a peep-hole peeker?
nance was practiced, the start- This Is a peculiar kind of driv ing trouble rate was low.
er who wHI not bother to aftord
In lhe Province of Quebec himself any more vision than
wilh severe winters, only 19.5 Is barely necessary when Ice
percent of motorists contact- and frost cover windshield and
ed rrported starting problems rear window. Inadequate deRate of pre-winter tune-up frosters, poor windshield wippurchases was 43 percent . ers and lack of a scraper can
Both figures were the best in make the dltTerence between
a safe trip and tragedy.
North America

I,

T~!il lh~

firm

pr~""urr.

I

v-ay one on the moon
~t

~bate

'

\

~ l

ln Washington, called
~&amp;.sed

PAGE THREE - CAR CARE

TIRE TIPS

mu~ler

• Drh·ing at cxee&amp;live
epeeds.
• Faat lume on curvea
and ..,ound cornen.
• Drhing 0\'er eurbl!l,
chuck hole1, other ob ~Jtruc­
tion&amp;.

• "Jack rabbit" starh

a

RUTLAND FU
742·4111

ARNOLD GRATE

''

pinpoint

• Riding on overinftated
or underinflaled lir~t~~.
• Ne1leeting periodic
rotation of all til"e8 indudinc the spare.

~.-..-.. ~

WINNER

-:.
~

.......
·:·

when you trade!

Has "OLD-FAITHFUL" Had It?
,.'{00 NEED AWAIERFALL
THE SUN GOING DOWN SORT
rSOME REP STREAK~ IN

If repairs are becoming a constant source of
expense and inconvenience, then you rnay be
in the market for a new car. Right now you
have a wonderful selection of models from
which to choose.

Car Facts
With close to 3,000,000 passenger cars registered, Los Angeles County leads the nation
in number of cars. Only seven
entire states In the U.S. have
more cars registered than the
L.A. area.

• • •

According to the World
Health Organization, Americans are the safest drivers on
earth. In the U .S ., there were
52 deaths per 100 million vehicle miles traveled . Japan
had the highest toll with 402
deaths per 100 million vehicle
miles.

··:.

::

E LOOHAOO
Already a classic, Eldorado live-s up to it~ distinguisheUnamewithfreshdr:lm!ltl c sty lin~. plus thP
unique handling experience of front -w heel drivin~
prec1sion combir/eci with variahl(· - ratio 1--lO\\l!l' s t ee ring maneu~erability , E:1ch of the eighteen
hand-finished interiors emp ha size Cadillac crah manship.

SEE THE
NEW 1969
MODELS
:·.

Golllpoll•

·:·:

·--,J;.

'

H'ree Customer Parking

.

eComplete Banking Service

·.

SUPERIOR
SERVICE
\

nf"fllnl Mf'fl'kl"ll

rolloo loru';.~

I We seek to maintain

1

1 a fair policy to always 1
1 gi..,e you top allow- 1

PROFESSIONAL
SALES SERVICE
Our salesmen know Cadil-

loc:s and will gi"¥e profes·
sional
service.
You'll
like out quality way of do·
ing business .

1a Shiflet

Karr &amp; Van Zandt Motor Sales

look fo"'ard lo •n &lt;riiJG}'abJe,

Your Authorized Cadillac Dealer
992-5342
·.::·

PONT WORP.'/ BOSS ... 5V5&gt;J

POMEROY

THOUGH I'LL BS RSTI''ING A5
YOUR LOYAl SSCk'F-rARY-YOU
CAN ALWAyS CAL~ MiO AT MY
B£&lt;1/612L'I Hil-LS MAr-.t?IOIJ

·:·::·:·:··

·.;.·.;·

It's The Law

88
...
s.tof4

ldll'lw

wftltuclo.

Only se-veral years ago,
about one-third of the
states outlawed the use of
studded tires on the roads.
As this Issue went to press.
only tour states forbid stu ~­
ded tires - all ot them m
the Southern United States.
They are Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas .
The State of Hawaii has
no statute on the book either allowing or forbidding
studded tires although they
are forbidden In Honolulu .
Many states have statutes

limiting the time
when studded tires
used. To check for
tions in your area,

may be
regulacontact
your state authorities.

It's eommon lmowledge that
radiator antl-!reele Ia vital to
cold weatll•r operation. ·How·
ever, tllere's anotller type of
antl-!ree.. tllat .needS atten-

the

tion Make cenalD .tl1" "WWmm·

BAXTER &amp; MARY AKERS

GALLIPOLIS,. OHIO

lhleid wututr fluid · contalller
Ia' suppiied wttlla solution thai
prevent. tree~IDI. Remind

yOur· sen·lte attendant to

cheek

the supply every time

yoti' itop"for

p.oune.

DON1
YOUR CAR

WAIT!
h Can Cost
You Moneyl

period

GUARD AGAII'IST FREt:ZE

47c

446-1818

I

.;.·.·

)'OU

ll1estern IJnto

I

PEOPLE 5rRAI6HT

· ·~··

Gn YOUR UNICO
PERMANIN1-----DRIVE IN TODAY
WE'RE OPEN 24 HOURS

REDIGRIP
WIDE TREAD
MUD &amp; SNOW
TIRES

. PO'Mt·RIY~

suna ·

TOP VALUE .STAMPS
W.ITI!.~_!.!:, ~!/RC~~~~ . ~~,

s Sunday
al services for Mrs. Al-

let, 75, RD 1, RutlaOO,
rJ dead on arrival at Hoipita! Sunda~· morning, will
Tuesdal-· at 2 p. m. at the
Funeral Home with the
avid Sleets officiating.
w-ill be in the Gravel Hill
ry at Cheshire.
1.s born at Short Creek. W.
May 1:7, 1892, the daughe late Jacob and Josephine
and she had Uved in the
,&amp;ant area until movi~ to
in l9S6 and was a memle Rutlard ChurchoiGod.
1 also preceded in death
IUsboud, LemueL

iG ALDIJG,-

~CASEJ/ ·

,

IDPICKUP
.
'IEC6S • .

A new traction tire that can be fitted with 88 steel
stud ice . grips in tread area. Molded to put more
slotted tread ln contact with the road- for better
tread mileast as well as traction. Slotted tread re·
sists side-slip._,__ provides tnc:tton throughout life of
tread. Has 4·1ill Poly01ter cord ~Joey.

Rldi•Gri, W.T. Tuhlnl lllldl PoiJHIIf 4·PII.
.

e

rly Jotmson, 14, esdous injury when she
.1 the upstair 11 window
()cust &amp;. home tn Mid·
;un&lt;~ay attemooo. Midemergency squadmen
lS Johnson was leaning
~stain window shak·
ag when she apparenther balance. g..e fell
! window and apparent)() a complete somer mdlng on her feeL She
;en to Holzer Hospital
trvation and treatment.

L-----------...J

242W. MAIN

..... c,..........1.
when

)'011 l"an

l
l

l
I
l

TOP
TRADE-IN
ALLOWANCE

•

iAI(ES" A LAI/MA~
TO SETIHESE

FOR COIJSL!t.TATIOIJ!

• Perfom.ance·pro¥Wn so good. we
guarontH then~ 30,000 .. neal

weatho&lt;gn1b aod hat

perforntrd,

1

:·.

1 once for your Cadillac. 1

lroahle-frrf" winter ..... ,...,n nf dri\inl(.

MINE • MILL • TRUCK • FARM

weothor fadol415251~1

Model.
H~re't H bandy chft'k li11t of thinl&amp; to do to 1t1 yuur rar in 11luope
Fnr winff'l', In mOI!IIt rlll'f'll, all d1al'l!l rrquired is • .-in1lc trip to your
f.,.urite !W'rl'irf" outlrt for ~me 1imple pre:~th·e ~ICDIDI~·
t:lip thi10 li•l oul •nd rhn-k it "'ith your lll'rvwe- tKhn•ct•~· With

SET OF 8
RODNEY SUPPLY CO.

• Resist -

Factory traln•d m~c~anlu
·· to care for your Cad•llacuneKc•ll•d serYice whether yours is a '69 oro '59

i------------1

4r. am. Mrs. Oliver
me ceremonies Fri·
unbltn is on the far
Her escort is Earl
Jan Stidham, junior
daughter of Mr, 11111
r. and Mrs. Herman
ICe an.er the football
sts and door prizes.

OOMETIME5 IT

To Own A Cadillad
OUR 3-POINT PLAN:

:;..

CAR-TRUCK-FARM

$5.60

WE MAKE IT EASY

::::
·:·:
.

• Drive-in Window Service

SPARK
PLUG

llf. leiM.Iilcl

7

::

OHIO VALLEY BANK
................... t.a""iOOO.

4&lt;E COOING OliT OF lHE CHIMNft1'1

·.::

It is also a wonderful time to save some
money on the financing. Stop in.

. -,. :.~. ·•• -.·,.:.·.•·....... ... . .. -··· ......... . .. .. ' .. ' .••..••.• ' ••... ' .•.•• ' •••••• • • ,, .-...... ... ..... ... ,. l''·" '• ' ... ,ll~';t, ...~............... ... •,•.•

" '1.--·- .

.
.'

•

• Safety·apP&lt;OYed In all otatft
oequlrinv b..kot oho. mhl

THE FAMILY STORE201 THIRD &amp; GRAPE ST.

'

or

cyl-

trouble euily.
3. ll..ve your automotive
aervh:e .... n perfOl'm a eom·
plete inspeetlon ol the hrakinl •1~tem 1 ineludin&amp; lining11,
drume •nd hydraulic component• •l ka11 e-ery eix mottlhe.

:·:

ment.

o·lt&gt;"• try a hand~-oR' ~top at
uhout 30 mile" an hour. If the
o·ar pull .. lo one 11ide you muy
lune brake problem!!. Thi,. ulllo

muh•nic c.n

and

&lt;·&gt;

and ..panic" fllopl.
• Drlvin&amp; at excH&amp;ive
epeed• on rouah ..walh·
board" road11.
• Ridinc edge
p8'VC•

SAVE DURING FAMILY DAYS!
SAVf DURING
FAMILY DAYSI

of mil!·

;

a WD~~rn;oo when you buy ..

2. In a Oat , Je,·el, opt"ll area
"'·lu•re you are elf'ar of oh~;la·

~&gt;r mptomatir

·.·.·.

·:·

List

Thi" r.alls for innnedialf' al·
lent inn.

may be

bombing

··-:-:··

Wizard "30'' BONDED Brake Shoes

Kli11ned whn!l~ or unequal tire
inflation, KO ton&amp;ider the ..e ht-·
fore you &amp;el too deeply inYolved ;n hrake "ervh:e. A aood

·..·.· ..

practices:

inder.

You11 Always Do Better At Rutland
Furniture and Easy Terms Are Available.

·:

You can increase your
tire ll!e by avoiding these

holdin((

on 1he pedal. If

or the

an ApQllo mother-

lunar orbit betore
T for the return.

Haiphong Harbor as a
arm twisting"' to get
.Jaris negotiations.

hydrauli&lt;- .!ly.-lem

the pe1Jl1( fall" l!:raduully IO·
ward lh~ Hour, you are l~in~
pl"t."!o'IJUrt' in unr nf the wheel
~·ylinder"

Sards,

dar Practice
100 radar was to try
on Apollo 7 In much

)

~~;~:!~~~~~ ~r.:,.

Your Brakes
at leo~~ !!II once a wt't'k by

Whit.e

SUNDAY TIMES· SEN11NEL, OCTOBER 13, 1968

.,,

j

at

I

SUNJJAY TIMES • '
Alan Eva;

temperature.

1

PAGE TWO - CAR CARE
GALLIPOLLS SC IIUOL I' ·\TI/0!. - ~tcmbers of the W1.tshington Ell'mcntary School Safely Patrol, s hown 11cn· wilh Chief of Police .John Ta,~-lor and

oontii)UOd

id toolght with loo-

MIDDLEPORT - Four Instructors wUI ,resent the atudy
malertal for the evening Tuesday
when the ftrst ol two sessions on
defensive driving ls held at the
study hall ol the Meigs High

INTERESTED in~ Brullian pen pal?
Internatiorw.l l"''rieOOs, made "' of hurdreds of Brazillan people
of both sexes o1 allagesandproCessions, have formed an international correspondence club and are anxious to correspond with people of
other countries. The purpose, of course, Is to get to know people of
other natiCIUI.
If interested, you are to semi your name and complete address,
sex, occ~ation. hobbles to Amigos lnteraclonalr. caixa Postal30827,
Sao Paulo, Brazil.
inK one or both of the courses,
MEIGS Countians Interested in
may report to the high s&lt;:hool.
adult business education may
Mrs, Jllmes Venna.rl Is instructstill erter classes which began
this week at Meigs High School or.
Typing classes start at 7 p,m.
CONGRATULATIONS to Mr.
and shorthaOO at 8 Thursday eveand Mrs. James Fugate wl10 will
ning. Those irterested in pursuobsene their 45th wedding ann\..
versary at their Pomeroy home
Tuesday. Mr. Fugate retired 14

,., .. .

..,

.,

$11.15
~1.15

22.35
:14. U

21.55

22.35
23.15

25.01-

Attart,W. VLi Hue, Co; six slsters. Mrs. Mar)oarlen, Ct.r1estoo, W.
me Archer, Orchard Lake,

MaQ Dlekeraon. and
,.. MLcaJl, both of Las
'No~ Mra. lnol Hoi·

lhi

ieoJJqr. W.

VL, llll YIIB
$11U'Iel. iDIII, IIIII 10 ~

WE

..

b.Tu ldail

7.001113 (flis-6.50x13)
.
$1.92
F7s.l417.75xt•lfits·7c3!511141E711-141 2.19
G711-1418.25x14
2.35
11711-W8.55x14
·
2.56
F7B-1517.75x15 (fits 7.35ii51E7B-15J 2;21
G78-1!518.2S.I5
2.36
H78-1518.55xl5
,
2.54
~78-l!jf9.00x).5 (11~. ~15
2.81

vors lnclude two sons,

Ills 11111 call II the - -

FREEl

•
•

' .j&gt;

oil Oil)'~

·'

SESSION SLATED
12 Clrde Gl lllo -

.'

II

----·-

"'

�.

'

'

-. .
'

-

Sessions
To Begin

~ Times • Sen1iool, SuOOay. October 13, 1%8

••

-

Opportunity
__Business
,._, ........
...
..........
'-··~·-

yean 11110

~-

from

·hi• - 1011J1011l

•

• 11

Weather
oil' and

tllla "'enllll!. Low
:he 501 to the low
partly cloucly and

'

I

~uullay

'

School In Middleport.
Open to lhe public, the two-session course is bei~ sponsored

iints-~tntitttl

by the Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club. The

class will begin at 7:30p.m. The
second aesalon will be at 7:30 p,
m. on Tueaday, Oct. 22, at the
same location. Those ccmpletlng both sessions will receive
cards. 1he Intensive driving
training program II prepared by
the Ohio State Patrol.
Instructors Tuesday wUI Include POO\eroy Police Chief Jed
Webster, Mrs. Edith Sisson. dis-patcher for the Pomeroy depart..
menti John Mora, mathematlcs
instructor ol the Meigs Local
School District, and WWiam

10c

FIVE CEI'ITS

t

gcr McC.

. faculty spons.:.rs, Hoy Sprague and .lol1n Holle, are(l tor): Fir s t llnw - Chief
Taylor, Crt.'~ Fife, Hilly Ban.· us , Billy Williams, Joey Hubcn stahl, .Jim Jus·
tice, Jim Wood, Keith Sheets, Tommy Young, Paul Walker, Gl·cg Thoma:s,
John Sa!laz, James Cunn ingham, Bonald Clay, Ray Queen. Mark Poling, ard
George HaiTelt; Second row - Danny Lox, Bobby Condcc, 1\nthony llet!sc,

berry, M
Scott Car
Cllarle s •

au;

T~ in ·

'

'

.\',

SKM56GB
30 lncfl Custom lmF
Charcomatlc infra-re•
waist-high oven.

Data-Matic cooking ir
ovens.
Chrome-framed contJ

Electric clock with 4·
Sur face work light.
Recessed, lift-~.V top.

l.Jp-a ngle, wood-grain
control panel afl(
Lift-off lower oven
chrome-framed
window.
Lighted m•en interior
Deep~rawn base c
Lifetime porcelain fi
All burners and oven
bottom, guaranll.

'!·'
., '
. V&lt;.

·!

GAS

MODEL

,.,_.,'

---

STARTING -That's Most
Frequent Cold Weather
Motoring Problem
Yet in the Province of Brit Next to the comm on cold,
automobile starting trouble is ish Columbia with mild but
the m ost rrequent winter-timf' wet winters, rate of starting
trouble was 32.2 percent and
m1srry.
According to Champion rate of tune- up purchasE" was
Spark Plug Company, more only 26.8 percent.
Quebec's starting experience
than one out of every fUl:r
motorists will have starting was better t han any U.S. area
trouble this v..:inter . Of those including the Southern States
who have troub le, three out of and the West Coast. Rate of
t&gt;vcry five will experience it starting failure and tune-up
purchase were;
more than once.
Tha t st arting trouble is
Troublf! Pllt('hast1 ruly the No_ I motoring ill i~
."ilorlinl( Tum•-Vp
demonstrat€'d by latest Amer'Yv
ican Automobile Association ~ew England
31.9
22.3
figure s. AAA reported that Midtllt· Allanlil· 21.1
28.7
30.000,000 U.S. motorists called ("l.Y., JJu., ~.J.,
for starting assistance in 1967.
l)pl.)
That was a 20 perce nt increase Soulh Allanli~· 21.0
19,9
over the previous year's total E. North (:f!nlral 21 .0
29.1
In ract, the AAA said, 43 (Ohio, Mirl1.,
percent of all road service calls
Ind., Ill.,
resulted from starting failWi&gt;~I'Un!lin)
ure. This percentage was more t:. ,l;oulh 4:t-ntral 2.1.4
19.4
than double t he rate of flat (K,-., Tt"tm.,
tires and almost triple the inMi .. ~ .• Ala.)
cidence of motorist.s stuck in W. Norlh Cenrrul26. I
24.7
snow or mud .
(Minn., Th.George M . Galster, manager
Hakota .. , Mo..
of Cha.mpion' .o. automotive
Iowa, Kan ... ,
tec hnical services department,
Nf"b.)
says that lack of engine and U1.Su11fl• (Aonlrai23.U
18.7
ignition system maintenance (I.a •• Tt•x ..
is the primary cause of startOkla.)
ing troubles.
20.0
Mnunll•in Shtll"" 2(,.0
Galster quoted a survey con- 1--'~tdfir St•le" 25.0
21.3
ducted by the Missouri Auto A,,·t"rH,re LI.S,
25.2
24.7
Club In St. Louis. The auto M11rilimf'~
31.9
22.7
club studied tests on more t)ut-lll"t'
19.5
43.0
than I ,600 cars run through Onlltriu
33.3
24.3
its diagnostic center, Galster t•ruirie"
33.4
31.3
said . Ignition defects were the Ur. Columbiu 32.2
26.8
most frequently found faults C~tnada ,A,,·t-r. 25.8
34.2
with an average of .94 defects
" It Is obvious," Galster re per car tested
marked, "that motorists who
EtTects of engine condition
live in warm weather areas
on starli ng were shown in a don't feel they need tune-ups.
five-year. 50,000 car study of
Yet the fact that they have
hard starting cond ucted by as much starting trouble as
Champion. This year figures
their cold climate neighbors
revealed that 27c;.. of the nashows they are mistaken."
t ion's motorists experienced
Galster remarked that while
starting trouble.
no one has come up with a
Maintenance, rather than
cure for our leading wlnte1
severity of weather, is the key problem - the cold - there is
to wintertime starting, Galster a cure for the No. 2 ailment.
reported .
Tune-ups do help eliminate
The Champion study found "can't starts.''
that where engine maintenance was neglected Incidence
of starting problems was high
DON'T PUY PEEKABOO
Conve rsely, where mainteAre you a peep-hole peeker?
nance was practiced, the start- This Is a peculiar kind of driv ing trouble rate was low.
er who wHI not bother to aftord
In lhe Province of Quebec himself any more vision than
wilh severe winters, only 19.5 Is barely necessary when Ice
percent of motorists contact- and frost cover windshield and
ed rrported starting problems rear window. Inadequate deRate of pre-winter tune-up frosters, poor windshield wippurchases was 43 percent . ers and lack of a scraper can
Both figures were the best in make the dltTerence between
a safe trip and tragedy.
North America

I,

T~!il lh~

firm

pr~""urr.

I

v-ay one on the moon
~t

~bate

'

\

~ l

ln Washington, called
~&amp;.sed

PAGE THREE - CAR CARE

TIRE TIPS

mu~ler

• Drh·ing at cxee&amp;live
epeeds.
• Faat lume on curvea
and ..,ound cornen.
• Drhing 0\'er eurbl!l,
chuck hole1, other ob ~Jtruc­
tion&amp;.

• "Jack rabbit" starh

a

RUTLAND FU
742·4111

ARNOLD GRATE

''

pinpoint

• Riding on overinftated
or underinflaled lir~t~~.
• Ne1leeting periodic
rotation of all til"e8 indudinc the spare.

~.-..-.. ~

WINNER

-:.
~

.......
·:·

when you trade!

Has "OLD-FAITHFUL" Had It?
,.'{00 NEED AWAIERFALL
THE SUN GOING DOWN SORT
rSOME REP STREAK~ IN

If repairs are becoming a constant source of
expense and inconvenience, then you rnay be
in the market for a new car. Right now you
have a wonderful selection of models from
which to choose.

Car Facts
With close to 3,000,000 passenger cars registered, Los Angeles County leads the nation
in number of cars. Only seven
entire states In the U.S. have
more cars registered than the
L.A. area.

• • •

According to the World
Health Organization, Americans are the safest drivers on
earth. In the U .S ., there were
52 deaths per 100 million vehicle miles traveled . Japan
had the highest toll with 402
deaths per 100 million vehicle
miles.

··:.

::

E LOOHAOO
Already a classic, Eldorado live-s up to it~ distinguisheUnamewithfreshdr:lm!ltl c sty lin~. plus thP
unique handling experience of front -w heel drivin~
prec1sion combir/eci with variahl(· - ratio 1--lO\\l!l' s t ee ring maneu~erability , E:1ch of the eighteen
hand-finished interiors emp ha size Cadillac crah manship.

SEE THE
NEW 1969
MODELS
:·.

Golllpoll•

·:·:

·--,J;.

'

H'ree Customer Parking

.

eComplete Banking Service

·.

SUPERIOR
SERVICE
\

nf"fllnl Mf'fl'kl"ll

rolloo loru';.~

I We seek to maintain

1

1 a fair policy to always 1
1 gi..,e you top allow- 1

PROFESSIONAL
SALES SERVICE
Our salesmen know Cadil-

loc:s and will gi"¥e profes·
sional
service.
You'll
like out quality way of do·
ing business .

1a Shiflet

Karr &amp; Van Zandt Motor Sales

look fo"'ard lo •n &lt;riiJG}'abJe,

Your Authorized Cadillac Dealer
992-5342
·.::·

PONT WORP.'/ BOSS ... 5V5&gt;J

POMEROY

THOUGH I'LL BS RSTI''ING A5
YOUR LOYAl SSCk'F-rARY-YOU
CAN ALWAyS CAL~ MiO AT MY
B£&lt;1/612L'I Hil-LS MAr-.t?IOIJ

·:·::·:·:··

·.;.·.;·

It's The Law

88
...
s.tof4

ldll'lw

wftltuclo.

Only se-veral years ago,
about one-third of the
states outlawed the use of
studded tires on the roads.
As this Issue went to press.
only tour states forbid stu ~­
ded tires - all ot them m
the Southern United States.
They are Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas .
The State of Hawaii has
no statute on the book either allowing or forbidding
studded tires although they
are forbidden In Honolulu .
Many states have statutes

limiting the time
when studded tires
used. To check for
tions in your area,

may be
regulacontact
your state authorities.

It's eommon lmowledge that
radiator antl-!reele Ia vital to
cold weatll•r operation. ·How·
ever, tllere's anotller type of
antl-!ree.. tllat .needS atten-

the

tion Make cenalD .tl1" "WWmm·

BAXTER &amp; MARY AKERS

GALLIPOLIS,. OHIO

lhleid wututr fluid · contalller
Ia' suppiied wttlla solution thai
prevent. tree~IDI. Remind

yOur· sen·lte attendant to

cheek

the supply every time

yoti' itop"for

p.oune.

DON1
YOUR CAR

WAIT!
h Can Cost
You Moneyl

period

GUARD AGAII'IST FREt:ZE

47c

446-1818

I

.;.·.·

)'OU

ll1estern IJnto

I

PEOPLE 5rRAI6HT

· ·~··

Gn YOUR UNICO
PERMANIN1-----DRIVE IN TODAY
WE'RE OPEN 24 HOURS

REDIGRIP
WIDE TREAD
MUD &amp; SNOW
TIRES

. PO'Mt·RIY~

suna ·

TOP VALUE .STAMPS
W.ITI!.~_!.!:, ~!/RC~~~~ . ~~,

s Sunday
al services for Mrs. Al-

let, 75, RD 1, RutlaOO,
rJ dead on arrival at Hoipita! Sunda~· morning, will
Tuesdal-· at 2 p. m. at the
Funeral Home with the
avid Sleets officiating.
w-ill be in the Gravel Hill
ry at Cheshire.
1.s born at Short Creek. W.
May 1:7, 1892, the daughe late Jacob and Josephine
and she had Uved in the
,&amp;ant area until movi~ to
in l9S6 and was a memle Rutlard ChurchoiGod.
1 also preceded in death
IUsboud, LemueL

iG ALDIJG,-

~CASEJ/ ·

,

IDPICKUP
.
'IEC6S • .

A new traction tire that can be fitted with 88 steel
stud ice . grips in tread area. Molded to put more
slotted tread ln contact with the road- for better
tread mileast as well as traction. Slotted tread re·
sists side-slip._,__ provides tnc:tton throughout life of
tread. Has 4·1ill Poly01ter cord ~Joey.

Rldi•Gri, W.T. Tuhlnl lllldl PoiJHIIf 4·PII.
.

e

rly Jotmson, 14, esdous injury when she
.1 the upstair 11 window
()cust &amp;. home tn Mid·
;un&lt;~ay attemooo. Midemergency squadmen
lS Johnson was leaning
~stain window shak·
ag when she apparenther balance. g..e fell
! window and apparent)() a complete somer mdlng on her feeL She
;en to Holzer Hospital
trvation and treatment.

L-----------...J

242W. MAIN

..... c,..........1.
when

)'011 l"an

l
l

l
I
l

TOP
TRADE-IN
ALLOWANCE

•

iAI(ES" A LAI/MA~
TO SETIHESE

FOR COIJSL!t.TATIOIJ!

• Perfom.ance·pro¥Wn so good. we
guarontH then~ 30,000 .. neal

weatho&lt;gn1b aod hat

perforntrd,

1

:·.

1 once for your Cadillac. 1

lroahle-frrf" winter ..... ,...,n nf dri\inl(.

MINE • MILL • TRUCK • FARM

weothor fadol415251~1

Model.
H~re't H bandy chft'k li11t of thinl&amp; to do to 1t1 yuur rar in 11luope
Fnr winff'l', In mOI!IIt rlll'f'll, all d1al'l!l rrquired is • .-in1lc trip to your
f.,.urite !W'rl'irf" outlrt for ~me 1imple pre:~th·e ~ICDIDI~·
t:lip thi10 li•l oul •nd rhn-k it "'ith your lll'rvwe- tKhn•ct•~· With

SET OF 8
RODNEY SUPPLY CO.

• Resist -

Factory traln•d m~c~anlu
·· to care for your Cad•llacuneKc•ll•d serYice whether yours is a '69 oro '59

i------------1

4r. am. Mrs. Oliver
me ceremonies Fri·
unbltn is on the far
Her escort is Earl
Jan Stidham, junior
daughter of Mr, 11111
r. and Mrs. Herman
ICe an.er the football
sts and door prizes.

OOMETIME5 IT

To Own A Cadillad
OUR 3-POINT PLAN:

:;..

CAR-TRUCK-FARM

$5.60

WE MAKE IT EASY

::::
·:·:
.

• Drive-in Window Service

SPARK
PLUG

llf. leiM.Iilcl

7

::

OHIO VALLEY BANK
................... t.a""iOOO.

4&lt;E COOING OliT OF lHE CHIMNft1'1

·.::

It is also a wonderful time to save some
money on the financing. Stop in.

. -,. :.~. ·•• -.·,.:.·.•·....... ... . .. -··· ......... . .. .. ' .. ' .••..••.• ' ••... ' .•.•• ' •••••• • • ,, .-...... ... ..... ... ,. l''·" '• ' ... ,ll~';t, ...~............... ... •,•.•

" '1.--·- .

.
.'

•

• Safety·apP&lt;OYed In all otatft
oequlrinv b..kot oho. mhl

THE FAMILY STORE201 THIRD &amp; GRAPE ST.

'

or

cyl-

trouble euily.
3. ll..ve your automotive
aervh:e .... n perfOl'm a eom·
plete inspeetlon ol the hrakinl •1~tem 1 ineludin&amp; lining11,
drume •nd hydraulic component• •l ka11 e-ery eix mottlhe.

:·:

ment.

o·lt&gt;"• try a hand~-oR' ~top at
uhout 30 mile" an hour. If the
o·ar pull .. lo one 11ide you muy
lune brake problem!!. Thi,. ulllo

muh•nic c.n

and

&lt;·&gt;

and ..panic" fllopl.
• Drlvin&amp; at excH&amp;ive
epeed• on rouah ..walh·
board" road11.
• Ridinc edge
p8'VC•

SAVE DURING FAMILY DAYS!
SAVf DURING
FAMILY DAYSI

of mil!·

;

a WD~~rn;oo when you buy ..

2. In a Oat , Je,·el, opt"ll area
"'·lu•re you are elf'ar of oh~;la·

~&gt;r mptomatir

·.·.·.

·:·

List

Thi" r.alls for innnedialf' al·
lent inn.

may be

bombing

··-:-:··

Wizard "30'' BONDED Brake Shoes

Kli11ned whn!l~ or unequal tire
inflation, KO ton&amp;ider the ..e ht-·
fore you &amp;el too deeply inYolved ;n hrake "ervh:e. A aood

·..·.· ..

practices:

inder.

You11 Always Do Better At Rutland
Furniture and Easy Terms Are Available.

·:

You can increase your
tire ll!e by avoiding these

holdin((

on 1he pedal. If

or the

an ApQllo mother-

lunar orbit betore
T for the return.

Haiphong Harbor as a
arm twisting"' to get
.Jaris negotiations.

hydrauli&lt;- .!ly.-lem

the pe1Jl1( fall" l!:raduully IO·
ward lh~ Hour, you are l~in~
pl"t."!o'IJUrt' in unr nf the wheel
~·ylinder"

Sards,

dar Practice
100 radar was to try
on Apollo 7 In much

)

~~;~:!~~~~~ ~r.:,.

Your Brakes
at leo~~ !!II once a wt't'k by

Whit.e

SUNDAY TIMES· SEN11NEL, OCTOBER 13, 1968

.,,

j

at

I

SUNJJAY TIMES • '
Alan Eva;

temperature.

1

PAGE TWO - CAR CARE
GALLIPOLLS SC IIUOL I' ·\TI/0!. - ~tcmbers of the W1.tshington Ell'mcntary School Safely Patrol, s hown 11cn· wilh Chief of Police .John Ta,~-lor and

oontii)UOd

id toolght with loo-

MIDDLEPORT - Four Instructors wUI ,resent the atudy
malertal for the evening Tuesday
when the ftrst ol two sessions on
defensive driving ls held at the
study hall ol the Meigs High

INTERESTED in~ Brullian pen pal?
Internatiorw.l l"''rieOOs, made "' of hurdreds of Brazillan people
of both sexes o1 allagesandproCessions, have formed an international correspondence club and are anxious to correspond with people of
other countries. The purpose, of course, Is to get to know people of
other natiCIUI.
If interested, you are to semi your name and complete address,
sex, occ~ation. hobbles to Amigos lnteraclonalr. caixa Postal30827,
Sao Paulo, Brazil.
inK one or both of the courses,
MEIGS Countians Interested in
may report to the high s&lt;:hool.
adult business education may
Mrs, Jllmes Venna.rl Is instructstill erter classes which began
this week at Meigs High School or.
Typing classes start at 7 p,m.
CONGRATULATIONS to Mr.
and shorthaOO at 8 Thursday eveand Mrs. James Fugate wl10 will
ning. Those irterested in pursuobsene their 45th wedding ann\..
versary at their Pomeroy home
Tuesday. Mr. Fugate retired 14

,., .. .

..,

.,

$11.15
~1.15

22.35
:14. U

21.55

22.35
23.15

25.01-

Attart,W. VLi Hue, Co; six slsters. Mrs. Mar)oarlen, Ct.r1estoo, W.
me Archer, Orchard Lake,

MaQ Dlekeraon. and
,.. MLcaJl, both of Las
'No~ Mra. lnol Hoi·

lhi

ieoJJqr. W.

VL, llll YIIB
$11U'Iel. iDIII, IIIII 10 ~

WE

..

b.Tu ldail

7.001113 (flis-6.50x13)
.
$1.92
F7s.l417.75xt•lfits·7c3!511141E711-141 2.19
G711-1418.25x14
2.35
11711-W8.55x14
·
2.56
F7B-1517.75x15 (fits 7.35ii51E7B-15J 2;21
G78-1!518.2S.I5
2.36
H78-1518.55xl5
,
2.54
~78-l!jf9.00x).5 (11~. ~15
2.81

vors lnclude two sons,

Ills 11111 call II the - -

FREEl

•
•

' .j&gt;

oil Oil)'~

·'

SESSION SLATED
12 Clrde Gl lllo -

.'

II

----·-

"'

�Sessions
To Begin

...

I

I

.'

I

. ~uullny

nrst of two sessions on

imts-~tutiutl

sian coune is being sponsored
INTERESTED in a Brazilian pen pal?
International FrieOOs, made up of huMreds of Brazilian people by the Middleport Business and
of both sexes of all ages and professions, have formed an lnternation. Profes.slonal Women'! Club. The
11 correspondence club and are anxious to correspond with people of class will begin at 7:30p.m. The
other countries. The purpose, of course, is ffl get to know people of 11econd session wlll be at 7:30 p.
If interested, you are to send your name and complete address,
sex, occ~alion, hobbies to Amlgos Interaclonair, C8ixa Postal 30827,

sao Paulo, Brazil
MEIGS Countians Interested In
adult business education may
still enter classes which began
this week at Meigs High School,
Typing classes start at 7 p.m.

lng one ar both of the courses,

may report to the high school.
Mrs. James Vennarl Is instruct-

or.

CONGRATULATIONS to Mr.
and sf10rlhand at 8 Thursday eve-and Mrs. James Fugate who will
ning, Those interested in pursuobserve their 45th wedding anni·

versary at their Pomeroy home

Busin~ss Opportunity

ii'VI""'r,T 1 WtM" ' lu,ttl....e

~

m. on Tuesday, Oct. 22, at lhe
same location. Those c&lt;JIIQ)Ieting both sessions will recel ve
cards. The intensive drivlng
training program Is prepared by
lhe Ohio Slate PolrOI.
instructors Tuesday will include Pomeroy Police Chief Jed
Webster, Mrs. Edith Sisson, dis--

\lcmbers of the W•1sh ingt on Eleme n-

Alan F.vao

tary School Safct)' Patrol, shown hen• with Chief of Polin J ohn Taj lor and
faculty spoosun, Hoy Sprague and .Jolm l!olle, are O tor): Fir st f{uw - ('hi cr
Taylor, Gr~!l Fife, Bill_\ Barc u ~. lli li J' Williams, Joe} Hubcustahl, .lim Justice, Jim Wood, Keith Sheet'-, Tomml Young, 1-laul Walker, t; rcg Thoma s,
John Sa!laz, James l"unningl•am, ll:ona ld Clay, Ray Queen, 1\la1-h Poling, and

gcr McCj
a ll; T~il"C'
l&gt;t:rry, M:'
Scoll Cal

George Ha rrel l; Second row -

nannJ Cox, ilobby Condee,

A n U •on.~

CAR CARE

PAGE FOt'R -

Oh, Say Can You See

Hee se ,

-

SKM56CB
30 In c h Custom lmf

Charcomalic infra-n.."

wai st-high oven.
Data-Mali c cooking ir

. ..

I

GAS
.·.

••• Straight
CHEVY

ovens.
Ct•romc-fra mcd cont1
Electric dock with 4
Surface worh light.
Recessed, lift-up top.
Up-angle, wood-grain
control panel a••
Lift-off lower oven
chrome-framed
window.
Lighted oven interior
Deep-drawn base C'
LiCetime porcelain fi
All burners and o\'en
bottom, guaran(l

MODEL

Yc;&gt;U know your lights art&gt; not
on high beam, then your headlights need attention.

ROTATE TIRES
Tires should be rotated and
run In different wheel pos 1tlons in accordance with crtr
manufacturer's recommend ations, or every 5,000 miles, to
equalize wear and thereby in crease mUeage, handling and
riding comfort. Also, says the
Rubber Manufacturers As.-:ociaLlon, re-check lnftation af ter rotation to get proper fron t
and rear pressure relationship

Badger BaiUng
Badgers were once used for

a cruel sport called "badger
baiting." They were placed m

barrels, then made to fight
dogs that were pushed in to
drag them into the open. Th1 s
practice led to the expression
"to badger," meanin g to
tease.

NEVER BEFORE
IT THESE LOI

The Winning "Slate" for
Great O:tevy Performance

"
V Chevy Tune VStarting
O.eck

t/Chevy Lube v/Service Brakes
VAlign WheelsVCooling ~rvice

,/
I

'

-- - ~

-----------------------Get the jump on

----

~m
I at

White Sands,

an AWllo mother-

to;

lunar orbit before
I for Ute return.

~bate

I

\

•'• ........j,,.

Tue';'"'Y· Mr, F~te r~~r,.,S,H ,,, ~il&gt;ll"';~tl,ow ~· lulnact-

Unltke the myopic millionaire u·ho solved his driving visibility problems by installing
prescription windshields, most
Americans have to be content
with more routine means to
see- whe-re they're going·.
Fortunately, you don't have
to bf' a mUitonaire or even
close to it to maintain maxi mum good visibility in your
car. Yet It's as vital to safe
operation as sound brakes and
tires .
Chances are every time you
stop for gas. the attendant
cleans your glas::;. But he sel_.\ dirly wind~&amp;liit"ld t·Hn lead loa potenliMlllafely bladr11. Al~;o, l•i .. windllhif'ld wuher IIYIIIem iA not
dom If ever cleans It from the
IMzard. Thi11 n10tori~!~l i11 O\'erdue for nf'w wipf'r -.·orkin~ whid1 ('lllll'le" eJ.;~•f'tn•il'e IIIN&gt;Mii.in~~:.
inside . Condensed moist ure
and tobacco film cling to glass
sion on the wiper arms check- it is easy to check the vartou5
areas. cutting down visibility, bilit y ls worn wiper blades
ed. Too little tension makes lights on your car. Burnt out
especlally at night .
Streaking on the windshield Is
\\o1pers
inefl'ecttve and the arms bulbs are easy to spot. HowAlso. evaporation of plastic a sign that the blades need reever, headlights may be out of
may
need
replacement.
softeners. used in vinyl uphol- placement. Also have the tenalignment without the motorNaturally,
a
co!lBtantly
high
stery, collects on the interior
ist realizing the tact.
level
of
wlndshleld
washer
glass .
Signed Charter
One sign that your headftuld
is
a
must.
Remind
your
To eliminate these hazards,
lights may be out of line is
Edward
R.
Stettinius,
then
attendant
to
check
this
when
wash t he inside of the glass
having oncoming motorists
area with a window-cleaning U .S. secretary of state, signed he checks your oil .
Luckily for safe operation, nash t heir brights at you . lf
the United Nations charter
solvent. at. regular Intervals.
for the United States . Former
Another barrier to good visi- President Harry Truman witnessed the signing.

C harl es~

1oc

FIVE CENTS

I

11U'• qo· - ·11!·-~ilt . jjil ~;lhi l~.,.:i:Wit~'tlf;,tpi.t,l'

and be Seen? Better Check!

&lt;II' ll!ld conii!Jied
1d toolaht wltb !10-

dar Practice
tOO radar was to try
on Apollo 1 in much
va,y one on the moon

In Washington, called
oased bombing and
Haiphong Harbor as a
arm twlating'' to get

SUNDAY TIMES- SENTINEL, OCTOBER 13, 1968

PAGE F1VE - CAR CARE
GALLIPtlLIS SUIOOL PATHP!. -

Weather

11

j

patcher for the Pomeroy departrnentj John Mora, mathematics
instructor of the Meigs Local
School District, and William

SUNDAY TIMES- SENTINEL, OCTOBER 13, !968

•

lie sua 1o !he low
partly cl~ and
'I temperature.

defensive driving Is held at the
study hall of the Meigs High
School In Middleport.
Open to the public, thetwo-ses·

other nations.

.....

thia evening. Low

MIDDLEPORT - Four !.,.
structors will present the study
material for the evening Tuesda,y
when tile

.....

..,

~aris

'Can 't Get Started 'Your Tune?Here 'sHow to Change It
snap. This should include the
electrical and ignition systems
plus the carburetor and choke .
Assuming your car Is in A- 1
condition, what Is the best way
to be sure your cold engine will
start when you want It to?
There are several things you
can do t.o minimize the effects
of extreme cold, according to
the service engineers of Champion Spark Plug Company.
To be sure maximum current Is available for the task
of starting, turn oft lights and
accessories . On newer cars all
accessories except lights will
cut off when the starter Is en-

Most automotive engineers
and mechanics agree there is
no pat formu la for getting a
car started . From the time It
comes out of the factory every
engine ts different and cars
become Increasingly different
as they grow older
However, there are several
key things you can do, or not
do, as the case may be, to insure dependable starting in
even the coldest weather.
At the top of the Ust Is a
checkup of the condition of
your car; make sure it is In
good shape before you are taken by surprise by a sudden cold

I.~SPEC.TION

MU{J~ler
1\Teglect'
1 l4

gag ed, but headlamps do draw
a lot of current and can make
the difference between a start
and a no-start.
Do not pump your accel erator. Most carburetors are
built In such a way that pump Ing the accelerator sends a
substantial spray of raw gasoline into the engine for better
acceleration. This is fine when
the engine is running, but It
tends to ftood a cold engine
that has not been started.
To correct Hooding, hold the
accelerator pedal to the ftoor
!do not continue to pump itJ

and turn t he englne with the
starter in 5-second bursts. Do
not allow t he starter to grind
away too long as this can overheat the starter motor to the
point of damage and Is likely
to run the battery down. lf
there ls time to wait, It's a good
idea to allow the engine to
sit for 5 or 10 minutes before
again attempting to start.
A 75 or 100 watt bulb burntnt; under the hood on a cold
night will help to keep the
temperature of the battery
high enough for a good kick
when you need it. A dip sUck
heater, which plugs into house

regularly tor tread wear and
cuts or other damage. Removtng naUs, small stones or bits
ot glass embedded ln the tread
will help prevent fiats or costly tire damage which can lead

;:;:.~::r;:::,•:•:·/·"·.~.·~."

.... . ..... ~4?.·

current and Is immersed
through the dip stick hole Into the crankcase oil , helps keep
the oil warm enough ror quick
turnover after a cold night.
If yours is a stubborn car,
and your solution is to send an
SOS to your servic e man, be
sure you go a step beyond
merely ..::etting t.he car started.
Give him a chance to find out
what caused the problem In
the first place. This will involve a trip to his shop for
proper engine diagnosis and
necessary se rvice work, but it
will prevent your having the
same trouble again

••

'
:.

.~"1

Good l1lea to Keep Wimlow Op&lt;'n Sliuhth.

ALL TOO MANY!
Approximately 40 mllllon
cars are being driven with de fectlve Ignition systems and
worn spark plugs, according to
a survey which involved 174
cttJes across the nation.

Carbon monoxide is odorless.
but whenever you smell ex haust fum es you can assume
carbon monoxide is present. It
Is poisonou.s and sometimes
deadly when confined in places

· (·· ·

· ·. ··

:-::::
·.···

..'IOU NEED A klATERFALL
THE SUN GOING DOWN SORT
rSOME REO STREAK~ I

"'
your exha ust system is in gootl
cond ition . This i:::i especia lly
Important in wint e r when
driving with wmdows closed .
In any case. It's a good idea to
open your windows s light.ly

t;E COWNG OUT OF lHE

~~Afn~e,.O~Uf~ to ta._n_u_re_.___________________________________________ll_k_e_t_h_•_r_•_m_n_y_•_•_r_._M_•_k_e_•_"_r_•__w_h_•_n_d_r_lv_l_•_g_i_"_~~-·i_n_t•_'_·_
One of the most common
forms of suicide Is t he inhaling
of car exhaust fumes In a
closed garage. A very effectiv e
killer. one saucepanful of pure
carbon monoxide is enough to
put Its viclim lo sleep forever
A great deal less than thal
in a closed car will bring about
headache, nausea and drowsi ness; reason enough to keep
the exhaust system good and
tight.
How do you know if your car
is exhaust-safe?
You can't tell much from
sniffing because carbon mon oxide is odorless.
There's no mistaking the
sound of a blown muffler or
leaking exhaust pipe, of course.
First a rumble and t hen a roar,
the noise is your signal that
you have waited too long to
have the system checked .
The best way to be sure
about the condition of your
car's exhaust system Is to han
it examined by a competent
serviceman while the car is on
a lift. His trained eye can spot
the pinholes and ather sig ns
of deterioration which are the
tipoff that it's time to replace.
rr your car has not had a
new muf'fier in t he past two
years, you can expect to replace it soon. Life expectancy
runs between two and th ree
yean;.

••••••••

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

PAYS

Tires should be Inspected

l

negotiatioos.

Mlli=£/1

r·r-----------~~~

Going BIG
for 1969

.tr. and Mrs. OUver
me ceremonies Friunblin is on the far
Her eacort is Earl
lan Stidham, junior
daughter of 1\lr. ard
r. and Mrs. Herman
•ce after the footblll
ats and door prlzes.

l•

SOMETIMES IT

TAKES" A LA'IMAt.l
TO SETIHESE
PEOPlE 5rRAIGHT

rly Johnson, 14, eslrlous injury when she
.1 the upstairs window
acust St. home in Mid~

afternoon. Mld-

emer gency SCfllldmen
J&amp; Johnson was leaning
IIPSI&amp;iro wi.OOw shak·

FOitD
LTD 2- 0H HARDTOP

when ehe a_warenther balance. !'lie fell
! window and apparent-

1g

)(} a complete somer .nd41"g on her feeL 3le
•en tD Holzer Hospital

1rvatlon. and treatment.
:::;:;:;:;;;:;.;:;.;.;::'-);:·:·:·:·:·:·::::;:;.;::.... ::·

WE ARE FEATURING

1a Shiflet

The Big-Big One

WINTER DRIVING TROUBLES

[Lu[IDo

DO~T WC'RN BOSS .. ENEN
THOUG H lLL ~E R£0TIIi'I~G AS
YOJR LOYAL Sfa?ErAi&lt;Y-YOlJ

(.AN ALWAYS CALL..~E AT MY
/381181&lt;!LY HILL-S MAI610f.J
FOR COIJSULTATIOioJ!

WIDER STANCE ... LONGER WHEELBASE ... GREATER
LUXURY ...THE GREATEST CAR FOR ANY ROAD .• .

s Sunday
11 services Cor Mrs. Ale
let, 75, fW 1, Rutland,
' dead on arrival at Holpltal Sunda;y morning, will
Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the

Funeral Home with the
avid 9leet.s oO"iciating.
will be in the Gravel Hill

So badly delPrinrlllt·d lh•t it r..n
ol a nu)\'ina: c_·ur, thio~ mulftc-r
pu,.t'A a d•n•er 10 ill former ownf'r. A defecti,.·e muller t•un leak
lelhul c•rbon manolll:ide inlo thcpa~~o..en~:er compartment.

BRING YOUR CAR IN FOR OUR COMPLETE

GUARDIAN MAINTENANCE

...

;,vp•d. .,

'·'':_}
__, ...

"""
" "'
~'-'

RUT
742-4211

Whell you need new ttres, tt
IJ recommended theY be replaeed by the oome siZe, or approved options, recommended

~:4-HOUR

,.:~~~

111 tbe automobile manufac-

·yowfiNa
'""
."'
: .-rw

turer, uever bJ It IJI18]ler siZe.
New ttres ahould be broken In
bJ !lmiiiD&amp; your _.s to eo
mph lor the 11rat
drlolnl·

~~.·- w·

---------------SERY~(E

NDFU

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

ARNOLD GRATE

YOUR CHEVY DEALER

992-2126

-

POMEROY

/

e late Jacob and Josephine

and she had Uved in lhe
.sant area WltU movire to

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO.
606-E. MAIN ST .

992-2094

POIEROY.O.

Do

miles of

The war known as the
French and Indian War in
America was a prelude to and
part of the war known In Eu·
rope as the Seven Years' War.

The great majoritY ol
apouges live onlj' ln the sea,

but one !ami y of horny
1 pouges Is exclusively fresh

'\'tier.

ln 1956 and waa a mem-

FORD LTD 4-DR SEDAN

REPLAaNG TIRES

--------------------------·
You11 Always Do Better At Rutland
Furniture and Easy Terms Are Available.

ry at Cheshire.
&amp;sbornatShortCreek. W.
May 27, 1892, the daugh-

'Ml RutYII:I Oturcb ofGod.

also preceded tn death
tlJ,at.nd, LemueL
voca Lnclude two sons,

J

Sink Into
its Luxury-Drive
It a while-then
decide!
·BRING YOUR CAR BACK

YOU WON'T BELIEVE OUR PRICE I BUT IT'S TRUE I
SALESMEN-- CEWARD CALVERT
CLIFF PHILLIPS- EDDIE FIFE- DAN THOMPSON
YOU ALWAYS PAY LESS AT

KEITH GO
FO .

HOlE TQ ~E ·• "" , .

SERVICED·

.etart, W. VL; Hue, C~
i six ahd:ers 1 MrL Marlearlen, Clarlestoo. W.
... Archer. Of&lt;honl Lll&lt;e,
Ill; Mary Dloker100, and
J!lll Me~ llotb Q( LIS

••

...

u.r._ -

RolMill
lhlllet, - . . ,.........

E

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

' S. )dAVE.

:W·~

)e,Jh. .

w. va.. w

L

Ill• 11111 Clll at !he luaortat IIIII' lime.

•

•

attbl·· · -i

�Sessions
To Begin

...

I

I

.'

I

. ~uullny

nrst of two sessions on

imts-~tutiutl

sian coune is being sponsored
INTERESTED in a Brazilian pen pal?
International FrieOOs, made up of huMreds of Brazilian people by the Middleport Business and
of both sexes of all ages and professions, have formed an lnternation. Profes.slonal Women'! Club. The
11 correspondence club and are anxious to correspond with people of class will begin at 7:30p.m. The
other countries. The purpose, of course, is ffl get to know people of 11econd session wlll be at 7:30 p.
If interested, you are to send your name and complete address,
sex, occ~alion, hobbies to Amlgos Interaclonair, C8ixa Postal 30827,

sao Paulo, Brazil
MEIGS Countians Interested In
adult business education may
still enter classes which began
this week at Meigs High School,
Typing classes start at 7 p.m.

lng one ar both of the courses,

may report to the high school.
Mrs. James Vennarl Is instruct-

or.

CONGRATULATIONS to Mr.
and sf10rlhand at 8 Thursday eve-and Mrs. James Fugate who will
ning, Those interested in pursuobserve their 45th wedding anni·

versary at their Pomeroy home

Busin~ss Opportunity

ii'VI""'r,T 1 WtM" ' lu,ttl....e

~

m. on Tuesday, Oct. 22, at lhe
same location. Those c&lt;JIIQ)Ieting both sessions will recel ve
cards. The intensive drivlng
training program Is prepared by
lhe Ohio Slate PolrOI.
instructors Tuesday will include Pomeroy Police Chief Jed
Webster, Mrs. Edith Sisson, dis--

\lcmbers of the W•1sh ingt on Eleme n-

Alan F.vao

tary School Safct)' Patrol, shown hen• with Chief of Polin J ohn Taj lor and
faculty spoosun, Hoy Sprague and .Jolm l!olle, are O tor): Fir st f{uw - ('hi cr
Taylor, Gr~!l Fife, Bill_\ Barc u ~. lli li J' Williams, Joe} Hubcustahl, .lim Justice, Jim Wood, Keith Sheet'-, Tomml Young, 1-laul Walker, t; rcg Thoma s,
John Sa!laz, James l"unningl•am, ll:ona ld Clay, Ray Queen, 1\la1-h Poling, and

gcr McCj
a ll; T~il"C'
l&gt;t:rry, M:'
Scoll Cal

George Ha rrel l; Second row -

nannJ Cox, ilobby Condee,

A n U •on.~

CAR CARE

PAGE FOt'R -

Oh, Say Can You See

Hee se ,

-

SKM56CB
30 In c h Custom lmf

Charcomalic infra-n.."

wai st-high oven.
Data-Mali c cooking ir

. ..

I

GAS
.·.

••• Straight
CHEVY

ovens.
Ct•romc-fra mcd cont1
Electric dock with 4
Surface worh light.
Recessed, lift-up top.
Up-angle, wood-grain
control panel a••
Lift-off lower oven
chrome-framed
window.
Lighted oven interior
Deep-drawn base C'
LiCetime porcelain fi
All burners and o\'en
bottom, guaran(l

MODEL

Yc;&gt;U know your lights art&gt; not
on high beam, then your headlights need attention.

ROTATE TIRES
Tires should be rotated and
run In different wheel pos 1tlons in accordance with crtr
manufacturer's recommend ations, or every 5,000 miles, to
equalize wear and thereby in crease mUeage, handling and
riding comfort. Also, says the
Rubber Manufacturers As.-:ociaLlon, re-check lnftation af ter rotation to get proper fron t
and rear pressure relationship

Badger BaiUng
Badgers were once used for

a cruel sport called "badger
baiting." They were placed m

barrels, then made to fight
dogs that were pushed in to
drag them into the open. Th1 s
practice led to the expression
"to badger," meanin g to
tease.

NEVER BEFORE
IT THESE LOI

The Winning "Slate" for
Great O:tevy Performance

"
V Chevy Tune VStarting
O.eck

t/Chevy Lube v/Service Brakes
VAlign WheelsVCooling ~rvice

,/
I

'

-- - ~

-----------------------Get the jump on

----

~m
I at

White Sands,

an AWllo mother-

to;

lunar orbit before
I for Ute return.

~bate

I

\

•'• ........j,,.

Tue';'"'Y· Mr, F~te r~~r,.,S,H ,,, ~il&gt;ll"';~tl,ow ~· lulnact-

Unltke the myopic millionaire u·ho solved his driving visibility problems by installing
prescription windshields, most
Americans have to be content
with more routine means to
see- whe-re they're going·.
Fortunately, you don't have
to bf' a mUitonaire or even
close to it to maintain maxi mum good visibility in your
car. Yet It's as vital to safe
operation as sound brakes and
tires .
Chances are every time you
stop for gas. the attendant
cleans your glas::;. But he sel_.\ dirly wind~&amp;liit"ld t·Hn lead loa potenliMlllafely bladr11. Al~;o, l•i .. windllhif'ld wuher IIYIIIem iA not
dom If ever cleans It from the
IMzard. Thi11 n10tori~!~l i11 O\'erdue for nf'w wipf'r -.·orkin~ whid1 ('lllll'le" eJ.;~•f'tn•il'e IIIN&gt;Mii.in~~:.
inside . Condensed moist ure
and tobacco film cling to glass
sion on the wiper arms check- it is easy to check the vartou5
areas. cutting down visibility, bilit y ls worn wiper blades
ed. Too little tension makes lights on your car. Burnt out
especlally at night .
Streaking on the windshield Is
\\o1pers
inefl'ecttve and the arms bulbs are easy to spot. HowAlso. evaporation of plastic a sign that the blades need reever, headlights may be out of
may
need
replacement.
softeners. used in vinyl uphol- placement. Also have the tenalignment without the motorNaturally,
a
co!lBtantly
high
stery, collects on the interior
ist realizing the tact.
level
of
wlndshleld
washer
glass .
Signed Charter
One sign that your headftuld
is
a
must.
Remind
your
To eliminate these hazards,
lights may be out of line is
Edward
R.
Stettinius,
then
attendant
to
check
this
when
wash t he inside of the glass
having oncoming motorists
area with a window-cleaning U .S. secretary of state, signed he checks your oil .
Luckily for safe operation, nash t heir brights at you . lf
the United Nations charter
solvent. at. regular Intervals.
for the United States . Former
Another barrier to good visi- President Harry Truman witnessed the signing.

C harl es~

1oc

FIVE CENTS

I

11U'• qo· - ·11!·-~ilt . jjil ~;lhi l~.,.:i:Wit~'tlf;,tpi.t,l'

and be Seen? Better Check!

&lt;II' ll!ld conii!Jied
1d toolaht wltb !10-

dar Practice
tOO radar was to try
on Apollo 1 in much
va,y one on the moon

In Washington, called
oased bombing and
Haiphong Harbor as a
arm twlating'' to get

SUNDAY TIMES- SENTINEL, OCTOBER 13, 1968

PAGE F1VE - CAR CARE
GALLIPtlLIS SUIOOL PATHP!. -

Weather

11

j

patcher for the Pomeroy departrnentj John Mora, mathematics
instructor of the Meigs Local
School District, and William

SUNDAY TIMES- SENTINEL, OCTOBER 13, !968

•

lie sua 1o !he low
partly cl~ and
'I temperature.

defensive driving Is held at the
study hall of the Meigs High
School In Middleport.
Open to the public, thetwo-ses·

other nations.

.....

thia evening. Low

MIDDLEPORT - Four !.,.
structors will present the study
material for the evening Tuesda,y
when tile

.....

..,

~aris

'Can 't Get Started 'Your Tune?Here 'sHow to Change It
snap. This should include the
electrical and ignition systems
plus the carburetor and choke .
Assuming your car Is in A- 1
condition, what Is the best way
to be sure your cold engine will
start when you want It to?
There are several things you
can do t.o minimize the effects
of extreme cold, according to
the service engineers of Champion Spark Plug Company.
To be sure maximum current Is available for the task
of starting, turn oft lights and
accessories . On newer cars all
accessories except lights will
cut off when the starter Is en-

Most automotive engineers
and mechanics agree there is
no pat formu la for getting a
car started . From the time It
comes out of the factory every
engine ts different and cars
become Increasingly different
as they grow older
However, there are several
key things you can do, or not
do, as the case may be, to insure dependable starting in
even the coldest weather.
At the top of the Ust Is a
checkup of the condition of
your car; make sure it is In
good shape before you are taken by surprise by a sudden cold

I.~SPEC.TION

MU{J~ler
1\Teglect'
1 l4

gag ed, but headlamps do draw
a lot of current and can make
the difference between a start
and a no-start.
Do not pump your accel erator. Most carburetors are
built In such a way that pump Ing the accelerator sends a
substantial spray of raw gasoline into the engine for better
acceleration. This is fine when
the engine is running, but It
tends to ftood a cold engine
that has not been started.
To correct Hooding, hold the
accelerator pedal to the ftoor
!do not continue to pump itJ

and turn t he englne with the
starter in 5-second bursts. Do
not allow t he starter to grind
away too long as this can overheat the starter motor to the
point of damage and Is likely
to run the battery down. lf
there ls time to wait, It's a good
idea to allow the engine to
sit for 5 or 10 minutes before
again attempting to start.
A 75 or 100 watt bulb burntnt; under the hood on a cold
night will help to keep the
temperature of the battery
high enough for a good kick
when you need it. A dip sUck
heater, which plugs into house

regularly tor tread wear and
cuts or other damage. Removtng naUs, small stones or bits
ot glass embedded ln the tread
will help prevent fiats or costly tire damage which can lead

;:;:.~::r;:::,•:•:·/·"·.~.·~."

.... . ..... ~4?.·

current and Is immersed
through the dip stick hole Into the crankcase oil , helps keep
the oil warm enough ror quick
turnover after a cold night.
If yours is a stubborn car,
and your solution is to send an
SOS to your servic e man, be
sure you go a step beyond
merely ..::etting t.he car started.
Give him a chance to find out
what caused the problem In
the first place. This will involve a trip to his shop for
proper engine diagnosis and
necessary se rvice work, but it
will prevent your having the
same trouble again

••

'
:.

.~"1

Good l1lea to Keep Wimlow Op&lt;'n Sliuhth.

ALL TOO MANY!
Approximately 40 mllllon
cars are being driven with de fectlve Ignition systems and
worn spark plugs, according to
a survey which involved 174
cttJes across the nation.

Carbon monoxide is odorless.
but whenever you smell ex haust fum es you can assume
carbon monoxide is present. It
Is poisonou.s and sometimes
deadly when confined in places

· (·· ·

· ·. ··

:-::::
·.···

..'IOU NEED A klATERFALL
THE SUN GOING DOWN SORT
rSOME REO STREAK~ I

"'
your exha ust system is in gootl
cond ition . This i:::i especia lly
Important in wint e r when
driving with wmdows closed .
In any case. It's a good idea to
open your windows s light.ly

t;E COWNG OUT OF lHE

~~Afn~e,.O~Uf~ to ta._n_u_re_.___________________________________________ll_k_e_t_h_•_r_•_m_n_y_•_•_r_._M_•_k_e_•_"_r_•__w_h_•_n_d_r_lv_l_•_g_i_"_~~-·i_n_t•_'_·_
One of the most common
forms of suicide Is t he inhaling
of car exhaust fumes In a
closed garage. A very effectiv e
killer. one saucepanful of pure
carbon monoxide is enough to
put Its viclim lo sleep forever
A great deal less than thal
in a closed car will bring about
headache, nausea and drowsi ness; reason enough to keep
the exhaust system good and
tight.
How do you know if your car
is exhaust-safe?
You can't tell much from
sniffing because carbon mon oxide is odorless.
There's no mistaking the
sound of a blown muffler or
leaking exhaust pipe, of course.
First a rumble and t hen a roar,
the noise is your signal that
you have waited too long to
have the system checked .
The best way to be sure
about the condition of your
car's exhaust system Is to han
it examined by a competent
serviceman while the car is on
a lift. His trained eye can spot
the pinholes and ather sig ns
of deterioration which are the
tipoff that it's time to replace.
rr your car has not had a
new muf'fier in t he past two
years, you can expect to replace it soon. Life expectancy
runs between two and th ree
yean;.

••••••••

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

PAYS

Tires should be Inspected

l

negotiatioos.

Mlli=£/1

r·r-----------~~~

Going BIG
for 1969

.tr. and Mrs. OUver
me ceremonies Friunblin is on the far
Her eacort is Earl
lan Stidham, junior
daughter of 1\lr. ard
r. and Mrs. Herman
•ce after the footblll
ats and door prlzes.

l•

SOMETIMES IT

TAKES" A LA'IMAt.l
TO SETIHESE
PEOPlE 5rRAIGHT

rly Johnson, 14, eslrlous injury when she
.1 the upstairs window
acust St. home in Mid~

afternoon. Mld-

emer gency SCfllldmen
J&amp; Johnson was leaning
IIPSI&amp;iro wi.OOw shak·

FOitD
LTD 2- 0H HARDTOP

when ehe a_warenther balance. !'lie fell
! window and apparent-

1g

)(} a complete somer .nd41"g on her feeL 3le
•en tD Holzer Hospital

1rvatlon. and treatment.
:::;:;:;:;;;:;.;:;.;.;::'-);:·:·:·:·:·:·::::;:;.;::.... ::·

WE ARE FEATURING

1a Shiflet

The Big-Big One

WINTER DRIVING TROUBLES

[Lu[IDo

DO~T WC'RN BOSS .. ENEN
THOUG H lLL ~E R£0TIIi'I~G AS
YOJR LOYAL Sfa?ErAi&lt;Y-YOlJ

(.AN ALWAYS CALL..~E AT MY
/381181&lt;!LY HILL-S MAI610f.J
FOR COIJSULTATIOioJ!

WIDER STANCE ... LONGER WHEELBASE ... GREATER
LUXURY ...THE GREATEST CAR FOR ANY ROAD .• .

s Sunday
11 services Cor Mrs. Ale
let, 75, fW 1, Rutland,
' dead on arrival at Holpltal Sunda;y morning, will
Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the

Funeral Home with the
avid 9leet.s oO"iciating.
will be in the Gravel Hill

So badly delPrinrlllt·d lh•t it r..n
ol a nu)\'ina: c_·ur, thio~ mulftc-r
pu,.t'A a d•n•er 10 ill former ownf'r. A defecti,.·e muller t•un leak
lelhul c•rbon manolll:ide inlo thcpa~~o..en~:er compartment.

BRING YOUR CAR IN FOR OUR COMPLETE

GUARDIAN MAINTENANCE

...

;,vp•d. .,

'·'':_}
__, ...

"""
" "'
~'-'

RUT
742-4211

Whell you need new ttres, tt
IJ recommended theY be replaeed by the oome siZe, or approved options, recommended

~:4-HOUR

,.:~~~

111 tbe automobile manufac-

·yowfiNa
'""
."'
: .-rw

turer, uever bJ It IJI18]ler siZe.
New ttres ahould be broken In
bJ !lmiiiD&amp; your _.s to eo
mph lor the 11rat
drlolnl·

~~.·- w·

---------------SERY~(E

NDFU

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

ARNOLD GRATE

YOUR CHEVY DEALER

992-2126

-

POMEROY

/

e late Jacob and Josephine

and she had Uved in lhe
.sant area WltU movire to

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO.
606-E. MAIN ST .

992-2094

POIEROY.O.

Do

miles of

The war known as the
French and Indian War in
America was a prelude to and
part of the war known In Eu·
rope as the Seven Years' War.

The great majoritY ol
apouges live onlj' ln the sea,

but one !ami y of horny
1 pouges Is exclusively fresh

'\'tier.

ln 1956 and waa a mem-

FORD LTD 4-DR SEDAN

REPLAaNG TIRES

--------------------------·
You11 Always Do Better At Rutland
Furniture and Easy Terms Are Available.

ry at Cheshire.
&amp;sbornatShortCreek. W.
May 27, 1892, the daugh-

'Ml RutYII:I Oturcb ofGod.

also preceded tn death
tlJ,at.nd, LemueL
voca Lnclude two sons,

J

Sink Into
its Luxury-Drive
It a while-then
decide!
·BRING YOUR CAR BACK

YOU WON'T BELIEVE OUR PRICE I BUT IT'S TRUE I
SALESMEN-- CEWARD CALVERT
CLIFF PHILLIPS- EDDIE FIFE- DAN THOMPSON
YOU ALWAYS PAY LESS AT

KEITH GO
FO .

HOlE TQ ~E ·• "" , .

SERVICED·

.etart, W. VL; Hue, C~
i six ahd:ers 1 MrL Marlearlen, Clarlestoo. W.
... Archer. Of&lt;honl Lll&lt;e,
Ill; Mary Dloker100, and
J!lll Me~ llotb Q( LIS

••

...

u.r._ -

RolMill
lhlllet, - . . ,.........

E

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

' S. )dAVE.

:W·~

)e,Jh. .

w. va.. w

L

Ill• 11111 Clll at !he luaortat IIIII' lime.

•

•

attbl·· · -i

�Sessions
To Begin
MIDDLEPORT - Four
hr
atructore will presenl the study
material ror the evening Tuesday
when the nrst or two sessions on
detenslve drlvtug is held at the
Bluely hall of the Meigs High

'

-

INTERESTED in a Brazilian pen pal?
International Friends, made up of huOOreds of Brazilian people
of both sexes or all ages andproressions, have rormed an lnternatl~
aJ correspondence club and are anxious to correspond with people or
other countries. The purpose, of coorse, Is to get to know pe~le of

sion course is

bei~

cards.

'-

...

•

••. Weather
&lt;ly and -~eel
1&lt;1 too1ghl with loothia e\'eniDI. Low

he 50s to the low
partly

I

!I

'

81unbuy

bttts-~tutitttl

sponsored

sao Paulo, Brazil.

.

i

by the Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club. The
&lt;:lass will begin at 7:30p.m. The
aecond session wlU be at 7:30 p.
m. on Tuesday, Oct. 22, at the

same location. Those cmnpletlng both sessions will receive

Business Opportunity

......

,,

School In Middleport.
Open to the public, the two-ses-

other natiOOB.
IC interested, you are to seo:l your name and cmnplete addres'S,
sex, occ~.t&gt;ation, hobbies to Amigoslnteraclonatr, CaimPosta130827,
MEIGS Countians Interested in ing one or both or the courses,
adult business education ma.y may report to the high school.
still enter classes which began Mrs, James Vermari is instructthis week at Meigs High School. or.
Typing classes start at 7 p.m
CONGRATULATIONS to Mr.
and shortlland at 8 Thursday eveand
Mrs. James Fugate who wUl
ning. Those interested in plU"suobserve their 45th wedding aMi·
versary at their Pomeroy home

...

1oc:

FIVE CEtiiTS

J at

GALLIPOLIS SCIHJUL P .·\ THO!. -

~tcmbcrs

of the W'l.!ihington

~lcmen­

tary School Safety l'atrol, sho wn hen• with Chief of J'oli f'e John Taylor and
Cacult)'· spons.Jr s, Iloy Sprague and .Jotm llolle, a reO tor): Fir s t Huw - Chief
Taylor, Gr-.·g: Fife, BiJiy Barc us , Billy William s , Joey Hubenstal1l, J im Jus-

tice, Jim Wood, Keith Sheet'-, Tomm~ Young, Paul Walker, Greg Thomas,
John Sa!laz, J am es Cunn ingham, Honald Clay, Hay Queen, Ma~ Poling, and

George Haffch ; Sc e01l.l r ow -

Danny

co ~ ,

Alan r::va,
ger McC

all ; Thirr
berry, M
Sc ott Cll
Charle s ,

Bobby Corldcc, Anthony Heese,

SKM56GB
30 Inch Cu stl)m lmr
Charcomalk infra-r e&gt;
waist-high oven.
Data-Matic cooking ir
ovens.
Chrome- framed

•'.

'

.

contJ

Electr ic clock with 4
Surface work light.
Hecc!is ed, lift~ lop.
Up-angle , wood-grain
control panel anc
Lift-off lower ovon
chrome- framed
wi.-.::low •
Lighted oven inlerior
Deep-drawn base c•
Lifetim e por celain n
All burner s and oven
bottom, guarantl

.i
)

GAS

MODEL
'
;'T

l

-

PAGE SIX -

....

-oi·

I for the return.

~bate

Tuosday. Mr. Fugate _reti.r~ 14 , . G~J!.-&lt;!I:!MI ,~ .IJ!il~

'

~~~"~,...

Car Rallies on Ice Teach
Drivers Highway Safety
There·s not hing Uke a Sun day at the lake for some car
enthusiasts. To them, It's particularly exhilarating when
t he temperature ftlrts with the
zero mark and a root or soUd
Ice coats the waters.
These auto fanciers are not
'"polar bears" but devotees of
a fast-growing winter sport car runs on ice. The result ot
such an activity goes beyond
fun, fellowship and competition. Participants also learn a
valuable sarety lesson or how
to handle their cars on an icy
highway.
Object of the lee run 1.5 to
maneuver the car along a kidney-shaped course, about a
mile long, In the shortest possible time . Drivers do not race
against each other but against
the clock. The course is outlined b)' a series ot markers
outside of which the contestants must remain. At one
point, there Is a. chicane, or
narrow row ot markers which
drivers must pass through.
Contestants who run the
"track" in the least amount ot
ttme while staying on course
are winners. Cars are entered
in various classes such as rear
engine, forward engine with
front wheel drive and forward
engine with rear wheel drive.
Men and women are judged
separately.
No special tires or chaln11
are allowed but cars may be

weighted down for better t.rac·
Uon

,. t.
'1.t
•"'
...1"' =~

Safety is the prime co!Wd·

i t'

eratlon on lee runs. lee on the
lake must be a minimum of a
foot in thickness . nP3 on han·
dUng a car on glare ice are
Uberally given by expert&amp;. They
Include how and when to

downshltt for better control,
how to apply the brakes (pump,
don't jam downJ and how to
use snow for better traction.
Leading practitioners of Ice
runs are members of n.rtous
car clubs. They nnd that run
in cars doesn't stop when wann
weather ends.
DO THE UES HAVE IT?

Blinding snow in the winter
can be a great deal harder on
the eyes than summer sun. It's
advisable to carry a good grade
of sunglasses In your car tor
driving when bright aull4htne

hits white snow. Sunglasses
can prevent premature fatigue
or possible temporary bllnding.

.. :!

v-

Any Way You Look At It

CITIZENS NATIONAL 5%
AUTO LOANS CAN SAVE YOU MONEY
lfallonal

NO SKIDDING
During the winter, frost often torms on bridges and overpasses even though other parts
of the roadway seem perfecUy
dry. Watch for this phenomenon the next time you drive
and approach such locations

742-4211
•

'

ARNOLD GRATE

0

•

v

0•
....
0

•

"'

i

11.1

z

0

:z:

ll..

0

--·
--·

:et
Jl

41". and Mrs. Oliver
me ceremonies Fri·
unblin is on the far
Her e1cort is Earl
lan Stidham, junior
daughter of Mr. and

....
•
...
.
.
--·
...
--·~

cautiously to avoid a 811lPr1ae

scare and pOISible aecldent.

r. and Mrs. Herman
after the football
sts an:l door prizes.

ICC

SOMETIMES IT

.I

lAKES" A LA'fMAt.l

•v

TO SET 'THESE
PI:OPl£ 5TRAIGHT

:t

•

Studded Tire
Makes Winter
Travel
Safer
The snow
which has

•

RAWLINGS HONDA
INTRODUCES

and convenience factor in
winter driving, now is enjoyIng a significant improvement
through the &amp;dditlon of studs,
which are steel or carbontungsten projections from the
tire tread.
Tests by tire manufacturers
show that studded tires are lr
some instances dram_J.t,lca.lb·
more etrectlve than · regular
snow tires . In one test series,
the studded tlres were able to
help stop a car traveling at 30
miles per hour In 40 teet. On
the same hard and slippery
surface, conventional snaw
tires required 120 feet to stop.
U you plan to put studded
tires on your car, here are
some precautlons:

-

' "(

....
.'

make certain aU four tires on
the car are radials. Otherwise
handling characteristics will
be affected adversely.
• Watch your speed. Studded or regular snow tires may
lose the~r etrectlveness at high
speeds due to the heat they
generate .
• It you are having your
snow tires studded, make certain the right number of studs
are installed. Too many atuds
can be as Ineffective as too
rew. Tests on Urea with 150 or
more studs tend to make the
Uros "•kale" by neutralbling
tlre tread.
• Check tire pressure often,
especially if \here 1a a drastic
drop in tempera\""'. l'OI' ex·
ample, a tire tnllated to 28 ps!
at so• F wm be down to 24 po:
al -10' F . Such a drop would
allect handling serloualy, particularly at a time when JIOOd
traetton is vital.
• As wltb all tlres, make

IUI'e

JOU.

have sumctent tread .

Riding this Mini-Trail is sort of like
rediscovering what it is to really have
tun . In fact, you've never had as much
tun as you'll have on this beautifull y
designed little bike from Honda
It's easy to ride, easy to own, and
best of all, easy to take with you just
about anywhere. The Honda Min i·
Trail is intended for off-the-road use
only, so it need not be licensed
And to keep things on the safe side,
the Honda Mini -Trail has a sparkarrestor/muffler approved by the
USDA Forest Service. Automatic
clutch. too, so that you can shift its
sturdy little three-speed transmission
with ease. Standard equipment
includes special exhaust heat shields
to protect you, tough twin brakes
that stop you safely and surely, and
big, knobby tires to keep things in
balance. They're all here. And more.
It's why we call the Honda Mini-Trail
the little bike with the big excitement.

rly John.soo., 14, estrious injury when she
1

the upstairs window

ocust st. home in MidOmday stternoon. Midemergency squadmen
IS Johnson was leaning

.apstairs wtnOOw shaktg when she apparent.

0

the non-skid quality of tile

RUILANDFU

.. -s&amp;..
..
• • ~&amp;
•.
...c..
c . '1 •
...

• II th•y are radial tires.

You11 Always Do BeHer At Rutland
Furniture and Easy Terms Are Available.

In Washington, called
bombing and
Haiphong Harbor as a
arm twisting'' to get
;.aris negotiations.

,..ed

CAR CARE

tire,
been hailed as a key safety

.

Sallis,

oo Apollo 7 in much
'8J' one on the moon
k an Ap¢.1o motherlunar orbit before

the Ohio State Patrol.
lnstructors TUesday wW include Pomeroy Police Chief Jbd
Webster, Mrs. Edith Sisson. dispatcher for the Pomeroy departmenti John Mora, mathematics
instructor of the Melg'e Local
School District, and WWiam

--~~~"'"·"II'' ·''1'1}~""-...:ii!Vi""' ~·t fl(.·~·~..,\lrt:~~~~it~~~·,

White

dar Practice
uw:l radar was to try

Intensive driving
training program Ia prepared by
The

~YmP-Jf .JhJ!II. tt..-f~ t. ~- '.~ 110 trpm ·~·.!~ - ~~15jtm..l!\lliilL~..WAU" ·

. ..t

clouey and

temperature.

her balance. ~e fell
) window and apparentlid a complete somerulding on her feet. 9te
;en to Holzer Hospital
,rvation and treatment.

0

~

1a Shiflet
I'ON'r WORRY BOSS .. EVEN
THOUGH ILL 8 E i?Em?r ~6 AS
YOUR LOYA L SEO?EfARY-YCIJ
(AN ALWAYS CAl i.-.~E' AT MY
8f'VEI&lt;LY HILLS MAIJ510tJ

fOR CDM5Ul.TATIO/J!

s Sunday
tl services fur Mn. Al-

let, 75, RD 1, RutlaOO,
i dead on arri vat at Hoipita] Sunday morning, will
Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the
Fureral Horne

wl~

the

avid Sileets officiating.

will be In the Gravel Hill
ry at Cheshire.
tsbornatShortCreek, W.
May 'n, 1892, the daughelateJacob andJoseploioo
and she had Uved in the
.sant area untll movi~ to
ln 1956 and ns a mem• Rutland Church of God.
; also preceded in death

Lemuel.
vors include two son!',
.etart, W. VLi Hue, Co-; six: ahtera, Mrs. Marloarien, Charleston, w.
p Archer, Orc:hard Lake,
411; Mary DlokeriiCJII, am
1ft McCIII, of Las
IU!Ibazd,

ltlo~ YrL IDoz HGI-

ieellrv. w. va.. and Miss

..

lh1llet,.ladta, 1111110 ......

Ids ..U at the
' at~ lime.

RAWLINGS HONDA SALIS

r.--

I

i.E

SESSION SLATED

•. 12 etrde or 1M lit Cblrch ol ¥~'0 :l I

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

flt Weclno• • ~~

.. at tile . . . .. ,
-- ~--·---

-----...

~--··

---' ·

___...., ..

-~

_....,-

�Sessions
To Begin
MIDDLEPORT - Four
hr
atructore will presenl the study
material ror the evening Tuesday
when the nrst or two sessions on
detenslve drlvtug is held at the
Bluely hall of the Meigs High

'

-

INTERESTED in a Brazilian pen pal?
International Friends, made up of huOOreds of Brazilian people
of both sexes or all ages andproressions, have rormed an lnternatl~
aJ correspondence club and are anxious to correspond with people or
other countries. The purpose, of coorse, Is to get to know pe~le of

sion course is

bei~

cards.

'-

...

•

••. Weather
&lt;ly and -~eel
1&lt;1 too1ghl with loothia e\'eniDI. Low

he 50s to the low
partly

I

!I

'

81unbuy

bttts-~tutitttl

sponsored

sao Paulo, Brazil.

.

i

by the Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club. The
&lt;:lass will begin at 7:30p.m. The
aecond session wlU be at 7:30 p.
m. on Tuesday, Oct. 22, at the

same location. Those cmnpletlng both sessions will receive

Business Opportunity

......

,,

School In Middleport.
Open to the public, the two-ses-

other natiOOB.
IC interested, you are to seo:l your name and cmnplete addres'S,
sex, occ~.t&gt;ation, hobbies to Amigoslnteraclonatr, CaimPosta130827,
MEIGS Countians Interested in ing one or both or the courses,
adult business education ma.y may report to the high school.
still enter classes which began Mrs, James Vermari is instructthis week at Meigs High School. or.
Typing classes start at 7 p.m
CONGRATULATIONS to Mr.
and shortlland at 8 Thursday eveand
Mrs. James Fugate who wUl
ning. Those interested in plU"suobserve their 45th wedding aMi·
versary at their Pomeroy home

...

1oc:

FIVE CEtiiTS

J at

GALLIPOLIS SCIHJUL P .·\ THO!. -

~tcmbcrs

of the W'l.!ihington

~lcmen­

tary School Safety l'atrol, sho wn hen• with Chief of J'oli f'e John Taylor and
Cacult)'· spons.Jr s, Iloy Sprague and .Jotm llolle, a reO tor): Fir s t Huw - Chief
Taylor, Gr-.·g: Fife, BiJiy Barc us , Billy William s , Joey Hubenstal1l, J im Jus-

tice, Jim Wood, Keith Sheet'-, Tomm~ Young, Paul Walker, Greg Thomas,
John Sa!laz, J am es Cunn ingham, Honald Clay, Hay Queen, Ma~ Poling, and

George Haffch ; Sc e01l.l r ow -

Danny

co ~ ,

Alan r::va,
ger McC

all ; Thirr
berry, M
Sc ott Cll
Charle s ,

Bobby Corldcc, Anthony Heese,

SKM56GB
30 Inch Cu stl)m lmr
Charcomalk infra-r e&gt;
waist-high oven.
Data-Matic cooking ir
ovens.
Chrome- framed

•'.

'

.

contJ

Electr ic clock with 4
Surface work light.
Hecc!is ed, lift~ lop.
Up-angle , wood-grain
control panel anc
Lift-off lower ovon
chrome- framed
wi.-.::low •
Lighted oven inlerior
Deep-drawn base c•
Lifetim e por celain n
All burner s and oven
bottom, guarantl

.i
)

GAS

MODEL
'
;'T

l

-

PAGE SIX -

....

-oi·

I for the return.

~bate

Tuosday. Mr. Fugate _reti.r~ 14 , . G~J!.-&lt;!I:!MI ,~ .IJ!il~

'

~~~"~,...

Car Rallies on Ice Teach
Drivers Highway Safety
There·s not hing Uke a Sun day at the lake for some car
enthusiasts. To them, It's particularly exhilarating when
t he temperature ftlrts with the
zero mark and a root or soUd
Ice coats the waters.
These auto fanciers are not
'"polar bears" but devotees of
a fast-growing winter sport car runs on ice. The result ot
such an activity goes beyond
fun, fellowship and competition. Participants also learn a
valuable sarety lesson or how
to handle their cars on an icy
highway.
Object of the lee run 1.5 to
maneuver the car along a kidney-shaped course, about a
mile long, In the shortest possible time . Drivers do not race
against each other but against
the clock. The course is outlined b)' a series ot markers
outside of which the contestants must remain. At one
point, there Is a. chicane, or
narrow row ot markers which
drivers must pass through.
Contestants who run the
"track" in the least amount ot
ttme while staying on course
are winners. Cars are entered
in various classes such as rear
engine, forward engine with
front wheel drive and forward
engine with rear wheel drive.
Men and women are judged
separately.
No special tires or chaln11
are allowed but cars may be

weighted down for better t.rac·
Uon

,. t.
'1.t
•"'
...1"' =~

Safety is the prime co!Wd·

i t'

eratlon on lee runs. lee on the
lake must be a minimum of a
foot in thickness . nP3 on han·
dUng a car on glare ice are
Uberally given by expert&amp;. They
Include how and when to

downshltt for better control,
how to apply the brakes (pump,
don't jam downJ and how to
use snow for better traction.
Leading practitioners of Ice
runs are members of n.rtous
car clubs. They nnd that run
in cars doesn't stop when wann
weather ends.
DO THE UES HAVE IT?

Blinding snow in the winter
can be a great deal harder on
the eyes than summer sun. It's
advisable to carry a good grade
of sunglasses In your car tor
driving when bright aull4htne

hits white snow. Sunglasses
can prevent premature fatigue
or possible temporary bllnding.

.. :!

v-

Any Way You Look At It

CITIZENS NATIONAL 5%
AUTO LOANS CAN SAVE YOU MONEY
lfallonal

NO SKIDDING
During the winter, frost often torms on bridges and overpasses even though other parts
of the roadway seem perfecUy
dry. Watch for this phenomenon the next time you drive
and approach such locations

742-4211
•

'

ARNOLD GRATE

0

•

v

0•
....
0

•

"'

i

11.1

z

0

:z:

ll..

0

--·
--·

:et
Jl

41". and Mrs. Oliver
me ceremonies Fri·
unblin is on the far
Her e1cort is Earl
lan Stidham, junior
daughter of Mr. and

....
•
...
.
.
--·
...
--·~

cautiously to avoid a 811lPr1ae

scare and pOISible aecldent.

r. and Mrs. Herman
after the football
sts an:l door prizes.

ICC

SOMETIMES IT

.I

lAKES" A LA'fMAt.l

•v

TO SET 'THESE
PI:OPl£ 5TRAIGHT

:t

•

Studded Tire
Makes Winter
Travel
Safer
The snow
which has

•

RAWLINGS HONDA
INTRODUCES

and convenience factor in
winter driving, now is enjoyIng a significant improvement
through the &amp;dditlon of studs,
which are steel or carbontungsten projections from the
tire tread.
Tests by tire manufacturers
show that studded tires are lr
some instances dram_J.t,lca.lb·
more etrectlve than · regular
snow tires . In one test series,
the studded tlres were able to
help stop a car traveling at 30
miles per hour In 40 teet. On
the same hard and slippery
surface, conventional snaw
tires required 120 feet to stop.
U you plan to put studded
tires on your car, here are
some precautlons:

-

' "(

....
.'

make certain aU four tires on
the car are radials. Otherwise
handling characteristics will
be affected adversely.
• Watch your speed. Studded or regular snow tires may
lose the~r etrectlveness at high
speeds due to the heat they
generate .
• It you are having your
snow tires studded, make certain the right number of studs
are installed. Too many atuds
can be as Ineffective as too
rew. Tests on Urea with 150 or
more studs tend to make the
Uros "•kale" by neutralbling
tlre tread.
• Check tire pressure often,
especially if \here 1a a drastic
drop in tempera\""'. l'OI' ex·
ample, a tire tnllated to 28 ps!
at so• F wm be down to 24 po:
al -10' F . Such a drop would
allect handling serloualy, particularly at a time when JIOOd
traetton is vital.
• As wltb all tlres, make

IUI'e

JOU.

have sumctent tread .

Riding this Mini-Trail is sort of like
rediscovering what it is to really have
tun . In fact, you've never had as much
tun as you'll have on this beautifull y
designed little bike from Honda
It's easy to ride, easy to own, and
best of all, easy to take with you just
about anywhere. The Honda Min i·
Trail is intended for off-the-road use
only, so it need not be licensed
And to keep things on the safe side,
the Honda Mini -Trail has a sparkarrestor/muffler approved by the
USDA Forest Service. Automatic
clutch. too, so that you can shift its
sturdy little three-speed transmission
with ease. Standard equipment
includes special exhaust heat shields
to protect you, tough twin brakes
that stop you safely and surely, and
big, knobby tires to keep things in
balance. They're all here. And more.
It's why we call the Honda Mini-Trail
the little bike with the big excitement.

rly John.soo., 14, estrious injury when she
1

the upstairs window

ocust st. home in MidOmday stternoon. Midemergency squadmen
IS Johnson was leaning

.apstairs wtnOOw shaktg when she apparent.

0

the non-skid quality of tile

RUILANDFU

.. -s&amp;..
..
• • ~&amp;
•.
...c..
c . '1 •
...

• II th•y are radial tires.

You11 Always Do BeHer At Rutland
Furniture and Easy Terms Are Available.

In Washington, called
bombing and
Haiphong Harbor as a
arm twisting'' to get
;.aris negotiations.

,..ed

CAR CARE

tire,
been hailed as a key safety

.

Sallis,

oo Apollo 7 in much
'8J' one on the moon
k an Ap¢.1o motherlunar orbit before

the Ohio State Patrol.
lnstructors TUesday wW include Pomeroy Police Chief Jbd
Webster, Mrs. Edith Sisson. dispatcher for the Pomeroy departmenti John Mora, mathematics
instructor of the Melg'e Local
School District, and WWiam

--~~~"'"·"II'' ·''1'1}~""-...:ii!Vi""' ~·t fl(.·~·~..,\lrt:~~~~it~~~·,

White

dar Practice
uw:l radar was to try

Intensive driving
training program Ia prepared by
The

~YmP-Jf .JhJ!II. tt..-f~ t. ~- '.~ 110 trpm ·~·.!~ - ~~15jtm..l!\lliilL~..WAU" ·

. ..t

clouey and

temperature.

her balance. ~e fell
) window and apparentlid a complete somerulding on her feet. 9te
;en to Holzer Hospital
,rvation and treatment.

0

~

1a Shiflet
I'ON'r WORRY BOSS .. EVEN
THOUGH ILL 8 E i?Em?r ~6 AS
YOUR LOYA L SEO?EfARY-YCIJ
(AN ALWAYS CAl i.-.~E' AT MY
8f'VEI&lt;LY HILLS MAIJ510tJ

fOR CDM5Ul.TATIO/J!

s Sunday
tl services fur Mn. Al-

let, 75, RD 1, RutlaOO,
i dead on arri vat at Hoipita] Sunday morning, will
Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the
Fureral Horne

wl~

the

avid Sileets officiating.

will be In the Gravel Hill
ry at Cheshire.
tsbornatShortCreek, W.
May 'n, 1892, the daughelateJacob andJoseploioo
and she had Uved in the
.sant area untll movi~ to
ln 1956 and ns a mem• Rutland Church of God.
; also preceded in death

Lemuel.
vors include two son!',
.etart, W. VLi Hue, Co-; six: ahtera, Mrs. Marloarien, Charleston, w.
p Archer, Orc:hard Lake,
411; Mary DlokeriiCJII, am
1ft McCIII, of Las
IU!Ibazd,

ltlo~ YrL IDoz HGI-

ieellrv. w. va.. and Miss

..

lh1llet,.ladta, 1111110 ......

Ids ..U at the
' at~ lime.

RAWLINGS HONDA SALIS

r.--

I

i.E

SESSION SLATED

•. 12 etrde or 1M lit Cblrch ol ¥~'0 :l I

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

flt Weclno• • ~~

.. at tile . . . .. ,
-- ~--·---

-----...

~--··

---' ·

___...., ..

-~

_....,-

�Sundl,}- Times - Sentinel, SUnda.Y. Cc•obc•- 13, l!ltiM

Sessions
To Begin

·.--SII"

-

J.

'ik'i

.

~·~ ·~:-;;)..... ~ -n:~~-- .,-~~-

ovens.
Chrome-tra1

Electric clo
Surface wor

control
Lift-off loochrom&amp;
window.
Lighted

bttts-~rutitttl
r

Control That
Skid· Here's
How to Do It

GALLIPOLIS, 0
: .· ~:

.·.

IHOROBRED IIRES
·.·
·:·
::·
:·

bottvrn,

::::
:··:

·..
:=~.=.·
:-

WILLIS TIRE CO.

::
::
}
·::

GALLIPOLIS, 0.

3RD &amp; GRAPE
IT'S A BEAR FACT
WE'RE EXPERTS
AT

WHEEL
ALIGNMENT
AND
IT'S A FACT THAT

742-4211

ARNOLD GF.

WINTER IS COMINGI
SEE US FOR YOUR

WINTER SAFETY CHECK
WHEEL ALIGNMENT -WHEEL BALANCE
BRAKES
WINDSHIELD-AUTO CLASS-DOOR CLASS
INSTALLAT.ION

ROSE ALIGNMENT

286 W. MAIN

.

J at

.

POMEROY, 0.

A skid can be one of the
most fearsome experiences a
driver can endure or it can be
merely routine. It depends up on whether or not you know
what to expect and how to
control it.
A driver who hu experienced several types of skids
seldom panics when hts car
breaks away on slippery surfaces; he remains In control
of the situation . Here are a
few facts to better help you
understand and anticipate
skidding.
Generally, your car will go
Into one of three common
forms of skid : rear-end breakaway, four-wheel slide or spin·
out.
In the ease or the rear-end
breakaway, which may have
been caused by uneven brak~
lnl g atchtlon orlll stmood~ rrar
t res, e car w en
sw ng
180 degrees, pil'ottng on the
front wheels. It anticipated In
time, this may be corrected by
turning the front wheels In
the direction of the skid, called
countersteering.
A four-wheel slide is caused
by applying the brakes too
severely on a slick surface.
With the wheels locked you
have no control over the dlrecUon your car may be taking
until you release the brakes
and permit the tires to regain
normal roll1ng frlction . Obvi ously, additional braking pressure will not slow you down,
but gentle pumping of the
brakes will help If you can
maintain a light t.ouch with
your foot.
The spin-out is similar to
the rear-end breakaway, except . that you have lost con~
trol of the front wheels as well
and you are likely to be travel Ing at a greater rate of speed .
The only measure you can
take to correct this frightenIng skid Is to counter steer and
hope you will contact a section
of road surface on which you
can get gripping action.
Other forms of skids include
ftshta111ng, from excessive ac celeration a.nd hydroplanlng,
where your tires are virtually
skimming over a thin film of
water. By about 55 mph you
may have lost ail frictional
contact with the road. A sud den gust or wind gives you the
surprise of your life.
Two cardinal rules of skidding are : stay oil the brake
pedal until you have regained
steering control and always
steer In the direction or the
skid.
Be especially wary of an Icy
surface when it is Just below
the freezing point. It 1s twice
as slippery as It would be at

em Apollo 1 ln much

1 (or the return.

~bate
1n Washington, called
oased
~aris

maintenance expenses may be costing
It is saving you.
ear owner now spends about $13 monthly
his car. Yet., survey after survey shows most ears
are not running at their best. Also, omclal Inspections
that a sizable number bave aarety defects, according to
M. Galster, Manager o! Champion Spark Plug ComAutomotive Teebnlcal Berviees.

zero.

SO play it safe. Travel at a
sensible speed.

99.a,3576

.

K.eepln• Car in Mint Condition

order to keep a car ln meeha.nieally-mlnt condition at all
, an average expenditure or $19 a month 1s required,"
. Galster. "In other words, &amp;bout one-thlrd more than
being spent.
arrived a.t this by prtelng out a ltst of necessary services
out over five years, the length ot warranties on U.S .
Figures are based on malntalntng a fu1i·s1zed V·8 sedan
~ low price group with automatic transmission.
he'll spend an added $8 a month, in the long run
owner should more than recoup the outlay. Money
back to the owner Ia&gt; at trade-in time and lbJ In
operating costs.
How

10

Gel Belt Gu Milea111e

driving with an engine always in tune and with good tg~
. he'll realtze his run gas mileage potential all the time,
when the car)s new. And he'll be able to start in any
weather.
having the front-end always In good alignment - by
· the Urea regularly, and keeping the wheels balanced,
be extended- up to as much as 20 percent, which
source of savings.
trade-In time," Mr. Galster said, "allowances for cars
condition, according to NADA, average at least $235
t. han comparable models In just average or lair condithe first trade-ln. That vestment the average Ameriamounts to around four can makes," he declared.
a month rebate for the "Only by taking care of that
of ownership."
Investment on a regular basis
figures, according to can It be protected tully. Walt&gt;aJster, are the result of lng until you have a few extra
study of car main- dollars to maintain vital parts
costs by Champion. Is an Invitation to premature
50 associations and deterioration at best and a
lh·u•··turer~ were queried. dangerous, accident-Inviting
to the home, the car Situation at worst.''
Other reasons were cited ror
nts the largest cash In-

FOR LOW-COST AUTO INSURANCE SEE TOM MILLS TODAY.
OUR CLAIM SETTLEMENTS ARE FAST AND FAIR WITHOUT
RED TAPE OR QUIBBLING. WITH PREMIUM IN _EASY
COST AUTO COVERAGE, SEE ME, TOM MILLS, OR PHONE
446-3084 FOR INFORMATION.

E. MILLS, AGENCY
FOR THOSE WHO WANT TilE BEST

WINTER
. . . . . RIVING
KELLY
SPRINGFIEtD

EPAIR
ERVICE

WINTER

Dnlenfor

DAYTON

UP TO
6 MONTHS
TO PAY
WITH SUNOCO
CREDIT CARDS!

ancl

GOODYEAR
TIRES

• EXPLORERS
• BIG GRIPS

following a program ot car
care. A cared~for car always
will be ln prime operating condition, mlnlmlzlng the chance
of sudden breakdown at inconvenient Ume.s and places.
Also, new car warranties require adherence to maintenance schedules. By living up
to warranty requirements, motorists needn't worry about
many expensive repairs during
the time specified by the manufacturers.
Should the owner decide to
keep the car longer than the
average time, it would provide
dependable transportation
years after the final payment.
DATfERY NOT AT FAULT

Many starting failures listed
as battery !allures actually
are not. The trouble otten ls
caused by abnormal conditions
In the Ignition system which
causes the batteries to be~
come run down while the driver is attempting to get the car
started.
An average- automobile engine uses about 9,000 gall~
or air for every gallon or gasoline. Have youl;' air cleaner
serviced regularly tor top performance.

·.·

-:.;
.- ·.;.

i?::
·:·:-··
:::::::

Our radiator service isn't only ad·
ding anti-freeze.
See us today. Get
one day service.

::}:
·.·.;.;.
:-:-:-:

·,·.·,·

·:-/

Why Buy Cheap Anti-Freeze? We will guarantee
your car's cooli11 system protection with our
anti-freeze. If you need additional anti-freeze
after initial installation we add it free. Let us
check the thermostat, the radiator for leaks,
the heater hoses, tighten the fan belt ... add
the proper anti-freeze and water pump lubricant to stop rust in your cooling system at
Bailey's.

·:·

..'tOO NEED AWATERFALL
THE SUN GOING DOWN SORT
rsOME REP5TREAK~ IN
t:E CO'r\ING OUT OF THE

BAILEY'S SUNOCO

lr. ard Mrs. Oliver

me ceremonies

Home of the $2000 Sunny Dollars Winner

Pomeroy, 0 .

282 W. Main St.

unbl in is on the tar
Her escort is Earl
lan Stidham, junior
doughter
Mr. IJ1d
r. and Mrs. Herman
1ce after the football
sts and door prizes.

992-2995

FOR LUXURY LOVERS.

AGRAND NEW WAY TO CATCH

'I

•

50MEnME5 IT
1'Ai'eS" A LA!/MAt.!
TO SET IHES"E
PEOPLE 5r~AIGHT

RIZER I
ILz. co.J.
rr. . 'I'·

POWELLS SUNOCO

'Ill

Mlddlepolt, 0.

1

~--------~9~92~-M~57~--------~ 1

MAIN

I'OIIIIliO'r
PBONI . . .I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

}
DONT WORRY. £30S5 ...E:VE N

s Sunday
al services [or Mrs. Al-

let, 75, RD l, RutlaM,
~ dead on arrival at Hoipita! Sunday morning, will
Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the
Funeral Home with the
llvld S'leets officiating.
will be in the Gravel Hill

ry at Cheshire.
born at Short creek, w.

t!

1969 DODGE MONACO
So you're looking for a mora luxurious car than you've ever owned
before. How can you swing it? Meet Monaco for 1969. The big Dodge. The
plush Dodga. The all·naw Oodge. The car for the man woo wants
a luxury car at a standard car price.

R. H. Rawlinjs'·,Sons Co.
ly hlmavlv..U .

rly Johnsm, 14, esll'ious injury when she
.1 Ule upstairs window
acust St. horne in Mid~
....da,y aft8nloon. Mid·
emergency squadmen
IS Jomson was leaning
"Pslair• windoW shai&lt; LK when she apparent her balance. 9le fell
J window and apparentxi a complete somermding on her feet. ~e
;en to Holzer Hospital
JI-vatlon and treatment.

1a Shiflet
THOUGH I'LL ~ EO RE fll?tN6 AS
YOW&lt; LOYAL SECI?ErAPY- Y()()
{ANAl-WAYS CAL~M6" AT MY
B~I.SRLY HILLS MA~IO~
FOR COIJ5ULTATIQt.J!

OHIO'S OLDEST DODGE DEALER

I

---·---~.:--..-~

I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Fri~

or

WE CARE FOR YOUR CAR

-----------

Polyestar Cord Tires

No. Second Ava.

.·.;.·.

·-~-~------------------·I

EXPERT

negotiations.

LET US CHECK
YOUR RADIATOR

446-3084

GAUIPOLIS, OHIO

SERVICE

and

bombing

Haiphong Harbor as a
arm twisting" to get

LOW-COST PROTECTION
for your CAR

61 0 Fourth Ave.

White Sands,

'fi.Y one on the moon
k an Appllo motherlunar pt'blt before

A typleal Sundilr ahemoon r•llr checkpoint, with a hueb.n,~ and wife team. "'Now let's see. Did
the in•trudi.on 1 ..7 ,.e w~re •uppoaed to ttlop or ju11t wave?

All burOOl'6

RUTLAND Fl

('

dar Practice

tinting on Maintenance
False Economy

DAYTON

:-:

You11 Always Do Better At Rutland
Furniture and Easy Terms Are Available.

'

10c

FIVE CEf.ITS

11Ki radar was to try

Care for Family Car Pays Off
Lower Operating Costs; Much
Trade·in Allowances
H

ove•

r

IIIli and~

ltlttlsht with lso.
thlo ovordnll. Low
lie 50s to the low
partly cloudy and
"' temperature.

~un~ay

'

CHRYSURS
PLYMOUTHS

Deep-drawn
Lifetime p01

GAS
MODEL

_ Weather

SUNDAY TIMES- SENTINEL, OCTOBER 13, 1968

1!/ TNM/1111 THE WINTEN IJN

Reces sed, 1.
Lp-angle, Wt

•

• 11 . .

NINE - CAR CARE

446·3503
1639 EASTERN AVE.

waist-h
Data-Matlc

•-......

.

1'11'1

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLER· PLY MOUTH

Charcomall

•'

-· ol~'t!J...•·~~' ' ... t&lt;~~,.-~&lt;'II·!J'- ...-. ~"'-r•'="'ft.'li"t"'ll'~;.W:,~~~

OYER 40
NEW CARS ON DISPLAY

5KM56CB
30 Inch C•

·'

I

• LOW PRICES
• FINANW.O::
• EXPERT SERVICE

..

-

)

MIDDLEPORT - Foor ln.
structors will present the stl.lly
material ror the ti:Yenlng Tuesday
when the first of two sessions on
defensive driving Is held at the
otudy hall o1 the Meigs Hlgll
School In Middleport.
Open to the publlc, the two-ses·
INTERESTED In a Brazilian pen pal?
slon course Is being spo1180I'ed
International F'rierrJs, made up or hundreds of Brazilian people by the Middl(!l)ort Business aOO
of both sexes ol all ages and professions, have formed an internation- Pro£esslonal Women's Club. Tile
al correspolltence club and are anxious to correspond with people of class will begin at 7:30p.m. The
othu countries. The purpose, or course, Is to get to know people or second session will be at 7:30 p,
m. on Tuesday, Oct. 22, at the
other nations.
Jf Interested, you are to send your name an:l complete addtes'!l, same location. Those cmwlet-sex, occ'C)ation, hobbies to Amlgoslnteraclorelr, CaixaPosta130827, lng both sessions wUI receive
Sao Paulo, Brazil
cards. The intensive drivlns;
ing
·one or both of the courses, training program Is prep~~red by
MEIGS Counlians interested In
adult business education may may report to the high school. the Ohio State Patrol.
Instructors Tuesday will Instill enter classes which began Mrs. James Venreri is Instruct~
or.
clude
Pomeroy Police Chief Jed
this week at Meigs Hlgll School.
Webster,
Mrs. Edith Sisson. dls-Typing classes start at 1 p.m.
~ONGRATULATIONS
to
Mr.
palcher
lor
the Pomeroy departand shorthand at 8 Thursday eve-and
Mrs.
James
Fugate
who
wUI
ment;
John
Mora, mathematics
ning, Those interested in pursu-observe their 45th wedding aMi· Instructor ot the Meigs Local
versary at their Pomeroy home School District, and WUliam
Business Opportunity
Tuesday. Mr. Fugaw red red 14 Gibbs, drlvlrw tnlnirw lnltnlc:t.. ..-vror;u_Jl:'.N'I'· '"'""' .. - - · - years liD lr,QID.. M_s _' · l~e. ~ , ""' . f
- 1 _,_.•.; ~~

Why Wait•••
they're greatl

1969

.

td

pAGE EiGHT - CAR CARE

GALLU'OLIS SCI! OO I. I' l.THOL - fl,-! embers of the \VIt s lting ton Elcmen..
tary &amp;hool Safety P atrol, s hown hl' r c with Chief of Poli ce .J ohn Taylor and
facu..lty sponsurs, Ho~· Spragut.' and Johu Holle, areO tor): Fir st Bow - Chief
Taylor, GJ'o.•&amp; Fife, Bil ly Barc us , Billy William s , Joey Hubenstahl, Jim .Justice, Jim Wocd, Keilh Shceb, Tomm) Young, Paul Walker, Greg Thomas,
John sallaz, James Cunningham, llonald Cla.l-', Hay l~ecn. Marl\ l'oling, ard
George Haffcll; Second row - Danny Cox, Bobby Condee, AnthOI'\Y Heese,

.......

.,

..,•.

•

88 s. SeeQIId Awe.

•

:

M-.v 27, 1892, the daugh-e lateJac&lt;JbandJosephlne
and she twi lived In the
.aant are&amp; wttil movi~ to
in 1956 and was a mem~
1e Rutland Church of God.
1 also preceded In death

·~·batll, Lemuel.

vors include two sons,
..etart. W. VLi Hue, Co; alx sisters, Mrs. Mar·
learlen, Charleston, W.
,., Arcber, Orchard Lake,
lit; Mary Dicker..,.. IJ1d
ano M&lt;CIIl, both or Lll•
'Ne-; Mro. !Do• Rolieelllw. W. VL, ot1d Yl18
!billet, IDIIa. ud 10 ........

..

&amp;Ill'-

tds IIIII' till at the .._.,_

'Ill

LE

SESlliON SLATED
. 1% Crcle cl dte Clu'ch Clf M!Z 6;:

�Sundl,}- Times - Sentinel, SUnda.Y. Cc•obc•- 13, l!ltiM

Sessions
To Begin

·.--SII"

-

J.

'ik'i

.

~·~ ·~:-;;)..... ~ -n:~~-- .,-~~-

ovens.
Chrome-tra1

Electric clo
Surface wor

control
Lift-off loochrom&amp;
window.
Lighted

bttts-~rutitttl
r

Control That
Skid· Here's
How to Do It

GALLIPOLIS, 0
: .· ~:

.·.

IHOROBRED IIRES
·.·
·:·
::·
:·

bottvrn,

::::
:··:

·..
:=~.=.·
:-

WILLIS TIRE CO.

::
::
}
·::

GALLIPOLIS, 0.

3RD &amp; GRAPE
IT'S A BEAR FACT
WE'RE EXPERTS
AT

WHEEL
ALIGNMENT
AND
IT'S A FACT THAT

742-4211

ARNOLD GF.

WINTER IS COMINGI
SEE US FOR YOUR

WINTER SAFETY CHECK
WHEEL ALIGNMENT -WHEEL BALANCE
BRAKES
WINDSHIELD-AUTO CLASS-DOOR CLASS
INSTALLAT.ION

ROSE ALIGNMENT

286 W. MAIN

.

J at

.

POMEROY, 0.

A skid can be one of the
most fearsome experiences a
driver can endure or it can be
merely routine. It depends up on whether or not you know
what to expect and how to
control it.
A driver who hu experienced several types of skids
seldom panics when hts car
breaks away on slippery surfaces; he remains In control
of the situation . Here are a
few facts to better help you
understand and anticipate
skidding.
Generally, your car will go
Into one of three common
forms of skid : rear-end breakaway, four-wheel slide or spin·
out.
In the ease or the rear-end
breakaway, which may have
been caused by uneven brak~
lnl g atchtlon orlll stmood~ rrar
t res, e car w en
sw ng
180 degrees, pil'ottng on the
front wheels. It anticipated In
time, this may be corrected by
turning the front wheels In
the direction of the skid, called
countersteering.
A four-wheel slide is caused
by applying the brakes too
severely on a slick surface.
With the wheels locked you
have no control over the dlrecUon your car may be taking
until you release the brakes
and permit the tires to regain
normal roll1ng frlction . Obvi ously, additional braking pressure will not slow you down,
but gentle pumping of the
brakes will help If you can
maintain a light t.ouch with
your foot.
The spin-out is similar to
the rear-end breakaway, except . that you have lost con~
trol of the front wheels as well
and you are likely to be travel Ing at a greater rate of speed .
The only measure you can
take to correct this frightenIng skid Is to counter steer and
hope you will contact a section
of road surface on which you
can get gripping action.
Other forms of skids include
ftshta111ng, from excessive ac celeration a.nd hydroplanlng,
where your tires are virtually
skimming over a thin film of
water. By about 55 mph you
may have lost ail frictional
contact with the road. A sud den gust or wind gives you the
surprise of your life.
Two cardinal rules of skidding are : stay oil the brake
pedal until you have regained
steering control and always
steer In the direction or the
skid.
Be especially wary of an Icy
surface when it is Just below
the freezing point. It 1s twice
as slippery as It would be at

em Apollo 1 ln much

1 (or the return.

~bate
1n Washington, called
oased
~aris

maintenance expenses may be costing
It is saving you.
ear owner now spends about $13 monthly
his car. Yet., survey after survey shows most ears
are not running at their best. Also, omclal Inspections
that a sizable number bave aarety defects, according to
M. Galster, Manager o! Champion Spark Plug ComAutomotive Teebnlcal Berviees.

zero.

SO play it safe. Travel at a
sensible speed.

99.a,3576

.

K.eepln• Car in Mint Condition

order to keep a car ln meeha.nieally-mlnt condition at all
, an average expenditure or $19 a month 1s required,"
. Galster. "In other words, &amp;bout one-thlrd more than
being spent.
arrived a.t this by prtelng out a ltst of necessary services
out over five years, the length ot warranties on U.S .
Figures are based on malntalntng a fu1i·s1zed V·8 sedan
~ low price group with automatic transmission.
he'll spend an added $8 a month, in the long run
owner should more than recoup the outlay. Money
back to the owner Ia&gt; at trade-in time and lbJ In
operating costs.
How

10

Gel Belt Gu Milea111e

driving with an engine always in tune and with good tg~
. he'll realtze his run gas mileage potential all the time,
when the car)s new. And he'll be able to start in any
weather.
having the front-end always In good alignment - by
· the Urea regularly, and keeping the wheels balanced,
be extended- up to as much as 20 percent, which
source of savings.
trade-In time," Mr. Galster said, "allowances for cars
condition, according to NADA, average at least $235
t. han comparable models In just average or lair condithe first trade-ln. That vestment the average Ameriamounts to around four can makes," he declared.
a month rebate for the "Only by taking care of that
of ownership."
Investment on a regular basis
figures, according to can It be protected tully. Walt&gt;aJster, are the result of lng until you have a few extra
study of car main- dollars to maintain vital parts
costs by Champion. Is an Invitation to premature
50 associations and deterioration at best and a
lh·u•··turer~ were queried. dangerous, accident-Inviting
to the home, the car Situation at worst.''
Other reasons were cited ror
nts the largest cash In-

FOR LOW-COST AUTO INSURANCE SEE TOM MILLS TODAY.
OUR CLAIM SETTLEMENTS ARE FAST AND FAIR WITHOUT
RED TAPE OR QUIBBLING. WITH PREMIUM IN _EASY
COST AUTO COVERAGE, SEE ME, TOM MILLS, OR PHONE
446-3084 FOR INFORMATION.

E. MILLS, AGENCY
FOR THOSE WHO WANT TilE BEST

WINTER
. . . . . RIVING
KELLY
SPRINGFIEtD

EPAIR
ERVICE

WINTER

Dnlenfor

DAYTON

UP TO
6 MONTHS
TO PAY
WITH SUNOCO
CREDIT CARDS!

ancl

GOODYEAR
TIRES

• EXPLORERS
• BIG GRIPS

following a program ot car
care. A cared~for car always
will be ln prime operating condition, mlnlmlzlng the chance
of sudden breakdown at inconvenient Ume.s and places.
Also, new car warranties require adherence to maintenance schedules. By living up
to warranty requirements, motorists needn't worry about
many expensive repairs during
the time specified by the manufacturers.
Should the owner decide to
keep the car longer than the
average time, it would provide
dependable transportation
years after the final payment.
DATfERY NOT AT FAULT

Many starting failures listed
as battery !allures actually
are not. The trouble otten ls
caused by abnormal conditions
In the Ignition system which
causes the batteries to be~
come run down while the driver is attempting to get the car
started.
An average- automobile engine uses about 9,000 gall~
or air for every gallon or gasoline. Have youl;' air cleaner
serviced regularly tor top performance.

·.·

-:.;
.- ·.;.

i?::
·:·:-··
:::::::

Our radiator service isn't only ad·
ding anti-freeze.
See us today. Get
one day service.

::}:
·.·.;.;.
:-:-:-:

·,·.·,·

·:-/

Why Buy Cheap Anti-Freeze? We will guarantee
your car's cooli11 system protection with our
anti-freeze. If you need additional anti-freeze
after initial installation we add it free. Let us
check the thermostat, the radiator for leaks,
the heater hoses, tighten the fan belt ... add
the proper anti-freeze and water pump lubricant to stop rust in your cooling system at
Bailey's.

·:·

..'tOO NEED AWATERFALL
THE SUN GOING DOWN SORT
rsOME REP5TREAK~ IN
t:E CO'r\ING OUT OF THE

BAILEY'S SUNOCO

lr. ard Mrs. Oliver

me ceremonies

Home of the $2000 Sunny Dollars Winner

Pomeroy, 0 .

282 W. Main St.

unbl in is on the tar
Her escort is Earl
lan Stidham, junior
doughter
Mr. IJ1d
r. and Mrs. Herman
1ce after the football
sts and door prizes.

992-2995

FOR LUXURY LOVERS.

AGRAND NEW WAY TO CATCH

'I

•

50MEnME5 IT
1'Ai'eS" A LA!/MAt.!
TO SET IHES"E
PEOPLE 5r~AIGHT

RIZER I
ILz. co.J.
rr. . 'I'·

POWELLS SUNOCO

'Ill

Mlddlepolt, 0.

1

~--------~9~92~-M~57~--------~ 1

MAIN

I'OIIIIliO'r
PBONI . . .I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

}
DONT WORRY. £30S5 ...E:VE N

s Sunday
al services [or Mrs. Al-

let, 75, RD l, RutlaM,
~ dead on arrival at Hoipita! Sunday morning, will
Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the
Funeral Home with the
llvld S'leets officiating.
will be in the Gravel Hill

ry at Cheshire.
born at Short creek, w.

t!

1969 DODGE MONACO
So you're looking for a mora luxurious car than you've ever owned
before. How can you swing it? Meet Monaco for 1969. The big Dodge. The
plush Dodga. The all·naw Oodge. The car for the man woo wants
a luxury car at a standard car price.

R. H. Rawlinjs'·,Sons Co.
ly hlmavlv..U .

rly Johnsm, 14, esll'ious injury when she
.1 Ule upstairs window
acust St. horne in Mid~
....da,y aft8nloon. Mid·
emergency squadmen
IS Jomson was leaning
"Pslair• windoW shai&lt; LK when she apparent her balance. 9le fell
J window and apparentxi a complete somermding on her feet. ~e
;en to Holzer Hospital
JI-vatlon and treatment.

1a Shiflet
THOUGH I'LL ~ EO RE fll?tN6 AS
YOW&lt; LOYAL SECI?ErAPY- Y()()
{ANAl-WAYS CAL~M6" AT MY
B~I.SRLY HILLS MA~IO~
FOR COIJ5ULTATIQt.J!

OHIO'S OLDEST DODGE DEALER

I

---·---~.:--..-~

I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Fri~

or

WE CARE FOR YOUR CAR

-----------

Polyestar Cord Tires

No. Second Ava.

.·.;.·.

·-~-~------------------·I

EXPERT

negotiations.

LET US CHECK
YOUR RADIATOR

446-3084

GAUIPOLIS, OHIO

SERVICE

and

bombing

Haiphong Harbor as a
arm twisting" to get

LOW-COST PROTECTION
for your CAR

61 0 Fourth Ave.

White Sands,

'fi.Y one on the moon
k an Appllo motherlunar pt'blt before

A typleal Sundilr ahemoon r•llr checkpoint, with a hueb.n,~ and wife team. "'Now let's see. Did
the in•trudi.on 1 ..7 ,.e w~re •uppoaed to ttlop or ju11t wave?

All burOOl'6

RUTLAND Fl

('

dar Practice

tinting on Maintenance
False Economy

DAYTON

:-:

You11 Always Do Better At Rutland
Furniture and Easy Terms Are Available.

'

10c

FIVE CEf.ITS

11Ki radar was to try

Care for Family Car Pays Off
Lower Operating Costs; Much
Trade·in Allowances
H

ove•

r

IIIli and~

ltlttlsht with lso.
thlo ovordnll. Low
lie 50s to the low
partly cloudy and
"' temperature.

~un~ay

'

CHRYSURS
PLYMOUTHS

Deep-drawn
Lifetime p01

GAS
MODEL

_ Weather

SUNDAY TIMES- SENTINEL, OCTOBER 13, 1968

1!/ TNM/1111 THE WINTEN IJN

Reces sed, 1.
Lp-angle, Wt

•

• 11 . .

NINE - CAR CARE

446·3503
1639 EASTERN AVE.

waist-h
Data-Matlc

•-......

.

1'11'1

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLER· PLY MOUTH

Charcomall

•'

-· ol~'t!J...•·~~' ' ... t&lt;~~,.-~&lt;'II·!J'- ...-. ~"'-r•'="'ft.'li"t"'ll'~;.W:,~~~

OYER 40
NEW CARS ON DISPLAY

5KM56CB
30 Inch C•

·'

I

• LOW PRICES
• FINANW.O::
• EXPERT SERVICE

..

-

)

MIDDLEPORT - Foor ln.
structors will present the stl.lly
material ror the ti:Yenlng Tuesday
when the first of two sessions on
defensive driving Is held at the
otudy hall o1 the Meigs Hlgll
School In Middleport.
Open to the publlc, the two-ses·
INTERESTED In a Brazilian pen pal?
slon course Is being spo1180I'ed
International F'rierrJs, made up or hundreds of Brazilian people by the Middl(!l)ort Business aOO
of both sexes ol all ages and professions, have formed an internation- Pro£esslonal Women's Club. Tile
al correspolltence club and are anxious to correspond with people of class will begin at 7:30p.m. The
othu countries. The purpose, or course, Is to get to know people or second session will be at 7:30 p,
m. on Tuesday, Oct. 22, at the
other nations.
Jf Interested, you are to send your name an:l complete addtes'!l, same location. Those cmwlet-sex, occ'C)ation, hobbies to Amlgoslnteraclorelr, CaixaPosta130827, lng both sessions wUI receive
Sao Paulo, Brazil
cards. The intensive drivlns;
ing
·one or both of the courses, training program Is prep~~red by
MEIGS Counlians interested In
adult business education may may report to the high school. the Ohio State Patrol.
Instructors Tuesday will Instill enter classes which began Mrs. James Venreri is Instruct~
or.
clude
Pomeroy Police Chief Jed
this week at Meigs Hlgll School.
Webster,
Mrs. Edith Sisson. dls-Typing classes start at 1 p.m.
~ONGRATULATIONS
to
Mr.
palcher
lor
the Pomeroy departand shorthand at 8 Thursday eve-and
Mrs.
James
Fugate
who
wUI
ment;
John
Mora, mathematics
ning, Those interested in pursu-observe their 45th wedding aMi· Instructor ot the Meigs Local
versary at their Pomeroy home School District, and WUliam
Business Opportunity
Tuesday. Mr. Fugaw red red 14 Gibbs, drlvlrw tnlnirw lnltnlc:t.. ..-vror;u_Jl:'.N'I'· '"'""' .. - - · - years liD lr,QID.. M_s _' · l~e. ~ , ""' . f
- 1 _,_.•.; ~~

Why Wait•••
they're greatl

1969

.

td

pAGE EiGHT - CAR CARE

GALLU'OLIS SCI! OO I. I' l.THOL - fl,-! embers of the \VIt s lting ton Elcmen..
tary &amp;hool Safety P atrol, s hown hl' r c with Chief of Poli ce .J ohn Taylor and
facu..lty sponsurs, Ho~· Spragut.' and Johu Holle, areO tor): Fir st Bow - Chief
Taylor, GJ'o.•&amp; Fife, Bil ly Barc us , Billy William s , Joey Hubenstahl, Jim .Justice, Jim Wocd, Keilh Shceb, Tomm) Young, Paul Walker, Greg Thomas,
John sallaz, James Cunningham, llonald Cla.l-', Hay l~ecn. Marl\ l'oling, ard
George Haffcll; Second row - Danny Cox, Bobby Condee, AnthOI'\Y Heese,

.......

.,

..,•.

•

88 s. SeeQIId Awe.

•

:

M-.v 27, 1892, the daugh-e lateJac&lt;JbandJosephlne
and she twi lived In the
.aant are&amp; wttil movi~ to
in 1956 and was a mem~
1e Rutland Church of God.
1 also preceded In death

·~·batll, Lemuel.

vors include two sons,
..etart. W. VLi Hue, Co; alx sisters, Mrs. Mar·
learlen, Charleston, W.
,., Arcber, Orchard Lake,
lit; Mary Dicker..,.. IJ1d
ano M&lt;CIIl, both or Lll•
'Ne-; Mro. !Do• Rolieelllw. W. VL, ot1d Yl18
!billet, IDIIa. ud 10 ........

..

&amp;Ill'-

tds IIIII' till at the .._.,_

'Ill

LE

SESlliON SLATED
. 1% Crcle cl dte Clu'ch Clf M!Z 6;:

�... ·" .
'

~.

I

Sessions
To Begin

Sunda)· TUnes • Sentinel, 'Surw:tay, October 13, l!ll.ili

MIDDLEPORT - Fourt51
atructors wUI present the
materlal for the nenlngTu ay
when the nrst or two sessions on
defensive drlvlne is held at the
study hall of tile Meigs High
School In Middleport.
Open lo the public, thetwo--&amp;88·
sion col.ll'se is being sponsored
INTERESTED in a Brazilian pen pal?
International Friends, made lll of hundreds of Bnzlltan people by the Middleport Business and
or both sexes or all ages and proCessions, have formed an lnternatiOJl. Professional Women's Club. The
a1 correspondence club and are anxious to correspond with people or class will begin at 7:30p.m. The
other countries. The purpose, of course, is to pt to know people of second session will be at 7:30 p.
m. on Tuesday, Oct. 22, at the
other nations.
Ir Interested, you are to send your name and ciBJQ)lete addren, same location. Those conwlet-sex, occtllation, hobbies to Amigos lnteracionatr, CalxaPosta.l30827, lng both sessions will receive
cards. The intensive driving
Sao Paulo, Brazil.
lng or~B or both or the courses, training program Ia prepared by
MEIGS CounUans interested in
may report to the high school. the Ohio&gt; State Patrol.
adult business education may
Mrs. James Vennl.l'i is instrucllnstrucl.ora Tuesday will in.
still enter classes which began
elude
Pomeroy Pollee Chief Je,d
this week at Meigs Higtt School. or.
Webster,
Mrs. Edith Sisson. disTyping classes start at 7 p.m
CONGRATULATIONS
to Mr. patcher Cor the Pomeroy departand shorthand at8 Thursday eve-and Mrs. James Fugate who will ment; ,lOOn Mora, mathematics
ning. Those interested in pursuobserve their 45th wedding aruti· Instructor of the Meigs Local
v~~rsary at their Pomeroy home School Dlotrtct, and WWtam

drlv!O$ tnlnlnK toatructTue_'!l&amp;!• ~· ..~'f,J~~-~~ Glbb",
:;;&lt;'~j.i. f t.!i~~~
Wall"!~:

PAl
GALLU'ULlS SCHOOL P ATIWL -

Scope of Winter F

Members o( 1

"

'

la N
rri 11 t er cam ping Brings
pu r ew sport.
Th•onge
T R
•, " '
0
..
ecreational Areas

Snmvmobiling-Po

,

j• '.

The thing I like about

m~squJtoes," said one out;~~ter ~~ting.!l Is that there are no
I like the soJitud

!

r en msiast.

cte~~t' ot cool wea~h~r c:~~~;gin the wint.er," .'laid another

atever the reaso
1
.
::- IHllmlObiling.is one o~ih~ ~te~ recreaUon, !rom camping to
th?s m the U.S. and Canada ;s st growing leisure time actJvil~g ~€-hicles, winter sportsn~eno~~7te~~ ot moth-balling camp·
\\ f'at 1er purposes.
oy ern for a variety of cold
Added to the regular
. t
,
v,•yance Is captunn tl va~Ie Y of wheeled vehicles a new
SilO\\ n~obtle. a mot~nz~~ ~=~!~atton of sportsm~n It 15c~~;
rounuy Jnhabuant s and VISJt~r on ski-like runners Snow
rr~...,:i-Country run s f&lt;lee.s rallies s a~e usmg snowmobiles for
hr ntllnbf'r of SilO\\
I
an Just plam JOY riding
ha:::; S\lt':'llttd to marc than I es Iegistercd Ill North Amenca
formed 111 virtually all
a half nulhon Clubs have b
camp t 11
state
een
e JOn'&gt; and 1allies northern
llf'in
s an d provinces with
P ~ne mtrepJd snov.luobiler ~a~porsorcd by these clubs
a ready reached the North
o L' :tftel a 600 llllle lrek acr
~ ~ :1t~,~ are content 1\lth less ~s~vth~ frozen Arctic wastelands.
lll e.~ or so Most are hu
. en urous shorter runs of 300
frozen \\Intel countrysJd/py \\Ilh a short jaunt across the
Sno\\lllobJhng IS JUst
'Hiny
one of
' '
.tcllvJtle.s that ar i
rr e.lslllg the popularJte ~­
" 11\lt'r campmg
Sktl
y f
bo 11 Jn
fi
ng, 1ce
,
g, Ire slung and otht"
~ ueb wmter s ports go hand ~~
hand \\ Jth ttw modern heat d
e~mpt• r Wht the I at a Popul~r
..., J lf:'~C!t or " re mote hunt
~~1 :u ea, H provides a comfort~
~ e. convement and econormal kmct of acconunodatlon
In out-of-the- way
',\ heu no or he
,
P1aces,

n;ob

..

..

;.J.',

un

E

SUNDAY11MEHENTIN~IlCroJiERi3,1968

xtended b Mo··",.,._. .

tent assembly to $12,000 or so
for a travel coach or selt-contalned mobile home
Naturally, all wtnier camp
Jng isn't done in cold climate;
Parks in Florida, the Ouli
Coast States, the Southwest
and Pacific areas are filled
with recreational vehicles and
tents.
With winter camping and
snowmobiling on the uprise
It's another telling reason
keep the family car rolling In
top condition aU year-round .

GAS
MODEL
.I

f For your car

...... _)J
l- ---=---j- -

State Fann is all
)'OU need to know
about insurance.
See me.

You11 Always Do Better At Rutla
Furniture and Easy Terms 1

Carrol K. Snowden

Par~ Cer'ltra! Hotel Bldg
Second Ave . Ph. 446·4290

TRUST
YOUR

•

CAR

TO

DISTRIBUTED By

STATE

o "RIVE-IN WINDOW eFREE CUSTOM,
25 Court St.

,

·,

dar Practice
tnd radar wu to try
on Aflollo 7 In muciJ

/

I

one on the moon
k an Ap9llo mother·
lunar ~it before
r [or the return.

'48Y

'

' I

~bate

'

~ ' ~I(

"' I

in Washington, called
tased

ER PARKING
G'allipolis

bombing

and

Haiphong Harbor aa a
arm twisting'' to get
~arts negotiation:;.

SUNDAY TIMES- SENTINEL, OCTOBER 13, 1908

Car ~are Key to Trouble-Free Winter Motoring
If there is any conclusion to
be gathered, It Is this. More

people are going to more places
by car In winter. Cars are cap·
able of coping with the most
severe rigors winter can offer.

There was a time not too many years ago when the family
car went Into winter storage along with the beach gear, the golf
clubs and the cotton clothing .
Cars just couldn't take the rigors of winter driving and, be ~tdes , where was there to go? So, into the garage and up on
block;.; was the rule until the following spr1ng.
Rut today, the car is a van for all seasons. Engineering and
dr., l~J:n improvements and good maintenance make a rar as
ctrpendable in foul weather as it is In fair . Furthermore, there
h .~ udt an enticing array of fall and winter attractions that
hi bernation is foolhardy unless you are a bear.
Ftr.~t. lel's look at the modern car versus those of grandpa 's
tim e. Today's coolants, when properly looked after, are virtually roolproof. Cars of yesterday had to depend on coolants
th ut balled away quickly or could withstand only moderate
cold
Modern tires with new designs attack ice and snow with the
.'i urf:'foot.ednes.s of a tight rope walker . Even things we now
take a~ a matter of course like etflclent heaters and defrosters.
tntproved suspension, steering and fuels take the doubt out
of 1nntcr driving.
Thanks to the new dependability of the automobile, motor:n!i famllle~&gt; are enjoying a bountiful choice of places to go.
Wmter motoring vacations to the southern United States are
llf'comiug almost as common as ~ummer vacations
Fall and winter sports such as hunting, skiing, snowmobil 111 ~· .'i kating, Ice fishing and
enthusiasts .
tobogganing are luring mil·
But even with ~tter cars
hom to resorts throughout the and more places to go in them,
U.S and Canada. With arUfi- winter motoring is not lm clal .snow making machines, mune from unusual hazards.
r_ven mtld winter·area eleva.· For example, one out of every
1wn:; are becoming skJ resorts tour cars in North America
and are attracting throngs ot wUl experience winter starting

t.rouble . Of all who have trou·
ble starting, three out of ftve
w111 have It more than once .
Yet. there 'ts no need for
starting trouble -even in the
coldest climates. Exhaustive
studies prove that in Instances
where ignition maintenance is
practiced, starting problems
are rare. Conversely, where
maintenance is neglected,
starting trouble Is common even In warm weather areas!

4~r

That Is If the cars are properly maintained and equipped .
Thi:s section is intended to
show how proper car care will
give you more fun behind the
wheel this winter.

48·88

lr. and MrL OUver

me ceremonies Fri·

Plus Tax and Recappable
Tire

ambUn 111 on the tar
Her e1cort Is Earl
lan Stidh&amp;m, junior
daughter of Mr. and
r. and Mrs. Herman

H&amp; R FIRESTONE

tee after the football
sts and door prlzes.

992-2238

N. 2ND AVE.

SOMETIMES IT

MIDDLEPORT 0.

IAI'ES" A LAI(MAt.f
TO SETIHESE
PEOPlE 5TRAtGHi

T.V.
STAMPS
ON ALL

ANTI· FREEZE
SPECIALS

ta Shiflet
DOtJT WORRY B0 5S .. . ~VEI-J

THOUGH ! LL BE i&lt;Sflr&lt;'/~6 AS
YOUR LOYAL SE'O&lt;.'EfAR ~' - YOJ
CAN ALW.•YS CAL~ M6 AT MY
BEI/Eii&lt;LY HILLS MANSIOtJ

City Ice &amp; Fuel Co.

675-2460

PT. PLEASANT W VA
I' .
.

ance before It Is too late.

DAVIS-WARNER INS. SERVICE
114 W. Court

Pomeroy, Ohio

,· -'·"""''-" "''tl"Q:.;::::------.:99:2·~51:86:~

FREEl
BEAT WINTER
DRIVE INTO LOU'S
FOR YOUR WINTER
THERMOSTAT
AND G~T
FREE INSTALLAT'ION'

2.25 ••••

LOU'S ASHLAND
ROAD SERVICE-U·HAULS
COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE

I

learten, Charlestoo, W.
1(1'8 Archer, Orchard U.ke,
U\i Mary DlckeriOil, anJ.
... McCOll, both of Las
'No-; Mra. lmlz Rol-

.I

ileall.., W, Va., Old Mils
!JU1Iel,lllllta, 0111110 iP'Oftllo
L

c.u

111s _ .
ot 111o ,._...
lliUJtlme.

'

b:

719 W. MAIN
POMEROY
992-3535

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Ill servi&lt;:ea for Mrs. Altet, 75, RD 1, Rutland,
• dead on arrival at Holpital SUnday morning, will
Tue~· at 2 p. m. at the
Funeral Home with the

ry at Cheshire.
&amp;sbornatShortCreek. W.
May 27, 1892, the daughe lateJacobanciJosephine
and she had Uved in the
.unt area Wlt11 movi~to
in 1956 and waa a mem·
~ RuUand. Chw'ch of God.
i also preceded in death
\Usbalxl, Lemuel
vors include twa. sons,
..etart, W, VLi Hue, C~
; six sisters, Mra. Mar·

ANTI FREEZE
INSTALLED

s Sunday

1vid Sleets oll'iciatlng.
will be in the Gravel Hill

YlLYOLINE

most cautious driver. Get enau&amp;h auto insur·

when she apparent -

her balance. Sie [ell
~ window and apparent·
x1 a complete somer.mdlng on her feet. g,e
.en to Hol:r.er Hotlpital
1rvatioo and treatment.

fOR COIJSUlTATIOiJ!

Why does it always happen that the careful
dnver becomes Involved in an accident? Don't
trust your future to luck ... even if you are 1

rly Johnaoo., 14, esll'ious injury when she
1 the upstairs window
ocust St. home in MJ.d.
iuncta,y afternoon. Midemergency ~dmen
iS Johnson was leaning
~.~pstalrs window shaH Ig

2. 00 : ;,
FOR AlL YOUR WINTER DRIVING

Insurance Companiss

• to know •bout ineurance.

I

GASOLINE • MOTOROIL

'

late F.rm ia all you, need

J at White Sands,

EVEN A CAREFUL DRIVER
CAN HAVE AN ACCIDENT!

A

''

'

I

ASHLAND PERMANENT

II'UUI.ANU

~c.m eOIIices: Bloominoton llllhO/s

~m

FINANCE WITH US
•••••
COMPARE THE COSTSI
Why is it so many folks tak th . .
a new car, but seldom looke etr lime selecting
new-car financing plan7Why around for the best
~ary? II you are planni~g to ~ay more than necesm and see us. We can save uy a new car, come
our monthly payments with a you money. Compare
you' II agree that there i sn'~yon~ rn tow~. Then,
plan around.
a etter ftnancing

temperature.

FIVE CEI'ifTS

Improvement in _4utomobiles, Choice
Of Spots To Enjoy Winter Fun Join
1'o Create Van for All Seasons

!

HAlf fAIM

742-4211

I

(;rnl&gt;lh in popularil)' ur cold wealher !!porh ha~ nutde l&gt;'inlrr automobile tru"d almn111 u ,l'ita.i to
fun a~ ilu· JOuntmer variely. Ski re1orl8 find parkin.-; lob• fillf'd will! I'D~. 'l'o l{el lo 1he~~e ret~orl!!l and
.. tlu•r .•pori~&gt; areal!, t·ar" mu11l he in extra ~ood t~ondition .

H ome P h 446 - 4518""
Gol l ipo l i s , Ol-lio

RUTLJ

pertly cloudy and

NEW
TREADS

and your health

--zit

thil ev...UW. Low
lie 50• to the low

'f1rttfont

JOUr home
your life

. ( ro @

&lt;II' and oontltJued

.. lonlght wltb 1110-

'I

THIS INH.ATION- HF.I PS
Th ere Is
· an old wives'
" tale
that J~ you let some air out of
your t1res. they
bet
· will gl ve .you a
wo;derfgrlp on Icy roads. Latest
rom the exp t
is not the wa
_ er s is this
Uon. Insteal to Improve trac• use winter tire
an d ' tor icy conditi
s
sand and a shovel. ons, carry

to;

.

Weather

WITH

are an Increasingl
Y common
en they prm. ide hous mg fur outdoorsmen \1 ho 1
1
· r~ughmg 11 • simply t~ ~~~
a\\ay from It all.
Vehicles for camping travel
represent a national .
ment f
InYesto more than a bill!
dollar:; annually Th
on
is s
- . e money
pent for the enjoyment of
n:~re than 200 million people
\'. o camp at national or state
parks each year. !The totaJ l
~ourse, includes persons ca~;­
~ng. at more than one park
unng extended trips or multiple use of a single park I
This investment m pleas
ure includes expenditures
campmg units ranging in pric
from about $100 I or a largee

,;

..

.,.

··.·.

qght Ott

l'

'

- ...

I

....... -

r accommoda1JOns exist. camping
vehicles

. •n,.

"

- - ·' .

. . . . 4 ..

tO

•

' '

!

...,

pAGE ELEVEN - CAR CARE

PAGE TES- nR CARE
tary School Saf~:y Patrol, shown here with Chlef of
. facl.l.lty spons\lrs, Hoy Sp1·agliC' and .1o1m Holle, areO t
Taylor, Gr ...,s Fire, BUiy Ban·us, Billy \'·iilliams, J01
lice, Jim Wood, Keith Sheel b, Tommy Young, Paul
John Sa!laz, James Cunningham, l{onald Cla_y, Ray (
George Haffelt; Se&lt;-'Ond row - Danny Cox, Bobby

..,.I

I

•

SESSION SLATED
• 12 Clrdt of tile IIMdl
~~ Cllurdl of ll! :S · I

.. ····~--·

·· · ··· ·· ~

~Wa!o ';,~­

.

lfoollho . . . .

------------~-·~--_,_-••r=-·u-·,~ •·nxnn!IP'VW"
.,,

....

··---·-- ··-- - .......

�... ·" .
'

~.

I

Sessions
To Begin

Sunda)· TUnes • Sentinel, 'Surw:tay, October 13, l!ll.ili

MIDDLEPORT - Fourt51
atructors wUI present the
materlal for the nenlngTu ay
when the nrst or two sessions on
defensive drlvlne is held at the
study hall of tile Meigs High
School In Middleport.
Open lo the public, thetwo--&amp;88·
sion col.ll'se is being sponsored
INTERESTED in a Brazilian pen pal?
International Friends, made lll of hundreds of Bnzlltan people by the Middleport Business and
or both sexes or all ages and proCessions, have formed an lnternatiOJl. Professional Women's Club. The
a1 correspondence club and are anxious to correspond with people or class will begin at 7:30p.m. The
other countries. The purpose, of course, is to pt to know people of second session will be at 7:30 p.
m. on Tuesday, Oct. 22, at the
other nations.
Ir Interested, you are to send your name and ciBJQ)lete addren, same location. Those conwlet-sex, occtllation, hobbies to Amigos lnteracionatr, CalxaPosta.l30827, lng both sessions will receive
cards. The intensive driving
Sao Paulo, Brazil.
lng or~B or both or the courses, training program Ia prepared by
MEIGS CounUans interested in
may report to the high school. the Ohio&gt; State Patrol.
adult business education may
Mrs. James Vennl.l'i is instrucllnstrucl.ora Tuesday will in.
still enter classes which began
elude
Pomeroy Pollee Chief Je,d
this week at Meigs Higtt School. or.
Webster,
Mrs. Edith Sisson. disTyping classes start at 7 p.m
CONGRATULATIONS
to Mr. patcher Cor the Pomeroy departand shorthand at8 Thursday eve-and Mrs. James Fugate who will ment; ,lOOn Mora, mathematics
ning. Those interested in pursuobserve their 45th wedding aruti· Instructor of the Meigs Local
v~~rsary at their Pomeroy home School Dlotrtct, and WWtam

drlv!O$ tnlnlnK toatructTue_'!l&amp;!• ~· ..~'f,J~~-~~ Glbb",
:;;&lt;'~j.i. f t.!i~~~
Wall"!~:

PAl
GALLU'ULlS SCHOOL P ATIWL -

Scope of Winter F

Members o( 1

"

'

la N
rri 11 t er cam ping Brings
pu r ew sport.
Th•onge
T R
•, " '
0
..
ecreational Areas

Snmvmobiling-Po

,

j• '.

The thing I like about

m~squJtoes," said one out;~~ter ~~ting.!l Is that there are no
I like the soJitud

!

r en msiast.

cte~~t' ot cool wea~h~r c:~~~;gin the wint.er," .'laid another

atever the reaso
1
.
::- IHllmlObiling.is one o~ih~ ~te~ recreaUon, !rom camping to
th?s m the U.S. and Canada ;s st growing leisure time actJvil~g ~€-hicles, winter sportsn~eno~~7te~~ ot moth-balling camp·
\\ f'at 1er purposes.
oy ern for a variety of cold
Added to the regular
. t
,
v,•yance Is captunn tl va~Ie Y of wheeled vehicles a new
SilO\\ n~obtle. a mot~nz~~ ~=~!~atton of sportsm~n It 15c~~;
rounuy Jnhabuant s and VISJt~r on ski-like runners Snow
rr~...,:i-Country run s f&lt;lee.s rallies s a~e usmg snowmobiles for
hr ntllnbf'r of SilO\\
I
an Just plam JOY riding
ha:::; S\lt':'llttd to marc than I es Iegistercd Ill North Amenca
formed 111 virtually all
a half nulhon Clubs have b
camp t 11
state
een
e JOn'&gt; and 1allies northern
llf'in
s an d provinces with
P ~ne mtrepJd snov.luobiler ~a~porsorcd by these clubs
a ready reached the North
o L' :tftel a 600 llllle lrek acr
~ ~ :1t~,~ are content 1\lth less ~s~vth~ frozen Arctic wastelands.
lll e.~ or so Most are hu
. en urous shorter runs of 300
frozen \\Intel countrysJd/py \\Ilh a short jaunt across the
Sno\\lllobJhng IS JUst
'Hiny
one of
' '
.tcllvJtle.s that ar i
rr e.lslllg the popularJte ~­
" 11\lt'r campmg
Sktl
y f
bo 11 Jn
fi
ng, 1ce
,
g, Ire slung and otht"
~ ueb wmter s ports go hand ~~
hand \\ Jth ttw modern heat d
e~mpt• r Wht the I at a Popul~r
..., J lf:'~C!t or " re mote hunt
~~1 :u ea, H provides a comfort~
~ e. convement and econormal kmct of acconunodatlon
In out-of-the- way
',\ heu no or he
,
P1aces,

n;ob

..

..

;.J.',

un

E

SUNDAY11MEHENTIN~IlCroJiERi3,1968

xtended b Mo··",.,._. .

tent assembly to $12,000 or so
for a travel coach or selt-contalned mobile home
Naturally, all wtnier camp
Jng isn't done in cold climate;
Parks in Florida, the Ouli
Coast States, the Southwest
and Pacific areas are filled
with recreational vehicles and
tents.
With winter camping and
snowmobiling on the uprise
It's another telling reason
keep the family car rolling In
top condition aU year-round .

GAS
MODEL
.I

f For your car

...... _)J
l- ---=---j- -

State Fann is all
)'OU need to know
about insurance.
See me.

You11 Always Do Better At Rutla
Furniture and Easy Terms 1

Carrol K. Snowden

Par~ Cer'ltra! Hotel Bldg
Second Ave . Ph. 446·4290

TRUST
YOUR

•

CAR

TO

DISTRIBUTED By

STATE

o "RIVE-IN WINDOW eFREE CUSTOM,
25 Court St.

,

·,

dar Practice
tnd radar wu to try
on Aflollo 7 In muciJ

/

I

one on the moon
k an Ap9llo mother·
lunar ~it before
r [or the return.

'48Y

'

' I

~bate

'

~ ' ~I(

"' I

in Washington, called
tased

ER PARKING
G'allipolis

bombing

and

Haiphong Harbor aa a
arm twisting'' to get
~arts negotiation:;.

SUNDAY TIMES- SENTINEL, OCTOBER 13, 1908

Car ~are Key to Trouble-Free Winter Motoring
If there is any conclusion to
be gathered, It Is this. More

people are going to more places
by car In winter. Cars are cap·
able of coping with the most
severe rigors winter can offer.

There was a time not too many years ago when the family
car went Into winter storage along with the beach gear, the golf
clubs and the cotton clothing .
Cars just couldn't take the rigors of winter driving and, be ~tdes , where was there to go? So, into the garage and up on
block;.; was the rule until the following spr1ng.
Rut today, the car is a van for all seasons. Engineering and
dr., l~J:n improvements and good maintenance make a rar as
ctrpendable in foul weather as it is In fair . Furthermore, there
h .~ udt an enticing array of fall and winter attractions that
hi bernation is foolhardy unless you are a bear.
Ftr.~t. lel's look at the modern car versus those of grandpa 's
tim e. Today's coolants, when properly looked after, are virtually roolproof. Cars of yesterday had to depend on coolants
th ut balled away quickly or could withstand only moderate
cold
Modern tires with new designs attack ice and snow with the
.'i urf:'foot.ednes.s of a tight rope walker . Even things we now
take a~ a matter of course like etflclent heaters and defrosters.
tntproved suspension, steering and fuels take the doubt out
of 1nntcr driving.
Thanks to the new dependability of the automobile, motor:n!i famllle~&gt; are enjoying a bountiful choice of places to go.
Wmter motoring vacations to the southern United States are
llf'comiug almost as common as ~ummer vacations
Fall and winter sports such as hunting, skiing, snowmobil 111 ~· .'i kating, Ice fishing and
enthusiasts .
tobogganing are luring mil·
But even with ~tter cars
hom to resorts throughout the and more places to go in them,
U.S and Canada. With arUfi- winter motoring is not lm clal .snow making machines, mune from unusual hazards.
r_ven mtld winter·area eleva.· For example, one out of every
1wn:; are becoming skJ resorts tour cars in North America
and are attracting throngs ot wUl experience winter starting

t.rouble . Of all who have trou·
ble starting, three out of ftve
w111 have It more than once .
Yet. there 'ts no need for
starting trouble -even in the
coldest climates. Exhaustive
studies prove that in Instances
where ignition maintenance is
practiced, starting problems
are rare. Conversely, where
maintenance is neglected,
starting trouble Is common even In warm weather areas!

4~r

That Is If the cars are properly maintained and equipped .
Thi:s section is intended to
show how proper car care will
give you more fun behind the
wheel this winter.

48·88

lr. and MrL OUver

me ceremonies Fri·

Plus Tax and Recappable
Tire

ambUn 111 on the tar
Her e1cort Is Earl
lan Stidh&amp;m, junior
daughter of Mr. and
r. and Mrs. Herman

H&amp; R FIRESTONE

tee after the football
sts and door prlzes.

992-2238

N. 2ND AVE.

SOMETIMES IT

MIDDLEPORT 0.

IAI'ES" A LAI(MAt.f
TO SETIHESE
PEOPlE 5TRAtGHi

T.V.
STAMPS
ON ALL

ANTI· FREEZE
SPECIALS

ta Shiflet
DOtJT WORRY B0 5S .. . ~VEI-J

THOUGH ! LL BE i&lt;Sflr&lt;'/~6 AS
YOUR LOYAL SE'O&lt;.'EfAR ~' - YOJ
CAN ALW.•YS CAL~ M6 AT MY
BEI/Eii&lt;LY HILLS MANSIOtJ

City Ice &amp; Fuel Co.

675-2460

PT. PLEASANT W VA
I' .
.

ance before It Is too late.

DAVIS-WARNER INS. SERVICE
114 W. Court

Pomeroy, Ohio

,· -'·"""''-" "''tl"Q:.;::::------.:99:2·~51:86:~

FREEl
BEAT WINTER
DRIVE INTO LOU'S
FOR YOUR WINTER
THERMOSTAT
AND G~T
FREE INSTALLAT'ION'

2.25 ••••

LOU'S ASHLAND
ROAD SERVICE-U·HAULS
COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE

I

learten, Charlestoo, W.
1(1'8 Archer, Orchard U.ke,
U\i Mary DlckeriOil, anJ.
... McCOll, both of Las
'No-; Mra. lmlz Rol-

.I

ileall.., W, Va., Old Mils
!JU1Iel,lllllta, 0111110 iP'Oftllo
L

c.u

111s _ .
ot 111o ,._...
lliUJtlme.

'

b:

719 W. MAIN
POMEROY
992-3535

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Ill servi&lt;:ea for Mrs. Altet, 75, RD 1, Rutland,
• dead on arrival at Holpital SUnday morning, will
Tue~· at 2 p. m. at the
Funeral Home with the

ry at Cheshire.
&amp;sbornatShortCreek. W.
May 27, 1892, the daughe lateJacobanciJosephine
and she had Uved in the
.unt area Wlt11 movi~to
in 1956 and waa a mem·
~ RuUand. Chw'ch of God.
i also preceded in death
\Usbalxl, Lemuel
vors include twa. sons,
..etart, W, VLi Hue, C~
; six sisters, Mra. Mar·

ANTI FREEZE
INSTALLED

s Sunday

1vid Sleets oll'iciatlng.
will be in the Gravel Hill

YlLYOLINE

most cautious driver. Get enau&amp;h auto insur·

when she apparent -

her balance. Sie [ell
~ window and apparent·
x1 a complete somer.mdlng on her feet. g,e
.en to Hol:r.er Hotlpital
1rvatioo and treatment.

fOR COIJSUlTATIOiJ!

Why does it always happen that the careful
dnver becomes Involved in an accident? Don't
trust your future to luck ... even if you are 1

rly Johnaoo., 14, esll'ious injury when she
1 the upstairs window
ocust St. home in MJ.d.
iuncta,y afternoon. Midemergency ~dmen
iS Johnson was leaning
~.~pstalrs window shaH Ig

2. 00 : ;,
FOR AlL YOUR WINTER DRIVING

Insurance Companiss

• to know •bout ineurance.

I

GASOLINE • MOTOROIL

'

late F.rm ia all you, need

J at White Sands,

EVEN A CAREFUL DRIVER
CAN HAVE AN ACCIDENT!

A

''

'

I

ASHLAND PERMANENT

II'UUI.ANU

~c.m eOIIices: Bloominoton llllhO/s

~m

FINANCE WITH US
•••••
COMPARE THE COSTSI
Why is it so many folks tak th . .
a new car, but seldom looke etr lime selecting
new-car financing plan7Why around for the best
~ary? II you are planni~g to ~ay more than necesm and see us. We can save uy a new car, come
our monthly payments with a you money. Compare
you' II agree that there i sn'~yon~ rn tow~. Then,
plan around.
a etter ftnancing

temperature.

FIVE CEI'ifTS

Improvement in _4utomobiles, Choice
Of Spots To Enjoy Winter Fun Join
1'o Create Van for All Seasons

!

HAlf fAIM

742-4211

I

(;rnl&gt;lh in popularil)' ur cold wealher !!porh ha~ nutde l&gt;'inlrr automobile tru"d almn111 u ,l'ita.i to
fun a~ ilu· JOuntmer variely. Ski re1orl8 find parkin.-; lob• fillf'd will! I'D~. 'l'o l{el lo 1he~~e ret~orl!!l and
.. tlu•r .•pori~&gt; areal!, t·ar" mu11l he in extra ~ood t~ondition .

H ome P h 446 - 4518""
Gol l ipo l i s , Ol-lio

RUTLJ

pertly cloudy and

NEW
TREADS

and your health

--zit

thil ev...UW. Low
lie 50• to the low

'f1rttfont

JOUr home
your life

. ( ro @

&lt;II' and oontltJued

.. lonlght wltb 1110-

'I

THIS INH.ATION- HF.I PS
Th ere Is
· an old wives'
" tale
that J~ you let some air out of
your t1res. they
bet
· will gl ve .you a
wo;derfgrlp on Icy roads. Latest
rom the exp t
is not the wa
_ er s is this
Uon. Insteal to Improve trac• use winter tire
an d ' tor icy conditi
s
sand and a shovel. ons, carry

to;

.

Weather

WITH

are an Increasingl
Y common
en they prm. ide hous mg fur outdoorsmen \1 ho 1
1
· r~ughmg 11 • simply t~ ~~~
a\\ay from It all.
Vehicles for camping travel
represent a national .
ment f
InYesto more than a bill!
dollar:; annually Th
on
is s
- . e money
pent for the enjoyment of
n:~re than 200 million people
\'. o camp at national or state
parks each year. !The totaJ l
~ourse, includes persons ca~;­
~ng. at more than one park
unng extended trips or multiple use of a single park I
This investment m pleas
ure includes expenditures
campmg units ranging in pric
from about $100 I or a largee

,;

..

.,.

··.·.

qght Ott

l'

'

- ...

I

....... -

r accommoda1JOns exist. camping
vehicles

. •n,.

"

- - ·' .

. . . . 4 ..

tO

•

' '

!

...,

pAGE ELEVEN - CAR CARE

PAGE TES- nR CARE
tary School Saf~:y Patrol, shown here with Chlef of
. facl.l.lty spons\lrs, Hoy Sp1·agliC' and .1o1m Holle, areO t
Taylor, Gr ...,s Fire, BUiy Ban·us, Billy \'·iilliams, J01
lice, Jim Wood, Keith Sheel b, Tommy Young, Paul
John Sa!laz, James Cunningham, l{onald Cla_y, Ray (
George Haffelt; Se&lt;-'Ond row - Danny Cox, Bobby

..,.I

I

•

SESSION SLATED
• 12 Clrdt of tile IIMdl
~~ Cllurdl of ll! :S · I

.. ····~--·

·· · ··· ·· ~

~Wa!o ';,~­

.

lfoollho . . . .

------------~-·~--_,_-••r=-·u-·,~ •·nxnn!IP'VW"
.,,

....

··---·-- ··-- - .......

�-· . '
~

Sessions
To Begin

Smda)· Times - Sentinel, SUnday, Ocub:r 1:1, l!l6M

rr

MIDDLEPORT - Four lr&gt;o
1tructors wlll present the sttlb
materlal ror the evening Tuesday
when the nrst or two sessions on
defensive driVing is held at the
stud;y hall of the Meigs High
School in Middleport.
Open to the public. the two-ses-

••

'

.. , .. .

••

riloil\ot"''

-

.•

.

."
.

- ....

'1L .

~..

.

"'·

-· ~ Weather
odY and CO!u.,.ed
141 IDnlllllt with 1..,..
thlo evening. Low
he 50o to the len•
portly eloUdll and
1 temperature.

j

~uubug

sion course is being sponsored

iNTERESTED in a BruUtan pen pal?
lnternatioml FrieOOs, made ICJ or tumdireds or Brazlllan people by the Middleport Business and
of botll sexes of all ages and professions, have rormed an internation- Professional Women's Club. The
al corresp.m:lence club and are anxious to correspood with people of class will begin at 7:30P.m. The
second seuton will be at 7:30 p,
other countries. The purpose, of course. ts to get to knoW people or
m. on Tuesday, Oct. 22 1 at the
other nations.
same locatlon. Those completIf Interested, you are to send your name and complete address,
sex, OCCI('&amp;tion, hobbies to Amigos lnteracionalr, (:alxa Posta130827, Ing both sessions wlll receive
cards. 'l1te lntenalve driving
Sao Paulo, Brazil.
ing one or both of the courses. training program Ia prepared by
MEIGS Counlians Interested in may report to the high school. the Ohio state Patrol.
adult business education may Mrs. James Vennari is instructInstructors Tuesday wUl In-still enter classes which began
clude P001eroy Police ChJef Jed
thl s week at Meigs High School. or·
Webster, Mrs. Edith Sisson, disTyping classes start at 7 p.m.
CONGRATULATIONS to Mr. patcher for the Pomeroy dep~
and shorthand at 8 Thursday eve- and Mrs. James Fugate who will mert.j John Mora, mathematics
ning, Those interested in pursu-- observe Weir 45th wedding anni· instructor ol the Meigs Local
_,...,Ill J1Jo1r
PoiNIIi);.]IQIIIiki
~
~'&gt;WIIIIom
•
.,..
~ '·~~~-"
'iii!UUJif
t ; ,.,..
...___ .,

.. .

10-=

tintl
I

• '

.

FIVE CEFIT~

~m

'

J at White Sa...Ss,

'

I'

dar Practice

)

uKI radar was to try

I

mt Apollo 7 tn much
,a.y one on the moon

I

k an Appllo motherlunar ·¢1&gt;11 boCore

f for the retw'n.

i

~bate

l

I I!

ln Washington, called

...oo

bombing and
Haiphong Harbor as a

arm twisttng-' to get
c&gt;aris negotiations.

\

..

I'

GALLIPOLIS SCIIOOl. PAT!!OL - Members of the W~ashington EleJTIE
tary School Safety Pa1roi, shown here with Chief of Police John Taylor a
faculty spons'lrs, Ro}' Sprague and .lohn Holle, are(l tor): First How -Clr
Taylor, Gre&amp; Fife, Billy Barcus, Billy Williams, Joey Kubenstahl, Jim Jl
tlce, Jim Wood, Keith Sheets , Tommy "loung, Paul Walker, G1·eg Thorm
John Sallaz, James rurmingham, 1\onald Clay, Ray Queen, Mark l'ollng, f
George Haffelt; Second r&lt;m' - Danny Cox. Bobby Candee, Anthorzy Ree:

i

I

OC'IOBER 13, 1968

\

TIMES-SENTINEL

I

Sunday

at

LTD 2-DR.
HARDTOP

MARTIN FORD SALES INC.

.:·

Magazine

CUSTOM 2-DR. SEDAN
olr. and Mrs. Oliver
me ceremonies FritmbUn is on the far
Her eacort iii Earl
lan Stidham. junior
daughter of Mr. and
r. and Mrs. Herman
ICe after the football
sts and door prizes.

'I

•

MUSTANG MACH I

GAS

•

MODEL

rly JoMson, 14, es)l"'ous injury when she
ll the upltairs window
()Cilsl Sl. home In Mid~

artemoon. Mid·

emergency squadmen
u Jotmson was leaning
l!pstairs wtnOOw shak-

DUE TO OUR TREMENDOUS SALES VOLUME WE ARE ABLE TO GIVE YOU
THE LOWEST PRICE· BEST FINANCE • DEAL AND SERVICE IN TIDS AREA.
CHECK OUR DEAL BEFORE YOU TRADE!! WE WILL SAVE YOU MONEY!!

when she apparent-

tg

her balance. ~e fell
~ window and appa:rentJd a complete somermdlng on her feet. ~e
•en to Hol:z.er Hospital
Jrvation and treatment.

ta Shiflet
DO~ T WORRY BOSS ... &amp;V.ON
THOUGH IU BEO RGTII?I~a AS
YOUR LD)f\L SECJ?HARY-YW

i

ON ALWAYS CAU.. MG AT MY
f&gt;GveRLY HI LLS MA~IOIJ
fOR (OIJS(JLTATIOIJ!

FORD XL SportsRoof

SEE!!
CHARLIE WER"TER
\IELVIN LITfLE
IIO~IER WAt!GH

elate JacobandJosephine
and she had UYl!d In the

area until moving to
ln 1956 ard was a mem-

1.1&amp;nt

""RuUand ChurcltofGod.

, also preceded in death
wsband. Lemuel
vors include two sons,

.etart.W. VLi Hue 1 Co; six sisters, Mrs. Mar:loarlen, Charleston, w.
Archer. Ore bard Lake,

.i

417 SECOND

..-e

I

!eelbw. W, VL, IIIII Mlas

lN.-;

Mro. Inez

Rol-

.

S1illlol. lalla, 111111110 )11'11111-

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Ids 11111 ..0 at 111e llmrlllliYUDie.

..
'

'

......... -

and

... !llccaJI, both of Las

SESSION SLATED
12 Clrdo ol tho Htlllt
Owrch ot. WW 1crt.

742·4211

~.~~

Dl•ur...._

i

..; llfary

,_

MARTIN FORD SALES INC.

RUT LANE

al services for Mrs. Allet. 75, RD 1, RutlaPi,
s dead on arrival at Holpital Sunday morning, will
Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the
Funeral Home with the
avid !:ileets officiating.
Nlll be in the Gravel Hill
ry at Cheshire.
ts born at Short Creek. W.
lllay Tl, !892, the &lt;laugh·

THUNDERBIRD 2-DR HARDTOP

You11 Always Do Better At Rutland
Furniture and Easy Terms Are Availe•l•

s Sunday

-------

~.

..

~
- · · ~ - ··· · - "

... -·-·-·

-. -·- --- -·----....

�-· . '
~

Sessions
To Begin

Smda)· Times - Sentinel, SUnday, Ocub:r 1:1, l!l6M

rr

MIDDLEPORT - Four lr&gt;o
1tructors wlll present the sttlb
materlal ror the evening Tuesday
when the nrst or two sessions on
defensive driVing is held at the
stud;y hall of the Meigs High
School in Middleport.
Open to the public. the two-ses-

••

'

.. , .. .

••

riloil\ot"''

-

.•

.

."
.

- ....

'1L .

~..

.

"'·

-· ~ Weather
odY and CO!u.,.ed
141 IDnlllllt with 1..,..
thlo evening. Low
he 50o to the len•
portly eloUdll and
1 temperature.

j

~uubug

sion course is being sponsored

iNTERESTED in a BruUtan pen pal?
lnternatioml FrieOOs, made ICJ or tumdireds or Brazlllan people by the Middleport Business and
of botll sexes of all ages and professions, have rormed an internation- Professional Women's Club. The
al corresp.m:lence club and are anxious to correspood with people of class will begin at 7:30P.m. The
second seuton will be at 7:30 p,
other countries. The purpose, of course. ts to get to knoW people or
m. on Tuesday, Oct. 22 1 at the
other nations.
same locatlon. Those completIf Interested, you are to send your name and complete address,
sex, OCCI('&amp;tion, hobbies to Amigos lnteracionalr, (:alxa Posta130827, Ing both sessions wlll receive
cards. 'l1te lntenalve driving
Sao Paulo, Brazil.
ing one or both of the courses. training program Ia prepared by
MEIGS Counlians Interested in may report to the high school. the Ohio state Patrol.
adult business education may Mrs. James Vennari is instructInstructors Tuesday wUl In-still enter classes which began
clude P001eroy Police ChJef Jed
thl s week at Meigs High School. or·
Webster, Mrs. Edith Sisson, disTyping classes start at 7 p.m.
CONGRATULATIONS to Mr. patcher for the Pomeroy dep~
and shorthand at 8 Thursday eve- and Mrs. James Fugate who will mert.j John Mora, mathematics
ning, Those interested in pursu-- observe Weir 45th wedding anni· instructor ol the Meigs Local
_,...,Ill J1Jo1r
PoiNIIi);.]IQIIIiki
~
~'&gt;WIIIIom
•
.,..
~ '·~~~-"
'iii!UUJif
t ; ,.,..
...___ .,

.. .

10-=

tintl
I

• '

.

FIVE CEFIT~

~m

'

J at White Sa...Ss,

'

I'

dar Practice

)

uKI radar was to try

I

mt Apollo 7 tn much
,a.y one on the moon

I

k an Appllo motherlunar ·¢1&gt;11 boCore

f for the retw'n.

i

~bate

l

I I!

ln Washington, called

...oo

bombing and
Haiphong Harbor as a

arm twisttng-' to get
c&gt;aris negotiations.

\

..

I'

GALLIPOLIS SCIIOOl. PAT!!OL - Members of the W~ashington EleJTIE
tary School Safety Pa1roi, shown here with Chief of Police John Taylor a
faculty spons'lrs, Ro}' Sprague and .lohn Holle, are(l tor): First How -Clr
Taylor, Gre&amp; Fife, Billy Barcus, Billy Williams, Joey Kubenstahl, Jim Jl
tlce, Jim Wood, Keith Sheets , Tommy "loung, Paul Walker, G1·eg Thorm
John Sallaz, James rurmingham, 1\onald Clay, Ray Queen, Mark l'ollng, f
George Haffelt; Second r&lt;m' - Danny Cox. Bobby Candee, Anthorzy Ree:

i

I

OC'IOBER 13, 1968

\

TIMES-SENTINEL

I

Sunday

at

LTD 2-DR.
HARDTOP

MARTIN FORD SALES INC.

.:·

Magazine

CUSTOM 2-DR. SEDAN
olr. and Mrs. Oliver
me ceremonies FritmbUn is on the far
Her eacort iii Earl
lan Stidham. junior
daughter of Mr. and
r. and Mrs. Herman
ICe after the football
sts and door prizes.

'I

•

MUSTANG MACH I

GAS

•

MODEL

rly JoMson, 14, es)l"'ous injury when she
ll the upltairs window
()Cilsl Sl. home In Mid~

artemoon. Mid·

emergency squadmen
u Jotmson was leaning
l!pstairs wtnOOw shak-

DUE TO OUR TREMENDOUS SALES VOLUME WE ARE ABLE TO GIVE YOU
THE LOWEST PRICE· BEST FINANCE • DEAL AND SERVICE IN TIDS AREA.
CHECK OUR DEAL BEFORE YOU TRADE!! WE WILL SAVE YOU MONEY!!

when she apparent-

tg

her balance. ~e fell
~ window and appa:rentJd a complete somermdlng on her feet. ~e
•en to Hol:z.er Hospital
Jrvation and treatment.

ta Shiflet
DO~ T WORRY BOSS ... &amp;V.ON
THOUGH IU BEO RGTII?I~a AS
YOUR LD)f\L SECJ?HARY-YW

i

ON ALWAYS CAU.. MG AT MY
f&gt;GveRLY HI LLS MA~IOIJ
fOR (OIJS(JLTATIOIJ!

FORD XL SportsRoof

SEE!!
CHARLIE WER"TER
\IELVIN LITfLE
IIO~IER WAt!GH

elate JacobandJosephine
and she had UYl!d In the

area until moving to
ln 1956 ard was a mem-

1.1&amp;nt

""RuUand ChurcltofGod.

, also preceded in death
wsband. Lemuel
vors include two sons,

.etart.W. VLi Hue 1 Co; six sisters, Mrs. Mar:loarlen, Charleston, w.
Archer. Ore bard Lake,

.i

417 SECOND

..-e

I

!eelbw. W, VL, IIIII Mlas

lN.-;

Mro. Inez

Rol-

.

S1illlol. lalla, 111111110 )11'11111-

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Ids 11111 ..0 at 111e llmrlllliYUDie.

..
'

'

......... -

and

... !llccaJI, both of Las

SESSION SLATED
12 Clrdo ol tho Htlllt
Owrch ot. WW 1crt.

742·4211

~.~~

Dl•ur...._

i

..; llfary

,_

MARTIN FORD SALES INC.

RUT LANE

al services for Mrs. Allet. 75, RD 1, RutlaPi,
s dead on arrival at Holpital Sunday morning, will
Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the
Funeral Home with the
avid !:ileets officiating.
Nlll be in the Gravel Hill
ry at Cheshire.
ts born at Short Creek. W.
lllay Tl, !892, the &lt;laugh·

THUNDERBIRD 2-DR HARDTOP

You11 Always Do Better At Rutland
Furniture and Easy Terms Are Availe•l•

s Sunday

-------

~.

..

~
- · · ~ - ··· · - "

... -·-·-·

-. -·- --- -·----....

�. '"

Sessions
To Begin
MIDDLEPORT -

Four

of Brullian people

of bo~te:e:~o:ari.g:a~profe=s; =~e:~:,~::=e;:,~::r
al correspondence club and are •, -~se is to ma.t to knoW people of
oth er countr les· The purpose, o c....... ,
other nalioos.
send our name and complete addreS'J,

If tnteres~. you are to"~"""':lnteraclonalr I catxaPosta130827,
iex, occl4}ation, hobbles to 11.11""6"'
sao Paulo, Brazil.
both or the courses
it
tedi
tngoneor
•
MEIGS CounUans n eres
n may report to the high school.
adult business education may Mrs. James Vermarl is instruct·
still enter classes which began
this week at Meigs High School. or.
Typing classes start at 7 p.m.
CONGRATULATIONS to Mr.
and shorthanl at 8 Thursday eve-- and Mrs. James Fugate who wUI
nlng. Those interested In pursu-- observe their 45th wedding annl-

--

-

venarJ, at,,JIItlr ,f .....-.Q I:jlolnt

PAGE
.

•
••

GALLIPOLL... SCHOOL PATHOL - Membe~s of Ute ~lishingt~~ E]em
tary School safety Patrol, shown here with Chtef of Pobc~.J~hn Jaylor,
Caculty spons0rs, Hoy Spt·ague and .John llo.ll~, areO tor): l'lrst !tow -Cl
Ta,ylor Grc.,. Fift! Bill}' Barcus, Billy Wllhams, Joey Rubcnstahl, Jim J
Paul Walker, Greg 11lorn
U ce, J '·un w"ood ' Keith ·Sheet s' T omm)' Young,
,
Qu
Marl\ l'oling
John Sallaz James Cunningham, Honald Clay, Ray een,
•
George .Haffe1t; Second row - Danny Cox, Bobby Candee, Anthony ReE

... .

',,

PAGE TWO

somehow surviving this extraordinary Presidential campaign, but whether an irreplaceable public respect for the American waiversit}' system is also going to come out alive
is something else again.
Indeed, the most alarming aspect or this
whole campaign to thoughtful men is its heavJ and accumulating evidence that campus
hoodlums of spurious intellectual pretensions
are frightfUlly and perhaps even fatally damaging the very institution that ls called higher

learning.

of resistance in VIetnam.

College adminlstra1ors know this very well;
though, or course, they do not advertise it.
They know, too, that it 1o:: becoming increasingly difticult to raise those private donations
ror endowment purposes which have long been

There has been no letup In the abusive
heckling that has followed both Humphrey and
Mualde about the nation; the far~ts have only
been emboldened by Humphrey's unwise ges.
tures toward them.
This Is by no means so odd as at first
blush It might look. For the whole history
rl the totalitarian lett shows that it never
seeks its mortal adversaries among such moderate conservatives as Nixon or among sucll
ultra - conservatives as George Wallace. It
finds Its villains among just sucll non-extreme
liberals as Humphrey and Muskie.
St!ll - and this Is the ultimate Irony of all
- if Humphrey's drive is to pick up genuine
momentum in these last weeks, that lire is
likely to come precisely from public sympathy
for a man whose IUe-time of service to liberal causes is being repaid by the most savage hostility rrom those who at first glance
would seem to owe him most.
Certainly unwittingly, the far-outs may ac.
tually be helping Humphrey alter all, If only
by the very nastiness of their attempts to destroy him. When a man is beaten into the
dirt as these people are beating Humphrey
and Muskie irlto the dirt, the point can arrive where sensible voters begin to say that
Humphrey and Mnllkle can hardly be all bad,
considering the kind of enemies they have

WASHINGTON -

The American tradition

of reasonabts· civilized debate in politics 11!1

,,

'
. . 1':

'

indispensable to private edocatioo In this country,
The halls of academe, in short, are being put in a progressively thinner face of

pobl!c support by the sabotage actlono ol the
professional and far-out "rebels" within the
academic community. Political contests come

and go; and the republic endu-es. But up to
this point the university, as the cemral symbol or orderly intellectual progress, had been
asswned to be relatively untouched and more
or less timeless. The new £actor here is that
this assumption can no longer be regarded
as truly a safe one.
While Richard Nixon and George Wallace
are, or course, under intermittent assault from
hooligans of various nonacademic types, the
all.out academic wreckers havt really zeroed
in only upon Hubert Humphrey and his Democratic rmming mate, Sen. Edmund Muskie,
Humphrey has long since HJost his cool,"
to use the pseudo.Janguage or the campus rev.
olutionaries, and has several times struck out
Wildly at his tormentors. But now even t h e
heretofore unflappable Muskte is finding that
he can't take much more, as is illustrated by

1

made.

EDITORIAL

Rationalizing the Czechs' Dilemma
It must be rather difficult these days for
homegrown Communists and disciples of
Marxist -Leninism to tell themselves that
commuhism is the hope of mankind and that
Soviet Russia is the guardian of that hope .
Here is the price the Czechoslovakian people are going lo have to pay for the1r brief
flirtation with the e 1em en tar y freedoms
Americans and citizens of other " decadent"
democracies take for granted :
• The Communist party must resume
dominant rule in Czechoslovakia.
• The party must exercise complete control over the press , radio a&gt;:1d television.
• Liberal Czech leaders must be replaced
by orthodox Communists, meaning those who
will unquestioningly toe the Kremlin line.
In return for these chains, the Soviet Union
promises to begin withdrawing its occupation

You11 Always Do Better At Rutland
Furniture and Easy Terms Are Availa.le

troops-someday.
Yes. the mental convolutions non-Russian
Communists must be going through are dif·
ficult. but not impossible for men who recovered from the shocks of Hungary and de·
Stalinization.
What is surprising is that so many ordinary

RUT LAN·~

Americans have so easily accepted and so
quickly rationalized away Russia's brutal

742-4211

'
I

'

'

repression of Czechoslovakia,
The Russians were merely protecting their
legitimate national interests, the argument
goes, Their intervention In Czechoslovakia
was really not much different from our intervention in the Dominican Republic or In VIet·
nam. Indeed, runs the most extreme of these

rationalizations, our lnvolve,nent in Vietnam
set an example that encouraged the Russlalls
to move into Czechoslovakia.

As if America's failure to oppose the ag.
gressive spread of communism in Southeast
Asia (whether or not Vietnam was the wisest
choice of time or place to oppose it) would
have persuaded the Soviets to allow communism to peacefully recede in Eastern
Europe,
Yet so weary are we of more than two
decades of cold war, so anxious are we to
discover any indications of good will and
decency among the rulers of Russia and so
inconseq uentlal is little Czeehoslovakia that
many of us have hought these arguments.
We magnify the motes in our own eyes in
hopes it will cause our adversary to recognize
the beams in his. We content ourselves with
claiming a moral defeat for the Soviets in
Czechoslovakia, forgetting that this is the
kind of "defeat" the Soviets have always
willingly accepted in exchange for the pructical advantages it gains them.
Certainly, Czechoslovakia is not worth a
world war. There is nothing we can do for
the peoples of the European satellites that
they are unable ro do for themselves. But if
we cannot prevent a Hungary or a Czecho.
slovakia, neitber can we justify these human
tragedies '!f'der the delusion that there is
really no difference between Russian foreign
policy and our own.
Ironically, on the day that Secretary or
state Dean Rusk appeared at the United
Nations to call Russia to account for Its In·
vaslon of Czechoslovakia, he was heckled by
a group of young Vietnam war dlsseufen
about whom the most charitable thing that
can be 1 a I d Ia that their educaUon Ia

lneomplete,

•

• 11 --

11 .. .. .

• __ }Veather
illY lind contlqued
ld tonight -

110-

thll evening. Low
he 50o to tho low
partly clowjy and
11 temperature.

I

~uulluy

FIVE CEtiln

Professional Women's Club. The

....

same locaUon. Those eompleting both sessiona wlll receive
cards. The irtenaive drivin&amp;:

J at White sands,

''

dar Practice
ud radar wa.s to try
011 Apollo 1 In much
yay one on the moon

training program lo prepared by
the Ohio Stele Patrol.
Instructors Tuesday wW In-

k an Awllo motherlunar ~~ bolore
I for the return.

clude Pomeroy Pollu Ctdef Jed
Webster, Mrs. Edith SluCJO. dispatcher for the Pomeroy depart-menli John Mora, mathematlu
tnstruc!Dr ol tho Metgo Local

~bate

&amp;-·''Ill""""" ......._

ln Washl.ngton, called
&lt;ased bombing lind
Haiphong Harbor •• a
arm twlstlng'' to get
~aris negotiations.

·- ··--·
OCTOBER 13, 1968

WASHINGTON NOTEBOOK

his tortured counterattack at last upon four letter-word shouters at Syracutie Universit.Y.
Some in the Humphrey entourage had supposed that once he had delivered h.is recent
major speech on Vietnam, in which he declared his intention to soften up a bit on the war,
the anti...war left wing would be somewhat
placated and the aLmospher~ somewhat calmed ror him, It has, however oot worked that
way at a11. The Far Left has not been appeased - as some o( Humphrey's more mature
advisers had tried to tell him it would not
be - and will never be appeased wdess and
lDltil he abandOns any backing for any kind

.•., ...

class will bol(in at 7:30P.m. The
aecond session will be at 7:30 p,
m. on Tuesday, OcL 22, at the

Humphrey's Enemies._~,
Prove to His Credit
BY WILLL.\M S, WHITE

,

study hall oC tho Meigs Hlg!l
School In Middleport.
Open to the public, the two-eession coune is being sponsored
by the Mldd1eport Buslneu and

THE SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL

Washington White Paper

-~

l

·· - ~.

.

,,

I

lf&gt;o

when tho nrst of two sessio~s on
defensive driving Is held at the

P:~~reds

.

'I
I

materlal Cor the ewnlng Tuesday

t

'

.,

atructora will present the stud)'

INTERESTED In !raz!:

~

,,

Just Between

A High Tribute to Nixon--By None Other than Fortos
By NOEL GROVE
NEA Staff Correspondent

WASHINGTON-IN E A)A final irony concerning opposition to the nomination of

Supreme Court Justice Abe
Fortas for chief justice was
revealed recently by a close
friend to Fortas.

Fortas, who withdrew his
name from consideration after
heavy opposition-mostly from
Richard Nixon supportersonce paid one of his highest
profel:lsional compliments to
the courtroom skill of the Re·
publican candidate for president. the friend said.
Nixon had represented the
James J, Hill family of Connecticut in Time, Inc . vs. Hill,
the only case Nixon ever
pleaded be f o r e the U.S,
Supreme Court The family
was suing Time, Inc. for invasion of privacy after a mag-

azine article likened an experience of the family to the

plot of the stage play "The
Desperate Hours," in which a
family is held hostage by
three escaped convicts.
The court ruled against the
family, 6-3, but Fortas reportedly commented later
that Nixon had made one of
the best arguments he
(Fortasl had ever heard in
his days on the bench.
Fortas was one of the dissenting judges and also wrote
a dissenting opinion on the

court's decision.

• • •
Even ID the highest places
can one f i n d those little
symbols of humbling earthiness that serve as leveling devices for all people and all
things,
Amidst the grandeur of the
great rotunda of the Cannon
House Office Bullding. clrcl•d
by stately marble busts or
congressional immortals, sat
an old tin pail recently, conspicuously receiving dribbles
or rain that seeped through a
leaky ceiling,

• • •

What Robert Moaes and the
city of New York couldn't do,

Us

Montreal has done not oncr

but twice.
All the experts said last
predicted it would flop They
were wrong on both counts. as
50 million visitors to the man·
made islands in ttw St
Lawrence River that summt'r

By Pat Houck

•'

can testify.
So successful was Expo that
Montreal could not hccir to
see it close. And after the
second summer of tlw ~how
now called "Man and Hi s
World," total attemhmce will
top 12 million by the Oct, 14
closing date, d e s p i t e five
straight weeks of almost con·
stant rain .
That 12 million , said an M&amp;

GALLIPOLIS - For two weeks Pve been toying with thelclea oC
whether or oot to lell something.
At first I thought I wouldn't mention It, fearing that telling aboUt
a nice act might teile something aw.ylrom it. Yet, I really wanted
to share the incident with you.
I was kidded about writing nice things (buttering people up) so
they will do something lor me.
I dismissed the remark because it is not true. I like people.
I don't see bad things about them and if I did, I would just write

H W spokesman. is still higher
than total summer figure s of
either the Seattle or New
York world's fairs in the
States. Canadians like tn point

out little things like that,

• • •

Newsmen have their good
and bad days, just like every ·
one else. Sometimes r1ew s
sources take forever to nm
down, but occasionally they
drop right into your lap .
In a short visit recently to
Montreal this reporter was
standing on the periphery of
"Man and His World ," ad ·
miring the geodesic dome and
the whole futuristic lay01Jt &lt;md
idly wondering where to s t;.~rt
for some official comment on
the show's second year.
Just t h en the gentleman
standing next to me mqtrJ~cd
as to whether it was my hrst
visit to the site. It was . and
how about himself, was lt h1s

man'l owner. Andrew Goodman,
tumed doWn a $55,000,000 olfor
.... Christmas II almost t h r e o
Jl'l(IDths away and Georg Jen1e11'1
on 5th Ave., ha8 anowJaden Yuletree,ftlled windoWs •••• And B.

"S.lent

'

highly o!yled, lmpodent, minty OO·

phistlcation of the original, clicking off wit, humor and sentiment
with tbe cybernetic perfection or
a precision instrument of aciduloos cheerfulness, was beyond
George Grizzard, who plainly
wanted to be Noel Coward, but
missed by the width of an ocean

new 11private" Manhattan club
.... We per!Oilally encoontered
three prostitutes blatantly solicIting oo Perk Ave. at 59th st.
across from the Church or saint!:

Faith, Hope and Charity .••••
They eongregate near a big cafe
where more cluster inside {indoor streetwalkers?)
Dem. C&lt;&gt;ng. Jolm Murphy (of-

ficial Parliamentarian at t h e
Dem. Convention) told us Sen.
Eugene

everyone after the nomination be·

McCarthy got sore at

'

'

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
rorm four ordinary words.

tiona! snub;"' asked why McCarthy couldn't be cajoled later,

Its contents certainly were culled rrom Coward's lifetime ot
stage triumphs, but the production attheEthel Barrymore Theatre and Coward hllnsell were almost a contrast in terms ....
Attempts to give the spleodid
Coward music a rock beat didn't
work, removing the stylish, origInal polish and wit without add·
lng a comparably potent modern
mood or performance.
George Grizzard, Ita First Potato, Is hardly as British as heel
and kldno.Y pie, more American
u apple pie; and whllo It wu
clear he had the lntelllgenee and
wtU to appreclala this CowardiJI
catcball of Noel's Immense booiY
~ thoatrical work, his aptitude
lor the so very English task at
hand wao conliderably less than
suitable for a participant.
Tho same might he setd Cor
(rather, aplnat) comedienne
Dorothy Loodoo, e veteran cafe
performer whoH major detect,
apart from the complete lack of
brltUe ollhan-eas or a true
Coward delineator, ia her night
clw periiOilallt.y and mamer

Peg Blazer.

WISII MORE PEOPLE would try to get out lor the Community
singers. UnleBB they do, when they hear a beautiful vocal concert
this Christmas seasoo, they will bo In the same boot Pll be in,
sorry they aren't a part of it.

DON'T HAVE TOO MANY program books yet. Heve some of

which iLIUlOWlCe, somewhat overbrosdly, that she Is In on the
joke before the audience ...• Carole :ilelley•s English lralning was

you forgotten to share one with me?

HEARD BY WAy OF THE GRAPEVINE my Civllllelense l(irls
were disappointed because we didn't have a graduation ceremony,
or a UIUe somethiDB opeeial at the end of the medical self-llelp
course, Sorry rm so buoy l(lrls. r mentioned the dllrlculty of a time
wh\\11 we could all get together.
One of them setd, set a date and let those who can, oome. I
thought It wao a good o-stlon, oo will set a dale soon. I really
llllPreclate all those who particlpoted.

BARBS
Br PHIL PASTOitET
We discovered-we thought

--a new use for three-day-old
pizza, but guess that the tire
compsnies beat us to it by a
lew decades.

• • •

The fellow with a well·
developed bump of eurioft·

hl.al's ,.., if tllis WG) bw ma., ..,.. a rill! tltiltk
Hu,.,.,., atHI Hi- wiH tab .,.,· t.- W,._r'

I

lOUGH .. .'(00 NEED A WATERFALL
..SHOW THE SUN GOING DOWN SO~T
,NP POT SOM~ RED STREAK~ I
W.E ~COOING OIJT

tfr. arxi Mrs. Oll wr

me ceremonies Friamblin is on the far
Her eacort is Earl
Jan Stidham, junior

daughter oC Mr. end
r. and Mrs. Herman
ace after the football
sts and door prizes.

SOMETIMES IT
lAKeS' A LA't'MAA
10 SETiHESE
PEOPLE 5r~AI6HT

. . . _.,.

,. ,

()

•rly Johnson, 14, esm.ous injury when she
n the upstairs window
ocust St. home in Mid-

R.4HME

[]

imda.Y afternoon, Mid·

0

emergency squadmen
u Johnson was leaning
upstairs window shak-

t
I I I J

her balance. 3\e fell
) window and apparentKI a complete somer ·
mding on her feet. ~e
;:en to Holzer Hospital
n"Vatioo and treatment.

Sow arranre the circl.cl letten
to form the su=1H'ise amwer, u
sun~Sled by the above cartoon.

1Priai!M sMIS£ AIISillllllll 1A

..

r I I J-r I I J"
~.4.JYwf'n

Jun~hlf',.,

y.,. ............. ..

.

I-'..•""'

MOUaN

DAILT

ta Shiflet

,.,...tont

IUTUR LAGOON

,..,.,-MHr ~-&amp;N &amp;NGLI

TAil nu~ N

Woody Plants

DO~T WORRY BOSS, .&lt;NE&gt;N
THOUGH ILL Be K5fl i('IN6 AS
YODR LOYAL SEO?ErARY-YOJ
{ AN ALWAYS CALL-Me AT MY

I

4 Pronoun

14Abropte

sAred

15 Deceive

6 Requires

7 Concise

18 Asiatic

8 Wax (comb .

statements

name

form)
9 Unclose

(colt)

(poet.)

20 Father
21 Dawn

10 Transmit
11 Brazilian

goddess
seaport
23 Thus (Latin)
12 Winter
24 Delaware
vehicle
(ab,)
19 Three-toed
25 Numbers

(ab.)

21 Craftier
29 Lea:al point
31 Shade tree
32 Period of

al services for Mrs. Allet.. 75, RD 1, Rutl&amp;OO,
s dead on arrival &amp;t Holpital Surliay morning, wUJ
Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the
Funeral Home with the
avid ~ oCficiaUng.
will be in the Gravel Hill
ry at Cheshire.

hold

lS Intentice
1830 (Fr,)
17 Streets (ab,)

s Sunday

f?&gt;E'i/812LY HILLS MA~IOIJ
fOR (OI.ISLUATIOIJ!

2 Mountain
ACII088
crest
1--llveoalr.
3 Wrestler's
7 Fruits of •

woodY plant

sloths
22 Despicable!
24 Degrade

26 GunhK"k

catch
28 Heum t&lt;'u mb
f(lnn)

ubornatShortCrtek. W,
!&gt;lay 27, 18~2. the daugbe late Jacob ami Josephine
and she had II wei In the
unt area unW movi~ to
ln 1956 and w&amp;B 1 mem·
11e Rutland ChurchofGod.

dead limbs
42 Mc'lliitied in
to lor

43 Japanes••

outca:;;ts
30 Egyptian
woody plant 46 AuJnwnt~
48 Guidcl ·~ htt:h
34 Fruitless
nott:35 Hawk parrot
-19 Soak fl a'&gt;
3'J Put in new
glass
38 Pred ispclsed
40 Remo\'es

1

51 Sh't&gt;Twct r~..._·~i

.\;!

:'li'l'\\-

38 Boat paddle
38Cwhion
31 River Islet
41 Seine

also preceded in death

ruobaod, LemueL
vors include two sons,

Gumr•a

P"r:

~tart.

W, VL; Hue, C~
; six sisten, Mrs. Mar-

:&gt;eerlea, Charleston, W.
~Archer, Orchard Lake.
an; Maey Dl&lt;luoriiGII, and

time

33 Observe
lM. Nblte-

when she a,pparent.·

t,g

IGURMOE

"'=++-

-

McCall, -

)No-; Mro.

ol Las
1no1 Rd·

ieell1111o W. VL, and Miss
Shlllet.lltdla, 18110 anD&lt;~­

43Stray

44Jmpalr
45 Genw of

.

50-of

1 at Ia)" time.

UAnalnter

SESSION SLATED
~ u etrc:le or 111e lilt Ounll e1
t( t

.,=hter

WE NEIDiill A CLEAN CAR Cor a WRAP plduro lui week.
GtJmOn pull out of hi• prase acroes the
Bill LarP laW Glor&amp;O
acated h1ln and hlo bfiUtlllil illrell fram the
I tunled out we Clllld haYO U....'
cor, 0.W doa't
blad&lt; Ford, boealllt the car - ' t oholl UP at
.... 1111 old ~n=• to bt,lurY BID'o bled hid GeiJrP'I fa... 011, smarter tluin moat, but be II
quite' a bit lhorter/
all Andto14111
• '
' ' ·~
...u,
GeorP. ...... ,,.. ...otwliiiiiJ.

IS Le111IaUva

=~~

'

. ......... " ''" '

· - • .. ! •

~

1 GOT ~ INTRIGUED with looking around GUIIJIBIIIIn'• Dnll!
-~ s.-~ Sto. ' and talking to Richard (Jilek)
ty &lt;lese""'' it
Store, corner of PI ..., ..... ~...~
of lJ&gt;.
Ma komi that I bouRht the thlow, There Is 10 muc~
•
e, I
~ ,_,_ to tell about it here. Would love,to do a
Our neillbbor bu
tereat there, won ,. ..,.._
bridged dlCtlonariea.
fUll rep&gt;rl.

• • •

Ctla.,HIA...._

that they confusedly paired off
hardly heterosexually in the end;

backing HHH •.• Sen. Murphy (ol
Staten Island-Brooklyn) said McCartJ\y conaidered it an "inten.

Peg Blazer is one of them.
Each morning when m,y (amil,y dips into "melt ln the mooth"

but here was a much more generous soul than L
1 had a mental picture oC that small, neat blonde woman. In
the palo angora lavender IIWealer and matching alac:ka, (thla
was tho outllt she wore aile eamo In the ol!lce) and the hour a
of work which went into this gill. I thoulht of how periOIIIII, and 1o1W
love~¥. 1 wanted to keep It as a nice thing between her and myaell,
which rm sure ohe Intended It to be, until I arrived at the cleclston
we ohould alllell the good things.
1 know people do these things with oo thought oC reward bo&lt;IAise
tltey continually give my husband gifts of produce and lrult. Ama
May WUllams, E. Main St., Pomeroy; Rita Corliss,Gallipolls, Arron

wound up mildly amusing, with
three pairs of lovers dressed
and coifJed so precisely alike

Jr&amp;WID~® u..t 41&gt;1••'1.'..-1 ,.._

The allpshod, bland "Noel Cow~
ard's Potato'' bore the name, and

butter, wlld raspberry jelly, candied pickle~, plckled beets, peach

and the depth of a style.
An American, really, shouldn't dare try ••Mad Dogs a n d
Englishman" on a proresslonal
stage; "Mad About the B o y"

not ottensive, incidentally.
The rewe opened and closed
with the cast more or less nude,
polled in an intertwined tableau
not at all shocking nor even darIng; actually It effected an Innocence suggesting that someone thought they might be stat.
ing a naked '1.ruth" such as the
dirtily dull "Hair" attempts.
Some numbers by the cast en
masse missed entirely Coward's
rorm and sly style, even missing
U1e musical beat, consequer1tly
the mood and meaning .... Coward, or someone, updated 1\oel'~
"Let's Do It" panxlv or Cole
Porter's original song, which
plainly, in Coward's impeccable precision with words, timing and personality, could ha\'e
been an impertinent dt:light
("Ed Sullivan won't do it he's too highly strung''), but
herein wa.s performed as if it
were a first rehearsal, not the
First Night.

cause someone didn't deliver a
note to the podium asking to let
him then make a brief speech

THERE ARE STD.L A LOT OF VffiTUOUS KIND, DECENT,
HUMAN BEINGS IN THIS TROUBLED WORLD OF OUR!

butter. tomato preserves, and that do-llcloos Jelly I mentlooed above.
Each jar was neatly labeled with the date, decorated with a
nower seal, and a label saying, ''From the Kite~ of Peg mazer.''
If It had been me, 1 would have given me Jal', or at most two;

What ••Noel Coward's Potato"
lacked was Noel Coward: t h e

Night"

Sen. Murphy replied, "Pique!"

•

more like it; aa was Tom Kneebone, a Brltilll import by WilY
~ Canada, where he was a. res~
ldent leprechlwl, , the program
stales, obviously with the gills
to claim such a title.

in her Sept. TV special .••• Joey
Bishop's right hand, Regis PhUbin, and frau have a fiaoh •••.
Cory Grant had his name removed from the letterheads of a

I was afraid my telling about the act "oold &lt;;11al the wrong light
on a wonderful, generous act or thought.flllness, and make it appear
as though the person who did it knew it would be told. (There, that's
a big mouthful ol words but It's the bost I can do to explain,)
When I mentioned my reticence to Deane "Chatterbox" Wagner, she said, "You know me, Pat, Itell everything."
And with a second look, I decided there are so 1118!1)' bad things
done, so much evil and crime menti~ !IOmeone must counteract
this by "telling it like it is," even shouting this out loud:

Bryaot, Crown Ctzy, RL I, and Mr. Jimmy Evano, Nelg!lborhood
Rd., are several others who belmg In tho''good J!UYS" category witlt

BERRY'S WORLD

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - Bergdorf-Good-

about something else.

wild blackberry jelly, I think of her.
You see, Pes, a woman I had never laid eyes on, popped Into the
Times • Sentinel office one gloomy morning two weeks ago, Introduced herself, and said, "I've something for you. 11 :JJ.e put a wrapped package oo my desk and left.
When I later tore open the paper, I loond peach jam, apple-

OCTOIIEIIJ3, INB

WfiNII:L·

Voice a!ong Broadway

~eiaand sang

year's Expo 67 would ne\'er
come off and, when it did. thrv

first trip here?
.. Hardly," he laughed . " I
built the bloody thing!"
Enter Mr. J, G, Grandon ,
an engineer of installat~ons at
the Expo site, who d~recl ed
construction of the islands on
which the exposition was hllllt
and whose main concern no~·
is winterizing the site until
next year's opening.

TilE SUNDAT m

Ids

JDQ

call at lite flmar-

''
p:

land

54 Bewailed
aUdibly

wp

·llodT
11-IID. .
owlflll'

*""

WedDOIIIQ,Pe:"!
It lbt et••·~

DOWN
l Bound !It

--

· • - -. r ·~-- -----

-.

•

�. '"

Sessions
To Begin
MIDDLEPORT -

Four

of Brullian people

of bo~te:e:~o:ari.g:a~profe=s; =~e:~:,~::=e;:,~::r
al correspondence club and are •, -~se is to ma.t to knoW people of
oth er countr les· The purpose, o c....... ,
other nalioos.
send our name and complete addreS'J,

If tnteres~. you are to"~"""':lnteraclonalr I catxaPosta130827,
iex, occl4}ation, hobbles to 11.11""6"'
sao Paulo, Brazil.
both or the courses
it
tedi
tngoneor
•
MEIGS CounUans n eres
n may report to the high school.
adult business education may Mrs. James Vermarl is instruct·
still enter classes which began
this week at Meigs High School. or.
Typing classes start at 7 p.m.
CONGRATULATIONS to Mr.
and shorthanl at 8 Thursday eve-- and Mrs. James Fugate who wUI
nlng. Those interested In pursu-- observe their 45th wedding annl-

--

-

venarJ, at,,JIItlr ,f .....-.Q I:jlolnt

PAGE
.

•
••

GALLIPOLL... SCHOOL PATHOL - Membe~s of Ute ~lishingt~~ E]em
tary School safety Patrol, shown here with Chtef of Pobc~.J~hn Jaylor,
Caculty spons0rs, Hoy Spt·ague and .John llo.ll~, areO tor): l'lrst !tow -Cl
Ta,ylor Grc.,. Fift! Bill}' Barcus, Billy Wllhams, Joey Rubcnstahl, Jim J
Paul Walker, Greg 11lorn
U ce, J '·un w"ood ' Keith ·Sheet s' T omm)' Young,
,
Qu
Marl\ l'oling
John Sallaz James Cunningham, Honald Clay, Ray een,
•
George .Haffe1t; Second row - Danny Cox, Bobby Candee, Anthony ReE

... .

',,

PAGE TWO

somehow surviving this extraordinary Presidential campaign, but whether an irreplaceable public respect for the American waiversit}' system is also going to come out alive
is something else again.
Indeed, the most alarming aspect or this
whole campaign to thoughtful men is its heavJ and accumulating evidence that campus
hoodlums of spurious intellectual pretensions
are frightfUlly and perhaps even fatally damaging the very institution that ls called higher

learning.

of resistance in VIetnam.

College adminlstra1ors know this very well;
though, or course, they do not advertise it.
They know, too, that it 1o:: becoming increasingly difticult to raise those private donations
ror endowment purposes which have long been

There has been no letup In the abusive
heckling that has followed both Humphrey and
Mualde about the nation; the far~ts have only
been emboldened by Humphrey's unwise ges.
tures toward them.
This Is by no means so odd as at first
blush It might look. For the whole history
rl the totalitarian lett shows that it never
seeks its mortal adversaries among such moderate conservatives as Nixon or among sucll
ultra - conservatives as George Wallace. It
finds Its villains among just sucll non-extreme
liberals as Humphrey and Muskie.
St!ll - and this Is the ultimate Irony of all
- if Humphrey's drive is to pick up genuine
momentum in these last weeks, that lire is
likely to come precisely from public sympathy
for a man whose IUe-time of service to liberal causes is being repaid by the most savage hostility rrom those who at first glance
would seem to owe him most.
Certainly unwittingly, the far-outs may ac.
tually be helping Humphrey alter all, If only
by the very nastiness of their attempts to destroy him. When a man is beaten into the
dirt as these people are beating Humphrey
and Muskie irlto the dirt, the point can arrive where sensible voters begin to say that
Humphrey and Mnllkle can hardly be all bad,
considering the kind of enemies they have

WASHINGTON -

The American tradition

of reasonabts· civilized debate in politics 11!1

,,

'
. . 1':

'

indispensable to private edocatioo In this country,
The halls of academe, in short, are being put in a progressively thinner face of

pobl!c support by the sabotage actlono ol the
professional and far-out "rebels" within the
academic community. Political contests come

and go; and the republic endu-es. But up to
this point the university, as the cemral symbol or orderly intellectual progress, had been
asswned to be relatively untouched and more
or less timeless. The new £actor here is that
this assumption can no longer be regarded
as truly a safe one.
While Richard Nixon and George Wallace
are, or course, under intermittent assault from
hooligans of various nonacademic types, the
all.out academic wreckers havt really zeroed
in only upon Hubert Humphrey and his Democratic rmming mate, Sen. Edmund Muskie,
Humphrey has long since HJost his cool,"
to use the pseudo.Janguage or the campus rev.
olutionaries, and has several times struck out
Wildly at his tormentors. But now even t h e
heretofore unflappable Muskte is finding that
he can't take much more, as is illustrated by

1

made.

EDITORIAL

Rationalizing the Czechs' Dilemma
It must be rather difficult these days for
homegrown Communists and disciples of
Marxist -Leninism to tell themselves that
commuhism is the hope of mankind and that
Soviet Russia is the guardian of that hope .
Here is the price the Czechoslovakian people are going lo have to pay for the1r brief
flirtation with the e 1em en tar y freedoms
Americans and citizens of other " decadent"
democracies take for granted :
• The Communist party must resume
dominant rule in Czechoslovakia.
• The party must exercise complete control over the press , radio a&gt;:1d television.
• Liberal Czech leaders must be replaced
by orthodox Communists, meaning those who
will unquestioningly toe the Kremlin line.
In return for these chains, the Soviet Union
promises to begin withdrawing its occupation

You11 Always Do Better At Rutland
Furniture and Easy Terms Are Availa.le

troops-someday.
Yes. the mental convolutions non-Russian
Communists must be going through are dif·
ficult. but not impossible for men who recovered from the shocks of Hungary and de·
Stalinization.
What is surprising is that so many ordinary

RUT LAN·~

Americans have so easily accepted and so
quickly rationalized away Russia's brutal

742-4211

'
I

'

'

repression of Czechoslovakia,
The Russians were merely protecting their
legitimate national interests, the argument
goes, Their intervention In Czechoslovakia
was really not much different from our intervention in the Dominican Republic or In VIet·
nam. Indeed, runs the most extreme of these

rationalizations, our lnvolve,nent in Vietnam
set an example that encouraged the Russlalls
to move into Czechoslovakia.

As if America's failure to oppose the ag.
gressive spread of communism in Southeast
Asia (whether or not Vietnam was the wisest
choice of time or place to oppose it) would
have persuaded the Soviets to allow communism to peacefully recede in Eastern
Europe,
Yet so weary are we of more than two
decades of cold war, so anxious are we to
discover any indications of good will and
decency among the rulers of Russia and so
inconseq uentlal is little Czeehoslovakia that
many of us have hought these arguments.
We magnify the motes in our own eyes in
hopes it will cause our adversary to recognize
the beams in his. We content ourselves with
claiming a moral defeat for the Soviets in
Czechoslovakia, forgetting that this is the
kind of "defeat" the Soviets have always
willingly accepted in exchange for the pructical advantages it gains them.
Certainly, Czechoslovakia is not worth a
world war. There is nothing we can do for
the peoples of the European satellites that
they are unable ro do for themselves. But if
we cannot prevent a Hungary or a Czecho.
slovakia, neitber can we justify these human
tragedies '!f'der the delusion that there is
really no difference between Russian foreign
policy and our own.
Ironically, on the day that Secretary or
state Dean Rusk appeared at the United
Nations to call Russia to account for Its In·
vaslon of Czechoslovakia, he was heckled by
a group of young Vietnam war dlsseufen
about whom the most charitable thing that
can be 1 a I d Ia that their educaUon Ia

lneomplete,

•

• 11 --

11 .. .. .

• __ }Veather
illY lind contlqued
ld tonight -

110-

thll evening. Low
he 50o to tho low
partly clowjy and
11 temperature.

I

~uulluy

FIVE CEtiln

Professional Women's Club. The

....

same locaUon. Those eompleting both sessiona wlll receive
cards. The irtenaive drivin&amp;:

J at White sands,

''

dar Practice
ud radar wa.s to try
011 Apollo 1 In much
yay one on the moon

training program lo prepared by
the Ohio Stele Patrol.
Instructors Tuesday wW In-

k an Awllo motherlunar ~~ bolore
I for the return.

clude Pomeroy Pollu Ctdef Jed
Webster, Mrs. Edith SluCJO. dispatcher for the Pomeroy depart-menli John Mora, mathematlu
tnstruc!Dr ol tho Metgo Local

~bate

&amp;-·''Ill""""" ......._

ln Washl.ngton, called
&lt;ased bombing lind
Haiphong Harbor •• a
arm twlstlng'' to get
~aris negotiations.

·- ··--·
OCTOBER 13, 1968

WASHINGTON NOTEBOOK

his tortured counterattack at last upon four letter-word shouters at Syracutie Universit.Y.
Some in the Humphrey entourage had supposed that once he had delivered h.is recent
major speech on Vietnam, in which he declared his intention to soften up a bit on the war,
the anti...war left wing would be somewhat
placated and the aLmospher~ somewhat calmed ror him, It has, however oot worked that
way at a11. The Far Left has not been appeased - as some o( Humphrey's more mature
advisers had tried to tell him it would not
be - and will never be appeased wdess and
lDltil he abandOns any backing for any kind

.•., ...

class will bol(in at 7:30P.m. The
aecond session will be at 7:30 p,
m. on Tuesday, OcL 22, at the

Humphrey's Enemies._~,
Prove to His Credit
BY WILLL.\M S, WHITE

,

study hall oC tho Meigs Hlg!l
School In Middleport.
Open to the public, the two-eession coune is being sponsored
by the Mldd1eport Buslneu and

THE SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL

Washington White Paper

-~

l

·· - ~.

.

,,

I

lf&gt;o

when tho nrst of two sessio~s on
defensive driving Is held at the

P:~~reds

.

'I
I

materlal Cor the ewnlng Tuesday

t

'

.,

atructora will present the stud)'

INTERESTED In !raz!:

~

,,

Just Between

A High Tribute to Nixon--By None Other than Fortos
By NOEL GROVE
NEA Staff Correspondent

WASHINGTON-IN E A)A final irony concerning opposition to the nomination of

Supreme Court Justice Abe
Fortas for chief justice was
revealed recently by a close
friend to Fortas.

Fortas, who withdrew his
name from consideration after
heavy opposition-mostly from
Richard Nixon supportersonce paid one of his highest
profel:lsional compliments to
the courtroom skill of the Re·
publican candidate for president. the friend said.
Nixon had represented the
James J, Hill family of Connecticut in Time, Inc . vs. Hill,
the only case Nixon ever
pleaded be f o r e the U.S,
Supreme Court The family
was suing Time, Inc. for invasion of privacy after a mag-

azine article likened an experience of the family to the

plot of the stage play "The
Desperate Hours," in which a
family is held hostage by
three escaped convicts.
The court ruled against the
family, 6-3, but Fortas reportedly commented later
that Nixon had made one of
the best arguments he
(Fortasl had ever heard in
his days on the bench.
Fortas was one of the dissenting judges and also wrote
a dissenting opinion on the

court's decision.

• • •
Even ID the highest places
can one f i n d those little
symbols of humbling earthiness that serve as leveling devices for all people and all
things,
Amidst the grandeur of the
great rotunda of the Cannon
House Office Bullding. clrcl•d
by stately marble busts or
congressional immortals, sat
an old tin pail recently, conspicuously receiving dribbles
or rain that seeped through a
leaky ceiling,

• • •

What Robert Moaes and the
city of New York couldn't do,

Us

Montreal has done not oncr

but twice.
All the experts said last
predicted it would flop They
were wrong on both counts. as
50 million visitors to the man·
made islands in ttw St
Lawrence River that summt'r

By Pat Houck

•'

can testify.
So successful was Expo that
Montreal could not hccir to
see it close. And after the
second summer of tlw ~how
now called "Man and Hi s
World," total attemhmce will
top 12 million by the Oct, 14
closing date, d e s p i t e five
straight weeks of almost con·
stant rain .
That 12 million , said an M&amp;

GALLIPOLIS - For two weeks Pve been toying with thelclea oC
whether or oot to lell something.
At first I thought I wouldn't mention It, fearing that telling aboUt
a nice act might teile something aw.ylrom it. Yet, I really wanted
to share the incident with you.
I was kidded about writing nice things (buttering people up) so
they will do something lor me.
I dismissed the remark because it is not true. I like people.
I don't see bad things about them and if I did, I would just write

H W spokesman. is still higher
than total summer figure s of
either the Seattle or New
York world's fairs in the
States. Canadians like tn point

out little things like that,

• • •

Newsmen have their good
and bad days, just like every ·
one else. Sometimes r1ew s
sources take forever to nm
down, but occasionally they
drop right into your lap .
In a short visit recently to
Montreal this reporter was
standing on the periphery of
"Man and His World ," ad ·
miring the geodesic dome and
the whole futuristic lay01Jt &lt;md
idly wondering where to s t;.~rt
for some official comment on
the show's second year.
Just t h en the gentleman
standing next to me mqtrJ~cd
as to whether it was my hrst
visit to the site. It was . and
how about himself, was lt h1s

man'l owner. Andrew Goodman,
tumed doWn a $55,000,000 olfor
.... Christmas II almost t h r e o
Jl'l(IDths away and Georg Jen1e11'1
on 5th Ave., ha8 anowJaden Yuletree,ftlled windoWs •••• And B.

"S.lent

'

highly o!yled, lmpodent, minty OO·

phistlcation of the original, clicking off wit, humor and sentiment
with tbe cybernetic perfection or
a precision instrument of aciduloos cheerfulness, was beyond
George Grizzard, who plainly
wanted to be Noel Coward, but
missed by the width of an ocean

new 11private" Manhattan club
.... We per!Oilally encoontered
three prostitutes blatantly solicIting oo Perk Ave. at 59th st.
across from the Church or saint!:

Faith, Hope and Charity .••••
They eongregate near a big cafe
where more cluster inside {indoor streetwalkers?)
Dem. C&lt;&gt;ng. Jolm Murphy (of-

ficial Parliamentarian at t h e
Dem. Convention) told us Sen.
Eugene

everyone after the nomination be·

McCarthy got sore at

'

'

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
rorm four ordinary words.

tiona! snub;"' asked why McCarthy couldn't be cajoled later,

Its contents certainly were culled rrom Coward's lifetime ot
stage triumphs, but the production attheEthel Barrymore Theatre and Coward hllnsell were almost a contrast in terms ....
Attempts to give the spleodid
Coward music a rock beat didn't
work, removing the stylish, origInal polish and wit without add·
lng a comparably potent modern
mood or performance.
George Grizzard, Ita First Potato, Is hardly as British as heel
and kldno.Y pie, more American
u apple pie; and whllo It wu
clear he had the lntelllgenee and
wtU to appreclala this CowardiJI
catcball of Noel's Immense booiY
~ thoatrical work, his aptitude
lor the so very English task at
hand wao conliderably less than
suitable for a participant.
Tho same might he setd Cor
(rather, aplnat) comedienne
Dorothy Loodoo, e veteran cafe
performer whoH major detect,
apart from the complete lack of
brltUe ollhan-eas or a true
Coward delineator, ia her night
clw periiOilallt.y and mamer

Peg Blazer.

WISII MORE PEOPLE would try to get out lor the Community
singers. UnleBB they do, when they hear a beautiful vocal concert
this Christmas seasoo, they will bo In the same boot Pll be in,
sorry they aren't a part of it.

DON'T HAVE TOO MANY program books yet. Heve some of

which iLIUlOWlCe, somewhat overbrosdly, that she Is In on the
joke before the audience ...• Carole :ilelley•s English lralning was

you forgotten to share one with me?

HEARD BY WAy OF THE GRAPEVINE my Civllllelense l(irls
were disappointed because we didn't have a graduation ceremony,
or a UIUe somethiDB opeeial at the end of the medical self-llelp
course, Sorry rm so buoy l(lrls. r mentioned the dllrlculty of a time
wh\\11 we could all get together.
One of them setd, set a date and let those who can, oome. I
thought It wao a good o-stlon, oo will set a dale soon. I really
llllPreclate all those who particlpoted.

BARBS
Br PHIL PASTOitET
We discovered-we thought

--a new use for three-day-old
pizza, but guess that the tire
compsnies beat us to it by a
lew decades.

• • •

The fellow with a well·
developed bump of eurioft·

hl.al's ,.., if tllis WG) bw ma., ..,.. a rill! tltiltk
Hu,.,.,., atHI Hi- wiH tab .,.,· t.- W,._r'

I

lOUGH .. .'(00 NEED A WATERFALL
..SHOW THE SUN GOING DOWN SO~T
,NP POT SOM~ RED STREAK~ I
W.E ~COOING OIJT

tfr. arxi Mrs. Oll wr

me ceremonies Friamblin is on the far
Her eacort is Earl
Jan Stidham, junior

daughter oC Mr. end
r. and Mrs. Herman
ace after the football
sts and door prizes.

SOMETIMES IT
lAKeS' A LA't'MAA
10 SETiHESE
PEOPLE 5r~AI6HT

. . . _.,.

,. ,

()

•rly Johnson, 14, esm.ous injury when she
n the upstairs window
ocust St. home in Mid-

R.4HME

[]

imda.Y afternoon, Mid·

0

emergency squadmen
u Johnson was leaning
upstairs window shak-

t
I I I J

her balance. 3\e fell
) window and apparentKI a complete somer ·
mding on her feet. ~e
;:en to Holzer Hospital
n"Vatioo and treatment.

Sow arranre the circl.cl letten
to form the su=1H'ise amwer, u
sun~Sled by the above cartoon.

1Priai!M sMIS£ AIISillllllll 1A

..

r I I J-r I I J"
~.4.JYwf'n

Jun~hlf',.,

y.,. ............. ..

.

I-'..•""'

MOUaN

DAILT

ta Shiflet

,.,...tont

IUTUR LAGOON

,..,.,-MHr ~-&amp;N &amp;NGLI

TAil nu~ N

Woody Plants

DO~T WORRY BOSS, .&lt;NE&gt;N
THOUGH ILL Be K5fl i('IN6 AS
YODR LOYAL SEO?ErARY-YOJ
{ AN ALWAYS CALL-Me AT MY

I

4 Pronoun

14Abropte

sAred

15 Deceive

6 Requires

7 Concise

18 Asiatic

8 Wax (comb .

statements

name

form)
9 Unclose

(colt)

(poet.)

20 Father
21 Dawn

10 Transmit
11 Brazilian

goddess
seaport
23 Thus (Latin)
12 Winter
24 Delaware
vehicle
(ab,)
19 Three-toed
25 Numbers

(ab.)

21 Craftier
29 Lea:al point
31 Shade tree
32 Period of

al services for Mrs. Allet.. 75, RD 1, Rutl&amp;OO,
s dead on arrival &amp;t Holpital Surliay morning, wUJ
Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the
Funeral Home with the
avid ~ oCficiaUng.
will be in the Gravel Hill
ry at Cheshire.

hold

lS Intentice
1830 (Fr,)
17 Streets (ab,)

s Sunday

f?&gt;E'i/812LY HILLS MA~IOIJ
fOR (OI.ISLUATIOIJ!

2 Mountain
ACII088
crest
1--llveoalr.
3 Wrestler's
7 Fruits of •

woodY plant

sloths
22 Despicable!
24 Degrade

26 GunhK"k

catch
28 Heum t&lt;'u mb
f(lnn)

ubornatShortCrtek. W,
!&gt;lay 27, 18~2. the daugbe late Jacob ami Josephine
and she had II wei In the
unt area unW movi~ to
ln 1956 and w&amp;B 1 mem·
11e Rutland ChurchofGod.

dead limbs
42 Mc'lliitied in
to lor

43 Japanes••

outca:;;ts
30 Egyptian
woody plant 46 AuJnwnt~
48 Guidcl ·~ htt:h
34 Fruitless
nott:35 Hawk parrot
-19 Soak fl a'&gt;
3'J Put in new
glass
38 Pred ispclsed
40 Remo\'es

1

51 Sh't&gt;Twct r~..._·~i

.\;!

:'li'l'\\-

38 Boat paddle
38Cwhion
31 River Islet
41 Seine

also preceded in death

ruobaod, LemueL
vors include two sons,

Gumr•a

P"r:

~tart.

W, VL; Hue, C~
; six sisten, Mrs. Mar-

:&gt;eerlea, Charleston, W.
~Archer, Orchard Lake.
an; Maey Dl&lt;luoriiGII, and

time

33 Observe
lM. Nblte-

when she a,pparent.·

t,g

IGURMOE

"'=++-

-

McCall, -

)No-; Mro.

ol Las
1no1 Rd·

ieell1111o W. VL, and Miss
Shlllet.lltdla, 18110 anD&lt;~­

43Stray

44Jmpalr
45 Genw of

.

50-of

1 at Ia)" time.

UAnalnter

SESSION SLATED
~ u etrc:le or 111e lilt Ounll e1
t( t

.,=hter

WE NEIDiill A CLEAN CAR Cor a WRAP plduro lui week.
GtJmOn pull out of hi• prase acroes the
Bill LarP laW Glor&amp;O
acated h1ln and hlo bfiUtlllil illrell fram the
I tunled out we Clllld haYO U....'
cor, 0.W doa't
blad&lt; Ford, boealllt the car - ' t oholl UP at
.... 1111 old ~n=• to bt,lurY BID'o bled hid GeiJrP'I fa... 011, smarter tluin moat, but be II
quite' a bit lhorter/
all Andto14111
• '
' ' ·~
...u,
GeorP. ...... ,,.. ...otwliiiiiJ.

IS Le111IaUva

=~~

'

. ......... " ''" '

· - • .. ! •

~

1 GOT ~ INTRIGUED with looking around GUIIJIBIIIIn'• Dnll!
-~ s.-~ Sto. ' and talking to Richard (Jilek)
ty &lt;lese""'' it
Store, corner of PI ..., ..... ~...~
of lJ&gt;.
Ma komi that I bouRht the thlow, There Is 10 muc~
•
e, I
~ ,_,_ to tell about it here. Would love,to do a
Our neillbbor bu
tereat there, won ,. ..,.._
bridged dlCtlonariea.
fUll rep&gt;rl.

• • •

Ctla.,HIA...._

that they confusedly paired off
hardly heterosexually in the end;

backing HHH •.• Sen. Murphy (ol
Staten Island-Brooklyn) said McCartJ\y conaidered it an "inten.

Peg Blazer is one of them.
Each morning when m,y (amil,y dips into "melt ln the mooth"

but here was a much more generous soul than L
1 had a mental picture oC that small, neat blonde woman. In
the palo angora lavender IIWealer and matching alac:ka, (thla
was tho outllt she wore aile eamo In the ol!lce) and the hour a
of work which went into this gill. I thoulht of how periOIIIII, and 1o1W
love~¥. 1 wanted to keep It as a nice thing between her and myaell,
which rm sure ohe Intended It to be, until I arrived at the cleclston
we ohould alllell the good things.
1 know people do these things with oo thought oC reward bo&lt;IAise
tltey continually give my husband gifts of produce and lrult. Ama
May WUllams, E. Main St., Pomeroy; Rita Corliss,Gallipolls, Arron

wound up mildly amusing, with
three pairs of lovers dressed
and coifJed so precisely alike

Jr&amp;WID~® u..t 41&gt;1••'1.'..-1 ,.._

The allpshod, bland "Noel Cow~
ard's Potato'' bore the name, and

butter, wlld raspberry jelly, candied pickle~, plckled beets, peach

and the depth of a style.
An American, really, shouldn't dare try ••Mad Dogs a n d
Englishman" on a proresslonal
stage; "Mad About the B o y"

not ottensive, incidentally.
The rewe opened and closed
with the cast more or less nude,
polled in an intertwined tableau
not at all shocking nor even darIng; actually It effected an Innocence suggesting that someone thought they might be stat.
ing a naked '1.ruth" such as the
dirtily dull "Hair" attempts.
Some numbers by the cast en
masse missed entirely Coward's
rorm and sly style, even missing
U1e musical beat, consequer1tly
the mood and meaning .... Coward, or someone, updated 1\oel'~
"Let's Do It" panxlv or Cole
Porter's original song, which
plainly, in Coward's impeccable precision with words, timing and personality, could ha\'e
been an impertinent dt:light
("Ed Sullivan won't do it he's too highly strung''), but
herein wa.s performed as if it
were a first rehearsal, not the
First Night.

cause someone didn't deliver a
note to the podium asking to let
him then make a brief speech

THERE ARE STD.L A LOT OF VffiTUOUS KIND, DECENT,
HUMAN BEINGS IN THIS TROUBLED WORLD OF OUR!

butter. tomato preserves, and that do-llcloos Jelly I mentlooed above.
Each jar was neatly labeled with the date, decorated with a
nower seal, and a label saying, ''From the Kite~ of Peg mazer.''
If It had been me, 1 would have given me Jal', or at most two;

What ••Noel Coward's Potato"
lacked was Noel Coward: t h e

Night"

Sen. Murphy replied, "Pique!"

•

more like it; aa was Tom Kneebone, a Brltilll import by WilY
~ Canada, where he was a. res~
ldent leprechlwl, , the program
stales, obviously with the gills
to claim such a title.

in her Sept. TV special .••• Joey
Bishop's right hand, Regis PhUbin, and frau have a fiaoh •••.
Cory Grant had his name removed from the letterheads of a

I was afraid my telling about the act "oold &lt;;11al the wrong light
on a wonderful, generous act or thought.flllness, and make it appear
as though the person who did it knew it would be told. (There, that's
a big mouthful ol words but It's the bost I can do to explain,)
When I mentioned my reticence to Deane "Chatterbox" Wagner, she said, "You know me, Pat, Itell everything."
And with a second look, I decided there are so 1118!1)' bad things
done, so much evil and crime menti~ !IOmeone must counteract
this by "telling it like it is," even shouting this out loud:

Bryaot, Crown Ctzy, RL I, and Mr. Jimmy Evano, Nelg!lborhood
Rd., are several others who belmg In tho''good J!UYS" category witlt

BERRY'S WORLD

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - Bergdorf-Good-

about something else.

wild blackberry jelly, I think of her.
You see, Pes, a woman I had never laid eyes on, popped Into the
Times • Sentinel office one gloomy morning two weeks ago, Introduced herself, and said, "I've something for you. 11 :JJ.e put a wrapped package oo my desk and left.
When I later tore open the paper, I loond peach jam, apple-

OCTOIIEIIJ3, INB

WfiNII:L·

Voice a!ong Broadway

~eiaand sang

year's Expo 67 would ne\'er
come off and, when it did. thrv

first trip here?
.. Hardly," he laughed . " I
built the bloody thing!"
Enter Mr. J, G, Grandon ,
an engineer of installat~ons at
the Expo site, who d~recl ed
construction of the islands on
which the exposition was hllllt
and whose main concern no~·
is winterizing the site until
next year's opening.

TilE SUNDAT m

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call at lite flmar-

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54 Bewailed
aUdibly

wp

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11-IID. .
owlflll'

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It lbt et••·~

DOWN
l Bound !It

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Sessions
To Begin

other nationa.
1
addr
u interested, you·..., are to aeOO your name and compete
es'!,
"Oil ·~•ies to Amlgos Int.eracionalr, caixa Postal30827,
SeX, OCC'C)au o IIIAIU
Sao Paulo, Brazil.
lng ooo or both of the courses.
MEIGS CounUans interested in may report to the high 11chool.
adult business education m~J~ Mrs. James Vennari is Instructstill enter classes which began
this week at Meigs High School. or.
Typing classes start at 7 p.m.
CONGRATULATIONS to Mr.
and shorlharll at 8 Thursd~J~ eve- and Mrs. Jamell Fugate who will
ning. Those interested in pur11u- &lt;Jbsen-e their 45th wedding anni ..

-

I

&amp;\.Jbelr P-~ SchOd ""'lili'fa.

PAGE FOUR

TilE SUNDAY TIMES--'iENTINEL

pleceoot
·~rla6

rorone

DOWN

5. VaudevUie

l.lllam

2. HewtnJ"
tool

lspree)

Jl . WrtftkiAd
12.Co~ID

(REGULAR RIVER NEWS In the October,
1918, Gallipolis Dally Trlbenelssueswasslack.
Then I ran onto this story about the fig Qsb
that was displayed here Oct. 4..1, 1918).
WIIA T IS DECLARED by scientlats 1o be
the largest fish ever lmown in history or ever
capmred in the history of the world will be
on exhibition In Gallipolis Friday and Saturday aboard the yacht Tamlaml anchored at tho
river froot. In fact, it Is so big It could have
swallowed 20 Jonahs without suffering t h e
slightest pango or Indigestion.
Of course, It is harmless now, but before
It succumbed to the effects or five harpoon
thrusls and 1&gt;1 good-sized bullets In a bottle
thllt lasted 39 boors, its animal in~tincts were
so fierce that a black fish weighing 1,500 pounds
and an octopus weighing 400 pounds and &gt;OO
pounds of coral only served It aa an appetizer
or the mildest sort.
This is a big fish story, but it is a true one,
and is vouched Cor in every detail by the high.
est sclentlnc authorities.
The strange and mysterious monater which
as stated above will be on exhibition In Gallipolis Friday ..Saturday aboard the yacht Tamlaml,
anchored at the river rront; It Is 45 root In
length and measures 23 reet and nino Inches
In circumference. It weighed when captured
15 tons or 30,000 pounds and Its liver alone
weighed I, 700 pounds.
Think of harpooning such a monster u this
and being dragged throogh the water at express
train speed for hwuiredl oC miles over the
ocea.s ror two da,ys and a n1gtrt: before the game
was up and the capture sorely landed. Think or
catching a fish with a mruth big 9JICIUl!(1 to hold
three men of ordinary size and of such strange
and peculiar aspect that the men of science stood
astounded. Sounds like a Jonah story OOesn•t IL
And, for all anyone knows lo the contrary, It
may be and 1111CjU08tionably Is the sequel 1o that
story In the Bible that ror ages has proved
this stumbling block to men or science and
made mlnJ.sters at every cr_e ed use their wit
and lngenull;y to logically explain the story
of. lhe big nsh that swallowed lhe Hebrew
prophet several thouaand years ago,
It smashed a boat Into thousands or pieces
and crushed the rudder or a 31-1&lt;111 yacht with
a single swish or Its mlglll;y tail, which meesured 10 reet from tip 1o tip.
Scientists believe that the creature was an
Inhabitant or the deplhs of. more than 1 &gt;OO
reet below the surrace and that It wao blown
up by subterranean or volcanic upbaval, which
InJured Its diving apparatus 110 It was unable to
return lo Its native deplhs.
Its hide Is throe Inches thick and enabled It
to withstand the most enormous water pressure, a pressure almost inconceivable to man.
Its eyes, which are very small, have no lids
and were - e r eloiiOd indicating that It lived
at a deplll where eyes were of. no avail.
The creature Is not clualfied In natural history, the gO!Jis or opeclm'"' Ia unknown, and I•

.

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GAS

MODEL

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•

You11 Always Do Better At Rutland
Furniture and Easy Terms Are Avalla.le

RUTLAN,m.
742-4211

•

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11

~ Weather
dY and

cmil~Jued

ld IDnight with laothil evening. Low
he &gt;Oa to the low
partly cloudY and
'1 temperature.

'

FIVE CEf'.ITS

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'

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dar Practice
111d radar was to tey
011 Apollo 7 In much
'fay one on the moon
k an AD9llo motherlunar ~ll before
'l Cor tl"•e return.

I

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'

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48.1lut.er-

AV8088

I. Requiem,

G~LLIPOLIS - IS THIS THE GREAT FI.Sil
THn SWALLOWED JONAH?
SCIENTISTS ARE BAFFLED BY STRANGE
MONSI"ER TO BE IN GALLIPOLIS WIIICH
WAS CAP'I1JRED OFF THE FLORIDA KEYS.
LEADING SCIENTISTS DECLARE IT IS THE
WORlD'S LARGEST FISH.
C~PTAIN CHARGES TIIOMPSON OF MIAMI,
ITS CAPTOR, GIVES ITS WEIGHT AT 30,000
POUNDS, LENGTH 4&gt; FEET.

}

-· .

at White Sands,

~bate

I

ln Washington, called
tased bombing and
Haiphong Harbor as a
arm twisting'' to get
~aris negotiations.

DAILY CROSSWORD

15. DlMmbark
11. Man from
lndonmria :
abbr.
18. Coral

- .~
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~

. OCI'OIIER 13, 196S

It . Greeting

.. ,.

'

PAGE FIVE

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PAGE TWELVE-

GALLIT'OLL'. ~C JI OO I. P,.\TliOL - Members of the W·-tshington Elem
tary School Safety Patrol, shown here with Ch ief of Polic~.'J ohn Taylor ·
raculty spons;"&gt;r s, Hoy Sprague and .John llolle, are (1 to r): l' 1rst How - Cl
Taylor, Gn:g Fire, Billy Darcus, Billy Williams, Joey Rubens~.ahl, Jim J
tlce, Jim Wocd, Keith Sheet ~ , Tomm) Young, Paul Walker, Greg Thorn
John Sallaz, Jame s t'uuningham, Honald Clay, Ray Queen, M.atk Pollng,
George HaO"clt; Second row - Da rUlJ Cox, Bobby CoOOec , Anthony Ret

••

I

MIDDLEPORT - Fwr 11&gt;atructon wUl preaent the study
material ror the evonl111 ToesdiJ
when the flnt of two seulons on
defensive drlvl~ ts held at the
study hall or the Meigs High
School In Middleport.
Open to the pubHc, the two-session coune is being sponsored
by the Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club. The
clan will begin at 7:30 p. m. The
second session will be at 7:30 p.
m. on Tuesday, OcL 22, at the
same location. Those cQIDilet-lng both sessions wt11 receive
cards. The lnt.enslw driving
training progrem Is prepared by
the Ohio State Patrol.
Instructors Tuesday wUI include Pomeroy Pollee Chler Jed
Webster, Mrs. Edith Sisson. dispatcher Cor the Pomero,y depart..ment; John Mora, mathematics
Instructor of the Meigs Local

INTERESTED in a Brazilian pen pal?
International Friends, rnade ~ of hundreds or BrazUlan people
or both sexes or an ages and professions, have formed an interr~aUon­
al correspondence club and are anxious to correspond with people or
other countries. The purpose, of course, is to get to knoW people of

vuoarr

..,.

..'

1
I'

'

not only the moat remarkable zoological sped-

men bet the larl!"st specimen or the fish tribe
known In history.
Although the largest fish ever captured, scientists &lt;ialm It was only a baby or Its tribe
and H It had lived to attsln !WI growth It woold
have been two and one-half times as large.
Every undertaking establishment on the Flor ida east ooast (rom Jacksonville to Key West
gave up their entire supply of formaldeiiYde
to presene the monster and over 19 barrels
were used
11 was mounted by Professor J. S. Warmbeth, the eelebrated taxldermlat, who was recomm..- by the Smithsonian Jnstllute, who
was also chosen ID 110 with Admiral Perry on
his ramoua trip lo tile north pole.
MORE PUBLICITY ON THE DEEP SEA MYSTERY:
A Wooder!W Marine Exhibll on Capt. Thomp·
aon•s Yachl Exhibit Cootalns Many Rare SpecImens and Ia Probably the Flnesl In America.
HAS EXCEPTIONAL EDUCATIONAL VALUE.
Uve Sea Cow Weighing Nearly 1,000 PoW!ds
and Terrific Man·Eating ~ark Are ~own,

-·

J. Toothful
4. Dallal and
othera
O.Sol&amp;rdlok
6. StJpul&amp;Uon
1. Playpa

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of

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occupant
11. Mandartn

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13. Part of

23. orach

Ul Inquire

20. Story

........
Beverace

25. SIJIPn&amp;

2T.

of a kind
ZS.Huterul
21. None
god

30. MOIWter
31. TroJan
hm&gt;

M. Footb&amp;lter :
abbr.
3.1. EllUUe
31. Greek

letter
38. Fem&amp;le

water
!lprlte

.0. Dow-JOIWI
term
43.Jollu Foch
oW. A dd't 1anal
fl. Jobefor

Jua
tnUOiclanl

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Uln'a bow to work
AXYDLBAAXB
II LONGPJ:LLOW
One leUer limply- .ltaadl for aml:her. Ill thia IUDple A 11. uaed
for tbe three L'.. X lor tbe two 0'1, etc. &amp;Iaale Jetten. apol·
tropb!M, tho leqth ODd formalloo. ot the worde are aU blnll.
11:acb day tile cot1o totten an cllffonnt.

AMONG TilE RARE specimens are the octopus, one of the most repulsive creatures lmaglnablei a devil flsh, hanuner-head shark, angel
Qsh, a giant sail fish, with a sail two and onehalf feet wide; a glant baraconte, over seven
0 JKNX BJPB LPC OR OC SJV
feet long, wei&amp;hing 140 pounds with a mouth
GOHJS TJK OR. LKR.B KNKRVNA o c
and tooth large enough to bite oft a man's
arm.
NVFHBV TOSJ SJV QBBBGV , - OWRVC
By far, the most interesting specimen, howYoolenlaJ'o CI"JP!oqaoto: LA.W IINI'ORCmKIIIIT • • . MUST
ever, is Bessle, the sea cow, who i11 now
KAINTAIN INVIOLATE TH11 HISTOIUC LIBICRTIEll OF
making her home aboard the yacht. She was
mE mDIVIDUAL.-.1. EDGAR BOClVBR
captured recently near Eau Gallie, Fla., and
Is probably ooe or the largest specimens In cap.
Uvil;y. According lo ~ernment authorities,
the sea cow or manatee, has become almost
By Katie Crow
extinct and there are probably oot more than
POMEROY
There
is just no limit to the e"')&amp;nsion of the lit·
100 In IIOdstence.
tle
old
town
of
Syracu11e
and
Archie Lee is provUw: iL
Another singular specimen of the collection
Recently he purchased approximately 5 acres of land once my
Is the baby hammer-bead shark, with the sing.
ular elongated head rrom which it derives its rather's home, !rom a tract that belorwed to my gra.nd(ath~r Frank
'
name. The eyes are situated aroundtheextreme E. Holmes. It had consisted or 10 acre 11•
AI the death of my grandrather It was purchased by his daughler
outer edge of the "hanuner" so it can cover an
unusually wide range of vision. They grow and husband, Mr. and Mrs. George Freeland. This 10 acre rarm is
located two terahs or a mile from State Route 12-1
lo a length of 15 root and bring rorth their
young alive.
and is now being cleared, surveyedandlardscaped
It wiD be divided Into lots and will be knoWn as
The angel t:l.sh i11 a curious creature whose
place in nature ls midway between a shark
"Rustic HWs." Mr. and MrL Leeplantoerect sevand a ray. Their large pectoral fins, projecteral homes in thh area. This ill the second housirq,:
Ing far out m each side, have a fancied redevelopment ror the Lees. oot including. home now
semblance to wings, which is their only anunder construcUon on Rt 124 near the Pomeroygelic feature.
Minersville Corp.
Few creatures of the deep could have more
This development is a greet undertaking, but
horrible appearance than the octopus, aboul
appreciated. l iuKM', by the many reslderts or the
which some fl the most gruesome stories
town. With peq,le like this, who have proven their
KATIE
ever written have been lold. Another InterCl.ith ln their town, how can we lose? This ts proesting specimen of marine lire Is the giant gress,
saJl fish. Capt. Thompeon'a specimen is one
r1 the largest ever captured on the east coast, .
THE MEIGS CHAPTER or the American )ted Cron will begin
measures seven reet ln length,
Its
!lind drive on the ldck-&lt;&gt;tr date ot Oc~ 15•
Other specimens are the giant swordf'ish. Paul
ns ~ ror house to house canvasstrw throu.ghout the coonty.
giant Jewish, leether fish, dolphins, amber •
Case! IS In charge ol tho "ciiJil(&gt;algn by mall." We certainly
iq&gt;e lhat Me•Jack, parrot riah, porcupine fish and otl'lers
"'6"
ountiana g1ve and give generouab' to this worth&amp;gency.
The
Red Cross help 1
while
all of which are the rinest specimens avaUabl~
to
&amp;jlpreclate
Whet
It really does. •Inn IIIOD1WIJIL - · w e ran
and In a perfect state or preservation.
investigate the a hi
my hiDI!ble ~~Jillion, one should
The tl&amp;er or man..aUng shark of which
c ewments of such an o--'·-''-lhon .. _ -·••
·--•
u~y "~
Capt. Thompson hes a very fine specimen rully realize the good done• and be more wiUirv
to fl['ftl.
Is tho terror or the seas, growing 1o a IOJI8(h
He who hestilates Ia lost. Don't hesllate - Bl\'8.
of. 30 reet. Th&lt;lf lnhabll the warm waters of.
the tropics and often ascend tho guir stri!IIITUI
I have a recipe for Mamie Elsemower'o MIIIIcal Dollar Fudge
submiUed by Mrs. Roy !t&gt;encer.
to • more northerly latitude, where they are
4'h c~t~s sugar
a menace to bathen in the summer.
2 lableii!IOOI1B butter
I tall con OWjiOrated milk (4'h oo.)
The Almanac
The evening stars are Soturn
Prealdent'• houte, the first
I pkg. (12 oz.) oeml-IWeet .......... bite
~ United Preas Jnternaf1ou!
and v.....
(lllbllc building erected In
4 bars, (3 oz.) German IWeot chocolate
Today Ia &amp;lllclal, Oct. 13, tho
On this day In history:
Waeh[ngion, D.C.
I Jar &lt;:1 or 8 oo.) llllrllhmai!OII' ere~~~~
287th dol of 1988 with 79 to
In
177&gt;, the ~
In
1937,
Nazi Gerlnll1f
2 cups chopped oota.
Col low.
COnsreas ordered construction
promised Brllaln ond Fr-. It
The moon Ia - - Ito flail of. a Naval neet, tll u' orlglnat- nuld n o t Ylollle Belgium tho .sur Ulpther s~, butler andmllkandbclllk Jlllaltea. Placa
1
.ing the
Na&gt;y.
pilose and last quarter.
-alll;y, a promlH whleh In ~blta,o-dMW!I•te(lnpleeeo)llldlllll"llaniiiGilr ereme
The morning olara an Mar• ' .. 1792, Georp WasbiQIIon laterwaabrokaa.
~ ar
bowL PGur 111e bc1111rv .,.,., .,_ ill!lll ~and
ond Jupiter.
.lalf, the comor.- of the
a 12dl2n:-~.lbo .,_,... llllhDeltecL Sllr lri .... llld _ . iniO

Attn•-•-

Katie's Korner

";',';.llll

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- -... PID. Malooo lllcUIPil lk.

.

.

..

Hzghlzght 9th Con~.+erence

Health and wei.
fare problems in Appalachia wlll
be the subject or the Ninth Biennial Southeastern Ohio Confer ..
ence on Health and WelCare Issues
to be held at The Ohio University
Inn in Atllens, from 9 a.m. until
3:30 p.m. on Thursday, October
17.
''lJnderpri\lileged
Problema
and Processes 11 will be the topic
o£ keynote speaker Jack K. Hill,
Deputy Director or the Ohio Of.
+ + + + + +
lice or Opportunity.
NEWSPAPERBOY Day was observed across
Hill i11 chairman or the Ohio
Ole nation Saturday, It climaxed a week-long ob- Coordinating Committee on Huservance of National New~paper Week in the United. States. Last Sun- man Resources and a member of
day, we read a feature in the Sunday Columbus Dispatch magazine the Cooperative Area Manpower
section titled, "I'm An Old Newspaperboy M,y selL" It brought back Planning System Committee. He
mall.}' foo:l memories,
has been Communil;y Develop.
+++++ +
ment Consultant for Ohio State
ON Sept 9, 1944, we began peddling the Tribune (Route 8) ror University and a County Agent.
Publisher Harold W. WetherholL We remained on the route for three
The Conference is coM
sponsor..
years before "retiring" in the fall of 1947. When we took over the ed by Ohio University, Marietta
route rrom Jimmy Danner, we had 78 customers. We had 93 when College, Rio Grande College and
we gave it up,
Ohio Citizens' Council Cor Health
~ ++ +++
and WelCaretogiveintcrestcdcitOlll: roule began at the corner of Fourth and Locust - Osa izens a chance to hear about
Baird resided there at the time. We then moved over toward Third, Otuo•s health and wel£are prob.
turned right down Third on the West side, turned the corner at Dr. lems and programs and to exW. Lewis Brown's home, came over to Fourth, turned right at the press their opinions.
O'Brien home. We then went up Fourth to the corner, crossed the
The General Conterencc Ctlairstreet at Washington school, and came back down Fourth to State SL man is Dr . Robert L, Savage,
After covering both sides or State, we crossed Fourth again and turn- Vice-President ror Researcl1 and
ed right at Third where T. s. Berridge resided.
Industrial Liaison or Ohio Unl+ + + + + +
versit;y.
AFTER going down Third to Court, we turned right, moving
over to Fourth again where we turned right at Varney CleOOenin's
home. (We always had to cross the street to gel omar Zimmerman's
home on Fourth.) Then came the home stretch - back up Fourth,
wrapping up at the St Louis Catholic Church.
BY HOBART WII..SON, J,R, _ .•
DURING the past rew weeks, we've been asked (several times)
who we would like to see as the next president or the United States.
In Dateline's opinion, Richard M. Nixon is the best man. Now, we'd
like to ask the same question. Who is your choice
•.. Nixon-; Humphrey-; or Wallace-? 111ose interested in answering "Dateline's Poll" may do
so by 11ending a post card or letter to Dateline,
Sunday Times-8entlnel. 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis,
Ohio, 45631. Please inclWe ywr name and address.
We'll usc fJ.gUres only in compiling results between
now and Nov. 5.

25.-ln

8. Cupola

2l. Mllchlet·

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

,f\,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,:;::,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,:,,,,,,,:,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,Jfi1

22.8onor·

ATHENS -

+ + + + + +

WE don't remember all the carriers who were on duty when we
were, but we do recall some of them - Bill and Jack Simms, Dan,
Jim and Di ck Caldwell; Lee Bower, Stu Zimmerman, Bill Chambers,
Sammy Plantz, Russ Wcxxl, Pete Burdette, Bill Beard, Ted Boyer,
Ja ckie Jackson, Keith and Dan Thomas and Glen Christy.

monlha.
On both occasions, the acqr:
baa been given the new ••fiOU]"
tr•lment. And It just goes to
shOII' that ooo1 music can be
every bH as bad as any odler
kind whoa Ita uae Is misjudged.
WnqNot.e
The drat occaalon was the
openlrv of the Democratic
ConYenltoll In Olleaao,

*u-1

llld ""'

~ ... Are1ll!l

Frauldlll, and the . J".J!Iult Wll

positively excruciating. As I
recall, the words were also
routed up, but this was nothing
compared to the soul treatmerd..
The most recent occasion in
which "The Star..5pal!iled Banner" was decapitated was
berore a World Series game the
other day in DetroiL This time
the singer was Jose Feliciano,
who, like Miss f'ranklin, is very
talented-but who also rerdered
a highly embarrassing rendition
or the national anthem. That is,
II occasionally sounded like
"The Stsr..5pangled Banner"but you couldn't be sure..
And of course there were all
those spectators who oonnaily
like to join In the slrwtrw of the
anthem and who were left
speechless in theJr aUe~q»t to
keep "' with the soul vorolona.
Aclullb, _....who watches
the World Sertea and Cllher
aporia •-ts reauJarly pta to
be an eliPOri 011 "The SllrSpaJwled Bamer" and bOll' ' It Ia
done best and woroL

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT
This column is for yolUlg people, their problems and pleas .
ures, their troubles and fun. As
with the rest of llelen Help US!,
it welcomes laughs but won't
dodge a serious question with

A FATHER?

Japanese girls. Tbe label

on

'~e

can deserlbes the

cootenta as p o II u te d air
from Tokyo. The llem aeUs
lor abeut 33 U.S. ceals aad
Is being offered as a aouventr for visitors from thecountry who want a taste of
rlly

ur•.

nant contention ln recent years
is that we no lo~er have to
hear Gtzy Lombardo and his
band play tho notional anthem
in the World Series.
Everything Lombardo plays
somehow sOUJiis like u Auld
Lang Syne." tknd since World
Series games Cram the East
always start during mornlrw
hours here on the Weat Coast, I
began to get the shakes aa the
music created the Image of 1
ru,;trtmarish succession of New
Year's Eve ~verL
You may haw ootlces, by the
WIIJ', thU the rational anthem
before '!'lllrsday's ftnal game
waa aurv by ·the wire or lted

Schoendlenot, _ . r or lhio

St. Louis Clrdlnala. As I
remember, she alao ..rvltlaot

dr. and Mrs. Oliver
me ceremonies Friamblin ill on the far
Her escort 111 Earl
Jan Stidham, junior
daughtar of Mr. and
r , and Mrs. Herman
1ce after the rootball
-ats and door pri.t.ea.

OOMET!ME5 IT

By Helen Batte/

or Helen Help US! this newspa.
per.
SO NOW: WHt\T IS

POLLUTION SOLUTION
brlags a h.ugh lrom lhese

f..SHOW THE SUN GOING DOWN SORT
~NO NT SOME REO STREAK$ I
M SMOKE COOING OUT OF lHE

US. ••

Send your teenage questions

weekly Gallia Times ... l\ew Gallaher Drug Store opens here ... LL
noy Maddox, Rodney, receives pilot's wings and commissiorL .. PTA
organized In East Gallipolis••. Harland Wood named district Future
Farmers of Ameri ca prc s idenL .• Ed Jud,y buys Emmel Slagle home
... Clarion spoils llio Grarde College homecoming, 27-0... Don Payne
leads SEOAL scorers with 'l3 points •.• Unbeaten Blue Devils blank
Middleport ror 15th consecutive grid triumph in two years... Athens
passes beat Pomeroy, 26-0.

NOUGH .. HOO NEED AWATERFALL

Helen Help

to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care

+ + + + + +

HOLLYWOOD (UP!) - The
late actor Charles Coburn, a
Georgia
gentleman.
always
maintained "The Star--Spangled
Banner., was impossible to sirw,
and that "Dixie" should be the
national anthem.
At least, he would say,
.. Dixie" gave a fellow a chance
to si~ with rousing fervor, and
souOOed like a national anthem
should sound.
Old Charlie undoubtedly had a
point aboul "The Stllr..5parwled
Banner" being difficult to slrw.
But tough as it may be, the
nadonal anthem has probably
never been maMald.ed 111
crudely as during two major
televlaton events in recent

m

a brush~fl.

TWE~TY YEARS AGO, £rom the files o£ the Daily Tribune and

TV •. . in Review

The Con£ercnce is being held in tor, American Red Cross; Kercooperation v..ilh several state or- mith Campbell, Operation ~lain­
ganizations: Catholic Conference stream and Genevieve .Smith,
Ohio, League or Women Community Aide.
Luncheon speaker Dr. Martin
Voters, Ohio AFL ~C IO, Ohio Congress of Parents and Teachers, IJ. Keller, Head of the Division
Inc., Ohio COuncil of Churches, or Community Health, College
Ohio Council of Retail Merchants, of Medicine, The Ohio State l1 ni ~
Ohio Division - ;\merican ,\sso- versity, will tell about "Health
clatlon of University Women, Problems in an Appalachian
Ohio Farm Bureau Federation, County ."
In the afternoon J. E. Farring.
Ohio Federation oi Business and
Professional Women's Chtbs, ton, Executive Director of the
Ohio Federatlon or Women's Ohio Valley Health Services
Foundation in Athens, will de ·
Clubs and Ohio Jaycees.
The Family Service Center, scribe 11 Comprehensive Health
Marletta•s unusual approach to Planning in Appalachia."
"Public Welfare Every.
bringing the poor Into the mainstream of society will be explain· body's Whipping Boy" will be
ed by several speakers : Mary the final talk o£ the day by Wil ~
Whitacre, M.D., Marietta Health son H. Posey , Executive Direc Commissioner; Geraldine Peter- tor or the Ohio Citizens' Coun.
son, Director, Family Service cil for Health and Welfare.
The me~ is open to the pub Center; Ruth Martin, O..treaeh
Worker; Mary Gulliver, Direc· lic .

A father is a person who is
forced to endure chiid&gt;irth wiUIout an anesthetic. He growls
when he !eels good and laughs
very loud when he is scared hair
lo death.
A father never reels entirely worley of the worship In a
child's eyes. He is never quite
the hero his daughter thinks .•..
Never quite the man his son beUeves him to be. And th111 worries him sometimes. (So he works
too hard to try and smooth the
rough places in the road or those
or his own who will follow him.)
A father is a person who goes
to war sometimes .... and would
nm the other way except that
war is part of his only Important
job In life, (which Is making tile
world better for his child than it
has been ror him.)
Fathers grow older faster than
people, because they, in other
wars, have to stand at the train

QUICK QUIZ
Q-Did early Christians
observe the fe&lt;~st of the Pass·
ovtr?

A--Christians in the 1st
century continued to cPle·
brate tbe Passover without
drawing any distinction be·
tween a Christian and JewiSh
o~ance. Tbis continued
until the destruction of Jeruaalem In the year 70.

station and wave goodbye to the
unilorm that climbs aboard.
And, while mothers cry where
it shows, rathers stand and beam
. .•• outside .... and die inside.
Fathers are men who give
daughters awa,y to other men,
who aren't nearly good enough,
so that they can have children
that are smarter than anybody's.
Fathers fight dragons almost
daily. They hurry away rrom the
break£ast table, off to the area
which is sometimes called an
otrk-e or a workshop. There,
with calloused, practiced hands,
they tackle the dragon with three
heads: Weariness, Work, a n d
Monotony. And they never quite
win the fight but they never give
up.
Knights in shining armor;
fathers
in shiny trousers ;
There's little difference as they
march . awa,y to each workday.
I don't know where rather goes
when he dies, but Pvc an Idea
that, after a good rest, wherever
it Is, he won't just sit on a cloud
and wait £or the girl he's loved
and the children she bore .
He'll be busy there too •.•.
repairing the stairs, oiling the
gates, improving the streets,
smoothing the wa,y. - AUTHOR
UNKNOWN
Dear Readers:
Does anyone know the author
of. this beautifUl tribute? rd like
to give credit, ror I'm sure it
will be clipped and kept by many
who agree with ••Author Unknown. n - H.
Dear Helen:
Recently you offered proo!that
newspapers print more good than
bad about teenagers. This Is
probably true, but may I suggest a roiiow-&lt;~p? Tell young peo.
pie to show their appreciation
ct the 11 good stories" by writing
lo the editor and commending
him for printing them. It IIWIJI
people do thla, I'm llll"e the con ..
structlve, pollltlve artlcloswould
aot even - r play. It' a true
that reader demand and action
can alfect w1u11 Ia p...-, The
pl)lle volh Ia mightier than we

lAKES" A LA'IMAN
10 SETIHESE
PEOPLE ~AIGHT

ta Shiflet
DONT WORRY, BOSS . .EVEi&lt;J
THOUGH I'LL 6E: RSfii&lt;IN&lt;5 AS
YOU!&lt; LOYAL SECT(E rARY - YOI.I

CANAL WAYS CALl. .~e; AT AIY
B&amp;VERLY HILL.S MANSIOIJ
fOR COI.JSULTATIOIJ!

I'LL.TAe ALDIJG,..uUST II-i CASE I-· ·
' HAVE' ,-0 PIC:'K UF'
THS PI5C65! .

PI""

IJil'lhllll IIQ'

s Sunday
al services for Mr11..bJ.lel, 75, RD 11 Rutland,
s dead on arrival at Hoipita! Sunday morning, will
Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the
Funeral Home with the
avid Sleets oO"iciating.
rt"ill be in the Gravel Hill
ry at Cheshire.
u bornatShortcreek, w.
May 27, 1892, the daughe late Jacob and Josephine
and she had lived In the
1aant area until mo't'ingto
in 1956 and 01 a memhe Rutland Church or God.
J also preceded in death
msband, Lemuel.
vors include two sons,
..etart.. W. VLi Hue, Co; six sisters, MrL MarDoarlen, Chorleston, W.
a,ne Archert Qrehard. Lake,
In; Mary Dlokeraon, and
~ McC.U. both of Las
No-; llrL IDel Rd·

loeU.., w. va.. and Mlas

Shiflet, India, IIIIIIID&amp;fUII-

n.
ids mil call at the t at 110 lime.

'

SESSION SLATED
12 Circle

Q-What is the .smaUtrt
Loonllardo Touch Mlulq[
number
of countries that con
- · ·. and tho Clrdlnala For' . . . . .,, qae of th• aldll Thla ·'·lhof loot. It Just goes be tllltred to tthedule an.
~!Its or ~ . Now York to " - IIIII JGU c:an't CGU11t 011 ftletlt i11 the Olppi&lt;: Gomes?·
IIWili: - AlJCE
A-At least 12 eountrlet.
c1row1n1 out or

Y.,...•

·rly Johnson, 14, eswlous injury when she
o. the upstairs window
ocust St. home In Mldlwlday afternoon. Midemergency squadmen
•s Johlson was leaning
upstairs window shak·
lll when she apparenther balance. g,e fell
! window and apparent3d a oom!')lele somer ·
md1ng on her feet. ~e
•en to Holzer Hospital
Jnation and treatmmt.

Cha-ch

allbo

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or ""' Hlllh

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Sessions
To Begin

other nationa.
1
addr
u interested, you·..., are to aeOO your name and compete
es'!,
"Oil ·~•ies to Amlgos Int.eracionalr, caixa Postal30827,
SeX, OCC'C)au o IIIAIU
Sao Paulo, Brazil.
lng ooo or both of the courses.
MEIGS CounUans interested in may report to the high 11chool.
adult business education m~J~ Mrs. James Vennari is Instructstill enter classes which began
this week at Meigs High School. or.
Typing classes start at 7 p.m.
CONGRATULATIONS to Mr.
and shorlharll at 8 Thursd~J~ eve- and Mrs. Jamell Fugate who will
ning. Those interested in pur11u- &lt;Jbsen-e their 45th wedding anni ..

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&amp;\.Jbelr P-~ SchOd ""'lili'fa.

PAGE FOUR

TilE SUNDAY TIMES--'iENTINEL

pleceoot
·~rla6

rorone

DOWN

5. VaudevUie

l.lllam

2. HewtnJ"
tool

lspree)

Jl . WrtftkiAd
12.Co~ID

(REGULAR RIVER NEWS In the October,
1918, Gallipolis Dally Trlbenelssueswasslack.
Then I ran onto this story about the fig Qsb
that was displayed here Oct. 4..1, 1918).
WIIA T IS DECLARED by scientlats 1o be
the largest fish ever lmown in history or ever
capmred in the history of the world will be
on exhibition In Gallipolis Friday and Saturday aboard the yacht Tamlaml anchored at tho
river froot. In fact, it Is so big It could have
swallowed 20 Jonahs without suffering t h e
slightest pango or Indigestion.
Of course, It is harmless now, but before
It succumbed to the effects or five harpoon
thrusls and 1&gt;1 good-sized bullets In a bottle
thllt lasted 39 boors, its animal in~tincts were
so fierce that a black fish weighing 1,500 pounds
and an octopus weighing 400 pounds and &gt;OO
pounds of coral only served It aa an appetizer
or the mildest sort.
This is a big fish story, but it is a true one,
and is vouched Cor in every detail by the high.
est sclentlnc authorities.
The strange and mysterious monater which
as stated above will be on exhibition In Gallipolis Friday ..Saturday aboard the yacht Tamlaml,
anchored at the river rront; It Is 45 root In
length and measures 23 reet and nino Inches
In circumference. It weighed when captured
15 tons or 30,000 pounds and Its liver alone
weighed I, 700 pounds.
Think of harpooning such a monster u this
and being dragged throogh the water at express
train speed for hwuiredl oC miles over the
ocea.s ror two da,ys and a n1gtrt: before the game
was up and the capture sorely landed. Think or
catching a fish with a mruth big 9JICIUl!(1 to hold
three men of ordinary size and of such strange
and peculiar aspect that the men of science stood
astounded. Sounds like a Jonah story OOesn•t IL
And, for all anyone knows lo the contrary, It
may be and 1111CjU08tionably Is the sequel 1o that
story In the Bible that ror ages has proved
this stumbling block to men or science and
made mlnJ.sters at every cr_e ed use their wit
and lngenull;y to logically explain the story
of. lhe big nsh that swallowed lhe Hebrew
prophet several thouaand years ago,
It smashed a boat Into thousands or pieces
and crushed the rudder or a 31-1&lt;111 yacht with
a single swish or Its mlglll;y tail, which meesured 10 reet from tip 1o tip.
Scientists believe that the creature was an
Inhabitant or the deplhs of. more than 1 &gt;OO
reet below the surrace and that It wao blown
up by subterranean or volcanic upbaval, which
InJured Its diving apparatus 110 It was unable to
return lo Its native deplhs.
Its hide Is throe Inches thick and enabled It
to withstand the most enormous water pressure, a pressure almost inconceivable to man.
Its eyes, which are very small, have no lids
and were - e r eloiiOd indicating that It lived
at a deplll where eyes were of. no avail.
The creature Is not clualfied In natural history, the gO!Jis or opeclm'"' Ia unknown, and I•

.

•'(

GAS

MODEL

,,·,

i·

•

You11 Always Do Better At Rutland
Furniture and Easy Terms Are Avalla.le

RUTLAN,m.
742-4211

•

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•••

11

~ Weather
dY and

cmil~Jued

ld IDnight with laothil evening. Low
he &gt;Oa to the low
partly cloudY and
'1 temperature.

'

FIVE CEf'.ITS

)

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dar Practice
111d radar was to tey
011 Apollo 7 In much
'fay one on the moon
k an AD9llo motherlunar ~ll before
'l Cor tl"•e return.

I

I
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_.:i •w•

48.1lut.er-

AV8088

I. Requiem,

G~LLIPOLIS - IS THIS THE GREAT FI.Sil
THn SWALLOWED JONAH?
SCIENTISTS ARE BAFFLED BY STRANGE
MONSI"ER TO BE IN GALLIPOLIS WIIICH
WAS CAP'I1JRED OFF THE FLORIDA KEYS.
LEADING SCIENTISTS DECLARE IT IS THE
WORlD'S LARGEST FISH.
C~PTAIN CHARGES TIIOMPSON OF MIAMI,
ITS CAPTOR, GIVES ITS WEIGHT AT 30,000
POUNDS, LENGTH 4&gt; FEET.

}

-· .

at White Sands,

~bate

I

ln Washington, called
tased bombing and
Haiphong Harbor as a
arm twisting'' to get
~aris negotiations.

DAILY CROSSWORD

15. DlMmbark
11. Man from
lndonmria :
abbr.
18. Coral

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. OCI'OIIER 13, 196S

It . Greeting

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PAGE FIVE

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lO.Ona -

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PAGE TWELVE-

GALLIT'OLL'. ~C JI OO I. P,.\TliOL - Members of the W·-tshington Elem
tary School Safety Patrol, shown here with Ch ief of Polic~.'J ohn Taylor ·
raculty spons;"&gt;r s, Hoy Sprague and .John llolle, are (1 to r): l' 1rst How - Cl
Taylor, Gn:g Fire, Billy Darcus, Billy Williams, Joey Rubens~.ahl, Jim J
tlce, Jim Wocd, Keith Sheet ~ , Tomm) Young, Paul Walker, Greg Thorn
John Sallaz, Jame s t'uuningham, Honald Clay, Ray Queen, M.atk Pollng,
George HaO"clt; Second row - Da rUlJ Cox, Bobby CoOOec , Anthony Ret

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I

MIDDLEPORT - Fwr 11&gt;atructon wUl preaent the study
material ror the evonl111 ToesdiJ
when the flnt of two seulons on
defensive drlvl~ ts held at the
study hall or the Meigs High
School In Middleport.
Open to the pubHc, the two-session coune is being sponsored
by the Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club. The
clan will begin at 7:30 p. m. The
second session will be at 7:30 p.
m. on Tuesday, OcL 22, at the
same location. Those cQIDilet-lng both sessions wt11 receive
cards. The lnt.enslw driving
training progrem Is prepared by
the Ohio State Patrol.
Instructors Tuesday wUI include Pomeroy Pollee Chler Jed
Webster, Mrs. Edith Sisson. dispatcher Cor the Pomero,y depart..ment; John Mora, mathematics
Instructor of the Meigs Local

INTERESTED in a Brazilian pen pal?
International Friends, rnade ~ of hundreds or BrazUlan people
or both sexes or an ages and professions, have formed an interr~aUon­
al correspondence club and are anxious to correspond with people or
other countries. The purpose, of course, is to get to knoW people of

vuoarr

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not only the moat remarkable zoological sped-

men bet the larl!"st specimen or the fish tribe
known In history.
Although the largest fish ever captured, scientists &lt;ialm It was only a baby or Its tribe
and H It had lived to attsln !WI growth It woold
have been two and one-half times as large.
Every undertaking establishment on the Flor ida east ooast (rom Jacksonville to Key West
gave up their entire supply of formaldeiiYde
to presene the monster and over 19 barrels
were used
11 was mounted by Professor J. S. Warmbeth, the eelebrated taxldermlat, who was recomm..- by the Smithsonian Jnstllute, who
was also chosen ID 110 with Admiral Perry on
his ramoua trip lo tile north pole.
MORE PUBLICITY ON THE DEEP SEA MYSTERY:
A Wooder!W Marine Exhibll on Capt. Thomp·
aon•s Yachl Exhibit Cootalns Many Rare SpecImens and Ia Probably the Flnesl In America.
HAS EXCEPTIONAL EDUCATIONAL VALUE.
Uve Sea Cow Weighing Nearly 1,000 PoW!ds
and Terrific Man·Eating ~ark Are ~own,

-·

J. Toothful
4. Dallal and
othera
O.Sol&amp;rdlok
6. StJpul&amp;Uon
1. Playpa

--

lt. Variot,y
of

......

20.81ack·

,,, ..... ...........•....

ita'•
pannt

occupant
11. Mandartn

tu.

.........

t.WI""

13. Part of

23. orach

Ul Inquire

20. Story

........
Beverace

25. SIJIPn&amp;

2T.

of a kind
ZS.Huterul
21. None
god

30. MOIWter
31. TroJan
hm&gt;

M. Footb&amp;lter :
abbr.
3.1. EllUUe
31. Greek

letter
38. Fem&amp;le

water
!lprlte

.0. Dow-JOIWI
term
43.Jollu Foch
oW. A dd't 1anal
fl. Jobefor

Jua
tnUOiclanl

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Uln'a bow to work
AXYDLBAAXB
II LONGPJ:LLOW
One leUer limply- .ltaadl for aml:her. Ill thia IUDple A 11. uaed
for tbe three L'.. X lor tbe two 0'1, etc. &amp;Iaale Jetten. apol·
tropb!M, tho leqth ODd formalloo. ot the worde are aU blnll.
11:acb day tile cot1o totten an cllffonnt.

AMONG TilE RARE specimens are the octopus, one of the most repulsive creatures lmaglnablei a devil flsh, hanuner-head shark, angel
Qsh, a giant sail fish, with a sail two and onehalf feet wide; a glant baraconte, over seven
0 JKNX BJPB LPC OR OC SJV
feet long, wei&amp;hing 140 pounds with a mouth
GOHJS TJK OR. LKR.B KNKRVNA o c
and tooth large enough to bite oft a man's
arm.
NVFHBV TOSJ SJV QBBBGV , - OWRVC
By far, the most interesting specimen, howYoolenlaJ'o CI"JP!oqaoto: LA.W IINI'ORCmKIIIIT • • . MUST
ever, is Bessle, the sea cow, who i11 now
KAINTAIN INVIOLATE TH11 HISTOIUC LIBICRTIEll OF
making her home aboard the yacht. She was
mE mDIVIDUAL.-.1. EDGAR BOClVBR
captured recently near Eau Gallie, Fla., and
Is probably ooe or the largest specimens In cap.
Uvil;y. According lo ~ernment authorities,
the sea cow or manatee, has become almost
By Katie Crow
extinct and there are probably oot more than
POMEROY
There
is just no limit to the e"')&amp;nsion of the lit·
100 In IIOdstence.
tle
old
town
of
Syracu11e
and
Archie Lee is provUw: iL
Another singular specimen of the collection
Recently he purchased approximately 5 acres of land once my
Is the baby hammer-bead shark, with the sing.
ular elongated head rrom which it derives its rather's home, !rom a tract that belorwed to my gra.nd(ath~r Frank
'
name. The eyes are situated aroundtheextreme E. Holmes. It had consisted or 10 acre 11•
AI the death of my grandrather It was purchased by his daughler
outer edge of the "hanuner" so it can cover an
unusually wide range of vision. They grow and husband, Mr. and Mrs. George Freeland. This 10 acre rarm is
located two terahs or a mile from State Route 12-1
lo a length of 15 root and bring rorth their
young alive.
and is now being cleared, surveyedandlardscaped
It wiD be divided Into lots and will be knoWn as
The angel t:l.sh i11 a curious creature whose
place in nature ls midway between a shark
"Rustic HWs." Mr. and MrL Leeplantoerect sevand a ray. Their large pectoral fins, projecteral homes in thh area. This ill the second housirq,:
Ing far out m each side, have a fancied redevelopment ror the Lees. oot including. home now
semblance to wings, which is their only anunder construcUon on Rt 124 near the Pomeroygelic feature.
Minersville Corp.
Few creatures of the deep could have more
This development is a greet undertaking, but
horrible appearance than the octopus, aboul
appreciated. l iuKM', by the many reslderts or the
which some fl the most gruesome stories
town. With peq,le like this, who have proven their
KATIE
ever written have been lold. Another InterCl.ith ln their town, how can we lose? This ts proesting specimen of marine lire Is the giant gress,
saJl fish. Capt. Thompeon'a specimen is one
r1 the largest ever captured on the east coast, .
THE MEIGS CHAPTER or the American )ted Cron will begin
measures seven reet ln length,
Its
!lind drive on the ldck-&lt;&gt;tr date ot Oc~ 15•
Other specimens are the giant swordf'ish. Paul
ns ~ ror house to house canvasstrw throu.ghout the coonty.
giant Jewish, leether fish, dolphins, amber •
Case! IS In charge ol tho "ciiJil(&gt;algn by mall." We certainly
iq&gt;e lhat Me•Jack, parrot riah, porcupine fish and otl'lers
"'6"
ountiana g1ve and give generouab' to this worth&amp;gency.
The
Red Cross help 1
while
all of which are the rinest specimens avaUabl~
to
&amp;jlpreclate
Whet
It really does. •Inn IIIOD1WIJIL - · w e ran
and In a perfect state or preservation.
investigate the a hi
my hiDI!ble ~~Jillion, one should
The tl&amp;er or man..aUng shark of which
c ewments of such an o--'·-''-lhon .. _ -·••
·--•
u~y "~
Capt. Thompson hes a very fine specimen rully realize the good done• and be more wiUirv
to fl['ftl.
Is tho terror or the seas, growing 1o a IOJI8(h
He who hestilates Ia lost. Don't hesllate - Bl\'8.
of. 30 reet. Th&lt;lf lnhabll the warm waters of.
the tropics and often ascend tho guir stri!IIITUI
I have a recipe for Mamie Elsemower'o MIIIIcal Dollar Fudge
submiUed by Mrs. Roy !t&gt;encer.
to • more northerly latitude, where they are
4'h c~t~s sugar
a menace to bathen in the summer.
2 lableii!IOOI1B butter
I tall con OWjiOrated milk (4'h oo.)
The Almanac
The evening stars are Soturn
Prealdent'• houte, the first
I pkg. (12 oz.) oeml-IWeet .......... bite
~ United Preas Jnternaf1ou!
and v.....
(lllbllc building erected In
4 bars, (3 oz.) German IWeot chocolate
Today Ia &amp;lllclal, Oct. 13, tho
On this day In history:
Waeh[ngion, D.C.
I Jar &lt;:1 or 8 oo.) llllrllhmai!OII' ere~~~~
287th dol of 1988 with 79 to
In
177&gt;, the ~
In
1937,
Nazi Gerlnll1f
2 cups chopped oota.
Col low.
COnsreas ordered construction
promised Brllaln ond Fr-. It
The moon Ia - - Ito flail of. a Naval neet, tll u' orlglnat- nuld n o t Ylollle Belgium tho .sur Ulpther s~, butler andmllkandbclllk Jlllaltea. Placa
1
.ing the
Na&gt;y.
pilose and last quarter.
-alll;y, a promlH whleh In ~blta,o-dMW!I•te(lnpleeeo)llldlllll"llaniiiGilr ereme
The morning olara an Mar• ' .. 1792, Georp WasbiQIIon laterwaabrokaa.
~ ar
bowL PGur 111e bc1111rv .,.,., .,_ ill!lll ~and
ond Jupiter.
.lalf, the comor.- of the
a 12dl2n:-~.lbo .,_,... llllhDeltecL Sllr lri .... llld _ . iniO

Attn•-•-

Katie's Korner

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- -... PID. Malooo lllcUIPil lk.

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Hzghlzght 9th Con~.+erence

Health and wei.
fare problems in Appalachia wlll
be the subject or the Ninth Biennial Southeastern Ohio Confer ..
ence on Health and WelCare Issues
to be held at The Ohio University
Inn in Atllens, from 9 a.m. until
3:30 p.m. on Thursday, October
17.
''lJnderpri\lileged
Problema
and Processes 11 will be the topic
o£ keynote speaker Jack K. Hill,
Deputy Director or the Ohio Of.
+ + + + + +
lice or Opportunity.
NEWSPAPERBOY Day was observed across
Hill i11 chairman or the Ohio
Ole nation Saturday, It climaxed a week-long ob- Coordinating Committee on Huservance of National New~paper Week in the United. States. Last Sun- man Resources and a member of
day, we read a feature in the Sunday Columbus Dispatch magazine the Cooperative Area Manpower
section titled, "I'm An Old Newspaperboy M,y selL" It brought back Planning System Committee. He
mall.}' foo:l memories,
has been Communil;y Develop.
+++++ +
ment Consultant for Ohio State
ON Sept 9, 1944, we began peddling the Tribune (Route 8) ror University and a County Agent.
Publisher Harold W. WetherholL We remained on the route for three
The Conference is coM
sponsor..
years before "retiring" in the fall of 1947. When we took over the ed by Ohio University, Marietta
route rrom Jimmy Danner, we had 78 customers. We had 93 when College, Rio Grande College and
we gave it up,
Ohio Citizens' Council Cor Health
~ ++ +++
and WelCaretogiveintcrestcdcitOlll: roule began at the corner of Fourth and Locust - Osa izens a chance to hear about
Baird resided there at the time. We then moved over toward Third, Otuo•s health and wel£are prob.
turned right down Third on the West side, turned the corner at Dr. lems and programs and to exW. Lewis Brown's home, came over to Fourth, turned right at the press their opinions.
O'Brien home. We then went up Fourth to the corner, crossed the
The General Conterencc Ctlairstreet at Washington school, and came back down Fourth to State SL man is Dr . Robert L, Savage,
After covering both sides or State, we crossed Fourth again and turn- Vice-President ror Researcl1 and
ed right at Third where T. s. Berridge resided.
Industrial Liaison or Ohio Unl+ + + + + +
versit;y.
AFTER going down Third to Court, we turned right, moving
over to Fourth again where we turned right at Varney CleOOenin's
home. (We always had to cross the street to gel omar Zimmerman's
home on Fourth.) Then came the home stretch - back up Fourth,
wrapping up at the St Louis Catholic Church.
BY HOBART WII..SON, J,R, _ .•
DURING the past rew weeks, we've been asked (several times)
who we would like to see as the next president or the United States.
In Dateline's opinion, Richard M. Nixon is the best man. Now, we'd
like to ask the same question. Who is your choice
•.. Nixon-; Humphrey-; or Wallace-? 111ose interested in answering "Dateline's Poll" may do
so by 11ending a post card or letter to Dateline,
Sunday Times-8entlnel. 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis,
Ohio, 45631. Please inclWe ywr name and address.
We'll usc fJ.gUres only in compiling results between
now and Nov. 5.

25.-ln

8. Cupola

2l. Mllchlet·

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

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22.8onor·

ATHENS -

+ + + + + +

WE don't remember all the carriers who were on duty when we
were, but we do recall some of them - Bill and Jack Simms, Dan,
Jim and Di ck Caldwell; Lee Bower, Stu Zimmerman, Bill Chambers,
Sammy Plantz, Russ Wcxxl, Pete Burdette, Bill Beard, Ted Boyer,
Ja ckie Jackson, Keith and Dan Thomas and Glen Christy.

monlha.
On both occasions, the acqr:
baa been given the new ••fiOU]"
tr•lment. And It just goes to
shOII' that ooo1 music can be
every bH as bad as any odler
kind whoa Ita uae Is misjudged.
WnqNot.e
The drat occaalon was the
openlrv of the Democratic
ConYenltoll In Olleaao,

*u-1

llld ""'

~ ... Are1ll!l

Frauldlll, and the . J".J!Iult Wll

positively excruciating. As I
recall, the words were also
routed up, but this was nothing
compared to the soul treatmerd..
The most recent occasion in
which "The Star..5pal!iled Banner" was decapitated was
berore a World Series game the
other day in DetroiL This time
the singer was Jose Feliciano,
who, like Miss f'ranklin, is very
talented-but who also rerdered
a highly embarrassing rendition
or the national anthem. That is,
II occasionally sounded like
"The Stsr..5pangled Banner"but you couldn't be sure..
And of course there were all
those spectators who oonnaily
like to join In the slrwtrw of the
anthem and who were left
speechless in theJr aUe~q»t to
keep "' with the soul vorolona.
Aclullb, _....who watches
the World Sertea and Cllher
aporia •-ts reauJarly pta to
be an eliPOri 011 "The SllrSpaJwled Bamer" and bOll' ' It Ia
done best and woroL

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT
This column is for yolUlg people, their problems and pleas .
ures, their troubles and fun. As
with the rest of llelen Help US!,
it welcomes laughs but won't
dodge a serious question with

A FATHER?

Japanese girls. Tbe label

on

'~e

can deserlbes the

cootenta as p o II u te d air
from Tokyo. The llem aeUs
lor abeut 33 U.S. ceals aad
Is being offered as a aouventr for visitors from thecountry who want a taste of
rlly

ur•.

nant contention ln recent years
is that we no lo~er have to
hear Gtzy Lombardo and his
band play tho notional anthem
in the World Series.
Everything Lombardo plays
somehow sOUJiis like u Auld
Lang Syne." tknd since World
Series games Cram the East
always start during mornlrw
hours here on the Weat Coast, I
began to get the shakes aa the
music created the Image of 1
ru,;trtmarish succession of New
Year's Eve ~verL
You may haw ootlces, by the
WIIJ', thU the rational anthem
before '!'lllrsday's ftnal game
waa aurv by ·the wire or lted

Schoendlenot, _ . r or lhio

St. Louis Clrdlnala. As I
remember, she alao ..rvltlaot

dr. and Mrs. Oliver
me ceremonies Friamblin ill on the far
Her escort 111 Earl
Jan Stidham, junior
daughtar of Mr. and
r , and Mrs. Herman
1ce after the rootball
-ats and door pri.t.ea.

OOMET!ME5 IT

By Helen Batte/

or Helen Help US! this newspa.
per.
SO NOW: WHt\T IS

POLLUTION SOLUTION
brlags a h.ugh lrom lhese

f..SHOW THE SUN GOING DOWN SORT
~NO NT SOME REO STREAK$ I
M SMOKE COOING OUT OF lHE

US. ••

Send your teenage questions

weekly Gallia Times ... l\ew Gallaher Drug Store opens here ... LL
noy Maddox, Rodney, receives pilot's wings and commissiorL .. PTA
organized In East Gallipolis••. Harland Wood named district Future
Farmers of Ameri ca prc s idenL .• Ed Jud,y buys Emmel Slagle home
... Clarion spoils llio Grarde College homecoming, 27-0... Don Payne
leads SEOAL scorers with 'l3 points •.• Unbeaten Blue Devils blank
Middleport ror 15th consecutive grid triumph in two years... Athens
passes beat Pomeroy, 26-0.

NOUGH .. HOO NEED AWATERFALL

Helen Help

to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care

+ + + + + +

HOLLYWOOD (UP!) - The
late actor Charles Coburn, a
Georgia
gentleman.
always
maintained "The Star--Spangled
Banner., was impossible to sirw,
and that "Dixie" should be the
national anthem.
At least, he would say,
.. Dixie" gave a fellow a chance
to si~ with rousing fervor, and
souOOed like a national anthem
should sound.
Old Charlie undoubtedly had a
point aboul "The Stllr..5parwled
Banner" being difficult to slrw.
But tough as it may be, the
nadonal anthem has probably
never been maMald.ed 111
crudely as during two major
televlaton events in recent

m

a brush~fl.

TWE~TY YEARS AGO, £rom the files o£ the Daily Tribune and

TV •. . in Review

The Con£ercnce is being held in tor, American Red Cross; Kercooperation v..ilh several state or- mith Campbell, Operation ~lain­
ganizations: Catholic Conference stream and Genevieve .Smith,
Ohio, League or Women Community Aide.
Luncheon speaker Dr. Martin
Voters, Ohio AFL ~C IO, Ohio Congress of Parents and Teachers, IJ. Keller, Head of the Division
Inc., Ohio COuncil of Churches, or Community Health, College
Ohio Council of Retail Merchants, of Medicine, The Ohio State l1 ni ~
Ohio Division - ;\merican ,\sso- versity, will tell about "Health
clatlon of University Women, Problems in an Appalachian
Ohio Farm Bureau Federation, County ."
In the afternoon J. E. Farring.
Ohio Federation oi Business and
Professional Women's Chtbs, ton, Executive Director of the
Ohio Federatlon or Women's Ohio Valley Health Services
Foundation in Athens, will de ·
Clubs and Ohio Jaycees.
The Family Service Center, scribe 11 Comprehensive Health
Marletta•s unusual approach to Planning in Appalachia."
"Public Welfare Every.
bringing the poor Into the mainstream of society will be explain· body's Whipping Boy" will be
ed by several speakers : Mary the final talk o£ the day by Wil ~
Whitacre, M.D., Marietta Health son H. Posey , Executive Direc Commissioner; Geraldine Peter- tor or the Ohio Citizens' Coun.
son, Director, Family Service cil for Health and Welfare.
The me~ is open to the pub Center; Ruth Martin, O..treaeh
Worker; Mary Gulliver, Direc· lic .

A father is a person who is
forced to endure chiid&gt;irth wiUIout an anesthetic. He growls
when he !eels good and laughs
very loud when he is scared hair
lo death.
A father never reels entirely worley of the worship In a
child's eyes. He is never quite
the hero his daughter thinks .•..
Never quite the man his son beUeves him to be. And th111 worries him sometimes. (So he works
too hard to try and smooth the
rough places in the road or those
or his own who will follow him.)
A father is a person who goes
to war sometimes .... and would
nm the other way except that
war is part of his only Important
job In life, (which Is making tile
world better for his child than it
has been ror him.)
Fathers grow older faster than
people, because they, in other
wars, have to stand at the train

QUICK QUIZ
Q-Did early Christians
observe the fe&lt;~st of the Pass·
ovtr?

A--Christians in the 1st
century continued to cPle·
brate tbe Passover without
drawing any distinction be·
tween a Christian and JewiSh
o~ance. Tbis continued
until the destruction of Jeruaalem In the year 70.

station and wave goodbye to the
unilorm that climbs aboard.
And, while mothers cry where
it shows, rathers stand and beam
. .•• outside .... and die inside.
Fathers are men who give
daughters awa,y to other men,
who aren't nearly good enough,
so that they can have children
that are smarter than anybody's.
Fathers fight dragons almost
daily. They hurry away rrom the
break£ast table, off to the area
which is sometimes called an
otrk-e or a workshop. There,
with calloused, practiced hands,
they tackle the dragon with three
heads: Weariness, Work, a n d
Monotony. And they never quite
win the fight but they never give
up.
Knights in shining armor;
fathers
in shiny trousers ;
There's little difference as they
march . awa,y to each workday.
I don't know where rather goes
when he dies, but Pvc an Idea
that, after a good rest, wherever
it Is, he won't just sit on a cloud
and wait £or the girl he's loved
and the children she bore .
He'll be busy there too •.•.
repairing the stairs, oiling the
gates, improving the streets,
smoothing the wa,y. - AUTHOR
UNKNOWN
Dear Readers:
Does anyone know the author
of. this beautifUl tribute? rd like
to give credit, ror I'm sure it
will be clipped and kept by many
who agree with ••Author Unknown. n - H.
Dear Helen:
Recently you offered proo!that
newspapers print more good than
bad about teenagers. This Is
probably true, but may I suggest a roiiow-&lt;~p? Tell young peo.
pie to show their appreciation
ct the 11 good stories" by writing
lo the editor and commending
him for printing them. It IIWIJI
people do thla, I'm llll"e the con ..
structlve, pollltlve artlcloswould
aot even - r play. It' a true
that reader demand and action
can alfect w1u11 Ia p...-, The
pl)lle volh Ia mightier than we

lAKES" A LA'IMAN
10 SETIHESE
PEOPLE ~AIGHT

ta Shiflet
DONT WORRY, BOSS . .EVEi&lt;J
THOUGH I'LL 6E: RSfii&lt;IN&lt;5 AS
YOU!&lt; LOYAL SECT(E rARY - YOI.I

CANAL WAYS CALl. .~e; AT AIY
B&amp;VERLY HILL.S MANSIOIJ
fOR COI.JSULTATIOIJ!

I'LL.TAe ALDIJG,..uUST II-i CASE I-· ·
' HAVE' ,-0 PIC:'K UF'
THS PI5C65! .

PI""

IJil'lhllll IIQ'

s Sunday
al services for Mr11..bJ.lel, 75, RD 11 Rutland,
s dead on arrival at Hoipita! Sunday morning, will
Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the
Funeral Home with the
avid Sleets oO"iciating.
rt"ill be in the Gravel Hill
ry at Cheshire.
u bornatShortcreek, w.
May 27, 1892, the daughe late Jacob and Josephine
and she had lived In the
1aant area until mo't'ingto
in 1956 and 01 a memhe Rutland Church or God.
J also preceded in death
msband, Lemuel.
vors include two sons,
..etart.. W. VLi Hue, Co; six sisters, MrL MarDoarlen, Chorleston, W.
a,ne Archert Qrehard. Lake,
In; Mary Dlokeraon, and
~ McC.U. both of Las
No-; llrL IDel Rd·

loeU.., w. va.. and Mlas

Shiflet, India, IIIIIIID&amp;fUII-

n.
ids mil call at the t at 110 lime.

'

SESSION SLATED
12 Circle

Q-What is the .smaUtrt
Loonllardo Touch Mlulq[
number
of countries that con
- · ·. and tho Clrdlnala For' . . . . .,, qae of th• aldll Thla ·'·lhof loot. It Just goes be tllltred to tthedule an.
~!Its or ~ . Now York to " - IIIII JGU c:an't CGU11t 011 ftletlt i11 the Olppi&lt;: Gomes?·
IIWili: - AlJCE
A-At least 12 eountrlet.
c1row1n1 out or

Y.,...•

·rly Johnson, 14, eswlous injury when she
o. the upstairs window
ocust St. home In Mldlwlday afternoon. Midemergency squadmen
•s Johlson was leaning
upstairs window shak·
lll when she apparenther balance. g,e fell
! window and apparent3d a oom!')lele somer ·
md1ng on her feet. ~e
•en to Holzer Hospital
Jnation and treatmmt.

Cha-ch

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TIMELY
QUOTES

tht• p r £' t t&gt; n s e of bemg an
~post it• of love
. \ but they
know nothing of love in its
creative. sacrificial and redemptive aspects) . Jesus or
Nazareth gave us not flower·
power, but the power of the
cross. and wore not a wreath
of roses. but a c r o w n of
thorns.
-T he Rev. Robert E . Fitch.
professor of Christian
ethics at the Pacific School

He pretends to be a mature
adult. but there ls nothing he
dreads more than having to
grow up to responsible manhood. He likes to ·think of
himself as a nonconformist:
but all hippies in their own
circles are radically conformist in dress, speech, thought,
conduct and odor, and any
usemlfty of t h e m on the
street reminds one of nothing
so m~c.h as .a flock of sheep
. . . .· The wol_"st hypocrisy is

of Religion

in San

can history warns me that the
people, in their confusion and
desperation, will turn to vigilantism on a grand scale.
-Maxwell Brown, professOT
of history at William and

not a cake of soap ... Parents
have let themselves be talked

out of their experience and
even sometimes wisdom be-cause theY have. out of embarrassment in this age of
enlightenment. refused to
play God. But maybe now and
then it is necessary for a
parent to play God-not an
angry God, but a firm God.
-Wallace Stegner, Stanford
University English profes-

Fran-

Mary College.

The idea of the President
going to Russia at thi&amp; time
strikes me as pure madness.
What respect would the Russians pay to the word of a
lame duck president?

sor.

cisco. discussing hippies.

birth control controversy.

"'

To make one pound of whole &gt;
milk cheese requires 9 .9 ~
pounds of whole milk.
ga

we do not retain education under law, we will have
neither education nor law.
-New York Mayor John V.
[f

&gt;c

Lindsay, commenting on
disturbances in the city's
school system..

issue of The Critic on the

LISTEN TO 20th CENTURY REFORMATION HOUR

-George F. Kennan, former
V.S. ambassador to Moscow,

Unless our country receives
some real and honest leadership on this issue (law and
order), my reading of Ameri-

If youth must prove itself.
and;, it must. then let it prove
itself against a grindstone ,

Few will now bother to ask
whether the Pope is infallible
.. . They are more concerned
with whether The Pill is infallible.
-Anglican Bishop John A. T.
Robinson of Wollwich, England, writing in the current

--

Mon. thru Fri.
9:30AM
1360 :~~"EWMOV

commenting on a proposal

that President Johnson visit
the Soviet Union.

I SON SHOES

,.Serving you since 1936,.

R•ven5wood, W. V•.

a

Weekly Guide To Better TV Viewing

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To Begin

Sentinel. Sunday, l~.:tobcr 13, l!IUM

MIDDLEPORT -

Four

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I
·'

•

•

PAGE EIGHT

.
M bers of the Wlt shington Elem
GALLIPOLIS SCII O()L p A f l! O~e~· ~.. ~~~Chie f of Police .J ohn Taylor
tary School Safety Pat rol, shown I I II lie arc O tor): First How -CI
H Spr ague and . o1n o •
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MODEL
'
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'·;··~

By PAT GLASS
Extension Agent, Home Econ.
Gallia County
GALLIPOLIS - Therearesev~
eral method s that can be used
in drying flowers. Some work
better than others for certain
Oowers and weeds. Remember
to experiment, however. Here
are two:
HANGII\G ME THOD (takes one
to three weeks). This method
is recommended for Cockscomb,

.1.

'l
'.

should calve May 29. A call dropped lhat late
is certainly not ready Cor an early October sale.
Breeding the cows between Ma,y 1 and July
20 gives calving dates ranging from February 8

to April 29.
Changing the date of breeding may be one way
of increasing income.
Let's look at another item. Feedlot owners
apparentl.)· refuse to pay as much money per
hundredweight for heifers as they do for steers.
At the Gallipolis Sale the average price on steers

ranged from $25.42 to$29. 26 per hundrt!dweighl
Heifers ranged from $21.04 to $23.17. The average price for steers per hundredweight was

$27.15 and for heifers $22. 52 or $4.63 less
per oondredwelghl
You may ask, '"How do you get more steers
and less heifers when nature produces approximately 50 per cent heifers and 50 per cent
steers?"
If farmers wish to improve their income

they may wish to sell some oftheirpoorer, older cows and keep more of the better young
heifers to go into the breeding herd. This would
increase the percentage of steers to be sold as
feeder calves at a higher price.
What are some of the other ways increasing income from selling feeder calves ? Increased weight is a possibility. This may come
through breeding or feeding or care.
Let's take a look at this. A calf that has
been running out on the back 40811 summer long
may resist being put in a pen, loaded in a truck,
and hauled 10 to 50 miles to be mingled with

,.'

You11 Always Do Better At Rutland
Furniture and Easy Terms Are Avalla.le

742--4211

''

TO DRY FACE·DOWN or horIzontally: Cover the bottom of

ANYWAY YOU LOOK AT IT,
CALFUC IS STILL THf BfST
MILK RfPLACfR MONEY CAN BUYI
CENTRAL SOYA OF ~
•
G~~.~~~!~!.~t.~~IO ]It
I

..

... :t

.'

a box with an inch or more of
meal and borax mixture. Make
little mounds in the mixture on
which YOU place Dowers, Sift
more meal and borax mixture
\I), around, over the nower unill It Is COvered. Stems do not
noed to be covered. Put only
one layer in each box.
When 'fiower petals are dry

tbey can be removed lr&lt;111 the
meal and borax mixture. Occa.
slonaliy test one aower head to

see how it is tlryi~ (Some will
take only a few days, others
se'Val weeks.) Some pelalsiJliY

•

1 l

' • .•

~·~

..... '

-·

-----·---·--·--

.

·-·-·---

partly cloudy and

~uu~ny .

10c

FIVE CEt\fTS

~m
1 at

dar Practice
1nd radar was to try
011 Apollo 7 ln much
yay one on the moon
i( an Apollo motherlunar prblt before
t for Ute return.

Instructors Tuesday wW in--

clude Pomeroy Police Chief Jed
Webster, Mrs. Edith Sisson, dis-patcher for the Pomeroy depart-.
ment.; John Mora, mathematics
instructor of tbe Meigs Local
Sebool· DUIIIe.. 41111 ..,William

.. ,

I

..

~bate

1 'f u'~~'l!i'lil~
\

'"•'

White San:ts,

.

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the Ohio State Patrol.

•. . ~ Weather
It! and contlqued
ld tAillight - 1110-

I

a lot of other calves aM then hau1ed another
100 miles to a feedlot.
If we can make this transition from the farm
pasture field to the new horne as painless as
possible the calf will not lose as much weight.
The attention of the farmer during the swnmer
so the calf is familiar with human beings is one
simple way of helping reduce this strain. HaOO
feeding of salt at regular intervals throughoot
the summer has been a long familiar practice
of the better operators.
Construction of corrals so the calves can be
separated from their mothers easily and loaded into trucks smoothly Is another practice
which wUI result in less weight loss Crom the
farm to the scales.
Everythlf€ we can do to lessen this strain
on this calC, that ranges in age from 6 to 9
montl1s, is a way of-.lncreaslng income.
As marketing practices evolve over a peri·
od of years, farmers may fil'll it more profit..
able to move the cattle greater distances from
the farm and closer to the feedlot.
Meigs County consignors on the two sales
this past week were Paul Baer, Rex Bailey,
Robert Clark, William Culwell, Hussell Cullwns, C. E. Follrod, Charles Frecker, Bernard
Fultz, Gerald Guthrie, Pearl H. Hayes, Clarence
Hoffman, Victor llysell, Dwaine Jordan, Dale
Kautz, Virgil King, Howard Knight, Sam Michael, Leo Morris, Howard Parker, Homer
Radford, Hoger Ritchie, Harold Sauer, Wayne
Scott, Charles Sheets, Fred B. Smith, Leo
Sto~y, Rex Summerneld, Clair Waggoner, Clyde
Whtte, George and Roger Ziegler, Josephine
Blevins, Bertha Densmore, Paul Dutenhaver,
and Clarence Hoffman.
Buyers from the Meigs Coonty area at the
Gallipolis sale were Paul Karr aOO Hobert Hawk.

calves dropped in a two months period so they
will be uniform in size. Aoowbredon August 19

Goldenrod, HJdrangea, Cattails,
Lilies - of - the -valley, Queen
Corn tassel, Seed pods, Yarrow.
Lace, Snap Dragon, Rose
Anne's
Berries, Grains, Sugar Cane,
and Zinnia. Mix one part borax
and Grasses. Tie flower s in loose
to five parts white corn meal
bunches am hang, heads down,
Decide
whether flower should be
until they are dr}'. Hang in a
dried face-up (exam,ple, roBe),
dark, dry, warm, well-ventilatface down (example, pansy), or
ed place.
horizootally (example, delphiniMEAL AND BORA X METHOD um).
(takes approximately one to three
weeks). This method is recomSOME TECHNIQUES
me"?ed for Daisy, Pansy, Lllac,
TO DRY FACE-UP in meal
Mangold, HoJlyhock, Daffodil,
and borax: Use a shallow box
propped up over another carton
about 8 inches high. Punch holes
in the box far enough apart for
the heads not to touch and large
eoough for stems to go through,
(Stems need not be very long
since they can be lengthened by
norist wlre.)
Dnw Oower stems through
holes, leavi~ the .O.owers faceup resting on the bottom of the
box. Sift meal and borax mixture under aJXI between all the
petals aM around each flower
until it is ccmpletely 1 but Ug:htJy covered.

11

1 temperature.

'

same locaUon. Those completIng both sessions will receive
carda. The intensive driving
training program is prepared b)r

It's of the Essen:ce to Experiment

•

•

.'-.

itltts-itutiml

Drying Flowers, Foliage

GAS

·;.'

;

.

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-----··--

b1 Washington, called

·-·-·----

oased

bombing and
Haiphong Harbor as a
arm twi!lting'' to get
~aris negotiaUons.

·-- _...._....,,....,

SUNDAY, OGTOBER 13, 1968
--·--------· -- -·--··- --

OCTOBER 13, 1968

SEEK UMFORMITY
MOST FARMERS DO TRY TO HAVE their

Another ans wer migllt be to have the calves
creep fed. Still another answer is to have the
cahe s drq&gt;ped earlier so the y will be enough
older to take advantage of the early spring grass
and the more milk their mothers produce on

~

,lhlo ovenlnl. Low
.be SOo to the low

class will begin at 7:30P.m. The
second session will be at 7:30 p.
m. on Tuesday' Oct. 22. U the

·.ao~;~··~

this grass,

POMEROY - The average weight ofthe 760
heifers and steers at the Athens Area Feeder
Calf Sale on Tuesday was 43lpOUJ'Xjs, At the Gal468 head was slightly higher at 437.
The average price per hundredweight at
GallipoJis was $25.08 and at Ule Athens Sale it
was $26.54. This made the average price per
head at Gallipolis $105.39 and at Athens $109.60.
Thi s nerage figure of $105 to $110 per
head represents the total return to the farmer
for the product of one cow. Either the farmer
must keep his total cost per cow calved below
this figure or he is losing mone.r.
In recent weeks one large feeder irxficated
his cost of production was $90 which left him
about $15 to $2U In the Athens or Gallipolis sale
for family living income.
Most people are interested in knowing how
the family living income can be Increased,
There are many different wa.rs. Different farmers will take many different patterns of trying
to increase this income.
The standard r ecommendation, of course, is
tc· teU farmers to get better quality calves.
The 2-!9 choice s teers at Athens brought $26,25
to $33 per hundredweight while the 165 good
steers brought a range of $25.50 to $30.50 .
.~ verage price per hundredVI·eight for che choice
was $29,03; for the high good $28.!7; and for
the good $26.44.
How do you improve quality? Ma.Ybe paying
SlUU to $200 more for a better production tested
answer.

· ··

I.

Feeder Calf Income Can be Better
BY C. E. BLAKESLEE
County Extension Agent, Agriculture

~~-

School In Middleport.
Open to u.e public, the two--sea·
sion course is being sponsored
by the Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club. The

THE SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL

NEW IN FARMING

. racult)'· spons.x s, oy .~
Bill William s, Joey Rubenstahl, Jim
Tlilylor, Cn:&amp; Fire, Bill~ Barcus~
y Young Paul Walker, Greg 1bcl'n
h .. Wood
Keith Sheet s , 1 omm:r
'
Mark Poling,
tlce, J ""
•
.
ld Clay Hay Queen,
John Sallaz, J ames Cunnmgham, Hona. (
Bobby Candee, Anthony Ret
George Haffelt; Second r ow - Oarm) ox,

,. . ' -

.• • "' 4111

I

1,..

•
.

••

'•

atructora will present the study
material lor the owning Tuesday
when U.e first of two sessions on
defensive driving is held at the
study hall of the Melgs High

INTERESTED in a Bratllian pen ~!mreds or Brazlllan people
lnlernattoral Friends, made up
ve Conned an internation-of~ sexes of all ages andprofe=s,: correspond with people of
a1 correspondence club and are a
s I to get to know people of
s
The purpose, or course, s
owrtrle
other c
·
otber nations.
nd our name and complete addres'S,
If Interested, you are to~ :Interacionair,CaixaPostal30827,
sex, OCC'411.ti0ll, hobbles to
go
Sao Paulo, BraziL
lng 0 ~ or both of the course!l,
MEIGS Counlians interested in may report to the high school.
adult busine!'l5 education may Mr James Vennari is tnstruct•
still enter classes which began
s.
this week at Meigs Higtl School. or.
CONGRATULATIONS to Mr.
Typing classes start at 7 p.m.
and sOOrlhand at 8 Thursday eve-nd Mrs. James Fugate who wl~l
· pursu- aobserve their 45 th weddlng anm·
ning. Those ·tnlcres ted m
venar~ &amp;UJ!eir Pomero)'Jl.OID.C

••

need lo be brushed wilh a VERY
soft brush to remove all the
meal and borax.
SAND METHOD (use the same
method as for borax and corn

mean. Sand from the river and
beach should bewashedandbaked
in the oven until dry, This should
be done twice, Builders :sand is
cheap arxf may be used as bought.

OTHER METHODS
There are also several methods which can be used in preserving foliage of plants. Again,
(Continued on Page 9)

MOVE UP TO THE

FARMAL[ 656

r-C:.:;mt,~

't

1m

HI.
Heavyweight features include a bi
. .
and a heavy-duty rear end. Th ' . gh new t~nsmwnon
1
60 hp class also gives you big ~ n~w eavywe1ght of the
venience from stem to stern - fror~. or comrort ~nd consteering to its torque amplifier FrIts ~~rostat1c power
seat to its power-shift indepe~d otm 1
eep-cushioned
heavyweight champion of the 60 el!n pptol. Come see the

.. c ass.

TilE SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL

Columbus Day

talians, Spaniards Still Feudin'
By CHARLES W. BELL

Genoa,

according to ~sh

was "without a shadow of a landed on Chinese offl!lhore
doubt" Italian-born.
ialal'Kis),
Not long ago a Roman
Rival claims on behalf or
Catholic priest came lit wUh a Scandinavians, Irish, Welsh and
completely new theory about other eJplorers usually get
the famed eJWiorer.
bogged down pedalltry.
His name wasn't Colmnbus at
The record is quite clear on
all, but J. C. Donado, am. he the voyages Cohunbus made.
was a runaway priest who used He sailed we&amp;tward four times

noME (UPI) - CoiiDIIbus De.¥ biographers, was to take
be a cause lor celebration advantage of the city's reputa-

u1e Americas.

But for ltaJ..

aiXI Spaniards, lt'a theocealor renewllw an old feud.
Fur years, the)' haw been
IM!r Christopher Co-

ancestry.
with most ol the world behind
the Italians maintain be
burn Crlsto!oro Colombo In
near the IIOijJOrt of GelD in
middle or 1451, one ot lhe
or a wool weaver.

Nonsense. say the Scwtlaids.
IUIIIll! wu Crlotobol Colon,
he

Willi

born ...

weStern

Uon
Cor
map-making an:1
seamanship.
Even COI.wnbus' one known
statemert about his place or
birth-HI was born in Genoa"is interpreted by Spanian:l8 as
meenlng his life as a grest
seafarer started there.
Issue Decided
An inter...,tlonal conference
on maritime history tried last
year at Seville, Spain, to settle
the dispute once and for all.
After days of deliberations, the
conference announced Columbus

tbe new name to marry.
Leu controversial is the
highlight of Columbus' life-the
discovery o( the New World.
Most historians credit hlm with
finding the Americas Oct. 12.
1492, while seeking a new route
to
the Orient, (ln rae~

Columbus

thought

he

Rico. the Dominican Republic,
the Bahamas and some
Central American states. Wh..
some

had

or

thor 11&lt;&gt; was firot is something

died.
But everyone agrees women

pose the highest obstacle to
Columbus being named "st.
Christq~her, "

He married Felippa Moniz in
1480 in Madera, ,SC,ain, but six
or seven years later, he met
Beatriz Enrlquez de Arana in
COrdoVL And In 1488, there was
born Ferdinanda Columbus, who
always has been regarded as
the navigator's illegitimate son
(and his father's best blogra.

pher).

'5 NOTENOUGH .. .'{OU NEED A WATERFALL
,:SVNSET..SI-()WTHE SUN GOING DOWN SORT
~NG&amp;' ANDMSOME Re05TREAK51N
~PAAVE'SCN.E $l.lllKE COMING OIJT OFlHE~HIM

Tbe only resson he went to

Feeder

ARK'S

(Continued !rom Page 8)
IXDCICim&lt;&gt;fl! Oft U!ese.
PRESSING METHOD (akesaptllree weeks). This
recommended ror all t;ypes of
leaves. Laves that are
on their branches (example,
honeysuckle). Place leaves
Place under a rug
weight down with brlcks or

See Our Complete Line Of
EiiEEiLEFI

~o,;;ibiE

Cucumber Tree or MDuoMagmJa.) Tbeoe leafto Jllll
the ground and dey Ill wrlclua
••~apes In a lovely broim color,
if they ..... taiien lralll the
and dried Ill a warm plaee,
will be ....... In color.
Next week we will eanliaueour
· scusoton ol. dried lowero, 1111, and WMdo by dlocuoollw
malting ol. dried ~

&amp;mblin l&amp; on the far
Her e1cort is Earl
lan stidham, junior
daughter of Mr. ani
r. and Mrs. Herman
ICe after the foothall
sts and door prizes.

7-19 ONLY

1etwecn several thicknesses of

object.s. Press as soon as
after cutting before they
to wilL Do not over-lap
' leaves.
GLYCEIUN METHOD (takes
weeks or l~r). Tbiamethi s recommended tor Beech.
Dogwood, Mahonia, Hoi·
llaptlsia, Aj&gt;ple, lly~
Magnolia (E v e r·
Maple, Gardeniaand ForThe foliage ls dried by
method. !i&gt;llt stems up the
2 Inches ol the branch
· th clippers !10 that fiber as
as bark is cut. Next, stand
naJE,rial up in a Jar conlaining
well-mixed solution or two water and one • ddrd
glycerin which reaches 3 to 5
\41 the stems. Let tho ma.
st.a.rw:l in this solut1CII unluli obSOIJ)tion has taken
Leaves wUI change color
check edges of leave&amp; to see
lhey have absorbed all the
&gt;olutlon tbey need.
Most foliage dried by the gty.
metlol will ture brown,
will be soft and lovell'.
If you cut beech leaves when
are green, you may want to
remove them lr&lt;l!l the glyeerln
•oiution in 24 to 36 hours if you
to try to keep them looklng
fresh, green leaves. How..
they will ture brown if
in the solutloo two or three
Be sure foliage II mature
treating In pycerln.
NATURAL METHOD. Some
iust dry naturallY and
be used lor Interesting btlclogroond lllllerlaL (For e-Io,

lr. and Mrs. Oliver

me ceremonies Fri-

FUEL OIL
HEATING STOVES

t..

LIGHT
.""\BULBS

·.! · FLASHLIGHT

L

r ·~ 16~.

High trade-in on
your present stove

0

~·225°

First

Prize

Second
Prize

$8.06

f·

11C

TO SET IHESE

PEOPLE 5rRAIGHT

of;

Uni co freezers
have Urethane foam
insulation for maximum
food -keeping efficiency. The t.hi~ner ~all
gives you more storage space 1ns1de W)thout need for more floor space outs•de.
With a freezer, you can ser11e farm .fresh
foods the year-around.

Co-op DETERGENT

$1000°0
$500°0

decompose
in sewer or
septic tank,
leave no
residue . ·

. f'i··.

•

Worth of merchandise from
your lANDMARK Dealer
other prizes: West·
cioJC Electric Alarm
Clocks.
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. just come
m, or write in, to register at lANDMARk
during the Autumn Sale, Oct. 7 thru 19.

general housel'lold
cleaner.
32 oz.

55'

Fabulous Offer!
Get a Elec. Dryer

0

end wrenches

plus handy
plastic snap ·
pouch.

WITH .A PURCHASE
OF A
22 cu . ft . Side-by.Side
REFRIGERATOR·
COMBINATION

ta Shiflet

a .

RFO.IB,
6-vo!t

STOCK· TANK

DE-ICER

$16.65

with 18 flat

port, 52"

szaa

Teflon coated snow pusher:

BATTERY
CHARGER

y
YOUI "COMP.JiTE

DO ~T WORWI BOSS ... EVEN
THOUG H !"i..L BE RETI''i~6 AS
YOUR LOYA LSC'o&lt;E fARY- YOt.J
[AN ALWA 'IS CALl. M&lt;i: AT MY
Bi?Vl24&lt;LY HilLS MAN$10tJ

fOR COIJSULTATIOIJ!

s Sunday
a1 services for Mrs. AI·
let, 75, RD 1, Rutland1
s dead on arrival at Holpital Sunday morning, will
Tuesday at 2 p.. m. at the

Funeral Home with the
avid Sheets ofticiating.
will be in the Gravel Hill
ry at Cheshire.
ubornatShortCreek. W.
!day 27, 1892, the dsugh-

elate JacobandJ """'hine
and she had II ved In the
~sant area WltU movh~ to
in 1956 and. was a memlle RuUand ChurchofGod.
, also preceded ln death

spring steel
spring sup·

·rly Jotm.son, 14, esJl'ious injury when she
!l the upstair !I window
etcust St. home in Mid~ aftemOt. Midemergency aquadmen
1s Johnson was leaning
upstair&amp; wtn&lt;bw shak18 when she apparenther balance. ~e fell
1 window and apparenlld a complete somermdlng on her feet. Sbe
iel'l to Holzer Hospital
1rvatim and treatmmrt.

msbtlnd, LemueL

18'r'lH wide,

teeth and

10-Piece
WRENCH
SET
10 Th ors e n

FREE

BATTERIES

LEAF
RAKE

hant:l,Je.

0

These Unico laundry twins have all the
automati c features you want, to lake th e
"blue" out of Blue Monday washday .
Programmed, push-button washing a.nd
dryiPg, btg family-S12e toads . Buy wrth
no down payment on LIIIINDMIIiiRI&lt; budget
plan; washer $7.54 a month, dryer $5.03 .

100

A pleasant laundry
and dish- washing
grease cutter and

50 lbs.

~~-

$100~.!

Pink Lotion
Detergent

A soft detergent, will

.zt..M Pacemaker
WASHER &amp; DRYER

your

5 Prizes

saa

each

TAKES' A LA'IMAt-1

Worth of merchand ise from
LANDM,.RII Dealer.

a month

Teflon! . . ,

l.-~

•

SOMETIMES IT

~.

Worth of merchandise from
your i.ANOMARKe0eaJer.

SNOW
SHOVEL
Snow won't
stick to tJII"15

, BATTERIES

~--·o·' soze .

$7.15

107 PRIZES!

Teflon-S
Aluminum

11~

Regularly

19 Cu. Ft. UNICO
CHEST FREEZER
-1'~'

$209

i'

60· 75-l 00 watt

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.
Rear Mairs General Hospital

between 1492 and 1504.
Logs Show Landlrws
Ship's logs and other o!llclal
reports show he landed at what
now are C\k. Jamaica, Puerto

OCTOBER 13, 1968
else.
Another subject guaranteed to
stir debate on Columbus is the
women In his lite.
More than a century ago, he
was prq~osed tor sainthood. The
Vatican files still are pulled out
periodically, dusted and restu-

tJ375

Keeps open
area of wat.~r

in frozen stock
tanks. fully
automatic, l·yr

guarantee.

· 99Zjl8f..:Jack w, .Carsey, Mrr1EVERY. NIGHT

"VOrs include two sons,
~. W. VLi Hue, Coi six sisters, MrL Mar·
llearlen, Charleston, W.
Jne Archer, Orchard Lake,
In; Maey Dicker-. ani
llleCall, bolh ol Las

.

''Ne-· llfra. IDu Rd-

AoelllWo W, Va., and Ylos

..

Shlllol. IDIIa,lllld 10.,...

tills
at

&amp;II)"~

call at the liar·

SES!ION SLATED

Cb'clo Ill 1M
Cburch Ill

' 12

�' ....· ..

Sessions
To Begin

Sentinel. Sunday, l~.:tobcr 13, l!IUM

MIDDLEPORT -

Four

,

..,

--

·t "

I
·'

•

•

PAGE EIGHT

.
M bers of the Wlt shington Elem
GALLIPOLIS SCII O()L p A f l! O~e~· ~.. ~~~Chie f of Police .J ohn Taylor
tary School Safety Pat rol, shown I I II lie arc O tor): First How -CI
H Spr ague and . o1n o •
J

,•.

•

';I

:j

i

.

I.

..
-~ ~:

,[

\f'J,.:;., .

.·.J l io

! •

\
'.'•
~

MODEL
'
I,;,.
'·;··~

By PAT GLASS
Extension Agent, Home Econ.
Gallia County
GALLIPOLIS - Therearesev~
eral method s that can be used
in drying flowers. Some work
better than others for certain
Oowers and weeds. Remember
to experiment, however. Here
are two:
HANGII\G ME THOD (takes one
to three weeks). This method
is recommended for Cockscomb,

.1.

'l
'.

should calve May 29. A call dropped lhat late
is certainly not ready Cor an early October sale.
Breeding the cows between Ma,y 1 and July
20 gives calving dates ranging from February 8

to April 29.
Changing the date of breeding may be one way
of increasing income.
Let's look at another item. Feedlot owners
apparentl.)· refuse to pay as much money per
hundredweight for heifers as they do for steers.
At the Gallipolis Sale the average price on steers

ranged from $25.42 to$29. 26 per hundrt!dweighl
Heifers ranged from $21.04 to $23.17. The average price for steers per hundredweight was

$27.15 and for heifers $22. 52 or $4.63 less
per oondredwelghl
You may ask, '"How do you get more steers
and less heifers when nature produces approximately 50 per cent heifers and 50 per cent
steers?"
If farmers wish to improve their income

they may wish to sell some oftheirpoorer, older cows and keep more of the better young
heifers to go into the breeding herd. This would
increase the percentage of steers to be sold as
feeder calves at a higher price.
What are some of the other ways increasing income from selling feeder calves ? Increased weight is a possibility. This may come
through breeding or feeding or care.
Let's take a look at this. A calf that has
been running out on the back 40811 summer long
may resist being put in a pen, loaded in a truck,
and hauled 10 to 50 miles to be mingled with

,.'

You11 Always Do Better At Rutland
Furniture and Easy Terms Are Avalla.le

742--4211

''

TO DRY FACE·DOWN or horIzontally: Cover the bottom of

ANYWAY YOU LOOK AT IT,
CALFUC IS STILL THf BfST
MILK RfPLACfR MONEY CAN BUYI
CENTRAL SOYA OF ~
•
G~~.~~~!~!.~t.~~IO ]It
I

..

... :t

.'

a box with an inch or more of
meal and borax mixture. Make
little mounds in the mixture on
which YOU place Dowers, Sift
more meal and borax mixture
\I), around, over the nower unill It Is COvered. Stems do not
noed to be covered. Put only
one layer in each box.
When 'fiower petals are dry

tbey can be removed lr&lt;111 the
meal and borax mixture. Occa.
slonaliy test one aower head to

see how it is tlryi~ (Some will
take only a few days, others
se'Val weeks.) Some pelalsiJliY

•

1 l

' • .•

~·~

..... '

-·

-----·---·--·--

.

·-·-·---

partly cloudy and

~uu~ny .

10c

FIVE CEt\fTS

~m
1 at

dar Practice
1nd radar was to try
011 Apollo 7 ln much
yay one on the moon
i( an Apollo motherlunar prblt before
t for Ute return.

Instructors Tuesday wW in--

clude Pomeroy Police Chief Jed
Webster, Mrs. Edith Sisson, dis-patcher for the Pomeroy depart-.
ment.; John Mora, mathematics
instructor of tbe Meigs Local
Sebool· DUIIIe.. 41111 ..,William

.. ,

I

..

~bate

1 'f u'~~'l!i'lil~
\

'"•'

White San:ts,

.

\'

I

the Ohio State Patrol.

•. . ~ Weather
It! and contlqued
ld tAillight - 1110-

I

a lot of other calves aM then hau1ed another
100 miles to a feedlot.
If we can make this transition from the farm
pasture field to the new horne as painless as
possible the calf will not lose as much weight.
The attention of the farmer during the swnmer
so the calf is familiar with human beings is one
simple way of helping reduce this strain. HaOO
feeding of salt at regular intervals throughoot
the summer has been a long familiar practice
of the better operators.
Construction of corrals so the calves can be
separated from their mothers easily and loaded into trucks smoothly Is another practice
which wUI result in less weight loss Crom the
farm to the scales.
Everythlf€ we can do to lessen this strain
on this calC, that ranges in age from 6 to 9
montl1s, is a way of-.lncreaslng income.
As marketing practices evolve over a peri·
od of years, farmers may fil'll it more profit..
able to move the cattle greater distances from
the farm and closer to the feedlot.
Meigs County consignors on the two sales
this past week were Paul Baer, Rex Bailey,
Robert Clark, William Culwell, Hussell Cullwns, C. E. Follrod, Charles Frecker, Bernard
Fultz, Gerald Guthrie, Pearl H. Hayes, Clarence
Hoffman, Victor llysell, Dwaine Jordan, Dale
Kautz, Virgil King, Howard Knight, Sam Michael, Leo Morris, Howard Parker, Homer
Radford, Hoger Ritchie, Harold Sauer, Wayne
Scott, Charles Sheets, Fred B. Smith, Leo
Sto~y, Rex Summerneld, Clair Waggoner, Clyde
Whtte, George and Roger Ziegler, Josephine
Blevins, Bertha Densmore, Paul Dutenhaver,
and Clarence Hoffman.
Buyers from the Meigs Coonty area at the
Gallipolis sale were Paul Karr aOO Hobert Hawk.

calves dropped in a two months period so they
will be uniform in size. Aoowbredon August 19

Goldenrod, HJdrangea, Cattails,
Lilies - of - the -valley, Queen
Corn tassel, Seed pods, Yarrow.
Lace, Snap Dragon, Rose
Anne's
Berries, Grains, Sugar Cane,
and Zinnia. Mix one part borax
and Grasses. Tie flower s in loose
to five parts white corn meal
bunches am hang, heads down,
Decide
whether flower should be
until they are dr}'. Hang in a
dried face-up (exam,ple, roBe),
dark, dry, warm, well-ventilatface down (example, pansy), or
ed place.
horizootally (example, delphiniMEAL AND BORA X METHOD um).
(takes approximately one to three
weeks). This method is recomSOME TECHNIQUES
me"?ed for Daisy, Pansy, Lllac,
TO DRY FACE-UP in meal
Mangold, HoJlyhock, Daffodil,
and borax: Use a shallow box
propped up over another carton
about 8 inches high. Punch holes
in the box far enough apart for
the heads not to touch and large
eoough for stems to go through,
(Stems need not be very long
since they can be lengthened by
norist wlre.)
Dnw Oower stems through
holes, leavi~ the .O.owers faceup resting on the bottom of the
box. Sift meal and borax mixture under aJXI between all the
petals aM around each flower
until it is ccmpletely 1 but Ug:htJy covered.

11

1 temperature.

'

same locaUon. Those completIng both sessions will receive
carda. The intensive driving
training program is prepared b)r

It's of the Essen:ce to Experiment

•

•

.'-.

itltts-itutiml

Drying Flowers, Foliage

GAS

·;.'

;

.

~

-----··--

b1 Washington, called

·-·-·----

oased

bombing and
Haiphong Harbor as a
arm twi!lting'' to get
~aris negotiaUons.

·-- _...._....,,....,

SUNDAY, OGTOBER 13, 1968
--·--------· -- -·--··- --

OCTOBER 13, 1968

SEEK UMFORMITY
MOST FARMERS DO TRY TO HAVE their

Another ans wer migllt be to have the calves
creep fed. Still another answer is to have the
cahe s drq&gt;ped earlier so the y will be enough
older to take advantage of the early spring grass
and the more milk their mothers produce on

~

,lhlo ovenlnl. Low
.be SOo to the low

class will begin at 7:30P.m. The
second session will be at 7:30 p.
m. on Tuesday' Oct. 22. U the

·.ao~;~··~

this grass,

POMEROY - The average weight ofthe 760
heifers and steers at the Athens Area Feeder
Calf Sale on Tuesday was 43lpOUJ'Xjs, At the Gal468 head was slightly higher at 437.
The average price per hundredweight at
GallipoJis was $25.08 and at Ule Athens Sale it
was $26.54. This made the average price per
head at Gallipolis $105.39 and at Athens $109.60.
Thi s nerage figure of $105 to $110 per
head represents the total return to the farmer
for the product of one cow. Either the farmer
must keep his total cost per cow calved below
this figure or he is losing mone.r.
In recent weeks one large feeder irxficated
his cost of production was $90 which left him
about $15 to $2U In the Athens or Gallipolis sale
for family living income.
Most people are interested in knowing how
the family living income can be Increased,
There are many different wa.rs. Different farmers will take many different patterns of trying
to increase this income.
The standard r ecommendation, of course, is
tc· teU farmers to get better quality calves.
The 2-!9 choice s teers at Athens brought $26,25
to $33 per hundredweight while the 165 good
steers brought a range of $25.50 to $30.50 .
.~ verage price per hundredVI·eight for che choice
was $29,03; for the high good $28.!7; and for
the good $26.44.
How do you improve quality? Ma.Ybe paying
SlUU to $200 more for a better production tested
answer.

· ··

I.

Feeder Calf Income Can be Better
BY C. E. BLAKESLEE
County Extension Agent, Agriculture

~~-

School In Middleport.
Open to u.e public, the two--sea·
sion course is being sponsored
by the Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club. The

THE SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL

NEW IN FARMING

. racult)'· spons.x s, oy .~
Bill William s, Joey Rubenstahl, Jim
Tlilylor, Cn:&amp; Fire, Bill~ Barcus~
y Young Paul Walker, Greg 1bcl'n
h .. Wood
Keith Sheet s , 1 omm:r
'
Mark Poling,
tlce, J ""
•
.
ld Clay Hay Queen,
John Sallaz, J ames Cunnmgham, Hona. (
Bobby Candee, Anthony Ret
George Haffelt; Second r ow - Oarm) ox,

,. . ' -

.• • "' 4111

I

1,..

•
.

••

'•

atructora will present the study
material lor the owning Tuesday
when U.e first of two sessions on
defensive driving is held at the
study hall of the Melgs High

INTERESTED in a Bratllian pen ~!mreds or Brazlllan people
lnlernattoral Friends, made up
ve Conned an internation-of~ sexes of all ages andprofe=s,: correspond with people of
a1 correspondence club and are a
s I to get to know people of
s
The purpose, or course, s
owrtrle
other c
·
otber nations.
nd our name and complete addres'S,
If Interested, you are to~ :Interacionair,CaixaPostal30827,
sex, OCC'411.ti0ll, hobbles to
go
Sao Paulo, BraziL
lng 0 ~ or both of the course!l,
MEIGS Counlians interested in may report to the high school.
adult busine!'l5 education may Mr James Vennari is tnstruct•
still enter classes which began
s.
this week at Meigs Higtl School. or.
CONGRATULATIONS to Mr.
Typing classes start at 7 p.m.
and sOOrlhand at 8 Thursday eve-nd Mrs. James Fugate who wl~l
· pursu- aobserve their 45 th weddlng anm·
ning. Those ·tnlcres ted m
venar~ &amp;UJ!eir Pomero)'Jl.OID.C

••

need lo be brushed wilh a VERY
soft brush to remove all the
meal and borax.
SAND METHOD (use the same
method as for borax and corn

mean. Sand from the river and
beach should bewashedandbaked
in the oven until dry, This should
be done twice, Builders :sand is
cheap arxf may be used as bought.

OTHER METHODS
There are also several methods which can be used in preserving foliage of plants. Again,
(Continued on Page 9)

MOVE UP TO THE

FARMAL[ 656

r-C:.:;mt,~

't

1m

HI.
Heavyweight features include a bi
. .
and a heavy-duty rear end. Th ' . gh new t~nsmwnon
1
60 hp class also gives you big ~ n~w eavywe1ght of the
venience from stem to stern - fror~. or comrort ~nd consteering to its torque amplifier FrIts ~~rostat1c power
seat to its power-shift indepe~d otm 1
eep-cushioned
heavyweight champion of the 60 el!n pptol. Come see the

.. c ass.

TilE SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL

Columbus Day

talians, Spaniards Still Feudin'
By CHARLES W. BELL

Genoa,

according to ~sh

was "without a shadow of a landed on Chinese offl!lhore
doubt" Italian-born.
ialal'Kis),
Not long ago a Roman
Rival claims on behalf or
Catholic priest came lit wUh a Scandinavians, Irish, Welsh and
completely new theory about other eJplorers usually get
the famed eJWiorer.
bogged down pedalltry.
His name wasn't Colmnbus at
The record is quite clear on
all, but J. C. Donado, am. he the voyages Cohunbus made.
was a runaway priest who used He sailed we&amp;tward four times

noME (UPI) - CoiiDIIbus De.¥ biographers, was to take
be a cause lor celebration advantage of the city's reputa-

u1e Americas.

But for ltaJ..

aiXI Spaniards, lt'a theocealor renewllw an old feud.
Fur years, the)' haw been
IM!r Christopher Co-

ancestry.
with most ol the world behind
the Italians maintain be
burn Crlsto!oro Colombo In
near the IIOijJOrt of GelD in
middle or 1451, one ot lhe
or a wool weaver.

Nonsense. say the Scwtlaids.
IUIIIll! wu Crlotobol Colon,
he

Willi

born ...

weStern

Uon
Cor
map-making an:1
seamanship.
Even COI.wnbus' one known
statemert about his place or
birth-HI was born in Genoa"is interpreted by Spanian:l8 as
meenlng his life as a grest
seafarer started there.
Issue Decided
An inter...,tlonal conference
on maritime history tried last
year at Seville, Spain, to settle
the dispute once and for all.
After days of deliberations, the
conference announced Columbus

tbe new name to marry.
Leu controversial is the
highlight of Columbus' life-the
discovery o( the New World.
Most historians credit hlm with
finding the Americas Oct. 12.
1492, while seeking a new route
to
the Orient, (ln rae~

Columbus

thought

he

Rico. the Dominican Republic,
the Bahamas and some
Central American states. Wh..
some

had

or

thor 11&lt;&gt; was firot is something

died.
But everyone agrees women

pose the highest obstacle to
Columbus being named "st.
Christq~her, "

He married Felippa Moniz in
1480 in Madera, ,SC,ain, but six
or seven years later, he met
Beatriz Enrlquez de Arana in
COrdoVL And In 1488, there was
born Ferdinanda Columbus, who
always has been regarded as
the navigator's illegitimate son
(and his father's best blogra.

pher).

'5 NOTENOUGH .. .'{OU NEED A WATERFALL
,:SVNSET..SI-()WTHE SUN GOING DOWN SORT
~NG&amp;' ANDMSOME Re05TREAK51N
~PAAVE'SCN.E $l.lllKE COMING OIJT OFlHE~HIM

Tbe only resson he went to

Feeder

ARK'S

(Continued !rom Page 8)
IXDCICim&lt;&gt;fl! Oft U!ese.
PRESSING METHOD (akesaptllree weeks). This
recommended ror all t;ypes of
leaves. Laves that are
on their branches (example,
honeysuckle). Place leaves
Place under a rug
weight down with brlcks or

See Our Complete Line Of
EiiEEiLEFI

~o,;;ibiE

Cucumber Tree or MDuoMagmJa.) Tbeoe leafto Jllll
the ground and dey Ill wrlclua
••~apes In a lovely broim color,
if they ..... taiien lralll the
and dried Ill a warm plaee,
will be ....... In color.
Next week we will eanliaueour
· scusoton ol. dried lowero, 1111, and WMdo by dlocuoollw
malting ol. dried ~

&amp;mblin l&amp; on the far
Her e1cort is Earl
lan stidham, junior
daughter of Mr. ani
r. and Mrs. Herman
ICe after the foothall
sts and door prizes.

7-19 ONLY

1etwecn several thicknesses of

object.s. Press as soon as
after cutting before they
to wilL Do not over-lap
' leaves.
GLYCEIUN METHOD (takes
weeks or l~r). Tbiamethi s recommended tor Beech.
Dogwood, Mahonia, Hoi·
llaptlsia, Aj&gt;ple, lly~
Magnolia (E v e r·
Maple, Gardeniaand ForThe foliage ls dried by
method. !i&gt;llt stems up the
2 Inches ol the branch
· th clippers !10 that fiber as
as bark is cut. Next, stand
naJE,rial up in a Jar conlaining
well-mixed solution or two water and one • ddrd
glycerin which reaches 3 to 5
\41 the stems. Let tho ma.
st.a.rw:l in this solut1CII unluli obSOIJ)tion has taken
Leaves wUI change color
check edges of leave&amp; to see
lhey have absorbed all the
&gt;olutlon tbey need.
Most foliage dried by the gty.
metlol will ture brown,
will be soft and lovell'.
If you cut beech leaves when
are green, you may want to
remove them lr&lt;l!l the glyeerln
•oiution in 24 to 36 hours if you
to try to keep them looklng
fresh, green leaves. How..
they will ture brown if
in the solutloo two or three
Be sure foliage II mature
treating In pycerln.
NATURAL METHOD. Some
iust dry naturallY and
be used lor Interesting btlclogroond lllllerlaL (For e-Io,

lr. and Mrs. Oliver

me ceremonies Fri-

FUEL OIL
HEATING STOVES

t..

LIGHT
.""\BULBS

·.! · FLASHLIGHT

L

r ·~ 16~.

High trade-in on
your present stove

0

~·225°

First

Prize

Second
Prize

$8.06

f·

11C

TO SET IHESE

PEOPLE 5rRAIGHT

of;

Uni co freezers
have Urethane foam
insulation for maximum
food -keeping efficiency. The t.hi~ner ~all
gives you more storage space 1ns1de W)thout need for more floor space outs•de.
With a freezer, you can ser11e farm .fresh
foods the year-around.

Co-op DETERGENT

$1000°0
$500°0

decompose
in sewer or
septic tank,
leave no
residue . ·

. f'i··.

•

Worth of merchandise from
your lANDMARK Dealer
other prizes: West·
cioJC Electric Alarm
Clocks.
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. just come
m, or write in, to register at lANDMARk
during the Autumn Sale, Oct. 7 thru 19.

general housel'lold
cleaner.
32 oz.

55'

Fabulous Offer!
Get a Elec. Dryer

0

end wrenches

plus handy
plastic snap ·
pouch.

WITH .A PURCHASE
OF A
22 cu . ft . Side-by.Side
REFRIGERATOR·
COMBINATION

ta Shiflet

a .

RFO.IB,
6-vo!t

STOCK· TANK

DE-ICER

$16.65

with 18 flat

port, 52"

szaa

Teflon coated snow pusher:

BATTERY
CHARGER

y
YOUI "COMP.JiTE

DO ~T WORWI BOSS ... EVEN
THOUG H !"i..L BE RETI''i~6 AS
YOUR LOYA LSC'o&lt;E fARY- YOt.J
[AN ALWA 'IS CALl. M&lt;i: AT MY
Bi?Vl24&lt;LY HilLS MAN$10tJ

fOR COIJSULTATIOIJ!

s Sunday
a1 services for Mrs. AI·
let, 75, RD 1, Rutland1
s dead on arrival at Holpital Sunday morning, will
Tuesday at 2 p.. m. at the

Funeral Home with the
avid Sheets ofticiating.
will be in the Gravel Hill
ry at Cheshire.
ubornatShortCreek. W.
!day 27, 1892, the dsugh-

elate JacobandJ """'hine
and she had II ved In the
~sant area WltU movh~ to
in 1956 and. was a memlle RuUand ChurchofGod.
, also preceded ln death

spring steel
spring sup·

·rly Jotm.son, 14, esJl'ious injury when she
!l the upstair !I window
etcust St. home in Mid~ aftemOt. Midemergency aquadmen
1s Johnson was leaning
upstair&amp; wtn&lt;bw shak18 when she apparenther balance. ~e fell
1 window and apparenlld a complete somermdlng on her feet. Sbe
iel'l to Holzer Hospital
1rvatim and treatmmrt.

msbtlnd, LemueL

18'r'lH wide,

teeth and

10-Piece
WRENCH
SET
10 Th ors e n

FREE

BATTERIES

LEAF
RAKE

hant:l,Je.

0

These Unico laundry twins have all the
automati c features you want, to lake th e
"blue" out of Blue Monday washday .
Programmed, push-button washing a.nd
dryiPg, btg family-S12e toads . Buy wrth
no down payment on LIIIINDMIIiiRI&lt; budget
plan; washer $7.54 a month, dryer $5.03 .

100

A pleasant laundry
and dish- washing
grease cutter and

50 lbs.

~~-

$100~.!

Pink Lotion
Detergent

A soft detergent, will

.zt..M Pacemaker
WASHER &amp; DRYER

your

5 Prizes

saa

each

TAKES' A LA'IMAt-1

Worth of merchand ise from
LANDM,.RII Dealer.

a month

Teflon! . . ,

l.-~

•

SOMETIMES IT

~.

Worth of merchandise from
your i.ANOMARKe0eaJer.

SNOW
SHOVEL
Snow won't
stick to tJII"15

, BATTERIES

~--·o·' soze .

$7.15

107 PRIZES!

Teflon-S
Aluminum

11~

Regularly

19 Cu. Ft. UNICO
CHEST FREEZER
-1'~'

$209

i'

60· 75-l 00 watt

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.
Rear Mairs General Hospital

between 1492 and 1504.
Logs Show Landlrws
Ship's logs and other o!llclal
reports show he landed at what
now are C\k. Jamaica, Puerto

OCTOBER 13, 1968
else.
Another subject guaranteed to
stir debate on Columbus is the
women In his lite.
More than a century ago, he
was prq~osed tor sainthood. The
Vatican files still are pulled out
periodically, dusted and restu-

tJ375

Keeps open
area of wat.~r

in frozen stock
tanks. fully
automatic, l·yr

guarantee.

· 99Zjl8f..:Jack w, .Carsey, Mrr1EVERY. NIGHT

"VOrs include two sons,
~. W. VLi Hue, Coi six sisters, MrL Mar·
llearlen, Charleston, W.
Jne Archer, Orchard Lake,
In; Maey Dicker-. ani
llleCall, bolh ol Las

.

''Ne-· llfra. IDu Rd-

AoelllWo W, Va., and Ylos

..

Shlllol. IDIIa,lllld 10.,...

tills
at

&amp;II)"~

call at the liar·

SES!ION SLATED

Cb'clo Ill 1M
Cburch Ill

' 12

�~· ·"""

.,

. . ...

-~

Sessions
To Begin

~· Times - Sentinel, Sunday, Octobt•r 13, 1!ltiH

-,-

. '"

-· ..

when the first or two sessions on
detenalve driving ls held at the
study hall o! the Meigs Hlgll

. ~uu~ay

Open to the publlc,lhe two--session course Is being sponsored

imts-~rutintl

lnternatlonal Friends, made up of hundreds of BrazUlan people by lhe Middleport Business and
of both sexes of all ages and proCessions, have formed an internation- Professional Women's Club. The
al correspoOOence club and are anxioUs to correspond with people or class will begin at 7:30p.m. The
other countries. The pUJl)Ose, of coorse, is to get to know people of aecond session will be at 7:30 p.
m. on Tuesday, OcL 22. at the
other natiOJUI.
If interested, you are to sen:t your name and complete addreu, same loc:ation. Those e(l11)letlsex, occ\C&gt;ation, hobbies to Amigos tnteraclonalr, Caixa Postal30827, ing both sessions will recehe
cards. The intensive drlvlne
Sao Paulo, Brazil.
ing o!le or botl1 of the courses, l.raining program is prepared by
MEIGS Count.ians Interested In may report to the high school. the Ohio Stat. Patrol.
adult business eduution may Mrs. James Vennari is instructw
lnstructors TUesday wW instill enter classes which began
clude
Pomeroy Police Chief Jed
or.
this week at Meigs High School.
Webster, Mrs. Edith Sisson, disTyping classes start at 7 p.JrL
CONGRATULATIONS to Mr. pat&lt;:her ror the Pomeroy departand shorthand at 8 Thursday eve- and Mrs. James Fugate who will ment; John Mora, mathematics
ning. Tllose interested in pursu- observe tlleir 45th wedding anniw instructor of the Melga Local

-

Jt

'JWB·SIPTAY 11&amp;'111-l!lMIEII!IIfli'ILIIIII&lt;k ·

PAGE TEN

dar Practice
on Apollo 7 1n much
'8.Y one on the moon
!l an J\pOllo motherhmar prbit before

r

I

~bate

I

In Washington, called

SUNDAY, OCTOBER
13,1968
--·______ _______..

'

h.'"

i

.,

GAS
MODEL

.(

"· ..

.·--~'

'j''.

., r,

CL
A second finishdoesthetedious work

ADDING HANDLE -

o£ adding a handle. Note the j'pucellas", a huge pair of tweezers which act as a setofaddUioralfingers for the sldlled glass
craftsman.

The rnaldni ol glaos begins
with a mixture of silica (sand
from West VIrginia quarries),
IIOda allh, lime and !eldspar.
Small cpJBnlitles of chemicals
are oddod to maka a 2000 pound

"batch".
A quantity of broken glass is
added to speed ~ the mel~
process. nus part of the process

mn--:ortos

THE SUNDAY TIMFS-SENTINEL

Route 33 Dedication See;~;·

. ·,

'

i- '~
.-..

~/

'·

onn•,

10t

:s

ounts, as
the roan -

NOTENOOGH .. HOO NEED A WATERFALL
~ 5VNSET..5HOW THE SUN GOING DOWN SORT
~N6£ft, ANP PUT SOME REP STREAK~ 1N
!NPHAVE- StJCKE COMING OUT OF lHE

the Sl
summer

:xpo th&lt;.~l
bear lo
tfter the

show.

~e

and 1-li s
mce will
' Oct. 14
i t e fivp

By PAT HOUCK

..

________ ._...,

aid la st
ld never
did, they
tp. They

In a gray building, a city block
deq:, aoo one-half a block wid~,

·I

....ed bombing and
Haiphong Harbor as a
arm twisting'' to a:et

?arts negotiations.

PAGE ELEVEN

tour.l

"

for the return.

OCI"OIIER 13, 1968

(Editor's Nole - Twentythree Gallla Councy Homomaken journeyed to Huntington
last Wednesday where they
toured The Rainbow Art Glass
Co., Inc. They were accompanied by Times-Sentinel reporter Pat Houck. Here is a
brie£ summary of what she saw
on the "never..to-be-!orgotten

·~· •. &gt;'

1 at white Sands,
1nd radar was to try

~

Work of Ancient Art Viewed By
Gallia Homemakers lnHuntington

·'

l«r

I

23 Tour Rainbow Art Glass Firm

amaH groups of men work In hot,
ugly surroundi11ts.
Their tools arc crude aDd
rough, and concrete blocks al'kl
corregated metal panels hold
ba.:k some of the heat from blaz·
i~ twnaces.
But from this monochromatic
scene comes beauty. Beauty in
the form of perfect little glass
bottles, cruets, tumblers and
decanters, in jewel colors.
Sun coming ln the side wiOOCJW
strikes glittering brlgllt bits ol
color, red, green, blue, ora~e
and yellow.
The name Rainbow Glaos Ia a
perfect one for all the rainbow
colors are reproduced here in ex·
qulaita hand-made glaiS Items.
The art of glass making ls at
least tour thouaand years old and
is the oldest irdustry in Arneri·

temperature.

FIVE CEflfTS

)

'l ,}
GALLlPULIS SCIIOOL PATHOL - Members of the W1tshingt0n Elem'
tary School Safety Patrol, shown her" willt Chief or Polire John Taylor:'
faculty spons;&gt;r s , Roy Sprague and .John Holle, arc 0 to r): First Row - Clt
Taylor, Gr&lt;.'fi Fife, Billy Barcus, Billy William s , Joey Rubenstahl, Jim
tice, Jim Wood, Keith Sheet s , Tommy Young, Paul Walker, Greg ThOIII!
John Sallaz, Jame!; C'UJmingham, Honald Clas, Ray (Juecn, Mark Poling, t
George HaiTelt ; Se(·ond row - Danny Cox, Bobby Condec , A.nthortY Rei~

ill' and c&lt;rtliJiued
lei tonight with 1....

I '

Scbool• .Jlt.tllte'-. 41'Mlll••'WWlam

·-.Weather

1

'

S.hoolln Middleport.

--~

~

. ..,. ...

thla eoeolng, Low
he 501 to the low
~Y cloudy and

I

materlll lor the evening Tuesday

versar~ IIIJ)!el!: fO!!ler&lt;&gt;J,,hOJDO

.11

I

MIDDLEPORT - Four lt&gt;atructors will present the study

INTERESTED in a Brazilian pen pal?

•-

• 11 . "

lost con~.

I an M &amp;

.-&gt;ft:,,:;)( .. ~ ." '

ill higher

gores of
or New
in the
to point
thai.

!

LARGE CROWD -

An audience estimated In the vicinity of 1 000 persons

attended the Friday morning dedication and ribbon-cutting

cere~onies of the

was taken from one of the beaudful roadside rest areas
highway.

~ the

and Mrs. Oliver
Friamblin is on the tar

me ceremonies

new

··:

- -

sect10n of

Her escort is Earl
Jan Stidham, junior

new stretch of Route 33 in Meigs County. This view of part of the atteroance

dauglltar

r. and

ICe after the (oatball
a.-1 door prb:eS.

eir good
~e

SKILLFUL TOUCH - In the practiced hondo of tho sklllful finisher the glass takes on final form. It is then placed in a
"lehr" oven and tra.,.t!ls slowly through scvera1 hours or ever
reducing heaL

is much like the old process of Tardiness Taboo
NEW YORK tUPil -Stars
reusing metal In newspaper printsaid to be traditionally tar~
are
Ing.
dy
arriving on tUm sets, but
The process, from then on, is
chances are that strict puncdone with tools dating back to t.uaUty will be observed when
medieval times. The results are "Patton" goes tnto production
fine quality glass, blown ard shap- next February.
ed by hard, treasured items to
The reason? Gen. Omar N.
Bradley, who will serve as sebe cherished by generations.
nior mtllt.ary advisor on the
film, 18 chairman of the board
of Bulova Watch Co. The
Q-ln what novel did SiT screenplay. to be ftllru!d in
ATthuT Conan Doyle intTO· Spain by 20th century-Fox,
duce Sh&lt;Tiock Holmos?
wUl be based in part on Gen·
A-" A Study in Scarlet " eral Bradley's book, "A Sol·
published in 1887.
'
dier's Story."

,uy

they

lap.
oently to
ter was
phery of
ld," ad"
orne and
yout and
~

1St&amp;

every-

es news
· to run

to star!

1ment on
'r.

!Dtlernan
inquired
my firsl
was, and
·as it his
~hed,

II"
,.

"I

}randon,
ations at

eli reeled
lands on
was built
~em now
lte until

m: Mr. and

Mrs. Herman

SOMETIMES IT

iAI'ES" A LAI/MAJ.I
1'0 SETIHESE

Meigs County's first
stretch of four-lane hig~
way, on U.S. Route 33,
was dedicated Friday morning with a crowd esli·
mated at nearly 1,000 persons attending, Gov .
James Rhodes was principal speaker and then he
went to the Sa Ii sbury
Elementary School for a
luncheon. Times - Senti·
nel Photographer Robert
Wingett followed him,
laking these picl11es and
those found elsewhere in
loday's editioro.

!l'ly Johnson, 14, esJrioua injury when she
n the upstairs window
ocust St. home in MidSUnday afte!'ll(Dl. Mid·

PEOPLE ~AIGJ.{T

emergency squadmen

I

Johnson was leaning
upstairs window shak-

!.S

when she awarenther balance. ~e fell
o wlnOOw and apparent·
ed a complete somer .
andlng on ber loot. !ile
ten to Holzer Hospital
"rvatioo and treatment.
Jg

rla Shiflet
GOES TO CLASSROOM - Gov. James A. Rllodeo, State
Rep. Ralph Welker and Stat. sen. O.kley C, Collins took time
out from a busy schedule Friday to visit the classrooms at the
salisbury ElemerUry School where a luncheon for the offlcials

was held after the Route 33 dedication ceremonies. Here, the
state officials pose with Rosalie story and her third grade class
The !ilt&amp;te leaders took the classroom tour at the request

of

Melga LoCal Sot&gt;~ George Hargraves, Jr.

DO&lt;IT WORPY BOSS . .EVf"N
THOUGH l'LL BE' RS.Tik'IN0 AS
YOUR LOYAL SECK'H ARY - YOtl
CAL~ M6 AT /.\Y
fjEVERLY. HILLSMA$10~

[ AN ALWAYS

FOR COIJSlJLTATIO~!

Sunday

:s

-al services for Mrs. Alllet, 75, RD 1, RutlaOO,
s dead on uri val at Hol·
;pital Sunday morning, will
Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the
Funeral Home with tile
evid 5lteets officiating.
will be In the Gravel Hill

'ry at Cheshire.
as born at Short Creek. w.
Ma,y 27, 1892, the daughe late JaeobandJ osephine
and she had lived In the
1sant area until movingto
In 1956 and WIB a momhe RuUand Church at God.
11 also preceded in death
llusbond, Lemuel.

''

.wars include· two sons,
~tart, W, VLi Hue, Cl).
ll six atstera, Mrs. Mar·

You11 Always Do Better At Rutland
Furniture and Easy Terms Are Avail

Dearten, Charleston, w.
eDe Archer, Orchard Lalre,

p;

lllaey Dlckero~•. and

,... McColl, of Les
~ Vrs. lDn Rol~~~;w. va., and Ylao
........,lalio,ud 1011flD11-

RUT LAN

.,

lllls- coil at the,_,..
at lUll' limo.

742-4211

SESSION SLATED
'

U•

BWWPIPE IN USE - A· holl'l'f' tubeohteel with a opeclal ,
''head" which a gatherer dips into the red openirw: in a tank of
molten glaas.

..........

-..---·

TOP OfftaAUJ...., (lot, ...U,.. .A. Rt 'ro,(d,-•
3h•+ •a·Mitb J. w.- "llJI!i" Wllloll, ~­
of the CJIIIODepu1mentoiHJiliWIIo,....,.,uilP. E. Muheler,
Obio mr.etAr olthe~ollll&amp;bi!VUIIIII -vo Melc•
Coo ....,· ~'!!!* didleoiilaa~•olthe-atrotdl
o f - 33 ee Pr*J. · · • ·-· ' i : .

12 Cl&lt;de of the DNreh ot

'MEETS YOUNGSTER - Ohio Gov. J...,.o A. RIMxleolo ohown 11ort talldng to Rick Sane
of the Slllobury Elemelllll'Y School llude!ll.", In the claool'OCII!l on Frhtay, Gov. Rhodeo Yiai~' :
the
clulea ot the ac"!!O alter an
Inrorma!IWidoOQII
held
tolll:oriao .._ ~a.·
1
-1
_
,· o ,_~~qr&lt;r~ "fl'
·33 --~
~wCIIl eere-

----.. --

)fJ ,

n

s..,
i1rt

�~· ·"""

.,

. . ...

-~

Sessions
To Begin

~· Times - Sentinel, Sunday, Octobt•r 13, 1!ltiH

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when the first or two sessions on
detenalve driving ls held at the
study hall o! the Meigs Hlgll

. ~uu~ay

Open to the publlc,lhe two--session course Is being sponsored

imts-~rutintl

lnternatlonal Friends, made up of hundreds of BrazUlan people by lhe Middleport Business and
of both sexes of all ages and proCessions, have formed an internation- Professional Women's Club. The
al correspoOOence club and are anxioUs to correspond with people or class will begin at 7:30p.m. The
other countries. The pUJl)Ose, of coorse, is to get to know people of aecond session will be at 7:30 p.
m. on Tuesday, OcL 22. at the
other natiOJUI.
If interested, you are to sen:t your name and complete addreu, same loc:ation. Those e(l11)letlsex, occ\C&gt;ation, hobbies to Amigos tnteraclonalr, Caixa Postal30827, ing both sessions will recehe
cards. The intensive drlvlne
Sao Paulo, Brazil.
ing o!le or botl1 of the courses, l.raining program is prepared by
MEIGS Count.ians Interested In may report to the high school. the Ohio Stat. Patrol.
adult business eduution may Mrs. James Vennari is instructw
lnstructors TUesday wW instill enter classes which began
clude
Pomeroy Police Chief Jed
or.
this week at Meigs High School.
Webster, Mrs. Edith Sisson, disTyping classes start at 7 p.JrL
CONGRATULATIONS to Mr. pat&lt;:her ror the Pomeroy departand shorthand at 8 Thursday eve- and Mrs. James Fugate who will ment; John Mora, mathematics
ning. Tllose interested in pursu- observe tlleir 45th wedding anniw instructor of the Melga Local

-

Jt

'JWB·SIPTAY 11&amp;'111-l!lMIEII!IIfli'ILIIIII&lt;k ·

PAGE TEN

dar Practice
on Apollo 7 1n much
'8.Y one on the moon
!l an J\pOllo motherhmar prbit before

r

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~bate

I

In Washington, called

SUNDAY, OCTOBER
13,1968
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GAS
MODEL

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CL
A second finishdoesthetedious work

ADDING HANDLE -

o£ adding a handle. Note the j'pucellas", a huge pair of tweezers which act as a setofaddUioralfingers for the sldlled glass
craftsman.

The rnaldni ol glaos begins
with a mixture of silica (sand
from West VIrginia quarries),
IIOda allh, lime and !eldspar.
Small cpJBnlitles of chemicals
are oddod to maka a 2000 pound

"batch".
A quantity of broken glass is
added to speed ~ the mel~
process. nus part of the process

mn--:ortos

THE SUNDAY TIMFS-SENTINEL

Route 33 Dedication See;~;·

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onn•,

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ounts, as
the roan -

NOTENOOGH .. HOO NEED A WATERFALL
~ 5VNSET..5HOW THE SUN GOING DOWN SORT
~N6£ft, ANP PUT SOME REP STREAK~ 1N
!NPHAVE- StJCKE COMING OUT OF lHE

the Sl
summer

:xpo th&lt;.~l
bear lo
tfter the

show.

~e

and 1-li s
mce will
' Oct. 14
i t e fivp

By PAT HOUCK

..

________ ._...,

aid la st
ld never
did, they
tp. They

In a gray building, a city block
deq:, aoo one-half a block wid~,

·I

....ed bombing and
Haiphong Harbor as a
arm twisting'' to a:et

?arts negotiations.

PAGE ELEVEN

tour.l

"

for the return.

OCI"OIIER 13, 1968

(Editor's Nole - Twentythree Gallla Councy Homomaken journeyed to Huntington
last Wednesday where they
toured The Rainbow Art Glass
Co., Inc. They were accompanied by Times-Sentinel reporter Pat Houck. Here is a
brie£ summary of what she saw
on the "never..to-be-!orgotten

·~· •. &gt;'

1 at white Sands,
1nd radar was to try

~

Work of Ancient Art Viewed By
Gallia Homemakers lnHuntington

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23 Tour Rainbow Art Glass Firm

amaH groups of men work In hot,
ugly surroundi11ts.
Their tools arc crude aDd
rough, and concrete blocks al'kl
corregated metal panels hold
ba.:k some of the heat from blaz·
i~ twnaces.
But from this monochromatic
scene comes beauty. Beauty in
the form of perfect little glass
bottles, cruets, tumblers and
decanters, in jewel colors.
Sun coming ln the side wiOOCJW
strikes glittering brlgllt bits ol
color, red, green, blue, ora~e
and yellow.
The name Rainbow Glaos Ia a
perfect one for all the rainbow
colors are reproduced here in ex·
qulaita hand-made glaiS Items.
The art of glass making ls at
least tour thouaand years old and
is the oldest irdustry in Arneri·

temperature.

FIVE CEflfTS

)

'l ,}
GALLlPULIS SCIIOOL PATHOL - Members of the W1tshingt0n Elem'
tary School Safety Patrol, shown her" willt Chief or Polire John Taylor:'
faculty spons;&gt;r s , Roy Sprague and .John Holle, arc 0 to r): First Row - Clt
Taylor, Gr&lt;.'fi Fife, Billy Barcus, Billy William s , Joey Rubenstahl, Jim
tice, Jim Wood, Keith Sheet s , Tommy Young, Paul Walker, Greg ThOIII!
John Sallaz, Jame!; C'UJmingham, Honald Clas, Ray (Juecn, Mark Poling, t
George HaiTelt ; Se(·ond row - Danny Cox, Bobby Condec , A.nthortY Rei~

ill' and c&lt;rtliJiued
lei tonight with 1....

I '

Scbool• .Jlt.tllte'-. 41'Mlll••'WWlam

·-.Weather

1

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S.hoolln Middleport.

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thla eoeolng, Low
he 501 to the low
~Y cloudy and

I

materlll lor the evening Tuesday

versar~ IIIJ)!el!: fO!!ler&lt;&gt;J,,hOJDO

.11

I

MIDDLEPORT - Four lt&gt;atructors will present the study

INTERESTED in a Brazilian pen pal?

•-

• 11 . "

lost con~.

I an M &amp;

.-&gt;ft:,,:;)( .. ~ ." '

ill higher

gores of
or New
in the
to point
thai.

!

LARGE CROWD -

An audience estimated In the vicinity of 1 000 persons

attended the Friday morning dedication and ribbon-cutting

cere~onies of the

was taken from one of the beaudful roadside rest areas
highway.

~ the

and Mrs. Oliver
Friamblin is on the tar

me ceremonies

new

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sect10n of

Her escort is Earl
Jan Stidham, junior

new stretch of Route 33 in Meigs County. This view of part of the atteroance

dauglltar

r. and

ICe after the (oatball
a.-1 door prb:eS.

eir good
~e

SKILLFUL TOUCH - In the practiced hondo of tho sklllful finisher the glass takes on final form. It is then placed in a
"lehr" oven and tra.,.t!ls slowly through scvera1 hours or ever
reducing heaL

is much like the old process of Tardiness Taboo
NEW YORK tUPil -Stars
reusing metal In newspaper printsaid to be traditionally tar~
are
Ing.
dy
arriving on tUm sets, but
The process, from then on, is
chances are that strict puncdone with tools dating back to t.uaUty will be observed when
medieval times. The results are "Patton" goes tnto production
fine quality glass, blown ard shap- next February.
ed by hard, treasured items to
The reason? Gen. Omar N.
Bradley, who will serve as sebe cherished by generations.
nior mtllt.ary advisor on the
film, 18 chairman of the board
of Bulova Watch Co. The
Q-ln what novel did SiT screenplay. to be ftllru!d in
ATthuT Conan Doyle intTO· Spain by 20th century-Fox,
duce Sh&lt;Tiock Holmos?
wUl be based in part on Gen·
A-" A Study in Scarlet " eral Bradley's book, "A Sol·
published in 1887.
'
dier's Story."

,uy

they

lap.
oently to
ter was
phery of
ld," ad"
orne and
yout and
~

1St&amp;

every-

es news
· to run

to star!

1ment on
'r.

!Dtlernan
inquired
my firsl
was, and
·as it his
~hed,

II"
,.

"I

}randon,
ations at

eli reeled
lands on
was built
~em now
lte until

m: Mr. and

Mrs. Herman

SOMETIMES IT

iAI'ES" A LAI/MAJ.I
1'0 SETIHESE

Meigs County's first
stretch of four-lane hig~
way, on U.S. Route 33,
was dedicated Friday morning with a crowd esli·
mated at nearly 1,000 persons attending, Gov .
James Rhodes was principal speaker and then he
went to the Sa Ii sbury
Elementary School for a
luncheon. Times - Senti·
nel Photographer Robert
Wingett followed him,
laking these picl11es and
those found elsewhere in
loday's editioro.

!l'ly Johnson, 14, esJrioua injury when she
n the upstairs window
ocust St. home in MidSUnday afte!'ll(Dl. Mid·

PEOPLE ~AIGJ.{T

emergency squadmen

I

Johnson was leaning
upstairs window shak-

!.S

when she awarenther balance. ~e fell
o wlnOOw and apparent·
ed a complete somer .
andlng on ber loot. !ile
ten to Holzer Hospital
"rvatioo and treatment.
Jg

rla Shiflet
GOES TO CLASSROOM - Gov. James A. Rllodeo, State
Rep. Ralph Welker and Stat. sen. O.kley C, Collins took time
out from a busy schedule Friday to visit the classrooms at the
salisbury ElemerUry School where a luncheon for the offlcials

was held after the Route 33 dedication ceremonies. Here, the
state officials pose with Rosalie story and her third grade class
The !ilt&amp;te leaders took the classroom tour at the request

of

Melga LoCal Sot&gt;~ George Hargraves, Jr.

DO&lt;IT WORPY BOSS . .EVf"N
THOUGH l'LL BE' RS.Tik'IN0 AS
YOUR LOYAL SECK'H ARY - YOtl
CAL~ M6 AT /.\Y
fjEVERLY. HILLSMA$10~

[ AN ALWAYS

FOR COIJSlJLTATIO~!

Sunday

:s

-al services for Mrs. Alllet, 75, RD 1, RutlaOO,
s dead on uri val at Hol·
;pital Sunday morning, will
Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the
Funeral Home with tile
evid 5lteets officiating.
will be In the Gravel Hill

'ry at Cheshire.
as born at Short Creek. w.
Ma,y 27, 1892, the daughe late JaeobandJ osephine
and she had lived In the
1sant area until movingto
In 1956 and WIB a momhe RuUand Church at God.
11 also preceded in death
llusbond, Lemuel.

''

.wars include· two sons,
~tart, W, VLi Hue, Cl).
ll six atstera, Mrs. Mar·

You11 Always Do Better At Rutland
Furniture and Easy Terms Are Avail

Dearten, Charleston, w.
eDe Archer, Orchard Lalre,

p;

lllaey Dlckero~•. and

,... McColl, of Les
~ Vrs. lDn Rol~~~;w. va., and Ylao
........,lalio,ud 1011flD11-

RUT LAN

.,

lllls- coil at the,_,..
at lUll' limo.

742-4211

SESSION SLATED
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BWWPIPE IN USE - A· holl'l'f' tubeohteel with a opeclal ,
''head" which a gatherer dips into the red openirw: in a tank of
molten glaas.

..........

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TOP OfftaAUJ...., (lot, ...U,.. .A. Rt 'ro,(d,-•
3h•+ •a·Mitb J. w.- "llJI!i" Wllloll, ~­
of the CJIIIODepu1mentoiHJiliWIIo,....,.,uilP. E. Muheler,
Obio mr.etAr olthe~ollll&amp;bi!VUIIIII -vo Melc•
Coo ....,· ~'!!!* didleoiilaa~•olthe-atrotdl
o f - 33 ee Pr*J. · · • ·-· ' i : .

12 Cl&lt;de of the DNreh ot

'MEETS YOUNGSTER - Ohio Gov. J...,.o A. RIMxleolo ohown 11ort talldng to Rick Sane
of the Slllobury Elemelllll'Y School llude!ll.", In the claool'OCII!l on Frhtay, Gov. Rhodeo Yiai~' :
the
clulea ot the ac"!!O alter an
Inrorma!IWidoOQII
held
tolll:oriao .._ ~a.·
1
-1
_
,· o ,_~~qr&lt;r~ "fl'
·33 --~
~wCIIl eere-

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SunclaJ·

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'

Sessions
To Begin

•
,_ l'nel '"rday ccu:b :r 13, I~I()H
Tunes - .... n 1 , .:xo
•
•

INTERESTED in a Brazilian pen pal?
International friends, made ICJ of hurllreds of Brazilian people
of both sexes of all aa:es and professions, have formed an internat~on- r
al correspon:lence club and are anxious to correspond=
other countries. The pUJ1)0se, of course, is to pt to
pe

pe:.: :C

other nations.ted
are to seni your rarne and cOOJPlete address.
If interest\ ' hobbyooleo to .....~ ...... lntera.ctonalr, Cab:a Postal30827'
sex, occtetl on,
tu•uaSao Paulo, Brazil.
i one or both of the courses,
MEIGS COUntians Interested
in
ng 'repor 1 to tho hi""
i
may
..,, school ·
adult business educat on may Mrs. James vennart is Instructstill enter classes which began
this week at Meigs Higtl School. or.
Typing classes start at 7 p.m.
CONGRATULATIONS to Mr.
and shorthand at 8 Thursday eve- and Mrs. James Fugate who will
ning. Those interested in pursuobserve their 45~.!,~..!.9~~

'Yiinarv~ M t!IMi~ P•""•:ou. ~

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~~ Weather
Qy IIIII c:ontll!ued
1d tAillight with loo-

lhlo ovtrdntl. Low
he 50 o to tho low

I

MIDDLEPORT - Four lr&gt;atructors wUl preaent the study
material lor tile ewnllll! Tuesday
when the flrat of two sessions on
defensive drtvtrw is held at the
otudy hall ol tho Meigs Hlp
School In Middleport.
Open to the public, the two-session course Is beirw sponsored
by the Middleport Business and
Profeuional Women's Club. The
class will begin at 7:30P.m. The
second aession wiD be at 7:30 p,
rn. on Tuesday, Oct. 22, at the
same location. Those cmnpletiing ))(ttl senlons will receive
cards. Tho Intensive driving
training prot!l'IID Ia prepared by
tile Ohio State Patrol.
Instructors Tuesday will include Pomeroy Police Chief Jed
Webater, Mrs. Edith Sinon. dispatcher for the Pomeroy depart..
ment· JOOn Mora, mathemaUca

!

partly cloucb' IIIII

I

1

~uullny

',

. 1oc:

~m
dar Practice

1D1 radar was to try
em Apollo 7 in much

,I

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lunar ·!ftlt before
for the return.

·*

~bate
In WashlnK!on, called
,..ed bombing and
Haiphong Harloor •••
arm twisting" to get
?aris negotiations.

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1968

i

lI I

John Sa!laz James Cunningt1am, Honald Clay, RaJ Queen, Mark Poling, ~
DaJU\Y Cox, Bobby Candee, Anthony

Rei~

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INTRODUCTIONS MADE -

States, second rrom left, shakes haOOs with Charles
Democrat Club during the district-wide workshopanddinnerheld in Rutland Thursday night. AL left
is Jack Crisp, Meigs Democrat executive committee chairman, and, secoOO from right, Harry B.
Crewson, candidate for congress !rom the lOth district, looks on. Also present for the Thursday
night activities were Bob Humphrey, son of Hubert Humphrey, and his wife, Donna.

.&gt;

!

v,-·

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':.,f

or agriculture for the United
King. president or the Meigs COlmty Young

John Baker, assistant secretary

I

GAS

MODEL
I

t

$759 Million Bond
Issue a Cinch
OBC."
01110 POLITICS
"OBC was just wide open,"
By RICHARD E. LIGHTNER
said
King. ult had virtually no
UPI Statehouse Reporter
control
by the legislature. The
COLU~ffiUS (UP!)- &amp;Jpport
sky
was
the limit and that was
by Ohio's two political parties
has apparently insured the success at the polls or the Rhodes
Administration's S759 million
bond Issue.
In addition to an endorsement
by the Democratic party, the
state AFL-CIO ha.s come out Cor
the bond issue. Both worked
hard to defeat the administration's Ohio Bond Commission.
While the supporters of the
bond issue have not forgotten
that voters rejected the commission idea by almost two-toone, they feel things are different this time.
Both the commission and
OOnd issue were aimed at raising money for highways and
capital improvements. But the
commission concept wou ld have
erased the constitutional requirement that voters have to

approve each bond issue.
·':I

You11 Always Do Better At Rutland
Furniture and Easy Terms Are Avalla•l•

or

~·
i;:

King and Senate Mojorlt.y
Leader Ted W, Gray, R.Piqua,
are co-chairmen of the Greater
Ohio Committee which was
formed to promote the bond Is.
sue.
state Democratic ' Chairman
Eugene P. (Pete) O'GraciY, In
the current party newsletter,
said the party was ••now in the
strlllli" position or recommend·
1ng Issue No. 1" because It waa
an ••all-out ~t ... ol. the

,

Goodol

Early Start
BEVERLY HILLS. Calif.
(UPH-Volunteer Red Cross
workers here and In West Los
Angeles already have begun
packing 2,400 Christmll.S gift
bags for servicemen and. women overseas.
Bags for the men include
writing material, razors, blades,
combs, klwelettes, p 1 a y 1 n g
cards, soft drink powder, nut&amp;
and candy. The bag&amp; 1or servicewomen include hand and
face lotions.

NEW LOOK lor Elvia Prealey, lell, hoo him heanled and
&amp;rimy far 0 weolerD rete Ia 88 upeomlaJ 111m. 11'1 8 lu
diUereal lmoJO f,.,m , . . oat Prealey had haek Ia 1111,
riJftt, whealle was ea•~•r•1wHII foll-nek mulk.

. '· ·,

Charlie8r011n
601N610 COLOR

..- .

THAT'~

THAT'S NOIENOUGH .. .'t'OO NEED A WATERFALL
AND ASVNSET ..Sii:JW THE SUN GOING DOWN SORT
ORANGE'?, ANO F'OT SOME ~EP 5TREAK5 IN
SKq, ANP HAv'E&amp;a.IE 5d COMING OUT OF 'THE o..n11n1

NOI ART

THEM 6REeN

II

d

I

(\ !
I\
i

\1

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\lr. alii Mrs. on ver
!]1\e ceremonies Friambiin ia o:~ the far
Her eacort is Earl
Do.n Stidham, junior
daughler ol Mr. ard
r. an:l Mrs. Herman
tee after the Cootball
,sts and door prizes.

(

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OOMETIME5 IT
lAKeS A LAI/MAN
TO SETiHE$E
PEOPlE 51"RAIGHT

I

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'

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aerate the way the OBC was,
THE ACI19G GU:.ISHIPS (rom Lockbourne Air Force were back
lies in the marmer in which the
over
Gallipolis and GaUia County this week. The big Flying Boxadministration went about getcars
were seen every night for the first four nights of the week.
ting tile proposal through the
~onday
night, one C-119 was seen flying over the Gallipolis
legislature.
Roller
Dam
at
Dureka. The next night, reports came in that one was
Almost every concession was
granted to the mlnorlt.y party O.ying over Cadmus, and the same night the;· spotted one down on
and it was handled almost like Rt 218.
Each night, one of the big ships Oew a left hand pattern over the
a bi-partisan proposal. Modifiwestern
part of the city. It just kept circling. Thursday night, one
cations to the original 0 B C
C-119
flew
in circles over town for 20 minutes before the pilot
were granted almost bitterly.
veered
off
and
headed down toward tfle dam.
As one member of the adThere
were
no report s , howeve r, of anyone seeing the bril·
ministration team that was reJiant
lights
this
week.
I imag ine the training Oight wllich is designed
sponsible Cor moving the bond
Issue through the General As- to train operators of the illuminator light, was broken down into
sembly: ' 1 0BC taught us a les- two phases. The first phase is probably to train pilots in use of a
son we are not about to for- sighting device that a.llows him to find ground targets in complete
darkness, and the secord phase to train operators of the light
get."

sion.

RUTLAN,,m .·~;
742-4211

~lore Than Money
However, the .similarities between the bond issue and commission ideas go beyond raJ sing
money. ln short, it permits the
issuance of tax .supported obli gations to tile extent of $500
million for highway purposes,
renewable forever, withoot a
vote or the people.
Senate ?\.UnoritJr Leader Frank
King, D-Toledo, who also is
president of the 650,000-member
state AFL..CIO, is one ot those
promoting the bond issue. He
vigorously opposed the commis-

just too much."
King pointed out the present
bond issue spells out, at least
roughly, how tile $7&gt;9 million
raised by the issue would be
spent.
Explains Expemtltures
In the proposal $&gt;00 million
is set aside for highways, $120
mlllion for water pollution control and management, $100 million for technical and vocational education, higher education
and juvenile rehabilitation, $20
million for parks and recreation, $19 million for more councy airports and state butldlng11.
11 All
of the control here Is
with the legislature,'' King continued. '•It must pass on borrowing all that money and on
how It will be spent."
Republicans got the support
of the Democrats by bowing to
them. King won a pledge from
the administration to set aside
$2&gt;0 million
the highway
money for use to break urban
traffic bottlenecks.
Something New By Dems
The modification• won by
House Democrats set a prece-

dent. h lifted the requirement
for a vote every time the leglslature wants to issue highwa,y
bonds.
The major reason the bond
issue was not attacked by Dem -

fe~turittq

I'M DRAWING A ROW
OF l'REES, AND I'M

I i
II

GALLlPOLlS - As bad as I felt, and I did ha\'e a stinking cold,
I jumped for jOJ when the Oetroil Tigers e:lQ&gt;loded for three runs
in the top of the seventh irming to go ahead of the St. Louis cardin.
als in the final game of the 1968 World Series.
Somehow, it e\·ened the score for the Tigers of old who went
down to defeat in the seventh game of the 1934 World Series against
the slants of the great Jerome (Dizzy) Dean of the cardinals by a
lopsided 11-U score.
Those 1934 Tigers were a great bunch. Mickey Cochrane was
catcher. There was Hank Greenberg, Charley Gehringer, and a
couple of great pitchers, School Boy l~owc arxl Tonuny Bridges. l
don't remember the rest of them. I suppose 1 could look them up,
but won't
My big gripe of this series was the way the Tigers' centerfielder Jim Northrup kept stealing fly balls from left fielder Willie
Horton. In Thursday's game Northrup cut in em Horton to take a fly
and muffed lhe catch. I'm sure Willie would have handled It without
an error.
But, it wasn't the first time ~orthrup pulled the grandstand.
In one of the other games I saw him on two occasions move over
into left centu and swipe catches from Horton
The Cards' Bob Gibson is a great hurler but the law of aver,ages caught up with him. In the lop of the seventh, singles b.Y A1 Ka..
line, llorton and Northrup and Bill Freehan's double "blew the lid
o(( the old pressure pan."
The Cardinals have a great ball dub but revenge is sweet.
So was this one for me, even if I did wail 3-1 years for it.

fl4

~ ~clltJtz...

I .II

"='• ' ...

moon

r

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George uafrclt; Second rov• -

the

&lt; an Apjlllo mother-

I

GALLIPOLIS SCHOOL PATHOL - Members of the W~tshington Elem_:
tary School Safety Patrol, shown herl' with Chief of Pohce__ John Taylor ·,
raculty spons&gt;lrs, Hoy Sprague and .John llolle, are (1 to r): 1-1rst Row - Cll.
Taylor, Gr~t: Fife, Billy Barcus , Billy Williams, Joey Hubenstahl, Jim .1(
Uce, Jim Wood, Keith Sheets, Tomm.r Young, Paul Walker, Greg Th~

one on

vay

I

...

whlte sands,

t at

)

·~~-- ·,-~

temperature.

FIVE CEt&gt;ITS

ilnrs·~tutttttl

· ~~~ ~£.~~·,t!«~tc!r.J!

...

'-

• 11

~ten

to Holzer Hospital

e;rvation and treatment.

11a
DOMT WORRY. BOSS .. SVE'N
THOUGH lU BE' RE&gt;fli&lt;'/ ~&amp; AS
'/OUR WYAL SECK'HAI&lt;'Y-YOO
(AN ALWAYS CALL.~;; AT MY

I HOPE YOU'RE'
~OTS!'ITI~&amp;

YOUR HOPES
IOOHiGH,JO-

~s

Shiflet

Sunday

'II services for Mrs. AlOet. 75, RD 1, RutlaOO,
.a dead on arrival at Holl)ital Sumay morning, wUl
Tuesday at 2 p. m . at the
FUneral Home wiUl the
ll.vld Sleets omciating.
will be in the Gravel Hill
try at Cheshire.
as born at Short creek. w.
May 27, 1892, tile daugh·
I!! late Jacob and Josephine
ond she lwl lhod In the
asant area Witll movl~ to
. 'in 1956 and was a memlle Rutlord Church of God.
a also preceded In death

!&gt;EVERLY HILLS MA~ION

FOR CO~SULTATION!

LAST SUNDAY WilEN I ME~TIONED that great basketbaU team
of the past - The Shamrocks - I nferred to one of them as the
late Lorah "Link" Robinson. I was, however, informed by a relative
last Sunday night that Link is not "late" but is very much alive and
lives at Dayton.
Link Robinson is a retired pharmacist and is enjoying liCe. I
remember him well when dW'ing Ill.)' senior year of high school I
worked at the C. D. Kerr Drug CO. His father owned the store and
Link worked there. But Link Robinson in the local sporting world
will be remembered as a great athletic official. And, besides that,
he was also a great basketball player with the Shamrocks.
My call for a picture of the Shamrocks was answered two-fold.
First, Gaynard Ghrist called and said ttismother, Mrs. Mary Ghrist,
had a picture of the team and that I could borrow it. Then on Moaday,
Harold W. Wetherholt sent me word that he had a picture of the 1921
Shamrocks I could use.
Now another member of that great cage squad was the late Frank
(Dutch) Ghrist, Gaynard's father. So 1 guess pictures of the team
will preseri. no problem. Of course, it will take some time to gather
the story.
There was aoother great Shsmrock team In tho early hlstorJ of
Gallipolis and GaUia County. Bu4 this one was a basel&gt;ell te1m
composed mainly of some Mills brothers 8Jkl other members of the
Old Gang of that era. But that is another story,
Garland B. Gill~m. _b eUer known as "Gllly," sent me word
that I had been wrong alooui- "tho late Link Robinson. " GIIIy hod
planned to tell me when he saw me In the drug store but he negot the chance, llope he gets the message, Now, I 1cnow - 11cnow.
CLARENCE (CLANCY) TUCKER, former GoUla CGw1ty oanitarian, was beck in Gallia COWlty this week. Clancy t1 now worklrw •• a
food lnapeetor with the Nelsonville Southeast Omce of the Ohio l)e.
parlment of Haalth. He was back In the county thlo week choeldlltl food
-poratloos of SGIIle of tho drl'feolnlllld reatauranta.

1rly Jolmson, 14, estrloua injury when she
n the up~~ta.lrs window
ocust &amp;.. home in Mid&amp;lnday attornoon. Mid·
emergency squadmen
ss JobniiOD was leaning
upstair! windoW shak.lg' when she awarent .
her balance. Sle £ell
e windoW and apparent·
ed a complete aomerandlng on her leo!. ~

bua-. LemueL

i\'Ora include two sons,
~. W. VL; Hue, Co~ six sl81ero, Mra. Marlloarlea, a.rleston, W.

·., ne Archer, Orchard Lake,
lin; Mory Dlekenon, ard

=

;.. M!:C.U. -

of Lu
llill llrL RoiW, VL, IIIII Milo
IDdlo, ...no_....

m.

als

Ill&amp;)'

e.u oUbe ,._._

IIOIQI-

'
SES!ION SLATED
12 Qrde of .... lloldl
Qwrdl of

.,

,
'
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- ~ ..:u .

__ ...__ __........... _

-·

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..... ' .

t

'

Sessions
To Begin

•
,_ l'nel '"rday ccu:b :r 13, I~I()H
Tunes - .... n 1 , .:xo
•
•

INTERESTED in a Brazilian pen pal?
International friends, made ICJ of hurllreds of Brazilian people
of both sexes of all aa:es and professions, have formed an internat~on- r
al correspon:lence club and are anxious to correspond=
other countries. The pUJ1)0se, of course, is to pt to
pe

pe:.: :C

other nations.ted
are to seni your rarne and cOOJPlete address.
If interest\ ' hobbyooleo to .....~ ...... lntera.ctonalr, Cab:a Postal30827'
sex, occtetl on,
tu•uaSao Paulo, Brazil.
i one or both of the courses,
MEIGS COUntians Interested
in
ng 'repor 1 to tho hi""
i
may
..,, school ·
adult business educat on may Mrs. James vennart is Instructstill enter classes which began
this week at Meigs Higtl School. or.
Typing classes start at 7 p.m.
CONGRATULATIONS to Mr.
and shorthand at 8 Thursday eve- and Mrs. James Fugate who will
ning. Those interested in pursuobserve their 45~.!,~..!.9~~

'Yiinarv~ M t!IMi~ P•""•:ou. ~

""

.. - ----·-- --·.

-~

-.

.L .-

.- ~

..

..

-·

••

,.

~~ Weather
Qy IIIII c:ontll!ued
1d tAillight with loo-

lhlo ovtrdntl. Low
he 50 o to tho low

I

MIDDLEPORT - Four lr&gt;atructors wUl preaent the study
material lor tile ewnllll! Tuesday
when the flrat of two sessions on
defensive drtvtrw is held at the
otudy hall ol tho Meigs Hlp
School In Middleport.
Open to the public, the two-session course Is beirw sponsored
by the Middleport Business and
Profeuional Women's Club. The
class will begin at 7:30P.m. The
second aession wiD be at 7:30 p,
rn. on Tuesday, Oct. 22, at the
same location. Those cmnpletiing ))(ttl senlons will receive
cards. Tho Intensive driving
training prot!l'IID Ia prepared by
tile Ohio State Patrol.
Instructors Tuesday will include Pomeroy Police Chief Jed
Webater, Mrs. Edith Sinon. dispatcher for the Pomeroy depart..
ment· JOOn Mora, mathemaUca

!

partly cloucb' IIIII

I

1

~uullny

',

. 1oc:

~m
dar Practice

1D1 radar was to try
em Apollo 7 in much

,I

~

I

lunar ·!ftlt before
for the return.

·*

~bate
In WashlnK!on, called
,..ed bombing and
Haiphong Harloor •••
arm twisting" to get
?aris negotiations.

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1968

i

lI I

John Sa!laz James Cunningt1am, Honald Clay, RaJ Queen, Mark Poling, ~
DaJU\Y Cox, Bobby Candee, Anthony

Rei~

I

!

•"
,'~ '·

I

I
i

I'

'. '
i' I
'

I

~

\ I \

,j

".

..

INTRODUCTIONS MADE -

States, second rrom left, shakes haOOs with Charles
Democrat Club during the district-wide workshopanddinnerheld in Rutland Thursday night. AL left
is Jack Crisp, Meigs Democrat executive committee chairman, and, secoOO from right, Harry B.
Crewson, candidate for congress !rom the lOth district, looks on. Also present for the Thursday
night activities were Bob Humphrey, son of Hubert Humphrey, and his wife, Donna.

.&gt;

!

v,-·

'I

" \~I

':.,f

or agriculture for the United
King. president or the Meigs COlmty Young

John Baker, assistant secretary

I

GAS

MODEL
I

t

$759 Million Bond
Issue a Cinch
OBC."
01110 POLITICS
"OBC was just wide open,"
By RICHARD E. LIGHTNER
said
King. ult had virtually no
UPI Statehouse Reporter
control
by the legislature. The
COLU~ffiUS (UP!)- &amp;Jpport
sky
was
the limit and that was
by Ohio's two political parties
has apparently insured the success at the polls or the Rhodes
Administration's S759 million
bond Issue.
In addition to an endorsement
by the Democratic party, the
state AFL-CIO ha.s come out Cor
the bond issue. Both worked
hard to defeat the administration's Ohio Bond Commission.
While the supporters of the
bond issue have not forgotten
that voters rejected the commission idea by almost two-toone, they feel things are different this time.
Both the commission and
OOnd issue were aimed at raising money for highways and
capital improvements. But the
commission concept wou ld have
erased the constitutional requirement that voters have to

approve each bond issue.
·':I

You11 Always Do Better At Rutland
Furniture and Easy Terms Are Avalla•l•

or

~·
i;:

King and Senate Mojorlt.y
Leader Ted W, Gray, R.Piqua,
are co-chairmen of the Greater
Ohio Committee which was
formed to promote the bond Is.
sue.
state Democratic ' Chairman
Eugene P. (Pete) O'GraciY, In
the current party newsletter,
said the party was ••now in the
strlllli" position or recommend·
1ng Issue No. 1" because It waa
an ••all-out ~t ... ol. the

,

Goodol

Early Start
BEVERLY HILLS. Calif.
(UPH-Volunteer Red Cross
workers here and In West Los
Angeles already have begun
packing 2,400 Christmll.S gift
bags for servicemen and. women overseas.
Bags for the men include
writing material, razors, blades,
combs, klwelettes, p 1 a y 1 n g
cards, soft drink powder, nut&amp;
and candy. The bag&amp; 1or servicewomen include hand and
face lotions.

NEW LOOK lor Elvia Prealey, lell, hoo him heanled and
&amp;rimy far 0 weolerD rete Ia 88 upeomlaJ 111m. 11'1 8 lu
diUereal lmoJO f,.,m , . . oat Prealey had haek Ia 1111,
riJftt, whealle was ea•~•r•1wHII foll-nek mulk.

. '· ·,

Charlie8r011n
601N610 COLOR

..- .

THAT'~

THAT'S NOIENOUGH .. .'t'OO NEED A WATERFALL
AND ASVNSET ..Sii:JW THE SUN GOING DOWN SORT
ORANGE'?, ANO F'OT SOME ~EP 5TREAK5 IN
SKq, ANP HAv'E&amp;a.IE 5d COMING OUT OF 'THE o..n11n1

NOI ART

THEM 6REeN

II

d

I

(\ !
I\
i

\1

'

\lr. alii Mrs. on ver
!]1\e ceremonies Friambiin ia o:~ the far
Her eacort is Earl
Do.n Stidham, junior
daughler ol Mr. ard
r. an:l Mrs. Herman
tee after the Cootball
,sts and door prizes.

(

I

I, i II ·
I
I I
) '

OOMETIME5 IT
lAKeS A LAI/MAN
TO SETiHE$E
PEOPlE 51"RAIGHT

I

I ·.
'

I

aerate the way the OBC was,
THE ACI19G GU:.ISHIPS (rom Lockbourne Air Force were back
lies in the marmer in which the
over
Gallipolis and GaUia County this week. The big Flying Boxadministration went about getcars
were seen every night for the first four nights of the week.
ting tile proposal through the
~onday
night, one C-119 was seen flying over the Gallipolis
legislature.
Roller
Dam
at
Dureka. The next night, reports came in that one was
Almost every concession was
granted to the mlnorlt.y party O.ying over Cadmus, and the same night the;· spotted one down on
and it was handled almost like Rt 218.
Each night, one of the big ships Oew a left hand pattern over the
a bi-partisan proposal. Modifiwestern
part of the city. It just kept circling. Thursday night, one
cations to the original 0 B C
C-119
flew
in circles over town for 20 minutes before the pilot
were granted almost bitterly.
veered
off
and
headed down toward tfle dam.
As one member of the adThere
were
no report s , howeve r, of anyone seeing the bril·
ministration team that was reJiant
lights
this
week.
I imag ine the training Oight wllich is designed
sponsible Cor moving the bond
Issue through the General As- to train operators of the illuminator light, was broken down into
sembly: ' 1 0BC taught us a les- two phases. The first phase is probably to train pilots in use of a
son we are not about to for- sighting device that a.llows him to find ground targets in complete
darkness, and the secord phase to train operators of the light
get."

sion.

RUTLAN,,m .·~;
742-4211

~lore Than Money
However, the .similarities between the bond issue and commission ideas go beyond raJ sing
money. ln short, it permits the
issuance of tax .supported obli gations to tile extent of $500
million for highway purposes,
renewable forever, withoot a
vote or the people.
Senate ?\.UnoritJr Leader Frank
King, D-Toledo, who also is
president of the 650,000-member
state AFL..CIO, is one ot those
promoting the bond issue. He
vigorously opposed the commis-

just too much."
King pointed out the present
bond issue spells out, at least
roughly, how tile $7&gt;9 million
raised by the issue would be
spent.
Explains Expemtltures
In the proposal $&gt;00 million
is set aside for highways, $120
mlllion for water pollution control and management, $100 million for technical and vocational education, higher education
and juvenile rehabilitation, $20
million for parks and recreation, $19 million for more councy airports and state butldlng11.
11 All
of the control here Is
with the legislature,'' King continued. '•It must pass on borrowing all that money and on
how It will be spent."
Republicans got the support
of the Democrats by bowing to
them. King won a pledge from
the administration to set aside
$2&gt;0 million
the highway
money for use to break urban
traffic bottlenecks.
Something New By Dems
The modification• won by
House Democrats set a prece-

dent. h lifted the requirement
for a vote every time the leglslature wants to issue highwa,y
bonds.
The major reason the bond
issue was not attacked by Dem -

fe~turittq

I'M DRAWING A ROW
OF l'REES, AND I'M

I i
II

GALLlPOLlS - As bad as I felt, and I did ha\'e a stinking cold,
I jumped for jOJ when the Oetroil Tigers e:lQ&gt;loded for three runs
in the top of the seventh irming to go ahead of the St. Louis cardin.
als in the final game of the 1968 World Series.
Somehow, it e\·ened the score for the Tigers of old who went
down to defeat in the seventh game of the 1934 World Series against
the slants of the great Jerome (Dizzy) Dean of the cardinals by a
lopsided 11-U score.
Those 1934 Tigers were a great bunch. Mickey Cochrane was
catcher. There was Hank Greenberg, Charley Gehringer, and a
couple of great pitchers, School Boy l~owc arxl Tonuny Bridges. l
don't remember the rest of them. I suppose 1 could look them up,
but won't
My big gripe of this series was the way the Tigers' centerfielder Jim Northrup kept stealing fly balls from left fielder Willie
Horton. In Thursday's game Northrup cut in em Horton to take a fly
and muffed lhe catch. I'm sure Willie would have handled It without
an error.
But, it wasn't the first time ~orthrup pulled the grandstand.
In one of the other games I saw him on two occasions move over
into left centu and swipe catches from Horton
The Cards' Bob Gibson is a great hurler but the law of aver,ages caught up with him. In the lop of the seventh, singles b.Y A1 Ka..
line, llorton and Northrup and Bill Freehan's double "blew the lid
o(( the old pressure pan."
The Cardinals have a great ball dub but revenge is sweet.
So was this one for me, even if I did wail 3-1 years for it.

fl4

~ ~clltJtz...

I .II

"='• ' ...

moon

r

' .

George uafrclt; Second rov• -

the

&lt; an Apjlllo mother-

I

GALLIPOLIS SCHOOL PATHOL - Members of the W~tshington Elem_:
tary School Safety Patrol, shown herl' with Chief of Pohce__ John Taylor ·,
raculty spons&gt;lrs, Hoy Sprague and .John llolle, are (1 to r): 1-1rst Row - Cll.
Taylor, Gr~t: Fife, Billy Barcus , Billy Williams, Joey Hubenstahl, Jim .1(
Uce, Jim Wood, Keith Sheets, Tomm.r Young, Paul Walker, Greg Th~

one on

vay

I

...

whlte sands,

t at

)

·~~-- ·,-~

temperature.

FIVE CEt&gt;ITS

ilnrs·~tutttttl

· ~~~ ~£.~~·,t!«~tc!r.J!

...

'-

• 11

~ten

to Holzer Hospital

e;rvation and treatment.

11a
DOMT WORRY. BOSS .. SVE'N
THOUGH lU BE' RE&gt;fli&lt;'/ ~&amp; AS
'/OUR WYAL SECK'HAI&lt;'Y-YOO
(AN ALWAYS CALL.~;; AT MY

I HOPE YOU'RE'
~OTS!'ITI~&amp;

YOUR HOPES
IOOHiGH,JO-

~s

Shiflet

Sunday

'II services for Mrs. AlOet. 75, RD 1, RutlaOO,
.a dead on arrival at Holl)ital Sumay morning, wUl
Tuesday at 2 p. m . at the
FUneral Home wiUl the
ll.vld Sleets omciating.
will be in the Gravel Hill
try at Cheshire.
as born at Short creek. w.
May 27, 1892, tile daugh·
I!! late Jacob and Josephine
ond she lwl lhod In the
asant area Witll movl~ to
. 'in 1956 and was a memlle Rutlord Church of God.
a also preceded In death

!&gt;EVERLY HILLS MA~ION

FOR CO~SULTATION!

LAST SUNDAY WilEN I ME~TIONED that great basketbaU team
of the past - The Shamrocks - I nferred to one of them as the
late Lorah "Link" Robinson. I was, however, informed by a relative
last Sunday night that Link is not "late" but is very much alive and
lives at Dayton.
Link Robinson is a retired pharmacist and is enjoying liCe. I
remember him well when dW'ing Ill.)' senior year of high school I
worked at the C. D. Kerr Drug CO. His father owned the store and
Link worked there. But Link Robinson in the local sporting world
will be remembered as a great athletic official. And, besides that,
he was also a great basketball player with the Shamrocks.
My call for a picture of the Shamrocks was answered two-fold.
First, Gaynard Ghrist called and said ttismother, Mrs. Mary Ghrist,
had a picture of the team and that I could borrow it. Then on Moaday,
Harold W. Wetherholt sent me word that he had a picture of the 1921
Shamrocks I could use.
Now another member of that great cage squad was the late Frank
(Dutch) Ghrist, Gaynard's father. So 1 guess pictures of the team
will preseri. no problem. Of course, it will take some time to gather
the story.
There was aoother great Shsmrock team In tho early hlstorJ of
Gallipolis and GaUia County. Bu4 this one was a basel&gt;ell te1m
composed mainly of some Mills brothers 8Jkl other members of the
Old Gang of that era. But that is another story,
Garland B. Gill~m. _b eUer known as "Gllly," sent me word
that I had been wrong alooui- "tho late Link Robinson. " GIIIy hod
planned to tell me when he saw me In the drug store but he negot the chance, llope he gets the message, Now, I 1cnow - 11cnow.
CLARENCE (CLANCY) TUCKER, former GoUla CGw1ty oanitarian, was beck in Gallia COWlty this week. Clancy t1 now worklrw •• a
food lnapeetor with the Nelsonville Southeast Omce of the Ohio l)e.
parlment of Haalth. He was back In the county thlo week choeldlltl food
-poratloos of SGIIle of tho drl'feolnlllld reatauranta.

1rly Jolmson, 14, estrloua injury when she
n the up~~ta.lrs window
ocust &amp;.. home in Mid&amp;lnday attornoon. Mid·
emergency squadmen
ss JobniiOD was leaning
upstair! windoW shak.lg' when she awarent .
her balance. Sle £ell
e windoW and apparent·
ed a complete aomerandlng on her leo!. ~

bua-. LemueL

i\'Ora include two sons,
~. W. VL; Hue, Co~ six sl81ero, Mra. Marlloarlea, a.rleston, W.

·., ne Archer, Orchard Lake,
lin; Mory Dlekenon, ard

=

;.. M!:C.U. -

of Lu
llill llrL RoiW, VL, IIIII Milo
IDdlo, ...no_....

m.

als

Ill&amp;)'

e.u oUbe ,._._

IIOIQI-

'
SES!ION SLATED
12 Qrde of .... lloldl
Qwrdl of

.,

,
'
i_, ...... ..

- ~ ..:u .

__ ...__ __........... _

-·

�.· .· .· .~ ....
- ..- -_.
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SliORT BIBS

11; I ._

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•

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..•... .-.····

(

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...-._ .. ''--&lt;'

1-\AS CAS1' A
Sf'EL..L ON ME

..

,
.em

FIVE CEI'ITS

·~

Radar Practice
,.-oun:l radar was to try
k" 00 Apollo 1 ln much

.J

.I

way one oo the moon
rack an AWJ.lo mothera lunar r:*btt
'
be-Core

lt

. I

ott tor the return.

I

~LiliiPI

Of-\, t&gt;EA~ I WI-\AI
51-\Al..L l. t&gt;0 ?,
GE1'i..OS1, DO&amp; ! •

"'

•
~

..

..

..

GALLIPOLlS SCl !OOL p
tary School Safety Pau-ol, sr
faculty spoose~n; , Hoy Spragu
· Taylor, Gn-'~ Fife, Billy BaJ
tice, J ·u n Wl)('ld ' Keith Shee1
John Sa!laz, .lames Cunning'
George Haffell; Set·ond rov-

,

__

HERE, PRitJG&amp;f .

E£KClAIMS H~ .
· ' OW SPEJJD MJ €1Vr1RG
DA'I' JUST LYIOO OOIUIJ !

cy, In Washington, called
1creased bombing and
&lt;t Haiphong Harbor as a
l "arm twisting'' to eet
in Paris negotiations.

fi1UCH ~I( f!-IAI!
NOUI ~HS t:~E:-1 J)OWN
iD Jj(.)Sit-.JESS ~'-lO
yo 1Hf AD!

" ... Mla;rf ft;JSS!8J.'f !JE
AB!iOKBINri 7tJ A /rfORIJN. "
~~AH! ~JsreN

I

ebate

IIJHL, so

~~ ANQTt-1~­

-

)

Helt£, PRINCE! .

'(O

fHtS ONf;- ''... If 11/~LO
§£ SU!'!R8 liS A CHOICE
rM 7/fE !ilfJ~sr /&gt;ffJfl£
Of Tf/£ tf£,1~/"

QK. HOI.(}

PO~S

IH15 SOUNDlOP ~Rtf!CS CALL
fl'itS flt.M:

HoW A6(){)1 f~IS-

"SIJI'61(8 "
"61(/UIANr'·
"A6$/Jitlll."

·: ., A Bf!Lt.IAJJr
fXI/!11P/...£ tJf f?i/,ef
1/(jf'£.' I

!)

I

i
I\

"FASCINATIN/i •
•f'OWIRFUL. r"

, of Mr. aOO Mrs. Oliver
Lllftlme ceremonies Fri-

l '\

n Shamblin la on the: far
left. Her escort is Earl

II
I

rs. Dan Stidham, junior
~se, daughter of Mr. and

of Mr. and Mrs. Herman
~ dance after the foctbaU

I

I
: I

I

L.
.

~ontests

I

:.

I HAVE! I'VE

GOTGUZON
A DIET!

.

·J i.

.,·.

CAN'T IMAGINE
IT'S LJKE LJVING WITH
MAN WI-IO'S HUNSR:Y AJ.J..J
lH' TIME!

(mberly Johnson, 14, es·

Jd serious injury when she
from the upstairs winck»w
er Locust St. home Ln Midor! &amp;mda.Y al'ternoon. Mid·
1011. emergency squadmen
1 Miss Johnson was leaning
an upstairs window shaka rug when she appa.rent~ost her balance. 9\e fell
n the window and apparentturned a complete somerIt landing on her feet. Sle
: 'taken to Holzer Hospital
observation and treatment.
::;x;:::::;:::::::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::;;.:;:·:·:·.•·:=:

1.
.''·
I

..
,;

\,

-~­
.,

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·'':"":'

..

....
:~.

~

~-·

WINTHROP
'THis BOOk:: IM
READING 15
ABCX.Jr MAI21E

WH056HE?

by Dick Cavalli

r---------------------,
RE\.a..LJTTQ\l •
6HC: WA? ~BIG AI20UND THE
TIME OF THE A:1ENCH

lma Shiflet

AND ?HE

5&lt;\ID,"TH&amp;Y

ANTOl NeT1E.

and door prizes.

·vou

'..•;

GAS
MODEL

~

r and tonight wl1h lso.
era thia 8\lenl.ng, Low
.. tho so. 10 the low
iiY• portly ciou&lt;IY IIIII
:e In temperature .

A WICKEt&gt; W11'C.H

:I'M A PRINCe~S/!

Weather

....~"';/'"- •

:louclr llld

.-------r

l'M NOi RtAL.I.'VA FROG.

~

'AT'S

CEIZTAINLY

RIGHT, OOOLA,

I'M L.ITERALLY
STARVING 11-IAT

AQE! n-

WELL ,

I 'LL Blii ...

MAN 10 DEATH ...

II
I '

ies Sunday
uneral service s Cor Mr s. AlShinet. 75, RD 1, Rutlard,
1 was dead on arrival at HoiHospital Sunday morning, will
mld Tuesda.y at 2 p, m. at the
rtin Funeral Home with the
David Sheets of'ficiatlng.

ia1 will be in the Gravel Hill

(

NO! HE TOLD HER 'THE
PE:OPlE WCR&amp; MAD
~'THEY HAD
NO ~D '10 E;AT.

netery at Cheshire.
11 w-ubornatShort Creek. W.
011 MOll 27, 1892, the daugh1ofthe late Jacob and Josephine
:on am she had llved in the
Pleasant area. until movi~tD
&amp;and in 1956 ard waa a memof the Rutland Oturch orGoi
was also preceded in death
ber husband, Lemuel.
~vivors include two sons,
:k. Letart, W. VL;. Hue, Collbue; aix ai.-rs. Mrs.. Mar-

THAT MU5T HAVE.
BEEN PI&lt;ET1Y
&amp;CDT'lEN OI.KE.

•t Dearlen, Chorleston. W.
•a Irene Arcber. Orehard Lake,
~n; Mary DlckeriiCIII, and
1. Anra Mcc.ll, both or Las
... Ne-; !lira. IDol R&lt;ll·
f11 WheroliJ1L W. Vo., IIIII Yll&amp;

You11 Alway
Furnitu

..

••

CN''Shlflel. ~- 10 .........

!hen.

I
.

.
I'

;roms llliiY Clll at !be _...
""'"at~:p&lt;:LE SESSION SLATED
~·· 12 Circle Ill tile lloalll
Church et Wf1! aFz:1.

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, -.-·. -Weather

doo&lt;IY ll!d eontlquod
1Y ll!d tonlilrt with II(&gt;.
ters thia Pening. Low
llll llle 50 I lo llle low

aay.
...

'·

'

Art Sanso111.

TilE BORN LOSER.

..

partly cloudy ....

le ln temperature.

FIVE CEt'ITS

I

Good ~rief' .
/3ed/y Damp

~em
aund at White Sands,

Radar Practice

JI'Ollfll radar was to

try
;k'' oo Apollo 7 in much
ne way one 011 the moon
;rack an AP,pllo motherIll lunar -~it before
: o[f for the retur~

TOASTS T~EIR Ll'l.
FOUNDING

'ebate

FATHER

WHERE':&gt;

a,y, in Washington, called
ncreased bombing and
' a! Haiphong Harbor as a
&gt;f "arm twisting" to get
: In Paris negotiations.

EVERYSOD'I
Wl'-1 11 FL.OYD~

.
•
..
..

GALLIPOLIS SCHOOL P

tary School safety Pa1rol, sh·
faculty sponsvrs, Roy Spragur
· Taylor, Gr~,;: Fife, Bill}' Bar
Uce, Jim Wood, Keith Sheet
John Sa!laz, James Cunningl1
George Haffelt; Sel'ond row

ItA ., NIIA, lac. T,M.

-

MAuOf'. OFF ICERS OF
"PEEWEE UNLIM ITED'' RUSH
TD THE:. SIWIPL.E HOME:. OF
GOOD OLD BEDL.'/ DAMP
THE CARTOONIST-

~EPT

"

THAT THE. PS"'CHIATRIST

NEl&lt;.TDOOR MCW&amp;D

AWAV~­

BUT HE WMS GETTING TO
=T!/ AL.WA'IS T.tiL.KING

WE' SU!l.~ PIC~D A Rt&lt; E
DA'{ FOI1. A PIOJIC f

e.e. A

CMIAI ki 10 ME-WMIL&amp;

I WtSI-1 we:

LEH; 6ET SAC!(
10 THE O.R!

WE·D 6~1 ~E.Z.. ;..;;,)T SlA\
UNDER Tr11S Tt&lt;EC!

STA~!&gt;

HADI&gt;J•T PAI&lt;KED
ll' SO FAI&lt; AWAY f

I WAS DOIN.-N&amp;Wa•t!

.

LE1'5
UNDfl&lt;

-mAr

TRE.E FOt&lt;.
AWI-IILe!

·of Mr. and Mrs. OU\Ier
Wft.lme ceremonies Fri-

.n Shamblin is on the rar
left. Her escort is Earl
Dan Stidham, junior
IJSe 1 daughter of Mr. ard
of Mr. and Mrs. Herman
f dance after the rootball
·ontests and door prizes.

:rs.

.

I

LIGHTNING?

l:

1 Trtlr-JIOLL !!UN

IT Al.IIJAY5 ST~K'ES
THE TALLEST OBJar

'IOU Kr-lOTHfAD, DOI-l•r
YOU KNOW ~IN0 A&amp;OUT

MYFEEf

IN ITSPATH!

AilE
f!,E&lt;!Ili\ININ6

0~

MY KNEES

FoR .AWt-II!.E"•

10 HU!Zf.
lmberly JohnS(I"', 14, es-

Jd serious injury when she
from the upstairs window
er IA&gt;cust St. home in Mid·
10rt &amp;rnda.Y afternoon. Mldort emergency squadmen
1 Min Johl.son was leaning
an upstairs winc:bw shak-

GAS
MODEL

:I

.

I

.•

MU!:h SCreW":J

a rug when she apparentlost her balance. Sl.e fell
n the window and apparentturned a complete somertl, landing on her loot. ~·
. taken to Holzer Hospital
observation and treatment.

•'

Little fox~
haw look/'

lma Shiflet
DUR POLLY- After polishing shoes with

Foncy F'reo

patN shot po:hsh , toothpo1te tokes the
polish off hands and naih _ It also toktls

WM£THll ,., G jiCirt)r'l hlftq "'" 01'
0 doyfiliiMI ""'' ytltll tittlt tirl wttl
loYt tht '-WIIN htlillt ot tlti1

......

ball point ink off yowr honds.-MIKt.

.......
,.....,. ,...

No. aM ..Ito PHOTQ.GUIDI k
ill 1in1 2t. I yt0r11. Siu !, I% JIM8

BtltliM lonnot

---lltr·

ftEU:'S a . ., da.. litlaltttl

.., _
s,..n .....
....
-~_
r..llloood-""

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

•
._. . ...,.,.. . ¥ .,..i:,·::

......... ,.. whtlll• far

DIAl POLL'l'...a olaiiJi . . tw

No. DU wit~ PATT.O.

lAMA . . . . '· 11, 12, 11.
14, 1~-lll.etMlilll •.

I

Ii •

It's all that's

left of a nice old.

bouse!

.

sao n, II!&gt; ..,., l!t ,.,.

i

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of!Hodt.

.......... 11111

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t1 \linll 411t~""-•~ft1Ct

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DiAl POLLY -Old hotO lit wondorlul
atuffi•t for Milt lllf tllhi!lll eo4 oro
"'fer th• !&lt;&gt;dill Mllet...tU.UDtA

w••_, *"•
YOU'liiiI.Uw:::. ..•• ••tlooo·
n;, "
,._No.

You11 Alway
Furnitu

'

'
,.

•
•

DEAR POLLY-Did you ever ned an
emtrtlftcy hattter when tra ... tling? Moil~
a 1tiH roll wit+l • whole sect1on of newtpaplr, tie in tltt middle with string •nd.
hone on a hook in tht car or cltMt:.NANCl

I
74:

.,•
I

'Shl!let, llldlo,llld 10 ~

lt•n.

'8endo mQ ..n at the - .
&amp;IIUV lime.

l!iline
•

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....................... ,.. _...

,...~

........, ..... ... .
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..., .~1 -(ll o· l ,.,.l

•• • •

'·'

DL\1 POLLY-Whoo I fill'tol to HY
t11041t·hal4en hr a •irtholoy cako I u10
M_...ioo cllorrin.-4\AlTHA

r

\

.,, ...,...j.

It ..... 1'"'

lit..,...,,

Glthe late Jacob and Josephine
and she had lived ln the
Pleasant area until moving to
land in 1956 and was a. memo! the RuUard Church of God.
was also preceded in death
:ter husb&amp;ml. Lemuel
tivivors include two sons,
k, Letart, W, Va.; Hue, Co~&amp;i six elstera. Mrs. Mar~
tit Dearien, Chorleston. W.
.;;Irene Archer, Orchard Lake,
~ Mary Dlcur1011, ll!d
1., Arm McColl, of Las
~· No~ llr1o IDol Rolli~IW. W. VL, IIIII Mila

:oo

li.

...hlot-~
Mit """"'
-til: colon
......
~1 1M 1lotoioooi hanolor; ctltr
cllott; itillk ;lloiolnllanL

.mera.l services £or Mrs. AlShifiet, 75, RD 1, RutJ.aOO,
was dead on arrival at HoiHospital Sunday morning. will
1eld Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the
rtin Funeral Home with the
• David 5lleets ofl'iciating.
·tal will be in the Gravel Hill
netery a.t Cheshire.
.e was born at Short Creek., W.
, on May 27, 1892, the daugh·

nrotr ....,

woib

ies Sunday

. CLE wnc-.. SLATED
;In 12 Cb"de ol 11!0 11t1111
11 Church ol "'M J ....
HIWednolllllr,Qt' hrf,j.

m. It the cl w:a

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.

iii

lllld -

::::::l1llllalrt with ....

W.n 1h18 ""erdq. Low

~ the 501 to the low
• • portly cloud;y lllld

0111 In temperature.
·,'

FIVE CEFITS

round at

White

Sands,

Radar Practice
IJ'(M.Ird radar was to try
.ek'' on Apollo 7 ln much
me way one on the moon
track an Apollo mother·
ill lunar ~t beCore
w otr for the return.

"GEM MYSTUY STOlY ,UILISIUHG COMPANY .• • GUIU WHO''

..
~

.-.
'

.,

~ebate

FROM
· l=ATI-IERS WI-IO

WELl.., NOW
I'VE GOT
HOWARD

HATE
...
"'

ME

ofa.y, in Washington, called
lncreaoed bombing and
11 o( Haiphong Harbor as a
of "arm twtating'' to get
~ in Paris negotiations.

GALUPOLIS SC HOOL t
tary School Sa(et.Y Patrol, ~

(acuity spons0r s, l:oy

~rag

. Taylor' GI'L'6 Fife, Bill )' &amp;
tice Jim Wood, Kcilh She1
Joh~ Sallaz, Jamt!S Cunnirl!
George Haifelt; Second r o

•

by Ralph BeiJDdahl
WHAT~MATT'eft

HE.RE YA GO, OSGOOD.' THIS IS TH'
LAST MEA\. YA GeT OFF Me, YA
rooD SNAFFI.IN' MONSTe~!

.

... yA SfCK?

YA MfAN
YACANT'
E.AT 'CAUSe

rM
HLLIN'

"WHAT'S WlONG WITH MEl HillE I AM AlMOlT SEVEN YL\lS
OLD AND STILL IUYING MY OWN CANDY!"

SWEAl

•A liA. CLEAN LIVING KID .
. . . INSISTS ON

OUT O'UB WAY

SOLD

SAM. W14AT WAS
THAT PHONE CAl-lAl-l- ABOUT?

VAl

A7~NAf7

-W~ERE:~,TI-IE

by Walt Wetterberg

r-~::::::::::::::~~D~A~D.~.~D~O~W~E~

I'l-l- TEL-L. you
'TI-l~ J=00 \.I FT&gt;$

7~ 'Z()iltet4

!

HAVE ANY
POTATO

NOW WI-IAT ABOUT
T~AT

PJ..\ON E GAl-L- ?

WE. HA.VE- A BIG
BAG IN THE CAR.
TOOI..IP, I'l-L.

GETTHEM!

NOW ABOUT
PI-lONE.

.

.CAL-L-!

~HIPS?

HAM

or

!r
Mr. aOO Mrs.. Oliver
halft.ime ceremonies Fri~
tm Shamblin is on the far

~

'i

e left. Her escort is Earl
..-·:,

IT~ NOTHIN' PERSONAL ...
WHAi I MEAN .•• THAT.

LISTEN,YA
~IG

C.I.UCK,
SE:I.LIN'

V'STRA16HT
I'l-L oiVE. IT TO YOU
.... I-lOW WOULD

IS ... OH, 'F!~ ~N'

OUT I.OUD.

PETS IS MY
IMJSINESS,1

~EVER

.o~$C4T

se1-1. 'eM,
~ROKE!

ITS

OF IT!

----T

IGO

BOTWHO .
Kt-IOW5 WI-lEI\!

WHEN IT'S OVeR!

. H'E:ARD

YOU .1..1 KETO MOVE.,

u: I,DON'r

'.·

BOY, THIS MOVING 15
HECTIC! I'L.L BE GL.W

OVER~.

WE'l-L-, AS I STA!&lt;rED TO TELL. YOU,
T~E:- BOS5 IS TRAN6FERRII\IG ME.
TO NEBRAN~ CITV.... CARE.
TO COOE'AL.ONG?

tttrs. Dan Stidham, junior
rose, daughter Df Mr. aOO
. oC Mr. and Mrs. Herman
~ dance after the football
contests aOO door prizes.

::;:;::::::;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::-:·:

Qmberly Johnson, 11, esJIId serious injury when she
1 from the upstairs windoW
her Locust &amp;. home Ln Mid1X'rl &amp;mday afternoon. Mld-

IPOrt emergency S(lUB.~en
ld Miss Johnson was learung
t an upstairs window shakl a rug when she apparent-

GAS

MODEL

klst her balance. ::il.e fell
xn the wincbw and apparent-

.,

' .:lt

turned a complete somer -

ult, landing 011 her feet. ~e
ll taken to Hol-ter Hospital

iJ;,

1,

r obaervation and treatment.

,,

-»:;;;;;;;;.;.;.;;;;:;;;;.;;;;;.;;:;;.;;:·:·:;;;;;:;;:;:;.;;;._ .-:-·

'.

by

ANDY CAPP

NAME DAY OCT.15

I MI@-IT BE LATE
TONIGHT, FLOt

\

I

~NG ON, LAb,
1LL 'ELP 'VER

I

J., Wrt'H A. HEII.'ifY OOUBL.E

THREAD AND I.ARGE.
NSSILE,smiNG A

5
1

SIN!;!.~

ON WI' 'r'ER

COAT

A!.lO DOUBLE

PEt&gt;J-J[)T TOGETHER.
2.. STRIIJG ON TWO DOUBLE

PEAt-JUTS l=oR ARMS AND

TVJ0

MO~E.

FOR LEGS .

t

3 IN--..,.

•

,3, TIE A HE:AVY
THREP.P SIIJ.

:i

"j

1..0/JG-

TO 1&lt;'-IOT
ON H Ep.J) AtJP
TIE IT THROIJ6H

i%

You11 Alway1
furnitu

CE.N,T ER OF
A PIEC.E OF
cAROBO,I..RC.

.t

-i
@

.STRIP.

1"-;::i"'llll§§ WHEN "'ER DO c;ET IN

)ies Sunday
Funeral services (or Mrs. All Shiflet, 7a, RD I, RutlaOO,
10 was dead on arrival at Hol:r Hospital Sunday morning, will
, held Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the
&amp;rUn Funeral Home with the
1v, D•\id ~eets oUidating.
o-ial will be in the Gravel Hill
9netery at Cheshire.
lle wasbornatShortCreek., W.
L, on May n, 1892, the daughr of the leteJacoibandJosephioo
1too and she had lhed in th.e
.. Pleasant area until movitl!: to
1tland in 1956 and ns a mem~r· of the RutlaOO. Church ofGod.
11 was also preceded in death
· ber husbaml, LemueL
Survivors indude two sons,
LCtc. Letart, W. Va.. i Hue, C~
Dbu.s; six ai ltera, MrL Marorit Dearlen, Charleoton, W.
ond

McCOll, of ~·
NeWKia; 'Yra. IDiz RolW. Va., IIIII Mlao

!&lt;NOT IN EACH

ANOTHER

MAKE A NICC:. 'SUPPER. F' "f~

Mary

TIS. A THRE;Atl
8 1111 LONG TO

CAR.PBOI&gt;.R.D

ENJOY ~LF, K.ll:&gt;.l1LL

Jma Shiflet

a.j,lrenoo Arche&lt;, O&lt;ehanl Lake,

4.

ARM AND TIE
THREADS TO
ENDS OF

-':::===-.J

r

NOT-ILL
PLA"{ IT 8'f
MA,"{

~tltV.ttfVt..

I

!

may call at the fwlor-

at IIIII' lime.

I

l

g!JICLE SE!RON SLATED
12 llrd.o ol tile

a..-d.l

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· · ·~ --. -

.

--

--

Now You Know

SPACE

CENTER, Houston
A ghost.-like Oaw
knocked out part or Apollo 7's
electrical system briefly today
but the problem ~peared licked
lliKI
the spaceship's
crew
gave earthbound viewersaun1que
televised look at lite In orbit.
If the electrical system

INTO THE CASTLE GATE·
HOUSE AND TAKE POSITIONS
ICY THE PORTCULLIS AND
TilE sMALL INNER' DOOR
OF THE CDURTYARO I

(UPl)

THE GRAVE.

-

Causes Concern
collapse wus caused by a terns failed. Systems specialist
failure had oont.inued, Walter
..
We
sound
casual now," said
Cunningham quickly Qlcked a
Schtrra, Donn Eisele and Walter momentary electrical overload.
commal\ier
Schirra
in reporting
switch to reactl.w.te the~Q.
Cunningham would have been Their remedy was to turn ofJ
tho
dlmculcy
to
groond
control.
The failure triggered the
rorc·cd down prematurely. In- tans in one or the moonshlp'e
"We
were
not
then."
ship's master alarm warning
stead, they received routine o:Q'gen tanks.
Grourd controllers, mcur
system
which lights a bril!rt
The problem developed shorf...
clearance to fly Into the fourth
while,
went ahead with the
red light on the astronauts'
day of the moonshlp's 11-da.Y ly after midnight when the
Olght
plan
alll directed the
space(raft's two alternating control panel and sourds a
orbital trial run.
asl.ronauts
to
prepare ror the
buzzer In their headsets.
Controllers believed the power current (AC) distribution aya---

THOSE SCREAMS WILL SIGNAL ~HO TO
TRIGGER THE PORTCULLIS, AND FOR PEDRIO 10
BOLT THE GATE SEHIND THE RASCALS AS
THEY R'USH INTO THE GATEHOUSE I

by Leslie Turner

CAPTAIN BASY
T~AT

AA'7

TIN'I TIM

~ORGOTTEN

V-'IE6... t
GUE55 rr'LL
TAKE TIME!

NO! DOijlT FORI!rET HE
HASN'T YIOPIKED WI"Ill ~OU
FOil 'IEAPIS, POLL'/!

rr------....
ALSO, HE" NEARL'I I!ILIND .. ,
LIKE AtE, DOLL'I! IT WA~
l!rOOD OF 'IOU TO COAlE.!

TOM, COULD WE
~TA'"'-ALL 0\IER,

AW, DOLL'/.,,''1011 DON'T WANT
A.NEIIRL'I BLIND HU,8AND AND

NEW OFF1CERS - Here are the new orn.cers or the Knotts School of At~ctioneerlng Alwnnl
Association elected SUnday at Royal Oak Park. Frort row, left to right, Golden Casto, Butfal.o. W.
VL, vice president; B1ll Brown, Athens, presidenti Calvin Vinson, Marietta, secretary-treasurer;
back row, left to right, the executive committee, Gene Acton, Frankfort.; Junes Carnahan, Racine,
outgoing president who presided over Sunday's reunion, and Charles Wltbeck, Columbus.

A SI6fiTLES5 OLD ELEI'IlANT!

~IN!

r\IE, TOM!

Auctioneers
. ~-

RIE&gt;HT! I PHONED
.W'~EE .. ~r RELEASED

C.OULD

B~ ~IND

OF ~NSATIONAL!
BLIND TPIAINEI'\
ANO BUND

T~E ~TOPIV

TO THE PilE~,
ANO TWO 816 1~ !i~OW~

WANT 10 e&lt;lOI'o YOU!

NO! TOM, We'P.c TOO
OLD TO 60 IIA&lt;:.l'i INTO
S~OW 81"t! AH'IT~IN6
·COULD HAPPfN!

:

~EA~SNS 1

'"HAT DOLL)' IS DEAD .• AND TllAT

I'M HEll TIIIIN !iWI£1'1!

ELCPIIANT!

0

,,

0

"

i

GAS
-,

JIO-I'J

MODEL

'JOY&amp; 1 'DON'T LIKE.
iH'E SOUND OF \HAT
"&amp;DOD OLtH'A';I-liONEO

.

·-·

.

I CAN'T REVEAL

'.
.(

..

At Royal Oak

~.··,

;

FIVE CEf:fn.
.

~

.

nation's first "live" television
broadcast trom an orbiting
spaceship.
Cunningham said he was
ready for "show business" even
though he guessed, "I'll have to
get dressed ror it." Cunnilltham
and the other astronauts hid
again Sunday taken off their

heavy S4-POOnd space suits and
donned their lighter white cover
aUs to work ln.
Eisele ooted that the telecast
was scheduled for 10:41 a.m.
EDT, about the same time
ApoUo 7 was to participate in a
test with an Apollo moon
landing spacecraft. radar unit on

the ground at White Sands,
N.M.
Radar Practice
The grourd radar was to try
to 11 lock" on Apollo 1 in much
the same way one on the moon
would track an Apollo mothership In lunar (J:'btt before
blasti~ olf [or U!e return.

MAY~ I~ 1 'STAY AWAY LONE&gt; ENOUGI-\
-GHE'LL FORGET TI-\AT PAP:T ABOUT WORI&lt;!

•

7

,._

Ah.1111i of the Kootts
School of Auctioneerinl
net Slllday at Royal Dak
Park In Meigs County. Alllllni SJ11nl the aftermon relalirt tllllr experiences in
the auctioneerlrt field. At
5 p.m., women of the Dorcas
United Metllldist Cluch
100¥811 irto the pilk with a
smorpsbord. Then can~~
the hijlliaht as each all:·
tioneer clllnted his way
tfrolth two sales to his feiIGW aiJ:Iioneers who were
also the jlllges in selectil1
the cha1111ion. A$1 bill was
aiJ:Iionad for $Z d11irt the
c:ocqJBtition apparently lfOYirt thai Banun was riaht.
On the ca. IBIII, perhaps,
it lfoved that the quality of
auclionearlna at Slllday's
affair was first class. The

WOMAN AUCTIONEER - R. E. Knotts, operator of the
Knotts School of Auctioneering, chats with Hazel Witbeck, c~
lumbus, the only woman auctlonner present for the reunion.
Mrs. Wttbeck proved her ability during the auctioneer!~ competition by selling a dollar bill for two dollars to a fellow auc-

llcmoer.

strata 501111 of the hi&amp;hlilhts
of the reunion.

T. Agnew, said promised to help Americans
&amp;mday Nixon would not debate who are "totali.Y unfitted" Cor
becau8e he didn't want Hum- big city life return '"from
phrey to use Wallace .. as a when~ they came. n
aprlngboo.rd"
In a falling
Like
the Democrats, he
campaign.
Another Nixon adviser, sen.
Edward W. Brooke, D-Mass.,
aaid Nixon's decision not to
debate Is lhe rlgbt thing
politically as long as he is the
rrootrwmer in the pesidential
race.
Nixon, resting in Key Biscayne,
Fla.,
oontinued to
remain aloof from the argument
over whether to debate. In his
only campaign statement 9.mday, he called for a revitalized
NATO alliance as the key to
peaceful dealings with Russia.
Wallace meanwhile unveiled
his American Independent party
platrorm while his nmning
mate, Gen. Curtis E. LeMay,
advocated dosing the port of
Haiphong
and bombing of
military targets in populated
ueas or North Vietnam.
Wallace's 14,000-word cam.
palgn
document
was little
different than the Republican
and Democrat platforms. It

Gov .

Spiro

proposed bigger Social Security
payments, and like the GOP, he
promised to tie automatic Social
Security increases to rises in
the cost or living.

The doporlmenl of Meigs
Coont;y Slerlll" Hobert lfl.rtenbach Is lnver;tlgatlng the brellking and entering of a Melgo Coonty school and also the Chester
Car Wash.
Both offenses were reported
to the sheriff on &amp;lnday, apparently having taken place sometime overnighl
The SalisOOry school was entered rrom the roor where a

Autos Collide

hatch was pried open. There waa
evidence that most rooms or the
school had been entered but as
d this morning, nothing was reported to be missing.
The Newell Car Wash at Chester was broken into by apparently the use or a tire tool. Keys to
the coin boxes were stolen but
nothing else was reported missing there.

LeMIQ', In Washington, called
lor lncrearrod bombing and
closing at Haiphong Harbor as a
form of .. arm twisting'' to get
results in Parts negotiationfl.

HALFTIME AC"nYITIES AT KYGER CREEK- Mary KaU, daugltter o! Mr, and Mr.. Oliver
Kail, was crowned Homecoming Queen of Kyger Creek High School during halftime ceremonlea Fri·
day night. Miss KaU was escorted by Tom Reese. Senior attendant Karen Shamblin is on the far
right. Her escort is Buddy Moore. Senior atteniant Sue Grlm is oo the letL Her e&amp;cort is Earl
Thomas. others in the court were COnnie Stidham. daughter of Mr. an:J Mrs. Dan Stidham, junior
attendant. escorted by Chuck Bradhuryj sophomore attendant, Emily Grose, daughter of Mr. &amp;Ill
Mrs. Roy Grose, escorted by Jim Swisher, and Rosalie Reese, daughter or Mr. aod Mrs. Hennan
Reese, escorted by Roy Thonwson. The queen reigned at the homecoming dance after the football
game. The senior class sponsored the dance which reatured a band, contests and door prizes.

students and alumni atterKled.

White Scores

News ... in Briefs

In Rutland
Cars driven by Samuel A.
Gibbs, Jr .• 48, Rutland, and Earl
L. Aleshire, 21, Rutland, colllclod at 10:30 a.m. Saturday In
RuUand, the Slate Highway Patrol .-.ported.
Offtcers said that Aleshire,
headed west oo Rl. 124, attempled. to pass the other car just as
Gibbs was making a left tum
Into a driveway. There was hea·
vy damage to the Aleshire car
and moderate to the Gibbs car.
A passenger in the Alelhire

car, Beverly Abbott, 20, DIQ'ton, IJUflered a minor injury, was
oxamlnad by a local physician

accclfl1liiDYin&amp; pOOtos, taken
by Brb Hoeflich, delliO&amp;

WORK

By United Press lnternaUonal
Hubert 11. Humphrey continued to press his presidential
_.,.nta today to maat him In
a national television debate.
His top campa.lgn aide,
meanwhile charged "secret
negQtiations" were under WIQ'"
that coold give Richard M.
Nixon the electoral votes of
third party candidate George C.
Wallace in the event of a threeway daadlock.
Lawrence F. O'Brien, Humphrey's
campaign
manager,
aaid the secret talks with
Wallace were at the root pt
Nixon's contlrlled refusal to
appear
with
Wallace
and
Hwnphrey In a three-way
televised debate.
Nevertheless, Humphrey anOOI.Ulced &amp;utda.Y he has reserved
time for such a confrontation on
CBS next Sunday nlglrt and said
U neither Nixon nor Wallace
was willing to help pay Cor it,
he would find the money
hlmselt
There was no indication that
Nixon would agree to debate
elt11er Humphrey or Wallace.
Nixon's running mate, Maryland

Probing B &amp; E's

Hold Meeting

,,

J

Hubie Still Pressing for TV Debate

GALLlP(lLIS Sl"!H)llL
tary School Safety Patrol,
faculty sponsC&gt; rs, Hoy Sprag
· Taylor, Gn.:&amp; Fife, Billy Btice, Jim Wood, Keith She
John SaHaz, James Cunnin
George llaiTelt; Second r(

t M AFRAID

l_

Apollo 7 Encounters Brie Power Problem

ANf~~YOOI.LPEPRO,
. ,_.., WI GET

1

r•

MONDAY, OCTOBER

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Partly clooey and ~
warm tDdi.Y and toolgl1t wltb loolated showera thla eYerdn,g. Low
tonight !rom tllo 501 to the. low
60a. Tuesday, partly cloudy and
little change In temperature.

, --1

l)pt,oled To Tlw lnlere•ts OJ The Mei~s- Mason Area

VOL. XXI NO 121

kEVIN PLANS 10 CREm
THE GHOST OF THE OLD
MAN, DON QUIXOTE, WHOM
MAiroOC THINk'S HE,
MAfl.fXJC, HOUNDED TO

Weather

ent1.

at

e

The United statea public debt
ln 1967 was more than $326
bllllon, amoontlng to approximately $1,638 for every man,
woman and child ln too nation.

•

•

•

CHAMPION - Mr. and Mrs. Gene Acton or Frankfort are
pictured just after Mr. Acton was named ch~ion auctioneer
amoag the alumni or the Knotts School or Auctioneering following competition among those atterding Sunday's reunion.
Selection was •sed on salesmanship, personality and chanl
The auction - with member&amp; st.pplytng and selling the merclwrdlae - nlaed about $40 lor the alrmurl treasury. 1\PproxImatal¥ 50 - · IIIII tbelr wlvoa attended the ..-..,

Has 3 Cases

You11 Alway:
Furnitu

Tornado Win

George C. Wallace has released the platform on which he seeks the
American presidency. It calls for purging the Pentagon of those who
"fustered the 'no win' policJ in Vietnam."
Accusing politicians of practicing ''minority appeasements as
the country burns," the platfonn fourxl U1e nation "beset by riots, .
minority groups, rebellion, domestic disorders, student protests,
spiraling living costs, soaring interest rates, a !rlghtening increase
In the crlme rate, war abroad. and war ror perso:w.lliberty at home."
WASHINGTON- FORMER PRESIDENT DWIGHT D. Eisenhower
observed his 78th birthday today at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, where he was recovering l'rorn a series of heart attacks.
A private family party at the hospital, with his wile, Mamie, and
son, John, also kicked off salute to Eisenhower Week proclaimed by
President Jotmson.
Hospita.l spokesmen reported Sunday that the five-star general
1 'is doing very well'' under treatment ror his seventh heart attack

and released. No charge was filed.
The patrol investigated an ac. Aug. 16.
cldent at 8:4ll p.m. Saturday on
Rl 279 In eentervtlle. Officers
COLUMBUS - SEN. FRANK J. LAUSCIIE, IJ..Ohio, has bollsd
aald !\Yivla G, Lane, 46, Ma- his party to support Repablican IUchard Nixon ror President. Scripps
100, W. VL, was driving Into Howard newspapers reported today,
lire village. bacame coniUoad and
Scripps quoted the Cleveland Democrat as sa,ytng, 11 ] shall cast
&amp;Riiled bar brakes. The Lane my vote for Mr. Nixon, because of all 1M candidates he is best equipcar orlddded Into a deop ditch. ped to lead this country out ollts present crises and into a sense or
'lbere was minor darnase· No national purpose and strerwth."
Lausche will make his decision public in a statement to be rewas injured and no ebarge
waa rued.
leased "in a few days," the article said.

Mayor Legar

(J

By unired Press Internatiooai
FRESNO, CALIF.- W!TH 22DAYSLEFTBEFOREthe election,

Two Times in

LOS ANGELES- IlEA BENADERET , THE VERSATILE character actress who starred on television as the keeper ol a rural hotel at
"Petticoat Junction," is dead at the age or 62.
Early this year she underwent five weeks or radiation thenpy
for lung cancer &amp;1: stanford Medical Center at Palo Alto, CallC.
Miss Bena.deret, whose show business career spanned four decades, was In great demand aa a radio actress because of her vocal
characterizations, before she I a - tbeparto!Kate Bra.lloy In 1963.

W ASIIINGTON- PRESIDENT JOHNSON RETURNED to his desk
Two defenlanla were ftr&gt;rd and
o third forfeited a bond In tbe at the White House today after speRling the weekend at the LBJ
court or Pomeroy Ma,yor Olarles Ranc:h In TOl&lt;ls.
Lepr Saturdl,y night.
Gerald MeDanlel. Pomeroy,
was fined $35 and coati on Lntoxlcatlon charges and Ce&lt;ll ElaalCOLUMBUS (UPO- Blda will be replaced west ol Ohio 13.
ateln, Pcrneray, ftned $5 and bo opened here Tuescla,y by the
C05ts ooclrargesoflalllngto ,..,.. Ohio Department ol Hl&amp;lrwayO
The second project .., for bid
pcy to the CU"iiJIIand of PomorOJI for two proJects.
Is o relocaii&lt;HI of .4-mlle ol
offtcer Carl HyaaU In reterelll:e
One will be Improvement at Ohio 124 In Meigs County. Elllto a parking llckeL Forlaltilw a .06-mlle ol tbe Ohio 22f In Hur- mated coatls$120,000. The road$23.70 bond on charges or """""'" oo C&lt;u!l) ,._ an estimated eoat way, just eaat ol Racine, lo to
bw was Olio Farley, MarJaYIIIe, ol $93,000, Two brlclgos are to be wldoned lrom 2f to 36 feet,

Touchdowns by Halfback J"un
White one rt1Jl8 of 8 and I yards,
a six.pointer by Terry Proffitt
on a 11 yard reverse play and
the recovery or Haman Traee
!Umble by Dan Scott In tho end
zone gave the Southern Tornadoes their 24~ win Friday nlglrl.
The Tornadoes of Coach Bob
Ashley scored in each of the
periods against the hoat Wildcats.
It was Southern's second victory of the grid season.
White, Fullback Junior Brewer and Senior Mike ~wart were
singled oul lor praise by Coach
Ashley.

The rrtatlstlcs showed Soothern picked up 189 yards rushing whlle H-T had a minus 19
yards. Southern got 87 yards
m passes compared to 44 for
the hosts. The Tornadoes completed 11b: of 11 passes and had
two Intercepted wlrlle the Wlldcata compl- ...,., ol IS and
also had two Intercepted. Southern "" 14 first downs and H-T
6. The villtors were assessed
ISS yarda In ponoltles and Hannan Trace, 35.
Details or the game were not
available Cor &amp;mday's edition.

SQUAD SUMMONED
The Pomeroy emergency squad
answered caD at 1:05 p. m. Sunday to the James Garnes residence in POOlero;y. Mrs. CU.s
was tran&amp;ferred to an amt.d•nce
IIIII lOken to Holzer HospitaL 9re

was

1

motarn111 patient.

To Open Meigs Project Bids

I
74:
GIVEN

GAVEL - BIB -.., left, Atlrona, president oloct, Ia prosenled tile p&gt;el of the
Airunnl Aarroclltlcrll by Jamea C&amp;r11olran, ~ president, who beorlod tllo Sunday allllr
II ilo1ll 001&lt; i'll"k.

-

..

MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
ADMISSIONS SATURDAY -

None,
DISCHARGES SATURDAY Nono.
AD!oiiSSIONS SUNDAY - Nono.
DISCHARGES SUNDAY
Clorence WUIIamL

•

Kimberly Johnsoo, 14, escaped serious bJ..jw.-y when she
re11 [rom the upstairs window
ol her Locust St, borne In Middleport rr1ternoorr. Middleport emergency sq.aadmen
said Miss Johnson was leaning
out an upstair• window shakIng a rug when oho IIJII)BJ"Ontly lost her balance. Sle fell
from the window and apparently turned a complete somersault, landing on her feet. :!ile
was taken to Holzer Hospital
for oba:ervaUoo and treatment.

Alma Shiflet
Dies Sunday
Funeral servh;es for Mrs. Alma Shiflet, 75, IW 1, RutlaOO,
who was dead on arrival at Holzer Hospital Sunday morning, will
be held Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the
Martin Funeral Home with the
Rev. David ~eets officiating.
Burial will be in the Gravel Hill
Cemetery at Cheshire.
She was born at Short Creek, W.
VL, orr Malf 27, 1892, tbe daughter of the lateJacobandJosephine
Hilton and she hod Uwcl In the
Pt. Pleasant area wttll movi~to
RutlaM in 1956 ard was a member of tho Rutland Church o!God.
She was also preceded ln death
by her husbud, Lemuel.
Survlvocs include two sons,
Jack. Letart, W. VLi Hue, Columbus; slx sistera, MrL Mar·
pnt Dearlen, Chu:lerrton, w.
VLi lreMArcher.Orchu'dLake,
Nlclrllan; MoQ Dlekeraon, and

Mro. lrlccaD, of Las
Vopo, Ne-; llrL IDu Rd·
Uno, Wheell~Vo W. VL, IIIII Ylaa
lled&lt;y.Shlllet, llllla,llllll Dpolrllc:hlldren.
Frlerrrla mo,y c:all ot the "-"
a1 home at 111\1' ~

CIRCLE SESSION SLATED
Clasa 12 Cll"cle ol tile ~
Me11rodlot Churdl ol !0 I' 11 t
wlllmeetW-IIlllr,~· Ct.
at ap. &amp;lllbo ...,.-., ,.. ..

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