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                  <text>I - 'n. tlallv Sentinel, Pomeroy·Middleport, 0., Friday, October 18, .~968 .

I Replies
. ... =a::!"'"''W%"

Nearly 100 New Scouts Stalnaker
Signed Up In MGM In Vietnam~
_lttporta Crom trur districts trict «10rdlnator. It Is apectIn U\e Tri-State Area Council, ed that 25-30 ..... Cub Scoot
Boy Scouts or America, show packs and Boy Scwt troops will
that almost 600 boys became be organized aa the result of the
Cub Scwts and Boy Seoota Tues- recruiting drive.
clo.Y nisht as part of the School
Boys or their parenta wbo
Nlgbt lor Scwtine recruiting pfO.. could not attend their local School
gram, The M-G-M District con- Night tor Scouting program may
tributed almost 100 boys.
get information about beromlng
The tinal tally ahoulc1 reach Cub Scouta or Boy Scouts b_y
at least 1,200, according to
calllng: In Gallipolis area Clarence 'Thompson, M-G-M Dis- Carl Cameron,
ln Rio Grande area - Rev.
Robert Mussman.
Early American
In Midd!ElJX)rt area - John
Decorator Items
Fultz.
In Wooden Ware
In Pomeroy area - Pat Wood.
The M-G-M District wishes
ePLANTERS PLAQUES
to thanh all Boy Scout aod Cub
•SPICE RACKS
Scout volunteer!! who helped ln
eWALL SCONES
this recruiting effort.
ETC.

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

LOCAL TEMP
The temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Friday, with
llght raiD [ailing, was 63 degrees.

,

FASHION IDEAS

Given By
Dudley

::.:
~. -5 Torey llalnoker, em of &lt;':
:~
Mr. and 1\lrs. HariOIY Stalnal&lt;or, I!!
funi610Y Route 3, hal arrived ::;:
:~:
ln Vietnam m a year's tour of ~~:
du1y with the u.s. Army.
COLUMBUS (IJPI) - WDlard
He Ia aboard the Corpla Chrta·
II Ba.r 9llp aa a helleoplertru... P. Dudley, odmlnlalrstor of the
&amp;lata Bureau ol Elnj1loymlr!t
miaalan mechanic.
~clallst ~or Ia a 1965 Servleoo tndll' roplled In IIIII·
graduate of l'l&gt;mei'OJ' lli8b S&lt;hool geotloos modo by live youth
and graduated from the Oldo worken on lmplemontlnil pro.
Slate Barber College In Colum- 8fllllS In help reach all dlaad·
lxla before entering the umed vartapd youths In tho state.
Dudley commented on each of
forceain November, 1966.
the
provtwo sugpstlono, then
He .-nront basic tralnbli
eddod
some of his o1m.
at Fort Bragg, N. C., and later
••PUblic
reereatim haJ tradl
was staUmed at Camp Eustis,
tlonslly
beon
regarded so a toVa.; Columbus, Ga., and Corpua
es!
problem,"
lludltiY osld. "To
Christi, Tex. Ills wUe, Teresa,
tle&lt;UI'O
lll!lllOrl
with atote lUnda
lives in Pomeroy.
would
reQllre
new
leglolalloo."
~!allot ~er
talked
He
said
to
secure
new leglalawith his parents by abort wave
tloo
the
grwp
r:i
live
youth CO·
radio about a week ago, Ills adordlnatoro
should
plon
to get
dress Is: ~...s Terry D. salnathe
matter
before
the
next
sesker, RA 51876940, Co. A, lilt T,
sloo
of
the
General
Anembly.
C Battalloo (ACFT Molnl. Dept.)
The coordinators included:
USNS Corpuo Chrtatl Ba.r (SGU);
James
A. Roseboro, Columbus;
FPO San Franclaco, catlf.,
H&lt;ll&gt;eri
D. Lewis, Dorton;
966()1.
Clalck Buckenmeyer, Toledo;
Walter Beach, Cleveland llld
Rl chard Nsai, Akron.
On of the -lllions
made to the atato, Dudley osld
he saw "no reasm for the state
. . . to sllocate t'lmds I&lt;&gt; the clt .
les to •create' more employment

:§

483 Papers
Supporting

Dick Nixon

NEW YORK (UPI) - Rich.
ard M. Nixon has the ootspo..
ken edltorlsl support of 483 dally newspapers, five times more
than Hubert Humphrey enjoys
but fewer than the former vice
president had when he ran for
the presidency In 1960, Editor
and Publisher magazine said
Thursday.
The weekly magazine of the
newspaper and adVertilingindlstries said the newspapers Blij)porting Nixon have an aggregate
elreula- of 20.7 mlllloo cop.
les. Lined up for Humphrey are
93 dally newspapers with total
clreulaUon of 3.9 mlllloo copies while 10 daily newspapers,
rive of them in his home state,

said.

DudliiY'• suggestions Included:
-Each ~ local commun~
lty be enoouragect to dovelop a
comprehensive plan ror moblll·
zatlm of tbe community's entire
resources for worldng with the
dlaadvantqed,
-Better coordl.natJon ol resour cea In each conunwrlty to
get the most dectlve use.
-Inventory
and
provide
guidelines for utfllzatlon or Ill
supportive services necessaryto
the rehabUitatlon of U!e dl.s-

are supporting George Wallace
ol the American Independent par ty,
Charging grou neglect of mty
E&amp;P osld 280 dally nowspa.
and extreme cruelty, H e n r y
pero with 9.4 million ctreulatloo
l'llelpo, Racine Route 2, has ftl.
were still on the renee or mained lllit tor divorce from Vivian
taining an independent stance aa
Eileen Pbe.lpa, same addreas,
c1 Oct. 15, when a prellmlnary
In the Meigs eouncy. oommon
report was «&gt;!llllfied on editor.
pJeas court.
Ia! suwort lor Ute prosldontlsl
In the same court. a divorce
candidates. E&amp;.P makes the suractim
filed earlier by Esther
vey every election year.
Virginia Borger against Wends!!
The magazlne nnt lnqutrles
W. Barker was dismissed.
to Ule 1, 749 dally newspapers,
asking editors or publishers to
CALL CANCELLED
check of! candidates to whom
Tba Pomei'OJ' lire deportment
their papers were giving edltorJal endorsement. C-ards were re"AAlved a eall Tbursdlly alter·
111111 coming back lhls week, E&amp;P noon when a car was reported
on fire at Hidden Lakes. Howsaid.
Per, the call was cancelled beSQUAD SUMMONED
fore the department arrived at
The Middleport emergency the scene.
squad answered a call Thursday
ntglll In the home ol Alma Simp.
NAME CHANGED
aoo In Bradbury. Mro. Slmpi!Otl,
At an ol!lelal board mooting
who had become Ill, was taken to
this week the name or the RaVslerano Memorl&amp;l Hospital
cine United Methodist Church
where she was treated WJ.d diawas changed to the Wesleyan Unlta
eharged.
ed M - I l Cbureh.

FileA for Divorce

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

.,

''

'

PIGSKIN
_!

OR

' •

POCKETBOOK

The set with the "works in a drawer"
Here ·s a Co lor TV wit h the works you can see. The
wo rk s cons1st ol 10 tubeless plug -in min i -circuits
thai prov1de solid-slate dependability. and fa st. economica l at -home service . Quasar
the se1tha• stavs
ar home working
.. II 82 Channel UHF/VHF

Color
WERNER RADIO &amp; TV.
Middleport, 0.

By Death Of K. A. Leikari
dlotdeal _., 1111
W..........,
af4' In
a
ltau·
PT. PLEASANT -

Of all the ways to be sure of "scoring " of
achieving "goals" in this life-such ~s a
special trip, higher education, new car or
hom~-probably the surest way is to open
a Savmgs Account here right now! We'll keep
it growing with interest, as earned. You keep
1t growing with deposits every month or
payday.
Start saving here NOW!

POMEROY.
NATIONAL BANK
POMEROY

RUTLAND

Serving Meigs County for over 96 years
Member Fe:lerol Reserve System

Optn Friday Nights 5:00 to 7:00

Kemeth greo In . .

Arvi Lelkorl, t3, of 928 23rd
91,, Pl. PIPI!I!It, AU doad em
arrival at Pleo- Vallllf lloapllal 'llwtredl,y lflernooo ll!ll'ertng an - • heart littack at Ida homo.
Mr. Lolkorl had been adrisor fit Elplorar Poll 281 fit Main
S1raet llapllot Clltreh for three
years. Under h11 actf.ve Ieader.
llhlp the unit ·had grown to 45
membon. For their Wtatandlng
Job cm!nB lho eollapoe of the
&amp;lver Bridge the Wilt llld thslr
adriaer reeslved the R~ Re118rVe Award from the National
Council of the Boy Scouts of

America.

I

from~

Uldvar.
1N1111d AU llrot
In tbo Air Corpo Ia WOJ'Id
war n IDd wao a of the

..........

or

CHARLESI'ON, W. VL - Tht
IUr.obma of &lt;N of the vlcllma
of the lllvor BriAI80 "AAll-lnlo

the Old&lt;&gt; River 1111 7eor 111m
filed aftmllllmlJbellllltep•n•
the Clov- Plaia l)oolor lor on
of t h e · - · - -

111111&gt;.

(Cootlnued from pap 1)
Downtns, Thoodore T. Reed,
Theron John8011., Helen RattiJum
Cla&amp;&gt;l&gt;, Pauline Atkloa, Betty Milhoan, Dolly Hayes, Virginia Thoren, Gladys Morgan IDd Vllma
Plkkoja and honorary truatees,
Mrs. Edna Stewart and Mrs. J,
W. Herscher. Wallace Bradford
and Mrs. W, P. Lochary served u the nominating oonunltteo.
Following prayer by Mrs. Norma Lee, Mrs. Paullne Atkins,
secretary, paid tribute to the
1418 A. v. Howell, long • time
presltlont of the aoelet;y, IDd the
late John W, Herscher, a vice
president of the group IDd a [ormer reatdent who gave thouaando of dollars to Melgo County
organbatlona and churches. The
eoclety received IOJI\e $30,000
from the late Mr. Herscher

towards tile constructioo ot tile
muii4JUID.
Plana tor the rnuaaum u drawn
by Everett Ra,v John...., formerly of Pomeroy and oow of Columbus, were dloplayed.llobstetter spoke on tho alto loeatloo
wldeh ha.s .,.., glvon by I h e
Molga eouncy. Commloalooers.
Two of the commisatoners were
presen~ Robert Clark ond Ralph
Wardon Ouro. The lhlrd oommJsll.oner, Dick Karr, was Wl~
able to attend due to illneas.
During a dlscusaion it was
pointed out that aome 32lJ books
belonging to tile late Mr. How.
ell have been turned over In the

bookmobile headquarters. T w o
members of the society Indicated
that Mr. Howell had stated on

118Veral occasions before h I s
doath that he had planned that
his hlstorlcal poasesa1ona woold
be given I&lt;&gt; the Molgo C o u n t y

Musewn.
Following the soctoQ- meetlne
the trustees reelected olUcera.
They are Hctlstetter, president;
Gordon CaldWell, flrlt vlceprelldont; W. P. L&lt;H:hary, second
vice presidenti Howard Frank,
lhlrd vice presltlont; Pauline AJ.
Idna, secretary; Dolly Hayes,
treaiUl'eri Norma Lea, chapl.aini
Oleva Cotterill, musician; Beulah Jooes and Bob Hoeflich, pubHdoto, and Betty Milhoan, di-

(IJ~U.S.

SAIGON

VletDam

Jackie
(Contlllled from 0
mlleo from llhaca, the homo
loland ol the mythical tllysaeo.
N.....,.. llld photosupltoro

PTA Committee

tried
"' In
- time
"' Alltlravlda
from
Athena
for Mrs.
Kenlecb"'s arrival never made
II. Oftlelalo of Olympic AlrwiiY•
asld lhll!' had no planes or
helleoptero available. The army.
baeked Greek government llrst
The Exeeutlve Committee of prorntaed In make two mllltary
the Middleport PTA today Warn· planes avallable for nawiDlen,
ed paronto of an Impending dao- then reveraed the doclolon,
ger In the eommunlt,y.
aplalnlng IIIIIY c:oulm't arrive
The committee atatos thll Ills In time.
reiJably reported that 011 S8Va
Kemedy !biers
eral occasions in the early eveMr1. Kemedl was accompaning recently an lD'Iclothed male nied m the filslt from Now
has aweared in several parts of Yori&lt; by her children, Caroline
Middleport. So far, the miD .... and Joltn, her llep!ather llld
made no attempt to accost anya mother, Mrs. IDd Mrs. Hugh D,
one. He has, however, lteiJped Auc:hlneloaa, and the K1!111ledy
from behind buoltes IDd appor. sisters, Patricia and Jean.
ently other hiding places to ''Pat'' Ia the former wile of
!rlglton women and girls.
actor Pater Lawford. Jean is
The Executive Commltteo of married 1&lt;&gt; Slophen &amp;nllh.
the PTA warns parents tobeparOnassla, wearing a dark auit
tieularly on tho alert for the oafe. and red tie, a... In "'
ty of their children. This, es- Andravlda from Athens with his
peclslly, with the oPJlroeeh or slater, Artemlo Garoulalldl,
the Halloween season when they ohortly bo[ore the Komed!'
are more apt to beoo the str&amp;ets. plane landod.
So far, no one has been able
Reports lrom the )&gt;llrl city ol
to identlt.r the ol!ender.
Alttoa, Oll)&gt;Oslte ll&lt;orploo, osld
preparations for the
were being -rvloed by 18SCHOOlS CLOSED
Meigs ColDrty schools wert~ year-old Cbrlsdna OnassJa, his
closed today so that teachera daughter by his llrot marriage.
arrived at Swrplos from
could attend a meeting ol the
Meigs eouncy. Educatlen Asao. Parlo about a week ago.
Onaalla osld no llrm hod
clatloo belns hold at Eastern
been sat for the wedding.
lli8b S&lt;hool.

Issues Warning

Appoint

Smash 165
Sampans In
All-Out Raid

Federal-Mogul Will Build Plav
GALLIPOLIS - ()[lleialo of
Federal-Mogul Corporation, De·
troll, maker of auto porta have
amouneed CO!IIIIl- of plano
for the constnu:tton of a new
plant here, aeoordlng In Gary R.
IIJort, presldotll ot the Galllo
Comly Community Improvement
COfporallo!l.
The flellit,y will greatly ln-

!IOY7

Tht t.mll,y of Mol\'ln A. cu.. "IWill" - . . Coul QIOrd
trell fit Pl. Pleo-, lllod lAIIt -~ llld Arm7 ...,,..._..
llo AU a mambor of t h o Ia f8dtral &lt;Ob1 ...... '1'beiY lll!lllo a Commtttdll I I 0 • •
Amorleon ~eal Sodel1, tbo ed the Plain Deolor, tile Foreot n.Ha lqJPIJ ~ llld
Amerleon Sodoey of Cltemieal Cl1;y Publ.llhlttg Co., J)boCioe:.. - - 11$ _.till · - ·
E1181naar• llld Hal emploYed at &amp;1ller Rlehlrd Canra,y llld ,... and . . . . . . - . . ...
Goocb'ear Plant at Awle Grove p&gt;rler JoleP!...,._ aold ~.
U I IIOIIior dovelopment engl.
The llllt """ ID AtJa. 4 or.
Tht ra1d lala "VIet Coal
neer.
ticle In tile Plaia Deolar lim· lake'' 155 mlloo . , 'I wwt ill
~rvlvors Ia addltloo In the
dOl' magazine doplcled Ute CID· Sailoa 'llwtredl7 .... cmo of
latllar lnell... the widow, Mro. trell 1am111 ao 111cl..., baek- · tho - · amt •eee..tul IDd
Am Bumnston Lelkarl; o n e 'ft'l1'd. dr.tJ, unleellaa hlllbJlllea 'P''"el ln-c:camtr)' naval cpra..
11011, Mlehoel Kemolh Lelkarl, llld cantrell himself · - tlone,.. u.s. lllllltorJ .............
II home; 1110 cleu8hlora, Pamsla Httle to Hve lor" llld 1181 an tero Ald.
Am llld Krlatal Uao Lolkart, tsnoram dnllk.
Far tn lho north In · both at borne; me brother, Welbite IDID Red war IUJlPiloo,
ko Lslkarl ol Rlversldo, Csllf.
Amertean Martnea llammed
FUDel'a1 aenteesaretentattvedolp IDID tile Nortb-81uth

He was one ot three a d u 1 t
leadon aeOOIIlpiiiY!ng the Trt •
Sbte oontln&amp;onl of Scwto In Philmont Ranch In N"" Mexl co lhla ly oehecluled for 11 Lm. Slturcta.Y at MohraGvMO Funeral
eummer.
He was chairman at MaiJOfl Home by the Rev. Gary Brown.
eouncy. Heart Fund eorly thlo lltrlal Ia "' be at Akron, Ohio.
Friends may call at the funer.
year and on Sept. 20, was placed m the board of directors of al hOme alter 7 p.m. today.
the Wool Virginia Heart Fund
Asi!IOciatlon,
Born at Fort Madl1011, Ia.,
Dec. 5, 1924, he waa a son
Nikko Arvl Lelkarl who s u rvivea, and the late Gertrude Rupp! l.ell&lt;ort.
He received a bachelor's de-

wlthln the city government."
"Thla seems to be a proposal
ol 'make work' that Js not jus.
tined in toda,v'a economy," he

advontaged.

flies Libel SWt

Area Residents Saddened

w-..r

a.e

erease produclioo

-r

Dom!lllortoed
'llwtreda7 IDd

Zcmo

O&gt;MZ)

-

333 lllelll far tbo blaoot

IUD iD the ['nmm!mfp arllllll.

In tbo delta, .........,.,. .....
tile

thraa

50.-~mr,

hlab-

_ . . Navy "lwlll ran the liiUIUI of Vlot CQJ8
guardo

lala ''V.C. lake" , .

otroyed 6f - - hula llld
15 M11lpiUlS llld clamapd 61

buta llld 25 Tht bloW bit tile heart (){ tbo
CollliJIUid.at MJ!Ij)"' -.,ply Hue
11'0111 tho lOUth..- proriDee
Ia South Vle1Dam to buo •. _
lOUth of SaJp llld ammd the
oapltal.
Allied oolcllers prowling Sol·
p'o outoklrto found 1110
I!IIOl'rllla orma caebeo-ooo wiU!
rifles IDd ammunition, tbo
with
100
amirockets, 75 !'OIIDdl of aploolvtl
llld -

4,000 b!llleto.

I

I

:l

Zorltle, Cheater

:•
••
:
••
:

.P olice Cite
-Driver into

City Court
GAlJ.IPOLIS -

Donny

C,

wu cited In Gallipolis Municipal
Court Oct. 21 on a charge or
taUure to 1~ Within theauured
clear diatance alter an accident
It 9:45 p. m. Friday on Rt. 7,
three and seveJlootenths miles
oouth o[ Cheshire.
The Slate lllghwQ Patrol saki
that Morrow attet11&gt;ted 1&lt;&gt; pass
another ~ car driven
by Floyd Ktdd, 39, catlettsburg,
Ky., aaw another car ~and
IWened to cut ..ck Into his lane
of trawL Morrow Qlied hio
brakes llld hlo ear slltllnlo Ute
..ek of the KJdd ear.
No one wes inJured. There was
minor dtunago to the Kldtl car
llld heaVY dlmage to tho Mor·

FRIDAY THRU TUE'lDAY

OCTOBERIB-23
NEVER A DULL
MOMENT

(Color)
Paul No1110011-Geo.

HON. CLARENCE E. MILLER. SPEAKER

""' ear.

The patrol lave1tiallted a .. .,

6:00P.M., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23
POMEROY ELEMENTARY SCHOOL

oad accldont at 10:15 p. m. Frl·
dlf em Rt. 160, elglt&gt;-tontha mlle
,...ttt ot Rt. 55t. No ooe was !~&gt;­

Jured.

. omeoro roported that Larry
19, Columbus, lost con--

Burke,

trol em the wet hltlhwo.Y 1 n d
off the rlalrt olde ol the

TICKETS AYAILAILE AT
COUNTY RECORDER'S OFFICE
WEBSTER AND FULTZ, ATTYS.

r&lt;JOtL HPdediGUth,NitlaVar..,y,
. i8, Rl. 2 Vlllloo, ...,. tile ear ol!

U.

•.lflo

$5.00 PER PERSON

(Color)

Pd. Pol, MY,

I

h.,.,..o,y, aJKI aeoordlng to

potro1 loot coatrol llld her
sllt1 orr the rood llld otruek
·ilto Burlra ear. There wao minor
. . . _ In both eon.
~. Tbe patrol elted Nltla Vorney
Jll Gollla c-ty Juwnlle Court
·a~~~rc~o.y o.t.
charp of
~ In exeeso for road condl·

-

Kemedy

AND
Rollert Slaek-Elks Smtmer
"THE.CORRUPT ONES"

GAIJ..lPOLIS City police
cited Harold E. Hannon, 19, or
205 Chestnut SL, to Gallipolis
Municipal Court Oct. 21 on a
charge or reckless operation after an accident at 9:30 p.m Fri.
di.Y In the 900 block or First

.•
••

u ... •

.,
*""'

JIM LOHSE

Lohse Named
Director of
WTVN Radio

Ave.
Pollee said Hermon, headed
northeast on First Ave., lost
control or his car. The vehicle
went otr the lett side of the
street, struck a stone wall and
went onto the lawo, or the Wayne
Brown residence at 934 Fiest
Ave.

Juveniles are

Fined Saturday
GALLIPOLIS - Gol1ta County Juvenllo Judge John w. Jlow.
ell lined throe )lvenlleo Saturday m State lllghwQ Patrol lraf·
fie charges llld lolfelted bondl
of 1110 othera who !alled to tijl·

POMEROY - Jhn Lohse, tormer host of WTVN Radio's PtW•
lar •• Lohse J...ounge," hu been
tamed program director Ill
pear.
WTVN, Columbus.
Fined were Nlda K. Varney,
Ldlae, a native of Pomeroy,
16,
Rl. 2 VInton, •10 llld oosta,
joined the stafi of WTVN Jan.
IPeed
1n excess for road a n d
14, 1962 and has since becmne
weather
condltlnnl; Brendl S.
or» of eeotral Ohio's boot known
Hemby,
16,
Rt. 1 Bidwell, .10
and Jq~siar redia peroonalltleo.
and
ooota,
mille
voblcle, and
In 1963 he was nuned music dJ ..
Stapllon
T.
Simp
.....
17, Raclno,
rector.
$10
llld
eolia,
epeedlna.
During the past three years
Forfoltlng bcmdo were Rd&gt;ert
he was chosen by BlllbeartlldagH.
Burillo, 16, Golllpollo, •18,
azine, In ita research aurveya,
failure
In obOl' an autotnatktraf.
as most _.mr In the Columbus
tJe
signal
and cat\'ln F. Dorton,
area for Ida ability In motivate
16,
Cievelllld,
if23, lpNd'na:
Hstenlna audleneeo In roprd In
hit recordlrws. He recentl)' received e special sUver record
for brlng!oa tile bit 10111o "A
FOOT LACERATED
~ for SUaan" to naUoral
GALIJPOLlS
- In 0, Ex·
lame.
liDe,
~.
ICII
~
Mr. and Mra.
1n MB.Y or 1988, Mall• Hltlh
Daniel
J,
Exline,
HI.
2 Wall-,
School chose the song "Maroon
was
admitted
In
Holaor
Modleal
llld Gold". 004Utbored by Jim
Center
at12:05
p.m.
Frldo,y
with
and hls sister JenDiter, u the
1
14eeratlon
of
lho
left
foot.
He
official 1ehool olmamalor, Jim' a
wu
lnjurod
Ita
llll!ll1ed
parents, Mr. ud Mrs. Harold
Lohse, llvo at lOll Wolfo Drlw, em tilul. HII COIIdltlon II report.
ed .. good.
Ptlllleroy.

•abat 11' 1 H

I'

Maoleo IDd Puet1o BleD, ...
mtnoriv ........,lhlp - - .,

....,_,-........,uoatnAl&amp; I'+
llldJ..,an.

Reedsville
Man Shot
POMEROY - Robert Ralguel, 40, ol Rt. 1 Reedsville, wu
taken In Veterua Memorial lloop!ial lor treotmmt of 11"''II'OIIIldo llld then jailed aftor he wao struck by a lllltltllm blul
In the legs early Sllllrday morning.
Ralguel was hit by a ~ blast allegedly tired by Norman Evans, 32, also ot Rt. 1 Reedsville, outalde ol the EYau
home at about 2:30 a.m.
Evona told Meigo ~v illerll! ROOert c. llartartbacb llld
Proooeutor Bernard V. Fultz he tired at Ralgool aftor Raljpoel
came to his home and struck him In the tace while he wu Weep,
EviUI&amp; and Ralgue1 are neighbors,
Evana, ooon alter the lndleont oocurreo!, telephone !ilerlll Hartanbach and informed him of the shooting.
114rtenbaeh summoned tlte l'l&gt;moi'OJ' Emergency StJtad, Dep.
utles Manning Rouolt llld John Tllllo IDd Proaeeutor Fultz llld
rw~hed to the Evans residance. The aherlfr took Evans into cu ..
tody, and &amp;a IKJIA(Imon left for the hospital with J!ai8uo1 before
the other otficlala arrived at d:Je EYana home in another car.
The CoolviUe Emergency unit was also at the aceoe.
Ralguel, following treatment, was taken to COOIIIf;y jail where
he was booked on an intoxication charge, an old dldavlt r1 cb-

There was minor damage to the
lawn, wall IIDd car. No one wu
Injured.
That was one of three acd•
dents Frldlf bring!n,: tho IUlllUOl
accidert total to 314 accldentl
in the first 292 days of the year.
Pollee investigated a mJnor
baeklne aecltlottl at 12:37 p.m.
Friday on Court St. , at the lower enl ol the city park. Ortlcers
aald Roselyn B. WhobrE-y, 38,
Addlt100, backed Into a parked
car owned by SherJ L. saunders,
10, Rt. 2 Gallipolis. There· waa
minor damage to both cars,
Reported to the stadon was an
accident that occurred at 3:30
p.m. Friday in the parking lot
at the Gallipolis Daily Tribune,

825 Third Ave.
Pollee said a car driven by
Harold Erwin, 50, Crown City,
backed into a car driven by
Hm1er E. Beckett, 68, of 420
Hedgewood Dr. There waa DO
dlmage to tile Erwin ear and mJr
nor dlmage to the Beckett ear.

Two Couples Ask
Divorce Aetions
&lt;iALLIPOLb - Two coupleo
lljJpliod lor dlvorooa Frlcta.Y In tho

ollleo

of MarJorie Rinehart,

Clark fit Court, GoJJla County
Common Pleao Court.
Linda Rldlardl Harvey, Rt.
2 l'ltrlot, llled a petltloo lor a

MARAIJDER HOMECOMING - Nancy Httrrls, dlu&amp;hte&lt; of
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Harris oC Middleport. poses fl'lth a bouo.
quet of roses and heir escort, Cheater Roush, of P&lt;meroy, aft..
er she wes crowned Hmnecoming Queen of Meigs High School
in ceremonies before lhe Meigs-Wellston game Friday night.
Min Harris ls a senior.

Frey MGM District
Scouter of the Week

POMEROY - A bigger, more challengtrw owortunt.t;y taa called
Walter K. Stewart, adminlstrtttor of Veterons Memorial lloopltol,
am he has accepted Ita
stewart, 50, administrator of Veterans MemortalslnceJ.....,..
1966, said he will become administrator of the 11~ l..aneuta'Fair11eld Hoipltal on Nov. 16. His reaignatl.on wa• tw:ded to the
Veterans Memorial Ho!IPital Beard of Trulteea Wednuclly rQtt. It

North Gallia
Classes are

Being Held

GALUPOL1S- TheNorthGal111 Local Sehool District Is spon.
oaring an Aclllt Basic Education
program for the relidant.s of all

'lbroush oooperatlm of loeal
1cllool tllatrlcts or Gsllia eoun.
Qr there are clasBeB In progress
at North GoJJla lli8b S&lt;hool, K,y.
pr Crook Higb S&lt;hool, Hannan
Traee llllih SeMol, ond Southwoatem llllih S&lt;hool. Eilrollment
to date ln the classes is as follows:

boys in New Hliven.
He has not tound time, but

taken time, to gi w to boys unaelllshly and he has stoa1 tall
In the eyes of boy&amp; in New HI,... lor the paat 17 yearo.
Hla wife Glenna ha.s been •
den mother eight years.

Jack entered acoutl~ IS u[)en
n.d" in the lloll of 1961 with 1
,_ CUb Scout pack, tho Drat
In New Hawn, No. 256. Ro was
Den n.d for a "'""Je of yeoro,
thea became eub scout master
aJKI
had three 1001 who were
nont atiii -otlng cldld
ab
ac::outa,
11 they reached the
In JO!IW'Y, Sho oliO setlks all1110111' and cuBIDtly of the eldld. rflhlage.
Frey became scoutmaster in
Mary
Romey, llled a
1956
of the Maoon troop. He
petllllm far a tllvoreefrom Gorno
C. Vllltere, Lopa, W, Va., on eateoaiw training at all the
--fltiJ'OIIliOiillt ofduty. 11110&lt;1al eventa he waa able to
'l'baf...,.. married AtJa,17,1935 atteod while eub muter, taklntl
IDd bavt &lt;N minor child. She along all the Den Methero who
aloo - a cuBIDtly ol the cMid. wanted to go.

ln.J..Publlc l)aJIImottl ~tllrclo.y.
• ,.. ~ _ , _
He added: ''Mr. stewart's move fO f.ailC.alter.FairlleJd J1a 1lfCiao!
dert\tl OW&gt;&lt;Jrtunillo' for him, tlemonstratlni hfl tina IU&lt;Cell liKe U
an administrator. His move also is 1. most regrettable acttaD. tDr
VeteraruJ Memorial as he will be dltl'lcult to replace.'"
Nolan said perhlps one of the
chief achievements of the past opened under Its pnseat Baud
three years tmder Stewut's ad- or Trustees, as a DJnoproftt hotministntion has been the devel- pltal, October 24, 1964. SIDt:e
opment of smooth cooperation Stewart succeeded Charles ~
between members oi the medi- out as admlnlotrator eor]l In
cal staff which is made up or 1966, Ve......,. Memorial doctors or osteopathy and medl· pltal has increued Its '"hUent
eal doctors. Wlth R. R. Pickens, dQa" an avenge ot 1,000 •
D. 0., Chief of Staff, this coop- nually; lnereased tho lllliXIor fit
eraUon has achieved listing or eQioyees from 74 to 88 and lothe hospital by the Amerltan creased the numberof.bedaavallable to the public ~om 46 to 51.
Hospiial Association.
Hospital operations have per~
Stewart himself told t h e
mltted
the spending of $22,000
Tlmes - Sentinel he considered
in
capital
1mproV8llleiKs. The
helping bring about this cooperapayroll
through
September, 1968,
tion ooe of his most important
already
hu
exceeded
the _pay..
cortributions in almost three
roll
or
all
of
1965.
In 1967,
years at Veterans Memorial.
there
were
1,820
admlalllD08,
There are nine physicians on
The Stewart administration hal
Veterans Memorial Stall There
also
been a time or growth ror
are over 30 on the starr or ~
two
hospital
auxiliaries. Memcaster • Falrfteld, which recent·
bership
in
the
Veteran~ Memorly was made an open start
Ial
Hoopllal
Auxiliary
hu growu,
Veterans Memorial Hospital
as haa its reaponatbilitlea. Mrs.
Faye Sauer Is president. The
Junior Auxiliary, the Votenna
Memorial llospital ~
ers, has experienced lim1lar
growth.
Mr. Stewart, a resldert ot
Syracuse, will move to I ADCII
ter lC)Oil taking 111 hJs ~

Goll14 Coun17.

NEW HAVEN - Jack W, Frey
Ia the M-G-M District's "Scouttr of1he Week." Jaek is the rea..
aon 'fro(lp 256 is still serving

divorce rrom Ronda Harvey,
Bethol, on groundo of gran neglect ol duty llld tllllrtml8 cruelty. Tilof were married Dee. 31,
1963 llld ltave one minor child,
the plsintlfl 14 PfOI·

-or,

v-··

Stewart Will
L eave 1'II
•
'.I_ etgs

Tr\l.!lllOJ

In Reckless Operation

the assault indictment. A demur-

Ol'

.......raeturiD hctlltfp In
France, ~ Jtall, At&amp; " "
in

was accepted wlth regreL
"Mr. Stewart's resignation na a gtUt surprise," u1d HDifard Nolan, president of the Veterans Memorial Hospital Boart1 of

Police Charge Driver

Morrow, 18, Rt. 1 Galllpol.la,

OCT. 18-1&amp;.20
•• COOL HAND LUKE"

entine

or

MEIGS GENERAL Hosm'AL
ADMISSIONS- None.
DISCHARGES- Ncoto.

eraldp

(Continued on Page 2)

questions, which, by the W8¥,
were quite lrrelevant, he refused to anawer the same, thus renewing his objection to testily,
despite the waiver, andwasthere'!11"" . .lhr~ed with -.npt .
~~~~.r!!ILJ!\!I!I.J!llt.~.•,..l\! .1!!."'1'/9. liB.: , •.!Jl'l~I~!'I.,IW.~.,-·
~~~ John w, BurlUe, Jr., gree riot and tuso agiJ'av'l'lie Opinion o:ontlmi8d: "Even . r:i eaurt 'I&gt;Y11ii"'Pi'61ecatlng lit18, jUld 11M Jon!iy, 20, of Utlllllt. The eaaeo are [)Otltllq If lhlo ware oo, IDd the court lome¥ If he did not aniWer the
Goli!Pollo, In tho July 14 Incl. trial.
should lind that he did Wldor- (JiesU.on. I eonsJdar this, and othtlont- 1n wldch Pem - e . 16,
Judge Mlteball In his doclsloo aiiDd tho privilege oulllclently er circumstances involved, aa
Chelldre, reoetved a broken jaw. concluded that even though the to waive Jt, whal the defendant belni violative of the defendant's
. BurlUe, Janey, MJke Dldfy, witness (BuriUe) was instructed later on ln the oourse ot the constitutlmal rights, and t o r
(Coittlnued on Page 2)
·1a, and Gary llu[fy, 20, Gslll- obout his constitutional prlvUege, grand Juey was aoked eerialn
poll a, and a filth person, lndicted oeeretly, were Indicted by
the September term grand jury.
·The Duffy brothers were abo
indicted for aggravated assault
'and Jeney for assault.
BurBle and Janey llled pleos
In abatement I&lt;&gt; the secmddogree
riot Indictments and Janey, In

••
••
•
•
i• Unti
!•
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.:

TONIGHT, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY

rsle of nearly $2SO,OOtl,OOO.

Today the oompany employes
ty of Rio Grande College llld
lllProdmately 13,000 people
Ohio University.
Allllating tile CO!liOratlon In within ita 13 dlvlsloos, and has
the eeleclloo ware the Ohio De- 16,000 stockholders who o w n
velOf)lllent Department, tho Co- more than 5,000,000 shares r1
lwnbia Gas &amp;Yatem of Ohio, the Its eommon Bloch.
Federal-Mo!l)l) hasgrowntonaCOlumbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Company IDd the CJC of Uonal and intematt.onal prominence as the only Independent
GoJJla County.
Myron C. Sames, general man- prod.lcer or all major t;ypes ~
ager of the Haller Dlvl olon, said bearings In the United statea. It
Federal-Mogul Is most interest- ia also a leader in developing
ed In the posslbUitlea offered technitJ.Jes for the fabrlcatim ot
by the new facility.
parts rrom high )&gt;llrlty metal
"The GelllpoUs plant will pro- powders, creating combinations
duce parts by a new process IDd densities of materl&amp;lo oot
we have recently perfected. obtainable by standard producThese parts are coosiderably tion methods.
·
strmger than those manufacturJn add1 tlon, the company• a 30
ed by methods generally used domestic plants mamracture oll
in our industry, and the market seals and O~rtngs, gaskets, grindpotential tor them Is virtually Ing wheels, cutting tools, and
unlimited," Sames said. "Since aerospace tuel system con,ponthe !acUity Is to be built to our ents and protective garments.
own specifications, we expect to These proWcts serve as origire.allze
important savings nal equipment and replacement
through greater efficiency."
parts toe avec 2,000 customers
The G&amp;J Auto Parts Co., with throughout the natim - includstores in Gallipolis and Pome. lng all the automobile and truck

GALLIPOLIS - Gallla Couo- rer was flied to Janey's plea In it was (~.lite obvioua from the
ty Prosecuting AUornoy John A. abatement to asfiiWit and no do· teatlm011Y of tile witness on the
~ling said Soturday he ·Intends eialoo has been tiled In that ease. wltnoos siiDtl, llldatalotertlme,
to tiJli)Osi the doctaloo JUd&amp;e
Gary and Mike Dutry pleadod that be did oot really unclor'olancl
Thomas W, Mitchell to quash oot gullt,y upon orraignment to the tltll Import llld nolure of his

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•
•

•:wNDRiwf· u&lt;~

availability of manpower, a fa~
vorable economic climate, the
attractiveness of the area aa a
plaoe to Uve and the proximi-

John Epling Will Appeal Quash Action

art, Sarah Cooao, JO!IIIo Now!blrlll!' KID&amp; WlnnleDaf.

~er,

MDGS THEATRE

Goa•• I• Wild
Admlulon 15c &amp; SOc
SHOW STARTS 7 PM

Federal-~! listed BOVoral
rea1011a for choosing to locate
ln GaU.(poU a alter screening several possible locations in southeastern Oldo. II pointed to the

~

roy, Ilk.. ··•·•.
parta olncb ·
Federal - h.
had Ita beginning .
mill II1JilPly ...... •
TbroUgb expansloo and 1.
OUI acquilftioo&amp; and DMn ger ..
has grown to be the natlon'a
332od largest ln&lt;llotrlal oorpor.
atim, wWl a eurrentannualsales

28 PAGES
THREE SECTIONS
-VQ-:--l.-:3:-:N-:-OJ:;'
-~
. 3"'8:----P-O_ME_R,o'Y
""·MID
c::::-:D
c::-LE=P:-:-O=RT::. ------::
SU:-:-NC":::"DA'C":':Y,-OC==-ro=-a=-E::R:-2::-:0:-.""'19"'68-:-=------GAL-U-PO_US._PT_._P_LE_AS_AN_T_ _ _' P'"R"'/"C 'f'-:1:::0-:C::-:f:-N-:T::-::S

Women of the &amp;. Paul Church
1erved light refreshmoots at the
clo,. of the meeting.

Hlway Heclr.ler•

MB.Y of

Devoll!d To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

Rlgheo, Cheahlra.
DISCHARGES- Rlehlrd 9te!r.

:• El berfelds In Pomeroy
••
:
Are Open
••
: Friday and Saturday Nights

the corporation'• Holler Dlvt·
aloo, wldeh bas pioneered In
the fabrleatlon of parta from
powdo.ted metal. Tho Golllpolta
plant will inOOJJ)OI'ate and expand upon the very lateot Jrn&gt;.
vatlms and technology In this
rslatively now lleld.
An area on Route 7 on the east
Bide of town ha.s been selected as
the plant site. This Is lmmedl·
slely adjacent to the new ChrtoCraft plurt, near the new GallipoHs airport.
The primary structure will
cover 62,000 &amp;CJIB.I"e (eellllldwlll
be dostgned to allow lor expan.
&amp;!oo toapprodmatelythreotlmes
Its original sJ ze. The plant wf.ll
Initially employ about 150 per.
sons who, with the W&amp;:Ceptioo of
a rew management people, will
be drawn tor the inunediate area.
Design and constructioo will be
done by an OhJo firm to be chosen (rom bids currently under
review. Construction is tupected In begin almost immediately,
with manufacturln8 ~rations

tmts

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Hosm'AL
ADMISSIONS- Charles Karr,
Pomeroyi Helen Molden, Rutlllld;
Thomao ll&lt;hoonover, Ru11anc1;
Oaa Boggeas, ~acuse; J o h n

loy, WOllam
Tamolttll .

of

+

i

rector.

Dick Van Dyke
Dorothy Provine
DISNEY CARTOONS,
For Whom The lulh Tell
Flvaro &amp; Cleo
Feudln' Fivhtln"

SHOWS SITE - Gary R. !bart, Preoldont of the Gallta Cotmty Conmnmlty Jot&gt;ro,..ment Corporatim, points to the locatlon or the site on which the Federai-MoKuJ, Corporation, Detroit, Mich.,
will build ita new GallJs&gt;olls planL The new plant adjacent to Chris Craft on Eastern Ave., which wUI
en_,ld'y 150 persons, will be constructed by lhe Don Kfns Conatruction Co., Jackson, and construe~
tion Ia scheduled to start In the next 10 days, with completion scheduled for May 1969.

c~~~~:clty

ochellded to start In
1969.

JACK W. FREY

CUb seoutlns Ooorlsbed lor
several yeara. Healsohadbooth1
11 aU the Soouj,.().Rimao.

He -

• troo,p "' Con'() Ar&lt;rMtlnued on Page 2)

North Goll14 11i8b Sehool, 18,
with Roaemary Cuter as lna
llrudOr; K.Yier Creel&lt; H 1 g h
St:hool, 33, with MelvUlo With•• u fnatructor; Haman Trace
lll8h S&lt;hoo~ 2:, with HODIJ' DU.
lon u lnltruetor, and Southweltorn lll8h Sehool, 22, with Lots
!lboetaulnolru-.
Cluae1 are offerod In Amorlcan hi.Jtory, arithmetic, En 1Uah, and ..-ns, The purpooe
of tbo 114111 baole etloeatloo P""
rram Ia In ,111'011111'11 - n t • lor
the GrttWale ~ValtliiC:O DeveJ.
opiiWU examination which Ia
OQJiYalonl ~ • blglt diploma, aold Howard - . . . .
Cooi'dlnalor.

there.

Eleven Win

Degrees
POMEROY - Eleven Molal
am.

Countiana were IJilOIIC 703

cferts receiving o1eanu at tho
end of the summer quan.r It
Ohio Unlverslzy.
The 11'010&gt; Includes Mildred
Ohlinger
Bailey, -~
Route 1, muter of scieace; Mn.
Betty J, Fultz, Middleport, ......
elor ol sctenee In edneatlon;
Thoma• L. Kelly, .....
maoter of edtteltloa; KaroD 111...

Elhlfti\Y, MidtDreport, muter of
ert.a; JcN RedDYiaD, Jr., lllddltiiOI'I, maoter of•ndon;·llll11 E. Sehaa~ Mlddl_.c, .....
or r:i ...,J&lt;Mim; J"!lflh . _ WU..

dermuth, Ylddl..... tw bi'CII'ol
......... Jclul-.
PCJIDilW, mastw of "'te ._

Je.._. Beeele, Racl- ....,.

~~

.s

ol adl!catlon;
-·
lleoPe. Had..., of ....
eatton; Bom1e 9d 't 111111r
- ·
Racine, }lachelOI' al ..1 "-.
ud John M. n a an..s r
Bootie 1, ......, ... of ........
.,.tneorlng.
.

�. ... .

···~· ~!

'

..

3 - Thr ~ Times - Sonth.,l, Stnlsy, October 20, 1966
:::::::::::;:;:;.;:::x.:.-:m:::«-::::.&lt;:.::::=:::::::::::c::::::x::

:! - The Sunday Times~ Sentinel, Sunday, October 20, 1968

22 Defendants Fined by Court
Fifteen defend- der, Ellicott City, Md. , $27.50,
ants forfeited boOOs and 22 o!h- spct.--dir~; Dennis A Sharp, Amesers were rined Friday in the ville, $17.50, failure to dim headcourt of Meigs Counts Judge lights; John F. Ca.le, I...oog Bottom, $l7.5ll, failure to display
Frank W. Porter.
Forfeiting bords were Gary slow mo\'illg vehicle emblem;
Hinkle, Chanute, Kansas, $250, J imm} D. \!arvc), Columbus,
driving while intoxicated; Bobby specdin~. $32.50; Esl·um MesJ. Yost, Bidwell, $17.50, defl'C·- ser, Kermit, W. VIL, $27.50,
tive exhaust; Steve J. Kohut, pas sitlJ2: without as~.ut'od clear
Cleveland, $27.50, passing witt._ distance; Blaint-' Kendt:.•ll, lluntout clu.r distance ahead; Uonald i~&gt;ton, w. \'a., $27.5D, spct:ding;
H. Hall, Pt. Pleasam, $17. 50 , Donald E. Nerr, l'hillit:othe,
and Herman R Holcomb, Pt. spcedifl!:, S27.50; Mary M. NelPleasant, $17.50, bot11 for fail- son, \ inrent Boutc I, $::!57,;1!1,
ing to wear protective equipment driving while intoxicated; llaron a rnoton·yde; George II. Sf\!- uld L". !\elson, \'inl'cnt Houte I,
int..: txicatiun, $27. 5U; Lawrence
Lowery, Chesapeake, $27.50,
speeding.
.John \, sa1·gcnt, l'omero~ ·
RouLc l, $5 arx.l l"os ts, insel·ure
load; Howard llubcr, Heeds ville,
assault
and battery, $:.:5 and costs
TONIGHT ONLY
all:! five days in jail witl1 the eonfinement suspended and the de"COOL HAND LUKE"
fendant placed on probation for
(Color)
s ix monthl-1 and ordered not lo
Paul Newman-Ceo. Kcnncd)
anend any ~chool arfairs ; eosts
AND
were al so assessed Barber on
Robert Stack-Eike Sommer
reckless operation charges; Hob"THE COH.RLIPT Oi\E""
crt W. (Juillen, Mason, $1U and
(Color)
cos ts, stop s ign; Lowell L. N ei~
meyer, Pomeroy, stop sign, $Hl
arx! costs; David E. McDonald,
Pom eroy Houte 4, $30 and l"Os ts,
speeding; Dwight W. Milhoan,
Pomeroy Route 3, unsafe \'&lt;! hie·
TONIGHT th'" TUESDAY
le, $5 and costs; James P. SnyOCTOBER 18·23
der, Pomeroy, overload, $75 arrl
WALT DIS.NEY
costs with $50 suspendt-'d; Dennis
NEVER A DUL L
{l.
'\yer, Cheshin• Haute l,$75and
MOMENT
costs wilh $5U suspended, over' Te e h..,kolor)
load; Gerald C. Eblin, MiddlcDic k Von Dyke
poli, $52 and cos ts , $37 suspendOo rQtt.y Pro ,.. ine
DISNEY CARTOONS ·
ed, overload; llarold Newell,
For Whom The Bulls T.,ll
Chester, $10 and costs, speedFigoro &amp; Cle"
i~; Hoben H. Eastman, PomFeo.~din' Fightin'
eroy Route 3, $10 aocl costs,
Hiwoy Heckhtr~
Goon 15 Wild
speeding; William J. Jividen, McA.lmiuion 85c &amp; SOc
Arlhur, $10 and costs, left or
SHOW STARTS 7 PM
center.
POMERO'i -

•·:ASON

.,
'

'

DRIVE·IM

MEIGS THEATRE

.,

Othen:i fined were Herman A.
Boberts, Pomeroy Houle 4, $1U
and rusts, misuse offarmplates;
Douglas E. llaltllill, Cheshire,
derectivc brakes, $5 aocl costs;
Myrtl~ Q. McCwnber, Cheshire,
$10 and costs on a stop sign violation; Donna L. King, Pomeroy
l~outc '1, st«J sign violation, $10
and costs; Ralph B. Wells, Long
Bottom, $10 and costs, fidicious
registration; Mit'key R Hutton,
Hutland, $5 and costs, unsafe vchide; Ka)· D. Lester, Lowell
$15 and costs, speeding; Earl M.
Fry, Dayton, $150 and costs,
three days in jail and 60 days
suspension of his driver's li~·cnse, driving while intoxkated;
William L. Patterson, l,omeroy
Houle 2, insecure load, $5 and
t'ost s; Don H. Hill, Racine Route
2, $25 and eosts, $15 suspended
overload.

The!\ Prohed
G \LLIJ'OLIS The Gallia
Count;y .'Sheriff' s Department Fri Ua,.v afternoon investigated the
theft of a throttle and gear box
off a 16-foot I\it Boat in the Ohio
!liver off the park front.
Sherifrs deputies said I h c
items were valued at $75. The
boat belonged to Ronald ~ring­
er of 124 Portsmouth and was
tied up at the park front. The
sheriff's departmllnt is invcsti gatin,g.

Dartmouth won the

eolle~iate

pulp \"HUH 1it lt' 'r.\"iHI

:1

leap

.i

Training c:on b~ obtained
only through a c:oll~g~·
l~v~l program.

Steve McQueen

ANormanJewison Film

(New Quarter Beeins
·December 10)
Write or call for catalog
and information .

COLOR

IJd

lo 1

U""

Umted Arhsls

·::;,1l~

CARTOON

(·

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS
COLLEGE
36 Locvst Street

Gallipoli5

Uoak, 24, Parkersburg, W. Va.;
William Rio Parsons, 30, Gallipolis; and Basil W. Stout, 34,
Ashland, Ky., all $18, speedlngj
trol cl1argcs were Richard A.
Uecker, 21, Hio Grande, pas sing Monorc E. Cassady, 27, Inez,
Ky.; Elmer L, Harris, 48, Ripover a yellow line, and Kim I.
Palmaffy, 20, Rio Grande, speed- ley; and llarvey L. Mullins , 48,
ing. Both cases were continued Casl.alia, Ohio, all $23, spee&lt;f.
ing; Hussell E. Toole, 39, Ashto Oct. 22.
ville, $28, speeding; and WilJudge RobertS. Detz, in other
liam Qualls, 32, Gallipolis, $3!-1,
patrol cases, fined Robert K.
._, '
Wallace, 19, Norwalk, $10 and . no highway use tax permh.
costs, defective . exhaust; Jack
Arnold E. Walser, 34, GreensE. Pickens, 32, Rt. I Bidwell, boro, N, C., pleaded not guilty
both $10 and costs, derective t.o a patrol charge of driving
exhaust; and Boyd M. Jones, 44, without tile assured dear disRL 2 Crown City, $20 and costs,
tam~e and the case was continued
intoxication.
until OcL 22.
Forfeiting bonds on patrol
Wayne l Shoemaker, 42, Rt. 2
charge ~ were: Clara F. Reynolds,
Gallipolis, was fined $10 and
34, Ht. 2 Bidwell, 818, derective costs on a city police charge of
exhaust; David W. Colbert, 23,
spe1.-ding.
Bethel Par k, Pa,; Frederick A.

TIFFIN CREDIT
JEWELERS
BENRUS
Sea lord

TODAY II LC
• Dress Watch
• 17 jewels

$25.00

EASY
CREDIT
·'
h

I

LOOK INTO THE
FUTURE
TASCO
Binoculars
LOOK TO
TIFFINS
FOR PL. ANN ED CREDIT

from 24.95

Emperor

Onyx Rings
STYLE ANO DESIGN
Credit for this G ift .

-

Fine • Handsome

from 19.95

2 'P"~ ...
WITH AM·FM RADIOS
EASY TO OW~
WITH CREDIT

from $64.00

GALLIPOLIS - Applying for
a marriage license Frida,y In
the office or Gallla County PrObate Court were Roger D e a n
Vanco, 22, Gallipolis, farmer,
and &amp;!san Tharon Houck, 18,
Gallipolis, clerk-typist.

COFFEE
PERCOLA
For Real
Coffee
REAL CREDIT
FROM

9•99

NO TRICK!
TEFLON COATED

COOKWARE
USE

TIFFI~

CREDIT

FOR THIS TREAT

$14.99

Moni s.-Bowman

POWER SAWS

You've read
abou1 it in alltht'
mag,uine~ . You' ve
~f'rn it on tell"vision. Now
rome see it in ntion. The
0Jtdinder Calendar Watchband
by Speidel. II puis the whole yea1
on your wrist- and then some.
H.mdsome Twht·O-Fle." styles.
St•inless steel, $8.95. Yellow
gold-filled, $11.95. for any man.
For any gift o&lt;usion.

LAY·A·WAY TODAY
FOR
His Christmas at Tiffins

1HE HOME OF INSTANT CREDIT-OPEN AN ACCOUNT IN JUST l

TIFFIN cREDITJEWELERS

LES WILLIAMSON
IILL WELLMAN
416 MAIN STREET' POINT PLEASANT, W. VA.

I

(Continued fnm Page 1)
rowhead in the summer for a
week's camping, missing only
once or twice when OOys were
not intcresled
Frey also had a camp near
Ne~ Havtm £or TroqJ 256, loaned by Central Operating Company, where the boys enjoyed
camping spring, summer and
rail He has two sons who are
Eagle Scouts, one also belonged to
the "Order or the Arrow."
He is Shirt Engineer on operations, Central Operating Co. ,
belong to the Lions Club, which
sponsors the Boy Scoot troop,
His sons have been OOyorkl scouting age for rour years.

ASK TO WED

BETTER THAN A BAG
OF TREATS

Bewitc:hing Sounds

STEREOS

Waterproof•
17 jewels
Stainles~ steel
case
Leather straP

from $12.95

~
ATTACHE CASES

or

'
·
·
,

Beeauae ot his high aeore,
&amp;niUt, according to Prlndpat

'
'

pol Court. I stgned the chargeo '

against these defendants.
11 ( chose to take the eases to '
the grand jury, however, so that '
not I alone but 15 good respecta- :

ble cltlzens could Inquire Into •
the matter and determine whether ;
they thought there should be

ARREST MAllE
GALLIPOLIS The Gallta
County ~erifl"s Department arrested Richard Rupe, 36, of COlumbus, Friday on a flve year
old warrant charging non-sup.
port. The warrant wat!i signed Oct.
22, 1963. Rupe will have a hearlng in Gallia County Common
Pleas Coort.

Timely Quotes

'•

•1

"

·~

Ameriun people, regardless
of party, is fed up with our

quadrennial

political

quarts of. strawberries Frl-

Field Coordhator ror the o h 1 o
Omce or EcoDOIIIlc On&gt;ortunill'.

Hollinger is

Speaker to

rtculum Wednettela,yevanlfllal the
llollloo 7, Southoaotorn 0 h t o

School Prlnctp.lo AaooclaUM meetJrwatJackiOIIHijjh

School
N.

High

School, Gallipolis. who wao

Ronald R. Calhoun
Candidate for Judee
of the Common Pleas Court

on the above Items could be ' ' high

IIW were read II¥ Ed Stewart,

•••Iotan! Sdtool,
prlnctp.l, GoUla """""
Galltpolia, ....
'I
and III&gt;Pl'Ovod.
\

-

I

High

~Hourer,

Jdm Worlltlfllton &amp;IIIIIUIICad
theA would be a North Ce...-.J
Aaooc:latlm meet!Jw Nov. 14-15
at Zanenllle, at the llolldl,)' Ifill.
New criteria ror hl8ll ochoola
.tbat will co lnlo ellect next Sopt;.,.ber wiU be dlocuaoed at !hot

• 11tt next mMI!rw waa HI for
:Jan. 29, 11119. Plaal ...... ella: caaoad to 1... lnlo the poollb111-

f(.r.NV
I
q~

For toe less the above
cost (110.39) you could stock your
med1c1De c.best tills way
w.ben you buy t.be Nationally
Famous Products at Revco.

11 .

MAO PRAISED
PARIS (IJPD-Frendt ..,...
list Andre Malraux oatd Frldo,J

Mao T~ hao ......111111¥
rompl- hlo culturol prolrlan rwolutlm In Communist
China. "Mao to tho laot - '

revolurtonory Ieeder
world.'• Malraux aaJd.

ht

lhe

/5 .rd&lt;;,....:t.v
~

L,t..·

II

For only IIG.I8you could
fUI your medicine c.best tills way

Comparable ID nery way
to NaUOnally Famous Brandsucept ID price.

-

i'

... 1!9~!

FLDOR
PLANS

~· ·

1 ,...
.. /

OY!R 30
MOBILE

•

Dloploy

K&amp;K ~iiB Home Sa!es

1.10

1.09
2.00

$10.49

H the proclucta belt
ftevca Qu.lltty lAbel your

ro
\1
DISCOUNT

CENTERS

1.37
. 73
1.89

99
99
79
T1

1.49
1.37

$10.39

Revco Sale-Bleep Capsules, 428 .
Revco Aspirin for ChUdren, 36s .
Revco 5-Gralns Aspirin, IOOs. . .
Revco Fluoride Toot.b Paste, 63.4 . z.
Revco Medicated Skin Cream, 16-ol..
Revco Wh1te Petroleum JeUy, 16-ol.
Revco 12 Timed Cold CApsules, 1.28 .
Revco Cold Tablets, IOOs . . .
Revco Deodorant Spray, 7 oz.
Revco Instant S.bave Cream, 15 oz..
Revco SUper Stainless Blades, lOs
Bevco !fter Sbave LoUOn, 8 01. . .
Bevco Antiseptic Mouth Wash,l8 01. .
Revco Flip 'n Oo 8ettlq &amp;el, 1 lb..
Revco Dandruff Sb••poo, 7.5 OL .
N

I,
i.,~ I

THAT
OFFER
THE BEST
··-·
.- '· ....
..
IH MOBILE
HOME
LIYIHG.
Stop Ta &lt;lor, Look at Plan•
aod ltla~llo Hamoo On

2.00
2.85
1.45

Nytol for sound Bleep, 38s . . . .
Vuellne Petroleum JeUy, 16-oz. .
Contae for colds, 20s . . . . .
JUg.bt Guard DeocloraDt, 7 oz.
&amp;matte SUper 8.8. Blades, lOs
Mennen Skin Bracer, 8 oz.
Llsterlne Antiseptic, 14 oz.
Bead 6 Shoulders Sb•mpw, 5 oz.
Dlpplty·dO Betting &amp;el, lib. .
If 1bove ltem1 ere purch11ed at Revco's
Everydly Dl1eaunt PriCM your coal wilt be

·:
1:

675-3000
3311 J,.......... .
:tr of havifll t1t1 next DtMtlrw at
1-...:;lPt::,..l'ioa.!!'~W. Yo.
; the- Alhenl Rljjh School.
•'

&amp;ana Well.

#!D· ~'I

FO-R YOU!

uidJII.

•mMIIJW.

conventions.

If purchBs.cl elsewhete, your COli

when you buJ
Bevco Quality Products.

J

rlcultml can be enrldled and the
rroe oorvlceo oCCered b)' the Ohio
E - c o CowtcD at Oldo Unl·
verolty, ID public ocltoolo rtr tho

bar• aad one pat preallt. 1be
at!-. or the Jan. 31,11188 moet-

Wlr)'ne

Nytol for sound Bleep, 36s
Contae ror colds, 20s . . .
Gmette Super S.S. Blades, lOs .
Mennen Skin Bracer, 6 oz•.
Llsterlne Antiseptic, 14 oz.
Dlpplty-do Betting &amp;el, I lb.

U you bought t.bem elsewhere
your cost would be IID.4t.

,I

chairman, Holl!lwwr explained how tho hlp school cur-

President James Dlelil ...,.
ducled the moedrw with 28 mam-

SOPHOMORES - DON ANDERSON, R&lt;lbert Baker, Mar)' E.

an, Linda VIctoria Cardillo, Lin- Bracl&gt;ury, MARY K. BRICKLES,
da &amp;le Cotterill, Mark Couahe- TWH.A SUE CLATWORTHY,
naur, &amp;11811 Elaine Gerlach, Rog- Robert Stanley Coates, DEBBIE
er Paul Gilmore, Mary Marl111e CROW, 9lerrfe Karen Dinlusa,
Goodwin, Michael Cla.Y~Dn Gra- GLORIA JUNE GOFF, David Robham, SHERRY LYNN HAVE'\ ert Haggerty, Carol Margaret
Terry Allen Hendrlck.o, Rhmda Hargravea, Don Loren H a y e 1,
Kalhl..., Hysell, Diane M a e llemadettelhntes&lt;f1, REBECCA

These are some of t.be Nationally
Famous Products you'd want
----....1\
In your medicine c.best. L......----./

SCHULT
HAS PLANS

Pl'Oil"'D1

I om just as firmly convinced thot when o man accepts the res pons ibilities of judge that he must make his own de c isions and he must stond
by them. There may be times when his decisions may be unpopular with
the lawyers of the County and sometimes his dec:is ions may even be unpopvlor with the people of tht: County, but as I hove a lreody said I believe that
it is the Judge's duty to make honest and foir decisions and to operate his
Court in an impartial manner, and, having done this he should then s tand
by his doc is ions .

Sincerely yours,

Introduced b)' Principal James
M. Davia, Gallla Academy

JUNIORS - Danny Ray Ab·
batt, Linda Leigh Beal, !IJ.errle ~ Blackston, James Leslie Brewer, Nancy Am BuchM-

a..

The MEDICINE CHEST TEST

GALLIPOLIS- IQronHolllqf.

tlntl&lt;&gt;n, Tom Weaver, Rotler
er. Ohio Unlveralb', JPOkeoaEc:- Wolker, Steve Wroblewakl, llld
....,.lco In tho Hljjh School Cur·
Fred Wheeler.
Secondary

long, SIJaroo McCune, DlaneMcDIDiela, Reck&amp; &lt;Aye McQdre,
M;yrta !4'me McQdre, SHIRLEY
ANN McKINNEY, Patricia Diane
Mot.oon, Janet Eileen Mees, SANDRA JEAN MILLER, Cynthia Ann
MIUs, Gory Paul Mitch, KalhJo
Am Morgan, Randy Mulrord,
Elaine Mae Muri&gt;IIY. SHERRIE
fi..ENE SHULER, Wtlllam ~gene

Woods, Sandra Lee Zerkle.

JEAN HOIJDASIIELT, Klu'oHowell. J..... Dtwkl 1 - ,
Gl.ma Kif Jeyo, Mar)' L o u
K1nl. Mar7 Cero.l Pearoon, ,....
Louam Rll~. Frftlln llc!rrll
Rizer D, Paula Kq Ruu.U,
Jolat David Sobo, Brenda
hll~ BEVERLY THOMPSON, Ka- &amp;nltlt. GLENNA SPRAGUE, Nlil)' Louise Wehruna, Richard cy Avfce St. Clair, Rebecca Jane
Paul Werner.
Trlpi.U, DONNA RAE WEBER,

A Daring Discount Demonstration from Revco:

Principals

Being a Judge interests me . I enjoy reviewing and researching the
law . I en joy hear ing the facts ondgiving them careful c:onsiderotion . I am
vitally interested in arriving of la1r and jvst dec1sions, and, 11 is my ftrm
belief c Judge shovld give coreful consideration to ony matter before he
he makes a dec ision .

for you.

Robert Sldn&lt;o' - · J u n e
Marte Buah. Charleo Mlcboel
Butddrk, Tereoa Celeste Caod,
K- Chaney, Gl&lt;01 Cr1op, Palsaued tor the ftrat tfme,
tricia Jean Collins. Jameo Hyo.
Maklna a IJ'ade ot usn or a- em Crow, ROONEY KE!rH DAbove In an oub.lecta to be l i - VIS, Karen Jean Flores, Tama
on the roll were (Namea ln caps, Marie Carmer, Linda &amp;le Hackall A):
ett, Comle Hotlleld. Moria Ray
SENIORS - Jud,y J4'm Brew- Hubbard, MARY JANE JENKINer, Rutdall M. Burt, Comie Lee 8:&gt;N, Stlrley Faye Jordan, PaBachner, Cetb,y Yv- Ball~, tricia Jane K~meciY, &amp;lson !.anand ll - · "' the .... Melgtt
Setllor High School In Middleport
have been named IDihe-roll

nlng, Ginger Am Lewis, Dwight
Emmer1&lt;11 Logan, Mary A n n

Knorr, Jolm BrldCord Loltoe, Ja
Michael Long. PIUI steven Miller, Pamela J4'm Noutzltng. Roberta Jean Ord. Jdm Warren
Rltchhart, Linda Am Sllenelleld.
Georae Sdmer, James FrederJck Swatzel, John Vernon Tame-

or

GALLIPOLIS Prtncloal
lluclents who will take lhe teat
James N, M. Davis, Gallla A...S. Tueldi\Y are:
omy High School. amounced Sat.
Miriam Armstron&amp; L I a a
urday approximately 7D -.uta Brink, Dean Busb, Lonnie Bush,
will write the Prellmlnory Scho- Ndlam Ray Bostte, Jr., Sllnlb'
laotlc Aptitude Test m Oct. 22 CJ'OBs, C&lt;mde Carhart, Dana CleatGAHS.
land, VIc carruthers, Karen CoDavid Lee Carter, GARS Df. ker, Gene Celllday, llqplr Coul·
reciDr &lt;II Qddance, ,llOints out oon, larry Dol&gt;eoo, David Doy,
that the PS.\T Is opeclllcaU,y David Durham, Andra Davtclaon,
destgnod loWinl aostotlng stu- Ruoo Elliott, BUI Fol~, Fred
dent• In maklna dedttlona about Fral~, Gary Foose, Jlarxly
collep · by estlnudlng the stu- Finney, John Gooldln,JenyGooldent's ability ID work at the col- dln, Bob llout, Rick Hueholt,
lepleveL
SIJaroo Hamlllort. Ronald Henry,
Sludents Wbo have had Iltlle Pam Henry, Keith llallklna, Tim
OJIIOriiiiCII wttlt limed multiple Hemsworth, Alleen Kilgore, Dac:hatee testa or who !eel uncer- vid Kurz, Bett;y Jo John1011, stetain about Iakins ouch teSbt Cor veu Knott. Pam Maqled, &amp;loan
college admlulms may hl!!!!!l!t Markley, Tonuny MaUhewa, Jane
from Iakins the PSAT.
"
MIUs, Jolin Morgan, Tom Mor1!111, &amp;!Am Mitchell, Nancy Ma,vnard, Jack Matlhewo, Marcia Malone, .M:lke Orr, Mike Rake, David Romaine, Roy Srutdoro, Melo"' hlwl, Terry Slllndero. Dale
Saunden, Bob Scltopla, &amp;loan
Thompoon, John 'I'IIomu, Jamoo
Tltomao, Garrett Thacker, Plula
Vorultolt, Ellen Vance, Sora Winten, steve Walker, Cello1 Wldt-

Now let me soy at this point that 1 om o candida te for J udg e because I wont to be Judge.

To me, being o jvdge is o position, a respon s ibility, and a trust for
the people of the County; o position wherein the man hold ing office should
endeavor in his personal life to do that which upholds the office; the responsibility to follow tht~ low in his decisions and fairly consider the evidence; end a trust to be faithful to the people of the County .

MIDDLEPORT - One hundred

The morning session incl\lled
-'&lt;en trom the Ohio~
meet of Health, divisiODB of Materoal 1111 Orlld Health; Burtau
Services for the BUM, Crtp.
pled Children, and the Welfare
Department.
Attendlflll l'rom Galllpollo were
Mro. Barbara Steele. Galllpollo
Clt,r Health Nursei Mrs. Pearl
Hatfteld, Mn. Pearl P~, and
Mro. Naomi Rose, Gallta CooJ&gt;.
ty Healu. Nurses1 and Mrs. PoUy
Wetherholt and Mrs. Jean Clark,
Gallipolis City School Nunes.

Take Test on Oct. 22

P

Earlier this yeor I learned that there was a possibility t~at I might
be considered as o candidate for Common Pleas Judge of Gollta County.
So I mode inquiry about this possibility. After being told that there was
an opportunity to run for Cornman Pleas Judge, I disc:ussed the matter at
length with my wife and we mode severo I trtps to G~ll1o County . We talked
to several people in Gallic County; looked at hous~ng , 1nqu rred about the
c hurches and schools, drove completely around the County on two occo·
sions and we were convinced thot Gallic County would be o good place
to raise our children . Hoving satisfied myself that my family would be
happy and well odjusted in Gallio County, I then felt that I c ould do whot
I wanted to do- move to Gallic County and run for Judge.

Pd. Pol. Adv.

Represented
GAU.IPOLIS -

PICKING

On First Six Wee~ Honor Roll

Slater, Harry David Slawter, JanIce &amp;nlth, Gloria Jean 'fo,ylor,
Robeksh T&lt;f1lor, R&lt;lbert Wl,)'lle
Vance, Dean Elson Weber, Jeff.
rey &amp;ephen Werry, BARBARA
IVHITE. Myrta Jean wueon. Violet Lool.. Wolfe, Mar)' !4'me

bation violation, waa contiooed
on probati.OIL

Five Counties

Count;y oorvlcoman llatlonod In
the Far East: Pvt. Lorry D, Petrie, US 51846798, 528 Trano.
Co., (Lt. Trk.), APO 86316. IUo
oerlal li1Diber wu tranoposed
when the adclre10 In
the local_.- ... Oct. 17.

·.,

party

-Sen. Edmu~td S. Muskie . D·
Maine.

Roy F. Goodwin, 32, Kan&amp;Uo
p, picked 010 b)' tho Gallla
CourtlY Sllerll!"o Deportment
thia week on a chirp of pro--

About 70 Students to

In the post years, I hove tried cases in many Ohio C ourts, omcng
them ore courts in Columbus, Cleveland, Dayton, Akron, Canton, Ironton ,
Cincinnati, Marietta and Portsmouth. During the si:oo: and one-half yeors I
was with the Boord of Tax Appeals, I heord several hundred cases and it
Was while hear ing these c:ases that I found my ambition wos to somedoy
be a judge .

of the underdog to be a very
comfortable and routine one.

don.

ID 1be
compole for further - · ·
Oldo Hlstor]' Committee
baa Ollatded !mUth an Invitation
to be their guest at Ohio Unlvarstty, Fricla1 and saturda,v,
N&lt;lv, 8.&amp; at 4 p.m. w11en Smith

FALL

As you may already know, my porents ore both Gallio Countians
Gnd my ancestors were among the early settlers of this County. I, however,
have lived most of my 36 years in Columbus , Ohio. I hove tw~ degrees
from the Ohio 5tote University, (l) a Bachelor of Sc ience tn Busmess Administration and (2) o Juris Doctor Degree from the College .of Low. I ~as
odmitted to the prad ice of law in 1958, and I hove engaged 1n the proctrce
of low since that time. I have also been Secretory of the Oh1o Board of
Tax Appeals, Counsel for the Columbus Bor Association, Trial Counsel
for Pioneer Insurance Company and Legislative Consultant for the Ohro
Education Association . During the Korean Conflict , I was an Aidman in
the U. S. Army. I am married, have two sons, my wife is a first and second
grode school teacher, and we reside at 450 First Avenue, Gallipo li s, Ohio .

I'-ve always found the rolt"

aentenclrw: or probao-

·:::::x::::::::::;:;::::::::::'.:::::::::::::::::::::::--:•:·:::::x•:o::;.

GALUPOLIS - Mro. Enos
McQdre, Bulavtlle Rd., picked

~. , The purpose of this ·f.etter · is tt) give the peOJJie of Ga_llla County a .J.·;. £ 4
view of my background, experience, and the reasons I am runntng for Judge.

-Sen. Gaylord Nelson , D·Wis.

either

l.&amp;neo

"Project ~
Partldpants wiU also . . _ . Jl'l(le" aponaored by the Ohio
In the aodat eveota and ontar- Department ol Heolth and the orta!nmeat being plsnned ror ~ nee or Ecooomlc Opportunity wa.s
hold Thurodo,y In the lounge oC
muingtheHtwo days.
Tltomao Weaver. a GAHS Jun- Davia Hall, Holzer Hoaplt&amp;l
Ior, 1t11 a! Mr. and Mrs. Lowell School or Nurslrw.
A nve county area, Vinton.
E. Weaver, 1112 &amp;:mset Dr.,
rlllked oecmd In tho C&lt;IUIIIy on Meiga, Jackson, Lawrence and
the same tut. Altbough he """ Gallta, was repreaented at the
not one of the ftnaltsts, Weavar meeting b)' clty. county and school
Ia ID be ooiJUI1ehded ror his nurses. Purpose of the meetins
acholaltf.c achievement In thi1 was to acquaint local _personnel
with the racWties avallable tor
area, stated Principal Davis.
the ecmpreheneive health program lhrousl&gt; the Commwrlty A&lt;&gt;CORRECT ADDRESS
Uoo Pl'OIP'am.
GALLIPOLIS - Here's t h a
The meedng was opened with
correct address ol a G a I 1 1 a remarks by Maxine Plummer,

I

If elected, I will try to the best of my abilities to be o good Judge;
a Judge that you the people of Go Ilia County will be proud to have working

1 think a majorily of lhe

Bowllrw Alley. He pleadediUIIIYwhenarraigned and, aJace SepL 11,
hla been tn cuatody awaiting

lnatlon.

charges laid against the defendants. 1 need not have dooe that •
but 1 have great faJth in the •
system of criminal jutotice in ·
America and Ohio and so J pre- ,
sented the cases to the grand :
jury and they indicted.
"So we will aweai this matler feeling oonfident that uphold- '
ing law and order demand that ~
we appeal. The preservation of '
the sanctity as well as power of '
the grWld jury system requires ·
that we appeal and secure a ruling on points or law raised.'"

•

or Shyllno

IIIII take the final Eooa,v Ewn-

Gallia County
"

McComas wao lndlctod b)'
tho September term ll'and Jury
ror the breaking and ·~

Daria, Ia now el.J.elble to take
the final Eosa,y eawnlnotlm and

two

•! t: •I

enter OW.

GALLIPOLIS - James N. M.
Davto, l'rindpat, Gollla Academy High Bdlool, has amounced
that Siephen Smith, a GAHS oenlor, 1011 oC Mr. and Mro. Car. roll &amp;nlth, Rt. 2 Galllpollo, wao
one a! 103 C&lt;IUIIIy and state - at •
large winners !rom among 7,029
Wbo at1emJ&gt;ted tho Preliminary
Q&gt;jectlve ExamlnaUon In Olllo
Hlstor]', Goverllllltllt and CIU••uthlp Contell.

da,v.

Ronald R. Calhoun

McComaa, 23, Huntllwton. W.
VL, to 1~ yeara In the Qhlo
Penitentiary for brealdna and

Examination

"

Common Pleas
oentoncod Ezra Cltno

111 Meigs High Students Listed

Councy

Cour~

Winner in

An Open
Letter To The
People Of

Pleading not

NS

LAYAWAY
A BENRUS
AT TIFFINS

these reasons, the indictments
will be IJlashed."
,.While the fact sltuatloo is
somewhat different in the case
of Janey, the court feels that
this indictment, also, should be
quashed,'" Judge Mitchell said
in his dedsJon .
EPLING COMMENTS
commenting on the court's de cision lll!.d the state's future ac tion ln the case Saturday, Prosecuting Attorney Epllng said:
••I think the people are enti Ued to knoW the proper dlrection the slate of Ohio will take
in reference to the decision. I
must assume there "ill be a
journal entry filed making the

b"tlilty Friday in Gallipolis Municipal Court to State HighWB,}' Pa-

Frey
'.!

(Continued from Page 0

Two Plead No Guilt
GALLIPOLIS -

GBC GRADUATE S
GET THE t!ETTER
jOBS 1

I:&lt;ayeDunaway. .

(Continued from Page 1)
turbing the peace, and a violation o( probation charge. Bond was
set at $5UO cash or $1,000 in property.
Evans was booked at the Middleport jail 1 where no charge had
been filed against him by late Saturday.
In od 1er activit,y, the sheriff's department investigated an accident at 12:30 p .m. Friday on Route 7, one mile north or Five
Points, where three persons were t.niured.
Authorities said a car driven by William J. Ripley, 19, Wheelin,::, ran into the rear or a 1961 model truck operated by Paul
Orin Ervin, 42, Rt. 1 Racine.
Ripley su1Iercd a leg laceration and a passenger in his car,
Frank Biega, 18, also of Wheeling, suffered a chin laceration
and neck and back Injuries. Both Ripley and Biega were transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital by Sheriff Hartenbach for
treatment. Ervin 1·cportcdly sustained minor htiuries.
The Hipley car, a 1967 model Mllstang, was demolished and
there WBB heavy damage to the back end and bed of the Ervin
truck. Ripley was cited to Meigs County Court on an assured
clear distance charge,

ed:·A~ ~.::e'::~~tr:W:~~:

wtll except 1D tho decision of
the court and pursue the statutory proce&amp;lre provided for
the review of such decisions.
u1 plan to take the matter to
the Fourth District Court or Ap.
peals and apply for permission
to present this matter to that
court upon the question or quashi.ng the indictments. I mean not
at all to comment upon the facts
the case involving tile defendants or the evidence or the clrcumstances of the case but rather only upon legal points now
raised by the court's dedsion.
••It is tl1e state's position that
the law of Ohio, at least since
1922, llas been that a persoo
subpoenaed to appear berore the
grand jury investigating a crime

of

Professional Businus

1 ht' o\ lor "' h 4· r or po or .l I1on f'tt ' '.f'flh

Epling

Man Shot

Different Now

only 12 ft&gt; rr

TODAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY &amp; WEDNESDAY

sca.ls, pistons, valves, aerospac'.&gt; systems and other precision
components for vehicles and mechanical equipment.

Judp War.
ren S. Earhart, Frldl,y tnGaJ.

lla

DI\ OU CE GRANTED
POMEROY - On a cross pe tition, Daniel McDonald, Harri The department also probed a one-car accident at 3:15a.m. Sat- ,,~ou:rt:!:;'s~de~c~ts:io:n~s::,::rea:!ll~ty~.---~an~d:,:e~x~a::m~ln:::&lt;'&lt;i~a::;s:,::ID~hi:::·:.s,:a~ct~s:,:an=d-----------,
sonville Route 1, has been b'l'anl .•
urday 200 reet
south or Route 7 on old Route 7, near Hobson. 1
ed a divorce from Eunice Mc A car driven by Mar.rin 11, Milliron, 21, Middleport, was reDonald,
same address, on
portedly forced off the road by an oncoming vehicle. Ml111ron's
('hargcs of gross neglect of duty
vehicle ran over an embankment causing medium damage. A
"
and extreme cruell.y in the Meigs
passenger, Michael lleech , Middleport, suffered a minor head
County Common Pleas Court.
laceration. 1\'o injuries or arrest were reported.
NEW YO RK • UPJ 1 In
1922 Krnn e!l1 P Libbey of

•

ADMlNISTRATIVE CEl'JTER In Southfield, Michigan, a su~
urb or Detroit, for world-wide facilities producing bearings,

conduct in relation thereto, where
he docs not clalm his privilege
to self lncrtmtnatioo, is deem~
ed to have testirJed voluntarlly.
"In this case Burlile appeared as a witness, under su~
na, after his lawyer consented
to the prosecuting attorney that
he would be called as a witness.
He was nevertheless thorooghly
advised before and during t h e
testimony of his cOnstitutional
rights.
"'Mr. Janey was fully a n d
equally advised oC his rights.
••They were called as witnesses primarily in the felon.Y matter (harging M!~e and Gary Dutfy with aggravated assault but
they were told they need not
testl(y If they did not want ID.
So we went beyond the requirements or Ohio Law. These cases
were rJied in Galllpolla Municl-

Smith is

GALLIPOI~IS -

caM.

will be .

67
19
13
49
79
53
1.49
99
69
58

79
57
49
69
1.09

$10J8

Day is Savings Day on Everything at REVCO!

314 SECOND AVENUE

Gallipolis, Ohio

OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. 11L 9 P.M.-SUNDAYS 10 A.M. 11L 6 P.M.
/-~~~~A-M~E~Rt-cA-'S_F_A_sn_s_r_G_R~ow•,•N•o•c•HA-IN___..____

-------------------------------------;

'

�. ... .

···~· ~!

'

..

3 - Thr ~ Times - Sonth.,l, Stnlsy, October 20, 1966
:::::::::::;:;:;.;:::x.:.-:m:::«-::::.&lt;:.::::=:::::::::::c::::::x::

:! - The Sunday Times~ Sentinel, Sunday, October 20, 1968

22 Defendants Fined by Court
Fifteen defend- der, Ellicott City, Md. , $27.50,
ants forfeited boOOs and 22 o!h- spct.--dir~; Dennis A Sharp, Amesers were rined Friday in the ville, $17.50, failure to dim headcourt of Meigs Counts Judge lights; John F. Ca.le, I...oog Bottom, $l7.5ll, failure to display
Frank W. Porter.
Forfeiting bords were Gary slow mo\'illg vehicle emblem;
Hinkle, Chanute, Kansas, $250, J imm} D. \!arvc), Columbus,
driving while intoxicated; Bobby specdin~. $32.50; Esl·um MesJ. Yost, Bidwell, $17.50, defl'C·- ser, Kermit, W. VIL, $27.50,
tive exhaust; Steve J. Kohut, pas sitlJ2: without as~.ut'od clear
Cleveland, $27.50, passing witt._ distance; Blaint-' Kendt:.•ll, lluntout clu.r distance ahead; Uonald i~&gt;ton, w. \'a., $27.5D, spct:ding;
H. Hall, Pt. Pleasam, $17. 50 , Donald E. Nerr, l'hillit:othe,
and Herman R Holcomb, Pt. spcedifl!:, S27.50; Mary M. NelPleasant, $17.50, bot11 for fail- son, \ inrent Boutc I, $::!57,;1!1,
ing to wear protective equipment driving while intoxicated; llaron a rnoton·yde; George II. Sf\!- uld L". !\elson, \'inl'cnt Houte I,
int..: txicatiun, $27. 5U; Lawrence
Lowery, Chesapeake, $27.50,
speeding.
.John \, sa1·gcnt, l'omero~ ·
RouLc l, $5 arx.l l"os ts, insel·ure
load; Howard llubcr, Heeds ville,
assault
and battery, $:.:5 and costs
TONIGHT ONLY
all:! five days in jail witl1 the eonfinement suspended and the de"COOL HAND LUKE"
fendant placed on probation for
(Color)
s ix monthl-1 and ordered not lo
Paul Newman-Ceo. Kcnncd)
anend any ~chool arfairs ; eosts
AND
were al so assessed Barber on
Robert Stack-Eike Sommer
reckless operation charges; Hob"THE COH.RLIPT Oi\E""
crt W. (Juillen, Mason, $1U and
(Color)
cos ts, stop s ign; Lowell L. N ei~
meyer, Pomeroy, stop sign, $Hl
arx! costs; David E. McDonald,
Pom eroy Houte 4, $30 and l"Os ts,
speeding; Dwight W. Milhoan,
Pomeroy Route 3, unsafe \'&lt;! hie·
TONIGHT th'" TUESDAY
le, $5 and costs; James P. SnyOCTOBER 18·23
der, Pomeroy, overload, $75 arrl
WALT DIS.NEY
costs with $50 suspendt-'d; Dennis
NEVER A DUL L
{l.
'\yer, Cheshin• Haute l,$75and
MOMENT
costs wilh $5U suspended, over' Te e h..,kolor)
load; Gerald C. Eblin, MiddlcDic k Von Dyke
poli, $52 and cos ts , $37 suspendOo rQtt.y Pro ,.. ine
DISNEY CARTOONS ·
ed, overload; llarold Newell,
For Whom The Bulls T.,ll
Chester, $10 and costs, speedFigoro &amp; Cle"
i~; Hoben H. Eastman, PomFeo.~din' Fightin'
eroy Route 3, $10 aocl costs,
Hiwoy Heckhtr~
Goon 15 Wild
speeding; William J. Jividen, McA.lmiuion 85c &amp; SOc
Arlhur, $10 and costs, left or
SHOW STARTS 7 PM
center.
POMERO'i -

•·:ASON

.,
'

'

DRIVE·IM

MEIGS THEATRE

.,

Othen:i fined were Herman A.
Boberts, Pomeroy Houle 4, $1U
and rusts, misuse offarmplates;
Douglas E. llaltllill, Cheshire,
derectivc brakes, $5 aocl costs;
Myrtl~ Q. McCwnber, Cheshire,
$10 and costs on a stop sign violation; Donna L. King, Pomeroy
l~outc '1, st«J sign violation, $10
and costs; Ralph B. Wells, Long
Bottom, $10 and costs, fidicious
registration; Mit'key R Hutton,
Hutland, $5 and costs, unsafe vchide; Ka)· D. Lester, Lowell
$15 and costs, speeding; Earl M.
Fry, Dayton, $150 and costs,
three days in jail and 60 days
suspension of his driver's li~·cnse, driving while intoxkated;
William L. Patterson, l,omeroy
Houle 2, insecure load, $5 and
t'ost s; Don H. Hill, Racine Route
2, $25 and eosts, $15 suspended
overload.

The!\ Prohed
G \LLIJ'OLIS The Gallia
Count;y .'Sheriff' s Department Fri Ua,.v afternoon investigated the
theft of a throttle and gear box
off a 16-foot I\it Boat in the Ohio
!liver off the park front.
Sherifrs deputies said I h c
items were valued at $75. The
boat belonged to Ronald ~ring­
er of 124 Portsmouth and was
tied up at the park front. The
sheriff's departmllnt is invcsti gatin,g.

Dartmouth won the

eolle~iate

pulp \"HUH 1it lt' 'r.\"iHI

:1

leap

.i

Training c:on b~ obtained
only through a c:oll~g~·
l~v~l program.

Steve McQueen

ANormanJewison Film

(New Quarter Beeins
·December 10)
Write or call for catalog
and information .

COLOR

IJd

lo 1

U""

Umted Arhsls

·::;,1l~

CARTOON

(·

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS
COLLEGE
36 Locvst Street

Gallipoli5

Uoak, 24, Parkersburg, W. Va.;
William Rio Parsons, 30, Gallipolis; and Basil W. Stout, 34,
Ashland, Ky., all $18, speedlngj
trol cl1argcs were Richard A.
Uecker, 21, Hio Grande, pas sing Monorc E. Cassady, 27, Inez,
Ky.; Elmer L, Harris, 48, Ripover a yellow line, and Kim I.
Palmaffy, 20, Rio Grande, speed- ley; and llarvey L. Mullins , 48,
ing. Both cases were continued Casl.alia, Ohio, all $23, spee&lt;f.
ing; Hussell E. Toole, 39, Ashto Oct. 22.
ville, $28, speeding; and WilJudge RobertS. Detz, in other
liam Qualls, 32, Gallipolis, $3!-1,
patrol cases, fined Robert K.
._, '
Wallace, 19, Norwalk, $10 and . no highway use tax permh.
costs, defective . exhaust; Jack
Arnold E. Walser, 34, GreensE. Pickens, 32, Rt. I Bidwell, boro, N, C., pleaded not guilty
both $10 and costs, derective t.o a patrol charge of driving
exhaust; and Boyd M. Jones, 44, without tile assured dear disRL 2 Crown City, $20 and costs,
tam~e and the case was continued
intoxication.
until OcL 22.
Forfeiting bonds on patrol
Wayne l Shoemaker, 42, Rt. 2
charge ~ were: Clara F. Reynolds,
Gallipolis, was fined $10 and
34, Ht. 2 Bidwell, 818, derective costs on a city police charge of
exhaust; David W. Colbert, 23,
spe1.-ding.
Bethel Par k, Pa,; Frederick A.

TIFFIN CREDIT
JEWELERS
BENRUS
Sea lord

TODAY II LC
• Dress Watch
• 17 jewels

$25.00

EASY
CREDIT
·'
h

I

LOOK INTO THE
FUTURE
TASCO
Binoculars
LOOK TO
TIFFINS
FOR PL. ANN ED CREDIT

from 24.95

Emperor

Onyx Rings
STYLE ANO DESIGN
Credit for this G ift .

-

Fine • Handsome

from 19.95

2 'P"~ ...
WITH AM·FM RADIOS
EASY TO OW~
WITH CREDIT

from $64.00

GALLIPOLIS - Applying for
a marriage license Frida,y In
the office or Gallla County PrObate Court were Roger D e a n
Vanco, 22, Gallipolis, farmer,
and &amp;!san Tharon Houck, 18,
Gallipolis, clerk-typist.

COFFEE
PERCOLA
For Real
Coffee
REAL CREDIT
FROM

9•99

NO TRICK!
TEFLON COATED

COOKWARE
USE

TIFFI~

CREDIT

FOR THIS TREAT

$14.99

Moni s.-Bowman

POWER SAWS

You've read
abou1 it in alltht'
mag,uine~ . You' ve
~f'rn it on tell"vision. Now
rome see it in ntion. The
0Jtdinder Calendar Watchband
by Speidel. II puis the whole yea1
on your wrist- and then some.
H.mdsome Twht·O-Fle." styles.
St•inless steel, $8.95. Yellow
gold-filled, $11.95. for any man.
For any gift o&lt;usion.

LAY·A·WAY TODAY
FOR
His Christmas at Tiffins

1HE HOME OF INSTANT CREDIT-OPEN AN ACCOUNT IN JUST l

TIFFIN cREDITJEWELERS

LES WILLIAMSON
IILL WELLMAN
416 MAIN STREET' POINT PLEASANT, W. VA.

I

(Continued fnm Page 1)
rowhead in the summer for a
week's camping, missing only
once or twice when OOys were
not intcresled
Frey also had a camp near
Ne~ Havtm £or TroqJ 256, loaned by Central Operating Company, where the boys enjoyed
camping spring, summer and
rail He has two sons who are
Eagle Scouts, one also belonged to
the "Order or the Arrow."
He is Shirt Engineer on operations, Central Operating Co. ,
belong to the Lions Club, which
sponsors the Boy Scoot troop,
His sons have been OOyorkl scouting age for rour years.

ASK TO WED

BETTER THAN A BAG
OF TREATS

Bewitc:hing Sounds

STEREOS

Waterproof•
17 jewels
Stainles~ steel
case
Leather straP

from $12.95

~
ATTACHE CASES

or

'
·
·
,

Beeauae ot his high aeore,
&amp;niUt, according to Prlndpat

'
'

pol Court. I stgned the chargeo '

against these defendants.
11 ( chose to take the eases to '
the grand jury, however, so that '
not I alone but 15 good respecta- :

ble cltlzens could Inquire Into •
the matter and determine whether ;
they thought there should be

ARREST MAllE
GALLIPOLIS The Gallta
County ~erifl"s Department arrested Richard Rupe, 36, of COlumbus, Friday on a flve year
old warrant charging non-sup.
port. The warrant wat!i signed Oct.
22, 1963. Rupe will have a hearlng in Gallia County Common
Pleas Coort.

Timely Quotes

'•

•1

"

·~

Ameriun people, regardless
of party, is fed up with our

quadrennial

political

quarts of. strawberries Frl-

Field Coordhator ror the o h 1 o
Omce or EcoDOIIIlc On&gt;ortunill'.

Hollinger is

Speaker to

rtculum Wednettela,yevanlfllal the
llollloo 7, Southoaotorn 0 h t o

School Prlnctp.lo AaooclaUM meetJrwatJackiOIIHijjh

School
N.

High

School, Gallipolis. who wao

Ronald R. Calhoun
Candidate for Judee
of the Common Pleas Court

on the above Items could be ' ' high

IIW were read II¥ Ed Stewart,

•••Iotan! Sdtool,
prlnctp.l, GoUla """""
Galltpolia, ....
'I
and III&gt;Pl'Ovod.
\

-

I

High

~Hourer,

Jdm Worlltlfllton &amp;IIIIIUIICad
theA would be a North Ce...-.J
Aaooc:latlm meet!Jw Nov. 14-15
at Zanenllle, at the llolldl,)' Ifill.
New criteria ror hl8ll ochoola
.tbat will co lnlo ellect next Sopt;.,.ber wiU be dlocuaoed at !hot

• 11tt next mMI!rw waa HI for
:Jan. 29, 11119. Plaal ...... ella: caaoad to 1... lnlo the poollb111-

f(.r.NV
I
q~

For toe less the above
cost (110.39) you could stock your
med1c1De c.best tills way
w.ben you buy t.be Nationally
Famous Products at Revco.

11 .

MAO PRAISED
PARIS (IJPD-Frendt ..,...
list Andre Malraux oatd Frldo,J

Mao T~ hao ......111111¥
rompl- hlo culturol prolrlan rwolutlm In Communist
China. "Mao to tho laot - '

revolurtonory Ieeder
world.'• Malraux aaJd.

ht

lhe

/5 .rd&lt;;,....:t.v
~

L,t..·

II

For only IIG.I8you could
fUI your medicine c.best tills way

Comparable ID nery way
to NaUOnally Famous Brandsucept ID price.

-

i'

... 1!9~!

FLDOR
PLANS

~· ·

1 ,...
.. /

OY!R 30
MOBILE

•

Dloploy

K&amp;K ~iiB Home Sa!es

1.10

1.09
2.00

$10.49

H the proclucta belt
ftevca Qu.lltty lAbel your

ro
\1
DISCOUNT

CENTERS

1.37
. 73
1.89

99
99
79
T1

1.49
1.37

$10.39

Revco Sale-Bleep Capsules, 428 .
Revco Aspirin for ChUdren, 36s .
Revco 5-Gralns Aspirin, IOOs. . .
Revco Fluoride Toot.b Paste, 63.4 . z.
Revco Medicated Skin Cream, 16-ol..
Revco Wh1te Petroleum JeUy, 16-ol.
Revco 12 Timed Cold CApsules, 1.28 .
Revco Cold Tablets, IOOs . . .
Revco Deodorant Spray, 7 oz.
Revco Instant S.bave Cream, 15 oz..
Revco SUper Stainless Blades, lOs
Bevco !fter Sbave LoUOn, 8 01. . .
Bevco Antiseptic Mouth Wash,l8 01. .
Revco Flip 'n Oo 8ettlq &amp;el, 1 lb..
Revco Dandruff Sb••poo, 7.5 OL .
N

I,
i.,~ I

THAT
OFFER
THE BEST
··-·
.- '· ....
..
IH MOBILE
HOME
LIYIHG.
Stop Ta &lt;lor, Look at Plan•
aod ltla~llo Hamoo On

2.00
2.85
1.45

Nytol for sound Bleep, 38s . . . .
Vuellne Petroleum JeUy, 16-oz. .
Contae for colds, 20s . . . . .
JUg.bt Guard DeocloraDt, 7 oz.
&amp;matte SUper 8.8. Blades, lOs
Mennen Skin Bracer, 8 oz.
Llsterlne Antiseptic, 14 oz.
Bead 6 Shoulders Sb•mpw, 5 oz.
Dlpplty·dO Betting &amp;el, lib. .
If 1bove ltem1 ere purch11ed at Revco's
Everydly Dl1eaunt PriCM your coal wilt be

·:
1:

675-3000
3311 J,.......... .
:tr of havifll t1t1 next DtMtlrw at
1-...:;lPt::,..l'ioa.!!'~W. Yo.
; the- Alhenl Rljjh School.
•'

&amp;ana Well.

#!D· ~'I

FO-R YOU!

uidJII.

•mMIIJW.

conventions.

If purchBs.cl elsewhete, your COli

when you buJ
Bevco Quality Products.

J

rlcultml can be enrldled and the
rroe oorvlceo oCCered b)' the Ohio
E - c o CowtcD at Oldo Unl·
verolty, ID public ocltoolo rtr tho

bar• aad one pat preallt. 1be
at!-. or the Jan. 31,11188 moet-

Wlr)'ne

Nytol for sound Bleep, 36s
Contae ror colds, 20s . . .
Gmette Super S.S. Blades, lOs .
Mennen Skin Bracer, 6 oz•.
Llsterlne Antiseptic, 14 oz.
Dlpplty-do Betting &amp;el, I lb.

U you bought t.bem elsewhere
your cost would be IID.4t.

,I

chairman, Holl!lwwr explained how tho hlp school cur-

President James Dlelil ...,.
ducled the moedrw with 28 mam-

SOPHOMORES - DON ANDERSON, R&lt;lbert Baker, Mar)' E.

an, Linda VIctoria Cardillo, Lin- Bracl&gt;ury, MARY K. BRICKLES,
da &amp;le Cotterill, Mark Couahe- TWH.A SUE CLATWORTHY,
naur, &amp;11811 Elaine Gerlach, Rog- Robert Stanley Coates, DEBBIE
er Paul Gilmore, Mary Marl111e CROW, 9lerrfe Karen Dinlusa,
Goodwin, Michael Cla.Y~Dn Gra- GLORIA JUNE GOFF, David Robham, SHERRY LYNN HAVE'\ ert Haggerty, Carol Margaret
Terry Allen Hendrlck.o, Rhmda Hargravea, Don Loren H a y e 1,
Kalhl..., Hysell, Diane M a e llemadettelhntes&lt;f1, REBECCA

These are some of t.be Nationally
Famous Products you'd want
----....1\
In your medicine c.best. L......----./

SCHULT
HAS PLANS

Pl'Oil"'D1

I om just as firmly convinced thot when o man accepts the res pons ibilities of judge that he must make his own de c isions and he must stond
by them. There may be times when his decisions may be unpopular with
the lawyers of the County and sometimes his dec:is ions may even be unpopvlor with the people of tht: County, but as I hove a lreody said I believe that
it is the Judge's duty to make honest and foir decisions and to operate his
Court in an impartial manner, and, having done this he should then s tand
by his doc is ions .

Sincerely yours,

Introduced b)' Principal James
M. Davia, Gallla Academy

JUNIORS - Danny Ray Ab·
batt, Linda Leigh Beal, !IJ.errle ~ Blackston, James Leslie Brewer, Nancy Am BuchM-

a..

The MEDICINE CHEST TEST

GALLIPOLIS- IQronHolllqf.

tlntl&lt;&gt;n, Tom Weaver, Rotler
er. Ohio Unlveralb', JPOkeoaEc:- Wolker, Steve Wroblewakl, llld
....,.lco In tho Hljjh School Cur·
Fred Wheeler.
Secondary

long, SIJaroo McCune, DlaneMcDIDiela, Reck&amp; &lt;Aye McQdre,
M;yrta !4'me McQdre, SHIRLEY
ANN McKINNEY, Patricia Diane
Mot.oon, Janet Eileen Mees, SANDRA JEAN MILLER, Cynthia Ann
MIUs, Gory Paul Mitch, KalhJo
Am Morgan, Randy Mulrord,
Elaine Mae Muri&gt;IIY. SHERRIE
fi..ENE SHULER, Wtlllam ~gene

Woods, Sandra Lee Zerkle.

JEAN HOIJDASIIELT, Klu'oHowell. J..... Dtwkl 1 - ,
Gl.ma Kif Jeyo, Mar)' L o u
K1nl. Mar7 Cero.l Pearoon, ,....
Louam Rll~. Frftlln llc!rrll
Rizer D, Paula Kq Ruu.U,
Jolat David Sobo, Brenda
hll~ BEVERLY THOMPSON, Ka- &amp;nltlt. GLENNA SPRAGUE, Nlil)' Louise Wehruna, Richard cy Avfce St. Clair, Rebecca Jane
Paul Werner.
Trlpi.U, DONNA RAE WEBER,

A Daring Discount Demonstration from Revco:

Principals

Being a Judge interests me . I enjoy reviewing and researching the
law . I en joy hear ing the facts ondgiving them careful c:onsiderotion . I am
vitally interested in arriving of la1r and jvst dec1sions, and, 11 is my ftrm
belief c Judge shovld give coreful consideration to ony matter before he
he makes a dec ision .

for you.

Robert Sldn&lt;o' - · J u n e
Marte Buah. Charleo Mlcboel
Butddrk, Tereoa Celeste Caod,
K- Chaney, Gl&lt;01 Cr1op, Palsaued tor the ftrat tfme,
tricia Jean Collins. Jameo Hyo.
Maklna a IJ'ade ot usn or a- em Crow, ROONEY KE!rH DAbove In an oub.lecta to be l i - VIS, Karen Jean Flores, Tama
on the roll were (Namea ln caps, Marie Carmer, Linda &amp;le Hackall A):
ett, Comle Hotlleld. Moria Ray
SENIORS - Jud,y J4'm Brew- Hubbard, MARY JANE JENKINer, Rutdall M. Burt, Comie Lee 8:&gt;N, Stlrley Faye Jordan, PaBachner, Cetb,y Yv- Ball~, tricia Jane K~meciY, &amp;lson !.anand ll - · "' the .... Melgtt
Setllor High School In Middleport
have been named IDihe-roll

nlng, Ginger Am Lewis, Dwight
Emmer1&lt;11 Logan, Mary A n n

Knorr, Jolm BrldCord Loltoe, Ja
Michael Long. PIUI steven Miller, Pamela J4'm Noutzltng. Roberta Jean Ord. Jdm Warren
Rltchhart, Linda Am Sllenelleld.
Georae Sdmer, James FrederJck Swatzel, John Vernon Tame-

or

GALLIPOLIS Prtncloal
lluclents who will take lhe teat
James N, M. Davis, Gallla A...S. Tueldi\Y are:
omy High School. amounced Sat.
Miriam Armstron&amp; L I a a
urday approximately 7D -.uta Brink, Dean Busb, Lonnie Bush,
will write the Prellmlnory Scho- Ndlam Ray Bostte, Jr., Sllnlb'
laotlc Aptitude Test m Oct. 22 CJ'OBs, C&lt;mde Carhart, Dana CleatGAHS.
land, VIc carruthers, Karen CoDavid Lee Carter, GARS Df. ker, Gene Celllday, llqplr Coul·
reciDr &lt;II Qddance, ,llOints out oon, larry Dol&gt;eoo, David Doy,
that the PS.\T Is opeclllcaU,y David Durham, Andra Davtclaon,
destgnod loWinl aostotlng stu- Ruoo Elliott, BUI Fol~, Fred
dent• In maklna dedttlona about Fral~, Gary Foose, Jlarxly
collep · by estlnudlng the stu- Finney, John Gooldln,JenyGooldent's ability ID work at the col- dln, Bob llout, Rick Hueholt,
lepleveL
SIJaroo Hamlllort. Ronald Henry,
Sludents Wbo have had Iltlle Pam Henry, Keith llallklna, Tim
OJIIOriiiiCII wttlt limed multiple Hemsworth, Alleen Kilgore, Dac:hatee testa or who !eel uncer- vid Kurz, Bett;y Jo John1011, stetain about Iakins ouch teSbt Cor veu Knott. Pam Maqled, &amp;loan
college admlulms may hl!!!!!l!t Markley, Tonuny MaUhewa, Jane
from Iakins the PSAT.
"
MIUs, Jolin Morgan, Tom Mor1!111, &amp;!Am Mitchell, Nancy Ma,vnard, Jack Matlhewo, Marcia Malone, .M:lke Orr, Mike Rake, David Romaine, Roy Srutdoro, Melo"' hlwl, Terry Slllndero. Dale
Saunden, Bob Scltopla, &amp;loan
Thompoon, John 'I'IIomu, Jamoo
Tltomao, Garrett Thacker, Plula
Vorultolt, Ellen Vance, Sora Winten, steve Walker, Cello1 Wldt-

Now let me soy at this point that 1 om o candida te for J udg e because I wont to be Judge.

To me, being o jvdge is o position, a respon s ibility, and a trust for
the people of the County; o position wherein the man hold ing office should
endeavor in his personal life to do that which upholds the office; the responsibility to follow tht~ low in his decisions and fairly consider the evidence; end a trust to be faithful to the people of the County .

MIDDLEPORT - One hundred

The morning session incl\lled
-'&lt;en trom the Ohio~
meet of Health, divisiODB of Materoal 1111 Orlld Health; Burtau
Services for the BUM, Crtp.
pled Children, and the Welfare
Department.
Attendlflll l'rom Galllpollo were
Mro. Barbara Steele. Galllpollo
Clt,r Health Nursei Mrs. Pearl
Hatfteld, Mn. Pearl P~, and
Mro. Naomi Rose, Gallta CooJ&gt;.
ty Healu. Nurses1 and Mrs. PoUy
Wetherholt and Mrs. Jean Clark,
Gallipolis City School Nunes.

Take Test on Oct. 22

P

Earlier this yeor I learned that there was a possibility t~at I might
be considered as o candidate for Common Pleas Judge of Gollta County.
So I mode inquiry about this possibility. After being told that there was
an opportunity to run for Cornman Pleas Judge, I disc:ussed the matter at
length with my wife and we mode severo I trtps to G~ll1o County . We talked
to several people in Gallic County; looked at hous~ng , 1nqu rred about the
c hurches and schools, drove completely around the County on two occo·
sions and we were convinced thot Gallic County would be o good place
to raise our children . Hoving satisfied myself that my family would be
happy and well odjusted in Gallio County, I then felt that I c ould do whot
I wanted to do- move to Gallic County and run for Judge.

Pd. Pol. Adv.

Represented
GAU.IPOLIS -

PICKING

On First Six Wee~ Honor Roll

Slater, Harry David Slawter, JanIce &amp;nlth, Gloria Jean 'fo,ylor,
Robeksh T&lt;f1lor, R&lt;lbert Wl,)'lle
Vance, Dean Elson Weber, Jeff.
rey &amp;ephen Werry, BARBARA
IVHITE. Myrta Jean wueon. Violet Lool.. Wolfe, Mar)' !4'me

bation violation, waa contiooed
on probati.OIL

Five Counties

Count;y oorvlcoman llatlonod In
the Far East: Pvt. Lorry D, Petrie, US 51846798, 528 Trano.
Co., (Lt. Trk.), APO 86316. IUo
oerlal li1Diber wu tranoposed
when the adclre10 In
the local_.- ... Oct. 17.

·.,

party

-Sen. Edmu~td S. Muskie . D·
Maine.

Roy F. Goodwin, 32, Kan&amp;Uo
p, picked 010 b)' tho Gallla
CourtlY Sllerll!"o Deportment
thia week on a chirp of pro--

About 70 Students to

In the post years, I hove tried cases in many Ohio C ourts, omcng
them ore courts in Columbus, Cleveland, Dayton, Akron, Canton, Ironton ,
Cincinnati, Marietta and Portsmouth. During the si:oo: and one-half yeors I
was with the Boord of Tax Appeals, I heord several hundred cases and it
Was while hear ing these c:ases that I found my ambition wos to somedoy
be a judge .

of the underdog to be a very
comfortable and routine one.

don.

ID 1be
compole for further - · ·
Oldo Hlstor]' Committee
baa Ollatded !mUth an Invitation
to be their guest at Ohio Unlvarstty, Fricla1 and saturda,v,
N&lt;lv, 8.&amp; at 4 p.m. w11en Smith

FALL

As you may already know, my porents ore both Gallio Countians
Gnd my ancestors were among the early settlers of this County. I, however,
have lived most of my 36 years in Columbus , Ohio. I hove tw~ degrees
from the Ohio 5tote University, (l) a Bachelor of Sc ience tn Busmess Administration and (2) o Juris Doctor Degree from the College .of Low. I ~as
odmitted to the prad ice of law in 1958, and I hove engaged 1n the proctrce
of low since that time. I have also been Secretory of the Oh1o Board of
Tax Appeals, Counsel for the Columbus Bor Association, Trial Counsel
for Pioneer Insurance Company and Legislative Consultant for the Ohro
Education Association . During the Korean Conflict , I was an Aidman in
the U. S. Army. I am married, have two sons, my wife is a first and second
grode school teacher, and we reside at 450 First Avenue, Gallipo li s, Ohio .

I'-ve always found the rolt"

aentenclrw: or probao-

·:::::x::::::::::;:;::::::::::'.:::::::::::::::::::::::--:•:·:::::x•:o::;.

GALUPOLIS - Mro. Enos
McQdre, Bulavtlle Rd., picked

~. , The purpose of this ·f.etter · is tt) give the peOJJie of Ga_llla County a .J.·;. £ 4
view of my background, experience, and the reasons I am runntng for Judge.

-Sen. Gaylord Nelson , D·Wis.

either

l.&amp;neo

"Project ~
Partldpants wiU also . . _ . Jl'l(le" aponaored by the Ohio
In the aodat eveota and ontar- Department ol Heolth and the orta!nmeat being plsnned ror ~ nee or Ecooomlc Opportunity wa.s
hold Thurodo,y In the lounge oC
muingtheHtwo days.
Tltomao Weaver. a GAHS Jun- Davia Hall, Holzer Hoaplt&amp;l
Ior, 1t11 a! Mr. and Mrs. Lowell School or Nurslrw.
A nve county area, Vinton.
E. Weaver, 1112 &amp;:mset Dr.,
rlllked oecmd In tho C&lt;IUIIIy on Meiga, Jackson, Lawrence and
the same tut. Altbough he """ Gallta, was repreaented at the
not one of the ftnaltsts, Weavar meeting b)' clty. county and school
Ia ID be ooiJUI1ehded ror his nurses. Purpose of the meetins
acholaltf.c achievement In thi1 was to acquaint local _personnel
with the racWties avallable tor
area, stated Principal Davis.
the ecmpreheneive health program lhrousl&gt; the Commwrlty A&lt;&gt;CORRECT ADDRESS
Uoo Pl'OIP'am.
GALLIPOLIS - Here's t h a
The meedng was opened with
correct address ol a G a I 1 1 a remarks by Maxine Plummer,

I

If elected, I will try to the best of my abilities to be o good Judge;
a Judge that you the people of Go Ilia County will be proud to have working

1 think a majorily of lhe

Bowllrw Alley. He pleadediUIIIYwhenarraigned and, aJace SepL 11,
hla been tn cuatody awaiting

lnatlon.

charges laid against the defendants. 1 need not have dooe that •
but 1 have great faJth in the •
system of criminal jutotice in ·
America and Ohio and so J pre- ,
sented the cases to the grand :
jury and they indicted.
"So we will aweai this matler feeling oonfident that uphold- '
ing law and order demand that ~
we appeal. The preservation of '
the sanctity as well as power of '
the grWld jury system requires ·
that we appeal and secure a ruling on points or law raised.'"

•

or Shyllno

IIIII take the final Eooa,v Ewn-

Gallia County
"

McComas wao lndlctod b)'
tho September term ll'and Jury
ror the breaking and ·~

Daria, Ia now el.J.elble to take
the final Eosa,y eawnlnotlm and

two

•! t: •I

enter OW.

GALLIPOLIS - James N. M.
Davto, l'rindpat, Gollla Academy High Bdlool, has amounced
that Siephen Smith, a GAHS oenlor, 1011 oC Mr. and Mro. Car. roll &amp;nlth, Rt. 2 Galllpollo, wao
one a! 103 C&lt;IUIIIy and state - at •
large winners !rom among 7,029
Wbo at1emJ&gt;ted tho Preliminary
Q&gt;jectlve ExamlnaUon In Olllo
Hlstor]', Goverllllltllt and CIU••uthlp Contell.

da,v.

Ronald R. Calhoun

McComaa, 23, Huntllwton. W.
VL, to 1~ yeara In the Qhlo
Penitentiary for brealdna and

Examination

"

Common Pleas
oentoncod Ezra Cltno

111 Meigs High Students Listed

Councy

Cour~

Winner in

An Open
Letter To The
People Of

Pleading not

NS

LAYAWAY
A BENRUS
AT TIFFINS

these reasons, the indictments
will be IJlashed."
,.While the fact sltuatloo is
somewhat different in the case
of Janey, the court feels that
this indictment, also, should be
quashed,'" Judge Mitchell said
in his dedsJon .
EPLING COMMENTS
commenting on the court's de cision lll!.d the state's future ac tion ln the case Saturday, Prosecuting Attorney Epllng said:
••I think the people are enti Ued to knoW the proper dlrection the slate of Ohio will take
in reference to the decision. I
must assume there "ill be a
journal entry filed making the

b"tlilty Friday in Gallipolis Municipal Court to State HighWB,}' Pa-

Frey
'.!

(Continued from Page 0

Two Plead No Guilt
GALLIPOLIS -

GBC GRADUATE S
GET THE t!ETTER
jOBS 1

I:&lt;ayeDunaway. .

(Continued from Page 1)
turbing the peace, and a violation o( probation charge. Bond was
set at $5UO cash or $1,000 in property.
Evans was booked at the Middleport jail 1 where no charge had
been filed against him by late Saturday.
In od 1er activit,y, the sheriff's department investigated an accident at 12:30 p .m. Friday on Route 7, one mile north or Five
Points, where three persons were t.niured.
Authorities said a car driven by William J. Ripley, 19, Wheelin,::, ran into the rear or a 1961 model truck operated by Paul
Orin Ervin, 42, Rt. 1 Racine.
Ripley su1Iercd a leg laceration and a passenger in his car,
Frank Biega, 18, also of Wheeling, suffered a chin laceration
and neck and back Injuries. Both Ripley and Biega were transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital by Sheriff Hartenbach for
treatment. Ervin 1·cportcdly sustained minor htiuries.
The Hipley car, a 1967 model Mllstang, was demolished and
there WBB heavy damage to the back end and bed of the Ervin
truck. Ripley was cited to Meigs County Court on an assured
clear distance charge,

ed:·A~ ~.::e'::~~tr:W:~~:

wtll except 1D tho decision of
the court and pursue the statutory proce&amp;lre provided for
the review of such decisions.
u1 plan to take the matter to
the Fourth District Court or Ap.
peals and apply for permission
to present this matter to that
court upon the question or quashi.ng the indictments. I mean not
at all to comment upon the facts
the case involving tile defendants or the evidence or the clrcumstances of the case but rather only upon legal points now
raised by the court's dedsion.
••It is tl1e state's position that
the law of Ohio, at least since
1922, llas been that a persoo
subpoenaed to appear berore the
grand jury investigating a crime

of

Professional Businus

1 ht' o\ lor "' h 4· r or po or .l I1on f'tt ' '.f'flh

Epling

Man Shot

Different Now

only 12 ft&gt; rr

TODAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY &amp; WEDNESDAY

sca.ls, pistons, valves, aerospac'.&gt; systems and other precision
components for vehicles and mechanical equipment.

Judp War.
ren S. Earhart, Frldl,y tnGaJ.

lla

DI\ OU CE GRANTED
POMEROY - On a cross pe tition, Daniel McDonald, Harri The department also probed a one-car accident at 3:15a.m. Sat- ,,~ou:rt:!:;'s~de~c~ts:io:n~s::,::rea:!ll~ty~.---~an~d:,:e~x~a::m~ln:::&lt;'&lt;i~a::;s:,::ID~hi:::·:.s,:a~ct~s:,:an=d-----------,
sonville Route 1, has been b'l'anl .•
urday 200 reet
south or Route 7 on old Route 7, near Hobson. 1
ed a divorce from Eunice Mc A car driven by Mar.rin 11, Milliron, 21, Middleport, was reDonald,
same address, on
portedly forced off the road by an oncoming vehicle. Ml111ron's
('hargcs of gross neglect of duty
vehicle ran over an embankment causing medium damage. A
"
and extreme cruell.y in the Meigs
passenger, Michael lleech , Middleport, suffered a minor head
County Common Pleas Court.
laceration. 1\'o injuries or arrest were reported.
NEW YO RK • UPJ 1 In
1922 Krnn e!l1 P Libbey of

•

ADMlNISTRATIVE CEl'JTER In Southfield, Michigan, a su~
urb or Detroit, for world-wide facilities producing bearings,

conduct in relation thereto, where
he docs not clalm his privilege
to self lncrtmtnatioo, is deem~
ed to have testirJed voluntarlly.
"In this case Burlile appeared as a witness, under su~
na, after his lawyer consented
to the prosecuting attorney that
he would be called as a witness.
He was nevertheless thorooghly
advised before and during t h e
testimony of his cOnstitutional
rights.
"'Mr. Janey was fully a n d
equally advised oC his rights.
••They were called as witnesses primarily in the felon.Y matter (harging M!~e and Gary Dutfy with aggravated assault but
they were told they need not
testl(y If they did not want ID.
So we went beyond the requirements or Ohio Law. These cases
were rJied in Galllpolla Municl-

Smith is

GALLIPOI~IS -

caM.

will be .

67
19
13
49
79
53
1.49
99
69
58

79
57
49
69
1.09

$10J8

Day is Savings Day on Everything at REVCO!

314 SECOND AVENUE

Gallipolis, Ohio

OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. 11L 9 P.M.-SUNDAYS 10 A.M. 11L 6 P.M.
/-~~~~A-M~E~Rt-cA-'S_F_A_sn_s_r_G_R~ow•,•N•o•c•HA-IN___..____

-------------------------------------;

'

�·.
- The Silnda,y Time• -SonUnel, Sunday, October 20, 1968

Washington White Paper

Affection, Respect of Ike Surges
PUBUSHED BY TilE OffiO VALLEY PUBLISHING COMPANY
Chester Tannehill, Exec. Editor
Hobart Wilson, Jr., Man. Editor

Richard S. OWen, Publisher
Vernon Deweese, Adv. :Mgr.
James E. Danner, Adv. Dir.

::
:·,.

..••
.•

the gates

Behind the Facade Of TV Debates
Hubert Humphrey has been down so long

In the polls, it's beginning to look like up to
him (to paraphrase the title of a book published a couple years ago).
But he would get a lot more political mileage out of his baiting of Richard the Chickenhearted, as he calls Nixon for refusing to
meet him in a televised debate, were it not
that many remember it was Hubert the
Hardhearted who pooh·poohed the idea of a
similar confrontation between President
, Johnson and Barry Goldwater in 19&amp;4.

::

This matter of debates is the phoniest

"issue" yet to be raised in the campaign.
., Uk:e one of those copper-nickel sandwiches
.• the government passes off as money, it has
:: face value but little intrinsic worth .
Nixon, of course, can hardly pose as Rich,•
ard the Righteous. Here is what he wrote on
:. the subject back in 1964:
"I bel i e v e that television debates con~ tribute sign~ficantly to four major objecUves
•. which are in the public interest: A bigger
:: vote, better informed voters, lower campaign
•: coats and, in the end, a better president....
..
"Millions of Americans, who would never
' 10 out to hear a political speech, or even
i
listen to one on television, tuned in to the
:• debates to see a fight and stayed to learn
.. about the issues. As a result, the electorate
•' In 1960 was probably ~he best-informed in
: the nation's history ...
•,
"America has given the world a new and
: exciting technique in democracy, and we
: ahould not allow it now to be discarded in
: our own country."

•

..:•
.

school Integration or those divtalve personal41

ltlea" - like the late Son. Joaoph Mccarthy which, as he said 10 many tlmea, he did not be-

Evidently Nixon has changed his mind
lllnce then. Perhaps he realizes that what he
gave was an idealized description of what
television debates ought to do.

What they ought to do iB convey to the
American public ln instantaneous, unambiguous and easily assimilable form the major o~
posing views on the major issues of the day.

What they would actually do, simply beeause
television is the kind of medium it 11, would
be to s u b m e r g e the issues behind tbe
"images" projected by two Ior in 1968, three)
contrasting personalities.

Undoubtedly, as Nixon noted, the liJeO de·
bates did stimulate immense voter interest
in the election. As he well knOW6, however,
he came out second best not because of his
sbmd on the issues but largely on the basis
of his "image" that was transmitted elec-

death.

of

As a President he wu the despair of poUt..
ical theorists, and aa the Sqlreme Allied Commander In Eurape he was the despalr ot professional soldiers, to this columnist's well-remem-

want

knowledge. For he seemed to solve great

bered

bower, ao:! his tangled syntax was always forgiven him. No public man waa ever auch a paradox: a soldier who hated war: an antli&gt;Oiltictan
who was~ the sheer test of auccesa one of 1111
greatest politicians we ha¥8 known.
He did what he pleased and when hopleand
ud he told the
they could toke him or

to be President and that anyhow somebody

-1•

Yet the undeniable fact is that while politi-

lea... him - and they took him. Why? Porbljpa
because seekina: nothing, all came to him; demandlllt nothing, nothing was denied him. And·
perhaps most of all because he was the wry
model of the kind, decent, patient and quietly
determined controlli118 mass that lo the Amort-

cal tq&gt;hlstlcatel were almost unanimous that he
wasn't much of a President the J)OCI!le happily

was odd-man out: a Chief Executive retuslrw:
power rather than seeking more of It; a politician who was bored by politics and made no
bones about lt. He could q:~enly yawn at partisan

elected him to two terml and would surely have
given him 1 third had not his own party mean-

time forced through an amendment against third
terms.

clsckety~lack."

can middle class.

So he left offtce not in a blaze ol glory,
certainly, but rather in a bland llfterg1ow best

Simllarb, when nadonal lnues reached 1
pitch of heat he cooled them orf by declint~ to

their beer and munched their crackers.

shortly after election day .
'nle medium, as Marshall McLuhan recognized later, was indeed the messa~e in
llleO. It still is. So powerful, so immediate-

B, RAY CROMLEY
NEA Washington Corraspondent
WASIDNGTON (NEA)
Those who believe the war in South Vietnam wlll be won
when the VietCong and North Vietnamese invading forces are

in a word, so vlsual-istelevision that millions

more Americans might Oock to the polls this
year as a result of televised debates than

otherwise would. but whether they would be

defeated and their political organization "crUJhed" are due
for a very unpleasant surprise.

better informed voters is highly questionable.

Certainly we should not permanently dis·

There is a lesson in Indonesia, where the Communist party
was "wiped out" just three years ago in a purge and blood
bath which took 100,000 to 300,000 lives. Party cadrea were
"eliminated" down to the vlllage level. Jalls were overfilled.
Secret Reds were weeded out of the government from top to
bottom. By all estimates, the party was done for. The Indonesian army took over and screened all men for all important
posts, including top air force and navy posts.
Yet in recent months the Indonesian Comm\mists have
staged a highly elfective campaign of robberies, kidnapings

~' '

cathode tube-or at least until politicians be·
gin giving strai~ht answers to straight ques·

tions, on or off television- we had better
approach the technique with extreme caution.

and murders.

•

'.
''

'~~
~
~

:

~
t

J

1
...,.
•'

~•'

•'
::
•
:
:
.•

Hawk on Vietnam Sheaths His Claws
When a hawk of such brilliant plumage as
McGeorge Bundy begins molting, the new cry
he makes is of more than passing ornothological interest.
Bundy, chief roreign policy aide to Presi dents Kennedy and Johnson until he res1gned
in December, 1965, played an 1mportant sup·
porting role in the two maJor decisiOns made
about Vietnam- the commitment of American troops to combat and the program of
restrained, sustained bombing attacks on
North Vietnam.
Today, as president of the Ford Foundation,
he still defends these decisions as the right
ones, taken at a time when the Communists
were close to victory in South Vietnam. Now.
however , he calls lor a program ol de-escalation to "lift this burden from our lives."
The North Vietnamese, it seems, have
crossed us up by refusing to cave in. Thus
Bundy's recommendation for a withdrawal of

disengagement as the burden of the war is

:•
·:
::
::
.
::

cal hostility'' but on a cool appraisal of the
situation, could weigh heavily m the dedsion.

~~

!j
.'••'
:::·
-

in the early years or the haby boom, one edu·

cator claims the nation has been caught flat-

footed by the decline in the birth rate and
has no plans to cope with it.
" Any industry faced with the Joss of 10
million clients needs to do some planning,"
aays Dean H. Thomas James of the Stanford
School of Education .
The declining enrollment in lower schools
will be help£ul to colleges and universities, he
says, by permitting the shift or some resources to the support of higher education.
Undoubtedly , many thousands of teachers

=-. \ •

'

I, /
' ' l. . I

~ff:::J
·ii~·
/~
'
,/

)

areas.
A "People's Defense School" was uncovered in central
Java, giving lnatruction in the special tactics and the various
types of arms now being used by the Viet Coag in South Viet-

"M

nam. Tbe school also conducted courses in digging undergrOUild tunnels. A military· trailliDg school
alsq ~overed in western Sumatra.
.
.
.
· .
But moat disconcerting ol aU, the Indonesian army. bai ~lis­
covered of late that its own officer and noncommissioned oitleer corps are riddled with Communists. One of the moat recent arrests is the inspector-general of the army, former
commander of forces in western Irian and eastern Indonesia.
He is accused of being a leadillg member of the Communllt
underground.
More than 50 officers, includillg colonels, Ueutenant-coloneiJ
and majors, have heen detained in the crack Siliwangi Dlvlsioo, considered the most reliable unit in the Indonesian
army.
Several hundred members of the armed forces in eastern
Java are being held for interrogation, including the chief of
staff of one of the Raider brigades of the Brawidjaja Divillon.
Two hundred members of the Central MIUtary Command
have been arrested. Several officials of tho Tblrd MIUtary
Command for West Sumatra and Riau, including reglmeatal

~/

shifted to the South Vietnamese. There appear to be no other courses.
This change of heart by one prominent

hawk, based "not on moral outrage or politi·

QUOTES

commandera, have been arrested for Communist actfvitiet.

Just as in ancient Persia

they would chop oil the head

School Planners Out on a Limb
Elementary and secondary school enrollments wUI drop 25 per cent in Ute next 15
years, population experts forecast .
This ought to be good news. But in a reverse twist of the warnings that were heard

By thll oammer, the party bad aueeoeded Ia re-eslllblllblall
baaeo IUld lraiDIDI eeaten for armed rebellloa Ia a llriDI 01
remote areal, wltlla clalldellllle or&amp;ulzatloa wbleb utellded
from vUiale to provlaeW level. Self-&lt;lefeose ulll opera~
Ia vllla1e1. Guerrilla delllcluneall moved over eoulderollle

\ \ 1;,

It is unacceptable, says Bundy, because
the penalties upon us are too great. The
penalties are the annual costs of $30 billion,
the annual sacrifice of more than 10,000
American lives , the increasing bitterness and
polarization of our peo{&gt;le and " the growing
alienation of a generation which is the best
we have had."
In other words, in "cost-effectiveness
terms"- to borrow a phrase from former
Defense secretary Robert McNamara-the
Vietnam war is simply not paying oft and
further investment in it at the current level
or at a higher level will only further unbalance the equation.
One thin~ seems certain. The next president early m his first year in office will have
to choose among three alternatives: Continuation of the war as it is going now, a sharp
escalation and even more massive commitment of American resources, or a gradual

:: t;.S. forces down to a level of about 100,000
troops, which he says could be achieved without insuring the defeat of South Vietnam, is
based "not on moral outrage or political
hostility to the objective, but rather on the
simple and practical ground that escalation
wiU not work and that continuation on our
present course is unacceptablt&gt;."

'

of the messenger who brou~ht
news of defeat, so in America
today when a news medium
brings the public bad news, it

who will not be needed will qualify them - is held to blame and is at·
selves for positions in higher education, and tacked.
some elementary and secondary schools will
be able to reduce class loads , remedy over- -Merrill Panitt, editor of TV
Guide, soying television u
crowded conditions and improve the quality
giving p t o p l e fTont-row
of their programs.
seats on world conflict and
But ghetto schools in the cities or other
many viewen don't like
schools which will continue to grow because
wMt they see.
of in-migration of pupils will find no relief.
What we need to know right now, says
I don't know what greatness
James , is where we must go on building would have come out of this
schools, where school s will be only partially country had only White
filled , where we will continue to have short- Anglo-Saxon Proteatants been
ages in school personnel and where there will allowed to work on atomic
energy, on music or any other
be surpluses.
The 1970 census, he predicts, "will reveal field.
the shockin¥ misdirection of the estimates -Whitney Young, executive
director of the National Ur·
now in use.'
ban League, on whites who
don't want their children to
have contact toith Negroe1.

Hatlo's They'll Do It

Universities are no longer

ivory-towered retreats from

the world. We really are a
laboratory of the scJences and

art of life . .. We mUll in·

volve ourselves ... We mult
face up to "like it il" but we

De1plte tllese arreltl, aad deoplte oome bitter campelpa Ia
wldeb aamberl of Commaalst baset bave lleea ...lroyed nd
leadlac Cemmuallt party memberl killed or caplured, tile
ReiimderiP'oud reportedly bao lleea rep)aelll&amp;lll top codre1
ao rapidly u they have lleea loot. Wftbla a vel'} lblrl time
offer 11 memberl of lbe puty cutral .....,..._ were killed
or eaplared, II wa1 reported that ob: top-level replaeellllOillll
bad moved Ia 1o fm tllelr lboeo.
By NOEL GROVE
A tendency in high places In the U.S. government has been
NEA Staff Correspondent
to move into emergency situations in the Dominican RepubWASIDNGTON- (N E A)- meat," he must have been lic, the Congo, Thalland and Vietnam-in one country after
another with troops or intensified ecooomlc or arm1 aid unThe long months of political tbinking of politicians.
til
a "crtsis" is over. Then, often, the United States sits bac:k,
combat are obviously putting
• • •
believing
the problem is solved. lndonellln Indicates solutions
a strain on those slugging it
IN mE RECORD BOOK of
are
not
quite
that straightforward.
out on the front !lues. You twisted metaphors, a state.

Shakespeare Wrote It
But Quoters Disagree

can ten when, for example,
Shakespeare becomes a campaign issue.

ment by Hubert Humphrey on
the campaign trail in Houston
surely won a small niche.

First to turn to lbe bard was

Careful reading of the pass·

Illinois Republican Congress·
man Edward Derwinski, who
was sweeping up after a little

age does reveal the substance
of its meaning. But in the
spoken word, it came out a

verbal flakiness by Gov. Spiro

Agnew. The GOP veep candidate's use of the word
"Polack" in a recent speech
was not an ethnic slur. said
Derwin ski, himself of Polish
descent, but a term that has
heen acceptable through the

ages, even used by Shake·
speare in "Hamlet."
Act 1, scene 1, said Derwin·

for president, "cannot slop
that change but he will he
burted by the sandstorm of
time as it passes him by."

ski, shows Hamlet's father be-

Stomach flu apparently isn't
plaguin~

the only ailment

brave that in battle he once

-John W. Lederle, prerident
of the Universlt~ of Massa·

"smote tho sledded Polacks

vice president. Such stramed,

reaching statements also show

on the ice."
Foul, crIed Rep. Henry
Reuss, Democrat from Wls·
consln, 'twas not ice-borne
Poles of which friend Willie

symptoms of a bad case of
political fervor.

SUNDAY
TIMES-SENTINEL
P""lo •h~d

c•U• '&gt;•md-.• b) rh• Oto&gt;o ~' alltJ

G"'LUI'Oll.~

A!.\ Th•cd

DAI L\ TltlBI :\[

A••., 1.au ,..,_.,a .., Ollio. nn1

,.,._

l &gt;oi!MI • ••r .• ~••M-1• t·~~·n~ P&gt;(fiPI ~lurGIIJ,
l'o~,.,:c

St&lt;vro:l ( I•••

hid •• C.lllflnhl. Dh•n

UG3 i

IIU W•~'-""' '&gt;l r..,t. Poouro•, llh&gt;o, I&gt;"MI.
Potolr tl&gt;td tun ,.t&lt;•Oda) '''"'"~ eoc.,.. ·' -"••·
ell) . lnltr.-.J u•t. O&gt;ll1 , Ja. - m.u lo"f mtH tr ••
Pom~ro), (JI,,,, l'n•• i'lf'l &gt;&lt;·•··
ft~ .,

01 'll!.'&gt;t ' JQJ' IIU.\

RJ etrr&gt;tr dl•l;.

MAIL
rlr ~

~ rill

~l8--,..; ·

!ou&gt;&amp;i•, 3:;, pwr

~""~­

IUI'TIOll I!An::.

I ,.J)•P&lt;Jh• T&lt;&gt;bo- in OhiO lnojllnr \ir-

11'"''· o•&gt;t " ' " S '' ~ " ' m.,n&lt; h• SJ ~ &gt;htu 11\onoho
53; &lt;I '""''ec&lt; . O~ )llOC8 10j &gt;II mGni~ &gt;Sf:ij !hrft
mont h&gt; 83..10

The flt.dJ Senw,.l, one •t.lr IIU: "' - h•
1~ . ::,;

d,,..,.

m"'"~•

U.

"'".,j

l'r•"" luwr"'•HD&gt;"I •• "" j, ,_
"el • eno r! led '" ~~~ u•c IM l'"bl lrlorQ" ~~ 1111
,...., d•&gt;f"''"'~' c r ed iU!d 10 Lin • ""IIII"'Pl'l. an
II»- l

"'"" •'•• IQ, • I

spake, but a lead-weighted

club called a "pole-axe'' which

t'ubl" l"'"' l u.

the late king slammed down
in disgust.
Quoth the Wisconsin con·
gressman : "So frowned he
once when . in angry r,arle. he
smote the steaded po P-axe on
the ice ... "
"Polacks," or "pole-axe."
Mr. Shakespeare? Ay, there's
the rub.
One can only conclude, as

did a Capitol Hill wag. that
when Shakespeare also said.

"Thy head is as full of
quarrels as an egg is full of

around here. It bothered me ao much I eouldn!t lleep and some- o1 .. said It alfoclod them th.o same Will'·
To me, tl'le most touching seene was when the girl saw her
father cry. h
said, ur dldnJt th1nk be could." Maybe all our
tftorts to be mature and manage our Uvea are not what our chlldrlll nood. Maybe they naod to know ,.. ar111't al""¥S stroag and

In control.
The program aftected me more because I had Just read an
article in a wldoi.Y drculatod mapzlne lor yOWig girls. It told
of their problems with parents. It seemiNI a parent was wrong
If lhe was permissive and wrona lt she was adamant and oon.

•

THAT RIO GRANDE communifiy is catching up with ua. Those
pls are real workers. They now have a new Brtnmie Troop
No. 1156. This ia the flrsl troop started outside of Gallipolis:
Mrs. Barry Stoller, &amp;lzame steni.Y, Crll Ross and Su1an Burnaide an 'IIOl'idni with thia fll'OOP. Wolcomo to the ranks of those
who wlll•,ear out" not 11 rust out."
MRS. SANDRA KOBY continues to amsze me with her talent.
9Ie deo!gnod the ()pen Gate Garden Club yearilook and It Ia very
cleverly done. D. bas a gate that opens out and reveals a colorful
garden, with birds yet.

SOMEONE TOlD ME I missed a very Important social event
re&lt;tntly. One I lhould have had by all mean1. Didn't think lliJ'
frl- would 111 me miss somethfn&amp; big. Heve racked lllJI poor
brafe trying to ftguro out what it was. Does anyone know? I wan!
to do I IIOod job of societY but am still learn!q and need help,
a~ch

aa leads and Information.

WONDER WHY THE troo ot 615 Third has turnod red 011 two
sldeo and is still gro111 in the middle?
ll' FEELS REAL strange to me to go in tho back door or a
baDk. Tho new parldng for First National rustomers Is great
but I can't pt over thinking how I would feel If I workod in a
bank and someone came in the back door. It' a bad enough it someone comes In oo me when rm Ironing or something :ike that.
M.Y bullband can tell you I almost Jump out of lliJ' skin.

" ·MJiRy FULTOil'' TELLS mo thOY are trying a new oot"'P al
~aer Crook lllgii School by havil18 their dances clond to any.
lilll but atudelta and alumni. ~. said tho recent homecoming
dance waa very nice and one of the molt successfUl. The kids
were kind of doubtfUl about how It would work.

Welt Vlrglnla friends: Unless she needa something from there.

By GAYNOR MADDOX
NEA Food Editor
The world seems to be go-

ing snack-crazy. A new killd
or a new flavor appears a1·
most every week. They take
more than $2 billion from the
American food budget every
year.
Aa the American way of

Herman W. Lay, chairman of

PepsiCo, Inc., a worldwide
corporation apecializing in

snack foods and soft drinks.
"People keep buying them because they lilie tbem. They
have more m one y for what
they want and can therefore
indulge in more impulse buying."
Large supermarkets and

small groceries! deiicatessens,

candy stores, unch counters

aad v e n d I n &amp; machines ail

cater to impulse buying today.
Among other things they ol!er

"Our

eating

changing,

habits

are

More and more

women are working. They

prepare less food at home.
Family m e a l s have fewer

bulky items in them. Modern
mothers are strangely moti-

vated by the desires of their
6- to 7-year-old chUdren, manr
of whom seem almost to go di·
recUr from their discarded
nursmg bottles to a demand

TIIES&gt;AY
JOINT MEETING or Vinton
American Legion POst 161 and
Auxlli&amp;I7, Veterans D113 meetingot Legion Hall at Ewlngton,
8 p.m. Guesta wU1 be second

vice-commander ol the Elghth
dlstrlct, Harold C o t t r I I I

l.angsvllle. All urgedtoattend:
Potluck refreshmenta.
RIVERSIDE Club will moot at
the home of Mrs. Ben Eaches,
1 p.m.

WEDNE!I&gt;AY
SPECIAL MEETING

ADDISON- The Addison Free

Will Baptist Youth group recently
held an outing and hike. The groop
met at the church for a business
meeting and refreshments follow-

ing the outing.
Present were Mike Massie,
Tom Paterson, &amp;late and Patty
Clonch, Janice, Joyce and Bonna

lllggl.nbottom, Mr. aed Mrs. Denell McCoy and family, Janice

Meadows, Mra. Pauline Wattson
and daughter Dorotii.Y, Charles
Kline, Doug Cartroll, Jimmy and
Jackie Bias.
Youths of the area are welcome to joii1 the Youth League,
It meets weekly on 1\leaday nights
at 7 p.m.

the

ad.
THURSDAY
ALEXANDER SOCIAL Club all
day meetlns with Mrs. Irene
Smeltzer,

potluck

refresh-

ments.

B AND PW Amual Boss

Night

at Grace United Methodist
Church, 6:30 p.m. Charles J.
Carraher, Jr., ot the Cincinnati Enquirer will be the feab.lred speaker,

CORA WSCS wut meet with
Mrs. Paul Burnette, 1:30 p.
m.

"The increase proportioo of
teen-agers in our population is
also a large factor. They are
enormous consumers of
snacks and soft drinks," he

adds.
Lay, orlginaily a potato chip
manufacturer in AUanta, later
merged with the Frlto Corp.

was opened by prt,Yer. The minutes at. the last meeting were
read and the treasurer's report
waa given by Mrs. Conley Whitley. Mildred Baker was elected

First Baptist
Missionary
Group Meets
GALLIPOLIS -

A workshop

followed the business session of
the Ladles Missionary Fellowship of the First Baptist Church
on Tuesday evening. The group
worked on various articles for
the missio:J&amp;ries. Miss Hazel
Halley explained the needs or the
missionaries am preserted 8&amp;111ples that are to be made at ln..
tervals by the gr(q).
Mrs. Ruuell sarrett presid~
ed over the meeting which open-ed with prayer b)' Mrs. James
Danner, Devotions were given
by Mrs. Lawrence Dickey who
read from Jeremiah 5:1 to 7.
A lovely covered dish dltmer
was served at 6:30 p.m. In the

BARBS
By PHIL PASTOIET
At one time there were 80,·
000 street cars in operation in

the United States, and If you
ask "What's a street ear'"

you'il make llJ'llndpa feel his
age.

$250.00

• • •

K.,p lfOilr chin wp and
lfOil'll trip ove• curbs.

grip while trying to up-end a

AWNEY JEWELERS

.·ms...odAvo.

Herman W. Ley

fellowship room.
Hostesses for the evening were
Helen Dickey, Violet Teale and
Lucille Serrett.

At the first meeting the members wrote the Constitution and
mode by the Seddle and Sirloin the first goal is a drive ro; new
Riding Club to give away a pony, membera. Those interested
saddle and brklle Dec. 21. The please contact Mrs. Bob
October meeting of the club was ot 388-8710.
held recently at the BulavUJe
townhouse,
The meeting was opened by
Dick Roach with all members
recltlng the pledge to the Oag.
Tickets for the pony may be
purchased from any member of
the club and wut be sold "' Wllll
drawing time.
Mr. am Mrs. Don Harrison
tVere named in charge of ticket
sales am Melvin Mooney will
be in charge of publiclty.
The next meeti~ will be election of trustee&amp; ani will be a
Thanksgiving d.irnr held at the
Kyger Creek tm~Jloyees club.
GALCIPOLIS -

•

0

0

Why do they schedule some
nr those "family" show• on
Vl&lt;1eo so late thlt grownupa
can't atay up to watch!

Golllpolla, Ohio

\.1

A wonderful winter wedding begins at Bernadines
9100 to StOO Monday, Tw11day, W•dneuloy, Saturday;
9-12 Thuu. 9t00 to 8,00 Frldoy

Bernadines
Gallipolis,

326 Second Ave.

&amp;ntth

cL

FALLFROMF1\SHieNS
THE HAT SHOPI .
I

}/

;1/

growing trend to use snack&amp;
as parf of family meals, not
just as something to nibble

FULL LINE OF ...

FALL HATS
Yo u can't top our great selection
of new foil furs , felts, velours

and

metal lies, hat fashions that

feature

the latest styles and

ex~

c iting looks . T ry them on for size

now !

SSoOO to $32.00
Large
FUR HOODS .......... $6.50 to $12.00

LINGERIE &amp; A(XESSORIES
&amp;y KAYSER

on." he adds .

As for the Negro market
Lay says : "I see no difference

between white and black taste

It's a matter of economics:

LOUNGE ROBES ... $11.00 to $19.00

Some years ago in AUanta one
salesman a week would call

Staying home is twice the fun with a

on the Negro stores. But now
with increased incomes

fashion onist from our glamorously
beautiful, glowingly warm robes. Choose
from colors, prinh, in every favorite

we

lng and because their per

Also a director of Branilf

International, the chairman of
PepsiCo, Inc. sees steady

length.

SLIPS .. . ....... . .. $6.00 to $11.00
HALF SLIPS ........ $4.00 to $6.00

growth of snack sales around
the world." In Latin America

in Spain, Italy, Germany ani!
England the sales constanUy

For the underneath-it-all of fashion , sele&lt;:t our slips . We've the length s, the
colors, the shapes you want , in marvelous eosy~care fabrics.

go up. They are now about

where the United States
25 years ago. But they
still behind American
drinks, which we sell in

was
are
soft
116

PANTIES ........... $1.00 to $3.00

countries."

"Furthermore, there is a

GLOVES.. ......... SZ.OO to $3.00

\1

.w

MINI GOWNS

""'-

by KATZ
Challis and Cuddle Trlqile

"""-

\

$3• ,.·9

~

Darnbrou h's

DEPT. STORE

Bernadines offers a superb collection of bridals
attd bridesmaid's gown ... with lovely street
length dresses for mother . If you are planning
a winter wedding right now is the time to visit
Bernadines . Bridal Boutique where sizes, slyles
and selectoon abound.

Plans were

in the same areaa."

In Beautiful
Hot Shades!

Is a bride
gowned by
Bemadines

and 21.

could use 10 men every' day

improved packagin~ will also
increase the appeal, ' be says.

bride

aa the new secretary. The other

GALLIPOLLS- The newly organized colony of Beta ggrna
Phi Sorority met at the home or
Mra. John Rader oo October 16.
Thla sorority Ia for professional women between the ages or 18

popular, although California is

storage of raw materials and

loveliest

der for abusineu meeting, which

Holds First Meet

Saddle and

still our best market. That is
because of their outdoor llv·

ment due to technology, better

the

Dae Evana called the grouptoor-

Beta Sigma Phi

Meet Held

Youth Group

of

Ohio Valley Grange 7:30p.m.
Ladles bring cake or fruit sal-

By Baptist

capita income is larger."
He predicts an ever increasing growth. "As more and
more people in the lower in·
come groups earn larger pay
checks, they wlll enter the
market. The steady improve·

for snack foods.

nr&gt;&lt; &gt; l'"bhhed ""re;n

.....

Butineas meeting at 8. Teaeh-

ers will be lntrocluced. Re-

Sirloin Club

with Pepsi Cola to form the

corn and snack crackers.

ONLY

An enthusiastic party
worker apparently lost his

narrowly missing three men.

IL

Outing Held

PepsiCo, Inc. He beUeves the
American consumer ls insatiable in his desire for novelty
in foods .
"The Fritos corn chips recipe was bought from a Mexi·
can. It sold at first mainly in
the Southwest and souUlem
California. Now it is nationally

sandwiches, salted nuts, pop-

•• TOTAL DIAMOND WEICHT

compressed

paper fell to th• street below,

Hostess Fort

of Dallas, forming Frito-Lay,
Inc. They merged in 11165

almost innumerable varieties
of puffed s n a c k s, cracker

1/2 CARAT

" . •. end when I soid that it "'" time for him to , _
up aod shoulder res,...,si/Hlity, A. sail 'What'o in
it lor me?',.
'

vember Fair.

KYGER CREEK BandBooatero
meeting 7:311 p.m. at Cafoter-

A potluck dlaner waa enjoyed,

after which the President, Mrs.

Snacks Almost an American Way of Life

ous? That light, fine snow that
wafts down from the urban
heavens to nurture and cheer
the campaigning politician?
Only when it comes in a
cloudburst. And what fell from
a window on Chestnut St. in
Philadelphia recently during
an Edwin Muskie cavalcade

wholP bag at once, and the 80pound container or shredded

Contest Planned

Meat, roDs, coffee will be rurniahod. Meeting, 7:311 p.m.

FOOD FOR AMERICANS

CAN CONFETfl be danger·

was a highly
blizzard.

Fair Poster

MONDAY
GALLIA AND KYGER CouncUs Dauglrtel's of America,
friendship night, K ol P hall.
Dimer, 6:30 p.m. Bring covered dish and table oervlce.

rrelhmenta 1¥111 be lerved.

Kyger WSCS

Washington PTA

Vinton Methodist WSCS

lor Open House 7 to 8 p.m.

Mrs. Sisson is

live qUarta ttl •WI• ,tortfet )jtre
handed In, and lbielk.• Gl igor
and Jar• to !It utod: lio !iii -..
ing wore pven, aliO, ,.,... for
goltin8 koltleo .iad -~~~~~ tither ltelill neectod In the D10idnl
were -ked out.
'IWenfl.lOUJ' lick eallo were
GALLIPOLIS - Women ttl the otricera remain the IllUDe.
reported
li10de lhll pol! IIICIIIIII.
A
f'ree
will
oll'erlng
waa
taken.
VInton United Methndlot Church
The
mootlnl
eloMd bf·-or.
Two
get-well
cards
were
signed
~et at the home of Mrs. Conher ' - •
ley WhWey lor the algn1ng or to be aent to friends who are Jane POllng lilll to lloe group lor' ~ 1'hankqj,.
the new w,s.c.s, Charter on hoiJlltallzed.
Orders for two hundred and ing meeting oo Nov. 21,
Thursday October 17, with twency...,e women participating in
the olgnlng.

Charter Service Held by

THE VINTON PTC will meet

candles and silver candelabra,
surrounded with yellow chrysanthemwns.
Mr1. Abner Pleasants prel!td.
ed at the punch bowl.
Other guests ln attendance
GALLIPOLIS - The WoJDSJ's
were Mrs. L. K. Evan&amp;, Mrs. Les- Society or Kyger Methodist
lte Brewer, Margaret Ann Brew. Church met Wednesday, for all
er, Mrs. Ronnie Keenan, Mrs. day meeting in the home of Mrs.
WUbur Demis, Mrs. Emerson Gall Sissm. They worked on two
Evans, Mrs. Joseph Chapman, comforts and sewed rug rats.
Mrs, Edward stewart, Mrs, Clyde
At noon Mra. Sisson terVed
seunder.s, Mrs. Owen Uoyd, Mrs. beef stew, doughnuts and cotAllen Romaine, Mtu Becky Saun- lee.
ders, Mrs. Jlmmy Sawtders,
Buslneas meeting was ln
Mrs. Bill Kirtland, Mrs. 1-1 a r- charge of the president, M a r y
land Saunders, Mrs. Cliff Wil- Bradbury. Scripture reading was
son, Mrs. BUI Matthews, Mra. the 46th Psalm by Mae Athey.
Clyde Price, Miss Margaret Tab· All repeated the Lord'a Pray.
it, Mra. Abner Pleasants, Mra. er, and sang ••Let the Lower
Gene .!turlock, Mrs. Marlin Cre- Ligtrts Be Burning." Secretary
meens, Mrs. JameaDanner, Miss and treasurer's reports were
Hazel Halley, Mrs. Casby Mea- react
doW•, Sr., Miss Marsha Ann EdelThe ladies wiU serve dinner on
blute, Mrs. Wayne Amabary, eJection day in Kyger lodge hall.
Mra. Kenneth Amsbary, Mrs.
The menu will be Hotdog&amp;, filh,
Arden Dob11011, Mrs. WUUs Mc- vegetable and bean soup, pie,
Bride, Mrs. Eddie Feustal 1 Mra. coffee and pop.
Harold Walker, Mrs. Russell SarPresent were Gail Sisson, Marett.
linda Bradbury, Frances Conkle
Those sending gifts were Mrs. Mae Athey, Luctlle Mulford'
Max Avner, Ml&amp;a Virginia Kil - Mary Sisson, Mary Bradbury:
lin, Miss Bette WU son, Mrs. Glema 5iluler and one guest, Mrs .
Donald Harrison, Miss Char- Frank Cheesebrew.
lotte Hambrick, Mrs. Preston
The next meeting will be held
Eianaugle, Mrs . John Epling, in the home of Mrs. A r n o I d
Mrs. George Tabit, Mrs. Gary Stump l\1ov. 20 .
Layne, Mrs. Calvin Layne, Mrs.
James Taylor, Mrs. Carter
Marks, Mrs. Raymond ~eline,
Mrs. Max Tawney, Miss Hilda

The contest wtll be judged on
orlginallt;y and neatness. It Will
take place oo October 29 at 1 p.
I HEARD MRS. ~elby Roberta makes wonderfUl hot rolls• m. in the Washington School Library. There will be prizes
That's mo ollliJ' spoclalties too.
awarded to the top five wlmlers.
This contest Is open to filth
AIS&gt; HEARD Eddie Roark was terrific in the play ''Look Back
Jn Anler," preaented last week at the Rio Grande COllege. I real - and alxth grades only .
POsters will be displt,Yed in
ly wanted to 19&gt;, but .•• I love hiving a lot of things going on but
the
downtown store windows.
I wilh sometimes there were two of me.

consumption of snacks ' will
continue to grow," observes

• •

Dean Davis. Mrs. Wilson Rusk,
Mrs. Gene Gherke, Mrs. Elmer
Bona. Mrs. George Adams, Mra.
Paige Humphreys, Mrs. Vernon
Harvey, Mrs. John North, Jr.,
Mrs. Ra,vrnond Gooch .

refreshment table was de-

I for one mlas that nice little fabric shop in upper Pl. Pleasant.)

living continues to shift the

the

The

llght(ully decorated with yellow

GALLIPOLIS- Mrs. Dan Tho·
WHY DOES TilE Galllpolla phone book always fall opeo to Pl. mas, art chairman for the WashPloaaant? Mrs. Lao Bean has a fool proof system lor avoiding ington PTA is announcing a Posthi1. liie folds back the whole Pl. Ploaaant sectloo. (Note Cor ter Contest pertalnlng to the No ·

(j

ology that left its listeners
scratched and muddled.
"He who buries his head in
the sand and sets his face
ag~inst the winds ~f change,"
srud the Democratic candidate

ing described as a man so

chu.setts.

BERRY'S

tangled briar patch of phrase-

mUll work for "lite it ou&amp;ht

to be."

belq won by Mrs. Caoby Meallm't know how lll8liY ol you ntchod tho "People Next Door" dows, 51'. and Mrs. Bill KirtprtNdocl Tuoaday night oo CBS.TV, but It causod a tot of talk land.

to • remark that the daughter made about her parents not check·
log on where she was. The rnolller said, que!Jtloningly, "Is it
wr&lt;M18 then, to trult?'' There's a thought provoking QJtltlon for

The Hydro-headed Reds-In Vietnam as in Indonesia

Floyd stnunms, Mr1. Smeltzer
Rose, Mrs. Caroll Sbowden, Mra.

Games were played with prizes

•

you.

"missile gap," which strangely evaporated

card this •'new and exciting technique in
democracy ." But W1til such time as Ameri·
cans are sophisticated enough to see behind
the surface impressions projected onto the

the gift table.

Tho mothar In tho plt,Y said the followl118 words in answer

High Atop Everything

The proof of this is that despite his COO·
siderable debatin~ skill, Nixon was unable to
pierce the emotional fog surroundillg the
phoniest Issue of that campaign-the s&lt;&gt;&lt;:alied

By Pat Houek

ventlmal.

RAY CROMLEY

tronically to the folks at home as they sipped

A yellow and green c o 1 o r
acheme waa carried out with a
decorated IIPfinkllng can 8118~
pended from the stairway ovar

done."
But mlstskes 110wr !allowed Dwight EIHI&gt;o

like the admiral "ho hsted the sea; a politician

Both as Presidert and politician, indeed, he

Mra, Edwin Edelblute served
as eo..hosteu with Mrs. Halkins.

suffered aerious Ulneu, wu momentarily hav·
iDg trouble articulating his lhooghiL He bad
meant to ...,., "Good heavens, It woulcl toke me
a week to tell you all the g&lt;IOd things Nbaln hal

who hated politics.

And he led the Repti&gt;llcan party simply by seemiDg to be uninterested in leading It ot alL

Firat Avenue.

The truth is that Presldert Elaenhower,whohld

else made all his real declslonl; and even that
he "ould read oothiDg the! could not be compressed upon a siqde sheet of p~per. He was

problems, in the White Houae or ln Nonnand,y,
simply by refusing to accept their existence.

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Pat Me. Hallll)', Mila Ama Mae Halley,
Bride, former Slelil&gt; Sarrett, Mrs, Jamea Hook, Mro. Cbar·
wat the recent hooored JUest les Lanham, Mrs. D e 1 b e r t
tor a bridal shower at the home Staats, Mrs. Donald Wallace,
ol Mrs. Morris Haskins, 1040 Mrs. Marshall Towler, M r s.

Us

lustraUon, he de&lt;ply in)ur)' Richard N"""''l
Presidential candidacy In 1960 by relllii'I&lt;IIW In
substonce that ghon a "eek he mlgllt be obl.e to
think or good tlllqs clone by his Vice-PreaidonL

lieve In ' 1dlscusstna."
He came to oatce after a lofll en of
11 1t:rorw'' Presiderts ln Franklin Roosevelt IUid
Harry Truman; anti sometimes he appeared bert
liNJII rumina the ''Weakest" Presl.deney of this
century. And yet someiKM there wa1 great desip tn what he was dotfw. And thls, quite aimply, was an irreplaceable design to lance the
bolls and reduce the fevers in thia nation.
It was often said that he did not reaDy

receiving both a wst surge ol pub1tc affection
am a new re1pect from old critics that have
come to m other American leader this aide of

Just Between

e"')resaed tn the phraae "eood, old Ike.''
Hla mistakes, w~n viewed on common
standards, were many. UnirUnttonal)f, tor U-

about them at all, whether they lnvohed

talk

BY WILUAM S. WffiTE
WASHINGTON - A process tllat might be
called Eisenhower revisited - a "historical
revisionism" of the ki.OO which o11hodox Communists reprd 11 man's worst sin - is aolna:
on in this aeaaon of the 78th btrt!Qay anniversary of a former President of the UnUedStates.
Dwight David Eloemower Ia In his own time

Bridal Shower Given for
The Former Shelly Sarrett

'·

Basic to your wardrobe are these ele·
pant gloves - - • always tastefully on
hand to contribute to good groom•ng .

HANDBAGS ........ $7 .50 to $32.50
It's the brand-newest thing in handbags
today . . . creative styling ... the bet•
ter ta go with this, that, whotever you're
wearing. Get a lood of our handbags
You'll s~e-and grab!-what we mean! .

THE HAT SHOP
GAL.L.IPOLIS, OHIO

•

�·.
- The Silnda,y Time• -SonUnel, Sunday, October 20, 1968

Washington White Paper

Affection, Respect of Ike Surges
PUBUSHED BY TilE OffiO VALLEY PUBLISHING COMPANY
Chester Tannehill, Exec. Editor
Hobart Wilson, Jr., Man. Editor

Richard S. OWen, Publisher
Vernon Deweese, Adv. :Mgr.
James E. Danner, Adv. Dir.

::
:·,.

..••
.•

the gates

Behind the Facade Of TV Debates
Hubert Humphrey has been down so long

In the polls, it's beginning to look like up to
him (to paraphrase the title of a book published a couple years ago).
But he would get a lot more political mileage out of his baiting of Richard the Chickenhearted, as he calls Nixon for refusing to
meet him in a televised debate, were it not
that many remember it was Hubert the
Hardhearted who pooh·poohed the idea of a
similar confrontation between President
, Johnson and Barry Goldwater in 19&amp;4.

::

This matter of debates is the phoniest

"issue" yet to be raised in the campaign.
., Uk:e one of those copper-nickel sandwiches
.• the government passes off as money, it has
:: face value but little intrinsic worth .
Nixon, of course, can hardly pose as Rich,•
ard the Righteous. Here is what he wrote on
:. the subject back in 1964:
"I bel i e v e that television debates con~ tribute sign~ficantly to four major objecUves
•. which are in the public interest: A bigger
:: vote, better informed voters, lower campaign
•: coats and, in the end, a better president....
..
"Millions of Americans, who would never
' 10 out to hear a political speech, or even
i
listen to one on television, tuned in to the
:• debates to see a fight and stayed to learn
.. about the issues. As a result, the electorate
•' In 1960 was probably ~he best-informed in
: the nation's history ...
•,
"America has given the world a new and
: exciting technique in democracy, and we
: ahould not allow it now to be discarded in
: our own country."

•

..:•
.

school Integration or those divtalve personal41

ltlea" - like the late Son. Joaoph Mccarthy which, as he said 10 many tlmea, he did not be-

Evidently Nixon has changed his mind
lllnce then. Perhaps he realizes that what he
gave was an idealized description of what
television debates ought to do.

What they ought to do iB convey to the
American public ln instantaneous, unambiguous and easily assimilable form the major o~
posing views on the major issues of the day.

What they would actually do, simply beeause
television is the kind of medium it 11, would
be to s u b m e r g e the issues behind tbe
"images" projected by two Ior in 1968, three)
contrasting personalities.

Undoubtedly, as Nixon noted, the liJeO de·
bates did stimulate immense voter interest
in the election. As he well knOW6, however,
he came out second best not because of his
sbmd on the issues but largely on the basis
of his "image" that was transmitted elec-

death.

of

As a President he wu the despair of poUt..
ical theorists, and aa the Sqlreme Allied Commander In Eurape he was the despalr ot professional soldiers, to this columnist's well-remem-

want

knowledge. For he seemed to solve great

bered

bower, ao:! his tangled syntax was always forgiven him. No public man waa ever auch a paradox: a soldier who hated war: an antli&gt;Oiltictan
who was~ the sheer test of auccesa one of 1111
greatest politicians we ha¥8 known.
He did what he pleased and when hopleand
ud he told the
they could toke him or

to be President and that anyhow somebody

-1•

Yet the undeniable fact is that while politi-

lea... him - and they took him. Why? Porbljpa
because seekina: nothing, all came to him; demandlllt nothing, nothing was denied him. And·
perhaps most of all because he was the wry
model of the kind, decent, patient and quietly
determined controlli118 mass that lo the Amort-

cal tq&gt;hlstlcatel were almost unanimous that he
wasn't much of a President the J)OCI!le happily

was odd-man out: a Chief Executive retuslrw:
power rather than seeking more of It; a politician who was bored by politics and made no
bones about lt. He could q:~enly yawn at partisan

elected him to two terml and would surely have
given him 1 third had not his own party mean-

time forced through an amendment against third
terms.

clsckety~lack."

can middle class.

So he left offtce not in a blaze ol glory,
certainly, but rather in a bland llfterg1ow best

Simllarb, when nadonal lnues reached 1
pitch of heat he cooled them orf by declint~ to

their beer and munched their crackers.

shortly after election day .
'nle medium, as Marshall McLuhan recognized later, was indeed the messa~e in
llleO. It still is. So powerful, so immediate-

B, RAY CROMLEY
NEA Washington Corraspondent
WASIDNGTON (NEA)
Those who believe the war in South Vietnam wlll be won
when the VietCong and North Vietnamese invading forces are

in a word, so vlsual-istelevision that millions

more Americans might Oock to the polls this
year as a result of televised debates than

otherwise would. but whether they would be

defeated and their political organization "crUJhed" are due
for a very unpleasant surprise.

better informed voters is highly questionable.

Certainly we should not permanently dis·

There is a lesson in Indonesia, where the Communist party
was "wiped out" just three years ago in a purge and blood
bath which took 100,000 to 300,000 lives. Party cadrea were
"eliminated" down to the vlllage level. Jalls were overfilled.
Secret Reds were weeded out of the government from top to
bottom. By all estimates, the party was done for. The Indonesian army took over and screened all men for all important
posts, including top air force and navy posts.
Yet in recent months the Indonesian Comm\mists have
staged a highly elfective campaign of robberies, kidnapings

~' '

cathode tube-or at least until politicians be·
gin giving strai~ht answers to straight ques·

tions, on or off television- we had better
approach the technique with extreme caution.

and murders.

•

'.
''

'~~
~
~

:

~
t

J

1
...,.
•'

~•'

•'
::
•
:
:
.•

Hawk on Vietnam Sheaths His Claws
When a hawk of such brilliant plumage as
McGeorge Bundy begins molting, the new cry
he makes is of more than passing ornothological interest.
Bundy, chief roreign policy aide to Presi dents Kennedy and Johnson until he res1gned
in December, 1965, played an 1mportant sup·
porting role in the two maJor decisiOns made
about Vietnam- the commitment of American troops to combat and the program of
restrained, sustained bombing attacks on
North Vietnam.
Today, as president of the Ford Foundation,
he still defends these decisions as the right
ones, taken at a time when the Communists
were close to victory in South Vietnam. Now.
however , he calls lor a program ol de-escalation to "lift this burden from our lives."
The North Vietnamese, it seems, have
crossed us up by refusing to cave in. Thus
Bundy's recommendation for a withdrawal of

disengagement as the burden of the war is

:•
·:
::
::
.
::

cal hostility'' but on a cool appraisal of the
situation, could weigh heavily m the dedsion.

~~

!j
.'••'
:::·
-

in the early years or the haby boom, one edu·

cator claims the nation has been caught flat-

footed by the decline in the birth rate and
has no plans to cope with it.
" Any industry faced with the Joss of 10
million clients needs to do some planning,"
aays Dean H. Thomas James of the Stanford
School of Education .
The declining enrollment in lower schools
will be help£ul to colleges and universities, he
says, by permitting the shift or some resources to the support of higher education.
Undoubtedly , many thousands of teachers

=-. \ •

'

I, /
' ' l. . I

~ff:::J
·ii~·
/~
'
,/

)

areas.
A "People's Defense School" was uncovered in central
Java, giving lnatruction in the special tactics and the various
types of arms now being used by the Viet Coag in South Viet-

"M

nam. Tbe school also conducted courses in digging undergrOUild tunnels. A military· trailliDg school
alsq ~overed in western Sumatra.
.
.
.
· .
But moat disconcerting ol aU, the Indonesian army. bai ~lis­
covered of late that its own officer and noncommissioned oitleer corps are riddled with Communists. One of the moat recent arrests is the inspector-general of the army, former
commander of forces in western Irian and eastern Indonesia.
He is accused of being a leadillg member of the Communllt
underground.
More than 50 officers, includillg colonels, Ueutenant-coloneiJ
and majors, have heen detained in the crack Siliwangi Dlvlsioo, considered the most reliable unit in the Indonesian
army.
Several hundred members of the armed forces in eastern
Java are being held for interrogation, including the chief of
staff of one of the Raider brigades of the Brawidjaja Divillon.
Two hundred members of the Central MIUtary Command
have been arrested. Several officials of tho Tblrd MIUtary
Command for West Sumatra and Riau, including reglmeatal

~/

shifted to the South Vietnamese. There appear to be no other courses.
This change of heart by one prominent

hawk, based "not on moral outrage or politi·

QUOTES

commandera, have been arrested for Communist actfvitiet.

Just as in ancient Persia

they would chop oil the head

School Planners Out on a Limb
Elementary and secondary school enrollments wUI drop 25 per cent in Ute next 15
years, population experts forecast .
This ought to be good news. But in a reverse twist of the warnings that were heard

By thll oammer, the party bad aueeoeded Ia re-eslllblllblall
baaeo IUld lraiDIDI eeaten for armed rebellloa Ia a llriDI 01
remote areal, wltlla clalldellllle or&amp;ulzatloa wbleb utellded
from vUiale to provlaeW level. Self-&lt;lefeose ulll opera~
Ia vllla1e1. Guerrilla delllcluneall moved over eoulderollle

\ \ 1;,

It is unacceptable, says Bundy, because
the penalties upon us are too great. The
penalties are the annual costs of $30 billion,
the annual sacrifice of more than 10,000
American lives , the increasing bitterness and
polarization of our peo{&gt;le and " the growing
alienation of a generation which is the best
we have had."
In other words, in "cost-effectiveness
terms"- to borrow a phrase from former
Defense secretary Robert McNamara-the
Vietnam war is simply not paying oft and
further investment in it at the current level
or at a higher level will only further unbalance the equation.
One thin~ seems certain. The next president early m his first year in office will have
to choose among three alternatives: Continuation of the war as it is going now, a sharp
escalation and even more massive commitment of American resources, or a gradual

:: t;.S. forces down to a level of about 100,000
troops, which he says could be achieved without insuring the defeat of South Vietnam, is
based "not on moral outrage or political
hostility to the objective, but rather on the
simple and practical ground that escalation
wiU not work and that continuation on our
present course is unacceptablt&gt;."

'

of the messenger who brou~ht
news of defeat, so in America
today when a news medium
brings the public bad news, it

who will not be needed will qualify them - is held to blame and is at·
selves for positions in higher education, and tacked.
some elementary and secondary schools will
be able to reduce class loads , remedy over- -Merrill Panitt, editor of TV
Guide, soying television u
crowded conditions and improve the quality
giving p t o p l e fTont-row
of their programs.
seats on world conflict and
But ghetto schools in the cities or other
many viewen don't like
schools which will continue to grow because
wMt they see.
of in-migration of pupils will find no relief.
What we need to know right now, says
I don't know what greatness
James , is where we must go on building would have come out of this
schools, where school s will be only partially country had only White
filled , where we will continue to have short- Anglo-Saxon Proteatants been
ages in school personnel and where there will allowed to work on atomic
energy, on music or any other
be surpluses.
The 1970 census, he predicts, "will reveal field.
the shockin¥ misdirection of the estimates -Whitney Young, executive
director of the National Ur·
now in use.'
ban League, on whites who
don't want their children to
have contact toith Negroe1.

Hatlo's They'll Do It

Universities are no longer

ivory-towered retreats from

the world. We really are a
laboratory of the scJences and

art of life . .. We mUll in·

volve ourselves ... We mult
face up to "like it il" but we

De1plte tllese arreltl, aad deoplte oome bitter campelpa Ia
wldeb aamberl of Commaalst baset bave lleea ...lroyed nd
leadlac Cemmuallt party memberl killed or caplured, tile
ReiimderiP'oud reportedly bao lleea rep)aelll&amp;lll top codre1
ao rapidly u they have lleea loot. Wftbla a vel'} lblrl time
offer 11 memberl of lbe puty cutral .....,..._ were killed
or eaplared, II wa1 reported that ob: top-level replaeellllOillll
bad moved Ia 1o fm tllelr lboeo.
By NOEL GROVE
A tendency in high places In the U.S. government has been
NEA Staff Correspondent
to move into emergency situations in the Dominican RepubWASIDNGTON- (N E A)- meat," he must have been lic, the Congo, Thalland and Vietnam-in one country after
another with troops or intensified ecooomlc or arm1 aid unThe long months of political tbinking of politicians.
til
a "crtsis" is over. Then, often, the United States sits bac:k,
combat are obviously putting
• • •
believing
the problem is solved. lndonellln Indicates solutions
a strain on those slugging it
IN mE RECORD BOOK of
are
not
quite
that straightforward.
out on the front !lues. You twisted metaphors, a state.

Shakespeare Wrote It
But Quoters Disagree

can ten when, for example,
Shakespeare becomes a campaign issue.

ment by Hubert Humphrey on
the campaign trail in Houston
surely won a small niche.

First to turn to lbe bard was

Careful reading of the pass·

Illinois Republican Congress·
man Edward Derwinski, who
was sweeping up after a little

age does reveal the substance
of its meaning. But in the
spoken word, it came out a

verbal flakiness by Gov. Spiro

Agnew. The GOP veep candidate's use of the word
"Polack" in a recent speech
was not an ethnic slur. said
Derwin ski, himself of Polish
descent, but a term that has
heen acceptable through the

ages, even used by Shake·
speare in "Hamlet."
Act 1, scene 1, said Derwin·

for president, "cannot slop
that change but he will he
burted by the sandstorm of
time as it passes him by."

ski, shows Hamlet's father be-

Stomach flu apparently isn't
plaguin~

the only ailment

brave that in battle he once

-John W. Lederle, prerident
of the Universlt~ of Massa·

"smote tho sledded Polacks

vice president. Such stramed,

reaching statements also show

on the ice."
Foul, crIed Rep. Henry
Reuss, Democrat from Wls·
consln, 'twas not ice-borne
Poles of which friend Willie

symptoms of a bad case of
political fervor.

SUNDAY
TIMES-SENTINEL
P""lo •h~d

c•U• '&gt;•md-.• b) rh• Oto&gt;o ~' alltJ

G"'LUI'Oll.~

A!.\ Th•cd

DAI L\ TltlBI :\[

A••., 1.au ,..,_.,a .., Ollio. nn1

,.,._

l &gt;oi!MI • ••r .• ~••M-1• t·~~·n~ P&gt;(fiPI ~lurGIIJ,
l'o~,.,:c

St&lt;vro:l ( I•••

hid •• C.lllflnhl. Dh•n

UG3 i

IIU W•~'-""' '&gt;l r..,t. Poouro•, llh&gt;o, I&gt;"MI.
Potolr tl&gt;td tun ,.t&lt;•Oda) '''"'"~ eoc.,.. ·' -"••·
ell) . lnltr.-.J u•t. O&gt;ll1 , Ja. - m.u lo"f mtH tr ••
Pom~ro), (JI,,,, l'n•• i'lf'l &gt;&lt;·•··
ft~ .,

01 'll!.'&gt;t ' JQJ' IIU.\

RJ etrr&gt;tr dl•l;.

MAIL
rlr ~

~ rill

~l8--,..; ·

!ou&gt;&amp;i•, 3:;, pwr

~""~­

IUI'TIOll I!An::.

I ,.J)•P&lt;Jh• T&lt;&gt;bo- in OhiO lnojllnr \ir-

11'"''· o•&gt;t " ' " S '' ~ " ' m.,n&lt; h• SJ ~ &gt;htu 11\onoho
53; &lt;I '""''ec&lt; . O~ )llOC8 10j &gt;II mGni~ &gt;Sf:ij !hrft
mont h&gt; 83..10

The flt.dJ Senw,.l, one •t.lr IIU: "' - h•
1~ . ::,;

d,,..,.

m"'"~•

U.

"'".,j

l'r•"" luwr"'•HD&gt;"I •• "" j, ,_
"el • eno r! led '" ~~~ u•c IM l'"bl lrlorQ" ~~ 1111
,...., d•&gt;f"''"'~' c r ed iU!d 10 Lin • ""IIII"'Pl'l. an
II»- l

"'"" •'•• IQ, • I

spake, but a lead-weighted

club called a "pole-axe'' which

t'ubl" l"'"' l u.

the late king slammed down
in disgust.
Quoth the Wisconsin con·
gressman : "So frowned he
once when . in angry r,arle. he
smote the steaded po P-axe on
the ice ... "
"Polacks," or "pole-axe."
Mr. Shakespeare? Ay, there's
the rub.
One can only conclude, as

did a Capitol Hill wag. that
when Shakespeare also said.

"Thy head is as full of
quarrels as an egg is full of

around here. It bothered me ao much I eouldn!t lleep and some- o1 .. said It alfoclod them th.o same Will'·
To me, tl'le most touching seene was when the girl saw her
father cry. h
said, ur dldnJt th1nk be could." Maybe all our
tftorts to be mature and manage our Uvea are not what our chlldrlll nood. Maybe they naod to know ,.. ar111't al""¥S stroag and

In control.
The program aftected me more because I had Just read an
article in a wldoi.Y drculatod mapzlne lor yOWig girls. It told
of their problems with parents. It seemiNI a parent was wrong
If lhe was permissive and wrona lt she was adamant and oon.

•

THAT RIO GRANDE communifiy is catching up with ua. Those
pls are real workers. They now have a new Brtnmie Troop
No. 1156. This ia the flrsl troop started outside of Gallipolis:
Mrs. Barry Stoller, &amp;lzame steni.Y, Crll Ross and Su1an Burnaide an 'IIOl'idni with thia fll'OOP. Wolcomo to the ranks of those
who wlll•,ear out" not 11 rust out."
MRS. SANDRA KOBY continues to amsze me with her talent.
9Ie deo!gnod the ()pen Gate Garden Club yearilook and It Ia very
cleverly done. D. bas a gate that opens out and reveals a colorful
garden, with birds yet.

SOMEONE TOlD ME I missed a very Important social event
re&lt;tntly. One I lhould have had by all mean1. Didn't think lliJ'
frl- would 111 me miss somethfn&amp; big. Heve racked lllJI poor
brafe trying to ftguro out what it was. Does anyone know? I wan!
to do I IIOod job of societY but am still learn!q and need help,
a~ch

aa leads and Information.

WONDER WHY THE troo ot 615 Third has turnod red 011 two
sldeo and is still gro111 in the middle?
ll' FEELS REAL strange to me to go in tho back door or a
baDk. Tho new parldng for First National rustomers Is great
but I can't pt over thinking how I would feel If I workod in a
bank and someone came in the back door. It' a bad enough it someone comes In oo me when rm Ironing or something :ike that.
M.Y bullband can tell you I almost Jump out of lliJ' skin.

" ·MJiRy FULTOil'' TELLS mo thOY are trying a new oot"'P al
~aer Crook lllgii School by havil18 their dances clond to any.
lilll but atudelta and alumni. ~. said tho recent homecoming
dance waa very nice and one of the molt successfUl. The kids
were kind of doubtfUl about how It would work.

Welt Vlrglnla friends: Unless she needa something from there.

By GAYNOR MADDOX
NEA Food Editor
The world seems to be go-

ing snack-crazy. A new killd
or a new flavor appears a1·
most every week. They take
more than $2 billion from the
American food budget every
year.
Aa the American way of

Herman W. Lay, chairman of

PepsiCo, Inc., a worldwide
corporation apecializing in

snack foods and soft drinks.
"People keep buying them because they lilie tbem. They
have more m one y for what
they want and can therefore
indulge in more impulse buying."
Large supermarkets and

small groceries! deiicatessens,

candy stores, unch counters

aad v e n d I n &amp; machines ail

cater to impulse buying today.
Among other things they ol!er

"Our

eating

changing,

habits

are

More and more

women are working. They

prepare less food at home.
Family m e a l s have fewer

bulky items in them. Modern
mothers are strangely moti-

vated by the desires of their
6- to 7-year-old chUdren, manr
of whom seem almost to go di·
recUr from their discarded
nursmg bottles to a demand

TIIES&gt;AY
JOINT MEETING or Vinton
American Legion POst 161 and
Auxlli&amp;I7, Veterans D113 meetingot Legion Hall at Ewlngton,
8 p.m. Guesta wU1 be second

vice-commander ol the Elghth
dlstrlct, Harold C o t t r I I I

l.angsvllle. All urgedtoattend:
Potluck refreshmenta.
RIVERSIDE Club will moot at
the home of Mrs. Ben Eaches,
1 p.m.

WEDNE!I&gt;AY
SPECIAL MEETING

ADDISON- The Addison Free

Will Baptist Youth group recently
held an outing and hike. The groop
met at the church for a business
meeting and refreshments follow-

ing the outing.
Present were Mike Massie,
Tom Paterson, &amp;late and Patty
Clonch, Janice, Joyce and Bonna

lllggl.nbottom, Mr. aed Mrs. Denell McCoy and family, Janice

Meadows, Mra. Pauline Wattson
and daughter Dorotii.Y, Charles
Kline, Doug Cartroll, Jimmy and
Jackie Bias.
Youths of the area are welcome to joii1 the Youth League,
It meets weekly on 1\leaday nights
at 7 p.m.

the

ad.
THURSDAY
ALEXANDER SOCIAL Club all
day meetlns with Mrs. Irene
Smeltzer,

potluck

refresh-

ments.

B AND PW Amual Boss

Night

at Grace United Methodist
Church, 6:30 p.m. Charles J.
Carraher, Jr., ot the Cincinnati Enquirer will be the feab.lred speaker,

CORA WSCS wut meet with
Mrs. Paul Burnette, 1:30 p.
m.

"The increase proportioo of
teen-agers in our population is
also a large factor. They are
enormous consumers of
snacks and soft drinks," he

adds.
Lay, orlginaily a potato chip
manufacturer in AUanta, later
merged with the Frlto Corp.

was opened by prt,Yer. The minutes at. the last meeting were
read and the treasurer's report
waa given by Mrs. Conley Whitley. Mildred Baker was elected

First Baptist
Missionary
Group Meets
GALLIPOLIS -

A workshop

followed the business session of
the Ladles Missionary Fellowship of the First Baptist Church
on Tuesday evening. The group
worked on various articles for
the missio:J&amp;ries. Miss Hazel
Halley explained the needs or the
missionaries am preserted 8&amp;111ples that are to be made at ln..
tervals by the gr(q).
Mrs. Ruuell sarrett presid~
ed over the meeting which open-ed with prayer b)' Mrs. James
Danner, Devotions were given
by Mrs. Lawrence Dickey who
read from Jeremiah 5:1 to 7.
A lovely covered dish dltmer
was served at 6:30 p.m. In the

BARBS
By PHIL PASTOIET
At one time there were 80,·
000 street cars in operation in

the United States, and If you
ask "What's a street ear'"

you'il make llJ'llndpa feel his
age.

$250.00

• • •

K.,p lfOilr chin wp and
lfOil'll trip ove• curbs.

grip while trying to up-end a

AWNEY JEWELERS

.·ms...odAvo.

Herman W. Ley

fellowship room.
Hostesses for the evening were
Helen Dickey, Violet Teale and
Lucille Serrett.

At the first meeting the members wrote the Constitution and
mode by the Seddle and Sirloin the first goal is a drive ro; new
Riding Club to give away a pony, membera. Those interested
saddle and brklle Dec. 21. The please contact Mrs. Bob
October meeting of the club was ot 388-8710.
held recently at the BulavUJe
townhouse,
The meeting was opened by
Dick Roach with all members
recltlng the pledge to the Oag.
Tickets for the pony may be
purchased from any member of
the club and wut be sold "' Wllll
drawing time.
Mr. am Mrs. Don Harrison
tVere named in charge of ticket
sales am Melvin Mooney will
be in charge of publiclty.
The next meeti~ will be election of trustee&amp; ani will be a
Thanksgiving d.irnr held at the
Kyger Creek tm~Jloyees club.
GALCIPOLIS -

•

0

0

Why do they schedule some
nr those "family" show• on
Vl&lt;1eo so late thlt grownupa
can't atay up to watch!

Golllpolla, Ohio

\.1

A wonderful winter wedding begins at Bernadines
9100 to StOO Monday, Tw11day, W•dneuloy, Saturday;
9-12 Thuu. 9t00 to 8,00 Frldoy

Bernadines
Gallipolis,

326 Second Ave.

&amp;ntth

cL

FALLFROMF1\SHieNS
THE HAT SHOPI .
I

}/

;1/

growing trend to use snack&amp;
as parf of family meals, not
just as something to nibble

FULL LINE OF ...

FALL HATS
Yo u can't top our great selection
of new foil furs , felts, velours

and

metal lies, hat fashions that

feature

the latest styles and

ex~

c iting looks . T ry them on for size

now !

SSoOO to $32.00
Large
FUR HOODS .......... $6.50 to $12.00

LINGERIE &amp; A(XESSORIES
&amp;y KAYSER

on." he adds .

As for the Negro market
Lay says : "I see no difference

between white and black taste

It's a matter of economics:

LOUNGE ROBES ... $11.00 to $19.00

Some years ago in AUanta one
salesman a week would call

Staying home is twice the fun with a

on the Negro stores. But now
with increased incomes

fashion onist from our glamorously
beautiful, glowingly warm robes. Choose
from colors, prinh, in every favorite

we

lng and because their per

Also a director of Branilf

International, the chairman of
PepsiCo, Inc. sees steady

length.

SLIPS .. . ....... . .. $6.00 to $11.00
HALF SLIPS ........ $4.00 to $6.00

growth of snack sales around
the world." In Latin America

in Spain, Italy, Germany ani!
England the sales constanUy

For the underneath-it-all of fashion , sele&lt;:t our slips . We've the length s, the
colors, the shapes you want , in marvelous eosy~care fabrics.

go up. They are now about

where the United States
25 years ago. But they
still behind American
drinks, which we sell in

was
are
soft
116

PANTIES ........... $1.00 to $3.00

countries."

"Furthermore, there is a

GLOVES.. ......... SZ.OO to $3.00

\1

.w

MINI GOWNS

""'-

by KATZ
Challis and Cuddle Trlqile

"""-

\

$3• ,.·9

~

Darnbrou h's

DEPT. STORE

Bernadines offers a superb collection of bridals
attd bridesmaid's gown ... with lovely street
length dresses for mother . If you are planning
a winter wedding right now is the time to visit
Bernadines . Bridal Boutique where sizes, slyles
and selectoon abound.

Plans were

in the same areaa."

In Beautiful
Hot Shades!

Is a bride
gowned by
Bemadines

and 21.

could use 10 men every' day

improved packagin~ will also
increase the appeal, ' be says.

bride

aa the new secretary. The other

GALLIPOLLS- The newly organized colony of Beta ggrna
Phi Sorority met at the home or
Mra. John Rader oo October 16.
Thla sorority Ia for professional women between the ages or 18

popular, although California is

storage of raw materials and

loveliest

der for abusineu meeting, which

Holds First Meet

Saddle and

still our best market. That is
because of their outdoor llv·

ment due to technology, better

the

Dae Evana called the grouptoor-

Beta Sigma Phi

Meet Held

Youth Group

of

Ohio Valley Grange 7:30p.m.
Ladles bring cake or fruit sal-

By Baptist

capita income is larger."
He predicts an ever increasing growth. "As more and
more people in the lower in·
come groups earn larger pay
checks, they wlll enter the
market. The steady improve·

for snack foods.

nr&gt;&lt; &gt; l'"bhhed ""re;n

.....

Butineas meeting at 8. Teaeh-

ers will be lntrocluced. Re-

Sirloin Club

with Pepsi Cola to form the

corn and snack crackers.

ONLY

An enthusiastic party
worker apparently lost his

narrowly missing three men.

IL

Outing Held

PepsiCo, Inc. He beUeves the
American consumer ls insatiable in his desire for novelty
in foods .
"The Fritos corn chips recipe was bought from a Mexi·
can. It sold at first mainly in
the Southwest and souUlem
California. Now it is nationally

sandwiches, salted nuts, pop-

•• TOTAL DIAMOND WEICHT

compressed

paper fell to th• street below,

Hostess Fort

of Dallas, forming Frito-Lay,
Inc. They merged in 11165

almost innumerable varieties
of puffed s n a c k s, cracker

1/2 CARAT

" . •. end when I soid that it "'" time for him to , _
up aod shoulder res,...,si/Hlity, A. sail 'What'o in
it lor me?',.
'

vember Fair.

KYGER CREEK BandBooatero
meeting 7:311 p.m. at Cafoter-

A potluck dlaner waa enjoyed,

after which the President, Mrs.

Snacks Almost an American Way of Life

ous? That light, fine snow that
wafts down from the urban
heavens to nurture and cheer
the campaigning politician?
Only when it comes in a
cloudburst. And what fell from
a window on Chestnut St. in
Philadelphia recently during
an Edwin Muskie cavalcade

wholP bag at once, and the 80pound container or shredded

Contest Planned

Meat, roDs, coffee will be rurniahod. Meeting, 7:311 p.m.

FOOD FOR AMERICANS

CAN CONFETfl be danger·

was a highly
blizzard.

Fair Poster

MONDAY
GALLIA AND KYGER CouncUs Dauglrtel's of America,
friendship night, K ol P hall.
Dimer, 6:30 p.m. Bring covered dish and table oervlce.

rrelhmenta 1¥111 be lerved.

Kyger WSCS

Washington PTA

Vinton Methodist WSCS

lor Open House 7 to 8 p.m.

Mrs. Sisson is

live qUarta ttl •WI• ,tortfet )jtre
handed In, and lbielk.• Gl igor
and Jar• to !It utod: lio !iii -..
ing wore pven, aliO, ,.,... for
goltin8 koltleo .iad -~~~~~ tither ltelill neectod In the D10idnl
were -ked out.
'IWenfl.lOUJ' lick eallo were
GALLIPOLIS - Women ttl the otricera remain the IllUDe.
reported
li10de lhll pol! IIICIIIIII.
A
f'ree
will
oll'erlng
waa
taken.
VInton United Methndlot Church
The
mootlnl
eloMd bf·-or.
Two
get-well
cards
were
signed
~et at the home of Mrs. Conher ' - •
ley WhWey lor the algn1ng or to be aent to friends who are Jane POllng lilll to lloe group lor' ~ 1'hankqj,.
the new w,s.c.s, Charter on hoiJlltallzed.
Orders for two hundred and ing meeting oo Nov. 21,
Thursday October 17, with twency...,e women participating in
the olgnlng.

Charter Service Held by

THE VINTON PTC will meet

candles and silver candelabra,
surrounded with yellow chrysanthemwns.
Mr1. Abner Pleasants prel!td.
ed at the punch bowl.
Other guests ln attendance
GALLIPOLIS - The WoJDSJ's
were Mrs. L. K. Evan&amp;, Mrs. Les- Society or Kyger Methodist
lte Brewer, Margaret Ann Brew. Church met Wednesday, for all
er, Mrs. Ronnie Keenan, Mrs. day meeting in the home of Mrs.
WUbur Demis, Mrs. Emerson Gall Sissm. They worked on two
Evans, Mrs. Joseph Chapman, comforts and sewed rug rats.
Mrs, Edward stewart, Mrs, Clyde
At noon Mra. Sisson terVed
seunder.s, Mrs. Owen Uoyd, Mrs. beef stew, doughnuts and cotAllen Romaine, Mtu Becky Saun- lee.
ders, Mrs. Jlmmy Sawtders,
Buslneas meeting was ln
Mrs. Bill Kirtland, Mrs. 1-1 a r- charge of the president, M a r y
land Saunders, Mrs. Cliff Wil- Bradbury. Scripture reading was
son, Mrs. BUI Matthews, Mra. the 46th Psalm by Mae Athey.
Clyde Price, Miss Margaret Tab· All repeated the Lord'a Pray.
it, Mra. Abner Pleasants, Mra. er, and sang ••Let the Lower
Gene .!turlock, Mrs. Marlin Cre- Ligtrts Be Burning." Secretary
meens, Mrs. JameaDanner, Miss and treasurer's reports were
Hazel Halley, Mrs. Casby Mea- react
doW•, Sr., Miss Marsha Ann EdelThe ladies wiU serve dinner on
blute, Mrs. Wayne Amabary, eJection day in Kyger lodge hall.
Mra. Kenneth Amsbary, Mrs.
The menu will be Hotdog&amp;, filh,
Arden Dob11011, Mrs. WUUs Mc- vegetable and bean soup, pie,
Bride, Mrs. Eddie Feustal 1 Mra. coffee and pop.
Harold Walker, Mrs. Russell SarPresent were Gail Sisson, Marett.
linda Bradbury, Frances Conkle
Those sending gifts were Mrs. Mae Athey, Luctlle Mulford'
Max Avner, Ml&amp;a Virginia Kil - Mary Sisson, Mary Bradbury:
lin, Miss Bette WU son, Mrs. Glema 5iluler and one guest, Mrs .
Donald Harrison, Miss Char- Frank Cheesebrew.
lotte Hambrick, Mrs. Preston
The next meeting will be held
Eianaugle, Mrs . John Epling, in the home of Mrs. A r n o I d
Mrs. George Tabit, Mrs. Gary Stump l\1ov. 20 .
Layne, Mrs. Calvin Layne, Mrs.
James Taylor, Mrs. Carter
Marks, Mrs. Raymond ~eline,
Mrs. Max Tawney, Miss Hilda

The contest wtll be judged on
orlginallt;y and neatness. It Will
take place oo October 29 at 1 p.
I HEARD MRS. ~elby Roberta makes wonderfUl hot rolls• m. in the Washington School Library. There will be prizes
That's mo ollliJ' spoclalties too.
awarded to the top five wlmlers.
This contest Is open to filth
AIS&gt; HEARD Eddie Roark was terrific in the play ''Look Back
Jn Anler," preaented last week at the Rio Grande COllege. I real - and alxth grades only .
POsters will be displt,Yed in
ly wanted to 19&gt;, but .•• I love hiving a lot of things going on but
the
downtown store windows.
I wilh sometimes there were two of me.

consumption of snacks ' will
continue to grow," observes

• •

Dean Davis. Mrs. Wilson Rusk,
Mrs. Gene Gherke, Mrs. Elmer
Bona. Mrs. George Adams, Mra.
Paige Humphreys, Mrs. Vernon
Harvey, Mrs. John North, Jr.,
Mrs. Ra,vrnond Gooch .

refreshment table was de-

I for one mlas that nice little fabric shop in upper Pl. Pleasant.)

living continues to shift the

the

The

llght(ully decorated with yellow

GALLIPOLIS- Mrs. Dan Tho·
WHY DOES TilE Galllpolla phone book always fall opeo to Pl. mas, art chairman for the WashPloaaant? Mrs. Lao Bean has a fool proof system lor avoiding ington PTA is announcing a Posthi1. liie folds back the whole Pl. Ploaaant sectloo. (Note Cor ter Contest pertalnlng to the No ·

(j

ology that left its listeners
scratched and muddled.
"He who buries his head in
the sand and sets his face
ag~inst the winds ~f change,"
srud the Democratic candidate

ing described as a man so

chu.setts.

BERRY'S

tangled briar patch of phrase-

mUll work for "lite it ou&amp;ht

to be."

belq won by Mrs. Caoby Meallm't know how lll8liY ol you ntchod tho "People Next Door" dows, 51'. and Mrs. Bill KirtprtNdocl Tuoaday night oo CBS.TV, but It causod a tot of talk land.

to • remark that the daughter made about her parents not check·
log on where she was. The rnolller said, que!Jtloningly, "Is it
wr&lt;M18 then, to trult?'' There's a thought provoking QJtltlon for

The Hydro-headed Reds-In Vietnam as in Indonesia

Floyd stnunms, Mr1. Smeltzer
Rose, Mrs. Caroll Sbowden, Mra.

Games were played with prizes

•

you.

"missile gap," which strangely evaporated

card this •'new and exciting technique in
democracy ." But W1til such time as Ameri·
cans are sophisticated enough to see behind
the surface impressions projected onto the

the gift table.

Tho mothar In tho plt,Y said the followl118 words in answer

High Atop Everything

The proof of this is that despite his COO·
siderable debatin~ skill, Nixon was unable to
pierce the emotional fog surroundillg the
phoniest Issue of that campaign-the s&lt;&gt;&lt;:alied

By Pat Houek

ventlmal.

RAY CROMLEY

tronically to the folks at home as they sipped

A yellow and green c o 1 o r
acheme waa carried out with a
decorated IIPfinkllng can 8118~
pended from the stairway ovar

done."
But mlstskes 110wr !allowed Dwight EIHI&gt;o

like the admiral "ho hsted the sea; a politician

Both as Presidert and politician, indeed, he

Mra, Edwin Edelblute served
as eo..hosteu with Mrs. Halkins.

suffered aerious Ulneu, wu momentarily hav·
iDg trouble articulating his lhooghiL He bad
meant to ...,., "Good heavens, It woulcl toke me
a week to tell you all the g&lt;IOd things Nbaln hal

who hated politics.

And he led the Repti&gt;llcan party simply by seemiDg to be uninterested in leading It ot alL

Firat Avenue.

The truth is that Presldert Elaenhower,whohld

else made all his real declslonl; and even that
he "ould read oothiDg the! could not be compressed upon a siqde sheet of p~per. He was

problems, in the White Houae or ln Nonnand,y,
simply by refusing to accept their existence.

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Pat Me. Hallll)', Mila Ama Mae Halley,
Bride, former Slelil&gt; Sarrett, Mrs, Jamea Hook, Mro. Cbar·
wat the recent hooored JUest les Lanham, Mrs. D e 1 b e r t
tor a bridal shower at the home Staats, Mrs. Donald Wallace,
ol Mrs. Morris Haskins, 1040 Mrs. Marshall Towler, M r s.

Us

lustraUon, he de&lt;ply in)ur)' Richard N"""''l
Presidential candidacy In 1960 by relllii'I&lt;IIW In
substonce that ghon a "eek he mlgllt be obl.e to
think or good tlllqs clone by his Vice-PreaidonL

lieve In ' 1dlscusstna."
He came to oatce after a lofll en of
11 1t:rorw'' Presiderts ln Franklin Roosevelt IUid
Harry Truman; anti sometimes he appeared bert
liNJII rumina the ''Weakest" Presl.deney of this
century. And yet someiKM there wa1 great desip tn what he was dotfw. And thls, quite aimply, was an irreplaceable design to lance the
bolls and reduce the fevers in thia nation.
It was often said that he did not reaDy

receiving both a wst surge ol pub1tc affection
am a new re1pect from old critics that have
come to m other American leader this aide of

Just Between

e"')resaed tn the phraae "eood, old Ike.''
Hla mistakes, w~n viewed on common
standards, were many. UnirUnttonal)f, tor U-

about them at all, whether they lnvohed

talk

BY WILUAM S. WffiTE
WASHINGTON - A process tllat might be
called Eisenhower revisited - a "historical
revisionism" of the ki.OO which o11hodox Communists reprd 11 man's worst sin - is aolna:
on in this aeaaon of the 78th btrt!Qay anniversary of a former President of the UnUedStates.
Dwight David Eloemower Ia In his own time

Bridal Shower Given for
The Former Shelly Sarrett

'·

Basic to your wardrobe are these ele·
pant gloves - - • always tastefully on
hand to contribute to good groom•ng .

HANDBAGS ........ $7 .50 to $32.50
It's the brand-newest thing in handbags
today . . . creative styling ... the bet•
ter ta go with this, that, whotever you're
wearing. Get a lood of our handbags
You'll s~e-and grab!-what we mean! .

THE HAT SHOP
GAL.L.IPOLIS, OHIO

•

�·-- . ........... .. -. . . . . . ....

-·
• ~ '!'be SllndiY Time•- Sontlaol, Sundlf, O&lt;tobor 20, 1968

Completed by

GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Kemeth
.......... Dlre&lt;tor "' Golllo Counlr ChoU De!e1110, wu the r.tund ~er lor the Adclavllle
PTA ._urw held Thuraday at
tho ldlool.

the second place wlnaer)
Mrs. Mulford. ftratgrade, Dubbie Stover, and Woody Burnett.

WeUrer's subject was, '"Fall-

Mlas Davis, seconcl grade, David Russell and Julia Polcyn.

Mia a Johnson, ft.ratgrade, Robert Phillips and Tomrn,y ~r!J&gt;o
gv.

Mrs. Bermett. secoOO grade,

S&amp;fety posters wereondhp]IJ',
The first place wlmers reei!lved blue ribbons and second place

Clonch.

wlmers were awarded red rtblxllla.

Mrs. Rhodes, third grade, Teresa C&amp;.Jnpbell and Mickie Gra-

FollEMing are listed the teacher, grade and ram.e or wimlers:
(The drat name is the firstplace
winner ard the second name is

ham.
Mrs. Kennedy, third grade,

Beverly

Brown

a nd

Johnny

Billy McCO)' anti Sheila Oller.

Mrs. Jenkins, fourth grade,

Snyder Descendents Hold
Seventh Annual Reunion
GALUPOLJS - The seventh deU Woodru!f, Cletus and Todd
remuoo ot the descendants of Harder, Comie Horton and Dick
Mr. and Mrs. Mlltoo &amp;l&gt;der took Cr emeans. All enjoyed a good via-

~ '(
j

'

i•
'

.

'

.'
0

~

I

L

I

I

t
It
i I
I

.'
I
'

j

rood. The reunIon will be held oo. the same date

place October 6 al Tar Hollow
state Park, with 43 present and

it and plentY of

two vislton.

next year.

Those coming from Obetz
wore: Mr. and Mrs. Wendell
Woodruff, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Horton and chlldren, Comle and Keith
and a (rfend. From Columbus
were: Mr. and Mrs. Ted Harder
md Gina, Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Harder, Terry Jay and Stephanie,
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Cremeans and

This is the secOnd ttme the reunion had been held at Tar Hollow. Other places it was held
were Lancaster, Aah Cave, ~­

der Pork in Sprlng!leld, R o &lt; k
Houso and the Logan Park.

Robin, and Karl - · Mr.
and Mrs. Bradley Harder, &amp;evie, Jeftrey, and Lisa.
From Vinton, were Mr. and
Mrs. Jamu Mulholand, IUckle,
Anthony, Erie, and PennY.
Mrs. Kathryn EvanJ from Rio
Grande was one of the visltor s.
From Wilkesville were Mr. and
Mrs. Alva Woodruff.
From Union Furnace were Mr.

and

Toey .
Also com.ing from Columbus
were Mr. and Mrs. Paul Croa.
by, Patricia and Buddy.
T'lDse celebrating birthdays in
1he month of October were Wen-

Sunday School

•P\t New Hope
GALLIPOLIS -

A play, "It
Makes A Dift'erence, ' ' will be
presP.nted by the New Hope Sunday ~ hool on Thursday, Oct.
24 at 7:30 p.m.

Following the play, s talent
hour will be held and refreshmenta wUI be served.
The cast of chAracter&amp; is as
tollows, Ivan G. Hurt, Pal Don;
Merle Howard, Margaret; Ruby
Hurt. Patty; Jim Wilford, Phil;
Allee Garnes , mana and Jackie
Howard, "a surprise character."
The New Hope Church is on

554.

THE A-SHAPED tatfeta
{;Venlng coat , narlng to the
hem, Is for a most dramatic
entrance. Two giant black
taffeta roaes frame the tace .
It 11 otrered ror fa11 and winter
by St&amp;vropoloull. Jewelry by
Cadoro, shoes by Levine.

Flag EllqueUe
In displaying the American
flag vertically from a window

or wall ~ the union of the flag
should be on top, on your left
as you face it.

Mrs. Grossman, fifth grade.
Jeff Blazer and Brelk1a Wallace.
Mrs. King, sixth grade, Linda
Je!iers and MarceUa Nunn.
The judges were senior students at Kyger Creek H i g h
School , carol Sue Daniels and
Jackie Curnutte. The Art teacher is Mrs. Mosier,

-

Gallipolis

Minor Hurts
PT. PLEASANT - Two persons received minor Injuries in
a one car accident. Friday 11:50 p.m. oo Rt. 2 near the Goodyear plant.
According to the ::ileriff'a de partment a car driven south on

Rt. 2 by Eleanor Stover, 49,
Apple Grove, went off the berm

of the road then out ot control
and overturned. Injured were two
passengers, Elsa stover, Apple

Grove, who complained of a right
shoulder sprain BDd Roger Mc-

Apple Grove, ~t leg
Both declined medical
treotment.
Arrests recorded at the COWl ~

were:

t;y jail

Ersel Otto Coa-

Evans., w. Va. , chargdriving while intoxicated; Herbert R, McDonald, 41,

sln. 48,
ed with

..

'

Ft. Pleasant, intoxication; and
Sidney E. Huddlestoo m, 20, Pt.

''

Pleasan~

driving while intoxicat-

ed.

FREE PADDING
AND

A1LowA1

eNYLON
eACRJLAN

6.95

oq. yd.

O.er SOD Colon and Potlerns To s.lecl' From.
Come in Today and Mako Your s.lection

e FREE ESTIMATES e EASY TERMS
OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY NIGHTS

ll&lt;ln, organlo~

and Mlas Jeanne
Wall, vocalist, provided oopllal

music.
'The bride wore an empire,
floor-length gown of satin and
chiffon, trimmed with embroJ dered lace. Her chapel Iength
train was attached to the empire bodice ot the gown. The
rtngertlp veil of eylon !Uualoo
wu caught to a headpiece of
petals. She carried a bouq.let
of white carnattms and roses.
Mlss Vicki Steele, twin sis -

ter
~

or

F1owe:rs in perfect

Mlso Cynthia Steele, sister
of the bride, and Mila Janet Withers, aister of the groom, serv ed as jwlior bridesmaids. They
wore gowns of deep aqua and

carried bouquets ol light pink
carnations.
Serving as best man was David Nibert. Ushers were David
Ball, Bill Tatter11011, Larry Saver. and Stevie Watterson.
The bride' s mother wore a
beige lace dress with yellow
accessories and a corsage ol
yellow sweetheart roses. The
groom's mother wore a blue

Mrs, Wither. was attired in a
gold knit dress with white accessories and a corsage of white
roses.

Weddings, tunerals
Special Occasions

Cor-•

~~~

Mrs. Withers la a 1966 p-ad-

Veterans to Hold

Flo...I

Fish Fry Event

Ar~~nll

PT, PLEASANT - The local
chapter of the World War I vet-

•• Spodliod

BOSWORTH'S FLOWERS
MtlthbOrhood ~d~
;ff'
.•
Ph. «6-414
,.
fr--~;

'n&lt;'li/,;:,

ll

polated In any ot tbe per·
formaaee. Tbe aupportlng
cad, eo1tumtng aad Peggy's
anbeUevable skill wW make
her lelevlslon 1how (NBC,
Nov . :U) oae of the vear'l
wertbwhlle "opeciala.''
CUBAN CAPERS: Castro's

teem:

floor-length gown ol deep aQla
and carried a bouquet of light
pink carnations.
Serving as bridesmaids were
Miss Linda Withers, Mils &amp;1zanne Wltbera, both sisters of
the groom, Miss Vivian May nard, and Mrs. Richard Dot11011. They each wore floor length gowns of light aqua and
carried bouquets ol deep pink
carnatims.

water Falls, W, Va., the new

taste for everyone

audleneea lD Loa ADgelea.
Cuttomers were not disap-

the bride, served as maid

Mrs. Hyltoo Longstall', M r s.
Som Price, Mro. WU!Iarn Warfield, and Miss Marty Bul!lngton. Miss Paula Brake reglstered tile wedding 8UOsts.
For a wedding trip to Black-

Cut Flowers

PEGGY FLEMING A SMASH! Olympic champion wW be
supentar for years to come. Her lee FoUlea opened to SRO

eran• will have a combined business meeting and D.sh fry Monday, October 21, at the American
Legloll Post on Main Street. All
World War J veterans, memhers

or not, are welcome to attmd.

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Mrs. Frances Uevlng, prealdent;

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Mr1. Frances Stanley, 18CJ"elary;
Mn. Anita Hoschar, BOlli" lead-

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er.
The Wiles and reaponolblillles
or the new oltlcera were explained by Mrs. M..,. , . _ , 'Mi-. ·
Barnette gave a reoume ot lho ·
W Leaden Conference at Camp
Virgil Tate held Oct. 11 and 12th.
II woo announced that the Ma·
8011 County W All Stars will bE
1n charp of arr111.gementl!l for
the Achievement llanq.Jet alated
for November 16 at 7 p.m. In the
Pt. Pleoaant Jr. lllgl! School.
Bob Dewla!rot, Betoy Fowler
and Margaret Buckal"" gave a

Peggy Fleming
cent as they have for the

past

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The IB·year·old girl fU.tly
sooted that young CubaJU
just weren't b u yin g the
Ccutro party line I 00 per
eight years.

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Imagine natlonailJ advertlledl
Artcarved Diamond Rlntlo, !..
moua for over .100 yean, atl

this low, low price. F u ll1l
guaranteed for pennanent dlaol

the Area RecreaUonal
Workohop at Camp Tate.

J

mood value.

J PAll. DAVIES
There are 29 genuine auto-

I

graphs of Christopher Colum·
bus in existence. All are said
to be in the hands or his descendants.

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JEWD.ERS

404 5I silt Ave.
Gallipolis; Ohio

«.arl '.u
FI.Mil Y SHOE STORE

STORE HOURS

Mon. Tuu. Wed ,

•••

Fr1.-------9o8

Sot.- - - - - -9·5

Golllpollo, Ohio

graduate school deans warned the draft U.ws would U.y
waste to their schoo~ by takmg 10 per cent of malo students.
N ow a few deans admit that tile " scare" stones were mtended

MOSAIC

to f?Tessure Congress to change the laws. Makes the "credibility gap" between academic leadership, students and tax·
payers loom ~ven greater than student protests would lead

$11.9S

believe.

GOING OUT IN SMOKE: Asooclallou lor Health, Pbyalcal
Education and Recrea&amp;lon claim• teea--ace 1moker 1horten1

his/her life by eight yeara;
that a million of loday'o
leeno wW die oomeday of

that 15 per cent of 13-year·
old• are oa "weedl" and that

New

more than half of lS.year·

old• have entered tbe "term·
1Weepatake1"
clgareUe omoklng.
l.Dal

of

DORIS DAY ' S DAY'
Recent feen poll of 13-J7.

year·ol.d girls reveals Doris
Day as No . 1 female actress.
A landslide!

GROUP GAP! John Sebastian I b I ( t I chords after
oeveral years of pop·parlller·
ohlp with "Lovin' Spooalol"

&amp;roup. Now on bl1 owm, bla
lndepeadence lo eharaeler·
lstic of trend that "1prlng1''
best lead aingen and wrltero
Dorll Day
from Ieuer taleat In their
"groups." John worked wltb
Mama Caas on her new album , aod Steve SIUs (Bulalo
Springtleldi and David Crosby (Byrdsi are now worklag with
Sebastian on hJa rlrst solo album. Three of songs on John's
1olo album were wrlUen for a new Broadway play , "Jimmy
Shine,'· slurring Ouatln Hollman.

-By Robert Macleod
Editor,

'Teen

Magazine

CORfAM'
combo:
lizard plus suede
Don't let the elegant look foot you.
Thi s pump by Autliti ons is carefree ·
can be . Brush it. Wipe it. We &lt;If il.
And never fret about getting it wet
llccause the lizard and suede arc rcully
C1lrfam. DuPont's marvelous man -made
p~1 mmeric upper. You'll Jove how it
h)(lks and lasts.

auditions
As st:t:n i11

Latlic~ ll11111~

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enrollment this year will be close to last year's. Last IJ)ring

lung caneer. Estimate• are

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attending

TEAPOT TURMOIL : Anticipated devastlltion of graduate
school ranks by the draft hal failed to materialize. Final

us to

·~

I

talk m their experlancea while

are running wild.

prostitution. Recent teen
refugee in Miami stated that
the government's claim that
the actions are "C.I .A. inspired" is total "poppycock."

Joseph Brinker ot Belpre,
brother-ln~aw at the bridegroom,

employed at Jack's Dairy Bar In

Middleport. St::lloned at Fort

Journal

Bemlng, Ga., thebrtdegroomhao
had eight 1ear• in the U, S.
ArmY.

RAiallztrw the lnqJortance ot
hlllne beautllleollon lor isoUdl,yl,
Mrs. Slanobury thr0Uill:the7Nrl
heo l:oen a promoter of tho Chrlstmaa hmle decoratlrw contests,
II)ONored cooperatlveb' by the
Mrs. Goren Stansbury
two Middleport clubo and I h e
C - r of Cllltlmerce. She hal af2QO owanL
Mlddl011ort as a bride almost 56
sened aa a judge or simUar conBesides dedicated work to her years ago. She has a daughter,
testa ln other coDUnUnl ties m own prden club, Mrs. Stansbury Jane Hemmenway ofWallirwford,
numerous occasions.
hu served as county radio chair· PL, a son, WUllam, ot ClearLatest project to be IIPNrheld- man, has been gueat speaker on water. Fla., and fl. ve grandchil·
ed by this avid gardener was Use aeveral occasions, and hla
dren.
ed her antique-ruled hmne for
f800 lntorn:al Plantina of
01')' at the naw Wellllro Dollartmeetings and her garden for
ment building In
She tour a. 51te has been an tnO.uence In
plandrw took oecODd place in . . the conununJty for better gar...
g1on 11 ._eutlon 1n 11se Soars' dening.
Civic Beaullftcatlon Corteat. The
Halllng frCBSl the ldlls of West
Middle-' Garden Club received Virginia, Mrs. Stansbury came to

•n-

BOth Birthday

Observed by

Homebuilders Class

f\~6RT,.;:
aqpgJ-'~'',f!O\'Oral
.~a.nquet Held

al4ta ;,we pre.- and ssow offt.!ero . were . eleclad at the ....
DUll t.anQ&amp;.t ot. the Hmnebulldera Claaa of the MJckQepnrt
Cln:rch ot Christ '1\seedl)' nlglst
Mrs. Norman Yeauger was
DID'Ied pnaldent ot. the clan,
with Chester Erwin belug electeel vtce president; Mrs. Dtxie
Tolbert. secretary; Mrs. Wendell Gerlach, aaalatant aecretaQ; and Mra. wu.u.m. Orueser,
treaaurer.
Muter or ceremonies tor the
PJ'OIII'Uil wa1 Wendell Gerlach.
Sldta preoe- Included "Tho

Cosh Bohr and Herman

1llncaJd

aloo gave a oldt.
Triplett, outgolrw president ot
~~ elau, waa presented a gltt.

Mrs. Dorothy Baker read a hla·
tory ot the gro~. Following Use

banquet served by the PI:Uathea
wmnen of the church, members

viewed a blpttam in the church

sanctuary.
A fall rnotit was carried out
In the table decontions. Green
tapers flanked a cerUrplece of

bronze, yellow aDd white mums,
and hor111 of plenty were used on
the table. Fawrs weremlnl.ature

pumpldns. Fall touaae andPiiDII&gt;'
Horae" by Mrs. Denver Rice kin a.ceo decorated the dlnlq
and Franklin Triplett, "A Ut- roam.
lie Deal" by Mrs. Kenneth MeThe sunsa1 event cmclutled
E.lhirl'u", Mra. Gruaaer, ani Mrs. with members joini~ hands and
Chester Erwin; "'Indian Medf.. singing 11 Bless Be the Tie That
cine" by Mr. and Mrs. Gerlach, Blndo," arrl preyer by Tripand Mn. Triplett; an:1 -•nick- lett.
er, Flicker" by Mrs. Yeauger,
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Yeauger, Mr. and Mrs. Triplett,
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Stewart,
the Rev. arrl Mrs. Raullin Moyer, Mr. and Mrs. Erwin. Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Powero, Mr. and
Mrs. Grueser, Mr. and Mra.

OU Homecommg'

Kincaid. Mr. am Mrs.

Rice, Mr.
Ull Mrs. Gerlach, Mr. lUll Mrs.

Plans are Set
ATHENS - Ol:lo Unlversll¥'1
1968 hmnocoming weekend will
tutuns everyllslna from illllke
donee• and parodes te -.n
and SlmOII and GarfUDkol,
'!be • - e ot events betllno
Frldl,y, October 25, at 6 p.m.
witb a oseak8 donee from Bokor
CerQr to GroYer Center. The
1968 Homecc:mlna ~ and her
court will bo pruented at 6:30
p.m. at Bokor CerQr.
Val Wol::h, a senior in the
Collop ot Fine Artis and dlu!il&gt;·
ter ol Mr. and Mrl. Hamid Lee
Welch, 221 Haven- Drive,
Cor-Us, Pa., and Gary Lutt.rmnoer, a senior In tho Collop ol ~ and - " '
~ LullomW&gt;ser, 28529 Oo-

llahr, Mr. and Mrs. Ruooell WUsoo, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Van
Meter, Mrs. Pblllp Balle7, Mrs.

fiunmerfleld,

or

Mu:rryoville,

Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. BueJ amuner.

field ol Jacksonville, Fla.; Mr.
and Mrs. Charles &amp;smmerfleld
r1 Sevanah, Gs.; Mr. and Mrs.
Cecil Caldwell and Kenneth, aod
Bob Mllrpltey, ot Tuppers Plains;

Mr. and Mrs. Rexal&amp;smmerfleld
and S1na ~. and Mr. and Mrs.
Tom &amp;unmerflold and Candl of
ReediVille RU; Mr. and Mrs.
Adams and Lori, of Ra-

Rcine,

Attend Scout
Song Camp
MIDDLEPORT -Debbie Schuck
and Venlda Gibbs ol Middleport
Troop 185 are at camp Sandy
Bero, Elizabeth, W. Va. this
weekerrl attendlq Use Cadette
Song camp of Use Four Rivers
Girl Scout CooncU.
The two girls represent Neighborhood I or the councU. During
a recert meeting of the troop

held at the home of Mra. Wallace Powers, plans were made
for a trip to Columbus to visit
the state house.
1be flag ceremQI\Y, recitation
or the girl scout premise &amp;lid
laws opened the meeting. Amy
Hamm and Jyl Beaver aerved refreshments. Others atterxling
were Nancy Buskirk, Susan Powera, Barbara Anthony, and Mary
Krawsczyn. Guests were Mike
Powers, Richard Powers, and
Wesley Simons.

Also, Mr. and Mrs. S:anle,y
!lussmerfleld, Slsaross and MellooaofNitro, w. Va.;Mr. andMro.
Vernon Swartz, Rena, Tena,
Robin, Rex and Roger, ot CoolvUie; Mra, Clay Tuttle ot Mid- Mrs. Jack Timberlake, Mi11
dleport; Mr. and Mrs. Olin Lamb Elizabeth Wheeler snd ll&lt;mlo
r1 Parkersburg; Mr. and Mrs. Vooe ot Cantoo; Betey ~ ... of
Carl Lamb, of llwslinltm; Mr. Fairpoint; VIrgil Walker ot Raand Mrs. Giesen Powell and Mr. cine, and Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
and Mrs. WUUam Northup, Deb- and family ot Ball Rws.
bie and Jet!, of Gallipolis; Mr.
BAXTER GRADUATFS
and Mrs. Herbert Parker ot
POIIIEROY - Seunan Appress~racuse.
Atternoon callers were Mr. tlce Charles E. Baxter, U~, 20,
and Mrs. R.1ymond Frecker of 100 of Mr . and Mrs. Norman J.
'l\glers Plains. Thla waa the Baxt8r of 298 Mulherey Ave.,
oecond lime all six of Mrs. Pomeroy, hal bees: gramated
&amp;smmerfleld's cblldreo have from nine -ka ot Navy bulc
training at the Naval Training
been togather since 1957,

to COidllcta
Uea.

CCL Guest
spea ker Dr. James 0 r r
I

MIDDLEPORT -

Firs! aid

for childhood emergencies was
discussed by Dr. James Orr,

guest speaker at Thurlbday ssigh~s
meeting of the Mlddle-' Child
Dr. Orr, pediatrician at Holzer Hospital, dlacu1aed act.looa
to be taken in Urnes of emer-

Sia&amp;m; 11 chairman.
A report on the recent state

pictures. Four name• were N&gt;mltted tor memberahlp. T h e
pledge 1n the Dag opened the

meeting · - by 23 mem-

~era

listed for the group the lb&gt;mo W!Ularn lrsgelo,
Devot1ons were given by Mrs.
to be incl.- In a well-equipRobert
SchmoU.
ped lsosne first aid kiL T h e
speaker was introduced by Mrs.
Kenneth Sclb&gt;s, director ot the

Refreshmentl were sened by
Mrs. Thomas, Mrs. Sl.siMJII, Mrs.

South Central District of the
Oldo League.

Hensler.

Myrm Bailey,

and Mrs. Glem

F ollowl:sg his talk, Dr, Orr
was presented a gift from the
club by Mrs. Alan King, vice

president.
Meeting in the social room or
the Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co., the members voted
to prrchase a tape recorder for

tile retarded children's class.
Plans were made for serving
the bloodmobile canteen at the
Pomeroy Elementary School en
Oct. 28 and acknowledged at the

meeting was a $5 oontrlbullon
for canteen expenses from the
City Ice and Fuel. Mrs. Frank

Dyers to Observe
50th Anniversary
golden wedding anniversary on
&amp;snday, Oct. 27, with open house
at their Ml&amp;lleport, Route 1,
home from 1 to 3 p.m.
Married en Oct. 27, 1918 at
Belle, W, Va., Mr. and Mrs.

Dyer have tour cblldrell. They
are E):gene and Mrs. Opal Dyer

w.

Buckholt, both of Bella,
V&amp;.i
B1ll of Cheshire, Route 2, and
Jim of !t'racuoe. They have 11

grandcblldren and 6 great.grandclslldren.
Friend• and relatives are tn ..
open

Citizens Band

Sgt. Bocock to
Recruit for AF
CHFSIIIRE - Technical Sergeant Robert L. Bocock, lbOIS ot
Mr. and Mrs. John W, Bocock
ci Cheahire, has completed the
apeclal u .s. Air Force recruit-

er course at Lackland. AFB, Tex.
Prevlooaly assigned at Com Ranh
Bay AB, Vietnam,

he will be an

olficlal Air Force recn.d.ter at

Mro. Neal UllbOUDced ao Ullt
1-rablp couroe 011 bulc outdoor aldUa In bo held on Oct.
25 at Camp SlusciY Bend at Elizabeth, W, Va. !rom 10 a.m. iD
7 p.m. Mrs. Vaushan, ......,_
troop organizer, att Mled a NrYIoe team training IOSalcm bol:1
Thuraday at the Belpre Pllbllc
Ubrary .

Club Meets
SYRACUSE -

with _ . - -

The Tri-County

Cltlza~a

Ban.:. Radio Club meet..
i.ng, Od. 10 at the club room waa
presided over by the acting prelldent, Grace Holalnger.
Reports were made and a letter from Leiter O. Huth, ol FOIInria, was read by A.qsses Wldb&gt;.

welcomed.
During the 110clal hour a pot.

luck supper was served to Mr.
and Mrs. Brooks Edwards and
gw-1ey, Famy Keams, Mr. and
Mrs. Junior Hollinger and sons,
Brad and Paul WISJ'ne, Max Hill,
Margant and Geraldine E:yoon,
Am Rooe and daughter Leoa,
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas HemalfiJ,
Agnes Wldte and Richard Duckworth.

Mrs . Dugan is
Hostess For

MWMS Meeting
POMEROY - Mrs, Lloyd Dugan woo hostess to lise I!Jeall
Rws F r e e - Woa:aa'o
Mlsllimary !bdety at her -

'1\:eldi.Y evening. Tho snaodn!r
.... opened with tiJWP led by Mrs. Ramie Moore. llrl.
COcU Wise read lise 10th ~

ot Romano.
Miaa Rosalee Wise pve a
reading contalssing ldddon -

Plaus were made for a Hal- UUeo and lise I!J'(q) then OlliOtYl__, masquerade party In be eel gueoatng the varloua Utloo.
held at the next meeting, Ocl
A get-well card wu sllftad lor
24, at the home ot Mr. and Mrs. Robert Geor&amp;e and a thosnkMr1. Edwardalt .Mason,

w. Va.,

at 7 :30 p.m. Prizes will be
awarded and refreshments wiU
be furnished by the club. All
membera are urged to attend.

you card trom the Htachllllll famIly waa read. Following the bual-

ne81 meeting Mrs. IJugass sserved

Ready.
for

rerreslutlema to lourte.J

members.

• •

SERVICE WORK!

Aohland, Ky. The sergeant, who
served during the Korean War,
is a graduate of Cheshire High
School and attended the Unlver-

si\Y of Athens Portsmouth (Oido)

James Dyer will observe their

'rited to attend the
observance.

Tri County

eonventlon was given by Mrs.
Dm Thomas wro also ohowed 0 A new member, Max Hill, waa

and _ guesta, Mrs. Don
Grueaer,
Mra. Janice Barnett,
geocleo and distributed flrot aid
Mra.
Clarice
Remedy, and Mrs.
charta to the members. He also

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. andMrs.
HOME FROM HDSmAL
POMEROY - Mrs. Robert
Laudermilk, a patlml at Holzer
Hospital, has l:oen returned home
and Is lmproring. VIsiting her
over the weekend were Mr. and
Mrs. Pete Wheeler of Columbus,

ey collectesl in Pomeroy, and
Paul CUd will be treaourer ot
fwlda for Middleport. Lettera aolidlln&amp; dmatlono """" mailed In

Olslo League.

Consenatlon League.

Local Girls

eel aa s:halnr:ers lor tho girl scoot cookie eale. An all" - Halloween parf1 pl•mad
tor Oct. 31 wu cancellad u

house

Branch.
His wife, 9drley, Is the daughter (1 Mr. and Mra. Carl G.
Lawhorn of Mason CI\Y, W, Va.

Flowers Express
Yo11 Sympathy
In Time Of
Grief. Let Yo11
Friends Know You
Care

14.95

ShDM for a busy service

Dudley's Florist

ltltion

at~ndant

GALLIPOLIS,' 0 .

dur.t:rle. mt.tst have oil·

resiu.nt soles and heels.
Th• to\""j cut •rvice

HOME Of FINE

o x ford• do .

center. Great Lakes, m.

woR shoes in our col·

FURNITURE

taction .

POMEROY - Al:ollday bazoar
heo been plosused tor Dec. 7
in the baoement of the Trlnil&gt;'
United Olurch of Chr!ot by the
Ohio Ela Phi Chapter of Bela
Slpna Phi Sororlcy,
Plans forthebuaarwerea:ade

Chrlstmaa decontions, dec:ont-

WOMEN OREN

lllrtfOrd. w. Va., ftl proiiiCJtad 1o Arm1 ......... l1rol calli

common. Kid~ or- Bladder lrrlta·
Uoru: afl'ect. twleie u maft)' women u
men. often eautlna tenteneu an.d

- - ............. wllb tho801h
Artlll117, •• a mau lt8Wud.
Hla .u., Dna. .. wllb him In

may late 1IHp and have Hud:achea.

nervouiMII from fr:equnl_, burntn1.
ltchlni urination. SeCondarilY, you

Bad!lacMI anCI .leel older.~- tired:, &lt;1,...
pr:nMd. In tor.h catn. CY:sTEX UIU·
ally brlnr• rtlulq comrort b)' t;ur~

lnJ prn11 In Al!ld urtn. aftd nalnR
pllln. Get C'iSTEX at drultliU todaY.

.
.
Ne-w Zenith '"Zenette" un make lile fun again. PrKision amplifi·
c;uion from 2 Mi c ro-tithi~ circu i ts. Weighs only 1/ti ounce and
KOOd lor moil mild lossn . Come in fo• a demonm,.ion of Zenith's
new Zc nelle . II may he juU risht for you I

_7111'(*

Thr quality fMI it1

.&amp;,lJT~ORtZED

...

((

.

Cash on the barrel-head . . .

17.95

~10,.. the n.1me 110.1 on•

ZENITH OEALEII:

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LJ ,._ -.It luh 4ltllts llld ,,.. littrltvrt
:1 ..............
fOil ....

-·"""'to"'""'

--

Two ot

the many dependeble ·

Holiday Bazaar

during a m..Urw ot the chopter's
,..yo and means COISIJIIIUoe held
at the home ofLyMSI:mq&gt; Tl:urodl,y siglsl. ~lalllea ot the bazaar will be aodqued milk Cblill,

mult

be comfortable, must bll

MIDO LE PORT 0 .

Sorority Plans

ed Jewelr1 boxes, potted plants,
an - a l co - chairmen ot and baked Items.
VUdd Gloeckner and Mrs.
llomecomlni Weekend Committoea.
Stwrct are co • etalrmen of the
ownt and otllora oervlqr 011 the
COISIJIIittoo ere 11art1ara Rilfla,
Bewrb' '-o Allde ll1lpmaD,
and
Donna Byer.
REli10IIE PROMOTED
' HARTFORD 'l1lomu C,
Rollmlre. 28, - "' Mr. and
Mn. llarr1 A, Rollmlns &amp;-•• HAVIILADDEI IRIITAnON

--·

SYRACUSE - The 80tll birthday of Mrs. Edna &amp;unmerfleld
was celebrated with a potluck
dinner at her home near Chester
m &amp;snday Oct. 6. EnJo1ingtheaffaJr were ' Mr. lftd ~~~. Earl

Drive.

Baker and Mrs. McElhlrmy,

bom Rd., BQ VUlQB, Oblo,

s.p. u1n oarm-. Gornla!!f.

Syracuse Woman

The couple left Saturctoy tor
Columbus, Ga.. , . . . they will
Uve at Lot 36, 3576 VIctory

Harris, !t'racuae; Mra. T o m
Martin, Rutland: Mrs. " Bahr and Mrs. Henry Hunter,
Chester. Soulsbyw:lllhandlemoo-

CCL SPEAKER- Dr. J~mes Orr, pedlatrtctan aaaoeiated
with Holzer Hospital. was guest speaker Thursday night at the
Middleport &lt;llild Conserv~~tion League. Here Dr. Orr chats
with Mro. Kenneth Sciteo, South central District director ot the

:~Mr~beE::Gy::\:Middleport

Mldtll""""'

~-----~--------j

Cuban hippies are burningo
flags, tearing down posters,

smoking "imperialist" cigarettes, tearing down tele ·
phone poles ami furthering

ot wlslte carnatloos.

IP'""'

celller, WU
hooteoo lor the H..,.,makero meeting and in tront. ~ Call,
and back, Leah SChoonover, co-hoatesses.

Charlie WUIIams, vicepreatdent; I

. THI NATIONAl IIIPOII1 ON ·WHA1'S HAPPENING

u Dorst of Mlddleport served u

work have been many. Perhlps
most signUI.cant am.qtheaewaa
the Plantintl of the redbud trail
on Main and Grant Streela.

PT. PLEASANf - An lnatal- house annex.
Gil Barnotte WOS the installing
latlon of officers of the Mum.
otllcer
In the Impressive canCounty 4-H Leaders AasoclaUon
dlelight
181'\'lce. omcera a r e
woo held this week at the Court-

Youth Beat

honor. !lie was attl.red In a

Aaslotlng at tile receptloo held

And

Held at Annex

ot yellow rosebuds. Mrs. Thommatron r1 honor for her silter.
h wore a pJnk. knit dreaa with
black accesaories and a corsage

buslne&amp;li Mr1. Joe Turner and
Mra. Frank Powers, Middleport;
Mrs. K.., Nease and Mrs. Paul

are Jacob Turner and Jamea

a mint green an4whitedrel!lawltb
black a&lt;:ceeaorl.eJ and a eorsage

orpnlzetlm• IDil dlttl ....U.
thla lllillllll.
Melp CoolsV -t:u21-.
troops, .......... to Mn. Neal.
Thoro an tdx In - . - t .

five In l'ollloro1, tl:reo In llall-.
bury, two In fl3racual. In
Cheater, and two Ia Bvfl . .
1'be tund drl¥1 wW . . 1-.
thrcsugl! Oct. 31.
During a recant nollhlsormeetlng, Mr1. and Y r ._
Richard VauabaJ were ILL #nt..

Soullb7, Pomeroy reatdesst1al and

For her weddlngthebrtdewore

Ol'ff,IIIIJed a hell dozen clubo, ono
of which to the 018oter Gorden
Club.
Mro, Stansbury's civic contribuUIIIIO through her prden club

E.UII,

NEA's

In tbe church IJOCial hall were

l7reen House

eWOOL
eHERCULON

n.

Of Officers

Mlaa Rar.., &amp;Je Pettit and s.
Edward MeDonlei, Jr.
Tho bride lo the dali8l:ter of
Mr. and Mr•. Albert Pettit "'
Pomeroy. The brldels 00111 .. the
""" of Mr. and Mrs. Howvd E.
McDaniel, &amp;-. or Cllf!Dn, W, Va.
Vowa of the ceresllOII1 were
read at 7:30 p.m. by the Rev.
Audrey Miller.

Bit. Howard

Regloo 11 and dlll'lrw U.t time

the November program at the
home r1 Mra. Faye Sample.s, with
Mra. Cleo McManis ~ Mn.
S\le Beverly u ccWioltesses.

GALLIPOLIS - The marriage uate of Point Pleosant H I g h
of Miss Brenda Lou steele, School and ia a jwrlor at Mardaughter ol Mr. and Mrs. Ell - sh&amp;ll University where she is
gene R. Steele or Point Pleas. majoring in Elementary FDJant, W. Va., to Charles Rowsey caUon.
Mr. Withers i&amp; a 1965 gradWithers
aon of Mr. and Mra.
uate
of Point Pleo118111 H I g h
Charles R. Withers of J\Wle
Grove, W, Va., was solemnh.ed School and is a student at West
on August 16 at the Main Street Virginia Slate College,
The couple Ia making their
Bapttat Church in Point Pleashome
at R. 'J:/18 Guyan Aveant.
Miss Steele Is the granddaugh- Iwe, Huntington, W, Va.
ter of Mr. and Mrs. A. M.
steele of Sycamore St., in Gal lipolis and the late Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Waugh, Sr. of Bladen .
The Rev . Earl Ted Wall per formed the open-ehurch, doublering c.ere~qror . Mrs. George Hes-

roaes.

With Tha PurchaH Of . . ..
AI Rogulor Pri.-

Brenda Steele Weds
Charles Withers II

dress of crepe and lace and a
corsage of white sweetheart

INSTALLATION
CARP£T

meet!•

MIDDLEPORT - A houoe ll:nd drtro tor lise Four
111Yer1 Girl Scout CouncU will
.... ~ in Melp CossnV
Mondo.1, Mrs. ~ R, Neal, nolal&gt;borhood chairman, amounced todl,y,
Clsalrm.., tor the fmd drive

day nig!st united in marrlap

1be "Jreen thumb" attributes

fee and Coke.
''Christmas Decorationa'' by
Mra. Arlene 8Jrface and Mrs.
Lois Hale !rom Wellston will be

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rowsey Withers II

Church of the Nazanme 'lbur._

of this active Od&lt;lpssartaa and
her entll:lloom In prdeu club
actiYIIIea thrG:sah the years laV1i
, _ Mrs. Stanabury a cbass1PIIII
ol acc-llsshmenl unaqr her
lellow p.rdenere.
A charter member of lise Mldo
dlii&gt;Drl Garden Club, orpnlzed
In 1935, idee oenod tour times
as president. From 1938 to 191.1
Mrs. Stansbury wu director ol

Mrs. Barbara Miller, 549 Hlldl
Drive, Mrs. Jean Laut:t.anws, 545
Hilda l&gt;rlve, and Mro. Deoe Wag-

React Units to

tltle of uoutatand~JW: IJI'deDer 11
by tho Olslo Alooclallon ol Gar-

heaV)' frosll ol fa1l, her prden
11 a panopl,y of coiCX' u the more
thao 150 varieties of Oowen
burst btD bl-..

&lt;&gt;c-.

Fund Drive Announced

POIIIEROY - A doubtH1nK
cer0i1i0ill' at the Mlddl_.t

From earb' aprJrw until tho

GUEST SPEAIIER- Dr. Leoaord Harrlo wu tho _._.

Georgia Follows

MIDDLEPORT - MlcJdleport'o
Mra. Gonm Stansbury, given the

loveliest flower prdena about

lor the Fairview - ~rlrw Valley Hmnemakero Club

Four Rivers Girl Scout

Recent Wedding

town.

ner, 503 Pecan Street. Co-boste•ses, Mra. LeahSchoonovarand
Mra. Betq Call oerved dellcioua
pumpkin cake, IUs, mintS. &lt;Of-

~ury .

•'

children at all ages.
Mrs. Fa,ye Samples, preoldent,
welcomed three new neigbbor1,

Gallia CB and

Carty,

I

Television, books, J118811Zinel,
and ochoolllreorlenttngthecMldreo earner about Ute and tamUy liviD&amp; so parents need In
keep upolo.&lt;fate and communicate
truthtU11y and helpllll1y with their

Polcyn.

Honeymoon in

Outstanding OAGC Gardener is
Mrs. Stansbury of Middleport
dotS Clubl In 1962, ~. 8ainOd
a "''lutallm of Iavt:w me of the

dlaellel.

Sickle ard Rebecca

Van

7- Tho SllndiY Tlmeo- Sentinel, Sundo,y, ll&lt;tobor 20, 1968

trom their parenta in 1an&amp;uaP
lhloY can understand. He oald 1
ROOd home llle teaches a cblld
about ute and love because cblldrell mimlc their parenll. Ho
said the venereal dlaea~ea are
lncreoatng dloproualy 1111111111
the 12-lt year oldl, and thatparerts and cldldren need more
sclenutlc Information about the

cede the ceremony,
The custom of IPI1 church will
be observed with reception lm·
mediately rollowtng in the church
social 1"0&lt;1118,

Two Receive

Presents Play

Rt,

Tho wedding wiD be an event
or October 27 at 2 p.m. at the
Aj&gt;ootallc GollPel Church, Eutern Ave. in GaJlt,polla. The Rev.
Wlllard Blankenship will olllciate. NtCJtial music will pre-

GaUta Count;y React aid Civil
Defense units will help patrol
the cit;)" and county on Halloween
it was IU\DOUDced at the regular
meeting of the Gallia CoWlty
Citizen's Band Radio Inc. held
Wednesday.
Oarles (l'' oxy) Grart called
the meeUng to order. Secretary
Gladys Grant took roll call arr:l
read tht; minutes of the last
meeting.
Clifford Newman lead the grolC)
in repeating the Lord's Prayer. Mrs. Opal Stover gave the
treasurer' s report.
A committee was appointed to
make arrangements tor the club' s
anwal Thanksgiving Dinner.
Colonel Welker was presented
with his React assistant director's bars.
~son casey won the door
~ prize. The next meeting will be
• held on,· Nov. 8 ·M 7:80 p.m. at
, the K of P Hall.

and Mrs. CleWs Harder, Todd,

Slate

Rcush, Pomeroy,

Joy

'

dnm" before twene;y Fairview !PJ'Ing
Vallof li&gt;memllterl
Thurldi.Y nlabl at tho home "'
Mr1. Pa!Q&gt; Evana, 504 M a p I o
Drive,
Dr. Harrll etreosed lmr cldldr.., need the IJue !acta ot lifo

Leonard

Marvin

GALLIPOLIS

Attendl.ng from Ewlngton were
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Harder, Mr ,

~rouse

to

·~

GALUPOLIS - Dr. Harrl1
opoke 011 ''Sex FD.Icatlon tor Cldl-

GALLIPOLIS - Miss Mary
Elizabeth Cross, 1803 Chestrul
St. has COIII&amp;lleted plans tor her

Assist Police

Vm.

and Mrs. Tommy

Miss Mary Cross

wedding

~

Fain'iew-Spring Valley Club
Guest Speaker is Dr. Harris

Wedding Plans

Fallout Shelters Topic
··•For Addaville PTA Meet

out Shelters and Hurrlclllea,"

~

eo••..,,..,, r .... ~•L.J
A,_flldOn All
Perch••••

FURNITUIE
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 9:110
AL~PEN ALL DAY THURSDAYS

il

'

�·-- . ........... .. -. . . . . . ....

-·
• ~ '!'be SllndiY Time•- Sontlaol, Sundlf, O&lt;tobor 20, 1968

Completed by

GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Kemeth
.......... Dlre&lt;tor "' Golllo Counlr ChoU De!e1110, wu the r.tund ~er lor the Adclavllle
PTA ._urw held Thuraday at
tho ldlool.

the second place wlnaer)
Mrs. Mulford. ftratgrade, Dubbie Stover, and Woody Burnett.

WeUrer's subject was, '"Fall-

Mlas Davis, seconcl grade, David Russell and Julia Polcyn.

Mia a Johnson, ft.ratgrade, Robert Phillips and Tomrn,y ~r!J&gt;o
gv.

Mrs. Bermett. secoOO grade,

S&amp;fety posters wereondhp]IJ',
The first place wlmers reei!lved blue ribbons and second place

Clonch.

wlmers were awarded red rtblxllla.

Mrs. Rhodes, third grade, Teresa C&amp;.Jnpbell and Mickie Gra-

FollEMing are listed the teacher, grade and ram.e or wimlers:
(The drat name is the firstplace
winner ard the second name is

ham.
Mrs. Kennedy, third grade,

Beverly

Brown

a nd

Johnny

Billy McCO)' anti Sheila Oller.

Mrs. Jenkins, fourth grade,

Snyder Descendents Hold
Seventh Annual Reunion
GALUPOLJS - The seventh deU Woodru!f, Cletus and Todd
remuoo ot the descendants of Harder, Comie Horton and Dick
Mr. and Mrs. Mlltoo &amp;l&gt;der took Cr emeans. All enjoyed a good via-

~ '(
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t
It
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rood. The reunIon will be held oo. the same date

place October 6 al Tar Hollow
state Park, with 43 present and

it and plentY of

two vislton.

next year.

Those coming from Obetz
wore: Mr. and Mrs. Wendell
Woodruff, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Horton and chlldren, Comle and Keith
and a (rfend. From Columbus
were: Mr. and Mrs. Ted Harder
md Gina, Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Harder, Terry Jay and Stephanie,
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Cremeans and

This is the secOnd ttme the reunion had been held at Tar Hollow. Other places it was held
were Lancaster, Aah Cave, ~­

der Pork in Sprlng!leld, R o &lt; k
Houso and the Logan Park.

Robin, and Karl - · Mr.
and Mrs. Bradley Harder, &amp;evie, Jeftrey, and Lisa.
From Vinton, were Mr. and
Mrs. Jamu Mulholand, IUckle,
Anthony, Erie, and PennY.
Mrs. Kathryn EvanJ from Rio
Grande was one of the visltor s.
From Wilkesville were Mr. and
Mrs. Alva Woodruff.
From Union Furnace were Mr.

and

Toey .
Also com.ing from Columbus
were Mr. and Mrs. Paul Croa.
by, Patricia and Buddy.
T'lDse celebrating birthdays in
1he month of October were Wen-

Sunday School

•P\t New Hope
GALLIPOLIS -

A play, "It
Makes A Dift'erence, ' ' will be
presP.nted by the New Hope Sunday ~ hool on Thursday, Oct.
24 at 7:30 p.m.

Following the play, s talent
hour will be held and refreshmenta wUI be served.
The cast of chAracter&amp; is as
tollows, Ivan G. Hurt, Pal Don;
Merle Howard, Margaret; Ruby
Hurt. Patty; Jim Wilford, Phil;
Allee Garnes , mana and Jackie
Howard, "a surprise character."
The New Hope Church is on

554.

THE A-SHAPED tatfeta
{;Venlng coat , narlng to the
hem, Is for a most dramatic
entrance. Two giant black
taffeta roaes frame the tace .
It 11 otrered ror fa11 and winter
by St&amp;vropoloull. Jewelry by
Cadoro, shoes by Levine.

Flag EllqueUe
In displaying the American
flag vertically from a window

or wall ~ the union of the flag
should be on top, on your left
as you face it.

Mrs. Grossman, fifth grade.
Jeff Blazer and Brelk1a Wallace.
Mrs. King, sixth grade, Linda
Je!iers and MarceUa Nunn.
The judges were senior students at Kyger Creek H i g h
School , carol Sue Daniels and
Jackie Curnutte. The Art teacher is Mrs. Mosier,

-

Gallipolis

Minor Hurts
PT. PLEASANT - Two persons received minor Injuries in
a one car accident. Friday 11:50 p.m. oo Rt. 2 near the Goodyear plant.
According to the ::ileriff'a de partment a car driven south on

Rt. 2 by Eleanor Stover, 49,
Apple Grove, went off the berm

of the road then out ot control
and overturned. Injured were two
passengers, Elsa stover, Apple

Grove, who complained of a right
shoulder sprain BDd Roger Mc-

Apple Grove, ~t leg
Both declined medical
treotment.
Arrests recorded at the COWl ~

were:

t;y jail

Ersel Otto Coa-

Evans., w. Va. , chargdriving while intoxicated; Herbert R, McDonald, 41,

sln. 48,
ed with

..

'

Ft. Pleasant, intoxication; and
Sidney E. Huddlestoo m, 20, Pt.

''

Pleasan~

driving while intoxicat-

ed.

FREE PADDING
AND

A1LowA1

eNYLON
eACRJLAN

6.95

oq. yd.

O.er SOD Colon and Potlerns To s.lecl' From.
Come in Today and Mako Your s.lection

e FREE ESTIMATES e EASY TERMS
OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY NIGHTS

ll&lt;ln, organlo~

and Mlas Jeanne
Wall, vocalist, provided oopllal

music.
'The bride wore an empire,
floor-length gown of satin and
chiffon, trimmed with embroJ dered lace. Her chapel Iength
train was attached to the empire bodice ot the gown. The
rtngertlp veil of eylon !Uualoo
wu caught to a headpiece of
petals. She carried a bouq.let
of white carnattms and roses.
Mlss Vicki Steele, twin sis -

ter
~

or

F1owe:rs in perfect

Mlso Cynthia Steele, sister
of the bride, and Mila Janet Withers, aister of the groom, serv ed as jwlior bridesmaids. They
wore gowns of deep aqua and

carried bouquets ol light pink
carnations.
Serving as best man was David Nibert. Ushers were David
Ball, Bill Tatter11011, Larry Saver. and Stevie Watterson.
The bride' s mother wore a
beige lace dress with yellow
accessories and a corsage ol
yellow sweetheart roses. The
groom's mother wore a blue

Mrs, Wither. was attired in a
gold knit dress with white accessories and a corsage of white
roses.

Weddings, tunerals
Special Occasions

Cor-•

~~~

Mrs. Withers la a 1966 p-ad-

Veterans to Hold

Flo...I

Fish Fry Event

Ar~~nll

PT, PLEASANT - The local
chapter of the World War I vet-

•• Spodliod

BOSWORTH'S FLOWERS
MtlthbOrhood ~d~
;ff'
.•
Ph. «6-414
,.
fr--~;

'n&lt;'li/,;:,

ll

polated In any ot tbe per·
formaaee. Tbe aupportlng
cad, eo1tumtng aad Peggy's
anbeUevable skill wW make
her lelevlslon 1how (NBC,
Nov . :U) oae of the vear'l
wertbwhlle "opeciala.''
CUBAN CAPERS: Castro's

teem:

floor-length gown ol deep aQla
and carried a bouquet of light
pink carnations.
Serving as bridesmaids were
Miss Linda Withers, Mils &amp;1zanne Wltbera, both sisters of
the groom, Miss Vivian May nard, and Mrs. Richard Dot11011. They each wore floor length gowns of light aqua and
carried bouquets ol deep pink
carnatims.

water Falls, W, Va., the new

taste for everyone

audleneea lD Loa ADgelea.
Cuttomers were not disap-

the bride, served as maid

Mrs. Hyltoo Longstall', M r s.
Som Price, Mro. WU!Iarn Warfield, and Miss Marty Bul!lngton. Miss Paula Brake reglstered tile wedding 8UOsts.
For a wedding trip to Black-

Cut Flowers

PEGGY FLEMING A SMASH! Olympic champion wW be
supentar for years to come. Her lee FoUlea opened to SRO

eran• will have a combined business meeting and D.sh fry Monday, October 21, at the American
Legloll Post on Main Street. All
World War J veterans, memhers

or not, are welcome to attmd.

1
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Mrs. Frances Uevlng, prealdent;

I

Mr1. Frances Stanley, 18CJ"elary;
Mn. Anita Hoschar, BOlli" lead-

1
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er.
The Wiles and reaponolblillles
or the new oltlcera were explained by Mrs. M..,. , . _ , 'Mi-. ·
Barnette gave a reoume ot lho ·
W Leaden Conference at Camp
Virgil Tate held Oct. 11 and 12th.
II woo announced that the Ma·
8011 County W All Stars will bE
1n charp of arr111.gementl!l for
the Achievement llanq.Jet alated
for November 16 at 7 p.m. In the
Pt. Pleoaant Jr. lllgl! School.
Bob Dewla!rot, Betoy Fowler
and Margaret Buckal"" gave a

Peggy Fleming
cent as they have for the

past

I
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The IB·year·old girl fU.tly
sooted that young CubaJU
just weren't b u yin g the
Ccutro party line I 00 per
eight years.

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Imagine natlonailJ advertlledl
Artcarved Diamond Rlntlo, !..
moua for over .100 yean, atl

this low, low price. F u ll1l
guaranteed for pennanent dlaol

the Area RecreaUonal
Workohop at Camp Tate.

J

mood value.

J PAll. DAVIES
There are 29 genuine auto-

I

graphs of Christopher Colum·
bus in existence. All are said
to be in the hands or his descendants.

1

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JEWD.ERS

404 5I silt Ave.
Gallipolis; Ohio

«.arl '.u
FI.Mil Y SHOE STORE

STORE HOURS

Mon. Tuu. Wed ,

•••

Fr1.-------9o8

Sot.- - - - - -9·5

Golllpollo, Ohio

graduate school deans warned the draft U.ws would U.y
waste to their schoo~ by takmg 10 per cent of malo students.
N ow a few deans admit that tile " scare" stones were mtended

MOSAIC

to f?Tessure Congress to change the laws. Makes the "credibility gap" between academic leadership, students and tax·
payers loom ~ven greater than student protests would lead

$11.9S

believe.

GOING OUT IN SMOKE: Asooclallou lor Health, Pbyalcal
Education and Recrea&amp;lon claim• teea--ace 1moker 1horten1

his/her life by eight yeara;
that a million of loday'o
leeno wW die oomeday of

that 15 per cent of 13-year·
old• are oa "weedl" and that

New

more than half of lS.year·

old• have entered tbe "term·
1Weepatake1"
clgareUe omoklng.
l.Dal

of

DORIS DAY ' S DAY'
Recent feen poll of 13-J7.

year·ol.d girls reveals Doris
Day as No . 1 female actress.
A landslide!

GROUP GAP! John Sebastian I b I ( t I chords after
oeveral years of pop·parlller·
ohlp with "Lovin' Spooalol"

&amp;roup. Now on bl1 owm, bla
lndepeadence lo eharaeler·
lstic of trend that "1prlng1''
best lead aingen and wrltero
Dorll Day
from Ieuer taleat In their
"groups." John worked wltb
Mama Caas on her new album , aod Steve SIUs (Bulalo
Springtleldi and David Crosby (Byrdsi are now worklag with
Sebastian on hJa rlrst solo album. Three of songs on John's
1olo album were wrlUen for a new Broadway play , "Jimmy
Shine,'· slurring Ouatln Hollman.

-By Robert Macleod
Editor,

'Teen

Magazine

CORfAM'
combo:
lizard plus suede
Don't let the elegant look foot you.
Thi s pump by Autliti ons is carefree ·
can be . Brush it. Wipe it. We &lt;If il.
And never fret about getting it wet
llccause the lizard and suede arc rcully
C1lrfam. DuPont's marvelous man -made
p~1 mmeric upper. You'll Jove how it
h)(lks and lasts.

auditions
As st:t:n i11

Latlic~ ll11111~

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enrollment this year will be close to last year's. Last IJ)ring

lung caneer. Estimate• are

'I.
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attending

TEAPOT TURMOIL : Anticipated devastlltion of graduate
school ranks by the draft hal failed to materialize. Final

us to

·~

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talk m their experlancea while

are running wild.

prostitution. Recent teen
refugee in Miami stated that
the government's claim that
the actions are "C.I .A. inspired" is total "poppycock."

Joseph Brinker ot Belpre,
brother-ln~aw at the bridegroom,

employed at Jack's Dairy Bar In

Middleport. St::lloned at Fort

Journal

Bemlng, Ga., thebrtdegroomhao
had eight 1ear• in the U, S.
ArmY.

RAiallztrw the lnqJortance ot
hlllne beautllleollon lor isoUdl,yl,
Mrs. Slanobury thr0Uill:the7Nrl
heo l:oen a promoter of tho Chrlstmaa hmle decoratlrw contests,
II)ONored cooperatlveb' by the
Mrs. Goren Stansbury
two Middleport clubo and I h e
C - r of Cllltlmerce. She hal af2QO owanL
Mlddl011ort as a bride almost 56
sened aa a judge or simUar conBesides dedicated work to her years ago. She has a daughter,
testa ln other coDUnUnl ties m own prden club, Mrs. Stansbury Jane Hemmenway ofWallirwford,
numerous occasions.
hu served as county radio chair· PL, a son, WUllam, ot ClearLatest project to be IIPNrheld- man, has been gueat speaker on water. Fla., and fl. ve grandchil·
ed by this avid gardener was Use aeveral occasions, and hla
dren.
ed her antique-ruled hmne for
f800 lntorn:al Plantina of
01')' at the naw Wellllro Dollartmeetings and her garden for
ment building In
She tour a. 51te has been an tnO.uence In
plandrw took oecODd place in . . the conununJty for better gar...
g1on 11 ._eutlon 1n 11se Soars' dening.
Civic Beaullftcatlon Corteat. The
Halllng frCBSl the ldlls of West
Middle-' Garden Club received Virginia, Mrs. Stansbury came to

•n-

BOth Birthday

Observed by

Homebuilders Class

f\~6RT,.;:
aqpgJ-'~'',f!O\'Oral
.~a.nquet Held

al4ta ;,we pre.- and ssow offt.!ero . were . eleclad at the ....
DUll t.anQ&amp;.t ot. the Hmnebulldera Claaa of the MJckQepnrt
Cln:rch ot Christ '1\seedl)' nlglst
Mrs. Norman Yeauger was
DID'Ied pnaldent ot. the clan,
with Chester Erwin belug electeel vtce president; Mrs. Dtxie
Tolbert. secretary; Mrs. Wendell Gerlach, aaalatant aecretaQ; and Mra. wu.u.m. Orueser,
treaaurer.
Muter or ceremonies tor the
PJ'OIII'Uil wa1 Wendell Gerlach.
Sldta preoe- Included "Tho

Cosh Bohr and Herman

1llncaJd

aloo gave a oldt.
Triplett, outgolrw president ot
~~ elau, waa presented a gltt.

Mrs. Dorothy Baker read a hla·
tory ot the gro~. Following Use

banquet served by the PI:Uathea
wmnen of the church, members

viewed a blpttam in the church

sanctuary.
A fall rnotit was carried out
In the table decontions. Green
tapers flanked a cerUrplece of

bronze, yellow aDd white mums,
and hor111 of plenty were used on
the table. Fawrs weremlnl.ature

pumpldns. Fall touaae andPiiDII&gt;'
Horae" by Mrs. Denver Rice kin a.ceo decorated the dlnlq
and Franklin Triplett, "A Ut- roam.
lie Deal" by Mrs. Kenneth MeThe sunsa1 event cmclutled
E.lhirl'u", Mra. Gruaaer, ani Mrs. with members joini~ hands and
Chester Erwin; "'Indian Medf.. singing 11 Bless Be the Tie That
cine" by Mr. and Mrs. Gerlach, Blndo," arrl preyer by Tripand Mn. Triplett; an:1 -•nick- lett.
er, Flicker" by Mrs. Yeauger,
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Yeauger, Mr. and Mrs. Triplett,
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Stewart,
the Rev. arrl Mrs. Raullin Moyer, Mr. and Mrs. Erwin. Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Powero, Mr. and
Mrs. Grueser, Mr. and Mra.

OU Homecommg'

Kincaid. Mr. am Mrs.

Rice, Mr.
Ull Mrs. Gerlach, Mr. lUll Mrs.

Plans are Set
ATHENS - Ol:lo Unlversll¥'1
1968 hmnocoming weekend will
tutuns everyllslna from illllke
donee• and parodes te -.n
and SlmOII and GarfUDkol,
'!be • - e ot events betllno
Frldl,y, October 25, at 6 p.m.
witb a oseak8 donee from Bokor
CerQr to GroYer Center. The
1968 Homecc:mlna ~ and her
court will bo pruented at 6:30
p.m. at Bokor CerQr.
Val Wol::h, a senior in the
Collop ot Fine Artis and dlu!il&gt;·
ter ol Mr. and Mrl. Hamid Lee
Welch, 221 Haven- Drive,
Cor-Us, Pa., and Gary Lutt.rmnoer, a senior In tho Collop ol ~ and - " '
~ LullomW&gt;ser, 28529 Oo-

llahr, Mr. and Mrs. Ruooell WUsoo, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Van
Meter, Mrs. Pblllp Balle7, Mrs.

fiunmerfleld,

or

Mu:rryoville,

Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. BueJ amuner.

field ol Jacksonville, Fla.; Mr.
and Mrs. Charles &amp;smmerfleld
r1 Sevanah, Gs.; Mr. and Mrs.
Cecil Caldwell and Kenneth, aod
Bob Mllrpltey, ot Tuppers Plains;

Mr. and Mrs. Rexal&amp;smmerfleld
and S1na ~. and Mr. and Mrs.
Tom &amp;unmerflold and Candl of
ReediVille RU; Mr. and Mrs.
Adams and Lori, of Ra-

Rcine,

Attend Scout
Song Camp
MIDDLEPORT -Debbie Schuck
and Venlda Gibbs ol Middleport
Troop 185 are at camp Sandy
Bero, Elizabeth, W. Va. this
weekerrl attendlq Use Cadette
Song camp of Use Four Rivers
Girl Scout CooncU.
The two girls represent Neighborhood I or the councU. During
a recert meeting of the troop

held at the home of Mra. Wallace Powers, plans were made
for a trip to Columbus to visit
the state house.
1be flag ceremQI\Y, recitation
or the girl scout premise &amp;lid
laws opened the meeting. Amy
Hamm and Jyl Beaver aerved refreshments. Others atterxling
were Nancy Buskirk, Susan Powera, Barbara Anthony, and Mary
Krawsczyn. Guests were Mike
Powers, Richard Powers, and
Wesley Simons.

Also, Mr. and Mrs. S:anle,y
!lussmerfleld, Slsaross and MellooaofNitro, w. Va.;Mr. andMro.
Vernon Swartz, Rena, Tena,
Robin, Rex and Roger, ot CoolvUie; Mra, Clay Tuttle ot Mid- Mrs. Jack Timberlake, Mi11
dleport; Mr. and Mrs. Olin Lamb Elizabeth Wheeler snd ll&lt;mlo
r1 Parkersburg; Mr. and Mrs. Vooe ot Cantoo; Betey ~ ... of
Carl Lamb, of llwslinltm; Mr. Fairpoint; VIrgil Walker ot Raand Mrs. Giesen Powell and Mr. cine, and Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
and Mrs. WUUam Northup, Deb- and family ot Ball Rws.
bie and Jet!, of Gallipolis; Mr.
BAXTER GRADUATFS
and Mrs. Herbert Parker ot
POIIIEROY - Seunan Appress~racuse.
Atternoon callers were Mr. tlce Charles E. Baxter, U~, 20,
and Mrs. R.1ymond Frecker of 100 of Mr . and Mrs. Norman J.
'l\glers Plains. Thla waa the Baxt8r of 298 Mulherey Ave.,
oecond lime all six of Mrs. Pomeroy, hal bees: gramated
&amp;smmerfleld's cblldreo have from nine -ka ot Navy bulc
training at the Naval Training
been togather since 1957,

to COidllcta
Uea.

CCL Guest
spea ker Dr. James 0 r r
I

MIDDLEPORT -

Firs! aid

for childhood emergencies was
discussed by Dr. James Orr,

guest speaker at Thurlbday ssigh~s
meeting of the Mlddle-' Child
Dr. Orr, pediatrician at Holzer Hospital, dlacu1aed act.looa
to be taken in Urnes of emer-

Sia&amp;m; 11 chairman.
A report on the recent state

pictures. Four name• were N&gt;mltted tor memberahlp. T h e
pledge 1n the Dag opened the

meeting · - by 23 mem-

~era

listed for the group the lb&gt;mo W!Ularn lrsgelo,
Devot1ons were given by Mrs.
to be incl.- In a well-equipRobert
SchmoU.
ped lsosne first aid kiL T h e
speaker was introduced by Mrs.
Kenneth Sclb&gt;s, director ot the

Refreshmentl were sened by
Mrs. Thomas, Mrs. Sl.siMJII, Mrs.

South Central District of the
Oldo League.

Hensler.

Myrm Bailey,

and Mrs. Glem

F ollowl:sg his talk, Dr, Orr
was presented a gift from the
club by Mrs. Alan King, vice

president.
Meeting in the social room or
the Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co., the members voted
to prrchase a tape recorder for

tile retarded children's class.
Plans were made for serving
the bloodmobile canteen at the
Pomeroy Elementary School en
Oct. 28 and acknowledged at the

meeting was a $5 oontrlbullon
for canteen expenses from the
City Ice and Fuel. Mrs. Frank

Dyers to Observe
50th Anniversary
golden wedding anniversary on
&amp;snday, Oct. 27, with open house
at their Ml&amp;lleport, Route 1,
home from 1 to 3 p.m.
Married en Oct. 27, 1918 at
Belle, W, Va., Mr. and Mrs.

Dyer have tour cblldrell. They
are E):gene and Mrs. Opal Dyer

w.

Buckholt, both of Bella,
V&amp;.i
B1ll of Cheshire, Route 2, and
Jim of !t'racuoe. They have 11

grandcblldren and 6 great.grandclslldren.
Friend• and relatives are tn ..
open

Citizens Band

Sgt. Bocock to
Recruit for AF
CHFSIIIRE - Technical Sergeant Robert L. Bocock, lbOIS ot
Mr. and Mrs. John W, Bocock
ci Cheahire, has completed the
apeclal u .s. Air Force recruit-

er course at Lackland. AFB, Tex.
Prevlooaly assigned at Com Ranh
Bay AB, Vietnam,

he will be an

olficlal Air Force recn.d.ter at

Mro. Neal UllbOUDced ao Ullt
1-rablp couroe 011 bulc outdoor aldUa In bo held on Oct.
25 at Camp SlusciY Bend at Elizabeth, W, Va. !rom 10 a.m. iD
7 p.m. Mrs. Vaushan, ......,_
troop organizer, att Mled a NrYIoe team training IOSalcm bol:1
Thuraday at the Belpre Pllbllc
Ubrary .

Club Meets
SYRACUSE -

with _ . - -

The Tri-County

Cltlza~a

Ban.:. Radio Club meet..
i.ng, Od. 10 at the club room waa
presided over by the acting prelldent, Grace Holalnger.
Reports were made and a letter from Leiter O. Huth, ol FOIInria, was read by A.qsses Wldb&gt;.

welcomed.
During the 110clal hour a pot.

luck supper was served to Mr.
and Mrs. Brooks Edwards and
gw-1ey, Famy Keams, Mr. and
Mrs. Junior Hollinger and sons,
Brad and Paul WISJ'ne, Max Hill,
Margant and Geraldine E:yoon,
Am Rooe and daughter Leoa,
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas HemalfiJ,
Agnes Wldte and Richard Duckworth.

Mrs . Dugan is
Hostess For

MWMS Meeting
POMEROY - Mrs, Lloyd Dugan woo hostess to lise I!Jeall
Rws F r e e - Woa:aa'o
Mlsllimary !bdety at her -

'1\:eldi.Y evening. Tho snaodn!r
.... opened with tiJWP led by Mrs. Ramie Moore. llrl.
COcU Wise read lise 10th ~

ot Romano.
Miaa Rosalee Wise pve a
reading contalssing ldddon -

Plaus were made for a Hal- UUeo and lise I!J'(q) then OlliOtYl__, masquerade party In be eel gueoatng the varloua Utloo.
held at the next meeting, Ocl
A get-well card wu sllftad lor
24, at the home ot Mr. and Mrs. Robert Geor&amp;e and a thosnkMr1. Edwardalt .Mason,

w. Va.,

at 7 :30 p.m. Prizes will be
awarded and refreshments wiU
be furnished by the club. All
membera are urged to attend.

you card trom the Htachllllll famIly waa read. Following the bual-

ne81 meeting Mrs. IJugass sserved

Ready.
for

rerreslutlema to lourte.J

members.

• •

SERVICE WORK!

Aohland, Ky. The sergeant, who
served during the Korean War,
is a graduate of Cheshire High
School and attended the Unlver-

si\Y of Athens Portsmouth (Oido)

James Dyer will observe their

'rited to attend the
observance.

Tri County

eonventlon was given by Mrs.
Dm Thomas wro also ohowed 0 A new member, Max Hill, waa

and _ guesta, Mrs. Don
Grueaer,
Mra. Janice Barnett,
geocleo and distributed flrot aid
Mra.
Clarice
Remedy, and Mrs.
charta to the members. He also

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. andMrs.
HOME FROM HDSmAL
POMEROY - Mrs. Robert
Laudermilk, a patlml at Holzer
Hospital, has l:oen returned home
and Is lmproring. VIsiting her
over the weekend were Mr. and
Mrs. Pete Wheeler of Columbus,

ey collectesl in Pomeroy, and
Paul CUd will be treaourer ot
fwlda for Middleport. Lettera aolidlln&amp; dmatlono """" mailed In

Olslo League.

Consenatlon League.

Local Girls

eel aa s:halnr:ers lor tho girl scoot cookie eale. An all" - Halloween parf1 pl•mad
tor Oct. 31 wu cancellad u

house

Branch.
His wife, 9drley, Is the daughter (1 Mr. and Mra. Carl G.
Lawhorn of Mason CI\Y, W, Va.

Flowers Express
Yo11 Sympathy
In Time Of
Grief. Let Yo11
Friends Know You
Care

14.95

ShDM for a busy service

Dudley's Florist

ltltion

at~ndant

GALLIPOLIS,' 0 .

dur.t:rle. mt.tst have oil·

resiu.nt soles and heels.
Th• to\""j cut •rvice

HOME Of FINE

o x ford• do .

center. Great Lakes, m.

woR shoes in our col·

FURNITURE

taction .

POMEROY - Al:ollday bazoar
heo been plosused tor Dec. 7
in the baoement of the Trlnil&gt;'
United Olurch of Chr!ot by the
Ohio Ela Phi Chapter of Bela
Slpna Phi Sororlcy,
Plans forthebuaarwerea:ade

Chrlstmaa decontions, dec:ont-

WOMEN OREN

lllrtfOrd. w. Va., ftl proiiiCJtad 1o Arm1 ......... l1rol calli

common. Kid~ or- Bladder lrrlta·
Uoru: afl'ect. twleie u maft)' women u
men. often eautlna tenteneu an.d

- - ............. wllb tho801h
Artlll117, •• a mau lt8Wud.
Hla .u., Dna. .. wllb him In

may late 1IHp and have Hud:achea.

nervouiMII from fr:equnl_, burntn1.
ltchlni urination. SeCondarilY, you

Bad!lacMI anCI .leel older.~- tired:, &lt;1,...
pr:nMd. In tor.h catn. CY:sTEX UIU·
ally brlnr• rtlulq comrort b)' t;ur~

lnJ prn11 In Al!ld urtn. aftd nalnR
pllln. Get C'iSTEX at drultliU todaY.

.
.
Ne-w Zenith '"Zenette" un make lile fun again. PrKision amplifi·
c;uion from 2 Mi c ro-tithi~ circu i ts. Weighs only 1/ti ounce and
KOOd lor moil mild lossn . Come in fo• a demonm,.ion of Zenith's
new Zc nelle . II may he juU risht for you I

_7111'(*

Thr quality fMI it1

.&amp;,lJT~ORtZED

...

((

.

Cash on the barrel-head . . .

17.95

~10,.. the n.1me 110.1 on•

ZENITH OEALEII:

- ---

-_______.....

LJ ,._ -.It luh 4ltllts llld ,,.. littrltvrt
:1 ..............
fOil ....

-·"""'to"'""'

--

Two ot

the many dependeble ·

Holiday Bazaar

during a m..Urw ot the chopter's
,..yo and means COISIJIIIUoe held
at the home ofLyMSI:mq&gt; Tl:urodl,y siglsl. ~lalllea ot the bazaar will be aodqued milk Cblill,

mult

be comfortable, must bll

MIDO LE PORT 0 .

Sorority Plans

ed Jewelr1 boxes, potted plants,
an - a l co - chairmen ot and baked Items.
VUdd Gloeckner and Mrs.
llomecomlni Weekend Committoea.
Stwrct are co • etalrmen of the
ownt and otllora oervlqr 011 the
COISIJIIittoo ere 11art1ara Rilfla,
Bewrb' '-o Allde ll1lpmaD,
and
Donna Byer.
REli10IIE PROMOTED
' HARTFORD 'l1lomu C,
Rollmlre. 28, - "' Mr. and
Mn. llarr1 A, Rollmlns &amp;-•• HAVIILADDEI IRIITAnON

--·

SYRACUSE - The 80tll birthday of Mrs. Edna &amp;unmerfleld
was celebrated with a potluck
dinner at her home near Chester
m &amp;snday Oct. 6. EnJo1ingtheaffaJr were ' Mr. lftd ~~~. Earl

Drive.

Baker and Mrs. McElhlrmy,

bom Rd., BQ VUlQB, Oblo,

s.p. u1n oarm-. Gornla!!f.

Syracuse Woman

The couple left Saturctoy tor
Columbus, Ga.. , . . . they will
Uve at Lot 36, 3576 VIctory

Harris, !t'racuae; Mra. T o m
Martin, Rutland: Mrs. " Bahr and Mrs. Henry Hunter,
Chester. Soulsbyw:lllhandlemoo-

CCL SPEAKER- Dr. J~mes Orr, pedlatrtctan aaaoeiated
with Holzer Hospital. was guest speaker Thursday night at the
Middleport &lt;llild Conserv~~tion League. Here Dr. Orr chats
with Mro. Kenneth Sciteo, South central District director ot the

:~Mr~beE::Gy::\:Middleport

Mldtll""""'

~-----~--------j

Cuban hippies are burningo
flags, tearing down posters,

smoking "imperialist" cigarettes, tearing down tele ·
phone poles ami furthering

ot wlslte carnatloos.

IP'""'

celller, WU
hooteoo lor the H..,.,makero meeting and in tront. ~ Call,
and back, Leah SChoonover, co-hoatesses.

Charlie WUIIams, vicepreatdent; I

. THI NATIONAl IIIPOII1 ON ·WHA1'S HAPPENING

u Dorst of Mlddleport served u

work have been many. Perhlps
most signUI.cant am.qtheaewaa
the Plantintl of the redbud trail
on Main and Grant Streela.

PT. PLEASANf - An lnatal- house annex.
Gil Barnotte WOS the installing
latlon of officers of the Mum.
otllcer
In the Impressive canCounty 4-H Leaders AasoclaUon
dlelight
181'\'lce. omcera a r e
woo held this week at the Court-

Youth Beat

honor. !lie was attl.red In a

Aaslotlng at tile receptloo held

And

Held at Annex

ot yellow rosebuds. Mrs. Thommatron r1 honor for her silter.
h wore a pJnk. knit dreaa with
black accesaories and a corsage

buslne&amp;li Mr1. Joe Turner and
Mra. Frank Powers, Middleport;
Mrs. K.., Nease and Mrs. Paul

are Jacob Turner and Jamea

a mint green an4whitedrel!lawltb
black a&lt;:ceeaorl.eJ and a eorsage

orpnlzetlm• IDil dlttl ....U.
thla lllillllll.
Melp CoolsV -t:u21-.
troops, .......... to Mn. Neal.
Thoro an tdx In - . - t .

five In l'ollloro1, tl:reo In llall-.
bury, two In fl3racual. In
Cheater, and two Ia Bvfl . .
1'be tund drl¥1 wW . . 1-.
thrcsugl! Oct. 31.
During a recant nollhlsormeetlng, Mr1. and Y r ._
Richard VauabaJ were ILL #nt..

Soullb7, Pomeroy reatdesst1al and

For her weddlngthebrtdewore

Ol'ff,IIIIJed a hell dozen clubo, ono
of which to the 018oter Gorden
Club.
Mro, Stansbury's civic contribuUIIIIO through her prden club

E.UII,

NEA's

In tbe church IJOCial hall were

l7reen House

eWOOL
eHERCULON

n.

Of Officers

Mlaa Rar.., &amp;Je Pettit and s.
Edward MeDonlei, Jr.
Tho bride lo the dali8l:ter of
Mr. and Mr•. Albert Pettit "'
Pomeroy. The brldels 00111 .. the
""" of Mr. and Mrs. Howvd E.
McDaniel, &amp;-. or Cllf!Dn, W, Va.
Vowa of the ceresllOII1 were
read at 7:30 p.m. by the Rev.
Audrey Miller.

Bit. Howard

Regloo 11 and dlll'lrw U.t time

the November program at the
home r1 Mra. Faye Sample.s, with
Mra. Cleo McManis ~ Mn.
S\le Beverly u ccWioltesses.

GALLIPOLIS - The marriage uate of Point Pleosant H I g h
of Miss Brenda Lou steele, School and ia a jwrlor at Mardaughter ol Mr. and Mrs. Ell - sh&amp;ll University where she is
gene R. Steele or Point Pleas. majoring in Elementary FDJant, W. Va., to Charles Rowsey caUon.
Mr. Withers i&amp; a 1965 gradWithers
aon of Mr. and Mra.
uate
of Point Pleo118111 H I g h
Charles R. Withers of J\Wle
Grove, W, Va., was solemnh.ed School and is a student at West
on August 16 at the Main Street Virginia Slate College,
The couple Ia making their
Bapttat Church in Point Pleashome
at R. 'J:/18 Guyan Aveant.
Miss Steele Is the granddaugh- Iwe, Huntington, W, Va.
ter of Mr. and Mrs. A. M.
steele of Sycamore St., in Gal lipolis and the late Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Waugh, Sr. of Bladen .
The Rev . Earl Ted Wall per formed the open-ehurch, doublering c.ere~qror . Mrs. George Hes-

roaes.

With Tha PurchaH Of . . ..
AI Rogulor Pri.-

Brenda Steele Weds
Charles Withers II

dress of crepe and lace and a
corsage of white sweetheart

INSTALLATION
CARP£T

meet!•

MIDDLEPORT - A houoe ll:nd drtro tor lise Four
111Yer1 Girl Scout CouncU will
.... ~ in Melp CossnV
Mondo.1, Mrs. ~ R, Neal, nolal&gt;borhood chairman, amounced todl,y,
Clsalrm.., tor the fmd drive

day nig!st united in marrlap

1be "Jreen thumb" attributes

fee and Coke.
''Christmas Decorationa'' by
Mra. Arlene 8Jrface and Mrs.
Lois Hale !rom Wellston will be

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rowsey Withers II

Church of the Nazanme 'lbur._

of this active Od&lt;lpssartaa and
her entll:lloom In prdeu club
actiYIIIea thrG:sah the years laV1i
, _ Mrs. Stanabury a cbass1PIIII
ol acc-llsshmenl unaqr her
lellow p.rdenere.
A charter member of lise Mldo
dlii&gt;Drl Garden Club, orpnlzed
In 1935, idee oenod tour times
as president. From 1938 to 191.1
Mrs. Stansbury wu director ol

Mrs. Barbara Miller, 549 Hlldl
Drive, Mrs. Jean Laut:t.anws, 545
Hilda l&gt;rlve, and Mro. Deoe Wag-

React Units to

tltle of uoutatand~JW: IJI'deDer 11
by tho Olslo Alooclallon ol Gar-

heaV)' frosll ol fa1l, her prden
11 a panopl,y of coiCX' u the more
thao 150 varieties of Oowen
burst btD bl-..

&lt;&gt;c-.

Fund Drive Announced

POIIIEROY - A doubtH1nK
cer0i1i0ill' at the Mlddl_.t

From earb' aprJrw until tho

GUEST SPEAIIER- Dr. Leoaord Harrlo wu tho _._.

Georgia Follows

MIDDLEPORT - MlcJdleport'o
Mra. Gonm Stansbury, given the

loveliest flower prdena about

lor the Fairview - ~rlrw Valley Hmnemakero Club

Four Rivers Girl Scout

Recent Wedding

town.

ner, 503 Pecan Street. Co-boste•ses, Mra. LeahSchoonovarand
Mra. Betq Call oerved dellcioua
pumpkin cake, IUs, mintS. &lt;Of-

~ury .

•'

children at all ages.
Mrs. Fa,ye Samples, preoldent,
welcomed three new neigbbor1,

Gallia CB and

Carty,

I

Television, books, J118811Zinel,
and ochoolllreorlenttngthecMldreo earner about Ute and tamUy liviD&amp; so parents need In
keep upolo.&lt;fate and communicate
truthtU11y and helpllll1y with their

Polcyn.

Honeymoon in

Outstanding OAGC Gardener is
Mrs. Stansbury of Middleport
dotS Clubl In 1962, ~. 8ainOd
a "''lutallm of Iavt:w me of the

dlaellel.

Sickle ard Rebecca

Van

7- Tho SllndiY Tlmeo- Sentinel, Sundo,y, ll&lt;tobor 20, 1968

trom their parenta in 1an&amp;uaP
lhloY can understand. He oald 1
ROOd home llle teaches a cblld
about ute and love because cblldrell mimlc their parenll. Ho
said the venereal dlaea~ea are
lncreoatng dloproualy 1111111111
the 12-lt year oldl, and thatparerts and cldldren need more
sclenutlc Information about the

cede the ceremony,
The custom of IPI1 church will
be observed with reception lm·
mediately rollowtng in the church
social 1"0&lt;1118,

Two Receive

Presents Play

Rt,

Tho wedding wiD be an event
or October 27 at 2 p.m. at the
Aj&gt;ootallc GollPel Church, Eutern Ave. in GaJlt,polla. The Rev.
Wlllard Blankenship will olllciate. NtCJtial music will pre-

GaUta Count;y React aid Civil
Defense units will help patrol
the cit;)" and county on Halloween
it was IU\DOUDced at the regular
meeting of the Gallia CoWlty
Citizen's Band Radio Inc. held
Wednesday.
Oarles (l'' oxy) Grart called
the meeUng to order. Secretary
Gladys Grant took roll call arr:l
read tht; minutes of the last
meeting.
Clifford Newman lead the grolC)
in repeating the Lord's Prayer. Mrs. Opal Stover gave the
treasurer' s report.
A committee was appointed to
make arrangements tor the club' s
anwal Thanksgiving Dinner.
Colonel Welker was presented
with his React assistant director's bars.
~son casey won the door
~ prize. The next meeting will be
• held on,· Nov. 8 ·M 7:80 p.m. at
, the K of P Hall.

and Mrs. CleWs Harder, Todd,

Slate

Rcush, Pomeroy,

Joy

'

dnm" before twene;y Fairview !PJ'Ing
Vallof li&gt;memllterl
Thurldi.Y nlabl at tho home "'
Mr1. Pa!Q&gt; Evana, 504 M a p I o
Drive,
Dr. Harrll etreosed lmr cldldr.., need the IJue !acta ot lifo

Leonard

Marvin

GALLIPOLIS

Attendl.ng from Ewlngton were
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Harder, Mr ,

~rouse

to

·~

GALUPOLIS - Dr. Harrl1
opoke 011 ''Sex FD.Icatlon tor Cldl-

GALLIPOLIS - Miss Mary
Elizabeth Cross, 1803 Chestrul
St. has COIII&amp;lleted plans tor her

Assist Police

Vm.

and Mrs. Tommy

Miss Mary Cross

wedding

~

Fain'iew-Spring Valley Club
Guest Speaker is Dr. Harris

Wedding Plans

Fallout Shelters Topic
··•For Addaville PTA Meet

out Shelters and Hurrlclllea,"

~

eo••..,,..,, r .... ~•L.J
A,_flldOn All
Perch••••

FURNITUIE
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 9:110
AL~PEN ALL DAY THURSDAYS

il

'

�~

Community
By Charlene
Corner••• Hoeflich
NOIIII' that the leaves are falling, the Stars and Strl1J81 ln all its
ll1oey Ia visible at the Wolter Grueser home 011 Lincoln HDL
The alx by ten loot !lag, a blrthdi&gt; gift from dougbter Kandl to
.... - r . Qles at the top or a 4()-1001 pole. The flag has been In the
loc:atlon for several weeks now, but was not visible to rarlY 50
IIIUO' residents an:l travelers as it is now with the approach or fBll.

Moat impressive!
VIA JET, POLLY KARR LEF;T Columbwi Friday momtrw lor a
l()..day stay in sumy F1orlda. She will be attending the American Bus.
lness Women's convention at JaeksonvtiJe u a delegate from the
Rose Capital Chapter of Columbus.

S,.sGT. EDWARD McCOMAS DIDN'T GO to VletrBm alter aiL
N lhe last minute he was reassl.gned to Okinawa. Seems that whUe
SKL McComas was on the overnight rest stop at Okinawa enroute to
Vien.m his orders were changed and he was assigned to the career
Advisor; Team there for 15 months. In fact, his gear was on lhe
plane and he was embarking, when he was paged an:l notified of the
change in assignment Sgt. McComas W85 in Vietnam three years
180rRIDAY WAS A DAY OF SURPRISE ror Mrs. Garen stansbun.

While it wu her 84th birthday, she had no idea ol the party which
had been planned in her honor by next door neighbor Mrs. Leo

Mr. and Mra. Wolter Grueser

D, and daugbter, Amanda, ofCirclev:Ule are weekend pats of
his parents, Mr. · and Mr1. Walter

Grueser L

Mrs. Louise Meea SteJOOeuer

of Colmnbua Is theweekelldgueat
of Mrs. W. A. Morpn.
Recent vlaltors or Mr. •liS
Mrs. Karl Grueser were their
IKJI&gt;ol!Waw and dougbter, Mr. and
Mrs. Patrick Quinn and cldldren, Cindy and Pat of Col..,.
bus.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarles Kesserwer were in Columbus
neadly to visit Mrs. Kathern
Smith, surgical patient at Mount
carmel Hospital

w•

Potluck Dinner

Rock Springs

CHESl'ER PTA 8 p.m. Moo·
day at school. Grandparents nlg!rt
1o be observed with Mra. Kermit Root. chairman. Room visltldloa starting at 7:25p.m. Free
kby sitting and refreshments
will be served.

Methodist Hold
Charter Meet

CANDYSTRIPERS MEE11NG 1
Veterans Memorial Hospital, 6:p.m. Monday.
J.O.F. Class at 7:30 p.m. Monday In parlor of United Methodllt Church, Pomeroy.
TUESDAY
LADIES AUXILIARY, Drew
Webster Post 39, American Leafon, 7:30 p.m. TUeaday at post

POMEROY - A service ot
celebratloo, hl&amp;l&gt;llg!Jted by the
Charter signing and U.e . _
Ceast, was held recently at the
Rock ~rings United Methodist
Church by the Women's Sociecy of Christian Service.
The service was in observance
of the merger or the women's
oocletles of the Evangelical UnitBrethrEn Church and the Methodist Clftlrch.
An Dri!Bfl prelude by Mra. LewIs Grueser, and group singing
of ''Faith of Our Father" opened the meeting. Histories r1 the
organizations were given by Mrs.
Amos Leonard for the E.U,B,
and Mrs. W_ A. Morgan ror the
Metllodlat.
Mra. Gn.~eser gave the meditation '"Bread of Life" with MJ'I.
Harold Blackalnn, Mrs. Moi'I!JUI,
Mn. Walter Wears, and Mrs.
Edgar Abbott giving U.e lngredlents of the bread as symbols
of attributes of the Christian
life.
The purpose o( the IIOCiety
was given 1n unison and Mrs.
William Grueser, president., presided at U.e algnlng of the char.
ter. Mrs. Lewis Grueser gave a
resume or the hiltory or the
agape rea at partaken by the members rrom a table centered with
a fail noral piece. A pr.,-er
of U.onks and tile doxology lnunl11011 concluded the service ol
celebration.

ao

f
•
d ...

-J

·"

..,me.

LADlES AUXILJARY, Racine
American Legion Post 602, wlll
meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday. CivU
defense program will follow.
Members to take fiower bulbs
to be planted
LADIES AUXILIARY, FeeneyBennett Post 128, American Lea
glon, 7:30 Tuesday nig!rt at U.e
haD. Orpnlzatlonal meeting or
IJio junior auxiliary wW be held
at 1 p.m. Officers will be elected.
FEENEY-BENNETT Post 128,
American Legion, 7:30 p. m.
Tuesday at the haD. Plans will
be """"Jeted lor the SOU. annlvenary observance of Veterans
Dl,y with a potluck dimer on Nov.
11 at 6 p.m.

TRADE PACT SIGNED
Burchareot (UPO - Britain

and Romania signed a new fiveyear trade aareement Friday. It
calla lor Romania to send
B r 1 t a l n chemicala, textllea,
tires,
rumlture, lood and
lu!"'hlnes In exchange Cor heavy
lndultr••· "((uipment, airplanes
and steel prOI.••·"··....

Gueat demonstrator lor the
meettrw will be Mrs. Pearl Mora
of the Chester Garden Club.
Plana for the regiOIIIi mooting
to be hold at Eastern Hlch School
on Nov. 18 were announced. Mra.
GObert Cullum of Marietta will
give a demonstration on Christmas arrangements. ReservaUoDI

"

. ...

I

. ._ .....

4

Roushs Announce

$1.85

Family Party

Pc:meroy.

Columbus Tour

SYRACUSE - Sxteen memberll answered rol1 call when
The Third Wednesday Homemaker's Club met at Munlclpol Park,
Ott. 9. President NIIOJ!Ii London
opened the meeting with a readin&amp; 11 Never MJid," followed tor
prayer. Reports were read and
approved.
A trip to Columbus to tour
the ''behind the scenes"' d. Lazarus and going throogh German
Village was discussed. It was
decided to make Chrla1mas candles at the meet1nK house oo
Nov. 12. A sack hutch wlll be at
noon. Anyone wishing more Information may call Mrs. Lcxuion,
992-5201 or Llnda Ferrell, 992.
5317.
Mabel Pickens and Jessie Cottrill reponed oo the Health Conference they hadattendedatJacksoo. Mrs. Pickens showed slides
oo ..Solid Waste Disposal", Literature was distributed, followed by an Interesting groop dis·
cusstm.
A potluck diruter was enjoyed
at nom with grace given by Mrs.
London. The roll call Cor the
Nov. 20 meeting will be .. Something to be Uw1ktul for. 11 These
meetings are open to all Homemakers.
Attending were Mrs. I...onOOn,
Mrs. Ferrell, Mrs. CottrlU, Mrs.
Pickens, Jean Hall, Irene Parker, Helen Diddle, Ada Slack,
VIrginia Salser, Myla lludO&lt;ll1,
A&amp;nes White, Pauline Morarlcy,
Ann Sauvage, Geneva Nolan, Sara
Roush and Margaret Cottrill.

MIDDLEPORT - Tho birlllday anniversaries of Mrs. Bessie Baughman, Sharon Smith, and
John Smith were observed Friday wllll a party at the home or
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Smilll,
Middleport.

A cake decorated with r e d
roses was served with ice
cream. Attending were the boats'
children, Clllly alii Tim; Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Smith and children, Ray, Tira, Anthony, 8D1
Laura of Cheshirej Mrs. Robert
Duckworth, sally, Robin and Bobby, Mr. and Mrs. Loren BaughDWl and soo, Jeffrey, Middleport; and Mr. and Mra. Fred
William Smith, Sr,, an:l grandchildren, Sharon, Patty, Carter
and Ray Smllll of Bra&lt;l&gt;ury.

Orlglaated Nlelmame
Gen. Thomas Jackson received his unforgettable nick·
name of "Stonewall" from
Gen. Bernard E . Bee, who, at
the first Battle ol Bull Run,

raquJre

hostess, gave devotions usbw
scripture from IaalaJJ 55. Members responded to roll coil by
naming a new UJ.y. Tlmel,y hints
were given by Mrs. !Averett
Roush.
A paper, "Start Now For Winter Bulb Blooms" was g:lwn by
Mrs. Hemessy who commented
on selection of bulbs, techniques
ot potting. and methods of care
lor winter blooming.
Mrs, Eddie Smllll spoke on
"New Lutes". She discussed new

Guiding Star
DAR October
Meet Held
SYRACUSE - Qddlng S t a r
Council 124, Daugbters of America Lodge, met In rltuallatlc
Corm recently, presided over by
Councilor Ada Slack. Secretary,
treasurer and auditing oonunlttee reports were read and accepted .
Slater Myrtle Durst waa r~
ported In the hospital and Sisters Uzzle Quick and Jesste
Stowe •• about the same.,,
A Halloween porb' will be held
!ullowlng the Oct. 24 meetlni:.
Eileen Clark and Edith Hood
were named to the refreshment
oommlttee. Decorating oonunlttee will be Mrs. Black, Myla
ltldson and Jean Hall.
Attending were Mrs. Hood,
Mrs. Clark, Mrs. Hudson, Mrs.
Hall, Mrs. Slack, Margaret Eich-

rallied hls troops by shouting,
..Look at Jackson. He's stand· Inger, Pauline Morlli'IV, Esther
Harden and Sadie Thuener.
ing like a stone wall''

The ar-ont of IJio month
was made by Mra. Helnaa and foa..

tured two 11P0s of yeUuw mums
and 0110 or bronze, lire bush allll
pyracanthL She oliO hod 011 dlap)l)' • modern maas desf8nuatna
Jarse red dahlias, p)Tiocanlha
and J,.p1uwse holly. Mrs. Helnas
and Mrs. Roush exhibited II'•
~ of marl&amp;&lt;llda.
The Halloween theme was carried out In refreshments served
by tho hostosaea.

ICII, -IIY Dllllltlll, Wodnoodal
at Holzer llaspltal. '1llo b a b 7

weighed nino pounds, ... ounce.
Mr. and Mro. Rwob have an..... Todd Lee, two. Grandparonll are Mr. and Mro. JaiH
llaaY, Laurel CUlr, and Mr. and
Mra. Woller D, Roulh, Middleport. Mrs. Nova Pnlt and Mra.
Dora Rouah, of Mlddloporl,

....,.,...t.grlllllmo4herl.

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DEPARTMENT STORE

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FALL
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Brown knit wrist Jersey
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Or use them for house
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days ahead. Childrens

styles and

and Wom&amp;ns, too!

TRANSISTOR
BAnERIES
The bottery of many
uses. Now at the law ..
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Shopper ~rt Starn.

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5 to 10.

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BIG SHIPMENT JUST ARRIVED!

VINYL FALL FLOWERS

SPORT
SHIRTS
Permo~nt

•tyle1
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They really look like the real live
flowers - included are all af the
well known foll varieties. You
nome the flower we hove them.
Potted plant' and table arrangements too at 87c.

•.

ea.

ea.

BAGS OF CANDY
CANDY CORNI GUMI JEU Y BEANS
CANDY BARSI CANDY POPS .

WOMENS
BLOUSES

26~~~to s6e~,

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At Shopper Mart Stcns!
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Whites, black, dear,
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Compore at $3.98. White

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WOMEN

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can

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88
ea.

12 PACKAGES OF CHEWING GUMI

"CLARKS" CHEWING GUM
"Teaberry" "Fruit" "Cimamlnt"
You Save 23c

PACKAGES
FOR

US •• •

OES Special Meet Held

By

of Middleport Lodge 383, F, and
A.M.
Pro tern otncers tor the evenIng were Mrs. Dorothy Young,
aecretary; WUllam Klns. marlhall; Evelyn Lewis, warder; Hel.
en Reyoolda, sentinel; and Kathryn Mitchell, aJBoclate matron.
The Call motU was carried out
In the refreshment table decorations. An arrangement ol
i1
chrysanthemums centered thetable and colored leaves and buckeyes were used. Linda Mayer and
WUUam King, James Thomas, Marilyn WUcox presided at the
husband of the worthy matron, coffee and tea services. Hostessand Mr. and Mrs. Robert MD· es were Mary Jane Wise, E).wetler ol Middleport, Route 1, were ta Bechtle, Rosemary l,yons, Malnitiated Into chapter member- rlo Pickens, and Mrs. Mitchell.
ship,
Dl&amp;tlngulshod guests lntl'OOlced were Roberta K, MIDdling,
general grand chapter oommlt4
tee member, chairman ol t h e
lntematlooal Temple lund, and a
past grand matron or the Grand
Chapter ol Ohio; Juanita Barn·
hlll, Grand Ada; Naomi Kin&amp;
,, Grand Ruth; Cora Webb, dep.
' ucy grand matrm of District
25; and Clare Mosley, grand
PT. PLEASANT - llx Well
representative to New Mexico,
VIsiting wortiQ&gt; matroos and Vlrglnla members of the United
woriJiy patrons recognized in- Melhodlllt Church returned late
cluded Julia Fleming ol Lowell, Friday !rom Atlanta, Georgia,
Joaeph Hutchison of Marietta, where they atta&gt;ded a two day
and Geor)!O Moslll!' of Macks- Regional Pensloo Conlerence of
berg, Also Introduced was Ray- the General Board or PErlslons
mond WUoox, worshJpful master of the deoomlnsUon.
In the group, officers or the
Cm.ference Board of Penatons
of the former Methodist church
[HOSPITAL NEWS
were Dr . Henry High, of Charielllnn,
Rev. VIrgil Ware, oiSemVETERANS MEMORIAL
mersvllle; Rev. Joseph Casey, of
HOSPITAL
Logan; and the Carmer Evangelical United Brethren Church
Admitted Wolter D&gt;lln, were Rev. James Reed, or BuckPomeroy; Jolm Page, Mlddleporl; hannon; Rev. Clarenee Edman,
Evelyn llolb!r, Racine; Elba of Falrmon~ and Roy messing,
hader, Pomeroy; Phyllis Clay, Point Plea11111t.
Albany; Dennl.a Boas, MiddleThe cooferenc:e at Atlaota was
port.
one of tlve scheduled tor the
Discharged Ida Collins,
United States, others having been
James Gllmore, Bonnie Saun- hold or planned at Phtladelphla,
ders. ROOy Mosaman.
Evanlrtm, Olinois; Dallax, Texas, and San Francisco, C811forMEIGS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL n1a. Main purposes or the COil•
Admitted - Mra. Lelxh Wea· terence were to example the
therl&gt;y, Middleport; Mra. Wlnl- principles underlying the penb'ed Stiles, Pomeroy.
sion program• in the churchj
Discharged - N0110.
discuss Amual Conference penaloo odrnlnlstratlon; exchange
PLfsri.SANT \[ALLEY HOs,PITAL viewa and share ~rlaJces,
IDi M:('L Te:.;:Ji ·Par- and to perfect knowledge and
san Bu!!alo; !41's. PldU!p Pick- lnb!rpretatlllll of pensloo mles
ens, Pt. Pleasanli Wendell E. and regulatlon1 as the two formCral&amp; Robertsburg; Essie Atkin· er conununlona enter Into the
son, l't. Pleasant.
United Methodlat Church.
DISCHARGED:
E v ore t t
Dr, Claire C. Hoyt, executive
Schwartz, Pt.. Pleasant; Bever- secretary, and Dr. Harley E.
ly Llevlng, Pt. Pleasant; James JWler, associate secretary or
Comell, Pt. Pleasant; Sabra tile General Board of Pensions
Freeman, Galllpollo Ferry; Mro. directed the Conference.
Jake Somarvllle, l't. Pleaaant;
Jarneo Byrd Rollins, Leon.
BffiTHS: Mr. and Mrs. Pbllllp Pickens, Pt. Pleasant, a dool!ltler; Mr. and Mra. Terry Par- W, Crawford, Apple Grove; Mrs.
sona, Buffalo, a daughter.
Andrew Jl Van Matre, Cllfton;
Mrs. Earl C. Booecutter, Henderson. W, Va.; Stuart Hackler,
Holzer Medical Corter. First Jackson; Gretta A. Addla, Marl ..
Ave., Gallipolis. VlslUJW hours on; Ml88 A. Diane ~rlnldes,
2-4 and 7-8 p.m. Parents 0!1ly &lt;11 Wellston; Charles E. Beckie,
Pediatrics Ward.
Athens; Mrs. Mamie Bradley,
ADMISSIONS
Ashland, Ky.; Ira 0, Exline, Rt.
Elmer Rose, l27'h P lne St., 2 Wellston; Richard ll Perkins,
GaUlpolla; Mrs. Kennelll W. J!ob. Wellston; Mrs. James E. Lackey,
ln11011, 1712 Eastern Ave., Gal- Jackson; Mrs. William R. Helllpolls; Mra. Rubby D. Conley, man, Jackson; Mrs. Harley E.
Thurman; Edwin E. Gates, Pa- Johnson, 1808 Eastern Ave.; Edtriot; Marshall Montgomery, RL win L. Stein. Ashlard, Ky,
I Crown Clcy; Donald M. BurDISCHARGES
chet4 Cheshire; Thomas E.
Mra. MarJorie Ball, John M.
Sllyre, RL 1 NorUu.,; Phllllp B. Deerlllt!, Fred E. Dellanbeugh,
Hermosy, pt_ Pleasant; WWiam David W. Edwards, Mrs. Adrt ..

MIDDLEPORT - Initiatory
work waa exemplltled tor lour
candidates and past matrons and
past patrons were honored at a
.special meeting or Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order or the Ea.stern star, Thursday night at the
Middleport MaSCillc Temple.
Am 'lbomas, worthy matron,
welcomed the member.&amp; and
guests. S!.e preaented each of
the past matrons with a long
stemmed yellow rose. Debbie
King, daughter of Mr. ODd Mrs.

Delegation

Returns from

Conferences

fill the Blanks

A.w..loPmiootPoulo

AC&amp;OII
DOWM
11'avorite- 1 Olrl't name
amdld•te

I "Shoot, U

2 Poenu

I Homeakk-

neu

• Loc float.

5 Measure at

70U- •.• "
laDd
llll'lw
I H01pjoe
II CulmlnaUCMI ~-profit
It Athe:na
I Emporiums
II Leaal potnt
t Ann bone
Jl -Order 10 " - I t with
of Police
• IWII"
II Cn1Uer
11 " - ot
20 Tutelea
Two Chiel"

11 Oftaler

I~ Londed

I f - ot

lt J:mployen
23 Baff1et:
24Penla
2&amp; Wl\bened.

D Howtl

Sloe

IIO...t

portleo

propert7

27 BallJton. _
21 J'l.,ht ot
10 "You."llateps
It

27 Slovenl,Y
women
21 CentUJ'y
plant fiber

21 lliJh ..fdl

31 Moral

-1••

SS Emluary
38 Prtntln&amp;

mlltalr:es
40-oh
feathel:

41 Conc:emlnc
412- nult

41 Enalilh
llnom
44llolnon
emperor
48 Pblllpplne

ow-·

47 "Hewuan
old-"
48 Local
poliUon of

a town.
50 Net.ll

.CJ'mball of
!nella .

Voice along Broadway

Helen Help

Evangeline Chapter 172

fall''

to

8~
12~

I - Tho Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, October 20, 1968

4 "~ •• IOI'H
-mUil

1\ famous make ironing board that adjusts to 5
different hellhts, lilht weleht - Easy handle.
Ironing Board
27c.

BOYS TIE or LOAFER

jl

I

IRONING BOARD

T

MI&gt;DLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs.
Ropr Lee Rwlh of Mlddloporl
are amounctna the birth of a

1111 plantiJw,

ALL METAL

White, Colors
All Sizes

B-D and
E Width

of Son

SHOP OUR

Gallipolis
Mason
Point Pleasant

Lorw Sleeve

Held Honoring
Three Birthdays

B~rth

hylrld Ulloa lromtllo lllll'llnMst..
ern oecUOil of tho cwnlrY which

Mrs. 'Elmer Wickhl.m, president.
Mrs. Jack Robson, the C()oo

.•

for the meeUng are to be made

Studies Start

Pecans have been ordered and
will be avollable belore Thanksgiving at
a poond. Mrs.
James CrlsweU is chairman or
the pecan sal e.
The Halloween theme was carried out in the decorations or
the refreshment table. Yell ow
tapers flanked an arrangement
or marigolds ina pumpkin. Pumpkin pie and coffee were served
by the hostess, Mrs. E. M. Wood,
assisted by Mrs. Nan Moore
and Mn. L. W. McComas. ContribJdng hostesses were Mrs.
Forest Bachtel aOO Mrs. Harold George.

Also presented at the meettrw
was an lnvlfatlnn from the Rutland Friendly Gardeners regll'dlJW their open meeUJW to be held
Wednosday night at the Rutland
Church or Christ. ReserYIItion&amp;
are to be made wltll Mrs. Harold Wolle by Monda,y,
A letter of 11Jpredation Cor
items sent to the flower mart at
the Athens State Hoapltal country
fair "as received trom the Southeastern Mental Health Service
and read at U.e meeting.
Mrs. T. A. Hennessy presided
at the meetl.ng in the absence or

YOllTH AmGD FOR ITl

Thla colunm Ia tor yoong people, their problem• and pleasurea, their troubles and tun.
M with the rest ot Helen Help
USI, 1t welcomes laughs but
won't dodge a aerioua (Jlestlm
wt.th a brustw»ft'.
Send ywr teenage questions
to YOUTH ASKED FOR rr. care
of Helen Help US! this newspa-

per.
PROS AND CONS FOR
"PREACHER'S KID"
Dtar Helen:
Jt lan'tonly "Preachers• Kids"
who get barebottom apankl.ngs. 1
can't blame uP.K!' for wanting
to run away trom her hellflre
and damnation father. Don't sug-

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - Ella Logan's
personal setbacks (major surHelen Bottel
gery etc.) led the great Scotture 11 Preacher's Kld" ia going tisll Songstress to painting as
through. ate Js rorced to dress therapy: and Ella's now so good,
and act dlfterently Crom others she gets her own one-man-show
her age, told that every joyful at the Centre Art Gallery ....
and happy desire is sinful anddlr- Hadn't heard a peep about Frank
tyj 11 aadl.ltieally punished lCshe
Parker, and he turned up at
~Ia.
The Gold Coin, singlng softly to
My mother was the same kind.
composer ("Man With a Horn")
and I say, without selr'idty, she Bonnie Lake .... It's a boy for
ruined a big portion o1 my ure. tlle TV producer Mac Hemions
IJle ~t and deprived me so l .•.. Mario Bruschi, waiter at tile
would oot dlagrace her. l mar- Palm Restaurant, has some rare
rled young (to escape) and sought film footage - of Padre Plo,
out. in the twisted way or neu- ol't.ogenarlan halian priest who
rotlca, a man who treated me suffered tile Stigmata for half a
the same. [ am finally getting a century until he died a week e~go
divorce and psychiatric care. A in Fot;gla, ItaJy,
good oounaelor- now, while she
Dorothy Hammer stein, widow
Ia young - might save P. K. of the late great lyricist-llbretP. S.
tlst Oscar llamrnerstein, said the

Pen &amp; Pencil steakery didn't gel
his eyes right - so Ute management hauled it down and correct.
ed the opthalmological booboo
.... Ava Gardner peddled her
property in ~ and ls swinging in Loodon.

Barry :illlhan's 13-yeu-old
Patty makes her acting deb.rt
on "That Girl" .... Dozens or
dlflerent French grapes are marketed, but only three legally may
be stomped into champagne there
(Black Pl.not, Meunier Chardonnet; call us p'fcssor and set 'em
up again bartender) .... Alex Cord
and spouse Joama Pettet n r e
bouncing QbQby boy .... Arbitrageurs are anticipating a devalued
French franc .
Sales of pets and pet foods
doubled In five years and are
expec~ d to double again in three
... . When Jad Jones headlines
I

traction will be JOJ Sl. John, who

believes a wire ahou.ld be with
her husband at all times es-

II1Q bo juJt JOU ordlnlll: ~)via - a a ... ln001111! 1tn1tt1nJ and PD"IIDI $25,000 for .... maJor Ill*" ....
Glmbela 81110W1ced Ita 881h
rt. store cnrrc' ·'"lfliJna Ill tt.m

we ra 1

~

. )

ca . .... 111ebulldlnc

pectally when chorus girls abound also , tl L1cludl a pair ot cin••.• Earl.Y straw vote 1n the Eng- ema l.ooat.res,neJsliboJboodaemt
lish-language 11 Salgon D a 1 1 y .... The newlldwy.llia1''TboFIIj&gt;
News" has Wallace the trimer, Sldl" beat Fllj&gt; WDPI Ia that
Nixon and Humphrey rUJUlers - title oo the gifted )'1lUI1t! clown
down •••. Barbara Britton sold her will call his next rec:onJ "T h e
lrwood home and joined N. Y!s Flip Show'' Instead.
posh Central Park South clitf'Marc Comtell,y'S '"Voi.CII Offdwellers.
otago" Ia a totally charmin&amp; 1111\bbe Lane spend" aU her ctJ- tertalnlng and delighttUl m-r;
floor show time from the Persian Marc wiU be 78 In a day or ave
Room or the Plaza upstairs with and !1 an amazlngly ontlllslua couple of males she's not mar- tlc, lively and liWO&gt;• lnterutried to - her sons, ages three lng throwback to U.e do,ys and one .... Noland Clay, 10-year- there were llghter-beartedllaotl
old Apache "warrior'' or 11 Th e In the word • bealnen, unlike to~king Moon" movie, gives his day's, whose pictures of thornelders goosebumps when he spins selves coma out IIO)~sllke.
tales of his very reallnjwtgreatgrandpappy - says the old boy
once scalped 17 settlers ina raid.
The Peace Corps was estab-

r•-.-----------~po::rtr:al::!,t~or~o:scar:;~h:ang!ng:!~i~n~the~.a~t~t~he:;,!c~·o~pa~,~th~e~ext:!;r~a~un::pat~·d::.:•t~·-~~::.i::::.:.;;::=:::::~~li~sh:ed:.;o:n~Se=p~t.~22:!;,,!196:1·;....

a more

gelt that
cooperative
oponaa lrom her will change him.
Thai kind aever chlngesl

IT'S NEW! IT'S HERE!

Cooalcler the girl (me) whose
parents conatantly tall her to

aet an example or

d1gnlb and
modestY for the ymmger chll
4

dren. Then

they

let those chil-

dren hear detailed Instructions
about preparing herself f o r
aponklng - and U.ey admlnls·
tar It where everyone can hear
the sound effects.
The girl will bove quite eoougb
trouble, at best. seeing why lt
1hould be rl.ght Cor ooe man,
her Cather, to undress her at
will, but 110 outrageous ror another. And .omehow the rather
who gives the beatings w 1 i I
NEVER understand how wrong

heist
rm glad you see the teen side
of it when parents are monstrously wrong. Otherwise you would
be like another newspaper advice columnist who held forth
at great length about how some.
day all kids would come to realize their Calks were right all
time ....
•••• And had the misrortune
find thill printed on tile same
page, same issue, with an •rl'- •
cle on the "'battered child
drome."- P. L.
Dear Helen:
I was shoclwd at your answer
to "Preacher's Kid" g..e ia
nothing but o troublemaker,
sneaklng out and bringing disgrace CBI her father. No wonder
he never lets her go out att.er
dark, tr the first time she tries
It she ends up ot a beer porcyt
My Cather would not only have
spanked me. I wouldn't have had
any hide ten on m,y bore bottom. !lte'd just better praa out
loud an hour a day. Maybe lt ovlll
help keep her Crom leading her
allltera astra.v. Why shouldn't
her father spank her in rront of
everyone at the police station?
She got what was coming to her!
Even if she' a 17, she must attn
obey, Rebels have to be puniahed. - A GffiL WHO BELIEVES
IN THE ROD

24-HOUR BANKING SERVICE
AT OUR NEW

AUTO
BAN
328-330 Third Avenue

I hope you mellow before yru
have chlldren OC yrur own! - H.
Dear Helen:
Even ir P. K. got a roster
home, she might end up with the
same problem. About one in four
teena 1 know get the hairbrush
treatment.
Four o1 usgi.rlsweretwohours
late comlng home rrom a trip;
we couldn't get to a telephone.
Girl No. 1 Ia "in Cree." Her
parents have been in another
quarrol; her lather Is off to the
...-y club, her mother dnmk.
No one notlces she is late. Girl
No. % get. asked Mlere on earth
she bas been, as ber Colks were
worried, end of apeech. Girl No.
3 (me) Is told not to do lido •gain or by golly ohe'll get moro
thaD a lecture - but she isn't
grounded this time. Girl No. 4
gets a hard apanklng from her
lather, lollowed later by another
argument, and an eva1 harder
llpllMlng. witnessed by h e r
ywnger brother who 00 doobt
told hi a lrlends.
If P. K. traded places, which
11 these rour tamllies would lhe
' c:hooae? Or maybe she wouldn't
know, until too late, whatlhowaa
getting Into. - A TEEN READ·

(YES, IT'S AVAILABLE NOT ONLY TO MERCHANTS BUT ANYONE CAN USE
THIS CONVENIENT SERVICE) NO KEY IS NEEDED FOR THIS SERVICEI
USE THIS HANDY ENVELOPE-AVAILABLE AT THE NIGHT DEPOSITORY.

I

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1

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Dear Helon:
Unless yoo have lived with a
••hellftre and damDattonu parent. you can't lmaglna U.e tor-

I

used for roadmak·
.

-·-

~

1

a.t'les W, Rawllna, Elmer I.
Rlchardo, Ewllltl F. Kola, Mrs.
Walter E. Stlveraon, Mrs. Nora
B. Tripp, Mrs. Roy E. Wny,
WWiam D. W~, MrL Gary
Lee llaas!e and lafiDI d&amp;utlb181'. Mrs. lllc:hanl E. Nortiq, and
lalant-

..

NOW AVAILABLE TO EVERYONEI

ER

an F. Gibson, Mrs. Gearp R.
Gould, Mrs. IL Burdell IJayea 1
Mra. Roy HuwoU, r.fra. BasU
W, Jlvldell, Mrs. Jamoa 0. KoiJy, Nrs. lAslle IAmley, WUbur
Maule, William H. Norman,

·,.

LIGHTED ALL NIGHT

Dear Girl:

Baaalt Is
lng.

\

\

~ ~- · - ··· -~ -··--·-

by Nov, 10 with Mrs. Earl Deen,

Homemakers

Is Planned

SUNDAY
HOMECOMING, Morning Star
Ullted Metllodl st Church, &amp;InPOMEROY - A Thanksglv.
day. &amp;mday School, 9:45a.m.; lng potluck dinner was planned
worahi.p, 10:45, basket dinner at [or the November meeting when
noon. Afternoon service, 1:30 Magnolia Temple, Pythian ~b­
p.m. with Rev. Charles Norris ters, met Thursday night at the
I!&gt;Nklng.
D.A.V, hall.
COUNTY PRAYER service 2
The cUnner will be aerved at
p.m. iilnda.Y at MI. Olive Church, 6:30 p.m. and me!Mers arC! to
I.mg Bottom. Okey Ahart, lead- take their own table service.
er. PUblic welcome.
A report of sick calls made
MONDAY
during the past month was givSOUTHERN ATHLETIC Boos- en and a commmlcaUoo oo Pythters, Monday, 7:30p.m. at South- tan Sliter buainess was presentom lUI!IJ School, Racine.
ed. Mrs. Karl Grueser, molrt
excellent
chief, presided.
REVIV A.L at Silver Run Free
Will Q\urch at 7:30 p, m. startlnl Oct. 21 ror two weeks with
the Rev. Carl Valance, huntington. speaker. Public welcome.

Thurlda,v night

Discussed by

Sunday nlghL

Social
:::
· Calendar

p-

POMEHOY - Alllllll guest
night oftllo TwUigllt Garden Club
was
lor Nov, 21 at tho
Pt0118J'(l,l' Flrll Blj&gt;tlat Clurch
11 a IJIMII11t1 of membera bold at
the home of Mro. Mary Helnos

Health Class

Of Methodism

Pythian Sisters

~

; .,

Twilight Garden Club Guest Night Held

Gerling.
It was a delightful afternoon. Many or her frierx:l.s were there,
she received lO\'ely gifts, ard the gracious hostess brought forth
a birtlxlay cake wiU1 candles.
.
MIDDLEPORT - A fUm on
At the party w~;:re Miss FriQda Faehnle, Mrs. John Kincatd, tl~e beginning of Methodism was
Mrs. E. 0. Tewksbary, Mrs. George Lasher, Miss Mildred Beeson, shown by the Rev. Max Dorehue
Mrs. C. M. Hennesy, Mrs. James Titus, Mrs. E. A. Reed, Mrs. at a meeting of Clan 12 held
Nancy Reed, Mrs. Crary Davis, Mrs. J . E. Harley and Mrs. Mar- Wednesday nii!IJt at Heath United Methodist Church.
cus Chambers.
Mrs. M. L. French opened the
SPEAKING OF BIRTHDAYS, Mrs. John Fry who Jlves at Mid- mee~ with devatims using the
dleport Route 1 will observe her 73rd on Friday. Her hobby is re- 23rd Paolm and pnyer. During
membering othe;s witb cards, so perhaps now )'ou'd Uke to remem- the business se58im, it was reported that R. W. Harris Md conber her with one.
tributed money to the class Cor
WHEN DOES A MILK CAN cease to be I milk can? When it's use In the schoollWlCh program
been antiqued and decalad - then It's an umbrella staid. Would Cor needy children.
you believe that these little items are selllng in department stores
An Invitation was extended to
the members to join with the
lor $25 and $35.
The antiqued cans will be a spe"cialty or the holiday bazaar be- Harrisonville congregation in a
Ing planned by the Beta Slgmo Phi SOrorlcy and Annie Chapman ls SuMay night service. The Rev.
using her artistic talents toward unique designing.
Mr. Donahue preaches there each
TODAY'S YOUNG PEOPLE reolly get IU'ound.
Friday, Janice Tannehill, daughter or Chester Tannehnl, Mid--:
dleport, left via plane from Columbus Cor Bangkok, Thailan:l. She
will be atterxling scOOol this year at the University or Bl~ok
where she will be a junior. Janice's Dance, Engineer Vinal Tantraporn, a native or BarliJ';ok., is employed there by an American
Oil co. Both Miss Tannehill and her fianee expect to return to the
States in a year.

&lt; ... '·

Dwt

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.·

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DO NOT MAIL

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328-330 THIRD AVENUE
GALUPOLIS, OHIO

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PlEASE USE THE ENCLOSED DEPOSIT FOR THE PURPOSE INDICATED:
(If pasabook Ia not enclosed, please include a duplicate deposit slip which
will II• ~led to you~· your receipt.)

$ (t!?"·

0

o

Deposit to Checking Account No--.JO&amp;'c..9&lt;-=::.3'-"~"----

$ 1(20. "" Deposit to Savings Account No _ _,y~~.::_s:..-..!."1____
$..______o~Payment on Loan No~----CEnclo•e Schedule or Payment Baoij

Amount Enclooed

/t)o. oo

Cash

$

Checks

'=$

Total

$ &lt;Joo.M

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SERVING THIS COMMUNITY SINCE 1863

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...
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Community
By Charlene
Corner••• Hoeflich
NOIIII' that the leaves are falling, the Stars and Strl1J81 ln all its
ll1oey Ia visible at the Wolter Grueser home 011 Lincoln HDL
The alx by ten loot !lag, a blrthdi&gt; gift from dougbter Kandl to
.... - r . Qles at the top or a 4()-1001 pole. The flag has been In the
loc:atlon for several weeks now, but was not visible to rarlY 50
IIIUO' residents an:l travelers as it is now with the approach or fBll.

Moat impressive!
VIA JET, POLLY KARR LEF;T Columbwi Friday momtrw lor a
l()..day stay in sumy F1orlda. She will be attending the American Bus.
lness Women's convention at JaeksonvtiJe u a delegate from the
Rose Capital Chapter of Columbus.

S,.sGT. EDWARD McCOMAS DIDN'T GO to VletrBm alter aiL
N lhe last minute he was reassl.gned to Okinawa. Seems that whUe
SKL McComas was on the overnight rest stop at Okinawa enroute to
Vien.m his orders were changed and he was assigned to the career
Advisor; Team there for 15 months. In fact, his gear was on lhe
plane and he was embarking, when he was paged an:l notified of the
change in assignment Sgt. McComas W85 in Vietnam three years
180rRIDAY WAS A DAY OF SURPRISE ror Mrs. Garen stansbun.

While it wu her 84th birthday, she had no idea ol the party which
had been planned in her honor by next door neighbor Mrs. Leo

Mr. and Mra. Wolter Grueser

D, and daugbter, Amanda, ofCirclev:Ule are weekend pats of
his parents, Mr. · and Mr1. Walter

Grueser L

Mrs. Louise Meea SteJOOeuer

of Colmnbua Is theweekelldgueat
of Mrs. W. A. Morpn.
Recent vlaltors or Mr. •liS
Mrs. Karl Grueser were their
IKJI&gt;ol!Waw and dougbter, Mr. and
Mrs. Patrick Quinn and cldldren, Cindy and Pat of Col..,.
bus.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarles Kesserwer were in Columbus
neadly to visit Mrs. Kathern
Smith, surgical patient at Mount
carmel Hospital

w•

Potluck Dinner

Rock Springs

CHESl'ER PTA 8 p.m. Moo·
day at school. Grandparents nlg!rt
1o be observed with Mra. Kermit Root. chairman. Room visltldloa starting at 7:25p.m. Free
kby sitting and refreshments
will be served.

Methodist Hold
Charter Meet

CANDYSTRIPERS MEE11NG 1
Veterans Memorial Hospital, 6:p.m. Monday.
J.O.F. Class at 7:30 p.m. Monday In parlor of United Methodllt Church, Pomeroy.
TUESDAY
LADIES AUXILIARY, Drew
Webster Post 39, American Leafon, 7:30 p.m. TUeaday at post

POMEROY - A service ot
celebratloo, hl&amp;l&gt;llg!Jted by the
Charter signing and U.e . _
Ceast, was held recently at the
Rock ~rings United Methodist
Church by the Women's Sociecy of Christian Service.
The service was in observance
of the merger or the women's
oocletles of the Evangelical UnitBrethrEn Church and the Methodist Clftlrch.
An Dri!Bfl prelude by Mra. LewIs Grueser, and group singing
of ''Faith of Our Father" opened the meeting. Histories r1 the
organizations were given by Mrs.
Amos Leonard for the E.U,B,
and Mrs. W_ A. Morgan ror the
Metllodlat.
Mra. Gn.~eser gave the meditation '"Bread of Life" with MJ'I.
Harold Blackalnn, Mrs. Moi'I!JUI,
Mn. Walter Wears, and Mrs.
Edgar Abbott giving U.e lngredlents of the bread as symbols
of attributes of the Christian
life.
The purpose o( the IIOCiety
was given 1n unison and Mrs.
William Grueser, president., presided at U.e algnlng of the char.
ter. Mrs. Lewis Grueser gave a
resume or the hiltory or the
agape rea at partaken by the members rrom a table centered with
a fail noral piece. A pr.,-er
of U.onks and tile doxology lnunl11011 concluded the service ol
celebration.

ao

f
•
d ...

-J

·"

..,me.

LADlES AUXILJARY, Racine
American Legion Post 602, wlll
meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday. CivU
defense program will follow.
Members to take fiower bulbs
to be planted
LADIES AUXILIARY, FeeneyBennett Post 128, American Lea
glon, 7:30 Tuesday nig!rt at U.e
haD. Orpnlzatlonal meeting or
IJio junior auxiliary wW be held
at 1 p.m. Officers will be elected.
FEENEY-BENNETT Post 128,
American Legion, 7:30 p. m.
Tuesday at the haD. Plans will
be """"Jeted lor the SOU. annlvenary observance of Veterans
Dl,y with a potluck dimer on Nov.
11 at 6 p.m.

TRADE PACT SIGNED
Burchareot (UPO - Britain

and Romania signed a new fiveyear trade aareement Friday. It
calla lor Romania to send
B r 1 t a l n chemicala, textllea,
tires,
rumlture, lood and
lu!"'hlnes In exchange Cor heavy
lndultr••· "((uipment, airplanes
and steel prOI.••·"··....

Gueat demonstrator lor the
meettrw will be Mrs. Pearl Mora
of the Chester Garden Club.
Plana for the regiOIIIi mooting
to be hold at Eastern Hlch School
on Nov. 18 were announced. Mra.
GObert Cullum of Marietta will
give a demonstration on Christmas arrangements. ReservaUoDI

"

. ...

I

. ._ .....

4

Roushs Announce

$1.85

Family Party

Pc:meroy.

Columbus Tour

SYRACUSE - Sxteen memberll answered rol1 call when
The Third Wednesday Homemaker's Club met at Munlclpol Park,
Ott. 9. President NIIOJ!Ii London
opened the meeting with a readin&amp; 11 Never MJid," followed tor
prayer. Reports were read and
approved.
A trip to Columbus to tour
the ''behind the scenes"' d. Lazarus and going throogh German
Village was discussed. It was
decided to make Chrla1mas candles at the meet1nK house oo
Nov. 12. A sack hutch wlll be at
noon. Anyone wishing more Information may call Mrs. Lcxuion,
992-5201 or Llnda Ferrell, 992.
5317.
Mabel Pickens and Jessie Cottrill reponed oo the Health Conference they hadattendedatJacksoo. Mrs. Pickens showed slides
oo ..Solid Waste Disposal", Literature was distributed, followed by an Interesting groop dis·
cusstm.
A potluck diruter was enjoyed
at nom with grace given by Mrs.
London. The roll call Cor the
Nov. 20 meeting will be .. Something to be Uw1ktul for. 11 These
meetings are open to all Homemakers.
Attending were Mrs. I...onOOn,
Mrs. Ferrell, Mrs. CottrlU, Mrs.
Pickens, Jean Hall, Irene Parker, Helen Diddle, Ada Slack,
VIrginia Salser, Myla lludO&lt;ll1,
A&amp;nes White, Pauline Morarlcy,
Ann Sauvage, Geneva Nolan, Sara
Roush and Margaret Cottrill.

MIDDLEPORT - Tho birlllday anniversaries of Mrs. Bessie Baughman, Sharon Smith, and
John Smith were observed Friday wllll a party at the home or
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Smilll,
Middleport.

A cake decorated with r e d
roses was served with ice
cream. Attending were the boats'
children, Clllly alii Tim; Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Smith and children, Ray, Tira, Anthony, 8D1
Laura of Cheshirej Mrs. Robert
Duckworth, sally, Robin and Bobby, Mr. and Mrs. Loren BaughDWl and soo, Jeffrey, Middleport; and Mr. and Mra. Fred
William Smith, Sr,, an:l grandchildren, Sharon, Patty, Carter
and Ray Smllll of Bra&lt;l&gt;ury.

Orlglaated Nlelmame
Gen. Thomas Jackson received his unforgettable nick·
name of "Stonewall" from
Gen. Bernard E . Bee, who, at
the first Battle ol Bull Run,

raquJre

hostess, gave devotions usbw
scripture from IaalaJJ 55. Members responded to roll coil by
naming a new UJ.y. Tlmel,y hints
were given by Mrs. !Averett
Roush.
A paper, "Start Now For Winter Bulb Blooms" was g:lwn by
Mrs. Hemessy who commented
on selection of bulbs, techniques
ot potting. and methods of care
lor winter blooming.
Mrs, Eddie Smllll spoke on
"New Lutes". She discussed new

Guiding Star
DAR October
Meet Held
SYRACUSE - Qddlng S t a r
Council 124, Daugbters of America Lodge, met In rltuallatlc
Corm recently, presided over by
Councilor Ada Slack. Secretary,
treasurer and auditing oonunlttee reports were read and accepted .
Slater Myrtle Durst waa r~
ported In the hospital and Sisters Uzzle Quick and Jesste
Stowe •• about the same.,,
A Halloween porb' will be held
!ullowlng the Oct. 24 meetlni:.
Eileen Clark and Edith Hood
were named to the refreshment
oommlttee. Decorating oonunlttee will be Mrs. Black, Myla
ltldson and Jean Hall.
Attending were Mrs. Hood,
Mrs. Clark, Mrs. Hudson, Mrs.
Hall, Mrs. Slack, Margaret Eich-

rallied hls troops by shouting,
..Look at Jackson. He's stand· Inger, Pauline Morlli'IV, Esther
Harden and Sadie Thuener.
ing like a stone wall''

The ar-ont of IJio month
was made by Mra. Helnaa and foa..

tured two 11P0s of yeUuw mums
and 0110 or bronze, lire bush allll
pyracanthL She oliO hod 011 dlap)l)' • modern maas desf8nuatna
Jarse red dahlias, p)Tiocanlha
and J,.p1uwse holly. Mrs. Helnas
and Mrs. Roush exhibited II'•
~ of marl&amp;&lt;llda.
The Halloween theme was carried out In refreshments served
by tho hostosaea.

ICII, -IIY Dllllltlll, Wodnoodal
at Holzer llaspltal. '1llo b a b 7

weighed nino pounds, ... ounce.
Mr. and Mro. Rwob have an..... Todd Lee, two. Grandparonll are Mr. and Mro. JaiH
llaaY, Laurel CUlr, and Mr. and
Mra. Woller D, Roulh, Middleport. Mrs. Nova Pnlt and Mra.
Dora Rouah, of Mlddloporl,

....,.,...t.grlllllmo4herl.

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US •• •

OES Special Meet Held

By

of Middleport Lodge 383, F, and
A.M.
Pro tern otncers tor the evenIng were Mrs. Dorothy Young,
aecretary; WUllam Klns. marlhall; Evelyn Lewis, warder; Hel.
en Reyoolda, sentinel; and Kathryn Mitchell, aJBoclate matron.
The Call motU was carried out
In the refreshment table decorations. An arrangement ol
i1
chrysanthemums centered thetable and colored leaves and buckeyes were used. Linda Mayer and
WUUam King, James Thomas, Marilyn WUcox presided at the
husband of the worthy matron, coffee and tea services. Hostessand Mr. and Mrs. Robert MD· es were Mary Jane Wise, E).wetler ol Middleport, Route 1, were ta Bechtle, Rosemary l,yons, Malnitiated Into chapter member- rlo Pickens, and Mrs. Mitchell.
ship,
Dl&amp;tlngulshod guests lntl'OOlced were Roberta K, MIDdling,
general grand chapter oommlt4
tee member, chairman ol t h e
lntematlooal Temple lund, and a
past grand matron or the Grand
Chapter ol Ohio; Juanita Barn·
hlll, Grand Ada; Naomi Kin&amp;
,, Grand Ruth; Cora Webb, dep.
' ucy grand matrm of District
25; and Clare Mosley, grand
PT. PLEASANT - llx Well
representative to New Mexico,
VIsiting wortiQ&gt; matroos and Vlrglnla members of the United
woriJiy patrons recognized in- Melhodlllt Church returned late
cluded Julia Fleming ol Lowell, Friday !rom Atlanta, Georgia,
Joaeph Hutchison of Marietta, where they atta&gt;ded a two day
and Geor)!O Moslll!' of Macks- Regional Pensloo Conlerence of
berg, Also Introduced was Ray- the General Board or PErlslons
mond WUoox, worshJpful master of the deoomlnsUon.
In the group, officers or the
Cm.ference Board of Penatons
of the former Methodist church
[HOSPITAL NEWS
were Dr . Henry High, of Charielllnn,
Rev. VIrgil Ware, oiSemVETERANS MEMORIAL
mersvllle; Rev. Joseph Casey, of
HOSPITAL
Logan; and the Carmer Evangelical United Brethren Church
Admitted Wolter D&gt;lln, were Rev. James Reed, or BuckPomeroy; Jolm Page, Mlddleporl; hannon; Rev. Clarenee Edman,
Evelyn llolb!r, Racine; Elba of Falrmon~ and Roy messing,
hader, Pomeroy; Phyllis Clay, Point Plea11111t.
Albany; Dennl.a Boas, MiddleThe cooferenc:e at Atlaota was
port.
one of tlve scheduled tor the
Discharged Ida Collins,
United States, others having been
James Gllmore, Bonnie Saun- hold or planned at Phtladelphla,
ders. ROOy Mosaman.
Evanlrtm, Olinois; Dallax, Texas, and San Francisco, C811forMEIGS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL n1a. Main purposes or the COil•
Admitted - Mra. Lelxh Wea· terence were to example the
therl&gt;y, Middleport; Mra. Wlnl- principles underlying the penb'ed Stiles, Pomeroy.
sion program• in the churchj
Discharged - N0110.
discuss Amual Conference penaloo odrnlnlstratlon; exchange
PLfsri.SANT \[ALLEY HOs,PITAL viewa and share ~rlaJces,
IDi M:('L Te:.;:Ji ·Par- and to perfect knowledge and
san Bu!!alo; !41's. PldU!p Pick- lnb!rpretatlllll of pensloo mles
ens, Pt. Pleasanli Wendell E. and regulatlon1 as the two formCral&amp; Robertsburg; Essie Atkin· er conununlona enter Into the
son, l't. Pleasant.
United Methodlat Church.
DISCHARGED:
E v ore t t
Dr, Claire C. Hoyt, executive
Schwartz, Pt.. Pleasant; Bever- secretary, and Dr. Harley E.
ly Llevlng, Pt. Pleasant; James JWler, associate secretary or
Comell, Pt. Pleasant; Sabra tile General Board of Pensions
Freeman, Galllpollo Ferry; Mro. directed the Conference.
Jake Somarvllle, l't. Pleaaant;
Jarneo Byrd Rollins, Leon.
BffiTHS: Mr. and Mrs. Pbllllp Pickens, Pt. Pleasant, a dool!ltler; Mr. and Mra. Terry Par- W, Crawford, Apple Grove; Mrs.
sona, Buffalo, a daughter.
Andrew Jl Van Matre, Cllfton;
Mrs. Earl C. Booecutter, Henderson. W, Va.; Stuart Hackler,
Holzer Medical Corter. First Jackson; Gretta A. Addla, Marl ..
Ave., Gallipolis. VlslUJW hours on; Ml88 A. Diane ~rlnldes,
2-4 and 7-8 p.m. Parents 0!1ly &lt;11 Wellston; Charles E. Beckie,
Pediatrics Ward.
Athens; Mrs. Mamie Bradley,
ADMISSIONS
Ashland, Ky.; Ira 0, Exline, Rt.
Elmer Rose, l27'h P lne St., 2 Wellston; Richard ll Perkins,
GaUlpolla; Mrs. Kennelll W. J!ob. Wellston; Mrs. James E. Lackey,
ln11011, 1712 Eastern Ave., Gal- Jackson; Mrs. William R. Helllpolls; Mra. Rubby D. Conley, man, Jackson; Mrs. Harley E.
Thurman; Edwin E. Gates, Pa- Johnson, 1808 Eastern Ave.; Edtriot; Marshall Montgomery, RL win L. Stein. Ashlard, Ky,
I Crown Clcy; Donald M. BurDISCHARGES
chet4 Cheshire; Thomas E.
Mra. MarJorie Ball, John M.
Sllyre, RL 1 NorUu.,; Phllllp B. Deerlllt!, Fred E. Dellanbeugh,
Hermosy, pt_ Pleasant; WWiam David W. Edwards, Mrs. Adrt ..

MIDDLEPORT - Initiatory
work waa exemplltled tor lour
candidates and past matrons and
past patrons were honored at a
.special meeting or Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order or the Ea.stern star, Thursday night at the
Middleport MaSCillc Temple.
Am 'lbomas, worthy matron,
welcomed the member.&amp; and
guests. S!.e preaented each of
the past matrons with a long
stemmed yellow rose. Debbie
King, daughter of Mr. ODd Mrs.

Delegation

Returns from

Conferences

fill the Blanks

A.w..loPmiootPoulo

AC&amp;OII
DOWM
11'avorite- 1 Olrl't name
amdld•te

I "Shoot, U

2 Poenu

I Homeakk-

neu

• Loc float.

5 Measure at

70U- •.• "
laDd
llll'lw
I H01pjoe
II CulmlnaUCMI ~-profit
It Athe:na
I Emporiums
II Leaal potnt
t Ann bone
Jl -Order 10 " - I t with
of Police
• IWII"
II Cn1Uer
11 " - ot
20 Tutelea
Two Chiel"

11 Oftaler

I~ Londed

I f - ot

lt J:mployen
23 Baff1et:
24Penla
2&amp; Wl\bened.

D Howtl

Sloe

IIO...t

portleo

propert7

27 BallJton. _
21 J'l.,ht ot
10 "You."llateps
It

27 Slovenl,Y
women
21 CentUJ'y
plant fiber

21 lliJh ..fdl

31 Moral

-1••

SS Emluary
38 Prtntln&amp;

mlltalr:es
40-oh
feathel:

41 Conc:emlnc
412- nult

41 Enalilh
llnom
44llolnon
emperor
48 Pblllpplne

ow-·

47 "Hewuan
old-"
48 Local
poliUon of

a town.
50 Net.ll

.CJ'mball of
!nella .

Voice along Broadway

Helen Help

Evangeline Chapter 172

fall''

to

8~
12~

I - Tho Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, October 20, 1968

4 "~ •• IOI'H
-mUil

1\ famous make ironing board that adjusts to 5
different hellhts, lilht weleht - Easy handle.
Ironing Board
27c.

BOYS TIE or LOAFER

jl

I

IRONING BOARD

T

MI&gt;DLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs.
Ropr Lee Rwlh of Mlddloporl
are amounctna the birth of a

1111 plantiJw,

ALL METAL

White, Colors
All Sizes

B-D and
E Width

of Son

SHOP OUR

Gallipolis
Mason
Point Pleasant

Lorw Sleeve

Held Honoring
Three Birthdays

B~rth

hylrld Ulloa lromtllo lllll'llnMst..
ern oecUOil of tho cwnlrY which

Mrs. 'Elmer Wickhl.m, president.
Mrs. Jack Robson, the C()oo

.•

for the meeUng are to be made

Studies Start

Pecans have been ordered and
will be avollable belore Thanksgiving at
a poond. Mrs.
James CrlsweU is chairman or
the pecan sal e.
The Halloween theme was carried out in the decorations or
the refreshment table. Yell ow
tapers flanked an arrangement
or marigolds ina pumpkin. Pumpkin pie and coffee were served
by the hostess, Mrs. E. M. Wood,
assisted by Mrs. Nan Moore
and Mn. L. W. McComas. ContribJdng hostesses were Mrs.
Forest Bachtel aOO Mrs. Harold George.

Also presented at the meettrw
was an lnvlfatlnn from the Rutland Friendly Gardeners regll'dlJW their open meeUJW to be held
Wednosday night at the Rutland
Church or Christ. ReserYIItion&amp;
are to be made wltll Mrs. Harold Wolle by Monda,y,
A letter of 11Jpredation Cor
items sent to the flower mart at
the Athens State Hoapltal country
fair "as received trom the Southeastern Mental Health Service
and read at U.e meeting.
Mrs. T. A. Hennessy presided
at the meetl.ng in the absence or

YOllTH AmGD FOR ITl

Thla colunm Ia tor yoong people, their problem• and pleasurea, their troubles and tun.
M with the rest ot Helen Help
USI, 1t welcomes laughs but
won't dodge a aerioua (Jlestlm
wt.th a brustw»ft'.
Send ywr teenage questions
to YOUTH ASKED FOR rr. care
of Helen Help US! this newspa-

per.
PROS AND CONS FOR
"PREACHER'S KID"
Dtar Helen:
Jt lan'tonly "Preachers• Kids"
who get barebottom apankl.ngs. 1
can't blame uP.K!' for wanting
to run away trom her hellflre
and damnation father. Don't sug-

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - Ella Logan's
personal setbacks (major surHelen Bottel
gery etc.) led the great Scotture 11 Preacher's Kld" ia going tisll Songstress to painting as
through. ate Js rorced to dress therapy: and Ella's now so good,
and act dlfterently Crom others she gets her own one-man-show
her age, told that every joyful at the Centre Art Gallery ....
and happy desire is sinful anddlr- Hadn't heard a peep about Frank
tyj 11 aadl.ltieally punished lCshe
Parker, and he turned up at
~Ia.
The Gold Coin, singlng softly to
My mother was the same kind.
composer ("Man With a Horn")
and I say, without selr'idty, she Bonnie Lake .... It's a boy for
ruined a big portion o1 my ure. tlle TV producer Mac Hemions
IJle ~t and deprived me so l .•.. Mario Bruschi, waiter at tile
would oot dlagrace her. l mar- Palm Restaurant, has some rare
rled young (to escape) and sought film footage - of Padre Plo,
out. in the twisted way or neu- ol't.ogenarlan halian priest who
rotlca, a man who treated me suffered tile Stigmata for half a
the same. [ am finally getting a century until he died a week e~go
divorce and psychiatric care. A in Fot;gla, ItaJy,
good oounaelor- now, while she
Dorothy Hammer stein, widow
Ia young - might save P. K. of the late great lyricist-llbretP. S.
tlst Oscar llamrnerstein, said the

Pen &amp; Pencil steakery didn't gel
his eyes right - so Ute management hauled it down and correct.
ed the opthalmological booboo
.... Ava Gardner peddled her
property in ~ and ls swinging in Loodon.

Barry :illlhan's 13-yeu-old
Patty makes her acting deb.rt
on "That Girl" .... Dozens or
dlflerent French grapes are marketed, but only three legally may
be stomped into champagne there
(Black Pl.not, Meunier Chardonnet; call us p'fcssor and set 'em
up again bartender) .... Alex Cord
and spouse Joama Pettet n r e
bouncing QbQby boy .... Arbitrageurs are anticipating a devalued
French franc .
Sales of pets and pet foods
doubled In five years and are
expec~ d to double again in three
... . When Jad Jones headlines
I

traction will be JOJ Sl. John, who

believes a wire ahou.ld be with
her husband at all times es-

II1Q bo juJt JOU ordlnlll: ~)via - a a ... ln001111! 1tn1tt1nJ and PD"IIDI $25,000 for .... maJor Ill*" ....
Glmbela 81110W1ced Ita 881h
rt. store cnrrc' ·'"lfliJna Ill tt.m

we ra 1

~

. )

ca . .... 111ebulldlnc

pectally when chorus girls abound also , tl L1cludl a pair ot cin••.• Earl.Y straw vote 1n the Eng- ema l.ooat.res,neJsliboJboodaemt
lish-language 11 Salgon D a 1 1 y .... The newlldwy.llia1''TboFIIj&gt;
News" has Wallace the trimer, Sldl" beat Fllj&gt; WDPI Ia that
Nixon and Humphrey rUJUlers - title oo the gifted )'1lUI1t! clown
down •••. Barbara Britton sold her will call his next rec:onJ "T h e
lrwood home and joined N. Y!s Flip Show'' Instead.
posh Central Park South clitf'Marc Comtell,y'S '"Voi.CII Offdwellers.
otago" Ia a totally charmin&amp; 1111\bbe Lane spend" aU her ctJ- tertalnlng and delighttUl m-r;
floor show time from the Persian Marc wiU be 78 In a day or ave
Room or the Plaza upstairs with and !1 an amazlngly ontlllslua couple of males she's not mar- tlc, lively and liWO&gt;• lnterutried to - her sons, ages three lng throwback to U.e do,ys and one .... Noland Clay, 10-year- there were llghter-beartedllaotl
old Apache "warrior'' or 11 Th e In the word • bealnen, unlike to~king Moon" movie, gives his day's, whose pictures of thornelders goosebumps when he spins selves coma out IIO)~sllke.
tales of his very reallnjwtgreatgrandpappy - says the old boy
once scalped 17 settlers ina raid.
The Peace Corps was estab-

r•-.-----------~po::rtr:al::!,t~or~o:scar:;~h:ang!ng:!~i~n~the~.a~t~t~he:;,!c~·o~pa~,~th~e~ext:!;r~a~un::pat~·d::.:•t~·-~~::.i::::.:.;;::=:::::~~li~sh:ed:.;o:n~Se=p~t.~22:!;,,!196:1·;....

a more

gelt that
cooperative
oponaa lrom her will change him.
Thai kind aever chlngesl

IT'S NEW! IT'S HERE!

Cooalcler the girl (me) whose
parents conatantly tall her to

aet an example or

d1gnlb and
modestY for the ymmger chll
4

dren. Then

they

let those chil-

dren hear detailed Instructions
about preparing herself f o r
aponklng - and U.ey admlnls·
tar It where everyone can hear
the sound effects.
The girl will bove quite eoougb
trouble, at best. seeing why lt
1hould be rl.ght Cor ooe man,
her Cather, to undress her at
will, but 110 outrageous ror another. And .omehow the rather
who gives the beatings w 1 i I
NEVER understand how wrong

heist
rm glad you see the teen side
of it when parents are monstrously wrong. Otherwise you would
be like another newspaper advice columnist who held forth
at great length about how some.
day all kids would come to realize their Calks were right all
time ....
•••• And had the misrortune
find thill printed on tile same
page, same issue, with an •rl'- •
cle on the "'battered child
drome."- P. L.
Dear Helen:
I was shoclwd at your answer
to "Preacher's Kid" g..e ia
nothing but o troublemaker,
sneaklng out and bringing disgrace CBI her father. No wonder
he never lets her go out att.er
dark, tr the first time she tries
It she ends up ot a beer porcyt
My Cather would not only have
spanked me. I wouldn't have had
any hide ten on m,y bore bottom. !lte'd just better praa out
loud an hour a day. Maybe lt ovlll
help keep her Crom leading her
allltera astra.v. Why shouldn't
her father spank her in rront of
everyone at the police station?
She got what was coming to her!
Even if she' a 17, she must attn
obey, Rebels have to be puniahed. - A GffiL WHO BELIEVES
IN THE ROD

24-HOUR BANKING SERVICE
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AUTO
BAN
328-330 Third Avenue

I hope you mellow before yru
have chlldren OC yrur own! - H.
Dear Helen:
Even ir P. K. got a roster
home, she might end up with the
same problem. About one in four
teena 1 know get the hairbrush
treatment.
Four o1 usgi.rlsweretwohours
late comlng home rrom a trip;
we couldn't get to a telephone.
Girl No. 1 Ia "in Cree." Her
parents have been in another
quarrol; her lather Is off to the
...-y club, her mother dnmk.
No one notlces she is late. Girl
No. % get. asked Mlere on earth
she bas been, as ber Colks were
worried, end of apeech. Girl No.
3 (me) Is told not to do lido •gain or by golly ohe'll get moro
thaD a lecture - but she isn't
grounded this time. Girl No. 4
gets a hard apanklng from her
lather, lollowed later by another
argument, and an eva1 harder
llpllMlng. witnessed by h e r
ywnger brother who 00 doobt
told hi a lrlends.
If P. K. traded places, which
11 these rour tamllies would lhe
' c:hooae? Or maybe she wouldn't
know, until too late, whatlhowaa
getting Into. - A TEEN READ·

(YES, IT'S AVAILABLE NOT ONLY TO MERCHANTS BUT ANYONE CAN USE
THIS CONVENIENT SERVICE) NO KEY IS NEEDED FOR THIS SERVICEI
USE THIS HANDY ENVELOPE-AVAILABLE AT THE NIGHT DEPOSITORY.

I

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Dear Helon:
Unless yoo have lived with a
••hellftre and damDattonu parent. you can't lmaglna U.e tor-

I

used for roadmak·
.

-·-

~

1

a.t'les W, Rawllna, Elmer I.
Rlchardo, Ewllltl F. Kola, Mrs.
Walter E. Stlveraon, Mrs. Nora
B. Tripp, Mrs. Roy E. Wny,
WWiam D. W~, MrL Gary
Lee llaas!e and lafiDI d&amp;utlb181'. Mrs. lllc:hanl E. Nortiq, and
lalant-

..

NOW AVAILABLE TO EVERYONEI

ER

an F. Gibson, Mrs. Gearp R.
Gould, Mrs. IL Burdell IJayea 1
Mra. Roy HuwoU, r.fra. BasU
W, Jlvldell, Mrs. Jamoa 0. KoiJy, Nrs. lAslle IAmley, WUbur
Maule, William H. Norman,

·,.

LIGHTED ALL NIGHT

Dear Girl:

Baaalt Is
lng.

\

\

~ ~- · - ··· -~ -··--·-

by Nov, 10 with Mrs. Earl Deen,

Homemakers

Is Planned

SUNDAY
HOMECOMING, Morning Star
Ullted Metllodl st Church, &amp;InPOMEROY - A Thanksglv.
day. &amp;mday School, 9:45a.m.; lng potluck dinner was planned
worahi.p, 10:45, basket dinner at [or the November meeting when
noon. Afternoon service, 1:30 Magnolia Temple, Pythian ~b­
p.m. with Rev. Charles Norris ters, met Thursday night at the
I!&gt;Nklng.
D.A.V, hall.
COUNTY PRAYER service 2
The cUnner will be aerved at
p.m. iilnda.Y at MI. Olive Church, 6:30 p.m. and me!Mers arC! to
I.mg Bottom. Okey Ahart, lead- take their own table service.
er. PUblic welcome.
A report of sick calls made
MONDAY
during the past month was givSOUTHERN ATHLETIC Boos- en and a commmlcaUoo oo Pythters, Monday, 7:30p.m. at South- tan Sliter buainess was presentom lUI!IJ School, Racine.
ed. Mrs. Karl Grueser, molrt
excellent
chief, presided.
REVIV A.L at Silver Run Free
Will Q\urch at 7:30 p, m. startlnl Oct. 21 ror two weeks with
the Rev. Carl Valance, huntington. speaker. Public welcome.

Thurlda,v night

Discussed by

Sunday nlghL

Social
:::
· Calendar

p-

POMEHOY - Alllllll guest
night oftllo TwUigllt Garden Club
was
lor Nov, 21 at tho
Pt0118J'(l,l' Flrll Blj&gt;tlat Clurch
11 a IJIMII11t1 of membera bold at
the home of Mro. Mary Helnos

Health Class

Of Methodism

Pythian Sisters

~

; .,

Twilight Garden Club Guest Night Held

Gerling.
It was a delightful afternoon. Many or her frierx:l.s were there,
she received lO\'ely gifts, ard the gracious hostess brought forth
a birtlxlay cake wiU1 candles.
.
MIDDLEPORT - A fUm on
At the party w~;:re Miss FriQda Faehnle, Mrs. John Kincatd, tl~e beginning of Methodism was
Mrs. E. 0. Tewksbary, Mrs. George Lasher, Miss Mildred Beeson, shown by the Rev. Max Dorehue
Mrs. C. M. Hennesy, Mrs. James Titus, Mrs. E. A. Reed, Mrs. at a meeting of Clan 12 held
Nancy Reed, Mrs. Crary Davis, Mrs. J . E. Harley and Mrs. Mar- Wednesday nii!IJt at Heath United Methodist Church.
cus Chambers.
Mrs. M. L. French opened the
SPEAKING OF BIRTHDAYS, Mrs. John Fry who Jlves at Mid- mee~ with devatims using the
dleport Route 1 will observe her 73rd on Friday. Her hobby is re- 23rd Paolm and pnyer. During
membering othe;s witb cards, so perhaps now )'ou'd Uke to remem- the business se58im, it was reported that R. W. Harris Md conber her with one.
tributed money to the class Cor
WHEN DOES A MILK CAN cease to be I milk can? When it's use In the schoollWlCh program
been antiqued and decalad - then It's an umbrella staid. Would Cor needy children.
you believe that these little items are selllng in department stores
An Invitation was extended to
the members to join with the
lor $25 and $35.
The antiqued cans will be a spe"cialty or the holiday bazaar be- Harrisonville congregation in a
Ing planned by the Beta Slgmo Phi SOrorlcy and Annie Chapman ls SuMay night service. The Rev.
using her artistic talents toward unique designing.
Mr. Donahue preaches there each
TODAY'S YOUNG PEOPLE reolly get IU'ound.
Friday, Janice Tannehill, daughter or Chester Tannehnl, Mid--:
dleport, left via plane from Columbus Cor Bangkok, Thailan:l. She
will be atterxling scOOol this year at the University or Bl~ok
where she will be a junior. Janice's Dance, Engineer Vinal Tantraporn, a native or BarliJ';ok., is employed there by an American
Oil co. Both Miss Tannehill and her fianee expect to return to the
States in a year.

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', ·~ 10 -

Tbe Sunday Times • Sentinel, Sunday, October 20,1968

Area Deaths

Charles Norria oftldat.ing. Burial will be In lhe Letart cemetery. Friends IIIIQ' call at lhe
funeral home anytime.

was appointed to the Board of
Dlrectors ol the West Virginia
O.bome
PI'. PLEASANT - ' .· h:"l Har- Heart Fund A.ssodatlon.
v.,y Rice, 83, st.. iuf. . • forHe is survived by the widow,
POMEROY - M. E. Olbome,
~nJ~rly O( Point Pleasa.M-. .oicd three children, father and stepEast Liverpool, brother of HarSl.turda.y 4:30 a.m. in Thomas brotller.
ry Osborne, ~mero,y, died MooMemorial Hospital in so u t h
day In East Uvorpool. Ftmeral
Charleston after a short illness.
Ralph Jackett
services were held Thursday at
He was born November 12, 1884
the Daw60fl. FW"Ieral Horne. Atin Kanauga, Ohio, a son of the
1'1'. PLEASANT- HalphTack- tending the 80rvlcea Ia East Livlate Tom and Ellen 0. Lee Rice. elt, 60, or Mlltoo, W. Va., for- erpool were Mr. and Mrs. HarMr. Rice was formei'ly employ- merly of Point Pleasant, died ry Osborne, Louis O:sbome, and
ed at Mt. Vernon farms.
11 :30 p.m. Frida.Y In St. Mary's Mn. Julius Sauvage, POmeroy,
His wife was the late Lirmie Hospital in Huntington a.ner a and Mrs. James Harris, GallipoVene Riffle Rice.
two weeks illness. He was a lis.
&amp;lrvtving are three children, construction worker.
Robert, VIrginia and Ethel and
lie Is sunilved by his wife,
three grandchildren.
l.ena; one son, Brent Tackett,
Funeral service will be held 8erving with the lJ. S. Mr Force
at 2:30 p.m . :Monday in Crow - at Sheppard Field, Texas; on e
Bussell Funeral Home l'oith the daughter, Mrs. David (Sandra)
By United Press International
Rev. 0. U. Carder officiating. Walters of ~. Albans and oevToday Is ~day. Oct. 20, the
Burial will be in &amp;merest cern· eral brothers and sisters.
294th
day of 1968 with 72 to
etery. Friends may call at the
The body is at Heck's Funerfuneral home alter 1l a.m. 9.m- al Home in Milton where ar- follow.
The moon 11!1 between Its last
day
rangements will be announced.
~arter and new phase.
TI1e morning stars are Jupiter
Kenn.-th Leikari

JObn .H. Ri"'

M. E.

Today's
Almanac

P'T. PLE:\:HNT - Funeral
service for Kenneth :\, Leikari,
43, J&gt;t. Pleasant, will be held
11 :3U a.m. in thP Mo!lr~l.evens
Funeral Home with the Rev .
Gary Brown assisted by the He\'.
Ted Wall o«iciating. Burial will
follow in Kirkland Memorial Gar.

dena.
Mr. Leikari. prominent in the
MGM Scooting circles, died suddenly 11JUr5day evening. lle was
a mechanical Cllb&gt;ineer employed
as Senior Deve lopment Engineer
at the Good,ycar Plant at .'\pple
Grm·e.
Mr. Leikari in addition to his
1coud.n.g activities had headed
the 1968 Mason Count:,.· He.1rt
Fund drive and only recently

and Mars.

Mao ion Furbee
PORTL\ND - Marion L. Furbee, 81, Portland, died Frida.v
night at Veterans Memorial Hospital. Mr. Furbee was a member of the Great Bend Methodist Church, Great Bend Grange
and the Meigs County Farm Bureau.
:::M1rvivlng are his wife, Mo:.o;
two daughters, Mrs. Thomas
(Juanita) Sayre, Portland; Mrs.
Robert (Harriet) Schaefer, DSJ'ton; a son, Haymond, Racine; a
brother, Randall Furbee, Lebanon, and seven grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Monday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the R e v.

,......

2,190 Tuberculin·

De ense Policy Wrong Says Nixon

Skin Tests Given
GALLIPOLIS - With Monda.Y
the Dnal day of testlns lhe GoJ.
lla Coou!V Healthlleportmenthao
glvea 2,190 tuberculiD akin testa
In Gollla Councy Sebooll.
This jlllst week, bealth llli"MI
pve 323 tuberculla lldn tellllla
U1o K,yger Creek Local School
District and 318 In the North GoJ.
Ita Local Sebool District. TestIng Mmda.Y will be at Rlo Grande
COllep, Rlo Grande Elemenlary
School and Centerville Elementary School.

QUICK QUIZ
Q-What did lh• lerm
''Hooverize" me on during
World War l?
A-AB food admiDIItrator

during

World War I, Herbert

Hoover called for "meatless
meals" and "wheaUess days"
to save food for hungry Europeans. The term "Hooverize"
came to mean economize.

MILLER HOME - Tenth District Corwressman Clarence
E. Miller has returned to the District following adjourrunent
·at Corweas and has begun the nna1 phase of his caqWgn. tor
reelection. He was greeted \.I)On his return to the District by
the Ctal.nnan of the Miller for Congress Committee, Mrs. Max~
lne H. Charlton of Lancaster, above, in o-ont of the MUier for
Corwress Committee Headquarters at Lancaster. From now
until election day, November 5th, Congressman Miller has a
busy schedule which wUI take him into every area of the Tenth
District. The district is the largest, geographically, In the
state. It lnclllcles twelve and a hal! COWlties of Southeastern

Q-ls the CommonweoUh

of Puerto Rico repre.senttd in

the U.S. House of Rtpresenlotives?

The evening stars are Vem.Js
A- Yes, by a resident comand Saturn.
missioner in Washington, who
On this day In history:
has a vo~ but no vote.
In 1873, P.T. Bamun opened
the Hippodrome in New York of 90.
City to house his "Greatest
A thought for the day:
~OW 011 Earth. 10
American humorist and writer
In 1918, the Germans acceptMark Twain, said: "Grlef can
ed President Woodrow WUson•a
take care of lt801!, but to get
terms to end World War L
the full value of joy you JrJJit
ln 1944, American troops
have 210mebod.Y to dlvtde it
landed on the eastern coast of with .••
Leyte Gulf ln the Philippines.
Gen. Douglas MacArthur, who
had l)een forced to leave the
islands 2',~ years earlier, said
"I have returned."
b1 1964, former President
Herbert Hoover died at the age

HOMECOMING AT MEIGS - Nancy Harris, 1968 Meigs
High School Hmnecuming Queen, poses with her court Frida.Y
nJght after Bhe was crowned in pre-game ceremonies of the
Meigs-WeUston football game. She was selected by the school
student body. In the foreground, above, are Todd Morrison.

crown bearer, and Vlcld Morrlaon, flower girL Ill G1e row are attendants, trom lett. Mary Wood. SUsan Lanning,
M11111 Harris, the queen; SI.My Zerkle and Pat Kennedy. Eaa
corlll In llle background are Gary Slavin, Rldlanl llagercy,
Chester Rooah, Jol&gt;n Ingels and Mike Buskirk.

Ohio.
PROTECTION RENEWED
RACINE - A oontract lor l'lre
protection by the Racine Fire

Department has been ren""ed
with the trustees of Lebanon
township. Rellldents or llle town-

ship needing Dre protecllon are
to call the Raclae department.

because of their wbltlsb-yellow color.

SUNDAY. OCTOBER 20, 1968

SPACE CENTER, Houston
(\JPJ) - Apollo 71 s astrm.auts
put on a alapaUck comedy rootine Saturday that pushed the
ldddy cartoons off televllllon, but
they tumed deadly aerloua over
thatr elot!ied eers and wiring
repaln recalling the Apollo I

dlsaater.
of

23"

Their DlJiht, in the ninth day
Ita 11-day trial f o r a

Christmastime mission ar0tu1d
the moon, became the second

longest sparelllglrt In history.
"We've reached the bitter
end," spacecraft commander
Walter Schlrra told ground controllers Ia refualng to attempt
!urther repair&amp; of broken elee~
trical wires.
The sotrawrts also aald they
were coosiderlng making Tues-

Nixon Wants Ohio
dress a fund ralalng dinner Fri~
day at Clllumbus.
Nixon's whistle atop tour will
be his fourth vllllt to Ohio during
the campaign. He made a similar trip in 1960 when he carried
the Buckeye State by 273,000
votes over Prellldenl Kennedy.
stopa Include Middletown, Dayton, ~ringtleld, London, Colurn.
bus, Marion, Deshler and Toledo. However, Nbron will leave
lhe train lor a speech at
before Nov. 5 include Ma¥or Nixon was scheduled for a maJohn Llndlay of New York, Gov. Jor address Oct. 30 at CleveNel..., A. llockefeller of New land
York, U.S. Sons. I!AiwardBrooke
~ Muaachusetta and Charles
Percy ol Wlnolo.
Slate DemocraUc Chairman
Eupne Pete O'Gr&amp;&lt;IY aald hlo
parl,y had not lchem.led any candldalel but did say VIce Prellldent Habert H. llwnphro,y would
be back Ia Ohio before lhe son·
eral ·eltctloo.
Third party candidates, George
C. Wallare and CUrUs E. LeMay,
MIDDLEPORT Fltteen •
w!U both visit Ohio this week. year~d
Demla Bogp, a Meise
W:allace will apeak Wedneaday
High. sophomore, apparently owes
at Youngstown and Slturday at
hll life todoy to Dallu Knorr of
ClaclmaU while LeMay will adlhe Rutland area.
School offlclals and emergency - rescue IQ.Uldmen of Pomeroy said Knorr, acting with lU'Iusual declolon and speed, Illerally .. roll blocked'' Boggs trom
conlt.ct with a hot guy wire leadIng to the switch box for llg1J1o
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UPI)llilrricane Gladys ripped a jlllth at the Marauder Stadium Friday
ct.death ao:l destruction across nlglrt; lmmedlatel,y after the Well!lie watst of Flnrlda from the ston game.
Boggs had by chance laken
gult to llle Atlanllc Saturday,
ahold
of the wire in the muddy,
then edged menaclrwJ.y toward
llllppery
condltlnna and the wire,
the Carolinas with new - round
cme to extreme rainy
apparently
fury and 100 111&gt;h winds.
cmdltlonl,
carried a oonalderaA hurricane watch was orderble
charge.
ed !ram CMI'Ieston, S. C. to
rrylng for help, Will&amp;·
Katteraa, N, C.
Gli&lt;IY• loll three cleod and nored momentarily, witneaaea
dhmJ 40,000 persona from their laid, aa It woo tliou8ht to be a
bi:mes In Its destructive march Qpical caH of. "Wolf, Wolf... ,.
But Knorr, realizing the danllCJ'(III FlorldL Omciala said
pr
llolllla was In, threw hlmsell
- - In the sunohlM Stole
at
the
bo.Y, forcing his two handorould be counted In the miled
I!I1J&gt;
loo10 from the wire,
Dons of dollars.
Bogp ns removed to Veterans Memorial Hospital and kept
. KILL EIGHT REDS
ovemlglot
for observation. He 11111SEOUL, South Korea (UPD fered
moderate
buma on his
lllllllary conununlque Soturday·
hands
and
shock.
He Ia the ll&lt;lll
.aid South KOI'Mn tr&lt;q&gt;a killed
ot
Mr.
IIIII
Mr
a.
Llme1 Boiu1B,
ol&amp;ht North Korean iallltrat&lt;lrl
Llacola
St.
Ia two _.ate cleobes Fridl1
. !f'CINNATI (UP0- iilc:hard
M. ll'llmo plumed 1&lt;1 arrlte'f181'e ·
lo!aidaY al8hl to lead a drlve aimO!d at lasurlng Ohio's 26 elect&lt;lral votes go to him.
Nixon has a rally scheduled
here and then will leave Tueoday IIIOnllag on a whistle atop
tc:ur across Ohio. The trip by
~C&gt;ecial train will laclude a number of stops.
Other promlnenl Republicans
planning to campaign In 0 h I o

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Path of Death

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STUDY TOUR
MOSCOW (UP!) - Tha Tau

- • opncy aaldSoturdayPrlme
LAUNCH COSMOS
Minister Mauno Kovlota of FIJ&gt;.
~tMCJSCO•W (UPD - The Sovl· land wiD orrlve lnl\loacowTueoSoluniQ Launehed No. 248
fw "holiday&amp; and • lllid;y
.a. •nn•nrwd Colmoa aeriea. di.Y
tour" of lila Sovial Union 11 a
·~clll TaiO .......... _ , ot Pnmlar AIU81 N, Ko-

tiiij•• tho apuinlk Wll .. _ _

DDI'IRIIb'o II

I

day's reentry and splashdown
In the Atlantic without t h e i r
apacesulta on to help them fight
against burstlns their eardnuns
In the sudden pressure increase.
'~We have six blocked ears up
here" as a result of the first
known head colds in a p a c e,
Schlrra reported. They h a v e
been lighting tbe colds BIDce
thstr Oct. 11 launch from Cape

Remedy.

~~'·

··.~"':'...... , )i
•
, ..

PAGE 11

Space Trio Make Slapstick

Quick Action

.,.~"\

LONDON, K,y. (UPO - Republican vice
presidential
nominee ~lro T. Agnew charged Saturday that his opponent,
Sen. Edmund Mu!dd.e, D-Maine,
11 !11 encouraging lawbreaking. ••·
Addressing approximately 6, 000 per1011.s at an airport ral.
ly here at the foothills of AppalachiA, the Maryland governor quoted Muski.e as saying
per1011.s could burn their draft
cards ll they were willing to
pay the penalcy.
~&lt;Senator Muskie ia encouraging lawbreaking," Agnew
said. "He hi being permissive."

itntintl
VOL 3 NO. 38

ZENITH
COLOR

. . , ,. ...,-* .......

lng crowd ol MVeral thoullllld
per!Kils in a 111gb school gym.
naslum.
He laid llle goal or hlo administration would be to cluu1
a course to keep the nation at
peace for the rest ol this century.
In hla radio addresa, Nixon
sa.id, '"It another world war Ia
to be prevented. every atep posilble mu1t be taken to avert

Ghost shrimp are so-called

fresh and stimulating
with the warmth
of colonial times

GIANT-SCREEN

CHICAGO (UP0 Richard
M. Nixon charged Soturday that
''short-sighted defense pollelea 11
ol the John&amp;OO Administration
have dissipated the ooclear superiorll,y the United Slates needs
to deal with the Communi II M&gt;rld.
In a major radio speech, the
Republican presidential candidate also told Asian nation• they
would have to band together to
fight future wars such as the
ooe in Vietnam by themselves.
1\ Nixon Administratlon, he
said, would seek to keep t h e
peace thi"'O.lgh "'Preventlve diplomacy."
Nl&gt;oo spelled oot detail a ol
his Asian poiJcy in a 15 - minute ldlres• which had been tap..
ed for natimwide broadcast (C~
Saturday night. It was the fourth
in a series ol10 radio speeches
Nlxon has scheduled on major
ilsues of the campaign.
Nixon began the da,y' s cam.
pa1gnlng with a opeech In t h e
Chicago subum or Moon! Prospect and was to travel oo to a
rally at Eatontown, N. J.
111 don't think you have to
have three wars in a generation as we have had In the past
generatim.," he told a cheer-

l)'gln.

Sehlrra and his crewmen, Dorm
Eisele and Walter Cunningham,
set utde their problem&amp; to put
on the wildelt yet ot their five
telecasts from space.
The wisecracking astronaut~

went through a comic elosG order drill, whirling Uke lops and
bouncing up and down like pistons
in t.be weightless atmosphere of
the spacecraft.
There was no humor, however, when ground controller Btn

Pogue asked Schirra to tape up
Eisele's broken medical sensor
wires.
'~] think we better refer back
to the Apollo 1 accident board,
where I stated :ru have no changes
ln the suJt loop, u Schirra said.
"We've gone much too far with
this kluse (makeshift repair)
right oow.
"Now, when Donn Eisele has
a hot aignal conditioner part of
the wiring there, we've reached
the bitter end. Pm not yielding
m that one."
Breakage, Sehlrra aald, was
"the thing that scares us." According to investigators, it was
spark from a broken wire that
Bel llle cabla or Apollo I atlre
during a ground test Jan. 27,
1967, killing astronauts VIrgil
Grissom, Edward White a n d
Roger Chaft'ee.

a

down the war.

"There wUI be no statement
from here until there ts something from elsewhere," one u.s.
otftcial said when asked about

Film Shown

On Issues l-2
MmDLEPORT - G e o r g e
Metmart showed and commented oo a Qlm Friday nlg!lt at
Hesth Churdl aoldng voter approval of Issues 1 and 2 In tbe
November election when the Middleport - I'Omaro,y Rotary Club
met for dbmer and a buatness
meeting.
He was accomponled by Bill
Lambert of the Slate Hl&amp;hwaY
Departmenl, for whom Mr, Meinhart alao works m aaalgnment.
President Wilbur ~d
preolded, and Intromcecl three
auesta, all of Wellllloll here tor
the foothall pms. They were
Charleo Gasldna, Areh McCormick, and Carl Dahlber!l.
Hesth Clllrch ladles 10rvlng
dinner were Mrs. Em1e Frlser, Mr1. Bent.ard Fultz, Mr1.
Robert' Fisher, Mrs. Hoochlna,
Mrs. Max Donahue, Mlaa Betll
Fultz and Mill BeSI Sanbom,

NIDRION, Greece (UPO The llle of Smrploa, polished
down to llle lut liMe, falrlJ'
glOBIIled Saturii!,Y for the &amp;Inday wedding ol Illn. John F.
Kennedy and ArlstoUe Onaasla,
The couple, along with a dozen or 10 guests already on hand.
- t their pre-wedding nlg!lt aboard the yacht Christina, anchored In a deeply Inset ba.Y or
the i Bland. It was expected there
would be a parl,y aboard the ohlp,
virtually a tloatlng palace.
Througbout the day dozens of
workmen watered, clipped and
dressed 14J Storpios, an island
tour miles otr the coaJitofGreece
that Onassia - a multi-millionaire Greek shipowner - bought
for himself. The Christina is being used as the house since the
62-year-old Onassta has not got..
ten around to building alSO-room
mansion he has planned for Ute
island.
Quiet Da,y
Aside from some trouble wtth
the hordes of journalists a n d
'·'1tographers who have descend-

.-.. the--

SAIGON (UP!) - American
bombers streaked into North
Vietnam for a new series of
raids Saturday, and the U. S.
Command reported 135 North VIetnamese and Viet Cong killed in
a series ol scattered battle ln
&amp;Mrth Vtetnarn.
Despite the f!gbtlng, the ground
war remained in a gmeral lull
and a further reduction in combat was expected as tropical
storm Hester bore down on the
Soutll Vietnamese coast l1lO
miles east of Saigon.
President Nguyen Van Thieu

Question

o.,y.

Slnlal.
· -·
,00 [11111)'
'11CIUIIY
north
and Ulllo chlroge In
lelq&gt;eroture. Hl8h Ia !lie 801
rarogtrog to near 10 extrtiiM......, lllr With IOIIOIMiblelem-

perature.

A WEJ.L.OONE "PEANVTS"' OOMIC lll'(p wu corrled out Friday Dlaht II a clance IGI!owlng the Me1&amp;1-Welloton
p.mo. llln. IIGpr Motpn, Mlddl~ creolod th11 jlllper
macho "Snoopy" who Ill to' his doahouH and a eolortul a(ln
wblch rood "lllllPlee•a II """'-c:omlow". The &lt;lance waa held
In the l\lolp Junlcr HIP Auditorium. Miss Meqlo Harris,
dallllhter ot Mr, IIIII Mrs. Eupno Harrll, Mlddleport, wu

homeeomlow queen.

ed. on the area, Saturday w a s
spent quietly. Thore were reports Onassls and Mrs. Kemedy, 39, wenl to the little white
chapel on the island, where they
will be married In • Greek Orthodox ceremony &amp;mday, for a wedding rehearsal. But th11 was not
otnclally conftrmed.
The latest arrival was Mrs.
Kennedy's sister, Princess Lee
Radzlwill, and her husband,
Prince 9anisl&amp;Us Radziwill,
When they arrived at Athena airport before !lylns to !korploa
Prinooss Radziwill told reporters the wedding will take place
at 4 p.m. (10 a.m. EDT) &amp;lnday
and would last for about an hour.
It was the Orst word on any exact plana.
Throughout the day there was
litUe to be seen of Mrs. KennectY, and Onassis hlmselfd:idnot
appear above decks on the Christina.
~werful motorboats with aaiIors and men from the Island aboard kept repn1.ers and news-

men away from both the laland
and the Christina.
WhSI Mrs. KOIIIIOIIy Dnally appeared on deck, accompanied by
her two chUdren, 10-year..old
Caroline and John Jr., 7, they
were allowed in close to take
pictures of her.
Hugs and SmJies
Dressed l.n white alacks and a
black hlghnecked sweater, she
buggec! her children and smiled
•• the naohbulbs llOiliJO(l from the
amall floUlla o! rowboats on the
emerald greeo sea beside t h e
yachl.
One Jl(lolo8l'apher yelled In
Engll1h, "How are you~•
"1 am very happy," Mrs. Kennet~¥ replied with a smile.
Throughout the day there waa
activity on Storpio1 and both
the helicopter and Onassis'sseaplane, which can be kept aboard
the Christina, were ln constant
action.
For the few h\mdred citizens
~ thla little Dohing v1llnge that
sits oo the isl.and of Levkaa just

Soturday relteratell hlo hardllne
stand in the face of worldwide
speculation about a _poufble U.
S. bombing halt against North
Vlelnom. He laid auch a halt

was ••impossiblen without reciprocal de - escalation by North
Vletruun.
"Missiorul were scheduled for
Salurclay and - ·

are ll.Y-

Wallace
To Make
Report

control Friday alalot IIIII otruc:k

Weather

has very nearly achieved tt• United Slates ..., be ~od,
they DO loniier are backed 10'
RDBls. n Nlxon aald.
u.u a result, even where the the decisive Ill&lt;*&lt; -riDril;y
jalnll,y stretched forces ol lhe wbldl Ia jlllsl criMI made aur
power tuUy credible."

across the way from !lrorploo II
was a day to romeriler. F!Jblng Will fOl'IIOIIOII u the ....
hired their boata out to tho
awarms ol. newamen and pl-.
tograph.en. 'lbl1 came to ID tad
late In the day when lhe muter - IIJPU'ed:ly OD a re.
quest from Onull.s cloled
the harbor to amaJl croft, oucces811Jlly cutting off the . trade.

Another lllrill lor the people, who live Oil a day to c1o1
IUrV!val balls that 151rGno1Y ...,_
!ruts with the multlmlliJao dollar luxury ortheChrlstlnaandtho
..uoep~~c, poll•hed beaut;y ol
~rpioa, came wbl!ll Onulf.1
helloopter buzzed the vllla&amp;e.
.For no _..,.. rea- Jull
as m.lk waa lallln&amp; It awept low
over the ba.Y and vlU&amp;&amp;e
al Umes.
It &amp;JlPO&amp;l'ed to be a Joy rida
- IIIII lhe vlllqer1 II u
such, It wu lmposslble to ..,
wllo wu aboard lhe craft at lhe
Ume.

-or-

American Planes Launch New Raids

KILLED IN CAR
DAYTON (UP0 - Mrs. Garaldlne Holden, 39, Dayton, wu
klllod whea her car wont out of

ot the
loll !late Meatal Hoopltal.

"But under the short ...lghted
defenae policies Oil the preaent
admlnlatratlon, that advlllllage
has boon dlallijllltecl; a determined &amp;Met drive for supremacy

Skorpios Shines for Jackie

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (IJP0George C, Wallace, his popularlt,y slipping ellghtly in the
public opinion polls he scorns,
reports to the nation &amp;mda,y oo
the resul~ of his rwuting mate's
trip to Vletruun.
VIce presidential candlda.te
the possibiUty of a halt in AmeriCurds LeMay, former Air Force
can air raids against North VietChief of statr, will return from
nam.
Sources close to the North the tour &amp;lnday morning and
Vietnamese delegation privately confer with Wa.llace before the
confirmed that an American pro- former Alabama governor ap.
posal has been received and that pears oo a nationally televised
tt has been sent to Haooi for Interview program (NBC's Meet
the Press).
consideration. Both sides denied
LeMay said in Saigon Saturthat N&lt;&gt;rth Vletruun had rll(&gt;lled
day he opposed a halt In t h e
to the U.S. plan.
bombing of North VletruunSome iOOieatlon of Hanofl s pohe felt that llle present bombsition was ell)er.ted Monday when
ing
there was "inefticient. u
the North Vletnameoe negollatHe said a Wallaoo.LeMay adhog team holds its regular brief·
ministration could procklee "a
lng ror newsmen coverina tbe
proper and eflicient soluUon,.
Paris talks. The next regular
to the war.
negotla~ sessloo is scheduled
Wallace Is m rerord favoring
for Weclneaday.
a military victory with convenTh&amp;re were several veniona
Uonal weapons in VIetnam should
of the U.S. formula In circulanegotiations fall. He said he dattion, but nooe was confirmed
ly opposes any use ot. nuclear
by any source.
weapoos in that country.
Most atter&amp;ion focused on the
A Harris poll published Friposslbilll,y ot a U.S. bambirog
day showed Wallace with 18 per
halt in return for finn guarancent of 1he vote nationally, a
tees from North Vietnam ttat
drop of three per cent. A rethe Commwdsts would oot take
cent Gallup poll p.ve him 20
advantage ot llle U.S. peaeemo"'
per cent. a drop of one per cent
to liep "' the .....
tho - - - Gollup poll.

Rarry Reace
PARIS (UPO - Ol!lclal U.S.
spokesmen Saturday parried
questions about reported Ameri~
can p,roposals for breaking the
deadlock in negotiations with
North VIetnam aimed at scaling

a direct conll"oniBtlon between
nuclear powers!'
Nuclear weapon superiority Is
needed to deal with llle Soviet
Union, he said.

POMEROY - THE POMEROY NATIONAL BANK and The
Farmers Bank and Savings Co. have been presented awards
Cor "100 per cent Participation" in the Ohio Bankers lnsw-ance Furx:l CUstomer Service alii Employee Benefit Programs.
Participating in the ceremonies we~ lett, above (L to R),
Deck Webb, special representative for Turner &amp; Shepard, Inc. ,
administrator of O.RLF. 1 and Edison Hobstetter, president of
Pomeroy National Bank.
. Webb in maid,. the pre~t­
'antations saJd, "ReclpJents of the plaques such as the-Pomeroy banks have eJqJressed by theJr participation in this Ohio
Bankers Association program a deep concern and awreciation
Cor the welfare of their customers am employees." The Customer Service Program meanli the bank offers mortgage paymart protection, mortgage lite, and credit life lnaurance pri)IU'Uns for enrolled cus«mers.

Humphrey Vows Slash

In Military Largess
WASHINGTON (UPO -

Hu-

COll"ltrles."
But he charged the congresurday lacreaaed economic aid sional cut e-conomic aid to the
but promised a cutback of U. S. Latin natlms was '"irresponsimllitary a11J stance to L a t i n ble and short-slghted" and IBid
America. The Democratic pres. he would seek and IIUPIJOI'l lnldenUal candidate laid he Mltlld crea.sed fUnds, if elected.
a110 seek an end to the arms
The policy statement was
race 80Uih ol the border.
issued b,y Humphrey as he reThe Vlce President said "any turned to Washlng!oo for the
realistic Bnlutlon to the arms weekend.
race in Latin Amerie~~'' ia LmAlter arriving from New York
poaalble without the cooperation Clcy, Humphrey druve through
ol the United Slate&amp; and Europe. the rain to an endoaed shopping
'"So long as Europe and Amer- C8lter In 8llburban 9Jltland, Md.,
Ica compete for convattlonal where be spoke to an estimatarms sales In Latin America, ed 3,000 per10111, including mthere will cortlmoe to tlourlsh merouo and notey Wallace heckIa many countrlea a policy which lers.
eacouraaoa ill-ted children and
well..fed armies."
In a major policy lllltement
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (IJPO
111 La11D America, lhe Democrst.
- Gov. Roaald llelp.n ol call·
ie camHdate said "we should
forn1a Is eJ*ted to 1ttract
...,....t with nt_., pem.
more than fi.OO,ODO to the Rementa to determine what can be
pldleu ....,..,P coffers
done to reatrlct the competition
here Ia a Alnd • rai11Ds dinner
Ia lolling . . _ . to
next1burllla1 nl&amp;hl in the CivLa1ID America."
Ic Audltarban, at .100 a plata,
He added: 11 Aa Preal.d8nt. I
1be l!Aonl CcomQo Rop...Ucan
will review lmmedleteJy u,
- - co· cbatrman, Wal·
military policy In reprd Ill Lilter J. Rualell IIIII '1'11111111 C.
la America, With . the obJect ot
Jr., laid lbout
........ doWn the u.
rnl1llarjo
1,200 pertOIII trcm 25 lllldllpre1011re;
rlp(diT cvrtallllll
... .....Uel .... OJIIIIdod for
ll'anl military ullatance; and
lllo evorL
strictly controliq
military
erodlt aaloa to La1ID America

bert H. llwnphrey proposed Sat-

s.

s.

Blo..,....,

lng right

now,"

a spokesman

[or the U.S. Command laid.

Mon10011 rain1 and clwda
pouring oot of China -e restricting pllota, and beadqloortera laid only 102 mluionowere
Down Friday.
'lbleu apoke with IIOWIIIIU!II at
Vung Tau a tew hours after
Communlll troops llred 10 ol
thstr bit 122mm Soviet • made
rockets Into the coastal re-.t
42 mlles IIOUiheast of Salp.
Five Vlelnameoe civiltans were ldlled and 19 other
persons, Including al8hl U.S. servicemen, were WDIIDdad In tae

attack, t'j)Oheom'"' aald.
The boatlood ~ Communlllll
believed respo11111ble fortheVq
Tau attack pold tor It. The ..,..
801 with about 20 Reds aboard
..... _.-entl,y trying to make
a get-a.wa,y It ran late 1
pair of U, S. Navy D•nboet• In
tbe Mo Nhat River.
"We opened up at ~Im&lt;
ranee,•• said Qlarterma8ter' I. C.
Clarenre F. Wllllaml of Honolulu, Hawaii, commander of patrol boa! •'BR754.

Simple
Wedding
Sought
NIDRION, Greece (UPO Mra. John F. Konnedy, 39, marries Aristotle Onasats, 62, b .
day Ia 1 tiny Greek ~
chapel em the laland be 011111
In lhe lmlm Sea. The wo""'"
who ha.l known 10 much lOrrow said Satl.lrdQ" she was•..-ery
happy."
Describing herBOlf and tho
mulUmllllooalre Onulla u
"simple,. people, the wlduwed
first li&lt;IY pleaded with - - mea to reaped llle privacy ol
the wedding aet for f p.m. em
the lale ol Slwrploo.
"We know you understand thl1
eveo lhrugh people may be wall
known, they aUll hold In their
hearts the ematim• of a almple person for tbe lllllll1mta thU
are most Important of tbo• w
know oo earth - birth, marriap, dellh," Mrs. Kemeclf laid
Ia a meaaose ralayecl Ill t h e
1mall army

r:l.

DIWIINIII UMIIl-

bled to cover the - . . , of the
year.
II wao her willh, Mrl. Remedy laid, thet bel' marriap tD
liJ.assiS be '"a _pri.Yaillll"IJIIMJt 1

Ia lhe chapel amana: the Cnno•
treea m llle 11111111 he bouihl u
a private pondlae.
HWtah

Ul

...,.....

• D4

peaee,., Mra. Kaaec17 llid.
1be l1lbtl em t)y•ata• ,-atM

Chrl- twlddecl u 1111M r.u
and membua ~ the 10 'Zrw
party tDuted tho ~ .......
TRACY DID
LOS ANGELES (UJII) - 1M
Tnq, no~ • wt• cnell:
1111 ._.,. Ia " .1'111 F r o a t
Plao'' Ia lhe ... . . .

porodlod Harry

- r - .....,.

-~ Ia tlio ' " " ... ,
f'rlclo111 ... 70.

�.

', ·~ 10 -

Tbe Sunday Times • Sentinel, Sunday, October 20,1968

Area Deaths

Charles Norria oftldat.ing. Burial will be In lhe Letart cemetery. Friends IIIIQ' call at lhe
funeral home anytime.

was appointed to the Board of
Dlrectors ol the West Virginia
O.bome
PI'. PLEASANT - ' .· h:"l Har- Heart Fund A.ssodatlon.
v.,y Rice, 83, st.. iuf. . • forHe is survived by the widow,
POMEROY - M. E. Olbome,
~nJ~rly O( Point Pleasa.M-. .oicd three children, father and stepEast Liverpool, brother of HarSl.turda.y 4:30 a.m. in Thomas brotller.
ry Osborne, ~mero,y, died MooMemorial Hospital in so u t h
day In East Uvorpool. Ftmeral
Charleston after a short illness.
Ralph Jackett
services were held Thursday at
He was born November 12, 1884
the Daw60fl. FW"Ieral Horne. Atin Kanauga, Ohio, a son of the
1'1'. PLEASANT- HalphTack- tending the 80rvlcea Ia East Livlate Tom and Ellen 0. Lee Rice. elt, 60, or Mlltoo, W. Va., for- erpool were Mr. and Mrs. HarMr. Rice was formei'ly employ- merly of Point Pleasant, died ry Osborne, Louis O:sbome, and
ed at Mt. Vernon farms.
11 :30 p.m. Frida.Y In St. Mary's Mn. Julius Sauvage, POmeroy,
His wife was the late Lirmie Hospital in Huntington a.ner a and Mrs. James Harris, GallipoVene Riffle Rice.
two weeks illness. He was a lis.
&amp;lrvtving are three children, construction worker.
Robert, VIrginia and Ethel and
lie Is sunilved by his wife,
three grandchildren.
l.ena; one son, Brent Tackett,
Funeral service will be held 8erving with the lJ. S. Mr Force
at 2:30 p.m . :Monday in Crow - at Sheppard Field, Texas; on e
Bussell Funeral Home l'oith the daughter, Mrs. David (Sandra)
By United Press International
Rev. 0. U. Carder officiating. Walters of ~. Albans and oevToday Is ~day. Oct. 20, the
Burial will be in &amp;merest cern· eral brothers and sisters.
294th
day of 1968 with 72 to
etery. Friends may call at the
The body is at Heck's Funerfuneral home alter 1l a.m. 9.m- al Home in Milton where ar- follow.
The moon 11!1 between Its last
day
rangements will be announced.
~arter and new phase.
TI1e morning stars are Jupiter
Kenn.-th Leikari

JObn .H. Ri"'

M. E.

Today's
Almanac

P'T. PLE:\:HNT - Funeral
service for Kenneth :\, Leikari,
43, J&gt;t. Pleasant, will be held
11 :3U a.m. in thP Mo!lr~l.evens
Funeral Home with the Rev .
Gary Brown assisted by the He\'.
Ted Wall o«iciating. Burial will
follow in Kirkland Memorial Gar.

dena.
Mr. Leikari. prominent in the
MGM Scooting circles, died suddenly 11JUr5day evening. lle was
a mechanical Cllb&gt;ineer employed
as Senior Deve lopment Engineer
at the Good,ycar Plant at .'\pple
Grm·e.
Mr. Leikari in addition to his
1coud.n.g activities had headed
the 1968 Mason Count:,.· He.1rt
Fund drive and only recently

and Mars.

Mao ion Furbee
PORTL\ND - Marion L. Furbee, 81, Portland, died Frida.v
night at Veterans Memorial Hospital. Mr. Furbee was a member of the Great Bend Methodist Church, Great Bend Grange
and the Meigs County Farm Bureau.
:::M1rvivlng are his wife, Mo:.o;
two daughters, Mrs. Thomas
(Juanita) Sayre, Portland; Mrs.
Robert (Harriet) Schaefer, DSJ'ton; a son, Haymond, Racine; a
brother, Randall Furbee, Lebanon, and seven grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Monday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the R e v.

,......

2,190 Tuberculin·

De ense Policy Wrong Says Nixon

Skin Tests Given
GALLIPOLIS - With Monda.Y
the Dnal day of testlns lhe GoJ.
lla Coou!V Healthlleportmenthao
glvea 2,190 tuberculiD akin testa
In Gollla Councy Sebooll.
This jlllst week, bealth llli"MI
pve 323 tuberculla lldn tellllla
U1o K,yger Creek Local School
District and 318 In the North GoJ.
Ita Local Sebool District. TestIng Mmda.Y will be at Rlo Grande
COllep, Rlo Grande Elemenlary
School and Centerville Elementary School.

QUICK QUIZ
Q-What did lh• lerm
''Hooverize" me on during
World War l?
A-AB food admiDIItrator

during

World War I, Herbert

Hoover called for "meatless
meals" and "wheaUess days"
to save food for hungry Europeans. The term "Hooverize"
came to mean economize.

MILLER HOME - Tenth District Corwressman Clarence
E. Miller has returned to the District following adjourrunent
·at Corweas and has begun the nna1 phase of his caqWgn. tor
reelection. He was greeted \.I)On his return to the District by
the Ctal.nnan of the Miller for Congress Committee, Mrs. Max~
lne H. Charlton of Lancaster, above, in o-ont of the MUier for
Corwress Committee Headquarters at Lancaster. From now
until election day, November 5th, Congressman Miller has a
busy schedule which wUI take him into every area of the Tenth
District. The district is the largest, geographically, In the
state. It lnclllcles twelve and a hal! COWlties of Southeastern

Q-ls the CommonweoUh

of Puerto Rico repre.senttd in

the U.S. House of Rtpresenlotives?

The evening stars are Vem.Js
A- Yes, by a resident comand Saturn.
missioner in Washington, who
On this day In history:
has a vo~ but no vote.
In 1873, P.T. Bamun opened
the Hippodrome in New York of 90.
City to house his "Greatest
A thought for the day:
~OW 011 Earth. 10
American humorist and writer
In 1918, the Germans acceptMark Twain, said: "Grlef can
ed President Woodrow WUson•a
take care of lt801!, but to get
terms to end World War L
the full value of joy you JrJJit
ln 1944, American troops
have 210mebod.Y to dlvtde it
landed on the eastern coast of with .••
Leyte Gulf ln the Philippines.
Gen. Douglas MacArthur, who
had l)een forced to leave the
islands 2',~ years earlier, said
"I have returned."
b1 1964, former President
Herbert Hoover died at the age

HOMECOMING AT MEIGS - Nancy Harris, 1968 Meigs
High School Hmnecuming Queen, poses with her court Frida.Y
nJght after Bhe was crowned in pre-game ceremonies of the
Meigs-WeUston football game. She was selected by the school
student body. In the foreground, above, are Todd Morrison.

crown bearer, and Vlcld Morrlaon, flower girL Ill G1e row are attendants, trom lett. Mary Wood. SUsan Lanning,
M11111 Harris, the queen; SI.My Zerkle and Pat Kennedy. Eaa
corlll In llle background are Gary Slavin, Rldlanl llagercy,
Chester Rooah, Jol&gt;n Ingels and Mike Buskirk.

Ohio.
PROTECTION RENEWED
RACINE - A oontract lor l'lre
protection by the Racine Fire

Department has been ren""ed
with the trustees of Lebanon
township. Rellldents or llle town-

ship needing Dre protecllon are
to call the Raclae department.

because of their wbltlsb-yellow color.

SUNDAY. OCTOBER 20, 1968

SPACE CENTER, Houston
(\JPJ) - Apollo 71 s astrm.auts
put on a alapaUck comedy rootine Saturday that pushed the
ldddy cartoons off televllllon, but
they tumed deadly aerloua over
thatr elot!ied eers and wiring
repaln recalling the Apollo I

dlsaater.
of

23"

Their DlJiht, in the ninth day
Ita 11-day trial f o r a

Christmastime mission ar0tu1d
the moon, became the second

longest sparelllglrt In history.
"We've reached the bitter
end," spacecraft commander
Walter Schlrra told ground controllers Ia refualng to attempt
!urther repair&amp; of broken elee~
trical wires.
The sotrawrts also aald they
were coosiderlng making Tues-

Nixon Wants Ohio
dress a fund ralalng dinner Fri~
day at Clllumbus.
Nixon's whistle atop tour will
be his fourth vllllt to Ohio during
the campaign. He made a similar trip in 1960 when he carried
the Buckeye State by 273,000
votes over Prellldenl Kennedy.
stopa Include Middletown, Dayton, ~ringtleld, London, Colurn.
bus, Marion, Deshler and Toledo. However, Nbron will leave
lhe train lor a speech at
before Nov. 5 include Ma¥or Nixon was scheduled for a maJohn Llndlay of New York, Gov. Jor address Oct. 30 at CleveNel..., A. llockefeller of New land
York, U.S. Sons. I!AiwardBrooke
~ Muaachusetta and Charles
Percy ol Wlnolo.
Slate DemocraUc Chairman
Eupne Pete O'Gr&amp;&lt;IY aald hlo
parl,y had not lchem.led any candldalel but did say VIce Prellldent Habert H. llwnphro,y would
be back Ia Ohio before lhe son·
eral ·eltctloo.
Third party candidates, George
C. Wallare and CUrUs E. LeMay,
MIDDLEPORT Fltteen •
w!U both visit Ohio this week. year~d
Demla Bogp, a Meise
W:allace will apeak Wedneaday
High. sophomore, apparently owes
at Youngstown and Slturday at
hll life todoy to Dallu Knorr of
ClaclmaU while LeMay will adlhe Rutland area.
School offlclals and emergency - rescue IQ.Uldmen of Pomeroy said Knorr, acting with lU'Iusual declolon and speed, Illerally .. roll blocked'' Boggs trom
conlt.ct with a hot guy wire leadIng to the switch box for llg1J1o
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UPI)llilrricane Gladys ripped a jlllth at the Marauder Stadium Friday
ct.death ao:l destruction across nlglrt; lmmedlatel,y after the Well!lie watst of Flnrlda from the ston game.
Boggs had by chance laken
gult to llle Atlanllc Saturday,
ahold
of the wire in the muddy,
then edged menaclrwJ.y toward
llllppery
condltlnna and the wire,
the Carolinas with new - round
cme to extreme rainy
apparently
fury and 100 111&gt;h winds.
cmdltlonl,
carried a oonalderaA hurricane watch was orderble
charge.
ed !ram CMI'Ieston, S. C. to
rrylng for help, Will&amp;·
Katteraa, N, C.
Gli&lt;IY• loll three cleod and nored momentarily, witneaaea
dhmJ 40,000 persona from their laid, aa It woo tliou8ht to be a
bi:mes In Its destructive march Qpical caH of. "Wolf, Wolf... ,.
But Knorr, realizing the danllCJ'(III FlorldL Omciala said
pr
llolllla was In, threw hlmsell
- - In the sunohlM Stole
at
the
bo.Y, forcing his two handorould be counted In the miled
I!I1J&gt;
loo10 from the wire,
Dons of dollars.
Bogp ns removed to Veterans Memorial Hospital and kept
. KILL EIGHT REDS
ovemlglot
for observation. He 11111SEOUL, South Korea (UPD fered
moderate
buma on his
lllllllary conununlque Soturday·
hands
and
shock.
He Ia the ll&lt;lll
.aid South KOI'Mn tr&lt;q&gt;a killed
ot
Mr.
IIIII
Mr
a.
Llme1 Boiu1B,
ol&amp;ht North Korean iallltrat&lt;lrl
Llacola
St.
Ia two _.ate cleobes Fridl1
. !f'CINNATI (UP0- iilc:hard
M. ll'llmo plumed 1&lt;1 arrlte'f181'e ·
lo!aidaY al8hl to lead a drlve aimO!d at lasurlng Ohio's 26 elect&lt;lral votes go to him.
Nixon has a rally scheduled
here and then will leave Tueoday IIIOnllag on a whistle atop
tc:ur across Ohio. The trip by
~C&gt;ecial train will laclude a number of stops.
Other promlnenl Republicans
planning to campaign In 0 h I o

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STUDY TOUR
MOSCOW (UP!) - Tha Tau

- • opncy aaldSoturdayPrlme
LAUNCH COSMOS
Minister Mauno Kovlota of FIJ&gt;.
~tMCJSCO•W (UPD - The Sovl· land wiD orrlve lnl\loacowTueoSoluniQ Launehed No. 248
fw "holiday&amp; and • lllid;y
.a. •nn•nrwd Colmoa aeriea. di.Y
tour" of lila Sovial Union 11 a
·~clll TaiO .......... _ , ot Pnmlar AIU81 N, Ko-

tiiij•• tho apuinlk Wll .. _ _

DDI'IRIIb'o II

I

day's reentry and splashdown
In the Atlantic without t h e i r
apacesulta on to help them fight
against burstlns their eardnuns
In the sudden pressure increase.
'~We have six blocked ears up
here" as a result of the first
known head colds in a p a c e,
Schlrra reported. They h a v e
been lighting tbe colds BIDce
thstr Oct. 11 launch from Cape

Remedy.

~~'·

··.~"':'...... , )i
•
, ..

PAGE 11

Space Trio Make Slapstick

Quick Action

.,.~"\

LONDON, K,y. (UPO - Republican vice
presidential
nominee ~lro T. Agnew charged Saturday that his opponent,
Sen. Edmund Mu!dd.e, D-Maine,
11 !11 encouraging lawbreaking. ••·
Addressing approximately 6, 000 per1011.s at an airport ral.
ly here at the foothills of AppalachiA, the Maryland governor quoted Muski.e as saying
per1011.s could burn their draft
cards ll they were willing to
pay the penalcy.
~&lt;Senator Muskie ia encouraging lawbreaking," Agnew
said. "He hi being permissive."

itntintl
VOL 3 NO. 38

ZENITH
COLOR

. . , ,. ...,-* .......

lng crowd ol MVeral thoullllld
per!Kils in a 111gb school gym.
naslum.
He laid llle goal or hlo administration would be to cluu1
a course to keep the nation at
peace for the rest ol this century.
In hla radio addresa, Nixon
sa.id, '"It another world war Ia
to be prevented. every atep posilble mu1t be taken to avert

Ghost shrimp are so-called

fresh and stimulating
with the warmth
of colonial times

GIANT-SCREEN

CHICAGO (UP0 Richard
M. Nixon charged Soturday that
''short-sighted defense pollelea 11
ol the John&amp;OO Administration
have dissipated the ooclear superiorll,y the United Slates needs
to deal with the Communi II M&gt;rld.
In a major radio speech, the
Republican presidential candidate also told Asian nation• they
would have to band together to
fight future wars such as the
ooe in Vietnam by themselves.
1\ Nixon Administratlon, he
said, would seek to keep t h e
peace thi"'O.lgh "'Preventlve diplomacy."
Nl&gt;oo spelled oot detail a ol
his Asian poiJcy in a 15 - minute ldlres• which had been tap..
ed for natimwide broadcast (C~
Saturday night. It was the fourth
in a series ol10 radio speeches
Nlxon has scheduled on major
ilsues of the campaign.
Nixon began the da,y' s cam.
pa1gnlng with a opeech In t h e
Chicago subum or Moon! Prospect and was to travel oo to a
rally at Eatontown, N. J.
111 don't think you have to
have three wars in a generation as we have had In the past
generatim.," he told a cheer-

l)'gln.

Sehlrra and his crewmen, Dorm
Eisele and Walter Cunningham,
set utde their problem&amp; to put
on the wildelt yet ot their five
telecasts from space.
The wisecracking astronaut~

went through a comic elosG order drill, whirling Uke lops and
bouncing up and down like pistons
in t.be weightless atmosphere of
the spacecraft.
There was no humor, however, when ground controller Btn

Pogue asked Schirra to tape up
Eisele's broken medical sensor
wires.
'~] think we better refer back
to the Apollo 1 accident board,
where I stated :ru have no changes
ln the suJt loop, u Schirra said.
"We've gone much too far with
this kluse (makeshift repair)
right oow.
"Now, when Donn Eisele has
a hot aignal conditioner part of
the wiring there, we've reached
the bitter end. Pm not yielding
m that one."
Breakage, Sehlrra aald, was
"the thing that scares us." According to investigators, it was
spark from a broken wire that
Bel llle cabla or Apollo I atlre
during a ground test Jan. 27,
1967, killing astronauts VIrgil
Grissom, Edward White a n d
Roger Chaft'ee.

a

down the war.

"There wUI be no statement
from here until there ts something from elsewhere," one u.s.
otftcial said when asked about

Film Shown

On Issues l-2
MmDLEPORT - G e o r g e
Metmart showed and commented oo a Qlm Friday nlg!lt at
Hesth Churdl aoldng voter approval of Issues 1 and 2 In tbe
November election when the Middleport - I'Omaro,y Rotary Club
met for dbmer and a buatness
meeting.
He was accomponled by Bill
Lambert of the Slate Hl&amp;hwaY
Departmenl, for whom Mr, Meinhart alao works m aaalgnment.
President Wilbur ~d
preolded, and Intromcecl three
auesta, all of Wellllloll here tor
the foothall pms. They were
Charleo Gasldna, Areh McCormick, and Carl Dahlber!l.
Hesth Clllrch ladles 10rvlng
dinner were Mrs. Em1e Frlser, Mr1. Bent.ard Fultz, Mr1.
Robert' Fisher, Mrs. Hoochlna,
Mrs. Max Donahue, Mlaa Betll
Fultz and Mill BeSI Sanbom,

NIDRION, Greece (UPO The llle of Smrploa, polished
down to llle lut liMe, falrlJ'
glOBIIled Saturii!,Y for the &amp;Inday wedding ol Illn. John F.
Kennedy and ArlstoUe Onaasla,
The couple, along with a dozen or 10 guests already on hand.
- t their pre-wedding nlg!lt aboard the yacht Christina, anchored In a deeply Inset ba.Y or
the i Bland. It was expected there
would be a parl,y aboard the ohlp,
virtually a tloatlng palace.
Througbout the day dozens of
workmen watered, clipped and
dressed 14J Storpios, an island
tour miles otr the coaJitofGreece
that Onassia - a multi-millionaire Greek shipowner - bought
for himself. The Christina is being used as the house since the
62-year-old Onassta has not got..
ten around to building alSO-room
mansion he has planned for Ute
island.
Quiet Da,y
Aside from some trouble wtth
the hordes of journalists a n d
'·'1tographers who have descend-

.-.. the--

SAIGON (UP!) - American
bombers streaked into North
Vietnam for a new series of
raids Saturday, and the U. S.
Command reported 135 North VIetnamese and Viet Cong killed in
a series ol scattered battle ln
&amp;Mrth Vtetnarn.
Despite the f!gbtlng, the ground
war remained in a gmeral lull
and a further reduction in combat was expected as tropical
storm Hester bore down on the
Soutll Vietnamese coast l1lO
miles east of Saigon.
President Nguyen Van Thieu

Question

o.,y.

Slnlal.
· -·
,00 [11111)'
'11CIUIIY
north
and Ulllo chlroge In
lelq&gt;eroture. Hl8h Ia !lie 801
rarogtrog to near 10 extrtiiM......, lllr With IOIIOIMiblelem-

perature.

A WEJ.L.OONE "PEANVTS"' OOMIC lll'(p wu corrled out Friday Dlaht II a clance IGI!owlng the Me1&amp;1-Welloton
p.mo. llln. IIGpr Motpn, Mlddl~ creolod th11 jlllper
macho "Snoopy" who Ill to' his doahouH and a eolortul a(ln
wblch rood "lllllPlee•a II """'-c:omlow". The &lt;lance waa held
In the l\lolp Junlcr HIP Auditorium. Miss Meqlo Harris,
dallllhter ot Mr, IIIII Mrs. Eupno Harrll, Mlddleport, wu

homeeomlow queen.

ed. on the area, Saturday w a s
spent quietly. Thore were reports Onassls and Mrs. Kemedy, 39, wenl to the little white
chapel on the island, where they
will be married In • Greek Orthodox ceremony &amp;mday, for a wedding rehearsal. But th11 was not
otnclally conftrmed.
The latest arrival was Mrs.
Kennedy's sister, Princess Lee
Radzlwill, and her husband,
Prince 9anisl&amp;Us Radziwill,
When they arrived at Athena airport before !lylns to !korploa
Prinooss Radziwill told reporters the wedding will take place
at 4 p.m. (10 a.m. EDT) &amp;lnday
and would last for about an hour.
It was the Orst word on any exact plana.
Throughout the day there was
litUe to be seen of Mrs. KennectY, and Onassis hlmselfd:idnot
appear above decks on the Christina.
~werful motorboats with aaiIors and men from the Island aboard kept repn1.ers and news-

men away from both the laland
and the Christina.
WhSI Mrs. KOIIIIOIIy Dnally appeared on deck, accompanied by
her two chUdren, 10-year..old
Caroline and John Jr., 7, they
were allowed in close to take
pictures of her.
Hugs and SmJies
Dressed l.n white alacks and a
black hlghnecked sweater, she
buggec! her children and smiled
•• the naohbulbs llOiliJO(l from the
amall floUlla o! rowboats on the
emerald greeo sea beside t h e
yachl.
One Jl(lolo8l'apher yelled In
Engll1h, "How are you~•
"1 am very happy," Mrs. Kennet~¥ replied with a smile.
Throughout the day there waa
activity on Storpio1 and both
the helicopter and Onassis'sseaplane, which can be kept aboard
the Christina, were ln constant
action.
For the few h\mdred citizens
~ thla little Dohing v1llnge that
sits oo the isl.and of Levkaa just

Soturday relteratell hlo hardllne
stand in the face of worldwide
speculation about a _poufble U.
S. bombing halt against North
Vlelnom. He laid auch a halt

was ••impossiblen without reciprocal de - escalation by North
Vletruun.
"Missiorul were scheduled for
Salurclay and - ·

are ll.Y-

Wallace
To Make
Report

control Friday alalot IIIII otruc:k

Weather

has very nearly achieved tt• United Slates ..., be ~od,
they DO loniier are backed 10'
RDBls. n Nlxon aald.
u.u a result, even where the the decisive Ill&lt;*&lt; -riDril;y
jalnll,y stretched forces ol lhe wbldl Ia jlllsl criMI made aur
power tuUy credible."

across the way from !lrorploo II
was a day to romeriler. F!Jblng Will fOl'IIOIIOII u the ....
hired their boata out to tho
awarms ol. newamen and pl-.
tograph.en. 'lbl1 came to ID tad
late In the day when lhe muter - IIJPU'ed:ly OD a re.
quest from Onull.s cloled
the harbor to amaJl croft, oucces811Jlly cutting off the . trade.

Another lllrill lor the people, who live Oil a day to c1o1
IUrV!val balls that 151rGno1Y ...,_
!ruts with the multlmlliJao dollar luxury ortheChrlstlnaandtho
..uoep~~c, poll•hed beaut;y ol
~rpioa, came wbl!ll Onulf.1
helloopter buzzed the vllla&amp;e.
.For no _..,.. rea- Jull
as m.lk waa lallln&amp; It awept low
over the ba.Y and vlU&amp;&amp;e
al Umes.
It &amp;JlPO&amp;l'ed to be a Joy rida
- IIIII lhe vlllqer1 II u
such, It wu lmposslble to ..,
wllo wu aboard lhe craft at lhe
Ume.

-or-

American Planes Launch New Raids

KILLED IN CAR
DAYTON (UP0 - Mrs. Garaldlne Holden, 39, Dayton, wu
klllod whea her car wont out of

ot the
loll !late Meatal Hoopltal.

"But under the short ...lghted
defenae policies Oil the preaent
admlnlatratlon, that advlllllage
has boon dlallijllltecl; a determined &amp;Met drive for supremacy

Skorpios Shines for Jackie

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (IJP0George C, Wallace, his popularlt,y slipping ellghtly in the
public opinion polls he scorns,
reports to the nation &amp;mda,y oo
the resul~ of his rwuting mate's
trip to Vletruun.
VIce presidential candlda.te
the possibiUty of a halt in AmeriCurds LeMay, former Air Force
can air raids against North VietChief of statr, will return from
nam.
Sources close to the North the tour &amp;lnday morning and
Vietnamese delegation privately confer with Wa.llace before the
confirmed that an American pro- former Alabama governor ap.
posal has been received and that pears oo a nationally televised
tt has been sent to Haooi for Interview program (NBC's Meet
the Press).
consideration. Both sides denied
LeMay said in Saigon Saturthat N&lt;&gt;rth Vletruun had rll(&gt;lled
day he opposed a halt In t h e
to the U.S. plan.
bombing of North VletruunSome iOOieatlon of Hanofl s pohe felt that llle present bombsition was ell)er.ted Monday when
ing
there was "inefticient. u
the North Vletnameoe negollatHe said a Wallaoo.LeMay adhog team holds its regular brief·
ministration could procklee "a
lng ror newsmen coverina tbe
proper and eflicient soluUon,.
Paris talks. The next regular
to the war.
negotla~ sessloo is scheduled
Wallace Is m rerord favoring
for Weclneaday.
a military victory with convenTh&amp;re were several veniona
Uonal weapons in VIetnam should
of the U.S. formula In circulanegotiations fall. He said he dattion, but nooe was confirmed
ly opposes any use ot. nuclear
by any source.
weapoos in that country.
Most atter&amp;ion focused on the
A Harris poll published Friposslbilll,y ot a U.S. bambirog
day showed Wallace with 18 per
halt in return for finn guarancent of 1he vote nationally, a
tees from North Vietnam ttat
drop of three per cent. A rethe Commwdsts would oot take
cent Gallup poll p.ve him 20
advantage ot llle U.S. peaeemo"'
per cent. a drop of one per cent
to liep "' the .....
tho - - - Gollup poll.

Rarry Reace
PARIS (UPO - Ol!lclal U.S.
spokesmen Saturday parried
questions about reported Ameri~
can p,roposals for breaking the
deadlock in negotiations with
North VIetnam aimed at scaling

a direct conll"oniBtlon between
nuclear powers!'
Nuclear weapon superiority Is
needed to deal with llle Soviet
Union, he said.

POMEROY - THE POMEROY NATIONAL BANK and The
Farmers Bank and Savings Co. have been presented awards
Cor "100 per cent Participation" in the Ohio Bankers lnsw-ance Furx:l CUstomer Service alii Employee Benefit Programs.
Participating in the ceremonies we~ lett, above (L to R),
Deck Webb, special representative for Turner &amp; Shepard, Inc. ,
administrator of O.RLF. 1 and Edison Hobstetter, president of
Pomeroy National Bank.
. Webb in maid,. the pre~t­
'antations saJd, "ReclpJents of the plaques such as the-Pomeroy banks have eJqJressed by theJr participation in this Ohio
Bankers Association program a deep concern and awreciation
Cor the welfare of their customers am employees." The Customer Service Program meanli the bank offers mortgage paymart protection, mortgage lite, and credit life lnaurance pri)IU'Uns for enrolled cus«mers.

Humphrey Vows Slash

In Military Largess
WASHINGTON (UPO -

Hu-

COll"ltrles."
But he charged the congresurday lacreaaed economic aid sional cut e-conomic aid to the
but promised a cutback of U. S. Latin natlms was '"irresponsimllitary a11J stance to L a t i n ble and short-slghted" and IBid
America. The Democratic pres. he would seek and IIUPIJOI'l lnldenUal candidate laid he Mltlld crea.sed fUnds, if elected.
a110 seek an end to the arms
The policy statement was
race 80Uih ol the border.
issued b,y Humphrey as he reThe Vlce President said "any turned to Washlng!oo for the
realistic Bnlutlon to the arms weekend.
race in Latin Amerie~~'' ia LmAlter arriving from New York
poaalble without the cooperation Clcy, Humphrey druve through
ol the United Slate&amp; and Europe. the rain to an endoaed shopping
'"So long as Europe and Amer- C8lter In 8llburban 9Jltland, Md.,
Ica compete for convattlonal where be spoke to an estimatarms sales In Latin America, ed 3,000 per10111, including mthere will cortlmoe to tlourlsh merouo and notey Wallace heckIa many countrlea a policy which lers.
eacouraaoa ill-ted children and
well..fed armies."
In a major policy lllltement
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (IJPO
111 La11D America, lhe Democrst.
- Gov. Roaald llelp.n ol call·
ie camHdate said "we should
forn1a Is eJ*ted to 1ttract
...,....t with nt_., pem.
more than fi.OO,ODO to the Rementa to determine what can be
pldleu ....,..,P coffers
done to reatrlct the competition
here Ia a Alnd • rai11Ds dinner
Ia lolling . . _ . to
next1burllla1 nl&amp;hl in the CivLa1ID America."
Ic Audltarban, at .100 a plata,
He added: 11 Aa Preal.d8nt. I
1be l!Aonl CcomQo Rop...Ucan
will review lmmedleteJy u,
- - co· cbatrman, Wal·
military policy In reprd Ill Lilter J. Rualell IIIII '1'11111111 C.
la America, With . the obJect ot
Jr., laid lbout
........ doWn the u.
rnl1llarjo
1,200 pertOIII trcm 25 lllldllpre1011re;
rlp(diT cvrtallllll
... .....Uel .... OJIIIIdod for
ll'anl military ullatance; and
lllo evorL
strictly controliq
military
erodlt aaloa to La1ID America

bert H. llwnphrey proposed Sat-

s.

s.

Blo..,....,

lng right

now,"

a spokesman

[or the U.S. Command laid.

Mon10011 rain1 and clwda
pouring oot of China -e restricting pllota, and beadqloortera laid only 102 mluionowere
Down Friday.
'lbleu apoke with IIOWIIIIU!II at
Vung Tau a tew hours after
Communlll troops llred 10 ol
thstr bit 122mm Soviet • made
rockets Into the coastal re-.t
42 mlles IIOUiheast of Salp.
Five Vlelnameoe civiltans were ldlled and 19 other
persons, Including al8hl U.S. servicemen, were WDIIDdad In tae

attack, t'j)Oheom'"' aald.
The boatlood ~ Communlllll
believed respo11111ble fortheVq
Tau attack pold tor It. The ..,..
801 with about 20 Reds aboard
..... _.-entl,y trying to make
a get-a.wa,y It ran late 1
pair of U, S. Navy D•nboet• In
tbe Mo Nhat River.
"We opened up at ~Im&lt;
ranee,•• said Qlarterma8ter' I. C.
Clarenre F. Wllllaml of Honolulu, Hawaii, commander of patrol boa! •'BR754.

Simple
Wedding
Sought
NIDRION, Greece (UPO Mra. John F. Konnedy, 39, marries Aristotle Onasats, 62, b .
day Ia 1 tiny Greek ~
chapel em the laland be 011111
In lhe lmlm Sea. The wo""'"
who ha.l known 10 much lOrrow said Satl.lrdQ" she was•..-ery
happy."
Describing herBOlf and tho
mulUmllllooalre Onulla u
"simple,. people, the wlduwed
first li&lt;IY pleaded with - - mea to reaped llle privacy ol
the wedding aet for f p.m. em
the lale ol Slwrploo.
"We know you understand thl1
eveo lhrugh people may be wall
known, they aUll hold In their
hearts the ematim• of a almple person for tbe lllllll1mta thU
are most Important of tbo• w
know oo earth - birth, marriap, dellh," Mrs. Kemeclf laid
Ia a meaaose ralayecl Ill t h e
1mall army

r:l.

DIWIINIII UMIIl-

bled to cover the - . . , of the
year.
II wao her willh, Mrl. Remedy laid, thet bel' marriap tD
liJ.assiS be '"a _pri.Yaillll"IJIIMJt 1

Ia lhe chapel amana: the Cnno•
treea m llle 11111111 he bouihl u
a private pondlae.
HWtah

Ul

...,.....

• D4

peaee,., Mra. Kaaec17 llid.
1be l1lbtl em t)y•ata• ,-atM

Chrl- twlddecl u 1111M r.u
and membua ~ the 10 'Zrw
party tDuted tho ~ .......
TRACY DID
LOS ANGELES (UJII) - 1M
Tnq, no~ • wt• cnell:
1111 ._.,. Ia " .1'111 F r o a t
Plao'' Ia lhe ... . . .

porodlod Harry

- r - .....,.

-~ Ia tlio ' " " ... ,
f'rlclo111 ... 70.

�,., ' . -· ..

.

... .-.

'

.

·~

.,

..·· . .

'

..-.... .- .
~

•

• ' • ·-

'

• '-

'

'.1,- • ·., .

.

'

'

.

...

New in Farming

13 -

BY C, E. BLAKESLEE

Extension Agent, Agriculture
Meigs County
POMEROY - With the construction of the new water system of the Tuppers Plaina-Ches.
ter Water Association, the eastern part of Meigs County will have
an excellent supply of good safe
water. The other parts of tlle
county may ha ..·e to walt a little
longer to have such a source of
supply.
Each year we have reeelvid
several reqJests on how to be
sure that water from wells or
cisterns was safe for drinking
purposes. The followingWormation from Melville Palmer, Extension agricultural engineer at
Ohio state University, is t h e
best Information we have seen
on this problem.

OBSERVE S..\FE fOIIN HARVEST PROGRAM - Observing H!C Safe Corn llanl'~l !'ro,.: ram this week are tile following iOOividuals repr('seming Callia's I·T ·\ :haptcrs, and Bill

Lay of the Land

Spring

\'aneo, of Va .rtco lmplemenl Co. Left to right are Ulll \lanco,
Danny O'Dell, Jim Walker, Jim Hively, Ken Buckley. Kneeli~

is Larry l3ow~utL

Gallia FFA Chapters

•

lS

Take Part In Program
during that same period, anu
ing hurt while operating mechan- the careless operator has a 50 50 chance of being seriously inic!ll corn picking equipment'!
That depends on you ~tccord­ jured.
The Gallia County Chapters
ing to Jim Walker, Southwestof
lhe FF A have joined the Safe
ern, James !lively, Gallipolis,
l'urn
Harvut Program. The proLarry Bowcott, North Gallia,
gram
- sponsored by the Farm
l\enn,)r Buckley, Kyger Creek,
and
lndustriaJ
Equipment Instiand Danny O'Dell, Hannan Trace
tute
and
the
NAtional
Safety CounFuture Farmers of America
dl
is
aimed
at
increasing
chapters in Gallia County.
harvest-time
safety
.
Acrording to a stud,y made by
As part of the program, memtht• University of Dlinois. a safe
bers
of the chapters will visil
operator has only aboul o n e
farm
families
to review the safec hanL~ in a million of being hu11
ty
precautions
required for the
on a pkker or (·om!Jine in the
sal~ operation of corn pickers
next five year!i.
The averaf,le opcrator8 stand and other harvest equipment
one chan ce in 2:&gt; oJ' bein~; ilurt Safety reminders will be lcrt
with each family.
What are your chances of be-

Developed
DY IW:'\:\LD GILKESOI\"
Soil Conservation Ser\'i ce Mason CoWlty
rT. PLEASAr-:T - Bert Hess l1as completed development or
a spring on his farm ncar Deer lick along Thirteen Mile Creek.
Denver Yoho or USDA ;i:&gt;il Consenoation Service (SC~i) assislcd
Mr, !less with the design work and also checked the installation.
In order to develop the spring, it was necessary to las 48 feet
of 4-lnch drain tile to trap the water seeping out of the hill. The
tile carries the water to a collectinl; basin. From this basin,
the water flows througli P ·~ -inch plastic pipe to a metal water lng trough which holds 250 gallons of water.
This is the third spring to be de\•eloped on the Hess farm i.n
the last three years. The Hess family has been well-satis fied with the previous installation.

There is great risk in drinking contaminated water, since
water-borne bacteria and virusIS can cause t;yphoid rever, dysentery, infectious hepatitis and
other diseases. Home and mUkhouse water supplies should be
tested for safety at least once a
year and whenever contamination
ls suspected. County health departments, when contacted, will
arrange for bacteriological water tests.
Chlorine is the most widely
accepted water diainfectant for
several reasons. It is readily
available in powder, tablet or
liquid form, it doesn't require
a high degree of experience on
IJie part or the user, and it's
relatively safe to use.
Chlorine solutions must be
thorooghly mixed with water and

I

POMEHO'i Virgil K f n g,
president of the Meigs County

Farm Bureau Federation, an nounced Saturday special recognition will 00 given on Oct. 22
to the seve-n charter members
of the organization who have
held a continuoos membership

for 50 years. He also 81Ul0W1Ced that other membership awards
will be presented lhat evening.
Resolutions on the county, state
and natlmal level, will be acted upon by the general membership and theprogressoftheFarm
Bureau marketing program will

Second Tested Heifer
Sale Will Be Oct. 31
PT. PLEASANT -

The Sec-

ond West Virginia Performance
Tested Heifer Sale will be held
at Jackson's Mill, Weston, West
Virginia on Thursday, October
31, according to Carl Cook, County Extension Agent. Sale Ume is
scheduled for 7:30 p.m.
This sale will otter approximately sixt.y top-quality heifers
from some of the state's most
outstanding beef cattle herds.
Only those calves with a top

performance index were accept~
ed. To be eligible for sale, all
calves had to be entered in the
West Virginia Beef Cattle Performance Testing Program,
grade at least Choice, and have
an average gain of t.Spotmdsper
day or better ln accordance with
the testing program standards .
Complete performance test records will be published on all calves consigned.
The sale is sponsored by the
Cooperative Extension Service,
West Virginia University Appalachlan Center, and the West
Department o!Agrlcul-

JOHN COOPER, OF TilE tSDA Soil Consenration Service at
Point Pleasant, recently attended an Equal Employment Opportwlity Conference at Virginia Beach, Virginia.
Cooper was telling us about the vegetation which he obsened in that area. He reported several live oak trees which grow
alont the eastern coast from Virginia soutll. ln South Carolina
and Georgia, the tree often has a parasitis moss somewhat like
dodder growing In its branches. lie also observed some firethorn, a shrubby planl used for ornamental purposes as a hedge
or an lndividua.! plant. The plant is very thorny and has an orange
fruit about the size of a pea which remains up into the winter.
Numerou!l bermudagrass pastures were also seen in the area.

- .lATEX

•lORS

·&lt;·..

~

BY P.\ T GLASS
Extension Agent, Uomc Ec .
Gallia County
GALLIPOLIS ~ Now that you
have collectetl and dried the materials for arrangements, it i:s
time to think about the arranging of these materials. The following are some suggestions you
may want tn try.
You may prefer to use line arrnagemcnt in making dried arrangements. The}' are easier to
make, may look bcHer and last
longer.
Many of the same general rules
(or making any rlower arrangement should be applied to dried
arrangements; for example: Use
odd numbers .... Have a focal
point of interest .... Work out Interesting color and texture combinations.
Have good cutting tools on hand
to use - clippers, knife or
scissors .
A nower holder is essential
and a 11eedle point holder is best.
A bit of floral clay attached to
the bottom of tile hoi der and the
holder pressed firmly with a
twist against the bottom of the
container will keep the arrangement securely in place. Both clay

and container !ihould be dry.
There Is no limit as to what
can be used as a container for a
dry arrangement - old bark,
driftwuud, odd shaped board,
branche!i, metal or wood containers, stone jars, jugs, baskets,
needed on these arrangements.
Keep arrangement simple. Do
not use too many kinds of materials in one arrangement.
Three to five is best.
Dried arraJlbTCments are popular today because they are long
lasting. You may be tempted to
let a single arrangement provide
room decoration all winter long.
This should be avoided. Even the
most beautiful composftlon becomes so familiar that it goes
wmoticed after a few wooks. The
solution is tn have several dried
acrangcments on hand and to
alternate them frequently.
Your dried arrangements have
money value. Check the florist
shops tn see how they sell dried
material by the piece or by
the bunch. Also, checkthelrprices on dried arrangements. You
can collect just as interesting
material, and you can make even
more attractive acrangements

LATEX SEMI-GLOSS
ENAMEL

CAROLINA LUMBER
and SUPPLY

Opp. B&amp;O Depot

PT . PLEASANT

675·1169

STOP IN TODAY AND PICK UP
YOUR FREE SOIL TESTING BAG.
WE WILL TELL YOU HOW TO TEST.

CENTRAL SOY A OF
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Third &amp; Sycgml)re Stre-ets

the sale can be obtain-

t

'

two touchdowns mt ran

College
Grid Round-Up
II¥ United Proos lntern.oUonal
lOW A CITY, lOW A - Ed Podolak, playlrv hla llrat lull pma
at taUback after being converted !rom qtarterbeck, nn lor !29
yordo and acored two touc-.a Soturday whUe loedlng [Oifa lA&gt; a
41-0 l"'OrQ) ·over wlnlesa Wtaeoutn.
Podolak also COUI!ht tllreo paseoa for 43 yords as Iowa won Ita
second game of the year aad Its llrat Bls Ten contest since 1966.
CHAPEL lULL, N. C. - Junior Roo Hartig kicked tllree lleld
plo and Mlko Smith led a oplrlted North Carollra defenee Saturday
In a •tllml!W 2:1.7 ..,,.t of oeventh-nnked and proYiwacy unbeoten
F1orlda durlrw a tA&gt;rrentlal ratn.
Hartig kicked lleld pia or 49, 47 and 44 yords, setting OliO
•chool record for the Ionaeat llold p i and tytrw tho school's mark
for most lleld pis In a pmo.

i
I

I'

BE111ANY, W, VA. -

Ernie Whitted scored on rw10 or81 aad
Bathany Collop lA&gt; a 24-6 victary over

Adolbert of Cleveland.
Whitted was helped by Bud Scl'Otlllna who kicked t11reo extn
point&amp; aad a 25-)'01'11 lleld pl. Tho other Bethany touchdown wao
· - 011&amp; 1-)'01'11 PI" !rom Joe

LAWHENCE, Kan. -

Marlao.

Bowl....,acloua aad 1ourt11 - ranked Kan-

,....,._forfor

~load.

:The win """ Kanau' llllh of t11o ......, and aooond In the BJr
£!8bl Canlerenca. Oklahoma State now Ia 1-3 overall ODd 0-1
lnllloleque.
:FORT COLLINS, Colo. - A 32.yard tow:hdown nm from a
piao lntercO!IIim by C7d Multala, a pair of •corlnr runo by
QirUo Martin, another by Jim o-to and a 211-Yard lleld p1
bt Demll Louthauaer pve 111o Air Foroe Fal00111 a 3M vlc-

Tractor
•

ill!7 over Colorado Stata University Solurdo,y,

II!" dol' with ahout live m1mrte1 Ioftin the game.

gk~~ TIICTIOI

=-·

_ ..

KEEP YOU ON THE 61!·
Getd"tt.e&amp;t PfuA ~:
fet h•die" ift Ml#li, lhtoh Mtl t!Y&gt;W .

e ALL-DIIICTION IIACIION
•

N• "•• ., .. ;w.ti•"

... ,.,., ••••·

•

fllew••,."• ef t•iplliftl e-dt•• fef p.etiliwe
•••ctie" •"" wei 11•~•"'•,., .",. ice .

• l•"l'' life tnMI ,.,...,

.,.,,.... ..,...
•

White 1i.t.-n •• ~--•

,

• ' Tut.e4 ., , ........

Pomeroy Lan.mark

.

~

........ -· ..

. --..

·----------------------:-

-·---.-.........

he h!'d done In the St. Louis locker room after getting knocked

Then, he wore a sweat·blackened gray T-shirt unbuckled
baseball pants with stripe, shower clogs and th~t unruffled
grin. Now, he wore a baby-blue, frilly-front tuxedo shirl
black tux p~ts with stripe, black alligator loafers and thaf
unrufJied gnn. Later that evening he would appear with his
quartet on a national television show.
"It's hard for people to imagine me as a serious organist"
said the petroit Tigers' 31-game w~nner. "They see me pikh
and that s all they see. Thel do~ t see Denny McLain, the
man. But I can understand 1l. I ve seen pictures of myself
on the mound. my face all
screwed up. Looks pretty
damn silly .
"Then there's that public
Image of me as a brash
smart-aleck. I don't like it,
but I'm learning to live with
it. Actually, I do like it. It's
me. I pop off because there
are things I want to say. I
don't keep anything Inside.
You know why? Because I'm
not going to die young. I'm
going to eat myself up Inside. Besides it's publicity.
"I guess I'm a cold person,
at least on the outside. Sometimes, anyway. But I stop to
gJve kids autographs, sometimes for half an hour at a
time. But there's got to be a
limit. Then there are things
I do that never get in the
papers, that I don't want in
the papers. I feel sorry for
De•oy MeLaln
anyone who is disabled, and

J go out ol my way to do

ldclaJir and drove Ill tho Huakloo
27. On the Courth dowD Ron
Alai&amp;'• lleld goal sttampt was
abort. BID Srlnklo llelded tho
ball oo tho fwr, fumbled ODd It
""" l'OCOYered by USC'• Dldt
AUmOII ... the ...IIIIth.
!lmpaon c:arrled tho ball lour
limos and on lourtll - . , dived
over !rom tho one.
Neither team eoutd mount a
ecorlng throat for the remalnclor or lllo llrat hall. But In the
aeCIDI bait the Huskies moved
to the 2t wllero a lleltl p i
atl8mpt wu abort. on 111o llrst
Trojan play quarterbaek Steve

things for those people. Why not! I'm lucky and I know it.
But others aren't so lucky.
"Do you know what I'm really like? This is what I'm like:
I lei Mickey Manlle hit that ball in Detroit. O.K. I've ad·
mitted it to you. I wanted him to hit a homer. It was going to
be his last time up in Tiger Stadium. I wanted him to bow out
in glory. Why? Because he's been my idol all my life . Because
be's an All-American hero type. And because he's done so
much for baseball. I'd like to be like him."

-eeomlng """"' of

;-n. boat -

... "' • :10111111 Sta•
tlloovoo~-perlod.
Tho
lllo bell 41,....

.... r.t -

...

:!C~.ta
••

JwrJ wllllaai •

~

conrer-

next touchdown on a one-yard
plunge In the second quarter.

BAIRD
BROS

Phllhower then booted a 40yard lleld goal with 23 seoonds
left In the second (Jiarlor.
Wingback

Ga r y

Chadwell

Auto
Wre£king

caught a 42-Yard pass from
CJ!arlerback Bill Slpka In the
atd zone in the seem.d CJJarter
for Ma.rtetta•s rtrst score.

Kenyon Victorww
!DRAM, Ohio (UPO - Kenyon
won its nest Ohio Conference
game In a !roe scoring 31-28
football game before some 2,000
tans here S a - .
Kenyon, now 1-2 In the league
and 3-2 DVl!rall, scored 14 .POints
in the initial period and 17 in
the aecon1. The Lords were held
scoreless In the ftnal two periods.

PASS BRINGS WIN
SPOKANE, Wash. (UP0 - An
II..yard acorlng pass !rom Stanlord's Jim Plunkett tA&gt; llari&lt;er
Gene Waahlngton with less than
two ntlnutes loft Saturday brought
the Indians !rom a 21-U dollclt
10 a 21-21 tie with 14&gt;set..mlndod
Washington State.

I·IMjii+M KINGSLEY

TAPT
CHIEF JUSTICE
~-=..;;~;;:·-:;;•;;.;;-;...;•:;,;•-

or

am

Ashland Winner

-

SPRINGF1ELD, Ohio (UPI)-

FUIIbeck J I m Juatlco no for
tllree touchdowns S a - . two

of them within lllo opoJJinB llw
mlmltes
the aame, •• Wittenborg thumpad lleldelbei'J, fl-12,
in an Ohio Conference pme.
Justice scored on runs ol feu'
COLUMBUS (UPD - Jerry
Philhower booted a 22-yard lleld aad Dvo yarda the llrat two
goal In tho Dna! cparter Satur- Umeo tho Tiger 1 had tho bell,
day, hla third threei)OIDtor of taking advaotsge of a ol,.,...t
a ft=Hr
the dol', to lead Capital lA&gt; a 15- Heidelberg Aunt
The
Tigers
ama01ed
429 yorda
12 victory over Marietta in an
In
to1a1
ollense
and
had
28 llrat
Ohio COnference pme.
dawns.
They
led,
14-6,
at
balf·
Philhower's field goaJ came
after Marietta reccwered a tum- Umo.
1be contest was a hcJmecom.
ble and marched 85 yarda In 14
lng
game at Wlttenbei'J aad the
plays lA&gt; tie the game, 12 .12, In
13th
consecutive homoc:oml!W
the tlllrd period. Tho Plonsors'
victory
ror coach BUI Edwards.
tall¥ came oo a one-yard plunge
WitteiDerg
now is 2-1 In ccmby lullback Ran&lt;IY Reese.
Philhower Cj&gt;l!lled the scoring ferenco play and 3-1 overall.
In the llrat period with s 24- Heidelberg Is 1-3 In the
yard field pl. Hallback Dan ence and 1-4 overall.
Jones acored the Crusaders'

yards on the ground In a sparkling performance In a roglonaUy
televised Big Ten game Ill (live
Ohio State Its lourlh atraliibt win.
The red-haired Kern 1twmed
the Wildcats with a 72-yard J)&amp;IIJ
play to eOO Jan White in the
first period and comeeted with
Bruce Jankow!lkl on a 23- yard
pass In the third period to put
the game out of reach.
Kern ran seven yard!l for Ohio
State's secoo:l touchdown earl,y
in the secolll period.
Ohio State rullback Jlm Otis
scored two touchdowns on a pair
or sb: -yard runs and sophomore
Leo Hayden scored on a threeyard Jaunt In the final period.
For Northwestern, sq&gt;hornore
quarterback Dave Shelbourne
.P&amp;BBed for a pair of touchdowns,
hitting ends Pat HarrifJIWn and
John Hlttman with tosses ot 15
and 'n yards re!JPSctiwly.
Shelbourne scored himself on
a lour-yard keeper lor the llnal
Northwestern touchdowJL
Urxlerdog Northwestern, which
had lost 10 lour of the tA&gt;p II
teams in the nation, finally caved
in the fourth period as the Buckeyes elqlloded for three toucJt..
downs.
Northw •• , •.•. 7 7 7 0-21
Ohio s~ ..... ,6 15 6 18- 45

ASHLAND, Ohio (IJP0 Small but power!UI Aahland College won its 18th consecutive
game here Saturday by trouncIng John Carroll 45-U.
The Eagles chewed "' the
Jolm carroll defenae with 275
yords passing and 287 yords
rushing.
Ron Lab, tullng In at quarterback tor the injured Mike Hea·
cy passed lor two touchdowns.
He cormected with Dave Gray
on a 47 yard scoring pla,y and
hll AI Fields with a 10 - yard
scoring aerial

Downed, 41-12

ca- •

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NEW CONCORD, Ohio (IJP0
Ohio Wesleyan spelled Mus.
SotP'a paaa """ Intercepted ..,
the 38 by AI Worley w b o ldngum'e homecoming 19-3 Satulmned It 10 7arda.
urday and moved lniA&gt; oole possea&amp;ion of the Ohlo Conference
~w.~:m~·:®•:;w"*:?.~
lead bo!ore 5, :&gt;00 lans.
It .... tho Brat homecoming
MEXICO CITY (IJP0- Mad!001
for the Musldes alnco U53,
eliDe Mannina of Cleveland,
Oblo, stormed lA&gt; a runaway
'l'hoy """ hold a 2..2-1 record.
raid modal vlctary In t h o
Mulklngum scored In the llrat
poriod oo a 21-fVd lleld p i
WGIDeD'a 800 • meter run In
lllo Ol,ymplc Gamea Saturday
by Vomon Albery. Tho by
Albery ,... bla 22od by hlo carand set IR Oi¥mPic record or

eer, a naw leque mark.

2;00.1,

::&amp;.::..ass ...:. iJ"S?r ·

.....

-lhw

Welleyan scored on a threeyard pass !rom Dicit Cromwell lA&gt;
Tom Uller and lour !1old pis

~~».=

by Pfle

llllllll&amp;ton to -

"'

tho defonalve game, BllllniiOn
had klckl or 21, 22, 3D and
35 yards.
McMurray Coli. 10

Som llousiA&gt;n St. CoiL 7
Colorado 37

Kanaaa St. 13

And Aw111 You Go .••
for Smooth Dri•ing
Mow

- · whlla 111111 Slala lo
ID lix stu1lo Tho
naii!N ha" leot lour confar..

ca• Ia. sure of fast, frle 1,,
efficient IIUfo service, here.

tires?

011

chango?

Whote••r pur cor nMd':J""

.-gameo.

p J. N7iln1 • 'I'D 011
• - " " " ..._ Ia lbequu18r aad paalld 22 ,.... tiD

Grol Sid• ID lllo parlod
a the 1eccal hi I hwn far

-lhw-

lliU.n
- ....
run 1a 111o·lldr4
-.

feolr.pnl

... ...... -

Capital
Defeats
Marietta

·:::· .:.:

lllo drlw ,.. a one-yard

tar 11111 - -

Pll&amp;ld.

Trips Muskies

Gnea Ia 4-4-1,
2-&amp;-1 In the Jlld.Amerlc:u can.

Frad

ou forged . - In lllo tlllrcl
period on a one - )'01'11 run by

Dave LeVeck. The II«Jbrooo-

eel 10 polnta In lllo Courth ge.
rlod 011 a 73 - )'01'11 pall pl.,!rom Bryant lA&gt; Tocll ~
aad a 21-)'U'd lleld p i b)' BID

Ohio Wesleyan

San Joao St. 55 Now Moxlco 24

-

•

Kern completed 8 or 14 passes
lor 170 yards and added 121

out m the first game of the World Series.

•

~

Super Service Station
992-9932
Open 24 Hours

Nortlrwester-n.

24, crossed his legs atop the desk In the hotel suite, just as

Air Force 31 Colondo St. 0

!'111o Fol..... · - llrst llr
t'fOIIVIriJw • bloeked puat ...
tlo 111111 28. Sown playa
Ji. AI stJ• boatld a ..,_...
Sld p i lA&gt; put IIG m lha

"''"'""~Jl...i/1·9·6:8: ..,; ~,·:~:;:.,i·4·~jfi~~

lll1d seconf ranked Ohio State
to a 45-21 victory O"Yer winless

NEA Sperm t::elamnlst

tho - " "

Southern Col -

T~oon.

Times-Sentinel

IraBerkow

hio

lf,2lt.

$now Tires. Coupon valid until Oct.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (IJPO Rombllqr Rex Kern, Ohio Slate' a
touted sophomore quarterback,
paasod for two touchdowns and
ran for another lA&gt; lilt unbeaten

Simpson,
Trojans

for

......

rrom

roy product.
Miami mode It 7-7 at halltlme
011 a tllreo )'01'11 rw1 by Kera

Kern Leads OSU Victory

a 3-0

ScMinNst Tom. 33 CoutGuard 7
TeD1 Southorn33AICOI'IIA&amp;M21
Gnmhii!W 28 NIIL Valley St. 13
Purd• 28 Waka Forelt 27
Fralidln u lad- Cantnl 14
IJ68.
Waahingtal &lt;St. 1..) 27
: Olaon """ for olovm pa•aJna midway throuilh the tlllrcl
Calcndo CoU. 0
_...,. and tho Vlllllola trailed 17~. Be ended "' with 21 for
Mlcblgan
21
'acti•M
22
til
289 yar&lt;la.
Oberlin
42
Lelle
Foreot
22
; The ....,......,.. .,. I'&amp;IIP In the second hall with
Oldohoma421onSt.
7
ravurtto recalver, Jerry llaldlen, Tho pair eomeded for
NIIIOUri 18 Nebrula 14
~ ldiiM&gt; ID•chdatlm !rom the Or.., 2l7ard line.
N«th TeDI St. 20 'l'lllaa 17

ltflGre •

Note: Offer not vood on any Wide-T rock

POMERO\

Orqon'o .1o1m 11arr1ngtm outdueled ldaho'l
_... 011&lt;11, lllo nallon'l lOIIdlna oollo(llate paaiOI', Soturday to
lUll tho Dud&lt;• to a 23.8 lootball win.
· HarrlngtA&gt;n ran for oue touciKitnm and threw for another 11
put beck Ill bedt wins 1oeet1101 for the llrst Ume alnce

: BOWUNG GREEN, 0 h I o
(01'0 - Capitalising .., '111111
. . , error•. BowUJW G r • i n
IIIU(M to I 3(1.7 victory 0" ' GoldOD Flaeho1 S.lm'day

On a pair of Unico Redi-Grip Mud &amp;
Snow tiru from Pameroy Landmark
Super Service Station.

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT
CO.
Rear Meigs General Hospital

:DJGENE, Oro. -

Defeat
Flashes
•

$4.00 OFF

See the New 656 Hydrostatic All-Speed
Drive tractor today!

5-10, 18l.paund ballhadt, c:arrlod the ball acroaa !rom
1-fVd line oar!¥ In tho IOcoad _...,. and op1n .., a lORn~ trut oar!¥ In tho third parlod. o-to ....t ovw - f o r
~f yard at t11o end o1 tho tlllrcl _...,.,

II!'

24 carries and cOMBCtlng on
rune of 24 pa11es for 179 yards.
OU scored llrst In the oecoad
period on a 19-yard ,Pall
Bryant lA&gt; Phil Swindell, a Pom&amp;-

Heidelberg is

time ad¥antap an a one - yard
PhiliP by Jim McKay.
However, after a sc:oreleas
tlllnl pariod DaytA&gt;n moved out
Ill a 17-10 advantage m a 27.
yard llold p i by Marl&lt; Redrick mid a 45.yard sooring paaa
from Jerry Bleboyck lA&gt; Bob Madden.

lead oarcy In tho lint period
on a 35-t&lt;ard lleld p i by Mlko
BradhY. DaytA&gt;n then went ahead 7-3 m a 77-)'01'11 punt r&amp;lurnbyAISbaUMl.
Sill moved out Ill a 10-7 hall-

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992-2176

.: -ttaJa 1cored hlo touciKitnm .., his third lntorcopllon of

.R

DAYTON, Ohio (UP0 - John
Quillen, had two I o n 1
touchdown 1'11118 called bed&lt;,
plunpd for a ~ OOIIVeralm with fOlD' mlmrtes left lA&gt;
(live s...thern Winola an 18-17
win over DaytA&gt;n here Saturday,
Quillon ran tho openlns kick·
olf back 91 yarda lor a touchdolm but It was rlliUIIed by a
penaley. Late In the lourth - loci ho raeed 89 yards lor TO
but It .... ..Ued back ollldala ruled ho had stopped

Get Win

11111
touchdowns.
llauglu1, a ran&amp;r 8-4, 22(l.ponlld --.,.,., pluapd ..,. yard
for • touchdown ODd palsocl 50 )'OI'da lA&gt; lpllt end Goorp McGann
another In staking the . . . - Jayhewlut to a lf~

656
HYDROSTATIC
DRIVE

that had rolled "' 160 polras In
lour gamea 10 rari&lt; tlllrd In the
raUon Ia that category,
Bryant picked the Redsklns
detenBe apart with 97 yards In

Dayton Suffers 18-17 Defeat

NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. - Charley Jarvia ran lor 153 yards
throtollh a ateadJ&gt; rain, 1ettlng "' a touchdown and a lleld goal aac1
T&lt;lll Haller need 30 yards with an h:Urcepted pass for a ;core
saturdl;y as Army took &amp;dvantaae Dt Rutaers' arrora to rtaq&gt; to a
LOS ANGELFS (UPI).. Tho
24-4 victory,
Jarvlo, a 11-IOIJI..2, 205 pound senior, alternated with Bllly HIIJII,. briWant 0. J. Slmj&gt;ICXI merchod
or In helplna the cadets Ill their llrat acore, a six-yard run by Lynn the Unlveralty or Southern CellMoon. Jarvia oloo cerrled for 28 of 47 yorda •ettlrw up Ardon JoJio lornla 99 yarda and acored a
tlebreaklng touchdown In tho
- · 31-YOl'd lleld goal In tho aecoad quarter,
lourth period lA&gt; lilt tho Trojaua
ATHENS, GA. - The Dlnth-nnlted Gooqla BuUdot~o, brouPt lA&gt; lA&gt; a herd !ought 14-7 Paclllc
U1e by a ltanberlng 84-yard pan lnterc:eptillll return by tackle Bill El&amp;ltt vlctor7 Saturday aver tho
SlaDIIU, er..,ted for 16 polllll In tho oocoadpariod S a - aac1 want Unlverslly or Waahlngton.
Tho toochdoom came oo tho
Oil lA&gt; wear down the Vanderbllt Commodoroo 3U,
only
.,atalned acerlng drive of
Tho Commodorea, -chdown tllldenlop, were IOIIdlna 6-0
the
game ODd lollowed a
aad kaockllll! at tho Bulldop' p i Uae 1a1e 1n 111o Brat period When
briUlant
p i line stand by
Slaellll ptcl&lt;ed otf a pale blocked by dolenaho end Terry Oabolt and
Southern
Ca!Uornla
oo tho lllec:arrled It lA&gt; lllo Vanderbilt 111-)'01'11 llnobo!orebelna cauaht !rom 0...
)'01'11 line. II the Trojans 11
hlnl.
plays lA&gt; cover tho 99 yarda with
801!111 BEND, IND. - Terry Hanntty paned tho lopndary Slmp1011 catTY1nl! eoven t!moe
Georp Glj&gt;p ao Notre Dame'o IP'OIIost graundgalnor Saturtlay, pass- lor 57 yards and scerlng from
Ing for three touchdowrul and rackiJ1r"' 269 yords over - all In a 5W line7ardl out.
llou1bern Ca!Uornla acored a
IDUIICre of Wlnois.
touchdown
In the llrst period
It waa Winola' llftll doleat In a wlnlen -son and tho moat Joi&gt;.
lifter
a
fumble
recovery.
sided they have suffered In 62 yeor1o
WILIIIIIIgton tallied In the tlllrcl
ANNAPOLIS, MD, - Jim Cocozu'a 311-)'01'11 Deld p i with 3::111 _...,. lollowiD&amp; a pall lnterloft In the game to c:l-. I atlrriqr ll.point CCIIIobec:k Ia tho ilet coptlon lA&gt; loan the toamo
10 mlmta1 gave Navy a 17-18 Ylctory S a - """ Plttabur&amp;h In deadlocked m~ throuilh the
last (Jiarlor tho Trojans
Navy Memorlol Sladlum.
Taklna tho llna1 klckoll, Plttsburgb drove 81 )'OI'de tA&gt; Navy's put 011 their .,stained mardi to
ft..,.)'lrd-UDe, but with 27 socondo remaining, a 21-)'01'11 llold p i vlclor7. The win left lllo No. I
ranked Trojans with a 5~
atleq&gt;t by Pltt'a Joe ~lcko okldded ott his foot.
188100.'1 record.

two )'OI'da Saturtlay Ill lead

INTERNATIONAe

which had (liven "' only 167.7
yorda and 5.6 polots a game
opln.ot a -orlul OU otren.oo

NEW YORK-(NEA)-ln that jaunty way, Denny McLain,

Has

TIRE SALE

and 4-2-1 for the seaoon.
It wa1 a claaalc •bowdonn
lhlt .P I t t e d Miami •a defenn

outotbouDtll.
Southern Illinois -

wa-'"

2 Big

ror 91

yorda lo leod UllbeafAin Ohio
Unl.veraity to a 24-7 win over
Miami, the nation's top defen-

alve team, and sole poa1eaalon
ol llrot place In lllo Ml6-Amerlc&amp;D Conference.
ne Bobcata are 110ft' t-0 in
the MAC aad 5-0 .......0 wlllle
Miami Ia f.3 In lllo conlerence

ou roBed over outmamed lid._ Stale fl-It Salurday 00
the talonta o1 CJI&amp;rlorback lld&gt;ll7 llaugluo, aaled Zit yards

I

I

ATHENS, Ohio (IJP0-Quar1arbock Cleve Bryant pa01ed for

.

about 200 mg.!. Use 3 pints of::
1JA per cent chlorine laundry· ·
bleach tor each 100 gallons ot
water ln the well to get thh concontraUon. Mix the chlorine with
at least 4 gallons of water belore pouring It Into the well.
storage capacity por rootofdepth
in wells Is as follows: 4 Inches
diameter - 0.6 gallonsi 5 Inch~
es diameter - 1.0 pllons; 6
Inches diameter - 1.5 gallons.
(3) Let the pump oporato and
use a hose to recirculate t h e
chl&lt;Jrinated water out ot and back
lniO the woll. Wash dmm !howelL
caaing and drop pipe. Add more ·
chlorine solution if the water
does not have a distinct chlorine
odor.
•
(4) Open each laucet In the ,
water system, one at a time, un- ;
tll the water has a distinct chlorIne odor, then shut it off.
,
(5) Leave the chlortnatecl
er ln the well and water system, at least overnight or, pref- ,,
be discussed.
erably,
24 hours. Then. PUJnD ~
The public is invlt.
ed to attend thla dirmer meeting tho chlorinated water out or tho t
whlch is to be held at the Salis- well and flush the water lines.
(6) Alter shock chlorination .,
bury Elementary School on Ocit
may be neces~ to remove ...~
tooer 22 at 7:26p.m.
Reservatima ma,y be made with roslduos of Iron bacteria by blowan,y board member or by calling Ing out tho pipes and ftttlngs
the office in Pomeroy at 992- with compressed air and follow- J
2181. One ol the main features ing with a second shock chlor- ;•
of the evening wm be the ap- lnaUoo.
Water
from
drllled
wells
·;::
pearance of Sleepy, Honey and
Roscoe, who entertain regular- should also be chlorinated conly on Chanel 8 - WCIJS.TV. tinuously II propor locatloo, con- .,
struclion and protoetlon or tho .,
well does not result in safe wa- ...
Roush Herd
lAir at all Urnes. Health departments can make recommendations on how to chlorinate con-,~
Producers
tinuoualy.
..
If water from springs, cis- .
PETERSBOROUGH, N. H. terns, W.g wells, or farm pm.ds
Two registered Guernsey cow&amp; is used ln the homf or milk......
In the herd of Edson Roush, Ra- houoo It should be chlorinated . ,
cine, have recenUy completed top continuously with an automatic .....
official DHIR actual production chlorinator. These water IIOW'c-,.,
records, according to The Amer- 11 are easlly contaminated, even
lean Guernaey CatUe Club. All wh., they are woll located and
cows were milked two times a protected trom obvious IIOUI'C88 ,-;
day. The testing was supervts- ol contamlnation such aa !IPdc,. ,;
ed by Ohio Slate University,
tanka and leodlots. Farm pond,,.
They were Locust Grove Bea- water rtQlires tlltration, u!linga
trina, a &amp;. Yearling, pl'Odlced alow sand ftlter, in acklition to: :
14,020 poonds of milk and 553 chlorination.
JlOIIllds ·qll-1. !It:30~ dol'II Lc!GUI!I · .• •ID .1111' o..-nCll, -·~­
Grove Ellen D, a Sr. YearUng, be purlfted ·&lt;by.J&gt;olllng IH110l'llol
prcxluced 10,740 pounds of milk ousl,y for 2 minutes to klll dl.-111
and 542 pounds ol fat, in 305 sease • causing organlsma, Pal-o~.,
d&amp;J'I.
mer adds.

to "try out" from magazines,
books, and leaflets. Be observ.
ant when you visit or truel
for ideas you, too, can try.
Leacn to express yourself
throngh the beauty ol both lresh
and dried nowers, branches,
leaves, weeds, grasses, or IUIYtlllng with lorm and texture.
Learn to add color, charm, and
cheer to your home and have
lun doing it.

Introduces a totally
New Concept in
tractor farming

IDevoe

Our new Latex Semi-Gloss Enamel g1ves you the
toughest fin1sh 1n tow n. yet looks as soH and delicate as
any flat wall paint. Put 1t to the test 1n k1tchens. bathrooms. children' s room s . hall ways .
any place you
want durable scrubbable pro te ction without sacnf1C1ng
beauty . II flows on like any la te x
dries in le "'s than a n
hour without paint odor to a tough-as-nails f1nish

than you can buy in many florist shops. But you have to keep
your eyes open the year around
to collect varying textures,
forms, and colors. Once materials are dried they can be used
many times in many different
ways. Store materials in boxes
in a dry place when not in use.
Always be Oal the search (or
new ideas and shace them with
others. You can learn rnaJzy tricks

c '0 n-

IH.

SO\l
nsltMG

This New

Additional ' lnformaUon

cernir~R:

flU

SEMI- GLOSS

,,

.,..., , ,

-·,, I'

(2) Add enough chlorine lA&gt; thl' 1
well or other water source to~
vide a chlorine concentration or

Charter Members to be Honored

A
G
•
V
re lVen ror ~~;:,w·
sugges t
• dA
JI k•
rrangements':.elro;;:.r::;n ~~c:O:::~::
approxi-Jf~U tng Drle

DOllGLAS RA."\'DOLPIJ, WHOSE farm is located off Boutc 2
near Morgan Church, has compleled a farm pond. Denver Yoho
of SCS assisted with the design work and supervised constrw.: tion of the pond. The earU1moving was done by a bulldozer owned'by Ray Beegle of Rt. 87.
The pond is located near a barn and will provide water for
some or the Randolph daiLj' cows. The pond will hold
mately 80,000 gallons of water and will hav~ a 500-gallon concrete watering trough poured below it from which the cows may
drink.

remain in the water long enough
to destroy bacteria and other orgenlsms.
Shock ChlorlnaUoo- the add·
lng or a strong chlorlne solution
to a water source and the entire
water system to kill bacteria
and other organisms - is recommended by Palmer following
new well construction, p.1mp installation or any time the water system is opened for repair. ~ock chlorination of a well
and water system every f e w
months can also be very helpful ln keeping iron bacteria under cootrol. Steps lA&gt; lollow In
performing shock chlorination
ace as follows:
(1) Clean the well, cistern or
spring OOx to remove any floating debris, suspended foreign
matter and deposits ott interior
surfaces.

Suncla.Y Timeo - Seralnol, Sunda.Y, Odobor 20, 1968

Unbeaten Bobcats Rip Miami 24-7; Swindell Scores TD

'

Make Drinking Water Report

The

Da~ lluiJ.

lllprdlwt

SPECIAL! KELLY HOTLINE SNOW TIRES

.650xiL-$)5 ~!':

BAI~EY'S
383 "'""'
212W.

ISi'ol&lt;

ISblS

$29 '••

SUNOCO

PluS

Just sitting there,this'69 Chevrolet can do
;.

four things competitive cars can't:

It can wash its headlights.
• It can apply liquid tire chain to
1ts rear wheels.
It can silently defog or defrost
the rear window.
It can keep you cool or warm

automatically with Comfortron the oeH-adjusting air-conditioning

system.

And once you've added aU th...
wonderful devices to a new Chevrolet, you just can't imagine why

anyone would give a

se&lt;:ond thought

to a second-place car.
The headlight washers and liquid
tire chain for traction on slippery
roads ""' opemted at the touch of
~ buttGJ! from the driver's oeat. So
•• the silent n""' JI!Uowindow defroster. lnviaible ceramic stripe on
the &amp;laA heat up to keep the window clear.
Alao available: Chevrolet's Light
Monitorinl System that leta you

know

from inside if all your outaide
lights are working, full f............ur

stereo, a smooth
Hydra-matic

3~apeed

tniDRDiMIOD

'Turbo

AU

iD

a

car made quieter, made atronpr
made more comfortable.

Now

ai

your Chevrolet dealer's.
• We:W aaid it bef01e, and we'll lay
1tapm.
Match thia, you
other '698!

~

I'll" I ,_ tint. ..... •

·

'

�,., ' . -· ..

.

... .-.

'

.

·~

.,

..·· . .

'

..-.... .- .
~

•

• ' • ·-

'

• '-

'

'.1,- • ·., .

.

'

'

.

...

New in Farming

13 -

BY C, E. BLAKESLEE

Extension Agent, Agriculture
Meigs County
POMEROY - With the construction of the new water system of the Tuppers Plaina-Ches.
ter Water Association, the eastern part of Meigs County will have
an excellent supply of good safe
water. The other parts of tlle
county may ha ..·e to walt a little
longer to have such a source of
supply.
Each year we have reeelvid
several reqJests on how to be
sure that water from wells or
cisterns was safe for drinking
purposes. The followingWormation from Melville Palmer, Extension agricultural engineer at
Ohio state University, is t h e
best Information we have seen
on this problem.

OBSERVE S..\FE fOIIN HARVEST PROGRAM - Observing H!C Safe Corn llanl'~l !'ro,.: ram this week are tile following iOOividuals repr('seming Callia's I·T ·\ :haptcrs, and Bill

Lay of the Land

Spring

\'aneo, of Va .rtco lmplemenl Co. Left to right are Ulll \lanco,
Danny O'Dell, Jim Walker, Jim Hively, Ken Buckley. Kneeli~

is Larry l3ow~utL

Gallia FFA Chapters

•

lS

Take Part In Program
during that same period, anu
ing hurt while operating mechan- the careless operator has a 50 50 chance of being seriously inic!ll corn picking equipment'!
That depends on you ~tccord­ jured.
The Gallia County Chapters
ing to Jim Walker, Southwestof
lhe FF A have joined the Safe
ern, James !lively, Gallipolis,
l'urn
Harvut Program. The proLarry Bowcott, North Gallia,
gram
- sponsored by the Farm
l\enn,)r Buckley, Kyger Creek,
and
lndustriaJ
Equipment Instiand Danny O'Dell, Hannan Trace
tute
and
the
NAtional
Safety CounFuture Farmers of America
dl
is
aimed
at
increasing
chapters in Gallia County.
harvest-time
safety
.
Acrording to a stud,y made by
As part of the program, memtht• University of Dlinois. a safe
bers
of the chapters will visil
operator has only aboul o n e
farm
families
to review the safec hanL~ in a million of being hu11
ty
precautions
required for the
on a pkker or (·om!Jine in the
sal~ operation of corn pickers
next five year!i.
The averaf,le opcrator8 stand and other harvest equipment
one chan ce in 2:&gt; oJ' bein~; ilurt Safety reminders will be lcrt
with each family.
What are your chances of be-

Developed
DY IW:'\:\LD GILKESOI\"
Soil Conservation Ser\'i ce Mason CoWlty
rT. PLEASAr-:T - Bert Hess l1as completed development or
a spring on his farm ncar Deer lick along Thirteen Mile Creek.
Denver Yoho or USDA ;i:&gt;il Consenoation Service (SC~i) assislcd
Mr, !less with the design work and also checked the installation.
In order to develop the spring, it was necessary to las 48 feet
of 4-lnch drain tile to trap the water seeping out of the hill. The
tile carries the water to a collectinl; basin. From this basin,
the water flows througli P ·~ -inch plastic pipe to a metal water lng trough which holds 250 gallons of water.
This is the third spring to be de\•eloped on the Hess farm i.n
the last three years. The Hess family has been well-satis fied with the previous installation.

There is great risk in drinking contaminated water, since
water-borne bacteria and virusIS can cause t;yphoid rever, dysentery, infectious hepatitis and
other diseases. Home and mUkhouse water supplies should be
tested for safety at least once a
year and whenever contamination
ls suspected. County health departments, when contacted, will
arrange for bacteriological water tests.
Chlorine is the most widely
accepted water diainfectant for
several reasons. It is readily
available in powder, tablet or
liquid form, it doesn't require
a high degree of experience on
IJie part or the user, and it's
relatively safe to use.
Chlorine solutions must be
thorooghly mixed with water and

I

POMEHO'i Virgil K f n g,
president of the Meigs County

Farm Bureau Federation, an nounced Saturday special recognition will 00 given on Oct. 22
to the seve-n charter members
of the organization who have
held a continuoos membership

for 50 years. He also 81Ul0W1Ced that other membership awards
will be presented lhat evening.
Resolutions on the county, state
and natlmal level, will be acted upon by the general membership and theprogressoftheFarm
Bureau marketing program will

Second Tested Heifer
Sale Will Be Oct. 31
PT. PLEASANT -

The Sec-

ond West Virginia Performance
Tested Heifer Sale will be held
at Jackson's Mill, Weston, West
Virginia on Thursday, October
31, according to Carl Cook, County Extension Agent. Sale Ume is
scheduled for 7:30 p.m.
This sale will otter approximately sixt.y top-quality heifers
from some of the state's most
outstanding beef cattle herds.
Only those calves with a top

performance index were accept~
ed. To be eligible for sale, all
calves had to be entered in the
West Virginia Beef Cattle Performance Testing Program,
grade at least Choice, and have
an average gain of t.Spotmdsper
day or better ln accordance with
the testing program standards .
Complete performance test records will be published on all calves consigned.
The sale is sponsored by the
Cooperative Extension Service,
West Virginia University Appalachlan Center, and the West
Department o!Agrlcul-

JOHN COOPER, OF TilE tSDA Soil Consenration Service at
Point Pleasant, recently attended an Equal Employment Opportwlity Conference at Virginia Beach, Virginia.
Cooper was telling us about the vegetation which he obsened in that area. He reported several live oak trees which grow
alont the eastern coast from Virginia soutll. ln South Carolina
and Georgia, the tree often has a parasitis moss somewhat like
dodder growing In its branches. lie also observed some firethorn, a shrubby planl used for ornamental purposes as a hedge
or an lndividua.! plant. The plant is very thorny and has an orange
fruit about the size of a pea which remains up into the winter.
Numerou!l bermudagrass pastures were also seen in the area.

- .lATEX

•lORS

·&lt;·..

~

BY P.\ T GLASS
Extension Agent, Uomc Ec .
Gallia County
GALLIPOLIS ~ Now that you
have collectetl and dried the materials for arrangements, it i:s
time to think about the arranging of these materials. The following are some suggestions you
may want tn try.
You may prefer to use line arrnagemcnt in making dried arrangements. The}' are easier to
make, may look bcHer and last
longer.
Many of the same general rules
(or making any rlower arrangement should be applied to dried
arrangements; for example: Use
odd numbers .... Have a focal
point of interest .... Work out Interesting color and texture combinations.
Have good cutting tools on hand
to use - clippers, knife or
scissors .
A nower holder is essential
and a 11eedle point holder is best.
A bit of floral clay attached to
the bottom of tile hoi der and the
holder pressed firmly with a
twist against the bottom of the
container will keep the arrangement securely in place. Both clay

and container !ihould be dry.
There Is no limit as to what
can be used as a container for a
dry arrangement - old bark,
driftwuud, odd shaped board,
branche!i, metal or wood containers, stone jars, jugs, baskets,
needed on these arrangements.
Keep arrangement simple. Do
not use too many kinds of materials in one arrangement.
Three to five is best.
Dried arraJlbTCments are popular today because they are long
lasting. You may be tempted to
let a single arrangement provide
room decoration all winter long.
This should be avoided. Even the
most beautiful composftlon becomes so familiar that it goes
wmoticed after a few wooks. The
solution is tn have several dried
acrangcments on hand and to
alternate them frequently.
Your dried arrangements have
money value. Check the florist
shops tn see how they sell dried
material by the piece or by
the bunch. Also, checkthelrprices on dried arrangements. You
can collect just as interesting
material, and you can make even
more attractive acrangements

LATEX SEMI-GLOSS
ENAMEL

CAROLINA LUMBER
and SUPPLY

Opp. B&amp;O Depot

PT . PLEASANT

675·1169

STOP IN TODAY AND PICK UP
YOUR FREE SOIL TESTING BAG.
WE WILL TELL YOU HOW TO TEST.

CENTRAL SOY A OF
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Third &amp; Sycgml)re Stre-ets

the sale can be obtain-

t

'

two touchdowns mt ran

College
Grid Round-Up
II¥ United Proos lntern.oUonal
lOW A CITY, lOW A - Ed Podolak, playlrv hla llrat lull pma
at taUback after being converted !rom qtarterbeck, nn lor !29
yordo and acored two touc-.a Soturday whUe loedlng [Oifa lA&gt; a
41-0 l"'OrQ) ·over wlnlesa Wtaeoutn.
Podolak also COUI!ht tllreo paseoa for 43 yords as Iowa won Ita
second game of the year aad Its llrat Bls Ten contest since 1966.
CHAPEL lULL, N. C. - Junior Roo Hartig kicked tllree lleld
plo and Mlko Smith led a oplrlted North Carollra defenee Saturday
In a •tllml!W 2:1.7 ..,,.t of oeventh-nnked and proYiwacy unbeoten
F1orlda durlrw a tA&gt;rrentlal ratn.
Hartig kicked lleld pia or 49, 47 and 44 yords, setting OliO
•chool record for the Ionaeat llold p i and tytrw tho school's mark
for most lleld pis In a pmo.

i
I

I'

BE111ANY, W, VA. -

Ernie Whitted scored on rw10 or81 aad
Bathany Collop lA&gt; a 24-6 victary over

Adolbert of Cleveland.
Whitted was helped by Bud Scl'Otlllna who kicked t11reo extn
point&amp; aad a 25-)'01'11 lleld pl. Tho other Bethany touchdown wao
· - 011&amp; 1-)'01'11 PI" !rom Joe

LAWHENCE, Kan. -

Marlao.

Bowl....,acloua aad 1ourt11 - ranked Kan-

,....,._forfor

~load.

:The win """ Kanau' llllh of t11o ......, and aooond In the BJr
£!8bl Canlerenca. Oklahoma State now Ia 1-3 overall ODd 0-1
lnllloleque.
:FORT COLLINS, Colo. - A 32.yard tow:hdown nm from a
piao lntercO!IIim by C7d Multala, a pair of •corlnr runo by
QirUo Martin, another by Jim o-to and a 211-Yard lleld p1
bt Demll Louthauaer pve 111o Air Foroe Fal00111 a 3M vlc-

Tractor
•

ill!7 over Colorado Stata University Solurdo,y,

II!" dol' with ahout live m1mrte1 Ioftin the game.

gk~~ TIICTIOI

=-·

_ ..

KEEP YOU ON THE 61!·
Getd"tt.e&amp;t PfuA ~:
fet h•die" ift Ml#li, lhtoh Mtl t!Y&gt;W .

e ALL-DIIICTION IIACIION
•

N• "•• ., .. ;w.ti•"

... ,.,., ••••·

•

fllew••,."• ef t•iplliftl e-dt•• fef p.etiliwe
•••ctie" •"" wei 11•~•"'•,., .",. ice .

• l•"l'' life tnMI ,.,...,

.,.,,.... ..,...
•

White 1i.t.-n •• ~--•

,

• ' Tut.e4 ., , ........

Pomeroy Lan.mark

.

~

........ -· ..

. --..

·----------------------:-

-·---.-.........

he h!'d done In the St. Louis locker room after getting knocked

Then, he wore a sweat·blackened gray T-shirt unbuckled
baseball pants with stripe, shower clogs and th~t unruffled
grin. Now, he wore a baby-blue, frilly-front tuxedo shirl
black tux p~ts with stripe, black alligator loafers and thaf
unrufJied gnn. Later that evening he would appear with his
quartet on a national television show.
"It's hard for people to imagine me as a serious organist"
said the petroit Tigers' 31-game w~nner. "They see me pikh
and that s all they see. Thel do~ t see Denny McLain, the
man. But I can understand 1l. I ve seen pictures of myself
on the mound. my face all
screwed up. Looks pretty
damn silly .
"Then there's that public
Image of me as a brash
smart-aleck. I don't like it,
but I'm learning to live with
it. Actually, I do like it. It's
me. I pop off because there
are things I want to say. I
don't keep anything Inside.
You know why? Because I'm
not going to die young. I'm
going to eat myself up Inside. Besides it's publicity.
"I guess I'm a cold person,
at least on the outside. Sometimes, anyway. But I stop to
gJve kids autographs, sometimes for half an hour at a
time. But there's got to be a
limit. Then there are things
I do that never get in the
papers, that I don't want in
the papers. I feel sorry for
De•oy MeLaln
anyone who is disabled, and

J go out ol my way to do

ldclaJir and drove Ill tho Huakloo
27. On the Courth dowD Ron
Alai&amp;'• lleld goal sttampt was
abort. BID Srlnklo llelded tho
ball oo tho fwr, fumbled ODd It
""" l'OCOYered by USC'• Dldt
AUmOII ... the ...IIIIth.
!lmpaon c:arrled tho ball lour
limos and on lourtll - . , dived
over !rom tho one.
Neither team eoutd mount a
ecorlng throat for the remalnclor or lllo llrat hall. But In the
aeCIDI bait the Huskies moved
to the 2t wllero a lleltl p i
atl8mpt wu abort. on 111o llrst
Trojan play quarterbaek Steve

things for those people. Why not! I'm lucky and I know it.
But others aren't so lucky.
"Do you know what I'm really like? This is what I'm like:
I lei Mickey Manlle hit that ball in Detroit. O.K. I've ad·
mitted it to you. I wanted him to hit a homer. It was going to
be his last time up in Tiger Stadium. I wanted him to bow out
in glory. Why? Because he's been my idol all my life . Because
be's an All-American hero type. And because he's done so
much for baseball. I'd like to be like him."

-eeomlng """"' of

;-n. boat -

... "' • :10111111 Sta•
tlloovoo~-perlod.
Tho
lllo bell 41,....

.... r.t -

...

:!C~.ta
••

JwrJ wllllaai •

~

conrer-

next touchdown on a one-yard
plunge In the second quarter.

BAIRD
BROS

Phllhower then booted a 40yard lleld goal with 23 seoonds
left In the second (Jiarlor.
Wingback

Ga r y

Chadwell

Auto
Wre£king

caught a 42-Yard pass from
CJ!arlerback Bill Slpka In the
atd zone in the seem.d CJJarter
for Ma.rtetta•s rtrst score.

Kenyon Victorww
!DRAM, Ohio (UPO - Kenyon
won its nest Ohio Conference
game In a !roe scoring 31-28
football game before some 2,000
tans here S a - .
Kenyon, now 1-2 In the league
and 3-2 DVl!rall, scored 14 .POints
in the initial period and 17 in
the aecon1. The Lords were held
scoreless In the ftnal two periods.

PASS BRINGS WIN
SPOKANE, Wash. (UP0 - An
II..yard acorlng pass !rom Stanlord's Jim Plunkett tA&gt; llari&lt;er
Gene Waahlngton with less than
two ntlnutes loft Saturday brought
the Indians !rom a 21-U dollclt
10 a 21-21 tie with 14&gt;set..mlndod
Washington State.

I·IMjii+M KINGSLEY

TAPT
CHIEF JUSTICE
~-=..;;~;;:·-:;;•;;.;;-;...;•:;,;•-

or

am

Ashland Winner

-

SPRINGF1ELD, Ohio (UPI)-

FUIIbeck J I m Juatlco no for
tllree touchdowns S a - . two

of them within lllo opoJJinB llw
mlmltes
the aame, •• Wittenborg thumpad lleldelbei'J, fl-12,
in an Ohio Conference pme.
Justice scored on runs ol feu'
COLUMBUS (UPD - Jerry
Philhower booted a 22-yard lleld aad Dvo yarda the llrat two
goal In tho Dna! cparter Satur- Umeo tho Tiger 1 had tho bell,
day, hla third threei)OIDtor of taking advaotsge of a ol,.,...t
a ft=Hr
the dol', to lead Capital lA&gt; a 15- Heidelberg Aunt
The
Tigers
ama01ed
429 yorda
12 victory over Marietta in an
In
to1a1
ollense
and
had
28 llrat
Ohio COnference pme.
dawns.
They
led,
14-6,
at
balf·
Philhower's field goaJ came
after Marietta reccwered a tum- Umo.
1be contest was a hcJmecom.
ble and marched 85 yarda In 14
lng
game at Wlttenbei'J aad the
plays lA&gt; tie the game, 12 .12, In
13th
consecutive homoc:oml!W
the tlllrd period. Tho Plonsors'
victory
ror coach BUI Edwards.
tall¥ came oo a one-yard plunge
WitteiDerg
now is 2-1 In ccmby lullback Ran&lt;IY Reese.
Philhower Cj&gt;l!lled the scoring ferenco play and 3-1 overall.
In the llrat period with s 24- Heidelberg Is 1-3 In the
yard field pl. Hallback Dan ence and 1-4 overall.
Jones acored the Crusaders'

yards on the ground In a sparkling performance In a roglonaUy
televised Big Ten game Ill (live
Ohio State Its lourlh atraliibt win.
The red-haired Kern 1twmed
the Wildcats with a 72-yard J)&amp;IIJ
play to eOO Jan White in the
first period and comeeted with
Bruce Jankow!lkl on a 23- yard
pass In the third period to put
the game out of reach.
Kern ran seven yard!l for Ohio
State's secoo:l touchdown earl,y
in the secolll period.
Ohio State rullback Jlm Otis
scored two touchdowns on a pair
or sb: -yard runs and sophomore
Leo Hayden scored on a threeyard Jaunt In the final period.
For Northwestern, sq&gt;hornore
quarterback Dave Shelbourne
.P&amp;BBed for a pair of touchdowns,
hitting ends Pat HarrifJIWn and
John Hlttman with tosses ot 15
and 'n yards re!JPSctiwly.
Shelbourne scored himself on
a lour-yard keeper lor the llnal
Northwestern touchdowJL
Urxlerdog Northwestern, which
had lost 10 lour of the tA&gt;p II
teams in the nation, finally caved
in the fourth period as the Buckeyes elqlloded for three toucJt..
downs.
Northw •• , •.•. 7 7 7 0-21
Ohio s~ ..... ,6 15 6 18- 45

ASHLAND, Ohio (IJP0 Small but power!UI Aahland College won its 18th consecutive
game here Saturday by trouncIng John Carroll 45-U.
The Eagles chewed "' the
Jolm carroll defenae with 275
yords passing and 287 yords
rushing.
Ron Lab, tullng In at quarterback tor the injured Mike Hea·
cy passed lor two touchdowns.
He cormected with Dave Gray
on a 47 yard scoring pla,y and
hll AI Fields with a 10 - yard
scoring aerial

Downed, 41-12

ca- •

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THEM TODAY!

BOB EVANS DRIVE-IN

NEW CONCORD, Ohio (IJP0
Ohio Wesleyan spelled Mus.
SotP'a paaa """ Intercepted ..,
the 38 by AI Worley w b o ldngum'e homecoming 19-3 Satulmned It 10 7arda.
urday and moved lniA&gt; oole possea&amp;ion of the Ohlo Conference
~w.~:m~·:®•:;w"*:?.~
lead bo!ore 5, :&gt;00 lans.
It .... tho Brat homecoming
MEXICO CITY (IJP0- Mad!001
for the Musldes alnco U53,
eliDe Mannina of Cleveland,
Oblo, stormed lA&gt; a runaway
'l'hoy """ hold a 2..2-1 record.
raid modal vlctary In t h o
Mulklngum scored In the llrat
poriod oo a 21-fVd lleld p i
WGIDeD'a 800 • meter run In
lllo Ol,ymplc Gamea Saturday
by Vomon Albery. Tho by
Albery ,... bla 22od by hlo carand set IR Oi¥mPic record or

eer, a naw leque mark.

2;00.1,

::&amp;.::..ass ...:. iJ"S?r ·

.....

-lhw

Welleyan scored on a threeyard pass !rom Dicit Cromwell lA&gt;
Tom Uller and lour !1old pis

~~».=

by Pfle

llllllll&amp;ton to -

"'

tho defonalve game, BllllniiOn
had klckl or 21, 22, 3D and
35 yards.
McMurray Coli. 10

Som llousiA&gt;n St. CoiL 7
Colorado 37

Kanaaa St. 13

And Aw111 You Go .••
for Smooth Dri•ing
Mow

- · whlla 111111 Slala lo
ID lix stu1lo Tho
naii!N ha" leot lour confar..

ca• Ia. sure of fast, frle 1,,
efficient IIUfo service, here.

tires?

011

chango?

Whote••r pur cor nMd':J""

.-gameo.

p J. N7iln1 • 'I'D 011
• - " " " ..._ Ia lbequu18r aad paalld 22 ,.... tiD

Grol Sid• ID lllo parlod
a the 1eccal hi I hwn far

-lhw-

lliU.n
- ....
run 1a 111o·lldr4
-.

feolr.pnl

... ...... -

Capital
Defeats
Marietta

·:::· .:.:

lllo drlw ,.. a one-yard

tar 11111 - -

Pll&amp;ld.

Trips Muskies

Gnea Ia 4-4-1,
2-&amp;-1 In the Jlld.Amerlc:u can.

Frad

ou forged . - In lllo tlllrcl
period on a one - )'01'11 run by

Dave LeVeck. The II«Jbrooo-

eel 10 polnta In lllo Courth ge.
rlod 011 a 73 - )'01'11 pall pl.,!rom Bryant lA&gt; Tocll ~
aad a 21-)'U'd lleld p i b)' BID

Ohio Wesleyan

San Joao St. 55 Now Moxlco 24

-

•

Kern completed 8 or 14 passes
lor 170 yards and added 121

out m the first game of the World Series.

•

~

Super Service Station
992-9932
Open 24 Hours

Nortlrwester-n.

24, crossed his legs atop the desk In the hotel suite, just as

Air Force 31 Colondo St. 0

!'111o Fol..... · - llrst llr
t'fOIIVIriJw • bloeked puat ...
tlo 111111 28. Sown playa
Ji. AI stJ• boatld a ..,_...
Sld p i lA&gt; put IIG m lha

"''"'""~Jl...i/1·9·6:8: ..,; ~,·:~:;:.,i·4·~jfi~~

lll1d seconf ranked Ohio State
to a 45-21 victory O"Yer winless

NEA Sperm t::elamnlst

tho - " "

Southern Col -

T~oon.

Times-Sentinel

IraBerkow

hio

lf,2lt.

$now Tires. Coupon valid until Oct.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (IJPO Rombllqr Rex Kern, Ohio Slate' a
touted sophomore quarterback,
paasod for two touchdowns and
ran for another lA&gt; lilt unbeaten

Simpson,
Trojans

for

......

rrom

roy product.
Miami mode It 7-7 at halltlme
011 a tllreo )'01'11 rw1 by Kera

Kern Leads OSU Victory

a 3-0

ScMinNst Tom. 33 CoutGuard 7
TeD1 Southorn33AICOI'IIA&amp;M21
Gnmhii!W 28 NIIL Valley St. 13
Purd• 28 Waka Forelt 27
Fralidln u lad- Cantnl 14
IJ68.
Waahingtal &lt;St. 1..) 27
: Olaon """ for olovm pa•aJna midway throuilh the tlllrcl
Calcndo CoU. 0
_...,. and tho Vlllllola trailed 17~. Be ended "' with 21 for
Mlcblgan
21
'acti•M
22
til
289 yar&lt;la.
Oberlin
42
Lelle
Foreot
22
; The ....,......,.. .,. I'&amp;IIP In the second hall with
Oldohoma421onSt.
7
ravurtto recalver, Jerry llaldlen, Tho pair eomeded for
NIIIOUri 18 Nebrula 14
~ ldiiM&gt; ID•chdatlm !rom the Or.., 2l7ard line.
N«th TeDI St. 20 'l'lllaa 17

ltflGre •

Note: Offer not vood on any Wide-T rock

POMERO\

Orqon'o .1o1m 11arr1ngtm outdueled ldaho'l
_... 011&lt;11, lllo nallon'l lOIIdlna oollo(llate paaiOI', Soturday to
lUll tho Dud&lt;• to a 23.8 lootball win.
· HarrlngtA&gt;n ran for oue touciKitnm and threw for another 11
put beck Ill bedt wins 1oeet1101 for the llrst Ume alnce

: BOWUNG GREEN, 0 h I o
(01'0 - Capitalising .., '111111
. . , error•. BowUJW G r • i n
IIIU(M to I 3(1.7 victory 0" ' GoldOD Flaeho1 S.lm'day

On a pair of Unico Redi-Grip Mud &amp;
Snow tiru from Pameroy Landmark
Super Service Station.

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT
CO.
Rear Meigs General Hospital

:DJGENE, Oro. -

Defeat
Flashes
•

$4.00 OFF

See the New 656 Hydrostatic All-Speed
Drive tractor today!

5-10, 18l.paund ballhadt, c:arrlod the ball acroaa !rom
1-fVd line oar!¥ In tho IOcoad _...,. and op1n .., a lORn~ trut oar!¥ In tho third parlod. o-to ....t ovw - f o r
~f yard at t11o end o1 tho tlllrcl _...,.,

II!'

24 carries and cOMBCtlng on
rune of 24 pa11es for 179 yards.
OU scored llrst In the oecoad
period on a 19-yard ,Pall
Bryant lA&gt; Phil Swindell, a Pom&amp;-

Heidelberg is

time ad¥antap an a one - yard
PhiliP by Jim McKay.
However, after a sc:oreleas
tlllnl pariod DaytA&gt;n moved out
Ill a 17-10 advantage m a 27.
yard llold p i by Marl&lt; Redrick mid a 45.yard sooring paaa
from Jerry Bleboyck lA&gt; Bob Madden.

lead oarcy In tho lint period
on a 35-t&lt;ard lleld p i by Mlko
BradhY. DaytA&gt;n then went ahead 7-3 m a 77-)'01'11 punt r&amp;lurnbyAISbaUMl.
Sill moved out Ill a 10-7 hall-

a.-

• U:TIA·WIDI TIIAD .,. .. Dlf' lfloULDIIl

Hydrostatic drive provides every speed for top performance and peak efficiency. Lets you go from 9
MPH in reverse to 20 MPH in forward and everythinG
in between ... Selected w1th ONE CONTROL ... On
the go . . . No dutch ... Without touching the throttle ...
Now, you can plow, plant, cultivate, mow. chop /
bale at the precise speed ratio to cope with every
field or crop condition. No matter how often you
change speed, your engine continues to deliver peak
power to the PTO and hydraulic system.
Yes! The lnternational656 Hydrostatic drive trac ·
tor is your key to faster work , greater comfort and
convenience.

992-2176

.: -ttaJa 1cored hlo touciKitnm .., his third lntorcopllon of

.R

DAYTON, Ohio (UP0 - John
Quillen, had two I o n 1
touchdown 1'11118 called bed&lt;,
plunpd for a ~ OOIIVeralm with fOlD' mlmrtes left lA&gt;
(live s...thern Winola an 18-17
win over DaytA&gt;n here Saturday,
Quillon ran tho openlns kick·
olf back 91 yarda lor a touchdolm but It was rlliUIIed by a
penaley. Late In the lourth - loci ho raeed 89 yards lor TO
but It .... ..Ued back ollldala ruled ho had stopped

Get Win

11111
touchdowns.
llauglu1, a ran&amp;r 8-4, 22(l.ponlld --.,.,., pluapd ..,. yard
for • touchdown ODd palsocl 50 )'OI'da lA&gt; lpllt end Goorp McGann
another In staking the . . . - Jayhewlut to a lf~

656
HYDROSTATIC
DRIVE

that had rolled "' 160 polras In
lour gamea 10 rari&lt; tlllrd In the
raUon Ia that category,
Bryant picked the Redsklns
detenBe apart with 97 yards In

Dayton Suffers 18-17 Defeat

NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. - Charley Jarvia ran lor 153 yards
throtollh a ateadJ&gt; rain, 1ettlng "' a touchdown and a lleld goal aac1
T&lt;lll Haller need 30 yards with an h:Urcepted pass for a ;core
saturdl;y as Army took &amp;dvantaae Dt Rutaers' arrora to rtaq&gt; to a
LOS ANGELFS (UPI).. Tho
24-4 victory,
Jarvlo, a 11-IOIJI..2, 205 pound senior, alternated with Bllly HIIJII,. briWant 0. J. Slmj&gt;ICXI merchod
or In helplna the cadets Ill their llrat acore, a six-yard run by Lynn the Unlveralty or Southern CellMoon. Jarvia oloo cerrled for 28 of 47 yorda •ettlrw up Ardon JoJio lornla 99 yarda and acored a
tlebreaklng touchdown In tho
- · 31-YOl'd lleld goal In tho aecoad quarter,
lourth period lA&gt; lilt tho Trojaua
ATHENS, GA. - The Dlnth-nnlted Gooqla BuUdot~o, brouPt lA&gt; lA&gt; a herd !ought 14-7 Paclllc
U1e by a ltanberlng 84-yard pan lnterc:eptillll return by tackle Bill El&amp;ltt vlctor7 Saturday aver tho
SlaDIIU, er..,ted for 16 polllll In tho oocoadpariod S a - aac1 want Unlverslly or Waahlngton.
Tho toochdoom came oo tho
Oil lA&gt; wear down the Vanderbllt Commodoroo 3U,
only
.,atalned acerlng drive of
Tho Commodorea, -chdown tllldenlop, were IOIIdlna 6-0
the
game ODd lollowed a
aad kaockllll! at tho Bulldop' p i Uae 1a1e 1n 111o Brat period When
briUlant
p i line stand by
Slaellll ptcl&lt;ed otf a pale blocked by dolenaho end Terry Oabolt and
Southern
Ca!Uornla
oo tho lllec:arrled It lA&gt; lllo Vanderbilt 111-)'01'11 llnobo!orebelna cauaht !rom 0...
)'01'11 line. II the Trojans 11
hlnl.
plays lA&gt; cover tho 99 yarda with
801!111 BEND, IND. - Terry Hanntty paned tho lopndary Slmp1011 catTY1nl! eoven t!moe
Georp Glj&gt;p ao Notre Dame'o IP'OIIost graundgalnor Saturtlay, pass- lor 57 yards and scerlng from
Ing for three touchdowrul and rackiJ1r"' 269 yords over - all In a 5W line7ardl out.
llou1bern Ca!Uornla acored a
IDUIICre of Wlnois.
touchdown
In the llrst period
It waa Winola' llftll doleat In a wlnlen -son and tho moat Joi&gt;.
lifter
a
fumble
recovery.
sided they have suffered In 62 yeor1o
WILIIIIIIgton tallied In the tlllrcl
ANNAPOLIS, MD, - Jim Cocozu'a 311-)'01'11 Deld p i with 3::111 _...,. lollowiD&amp; a pall lnterloft In the game to c:l-. I atlrriqr ll.point CCIIIobec:k Ia tho ilet coptlon lA&gt; loan the toamo
10 mlmta1 gave Navy a 17-18 Ylctory S a - """ Plttabur&amp;h In deadlocked m~ throuilh the
last (Jiarlor tho Trojans
Navy Memorlol Sladlum.
Taklna tho llna1 klckoll, Plttsburgb drove 81 )'OI'de tA&gt; Navy's put 011 their .,stained mardi to
ft..,.)'lrd-UDe, but with 27 socondo remaining, a 21-)'01'11 llold p i vlclor7. The win left lllo No. I
ranked Trojans with a 5~
atleq&gt;t by Pltt'a Joe ~lcko okldded ott his foot.
188100.'1 record.

two )'OI'da Saturtlay Ill lead

INTERNATIONAe

which had (liven "' only 167.7
yorda and 5.6 polots a game
opln.ot a -orlul OU otren.oo

NEW YORK-(NEA)-ln that jaunty way, Denny McLain,

Has

TIRE SALE

and 4-2-1 for the seaoon.
It wa1 a claaalc •bowdonn
lhlt .P I t t e d Miami •a defenn

outotbouDtll.
Southern Illinois -

wa-'"

2 Big

ror 91

yorda lo leod UllbeafAin Ohio
Unl.veraity to a 24-7 win over
Miami, the nation's top defen-

alve team, and sole poa1eaalon
ol llrot place In lllo Ml6-Amerlc&amp;D Conference.
ne Bobcata are 110ft' t-0 in
the MAC aad 5-0 .......0 wlllle
Miami Ia f.3 In lllo conlerence

ou roBed over outmamed lid._ Stale fl-It Salurday 00
the talonta o1 CJI&amp;rlorback lld&gt;ll7 llaugluo, aaled Zit yards

I

I

ATHENS, Ohio (IJP0-Quar1arbock Cleve Bryant pa01ed for

.

about 200 mg.!. Use 3 pints of::
1JA per cent chlorine laundry· ·
bleach tor each 100 gallons ot
water ln the well to get thh concontraUon. Mix the chlorine with
at least 4 gallons of water belore pouring It Into the well.
storage capacity por rootofdepth
in wells Is as follows: 4 Inches
diameter - 0.6 gallonsi 5 Inch~
es diameter - 1.0 pllons; 6
Inches diameter - 1.5 gallons.
(3) Let the pump oporato and
use a hose to recirculate t h e
chl&lt;Jrinated water out ot and back
lniO the woll. Wash dmm !howelL
caaing and drop pipe. Add more ·
chlorine solution if the water
does not have a distinct chlorine
odor.
•
(4) Open each laucet In the ,
water system, one at a time, un- ;
tll the water has a distinct chlorIne odor, then shut it off.
,
(5) Leave the chlortnatecl
er ln the well and water system, at least overnight or, pref- ,,
be discussed.
erably,
24 hours. Then. PUJnD ~
The public is invlt.
ed to attend thla dirmer meeting tho chlorinated water out or tho t
whlch is to be held at the Salis- well and flush the water lines.
(6) Alter shock chlorination .,
bury Elementary School on Ocit
may be neces~ to remove ...~
tooer 22 at 7:26p.m.
Reservatima ma,y be made with roslduos of Iron bacteria by blowan,y board member or by calling Ing out tho pipes and ftttlngs
the office in Pomeroy at 992- with compressed air and follow- J
2181. One ol the main features ing with a second shock chlor- ;•
of the evening wm be the ap- lnaUoo.
Water
from
drllled
wells
·;::
pearance of Sleepy, Honey and
Roscoe, who entertain regular- should also be chlorinated conly on Chanel 8 - WCIJS.TV. tinuously II propor locatloo, con- .,
struclion and protoetlon or tho .,
well does not result in safe wa- ...
Roush Herd
lAir at all Urnes. Health departments can make recommendations on how to chlorinate con-,~
Producers
tinuoualy.
..
If water from springs, cis- .
PETERSBOROUGH, N. H. terns, W.g wells, or farm pm.ds
Two registered Guernsey cow&amp; is used ln the homf or milk......
In the herd of Edson Roush, Ra- houoo It should be chlorinated . ,
cine, have recenUy completed top continuously with an automatic .....
official DHIR actual production chlorinator. These water IIOW'c-,.,
records, according to The Amer- 11 are easlly contaminated, even
lean Guernaey CatUe Club. All wh., they are woll located and
cows were milked two times a protected trom obvious IIOUI'C88 ,-;
day. The testing was supervts- ol contamlnation such aa !IPdc,. ,;
ed by Ohio Slate University,
tanka and leodlots. Farm pond,,.
They were Locust Grove Bea- water rtQlires tlltration, u!linga
trina, a &amp;. Yearling, pl'Odlced alow sand ftlter, in acklition to: :
14,020 poonds of milk and 553 chlorination.
JlOIIllds ·qll-1. !It:30~ dol'II Lc!GUI!I · .• •ID .1111' o..-nCll, -·~­
Grove Ellen D, a Sr. YearUng, be purlfted ·&lt;by.J&gt;olllng IH110l'llol
prcxluced 10,740 pounds of milk ousl,y for 2 minutes to klll dl.-111
and 542 pounds ol fat, in 305 sease • causing organlsma, Pal-o~.,
d&amp;J'I.
mer adds.

to "try out" from magazines,
books, and leaflets. Be observ.
ant when you visit or truel
for ideas you, too, can try.
Leacn to express yourself
throngh the beauty ol both lresh
and dried nowers, branches,
leaves, weeds, grasses, or IUIYtlllng with lorm and texture.
Learn to add color, charm, and
cheer to your home and have
lun doing it.

Introduces a totally
New Concept in
tractor farming

IDevoe

Our new Latex Semi-Gloss Enamel g1ves you the
toughest fin1sh 1n tow n. yet looks as soH and delicate as
any flat wall paint. Put 1t to the test 1n k1tchens. bathrooms. children' s room s . hall ways .
any place you
want durable scrubbable pro te ction without sacnf1C1ng
beauty . II flows on like any la te x
dries in le "'s than a n
hour without paint odor to a tough-as-nails f1nish

than you can buy in many florist shops. But you have to keep
your eyes open the year around
to collect varying textures,
forms, and colors. Once materials are dried they can be used
many times in many different
ways. Store materials in boxes
in a dry place when not in use.
Always be Oal the search (or
new ideas and shace them with
others. You can learn rnaJzy tricks

c '0 n-

IH.

SO\l
nsltMG

This New

Additional ' lnformaUon

cernir~R:

flU

SEMI- GLOSS

,,

.,..., , ,

-·,, I'

(2) Add enough chlorine lA&gt; thl' 1
well or other water source to~
vide a chlorine concentration or

Charter Members to be Honored

A
G
•
V
re lVen ror ~~;:,w·
sugges t
• dA
JI k•
rrangements':.elro;;:.r::;n ~~c:O:::~::
approxi-Jf~U tng Drle

DOllGLAS RA."\'DOLPIJ, WHOSE farm is located off Boutc 2
near Morgan Church, has compleled a farm pond. Denver Yoho
of SCS assisted with the design work and supervised constrw.: tion of the pond. The earU1moving was done by a bulldozer owned'by Ray Beegle of Rt. 87.
The pond is located near a barn and will provide water for
some or the Randolph daiLj' cows. The pond will hold
mately 80,000 gallons of water and will hav~ a 500-gallon concrete watering trough poured below it from which the cows may
drink.

remain in the water long enough
to destroy bacteria and other orgenlsms.
Shock ChlorlnaUoo- the add·
lng or a strong chlorlne solution
to a water source and the entire
water system to kill bacteria
and other organisms - is recommended by Palmer following
new well construction, p.1mp installation or any time the water system is opened for repair. ~ock chlorination of a well
and water system every f e w
months can also be very helpful ln keeping iron bacteria under cootrol. Steps lA&gt; lollow In
performing shock chlorination
ace as follows:
(1) Clean the well, cistern or
spring OOx to remove any floating debris, suspended foreign
matter and deposits ott interior
surfaces.

Suncla.Y Timeo - Seralnol, Sunda.Y, Odobor 20, 1968

Unbeaten Bobcats Rip Miami 24-7; Swindell Scores TD

'

Make Drinking Water Report

The

Da~ lluiJ.

lllprdlwt

SPECIAL! KELLY HOTLINE SNOW TIRES

.650xiL-$)5 ~!':

BAI~EY'S
383 "'""'
212W.

ISi'ol&lt;

ISblS

$29 '••

SUNOCO

PluS

Just sitting there,this'69 Chevrolet can do
;.

four things competitive cars can't:

It can wash its headlights.
• It can apply liquid tire chain to
1ts rear wheels.
It can silently defog or defrost
the rear window.
It can keep you cool or warm

automatically with Comfortron the oeH-adjusting air-conditioning

system.

And once you've added aU th...
wonderful devices to a new Chevrolet, you just can't imagine why

anyone would give a

se&lt;:ond thought

to a second-place car.
The headlight washers and liquid
tire chain for traction on slippery
roads ""' opemted at the touch of
~ buttGJ! from the driver's oeat. So
•• the silent n""' JI!Uowindow defroster. lnviaible ceramic stripe on
the &amp;laA heat up to keep the window clear.
Alao available: Chevrolet's Light
Monitorinl System that leta you

know

from inside if all your outaide
lights are working, full f............ur

stereo, a smooth
Hydra-matic

3~apeed

tniDRDiMIOD

'Turbo

AU

iD

a

car made quieter, made atronpr
made more comfortable.

Now

ai

your Chevrolet dealer's.
• We:W aaid it bef01e, and we'll lay
1tapm.
Match thia, you
other '698!

~

I'll" I ,_ tint. ..... •

·

'

�,...

-:' 111o ~ Tlmea • Sordllol, Sundi.Y, Oetober 20,

fsss

·~~Southern Suffers

· Loss to Glouster
After Upset Try
GLOU!ITER -

The GIC&gt;IIW"

Torncata held oft' a Southern up..
oat ol!cr.t and went m 1o a 30.S
victory on a rain aaturated field
bon Friday nll!ltt.
The victory cmtimed Glouaterta unbeaten record In the Mid~

Ohio Valley conference, making
3~ in loop action and..,.,...
the Tomcats seaiKXI alate to 4...2,
Soutbern, meanwhile, dropped
Its record to 2-5 and made them
0-1 in the MOVC.

them

The host Tomcats jumped off
1D a 6..0 lead ln the first period
when &amp;lphomore c;wuierback By-

'.

...... ...
~

over Easter·n
Wahama Wins
26-0
·=·

MASON - Wllhama proved 1o
be better muddoro thin Ealllern

u the While Falcons scored a
26-4 triUIIlj)IJ at Bachtel Field
Friday ni8hiThe two teams, battling on
prdlably the Bioppleat lleld In
Wahama IUI!ItSchoolhio1ory,performed In tbo ankle doop llaldberemained a threat to the hosts. fore a small crowd of falthfW
Guinther finally broke the Ice followers.
for the winners In the eorly part
Tho nonJeague vlctocy ll1&amp;de
ci. the last caniA&gt; when he jaunt- Wahama's slate 3-4--1 for the
ed nine yards to score and Chal- ......, and dJ opped Ealllem 1o
fant cooverted the ertrapointaon a 1~ record.
a run.
The Tomcats then got the ftnal
!lix.polnter later in tbe stanza
when Chalfant Intercepted a Rook
Crow pass and raced 53 yards
to score. Guinther tallied the
extra points on a run.
Southern, though going down
to defeat, played ooe of Its better games and the clash was
GALLIPOLIS - The Kyger
more closely fought thau the 11- Creek Bobcats racked ~ their
na:J score indicated. •'They out- fifth otralglrt triumph of the seahit u&amp; thoogh," l&amp; how Coach BOll Friday night at Albany with
Ashley summed up the game. an 18-8 victory over the AlexAshley named Jim \Vhl.te, a ander ~rtana.
halfback; Hoback, David White,
The win left the Bobcats with a

-a

Bclbb!' -

opened the
coach Grilli ~·•
boya In the first period- he
hond-cllr from Gu-yFlelda,
plowed 1 hole over rllht tackle
and cut down !leld 1o paydlrt.

IDa l&lt;&gt;r

Gary - · · boot l&lt;&gt;r tho ...
tra polnta was no sood aa Gory
Fields had trouble holcllng the
wet plgakln.
Bryant Hud11011!mmecllate1y let
o., another Felcm TD laterlntlto
first 1JW1ar wiMII he recovered
an Eutam fUmble 111 the Ylal1oro' l4 yard line. Flvo ple.ya

•

GALLIPOLIS -

bot•-

5.:!~

overall slate and 4-0-4 In
the Southern Volley AlhleUc Cooterence. Only Haman Trace on
Oct. 31 stands in the way of the
Bobcats• secmd consecutive
SVAC crown.
The ~~ are now 2-4-0
for the 1968 season.
Oris Hudnell, !50-round ll&lt;l!&gt;h-

omore back, scored the ~­ Mike Thompam, 15D-j)OWld JLDt·
lana oniJ' touchdown In the third ior, raced for the touchdoWn.

Pooaldes • . . . . . . 45

-'od to cloae the gap 1o 12.S
after Hudnell scored the extra
points.
The Bob&lt;ata took a 6~ lead
In the !lrat period Ron
~ ... 15D.pound aenlor, drove
over from five yarda out capping a 31-,yard drive.
Kypr Creek'• second touchdown came In the second perIod when Dan l'lllcyn, 210iJOW!d
Junior tadde, blocked s punt
doep in :,p.rtan territory a n d

ll5

Thet made It 12-4.
After a scoreless third period, the Bobcats acored on a
5D-yard march with Stove ~­
ding, JU.pound junior quarter-

lrtaUsUcs were available from
LAFAYEITE, Ind. (UPO ed foor of theDL The Deacons
North Gallla.
Purdue stumbled through three converted three of the recovGallla High School 24-0 Friday
It was the fifth win of t h e periods but put together t w o eries into two touchdowns and a
night at North Gallia.
season a.galnrrt two losses for touchdowns in the final period to field goal.
No detail a at the &amp;coring or the Lancers, now in their first pull out a 28-27 victory saturday
PW'due, which lost its top-ratyear ol football alnce cooaoll- over upset-minded Wake Forest. ing when it feU last week to Ohio
daUon.
The winless Deacons shocked State, got a touchdown on a 14
JORDAN DIES
The North GaUla Pirates are the Olth-nnked Boilermakers by yard run by Jim K!Jolipatrick with
CHINO, Calif. (UP0- G, Pay- oow 3-4~ in aU gamea and 2..'1- taking a 17·7 halftime lead and
seven minutes remaining in the
, ton Jordan, father of U.S. o in the Southern Valley Athlet- held a 27-14 margin wid1 12
contest.
(. Olympic tcack and field coach Ic Conference and have mly Han- minutes left in the contest.
Reserve quarterback Don Klt&gt;Payton Jordan, has dled at hh IWl Trace left oo Its 196S SV AC
But Purdue's All - America peri, Wllng In for the iniw-ed
borne here from natural causes. scheW.le.
Leroy Keyes came to lite In the Mike P hlpps in the waning miDlie .... 72.
Rna! period and sparked the Boil- utes of the game, guided the BoU.•·..
Tbe elder Jordan i1 aurvived
ermakers
offense with determi~ ennaker offense on the final scorIn
referring
to
himself
the
1
t:Js hla widow, Rozslla, and two Pope does not use the pronoun
ed ruruling. Keyes had tumbled ing drive, cllj)pOd bY a two-yBrd
1m1. Payton Jordan Is head
''I'' but uses the formal papal six times in the first three per- nm by Keyes with only 1:15 to
track coach at Stanford Unlver- "We."
Iods, am Wake Forest recover- play. That ded It and Jeff Jones
alt;y at Palo Alto, Calif.

, ________________

ATHENS- Coach DonEskay'a
Athens Bulldogs grabbed off sole
possesalon or first pllce tn the
SEOAL F'rlday nll!ltt on I rei,_
soaked gridiron 1s the,y fought
back from a 14-0 deDctt to Inmet an 16-14 defeat on the Iron..

ton Tigers.
The flred-q&gt; Tigers took the
first Athens punt of the contest
and marched 71 yards In 11
plays to hit paydlrt. The big play
was a fine 37 yard pass from
Greg Sternaman to Mike Akers
thot carried to the Bulldog 17

booted the extra point for the
winning margin.
Keyes earlier had scored on a
19-yard run In the third period.
Tom Deacoo got Wake Forest off
and runniJV with a 2JI.yard lleld
goal in the tlrstperlod. Thentullb&amp;ck Jim Johnson galloped 24
yards in the aecondatan.atoglve
the Deacons a 10-0 spread.
The BoUennakers n,.oy got
on the scoreboard in the aecolll
perlcxl when fullb&amp;ek Perry Williams pl....,.. from the 2,yard
line, but Wake Fore at's star quarterback. Freddie Summers, moY.
ed across trom fOW' yarda out to
give the Deacons their halftime

advantage.
Buz Leavitt caught a seve~&gt;­
yard pass from Smnmers for a
touchdown in the third period and
Deacon booted a 311-yard lleld
gaol in the final stanza.
Ph.Jpps, who had an otr dQlast

QUALITY

CONSTIUCYION

week at Ohio State, again was

orr fonn before being Injured. He
COOijlleted only four ol10 po18ea
for 40 yards, whileKieperlpltched one e&lt;aqJletion in three trJes
and Keyes was unsuccessfUl in
two throws. In all, Purdue was 5
of 15 for 42 yards pual.., while
Summers connected on 22 of 31
for 182.

ONIIfOP

UIVICI

OVII

Buckeyes

21 MODILI

Scare JUS,
LOW

Lose, 14-6

CASH PIICI

NELSONVILLE - Pb.,mg on a
soaY llold at Nelaonvtlle Frl·
day nlaht the Jackson lronmen
had to batde froin bohlnd before
llrally nudglllJI I determlnod
Bueke)'e eleven by a 1f.6 score.
Playing In a ataady drizzle the
two team I fought off each other In
the first period uJt.U the Buck·
eyes began a sustained drive that
ended with a touchdown In the
aecon:l period. The TD came on
the ftrat play of the aeconl quar.
tar when quarterback Larry Evana rolled out on a l)(1rfer sweep
and ran 10 yards to score and give
the Buckeyes 1 6-0 hallllmelead.
1lle lronnen picked them·
selves out ot the Nebonvlllamud
alii came back to acore on a 22yard run by fullbock Gary Sox·
t011 owr the mtddle wtth 11:41
Ioftin the third quortar, Aconver11011 run tailed and the score wu
tied at 6-6.
Jacklon wnpped It "'wlthjuat
four minutes left in the contest
when halfback Darwin Valertlne

,_,

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_____ ____________
P. 0 . lox 2.g
Phon•: 167-3153

ran 11 yards for a touchdown and

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--------

lor A I - r . The ~shad
SO yanla rushing and no passing
yanlap.
Kyger Creek .•.. 6 6 0 6 -

IS
Alex..- .... .. ooso- 8

18.S.
Kypr Creek hBd 161lrlt downs

Athens Undisputed SEO Leader

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MARAUDER STADIUM- Cooeh
Cbarlta Clancey'o Melp Maraudora cllfaated 1 eonatant dow,.
pour, mud puddles, aD:J 1 deter..
mlnod previouol)o - t a d
Wollaton Rocketa _ . team
bore Jl..2 Friday nJaht,
Jl..2 Frlda,y nll!ltL
The Marauders kDocliodwoJJ ..
ton out of a ftrst .Place tie with
Athens, which cllleatad Ironton.
Athena twa a tleapinstl4 Wollaton 1 de and the dillydunkerloss
to Mella. Metga hal been edged
twice, both tlmea by an extra

tt.n added a twOi)Oint conversion
nm to make it 14-6•
No ataUatic:1 were available on
the cod:elt, but both teams were
Pilaued with 6Lmblea due to the
ralo-IOiked gridiron, The win..,_
pod Jackloo' 1 leegue record to
3-.2 whlle U. Bucke)'ea remain
wlnlesa in flve lcq~ contesta.
Score by quartera:
JaekBOil
o o 6 8-14
Nala.-York
0 6 0 0- 6

yard line. The touchdown came
on 1 one yard plu,.. by freshmill tullb&amp;ck Rick Boykln wltll
5:06 left in the quarter. A cooversion rlll taled.
Following an exchange ofpunta
the Tl&amp;era started "' the mnddy
gridlron late in the 11rsl period
on amther acorq drive that
carried over into the second
quarter. The austalneddrlvecov·
ered 58 yards In 11 playa with
the touchdown coming on a 23yard scamper by Boyldn with
10:20 left In the second period.
BW Waahburn then paned to
Randy Edwards for the twC&gt;{lolnt
conversion lll:llrom&gt;n was sallIJV along with • 14-0 lead.
Athens was stunned but nat
out as halfback Mike Goo:Jw:ln
brcall!ltt them boek with a dazzl·
IJV 75-yard pwll rerum for a
touchdown 11 tho 7:02 mark of
the second quarter.
The second Bulldog TD wu
set '-1) when BW W1ahburn'a
punt traveled only six yards to
gtve Athena the baD on the TIger 34 yard line. Three play•
later Goodwin riRloll.....,.. the
coraor and oped 30 yards ror hia
aecon! TD of the oontesL Goodwin was s~ped on hh conver·
ston run at the 3:27 mark and
the lwUIIme score stood at 14-12.
BcXh teams sloshed around in
the mud for most of the third
period until Athelll took over on
the1r own H yard nne aed proceeded to roll 56 yards In 11
playa to score what became the
winning touchdown. Quarterbeek
Bob Handley raced 14 yards oo
an qrt:lon play to score with juat
30 secooos remaining In the third
period. The conversion run
falled, but Athens led 111-14.
In lhe final period Ironton waa
never able to mount. a serious
ttu-elt but AtheDB waa forced to
cough up the oval on downa at
the Tlaer 26 and 13 yard lines
In the late stages of the conteaL
DeiiPite the lou 1rolton was

again the winner In statistics as
the Tiprs led In tlrst down&amp; 138, in rushing 182 yards to 128
yards, an::l in passirw as they
c0111&gt;leted three ot 15 for 54
yards. The Bulldogs llllde sood
on three of seven tor 23 yards.
Each team lost the ball once on
fwnbles.
Boykln, the 192-pound freal&gt;rnan, carried the ball33 times for
120 yards while Goodwin Jed AlheDJ with 70 yards In 12 carries.
Athens ia oow in first place with
a 4-0-1 record while lrontondrO!&gt;ped to aeventh with a 1-4 mark.
Score by quarters:
Ironton
6 8 0 0-14
Athens
0 12 6 D-IS

Doc Smith
Says:

point

ANTI -FREEZE
WILLIAM

run.

It was a brilliant run .ol 65
yardo by Marauder Fullbock Ken
Wloh !rom his own 16 to the
Wollaton 19 that set up the wlnnl-w touchdown in the secolll

-

and hBd a total ci. 215 yordagalried COILIIJOfOd to eight !lrst downs

back, goinB over from the me
yard line for the score. Apln
as they had all evenln&amp; the Bol&gt;cata mlaeed the extra point&amp;
And, that's the way It ended

The llunda,y Time• • Sondnel, SUnday, October 20, J96S

.....,,

PENH

FULL STRENGTH

ANTI-FREEZE
1.25 gal.

First DowLll •..•• 6
YdL Ruohing ••• 147
Yda. Paul111 , , • 20
Total Yards , , •• 167
PuaeaAU. . . . . . 5

1.15 gal.

Po••••
eonw.. .. . 2
Puaea lntq&gt;d. . . .. o

In 55 Gal. Drumo

MEIGS
2nd
hall
o
IS
0
18
0

Aull- 10, 10
I

6
165

20
185
5

2

o
3
I

SCORING I
Aulto 10 yard pall play,

2
2

6
3

7-.226
3-JOS
10
0
YARDAGE
Via , •••• 6-20
Perdue .. 7- 4
Headly .. 3- 7
Lockhart •• 1-2

3-74
0

11-44 IIHI4
4-9 11-13
3-11 6-IS
I· 1 Z-3
1-12 1-12

SO IT WAS! - Melp Cheerl-ra Lola St.uer, loll, and
Brerda McGuire hold the large paper screen saying "l~Qpl­
neas Is Vlctory" that the Marauder team wert through whUe
going onto the field 1o defeat WeUaton 6-2 Friday nlghL The
drawing Is of "Snoopy" which was the theme for the Meigs
High Hcxnecomlng activitles.

Friday's High School Scores

Wooster Defeats Denison

HIIDS

.\ \'
'·'-'
'

,..

'

\

... ~~, ~

. ... ,~

enJ1.
Jell Wlae and Tim Aroot each
scored on one-yard runa, Tom
a..ntman passed 19 yards to
Ron Showalter for another touchdown and Ed Th00111son raced 74
yards for the ftnal Scot score.
II&gt;
' "'"·~
....,.

.

Wilmington is Beaten, 25-12

•oooto-·

•

WOOSTER,
Ohio (\JPI) W001ter scored In owry quarter
saturda,y to defeat Dem1011 28-0
In an otdoConterencepmehere.
Wooster Is now 1..2 in the conference aed 2-3 overall while DenITIIliT Ia 1·1 In the OC and 3-2 ov-

Worlt • rou wll~ Docfal-.ol
.. • poly11tet tticot, 41rlet
wrinldo-lno wllhl• 2 Hoi d1 roely tcn'1oNcl • • •
ood • -··Shawn
olwl........
f1l
In Ololl.
a lift, llhortp• 1 P•

WILliiNGTON, Ohio (UPI) Tailback Je.y w_.- scored two
touehclotma oo 1'UJII oi2Dandfive
;rll'da Soturcle.y to lead Slljlpery
Rock (Po.) Slate Collep1o • 2512 vlctocy owr WilmiJVton In a
1J111L0 marred by pe.-Jdes.

-Jar.

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STORE HOURS

Waper'a touchclawnrunacame
In the 11.-1 period and • ...,ped
I 12-12 tie. Wllmlngtoo deadlocked the IJIIILO In tha third

,•,

Mon. T~1. Wed. Sot,
9 to 5
Thur. 9 to 12
Fri. 9 to 8

:::·

r

·.

quarter on a 17-yard pols !rom
quarterback Bob IQoclmer to eoo
Jlm Sullhu In U. en;l zone.
11lo G..- Wave scored first
lD the ~ period on a 2~
yard run by bol1hack Bob Brown,
but Slippery Rock the
6-6, ona47.,.,-dpoaolrom
quarterback John Ross to Pat
Walsh In the aune atanza.

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Morot
Co..
Ia
_....,

Academy 41 Ea&amp;t Knox 18
Cola. Llooen 38 Colo, East 12

College Scores
Pem 34 Lehll!lt G
Dartmouth 4S Brown 0
Colgate 14 Princton 7
PMC Coli. 7 Moravian 2
Villanova 28 Buffalo 7
Harvard 10 Cornell 0
Yolo 29 Columbia 7
Hol,y Cross 7 Boston University 7
ITIIlana (PL) Clarion (PL) 13
Gettysburl!lt 12 Bucknell 7
Cornogle-Moilon 48 Alleglleny 18
Union 24 Rensselaer Pol,y 14
WoaiDLinster 20 Union 6
Anny 24 Rulgors 0
Hamilton 18 Mlddlebury 14
Rhode l.sland 14 Massachusetta9
Upaala 16 Susquehanna 9
Hol&gt;art 14 Alfred 7
Williams 14 Bowdoin 7
Delaware st. 25 st. Paul's 0
Maryland 21 South Corollna 19
West Vlrlinla 20 Wm. &amp; Mary 0
Clemaoo 39 Duke 22
North Carolina 22 F1orlda 7
Morpn State 24 VIrginia Union 0
Navy 17 Pittsburgh 16
Geor!lia 32 Vanderbilt 6
Clladel 13 Vlrilnla Mil IML S
Geor!lia Tech 21 Auburn 20
JOOna Hopkins 42 Haverford 0
Rand.·Macoo 50 Maryville Coli. 0
Te-osee 10 Alabama 9
~dney 0 W&amp;ab. &amp; LeeO
Tulane 2s Booton
l4
Mlmoaota 14 Michigan Slate 13
Toledo 30 Western Michigan 6
Loulovllle 13 Maraholl 10
Bowlq Green 30 Kent State 7
Ohio Unlverslt;y 24 Miami (O.) 7
Ohio state 45 Northwestern 21
1lelhaiiJ 24 Western Reae"" 6
- . n Winola J8 ~ 17
Iowa !1 Wlaconsln 0
Kansas 49 OkiahcBna Slate l4
Notre Dome r;s Wlnois 8
No. Dakota St. 14 No. Dakota 8
VerqLO!LI 12 New Hampshire 10
JwdiLIL 2S Lycoming 7
CGmecUcut 29 Moine 0
Norwich 10 St. Lawrence 0
Amherst 26 llocheater 0
IIUble-.rs t5 Uralnus 6
FriDILiln &amp; Marohalf 24
Dlcldnaon7
Lalloptte 2'1 Dredl 0
N...-atora lO SpriTWIIold 7
lllaalasiPpl Zl ·s. Mlaalaai[;pl. 13

uvtrw- Coli 111 J.C. Smliho

West Vlqlnla St. 29 H'"'anl 0
NOrth CVallLLI Sl. II. Vtrpala 0

_

;,

LLLOI'LII!v. "I

to gtw WoJISioll the baD - ·

return. X-t~~~llhowedloterthore

.... ... break, -

.... palled

llpmenta, IUo ret1!1'11 to full
i1 Q.UIItionlble 1 how-

there so clote," he u1d.
But Worry iol bock 1rto the

ewr.

eed zone without alJilpl"" - · ·
or boiTW tackled short ot It, and
Barr iol hio free 40 yard pwl
from the 20thatputWollatonboek
to the Meigl 41 lifter carr returned 19 yards to that point.
WeUaton iol down to the Kelp
2S, but had to li YO 0., &amp;fter I
fumble and Worry fall oo the baD
twice to end the game.

Senior Rond1 Hawley came In
aoo performed with JII'Oit credit
for Whitlatch.
Top.,...... plner ol the pmo
was EJV)lsh wltlllHhar&lt;Harned
Yardl Jn 22 carries. Via led
WeUoton with 64 yards In 15
carries.
Moll• had the ecJ&amp;o In e"'ry
statistical department (see chart

eondltlon

oafet;y. That moc)e It 6..'1.
The llll!ltlander• had s e v e n
with an ln'Grall record ot 4--3-0 firat downs to four for Hannan
and a 3..2~ recorilln sv AC play. Trace. The llll!ltlandors C0!11&gt;1etThe llll!ltlandon are aaaured ci. ed 1118 o1 a 1 x - for 15yordo
at least a &amp;eeond plaee tie wWl and hBd 9S 111 the II'OOnd for a
North Gellla in the SV AC, North to4ai ci. 113 yards. The Wildcats
Gallla has oniJ' 1118 contooat left tried ....., posses wlUt no comIn the SV AC with Hannan Trace pleUma bu1 pined 74 yards m
next Friday. The Pirates are the IJ'O!DLd.
2..'1-0 In SVAC play.
By Qlartara;
11lo Highlanders' only Southnatarn • , .. 0 6 U 0 - 6
down came in tho seoond period Hannan Trace . . .. 0 0 0 2- 2

Gophers Stop Conversion
Effort to Triumph, 14-13
EAST LANSING, Mleb. (\JPI)-

Ohio Hll!lt School Football Scores
By Urdted Pre&amp;s International
lJma Senior 12 Mlddlotown 6
Sprtng. Sooth 14 Portsmouth 13
New Boston 28 Northwest 12
Zanesville 24 Newark 21
lolorpn 18 Tri-Valley 8
Sheridan 8 Mayovllle 0
Philo 30 Crookovllle 13
Barnesvlllo 12 Shenandoah 6
. Clmbrl4oe 38 CJaymoat ·o
Cola. Wool J4 Cols. Mohawk 0
Cols. Eaalmoor 26 Cols, WheL 6
Cols. Northland 26 Cola. North 0
Colo. SOuth 30 Cola. Will. Ridge 14
WorthlllgiOn 22 Reynoldsburg 0
Westerville 7 ML Vernon 0
Falr!leld Union 48 Lib. Union 0

eon-

One owner, air conditioned

Saturday

Kelp pold 1 Pl'lee for tha victory, Mlddlt ...,-dMaxWhltlatch
in tho aecond QUII'tor IUffered I
bool4- br1llaed - and cwlLl not

SVAC play and 0-7-4inaUpmea,
The win left the llll!ltlandera

0

0 0 0 2- 2

Clwncey

got alck all over after aendl""
In that fourth dowa aa1et;y ple.y,
thinkinJr ar all that eould hllj)pen

apeed and
wlliL tha tilll of VII' a alndeloow 32 yard
run. VIa, for example, J10t only

GALLIPOLIS - The Sooth- wllen Sootll Atha, 15D • )IOUIId
weatem llil!ltlandera downed aon1or ac-ed 2S yard&amp;m a
the Haman Traee Wildeata foke roverae 1o put Soothwest6 • 2 Frlda,y night at Mer- em ahead 6-4.
cerYIIJo in the lllahlandera 11na1
The Wlldeata Jlllt m the oeoreSoutltern Valley AthleUe C.er- board with lbwt three and a half
onee game of the - - ·
mlmLtea to Jill In the fourth - Jt waa Hannan Trace' a sev- ter wtl&amp;'l Jimmy D. Wl.lker, 182IILih conaeeutlve lo11 ot the sea- JIOUIId aenlor IUIIback, """ trap.
am. The Wlldeall are 0-3~ In pod In his own ormme for a

5
6-182

(SAFETY)

"I ohould have had ltlm Jill for
the aafet;y all8r two dooma," oal!l

-·r

Tho - - line and lllekara .-ned tiLe Wolltton

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SCORE BY QUARTERS:

Kelp

·: \

VIa 4 and lleedly 3 to tha II
But the weather and the pressure denied the Rockell. On the
next pJa.y, second down and a
yard, Lockhart fumbled and
44 •unebotb'"
for Melcs recovered on the Melp 2. There was
4:37 leflln the JIIIILO.
And Coaeh Olancey'o pr06lom
waa to bang orto the baD long
emul!lt to sat It&gt; • little or the
clock and aet it 1afely out of
there without a tumble or hiving
a pLDtt blocked, backed up tll!ltt
into his &lt;Mn eOO zone.
He sent Werry lnto the Hoe on
three anaaks, getUng the ball out
to the 6 yard nr.. then on rourth
down ordered him to run tho ball
bock Into the eoo zone for a

WELI.SfON
1st
2oo
Total
hair half
1
3
4
33
77
110
13
5
IS
46
S2
128
7
I
8
1
G
I
0
0
0

Bethel .... G
PASS RECEIVING
Perdue, 13i Bethel, 5

In 54 Gal. Drumo

•

Total

o

Poaaltloa , , ..... , 10
o
INDIVIDUAL
ETWillh ••• 14-125 11-19 22-144
Smltll .... 7- 19 4- 2 u- 21
WW!ama • ., Z- 8 I· I
3- 9
Werry • , , • I -5 7 -4 S -9

ALCOHOL
75e ,.1.

From then on Ute pme waa a
bottle of !leld pool don, the fewest
Aunbleo, the boot punting, aoo
the bost baD handllJV.
Wollaton had JII'Oal _........
Ues to pull out a victory ln the
second halt
lta tlnett came ln the fourth
period attar 1 Mike Barr punt
landed squarely on the 5D yard
line aoo almost sank oot olslibt,
without a bounce. On the first
play, the Rockets' tine Fullback
Toby VIa cleared his right eDd
aoo slogged 32 yards to the Moli•
18.
Now tired "'• sensl~a victory,
C.Och Bob Brennan sent VIa "'
the middle for 8 to the 10. Vii
waa held on the next play, but
Qw ta.,..k Rick Porduo )1012,

rO&lt;OW!red hy Rocky Willilmo.
On IILo !I rat Marauder play, E..Uoh oJ1pped betwnn his left
tackle and end, cut tothelert, and
wu off on his 66 )'Vder.
FrGm the Wellston 19, John
Smith got 8, then 2 to the 9,
EJV)lsh aot 4 to the fiw. A Aim·
ble set the Marauders back to
tbo 10.
On the next play' Quorterback
Jeff Werry hit Eoo Dennis Ault
In the rlibt nat at about the s
yard line wlthaperfeetpou. Ault
broke one tackle, outraced &amp;IP
other defender, and scored atandiTW Ll&gt;· Tbo extra point nm falled
ln an ocean of mud. There w11
6:67 len on the dock.

o

Fumbleo ••••••• , 2
I
Fumbles Lost . . . . . I
0
PLULII . . . . . . . . .3.83 4-143

METHANOL

quarter. Wellston had been atop.
pod 011 the Melia 17 b;y a Aunble

Meigs Statistics
1S1
half

NIVR,

below).

Meigs Shines in Rain: Wins 6-2

ana, lneludlnil three ~ ILIIIh
boyo, Mike White, Dovl!I .Mor·
IIIII and Som Bemett, *&gt; bid
)111 moved up to the -alt;y.
Fal..., atartera were , Lan7
Corpenter, Doo Wood, EJ-Ie llfDr·
ri•, GUI!aple, Randy S m II h,
RedmoLLcl, Dick Ord, M!Miluma,
Stove llalatead, Flelda, B,o b by
Rouob, Jludem, Clark and Gory
Slok,
1
!tartlng for Eastern w t r o
Tom Buckley, Ray Karr, Dml
lolora, Bob Wood, Raymond Cline,
DUL Grueur, Bob Rlt&amp;:hla, Jim
9tettler, Mike Boring, Tom Karr
and Elton steele.

EaiiiOI'LL ••.•••• 0 0 0 0- _0
Wahama.
• •• 13607-26

Bobcats Score Fifth Straight Win

Hoddng Lancers downed North

·-

.....

II -

Bv~o:

K
L
d
•
~~·y:" ·.-.·.:::2:~ 21~
eyes ea er tn
E!: ~;;. ::·:-:-: ·: ~ Fourth Quarter
Lancers Defeat Pirates, 24-0 Purdue Comeback

a pass from Guinther.
SECOND HALF
The Tornadoes battled strongly during the third quarter and

Wahaml LPI blek lD lt1- acor- fine c:t~~ter, ~ to record
later, Flolcll allllped a poll 1o
David GUllljlie who In to inl pattern apln In the laat a yardap pick-up al hill """ In
the pme u he ondocl up wltlt a
score. Thlo dmo, Burdette's try quarter I I Gory Clark went for the the extra JT(IInla wa a sood 1oward the lldtllneo, received lllmbled ball and ,...., four yards
and the Falcons came blek up sood block, aaw .-mg bul mud betoro belnl haUled down - •
field with a 13-4 leed.
and nt.r
him and the pretfJ' sood average for a .,...
In tho aecond quarter, It waa goal line and raeed 66 yard• 1o
The White Felcons travel thla
apln Bryllll Hud11011 who recov- paydlrl. Bordetle'a kick lor the
ered an Eqlea twnble - 1h11 extra point was apln sood this Friday to play the ~cor Yeltime oo the Eaatarn 30. On the Ume to 8Hi the pme'a acorlne. low Jackell In what Bhould bo a
first ple.y ll'om ocrlnunap,
Clark had another 55 yard aeor- cloae match and the Ea&amp;le• hoot
.Fields paaeed 1o GIWople ond he lng run celled back In third per- Southwestern•
All Wahama players saw ac.
turned 111 the steam, racing 70 Iod bai:ause ci. a clipping pen.
t1111
against the Melis Coundyards to make the margin JB~. alt;y.
The extra point wu no sood.
Robert Redmond, the Felcona

Defeats Alexander, 18-8

ron Guinther capped a Glouster
-drive with a two yard carry to
paydlri.
Coach Bob Ashley's Southern
ICJIIld came roaring back mldWIIJI in the aeoond period by
marching 99 yards for a six ...point- defensive safet;y and Roger Ours,
er on a 1 yard plunge by Senior a lineman, for tum1ng tn good
Bill Hoback. Jlmior Brewer then performances.
The Tornadoes host Alexancarried IJ\Ier the extra points and
der
this coming Friday night.
-ernled8-0.
B,y QJartero:
Southern, earlier In the same
stanza, had g&lt;Jtten down to the Southern . . . . 0 8 0 0- 8
Tomcat 6 yard line and lost the Glooster . . . . 6 8 0 16- 30
STATISTICS
pigskin m a twnble.
Southern Glouster
Glouster took a 14...8 advantaee before halltime when Dan- Yds. Rush . . . • .. 187 21J
DY Davis raced 11 yards oo a
IWN:P to score and Ernie Chal14
fant scored the extra points on First Downs •.. , • 13

'

-~~

Hamilton Twp. 56 Hartley 12
Granville 26 Watkins Memorial 0
Wash. C. H. 35 Circleville 8
North Union 26 Mt. Gilead 8
Athel\8 18 Ironton 14
Meigs 6 Wellston 2
Galllpolla 21 Logan 14
Unioto J2 Paint Valley 0
Mar. Hardlrw 26 Mana. Senior 20
Flllllay 8 Fremont Ross 6
Upper Slndusi&lt;Y 3D Bucyrus 8
Gahanna 16 Delaware Hayes 6
l,Wer Arlington 31 Chillicothe 6
Bellefontaine 8 Shawnee 0
Marlon Local 20 Minster 12
Sidney 41 Urbana 0
Cory-Rawson 62 Leipsic 0
Cleve. l!gts. 26 Euclid 14
Cl. Line. 18 Cl. Hol,y Name 12
Franklin llgts. 32 Teays Valley 14
Day, Col. White 30 Dayton Roth 14
Day. DwtJar 18 IJa.v. Roosevelt 6
Xenia 40 Doyton Stebbins 8
Wahama, W. VL 26 Eastern 0
Bellalre St. John's 21
Weirton f:l/. VL) Modonna 7
Cln. Aiken 20 Cln. Withrow 8
Cin. Courter Tech 25
Cin. Western HUI&amp; 0
oak HWs 18 Anderson 6
Canton McKinley 44
Toledo Devilbiss 12
Moas!Uon 20 Sleubenvllle 12
Alliance 6 Barterion 0
Qakwood 20 North Canton 14
Fairless 9 canton South 6
Glenwood 28 Terry 6
' C&amp;mbrld&amp;e 38 F'remont o
Warren Harding 25
Toledo Mac001ber 6
Columbiana 18 Sebring 14

Mlmesota linebacker TOIQ' p..,
hula and teamm.lte Steve ThoniJ&gt;oon smothered Mlchlpn State
quarterback BIU Trilllett oo a
two-point conversion effort with
2:30 left to play Soturday to preserve a 14--13 Bf.a Ten football
victory for the Gophers.

The dramatic "aucklen-death"
effort carne from the aeven-yard
line alter MlchlpnState"aopenalized live yards ror delay of
pme follow!JV an SJI.yard touchdown drive,
Trlpletl rolled to his rll!ltt and
looked back to his left for a roceiver, but was greeted by the
thuooerlrw Pshula and Thompsoo.
Moments later, the ~1rtans
again marchad deep Into Minnesota territory but the &amp;q)homore
qaarterblck, startirw his tint
pme due to an inJury to regular
BUI Feraco, was &amp;gain thrown
back tor losses and a laat-psp
53-yard field goalatleqlt by Gary
Boice wu way short.
Minnesota scored both of its
touchdowns in the third period,
one a 58-yard puN return by
oafet;y Dovg Roolotad.
The winning score came late lJ1
the period on 1 three-yard pass
li'&lt;lm QUirtorbaek Phil Hagen to
fullback Jbn C&amp;rter, climaxing a
56-yard Mlnneaota drh.. Bob
Stein kicked the crucial extra

321 by taking a 7..0 hallllme lead
oo a 1.3-yard paaa from Triplett
to eo:l Fnnk Foreman.
But the pleasure quickly turned to alomn after the intermission when R~lltad, a 5-foot-11
Junior, rambled umnolesteddown
the aldellne with 1 Michigan State
pmt rar the flrst Gqlher score.
The Spartans fought bock wltb
a swift march to the visitors• 10~
Yard llno.Th!'~ , attem,pta tope,.
etrate the em zone tailed and the
scorlng threat fizzled when a 27yard Oeld goal attempt by Bolce
went bad.
Michigan State refused, however, to gl ve In to a rugged Minnesota defense - one that forced
seven ~artan fumbJes- andregr~ for a touchdown with 2:34
remaining In the contest. T h e
score came on 17-yard pass
from Triplett to Foreman. The
ill - fated 11 go-for-broke'' effort
followed on instructions from
head coach Duffy Daul!lteriy.
Minnesota
o o 14 0- l4
MSU
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.•

::
.,..·

�,...

-:' 111o ~ Tlmea • Sordllol, Sundi.Y, Oetober 20,

fsss

·~~Southern Suffers

· Loss to Glouster
After Upset Try
GLOU!ITER -

The GIC&gt;IIW"

Torncata held oft' a Southern up..
oat ol!cr.t and went m 1o a 30.S
victory on a rain aaturated field
bon Friday nll!ltt.
The victory cmtimed Glouaterta unbeaten record In the Mid~

Ohio Valley conference, making
3~ in loop action and..,.,...
the Tomcats seaiKXI alate to 4...2,
Soutbern, meanwhile, dropped
Its record to 2-5 and made them
0-1 in the MOVC.

them

The host Tomcats jumped off
1D a 6..0 lead ln the first period
when &amp;lphomore c;wuierback By-

'.

...... ...
~

over Easter·n
Wahama Wins
26-0
·=·

MASON - Wllhama proved 1o
be better muddoro thin Ealllern

u the While Falcons scored a
26-4 triUIIlj)IJ at Bachtel Field
Friday ni8hiThe two teams, battling on
prdlably the Bioppleat lleld In
Wahama IUI!ItSchoolhio1ory,performed In tbo ankle doop llaldberemained a threat to the hosts. fore a small crowd of falthfW
Guinther finally broke the Ice followers.
for the winners In the eorly part
Tho nonJeague vlctocy ll1&amp;de
ci. the last caniA&gt; when he jaunt- Wahama's slate 3-4--1 for the
ed nine yards to score and Chal- ......, and dJ opped Ealllem 1o
fant cooverted the ertrapointaon a 1~ record.
a run.
The Tomcats then got the ftnal
!lix.polnter later in tbe stanza
when Chalfant Intercepted a Rook
Crow pass and raced 53 yards
to score. Guinther tallied the
extra points on a run.
Southern, though going down
to defeat, played ooe of Its better games and the clash was
GALLIPOLIS - The Kyger
more closely fought thau the 11- Creek Bobcats racked ~ their
na:J score indicated. •'They out- fifth otralglrt triumph of the seahit u&amp; thoogh," l&amp; how Coach BOll Friday night at Albany with
Ashley summed up the game. an 18-8 victory over the AlexAshley named Jim \Vhl.te, a ander ~rtana.
halfback; Hoback, David White,
The win left the Bobcats with a

-a

Bclbb!' -

opened the
coach Grilli ~·•
boya In the first period- he
hond-cllr from Gu-yFlelda,
plowed 1 hole over rllht tackle
and cut down !leld 1o paydlrt.

IDa l&lt;&gt;r

Gary - · · boot l&lt;&gt;r tho ...
tra polnta was no sood aa Gory
Fields had trouble holcllng the
wet plgakln.
Bryant Hud11011!mmecllate1y let
o., another Felcm TD laterlntlto
first 1JW1ar wiMII he recovered
an Eutam fUmble 111 the Ylal1oro' l4 yard line. Flvo ple.ya

•

GALLIPOLIS -

bot•-

5.:!~

overall slate and 4-0-4 In
the Southern Volley AlhleUc Cooterence. Only Haman Trace on
Oct. 31 stands in the way of the
Bobcats• secmd consecutive
SVAC crown.
The ~~ are now 2-4-0
for the 1968 season.
Oris Hudnell, !50-round ll&lt;l!&gt;h-

omore back, scored the ~­ Mike Thompam, 15D-j)OWld JLDt·
lana oniJ' touchdown In the third ior, raced for the touchdoWn.

Pooaldes • . . . . . . 45

-'od to cloae the gap 1o 12.S
after Hudnell scored the extra
points.
The Bob&lt;ata took a 6~ lead
In the !lrat period Ron
~ ... 15D.pound aenlor, drove
over from five yarda out capping a 31-,yard drive.
Kypr Creek'• second touchdown came In the second perIod when Dan l'lllcyn, 210iJOW!d
Junior tadde, blocked s punt
doep in :,p.rtan territory a n d

ll5

Thet made It 12-4.
After a scoreless third period, the Bobcats acored on a
5D-yard march with Stove ~­
ding, JU.pound junior quarter-

lrtaUsUcs were available from
LAFAYEITE, Ind. (UPO ed foor of theDL The Deacons
North Gallla.
Purdue stumbled through three converted three of the recovGallla High School 24-0 Friday
It was the fifth win of t h e periods but put together t w o eries into two touchdowns and a
night at North Gallia.
season a.galnrrt two losses for touchdowns in the final period to field goal.
No detail a at the &amp;coring or the Lancers, now in their first pull out a 28-27 victory saturday
PW'due, which lost its top-ratyear ol football alnce cooaoll- over upset-minded Wake Forest. ing when it feU last week to Ohio
daUon.
The winless Deacons shocked State, got a touchdown on a 14
JORDAN DIES
The North GaUla Pirates are the Olth-nnked Boilermakers by yard run by Jim K!Jolipatrick with
CHINO, Calif. (UP0- G, Pay- oow 3-4~ in aU gamea and 2..'1- taking a 17·7 halftime lead and
seven minutes remaining in the
, ton Jordan, father of U.S. o in the Southern Valley Athlet- held a 27-14 margin wid1 12
contest.
(. Olympic tcack and field coach Ic Conference and have mly Han- minutes left in the contest.
Reserve quarterback Don Klt&gt;Payton Jordan, has dled at hh IWl Trace left oo Its 196S SV AC
But Purdue's All - America peri, Wllng In for the iniw-ed
borne here from natural causes. scheW.le.
Leroy Keyes came to lite In the Mike P hlpps in the waning miDlie .... 72.
Rna! period and sparked the Boil- utes of the game, guided the BoU.•·..
Tbe elder Jordan i1 aurvived
ermakers
offense with determi~ ennaker offense on the final scorIn
referring
to
himself
the
1
t:Js hla widow, Rozslla, and two Pope does not use the pronoun
ed ruruling. Keyes had tumbled ing drive, cllj)pOd bY a two-yBrd
1m1. Payton Jordan Is head
''I'' but uses the formal papal six times in the first three per- nm by Keyes with only 1:15 to
track coach at Stanford Unlver- "We."
Iods, am Wake Forest recover- play. That ded It and Jeff Jones
alt;y at Palo Alto, Calif.

, ________________

ATHENS- Coach DonEskay'a
Athens Bulldogs grabbed off sole
possesalon or first pllce tn the
SEOAL F'rlday nll!ltt on I rei,_
soaked gridiron 1s the,y fought
back from a 14-0 deDctt to Inmet an 16-14 defeat on the Iron..

ton Tigers.
The flred-q&gt; Tigers took the
first Athens punt of the contest
and marched 71 yards In 11
plays to hit paydlrt. The big play
was a fine 37 yard pass from
Greg Sternaman to Mike Akers
thot carried to the Bulldog 17

booted the extra point for the
winning margin.
Keyes earlier had scored on a
19-yard run In the third period.
Tom Deacoo got Wake Forest off
and runniJV with a 2JI.yard lleld
goal in the tlrstperlod. Thentullb&amp;ck Jim Johnson galloped 24
yards in the aecondatan.atoglve
the Deacons a 10-0 spread.
The BoUennakers n,.oy got
on the scoreboard in the aecolll
perlcxl when fullb&amp;ek Perry Williams pl....,.. from the 2,yard
line, but Wake Fore at's star quarterback. Freddie Summers, moY.
ed across trom fOW' yarda out to
give the Deacons their halftime

advantage.
Buz Leavitt caught a seve~&gt;­
yard pass from Smnmers for a
touchdown in the third period and
Deacon booted a 311-yard lleld
gaol in the final stanza.
Ph.Jpps, who had an otr dQlast

QUALITY

CONSTIUCYION

week at Ohio State, again was

orr fonn before being Injured. He
COOijlleted only four ol10 po18ea
for 40 yards, whileKieperlpltched one e&lt;aqJletion in three trJes
and Keyes was unsuccessfUl in
two throws. In all, Purdue was 5
of 15 for 42 yards pual.., while
Summers connected on 22 of 31
for 182.

ONIIfOP

UIVICI

OVII

Buckeyes

21 MODILI

Scare JUS,
LOW

Lose, 14-6

CASH PIICI

NELSONVILLE - Pb.,mg on a
soaY llold at Nelaonvtlle Frl·
day nlaht the Jackson lronmen
had to batde froin bohlnd before
llrally nudglllJI I determlnod
Bueke)'e eleven by a 1f.6 score.
Playing In a ataady drizzle the
two team I fought off each other In
the first period uJt.U the Buck·
eyes began a sustained drive that
ended with a touchdown In the
aecon:l period. The TD came on
the ftrat play of the aeconl quar.
tar when quarterback Larry Evana rolled out on a l)(1rfer sweep
and ran 10 yards to score and give
the Buckeyes 1 6-0 hallllmelead.
1lle lronnen picked them·
selves out ot the Nebonvlllamud
alii came back to acore on a 22yard run by fullbock Gary Sox·
t011 owr the mtddle wtth 11:41
Ioftin the third quortar, Aconver11011 run tailed and the score wu
tied at 6-6.
Jacklon wnpped It "'wlthjuat
four minutes left in the contest
when halfback Darwin Valertlne

,_,

IIIIMIDIATI
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.I

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_____ ____________
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ran 11 yards for a touchdown and

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--------

lor A I - r . The ~shad
SO yanla rushing and no passing
yanlap.
Kyger Creek .•.. 6 6 0 6 -

IS
Alex..- .... .. ooso- 8

18.S.
Kypr Creek hBd 161lrlt downs

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MARAUDER STADIUM- Cooeh
Cbarlta Clancey'o Melp Maraudora cllfaated 1 eonatant dow,.
pour, mud puddles, aD:J 1 deter..
mlnod previouol)o - t a d
Wollaton Rocketa _ . team
bore Jl..2 Friday nJaht,
Jl..2 Frlda,y nll!ltL
The Marauders kDocliodwoJJ ..
ton out of a ftrst .Place tie with
Athens, which cllleatad Ironton.
Athena twa a tleapinstl4 Wollaton 1 de and the dillydunkerloss
to Mella. Metga hal been edged
twice, both tlmea by an extra

tt.n added a twOi)Oint conversion
nm to make it 14-6•
No ataUatic:1 were available on
the cod:elt, but both teams were
Pilaued with 6Lmblea due to the
ralo-IOiked gridiron, The win..,_
pod Jackloo' 1 leegue record to
3-.2 whlle U. Bucke)'ea remain
wlnlesa in flve lcq~ contesta.
Score by quartera:
JaekBOil
o o 6 8-14
Nala.-York
0 6 0 0- 6

yard line. The touchdown came
on 1 one yard plu,.. by freshmill tullb&amp;ck Rick Boykln wltll
5:06 left in the quarter. A cooversion rlll taled.
Following an exchange ofpunta
the Tl&amp;era started "' the mnddy
gridlron late in the 11rsl period
on amther acorq drive that
carried over into the second
quarter. The austalneddrlvecov·
ered 58 yards In 11 playa with
the touchdown coming on a 23yard scamper by Boyldn with
10:20 left In the second period.
BW Waahburn then paned to
Randy Edwards for the twC&gt;{lolnt
conversion lll:llrom&gt;n was sallIJV along with • 14-0 lead.
Athens was stunned but nat
out as halfback Mike Goo:Jw:ln
brcall!ltt them boek with a dazzl·
IJV 75-yard pwll rerum for a
touchdown 11 tho 7:02 mark of
the second quarter.
The second Bulldog TD wu
set '-1) when BW W1ahburn'a
punt traveled only six yards to
gtve Athena the baD on the TIger 34 yard line. Three play•
later Goodwin riRloll.....,.. the
coraor and oped 30 yards ror hia
aecon! TD of the oontesL Goodwin was s~ped on hh conver·
ston run at the 3:27 mark and
the lwUIIme score stood at 14-12.
BcXh teams sloshed around in
the mud for most of the third
period until Athelll took over on
the1r own H yard nne aed proceeded to roll 56 yards In 11
playa to score what became the
winning touchdown. Quarterbeek
Bob Handley raced 14 yards oo
an qrt:lon play to score with juat
30 secooos remaining In the third
period. The conversion run
falled, but Athens led 111-14.
In lhe final period Ironton waa
never able to mount. a serious
ttu-elt but AtheDB waa forced to
cough up the oval on downa at
the Tlaer 26 and 13 yard lines
In the late stages of the conteaL
DeiiPite the lou 1rolton was

again the winner In statistics as
the Tiprs led In tlrst down&amp; 138, in rushing 182 yards to 128
yards, an::l in passirw as they
c0111&gt;leted three ot 15 for 54
yards. The Bulldogs llllde sood
on three of seven tor 23 yards.
Each team lost the ball once on
fwnbles.
Boykln, the 192-pound freal&gt;rnan, carried the ball33 times for
120 yards while Goodwin Jed AlheDJ with 70 yards In 12 carries.
Athens ia oow in first place with
a 4-0-1 record while lrontondrO!&gt;ped to aeventh with a 1-4 mark.
Score by quarters:
Ironton
6 8 0 0-14
Athens
0 12 6 D-IS

Doc Smith
Says:

point

ANTI -FREEZE
WILLIAM

run.

It was a brilliant run .ol 65
yardo by Marauder Fullbock Ken
Wloh !rom his own 16 to the
Wollaton 19 that set up the wlnnl-w touchdown in the secolll

-

and hBd a total ci. 215 yordagalried COILIIJOfOd to eight !lrst downs

back, goinB over from the me
yard line for the score. Apln
as they had all evenln&amp; the Bol&gt;cata mlaeed the extra point&amp;
And, that's the way It ended

The llunda,y Time• • Sondnel, SUnday, October 20, J96S

.....,,

PENH

FULL STRENGTH

ANTI-FREEZE
1.25 gal.

First DowLll •..•• 6
YdL Ruohing ••• 147
Yda. Paul111 , , • 20
Total Yards , , •• 167
PuaeaAU. . . . . . 5

1.15 gal.

Po••••
eonw.. .. . 2
Puaea lntq&gt;d. . . .. o

In 55 Gal. Drumo

MEIGS
2nd
hall
o
IS
0
18
0

Aull- 10, 10
I

6
165

20
185
5

2

o
3
I

SCORING I
Aulto 10 yard pall play,

2
2

6
3

7-.226
3-JOS
10
0
YARDAGE
Via , •••• 6-20
Perdue .. 7- 4
Headly .. 3- 7
Lockhart •• 1-2

3-74
0

11-44 IIHI4
4-9 11-13
3-11 6-IS
I· 1 Z-3
1-12 1-12

SO IT WAS! - Melp Cheerl-ra Lola St.uer, loll, and
Brerda McGuire hold the large paper screen saying "l~Qpl­
neas Is Vlctory" that the Marauder team wert through whUe
going onto the field 1o defeat WeUaton 6-2 Friday nlghL The
drawing Is of "Snoopy" which was the theme for the Meigs
High Hcxnecomlng activitles.

Friday's High School Scores

Wooster Defeats Denison

HIIDS

.\ \'
'·'-'
'

,..

'

\

... ~~, ~

. ... ,~

enJ1.
Jell Wlae and Tim Aroot each
scored on one-yard runa, Tom
a..ntman passed 19 yards to
Ron Showalter for another touchdown and Ed Th00111son raced 74
yards for the ftnal Scot score.
II&gt;
' "'"·~
....,.

.

Wilmington is Beaten, 25-12

•oooto-·

•

WOOSTER,
Ohio (\JPI) W001ter scored In owry quarter
saturda,y to defeat Dem1011 28-0
In an otdoConterencepmehere.
Wooster Is now 1..2 in the conference aed 2-3 overall while DenITIIliT Ia 1·1 In the OC and 3-2 ov-

Worlt • rou wll~ Docfal-.ol
.. • poly11tet tticot, 41rlet
wrinldo-lno wllhl• 2 Hoi d1 roely tcn'1oNcl • • •
ood • -··Shawn
olwl........
f1l
In Ololl.
a lift, llhortp• 1 P•

WILliiNGTON, Ohio (UPI) Tailback Je.y w_.- scored two
touehclotma oo 1'UJII oi2Dandfive
;rll'da Soturcle.y to lead Slljlpery
Rock (Po.) Slate Collep1o • 2512 vlctocy owr WilmiJVton In a
1J111L0 marred by pe.-Jdes.

-Jar.

..........Jar. $9.00
STORE HOURS

Waper'a touchclawnrunacame
In the 11.-1 period and • ...,ped
I 12-12 tie. Wllmlngtoo deadlocked the IJIIILO In tha third

,•,

Mon. T~1. Wed. Sot,
9 to 5
Thur. 9 to 12
Fri. 9 to 8

:::·

r

·.

quarter on a 17-yard pols !rom
quarterback Bob IQoclmer to eoo
Jlm Sullhu In U. en;l zone.
11lo G..- Wave scored first
lD the ~ period on a 2~
yard run by bol1hack Bob Brown,
but Slippery Rock the
6-6, ona47.,.,-dpoaolrom
quarterback John Ross to Pat
Walsh In the aune atanza.

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'

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Dialer to pniLII 1o ......... E,....U Slundon 11 their
sdeiiiiWL of tho r..- Soptimbor, -Oai.Y thru excelltat
NL'11eo ud a 11r0111 dllln to ploua the peapt. al thla
· ... thlo bt acCOQtllahad. Mr. SoL 'tro naldeo at
Drl\llo Galllpollo,
hll lqnl)o. wilt LIDiu

• Kt..

'"*

~ ,. ~. l~~~---and.......-dL!Jdnta, Clro411 and · GaJ!Jpolla
prldl
·.';·· .to E~ llllldo fpLII;J, .c a :I 1""IIILI.

Morot
Co..
Ia
_....,

Academy 41 Ea&amp;t Knox 18
Cola. Llooen 38 Colo, East 12

College Scores
Pem 34 Lehll!lt G
Dartmouth 4S Brown 0
Colgate 14 Princton 7
PMC Coli. 7 Moravian 2
Villanova 28 Buffalo 7
Harvard 10 Cornell 0
Yolo 29 Columbia 7
Hol,y Cross 7 Boston University 7
ITIIlana (PL) Clarion (PL) 13
Gettysburl!lt 12 Bucknell 7
Cornogle-Moilon 48 Alleglleny 18
Union 24 Rensselaer Pol,y 14
WoaiDLinster 20 Union 6
Anny 24 Rulgors 0
Hamilton 18 Mlddlebury 14
Rhode l.sland 14 Massachusetta9
Upaala 16 Susquehanna 9
Hol&gt;art 14 Alfred 7
Williams 14 Bowdoin 7
Delaware st. 25 st. Paul's 0
Maryland 21 South Corollna 19
West Vlrlinla 20 Wm. &amp; Mary 0
Clemaoo 39 Duke 22
North Carolina 22 F1orlda 7
Morpn State 24 VIrginia Union 0
Navy 17 Pittsburgh 16
Geor!lia 32 Vanderbilt 6
Clladel 13 Vlrilnla Mil IML S
Geor!lia Tech 21 Auburn 20
JOOna Hopkins 42 Haverford 0
Rand.·Macoo 50 Maryville Coli. 0
Te-osee 10 Alabama 9
~dney 0 W&amp;ab. &amp; LeeO
Tulane 2s Booton
l4
Mlmoaota 14 Michigan Slate 13
Toledo 30 Western Michigan 6
Loulovllle 13 Maraholl 10
Bowlq Green 30 Kent State 7
Ohio Unlverslt;y 24 Miami (O.) 7
Ohio state 45 Northwestern 21
1lelhaiiJ 24 Western Reae"" 6
- . n Winola J8 ~ 17
Iowa !1 Wlaconsln 0
Kansas 49 OkiahcBna Slate l4
Notre Dome r;s Wlnois 8
No. Dakota St. 14 No. Dakota 8
VerqLO!LI 12 New Hampshire 10
JwdiLIL 2S Lycoming 7
CGmecUcut 29 Moine 0
Norwich 10 St. Lawrence 0
Amherst 26 llocheater 0
IIUble-.rs t5 Uralnus 6
FriDILiln &amp; Marohalf 24
Dlcldnaon7
Lalloptte 2'1 Dredl 0
N...-atora lO SpriTWIIold 7
lllaalasiPpl Zl ·s. Mlaalaai[;pl. 13

uvtrw- Coli 111 J.C. Smliho

West Vlqlnla St. 29 H'"'anl 0
NOrth CVallLLI Sl. II. Vtrpala 0

_

;,

LLLOI'LII!v. "I

to gtw WoJISioll the baD - ·

return. X-t~~~llhowedloterthore

.... ... break, -

.... palled

llpmenta, IUo ret1!1'11 to full
i1 Q.UIItionlble 1 how-

there so clote," he u1d.
But Worry iol bock 1rto the

ewr.

eed zone without alJilpl"" - · ·
or boiTW tackled short ot It, and
Barr iol hio free 40 yard pwl
from the 20thatputWollatonboek
to the Meigl 41 lifter carr returned 19 yards to that point.
WeUaton iol down to the Kelp
2S, but had to li YO 0., &amp;fter I
fumble and Worry fall oo the baD
twice to end the game.

Senior Rond1 Hawley came In
aoo performed with JII'Oit credit
for Whitlatch.
Top.,...... plner ol the pmo
was EJV)lsh wltlllHhar&lt;Harned
Yardl Jn 22 carries. Via led
WeUoton with 64 yards In 15
carries.
Moll• had the ecJ&amp;o In e"'ry
statistical department (see chart

eondltlon

oafet;y. That moc)e It 6..'1.
The llll!ltlander• had s e v e n
with an ln'Grall record ot 4--3-0 firat downs to four for Hannan
and a 3..2~ recorilln sv AC play. Trace. The llll!ltlandors C0!11&gt;1etThe llll!ltlandon are aaaured ci. ed 1118 o1 a 1 x - for 15yordo
at least a &amp;eeond plaee tie wWl and hBd 9S 111 the II'OOnd for a
North Gellla in the SV AC, North to4ai ci. 113 yards. The Wildcats
Gallla has oniJ' 1118 contooat left tried ....., posses wlUt no comIn the SV AC with Hannan Trace pleUma bu1 pined 74 yards m
next Friday. The Pirates are the IJ'O!DLd.
2..'1-0 In SVAC play.
By Qlartara;
11lo Highlanders' only Southnatarn • , .. 0 6 U 0 - 6
down came in tho seoond period Hannan Trace . . .. 0 0 0 2- 2

Gophers Stop Conversion
Effort to Triumph, 14-13
EAST LANSING, Mleb. (\JPI)-

Ohio Hll!lt School Football Scores
By Urdted Pre&amp;s International
lJma Senior 12 Mlddlotown 6
Sprtng. Sooth 14 Portsmouth 13
New Boston 28 Northwest 12
Zanesville 24 Newark 21
lolorpn 18 Tri-Valley 8
Sheridan 8 Mayovllle 0
Philo 30 Crookovllle 13
Barnesvlllo 12 Shenandoah 6
. Clmbrl4oe 38 CJaymoat ·o
Cola. Wool J4 Cols. Mohawk 0
Cols. Eaalmoor 26 Cols, WheL 6
Cols. Northland 26 Cola. North 0
Colo. SOuth 30 Cola. Will. Ridge 14
WorthlllgiOn 22 Reynoldsburg 0
Westerville 7 ML Vernon 0
Falr!leld Union 48 Lib. Union 0

eon-

One owner, air conditioned

Saturday

Kelp pold 1 Pl'lee for tha victory, Mlddlt ...,-dMaxWhltlatch
in tho aecond QUII'tor IUffered I
bool4- br1llaed - and cwlLl not

SVAC play and 0-7-4inaUpmea,
The win left the llll!ltlandera

0

0 0 0 2- 2

Clwncey

got alck all over after aendl""
In that fourth dowa aa1et;y ple.y,
thinkinJr ar all that eould hllj)pen

apeed and
wlliL tha tilll of VII' a alndeloow 32 yard
run. VIa, for example, J10t only

GALLIPOLIS - The Sooth- wllen Sootll Atha, 15D • )IOUIId
weatem llil!ltlandera downed aon1or ac-ed 2S yard&amp;m a
the Haman Traee Wildeata foke roverae 1o put Soothwest6 • 2 Frlda,y night at Mer- em ahead 6-4.
cerYIIJo in the lllahlandera 11na1
The Wlldeata Jlllt m the oeoreSoutltern Valley AthleUe C.er- board with lbwt three and a half
onee game of the - - ·
mlmLtea to Jill In the fourth - Jt waa Hannan Trace' a sev- ter wtl&amp;'l Jimmy D. Wl.lker, 182IILih conaeeutlve lo11 ot the sea- JIOUIId aenlor IUIIback, """ trap.
am. The Wlldeall are 0-3~ In pod In his own ormme for a

5
6-182

(SAFETY)

"I ohould have had ltlm Jill for
the aafet;y all8r two dooma," oal!l

-·r

Tho - - line and lllekara .-ned tiLe Wolltton

DOUBLE
CHECKED
USED
CARS
65 Buick
$2,195
Electra 4 Dr. Hard Top. One very careful local owner.
Fully equipped, with vinyl top. Factory Air ConditioMCI,
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nice.

Highlanders Win 66 Pontiac

o 6 o o-o

wolllllll

I

e&amp;lotJ.

8

SCORE BY QUARTERS:

Kelp

·: \

VIa 4 and lleedly 3 to tha II
But the weather and the pressure denied the Rockell. On the
next pJa.y, second down and a
yard, Lockhart fumbled and
44 •unebotb'"
for Melcs recovered on the Melp 2. There was
4:37 leflln the JIIIILO.
And Coaeh Olancey'o pr06lom
waa to bang orto the baD long
emul!lt to sat It&gt; • little or the
clock and aet it 1afely out of
there without a tumble or hiving
a pLDtt blocked, backed up tll!ltt
into his &lt;Mn eOO zone.
He sent Werry lnto the Hoe on
three anaaks, getUng the ball out
to the 6 yard nr.. then on rourth
down ordered him to run tho ball
bock Into the eoo zone for a

WELI.SfON
1st
2oo
Total
hair half
1
3
4
33
77
110
13
5
IS
46
S2
128
7
I
8
1
G
I
0
0
0

Bethel .... G
PASS RECEIVING
Perdue, 13i Bethel, 5

In 54 Gal. Drumo

•

Total

o

Poaaltloa , , ..... , 10
o
INDIVIDUAL
ETWillh ••• 14-125 11-19 22-144
Smltll .... 7- 19 4- 2 u- 21
WW!ama • ., Z- 8 I· I
3- 9
Werry • , , • I -5 7 -4 S -9

ALCOHOL
75e ,.1.

From then on Ute pme waa a
bottle of !leld pool don, the fewest
Aunbleo, the boot punting, aoo
the bost baD handllJV.
Wollaton had JII'Oal _........
Ues to pull out a victory ln the
second halt
lta tlnett came ln the fourth
period attar 1 Mike Barr punt
landed squarely on the 5D yard
line aoo almost sank oot olslibt,
without a bounce. On the first
play, the Rockets' tine Fullback
Toby VIa cleared his right eDd
aoo slogged 32 yards to the Moli•
18.
Now tired "'• sensl~a victory,
C.Och Bob Brennan sent VIa "'
the middle for 8 to the 10. Vii
waa held on the next play, but
Qw ta.,..k Rick Porduo )1012,

rO&lt;OW!red hy Rocky Willilmo.
On IILo !I rat Marauder play, E..Uoh oJ1pped betwnn his left
tackle and end, cut tothelert, and
wu off on his 66 )'Vder.
FrGm the Wellston 19, John
Smith got 8, then 2 to the 9,
EJV)lsh aot 4 to the fiw. A Aim·
ble set the Marauders back to
tbo 10.
On the next play' Quorterback
Jeff Werry hit Eoo Dennis Ault
In the rlibt nat at about the s
yard line wlthaperfeetpou. Ault
broke one tackle, outraced &amp;IP
other defender, and scored atandiTW Ll&gt;· Tbo extra point nm falled
ln an ocean of mud. There w11
6:67 len on the dock.

o

Fumbleo ••••••• , 2
I
Fumbles Lost . . . . . I
0
PLULII . . . . . . . . .3.83 4-143

METHANOL

quarter. Wellston had been atop.
pod 011 the Melia 17 b;y a Aunble

Meigs Statistics
1S1
half

NIVR,

below).

Meigs Shines in Rain: Wins 6-2

ana, lneludlnil three ~ ILIIIh
boyo, Mike White, Dovl!I .Mor·
IIIII and Som Bemett, *&gt; bid
)111 moved up to the -alt;y.
Fal..., atartera were , Lan7
Corpenter, Doo Wood, EJ-Ie llfDr·
ri•, GUI!aple, Randy S m II h,
RedmoLLcl, Dick Ord, M!Miluma,
Stove llalatead, Flelda, B,o b by
Rouob, Jludem, Clark and Gory
Slok,
1
!tartlng for Eastern w t r o
Tom Buckley, Ray Karr, Dml
lolora, Bob Wood, Raymond Cline,
DUL Grueur, Bob Rlt&amp;:hla, Jim
9tettler, Mike Boring, Tom Karr
and Elton steele.

EaiiiOI'LL ••.•••• 0 0 0 0- _0
Wahama.
• •• 13607-26

Bobcats Score Fifth Straight Win

Hoddng Lancers downed North

·-

.....

II -

Bv~o:

K
L
d
•
~~·y:" ·.-.·.:::2:~ 21~
eyes ea er tn
E!: ~;;. ::·:-:-: ·: ~ Fourth Quarter
Lancers Defeat Pirates, 24-0 Purdue Comeback

a pass from Guinther.
SECOND HALF
The Tornadoes battled strongly during the third quarter and

Wahaml LPI blek lD lt1- acor- fine c:t~~ter, ~ to record
later, Flolcll allllped a poll 1o
David GUllljlie who In to inl pattern apln In the laat a yardap pick-up al hill """ In
the pme u he ondocl up wltlt a
score. Thlo dmo, Burdette's try quarter I I Gory Clark went for the the extra JT(IInla wa a sood 1oward the lldtllneo, received lllmbled ball and ,...., four yards
and the Falcons came blek up sood block, aaw .-mg bul mud betoro belnl haUled down - •
field with a 13-4 leed.
and nt.r
him and the pretfJ' sood average for a .,...
In tho aecond quarter, It waa goal line and raeed 66 yard• 1o
The White Felcons travel thla
apln Bryllll Hud11011 who recov- paydlrl. Bordetle'a kick lor the
ered an Eqlea twnble - 1h11 extra point was apln sood this Friday to play the ~cor Yeltime oo the Eaatarn 30. On the Ume to 8Hi the pme'a acorlne. low Jackell In what Bhould bo a
first ple.y ll'om ocrlnunap,
Clark had another 55 yard aeor- cloae match and the Ea&amp;le• hoot
.Fields paaeed 1o GIWople ond he lng run celled back In third per- Southwestern•
All Wahama players saw ac.
turned 111 the steam, racing 70 Iod bai:ause ci. a clipping pen.
t1111
against the Melis Coundyards to make the margin JB~. alt;y.
The extra point wu no sood.
Robert Redmond, the Felcona

Defeats Alexander, 18-8

ron Guinther capped a Glouster
-drive with a two yard carry to
paydlri.
Coach Bob Ashley's Southern
ICJIIld came roaring back mldWIIJI in the aeoond period by
marching 99 yards for a six ...point- defensive safet;y and Roger Ours,
er on a 1 yard plunge by Senior a lineman, for tum1ng tn good
Bill Hoback. Jlmior Brewer then performances.
The Tornadoes host Alexancarried IJ\Ier the extra points and
der
this coming Friday night.
-ernled8-0.
B,y QJartero:
Southern, earlier In the same
stanza, had g&lt;Jtten down to the Southern . . . . 0 8 0 0- 8
Tomcat 6 yard line and lost the Glooster . . . . 6 8 0 16- 30
STATISTICS
pigskin m a twnble.
Southern Glouster
Glouster took a 14...8 advantaee before halltime when Dan- Yds. Rush . . . • .. 187 21J
DY Davis raced 11 yards oo a
IWN:P to score and Ernie Chal14
fant scored the extra points on First Downs •.. , • 13

'

-~~

Hamilton Twp. 56 Hartley 12
Granville 26 Watkins Memorial 0
Wash. C. H. 35 Circleville 8
North Union 26 Mt. Gilead 8
Athel\8 18 Ironton 14
Meigs 6 Wellston 2
Galllpolla 21 Logan 14
Unioto J2 Paint Valley 0
Mar. Hardlrw 26 Mana. Senior 20
Flllllay 8 Fremont Ross 6
Upper Slndusi&lt;Y 3D Bucyrus 8
Gahanna 16 Delaware Hayes 6
l,Wer Arlington 31 Chillicothe 6
Bellefontaine 8 Shawnee 0
Marlon Local 20 Minster 12
Sidney 41 Urbana 0
Cory-Rawson 62 Leipsic 0
Cleve. l!gts. 26 Euclid 14
Cl. Line. 18 Cl. Hol,y Name 12
Franklin llgts. 32 Teays Valley 14
Day, Col. White 30 Dayton Roth 14
Day. DwtJar 18 IJa.v. Roosevelt 6
Xenia 40 Doyton Stebbins 8
Wahama, W. VL 26 Eastern 0
Bellalre St. John's 21
Weirton f:l/. VL) Modonna 7
Cln. Aiken 20 Cln. Withrow 8
Cin. Courter Tech 25
Cin. Western HUI&amp; 0
oak HWs 18 Anderson 6
Canton McKinley 44
Toledo Devilbiss 12
Moas!Uon 20 Sleubenvllle 12
Alliance 6 Barterion 0
Qakwood 20 North Canton 14
Fairless 9 canton South 6
Glenwood 28 Terry 6
' C&amp;mbrld&amp;e 38 F'remont o
Warren Harding 25
Toledo Mac001ber 6
Columbiana 18 Sebring 14

Mlmesota linebacker TOIQ' p..,
hula and teamm.lte Steve ThoniJ&gt;oon smothered Mlchlpn State
quarterback BIU Trilllett oo a
two-point conversion effort with
2:30 left to play Soturday to preserve a 14--13 Bf.a Ten football
victory for the Gophers.

The dramatic "aucklen-death"
effort carne from the aeven-yard
line alter MlchlpnState"aopenalized live yards ror delay of
pme follow!JV an SJI.yard touchdown drive,
Trlpletl rolled to his rll!ltt and
looked back to his left for a roceiver, but was greeted by the
thuooerlrw Pshula and Thompsoo.
Moments later, the ~1rtans
again marchad deep Into Minnesota territory but the &amp;q)homore
qaarterblck, startirw his tint
pme due to an inJury to regular
BUI Feraco, was &amp;gain thrown
back tor losses and a laat-psp
53-yard field goalatleqlt by Gary
Boice wu way short.
Minnesota scored both of its
touchdowns in the third period,
one a 58-yard puN return by
oafet;y Dovg Roolotad.
The winning score came late lJ1
the period on 1 three-yard pass
li'&lt;lm QUirtorbaek Phil Hagen to
fullback Jbn C&amp;rter, climaxing a
56-yard Mlnneaota drh.. Bob
Stein kicked the crucial extra

321 by taking a 7..0 hallllme lead
oo a 1.3-yard paaa from Triplett
to eo:l Fnnk Foreman.
But the pleasure quickly turned to alomn after the intermission when R~lltad, a 5-foot-11
Junior, rambled umnolesteddown
the aldellne with 1 Michigan State
pmt rar the flrst Gqlher score.
The Spartans fought bock wltb
a swift march to the visitors• 10~
Yard llno.Th!'~ , attem,pta tope,.
etrate the em zone tailed and the
scorlng threat fizzled when a 27yard Oeld goal attempt by Bolce
went bad.
Michigan State refused, however, to gl ve In to a rugged Minnesota defense - one that forced
seven ~artan fumbJes- andregr~ for a touchdown with 2:34
remaining In the contest. T h e
score came on 17-yard pass
from Triplett to Foreman. The
ill - fated 11 go-for-broke'' effort
followed on instructions from
head coach Duffy Daul!lteriy.
Minnesota
o o 14 0- l4
MSU
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68 Pontiac

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65 Dodge

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66 Ford

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66 Buick

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63
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$1,895

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GaOU"R

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.,:·

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W/W Tiroo.

61 CHEVROLET BELAIR $295

and OLDS EJe-Poppers
1968 Cadillac H.T. Sedan DeVIlle ••• -- ·$5600
Gray 111etallic fini1h with black interior, full power
equipment, rodio, tinted glan, w/ a./w tires, Co111fort
Control Alr·Conditioning, 13,000 milet. One owner
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1968 Olds !IHuxwy Sedan • • • • - - • • - - ·$4600
White ov•r htrquoi .. metallic finish with tvrquoi ..
interior, full power equipment, tilt &amp; teletcop• after·
ing whNI, radio, tinted glass, w/s/w iir.. Corn·
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One owner new Olds tro.t.. Juat like new.

See yow authorized Cadillac dealer

COUPE DE VILLE

TEST DRIVE A
1969 CADILLAC

URI &amp; VAN ZANDT
MOTOR SALES
OPIN IVIS. TIL ltGO

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60 CORY AIR ______ $295
2 Door, Auto.

Trans., Radio and H.ater.

.•

::
.,..·

�1• -

The Sunclay Times • sentinel. Sunday. October 20, 1968

Upset Logan,

: Gallipolis Rallies
GALLIPOl.lS -

Jom-

David

went to t h e Logan 18, Dlllll
Beougher returned It to the LHS
44.
On a fourth and 20 lftuatlon,

tumed to the DevOs t8.
II took the GoWans ll plays
to mar&lt;h ~ yardS' - rlgllt up
the mlcldle of the lllge Chleltaln
rorward wall - to score. With
4:43 loR, Spenc:er oneaked over

Tom Prose replaced Ruu Elliott
at defenalve left end. Prose
crashed through and tossed QB
Rob Johnston Cor a 10-yard loaa
to assure GAHS the victory.
The Gallians had the pigskin
on the Logan eight when the final gun l'IOUI"lded.
The first quarter was all Gal lipolis. LOgan dominated the sec ond period. GAHS took charge
in the third stanza, and never
gave ~.P I .ogan failed to move followin,.; the initial ki ckoCf. Bob John ston's punt was taken lzy ~n­
em lbe GAHS 44, 1114 re-

rrom the one, then kicked the
extra paint lor a 7.1) GAllS lead,
In that drive, Neal carried five
Umel!l ror 29 yarda, Prose picked up 22 in five trips.
Logan lalled to advan&lt;e It
again . Johnston punted out - or •
bounds on the GAHS 38.
With Neal and Prose alternating, the Galllans picked up two
more Clrst downs. and marched
21 yarda to the Logan 41 as the
period ended.
Two success ive GAHS tumbles
(both r ecovered by the Gallians)
ended the drive. ~neer' s first
punt wont out ol baunda em the

That made It 21-14.
Fred WUaon'&amp; ensuing ktclmff

record, Overall, the GalliM&amp; are

l58..pound senior Dlue De- 3-4.
Before the disastrous Logan
' '11 defensive halfback, reOO\·ermidway in the final stanfumble
ed a rhuch Lowe rumble on the
z.a,
the
Chiertains were moving
GAHS 34 7:02 left In the fourth
goalward,
having marched £rom
period, snuffing out a Logan
their
own
16 to the GAHS 34
touchdown drh·e and possibl e
in
seven
pla.ya.
Prior to the Lowe
Chlef'tain virtory, then GaUipofumbl
e,
Chuck
Conrad,
170i)Ollnd
lls drove 66 ya rds in nine pl ays
senior
halfback,
had
galloped
35
to score its thi r d tou chdown of
yards
f1·om
the
Logan
30
to
the nigh+ and the re suh wa s a
the
[;,\J!
S
3:1,
It
was
the
giUJle's
IUI'prlsing 2 1-14 upset triumph
longest r un from s rrimmage.
for the Gallipolitans .
The cli ncher went like thi!l.
It was home eorning for the
Big l" huc h. Neal d ppedo£feight
host Blue De·vils, but onl y a
~·a
rd
s to the GAHS 42 a fter
handlull of spectator s were on
Lowe-'
s bobbl e. Neal then broke
hand ror the battle due to a st eactv
r ain whi ch fell tlwuughout the loose for a 24-yard gain ~ he
appea. rcd en route to pay dirt . but
48-m inme rontest.
All pre...game homecomi ng ac- stu mbled, and fell on the Logan
th ·itirs were washed oo t - th e 34.
(.,lua r tcr bac h. Tom
Spencer
cer emon,'t was conduc ted ins ide
picked
up
one.
then
added
19
foll owi ng the Blue De,·ils' big
oo
a
keeper
pi
a..v.
That
put
it
on
tr iumph .
The lo!'iis all tx.l t eli minated Lo- the Chiefs' 14 .
gan from the 1968 Southeastern
Neal banged up the middl e for
Ohio League title picture. The three, halfba ck Tom Prose got
char ges of Coac h Lou Parker si" to the fi11 e. Prose was s topare now 4-3 on th e .rear, and 3-2 pt"l.l for no gain . ~en ce r sneaked
ln side the confer ence.
for a firs t down on the Logan
The win left l"Otu.: h Clenn th ree. Neal r ammed it into the
Trout' s bo~·s with a Z-3 luop endzone wi th 3:38 remaining.
ICII'I,

Logan 25 -

it was a 15-yarder.

From here, the Chlef1 caught
lire, 011d drove 75 yard• In 10
playa. COnrad blasted off right
tackle tor the sh:..polqter with

6:20 left In the hall, The polnto

USE CLASSIFIED ADS ·----------------- to Buy, Sell, Swap, Rent or Hire·~
J

.

a John aton punt roll dead oo the
GAHS 12.
Eleven plays later, GAHS had
moved to the ~ 48, but a

took over m ita own 43.
CJn a third and eight situation,
Spencer rambled 18 yards on a

HFTl'H\ Y A:H1J\GF:

Y -\nOS HLS!IIr.:C

Call ipoli s . . . • .J '27 14 II- .JS
Loga n ..•... 22 0 12 2i- 61

((;allipolis)
PLAYf.R- Pos.
TCU YC A\"C;,
Neal, FB, . . .

. . 16

:13

5. H

Prose , HB..... . 2U l CI3 5. 1
Speocc r. QB, .... , 13 ri5 S.O
Hueholt, FB, ..... , I 2 ~.0
Johnson, li B, .•.... 1 - I -I
How ard, FB, , .•... ' -G .J
TOT Al..S

33 2J6

Ul

( Logan)

PLAYER- Pos. TC B y{; :\\ G
Conrad, HB, • . . . 16 90 5.6
Lowe, UB , .. , , • l.'i 63 ~.::!

Beougl1e r,

HB, . . . Jl 37 3.J
J ohnston, QB, . • . . 2 -10 -5
TOTAL~
H IHO ..J.I

-

TEA~I

ST ,\TISTI(S-

SCOHE BY QL'ARTERS
Gallipoli s .... , 7 0 H !l-:!1
Logrm .••..... U 1 ~

after attempt was tumbled by broken .IIIISS play, putting the ball
Johnston. Big gainer In the drive on Lop.n's 37.
Tom Prose got slx despite a
was Lowe's 21-yard gallop.
Another GAHS fumble forced fumble, reCO\Iered by Gib Craig,
Neal slammed for £our to the
the Gallians into a second punting situation moments later. O.leltaln 27.
Prose took a handotC !rom
~ncer's boot rolled dead on
~cer , cut to his left, and galthe Logan 31.
Eleven plays later, the lA&gt;gan· loped 27 yards into the endzone
era had marched 69 yards. With with 5:!4 left In the period.
18 seconds lert ln the hair, Dana Prose carried a Loganer over
Beougher slammed it 0\'er. Lo- the goal. GAHS stllltralled, 14gan led 12-7. Chuck Conrad rac- 13. ~nee:, on a keeper around
ed around right end ror the extn left end, put the Gallians ahead
for keeps, 15--14.
points. That made it 14-7.
Alter holdiru&lt; the Chie!s again
Big gainer in the Chieftain
-

0

Gallipoli s . . . . 5 U 6 1- lJ
Logan ••.•. ,. 0 9 1
Y .A.R IJS GA.I t\ED Rl"SI!f\G

~ - I~

12 1 0~ 83-270

Loga n .•. . • 11 105 19 :&gt; S-1 93
YARDS LOST Hl "SIII:\Ci
~pli,s ...... 1 2 l l li- 11
~n, ........ 1 0 ~ 10- 13

N'f:"r YARO~ RLSHI~G
Gallipolis .. 72 10 101 73- ~51;
Logan .• .• 10 105 J i B - lSO
PASSES ATI!CMPTEO
Gallipolis . . . . . . 0 I 2 1- -t

Logan . • . • . , , , I 1 U 0- 2

PASSES CO~IPLETCD
Gallipoli s . , . . . 0 1 I U-

~

P AS'i!::S ~TERCEP fED
Gallipol is . . . . . . . 0 0 0 0- 0
L Qff8n • , • . . . . . . U U ll U- U

YARDS GAlJ',;E O PAS.';I'\S
Gallipolis • , ... 0 1-1 0 0-

R

Logau • • • .
, 0 23 U 0- 23
T OTAL YAH DS (Rush-Pass)

Gallipoli s .. 72 18 101 73- :!64
L~ n ..... 10 128 17 18-203
P L .&lt;\'r'S FIWM 'ICRIMMACE

Gallipolis . . . 17 G t i
Logan • . • . . • 6 21

17 ~ :,7

'·
'.

'J·.·

'. '

In 1M erl1111o01
co,., ouJI;•IttN few clonlfiod od•

..

'"""
"· ..4o
Any c._,.,

c...,..
-' 25c t., •nh ch.,.o .

lront for the Gallla CounUanl.
Mike Cottrill was outatandlng on
delense for the Hoddng countl-

the tumble on the GAHS 34.
Gautpolia not only won on the

.,...,,,,...,.. will M

ca-,otl for oJtly " • •, of
1111101 fiw .. cl .. o o..-Mcl,
D. .clli•: ":JO p.M. dolly ollllll 11

Nelsonville - York In their final
home
game of the 1961 camThe Gallians coJieeted 15 first
downo, permitted 12, In total paign. k wUI be Parent'• Nlgllt_
yardo, GAHS gained 264 to Lo- l.opn playo at Welllllon, an up.
gan•a 203. GAHS controlled the aet vi &lt;lim of Melgo Friday nll!hl-

night_

•·•· s... urt&amp;o, .

In Memory

·~

smallest

all-channel

transceiver.

I 2 :! 1-6
0 U I H~ I

Ju st

Sl49

Co mple le with cr ys tal s
for a!! 23 chr.J rmels

play. Other players, left. to right, are Gallla's Glb Craig.
Bob Baxter , Logan's Dana Beougher (out- stretched), Mike
Canaday (on r ight) and Ron R1.1 5Sell , who appears to be doing
the Fr ug behind the big p il e up,

Highlanders Upset Big Blacks

J olmson, Prose,
Burnett, Howard, (.
\eal, llueholt, P. ~eal, l\l Canada:y.

(Logan)
Dl~ - Shaw , McFadden.
TACKLES - Co ttr ill , Hutc hison, Wal ker.

HJtter, D. Brow n,

.Joh nson.
CENTER - Elli s.
BACKS Adair, Beoughe r ,
Conrad, Johnston, Lowe, Me·
Broom.
OFFICIAL.&lt;; - foe Yanity, Bill
DcVaco, Paul T ribe, Art Chi ki,
At hens Chap ter.
1\EXT GAHS GAME- Friday,
Oct. 25, Nelsonville-York, home,
(Pare nts' Nig ht).

PT. PLE.~SANT - ,\ mi ssed
conve r sion point a fter P t. Pleasant 's second touchdown enabled
Huntington East to eke out a 1413 vic tory Friday.
The ga me was played in rain
rhat tuthed intO 8 downpour midway i n the thir d qua rter. Fourteen fumbles oceurred, with Pt.
Pleasant losinJ six and East one,
r he loss was the second
straight for Pt. Pleasant The
illa;::k Kni ghts, o nce ra ted fift h
in the state , los t 7..{) la~t week
to Milton. Tiley arc 4-:l- 1 fu r the
seas on wilile Ea.~ t is 2-5.
East held a 14-7 lead late in
the tlli r d qua rter when Pt. P lea sa m st.artcd its final touclldow•l
drive. The Blat:k Knigh ts mo ved
76 .}'ards in 15 pla ys, with t he
big gainer Jx&gt;i ng a 42-yard pass
fro m Pete M~ De rmott to Doug
Jackson that put the ball at the
Ea st 2~. Greg Clayton finally
scor ed from t he four, but Mike
Rawson's place ment try fur t h ~
tying po int was off to the le ft.

!'he Hi g hl a nders took th e
open ing kickoff and
game ' s
marc hed 71 ya rd s for their fir st
score. Steve Morr ison passed
18 )ard ~ to Larry Cam) wreach
the I'L Pleasant 3'3. Dan Muth
then went the d l"sUm~e fo r t h e
touchdown and Cam'J added the
extra poi m by kic k.
The Black Knight s c am·~ r ight
back to tic th e gam• \ o-~:1 1is Niber t set up the score by re turning the ki ckoff 63 )"ard s to tile
Eas t 31. Pt. P lea sant needed s t:\1en pia) s to score as Don Riffl e
plunged over fr om the one, Raw son made t.hc placerrM.;nl.
Eas t scored the go-ahead points
in the fi nal period by mar&lt;'hing
76 yards in 15 plays. Ken McCarley tapped t.ht: dri ve by sco ring from the one and Camp made
the pla{·emcnt..
Eao;; : bl ew a chance to add another scor e late in the game.
Hoge r Barcus , on on ~ 0f his three
fum ble ret:ove ri~s of the nig ht,
got the Highla nder s the ball at

-

I -I_

PT. PLEASANT
SOUTHERN STATES

Packed wi th h igh pe rfo rm a n&lt;:e fea tures.
Clock-co n trolled au to m ati&lt;: oven . A vto mctic pre -heat . Re m ovab le infmite he at
top e l emen t ~ . Signol li g hts for oven a nd
top un its. Plu s mony mom .
No P880 ·3 PW

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with o n e -h o v r ti m e r . Appl ian ce o utlet .
P lv~ many mor e o u ts ta nd i ng feo tures.
No . P2070 3EGPW

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SOUTHERN STATES POINT PLEASANT
CO-OPERAliVE INC.
Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.

Your Southern States Cooperative Agency

•
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Ever·ything in Two Way Radios,
Antennas ond Acceuories 11

,.

GA.lllPOLIS, OHIO 45631 ;..... fttifNE «~451'7
GEORGE'S .CREEK ROAD

;

..., .......

IJRGER CHEF
Valuable National fran-

SHALLOW

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and

For information, Call
Columbus 237-6354.

44
96
84
72
115
134
157

FULL
FAUCET
FOBCE!
•
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Wanted
CARRIERS lor moming paper
routes In GaWpoUs. SI.OO
weekly eaminp. Ph. 44M'IIO

stU

Female Help Wan!M
WOMEN I'UR PART time ""rk
In Gallla Co. Write Corl Cosmetics, 24S'/ So. lOth st. Ironton, Ohio 45838.
LJVING IS EASIER WITH
PLENTY OF WATER PRESSURE
You can rWl the automatic wash-

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run

part or
time, No e"""rt"""e required. COmpletetral,.
liW liven to acCO[)Ied
c:antL call 3~266, 4 to 6 p.
m.
?-46-1

tlme and still have plenty of
water pressure tor bath or show·
er. Myers Ejecto Pump makes
it possible. Only o ne movirw; part.
Sturdy. Smooth runnl~ . VIrtually
maintenance free.

R~U t TS:

,\ SCOUT
PHlL \IJEI.PlllA (U PO - Ger.
r y Mel nyk , a former c&lt;.&gt;nter ror
the Philadelphia Flyers, ha s
rejoined the National Ho ckey
League club aa a scout.
Melnyk, £arced to r eti re from
hockey because or a heart
a ilment. will seoul the Canadian
province s or Alberta and nriti sh
Columbia rrom hi s headquarte rs
in Edmonton. Alber·la.

ewn-

Help Wanted
MAN TO work In service sta-

The Price is RIGHT at Pickensl

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446-3628.
246-1

TUB ENCLOSURES

For Sale or Trade

MEDICINE CABINETS
BATHROOM
LIGHTS
BATHROOM
HEATERS

Hot Water

BATHROOM
FIXTURES
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wide ovals, 6000 actual mllos.
4 yean fadory warranty ,..
malning, financing available.
Pll, C46-1544.
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IAw rem.~ pr1..,. tor ran
till 'til model Apache Camp-

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low new IIlii demaft.
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JOMEN WANTED: E:.panded dlvilion of Helene curtll CoameUcs hal openings tor beaoQ' Illes demonstrators towork

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675-2780

11

62

DETROIT (U PQ - Pitching
coach Johnny Saln, t:redlted
with a major r ole In deve loping
the mound 5taff that br ought
Detroit the World Serie s title,
wi ll return next sea son in the
same capaci ty with the ,\me r ican League club.
The Tigers rounded out thei r
coaching s tarr for n e ~ season
Friday by reappointing Sa.in and
bullpen coach Hal Naragon.

Saves t•m e for ho me ma kers Get s a se rv.
•ce for 14 spot le ss. Au tom al1 c de ttorge nt
d 1 ~penser Bu ilt -m water h eo t•ng boos ter
Plate wormer Roll s easily N o . HFD

EXCELLENT business opportunlly for husband and wife
team. Must have some capital. Will finance right party.
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Tnly St., Dayton, 0 . 4M04,
area code 513-461-S775.

OP

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Unico Portable Formica -Top
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• MODERATE PRICES

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DEEP WELL

Gallipolis 21 Logan 14
Meigs 6 We ll ston 2
Athens 18 Ir onton 1q
Jackson 1.4 Nel s. Yor k fi
OCT. 25 GAMES'
Nels.-York at Ga ll ipoli s
.A.thens at Jackson
Logan a t Well ston
MPigs at Ironton

Unico 36" Gas RangeOnly $27.90 Down

246-1

Bob's Citizens Band Radio
Equipment

SEO Standings

SEOA L ONLY
TE AM
W L T POP
A.thens . . . . . 4 0 1 52 35
Wellston ••.• 3 1 1 62 26
Lagan ••• , .. 3 2 0 78 63
Meigs . . . . . . 3 2 u 82 38
Jackson . , •. , 3 2 0 95 76
Gallipoli s .... 2 3 0 58 88
Ironton . ..•.. 1 4 0 92 93
Nel s.-Y o rk ., .. 0 5 0 28 128
TOTALS
19 19 2 547 547

Unico 30" Electric RangeOnly $28 .90 Down

time on Thursdays, «herdlys,
after 5 p. m. Ph. 446-2089,

S44's

Los Angeles Oct, 22 to begin
the Pt. Pleasant five, l·lowe ..,e r, their 33-da,y toor or Japan,
Last eventuall &gt; r an out of downs General Manager Bing Devine
at th e one.
aMounced Friday .
T he Black Kni g hts attempted to
Neither Hoger Marh nor
m~ke a late rall y and hit on s ix
Julian Javier will make the
short passes to get to the44 when
trip. Maris . has re~red and
the gam·~ -e n:1ed. ·
Javier will be managing ln the
ll unL Ea st
707 0- 14 Dominican
Republic
Winter
PL Pleasa nt
7 0 u 6- 13
League.
Scoring- Eas t: M•1th, 33 yd.
run (Camp kick); McCarle y,! yd,
run (Camp ki ck). Pt. Plea san t:
Hiffie , 5 yd. r un (Kawson ki ck);
Cla,y ton, 4 yd. r un (ki ck railed).

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L T P
Athtm s . ..•••• 5 1 1 106
Well ston ...... 5
I 138
J ackson ...•• 5 2 0 151
Loga n ....... 4 3 0 98
Meigs ...•... 4 J 0 101
Gallipoli s ..... 3 4 0 92
Nels.·York .... 2 5 0 74
lr.:mton ....... I 6 0 106

CALL AT 19241/, Eastern Ava,
lor Rawlellh ProductJ any

CB-20 5 CHANNEL SOLID
STATE RADIOS LEFT AT

CARDIN ALS TO J APAN
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For Sale

For Sale
36" X 23" X.OO!l

11166 FORD Galalle 500. Pll.
446-1011.
SM-3

FURNISHED apartment, conlacl Stella Arnold, Park ConIra! Hotel.
'lf.lf

Aluminum
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USED cash reglslera, National,
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Pig. &amp; Office Equip. 44f.13!1'1.
Z30-tl

SLEEPING rooms. weekly
rates. Park Central Hotel.
78-tf
BRADBURY efficiency apartment. first floor, adulll only.
719 SeOOil&lt;l Ave.
231-11

ll~t~d

Offset Plate&amp;
HAVE

MANY USES

2oe

Bfor$1.00

Gallipolis Dally
Tribune

24H

FURNISHED apartment, I
rooms and bath. Pit 446 3500.
:144-3

l"YPEWRITERS, adding machInes, new and ooed. Simmons
Pig. II Office Equip. C46-IS97.
230-tf

Off. 446 3643
En. 446-UH
446-4500

~PPLES

- Grimes, Red and
Golden DeUclous, Jonat!lan,
Mclntoob, Romes, Winesap:
Sweet elder, pumpklno. Sigler's PmdlU!e Mkt., 742 Third
Ave .. GallipoUs. 0 .
246-6

GERMAN Shepherd puppies,
bappy, healthy, farm railed.
AKC reg. Phone Jact.. llfl.
2251 or 28fl.1778.
:MU

A Sllrt:B IN TD1B
ll1611 ZIG ZAG automatle - lng machine, tbll baa II buill
In dealgns, make&amp; buttonholel.
This original aold fl9ti.I!G now
pay only f/5 or f5 per month.
Call 675-3081.
~
61 CHEVROLET lmpela, bladt
&amp; white finish wllb red Inter·
ior, good oonditlon. Call Carla Swain, 256-6752.
246-3
AKC PEKINGESE
Ph. 44e.al&amp;7.

PUPPY.
3M-3

Magnificent Vi•w
4 Beclroom~anch
THIS LOVELY

HOW!

t• •

WILL SA'J1SFY YOVB EVERY
WISH, 4 HUGE BEDROOMS
30 UVINO ROOM. LAROE l'A.M·
R.Y ROOIII
WITH
NATURAL

STONE I'LOOIR. 3 BATHS, FOil ·
MAL DINING ROOII, WOOD
BURNING FIRE PLACE, AND ::1

BON
BUlU' RTSfro I, A.TELY1'
YOU WILL RJ: WREN YOU !liD
THIS BRAND NZW MODDN
JOTCRN IN THill OLOD ROJIE
ON UPPER IND . JNCLUDEI!I A
NYW n rRN ACE AND Ill IN IX ·
CELLENT CONDm()N JN' OTIIIR
R1:8PPJCT8. LAIIIGE LOT.

LOT WITH ONE crr Tim BEST
\'li:WS AWNG THE 01DO. OW:ftB LZAVII&gt;j' G
STATE
AND
HOP'IS T1B NEXT FAMILY EN·
.liOY lT A8 MUCH All 'I'BSY

HAVE.

3 Beciroom Brick
WC A TED ON ROt.I'I'E S5. A

nN'I

HOIR IN A FINE LOCATION
WB HAVE 3 TO CHOOSit FROM

3Beclroom
Full Basement
THill KOMI WAS WELL BUJLT
TO Bl:GrN wrrR AND RAt ltAn
U:C&amp;LL"ENT
CA1l"l
51'~.
LOVII!LY
CAR.PimCD (lVIJ«&lt;
ROOII wrn1 rtR! Pt.ACB. FA·
MILY Jt.OOM AND GARAGE Lf'•
CATII:D ON A LARG"I LOT lUST
O'UT OF TOWN I MJLB.

For Rent

whal cleaning
when you use
Rent electric
Farmer'o HardHf-6

STEREO, AM FM, radio, 4
speed automatic changer.
Walnut c:onsole model. Will
sacrifice for f18.32 or lllOilthly paymenll. Call 446-1021.

10:30
11:00
11:45
12:00
12:15
12:30

2Bedroom
$8,200
VlmtY NlCE 4 B"ED"ROOM J10ME
ON LARG"! TREE SliADim LOT .
~

OlltterboJI
The Morning World &amp; MaiiOCl Co. Newo
Com'nl\Y and Markel Newo
Bulletin Boord
Preae&lt;ulor Rpls. (Mon.)

Farm &amp; Hmte (Tues .•
Wed., Thun.)
12:45 Country Go Round

4:00 lntercha~
5:00 News, Weather,~~
(SATURDAYS)
11:55 Washington REports
12:00 News Rount:hc&gt;
12:15 Bulletin Boord
12:30 The "In" Sourl:l
12:35 Tee•Tlme '68
4:00 Inlerclw&gt;go
5:00 News, Weather , ~rts

5:30 Sunoet Serenade

(UnW

SlgJ&gt;&lt;)tl)

ROOM FOR A MOBnE

Jroft. LOCATED ON I!:DG'E OF

New 3 Bedroom

8:00

Centenary

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

Dillon Agency

0. D. PARSONS
REALTOR

UNUSUAL HOME
Loc:ated on a wooded lot. HO!
'l woman's dream kitchen. 3
llR, 3 tile baths In color, play
room, T.V. room , 2 WB fireplaces, cathedral ceiling, wool
c~rpet throughout. a view of
:he Ohio River lrom lhe sun
deck. car port.

· 9:45 01Udron•o Ollpol
10:00 Music lor SUnc1117
10:30 Flrot Bopdot Olurcb
11:30 GollliOI ol Chrlat
12:00 New•
12:15 Trlnl\Y Hcur
12:4$ Catholl&lt; [nfarmatlon
1:00 Olurch or God
1:30 Goopel call
2:00 SuJ1da¥ Drl ve Tlmll
5: 00News~

WJEH·FM LOG
(Dally ex&lt;'llt where

6:00

lndlcotooll

and Earl,y Show (utept Sundllya)
Sign

011

(SUNDAYS)
and the Singing

Sign ():,

8:05 Mual&lt; Unlimited
10:30 Chatterbox (except saturday and Somda¥)
11:00 Muol&lt; Unlimited
11:45 All the News (e:o:'lll Sun.)
12:00 Newo (Sunday only)
12:15 Mualc Unlimited
5:00 News
5:15 Dinner Serenade

7:00 Evenl~ Sereowdo
9:45 Armed Forces Showa
10:00 First National Ft.l
10:15 Music UnW Slgn Off

Preacher

YOU WILL ENJOY A NI:W
MOD. KV"KR.Y QN"I W'"DL TICLL
VOU ROW LUCKY YOU All&amp;.
THlS ONE R.-\8 A MODERN 10'1'·
CIIBN.
ATI"A.CHJ:D GARA.OJ:
AND NlCit tnCATroN. rtiLL
PRICE .11,71!10.

'I"'WN ON 141 .

new. Thai's
rugs will do
Blue Lustre.
shampooer $1.
ware Co.

MONDAYS THRU FRIDAYS)
7:4$ Echooo or Joy
8:00 Ohio Valley News
8:15 ~k olllle Town
9:15 The Mornlne s.-

3 Bedroom !\rick
ll!'rC""Ir.I,LENT LOCATION WrrK
RIV..::tt VIEW . MODERN HOME
wmt: FULL BASEMENT, UP TO
DATE JnTC'HZN.

'

8:00Newo~

CAA GARAGE. LOCATED ON A
LARO.I n.A.T 1'1\D SHADED

Farm, Vlllap, CH7 P"'ropa-nly
Pbone 44U:III

7 ACRES
Seven rooms &amp; bath, Jarge ldlr hen, full basement. garage,

rail bam, spring, Kyger Creek
•choola.

Live Sports 8nJod.
cas ts wtu s\C)8rcecle reptar progruna whell. aeheduled.)

(Note:

8:15 News

8:30 Herold or Truth
9:00 Protestant Hour

9:30 Aunt Bertha

Real Estate For Sale
D. H. WOOD, Realtor
Phone 446-1066
I A., nice comfortable borne,

Services Offered
CERTIFIED electric and . .
welding, mechanic, bocl7 1101
fender work. 12 yean eliiJII"
lence, work guaranteed. T:a
a.m. UIIO p.m. 7 da)'l a weoll.
Joe'o Ashland SiaUDII, Jll6.
well, 0. ·
till-If

two large bedroorn.o, hard·
wood fioor , large kitchen, cal&gt;
inets , aluminum siding, two
water oystems, one on well
and another on large &lt;IBtern,
Plumbing &amp; Heating
10.000 pl., garage, fuel oil
STANDARD
PWMIIJiiiG a
furnace, nice bath. Located
HEATING,
Ill
'ndnl A ill Village. Price worth the
44UIIZ,
..
money.
LARGE lot, 3 bedroom brick,
IIRAMMER'I
part basemen!, bath, with
Phnnblbc
1101 11ea1111
new decorating you could in300
4th
Ave.,
446-lD'I.
crease the value of the properly c:onsklerable. If you are
looking for value In a good lo.
DEWIII'S PLUliiBIIIO
cation see tbll. Will finance
AND IIEA'l1NG
easily. f9000.
3 BEDROOM home In city, lot ROUTE 110 at Ever!P-· PI!.
446-2'135.
171 II
180l:42, partly furnished , stove,
washing machine, breakfast
Insurance
sel, elc. Will sell on land oonFOR ALL your lniiUl'lni:O .......
tra&lt;l. $4750.
check wllh your Grsnge _,!
WE HAVE several nice homes.
enll
at the Neal Ina. AIOMJ,
See us. Always nice to talk
64
State
St. AieniB for aulD,
lo you.
fire,
Homeowners,
...pltal
Even lags:
and
general
Uablllly.
M-41
Rossell D. Wood UC MIS
John I. Rlcb~
NATIONWIDE INSURANCE
Ronald K. Caaaday 1113131
Atrro. Ore. llfe. 4S Stale ..
Waldo F. Brown, W.
Services OHered
Bmwr.. C46-IIIIO.
M

HONDA 300. excellenl oondl60 ACRES
llon, $350. Kitchen set wllh STEREO. Early American steFour
room
house, Y.a A. Tob.
80 ACRES
formica lop and 4 chairs, 120.
reo, radio combinallon. Solid
P.,
bam.
spring,
pasture, plenLocated on State Road , large
Ph. 446-0785 or 446-1835. 24:1-5
slate unil, 4 speed changer,
ty water, Green Twp. $6,500.
FURNISHED 3 rooms and bath,
bar n. .86 tobacco base , fnir
lovely maple finish . Make payall utlllttes paid, adulll onlJ.
105 ACRES
A GOOD DEAL
ments of $6.00 per month or fence. plenty water, l'h story
Pll. C46-l519.
244-tf 1968 AM/FM stereo console
modern home, 3 BR. nice kit- On St. Rt. 160 across from N.
balance of $98.12. Call C46&lt;hen with plenty cabinets. front Gallla School, Good 3 BR home,
wllh 4 speed automallc chan1028.
3M-3
2 BEDROOM apartment, kitnorch
covering a picture wln- 1.1rge barn. blrtgs , milk house,
ger. 4 speaker sound system.
eben furnlshed. Ph. 4441 3329.
•llo. 3 pondo. Buy the whole
Jow
.
Price
112,500.
Lovely walnut console. Take !1166 CORVE1TE convertible
246-&lt;1
farm
or any tract you want .
over payments of $1.50 per
84 ACRES
427, 425 four speed. Pll. 25fl.
SPACIOUS COUNTRY HOME
RT. 7
week or pay '104.12. Try It
6954.
Z4fl.6 ~orth of Thurman , farm is clean
located on Triple E Ranch,
In your home. 675-30111. 24:1-tf
Modern
3
year old home, 8
in gra ss and good fence , some
a..LWb,t,te !load•.~ l!eflmme,
r ood timber' this is ideal for rooms &amp; bath, full basement, 2
upslaln plus storage room II WE HAVE some real buys In STEEL 'mAPS $5.75 dozen, cnttle farm , plenty water, 5 fireplaces , carport, Kyger Creek
killer traps $12 dozen. wire
modem full bath. 5 rooms
used cameras, all types, moalretcbers $4.65 dozen, tap, room home. Needs some re- Schools, mid-teens.
downstairs with modem builtvie or still. Tawney Studio, 422
lures and knives. Open 4 p m. pair. $11,500.
BUILDING SITES
In kitchen plus ball bath. New
Second Ave.
243-6
to 10 p.m. dally. Ph . '1'13-j;Z9Q . NEED 3 BEDROOMS?
City.
Kanauga, Rl. 100, Rl. 141,
fuel oil furnace. Rented only
Maran Fur House. N'ortn Ranch style home wllh large Rl. 7. Any school dlslricl. Also
by lease; $125 per mo. Shown &lt;;LEANINGEST CARPET cleanBrown St , Masoo, W. Va. 0 . T..R carpeted, buill·in kitchen, vacant land.
by appointment. Pbooe C46er you ever used. so easy too.
0
. Wright and Sons.
3M-3 laundry room, car port, awnTRYING TO SEIL1
2443, 9 to 5, or call Emerson
Get Blue Luslre. Renl electric
ings, natural gas and city waCAlL US!
E. Evans.
Hfl.3
shampooer $1. Central Supply
Joy Shoppanl, 44S-e19
ler, large lot, c an assume a
Co.
246-6
loan al 5% Int. Small down
Earl Wlnl&lt;rs, 44t 1m'
FURNISHED APARTMENT payment
low
mo.
payments.
Wayne
Amobary,
3 rooms and plenty of storage
Vacant.
space. All DeW!y re-de&lt;orated,
NEW GMC TRUCK
WANT A HOME?
BAIRD REALTY CO.
clean, private, reasonable. PI!.
O..op
by
the
DILLON
AGENCY
C46-3627 after 5. James E.
HEADQUARTERS
Oscar Baird, Realtor
Two Patrol Leadel'll
OFFICE window and view lhe
Danner,
:116-tf
1966 1&gt; T. GMC Pickup
WITH
Bldg. Lots
NEW LOCATION
wide selection of beautiful borne
1967 I&gt; T. GMC Pickup
Reported Elected
TIDRD &amp; STATE 1111tEETS pictures - tinted In oil to belp LOOK? We have flat bldg. loll
- ForSale
1958 I&gt; T. Ford Pl&lt;lwp
for
as
low
as
$l,ll0ll
on
black·
in your decision of a future
NEW LISTING
1957 2 T. GMC
• I • I ( ,' .
1968 HONDA 175 &amp; rambler, Ph,
top rd . call us loclay.
!' \ i
home . While there - drop In
PT, PLEASANT - Sharon HOIIYOU'LL
like
everything
about
1965
GMC
Suburban
446-4327,
246-1
ry
and Tina Cauter have bean
and
list
your
home
.
Let
us
place
Will
Trade
BR,
I
I&gt;
story
ltome
Jo.
this
4
1958 2 T Studebaker
elected
patrol leaders Cor for·
the
picture
of
your
home
in
OWNER
anllous
to
aeU
their
cated
on
a
large
lol
about
3
New 5 T Farm Wagons
mer
Girl
Scout Troop 83 wld&lt;h
our
window.
Our
service
does1131&gt;
A.
!arm.
2
story
home,
mUes from town. Ha• a two
,1311.50
oow
bel&lt;qa
to Mountain llllrol
barn, .64 lob. base. Will take
420 JOHN DEERE trawler
car garage and Is priced be· n'l cost, H pays beneflll from
1962 21&gt; T. Chev.
Girl
Scout
Cwn&lt;U
with headtractor, 14 inch track, 6 toot
housetraller ln.
low the cost to replace. Cali our active sales efforts.
1958 I&gt; T. GMC plc:lwp
quarters
ln
Charleoloo
and the
blade, power take off, low
today for an appointment.
1964 2 T. IntemaUonal
JUST LISTED
Four Bedrooms
Thurman, Ohio
troop
rumber
has
been
chanpdto
hours. Call 446-2957.
246-3
IF YOU can qualify you can 6 r oom - one story home on HERE'S a lovely home deslsn1955 1&gt; T. Dodge pickup
33 year a Axperience
683.
buy lbls 2 BR home wllh St. Rt. 35, large all modem kit·
1968 II&gt; T. Dodge truck
ed for the large family . ll
PIKine 211&gt;-5269 or
Aaslllanl.lllltrol loaders olect00 RENAULT for parts, all In
basement, wall to wan car· chen with range and oven and
Central Soya
446-2463
1956 2 T. Int. Tractor
includes lOY.. A.. a rooms, n!ce
ed
are Joy&lt;e Lanham and llobpet In living room, attached snack bar, tile bath with showAI condlllon. 388-8751. 245-3 1963 \1 T. Chev. pickup
balb, big kitchen, utility room,
ble
Garrtoon. Linda McKIINy
prage for f500 down and er, 3 BR. basement, TV room
2 car garage, and W/B fire.
1966 I T. GMC
TERMITE PEST CONTROL was named secretary and BarCOAL FURNACE, new gas wabalanee llke renl. Located paneled, carport, tot 100' x 300'.
I Minneapolis Moline Powor
place in lhe extra large liv- FREE Inspection. call ~ bara WUcoxen, treaaiU'er. Mra.
ter heater, an malertala In 2
near
town
on
SR
5811.
Price
$18,500.
Unit
ing room overlooking the Oblo
Merrlll O'Dell, Operator for Rex Garrtsm Ia the leader ol
story frame house, windows,
New 60'' Rotary Cutfen River.
MAKE US AN OFFER
Elrtermllal
Termite llervtc. the troop and meetlnp wtU be
60 ACRES
doors, etc. See at N. Second
$199.50. New 8.25 x 20. 10 ply ON TIDS 53 acre farm lOCated 6 mDee east of Rio Grande, hO!
10
Belmont
Dr.
lll'f II held bl-WeOkl.Y at the Preob;rterPrime Location
Ave. Middleport by Blue Su·
nylon tires SSS. Inc. Jl'edersl
2 miles from town, % BR tobacco base, alra good fence, FOR $7500, you can buy this big
lan Chur&lt;h.
noco Station.
254-3
tu.
home with balh and base. lO acrea farm land, ...
2 olory home and 6 A., only
OOLL House Nursery triDipGI'
n•to VaHey Jmpltmenl 81,
men!.
springs
and
farm pond, bam
2 miles drive from downtown.
2 SADDLES, 2 bridles, 44fi.0648.
laUon avallable, reasonable
133 Pine Sl. P.. Ill !131.
and plenty oot bulldlnp, 11&gt; om"' Pen• 446-4111 u Bn.
DON'T DELAY
Sl$-3
rates also for ahopplng or
141 II
story home, bath, ldlchen bas
EveaiDp
&amp; BE SORRY
wortlng mothe111, ltourly, dalDoug
Welllerbolt,
Pb. 4*4ZH
2 REGISTERED Suffolk Rams, GOOD CLEAN LUMP and stok. OWNER aRilous to oell thlo plenty cablneb. Price f!USO.
ly or weekly rsteo. PI!. C46Rob&lt;rt L. IIUII, P.. ltlllll
LOCATION?
nearly new 3 BR ltome with
l mare pony with colt. All
4DS.
M If
er coal. Carl Winton, Rio
attached garage. Thel'lllO- This lwo story home Is located
kinda lroplcal fish. 44fl.2947.
Grande. Phone 245·5115. S.tf
pane wlndowo and oulllde lr !be heart of down town 34W
Services OHerad
'tal Gllllal'
ond
near churches. sd!ool and shop.
patio.
IF YOU are buDding a new
REYNOLD'S
GALLIPOLIB
TV
WATER
Anytime
Day
or
om.. PI!. 411 . .1
PRDFESSIOMAL
ping. Has 4 BR, 2 balh, dlnlnc
11161 PL \'MOUTH 4 door sedan,
home or remodeling, oeo us.
4311 Second A Nighl.
Da)'I&gt;-Ph. 388118M,
Cllll!eo
M.
Neal
44f.Illll
room,
laundry,
storm
wiDdows
A.UCTIOM
SERVICE
new tires, beater. turn 1118We are buDders. l)lltrlbulor
Across from l'osl Ollke
Eventns• - J . B. or Leo
nnd
doors,
earport
and
storqe
nals, A-1 Sllape, must seU due
for Rotpolnt Appllances, ADIbuy and . . 11 CoMpt.te
"- •. Nibert Phone 446-0111
Kina Ill 11M or Ronnie SkidCorter Mode, 441-#ltl
room, basement.
•• , ..... Call R. E. rN&lt;&gt;n·&lt;l
to beallh. One owner, ~ ftb
aon Eloctrie.
1M II
Your Emerson Dealer more C46-l'l56.
m.tf
.U6-H17 at 1163 Second
Ave.
Jl5..l
BEAunFUL
Av• .• Galllpoll•.
Far Sale By Onor
LOW. LOW. PRICES on Mat.
PICTURESQUE VIEW
PINKING SHEARS sharpenad
Oli FOIW, loocl condiUon, new
tresses. Rice and Corbin Fur- 6 ROOM Home wilh modern
From
tbll
two
story
horne
Jo.
soow ures on bac&amp;. can C46niture.
a II convenienees. 21 acres, or will rated on Lower River Rd., $1.25
, scissors
45c up.
Shoppard uo
Sewing
Machine
Sales
II
!!ell house and lol. 16 Burkhart
q
alter $.
Sl$-3
large carpeted LR wllb fire.
Servir:e,
862
lsi
Ave.
Z4fl.6
Lane,
Phone
C46-1476.
245.'1
ALL types of buDding mater·
place, formal DR, I I&gt; bath, 3
lab, block. brick, ,._ pipe,
UIIH FORD Galaxie, 1 dr, bard87 Olive Sheet
GaiHpal1, OW.
top, ucelleot coodltloll, t
wlndowo, llntela, etc. Claude HOME, I rooms and bath, 2 BR, fuU basement, 2 car sarDEAD
STOCK
IUO I!IIAVICI CR.Uo•
porch.. , one encloeed, full age, BT drive, larse deep lot
Wlntera, Rio Grande, 0. Cll
speed std. lrana. 44fi.S'/D8.
W1U ai:IIOVK TOtra D&amp;AD
plenty
beautllul
tne1
and
"'ith
basement, sas furnace, !Ill·
Sl$-3
"Ill alter 1.
• II
HORSU AND COWl
BACKHOE, IUU.DOZER, C'U..
CALL IACESON - . - 1
rage, large lot, 121 Third Ave. llllrubs.
BOIWtT
niJIAJM,
Bodl
GRADER AND DRAGLINE Sd:ncl
CaD 44&amp;-3144 after 5 p.m.
MAIL ORDERS liUed for Merle APPLEs - Red and Yellow
ALIIEllT I!IIMJ,Jf
244-11
DellcliRIB,
Grimes,
RDme1,
Norman cosmeUcs. Call Point
Basements-Footers-Leech Beds
Water Delivery Senlee
SlaJDIBD, SWeet cider. MlfPleasant 675-3040 for Jour orLllelle
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
·
Patriot
star
Rl.,
GaDlpo1ll
Farm Ponds-Septic Tenks-Y.._
lo I p_.ta
kel hours: opeo1 I to e Mono
der.
!j6.l
PIL J7NlJ3
Driveways;-Land Clearing fill Dirt
day lhru Frid17, I lo e SatIIJ.II
Services
Offwtld
Services
OffeNd
urday, 12 lo 6 Sunday. Wella
Top Soil-Ponds Cleaned-Parking Lott
MONDAYS lllld 'i'ueldays are
TERMITE a PDr OllNTIIOL
KENNETH STBGI!B'I
Orchards, Rt. 111, I mDe LEE'S PWMBING II REYOI).
piece guods l'OIIIII8Dt dayo at
•1F IT'S DIRT, WE'Ll NOVE ITt"
·
EIJNG, Crown Clb', 0, ft. WATER DELIVERY SERVIc&amp; FAIN Eiterminatlon Oo, Wbeelo
South ol Wllkemlle, 0.
Upper MIII'J&gt;b1. 4 Janis ,1.00.
ersburl, Ohio. Pb. 17Uill.
.
. tu4
PIL - 7 .
lll'f U
2111 16M.
IJ'l.U

-31

a

CUSTOM SPRAY
PAINTING
f« farmers

•

ERNEST THORNE

no.

USED

FURNITURE

ro-------------------·
CARnR AND EVANS, IK.

Excavating and Building Ctal•••

.....,,

...

-~~

•

LABGB

4 Bedroom. In Town

FLUFFY SOFT and bright u

3M-3

apartment.
waler furnished, adulll only.
Ph. C46-l5l9.
244-tf

3 ROOM unlum.

THE WISEMAN
AGENCY

'

WJEH

Real &amp;tate For Sale

OFFICE space for rent. Call
446-2342 from I a.m. till 5
p.m.

SM-3

--------~-------~
A FEW OF THE HALLICRAFTER
THIS IS FOOTBALL? It was a nigbt more suited ror water
polo i n southern Ohio Friday, as thi s Times-Sentinel (mu:tr ai n splattered) photograph reveals. It s how s Loga n' s Chuck
Conrad (ec nter) advancing t he pigsk in to the GAllS thre e yard
li ne midway in tile second stanza. Conra.d scored on the ne xt

Fot Rent

IN LOVING memory or my lath- FURNISHED apartment - 2
rooms and balh, adulll. Ph.
er, Euatace Sowards, whopaas-125 Third Ave
446-4923.
~~~
ed away October 20, 1964.
CHIIipolls
A loiPPY home we onee el\li&gt;Yed
APARTMENTS
How sweet the memoey stUI. FURNISHED
But death has lett alooellnoll
Gallla Hotel. 446-22011. 239-26
For Sale
The world can never nn.
2 REFRIGERATORS, portable
Sadly mlued by his daughter, SLEEPING ROOMS,
weekly
record players, 2 gas rangea,
Ruby Sowardo
239-llll
rates. C46-22011.
3
breakfast sets, coil springs,
246-1
hideaway bed, 2 utility cablC01TAGE, 4 rooms and bath,
nels, dresser. Rice &amp; Corbin
IN LOVING memory oC our aon
on Olive St. Newly redecorFurnllure Co. 953 Second
and brother, Johnny R Burated, large lot and garage.
Ave.
446-ll7I.
239-tf
nette, who passed awey on
Ph. 446-0279 or 431 Second
October 20, 1964.
Ave.
SM-3 STORM DOORs II WINDOWS
Looking beck with memories
Awnings, carports, raUings
Along the road we trod,
5 ROOM fum . apt. 2 private enLowe Brothen Palnll
We bless the years we had you,
lrance&lt;i, adulla only. can C46Wallpaper,
Picture Framing
And leave the rest to God.
367l after 7 p.m.
~
MULLINEAUX
DECORATING
Sadly mlsoed by Mom andllod,
Since
1911
446-26011
brothers and sisters.
24&amp;-1
FIRST floor apt., 3 rooms and
258 Third Avenue, Galllpolll
bath, unfurn. Adulll. EveryNotice
lhlng private. 41 Grape Sl.
FILING cabinets, supplleo,
WANTING large white male AJ.
:MU
133.50, $4U5 up. Immediate
ghan boUnd to sire puppies
deUvery. In stock. Slmrnono
for former owner. Write Mn. 2 LARGE apartmenll, located
Ptg.
&amp; Office Equip. 446-1397.
W. G. Caperton, I Hilltop
on Se&lt;ond Ave. Pll. 44412810.
230-tf
&lt;but, Charleston , W. Va.

drive wu a 23-¥ard tu• !rom

1 2 2 0-5
() 0 I I ~ 2

will

M

Frlda,y, the Galllans w:lll holt

World's

01 .,. ~~-·

...4 11op,.cl Mforo ••plrotion

ano.

scoreboard, but the Devill!l al110
won the statistics battle Friday

d the rol•

..... ..w •• ... ,....

23-channela.

B.l.CK··l -

1519 Kanawha St.

Tim Hemsworth atoocJ:. out up

COURIER
TRAVELLER

Sp-~ .1 c cr,

IS YOUR

I

,..vi• Dolly Tri"uM 1tylo ol ,,.,.

. ". .-

~o~~ tgnol.

THE LOGICAL PLACE
TO BUY APPLIANCES

All ..., ro•trlct.4 to their
,..,., clouiltcotlolll o...t to th.

.
._

(C;a lli polis)
E\: DS - Pa ul e~, Crai g, R Ellion, \\" ilson.
L\tl\LE'"&gt; - ~{o s l ey, ll em sworlh, ~t Da&gt;J~, Clagg.
GlAHDS - H. Da\is, Baxter.
(lelard.
CE."\" TERS - fl:us~ U , Wood,

.'i I I - ·Hi

.....

yards In 16 attempts. LOwe had
63 in 15 tries.

/lf

(Ll:\ I::TPS)

GL.: r\RDS -

lop

ourier Solid-State C

I Jard run , -1: -1 3, li r ~l, Speneer
kick; Prose, ~7-~ a r d r un, 5:·H
t11i rd, Spenrer , run; :\cal, 3)afd run , 3:3R fourt h, r un fail.
( LI IS) : Co nrad, 3-yar d run, 6:211
set"ond, run fai l, Beougher , -\-yard
run, :lh ~ecund , Conrad r un.

Logan . . . . . • • . fl l fi 0-1

Tom Prose was the Ga.IIJan'a

Chleltaln's 15. Beougher returned It to the 16.
Then came the ChieC"s last
serloua threat, which ended with

Y,\ HDS LOS T I' E ~:\LTI ES
Gall ipoli s ...... u 15 0 Cl - IS
Logan ., •.. . .. 5 U 5 1 9-~9
Pt\TS - Spence r ((;) -1-126,
(31.5). Johns ton (L) -1-1 39 , C:H. 7),
SCOlH:\L - (C.-\ 11.'-i): Spencer,

11-1-l

F lR'iT DOW:\S

Gallipolis .. 73

rniBLLS
Gall ipoli s . . . . . . .
Loga n . , . . . . . . .
llECOVI::HED RY
Gallipoli s . . . . . . .
Logan . , . . . . . , .

CLASSIFIED IU.TE$

OM o.,._o- tt,.. • ~.- . ·17c ,,.,.
Si• cen..cutlve dey1 ••• • -15c liM
fhrft COIIIOCuth•O ioyo • • ·16c ll•
A.lv~trtlll.. .-HrH for l,...,ul..lftHf110rll ... 111 tokl ft.. OM tiN

grOWlder piner with 103
yards
In 20 trlpo. Neal had t3
(Umble (again recovered by
In
16,
and ~n&lt;er 65 ln IS,
GAHS) and two losses ended the
Conrad
paeed
the Ch1el1 with 110
drt ve. ~cer punted to t h e

GAHS-Logan Statistics
1:'\DI\· ID L A L '\ET

baD, rwmlng 57 plays to Logan'•
46. In the oeoond hall, GAHS
had It 34 playo to Logan'o 19.

late In the period, the Devils let

Johnston to Chuc:k Conrad.
Alter an exchange of punta
early in the W.td stanza, GAHS

Tho Sunday Tlmeo - Sentinel, SuJ1da¥, October 20, 1968

17 -

•

.,

�1• -

The Sunclay Times • sentinel. Sunday. October 20, 1968

Upset Logan,

: Gallipolis Rallies
GALLIPOl.lS -

Jom-

David

went to t h e Logan 18, Dlllll
Beougher returned It to the LHS
44.
On a fourth and 20 lftuatlon,

tumed to the DevOs t8.
II took the GoWans ll plays
to mar&lt;h ~ yardS' - rlgllt up
the mlcldle of the lllge Chleltaln
rorward wall - to score. With
4:43 loR, Spenc:er oneaked over

Tom Prose replaced Ruu Elliott
at defenalve left end. Prose
crashed through and tossed QB
Rob Johnston Cor a 10-yard loaa
to assure GAHS the victory.
The Gallians had the pigskin
on the Logan eight when the final gun l'IOUI"lded.
The first quarter was all Gal lipolis. LOgan dominated the sec ond period. GAHS took charge
in the third stanza, and never
gave ~.P I .ogan failed to move followin,.; the initial ki ckoCf. Bob John ston's punt was taken lzy ~n­
em lbe GAHS 44, 1114 re-

rrom the one, then kicked the
extra paint lor a 7.1) GAllS lead,
In that drive, Neal carried five
Umel!l ror 29 yarda, Prose picked up 22 in five trips.
Logan lalled to advan&lt;e It
again . Johnston punted out - or •
bounds on the GAHS 38.
With Neal and Prose alternating, the Galllans picked up two
more Clrst downs. and marched
21 yarda to the Logan 41 as the
period ended.
Two success ive GAHS tumbles
(both r ecovered by the Gallians)
ended the drive. ~neer' s first
punt wont out ol baunda em the

That made It 21-14.
Fred WUaon'&amp; ensuing ktclmff

record, Overall, the GalliM&amp; are

l58..pound senior Dlue De- 3-4.
Before the disastrous Logan
' '11 defensive halfback, reOO\·ermidway in the final stanfumble
ed a rhuch Lowe rumble on the
z.a,
the
Chiertains were moving
GAHS 34 7:02 left In the fourth
goalward,
having marched £rom
period, snuffing out a Logan
their
own
16 to the GAHS 34
touchdown drh·e and possibl e
in
seven
pla.ya.
Prior to the Lowe
Chlef'tain virtory, then GaUipofumbl
e,
Chuck
Conrad,
170i)Ollnd
lls drove 66 ya rds in nine pl ays
senior
halfback,
had
galloped
35
to score its thi r d tou chdown of
yards
f1·om
the
Logan
30
to
the nigh+ and the re suh wa s a
the
[;,\J!
S
3:1,
It
was
the
giUJle's
IUI'prlsing 2 1-14 upset triumph
longest r un from s rrimmage.
for the Gallipolitans .
The cli ncher went like thi!l.
It was home eorning for the
Big l" huc h. Neal d ppedo£feight
host Blue De·vils, but onl y a
~·a
rd
s to the GAHS 42 a fter
handlull of spectator s were on
Lowe-'
s bobbl e. Neal then broke
hand ror the battle due to a st eactv
r ain whi ch fell tlwuughout the loose for a 24-yard gain ~ he
appea. rcd en route to pay dirt . but
48-m inme rontest.
All pre...game homecomi ng ac- stu mbled, and fell on the Logan
th ·itirs were washed oo t - th e 34.
(.,lua r tcr bac h. Tom
Spencer
cer emon,'t was conduc ted ins ide
picked
up
one.
then
added
19
foll owi ng the Blue De,·ils' big
oo
a
keeper
pi
a..v.
That
put
it
on
tr iumph .
The lo!'iis all tx.l t eli minated Lo- the Chiefs' 14 .
gan from the 1968 Southeastern
Neal banged up the middl e for
Ohio League title picture. The three, halfba ck Tom Prose got
char ges of Coac h Lou Parker si" to the fi11 e. Prose was s topare now 4-3 on th e .rear, and 3-2 pt"l.l for no gain . ~en ce r sneaked
ln side the confer ence.
for a firs t down on the Logan
The win left l"Otu.: h Clenn th ree. Neal r ammed it into the
Trout' s bo~·s with a Z-3 luop endzone wi th 3:38 remaining.
ICII'I,

Logan 25 -

it was a 15-yarder.

From here, the Chlef1 caught
lire, 011d drove 75 yard• In 10
playa. COnrad blasted off right
tackle tor the sh:..polqter with

6:20 left In the hall, The polnto

USE CLASSIFIED ADS ·----------------- to Buy, Sell, Swap, Rent or Hire·~
J

.

a John aton punt roll dead oo the
GAHS 12.
Eleven plays later, GAHS had
moved to the ~ 48, but a

took over m ita own 43.
CJn a third and eight situation,
Spencer rambled 18 yards on a

HFTl'H\ Y A:H1J\GF:

Y -\nOS HLS!IIr.:C

Call ipoli s . . . • .J '27 14 II- .JS
Loga n ..•... 22 0 12 2i- 61

((;allipolis)
PLAYf.R- Pos.
TCU YC A\"C;,
Neal, FB, . . .

. . 16

:13

5. H

Prose , HB..... . 2U l CI3 5. 1
Speocc r. QB, .... , 13 ri5 S.O
Hueholt, FB, ..... , I 2 ~.0
Johnson, li B, .•.... 1 - I -I
How ard, FB, , .•... ' -G .J
TOT Al..S

33 2J6

Ul

( Logan)

PLAYER- Pos. TC B y{; :\\ G
Conrad, HB, • . . . 16 90 5.6
Lowe, UB , .. , , • l.'i 63 ~.::!

Beougl1e r,

HB, . . . Jl 37 3.J
J ohnston, QB, . • . . 2 -10 -5
TOTAL~
H IHO ..J.I

-

TEA~I

ST ,\TISTI(S-

SCOHE BY QL'ARTERS
Gallipoli s .... , 7 0 H !l-:!1
Logrm .••..... U 1 ~

after attempt was tumbled by broken .IIIISS play, putting the ball
Johnston. Big gainer In the drive on Lop.n's 37.
Tom Prose got slx despite a
was Lowe's 21-yard gallop.
Another GAHS fumble forced fumble, reCO\Iered by Gib Craig,
Neal slammed for £our to the
the Gallians into a second punting situation moments later. O.leltaln 27.
Prose took a handotC !rom
~ncer's boot rolled dead on
~cer , cut to his left, and galthe Logan 31.
Eleven plays later, the lA&gt;gan· loped 27 yards into the endzone
era had marched 69 yards. With with 5:!4 left In the period.
18 seconds lert ln the hair, Dana Prose carried a Loganer over
Beougher slammed it 0\'er. Lo- the goal. GAHS stllltralled, 14gan led 12-7. Chuck Conrad rac- 13. ~nee:, on a keeper around
ed around right end ror the extn left end, put the Gallians ahead
for keeps, 15--14.
points. That made it 14-7.
Alter holdiru&lt; the Chie!s again
Big gainer in the Chieftain
-

0

Gallipoli s . . . . 5 U 6 1- lJ
Logan ••.•. ,. 0 9 1
Y .A.R IJS GA.I t\ED Rl"SI!f\G

~ - I~

12 1 0~ 83-270

Loga n .•. . • 11 105 19 :&gt; S-1 93
YARDS LOST Hl "SIII:\Ci
~pli,s ...... 1 2 l l li- 11
~n, ........ 1 0 ~ 10- 13

N'f:"r YARO~ RLSHI~G
Gallipolis .. 72 10 101 73- ~51;
Logan .• .• 10 105 J i B - lSO
PASSES ATI!CMPTEO
Gallipolis . . . . . . 0 I 2 1- -t

Logan . • . • . , , , I 1 U 0- 2

PASSES CO~IPLETCD
Gallipoli s . , . . . 0 1 I U-

~

P AS'i!::S ~TERCEP fED
Gallipol is . . . . . . . 0 0 0 0- 0
L Qff8n • , • . . . . . . U U ll U- U

YARDS GAlJ',;E O PAS.';I'\S
Gallipolis • , ... 0 1-1 0 0-

R

Logau • • • .
, 0 23 U 0- 23
T OTAL YAH DS (Rush-Pass)

Gallipoli s .. 72 18 101 73- :!64
L~ n ..... 10 128 17 18-203
P L .&lt;\'r'S FIWM 'ICRIMMACE

Gallipolis . . . 17 G t i
Logan • . • . . • 6 21

17 ~ :,7

'·
'.

'J·.·

'. '

In 1M erl1111o01
co,., ouJI;•IttN few clonlfiod od•

..

'"""
"· ..4o
Any c._,.,

c...,..
-' 25c t., •nh ch.,.o .

lront for the Gallla CounUanl.
Mike Cottrill was outatandlng on
delense for the Hoddng countl-

the tumble on the GAHS 34.
Gautpolia not only won on the

.,...,,,,...,.. will M

ca-,otl for oJtly " • •, of
1111101 fiw .. cl .. o o..-Mcl,
D. .clli•: ":JO p.M. dolly ollllll 11

Nelsonville - York In their final
home
game of the 1961 camThe Gallians coJieeted 15 first
downo, permitted 12, In total paign. k wUI be Parent'• Nlgllt_
yardo, GAHS gained 264 to Lo- l.opn playo at Welllllon, an up.
gan•a 203. GAHS controlled the aet vi &lt;lim of Melgo Friday nll!hl-

night_

•·•· s... urt&amp;o, .

In Memory

·~

smallest

all-channel

transceiver.

I 2 :! 1-6
0 U I H~ I

Ju st

Sl49

Co mple le with cr ys tal s
for a!! 23 chr.J rmels

play. Other players, left. to right, are Gallla's Glb Craig.
Bob Baxter , Logan's Dana Beougher (out- stretched), Mike
Canaday (on r ight) and Ron R1.1 5Sell , who appears to be doing
the Fr ug behind the big p il e up,

Highlanders Upset Big Blacks

J olmson, Prose,
Burnett, Howard, (.
\eal, llueholt, P. ~eal, l\l Canada:y.

(Logan)
Dl~ - Shaw , McFadden.
TACKLES - Co ttr ill , Hutc hison, Wal ker.

HJtter, D. Brow n,

.Joh nson.
CENTER - Elli s.
BACKS Adair, Beoughe r ,
Conrad, Johnston, Lowe, Me·
Broom.
OFFICIAL.&lt;; - foe Yanity, Bill
DcVaco, Paul T ribe, Art Chi ki,
At hens Chap ter.
1\EXT GAHS GAME- Friday,
Oct. 25, Nelsonville-York, home,
(Pare nts' Nig ht).

PT. PLE.~SANT - ,\ mi ssed
conve r sion point a fter P t. Pleasant 's second touchdown enabled
Huntington East to eke out a 1413 vic tory Friday.
The ga me was played in rain
rhat tuthed intO 8 downpour midway i n the thir d qua rter. Fourteen fumbles oceurred, with Pt.
Pleasant losinJ six and East one,
r he loss was the second
straight for Pt. Pleasant The
illa;::k Kni ghts, o nce ra ted fift h
in the state , los t 7..{) la~t week
to Milton. Tiley arc 4-:l- 1 fu r the
seas on wilile Ea.~ t is 2-5.
East held a 14-7 lead late in
the tlli r d qua rter when Pt. P lea sa m st.artcd its final touclldow•l
drive. The Blat:k Knigh ts mo ved
76 .}'ards in 15 pla ys, with t he
big gainer Jx&gt;i ng a 42-yard pass
fro m Pete M~ De rmott to Doug
Jackson that put the ball at the
Ea st 2~. Greg Clayton finally
scor ed from t he four, but Mike
Rawson's place ment try fur t h ~
tying po int was off to the le ft.

!'he Hi g hl a nders took th e
open ing kickoff and
game ' s
marc hed 71 ya rd s for their fir st
score. Steve Morr ison passed
18 )ard ~ to Larry Cam) wreach
the I'L Pleasant 3'3. Dan Muth
then went the d l"sUm~e fo r t h e
touchdown and Cam'J added the
extra poi m by kic k.
The Black Knight s c am·~ r ight
back to tic th e gam• \ o-~:1 1is Niber t set up the score by re turning the ki ckoff 63 )"ard s to tile
Eas t 31. Pt. P lea sant needed s t:\1en pia) s to score as Don Riffl e
plunged over fr om the one, Raw son made t.hc placerrM.;nl.
Eas t scored the go-ahead points
in the fi nal period by mar&lt;'hing
76 yards in 15 plays. Ken McCarley tapped t.ht: dri ve by sco ring from the one and Camp made
the pla{·emcnt..
Eao;; : bl ew a chance to add another scor e late in the game.
Hoge r Barcus , on on ~ 0f his three
fum ble ret:ove ri~s of the nig ht,
got the Highla nder s the ball at

-

I -I_

PT. PLEASANT
SOUTHERN STATES

Packed wi th h igh pe rfo rm a n&lt;:e fea tures.
Clock-co n trolled au to m ati&lt;: oven . A vto mctic pre -heat . Re m ovab le infmite he at
top e l emen t ~ . Signol li g hts for oven a nd
top un its. Plu s mony mom .
No P880 ·3 PW

FRID1\Y'S

" Burner with a brain " m a kes a ll ute mil s
automa tic! Auto ma tic coo k-and- kee p warm oven . Fifth bv rner d o vble s as
gr iddle . lllvm i noted boc kgu ord . Clock
with o n e -h o v r ti m e r . Appl ian ce o utlet .
P lv~ many mor e o u ts ta nd i ng feo tures.
No . P2070 3EGPW

CO-OPERATIVE
• EASY PAYMENT PLAN
• EXPERT SERVICING

• QUALITY PRODUCTS

SOUTHERN STATES POINT PLEASANT
CO-OPERAliVE INC.
Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.

Your Southern States Cooperative Agency

•
'

Ever·ything in Two Way Radios,
Antennas ond Acceuories 11

,.

GA.lllPOLIS, OHIO 45631 ;..... fttifNE «~451'7
GEORGE'S .CREEK ROAD

;

..., .......

IJRGER CHEF
Valuable National fran-

SHALLOW

chise, available locally.

and

For information, Call
Columbus 237-6354.

44
96
84
72
115
134
157

FULL
FAUCET
FOBCE!
•
•

Wanted
CARRIERS lor moming paper
routes In GaWpoUs. SI.OO
weekly eaminp. Ph. 44M'IIO

stU

Female Help Wan!M
WOMEN I'UR PART time ""rk
In Gallla Co. Write Corl Cosmetics, 24S'/ So. lOth st. Ironton, Ohio 45838.
LJVING IS EASIER WITH
PLENTY OF WATER PRESSURE
You can rWl the automatic wash-

er, wash the dishes at the same

run

part or
time, No e"""rt"""e required. COmpletetral,.
liW liven to acCO[)Ied
c:antL call 3~266, 4 to 6 p.
m.
?-46-1

tlme and still have plenty of
water pressure tor bath or show·
er. Myers Ejecto Pump makes
it possible. Only o ne movirw; part.
Sturdy. Smooth runnl~ . VIrtually
maintenance free.

R~U t TS:

,\ SCOUT
PHlL \IJEI.PlllA (U PO - Ger.
r y Mel nyk , a former c&lt;.&gt;nter ror
the Philadelphia Flyers, ha s
rejoined the National Ho ckey
League club aa a scout.
Melnyk, £arced to r eti re from
hockey because or a heart
a ilment. will seoul the Canadian
province s or Alberta and nriti sh
Columbia rrom hi s headquarte rs
in Edmonton. Alber·la.

ewn-

Help Wanted
MAN TO work In service sta-

The Price is RIGHT at Pickensl

tion and grocery store. Ph.
446-3628.
246-1

TUB ENCLOSURES

For Sale or Trade

MEDICINE CABINETS
BATHROOM
LIGHTS
BATHROOM
HEATERS

Hot Water

BATHROOM
FIXTURES
EXHAUST FANS

HEATERS

6' Shower
Stalls

"
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!961 FORD MUSTANG Fastback, blue, P.S., auto. trana.,
wide ovals, 6000 actual mllos.
4 yean fadory warranty ,..
malning, financing available.
Pll, C46-1544.
:116-tf

Rw•lmi ud fall eampm.

IAw rem.~ pr1..,. tor ran
till 'til model Apache Camp-

-

Gas &amp; Electric

I

low new IIlii demaft.
at rtalo prices.

lllrat«o

PIPE INSULATION

AMSBARY
APAotE TRAILER

.....

al,_..Aft,

. -I IL

PHOIIE

:116-1

JOMEN WANTED: E:.panded dlvilion of Helene curtll CoameUcs hal openings tor beaoQ' Illes demonstrators towork

A1lo

M EL~Yli

675-2780

11

62

DETROIT (U PQ - Pitching
coach Johnny Saln, t:redlted
with a major r ole In deve loping
the mound 5taff that br ought
Detroit the World Serie s title,
wi ll return next sea son in the
same capaci ty with the ,\me r ican League club.
The Tigers rounded out thei r
coaching s tarr for n e ~ season
Friday by reappointing Sa.in and
bullpen coach Hal Naragon.

Saves t•m e for ho me ma kers Get s a se rv.
•ce for 14 spot le ss. Au tom al1 c de ttorge nt
d 1 ~penser Bu ilt -m water h eo t•ng boos ter
Plate wormer Roll s easily N o . HFD

EXCELLENT business opportunlly for husband and wife
team. Must have some capital. Will finance right party.
Call or write Westinghouse
Laundromat Distributor, 300
Tnly St., Dayton, 0 . 4M04,
area code 513-461-S775.

OP

S P IN TO RE T L" W\"

Unico Portable Formica -Top
Automatic DishwasherOnly $21.70 Down

• MODERATE PRICES

Business Opportunity

DEEP WELL

Gallipolis 21 Logan 14
Meigs 6 We ll ston 2
Athens 18 Ir onton 1q
Jackson 1.4 Nel s. Yor k fi
OCT. 25 GAMES'
Nels.-York at Ga ll ipoli s
.A.thens at Jackson
Logan a t Well ston
MPigs at Ironton

Unico 36" Gas RangeOnly $27.90 Down

246-1

Bob's Citizens Band Radio
Equipment

SEO Standings

SEOA L ONLY
TE AM
W L T POP
A.thens . . . . . 4 0 1 52 35
Wellston ••.• 3 1 1 62 26
Lagan ••• , .. 3 2 0 78 63
Meigs . . . . . . 3 2 u 82 38
Jackson . , •. , 3 2 0 95 76
Gallipoli s .... 2 3 0 58 88
Ironton . ..•.. 1 4 0 92 93
Nel s.-Y o rk ., .. 0 5 0 28 128
TOTALS
19 19 2 547 547

Unico 30" Electric RangeOnly $28 .90 Down

time on Thursdays, «herdlys,
after 5 p. m. Ph. 446-2089,

S44's

Los Angeles Oct, 22 to begin
the Pt. Pleasant five, l·lowe ..,e r, their 33-da,y toor or Japan,
Last eventuall &gt; r an out of downs General Manager Bing Devine
at th e one.
aMounced Friday .
T he Black Kni g hts attempted to
Neither Hoger Marh nor
m~ke a late rall y and hit on s ix
Julian Javier will make the
short passes to get to the44 when
trip. Maris . has re~red and
the gam·~ -e n:1ed. ·
Javier will be managing ln the
ll unL Ea st
707 0- 14 Dominican
Republic
Winter
PL Pleasa nt
7 0 u 6- 13
League.
Scoring- Eas t: M•1th, 33 yd.
run (Camp kick); McCarle y,! yd,
run (Camp ki ck). Pt. Plea san t:
Hiffie , 5 yd. r un (Kawson ki ck);
Cla,y ton, 4 yd. r un (ki ck railed).

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L T P
Athtm s . ..•••• 5 1 1 106
Well ston ...... 5
I 138
J ackson ...•• 5 2 0 151
Loga n ....... 4 3 0 98
Meigs ...•... 4 J 0 101
Gallipoli s ..... 3 4 0 92
Nels.·York .... 2 5 0 74
lr.:mton ....... I 6 0 106

CALL AT 19241/, Eastern Ava,
lor Rawlellh ProductJ any

CB-20 5 CHANNEL SOLID
STATE RADIOS LEFT AT

CARDIN ALS TO J APAN
;,-, LOUIS (UPO-- The St.
l.nuis Cardinals will rly Crom

111·~_-

MISOII, W. Yl,

For Sale

For Sale
36" X 23" X.OO!l

11166 FORD Galalle 500. Pll.
446-1011.
SM-3

FURNISHED apartment, conlacl Stella Arnold, Park ConIra! Hotel.
'lf.lf

Aluminum
Sheets

USED cash reglslera, National,
R. C. Allen, VIdor. Simmons
Pig. &amp; Office Equip. 44f.13!1'1.
Z30-tl

SLEEPING rooms. weekly
rates. Park Central Hotel.
78-tf
BRADBURY efficiency apartment. first floor, adulll only.
719 SeOOil&lt;l Ave.
231-11

ll~t~d

Offset Plate&amp;
HAVE

MANY USES

2oe

Bfor$1.00

Gallipolis Dally
Tribune

24H

FURNISHED apartment, I
rooms and bath. Pit 446 3500.
:144-3

l"YPEWRITERS, adding machInes, new and ooed. Simmons
Pig. II Office Equip. C46-IS97.
230-tf

Off. 446 3643
En. 446-UH
446-4500

~PPLES

- Grimes, Red and
Golden DeUclous, Jonat!lan,
Mclntoob, Romes, Winesap:
Sweet elder, pumpklno. Sigler's PmdlU!e Mkt., 742 Third
Ave .. GallipoUs. 0 .
246-6

GERMAN Shepherd puppies,
bappy, healthy, farm railed.
AKC reg. Phone Jact.. llfl.
2251 or 28fl.1778.
:MU

A Sllrt:B IN TD1B
ll1611 ZIG ZAG automatle - lng machine, tbll baa II buill
In dealgns, make&amp; buttonholel.
This original aold fl9ti.I!G now
pay only f/5 or f5 per month.
Call 675-3081.
~
61 CHEVROLET lmpela, bladt
&amp; white finish wllb red Inter·
ior, good oonditlon. Call Carla Swain, 256-6752.
246-3
AKC PEKINGESE
Ph. 44e.al&amp;7.

PUPPY.
3M-3

Magnificent Vi•w
4 Beclroom~anch
THIS LOVELY

HOW!

t• •

WILL SA'J1SFY YOVB EVERY
WISH, 4 HUGE BEDROOMS
30 UVINO ROOM. LAROE l'A.M·
R.Y ROOIII
WITH
NATURAL

STONE I'LOOIR. 3 BATHS, FOil ·
MAL DINING ROOII, WOOD
BURNING FIRE PLACE, AND ::1

BON
BUlU' RTSfro I, A.TELY1'
YOU WILL RJ: WREN YOU !liD
THIS BRAND NZW MODDN
JOTCRN IN THill OLOD ROJIE
ON UPPER IND . JNCLUDEI!I A
NYW n rRN ACE AND Ill IN IX ·
CELLENT CONDm()N JN' OTIIIR
R1:8PPJCT8. LAIIIGE LOT.

LOT WITH ONE crr Tim BEST
\'li:WS AWNG THE 01DO. OW:ftB LZAVII&gt;j' G
STATE
AND
HOP'IS T1B NEXT FAMILY EN·
.liOY lT A8 MUCH All 'I'BSY

HAVE.

3 Beciroom Brick
WC A TED ON ROt.I'I'E S5. A

nN'I

HOIR IN A FINE LOCATION
WB HAVE 3 TO CHOOSit FROM

3Beclroom
Full Basement
THill KOMI WAS WELL BUJLT
TO Bl:GrN wrrR AND RAt ltAn
U:C&amp;LL"ENT
CA1l"l
51'~.
LOVII!LY
CAR.PimCD (lVIJ«&lt;
ROOII wrn1 rtR! Pt.ACB. FA·
MILY Jt.OOM AND GARAGE Lf'•
CATII:D ON A LARG"I LOT lUST
O'UT OF TOWN I MJLB.

For Rent

whal cleaning
when you use
Rent electric
Farmer'o HardHf-6

STEREO, AM FM, radio, 4
speed automatic changer.
Walnut c:onsole model. Will
sacrifice for f18.32 or lllOilthly paymenll. Call 446-1021.

10:30
11:00
11:45
12:00
12:15
12:30

2Bedroom
$8,200
VlmtY NlCE 4 B"ED"ROOM J10ME
ON LARG"! TREE SliADim LOT .
~

OlltterboJI
The Morning World &amp; MaiiOCl Co. Newo
Com'nl\Y and Markel Newo
Bulletin Boord
Preae&lt;ulor Rpls. (Mon.)

Farm &amp; Hmte (Tues .•
Wed., Thun.)
12:45 Country Go Round

4:00 lntercha~
5:00 News, Weather,~~
(SATURDAYS)
11:55 Washington REports
12:00 News Rount:hc&gt;
12:15 Bulletin Boord
12:30 The "In" Sourl:l
12:35 Tee•Tlme '68
4:00 Inlerclw&gt;go
5:00 News, Weather , ~rts

5:30 Sunoet Serenade

(UnW

SlgJ&gt;&lt;)tl)

ROOM FOR A MOBnE

Jroft. LOCATED ON I!:DG'E OF

New 3 Bedroom

8:00

Centenary

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

Dillon Agency

0. D. PARSONS
REALTOR

UNUSUAL HOME
Loc:ated on a wooded lot. HO!
'l woman's dream kitchen. 3
llR, 3 tile baths In color, play
room, T.V. room , 2 WB fireplaces, cathedral ceiling, wool
c~rpet throughout. a view of
:he Ohio River lrom lhe sun
deck. car port.

· 9:45 01Udron•o Ollpol
10:00 Music lor SUnc1117
10:30 Flrot Bopdot Olurcb
11:30 GollliOI ol Chrlat
12:00 New•
12:15 Trlnl\Y Hcur
12:4$ Catholl&lt; [nfarmatlon
1:00 Olurch or God
1:30 Goopel call
2:00 SuJ1da¥ Drl ve Tlmll
5: 00News~

WJEH·FM LOG
(Dally ex&lt;'llt where

6:00

lndlcotooll

and Earl,y Show (utept Sundllya)
Sign

011

(SUNDAYS)
and the Singing

Sign ():,

8:05 Mual&lt; Unlimited
10:30 Chatterbox (except saturday and Somda¥)
11:00 Muol&lt; Unlimited
11:45 All the News (e:o:'lll Sun.)
12:00 Newo (Sunday only)
12:15 Mualc Unlimited
5:00 News
5:15 Dinner Serenade

7:00 Evenl~ Sereowdo
9:45 Armed Forces Showa
10:00 First National Ft.l
10:15 Music UnW Slgn Off

Preacher

YOU WILL ENJOY A NI:W
MOD. KV"KR.Y QN"I W'"DL TICLL
VOU ROW LUCKY YOU All&amp;.
THlS ONE R.-\8 A MODERN 10'1'·
CIIBN.
ATI"A.CHJ:D GARA.OJ:
AND NlCit tnCATroN. rtiLL
PRICE .11,71!10.

'I"'WN ON 141 .

new. Thai's
rugs will do
Blue Lustre.
shampooer $1.
ware Co.

MONDAYS THRU FRIDAYS)
7:4$ Echooo or Joy
8:00 Ohio Valley News
8:15 ~k olllle Town
9:15 The Mornlne s.-

3 Bedroom !\rick
ll!'rC""Ir.I,LENT LOCATION WrrK
RIV..::tt VIEW . MODERN HOME
wmt: FULL BASEMENT, UP TO
DATE JnTC'HZN.

'

8:00Newo~

CAA GARAGE. LOCATED ON A
LARO.I n.A.T 1'1\D SHADED

Farm, Vlllap, CH7 P"'ropa-nly
Pbone 44U:III

7 ACRES
Seven rooms &amp; bath, Jarge ldlr hen, full basement. garage,

rail bam, spring, Kyger Creek
•choola.

Live Sports 8nJod.
cas ts wtu s\C)8rcecle reptar progruna whell. aeheduled.)

(Note:

8:15 News

8:30 Herold or Truth
9:00 Protestant Hour

9:30 Aunt Bertha

Real Estate For Sale
D. H. WOOD, Realtor
Phone 446-1066
I A., nice comfortable borne,

Services Offered
CERTIFIED electric and . .
welding, mechanic, bocl7 1101
fender work. 12 yean eliiJII"
lence, work guaranteed. T:a
a.m. UIIO p.m. 7 da)'l a weoll.
Joe'o Ashland SiaUDII, Jll6.
well, 0. ·
till-If

two large bedroorn.o, hard·
wood fioor , large kitchen, cal&gt;
inets , aluminum siding, two
water oystems, one on well
and another on large &lt;IBtern,
Plumbing &amp; Heating
10.000 pl., garage, fuel oil
STANDARD
PWMIIJiiiG a
furnace, nice bath. Located
HEATING,
Ill
'ndnl A ill Village. Price worth the
44UIIZ,
..
money.
LARGE lot, 3 bedroom brick,
IIRAMMER'I
part basemen!, bath, with
Phnnblbc
1101 11ea1111
new decorating you could in300
4th
Ave.,
446-lD'I.
crease the value of the properly c:onsklerable. If you are
looking for value In a good lo.
DEWIII'S PLUliiBIIIO
cation see tbll. Will finance
AND IIEA'l1NG
easily. f9000.
3 BEDROOM home In city, lot ROUTE 110 at Ever!P-· PI!.
446-2'135.
171 II
180l:42, partly furnished , stove,
washing machine, breakfast
Insurance
sel, elc. Will sell on land oonFOR ALL your lniiUl'lni:O .......
tra&lt;l. $4750.
check wllh your Grsnge _,!
WE HAVE several nice homes.
enll
at the Neal Ina. AIOMJ,
See us. Always nice to talk
64
State
St. AieniB for aulD,
lo you.
fire,
Homeowners,
...pltal
Even lags:
and
general
Uablllly.
M-41
Rossell D. Wood UC MIS
John I. Rlcb~
NATIONWIDE INSURANCE
Ronald K. Caaaday 1113131
Atrro. Ore. llfe. 4S Stale ..
Waldo F. Brown, W.
Services OHered
Bmwr.. C46-IIIIO.
M

HONDA 300. excellenl oondl60 ACRES
llon, $350. Kitchen set wllh STEREO. Early American steFour
room
house, Y.a A. Tob.
80 ACRES
formica lop and 4 chairs, 120.
reo, radio combinallon. Solid
P.,
bam.
spring,
pasture, plenLocated on State Road , large
Ph. 446-0785 or 446-1835. 24:1-5
slate unil, 4 speed changer,
ty water, Green Twp. $6,500.
FURNISHED 3 rooms and bath,
bar n. .86 tobacco base , fnir
lovely maple finish . Make payall utlllttes paid, adulll onlJ.
105 ACRES
A GOOD DEAL
ments of $6.00 per month or fence. plenty water, l'h story
Pll. C46-l519.
244-tf 1968 AM/FM stereo console
modern home, 3 BR. nice kit- On St. Rt. 160 across from N.
balance of $98.12. Call C46&lt;hen with plenty cabinets. front Gallla School, Good 3 BR home,
wllh 4 speed automallc chan1028.
3M-3
2 BEDROOM apartment, kitnorch
covering a picture wln- 1.1rge barn. blrtgs , milk house,
ger. 4 speaker sound system.
eben furnlshed. Ph. 4441 3329.
•llo. 3 pondo. Buy the whole
Jow
.
Price
112,500.
Lovely walnut console. Take !1166 CORVE1TE convertible
246-&lt;1
farm
or any tract you want .
over payments of $1.50 per
84 ACRES
427, 425 four speed. Pll. 25fl.
SPACIOUS COUNTRY HOME
RT. 7
week or pay '104.12. Try It
6954.
Z4fl.6 ~orth of Thurman , farm is clean
located on Triple E Ranch,
In your home. 675-30111. 24:1-tf
Modern
3
year old home, 8
in gra ss and good fence , some
a..LWb,t,te !load•.~ l!eflmme,
r ood timber' this is ideal for rooms &amp; bath, full basement, 2
upslaln plus storage room II WE HAVE some real buys In STEEL 'mAPS $5.75 dozen, cnttle farm , plenty water, 5 fireplaces , carport, Kyger Creek
killer traps $12 dozen. wire
modem full bath. 5 rooms
used cameras, all types, moalretcbers $4.65 dozen, tap, room home. Needs some re- Schools, mid-teens.
downstairs with modem builtvie or still. Tawney Studio, 422
lures and knives. Open 4 p m. pair. $11,500.
BUILDING SITES
In kitchen plus ball bath. New
Second Ave.
243-6
to 10 p.m. dally. Ph . '1'13-j;Z9Q . NEED 3 BEDROOMS?
City.
Kanauga, Rl. 100, Rl. 141,
fuel oil furnace. Rented only
Maran Fur House. N'ortn Ranch style home wllh large Rl. 7. Any school dlslricl. Also
by lease; $125 per mo. Shown &lt;;LEANINGEST CARPET cleanBrown St , Masoo, W. Va. 0 . T..R carpeted, buill·in kitchen, vacant land.
by appointment. Pbooe C46er you ever used. so easy too.
0
. Wright and Sons.
3M-3 laundry room, car port, awnTRYING TO SEIL1
2443, 9 to 5, or call Emerson
Get Blue Luslre. Renl electric
ings, natural gas and city waCAlL US!
E. Evans.
Hfl.3
shampooer $1. Central Supply
Joy Shoppanl, 44S-e19
ler, large lot, c an assume a
Co.
246-6
loan al 5% Int. Small down
Earl Wlnl&lt;rs, 44t 1m'
FURNISHED APARTMENT payment
low
mo.
payments.
Wayne
Amobary,
3 rooms and plenty of storage
Vacant.
space. All DeW!y re-de&lt;orated,
NEW GMC TRUCK
WANT A HOME?
BAIRD REALTY CO.
clean, private, reasonable. PI!.
O..op
by
the
DILLON
AGENCY
C46-3627 after 5. James E.
HEADQUARTERS
Oscar Baird, Realtor
Two Patrol Leadel'll
OFFICE window and view lhe
Danner,
:116-tf
1966 1&gt; T. GMC Pickup
WITH
Bldg. Lots
NEW LOCATION
wide selection of beautiful borne
1967 I&gt; T. GMC Pickup
Reported Elected
TIDRD &amp; STATE 1111tEETS pictures - tinted In oil to belp LOOK? We have flat bldg. loll
- ForSale
1958 I&gt; T. Ford Pl&lt;lwp
for
as
low
as
$l,ll0ll
on
black·
in your decision of a future
NEW LISTING
1957 2 T. GMC
• I • I ( ,' .
1968 HONDA 175 &amp; rambler, Ph,
top rd . call us loclay.
!' \ i
home . While there - drop In
PT, PLEASANT - Sharon HOIIYOU'LL
like
everything
about
1965
GMC
Suburban
446-4327,
246-1
ry
and Tina Cauter have bean
and
list
your
home
.
Let
us
place
Will
Trade
BR,
I
I&gt;
story
ltome
Jo.
this
4
1958 2 T Studebaker
elected
patrol leaders Cor for·
the
picture
of
your
home
in
OWNER
anllous
to
aeU
their
cated
on
a
large
lol
about
3
New 5 T Farm Wagons
mer
Girl
Scout Troop 83 wld&lt;h
our
window.
Our
service
does1131&gt;
A.
!arm.
2
story
home,
mUes from town. Ha• a two
,1311.50
oow
bel&lt;qa
to Mountain llllrol
barn, .64 lob. base. Will take
420 JOHN DEERE trawler
car garage and Is priced be· n'l cost, H pays beneflll from
1962 21&gt; T. Chev.
Girl
Scout
Cwn&lt;U
with headtractor, 14 inch track, 6 toot
housetraller ln.
low the cost to replace. Cali our active sales efforts.
1958 I&gt; T. GMC plc:lwp
quarters
ln
Charleoloo
and the
blade, power take off, low
today for an appointment.
1964 2 T. IntemaUonal
JUST LISTED
Four Bedrooms
Thurman, Ohio
troop
rumber
has
been
chanpdto
hours. Call 446-2957.
246-3
IF YOU can qualify you can 6 r oom - one story home on HERE'S a lovely home deslsn1955 1&gt; T. Dodge pickup
33 year a Axperience
683.
buy lbls 2 BR home wllh St. Rt. 35, large all modem kit·
1968 II&gt; T. Dodge truck
ed for the large family . ll
PIKine 211&gt;-5269 or
Aaslllanl.lllltrol loaders olect00 RENAULT for parts, all In
basement, wall to wan car· chen with range and oven and
Central Soya
446-2463
1956 2 T. Int. Tractor
includes lOY.. A.. a rooms, n!ce
ed
are Joy&lt;e Lanham and llobpet In living room, attached snack bar, tile bath with showAI condlllon. 388-8751. 245-3 1963 \1 T. Chev. pickup
balb, big kitchen, utility room,
ble
Garrtoon. Linda McKIINy
prage for f500 down and er, 3 BR. basement, TV room
2 car garage, and W/B fire.
1966 I T. GMC
TERMITE PEST CONTROL was named secretary and BarCOAL FURNACE, new gas wabalanee llke renl. Located paneled, carport, tot 100' x 300'.
I Minneapolis Moline Powor
place in lhe extra large liv- FREE Inspection. call ~ bara WUcoxen, treaaiU'er. Mra.
ter heater, an malertala In 2
near
town
on
SR
5811.
Price
$18,500.
Unit
ing room overlooking the Oblo
Merrlll O'Dell, Operator for Rex Garrtsm Ia the leader ol
story frame house, windows,
New 60'' Rotary Cutfen River.
MAKE US AN OFFER
Elrtermllal
Termite llervtc. the troop and meetlnp wtU be
60 ACRES
doors, etc. See at N. Second
$199.50. New 8.25 x 20. 10 ply ON TIDS 53 acre farm lOCated 6 mDee east of Rio Grande, hO!
10
Belmont
Dr.
lll'f II held bl-WeOkl.Y at the Preob;rterPrime Location
Ave. Middleport by Blue Su·
nylon tires SSS. Inc. Jl'edersl
2 miles from town, % BR tobacco base, alra good fence, FOR $7500, you can buy this big
lan Chur&lt;h.
noco Station.
254-3
tu.
home with balh and base. lO acrea farm land, ...
2 olory home and 6 A., only
OOLL House Nursery triDipGI'
n•to VaHey Jmpltmenl 81,
men!.
springs
and
farm pond, bam
2 miles drive from downtown.
2 SADDLES, 2 bridles, 44fi.0648.
laUon avallable, reasonable
133 Pine Sl. P.. Ill !131.
and plenty oot bulldlnp, 11&gt; om"' Pen• 446-4111 u Bn.
DON'T DELAY
Sl$-3
rates also for ahopplng or
141 II
story home, bath, ldlchen bas
EveaiDp
&amp; BE SORRY
wortlng mothe111, ltourly, dalDoug
Welllerbolt,
Pb. 4*4ZH
2 REGISTERED Suffolk Rams, GOOD CLEAN LUMP and stok. OWNER aRilous to oell thlo plenty cablneb. Price f!USO.
ly or weekly rsteo. PI!. C46Rob&lt;rt L. IIUII, P.. ltlllll
LOCATION?
nearly new 3 BR ltome with
l mare pony with colt. All
4DS.
M If
er coal. Carl Winton, Rio
attached garage. Thel'lllO- This lwo story home Is located
kinda lroplcal fish. 44fl.2947.
Grande. Phone 245·5115. S.tf
pane wlndowo and oulllde lr !be heart of down town 34W
Services OHerad
'tal Gllllal'
ond
near churches. sd!ool and shop.
patio.
IF YOU are buDding a new
REYNOLD'S
GALLIPOLIB
TV
WATER
Anytime
Day
or
om.. PI!. 411 . .1
PRDFESSIOMAL
ping. Has 4 BR, 2 balh, dlnlnc
11161 PL \'MOUTH 4 door sedan,
home or remodeling, oeo us.
4311 Second A Nighl.
Da)'I&gt;-Ph. 388118M,
Cllll!eo
M.
Neal
44f.Illll
room,
laundry,
storm
wiDdows
A.UCTIOM
SERVICE
new tires, beater. turn 1118We are buDders. l)lltrlbulor
Across from l'osl Ollke
Eventns• - J . B. or Leo
nnd
doors,
earport
and
storqe
nals, A-1 Sllape, must seU due
for Rotpolnt Appllances, ADIbuy and . . 11 CoMpt.te
"- •. Nibert Phone 446-0111
Kina Ill 11M or Ronnie SkidCorter Mode, 441-#ltl
room, basement.
•• , ..... Call R. E. rN&lt;&gt;n·&lt;l
to beallh. One owner, ~ ftb
aon Eloctrie.
1M II
Your Emerson Dealer more C46-l'l56.
m.tf
.U6-H17 at 1163 Second
Ave.
Jl5..l
BEAunFUL
Av• .• Galllpoll•.
Far Sale By Onor
LOW. LOW. PRICES on Mat.
PICTURESQUE VIEW
PINKING SHEARS sharpenad
Oli FOIW, loocl condiUon, new
tresses. Rice and Corbin Fur- 6 ROOM Home wilh modern
From
tbll
two
story
horne
Jo.
soow ures on bac&amp;. can C46niture.
a II convenienees. 21 acres, or will rated on Lower River Rd., $1.25
, scissors
45c up.
Shoppard uo
Sewing
Machine
Sales
II
!!ell house and lol. 16 Burkhart
q
alter $.
Sl$-3
large carpeted LR wllb fire.
Servir:e,
862
lsi
Ave.
Z4fl.6
Lane,
Phone
C46-1476.
245.'1
ALL types of buDding mater·
place, formal DR, I I&gt; bath, 3
lab, block. brick, ,._ pipe,
UIIH FORD Galaxie, 1 dr, bard87 Olive Sheet
GaiHpal1, OW.
top, ucelleot coodltloll, t
wlndowo, llntela, etc. Claude HOME, I rooms and bath, 2 BR, fuU basement, 2 car sarDEAD
STOCK
IUO I!IIAVICI CR.Uo•
porch.. , one encloeed, full age, BT drive, larse deep lot
Wlntera, Rio Grande, 0. Cll
speed std. lrana. 44fi.S'/D8.
W1U ai:IIOVK TOtra D&amp;AD
plenty
beautllul
tne1
and
"'ith
basement, sas furnace, !Ill·
Sl$-3
"Ill alter 1.
• II
HORSU AND COWl
BACKHOE, IUU.DOZER, C'U..
CALL IACESON - . - 1
rage, large lot, 121 Third Ave. llllrubs.
BOIWtT
niJIAJM,
Bodl
GRADER AND DRAGLINE Sd:ncl
CaD 44&amp;-3144 after 5 p.m.
MAIL ORDERS liUed for Merle APPLEs - Red and Yellow
ALIIEllT I!IIMJ,Jf
244-11
DellcliRIB,
Grimes,
RDme1,
Norman cosmeUcs. Call Point
Basements-Footers-Leech Beds
Water Delivery Senlee
SlaJDIBD, SWeet cider. MlfPleasant 675-3040 for Jour orLllelle
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
·
Patriot
star
Rl.,
GaDlpo1ll
Farm Ponds-Septic Tenks-Y.._
lo I p_.ta
kel hours: opeo1 I to e Mono
der.
!j6.l
PIL J7NlJ3
Driveways;-Land Clearing fill Dirt
day lhru Frid17, I lo e SatIIJ.II
Services
Offwtld
Services
OffeNd
urday, 12 lo 6 Sunday. Wella
Top Soil-Ponds Cleaned-Parking Lott
MONDAYS lllld 'i'ueldays are
TERMITE a PDr OllNTIIOL
KENNETH STBGI!B'I
Orchards, Rt. 111, I mDe LEE'S PWMBING II REYOI).
piece guods l'OIIIII8Dt dayo at
•1F IT'S DIRT, WE'Ll NOVE ITt"
·
EIJNG, Crown Clb', 0, ft. WATER DELIVERY SERVIc&amp; FAIN Eiterminatlon Oo, Wbeelo
South ol Wllkemlle, 0.
Upper MIII'J&gt;b1. 4 Janis ,1.00.
ersburl, Ohio. Pb. 17Uill.
.
. tu4
PIL - 7 .
lll'f U
2111 16M.
IJ'l.U

-31

a

CUSTOM SPRAY
PAINTING
f« farmers

•

ERNEST THORNE

no.

USED

FURNITURE

ro-------------------·
CARnR AND EVANS, IK.

Excavating and Building Ctal•••

.....,,

...

-~~

•

LABGB

4 Bedroom. In Town

FLUFFY SOFT and bright u

3M-3

apartment.
waler furnished, adulll only.
Ph. C46-l5l9.
244-tf

3 ROOM unlum.

THE WISEMAN
AGENCY

'

WJEH

Real &amp;tate For Sale

OFFICE space for rent. Call
446-2342 from I a.m. till 5
p.m.

SM-3

--------~-------~
A FEW OF THE HALLICRAFTER
THIS IS FOOTBALL? It was a nigbt more suited ror water
polo i n southern Ohio Friday, as thi s Times-Sentinel (mu:tr ai n splattered) photograph reveals. It s how s Loga n' s Chuck
Conrad (ec nter) advancing t he pigsk in to the GAllS thre e yard
li ne midway in tile second stanza. Conra.d scored on the ne xt

Fot Rent

IN LOVING memory or my lath- FURNISHED apartment - 2
rooms and balh, adulll. Ph.
er, Euatace Sowards, whopaas-125 Third Ave
446-4923.
~~~
ed away October 20, 1964.
CHIIipolls
A loiPPY home we onee el\li&gt;Yed
APARTMENTS
How sweet the memoey stUI. FURNISHED
But death has lett alooellnoll
Gallla Hotel. 446-22011. 239-26
For Sale
The world can never nn.
2 REFRIGERATORS, portable
Sadly mlued by his daughter, SLEEPING ROOMS,
weekly
record players, 2 gas rangea,
Ruby Sowardo
239-llll
rates. C46-22011.
3
breakfast sets, coil springs,
246-1
hideaway bed, 2 utility cablC01TAGE, 4 rooms and bath,
nels, dresser. Rice &amp; Corbin
IN LOVING memory oC our aon
on Olive St. Newly redecorFurnllure Co. 953 Second
and brother, Johnny R Burated, large lot and garage.
Ave.
446-ll7I.
239-tf
nette, who passed awey on
Ph. 446-0279 or 431 Second
October 20, 1964.
Ave.
SM-3 STORM DOORs II WINDOWS
Looking beck with memories
Awnings, carports, raUings
Along the road we trod,
5 ROOM fum . apt. 2 private enLowe Brothen Palnll
We bless the years we had you,
lrance&lt;i, adulla only. can C46Wallpaper,
Picture Framing
And leave the rest to God.
367l after 7 p.m.
~
MULLINEAUX
DECORATING
Sadly mlsoed by Mom andllod,
Since
1911
446-26011
brothers and sisters.
24&amp;-1
FIRST floor apt., 3 rooms and
258 Third Avenue, Galllpolll
bath, unfurn. Adulll. EveryNotice
lhlng private. 41 Grape Sl.
FILING cabinets, supplleo,
WANTING large white male AJ.
:MU
133.50, $4U5 up. Immediate
ghan boUnd to sire puppies
deUvery. In stock. Slmrnono
for former owner. Write Mn. 2 LARGE apartmenll, located
Ptg.
&amp; Office Equip. 446-1397.
W. G. Caperton, I Hilltop
on Se&lt;ond Ave. Pll. 44412810.
230-tf
&lt;but, Charleston , W. Va.

drive wu a 23-¥ard tu• !rom

1 2 2 0-5
() 0 I I ~ 2

will

M

Frlda,y, the Galllans w:lll holt

World's

01 .,. ~~-·

...4 11op,.cl Mforo ••plrotion

ano.

scoreboard, but the Devill!l al110
won the statistics battle Friday

d the rol•

..... ..w •• ... ,....

23-channela.

B.l.CK··l -

1519 Kanawha St.

Tim Hemsworth atoocJ:. out up

COURIER
TRAVELLER

Sp-~ .1 c cr,

IS YOUR

I

,..vi• Dolly Tri"uM 1tylo ol ,,.,.

. ". .-

~o~~ tgnol.

THE LOGICAL PLACE
TO BUY APPLIANCES

All ..., ro•trlct.4 to their
,..,., clouiltcotlolll o...t to th.

.
._

(C;a lli polis)
E\: DS - Pa ul e~, Crai g, R Ellion, \\" ilson.
L\tl\LE'"&gt; - ~{o s l ey, ll em sworlh, ~t Da&gt;J~, Clagg.
GlAHDS - H. Da\is, Baxter.
(lelard.
CE."\" TERS - fl:us~ U , Wood,

.'i I I - ·Hi

.....

yards In 16 attempts. LOwe had
63 in 15 tries.

/lf

(Ll:\ I::TPS)

GL.: r\RDS -

lop

ourier Solid-State C

I Jard run , -1: -1 3, li r ~l, Speneer
kick; Prose, ~7-~ a r d r un, 5:·H
t11i rd, Spenrer , run; :\cal, 3)afd run , 3:3R fourt h, r un fail.
( LI IS) : Co nrad, 3-yar d run, 6:211
set"ond, run fai l, Beougher , -\-yard
run, :lh ~ecund , Conrad r un.

Logan . . . . . • • . fl l fi 0-1

Tom Prose was the Ga.IIJan'a

Chleltaln's 15. Beougher returned It to the 16.
Then came the ChieC"s last
serloua threat, which ended with

Y,\ HDS LOS T I' E ~:\LTI ES
Gall ipoli s ...... u 15 0 Cl - IS
Logan ., •.. . .. 5 U 5 1 9-~9
Pt\TS - Spence r ((;) -1-126,
(31.5). Johns ton (L) -1-1 39 , C:H. 7),
SCOlH:\L - (C.-\ 11.'-i): Spencer,

11-1-l

F lR'iT DOW:\S

Gallipolis .. 73

rniBLLS
Gall ipoli s . . . . . . .
Loga n . , . . . . . . .
llECOVI::HED RY
Gallipoli s . . . . . . .
Logan . , . . . . . , .

CLASSIFIED IU.TE$

OM o.,._o- tt,.. • ~.- . ·17c ,,.,.
Si• cen..cutlve dey1 ••• • -15c liM
fhrft COIIIOCuth•O ioyo • • ·16c ll•
A.lv~trtlll.. .-HrH for l,...,ul..lftHf110rll ... 111 tokl ft.. OM tiN

grOWlder piner with 103
yards
In 20 trlpo. Neal had t3
(Umble (again recovered by
In
16,
and ~n&lt;er 65 ln IS,
GAHS) and two losses ended the
Conrad
paeed
the Ch1el1 with 110
drt ve. ~cer punted to t h e

GAHS-Logan Statistics
1:'\DI\· ID L A L '\ET

baD, rwmlng 57 plays to Logan'•
46. In the oeoond hall, GAHS
had It 34 playo to Logan'o 19.

late In the period, the Devils let

Johnston to Chuc:k Conrad.
Alter an exchange of punta
early in the W.td stanza, GAHS

Tho Sunday Tlmeo - Sentinel, SuJ1da¥, October 20, 1968

17 -

•

.,

�. A LITTLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Bring Top . Grade Results
19 -

DEADLINES
5
Dor Before Publlnllon
Mo.... 111, O.edlirw 9 o.m.
CeMollotl ...... c ... ctionl

,.Ill.

Will lite

MC.iplecl vntil 9 •-"' · lot
Dow •' Public:elion

REGULA TIOH5
The Publl•""• •••••.,•• iho rig-ht
to .dlt or relec:t onr od• do•m•d Obtec:llonabl •. Th. f.ubll.her will not
be reepctn1lble or more rhan on•
lnc:orreet lneertlon.

UTES
F., Wo11t Ad S.r .. ice
5 , • ..,, ~· Word oM l""'ertion
Mlnllftum Cllor . . 75c
12 centl ,_, wo.d tlw•• coneecu·

,,.,

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

11

Ceflll p41r

Word ••• conncvrive

lnnrtior~e .

· 25 P"' eent DieCo11nt on p&lt;~id cule
o..d ode p11id ..-irhin 10 doye .
CARD Of T HANK!!&amp;. OBITU .. RY

$1 SO IO&lt; SO wo«l "'' " '""'"' - Eo
l4diri011ol word 1t.
p41•

10

s,oo

ment, E. Main St., Pomeroy,
Pbone 119S-7064.
~~·

CARETAKER, free rent, dial
593-7253 Athens, collect.
10-11-31c ONE FURNISHED apartmnl,
one two-bedroom
trailer.
Phone
Muon
773-5117,
MarRIDE TO ATHENS, mUll leave
ion
Reynolda
.
1~tfc
Pomeroy by 5 A.M. Pbone
911U147.

Adnr-

p .m. 0Gil~

In Memory
Joseph

White who passed away

W.
a

year ago today, Ort. 20, 1967.
Sadly missed by his wife,
Alice , daughters, son and
grandcl!ildren.
10.20-ltc

Cud rrf Thanb
WE WISH to express our thank~
to all of the trierxis who sent
flowen , cards 8.00 food duri~
the bereavement of our husbanl
aoo father. wilbur
~rque. Special thanks lo the
Rev. Robert II. Woods and Mr.
Jack Wh.lte,
Mrs. HelenSpragueaOO Family
10 20 1tp

''. ''
:

'i '

'

,

Notice
THE MIDDLEPORT City Cab
is now open under new managelll&lt;flt giving prompt 24
hour service. Phone 992-3280.
IO.l~tr

BARN REVJV AL beginnin«
Monday, Oct. 21, at 7::10 p.m.
JnterdeMminatiollal servl.,...

Everyone welcome. Evangelist Jim Debruhl. Churcll located on Horse Cave Road
near Basban.
10-lHtc

LADIES. looking for full or
part time work lor holiday
....son ahead Call !Jin.24lt

'' '

10-2~

NATIONAL BIBLE WEEK, Oct.
20-27, special offer, fr&lt;e BIble, with enlightening. easy to

follow study guides. Reserve
vours

now, write to Free Bi·

ble, Box 333, Pomeroy, Ohio.
I0-20-6tp
BAM SHOOT Sunday, Oct. 20,
1-1 p.m. Racine Buhan Road,
Hams, bacon, 2 \1 hop, sponsored by Racine Fin! Dept.
10-lMtc
COAL HAULING,

zaos.

phone 911I0-11-12tp

WILL Do sewing at borne zippers,
pockets, pegging,
hemming,

alterations,

SILVER DOUARS, wlll pay
$1.75 each. Call 9&amp;2-3611.
10-17.3tp

SOLID STATE S1ereo, 11168 walnut console model. Racllo
equipped with 4 speed automatic changer, 4 speaker
sound system. pay only $11.33
or monthly payments. Call
!Jin.321B
10- l~tc

Lost

pond.

'

Public Sale

~'AHM

SALE, Satur&lt;lay, Oct.
26 at 11 a.m. I have sold my
farm located 21f.t miles north
of Rutland just off Rutlan&lt;l

etc.

and Harrisom·ille Road. Watch
for sale signa. Will sell the

following personal property.
One 641 For&lt;! tractor, plow,
mower, disc harrow . two wa·

gons ()n rubber. Windrow hay
loader. some horse drawn
tools , 1957 GMC pickup truck,

basement, water line,

oeptic tank, R. W. O&gt;wdery,
Long Bottom, Ohio. 0.27-!0tc

sticks, ladders.
one 4 year old Guernsey cow.
Two piece living room suite,
odd chairs, stands, chests of
drawers, dressers, beds and

beddmg, wardrobe. chifforobe,
three 9xl2 rugs, rollaway bed
complete. old buffet, some
clothing, 5 gas heeaters, Maytag wringer washer. Burnside
stove. kitchen cabinet, pots
and pans. glass door cupboard,
round oak table, lwo breakfast
sets. lawn chairs, copper ket·

haust check--up. Mech.anical
work of all kinds al reaSOMble
prices. Get our price before

tie , iron kettle. hand earl.
lamps. 5 old style bath tubs.
Burnside stove and many ar:

you trade your trOI.tdes foc

Ucies nol lioled
Charley
Stone , owner. Terms cash.

~ecial M~

day througll Wed~Esday only,
Brake Adjustment. $1. ~en
seven days a week from 7 a.

11!E

Fluffy Bathroom

TI.HK COVERS.. ut $2.99

yants Budget Shop
108 W. Main
Pameroy
992-5896

11165 HONDA, all acx! lflea,
low mileage, priced to aell.
Call 1192-73M.
10.11-ltp

•"'LDDR Demouotrator, 1JII
stereo AM &amp; FM radio reoonl
player, $114 or $7 a month,
grindstone.
Phone 713-5940.
lll-17-3tp

G&amp;A GARAGE now open urder
the managership of Ray Busch.,
Cold weather is \.ere and now
is the time for your &lt;:old weather tUI'Ie-q) and a complete ex-

m. to 8:30 p. m.

BATH TOWELS......••· 88f
HI.HD TOWELS.. 2 lor 35.

1000 bales {)f hay aOO some
loose bay, 200 feet of hay
rope, garden tiller , tobacco

THERE will be a Gun Shoot
Sunday, Oct. 7JI, beginning al
noon at the Forked Run
Sportsman Club. Everyone ~
welcome.
10-!Mtc

I(Jftleone eiRe's.

Ave. Middleport by Blue Sunoco Station .
10-18-Stc

Road, Pomeroy.

10.17.3tc

AUCI'IONEER

WARM MORNING coal stove
with fan, used Jess than two
months. Glenn Jewell, Downtngton, Oblo.
I0-18-41c
ACREAGE, beautHul site, dial
593-7253 Athens, oollect.
I0-18-3tc
FlEW GROWN CHRYSANTHEMUMS an&lt;! JDUIDI all
oolors, blg and healthy, a1ao
oannllll pears and potatoes,
Reynolds P'lower Shop, Mason City, just above Corp.
line.
IO+Uc
POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
miniature. $'15 and up. Stud
service and grooming. PhoDe
1192-544!.
II 3 Uc

Not responsible for theft or accidents Rradford Auction Co.
Rox 116. Racine. Ohio. Phone

10 20 Itt

940.3821

SOUTHERN Local Athletic

Boosters will bold an auction
Saturday, Ocl 26, at 01e Racine Junior High School gym begiming at 11 a. m. with James
carnahan aDd Dan Smith, Auctioneers, Electric ranges, gas
ranges, automatic washer, television sets, record player,
desk lamp and oomerous other
howiehold items. Elson Spe~
cer, ,Presideri..
10 20 It&gt;:"

For Rent
F1ffiN1SHF.n

F'URNISHF.D GARAGE

10-18-tfc
spart-

mP.rlt on Lincoln Hill . utilities

paid ; adults o:1ly. Phone 112-

:1489

8-19-tlc

Olflce -

Res. -

lltZ-ZZit

•an

10-:ZO.Jtc

nice lawn and fruit trees. 300
yards from highway. Close to
school. Priced reuonable.
Contact Ben Quisenberry in
Syracuse . Phone 992-2954.
I0-20-61c

!1168 STEREO. Lovely walnut
oonsoie with AM &amp; I'M radio,
automatic floating turn table.
Take over paymenlll of ~ per
month or pay balance due,
$1116.43. Try t1 in yoor home.

call

m.m

1tl-20-6tc

1!1611 RED FORD Futurl Sports
Coupe, bucket seata, Cru!Jeamatic, new tlret, Gamet
Roush, phone il9S-37'11.

tt•fk

H &amp; N DAY OW or started
Leghorn Pullets, both floor or
cage grown available. Poultry housing and automation.
Moctem Poultry, Bo• 118, Ath-

ens, Ohio, phone 51:1-7131.
10.7ll-1tc

HOBSTETTER·
REALTY
GEO. HOBSJEIIER, BROKER
POMEROY -

6 room brick,

bath, flreplace, full basement,

ntce inside. $65110.00.
IIIIDDLEPORT - 7 rooltlll, bath,
furnace , lull basement, corner lot, garage. $14,000.011.
MIDDLEPORT - Z apt. frame
house, z baths, both rented .
Income $132.00 per montlt.
$5500.00.
HELEN or VIRGIL TEAFORD
ASSOCIATES
ltll
SYRACUSE
I0-20-3tc

m•

and th.n 1111 hlth prn•u,.
rlnt• of tolr wat•r to
r.c~ke car shiJ _ A.tlendont on cluty

Sat . • - - - - - •• - •

Wheel Alignment

5.55

READY - MIX concreto delivered right to your project.
Fast and easy. Free estimates. Phone 992-3284, GoegJeln Ready - Mil Co., Middleport, Ohio.
8 so lfe

have an

almost
colorless blood which does.
however , have a bluish tinge .

WMPO
• Free Estimates
• QualiiJ Concrete
• Certified Strength

-GUARAHI'EEDPHONE 992-2094

Au

Pomeroy Home &amp;

BUDGET PRICE furniture on
our third noor budget abop.
Baker Furniture, :r.fuldleporl.
Obto.
? II tfc

... E. MaiD

Pomeroy, 0

Business ServiINSTALL CERAMIC
TILE, NEW OR REMODEL
WORK on bathrooms, remodel old fireplaces wltb marble.
Free estimates, for appotnt.ment phone 911U634. 10.17~

WILL

SEWING MACIIINES, repair
..rvlce, aD mikes. WY s2284. The P'abrlc ShoP. Pomeroy. /t.uthortr.ed Singer Sal..
and Service. We Sharpen
Sclaorl.
S-29-Uc
ma~

and service. ABC Enterprlsea,
Mason, W. Ve . Phone mu4S.
8-1-tfc

Insurance

clJWJdl!J]®t'.:::::!!:!~c
~quare,

• Dellvei'J
• Quick Service
• Finishing
• Sand &amp; Gravel
DIAL !1!12·3284

7:50 A.M.
12 NOON
3 P.M.
AND
BO P.M.

407 PI.GE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

LEGAL NOTICE
MCmCI 0P tAL•
The uad~ wtD offer for -.I•

offtee of erow. Crow It Forln. Au-JII at Law, PonletaJ,
Ob!o, lD aenl, lllDN or ~. lA
Sctp1o Towllllhlp, . . . cw:!'~
(BuepUII.I IAI of mlnenliJ,
"~
Ill• late W•ber r. HeU. 8dd. rul

to

for111 tour onllnarr wor••·

e~taa. lo M _,14 OD Oatoii:W ••
1811 at 10:30 A.ll'. for aot lMI tlwl
tb• appn..U ~ ol llDAOOAO.
&amp;ale IIUbjMt to tbe .ppronl ol tbl
Pn~t~tt. Court oJ ....... cowrtt. ~WILLIAM • D. CHILDI.
Adrnl•tatrm.r of tM

• ...,. tt

1

r

tEUGLED

J I

Dn
10 lll 10 -

·-·
'THEY ALL CLOSe -"f

Enlertained

w.... r •· Nett,

'·
10 •

...,

FOR THE YOUNG &amp; YOUNG AT HEART

(.t.wen ..._,.~

Jumhkt1 CHOill

....

A.D1 010 ...old'

PIIOZI

I"-'""'' ...., ,.. ......,..,.·-..... _, .,._
- y - A ..,__,.,

1. Tomeatl
5. Side lhelvea
in flrtplaefls

9. JCnough,
old 1tyl@
JO.lnctt.e
11. Slant of
aoort
12. Meaeure
H. Bond or

Fleet
16. PoeUc Ume
17. Guldo·s
highest
note
18. Ow.re
21 . Gil
Hodga
et al.
23. Court
:u. Books of
the Bible :
~.Consume

27. Mariner
29. Eeker

31 . Lever

40. Some
.U.ltalian
ooaport
43. GrMk
valley

H . Cood"""

41 . Yardann

4B. ma,te
41. Sle
~. Slumpt.
DOWN
1. Mild
z. '}1)ankleu

....

32. Over there
snd

42. ~tuuy
In Brull

4

•

~ 15"

turquoise finish, blade in·
terior, radio &amp; heater. Priced to move now.

art11

·m

?

'/: [10

64 CORY AIR Spider 2 Door ..... -. ... -.... $895
Four speed trans., Dlower on motor, good tires, Duck·
"' seats, red vinyl int., jet block finiah. Radio.

~

It~

~2!

I"

1959 Chev. BlscaynB 6 2 Dr. . _.... $100'
1960 Buick . .'. . .. _. . _ ... · . ... . .. $19'

v..

LeSabre &amp;_Dr. P .S. Automat•c . t&lt;adio

1959 R-amoler .. .. .. . .. .. . . -.... .. .. $239

~ il.l·~ ~
::%

40

'"'l/

47

t"/-

-i-~

St.

Waqon. G9od tires.

ZHJ ' II
DPLJI

Qr

ZHXMB

POMEROY - Named to the
first honor roll issued by the
new Meigs Junior High School
were 137 students who made a
grade of "B'' or above in all
their subjects during the first
six weeks of school.
Named to the roll were:
GRADE SEVEN
Albert
Smith Jeanie Schneider, Gary
&amp;wutfer, William SWisher, Grace
Tubb, Patricia Wood, Steve An derson, John Ash, Karen Baity,
David Barnhart, Regina B 1 n g,
Rtclcy Bolin, Donna Boyd, Sarah
Boyles, Dinah ErleWine, Hazel
Erlewtne, Rodney Frecker, DB·
vid Grant, Cathy Harrison, Den.
nis Hawk, Ingrid Hawley, James
Hill, Frederick Burney, Diana
Carsey, Vicky Cleland, James
Couch, Joyce Davis, Robert Eason, Melvin Cremeans, Jacqueline Hutton, Mary Janey, Gen.
eva King, Mary Krawsczyn, Jeff

.. S299

Greenlee, C'.omte Grueser, Mel·
anie Hackett, ~elly Hall, Pat
Harris, Hich Kelly, Arthur Kloes,
William Krawsczyn, Corulie LanIng, Charles Legar, Pam Manley,

Debra Mil.)', Dwight M&lt;:Danlel,
Mary Midkiff, Mark Miller, Jeff
Morris , Cheryl Nelson, Darla
N('ulzllng, Am Ohlinger, Steve
&amp;anle,y, Leanne Sebo, MilisaRizer, Rosemary Rice, Corulie Radford, Karen Price, Ste\le Powell, Becky Scaggs, Tom Cleland,
Samson Darst, Mike ~ble, John
Swartz , Fred 'Ibompaon, Martin

Vaughan, Joe Welker, Bed&lt;y WUI,

Brenda Woods, Be&lt;lcy Wright

4 New '68 Chevys In Stock
1-Corvair Conv.
1-lmpala Custom Cpe.

~

~

1-Chevelle SS 396 Cpe.
1-Caprlce 4 Dr. with Air

'""'!

Yes, Good Selection 01
'69 MODELS
Best Deals, Too!

. We Servin

What
DC

PJIVB-

Nllli9LmHLO

Jll .LIIB ·

JPIIBVTII

I *o "• (lfJpllllq U: A NATION KAY LOIDI JT8 LlB~
J:RTIIlB 1M A DAY, A!1D Nar 11188 'I'HIIII J'OR A CEN·
'J'llRY.- MO:N'I'Z8QUIEU
'Y

w. S.ll

ACCIDENT REPORTO&gt;
POMEROY - POllee reported a minor accident Friday evening on Pomeroy' a W. Main
when a car driven by Robert
Burdette, 17, Pomeroy, skidded

st:

Into the rear of a car driven
by Simon Holsinger, 5.1, Balti-

--------·--- -----

eu

PJLGPJHDPCJ

trans .

V8 eng•ne, std. hans .

AXYDLBAAXR
.. LONOFZLLOW
One letter limply .taDda for uwther. In thta IIUDple A II u.ed
for the three L'-, X for the two O'e, etc. Bln&amp;'le letten. apoetropbill, tbe leqtb and fonnatlon. of tbe wordl are all hillt&amp;
Jl'.&amp;dl day the code Jetten are dlt'ferent.

an&amp;c,rnM

Sld.

1961 Fora ...... . ... __ ...... .

DAILY CKYPTOqUarE-Here'a bow to -rk It:

A

.

.. .

283 engine, 4 on the floor,

ptiA

•

.

64 CHEVROLET Impala H.T. Cpa......... $995

45. -

%:1,112.

ll

vmy tnm.

...- ""

37 . Lower female deity

J

ti~es( g~een exterior with white -:tylon top, green with

eolope

nameuke11
35. Girl

[II
?

Malibu Conv . V8 engine, P.G. transmission, new w•s•w

38. Monl.ken

34. Miss Dunne

22 Weakens

36. Feature ot
an estate
39 . Name

y~·······-

mentally

pnu

11/;::

65 CHEVELLE .. . .. .. ... .. . ... -. ..... .. $1495

80Wld,

20. Kind of

[14

watchful

(out)

marble
19. Salukl. or
Malemute

~

Local owner car, 4 on the floor, good wide oval W.W.
tires, red vinyl intertor, white t•n•sh, radiO &amp; heater.
Try it for performance .

29. Ita

pre&lt;:lous
alloy
13. Pauee
15. Shooter

S3. Manh bl.rd

........

color
or com
28. Dipping

11. Egypt.

2.

66 CHEVELLE SS 396 H.T. Cpe .... _.. -.. $1995

wlth

capital
IS
Muocat
30. Most

'

j

PLEASING
TERMS!

POMEROY MOTOR .CO.·
308 ·318 E. MAIN
"2·2126
POMEROY
OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8:00

more, Md., who slowed suddenly. There were no IJUurlea and
no charges filed. Minor damage!l were incurred r.o the Hoi.
1Inger car and oone to the lltrdette vehicle.

MEETING CHANGED
RACINE - A mooting ol tile
'§.;.thorn Local Athletic Booatorlglnally sclleciUled f o r
_evening lllllleod 'IIIII be
tile Soolhem H 11 h
Ill Racine at 8 p.m. Tuel-

titm.d..,.

OCT, 15, 1918 - TIIERE are now being
built at Pittsburgh eight steel towboats, two steel
tug boats, seven steel maneuvering barges, one
steel ferryboat and one steel machine boat ;
which surely speaks well for Pittsburgh, the
greatest towboat center Ln the world.
No boat ever built in the world for towing
purposes has ever equalled the Pittsburgh
sternwheel towboat. This kind or towboat known
as the Ohio River towboat is Ln use on rivers
in Russia, Egypt, Australia, Africa, Mexico,
lndia, Venezuela, Bolivia, Nicaragua and other
countries.
Captain J. frank Ellison of Cincinnati, who
with Captain Thomas Rces of Pittsburgh arc
considered two or the best authorities in Ulc
world on river steamboats and machinery , arc
of the opinion that no boat has ever been buill
that gave the satisfaction that has been given
by the Ohio River sternwheel towboat whic.:h
outclasses in every way the tunnel screw
boats or any other inventJons that have been
tried Ln the construction of riverboats,

Missiasl.wl River, now operating between 8..
Louis and New Orleans.

GALLlf'OL~ By the Call ot 1918 it was
apparent that the ll. S. Government had no
plans for the Improvement of war - time
river transportation on the Ohio River. Most
river interests were dhignmtled, some call ing it a "raw deal!'
Little did they realize that one of the major obstacles, to their proposal!! that a government barge line be formed, was the conatruction of the locks and dams system Cor the
Ohio ·River, Too, they could not forsee that
in a few short weeks the War in Europe
would be 0\ler.
The River News in the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune had this to sa.y about the barge line:

tnar, Jim Boggs, Edgar Abbott,
Linda Atkinson, Robin Crew, Paul
CUnningham, Gene Davis, Merrl
Ebersbach, Beth Fultz, Pl•ilip
Gaul, Terry George, Patrlzla
Glaze, Karen Hale, John Harri.
son, Sltelia Hawk, Randy Haynes,
Trudy llendrix, Jeanie Hooper,
~gene McKinney, Rick Mayer,
Edie Mees, Darline Michael,
9\erry Midlael, John MlUer,
Desiree Pike, Ragena McGuire,
James Schmoll, John Slaven, WO llam Stanley, Desiree Still, Richard Vaughan, Jane Thomas, AndY
Vaughan, Dallas Weber, Marlnda Young.
GRADE NINE - Joyce Arney,
&amp;!san Andrews, Richard A s h,
Doris Barnhart, Irene Barnes,
Opal Barry, Karen Cadle, Tom
Crisp, Mike Cullums, Jo Ellen
Diehl, Nancy Dixon, Roger Dixon, Andrea Dewhurst. Debbie
Garnes, Victoria Grate, Nancy

dark blue finish with white nylon top. A real sharpie .

lix

of pepper
8. Man'e name

;: .

Four on the floor, 400 8 cyl., LeMons, blue finish,
custom striping, blue vinyl int. , with bucket soots ,
stereo P~B . rGdio, 23,000 miles by local owner. Like
new 1st line wide oval W.W. tires.

bucket seats, console, radio, P .S. &amp; P .B. , auto. trans.

26. Pro-

porter's job
5. Actor
Holbrook
6.Get.ha
gear
7. Species

....

GRADE EIGIIT - Diana Aleshire, Lynne Baker, Liz Blaet.

66 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON. • • · • • • $2095

DAILY CROSSWORD
3. Clay
4. Do a

'

67 PONTIAC Fireblrd H.T. Cpe.... __ -.... $2595

Local I owner car, new w-1-w tires, vinyl trim with

A(JIIOI1I1

I"

Lightfoot, Keith Little, Mike Mll.Y,
• AlWl McLaughlin, Janet Morris,
Mark Morris, Tlna Nieri, Peggy
O'Brien, Gary O'Dell, Paul Pear1101'1, Robert Ramsburg, Joe Rosenbaum, Debra Schuck, &amp;!san
Powers, Donna Bunch.

Match These Buysl

MIDN16HT HE!a!.

FOYMID

Y~fl'4·r·•

l&lt;eeping Meigs
Gallic and
Mason Area
Informed As
Well As

I

I

fice at Clnclnnati for the purpose of studyiru.:
the traffic and transportation conditions on the
Ohio River and its tributaries in the hope that
a larger utilization of the present cqu.lpment
may be accomplished. You are, of course,
aware that the authorized improvements of
the Ohio River between Wheeling and Cin'cin~
nati have not been completed. Indeed, some of
the projected locks and dams have not yet begun,

OCT, 18, 1918 - NO BARGE LINE FOR
THE OHIO RIVER was the heading of this
Item: A final and ooequivocal negative an.
awer to the demand that the Railroad Admin.
lstration set aside a sum to construct barges
for the Ohio River is contained in a letter
which Senator Watson or Indiana bas received from G, A, Tomlinson, who is Ln charge of
tlle Water Transportation Division of the Rail~
road Administrator's Office, The letter says :

UNDER TilE oxlsting conditions, I do oot
feel justified in reconunending to the Director-General of the Railroad Administration an
appropriation for the construction of vessels
for Ollio River service.
The Inland Waterways Division of the U. S.
Railroad Administration is establishing an of-

Junior High
Honor Roll

AT

,, t lbe

UNcmnhlethne l'our Jumhl..,

one letter to each

Y'

OCT, 15, 1918 THE government has
given the Ohio River a raw deal from report s and there will be no barge lines bullt
for this river until a later time. Appropriations were made Cor a barge line on the

INFORMATION
NEWS
presents
LOCAL REPORTS
DAILY

GOEGLEIN GRAVEL

AllTOMOBJLE Insurance beeo
csnceDed? Loot vour operator's license? Can il9S-ZIIM.
I 15 lfe

BHZO. - ZKPJTCGM
Bivalves

BLAETTNARS
PH. 99:1-2143

I;XPERT

4 I lfe

CIGARI!.TI'E vending

Fnun the Larplt Truc'k or
Bullcb- Radiator To Tho
!ftalltst HMter Core.

Hocklneport, Ohio
Phone 667·3370

Svn.········ · ·

eration, New Haven. bone

.
I

October 20, 1988

BOAT BUILDING BOOMING

Sc•awarzel Marine

M-F- --- - - - - • - - I I to 6

Am CONDITIONING Refrigeration service. Jack's Refrig-

abbr.

bUt-

~nd

Phone 9!n-5434,

$1,500.011.
RACINE - BUSINESS ROOMTile construction, tiled noors ,
ceiling heater, storage room,
tollet In good condition.
$5,1100.110.
REEDSVILLE - NICE COTTAGE - I \1 story, I rooffil, 3
bedrooms, bath. basement.
free gas beat, drilled well , garage. A buy at 15.9110.110.
HENRY c:u:LAND

level lots . One room cellar,

10-20-5tc NINE ROOM ROUSE, 2 baths,
outbulldil188, 13 acre• ground,
$16.1100. can Mary Lyons m.
22911.
10.20-61c

unfurnished
apartment~ . CloR to school.

pon:hes. gas noor furnace.

FIVE ROOMS and bath on lour
tonholes, etc., pay $14.90 or
$UO a month. Phone 7n$40.
10.17-3tp

&lt;00

Compieto Senlce
PlloM ••••
a.ciDe. Oldo
Crttl BrHfwd
i I lie

,,

6-9%-18
On DlsplaJ
115 Soon
To Arrive

'

Romolo lo !~-~
with warln lOOP
l ,• Spray•d

C. C. BRADFORD

17 FOOT sell-liS!elllbled camp.
er, Lone Eagle, located ot
camp sl1e 24, Ruyal Dak Park,
$800, Phone 11112-6147. I0-18-Stc

1"18 ZIG ZAG sewlnt machine.
The machine l1l()ll()gl'ams,

(Not A Orlva"''Thru}

•

S.nti~EI, Sunday,

EYINRUDE
69's Are Here

.... "''" .,..,,; CAR WASH

Flalwooda

RED BONE coon hound near
Chesler, name, 'King', Phone
185-1132.
10.17.3tc !':ARLY AMERICAN Stereo,
lovely maple finish, instant
AKC Golden Retriever puppies,
For Sale or Trade
on radio, AM &amp; FM, I speed
524 Ash St., Middleport. il9S1967 INTERNATIONAL truck, 4
changer, dual volume control.
541!.
~
speed, '10 ton, 1964 Chevrolet,
Balance of 191.02 or monthly
1967 Mustang &amp;-cylil&gt;ler, :!payments of $6, Phone m.
TWO c&lt;l81 otokers with conspeed. Financing avaDable.
3218.
10-l~tc
trols, Arnold Brothers, PoPbone 9ft.fi647 ; alter 5 p.m.
meroy, Pllone il9S-U48.
Phone 19M748.
Ht-lfc THREE young heifers, two Hollo.I:I-Uc
stein, one Jersey . Phone 7425252.
10-18-ttp
NYI'ATOES,
Phone iM:I-2254
For Sale or Rent
Clarence
Proffitt,
Portland.
LARGE 4 BEDROOM bowre, FOUR room house, bath. all
10-18-lfc
near all schools, in Racine.
conveniences, Pomeroy, pricPhone 941).4()73.
10.»«&lt;:
ed reasonably. Contact Bob
20 INCH COAL furnace In good
Eastman, Phone m.M90 or
oondillon, f35, Phone Mason.
~ ~3558.
10-l(.Qp
Help Wanted
Tn-5202.
10-!Hlp
GRILL COOK, Apply In person,
Crow's Steak House, Pome- TWO FAMJL Y bouse, 2M Race 7x8 FOOT overhead wood gaSt., Middleport, Phone il9Sroy.
16-~
rage door, 4 lncb clearance.
568t
10-14-12tp
oomplete with hardware and
fllSIIWASHER wanted on weekdoor jams, S28.011. Brown's
ends. Apply in penon, Crow A GOOD DEAL, 111111 AM-FM
Trailer Park, Mtnerovllle.
stereo console with 4 speed
Steak House, Pomeroy.
Phont 982-33H.
10-~
automatic changer, 4 opeaker
10-17.3tc
sound system. Lovely walnut
ONE RIDING HORSE, gaited,
console. Taite over paymenta
Strawberry Roan, phone 742of $1.50 per week or pay
Help Wanted
011 alter 5 phone 742-5163.
$101.12. Try H tn yoor home,
111-1'-'lc
Mille or Female
Phone 9112-2838.
10-!Uic
MAKE 13 TO 15 or more an
hour serving Watkins custom- 10 PAYMENTS OF $5 or $11
Real Estate For Sale
ers in c1ty of Pomeroy with
cash. Must sell 1968 sewing ONE STORY frame, three beddaily used products plus
machine. Fully equipped to
rooms, bath, large lot, full
Christmas gilts. Men or wo-.
zig zag, make buttomoles, sew
t?asement, on Pomeroy·Harmen are eligible, No ag• lion buttons, etc. Five months
••sonville Road. Rodney Down·
mit. Spare or full time. Openold. Call 992-2836,
mg, Broker, PhoM 992-2341.
ioa now. Write immodiately
10-20-6tc
IO.l~tc
D-90. Watkins Products, Inc .,
Winona, Minnesota 559117.
HOME SI.LE
O'BRIEN &amp; CROW
10-20-ltc
REALTY COMPANY
BEDSPREADS.......... $9.95
I'OMEROY - 7 room frame, 3
THROW RUGS........... $1. 99
bedrooms, bath, basement, %

VACANCY for two elderly pee&gt;
pie. Prefer private paid patients . Phone Mason, 'm-5185.
10-3-tfc

'

alao.EMeyiDU,

IJG.WI9.

For Sale
2 story frame hOI.llK!, windows,
doors, etc. See at N. Second

BACK HOE and Dof.er Service,

,,._.. ,

bedroom apartment
with garage on Butternut
Ave. Phone 1192-5127. 10-14-Uc

r.JNSENG, $33 Jb. Golden Seal
$2.50, Snake Root 14.50, May
Apple Root 10 cents. Blll
Bailey, ReedaviUe.

REPAffi, REFINISH, 1'1!COildltlon goH clubs, John Teaford.
().2S-30tp

·'

THREE

COAL FURNACE, new gas water heater, all materlal11 in

Wanted To Buy

Mrs Freddie Thabet. Maoon,
Phone 773-5651.
4-30·tfc

1.. •

10-JJ.«e

ANTIQUES, furniture, dl!lbea,
miscellaneous. Mrs. Howard
Cecil, 800 W. MaiD St., Pomeroy.
14-Uc

12:00 Noon Soturday

IN MEMORY of

Business Services

lulinlh Servi-

'fliAILEil LOTS. Bob'• llablle A STITCH In lillie, 1111 ate UC DITCH DIGGING, water lb!eo,
antpmaHe leWiDC maebiDe.
Court, Syr.....,, Oblo 011 Sllte
teed1 bedl, Paul Anderaon,
This hu 1J bullt.ln detlp.
Rt. 121, Phone . .1.
1\lalon, w. va. Phone m8-11-lfc
Maka buttenholeo. ThlB or5'118.
16-1-301p
lJlnal aold lolr Pll8.50 now pay
only $75 or t1 per month. DOZER, BACKHOE, lrellcller
11UULER SPACE, ~ te
Phone il9S-IIIe.
lll-14-111:
hook up, private, pJenl7 of
and truck ..me., oeptle
room lor chlldren to Jlla1.
tanks, water llnes, basementll,
Phone 912.3901.
8-14-lk PONIES, your choice of 10
also topooU. Henry illhr,
RIDE TO ATHENS. Must leave
hut!
f40
each,
mares
and
phone
. . mr or Roger Babr,
Pomeroy by 12 noon retum
geld!Dp, other ponleo lor oaJe
plione 1111 ....
10-UI)tp
FOUR
ROOM
flnllbed
apart10 p.m. ~.
10-~

OFFICE HOURS
11 ,30 o,. to

For Sale

A GENEROUS PEIISON to
uona1e a g.. beater for the
2ra1:to Chester moetin8 room
of the O&gt;b, Boy and G I r I
Scouts. Contscl Nat CaJpenter, Long Bottom, Phone 9153564 or Hob Mill11, Star Jl&lt;lu1e,
Phone 98&gt;41l0.
10-2Ntp

BLIND 4.DS.
A4dhloMI 25c Chorge

8:30 o .m.

For lent

W111tM

WANT AD
INFORM.\ liON

The Sunday Times -

Vl/il'l' IS OVER
,
'
NEW TOWBOAT SINKS
TOKYO cOPO- A i r - N,
OCT. 18, 1918 - THE fiiB- Sbelepln, 1 kip member ol the
&amp;hlp Clairton of the &lt;:arnotge SOviet I'Olllburo, CCIIICluded I

TOWBOAT M.AN DROWNED
OCT, 16, 1918- LONNlE Mash, a ooai handler on the towboat Eugene Dana Smith, was
drowned Monday nigllt while she was passing
through Carrion Riwle, three miles below Gallipolis. Mash was wheeling coal and the wheel
of his wheelbarrow struck the bulkhead and
threw him into the river. The fireman saw him
and ran back a long the guard oftheboat to catch
him but he never came to the surfuce. The Smith
was enroutc down tho river with a tow of coal.
S..e was stopped and a yacht lowered and every
effort made to find him, with no success, and
.she proceded on down the river.
Captain E. A, Burnsides, SuperlntemiBnt of
the Campbells Creell. Coal Co., has a man on
the scene today trying to Und the bodY but at
last reports had not succeeded. Mash was 29
years old and lived at Lock No. 9.

Stee1 Co. sank in the Mononphela River, near Brownsville,
PL, according to word recehed
here today. with four loaded
barges. The boat hid ded.., near
the Pike Mine of the Diamond
Coal Co. the previous nJght and
Tuesday began to !link, finally
settling in eight feet of water. The
b«lt was one of the speediest in
this section and was built at
Charleston, W. Va., arriving at
Pittsburgh last SepL 9.
Carnelge steel officials said
toda,y that steps would be taken
to raise the Clairton. NQ cause
is koown for the sudden collapse
of Ule boat. The Clairton was a
brand new steel hull, tunnel screw
boat built at the Charles Ward
Engineering Co., Charleston, W.

PA[JIJ LE WIIEE LS OR PROPEJ.LORS

OCT . 17, 191 ~ - AS ;\ solution of rher problems, Oscar Bradford of Chicago, Dl., famous
river improvement advocate and inventor, suggests that steamboats be propelled by engines
with spiral shafts directl.v conne(!ted with separate motors. Uradfofd states that we must appropriate some of the successful devi ces embodied
in the aeroplane and automobile. The paddle
wheel must be done away with, says Mr. Bradford. In this, 11e is away off, in our opinion.
The paddl ewht'&lt;! l steamboats have been the
most successful for all general purposes that
have ever bt-cn used on any inland river. What
steamboats nt"Cd is a device that will reduce
the cost of labor and fuel.

1-

- ·

'

. . ·-- "
~

Ia
tllo thlrtl

Japon.&amp;Jviet Labor Unkln 111terchall&amp;e moeting. He On te
Mo1eow.

James K. Polk, in hia bid
for the presidency ill 1844, wa1
the first "dark horae" in
American _politics.

Va.

LISTEN TO 20th CENTURY REFORMATION HOUR

Mon. thru Fri. -- 9:30AM
1360 ~~.~HE WMOV

Rnenswood. W. Ve.

Weekly Guide To Better TV Viewing
Fold and !'lare Near Your Television Set li1r Connnit·n t Hef.,renct•

tHA~NEL

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'""""

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l:riffi11

1 l.ove l.ury

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UlANNU 8

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&lt;&gt;

lloll)"lloW Squaroo

&amp;.•hal fir..

6 "'"""
7'""""
8 "'"""'

CllANNH 3

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\haou"o \lltoo

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CHANNF.L 13

OUNNEL I

CHANNELI3

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Tl/LRSIXJ} .

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nve.dll.)' vtllt to
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t

�. A LITTLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Bring Top . Grade Results
19 -

DEADLINES
5
Dor Before Publlnllon
Mo.... 111, O.edlirw 9 o.m.
CeMollotl ...... c ... ctionl

,.Ill.

Will lite

MC.iplecl vntil 9 •-"' · lot
Dow •' Public:elion

REGULA TIOH5
The Publl•""• •••••.,•• iho rig-ht
to .dlt or relec:t onr od• do•m•d Obtec:llonabl •. Th. f.ubll.her will not
be reepctn1lble or more rhan on•
lnc:orreet lneertlon.

UTES
F., Wo11t Ad S.r .. ice
5 , • ..,, ~· Word oM l""'ertion
Mlnllftum Cllor . . 75c
12 centl ,_, wo.d tlw•• coneecu·

,,.,

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

11

Ceflll p41r

Word ••• conncvrive

lnnrtior~e .

· 25 P"' eent DieCo11nt on p&lt;~id cule
o..d ode p11id ..-irhin 10 doye .
CARD Of T HANK!!&amp;. OBITU .. RY

$1 SO IO&lt; SO wo«l "'' " '""'"' - Eo
l4diri011ol word 1t.
p41•

10

s,oo

ment, E. Main St., Pomeroy,
Pbone 119S-7064.
~~·

CARETAKER, free rent, dial
593-7253 Athens, collect.
10-11-31c ONE FURNISHED apartmnl,
one two-bedroom
trailer.
Phone
Muon
773-5117,
MarRIDE TO ATHENS, mUll leave
ion
Reynolda
.
1~tfc
Pomeroy by 5 A.M. Pbone
911U147.

Adnr-

p .m. 0Gil~

In Memory
Joseph

White who passed away

W.
a

year ago today, Ort. 20, 1967.
Sadly missed by his wife,
Alice , daughters, son and
grandcl!ildren.
10.20-ltc

Cud rrf Thanb
WE WISH to express our thank~
to all of the trierxis who sent
flowen , cards 8.00 food duri~
the bereavement of our husbanl
aoo father. wilbur
~rque. Special thanks lo the
Rev. Robert II. Woods and Mr.
Jack Wh.lte,
Mrs. HelenSpragueaOO Family
10 20 1tp

''. ''
:

'i '

'

,

Notice
THE MIDDLEPORT City Cab
is now open under new managelll&lt;flt giving prompt 24
hour service. Phone 992-3280.
IO.l~tr

BARN REVJV AL beginnin«
Monday, Oct. 21, at 7::10 p.m.
JnterdeMminatiollal servl.,...

Everyone welcome. Evangelist Jim Debruhl. Churcll located on Horse Cave Road
near Basban.
10-lHtc

LADIES. looking for full or
part time work lor holiday
....son ahead Call !Jin.24lt

'' '

10-2~

NATIONAL BIBLE WEEK, Oct.
20-27, special offer, fr&lt;e BIble, with enlightening. easy to

follow study guides. Reserve
vours

now, write to Free Bi·

ble, Box 333, Pomeroy, Ohio.
I0-20-6tp
BAM SHOOT Sunday, Oct. 20,
1-1 p.m. Racine Buhan Road,
Hams, bacon, 2 \1 hop, sponsored by Racine Fin! Dept.
10-lMtc
COAL HAULING,

zaos.

phone 911I0-11-12tp

WILL Do sewing at borne zippers,
pockets, pegging,
hemming,

alterations,

SILVER DOUARS, wlll pay
$1.75 each. Call 9&amp;2-3611.
10-17.3tp

SOLID STATE S1ereo, 11168 walnut console model. Racllo
equipped with 4 speed automatic changer, 4 speaker
sound system. pay only $11.33
or monthly payments. Call
!Jin.321B
10- l~tc

Lost

pond.

'

Public Sale

~'AHM

SALE, Satur&lt;lay, Oct.
26 at 11 a.m. I have sold my
farm located 21f.t miles north
of Rutland just off Rutlan&lt;l

etc.

and Harrisom·ille Road. Watch
for sale signa. Will sell the

following personal property.
One 641 For&lt;! tractor, plow,
mower, disc harrow . two wa·

gons ()n rubber. Windrow hay
loader. some horse drawn
tools , 1957 GMC pickup truck,

basement, water line,

oeptic tank, R. W. O&gt;wdery,
Long Bottom, Ohio. 0.27-!0tc

sticks, ladders.
one 4 year old Guernsey cow.
Two piece living room suite,
odd chairs, stands, chests of
drawers, dressers, beds and

beddmg, wardrobe. chifforobe,
three 9xl2 rugs, rollaway bed
complete. old buffet, some
clothing, 5 gas heeaters, Maytag wringer washer. Burnside
stove. kitchen cabinet, pots
and pans. glass door cupboard,
round oak table, lwo breakfast
sets. lawn chairs, copper ket·

haust check--up. Mech.anical
work of all kinds al reaSOMble
prices. Get our price before

tie , iron kettle. hand earl.
lamps. 5 old style bath tubs.
Burnside stove and many ar:

you trade your trOI.tdes foc

Ucies nol lioled
Charley
Stone , owner. Terms cash.

~ecial M~

day througll Wed~Esday only,
Brake Adjustment. $1. ~en
seven days a week from 7 a.

11!E

Fluffy Bathroom

TI.HK COVERS.. ut $2.99

yants Budget Shop
108 W. Main
Pameroy
992-5896

11165 HONDA, all acx! lflea,
low mileage, priced to aell.
Call 1192-73M.
10.11-ltp

•"'LDDR Demouotrator, 1JII
stereo AM &amp; FM radio reoonl
player, $114 or $7 a month,
grindstone.
Phone 713-5940.
lll-17-3tp

G&amp;A GARAGE now open urder
the managership of Ray Busch.,
Cold weather is \.ere and now
is the time for your &lt;:old weather tUI'Ie-q) and a complete ex-

m. to 8:30 p. m.

BATH TOWELS......••· 88f
HI.HD TOWELS.. 2 lor 35.

1000 bales {)f hay aOO some
loose bay, 200 feet of hay
rope, garden tiller , tobacco

THERE will be a Gun Shoot
Sunday, Oct. 7JI, beginning al
noon at the Forked Run
Sportsman Club. Everyone ~
welcome.
10-!Mtc

I(Jftleone eiRe's.

Ave. Middleport by Blue Sunoco Station .
10-18-Stc

Road, Pomeroy.

10.17.3tc

AUCI'IONEER

WARM MORNING coal stove
with fan, used Jess than two
months. Glenn Jewell, Downtngton, Oblo.
I0-18-41c
ACREAGE, beautHul site, dial
593-7253 Athens, oollect.
I0-18-3tc
FlEW GROWN CHRYSANTHEMUMS an&lt;! JDUIDI all
oolors, blg and healthy, a1ao
oannllll pears and potatoes,
Reynolds P'lower Shop, Mason City, just above Corp.
line.
IO+Uc
POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
miniature. $'15 and up. Stud
service and grooming. PhoDe
1192-544!.
II 3 Uc

Not responsible for theft or accidents Rradford Auction Co.
Rox 116. Racine. Ohio. Phone

10 20 Itt

940.3821

SOUTHERN Local Athletic

Boosters will bold an auction
Saturday, Ocl 26, at 01e Racine Junior High School gym begiming at 11 a. m. with James
carnahan aDd Dan Smith, Auctioneers, Electric ranges, gas
ranges, automatic washer, television sets, record player,
desk lamp and oomerous other
howiehold items. Elson Spe~
cer, ,Presideri..
10 20 It&gt;:"

For Rent
F1ffiN1SHF.n

F'URNISHF.D GARAGE

10-18-tfc
spart-

mP.rlt on Lincoln Hill . utilities

paid ; adults o:1ly. Phone 112-

:1489

8-19-tlc

Olflce -

Res. -

lltZ-ZZit

•an

10-:ZO.Jtc

nice lawn and fruit trees. 300
yards from highway. Close to
school. Priced reuonable.
Contact Ben Quisenberry in
Syracuse . Phone 992-2954.
I0-20-61c

!1168 STEREO. Lovely walnut
oonsoie with AM &amp; I'M radio,
automatic floating turn table.
Take over paymenlll of ~ per
month or pay balance due,
$1116.43. Try t1 in yoor home.

call

m.m

1tl-20-6tc

1!1611 RED FORD Futurl Sports
Coupe, bucket seata, Cru!Jeamatic, new tlret, Gamet
Roush, phone il9S-37'11.

tt•fk

H &amp; N DAY OW or started
Leghorn Pullets, both floor or
cage grown available. Poultry housing and automation.
Moctem Poultry, Bo• 118, Ath-

ens, Ohio, phone 51:1-7131.
10.7ll-1tc

HOBSTETTER·
REALTY
GEO. HOBSJEIIER, BROKER
POMEROY -

6 room brick,

bath, flreplace, full basement,

ntce inside. $65110.00.
IIIIDDLEPORT - 7 rooltlll, bath,
furnace , lull basement, corner lot, garage. $14,000.011.
MIDDLEPORT - Z apt. frame
house, z baths, both rented .
Income $132.00 per montlt.
$5500.00.
HELEN or VIRGIL TEAFORD
ASSOCIATES
ltll
SYRACUSE
I0-20-3tc

m•

and th.n 1111 hlth prn•u,.
rlnt• of tolr wat•r to
r.c~ke car shiJ _ A.tlendont on cluty

Sat . • - - - - - •• - •

Wheel Alignment

5.55

READY - MIX concreto delivered right to your project.
Fast and easy. Free estimates. Phone 992-3284, GoegJeln Ready - Mil Co., Middleport, Ohio.
8 so lfe

have an

almost
colorless blood which does.
however , have a bluish tinge .

WMPO
• Free Estimates
• QualiiJ Concrete
• Certified Strength

-GUARAHI'EEDPHONE 992-2094

Au

Pomeroy Home &amp;

BUDGET PRICE furniture on
our third noor budget abop.
Baker Furniture, :r.fuldleporl.
Obto.
? II tfc

... E. MaiD

Pomeroy, 0

Business ServiINSTALL CERAMIC
TILE, NEW OR REMODEL
WORK on bathrooms, remodel old fireplaces wltb marble.
Free estimates, for appotnt.ment phone 911U634. 10.17~

WILL

SEWING MACIIINES, repair
..rvlce, aD mikes. WY s2284. The P'abrlc ShoP. Pomeroy. /t.uthortr.ed Singer Sal..
and Service. We Sharpen
Sclaorl.
S-29-Uc
ma~

and service. ABC Enterprlsea,
Mason, W. Ve . Phone mu4S.
8-1-tfc

Insurance

clJWJdl!J]®t'.:::::!!:!~c
~quare,

• Dellvei'J
• Quick Service
• Finishing
• Sand &amp; Gravel
DIAL !1!12·3284

7:50 A.M.
12 NOON
3 P.M.
AND
BO P.M.

407 PI.GE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

LEGAL NOTICE
MCmCI 0P tAL•
The uad~ wtD offer for -.I•

offtee of erow. Crow It Forln. Au-JII at Law, PonletaJ,
Ob!o, lD aenl, lllDN or ~. lA
Sctp1o Towllllhlp, . . . cw:!'~
(BuepUII.I IAI of mlnenliJ,
"~
Ill• late W•ber r. HeU. 8dd. rul

to

for111 tour onllnarr wor••·

e~taa. lo M _,14 OD Oatoii:W ••
1811 at 10:30 A.ll'. for aot lMI tlwl
tb• appn..U ~ ol llDAOOAO.
&amp;ale IIUbjMt to tbe .ppronl ol tbl
Pn~t~tt. Court oJ ....... cowrtt. ~WILLIAM • D. CHILDI.
Adrnl•tatrm.r of tM

• ...,. tt

1

r

tEUGLED

J I

Dn
10 lll 10 -

·-·
'THEY ALL CLOSe -"f

Enlertained

w.... r •· Nett,

'·
10 •

...,

FOR THE YOUNG &amp; YOUNG AT HEART

(.t.wen ..._,.~

Jumhkt1 CHOill

....

A.D1 010 ...old'

PIIOZI

I"-'""'' ...., ,.. ......,..,.·-..... _, .,._
- y - A ..,__,.,

1. Tomeatl
5. Side lhelvea
in flrtplaefls

9. JCnough,
old 1tyl@
JO.lnctt.e
11. Slant of
aoort
12. Meaeure
H. Bond or

Fleet
16. PoeUc Ume
17. Guldo·s
highest
note
18. Ow.re
21 . Gil
Hodga
et al.
23. Court
:u. Books of
the Bible :
~.Consume

27. Mariner
29. Eeker

31 . Lever

40. Some
.U.ltalian
ooaport
43. GrMk
valley

H . Cood"""

41 . Yardann

4B. ma,te
41. Sle
~. Slumpt.
DOWN
1. Mild
z. '}1)ankleu

....

32. Over there
snd

42. ~tuuy
In Brull

4

•

~ 15"

turquoise finish, blade in·
terior, radio &amp; heater. Priced to move now.

art11

·m

?

'/: [10

64 CORY AIR Spider 2 Door ..... -. ... -.... $895
Four speed trans., Dlower on motor, good tires, Duck·
"' seats, red vinyl int., jet block finiah. Radio.

~

It~

~2!

I"

1959 Chev. BlscaynB 6 2 Dr. . _.... $100'
1960 Buick . .'. . .. _. . _ ... · . ... . .. $19'

v..

LeSabre &amp;_Dr. P .S. Automat•c . t&lt;adio

1959 R-amoler .. .. .. . .. .. . . -.... .. .. $239

~ il.l·~ ~
::%

40

'"'l/

47

t"/-

-i-~

St.

Waqon. G9od tires.

ZHJ ' II
DPLJI

Qr

ZHXMB

POMEROY - Named to the
first honor roll issued by the
new Meigs Junior High School
were 137 students who made a
grade of "B'' or above in all
their subjects during the first
six weeks of school.
Named to the roll were:
GRADE SEVEN
Albert
Smith Jeanie Schneider, Gary
&amp;wutfer, William SWisher, Grace
Tubb, Patricia Wood, Steve An derson, John Ash, Karen Baity,
David Barnhart, Regina B 1 n g,
Rtclcy Bolin, Donna Boyd, Sarah
Boyles, Dinah ErleWine, Hazel
Erlewtne, Rodney Frecker, DB·
vid Grant, Cathy Harrison, Den.
nis Hawk, Ingrid Hawley, James
Hill, Frederick Burney, Diana
Carsey, Vicky Cleland, James
Couch, Joyce Davis, Robert Eason, Melvin Cremeans, Jacqueline Hutton, Mary Janey, Gen.
eva King, Mary Krawsczyn, Jeff

.. S299

Greenlee, C'.omte Grueser, Mel·
anie Hackett, ~elly Hall, Pat
Harris, Hich Kelly, Arthur Kloes,
William Krawsczyn, Corulie LanIng, Charles Legar, Pam Manley,

Debra Mil.)', Dwight M&lt;:Danlel,
Mary Midkiff, Mark Miller, Jeff
Morris , Cheryl Nelson, Darla
N('ulzllng, Am Ohlinger, Steve
&amp;anle,y, Leanne Sebo, MilisaRizer, Rosemary Rice, Corulie Radford, Karen Price, Ste\le Powell, Becky Scaggs, Tom Cleland,
Samson Darst, Mike ~ble, John
Swartz , Fred 'Ibompaon, Martin

Vaughan, Joe Welker, Bed&lt;y WUI,

Brenda Woods, Be&lt;lcy Wright

4 New '68 Chevys In Stock
1-Corvair Conv.
1-lmpala Custom Cpe.

~

~

1-Chevelle SS 396 Cpe.
1-Caprlce 4 Dr. with Air

'""'!

Yes, Good Selection 01
'69 MODELS
Best Deals, Too!

. We Servin

What
DC

PJIVB-

Nllli9LmHLO

Jll .LIIB ·

JPIIBVTII

I *o "• (lfJpllllq U: A NATION KAY LOIDI JT8 LlB~
J:RTIIlB 1M A DAY, A!1D Nar 11188 'I'HIIII J'OR A CEN·
'J'llRY.- MO:N'I'Z8QUIEU
'Y

w. S.ll

ACCIDENT REPORTO&gt;
POMEROY - POllee reported a minor accident Friday evening on Pomeroy' a W. Main
when a car driven by Robert
Burdette, 17, Pomeroy, skidded

st:

Into the rear of a car driven
by Simon Holsinger, 5.1, Balti-

--------·--- -----

eu

PJLGPJHDPCJ

trans .

V8 eng•ne, std. hans .

AXYDLBAAXR
.. LONOFZLLOW
One letter limply .taDda for uwther. In thta IIUDple A II u.ed
for the three L'-, X for the two O'e, etc. Bln&amp;'le letten. apoetropbill, tbe leqtb and fonnatlon. of tbe wordl are all hillt&amp;
Jl'.&amp;dl day the code Jetten are dlt'ferent.

an&amp;c,rnM

Sld.

1961 Fora ...... . ... __ ...... .

DAILY CKYPTOqUarE-Here'a bow to -rk It:

A

.

.. .

283 engine, 4 on the floor,

ptiA

•

.

64 CHEVROLET Impala H.T. Cpa......... $995

45. -

%:1,112.

ll

vmy tnm.

...- ""

37 . Lower female deity

J

ti~es( g~een exterior with white -:tylon top, green with

eolope

nameuke11
35. Girl

[II
?

Malibu Conv . V8 engine, P.G. transmission, new w•s•w

38. Monl.ken

34. Miss Dunne

22 Weakens

36. Feature ot
an estate
39 . Name

y~·······-

mentally

pnu

11/;::

65 CHEVELLE .. . .. .. ... .. . ... -. ..... .. $1495

80Wld,

20. Kind of

[14

watchful

(out)

marble
19. Salukl. or
Malemute

~

Local owner car, 4 on the floor, good wide oval W.W.
tires, red vinyl intertor, white t•n•sh, radiO &amp; heater.
Try it for performance .

29. Ita

pre&lt;:lous
alloy
13. Pauee
15. Shooter

S3. Manh bl.rd

........

color
or com
28. Dipping

11. Egypt.

2.

66 CHEVELLE SS 396 H.T. Cpe .... _.. -.. $1995

wlth

capital
IS
Muocat
30. Most

'

j

PLEASING
TERMS!

POMEROY MOTOR .CO.·
308 ·318 E. MAIN
"2·2126
POMEROY
OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8:00

more, Md., who slowed suddenly. There were no IJUurlea and
no charges filed. Minor damage!l were incurred r.o the Hoi.
1Inger car and oone to the lltrdette vehicle.

MEETING CHANGED
RACINE - A mooting ol tile
'§.;.thorn Local Athletic Booatorlglnally sclleciUled f o r
_evening lllllleod 'IIIII be
tile Soolhem H 11 h
Ill Racine at 8 p.m. Tuel-

titm.d..,.

OCT, 15, 1918 - TIIERE are now being
built at Pittsburgh eight steel towboats, two steel
tug boats, seven steel maneuvering barges, one
steel ferryboat and one steel machine boat ;
which surely speaks well for Pittsburgh, the
greatest towboat center Ln the world.
No boat ever built in the world for towing
purposes has ever equalled the Pittsburgh
sternwheel towboat. This kind or towboat known
as the Ohio River towboat is Ln use on rivers
in Russia, Egypt, Australia, Africa, Mexico,
lndia, Venezuela, Bolivia, Nicaragua and other
countries.
Captain J. frank Ellison of Cincinnati, who
with Captain Thomas Rces of Pittsburgh arc
considered two or the best authorities in Ulc
world on river steamboats and machinery , arc
of the opinion that no boat has ever been buill
that gave the satisfaction that has been given
by the Ohio River sternwheel towboat whic.:h
outclasses in every way the tunnel screw
boats or any other inventJons that have been
tried Ln the construction of riverboats,

Missiasl.wl River, now operating between 8..
Louis and New Orleans.

GALLlf'OL~ By the Call ot 1918 it was
apparent that the ll. S. Government had no
plans for the Improvement of war - time
river transportation on the Ohio River. Most
river interests were dhignmtled, some call ing it a "raw deal!'
Little did they realize that one of the major obstacles, to their proposal!! that a government barge line be formed, was the conatruction of the locks and dams system Cor the
Ohio ·River, Too, they could not forsee that
in a few short weeks the War in Europe
would be 0\ler.
The River News in the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune had this to sa.y about the barge line:

tnar, Jim Boggs, Edgar Abbott,
Linda Atkinson, Robin Crew, Paul
CUnningham, Gene Davis, Merrl
Ebersbach, Beth Fultz, Pl•ilip
Gaul, Terry George, Patrlzla
Glaze, Karen Hale, John Harri.
son, Sltelia Hawk, Randy Haynes,
Trudy llendrix, Jeanie Hooper,
~gene McKinney, Rick Mayer,
Edie Mees, Darline Michael,
9\erry Midlael, John MlUer,
Desiree Pike, Ragena McGuire,
James Schmoll, John Slaven, WO llam Stanley, Desiree Still, Richard Vaughan, Jane Thomas, AndY
Vaughan, Dallas Weber, Marlnda Young.
GRADE NINE - Joyce Arney,
&amp;!san Andrews, Richard A s h,
Doris Barnhart, Irene Barnes,
Opal Barry, Karen Cadle, Tom
Crisp, Mike Cullums, Jo Ellen
Diehl, Nancy Dixon, Roger Dixon, Andrea Dewhurst. Debbie
Garnes, Victoria Grate, Nancy

dark blue finish with white nylon top. A real sharpie .

lix

of pepper
8. Man'e name

;: .

Four on the floor, 400 8 cyl., LeMons, blue finish,
custom striping, blue vinyl int. , with bucket soots ,
stereo P~B . rGdio, 23,000 miles by local owner. Like
new 1st line wide oval W.W. tires.

bucket seats, console, radio, P .S. &amp; P .B. , auto. trans.

26. Pro-

porter's job
5. Actor
Holbrook
6.Get.ha
gear
7. Species

....

GRADE EIGIIT - Diana Aleshire, Lynne Baker, Liz Blaet.

66 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON. • • · • • • $2095

DAILY CROSSWORD
3. Clay
4. Do a

'

67 PONTIAC Fireblrd H.T. Cpe.... __ -.... $2595

Local I owner car, new w-1-w tires, vinyl trim with

A(JIIOI1I1

I"

Lightfoot, Keith Little, Mike Mll.Y,
• AlWl McLaughlin, Janet Morris,
Mark Morris, Tlna Nieri, Peggy
O'Brien, Gary O'Dell, Paul Pear1101'1, Robert Ramsburg, Joe Rosenbaum, Debra Schuck, &amp;!san
Powers, Donna Bunch.

Match These Buysl

MIDN16HT HE!a!.

FOYMID

Y~fl'4·r·•

l&lt;eeping Meigs
Gallic and
Mason Area
Informed As
Well As

I

I

fice at Clnclnnati for the purpose of studyiru.:
the traffic and transportation conditions on the
Ohio River and its tributaries in the hope that
a larger utilization of the present cqu.lpment
may be accomplished. You are, of course,
aware that the authorized improvements of
the Ohio River between Wheeling and Cin'cin~
nati have not been completed. Indeed, some of
the projected locks and dams have not yet begun,

OCT, 18, 1918 - NO BARGE LINE FOR
THE OHIO RIVER was the heading of this
Item: A final and ooequivocal negative an.
awer to the demand that the Railroad Admin.
lstration set aside a sum to construct barges
for the Ohio River is contained in a letter
which Senator Watson or Indiana bas received from G, A, Tomlinson, who is Ln charge of
tlle Water Transportation Division of the Rail~
road Administrator's Office, The letter says :

UNDER TilE oxlsting conditions, I do oot
feel justified in reconunending to the Director-General of the Railroad Administration an
appropriation for the construction of vessels
for Ollio River service.
The Inland Waterways Division of the U. S.
Railroad Administration is establishing an of-

Junior High
Honor Roll

AT

,, t lbe

UNcmnhlethne l'our Jumhl..,

one letter to each

Y'

OCT, 15, 1918 THE government has
given the Ohio River a raw deal from report s and there will be no barge lines bullt
for this river until a later time. Appropriations were made Cor a barge line on the

INFORMATION
NEWS
presents
LOCAL REPORTS
DAILY

GOEGLEIN GRAVEL

AllTOMOBJLE Insurance beeo
csnceDed? Loot vour operator's license? Can il9S-ZIIM.
I 15 lfe

BHZO. - ZKPJTCGM
Bivalves

BLAETTNARS
PH. 99:1-2143

I;XPERT

4 I lfe

CIGARI!.TI'E vending

Fnun the Larplt Truc'k or
Bullcb- Radiator To Tho
!ftalltst HMter Core.

Hocklneport, Ohio
Phone 667·3370

Svn.········ · ·

eration, New Haven. bone

.
I

October 20, 1988

BOAT BUILDING BOOMING

Sc•awarzel Marine

M-F- --- - - - - • - - I I to 6

Am CONDITIONING Refrigeration service. Jack's Refrig-

abbr.

bUt-

~nd

Phone 9!n-5434,

$1,500.011.
RACINE - BUSINESS ROOMTile construction, tiled noors ,
ceiling heater, storage room,
tollet In good condition.
$5,1100.110.
REEDSVILLE - NICE COTTAGE - I \1 story, I rooffil, 3
bedrooms, bath. basement.
free gas beat, drilled well , garage. A buy at 15.9110.110.
HENRY c:u:LAND

level lots . One room cellar,

10-20-5tc NINE ROOM ROUSE, 2 baths,
outbulldil188, 13 acre• ground,
$16.1100. can Mary Lyons m.
22911.
10.20-61c

unfurnished
apartment~ . CloR to school.

pon:hes. gas noor furnace.

FIVE ROOMS and bath on lour
tonholes, etc., pay $14.90 or
$UO a month. Phone 7n$40.
10.17-3tp

&lt;00

Compieto Senlce
PlloM ••••
a.ciDe. Oldo
Crttl BrHfwd
i I lie

,,

6-9%-18
On DlsplaJ
115 Soon
To Arrive

'

Romolo lo !~-~
with warln lOOP
l ,• Spray•d

C. C. BRADFORD

17 FOOT sell-liS!elllbled camp.
er, Lone Eagle, located ot
camp sl1e 24, Ruyal Dak Park,
$800, Phone 11112-6147. I0-18-Stc

1"18 ZIG ZAG sewlnt machine.
The machine l1l()ll()gl'ams,

(Not A Orlva"''Thru}

•

S.nti~EI, Sunday,

EYINRUDE
69's Are Here

.... "''" .,..,,; CAR WASH

Flalwooda

RED BONE coon hound near
Chesler, name, 'King', Phone
185-1132.
10.17.3tc !':ARLY AMERICAN Stereo,
lovely maple finish, instant
AKC Golden Retriever puppies,
For Sale or Trade
on radio, AM &amp; FM, I speed
524 Ash St., Middleport. il9S1967 INTERNATIONAL truck, 4
changer, dual volume control.
541!.
~
speed, '10 ton, 1964 Chevrolet,
Balance of 191.02 or monthly
1967 Mustang &amp;-cylil&gt;ler, :!payments of $6, Phone m.
TWO c&lt;l81 otokers with conspeed. Financing avaDable.
3218.
10-l~tc
trols, Arnold Brothers, PoPbone 9ft.fi647 ; alter 5 p.m.
meroy, Pllone il9S-U48.
Phone 19M748.
Ht-lfc THREE young heifers, two Hollo.I:I-Uc
stein, one Jersey . Phone 7425252.
10-18-ttp
NYI'ATOES,
Phone iM:I-2254
For Sale or Rent
Clarence
Proffitt,
Portland.
LARGE 4 BEDROOM bowre, FOUR room house, bath. all
10-18-lfc
near all schools, in Racine.
conveniences, Pomeroy, pricPhone 941).4()73.
10.»«&lt;:
ed reasonably. Contact Bob
20 INCH COAL furnace In good
Eastman, Phone m.M90 or
oondillon, f35, Phone Mason.
~ ~3558.
10-l(.Qp
Help Wanted
Tn-5202.
10-!Hlp
GRILL COOK, Apply In person,
Crow's Steak House, Pome- TWO FAMJL Y bouse, 2M Race 7x8 FOOT overhead wood gaSt., Middleport, Phone il9Sroy.
16-~
rage door, 4 lncb clearance.
568t
10-14-12tp
oomplete with hardware and
fllSIIWASHER wanted on weekdoor jams, S28.011. Brown's
ends. Apply in penon, Crow A GOOD DEAL, 111111 AM-FM
Trailer Park, Mtnerovllle.
stereo console with 4 speed
Steak House, Pomeroy.
Phont 982-33H.
10-~
automatic changer, 4 opeaker
10-17.3tc
sound system. Lovely walnut
ONE RIDING HORSE, gaited,
console. Taite over paymenta
Strawberry Roan, phone 742of $1.50 per week or pay
Help Wanted
011 alter 5 phone 742-5163.
$101.12. Try H tn yoor home,
111-1'-'lc
Mille or Female
Phone 9112-2838.
10-!Uic
MAKE 13 TO 15 or more an
hour serving Watkins custom- 10 PAYMENTS OF $5 or $11
Real Estate For Sale
ers in c1ty of Pomeroy with
cash. Must sell 1968 sewing ONE STORY frame, three beddaily used products plus
machine. Fully equipped to
rooms, bath, large lot, full
Christmas gilts. Men or wo-.
zig zag, make buttomoles, sew
t?asement, on Pomeroy·Harmen are eligible, No ag• lion buttons, etc. Five months
••sonville Road. Rodney Down·
mit. Spare or full time. Openold. Call 992-2836,
mg, Broker, PhoM 992-2341.
ioa now. Write immodiately
10-20-6tc
IO.l~tc
D-90. Watkins Products, Inc .,
Winona, Minnesota 559117.
HOME SI.LE
O'BRIEN &amp; CROW
10-20-ltc
REALTY COMPANY
BEDSPREADS.......... $9.95
I'OMEROY - 7 room frame, 3
THROW RUGS........... $1. 99
bedrooms, bath, basement, %

VACANCY for two elderly pee&gt;
pie. Prefer private paid patients . Phone Mason, 'm-5185.
10-3-tfc

'

alao.EMeyiDU,

IJG.WI9.

For Sale
2 story frame hOI.llK!, windows,
doors, etc. See at N. Second

BACK HOE and Dof.er Service,

,,._.. ,

bedroom apartment
with garage on Butternut
Ave. Phone 1192-5127. 10-14-Uc

r.JNSENG, $33 Jb. Golden Seal
$2.50, Snake Root 14.50, May
Apple Root 10 cents. Blll
Bailey, ReedaviUe.

REPAffi, REFINISH, 1'1!COildltlon goH clubs, John Teaford.
().2S-30tp

·'

THREE

COAL FURNACE, new gas water heater, all materlal11 in

Wanted To Buy

Mrs Freddie Thabet. Maoon,
Phone 773-5651.
4-30·tfc

1.. •

10-JJ.«e

ANTIQUES, furniture, dl!lbea,
miscellaneous. Mrs. Howard
Cecil, 800 W. MaiD St., Pomeroy.
14-Uc

12:00 Noon Soturday

IN MEMORY of

Business Services

lulinlh Servi-

'fliAILEil LOTS. Bob'• llablle A STITCH In lillie, 1111 ate UC DITCH DIGGING, water lb!eo,
antpmaHe leWiDC maebiDe.
Court, Syr.....,, Oblo 011 Sllte
teed1 bedl, Paul Anderaon,
This hu 1J bullt.ln detlp.
Rt. 121, Phone . .1.
1\lalon, w. va. Phone m8-11-lfc
Maka buttenholeo. ThlB or5'118.
16-1-301p
lJlnal aold lolr Pll8.50 now pay
only $75 or t1 per month. DOZER, BACKHOE, lrellcller
11UULER SPACE, ~ te
Phone il9S-IIIe.
lll-14-111:
hook up, private, pJenl7 of
and truck ..me., oeptle
room lor chlldren to Jlla1.
tanks, water llnes, basementll,
Phone 912.3901.
8-14-lk PONIES, your choice of 10
also topooU. Henry illhr,
RIDE TO ATHENS. Must leave
hut!
f40
each,
mares
and
phone
. . mr or Roger Babr,
Pomeroy by 12 noon retum
geld!Dp, other ponleo lor oaJe
plione 1111 ....
10-UI)tp
FOUR
ROOM
flnllbed
apart10 p.m. ~.
10-~

OFFICE HOURS
11 ,30 o,. to

For Sale

A GENEROUS PEIISON to
uona1e a g.. beater for the
2ra1:to Chester moetin8 room
of the O&gt;b, Boy and G I r I
Scouts. Contscl Nat CaJpenter, Long Bottom, Phone 9153564 or Hob Mill11, Star Jl&lt;lu1e,
Phone 98&gt;41l0.
10-2Ntp

BLIND 4.DS.
A4dhloMI 25c Chorge

8:30 o .m.

For lent

W111tM

WANT AD
INFORM.\ liON

The Sunday Times -

Vl/il'l' IS OVER
,
'
NEW TOWBOAT SINKS
TOKYO cOPO- A i r - N,
OCT. 18, 1918 - THE fiiB- Sbelepln, 1 kip member ol the
&amp;hlp Clairton of the &lt;:arnotge SOviet I'Olllburo, CCIIICluded I

TOWBOAT M.AN DROWNED
OCT, 16, 1918- LONNlE Mash, a ooai handler on the towboat Eugene Dana Smith, was
drowned Monday nigllt while she was passing
through Carrion Riwle, three miles below Gallipolis. Mash was wheeling coal and the wheel
of his wheelbarrow struck the bulkhead and
threw him into the river. The fireman saw him
and ran back a long the guard oftheboat to catch
him but he never came to the surfuce. The Smith
was enroutc down tho river with a tow of coal.
S..e was stopped and a yacht lowered and every
effort made to find him, with no success, and
.she proceded on down the river.
Captain E. A, Burnsides, SuperlntemiBnt of
the Campbells Creell. Coal Co., has a man on
the scene today trying to Und the bodY but at
last reports had not succeeded. Mash was 29
years old and lived at Lock No. 9.

Stee1 Co. sank in the Mononphela River, near Brownsville,
PL, according to word recehed
here today. with four loaded
barges. The boat hid ded.., near
the Pike Mine of the Diamond
Coal Co. the previous nJght and
Tuesday began to !link, finally
settling in eight feet of water. The
b«lt was one of the speediest in
this section and was built at
Charleston, W. Va., arriving at
Pittsburgh last SepL 9.
Carnelge steel officials said
toda,y that steps would be taken
to raise the Clairton. NQ cause
is koown for the sudden collapse
of Ule boat. The Clairton was a
brand new steel hull, tunnel screw
boat built at the Charles Ward
Engineering Co., Charleston, W.

PA[JIJ LE WIIEE LS OR PROPEJ.LORS

OCT . 17, 191 ~ - AS ;\ solution of rher problems, Oscar Bradford of Chicago, Dl., famous
river improvement advocate and inventor, suggests that steamboats be propelled by engines
with spiral shafts directl.v conne(!ted with separate motors. Uradfofd states that we must appropriate some of the successful devi ces embodied
in the aeroplane and automobile. The paddle
wheel must be done away with, says Mr. Bradford. In this, 11e is away off, in our opinion.
The paddl ewht'&lt;! l steamboats have been the
most successful for all general purposes that
have ever bt-cn used on any inland river. What
steamboats nt"Cd is a device that will reduce
the cost of labor and fuel.

1-

- ·

'

. . ·-- "
~

Ia
tllo thlrtl

Japon.&amp;Jviet Labor Unkln 111terchall&amp;e moeting. He On te
Mo1eow.

James K. Polk, in hia bid
for the presidency ill 1844, wa1
the first "dark horae" in
American _politics.

Va.

LISTEN TO 20th CENTURY REFORMATION HOUR

Mon. thru Fri. -- 9:30AM
1360 ~~.~HE WMOV

Rnenswood. W. Ve.

Weekly Guide To Better TV Viewing
Fold and !'lare Near Your Television Set li1r Connnit·n t Hef.,renct•

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�BY HOBART WWlON, Jll,
ALTHOUGH no apecimenl haW been I!OIIUvel,y ,.rlllocl or ...
ceived by entomoloslsts at the Ohio State Unlvenll;f or Ohio Air!·
cultural Research ml Dovelqlment Center, the brown recluH
lljllder lillY be invadillt thla sector of Cilia.

++++++
THIS was reporuod in the Aue. 3 edition of
The Ohio Farmer mapzine, on pqe 41. It waa
br&lt;JUIIIt to Dateline's attention by Clyde Ramsay,
managar ol the Buckeye Rural Electric omce in
GaDlpolis.

++++++

HOMECOMING - Miss Beth Bastlani, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Bastian!, Key
Club candidate, was crowned Gallia Academy Homecoming Qut!en at the post game dance Friday
night at GAHS. Serving in the court were runners-up Christy Davis, daughter of Dr. and Mrs.
George Da,is, and Connie Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Smith. Miss Davis was sponsored by Thespian Club and Miss Smith by Tri-Hi-l:', Miss Bastiani, who was chosen by the vote
o! the student body, was crowned by Mike Adams, president of the student body. She was present-

RAMSAY said a aood lriend or his was bitten
by a spider recently while CIIJI1li01 at a state park
. in southern Ohio. The friend became Ill, and broke
out in a rash. It Is belleved the Individual may
have been bitten by one olthe Br&lt;JI'In recluse lljliders.

eel wllh ' red rooes m1 a trophy, Attendants were also presented trophies. The dance was sponsored by the Ht-Y, of whlcb Grea Pauley is president. Faculty advisor lor the HomeC&lt;JWna event
••• Mrs. Jane YociDIL HomecomlOI ~ cmlidates, standinaleft to right, Patsy lloVJdson, Joo.n
Ford, SUsan Clarke, Joy Dolly, Clthy Davis, lle&lt;:ky Gibson, Nancy Lease, Martha Cornwell, Ginaer
Elcessor, Sue Ann Macke111ie, Paula Young, Gathy Sutter, and Susanne Wickline. Seated, left to
right, are Christy Davis, Queen Beth Bastiani, and Connie Smith.

+ + + + + +
ACCORDING to The Ohio Farmer, ills quite posaible that thio
spider cwld be Introduced Into Ohio due tolhis apecies bei11t able to
Uve lone periods ol time withoot moisture. Methods olentry into
Ohio could be through furniture, iuggqe, aatomobUes, or other
sources ot transportation.

ol Highways.

Katie's Korner

Week that was for me," for receiving
Dowers, tllat is. On Monday morni11t I nearly tainted when I received
11-IIS HAS BEEN TilE

14

+ + + + + +

CONTINUED the mapzine: "The Brown recluse spider ls ol
mediiDII olze and nngas frml 3-10 to 'h inch in le!lllh. Males are
sllllhtly smaller than the femaloa end the coloration varies !rom
orange-yellow to dark br&lt;JI'In or black with the body clothed with shor~
sllllht pubeocence. Legs are lo01 and darker than the body.

dozen red roses from Mr. and Mrs. Archie
Lee. They were gorgeous to say the lea''- and I
enjoyed them so much. On Wednesday, Dorothy
Roller, who has quite a knack with nower arranging,
sent n.o beautiful bou&lt;p~ets ol yellow mums. ,,... delighted. Doesn't it make one lee! ,reat when people
do such nice things? Thanks so much for maki~ my
week a pleasant one.

a

By Katie Crow
Up, Up, and Away!
Rambler Dealers in Uniled Stlltcs were given a surprise
trip recently to California. One of the lucky ones was Carroll Nor·
ris ot R H. Rawlings and son. The pleasure trip was for one day,
Oyillt tc Clillornia by jeL

ROGER WEAVER, grandson or Mr. aOO. Mrs. Ross Norris,
Syr~cuse, a recent graduate of Manpower Training Center at Jackson, is now employed as a draftsman ln the office or the state Dept,

++++++
"THE best idelllifYinlr edult features are the presence ol three
pairs or eyes arranaed in a semi-circle on lha forepart or the heed
ml a aultar or violin-shaped marldna immediately behind the semicircle of eyes with a distinct short median aroove lorml01 the neck
olthe 'aultar'.

CONGRATULATIONS GO OUT to Mr. anl Mrs.
KATIE
James Quick, Syracuse, who today will celebrate
their 60th wedding armiversary1 Mr. aOO Mrs. Quick have two chUdren. James of Colwnbus, who is an assistant to the State ~ri~P­
tendent of Schools ard Margaret COttrill. Syracuse, is assistant
postmaster at Syracuse. Best wishes to you and may your day be a

+ + + + + +

pleasant one,

WOULD LIKE TO PASS on to you some intereStillt bits from a
small paper published in 1938 by R. G, Webster called "The Glmlel" At the top of the paper is the following u The City ot Happiness
is in the State of the M.illi"
30 YEARS AGO
From the Court House: There are 24.000 tracts of land in
Meigs County, the treasurer has 10,000 tax receipts lor Meigs
County, 52,000 bills of .sales and titles to automobiles are on tlle in
the Clerk ol Courts office. Ali old books and records In the Clerk
ol Courts are to be re-bound and inlexed. Since 1819 there have
been 4.249 criminal cases filed in Meigs County. There fire 15,000
marriage licenses on record in the probate court, George Meinhart and wife have recorded 1,800 oil and gas leases since they
have been in office, also 4,200 deeds to real estate.
UJJier a heading, in thtl same edition, "Pom...Roi," are the
following: "There is no one Iisted in the Pomeroy telephone directory under X - only one under I - two uiKier Q, and two under
U. A. man in Pomeroy told us that it you look after your business
when It is young, it will look after you when yoo are old. What will
we name the flood roo.d to Middleport? It is exactly two miles !rom
the Court House to the water works pumpi~ station. Pomeroy oow
has a cross street intersection."
Also in the cqJy of the 30 year old edition are some humorous
qucKes; "Don't expect your wife to make bread Uke mother used to
make - If you don't make the dough like rather used to make.''
uwhen you are courting, it's hearts,
When your engaged it's diamonds;
When you are married it's clubs;
When you are dead- lt's spades."

Comes from
owning a home
with a mort·
-that is
easy to live with,
one that was
planned by el(perts.
Talk to us!

OHIO VALLEY BANK
_.....,..... _,.,IWlOO

Gallipoll1

u, te Customer

Parking

• Drive-in Window Service
• Complete Banking Service

LATE JUSI'ICE
PALERMO, Sicily (UPI)Twenty-three years after Glorgio Comparetto' • desth in a
shottpln ambush, Salvatore La
Coi'W went on trial Friday lor
his murder. Prosecutors said La
Coi'W gunned down Comparetto,
whom he suspected of stealing
La Coi'W cattle.

~·

GALlJPOLIS - Silent sentinels ol the past - old brick waDs standing since Nitro's busy World War I days, are comlna down to
take part in today's progress across the Kanawha River.
Tbe walls were part of a powder plant complex built under
emergency conditions by the U. S. government to provide gul1J(J't'fller
for the war effor~ They have been standi!1l for 50 years, a reminder
ol the bustllna activity that gave birth to Nitro, W. VL
Now, accordiDI to the management of the Monsanto Chemical
Co., which owns them, they are being toPPled and the rubble is being
used lor fill and roo.d buildlDI at the huge .wpalachian Power Co.
plant under construction across the ~nawha River on Rt. 17, a few
mUes downstream.
My wlfe and 1, who had a day off this week, took a drJve \II the
Kalw.wha River Valley to Charleston and we saw the new John Amos
Power Plant of the AEP. On the return trip, we drove from Charleston to Huntinaton over 1~4 and had a good look at the Nitro powder
complex that ts being torn down.
Incidentally, the ferrylxat service at Pt. Pleasant (between
Kallluga and HeOOerson) has improved. There are two bolts in service and we did not have a lo11t wait. But alter driving ~ Rt. 17, I d..
cided to return over 1~4 through Huntington. It took the monotony
out ol drivlna, to be able to breeze alo11t over the four lane divided
hillhway.

"EARLY immalures do not have the 'aultar shaped' wid~
However, they have the alx-eye arrarcement. Both sexes are CIPable ol. inlllclillll poiJonoua bites to mammals. In case or bite, 0110
shwld consult 1 PhYSician Immediately ml if poaslble br!Jw a1111111
the spider lur positive ldenliflceUon. Aa yet, specific and-......., Ia
not avaUable for treatment; therofore, both local and systemic reactiona have been treated SYJ~Wtomatieally."

++++++
PAT Houck "hit the biglime" recently. The Tribune society editor, trying her hml at ,_zine writ!OI, had an article publlabad
in the October Issue ol "Hunting Dog," 1 monlhl.v authority on all
breeds of sportltw dol• millie outdooro.

.or

+ + + + + +
PAT'S FE ATtiRE WAS ON Kon Sheets' Beaaies - she did a
simUar story for the Time...S.nUnel last sprlns. The magazine
story llj)pe&amp;rs oo pap 26. The article is ac«mpenled by three pi.,.
lures. The mapzlne is publlshed In Greenlleld, Ohio. It is a relatively new publicailon, havi11tprinted Ita llrstlssue In J&amp;nlii'Y, 1966.

+ + + + + +
WITH the 1968 election just around the corner, activity \1 beginning to pick .., ln Galli&amp; COunty. Althoullft it hao oppeared quiet on
the surlace durlna the paot le• weeks, members of both lUlor parties have been worklllR hard • ..,.,orting their cendidat4!.s end Issues.

happened.
I found my sell lalling, lendlDI on my back ml shoulders, feet
aticklng .., In the air ml holdiDI the camera hliiho so as not to _ .
ace lt. Going down I hit both knees, scraped my chin end slrllck IIU'
nose on the concrete riser and ruined one lens In Ill)' glasses.
WOULD YOU BEUEVE: I stepped on a mouse? I walked Into an
meecling profusel,y from the bridle the nose ard a "'" denta
airplane propenor? My wife hit me with an iron? Crashed my Hoodo
in my chin, I leaped ..,,pulled out a clean hankie and started ~01
into a stone wall? Walked into a door?
at my 0080. Mrs. -J... vOc:Uin, sponaor of the Queen'• contest. 11111It's difficult to explain the big scab oo my nose and the abrasion
aested I 10 to the school I'AII'SO.
on my chin. Not to mention one abrasion on each knee and a ski.rmed
1 reneged: "I came to set a picture anl gal a picture I wilL
.., thumb. And a torn trouser knee anl a ripped shwlder In a white
Then I'U co home. l'w got a lllll'Se there," I said. So I proeeded to
shirt.
But none of the above excuses are right. So, if you don't believe shoot elllht pictures beilre I retired !rGm the scene.
The only thine hurl by the r.ll was my feeli011. lmqine my
any of the above possibUities - you won't believe the truth, or will
embsrrasamenl, In front or all the girls, moat of wbom were in a
you?
state or shock by the lime I regroq&gt;ed end set to work.
It was Wednesday alternoon. My assigmnent was to photoarllilh
I'U never lmoiY bow It hlljlpened. The concrete risers are about
the llomecomina Queen cendidates. My boss, Junior Wilson, said
three teet high. I either stopped
the edga, stopped on llOIIIethlna
shoot them at the swimming pool. So I did.
m1 lost my balance or the edga crlllllbled ml down I went. Oh, well,
Now it's difficult to pose 16 girls with a half-way decent backGALLIPOLIS - TellljleraturaD's well that ends well.
ers. precipitation and weather ,roond. But I tried. Usina the concrete bleachers, I posed the girls
And that's how it happened.
conditions lor each 24-llour peri- in three rows. I was just about to take the ftrst picture - then it
od as recorded by Pete McCormick at Fairlleld Weatller Sta·

or

Week's

Weather

Roundup

orr

AAUGH!~

t

F16liRE IHAT
PlACE
OOT...

tion.
Day

High Low Prec.
Sulllay
• • ; . 80 59
Monday •• • . . • . 82 55
Tuesday • ••••.. 82 51
Wednesday .•••.. 81 57
Thursday • . ...•• 84 64 .10
Friday •..•••... 76 63 .37
Saturday • .•••••• 56 51 .36
Averaae high temperatures lor
the week this year - 77,2 degrees; last year - 72.4degrees.
Average low ~erature (or
the week this year - 57.1 degrees; last year - 45.5 decrees.
Total preclpitatim lor the
woek this year
0. 83 ol an
inch; last year - 0.50 of an
inch.
Total precipitation to date this
year - 39.28 inches; last year
- 29.07 inches.
Normal aver.,. precipitation
aMually- 38.40 inches.

IIARBS
By PHIL PASTOR£T

The worst
actor on TV?
The Reverend Albert Ramsellrsrd arr actor. Hcs a retrred mrnrster rn Canton,
Ohro You've seen hrm on TV (along wrth other Ohro homeowners) on our
electrrc heatmg commermls HIS comments on cost. "Electric heat doesn 't
cos! us any more than the heat we had before." Rev. Ramself knows. He 's had
electrrc heal for 7 years.

There is no one more
anonymous 24 hours alter a
political convention than a

"favorite son."

• • •
delegates g a t h e1 to get
their suits spruced-up.

• • •
Now is the sea:;un when you
can drive 50 miles into the

a free electriC heat ~osl estimate for you r home.

\

country to pick up rroduce
available at the loca super·
market.

• •

The best way to keep a
sqret ls qui&lt;!tly .

-

..

,.1\i.·.,

f'OIJ'f SE'E' HCNI MAKE-VP
CM.HMPRDV£ THIS (HICKr!C,
BLJT GIVE' IT A TI&lt;Y-YI-YI, WILL.

YOU, SWEEifHEARr'Z.

••• Walk up One Flight to the Furniture Floor
LIVING ROOM. BEDROOM. DINING ROOM, KITCHEN FURNITURE, LAMPS AND
TABLES. EVERYTHING IN· FURNITURE, NATIONALLY KNOWN MAKES. PROMPT
DELIVERY, CONTINUOUS SERVICE AND ELBERFELD$ OWN SENSIBLE CREDIT.

No, Gwendolyn, a press

Call your Reddy Kilowatt Recommended Dealer or Ohio Powe~ Company for

Move UP to FLAMELESS electric ""'"'•

Use the Parking Lot Across Fro11 Our 2nd Floor

conference isn't where the

. with "no ser,ce calfs, no bother, no worrres."

(~~rf)~;;WER CQMPANY

Visit Elberfelds 3rd Floor
Furniture Department

let Us Outfit Your Holle
Co11pletely•••
Furn lture -Draperies -Carpet

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
-----.- ...- . -- ·---·-------- -·
~ ~

• ··

CAN'T

1 HOP"' SO .. BUT
1'D f££1-- ,\\ORE
S-SbGUI'!E IF L

THIH, LIKI' /tMNNfoQUIIN5!:.J
ALLOFYOO!

W[;l&lt;£0

�BY HOBART WWlON, Jll,
ALTHOUGH no apecimenl haW been I!OIIUvel,y ,.rlllocl or ...
ceived by entomoloslsts at the Ohio State Unlvenll;f or Ohio Air!·
cultural Research ml Dovelqlment Center, the brown recluH
lljllder lillY be invadillt thla sector of Cilia.

++++++
THIS was reporuod in the Aue. 3 edition of
The Ohio Farmer mapzine, on pqe 41. It waa
br&lt;JUIIIt to Dateline's attention by Clyde Ramsay,
managar ol the Buckeye Rural Electric omce in
GaDlpolis.

++++++

HOMECOMING - Miss Beth Bastlani, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Bastian!, Key
Club candidate, was crowned Gallia Academy Homecoming Qut!en at the post game dance Friday
night at GAHS. Serving in the court were runners-up Christy Davis, daughter of Dr. and Mrs.
George Da,is, and Connie Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Smith. Miss Davis was sponsored by Thespian Club and Miss Smith by Tri-Hi-l:', Miss Bastiani, who was chosen by the vote
o! the student body, was crowned by Mike Adams, president of the student body. She was present-

RAMSAY said a aood lriend or his was bitten
by a spider recently while CIIJI1li01 at a state park
. in southern Ohio. The friend became Ill, and broke
out in a rash. It Is belleved the Individual may
have been bitten by one olthe Br&lt;JI'In recluse lljliders.

eel wllh ' red rooes m1 a trophy, Attendants were also presented trophies. The dance was sponsored by the Ht-Y, of whlcb Grea Pauley is president. Faculty advisor lor the HomeC&lt;JWna event
••• Mrs. Jane YociDIL HomecomlOI ~ cmlidates, standinaleft to right, Patsy lloVJdson, Joo.n
Ford, SUsan Clarke, Joy Dolly, Clthy Davis, lle&lt;:ky Gibson, Nancy Lease, Martha Cornwell, Ginaer
Elcessor, Sue Ann Macke111ie, Paula Young, Gathy Sutter, and Susanne Wickline. Seated, left to
right, are Christy Davis, Queen Beth Bastiani, and Connie Smith.

+ + + + + +
ACCORDING to The Ohio Farmer, ills quite posaible that thio
spider cwld be Introduced Into Ohio due tolhis apecies bei11t able to
Uve lone periods ol time withoot moisture. Methods olentry into
Ohio could be through furniture, iuggqe, aatomobUes, or other
sources ot transportation.

ol Highways.

Katie's Korner

Week that was for me," for receiving
Dowers, tllat is. On Monday morni11t I nearly tainted when I received
11-IIS HAS BEEN TilE

14

+ + + + + +

CONTINUED the mapzine: "The Brown recluse spider ls ol
mediiDII olze and nngas frml 3-10 to 'h inch in le!lllh. Males are
sllllhtly smaller than the femaloa end the coloration varies !rom
orange-yellow to dark br&lt;JI'In or black with the body clothed with shor~
sllllht pubeocence. Legs are lo01 and darker than the body.

dozen red roses from Mr. and Mrs. Archie
Lee. They were gorgeous to say the lea''- and I
enjoyed them so much. On Wednesday, Dorothy
Roller, who has quite a knack with nower arranging,
sent n.o beautiful bou&lt;p~ets ol yellow mums. ,,... delighted. Doesn't it make one lee! ,reat when people
do such nice things? Thanks so much for maki~ my
week a pleasant one.

a

By Katie Crow
Up, Up, and Away!
Rambler Dealers in Uniled Stlltcs were given a surprise
trip recently to California. One of the lucky ones was Carroll Nor·
ris ot R H. Rawlings and son. The pleasure trip was for one day,
Oyillt tc Clillornia by jeL

ROGER WEAVER, grandson or Mr. aOO. Mrs. Ross Norris,
Syr~cuse, a recent graduate of Manpower Training Center at Jackson, is now employed as a draftsman ln the office or the state Dept,

++++++
"THE best idelllifYinlr edult features are the presence ol three
pairs or eyes arranaed in a semi-circle on lha forepart or the heed
ml a aultar or violin-shaped marldna immediately behind the semicircle of eyes with a distinct short median aroove lorml01 the neck
olthe 'aultar'.

CONGRATULATIONS GO OUT to Mr. anl Mrs.
KATIE
James Quick, Syracuse, who today will celebrate
their 60th wedding armiversary1 Mr. aOO Mrs. Quick have two chUdren. James of Colwnbus, who is an assistant to the State ~ri~P­
tendent of Schools ard Margaret COttrill. Syracuse, is assistant
postmaster at Syracuse. Best wishes to you and may your day be a

+ + + + + +

pleasant one,

WOULD LIKE TO PASS on to you some intereStillt bits from a
small paper published in 1938 by R. G, Webster called "The Glmlel" At the top of the paper is the following u The City ot Happiness
is in the State of the M.illi"
30 YEARS AGO
From the Court House: There are 24.000 tracts of land in
Meigs County, the treasurer has 10,000 tax receipts lor Meigs
County, 52,000 bills of .sales and titles to automobiles are on tlle in
the Clerk ol Courts office. Ali old books and records In the Clerk
ol Courts are to be re-bound and inlexed. Since 1819 there have
been 4.249 criminal cases filed in Meigs County. There fire 15,000
marriage licenses on record in the probate court, George Meinhart and wife have recorded 1,800 oil and gas leases since they
have been in office, also 4,200 deeds to real estate.
UJJier a heading, in thtl same edition, "Pom...Roi," are the
following: "There is no one Iisted in the Pomeroy telephone directory under X - only one under I - two uiKier Q, and two under
U. A. man in Pomeroy told us that it you look after your business
when It is young, it will look after you when yoo are old. What will
we name the flood roo.d to Middleport? It is exactly two miles !rom
the Court House to the water works pumpi~ station. Pomeroy oow
has a cross street intersection."
Also in the cqJy of the 30 year old edition are some humorous
qucKes; "Don't expect your wife to make bread Uke mother used to
make - If you don't make the dough like rather used to make.''
uwhen you are courting, it's hearts,
When your engaged it's diamonds;
When you are married it's clubs;
When you are dead- lt's spades."

Comes from
owning a home
with a mort·
-that is
easy to live with,
one that was
planned by el(perts.
Talk to us!

OHIO VALLEY BANK
_.....,..... _,.,IWlOO

Gallipoll1

u, te Customer

Parking

• Drive-in Window Service
• Complete Banking Service

LATE JUSI'ICE
PALERMO, Sicily (UPI)Twenty-three years after Glorgio Comparetto' • desth in a
shottpln ambush, Salvatore La
Coi'W went on trial Friday lor
his murder. Prosecutors said La
Coi'W gunned down Comparetto,
whom he suspected of stealing
La Coi'W cattle.

~·

GALlJPOLIS - Silent sentinels ol the past - old brick waDs standing since Nitro's busy World War I days, are comlna down to
take part in today's progress across the Kanawha River.
Tbe walls were part of a powder plant complex built under
emergency conditions by the U. S. government to provide gul1J(J't'fller
for the war effor~ They have been standi!1l for 50 years, a reminder
ol the bustllna activity that gave birth to Nitro, W. VL
Now, accordiDI to the management of the Monsanto Chemical
Co., which owns them, they are being toPPled and the rubble is being
used lor fill and roo.d buildlDI at the huge .wpalachian Power Co.
plant under construction across the ~nawha River on Rt. 17, a few
mUes downstream.
My wlfe and 1, who had a day off this week, took a drJve \II the
Kalw.wha River Valley to Charleston and we saw the new John Amos
Power Plant of the AEP. On the return trip, we drove from Charleston to Huntinaton over 1~4 and had a good look at the Nitro powder
complex that ts being torn down.
Incidentally, the ferrylxat service at Pt. Pleasant (between
Kallluga and HeOOerson) has improved. There are two bolts in service and we did not have a lo11t wait. But alter driving ~ Rt. 17, I d..
cided to return over 1~4 through Huntington. It took the monotony
out ol drivlna, to be able to breeze alo11t over the four lane divided
hillhway.

"EARLY immalures do not have the 'aultar shaped' wid~
However, they have the alx-eye arrarcement. Both sexes are CIPable ol. inlllclillll poiJonoua bites to mammals. In case or bite, 0110
shwld consult 1 PhYSician Immediately ml if poaslble br!Jw a1111111
the spider lur positive ldenliflceUon. Aa yet, specific and-......., Ia
not avaUable for treatment; therofore, both local and systemic reactiona have been treated SYJ~Wtomatieally."

++++++
PAT Houck "hit the biglime" recently. The Tribune society editor, trying her hml at ,_zine writ!OI, had an article publlabad
in the October Issue ol "Hunting Dog," 1 monlhl.v authority on all
breeds of sportltw dol• millie outdooro.

.or

+ + + + + +
PAT'S FE ATtiRE WAS ON Kon Sheets' Beaaies - she did a
simUar story for the Time...S.nUnel last sprlns. The magazine
story llj)pe&amp;rs oo pap 26. The article is ac«mpenled by three pi.,.
lures. The mapzlne is publlshed In Greenlleld, Ohio. It is a relatively new publicailon, havi11tprinted Ita llrstlssue In J&amp;nlii'Y, 1966.

+ + + + + +
WITH the 1968 election just around the corner, activity \1 beginning to pick .., ln Galli&amp; COunty. Althoullft it hao oppeared quiet on
the surlace durlna the paot le• weeks, members of both lUlor parties have been worklllR hard • ..,.,orting their cendidat4!.s end Issues.

happened.
I found my sell lalling, lendlDI on my back ml shoulders, feet
aticklng .., In the air ml holdiDI the camera hliiho so as not to _ .
ace lt. Going down I hit both knees, scraped my chin end slrllck IIU'
nose on the concrete riser and ruined one lens In Ill)' glasses.
WOULD YOU BEUEVE: I stepped on a mouse? I walked Into an
meecling profusel,y from the bridle the nose ard a "'" denta
airplane propenor? My wife hit me with an iron? Crashed my Hoodo
in my chin, I leaped ..,,pulled out a clean hankie and started ~01
into a stone wall? Walked into a door?
at my 0080. Mrs. -J... vOc:Uin, sponaor of the Queen'• contest. 11111It's difficult to explain the big scab oo my nose and the abrasion
aested I 10 to the school I'AII'SO.
on my chin. Not to mention one abrasion on each knee and a ski.rmed
1 reneged: "I came to set a picture anl gal a picture I wilL
.., thumb. And a torn trouser knee anl a ripped shwlder In a white
Then I'U co home. l'w got a lllll'Se there," I said. So I proeeded to
shirt.
But none of the above excuses are right. So, if you don't believe shoot elllht pictures beilre I retired !rGm the scene.
The only thine hurl by the r.ll was my feeli011. lmqine my
any of the above possibUities - you won't believe the truth, or will
embsrrasamenl, In front or all the girls, moat of wbom were in a
you?
state or shock by the lime I regroq&gt;ed end set to work.
It was Wednesday alternoon. My assigmnent was to photoarllilh
I'U never lmoiY bow It hlljlpened. The concrete risers are about
the llomecomina Queen cendidates. My boss, Junior Wilson, said
three teet high. I either stopped
the edga, stopped on llOIIIethlna
shoot them at the swimming pool. So I did.
m1 lost my balance or the edga crlllllbled ml down I went. Oh, well,
Now it's difficult to pose 16 girls with a half-way decent backGALLIPOLIS - TellljleraturaD's well that ends well.
ers. precipitation and weather ,roond. But I tried. Usina the concrete bleachers, I posed the girls
And that's how it happened.
conditions lor each 24-llour peri- in three rows. I was just about to take the ftrst picture - then it
od as recorded by Pete McCormick at Fairlleld Weatller Sta·

or

Week's

Weather

Roundup

orr

AAUGH!~

t

F16liRE IHAT
PlACE
OOT...

tion.
Day

High Low Prec.
Sulllay
• • ; . 80 59
Monday •• • . . • . 82 55
Tuesday • ••••.. 82 51
Wednesday .•••.. 81 57
Thursday • . ...•• 84 64 .10
Friday •..•••... 76 63 .37
Saturday • .•••••• 56 51 .36
Averaae high temperatures lor
the week this year - 77,2 degrees; last year - 72.4degrees.
Average low ~erature (or
the week this year - 57.1 degrees; last year - 45.5 decrees.
Total preclpitatim lor the
woek this year
0. 83 ol an
inch; last year - 0.50 of an
inch.
Total precipitation to date this
year - 39.28 inches; last year
- 29.07 inches.
Normal aver.,. precipitation
aMually- 38.40 inches.

IIARBS
By PHIL PASTOR£T

The worst
actor on TV?
The Reverend Albert Ramsellrsrd arr actor. Hcs a retrred mrnrster rn Canton,
Ohro You've seen hrm on TV (along wrth other Ohro homeowners) on our
electrrc heatmg commermls HIS comments on cost. "Electric heat doesn 't
cos! us any more than the heat we had before." Rev. Ramself knows. He 's had
electrrc heal for 7 years.

There is no one more
anonymous 24 hours alter a
political convention than a

"favorite son."

• • •
delegates g a t h e1 to get
their suits spruced-up.

• • •
Now is the sea:;un when you
can drive 50 miles into the

a free electriC heat ~osl estimate for you r home.

\

country to pick up rroduce
available at the loca super·
market.

• •

The best way to keep a
sqret ls qui&lt;!tly .

-

..

,.1\i.·.,

f'OIJ'f SE'E' HCNI MAKE-VP
CM.HMPRDV£ THIS (HICKr!C,
BLJT GIVE' IT A TI&lt;Y-YI-YI, WILL.

YOU, SWEEifHEARr'Z.

••• Walk up One Flight to the Furniture Floor
LIVING ROOM. BEDROOM. DINING ROOM, KITCHEN FURNITURE, LAMPS AND
TABLES. EVERYTHING IN· FURNITURE, NATIONALLY KNOWN MAKES. PROMPT
DELIVERY, CONTINUOUS SERVICE AND ELBERFELD$ OWN SENSIBLE CREDIT.

No, Gwendolyn, a press

Call your Reddy Kilowatt Recommended Dealer or Ohio Powe~ Company for

Move UP to FLAMELESS electric ""'"'•

Use the Parking Lot Across Fro11 Our 2nd Floor

conference isn't where the

. with "no ser,ce calfs, no bother, no worrres."

(~~rf)~;;WER CQMPANY

Visit Elberfelds 3rd Floor
Furniture Department

let Us Outfit Your Holle
Co11pletely•••
Furn lture -Draperies -Carpet

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
-----.- ...- . -- ·---·-------- -·
~ ~

• ··

CAN'T

1 HOP"' SO .. BUT
1'D f££1-- ,\\ORE
S-SbGUI'!E IF L

THIH, LIKI' /tMNNfoQUIIN5!:.J
ALLOFYOO!

W[;l&lt;£0

�_ Times •
•

. •.

f:j"'""'"~"". 1.
~
- Jo.'f'"r

,

1

1968
_

I I
Jc O'Neal

SHORT
'

You're All Wet,
Bedly Damp-

HOMECOMING - Mi:
Club candidate, was crown
night at GAHS. Serving il
George Davis, and Cormie
sored by Thespian Club ar
of the student body, was c1

VAP!

VAPI

Katie's
By

...

Katie

1'1-\INGS I.-IKE 'THAT

Up, Up, and Away!
Rambler Dealers in Un;

COt.ILD ONL\f HAPPEN.
IN 'IK.~ COMICS.

trip recently to california. Or
ris of R. H. Rawlings aOO Sor
Qyil"@: to Callfornia by jeL

""'
t

ROGER WEAVER, grands
Syracuse, a recent graduate o
aon, is now employed as a drP

~

..AND I'LL COM!: &amp;ACK

j

f&gt;ECOME CHA.IRMAN

CHILL A. MA.&amp;NUM

A.LIV£.6ROW UP. .. A.NO

OF BU&amp;&amp;LV!! .. .
IJ.Je.t:L TOAST MV
VICTORY AT
LES FOUES
WITH

OF TH£ ao.A.RP OF A.
HUG! AIRLINE!!

~

%

.r

LES GIRLS!!

~
@

... WH~ SuS1' HAVE

iO ~SCAbAll OUR

R~S i01ANC~ lo ettA NEt~!

.,

Comes from
owning a home

a mortgage that is

with

i

.'

·I.,

.i

easy to live with,
one that was
plannod by axperts.

w~L L, r

au£Ss

1Ht.I{E'S ONL-~ 0~~
1'HIN~ JQ PO ...

Talk ~ usl

OHIO VAl
~dopooltoru-rwcltot11!,0

It's c.omin' hB:te!

.'

'

:! '

'I

.·: c ..• f'·.,;

.,

'
J

by Dick Cavalli

'WINTHROP
'' TI-4EY ARE A? 51().(
ll1AT BU2FEIT WfTH
TOO MLXH A? l'HeY
'THATel"ARVB WI1H
NOTHINe.8 WIUJAM

-

51-tA.~

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

~A ~N56.T•..
A..YIN@ Ha2.

" HOW MANY HIRED
6Ef.2VAN175 a= MV

FATHERfs HA \te

NEEDLE AND

Bf;EAD ENO£..JE;H

"THI256.05riTCH ~10-1

AND TO OPAI2.e,
AND I FSRI6H

6Tin::H! IN

WITH Hc.JNGER! H
6r. Wlt::E XIII

FtJVel2'1"Y-

HUNGeRAND
Df/Zr../1

THOhW5HOOD

!'in Ol'-')..,:y!

I didrit. ~ive

Ididnt~t
~Olll'

The Reverend
Ohio You've'
electnc heatin
cost us any me
electnc heat f·
Call your Redt
a Iree electric

na"me!

~

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.t I .~ l. l. ·1L l .l.~ l .LLl aJ.I
by A:rt Sansom ·

TIIB
. BORN LOSER
.

'Tir:- I RIJ~ It IAa:i'T

,..~ IG C)l[,Y
A HALF-8UXK
/J.JNAY •••

~5T

WHAT A~
DAY TO

TOO WET

F~TMY

VMSReLt.A ...
HOMECOMING -

Ml

Club candidate, was rrowr
nlght at GAHS. Serving i
George Da \'is, and Connle
sored by Thespian Club 81
of the student body, was c

Katie's
By Karie
Up, Up, alld Away!

Rambler Dealers in Un
trip recently to California. 01
rts of R. H. Rawlings and Sol
llyiJl! to California by jeL

AAD TH~

AND

I'M SUPFOSeD

FN:.T "mAT
I'M tJ?T
GV81J

r1Y!

ROGER WI::AVER, grand•
Syracuse, a recent graduate (
aon, i.s now employed as a drr

(:"'

TO B6 NEE.TIIJ"

~AOIS NJO

111€"

~'$

().)€ ·8RIGK'.

S~-OF-A·

WAD,

()UT$10€

FOR SUPP61t.

8E
I-IER5!

TO

S:,A.ID

THORtJAPP!E
MA~, SITIItJ 1

KIDS' OOWMTOJ.lt.J
~tbHT ~~

SUPPOS6D

ALUlA'/!; ""l

LOOK I 8€A' IT'$
THAT PECULIAA

EMI~V!

TH'

A-TA~KI~'

TO

CAPTAIN EASY
. "ffA4! nlEV ~WHOU AND TIN'I11NI 1 ~0*
1110TH OF VOU AlliE NEAP\L~ 8l1NO! rr1r. A~IIO'tol

.oou.'/I YOU LEI='T ME
~

A"10\JNG ACR08AT,
Y!AIIIS AGO ... APtE
'IOU IIA Cl'i 'Til

GlfMIICI'\ ... AN'/THIN6 c.OOLD HAPPal!

OOLLV

HA~

POINT 11).1ellll 1
.

'TOM!

,

IUT WE cOULD
PIG~ ~p A FA~T
'TEN WND- Al-i&gt;

IN COAif:ORT,

&amp;A100, You MUST Be CVT OF YOUIZ..
WHAT MAl(ES'Iou THINK YOU CMI6o
SURFING ltJ (;, FOND?

£')(Ct PTiONA LliDES

COASr/

EA.,Y!

S.TAV~

VIEt~, l:V! DONE SQM~ \'S!Zi SEI210u5
(DMPLJTING ···AND l HAVE A TriEOitY !

ARt: FORecAST ~y
ALoN61HE ATLAtJTiC

Comes from
owning a home

with a mort·

gage that is
easy to I ive with,
one that was
planned by experts.
Talk to us!

OHIO VAl

I'M 0\/EI'IWEI &amp;HT- AND TOO 0\.01

IU'T IF liN'/ TIM WILL 'IIORK Wl'n-1

..... dopool- ilula&lt;Od lotWl

All, l'LL l1IIV

·;~!II!!

n!

.. .c.APTAIN CA,Y I I

fJP.£A1!

HA'* A 5UIL.1' .GQ.\41lL.aX...

OGI.L'f If DIAD! l'M Ia!III TVIIN ".,.11,,

:t'L.L 'THIN~ OF

SllQIJI.D I 60 ON Willi

A SAF-f !IDimNE
J'f AI~IN6!

114" tii,«M?- ' .

!Whl ... t'o Wt'/ Tile FAIPI Tllllol6 TO 00
WOULD SE 10 LE'/Erl- Wl'lll TO_.,, "UT
'Nilr'C

UP 10 YOU1IICILL.V .ER, NIT..!

IF. THE ATLANTIC: TIDES At&lt;E tli&lt;Cill ENOU&lt;:iH,.lH£'(•~~~&amp;
DOWN THE Sf.
/WD MIT
GR61\T
¥1\Tio\ A Wi\l.f.OP.

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DEAR POLLY---An unund lun&lt;h

CROCHE1

box lined witt~ goy colored felt
mcak11 o most ettracti.-• Hwm:.,
bo ... Prwtry designs or .ac.ls can

5255

be put on. tht outtWt ott.r you
hoYt paint.d it.--N. M .

DEAl POLLY-HouM c.....liot lo
rnoh ooolor olftct I footnool •
d"''"' k..., loto the wood lrHk ef
my KNIIW"' lrruoh.-E. M. I.

t

•
•

NO~

Wf WOU~ON'T 61V&amp;

BUT, AMOS,1HI

Sf.\AF(f. YOUP.

YOLI NOW IF .IT

Oh1o. You 've '
elecln c healin
cost us any mt

YOUR 8lRTI-IDAY!

LAt~t:::

-CAJOL

DIAl HILLY-Meko ..,.mont o&gt;
olork liNk ...,. ...... to opot by
ptlinli. . . . . . . . . . . . :wllilll = b y

Mod Mo!;coaln•

Plllfilll tnll few ltript of Nftoctl
hlpt. Tltlo .... ....... ,.,

MEET lht ~~~~ Ia o pair of thtt~~
Moll Mace.... ill ....,., ....Uti
Gor ito4 cay It -o! Paltlrw H..
SUS Mil ....,..41NdioM fw ,..,..

eleclric heat I
Ca II yom Redr

hor•·teofln• lftht

awltcho~

IVIIttTA .•

.

on'o9"01111lD"ooln;MH'aii"IIINI
12" lOin.

a free elechic

way to •to,.l!allr'o pacifier..,., cloa=
otorlll~ngood using ono of •• baby
joio. E'"'Y '!or 1111 i•r and pociliell .,.

'

" '''-rUiao.l witlo tlio lrottln.-MRS. V;

•'-·.~

Yl;''/(·

':.

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•

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. Ur'J.:"t::'W:.;;r"W!I.
caM llifloi~.. . . . . .

. " . ;MilailiJw:

·------~--::.-~-

. ...

-·

··~ ~.

... . ..

DEAR POLLY--I olwoys o,owy "'Y
hair ltefoN puttint on torrin11 •n4
a ntcldoct. Thfl prntntt • coating loam IOnoli•l that ....... the
l•,..lry dull o114 oticky INIII~~~o-

CLAIIF

•

DEAl POLLY-W... traooliot I hu
il... •
d!P
w1111 • . .
in tlooNp, attoclio .... efwh .....

-u cltn••••

........ """ .............'*."'*'

"" htlt 11114 ..... it. "" '"""'""
in good shape HI io .,...._.....,,
-MI.M. M. •
.
ttays

DEAl POUY-1 ha" kuod o neot,cltail

Mo

dow• ond maoy olloer llliot•· To kHp
tit.,. -rato '""" tlooeo Milot wom I

cut them open on rht sides. T1aey ore
oasily sortod from oltror•ko io tloo waoh.

DUJ POLLY-Whon my hondo fll wot
or I ..... I Hnd tho lothor coo IIndo to
olip th11yt)l my lingers. I put odhtoi••
hlilt -114 tho !OJ ond tho middlo of
.tho ..,,_., oon-skid trip rosults.-Ml.
E. A. S.
The Reverend

•
•

DEAJ POLLY -Mony ef •• uoo wo1n out
or o11tgrown sockl to Wish the cer, win-

~

DIAl POLLY-1 IIU "'.Jifll ¥$1o
clattro fo&lt; Weahli!f.~bh., '"*oN
""'
·~
.. • It·•Ill jft:
· io .
little' oonltory.
..;... I Mt

"¥

.

..._................-'l'llit
.
.
IHI . . . . . . . ""' .. . . . ~:·
.
• .... i-'·~
A. ...,. '., ...... f

.

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�u ' ..

• Sentinel. SuOOQio October :!j. 1968

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. ...-

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...

.

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. .

. .. ,

.

HOMECOMING - Mi
Club candidate, was crowr
night at CAHS. Serving i
George Dnis, and Cmmle
sored by Thespian Club a•
of the student body, was c

•

.

'

Katie's

"PHOOEY ON PSYCHIATRY! FOR THREE YEARS I WAS
NAPOLEON
. NOW I'M A NOBODY•'

By Ko t1e
Up, Up, and Away!

Rambler Dealers in Un

'
'

'

'

't

trip rece~ to California. Ot
rls of R H. Rawlings and So1
Qyire to California by iel

\

ROGER WEAVER, grand:
Syracuse, a recent graduate c
BOO, is oow employed as a dr:

\

/'

6

,;

'
....

2

"LET'S CON!:ENTRATE ON THE PINS AT THE OTHER END OF THE ALLEY,

. HENRY!"

by Ralph HeiJDdahl.

/BUGS BUN_N_Y
_ _ __,

OUT . . OUR 'W'AY

IF YA SAID WHAT 'I THINK
VA SAID. X
.
.
·

I'L.L HA~ ONE WITH EVEWVTt-UN6.'

"THE CHANGEOI'It WAS SIMPLE . IT OPERATfS ON
COFFEE, SAME AS OUR FORMER EMI'LOYEE5!"

by "W'alt 'W'etterberg
,---"?' I "fi.UNK I'T WOULD BE A
. NIGE GESTURE IF l WERE
TO ~EAVE. THIS PL-ANT FOR

OUGHTA LET"

Y'A HAVE.

M~5. WILLET.

IT/

IT{}" A

MONSTROSITY,
ISN'T IT~
•

Comes from
owning a home

I

•'

with a mort-

I

t
I'

gage that is

,/

easy to live with,
one that was

~

planned by exparts.

&lt;

Talk to usl
T_M_ll•g. U.S. fof . Off_.Q

OHIO VAl

ARE. \'CUR F-RANKFU

. . . dlopoa--tDIIIi,()

ALL f!EE.F WITH
NO CEWf.AI.

~

1.\STEN I YA
LI'L. CL.UCK, :;:
JUST SELL 'EM,

I DON'T

OTHEP:. ~IL.LE~
ADDED?

MAK!.1
'EM.

DO THEY'
CONTAIN

WEQUI~EO

THeY OOT WHATEVE~ THEY

AMOUNTS
OF VITAMINS,
PWOTEINS,

Ar;, A 6E5TURE: OF GOOD

WIL.L.,IM LEAVIN6 YOU MY
PAPER6AC.K I..I:--:ARY,

NEED T' MAKE
'EM T14' BEST.'

t-1 L.!

GOOD LUCK.

PNJTHE
NE:WJO[!),
SAM!

WII!&gt;O~VIN,

AND

'1

IRON,

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M3ST 84RDS H&lt;;.V5 TI-4R.55
T35S, P3+NT4NS F3RWt;RD
~ND 3N5 B5'1-14ND, B2T
PfDFlR3TS, C2CK33S "NP

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TW3 T35S 4-N FR3NT
'ND TW3 B5"H4ND.

\9 1961 br NEA, hoc. T.M. l ... U.S. Pot . Off •

.1

The Reverend
Oh1o. You 've 1

CUT A. C~RDBOAR.P
BOX LIKE THIS ...

.3. CIJT A.

RUBBER

BANDY41~ .

eleclnc heatin
cost us any 111(

WIDE AND
ZIN.LONG

electnc heat f
Call your Red•

IN HALF

ON THE
RU&amp;eE~ ~D

A BURtJED MATCH PUT 1&gt;. PSI-NUT I~
STICK ... PUT OTHER. RUBBER B~ND .. •

2. TRACE' AROUND
A C/I.RDBt)A.R[)

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END THROUGH 2-

TU6E ABOUT
1-tJN. WIDE AND
4-t IN. LONG Oj.J
FRONT OF BO)(

Mo

HOLES liN. FROM

E

PULL ~I.&lt;. ~D J:IR,e 1.

TUBE

C.UT OVT

THE HOI.E

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SACk.

"f.11E O~E END TO THR.OlJE.H TUBE .. ·

a free electric

....

... POLL

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.

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ANDY CAPP
10W

CAN "'iel&lt;: 4)TA"'f
WITH A SLOI&lt;E LIKE?

ME -'OW CAN ~ER •••

"I'M AT AN AWKWARD AGE . I'M OLD ENOUGH TO TEAR THINGS UP,
&amp;UT TOO YOUNG TO BE A REGULAR STUDENT'"

~0 I..ONcS! DON' I
FORGET TI1E THIN65

WE \.EFT FOR YOU

IN THE GARAGE: !

A? A 6ES1URE. OF GOOD
WILL., I'VE LEFT A F'e,W

1'141

GE:ORG'e IN

,.....,...11-\E GARAGE ! ~~.:::..:..:.:. ~:;.:..:...,

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Memoirs Show U. S. at Edge ofWar

R&amp;v. - ~IC.£!
SI..OLVPoK€?

•

W N-.1-tiNGTON (UPI) - The
gravest moments or the Cuban
missile crisis came when a
confrontation nearly occurred
between a Soviet submarine and
a U.S, aircraft carrier, according to newly published memoirs
of tlle late Sen. Robert r.

Kennedy.
The memoirs, purchased from
the Kennedy estate Cor more

HOMECOMING -

than $1 million and published
Slmday in McCall's magazine,
added new details to the
historical record of the show-

loll

Club candidate, was crowr
night at GAHS. Serving i

down between the United States
and Russia in October 1962,
At the height or the crisis on
Wednesday, OcL 24, Kennedy
reported, two Soviet cargo ships
approached
the
U.S. Navy
"quarantine" barrier set ~
across the .&lt;\tlantic approe.ches
to Cuba. A Russian sub was
sailing submerged between the
two ships,
The U.S. aircraft carrier
Essex
was to signal the
submarine b)' sound equipment
to surface and identify itself,

Kennedy said. He said that it it
reCused, the Essex was to drop
depth charges with "a small
explosive" 10 force compliance.
Describes Crucial Moment
Robert KeiUIC&lt;b described the
appearance and tlKMJihts of his
brother President John F.
Kennedy. at this moment:
"Was the world on the brink
of a holocaust? Was it our
error? A mistake? Was there
something rurther that should
have been done·? Or not done?
His hand went up to his face

and

covered his mouth. He
opened and closed his fist. His
face seemed drawn. his eyes
pained, almost gra.y,"
Robert Kemedy quoted the
President as saying: "Isn't
there some way we can avoid
having our Clrst exchange with
a Russian submarine- almost
anything but that'?"
Minute II later, a me11sage
came that some or the Soviet

ships headed toward Cuba had
stopped.
President
Kermedy
ordered the E11sex to do nothing

Now You Know

sored b.)· Thespian Club 81
of the studenl body, was c

By Katie
Up, Up, and Away!
Rambler Dealers in Un
trip recently to California. 01
ris ot H. H. Rawlings and M1
fiyil"@' to california by jet

C'/v¥)10, WVAEJ...E, I
f'£T I CA/0 B£1!\1 'rbu
1/J A RACE TO 1\-\E Rcn::~

1/ (/

010 YWR MI\RK

GET SET... GO!

.

Y\X.J C0'-.!1 STAND
A Cf.\AI0CE, FRE.:"IKY I

v

IJ.H(. L£T'S

e

PauJ Revere, best remembered as a horseman, was the leadIng silversmith of the American
colonies. He also sold spectacles, replaced missing teeth and
made surgicallnstrwnents.

OH, YE.AH'7

Missile Crisis

could win, ....

but give the Russian vessels an

Quote Khrushchev

opportwtlty to turn back. One
stage of the crisis was over.
The memoirs also reveal
some new gli.Jnpses lniO some of
the UJWUblished correspondence
between President Kennedy and
then Soviet Premier Nildta S.
Khrushchev, In one letter,
Kennedy told the Soviet leader:
"I have not uswned that _yoo
or al\)' other sane man would, ln
this nuclear age, deliberately
plunge the world into war which
it is crystal clear oo country

In an emotional letter to the
President Oct. 26, parts of
which Mve appeared in print
previously, Khrushchev said:
uu people do not show wisdom,
then in the n.nal aralysb they
wiJI come to a clash, like blind
moles, and then reciprocal
extennination will begin."
This was the letter which
contained the seeds or the
agreement later rOached In
which Soviet offensive missiles

were withdrawn Crom Cuba and
the u.s. blockade was lifted.
The article a1so told or a
poignant mc:nent when the two
brothers, both later a&amp;aassirat.-ed, were alone after the crl sis
had erded.
The President, recalling Abr'&lt;i·
ham Lincoln's death after the
Civil War, wryly cMtmented:
wrhis is the night J should go to
the theater."
"If you go, I want to go with
you," Robert Kenned.Y replied .
Robert
v
edy's accOWlt

•

George Da\'IS, and Connie

Katie's

•
ln

details how cl- the Cuban
crisis came to actual war In
aevenl ways- how mUliarJ
ldvlaers _pressed tor an attatk
qainst Cuba; how advance
preparation• lor such an attack
were madei and how, liB the
climax approached, the chancel
for mlac::alculation by both
countries grew.
Military Urge!l Attack
from Ihe begimlrw, he said,
the Joint Chiefs of Statr were
unanimous in advocatlrw imme(Contlnued oo page 8)

Weather

at y

'""

Mostly fair and not 11 coul
Lows In the 40a. Increasing cloudiness and warm
tonight.

t '

Tuesday. Scattered showera over
moat of the state by evening.

lkt&gt;oled To The lnleresls Of The MeitwMwon Area

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

VOL XXI NO. 126

FIVE CENTS

MONDAY. OCTOBER 21. 1968

S££ ABaJr lt\AT ·'
y

ROGER WEAVER, ~rand :
Syracuse, a recent graduate (
aon, iB now employed as a ctr:

SPACE CENTER, Houston
(U PI}- With pictures of their

HAH I I BEI&gt;.T VOU 1 I 5£AT
YOU COLD ' I'M BETT£R THAIJ

YSP, YaJ 5UR€ ARE, Kl D I
IT 1/JAS GRtAT FUIU AtuYii.JA,y

B£TIER, BElTER, &amp;lTE.R'

11-tERE~

ONE 'THI"-JC.
1 CAt..J'T STAND IT~
A GOOD LO~ER !

IF

Ul USE I&lt;JDDI'JG MYSELF BUT

YOU ARE I BETTER, B€TTE.R,

wives mounted tn front of them,
the three Apollo 7 astrooauts
lrtaged the finale or their space
television series loday and
windup or the moons hip's
superb 11-day orbital trial.
Despite the irritations of
colds, itchy b e a r d s and
' 1 blaach"
food, the fUght of
Walter Schlrra, Dom Eisele and
Walter Cwmingham was going
better than hoped. It soomed
certain lt. would set the stage
Cor a Christmas night around
the moon by Apollo 8.
Schirra opened the 10-minute

I

Wallace Demands Hanoi
Make Public Confessions

Comes from
owning a home
with a mort·
gage that is

By United Press International
V.,Lce President Hubert H.

easy to live with,
one that was

planned by experts.

PRESENTS SPEOAL SHOW - Mrs. Sarah McNelr Moshier, talented Gallipolis artist, displayed oil paintings, 8Culpture, acrylics and watercolors prior to the Tri-Count.y Community Concert Sunday afternoon at the Gallia AcNemy Hief1 School Auditorium. The highlight or Mrs, Moshier's exhibit wasamuraldepictingthe historical backgroWld of Gallipolis. The mural wUI be placed
on pennanent displa_y in the Gallipolis post office. Mrs. Moshier is presently teaching art at Kyger Creek High School. She is pictured above with her !lOR, Bertram.

Talk to us'

OHIO VAl
J!IOalillopooltc&lt;-... 016,1)

YtiOTTA HANP IT 10 OOP
AN' RX&gt;ZV! 'THEY SURE
II:NOW HOW 10 WHIP UP

A FINE FEEDf

GEE, .I NEVER

HEY, WWA.T YOU

GIRLS DOIN'

OUT HERE?

.

OH, WE TI-IOIJGHT WE'D
JOIN IN 11-1' FESTIVE
GA'THEORING/

QUITE A l\llf~L V0U
FELLAS COOKED
FOR KING GUZ
AND UMPA.!

550 Hear Folk Singer Duo
By MRS. CAROLYN RODERICK rounding area attracted much at-A beautiful fall Sunday after- tention. However, Ute entire lob-noon am two major attractions by or the high school was lined
c&lt;mbinod to fill Gallia Academy with a wide variety of paintings
High School auditorium with an and sculpture which demonstrataudience of almost 550 persons ed the versatility and unique talfor the qJening or the Tri-County ent of this gifted young artist.
From the hwnorous arxt colorCommunity Concert
Associaful "Sentinel of Lhe Studio," a
tion's current series.
Talented young Colk singers composition or pine, plywood and
Steve Addlss aM BUI Crofut cap- rods which greeted visitors at
tivated all thelr listeners, which the door, to the cement "lady,"
a paradox of grace and abandon
included a large nwnberofyoung
people as well aB concert assl)o combined with the weight of the
ciation members £rom the three- medium; from the bold splashes
cwnty area and Ashland, Ky., of the artist's "Configurations"
Portsmouth, Waverly, Chilli- to the subdued, translucent qualities of her oils done in the style
cothe and Washington C. H.
Before the concert and during of the Old Masters, the entire
lntermluion, concert-goers e~ show was termed one of the most
joyed the opJIOJ1unity of viewing exciting art events to be enioyed
a one-man showing of the art or In this area in anwnberoCyears.
Mrs. sara M.eNeir Moshier,
EXCITING ENTERTAINERS
sponsored by the French Art ColEqually
exciting and enterta.h~
o~ .
ing
were
the
two young performMrs. Moshier's large mural
ers
on
the
stage.
Opening strongdepleting the historical backly
with
an
old
Shaker
song, "Simground o( Gallipolis and the sur-

News ... in Briefs

ple Gifts," Addiss am CroCul
rolled easily into the rolicking
sea chantey, "The Whale."
Bill Crofut, demonstrating his
exceptional skill on the banjo,
which seemed almost an extension of himself, showed the similar basis for all mush.: from
Gregorian chams to contemporary folk music.
The two artists had cornDosed
many of their songs, setting them
to words by poets such as Sara
Teasdale and e. e. cwnmings or
based on themes inspll-ed by television programs, such as "The
J 1.mmy Song," which also incor·
porated Bach in its introduction
and close,
The program ranged from
American blues to old English
roundsi irom melodic conlemporary folk music and lovesongs
from Canada and Brazil to the
"Ragupati" of India arxtdellcate,
harp--like tunes on the unusual
dn-trartt of v letnam.
Establishing a warm rapport
with their listeners early in the
concert, the two versadle musicians evoked a rousing re!JI)OilSe
as the entire audience joined in
singing "Rambling Boy" and" Ah
Robyn," an English round. ~
other hwnorous round, "Don•t
Push," was a high point in the

program.
"The Jinun)o Song," their fl.rst
(CmUnued on Page 8)

By United Press International

AlL RIGHT, BOYS, NOW 'IOU CAN
UP AND 60 10 WORK!
The Reverend

elect nc heafin

cost us any

PARIS- NORTH VIETNAM TODAY CANCELED a regular new s
conference that might have Indicated Hanoi's feelings about efforts
to dHscalate the Vieblam War. The North Vietnarnen delegatloo
to 27-week-alc:l talks here with the United States gave no reason for
the sudden cancellation or their week.l,y Monday news briefl~.
Diplomatic observers said Hanoi possibly called ott the session, usually a platform for bitter dewnciation of American Vietnunese policy, in order mt to rock the J:Q.t in a time of delicate

Helen Molden
Dies Saturday

Funeral services for Helen B.
Molden, S4, RD 1, Rutland, who
negotlatloos,
died 5aturday evening In the Veterans Meinol'ial Ho!lpital after a
SAIGON - A C47 TRANSPORT PLANE enroute from Solgon to lon,g Illness, Jf'ill be held TuesDa Nang eras,..,.. South VIetnam's Central Highlands today ldlllng day at I p. m. at the Martin fu.
all 24 per&amp;ODI aboord, U. S. mllltary OI)O(&lt;esmen sold. The dead In- neral Home "'lth the Rev, Paul
cluded 20 AJr Force personnel, two Army men and two civillana, It Taylor omclat!n&amp; Burial wUl be
was reported.
In the Miles Cemetery. She was
Authorities said t:Jle alrer•tt crashed 11 miles southwest of preceded In death by 1 daughter,

Oh1o. You 've.·
rTK.

ele&lt;lrrc heat I

Call your Redr

a free elechic

lhe Central lll&amp;hlands city of B111 Me Thuot about dawn. Names of
the victims were wllhheld P81dns notiflcatlon of next of kin.

Lola.
Survivon Include her huaband.
WUbur; a sister, Mrs. OWe ShuLANCASTER, OWO - OHIO UNIVEJlSITY OPENED Its Dfth ler, Chesleri five brothers, Guy
nglonal campus here~ with tho dedication or the $2.35 mlliJon Priddy, RuueU PMddy and ThurJolm T. Brasee HaU Hal,ph D. smith waaiiJPO(nted OU'a now dean of marl Pridlb, all ot RD 1, Rutoi!&lt;IJI1IUI academic PJ'08l"IIDI and also will direct the OU rqional lallll; Lloyd Priddy, RD1, Mlddl..
por4 and R01 Prld!ly, Middleport.
CIJI1)US81.
Some 281 treahmen lind sophomores are enrolled at the new Friends may call at lhe Amoral
JllcUlty, located oo Ohio 37, north of here.
home after 7 p, m. today.

Mo

-- - ... -

engine later In the morning. But
telecast holding up the now- Cape Kennedy.
The "live" t.elecal!it, beamed he dritted up into the camera'.!!
familiar 11 cue card": "Hello
from the lovely Apollo Room back In the same hlgb quality view and all three pilots carne
high
atop everything''
and seen in .six earlier shows, into view.
1\S the little televisioo camera
showed heavy beards on the
closed h by saying:
panned across the Apollo 7
"As the SWl sinks slowly in three pUots.
uwe thought we'd give each cockpit, photographs of each
the West, this is Apollo 7
r1 you a closeup of our beards crewman's wife could be seen
Cutting out 00W, II
"This will end our weekly this morning to prove we've mounted on the ship's inbeen here and that we are not strument panel .
series," said Cumlngham.
Before the telecast, which
The astrooauts are scheduled fans of the beard club," Schirra
ID
rlde their
cone-!lhaped said. He added, however , he started at 8:21 a.m. IDT,
command ship down to a woold not admit to any gray In Schlrra said he, Eisele and
splashdown in the Western his whiskers . "Only my hair Cunnlngham were preparing for
their return to earth Tuesday
Atlantic Ocean at 7: 12 a.m . dresser lmows for sure."
Eisele at first was below the by taking decongestant pills
EDT Tuesday, after covering
4.5 mllllon miles in 163 orbits pilots' couches preparing for the every eight hours. The astrosince their Oct . 11 launch from !!eventh firing of Apollo's main nauts have been plagued by
colds for most of the fil.ght and
the piUs are expected to clear
their ears and reduce the risk
of rupturing lhem during the
pressure changes of Apollo's
descent .
As the pUots ate breakfast
today,
Cunnlnjjlam quipped:
"Happiness
is a package of
significance. 11 He said In a
hal nominee Sen. Edmtmd S.
bacon S&lt;J.Iare.ll oo da.y 10 ."
Muslde Sunday both raised the broadcast interview ( face the
question whether North VIet· Nation- CBS) the combat dt.'nam has actually offered cline "surely ought to be taken
into account" in the decision on
concessions in exchange for a
a
bambi ng halt.
Ll, S, bombing halt.
Nixon, in an interview pubWallace said in an interview
lished
in the New Republic, said
(Meet the Press- NBC), "I
he
opposed
"imposition of a
believe now they are talking
coalition
government
on South
about unannounced concessions
Vietnam.
ard I think any concession
"There is little reason to
ought to be made publi c to the
believe
that an imposed coali~
American people and to the
SKORPIOS, Greece (UPO lion
government
in South Aristotle and Jacqueline Onaspeople of the world. "
Vietnam
would
serve
the sis began their honeymoon toHe said there should not be
"any unannounced reciprocal interests of Lhe Soulh Vietna- day on his $3 millioo yacht oti
agreements on the part of the mese. "
a paradise island where they
North Vietnamese. "
The forme,r vice pre.sident~aso re wed during 1 rain that
Muskie, on another show advocated ' small wut ac
Greek mythology says will inaure
(Issues and Answers- ABC), in the war zone as a good 8.Y they live happily ever after.
was asked about the former to shift more of the Hghting to
The 39-year..old 5 ft. 7" widAlabBrna governor's comments. the South Vietnamese and start ow of President John F. Keme"Gov. Wallace has been briefed "de-AmerJcanf zation of the con- dy and the 62..year-old Greekas the rest of us have been on flic L ''
Argentine 5 ft. 5" multimillionthe present position aoo if he
In other developments:
aire will sail the 325-loot white
wants to mahe it public he' s in
Hwnphrey- Opening a week Christina down the kmian Sea
a position to do so."
of big state campaigning in New in search or Mediterranean sun
Humphrey, commenting on York today, the vice president in a day or so, aides said.
the recent s cale down in predicted a " Democratic mirFollowing their 45
minute
fighting, said the lull "has some acle" on election day. He said wedding ceremony in a 13 by
the Democrat s will win because 30 foot Greek Orthodox chapel
the people do not trust Nixon,
on Onassis' private island of
Agnew, Wallace or LeMay.
3rorp1os olJ Greece's western
Humphrey was going into Texas coast, the couple went aboard
aOO caiifornia later this week the yacht and toasted each othseeking those states ' big elec- er and fortWle with champagne
toral votes.
and red wine. Crewmen said
Nixon- In a network (CBS) the newlyweds lett word they
radio speech Surxla.,v night, would be sleeping late.
minor one.
NLxon proposed that the federal
Among their first tasks of
A car driven by Pauline Joyce goverrment provide aid to married life was saying gocxl&gt;ye
Taylor , 20, Columbus, traveling children attend i ng private to Mrs. Onassls' two children,
south. slid brto a pile of ties schools. He did not spell out Caroline Kennedy, 10, and John
that held an embankment when
(Continued on page 8)
F . Kermedy Jr., 7. The late presa Uclaid owned by the Shell..v
ident' s children were expected
Sand and Gravel Company ap- Two Defendants
toflybacktotheir private
proached the highway from a side
schools in New York City,
road and T.rlor thought the ve-

'

,.

I
..

.

'

. .. . .

'

.

~

. .

I

I
I

'

r

HtirlPhrey says the recent lull
in flgl:lting In Vietnam should be
an important factor in the
American deliberations on whether to stq&gt; bomblll:t North
Viet~Wm again.
Third part.y candidate George
C. Wallace, at the same time,
Oatly opposed a bombing halt
unless the North Vietnamese
make immediate public concessions. He said the Communist5
are taking advantage of restrictions on U.S. bombing lo make
a "very significant" buildl.ll in
stt)plies.
Hichard M. Nixon, the Republi can presidential candidate,
meanwile rejected, by inference, Viet Cong participation in
any coalition govermnent in
Saigon, Nixon also called for
"de-Americanlzation" of the
war,
AU three caOOidates made
their stal.ements Sunday. Broadcast comments by both Wallace
and Democratic:: vice presiden--

Honeymoon
Begins on
Christina

w

Driver Cut when Car
Ditched Early Sunday
A driver Involved in one of

two accidents investigated by

Meiss Couotcy Sherit! Rober! C.
llartemach•s department over
weekend was takentoHolzerHosplial lor treatment oC lniurles.
Robert L, Dugan, 32, Rt. 1,
RuUa."ld. auftered a cut ~hin and
lacerations
the nose and right
arm when be lost control of his
1959 mo:lel car on a curve and
drove it. into a ditch on Route 124,
one-tenth of a mile east of Rut-

or

land, at 3:30 a.m. &amp;lnday.
Dugan was removed to the hospital by private vebiele. His car
had medium front end damage,
The other acciOOnt, w!tlch occurred Saturda,y at 9:50 a.m. on
RO&lt;Ile 338, 1.2 miles oorih at
Lock 23 at Apple Grove, waa a

hicle was going to cross in her
front. The uclaid was driven by
Danny Lee !l!aln, 24, Rt. 1, Racine.
The department over the weekend arrested Enunett Welch,
59, RD, Pomeroy, on an lntoxlcation charge . A 15-year..old Middleport girl was also booked 011
a delinquency aflldavit flied In
juvenile court.

Forfeited Bonds

Two defendants forfeited bonds
and a third w.t.s fined Saturda,y
night in the court of Pomeroy
Ma,ror Charles Legar.
Forfeiting boods ~ $23.70 each

MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL

ADMISSIONS SATUROAY -

None.
D~CHARGES

SATURDAY -

on charges or speeding

None.

ant, and Chester NeJ son, Columbus. Rodney 1\rtt.le, Minersville,
was fined $5 and costs on charges

Ben PhilSCtl\ Racine;

we r e
Donald Van MAire, Pl. Pleas-

~

""eallng tires.

ADMISSIONS
erson. Rutland;
Cheshire.

DISCHARGES

SUNDAY
Goldie~

Edna

Little,

SUNDAY

None.

New Auto Insurance Concept Bared
WASiliNGTON

(UPQ -

An
insurance association representing 160 companies today unveiled an auto insurance plan
designed to scrap the ''Whda at
Cauttn payment concept.
Accordlna tc the American
Insurance Assodatloo (AlA),

Personal Protection AutomOOlle
Insurance Plan, the proposal
would cost ''ul) to 45 per cent
less than the cost of the present
I)'8Win." said Associatlm Presldant T. ta~ence.Jones.
Under
y .r eMII llabUity

ac&lt;ldent victima would have

port. then must
a determination ol who Ia a fault before
claims can be pold.
The new pl111 woold be
compul10ey- that Ja, a per am
would have to meet Insurance
COYerap requirement• to oper-

their economic losses and
medlcel expenaea paid by lbelr
o w n btsuranee
companlas.

There would be no court
lltlp.tlon or settlement between

oppoalng companies.
Known as the

Complete

iniiUI'IDce

ate a ear.

Blem,*

[n

the most

return,

would be complete lnununlty
from court suits, Jones aald.
The proposed system woold
make no change in automobUe

coUlaion, fire and theft polldea.
Immediate ._.woo came

rrom other insurance companies
and grwps not comocted with

the AlA.
The Natimal AsiOdaUon
lndependeot

lnauren

ot

(NAil),

which says Its 480 member
companies write more than hall
the private car lniUJ'ance ln the

nation, said the no.tault scheme
U•ere woold aldft to each motorial

POLAR SCOUT, a E1r•
peao-&lt;leslgaed-aad-!JuUigleUte &lt;aUed ESR0-1, tlllder.
goeo tesllog al NASA'•
western test rau1e Ia Call·
forola. Tbe veblcle wlll be
lauocbed lo lludy tile
aurora borealis and oiler
related pbeuomeaa of tbe
polar loaoopbere Ia a ...
•r.raUve prDII'Itm laetw I
1 e 10-aalloo Eoropen
Spaee Reoear.. O.,ulu11 o o (ESRO) a a d U t
National Aeroaaalko IIIII
Space Admlalotralloa.

Enemy
Gunners
Bluffed
SAIGON (UPO - Two unarm.
ed U. S. Navy pilOU.buzzedNot111
Vietnamese gunners in a bluff
that paid oft in the r escue of six
American fliers downed off the
Commwdst
coast,
militarY
spokesmen said today .
They described the saving ~
the airmen Smday as one of the
most dramatic rescues of t h e
Vletnam War .
North Vietnamese gunners oo
an island just above the South
VIetnam border had shot down a
four..man U. S. Air Force ,.Jolly
Green Giant" helicopter that had
KDM to rescue the two crewmen or a downed American P'twl tom jet. The six downed alrmen
wallowed in IO..foot waves IDlder
fire from the coastal guns 11. mile
and a hal£ away.
About 24 Air Force and Na-vy
jets battered the coastal IUDII
for 90 minutes while another
"Jolly Green Gtant•' plucked the
six airmen to safety. In o n e
crucial moment, two Navy planes,
although out at ammunition,
streaked over the Red gunners Oil
"dry nms," divertln.g the Com ~
muniat fire from the airmen
struggling oti the shore.
In other action Communlat
mortars smashed Into U. S. and
Allied bases _ , . In the Central lilgblands, near Satson and
In the Mekaag Deha to tho - ·

QUARANTINE EXPANDS
'the entire burden of Insuring
COLUMBUS (UPIJ - S ta t e
himaelf qainst all hia losses- A8ricullure Director . - M.
both those caused by himself as Sladthouae hao repol1ed a Japo.
well as those caused by other neoe beetle _ . . _ ..._,
1

an additional five N!lmtleL c.a...
des ""'ered are Adamo, 11n11m,
ita 11 million poUeyboJ. Cler~ Pike IIIII SC1oU&gt;. Tbo
ders would want "the coat of _..anllne now laellldeo accldenta ahifted trom the ~ lltllo'a 88 ...-L
reckless drinr to his victims, •
AUotate lllsurance said the
LOCAL ' TEMPS
AlA pr&lt;~poaal """'d mean
The temperMqn ... f.!' " .....
'"'rreaponaJbie and reddeu
•~~rw. 11
driven would be held llniDcial11:10
a.m.
todl1·111 ~
l.Y blameless."
motorists."

Slate Farm Mutual expressed

-

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under SUI'IQ' aldoL

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