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I

\\

Mrs. Stutler Gives
Prpgram for WSCS

Plan Holiday Events
Holiday plans were made durill; Wednesday night's meeting:
of the put presidents or the Ladles Auxiliary, Drew Webster
Post 39, at the Gallipolis home
or Mrs. Olin Knapp.
Mrs. 0 . H. Martin presided
at the meeting which ~ened with
devotions by Mrs. Gerald Wildennuth. She used. a Thanksgivi~ u~mc presenting two poems,
"An Occasion for Thanks," and
''A ~imp1e Formula."
It was decided to send Thanksgiving cards to Miss Constance
Thorn at Miller's Cottage, Dayton, and to Mrs. Carrie Meinhart, a patient at Holzer Hospital. The group will also se nd a

Christmas gin to Mrs. Thorn.
The annual Christmas dinner
will be heJd at Crow 1s Steak
llouse, with a party following at
the hmne of Mrs. Neut:ding, on
Dec. 18. The dimer will be held
at 6:30. 1-"or the program, members are to give a Christmas

thought or poem. M.-s. George
Hackett, Sr. will present devo-tions.
A scholarship program for
nurses was discussed. Mrs. J .
M. Thornton conducted games
with prizes being awarded to the
winner. Mrs. Knapp served a
dessert course. She gave flvors o( miniature cornicopias.

Pack Overseas Boxes
~ms. JAMES RICHARDS, left, Rlo Grande, was regioral director when the Wi..U.W TniJ
(,arden Chtb was formed 20 )ea r s ago. She aUcoded a special observanee of lhe club Wednesday
night and wa s honored along with three charter members. Picturt'd ar_e the charter members wtlh
:'-1rs. Hicha rds, The) are, left to r ight, Mrs. Alla rd Pratt , \Irs. Ua~en~e L. !Ieaton and Mrs.
Julin Terrel l. rhc (our were presenled gifts during a dinner he ld at&lt;. row s Sleak !louse.

Charter Members Honored
In Special Presentation
,\ "Thi.&lt;i Is Your (;arden Club"
presentation featuri ng the recog-

nition of l' harter members hi ghlighted the 20th anni ve rsary ob-

se r vam·c of the Winding Trail
Garden Club Wednesday night.
The meeting held at the home
of Mrs. Clarence Ilea ton was pre-

ceded by an anni versary dinner
at Crow's steak !louse. One of
the guests wa s Mr s. James Rich -

ards of Rio Grande, director
of Region 11, Ohio r\ssociation
of Garden Cl ub~ . at the lime
the chJ.l was organized oo Nov .
3, 1948 , at the Heaton home.
Charter members recognized

were Mrs. Heaton, Mrs . Allard
Pratt, and Mrs. John Terrell ,

MEIGS THEATRE,
TONIGHT Ai\DSATL'RDAY
r\0\'. 22 - 23

Don Knotts
"T HE SH AKIFST GUN IN
THE WE ST"
(Terhnicolor)

MD
"SERGEAN'T RYKER"
(Tech ni l'olor)

Lee Marvin-Bradford DoHman
St:NDAY, MOJ\'DA\
MD Tl'ESDA\'
NOV. 24-25-26

"WHERE WEHE YOL WHEN
THE LIGHTS WE!\T Ot.:T''"
(Technicolor)

Doris Day - Robert Morse
COLO RCAHTOO!\ S:

Jitterbug Knight
Skater Dater
One Cab's Family
Baby Butch
SI!OW STARTS 7 P. M.

still active in club work.
In the "This Is Your Garden Club' ' presentation by Mrs.
Robert Lewis, president, it was
noted that Mrs. Ueaton and Mr s.
Terrell, prior to the organization of the Winding Trail Club ,
were members and paet preside nts of the Hemlock Grove Gar den Club.
The Winding Trail Club was
organized with 15 members, Mrs.
Heaton being its first president.
Mrs. Pratt was one of the new
club members and served that
first year on the civic committee . That first year also the
club hosted the regional meet ing.
Presidents through the years
recognized by Mrs . Lewis were
Mrs . Dale Smith, 1950-51; Mrs.
Clara Koehler , 1951-.')2; Mrs.
Pratt, 1953.56; Mrs . Terrell,
1956..58; Mrs. Robert Thompson,
1958-59; Mrs. Charles Lewis,
19 59-62; Mrs. Carl Will , 1962 63; Mrs . Robert Lewis, 196364; Mrs. Charles Lewis, 196568. Mrs. Robert Lewis is the
curre nt president of the club.
Activ ities through the year s
were recalled during the pro gram with comments on workshops . awards, nower shows,
and regional meetings. Program
books of past years were di splay ed,
Members wore corsages whi ch
they had made. The corsages
were judged by Mrs. Richards
and Mrs. S. E. Jenkinl!l, a guest
from Rio Grande, with rlbboll8
being awarded to Mrs. Thomp ~
son, blue, and Mrs . Robert Lewis, red, li'lle materials; IUld Mrs
Pratt, first, Mrs. Heaton, sec·

;::::::::=~~~o:nd~·.:an~d

'i

Any girl who
has hopes ...
plans ...
ambitions ...

shop conducted by Mrs. Lewis
a nd Mrs. Thompson at the Hendo' -the-Hiver Club. The president
thanked the members who made
arrangements for the f'T A dinner served to the !\ .S,l".S.
The annual all-county Christma s show st.:heduled for the weekend followin g Thanksgivinj:!; was
discussed. A sales table will be
included in the club's acti'llitics
at the show . The class drawn by
the club for ex hibit s was "Star
of Antiquity,'' an Interpretive
category.
Plans were made to instruct the
junior members of the Ladies
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett Post
128, in making Christmas arrangements for the Chillicothe
Veterans Hospital . The workshop
wm be held on Wednesday. Dec.

azinc, and a card signed b}'
the members. Mer chants contributing toward the project
were Swisher and Lohse,
T iny'!! FoodlaOO, Simon's Grocery, and the C.. and J . Auto
Parts.
Plans were made to prepare a basket for a family
at Christmas. AI th e next.
meeting the toys made by
members of the t.: lub for the
.Jaycee Christmas project for
needy families will be completed.
Officers e le(·ted were Mrs.
William McDaniel, president;

Mrs. Larry Wehrung, vice
president; Mrs. ,John King,
secretary; M r s.
Ronald
Brown!~.
treas ure r; and
Mrs. Elza Gilmore , news re~
porter,
FHIDAY

BOS\\'OHTII COIJN CIL46, Hoya! and Select Masters, annual
inspection, Friday , 7:30p.m. Dinner at 6:30 for companions aM
ladies; Elmer Williams, Jackson,
grand conductor or GraOO Coun-cil ol Ohio, inspe cting oHh:er.
P AST M ATRONS, Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern Star. 7:30 Friday night at the
Midd le port Masonic Temple;
Mrs. James Clatworth,)· and Mrs.
Theo Neutzling, hostesses.
FO RF~(\'f HUN W. S.C.S. bake
sale Friday at Duke Dry Clca~
ers, Pomeroy, beginning at 10 a.
m.; special feature , homemade
breads and rolls.
11.
WILLIM i WOHKElt'i Clasf&gt; of
Mrs . lleaton, Mrs. Pratt, Mrs .
Thompson and Mrs. Robert Lew- the Enterpri se UnitL"&lt;.. Methodist
Cl1ur ch, 7:311 p. m. Fridll.}, home
is vol untee red to assistthe Windof Mrs. Thomas Bentz.
inM Trail J unior Club in making
PAST ~M T BONS, F.vangeli nt'
20 holiday arrangements for the
Chapter
172, Order or the Eas tSoutheaster n Ohio Mental Health
ern
Star,
7:30 Friday night at lhe
Center, Athens.
home
of
Mrs
. .James Clarworthy,
During a concluding social
Pomero)'·;
Mrs.
Theo Neult.li~,
hour, Christmas gifts were ex assisting
hostess.
changed and secret pal names
were revealed. New names were
WAIIAMA liiGil S(.l!OOL Soph·
drawn for the coming year. Mrs.
omore
class sponsors dance parHeaton served cupcakes and corty,
Friday,
8 to 11 p. m. The pubfee. The traveling prize was won
li
e
is
welcome.
,Jay s in charge.
by Mrs . Robert Lewis.
SAT!JI!DAY
Attending the armiversary din HOLIDAY B J\ZA ~\H , HuUand
ner besides the charter memMethodist
Church WSCS, Saturbers and the two guests from
Mr s. Terrell , third, R lo Grande wen Mr s. Char- day beginning at 9 a.m., Rutland
Department
Store, featuring
les Uaye s, who gave the grace,
homemade
gift
items and baked
Mrs . Lloyd Moore, Mrs. Wal goods.
ter BentJ., Mr s. Lettie Spencer,
1-llGH SCHOOL DANCE SaturMrs. Char le s Lewis , Mrs . Robday,
8 to 11 p.m., at the Meigs
ert Lewis, Mr s. Mary ~ulcr,
lligh
School audiloriwn in Midand Mrs . Thompson.
dleport. Jays will em c~e.

Mrs. Bud Simp son will be
the hostess for the next meeting. Mrs. Flo Strickland sened refreshinems carrying out
the Thanksgiving theme following the meeting. Mrs. Willard Boyer reed veda birthday

••The Dtsclplined LHe"' waathe
program topic preserUd by Mra.
Wendell autler at Tuelday
nlgtrt•a meetlng ~ the Women' a
Society al Christian Service, Asbury United Methodist Church,
~racu..,.

Featured in the program were
questton.R for sell .. examination.
The hymn, "Spirit or God Deacend upon My Heart" "aa &amp;Wlg
by the group, Scripture from the

139th Psalm and a poem, "Pray-

Missionary
Family Aided
A contribution to the Howard
Crowl missionary family in Africa l'laS made when the Evangeline Missionary Society m e t

Tuesday night at the Pomeroy
Cl1urch or Christ.
During the meeting presided
onr by Mrs. OrvUle Well, it

ing Hands, .. were react
During the business meeting
conducted by Mrs. John Sauvage, plans were made (or the annual holida.Y dirmer. Committees
named were Mrs. Alice Capehart, Mrs. Grace Weese, a n d
Miss Marcia Karr, dinner; Mrs.
Christina Grimm, Mrs. M a r y
Lisle, and Mrs. Helen Teaford,
decorating; Mrs. Sauvage, devotions; Mrs. Margaret Eichinger,

was decided to remember shutin members at the church on
Thanksgiving. A potluck dimer
was planned for Dec. 17 at the
church.
The mission study program
presented by Mrs. Robert Wood
was on the work of the G u y
Mayfield family in Italy with
servicemen and was entitled
"Christian
Military Fellowship." A character sketch on
Sarah l'las given by Mrs. Well
and Mrs.
Venoy presented devotions on the topic " The
Word •Work' ."
In response to roll call members gave thoughts on Thanksgiving.
Mrs. Harold Smith, hostess,
served refreshments to those
named and Mrs. Elwood Bower8, Mrs. Loui.R Osborne, Mrs.
Conrad Ohlinger, and Mrs. Den ver Kapple.

Edward

gift.

Children are
Forming Choir
Secorld rehearsal for a chil-

Mrs. Nora Houdashelt, and Mrs.
Helen Damewood, gifts ror the
rest home; and Mrs. Sauvage,
Mrs. Janice Harper, and Mrs.
Stutler, program.
The group sang "For t h e
Beaut,y of the Earth" and devotions were led by Mrs. Capehart. 91e u8ed scripture f r o m
Romans 15, a meditation entitled
'"The World and Uome Communtty ,'' and prayer.
h was reported that 15 shutin calls were made during the
past month . Mrs. Stutler commented on the ministers' wivea
retreat and a thank offering wu
taken.
To conclude the meeting, Mbs
Karr pve a meditation on thank~
fulne8S. The blrthdJ.ys of s I x
members were obsen-ed. Refreshments were served by Mrs.
Sauvage with Mrs. Don Lisle a
contributing hostess.

Birtll::lay" to Debbie Bechtle.
Mrs. Ne wman Burdette is assistant to Mrs. Fultz, and Mrs.
Donahue is accompanist ror the
gro~. Plans are for the childrcn to s ing at the Christmas
program.

time a $5 contribution from ROOert Harris for lunches attbe Middleport Elementary School was
acknowledged. It was reported
that all pecans have been sold
and that eight more cases have
been ordered.
Holiday decorations for the
church were discussed and members were urged to s~port the
newly organized children's choir.
Miss Bes.8 sanborn opened the
meet111: with devotions using
•' Dal'id' s Songs or Thanksgiving"
as the theme. She read selected
verses tram the Psalms. T h e
Thanksgiving themewualgocarried out in the program presented by Mrs. James Criswell. She
read severlll poems and meditations.
The refreshment table was covered in ivory satin and centered with a sheaf of wheat surrounded by fruit and Oanked by yellow
tapers. Mrs. CrisweU presided
at the coCree service. Hostesses
were Mrs. Jack Bechtle~ MJss
NeUie Zerkle, Mrs. Hattie Smith
and Mrs. carroll Swanson.

Gifts (or mission work will
be given in lieu or the usual
Christmas exchange at the December meeting of Class 12, ac·

cording to plang made at Wednesday night's meeting held at
Heath United Methodist Church.
Middleporl
Mrs. L. W. McComas presided at the meeting during which

Buffet Dinner
Produces $618
LAKIN - Employes ol Lakin
State Hospital ha\leannounced the
profit of their first project, a
buffet dinner to raise hllds for
the erection of a chapel on the
hospital grounds, amounted to
$6!8.
saturday, November 23, a seeft
om project to enlarge this amount
wiU consist of a Bho«ing match
to take place at 10 a. m. behind
the beef barn on the hospital
grounds. Prizes of canned hams,
smoked hams and tw-keys will be
awarded.

dren's choir being organized at

the !Ieath t:nited Melhoclist
Church, Mic;ldleport, will be held
at 10 a.m. saturday morning at
the church, Mrs. Bernard Fultz,
dire(:tor, announced.
Children of the c-ommunity
from the first through the sixth
grades are invited to partkipate
in the choir. Children rna) attend either or both practices to
be held weekly on Wednesdays
rollowing school, and on Salurday morning from 10 to ll a.m.
Wedne sday's program included ramiliar hymns, some Christmas music, a Thanksgi\ling h_ymn,
and a Chrisunas roord, "Bethlehem Star." Children were familiarized with the Methodi st
hymnal ard they sang "!lapp)'

SUBDISfR ICT MYF meeting ,
2 p.m. Sunday, Heat h Methodist
Church , Middleport; all young
people invited .
XI GAMMA MU Chapter, Beta
Phi Sorority, tea, 6:3U p.m . Sun·
Purchase or poin.st~t.lias to dec- day at home or Yvorme ScaJly,
o rate the Pomeroy First Baptist Middleport.
DEOICATION OJ· addition to
Church was approved during a
r ecent meeting of the One-Won - Car-leton Chu rch, 2 p.m. Sunday
One Class held at the home of with Hev. Clyde llinton, former
pastor, speaki ng. Publid welMr s. Harry Lee Bailey.
The plants will be taken to come.
s hut -ins of the chur ch following
MONDAY
the holiday St!r vices. The teachSOUTHERN ATIILI:.!IC Booser's thought on Thanksgiving and ters, Monday 7:30 p.m. at high
ble ssings was given by M r s. school, Racine; final plans for
James Stephenson who presid- football banquet ; Elson Spencer,
ed at the meeting.
pre8ldent , urges all Interested
Mrs. T. T. Shelton present- to be present.
ed devotions on the Thanksgh·
MF.IGS BAND Boosters, 8 p.
ing theme . ~e reao a poem,
m, Monday at Meigs High School
"Thanking G o d for Little
Things," a11d several meditations cafeteria, Middleport.
including "What Is a Ho me,"
and "Giving Thanks Unto t h e
Lord."
Mrs. Bailey and Mrs. L. P.
Sterrett , the ass isting hostess,
served refreshment~ to those
named and Mrs. Ellen Couch,
Alum inotion Point fo•
Mr s. Joseph Cook, Mrs . .J. F'.dRo o fing
Semi -C. 1o•• h oubboble
ward FoMter, Mrs. George !YI:inPoint
ner, Mrs. ,\ten Shain, and Mrs.
Eltlu ior &amp; Al.,mi num
fiber Ro o! Point
El mer Wickham

Elberfelds In Pomeroy Are Open
Both Friday and Saturday Nights

UNTIL 9:00

Class to Buy
Poinsettias

POMEROY

NATIONAL BANK
RUTLAND

COLOR TV
~

g,'t~~ $'1~98

Model Zll04

TV

14"
PORTABLE
DIAG.

PRICES
START ,A.T

A FULL Serving Meigs County for
SERVICE
over 96 years
!3ANK

\" ISIT HEB E
Mi~s

END~D

."\arw:lra Kay Bing, Spring·

Member Federal Reserve System

field, and Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Bing and childn:n, Soruly, Melissa utd Ouane, of La c;range, Ind. ,
have returned to their homesart...

Open friday NiRhts 5:00 to 7:00

er vis iting wilh their parents ,
Mr. and Mrs. Ve rnon Ring and

Sha ron of Harri sonville l!oad,

'

Wt set leotuna:
• hcblw. Modular SoiW-Stete l · Stclll VW..IP AmplfW

NO PAYMENT
UNTIL FEB. 1969

• FuM . .ted Power Tnnnfortn~r
• T... ltltpiftl Dlpote Ant•nno lor VHF leapt ion
• $unahine Cotar Ptcture ,.,.. • AutOtMtic Color Oaritier

• s.,., v•o lfonge Tunin1 Sy•"m

ATE STEREO

With FMfAM STEREO FM RADIO
Full Nolorol lleroo aound,
years of oufdandinq
li_.tenin~ "plea1urel

ZENITH
STEREO
PRICES

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.
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Tuppers Plains
Hardware
667-396]

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START AT

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RIDENOUR
CHESTER. OHIO

~

VQL 3

NO 43

· ~ICkQ-TOUCH •

IG TONE ARM

Until Feb., 1969

IIGHfSPIAKik
$0UN_D SYSIIM

DIO&amp; IV.

"We Service What We Sell"

985-3308

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley
SUNDAY. NOVjMBER 24, 1968

Pomeroy-Middleport

MIDDLEPORT - Appllcatloos
(or Appalachian and other funds

by the Veterans Memorial Hospital - peedlng tor two yearsnow have the highest priority.
Jack Farrington, Athens, dlrector oC the Ohio Valley Health
Services Foundation, told the
Middleport ~ Pomeroy Rotary

Club Friday night at Heath Methodist Church he was optimistic
that the local hospital would be
able to proceed next year to

start a new 40
care unit.

~

bed intenHive

Money would come from HlllBurtoo Funds and Appalachia

agencie8.
Farrington,

LOCAL FACIUI'Y aiOSEN - Dr. J, &lt;lonlon Gibert
(right), head ol the Department ol Family Practice ol the Holzer Medical Center Clinic, interviews Robert S. Jones, Port
Clinton. r~st oC a .Reries of medical students from the College
ot Medicine of Ohio State University.

Clinic Aids Program.
GALLIPOLIS- Doctor J, Gorot the Depart.
mont ot Famll.Y Practice ot The
Holzer Medleal Cenrer Cllnic, ID·
DOODeed today that the COIIot!O o1
Medlelne or Ohio State Unlversity baa chosen the local cUnlc
group tO aid in a teachina pro..
gram in family praettc:eandcommunlty medicine.
'Dlls program 11 an elective

ty to observe office procedures,
medical therapy, hospltal treatment and community health clinics such as plastic surgery and
well babY clin1cs.
Robert S. Jones o1 Port Cllnton, Ohio is the first of. a series
of inedical student8 (rom the Ohio
State Unl\lersity who wiU partieipate in this program under
the supervision r1 Doctor Gibert
cou:rr..e otrered toeueouragemed- aDd his associates.
leal ltUdeDts to prepare tor ear..
Doctor Gibert stateCV•Itisour
eeroln bmlly prl&lt;tlce anil com- hqie that this -rlenee will
. 1111D!lale ~ llludents toac:cept
llllmlty medlalnil.' · ·
Sludeuto partlelpotlng In 0,. ·lhio dUll~.._ d a career In tamdon Gibert, head

a

professional

health gervices piBimer, reviewed the 5~Year plan In which seven
southeastern Ohio counties, including Meigs, Gallla and Athens, will experience upgradingof
health services. The plan includes the planned new health
center near Ga1Upoll8, an enlarged Veterans Memorial Hospital, and a health center In Athens.
He said the plan calls for an
estimated spending o!$40 m!Uion
dollars in the area - the first
1n the IJnlled States - designed
as a ••pilot, or demonstration
project 11 proving health services
can be made standard in rural

Accidents
Run Over

1 Per Day

GALLIPOLIS -- Clty pollee
lnveatipted
three minor aceiprogram are given the~.~: ~~_. ~dne."
~ - Friday brlnglng to 364
Uie iuimlier al accldents lnveltigated In the first 327 days of the
year.
No one was injured in a back.
ing accident at 9:18 a .m. Friday
on OUve St., at Second Ave. PoTIJPPERS PLAINS Tbe barre - Graham Company and llee said Merrill D. Abele, 45,
Eastern Local Board of Educa~ Bahr and Turner also attended. Wellston, was bacldng up to park
A payment penalty was enforc- his truck and the vehicle struck
tlon l!I'IUIIM a salary raise to
non.teachln.g employees, voted to ed against the Labarre • Graham a car driven by Robert o . Smith,
lnBiall a septic tanl&lt; altho Tup- Company lor not completing tile 27, Rt. 1 Ga!Upolls.
Both vehicle8 were headed
pers Plains elementary school, »ro.iect within the contract time.
In other action, the resigna- ooutbeastoo Olive St., and Smlfll
and accepted the resignation r:A
one bua driver tn a speclal ses.. tion ol George Hensley as a bus had pulled up behind the truck
alan Thuroday night,
driver in the Long Bottom area near the lnterseetic;m, There was
The board awroved adjustment was accepted, eftectlve Jan. 1, no damage to the truck and minor
ot. salaries ot custodians, cooks, 1969. &amp;lilt. Riebel said ho Is ac- damage to the car. No charr.e
and secretartea of the diBtrtct to ce(ting applications ror the va- was filed.
Two cars, both reversing from
meet federal minimum wage cancy and also Cor substitute
packing spaces, were involved
standards.
drivers.
Allendlng, 1n addition ro the in a minor accident at 11:55 a.
!iipt, John Riebel said file
above
were Eastern High Princi - m. Friday In file 300 block or
amount of Increases will be anpal Charles Taylor, Board Clerk Second Ave. The cars were drhnounced soon.
A delegatioo ol custodians, in- C. 0. Newland, Bill Carr, board en by Roy D, Martin, 18, Rt. 1
eluding Ross Cleland of Chester, president, and members L 0, Crown City and James F. Day,
Mr, and Mrs. Howard Caldwell, McCoy, Roser Epple, Dooald 66, Rt. 1 Gallipolis. No one was
injured, damage was minor and
Sr. d Tuppers Plains, Mr. and Mora and Ernest Whitehead.
no charges were filed.
Mro. Carl Walton, Sr. ol ReedsPolice investigated an acci•llle and Mr, and Mrs. Raymond
dent
at 4:57p.m. Friday on SecFrecker, RFD, Reedsville, atASK
TO
WED
ond
Ave.,
!lit the entrance to the
tended file meeting.
GALLIPOLIS
At&gt;l&gt;lylng
lor
parkjng
lot
at Grace United MethFIDal payment d $3,340 was
marriage
llcenaea
Friday
and
odist
Church.
Noone was injured .
approved tt&gt; file Labarre.()raham
SalludaY
In
the
otrlce
a!
Gallla
Damage
was
·minor
to both cars.
C0111J11111Y ol Mllrtotta thatlnBiallCounty
Probate
Court
w
e
r
e:
otllcer
o
said
that
Harold w,
ed the septle tanl&lt; IIY!ilem at file
James
G.
Brown,
25,
Ft.
Pleas~
Wetllerholt,
68,
of
409FirstAve.,
Tupporo PlainS sehodl and approval was also gtvep to com- ant, and Deborah Am Darn- was leaving the parking lot. The
pensate Joe Turner for engln. brough, 25, Galllpolls, at home; Wetherholt car struck a p&amp;rked
Hrlng lees on tho ptojoet and and Reyman David White, 20, car owued by Henry L, Pierce,
Racer Bahr lor OX&lt;8vai:ton, R011 Galllpolis, student, and Jane Alll Rl. 2 Galllpollo. No charge was
Graham repreaented tile La- Yll&lt;llll, 19, Galllpollo, secretary. tiled.

)~-Eastern Sthoor:Boanl
Votes Pay Increases

America.

pec!all,y Bernard Fultz lor his
''deep Interest" in tnwrovtng
commwrlt;y health services.
Health services, he pointed
out, are a two - wa,y street.
First they have to be available,
secondly people mulit use them.
Neither have been a\lallable In
the past here, he said.
For example, Farrington listed 32 gaps in services in Meigs
Cowty, which ranged (rom use

'PRICE TEN CENT$

h Priority

or well - baby
cllnlea to care for the elderly.
As for meeting needs_ he noted
that there is one agency in the
cotmt;y - the Pomeroy UOns
Chili - which Is able to meet
about 10 per cent ol the need
(or glaases. He said the cost to
outfit all the people of the county
who need glassea would be $45,000, clearly beyond the capacit,y

of the Lions.

Farr!ngtoo emphasbed that
communities must prove will ingness to help themselves to
the llmlt ol t!nanciai capablllty
to participate in the program.
Rotarian Dr. .Jerry Matheny

iJI

inlrOOll
Lee

o,. ~ ~ ~

tile amrua.

0

.cy loolball •ban-

quet, repot red a money loss of

thanks ot Meigs High Marauder
Coach Charles Chancey for the
banquet.
McComas said there were 89
guests at the banquet Including
players, coaches, and cheerleaders, and the sale o( 120 tickets.
ladies of Heath Church sen.
lng the dimer Friday night were
Mrs. Nan Moore, Mn. Mildred
Zeigler, Mrs. Edith Jividen, Mrs.
Everett Davis, Mrs. Kay Hall
and Miss Bess Sanborn .

lntersection8.

JACK FAURINGTON, left, a profess ional health planner.
Athens , director of tlle Ohio Valley UealUl Services f'ounda-Uon, aOO Dr. Jerry Matheny of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club.

Flower Show to
Usher in Season
8Jo CIL\RLENE HOEFUCH
POMEROY - It's Christmas,
Christmas everywhere!
Meigs County garden clubs will
usher In the season with a flower show which will not only feature numerous artistic arrangements but also Christmas corsap&amp;, gift wrappings, door decoraUOii&amp; and holiday magazines.
The show, Wlder the direction
of Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis, is
. ' ~ Saturday 101!11. lUI~ ln ~

I'Oaieroy Elementary School.
Mro . Albert Pool ot Marietta,
an accredited judge, and immediate pall president of tile Ohio
Association « Garden Clubs, will
be the judge. Judging, by the

-cl-

3 p.m., oo Dec. 24.
Thuroday, workers bepn put.
ling ._.. the Christmas deeoraUons in the Plmlic Sq.&amp;are and
along Second Ave ., and various

I

$4.25, and cooveyed the persooal

Arrival of Santa Claul!l Friday
will officially launch the 1968
Christmas shopping season 1n
Galllpolio.
The Gallipolis Merchants' annual Christmas parade will kickoil' Friday's activities. The parade will form on Fourth Ave., in
!root ot the Washington School
Building, beglnnlng at 1:30 p.m.
The parade w!ll start promptly
at 2 p .m., go down Fourth tt&gt;
Court St., turn left, over to
Third, up Tidrd to Locust St. ,
turn right to Second, down Sec~
ond to Coort, turn left to First,
and move back up First to the
rjver bank ~· Santa Cl'lfla
will greet thousinds ol ldddlea
lor file -flrll time this winter .
At lealtt t!ve bands are
od to take part ln Friday' a par.
ado. Cub, Boy, Girl and Explorer Scouts, members or riding
clubs, new automobiles, a police
cndser, fire engines and others
will participate 1n the parade
according to Bill Whitman, chairman.
First Ave., wiD bo roped ot!
from Court to State. Members
ol file City Police department will
be on hand to l!lupervise activities along the riverbank when
Sanla passes out good[ea to all
klddles 12 years and ~mder.

The night shopping season In
Gallipolis will begin on Monday,
Dec. 9, Tho amual Sbop-0--Rama
program, sponsored by the local
merchants, got Wtderway here
on Nov. 11. It will nm through

.I

~-- '~ ~ D ..oalrman ot

By HOBART WILSON, JR,
GALLIPOLIS - Although area
shoppers have been mighty busy
during the past two or three
weeks, actlo.1 is expected to really pick up In the Old French
City on Friday as Jolly Ole' st.
Nick makos his lirsl olficlal ap.
pearance or the season.

atternom. lt has been held at
night in previ0118 years, but due
to the cold weather, officials felt
the afternoon event would be better (or all concerned.

'"* :'

FOUH SECTIONS

St. Nick Coming

This Is !be tlrst time 1n several years the Christmas parade has been cooducted ln the

&lt;-1ouily IUid C&lt;JCIIer So"*;r . . .
Sundo.Y niPt. H!cb lo tlio lltil. ·
Port~¥ cloudy wlfll . . ,
lelllpeqtureo Mondo,y.

• "'t\ ••
11\.\~~
~Ig
~f,
~

and avallablllty

Farrington reviewed prelim ~
lnary survey and in\lestigative
work that has gune into launchIng the plan, which the foundAtion he directs assists in an advisory wa,y . He f!ingled oot es-

'0
~

40-Unit Hospital Addition
'

Weather

entint

tmts

40 PAGES

Inside Today
Page 2 :-~ . . . In Our Town
Page 4-5 . . . . . . . Society,
Just Between Us

.Beat of the Bend,
Hospital News
Page 9 .
. ... Farm News
Page 10 . .
. TV Guide
Page 13-14-21 . , . , .st&gt;orts
Page 15-16 .. Classified Ad.8
Page 17-18-19 . . , .Society,
Community Comer
Page 11-32 .• Christmas 9lopping Edition
Page 27 . . ..... Dateline,
50 Years On River
Page 33-40 ... .. ... Comics
:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:::-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::
Page 7 .

NEW DECORATIONS- Tlllo chandelier tree ln the nortl&gt;west corner of the Public Square is one of two purchased by
the Gallipolis Retail Merchants Association to beautify the
city park at Christma..R. An identical tree was erected at the
other eM or the park at Secorl! Ave. and Court st. by John
Foster and his assistant, Carl Oleney . The merchants spent
more than $1,300 this year on Christmas decoratlooa which
im:luded new sugar plum detanticDI at intenectiona in the
business districL

The street decora.Uons are ~
POMEROY - The '!WonderfUl and reodjl tt&gt; be llghled 1n Pomeroy tile day !ollowlng Thanksglv.
· World ot Chrlllmas'l lo to eroas over t11o lbrellhold or ing, Santo will arrive In Pornoroy at 1 p.m. on Saturday, Nov.
Melge co.nt,y.
·AJthou&amp;h Thankqlving h&amp;a not 30. He wiU reappear on Dec.
1ot arrived, conunwdt!es are 14 and will appear dally omtll
buiii&gt;IIDI wllh plana rclr the hoU- Chr!llmaa In Santa'• hoose on
Main St.
•··
~ se&amp;IDD.
II
So far, Pomeroy Ia one ol the
11:1 · Pomeroy, mer charts han
amamced a aiVHWOI' i&gt;'OIIfiDI lew oommunllleo!n whlehahome
will\ no purchase rOCJJlred lor decorating eontest has oot been
&amp;IIIIOUJ1ced, Gordan clubB acroao
partlcll)olkin.
The i&gt;'OIIfiDI wlll get under- the COliDtiY are taking an active
WOI' !l&lt;lndiiY wllh a $50 !11ft cer- role In file leaderllhlp ol these
ll!leale .and two $2~ !11ft cortl!l- conteat..
IN IIIDIDLEPORT
eatal to be given aWIQ' til New.
In
Middleport,
tlio boll30, The .. !11ft • giving day
will be on Dec. 7 When prlzeo day llghto are in plaee r,adlo to
'Will be a 12 ' Inch portabletele- be llgbled. 'l'he1 ..... ~""by
rulal, a tso !11ft ~to and the vlll4ge malateniDcel\Qiri.
a $25 !11ft cortl!lcate. On Dec. ment
Middleport merclill!h are aloo
lf, tile marcluull• wlli .._t
111e Dec!. 7 !llflllBI and tlio l'aurlh dolna • proDIQIIOIIai ,P&lt;i&gt;srom,
prize award dl11• Dec. 24. The which will pi llllderw8l' 011 MDnII a color leleYilkiD ind 1111 ""-" buainuiiDIIII wlllllarl
alv!ng Uckoto to vllltoro to tllelr

prjzi

ll!i"!'·

establla~s.

No purchases
are required lor partlclpatlon,
In Middleport, a kick • ot!
parade Ia s!atad ror 6:311 p.m. on
Dee. 2, SiDia will make hislnltlal appearance and merchants
wiU otage a Moonllght Sale durlng that ev~. Santa will ellstribute treab tt&gt; file children.
The JIIU'Ide wlli be !rom tlio A.
and P, siore to the lot noxt w
the VWap Pharmacy, The Mo!go
Hlcb SchOMIIBarll will be oo hand

In &amp;Yracuse, file tlre depart.
ment auxiliary wtll also piiQ' a
role 1n community Chrlllmaa observances. 1be unit has purchal!l·
ed 200 pound&amp; d bulk •111111 p!ua
500 &lt;andY baro. These wlll be
dlotrlbuled by Santa at 2 p.m. on
&amp;mday, Dec. 22, at the unles
headquarters oow localed In the
former King jJ1"(Jpprty at the munlc~ park. The unll meD!era
wlll a!oo visit tile aged and llhut!na of file town with treata.

to present a short concert.

1ltere is no merchant promo..
t1onal program amouneed so
lar thla year 1n Raelne. However, Oremea there wiD decorate tile area ot their &lt;11111era.
Al10 on &amp;mday beFore Chrlstmu,
children d file community will
be alven treato by Souto at tlio
tlrehou&amp;e.
Aplo thla year file Cheoler
Gardin Cl.m will &amp;tap a home
deoorllton e&lt;lllell for thai area.
There Ia .., redllrllklll reqnlr-

llllddleport IIIOl"charrto will hold
dally drawing~ ll!v!ng $100 ln
&amp;if! cOrll!lcatea eacb day !rom
Dec. 2 r.. ·~ .-,.. There will
be a !lnal Jlnwlnl of ftva $100
. alii •8J'IIfleatet ... Dec. 23.
Mlddlepott wlli ap!nolrer!ree
parking lillie motero !rom Dec.
13 lhJ'OU8It Chrlllmaa, Garden
cl~o ot the town will again &amp;tap
a home decorating eontell wlfll
the m.arehanll JIIGY[dlne •15 to1rarda prlzea,

ed and pr!J:u will be · - In

rellgloua and 11011..-ellglous categories. The committee ln eharge
is Mrs. Horace Karr, Mrs. Paul
Baer and Mra. Homer Holter,
The garden clubo In the Rutland oonununlty will again otage
a home lighting c:mtell wlfll plana
tt&gt; be concreted earl,y nerl month,
At Tuppers Plains the Rose
Garden Club Is staging an uau
out effort" to round up conunun!ty deoorat!ooa lor tbe tlrll
time. There will also be a home
decorating c:mtell Wider tile
opmiiCII'IIhip or t11e club.
And, r1 COOJ'H, there 1rill be
tile IIOCIIl llll!rl •• cl.m and orpn!oatloal bold lholr amual
Cbrlllmu dllllero and partleo.
Then will be prosramo - dueled •• uoua1 to · belp llle ,.._
derpr!Yiiepd u well u pro.
&amp;riiDII to lnaun that realdontod
tile COOIII:l' home, the ~ lnftrllllll', llle Atliena Stale Hoo-

-------

~

........

·~ -

-·

·--

. ·-

Christmas scene: "ChriltmU
Eve," evergreen specimens, aad
a special display by the fller11111
cla50 dtheRutlandFrlendiyGardeners entitled "Christmas lJ
llappiness.n

INVITATIONAL CLASSES
The lnvitatlonal classes for
artistic arrangements opea for
exhibit by any garden cldJ mem.;.
ber are ..The Christmas Soli&amp;,.,
a flower piece containing an an.
(CooUnued oo Poge 1Z)

pllal IUid - · -

ed.

remember-

I

J

I

}

'• .

MARCIE ASH. m!IEE-YEAR-OLD t · · ... ot 11r. udlfn. 11o1nw ""~. - • • • ' -

tor Santo bringing juot a lew d tlio . . , _ , In the
ney" of her bGne.

m.-

o1 lhil Pomeroy lion .. _

I

-

There are tour categorlea la
the dlvlsioo lor Junior prdoaers. They are "My Kitten," u
arrangement uslng an animal 0&amp;"urine; ••This ls the Nlgbt, 11 a

ARRFSr MADE
GALLIPOLIS - The GaUia
County Sheri!!' s Department !ale
Friday night arn!sled Harold
Dennis, 29, Louis\'ille, Ky., on a
charge or dlaorderl.Y «&lt;IIW ct.
Demls' case will be heard Moo ~
day 1n Galllpoils Munldpal Court.

I

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

studard I!Yotem. will be oral,
and ~en to the poj&gt;ilc. It will
begin at noon Saturda¥.
The show will be ~ for
viewing by the publlc from noon:
Sarurday unt11 8 p.m. and !rom
1 p.m. to 4 p.m. &amp;mday, Thirteen Me!go County garden cl.mo
will be exhibiting ln file lhoW
which last year took the tlrlt
place award tn tbe .state In gnq:t
Christmas l!lhowB.
"Chriatmu [deall!l" •• flleme of tile show whleh bu a ' '
1ota1 d 19 e!uoeo In the artlot!c arrangemeelo cotegory, 111terpretlve designs, tho~(") ulinc
Madoma figurines,
candlu.
weathered or drift wood, bolb'1
glitter and evergreell are Dhl:led In the classes to be filled b7
the garden club members.
--

Communities Ready for Christmas
8Jo BOB HOEFJ,-ICH

•11.500 Vott1 ol Pictun Ponr

Model Zt40W

C.S.V . 10-C OLOR
ALS.O BLACK &amp; WHITE
Sl7 .9S up

.

Cu&amp;tem Portabll Color TV with

Wat .. Pipe
Plattl( F iuiniJ
Tripi• Tra t k Storm
Win.! owl

unba:u

Class 12 Plans Missions

SUI'illA Y

Any girl who has hopes, pians;iirobitions
- and that is pretty much every girlshouldn 't have to ask her.self why she
should have an active, interest-earning
Savings Account here. Start building
your own savings reserve here next payday ... and keep it up!

POMEROY

corsa ges of dried or artificial
materials.
Displayed at the meeting wa.R
the award whh:h the club received for placing third in the region for a single club show .
A report wa s given on the work-

Christmas boxes for sH vicemen were packed for mailing and new officers were
elected at Wednesday night's
meeting of the Sc ~·- Hi te-.5ew ­
ing L1ub.
The 10 boxes to gu to Meigs
servi ce men in Vietnam, Thailard, and Korea, each contained a miniature lighted (.llristmas tree, candy, nuts, gum,
l'anned meat, Kool-Aid, writing pad, pen, airmail envclq1es, playing cards, a Christmas edition of a popular mag-

Mrs. Dai~ Ankrom of Walton,
Ky. is here \llsitJng with her
niece, Mrs. James Brewlngton.
Mr. and Mrs. ROOert Reibel
rA Morristown are the guests d.
her son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Brad&gt;ury and
family, and his sister, Misa Mary
Virginia Reibel, Pomeroy.
Mrs. Esther Kissell .8 p e n t
Thuuday and Friday in Columbus on business.

Briti1h writer samuel Butler
said, •• An enttty house is like a
stray dog or a boy from which life
has deputed."

+

'

.......

�--------------The Sundl.l· Times - Sertlnel, sur.ta.y, Noveritber 24, 1968
UEVIV AL BEGINS
Special slrwers are requested.
WNG BOTTOM - A revival AD are welcome.
bepn here at the Uniled MethoPLAN Bl.KE SALE
dlst Church Nov. 23. at 7:30 p.
POMEROY- The Sewnthlloy
m. The pastor, Rev. Ctw.rles Adventist Cburch wlU holdabake
Ncrrls, wUl be assisted by his sale Wednesday It the Krater
father, Rev. Freeland Norris. Store In Pmnerov

2 _

as recorded by Pete MtCOr· tho week this year - 51.4 d&amp;mlck at Fairfield Weather Sla- arees; last year - 50.3 deDAY
HIGH LOW PREC.
Surlll,y • • ••••• 60
49

Roundup
Tempera·
tures, precipitation 100 weather
coMlUons for Nch 24-hour perGALLIPO!JS

-

Monday • • . . . •• 58

40 •62

Tuol!dlY •••••• 10
Wed..,odly •.•.• 38

31 .07
2!

ThursdOJ • • . • • • 47
Fridsy •••.•••• 62
Sotunll.l' . • . • ••• 54

37
26

23

Average high. tempe~tures tor

Average tow temperatures for
tho week lllio year - 32.6 d~
grees; lut year - 33.3degreea.
Total preciJJitatlon lor tho week
thla year - 0.69 ~ an inch;
last year - 0.35 of an Inch.
Total proclpltatlon 10 data lllis
year - 4LS2 lnchea; last year
- 3L 77 lnclteL

i

!'
Ethel Edna Amo8
GALLIPOLIS -

1 REMEMBER Chuck Romine when t'Je was working In the 0. J.
Morrison Store at Pl Pleasant, managed by his father, Charles Romine.
Just the other day I picked up
an old Huntington paper and there
THEAll~
was Chuck's picture. He was a
candidate for the West Virginia
TON!GilT, MON. &amp; TUES.
House of Delegates. And after the
NOV. 24 - 25 - 26
voles were C'ounted in the Nov. 5
••WHERE WERE YOU WHEN
election, Chuck Romine was a
THE UGHTS WENT OUTI'"
wioner.
(Technicolor)
His father went from Pt. PleasDoris Day - Robert Morse
ant to Huntington where he manCOLORCARTOONS:
aged the 0. J. Morrison store
Jitterbug Knight
there. Then when they closed the
Skater Dater
Morrison store, Charley Romine
One Clb' s Family
went to work as a salesman for
Baby Butch
the George H. Wright Co..
SHOW STARTS 7 P. M.
Before he got into politics,
Chuck Romine, 32, a Marshall Un-.
h-erslt;y graduate, was nn insurance agent. He survived a 17clrdidate primary field and placed fourth with 3,490 votes among
those seeking the six Republican nominations.
The story about the former Pt.
Pleasant boy w1s by Russell Lilly
o£ the Herald Dispatch, whom I
worked with a yearagodurlngmy
short stay at the Huntington paper.

MDGS

PAUL LYNDE

--·-·-· -·'"'""
~ .wt Mel ... 11211

... "'"

. ... ····-··· •... ...... ... . .
~,

,

CARTOON

Techoo~olo1·

Panaw;1011'

)

)

FROM ANOTHER Huntington
paper I came up with a clippi~
about two dogs owned by Dr. a.OO
Mrs. J. A. deLamerens o( Gallipolis. Both were winners indif~
rerent classes at a recent HuntIngton Kennel Club's annual sanction match for puppies aOO adult
dogs at Memorial Fiekl House.
A German shorlAlair pointer
(I'm not sure of her name but I
beUeve It wasHeidi)ownedbyDr.
and Mrs. de Lamerens was judg.
ed best of match among adult

POMEROY -

Medical Center, First Ave,, about
I :40 p.m., Saturda,y. Sbe was 83.
Mn. Amos was born on Dec.
:26, 1884, ln Vanceburg, Ky.,
:daughter ot. the late llarrtettDen:ney and David Darst. Her hUJ: band preceded her 1n death.

L. Woodard, Jr., 21, &amp;on of
Mr. mJ Mrs. Martin Woodard,
Sr., Pomeroy Route 4, h • s
completed eight weeks of basic
trainire with the u. S. Army
at Fort Jackson, S. C. He is a
1967 graduate of Rutl1lll High
School and is married to the
former
Shirley
Lowery,
daughter or Mr. and Mrs. Don
Lowery, Glouster Route I.
Mrs. Woodard is a 1968 graduate or Glouster Higll School.
Pvt. Woodard was elllj)loyed
at the Economy Savlllts and
Loan (Q. at Marietta before
entering the service.

Tie-Tack

This card entitles you to take advantage or a special offer.

Buy 200 pounds or more of Southern States Hone Feed
and get handsome. smartly styled, enameled metal Tte-Tack
or

)

I
i

SOUTHERN STAID
PT. PLEAIAIIT CO.OPIIIATIVI

INC.

• EASY CREDIT TERMS •

Pot&gt;liohoed e1eq -"''"""'' bJ lht Dt&gt;ID \ 'alit)

f'ut.Uoh'"'"'"
C/oLLIPOLL!J IJAI U

T Rial J~;E

:guilty Frlda.Y In Gallipolis Muni: clpal Coort to a State HlghwOJ
:Patrol charge of !Peed In ex: cess for roadconclltions. His case
~ was set tor trial Dec. 10.
: Richard A. Darr, 19, R i o
: Grame, was found not guilty aner
•a hearing on e patrol charge of
~ having an e"'Jired operator's li- cense.
:· Jl.ldge Rober!
Bet. fined El: nora E. Price, 44,Gallipolis,$20
:and costs, lett of center; Leonard
Mazza, 21, Long Branch, N.
· J., $20 and costs, James fl
·Schoolcraft, 22, VInton, $10 and
· costs; defective exhaust system;
"arxl Thomas M. Watson, 35,
Crown City, $10 and costs,

1519 KANAWHA ST.

675-2780

:F.

~ speeding.

·:

Forfeiting bonds on patrol
: charges were John C. Mccann.

58, PlUsburgh, PL; Bernard Jl
South Pointj Harry
McGirmis, 40, Pl. PJeasant, aOO
Lois K. Layne, 33, Patriot Star
Rt., all $18; Hershel L George,
22, Rt 1 Wellston, $18, defective
mu.a:l.er syslem; Frank H. Mills,
51, Crown City, $18, defective
exhaust; Robert L. Hausfield, 37,
Dayton, aiXI Eddie R. Powers, 24,
Columbus, both $23, speeding;
Catherine L Temple, 21, COlum-

bus, $28, ~Lred operator's 11cense; and Mark R Smith, 56,
Flint, Mich., $28. passing over
the yellow line.
In city pollee cases, Irene C.
Furst, 56, RL 1 Gallipolis, was
fined $20 and coats, tntoxlca..
Uon; Ray c. Stewart:. 39, Lower
River Rd., 1orteited a $28 boOO,
impr(JI)er backing aoo Norbert
Stattey, 29, Indianapolis, Ind.,

*A 1011%

HUMAN
HAIR WIGLET
FOR ONLY $2.95
(See below for detallsl

~···
discoun1 price of 73¢. Yes, only 73¢ for
' / ,.. ---,y.~:::_
""Maybelline"s new Urush-On Ultra Shadow (soft

~MMUNITY SINGER rehear·

.

· / \ '¥ ~

:iaJ. at 2 p . m. In vocal rocm
lit Gallla Academy.

\\

"1r10NDAY

·CENTENARY Granse Amua1
~Turkey dinner at 6:30 p.m.
:j..adies, bring covered disb.

SCHULT
AT

K&amp;K
MOBILE HOMES

:lhe Bettermert f1 PTC." All

--

You'll gobble up the fobulou
Homestead Custom Imperiale

:lite

odels from . Sch~,~lt ror people on 'the. mov~!

:}arents are urged 10 attend.

: tm:soAY
.::lNN JUDSON Bible Class of

First Baptist Church will

'::lbeet in tho Followslrlp

Room

-

LET'S TALK TURKEY
ABOUT

PACK MEEl'lNG Cub Scouts
403 will meet at the Methodist
:ct.urch at 7:30p.m.
.:tiPEClAL meeting ol VInton
:P,.c at 7:30 p.m. Discussion
:l•llow 10 Spend our llf&lt;llle1 for

~ ,J.ewher~.

LES WILLIAMSON
416 MAIN ST.
675-2900

•

11111~111 ·

BILL WELLMAN
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.

'

t3

m.
::IJ.!E!UCAN Lesioo Auxiliary
::Jenera! meeting, 7:30p.m., at
:fle hall. Initiation ot six new
~embers. Refreshments.

Wbai'J yom favorite iipJtick."" Your f(Jt"Orit e l1pJ11ck
sht:lde? Do you prefer frosted;? Chat~cei Me you'li
find lhe right iJpJtidc /o1 you 41 Revco for 01~Jy 39~
efJch or) for JJ.OO. Wonduin~ about the low price?
Well, if theu mol;rure aeam lipuiclu were tnade by
you·know-whu you'd ha,..·e to pay much, much more
But becfJUJe they're h)" We1tbu1'y ynu ra,..·e ll prett}
penny. I Your llp1 will net•er retw! what you p:~id.J

P.M. TO

-

afty tiMe .,..

108 EYANS 'STEAI HOUSE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

PHONE 4.46-14112

'•

4'•• •

' "(~;

f~b'ii~us

Only sus and tbe
label OB Lanolin Plus Hair
Spray gets you a wiglet

fakes

nail

I ~--:;~~;;...., txltndf'r

ol 100% hu-

man balr,

--··-- --··-·--

---

handmade
by e1perts

and matched

to your own
color. 99C

Lanolin Plus
Hair Spray
(Reg. &amp; Hard-

to-Hold) lor

2.00

1

The long, lovely nBils
always w•nred
are yours with Hazel
Bishop's Fabulous
Fakes. fabulously priced
ot only $1.49. (Compore at $2 .00}.
you·~e

P.M.

"-•·
. ·'
~

Here's the make-up that
brought about the clean.
natural unmade-up look.
Cover Girl by Noxzema.
Talee your choice of liquid,
pressed powder or tube in
various shades at only
$1.27 each. (Are you paying $1.65. the price that's
on lhe package?)

Let's T.. , ...,

STORE HOURS:
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M.

about the money we can 11ve

STOP IN!

10 VALLEY BANK
Gallipolis
• ft'H Clillo~~~et ·P.Irklac
• Drive-ill Wiild..W Se!'Viee

Bant1n1 Semro

..,., d"•IHirh .. aedlllld ll! II"' "'" "114'1'' ll"o

1hco th• lot·ll ne• • publ '&gt;hod h•uin

.
'

""'"""'"
........

Here's a beauty product lhat really lives up
to its name. Happy Hair makes your hair just
that. Caryl Richards' non -greasy, absorbable
lanolin formula brightens, conditions hair
instantly-with just a bit of a spray. The
price on the can reads $1.25 but our price p!ir&lt;'&lt;NMilili&lt;HI~I
is 69e. How happy can you get.

OPEN THANKSGIVING 10 A.M. 11l 6 P. I.

Day is Savings Day on Everything at REVCOI

you on your next auto loan.

Tht flail) Sentilltll, u"~ •N r $lH~ "'"""'tho
f5,.U; 1brw murn h• JJ.
J"ho&lt; l "'"''' l'r•"'&gt; lnl ~&lt;""' '"'"' l I&gt; ~\l'h'""
i••h ~nHtled •o ,,... "" for p" blo&lt;lllon ul all

-·· ~

Of

want to present soMeOne with o nice gift.

*

PACQUIN INVITES YOU TO
SAMPLE THEIR NEW SKIN
LOTION WITHOUT CHARGE
WHEN YOU PURCHASE THEIR
FAMOUS $1.00 HAND
CREAM. REVCO MAKES THIS
OFFER EVEN MORE INVITING
BY PRICING THE DUO AT
llii'ILT 73¢. (NOW THAT SKIN
NG WEATHER IS HERE,
THIS VALUE IS A MUST.)

3311 JACKSON AVE .
PT. PLEASANT, W.VA.

PEN SUNDAY

o nt J""r8 J0; "" mono h•ll6; ohr...,.

- _,....--.: ..

An id.a gift for onrone at ChrhtMGa

only SDC.

~0

''

brush included. ) And only 73¢ for Mayhelline's
Ultra-lash Mascara that lengthens and thicke~s
lashes as 11 colors, curls and separates . Revco 'i
price for Maybcllinc's waterproof fluid Fye Liner?
~~~-~;tOGc
Only 73rt. . fMay we n(tw ask if you've been
paying $ !.00 for each of the above elsewhere?)

K&amp;K MOBILE HOMES
PARK &amp;SALES

:Jt 7:30 p.

M.IJL ,._ lbl"H:IPTIOt K.HD
Th• (,a.lloPIOh • Tr•b&lt;me '" Ot"o l n.d 11 UL \ ••·
i' inia. "'"' •ur 8~ ~ ,,. monon; S.\ ; turn ~ &gt;l h &gt;

The Home of Instant Credit

FOOD GIFT CERTIFICATE SERVICE

You know the· name, Desen Flower. You recogn~e the
value (the 4.00 SiZe for 2.00 and the 2.00 size
for 1.0 0 is clearly pnnted on !he bottles)
~~
but leave it to Revco to pnce this famous
f&lt;""''" F=4- Hand &amp;Body lotion still lower. Our prices
~ llf5ERT
-.....::::7 loWER are $1.41 for the 16 oz. 4.00 srze and
~ . . .... .
r.....
73¢ for the B oz. 1.00 me . Now isn't
that a beaulllul discount.

All eyes righr with Maybelline at Revco's low, low

.

~·

REVCO
DISCOUNT
CENTERS

h

We Now Have

¥~·~......~ ........, ,.,_-

..

o• "' •

w t.

were Dllllald

rice eau

I ;GJt.

JEWELERS

52, Pc:aiWiiOJ 1 JUI

lJ

atq&gt; sign.
Arrested by Division of Wild-

Ja)IAL FRIENDS anti Men's
M"'e Class will meet at 5:30
S .. ·tn. at the hmte of M r s..
- e s Richards.

"'""'"II

TIFFIN CREDIT

MllYhr

The REVCO PRICE, naturally! (Paying more is ridiculous)

-

B:l.S Th ord .l&lt;t.,Call ipoh•. Ol&gt;o&lt;&gt;. f563J PubJ1~toed e.er) """kdlo)
n&lt;"'ll S.lurda).
!&gt;eo,.on.d Ot•• Pon•~• Paid at G•Jlipoh~. Ol&gt;lo

fill:: V.U L \ SE,\Tir&gt;.I::L
II U Mtd &gt;l PIC ~""'• f'Gmtro;, ot.io, U7n.
Publithlod t&gt;er: "UO&lt;Ia) e1enon~ tutp! S.tur•
,£t; . fmulod 1&lt;111&lt;'000 rl&amp;" mallu111 mouer 11
Pomero), Ohou. Pno• fll'fa·e.
TU!NS 01 'l lbl. Ill PTIO.\
II) urrier G~ o l) •od ~r.AJ 45c per ~-.,•.

nllht

n

YOU WON'T BELl EVE YOUR EYES
BUT IT'S A FACT. TWO PAIRS OF
HUMAN HAIR EYE LASHES (SELFADHERING. PRE·TRIMMED. PREFEATHERED) ... THE KIND OF
LASHES YOU"VE BEEN PAYING
UP TO $5 FOR, NOW AT REVCO
FOR ONLY $1.79 . (YES . YOU
SAW RIGHT, ONLY $179) . AND
THAT'S FOR 2 PAIR.

lire officials. Thomas Bradford,
43, Charleston, W. VL, forfeited
a $23 bond for possession of a
dove. (A dove is not 1 game bird
In Ohio)

&amp;a~RAX.""""'

POINT PLEASANT STORE

ment Friday

Fwtlatd. ....,...

Lovett, fS.

tton.

forfelled a $28 bond, dl sobeying

a

PT. PLEASANT, 11. VA. ;

Teachers Association, who now
lives and teaches at Jackson, is
a former GaUia Countian.
He is Richard (Dick) Lanier,
who is also asslstantcoachonthe

SUNDAY
TIMES-SENTINEL

Smith,

s.

Southeastern Ohio IrKiustrial Art

DON

GALLIPOLIS- JOOil A.

TWO ARRESTED
POMEROY - Arnllled by tho
Me!p County !l!erlll'a lleport.

You can't put a price tog on beauty. But you con evaluate the volue of the
products you use to achieve beauty. May we suggest you look into the
merits of Revco's own brand of beauty products. They've been formuloted
and tested to be comparable to.JU!tional brands. But they're priced to save
you up to SO%. Here ore 411eautiful examples, Moisture Drops, 4-oz. size
comparable to $3.50 brand( our price $1.23; Cold Cream, 16-oz.
comparable to $1.25 brands,
our price 89(; Medicated
Skin Cream, 16-oz. comparable to $1.59 brands,
our price 79(; Skin Freshener, 8-oz. size comparable to $1.50 brands, our
price 69«.

: Jr .• 23, Gallipolis, pleaded not Freeman. 4S,

I

Don Mohr h the
son of Mrs. Stella Mohr, 436 First
Ave., a graduate or Gallia Acad-emy lligh School, has played with
several Big Nune Bands on the
west coast, Chicago alii. else-where, and was with the Harry
James Band last ~ril on the Ed
Sullivan Show,
COACH ART LANHAM and
family were interested spectators at Friday night's GallipolisChesapeake game. Art is coach
of the R.ioGrande College Redrnen
arx:l his team had been scheduled
to play Friday nigllt in a warmup tournament at West Virginia
Tech at Montgomery but t h e
clash was called oft.
FRED DEEL, snappy guard of
last year's North Gallia Pirates,
is the only Gallia COWlty b o Y
playing basketball this year at Rio
Grarde College. A real fine lad,
Deel is a member or the Rio
Grarrle Jwtior Varsity.

~e was born Nov. 23, 1873 at
Hartford, the daughter of the late
William and Ama llouglass Slm.
mons. h
was also preceded
In death by her husband, JOOil.

·

~ For Trial Dec. lOth

l

son.
BACKUP -

NEW HAVEN- Herman Chester Rouah, 73, Ne" Haven, died

-

at one billing, and good one time only per f811111y.

THE NEW PRESIDENT of the

SELECTED SHORTS -

'

and performance in horses. Offer lumtcd to ~rchase

Bring this card in with you now.

Herman C. Roush

Friday In Veterans ilolpltal In day at 1:30 p.m. from tho Fogle...., F.....-.1 Home with tho Reo.
He was bom Nov. 2, 1895 .at Paul Fortney Gftlelatlng. Burial
Letart, W. Va., the IMlll o1 the will be In Grllham C81neter7late Joseph and Frances lldlan- MIIItary gravealde rltea wiD be
Jel Roush. He was a veteran ~ held by tho Smith - Capelwrl
World War 1 and an employe of Poal 140 ol NOll' llav... F r l tho State Road Comm!solm.
miJ coil until time of ....te...
llo Is survived by four daughters, Mrs. Lovella Goett, Mrs.
Geraldine Young, and .Miss Mae
JUDGMENT FILEll
Roush, all ~ New Haven, and
GALLIPOLIS
- Doo Wolford,
Mrs. Grace Roaeb, Mfoominee
VInton,
filed
a
confesoecl )IdaMJch. ; me son, Earl Roush, New
mont
Friday
In
Gall!a Coomt;y
Haven; a brother, Taylor Roush,
Kirkland, Dl. ; a sister, Mrs. CollllnOO: Pleas Court l.n favor
Vema Yomg, Monevflle, Pa.; 11 of the VInton BaMing Co., In the
grandchildren, and five great - amount ol $521. The action Included sb: per cent lnterelttrom
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be Sun- Oct. 1, J98S.
lluntlngtm.

;speed Case Set Down

Brood Mare Special ... Colt Maker ... Perfonnance
Champion ... Trophy Winner ... Bonanza ... Stiver .
Stirrup. These feeds are tops for buil_ding health, condtbon

Charm

Methodist Church with lhe Rev.
Normal Nash drlclatlng. Burial
will follow In the Smith cemetery.
Mrs. King died Thursday In
Pleallllt Valley Hospital. li1e
was the daughter f1l the late Rev.
c. J. and Maggie Baker.
SUrviving are two sons, Oulrlos King. Leoo and WUIIam King,
Arbut:kle; one daughter, Mrs.
Mlmie stewart, Arbuclde; two
sisters, Mrs. Minnie Casto and
Mrs. Leona Casto, both of Leon
and one brother, lbomas Baker,
Leon; nine grandchildren and 17
great.grandctrlldren.

Star Lodge.

' Funeral services will be held"
; I p.m., Mmday at the McCoy
: Funeral Home in Vinton. Burial

Charm as a free gift. Come in now for Southern States

Their second winner was Mrs.
de Lamerens' ''TerloBriarpatch
Dawn," a Gordon Setter which
was the winner or the ~rting
PLQY Group. The de Lamerens
have had manywirmers inlhepast
with their Gordon Setters.

MOHR his alto--clarinet and the
Harry' James Orchestra, will be
seen Monday night on the Frank
Sinatra ~ecial - check your 1ocal listings for the time and network.
GALLIPOLIS basketball got off
to a flying start Friday night as
Wilson's WoOOers and Burson's
Bombers made it a clean sweep
over Chesapeake. Coach Cliff
Wilson lUI! Coach Duke Burson
have the makings of a fine sea-

'dren.

HORSE. FEEDS

dogs.

Jackson High School athletic
staff. Lanier was elected president at the OcL 31 meeting of the
Association at Athens.
Lanier holds a Bachelor of
Science degree rrom Rio Grande
College and is currenUy working
on his Master's degree at Ohio
University, He and his wife, the
former Peggy Rowe, a Jackson
teacher, have two children.

: &amp;u-rivlng are two children,
: Mrs. Henry Amos, Upper San: ctusky, 1nd Mrs. Issac OUer,
. Rt. 2, Vinton; a step-son, Har~ old, ln Kansas; seven grandchil. dren. and five great - grandchil-

with purchase of
SOUTHERN STATES

Pvt. Martin

Ethel Edns

'Amo1, VInton, died at the Holzer

FREE during November
GALUPOLlS _ Old newspapers are lnteresti~, in tact, some
of the recefi: old piper&amp; turn liJ things I had missed when they occurred. Old you know tbat a Holzer Hospital School of Nursirw gradtr
ate wu the head nurse on the first heart transplant in the state of
Ohio?
Well, she WIS. Mrs. Marilyn messing (the (onner Tonl Compston of Wellston) was head nurse on the firSt heart transplant In
Ohio at the clewland CUnic this fall. She is a 1963 graduate of
Holzer.
Mrs. Blessing is the daughter of Mrs. David Comp&amp;ton, 222 East
12th St. Wellston. She has been at the Clevelan:l Clinic four years
and sh: was one of tour nurses and four surgeons who perfonned
the two and one--half hour operation. The patient at last report was
doing nne.

!lle il survived by a step..
dauohter, Mrs. Paul Lacroix, St.
_J'eteroburg, Fla.; three cousins,
Mrs. CUistance 9delds, Rock
~rlnga, and Mrs. DalOJ lloug.
lass and. Mrs. Famle Douglass,
both of Pl. Pleasant.
Funeral service&amp; will be held
will be In Pine Grove Cemetery.
Friends 11183' call at the funeral today at 3 p.m. from the Foglehome between 7..9 &amp;mda.Y even- IOng Ftmeral Home with the Rev.
Psul Fortney drlclatlng. Burial
Ing.
wUI be In AdamsvUie Cemetery.
Friends may coil unUI time of
Elizabeth Raybould
senices.
NEW flA VEN - Mrs. Elizabeth G. R~d, 94, died FriClara M. King
day evening at the residence ol
PJ', PLEASANT - Fllleral
Mr. and Mrs. Jamea Wise. Mrs. service for Mrs. Clara M. King,
Raybould, a resident of Maaon 84, of Arbuckle, will bo held 10marJ¥ years ago, was a melltler dOJ' at 2 p.m. In the Leoo United
of the Christ ~lsoopal Church,
Pt. Pleasant, and of Eastern
-···-.
~· ···-·.~·

srees.

tton.

Weather

The Sunday Times - Sentinel, Sunday, N6vember 24, 1963

3 -

lod

Week's

......•.

314 SECOND A
I
Gallipolis, Ohio
OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. 11L 9 P.M.-SUNDAYS 10 A.M. 11L 6 P.M.
AMERICA'S · FAmST GROWING CHAIN

�--------------The Sundl.l· Times - Sertlnel, sur.ta.y, Noveritber 24, 1968
UEVIV AL BEGINS
Special slrwers are requested.
WNG BOTTOM - A revival AD are welcome.
bepn here at the Uniled MethoPLAN Bl.KE SALE
dlst Church Nov. 23. at 7:30 p.
POMEROY- The Sewnthlloy
m. The pastor, Rev. Ctw.rles Adventist Cburch wlU holdabake
Ncrrls, wUl be assisted by his sale Wednesday It the Krater
father, Rev. Freeland Norris. Store In Pmnerov

2 _

as recorded by Pete MtCOr· tho week this year - 51.4 d&amp;mlck at Fairfield Weather Sla- arees; last year - 50.3 deDAY
HIGH LOW PREC.
Surlll,y • • ••••• 60
49

Roundup
Tempera·
tures, precipitation 100 weather
coMlUons for Nch 24-hour perGALLIPO!JS

-

Monday • • . . . •• 58

40 •62

Tuol!dlY •••••• 10
Wed..,odly •.•.• 38

31 .07
2!

ThursdOJ • • . • • • 47
Fridsy •••.•••• 62
Sotunll.l' . • . • ••• 54

37
26

23

Average high. tempe~tures tor

Average tow temperatures for
tho week lllio year - 32.6 d~
grees; lut year - 33.3degreea.
Total preciJJitatlon lor tho week
thla year - 0.69 ~ an inch;
last year - 0.35 of an Inch.
Total proclpltatlon 10 data lllis
year - 4LS2 lnchea; last year
- 3L 77 lnclteL

i

!'
Ethel Edna Amo8
GALLIPOLIS -

1 REMEMBER Chuck Romine when t'Je was working In the 0. J.
Morrison Store at Pl Pleasant, managed by his father, Charles Romine.
Just the other day I picked up
an old Huntington paper and there
THEAll~
was Chuck's picture. He was a
candidate for the West Virginia
TON!GilT, MON. &amp; TUES.
House of Delegates. And after the
NOV. 24 - 25 - 26
voles were C'ounted in the Nov. 5
••WHERE WERE YOU WHEN
election, Chuck Romine was a
THE UGHTS WENT OUTI'"
wioner.
(Technicolor)
His father went from Pt. PleasDoris Day - Robert Morse
ant to Huntington where he manCOLORCARTOONS:
aged the 0. J. Morrison store
Jitterbug Knight
there. Then when they closed the
Skater Dater
Morrison store, Charley Romine
One Clb' s Family
went to work as a salesman for
Baby Butch
the George H. Wright Co..
SHOW STARTS 7 P. M.
Before he got into politics,
Chuck Romine, 32, a Marshall Un-.
h-erslt;y graduate, was nn insurance agent. He survived a 17clrdidate primary field and placed fourth with 3,490 votes among
those seeking the six Republican nominations.
The story about the former Pt.
Pleasant boy w1s by Russell Lilly
o£ the Herald Dispatch, whom I
worked with a yearagodurlngmy
short stay at the Huntington paper.

MDGS

PAUL LYNDE

--·-·-· -·'"'""
~ .wt Mel ... 11211

... "'"

. ... ····-··· •... ...... ... . .
~,

,

CARTOON

Techoo~olo1·

Panaw;1011'

)

)

FROM ANOTHER Huntington
paper I came up with a clippi~
about two dogs owned by Dr. a.OO
Mrs. J. A. deLamerens o( Gallipolis. Both were winners indif~
rerent classes at a recent HuntIngton Kennel Club's annual sanction match for puppies aOO adult
dogs at Memorial Fiekl House.
A German shorlAlair pointer
(I'm not sure of her name but I
beUeve It wasHeidi)ownedbyDr.
and Mrs. de Lamerens was judg.
ed best of match among adult

POMEROY -

Medical Center, First Ave,, about
I :40 p.m., Saturda,y. Sbe was 83.
Mn. Amos was born on Dec.
:26, 1884, ln Vanceburg, Ky.,
:daughter ot. the late llarrtettDen:ney and David Darst. Her hUJ: band preceded her 1n death.

L. Woodard, Jr., 21, &amp;on of
Mr. mJ Mrs. Martin Woodard,
Sr., Pomeroy Route 4, h • s
completed eight weeks of basic
trainire with the u. S. Army
at Fort Jackson, S. C. He is a
1967 graduate of Rutl1lll High
School and is married to the
former
Shirley
Lowery,
daughter or Mr. and Mrs. Don
Lowery, Glouster Route I.
Mrs. Woodard is a 1968 graduate or Glouster Higll School.
Pvt. Woodard was elllj)loyed
at the Economy Savlllts and
Loan (Q. at Marietta before
entering the service.

Tie-Tack

This card entitles you to take advantage or a special offer.

Buy 200 pounds or more of Southern States Hone Feed
and get handsome. smartly styled, enameled metal Tte-Tack
or

)

I
i

SOUTHERN STAID
PT. PLEAIAIIT CO.OPIIIATIVI

INC.

• EASY CREDIT TERMS •

Pot&gt;liohoed e1eq -"''"""'' bJ lht Dt&gt;ID \ 'alit)

f'ut.Uoh'"'"'"
C/oLLIPOLL!J IJAI U

T Rial J~;E

:guilty Frlda.Y In Gallipolis Muni: clpal Coort to a State HlghwOJ
:Patrol charge of !Peed In ex: cess for roadconclltions. His case
~ was set tor trial Dec. 10.
: Richard A. Darr, 19, R i o
: Grame, was found not guilty aner
•a hearing on e patrol charge of
~ having an e"'Jired operator's li- cense.
:· Jl.ldge Rober!
Bet. fined El: nora E. Price, 44,Gallipolis,$20
:and costs, lett of center; Leonard
Mazza, 21, Long Branch, N.
· J., $20 and costs, James fl
·Schoolcraft, 22, VInton, $10 and
· costs; defective exhaust system;
"arxl Thomas M. Watson, 35,
Crown City, $10 and costs,

1519 KANAWHA ST.

675-2780

:F.

~ speeding.

·:

Forfeiting bonds on patrol
: charges were John C. Mccann.

58, PlUsburgh, PL; Bernard Jl
South Pointj Harry
McGirmis, 40, Pl. PJeasant, aOO
Lois K. Layne, 33, Patriot Star
Rt., all $18; Hershel L George,
22, Rt 1 Wellston, $18, defective
mu.a:l.er syslem; Frank H. Mills,
51, Crown City, $18, defective
exhaust; Robert L. Hausfield, 37,
Dayton, aiXI Eddie R. Powers, 24,
Columbus, both $23, speeding;
Catherine L Temple, 21, COlum-

bus, $28, ~Lred operator's 11cense; and Mark R Smith, 56,
Flint, Mich., $28. passing over
the yellow line.
In city pollee cases, Irene C.
Furst, 56, RL 1 Gallipolis, was
fined $20 and coats, tntoxlca..
Uon; Ray c. Stewart:. 39, Lower
River Rd., 1orteited a $28 boOO,
impr(JI)er backing aoo Norbert
Stattey, 29, Indianapolis, Ind.,

*A 1011%

HUMAN
HAIR WIGLET
FOR ONLY $2.95
(See below for detallsl

~···
discoun1 price of 73¢. Yes, only 73¢ for
' / ,.. ---,y.~:::_
""Maybelline"s new Urush-On Ultra Shadow (soft

~MMUNITY SINGER rehear·

.

· / \ '¥ ~

:iaJ. at 2 p . m. In vocal rocm
lit Gallla Academy.

\\

"1r10NDAY

·CENTENARY Granse Amua1
~Turkey dinner at 6:30 p.m.
:j..adies, bring covered disb.

SCHULT
AT

K&amp;K
MOBILE HOMES

:lhe Bettermert f1 PTC." All

--

You'll gobble up the fobulou
Homestead Custom Imperiale

:lite

odels from . Sch~,~lt ror people on 'the. mov~!

:}arents are urged 10 attend.

: tm:soAY
.::lNN JUDSON Bible Class of

First Baptist Church will

'::lbeet in tho Followslrlp

Room

-

LET'S TALK TURKEY
ABOUT

PACK MEEl'lNG Cub Scouts
403 will meet at the Methodist
:ct.urch at 7:30p.m.
.:tiPEClAL meeting ol VInton
:P,.c at 7:30 p.m. Discussion
:l•llow 10 Spend our llf&lt;llle1 for

~ ,J.ewher~.

LES WILLIAMSON
416 MAIN ST.
675-2900

•

11111~111 ·

BILL WELLMAN
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.

'

t3

m.
::IJ.!E!UCAN Lesioo Auxiliary
::Jenera! meeting, 7:30p.m., at
:fle hall. Initiation ot six new
~embers. Refreshments.

Wbai'J yom favorite iipJtick."" Your f(Jt"Orit e l1pJ11ck
sht:lde? Do you prefer frosted;? Chat~cei Me you'li
find lhe right iJpJtidc /o1 you 41 Revco for 01~Jy 39~
efJch or) for JJ.OO. Wonduin~ about the low price?
Well, if theu mol;rure aeam lipuiclu were tnade by
you·know-whu you'd ha,..·e to pay much, much more
But becfJUJe they're h)" We1tbu1'y ynu ra,..·e ll prett}
penny. I Your llp1 will net•er retw! what you p:~id.J

P.M. TO

-

afty tiMe .,..

108 EYANS 'STEAI HOUSE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

PHONE 4.46-14112

'•

4'•• •

' "(~;

f~b'ii~us

Only sus and tbe
label OB Lanolin Plus Hair
Spray gets you a wiglet

fakes

nail

I ~--:;~~;;...., txltndf'r

ol 100% hu-

man balr,

--··-- --··-·--

---

handmade
by e1perts

and matched

to your own
color. 99C

Lanolin Plus
Hair Spray
(Reg. &amp; Hard-

to-Hold) lor

2.00

1

The long, lovely nBils
always w•nred
are yours with Hazel
Bishop's Fabulous
Fakes. fabulously priced
ot only $1.49. (Compore at $2 .00}.
you·~e

P.M.

"-•·
. ·'
~

Here's the make-up that
brought about the clean.
natural unmade-up look.
Cover Girl by Noxzema.
Talee your choice of liquid,
pressed powder or tube in
various shades at only
$1.27 each. (Are you paying $1.65. the price that's
on lhe package?)

Let's T.. , ...,

STORE HOURS:
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M.

about the money we can 11ve

STOP IN!

10 VALLEY BANK
Gallipolis
• ft'H Clillo~~~et ·P.Irklac
• Drive-ill Wiild..W Se!'Viee

Bant1n1 Semro

..,., d"•IHirh .. aedlllld ll! II"' "'" "114'1'' ll"o

1hco th• lot·ll ne• • publ '&gt;hod h•uin

.
'

""'"""'"
........

Here's a beauty product lhat really lives up
to its name. Happy Hair makes your hair just
that. Caryl Richards' non -greasy, absorbable
lanolin formula brightens, conditions hair
instantly-with just a bit of a spray. The
price on the can reads $1.25 but our price p!ir&lt;'&lt;NMilili&lt;HI~I
is 69e. How happy can you get.

OPEN THANKSGIVING 10 A.M. 11l 6 P. I.

Day is Savings Day on Everything at REVCOI

you on your next auto loan.

Tht flail) Sentilltll, u"~ •N r $lH~ "'"""'tho
f5,.U; 1brw murn h• JJ.
J"ho&lt; l "'"''' l'r•"'&gt; lnl ~&lt;""' '"'"' l I&gt; ~\l'h'""
i••h ~nHtled •o ,,... "" for p" blo&lt;lllon ul all

-·· ~

Of

want to present soMeOne with o nice gift.

*

PACQUIN INVITES YOU TO
SAMPLE THEIR NEW SKIN
LOTION WITHOUT CHARGE
WHEN YOU PURCHASE THEIR
FAMOUS $1.00 HAND
CREAM. REVCO MAKES THIS
OFFER EVEN MORE INVITING
BY PRICING THE DUO AT
llii'ILT 73¢. (NOW THAT SKIN
NG WEATHER IS HERE,
THIS VALUE IS A MUST.)

3311 JACKSON AVE .
PT. PLEASANT, W.VA.

PEN SUNDAY

o nt J""r8 J0; "" mono h•ll6; ohr...,.

- _,....--.: ..

An id.a gift for onrone at ChrhtMGa

only SDC.

~0

''

brush included. ) And only 73¢ for Mayhelline's
Ultra-lash Mascara that lengthens and thicke~s
lashes as 11 colors, curls and separates . Revco 'i
price for Maybcllinc's waterproof fluid Fye Liner?
~~~-~;tOGc
Only 73rt. . fMay we n(tw ask if you've been
paying $ !.00 for each of the above elsewhere?)

K&amp;K MOBILE HOMES
PARK &amp;SALES

:Jt 7:30 p.

M.IJL ,._ lbl"H:IPTIOt K.HD
Th• (,a.lloPIOh • Tr•b&lt;me '" Ot"o l n.d 11 UL \ ••·
i' inia. "'"' •ur 8~ ~ ,,. monon; S.\ ; turn ~ &gt;l h &gt;

The Home of Instant Credit

FOOD GIFT CERTIFICATE SERVICE

You know the· name, Desen Flower. You recogn~e the
value (the 4.00 SiZe for 2.00 and the 2.00 size
for 1.0 0 is clearly pnnted on !he bottles)
~~
but leave it to Revco to pnce this famous
f&lt;""''" F=4- Hand &amp;Body lotion still lower. Our prices
~ llf5ERT
-.....::::7 loWER are $1.41 for the 16 oz. 4.00 srze and
~ . . .... .
r.....
73¢ for the B oz. 1.00 me . Now isn't
that a beaulllul discount.

All eyes righr with Maybelline at Revco's low, low

.

~·

REVCO
DISCOUNT
CENTERS

h

We Now Have

¥~·~......~ ........, ,.,_-

..

o• "' •

w t.

were Dllllald

rice eau

I ;GJt.

JEWELERS

52, Pc:aiWiiOJ 1 JUI

lJ

atq&gt; sign.
Arrested by Division of Wild-

Ja)IAL FRIENDS anti Men's
M"'e Class will meet at 5:30
S .. ·tn. at the hmte of M r s..
- e s Richards.

"'""'"II

TIFFIN CREDIT

MllYhr

The REVCO PRICE, naturally! (Paying more is ridiculous)

-

B:l.S Th ord .l&lt;t.,Call ipoh•. Ol&gt;o&lt;&gt;. f563J PubJ1~toed e.er) """kdlo)
n&lt;"'ll S.lurda).
!&gt;eo,.on.d Ot•• Pon•~• Paid at G•Jlipoh~. Ol&gt;lo

fill:: V.U L \ SE,\Tir&gt;.I::L
II U Mtd &gt;l PIC ~""'• f'Gmtro;, ot.io, U7n.
Publithlod t&gt;er: "UO&lt;Ia) e1enon~ tutp! S.tur•
,£t; . fmulod 1&lt;111&lt;'000 rl&amp;" mallu111 mouer 11
Pomero), Ohou. Pno• fll'fa·e.
TU!NS 01 'l lbl. Ill PTIO.\
II) urrier G~ o l) •od ~r.AJ 45c per ~-.,•.

nllht

n

YOU WON'T BELl EVE YOUR EYES
BUT IT'S A FACT. TWO PAIRS OF
HUMAN HAIR EYE LASHES (SELFADHERING. PRE·TRIMMED. PREFEATHERED) ... THE KIND OF
LASHES YOU"VE BEEN PAYING
UP TO $5 FOR, NOW AT REVCO
FOR ONLY $1.79 . (YES . YOU
SAW RIGHT, ONLY $179) . AND
THAT'S FOR 2 PAIR.

lire officials. Thomas Bradford,
43, Charleston, W. VL, forfeited
a $23 bond for possession of a
dove. (A dove is not 1 game bird
In Ohio)

&amp;a~RAX.""""'

POINT PLEASANT STORE

ment Friday

Fwtlatd. ....,...

Lovett, fS.

tton.

forfelled a $28 bond, dl sobeying

a

PT. PLEASANT, 11. VA. ;

Teachers Association, who now
lives and teaches at Jackson, is
a former GaUia Countian.
He is Richard (Dick) Lanier,
who is also asslstantcoachonthe

SUNDAY
TIMES-SENTINEL

Smith,

s.

Southeastern Ohio IrKiustrial Art

DON

GALLIPOLIS- JOOil A.

TWO ARRESTED
POMEROY - Arnllled by tho
Me!p County !l!erlll'a lleport.

You can't put a price tog on beauty. But you con evaluate the volue of the
products you use to achieve beauty. May we suggest you look into the
merits of Revco's own brand of beauty products. They've been formuloted
and tested to be comparable to.JU!tional brands. But they're priced to save
you up to SO%. Here ore 411eautiful examples, Moisture Drops, 4-oz. size
comparable to $3.50 brand( our price $1.23; Cold Cream, 16-oz.
comparable to $1.25 brands,
our price 89(; Medicated
Skin Cream, 16-oz. comparable to $1.59 brands,
our price 79(; Skin Freshener, 8-oz. size comparable to $1.50 brands, our
price 69«.

: Jr .• 23, Gallipolis, pleaded not Freeman. 4S,

I

Don Mohr h the
son of Mrs. Stella Mohr, 436 First
Ave., a graduate or Gallia Acad-emy lligh School, has played with
several Big Nune Bands on the
west coast, Chicago alii. else-where, and was with the Harry
James Band last ~ril on the Ed
Sullivan Show,
COACH ART LANHAM and
family were interested spectators at Friday night's GallipolisChesapeake game. Art is coach
of the R.ioGrande College Redrnen
arx:l his team had been scheduled
to play Friday nigllt in a warmup tournament at West Virginia
Tech at Montgomery but t h e
clash was called oft.
FRED DEEL, snappy guard of
last year's North Gallia Pirates,
is the only Gallia COWlty b o Y
playing basketball this year at Rio
Grarde College. A real fine lad,
Deel is a member or the Rio
Grarrle Jwtior Varsity.

~e was born Nov. 23, 1873 at
Hartford, the daughter of the late
William and Ama llouglass Slm.
mons. h
was also preceded
In death by her husband, JOOil.

·

~ For Trial Dec. lOth

l

son.
BACKUP -

NEW HAVEN- Herman Chester Rouah, 73, Ne" Haven, died

-

at one billing, and good one time only per f811111y.

THE NEW PRESIDENT of the

SELECTED SHORTS -

'

and performance in horses. Offer lumtcd to ~rchase

Bring this card in with you now.

Herman C. Roush

Friday In Veterans ilolpltal In day at 1:30 p.m. from tho Fogle...., F.....-.1 Home with tho Reo.
He was bom Nov. 2, 1895 .at Paul Fortney Gftlelatlng. Burial
Letart, W. Va., the IMlll o1 the will be In Grllham C81neter7late Joseph and Frances lldlan- MIIItary gravealde rltea wiD be
Jel Roush. He was a veteran ~ held by tho Smith - Capelwrl
World War 1 and an employe of Poal 140 ol NOll' llav... F r l tho State Road Comm!solm.
miJ coil until time of ....te...
llo Is survived by four daughters, Mrs. Lovella Goett, Mrs.
Geraldine Young, and .Miss Mae
JUDGMENT FILEll
Roush, all ~ New Haven, and
GALLIPOLIS
- Doo Wolford,
Mrs. Grace Roaeb, Mfoominee
VInton,
filed
a
confesoecl )IdaMJch. ; me son, Earl Roush, New
mont
Friday
In
Gall!a Coomt;y
Haven; a brother, Taylor Roush,
Kirkland, Dl. ; a sister, Mrs. CollllnOO: Pleas Court l.n favor
Vema Yomg, Monevflle, Pa.; 11 of the VInton BaMing Co., In the
grandchildren, and five great - amount ol $521. The action Included sb: per cent lnterelttrom
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be Sun- Oct. 1, J98S.
lluntlngtm.

;speed Case Set Down

Brood Mare Special ... Colt Maker ... Perfonnance
Champion ... Trophy Winner ... Bonanza ... Stiver .
Stirrup. These feeds are tops for buil_ding health, condtbon

Charm

Methodist Church with lhe Rev.
Normal Nash drlclatlng. Burial
will follow In the Smith cemetery.
Mrs. King died Thursday In
Pleallllt Valley Hospital. li1e
was the daughter f1l the late Rev.
c. J. and Maggie Baker.
SUrviving are two sons, Oulrlos King. Leoo and WUIIam King,
Arbut:kle; one daughter, Mrs.
Mlmie stewart, Arbuclde; two
sisters, Mrs. Minnie Casto and
Mrs. Leona Casto, both of Leon
and one brother, lbomas Baker,
Leon; nine grandchildren and 17
great.grandctrlldren.

Star Lodge.

' Funeral services will be held"
; I p.m., Mmday at the McCoy
: Funeral Home in Vinton. Burial

Charm as a free gift. Come in now for Southern States

Their second winner was Mrs.
de Lamerens' ''TerloBriarpatch
Dawn," a Gordon Setter which
was the winner or the ~rting
PLQY Group. The de Lamerens
have had manywirmers inlhepast
with their Gordon Setters.

MOHR his alto--clarinet and the
Harry' James Orchestra, will be
seen Monday night on the Frank
Sinatra ~ecial - check your 1ocal listings for the time and network.
GALLIPOLIS basketball got off
to a flying start Friday night as
Wilson's WoOOers and Burson's
Bombers made it a clean sweep
over Chesapeake. Coach Cliff
Wilson lUI! Coach Duke Burson
have the makings of a fine sea-

'dren.

HORSE. FEEDS

dogs.

Jackson High School athletic
staff. Lanier was elected president at the OcL 31 meeting of the
Association at Athens.
Lanier holds a Bachelor of
Science degree rrom Rio Grande
College and is currenUy working
on his Master's degree at Ohio
University, He and his wife, the
former Peggy Rowe, a Jackson
teacher, have two children.

: &amp;u-rivlng are two children,
: Mrs. Henry Amos, Upper San: ctusky, 1nd Mrs. Issac OUer,
. Rt. 2, Vinton; a step-son, Har~ old, ln Kansas; seven grandchil. dren. and five great - grandchil-

with purchase of
SOUTHERN STATES

Pvt. Martin

Ethel Edns

'Amo1, VInton, died at the Holzer

FREE during November
GALUPOLlS _ Old newspapers are lnteresti~, in tact, some
of the recefi: old piper&amp; turn liJ things I had missed when they occurred. Old you know tbat a Holzer Hospital School of Nursirw gradtr
ate wu the head nurse on the first heart transplant in the state of
Ohio?
Well, she WIS. Mrs. Marilyn messing (the (onner Tonl Compston of Wellston) was head nurse on the firSt heart transplant In
Ohio at the clewland CUnic this fall. She is a 1963 graduate of
Holzer.
Mrs. Blessing is the daughter of Mrs. David Comp&amp;ton, 222 East
12th St. Wellston. She has been at the Clevelan:l Clinic four years
and sh: was one of tour nurses and four surgeons who perfonned
the two and one--half hour operation. The patient at last report was
doing nne.

!lle il survived by a step..
dauohter, Mrs. Paul Lacroix, St.
_J'eteroburg, Fla.; three cousins,
Mrs. CUistance 9delds, Rock
~rlnga, and Mrs. DalOJ lloug.
lass and. Mrs. Famle Douglass,
both of Pl. Pleasant.
Funeral service&amp; will be held
will be In Pine Grove Cemetery.
Friends 11183' call at the funeral today at 3 p.m. from the Foglehome between 7..9 &amp;mda.Y even- IOng Ftmeral Home with the Rev.
Psul Fortney drlclatlng. Burial
Ing.
wUI be In AdamsvUie Cemetery.
Friends may coil unUI time of
Elizabeth Raybould
senices.
NEW flA VEN - Mrs. Elizabeth G. R~d, 94, died FriClara M. King
day evening at the residence ol
PJ', PLEASANT - Fllleral
Mr. and Mrs. Jamea Wise. Mrs. service for Mrs. Clara M. King,
Raybould, a resident of Maaon 84, of Arbuckle, will bo held 10marJ¥ years ago, was a melltler dOJ' at 2 p.m. In the Leoo United
of the Christ ~lsoopal Church,
Pt. Pleasant, and of Eastern
-···-.
~· ···-·.~·

srees.

tton.

Weather

The Sunday Times - Sentinel, Sunday, N6vember 24, 1963

3 -

lod

Week's

......•.

314 SECOND A
I
Gallipolis, Ohio
OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. 11L 9 P.M.-SUNDAYS 10 A.M. 11L 6 P.M.
AMERICA'S · FAmST GROWING CHAIN

�Till' Sunda~ Timl'l' ~ Sentinel, Sunday. Novt.•mtK•r :!-t, HlliK

-1 -

ATTENDS SCHOOL
GALLIPOLIS - MIOB .loam
8111100, a 1968 gra- or Gal·
Ila Acadeii'O', Is attending Buill-

I

~ Just Between .~~~.

nes• Qllleae ln Col\llliiUL her
addreu Ia Tho Toworo, 1131 E,
Brood St., Room 212, Col.-o,
Oblo t3215.

shop Bemadines

t.:

I

I

(

•

.

.

THAN ANY OTHER STORE

•

I

IT'S EASY JUST LOOK
!

~:

::"i:

A ver) tall tree i!:i framed in the oblong wirdow of noom 269,

~

Uolzer Medical Ct'ntct'. The room is onthesccoOO aoor, but the tree
in Dr. Morgan's yard reaches mam· feet higher than this.
~cattcrt&gt;d along the- widespread branches are yellow lca,·es,
ha11g1ng tenadousl}' in spite of the fiert·e mid-November wirxi.
These le&amp;\;es remind me of TO) scattered friends who h11.ve sent
regards and best wishes from all over the area.
The room full of nowers reaffirms this pleasant euphoria caused
bJ friends taking time off from busy schedules to send these bright
tokens of thoughtfulness.
It was almost a week before I picked up a pencil. I ran't describe
how nice it felt in my nngers.
I was almost afraid to begin lomentionthose fine gals on Second
North. I was afraid I would miss someone who had been espcdal]y
nice to me.
Forgive me, if I miss an,yone but I just t'ouldn't let the extra
thou.ghfulness of the R.N.'s, aide!!', and everyone on Secord North go
unnoticed.
So as well as I can remember, here goes:
One of the first I'll mention will be Opal Phillips. Opal is neat,
straight and tall and at first I didn't know If I would like her. But,
very soon her dedication in carrying ou;. the doctors orders made
me know she really cared; and returned in the night hours and rubbed m,y hot, tired bacf\.
Pretty, red·./Jaired Cameron Spears brightened the room, Cathy
Starcher "'·as perky, Barb Spencer was interesting and looked about
18, with her prett) skin. !lead nurse Beu could sparkle or be stern
as her job t·equired.
Meigs Countians will lmo,.i how dirficult it would be to describe
Myrtle Louise Faulk, aide, her young heart Is big ard encompasses
everyone in pain.
I want to mention these others, even though 1 was to groggy to
single them out: Ann Rouse, Cath) Wea\'er, Lucille Saunders, E.
Rife, Pat Mannon and Geneva Beaver.
A bouquet to Katie Crow formentioningmcin her Sunday TimesSentinel column.
Also, thank!i to Min Grime!i, executi\'e editor of the Ironton
Tribune, who sent a card and wished me a speedy reco\·ery.
Another bouquet to Joanne Meade for serding me the carna~
tions. It was delightful, ard doubly so because it was so totally

'

unexpected.
AOO how do yoo say thanks to someone like Helen Fenderbosch
who was willing to fill in on short notice. Helen's kiMnesses hne
been well known amoll!' her friends for years. In fact, I intended
some time ago to do a column on her and her charming family, But
I got side-tracked.
I ha\'e read pages and pa,~s in an anothology about modern
fiction. Talk about diversil): thOse stories arc about e\·erything,
so don't be sull"rised at anything I write from now on. Of the boss
wiU let me, that isJ
I sure do smell good, thanks to two thoughful couples who knew
my favorite fragrance and gave me some instead or flowers ... Don't
think they would want me to mention name!&gt;.
That leads me right into Friday's letter to the editor in ttu.' Tri~
bune from a groq~ of irate G.S.I. employees. They want me to apol~
ogize for a letter I pflnted recently' in my column. I just want tu sa}
C?ne thing ror myselt I know there is no newspaper and no book big
enough to hold the mam· kindnesses aOO t,'OOO things done b,y so
many people. Is it so bad that I try, now arl:l then, to praise someone of lhose thoosarxls, one 1'\-e heard about or one I've seqn'.'
I sincere!.)· meant no slight to an..\ one aOO would never in this
world want anything but good to come of an,:,thing 1'\'e written about
anyone. Shall we shake haOOs?
I'll see you all soon as I'm 141 ar.:l about

Miss Bastiani Named

Pershing Rifles, Queen
Miss Ga.v Bas ~ and Purdue. Company F -1 and
tiani, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. its Black Dragon Exhibition Drii1
Lawrence Bastiani, Gallipolis, Team has earned the reputation
was recently selected to be Co~ as one of the top units in t h e
ed Sponsor for Ohio L'niversity's country.
A junior at Ohio Universit,y,
unit of the National Society of
Gay
was also recently initiatPershing RJlles, Company F-1.
ed
into
Cardinal Key, the Greek
In order to be chosen, Miss
Women's
Honorary. ~ ls a
Bastlani competed with women
member
of
Alpha Xi Delta Sororfrom each dorm_jtory and Greek
or
which
she is social chalrity,
Housing unit .
man.
Miss Bast.iani has received
Her activities include AU the honorary rank of captain
Rush Chairman, Chimes
Campus
and will have the option tG atllonorary,
Torch and Key, and
tend an.}' of the drill meets in
a
member
of Ohio's ForenIs
which Company F ~ 1 participates,
sic
Speech
Team.
laduding Ohio State University
ATHENS -

~·

*.,§'

·~:

MR. AND MRS, T. 1.. LAWHON

Members of the Registered Nurses A.ssodation of Gallipolis
arc pirtured here pn.•paring for their annual Christmas Bazaar, scheduled Nov. 26 and 27 between 9 and 5 p.m .. at the St. Peter's Episcopal Church. Proceeds this year will go toward the
purchase of a stained glass window which will be placed in the new Ho1zer Me-dical Center chapel.
Shown lwre (seated) an: Dorothy Frazier, (standing) left to rightllett)' Pl;ymale, Jeannie Curmingham, Clarit·c \'alenline, Sharron Davis and Phyllis Aetz.

,\NNOUNCE BO!TII
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
nobert c. Waugh announce the
birth of a third son, Thomas
Carr, on Nov. 16, who weighed
8 lbs., 13 ozs. He is welcomed
by two brothers, Robbie and Stevcn . The maternal grandparents
are Mr . and Mrs. Joe Thomp cy in New Haven. Price of tick- son, Cheshire. The paternal
ets is $5 a couple. Table reser - grandfather is Mr _ II. C.
vations are 50 cents a couple.
They may be made by calling
Mrs. Ronald 5'ibold at 67.J - Harding of Piqua, Ohio, and Mrs.

'Holiday Ball' Theme

Of November Dance
PT. PLEASANT - The Pl.
Pleasant Jwlior Women' s Club
annual Oance will be held Saturday, Nov. 30, at the National Guard Armory . Dancing will
be rrom 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. This
year's theme is "1-loliday Ball.''
Mrs. David Lanham is chair man with Mrs . Theodore Mel~
rose as co~chairman . The Twi ·
lighters Combo will be playing
for the evening. This popular
group has performed for the
area top runctions such as, An~
nual Charity llall, Hicklcn Val !e;y l'ountn Club dance andman..v
others.
Tickets arc now on sale by
club members, or may be pur chases at Rardin ~ Center
and Ruth's Pharmacy in l't.
Pleasant and Sumner's Pharma -

Friendsh1p

Phi Theme

Enroll Now

Blockhead Treotment

:~·~:~
~

~
~~

·:·:

~

@.

ti
~

I
i

MRS. LOUIS V. MUELLER 0

Muller -Crocket

~
::::

GBC Winter

::~

Quarter

\l\~

Vows Read Saturday

:·:·

~~;~

GBC Graduates Get
The Better Jobs
With More Pay!

BLOUSES
SWEATERS
DRESSES

Iii

For Free Catalog And
Information, Write

VisH, or Coli 446-4367

so long rrom root buds that its
see:is have become worthless
as seeds.

Gallipolis
Business College
36

Locvst

Gallipolis

COATS

Available in 14·k yellow
or white gold.

BERNADINES IS SANTA'S
HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL
THE LADIES ON HIS LIST

NOW ONLY-$199
COMPARE OUR PRICES
ANYWHERE

EY JEWELERS
446·1615

Gallipolis

lhgh quality arul wide
selection lhroughout Ber•
nadine's assure all good
Santas that his gifl is
Christmas perfect for
Htr.

(

league Met Tuesday
RIO GRANDE The RIo
Grande Mothers League m e t
Tuesday evening at the home of
Mrs. Robert Brandeberry, Mrs.
James Skaggs, co-hostess.

Mrs. Ray Davis, president,
presided over the business meeting. DevotionswereglvelibyMrs.
Brandeberry. Mrs. James!lut,ggs
read· the secretary's report. The
treasurer's report was given by

favorite Christmas carol. Plans
were made for Husband's Night

and the annual chlldran' s Christmas party. Mrs. Davis reported
oo the meeting held recently at
Oscar's, with district president,
Mra. Barbara Scltles, preatdfna. Ideas were presented at
this meeting on bow

to

make a

stronsor, and better league.
Guest speaker tor the evenHome Service RepreserU.Uve tor

S~OE

STORE HOURS
Mon. Tues. Wed. Soi.
Thursday ...
Friday ..... .

fAS~iON S MOST EXciTiNG

you'll WEAR EyERywkERE!

BASTIAN(
Brown
Taupe

Black

. ,. \I ill
\ \I''

the Columbus and Southern Ohio

9·S
9·12
.9·8

1

Given in marriage by her father, the bride was attired In a long
ruffled ribbon lace gown, styled
with a mandirin collar and loog
ltleeves ending in a rume. A satin
blsert at the empire waistline
higbllgbted the controlled A~lne
skll1 ot matching lace. A detachable bouffant chapel train
of satin fiowe&lt;l from the back
waistline. Her tiered bouffant
veiling of imported illusion cascaded from a lace petal headpiece with seed pearls and swiss
crystals. The bride carried a
colonial bouquet of white carna-

tion&amp;.

STORE HOURS

BEGINNING
DECEMBER I
9A.M.to8P.M .

LAY-A-WAY PLAN
CONVENIENT CHARGE
FREE GIFf WRAP

Electric Company. Mrs. Davia
entertained the group wlthademonstntlon on malting Cllrlatmas
tlecorat!ooa. All the Items made
depictetliOMO Important hhtorleai event oecurrln.!I In Ohio.
Mrs. Jackie Davis received
the door prize. Refreshments
a/. coffee and cookies were provided by Mra. Barbara Davia and
served to nine meld&gt;ers and ooo
aueat, Mra. Marshall Kimmell.

best man. Ushers were Mr. Jim
Schneider and Mr. Karl Meek.
A reception was held in the social room
the church rollow~
lng the ceremony. Serving lrllhe
reception were: Mrs. Eunice T83'~
lor, Mrs. Irls Powers, Miss Don~
na Simmons~ Mrs. Jo Keffer,
Miss Marlene Pyles, Mra. Laverne Sellards, Mrs. Pauline
Brumfield, Mrs. Ireta Spence,
Mrs. Mae Crockett, Mrs. Zelphla
Smith and Mrs. Nlrla Cam~II.
Mrs. Mueller Is a graduate of
Buffalo Hlgb School and Huntington College of Business. She is
employed by theJ. c. Pemy Company of Huntlngtoo.
Mr. Mueller is a graduate or.
Gallla Academy HlgbSchooi,Galllpolla. He attended Marshall unlverlicy and Rio Grande College.
He I&amp; employed by Reeves Broadcallllng ComJNIDY of Huntington.
Tho couple will live In Proctor-

or

Tri Advisory
Council Topic
GALLIPOLIS - The Tri-Ad·
vtsory Council met at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. George Northup
Friday evening.
The meeting was caned to or.
der by the COWlcil chairman,
Mr. Denver Yoho. Devotions were
given by Mrs. Maurice Forgey,
she chose as her thought "l.&gt;o
Not Be Anxious for the Morrow. 11
Sbe read also a timely poem
"The Twilight Time of Year.''
Mr. and Mrs. David Altizer
were welcomed as new mem~
hers or the Tri -Advisory cotrl~
ell. Mrs. Clarence Davis reported that the County Farm Bu~
reau Women would go to the
County Home with a program
and gifts at Christmas Ume.
~ invited any who wish to attend tho program. A gift to
Crop, designated to Literary Vii~

I)EPT. STORE.

vete~a~

=~:

Q',

lr-

Garden Clubs
Hold Session
At Institute
GA LLIPOLL'5 - The Nature's
Garden Club met on Thursday
at the Gallipolis State Institute.
The gardener's pledge was given, [ollowedbythebuslness meeting. noll call and the secretary's
report were given. Poems were
read by the members.
Mrs. W. Donald Gallowa,y of
the (iallipolis Garden Club introduced Mrs. James Titus, Mrs.
Virgil Atkins, Mrs. Thelma Ash-

lips, Gallipolis Garden Club
member and Regional 11 Director of Therapy.
Refreshments were sened by
the guest club.
The next meeting will be a
Christmas parl;y on Dec. 19 with
the Gallipolis Garden Club in
charge.

W"M
PERMA·IRON
"EASY CLB.4N'
by

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-LADY.ARRO"W-

} Stop in soon and see our collection of Lady
:::: Arrow blouses. Hi&amp;hlight your wardrobe with
fresh new styles and shadings. In sizes 8 to 18.
:,:.:::: Prices begin at $6.00.

J

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e NYLON
e WOOL
e ACRJLAN e HERCULON

Come In Todoy ond Make Your Selection

e FREE ESTIMATES eEASYTERMS
OPENMONDAYAnd FRIDAY NIGHTS

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MOTHERS LOOK!
A leoutlful LUSTRE-TONE Pottnllt Of Your Chile!

ONLY

8x10
12 l'h " J'h

AND
WALLET SIZI

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....... While

PHOTOGRAPHER'S
HOURS:

NO AC:E LIMIT
ADULTS WELCOME
No Appointment Nedd
Phllhll Tobn Single Only
No Other Obligation

12 TO 8 P.l.
DAILY

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS
-«14 S.cond Avt.
GaUl polio, Ohle-

. · GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

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CHOICE OF SEVERAL PROOFS!
NO PURCHASE NESSARYI
.\M OUTSTANDING VALUE 1

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Mothers Bring Your Children to the Gallipolis
A &amp; P-735 2nd. lve. Get l Famous FliNNATIONAL Photo of Each of Your Childrenl
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IICI• yd.

Over SOD Colora 01111 PoHerna To SelectrF..-.

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MONDAY, NOV. 25th.
TUESDAY NOV. 26th
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 27t~

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SPECIAL I
3 Days Only I :

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CARPET
6 95

~:Y.

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Navy.

Out of town guests attending
the wedding were: Mr . and Mrs.
Larry Lawhon, Laurel, Mary~
land; Mr. and Mrs. James Fleming, Trimble; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Holcomb, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. L. D. Houston and s o n
Eddie, Chesapeake, and Mrs. L:
1\, Johnson, Proctorville.

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worth, Mrs. Paul Winn, Mrs.
'Clarence Murray and Mrs. Marie
Bishop, who are members of the
ies for a short wedding trip. She
wore a corsage of white roses
rrom her wedding bouquet.
Tile new Mrs. Lawhon is a
1968 graduate o! Gallia Academ.Y High School and is now employed at G. c. Murphy's.
Mr. Lawhon, a graduate of
Kyger Creek High School, is
now servingwlth the United States

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Rutland Garden Club and who coo~
ducted the program "Making
Christmas Corsages. 11 Each girl
made a corsage and was assisted by the guests.
Mrs. Garnet Wood, Therapy
Dept., distributed program books
for the year, which had been
prepared by Mrs. Gomer Phil-

With The PurchaM Of .•. ,
At R19ulor Prl.As. Low As

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amlla~

INSTALLATION

by FRUIT·OF·THE-LOOM

Darnbrough's

lage in India, was maae.
The program for the even~
lng was given by Mrs. Finley,
she read an article 011 "The
First Thanksgiving in America"
and a humoroos story, ''No Hogs
ln M.Y Heaven." She closed with
a poem, "The Love of Friends."
Mr. Harland Vollbornledadis~
cusslon on the subject "World
Trade-It is Important to Agricul~
ture."
Subjects which were considered of interest to the group were
chosen for next year' 8 study.
Refreshments were served to
22 members and two guests by
Mr. and Mrs. Northup, during
the social hour.

Fuller~n

AND

LACE PANTY HOSE

2.49

Mr. Charles Holcomb served
as best man. Ushers and taper
lighters were Elwood N u n n
Marc Lawhon, brother o( t h ;
groom, and Tom Wheeler.
Nuptial music was pla,yed by
Mrs. Joe Drummood.
Misses BeciQ&gt; Damron and
Paula Fife registered the guests.
For her daughte-r's wedding,
Mrs. Houston chose an oil-white
wool suit with old rose acces~
sortes. Her corsage was old rose
carnations.
FOR her son's wedding, Mrs.
Lawhon chose a three piece knlt
suit of mocha with matching
accessories. Her corsage was
or yellow carnations.
Following the ceremony a re~
ception was held at the home of
the bride's parents.
The oolor scheme or pink and
wtlite was carried out at t h e
bride's table. The three-tiered
wedding cake, topped by a bride
and groom, was accented by pink
and white nowers and white tapers.
Assisting at the recepli&lt;it we·re
Misses Barbara Clark, Margaret
Sweat and Kathy SWeat.
The bride changed to a navy
blue long sleeved A~line dress
with matching coat and accessor~

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT AND APPROACIUNG MARRIAGE - Mr. and Mrs. Glen W. Bryant AIBheim calif.
anmunec the enmam:om
'
• their•
._.. e nt a1..-~
... approachh:w marriage
of
daughter, Miss Carol Lynn Bryant, to~- Jame F Be
Jr son or M
nd
"-'(;'"
s .
nson,
r. a Mrs. James F' Benson, Sr•• or Gall'IPOI'IS.
Mi" B
ss ryant graduated rrom Magnolia High School and tterded
Junior College at Anaheim. She Is
with
the Beta Slgma Phi Sorority. Sgt. Benson graduated from Gal
lia Academy High sCh001 &amp;uu
~ has been m
. the U s Ma · •
Corps since June, 1966. He is a Vietnam war
spent 13 months in Vietram. A Dec. 7 wedding is planned in
the West Anaheim Methodist Churctl.

FREE PADDING

ville.

In all the newest colors

L__

'World Trade'

Robertaon, thebrldo'saunt,wore

a long aqua ribbon lace chiffon
gown styled along empire lines.
The lltted bodes&amp; ol lace had a
fitted neckline andelbowsleevea.
The sheath skirt of chitron was
highlighted ln back with a matchlog lace panel. Her circle veil
was attaclled to a matching silk
chltfon rosebud headpiece In
a(f.l8. The brides maid, Miss Eva
&amp;1e Crockett, cousin ofthebrlde,
wore an identical styled gown
and hat to the honor attendant

Mrs. WUlard Copley. Roll call
1r1 '""'· Both carried colonial
wu answered by each member bouquets of white carnations.
alnglng the first line ol their
Mr. Argyle Walker "served as

ina was Mrs. Barbara Davia,

JoycE pUTS Up A biG fRONT. ••
VAMp &lt;!ECOR ... ON A

Rio Grande Mothers

mons was soloist.

The matroo o{ honor . Mrs. Reva

SKIRTS

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PT. PLEASANT - The marriage of Mlaa stella Louise
Crockett, daughter ol Mr. and
Ml'l. Jobn Crod&lt;ett, 4485 8th
sej:eet Rood, tlfld LoulB ValentiH Mueller·~ U. was soleJIU}..
bid Nov. 23, In Slo&amp;ls Bamist
Clllrch. Mr. Mueller is the son
o1 Mr. and Mrs. Louis V, Mueller, of2017 Marquette Ave., Point
Pleasant.
'lbe Rev. Cleland Willis performed the double ring ceremony.
Mrs. Sandra Rogers was organ~
lot and Mlsa Donna Gall Slm-

Begins Dec. 10

One of the best "do-it·
yourself" treatment!;; for
hladhc-ads is a meal wash .
The in _g rE&gt;dient s arE' 16
uunees of po\\-dered oatmeal.
eight ounces of powdered
almond mPal. l'uur ounces of
powdered orris root and one
uunce powdered castile soap.
Mix thoroughly. then slight ly
moisten about onf! table ·
spoonful wlth hot water to
makP a paste . Apply gently
to -;kin with fingertips and
rub into bl&lt;u.;khead areas .
Rmse wilh l'old water

The banana tree has grown
VINTOt\' - The Colon,y of
Beta Sigma Phi met at the home
of Mrs. Bob Smith, Vinton, recently. /\II members were pres ~
ent .
The minutes of the last meeting were read and approved .
Pledge pins were i ssucd to the
members and pledgetrainingwill
now begin.
The program was presented by
Cath.Y Smith, and the topic was
friendship. A group discussion
was held on the different points
of rriendship.
The next meeting will be held
at the home of Mrs . Jim nush,
Dec . 18.
Refreshments were served by
the hostess.

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GALLIPOLIS - Before an al~
tar decked with white mums
snapdragons, a n d candelabra'
Mlss Donna Houston, daughter o(
Mr. and Mrs. Donlloustono!Galllpolis, became the bride of Mr.
Tlmothy L. Lawhon, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Lawhon of Gallipolis. The impressive doublering ceremony was read by the
Rev. Frank Cheesebrew in the
AddiROD Methodist Churehon&amp;mday, November 17, at half after
six in the evening.
The bride approached the altar on the arm of her father
wearing a gown of white nyl~
lace with a fitted bodice. T h e
sleeves came to points over the
hands. The bouffant skirt had five
lace tiers and her full chapel
train was held in place at the
shoulder with two small bows.
Her veU o( white Illusion was
held in place by a crownofpearls
and crystal. She carried a cascade of white roses and lilies of
the valley.
Miss Kathl Damron was maid
of honor, , Wss Kacen Houston
sister of the bride, was t h ~
bridesmaid. They wore identi~
eal floor-length gownB of pale
pink brocade and carried nosegays ol old rose carnations with
matching headdress.

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MISS CAROL LYNN BRYANT

Timothy L. Lawhon

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3776.
Minnie Cisler of Marietta.
A General Electric 15 inch
portable, black and white television will be given away the
night of the dance. Donations
will be $1. 1\ll proceeds from
this drawing will go to camp
Galahad, a camp for blind, mentally retarded and diabetic children .

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Donna Houston Weds

PHEPAHE I· OH BAZA/IH -

Where the Family Shops Together
328 Second AYe.
Gallipolis, Ohio

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WOHKSI!OI' HELD
GALLIPOl.IS- Mrs . lvanGro..
ver, Mrs . John Bocock, Mrs.
Melvin Little and Mrs. Frank
{;heesebrow a;ttendcd a workshop
an Nov. 2U, held at Lhe Grace
United Mettiodist Church for the
church women, group two, or the
southeastern area . Mn. William
Drown was the cont.ac_1. chairman
aDd Mrs . Marie Bichardsprcsid ·

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ROBES
BRAS
PANTIES
NEGLIGEE
SLIPS
TO
TCH

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�Till' Sunda~ Timl'l' ~ Sentinel, Sunday. Novt.•mtK•r :!-t, HlliK

-1 -

ATTENDS SCHOOL
GALLIPOLIS - MIOB .loam
8111100, a 1968 gra- or Gal·
Ila Acadeii'O', Is attending Buill-

I

~ Just Between .~~~.

nes• Qllleae ln Col\llliiUL her
addreu Ia Tho Toworo, 1131 E,
Brood St., Room 212, Col.-o,
Oblo t3215.

shop Bemadines

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THAN ANY OTHER STORE

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IT'S EASY JUST LOOK
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A ver) tall tree i!:i framed in the oblong wirdow of noom 269,

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Uolzer Medical Ct'ntct'. The room is onthesccoOO aoor, but the tree
in Dr. Morgan's yard reaches mam· feet higher than this.
~cattcrt&gt;d along the- widespread branches are yellow lca,·es,
ha11g1ng tenadousl}' in spite of the fiert·e mid-November wirxi.
These le&amp;\;es remind me of TO) scattered friends who h11.ve sent
regards and best wishes from all over the area.
The room full of nowers reaffirms this pleasant euphoria caused
bJ friends taking time off from busy schedules to send these bright
tokens of thoughtfulness.
It was almost a week before I picked up a pencil. I ran't describe
how nice it felt in my nngers.
I was almost afraid to begin lomentionthose fine gals on Second
North. I was afraid I would miss someone who had been espcdal]y
nice to me.
Forgive me, if I miss an,yone but I just t'ouldn't let the extra
thou.ghfulness of the R.N.'s, aide!!', and everyone on Secord North go
unnoticed.
So as well as I can remember, here goes:
One of the first I'll mention will be Opal Phillips. Opal is neat,
straight and tall and at first I didn't know If I would like her. But,
very soon her dedication in carrying ou;. the doctors orders made
me know she really cared; and returned in the night hours and rubbed m,y hot, tired bacf\.
Pretty, red·./Jaired Cameron Spears brightened the room, Cathy
Starcher "'·as perky, Barb Spencer was interesting and looked about
18, with her prett) skin. !lead nurse Beu could sparkle or be stern
as her job t·equired.
Meigs Countians will lmo,.i how dirficult it would be to describe
Myrtle Louise Faulk, aide, her young heart Is big ard encompasses
everyone in pain.
I want to mention these others, even though 1 was to groggy to
single them out: Ann Rouse, Cath) Wea\'er, Lucille Saunders, E.
Rife, Pat Mannon and Geneva Beaver.
A bouquet to Katie Crow formentioningmcin her Sunday TimesSentinel column.
Also, thank!i to Min Grime!i, executi\'e editor of the Ironton
Tribune, who sent a card and wished me a speedy reco\·ery.
Another bouquet to Joanne Meade for serding me the carna~
tions. It was delightful, ard doubly so because it was so totally

'

unexpected.
AOO how do yoo say thanks to someone like Helen Fenderbosch
who was willing to fill in on short notice. Helen's kiMnesses hne
been well known amoll!' her friends for years. In fact, I intended
some time ago to do a column on her and her charming family, But
I got side-tracked.
I ha\'e read pages and pa,~s in an anothology about modern
fiction. Talk about diversil): thOse stories arc about e\·erything,
so don't be sull"rised at anything I write from now on. Of the boss
wiU let me, that isJ
I sure do smell good, thanks to two thoughful couples who knew
my favorite fragrance and gave me some instead or flowers ... Don't
think they would want me to mention name!&gt;.
That leads me right into Friday's letter to the editor in ttu.' Tri~
bune from a groq~ of irate G.S.I. employees. They want me to apol~
ogize for a letter I pflnted recently' in my column. I just want tu sa}
C?ne thing ror myselt I know there is no newspaper and no book big
enough to hold the mam· kindnesses aOO t,'OOO things done b,y so
many people. Is it so bad that I try, now arl:l then, to praise someone of lhose thoosarxls, one 1'\-e heard about or one I've seqn'.'
I sincere!.)· meant no slight to an..\ one aOO would never in this
world want anything but good to come of an,:,thing 1'\'e written about
anyone. Shall we shake haOOs?
I'll see you all soon as I'm 141 ar.:l about

Miss Bastiani Named

Pershing Rifles, Queen
Miss Ga.v Bas ~ and Purdue. Company F -1 and
tiani, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. its Black Dragon Exhibition Drii1
Lawrence Bastiani, Gallipolis, Team has earned the reputation
was recently selected to be Co~ as one of the top units in t h e
ed Sponsor for Ohio L'niversity's country.
A junior at Ohio Universit,y,
unit of the National Society of
Gay
was also recently initiatPershing RJlles, Company F-1.
ed
into
Cardinal Key, the Greek
In order to be chosen, Miss
Women's
Honorary. ~ ls a
Bastlani competed with women
member
of
Alpha Xi Delta Sororfrom each dorm_jtory and Greek
or
which
she is social chalrity,
Housing unit .
man.
Miss Bast.iani has received
Her activities include AU the honorary rank of captain
Rush Chairman, Chimes
Campus
and will have the option tG atllonorary,
Torch and Key, and
tend an.}' of the drill meets in
a
member
of Ohio's ForenIs
which Company F ~ 1 participates,
sic
Speech
Team.
laduding Ohio State University
ATHENS -

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MR. AND MRS, T. 1.. LAWHON

Members of the Registered Nurses A.ssodation of Gallipolis
arc pirtured here pn.•paring for their annual Christmas Bazaar, scheduled Nov. 26 and 27 between 9 and 5 p.m .. at the St. Peter's Episcopal Church. Proceeds this year will go toward the
purchase of a stained glass window which will be placed in the new Ho1zer Me-dical Center chapel.
Shown lwre (seated) an: Dorothy Frazier, (standing) left to rightllett)' Pl;ymale, Jeannie Curmingham, Clarit·c \'alenline, Sharron Davis and Phyllis Aetz.

,\NNOUNCE BO!TII
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
nobert c. Waugh announce the
birth of a third son, Thomas
Carr, on Nov. 16, who weighed
8 lbs., 13 ozs. He is welcomed
by two brothers, Robbie and Stevcn . The maternal grandparents
are Mr . and Mrs. Joe Thomp cy in New Haven. Price of tick- son, Cheshire. The paternal
ets is $5 a couple. Table reser - grandfather is Mr _ II. C.
vations are 50 cents a couple.
They may be made by calling
Mrs. Ronald 5'ibold at 67.J - Harding of Piqua, Ohio, and Mrs.

'Holiday Ball' Theme

Of November Dance
PT. PLEASANT - The Pl.
Pleasant Jwlior Women' s Club
annual Oance will be held Saturday, Nov. 30, at the National Guard Armory . Dancing will
be rrom 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. This
year's theme is "1-loliday Ball.''
Mrs. David Lanham is chair man with Mrs . Theodore Mel~
rose as co~chairman . The Twi ·
lighters Combo will be playing
for the evening. This popular
group has performed for the
area top runctions such as, An~
nual Charity llall, Hicklcn Val !e;y l'ountn Club dance andman..v
others.
Tickets arc now on sale by
club members, or may be pur chases at Rardin ~ Center
and Ruth's Pharmacy in l't.
Pleasant and Sumner's Pharma -

Friendsh1p

Phi Theme

Enroll Now

Blockhead Treotment

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MRS. LOUIS V. MUELLER 0

Muller -Crocket

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GBC Winter

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Vows Read Saturday

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GBC Graduates Get
The Better Jobs
With More Pay!

BLOUSES
SWEATERS
DRESSES

Iii

For Free Catalog And
Information, Write

VisH, or Coli 446-4367

so long rrom root buds that its
see:is have become worthless
as seeds.

Gallipolis
Business College
36

Locvst

Gallipolis

COATS

Available in 14·k yellow
or white gold.

BERNADINES IS SANTA'S
HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL
THE LADIES ON HIS LIST

NOW ONLY-$199
COMPARE OUR PRICES
ANYWHERE

EY JEWELERS
446·1615

Gallipolis

lhgh quality arul wide
selection lhroughout Ber•
nadine's assure all good
Santas that his gifl is
Christmas perfect for
Htr.

(

league Met Tuesday
RIO GRANDE The RIo
Grande Mothers League m e t
Tuesday evening at the home of
Mrs. Robert Brandeberry, Mrs.
James Skaggs, co-hostess.

Mrs. Ray Davis, president,
presided over the business meeting. DevotionswereglvelibyMrs.
Brandeberry. Mrs. James!lut,ggs
read· the secretary's report. The
treasurer's report was given by

favorite Christmas carol. Plans
were made for Husband's Night

and the annual chlldran' s Christmas party. Mrs. Davis reported
oo the meeting held recently at
Oscar's, with district president,
Mra. Barbara Scltles, preatdfna. Ideas were presented at
this meeting on bow

to

make a

stronsor, and better league.
Guest speaker tor the evenHome Service RepreserU.Uve tor

S~OE

STORE HOURS
Mon. Tues. Wed. Soi.
Thursday ...
Friday ..... .

fAS~iON S MOST EXciTiNG

you'll WEAR EyERywkERE!

BASTIAN(
Brown
Taupe

Black

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the Columbus and Southern Ohio

9·S
9·12
.9·8

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Given in marriage by her father, the bride was attired In a long
ruffled ribbon lace gown, styled
with a mandirin collar and loog
ltleeves ending in a rume. A satin
blsert at the empire waistline
higbllgbted the controlled A~lne
skll1 ot matching lace. A detachable bouffant chapel train
of satin fiowe&lt;l from the back
waistline. Her tiered bouffant
veiling of imported illusion cascaded from a lace petal headpiece with seed pearls and swiss
crystals. The bride carried a
colonial bouquet of white carna-

tion&amp;.

STORE HOURS

BEGINNING
DECEMBER I
9A.M.to8P.M .

LAY-A-WAY PLAN
CONVENIENT CHARGE
FREE GIFf WRAP

Electric Company. Mrs. Davia
entertained the group wlthademonstntlon on malting Cllrlatmas
tlecorat!ooa. All the Items made
depictetliOMO Important hhtorleai event oecurrln.!I In Ohio.
Mrs. Jackie Davis received
the door prize. Refreshments
a/. coffee and cookies were provided by Mra. Barbara Davia and
served to nine meld&gt;ers and ooo
aueat, Mra. Marshall Kimmell.

best man. Ushers were Mr. Jim
Schneider and Mr. Karl Meek.
A reception was held in the social room
the church rollow~
lng the ceremony. Serving lrllhe
reception were: Mrs. Eunice T83'~
lor, Mrs. Irls Powers, Miss Don~
na Simmons~ Mrs. Jo Keffer,
Miss Marlene Pyles, Mra. Laverne Sellards, Mrs. Pauline
Brumfield, Mrs. Ireta Spence,
Mrs. Mae Crockett, Mrs. Zelphla
Smith and Mrs. Nlrla Cam~II.
Mrs. Mueller Is a graduate of
Buffalo Hlgb School and Huntington College of Business. She is
employed by theJ. c. Pemy Company of Huntlngtoo.
Mr. Mueller is a graduate or.
Gallla Academy HlgbSchooi,Galllpolla. He attended Marshall unlverlicy and Rio Grande College.
He I&amp; employed by Reeves Broadcallllng ComJNIDY of Huntington.
Tho couple will live In Proctor-

or

Tri Advisory
Council Topic
GALLIPOLIS - The Tri-Ad·
vtsory Council met at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. George Northup
Friday evening.
The meeting was caned to or.
der by the COWlcil chairman,
Mr. Denver Yoho. Devotions were
given by Mrs. Maurice Forgey,
she chose as her thought "l.&gt;o
Not Be Anxious for the Morrow. 11
Sbe read also a timely poem
"The Twilight Time of Year.''
Mr. and Mrs. David Altizer
were welcomed as new mem~
hers or the Tri -Advisory cotrl~
ell. Mrs. Clarence Davis reported that the County Farm Bu~
reau Women would go to the
County Home with a program
and gifts at Christmas Ume.
~ invited any who wish to attend tho program. A gift to
Crop, designated to Literary Vii~

I)EPT. STORE.

vete~a~

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Garden Clubs
Hold Session
At Institute
GA LLIPOLL'5 - The Nature's
Garden Club met on Thursday
at the Gallipolis State Institute.
The gardener's pledge was given, [ollowedbythebuslness meeting. noll call and the secretary's
report were given. Poems were
read by the members.
Mrs. W. Donald Gallowa,y of
the (iallipolis Garden Club introduced Mrs. James Titus, Mrs.
Virgil Atkins, Mrs. Thelma Ash-

lips, Gallipolis Garden Club
member and Regional 11 Director of Therapy.
Refreshments were sened by
the guest club.
The next meeting will be a
Christmas parl;y on Dec. 19 with
the Gallipolis Garden Club in
charge.

W"M
PERMA·IRON
"EASY CLB.4N'
by

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-LADY.ARRO"W-

} Stop in soon and see our collection of Lady
:::: Arrow blouses. Hi&amp;hlight your wardrobe with
fresh new styles and shadings. In sizes 8 to 18.
:,:.:::: Prices begin at $6.00.

J

:;:
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e NYLON
e WOOL
e ACRJLAN e HERCULON

Come In Todoy ond Make Your Selection

e FREE ESTIMATES eEASYTERMS
OPENMONDAYAnd FRIDAY NIGHTS

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Ill

MOTHERS LOOK!
A leoutlful LUSTRE-TONE Pottnllt Of Your Chile!

ONLY

8x10
12 l'h " J'h

AND
WALLET SIZI

s

....... While

PHOTOGRAPHER'S
HOURS:

NO AC:E LIMIT
ADULTS WELCOME
No Appointment Nedd
Phllhll Tobn Single Only
No Other Obligation

12 TO 8 P.l.
DAILY

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS
-«14 S.cond Avt.
GaUl polio, Ohle-

. · GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

'I

'

\.

"'

Ill

•

••

•

'·
0

·-

t
d
d
I

''
'

CHOICE OF SEVERAL PROOFS!
NO PURCHASE NESSARYI
.\M OUTSTANDING VALUE 1

•
•
•
:

.."'

t,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,.,,,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,,,.,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,.,.,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,)

Mothers Bring Your Children to the Gallipolis
A &amp; P-735 2nd. lve. Get l Famous FliNNATIONAL Photo of Each of Your Childrenl
~:

IICI• yd.

Over SOD Colora 01111 PoHerna To SelectrF..-.

::::

MONDAY, NOV. 25th.
TUESDAY NOV. 26th
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 27t~

·

e

rd

SPECIAL I
3 Days Only I :

··:·.·

CARPET
6 95

~:Y.

.~

Navy.

Out of town guests attending
the wedding were: Mr . and Mrs.
Larry Lawhon, Laurel, Mary~
land; Mr. and Mrs. James Fleming, Trimble; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Holcomb, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. L. D. Houston and s o n
Eddie, Chesapeake, and Mrs. L:
1\, Johnson, Proctorville.

lid

.·: ..::::·:'

worth, Mrs. Paul Winn, Mrs.
'Clarence Murray and Mrs. Marie
Bishop, who are members of the
ies for a short wedding trip. She
wore a corsage of white roses
rrom her wedding bouquet.
Tile new Mrs. Lawhon is a
1968 graduate o! Gallia Academ.Y High School and is now employed at G. c. Murphy's.
Mr. Lawhon, a graduate of
Kyger Creek High School, is
now servingwlth the United States

(0,

I!&lt;

ha::

Rutland Garden Club and who coo~
ducted the program "Making
Christmas Corsages. 11 Each girl
made a corsage and was assisted by the guests.
Mrs. Garnet Wood, Therapy
Dept., distributed program books
for the year, which had been
prepared by Mrs. Gomer Phil-

With The PurchaM Of .•. ,
At R19ulor Prl.As. Low As

~~

amlla~

INSTALLATION

by FRUIT·OF·THE-LOOM

Darnbrough's

lage in India, was maae.
The program for the even~
lng was given by Mrs. Finley,
she read an article 011 "The
First Thanksgiving in America"
and a humoroos story, ''No Hogs
ln M.Y Heaven." She closed with
a poem, "The Love of Friends."
Mr. Harland Vollbornledadis~
cusslon on the subject "World
Trade-It is Important to Agricul~
ture."
Subjects which were considered of interest to the group were
chosen for next year' 8 study.
Refreshments were served to
22 members and two guests by
Mr. and Mrs. Northup, during
the social hour.

Fuller~n

AND

LACE PANTY HOSE

2.49

Mr. Charles Holcomb served
as best man. Ushers and taper
lighters were Elwood N u n n
Marc Lawhon, brother o( t h ;
groom, and Tom Wheeler.
Nuptial music was pla,yed by
Mrs. Joe Drummood.
Misses BeciQ&gt; Damron and
Paula Fife registered the guests.
For her daughte-r's wedding,
Mrs. Houston chose an oil-white
wool suit with old rose acces~
sortes. Her corsage was old rose
carnations.
FOR her son's wedding, Mrs.
Lawhon chose a three piece knlt
suit of mocha with matching
accessories. Her corsage was
or yellow carnations.
Following the ceremony a re~
ception was held at the home of
the bride's parents.
The oolor scheme or pink and
wtlite was carried out at t h e
bride's table. The three-tiered
wedding cake, topped by a bride
and groom, was accented by pink
and white nowers and white tapers.
Assisting at the recepli&lt;it we·re
Misses Barbara Clark, Margaret
Sweat and Kathy SWeat.
The bride changed to a navy
blue long sleeved A~line dress
with matching coat and accessor~

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT AND APPROACIUNG MARRIAGE - Mr. and Mrs. Glen W. Bryant AIBheim calif.
anmunec the enmam:om
'
• their•
._.. e nt a1..-~
... approachh:w marriage
of
daughter, Miss Carol Lynn Bryant, to~- Jame F Be
Jr son or M
nd
"-'(;'"
s .
nson,
r. a Mrs. James F' Benson, Sr•• or Gall'IPOI'IS.
Mi" B
ss ryant graduated rrom Magnolia High School and tterded
Junior College at Anaheim. She Is
with
the Beta Slgma Phi Sorority. Sgt. Benson graduated from Gal
lia Academy High sCh001 &amp;uu
~ has been m
. the U s Ma · •
Corps since June, 1966. He is a Vietnam war
spent 13 months in Vietram. A Dec. 7 wedding is planned in
the West Anaheim Methodist Churctl.

FREE PADDING

ville.

In all the newest colors

L__

'World Trade'

Robertaon, thebrldo'saunt,wore

a long aqua ribbon lace chiffon
gown styled along empire lines.
The lltted bodes&amp; ol lace had a
fitted neckline andelbowsleevea.
The sheath skirt of chitron was
highlighted ln back with a matchlog lace panel. Her circle veil
was attaclled to a matching silk
chltfon rosebud headpiece In
a(f.l8. The brides maid, Miss Eva
&amp;1e Crockett, cousin ofthebrlde,
wore an identical styled gown
and hat to the honor attendant

Mrs. WUlard Copley. Roll call
1r1 '""'· Both carried colonial
wu answered by each member bouquets of white carnations.
alnglng the first line ol their
Mr. Argyle Walker "served as

ina was Mrs. Barbara Davia,

JoycE pUTS Up A biG fRONT. ••
VAMp &lt;!ECOR ... ON A

Rio Grande Mothers

mons was soloist.

The matroo o{ honor . Mrs. Reva

SKIRTS

"'

PT. PLEASANT - The marriage of Mlaa stella Louise
Crockett, daughter ol Mr. and
Ml'l. Jobn Crod&lt;ett, 4485 8th
sej:eet Rood, tlfld LoulB ValentiH Mueller·~ U. was soleJIU}..
bid Nov. 23, In Slo&amp;ls Bamist
Clllrch. Mr. Mueller is the son
o1 Mr. and Mrs. Louis V, Mueller, of2017 Marquette Ave., Point
Pleasant.
'lbe Rev. Cleland Willis performed the double ring ceremony.
Mrs. Sandra Rogers was organ~
lot and Mlsa Donna Gall Slm-

Begins Dec. 10

One of the best "do-it·
yourself" treatment!;; for
hladhc-ads is a meal wash .
The in _g rE&gt;dient s arE' 16
uunees of po\\-dered oatmeal.
eight ounces of powdered
almond mPal. l'uur ounces of
powdered orris root and one
uunce powdered castile soap.
Mix thoroughly. then slight ly
moisten about onf! table ·
spoonful wlth hot water to
makP a paste . Apply gently
to -;kin with fingertips and
rub into bl&lt;u.;khead areas .
Rmse wilh l'old water

The banana tree has grown
VINTOt\' - The Colon,y of
Beta Sigma Phi met at the home
of Mrs. Bob Smith, Vinton, recently. /\II members were pres ~
ent .
The minutes of the last meeting were read and approved .
Pledge pins were i ssucd to the
members and pledgetrainingwill
now begin.
The program was presented by
Cath.Y Smith, and the topic was
friendship. A group discussion
was held on the different points
of rriendship.
The next meeting will be held
at the home of Mrs . Jim nush,
Dec . 18.
Refreshments were served by
the hostess.

~

GALLIPOLIS - Before an al~
tar decked with white mums
snapdragons, a n d candelabra'
Mlss Donna Houston, daughter o(
Mr. and Mrs. Donlloustono!Galllpolis, became the bride of Mr.
Tlmothy L. Lawhon, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Lawhon of Gallipolis. The impressive doublering ceremony was read by the
Rev. Frank Cheesebrew in the
AddiROD Methodist Churehon&amp;mday, November 17, at half after
six in the evening.
The bride approached the altar on the arm of her father
wearing a gown of white nyl~
lace with a fitted bodice. T h e
sleeves came to points over the
hands. The bouffant skirt had five
lace tiers and her full chapel
train was held in place at the
shoulder with two small bows.
Her veU o( white Illusion was
held in place by a crownofpearls
and crystal. She carried a cascade of white roses and lilies of
the valley.
Miss Kathl Damron was maid
of honor, , Wss Kacen Houston
sister of the bride, was t h ~
bridesmaid. They wore identi~
eal floor-length gownB of pale
pink brocade and carried nosegays ol old rose carnations with
matching headdress.

I:

MISS CAROL LYNN BRYANT

Timothy L. Lawhon

·:·
:;:

:a::;~ ~:~ ~r~h:nr:~:R:':~ ~

3776.
Minnie Cisler of Marietta.
A General Electric 15 inch
portable, black and white television will be given away the
night of the dance. Donations
will be $1. 1\ll proceeds from
this drawing will go to camp
Galahad, a camp for blind, mentally retarded and diabetic children .

I!

Donna Houston Weds

PHEPAHE I· OH BAZA/IH -

Where the Family Shops Together
328 Second AYe.
Gallipolis, Ohio

cd.

~~·

:~

no••

WOHKSI!OI' HELD
GALLIPOl.IS- Mrs . lvanGro..
ver, Mrs . John Bocock, Mrs.
Melvin Little and Mrs. Frank
{;heesebrow a;ttendcd a workshop
an Nov. 2U, held at Lhe Grace
United Mettiodist Church for the
church women, group two, or the
southeastern area . Mn. William
Drown was the cont.ac_1. chairman
aDd Mrs . Marie Bichardsprcsid ·

~

Y.·

.:::

atl~

M]S;

~

ROBES
BRAS
PANTIES
NEGLIGEE
SLIPS
TO
TCH

..

�6 -

The Suncla) Times - Sentinel. Stmclly, No\'ember 24, 1968
Aj:ple Grove.
BIRTH - Mr. and Mro. Cha•·
les Ebert. Rende~ son, I c.ttughte~.

Shop Kroger For Low Prices On All Of Your
ant; James E. Love, New 0.¥en; Mrs. Frank Thomas, Galli·
polls
F~rry; Ralph Ml.)'es, Glen-ADMITIED - John Ma:sa~y,
wood;
Charlie Schultze, Pl
Pomeroy.
Pleasant;
Mrs. Marlin Oldaker,
DISCHARGED- Will-HealVETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL

All Turkeys Sold At
Kroger Are U.S.D.A.
lmpected Grade AI

Armour Star

Kroger Wishbone

~:~::. Turkeys

Wt rMerve tM rttht to limit ..,.mit._L

lb.37c

18-lbs.
Up

All Kroger Stores Will
Be Closed Thurs., Nov. 28
THANKSGJVJN(; DAY
OPEN Regula~· Hours
Friday and Saturday

18-lln.
Up

·'ilflw Honor Uuur.,.
- Ohio Universtty
honor ita Mid - American
ebamplmoldp footteam tanlll:t, In llal&lt;er ConThe amual ~ honorBID Heaa' team that fin~ In the MAC and 9~
';t~tro,.,P the llrat nine ...,.•••

lb.

lb.

w!U start at 6 p.m.

COnlerenee eommisslmer Bob
James will be Oil hand to award
the otwnp!ooaldp trqlh)r to Ohio
athletic director BUI Rahr and

Hess.
The most valuable player and
year's caplalns will also
be aonounced at the ban&lt;flel.

next

3 DAYS ONLY
CLIP THIS AD
W. Va. Brand Fully
Cooked
Semi-Boneless

Baking Hens

Serve
&amp; Save Sliced

----- --

lb.

45c

Krottr Co.; oh y Clult

Bacon
2 .17

Canned Ham

'"·

S-Ib .
- - - - - - con

Perk Loin

c.

Sllcod E....

&amp;,_

F""'lyeor-.1

Bacon ________

~-

99c

Meat Loaf · ·- · - .. 69e

SwUt"t P:wuh"" llleM

Bacon . - ---... - - ._ 59c

Ham Loaf

....

O.Car Mayer SllcM

F.......

Bacon _________ •. 79e

Shrimp Cocktail 3 ~ · $1

lb.

s..

lt-11 ...

.. 79e

Weiners _______ •. 69c

Sausage .... ... ... .. 65¢

F.....,,_

$4.39

Roll Roast ------- --- Ill. 89c

pkg.

Hams

F....., _ , . ....

lul'•kP&amp;D

PokP&amp;D

Shrimp ______':,.-; $1.59

Shrimp

._89e

___ ___ IV.·
,.,.,.lb.

$2.99

DRESS
COATS

$10

ss

Off

OFF

Gallipolis Ferry.

Smltl:.
DISCHARGED - Nooe.

Meadows. Ashton; Kessel Brum-

DISCHARGED - Brian BllnkMEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
enship, Galllpo)is Ferry; Mrs.
ADMISSIONS - Charleo Lytle, Elmer Fife, Gallipolis; Lester
1'0010roy; Goldie Clendenin. Jay Cislo, Pt. Plea sam: Mr s.
Portland: Georgia Smltl:. L o n g John Miller, HeOOerson;Patrlcia
Cowger,_Pt.

'" ~ , ·
along thl s bit or
MRS. MARGARET BJ'U&amp;.oLl
..,_,. ... cuae, passes
hmnor in tribute, to what else, - tile cowl
uThrough winter's cold and swnmer's breeze,
uShe's the author of our mUk and cheese;
"Sctentista lave clearly shown,
''She puts the Ice cream in the cone;
"When .she's gone IUd at last ahe resls,
"She leaves us nl111l81'0Us bequestl;
"Such as gelatin and glues,
" Ladies handbags and kiddiea shoes;
"The briefcases that she leaves behin:l,
40 Protect the plllns ot all mankind;
"But belts are her halo and crown,
01 They keep our parts frun falling down-"' '

ham, Leon: Mrs.
ElijahCharles
••·re Ebert.
E-·•·
Henderson;
~ • ·-· '
Donald Mullens pt. Pleasant:

M. waiter Pt. Pleas--

Chlrle
s

•

·

ONLY
NO
LAYAWAY
ON COATS $25-$45

And wltb the awr&lt;ach

ON COATS TO $25.00

Eggs

.t

.

"·

Washers, Dryers
Dishwashers,
Refrigerators
Ranges, Freezers

BOTH STORES

TUES. WED.

.,

Cottag~e Cheese

4

-···
~ream

.........

sl

2-lb.

White Bread

59c

K...,.r tto,. &amp; O.lp

1
;:.

$1

Colby Cheese

lb.

K._ Cut S,.on of
1
ASPARAGUS

75c

Birdleye

K,..,.,, Kraft, or Bor•n Cream

Cool Whip __ ...rt 49c

Cheese __ 3

Birlheye,

M&lt;s. Fllborl' o Soft, Golden, Whl.....

Awake ___ 3

~;;

$1

·-·-0."""'
lee Cream __ v....~ 79c

Margarine 2

~~.

~:;.

3

~

:!:' $1

89c

,.'-'om __ 5 '. $1
1
.......

79c

K,....,.

WMit or Sliced

Beets _ 5 ::; 89e

89c

Mix .... 4' '~;.~:·· $1
Kro FRUIT

Cocktail ... 3 ,!~. $1
Kroger G•nlln lwHt

K ....... Vee Pee

Kf"091'r Butnnnllk or Hemtstyle

Biscuits _ 12

Kro CAKE

Coffee _ !!· $1.89

Kroger HaH-Moon

l'ies 4

$US SIZI HAIR WRAY

KIIOGU IRAND

P...SO.klnt

Axion _ ~ $1.09

4

K,.,.r lhw Lako Cut or
F,_,CutG-

en.......

89e

new.,.,. c...,..

With
LMiftdry O.la .,.,,

Bold . __ - .~... 68e

$1.11 SIN Dry Sidn

B &amp; S RoDs 4

In maple, black 0( white

HOOVER
SWEEPER

-

1\liS (}11/!/~fN"'~

sttipts. Trousers

Tangeos
I

S ib.
~---- bag

s-r-

69f

Sunrise-Fresh
California Pascal

•CHAIRS, All Styles
and Colors

SAVE ~1.05
~;_\9 $
44

If&lt; Si•-•1-.mt

Fasteeth ___ 1-... 58e

,'ineapple 3 •~b~.:.~· $1

Pumpkin 2~~~;;..!,...· 35c:

K,....r lr...,

K,..., Brend

'fom. Juice 4 ::· $1

Potatoes ? 1 ~'::;..:..• · 89c

• RADIOS, AM &amp; fM
• RECORD CABINETS
• BOOKCASES
• Sofa Throw Cushions
• MIRRORS e PICTURES
•DESKS e HASSOCKS
e,BEDSPREADS
• 'JHROW RUGS
eLAMPS. All Types
• TABLES COFFEE, STEP,
&amp; COCKTAIL

Cranberries

lb.
pkg.

CaltfomY Nawtl 1U SIM

.......
Onions __ 3

!'i ,.,. 59e

Pears

Tan~erines

101.0 L.ANUDRY

Detergent

68c

c1• All P'l.l,...

MESH
NYLONS

-Ham

Ice Cream

Eiq&gt;. 1.1/311/118

Our No. 467

-

Fresh

,... 39¢

F..ot:

Hroecoli

••• :l!k

I .... P........
Or-.

Yams

Eiq&gt;. U/311/118

~":'u::" IYLOIS

2

SEAMLESS FLATTERY

.....

:~9e

Jettuee

"SIX FOOTER" ACRYLIC KNIT

IlL
$1.11

... 23e

G

FREE too
IXTIA TOO YAlUI STAMPS

6

Fringed LANKY SCAlF

rtHtl.,. .,. ReMIIM

F"'sh ttl Sia

SA V E ,_,,.

l(r•r Ceuntrw

REG. 54t

Fr1ih 1a Sin

Lv••u•ou coo-

1 • • c- Sllcod

K,......lrW

Oranges -_ ..... 79e

viant box

bave 2 grip-

P•• f•Ofll. A, B, C, D.

Freslr

Celery

6

OrbU calendllr Oliver

95. c.lendar feelure. 5!81n!ess stMI.
s.Jf.Windm.. Strap. WaterD(oof' .

Kroger Pears

Apples - -------- •·•·
.... 59c
Fr~, h

OUI OWN IIAND

b•oaddoth.
C o a t tops: stripes, prints,
solido-middy tops: ligu ...,

tt.lvn

Golf O.Rcious

WILL HOLD TIL CHRISTMAS

GiveBenrus time

Sanforized®

Jelly __ __ ___ ·~ 39e

Saltines •• _• .:, 25c

FR~E

·lut•a

50
tra-1::?1

TOI' YAUII

t~I;_~·L;~~ ,_e!::r:!~:E:~~~~ u~~~~~~=~~L!~~:~.~~~~-:~-~ ·:~J~ ~ i~;: · ~ ~~:.!! ~~~~~~

This Chrislmll

10% DOWN

·---------

lfc Si,. K..,.. l ' o t -

K..,..S.w

Our

MEN IN YOUR FA~ILY

c....-

JergeDS _. -. $1.49

Danish Pastry :;;: 49c

From

A DREAM OF A GIFT
IDEA FOR All OF THE

12 SilO Pt.•lk D I -

Twllh .-,: ld• e , .,,

Now

PAJAMAS

Deep Magie . ..... 88c

$1

•

Chnose

MEN'S

sl.19

""' ·~-

Bread ___ 4 ...... 88c

K._

!~~

88c
It=

IAYI

C•ockN-. ........
Block ........ Rye, &amp;

Peas _ 5 !! $1
Beans _4

....
.....

~

Adorn

Appli•nces

GIVE THEM

..:.,:__.-,,cT
.• ~

KROGER BRAHD

De&lt;kafd.

SMALL

BOSTON ROCKERS

TOP GREENHOUSE Sf ATE
The greenhouse tomato sea110n
started on the 3rd of October
in Ohio, which has more acres un-

• :i . .

·

Selection.

der glass than any other state.

'

Jack~

SUNBEAM

of the best of these Is thai held by the S1. Paul and S1. John
Lutheran Church Women.
They have set t11elr bazaar tor Dec. 6 and 7 with lunch to be
served in fellowship lall both days.
Heading the '8Wnt this year are Mrs. Kenneth Braun, ~weet
shop; Mrs. C. L. Karr, needlework; Mrs. Thomas Clelland, gift
shop, and Mrs. Lawrence Douglas and Mrs. Harry Davis, kitchen.

. ~ SALE

ney,

GIVE

or the tbrlstmas season cc:mes also the

PRE-CHRISTMAS

Mrs. JOMPh II. F1elda, Rt. 2
Cheshire, am, 10:21 L m. Fridayj Mrs. Lawrence E. Mceart;-

EMPIRE

In maple

For your H1ir C.fl

Fmh flfJifl (lllr O,.u

Kroger

.

AT THE

o..,

G. C. MURPHY

8IR'I1JS

DISCHARGES
Gilbert G. Adkb:o, MrL SIA!IIa
C. Booten, Mrs. Harold C. Dean.
Mrs. E. Kendall
Mn.
James W. Ewlng. Sr•• Elmer L.
Fish, Mrs. Cecil A. Hale, Mra.
G..ee E. HyoeU, WDiard R. Jefrers, Jr. , Helen L. Jordan. Roger
D. McClcllm:l, Mra. Ra7mDB! W.
Rock. Norman G. Ro.e, DeweyJ.
Ross, Mrs.. Thomaa C.. Runion.
Arthur R Sylveater,JanE. Rlley,
cal Yin B. Cordle, Mrs. Ed.pr C.
Griffith, Jr. aoo infant son, Mrs.
Clyde Smith and lnlant daugl:ter,
Mni. JIJiles L. Smith and lntant
Harrism. Rl 2 Gallipolis; Mrs. daughter.

bazaars.

UPPER STORE ONLY

GRADE A EX'IIIA LARGE

Pumpkin Pie

Rosemary

ADMISSIONS
Mr... Gary M. HorriiJDil, 124\'z
Third Ave.; Oarence A. Miller,
113 Fourth Ave.; Mra. Charles
E. Gatewood, 848 Second Ave. ;
Mn. Joseph R. Fields, Rt. 2,
Cheshire; Kenny R Stewart, Gallipolis; Gaither F. MlUer, RL I
Patriot; Mra. William T. Winter,
Jr. , Pt. Pleasant; George R Stewart, Mason; Kelly D. Bonecutter, Henderson; Mrs. Harold F.
Gardner, RL 1 Middleporto Mrs.
Growr L. Mullins, Rt. 2 Pomeroy; Mrs. Lawrence R Me~
OOy, Jackson; Lucu'llaJ. Matheny,
Ham:Jen; Jeremiah Shuler, Rt. 1
South Point Pleasant; Lowell F.

FARMHOUSE ROCKERS

Dlwn-Fmh Dairy FODds

IAHQUET MINCE OR

Pleas.~nt;

field, Aohton; Mro. Leonanl RlfOe, Pt. Pleasant; Mn. Alban Talbert and daughter, Crown City;
Harry Mlchlr, Pt. Pleasant; Og'den Hazlett, Apple Grove; Hoyt
8ayre. Mason: Mrs. John Watson, Jr., Ft. Pleasant: Carl Dove,

Plans for an organized program in Meigs CountY to remember
patierts at the Athens State Hospital duriQJ the Chrtatmas seasm
are rolling - !honks to Mn. Mary Martin and the Meigs Salon
Sand 40 .
.. God's Little House," located next to the Middleport Oturch
of Christ, has been secured for a headquarters and smteone will
be thoR aU day on Dec. 2and3 to receive gifts trom Individuals :md
grc:qJs trho wish to help with the project.
or - tr you have a quesUon or possibly can't get to the helldquarters jusl phooe 99~53, or 949-2599 with yoor problem.
On December 10, members of the Ladies Auxiliaries of American Legion Polls will take the gifts to the hospllal and whlle there
will wrap presents for the hospital patierts. Meigs Comay haa a
lolal of 70 patients at the hospllel this year - 39 men and 31
wcmon.

BRING
IT IN

WINTER
K,...... WlshiNne BrMd

In 1111 fflllll

Turkeys

JOto
Ulln.
lb.39c

on, Oele McCune.

Cieilan:l, Mrs. Ctarle• Gloeckner, MrL Paul Hill and Mrs. Hmner
Smltl:. Mro. Kenneth Bnlun will be JaiTOtor.
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Tho sOOw will be lolled Mollloy lor later •bowlnl.
ADMITIED-- Mrs. Ray Crook·

THE SERVANTS QUARft!T 01 Pubrobarg, W. VL, wiD
oi!W at the Chester Church of God at 7:30 p. m. tmlght (Smday).
The pastor, the Rev. Chester Bryant. exten1s an IDYitatlon to
the pOOllc to attend. The quartet is plctured with Its accompanist, Helen Riddle.

U.S.D.A.Impected Grade A

U.S.D.A.lmpeded Grade A

Cop'f'rftht, 1'hl K,....,. Co., 1MI

EQ!lle, pastor or the Sl.
Is stuJyiJW for tda master' I degree at Ohio Unlveralt;y.
Worklns In the field ol ndlo and leiOYhlon. the Rev. Mr. EDtlle
will produce a style show to be seen on WOUB-TV nert month.
Fashlooo to be ohown wUl be trom Melp County stores lncllllllrc Bahr Clothiers, Elbertelda, L. and Z, Shop and Ledlle SilderL
Models Crmn here will loclude Mrs. Richard Long. Mrs. Thmnas

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER:
Vloltlng hours Z-4 and 7-11 p. m.
Parents only onPedlatrlcaWan:L

David Y. Ta11ot'. ~ J ...
P. P-r. Patriot Slar Rt.;:Mn.
C. Dole RuaoaU; lit ·I 111:1we1L

SJ14

lAVE

"·"

KENNERS

EASY
BAKE

lllcllt•lt'l Bonrua, lt'o .,.,.

OUR REG. LOW

$10.99

LIMIT!

• Early American Accessories

en!Hd uncondltlonolly lor 3

full ,..,., If thl movement at
,.... a.nruo wotch fads fD por·

toni properly, Benrul will ,..

$933

e Wall Plaques

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

pair or ropllcelt fostoi:d free.

11 Bonrua modo an ordlna.y
Witch, thly'd live It an ordl·

-. -·-··
. TAW.NEY
JEWELERS
,22
lennll .......
, ..... _1611

G•lll,ells, Dhle

·~--_,
OPEN
I
MONDAY
and
FRIDAY
NIGHTS
------

21ECONDAVI.

446-1405
Golllpolla, Ohlo

l

r:::articipatlq
In Gallipolis
Merthants
SHOP-A-RAMA

•USE OUR ·cHRISTMAS LAY-AWAY

�6 -

The Suncla) Times - Sentinel. Stmclly, No\'ember 24, 1968
Aj:ple Grove.
BIRTH - Mr. and Mro. Cha•·
les Ebert. Rende~ son, I c.ttughte~.

Shop Kroger For Low Prices On All Of Your
ant; James E. Love, New 0.¥en; Mrs. Frank Thomas, Galli·
polls
F~rry; Ralph Ml.)'es, Glen-ADMITIED - John Ma:sa~y,
wood;
Charlie Schultze, Pl
Pomeroy.
Pleasant;
Mrs. Marlin Oldaker,
DISCHARGED- Will-HealVETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL

All Turkeys Sold At
Kroger Are U.S.D.A.
lmpected Grade AI

Armour Star

Kroger Wishbone

~:~::. Turkeys

Wt rMerve tM rttht to limit ..,.mit._L

lb.37c

18-lbs.
Up

All Kroger Stores Will
Be Closed Thurs., Nov. 28
THANKSGJVJN(; DAY
OPEN Regula~· Hours
Friday and Saturday

18-lln.
Up

·'ilflw Honor Uuur.,.
- Ohio Universtty
honor ita Mid - American
ebamplmoldp footteam tanlll:t, In llal&lt;er ConThe amual ~ honorBID Heaa' team that fin~ In the MAC and 9~
';t~tro,.,P the llrat nine ...,.•••

lb.

lb.

w!U start at 6 p.m.

COnlerenee eommisslmer Bob
James will be Oil hand to award
the otwnp!ooaldp trqlh)r to Ohio
athletic director BUI Rahr and

Hess.
The most valuable player and
year's caplalns will also
be aonounced at the ban&lt;flel.

next

3 DAYS ONLY
CLIP THIS AD
W. Va. Brand Fully
Cooked
Semi-Boneless

Baking Hens

Serve
&amp; Save Sliced

----- --

lb.

45c

Krottr Co.; oh y Clult

Bacon
2 .17

Canned Ham

'"·

S-Ib .
- - - - - - con

Perk Loin

c.

Sllcod E....

&amp;,_

F""'lyeor-.1

Bacon ________

~-

99c

Meat Loaf · ·- · - .. 69e

SwUt"t P:wuh"" llleM

Bacon . - ---... - - ._ 59c

Ham Loaf

....

O.Car Mayer SllcM

F.......

Bacon _________ •. 79e

Shrimp Cocktail 3 ~ · $1

lb.

s..

lt-11 ...

.. 79e

Weiners _______ •. 69c

Sausage .... ... ... .. 65¢

F.....,,_

$4.39

Roll Roast ------- --- Ill. 89c

pkg.

Hams

F....., _ , . ....

lul'•kP&amp;D

PokP&amp;D

Shrimp ______':,.-; $1.59

Shrimp

._89e

___ ___ IV.·
,.,.,.lb.

$2.99

DRESS
COATS

$10

ss

Off

OFF

Gallipolis Ferry.

Smltl:.
DISCHARGED - Nooe.

Meadows. Ashton; Kessel Brum-

DISCHARGED - Brian BllnkMEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
enship, Galllpo)is Ferry; Mrs.
ADMISSIONS - Charleo Lytle, Elmer Fife, Gallipolis; Lester
1'0010roy; Goldie Clendenin. Jay Cislo, Pt. Plea sam: Mr s.
Portland: Georgia Smltl:. L o n g John Miller, HeOOerson;Patrlcia
Cowger,_Pt.

'" ~ , ·
along thl s bit or
MRS. MARGARET BJ'U&amp;.oLl
..,_,. ... cuae, passes
hmnor in tribute, to what else, - tile cowl
uThrough winter's cold and swnmer's breeze,
uShe's the author of our mUk and cheese;
"Sctentista lave clearly shown,
''She puts the Ice cream in the cone;
"When .she's gone IUd at last ahe resls,
"She leaves us nl111l81'0Us bequestl;
"Such as gelatin and glues,
" Ladies handbags and kiddiea shoes;
"The briefcases that she leaves behin:l,
40 Protect the plllns ot all mankind;
"But belts are her halo and crown,
01 They keep our parts frun falling down-"' '

ham, Leon: Mrs.
ElijahCharles
••·re Ebert.
E-·•·
Henderson;
~ • ·-· '
Donald Mullens pt. Pleasant:

M. waiter Pt. Pleas--

Chlrle
s

•

·

ONLY
NO
LAYAWAY
ON COATS $25-$45

And wltb the awr&lt;ach

ON COATS TO $25.00

Eggs

.t

.

"·

Washers, Dryers
Dishwashers,
Refrigerators
Ranges, Freezers

BOTH STORES

TUES. WED.

.,

Cottag~e Cheese

4

-···
~ream

.........

sl

2-lb.

White Bread

59c

K...,.r tto,. &amp; O.lp

1
;:.

$1

Colby Cheese

lb.

K._ Cut S,.on of
1
ASPARAGUS

75c

Birdleye

K,..,.,, Kraft, or Bor•n Cream

Cool Whip __ ...rt 49c

Cheese __ 3

Birlheye,

M&lt;s. Fllborl' o Soft, Golden, Whl.....

Awake ___ 3

~;;

$1

·-·-0."""'
lee Cream __ v....~ 79c

Margarine 2

~~.

~:;.

3

~

:!:' $1

89c

,.'-'om __ 5 '. $1
1
.......

79c

K,....,.

WMit or Sliced

Beets _ 5 ::; 89e

89c

Mix .... 4' '~;.~:·· $1
Kro FRUIT

Cocktail ... 3 ,!~. $1
Kroger G•nlln lwHt

K ....... Vee Pee

Kf"091'r Butnnnllk or Hemtstyle

Biscuits _ 12

Kro CAKE

Coffee _ !!· $1.89

Kroger HaH-Moon

l'ies 4

$US SIZI HAIR WRAY

KIIOGU IRAND

P...SO.klnt

Axion _ ~ $1.09

4

K,.,.r lhw Lako Cut or
F,_,CutG-

en.......

89e

new.,.,. c...,..

With
LMiftdry O.la .,.,,

Bold . __ - .~... 68e

$1.11 SIN Dry Sidn

B &amp; S RoDs 4

In maple, black 0( white

HOOVER
SWEEPER

-

1\liS (}11/!/~fN"'~

sttipts. Trousers

Tangeos
I

S ib.
~---- bag

s-r-

69f

Sunrise-Fresh
California Pascal

•CHAIRS, All Styles
and Colors

SAVE ~1.05
~;_\9 $
44

If&lt; Si•-•1-.mt

Fasteeth ___ 1-... 58e

,'ineapple 3 •~b~.:.~· $1

Pumpkin 2~~~;;..!,...· 35c:

K,....r lr...,

K,..., Brend

'fom. Juice 4 ::· $1

Potatoes ? 1 ~'::;..:..• · 89c

• RADIOS, AM &amp; fM
• RECORD CABINETS
• BOOKCASES
• Sofa Throw Cushions
• MIRRORS e PICTURES
•DESKS e HASSOCKS
e,BEDSPREADS
• 'JHROW RUGS
eLAMPS. All Types
• TABLES COFFEE, STEP,
&amp; COCKTAIL

Cranberries

lb.
pkg.

CaltfomY Nawtl 1U SIM

.......
Onions __ 3

!'i ,.,. 59e

Pears

Tan~erines

101.0 L.ANUDRY

Detergent

68c

c1• All P'l.l,...

MESH
NYLONS

-Ham

Ice Cream

Eiq&gt;. 1.1/311/118

Our No. 467

-

Fresh

,... 39¢

F..ot:

Hroecoli

••• :l!k

I .... P........
Or-.

Yams

Eiq&gt;. U/311/118

~":'u::" IYLOIS

2

SEAMLESS FLATTERY

.....

:~9e

Jettuee

"SIX FOOTER" ACRYLIC KNIT

IlL
$1.11

... 23e

G

FREE too
IXTIA TOO YAlUI STAMPS

6

Fringed LANKY SCAlF

rtHtl.,. .,. ReMIIM

F"'sh ttl Sia

SA V E ,_,,.

l(r•r Ceuntrw

REG. 54t

Fr1ih 1a Sin

Lv••u•ou coo-

1 • • c- Sllcod

K,......lrW

Oranges -_ ..... 79e

viant box

bave 2 grip-

P•• f•Ofll. A, B, C, D.

Freslr

Celery

6

OrbU calendllr Oliver

95. c.lendar feelure. 5!81n!ess stMI.
s.Jf.Windm.. Strap. WaterD(oof' .

Kroger Pears

Apples - -------- •·•·
.... 59c
Fr~, h

OUI OWN IIAND

b•oaddoth.
C o a t tops: stripes, prints,
solido-middy tops: ligu ...,

tt.lvn

Golf O.Rcious

WILL HOLD TIL CHRISTMAS

GiveBenrus time

Sanforized®

Jelly __ __ ___ ·~ 39e

Saltines •• _• .:, 25c

FR~E

·lut•a

50
tra-1::?1

TOI' YAUII

t~I;_~·L;~~ ,_e!::r:!~:E:~~~~ u~~~~~~=~~L!~~:~.~~~~-:~-~ ·:~J~ ~ i~;: · ~ ~~:.!! ~~~~~~

This Chrislmll

10% DOWN

·---------

lfc Si,. K..,.. l ' o t -

K..,..S.w

Our

MEN IN YOUR FA~ILY

c....-

JergeDS _. -. $1.49

Danish Pastry :;;: 49c

From

A DREAM OF A GIFT
IDEA FOR All OF THE

12 SilO Pt.•lk D I -

Twllh .-,: ld• e , .,,

Now

PAJAMAS

Deep Magie . ..... 88c

$1

•

Chnose

MEN'S

sl.19

""' ·~-

Bread ___ 4 ...... 88c

K._

!~~

88c
It=

IAYI

C•ockN-. ........
Block ........ Rye, &amp;

Peas _ 5 !! $1
Beans _4

....
.....

~

Adorn

Appli•nces

GIVE THEM

..:.,:__.-,,cT
.• ~

KROGER BRAHD

De&lt;kafd.

SMALL

BOSTON ROCKERS

TOP GREENHOUSE Sf ATE
The greenhouse tomato sea110n
started on the 3rd of October
in Ohio, which has more acres un-

• :i . .

·

Selection.

der glass than any other state.

'

Jack~

SUNBEAM

of the best of these Is thai held by the S1. Paul and S1. John
Lutheran Church Women.
They have set t11elr bazaar tor Dec. 6 and 7 with lunch to be
served in fellowship lall both days.
Heading the '8Wnt this year are Mrs. Kenneth Braun, ~weet
shop; Mrs. C. L. Karr, needlework; Mrs. Thomas Clelland, gift
shop, and Mrs. Lawrence Douglas and Mrs. Harry Davis, kitchen.

. ~ SALE

ney,

GIVE

or the tbrlstmas season cc:mes also the

PRE-CHRISTMAS

Mrs. JOMPh II. F1elda, Rt. 2
Cheshire, am, 10:21 L m. Fridayj Mrs. Lawrence E. Mceart;-

EMPIRE

In maple

For your H1ir C.fl

Fmh flfJifl (lllr O,.u

Kroger

.

AT THE

o..,

G. C. MURPHY

8IR'I1JS

DISCHARGES
Gilbert G. Adkb:o, MrL SIA!IIa
C. Booten, Mrs. Harold C. Dean.
Mrs. E. Kendall
Mn.
James W. Ewlng. Sr•• Elmer L.
Fish, Mrs. Cecil A. Hale, Mra.
G..ee E. HyoeU, WDiard R. Jefrers, Jr. , Helen L. Jordan. Roger
D. McClcllm:l, Mra. Ra7mDB! W.
Rock. Norman G. Ro.e, DeweyJ.
Ross, Mrs.. Thomaa C.. Runion.
Arthur R Sylveater,JanE. Rlley,
cal Yin B. Cordle, Mrs. Ed.pr C.
Griffith, Jr. aoo infant son, Mrs.
Clyde Smith and lnlant daugl:ter,
Mni. JIJiles L. Smith and lntant
Harrism. Rl 2 Gallipolis; Mrs. daughter.

bazaars.

UPPER STORE ONLY

GRADE A EX'IIIA LARGE

Pumpkin Pie

Rosemary

ADMISSIONS
Mr... Gary M. HorriiJDil, 124\'z
Third Ave.; Oarence A. Miller,
113 Fourth Ave.; Mra. Charles
E. Gatewood, 848 Second Ave. ;
Mn. Joseph R. Fields, Rt. 2,
Cheshire; Kenny R Stewart, Gallipolis; Gaither F. MlUer, RL I
Patriot; Mra. William T. Winter,
Jr. , Pt. Pleasant; George R Stewart, Mason; Kelly D. Bonecutter, Henderson; Mrs. Harold F.
Gardner, RL 1 Middleporto Mrs.
Growr L. Mullins, Rt. 2 Pomeroy; Mrs. Lawrence R Me~
OOy, Jackson; Lucu'llaJ. Matheny,
Ham:Jen; Jeremiah Shuler, Rt. 1
South Point Pleasant; Lowell F.

FARMHOUSE ROCKERS

Dlwn-Fmh Dairy FODds

IAHQUET MINCE OR

Pleas.~nt;

field, Aohton; Mro. Leonanl RlfOe, Pt. Pleasant; Mn. Alban Talbert and daughter, Crown City;
Harry Mlchlr, Pt. Pleasant; Og'den Hazlett, Apple Grove; Hoyt
8ayre. Mason: Mrs. John Watson, Jr., Ft. Pleasant: Carl Dove,

Plans for an organized program in Meigs CountY to remember
patierts at the Athens State Hospital duriQJ the Chrtatmas seasm
are rolling - !honks to Mn. Mary Martin and the Meigs Salon
Sand 40 .
.. God's Little House," located next to the Middleport Oturch
of Christ, has been secured for a headquarters and smteone will
be thoR aU day on Dec. 2and3 to receive gifts trom Individuals :md
grc:qJs trho wish to help with the project.
or - tr you have a quesUon or possibly can't get to the helldquarters jusl phooe 99~53, or 949-2599 with yoor problem.
On December 10, members of the Ladies Auxiliaries of American Legion Polls will take the gifts to the hospllal and whlle there
will wrap presents for the hospital patierts. Meigs Comay haa a
lolal of 70 patients at the hospllel this year - 39 men and 31
wcmon.

BRING
IT IN

WINTER
K,...... WlshiNne BrMd

In 1111 fflllll

Turkeys

JOto
Ulln.
lb.39c

on, Oele McCune.

Cieilan:l, Mrs. Ctarle• Gloeckner, MrL Paul Hill and Mrs. Hmner
Smltl:. Mro. Kenneth Bnlun will be JaiTOtor.
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Tho sOOw will be lolled Mollloy lor later •bowlnl.
ADMITIED-- Mrs. Ray Crook·

THE SERVANTS QUARft!T 01 Pubrobarg, W. VL, wiD
oi!W at the Chester Church of God at 7:30 p. m. tmlght (Smday).
The pastor, the Rev. Chester Bryant. exten1s an IDYitatlon to
the pOOllc to attend. The quartet is plctured with Its accompanist, Helen Riddle.

U.S.D.A.Impected Grade A

U.S.D.A.lmpeded Grade A

Cop'f'rftht, 1'hl K,....,. Co., 1MI

EQ!lle, pastor or the Sl.
Is stuJyiJW for tda master' I degree at Ohio Unlveralt;y.
Worklns In the field ol ndlo and leiOYhlon. the Rev. Mr. EDtlle
will produce a style show to be seen on WOUB-TV nert month.
Fashlooo to be ohown wUl be trom Melp County stores lncllllllrc Bahr Clothiers, Elbertelda, L. and Z, Shop and Ledlle SilderL
Models Crmn here will loclude Mrs. Richard Long. Mrs. Thmnas

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER:
Vloltlng hours Z-4 and 7-11 p. m.
Parents only onPedlatrlcaWan:L

David Y. Ta11ot'. ~ J ...
P. P-r. Patriot Slar Rt.;:Mn.
C. Dole RuaoaU; lit ·I 111:1we1L

SJ14

lAVE

"·"

KENNERS

EASY
BAKE

lllcllt•lt'l Bonrua, lt'o .,.,.

OUR REG. LOW

$10.99

LIMIT!

• Early American Accessories

en!Hd uncondltlonolly lor 3

full ,..,., If thl movement at
,.... a.nruo wotch fads fD por·

toni properly, Benrul will ,..

$933

e Wall Plaques

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

pair or ropllcelt fostoi:d free.

11 Bonrua modo an ordlna.y
Witch, thly'd live It an ordl·

-. -·-··
. TAW.NEY
JEWELERS
,22
lennll .......
, ..... _1611

G•lll,ells, Dhle

·~--_,
OPEN
I
MONDAY
and
FRIDAY
NIGHTS
------

21ECONDAVI.

446-1405
Golllpolla, Ohlo

l

r:::articipatlq
In Gallipolis
Merthants
SHOP-A-RAMA

•USE OUR ·cHRISTMAS LAY-AWAY

�·-·-······-··-·-

6 -

.. -- ..

~ - ·

..

-~ .-

.-

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

The Sunda) Times - Sentinel, Sundl)', NO\'etnber 24, 191iK

~

Shop Kroger For Low Prices On All Of Your

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL

ADMITI'ED Pcmeroy.

A

All Turkeys Sold At
Kroger Are U.S.D.A.
IMpected Grade AI

CHOICE

Armour Star

Kroger Wishbone
THE SERVAN'I'S QUARTET 01 Parl&lt;eroburg, W. VL, will

U.S.D.A.IMpected Grade A

U.S.D.A.IMpected Grade A

W•

1:~::.

Copyritht. The kro_.r Co., 1HI
the right to llmH ctuentit~s.

NMr~

Turkeys

Ulba.
lb. 39c

18-lbs.
Up

Up

wiD start at 6 p.m.
Conference eonunlssloner Bob
James will be oo hand to award
the cbamplooohlp trophy to Ohio
athletic director BUI R- and
Hess.
The most valuable player and
next year's captains will aloo
be announced at the banquet.

lb.

lb.

3 DAYS ONLY
CLIP THIS AD

Baking Hens ·------ ... 45c

Frooh, Wholo Hot

W. Va. Brand Fully
Cooked
Semi-Boneless

Sausage

Bacon
2 .17

Canned Ham _. . . . .

~:1:

Roll Roast ----------a.. 89c

'"·

pkg,

Perk Loin

.... 79c

Dlwn-Frllh Osiry Foods

~

Bacon ________ :: 99c

Hams

$4.39

-

Weiners ------· ._ 69c

._65e

Sllud Eodt &amp; P -

K,....r Country Civil

DRESS
COATS

SwHt'"l ,. .. "'""' SklftiMI

........

Swift's Prtrnl..., llla4

F..... lrGrounol

Bacon ................ ... 59c

Ham Loaf

Oscar Me'(tr SllcNI

F..-.

avt.

Bacon __ __ _____ •. 79c

lb.

s..

Pol&lt; P &amp; D

Shrimp _____ .

$10

Meat Loaf--·-- •. 69c
llo.

5 OFF

89c

5

Shrimp Cocktail 3 t: $1

=- $1.59

OFF

Sbrimp ___ . _. ~:~~ $2.99

Kroger

-~

..

4 - sl
plcp.

Banquet Br•ncl

Cream ti ies 4

I
}

~~

$1

Coffee . !!· $1.89

Mix

K,...... Half-Mood

K,_ C"' Spoon of

Colby Cheese .... 75c

ASPARAGUS

v..... $1
3 141,...

, . o4

•

4

bol!et

Kro FRUIT

Cocktail . . 3.~.$1
K...,...Ga. . . I -

8ircMya

K,......, kraft, or Borden (,.am

Cool Whip __ ,.... 49c

Cheese . . 3 ::;. 89c

BirttN.,.

Mn. Filbert's 5oft, G.W.n, WhlppH

Awake ___ 3 :;::; $1

Margarine 2

K._A......,Dellolol

K,...r Buttermilk or Homustyle

Beets _ 5 :! 89c

Beans _4

Ice Cream .. .,... ~ 79c

Biscuits . 12 ::;; 89c

P...Soaklot

With newspaper
Laundry Delli .....

Apples _________ :· 59c
Fres.h
I•

59c

Tangelos

.,...

--

51b.

~

... bag

69e

Sunrise-Fresh
California Pascal

Celery

~:~

79c

$1

K,..... VM: Pee

t•
'"'om
_. 5 ?.-::·
-·- $1
K._ Whofo w Sllcod

Axion _!:" $1.09

PeaS -

K ,...,.,. Blw Lab Cvl or
FrHCh Cut Grwn

~

!!~

89c

3~~sl
Kr....- Br.nd

:=:· $1

Cranberries
CeUfoml• Newal IQ Sla.

Oranges . . ... 79c
Fnsh 12t Sitt

Prars

5 ... 59c

Potatoes

'1
• ~~bu.• ..., ....

89c

F,..h-

OniOnS __ 3 ,.. 39e
Frwtlt

Krorcoli

••. :me

stein

c.... _

Sonloriud~ br.,..ddotll.
C o • t tops: stripes, prints,

12 Slco Plastic 0 1 - -

toGds--middy topt: fi9ures,
-dripas. Trouser~ bave 2 griP"
per front. A, B, C, D.

JergeOS .. -.$1.49
Jelly ______ . ~~: 39c

SAVE si.05
~;\9
44

1k II• Dental Adhnlve

s

Fasteeth . __ ,.... 58c

I

cent,•••

Now
From
Our

0(

white

GIVE THEM

HOOVER
SWEEPER
This Christmas

10% DOWN
WILL HOLD TIL CHRISTMAS

•&lt;HAIRS, All Styles
and Colors
ca i~AA_$39.95.

Waterproof•.

-,dar fMIUrt. Stalnlesti steel. StriP.

. . . Dell• 139.15. 17 tewet~lt.
...... ~.Biactc conS.Y.. IOWor

Dy.Eicp. U/30168

Yams

&lt;&gt;{.~':..":' lfLOIS

2

SEAMLW FLATTERY

-VMUIRM. .

""SIX FOOTER"" ACRYUC KNIT .

llkanyK._
l'rothG--1
Elcp. 11 /30/61

REI.
SUI

IJit

U¥1
II.M

Fashionable 101rf to wrap and dropolf
~ n d you. Double """~; S.
fringod. Stripoo, oolich. 11/J•68 •

~

-...........

,.._"'

fjll!p. K.....

GtfatM

fll'

11\:M..a

Elcp. 11/30161

KENNERS

EASY
BAlE

-·lilY....,..
___
.........
-. TAWJtEY
JEWELERS
--------:
Dllmlftd N1n $49A 2 ...... IOIIdl

LIIIT6

••. 23c

FREE 1oo

In maple, black

1~;s· CHili~1N1.f
.::::..-..:o:.'i&amp;3lZ'k£ , :It

011 No. 467
REG. 54c

6 LV.ILUAIU COUPON

100

BOSTON ROCKERS

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

MESH
NYLONS

Club All Fl..,.,..

aro

FREE

..

c~

Selection•

Ire Sire K,..., Ptt: IliUM

FN"sh 211 Sin

TanP."erines ... :me

Ranges, Freezers

A"'l:nces

OUII OWN IUifD

Deep Magic _ -. 88c

Freah

pkg,

Washers, Dryers
Dishwashers,
Refrigerators

SMALL

lrltEN IN YOUR FA~ILY

$1.11 51• Dry

Twtth .,. w. ad•

lb.

SUNBEAM

GiveBenrus fime

Butter
Ice Cream

~lrand

GIVE

TOP GREENHOUSE STATE
The greenhouse tomato season
started on the 3rd of October
in Ohio, which has more acres Wl·
der glass than any other state.

.:....,. C.u:eltJ CW. • •

K,....r lrHII

EMPIRE

A DREAM OF A GIFT

Saltines . ___ !. 25e

Pumpkin 2 ~~~~,..,. 35e ec,...., Ctt II; t

AT THE

IDEA FOR ALL OF THE

Danish Pastry !i:: 49c

,'ineapple :JI·Ib~!.... $1

'J'om. Juice 4

88c

K,.....lrw

Bold . _. - ,1... 68c

doughier.

PAJAMAS

Bread _. _ 4 ~oo... 88c
K,_
B&amp;SRoUs4 :;::$1
........

Harrison, Rt. 2 Gallipolis; Mra.

MEN'S

Cr.ckH WhHt.. p.t...,
8a.d. Foreat flye:, &amp; ltal•

c~r

c-....

Kroger Pears
S-T-

a ,'! $1

4

.....
.....

Mrs. Joseph R. Fields, RL 2.
Junelj W. Ewing, Sr•• Elmer L
Cheshire; Kenny R. Stewart, Gallipolis; Gtllhor F. Miller, RL 1 Fish, Mra. Cecil A. Hale, MrL
Grace E. Hysell, WUlll'd ll JefPatriot; Mrs. WUUun T. Wlrd:er,
Jr., Pt. Pleasant; George R. Stew- fers, Jr., Helen L. Jordan, Ropr
art, Masont Kelly D. Bonecut-- D. McClelland, Mro. RQmondW.
ter, HeOOerson; Mrs. Harold F. Rock, Norman G. Hole, DoweyJ.
Gardner, RL I Mlddl-rl; Mrs. Ross, Mrs. 1b00111 C. Runion,
Grover L. Mullins, Rt. 2 P&lt;n- Arthur R. Sylvester, JanE. ·R iley,
eroy; Mrs. Lawrence R Me~ Calvin B. Cordle, Mrs. Edpr C.
nty, Jackson;Luc.:tooaJ. Matheny, Grlmth, Jr. and infant son, Mrs.
Hamden; Jeremlah Shuler, Rt. 1 Clyde Smith and I ntant daugtiter,
South Point Pleasanti IAJwell f. Mu. James L. Smith and lnfant

IFTS

,

BOTH STORES

TUES. WED.

White Bread
1 lb . ! ••.

..

$2.U $1ZE HAIR $PRAY

KROGER MMD

Kro CAKE

.

.,

~-

K,.,.r Rot. &amp; Drip

i ),

. . SALE.

~· " ~~
":\". ..

David N. Tlllor, CI'WI; J ...
P. PCll"ler, PatrlotSiar lll.rlfn.
c. Dale Rullell;
Ill. ·1 Bldnll.
BIRTHS
.
Mrs. J - h R. Flelda, Ill. 2
Cheshire, 0011, 10:21 L m. Friday; Mrs. lAwrence E. Mccart..
ney, Jackson.
DISCHARGES
Gilbert G. Adklu, Mra. Stella
C. Booten, Mro. Harold C. Dean,
Mrs. E. Kendall Deckafd, Mra.

am

PRE-CHRISTMAS
..

Cottag~e Cheese

113 Fourth Ave.; Mrs. Charles

E. Gatewocxl, 848 Second Ave.;

In maple

:•

.....

ON COATS TO $25.00

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER:
Vlollino houri 2-4 and 7-11 p. m.
Parents only oo Pediatrics Ward.
ADMISSIONS
MrS. Gary M. Harrison, 124'h
Third Ave.; Clarence A. Miller,

FARMHOUSE ROCKERS
For ytHJr Hlir Clrt

KROGER BRAHD

Portlarll; Georgia Smllh, L o n g John Miller, HeOOerson;Patricia
Cowger, PL Pleasant; Rosemary
Smith.
DISCHARGED - None.
1- MeadowS, Ashton; Kessel BnonClelland, Mrs. Charles Gloeckner, Mrs. Paul HW and Mrs. Hm1or
lleld, Ashton; Mrs. Leonard RifSmith. Mrs. Kenneth BraWl will be •rr•tor.
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL fle, Pt. Pleasant; Mrs. Alban TalTho s - will be taped Monday lor later showing.
ADMITIED- Mrs. Ray Crook· bert and dlug'1ter, Crown City;
Harry Machtr, PL Pleasant; Ogham Loon· Mrs. Charles Ebert.
MRS. MARGARET BAILEY, Syracuse, panes along thia bit or
'
'Ell~• ~·re EYUs· 'den Hazlett, Apple Grove; Hoyt
•
~Henderson;
JOU' ~
'
•
humor in tribute, to wnat else, - uu:r cow 1
0 nald Mullens Pt. Pleasant;. sa.vre. Mason: Mrs. John Wat"Through wirter'B cold and swruner'a breeze,
::..rles M. waiter, PL Pleas- son, Jr., Pt. Pleasant; cariiXIve,
"She's the author of our milk and cheese;
C
.
"Scientists have clearly ahown,
"She puta the ice cream Ln the cone;
"When she' a gone and at last ahe rests,
"She leaves ua numerous bequests;
41 SuCh a&amp; gelatin
gluea,
"Ladies handbags al¥1 kiddie&amp; 1hoes;
uTile briefciBe&amp; that she leaves behind,
.,Protect the plans of all manklnd;
"But belts are her hl.lo 1rd crown,
"They keep our pants trcm fal]lng dawn."'

And with the a"'roach of the Christmas season comes also the
bazaars.
One of the best of these is that held by the St. Paul and St. John
Lutlleran Church Women.
They have set their bazaar (or Dec. 6 and 7 wtth lunch to be
sorwd In lellowshlp bali both days.
Heading the event this year are Y..rs. Kenneth Braun, ~weet
ahop• Mrs. C. L. Karr, needleworki Mrs. Thomas Clelland, gift
shop, and Mrs. Lawrence Douglas and Mrs. Harry Davi5, kitchen.

G. C. MURPHY

S.a P'a• P &amp; D

Eggs
Pumpkin Pie

NO
LAYAWAY
ON COATS $25·$45

UPPER STORE ONLY

GRADE A EXTRA LARGE

BANQUET MIMCE OR

ONLY

ant; James E. Love, New Hallen; Mrs.. Fnrti Thomas, Gallipolis Ferry; Ralph Mayes, Glenwood; Charlie Schultze, pt.

DISCHARGED - WUiiam Hoot- Pleasant; Mr11. Marlin Oldaker •
Gallipolla Ferry.
on, Ocle MeCune.
DISCHARGED - Brian Blonk·
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL enship, Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
ADMISSIONS - Charleo Lytle, Elmer Fife, Gallipolis; Lester
Pmneroy; Goldie Oend.enln, Jay Casto, Pt. Pleasart; Mrs.

Plans for an organized program in Meigs Comt;v to remember
patierta at the Athens state Hospital durirw: the Christmas season
are rolling - thanks to Mrs. Mary Marlin and 1he Meigs SOlon
8 and 40.
"God's Little House,.. located next to the Mlddleport Church
of Christ, has been secured for a headquarters and smneorMt wUl
be there all day on Doc. 2 and3 to receive gilts !rom iildlvlduals and
I!I"O&lt;WS who wish to he)J&gt; with.!he projecL
Or - U you have a question or poBSibly can't get to the headquarters just phone 992-2353, or 949-2599 willi yoor problem.
On December 10, member a or the Ladles Auxiliaries of American Legion Posts will take the gifts to the hospital am while there
will wrap presents for the hospital patients. Meigs Court,y has a
total of 70 patients at the hospital this year - 39 men aRI 31
women.

BRING
IT IN

WINTER

Serve
&amp; Save Sliced

In till frHZif Clll

Panist. Helen Riddle.

18-lbB.

KrotW Wlsha..n. BrMICI

!.

aiDJallhe ChesterChurcho!Godat7:30 p.m. tmlght ($unday).
The pastor, the Rev. Chester Bryant, extends an invitation to
the ptj&gt;lic to attenL 'I1le quartet is pictured with its accom-

Turkeys

10to

lb. 37c

A/ll(l"oger Stores Will
Be Closed Thurs., Nov. 28
THANKSGIVING DAY
OPEN Regula,. Hours
Friday and Saturday

EDJJie, pastor of 1he St. Paul Lutheran Church,
is sbllyiqr for tds master•a degree at Ohio University.
WorkiDJ In 1he field of radio and television, 1he Rev. Mr. Engle
will produce a style show to be aeen on WOUB-TV Dext month.
Fashions to be shown will be !rom Meigs Coun1Y stores lncludIDJ Babr Clodllero, Elborlelds, I. and Z. Shop and Ledlle Sllllera.
Models trom here will Include Mn. Richard Long, Mrs. Thc:maa

John Mass~y,

Aj&gt;ple Grove.
BIRTH - Mr. and Mro. Char·
lea Ebert. Henlenon, I clfughler,

$933
LIMIT 1

- · •·• Bonruo, It' I &amp;Uif•
ontead unconditionally lor 3
1111 ,..,.. If the moftmtnl o1
,our Benru• watch lalla to par·
1an1o prvparly, &amp;onrus" will ,..
pair or nploca Mfast ohd ''"·
11 a.nrua modt an ordlno&lt;y
....... IIIIJ'd .,.. It •• onll·

422 Secoll4 ••••
PhH• ......ltlS
Oelll,ell,, Oht•

• RADIOS, AM &amp; FM
• RECORD CABINETS
• BOOKCASES
• Sofa Throw Cushions
• MIRRORS e PICTURES
• DESKS e HASSOCKS
•·BEDSPREADS
•rHROW RUGS
• LAMPS. All Types
• TABLES COFFEE, STEP,
&amp; COCKTAIL
e Wall Plaques
e Early American Accessories
·~----OPEN
MONDAY
illd
FRIDAY
NIGHTS

We Are Participatine

In Gallipolis
Mlltharb
SHOP·A·RAIIA

2 SECOND AVI.
446-1405
Golllpollo, Ohio

•·USE OUR CHRISTMAS LAY-AWAY
• \J

(I

�·-·-······-··-·-

6 -

.. -- ..

~ - ·

..

-~ .-

.-

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

The Sunda) Times - Sentinel, Sundl)', NO\'etnber 24, 191iK

~

Shop Kroger For Low Prices On All Of Your

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL

ADMITI'ED Pcmeroy.

A

All Turkeys Sold At
Kroger Are U.S.D.A.
IMpected Grade AI

CHOICE

Armour Star

Kroger Wishbone
THE SERVAN'I'S QUARTET 01 Parl&lt;eroburg, W. VL, will

U.S.D.A.IMpected Grade A

U.S.D.A.IMpected Grade A

W•

1:~::.

Copyritht. The kro_.r Co., 1HI
the right to llmH ctuentit~s.

NMr~

Turkeys

Ulba.
lb. 39c

18-lbs.
Up

Up

wiD start at 6 p.m.
Conference eonunlssloner Bob
James will be oo hand to award
the cbamplooohlp trophy to Ohio
athletic director BUI R- and
Hess.
The most valuable player and
next year's captains will aloo
be announced at the banquet.

lb.

lb.

3 DAYS ONLY
CLIP THIS AD

Baking Hens ·------ ... 45c

Frooh, Wholo Hot

W. Va. Brand Fully
Cooked
Semi-Boneless

Sausage

Bacon
2 .17

Canned Ham _. . . . .

~:1:

Roll Roast ----------a.. 89c

'"·

pkg,

Perk Loin

.... 79c

Dlwn-Frllh Osiry Foods

~

Bacon ________ :: 99c

Hams

$4.39

-

Weiners ------· ._ 69c

._65e

Sllud Eodt &amp; P -

K,....r Country Civil

DRESS
COATS

SwHt'"l ,. .. "'""' SklftiMI

........

Swift's Prtrnl..., llla4

F..... lrGrounol

Bacon ................ ... 59c

Ham Loaf

Oscar Me'(tr SllcNI

F..-.

avt.

Bacon __ __ _____ •. 79c

lb.

s..

Pol&lt; P &amp; D

Shrimp _____ .

$10

Meat Loaf--·-- •. 69c
llo.

5 OFF

89c

5

Shrimp Cocktail 3 t: $1

=- $1.59

OFF

Sbrimp ___ . _. ~:~~ $2.99

Kroger

-~

..

4 - sl
plcp.

Banquet Br•ncl

Cream ti ies 4

I
}

~~

$1

Coffee . !!· $1.89

Mix

K,...... Half-Mood

K,_ C"' Spoon of

Colby Cheese .... 75c

ASPARAGUS

v..... $1
3 141,...

, . o4

•

4

bol!et

Kro FRUIT

Cocktail . . 3.~.$1
K...,...Ga. . . I -

8ircMya

K,......, kraft, or Borden (,.am

Cool Whip __ ,.... 49c

Cheese . . 3 ::;. 89c

BirttN.,.

Mn. Filbert's 5oft, G.W.n, WhlppH

Awake ___ 3 :;::; $1

Margarine 2

K._A......,Dellolol

K,...r Buttermilk or Homustyle

Beets _ 5 :! 89c

Beans _4

Ice Cream .. .,... ~ 79c

Biscuits . 12 ::;; 89c

P...Soaklot

With newspaper
Laundry Delli .....

Apples _________ :· 59c
Fres.h
I•

59c

Tangelos

.,...

--

51b.

~

... bag

69e

Sunrise-Fresh
California Pascal

Celery

~:~

79c

$1

K,..... VM: Pee

t•
'"'om
_. 5 ?.-::·
-·- $1
K._ Whofo w Sllcod

Axion _!:" $1.09

PeaS -

K ,...,.,. Blw Lab Cvl or
FrHCh Cut Grwn

~

!!~

89c

3~~sl
Kr....- Br.nd

:=:· $1

Cranberries
CeUfoml• Newal IQ Sla.

Oranges . . ... 79c
Fnsh 12t Sitt

Prars

5 ... 59c

Potatoes

'1
• ~~bu.• ..., ....

89c

F,..h-

OniOnS __ 3 ,.. 39e
Frwtlt

Krorcoli

••. :me

stein

c.... _

Sonloriud~ br.,..ddotll.
C o • t tops: stripes, prints,

12 Slco Plastic 0 1 - -

toGds--middy topt: fi9ures,
-dripas. Trouser~ bave 2 griP"
per front. A, B, C, D.

JergeOS .. -.$1.49
Jelly ______ . ~~: 39c

SAVE si.05
~;\9
44

1k II• Dental Adhnlve

s

Fasteeth . __ ,.... 58c

I

cent,•••

Now
From
Our

0(

white

GIVE THEM

HOOVER
SWEEPER
This Christmas

10% DOWN
WILL HOLD TIL CHRISTMAS

•&lt;HAIRS, All Styles
and Colors
ca i~AA_$39.95.

Waterproof•.

-,dar fMIUrt. Stalnlesti steel. StriP.

. . . Dell• 139.15. 17 tewet~lt.
...... ~.Biactc conS.Y.. IOWor

Dy.Eicp. U/30168

Yams

&lt;&gt;{.~':..":' lfLOIS

2

SEAMLW FLATTERY

-VMUIRM. .

""SIX FOOTER"" ACRYUC KNIT .

llkanyK._
l'rothG--1
Elcp. 11 /30/61

REI.
SUI

IJit

U¥1
II.M

Fashionable 101rf to wrap and dropolf
~ n d you. Double """~; S.
fringod. Stripoo, oolich. 11/J•68 •

~

-...........

,.._"'

fjll!p. K.....

GtfatM

fll'

11\:M..a

Elcp. 11/30161

KENNERS

EASY
BAlE

-·lilY....,..
___
.........
-. TAWJtEY
JEWELERS
--------:
Dllmlftd N1n $49A 2 ...... IOIIdl

LIIIT6

••. 23c

FREE 1oo

In maple, black

1~;s· CHili~1N1.f
.::::..-..:o:.'i&amp;3lZ'k£ , :It

011 No. 467
REG. 54c

6 LV.ILUAIU COUPON

100

BOSTON ROCKERS

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

MESH
NYLONS

Club All Fl..,.,..

aro

FREE

..

c~

Selection•

Ire Sire K,..., Ptt: IliUM

FN"sh 211 Sin

TanP."erines ... :me

Ranges, Freezers

A"'l:nces

OUII OWN IUifD

Deep Magic _ -. 88c

Freah

pkg,

Washers, Dryers
Dishwashers,
Refrigerators

SMALL

lrltEN IN YOUR FA~ILY

$1.11 51• Dry

Twtth .,. w. ad•

lb.

SUNBEAM

GiveBenrus fime

Butter
Ice Cream

~lrand

GIVE

TOP GREENHOUSE STATE
The greenhouse tomato season
started on the 3rd of October
in Ohio, which has more acres Wl·
der glass than any other state.

.:....,. C.u:eltJ CW. • •

K,....r lrHII

EMPIRE

A DREAM OF A GIFT

Saltines . ___ !. 25e

Pumpkin 2 ~~~~,..,. 35e ec,...., Ctt II; t

AT THE

IDEA FOR ALL OF THE

Danish Pastry !i:: 49c

,'ineapple :JI·Ib~!.... $1

'J'om. Juice 4

88c

K,.....lrw

Bold . _. - ,1... 68c

doughier.

PAJAMAS

Bread _. _ 4 ~oo... 88c
K,_
B&amp;SRoUs4 :;::$1
........

Harrison, Rt. 2 Gallipolis; Mra.

MEN'S

Cr.ckH WhHt.. p.t...,
8a.d. Foreat flye:, &amp; ltal•

c~r

c-....

Kroger Pears
S-T-

a ,'! $1

4

.....
.....

Mrs. Joseph R. Fields, RL 2.
Junelj W. Ewing, Sr•• Elmer L
Cheshire; Kenny R. Stewart, Gallipolis; Gtllhor F. Miller, RL 1 Fish, Mra. Cecil A. Hale, MrL
Grace E. Hysell, WUlll'd ll JefPatriot; Mrs. WUUun T. Wlrd:er,
Jr., Pt. Pleasant; George R. Stew- fers, Jr., Helen L. Jordan, Ropr
art, Masont Kelly D. Bonecut-- D. McClelland, Mro. RQmondW.
ter, HeOOerson; Mrs. Harold F. Rock, Norman G. Hole, DoweyJ.
Gardner, RL I Mlddl-rl; Mrs. Ross, Mrs. 1b00111 C. Runion,
Grover L. Mullins, Rt. 2 P&lt;n- Arthur R. Sylvester, JanE. ·R iley,
eroy; Mrs. Lawrence R Me~ Calvin B. Cordle, Mrs. Edpr C.
nty, Jackson;Luc.:tooaJ. Matheny, Grlmth, Jr. and infant son, Mrs.
Hamden; Jeremlah Shuler, Rt. 1 Clyde Smith and I ntant daugtiter,
South Point Pleasanti IAJwell f. Mu. James L. Smith and lnfant

IFTS

,

BOTH STORES

TUES. WED.

White Bread
1 lb . ! ••.

..

$2.U $1ZE HAIR $PRAY

KROGER MMD

Kro CAKE

.

.,

~-

K,.,.r Rot. &amp; Drip

i ),

. . SALE.

~· " ~~
":\". ..

David N. Tlllor, CI'WI; J ...
P. PCll"ler, PatrlotSiar lll.rlfn.
c. Dale Rullell;
Ill. ·1 Bldnll.
BIRTHS
.
Mrs. J - h R. Flelda, Ill. 2
Cheshire, 0011, 10:21 L m. Friday; Mrs. lAwrence E. Mccart..
ney, Jackson.
DISCHARGES
Gilbert G. Adklu, Mra. Stella
C. Booten, Mro. Harold C. Dean,
Mrs. E. Kendall Deckafd, Mra.

am

PRE-CHRISTMAS
..

Cottag~e Cheese

113 Fourth Ave.; Mrs. Charles

E. Gatewocxl, 848 Second Ave.;

In maple

:•

.....

ON COATS TO $25.00

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER:
Vlollino houri 2-4 and 7-11 p. m.
Parents only oo Pediatrics Ward.
ADMISSIONS
MrS. Gary M. Harrison, 124'h
Third Ave.; Clarence A. Miller,

FARMHOUSE ROCKERS
For ytHJr Hlir Clrt

KROGER BRAHD

Portlarll; Georgia Smllh, L o n g John Miller, HeOOerson;Patricia
Cowger, PL Pleasant; Rosemary
Smith.
DISCHARGED - None.
1- MeadowS, Ashton; Kessel BnonClelland, Mrs. Charles Gloeckner, Mrs. Paul HW and Mrs. Hm1or
lleld, Ashton; Mrs. Leonard RifSmith. Mrs. Kenneth BraWl will be •rr•tor.
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL fle, Pt. Pleasant; Mrs. Alban TalTho s - will be taped Monday lor later showing.
ADMITIED- Mrs. Ray Crook· bert and dlug'1ter, Crown City;
Harry Machtr, PL Pleasant; Ogham Loon· Mrs. Charles Ebert.
MRS. MARGARET BAILEY, Syracuse, panes along thia bit or
'
'Ell~• ~·re EYUs· 'den Hazlett, Apple Grove; Hoyt
•
~Henderson;
JOU' ~
'
•
humor in tribute, to wnat else, - uu:r cow 1
0 nald Mullens Pt. Pleasant;. sa.vre. Mason: Mrs. John Wat"Through wirter'B cold and swruner'a breeze,
::..rles M. waiter, PL Pleas- son, Jr., Pt. Pleasant; cariiXIve,
"She's the author of our milk and cheese;
C
.
"Scientists have clearly ahown,
"She puta the ice cream Ln the cone;
"When she' a gone and at last ahe rests,
"She leaves ua numerous bequests;
41 SuCh a&amp; gelatin
gluea,
"Ladies handbags al¥1 kiddie&amp; 1hoes;
uTile briefciBe&amp; that she leaves behind,
.,Protect the plans of all manklnd;
"But belts are her hl.lo 1rd crown,
"They keep our pants trcm fal]lng dawn."'

And with the a"'roach of the Christmas season comes also the
bazaars.
One of the best of these is that held by the St. Paul and St. John
Lutlleran Church Women.
They have set their bazaar (or Dec. 6 and 7 wtth lunch to be
sorwd In lellowshlp bali both days.
Heading the event this year are Y..rs. Kenneth Braun, ~weet
ahop• Mrs. C. L. Karr, needleworki Mrs. Thomas Clelland, gift
shop, and Mrs. Lawrence Douglas and Mrs. Harry Davi5, kitchen.

G. C. MURPHY

S.a P'a• P &amp; D

Eggs
Pumpkin Pie

NO
LAYAWAY
ON COATS $25·$45

UPPER STORE ONLY

GRADE A EXTRA LARGE

BANQUET MIMCE OR

ONLY

ant; James E. Love, New Hallen; Mrs.. Fnrti Thomas, Gallipolis Ferry; Ralph Mayes, Glenwood; Charlie Schultze, pt.

DISCHARGED - WUiiam Hoot- Pleasant; Mr11. Marlin Oldaker •
Gallipolla Ferry.
on, Ocle MeCune.
DISCHARGED - Brian Blonk·
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL enship, Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
ADMISSIONS - Charleo Lytle, Elmer Fife, Gallipolis; Lester
Pmneroy; Goldie Oend.enln, Jay Casto, Pt. Pleasart; Mrs.

Plans for an organized program in Meigs Comt;v to remember
patierta at the Athens state Hospital durirw: the Christmas season
are rolling - thanks to Mrs. Mary Marlin and 1he Meigs SOlon
8 and 40.
"God's Little House,.. located next to the Mlddleport Church
of Christ, has been secured for a headquarters and smneorMt wUl
be there all day on Doc. 2 and3 to receive gilts !rom iildlvlduals and
I!I"O&lt;WS who wish to he)J&gt; with.!he projecL
Or - U you have a question or poBSibly can't get to the headquarters just phone 992-2353, or 949-2599 willi yoor problem.
On December 10, member a or the Ladles Auxiliaries of American Legion Posts will take the gifts to the hospital am while there
will wrap presents for the hospital patients. Meigs Court,y has a
total of 70 patients at the hospital this year - 39 men aRI 31
women.

BRING
IT IN

WINTER

Serve
&amp; Save Sliced

In till frHZif Clll

Panist. Helen Riddle.

18-lbB.

KrotW Wlsha..n. BrMICI

!.

aiDJallhe ChesterChurcho!Godat7:30 p.m. tmlght ($unday).
The pastor, the Rev. Chester Bryant, extends an invitation to
the ptj&gt;lic to attenL 'I1le quartet is pictured with its accom-

Turkeys

10to

lb. 37c

A/ll(l"oger Stores Will
Be Closed Thurs., Nov. 28
THANKSGIVING DAY
OPEN Regula,. Hours
Friday and Saturday

EDJJie, pastor of 1he St. Paul Lutheran Church,
is sbllyiqr for tds master•a degree at Ohio University.
WorkiDJ In 1he field of radio and television, 1he Rev. Mr. Engle
will produce a style show to be aeen on WOUB-TV Dext month.
Fashions to be shown will be !rom Meigs Coun1Y stores lncludIDJ Babr Clodllero, Elborlelds, I. and Z. Shop and Ledlle Sllllera.
Models trom here will Include Mn. Richard Long, Mrs. Thc:maa

John Mass~y,

Aj&gt;ple Grove.
BIRTH - Mr. and Mro. Char·
lea Ebert. Henlenon, I clfughler,

$933
LIMIT 1

- · •·• Bonruo, It' I &amp;Uif•
ontead unconditionally lor 3
1111 ,..,.. If the moftmtnl o1
,our Benru• watch lalla to par·
1an1o prvparly, &amp;onrus" will ,..
pair or nploca Mfast ohd ''"·
11 a.nrua modt an ordlno&lt;y
....... IIIIJ'd .,.. It •• onll·

422 Secoll4 ••••
PhH• ......ltlS
Oelll,ell,, Oht•

• RADIOS, AM &amp; FM
• RECORD CABINETS
• BOOKCASES
• Sofa Throw Cushions
• MIRRORS e PICTURES
• DESKS e HASSOCKS
•·BEDSPREADS
•rHROW RUGS
• LAMPS. All Types
• TABLES COFFEE, STEP,
&amp; COCKTAIL
e Wall Plaques
e Early American Accessories
·~----OPEN
MONDAY
illd
FRIDAY
NIGHTS

We Are Participatine

In Gallipolis
Mlltharb
SHOP·A·RAIIA

2 SECOND AVI.
446-1405
Golllpollo, Ohio

•·USE OUR CHRISTMAS LAY-AWAY
• \J

(I

�8 -

'ftle Sundl-v Thlwl• • sentinel, Sundllv. Nowmber 2t, 1988

9 -

The Sunda) Times - Senttnel, Sunday, Noventber 24, 1968

New in Farming

There's Money in Producing Lean Pori{
BY C. E. BLAKESLEE
Ext. Agont, Agriculture

tlon businen.
the Jast rew years a great
cleal of Improvement In tile productioo of more lean pork has
been achieved, according to
James Little, Area Extension
Agent, Animal Science, &amp;peakJog at the final session r1 the

ru

Meigs County

POMEROY- PUttlngleanpork
on the tables rl.coaaumersotrers
Melgo areo fuUUmo and partUme farmers an opportunity to
make money In the awine produc-

SUPER MARKETS

ALL mMS IN THIS AD.

252 THIRD AVENUE, GAlLIPOLIS, OHIO
California

PLUMP YOUNG

~ Hen Turkeys

Pascal
Celery
Crisp
and
Crunchy

Ito
14-lb.
Avs.

~
Stalk

Sucher's Yummy Brand-U.S. Govt. Inspected

No Center Sl·lces ·lfamovad

Perfect
for
Baking

lb.12c

Today In Oldo, reeder pip

Uonal.agrlcultural boys 10lder the
dlrecUOII ol vo.ag teacher Everett Holcomb ol. the M e 1 g s
High School. Several &lt;i tile boys
are plamlng to set up self-contained unlta to produce the feeder pii!B. The plga then will be
sold to area farmers or to the
orpnlzed feeder pig aales at
Chillicothe or Lancaster.
Some &lt;i tile boys who have attended one or more of Ule feeder pig meetings have Included
Bob Molclen, Lsrry Birchfield,
Harold Erlewlne, Bob Workmsn,
Dan cotterUI, and Rodney Walker.

are sold in one r1 the followIng ways: ~clal graded reedor pig auctlma, speclal IJIOIIty
controlled programs and aeUIng by private treaty, through
curtract, weekly livestock auctions, or on the farm.
Each of these methods has
its advantages and disadvantages. For turther information
on these advantaaea and disadvantages ask for the feeder pig
fact lestleta from tho Coonty
Extension O!llce.
At the last meeting Dr. Jay
Smith r1 the Ohio Department
of Agriculture, and Dr. Floyd
Smith, a visiting veterinarian
LOOK TO OUTSIDE
from Douglas, Arizona, were
In the past practically all the present. Dr. Smith replrted that
pigs tarrowed were fed out on hog cholera In Ohio may become
the same rarms. The advance- a thing of the past within the
ment &lt;i bog feeding tacllltlea next rew years due to the cooand equipment and larger farm trol programs which have been
operations have made m a n y In effect and which will eliminate
farmers look to an outside source tbe disease.
for feeder plgs. The trend Is
Hog cholera was first reportfor them to teed out more bogs ed in Ute United States in 1833.
thus making a more intensive It Is present in all parts or the
use or their facUlties and equip.. comtry, although It awears most
ment.
often In the oornbelt. H has been
Developmert of better farrow- eradicated from Canada and aplog facilities has made it pos- pears there mly sporadically
sible for some farmen to COl- as a result ol accidental introcentrate on the 4 ')-ear 81'01mdn ductlm of Infectious msterlal.
buslneBB of producingfeemrplgs
Disease problems ln swine,
to sell to feeders.
according to Dr. Smith, are primarily SB.Imonela and Eryr;ipe-

las. Other diseases wbieh must
be controlled by feeder p I g
producers include TGE andVPP.
Mr. Uttle gave several tips
on getting plga ready for market. It has been observed there
are several things a pig producer can do wlth a llttle Ume and
expense which will help his pigs
look better and bring a much
higher price.
They should be clean - Pigs
should have a clean bed at all
times; however, an extra supply r:A clean straw at leaat a
week before the sale will clean
up most pigs, In the warm months
many sellers find it beneficial
to wash their pigs. (Do oot turn
the hose Into the ears rl ptgs.)
Worming - Pigs shoold be
worm tree. This also holps the
price they bring,
Delousing Lice are quite
easy to control . They tend to
make a rough hair coat which
makes a pig look less thrlfl.y.
These three things mentioned may seem like a small thing
to the producer. However, any
one of these m~cy easily affect
tbe price your plgs bring by
$1 to $3 per hundredweight.
In the last Area Feemr ptg
Sale at Lancaster on October
25, 998 feeder plge were sold
wlth an average weight of 56
pounds and an average price per
hundredweight of $30.34 per hun-

1

FIR.L SHANK HALF

SOUTHERN YAMS

er pig meeting was the voea-

2500 Invited to Evening Classes
.r__ ..r ' Aimed at Improving Beef Profits
k
th
be
F-ZNOfS to
an lUI IOf.

lb.

Fully Cooked Hams
U.S. NO. I

me

At the recent Farm Science
Review two pork carcasses were
on dispi OJ. The meat;y cype weighed 195 pounds and the fat cype
210 pounds. The carcass length
oC the meat type was 31.61nehes,
of the fat cype 27.5 Inches. The
backfat thickness on tbe meaty
cype was 1.07 lnehes but on the
rat type, 1.8 inches. The loin eye
area (at the loth rib) was 4.63
square Inches on the meat type
and only 2.24 square lnchea oo
the rat t;ype.
When the total carcass was
CLt up and the varlous parts
tlgured at the correct price, the
lean lype carcass was worth
$22.32 and the fat cype only
$18.33.
Here in Meigs County several farmers are producing feed·
er pigs which are then sold to
other farmers in the area or outside the area who have plentv of
feed and can do a cheaper job
ol feeding out the pli!B ror approximately the last three fourlha of the growth period.
One or the very interesting
proJects reported atthelastfeed-

MEDALLION BRAND U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED

WI USIIVI TMI liGHT
TO LIMIT QUANTITIU OM

Feeder Pig School tlllo pastwook
In Mlcldleport.
According to Uttle, Increase
In the a1ze &lt;i the loin e,ye, Increase in carcass length, and
remctioo In bsck!at thlcknela Ia
a mark of better breeding In the
production &lt;i lean
pork.

As we gather with friends and relattves for the annual Thanksgiving
Day feast, we will be counting our

With a $7.50 Purchase excluding Cost of Turkey.
Limi~ne Per Customer
While Supply Lasts-Sorry, No Rain Checks
WITHOUT REQUIRED PURCHASES .......... . ...... . . · .. lb. 35c

blessings. Sure, we all have our prob-lems and our sorrows, but we have
many, many reasons for joy and

thanksgiving, too.

RIVERSIDE BRAND

U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED

Fully Cooked

CANNED
HAMS
$3.98
5-lb.
Size

GRADE A

U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED

TURKEYS
18 lbs. and Over

lb.3Jc

,, .

Important among our personal ble311ings is the privilege of.having so many
of you as customers and friends of
our bll8iness. It is our pleasure to
"!!""• your neods.
~

~

..

HAPPY THANKSGIVING!
J. D. NORTH
PRODUCE CO.

BY BRYSON R. CARTER
Extension Agent, Agriculture
GALLIPOI.IS - Seven ol our
Gallla Count,y beef cattle farmers have been working "overtime" more than usual these past
few weeks. They are Carl Hall,
George Woodward, Doug Kayser,
Charles DW'I.can, Paul Harrison,
Don Swisher, and Donovan Pope.
Really, it's not unusual that they
have been working long hours.
It's what they have been doing
that 1 want to tell you about.
~ are menfers of the re-

organized Gallla COWT\Y Extension Beef catUe Committee.
Their prime objective is to open
doors to a better future tn beef
cattle rarmingfor all Gallia Cotmty cattlemen.

The same three teachers will re-

To get the ball rolling, t h e y
have been helping me and our
Area Extension Agents set up
a serlesof evening classes, start~
ing this coming Tuesday evenln&amp; Nov. 26, for feeder calf producers, cattle feeders, and any
one else Interested in beet cat-

peat the same talks they gave
during the first class period.
You will have the apportunity to
participate ln a different class
this time. This secoodclassends
at 9:15 p,m, and that will be all
for the evening.
.
AU of the classes wtll be held
on Tuesday evenings. As I men-

tl e.

!I~jjjjijjjjjjjpjpjpjpjp.;;iiii;.;;jjjjpjjjjjjjjiiiiiiaUiiijaaiij~JIIIJIII•IJIIIJIII•~JIIIJII~JII~JIIIJ

jh~~~~ u.,,eo 15ft.
CHEST
FREEZER

DAD'S DEPARTMENT
SHOPMATE
1'h'' Power

A g1fl that keeps g1v1ng the year -around'

SAW

Ha s Ure t hane foam

\\

1nsulat• on for thin
wa ll s- more space 1n
s1de, less lloor space

___

outs1de

BUY WITH NO
DOWN PAYMENT

-Gifts for Mom:
DOMINION 2-SUCE

TOASTER
GP1es you the

nght shade of
crunchy toast
every t1me 1

83148

7-Piece
Screw Driver Set • • 2.19
Ray-0-Vac Red Flasher
Lantern ---- - ·- - 3.95
Includes baHery.

12-CUP
SUNBEAM

PERC

S12110 $13110

SUNBEAM

MIXER
L•ghtwe•ght and
portable, but has
powerful motor for
COOk l ng - mi)( I O£

needs

SUNBEAM HAIR

CURLER SET
New sty le heat curl1ng
set w1th 20 pla!t•c
curlers, handy heal rod

stand &amp; carry•ng case

823110

POMEROY
Jack w.

About 2,500 people have beer
invited to the Vocational Agriculture building of Gallia Academy HighSchool, wheretheclaaa.
ea will be conducted .
Those who attend Tuesday eveninl( s session will find thi1
school somewhat different rrom
earlier '1leef schools." Three
classes, beginning at 7:30p.m. ,
wlll be conducted in different
rooms, but all at the same time.
Thus, you'll need to decldewhlch
one of the three to attend the
first pniod. Following the first
ciao's ( which lailts i5 mi(!Uteo),
we'll take a coffee break and eo
into the second class period at
8:30 p.m. Here again you'll need
to make a choice of classes.

Open Eveiy Nltht Ti16:00 P.M.
Carsey, Mar.
Phone 992·2181

tioned,
the first
one
is be
November
26.
Three
others
will
held on
Deeerrfir 3, 10, and 17, respectively
Farm management, agronom,y
and beef cattle production, management and marketing are included In tills school. BUI &amp;nlth,
Ares Extension Agent, F a r m
Management, will take each evening on subjects relating to beef'
farm management.
Jim Little, Area Extensloo
Agent, Animal Industry, will talk
abolt beef cattle alone, and CharUe Knotts and Don Myers, Ares
Extension Agant, Agronon\y, and
OSU Exta&gt;sion Agronomist (Forago), respectively, will talk about aga OIKnli,Y as tt applies to
beef cattle farming.
Here are the datail s f1 each
claaa and each evening:
Section 1: Teacher - J i m
Little, Nov. 26 - 1:30 p.m. and
8:30 p.m. - Jim will cover beot
cattle seloction; traits f1 economic Importance; herltabWcy;
old versus new t;ype beef' animal; hoW to select for modem

dred pounds or $16.93 per hesd.
Farmers marketing feeder
pigs through graded auctions
must realize aucUons are t h e
quickest metOOd &lt;i marketing to
relied: changes In supply a n d
demand. They should be Informtlrno ot
cer-

Ialli welghta of pigs may brine
aprtceadva.ntage . However,molt
farmers who have aold feeder
pip fw several yeara I i n d
pigs weighing between 40 and
70 pounds bring tbe hiJhell prle-.
es and net '.twm the molt dollar"

SANTA SUGGESTS
PUROX
Oxrren·Acetylene
WELDING
and
CUTIING
OUTFITS
TYPE W-201
PART-«!645

155.00

Co.

BANKRUPTCY

In the United States District Court for the Southern Dis-

trict of Ohio, Eastern Division. No. 41750, No

PUBliC AUCTION

l•qu1dot1on of
GALLIPOLIS TIRE ANO TRIM CO.
1622 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh1o
on

THUR., DEC. 5th ot 10:00 A.M.
REAL PROPERTY
A life estate In twerty-four ant one-haJJ percent (241h per
cent) of the nilnerals in the followmg described laiXI: Town--

Dec. 3 -

7:30 p.m. and 8:30
Jlm will cover productlon teltlng; how to enroll;
costa; what' 1 needed to production test; freeze branding; uling
P, T. to Improve herd and get
greater returns per cow kept.
Dec. 10 - 7:30p.m. and 8:30
p.m. - Claas will be held at Ev-

ans

Paeldllg Company;

-

with where beef cattle are pro.

duced llld marketed and - tunltleo for l - calf production lD our area; obstacle• 1o
overcome In our firming

proeroms.
Sodlon

11: Teacher - B II I

Smllh, Nov. 26,

Dec. 3, llld Dee.

7:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.
Bill will use 2 - 3 ovenlllp
pt IIIIo tho lll\'e-. cooll

10 -

to

llld nlurna l'rGm ---~
......me
evaluatlea &lt;i practices

l lld

ltlnl

I Ia

.....

PERSONAL PROPERTY
Batter1es (4); Adding machine; Miscellaneous books; Customer Coul'\ter (plywood); Display racks (2); Wooden desk;
Desk chair; Metal cabinet; Auto hub c~s (4); Stool; Lot of
MisL-ellaneous supplies; Motorcycle seat; F1oor mats (17);
Seat covers (101); Tire!! (used 46); Farm tractor tire; Folding table an:l 5 chairs; Sh~ rollers or creepers (4); Jack
stands (3); Hydraulic Roller Bumper Jacks (2); Acetylene
Torch guages and hose (2 sets); Fire extinguisher; Battery
Jump cables; Plywood cab1net; United Delco Cabinet and
contents; Electric bench grinder; Bench vice; MateriJt.l
racks (4); Work tables (5); Lot of Rolls Upholstering material and Auto Rug material.
Floor mounted, au operated tire changer; Air compressor;
Stepladder; Truck tire wrench; Tea cart; Floor broo~ and
snow shove; 1- ront eOO ahgrunent rack; Small hydrauhc
.)lick; Small 4-drawer cabinet and contents; Holler fioor J&amp;ck;
Tractor innertubes {1 13 x 38 and 3 10 x 20}; Tractor aOO
heavy dul)' equipment; battenes (2); S&amp;mple auto seats (8);
Electric clock; HaOO roll billmg machine.

500

~Ia

ould
rtbo

.lull
!.40.
or\1

...
Pll

ballld

.....

.....
erst

'?·_

•••

mce

diu
....,..

flo
MR. LITTLE

MR. SMITH

-.
por-

urt

such as creep feeding; Call v r;,
spring calving; how much can you
afford to pa.y Cor a superior bull;
Dec. 17 - 1:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.
m . - Bill wtli discuss keeping
and using farm accounts and
record analysis.
Section m: Teachers - Dr.
Don Meyers, and Charles Knotts,
Area Extension Agent, Agronomy, Nov. 26 - 7:30 p.m. and
8:30 p.m. - Beef cow forage

management systems; Dec. J7:30pm. and 8:30pm.- Yearromd grazing for beef cattle;
round bales; Dec. 10 - 7:30
p.m. and 8:30p.m - Fertilization ol' pastures and meadows;
Dec 17 - 7:30 p.m. and 8:30
p. m - Interpreting your soil
and plant analysis rQPOrts; figuring out how to apply the fertilizer elements your soil test
calls (or .

11
MASTER MIX

U 11Xi:\:t(\U:II:~~IillU'iiilXJlimXJ

See us for the
NEW INTERNATIONAl:

HEAVYWEIGHT
in the 50 hp

dat
•

ver
oadlho

tho
I a
;ina

.........._
. &lt;I

naoan

The Hunters
Choice

SPECIAL-ONE WEEK ONLY
NOV. 25-3oth

S1.99

Your Fonn Supply Servin Center

CENTIAL SOYA
OF OHIO
3r.t &amp; Syc...oro $to.

ter,
&lt;i

l

HOUND PACK
DOG FOOD

REG. $2.«!
SAVE 41c

Who

'11

NEW

25 lb. BAG

' red

~

class

Introduces

carcass

7:30 and 8:30p.m.
Jim~ s last elua will deal

---

Terms- Cosh
Ronald R. Calhoun- Trusfee
~~-&amp; j A. French - Auctioneer

evaluatloo; USDA grading JIYItem; cWrer•eea between a meat
- cype ateer and over.flnlshed

-...
Dec. 17 -

l&lt;ey,
Vir-

ship 56 North, Range 69 West, 6th P.M., Cllrn»be11 County,
Wyoming. Tract 50 in Sections 15 &amp; 22 &amp; 27; Track SS in
Sections 15 &amp; 22; 'I ract 42 in Sections 14, IS &amp; 23; NW 114
NE 1A. E'h Elh or Section 21; Lot 2 and NW 1( or Section 22;
NE 1M NE 1/4 of Section 28.

cype.
p.m. -

,.

41751.

One look w111 show you that th1s new tractor 1s loaded
w1th features you want:
New Size 81g-tractor strength 10 a compact package·
Extra muscle 1n the frame, front bolster, aMies, axle
earners, bull gear drives, differential, dynallfe clutch
and d1sk brakes. The 544 International Farmall
we1shs over three tons.
New Power B1gser, mult1-range engines, 52 hp•, gas
or diesel, handle 4 bottoms at a fast clip, w1th 5
speeds forward, one reverse. Optional Torque Amplifier gives 10 speeds forward, 2 reverse-increases
pull power up to 45%.
New Comfort Hydrostatic power steering IS standard.
Suspension seat adJusts s1x ways. Deck IS clean and
roomy, corrugated for safety.
New Good Looks Instrument panel1s easier to read.
Bar-type snlle provides easy access to rad1ator and
011 cooler .
See the new International and International Farmall
544 here now ... put them through tha1r paces ...
fmd out for yourself what they can do.

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.
Rear Meies General Hospital

"992·2116
Ph. 446-2463

•Manufacturer's estimate

PomeroJ

Ito
,..

-...
avo
1111,

1111

hal

••

ldl

ut

.......
om.
rib
bot

�8 -

'ftle Sundl-v Thlwl• • sentinel, Sundllv. Nowmber 2t, 1988

9 -

The Sunda) Times - Senttnel, Sunday, Noventber 24, 1968

New in Farming

There's Money in Producing Lean Pori{
BY C. E. BLAKESLEE
Ext. Agont, Agriculture

tlon businen.
the Jast rew years a great
cleal of Improvement In tile productioo of more lean pork has
been achieved, according to
James Little, Area Extension
Agent, Animal Science, &amp;peakJog at the final session r1 the

ru

Meigs County

POMEROY- PUttlngleanpork
on the tables rl.coaaumersotrers
Melgo areo fuUUmo and partUme farmers an opportunity to
make money In the awine produc-

SUPER MARKETS

ALL mMS IN THIS AD.

252 THIRD AVENUE, GAlLIPOLIS, OHIO
California

PLUMP YOUNG

~ Hen Turkeys

Pascal
Celery
Crisp
and
Crunchy

Ito
14-lb.
Avs.

~
Stalk

Sucher's Yummy Brand-U.S. Govt. Inspected

No Center Sl·lces ·lfamovad

Perfect
for
Baking

lb.12c

Today In Oldo, reeder pip

Uonal.agrlcultural boys 10lder the
dlrecUOII ol vo.ag teacher Everett Holcomb ol. the M e 1 g s
High School. Several &lt;i tile boys
are plamlng to set up self-contained unlta to produce the feeder pii!B. The plga then will be
sold to area farmers or to the
orpnlzed feeder pig aales at
Chillicothe or Lancaster.
Some &lt;i tile boys who have attended one or more of Ule feeder pig meetings have Included
Bob Molclen, Lsrry Birchfield,
Harold Erlewlne, Bob Workmsn,
Dan cotterUI, and Rodney Walker.

are sold in one r1 the followIng ways: ~clal graded reedor pig auctlma, speclal IJIOIIty
controlled programs and aeUIng by private treaty, through
curtract, weekly livestock auctions, or on the farm.
Each of these methods has
its advantages and disadvantages. For turther information
on these advantaaea and disadvantages ask for the feeder pig
fact lestleta from tho Coonty
Extension O!llce.
At the last meeting Dr. Jay
Smith r1 the Ohio Department
of Agriculture, and Dr. Floyd
Smith, a visiting veterinarian
LOOK TO OUTSIDE
from Douglas, Arizona, were
In the past practically all the present. Dr. Smith replrted that
pigs tarrowed were fed out on hog cholera In Ohio may become
the same rarms. The advance- a thing of the past within the
ment &lt;i bog feeding tacllltlea next rew years due to the cooand equipment and larger farm trol programs which have been
operations have made m a n y In effect and which will eliminate
farmers look to an outside source tbe disease.
for feeder plgs. The trend Is
Hog cholera was first reportfor them to teed out more bogs ed in Ute United States in 1833.
thus making a more intensive It Is present in all parts or the
use or their facUlties and equip.. comtry, although It awears most
ment.
often In the oornbelt. H has been
Developmert of better farrow- eradicated from Canada and aplog facilities has made it pos- pears there mly sporadically
sible for some farmen to COl- as a result ol accidental introcentrate on the 4 ')-ear 81'01mdn ductlm of Infectious msterlal.
buslneBB of producingfeemrplgs
Disease problems ln swine,
to sell to feeders.
according to Dr. Smith, are primarily SB.Imonela and Eryr;ipe-

las. Other diseases wbieh must
be controlled by feeder p I g
producers include TGE andVPP.
Mr. Uttle gave several tips
on getting plga ready for market. It has been observed there
are several things a pig producer can do wlth a llttle Ume and
expense which will help his pigs
look better and bring a much
higher price.
They should be clean - Pigs
should have a clean bed at all
times; however, an extra supply r:A clean straw at leaat a
week before the sale will clean
up most pigs, In the warm months
many sellers find it beneficial
to wash their pigs. (Do oot turn
the hose Into the ears rl ptgs.)
Worming - Pigs shoold be
worm tree. This also holps the
price they bring,
Delousing Lice are quite
easy to control . They tend to
make a rough hair coat which
makes a pig look less thrlfl.y.
These three things mentioned may seem like a small thing
to the producer. However, any
one of these m~cy easily affect
tbe price your plgs bring by
$1 to $3 per hundredweight.
In the last Area Feemr ptg
Sale at Lancaster on October
25, 998 feeder plge were sold
wlth an average weight of 56
pounds and an average price per
hundredweight of $30.34 per hun-

1

FIR.L SHANK HALF

SOUTHERN YAMS

er pig meeting was the voea-

2500 Invited to Evening Classes
.r__ ..r ' Aimed at Improving Beef Profits
k
th
be
F-ZNOfS to
an lUI IOf.

lb.

Fully Cooked Hams
U.S. NO. I

me

At the recent Farm Science
Review two pork carcasses were
on dispi OJ. The meat;y cype weighed 195 pounds and the fat cype
210 pounds. The carcass length
oC the meat type was 31.61nehes,
of the fat cype 27.5 Inches. The
backfat thickness on tbe meaty
cype was 1.07 lnehes but on the
rat type, 1.8 inches. The loin eye
area (at the loth rib) was 4.63
square Inches on the meat type
and only 2.24 square lnchea oo
the rat t;ype.
When the total carcass was
CLt up and the varlous parts
tlgured at the correct price, the
lean lype carcass was worth
$22.32 and the fat cype only
$18.33.
Here in Meigs County several farmers are producing feed·
er pigs which are then sold to
other farmers in the area or outside the area who have plentv of
feed and can do a cheaper job
ol feeding out the pli!B ror approximately the last three fourlha of the growth period.
One or the very interesting
proJects reported atthelastfeed-

MEDALLION BRAND U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED

WI USIIVI TMI liGHT
TO LIMIT QUANTITIU OM

Feeder Pig School tlllo pastwook
In Mlcldleport.
According to Uttle, Increase
In the a1ze &lt;i the loin e,ye, Increase in carcass length, and
remctioo In bsck!at thlcknela Ia
a mark of better breeding In the
production &lt;i lean
pork.

As we gather with friends and relattves for the annual Thanksgiving
Day feast, we will be counting our

With a $7.50 Purchase excluding Cost of Turkey.
Limi~ne Per Customer
While Supply Lasts-Sorry, No Rain Checks
WITHOUT REQUIRED PURCHASES .......... . ...... . . · .. lb. 35c

blessings. Sure, we all have our prob-lems and our sorrows, but we have
many, many reasons for joy and

thanksgiving, too.

RIVERSIDE BRAND

U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED

Fully Cooked

CANNED
HAMS
$3.98
5-lb.
Size

GRADE A

U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED

TURKEYS
18 lbs. and Over

lb.3Jc

,, .

Important among our personal ble311ings is the privilege of.having so many
of you as customers and friends of
our bll8iness. It is our pleasure to
"!!""• your neods.
~

~

..

HAPPY THANKSGIVING!
J. D. NORTH
PRODUCE CO.

BY BRYSON R. CARTER
Extension Agent, Agriculture
GALLIPOI.IS - Seven ol our
Gallla Count,y beef cattle farmers have been working "overtime" more than usual these past
few weeks. They are Carl Hall,
George Woodward, Doug Kayser,
Charles DW'I.can, Paul Harrison,
Don Swisher, and Donovan Pope.
Really, it's not unusual that they
have been working long hours.
It's what they have been doing
that 1 want to tell you about.
~ are menfers of the re-

organized Gallla COWT\Y Extension Beef catUe Committee.
Their prime objective is to open
doors to a better future tn beef
cattle rarmingfor all Gallia Cotmty cattlemen.

The same three teachers will re-

To get the ball rolling, t h e y
have been helping me and our
Area Extension Agents set up
a serlesof evening classes, start~
ing this coming Tuesday evenln&amp; Nov. 26, for feeder calf producers, cattle feeders, and any
one else Interested in beet cat-

peat the same talks they gave
during the first class period.
You will have the apportunity to
participate ln a different class
this time. This secoodclassends
at 9:15 p,m, and that will be all
for the evening.
.
AU of the classes wtll be held
on Tuesday evenings. As I men-

tl e.

!I~jjjjijjjjjjjpjpjpjpjp.;;iiii;.;;jjjjpjjjjjjjjiiiiiiaUiiijaaiij~JIIIJIII•IJIIIJIII•~JIIIJII~JII~JIIIJ

jh~~~~ u.,,eo 15ft.
CHEST
FREEZER

DAD'S DEPARTMENT
SHOPMATE
1'h'' Power

A g1fl that keeps g1v1ng the year -around'

SAW

Ha s Ure t hane foam

\\

1nsulat• on for thin
wa ll s- more space 1n
s1de, less lloor space

___

outs1de

BUY WITH NO
DOWN PAYMENT

-Gifts for Mom:
DOMINION 2-SUCE

TOASTER
GP1es you the

nght shade of
crunchy toast
every t1me 1

83148

7-Piece
Screw Driver Set • • 2.19
Ray-0-Vac Red Flasher
Lantern ---- - ·- - 3.95
Includes baHery.

12-CUP
SUNBEAM

PERC

S12110 $13110

SUNBEAM

MIXER
L•ghtwe•ght and
portable, but has
powerful motor for
COOk l ng - mi)( I O£

needs

SUNBEAM HAIR

CURLER SET
New sty le heat curl1ng
set w1th 20 pla!t•c
curlers, handy heal rod

stand &amp; carry•ng case

823110

POMEROY
Jack w.

About 2,500 people have beer
invited to the Vocational Agriculture building of Gallia Academy HighSchool, wheretheclaaa.
ea will be conducted .
Those who attend Tuesday eveninl( s session will find thi1
school somewhat different rrom
earlier '1leef schools." Three
classes, beginning at 7:30p.m. ,
wlll be conducted in different
rooms, but all at the same time.
Thus, you'll need to decldewhlch
one of the three to attend the
first pniod. Following the first
ciao's ( which lailts i5 mi(!Uteo),
we'll take a coffee break and eo
into the second class period at
8:30 p.m. Here again you'll need
to make a choice of classes.

Open Eveiy Nltht Ti16:00 P.M.
Carsey, Mar.
Phone 992·2181

tioned,
the first
one
is be
November
26.
Three
others
will
held on
Deeerrfir 3, 10, and 17, respectively
Farm management, agronom,y
and beef cattle production, management and marketing are included In tills school. BUI &amp;nlth,
Ares Extension Agent, F a r m
Management, will take each evening on subjects relating to beef'
farm management.
Jim Little, Area Extensloo
Agent, Animal Industry, will talk
abolt beef cattle alone, and CharUe Knotts and Don Myers, Ares
Extension Agant, Agronon\y, and
OSU Exta&gt;sion Agronomist (Forago), respectively, will talk about aga OIKnli,Y as tt applies to
beef cattle farming.
Here are the datail s f1 each
claaa and each evening:
Section 1: Teacher - J i m
Little, Nov. 26 - 1:30 p.m. and
8:30 p.m. - Jim will cover beot
cattle seloction; traits f1 economic Importance; herltabWcy;
old versus new t;ype beef' animal; hoW to select for modem

dred pounds or $16.93 per hesd.
Farmers marketing feeder
pigs through graded auctions
must realize aucUons are t h e
quickest metOOd &lt;i marketing to
relied: changes In supply a n d
demand. They should be Informtlrno ot
cer-

Ialli welghta of pigs may brine
aprtceadva.ntage . However,molt
farmers who have aold feeder
pip fw several yeara I i n d
pigs weighing between 40 and
70 pounds bring tbe hiJhell prle-.
es and net '.twm the molt dollar"

SANTA SUGGESTS
PUROX
Oxrren·Acetylene
WELDING
and
CUTIING
OUTFITS
TYPE W-201
PART-«!645

155.00

Co.

BANKRUPTCY

In the United States District Court for the Southern Dis-

trict of Ohio, Eastern Division. No. 41750, No

PUBliC AUCTION

l•qu1dot1on of
GALLIPOLIS TIRE ANO TRIM CO.
1622 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh1o
on

THUR., DEC. 5th ot 10:00 A.M.
REAL PROPERTY
A life estate In twerty-four ant one-haJJ percent (241h per
cent) of the nilnerals in the followmg described laiXI: Town--

Dec. 3 -

7:30 p.m. and 8:30
Jlm will cover productlon teltlng; how to enroll;
costa; what' 1 needed to production test; freeze branding; uling
P, T. to Improve herd and get
greater returns per cow kept.
Dec. 10 - 7:30p.m. and 8:30
p.m. - Claas will be held at Ev-

ans

Paeldllg Company;

-

with where beef cattle are pro.

duced llld marketed and - tunltleo for l - calf production lD our area; obstacle• 1o
overcome In our firming

proeroms.
Sodlon

11: Teacher - B II I

Smllh, Nov. 26,

Dec. 3, llld Dee.

7:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.
Bill will use 2 - 3 ovenlllp
pt IIIIo tho lll\'e-. cooll

10 -

to

llld nlurna l'rGm ---~
......me
evaluatlea &lt;i practices

l lld

ltlnl

I Ia

.....

PERSONAL PROPERTY
Batter1es (4); Adding machine; Miscellaneous books; Customer Coul'\ter (plywood); Display racks (2); Wooden desk;
Desk chair; Metal cabinet; Auto hub c~s (4); Stool; Lot of
MisL-ellaneous supplies; Motorcycle seat; F1oor mats (17);
Seat covers (101); Tire!! (used 46); Farm tractor tire; Folding table an:l 5 chairs; Sh~ rollers or creepers (4); Jack
stands (3); Hydraulic Roller Bumper Jacks (2); Acetylene
Torch guages and hose (2 sets); Fire extinguisher; Battery
Jump cables; Plywood cab1net; United Delco Cabinet and
contents; Electric bench grinder; Bench vice; MateriJt.l
racks (4); Work tables (5); Lot of Rolls Upholstering material and Auto Rug material.
Floor mounted, au operated tire changer; Air compressor;
Stepladder; Truck tire wrench; Tea cart; Floor broo~ and
snow shove; 1- ront eOO ahgrunent rack; Small hydrauhc
.)lick; Small 4-drawer cabinet and contents; Holler fioor J&amp;ck;
Tractor innertubes {1 13 x 38 and 3 10 x 20}; Tractor aOO
heavy dul)' equipment; battenes (2); S&amp;mple auto seats (8);
Electric clock; HaOO roll billmg machine.

500

~Ia

ould
rtbo

.lull
!.40.
or\1

...
Pll

ballld

.....

.....
erst

'?·_

•••

mce

diu
....,..

flo
MR. LITTLE

MR. SMITH

-.
por-

urt

such as creep feeding; Call v r;,
spring calving; how much can you
afford to pa.y Cor a superior bull;
Dec. 17 - 1:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.
m . - Bill wtli discuss keeping
and using farm accounts and
record analysis.
Section m: Teachers - Dr.
Don Meyers, and Charles Knotts,
Area Extension Agent, Agronomy, Nov. 26 - 7:30 p.m. and
8:30 p.m. - Beef cow forage

management systems; Dec. J7:30pm. and 8:30pm.- Yearromd grazing for beef cattle;
round bales; Dec. 10 - 7:30
p.m. and 8:30p.m - Fertilization ol' pastures and meadows;
Dec 17 - 7:30 p.m. and 8:30
p. m - Interpreting your soil
and plant analysis rQPOrts; figuring out how to apply the fertilizer elements your soil test
calls (or .

11
MASTER MIX

U 11Xi:\:t(\U:II:~~IillU'iiilXJlimXJ

See us for the
NEW INTERNATIONAl:

HEAVYWEIGHT
in the 50 hp

dat
•

ver
oadlho

tho
I a
;ina

.........._
. &lt;I

naoan

The Hunters
Choice

SPECIAL-ONE WEEK ONLY
NOV. 25-3oth

S1.99

Your Fonn Supply Servin Center

CENTIAL SOYA
OF OHIO
3r.t &amp; Syc...oro $to.

ter,
&lt;i

l

HOUND PACK
DOG FOOD

REG. $2.«!
SAVE 41c

Who

'11

NEW

25 lb. BAG

' red

~

class

Introduces

carcass

7:30 and 8:30p.m.
Jim~ s last elua will deal

---

Terms- Cosh
Ronald R. Calhoun- Trusfee
~~-&amp; j A. French - Auctioneer

evaluatloo; USDA grading JIYItem; cWrer•eea between a meat
- cype ateer and over.flnlshed

-...
Dec. 17 -

l&lt;ey,
Vir-

ship 56 North, Range 69 West, 6th P.M., Cllrn»be11 County,
Wyoming. Tract 50 in Sections 15 &amp; 22 &amp; 27; Track SS in
Sections 15 &amp; 22; 'I ract 42 in Sections 14, IS &amp; 23; NW 114
NE 1A. E'h Elh or Section 21; Lot 2 and NW 1( or Section 22;
NE 1M NE 1/4 of Section 28.

cype.
p.m. -

,.

41751.

One look w111 show you that th1s new tractor 1s loaded
w1th features you want:
New Size 81g-tractor strength 10 a compact package·
Extra muscle 1n the frame, front bolster, aMies, axle
earners, bull gear drives, differential, dynallfe clutch
and d1sk brakes. The 544 International Farmall
we1shs over three tons.
New Power B1gser, mult1-range engines, 52 hp•, gas
or diesel, handle 4 bottoms at a fast clip, w1th 5
speeds forward, one reverse. Optional Torque Amplifier gives 10 speeds forward, 2 reverse-increases
pull power up to 45%.
New Comfort Hydrostatic power steering IS standard.
Suspension seat adJusts s1x ways. Deck IS clean and
roomy, corrugated for safety.
New Good Looks Instrument panel1s easier to read.
Bar-type snlle provides easy access to rad1ator and
011 cooler .
See the new International and International Farmall
544 here now ... put them through tha1r paces ...
fmd out for yourself what they can do.

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.
Rear Meies General Hospital

"992·2116
Ph. 446-2463

•Manufacturer's estimate

PomeroJ

Ito
,..

-...
avo
1111,

1111

hal

••

ldl

ut

.......
om.
rib
bot

�.... _ . . . . . . .

~.-.

...

·· - ~ -

~l'fll.~f.lit" ...~d'l't" 7· • • •• ~ · -

10.- The Sunday Times - Sentlne~. Sunday, November 24, 1968

. ,..
l.

..

Plumbing &amp; HHtlng

For Sale

PUllliiliMi a
IIJ:A1'1NG, Ill ftN A -

III'ANDAIID

t BIJ'rt:HERING hog. I Charo1111 bolfer call, I cut-of! mr

to ... lln!ftOd wltll belt one!
ll'f.l

pulley. Ph. itiiiSII.

JJtY~ilJE®~::::!!:! ~=

••s:a

OOMPlEI'E barner sllop equip. POII

m&lt;nt. 851

Second Ave .. Galli-

m-3

pollo, 0.

tt61 CHEVROLET Bel

I
new

Air

door !ledan. new tires.

exhaust sys~m. new shodts.
new ring and valve job. trail·
er hlkh. Ph. 118-0053. f/3.!

1300 roBACCO or tomato stick.!
at a bargain price CharUe
Stone. Rutland, 0 .
278-1
KEEP your ~arpets be.auttf1·:
~it£" constant footsteps of
a busy family Get Blue Lu•·
tl'f. Rent electric shampooer
II Central Supply Co. 278-&gt;
CARPET t'OIOI"S looking dim'
Bring 'em back - g1ve 'em
vim . Use Blue Lustre Rent
electric shampooer $1 Shop.
pan!, 882 lsi Ave
~

sPINET PlANO
WANTED. resoonslble party to
take over lnw montft1y J)a.J·
tnents on a solnet plano. Can
be seen locally Write Credit
Manager. P. 0 Box
SbelbvvfDe. lndlana.
2'18-1

!lent electrle shamoooer S1.
Fanner's Hardware Co. 2?1-5

S.rvlces Orfwed
La'S PLUMBING • RJ!3IOD.
II:LINO, Cl'cnm OIJ, 0. PIL

•• ...

111-11

Ul'JIIOlJl'S GALl.IPOU8 ' "
Gl llooalld A ""'- from Pool Ollloe

PIIGIIe ••

Yoar 1ma ... DNIIr

....,

"-

IITL/,(J

o.-. ...

e11eet w1111 ,.,...
- at tlto Neal Ins. ApneJ,

.. Statll !II. ,\fad~ lor - .
liN. ~- buiplbol

IIIII ........ llabiiiiJ.

11-tr

a

w.

I

[RIMBOI)

NA'ftONWIDE JIISUIIAIICI
Atri'O. lin!. life. 41 Statll
woldo r. ~~mm.
11.
llnnm. - - -

t

TOIJ(;UO±

V

~

...

[j

THE PI?OCH'S
TREE.

FAVO~ITE

sow B1'1'811fO tho cirdod lotion
to rorm the surprise answer, u

~

~::L1:::=~~~;;~~,1~~~=~1Nillt'lled by the above cartoon.

~Pril~'l~tbe~SilltPRlSE=~AIIS:::.:IER::..:bn=--.JI

Tailor Your Shampoo

L l

Tailor your shampoo to

J,.n,t.l ..~: IV£NT

your individual hair type.
Dry. oil. regular
you
choose it. And alwa•,. s sham·
poo more than once ·... then
rinse until hair is so squeaky
clean you can hear it.

\ ... l .. rdon ••

I

SOI.AJI

I I I II X)

(

NICm

FAIN Bllormlllatlall Co. 'llllaal-

lllllarll, Oblo, PIL I'IUI.11

SCiVDA}
f.Ht\IH J

6""
7~

·~· an~

.
.
"
0

2""'""'

8,...

lm..: II' of';~
f&gt;anriiOI!l
Tum £ Jo r11

&lt;ubi]..,

..

00

CHUn.L8

,"
oo

h&lt;illll Ufe

l\ar10011

L,..,,._ WOI"&lt;I
Thl • I• 111e u r~

7"'"
8:'""
9""

miDIED elfdrle ad . .
a ' "'C. mrioudr, bodJ .,.

Glonlw.d
"i!te(l\

.111 .....

EDGAR VAN INW AGEN, lett, an::l Arthur Stobart, Ohio
Valley Bakl~ Co. employe, discun plans for the Monday and
Tuelda.y distribution of bread in Pomeroy by members of
Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion. Using a theme,
"Dough tor Dough.'' members of the post, assisted by Boy
Scouts, will deliver a lmr or bread to each Pomeroy home.
They hope to receive a contribution in excha~e. The pror..'Ceds
will go to Ule "Gins for the Yanks Who Gave," designed Lo provide Christmas remembrances ror hospitalized velerans.

BAILEY'S SUNOCO
Home of the $2000 Winner

433 Sunny Dollan Winnen

0

lud!:n·~"'

s...,

282 W. Maln-992-2995-Pomoroy, 0.

"
"
•""

"'"

l"rou•or·~

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f .&lt;t .. II IIIUfllllll.l

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HwxleJ - IIrin~~ !

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Jotls Albllnd 8lallon, 11111-

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!lotlog._.....
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M I. toolboli

rllrnatonu

lr0011hlo
Movie

9 "'"

n..t Girl
JOI.Imt) toU,._

"

MANNINGTON, W. Va. (UP!)
- Worken begau drWing holea
Into the explosion and fire
ravaged Mannlnaton No. 9 coal
mine Saturday to test the
underground alr and send
signals to where 78 miner&amp; were
tra)lped alnce early Wednesda,y.
The three-Inch holes will be
aWik to a depth ol about 700
feet, the level where most of
tile men were workfn&amp; when
I n l I l a I explosion thundered
through the mine btnore dawn
Wednesda,y.
Once completed, metal tubing

--

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

_,..... _....

2 "'~"
I .~
"~
2"

Johi'IIJ' Qun1

Nt'l WHII

3'" ....,.,
4:"" ""'""
5..: """'" ...,

"
:
6 "'"
7:""
8:""
9..:

11 Fined
. . By Court

""''

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'"""

Gudlll om
Wreolll1111

0.11rw Gamt

6"'"
7"'"
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,,,.,

Rotian' I

.....

6"'"

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R!bl~

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AMwe .,

C" urn Cob R..,.,n

7

Fllble M •wero

~;

Sleep) lelfo ro

9"

0"
,
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00

ll"""rl) l&lt;lllbHh eo

t5

I oro I 00 li"''C!"

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PIHUM

llarotl

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.....

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446-4ffi0

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JOOj{n"'"'
l&gt;o.,.r[J

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llld. ( 'aoett

I•'""•~

1\a

l'h~ Duduu
Aroo~ ....

Luvo

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lloWl lc hod

ll'ot W&lt;O"ld

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"""''"I

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r. HI•I(Oio"• loland

"
•"

8 ..
9,."
00

GUARANTEED
USED AND
REBUILT
PARTS

00

&lt;,iiJIIIIU&gt;'• loland

:..,.,.1 ... ,
~

llun&lt;lo1· llnnfllo;
lullo

I I

m•

I '" I

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ll~r e '

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r;oo! f •ti,\ 1

Peyl&lt;llo PI•""

ll.,.er)J lllllbUIIu

!llovlo

00

GtNn A•ru

ll:ow•

U, " ! ' - a.fore
INto" - Etr- Zbnb&lt;lllot, Rbondl nun~rw

HIC -

Gr.lf)f) Pt('lo

a~•

....

TUI:!iDAr
7:00 - ), ·•'J'ho Lui Suu.t"
t:toprr

HUibiUiu

floclr, lh.ldun, (}oro.

-

New•

DIJ,o of

llhll,..r

Jungle

-

SATUIIDAY

11:15 -

111UilSDAY

9:00 -

a, "lll&amp;r""

Paln tho

to' NilrtJ&gt;.

.
·-.....

'"

JJ ::JO - a, '"""Arrillnlltt"
- Rolwo" 81110~
WEDNESDAY
9100 - 13, "Blll.llll S.th"
U:3Q - I, "1111111111r Hotd"'
- Rdotr! Mhotu.

"Sort~~

3,

we.t"- t:arJGrwot,F.,.
Marie Sl.lrot
II:H - A, "Bnde uf F'rul.
lltnMltn" - B«h ~

1:00 -

S, "SorMtl\IIJi fort

Loo.I.J ....... - Don Bloc--

Gulli•~&lt;

~:011

"'""-

i:OO -

llf Sono" -

Burl~oltn

P.,..te"

Gnnl, All;!ro1 1~
11;30 - 8, "l&gt;ooMI .sm.JI uf
Suoout" - 9urt Lan-

~-

r-:r" -

t'JUDIIY
~. "All

7:00 "~Jthl

"Golf

,IOfln C..IVffl

9:00 - !, "Cia..... " - Cary

'· "lllaqan" -

....

r~n.

v...
Dt•

.11, "Stet« d. U..
bum" .. "Tt. !lpl·

11:30 - , "Tho .... ~ ....
Ill'' - Jolin P.,..., J ...
!illrllllll
l21IKI - R, "It 1\fAIIMd Onl
N~tt&gt;t" am GatU.

"""'-""""

Dtlllrt

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Guidi,. Llehl

..,.,

1

lllr. Conoun

Gllll.pn'o lola,.,

00

Newo

·-·

H-

a H1lp«i

NIWO

7"
8E.•

lhro Gtlflln

;~

9:

OE"

IH:
2""

wUI be sunk into the hoi es and
11ignals will be &amp;ent down to an
area where some of the men
were believed to be trapped.
The holes were expected to be

Villagers
Massacred

By V-Cong

completed sometime Sunday.
Little Hope
There was little hope that any
of the entombed miners were
alive because the undergrotmd
fires have been burning unchecked since the tirst exploslm
ripped through the ConsolidaUon
Coal Co. mine. Since then,
seven more massive explosions
rumbled through the mine.
Smoke still poured into the
atmosphere from the Llewellyn
and Mahan shafts. A company
official said no resclle effort
could be made untU alter 12 to
24 hours of "absolutely no
activity- no smoke or explosions."
Some relatives or the trapped
men "crashed" a news briefing
conducted by William Poundstone, exe~utlve vice president
of Consolidatlon CoaL
One man, whose brother was
among the 78, asked PolDldstone
WhY bore holes were not being
drilled ''over every area where
the men are believed to be,"

the man:
is not a matter ot. rnon~y.
You have to realize the vast
area we are contronted with."
Many Tunnels
The Mannington mine has
&amp;even miles of tunnels.
Mrs. Hertzel Mayle ol Knottsville, mother of 16 children
ranging In ago rrom 4 to 25
years, whose husband was in
the mine, said, '~1 know m,y
husband is coming out or there.
I won't say he will be unhurt
but I know he is coming out of
there alive. I just have to hope
ROME (UPO - A power strug.
that. 11
gle inside Jtqly' s largest party
James Davis, 30, ot Lumb· delayed the solution of a govern.
port, Consolidation Coal Co. ment crisis Saturday in a nation
mining engineer, whose brother, shaken by lD'lrest and violence.
Dale, 40, was among the
The Christian Democrats, who
trapped men, said he was have provided eight of Italy's
against sealing the mine "un- nine premiers since the end or
less it must be done as a last World War n, were locked in an
resort."
lnternal battle for election of a
Once seaJed, all oxygen would new party leadership.
be cut off from entering the
The crisis, which hurt the pres·
mine and the tires would burn tige or an already discredited
out.
political class, coincided with a
wave or student and labor unrest.
A special anti - terroristforce
or 1,500 policemen patrolled
Rome from Friday night until
Diamond Head.
dawn Saturday and will continue
Luci,
and her husbWld, to do so nigh.tly. The torce was
Airman lc Patrick Nugent, set up after live explosions in
returned to Honolulu Friday 48 hours damaged schools and
trom a one-day stay at the gasoline stations earlier this
luxurious Mauna Kea beactt week.
resort on the island of Hawaii.
During ttteir short "vacation
NETWORK EXTENDill
within a vacation" the couple
COLUMBUS (UPO - A new
swam,
sWJbathed and took computerized
communications
pictures of photographers taking network which Is operated by
pictures or them.
the Ohio Highway Patrol has been
They said they had oo definite extended into Michigan, West
plans for the remainder of Virginia and Kentuck;y. The net.
Nugent's live day rest and work will be hooked up to a
rehabilitation stay. When ll Ia similar one In Michigan and ter.
over, he will return to Vietnam. minals will be established at
Lucl will f1,y to tbe President's Charlestoo, W. Va. and Ashland,
Poundstone told

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ov

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NEW BRIDGE APPROACH - The Gallla CoonlY Hlghwa,y Department began conatructlan ot
new. approaches and putting in a Ooor on the new bridge over Raccoon Creek at Northup. The Jl'ader IS operated by Joe Williams. The worker in the foregroul'kl is Bernie Queen The bridge was
completed recently but was unable to be used because of no Ooor and no appr01ctle~.

Britons Fight Tax
I.ONDON (UPD-Britain's politicians and the man-in-thestreet reacted angrily Saturday
against the Labor government's
jolting save.:the..pound tax fn.
creases and austerity package,
TeM of thousands of Britons
went on a hectic spending
spree, cleaning out stores of
remaining stocks of cigarets,
liquor, refrigerators, washing
machines and other items at
pre-tax boost prices.
Threaten Strike
Indignant pub owners threa ·
tened a three-day strike of
London's 6,000 pubs to protest
staggering
new government
taxes on whiskey, gin, beer and
wines.
Both the conservative opposi·
tioo and the Labor govern-

ment's own rank..and..file sup.
porters squared ~ to blast the
government wtlen the new
austerity measures are debated
in Parliament Monday night.
Conservative opposition leader
Edward Heath, addressing a
party rally at Derby, charged
the government with "false
pretenses, misapplying tunds
and gross negligence."
The turor was touched orr by
a package of tax Increases and
austerity measures announced
in
Parliament
Friday by
Chancellor of the Excllequer
Roy Jenkins immediately after
returning (rom the Bonn money
crisis talks .
Drastic Tightening
Jenkins told Britons they
would have to pay more at once

for cigarettes, beer, whiskey,
automobiles, gasoline and vtr ..
tually ail other consumer goocla.
He also announced drasttc
tightening ol bank loans and
tough new import curbs.
The package was the third
such crackdown m spendlq' Ia
Britain this year. It wu
expected to slaah up to 500
million pounds ($1.2 b!llloo) ID
domestic spending in a year.
Jenkins pledged there -.ld
be no further devaluaUan ~ tlil
pound, whose value was cut .lull
a year ago from ~.80 to $2.t0:
But he said the cuts In bnpw~
and domestic spending an
essential in order to Jill
Britain's foreign pa,yment:s balance back In the black and
bolster the stiU shaky pound.

In Turmoil No White House Weddint~;

North in
Hard Talk
On Peace

•

-

PAGE 11

mark, one of the world's
strongest currencies, and De
Gaulle apparently saw that
refusal as a chaUell!::e to tlis
will,
De Gaulle described devaluation, in a statement 11 days
ago, as the "worst possible
absurdity."
The communique annound~
no devaluation was brief, 1t
tollowed a three hour and 35
minute
cabinet meeting at
which bitter debate was report.
ed.
"The president of tlle Republic Informs the nation that after
today's cabinet meeting- Nov,
23- the following dedsion has
been taken: The present parity
or the Crane is maintained. Gen.
de Gaulle will make an address
to the nation over the radio
tomorrow at 8 p.m. (2 p.m.
EST!."
lntormed goverrvnent sources
said De Gaulle was fully aware
that any devaluation would be
interpreted aroun:l the world as
a
defeat of the weakening
french currenc:,· by the German
mark. This would be a bitter
blow to De Gaulle's prestige.
Fooled E)(l)erts
These sources said De Gaulle,
who rooted the experts wiU1 his
no-devaluation decision, told his
cabinet ministers they must join
him In a last..(!ltch staOO to
defend the frail(',
T h e fiooncial authorities
warned the de'lllluation mi.gtlt
become unavoidable unless De
C•ulle imposed near wartime
austerity measures.

SAIGON
(t:PO- VIet Cong
guerrUias invaded a Mekong
Delta hamlet, massacred 48
villagers with pointblank gunfire
and -bUrned its huts to the
ground, U.S. authorities reportPOMEROY - Eleven defend- ed saturday. Survivors said 38
ants were fined and 10 otbers of the victims were women and
!orfelled bonds Friday ln the children who .begged for mercy.
Fifty-seven peasants were
court of Meigs County Judge
Frank W. Porter.
wounded in what was described
Fined were Harold Smith, Long as one or the worst atrocities of
Bottom, costs only and six months the Vietnam War.
U.S.
Investigators piecing
probation, trespassing charge,
and $10 and costs, Lntoxicatf.oni together details of the assault
HONOLULU (UPO Lud
Cornelius ~r, Reedsville, last Monday night on the
Johnson
Nugent
and
her
airman
$10 lllld costs, intoxicationi hamlet of M,y Tho, 75 miles
Franklin Latdermilt, Pomeroy, southwest of saigon, said 60 husband were just another "R$5 and costs, unsafe vehicle; marauders stormed Into the and-R" couple in Honolulu
Dotw.ld Collins, Pomeroy, over- village behiOO a barrage of Saturday. But their accommolood, $66 wltb $50 suspeiXIed; mortar fire and mowed down 10 dations were tar trorn ordinary.
The President's daughter, sonRussell M. Williams, Reedsville militiamen who tried to stop
in-law and grandson Lyn were
Route l, $10 an:l costs, failure them.
staying in the •'pimlc house" on
Shot in Back
to transfer registratloni EleaThe guerrillas then swept the estate ol the late industrianor J. Duerr, Syracuse, $1.5 and
costs, speedingj John M. Powell, through the hamlet1 lobbing list Henry J. Kaiser in suburban
Racine Rtoue 2, $15 and costs, grenades and firing rifles into Honolulu, It is the same spot
speadlrw; Otarles M. Salser, Ra- bamboo huts and tunnels where tavored by the President during
cine, $10 and costs, speedlngi El- the villagers were huddled. several visits to the islands.
The picnic house Is a secluded
mer F. Harris, Rutland Route 1, Some were shot ln the t.ck as
luxurious home perched on the
$5 and costa, defective brakes; they tried to fiee,
florence D. WeU, Pomeroy Route
The VIet Cong Oed Into tbe edge of a cliff over the ocean.
3, $15 and costs, speeding, and delta swamps 30 minutes later There is a sweeping view r1 the
Dale M. Arl:lerson, Brainerd, after administering a coup de Paclllc _. lbo IIIII e1 T - raneb tor ~- IllMinn., $15 and costs, speedi~ grace to the village by settil"€ It
Forfeiting borr:ls were Paul E. afire,
Urwin, Gallipolis, $27.50, speedThe report on the delta attack
Ing; Thomas A. Ritchie, Mariet- coincided with a ctlarge by the
ta, $27.50, speedi~ J , P, Locke, U.S. Command in Saigon that
Wcasville, excessive speed tor the Communists have commit:
conditions, $27.50; Otis Town-- ted 210 violations of the
send, Parkersburg, overload, agreement not to abuse the
$67.50; Robert S. Burke, Athens Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) since
Route 2, speedirw:, $27.50; Jackie lhe bombh~ halt began Nov. 1.
Gottlelb, Huntington, $27.50,
speeding; Larry R. Webb, Athens,
$27.50, apeedlng; t..rryW. Edge,
Gallipolis, f.27.so,
1111eedirw;
Bryce L. Smith, Syracuse,
$.27. 50, opeeding, and Gtrrold L.
Buauw.n. address not known,
1$19.50, detecUve e&gt;llauo~
Hearlnga tor three defendants
!charged with breaking utd enterIng the Howery store In Carpel).
Iter recently were continued unUJ.
PARIS (IJ!'ll- North Viet:
n:ext week. The defendants are nam•s
key negoUator returned
1~ t.llierli\U.t, .Pomeroy, an::l
to
Paris Saturday from Haool
1Calvin Uribe and Pbllllp Lowry,
and Moscow consultations and
both ol Albany,
warned the United &amp;ales that
unless expanded peace talk1
begin
soon tbe Communists
SAIGON (UPD- Fewobaerwould
faght
the war to 04 flnal
vera In SaJgon now doubt that
MISS NINA RIJSI!IEU.. loft. Jn•!U I larp roplloo tor et,IM.21 to L1oJo1 '111kwoud
victory.''
pre~tdent of the Meigs Cowt;y cancer Society. representing the amount Meigs County provided
the South Vlelllameae governDeaplte the Iough talking of
the Intensive natioral e1ncer research program. Lookingonis Mrs. Catherine Shavorinsky exec•
ment Will flO to Parts, and tbe
tive
secretary or the local chapter.
'
Politburo
member
Le
Due
Tho,
betting hare Ia thai VIce Presihigh
level
Commwdst
aourcea
in
dent NSIIYeD Coo Ky will aa•
awne tbe overall leaderahlp o1 Paris said, "we cannot rule out
tbe $22,132,76snauonal,coordlnthe
opening o1 the talks
1r~4
ated research program oft h.
I SllflOn'•IIOflOIIIIIIIg team.
.., American cancer Society,
,j
Ky'a uame haaflauredprom. ahortly.h
Tho
arrived
by
air
from
IDentt,y iii Sll(lOn ,_l]llper
MIDDLEPORT - Thanksglv.. teera throughout Ohio to mark
"At this time we are especial..
baadllnea' ror tha, post .sever, Moamw as observers hi s.taPI lng llo)' Is to have ad"!'lmeanillll Ohio American concer Soc:letJ&lt; ly thankful andproodoltbepner•
a! c!IJ'• u Prelldent Nroen nld there was llt;llo lkMibt that here for American cancer Socl- Research Day In lDQlPressionof osltiY or our citizens to be able to
Van Thleu' 1 1l1te1¥ cholco to South Vlelllam wapld end Ito eb' volunteers.
thlnkMness to Ute public tor ita assmne our proper share in this
Not only wW they thank Gad for a..,port of u.e' Soc:let;y'l maoslve huge nationwide etlort to ftnd .tlle
over"see South Vtetnam•a ne- boyooll and send • delesatlm to
Pirlo, witb VIce Prelldenl their blessings ot the past year research J)l'OIJ'IIIl.
eaU2e and cure of cancer,"' Uo,Yd
r,t''"na lftorts.
. .
Ngu;yen
Coo
Ky
ao 1cp bu~ In addition, they wiU ioln
The obser....,. here highlights Blackwood, president of Meigs
I;;;w..::::::::~=:::::::~:;::=:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::~~:::.::=:=:=:;; ""'l"'iator.
ln oplrit wllh their fellow &gt;01111&gt;- tho role Meigs COW!!;)' plo,yo In Chapter, allied.

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BAIRD
BROS

France.
Prepared To Fight
De Gaulle's decision means
that the general has turned a
deal ear to the critics of his
financial policies and was
clearly determined to fight the
biggest aOO possibly last major
battle or his career.
The announcement Indicated
that De Gaulle was counting on
$2 billion In credits made
available to France by the 10
richest nations or the world and
austerity measures to save the
day.
Some financial experts had
said a devaluation of the franc
and a revaluation upwards of
the mark were desperately
needed to stem the latest
monetary crisis. But Germany
flatly reCused to raise the value

Attempting Signals to Men

CHANNEL ll

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S.Ff'l HUI}

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STOP IN TODAY FOR SNOW TIRES!

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count on us to do "the lob right,

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PARIS (UP0 President
Charles de Gaulle saturday
defiartly refused to devalue the
franc and pledged an all-out
struggle to save the crumbling
Frem.:h el-onom.y.
"I will not give in," De Gaulle
told a crisis mectil"€ of his
cabinet "They will not take the
Bastille again.''
De Gaulle thus threw down
the gaWJtlet in the face of the
most serious French economic
crisis In 10 years which has
seen millions of francs stream
out of the COWltry to West
Germany in a massive rush to
buy German marks.
By recalling the storming of
the Bastille In the French
Revolution, De Gaulle made it
clear he was prepared to fight
an all-out economic war lo save

h.,• kftps you going tafefy.

One stop

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CH.\\UL 8

DOLL &amp;me NuiWJ bWI&amp;'-

...

Georgo Wallace placed 63n!ln
the nttnga.
But Pre•ldent-elect Nimn
never rose tnper than 73rd.

We'll Give Your
Car a Real l.iff ••.

-

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111-11

• 60.

Folrl and Placo· Near Your TdeviNion Set for COJncnit·nt Reference

~

'rllllrrB • Pll8r OOHI'IIOL

DeGaulle Defies
Franc Pressure

Weekly Guide To Better TV Viewing

A Fl. i '-'Jibo.ll

. , If

Tho maJor eandldllel •
peared ln more than one apeclll
&lt;!aCh.
L_Ooe Humphrey-Muslde pr.,..
IIJ'IIII c limbed all the WIJ' to 57
ln the ntl,.._ Still another of
the DemocraUc prOIIrtiJlo rated

Rnen•wood, W. V•.

,."

10 ll''m* Dr.

•

::

9:30AM
Mon. thru Fri.
1360 ~~A~HE WMOV

''TIN...&amp;Nn"

11ENNB!8 &amp;IW'I
WATER DELIVERY SIIIYD
PIL tlNII'I.
. , If

Bldamltll Tumlte 8eulw

the candidates ln favor of old
movies, reruns, roller derbyarxl
other cultural manifeatadon&amp;
Conscious Effort
It took conscious effort to
avoid viewing !lie poi!Ueiorul
because they bought prime time
on the three major networks.

LIStEN TO 20th

"""d•y~

tAn-wf'r.
MANIAC

,\n ... rr ; W'laor th' ,ul.orno/oPI luna,d Jondlord ~pi­

'(!L !~I

IWilE PBI'l' CONIIIOL
ftD: Juspec&amp;u. call 111111
1ferrlll O'Doll, Opaum far

ticket of Dan Rowan and Dick
Martin would be headed for the
White House.
1n his latest ratl~s, Mr,
Nielsen placed the fulmi"*tor s
of fun at the toP or the llsl. No.
1..
This at the height of the fil'81
week or the rw.tlonal election.
1be Humphrey-Muskie lastminute pitch ror votes was
rated 70th. Nixon and Agnew
did even worSe, rath~ 74d.
Gives a thinkJng man pause.
Even a near idiot has to
wonder.
In what has been described as
one the most important elections or this century, millions of
citizens turned their backs

lfttr

ln•vr•AU:,_ lliaUllld lllllls,

:m.

SALLY'S Jn.Jaws comln2. !1110
didn't noster. cleaned !be
&lt;arpels wt!ll Bluo Lustre.

at ••••

HOLLYWOOD (UPll-U tele-

visloo were a real lnd.uence on
the lives of Americans, the

U~U~U&amp;mb~ thne Ccur Jumble-.

...., IIJ:A'IINQ

OLD CORN. lllfi7 crop, $1.11 ROtJ'IZ
.... Raymond Layne. Chesllln!. Ph. 311'7-72211.
278-1

TV ... in Review

ane letter to uch aquar., to
form four ordinary words.

DIWIII 8 I'UJMNMJ

Huqhrey-Muolde wore on
NBC, Nl-Agnew on CBS and
GOOI'll" Wall1&lt;:e on NBC.
'Jbese p o 1 1 t 1 e a l speclala
preempted oome of the tcp
series on the alr, lneludi,. 11 The
Rowan and Martin Lauaf'Hn. 11
Viewers, therefore, b)' cholce
dialed In other channel• rather'
than watch the men who were
bidding to run their jONi am1ent
tor the next four yean.

'

With 500 Close Friends
NEW

'li'ORK

(UPO- Fore-

going a White House wedding,

Julie Nixon and David Eisen·
hower wiU be married before
450 or 500 "close friends" on
Dec. 22 In New York's Marble
Collegiate Church,
it was
announced Saturday.
After the wedding they will
move
to an apartment in
NorthamptDn, Mass., and go
back to college.
Wedding plans tor the younger daughter of President-elect
Richard M, Nixon and the
grandson or to r mer President
Dwight D. Eisenhower were
announced by Mrs. Nixon's new
press secretary, Gerry Van der
Heuvel.

Oldest Heart
Transplant
Patient Die.&lt;J
United Press International
Everett C. Thomas, who was
the oldest surviving heart
transplant patient in the United
States, died Saturday in Hous.
ton after a kidney tailure and
with the third heart of h.i s 47
years in his chest.
The death of Thomas in St.
Luke's Hospital lett George
Henry Debord the longest
surviving U.S. patient, and
Debord was back in st. tuke's
under oxygen and showing signs
or reJecting his transplanted
heart.
Other Developments
Other developments in the
rtrst..movlng history ~ heart
transplants:
-The 89th transplant open.
tion
since Dr.
Chr1sUaan
Barna.rd'll first in history last
Dec. 3 at Cape Town, South
Africa,
was performed in
Turkey on Mrs.
Mavis
Karagoz. Mrs. Karagoz, who
was Turkey's first transplant
patient, lived only 18 hours.
-Darrell Hammar ley, 56, the
only other man in medical
hiotoey to have two transplanted
hearts, was ln fair condition in
Staotord
(Call!.)
Uolverstv
Medical Ceoter, Hammar loy
and Thomas both got their
s e c o n d transplanted hearts

Thurscta,.

~e said the young couple
passed up a wedding in the
White House in favor a( a "very
private" ceremony before close
friends of the families.
Dr. Norman Vincent Peale,
author of uThe Power of
Positive Thinking'' and a
minister of the Reformed
Church in America, will per.
form the 4 p.m. Protestant
marriage ceremony. A recep·
tion will follow in the gold and
red grand ballroom d the Plaza
Hotel overlooking Central Park
and about live minutes walk
from the l'~itth Avenue apart·
ment where the Nlxons now
live.
Julie and David, both 20, and

ATLANTA (U PO - Occur·
rences of urunuenza or uunen.
za-like illnesses, someotitthe
Hong Kong strain of Asian flue,
has spread Lo seven stales and
Puerto Rico, the National
Communicable Ulsease Center
(NCDC) said Saturday
Widespread outbreaks of the
flu have been reported in Cal.
ifornia, Colorado, New Jer·
sey .and Puerto Rico, NCDC
said.

Harvard

College

student -

was David's roolllJ11ate for four
years at Exeter .
The ushers will be mostly
classmates trom Amherst.
Bride's Attendants
The bride's older sister,
Tricia, will be bar maid ol
honor.

Recon Craft

Gunned Down

SAIGON (UP0 - Communist
gumers Saturday shot down a
U.S. reconnaissance plane mer
North Vietnam, American Headquarters
reported. It was tbe
.·.·. ·.·-:·:-:-:-:-:·:·:-:-:-:-:· -:-···
first such loss since the
bombing halt began NO\', 1.
The u.s. Command said a
search and rescue oper~
was wtder wa,y for the pilot of
the WJarmed photo.taldng plane.
Radio Hanoi said the pilot wu
captured,
but American spokea.
CLEVELAND (UPO - Delemen
refused
b&gt; confirm thla.
gates to ttte Ohio Edllcation As·
"We
have
no further informasociation conference on instruc~
tion
at
this
time,"
a spokesman
tions were told Saturday they
for
the
U.S,
Command
said.
ought to become ''flaming revo.
u.s. reconnaissance Qighta to
lutionaries" by a John Carroll
keep track ot COmmunist troopt
University professor.
You should become ' 'suchflam- and suppJ.y movements have
ing revolutionaries that we leave continued over North VIetnam,
the militant civil rights and civil although no raids have . , _
liberties spokesmen picnicldng carried out since the borlmbw
on the far right," associate pro. halt was ordered by Presl.dent
lessor John Slanavage, former Johnson to open the door to
principal of ~aker Heights High peace talks at Paris.
The last Amerlcon pi&amp;DO lhot
School, said.
stanavage declared that so far down O'Jer North Vietnam wu a
American education Is somewhat Marine F4 PhaDtom 11!1leb
sick, most Innovation has £ailed crashed hours barore tbe lalt
and too mau,y educators are more bomb fell on North Vlelllam.
concerned witll techniQJes c1 That "'" !lie 9161h U.S. p10M
teaching than With the end pro- lost over the North, •CCOI'dlnl
to U.S. llprea, Tho Nonb
duct .
He said schools and school Vletoameae claim to ha'IO lhot
systems still are too snarled in doWD 3,427 Amerlcaa plauea.
red tape to oope with • generaOLD GROUPER IIETIRED
tion of )'OIIng people who uno
GROTON,
CONN. (UI'I) - 'l1lt
longer walk Cl'l the grass,- they
oldest
OOIIIIII!oliaaed
..-...
smoke it."
lD tha U.S, Navy, lbo I],SJI;
G.._r, will be. rellredlll _..;
RECUPERATING AT HOME
AKRON, Oldo (IJPD - Ohio'a
··
at lbe111t
first heart tranaplant polient, Dee,

Educators Get

Radical Talk

-William Karraker, 49, a
&amp;ockton, CaiU., insurance exeeutlvt~ who received a transplanted heart In 111 operatlm
performed by Dr. Norman E, Dellell H. LaWiml Sr., &lt;Oillln·
Shumwa,y in Stanford, was ln uea to recuperate at his homo

!alr condition.

friends since childhood, are
students at Smith and Amherllt
colleges located about seven
miles aput In Massachusetts. a
was ttlere that their romance
blossomed.
Both will resume their atudle•
In their iunlor year In JatiUBI',J'.
They took tbe fsll term df to
campaign for Julie's lather.
David's grandfather, reeu,perating rrorn a series ~ beart
attacks, probabJ.y will not attend
the ceremony.
Ilia best man will be Fred
Grandy or Sioux City I kJwa, a

here .

z. ~
au --~:
-•• •

martae wa1 W

J-·

1841, Just ""' ---

�.... _ . . . . . . .

~.-.

...

·· - ~ -

~l'fll.~f.lit" ...~d'l't" 7· • • •• ~ · -

10.- The Sunday Times - Sentlne~. Sunday, November 24, 1968

. ,..
l.

..

Plumbing &amp; HHtlng

For Sale

PUllliiliMi a
IIJ:A1'1NG, Ill ftN A -

III'ANDAIID

t BIJ'rt:HERING hog. I Charo1111 bolfer call, I cut-of! mr

to ... lln!ftOd wltll belt one!
ll'f.l

pulley. Ph. itiiiSII.

JJtY~ilJE®~::::!!:! ~=

••s:a

OOMPlEI'E barner sllop equip. POII

m&lt;nt. 851

Second Ave .. Galli-

m-3

pollo, 0.

tt61 CHEVROLET Bel

I
new

Air

door !ledan. new tires.

exhaust sys~m. new shodts.
new ring and valve job. trail·
er hlkh. Ph. 118-0053. f/3.!

1300 roBACCO or tomato stick.!
at a bargain price CharUe
Stone. Rutland, 0 .
278-1
KEEP your ~arpets be.auttf1·:
~it£" constant footsteps of
a busy family Get Blue Lu•·
tl'f. Rent electric shampooer
II Central Supply Co. 278-&gt;
CARPET t'OIOI"S looking dim'
Bring 'em back - g1ve 'em
vim . Use Blue Lustre Rent
electric shampooer $1 Shop.
pan!, 882 lsi Ave
~

sPINET PlANO
WANTED. resoonslble party to
take over lnw montft1y J)a.J·
tnents on a solnet plano. Can
be seen locally Write Credit
Manager. P. 0 Box
SbelbvvfDe. lndlana.
2'18-1

!lent electrle shamoooer S1.
Fanner's Hardware Co. 2?1-5

S.rvlces Orfwed
La'S PLUMBING • RJ!3IOD.
II:LINO, Cl'cnm OIJ, 0. PIL

•• ...

111-11

Ul'JIIOlJl'S GALl.IPOU8 ' "
Gl llooalld A ""'- from Pool Ollloe

PIIGIIe ••

Yoar 1ma ... DNIIr

....,

"-

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e11eet w1111 ,.,...
- at tlto Neal Ins. ApneJ,

.. Statll !II. ,\fad~ lor - .
liN. ~- buiplbol

IIIII ........ llabiiiiJ.

11-tr

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[RIMBOI)

NA'ftONWIDE JIISUIIAIICI
Atri'O. lin!. life. 41 Statll
woldo r. ~~mm.
11.
llnnm. - - -

t

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THE PI?OCH'S
TREE.

FAVO~ITE

sow B1'1'811fO tho cirdod lotion
to rorm the surprise answer, u

~

~::L1:::=~~~;;~~,1~~~=~1Nillt'lled by the above cartoon.

~Pril~'l~tbe~SilltPRlSE=~AIIS:::.:IER::..:bn=--.JI

Tailor Your Shampoo

L l

Tailor your shampoo to

J,.n,t.l ..~: IV£NT

your individual hair type.
Dry. oil. regular
you
choose it. And alwa•,. s sham·
poo more than once ·... then
rinse until hair is so squeaky
clean you can hear it.

\ ... l .. rdon ••

I

SOI.AJI

I I I II X)

(

NICm

FAIN Bllormlllatlall Co. 'llllaal-

lllllarll, Oblo, PIL I'IUI.11

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Glonlw.d
"i!te(l\

.111 .....

EDGAR VAN INW AGEN, lett, an::l Arthur Stobart, Ohio
Valley Bakl~ Co. employe, discun plans for the Monday and
Tuelda.y distribution of bread in Pomeroy by members of
Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion. Using a theme,
"Dough tor Dough.'' members of the post, assisted by Boy
Scouts, will deliver a lmr or bread to each Pomeroy home.
They hope to receive a contribution in excha~e. The pror..'Ceds
will go to Ule "Gins for the Yanks Who Gave," designed Lo provide Christmas remembrances ror hospitalized velerans.

BAILEY'S SUNOCO
Home of the $2000 Winner

433 Sunny Dollan Winnen

0

lud!:n·~"'

s...,

282 W. Maln-992-2995-Pomoroy, 0.

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MANNINGTON, W. Va. (UP!)
- Worken begau drWing holea
Into the explosion and fire
ravaged Mannlnaton No. 9 coal
mine Saturday to test the
underground alr and send
signals to where 78 miner&amp; were
tra)lped alnce early Wednesda,y.
The three-Inch holes will be
aWik to a depth ol about 700
feet, the level where most of
tile men were workfn&amp; when
I n l I l a I explosion thundered
through the mine btnore dawn
Wednesda,y.
Once completed, metal tubing

--

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USED AND
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PARTS

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t:toprr

HUibiUiu

floclr, lh.ldun, (}oro.

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to' NilrtJ&gt;.

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- Rolwo" 81110~
WEDNESDAY
9100 - 13, "Blll.llll S.th"
U:3Q - I, "1111111111r Hotd"'
- Rdotr! Mhotu.

"Sort~~

3,

we.t"- t:arJGrwot,F.,.
Marie Sl.lrot
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1:00 -

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Loo.I.J ....... - Don Bloc--

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11;30 - 8, "l&gt;ooMI .sm.JI uf
Suoout" - 9urt Lan-

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7:00 "~Jthl

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9:00 - !, "Cia..... " - Cary

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wUI be sunk into the hoi es and
11ignals will be &amp;ent down to an
area where some of the men
were believed to be trapped.
The holes were expected to be

Villagers
Massacred

By V-Cong

completed sometime Sunday.
Little Hope
There was little hope that any
of the entombed miners were
alive because the undergrotmd
fires have been burning unchecked since the tirst exploslm
ripped through the ConsolidaUon
Coal Co. mine. Since then,
seven more massive explosions
rumbled through the mine.
Smoke still poured into the
atmosphere from the Llewellyn
and Mahan shafts. A company
official said no resclle effort
could be made untU alter 12 to
24 hours of "absolutely no
activity- no smoke or explosions."
Some relatives or the trapped
men "crashed" a news briefing
conducted by William Poundstone, exe~utlve vice president
of Consolidatlon CoaL
One man, whose brother was
among the 78, asked PolDldstone
WhY bore holes were not being
drilled ''over every area where
the men are believed to be,"

the man:
is not a matter ot. rnon~y.
You have to realize the vast
area we are contronted with."
Many Tunnels
The Mannington mine has
&amp;even miles of tunnels.
Mrs. Hertzel Mayle ol Knottsville, mother of 16 children
ranging In ago rrom 4 to 25
years, whose husband was in
the mine, said, '~1 know m,y
husband is coming out or there.
I won't say he will be unhurt
but I know he is coming out of
there alive. I just have to hope
ROME (UPO - A power strug.
that. 11
gle inside Jtqly' s largest party
James Davis, 30, ot Lumb· delayed the solution of a govern.
port, Consolidation Coal Co. ment crisis Saturday in a nation
mining engineer, whose brother, shaken by lD'lrest and violence.
Dale, 40, was among the
The Christian Democrats, who
trapped men, said he was have provided eight of Italy's
against sealing the mine "un- nine premiers since the end or
less it must be done as a last World War n, were locked in an
resort."
lnternal battle for election of a
Once seaJed, all oxygen would new party leadership.
be cut off from entering the
The crisis, which hurt the pres·
mine and the tires would burn tige or an already discredited
out.
political class, coincided with a
wave or student and labor unrest.
A special anti - terroristforce
or 1,500 policemen patrolled
Rome from Friday night until
Diamond Head.
dawn Saturday and will continue
Luci,
and her husbWld, to do so nigh.tly. The torce was
Airman lc Patrick Nugent, set up after live explosions in
returned to Honolulu Friday 48 hours damaged schools and
trom a one-day stay at the gasoline stations earlier this
luxurious Mauna Kea beactt week.
resort on the island of Hawaii.
During ttteir short "vacation
NETWORK EXTENDill
within a vacation" the couple
COLUMBUS (UPO - A new
swam,
sWJbathed and took computerized
communications
pictures of photographers taking network which Is operated by
pictures or them.
the Ohio Highway Patrol has been
They said they had oo definite extended into Michigan, West
plans for the remainder of Virginia and Kentuck;y. The net.
Nugent's live day rest and work will be hooked up to a
rehabilitation stay. When ll Ia similar one In Michigan and ter.
over, he will return to Vietnam. minals will be established at
Lucl will f1,y to tbe President's Charlestoo, W. Va. and Ashland,
Poundstone told

'~H

Italians

U:

Dual llean:ng
., . fio r D.
ov

Ooo Rkllleo

Will !iomftl
Star Troll

,.,

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NEW BRIDGE APPROACH - The Gallla CoonlY Hlghwa,y Department began conatructlan ot
new. approaches and putting in a Ooor on the new bridge over Raccoon Creek at Northup. The Jl'ader IS operated by Joe Williams. The worker in the foregroul'kl is Bernie Queen The bridge was
completed recently but was unable to be used because of no Ooor and no appr01ctle~.

Britons Fight Tax
I.ONDON (UPD-Britain's politicians and the man-in-thestreet reacted angrily Saturday
against the Labor government's
jolting save.:the..pound tax fn.
creases and austerity package,
TeM of thousands of Britons
went on a hectic spending
spree, cleaning out stores of
remaining stocks of cigarets,
liquor, refrigerators, washing
machines and other items at
pre-tax boost prices.
Threaten Strike
Indignant pub owners threa ·
tened a three-day strike of
London's 6,000 pubs to protest
staggering
new government
taxes on whiskey, gin, beer and
wines.
Both the conservative opposi·
tioo and the Labor govern-

ment's own rank..and..file sup.
porters squared ~ to blast the
government wtlen the new
austerity measures are debated
in Parliament Monday night.
Conservative opposition leader
Edward Heath, addressing a
party rally at Derby, charged
the government with "false
pretenses, misapplying tunds
and gross negligence."
The turor was touched orr by
a package of tax Increases and
austerity measures announced
in
Parliament
Friday by
Chancellor of the Excllequer
Roy Jenkins immediately after
returning (rom the Bonn money
crisis talks .
Drastic Tightening
Jenkins told Britons they
would have to pay more at once

for cigarettes, beer, whiskey,
automobiles, gasoline and vtr ..
tually ail other consumer goocla.
He also announced drasttc
tightening ol bank loans and
tough new import curbs.
The package was the third
such crackdown m spendlq' Ia
Britain this year. It wu
expected to slaah up to 500
million pounds ($1.2 b!llloo) ID
domestic spending in a year.
Jenkins pledged there -.ld
be no further devaluaUan ~ tlil
pound, whose value was cut .lull
a year ago from ~.80 to $2.t0:
But he said the cuts In bnpw~
and domestic spending an
essential in order to Jill
Britain's foreign pa,yment:s balance back In the black and
bolster the stiU shaky pound.

In Turmoil No White House Weddint~;

North in
Hard Talk
On Peace

•

-

PAGE 11

mark, one of the world's
strongest currencies, and De
Gaulle apparently saw that
refusal as a chaUell!::e to tlis
will,
De Gaulle described devaluation, in a statement 11 days
ago, as the "worst possible
absurdity."
The communique annound~
no devaluation was brief, 1t
tollowed a three hour and 35
minute
cabinet meeting at
which bitter debate was report.
ed.
"The president of tlle Republic Informs the nation that after
today's cabinet meeting- Nov,
23- the following dedsion has
been taken: The present parity
or the Crane is maintained. Gen.
de Gaulle will make an address
to the nation over the radio
tomorrow at 8 p.m. (2 p.m.
EST!."
lntormed goverrvnent sources
said De Gaulle was fully aware
that any devaluation would be
interpreted aroun:l the world as
a
defeat of the weakening
french currenc:,· by the German
mark. This would be a bitter
blow to De Gaulle's prestige.
Fooled E)(l)erts
These sources said De Gaulle,
who rooted the experts wiU1 his
no-devaluation decision, told his
cabinet ministers they must join
him In a last..(!ltch staOO to
defend the frail(',
T h e fiooncial authorities
warned the de'lllluation mi.gtlt
become unavoidable unless De
C•ulle imposed near wartime
austerity measures.

SAIGON
(t:PO- VIet Cong
guerrUias invaded a Mekong
Delta hamlet, massacred 48
villagers with pointblank gunfire
and -bUrned its huts to the
ground, U.S. authorities reportPOMEROY - Eleven defend- ed saturday. Survivors said 38
ants were fined and 10 otbers of the victims were women and
!orfelled bonds Friday ln the children who .begged for mercy.
Fifty-seven peasants were
court of Meigs County Judge
Frank W. Porter.
wounded in what was described
Fined were Harold Smith, Long as one or the worst atrocities of
Bottom, costs only and six months the Vietnam War.
U.S.
Investigators piecing
probation, trespassing charge,
and $10 and costs, Lntoxicatf.oni together details of the assault
HONOLULU (UPO Lud
Cornelius ~r, Reedsville, last Monday night on the
Johnson
Nugent
and
her
airman
$10 lllld costs, intoxicationi hamlet of M,y Tho, 75 miles
Franklin Latdermilt, Pomeroy, southwest of saigon, said 60 husband were just another "R$5 and costs, unsafe vehicle; marauders stormed Into the and-R" couple in Honolulu
Dotw.ld Collins, Pomeroy, over- village behiOO a barrage of Saturday. But their accommolood, $66 wltb $50 suspeiXIed; mortar fire and mowed down 10 dations were tar trorn ordinary.
The President's daughter, sonRussell M. Williams, Reedsville militiamen who tried to stop
in-law and grandson Lyn were
Route l, $10 an:l costs, failure them.
staying in the •'pimlc house" on
Shot in Back
to transfer registratloni EleaThe guerrillas then swept the estate ol the late industrianor J. Duerr, Syracuse, $1.5 and
costs, speedingj John M. Powell, through the hamlet1 lobbing list Henry J. Kaiser in suburban
Racine Rtoue 2, $15 and costs, grenades and firing rifles into Honolulu, It is the same spot
speadlrw; Otarles M. Salser, Ra- bamboo huts and tunnels where tavored by the President during
cine, $10 and costs, speedlngi El- the villagers were huddled. several visits to the islands.
The picnic house Is a secluded
mer F. Harris, Rutland Route 1, Some were shot ln the t.ck as
luxurious home perched on the
$5 and costa, defective brakes; they tried to fiee,
florence D. WeU, Pomeroy Route
The VIet Cong Oed Into tbe edge of a cliff over the ocean.
3, $15 and costs, speeding, and delta swamps 30 minutes later There is a sweeping view r1 the
Dale M. Arl:lerson, Brainerd, after administering a coup de Paclllc _. lbo IIIII e1 T - raneb tor ~- IllMinn., $15 and costs, speedi~ grace to the village by settil"€ It
Forfeiting borr:ls were Paul E. afire,
Urwin, Gallipolis, $27.50, speedThe report on the delta attack
Ing; Thomas A. Ritchie, Mariet- coincided with a ctlarge by the
ta, $27.50, speedi~ J , P, Locke, U.S. Command in Saigon that
Wcasville, excessive speed tor the Communists have commit:
conditions, $27.50; Otis Town-- ted 210 violations of the
send, Parkersburg, overload, agreement not to abuse the
$67.50; Robert S. Burke, Athens Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) since
Route 2, speedirw:, $27.50; Jackie lhe bombh~ halt began Nov. 1.
Gottlelb, Huntington, $27.50,
speeding; Larry R. Webb, Athens,
$27.50, apeedlng; t..rryW. Edge,
Gallipolis, f.27.so,
1111eedirw;
Bryce L. Smith, Syracuse,
$.27. 50, opeeding, and Gtrrold L.
Buauw.n. address not known,
1$19.50, detecUve e&gt;llauo~
Hearlnga tor three defendants
!charged with breaking utd enterIng the Howery store In Carpel).
Iter recently were continued unUJ.
PARIS (IJ!'ll- North Viet:
n:ext week. The defendants are nam•s
key negoUator returned
1~ t.llierli\U.t, .Pomeroy, an::l
to
Paris Saturday from Haool
1Calvin Uribe and Pbllllp Lowry,
and Moscow consultations and
both ol Albany,
warned the United &amp;ales that
unless expanded peace talk1
begin
soon tbe Communists
SAIGON (UPD- Fewobaerwould
faght
the war to 04 flnal
vera In SaJgon now doubt that
MISS NINA RIJSI!IEU.. loft. Jn•!U I larp roplloo tor et,IM.21 to L1oJo1 '111kwoud
victory.''
pre~tdent of the Meigs Cowt;y cancer Society. representing the amount Meigs County provided
the South Vlelllameae governDeaplte the Iough talking of
the Intensive natioral e1ncer research program. Lookingonis Mrs. Catherine Shavorinsky exec•
ment Will flO to Parts, and tbe
tive
secretary or the local chapter.
'
Politburo
member
Le
Due
Tho,
betting hare Ia thai VIce Presihigh
level
Commwdst
aourcea
in
dent NSIIYeD Coo Ky will aa•
awne tbe overall leaderahlp o1 Paris said, "we cannot rule out
tbe $22,132,76snauonal,coordlnthe
opening o1 the talks
1r~4
ated research program oft h.
I SllflOn'•IIOflOIIIIIIIg team.
.., American cancer Society,
,j
Ky'a uame haaflauredprom. ahortly.h
Tho
arrived
by
air
from
IDentt,y iii Sll(lOn ,_l]llper
MIDDLEPORT - Thanksglv.. teera throughout Ohio to mark
"At this time we are especial..
baadllnea' ror tha, post .sever, Moamw as observers hi s.taPI lng llo)' Is to have ad"!'lmeanillll Ohio American concer Soc:letJ&lt; ly thankful andproodoltbepner•
a! c!IJ'• u Prelldent Nroen nld there was llt;llo lkMibt that here for American cancer Socl- Research Day In lDQlPressionof osltiY or our citizens to be able to
Van Thleu' 1 1l1te1¥ cholco to South Vlelllam wapld end Ito eb' volunteers.
thlnkMness to Ute public tor ita assmne our proper share in this
Not only wW they thank Gad for a..,port of u.e' Soc:let;y'l maoslve huge nationwide etlort to ftnd .tlle
over"see South Vtetnam•a ne- boyooll and send • delesatlm to
Pirlo, witb VIce Prelldenl their blessings ot the past year research J)l'OIJ'IIIl.
eaU2e and cure of cancer,"' Uo,Yd
r,t''"na lftorts.
. .
Ngu;yen
Coo
Ky
ao 1cp bu~ In addition, they wiU ioln
The obser....,. here highlights Blackwood, president of Meigs
I;;;w..::::::::~=:::::::~:;::=:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::~~:::.::=:=:=:;; ""'l"'iator.
ln oplrit wllh their fellow &gt;01111&gt;- tho role Meigs COW!!;)' plo,yo In Chapter, allied.

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BAIRD
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France.
Prepared To Fight
De Gaulle's decision means
that the general has turned a
deal ear to the critics of his
financial policies and was
clearly determined to fight the
biggest aOO possibly last major
battle or his career.
The announcement Indicated
that De Gaulle was counting on
$2 billion In credits made
available to France by the 10
richest nations or the world and
austerity measures to save the
day.
Some financial experts had
said a devaluation of the franc
and a revaluation upwards of
the mark were desperately
needed to stem the latest
monetary crisis. But Germany
flatly reCused to raise the value

Attempting Signals to Men

CHANNEL ll

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PARIS (UP0 President
Charles de Gaulle saturday
defiartly refused to devalue the
franc and pledged an all-out
struggle to save the crumbling
Frem.:h el-onom.y.
"I will not give in," De Gaulle
told a crisis mectil"€ of his
cabinet "They will not take the
Bastille again.''
De Gaulle thus threw down
the gaWJtlet in the face of the
most serious French economic
crisis In 10 years which has
seen millions of francs stream
out of the COWltry to West
Germany in a massive rush to
buy German marks.
By recalling the storming of
the Bastille In the French
Revolution, De Gaulle made it
clear he was prepared to fight
an all-out economic war lo save

h.,• kftps you going tafefy.

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DOLL &amp;me NuiWJ bWI&amp;'-

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Georgo Wallace placed 63n!ln
the nttnga.
But Pre•ldent-elect Nimn
never rose tnper than 73rd.

We'll Give Your
Car a Real l.iff ••.

-

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111-11

• 60.

Folrl and Placo· Near Your TdeviNion Set for COJncnit·nt Reference

~

'rllllrrB • Pll8r OOHI'IIOL

DeGaulle Defies
Franc Pressure

Weekly Guide To Better TV Viewing

A Fl. i '-'Jibo.ll

. , If

Tho maJor eandldllel •
peared ln more than one apeclll
&lt;!aCh.
L_Ooe Humphrey-Muslde pr.,..
IIJ'IIII c limbed all the WIJ' to 57
ln the ntl,.._ Still another of
the DemocraUc prOIIrtiJlo rated

Rnen•wood, W. V•.

,."

10 ll''m* Dr.

•

::

9:30AM
Mon. thru Fri.
1360 ~~A~HE WMOV

''TIN...&amp;Nn"

11ENNB!8 &amp;IW'I
WATER DELIVERY SIIIYD
PIL tlNII'I.
. , If

Bldamltll Tumlte 8eulw

the candidates ln favor of old
movies, reruns, roller derbyarxl
other cultural manifeatadon&amp;
Conscious Effort
It took conscious effort to
avoid viewing !lie poi!Ueiorul
because they bought prime time
on the three major networks.

LIStEN TO 20th

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tAn-wf'r.
MANIAC

,\n ... rr ; W'laor th' ,ul.orno/oPI luna,d Jondlord ~pi­

'(!L !~I

IWilE PBI'l' CONIIIOL
ftD: Juspec&amp;u. call 111111
1ferrlll O'Doll, Opaum far

ticket of Dan Rowan and Dick
Martin would be headed for the
White House.
1n his latest ratl~s, Mr,
Nielsen placed the fulmi"*tor s
of fun at the toP or the llsl. No.
1..
This at the height of the fil'81
week or the rw.tlonal election.
1be Humphrey-Muskie lastminute pitch ror votes was
rated 70th. Nixon and Agnew
did even worSe, rath~ 74d.
Gives a thinkJng man pause.
Even a near idiot has to
wonder.
In what has been described as
one the most important elections or this century, millions of
citizens turned their backs

lfttr

ln•vr•AU:,_ lliaUllld lllllls,

:m.

SALLY'S Jn.Jaws comln2. !1110
didn't noster. cleaned !be
&lt;arpels wt!ll Bluo Lustre.

at ••••

HOLLYWOOD (UPll-U tele-

visloo were a real lnd.uence on
the lives of Americans, the

U~U~U&amp;mb~ thne Ccur Jumble-.

...., IIJ:A'IINQ

OLD CORN. lllfi7 crop, $1.11 ROtJ'IZ
.... Raymond Layne. Chesllln!. Ph. 311'7-72211.
278-1

TV ... in Review

ane letter to uch aquar., to
form four ordinary words.

DIWIII 8 I'UJMNMJ

Huqhrey-Muolde wore on
NBC, Nl-Agnew on CBS and
GOOI'll" Wall1&lt;:e on NBC.
'Jbese p o 1 1 t 1 e a l speclala
preempted oome of the tcp
series on the alr, lneludi,. 11 The
Rowan and Martin Lauaf'Hn. 11
Viewers, therefore, b)' cholce
dialed In other channel• rather'
than watch the men who were
bidding to run their jONi am1ent
tor the next four yean.

'

With 500 Close Friends
NEW

'li'ORK

(UPO- Fore-

going a White House wedding,

Julie Nixon and David Eisen·
hower wiU be married before
450 or 500 "close friends" on
Dec. 22 In New York's Marble
Collegiate Church,
it was
announced Saturday.
After the wedding they will
move
to an apartment in
NorthamptDn, Mass., and go
back to college.
Wedding plans tor the younger daughter of President-elect
Richard M, Nixon and the
grandson or to r mer President
Dwight D. Eisenhower were
announced by Mrs. Nixon's new
press secretary, Gerry Van der
Heuvel.

Oldest Heart
Transplant
Patient Die.&lt;J
United Press International
Everett C. Thomas, who was
the oldest surviving heart
transplant patient in the United
States, died Saturday in Hous.
ton after a kidney tailure and
with the third heart of h.i s 47
years in his chest.
The death of Thomas in St.
Luke's Hospital lett George
Henry Debord the longest
surviving U.S. patient, and
Debord was back in st. tuke's
under oxygen and showing signs
or reJecting his transplanted
heart.
Other Developments
Other developments in the
rtrst..movlng history ~ heart
transplants:
-The 89th transplant open.
tion
since Dr.
Chr1sUaan
Barna.rd'll first in history last
Dec. 3 at Cape Town, South
Africa,
was performed in
Turkey on Mrs.
Mavis
Karagoz. Mrs. Karagoz, who
was Turkey's first transplant
patient, lived only 18 hours.
-Darrell Hammar ley, 56, the
only other man in medical
hiotoey to have two transplanted
hearts, was ln fair condition in
Staotord
(Call!.)
Uolverstv
Medical Ceoter, Hammar loy
and Thomas both got their
s e c o n d transplanted hearts

Thurscta,.

~e said the young couple
passed up a wedding in the
White House in favor a( a "very
private" ceremony before close
friends of the families.
Dr. Norman Vincent Peale,
author of uThe Power of
Positive Thinking'' and a
minister of the Reformed
Church in America, will per.
form the 4 p.m. Protestant
marriage ceremony. A recep·
tion will follow in the gold and
red grand ballroom d the Plaza
Hotel overlooking Central Park
and about live minutes walk
from the l'~itth Avenue apart·
ment where the Nlxons now
live.
Julie and David, both 20, and

ATLANTA (U PO - Occur·
rences of urunuenza or uunen.
za-like illnesses, someotitthe
Hong Kong strain of Asian flue,
has spread Lo seven stales and
Puerto Rico, the National
Communicable Ulsease Center
(NCDC) said Saturday
Widespread outbreaks of the
flu have been reported in Cal.
ifornia, Colorado, New Jer·
sey .and Puerto Rico, NCDC
said.

Harvard

College

student -

was David's roolllJ11ate for four
years at Exeter .
The ushers will be mostly
classmates trom Amherst.
Bride's Attendants
The bride's older sister,
Tricia, will be bar maid ol
honor.

Recon Craft

Gunned Down

SAIGON (UP0 - Communist
gumers Saturday shot down a
U.S. reconnaissance plane mer
North Vietnam, American Headquarters
reported. It was tbe
.·.·. ·.·-:·:-:-:-:-:·:·:-:-:-:-:· -:-···
first such loss since the
bombing halt began NO\', 1.
The u.s. Command said a
search and rescue oper~
was wtder wa,y for the pilot of
the WJarmed photo.taldng plane.
Radio Hanoi said the pilot wu
captured,
but American spokea.
CLEVELAND (UPO - Delemen
refused
b&gt; confirm thla.
gates to ttte Ohio Edllcation As·
"We
have
no further informasociation conference on instruc~
tion
at
this
time,"
a spokesman
tions were told Saturday they
for
the
U.S,
Command
said.
ought to become ''flaming revo.
u.s. reconnaissance Qighta to
lutionaries" by a John Carroll
keep track ot COmmunist troopt
University professor.
You should become ' 'suchflam- and suppJ.y movements have
ing revolutionaries that we leave continued over North VIetnam,
the militant civil rights and civil although no raids have . , _
liberties spokesmen picnicldng carried out since the borlmbw
on the far right," associate pro. halt was ordered by Presl.dent
lessor John Slanavage, former Johnson to open the door to
principal of ~aker Heights High peace talks at Paris.
The last Amerlcon pi&amp;DO lhot
School, said.
stanavage declared that so far down O'Jer North Vietnam wu a
American education Is somewhat Marine F4 PhaDtom 11!1leb
sick, most Innovation has £ailed crashed hours barore tbe lalt
and too mau,y educators are more bomb fell on North Vlelllam.
concerned witll techniQJes c1 That "'" !lie 9161h U.S. p10M
teaching than With the end pro- lost over the North, •CCOI'dlnl
to U.S. llprea, Tho Nonb
duct .
He said schools and school Vletoameae claim to ha'IO lhot
systems still are too snarled in doWD 3,427 Amerlcaa plauea.
red tape to oope with • generaOLD GROUPER IIETIRED
tion of )'OIIng people who uno
GROTON,
CONN. (UI'I) - 'l1lt
longer walk Cl'l the grass,- they
oldest
OOIIIIII!oliaaed
..-...
smoke it."
lD tha U.S, Navy, lbo I],SJI;
G.._r, will be. rellredlll _..;
RECUPERATING AT HOME
AKRON, Oldo (IJPD - Ohio'a
··
at lbe111t
first heart tranaplant polient, Dee,

Educators Get

Radical Talk

-William Karraker, 49, a
&amp;ockton, CaiU., insurance exeeutlvt~ who received a transplanted heart In 111 operatlm
performed by Dr. Norman E, Dellell H. LaWiml Sr., &lt;Oillln·
Shumwa,y in Stanford, was ln uea to recuperate at his homo

!alr condition.

friends since childhood, are
students at Smith and Amherllt
colleges located about seven
miles aput In Massachusetts. a
was ttlere that their romance
blossomed.
Both will resume their atudle•
In their iunlor year In JatiUBI',J'.
They took tbe fsll term df to
campaign for Julie's lather.
David's grandfather, reeu,perating rrorn a series ~ beart
attacks, probabJ.y will not attend
the ceremony.
Ilia best man will be Fred
Grandy or Sioux City I kJwa, a

here .

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au --~:
-•• •

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The Surday Ttme1 - SenUnel, Slalay, November 24, 1968

12 -

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Pomeroy Youth is

13 -

Holy Land lmpressiom-Old Jerusalem

Jerusalem's

Hist~ry

GALUPOLJS - The walls ~ little shops have an assortment days of Jesus.
elm Jews ot this day,
to pray and bewail the 1011 of
Jeruaalem are very real. The of about anyt.hlng OIHI c:ould want.
There are several places that
Fb1ally, our Nn Testament their city. The drops ct early
preaent me, buUt In the 16th
There are no supermarkets, retell the story of the last week pl'q)hecy does oot demand t h e morning dew 011 the wall ue l8ld
century, is some 30 feet hlgb and but every ••staJJ" has its o w n ol Jesus• life before tbe cruel- rebuilding ol tbe Temple in the to represent tears as the an20 feet thick. No one knows the merchant. Meat is sold at o n e ftxfon. The House f1 CaJphas,for last dqa.
ctent wall weeps with the peoeu.ct location ~ tbe ancient spot, nuts ataootber,bakedgoods Instance, Js wellpreserved.Here
l must add a word about the pie otlarael.
walla, eapec:lall,y on the north at another, the fabrics at yet an- is the ancient cistern that ser. Waillng Wall, for so many have
'The Jews f1.18rael walk erect
aide ol the dt;y. Several gates other. A cobblerisworkiDginone ved as a prison and the place f1 asked. 'lbls Ia one f1 the holiest now, however, ror a new world
Pn access through the walls to- booth, a weaver at another, a scourging where the grooves of aU Jewish shrines and a place has come to them in Jerusalem
cky, but cars ue mt permitted. cran.sman at a third. There was made by ropes are ltlll evident of prayer and devotim for the and Israel. We stand 1n amaze-Only a camel or donkey could always a raft ofsouvenlrsandthe l.n the stone. Our guide told us Jewish people. 1t is located at the ment as we read Jeremiah's aoU'avel the many steps and nar- ever-present pop bottles that In~ of the meaning ol the 39 stripes base~ the western wall d the dent ,prophecy (23:7,8) thatl81l:
row streets. We lived In a hotel vite travellers to some warm pap and how perhaps thousands had Temple area and the huge stones
"Theretore. behold, the d a y 1
Just outside the famous Damas. tor one-halt Israeli 1J(NDd (about suffered In thia Roman torture cOu.id Well date back to the time come, satth the Lord, that thV
cua Gate and 90 wereabletowalk 16 cents).
chamber. Our eyes became moist of Solomon's Temple,
shall no more say, The Lord
the streets quite often.
History is in la.Yers in ancient as we remen'Oered how Jesus
A huge area has been recent· uvein which brought up the ehiJ.
I was amazed at the beehive of Jerusalem.
bore the punishment for our sins, ly cleared near the wall and It dren fA laraf,J out of Egypt; but,
•ctivity within the walls. Many
Every age since Solomon has perhBpa in this very place.
was almost fUled m the Sabbath The Lord lfveth, which brou8M
people live and own their o w n l.ts identifying marks. Our guide
The Fortress ci Antonio, lo- day that we visited. The men up and which led tlle seed ~
homes inside the walls and the would talk of Alexander t h e cated just north of the Temple and women worship separately Ule house of Israel out or tM
Great, the Macabees, the Ro. area, statred with a garrison ci with a divider marking the north north country, and tram all commans, the Arab rulers, the Cru- Roman soldiers 1n the days at area for the man and the south tries whither J have driven them;
saders, the Turks, the British Jesus, is the beginning of the section for the women.
and they shall drfellln their awa
and the Israelis. It was all inter- famous Vla Dolorosa (Way or
Jews have come hereforyears land."
esting, but we especially wanted Sorrows). Here Is still preser~
to see the JeruSalem aC Jesus ved the pavement where Jesus
and the Early Church.
must have stoOO when He was
The Church of the Holy Sepul~ tried before Pilate. A R o m a n
cher is a most sacred spot for Catholic Church is built over
Christians. This giant structure the area today and our white·
cover£ both the traditional Cal- robed nun pointed solemnlY to
vary and the tomb where Jesus the game room of the rortress
was burled and arose from the where the soldiers had used Jedead.
sus in their game of uy o o 1
REEDSVll..LE - Propert;y loss
A church was first bullt here King." Throughout the streets
was estimated at $10,000 Frl·
by Emperor Ccnstant:lne (335 A, between the Fortress and t he
day here when tile home of Mr.
D.) and was rebuilt by the Cru~ Church of the Holy Sepulcher
and Mrs. Claude &amp;nith was damsaders in 1149 A.D. Metal brae· are the marks of the 14 events
aged by a fire that started at
ings are about lll8ey part! aC the (Stations of the Cross) that took
4:30p.m.
buHdlng today in an attempt to place in the last hours before
Cause of the fire was not impresenre these ancient works ~ His crucULdon.
mediately known by the Olive
art and devotion.
The Upper Room, where Jesus
Fire Dept., which contained the
The church site is administer- ate the Last &amp;apper With His
blaze. Much of the damage was
ed today by the Roman Catholic disciples and where the H o 1 y
inside.
Church, the Greek Orthodox Spirit descended oo the Day &lt;i
FLremen saved some ri the
furniture. Damage was partially Church, and the Armenian Pentecost, is located south ~
Church. This triple admin~ the present dey wall and just next
covered by ln8urance.
lstration provides problems as tc. the Tomb rA David. It is reach~
Mrs. Smith publicly thanked
they attempt to keep in order ed by narrow steps, but the room
the firemen for their quick ac·
the eandles, icons, and religious Itself is about 4{1 by 60 feet and
tion which prevented the rtre
paraphernalia of the many groups has two large pillars in the cenrrom spreading to a grocery
who worship there.
ter. Our group stood in silence
store next ~r and adjacent
We sympathize, however, for and one ot the pastorsreadrelathomes, according to Mrs. L.yle
it is not easy to maintain a spir- ed Scripturepassagesafterwhich
BaJderBOil, Times - Sentinel coritual atmosphere with Ule thous- we sang from memory, "Alas,
respondent.
ands or pwking tourists who ap- and Did My Saviour Bleed."
. i
pear dally for a look at Chris~
The Temple area certainly
.) '
tendom's invl&amp;tbles. We will dominates the present walled cit;y
speak elsewhere of the Garden of Jerusalem. The great golden
Tomb and Gordon's Calvary dome atop the Muslim "Dome of
(Cootinued from page 1)
whi.::h many Protestants feel the Rock" is set apart in a huge
gel f~lne , and ••christmas could well be the alteofthe cruci- land area. A Muslim service was
Memories," a favorite arrange- fixion and the resurrection, and in progress as we arrived so
ment.
certainly ue more like t h e s e we waited some time to enter.
..liE· AU11ilih ut- .ui!S M-.:id.ES ot articles ar.t hie 11011,
The horlltulture dlvlalo!l in- places must baVe appeared I.Dtfte wi'TSmoved 'our shoes here but
John. ''iew ruins of a great Mid--East temple. Such scenes are
eludes classes for evergreen spedid not ccnrer our head as we did
littl more than 04 Piles of rock" without the excellent guides
clmens entitled .,The Twelve
in the mosques.
who bring life to these moooments of history.
Days o! Christmas"; flowering
The beautiful building, the exhouse plants, .. Legend of the
terior recently completely refinChristmas Rose, 11 and foliage
Ished, ns completedly covered
house plants, .,Christmas is a
with rug&amp; inside . There were no
state of the Mind."
chairs or altars or pictures. The
Three classes have been ingreat rock was there in the cen~
GALUPOLIS - The Rev. Ro~
cluded in the special displ8J's.
tor, however, and with the sight
These are .. Puppy Love," for aid Justice, pastor of the Church
of it came a flood of memories.
Christmas corsages; •• A present of the Nazarene, will deliver the
ATHENS - Uon Maddux. newHere it was that Abraham had
tor Santa," gttt wrappings, and Thanksgiving sennon next Wed- o!Jered Isaac, King David had o(. ly-elected state representative
"'There'll Always be a Christ- nesday morning at the a n n u a I
Cered sacrifice that the Jerusa- trom the 25th District, Thursday
Assembly for
mas," Christmas books and mag- Thanksgiving
men plague be stayed, the great night urged lOtll District Demgrades 7·12 at Gallia Academ.,y
azines.
temples c1 Solomon and Herod ocratic Action Club members
Mrs. Howard NolBII will give High Sehooi
had been buUt about It, arui ro "to keep a highly publicized,
Mike Adams, president oft he
a demonstration on handcrafted
this place came Jesus to wor- active Democratic Party in the
jewelry from native stones and GAHS Student CoWlcil, wiU reed
ship, and remained to teach. next 700 days. "
will have on exhibit at th e show the U. S. President's Thanksgiv~" Organization." he said, was
The Rock, which Is about the
her oollectlon of stones.
i~ Proclamation. Steve Snowden,
the
key In his victory over tbe
size o( a tennis court and rises
The flower show Christmas vice-presidert, will open the p~
lncombent
state representative,
from four to seven feet above
tree, to be prepared by the Wild- gram leading the pledge of allegHarvey
Wei!,
Approximately SO
the floor level, is sacred to the
wood Junior Garden Club, wlll iance to the flag. David Romaine,
club
members.
meeting In Athens
Muslims for they believe it was
be decorated with homemade or. Chaplain. will gJve dewtions.
for
the
regular
bi-monthly meetthis spot that Muhammad tookot!
naments, strings of popcorn and
There will be special ThanksIng
of
the
DAC,
also heard from
on a journey to heaven.
crlllberries, and decorated pine- gh1ng music by the GAHS choir
Harry
B.
Crew
son,
unsuccessful
Many Christians believe that
,
cones.
and the Madrigals, The choir will
Democratic
Congressional
clldithe Jews some day will rebuild
The doorw'aJ.. decoration tor sing "Let All the World," "The
date.
the Temple on this very site.
the show wilJ be made by the Pra,yer of Our Lord," and
DAC President Bill t.velle
Winding Trail Junior Garden "Praise to the Lord." The Madri· We were anxious tor the~ recognized club members from
of Dr. Robert Unmack (Our gJ"&lt;q&gt;
Club.
gals will sing "Sing Unto God"
B lble teacher and proCessor f1 each county and county chairmen
According to the show rules, aoo "Sing to the Lord oftheHarArcheology at Central Baptist lncludl~ Jack Crisp, E.A. Wlr&gt;DO plastic Oowers, foliage. or vesL' '
Seminary in Kansa• Clcy) oo gett, John Wingett and Gordon
Tom Brandeberry and James
other artificial plant material
this N&gt;:iect. He was not dog- caldwell. Meigs, and former Sen.
are permitted. Dried, painted, Mullins will play "The Lord's
matic in his &amp;nSl'fer, but gave James S. Porter ol Gallipolis,
glittered or fresh plant material Prayer" al'ki "LetthereBePeace
four reasms why he felt it would who reported on their local elecmay be used In any or all or the on Earth" in a guitar duet. Mrs.
tions.
eluses. Entries are to be In Arme Fischer, vocal music in- not happen ln the near ruture.
First, because it would cause
place by 11 a.m. oo Saturday and structor, will lead the singing of
a
religious war. This is t h e
not removed until the show closes " Am~:rica." Mike Adams w i II
IN VIETNAM
third
most sacred site in the
on &amp;mday at 4 p.m.
dismiss the assembly,
GALLIPOLIS - PF C FrederMuslim world and it has been
ick E, Schultz, Jr., arrived in
held by them since 1187.
Seoondly, It would be too coli- Nha Trang VIBIDam on Mondoy,
ly for the Jews. Their ecooomy Nov. 11. His acklren ia: PFC
is stretched to the limit now. Frederick E, Schultz, Jr., US
Thlnlly, the ancient UMUcal 51647489, HHBF 1 Force V. Arty,
ceremonies with their elabor- APO 96350, SanFrancl • ..o, Calif.
ate blood sacrifices would be He Ia a 1966 Pt. Pleaoanl gracmforeign even to the molt ortho- ate.

GALLIPOLIS - Judie Jolin W.
Howell tined VlriiU Adlllpo, 17,
PotnerOY, $15 and colla, Solurdo,)' In GaU!polla County Juvettlle
Court oo a State lllshWI.Y Patrol
chirp o( speeding.
In other patrol eale8, Jert7
HUI, 16, Addllllll, was lined $10
ud costs, defecUYI exhanP and
Kemeth MUler, 16, RL 1 Patriot,
•10 and collll, passing em a yellow line. Ceetl G. Tblvener, 17,
Gall!pollo, forfeltedafll!.~lxmd
for opeedlng.

Petition Filed

Fire Loss
$10,000

To Home

-·

Flower Show

Program for

Assembly Set

THE REV, NYLE D. BORDEN, CHAPLAIN at tha Galllpo.
lis State Institute, tntervfewa a boy trom the KumJ Laproaarlum in Uganda.

Reports
Visit

GALLIPOLIS- Pally McClelland, 2135 Eastern Ave., flied a
petition Friday In Gollla County
Common Pleas Court tor a df.
vorce from Roger McClellaDd on
srounda &lt;i extreme eruelt;y, She
also seeks alimony and cuatody
or three m1nor children. Thi!IY
were married Feb. 21, 1953.
Judge Ronald R. calltoun allowed an lnimtctlon qainlt the
defendant ro keep bltn !rom annoying or molesting the plalntlfr.

A

GALWPOLIS- Chaplain Nyle
Borden of the Gallipolis State Institute who mce served as mod~

erator for the Providence Misllonary Baptist AsOO&lt;iation,
spent two weeks in the L a k e
VIctoria Region of Africa early
last swruner aa a guest rl.. Dr,
BOl\iamln A. Perry.
Molt &lt;i lhlo time was spent
Ylsitlng ml"ion schools and hospitals which included the Kwnl
Leprosarium.
A description ot his visit and
10me €1 his experiences can be
beard oo WMPO this week at
10:15 a.m. The Meigs Cowtcy
Ministerial Assor.iaUon ls relinquishing Ito time so that the
Radio Audience can listen to
the "'Heart Beat of Mrlca."
The lett hand of the young man
Men in the picture had been
treated; however, he had returned to his village and was practJ.c.
lng the ancient custom of covering the bo&lt;\y with white volcanic
ashes.

Till' Sunday Times - Sentinel, SUnda)', November 2-4 , 1968 ·

Bucks Win 13th In
Row, Cop Big Ten,
•p
Set For Bowl Trl
By HARVEY SHAPIRO
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UI'O - Fullback Jim Otis crashed across
for four touchdowns Salurd&amp;,)' to propel unbeaten and second ranked
Ohio Slate to a 50-14 trouncing or fourth ranked Michigan, the Big
Ten title aOO a trip to the Rose Bowl.
Ohio State finished regular season play with a 9-D record whUe
Michigan tlnlshed al 8·2. It will be the first Rose Bowl trip for Ohio
State since 1958.
A record crowd of 85,371 swarmed onto the field after the final
gun and tore down tile goal posts aro mobbed the players.
Otis, a 20~ pounder, scored on runs of five, two, three and two
yards and racked up 141 yards in 32 trips to outshine Ron Johnson,
" Michigan's talented halfback, who owng the Big Ten single game and
, season rushing records,
Otis wourxl up with 16 touch- ois.
dOl\'0 runs for the season, a new
The Buckeyes spotted Michi· school reoord.
gan a fil'5t period touchdown but
Sophomore quarterback Re:x came back to tie it 7-7 on Otis'
Kern scored two touchdowns for nrst touchdown as the Initial
the Buckeyes on runs of five and quarter ended.
three yards, Larry Zelina swept
Kern put Ohio State ahead al
left end for s six :rard touchdown 14·7 in the seoord peri&lt;X1 before
.,run arxl Jim Roman booted a 32 Johnson got his second score and
yard field goal and made five con- the final Michigan touchdown of
versions.
the afternooo to tie It at 14-H.
Johnson set two Big Ten season Otis put the Buckeyes ahead to
~· records in defeat. His two touch~
stay on a two--yard smash in the
down plunges of one yard each second period to make the half- gave him 92 points in seven con-- time score 21-14.
•·· ference games lo surpass PW"The Buckeyes poured it on aft..
duc's Leroy Keyes who set tile er intermission witllOtis scoring
... record with 90 last season.
two more touchdowns ard Zelina
Johnson, who rolled up 347 and Kern one each while the ten.. yards and five touchdowns last acious Ohio state defense stop.... Saturday againstWisconsin,man-. ped Michigan cold.
aged onl,y 91 yards against the
Score by quarters:
... Buckeyes.
Michigan ...... ,7 7 0 0-14
But it was enough t.o give llim Ohio state . , . , .• 7 14 6 23-50
: 1,391 for the season, a new c~
Mich - Johnson I run (Killian
: terence starxtard. The old yard- kick)
: age record of 1,371 was set In
Ohio- Otis 5 run(Romankick)
7 1965 by Jim Grabowski of Dlirr.
Ohio- Kern 5 run (Roman kick)
Mich- Johnsoo 1 rWl (Killian
Ttgers
kick)
Ohio- Otis 2 run(Roman kick)
Ohio- Zelina 6 run (kick railed)
80-58
Ohio - FG Roman 32
Ohio - Kern3 run(Roman kick)
POIITSMOUTH - A 26-iJoint
:, erfort by Charles Taylor led
Ohio ·- otis 3 run(Romanklck)
Ohio - Otis 2 run (pass failed&gt;
:":: Portsmouth to an 80-58 cage vic~- tory Friday over Ironton after
A- 85,371 (record).
·" Ironton had taken a 36-35 haUStatistics of the Michigan-Ohio
time lead. steve Bartram had 19 Stale football game:
MICH osu
: points for the losers.
DEPARTMENT
28
·: IROt'jTON (:;al~]looch, 7-2-16; F~~t.t Downs ... .• .. 17
421
~ Bartnun: ·:;..S:'l6; Washti,;rn; ~ Rushing Yardage ... 140
46
· 9; s.yert, 1-0- 2; Edwards, 1-1-3; Passing Yardage . .. 171
162
."-Kitchen, 4-2-10; Akers, 0-2-2. To- Return Yardage .. . .. 160
-· tals: 20- 18-Sil.
6-9-t
Passes , ...... 14·24..3
PORTSMOUTH
(80) -llagPunts ... . ...... 5-39.8 2.3 0. 5
2
Fumbles lost . . . . . . . 1
gette, 4-2-10; Noel, 3-0-6; Ta,ylor,
37
11-4-26; Davis, 4-0..Si Lewis, -l- Yards pe!'lllized , .... 43
2-10; Webb, 5-4-14; Monk, 1-0-2;
Drew, 2-0-4. Totals: 34-12-80.
Score by Quarters:
lrorton . • ••. , .• 11 36 46 58
Portsmoutfl .•. , , 16 35 52 80

BUICK'S OPEL KADEn 2-DOOR SEDAN

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UPPER RT. 1

GALLIPOLIS

Maddux Tells

How He Won

BOILERMAKERS WIN
LArAYETIE, lnd, (lll'l)
All-America Leroy Keyes concluded a brilliant collegiate ca.
SEASON BIG 10
reer Saturday by scoring three of TEAM
7-0-0
his foui' touchdo,ms in the firal Ohio . . . . . . . 9~
G-1..0
peri od to give Purdue a cliffhang· Michigan ...•.. 8-2..0
5-2-0
er 3&amp;-35 triumph over arch-rival Purdue , .• . , .. 8-2-0
Minnesota
. . S..4-0
5-2-0
Irdiana.
4-3-0
Keyes, although hobbled most Indiana . . . . . • 6-4-0
4--3-0
of the seascn ~ injuries , gainl'd Iowa . . . . .. .. 5-5-0
2-S..()
138 yards In 26 carries all:l his Mich. State ..•• 5-5--0
1-0-0
longest sprint, good for 42 yards, Illinois . • . . . . 1-9-0
1-6-0 I
gave the Riveters their first Nortl1western ... 1-9-0
0..7~0
JOUchdown in the initial period. Wisconsin ...• 0-10-0

comes to

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longest-ln-the-nationa major col lege wllmint: streak at 16 games
and earn a tie for the Ivy
League champJonshir,) with a 2929 tie.
Harvard's deadlocking touct1down came after play had
expired and capped an amazing
comeback before 40,280 at
Harvard stadium as reserve
Frank
Champi
Quarterback
Ulrew an 8-yard scoring pass to
Captain Vic Gatto as lime ran
out on the final play of the
game.
lt took 15 minutes to clear the
crowd from the stadium turf
before Champ!, a junior from
Everett, Mass.. threw a sue cessful conversion p a s 6 to
sophomore end Pete Varney to
deadlock the score.
Fan Flood Gridiron
Pandemonium
erupted
as
more than 10,000 fans nooded

escorted the underdog Harvard
players slowly off the field.
The last-second heroics wiped
out an amazing one-man scoring
performance by Yale quarterback Brian Dowling after he
had had a personal hand in
every one of his team's points
Dowling ran 2 and 5 yards !or
scores, passed 4 yards to
halfback Calvin Hill for another
and 5 yards lo end Del Martin
on Ule two.potnt cooversion and
held the ball on thn;e successful
l."'OlVersion kicks by Bob Boy less.
Harvard trailed by as much
as 22 points in the first meeting
of the rirst mutually wtbeaten
Ivy rivals since i909 before
storming back with reservist
Cl1ampi playing a starring role.
lie passed ror three touch ~
downs, two of them to end
Bruce Freeman for lS and 16
yards. Fullback Gus Grim
plunged one yard for the other
score. lie also ran for an earlier
two point conversion.

Iowa Sets 2 Big 10
Records In 37-13 Win
CHAMPAIGN, Dl . (UPO - Iowa
set two Big Ten scoring r ecords
Saturday as sophemore quarter~
back Larry Lawrence led t h e
Hawkeyes to a 37-13 victors over

lllinois.
Lawrence ran four yards for
one score and connected on 13 of
18 passes for 179 yards including a 2()..yard touchdown toss to
Ai Bream. Hawkeye fullback Tim
Sullivan added two more touch·
downs, both on one yard plunges.
Iowa thus ended Its Big Ten
campaign with a mere 4-3 record,
but it scored 256 points in those
six game s, eclipsing the re..:ord
225 points scored by Purdue in
conference play in 1967.
The Hawkeyes ' ao.,oerage of36.fi
points per game surpassed the
record average of 34.5 set by
Michigan in 1943.

lead favored Michigan State to a
31-14 decision over Sorthwe st~
ern in a Big Ten rootball game.
The \ictory closed Michigan
State's season with a ~5 record
and a 2-5 mark in the Big Ten.
:-.lorthwestern's campaign e rded
with a 1-9 marJ.. and l·fi in conference pla_y,

~1ADlSON, Wis. (UPO - Min.
nesota s hook off !he lost fumble s
and used a key 4fi yard pas .~ interference pen&amp;ltJ and a brui s~
ing ground game Saturday to beat
winless Wisconsin 23-13. It wa s
the 15th successive loss f01· the
Badgers O\'er a two season span.
The Gophers, whofinishedwiLil
a Big Te n record of five wins
ard two losses had more than
they coWd handle for mo st of the
game as Wi sconsin, whicll e nded
its first winless season in hisEVANSTON, lll . (UP0 - So. tory, used ball control tactics lo
phomore BUI Triplett scored dominate the fir st half hoo come
three times on one yard dive s close to what wuld have been a
over the line and threw a touch- tying score in the final quarter.
down pass as well Saturda.v to

traditional Ivy League signal of
waving white handerkerchlefs
and streamers when the Crlmson's sudden comeback exploded.
Champi tired 16 yards to
Freeman for the score and
Crim plunged for the conversioo
to narrow the score to 29.21
with only 42 seconds remaining.
Harvard worked Ute onside
kick with sophomore safety Dill
Kelly recovering on the Yale 49.
Champi alternately ran and
passed the Crimsoo to tlle Yale
eight with three seconds remaining and scrambled wildly
as time ran out before finding
Gatto· in the end zone with a
touchdown pass.
lie then passed to Varney to
deadlock the score well after
the
game had ended fUld
destroy Yale's bid to become
the first sucl.-essful defender of
an Ivy League's championship.

OU Winner
AT HENS - Ohio Univers ity
completed a perfect season - un-.
defeated - here saturday by de~
cis i vely pounding Northern 0linois 28- 12.
Three fonner Southeastern
Ohio League stars we r e standouts, Phil Swindell at tight end;
Car so n Crow, al center on offen se, and Todd Snyder, split
end.
Swindell, of Pomeroy RD, suffered a kidney injury in the sec·
oOO qua rter and did not play artl!rwards. lie was hit in the end
zone whe n about to snare a pas!ll.
lnledl!re nce was called.

YOUNG REACTIVATED
PII!LADELPHM (UPD - The
Philadelphia Eagles announced
th~ activation of rookie linebacker Adrian Young Saturday for
Sunday's game against the Cleveland Browns.
.
YOlmg, an All-American from
tf1e University of South Califor nia, was placed on the inactive
list , for a month when he was
stricken with appendicitis at
PHtsburgt earlier in the sea -

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Galllpollo, Ohio
Phone «6-4113

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1965

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Yale was leading, 29-13, and rtnls
with identical
Ell Rooters were delivering the reeords in regular

8-Q-1

,..son play

and a 6-0-1 mark in Ivy
competition.
1be tie gave
Harvard its flrst wtteaten but
tied season since 1920 and was
tile first Harvard-Yale deadlock
since 19!il.
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67S.1

CINC1NNATI (UP!) - Jim

O'Brien, the nation's leading
collegiale scorer with 142
points, kicked a dramatic 47yard neld goal in the final
three secor.:ls Saturday to
Cincinnati to a 2~21 victory
over ancient rival Miami o{

un

Ohio .

A Pre-Owned ~

Cinci nnati quarterback Greg
Cook fired lhree touchdown
passes and racked lCJ 407
yard s in an aerial blitz that
wiped out a 21-7 Miami lead
in lhe fourth quarter. The brilliant Cincinnati passer raised
his :;eason total offense yardag~: t.o 3,210 yards to become
the third player in NCA history to amass more than 3,000
yards in a career.

•w•-•se

M•.o•

From
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1968 Cadillac Convertible De ,Ville .... ... $5600
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1964 Cadillac Coupe De Ville ........... $2095
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MARTIN TO RESIGN
HOUSTON (IJPD - Slater Martin, coach and general manager
of the Houston Mavericks d. the
American Basketball AssocJa.
tion, will quJt after Wednesday's
game against Denver, the Housoon Post said Saturday.
WILDCATS DE rEA TED
KNOXVD..LE, Tenn. (UP0 Quarterback Bubba Wyche threw
three touchdown passes saturday,
two of them to speedy wi~ck
Lester McClain, to pace the
eighth-ranked Tennessee Vols to

a 24-7 victory over the Kentucky
Wildcats.

1964 Cadillac H.T. Coupe ........ . ... . . $1795
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Harvard scored an astonishing
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The Surday Ttme1 - SenUnel, Slalay, November 24, 1968

12 -

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Pomeroy Youth is

13 -

Holy Land lmpressiom-Old Jerusalem

Jerusalem's

Hist~ry

GALUPOLJS - The walls ~ little shops have an assortment days of Jesus.
elm Jews ot this day,
to pray and bewail the 1011 of
Jeruaalem are very real. The of about anyt.hlng OIHI c:ould want.
There are several places that
Fb1ally, our Nn Testament their city. The drops ct early
preaent me, buUt In the 16th
There are no supermarkets, retell the story of the last week pl'q)hecy does oot demand t h e morning dew 011 the wall ue l8ld
century, is some 30 feet hlgb and but every ••staJJ" has its o w n ol Jesus• life before tbe cruel- rebuilding ol tbe Temple in the to represent tears as the an20 feet thick. No one knows the merchant. Meat is sold at o n e ftxfon. The House f1 CaJphas,for last dqa.
ctent wall weeps with the peoeu.ct location ~ tbe ancient spot, nuts ataootber,bakedgoods Instance, Js wellpreserved.Here
l must add a word about the pie otlarael.
walla, eapec:lall,y on the north at another, the fabrics at yet an- is the ancient cistern that ser. Waillng Wall, for so many have
'The Jews f1.18rael walk erect
aide ol the dt;y. Several gates other. A cobblerisworkiDginone ved as a prison and the place f1 asked. 'lbls Ia one f1 the holiest now, however, ror a new world
Pn access through the walls to- booth, a weaver at another, a scourging where the grooves of aU Jewish shrines and a place has come to them in Jerusalem
cky, but cars ue mt permitted. cran.sman at a third. There was made by ropes are ltlll evident of prayer and devotim for the and Israel. We stand 1n amaze-Only a camel or donkey could always a raft ofsouvenlrsandthe l.n the stone. Our guide told us Jewish people. 1t is located at the ment as we read Jeremiah's aoU'avel the many steps and nar- ever-present pop bottles that In~ of the meaning ol the 39 stripes base~ the western wall d the dent ,prophecy (23:7,8) thatl81l:
row streets. We lived In a hotel vite travellers to some warm pap and how perhaps thousands had Temple area and the huge stones
"Theretore. behold, the d a y 1
Just outside the famous Damas. tor one-halt Israeli 1J(NDd (about suffered In thia Roman torture cOu.id Well date back to the time come, satth the Lord, that thV
cua Gate and 90 wereabletowalk 16 cents).
chamber. Our eyes became moist of Solomon's Temple,
shall no more say, The Lord
the streets quite often.
History is in la.Yers in ancient as we remen'Oered how Jesus
A huge area has been recent· uvein which brought up the ehiJ.
I was amazed at the beehive of Jerusalem.
bore the punishment for our sins, ly cleared near the wall and It dren fA laraf,J out of Egypt; but,
•ctivity within the walls. Many
Every age since Solomon has perhBpa in this very place.
was almost fUled m the Sabbath The Lord lfveth, which brou8M
people live and own their o w n l.ts identifying marks. Our guide
The Fortress ci Antonio, lo- day that we visited. The men up and which led tlle seed ~
homes inside the walls and the would talk of Alexander t h e cated just north of the Temple and women worship separately Ule house of Israel out or tM
Great, the Macabees, the Ro. area, statred with a garrison ci with a divider marking the north north country, and tram all commans, the Arab rulers, the Cru- Roman soldiers 1n the days at area for the man and the south tries whither J have driven them;
saders, the Turks, the British Jesus, is the beginning of the section for the women.
and they shall drfellln their awa
and the Israelis. It was all inter- famous Vla Dolorosa (Way or
Jews have come hereforyears land."
esting, but we especially wanted Sorrows). Here Is still preser~
to see the JeruSalem aC Jesus ved the pavement where Jesus
and the Early Church.
must have stoOO when He was
The Church of the Holy Sepul~ tried before Pilate. A R o m a n
cher is a most sacred spot for Catholic Church is built over
Christians. This giant structure the area today and our white·
cover£ both the traditional Cal- robed nun pointed solemnlY to
vary and the tomb where Jesus the game room of the rortress
was burled and arose from the where the soldiers had used Jedead.
sus in their game of uy o o 1
REEDSVll..LE - Propert;y loss
A church was first bullt here King." Throughout the streets
was estimated at $10,000 Frl·
by Emperor Ccnstant:lne (335 A, between the Fortress and t he
day here when tile home of Mr.
D.) and was rebuilt by the Cru~ Church of the Holy Sepulcher
and Mrs. Claude &amp;nith was damsaders in 1149 A.D. Metal brae· are the marks of the 14 events
aged by a fire that started at
ings are about lll8ey part! aC the (Stations of the Cross) that took
4:30p.m.
buHdlng today in an attempt to place in the last hours before
Cause of the fire was not impresenre these ancient works ~ His crucULdon.
mediately known by the Olive
art and devotion.
The Upper Room, where Jesus
Fire Dept., which contained the
The church site is administer- ate the Last &amp;apper With His
blaze. Much of the damage was
ed today by the Roman Catholic disciples and where the H o 1 y
inside.
Church, the Greek Orthodox Spirit descended oo the Day &lt;i
FLremen saved some ri the
furniture. Damage was partially Church, and the Armenian Pentecost, is located south ~
Church. This triple admin~ the present dey wall and just next
covered by ln8urance.
lstration provides problems as tc. the Tomb rA David. It is reach~
Mrs. Smith publicly thanked
they attempt to keep in order ed by narrow steps, but the room
the firemen for their quick ac·
the eandles, icons, and religious Itself is about 4{1 by 60 feet and
tion which prevented the rtre
paraphernalia of the many groups has two large pillars in the cenrrom spreading to a grocery
who worship there.
ter. Our group stood in silence
store next ~r and adjacent
We sympathize, however, for and one ot the pastorsreadrelathomes, according to Mrs. L.yle
it is not easy to maintain a spir- ed Scripturepassagesafterwhich
BaJderBOil, Times - Sentinel coritual atmosphere with Ule thous- we sang from memory, "Alas,
respondent.
ands or pwking tourists who ap- and Did My Saviour Bleed."
. i
pear dally for a look at Chris~
The Temple area certainly
.) '
tendom's invl&amp;tbles. We will dominates the present walled cit;y
speak elsewhere of the Garden of Jerusalem. The great golden
Tomb and Gordon's Calvary dome atop the Muslim "Dome of
(Cootinued from page 1)
whi.::h many Protestants feel the Rock" is set apart in a huge
gel f~lne , and ••christmas could well be the alteofthe cruci- land area. A Muslim service was
Memories," a favorite arrange- fixion and the resurrection, and in progress as we arrived so
ment.
certainly ue more like t h e s e we waited some time to enter.
..liE· AU11ilih ut- .ui!S M-.:id.ES ot articles ar.t hie 11011,
The horlltulture dlvlalo!l in- places must baVe appeared I.Dtfte wi'TSmoved 'our shoes here but
John. ''iew ruins of a great Mid--East temple. Such scenes are
eludes classes for evergreen spedid not ccnrer our head as we did
littl more than 04 Piles of rock" without the excellent guides
clmens entitled .,The Twelve
in the mosques.
who bring life to these moooments of history.
Days o! Christmas"; flowering
The beautiful building, the exhouse plants, .. Legend of the
terior recently completely refinChristmas Rose, 11 and foliage
Ished, ns completedly covered
house plants, .,Christmas is a
with rug&amp; inside . There were no
state of the Mind."
chairs or altars or pictures. The
Three classes have been ingreat rock was there in the cen~
GALUPOLIS - The Rev. Ro~
cluded in the special displ8J's.
tor, however, and with the sight
These are .. Puppy Love," for aid Justice, pastor of the Church
of it came a flood of memories.
Christmas corsages; •• A present of the Nazarene, will deliver the
ATHENS - Uon Maddux. newHere it was that Abraham had
tor Santa," gttt wrappings, and Thanksgiving sennon next Wed- o!Jered Isaac, King David had o(. ly-elected state representative
"'There'll Always be a Christ- nesday morning at the a n n u a I
Cered sacrifice that the Jerusa- trom the 25th District, Thursday
Assembly for
mas," Christmas books and mag- Thanksgiving
men plague be stayed, the great night urged lOtll District Demgrades 7·12 at Gallia Academ.,y
azines.
temples c1 Solomon and Herod ocratic Action Club members
Mrs. Howard NolBII will give High Sehooi
had been buUt about It, arui ro "to keep a highly publicized,
Mike Adams, president oft he
a demonstration on handcrafted
this place came Jesus to wor- active Democratic Party in the
jewelry from native stones and GAHS Student CoWlcil, wiU reed
ship, and remained to teach. next 700 days. "
will have on exhibit at th e show the U. S. President's Thanksgiv~" Organization." he said, was
The Rock, which Is about the
her oollectlon of stones.
i~ Proclamation. Steve Snowden,
the
key In his victory over tbe
size o( a tennis court and rises
The flower show Christmas vice-presidert, will open the p~
lncombent
state representative,
from four to seven feet above
tree, to be prepared by the Wild- gram leading the pledge of allegHarvey
Wei!,
Approximately SO
the floor level, is sacred to the
wood Junior Garden Club, wlll iance to the flag. David Romaine,
club
members.
meeting In Athens
Muslims for they believe it was
be decorated with homemade or. Chaplain. will gJve dewtions.
for
the
regular
bi-monthly meetthis spot that Muhammad tookot!
naments, strings of popcorn and
There will be special ThanksIng
of
the
DAC,
also heard from
on a journey to heaven.
crlllberries, and decorated pine- gh1ng music by the GAHS choir
Harry
B.
Crew
son,
unsuccessful
Many Christians believe that
,
cones.
and the Madrigals, The choir will
Democratic
Congressional
clldithe Jews some day will rebuild
The doorw'aJ.. decoration tor sing "Let All the World," "The
date.
the Temple on this very site.
the show wilJ be made by the Pra,yer of Our Lord," and
DAC President Bill t.velle
Winding Trail Junior Garden "Praise to the Lord." The Madri· We were anxious tor the~ recognized club members from
of Dr. Robert Unmack (Our gJ"&lt;q&gt;
Club.
gals will sing "Sing Unto God"
B lble teacher and proCessor f1 each county and county chairmen
According to the show rules, aoo "Sing to the Lord oftheHarArcheology at Central Baptist lncludl~ Jack Crisp, E.A. Wlr&gt;DO plastic Oowers, foliage. or vesL' '
Seminary in Kansa• Clcy) oo gett, John Wingett and Gordon
Tom Brandeberry and James
other artificial plant material
this N&gt;:iect. He was not dog- caldwell. Meigs, and former Sen.
are permitted. Dried, painted, Mullins will play "The Lord's
matic in his &amp;nSl'fer, but gave James S. Porter ol Gallipolis,
glittered or fresh plant material Prayer" al'ki "LetthereBePeace
four reasms why he felt it would who reported on their local elecmay be used In any or all or the on Earth" in a guitar duet. Mrs.
tions.
eluses. Entries are to be In Arme Fischer, vocal music in- not happen ln the near ruture.
First, because it would cause
place by 11 a.m. oo Saturday and structor, will lead the singing of
a
religious war. This is t h e
not removed until the show closes " Am~:rica." Mike Adams w i II
IN VIETNAM
third
most sacred site in the
on &amp;mday at 4 p.m.
dismiss the assembly,
GALLIPOLIS - PF C FrederMuslim world and it has been
ick E, Schultz, Jr., arrived in
held by them since 1187.
Seoondly, It would be too coli- Nha Trang VIBIDam on Mondoy,
ly for the Jews. Their ecooomy Nov. 11. His acklren ia: PFC
is stretched to the limit now. Frederick E, Schultz, Jr., US
Thlnlly, the ancient UMUcal 51647489, HHBF 1 Force V. Arty,
ceremonies with their elabor- APO 96350, SanFrancl • ..o, Calif.
ate blood sacrifices would be He Ia a 1966 Pt. Pleaoanl gracmforeign even to the molt ortho- ate.

GALLIPOLIS - Judie Jolin W.
Howell tined VlriiU Adlllpo, 17,
PotnerOY, $15 and colla, Solurdo,)' In GaU!polla County Juvettlle
Court oo a State lllshWI.Y Patrol
chirp o( speeding.
In other patrol eale8, Jert7
HUI, 16, Addllllll, was lined $10
ud costs, defecUYI exhanP and
Kemeth MUler, 16, RL 1 Patriot,
•10 and collll, passing em a yellow line. Ceetl G. Tblvener, 17,
Gall!pollo, forfeltedafll!.~lxmd
for opeedlng.

Petition Filed

Fire Loss
$10,000

To Home

-·

Flower Show

Program for

Assembly Set

THE REV, NYLE D. BORDEN, CHAPLAIN at tha Galllpo.
lis State Institute, tntervfewa a boy trom the KumJ Laproaarlum in Uganda.

Reports
Visit

GALLIPOLIS- Pally McClelland, 2135 Eastern Ave., flied a
petition Friday In Gollla County
Common Pleas Court tor a df.
vorce from Roger McClellaDd on
srounda &lt;i extreme eruelt;y, She
also seeks alimony and cuatody
or three m1nor children. Thi!IY
were married Feb. 21, 1953.
Judge Ronald R. calltoun allowed an lnimtctlon qainlt the
defendant ro keep bltn !rom annoying or molesting the plalntlfr.

A

GALWPOLIS- Chaplain Nyle
Borden of the Gallipolis State Institute who mce served as mod~

erator for the Providence Misllonary Baptist AsOO&lt;iation,
spent two weeks in the L a k e
VIctoria Region of Africa early
last swruner aa a guest rl.. Dr,
BOl\iamln A. Perry.
Molt &lt;i lhlo time was spent
Ylsitlng ml"ion schools and hospitals which included the Kwnl
Leprosarium.
A description ot his visit and
10me €1 his experiences can be
beard oo WMPO this week at
10:15 a.m. The Meigs Cowtcy
Ministerial Assor.iaUon ls relinquishing Ito time so that the
Radio Audience can listen to
the "'Heart Beat of Mrlca."
The lett hand of the young man
Men in the picture had been
treated; however, he had returned to his village and was practJ.c.
lng the ancient custom of covering the bo&lt;\y with white volcanic
ashes.

Till' Sunday Times - Sentinel, SUnda)', November 2-4 , 1968 ·

Bucks Win 13th In
Row, Cop Big Ten,
•p
Set For Bowl Trl
By HARVEY SHAPIRO
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UI'O - Fullback Jim Otis crashed across
for four touchdowns Salurd&amp;,)' to propel unbeaten and second ranked
Ohio Slate to a 50-14 trouncing or fourth ranked Michigan, the Big
Ten title aOO a trip to the Rose Bowl.
Ohio State finished regular season play with a 9-D record whUe
Michigan tlnlshed al 8·2. It will be the first Rose Bowl trip for Ohio
State since 1958.
A record crowd of 85,371 swarmed onto the field after the final
gun and tore down tile goal posts aro mobbed the players.
Otis, a 20~ pounder, scored on runs of five, two, three and two
yards and racked up 141 yards in 32 trips to outshine Ron Johnson,
" Michigan's talented halfback, who owng the Big Ten single game and
, season rushing records,
Otis wourxl up with 16 touch- ois.
dOl\'0 runs for the season, a new
The Buckeyes spotted Michi· school reoord.
gan a fil'5t period touchdown but
Sophomore quarterback Re:x came back to tie it 7-7 on Otis'
Kern scored two touchdowns for nrst touchdown as the Initial
the Buckeyes on runs of five and quarter ended.
three yards, Larry Zelina swept
Kern put Ohio State ahead al
left end for s six :rard touchdown 14·7 in the seoord peri&lt;X1 before
.,run arxl Jim Roman booted a 32 Johnson got his second score and
yard field goal and made five con- the final Michigan touchdown of
versions.
the afternooo to tie It at 14-H.
Johnson set two Big Ten season Otis put the Buckeyes ahead to
~· records in defeat. His two touch~
stay on a two--yard smash in the
down plunges of one yard each second period to make the half- gave him 92 points in seven con-- time score 21-14.
•·· ference games lo surpass PW"The Buckeyes poured it on aft..
duc's Leroy Keyes who set tile er intermission witllOtis scoring
... record with 90 last season.
two more touchdowns ard Zelina
Johnson, who rolled up 347 and Kern one each while the ten.. yards and five touchdowns last acious Ohio state defense stop.... Saturday againstWisconsin,man-. ped Michigan cold.
aged onl,y 91 yards against the
Score by quarters:
... Buckeyes.
Michigan ...... ,7 7 0 0-14
But it was enough t.o give llim Ohio state . , . , .• 7 14 6 23-50
: 1,391 for the season, a new c~
Mich - Johnson I run (Killian
: terence starxtard. The old yard- kick)
: age record of 1,371 was set In
Ohio- Otis 5 run(Romankick)
7 1965 by Jim Grabowski of Dlirr.
Ohio- Kern 5 run (Roman kick)
Mich- Johnsoo 1 rWl (Killian
Ttgers
kick)
Ohio- Otis 2 run(Roman kick)
Ohio- Zelina 6 run (kick railed)
80-58
Ohio - FG Roman 32
Ohio - Kern3 run(Roman kick)
POIITSMOUTH - A 26-iJoint
:, erfort by Charles Taylor led
Ohio ·- otis 3 run(Romanklck)
Ohio - Otis 2 run (pass failed&gt;
:":: Portsmouth to an 80-58 cage vic~- tory Friday over Ironton after
A- 85,371 (record).
·" Ironton had taken a 36-35 haUStatistics of the Michigan-Ohio
time lead. steve Bartram had 19 Stale football game:
MICH osu
: points for the losers.
DEPARTMENT
28
·: IROt'jTON (:;al~]looch, 7-2-16; F~~t.t Downs ... .• .. 17
421
~ Bartnun: ·:;..S:'l6; Washti,;rn; ~ Rushing Yardage ... 140
46
· 9; s.yert, 1-0- 2; Edwards, 1-1-3; Passing Yardage . .. 171
162
."-Kitchen, 4-2-10; Akers, 0-2-2. To- Return Yardage .. . .. 160
-· tals: 20- 18-Sil.
6-9-t
Passes , ...... 14·24..3
PORTSMOUTH
(80) -llagPunts ... . ...... 5-39.8 2.3 0. 5
2
Fumbles lost . . . . . . . 1
gette, 4-2-10; Noel, 3-0-6; Ta,ylor,
37
11-4-26; Davis, 4-0..Si Lewis, -l- Yards pe!'lllized , .... 43
2-10; Webb, 5-4-14; Monk, 1-0-2;
Drew, 2-0-4. Totals: 34-12-80.
Score by Quarters:
lrorton . • ••. , .• 11 36 46 58
Portsmoutfl .•. , , 16 35 52 80

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GALLIPOLIS

Maddux Tells

How He Won

BOILERMAKERS WIN
LArAYETIE, lnd, (lll'l)
All-America Leroy Keyes concluded a brilliant collegiate ca.
SEASON BIG 10
reer Saturday by scoring three of TEAM
7-0-0
his foui' touchdo,ms in the firal Ohio . . . . . . . 9~
G-1..0
peri od to give Purdue a cliffhang· Michigan ...•.. 8-2..0
5-2-0
er 3&amp;-35 triumph over arch-rival Purdue , .• . , .. 8-2-0
Minnesota
. . S..4-0
5-2-0
Irdiana.
4-3-0
Keyes, although hobbled most Indiana . . . . . • 6-4-0
4--3-0
of the seascn ~ injuries , gainl'd Iowa . . . . .. .. 5-5-0
2-S..()
138 yards In 26 carries all:l his Mich. State ..•• 5-5--0
1-0-0
longest sprint, good for 42 yards, Illinois . • . . . . 1-9-0
1-6-0 I
gave the Riveters their first Nortl1western ... 1-9-0
0..7~0
JOUchdown in the initial period. Wisconsin ...• 0-10-0

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longest-ln-the-nationa major col lege wllmint: streak at 16 games
and earn a tie for the Ivy
League champJonshir,) with a 2929 tie.
Harvard's deadlocking touct1down came after play had
expired and capped an amazing
comeback before 40,280 at
Harvard stadium as reserve
Frank
Champi
Quarterback
Ulrew an 8-yard scoring pass to
Captain Vic Gatto as lime ran
out on the final play of the
game.
lt took 15 minutes to clear the
crowd from the stadium turf
before Champ!, a junior from
Everett, Mass.. threw a sue cessful conversion p a s 6 to
sophomore end Pete Varney to
deadlock the score.
Fan Flood Gridiron
Pandemonium
erupted
as
more than 10,000 fans nooded

escorted the underdog Harvard
players slowly off the field.
The last-second heroics wiped
out an amazing one-man scoring
performance by Yale quarterback Brian Dowling after he
had had a personal hand in
every one of his team's points
Dowling ran 2 and 5 yards !or
scores, passed 4 yards to
halfback Calvin Hill for another
and 5 yards lo end Del Martin
on Ule two.potnt cooversion and
held the ball on thn;e successful
l."'OlVersion kicks by Bob Boy less.
Harvard trailed by as much
as 22 points in the first meeting
of the rirst mutually wtbeaten
Ivy rivals since i909 before
storming back with reservist
Cl1ampi playing a starring role.
lie passed ror three touch ~
downs, two of them to end
Bruce Freeman for lS and 16
yards. Fullback Gus Grim
plunged one yard for the other
score. lie also ran for an earlier
two point conversion.

Iowa Sets 2 Big 10
Records In 37-13 Win
CHAMPAIGN, Dl . (UPO - Iowa
set two Big Ten scoring r ecords
Saturday as sophemore quarter~
back Larry Lawrence led t h e
Hawkeyes to a 37-13 victors over

lllinois.
Lawrence ran four yards for
one score and connected on 13 of
18 passes for 179 yards including a 2()..yard touchdown toss to
Ai Bream. Hawkeye fullback Tim
Sullivan added two more touch·
downs, both on one yard plunges.
Iowa thus ended Its Big Ten
campaign with a mere 4-3 record,
but it scored 256 points in those
six game s, eclipsing the re..:ord
225 points scored by Purdue in
conference play in 1967.
The Hawkeyes ' ao.,oerage of36.fi
points per game surpassed the
record average of 34.5 set by
Michigan in 1943.

lead favored Michigan State to a
31-14 decision over Sorthwe st~
ern in a Big Ten rootball game.
The \ictory closed Michigan
State's season with a ~5 record
and a 2-5 mark in the Big Ten.
:-.lorthwestern's campaign e rded
with a 1-9 marJ.. and l·fi in conference pla_y,

~1ADlSON, Wis. (UPO - Min.
nesota s hook off !he lost fumble s
and used a key 4fi yard pas .~ interference pen&amp;ltJ and a brui s~
ing ground game Saturday to beat
winless Wisconsin 23-13. It wa s
the 15th successive loss f01· the
Badgers O\'er a two season span.
The Gophers, whofinishedwiLil
a Big Te n record of five wins
ard two losses had more than
they coWd handle for mo st of the
game as Wi sconsin, whicll e nded
its first winless season in hisEVANSTON, lll . (UP0 - So. tory, used ball control tactics lo
phomore BUI Triplett scored dominate the fir st half hoo come
three times on one yard dive s close to what wuld have been a
over the line and threw a touch- tying score in the final quarter.
down pass as well Saturda.v to

traditional Ivy League signal of
waving white handerkerchlefs
and streamers when the Crlmson's sudden comeback exploded.
Champi tired 16 yards to
Freeman for the score and
Crim plunged for the conversioo
to narrow the score to 29.21
with only 42 seconds remaining.
Harvard worked Ute onside
kick with sophomore safety Dill
Kelly recovering on the Yale 49.
Champi alternately ran and
passed the Crimsoo to tlle Yale
eight with three seconds remaining and scrambled wildly
as time ran out before finding
Gatto· in the end zone with a
touchdown pass.
lie then passed to Varney to
deadlock the score well after
the
game had ended fUld
destroy Yale's bid to become
the first sucl.-essful defender of
an Ivy League's championship.

OU Winner
AT HENS - Ohio Univers ity
completed a perfect season - un-.
defeated - here saturday by de~
cis i vely pounding Northern 0linois 28- 12.
Three fonner Southeastern
Ohio League stars we r e standouts, Phil Swindell at tight end;
Car so n Crow, al center on offen se, and Todd Snyder, split
end.
Swindell, of Pomeroy RD, suffered a kidney injury in the sec·
oOO qua rter and did not play artl!rwards. lie was hit in the end
zone whe n about to snare a pas!ll.
lnledl!re nce was called.

YOUNG REACTIVATED
PII!LADELPHM (UPD - The
Philadelphia Eagles announced
th~ activation of rookie linebacker Adrian Young Saturday for
Sunday's game against the Cleveland Browns.
.
YOlmg, an All-American from
tf1e University of South Califor nia, was placed on the inactive
list , for a month when he was
stricken with appendicitis at
PHtsburgt earlier in the sea -

01AM.ERICA
· lucceuora to Key Finance

300 2nd Avo.

Galllpollo, Ohio
Phone «6-4113

.••

SPECIALS
1965

DODGI

2 Door Hardtop, V8
Std. Trans.

$1095

1964

For• Custo111

2 Door Sedan, V8
Std. Trans. Radio
Low mileaa•
One owner

$995.

. "OHIO'S OLDE$T QODGE DEALiit';l"

4 MOlLE HOlE.

fully Furnished
2 or 3 Bedroom

: __ ~ ~ ~

Yale was leading, 29-13, and rtnls
with identical
Ell Rooters were delivering the reeords in regular

8-Q-1

,..son play

and a 6-0-1 mark in Ivy
competition.
1be tie gave
Harvard its flrst wtteaten but
tied season since 1920 and was
tile first Harvard-Yale deadlock
since 19!il.
-:·:- :·:·:·:&lt;·:·:·:-:-:·:-:-:-:-:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:-:·:-:-::::::;:;.;:::::::::

121

X

6Q"

See Them l_,r-1/ n
and The
Skyline
Series On Display

Til-COUNTY MOBILE HOMES

201:1 EASTERN A VI.

2ND &amp; VIAND

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

PT. PLEASANT
67S.1

CINC1NNATI (UP!) - Jim

O'Brien, the nation's leading
collegiale scorer with 142
points, kicked a dramatic 47yard neld goal in the final
three secor.:ls Saturday to
Cincinnati to a 2~21 victory
over ancient rival Miami o{

un

Ohio .

A Pre-Owned ~

Cinci nnati quarterback Greg
Cook fired lhree touchdown
passes and racked lCJ 407
yard s in an aerial blitz that
wiped out a 21-7 Miami lead
in lhe fourth quarter. The brilliant Cincinnati passer raised
his :;eason total offense yardag~: t.o 3,210 yards to become
the third player in NCA history to amass more than 3,000
yards in a career.

•w•-•se

M•.o•

From
Karr &amp;

VanZandt

1968 Cadillac Convertible De ,Ville .... ... $5600
White with brown leother interior, full power equip-ment, Climate Control air-conditioning, only 8,000
miles . Just like new .

1964 Cadillac Coupe De Ville ........... $2095
Gold with matching interior , full power equipment and
faclor)l oir·conditioning .

MARTIN TO RESIGN
HOUSTON (IJPD - Slater Martin, coach and general manager
of the Houston Mavericks d. the
American Basketball AssocJa.
tion, will quJt after Wednesday's
game against Denver, the Housoon Post said Saturday.
WILDCATS DE rEA TED
KNOXVD..LE, Tenn. (UP0 Quarterback Bubba Wyche threw
three touchdown passes saturday,
two of them to speedy wi~ck
Lester McClain, to pace the
eighth-ranked Tennessee Vols to

a 24-7 victory over the Kentucky
Wildcats.

1964 Cadillac H.T. Coupe ........ . ... . . $1795
Black with black interior, radio, tinted glass and
w/s / w tire$ .

See your authorized Cadillac dealer

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
MOTOR SALES
OPEN EVES. Tl L 1:00

POMIRO.V

~~---••••••••••••••••••. .

soo.

WHAT A FEW DOLLARS A MONTH
WILL BUY AT BLAETTNARS
YOUR PRESENT CAR WILL PROBABLY MAKE DOWN PAYMENT.
NO MONTHLY PAYMENTS UNTIL 1969

as you

drive

$67•70 per month

67 GTO

2 Dr . HardTop . Real sharp and very sporty all with red vinyl bucket seah . 4 sp . trans. It has
all the get up and go of greot GTO, 400 c u. in . engine.

68 COMET SPORT COUPE, 6 tyl., auto . hans. , radio and heater, w/s tires.~- -$2495
67 DODGE CORONET 440 2 DR . H.T. , B cyl., auto. ttans ., powe• stoe.Ing •••• $2095

66 CHEV. II NOVA STATION WAGON, 6 cyl., std. t•ans., tad;o ond hoole• •• •• $1595
66 CHEV. IMP. 2 DR. H.T ., 8 cyl., auto. trans. , power steering, R&amp;H, w/s tires $1795
66 FALCON 2 DR ., 6 cyl. , std. trans ., radio and hater, w/s tires............... $1195
66MUSTAHG 2 DR .H.T.,B cyl., std.ttans., tad;o and heor., •• ••• •••••••• $1595
65 FORD CUSTOM 2 DR ., 8 cyl., std. ttans., tad;o ond heat•• •••••••••••• $1195

R. H. Rawlin•
Sons Co.

D-64, $1.89 D-200, $2.39 D-500, 52.69

Fa.etory Prepaid Proceuln9 Moilers $1.79

Harvard scored an astonishing
16 point&amp; in the final 42 ,.conds
Saturday to shatter Yale's

67 VOLKSWAGEN 2 DR . DELUXE, ,.d;o and heat., ••••••••• ---- •• ••• • 51595
67 CHRYSLER NEWPORT 4 OR ., avto. trans ., all power, radio &amp; heater, air tond. $2895
66 PLW 'OUTH BELVEDERE 2 DR. H.T., 8 cyl., std. ttans., 4 R&amp;H , w/• Htes $1595
66 COMET CAPRI 2 DR . H. T . 6 tyl., std. trans. , radio ond heater , w/ s tires .. ~ $1495

300 SECOND AVE

WHATEVER YOUR MONEY PROBLEM, you can depend on Prompt and
understandine financial assistance at CREDITHRIFT. Our services include
personal loans, sipature loans, as well as automobile and appliance
financing.

RICHARDSON
OFFERS YOU

29 29

Radio and heater.

Corner Second and Court Sts.

Lighted Slide Vlewerls

d T•

"~~. ~' •.._ -~~~~- t~.

10 Standings

(SUCCE$SORS TO KEY FINANCE)

1'his Anscocbrome*

y ·1 H

Fmal Big

01 AM.ERICA.

PRE-HOLIDAY FILM SALE!

........ ' .

Ohio State Rips Michigan, 50-14

Fined for Speed

is in Layers

~

65
64
64
64

FORD COUNTRY SEDA~ 4 OR . STA. WAG ., 8 cyl., outo. llano ., R&amp;H •••••
FORD GAL . 500 4 DR ., 8 cyl., auto. ttans ., tod;o and hooto• • • • • • • • • • • •
FORD FAIRLANE SOO 4 DR . STATION WAGON, 6 cyl., std . hans ., R&amp;H •••
FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE 4 DR . STATIO~ WAGON, 8 cyl., auto . ttons .••••

All power, radio and heater, air cond.
64 CHEV. IMP. 4 DR. H.T., 8 c:yl., auto. trans ., power steering, R&amp;H , air cond .
64 OLOS 98 2 DR . H.T ., auto. trans., oil power, radio and heater, w/ s tires •- •

$1595
S1295
$ 995
$1395

$1595
64 PONTIAC CATALINA VS 4 DR. H.T ., auto. ttons., pawot ste.,;ng, R&amp;H • • • • $1295

66 Pontiac

$54.56 per month

Bonneville 2 Dr . Hard lop . Extra nice, one owner car. All white with blue vinyl interior . Auto.
Irons. Power steering, Power brakes, radio, eMiro good white wall tires .

66 Pontiac

$54.46 per month

65 Dodge

$33. 65 per month

Catalina 6 pan . Station Wagon . One of the n ic est wagons in this area . One owner all white
with beautiful red vin)ll interior . Air conditioned , Power steering, Auto . trans . All new tires .

Dart 4 Dr. Sedan. Auto . trans . 6 C)ll. one of the cleonest 65 in our oreo. A one owner car reody
lor the rood .

63 Lincoln

$33.65 per month

Continent~ I 4 Dr .. Sed~n . One_~f t _h c finest used ca rs you will ever find for the big car buyer .
Full)' equ1pped w1th A1r cond1t 1o nmg , and many other accessories .

63 Buick

$28.85 per.month

LeSabre 2 Dr. Hard Top. Extro nice for 63 model. Power steering, Power brakes, Automatic
trans . Blue with white top.

68 Pontiac

$1 06. 81

B~nneville

per month

2 Dr ._ Hard Top. Factor)' Air Conditioning . Only 1,648 easy mile s, by one
ut1ves . Full)' equ1pped . Never been titled . 5 )leOr warranty.

63 Ford

of exec•

$24.87 I*Wilh

Gola x ie A Dr . Sedan . This c:or is a fine double chec ked used cor , has cruisematic trans . PS
PB , redia and rear good tires .
' '

WHERE QUALITY IS HIGHER THAN PRICE
BUICK
PH. 992-2143

PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS
POMEROY, OHIO
SINCE 1853

�·.. ·.' .•

Action Begins Wednesday
By DICK THOMAS
GALLIPOLIS - The 1968 - 69

hama last year. COac:h Sang has
tour returning lettermen inchtdSissoo, 5-IJI,-2; Bill Wells, 6-5; ing Chuck BraciNry. 6-3 senior,
Norm SWindler, 5-9; a.OO Joe Be- who was the seoond highest soorvan, S-10; and Sophomores: steve er last_year in the fN AC with u
average or 19.8 points per game.
Daniels, 6-1.
other returnillg lettermen are
RESERVE ROSI'ER - Sophomores: Larry Cremeans, 5-10; Kemy Buckley, 6-0 senior; Tom
Jerry Waugh, 5-11; Tom Beaver, Reese, 6-1 senior; and Joo Roth5-11; and Wayne Queen, 5-9; and geb, 6-1 junior. Bra.t&gt;ury, Reese
Freshmen : Jim Swindler, S-S; and Ro1hgeb are expected to be
Robert Pack, 5-6; Keith Swain, the big sparks or the Bobcat attack this year.
5-10; and Joe Johnson, 5~.
Kyger Creek nnlshed in a
HANNAN TRACE SCHEDULE
three-way
tie ror first place last
Nov. 27 - Kyger Creek; Dec.
year
In
the
SV AC with North
6 - North GalUa; Dec. 7 Gall
Ia
and
Eastern.
In SV AC pl..,.
Eastern; Dec. 11 - At Buffalo,
the
Bob
eats
were
7-3
and in all
W. Va.; Dec. 13 At Southgames
they
were
9-7.
western; Dec. 21 - Southern
'The assistant coach at Kyger
Local (Hacine); Dec. 27 - 28 Creek
Is Howard ~e Miller who
Holiday Tournament; Jan. 3 will
handle
the reserve squad.
At Eastern; Jan. 4 - Haman,
V
i\RSITY
ROSTER
- Seniors:
W. Va .; Jan. 10 - i\t Kyger
Chuck
Brac:lmry
6-3;
Kemy
BuckCreek; Jan. 17 - At North Gallia; Jan. 25 - Buffalo, W. Va.; ley, 6-0; Tom Reese, 6-1; Steve
Jan. 28 - At Southern Local Spaulding, 5-10; and Earl Tho(}{acine); Jan. 31 - Southwest- mas, 6-1; Juniors: Jackie lienern; and reb. 8 - At I Iannan, son, 5-1U; Tom Hyse11,5-10; Clifford Queen, 5-8; and Jon RothW, \'a.
KYGER CREEK- Last year's geb, 6-1.
RESERVE ROSTER- Jmrlors:
tri -champions of the SV AC, the
Robcats have a new head coach Tom Denny, 5-8; Bill Glndlesin Johnny Sang, who was at Wa- bcrger, 6-1; and Dan Polcyn, 6-1;

llltlng vani'Q' and reserve roa- erett Montgomery. 5.-8; and Larry Jeffers, 6.0; Jmiors: Jim
ten and schedules:

balketball season got underway
HANNAN TR•\CE - With last
IIIia weekend In Gallla COOney year' I top scorer oC the SV AC
with the Kyger Creek Bobcats back, Coach Paul DUlon's WlldtuUng the Clrat aetim Frldl3 cata are expected to give a good
nipt &amp;I they defeated Oak HW

acoourt ol themselves this sea-

69-62.

son. Dave DanJels, 6-1 senior

nil!hJ Nortll Gal- guard, led the league last year
liB School hosted a Southern Val- as a junior, averaging 24.1 points
Then Seturday

ley Athletic Conference Preview
with four teams, North GaJUa,
Haman Trace, Southwestern &lt;Old
Southern Local of Meigs Count,y,
ta1dng part.
The fint 5I/ AC leque game

per game.
Including Daniels, the Wildcats
ha\'e four ret:urnlng lettermen
from last year's squad that !iniahed in a fourth place Ue with
Ealtem. The Wildcats were 4-6
will be played this coming Wed - in SV AC play and 9-7 in all games
nesda.Y night as F..astern of Meigs last year.
COW1t;y Invades Southwestern and
Other returning lettermen for
Kyger Creek travels to Mercer- the Wildcats lnclude: Jim Chapville to take on Haman Trace. man, S-8 senior; Everett MontHannan Trace High SchoOl will gomery, 5-8 senior; Larry Jefbe the site (1. two tournaments Cers, 6-0 sen1or; and Jim SisdurlnJ the 1968 - 69 season. The son, S-111,-l junior. Gone are
Second Amual Holiday Tourna- Doug Pugh, Dan ~eets, and Rogment will be played Dec. 27 - 28 er Watson.
with Hannan Trace, llaman, W.
The assistant basketball coach
Va., &amp;Ymmes Valley and Union at Hannan Trace Is Noel HeisFurnace competing, Then the an- ter, who will handle the reserve
nual Gallla Count31 Tournament squad.
will be pl~ed there Feb. 14 -la.
VARSITY ROSTER - Seniors:
Here Is a rundown on Gallla Darrell Johnson, S-7; Dave DanCounty's four teams of the SV AC, iels. 6-1; Jim Chapman, 5-8; E\1-

C k
K
Oak Hill 6 9 62
yger

T

ree

All-Time SEO Grid Standings
ALL-;r;~~~~;~:aRANL~~~~.:;:;z;~~.~;AG~:68)

ops

Sophomores: Ken Brown, 6-1;
Jeri'}' Hlll, ~; Elbert Masters,
5-U; Ernie Metzger, 6~; and
Gary Saunders, 5-9.

KYGERCREEKSCHEDULE
Nav. Z2 - Oak lUll ; Nav. 27
- At Haman Trace: Dec. 6 Southwestern; Dec. 7 - At Fairland; Dec. 13 - At Southern Local; Dec. l4- Eastern; Dec. 21

At Oak Hill; Jan. 3 - At
Nortll Gatlin; Jan, 4 - Wahama;
Jan. 10 - Haman Trace; Jan.
-

11 - Fairland; Jan. 17 - At
Southwestern; Jan. 24 - Southern local (Racine); Jan. 28 -

At Wahama; Jan. 31- At Eastern; Feb. 7 - North Gallla.
NORTH GALLIA- Coach Rudy

Shively, whose 1967 - 6ll li(Jlad
flnlahed in a lhree way tie tor
first place in the SV AC, has six
returning lettermen, greatest
number ol returning lettermen
of any team In the league. The
new assistant coach this year is
Mel Carter, who will handle the
reserve squad.
Gone (rom last year's team
are Fred Deel, who's playing
Junior Varsity this year at Rio
Grande College; Big Dave Hager,
and Mike Payne. 'The Pirates

F•

tve

V

e

ATHENS - Ohio University's
basketball team wUI play its an-

nuaJ Green and White game next

Oass A All-State Honors

3-ll~;

Friday's

Lewis, 1-ll.:;

KYGER CREEK - Bradbury,
3-4-10; Rothgeb, 5-9-19; Reese,
3-7-13; Thomas, 4-5-13; Buckley,

MondaJI hl the new Coovocation
Center. Tipoft' Ume is 7:30p.m.
2-ll-4; Spaulding, 2.:~; Henson,
Bobcat cage '&lt;Oach Jim Sozy. 0-4-4; and Brown, 0..0-0. Totals,
der saJd the annual pre-~son
19-31-69. Reserve Score: Kyger
pme will be played under acCreek 41 0a1&lt; Hill 17.
tual game coodltlons, Including
otlicials. Snyder also plans to
:introduce the players to the fans
Friday's Fight Results
:prior to the game. No admls- By United Press International
:eton is charged.
ST. LOUIS (UPD - llemJI
: •-nus game will give the lo- Moyer, 161, Portland, Ore., out:cal fiUUI and students a chance pointed Bobby Harrington, 161,
·to see our team before the start st. Loois (10).
·ol the seasm and also see what
:we're tryingtoaccompllsh," said Jackson Center 92 Fairlawn 68
Springfield catholic 56
:SI1Yder.
; Seyder is still Wldecided on
Southeastern 43
;how he will split the squad for the St. Bernard 59 Lakota 48
·pm~.
New Knoxville 80
Sidney Holy Angels 50

Sjopping Dollors Are i11 the B•g
Wje11 Gilts Seoso11 Rolls Arountl
Be o clever Santa and came open a Christmas Club account for a carefree Christmas
in 1969. You'll receive your check early
enough to do your gilt •hopping with time
to spare ... and with no bill-paying blues
0~11 ' " ' A«ou11t So01t

FIRST
NATIONAL
BANK
Member FDIC
Opposite Park, Gallipolis
"Serving Thit Community For Over 105 Yean"

GALLIPOLIS - Only once in
a small Class A school's his tory, there comes a boy who is
an exceptionally outstanding football player.
Such is the case or Jimmy
Dale Walker, Southwestern High
senior, who is be in&amp; promoted
for All-State honors. He is the
son or Mr. and Mrs. Clyde B. Walker.
Walker, 182 - pound senior,
played ml&lt;klle linebacker on defense and during the past season
averaged 11 unassisted tackles
per game and had a hand in molt
all other tackles.
Offensively , Walker plays left
guard but during the past season, he performed double duty
at fullback, during the last six
games when the regular fullback
was injured.
As a fullback, Walker scored
five touchdowns In six ball games.
He carried the ball 55 times for
a total ol 350 yards, an average of 6.3 yards per carry_
The Southwestern senior was
a unanimous choice as a first
team oCI'enslve lineman tor AllSouthern Valley Athletic eon.
fer«:!:1ce team for the 1968 season. ln 1967 Walker wu Honorable Mention S&lt;J AC.
Walker has been selected for
the Most Valuable Player Award
on the Southwestern Highland.
ers In 1966 - 1967 - 1968. He
has made the All • Opponent
Team of every school that played
the IU&amp;fllanders and picked an
all - opponent team.
Steve Stiles, football coach of
the Highlanders, who praised
Walker as an outstanding player
and above average student, said
Saturday that the Southwestern
senior has received numerous
inquiries concerning college rootball.

u.s.

the

Open champion, took the
wor·~n•s singles crown, deprivinK Australia's Margaret Court
or a grand slam in the series.
Miss Wade defeated Mrs. COUrt

6-3, 6-4.

t
e

At
urn

the bo:ya are working real hard
and they appear to be constantly
striving for improvement."
Returnees this year are Steve
~uler, 6-1 senior; Mark Beegle,
5-10 senior; Randy Proffitt, 5-6
senior; Bob Diddle, 6-1 junior
and Gary Norris, 5-10 junior.
~ the To rna~
other membe rs u•
do varsity are Dan Smitll, 6-2
junior; Jim White, 5-9 senior;
DannyHlll,5-lljunior;RoyJohnson and Bllil' Hill, both 5-6 jwttors and Dick Sauvage, 5-10 jun-

· ········

.

REGULATIONS

RATES. &gt;
F .... Wont Ad s.,,.,ce

5

cal (Racine); Jan. 4 - At East-

,.,,_ . ,

ern; Jan. 7 - North Gallia; Jan.
lO Haman, W. Va.; Jan. 17
- Kyger Creek; Jan. 18 - At

OFF ICE HOURS.
I :JO a"' to .'i :DO ' -"' Daily
8:J0 o.m. to 12:00 Noon ~olurdgy

SOuthern Ul&lt;al (Racine); Jan. 24
- Wahama; Jan. 28 - At North

In Memory

Gallia; Jan. 31 - At Haman
Trace; and Feb. 7- AtWahams.

who passed away
11114:

··At

-::c:e

~lim
ij~
r

JJanan. 111 · · · · ...At.UHannannlon
FumaTraccee
·
· · · · · ·
Jan. 18 · ·······.Southwestern
Jan_ 21 · · · · · · ·.At Eastern
Jan. 24 ··· ·.At Kyger Creek
Jan. 31 · · · · · ' .North Gall~
Feb. 1 · · · · · .At Union Furnaee
Feb. 7 , . . . . • • . • At MOler

Feb. 14 . . . . . . . . . ,Goooter

."''

KEEP YOUR CAR

•

ON THE GO.- - - WINTER WEATHER AHEAD!

DROP IN AT

London 60 Northeastern 49

• COMPLETE BRAKE SERVICE
BATTERIES, TIRES, LUBRICATION
WASH JOBS, QUALITY PRODUCTS

MECHANIC ON DUTY
9 to 5 Week Da s-9 to 12 Sat.

GranvUle 79 Heath 63
Zane Trace 71 Southeastern 54

W. MAIN

Clark Ne. 89
Springfield Shawnee 62

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL SCORES

PROMOTED

FOR ALL -

STATE - Jimmie Dale Walker, 182 - pound senior, who
made the 1968 first team All~ern Valley AUdeUc Conference as an offensive lineman, is being promoted tor AllSlate Honors.

ZENITH
et:•age t:ires
WINTER DEEP TREADS
PREMIUM LINE-4 PLY

flU\l AND

TUBELESS BLACK SPECIAL-5 DAYS ONLY

PANELING
REGULAR PRICE 4.60

SHEET

For Limited Time

CAROL

MBER

AND SUPPLY

Opp. B&amp;O Oopot

PT. PLEoi.SANT

675-1160

I
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23.

'I'Ro\ILER LOl'll. Bob'l llaiJIIe
Court, SJracyoe, Oldo ... l1ale

nace, water. «as:

650113 •••-••••••••••••••-••15. 95 P. TGx
775x14 OR 775x15 •• __________ 19.9$l&gt;.t ..
825x_14 ,OR 815x15------------ 21.95P.r••
855x14 OR 845x15-----------· 23.95 P. Ta~
WHITE WALLS 3.00 MORE
SAFETY STUDS INSTALLED AT
ADDITIONAL COST.

RACINE
SERVICE
STAT
ION
949-3143

RACINE, 0.

liAR IWD and nltroa wan&amp;od. Mllll be II yean old.
Wblsperilll ,.,. Nile Qub,
Phone lllltl3.
111Mio

Male Help Wanted
NEED CASII1 SeD famOUI
Knapp Aerotred Shoes, full or
port time. High oommlui,...
pluo bonlll. Complete Uno ror
men and women. l!lqulpment
fumlshed - · Write to Gor-

don Rae, Dlslrld Sales MiJr.,
1014 Darbyshll't Drive, Columb111, Olllo, at. 11-U-31&lt;

.,
·'·'

..
•

JNl.lfe

o\XC Goldea llelr1ever Jllllllll",
lit o\111 81., IIJdcl1epn. ...
Mfll.
WI-lle

Wanted

HrDS to re-roof tile citY bulldlnl In Mason. P'or speelllcatlona. call Mason T/S.5201.

lt·lt-31&lt;

MO a month.

Set Esla Brlckles, Brlckl.. OIRISTMAS SPECIAL!

Gulf Service. Albany
11-21-31p
-----

For Sale or T~
·"'I CHEVY pickup, It-too, with

Cllllpor, l'or .... or trade.
Salem St., Rutland. 11-SI.ftc
1957 JAGUAR, M &amp; G Food
Markel, three miles 15011lh or
Middleport oo Rt. 7. 11-24-3tc

H &amp; N DAY-old or started l.eg-

horn pullets, both ftoor or
cage grown avaHable. Poultry housing and automation.
Modern Poullry. Box 188. Ath-

ens, Ohio, Phone 593-'1831.
ll-24-1te
~IX

GERMAN Pollee puppies.
$15 to $20, 1669 Lincoln Ills
Phone 992-7035
11·24-31c

Ads

Free
llfe-olze W11lklng doll and 3
111011lhl of plano 1.....,. by
teacher ol your choice wllh
the pon:haae of a ..,. WID'·
Utzer plaoo. Good quallty
SUitar oulfll, $3U5; Good oelectlon or Estey chord orgaiiJ,
t1311.5tl up; llfetltM guarantee on reeds. Wendell's, 1101
Garfield Ave., Parlenburg,
W. Va. Phone 415-4401.
11·11-

lllrl PONTIAC Flreblrd, V.fl au- CORN OU1 of field, plcldng
tomaUc transmission,
1961
now. Phone 991!-61136.
Oldsmobile converllble, V.fl.
11-24-!lc
power steering, power brakes:
1963 Rambler ·s.tallon wagon, TIMOTHY HAY 40 to 50 cents
6 cylinder, standard. Flnana bale. Marvin Wilson, On·
&lt;lnl available. Phone 991447
ter.
ll-24-31p
or 119!-57411.
11-24-trc

plete line of exotic fish and

Gift
certificates
available . The House or Wi1son, first road left below

Bring Top

For Sale

&lt;;IJF.RNSEY COW
Phon• 247-2241.

and calf
11·24-Gic

EVINRUDE

CORD WOOD Phone :147-2248
lt-24-Gir
TWO REOISTE:RF.D blark and
tan coon hound puos. Phone
992-11292
11-:14-31c

TWO 10-fNCH I-BEAMS 17 feet
long, two Keystone custom
mag~ for Pontiac or
Olds
Phone ('.oolvllle. 965-41'M.
11-2441p
I!OOd
motor. StOO Phone N~w Hav
en 882-21181 .
11-24-3tp

1 Rem1111ir1 r

Saturday. Phone 675-1065 .

11-24-IOtc
11111'1 SUPER Sport
Phone 912-2781.

lmpoDa.
11-lt.fllp

1965 CHEVROLET It-ion truck.
lone wheel bue wllh ...,..
load. Has all new 8-ply commercial Urea. In es&lt;ellenl
condition.

f12511. Pllone

lllv·

ensoond 2'13-4GS.
HALED 11MOTHY AND CLOVE:R HAY. this years hay 50

19 FORD MOTOR. 332
inch,

3656.

ruble

and pony. phone 74211-!4-31p

!.~· ~ • • - • • - - • • -

1967 ZIG ZAG-Omatic :

Well

known make sewing machine,
makes buttonholes, seww on

buttons. monograms. etc . All
without attachments. FuU balance due only $44.20 or $S per
morth. Phone 991-3218.
11-:&amp;'Uic

BUY

IN SYRACVSE
)'OU1' wile a nice home for

Xmaa, large lol, ! bedroom
with cioaels, tnotty pine kitellen, good cublnels, one •
one baH balM, large llvlng
room, stone front, needs nri
IJIOUHng, new oeptlc tank,
forced alr furnace, run baseIDOIIt for &lt;1d1dren to ploy.
Liberal linanclng.
D. B, WOOD, • IAcall st., GeiUpolla, 0,

.....

,._

menl. furnace . and ~arage
November special $3.000.00

RURAl. - 4 room frame,

el road . $500.00 down ~4.tl9 a
morth.
HEI.F.N •nd VIRGil, TEAFORll
~SSOCIATES
91'! :r.J'!S
SYRACUSE

llutl-s Servt CII
RADIO .t. 1V REPAIR ml .,._
letmal lnllallod. Jobn Jlarrl..... Phone M zm 11-Ullc

OOZIIill. BACKHOE, lnadw
and 1rudl: oenlee, aoptk
tanb, waW Unes. t;uemeuts.
November 30, 1968, al 10:110

ceived at the ornces of Webster and Fultz until Saturday,

Bryan, being a 1961 Chevro-

let Impala Sedan, low mileage.
11-:&amp;'Utc

....

lopiOil

Blbr,

Beary

Pbone 115 I or Roger Bahr,
Plloae 115 WI
ll·INDlo

0.

c. IIJWil'OIID

7u-43'11 .

11-22-31c

~APLE STEREO radio console
combination : 1967 modern stereo, AM&amp;FM radio ('OmbinaUon, 4-speed automatic chang.

er. Modem maple

console.

Balance due $91.7Al or payments of $6 per month. Call
99Z-3218.
li-2Uic
SOLID STATE st&lt;reo: 1967 walnut stereo console with 4
speakers, t-speed aulomatlc
&lt;hanger. Take over payments
of 15.25 per month or pay balance due $74.60. Phone 119!3218.
li-2Utc
REDUCE SAFE, simple and
fast with Gobese tablets. On·
ly 911 cents. Nelson Druga.
II-D-30tp

Coapllll llenlee
.._ ••

s:ss

SIX ROOM house on Mill St.,
In Middleport. Inquire at 439
Lincoln St.
11-:JUic
TliREE BEDROOM ranch style
borne In Syracuse. Hardwood

noors storm doors and carport. ' Economical gas heat.
C1ooe 1o school and churches.
ll-22-12tp
Phone 992-2954.

o\XC ~ 8tollill. Oa
l'lxlllel, '11'4111ea and S I '
... Jlalbrao Xl'l .. CDaltlla.
I

••

01111, l'llla ..,. . .

U·INIIe

SPECIAL
SNOW TIRE SALE

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992-2094

tl•o-.y duty , tlxtra de11p lrt11111d1,
fou• full pi~ nylan .
17h1.4 White ~ idewoiiJ

ONLY ~18.95

Plu• 2.19

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

•h••

l~A

GOEGLEIN GRAVEL

ln1ur•nce
AUTOMOIIJLE bliWIMO ben
lltlleaDedT Lost roar Ollll'lt.,.. license! CaD tllllll.
I 11 lie

Comfortron
equip. Blk.
Grey-green
than 6500
worronty .

Far s.. r., "'r Rent
FIVE ROOM house. bait!. !)aoement. 1AA2 Ltnro1n Hts_~one
1192·5671
11-:!UI•

Dark blue finish . 5potless clean, blue trim . W.W.
I ires like new. VB eng. Automatic trans . Power steering, t int gloss, radio . Sharp as you would like.

Start Day Right
StaTt your day with a
happy attitude . Before you
hop oul of bed . lell yourself
it's gotn~ to be a greal day
Even if you feel draggy.
make vour ~l'lf mov t&gt; fast and

1967 POI'ITIAC LeMans .......... ... ... .$2195
H.T. Cpe. Beautiful gold finish with block vinyl top,

326 cu. in. VB engine with 3 speed Irons. Console
bucket
seats, vinyl interior , only 23,000 miles by
local 1 owner . Radio, good white wall tires, show-

vou'll · conn• awakt&gt; sounet
You'll ht&gt; :-;urprised It rt&gt;all~
works.

room

D. New y..., Eft, '111M.,
Doc. II, 7:10 to D:ll. OpeD
Qlrlollllll Eve. a-1 Olrlll..... Opal 'll'edneldaJ, FridQ, Saturday, 7:11 to 11:10.
Aftllable for pii11ee, llaDdQ, TUoodaJ and ThundaJ

nJaldt, 8almday aDd llandl1
PfiDM . . . . IJI'
• 1111.
II·IT...

.... nootJI.

CIGARE'l'l'l 'ftlllllnl JUddw
..,. aero~ee. ABC BD1&amp;11I 1
)(... W Va. PhaM ftl.8ll.
I

'

.....-e

98
San Diego 126 Seattle 111

DOLLAR DAYS SAlE
We'¥• R•duced Our Alr•ody Low
Prlc••

R.g . 1.49 MerHi

. 1 .Oil

DRESS. SHIRTS ..
R,~_,

1.99

LADIES PURSES .
Ref!. 1.29 Patted
VINYL FLOWERS.... .

1.00

· . 1.00

Re9. ]9c eoch
Soap In Turtle Spon9• 3 lor 1.00
R.g . A9c ea. Lodi ..
H!AO SCARVES ..... 3 lor 1.00
R•g. 8 lor 1.00

GLASSES.. ....

. . 10 for 1.00
R•g. 2.99 Jonl•
RUG CLU.HER.. .....
. 1.00
R,g. 3Sc ea. 150 Wott
LIGHT BULBS ....... .. for 1.00
S.ol• •"~~• Mo:. 5:00P.M.

Bryant~
108 'fl . Main

Budget Shop

992-5896

clean.

66 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON.w~! ~':_()?~ $1995

a-

FridaJ, Mot.

Air Conditioning, tinted glass, full power
vtnyl roof over green body, spOtless clean.
•nt~!H IOr. Radio and all the goodies. Leu
actual mdeoge. S.ovel New cor title and

1967 CHEVY II Nova 4 Dr............... $1995

Local 1 owner cor, new w-s·w tires, vinyl trim with
bucket seats, console, radio, P .S. &amp; P_B., outo.trans.
dark blue finish with wh ite nylon top. A real sharpie.

&amp;5 CHEVELLE SS 396 H.T. Cpe.

.$1995

Lo.col owner cor, 4 on the floor, good wide ovaiW.W.
tires, red vinyl mter1or, wh1te t1n1sh, rodto
Try it for performance.

65 CHEVELLE

e. heater .

w., $1495_$1395

t-Aol ibu Conv. VB engine, P.G. transmission, new w-s·w
tires , green exter10r with white nylon top, green with
vinyl lr 1m.

1964 CHEVROLET Bel Air 4 Door ......... $995

rw

~.

773-5543

POMEROY

1968 CHEVROLET Caprice 4 Door

ca., w..,_

l.U.TE-A-WAY boUdly piil1ol.

Mason, West Virginia

THIS FINE SELECTION Of
HOLIDAY-PRICED ot. USED
CARS CAN MIKE YOUR
HOLIDAY I MERRY •E.

407 PAGE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

rfCIII

...,.

tippers ond
pock•ts. Profusional ru9
droning guorant••d.

Alterations,

DIAL 992-3284

Relrtt-

~.

MCORE'S
W. MAIN

ABC CLEANER
&amp; SHIRT LAUNDRY

• Delivery
• Quick Service
• Fir•ishing
• Sand &amp; Gravel

I

Authorlled 8IDger 8alll
and Sonlee. We Sllarpetl

Pomeroy

• Quality Concrete
• Certified Strength

•

me.

From the Largest Truck or
Bull&lt;bzer Radiator To The
~alle.st Heater Core.

• Free Estimates

NBA STANDINGS
lly United Press lntcrnational
East
I I 1ft
W. L. Pet. GB
Boston . . .
, 13 4 . 765
AIR OONDmONINO llefiiPI'- naltimore . . 13 5 . 722 lf
2
allon oemce. Jadl:'l
Cincinnati .... 12 5 . i06 1
erallon, Now Ill-. ~
. . HII.
f I lie Philadelphia .. 9 4 .692 2
Detroit . . . . . . t) 9 . 47 1 5
New York . . .. 7 13 .350 71h
READY • IIIX CIJiiCIOlo dollYMilwaukee . ... 4 11 .367 8
end
ID Jour projeet.
West
11'111 and ...,., Free 11111W. L. Pet. GB
JIIIIIol. PhoDe ....... Goor- LOS Angeles .. 13 5 .722
leln Ready • Mil
San Fran . . . . 9 9 ..JOO 4
part, Ohio.
• 10 1ft AUanta . . . . . 9 10 .474 4lh
San Oiego . . 8 10 .444 5
BUDGET PRICE
alll&amp;o Ul Chicago . . . . 7 12 .368 6'~~
oar third l1oor lludpl abop. Phoenix
. . 5 10 .333 Slh
Baker hrnltaro. Mldtlleport. Seattle . .
. 6 16 .273 9
Oldo.
' • liD
Friday's Results
New York 114 Chicago 107
SEWING Mo\CIIINlllll, repolr Boston 133 Phoenix 1()6
oemce, an mUel. lilY
Philadelphia 121 Baltimore 110
Tho P'abrlc Sbop, J'aiD. San Francisco 100 Los Angeles
3

ederol Tax

Moat populgr
OVIIIIilolole.
Limited numb•r ot thl1 prl c01.
Fully ~uoronl••d. Bull! br o bill
! lt11 mo er for , ..

llltl E. Main

IIIII
Crill Ill. . .

I

etflJ.

GOOD HAY and straw. Cell
991.Q27.
11-22-12tp

Hockingport, Ohio
Phone 667-3370

Standings

AliCnOIIDil
SEVEN YEAR OLD Spotted
Gelding, 57 iiK'hes, well broken, quiet for children, pbone

Schawarzel Marine

Wheel Alignment

lar~c

rlstern. 1ar~e 1ot. rn~ .'(rav-

IHIItw Servlct

!;XPERT

11-lMtc

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

EIPEIIENCII

BLAETTNARS

!:iiX week !'; old
lhorobrcds, \tah; amJ female.
I' hone :!92-707:&gt;.
11-2+.Jtc

IHI Estate For Sale

Res

PH, 992-2143

Di\LM!\TIO"'S,

FOR SALE - Bids will be re-

o'Clock A.M. for the purchase
of lhe automobile of E. C.

I 1 to 6

Sat. - - • · · - - • • • ·9 to 7
5un. • · • · • • • ·- ·11 to 6

l!AY. Phone 742-4753. ll -24-20tp

GF.O. HOBSI E I I ER. Broker
itA
CINE RURAL - 24 acr"".
COMPLETE barber •hop equiofour
room house. half bath,
ment. 854 Second Ave .. Gallibasemenl. oil furnace . several
polis. 0 .
11-24-llc
outbuildings and fruit trees
On
blacktop road. Garage
SHETLAND PONY. very gent·
Only
155110.110.
le. Phone 74:1-5265. 11-!L-31p
RT. lU - 7 rooms. bath. basP-

1968 FIAT al;. two snow tli-es
8.55 1 15. usud very lillie, may
be seen at 270 Walnut Sl.,
Middleport or phone !i92-7110
.ner 5 p.m.
11-21-31p

c&lt;:~r

Spro~11d
i 'w1111rm Joap
ont:l t!,.,, a hi9h p•e~sure
tin~e 0 1 •olo ... oleo ro
moNe L&lt;;of ihine
J Attandant on dut~

l'.ll CHEVY. 4-&lt;foor. very

cents, year old 40 cents_ Wm

Houdashelt Kingsbur~ Road.
Phone 991!-6758.
11-!4-31p

69's Are Here
6 - 9!-2 - 18
On Display
115 Soon
loArrive

2.

supplies.

Pleasant Point Resort. Open
9 to 9 Tuesday, Thursday and

Grade

Business Services

53 ACRE farm . M &amp; G Food
Market, three miles south &lt;tl
~lddleport on Rl. 7.
11-24-31c

5, 10, 15, galloo. see our com·

Notice

Inventory Reduction Special!

Yarltone
Cherry

•me.

OOY'S 211-in&lt;h blcyde, very
good condition Garage tools
and equipment Gall Miller.
Phone 912-3196.
tt-24-3tc

POODLE PUPPIES. o\XC ,.., 4:30 n m . al 482 Souftl .,.. ·'~-1
mlnlalure. $75 8lld ap. Iliad Ave _. Middlerort
11 · ~4-Jir
....... 11111 rroomma !'IlOilo
•uus.
u a 11e I.QUARWMS: Christmas sets,

M-.

• COMPLETE MOTOR TUNE-UP

Hamlllon Twp. 56

PVIINIBHED AP.urnmml
In Mlddleporl AD utDIU..
paid. I1DW1eJ • Reed, IQd.

ForW.

ForW.

POI'ATOES, Pboae MI . . In FT. 1 50 FT , AMERICAN
C1areDee ProfD&amp;t, Pw' 1
l!ouSP. traUer, front end kitIt-!We chen. two bedroom~. In good
condition. Can be SPPD aftE-r

----

;;;;;;

yards kicked by Bert 1Rechicher
of the Baltimore Coils in 1953.
White prevlousiJ' held the CIF
Soutbem Section field goal rec ord with a 47 yard kick.
Barstow won the game, 46-31,
and will meet El Centro Friday
in the division's seml~inals at
Barstow.

!n'OIL\GE SPACE, .-age lor
llootl, tnDen, earl. wnperw,
ItA!. Write P .O. 8os Ill, Pomeroy. PbtiMJ 11211. .. Old: s.,ler.
11-JS.J21ic

Rl 1ft, Pllooe . . ..
Mom 111 gone. forever gone,
FORD V S. I - · WICl-Il-lie ;!IM
And 1efl UJ here to weep
oo, Auto. Trails. Radio and
UnlU we are caned 1o folkrw
Healer. Good Condltioo, tlltlll.
TRAILD SPACE, IHdy ID
her
Call alter 5 P.M. IIUIIH.
boat ap, prloate, pleniJ ..
And In tho ground to SlOf!&gt;.
ll·IMIJ&gt;
..... lor ehiJdren 1o JIIIJ.
Oh, what can we say:
Memories, just memories. day
Phone . . - ..,. . . EXCELLENT, efflclent and
alter day.
e&lt;OIIOIIIIell. Tbat'o Blue LuorouR ROOM HOtJIIE ml bath.
The nights are an dark,
tre carpet and upholalery
l1llfllndlhed. IIIII Llncela
, . days are aU grey.
cleaaer. Rent eleelrle ahanr
Heigh~~. I'IMtne ......
Memories just memories,
pooer fl. Baker Fumllure.
tNt-If&lt;
Mom
11-11«&lt;
Slnc:e )'m1 went away.
SEVEN ROOM lpii1JDeal Ill '11'ARM MornbqJ coal stove wllb
Sadly missed by Richard Middleport, ....ly deoned ....
ra, bo8ll s "' • 1'001111, I1IOd
and Ruth Fink and
eompl&amp;ly tedot«aled. lea 1lllm two montho. Glem
and bact pordlea and enlnlr
daugbte!'ll, Judy GDmore
Jewell, llolrnbiiiDn. 0. Plloae
.... ..... blformat1oa eall
and Angle Harden
~131.
111t-121e
.mo.
11-17-lle
11-24-llc
TRY BEFORE you buy. We
JI'OVII
ROOM
furnllbod
opm.
'IIIU bring 1hLo llltltl model lig
c~rd Of Thanks
meat.
AD
utlUIIel
paid.
Phono
zag
sewing macblne to your
1 WISH 1o tllank my many
.....
11-IJ.Ife
home
ao you may ..,.. on II.
friends who helped In any
II you like It, buy It lor only
way during the mne.. and
.,. caah or 15.50 ptr month.
death of my lather, Fred 8 ROOM apm bJMII, claoe to
down!Dwn Pomeroy. can m
Cell 912-28311.
11-IH!e
Jadlson; for the many beau2111 before S p.m. 11-tt-tre
tiful floral offerings. RawEARLY AMERICAN stereo,
Ungs Coals Funeral Home.
4
ROOM
FURNJSIIEtl
apart·
1968 conaole with AM and J1'M
MI. Moriah Choir for tflelr
mont bait! and shower, fur..
radio,
automauc Dooling turn
music, Mn. Ervin Bumgarnoce heal, private parking,
table.
Take
over payments ol
ner. pianist: Rev. Robert out of .U ftonds, 3 blocb from
~fltkaoll .tor his C&lt;Jli!Ollnc
pel'.Jl."'!'lh•~c.l'i'~.j"l~l""'
o111ce. l&amp;6m IN&gt;m 12 ~
due, ....Ill. 111111 ... aold.
iOrdo. Your kindness will al- 11011·
p.m. to 8 p.m.
11-lttle
much hlgber. Try It tn your
. ways be remembered.
home. can 992-28311. 11·1Mtc
M!'ll. Campbell Harper.
11-24-lte TWO BEDROOM """ homo In
gu heat utility room. GERT'S a gay girl, ready for
Velma · ZUipon. Phone 'I'IJa wblrl alter cleaning earI WISH to extend my slnem
mo.
11-tHI&lt;
ptlll
with Blue Lustre, rent
thanks to each and everyone
electrle ohampooer fl. Tlny'o
who remembered me during
f'URNlSHED 4 Room House.
BargalDiand.
ll~te
my recent hospllallzatlon.
[..ower Monkey Run. Pomeroy.
Thanks to all my friends and
$40, no bath, bas running wa· GOOD USED Hanhrick gaa
relatives who sent can!B, gills
ter
&amp; gas heal See Esla
range, Norge refrigerator,
and nowero. Your kind...,
Brickles. Brlckles Gulf Ser·
large size Warm Monring 8'"
will never be rorgotten.
vice, Albany.
11-24-3tp
beater,
two-wheel !railer. Call
Mrs Robert W. Louks.
11-24-11&lt;
·
11·21-41c
WORKING MEN'S aparlment.
two rooms and bath, fum:Li&lt;"t' USED SPINET plaoo, A-1 conheDt. Private entrance . Call
dillon, llghl walnut ftnloh,
992-5440 between 5 and 7 p.m.
HETIRlNG DEC. 31, 1968. Will
$495. Wendell's, 1209 Garfield
ll-2Htc
~uy metals until above day
Ave., Parlle!'llburg, W. Ya.
and roots. No fur or hidea
Phone 4115-4401.
11-21-291c
wanted. Bill Bslley, Reeds- TIIREE-BEDROOM t•ollec . M
&amp;: G Food Market t ........ ..... p_.._ F'LOOR DEMONSTRATOR, 1968
ville, Ollio.
11-24-IOtc
~o11th of Mldrl1e~nrt on Rt 7
model stereo, beaullful wal11 -2 4-lk
W1IJ. DO ~ It bomo nut console AM &amp; FM radio,
- - -- llpperl,
pockets, pegglnc,
BSR automatic Ooatlng turn
tW&lt;&gt;-bedroom,
bemml"', olteratlons, etc. FURNISHED
lable. Make payments ~
lirsl
floor
apartment,
MiddleMnl. Freddie Thabet. llaloll.
f6.32 or pay fiiUS. Set ..ld
port. Phone 91JZ.3174.
Phone TIUISI.
~
much higher. Try It in yoiD'
11-24-tlc
home . Phone Mason City mVACANCY l'or two eldeltJ peo.
5940.
11-21-31c
pie. Prefer private pold pa- J1'URNISHED garage apartmenl
on Lincoln Hill : utilities paid. BLACK AND willie gelding oad- · Phone Mason, 'm6a.
Adu11n only. Phone 992-34119.
die horse, appro&lt;lmately 11110
lN6
ll-12..:Jtc lbo., very senile. Phone 70TURKEY SIIOO'I', lllelne Gun TRAILER-.-Bnnm-••- Trailer 5211&amp;,
11-21-31[&gt;
Club, SUnday, Nov. It, startParlt:, MlneriY111e,
Ohio. UNCLAIMED LAY-AWAY, llltltl
lnt! time I p.m. Free eall.
Pllone . . - .
l1·211«e Nelco aewlng madllne. Needs
Brinr JOIII' 11 rlllell. Thonl
wiD olio be a U.. turtey
----oo altadunents, oeWB on bullhool. Opal .... Gdy,
11'URNISilED TIIREE ROOM !Dna, 100t1CJ8r8111S, fancy stl~
li-!Ute
APARTMENT Jwith bath, ches; pay $44.53 or $15.25 a
Adults, 112 Soujll F1ftl1 Ave.. month. Try It in your home.
Middleport, pho\te 89UIIS.
Phone Mason City m-5Mtl.
HelpW~nt.cl
11-21-lf&lt;
11-21-3tc
I .AllY TO DO hou.....,rk and
rooking . Live ln. Phone 992·
5251. 0 . Hlndy, over Uberty FOUR ROOM house In lower ti-INCII SADDLE. Ll1re new.
Monkey Run. Pomeroy: fur. Pbone 742-52115.
1Ul-31p
Theatre.
11-24-tfc

_

°

11-24-llc

P'URNIIHI!D 61*fhwlt, t ·.vOULD LIKE to buy small
.-oo and bath. lbrlon l!eJ· cuckoo cl..,k . Call 912-5lli1.
noldl, M-. '11'. Va. Phono
ll-24-31p
'm6lfl.
11-lttfe

dleport, Phone
Nov.

5Mtl.

nRPENTRY. palnllng. plumb.
nJRHISIIZD and omrw.......,
lng. e1ectrka1 work . PhoneCheshire 367-785Z.
li-24-12tp
lpil blwtdl. Clooo ... ·
Phone ......
11-IJ.lfe

IN MEMORY o1 LOrna Wines,

Dec.
' ' .. ' ' ' ' . ' .. Ky
13
Dec.
' ' ' .. ' .. 'jrt (i :
14
ec.
· · · · · · · •
ou r

Jan.
· · · ' ·
4
an.
· · · · · · · · ·

(enh "•' Word o..,. in••" ion

Uw• int•••ionl .
II c•nt• ~· Word "'" con••cut•v•
""•••lion•
:I!S '"'' unt Oo•coun• on pgid odt
•ncletl1 poid wolhon 10 dGr•
CARD OF THANKS &amp; OB ITU,a,Jl.Y
51 50 lor 50 word monimum E1111
MclitionGI ...-ord ]c .
8UND ADS
Aclcli•ionGI lS( O•ort• ~"' Adv••·

At Union Furnace; Dec. 6- At
Kyger Creek; Dec. 13- Ham.u
Trace; Dee. 14- At Haman. W.
Va.; Dec. 20 - Southern Lo-

,., .....

Pickup and deliver In Mason
vicinity . Phone Mason 173-

Wan!MToluy

Mini"'""' Cha•t• 1Sc
\1 c•nh par w1111rd thraa con••cu•

and J, Woods, 5-8.
SOUTHWESTERN SCHEDULE
Nov. 27 - Eastern; Nov. 30-

J ec. 3 · · · · · · ·

,je•m•d

t.o •dll
1111ny ot:l1
ob·
.. clioru:.b la . Tftef.ub li 1har will nof .
b• •••"'en1ible or more thon one
lnconecl in1artion

RESERVE ROSTER- Junlon:

~ec. ~~······At=

Publi•her •e~eo•vu th• ,,11· ~,

or '' ''''

dllbel. WILL DO lronlnR In my home

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EmDI•,.•ment Wanted

ANTIQUES. rurallwe.

DEADLINES
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Dar o f Publicolian

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Laurelville 78
Starr-Washington 71

By United Press Interr11tional
Northridge 56 Utica 54
Portsmouth 80 Ironton 58
Ports. Clll)' 89 Green TW p. 6(1
Eastern 67 Soutll Webster 59
Valley Forge 63
Cleve. lleights 58
Euc\id 65 Garfield Hts. 42
Lakewood 74 Normaldy 61
Br&lt;d€side 50 Avon Lake 44
Fairview 79
Cleveland Lutheran West 51
Brooklyn 78 Cleve. Byzantine 47
Girard 67 CoMeaut 51
Berea 59 North Olmsted 56 (ot)
Wickliffe 72 Willoughby South 56
West.enille 74 MitOin 55
Cols. Ready 58 Miami Trace 53
C&amp;nal Winchester 66

LITTLE

WA.Nl AD
INFORMATION

Ramie Hutchins, 5-8; P. Jeffers,
5-S; Sophomores: R. GW, 5~;
J. Ehman, 6-1; J. Kuhn, 5-9;
Freshmen: M. Smith, 5-8; R.
Simmons, 5-7; S. Jetrers, 5-';

th
ouD
ern
6

or

Gallipolis 80 Chesapeake 72

Cage Scores

A

and Dave Morgan (when he recovers from a football ln)ary)
5-11; Junloro: Rulli¥ Hulchlna,
5-11; Jack Waters, 5-8; D, Haney,
5-9; Ricky Stout. 5~; J. Daily,
5-9; Sophomores: Larey Dillon,
5-9; and Freshmen - L. Stephens, 6-1.

S

lor.
Members
the Southern reserve team, coached by Hilton
"Big Fooz" Wolfe, are: sophomores- Barry Hart, 5-10;Gary
Hart, 5 •7 ; Sam Shain, G-.2; Roger
Nease, 5-9; Budd.Y Pyles, 5-10;
Lewis Van Meter, 5-7 ; Frank
Ihle ' 6-1 and Art Hill ' 5-2 ·
The Tornadoes, for the first
time this sea!JOII, wiU have a
freshmanteam,coachedbyl.arry
"Little Fooz" Wolfe.
SOUTHERN SCHEDULE
Nov !7
Alexander
·
· · · · · · · · ·
Gallla
Dec 3
At No~
1

Lakewood 60 Johnslown 37

or

Brttaln,

cine; 0«. 6- At Hannan Trace;
Dec. 14 - At Portsmouth West;
Dec. 20 - Eastern; Jan. 3 Kyger Creek; Jan. 7 - At Southwestern; Jan. 10 - At Eastern;

Hardest

hit by graduatlm last year were
the Highlanders who are mlnua
George Dillon, Dave Notter, Dan
Beaver, Mike Fadeley and Woody
Perroud and CUrt Baisden, who
was Injured this (all in football
and is not ouL
Coach Lloyd MJtera bas only
two returning lettermen, Jimmie
Walker, 5-10II.z senior; and Keith
Carter, 6-0 senior, who was
fourth in SV AC scoring last year
with an average ~ 16.5 point11
per game.
The hard-luck team al the conterence last year, the 1-Ughland·
ers, were fourth in the 'SI/ AC,
tied with Hannan Trace. Southwestern• s record was 4 - 6 in
SV AC pt..,. and 6-10 In all games.
Assisting coaeh Myers thls
year with the Southwestern reserve squad will be Steve Stiles
and T. J. Riggs.

Centerburg 75 Mt. Gllead 46

High School

tured !he men•s singles championship In the final tournament
the Dewar Cup indoor tennis
series Saturday when he defeated Britain's Mark Cox 6-4, 6-4.
~

NORTII GALLIA SCHEDULE
Dec:. 3 - SOuthern local (Ra-

SOUTHWESTERN -

Plain City 72 Fairbanks 45
Licking Valley 56 Licking Hts. 49

SMITH TRnJMPHS
LONDON (UPD - Lanky SIJin
Smith of Pasadena, Calif., cap-

VIrginia Wade

5-Ulh; James Dotson, 5-3; Pat
Stool, 5-1; and Ted Staten, 5-8\6.

erans

Scrimmage On

Denuit, 0-0-0; and M. Boggs, 00..0. Totals, 25-10-62.

Jack Smith. S-4; Artllur Clark,

R

Jimmie Walker Pushed F~r

2-4; Lovett,

mores: Larry Howell, 5-ii; Roger
Pelfrey, 5-SII.z; Hollis MJller, 57th.; Robert Ratlirr, 5~; and David Justus, 5-ll'h; Freshmen:

Cali1ornia
£
Lad Boots
FI"eld Goal 58 Yard

re-j~1i~

Monday Night

RESERVE ROSTER - Sopho-

t

TEAM
W
I.
T
PCT. + YEARS
RACINE- The Southern TorPortsmouth (1925) (1) . . . . . . . . . 14
3
0
.824
3 (1) nadoes have rive returning let•
Meigs (1967) (I) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3
.731
2
termen back (rom last year's
Jackson (1925) (12) . . . . . . _ ... 172
99 1R
.626 44
squad which finished frlth a 2-17
'
Athens (1925) (9)
. . . . . . 169
99 14
.624 41 (2) slate when they open their 1968. ..•.. 169 102
14
.618 44
69 season Wednesday at home
GALUPOLlS - Coach Johnny Sang's Kyger Creek Bobcats op- Logan (1925) (7}. • . . .
Gallipolis
(1925)
(6)
.
,
.
.
.
,
..
160
116
16
.575
44
against Alexander.
ened their 1968--69 cage season Friday night at hmle with a 69-62 win
11
3
.SS4
6 (3)
Coach Jim Adams,a1959gradover O&amp;k Hill. The Bobcat reserves took theprelimhary game 41-17. Irontoo (1925) (1) . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . 14
. . . . . . 20
21
5
.489 10 (4) uate ot Racine High, Ia optimiaKyger Creek led 14--10 at the endofthe first period, held a 27-25 New Boston (1927) (O) .
{ . -. . . . 101-- 4,_33
21 .451 40 (5) tic his 1968-69 wtU show great
lead at the half and pulled away 47-36 in a big tflin::l period, aoo Pomeroy (1926) (1) . •
Ml&lt;klleport
(1929)
(9)
.
.
.
)
.
.
.
108
134
10
.448 38 (6) improvement over last year•s
Cillsted to the 69-62 victory.
Wellston
(1925)
(6)
..
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
121
155
18
.442
44
squad.
The Oaka held an edge from
steve Boggs or the Oaks led all
Nelsonville
(1925)
(0)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
44
220
12
.181
42
(7)
'"We still doo't have much
scorers with 23 points. Davis the field making 26of71attempts
Nelsonville-York
(1967)
(0)
,
J
.
.
.
•
I
12
0
.07i
2
size,"
says Coach Adams, "But
for 36.6 per cent and had 10 of
had 11 and Brisker had 10 for
•
25 from the foul line for 40 per
+ Tie,&amp; coUnt halfr,me won and half lost. (1) Dropped out of the
the losers. Hutchison led the
cent_
league rollol¥ing ,192' season. (2) Dropped out of the league from
Oaks' rebounding with 15.
While outshot from the field, 1928 (j\ 1930;
Setting the pace for the Boblesgue in 1931. (3) Dropped out of the league
Kyger Creek made up the dif- from 1930 to 196T~ 're -JOined league in 1968. {4) Dropped out of the
c:ata was Jon Rothgeb, 6-1jwl.ior,
who tossed in 19 points. Chuck ference from the charity circle league following 1936 season. (5) Last season in league was 1966;
Braclrury, 6-3 senior, had 10. where they sank 31 of 51 for GU consolidated with Jl.liddleport and non-league member Rutland to
per cent. The Bobcats hit only form Meigs . (6} Last season in league was 1966; consolidated with
Tom Reese and Earl Thomas,
19 of S3 from the field for 35.8 Pomeroy and non-league member Rutland to form Meigs. (7) Last
both 6-1 seniors, each tallied 13
per cent
season in league was 1966; consolidated with non-league member
BARSfOW, Call!. (UPI)- Jim
points for the wimers.
In the prellmtnar,y game, the York to form Nelsonville-York .
White, is, a senior at Barstow
Kyger Creek had 44 rebounds
(Year In parentheses after team name indicates year team joined High School, kicked a 58-yard
paced by Reese with 18andBrad- Bobcats downed the Little Oaks
41-17 with Gary Saunders tossing league).
field goal Friday ulght In a Calibury with II.
in 16 and Ken Browngettlngnlne.
(Second number after learn name indicates number of titles won).
fornia Interscholastic Federation
MiciQ' Salpple~ paced the Oal&lt;
playoff football game against OnRBI reserves with four points.
tario High,
Score by Quarters:
The kick was twoyardAfarther
Oak Hill
. . . .10 25 36- 62
than the listed National Football
Kyger Creek . ·. , 14 27 47-69
League record field goal of 56
OAK HILL - S. Boggs, 103-23; Davis, 5-1-11; Brisker, 42-10; Hutchison, 2~-6; Clark, l-

OUCagers To

Robert Smith, 5-9\6; Dave Clark,
6..0; Mike Sout, 5~ 1h; and Charles Peck, 6..0.

West; Jan. 28 - Southwestern;
Jan. 31 - At Southern Loc:al (Ra.
cine); Feb. 1 - At Miller; Feb.
7 - At Kyger Creek; and Feb.
11 - Buffalo, W. Va.

-,

Thl· Sunday Time!l - ~nlincl, Stulda), ~n\'emh"r ~~. Wfi!'i

1;; -

were 7-3 In SV AC and 9-7 In all Jan. 11 - Miller; Jan. 17- HanVARSITY ROOI'ER - Serdoro:
nan Trate; Jan. 21 - AtBufl'alo, Jimmie Walker. 5-lO'h; Charles
W. Va.; Jan. 25 - P&lt;&gt;rtamouth Beman. 6-1; Keith Carter, 6-0;

games lalt year.
Ratumtng lettermen are Ron
Greenlee, 6~ senior, who was
lOth last year In SV AC ocorlng
with an average ~ 11.8 pointl
oer RIIIII&lt;O: Robert Smith, :wJI,&gt;
junior; steve Saunden, S-11 'h
jtmlor; and Ron Morris, S-11
senior.
VARSlTY ROSTER - Seniors:
Ron Greenlee, 6..2; Johl Garnes,
6-1; Dan Logue, 6-1; Larry Bowco«, 5-8; and Ron Morris, S-11;
Juniors: :bYe Saunders, S-111h;

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PLEASING

TERM~J .

992-Zl26 .
TIL 8:00

Sun •• Hn. 24,

�·.. ·.' .•

Action Begins Wednesday
By DICK THOMAS
GALLIPOLIS - The 1968 - 69

hama last year. COac:h Sang has
tour returning lettermen inchtdSissoo, 5-IJI,-2; Bill Wells, 6-5; ing Chuck BraciNry. 6-3 senior,
Norm SWindler, 5-9; a.OO Joe Be- who was the seoond highest soorvan, S-10; and Sophomores: steve er last_year in the fN AC with u
average or 19.8 points per game.
Daniels, 6-1.
other returnillg lettermen are
RESERVE ROSI'ER - Sophomores: Larry Cremeans, 5-10; Kemy Buckley, 6-0 senior; Tom
Jerry Waugh, 5-11; Tom Beaver, Reese, 6-1 senior; and Joo Roth5-11; and Wayne Queen, 5-9; and geb, 6-1 junior. Bra.t&gt;ury, Reese
Freshmen : Jim Swindler, S-S; and Ro1hgeb are expected to be
Robert Pack, 5-6; Keith Swain, the big sparks or the Bobcat attack this year.
5-10; and Joe Johnson, 5~.
Kyger Creek nnlshed in a
HANNAN TRACE SCHEDULE
three-way
tie ror first place last
Nov. 27 - Kyger Creek; Dec.
year
In
the
SV AC with North
6 - North GalUa; Dec. 7 Gall
Ia
and
Eastern.
In SV AC pl..,.
Eastern; Dec. 11 - At Buffalo,
the
Bob
eats
were
7-3
and in all
W. Va.; Dec. 13 At Southgames
they
were
9-7.
western; Dec. 21 - Southern
'The assistant coach at Kyger
Local (Hacine); Dec. 27 - 28 Creek
Is Howard ~e Miller who
Holiday Tournament; Jan. 3 will
handle
the reserve squad.
At Eastern; Jan. 4 - Haman,
V
i\RSITY
ROSTER
- Seniors:
W. Va .; Jan. 10 - i\t Kyger
Chuck
Brac:lmry
6-3;
Kemy
BuckCreek; Jan. 17 - At North Gallia; Jan. 25 - Buffalo, W. Va.; ley, 6-0; Tom Reese, 6-1; Steve
Jan. 28 - At Southern Local Spaulding, 5-10; and Earl Tho(}{acine); Jan. 31 - Southwest- mas, 6-1; Juniors: Jackie lienern; and reb. 8 - At I Iannan, son, 5-1U; Tom Hyse11,5-10; Clifford Queen, 5-8; and Jon RothW, \'a.
KYGER CREEK- Last year's geb, 6-1.
RESERVE ROSTER- Jmrlors:
tri -champions of the SV AC, the
Robcats have a new head coach Tom Denny, 5-8; Bill Glndlesin Johnny Sang, who was at Wa- bcrger, 6-1; and Dan Polcyn, 6-1;

llltlng vani'Q' and reserve roa- erett Montgomery. 5.-8; and Larry Jeffers, 6.0; Jmiors: Jim
ten and schedules:

balketball season got underway
HANNAN TR•\CE - With last
IIIia weekend In Gallla COOney year' I top scorer oC the SV AC
with the Kyger Creek Bobcats back, Coach Paul DUlon's WlldtuUng the Clrat aetim Frldl3 cata are expected to give a good
nipt &amp;I they defeated Oak HW

acoourt ol themselves this sea-

69-62.

son. Dave DanJels, 6-1 senior

nil!hJ Nortll Gal- guard, led the league last year
liB School hosted a Southern Val- as a junior, averaging 24.1 points
Then Seturday

ley Athletic Conference Preview
with four teams, North GaJUa,
Haman Trace, Southwestern &lt;Old
Southern Local of Meigs Count,y,
ta1dng part.
The fint 5I/ AC leque game

per game.
Including Daniels, the Wildcats
ha\'e four ret:urnlng lettermen
from last year's squad that !iniahed in a fourth place Ue with
Ealtem. The Wildcats were 4-6
will be played this coming Wed - in SV AC play and 9-7 in all games
nesda.Y night as F..astern of Meigs last year.
COW1t;y Invades Southwestern and
Other returning lettermen for
Kyger Creek travels to Mercer- the Wildcats lnclude: Jim Chapville to take on Haman Trace. man, S-8 senior; Everett MontHannan Trace High SchoOl will gomery, 5-8 senior; Larry Jefbe the site (1. two tournaments Cers, 6-0 sen1or; and Jim SisdurlnJ the 1968 - 69 season. The son, S-111,-l junior. Gone are
Second Amual Holiday Tourna- Doug Pugh, Dan ~eets, and Rogment will be played Dec. 27 - 28 er Watson.
with Hannan Trace, llaman, W.
The assistant basketball coach
Va., &amp;Ymmes Valley and Union at Hannan Trace Is Noel HeisFurnace competing, Then the an- ter, who will handle the reserve
nual Gallla Count31 Tournament squad.
will be pl~ed there Feb. 14 -la.
VARSITY ROSTER - Seniors:
Here Is a rundown on Gallla Darrell Johnson, S-7; Dave DanCounty's four teams of the SV AC, iels. 6-1; Jim Chapman, 5-8; E\1-

C k
K
Oak Hill 6 9 62
yger

T

ree

All-Time SEO Grid Standings
ALL-;r;~~~~;~:aRANL~~~~.:;:;z;~~.~;AG~:68)

ops

Sophomores: Ken Brown, 6-1;
Jeri'}' Hlll, ~; Elbert Masters,
5-U; Ernie Metzger, 6~; and
Gary Saunders, 5-9.

KYGERCREEKSCHEDULE
Nav. Z2 - Oak lUll ; Nav. 27
- At Haman Trace: Dec. 6 Southwestern; Dec. 7 - At Fairland; Dec. 13 - At Southern Local; Dec. l4- Eastern; Dec. 21

At Oak Hill; Jan. 3 - At
Nortll Gatlin; Jan, 4 - Wahama;
Jan. 10 - Haman Trace; Jan.
-

11 - Fairland; Jan. 17 - At
Southwestern; Jan. 24 - Southern local (Racine); Jan. 28 -

At Wahama; Jan. 31- At Eastern; Feb. 7 - North Gallla.
NORTH GALLIA- Coach Rudy

Shively, whose 1967 - 6ll li(Jlad
flnlahed in a lhree way tie tor
first place in the SV AC, has six
returning lettermen, greatest
number ol returning lettermen
of any team In the league. The
new assistant coach this year is
Mel Carter, who will handle the
reserve squad.
Gone (rom last year's team
are Fred Deel, who's playing
Junior Varsity this year at Rio
Grande College; Big Dave Hager,
and Mike Payne. 'The Pirates

F•

tve

V

e

ATHENS - Ohio University's
basketball team wUI play its an-

nuaJ Green and White game next

Oass A All-State Honors

3-ll~;

Friday's

Lewis, 1-ll.:;

KYGER CREEK - Bradbury,
3-4-10; Rothgeb, 5-9-19; Reese,
3-7-13; Thomas, 4-5-13; Buckley,

MondaJI hl the new Coovocation
Center. Tipoft' Ume is 7:30p.m.
2-ll-4; Spaulding, 2.:~; Henson,
Bobcat cage '&lt;Oach Jim Sozy. 0-4-4; and Brown, 0..0-0. Totals,
der saJd the annual pre-~son
19-31-69. Reserve Score: Kyger
pme will be played under acCreek 41 0a1&lt; Hill 17.
tual game coodltlons, Including
otlicials. Snyder also plans to
:introduce the players to the fans
Friday's Fight Results
:prior to the game. No admls- By United Press International
:eton is charged.
ST. LOUIS (UPD - llemJI
: •-nus game will give the lo- Moyer, 161, Portland, Ore., out:cal fiUUI and students a chance pointed Bobby Harrington, 161,
·to see our team before the start st. Loois (10).
·ol the seasm and also see what
:we're tryingtoaccompllsh," said Jackson Center 92 Fairlawn 68
Springfield catholic 56
:SI1Yder.
; Seyder is still Wldecided on
Southeastern 43
;how he will split the squad for the St. Bernard 59 Lakota 48
·pm~.
New Knoxville 80
Sidney Holy Angels 50

Sjopping Dollors Are i11 the B•g
Wje11 Gilts Seoso11 Rolls Arountl
Be o clever Santa and came open a Christmas Club account for a carefree Christmas
in 1969. You'll receive your check early
enough to do your gilt •hopping with time
to spare ... and with no bill-paying blues
0~11 ' " ' A«ou11t So01t

FIRST
NATIONAL
BANK
Member FDIC
Opposite Park, Gallipolis
"Serving Thit Community For Over 105 Yean"

GALLIPOLIS - Only once in
a small Class A school's his tory, there comes a boy who is
an exceptionally outstanding football player.
Such is the case or Jimmy
Dale Walker, Southwestern High
senior, who is be in&amp; promoted
for All-State honors. He is the
son or Mr. and Mrs. Clyde B. Walker.
Walker, 182 - pound senior,
played ml&lt;klle linebacker on defense and during the past season
averaged 11 unassisted tackles
per game and had a hand in molt
all other tackles.
Offensively , Walker plays left
guard but during the past season, he performed double duty
at fullback, during the last six
games when the regular fullback
was injured.
As a fullback, Walker scored
five touchdowns In six ball games.
He carried the ball 55 times for
a total ol 350 yards, an average of 6.3 yards per carry_
The Southwestern senior was
a unanimous choice as a first
team oCI'enslve lineman tor AllSouthern Valley Athletic eon.
fer«:!:1ce team for the 1968 season. ln 1967 Walker wu Honorable Mention S&lt;J AC.
Walker has been selected for
the Most Valuable Player Award
on the Southwestern Highland.
ers In 1966 - 1967 - 1968. He
has made the All • Opponent
Team of every school that played
the IU&amp;fllanders and picked an
all - opponent team.
Steve Stiles, football coach of
the Highlanders, who praised
Walker as an outstanding player
and above average student, said
Saturday that the Southwestern
senior has received numerous
inquiries concerning college rootball.

u.s.

the

Open champion, took the
wor·~n•s singles crown, deprivinK Australia's Margaret Court
or a grand slam in the series.
Miss Wade defeated Mrs. COUrt

6-3, 6-4.

t
e

At
urn

the bo:ya are working real hard
and they appear to be constantly
striving for improvement."
Returnees this year are Steve
~uler, 6-1 senior; Mark Beegle,
5-10 senior; Randy Proffitt, 5-6
senior; Bob Diddle, 6-1 junior
and Gary Norris, 5-10 junior.
~ the To rna~
other membe rs u•
do varsity are Dan Smitll, 6-2
junior; Jim White, 5-9 senior;
DannyHlll,5-lljunior;RoyJohnson and Bllil' Hill, both 5-6 jwttors and Dick Sauvage, 5-10 jun-

· ········

.

REGULATIONS

RATES. &gt;
F .... Wont Ad s.,,.,ce

5

cal (Racine); Jan. 4 - At East-

,.,,_ . ,

ern; Jan. 7 - North Gallia; Jan.
lO Haman, W. Va.; Jan. 17
- Kyger Creek; Jan. 18 - At

OFF ICE HOURS.
I :JO a"' to .'i :DO ' -"' Daily
8:J0 o.m. to 12:00 Noon ~olurdgy

SOuthern Ul&lt;al (Racine); Jan. 24
- Wahama; Jan. 28 - At North

In Memory

Gallia; Jan. 31 - At Haman
Trace; and Feb. 7- AtWahams.

who passed away
11114:

··At

-::c:e

~lim
ij~
r

JJanan. 111 · · · · ...At.UHannannlon
FumaTraccee
·
· · · · · ·
Jan. 18 · ·······.Southwestern
Jan_ 21 · · · · · · ·.At Eastern
Jan. 24 ··· ·.At Kyger Creek
Jan. 31 · · · · · ' .North Gall~
Feb. 1 · · · · · .At Union Furnaee
Feb. 7 , . . . . • • . • At MOler

Feb. 14 . . . . . . . . . ,Goooter

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Springfield Shawnee 62

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL SCORES

PROMOTED

FOR ALL -

STATE - Jimmie Dale Walker, 182 - pound senior, who
made the 1968 first team All~ern Valley AUdeUc Conference as an offensive lineman, is being promoted tor AllSlate Honors.

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don Rae, Dlslrld Sales MiJr.,
1014 Darbyshll't Drive, Columb111, Olllo, at. 11-U-31&lt;

.,
·'·'

..
•

JNl.lfe

o\XC Goldea llelr1ever Jllllllll",
lit o\111 81., IIJdcl1epn. ...
Mfll.
WI-lle

Wanted

HrDS to re-roof tile citY bulldlnl In Mason. P'or speelllcatlona. call Mason T/S.5201.

lt·lt-31&lt;

MO a month.

Set Esla Brlckles, Brlckl.. OIRISTMAS SPECIAL!

Gulf Service. Albany
11-21-31p
-----

For Sale or T~
·"'I CHEVY pickup, It-too, with

Cllllpor, l'or .... or trade.
Salem St., Rutland. 11-SI.ftc
1957 JAGUAR, M &amp; G Food
Markel, three miles 15011lh or
Middleport oo Rt. 7. 11-24-3tc

H &amp; N DAY-old or started l.eg-

horn pullets, both ftoor or
cage grown avaHable. Poultry housing and automation.
Modern Poullry. Box 188. Ath-

ens, Ohio, Phone 593-'1831.
ll-24-1te
~IX

GERMAN Pollee puppies.
$15 to $20, 1669 Lincoln Ills
Phone 992-7035
11·24-31c

Ads

Free
llfe-olze W11lklng doll and 3
111011lhl of plano 1.....,. by
teacher ol your choice wllh
the pon:haae of a ..,. WID'·
Utzer plaoo. Good quallty
SUitar oulfll, $3U5; Good oelectlon or Estey chord orgaiiJ,
t1311.5tl up; llfetltM guarantee on reeds. Wendell's, 1101
Garfield Ave., Parlenburg,
W. Va. Phone 415-4401.
11·11-

lllrl PONTIAC Flreblrd, V.fl au- CORN OU1 of field, plcldng
tomaUc transmission,
1961
now. Phone 991!-61136.
Oldsmobile converllble, V.fl.
11-24-!lc
power steering, power brakes:
1963 Rambler ·s.tallon wagon, TIMOTHY HAY 40 to 50 cents
6 cylinder, standard. Flnana bale. Marvin Wilson, On·
&lt;lnl available. Phone 991447
ter.
ll-24-31p
or 119!-57411.
11-24-trc

plete line of exotic fish and

Gift
certificates
available . The House or Wi1son, first road left below

Bring Top

For Sale

&lt;;IJF.RNSEY COW
Phon• 247-2241.

and calf
11·24-Gic

EVINRUDE

CORD WOOD Phone :147-2248
lt-24-Gir
TWO REOISTE:RF.D blark and
tan coon hound puos. Phone
992-11292
11-:14-31c

TWO 10-fNCH I-BEAMS 17 feet
long, two Keystone custom
mag~ for Pontiac or
Olds
Phone ('.oolvllle. 965-41'M.
11-2441p
I!OOd
motor. StOO Phone N~w Hav
en 882-21181 .
11-24-3tp

1 Rem1111ir1 r

Saturday. Phone 675-1065 .

11-24-IOtc
11111'1 SUPER Sport
Phone 912-2781.

lmpoDa.
11-lt.fllp

1965 CHEVROLET It-ion truck.
lone wheel bue wllh ...,..
load. Has all new 8-ply commercial Urea. In es&lt;ellenl
condition.

f12511. Pllone

lllv·

ensoond 2'13-4GS.
HALED 11MOTHY AND CLOVE:R HAY. this years hay 50

19 FORD MOTOR. 332
inch,

3656.

ruble

and pony. phone 74211-!4-31p

!.~· ~ • • - • • - - • • -

1967 ZIG ZAG-Omatic :

Well

known make sewing machine,
makes buttonholes, seww on

buttons. monograms. etc . All
without attachments. FuU balance due only $44.20 or $S per
morth. Phone 991-3218.
11-:&amp;'Uic

BUY

IN SYRACVSE
)'OU1' wile a nice home for

Xmaa, large lol, ! bedroom
with cioaels, tnotty pine kitellen, good cublnels, one •
one baH balM, large llvlng
room, stone front, needs nri
IJIOUHng, new oeptlc tank,
forced alr furnace, run baseIDOIIt for &lt;1d1dren to ploy.
Liberal linanclng.
D. B, WOOD, • IAcall st., GeiUpolla, 0,

.....

,._

menl. furnace . and ~arage
November special $3.000.00

RURAl. - 4 room frame,

el road . $500.00 down ~4.tl9 a
morth.
HEI.F.N •nd VIRGil, TEAFORll
~SSOCIATES
91'! :r.J'!S
SYRACUSE

llutl-s Servt CII
RADIO .t. 1V REPAIR ml .,._
letmal lnllallod. Jobn Jlarrl..... Phone M zm 11-Ullc

OOZIIill. BACKHOE, lnadw
and 1rudl: oenlee, aoptk
tanb, waW Unes. t;uemeuts.
November 30, 1968, al 10:110

ceived at the ornces of Webster and Fultz until Saturday,

Bryan, being a 1961 Chevro-

let Impala Sedan, low mileage.
11-:&amp;'Utc

....

lopiOil

Blbr,

Beary

Pbone 115 I or Roger Bahr,
Plloae 115 WI
ll·INDlo

0.

c. IIJWil'OIID

7u-43'11 .

11-22-31c

~APLE STEREO radio console
combination : 1967 modern stereo, AM&amp;FM radio ('OmbinaUon, 4-speed automatic chang.

er. Modem maple

console.

Balance due $91.7Al or payments of $6 per month. Call
99Z-3218.
li-2Uic
SOLID STATE st&lt;reo: 1967 walnut stereo console with 4
speakers, t-speed aulomatlc
&lt;hanger. Take over payments
of 15.25 per month or pay balance due $74.60. Phone 119!3218.
li-2Utc
REDUCE SAFE, simple and
fast with Gobese tablets. On·
ly 911 cents. Nelson Druga.
II-D-30tp

Coapllll llenlee
.._ ••

s:ss

SIX ROOM house on Mill St.,
In Middleport. Inquire at 439
Lincoln St.
11-:JUic
TliREE BEDROOM ranch style
borne In Syracuse. Hardwood

noors storm doors and carport. ' Economical gas heat.
C1ooe 1o school and churches.
ll-22-12tp
Phone 992-2954.

o\XC ~ 8tollill. Oa
l'lxlllel, '11'4111ea and S I '
... Jlalbrao Xl'l .. CDaltlla.
I

••

01111, l'llla ..,. . .

U·INIIe

SPECIAL
SNOW TIRE SALE

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992-2094

tl•o-.y duty , tlxtra de11p lrt11111d1,
fou• full pi~ nylan .
17h1.4 White ~ idewoiiJ

ONLY ~18.95

Plu• 2.19

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

•h••

l~A

GOEGLEIN GRAVEL

ln1ur•nce
AUTOMOIIJLE bliWIMO ben
lltlleaDedT Lost roar Ollll'lt.,.. license! CaD tllllll.
I 11 lie

Comfortron
equip. Blk.
Grey-green
than 6500
worronty .

Far s.. r., "'r Rent
FIVE ROOM house. bait!. !)aoement. 1AA2 Ltnro1n Hts_~one
1192·5671
11-:!UI•

Dark blue finish . 5potless clean, blue trim . W.W.
I ires like new. VB eng. Automatic trans . Power steering, t int gloss, radio . Sharp as you would like.

Start Day Right
StaTt your day with a
happy attitude . Before you
hop oul of bed . lell yourself
it's gotn~ to be a greal day
Even if you feel draggy.
make vour ~l'lf mov t&gt; fast and

1967 POI'ITIAC LeMans .......... ... ... .$2195
H.T. Cpe. Beautiful gold finish with block vinyl top,

326 cu. in. VB engine with 3 speed Irons. Console
bucket
seats, vinyl interior , only 23,000 miles by
local 1 owner . Radio, good white wall tires, show-

vou'll · conn• awakt&gt; sounet
You'll ht&gt; :-;urprised It rt&gt;all~
works.

room

D. New y..., Eft, '111M.,
Doc. II, 7:10 to D:ll. OpeD
Qlrlollllll Eve. a-1 Olrlll..... Opal 'll'edneldaJ, FridQ, Saturday, 7:11 to 11:10.
Aftllable for pii11ee, llaDdQ, TUoodaJ and ThundaJ

nJaldt, 8almday aDd llandl1
PfiDM . . . . IJI'
• 1111.
II·IT...

.... nootJI.

CIGARE'l'l'l 'ftlllllnl JUddw
..,. aero~ee. ABC BD1&amp;11I 1
)(... W Va. PhaM ftl.8ll.
I

'

.....-e

98
San Diego 126 Seattle 111

DOLLAR DAYS SAlE
We'¥• R•duced Our Alr•ody Low
Prlc••

R.g . 1.49 MerHi

. 1 .Oil

DRESS. SHIRTS ..
R,~_,

1.99

LADIES PURSES .
Ref!. 1.29 Patted
VINYL FLOWERS.... .

1.00

· . 1.00

Re9. ]9c eoch
Soap In Turtle Spon9• 3 lor 1.00
R.g . A9c ea. Lodi ..
H!AO SCARVES ..... 3 lor 1.00
R•g. 8 lor 1.00

GLASSES.. ....

. . 10 for 1.00
R•g. 2.99 Jonl•
RUG CLU.HER.. .....
. 1.00
R,g. 3Sc ea. 150 Wott
LIGHT BULBS ....... .. for 1.00
S.ol• •"~~• Mo:. 5:00P.M.

Bryant~
108 'fl . Main

Budget Shop

992-5896

clean.

66 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON.w~! ~':_()?~ $1995

a-

FridaJ, Mot.

Air Conditioning, tinted glass, full power
vtnyl roof over green body, spOtless clean.
•nt~!H IOr. Radio and all the goodies. Leu
actual mdeoge. S.ovel New cor title and

1967 CHEVY II Nova 4 Dr............... $1995

Local 1 owner cor, new w-s·w tires, vinyl trim with
bucket seats, console, radio, P .S. &amp; P_B., outo.trans.
dark blue finish with wh ite nylon top. A real sharpie.

&amp;5 CHEVELLE SS 396 H.T. Cpe.

.$1995

Lo.col owner cor, 4 on the floor, good wide ovaiW.W.
tires, red vinyl mter1or, wh1te t1n1sh, rodto
Try it for performance.

65 CHEVELLE

e. heater .

w., $1495_$1395

t-Aol ibu Conv. VB engine, P.G. transmission, new w-s·w
tires , green exter10r with white nylon top, green with
vinyl lr 1m.

1964 CHEVROLET Bel Air 4 Door ......... $995

rw

~.

773-5543

POMEROY

1968 CHEVROLET Caprice 4 Door

ca., w..,_

l.U.TE-A-WAY boUdly piil1ol.

Mason, West Virginia

THIS FINE SELECTION Of
HOLIDAY-PRICED ot. USED
CARS CAN MIKE YOUR
HOLIDAY I MERRY •E.

407 PAGE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

rfCIII

...,.

tippers ond
pock•ts. Profusional ru9
droning guorant••d.

Alterations,

DIAL 992-3284

Relrtt-

~.

MCORE'S
W. MAIN

ABC CLEANER
&amp; SHIRT LAUNDRY

• Delivery
• Quick Service
• Fir•ishing
• Sand &amp; Gravel

I

Authorlled 8IDger 8alll
and Sonlee. We Sllarpetl

Pomeroy

• Quality Concrete
• Certified Strength

•

me.

From the Largest Truck or
Bull&lt;bzer Radiator To The
~alle.st Heater Core.

• Free Estimates

NBA STANDINGS
lly United Press lntcrnational
East
I I 1ft
W. L. Pet. GB
Boston . . .
, 13 4 . 765
AIR OONDmONINO llefiiPI'- naltimore . . 13 5 . 722 lf
2
allon oemce. Jadl:'l
Cincinnati .... 12 5 . i06 1
erallon, Now Ill-. ~
. . HII.
f I lie Philadelphia .. 9 4 .692 2
Detroit . . . . . . t) 9 . 47 1 5
New York . . .. 7 13 .350 71h
READY • IIIX CIJiiCIOlo dollYMilwaukee . ... 4 11 .367 8
end
ID Jour projeet.
West
11'111 and ...,., Free 11111W. L. Pet. GB
JIIIIIol. PhoDe ....... Goor- LOS Angeles .. 13 5 .722
leln Ready • Mil
San Fran . . . . 9 9 ..JOO 4
part, Ohio.
• 10 1ft AUanta . . . . . 9 10 .474 4lh
San Oiego . . 8 10 .444 5
BUDGET PRICE
alll&amp;o Ul Chicago . . . . 7 12 .368 6'~~
oar third l1oor lludpl abop. Phoenix
. . 5 10 .333 Slh
Baker hrnltaro. Mldtlleport. Seattle . .
. 6 16 .273 9
Oldo.
' • liD
Friday's Results
New York 114 Chicago 107
SEWING Mo\CIIINlllll, repolr Boston 133 Phoenix 1()6
oemce, an mUel. lilY
Philadelphia 121 Baltimore 110
Tho P'abrlc Sbop, J'aiD. San Francisco 100 Los Angeles
3

ederol Tax

Moat populgr
OVIIIIilolole.
Limited numb•r ot thl1 prl c01.
Fully ~uoronl••d. Bull! br o bill
! lt11 mo er for , ..

llltl E. Main

IIIII
Crill Ill. . .

I

etflJ.

GOOD HAY and straw. Cell
991.Q27.
11-22-12tp

Hockingport, Ohio
Phone 667-3370

Standings

AliCnOIIDil
SEVEN YEAR OLD Spotted
Gelding, 57 iiK'hes, well broken, quiet for children, pbone

Schawarzel Marine

Wheel Alignment

lar~c

rlstern. 1ar~e 1ot. rn~ .'(rav-

IHIItw Servlct

!;XPERT

11-lMtc

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

EIPEIIENCII

BLAETTNARS

!:iiX week !'; old
lhorobrcds, \tah; amJ female.
I' hone :!92-707:&gt;.
11-2+.Jtc

IHI Estate For Sale

Res

PH, 992-2143

Di\LM!\TIO"'S,

FOR SALE - Bids will be re-

o'Clock A.M. for the purchase
of lhe automobile of E. C.

I 1 to 6

Sat. - - • · · - - • • • ·9 to 7
5un. • · • · • • • ·- ·11 to 6

l!AY. Phone 742-4753. ll -24-20tp

GF.O. HOBSI E I I ER. Broker
itA
CINE RURAL - 24 acr"".
COMPLETE barber •hop equiofour
room house. half bath,
ment. 854 Second Ave .. Gallibasemenl. oil furnace . several
polis. 0 .
11-24-llc
outbuildings and fruit trees
On
blacktop road. Garage
SHETLAND PONY. very gent·
Only
155110.110.
le. Phone 74:1-5265. 11-!L-31p
RT. lU - 7 rooms. bath. basP-

1968 FIAT al;. two snow tli-es
8.55 1 15. usud very lillie, may
be seen at 270 Walnut Sl.,
Middleport or phone !i92-7110
.ner 5 p.m.
11-21-31p

c&lt;:~r

Spro~11d
i 'w1111rm Joap
ont:l t!,.,, a hi9h p•e~sure
tin~e 0 1 •olo ... oleo ro
moNe L&lt;;of ihine
J Attandant on dut~

l'.ll CHEVY. 4-&lt;foor. very

cents, year old 40 cents_ Wm

Houdashelt Kingsbur~ Road.
Phone 991!-6758.
11-!4-31p

69's Are Here
6 - 9!-2 - 18
On Display
115 Soon
loArrive

2.

supplies.

Pleasant Point Resort. Open
9 to 9 Tuesday, Thursday and

Grade

Business Services

53 ACRE farm . M &amp; G Food
Market, three miles south &lt;tl
~lddleport on Rl. 7.
11-24-31c

5, 10, 15, galloo. see our com·

Notice

Inventory Reduction Special!

Yarltone
Cherry

•me.

OOY'S 211-in&lt;h blcyde, very
good condition Garage tools
and equipment Gall Miller.
Phone 912-3196.
tt-24-3tc

POODLE PUPPIES. o\XC ,.., 4:30 n m . al 482 Souftl .,.. ·'~-1
mlnlalure. $75 8lld ap. Iliad Ave _. Middlerort
11 · ~4-Jir
....... 11111 rroomma !'IlOilo
•uus.
u a 11e I.QUARWMS: Christmas sets,

M-.

• COMPLETE MOTOR TUNE-UP

Hamlllon Twp. 56

PVIINIBHED AP.urnmml
In Mlddleporl AD utDIU..
paid. I1DW1eJ • Reed, IQd.

ForW.

ForW.

POI'ATOES, Pboae MI . . In FT. 1 50 FT , AMERICAN
C1areDee ProfD&amp;t, Pw' 1
l!ouSP. traUer, front end kitIt-!We chen. two bedroom~. In good
condition. Can be SPPD aftE-r

----

;;;;;;

yards kicked by Bert 1Rechicher
of the Baltimore Coils in 1953.
White prevlousiJ' held the CIF
Soutbem Section field goal rec ord with a 47 yard kick.
Barstow won the game, 46-31,
and will meet El Centro Friday
in the division's seml~inals at
Barstow.

!n'OIL\GE SPACE, .-age lor
llootl, tnDen, earl. wnperw,
ItA!. Write P .O. 8os Ill, Pomeroy. PbtiMJ 11211. .. Old: s.,ler.
11-JS.J21ic

Rl 1ft, Pllooe . . ..
Mom 111 gone. forever gone,
FORD V S. I - · WICl-Il-lie ;!IM
And 1efl UJ here to weep
oo, Auto. Trails. Radio and
UnlU we are caned 1o folkrw
Healer. Good Condltioo, tlltlll.
TRAILD SPACE, IHdy ID
her
Call alter 5 P.M. IIUIIH.
boat ap, prloate, pleniJ ..
And In tho ground to SlOf!&gt;.
ll·IMIJ&gt;
..... lor ehiJdren 1o JIIIJ.
Oh, what can we say:
Memories, just memories. day
Phone . . - ..,. . . EXCELLENT, efflclent and
alter day.
e&lt;OIIOIIIIell. Tbat'o Blue LuorouR ROOM HOtJIIE ml bath.
The nights are an dark,
tre carpet and upholalery
l1llfllndlhed. IIIII Llncela
, . days are aU grey.
cleaaer. Rent eleelrle ahanr
Heigh~~. I'IMtne ......
Memories just memories,
pooer fl. Baker Fumllure.
tNt-If&lt;
Mom
11-11«&lt;
Slnc:e )'m1 went away.
SEVEN ROOM lpii1JDeal Ill '11'ARM MornbqJ coal stove wllb
Sadly missed by Richard Middleport, ....ly deoned ....
ra, bo8ll s "' • 1'001111, I1IOd
and Ruth Fink and
eompl&amp;ly tedot«aled. lea 1lllm two montho. Glem
and bact pordlea and enlnlr
daugbte!'ll, Judy GDmore
Jewell, llolrnbiiiDn. 0. Plloae
.... ..... blformat1oa eall
and Angle Harden
~131.
111t-121e
.mo.
11-17-lle
11-24-llc
TRY BEFORE you buy. We
JI'OVII
ROOM
furnllbod
opm.
'IIIU bring 1hLo llltltl model lig
c~rd Of Thanks
meat.
AD
utlUIIel
paid.
Phono
zag
sewing macblne to your
1 WISH 1o tllank my many
.....
11-IJ.Ife
home
ao you may ..,.. on II.
friends who helped In any
II you like It, buy It lor only
way during the mne.. and
.,. caah or 15.50 ptr month.
death of my lather, Fred 8 ROOM apm bJMII, claoe to
down!Dwn Pomeroy. can m
Cell 912-28311.
11-IH!e
Jadlson; for the many beau2111 before S p.m. 11-tt-tre
tiful floral offerings. RawEARLY AMERICAN stereo,
Ungs Coals Funeral Home.
4
ROOM
FURNJSIIEtl
apart·
1968 conaole with AM and J1'M
MI. Moriah Choir for tflelr
mont bait! and shower, fur..
radio,
automauc Dooling turn
music, Mn. Ervin Bumgarnoce heal, private parking,
table.
Take
over payments ol
ner. pianist: Rev. Robert out of .U ftonds, 3 blocb from
~fltkaoll .tor his C&lt;Jli!Ollnc
pel'.Jl."'!'lh•~c.l'i'~.j"l~l""'
o111ce. l&amp;6m IN&gt;m 12 ~
due, ....Ill. 111111 ... aold.
iOrdo. Your kindness will al- 11011·
p.m. to 8 p.m.
11-lttle
much hlgber. Try It tn your
. ways be remembered.
home. can 992-28311. 11·1Mtc
M!'ll. Campbell Harper.
11-24-lte TWO BEDROOM """ homo In
gu heat utility room. GERT'S a gay girl, ready for
Velma · ZUipon. Phone 'I'IJa wblrl alter cleaning earI WISH to extend my slnem
mo.
11-tHI&lt;
ptlll
with Blue Lustre, rent
thanks to each and everyone
electrle ohampooer fl. Tlny'o
who remembered me during
f'URNlSHED 4 Room House.
BargalDiand.
ll~te
my recent hospllallzatlon.
[..ower Monkey Run. Pomeroy.
Thanks to all my friends and
$40, no bath, bas running wa· GOOD USED Hanhrick gaa
relatives who sent can!B, gills
ter
&amp; gas heal See Esla
range, Norge refrigerator,
and nowero. Your kind...,
Brickles. Brlckles Gulf Ser·
large size Warm Monring 8'"
will never be rorgotten.
vice, Albany.
11-24-3tp
beater,
two-wheel !railer. Call
Mrs Robert W. Louks.
11-24-11&lt;
·
11·21-41c
WORKING MEN'S aparlment.
two rooms and bath, fum:Li&lt;"t' USED SPINET plaoo, A-1 conheDt. Private entrance . Call
dillon, llghl walnut ftnloh,
992-5440 between 5 and 7 p.m.
HETIRlNG DEC. 31, 1968. Will
$495. Wendell's, 1209 Garfield
ll-2Htc
~uy metals until above day
Ave., Parlle!'llburg, W. Ya.
and roots. No fur or hidea
Phone 4115-4401.
11-21-291c
wanted. Bill Bslley, Reeds- TIIREE-BEDROOM t•ollec . M
&amp;: G Food Market t ........ ..... p_.._ F'LOOR DEMONSTRATOR, 1968
ville, Ollio.
11-24-IOtc
~o11th of Mldrl1e~nrt on Rt 7
model stereo, beaullful wal11 -2 4-lk
W1IJ. DO ~ It bomo nut console AM &amp; FM radio,
- - -- llpperl,
pockets, pegglnc,
BSR automatic Ooatlng turn
tW&lt;&gt;-bedroom,
bemml"', olteratlons, etc. FURNISHED
lable. Make payments ~
lirsl
floor
apartment,
MiddleMnl. Freddie Thabet. llaloll.
f6.32 or pay fiiUS. Set ..ld
port. Phone 91JZ.3174.
Phone TIUISI.
~
much higher. Try It in yoiD'
11-24-tlc
home . Phone Mason City mVACANCY l'or two eldeltJ peo.
5940.
11-21-31c
pie. Prefer private pold pa- J1'URNISHED garage apartmenl
on Lincoln Hill : utilities paid. BLACK AND willie gelding oad- · Phone Mason, 'm6a.
Adu11n only. Phone 992-34119.
die horse, appro&lt;lmately 11110
lN6
ll-12..:Jtc lbo., very senile. Phone 70TURKEY SIIOO'I', lllelne Gun TRAILER-.-Bnnm-••- Trailer 5211&amp;,
11-21-31[&gt;
Club, SUnday, Nov. It, startParlt:, MlneriY111e,
Ohio. UNCLAIMED LAY-AWAY, llltltl
lnt! time I p.m. Free eall.
Pllone . . - .
l1·211«e Nelco aewlng madllne. Needs
Brinr JOIII' 11 rlllell. Thonl
wiD olio be a U.. turtey
----oo altadunents, oeWB on bullhool. Opal .... Gdy,
11'URNISilED TIIREE ROOM !Dna, 100t1CJ8r8111S, fancy stl~
li-!Ute
APARTMENT Jwith bath, ches; pay $44.53 or $15.25 a
Adults, 112 Soujll F1ftl1 Ave.. month. Try It in your home.
Middleport, pho\te 89UIIS.
Phone Mason City m-5Mtl.
HelpW~nt.cl
11-21-lf&lt;
11-21-3tc
I .AllY TO DO hou.....,rk and
rooking . Live ln. Phone 992·
5251. 0 . Hlndy, over Uberty FOUR ROOM house In lower ti-INCII SADDLE. Ll1re new.
Monkey Run. Pomeroy: fur. Pbone 742-52115.
1Ul-31p
Theatre.
11-24-tfc

_

°

11-24-llc

P'URNIIHI!D 61*fhwlt, t ·.vOULD LIKE to buy small
.-oo and bath. lbrlon l!eJ· cuckoo cl..,k . Call 912-5lli1.
noldl, M-. '11'. Va. Phono
ll-24-31p
'm6lfl.
11-lttfe

dleport, Phone
Nov.

5Mtl.

nRPENTRY. palnllng. plumb.
nJRHISIIZD and omrw.......,
lng. e1ectrka1 work . PhoneCheshire 367-785Z.
li-24-12tp
lpil blwtdl. Clooo ... ·
Phone ......
11-IJ.lfe

IN MEMORY o1 LOrna Wines,

Dec.
' ' .. ' ' ' ' . ' .. Ky
13
Dec.
' ' ' .. ' .. 'jrt (i :
14
ec.
· · · · · · · •
ou r

Jan.
· · · ' ·
4
an.
· · · · · · · · ·

(enh "•' Word o..,. in••" ion

Uw• int•••ionl .
II c•nt• ~· Word "'" con••cut•v•
""•••lion•
:I!S '"'' unt Oo•coun• on pgid odt
•ncletl1 poid wolhon 10 dGr•
CARD OF THANKS &amp; OB ITU,a,Jl.Y
51 50 lor 50 word monimum E1111
MclitionGI ...-ord ]c .
8UND ADS
Aclcli•ionGI lS( O•ort• ~"' Adv••·

At Union Furnace; Dec. 6- At
Kyger Creek; Dec. 13- Ham.u
Trace; Dee. 14- At Haman. W.
Va.; Dec. 20 - Southern Lo-

,., .....

Pickup and deliver In Mason
vicinity . Phone Mason 173-

Wan!MToluy

Mini"'""' Cha•t• 1Sc
\1 c•nh par w1111rd thraa con••cu•

and J, Woods, 5-8.
SOUTHWESTERN SCHEDULE
Nov. 27 - Eastern; Nov. 30-

J ec. 3 · · · · · · ·

,je•m•d

t.o •dll
1111ny ot:l1
ob·
.. clioru:.b la . Tftef.ub li 1har will nof .
b• •••"'en1ible or more thon one
lnconecl in1artion

RESERVE ROSTER- Junlon:

~ec. ~~······At=

Publi•her •e~eo•vu th• ,,11· ~,

or '' ''''

dllbel. WILL DO lronlnR In my home

rrdlteJianeoul. Vn. Rowud
~. lltlll '11'. Mllln 81.........
...,..
t.a.lft

Want

Watching

EmDI•,.•ment Wanted

ANTIQUES. rurallwe.

DEADLINES
5 '·"' · D1111r B•f~~~~t• Put.li(alion

Tt,.

'HOMEWORK'

Wanted

Mond1111r D•odt;,.,. 9 o .m
(gnc• llotion• &amp; Con•cliC&gt;t'll
Will be ae(.,t•d until 9 o . ... . j..,
Dar o f Publicolian

'"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I

Laurelville 78
Starr-Washington 71

By United Press Interr11tional
Northridge 56 Utica 54
Portsmouth 80 Ironton 58
Ports. Clll)' 89 Green TW p. 6(1
Eastern 67 Soutll Webster 59
Valley Forge 63
Cleve. lleights 58
Euc\id 65 Garfield Hts. 42
Lakewood 74 Normaldy 61
Br&lt;d€side 50 Avon Lake 44
Fairview 79
Cleveland Lutheran West 51
Brooklyn 78 Cleve. Byzantine 47
Girard 67 CoMeaut 51
Berea 59 North Olmsted 56 (ot)
Wickliffe 72 Willoughby South 56
West.enille 74 MitOin 55
Cols. Ready 58 Miami Trace 53
C&amp;nal Winchester 66

LITTLE

WA.Nl AD
INFORMATION

Ramie Hutchins, 5-8; P. Jeffers,
5-S; Sophomores: R. GW, 5~;
J. Ehman, 6-1; J. Kuhn, 5-9;
Freshmen: M. Smith, 5-8; R.
Simmons, 5-7; S. Jetrers, 5-';

th
ouD
ern
6

or

Gallipolis 80 Chesapeake 72

Cage Scores

A

and Dave Morgan (when he recovers from a football ln)ary)
5-11; Junloro: Rulli¥ Hulchlna,
5-11; Jack Waters, 5-8; D, Haney,
5-9; Ricky Stout. 5~; J. Daily,
5-9; Sophomores: Larey Dillon,
5-9; and Freshmen - L. Stephens, 6-1.

S

lor.
Members
the Southern reserve team, coached by Hilton
"Big Fooz" Wolfe, are: sophomores- Barry Hart, 5-10;Gary
Hart, 5 •7 ; Sam Shain, G-.2; Roger
Nease, 5-9; Budd.Y Pyles, 5-10;
Lewis Van Meter, 5-7 ; Frank
Ihle ' 6-1 and Art Hill ' 5-2 ·
The Tornadoes, for the first
time this sea!JOII, wiU have a
freshmanteam,coachedbyl.arry
"Little Fooz" Wolfe.
SOUTHERN SCHEDULE
Nov !7
Alexander
·
· · · · · · · · ·
Gallla
Dec 3
At No~
1

Lakewood 60 Johnslown 37

or

Brttaln,

cine; 0«. 6- At Hannan Trace;
Dec. 14 - At Portsmouth West;
Dec. 20 - Eastern; Jan. 3 Kyger Creek; Jan. 7 - At Southwestern; Jan. 10 - At Eastern;

Hardest

hit by graduatlm last year were
the Highlanders who are mlnua
George Dillon, Dave Notter, Dan
Beaver, Mike Fadeley and Woody
Perroud and CUrt Baisden, who
was Injured this (all in football
and is not ouL
Coach Lloyd MJtera bas only
two returning lettermen, Jimmie
Walker, 5-10II.z senior; and Keith
Carter, 6-0 senior, who was
fourth in SV AC scoring last year
with an average ~ 16.5 point11
per game.
The hard-luck team al the conterence last year, the 1-Ughland·
ers, were fourth in the 'SI/ AC,
tied with Hannan Trace. Southwestern• s record was 4 - 6 in
SV AC pt..,. and 6-10 In all games.
Assisting coaeh Myers thls
year with the Southwestern reserve squad will be Steve Stiles
and T. J. Riggs.

Centerburg 75 Mt. Gllead 46

High School

tured !he men•s singles championship In the final tournament
the Dewar Cup indoor tennis
series Saturday when he defeated Britain's Mark Cox 6-4, 6-4.
~

NORTII GALLIA SCHEDULE
Dec:. 3 - SOuthern local (Ra-

SOUTHWESTERN -

Plain City 72 Fairbanks 45
Licking Valley 56 Licking Hts. 49

SMITH TRnJMPHS
LONDON (UPD - Lanky SIJin
Smith of Pasadena, Calif., cap-

VIrginia Wade

5-Ulh; James Dotson, 5-3; Pat
Stool, 5-1; and Ted Staten, 5-8\6.

erans

Scrimmage On

Denuit, 0-0-0; and M. Boggs, 00..0. Totals, 25-10-62.

Jack Smith. S-4; Artllur Clark,

R

Jimmie Walker Pushed F~r

2-4; Lovett,

mores: Larry Howell, 5-ii; Roger
Pelfrey, 5-SII.z; Hollis MJller, 57th.; Robert Ratlirr, 5~; and David Justus, 5-ll'h; Freshmen:

Cali1ornia
£
Lad Boots
FI"eld Goal 58 Yard

re-j~1i~

Monday Night

RESERVE ROSTER - Sopho-

t

TEAM
W
I.
T
PCT. + YEARS
RACINE- The Southern TorPortsmouth (1925) (1) . . . . . . . . . 14
3
0
.824
3 (1) nadoes have rive returning let•
Meigs (1967) (I) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3
.731
2
termen back (rom last year's
Jackson (1925) (12) . . . . . . _ ... 172
99 1R
.626 44
squad which finished frlth a 2-17
'
Athens (1925) (9)
. . . . . . 169
99 14
.624 41 (2) slate when they open their 1968. ..•.. 169 102
14
.618 44
69 season Wednesday at home
GALUPOLlS - Coach Johnny Sang's Kyger Creek Bobcats op- Logan (1925) (7}. • . . .
Gallipolis
(1925)
(6)
.
,
.
.
.
,
..
160
116
16
.575
44
against Alexander.
ened their 1968--69 cage season Friday night at hmle with a 69-62 win
11
3
.SS4
6 (3)
Coach Jim Adams,a1959gradover O&amp;k Hill. The Bobcat reserves took theprelimhary game 41-17. Irontoo (1925) (1) . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . 14
. . . . . . 20
21
5
.489 10 (4) uate ot Racine High, Ia optimiaKyger Creek led 14--10 at the endofthe first period, held a 27-25 New Boston (1927) (O) .
{ . -. . . . 101-- 4,_33
21 .451 40 (5) tic his 1968-69 wtU show great
lead at the half and pulled away 47-36 in a big tflin::l period, aoo Pomeroy (1926) (1) . •
Ml&lt;klleport
(1929)
(9)
.
.
.
)
.
.
.
108
134
10
.448 38 (6) improvement over last year•s
Cillsted to the 69-62 victory.
Wellston
(1925)
(6)
..
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
121
155
18
.442
44
squad.
The Oaka held an edge from
steve Boggs or the Oaks led all
Nelsonville
(1925)
(0)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
44
220
12
.181
42
(7)
'"We still doo't have much
scorers with 23 points. Davis the field making 26of71attempts
Nelsonville-York
(1967)
(0)
,
J
.
.
.
•
I
12
0
.07i
2
size,"
says Coach Adams, "But
for 36.6 per cent and had 10 of
had 11 and Brisker had 10 for
•
25 from the foul line for 40 per
+ Tie,&amp; coUnt halfr,me won and half lost. (1) Dropped out of the
the losers. Hutchison led the
cent_
league rollol¥ing ,192' season. (2) Dropped out of the league from
Oaks' rebounding with 15.
While outshot from the field, 1928 (j\ 1930;
Setting the pace for the Boblesgue in 1931. (3) Dropped out of the league
Kyger Creek made up the dif- from 1930 to 196T~ 're -JOined league in 1968. {4) Dropped out of the
c:ata was Jon Rothgeb, 6-1jwl.ior,
who tossed in 19 points. Chuck ference from the charity circle league following 1936 season. (5) Last season in league was 1966;
Braclrury, 6-3 senior, had 10. where they sank 31 of 51 for GU consolidated with Jl.liddleport and non-league member Rutland to
per cent. The Bobcats hit only form Meigs . (6} Last season in league was 1966; consolidated with
Tom Reese and Earl Thomas,
19 of S3 from the field for 35.8 Pomeroy and non-league member Rutland to form Meigs. (7) Last
both 6-1 seniors, each tallied 13
per cent
season in league was 1966; consolidated with non-league member
BARSfOW, Call!. (UPI)- Jim
points for the wimers.
In the prellmtnar,y game, the York to form Nelsonville-York .
White, is, a senior at Barstow
Kyger Creek had 44 rebounds
(Year In parentheses after team name indicates year team joined High School, kicked a 58-yard
paced by Reese with 18andBrad- Bobcats downed the Little Oaks
41-17 with Gary Saunders tossing league).
field goal Friday ulght In a Calibury with II.
in 16 and Ken Browngettlngnlne.
(Second number after learn name indicates number of titles won).
fornia Interscholastic Federation
MiciQ' Salpple~ paced the Oal&lt;
playoff football game against OnRBI reserves with four points.
tario High,
Score by Quarters:
The kick was twoyardAfarther
Oak Hill
. . . .10 25 36- 62
than the listed National Football
Kyger Creek . ·. , 14 27 47-69
League record field goal of 56
OAK HILL - S. Boggs, 103-23; Davis, 5-1-11; Brisker, 42-10; Hutchison, 2~-6; Clark, l-

OUCagers To

Robert Smith, 5-9\6; Dave Clark,
6..0; Mike Sout, 5~ 1h; and Charles Peck, 6..0.

West; Jan. 28 - Southwestern;
Jan. 31 - At Southern Loc:al (Ra.
cine); Feb. 1 - At Miller; Feb.
7 - At Kyger Creek; and Feb.
11 - Buffalo, W. Va.

-,

Thl· Sunday Time!l - ~nlincl, Stulda), ~n\'emh"r ~~. Wfi!'i

1;; -

were 7-3 In SV AC and 9-7 In all Jan. 11 - Miller; Jan. 17- HanVARSITY ROOI'ER - Serdoro:
nan Trate; Jan. 21 - AtBufl'alo, Jimmie Walker. 5-lO'h; Charles
W. Va.; Jan. 25 - P&lt;&gt;rtamouth Beman. 6-1; Keith Carter, 6-0;

games lalt year.
Ratumtng lettermen are Ron
Greenlee, 6~ senior, who was
lOth last year In SV AC ocorlng
with an average ~ 11.8 pointl
oer RIIIII&lt;O: Robert Smith, :wJI,&gt;
junior; steve Saunden, S-11 'h
jtmlor; and Ron Morris, S-11
senior.
VARSlTY ROSTER - Seniors:
Ron Greenlee, 6..2; Johl Garnes,
6-1; Dan Logue, 6-1; Larry Bowco«, 5-8; and Ron Morris, S-11;
Juniors: :bYe Saunders, S-111h;

~,

6 cyl. Std. tron:. . Rod1o. local 1 owner cor, black
f i ni~h. spotless clean interior. Good tires.

1963 CHEVROLET jmpala H.T. Cpe ....... $995

I

I
I
I
I

Local 1 owner cor, VB engine, std. Irons., radio
heeler . We kn ow you will like thi s one.

&amp;

1962 MERCURY Comet 4 Door ...........• $595
6 cyL engine, outomot 1c trons. Radio &amp; heater . Local
1 owner car and pri ced fo go.

I

Yes, Good Selection Of
'69 MODELS
Best Deals, Too!

I
I

I

1----

------

1
1 POMEROY MOTOR CO•.
II ~318
POU~j
We Service

What Wo Soli

308

Pa"'"OJ

E. MAIN
OPEN

fun For All! Jr. Min

•

'

•

PLEASING

TERM~J .

992-Zl26 .
TIL 8:00

Sun •• Hn. 24,

�\
lti -

11te Sunday Times - Sentinel,

SUnday, No\'ember 24, 1968

USE CLASSIFIED ADS ------------------ to Buy, Sell, Swap, Rent or Hire
RNI
For s.le
...,Eat... For ....
WJEH
Dlllo1
Ag.-y
0. D. PARSONS
n

CLASSIFIED JUTES
OM Dor-0,.. tim• • · · · • - 17c lin•

51• '"""'"'""''"" do~• · · • • -15c li.,.
Thr•• con••culi~• da~• · · - 16c r.,...
Ad~e11l1i"9 O&lt;d•r•d Ia• ' ""filulor
l~~a••toonl wdl take t~.e on• lim•

,.,._

All odo a•• •••lri(t4'd to th• i•
11'09•r clllllurlicorlonl ar&gt;d to tl-•
,..ulor Doily lribur~• atyl• of type
inlelfion.
Any ~hor19• mod• '" tf-oe o&lt;ig•nol
cepy submilled lor c louoli•d od"•" ' ••m•nl will b• eloorged the rot•
el 2Sc lor •och chong•
Ach ord•red far tlve• ,. ti• tom••
•nd 11op ... d b•lo&lt;• upiral•on ..,,1 1
... cha•9•d 1,. only numh•r of
11-1 the ad dot• •o•,...d

o.od\ine

4 :30 p.m. doily ond II

•·"' Sot...,day .

Card of Th1nlc1

Notl~
5 WOMEN to .. the fabul0111
Ptnny Rlcb Bra. 111gb earnIngs. CaD 4'15-14211 belwee!l
hours of S and 7.
:rru

!=:RMI DRIVERS. Experlenl'f
helnful but not nf&gt;C'efl:!ary. we
will train you. For apoltcatlon
write Nation Widfo Safety Dlft'Ctor. c-o Haekl Terminal

Bldg. 1255 Corwin Avenue.
Hamilton. Ohio 45015 or call
51~ .
!76-1

1 WISH to express my sincere

thanks to the Waugh - HalleyWood ambulance service for
their prompt, patient and efficient serviCt- during my ill-

ness. Thank!! again. Chauncey E. Harrl.... 147 Garfield
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
276-1

GOOD MAN
OVER 41
T"lo." •horl tripe~ wrroun41nl GaUl·
l'Vlil .ru . M"an we WJIII .. worth
, . to

$1,800 In a Motttb
'"hJ• ttr#'lllar eath bonu•- Air "' ~ I
.-onfld~ntt•l leiter to A. D
Pat~.
P'rl!l.. Texu Refinery Corp , Rn"
711 . Fort Worth . Teua. TIIQl. 276-1

MAN WILLING TO LEARN a
going business with pleasing

THE FAMILY of Garland Caupersonallly for responsible podill wish to e"l"'&lt;" our gratisition, write bo&gt; 99, c-o Tri·
tude to the many friend! and
bune, slating qualiflcationa.
neighbon: tile faithful and un275-3
tiring oervlces of Dr. Kemp
and the nurses of Holzer Hos- 1100KKEEPER and typist, pleapital: the many canis; telesant working conditions, good
phone calls: food: and flowpay lor responsible person.
e-n; and generous contribJWrite Box 911, c-o Tribune,
tions to The American Cancer
stating qualifications.
215-3
Society; Rev. Paul Bauders
lor hto many calls and PI'!IY- I OR RENT OR LEASE
en; tile Waugh Halley Wood USED CMI lot in good toc&gt;Funeral Home; the Mason!l
Uon on corn~r of Second &amp;
for their lmoresslve service :
S)'Camore st. Ph. 446-lllO.
tile faithful members of tbe
27.1-3
Sllrlne Club; and an who
made tbe many week! of pain
For lent
and sufkring endurable.
276-1 llARAGE 1~, I """""
IDd bllb, anfunL Clll ...
1174 or tte Gilt.

.a

Lost

LARGE bla&lt;k and tan male
hound . .John Morgan, Kerr,
0. Ph. 446-1263.
26S-tr
IIILLP'O!D between Kroger
store and comer of State &amp;

Fourth Friday evening. Reward. Garrett Kerns, 446-2853
Z'lf-3

BIWIBURY Apt. No. I, U..
rm., llodrm., ldtdleo, bath •
JIIII'Cb, Mulll oniJ, 110 poll.
711 SecODd Aft.

2lilolf

I'IJIINlSIIBD IJI*I - . eoJI II
at l"aarttl Aft., Oel!lpAAI
Allo boule near Pl. Ph•ent

IIHf

NDIIIII
AQUARIUMS - Christmas sets
S, 10, 15 gallons _ See our complete line of exotic fish and

••pplies
Gift eertlflcates
available. The House of Wil·
1011. first
rond left below
Pleasant Point Resort. Open
9 to 9 Tues. tllru Sat. Ph.
175-1065.
!76-10

YISJT OOR Cllrlslmu 8b o p
dlllJ 10 Ill I p.m., """""" I
to I p.DL Smoltler'l llvdea
Ooaler,
..
I WILL NOT be responsible for
any debts other than my own
aa of this date November %2.
1918. Signed, Arnold L. Barnot! Jr.
1'15-3

Nft anlundlbecl apa 2 + 1
I bodlooml. adulll oa!J, •
s-.1
I'lL *llll.

..,

A...

Of i ICE

IGr nat. Clll

1p1&lt;t

141 1111 fnm I Ul. ltll I
P.IIL

IILtllliJPPimn";IG;;-:,a:a:..~,- _..,

,...

l'llel. Put Cllaln1 Balli.

FURN. apt.,

s I'OOIDI and bllb.

102 4th Aft. Ph. 44U7III ,..

ttsOHS.

liN

CALL at 1924\0 Eastern Ave. 5 ROOMS AND BA'nl, !urnllhed. Ph. 4'15-2858.
~
for Rawleigh Products any
tJme

on

11mrsdays.

other

days, alter 5 p.m. Ph. 446!Gtll.
2'16-1

3 ROOM AND BATII lu.,._
aparlment, uWIUes paid, Adults only. - • or 251-81103.

:t'IW

DEAD STOCK
U.OO RRVJCI CRARGK
WILL .DfOVJ: YOUII D-.uJ
HORIII8 AND COWS
CALL IA.CKION' .........U

WANTED

2 BEDROOM boule near Slate
Patrol Olllee. Ph. :M51at ...
HUIII.
1/1.41

6 ROOM houae In country with
!lath, 1311 mo. Ph. tiS 1111
2'14-3
! BEDROOM
meJ'Its

,,nfurn . aoarl ·

Ph. 446--0263 10 a.m.

to 4 p.m

SPARE TIME INCOME
DISTRIBUTOR FOR THIS AREA
Become a distributor in one of America's largest and fastest growing industn~ . This is a new
concept in !he fteld of vending . No experience
requtred . All accounts are contracted for. and set
uo b y ou r r.om pany . You merely restock locations
w1th our National Branct products

YOU CAN EARN $800
OR MORE A MONTH
BASED ON YOUR EFFORT!
Investment of 52 ,190 to $3,960 cash reqUired
secured hy tn ventory and eqwpment . You must
have a good car and be able to devote ot least
4 10 12 hou rs

For lent

~er

we.;k

If you are 1n ter o'!Sierl . have the desire, d rive . de

termmat1on 01nd want to be successful m a gro~ ­
in9 bus mes ~ of your own. write us today . Please
enclos{) name, acldress and telephone number .

WE WELCOME INVESTIGATION
INTER-STATE DIST. CO~
!l35 South Second Wt'st
Salt Lake City, Utah MIOI

2'14-li

JIIW.TIIa

..... Vl1lp,

aiJ Pa '

I)

, . _ CIIGll

7:45 Echoeo ol Joy
8:00 Ohlo Valley Newa
8:15 Talk or the Town

Lilce? Desire?

3'h ACRES

9:15 The Morning SIMM
Chatterbox
11:00 The Morning Show
11:45 World &amp; Ma11011 Co. N..,.
12:00 Com'nlty am Market Now a
12:15 BulleUn Board
10:30

12:30 Presecutor Rpta. (Mon.)
Fann &amp; H&lt;111e (Tues.,

12:45

lntorchlnge
S:OO News, Weather,
4:00

r

..

..

......

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

0

hfn•tll

..

=

.~
__v::.

CROSSWORD

.

..,..

...

13. Collonade
14. A. long time
l:"i&lt;. Man at

!!&gt;. Fragment
6. Purasitic
insecl!l

1. Norlhem
conatel-

16. Sun god
1":'. Music DOlt&gt;

lalion

18. Gloomy

II. Seaport
on the Bay
of Bengal

19. Cupld'l&gt;

title
20. Wintry

9. Facial

.,.,,,

accumula-

Uons

t I Intended

23. Kind ol
worker

•
"...

rum

25. Olla or um
26. CoUector" ~&gt;
Item
Z8. Sofu or a
kind

Jt Wife of

Sa tum

••

letter

0

34 . Daddy
35. Seed
vessel
36. Surrounde!l
by
JM. The '"Eagle"
In th~ sky
40. E;,relet

,,••
H

'!8

u _Enticed
42 . Wait near

27 . Nol

tr1Ulspar1'nt
28. Fountain
treat

~
,,

[0
I"

~

U. Goes With
odd•

dlspenaer
42 Pronoun

~

I"

~"

,.

0

~

0
~"

~

I"

o.t hand

37. Bu&lt;J&amp;e
39. Cotfee

~ I"'

~ I'•

~

I'"

z&lt;

~~

I" I"'
f%8 ~ I"
~l
~ I"'
~ I'"

~I"

~

~ I...

DAILY CKYI'TOQUOTE-Here'o how to
.t.XYDLBA.AXR

work"'"
It:

I• LONGFELLOW
One letlcr !imply stands for another. In thllllUilple Ad UHd
fur Ute three L'!!. X tor the two O'a, etc-. Blnl"le !etten, apo.lrrlphiea, the hmglh and ronnatiOD ot. the wordl are all hlnt8
Each day the code letters are d1tferent.
A. C1)JC IIQBII qtlab"
M:VPXY

KXCfo"G

PDX VXCN
LG HYPM C

)(V

liYX

XBHK

ZKNGX.-OMH·

KXCL
oy..,.,.rc~ay•_..

ION' IS

Crypt.oqiiDk: WELL. MY' DZLJBJ:RATE OPINIT"S A JOLLY' STRANGE WORLD.-BENDA
~e

:m«

bome. CaB - ·

1!161. Kla&amp;" Featcu-u IJ!dlc•te. 1.:.)

.... ..... ....... twa
&amp;llOd _ . 1)-, fael Gil
hlol, DM I D tltdMII, O!llardl

llreet, 1111111 rillap.
JIJflt I
d led, I Dice llaml,

.... lot. ltorm - . ......
.......... loelllldiD cliJ.
n wm ... JOG to 1ot111 tldl

Travel Time

Piper
36. Na.uUul
"hellO'"

26 . Resin

•

. . . , . . +Ill, ft. .......
Rabert L JIOIW, ft. 1•

TrJ II 1D , _

~ - Well-known

regular
ZJ Blubb.!r
2!'1. Gush

\0

11

32. s·lbling
JJ. Greek

29. BanWted
30. Downy
duck
32. ContatM

Wading
bird
22. Bleach.er.!
21.

13 14

0'

24. Kind of

muell blgber.

bull's -eye.
perhaps

meters

ACROSS
!-

....

(ab. )

57 Sea (Fr.)
Hebrides
DOWN
4 Cape of Good I Church part
2 Goddns of
8 River in
discord
Missouri
3 Nevadan, for
12 Ex ill
instance
13 Sheaf
4 City In
14 Group of
Louisiana
th...,
5 Leave out
15 Yu1oslav
6 Silvf'r coin
Island
of Colombia
160ne who
'1 Bitler vetch
stales
B Boolh for
wrongly
business
18 Lover of the 9 Crafts

....

24 Shatter
25 Poker stake

40 Gets up
41 Emissary

26 Free from
dirt
21 Rf'posltory

42 Mimicked
43 Supplicate
for
44 Flower
48 Indonesians
of Mindanao

28 Anatomical

~

Mslstant

,."

State"
48 Bela ian river
50 Paciric
turmeric

I' I'"

1. .

12:00 News
12:15 Trinity Hour
12:45 catbolk Jntormatlon
1:00 Church ol God
1:30 Goopel Clll
Z:OO SUnday Dr!"' Time
5:00News~

WJEH-FM . LOG
(Dally except where indicated)
6:00 Sign on am Early Blr(
Show (except Sundays)
B:OONews~

8:05 Muste Unllmi!Bd
10:30 Chatterbox (except saturday .... Sunday)
11:00 Music Unlimited
11:45 All the News (except Sun.)
12:00 News (Sunday only)
12:15 Music Unlimited
5:00 News
5:15 Dinner Serenade

7:00 E,.nlng Sere9:45 Armed· Forees ShOWs ·
10:00 First National Ftnal
10:15 Muslo Until SIJil Off

(Note: Live Sports Broadcasts will s~rcede regu-lar progruns when scbeduled.)

FwS.Ie
II ~ 15 BEIGE acrllon (WIIlda
Wove) carpel fill, 11" 1Anltb
'IV f?l, .._,. nclt .. bobby honle, Db new e&amp;, movie
......,. 40 • 40 $'1.110, wabllll
otereo cabinet for WilljiGbents $15. Ph. ftl.4ftl. 2'H4
CAUFORNrA car, 11111'1 O!nrolet eouvertlble, Hunt S ~peed
2113, ..... off« .....
• . Pit IIS-II'II.
1'11-J

USED
FURNITURE
ond

PROFESSIONAL
SERVICE

~UCTION

c

1JY OINM -

5

,,

1ft

....

I b tlriiB

..

bome ...,., d\J wator.
po, lUll I
• Plall
M Dlt. . . . I'll 1• I I

41

..

I"

I"
I"

n

87 Olive StiNt

To Remember Shut-ins
POMI.::HO\' - Shut-ins of the
,\sbury Fnitcd Methodi s t Chunl1
of Syracuse "'ill begivcnremcmbranccs during the holida) season, it was. dccidt'ddurin~o:Thurs­
da) night's mcctin~ of the Eagles
C'lass held at lhe churrh.
Bill Winebrenner, president,

c:orductcd the mt.'Cting. The annual ('h.-istmasdinncrwas set for
Dec. Jfl at the dmrdt.
Pra)er bJ lhc Hev. Wendellli .
Stuller opent.'&lt;l the mt."C{illJ:.
Tha nksgiving selections including "Count Your lllessi~s" and

""ll1erc Shall Be Showers of
BJeBsings" were sung. M i s s
~Ieanor llobson gave dcvolions_
She read from Psalm 1115andlll,
gave a reading on Than ksg iving,

and

presented

scriptures on

thankfulness.
Mrs.

CarroU Norris, Miss

Marcia Karr and Mrs. Bill Winewere hostesses. The

brenner
SLINlJA \'
SUBDISfRICT MYF meeting,
2 p.m. Sunday, lfealh Methodist
Church, Middleport; all young
people Invited.
XI GAMMA Mll Chapter, Beta
Phi Sorority, tea, 6:30p.m. SJ.an day at home of Yvonne Scally,
Middleport.
DEOICATlON OF addition to
Carlt.'ton Church, 2 p.m. Surdll)'
with Hev. Clyde ilinlon, former
pastor, speaking. Publid weicome.
MONDAy
SOUTHERN ATIII.ETIC Boosters, Monday 7:30 p.m . at high
school, Racine; final plans for
football banquet; Elson Spencer,
president, urges all interested
to be pre sent.

ff'' ' ' '=;;:=·;:;::'' ' ' ii

Lay of the Land

Thanksgiving theme was carried
out with turkey replicas and taP-

ers. A salad course was served.
AtteOOing were the He,.·. Mr. Stut.
ler, Mrs. Paul Kloes; Mrs. Karl
Kloes, Miss Robson, Mr. and
Mrs. Carroll Norris, 1&lt;.1rs, Estil
Moore, Mrs. Herbert Parker,

Mrs. Virgi l Teaford, Miss Karr,
Charles Hoback, and Mr. a n d
Mrs. Winebrenner.

A thought for the day:
Seottish poet Robert GilfiUan
said, "There's hope for every
woo, and balm for every pain,
but the first joys of our heart,
come never back again.''

Important First
In Mason County
By JOliN COOP£H
Soil Conservation Service
Mason County
PT. PLEASANT - We will
devote most of our t·olumn this
week to some sidelighls which
we observed t.•oncerning our recent celebration. The c.:elebralion of whiclt we speak was to
dedicate tl1e first one million
feet of tile to be installed in Mason County. Mason County landowners can be justl)· proud of
this accomplisl1ment, sin(·e Mason is the first (.'Ounty in the
state to achieve this milestone
and at the present rate of tile installation, no other county in
West Virginia can reacl1 thi s
amount for another I 0 to 15 years.
We would like to point out that
a million feet of tile laid end to
end would reach from Pt. Pleasam to ClevelarKi, or to ML Airy,
North carolina, w Charlotte sville, Virginia, or to New castle,
Indiana
It is noteworthy that man_ypeo-plc travelled a long way to be

with us at our dilmer and take
part in the ceremonies. Ken
Kountz of Gar Wood Irxlustries
came rrom Findlay, Ohio; Frank
Milliken aOO "Rip" Talkington
came from Bowerston, Ohio;
Hobert Oberholzer came from
Junction City, Ohio; Robert Quilliam, State Conser\'atlonist, Soil
Conser\'ation Service, came from
Morgantown. W. Va., J-1oyd Roth·
lisberger, rormer work unit con-servationist in Mason County,
came from Beckley and three or
four people came from Charleston.

It is estimated that these folks
mentioned abo.,.·e would have travelled a total mileageofmorethan
2,00U miles to get to our meeting
and bad !lome, and Ihey came for
the express purpose of laking
part in the meeting.
We would like to point out that
one speaker did some quick arithmetic and ended up with an incorrect statement. The mrreeted
statement would ~a.v that the total
cost of in!.lallation oflhe ooc mil·

::!

on Page 32

;~

·-:~:-::::::q.;:;:;:;:;:-:-:-:-x-:o~~w&amp;«»."~::

lion feet o f tile at today's prices
would be about$220,000. We make
this correction because we know
that the speaker would want it lo
be made.
This value of Ule installation
combined with the increased
value of crops as a result of
the tile, which we mentioned to
be $120,000, would mean that
perhaps ever}' two years the cost
of installation would pay for H~
self. We brought out also l.hatthe
$120,000 increase was new money
that would flow into the economy
of Mason County.
In spite of un'-'OOperative rains
we were able to eomplete 1 h e
ccrcmorzy on the Old Town Farm s
of C. C. Lewis and family .
West Virginia Commissioner
of Agricul ture, (;us II_ Douglass,
wa.s the one designate&lt;~ to Ia) the
l,OUO,OOOI!t fool lle \'ery e1qlertl~ did so as well a .'&gt; to la} the 20
feet which we der:lared had lO tw
which we declared l1ad to be laid
laid before the l,OfiO,OOOtll could
be put down. We feel Mr. Douglass probably bet"amc such an expert by having ins1alled !.c~·cral
thousand feet of tile on ltis own
farm at Crimm s Landing.
In order to remembl'!" the
event, we ~=:a\' C !.CH~ral ~cople a

Film, Mechanized Death, Shown Racine PTA
HACINE - A rum, "Meehani:led J.Jeath" shown by the Slate
Patrol, featurcdlheRacineGrade
School P'f .A. meeting Monday,
Nov. 18 at the school. Mrs. John
Fisher, president, presided . Two
songs, "America, .. and "Ameri ca the Aeautiful,., were SWlg_
The secretary report was read
by Mrs. Brady Uuffman, the

16 at the Junior High. The school
children willprcsentaChristmas
program.
A jitney supper is to be held
at a date to be announced. There
were 44 persons present. The

gift awardL'&lt;Ito Mrs . Edna Price•a
room.
The f i I m on "Mechanized
Death'• was shown by Ohio~
Patrolman James 52leets. A(JlElation and answer period rollowed.

;.::oo:::m;:""':::n:;,&lt;.;w;;•:;•:.,lal&lt;::::;•:;:n;_:;w,::il~h.;l:hc~~H~e~fr~c;sh~m~e~n·ts~w;er~e~se~rv~edj.~,

HOOD
YOUTH
OXFORD.

treasurer's report by Mrs. David 11111 . Plans were made to
hold the next PTA meeting Dec.
piece of four-inch tile on wl1ich
we had written about the occasion. Woodrow Brown, member of
the ,\gricultural StabilitationaOO
Conservation Committee, who
has also installed several thousand feet on hi s own rann, said,
"I am as proud of this piece of
tile as. if you had given me a
million dollars."

Colds are the most common
form of illness in the United
Stales according to the Encyclopaedia Britannica .

Black

C-0-E Width

IHESHOE BOX
Where Shou Are !Ntnsibly Price-d

0.

MEIGS BAND Boosters, 8 p.
m, Morklay at Meigs High School
cafeteria, Middleport.
BETHEL 62, International Order of Job's Daughters, 7:30 p.
m. Monru.y at the Temple.
AMERICAN LEGION Post 602,
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at Legion
Hall.

'

'

II

TUESDAY
LADIES AUXILIARY 1 Drew
Webster Post 39, American Legion, Tuesday at post home be.
ginning with a potluck dinner at

6:30p.m.

DREW WEBSTER Post 39 Junior Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m. TUesday. Take old Christmas cards
ror veter.ana:hoiPitat"J)alft.y strap..
book.
CIVll, DEFENSE program 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at American Le.
gion Hall, Racine.
LADIES AUXU..IARY, Feeney.
Bemett Post 128, American Legion, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
Middleport hall. Junior auxiliary

ifted with Glamour and Com

DUTTONS

•••
•.•.• ,

members will meet at 7 p.m.
MEIGS COUNTY Riding Club,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the home
of E. J. lUll, Flatwooda Road.
Plana will be made for the annual banquet ln January.

~

f'

WEDNESDAY
WilDWOOD Garden Club, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the home
of Mrs. Vernon Nease; Mrs. Da.
vld Flag co--hostess.
THANKSGlVING DINNER tor
Racine Grange members and
friends, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.
Gifts for state hospital, pig in
poke sale.

deya111
("(lf/I}JQd:-;

eve candlelight vesper service

74 7 Fl•l ·O-Lounaer. Contemporary
,ec: loner m ,.,gui;H, 1811. "nd e~l•a

IIUIII'i(JU.'l

at 8 p.m. Wednesday at St. Paul

}JUckelles

Lutheran Church. ~ecial music.
Message by the Rev. Brian Engle.

t" ll !&gt;&lt;1es

MIDDLEPORT Literary Club,
Wednesday, at home or Mrs.
Nan Moore. Rev. Everett Hayes
wlll report on letters or Ambrose
Bierce.

THURSDAY
I'(YfLUCK FELLOWSHlP dinner, 6 p.m. Thursday, at Morn-

PUBLIC SAU
THURS., DEC. 5th
~T

I P.M.

S.lll "II the lun&gt;ltur• ~;~nd
houtehold effeo;ll of Fronc••
Go~- Sal• wilt be eoncl"ctw
ad at
Kl"ollt Com ...vnlly
Auc:tlon Bcun.Cor. ThlrdAue.

ond Oliv• St.

CARnR AND EVANS, INC.

I"

..

..... 11:.

l~fli~

COMMUNITY THANKSGIVING

114

I•

~

......... "'

trballt'IP-·
Be 'r

1\

~2121

:*
"

47 "-Star

"

..

i'

9:30 Aunt Bertha
9:45 Olildren's 018pel
10:00 Music lor Sunda)'
10:30 First Blj&gt;tl1t Chureb
11:30 Gospel ol Chrl.ol

10

""

45 Avidly
48 Recumbent
51 Hawaiilln
blrdJ
52 Comfort. ·
53 Ardor
54 Individual
55 ColorlnJ
substances

Preacher

8:15 New~~o
8:30 Herold ol Truth
9:00 Protestant Hoor

boiDe
Ill 111et .....llloil. ,.. 1•t1 d,
,., Dice kllela, 4' ....,
fllld eolllr. illdl 3 I nD
ballell .... -.
prl I I, r-an lnel«, Glb-

"

42 Sprln&amp;
month

(SUNDAYS)
8:00 SI&amp;O On and the Slng!QI

" A. a.BAH..... _

tissue
29 Greek war
IOStead
20 Follow after II Rippt'd
Jod
21 Auricle
17 Naval depot 31 German state
22 Oversee
33 Sifter
ship
25 Au•tralian
38 Standards
19 Detester
pompano
of perfection
23 Mistake
28 p.,teboarrd
27 Depot (ab.)
30 Make
I'
endurinl
I"
32 Pl.uaer
34 Enallsh
I"
nonlisl
35 Sonlbird
36 Pronoun
1.'
37 Fur filament
39 Epochs
40 Gold district
of the
Transvaal
u Hell!

"

Slil&gt;OIIl

:!.J,

::!\li::\-=~~SSSSSS:M::!t~:tli:S:\l::\~K:t~Mt:!tl::tll::a'S:Qt:t'l::t"l::tl:SO:i'S:SSSSO::-=:\l:S:'!\l::'liKS::WS:t-.:'11KS

12:35 Teen-Time '68
4:00 lnterchange
5:00 News, Weather, ~
5:30 Sunset Serenade (Until

~m'l'lllbt..•r

1968 Christmas Season Shoppers' Guide

12:30 1be "In" Soun:l

For We

OMo.....,

~

l'inlCti - Sl.mliul'l, Snuda.l,

(SATURDAYS)
11:55 Washlnstoo Report.
12:00 News Roondlt&gt;
12:15 Bolletln Board

,.,...........

......

Wed., Thuro.)
Go Round

~y

Sunda~

'-ll::t~:\~l::!\li::'!\'V~~SSSSSS;;cli:SSS~:\~:\~:V.:!t~:\lt:!lli:SSS~l:SM:~'V:\li:S~~

MONDAYS THRU FRIDAYS:

Need? Want?

NNED - a 3 DR borne?
WANT - A ranch style hom•
7 RM. home, bath, basement,
wltb an all built In kitcben.
Off. 446-3643
30 x iO barn. \0 A. Tob. B. on
large
earpeted LR, spaclouo
he. 446-3796
446-4500
hard road, Springfield Twp.
rec ,.,.m wltb Ore place, attached garage. patio. can Gl
ONEOR25
2 BEDROOM borne In city. 1':1.
Brand
New
Nice-Close
To
100
per cent financing.
ACRES joining city limits, city
44i-0571.
2'1"-'
Move Before Winter
Town-$8,400
ochools, gaa &amp; water, 6 rms. UKE- A water front' A beauMOY&amp; 'fOMOU;OW INTO ftll5
If' YOU NUD A I BBDKOOII
tiful two story borne with a
&amp; bath, basement, 2 car 1•
; ROOM house and bath at
NSW S nDilOOV HOD WHICH ROllE. HDE'S Till: O!Q ~
111
CAIIPITSD TmtOUOHOUT YOU. RAt!l A LAIUJE LOT TO'II
picturesque view of tbe Obio
rage.
New
Jisting.
Hurry.
Cheshire, 0 . on Rt. 7. Call
AHD 18 tmAft'D nacnucAL- OAIIDI:N UD Oft
'I'II:AR.'I1l
River,
large LR with firealter 3 p.m. for appoint&gt;- 'I
LY. BEAtl'tiFUL LA.ROII: lOT· !Jl' A.CC, BRA'DY ntONT POftCII.
100ACRE5
CR1:N wrrH &amp;A.NCII:. OVEN AND RATR AND nTRNAC&amp;. OO!'f'T
place,
formal
DR. 3 BR, 114.
36'1-717'7.
27H
VACANT Land, Ill. miles out.
lttniiODA.TOW..
IMr
ftLED WArT, t..O&lt;* TOOAY.
BA'IftS, I CAR OA.aAO&amp; A!'nl
hatfl.
lUll
hutment.
! car ga1.1 Acre Tob. B.. 4 tier fob.
u.ao1: UO' .. _ . LOT. LOOK
Make Offer
rage,
deep
well,
shrubbed
Ill'
HOUSE, 4 rooms and bath, lull
TODAY, YO\M.L UD rr.
bam, large barn, pond. New
This
Bargain
On
•
4011'
lot.
basement. gu furnace, newly
listing.
Spring V•llev ht•tes l'IOMI: L1JatY FAliiLT 18 00·
DESIRE - A large 4 BR? Cam.
decorated, can be seen any.
IHO TO Oft A. 11&amp;\L .A.IIOA.IN
VD.Y NK2 I BlmiiOOII ROllE
105
ACRE!:
WITH
COliPLEft
kttcRI!N
KPI:'£.
Oft
YOUil
WTD
OPEN
lortable LR wllb flreplace. 3
time. Ph. t4&amp;-2709.
2'14-1
rftA!INJI!:, Ov.N. DLifiWAtmD..
.\NO SD TIDI. 1'1"8 A. KIODo1N
ST.
Rt.
lat.
6-lotlls
mile
baths, elegant kltcben with 2
ETC.) I IIATRS, CAilPrr'a) ICN·
P.ItN :1 BBDROOTtl WJTR VEKY
Nl("'l LARCI: Rtm.T IN ~­
lronlal!e. all clear land. Good
'T1t 'NCI AND LIV1 'f'1 NOO"ovens,
over size ref., dlspo~­
LA.ROI: DINING AaEA Oil T .V.
f:N
(IIANOZ.
OVDO. FULL
For Sale
3 BR home. large ham. bid••·
ROOM PLUB Pt.AV ltOOM J"O't
RASIIb'NT
AND
C.\IIPOR'I'.
al, DW and many extraa. banCHJLDaEN, I CAB
OA.A.OE
OWNER RA.t!l WOVED OUT or
milk bouse, •Ito. 3 DOnds. Can
NEW GMC 11UCK
quet size eating a"''· lull
AND OOV&amp;IlKD PATIO.
AII'IA AND WilL O!V&amp; JIDRD.
be boul!lrt 3 wa}'!l. I! ~ .. Ill A..
IAT! POSS!ai10N. RONJIIT hasomenl wllb oaneled rec
HEADQUAR1EIS
YOU WIU. IJII: HAPPY YOU
Brick On U.S. 35
or an 1115 acres.
room
&amp; WB n,..place. dnuble
IIAM: TRlJ: DTOil'l'.
111'1 I T. GliK:
Less1han
$20,~.
6ACRES
~!~rap,
this 111 a brick &amp;
For Rent
1111'1 I T. a...
YOU'LL Oft' JJIIRDTAT8 POfiOR
MORE
acres.
If
vou
oreter.
frame
home
42' x 95' on a
S!S8toN OP TRJS LAIIO&amp; :1
1• ~ T. a... Pkbp
Unfumlshed
tll!:llROOII MtiCK. YOU'LL KN ·
,.,...
lot,
In
the
city and vaNEW 30 • 111 'brick rancf&gt;
1111 Ito T. GMC Plobp
JOY THE LARO!
CAR~
trimmed In Redwoocl. Best
eant.
UVINO AND DJNINQ &amp;OOMS,
1t11 l!o T. GIIC Plcbp
NICE I BmllOOif. ct.OD TO
t\4! llA.TR8 AND BUILT lN Kft' .
construction
&amp;
materials
by
EVDYTlllNO.
1'1"'1
'HWAI!t
HWW
Pri&lt;e Reduced
111'1 Ito T. GIIC Plobp
CHEN. 1T'8 Qll'lln' IN A COUNAND · KJTCHIN Ill PARTLY PUW.TRY
A.TMOfiPHDE AND IN
Kentuckv builder. Price un- 1 BR and bath, eallM!ted LR,
1111 GIIC Solllal'N'JIRSD.
tTII.GO
JIO.
nf'Mil)fAft
CITY 8CROOL Drrnt.ICT. DON"T
P&lt;MSEMION.
cf&gt;an•ed despite cost of lumBUY TD..L YOU SD THDI.
beautiful kitchen wltfl an tile
11111 I T Sludo.....
ber lncrea.. Ibis montb. Rl.
bullt Ins, large laiDidry room,
NowSTJIWmW..141. 411. miles out.
Real
part baaement with now HW
FIIREKA
tank &amp; fumace. Iarg• porch.
Ita 21!. T. ClleY.
l!l$1 CHEV'RO!ZI' Plclrup, good
I,
ACRE.
4
111111.
&amp;
bath,
panVacant
11M s T. Ialllnllllollal
oondlUon. 379-21103.
275-S
eled. plenty lruK trees.
1. . Ito '- Dod&amp;e ......
54 Acres
IIIII 2 T. lnl Tnelltr
MAIL ORDERS filled lor Merle
IOTSOFLOTS
LOCATED on st. Rl. 160. land
I lllmltapolla lloiiDe Poww
Norman C&lt;lllllelics. Call Point
ONE ~CRE nr more lots Rt.
I• clean In grass, ~ per
NEW LOC&amp;'IION
tlllll
Ple888111 4'1S-304tl for your or141.
Beautiful
lobi
overlookvr.
oom leaae, plenty oot
TB111D a ITATB II1IBJ:l'l
!few
Ralor1 Cllttaw der.
riH
bulldlngl, a room home, bath,
in• the new Bv-Pass. Cltv lots,
NEWUmNGS
tiiUO. New IJI • •. II ply
coal furnace. deep wen, plen·K anaura. anv schoot dlstr1cl.
.,..,. llreo ... tile. ....... UII!:D TYPI:ImlTit:R IIALII:-4 WE HAVE A NlCE Z BR bunty WDter. aome machinery
anv price. From fiSII. with
tu.
GIIIJ. .... ...10 ..... ...... galow at 84 Garlleld A....., WDter. Hurry,
I{Oel farm. 'nils farm
hql I l l .
and "'....... $11.10. We llr' with a garage. Look It ovor
wm
qualify for a V.A. loan.
III,._I!L ft. I.
and give us an offer.
'floe ab llllbl. RIDIIIII. lim,., ... • ••• II"
Let the """' baae help pay
1.11
BEFORE YOU BUY a house
lor II.
I'll • Ollloe 1!qQip.
check this 4 BR borne allacbW.,., AIM'-rY, ttl •
15Acres
0001) CLEAN WMP and...._
ed garage, large ldtchen. Lc&gt;LOCATED on Blessing Rd . near
., t'OII. Carl WLil&amp;l, Rio REDIIONE Coon Round, good eated on a large lot at CenNEW BRICK l beclroom. l\0
Nortllup on Ra«oon Creek.
0r11111o. l'bolll! ~us. t-It
tenary.
bathtl. «arM'e. fu11 b11sement .
lnmter. Ph. - ·
271-l
S
room home. baaemenl. cool
WE HAVE CU!m.JMERS we
large lot with trees. 1\0 miles
lumaee.
2 bam•. toba&lt;CO
can1 oatisfy with our presIF YOU In! """""C I YOUNG freezer beef m foot or
from new bosoKal site on 160.
baae,
17
good
building lots on
ent Ustlngs. II you have prohome or I'IIIICidellng, • •·
droued. Ml'll . .1o1m Rob, i'll.
111,9110.
Ph.
446-1443
or
446Raccoon Creek.
... .... ballclen. Dloblbalor
perly you want aold call us.
1141 . ..
1'11-J
37lll3.
Z'lf.tf
lor Jlolpoinl AppllaDeeo, AJII.
We buy, sell and trade.
Kanaug•
1t111 Eleelrle.
Ill II APPLIII - Red ..a Yelllw
om.. ... 1•1 I
4 ROOM horne. natural g:".
deep well, garage. otorage
1eo II. Neal MI-JIII
Dellcloul, Grimel, ~
BAIRD REALTY CO.
LOW, LOW, PRICBI 4111 Jld.
building. 'nils Is a neat small
A. A. Bert Ill 11'11
fiiiYmU, Sweet elder. ......
OICir Belrd, Re•ltor
home with a price you'll llke.
bt
bourl:
op111
I
to
I
IIGD--~ . . . . . ~ Jh
- - Rice IIIII Olrllla J.l'ar.
· lOWDown
111,5011.
clay tlml i'rldiJ, I Ill I S.
...,.,., tt to s ......,_ Weill
10 A., .:as ""'· bole, .... 111\rJ
List Now!
For Sale
ALL 11J101 rA balldlatl ......,. On:ban!a, R1. IJI, I mile
, _ bome, balll, .... wall,
NATUR'ALLY you want to Usl
located "" State Rt. liD. 1IBI
1111, b1o&lt;t, brick, pipe,
yonr property with a nrrn
Soulb "' Wllblollle, 0.
BLACK and Decker valve rewbrdowa, IIDteiJ, ele, allldl
lrllde
f..lrlllor
...
....
that wm mnvert your home
faeer and valve reseater. See
Wlllten, Rio Onndt, 0. CB
Into
caall, oo call the DILLON
Bud Mille&lt;, Eureka.
2'16-1 yoa. Owuar will " UID after I.
• II Nft IIOII8B IL\OOLES, ....;
AGENCY now. Rememl&gt;er
·~A.
Ren'a , _ obllacolll • • that SOLD SIGN 111 ""at
IIIW ponJ 1addl11, •·•· NlD
PERHANEN'I' sPECLWI
Qooell Saddle ..... 114111411 ADDING MACIIIN1I8 fnlm -~ .... II!. llor7 , _ boale, 1lll1l oounll.
$10.SO Permanent $8.50, $12.50
10 IIIII ese.10 up, hllld or elec- hill, hal oil fllit I , plelltJ
ROBARTDILLON,Roaltor
Permanent $10.110, $15.00 Perlric. Slm- I'll· • otrl&lt;e good bldp., ..............
Equip,
1'/H
manent $12.50 for Tuesday &amp; 'PUBLIC Sl!lATDIG - d181n,
LadUe or -~
Reward Bruon
)llenl1 caltiMII. l«&lt;ted Wednesday, Nov. Z6, 27, also
folding lllblel, ab ldDdl.
Rio Grande. Tmrmf• . - .
Evea!DpMI-1211
TRY BJ!II'ORE YOU BUY
Dec. 2 and 3nl. Bee-Lov-Lee.
lebooJI, ehwd&amp;, '*1'"1'1:WE
WILL bring IIIII 1918 moot lllllL
Phone «6-3111J.
IllS
UID. !!hn!noml I'll· • Ollke
el llg 188 aawtn, macblne Ill
l!'qllp,
rltll
II!. 11or7 D. H. WOOD, ...hor
"""' bome .. you may .....
altlllllme tddiiC.
Phone446-1066
on ll. II yoa ID&lt;e II buy II fGr
DAILY
CII]J .,_ eaoll or $5.10 per bath, eablnell Ill ltlltlwl. lo' AU ELJCCnUC bome I adlll
13. Old44. V~ed
ACII088
month. Clll ~- :m« ealed Ill Galllpolll. lklllle fltnll. hD CrawD CIIJ, IIDIII Ill
Umr
l. Where
1m\ IIIIo .....
- · ....... dllpolal, ....
exclaDOWN
Plnar del
we
""'
aboal
aold
lJlll
..a
..
bar, llrp IIYIDI - . pd
mation
IWILY
AMIIIUCAH
rrt!RIIX)
1.
An
old
Rio is
18. Home
man.
low,
low
oa
IAOJMU•
10
..U.
water
IIIJIIIb', well IMtdaW,
5. Tspa.des
111118 CONSOLE with AM &amp; FM
for
whimsically
9. Termite.
Lei
lll
belp
JOG
..u
JOliN,
Atl1
_,
like
bome.
radio, automatic llootlfl8 turn
thr
!lpe&amp;klng
tor one
localloa.
Cllll
•ARK
YOUR
RBNT i«eeptt
table. Take over paJIIIOIIII of
2. Exhort
10. Hawaii"~&gt;
19.
Some·
3.
Honey
,
.
_
Ill
Ill
II
llrL
lllGwlnCf
Be
• laadlorll IIIII
Mr. Fong
e&amp; per month or pay balanee
th.ill&amp;'
maker.~
Bo
I
J
•
IIIII
I
bedroom
boale,
12. Move
due, • .II; this HI aokl
• . 100 sq.
cautiously

Appomattox

EXCEPTIONAL
OPPOR'nJNITY
~ANAGEMENT trainee In this
orea. age 25 to 60, married,
full or part time. No nperi...,. required. Income unUmlied. Write Box 'II c-o Tribune.
2'1U

THE WISEMAN
AGENCY

r'URN. 2 rooma and bath, Ideal
for worklnt! girl or wwtiDI
couple. Ph. 4411 19",
27441

apartment and
weekly rates on rooms. Pb.
446-2206. Gallia Hotel. 276-26

DRIVERS NEEDED

rh1.•

Etlele

For Rent

~'\IR~ISHED

HelaW•m.d

17 -

Galllpoh, Ohio

Excnating and Buiding Conluacttn
BACKHOE, IULLDOZER, CIANI,
GRADER AND DRAGLINE SEIVICI
Basements-Footers-Leech BedsFarm Ponds-Septic Tanks-YardsOriveways;-Land Clearing-Fill Dirt
Top Soil-Ponds Cleaned-Parking loti

•1F IT'S .DIIH, WE'i.l MOVE IT I"

ing 9ar United Method.JstChurch.
Program will rollow.
ANNUAL Thanksgiving dance
Thursday, 8 to 11 p.m. at Meigs
Hlglo School. Sponaored by Meigs
Athletic Assn. Open to public,
Ja,ys emceeing.

TRAINS COLLIDE
AKASIII,
Japan

(UPI}- A
packed with commuters
rlmmed the rear of another
train
at
Nakayagt
station
Friday night, kliJing a motorman and injuring at least 55
passengers, poUee said Saturd.,y.
The rirst train had
overshot the station and was
baeldna: up when hit, authorities

train

reported.

.· '

TORNADO EMERGENCY
BRISBANE (UPO- A tornado
ctemollllhed the township of
Jiltlarney Friday nlglot and

708 Flel·O.Loun•••· Mode rn c:tlannel baek h i lh la1 rechn,na ch•ir .

Saturda.Y. .. the,y
a state ol emergen·

o1 the towns 300 homes
were ciamBged or destroyed.
F'OG DELAYS PLANES
t LONDON

(UPI}- Fog

blank;ted 1...- aiJ'IIOrt early
S41!U'daJI and forced lending
clite,yo am flight dlvorsloos to
other British llelds.

IUAIAIIIII
ttflll.l
COMITIUCTIONI

CHOOSE FLEXSnEL
\~

'V1AX FACTOR

tpJured several residents, pollee
ed

95:1 FI••-0-Louncer. So lid maple
tnmmed. Darrel baclo Earl)' .t.maric•n reclln•nll chair

DUTTONS
PRESCRIPTIONS ARE OUR MAIN BUSINESS

MIDDLEPORT, _OHIO

STORE HOURS

9 AM·lO PM DAILY
4:30 PM to 9 PM
SUNDAYS

Whatever your -taste In furniture,
you can cbooae with confidence
from ~exsteel. Whether you select contemporary, traditional, lnodern or colonial, you will find an
impeccable elegance in every piece
that will be a proud additiOn to
your home. This dlstinctloe Fle•sleel styling is available In aolu,
sectionaiJ, suiles, chalra, and 1
unique lOla-sleeper. Hundreds and
bu&amp;dreds of fabrics, all decorolorselecled for beauWul correctness,
&amp;IV« you a eholee of 1101ida In a ••·
riel)' of rlcb weaves, prlnta, quilted
fabrics, matelasses, brocades, a&amp;d
other fulllonable fabrics.

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0,

•,

�\
lti -

11te Sunday Times - Sentinel,

SUnday, No\'ember 24, 1968

USE CLASSIFIED ADS ------------------ to Buy, Sell, Swap, Rent or Hire
RNI
For s.le
...,Eat... For ....
WJEH
Dlllo1
Ag.-y
0. D. PARSONS
n

CLASSIFIED JUTES
OM Dor-0,.. tim• • · · · • - 17c lin•

51• '"""'"'""''"" do~• · · • • -15c li.,.
Thr•• con••culi~• da~• · · - 16c r.,...
Ad~e11l1i"9 O&lt;d•r•d Ia• ' ""filulor
l~~a••toonl wdl take t~.e on• lim•

,.,._

All odo a•• •••lri(t4'd to th• i•
11'09•r clllllurlicorlonl ar&gt;d to tl-•
,..ulor Doily lribur~• atyl• of type
inlelfion.
Any ~hor19• mod• '" tf-oe o&lt;ig•nol
cepy submilled lor c louoli•d od"•" ' ••m•nl will b• eloorged the rot•
el 2Sc lor •och chong•
Ach ord•red far tlve• ,. ti• tom••
•nd 11op ... d b•lo&lt;• upiral•on ..,,1 1
... cha•9•d 1,. only numh•r of
11-1 the ad dot• •o•,...d

o.od\ine

4 :30 p.m. doily ond II

•·"' Sot...,day .

Card of Th1nlc1

Notl~
5 WOMEN to .. the fabul0111
Ptnny Rlcb Bra. 111gb earnIngs. CaD 4'15-14211 belwee!l
hours of S and 7.
:rru

!=:RMI DRIVERS. Experlenl'f
helnful but not nf&gt;C'efl:!ary. we
will train you. For apoltcatlon
write Nation Widfo Safety Dlft'Ctor. c-o Haekl Terminal

Bldg. 1255 Corwin Avenue.
Hamilton. Ohio 45015 or call
51~ .
!76-1

1 WISH to express my sincere

thanks to the Waugh - HalleyWood ambulance service for
their prompt, patient and efficient serviCt- during my ill-

ness. Thank!! again. Chauncey E. Harrl.... 147 Garfield
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
276-1

GOOD MAN
OVER 41
T"lo." •horl tripe~ wrroun41nl GaUl·
l'Vlil .ru . M"an we WJIII .. worth
, . to

$1,800 In a Motttb
'"hJ• ttr#'lllar eath bonu•- Air "' ~ I
.-onfld~ntt•l leiter to A. D
Pat~.
P'rl!l.. Texu Refinery Corp , Rn"
711 . Fort Worth . Teua. TIIQl. 276-1

MAN WILLING TO LEARN a
going business with pleasing

THE FAMILY of Garland Caupersonallly for responsible podill wish to e"l"'&lt;" our gratisition, write bo&gt; 99, c-o Tri·
tude to the many friend! and
bune, slating qualiflcationa.
neighbon: tile faithful and un275-3
tiring oervlces of Dr. Kemp
and the nurses of Holzer Hos- 1100KKEEPER and typist, pleapital: the many canis; telesant working conditions, good
phone calls: food: and flowpay lor responsible person.
e-n; and generous contribJWrite Box 911, c-o Tribune,
tions to The American Cancer
stating qualifications.
215-3
Society; Rev. Paul Bauders
lor hto many calls and PI'!IY- I OR RENT OR LEASE
en; tile Waugh Halley Wood USED CMI lot in good toc&gt;Funeral Home; the Mason!l
Uon on corn~r of Second &amp;
for their lmoresslve service :
S)'Camore st. Ph. 446-lllO.
tile faithful members of tbe
27.1-3
Sllrlne Club; and an who
made tbe many week! of pain
For lent
and sufkring endurable.
276-1 llARAGE 1~, I """""
IDd bllb, anfunL Clll ...
1174 or tte Gilt.

.a

Lost

LARGE bla&lt;k and tan male
hound . .John Morgan, Kerr,
0. Ph. 446-1263.
26S-tr
IIILLP'O!D between Kroger
store and comer of State &amp;

Fourth Friday evening. Reward. Garrett Kerns, 446-2853
Z'lf-3

BIWIBURY Apt. No. I, U..
rm., llodrm., ldtdleo, bath •
JIIII'Cb, Mulll oniJ, 110 poll.
711 SecODd Aft.

2lilolf

I'IJIINlSIIBD IJI*I - . eoJI II
at l"aarttl Aft., Oel!lpAAI
Allo boule near Pl. Ph•ent

IIHf

NDIIIII
AQUARIUMS - Christmas sets
S, 10, 15 gallons _ See our complete line of exotic fish and

••pplies
Gift eertlflcates
available. The House of Wil·
1011. first
rond left below
Pleasant Point Resort. Open
9 to 9 Tues. tllru Sat. Ph.
175-1065.
!76-10

YISJT OOR Cllrlslmu 8b o p
dlllJ 10 Ill I p.m., """""" I
to I p.DL Smoltler'l llvdea
Ooaler,
..
I WILL NOT be responsible for
any debts other than my own
aa of this date November %2.
1918. Signed, Arnold L. Barnot! Jr.
1'15-3

Nft anlundlbecl apa 2 + 1
I bodlooml. adulll oa!J, •
s-.1
I'lL *llll.

..,

A...

Of i ICE

IGr nat. Clll

1p1&lt;t

141 1111 fnm I Ul. ltll I
P.IIL

IILtllliJPPimn";IG;;-:,a:a:..~,- _..,

,...

l'llel. Put Cllaln1 Balli.

FURN. apt.,

s I'OOIDI and bllb.

102 4th Aft. Ph. 44U7III ,..

ttsOHS.

liN

CALL at 1924\0 Eastern Ave. 5 ROOMS AND BA'nl, !urnllhed. Ph. 4'15-2858.
~
for Rawleigh Products any
tJme

on

11mrsdays.

other

days, alter 5 p.m. Ph. 446!Gtll.
2'16-1

3 ROOM AND BATII lu.,._
aparlment, uWIUes paid, Adults only. - • or 251-81103.

:t'IW

DEAD STOCK
U.OO RRVJCI CRARGK
WILL .DfOVJ: YOUII D-.uJ
HORIII8 AND COWS
CALL IA.CKION' .........U

WANTED

2 BEDROOM boule near Slate
Patrol Olllee. Ph. :M51at ...
HUIII.
1/1.41

6 ROOM houae In country with
!lath, 1311 mo. Ph. tiS 1111
2'14-3
! BEDROOM
meJ'Its

,,nfurn . aoarl ·

Ph. 446--0263 10 a.m.

to 4 p.m

SPARE TIME INCOME
DISTRIBUTOR FOR THIS AREA
Become a distributor in one of America's largest and fastest growing industn~ . This is a new
concept in !he fteld of vending . No experience
requtred . All accounts are contracted for. and set
uo b y ou r r.om pany . You merely restock locations
w1th our National Branct products

YOU CAN EARN $800
OR MORE A MONTH
BASED ON YOUR EFFORT!
Investment of 52 ,190 to $3,960 cash reqUired
secured hy tn ventory and eqwpment . You must
have a good car and be able to devote ot least
4 10 12 hou rs

For lent

~er

we.;k

If you are 1n ter o'!Sierl . have the desire, d rive . de

termmat1on 01nd want to be successful m a gro~ ­
in9 bus mes ~ of your own. write us today . Please
enclos{) name, acldress and telephone number .

WE WELCOME INVESTIGATION
INTER-STATE DIST. CO~
!l35 South Second Wt'st
Salt Lake City, Utah MIOI

2'14-li

JIIW.TIIa

..... Vl1lp,

aiJ Pa '

I)

, . _ CIIGll

7:45 Echoeo ol Joy
8:00 Ohlo Valley Newa
8:15 Talk or the Town

Lilce? Desire?

3'h ACRES

9:15 The Morning SIMM
Chatterbox
11:00 The Morning Show
11:45 World &amp; Ma11011 Co. N..,.
12:00 Com'nlty am Market Now a
12:15 BulleUn Board
10:30

12:30 Presecutor Rpta. (Mon.)
Fann &amp; H&lt;111e (Tues.,

12:45

lntorchlnge
S:OO News, Weather,
4:00

r

..

..

......

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

0

hfn•tll

..

=

.~
__v::.

CROSSWORD

.

..,..

...

13. Collonade
14. A. long time
l:"i&lt;. Man at

!!&gt;. Fragment
6. Purasitic
insecl!l

1. Norlhem
conatel-

16. Sun god
1":'. Music DOlt&gt;

lalion

18. Gloomy

II. Seaport
on the Bay
of Bengal

19. Cupld'l&gt;

title
20. Wintry

9. Facial

.,.,,,

accumula-

Uons

t I Intended

23. Kind ol
worker

•
"...

rum

25. Olla or um
26. CoUector" ~&gt;
Item
Z8. Sofu or a
kind

Jt Wife of

Sa tum

••

letter

0

34 . Daddy
35. Seed
vessel
36. Surrounde!l
by
JM. The '"Eagle"
In th~ sky
40. E;,relet

,,••
H

'!8

u _Enticed
42 . Wait near

27 . Nol

tr1Ulspar1'nt
28. Fountain
treat

~
,,

[0
I"

~

U. Goes With
odd•

dlspenaer
42 Pronoun

~

I"

~"

,.

0

~

0
~"

~

I"

o.t hand

37. Bu&lt;J&amp;e
39. Cotfee

~ I"'

~ I'•

~

I'"

z&lt;

~~

I" I"'
f%8 ~ I"
~l
~ I"'
~ I'"

~I"

~

~ I...

DAILY CKYI'TOQUOTE-Here'o how to
.t.XYDLBA.AXR

work"'"
It:

I• LONGFELLOW
One letlcr !imply stands for another. In thllllUilple Ad UHd
fur Ute three L'!!. X tor the two O'a, etc-. Blnl"le !etten, apo.lrrlphiea, the hmglh and ronnatiOD ot. the wordl are all hlnt8
Each day the code letters are d1tferent.
A. C1)JC IIQBII qtlab"
M:VPXY

KXCfo"G

PDX VXCN
LG HYPM C

)(V

liYX

XBHK

ZKNGX.-OMH·

KXCL
oy..,.,.rc~ay•_..

ION' IS

Crypt.oqiiDk: WELL. MY' DZLJBJ:RATE OPINIT"S A JOLLY' STRANGE WORLD.-BENDA
~e

:m«

bome. CaB - ·

1!161. Kla&amp;" Featcu-u IJ!dlc•te. 1.:.)

.... ..... ....... twa
&amp;llOd _ . 1)-, fael Gil
hlol, DM I D tltdMII, O!llardl

llreet, 1111111 rillap.
JIJflt I
d led, I Dice llaml,

.... lot. ltorm - . ......
.......... loelllldiD cliJ.
n wm ... JOG to 1ot111 tldl

Travel Time

Piper
36. Na.uUul
"hellO'"

26 . Resin

•

. . . , . . +Ill, ft. .......
Rabert L JIOIW, ft. 1•

TrJ II 1D , _

~ - Well-known

regular
ZJ Blubb.!r
2!'1. Gush

\0

11

32. s·lbling
JJ. Greek

29. BanWted
30. Downy
duck
32. ContatM

Wading
bird
22. Bleach.er.!
21.

13 14

0'

24. Kind of

muell blgber.

bull's -eye.
perhaps

meters

ACROSS
!-

....

(ab. )

57 Sea (Fr.)
Hebrides
DOWN
4 Cape of Good I Church part
2 Goddns of
8 River in
discord
Missouri
3 Nevadan, for
12 Ex ill
instance
13 Sheaf
4 City In
14 Group of
Louisiana
th...,
5 Leave out
15 Yu1oslav
6 Silvf'r coin
Island
of Colombia
160ne who
'1 Bitler vetch
stales
B Boolh for
wrongly
business
18 Lover of the 9 Crafts

....

24 Shatter
25 Poker stake

40 Gets up
41 Emissary

26 Free from
dirt
21 Rf'posltory

42 Mimicked
43 Supplicate
for
44 Flower
48 Indonesians
of Mindanao

28 Anatomical

~

Mslstant

,."

State"
48 Bela ian river
50 Paciric
turmeric

I' I'"

1. .

12:00 News
12:15 Trinity Hour
12:45 catbolk Jntormatlon
1:00 Church ol God
1:30 Goopel Clll
Z:OO SUnday Dr!"' Time
5:00News~

WJEH-FM . LOG
(Dally except where indicated)
6:00 Sign on am Early Blr(
Show (except Sundays)
B:OONews~

8:05 Muste Unllmi!Bd
10:30 Chatterbox (except saturday .... Sunday)
11:00 Music Unlimited
11:45 All the News (except Sun.)
12:00 News (Sunday only)
12:15 Music Unlimited
5:00 News
5:15 Dinner Serenade

7:00 E,.nlng Sere9:45 Armed· Forees ShOWs ·
10:00 First National Ftnal
10:15 Muslo Until SIJil Off

(Note: Live Sports Broadcasts will s~rcede regu-lar progruns when scbeduled.)

FwS.Ie
II ~ 15 BEIGE acrllon (WIIlda
Wove) carpel fill, 11" 1Anltb
'IV f?l, .._,. nclt .. bobby honle, Db new e&amp;, movie
......,. 40 • 40 $'1.110, wabllll
otereo cabinet for WilljiGbents $15. Ph. ftl.4ftl. 2'H4
CAUFORNrA car, 11111'1 O!nrolet eouvertlble, Hunt S ~peed
2113, ..... off« .....
• . Pit IIS-II'II.
1'11-J

USED
FURNITURE
ond

PROFESSIONAL
SERVICE

~UCTION

c

1JY OINM -

5

,,

1ft

....

I b tlriiB

..

bome ...,., d\J wator.
po, lUll I
• Plall
M Dlt. . . . I'll 1• I I

41

..

I"

I"
I"

n

87 Olive StiNt

To Remember Shut-ins
POMI.::HO\' - Shut-ins of the
,\sbury Fnitcd Methodi s t Chunl1
of Syracuse "'ill begivcnremcmbranccs during the holida) season, it was. dccidt'ddurin~o:Thurs­
da) night's mcctin~ of the Eagles
C'lass held at lhe churrh.
Bill Winebrenner, president,

c:orductcd the mt.'Cting. The annual ('h.-istmasdinncrwas set for
Dec. Jfl at the dmrdt.
Pra)er bJ lhc Hev. Wendellli .
Stuller opent.'&lt;l the mt."C{illJ:.
Tha nksgiving selections including "Count Your lllessi~s" and

""ll1erc Shall Be Showers of
BJeBsings" were sung. M i s s
~Ieanor llobson gave dcvolions_
She read from Psalm 1115andlll,
gave a reading on Than ksg iving,

and

presented

scriptures on

thankfulness.
Mrs.

CarroU Norris, Miss

Marcia Karr and Mrs. Bill Winewere hostesses. The

brenner
SLINlJA \'
SUBDISfRICT MYF meeting,
2 p.m. Sunday, lfealh Methodist
Church, Middleport; all young
people Invited.
XI GAMMA Mll Chapter, Beta
Phi Sorority, tea, 6:30p.m. SJ.an day at home of Yvonne Scally,
Middleport.
DEOICATlON OF addition to
Carlt.'ton Church, 2 p.m. Surdll)'
with Hev. Clyde ilinlon, former
pastor, speaking. Publid weicome.
MONDAy
SOUTHERN ATIII.ETIC Boosters, Monday 7:30 p.m . at high
school, Racine; final plans for
football banquet; Elson Spencer,
president, urges all interested
to be pre sent.

ff'' ' ' '=;;:=·;:;::'' ' ' ii

Lay of the Land

Thanksgiving theme was carried
out with turkey replicas and taP-

ers. A salad course was served.
AtteOOing were the He,.·. Mr. Stut.
ler, Mrs. Paul Kloes; Mrs. Karl
Kloes, Miss Robson, Mr. and
Mrs. Carroll Norris, 1&lt;.1rs, Estil
Moore, Mrs. Herbert Parker,

Mrs. Virgi l Teaford, Miss Karr,
Charles Hoback, and Mr. a n d
Mrs. Winebrenner.

A thought for the day:
Seottish poet Robert GilfiUan
said, "There's hope for every
woo, and balm for every pain,
but the first joys of our heart,
come never back again.''

Important First
In Mason County
By JOliN COOP£H
Soil Conservation Service
Mason County
PT. PLEASANT - We will
devote most of our t·olumn this
week to some sidelighls which
we observed t.•oncerning our recent celebration. The c.:elebralion of whiclt we speak was to
dedicate tl1e first one million
feet of tile to be installed in Mason County. Mason County landowners can be justl)· proud of
this accomplisl1ment, sin(·e Mason is the first (.'Ounty in the
state to achieve this milestone
and at the present rate of tile installation, no other county in
West Virginia can reacl1 thi s
amount for another I 0 to 15 years.
We would like to point out that
a million feet of tile laid end to
end would reach from Pt. Pleasam to ClevelarKi, or to ML Airy,
North carolina, w Charlotte sville, Virginia, or to New castle,
Indiana
It is noteworthy that man_ypeo-plc travelled a long way to be

with us at our dilmer and take
part in the ceremonies. Ken
Kountz of Gar Wood Irxlustries
came rrom Findlay, Ohio; Frank
Milliken aOO "Rip" Talkington
came from Bowerston, Ohio;
Hobert Oberholzer came from
Junction City, Ohio; Robert Quilliam, State Conser\'atlonist, Soil
Conser\'ation Service, came from
Morgantown. W. Va., J-1oyd Roth·
lisberger, rormer work unit con-servationist in Mason County,
came from Beckley and three or
four people came from Charleston.

It is estimated that these folks
mentioned abo.,.·e would have travelled a total mileageofmorethan
2,00U miles to get to our meeting
and bad !lome, and Ihey came for
the express purpose of laking
part in the meeting.
We would like to point out that
one speaker did some quick arithmetic and ended up with an incorrect statement. The mrreeted
statement would ~a.v that the total
cost of in!.lallation oflhe ooc mil·

::!

on Page 32

;~

·-:~:-::::::q.;:;:;:;:;:-:-:-:-x-:o~~w&amp;«»."~::

lion feet o f tile at today's prices
would be about$220,000. We make
this correction because we know
that the speaker would want it lo
be made.
This value of Ule installation
combined with the increased
value of crops as a result of
the tile, which we mentioned to
be $120,000, would mean that
perhaps ever}' two years the cost
of installation would pay for H~
self. We brought out also l.hatthe
$120,000 increase was new money
that would flow into the economy
of Mason County.
In spite of un'-'OOperative rains
we were able to eomplete 1 h e
ccrcmorzy on the Old Town Farm s
of C. C. Lewis and family .
West Virginia Commissioner
of Agricul ture, (;us II_ Douglass,
wa.s the one designate&lt;~ to Ia) the
l,OUO,OOOI!t fool lle \'ery e1qlertl~ did so as well a .'&gt; to la} the 20
feet which we der:lared had lO tw
which we declared l1ad to be laid
laid before the l,OfiO,OOOtll could
be put down. We feel Mr. Douglass probably bet"amc such an expert by having ins1alled !.c~·cral
thousand feet of tile on ltis own
farm at Crimm s Landing.
In order to remembl'!" the
event, we ~=:a\' C !.CH~ral ~cople a

Film, Mechanized Death, Shown Racine PTA
HACINE - A rum, "Meehani:led J.Jeath" shown by the Slate
Patrol, featurcdlheRacineGrade
School P'f .A. meeting Monday,
Nov. 18 at the school. Mrs. John
Fisher, president, presided . Two
songs, "America, .. and "Ameri ca the Aeautiful,., were SWlg_
The secretary report was read
by Mrs. Brady Uuffman, the

16 at the Junior High. The school
children willprcsentaChristmas
program.
A jitney supper is to be held
at a date to be announced. There
were 44 persons present. The

gift awardL'&lt;Ito Mrs . Edna Price•a
room.
The f i I m on "Mechanized
Death'• was shown by Ohio~
Patrolman James 52leets. A(JlElation and answer period rollowed.

;.::oo:::m;:""':::n:;,&lt;.;w;;•:;•:.,lal&lt;::::;•:;:n;_:;w,::il~h.;l:hc~~H~e~fr~c;sh~m~e~n·ts~w;er~e~se~rv~edj.~,

HOOD
YOUTH
OXFORD.

treasurer's report by Mrs. David 11111 . Plans were made to
hold the next PTA meeting Dec.
piece of four-inch tile on wl1ich
we had written about the occasion. Woodrow Brown, member of
the ,\gricultural StabilitationaOO
Conservation Committee, who
has also installed several thousand feet on hi s own rann, said,
"I am as proud of this piece of
tile as. if you had given me a
million dollars."

Colds are the most common
form of illness in the United
Stales according to the Encyclopaedia Britannica .

Black

C-0-E Width

IHESHOE BOX
Where Shou Are !Ntnsibly Price-d

0.

MEIGS BAND Boosters, 8 p.
m, Morklay at Meigs High School
cafeteria, Middleport.
BETHEL 62, International Order of Job's Daughters, 7:30 p.
m. Monru.y at the Temple.
AMERICAN LEGION Post 602,
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at Legion
Hall.

'

'

II

TUESDAY
LADIES AUXILIARY 1 Drew
Webster Post 39, American Legion, Tuesday at post home be.
ginning with a potluck dinner at

6:30p.m.

DREW WEBSTER Post 39 Junior Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m. TUesday. Take old Christmas cards
ror veter.ana:hoiPitat"J)alft.y strap..
book.
CIVll, DEFENSE program 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at American Le.
gion Hall, Racine.
LADIES AUXU..IARY, Feeney.
Bemett Post 128, American Legion, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
Middleport hall. Junior auxiliary

ifted with Glamour and Com

DUTTONS

•••
•.•.• ,

members will meet at 7 p.m.
MEIGS COUNTY Riding Club,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the home
of E. J. lUll, Flatwooda Road.
Plana will be made for the annual banquet ln January.

~

f'

WEDNESDAY
WilDWOOD Garden Club, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the home
of Mrs. Vernon Nease; Mrs. Da.
vld Flag co--hostess.
THANKSGlVING DINNER tor
Racine Grange members and
friends, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.
Gifts for state hospital, pig in
poke sale.

deya111
("(lf/I}JQd:-;

eve candlelight vesper service

74 7 Fl•l ·O-Lounaer. Contemporary
,ec: loner m ,.,gui;H, 1811. "nd e~l•a

IIUIII'i(JU.'l

at 8 p.m. Wednesday at St. Paul

}JUckelles

Lutheran Church. ~ecial music.
Message by the Rev. Brian Engle.

t" ll !&gt;&lt;1es

MIDDLEPORT Literary Club,
Wednesday, at home or Mrs.
Nan Moore. Rev. Everett Hayes
wlll report on letters or Ambrose
Bierce.

THURSDAY
I'(YfLUCK FELLOWSHlP dinner, 6 p.m. Thursday, at Morn-

PUBLIC SAU
THURS., DEC. 5th
~T

I P.M.

S.lll "II the lun&gt;ltur• ~;~nd
houtehold effeo;ll of Fronc••
Go~- Sal• wilt be eoncl"ctw
ad at
Kl"ollt Com ...vnlly
Auc:tlon Bcun.Cor. ThlrdAue.

ond Oliv• St.

CARnR AND EVANS, INC.

I"

..

..... 11:.

l~fli~

COMMUNITY THANKSGIVING

114

I•

~

......... "'

trballt'IP-·
Be 'r

1\

~2121

:*
"

47 "-Star

"

..

i'

9:30 Aunt Bertha
9:45 Olildren's 018pel
10:00 Music lor Sunda)'
10:30 First Blj&gt;tl1t Chureb
11:30 Gospel ol Chrl.ol

10

""

45 Avidly
48 Recumbent
51 Hawaiilln
blrdJ
52 Comfort. ·
53 Ardor
54 Individual
55 ColorlnJ
substances

Preacher

8:15 New~~o
8:30 Herold ol Truth
9:00 Protestant Hoor

boiDe
Ill 111et .....llloil. ,.. 1•t1 d,
,., Dice kllela, 4' ....,
fllld eolllr. illdl 3 I nD
ballell .... -.
prl I I, r-an lnel«, Glb-

"

42 Sprln&amp;
month

(SUNDAYS)
8:00 SI&amp;O On and the Slng!QI

" A. a.BAH..... _

tissue
29 Greek war
IOStead
20 Follow after II Rippt'd
Jod
21 Auricle
17 Naval depot 31 German state
22 Oversee
33 Sifter
ship
25 Au•tralian
38 Standards
19 Detester
pompano
of perfection
23 Mistake
28 p.,teboarrd
27 Depot (ab.)
30 Make
I'
endurinl
I"
32 Pl.uaer
34 Enallsh
I"
nonlisl
35 Sonlbird
36 Pronoun
1.'
37 Fur filament
39 Epochs
40 Gold district
of the
Transvaal
u Hell!

"

Slil&gt;OIIl

:!.J,

::!\li::\-=~~SSSSSS:M::!t~:tli:S:\l::\~K:t~Mt:!tl::tll::a'S:Qt:t'l::t"l::tl:SO:i'S:SSSSO::-=:\l:S:'!\l::'liKS::WS:t-.:'11KS

12:35 Teen-Time '68
4:00 lnterchange
5:00 News, Weather, ~
5:30 Sunset Serenade (Until

~m'l'lllbt..•r

1968 Christmas Season Shoppers' Guide

12:30 1be "In" Soun:l

For We

OMo.....,

~

l'inlCti - Sl.mliul'l, Snuda.l,

(SATURDAYS)
11:55 Washlnstoo Report.
12:00 News Roondlt&gt;
12:15 Bolletln Board

,.,...........

......

Wed., Thuro.)
Go Round

~y

Sunda~

'-ll::t~:\~l::!\li::'!\'V~~SSSSSS;;cli:SSS~:\~:\~:V.:!t~:\lt:!lli:SSS~l:SM:~'V:\li:S~~

MONDAYS THRU FRIDAYS:

Need? Want?

NNED - a 3 DR borne?
WANT - A ranch style hom•
7 RM. home, bath, basement,
wltb an all built In kitcben.
Off. 446-3643
30 x iO barn. \0 A. Tob. B. on
large
earpeted LR, spaclouo
he. 446-3796
446-4500
hard road, Springfield Twp.
rec ,.,.m wltb Ore place, attached garage. patio. can Gl
ONEOR25
2 BEDROOM borne In city. 1':1.
Brand
New
Nice-Close
To
100
per cent financing.
ACRES joining city limits, city
44i-0571.
2'1"-'
Move Before Winter
Town-$8,400
ochools, gaa &amp; water, 6 rms. UKE- A water front' A beauMOY&amp; 'fOMOU;OW INTO ftll5
If' YOU NUD A I BBDKOOII
tiful two story borne with a
&amp; bath, basement, 2 car 1•
; ROOM house and bath at
NSW S nDilOOV HOD WHICH ROllE. HDE'S Till: O!Q ~
111
CAIIPITSD TmtOUOHOUT YOU. RAt!l A LAIUJE LOT TO'II
picturesque view of tbe Obio
rage.
New
Jisting.
Hurry.
Cheshire, 0 . on Rt. 7. Call
AHD 18 tmAft'D nacnucAL- OAIIDI:N UD Oft
'I'II:AR.'I1l
River,
large LR with firealter 3 p.m. for appoint&gt;- 'I
LY. BEAtl'tiFUL LA.ROII: lOT· !Jl' A.CC, BRA'DY ntONT POftCII.
100ACRE5
CR1:N wrrH &amp;A.NCII:. OVEN AND RATR AND nTRNAC&amp;. OO!'f'T
place,
formal
DR. 3 BR, 114.
36'1-717'7.
27H
VACANT Land, Ill. miles out.
lttniiODA.TOW..
IMr
ftLED WArT, t..O&lt;* TOOAY.
BA'IftS, I CAR OA.aAO&amp; A!'nl
hatfl.
lUll
hutment.
! car ga1.1 Acre Tob. B.. 4 tier fob.
u.ao1: UO' .. _ . LOT. LOOK
Make Offer
rage,
deep
well,
shrubbed
Ill'
HOUSE, 4 rooms and bath, lull
TODAY, YO\M.L UD rr.
bam, large barn, pond. New
This
Bargain
On
•
4011'
lot.
basement. gu furnace, newly
listing.
Spring V•llev ht•tes l'IOMI: L1JatY FAliiLT 18 00·
DESIRE - A large 4 BR? Cam.
decorated, can be seen any.
IHO TO Oft A. 11&amp;\L .A.IIOA.IN
VD.Y NK2 I BlmiiOOII ROllE
105
ACRE!:
WITH
COliPLEft
kttcRI!N
KPI:'£.
Oft
YOUil
WTD
OPEN
lortable LR wllb flreplace. 3
time. Ph. t4&amp;-2709.
2'14-1
rftA!INJI!:, Ov.N. DLifiWAtmD..
.\NO SD TIDI. 1'1"8 A. KIODo1N
ST.
Rt.
lat.
6-lotlls
mile
baths, elegant kltcben with 2
ETC.) I IIATRS, CAilPrr'a) ICN·
P.ItN :1 BBDROOTtl WJTR VEKY
Nl("'l LARCI: Rtm.T IN ~­
lronlal!e. all clear land. Good
'T1t 'NCI AND LIV1 'f'1 NOO"ovens,
over size ref., dlspo~­
LA.ROI: DINING AaEA Oil T .V.
f:N
(IIANOZ.
OVDO. FULL
For Sale
3 BR home. large ham. bid••·
ROOM PLUB Pt.AV ltOOM J"O't
RASIIb'NT
AND
C.\IIPOR'I'.
al, DW and many extraa. banCHJLDaEN, I CAB
OA.A.OE
OWNER RA.t!l WOVED OUT or
milk bouse, •Ito. 3 DOnds. Can
NEW GMC 11UCK
quet size eating a"''· lull
AND OOV&amp;IlKD PATIO.
AII'IA AND WilL O!V&amp; JIDRD.
be boul!lrt 3 wa}'!l. I! ~ .. Ill A..
IAT! POSS!ai10N. RONJIIT hasomenl wllb oaneled rec
HEADQUAR1EIS
YOU WIU. IJII: HAPPY YOU
Brick On U.S. 35
or an 1115 acres.
room
&amp; WB n,..place. dnuble
IIAM: TRlJ: DTOil'l'.
111'1 I T. GliK:
Less1han
$20,~.
6ACRES
~!~rap,
this 111 a brick &amp;
For Rent
1111'1 I T. a...
YOU'LL Oft' JJIIRDTAT8 POfiOR
MORE
acres.
If
vou
oreter.
frame
home
42' x 95' on a
S!S8toN OP TRJS LAIIO&amp; :1
1• ~ T. a... Pkbp
Unfumlshed
tll!:llROOII MtiCK. YOU'LL KN ·
,.,...
lot,
In
the
city and vaNEW 30 • 111 'brick rancf&gt;
1111 Ito T. GMC Plobp
JOY THE LARO!
CAR~
trimmed In Redwoocl. Best
eant.
UVINO AND DJNINQ &amp;OOMS,
1t11 l!o T. GIIC Plcbp
NICE I BmllOOif. ct.OD TO
t\4! llA.TR8 AND BUILT lN Kft' .
construction
&amp;
materials
by
EVDYTlllNO.
1'1"'1
'HWAI!t
HWW
Pri&lt;e Reduced
111'1 Ito T. GIIC Plobp
CHEN. 1T'8 Qll'lln' IN A COUNAND · KJTCHIN Ill PARTLY PUW.TRY
A.TMOfiPHDE AND IN
Kentuckv builder. Price un- 1 BR and bath, eallM!ted LR,
1111 GIIC Solllal'N'JIRSD.
tTII.GO
JIO.
nf'Mil)fAft
CITY 8CROOL Drrnt.ICT. DON"T
P&lt;MSEMION.
cf&gt;an•ed despite cost of lumBUY TD..L YOU SD THDI.
beautiful kitchen wltfl an tile
11111 I T Sludo.....
ber lncrea.. Ibis montb. Rl.
bullt Ins, large laiDidry room,
NowSTJIWmW..141. 411. miles out.
Real
part baaement with now HW
FIIREKA
tank &amp; fumace. Iarg• porch.
Ita 21!. T. ClleY.
l!l$1 CHEV'RO!ZI' Plclrup, good
I,
ACRE.
4
111111.
&amp;
bath,
panVacant
11M s T. Ialllnllllollal
oondlUon. 379-21103.
275-S
eled. plenty lruK trees.
1. . Ito '- Dod&amp;e ......
54 Acres
IIIII 2 T. lnl Tnelltr
MAIL ORDERS filled lor Merle
IOTSOFLOTS
LOCATED on st. Rl. 160. land
I lllmltapolla lloiiDe Poww
Norman C&lt;lllllelics. Call Point
ONE ~CRE nr more lots Rt.
I• clean In grass, ~ per
NEW LOC&amp;'IION
tlllll
Ple888111 4'1S-304tl for your or141.
Beautiful
lobi
overlookvr.
oom leaae, plenty oot
TB111D a ITATB II1IBJ:l'l
!few
Ralor1 Cllttaw der.
riH
bulldlngl, a room home, bath,
in• the new Bv-Pass. Cltv lots,
NEWUmNGS
tiiUO. New IJI • •. II ply
coal furnace. deep wen, plen·K anaura. anv schoot dlstr1cl.
.,..,. llreo ... tile. ....... UII!:D TYPI:ImlTit:R IIALII:-4 WE HAVE A NlCE Z BR bunty WDter. aome machinery
anv price. From fiSII. with
tu.
GIIIJ. .... ...10 ..... ...... galow at 84 Garlleld A....., WDter. Hurry,
I{Oel farm. 'nils farm
hql I l l .
and "'....... $11.10. We llr' with a garage. Look It ovor
wm
qualify for a V.A. loan.
III,._I!L ft. I.
and give us an offer.
'floe ab llllbl. RIDIIIII. lim,., ... • ••• II"
Let the """' baae help pay
1.11
BEFORE YOU BUY a house
lor II.
I'll • Ollloe 1!qQip.
check this 4 BR borne allacbW.,., AIM'-rY, ttl •
15Acres
0001) CLEAN WMP and...._
ed garage, large ldtchen. Lc&gt;LOCATED on Blessing Rd . near
., t'OII. Carl WLil&amp;l, Rio REDIIONE Coon Round, good eated on a large lot at CenNEW BRICK l beclroom. l\0
Nortllup on Ra«oon Creek.
0r11111o. l'bolll! ~us. t-It
tenary.
bathtl. «arM'e. fu11 b11sement .
lnmter. Ph. - ·
271-l
S
room home. baaemenl. cool
WE HAVE CU!m.JMERS we
large lot with trees. 1\0 miles
lumaee.
2 bam•. toba&lt;CO
can1 oatisfy with our presIF YOU In! """""C I YOUNG freezer beef m foot or
from new bosoKal site on 160.
baae,
17
good
building lots on
ent Ustlngs. II you have prohome or I'IIIICidellng, • •·
droued. Ml'll . .1o1m Rob, i'll.
111,9110.
Ph.
446-1443
or
446Raccoon Creek.
... .... ballclen. Dloblbalor
perly you want aold call us.
1141 . ..
1'11-J
37lll3.
Z'lf.tf
lor Jlolpoinl AppllaDeeo, AJII.
We buy, sell and trade.
Kanaug•
1t111 Eleelrle.
Ill II APPLIII - Red ..a Yelllw
om.. ... 1•1 I
4 ROOM horne. natural g:".
deep well, garage. otorage
1eo II. Neal MI-JIII
Dellcloul, Grimel, ~
BAIRD REALTY CO.
LOW, LOW, PRICBI 4111 Jld.
building. 'nils Is a neat small
A. A. Bert Ill 11'11
fiiiYmU, Sweet elder. ......
OICir Belrd, Re•ltor
home with a price you'll llke.
bt
bourl:
op111
I
to
I
IIGD--~ . . . . . ~ Jh
- - Rice IIIII Olrllla J.l'ar.
· lOWDown
111,5011.
clay tlml i'rldiJ, I Ill I S.
...,.,., tt to s ......,_ Weill
10 A., .:as ""'· bole, .... 111\rJ
List Now!
For Sale
ALL 11J101 rA balldlatl ......,. On:ban!a, R1. IJI, I mile
, _ bome, balll, .... wall,
NATUR'ALLY you want to Usl
located "" State Rt. liD. 1IBI
1111, b1o&lt;t, brick, pipe,
yonr property with a nrrn
Soulb "' Wllblollle, 0.
BLACK and Decker valve rewbrdowa, IIDteiJ, ele, allldl
lrllde
f..lrlllor
...
....
that wm mnvert your home
faeer and valve reseater. See
Wlllten, Rio Onndt, 0. CB
Into
caall, oo call the DILLON
Bud Mille&lt;, Eureka.
2'16-1 yoa. Owuar will " UID after I.
• II Nft IIOII8B IL\OOLES, ....;
AGENCY now. Rememl&gt;er
·~A.
Ren'a , _ obllacolll • • that SOLD SIGN 111 ""at
IIIW ponJ 1addl11, •·•· NlD
PERHANEN'I' sPECLWI
Qooell Saddle ..... 114111411 ADDING MACIIIN1I8 fnlm -~ .... II!. llor7 , _ boale, 1lll1l oounll.
$10.SO Permanent $8.50, $12.50
10 IIIII ese.10 up, hllld or elec- hill, hal oil fllit I , plelltJ
ROBARTDILLON,Roaltor
Permanent $10.110, $15.00 Perlric. Slm- I'll· • otrl&lt;e good bldp., ..............
Equip,
1'/H
manent $12.50 for Tuesday &amp; 'PUBLIC Sl!lATDIG - d181n,
LadUe or -~
Reward Bruon
)llenl1 caltiMII. l«&lt;ted Wednesday, Nov. Z6, 27, also
folding lllblel, ab ldDdl.
Rio Grande. Tmrmf• . - .
Evea!DpMI-1211
TRY BJ!II'ORE YOU BUY
Dec. 2 and 3nl. Bee-Lov-Lee.
lebooJI, ehwd&amp;, '*1'"1'1:WE
WILL bring IIIII 1918 moot lllllL
Phone «6-3111J.
IllS
UID. !!hn!noml I'll· • Ollke
el llg 188 aawtn, macblne Ill
l!'qllp,
rltll
II!. 11or7 D. H. WOOD, ...hor
"""' bome .. you may .....
altlllllme tddiiC.
Phone446-1066
on ll. II yoa ID&lt;e II buy II fGr
DAILY
CII]J .,_ eaoll or $5.10 per bath, eablnell Ill ltlltlwl. lo' AU ELJCCnUC bome I adlll
13. Old44. V~ed
ACII088
month. Clll ~- :m« ealed Ill Galllpolll. lklllle fltnll. hD CrawD CIIJ, IIDIII Ill
Umr
l. Where
1m\ IIIIo .....
- · ....... dllpolal, ....
exclaDOWN
Plnar del
we
""'
aboal
aold
lJlll
..a
..
bar, llrp IIYIDI - . pd
mation
IWILY
AMIIIUCAH
rrt!RIIX)
1.
An
old
Rio is
18. Home
man.
low,
low
oa
IAOJMU•
10
..U.
water
IIIJIIIb', well IMtdaW,
5. Tspa.des
111118 CONSOLE with AM &amp; FM
for
whimsically
9. Termite.
Lei
lll
belp
JOG
..u
JOliN,
Atl1
_,
like
bome.
radio, automatic llootlfl8 turn
thr
!lpe&amp;klng
tor one
localloa.
Cllll
•ARK
YOUR
RBNT i«eeptt
table. Take over paJIIIOIIII of
2. Exhort
10. Hawaii"~&gt;
19.
Some·
3.
Honey
,
.
_
Ill
Ill
II
llrL
lllGwlnCf
Be
• laadlorll IIIII
Mr. Fong
e&amp; per month or pay balanee
th.ill&amp;'
maker.~
Bo
I
J
•
IIIII
I
bedroom
boale,
12. Move
due, • .II; this HI aokl
• . 100 sq.
cautiously

Appomattox

EXCEPTIONAL
OPPOR'nJNITY
~ANAGEMENT trainee In this
orea. age 25 to 60, married,
full or part time. No nperi...,. required. Income unUmlied. Write Box 'II c-o Tribune.
2'1U

THE WISEMAN
AGENCY

r'URN. 2 rooma and bath, Ideal
for worklnt! girl or wwtiDI
couple. Ph. 4411 19",
27441

apartment and
weekly rates on rooms. Pb.
446-2206. Gallia Hotel. 276-26

DRIVERS NEEDED

rh1.•

Etlele

For Rent

~'\IR~ISHED

HelaW•m.d

17 -

Galllpoh, Ohio

Excnating and Buiding Conluacttn
BACKHOE, IULLDOZER, CIANI,
GRADER AND DRAGLINE SEIVICI
Basements-Footers-Leech BedsFarm Ponds-Septic Tanks-YardsOriveways;-Land Clearing-Fill Dirt
Top Soil-Ponds Cleaned-Parking loti

•1F IT'S .DIIH, WE'i.l MOVE IT I"

ing 9ar United Method.JstChurch.
Program will rollow.
ANNUAL Thanksgiving dance
Thursday, 8 to 11 p.m. at Meigs
Hlglo School. Sponaored by Meigs
Athletic Assn. Open to public,
Ja,ys emceeing.

TRAINS COLLIDE
AKASIII,
Japan

(UPI}- A
packed with commuters
rlmmed the rear of another
train
at
Nakayagt
station
Friday night, kliJing a motorman and injuring at least 55
passengers, poUee said Saturd.,y.
The rirst train had
overshot the station and was
baeldna: up when hit, authorities

train

reported.

.· '

TORNADO EMERGENCY
BRISBANE (UPO- A tornado
ctemollllhed the township of
Jiltlarney Friday nlglot and

708 Flel·O.Loun•••· Mode rn c:tlannel baek h i lh la1 rechn,na ch•ir .

Saturda.Y. .. the,y
a state ol emergen·

o1 the towns 300 homes
were ciamBged or destroyed.
F'OG DELAYS PLANES
t LONDON

(UPI}- Fog

blank;ted 1...- aiJ'IIOrt early
S41!U'daJI and forced lending
clite,yo am flight dlvorsloos to
other British llelds.

IUAIAIIIII
ttflll.l
COMITIUCTIONI

CHOOSE FLEXSnEL
\~

'V1AX FACTOR

tpJured several residents, pollee
ed

95:1 FI••-0-Louncer. So lid maple
tnmmed. Darrel baclo Earl)' .t.maric•n reclln•nll chair

DUTTONS
PRESCRIPTIONS ARE OUR MAIN BUSINESS

MIDDLEPORT, _OHIO

STORE HOURS

9 AM·lO PM DAILY
4:30 PM to 9 PM
SUNDAYS

Whatever your -taste In furniture,
you can cbooae with confidence
from ~exsteel. Whether you select contemporary, traditional, lnodern or colonial, you will find an
impeccable elegance in every piece
that will be a proud additiOn to
your home. This dlstinctloe Fle•sleel styling is available In aolu,
sectionaiJ, suiles, chalra, and 1
unique lOla-sleeper. Hundreds and
bu&amp;dreds of fabrics, all decorolorselecled for beauWul correctness,
&amp;IV« you a eholee of 1101ida In a ••·
riel)' of rlcb weaves, prlnta, quilted
fabrics, matelasses, brocades, a&amp;d
other fulllonable fabrics.

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0,

•,

�u

19 -

_ Thl! SundaJ Times - Sentinel, Sunda.Y, November 24, 196H

Tom my Lyons is Wed in Michigan

Community
By Charlene
Corner••• Hoellieh · ,

!

I

MIDDLEPORT - Before an
improvtaed altar decorated with
a basket al. mums and pbti car~
natlona, Miss Esther Marie Sangle of Puotlac, Mich., becr.me lhe
bride of Toi!UIIY L,yn Lyons, also
of Pontiac.
The bride Is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Carleton Scherlltz
of Marion, Mlch. The bridegroom
ia the son rA Mr. an,. Mrs . John
E. Lyons, Mlddk..,on. The wedding was an event or 5 p.m. oa

This past week brought recollections of the tragedies or the
Kennedy family to many Americans. Certainly so for Mrs. Esther
Kissell of Middleport, an acquaintance of the KerUledys.
Wednesday, Mrs. Kissell received rrom t:thel Keru1edy a personal acknowledgement of her eondolences at the lime of the death
of Sen. Robert Kennedy . The black-edged letter had been mailed on
tile e\'e of his birthday anniversary .
A World War U officer in the WAVES, Mrs. Kissell, the former
Esther Bowen, wu married to the prominent Columbus newspaperman, Bud Kissell. He died about four years ago, and about a year
ago Mrs. Kissell moved to MiddlepurL
MR. AND MRS.. JA~lES SOUDERS have received word that their
former neighbor, Mrs. H. C. Mcllrlde, now H7, fractured her hip in a
fall at ller Belpre home, Mrs, McBride is confined to the Camden
Cl&amp;rk Hospital in Parkersburg. Her daughter, Mrs. Quin Uayes (Margaret) has urived from Calltornia to be with her motber.

MAJOR RRUCE BRADFORD IS BACK Crom Vietnam and next
week will be moving to Columbus. Uruce, son of Mr. aOO. Mrs. Wallace Bradford, has been assignod to Ohio State University where he
will begin work on his master 's degree. He expects lobe there
for two years.
Bruce came from ManlaOO last week for s brief visit wilh hh
parents and to locale living quarters. The family will be residing in
Grove City. Their furnitw·c will be moved Tuesday and tfley· will be
drh1ng through a few days later. Both of the children, Dana and
Leslie, are in school.
A 1961 graduate of West Point, .Bruce had a year at the career
school in Baltimore just before going to Vietnam.
Needless to say, !he Wallace Bradfords are pleased to have
their son and famil:y within weekend "VisHing distance.
BARBARA JONES F1NEGOLD is delighted with her new job, She

is a research assi s tant to Dr. Robert Heckel, director of the lnsUtute tor Research on Underprivileged at the University of South car~
lira st Colwnbia. Prior to goi11g to South Carolina, Barbara worked
with the Ohio State Department of Peronnel. Her husband, Larry,
is a graduate student at the university.

Holiday Projects Planned
MIDDLEPORT - Holiday projects and plans were made durIng a meeting of the Busy Bee
Class of the Middleport First
Baptist Church Thursday night at
the church.
The group will provide three
poinsettias for the holiday church
services. The plants are to be
taken to shut-ina following the
services. Mrs. Lettie Roosh is
cllairman ror the class.
The holiday dinner was set
for Dec. 13 at the Middleport
Church or Christ. Mrs. Isabelle
Wlnebrermer and Mrs. Elizabeth
Slavin were appointed to decorate
the tables. Following the dfmer
the group will return to the Bap tist Church for the party .
Members were reminded or
the church - wide d.inner to be
held at the church on Dec. 8 to
honor new members . Mrs. James
Souders, Mrs. Pearl Hoffman,
and Mrs. Charles Bennett were
named to a nominating committee which will report at tlle December meeting.
Mrs. Slavin presided at the
meeting which opened with prayer bY Mrs . h'a 'Turner . T h c
group sang the class song, and
Mrs. Fielding Hawkins gave devotions. She read several scriptures on praise and thanksgiv Ing, and concluded with a poem
entitled "The First Thanksgtv.
ing." Each member gave something for which they were thank-

BACKACHE&amp;
SECONDARY TO

TENSION KIDNEY IRRITATION

Cummon K 1dnt'}" tor Hlnthlt'r l rrlta
t!uns m a ke ma11y mt'll and &gt;&lt;"nmt' ll
f«l tensl' o.nd nl'rWJllS from f rl'lJUl'lll .
burning or Hchln~~,; url 11atlon nl ~o; ht

and. d. a~· Sf-condarll y. you may Joaoe
IIHp and. have Headad1e . Back ac he
and let-1 o ld E"r. Ur&lt;"d. depress l"d In

Juch o · a !W ~ ('YST ""'" ( usually b r l n ~ ~
r .. l axlnlj: l·Om l ort I&gt;J •· urh l ng lr rl ! a!
ln~t l{f'rms l n ad d llri!M' a nd q u ic kl y
eu! nt: pal n Gt'! r'Y STF:X a ! dru;: ~o;!~! S

Charlene Alice Hysell
Miss Norma Nichols

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs, Charles M. Hysell, 1 Liberty
Ave,, Pomeroy, are announci['€ the engagement and approach-

nE.EDSVILLE -

Announcement is being made by Mr10..
Mary E. Nicllols, Reedsville, of the betrothal of her daugllter, Norma Sue, to WilHam W. Arbaugh, s~n of Mr. and Mrs.
John w. Arbaugh, Tlllpers Plains. The bnde-to-be, daughter
of the late Paul F. Nichols, is a graduate of Eastern Local
High School and of Columbus Business UniOJerslty. She is employed by Ohio University. ller fiance is also a graduate of
Eastern Local High School and has recently returned from
four years duty with tile Air Force.

M1ss Carol Floccari
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs. Mike Floccari, 63 Hutland SL, Middleport, are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Carol, to Mr. H01ner
Tate, son of Mr. aOO MrB. Charles Tate, Cheshire. Miss Floc~
cari is a graduate of Rutland High School and the Nationwide
Bcaut;y Academy. She is employed st lola's Beauty salon in
Pomeroy. Mr. Tate graduated from the Kyger Creek High
School and is employed at IOOustrial Nucleonics in Columbus.
The open church wedding will be an event or Dec. 28 at 2:30
p. m. at Lhe Old Kyger Baptist Church.

Demonstrations Given

ful.
Members answered roll call
with Bible verses. The program
presented by Mrs . Aaa Jordan
Included meditations, "For TW.s
One Hour" and "A Good Time."
Refreshments were e.erved by
Mrs. Hoffman, Mrs. Beulah White
and Mrs. Betty Darst. Tables
were arranged in a "T" formation with Thanksgiving centerpieces.
Attending besides those namOO
were Mrs. Charles Edwards,
Mrs. Golda Mourning, Mrs. Dana
flamm, Mrs. Mollie McGhee,
Mrs. Nora Hamilton, and Mrs.
Frances Bearhs.

The Almanac
By United Press Internatioral
Toda,y Js Sunday, Nov. 24, the
329th day of 1~68 with 37 to
follow.
The moon is between Its new
phase and first quarter.
The morning stars are Mars
and Jl.fliltlr.
The evening stars are Saturn
ard Venus.
On this day in history:
In 1869 women from 21 states
met in ClevelaOO to draw up
plans for the organization of the
American Women Suffrage Assotiation.
In 1944 super-fortresses ofthe
American Air Forc-e took off
from Saipan for the first raids
on Tokyo.
In 19fiJ the U.N. Security
Couneil gave Secretary General
t Thant permi~sion to use force
if necessary to setUe the Congo
crisis.
In 1963 Lee Harvey Oswald,
accused assassin of President
John Kennedy, was shot to
death by Jack Hub} in a Dallas
jail. The shooting !'las witnessed
b:y millions of people on
television.

POMEROY - A demonstration
on Christmas arrangements and
decorations by Mrs. Pearl Mora
of the Cllesler Garden Club highlighted a meeting of the Twilight
Garden ChiD held Thursday night
in the basement or the Pomeroy
First Baptist Church.
Mrs. Mora was presented a
gift by Mrs. T. A, Hermesy fol lowing her demonstration.
Members were reminded during the meeting to have their boliday therapy program girts for
the Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health Center at tile homei1Mn.
Mary Heines by Dec. 1. 'Miose
wishing to have their gifts pick ed up are asked to caJJ Mre. . El·
mer Wickham, president.
A report on the regional meet~
ing held at Eastern Hl.gh School
was gt"Jen during the meeting.
Participation in the armual Meigs
County Christmas nower show
to be staged next weekend at the
Pomeroy Elementary School was
discussed. The Twlllghl club will
exhibit 1n the class enUUed "Ice
Skating, •• arrangements showing
motion.
Read at the meeting was an inCALL ED TO LOUISVILLE
POMEROY - Mrs. Orna ruua
Prentice, forrneri.v or Pomeroy,
Is seriously ill at a hospital in
Louisville, Ky. Called there by
her illness were Mr. and Mrs.
Aaron ZahJ, Pomeroy.

vitation from the Middleport Amateur Gardeners to attend the
Betty Fast demonstration on JJec.
5 at the Middleport Elementary
School. New year books were
distributed by Mrs. Wickham.
Members responded to roll call
with a Thanksgi.etg thoug!Jl. Mrs.
Wickham presented devotims usIng "The Bread of Llfe" as ller
meditation.
Two mass arrangements of
deep purple mums were display.
ed by Mrs. Norma Parker. Refreshments .carrying I,)Ut the
'
ed .
Thank . . ...,_
llfPVlfll-metnewereRrv

·

OAPSE Unit Meets
AI Eastern High
REEDSVILLE - Ohio Assn.
of Public School Employes Chapter No. 448, Eastern Local School
District, met Monday at 7:30
p.m. at Eastern High School wllh
President Ross Cleland presiding and 18 members present.
Creston Newland reported on
the conOJention held in Ironton.
Refreghments were served by
the cooks at Eastern. The next
meeting will be Dec. 16, 6:30
p.m. at the home of Wanda Larkins. This will be a potluck dinner for members and their spouses, also there will be a 50 cent
gift exchange.

Donation Voted to Fund
POMEROY - Magnolia Temple 198, Pythian Sisters, voted
to contributetto the holiday entertaining fund for the Knights
of Pythias' horne at Springfield
during a meeting Thursday night
at the D. A. V. hall.
A. communication from Agnes
Woodard, grand chief, thanked
members for support of the re...t(
.
..,........ ~ .,... ln
.....:ce.,. on ,.. g&amp;.Yen ...- ...-..en..., ~·
ctB~arkl. She· 'also announced

that her project for the year
will be to purchase needed equ~
ment for the hospital at the Medina home.
It was voted during the meeting
to retain the same officers for
another year, Christmu cards
will be sent to shut-in members
and instead of the usual gift exchange, it was decided to contri-

trw

marriage of their daughter, Charlene Alice, to Terry 1
Lewis, son ol Mr. aOO Mrs. Earl L Lewis, Letart, W. Va.
The bride-elect is a graduate of Pomeroy High Scllool. Her fiance, a graduate of Watwna High School, is employed at Foote
Mineral Corp., Graham Station, W. Va. A November wedding
is planned.

Gifts Presented to Patients
POMEROY - Christmas gllto
Cor patlerts at the SOutheastern
Ohio Mental Health Center were
presented during the Thursday
night meeting of the Rock !tJrlngs
Grange.

New Fabrics are
Women's Club Topic
REEDSVILLE - The Reedsville-Long Bottom Homemakers
Club met at tile home of Mrs.
Dorald Myers for their November meeting with the program
topic being new fabrics and fin-ishes taught by Mrs. Walter

The grange also voted to make
a contribution to lhe 'Nierculosls and Health AssoclaUm. One
member waa reinstated and me
appeal Cor aid was anawered
during lhe meeting. .....,cted by
Fred Goeglein, master.
Reported Ill were Frank Grueser, Mrs.RobertLouka,andMrs.
Homer Radford. A report oo "Jfle
Ohio Slate Grange session was
given by Mr. and Mrs. aantord
Slx&gt;ckton, delegates.
Plans were made for a ChrlJt...
mas potluck at the Dec. 12 meeting, at 6:30 p.m. The horne eco~
nomics chairman will provide
the meat. Refreshments were
served following the meeting.

~u~~ t'LyL"~~~;x;; ,r;··'· ;e~n.b~~i~~;'~eeti~ c~nd~ct-

ported confined to Veterans Mem~
orial Hospital. Mrs. Thomas
Cook is ill at home. Membership
CUB SCOUTS TO MEET
was discussed and Mrs. Margaret
POMF. ROY ~ The regular Seidenabel and Mrs. Nettie Hayes
monthly meeting of Pack 24&amp;, were appointed to do contact
Cub Scouts and Wcbelos, "ill be work.
held Nov. 26, at Ulc D. A V. hall
The Thanksghing motiC w a s
on Butternut Ave. at 7 p. m. A carried out in the table decoraprogram will be presented on the tlons for a potluck dinner which
tbeme, "Showboat" Everyone is preceded the meeting. Members
urged to atteM.
were remiMed to take cookies to
the December meeting.

ed by the president. Mrs. Claremont lllrrris. Members voted to
secure a gift for David Sprague,
a patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. The next meeting will
be Dec. 19 at the home of Mrs.
Walter Brown
Retreshm.ente. were served by
the hostess to Mrs. Harris, Mrs.
Herman Grossnickle, Mra. Pickens, Mrs. Brown, Mrs, Ernest
Wllltehead aoo Mrs. Lyle Balderson.

You Can't Look At
FLOWERS Without
Fee ling " ,Thankful."
.That's Why They Make
Such Great
",Thanksgiving" Gifts.

DUDLEY'S FLORIST
MIDDLEPORT AND
GALUI'OUS, DHIO

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' "'•&lt;&gt;O E SMifH AUDI O-VI) UAL 5. INC •••·-'~
16 W. U nio n Sr
Ar'-ens , Qf,, , 45701
C o li (o llecl 593·7708

Wrl lram S. Di le1 , M9' ·
Hea •ing A iol Dep! .
I 1m rn!atttlltcl 1n lt..-ntnt Jbout ltnilh H~"'"l Aodl

MARRIAGE
POMEROY ward Skinner, 53,
Daisy Elizabeth
Pomeroy.

· J Plene ltleptloto1 "" iJI homt to ~Hinl' lor 1 ltern
ons1r111011

·

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ern - - - - - - - S i o \ 1 1 - - - I

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-- ~ ~ . ·~· ... · ~----------------"'
I

nations.

Georgia was named for King

George II

of England, being
founded during his reign.

For Boys and Girls

WE
GOT
A
TRUCK

12" to 26"

eral very enjoyable numbers.
or them were from '~he
Sound of Music" and the final
IUJ1ber wu "Let There " te

i'wo

LOAD I

See Us Before You
Buy! Come In Now!

OUR PRICE
IS RIGHT!!

A small down payme-nt will reserve yours in
our Lay-Away.

.Peace."

Now is the lime to join our Club, so you're sure to be a
happy Sonia next Christmas. Choose a plan to suit your
budget. Just a small amount saved weekly will add up
to a hearty check for you, for bill-free shopping in 1969.
lnjoy All the Convenience
of full-Service Banking to
Meet Ivery Requirement

IACINE HOME·
NATIONAL BANK
3RD. ST.

E. Williams, which coosisted or
poems, "Yoo Didn't ABk", by
Mrs. R. l
Larkins., and "M.y
Guide", by Mrs. Williams. This
was r~owed by sllem prayer.
Roll call was answered by mem~
hera glvi~ a Bible verse of
thanks.
Plans were made Cor the anrual.
Christmas party to be held Dec.
18 at 8 p.
at the home or Mrs.
Denver Weber wUfl Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead as co-hostess. Members &amp;re to bring a table arrarvement for use at the Athe111 State
Hospital dW'II1!the holidays. Also
a gilt exchangewlllbeheldamong
the members.
Thanksgiving faOJOU were sent
to the Elmwood Rest Herne. They
were made by Mrs. Webb m:l
Mrs. Donald Myers. Christmas
giftB were al80 sent to the Athens State Hospital.
The program topic w a s
"Thanksgiving for the Birds" by
Mrs. carl Buckley. Mrs. Buckley
abo demonstrated an easy dower
arrangement that could be sent to
the Athens state Hospital.
Mrs. John cme was welcomed
as a new member to the club. A
salad course was served during
the social hour. Mrs. Williams
recehed the door prize.

m.

Plan Open

Women's Class Plans Party
MIDDLEPORT - Christmas
pal'l1 plans were made "'ring
Thurllday night'• meeting of the
Loyal Women's Class of theMlddlepori Clllrch of Christ.
Committees appointed lor lhe
Dec. 13 dlmer party were Mrs.
Herman Lohse and Mrs. Frank
Beach, Utkets; Mrs. Bea&lt;:h and
Mn. E. L. Lallance, decoratIng; Mrs. Oscar Roush, general
chairman; Mra. Roush, Mrs. Lallance and Mrs. Leo Childs, gifts
for ahut-lnB. The dinner wiD be
served at 6 p.m. by the Homea
builders Class.
During lhe meeting oo!Wcled
by Mrs. William Reynolds, lhe
nominating conunlttee was named. They are Mrs. Beach, Mrs.
Audrey Sweat, and Mrs. Marie
Postlewait, ·who was welcomed
ai a new menDer.
Reported ill were Mrs. Blanclle
Gilkey, a patient at Holzer Hospital, and Mrs. WIUiam BradCord, at home. Mrs. Robert Reibel of Morristown, former teacher ol the clau, was a guest at
the meeting.

House

POMEROY - An open ltoose
in observance of the 25th: wedding amlversary of Mr. and Mrs.
J, M. Gaul, Chester, has been
planned for &amp;lnday, Dec. I.
Hosting the observance will
be the children or the couple,

The Thanksgiving theme was
carried out in the program presented by Mrs. Herman Lohse.
Mrs. Beach read scriptures [rom
the Psalms. Meditatlons by Mrs.
Lohse included "One Natlm Under God," "We Have a Lot to be
Thankful For," and ..Thankful
ror Our Blessings.'' She concluded with a Thanksgiving pra,yer.
Refreshments were ~erved by
Mrs. Lohse, Mrs. Lena Wolfe
and Mrs. Marilyn Bishop wilh
Mrs. Gilkey and Mrs. Horner
Jones as contributing bostesseB.

March has been set as membei-shlp month. Tbe third degree II
to be presentecllor the rltuilloUc
contest. The women's actlvltiaa
contest will be sugar cookies for
baking, and aprons, both tea and
work, for sewing.
Drawings were made Cor the
grange visitation. They are aa
follows: Hemlock "t o visltW.urel,
Harrisonville to Star, Raeine to
Columbia, Columbia to Hemlock,
Laurel to Rock Springs, Oleater
to Rarrisonville, Rock Springs to
Ohio Valley, Alfred to Chester,
Ohio Valley to Racine, alii Star
to Alfred.
stanford Stockton, delegate to
the state session, gave a short
report on the action taken at the
state convention. Aaron s.,re,
county prince, reported oo the
yooth activities and the pageant.
The grange rural urbanbarP
quet was announced ror Dec. 7
at Salisbury. The Rev. Robert
Wells, chaplain of lhe Ohio stale
Grange, will be the spelker.
Donuts alii coffee were served
during the concluding social hour.
a

Observance

Victor E. Gaul and Patricia Am
Gaul, Wayne. Mich., and Vicki
Lym Gaul, at home.
Relatives and friends of the
&lt;:ouple are Invited to call between
the hours of 2 and 4 p.m.

Only jewelry is the lasting, per·
sonal reminder of your love .. .

that's why people appreciate
gifts of jewelry on the most
sentimental holiday of all ...
Christmas. lsn 't there someone

you'd like to-gift-in o special way?

The First

Marty Evans and Beth Bastlanl.
The program was concluded by
the Motherflingers who sang BBV-

?
•

Garden Club

the placJie lor the gre81eot 1...
orease In membership and secretaries awarded certifh:ates Cor
ICCW'ICY alii punctuallty included Mrs. Grace Clark,. Alfred;
Mrs. CUlTon:! Morris ol Racine
for 12 years service; MrB. Mary
H\Dlter of Chester; Mrs. stanford
Stockton of Hemlock, 13 years
service; Mrs. Arthur Crabtree.
Columbia, 12 years, and M r s.
Fred Goeglein, Rock ~rings.
It was reported tllat all of the
grangers entering state baking
contests received ribbons and
girts (rom the Grange Insurance
Co. Partlcipatlng were Patty Dy·
er ol Star, the junior grange
cookie contestj Mrs. Nina McCumber, Star, Bubordinate cookie
winner; Mrs. Norma Lee, embroidered pillow case; Mrs. McCtunber, embroidered scarf;
Mrs . Sharon Jewell, crocheted
doily.
Outlined by Atkins at the meet,..
ing were state and national pr~
grams for the year. The theme
is "Grarge Is the key to anaburP
danl agriculture, creative cern-

munltr, and good government.'"

United Presbyterian Church held
Its amual Thankagiving dimer at
the church on Nov. 21. The dinner
waa served by the women rl. the

pr Elce&amp;IQT, Roberta Brintm,

what about Christmas '

Planned by

'The Alfred Grange received

By Presbyterians

presented by the Thespian Clw
of Gallla Academy High School.
The following girls look part In
the presentation which was UDder
the dlrecUm of Mrs. Ruth Gil·
!Ingham; Becky Glbsoo, P a m
Saunders, Martha Cornwell, Gin-

FOR CHRISTMAS

POMEROY - ProjectB or serv- continuation or grange vlsltllti.on.
It was also decided that P~
Ing the bloodmobUe canteen arxl
rw-al beautification were adopted mona Granp will continue to
for lhe year at lhe annual County sponsor 1M museum fund and its
Gra~ Conference held recently project. The Rareine and Racine
Junior Grange will e.erve the carP
11 tile Rock Si&gt;rlngs haiL
other hlg!illghts of the meeting teen at the December Red Cross
REEDSVILLE - Mrs. Clare- conducted by Virgil Atkins, state bl-.obUe. The Februory vlsll
moat Harris .00 Mrs. Herman deputy master, and attended by will be handled by tile Rock
Grossnickle were hostesses Cor 45 otftcers trom eight granges, Springs Grange, and Star will
tte Riverview Garden ClW ~ Included the awarding ~ plagues serve in April. The schedule for
cia¥ evening at the Harris home. and certltlcate11 and plaMirw: for the remainder ol the year will be
completed later.
Devotlona were given to Mrs. R.

. Annual Dinner Held

titled 4 "Don't Tell a Soul" was

LOOK

Projects Undertaken by Grange .Conference

Annual Party

Moore's in Pomeroy Is Your••••

The Thank Of!erlnl was - ·
cated at this Ume. This money
Is used throughout the world tor
educational comsellng service,
ecumenical yooth exchange, ministry to the aging, Christian medIcal lund, leadership developmeul
and scholarship &amp;fllistancetoNelfd, Spanish - American and Indiu - American youth. .seeking
equal edllcadm opportunity.
Allsr the dimer a playlet en-

LICENSE
Clarence EdColumbus. and
Skinner, 47,

JOIN NOW! CLUB OPENS DEC. 1st.

~ PIIHII mJil lull ckbi!s Jnd tr~ IJieiJ!Urt

For her weddingtbebrldewore
a floor len8th gown of AJlne
atyling. 11 was fashioned with an
empire waiat accented wlth blue
velvet rtbboli and long sleeves.
!ile carried a llou!Jiet of piDk
roses and wllite canattons.
N1ss Dlane Crabtree al. Pon~
tiae served as the maid ~ honor. Sle wore a noor length gown
In two shades of blue, the tOp
or wbicll was navy Yelvet. Her
Clowers were pink and white car-

church.

Complete Selection
All Models

l&lt;'"' &gt;t·l ' t•

Saturday, Nov. 16 at the horne
or the bride' a brother-tn.J.aw and
alster, Mr. and Mrs.. Charles
Keli,v, In Marloo.
Tbe toyer of the home featured a planter of pine wilh pink
satin balls. Organ music tor the
ceremony was presented by Mrs.
Arleen swtler. Performing the
double-ring ceremony was the
brotller-ln-law of the bride, the
Rev. Bryce SWiler.

Serving as best man Cor the
bridegroom was Bernard Lyons,
hie. brother.
For her dau&amp;hter's wedding,
Mn. Seherlltz wore a blue dress
with a corsage of yeUaw 1'08es
and white carnations. Mrs. Ly~
ons was In a blue knlt suit and
her nowers were pink rosebuds
Count Ywr meashwsl Nothing could be more appropriate as we and white carnations.
A reception was held at the
enter into Thanksglvirw season. We have so very much to be thank·
ful ror. When we hear or the many thousand.B that arc starvir~ to Kelly home tollowins: the cere• death ln the world it makes one wolller why these terrible sit•tions mony. The bride's table was cenmuBt exist.
tered wilh a tiered cake topped
Next Thursday when we celebrate Thanksgiv· with bells. Other decorations
were an arrangement of pink
tng, let us be very thankful.
Recentt.v 1 ) learned of a family o( fOUf Cflll- camatloos and mums and pine
dren that is badly in need of clothing. There is a and blue satin balls. AJsistlng
lltte girl 8 and one 5 years old, The 5-year-&lt;&gt;id with the serving at the reception
is rather chubby, a boy 3 and one 1 years or were MIBB.!hu'OIIScherlltz, Miss
age. U you have any clothing such as socks, Lenore Scherlitz, Miss Cindy
shoes, under clothing, dresses, or trooBers, just ScherUtz, Taylor, Mlch.; and
•
drop them off at The Daily Sentinel office and I Miss VIcky Scberlltz and MlBs
T o n y Scherlltz of Detroit,
will see that the family getB them.
KATIE
Mich.
For a wedding trip to CadilThis evening FBI Agent Mack our plates were filled before the
lac,
Mich., the bride changed in0. Ellis will speak to lhe youth adults sat down. Grace was alto
a
white and blue suit. 91.e
ot the :st. Paul Lutheran Church ways given. Alter dinner we en- wore the
rose corsage from her
in Pomeroy; the &amp;. John luth- joyed a good fellowship, which
bridal
bouquet.
eran Church, Pine Grove, and I believe is missed today. There
The new Mrs. Lyons ts a
the st. Paul Lutheran Church of was no television to sit and graduate of Marion High School
Ma11011, at the st. Paul Clllrch watch, but there was more living
and is employed at PooUac MoIll Pomeroy. ~Is' topic tsonthe done than there is todaJt.
tors.
Mr. Lyons, also 111 emJust the warmth of families
work ~the FBI, suggestingvoca~
ploye
of
P&lt;mtiac Motors, gram.
Uons In lhe FBI. Youngsters will being together was a great feel- ated from Middleport High School
find this very interesting, I am Ing.
The song, ''Over the river and and served two year• In lhe U.
sure.
through the woods to Grandmolh- s. Army.
The couple reside at 17 C.
WELL, TODAY IS MY DAY,or er's house we'll go, .. well, this street In Puntlac. Attending be·
rather should be, as I am a da.y . is what Thanksgiving was ....
aides Mr. and Mro. John Lyons
older. Don~ feel "''Y older, but Grandmother'sltoose, fUied wllh
and
SCil, Bernard, were the bridelove, warmth and good food.
groom's grandmother, Mrs. Ber·the cal_endar d years says so.
Let us ever be thankful.
When I was a youngster, my bJrthnard Schramm, ZIDeavWe.
. day was quite an occasion. I was
born on Thanksgiving 0113', my
mother and Cather's first wedding
anniversary, and my grandmother Holmes's birthday. I can remember the rarnUies getting to~
gether tor dinner wlth a table
loaded wllh good lhlngs to eat.
.The grown-ups sat at the main
table while all the kids were seat~ecfat a smaller table.
·. We were never neglected as

GALLIPOLIS -

HUFfYancl
ROADMA'STIR

Nt·v. z,. n rlh
&lt; ~ I I WI l •rlfll

The Sunday TimeB - Sentinel, Sunday, November 24, 1968

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JOHNNY TOYMAKER
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JOHNNY SPEED
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Plans Party
MIDDLEPORT- A Christmas
pal'l¥ waa planned for Dec. 18
during Thurlday night'o meeting
of. lhe Joli,v Bw&gt;cb Sswinir Clw
beld at the home of Mra. wu.
·IWn Rob8011.
. The pa1'11 wiD be held at the
J,ome of Mro. Bslty Cline. Mra.
.(;-p Hackett, Sr., presided
lit the meeting. The door priJe
~ by Mrl. Hacltett, and
prizes wsnl to !olra. Herman
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19 -

_ Thl! SundaJ Times - Sentinel, Sunda.Y, November 24, 196H

Tom my Lyons is Wed in Michigan

Community
By Charlene
Corner••• Hoellieh · ,

!

I

MIDDLEPORT - Before an
improvtaed altar decorated with
a basket al. mums and pbti car~
natlona, Miss Esther Marie Sangle of Puotlac, Mich., becr.me lhe
bride of Toi!UIIY L,yn Lyons, also
of Pontiac.
The bride Is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Carleton Scherlltz
of Marion, Mlch. The bridegroom
ia the son rA Mr. an,. Mrs . John
E. Lyons, Mlddk..,on. The wedding was an event or 5 p.m. oa

This past week brought recollections of the tragedies or the
Kennedy family to many Americans. Certainly so for Mrs. Esther
Kissell of Middleport, an acquaintance of the KerUledys.
Wednesday, Mrs. Kissell received rrom t:thel Keru1edy a personal acknowledgement of her eondolences at the lime of the death
of Sen. Robert Kennedy . The black-edged letter had been mailed on
tile e\'e of his birthday anniversary .
A World War U officer in the WAVES, Mrs. Kissell, the former
Esther Bowen, wu married to the prominent Columbus newspaperman, Bud Kissell. He died about four years ago, and about a year
ago Mrs. Kissell moved to MiddlepurL
MR. AND MRS.. JA~lES SOUDERS have received word that their
former neighbor, Mrs. H. C. Mcllrlde, now H7, fractured her hip in a
fall at ller Belpre home, Mrs, McBride is confined to the Camden
Cl&amp;rk Hospital in Parkersburg. Her daughter, Mrs. Quin Uayes (Margaret) has urived from Calltornia to be with her motber.

MAJOR RRUCE BRADFORD IS BACK Crom Vietnam and next
week will be moving to Columbus. Uruce, son of Mr. aOO. Mrs. Wallace Bradford, has been assignod to Ohio State University where he
will begin work on his master 's degree. He expects lobe there
for two years.
Bruce came from ManlaOO last week for s brief visit wilh hh
parents and to locale living quarters. The family will be residing in
Grove City. Their furnitw·c will be moved Tuesday and tfley· will be
drh1ng through a few days later. Both of the children, Dana and
Leslie, are in school.
A 1961 graduate of West Point, .Bruce had a year at the career
school in Baltimore just before going to Vietnam.
Needless to say, !he Wallace Bradfords are pleased to have
their son and famil:y within weekend "VisHing distance.
BARBARA JONES F1NEGOLD is delighted with her new job, She

is a research assi s tant to Dr. Robert Heckel, director of the lnsUtute tor Research on Underprivileged at the University of South car~
lira st Colwnbia. Prior to goi11g to South Carolina, Barbara worked
with the Ohio State Department of Peronnel. Her husband, Larry,
is a graduate student at the university.

Holiday Projects Planned
MIDDLEPORT - Holiday projects and plans were made durIng a meeting of the Busy Bee
Class of the Middleport First
Baptist Church Thursday night at
the church.
The group will provide three
poinsettias for the holiday church
services. The plants are to be
taken to shut-ina following the
services. Mrs. Lettie Roosh is
cllairman ror the class.
The holiday dinner was set
for Dec. 13 at the Middleport
Church or Christ. Mrs. Isabelle
Wlnebrermer and Mrs. Elizabeth
Slavin were appointed to decorate
the tables. Following the dfmer
the group will return to the Bap tist Church for the party .
Members were reminded or
the church - wide d.inner to be
held at the church on Dec. 8 to
honor new members . Mrs. James
Souders, Mrs. Pearl Hoffman,
and Mrs. Charles Bennett were
named to a nominating committee which will report at tlle December meeting.
Mrs. Slavin presided at the
meeting which opened with prayer bY Mrs . h'a 'Turner . T h c
group sang the class song, and
Mrs. Fielding Hawkins gave devotions. She read several scriptures on praise and thanksgiv Ing, and concluded with a poem
entitled "The First Thanksgtv.
ing." Each member gave something for which they were thank-

BACKACHE&amp;
SECONDARY TO

TENSION KIDNEY IRRITATION

Cummon K 1dnt'}" tor Hlnthlt'r l rrlta
t!uns m a ke ma11y mt'll and &gt;&lt;"nmt' ll
f«l tensl' o.nd nl'rWJllS from f rl'lJUl'lll .
burning or Hchln~~,; url 11atlon nl ~o; ht

and. d. a~· Sf-condarll y. you may Joaoe
IIHp and. have Headad1e . Back ac he
and let-1 o ld E"r. Ur&lt;"d. depress l"d In

Juch o · a !W ~ ('YST ""'" ( usually b r l n ~ ~
r .. l axlnlj: l·Om l ort I&gt;J •· urh l ng lr rl ! a!
ln~t l{f'rms l n ad d llri!M' a nd q u ic kl y
eu! nt: pal n Gt'! r'Y STF:X a ! dru;: ~o;!~! S

Charlene Alice Hysell
Miss Norma Nichols

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs, Charles M. Hysell, 1 Liberty
Ave,, Pomeroy, are announci['€ the engagement and approach-

nE.EDSVILLE -

Announcement is being made by Mr10..
Mary E. Nicllols, Reedsville, of the betrothal of her daugllter, Norma Sue, to WilHam W. Arbaugh, s~n of Mr. and Mrs.
John w. Arbaugh, Tlllpers Plains. The bnde-to-be, daughter
of the late Paul F. Nichols, is a graduate of Eastern Local
High School and of Columbus Business UniOJerslty. She is employed by Ohio University. ller fiance is also a graduate of
Eastern Local High School and has recently returned from
four years duty with tile Air Force.

M1ss Carol Floccari
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs. Mike Floccari, 63 Hutland SL, Middleport, are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Carol, to Mr. H01ner
Tate, son of Mr. aOO MrB. Charles Tate, Cheshire. Miss Floc~
cari is a graduate of Rutland High School and the Nationwide
Bcaut;y Academy. She is employed st lola's Beauty salon in
Pomeroy. Mr. Tate graduated from the Kyger Creek High
School and is employed at IOOustrial Nucleonics in Columbus.
The open church wedding will be an event or Dec. 28 at 2:30
p. m. at Lhe Old Kyger Baptist Church.

Demonstrations Given

ful.
Members answered roll call
with Bible verses. The program
presented by Mrs . Aaa Jordan
Included meditations, "For TW.s
One Hour" and "A Good Time."
Refreshments were e.erved by
Mrs. Hoffman, Mrs. Beulah White
and Mrs. Betty Darst. Tables
were arranged in a "T" formation with Thanksgiving centerpieces.
Attending besides those namOO
were Mrs. Charles Edwards,
Mrs. Golda Mourning, Mrs. Dana
flamm, Mrs. Mollie McGhee,
Mrs. Nora Hamilton, and Mrs.
Frances Bearhs.

The Almanac
By United Press Internatioral
Toda,y Js Sunday, Nov. 24, the
329th day of 1~68 with 37 to
follow.
The moon is between Its new
phase and first quarter.
The morning stars are Mars
and Jl.fliltlr.
The evening stars are Saturn
ard Venus.
On this day in history:
In 1869 women from 21 states
met in ClevelaOO to draw up
plans for the organization of the
American Women Suffrage Assotiation.
In 1944 super-fortresses ofthe
American Air Forc-e took off
from Saipan for the first raids
on Tokyo.
In 19fiJ the U.N. Security
Couneil gave Secretary General
t Thant permi~sion to use force
if necessary to setUe the Congo
crisis.
In 1963 Lee Harvey Oswald,
accused assassin of President
John Kennedy, was shot to
death by Jack Hub} in a Dallas
jail. The shooting !'las witnessed
b:y millions of people on
television.

POMEROY - A demonstration
on Christmas arrangements and
decorations by Mrs. Pearl Mora
of the Cllesler Garden Club highlighted a meeting of the Twilight
Garden ChiD held Thursday night
in the basement or the Pomeroy
First Baptist Church.
Mrs. Mora was presented a
gift by Mrs. T. A, Hermesy fol lowing her demonstration.
Members were reminded during the meeting to have their boliday therapy program girts for
the Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health Center at tile homei1Mn.
Mary Heines by Dec. 1. 'Miose
wishing to have their gifts pick ed up are asked to caJJ Mre. . El·
mer Wickham, president.
A report on the regional meet~
ing held at Eastern Hl.gh School
was gt"Jen during the meeting.
Participation in the armual Meigs
County Christmas nower show
to be staged next weekend at the
Pomeroy Elementary School was
discussed. The Twlllghl club will
exhibit 1n the class enUUed "Ice
Skating, •• arrangements showing
motion.
Read at the meeting was an inCALL ED TO LOUISVILLE
POMEROY - Mrs. Orna ruua
Prentice, forrneri.v or Pomeroy,
Is seriously ill at a hospital in
Louisville, Ky. Called there by
her illness were Mr. and Mrs.
Aaron ZahJ, Pomeroy.

vitation from the Middleport Amateur Gardeners to attend the
Betty Fast demonstration on JJec.
5 at the Middleport Elementary
School. New year books were
distributed by Mrs. Wickham.
Members responded to roll call
with a Thanksgi.etg thoug!Jl. Mrs.
Wickham presented devotims usIng "The Bread of Llfe" as ller
meditation.
Two mass arrangements of
deep purple mums were display.
ed by Mrs. Norma Parker. Refreshments .carrying I,)Ut the
'
ed .
Thank . . ...,_
llfPVlfll-metnewereRrv

·

OAPSE Unit Meets
AI Eastern High
REEDSVILLE - Ohio Assn.
of Public School Employes Chapter No. 448, Eastern Local School
District, met Monday at 7:30
p.m. at Eastern High School wllh
President Ross Cleland presiding and 18 members present.
Creston Newland reported on
the conOJention held in Ironton.
Refreghments were served by
the cooks at Eastern. The next
meeting will be Dec. 16, 6:30
p.m. at the home of Wanda Larkins. This will be a potluck dinner for members and their spouses, also there will be a 50 cent
gift exchange.

Donation Voted to Fund
POMEROY - Magnolia Temple 198, Pythian Sisters, voted
to contributetto the holiday entertaining fund for the Knights
of Pythias' horne at Springfield
during a meeting Thursday night
at the D. A. V. hall.
A. communication from Agnes
Woodard, grand chief, thanked
members for support of the re...t(
.
..,........ ~ .,... ln
.....:ce.,. on ,.. g&amp;.Yen ...- ...-..en..., ~·
ctB~arkl. She· 'also announced

that her project for the year
will be to purchase needed equ~
ment for the hospital at the Medina home.
It was voted during the meeting
to retain the same officers for
another year, Christmu cards
will be sent to shut-in members
and instead of the usual gift exchange, it was decided to contri-

trw

marriage of their daughter, Charlene Alice, to Terry 1
Lewis, son ol Mr. aOO Mrs. Earl L Lewis, Letart, W. Va.
The bride-elect is a graduate of Pomeroy High Scllool. Her fiance, a graduate of Watwna High School, is employed at Foote
Mineral Corp., Graham Station, W. Va. A November wedding
is planned.

Gifts Presented to Patients
POMEROY - Christmas gllto
Cor patlerts at the SOutheastern
Ohio Mental Health Center were
presented during the Thursday
night meeting of the Rock !tJrlngs
Grange.

New Fabrics are
Women's Club Topic
REEDSVILLE - The Reedsville-Long Bottom Homemakers
Club met at tile home of Mrs.
Dorald Myers for their November meeting with the program
topic being new fabrics and fin-ishes taught by Mrs. Walter

The grange also voted to make
a contribution to lhe 'Nierculosls and Health AssoclaUm. One
member waa reinstated and me
appeal Cor aid was anawered
during lhe meeting. .....,cted by
Fred Goeglein, master.
Reported Ill were Frank Grueser, Mrs.RobertLouka,andMrs.
Homer Radford. A report oo "Jfle
Ohio Slate Grange session was
given by Mr. and Mrs. aantord
Slx&gt;ckton, delegates.
Plans were made for a ChrlJt...
mas potluck at the Dec. 12 meeting, at 6:30 p.m. The horne eco~
nomics chairman will provide
the meat. Refreshments were
served following the meeting.

~u~~ t'LyL"~~~;x;; ,r;··'· ;e~n.b~~i~~;'~eeti~ c~nd~ct-

ported confined to Veterans Mem~
orial Hospital. Mrs. Thomas
Cook is ill at home. Membership
CUB SCOUTS TO MEET
was discussed and Mrs. Margaret
POMF. ROY ~ The regular Seidenabel and Mrs. Nettie Hayes
monthly meeting of Pack 24&amp;, were appointed to do contact
Cub Scouts and Wcbelos, "ill be work.
held Nov. 26, at Ulc D. A V. hall
The Thanksghing motiC w a s
on Butternut Ave. at 7 p. m. A carried out in the table decoraprogram will be presented on the tlons for a potluck dinner which
tbeme, "Showboat" Everyone is preceded the meeting. Members
urged to atteM.
were remiMed to take cookies to
the December meeting.

ed by the president. Mrs. Claremont lllrrris. Members voted to
secure a gift for David Sprague,
a patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. The next meeting will
be Dec. 19 at the home of Mrs.
Walter Brown
Retreshm.ente. were served by
the hostess to Mrs. Harris, Mrs.
Herman Grossnickle, Mra. Pickens, Mrs. Brown, Mrs, Ernest
Wllltehead aoo Mrs. Lyle Balderson.

You Can't Look At
FLOWERS Without
Fee ling " ,Thankful."
.That's Why They Make
Such Great
",Thanksgiving" Gifts.

DUDLEY'S FLORIST
MIDDLEPORT AND
GALUI'OUS, DHIO

!'""'' "'' "'

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nt•w l&lt; ll ·.· ll t • II ,.,.,,. ;,, . l "'i ~~~ 111 I " ' ~,., •

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Wrl lram S. Di le1 , M9' ·
Hea •ing A iol Dep! .
I 1m rn!atttlltcl 1n lt..-ntnt Jbout ltnilh H~"'"l Aodl

MARRIAGE
POMEROY ward Skinner, 53,
Daisy Elizabeth
Pomeroy.

· J Plene ltleptloto1 "" iJI homt to ~Hinl' lor 1 ltern
ons1r111011

·

'"

.,

I

:

ern - - - - - - - S i o \ 1 1 - - - I

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-- ~ ~ . ·~· ... · ~----------------"'
I

nations.

Georgia was named for King

George II

of England, being
founded during his reign.

For Boys and Girls

WE
GOT
A
TRUCK

12" to 26"

eral very enjoyable numbers.
or them were from '~he
Sound of Music" and the final
IUJ1ber wu "Let There " te

i'wo

LOAD I

See Us Before You
Buy! Come In Now!

OUR PRICE
IS RIGHT!!

A small down payme-nt will reserve yours in
our Lay-Away.

.Peace."

Now is the lime to join our Club, so you're sure to be a
happy Sonia next Christmas. Choose a plan to suit your
budget. Just a small amount saved weekly will add up
to a hearty check for you, for bill-free shopping in 1969.
lnjoy All the Convenience
of full-Service Banking to
Meet Ivery Requirement

IACINE HOME·
NATIONAL BANK
3RD. ST.

E. Williams, which coosisted or
poems, "Yoo Didn't ABk", by
Mrs. R. l
Larkins., and "M.y
Guide", by Mrs. Williams. This
was r~owed by sllem prayer.
Roll call was answered by mem~
hera glvi~ a Bible verse of
thanks.
Plans were made Cor the anrual.
Christmas party to be held Dec.
18 at 8 p.
at the home or Mrs.
Denver Weber wUfl Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead as co-hostess. Members &amp;re to bring a table arrarvement for use at the Athe111 State
Hospital dW'II1!the holidays. Also
a gilt exchangewlllbeheldamong
the members.
Thanksgiving faOJOU were sent
to the Elmwood Rest Herne. They
were made by Mrs. Webb m:l
Mrs. Donald Myers. Christmas
giftB were al80 sent to the Athens State Hospital.
The program topic w a s
"Thanksgiving for the Birds" by
Mrs. carl Buckley. Mrs. Buckley
abo demonstrated an easy dower
arrangement that could be sent to
the Athens state Hospital.
Mrs. John cme was welcomed
as a new member to the club. A
salad course was served during
the social hour. Mrs. Williams
recehed the door prize.

m.

Plan Open

Women's Class Plans Party
MIDDLEPORT - Christmas
pal'l1 plans were made "'ring
Thurllday night'• meeting of the
Loyal Women's Class of theMlddlepori Clllrch of Christ.
Committees appointed lor lhe
Dec. 13 dlmer party were Mrs.
Herman Lohse and Mrs. Frank
Beach, Utkets; Mrs. Bea&lt;:h and
Mn. E. L. Lallance, decoratIng; Mrs. Oscar Roush, general
chairman; Mra. Roush, Mrs. Lallance and Mrs. Leo Childs, gifts
for ahut-lnB. The dinner wiD be
served at 6 p.m. by the Homea
builders Class.
During lhe meeting oo!Wcled
by Mrs. William Reynolds, lhe
nominating conunlttee was named. They are Mrs. Beach, Mrs.
Audrey Sweat, and Mrs. Marie
Postlewait, ·who was welcomed
ai a new menDer.
Reported ill were Mrs. Blanclle
Gilkey, a patient at Holzer Hospital, and Mrs. WIUiam BradCord, at home. Mrs. Robert Reibel of Morristown, former teacher ol the clau, was a guest at
the meeting.

House

POMEROY - An open ltoose
in observance of the 25th: wedding amlversary of Mr. and Mrs.
J, M. Gaul, Chester, has been
planned for &amp;lnday, Dec. I.
Hosting the observance will
be the children or the couple,

The Thanksgiving theme was
carried out in the program presented by Mrs. Herman Lohse.
Mrs. Beach read scriptures [rom
the Psalms. Meditatlons by Mrs.
Lohse included "One Natlm Under God," "We Have a Lot to be
Thankful For," and ..Thankful
ror Our Blessings.'' She concluded with a Thanksgiving pra,yer.
Refreshments were ~erved by
Mrs. Lohse, Mrs. Lena Wolfe
and Mrs. Marilyn Bishop wilh
Mrs. Gilkey and Mrs. Horner
Jones as contributing bostesseB.

March has been set as membei-shlp month. Tbe third degree II
to be presentecllor the rltuilloUc
contest. The women's actlvltiaa
contest will be sugar cookies for
baking, and aprons, both tea and
work, for sewing.
Drawings were made Cor the
grange visitation. They are aa
follows: Hemlock "t o visltW.urel,
Harrisonville to Star, Raeine to
Columbia, Columbia to Hemlock,
Laurel to Rock Springs, Oleater
to Rarrisonville, Rock Springs to
Ohio Valley, Alfred to Chester,
Ohio Valley to Racine, alii Star
to Alfred.
stanford Stockton, delegate to
the state session, gave a short
report on the action taken at the
state convention. Aaron s.,re,
county prince, reported oo the
yooth activities and the pageant.
The grange rural urbanbarP
quet was announced ror Dec. 7
at Salisbury. The Rev. Robert
Wells, chaplain of lhe Ohio stale
Grange, will be the spelker.
Donuts alii coffee were served
during the concluding social hour.
a

Observance

Victor E. Gaul and Patricia Am
Gaul, Wayne. Mich., and Vicki
Lym Gaul, at home.
Relatives and friends of the
&lt;:ouple are Invited to call between
the hours of 2 and 4 p.m.

Only jewelry is the lasting, per·
sonal reminder of your love .. .

that's why people appreciate
gifts of jewelry on the most
sentimental holiday of all ...
Christmas. lsn 't there someone

you'd like to-gift-in o special way?

The First

Marty Evans and Beth Bastlanl.
The program was concluded by
the Motherflingers who sang BBV-

?
•

Garden Club

the placJie lor the gre81eot 1...
orease In membership and secretaries awarded certifh:ates Cor
ICCW'ICY alii punctuallty included Mrs. Grace Clark,. Alfred;
Mrs. CUlTon:! Morris ol Racine
for 12 years service; MrB. Mary
H\Dlter of Chester; Mrs. stanford
Stockton of Hemlock, 13 years
service; Mrs. Arthur Crabtree.
Columbia, 12 years, and M r s.
Fred Goeglein, Rock ~rings.
It was reported tllat all of the
grangers entering state baking
contests received ribbons and
girts (rom the Grange Insurance
Co. Partlcipatlng were Patty Dy·
er ol Star, the junior grange
cookie contestj Mrs. Nina McCumber, Star, Bubordinate cookie
winner; Mrs. Norma Lee, embroidered pillow case; Mrs. McCtunber, embroidered scarf;
Mrs . Sharon Jewell, crocheted
doily.
Outlined by Atkins at the meet,..
ing were state and national pr~
grams for the year. The theme
is "Grarge Is the key to anaburP
danl agriculture, creative cern-

munltr, and good government.'"

United Presbyterian Church held
Its amual Thankagiving dimer at
the church on Nov. 21. The dinner
waa served by the women rl. the

pr Elce&amp;IQT, Roberta Brintm,

what about Christmas '

Planned by

'The Alfred Grange received

By Presbyterians

presented by the Thespian Clw
of Gallla Academy High School.
The following girls look part In
the presentation which was UDder
the dlrecUm of Mrs. Ruth Gil·
!Ingham; Becky Glbsoo, P a m
Saunders, Martha Cornwell, Gin-

FOR CHRISTMAS

POMEROY - ProjectB or serv- continuation or grange vlsltllti.on.
It was also decided that P~
Ing the bloodmobUe canteen arxl
rw-al beautification were adopted mona Granp will continue to
for lhe year at lhe annual County sponsor 1M museum fund and its
Gra~ Conference held recently project. The Rareine and Racine
Junior Grange will e.erve the carP
11 tile Rock Si&gt;rlngs haiL
other hlg!illghts of the meeting teen at the December Red Cross
REEDSVILLE - Mrs. Clare- conducted by Virgil Atkins, state bl-.obUe. The Februory vlsll
moat Harris .00 Mrs. Herman deputy master, and attended by will be handled by tile Rock
Grossnickle were hostesses Cor 45 otftcers trom eight granges, Springs Grange, and Star will
tte Riverview Garden ClW ~ Included the awarding ~ plagues serve in April. The schedule for
cia¥ evening at the Harris home. and certltlcate11 and plaMirw: for the remainder ol the year will be
completed later.
Devotlona were given to Mrs. R.

. Annual Dinner Held

titled 4 "Don't Tell a Soul" was

LOOK

Projects Undertaken by Grange .Conference

Annual Party

Moore's in Pomeroy Is Your••••

The Thank Of!erlnl was - ·
cated at this Ume. This money
Is used throughout the world tor
educational comsellng service,
ecumenical yooth exchange, ministry to the aging, Christian medIcal lund, leadership developmeul
and scholarship &amp;fllistancetoNelfd, Spanish - American and Indiu - American youth. .seeking
equal edllcadm opportunity.
Allsr the dimer a playlet en-

LICENSE
Clarence EdColumbus. and
Skinner, 47,

JOIN NOW! CLUB OPENS DEC. 1st.

~ PIIHII mJil lull ckbi!s Jnd tr~ IJieiJ!Urt

For her weddingtbebrldewore
a floor len8th gown of AJlne
atyling. 11 was fashioned with an
empire waiat accented wlth blue
velvet rtbboli and long sleeves.
!ile carried a llou!Jiet of piDk
roses and wllite canattons.
N1ss Dlane Crabtree al. Pon~
tiae served as the maid ~ honor. Sle wore a noor length gown
In two shades of blue, the tOp
or wbicll was navy Yelvet. Her
Clowers were pink and white car-

church.

Complete Selection
All Models

l&lt;'"' &gt;t·l ' t•

Saturday, Nov. 16 at the horne
or the bride' a brother-tn.J.aw and
alster, Mr. and Mrs.. Charles
Keli,v, In Marloo.
Tbe toyer of the home featured a planter of pine wilh pink
satin balls. Organ music tor the
ceremony was presented by Mrs.
Arleen swtler. Performing the
double-ring ceremony was the
brotller-ln-law of the bride, the
Rev. Bryce SWiler.

Serving as best man Cor the
bridegroom was Bernard Lyons,
hie. brother.
For her dau&amp;hter's wedding,
Mn. Seherlltz wore a blue dress
with a corsage of yeUaw 1'08es
and white carnations. Mrs. Ly~
ons was In a blue knlt suit and
her nowers were pink rosebuds
Count Ywr meashwsl Nothing could be more appropriate as we and white carnations.
A reception was held at the
enter into Thanksglvirw season. We have so very much to be thank·
ful ror. When we hear or the many thousand.B that arc starvir~ to Kelly home tollowins: the cere• death ln the world it makes one wolller why these terrible sit•tions mony. The bride's table was cenmuBt exist.
tered wilh a tiered cake topped
Next Thursday when we celebrate Thanksgiv· with bells. Other decorations
were an arrangement of pink
tng, let us be very thankful.
Recentt.v 1 ) learned of a family o( fOUf Cflll- camatloos and mums and pine
dren that is badly in need of clothing. There is a and blue satin balls. AJsistlng
lltte girl 8 and one 5 years old, The 5-year-&lt;&gt;id with the serving at the reception
is rather chubby, a boy 3 and one 1 years or were MIBB.!hu'OIIScherlltz, Miss
age. U you have any clothing such as socks, Lenore Scherlitz, Miss Cindy
shoes, under clothing, dresses, or trooBers, just ScherUtz, Taylor, Mlch.; and
•
drop them off at The Daily Sentinel office and I Miss VIcky Scberlltz and MlBs
T o n y Scherlltz of Detroit,
will see that the family getB them.
KATIE
Mich.
For a wedding trip to CadilThis evening FBI Agent Mack our plates were filled before the
lac,
Mich., the bride changed in0. Ellis will speak to lhe youth adults sat down. Grace was alto
a
white and blue suit. 91.e
ot the :st. Paul Lutheran Church ways given. Alter dinner we en- wore the
rose corsage from her
in Pomeroy; the &amp;. John luth- joyed a good fellowship, which
bridal
bouquet.
eran Church, Pine Grove, and I believe is missed today. There
The new Mrs. Lyons ts a
the st. Paul Lutheran Church of was no television to sit and graduate of Marion High School
Ma11011, at the st. Paul Clllrch watch, but there was more living
and is employed at PooUac MoIll Pomeroy. ~Is' topic tsonthe done than there is todaJt.
tors.
Mr. Lyons, also 111 emJust the warmth of families
work ~the FBI, suggestingvoca~
ploye
of
P&lt;mtiac Motors, gram.
Uons In lhe FBI. Youngsters will being together was a great feel- ated from Middleport High School
find this very interesting, I am Ing.
The song, ''Over the river and and served two year• In lhe U.
sure.
through the woods to Grandmolh- s. Army.
The couple reside at 17 C.
WELL, TODAY IS MY DAY,or er's house we'll go, .. well, this street In Puntlac. Attending be·
rather should be, as I am a da.y . is what Thanksgiving was ....
aides Mr. and Mro. John Lyons
older. Don~ feel "''Y older, but Grandmother'sltoose, fUied wllh
and
SCil, Bernard, were the bridelove, warmth and good food.
groom's grandmother, Mrs. Ber·the cal_endar d years says so.
Let us ever be thankful.
When I was a youngster, my bJrthnard Schramm, ZIDeavWe.
. day was quite an occasion. I was
born on Thanksgiving 0113', my
mother and Cather's first wedding
anniversary, and my grandmother Holmes's birthday. I can remember the rarnUies getting to~
gether tor dinner wlth a table
loaded wllh good lhlngs to eat.
.The grown-ups sat at the main
table while all the kids were seat~ecfat a smaller table.
·. We were never neglected as

GALLIPOLIS -

HUFfYancl
ROADMA'STIR

Nt·v. z,. n rlh
&lt; ~ I I WI l •rlfll

The Sunday TimeB - Sentinel, Sunday, November 24, 1968

•MATTEL
HOT WHEELS
SEE 'N SAY
W.TTEL-0-PiillNE
SEE 'N SAY STORY BOOKS
FUN FLOWERS
MINI DRAGONS
PICA DOOS
W.TTEL TIPPEE TOES
BABY FIRST STEP
TALKING BARBIE
TALKING STACEY
BARBIE COSTUMES
FRANCIE &amp; CASEY
MAJOR W. TT MASON
AND EQUIPMENT
MRS. BEASLEY
RINGS &amp; THINGS
JOHNNY TOYMAKER
REGENCY BUFFET
REGENCY DESK
JOHNNY SPEED
JOHNNY EXPRESS

Plans Party
MIDDLEPORT- A Christmas
pal'l¥ waa planned for Dec. 18
during Thurlday night'o meeting
of. lhe Joli,v Bw&gt;cb Sswinir Clw
beld at the home of Mra. wu.
·IWn Rob8011.
. The pa1'11 wiD be held at the
J,ome of Mro. Bslty Cline. Mra.
.(;-p Hackett, Sr., presided
lit the meeting. The door priJe
~ by Mrl. Hacltett, and
prizes wsnl to !olra. Herman
Is alit!', Mrs. Jamoa Jividen, and

eam•

Cllne. A pt....U card

;..t to Mrs. Mallie Buah.

wu

• SUSIE HOMEMAKER
OVEN
WASHER
IRON &amp; IRONING BOARD

•REMCO

•IDEAL
KERPLUNK
HANDS OOWN
LOOK OUT BELOW
MOTORIFIC RACE SETS

Mot

wuua GIUONr, Mra. ErHll(lheS, Mrl. Orin 9mllb,

~

.uma MIUor,

Jljlcb, and

1uooL

Mro.

l'e\"1'1

lira. Cleo Kerns, a
Mro. BUlb wu • eootri-

tiiwdna: holtdl.

..

MONOPOLY
WINNIE THE POOH
SITUATION-4
SORRY
JUNGLE BOOK GAMES
CHILDREN'S HDUR
OUIGA BOARD
INSTANT INSANITY

•MILTON BRADLEY
RECALL
TWISTER
GRAB A LOOP
LIFE
CHUTES &amp; LADDERS
PASSWORD
OPERATION
EASY MONEY
IJCKET OF FUN

124w. MAIN

and Jade Rings

BULOVA WATCHES

c.oM£l

For Everyone On Your List

SltOPl

Compare\
CHECK

DECORATIVE

CLOCKS
Daft Klna "NO" Handsome yellow cal

oVR
pRICES

Conc•rto "AO" -

endar watch with sil ·

Gleaming heuogonal
cna . 17 jewels. Ex

11er dial. gill mukers.
17 jewels.
$35 .95

panslon br011cel1t . Yel·

low or while. $3!1.95

~~

SILVERPLATE AND
KROMEX
GIFT ITEMS

•KENNER$
SPIROGRAPH
SPIROTOT
CLOSE &amp; PLAY
GIVE A SHOW
EASY CURL HAIR
EASY BAKE OVEN

DELIGHTFUL TO GIVE
WONDERFUL TO GET .
Lodiet' Diamond Pendants &amp; Ear Rings
B. David Pin &amp; Ear Rings
Pierced Ear Ring•
Cultured Pearl Mec~laces
Prince &amp; Prlnceu Gardner Billfolds
Gents' Anton Ti ... Tau. Tie Ban and
Key Protectors
Speidel Watch Bond1, Ladies' &amp; Gent.'

SNOOPY SNIFFER
QUEEN BUZZY BEE
SING SONG RADIOS
HUFFY PUFFY TRAIN
CRY BABY BEAR
CASH REGISTER
GOLDILOCKS &amp; THE
THREE BEARS

SHOP••••

~otriOII, eo-hasten, aerved a

iialad ..,..... to thooe named and

To Cherish

• PARKER BROTHERS

• FISHER PRICE

KENNEDY AIRPORT
TIPPY TUMBLES
TRICKY TOMMY TURTLE
TRICKY DOODLE DUCK

•, Mrt. Robom and Mro. Jamoa

:ilro.

Ladiu' Birthstone,
Black Onyx, P•arl

ALL FAMOUS BRANDS
AT LOWER DISCOUNT PRICES!

•TOPPER

Sewing Club

tiro.

HEADQUARTERS

OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS
POMEROY

COMPLETE LINE
FINEST

COSTUME
JEWELRY

USE OUR LAY-AWAY PLAN NOW!

5

GOESSLER
PHONE 992·2848

Court St.

JEWELRY STORE

"A Gold Star Store"

Pomny

�J~

~Gallians
(i _\l.l.ll'tlLIS - Coad1 I&gt; 11 h

Burson':-.

·TANKER
JACKET

LADIES'
BULKY KNIT

make ext-ellent girts for
he r . Regular values to
$7.99. Sizes J.J to '10.

SPORTSWEAR

99

FLAT KNIT OR MESH

Trim Holl.ay Lim•s With

NYLON HOSE
Designed for the shorter
skirts, high welt sheer 1\Y-

·

Stretch factor gives bet·
ter fit, marvelous cling

in bag areas. In new fall

Place Your Order Now

Wreaths
Polled Plants

BUY NOW

Graue 13/ankcls
Corsaws
Arli f•c Ia I A"""Rcme nl s

CHRISTMAS GIFT
WRAP PAPER

4·

al'l:l winter shades.

' ROLL
PKG.

. 6 ROLL PIG.

44~

··~

MEN'S
PERMA-PRESS .

to 17.

99

"CAMPUS" BRAND
SPORT SHIRTS

Use Stiffler's layaway to btll' , _, ,,..
Mattei's Baby Small Talk or
Sister Small Talk ... who say
"Baby Help MOIIIIIIJ'7'" and sev·

HEART PIN AND FLOWER PIN
KlDDLES

Phooo 992·2644

rill )IWIIf}' )'OU Un - l r l

• KIDDl£ doll• onlr 71•"' •nd 1~{,'" 11n
pop out fo' upJrete pl11yt
• Slletr eet~h pin! M1teh .. In)' IIUlfitl

Famous "Campus" brand sport shirts, button down and regular collars, sizes small,
medium, large and erln large.

99

99

MODEL CARS

EACH

Special Manufacturer's Asst.

CHENILLE
ous "Match Box'· cars. Start
BEDS_P. READS
your collection ol these
,1
Authentic scale models or ram-

.
55

fam10011

today,

GIVE HER
A NEW QUILTED

.

Foil ot lwl" bod -4
shea, lint-free
chenille, In lo¥1•
ly decorator so llol

~

EA.

..1 ... ••

color•. Regulor
$6.99.

99
'

-

EACH

(;i\LI.JJ&gt;OLIS - Coach cJiff
Wihmn's &lt;iAJIS Blue Imps built
up a cnmmarxling 34-7 halftime
lead, then went on to thump the
l"hesapeakc reserves 61-29 in
their opening hardwood ~~lA~-~
here Frida}' night.
"lllirte cn Imps saw a.clion. All
bul thrce manaRed to tally one or
more points.
Bruce Wilson was the big gun
with H , followed (')osely by Larr) Snowden'h 13. Ron Ferguson

H NDB GS
These new leatherli~e vinyl handbags make ideal gifts,
·new shapes , ner. solid colors. Com~are at~·~·~.

EACH

l't •

__

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

-· ..... ---"""-"""·-

~

'"

.-

.

.

......

•

3

17

2
2

0
I

0
0
10

0
6
0
0
2
72

Oakwood 64 Blue Creek 49
Hkksville 60 North Ce ntral 59
Str~;ker 7R llilltnp ~I
Conrinental r.g Tinora 51
Old I· ort SH Hcpublic -13.

llidgeville 79 De'&gt;hle r 57
Edge non i .J l'a.1 ne fi3
Holgate HII Malinta \.14 (ot)

Socks &amp; Sl'inner·•
by Esquire

SLACKS
b)' Joymor &amp;
Hubbard

JADE EAST
Cologne, After Shave, Soap,
Deodorant

KNIT SHIRTS

Tut11e aod Mock Turtle neck

Remember!

,
MEN S JEWELRY
&amp; BILLFOLDS _..
by Swank

RAINWEAR &amp; ALL
WEATHER COATS
by Alligator

PAJAMAS
by Arrow &amp; Rei !li

NECKWEAR ...
by Sup•rbo

SUITS &amp;
SPORT COATS
by Styl•mort &amp;
Middi shade

• SHOP FRI. TIL 8
• SHOP SAT. TIL 9

USE OUR LAY
AWAY PLAN NOW!
SHOP NOW!

Downie-Gross
"HOME OF ARROW SHIRTS"

Pomeroy

Main St.

5th Annual Gold Star

3 !l 13 - '!9

Christmas . Give-Away
Sponsored by Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce.

CAMARO Z/28

IN
MERCHANDISE PRIZES
and Gin CERTIFICATES

WILL
LOVE OUR . _
MEN'S HI·BULK

All Drawings Held in Pomeroy

I

Parking Lot.

I

·ORLON
DRESS

sox

Begins Nov. 25-En•s Dec. 24
ALL PARTICIPATING
STORES WILL GIVE
FREE TICKETS.

I
I

No purchase necessary.
Need nol be present to win.
Winners will be nolified.

4 BIG GIVE-AWAYS
NOV. 30-DEC. 7-DEC. 14-DEC. 24
ht DRAWING 1,00 P.M. November 30 1968
Prizes : $50.00 gi h certificate and '
2 •• S25.00 Gift Certificates

FLANNELETTE
PAJAMAS
&amp; GOWNS

~~~WSHOP
POMEROY
STORES
DISPLAYING
THE
GOLD STAR

THIS IS HOW YOU CAN MAKE YOUR
CAMARO A SPORTING PROPOSITION.
,.

You can build your Camaro from an economical family car
all the way to a spirited sport.9ter with a name to match :

warm, comfortable a... ·
tWletto. Solid colors and

Z/ 28. Read over our power team choices and pick the one
that matches your idea of a car ,{'We'll stArt with our
strongest. Z!2R Camara. Thia is our mean streak. A tough
car to match, R hard ear to top. Z/28 iRa high-performanC'e

4-Speed l.ranKmis."ihn wil.h HurHt ftonr·mounted shift

,

0

14
9
20

TheHOTONE!

option package for the Camaro Sport Coujle. Includes a
special 290·hp Turbo. Fire 302 V~. quick.ratio •leering,
~pedal fim"pen~ion, ~pedal white let.t.ered tires, !'pecial rniJv
Ktriping, 7. ,'21'1 emhlems Anrl more. PoWer rliHr· bra.keto ami.

•

2

Top Performer In Its Class Today ••• •••••

She U love either a piJr
of pa,iamas or a gown ot

POMEROY

HATS ...

I

9~HOICE

99

••

TO TP

CALLIPOLJS BLUE DEVILS (80)
PLAYEH- Pos.
I'I.M-A I'TM -A HB PF TO TP
Jim Henr y, F. ..... , . .. .... , .13-22
5-1!1
10
3
31
Tom Prose, F . • . . . • . . • . . • . • • J-1
3-.J
2
4
3
5
2
Mike Fenderbosch , (', ... , , , , , , .5-8
7-8
9
4
17
Tom Spenccr, (; .. . ..• , •.. , •.. 2-6
0-0
9
5
4
3
Henr) Salas, (; . . . . . . . . , , , , , . 1·4
0.0
u
I
3
2
{ireg Smith, 1... , , , .• , , . , ••• , , 5-6
2~
12
5
0
12
e
Bluey,
·
.
,
,
..
.
•
•
,
.
•
.
.
.
..()
0..()
0
2 u
Gr g P ·'
I'
0
0
Reep Matthews, G ..•• , , • , , , , , J-10
2-3
3
2
0
8
Lonnie Bush, G ••• . . . .•••..•. 11-0
1-4
u u u
Dean Alberli, F ...... , , , . .. , .. 0-0
0-0
0
0
0
0
Norm Gilmore, C, • , • , . , , . , . , •• 0..0
0-0
0
0
0
Mik~ Orr, F , , . , . , , , , , , . , . , . , 0-Q
0-0
0
1 0
0
ltand} llamilton, G, ....••. , , , , , 0-0
0-1
0
0
0
0
TOTAL'&gt;
30-57 20-33 45 25 15 80
Points in Each ()uarter :
Chesapeake . • . . • . . . . • • . . • . • • • . . • , lfi 22 11 23- 72
Gallipoli s . • . • . . . . • • • . • ••••••••. 18 19 22 21-80
Key to abo'l'e figun~s: HIM-A, field goals made, attempted;
FTM-/\, tree throws made, attempted; RB, rebounds; PF, personal
fouls; TO, turnovers; TP, total points.

FOR
WARMTH WITHOUT
WEIGHT GIVE HER
EACH

FOR A MAN!
b)' Portis

~cner.

CIII ·~'&gt; AI'EAKE Pi\NTHF:Il"i (Tl)
PLAYF.H - Pos,
1-'{jM-A 1-"J'M-.&lt;\ HB PF
Mark Wilks. I' .... . . . . . . .. .•. 6-9
2-3
&gt; &gt;
.Jim Fairchild, V ......... .. .... 2-9
.&gt;-."&gt;
2 2
Malcolm Adkins, C. ....•. , .•.. . fi-12
!1~14
3
.John Snell, G . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . G-.15
:;.. 10
.Jeff Snell, G . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . t-4
0-1
Paul Larrico, F. , ... . . , • , .•. , • 1-3
lla}' llalleek, F ......... . . , . . . . 0-1
0-0
Bill Arms, C . . , , , • , • , , • , , . , , • 2-4
2-2
I
Brian Nh:hol s, F ••...••••..•..• ().fl
0~
0
Mike llenson, C • ..• .••••..••.•• O..(l
II~
0
.John Smith, 1-". .......... .. ..... 1-2
0~
3
TOTAL"i
25-59 22-36 IB 24

R:o· quarters :
I:Uul' Imps .... I~ "!.2 !I I H- Iii

YOUR CHOICE ONLY

LADIES' NEW HOLIDAY

The t•anlhcrs had 24 per~onals .
Tbc Hlue J)evils will host Logan Frida)i niJ,ttlt in their 196R-69

GARS-Chesapeake Box

NYLON DUSTER
For warmth, for beauty,
for a wanted girt for her,
buy a quilted nylon duster.
Values to$7.9!latStirfier's
in Pomeroy. Pastel colors,
sizes S.. M·L.

pact.-d by Malcolm ,1\dkins' ~even.

Sweaters &amp; Jack

88
EACH

foul circle~o~ for 61 per cent. Chesapeake hauled duwn HI rebound~.

SEOAL

~::::··---,

en more sayings in ·
·tiny voices

• Thl tlnlelt KIDOLES ol 111 lntidl

PLAINS ••• PLAIDS -·· PRINTS

YOUR
GIFTS

In Opener

FOR LADIES AND CHILDREN

EACH

A
SMALL
DEPOSIT
HOLDS

FRANCIS FLORIST

E. Main Str•et
Res . 992-2252
Pomeroy, 0 .
GREENHOUSE PHONE 992.3402

. HOLIDAY
GI_FT SLIPPERS

permanent

"FRUIT OF THE LOOM"

59'

Dell~ery o~&gt;

Telev•oph
Ord•••·

. GIVE

SHIRTS

ramous brand in sizes 141/~

Guooonteed

Fcndcrboseh and ~enccr collected nine l·ad1. (; ,'\liS t·ommitled 25 personal foul:,.
Chesapeake hit 25 or 59 rr om
the field for 42.3 per &lt;"e nL The
Panthers madl· 22 of 31i from the

,.,

Blue Jmps

Chesapeake •.. -1

WHITE DRESS
press white dren shJrts,
long sleeve styles, regular and button down collars. Yoo'll recognize the

(iallipolis t•ommiUL&gt;d IS lurnowrs - six in the set·ond tanto. The Panther:- outscored GAllS 2:!-HI in that pel"iod. Chesapeake lost till' ball 111 limes fhe l'IIS turnovers came in lhe
final period.
(;,"IS hit 30 of 57 rrom the
field fur 52.6 per l'Cill. From the
charity clrdes, tile Gallians hit
21! of 33 for 61 per cent . The
Ciallian:&gt;
hauled
down
45&gt;
rebourDs. (;reg Smith had 12 l'iiX ca me in the big third quarter. Henry pulled down 10 while

Cor the lo:.ers.
The Imps ledl2-4,34-7,and4JIIi at t he quarter marks. Box
scort·:
BLI.:E IMP~ - Wilson, 7-()..14;
!\oe, 2-J-7; Snowden, -t-$-13; Ballard. 2-U-4; Ferguson, 6-0-12;
stebbins, 1-0·2; \"ort h, :!-ti-l;
.Johnson, l-0-2; ll1omas, U-0-U;
-\ . Wedemeyer, 1.._0-{l; M Da\·is,
()..()-U; B. Smith, t..(l-2; Myers,
0-1·1. TD 'L\LS: :!!)..9-fol.
CIIES,\I'F \1\E HESEH\'ES Whille}, 2-H--1; (;rant, J-t-7; .\d·
killS, 2--1-H; Wil~on. 3-ll-6; Thacker, 0--1-.J; TOT .\I..I.i: 10-~-29.

PERSONNEL TO SERVE YOU BEST!

GREETING CARDS

TOPPER'S TINY
BABY MAGIC

~oal.

added 12. L&gt;on .J\dkins had eight

PHONE
992-2644
AND

21 COUNT lOX

WeU - made

Centerpieces

Poimetti~Js

..""""" N\eMiest ChristmaS

100

Ions with no - run toes.

EACH

COLORS·· PATTERNS '

TWO PAIRS
A

Compliment your hosten
dec k
your holl with beautiful and tradi·
tional flowers. We have fresh cut
blooms ,
table
arrangements
and
green s to bring the spirit of Christ·
mas into your home . Stop in soon or
ca ll us to

\ tanker jlcket- fof
man in your life will be
-·a welcome gift. In black
or olive, with knit cu0'1
and waistband, warm lined,
closure. Ccmparea

• BLOUSES
' • HOLIDAY DRESSES
• SHELLS
• SHORTS
• PANTS
,• SKIRTS • JACKETS
• COORDINATES
•SWEATERS
• JACKETS
ALL 1N riiGH FASHION FROM • ....;-...;_

:J:5-I leO in the thiL'd unto. (i ,\IIS
k'tl -17--11 at the time. Crcg Smllh
fooh:d out latt· in the Mme.
('hcsapcahc had tl1rcc m~..·n in
the double n~-:urcs. Makulm 1\dkins, t·enter, led the loser s wilh
211 marker s. (iuard John Snell
pumped io 17 and forward Mark
Wilks added 14. . Jim Fairchild
finished with nine.
Play was rather s luggish at
times. Nlether team managed to
~o.:ore following the 011ening lipnff until (; ,"IS st"nior fo rwa rd
.lim llenr~· popped in a free
thnJW with J:-\2 left in the per·
iod. lkL'P Matthew s ' lol'{:: twin
pointer with 5:03left in the first
period was the ga me' s first field

Thump Foe

99

NEW FALL AND WINTER FASHIONS.

~

t111.· thit·d stanza, and
lli.'\'t.'L'
headed, (;.J\IJS led [)~J--1!! after
three pL•riods of piiiJ. Wilh J :-111
h•rt in t11e final period, the Bur·
sonians held their bi~csllcad ~
IJ poillt S- li6-51.
Durin).: lhL' final two minute:;,
Coad1 Burson c-leared the bem·h
- all 131:Jo)·s who were dn.·sscd

.;m, the Parllhcrs of l'oadt Dan gut into the mntesL
llenr.1 topped all ~eon·rs with
1lusscll forgt&gt;(l ahead 3.~37 on
guard .fohn Snell's buekct at :11 markers. Fcndcrbnsch rinthe buner, end in~-: fir~t half piaL ishcd wilh Ii', and Crcg Smith
It was the Panthers onl } lead of pumped in 1:! for (;'liS, Beep
Matthew s , another suartcr, fin the nighL
GAllS, paced b.\ bi~Z Mike Fen- ished with eigl1t, aM Tom Spenderbosc h and sharp-shootill; Jim ct•r wound up with four - he
Henq and Greg smith's n·bourxl- cullccu.&gt;d four fouls car}) in U1c
lrw:, regained the lead early in ga me. Spcnn·•· fouled uut with

HIM ANEW .

Attractive bulky knit
cardigan
sweaters,

IUuc lk,il:-.

t'UI'Ull:l'll'Cl for ~:! pdint s in the
. lhit'd Pl' L'it:d whi]C' huldin~ \'i!'ilill:
Chc-sapeahc to I I, thl'n Wl'nl un
to dump the Lawn'IR'l' Cmmtian:-.
Stl-1~. ll wa11 the I%S-tl!l hat·dwuod ope1wr for both quintet s.
\\'ith a parhl'd huu:-.c looking

106 MAIN ST.- POMEROY

CARDIGAN
SWEATERS

l;allivoli~&gt;

t'

Trip Panthers 80-72 In Opener

ONLY 2\ S/101'1'/Nr; /JAYS TO GO'

..
~

POMEROY
MOTOR CO.
308·318 E. Main

All gift certificate!li to be

POMEROY, OHIO

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

992·2126
award..d are

good at

AMY

participating Mtrchant.

2od DRAWING 1,00 P.M. Oocember 7, 1968
Prites: 12 inch Portable T.V.
-~~--~"/ SSO .OO Gift Certificate &amp; S25 Gift Certificate

lrd DRAWING 1,00 P.M. Oocember 14, 1968
Prizu: 12 inch Portable T . V .,

SSO.OO Gih Certificate &amp; $25 Gift Certificate
41~ DRAWING 1,00 P.M. Oecombet
Puzes: Color T.V. and Stereo

24, 19'8

SANTA ARRIVES......
BIG PARADE IN POMEROY
SATURDAY, NOV .30-1 P.M.
'I

)

••

�J~

~Gallians
(i _\l.l.ll'tlLIS - Coad1 I&gt; 11 h

Burson':-.

·TANKER
JACKET

LADIES'
BULKY KNIT

make ext-ellent girts for
he r . Regular values to
$7.99. Sizes J.J to '10.

SPORTSWEAR

99

FLAT KNIT OR MESH

Trim Holl.ay Lim•s With

NYLON HOSE
Designed for the shorter
skirts, high welt sheer 1\Y-

·

Stretch factor gives bet·
ter fit, marvelous cling

in bag areas. In new fall

Place Your Order Now

Wreaths
Polled Plants

BUY NOW

Graue 13/ankcls
Corsaws
Arli f•c Ia I A"""Rcme nl s

CHRISTMAS GIFT
WRAP PAPER

4·

al'l:l winter shades.

' ROLL
PKG.

. 6 ROLL PIG.

44~

··~

MEN'S
PERMA-PRESS .

to 17.

99

"CAMPUS" BRAND
SPORT SHIRTS

Use Stiffler's layaway to btll' , _, ,,..
Mattei's Baby Small Talk or
Sister Small Talk ... who say
"Baby Help MOIIIIIIJ'7'" and sev·

HEART PIN AND FLOWER PIN
KlDDLES

Phooo 992·2644

rill )IWIIf}' )'OU Un - l r l

• KIDDl£ doll• onlr 71•"' •nd 1~{,'" 11n
pop out fo' upJrete pl11yt
• Slletr eet~h pin! M1teh .. In)' IIUlfitl

Famous "Campus" brand sport shirts, button down and regular collars, sizes small,
medium, large and erln large.

99

99

MODEL CARS

EACH

Special Manufacturer's Asst.

CHENILLE
ous "Match Box'· cars. Start
BEDS_P. READS
your collection ol these
,1
Authentic scale models or ram-

.
55

fam10011

today,

GIVE HER
A NEW QUILTED

.

Foil ot lwl" bod -4
shea, lint-free
chenille, In lo¥1•
ly decorator so llol

~

EA.

..1 ... ••

color•. Regulor
$6.99.

99
'

-

EACH

(;i\LI.JJ&gt;OLIS - Coach cJiff
Wihmn's &lt;iAJIS Blue Imps built
up a cnmmarxling 34-7 halftime
lead, then went on to thump the
l"hesapeakc reserves 61-29 in
their opening hardwood ~~lA~-~
here Frida}' night.
"lllirte cn Imps saw a.clion. All
bul thrce manaRed to tally one or
more points.
Bruce Wilson was the big gun
with H , followed (')osely by Larr) Snowden'h 13. Ron Ferguson

H NDB GS
These new leatherli~e vinyl handbags make ideal gifts,
·new shapes , ner. solid colors. Com~are at~·~·~.

EACH

l't •

__

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

-· ..... ---"""-"""·-

~

'"

.-

.

.

......

•

3

17

2
2

0
I

0
0
10

0
6
0
0
2
72

Oakwood 64 Blue Creek 49
Hkksville 60 North Ce ntral 59
Str~;ker 7R llilltnp ~I
Conrinental r.g Tinora 51
Old I· ort SH Hcpublic -13.

llidgeville 79 De'&gt;hle r 57
Edge non i .J l'a.1 ne fi3
Holgate HII Malinta \.14 (ot)

Socks &amp; Sl'inner·•
by Esquire

SLACKS
b)' Joymor &amp;
Hubbard

JADE EAST
Cologne, After Shave, Soap,
Deodorant

KNIT SHIRTS

Tut11e aod Mock Turtle neck

Remember!

,
MEN S JEWELRY
&amp; BILLFOLDS _..
by Swank

RAINWEAR &amp; ALL
WEATHER COATS
by Alligator

PAJAMAS
by Arrow &amp; Rei !li

NECKWEAR ...
by Sup•rbo

SUITS &amp;
SPORT COATS
by Styl•mort &amp;
Middi shade

• SHOP FRI. TIL 8
• SHOP SAT. TIL 9

USE OUR LAY
AWAY PLAN NOW!
SHOP NOW!

Downie-Gross
"HOME OF ARROW SHIRTS"

Pomeroy

Main St.

5th Annual Gold Star

3 !l 13 - '!9

Christmas . Give-Away
Sponsored by Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce.

CAMARO Z/28

IN
MERCHANDISE PRIZES
and Gin CERTIFICATES

WILL
LOVE OUR . _
MEN'S HI·BULK

All Drawings Held in Pomeroy

I

Parking Lot.

I

·ORLON
DRESS

sox

Begins Nov. 25-En•s Dec. 24
ALL PARTICIPATING
STORES WILL GIVE
FREE TICKETS.

I
I

No purchase necessary.
Need nol be present to win.
Winners will be nolified.

4 BIG GIVE-AWAYS
NOV. 30-DEC. 7-DEC. 14-DEC. 24
ht DRAWING 1,00 P.M. November 30 1968
Prizes : $50.00 gi h certificate and '
2 •• S25.00 Gift Certificates

FLANNELETTE
PAJAMAS
&amp; GOWNS

~~~WSHOP
POMEROY
STORES
DISPLAYING
THE
GOLD STAR

THIS IS HOW YOU CAN MAKE YOUR
CAMARO A SPORTING PROPOSITION.
,.

You can build your Camaro from an economical family car
all the way to a spirited sport.9ter with a name to match :

warm, comfortable a... ·
tWletto. Solid colors and

Z/ 28. Read over our power team choices and pick the one
that matches your idea of a car ,{'We'll stArt with our
strongest. Z!2R Camara. Thia is our mean streak. A tough
car to match, R hard ear to top. Z/28 iRa high-performanC'e

4-Speed l.ranKmis."ihn wil.h HurHt ftonr·mounted shift

,

0

14
9
20

TheHOTONE!

option package for the Camaro Sport Coujle. Includes a
special 290·hp Turbo. Fire 302 V~. quick.ratio •leering,
~pedal fim"pen~ion, ~pedal white let.t.ered tires, !'pecial rniJv
Ktriping, 7. ,'21'1 emhlems Anrl more. PoWer rliHr· bra.keto ami.

•

2

Top Performer In Its Class Today ••• •••••

She U love either a piJr
of pa,iamas or a gown ot

POMEROY

HATS ...

I

9~HOICE

99

••

TO TP

CALLIPOLJS BLUE DEVILS (80)
PLAYEH- Pos.
I'I.M-A I'TM -A HB PF TO TP
Jim Henr y, F. ..... , . .. .... , .13-22
5-1!1
10
3
31
Tom Prose, F . • . . . • . . • . . • . • • J-1
3-.J
2
4
3
5
2
Mike Fenderbosch , (', ... , , , , , , .5-8
7-8
9
4
17
Tom Spenccr, (; .. . ..• , •.. , •.. 2-6
0-0
9
5
4
3
Henr) Salas, (; . . . . . . . . , , , , , . 1·4
0.0
u
I
3
2
{ireg Smith, 1... , , , .• , , . , ••• , , 5-6
2~
12
5
0
12
e
Bluey,
·
.
,
,
..
.
•
•
,
.
•
.
.
.
..()
0..()
0
2 u
Gr g P ·'
I'
0
0
Reep Matthews, G ..•• , , • , , , , , J-10
2-3
3
2
0
8
Lonnie Bush, G ••• . . . .•••..•. 11-0
1-4
u u u
Dean Alberli, F ...... , , , . .. , .. 0-0
0-0
0
0
0
0
Norm Gilmore, C, • , • , . , , . , . , •• 0..0
0-0
0
0
0
Mik~ Orr, F , , . , . , , , , , , . , . , . , 0-Q
0-0
0
1 0
0
ltand} llamilton, G, ....••. , , , , , 0-0
0-1
0
0
0
0
TOTAL'&gt;
30-57 20-33 45 25 15 80
Points in Each ()uarter :
Chesapeake . • . . • . . . . • • . . • . • • • . . • , lfi 22 11 23- 72
Gallipoli s . • . • . . . . • • • . • ••••••••. 18 19 22 21-80
Key to abo'l'e figun~s: HIM-A, field goals made, attempted;
FTM-/\, tree throws made, attempted; RB, rebounds; PF, personal
fouls; TO, turnovers; TP, total points.

FOR
WARMTH WITHOUT
WEIGHT GIVE HER
EACH

FOR A MAN!
b)' Portis

~cner.

CIII ·~'&gt; AI'EAKE Pi\NTHF:Il"i (Tl)
PLAYF.H - Pos,
1-'{jM-A 1-"J'M-.&lt;\ HB PF
Mark Wilks. I' .... . . . . . . .. .•. 6-9
2-3
&gt; &gt;
.Jim Fairchild, V ......... .. .... 2-9
.&gt;-."&gt;
2 2
Malcolm Adkins, C. ....•. , .•.. . fi-12
!1~14
3
.John Snell, G . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . G-.15
:;.. 10
.Jeff Snell, G . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . t-4
0-1
Paul Larrico, F. , ... . . , • , .•. , • 1-3
lla}' llalleek, F ......... . . , . . . . 0-1
0-0
Bill Arms, C . . , , , • , • , , • , , . , , • 2-4
2-2
I
Brian Nh:hol s, F ••...••••..•..• ().fl
0~
0
Mike llenson, C • ..• .••••..••.•• O..(l
II~
0
.John Smith, 1-". .......... .. ..... 1-2
0~
3
TOTAL"i
25-59 22-36 IB 24

R:o· quarters :
I:Uul' Imps .... I~ "!.2 !I I H- Iii

YOUR CHOICE ONLY

LADIES' NEW HOLIDAY

The t•anlhcrs had 24 per~onals .
Tbc Hlue J)evils will host Logan Frida)i niJ,ttlt in their 196R-69

GARS-Chesapeake Box

NYLON DUSTER
For warmth, for beauty,
for a wanted girt for her,
buy a quilted nylon duster.
Values to$7.9!latStirfier's
in Pomeroy. Pastel colors,
sizes S.. M·L.

pact.-d by Malcolm ,1\dkins' ~even.

Sweaters &amp; Jack

88
EACH

foul circle~o~ for 61 per cent. Chesapeake hauled duwn HI rebound~.

SEOAL

~::::··---,

en more sayings in ·
·tiny voices

• Thl tlnlelt KIDOLES ol 111 lntidl

PLAINS ••• PLAIDS -·· PRINTS

YOUR
GIFTS

In Opener

FOR LADIES AND CHILDREN

EACH

A
SMALL
DEPOSIT
HOLDS

FRANCIS FLORIST

E. Main Str•et
Res . 992-2252
Pomeroy, 0 .
GREENHOUSE PHONE 992.3402

. HOLIDAY
GI_FT SLIPPERS

permanent

"FRUIT OF THE LOOM"

59'

Dell~ery o~&gt;

Telev•oph
Ord•••·

. GIVE

SHIRTS

ramous brand in sizes 141/~

Guooonteed

Fcndcrboseh and ~enccr collected nine l·ad1. (; ,'\liS t·ommitled 25 personal foul:,.
Chesapeake hit 25 or 59 rr om
the field for 42.3 per &lt;"e nL The
Panthers madl· 22 of 31i from the

,.,

Blue Jmps

Chesapeake •.. -1

WHITE DRESS
press white dren shJrts,
long sleeve styles, regular and button down collars. Yoo'll recognize the

(iallipolis t•ommiUL&gt;d IS lurnowrs - six in the set·ond tanto. The Panther:- outscored GAllS 2:!-HI in that pel"iod. Chesapeake lost till' ball 111 limes fhe l'IIS turnovers came in lhe
final period.
(;,"IS hit 30 of 57 rrom the
field fur 52.6 per l'Cill. From the
charity clrdes, tile Gallians hit
21! of 33 for 61 per cent . The
Ciallian:&gt;
hauled
down
45&gt;
rebourDs. (;reg Smith had 12 l'iiX ca me in the big third quarter. Henry pulled down 10 while

Cor the lo:.ers.
The Imps ledl2-4,34-7,and4JIIi at t he quarter marks. Box
scort·:
BLI.:E IMP~ - Wilson, 7-()..14;
!\oe, 2-J-7; Snowden, -t-$-13; Ballard. 2-U-4; Ferguson, 6-0-12;
stebbins, 1-0·2; \"ort h, :!-ti-l;
.Johnson, l-0-2; ll1omas, U-0-U;
-\ . Wedemeyer, 1.._0-{l; M Da\·is,
()..()-U; B. Smith, t..(l-2; Myers,
0-1·1. TD 'L\LS: :!!)..9-fol.
CIIES,\I'F \1\E HESEH\'ES Whille}, 2-H--1; (;rant, J-t-7; .\d·
killS, 2--1-H; Wil~on. 3-ll-6; Thacker, 0--1-.J; TOT .\I..I.i: 10-~-29.

PERSONNEL TO SERVE YOU BEST!

GREETING CARDS

TOPPER'S TINY
BABY MAGIC

~oal.

added 12. L&gt;on .J\dkins had eight

PHONE
992-2644
AND

21 COUNT lOX

WeU - made

Centerpieces

Poimetti~Js

..""""" N\eMiest ChristmaS

100

Ions with no - run toes.

EACH

COLORS·· PATTERNS '

TWO PAIRS
A

Compliment your hosten
dec k
your holl with beautiful and tradi·
tional flowers. We have fresh cut
blooms ,
table
arrangements
and
green s to bring the spirit of Christ·
mas into your home . Stop in soon or
ca ll us to

\ tanker jlcket- fof
man in your life will be
-·a welcome gift. In black
or olive, with knit cu0'1
and waistband, warm lined,
closure. Ccmparea

• BLOUSES
' • HOLIDAY DRESSES
• SHELLS
• SHORTS
• PANTS
,• SKIRTS • JACKETS
• COORDINATES
•SWEATERS
• JACKETS
ALL 1N riiGH FASHION FROM • ....;-...;_

:J:5-I leO in the thiL'd unto. (i ,\IIS
k'tl -17--11 at the time. Crcg Smllh
fooh:d out latt· in the Mme.
('hcsapcahc had tl1rcc m~..·n in
the double n~-:urcs. Makulm 1\dkins, t·enter, led the loser s wilh
211 marker s. (iuard John Snell
pumped io 17 and forward Mark
Wilks added 14. . Jim Fairchild
finished with nine.
Play was rather s luggish at
times. Nlether team managed to
~o.:ore following the 011ening lipnff until (; ,"IS st"nior fo rwa rd
.lim llenr~· popped in a free
thnJW with J:-\2 left in the per·
iod. lkL'P Matthew s ' lol'{:: twin
pointer with 5:03left in the first
period was the ga me' s first field

Thump Foe

99

NEW FALL AND WINTER FASHIONS.

~

t111.· thit·d stanza, and
lli.'\'t.'L'
headed, (;.J\IJS led [)~J--1!! after
three pL•riods of piiiJ. Wilh J :-111
h•rt in t11e final period, the Bur·
sonians held their bi~csllcad ~
IJ poillt S- li6-51.
Durin).: lhL' final two minute:;,
Coad1 Burson c-leared the bem·h
- all 131:Jo)·s who were dn.·sscd

.;m, the Parllhcrs of l'oadt Dan gut into the mntesL
llenr.1 topped all ~eon·rs with
1lusscll forgt&gt;(l ahead 3.~37 on
guard .fohn Snell's buekct at :11 markers. Fcndcrbnsch rinthe buner, end in~-: fir~t half piaL ishcd wilh Ii', and Crcg Smith
It was the Panthers onl } lead of pumped in 1:! for (;'liS, Beep
Matthew s , another suartcr, fin the nighL
GAllS, paced b.\ bi~Z Mike Fen- ished with eigl1t, aM Tom Spenderbosc h and sharp-shootill; Jim ct•r wound up with four - he
Henq and Greg smith's n·bourxl- cullccu.&gt;d four fouls car}) in U1c
lrw:, regained the lead early in ga me. Spcnn·•· fouled uut with

HIM ANEW .

Attractive bulky knit
cardigan
sweaters,

IUuc lk,il:-.

t'UI'Ull:l'll'Cl for ~:! pdint s in the
. lhit'd Pl' L'it:d whi]C' huldin~ \'i!'ilill:
Chc-sapeahc to I I, thl'n Wl'nl un
to dump the Lawn'IR'l' Cmmtian:-.
Stl-1~. ll wa11 the I%S-tl!l hat·dwuod ope1wr for both quintet s.
\\'ith a parhl'd huu:-.c looking

106 MAIN ST.- POMEROY

CARDIGAN
SWEATERS

l;allivoli~&gt;

t'

Trip Panthers 80-72 In Opener

ONLY 2\ S/101'1'/Nr; /JAYS TO GO'

..
~

POMEROY
MOTOR CO.
308·318 E. Main

All gift certificate!li to be

POMEROY, OHIO

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

992·2126
award..d are

good at

AMY

participating Mtrchant.

2od DRAWING 1,00 P.M. Oocember 7, 1968
Prites: 12 inch Portable T.V.
-~~--~"/ SSO .OO Gift Certificate &amp; S25 Gift Certificate

lrd DRAWING 1,00 P.M. Oocember 14, 1968
Prizu: 12 inch Portable T . V .,

SSO.OO Gih Certificate &amp; $25 Gift Certificate
41~ DRAWING 1,00 P.M. Oecombet
Puzes: Color T.V. and Stereo

24, 19'8

SANTA ARRIVES......
BIG PARADE IN POMEROY
SATURDAY, NOV .30-1 P.M.
'I

)

••

�SWIFT'S CANNED
- LB.

Till

;•sa.iiiAGE 2 lLIAG99~
STANDARD

~

.
••

..

FRUIT
COCKTAIL

OYSTERS•••.:!!~~--99,.

GELATIN

BISCUITS

3 OL
PKG.'

1 LB. 14 OZ.
NO. 2h

SOL

CAN

CAN

18 Ll UP

Rova

lb~
FOODUND SALTINE

NESTLES

CRACKERS__:~x_2 5~ CHOC. MORSELS..~~---4
HERSHEY'S INSTANT
CAKE
LB.4
BOXES 1. 0
CHOCOLATE DRINK BOX

PILLSBURY

Thank-goodness For••.
. •~

~ -;-:-

STORCK'S BROWN AND SERVE·

It's the season of abundan&lt;e. On&lt;e again we're
bringing you the finest of nature's bountiful harvest ..
everything for a memorable Thanksgiving feast.

.C'

P

. '

·:-~ -

~~

DINNER

ROLLS.~~---!:..

FOODLAND

SUPER MKT

~LlJLAYORS

ofFROZE·N·:·c . . :. JO 0~ PKG
STRAWBERRIES----------

ICE
CREAM·---~~--~

1/2 GAL.

GOLDEN
YAMS

BROUGHTON'S

ALL OF YOUR
HOLIDAY NEEDS
i

PARTY
NOG

p
0

u

N
0

LIBBY'S OR DEL MONTE

.

YELLOW GLOBE

OPEN REGULAR
HOURS ALL WEEK

QT.

'

CHESTNUTS - SAGE TANGELOS - APPLES

NO.
21/2
CANS

CLOSED
THANKSGIVING

DAY

-ONIONS.____________,3

p
0

u

N
0

.~·G 29~

TINY'S
HENDERSON, W. VA .
KANAUGA, 0.

CRISP
FRESH
CALIFORNIA'S
FINEST

.' I

( ' ·r.' !·,., .,
.:~~

'

Stalk
wuaum

=·

MD

iii-

•

,..._ "''

i&gt;,J.It~;· '

'' '

.,. .---.--····-....

,,·•

.,,

l

\'

�SWIFT'S CANNED
- LB.

Till

;•sa.iiiAGE 2 lLIAG99~
STANDARD

~

.
••

..

FRUIT
COCKTAIL

OYSTERS•••.:!!~~--99,.

GELATIN

BISCUITS

3 OL
PKG.'

1 LB. 14 OZ.
NO. 2h

SOL

CAN

CAN

18 Ll UP

Rova

lb~
FOODUND SALTINE

NESTLES

CRACKERS__:~x_2 5~ CHOC. MORSELS..~~---4
HERSHEY'S INSTANT
CAKE
LB.4
BOXES 1. 0
CHOCOLATE DRINK BOX

PILLSBURY

Thank-goodness For••.
. •~

~ -;-:-

STORCK'S BROWN AND SERVE·

It's the season of abundan&lt;e. On&lt;e again we're
bringing you the finest of nature's bountiful harvest ..
everything for a memorable Thanksgiving feast.

.C'

P

. '

·:-~ -

~~

DINNER

ROLLS.~~---!:..

FOODLAND

SUPER MKT

~LlJLAYORS

ofFROZE·N·:·c . . :. JO 0~ PKG
STRAWBERRIES----------

ICE
CREAM·---~~--~

1/2 GAL.

GOLDEN
YAMS

BROUGHTON'S

ALL OF YOUR
HOLIDAY NEEDS
i

PARTY
NOG

p
0

u

N
0

LIBBY'S OR DEL MONTE

.

YELLOW GLOBE

OPEN REGULAR
HOURS ALL WEEK

QT.

'

CHESTNUTS - SAGE TANGELOS - APPLES

NO.
21/2
CANS

CLOSED
THANKSGIVING

DAY

-ONIONS.____________,3

p
0

u

N
0

.~·G 29~

TINY'S
HENDERSON, W. VA .
KANAUGA, 0.

CRISP
FRESH
CALIFORNIA'S
FINEST

.' I

( ' ·r.' !·,., .,
.:~~

'

Stalk
wuaum

=·

MD

iii-

•

,..._ "''

i&gt;,J.It~;· '

'' '

.,. .---.--····-....

,,·•

.,,

l

\'

�--·----

25 -

•

The Sundlly Times • Sentinel, Sunday, November :.!-1, 1 ~6H

--.-

CLOSED THANKSGIVINGS DAY

-~

..

-·
.-.

RADIO
• ·. . 6 TRANSISTER

-·..•·--··-·-··--·;::

-=
...·--

I

I'

-

I

COMPLETE
LINE

ROOM
SIZE

RUGS

'

're Of•" t.,er'l Night
Vf e 'ti\ C.bristlftOS

AMICO
DOLL CHAIR&amp;
FEEDING SET

-.

'

·--·....
..·-.
-·..
...
~

~

OF

LARGE
PLASTIC
BOWLS

44

~

~ EACH

KENSINGTON
AC-DC
PORT ABLE RADIO

·-·-.....

··~

..
...

44

..

'
.!;

...-·...·.
_...
----··

lOSt

BlB1
LAY
A-WAY

KERPLUNK

I

'

51

'"

...

-------·

.-.
·.-·
--·.

l~

22

1::

-·-·--·---

IDEAL
POPPIN
HOPPlE
GAME

' -

16x20

88~
DISH
TOWELS
OF 6

SINGLE

WELLER
SODERING
GUN KIT

-

PICTURES

PKG.

::u 12.88
DOUBLE
BED

..

"-.11/

HY-FRY
COOKER &amp; FRYER

BLANKETS

.......,

~

11.96

ELECTRIC

·--·
.··--

'

IDEAL
MOTORIFIC
WHIRLWIND
RACERIFIC
CAR SET

NORTHERN

·--·--

66

93

NOW

'

GAME

ATTEL-0-PHONE

; ..

-·---··-,_
--..
·-·-·-

IDEAL

DOLL
OUTFITS

DOll

22

HERMAL
BLANKE-T
72x90

97
EACH

KEYSTONE
INSTANT LOADING

CAMERA KIT

1 88

·-

·-.......
----·
--~

'

'

2.99

·--

TINY'S
-D&amp;TOYLA
~- II Y' BARGAINL

------....
..

CLOSED
THANKSGIVING DlY

4

CLOSED
THANKSGIVING
DAY
. .'

".

�--·----

25 -

•

The Sundlly Times • Sentinel, Sunday, November :.!-1, 1 ~6H

--.-

CLOSED THANKSGIVINGS DAY

-~

..

-·
.-.

RADIO
• ·. . 6 TRANSISTER

-·..•·--··-·-··--·;::

-=
...·--

I

I'

-

I

COMPLETE
LINE

ROOM
SIZE

RUGS

'

're Of•" t.,er'l Night
Vf e 'ti\ C.bristlftOS

AMICO
DOLL CHAIR&amp;
FEEDING SET

-.

'

·--·....
..·-.
-·..
...
~

~

OF

LARGE
PLASTIC
BOWLS

44

~

~ EACH

KENSINGTON
AC-DC
PORT ABLE RADIO

·-·-.....

··~

..
...

44

..

'
.!;

...-·...·.
_...
----··

lOSt

BlB1
LAY
A-WAY

KERPLUNK

I

'

51

'"

...

-------·

.-.
·.-·
--·.

l~

22

1::

-·-·--·---

IDEAL
POPPIN
HOPPlE
GAME

' -

16x20

88~
DISH
TOWELS
OF 6

SINGLE

WELLER
SODERING
GUN KIT

-

PICTURES

PKG.

::u 12.88
DOUBLE
BED

..

"-.11/

HY-FRY
COOKER &amp; FRYER

BLANKETS

.......,

~

11.96

ELECTRIC

·--·
.··--

'

IDEAL
MOTORIFIC
WHIRLWIND
RACERIFIC
CAR SET

NORTHERN

·--·--

66

93

NOW

'

GAME

ATTEL-0-PHONE

; ..

-·---··-,_
--..
·-·-·-

IDEAL

DOLL
OUTFITS

DOll

22

HERMAL
BLANKE-T
72x90

97
EACH

KEYSTONE
INSTANT LOADING

CAMERA KIT

1 88

·-

·-.......
----·
--~

'

'

2.99

·--

TINY'S
-D&amp;TOYLA
~- II Y' BARGAINL

------....
..

CLOSED
THANKSGIVING DlY

4

CLOSED
THANKSGIVING
DAY
. .'

".

�-1-\
-

Th~ Sunda}' Times - sentinel, Sund~y, Nowmbcl' :!-\, 1%X

27 -

The Sunday Times - Sentinel, SUnd:a.)', No\'ember 24, 1968

Clean Combs Often
want to use a disinfectant on
your favorite combs, and

hard-rubber combs withstand these fluids best. Your
comb should be smooth to

Philco Big Screen
Rectangular Color TV

We Want to Help You
With Your
Christmas
Sh,opping •.•
fl' QIClurt me.,.mod!J/_,.)1,.1186 ~.111. Jl/dur •

JUST ARRIJED

TRUCKLOAD
FESCO

HIGH

models have: these features:
t. Phi leo 26,~volt Color Pilot Cool
• Phi leo Magicolor Picture Tube

QUALITY

Channel·~~~~,~~~i~

• Lighted VHF/UHF
Memory-Matic VHF Preset Fine
• S1mphfaed Color Preference Controls

,....

-

I:
0

WASTEBASKET
FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

N. 2ND AVE.

"'
1...
z
c
-

.,

ASST. COLORS

GALLIPOLIS - The Greene tain Thompson arrived r r om
Line, Inc. , lost itswhartage_prlv. F1orida. Pilot Joe Dose of Cb~
ileges at Charleston, W. VL,just clnn1ti Is steering the Tamiami
50 years ago this mmth. accord- which is lard to contro1 In wtrKI.
Rivermen may be Interested
Ing to the River News in the GalIn the following scale of wages
lipolis Dally Tr!OOre.
Inlluenu had hit many towbol.t a d - by the U. S. Shipping
crews and miners Ill and down Board In June for veasels oper~
the river. The U. S. Shi_pping ating in ocean harbors, biJ's,
rivers, and soonds, also the bo~
B~rd adopted a scale of wages
affecting rivermen. Here are us for \'esseb going lhrDUKh the
those and other stories !rom the war zone..
(al)tains per month - tll0Tribune:
$300, bonus, $3~150; First
NOV, 18, 1918 - IT IS report- mateo - $140-$165, bows,$2111ed lllat Henry Ford, the Detroit $247; Second mates - $125-$150,
automobile manufacturer, has or bows, $187-$225; Third mateswill purchase the Raymord City $110 • $135, bonus, $16S-$202i
mines of the Otto Marmet Coal Fourth mates- -$11H120,bonand Towboat Co.
us, $172-4180; Chief engineer Clptain J, HarWiy Stewart. $160-$230, bon.ls, $240-$345;
"the old reliable" boat builder First auistant e~neer - $140ar Kanauga, was a prominent $165, bonus, $210-$247; Second
Gallipolis business visitor Mon- usistant - $1254150, bows,
day.
$187-4225; Third assistant $110-$135, bonus, $165-$202; aoo
NOV.' 19, 1918- TilE rains or Fourth assistant - $11~120,
the past two days have been more booos, $1724180.
We got the above scale or
or less of a general nature and
wages
from the International
a general rise has occurred in
Marine
Engineering.
the rivers.
Major S. r. Neal, local weathNOV. 21, 1918- THE Charleser obsener, reported but .40 or
ton,
W. Va. wtlarfage privileges
an Inch of rain, all told, here up
have
been turned over to a Charto this morning.
leston
company oC businessmen
The fish boat Tamiami len
by
the
city council ror a term or
here Monday for the south.
five
years.
A large wharf from
The ferryboat Pike's name will
Louisville
will
be taken to Charbe changed to the City or HWltleston
where
!or
some time the
ington where she will be oper·
Greene
Lines
has
had a small
ated as soon as her repairs are
whartboat
ronnerly
used at Pt.
completed at PL Pleasant. She is
Pleasant.
a much larger ferryboat than the
old one.
NOV. 22, 1918- CAPTAINHo-

-~

• Sportswear by Cresco and McGregor

LONG WEARING
FINE FOR
STAIRWAYS,

• Hose, by Interworen
• Shirts by Manhattan, Enro &amp; Shapely

\

TINY'S BARGAI LAND
I

/

\

There are 88 constellaUons.

for Christmas Gifting

SINGER

BUY "HERS" NOW AT .... .

[tHE

FA~RIC SHOP)

Sin.., S.l•o &amp; S...V!co &amp; McC.IIs Pot~en~s

POIEROY,O

115 W. SECOND
:.:: .... .=..... --

..:.:__I

Hartley's ....

In Pomeroy
.,

F~hion's

Most Exciting
FAMOUS

BRANDS

+++ +++
YEAR

PLAYER

1944. •
• . . . •••..• •• •...•• •• . . •.• H0111er Burton
1945 . . , • • •.• .••• , • , • • • • . . . . • . . . • . Vance JohnSOI
1946
• • . . . • .. .• . ..•..• •• •.• • • .. ••• Jim Slmmo
1947
. • • • . • , • , • . ...••.•...•• ... •• . Bill Johnson
1948 • • . • • . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... , .. Bob Marchi
1949 . • • . . . • . • • . . . • • . • . . • • • • • . . • • • • BUl Hopn
1950
. . . , , , , • ..•••••. . .••.•.•• .. .. Jackie Jackson
1951 . • • . . . . . • . ..••••• , • , • , .• , . • , . .Jackie Jack5on
1952 • • • • • • • ••. •• • ••• •.• •• • , • • • • ..• James Halley
1953 • • • . • . .. " . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . ' Dan Beobout
1954 • . . . ••...•••••.••••••••. • •. . ••• Jack Simms
1955 • . . • . • •. • .. . • • .. . .•. •• , •.•• •. , • • carl Jenkins
1956 . • , . • •. • .. , .••...••• . . .• • . ••.•• • Bert ~Uh
1957 • • . . . . • . .. . . ••.••••••....•• .. . . • Ron carr
1958 , • • • . . . . . . . . . .... . . . . . . . . . . .... . Joy Simms
1959 .•.• • •.• . • , ••••••• . . ••. ••.. •.••• Tom Hopn
1960 . . .•• •• .. , . •.• , •••... , . , .• , .. , , • Dick Roderick
1961 . • • • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . .. . .. .. . Anly GUmore
1962 . . .. . •• . . . , • • ••. , ••••••••• .• . . • • Dan Howard
1963 •• .. . .. . . ......•.•• • , •.• .• ••.• .• Larry Fraley
1964 ••.•.•• , •.. . .•••...•. . .•••••.•. • Bill Wamoley
1965 • . . . . .. •... . ••••.• • ••• . •• •....•• Pete Andersoo
1966 ••••.. . .. . ... . • • , • , ••• • •.•••• • • • Darm,y Davies
1967 , • . • . . • . • •.••••• . .. . . •• ••• , •. .• • Jim GUm..-e
1968 . • . . . • . •. • • • ' •.•••• •••. • .. .. . •• • 7 ? 7 7

++++++
"JUST Between Us," a weekly column CUil)iled by Tlmes--.Seftt.
Ina! otalfer Pat Houck, ..W reoc&gt;poar ohcJrtb. Pa~ who undenfent
aurgery at the Holzer Mecliell center on Nov. 12, upecta to be
baick at her desk within tJw next few dlys. "PAH", in a telephone
conwr•tion last week, ll1d she's getUrw alorw ftne, and tlw.t

FVR HER!

Joyu
Connie
Jacqueline
Paris Faahion
Min Wonderful
Hut.h Puppies

Dr. Scholl's
Nlghttimer House Slipp•n

Connl• Handbags
Hosiery

t.,.

Archer

FOR HIM!
Flonh•im
Jarman

Rand
Ranclcroh
Hush Puppin
Ac111e

Rod Wing
Wol•erine

++++ ++

l'ur Over H l'_,.,

r.

TWENTY YEARS AGO, tr001 tho nleo of tho Dally TribWIII and
weekly Gallla Tlmea ••. Local re11dent1 recet~3,200ChriatmasSe1Js
In mall, ~ is $2,700 ror auoclatlon's work In 1949•••City recr&amp;. • - comml11ioo seta II) f11,276 budpt lor 1949. .•MrL Noll R.
Fronldln, 39, Bidwell, dies aller 1.,. mnoaL .. New $45,000,000 Jn.
dualrlal Rayon COQ)on.Uoo plant ID· bo built alolW Ohio River noor
Pt. Pluoant, ..W hire 2,000 lndlvldllllo... Miu Dorio Rl.. ljlPGinted
- Gollio Count)' hOOie apnt. ..Ge• Wethorbol~ Bob Marchi •ecolli telm, All-Ohio, by Untied Pren,
Folden, BUl JCJID.
1011 recel'" hononblo montloo AIJ.Ohlo p1d hoatlr1 ... l'llmm&gt;7 q&gt;o
seta Middleport 7-6, Jockslll blankl WeUstlln 7..0 ID aNIIII Turkey

w.,..

-----······llliiii---·J....IMIJIII--IIli-P.._._

"A GOLD STAR STORE"
1_

1111• • • lliJ'
tllta.
..OhloInStole
drqlt
82,754
thrGlW
Columbus.

IW

lliJ 10iiltll&gt; MldliiiD before re""nl

Stor Brand
Ball-Band
Goodrich

La

Cros. .
Justin Boots ontl

Bolio
8 rooh Sllooo For
Boys

'J:j)

"rest ucl reluation is wot~Mrtul."

SHOP NOW!

,, .

PRESENTATION or the most valuable player
trophy wlll tdghlight the awards ceremony. Tweney.rour Blue Devil gridders have recel'w'ed this cov~
eted award since It was first given ln 1944. Here's
a list of previous MVP' s:

1-

• Ties by Beau Brummell
• Shoes by Nunn·Bush
• Official Boy Scout Headquarters
• Complete Line Boys' Wear by Tom Sawyer
• ivy League Slacks For Men &amp; Boys by Levi

1

c

The C. C. Bowyer arr'ved here

++++++

• Und•wear by Faultless &amp; Hanes

l

.:1 n

SHOES
"Middle of lho Uppor. ll•ck"

¥
·.

!rom Huntington Friday night with

11IE Delaware State Reglater, LaUNI. DeL, reported CC.ch
Bishop's 1968 Junl..- Varall)'
•quod wao ''Probobly one o!
the best In the history of the achool." Bls}Q' s 1968 Laurel Hlgb
School equad won alx and loat ooe, and outscored the q,poaltion, 10431. Bishop stated, "1 aUII miss thlt Ohio !ooO&gt;alL I'll be In tho are1
around Chris-s time. Hope tD oee you ond some oi my old play.
ers."

• Belts by Hickok
• Sweaters by Revere &amp; Gillman &amp; Manhattan

-

Egypt.

++++++

• Slacks by Kenrldge

..--

per cent of the populotloll

IT'S SEW SIMPlE

RECEIVED a clipping recenlly !rom Richard (Dicl&lt;) Bishop, form.
er Gal.Upolis Junior High foneblll and basketblll cc.ch. Dick's Gal·
!!polls seventh and eighth sra&lt;le boys C&lt;J1!111Ued out&amp;tandiJW loolba1l
and basketball recorda here rcwo years leo.

• Lugeaee by Silllsonite (We Initial F-ree)

STEPS, AND
HALLWAYS
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO

Moslems form more UIM i1

+++ +++

His kind ol Christmas is
high on style, big on
comfort. It's casual . .
elegant . .. colorful.
It's the things he
needs and some
things just for fun. And
it's all here, ready for
wrapping . . . just for
him.

:J.'

•i

STOBART, now a backfield c~ch at Miami (Ohio) University,
coached the GAHS Blue DevOs to an undefeated season and the
SEOAL championship in 1960. The banquet will be
· held In the dining room at Grace United Methodist Church on MoJM!ay, Dec. 2, beginning at 6:30
p. m.

We're Ready For

w;

y•ur Ulo free el ft4!'l' .. ,
plna.
Ahroyl ,..... jeilr
·
111gb tllree.pme toW plno !Dr
wllll
••
eflcocllve
•••I
'
the evenlnl for women was Bet- Balli .u .....,. .........
\)' Ftmey wllb 534 pills and lor powder ...., malre ,... to!ll
lbo men was Doc Whi!Ao wtlb 58ll oorl of 1p0elal.
pins.

By HOBART WILSON, JR.
CHARLES (Chucl&lt;) Stobart, ex-Middleport aoo Ohio University
athlete, wlll be pst lj)llker durtrw the &lt;'•11fpoUa Blue Devlla'
261Jl annal post-ieiion~,..banquet.
·~ · ·
~ ~;t·- .

Hl16lft Store In Potnerou

CLOSED
THANKSGIVING
DAY

!llncllngo:
Team
Point•
Team 3 , .
. . . . . . . . 68
TeamD,.
. .. .. ... 83
Team 10 . . . .. . . . . . . 62
Team 5 . . . . . . ..... 52
Team 4 •
. .... ... f4l
Teom8
. . . . . . .... f41
Team I
.. .. ...... 44
mer Vuian, commander of the Team 2
. . . .. ... .. 37
Iarre towboat W. K. Fields, 18 , Teom 7
..... .. 31!
reported to hive been taken ott TeamS
. . . . . . .... 30
the boat at PL Pleasant dafwer·
On Tuellday, Nov. ID,thoCIHrrously UJ with a bad can of in- rolet Bowllng League at
fluenza. Clptain Varian 1a the !lcy11ne Lanea.
son ol Captain Elmer Varian. a
Teom 3 took 8 point&amp; !rom
well-known rlvennan.
Team 2. Georata Ritchie had blah
Mal\¥ towboat crews and min- lor Taom 3 wllb 512 tota1 pin1,
ers In and along the Pittsburgh and Doc Wbl!Ao had hll!h lor Team
pools have been put out of cmn- 2 wllb 586 toW pins.
misslon by the nu the last few
Team 10 took 8 pointe !rom
days. The disease has become Team 1. Jack Mink had hi&amp;b lor
more pre...ahmt again in many Team 10 wllb ~79 to1a1 pine, and
Dave Holley had hi&amp;b lor Team 1
localiUe•.
wtlb 549 tota1 pins,
NOV. 22, 1918- THE General
Team 9 took 8 pointa !rom
Wood arrived here Thursday aft- Team 8. Bob Byers had hi&amp;b lor
ernoon on her way to Charleston Team 9 wltll 484 to1a1 pins, and
with a light trip andretw-ntoday.
Ann Adklna had bl&amp;h lor Team
The packet Is reported to have 8 wtlb 441 total pino.
had a good trip (150-toos) out or
Team 7 took 8 _points !rom
Pittsburgh. Labor is very scarce Team 6. Charlie LuptDn had blah
on the river and the Wood hils lor Team 7 wllb 580 111ta1 pins,
more freight oaered, it is said, and EcN. JohniiClll had blah lor
tten she has deckhao:ls to handle Team 6 wllb 162 total pins.
Team 4 took 6 point• !rom
it. .
Team 5. SoniQ' &amp;llith had high
NOV. 23, 1918 - THE Pitts- lor Team 4 wllb 399 IDtal _pin&amp;,
burgh steamer General Wood is and Merriman Johnsoo had blah
said to be the best reeder on the
river. The deckhands on this
packet are said tobewell~treated
aOO well.red. Captain W. D. KiJn.. one of the largest trips of the
ble hopes to tave the Wood going
season. The packet had a big
through to Cincinnati beroremarzy
conslgmtent of turkeys am othweeks. She's the lugest and best
er produce ror local produce
equipped packet boat on the ti)IJE!r
houaes, which will be shipped to
Ohio River. Mates Tom Barton Pittsburgh aoo other points by
and William English are on tlle
rill
Wood with Howard Barton, watchman. Howard, it is said, is going
to make a Orst class mate.

NOV, 20, 1918 - THE propellor ftsh boat Tamiami w h i c h
started out from here Monday ror
St. Louis was blown across the
river and had to be s~ped by
throwing out the anchor, which
held her until today wl1en cal&gt;"

• Suits &amp; Topcoats by Joseph &amp; Feiss
• Hats by Stetson

yd.

*
JNt! •

CHEVROLET BOWLING
LEAGUE
Week t1 Nov. 19, 1988

+ + + ++ +

PORCHES, WALKS,

IN

..

'

lor Team 5 with 509 total pirul,
Beauty's ~ J
111gb pins lor lirwle pme !01'
Be••,,. •• ~- ..... ,, .,,
the evening tor women wu Bet- eleull.-. A Pllx, ~if'
\)' Finlley with 192 lin• ond lor llllower-tdPI
illllt.iif•'
the men wa1 Doc White with 212 .... rid ..

Local Bowling

• Suits &amp; Topcoats by Curlee

JUST IN TIME FOR THE BAD WEATHER
TRUCKLOAD

VINYL
MATING

-

reduce hair pull and protect
brittl~ hair. The more flexible th~ comb, such as hard
rubber. the less brittle it will
be and the more "give" It
will have. Be certain thaL
the teeth of your comb are
rounded so they won't dig
into your scalp.

Be sure that you select
combs which can wilhstand
constant cleanin~. You may

TRUCKLOAD SALE

.. .

p.,..,.,, Ot.lo

' .

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS TIL 9 (AIM 0,.. All 0., Thw..ril

�-1-\
-

Th~ Sunda}' Times - sentinel, Sund~y, Nowmbcl' :!-\, 1%X

27 -

The Sunday Times - Sentinel, SUnd:a.)', No\'ember 24, 1968

Clean Combs Often
want to use a disinfectant on
your favorite combs, and

hard-rubber combs withstand these fluids best. Your
comb should be smooth to

Philco Big Screen
Rectangular Color TV

We Want to Help You
With Your
Christmas
Sh,opping •.•
fl' QIClurt me.,.mod!J/_,.)1,.1186 ~.111. Jl/dur •

JUST ARRIJED

TRUCKLOAD
FESCO

HIGH

models have: these features:
t. Phi leo 26,~volt Color Pilot Cool
• Phi leo Magicolor Picture Tube

QUALITY

Channel·~~~~,~~~i~

• Lighted VHF/UHF
Memory-Matic VHF Preset Fine
• S1mphfaed Color Preference Controls

,....

-

I:
0

WASTEBASKET
FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

N. 2ND AVE.

"'
1...
z
c
-

.,

ASST. COLORS

GALLIPOLIS - The Greene tain Thompson arrived r r om
Line, Inc. , lost itswhartage_prlv. F1orida. Pilot Joe Dose of Cb~
ileges at Charleston, W. VL,just clnn1ti Is steering the Tamiami
50 years ago this mmth. accord- which is lard to contro1 In wtrKI.
Rivermen may be Interested
Ing to the River News in the GalIn the following scale of wages
lipolis Dally Tr!OOre.
Inlluenu had hit many towbol.t a d - by the U. S. Shipping
crews and miners Ill and down Board In June for veasels oper~
the river. The U. S. Shi_pping ating in ocean harbors, biJ's,
rivers, and soonds, also the bo~
B~rd adopted a scale of wages
affecting rivermen. Here are us for \'esseb going lhrDUKh the
those and other stories !rom the war zone..
(al)tains per month - tll0Tribune:
$300, bonus, $3~150; First
NOV, 18, 1918 - IT IS report- mateo - $140-$165, bows,$2111ed lllat Henry Ford, the Detroit $247; Second mates - $125-$150,
automobile manufacturer, has or bows, $187-$225; Third mateswill purchase the Raymord City $110 • $135, bonus, $16S-$202i
mines of the Otto Marmet Coal Fourth mates- -$11H120,bonand Towboat Co.
us, $172-4180; Chief engineer Clptain J, HarWiy Stewart. $160-$230, bon.ls, $240-$345;
"the old reliable" boat builder First auistant e~neer - $140ar Kanauga, was a prominent $165, bonus, $210-$247; Second
Gallipolis business visitor Mon- usistant - $1254150, bows,
day.
$187-4225; Third assistant $110-$135, bonus, $165-$202; aoo
NOV.' 19, 1918- TilE rains or Fourth assistant - $11~120,
the past two days have been more booos, $1724180.
We got the above scale or
or less of a general nature and
wages
from the International
a general rise has occurred in
Marine
Engineering.
the rivers.
Major S. r. Neal, local weathNOV. 21, 1918- THE Charleser obsener, reported but .40 or
ton,
W. Va. wtlarfage privileges
an Inch of rain, all told, here up
have
been turned over to a Charto this morning.
leston
company oC businessmen
The fish boat Tamiami len
by
the
city council ror a term or
here Monday for the south.
five
years.
A large wharf from
The ferryboat Pike's name will
Louisville
will
be taken to Charbe changed to the City or HWltleston
where
!or
some time the
ington where she will be oper·
Greene
Lines
has
had a small
ated as soon as her repairs are
whartboat
ronnerly
used at Pt.
completed at PL Pleasant. She is
Pleasant.
a much larger ferryboat than the
old one.
NOV. 22, 1918- CAPTAINHo-

-~

• Sportswear by Cresco and McGregor

LONG WEARING
FINE FOR
STAIRWAYS,

• Hose, by Interworen
• Shirts by Manhattan, Enro &amp; Shapely

\

TINY'S BARGAI LAND
I

/

\

There are 88 constellaUons.

for Christmas Gifting

SINGER

BUY "HERS" NOW AT .... .

[tHE

FA~RIC SHOP)

Sin.., S.l•o &amp; S...V!co &amp; McC.IIs Pot~en~s

POIEROY,O

115 W. SECOND
:.:: .... .=..... --

..:.:__I

Hartley's ....

In Pomeroy
.,

F~hion's

Most Exciting
FAMOUS

BRANDS

+++ +++
YEAR

PLAYER

1944. •
• . . . •••..• •• •...•• •• . . •.• H0111er Burton
1945 . . , • • •.• .••• , • , • • • • . . . . • . . . • . Vance JohnSOI
1946
• • . . . • .. .• . ..•..• •• •.• • • .. ••• Jim Slmmo
1947
. • • • . • , • , • . ...••.•...•• ... •• . Bill Johnson
1948 • • . • • . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... , .. Bob Marchi
1949 . • • . . . • . • • . . . • • . • . . • • • • • . . • • • • BUl Hopn
1950
. . . , , , , • ..•••••. . .••.•.•• .. .. Jackie Jackson
1951 . • • . . . . . • . ..••••• , • , • , .• , . • , . .Jackie Jack5on
1952 • • • • • • • ••. •• • ••• •.• •• • , • • • • ..• James Halley
1953 • • • . • . .. " . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . ' Dan Beobout
1954 • . . . ••...•••••.••••••••. • •. . ••• Jack Simms
1955 • . . • . • •. • .. . • • .. . .•. •• , •.•• •. , • • carl Jenkins
1956 . • , . • •. • .. , .••...••• . . .• • . ••.•• • Bert ~Uh
1957 • • . . . . • . .. . . ••.••••••....•• .. . . • Ron carr
1958 , • • • . . . . . . . . . .... . . . . . . . . . . .... . Joy Simms
1959 .•.• • •.• . • , ••••••• . . ••. ••.. •.••• Tom Hopn
1960 . . .•• •• .. , . •.• , •••... , . , .• , .. , , • Dick Roderick
1961 . • • • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . .. . .. .. . Anly GUmore
1962 . . .. . •• . . . , • • ••. , ••••••••• .• . . • • Dan Howard
1963 •• .. . .. . . ......•.•• • , •.• .• ••.• .• Larry Fraley
1964 ••.•.•• , •.. . .•••...•. . .•••••.•. • Bill Wamoley
1965 • . . . . .. •... . ••••.• • ••• . •• •....•• Pete Andersoo
1966 ••••.. . .. . ... . • • , • , ••• • •.•••• • • • Darm,y Davies
1967 , • . • . . • . • •.••••• . .. . . •• ••• , •. .• • Jim GUm..-e
1968 . • . . . • . •. • • • ' •.•••• •••. • .. .. . •• • 7 ? 7 7

++++++
"JUST Between Us," a weekly column CUil)iled by Tlmes--.Seftt.
Ina! otalfer Pat Houck, ..W reoc&gt;poar ohcJrtb. Pa~ who undenfent
aurgery at the Holzer Mecliell center on Nov. 12, upecta to be
baick at her desk within tJw next few dlys. "PAH", in a telephone
conwr•tion last week, ll1d she's getUrw alorw ftne, and tlw.t

FVR HER!

Joyu
Connie
Jacqueline
Paris Faahion
Min Wonderful
Hut.h Puppies

Dr. Scholl's
Nlghttimer House Slipp•n

Connl• Handbags
Hosiery

t.,.

Archer

FOR HIM!
Flonh•im
Jarman

Rand
Ranclcroh
Hush Puppin
Ac111e

Rod Wing
Wol•erine

++++ ++

l'ur Over H l'_,.,

r.

TWENTY YEARS AGO, tr001 tho nleo of tho Dally TribWIII and
weekly Gallla Tlmea ••. Local re11dent1 recet~3,200ChriatmasSe1Js
In mall, ~ is $2,700 ror auoclatlon's work In 1949•••City recr&amp;. • - comml11ioo seta II) f11,276 budpt lor 1949. .•MrL Noll R.
Fronldln, 39, Bidwell, dies aller 1.,. mnoaL .. New $45,000,000 Jn.
dualrlal Rayon COQ)on.Uoo plant ID· bo built alolW Ohio River noor
Pt. Pluoant, ..W hire 2,000 lndlvldllllo... Miu Dorio Rl.. ljlPGinted
- Gollio Count)' hOOie apnt. ..Ge• Wethorbol~ Bob Marchi •ecolli telm, All-Ohio, by Untied Pren,
Folden, BUl JCJID.
1011 recel'" hononblo montloo AIJ.Ohlo p1d hoatlr1 ... l'llmm&gt;7 q&gt;o
seta Middleport 7-6, Jockslll blankl WeUstlln 7..0 ID aNIIII Turkey

w.,..

-----······llliiii---·J....IMIJIII--IIli-P.._._

"A GOLD STAR STORE"
1_

1111• • • lliJ'
tllta.
..OhloInStole
drqlt
82,754
thrGlW
Columbus.

IW

lliJ 10iiltll&gt; MldliiiD before re""nl

Stor Brand
Ball-Band
Goodrich

La

Cros. .
Justin Boots ontl

Bolio
8 rooh Sllooo For
Boys

'J:j)

"rest ucl reluation is wot~Mrtul."

SHOP NOW!

,, .

PRESENTATION or the most valuable player
trophy wlll tdghlight the awards ceremony. Tweney.rour Blue Devil gridders have recel'w'ed this cov~
eted award since It was first given ln 1944. Here's
a list of previous MVP' s:

1-

• Ties by Beau Brummell
• Shoes by Nunn·Bush
• Official Boy Scout Headquarters
• Complete Line Boys' Wear by Tom Sawyer
• ivy League Slacks For Men &amp; Boys by Levi

1

c

The C. C. Bowyer arr'ved here

++++++

• Und•wear by Faultless &amp; Hanes

l

.:1 n

SHOES
"Middle of lho Uppor. ll•ck"

¥
·.

!rom Huntington Friday night with

11IE Delaware State Reglater, LaUNI. DeL, reported CC.ch
Bishop's 1968 Junl..- Varall)'
•quod wao ''Probobly one o!
the best In the history of the achool." Bls}Q' s 1968 Laurel Hlgb
School equad won alx and loat ooe, and outscored the q,poaltion, 10431. Bishop stated, "1 aUII miss thlt Ohio !ooO&gt;alL I'll be In tho are1
around Chris-s time. Hope tD oee you ond some oi my old play.
ers."

• Belts by Hickok
• Sweaters by Revere &amp; Gillman &amp; Manhattan

-

Egypt.

++++++

• Slacks by Kenrldge

..--

per cent of the populotloll

IT'S SEW SIMPlE

RECEIVED a clipping recenlly !rom Richard (Dicl&lt;) Bishop, form.
er Gal.Upolis Junior High foneblll and basketblll cc.ch. Dick's Gal·
!!polls seventh and eighth sra&lt;le boys C&lt;J1!111Ued out&amp;tandiJW loolba1l
and basketball recorda here rcwo years leo.

• Lugeaee by Silllsonite (We Initial F-ree)

STEPS, AND
HALLWAYS
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO

Moslems form more UIM i1

+++ +++

His kind ol Christmas is
high on style, big on
comfort. It's casual . .
elegant . .. colorful.
It's the things he
needs and some
things just for fun. And
it's all here, ready for
wrapping . . . just for
him.

:J.'

•i

STOBART, now a backfield c~ch at Miami (Ohio) University,
coached the GAHS Blue DevOs to an undefeated season and the
SEOAL championship in 1960. The banquet will be
· held In the dining room at Grace United Methodist Church on MoJM!ay, Dec. 2, beginning at 6:30
p. m.

We're Ready For

w;

y•ur Ulo free el ft4!'l' .. ,
plna.
Ahroyl ,..... jeilr
·
111gb tllree.pme toW plno !Dr
wllll
••
eflcocllve
•••I
'
the evenlnl for women was Bet- Balli .u .....,. .........
\)' Ftmey wllb 534 pills and lor powder ...., malre ,... to!ll
lbo men was Doc Whi!Ao wtlb 58ll oorl of 1p0elal.
pins.

By HOBART WILSON, JR.
CHARLES (Chucl&lt;) Stobart, ex-Middleport aoo Ohio University
athlete, wlll be pst lj)llker durtrw the &lt;'•11fpoUa Blue Devlla'
261Jl annal post-ieiion~,..banquet.
·~ · ·
~ ~;t·- .

Hl16lft Store In Potnerou

CLOSED
THANKSGIVING
DAY

!llncllngo:
Team
Point•
Team 3 , .
. . . . . . . . 68
TeamD,.
. .. .. ... 83
Team 10 . . . .. . . . . . . 62
Team 5 . . . . . . ..... 52
Team 4 •
. .... ... f4l
Teom8
. . . . . . .... f41
Team I
.. .. ...... 44
mer Vuian, commander of the Team 2
. . . .. ... .. 37
Iarre towboat W. K. Fields, 18 , Teom 7
..... .. 31!
reported to hive been taken ott TeamS
. . . . . . .... 30
the boat at PL Pleasant dafwer·
On Tuellday, Nov. ID,thoCIHrrously UJ with a bad can of in- rolet Bowllng League at
fluenza. Clptain Varian 1a the !lcy11ne Lanea.
son ol Captain Elmer Varian. a
Teom 3 took 8 point&amp; !rom
well-known rlvennan.
Team 2. Georata Ritchie had blah
Mal\¥ towboat crews and min- lor Taom 3 wllb 512 tota1 pin1,
ers In and along the Pittsburgh and Doc Wbl!Ao had hll!h lor Team
pools have been put out of cmn- 2 wllb 586 toW pins.
misslon by the nu the last few
Team 10 took 8 pointe !rom
days. The disease has become Team 1. Jack Mink had hi&amp;b lor
more pre...ahmt again in many Team 10 wllb ~79 to1a1 pine, and
Dave Holley had hi&amp;b lor Team 1
localiUe•.
wtlb 549 tota1 pins,
NOV. 22, 1918- THE General
Team 9 took 8 pointa !rom
Wood arrived here Thursday aft- Team 8. Bob Byers had hi&amp;b lor
ernoon on her way to Charleston Team 9 wltll 484 to1a1 pins, and
with a light trip andretw-ntoday.
Ann Adklna had bl&amp;h lor Team
The packet Is reported to have 8 wtlb 441 total pino.
had a good trip (150-toos) out or
Team 7 took 8 _points !rom
Pittsburgh. Labor is very scarce Team 6. Charlie LuptDn had blah
on the river and the Wood hils lor Team 7 wllb 580 111ta1 pins,
more freight oaered, it is said, and EcN. JohniiClll had blah lor
tten she has deckhao:ls to handle Team 6 wllb 162 total pins.
Team 4 took 6 point• !rom
it. .
Team 5. SoniQ' &amp;llith had high
NOV. 23, 1918 - THE Pitts- lor Team 4 wllb 399 IDtal _pin&amp;,
burgh steamer General Wood is and Merriman Johnsoo had blah
said to be the best reeder on the
river. The deckhands on this
packet are said tobewell~treated
aOO well.red. Captain W. D. KiJn.. one of the largest trips of the
ble hopes to tave the Wood going
season. The packet had a big
through to Cincinnati beroremarzy
conslgmtent of turkeys am othweeks. She's the lugest and best
er produce ror local produce
equipped packet boat on the ti)IJE!r
houaes, which will be shipped to
Ohio River. Mates Tom Barton Pittsburgh aoo other points by
and William English are on tlle
rill
Wood with Howard Barton, watchman. Howard, it is said, is going
to make a Orst class mate.

NOV, 20, 1918 - THE propellor ftsh boat Tamiami w h i c h
started out from here Monday ror
St. Louis was blown across the
river and had to be s~ped by
throwing out the anchor, which
held her until today wl1en cal&gt;"

• Suits &amp; Topcoats by Joseph &amp; Feiss
• Hats by Stetson

yd.

*
JNt! •

CHEVROLET BOWLING
LEAGUE
Week t1 Nov. 19, 1988

+ + + ++ +

PORCHES, WALKS,

IN

..

'

lor Team 5 with 509 total pirul,
Beauty's ~ J
111gb pins lor lirwle pme !01'
Be••,,. •• ~- ..... ,, .,,
the evening tor women wu Bet- eleull.-. A Pllx, ~if'
\)' Finlley with 192 lin• ond lor llllower-tdPI
illllt.iif•'
the men wa1 Doc White with 212 .... rid ..

Local Bowling

• Suits &amp; Topcoats by Curlee

JUST IN TIME FOR THE BAD WEATHER
TRUCKLOAD

VINYL
MATING

-

reduce hair pull and protect
brittl~ hair. The more flexible th~ comb, such as hard
rubber. the less brittle it will
be and the more "give" It
will have. Be certain thaL
the teeth of your comb are
rounded so they won't dig
into your scalp.

Be sure that you select
combs which can wilhstand
constant cleanin~. You may

TRUCKLOAD SALE

.. .

p.,..,.,, Ot.lo

' .

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS TIL 9 (AIM 0,.. All 0., Thw..ril

�:!'!\ - 1be Sunday Times - Sc!ontlnel, Sunday, NoVL·mber 24, J96S
GILIPE SJ,:.\SON ENmll
i•;
71•
Ohlo Agriculture Ill rector John

r*

,-q.

stackhousc ,..ed that the.,....,
aea1011 inspection started on the f
30th ot September and was con- ~
eluded at the end ot October.
Two prindpal points of inspcclion were used, at Geneva and

....

~ -

' ·.

' ' ...,,.,.

• ...

Time• - Sentlnol. Sundly, November 2~ 1968

Sale Starts Tomorrow At Rutland &amp;Mason Furnit._re

LOW
PRICES

11 .-

•
BY JACK O'llUIAN
NEW YORK - Van Johnson's

wholesale'?

Roger Vadim of the French
cinema was confused about what
the Smothers Bros. do so the.y
told him right oo the '"Tonight,.
show: "We do dirty television."
Rose Kenne&lt;tv , the Founding
Mother, at her Hyannis Pwt
mansion
personally
handed
NBC's Girl for Today, Barbara
Wa1ters, the major award rl
the Joseph P, Kennecb' Jr. FOtm-

dation for "Outstanding activity
to aid the mentally retarded."
Sen . Tedd;y"s son is Joseph P.

INFANTS TO SIZE 12
DRESSES BY NANETIE, CINDERELLA, POLLY
FLINDERS.
BOYS WEAR BY BILLY THE KID, ROB ROY,
HEALTH-TEX.
CARTER
BLUE BIRD
KNITWEAR FOR
SWEATERS
INFANTS and TODDLERS
STRETCHINI
TODDLETYKE
GIRLS KNITWEAR
INFANT WEAR

AT THE

5uDclll

j

·

.... Lyricist Carolyn Leigh Ia a
jewelry-buff; Cartier's Is Uke
1\von, Ohio.
ex-Wife Evic had serious surgecy her A &amp; P; she's so familiar a
In H'wood .... 111e llem,y (MVIry customer, one ~ the owners
Me Lains have some Wlmusical (name ol Liebman) said he'd
POTATOES o\LL IN
new.!l ...• A Latin American ag_ like to write a song with her and
Late summer potato inspection lng millionaire playboy is due sent the music ; Carolyn put it
was roncluded the third week in for a comeback - just had his aside and after months studled
crop was very good and there- face llfled •••. James Mason's melodies offered her and selectport noted that more and more been dating a brace of o u r ed one without noting the cornof Ohio's potato crop is being friends - Peggy Cass and love- poser - who of course turned
used in the pro&lt;l.Jction of potato ly Chinese beauty (and a real out to be Cartier's M. Liebehips
brain at Col umbia U.) Julie llowe man . ... From ttrls she can buy

Lay Auoay Now
For Christmas

Tile

MANY GIFTS
FOR BABY

KIDDIE
SHOPPE
ON THE T IN IIDDI.EPOIT, 0.

Al'e. gutter, the name on its blg
red dustba&amp; '"Roc:kefener Centre;" so we hav4' a solution to
the dirt of tills Smog CltJ&lt;: sell
the clt,y to the Rockefellers; no
one else seems to bother cleaning up our N. Y. Streets.
Our Town's now so tough, even
the Bums lnt'l Detective Agency
(world' a largest) is moving from
its longtime 42nd St. quarters to
the Westchester suburbs .... Da-

·GIREA.T

AT

NOVEMBER

HOMB

vid Hemmings gels Lynn R e dgrave as his ..Adventures in the

Skin Trade" star: thereby Hemmings will have worked with ev.
ery Redgrave .... The stormiest
of the Hedgraves, Vanessa, dashed df a letter to the London
Times protesting Russla's evil
invasion of Czechoslovakia; lUiti I
then, Russia seemed more Utoplllll to vllll.
Paulette Goctiard In Act 48
said husband Erich Maria Remarque hasn't finished his new
novel and already has a $500,000 olfer .... Lady Betty Prescott starred in a hefty Eastside
hotel jewel heist that didn't make
the papers; until now.
The rirst scene in uzorba"
(musical version of' the novel
and film) has a deliglltful wal lop and exuberance but the show
doesn't hang onto that flair and
pace; Hershel Bernardi's as Zorba globs on so much makeup he
looks as ir he"s wearing one or
those grotesque Greek - tragic
masks.
Bergdorl' - Goodman's had a
very stylish champagne celebrity premiere - o( its big new
men's shop; there• s a new barbershop with dozens of private
booths where hairsnips start at
$8 (and zoom to $35 If boss Jerry ~lina performs the clipping); all very smart - pushing
males toward the same beauty
salon tyram,y as the ladies .

Kennedy's only grandchild whc
inherited Ambassador Joe's red
hair; you can bet he rates an
extra cinnamun lollipop .... Rose
Kenne&lt;tY tried having tiny beach
shacks of her own to get away
from the Kemedy hordes at prayer and meditation times: "I rinally decided alter two were
blown out to sea during storms
to take God's hint and go back
to the children•• .... The Kennedy Hyannis Port main house
has many photos, one in a gold
frame picturing all Ambassador
and Mrs. Kenned,y's grandchildren; Its engraving: uwut all
these ducks really be swans?"
The Gene Cavalleros Sr. (Gene
Sr. founded the exclusive Colony restaurant) are bach !rom
tbeir Lago de Garda, Italy,
home, near Milan, for I h r e e
months .... Across the street
from St. Pat's, a l'luge vacuum
The southern Philippine Iscleaner was tidying up the 5th lands are inhabited by Moros.

BONUS VALUES FOR YOU!!

SALB

..

BACK AGAIN'

128 MILL ST.-MIDDLEPORT-USE OUR LAY-A-WAY PLAN
LADIES CORDUROY
AND TWILL

't!ENS' PERMA·PRESS

SHI

CAR COATS
Worm lined casual style coots
in popular fall and winter
colors and patterns, sizes

10

fo

FOR

WHITE

White cotton and polyester or
nylon tricot fabrics, never need
ironing in sizes 14}2 to 17.

You Can Get This
LIVING ·ROOM SUITE
oraEDROOM SUITE

18.

99

J9!.

each

For only$

FOR THE DRIEST BABY IN TOWN!

Reg. $1.15 12 oz.

PAMPERS
$1.69

NEW SUPER

SCOPE
Mouth Wash
&amp; Gargle
only

REG.
Disposable Diapers
DAYTIME 30's

The Lotion Horne Permanent

with the latest improvements

69

Buy Any 2-P(. Living Room

FOR ONLY $1 MORE

Rog. $1.69 .

BIG 21 COUNT BOX

CHRISTMAS
CARDS
Fine Christmas greeting cards
in assorted designs, with

envelopes.

'

PERMA-PRESS

3 PC. WHITE

BLOUSES

Pl1stlc Mixing

Never need ironing. White
and sol id co lors in roll vp
sleeve sty les .

100

Get A 3-Piece
Bedroom Suite •- -- -

BOWL SETS
T uckerware

plastic

!hree! graduated size~ · .,
1n nest .

~.- .

.Check" Our Pre.:H oliday SPECIALS .

EACH

binem~r last y•r how

BIG INSTANT SOUND

A.M. TABLE
RADIOS

9.99 ...

(

Arr1ngements

ea.

COATS
by Pendleton and
Smarhhire,
Rose

a-___;

by Pendle1on, Catalina,
Jantzen and Betty Rose

SWEATERS
by Pendleton, Catalina,
Jean Castle, Jantzen

HANDBAGS &amp;
BILLFOLDS
LUGGAGE

JACKETS
by Betty Rose
Pendleton

by

and Jockey

TIES
by Superbo, W&amp;mbley

Fascination

by Pendleton, Jean

by BeHy Ron

Castle, Catalina and
Jonhen

159
pair

SPORT
COATS

WALLETS

Machine woshoble, brighten up ony rl,)pm in the

HATS

and Zip L.ined
All Weather

COATS

BAHR CLOTHIERS
).,

1.'

TROUSERS
by Hubba•d

by Curlee and

LEVI
CASUAL

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Sizes
5 to 10

Rainbow Ruas
)

LUGGAGE

199

each

99C...

. ,.

'"' ..,,

~

1

BUY NOWI

tGANGULAR
2t5 14 ln. pldllf•.

WHY NOT GET THE
BEST? GET ZENITH
COLOR TELEVISION

ALSO SEE NEW '69 ZENITH STEREOS
HERE READY FOR CHRISTMAS LAY·AWAY

'7 Pc...............
~~~~u:::.
GROUP
_____ .........
.,. .................
.... ................................
-...
.......................

-

All Thbl'or Onlg

~---

. . . . . . . .J . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -

11 QT .. _.,..,-.

.~

UTILITY

PAllS

......

w

._.

Unbre~~able .;.ith .... ra l hand•
le, hondy pourin11 epout. A,,.
1orted colort.

HURRY! WHILE
YOUR MATtRESS
DOLLAR IS

BROOMS

24x36" Bolo Woven
Colorful-Reversible

and Metcalf

by Puritan and
Rugby

CAR COATS

colors ... viny ls, fabrics, both
soh and moulded soles.

by Puritan

by Meeker

SKIRTS
&amp;SUCKS

Big selection of styles and

'

Lifelike permanent Yule trees
with stand and storage box .
Use aoain and again.

GETS
ALL
THE
DUST!
FEATHER·TIP
Nylon Household

SLIPPERS

Arrow, Puritan,
Rugby, Jockey
In Turtle
Crew

TOPSTERS
SHIRTS
JACKETS

and Mojud

LADIES' GIFT HOUSE

For Christmas, gift him
in fine fa shion from our
wonderful se lecrion.
Sl yles he U'ants, clothes
he needs 1

T¥

...,

-

DON'T
WAin

:lfi'INT 23"., ...

As sotted artificial grranvemenh
in otlroclive plantar s.

You'll find for her an
ercellenl choice seleclwn from our Famous
Name Brands .

I

sc•rce Zenith Color TV w11
in December!

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

from BAHR CLOTHIERS

,..

.'

-

For example, a Living Room Suite
Selling at Sale Price of $229.95
and $1.00 For The Bedroom Suite,
You Pay Only $230.95 FOR IIITH
-SUITES. How can you beat this deal?
lily now and sa re!

94~...
MEN'S PLAID FLANNEL

SPORT SHIRTS .
Long tail atyle, well mode, cot•
flannel shirts in assorted
colors. Sizes

99

_&amp;_&amp;_
............... ,

---

/'

You'll Always Do Better At These Stores:

Rutland Furniture
RUTLAND,O.

ARNOLD GRATE

by ~msonlt•
and Airwoy

Mason ·Furniture
~

773-5592

'

HERMAN GRATE

.

MASON, W.VA.

serta-orth

Smooth-top comfort from head to toe. No tufts, no buttons.
Serta quality inside and out-for lasting quality and dura·
bility. Now's the time to take advantage of this outstanding
value, at a low sale price.

SEE THE NEXT 2 PAGES
FOR MORE EXCITINQ VALUES

1

�:!'!\ - 1be Sunday Times - Sc!ontlnel, Sunday, NoVL·mber 24, J96S
GILIPE SJ,:.\SON ENmll
i•;
71•
Ohlo Agriculture Ill rector John

r*

,-q.

stackhousc ,..ed that the.,....,
aea1011 inspection started on the f
30th ot September and was con- ~
eluded at the end ot October.
Two prindpal points of inspcclion were used, at Geneva and

....

~ -

' ·.

' ' ...,,.,.

• ...

Time• - Sentlnol. Sundly, November 2~ 1968

Sale Starts Tomorrow At Rutland &amp;Mason Furnit._re

LOW
PRICES

11 .-

•
BY JACK O'llUIAN
NEW YORK - Van Johnson's

wholesale'?

Roger Vadim of the French
cinema was confused about what
the Smothers Bros. do so the.y
told him right oo the '"Tonight,.
show: "We do dirty television."
Rose Kenne&lt;tv , the Founding
Mother, at her Hyannis Pwt
mansion
personally
handed
NBC's Girl for Today, Barbara
Wa1ters, the major award rl
the Joseph P, Kennecb' Jr. FOtm-

dation for "Outstanding activity
to aid the mentally retarded."
Sen . Tedd;y"s son is Joseph P.

INFANTS TO SIZE 12
DRESSES BY NANETIE, CINDERELLA, POLLY
FLINDERS.
BOYS WEAR BY BILLY THE KID, ROB ROY,
HEALTH-TEX.
CARTER
BLUE BIRD
KNITWEAR FOR
SWEATERS
INFANTS and TODDLERS
STRETCHINI
TODDLETYKE
GIRLS KNITWEAR
INFANT WEAR

AT THE

5uDclll

j

·

.... Lyricist Carolyn Leigh Ia a
jewelry-buff; Cartier's Is Uke
1\von, Ohio.
ex-Wife Evic had serious surgecy her A &amp; P; she's so familiar a
In H'wood .... 111e llem,y (MVIry customer, one ~ the owners
Me Lains have some Wlmusical (name ol Liebman) said he'd
POTATOES o\LL IN
new.!l ...• A Latin American ag_ like to write a song with her and
Late summer potato inspection lng millionaire playboy is due sent the music ; Carolyn put it
was roncluded the third week in for a comeback - just had his aside and after months studled
crop was very good and there- face llfled •••. James Mason's melodies offered her and selectport noted that more and more been dating a brace of o u r ed one without noting the cornof Ohio's potato crop is being friends - Peggy Cass and love- poser - who of course turned
used in the pro&lt;l.Jction of potato ly Chinese beauty (and a real out to be Cartier's M. Liebehips
brain at Col umbia U.) Julie llowe man . ... From ttrls she can buy

Lay Auoay Now
For Christmas

Tile

MANY GIFTS
FOR BABY

KIDDIE
SHOPPE
ON THE T IN IIDDI.EPOIT, 0.

Al'e. gutter, the name on its blg
red dustba&amp; '"Roc:kefener Centre;" so we hav4' a solution to
the dirt of tills Smog CltJ&lt;: sell
the clt,y to the Rockefellers; no
one else seems to bother cleaning up our N. Y. Streets.
Our Town's now so tough, even
the Bums lnt'l Detective Agency
(world' a largest) is moving from
its longtime 42nd St. quarters to
the Westchester suburbs .... Da-

·GIREA.T

AT

NOVEMBER

HOMB

vid Hemmings gels Lynn R e dgrave as his ..Adventures in the

Skin Trade" star: thereby Hemmings will have worked with ev.
ery Redgrave .... The stormiest
of the Hedgraves, Vanessa, dashed df a letter to the London
Times protesting Russla's evil
invasion of Czechoslovakia; lUiti I
then, Russia seemed more Utoplllll to vllll.
Paulette Goctiard In Act 48
said husband Erich Maria Remarque hasn't finished his new
novel and already has a $500,000 olfer .... Lady Betty Prescott starred in a hefty Eastside
hotel jewel heist that didn't make
the papers; until now.
The rirst scene in uzorba"
(musical version of' the novel
and film) has a deliglltful wal lop and exuberance but the show
doesn't hang onto that flair and
pace; Hershel Bernardi's as Zorba globs on so much makeup he
looks as ir he"s wearing one or
those grotesque Greek - tragic
masks.
Bergdorl' - Goodman's had a
very stylish champagne celebrity premiere - o( its big new
men's shop; there• s a new barbershop with dozens of private
booths where hairsnips start at
$8 (and zoom to $35 If boss Jerry ~lina performs the clipping); all very smart - pushing
males toward the same beauty
salon tyram,y as the ladies .

Kennedy's only grandchild whc
inherited Ambassador Joe's red
hair; you can bet he rates an
extra cinnamun lollipop .... Rose
Kenne&lt;tY tried having tiny beach
shacks of her own to get away
from the Kemedy hordes at prayer and meditation times: "I rinally decided alter two were
blown out to sea during storms
to take God's hint and go back
to the children•• .... The Kennedy Hyannis Port main house
has many photos, one in a gold
frame picturing all Ambassador
and Mrs. Kenned,y's grandchildren; Its engraving: uwut all
these ducks really be swans?"
The Gene Cavalleros Sr. (Gene
Sr. founded the exclusive Colony restaurant) are bach !rom
tbeir Lago de Garda, Italy,
home, near Milan, for I h r e e
months .... Across the street
from St. Pat's, a l'luge vacuum
The southern Philippine Iscleaner was tidying up the 5th lands are inhabited by Moros.

BONUS VALUES FOR YOU!!

SALB

..

BACK AGAIN'

128 MILL ST.-MIDDLEPORT-USE OUR LAY-A-WAY PLAN
LADIES CORDUROY
AND TWILL

't!ENS' PERMA·PRESS

SHI

CAR COATS
Worm lined casual style coots
in popular fall and winter
colors and patterns, sizes

10

fo

FOR

WHITE

White cotton and polyester or
nylon tricot fabrics, never need
ironing in sizes 14}2 to 17.

You Can Get This
LIVING ·ROOM SUITE
oraEDROOM SUITE

18.

99

J9!.

each

For only$

FOR THE DRIEST BABY IN TOWN!

Reg. $1.15 12 oz.

PAMPERS
$1.69

NEW SUPER

SCOPE
Mouth Wash
&amp; Gargle
only

REG.
Disposable Diapers
DAYTIME 30's

The Lotion Horne Permanent

with the latest improvements

69

Buy Any 2-P(. Living Room

FOR ONLY $1 MORE

Rog. $1.69 .

BIG 21 COUNT BOX

CHRISTMAS
CARDS
Fine Christmas greeting cards
in assorted designs, with

envelopes.

'

PERMA-PRESS

3 PC. WHITE

BLOUSES

Pl1stlc Mixing

Never need ironing. White
and sol id co lors in roll vp
sleeve sty les .

100

Get A 3-Piece
Bedroom Suite •- -- -

BOWL SETS
T uckerware

plastic

!hree! graduated size~ · .,
1n nest .

~.- .

.Check" Our Pre.:H oliday SPECIALS .

EACH

binem~r last y•r how

BIG INSTANT SOUND

A.M. TABLE
RADIOS

9.99 ...

(

Arr1ngements

ea.

COATS
by Pendleton and
Smarhhire,
Rose

a-___;

by Pendle1on, Catalina,
Jantzen and Betty Rose

SWEATERS
by Pendleton, Catalina,
Jean Castle, Jantzen

HANDBAGS &amp;
BILLFOLDS
LUGGAGE

JACKETS
by Betty Rose
Pendleton

by

and Jockey

TIES
by Superbo, W&amp;mbley

Fascination

by Pendleton, Jean

by BeHy Ron

Castle, Catalina and
Jonhen

159
pair

SPORT
COATS

WALLETS

Machine woshoble, brighten up ony rl,)pm in the

HATS

and Zip L.ined
All Weather

COATS

BAHR CLOTHIERS
).,

1.'

TROUSERS
by Hubba•d

by Curlee and

LEVI
CASUAL

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Sizes
5 to 10

Rainbow Ruas
)

LUGGAGE

199

each

99C...

. ,.

'"' ..,,

~

1

BUY NOWI

tGANGULAR
2t5 14 ln. pldllf•.

WHY NOT GET THE
BEST? GET ZENITH
COLOR TELEVISION

ALSO SEE NEW '69 ZENITH STEREOS
HERE READY FOR CHRISTMAS LAY·AWAY

'7 Pc...............
~~~~u:::.
GROUP
_____ .........
.,. .................
.... ................................
-...
.......................

-

All Thbl'or Onlg

~---

. . . . . . . .J . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -

11 QT .. _.,..,-.

.~

UTILITY

PAllS

......

w

._.

Unbre~~able .;.ith .... ra l hand•
le, hondy pourin11 epout. A,,.
1orted colort.

HURRY! WHILE
YOUR MATtRESS
DOLLAR IS

BROOMS

24x36" Bolo Woven
Colorful-Reversible

and Metcalf

by Puritan and
Rugby

CAR COATS

colors ... viny ls, fabrics, both
soh and moulded soles.

by Puritan

by Meeker

SKIRTS
&amp;SUCKS

Big selection of styles and

'

Lifelike permanent Yule trees
with stand and storage box .
Use aoain and again.

GETS
ALL
THE
DUST!
FEATHER·TIP
Nylon Household

SLIPPERS

Arrow, Puritan,
Rugby, Jockey
In Turtle
Crew

TOPSTERS
SHIRTS
JACKETS

and Mojud

LADIES' GIFT HOUSE

For Christmas, gift him
in fine fa shion from our
wonderful se lecrion.
Sl yles he U'ants, clothes
he needs 1

T¥

...,

-

DON'T
WAin

:lfi'INT 23"., ...

As sotted artificial grranvemenh
in otlroclive plantar s.

You'll find for her an
ercellenl choice seleclwn from our Famous
Name Brands .

I

sc•rce Zenith Color TV w11
in December!

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

from BAHR CLOTHIERS

,..

.'

-

For example, a Living Room Suite
Selling at Sale Price of $229.95
and $1.00 For The Bedroom Suite,
You Pay Only $230.95 FOR IIITH
-SUITES. How can you beat this deal?
lily now and sa re!

94~...
MEN'S PLAID FLANNEL

SPORT SHIRTS .
Long tail atyle, well mode, cot•
flannel shirts in assorted
colors. Sizes

99

_&amp;_&amp;_
............... ,

---

/'

You'll Always Do Better At These Stores:

Rutland Furniture
RUTLAND,O.

ARNOLD GRATE

by ~msonlt•
and Airwoy

Mason ·Furniture
~

773-5592

'

HERMAN GRATE

.

MASON, W.VA.

serta-orth

Smooth-top comfort from head to toe. No tufts, no buttons.
Serta quality inside and out-for lasting quality and dura·
bility. Now's the time to take advantage of this outstanding
value, at a low sale price.

SEE THE NEXT 2 PAGES
FOR MORE EXCITINQ VALUES

1

�•

.

-

• · • • ..
••

..

• . ·•' • •• ••
-.--

'

•.•

' ., .-&lt;
• ~ -·

~

~

• . ' ·•
.

·•

~

.
•

.

,- . , __,.. _,

I

•

••

" '

~--

'

•

•

~- ~ · .. - .. -• .. . ... - .... ~ -· ·

. .. ... ... .. ._. ... ...._......_. .... .. .. . .... .... ... ~- "tt' .... illlt . . ollll " ...

..
30 -

The Sunday Times

~

Times - Sentinel, Swxlay, November 24, 1968

Sentinel, Sundl,y ,_ ~ovember 24, 1968

SHOP

BOTH STORES At Mason Furniture, Mason, W ..Va.
FOR VALUES' At Rutland Furniture, Rutland, Ohio
DON'T TURN UP YOUR NOliE
YOUTH ASKED FOR lTl
This column is for young peo- AT E!lllldO CUSTOM, SHESAYS
ple, their problOIIIB and .Pleas- Dear Holen:
That 11UY woo aakecl llllJ' Esures, their troWies and fun. As
with the rest ft. Helen Help USI kimos IUJ noses - he should try
it welcomes laughs ·&gt;UL won't it sometime.
I read in a book that the nose
dodge a seriouB question wttJt a
is one ol the moat erogenous
brush-oft'.
Send your teenage questions (sensitive) areas fA a woman.
to YOUTHAatEDFOR tt,careft. n !IOUIIded silly, but I asked
Helen Help US! this newspaper. my boy friend to try it, and it's

GREAT NOVEMBER HOME
SALE!

no

pa011811 If

a lot better than llOilPJ' ld 11e1.

there would be

- THE NOliE HAS IT
Dear Nose:
Uke tho man lilY•: Wldch out
lor onlli.Wa. - H.
Dear Helen:
Jln't It true that every major
IOdal 'change In hillor)' hll been
acCOIIIpllllied by violence? BameUmes It im't phJsieal vlol•ee,
but there's always a big 111111
before - ' • awltch their Ideal.
Alao, loe't It uaually true that
tho violence Ia ~st just be·
fore the awltc:h.over is coq)lata,
or at least accepted b)' the ma~
jorlt;y'l Thla bocauao tldnp muat
be brOU8ht out Into tho lllht and
fought over before ''the mu1e1"
realize there is a problera?
II so, we oou1d uiUJile that

we hod t.ta1 pooco.
And we m1QIJI al• uunethat
some of our major problema wiU
10011 be aolved becauae ......,
118\'0f

!'oulhl

00 - -

ouch

Wns• before. - TIIINXER ·
Dear T.:

you'n wrong on tho
fir It uauqJtlan, rtpt on tho
aoooed. Ao lor your quootlcm:
The,y'd make a fine billa lor
I '-

cl&amp;ll dtleu11ion. -

H.

Dear Helen:

1 woold llke to aay - . . ,
In favor of tho blpplea. I have
loamod a lot - . Uvlng from
them - llld IIIII tho way youtblnl&lt;.
Many cloll't lalre druBa or .,
In lor poraonal love-Ina. ~
have a aood. .Pbllooopey. ~

aren't merelr Iller good gradoa
In oehool, but reallearnln&amp;. When
I underltood tlda, my grade a roH
!rom C to B • avorqo,
The,y love ure IDil tbo
beaula' In IIWe tblnga. II they
clre11 and look "different ,. well
whar I tbelr thine, and 'peopl~

lboulm't .iud&amp;o by ._..ances.
I know that IIOI!lo -'!edhlpJI(eo 80 too lar, but they aroo't
tbo real ...... The hi.Ppioa r
know are Intelligent, pntle, and
boneot. Everyooo woold bonellt
by talking to them a little.
Amtber tblng, hlwloa obit
juot 80 with hlpplea. There' a meln every crowd,
even -If he or she doerm't dress
tho part. - MYSELF
Dearllolom:

30" 'Gas and Electric

IEGULAR _ _ 399.95

we~ve

2. ~tU1ty drawers. 2 sp~cious st?rage shel\'es below. Mag·

$
choice of 3 superb styles:

00
No Money Down

BUY

Gibson'• patent.ld J'roat'Clear l)'llem ...
~ you no frwt eoor eon form Ia ,..
or freezu. Eliminates .IDfii:IJ
chorea forever. ADd Glbaoa'l
now 10-year Gold... Guaranlet- flnt ID
tha llldllllry - 111111'1!8 7011 of loJIIOl'
trouhle-boe aervlce.
'

, How "Foo-Bo&lt;k
7•plece dlnett•

GAS RANGES

'$88• 00

REGULAR .. ... . 239.95
YOUR TRADE . . .. 40.00

Next Year I

WITH DELUXE FEATURES
OF USUAL $110 DINETTES
Big, full-size 7•piece suites

SEE

Self.. dgod, 36x48x60 in. tables
Choice of Bronzetone or Chrome
Luxurious, gallery-topped chairs
Heavy, well-design plastic covers
Inlaid top on PfeHy oval table

ALL
SKM29GX-

November Special!

Great November
HOMESALFl

ROOM SIZE 9x12

OUR 79.95

RUGS s4.88

......

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

RUTLAND FURNITURE

A

(.

'

'

In The

purchaae

rtoll for SliO. Thoy'ro ,
ble,

beo~.tlful

qu&lt;~lity

~ ...

fovorltt

11roup.

We

con' I pl'OIIIIIO to ,.pnt
o ,,vi no like this lOOn .

95

EVERY ITEM
ON SALE AT BOTH STORES

$18. oo

Mlr~M-o lf~P

with weltH cftilro

Rutland Furniture
;lRNOI:D GRArl

.

~­
'

PHONE 742-42l1

'.

YOUR OWN COMPACT SUPERMARKET .. . Gibson Frost Clear Foodmaster
gives you full size (10.3 cu. ft.) refrigerator and a full size (185 lb. capacity)

WITH
JO-YEAR
WARRANTY

freezer, side-by-side at your fingertips. It's so compact that despite its 16
c~ic foot capacity, it's less than a yard wide .. _fits in even small kitchens.
And BOTH freezer and refrigerator are all Frost Clear . .. you'll NEYER de-

thot

they're prlcotl for a
qulclo tollout. Co"''
down, ••• all thr" , .
ond then plfll your

..

.

.

NEW 1969 MODEl

freezer I

, , , wltr-.

u,

you'll lovo. At $88,.

MASON, W.VA.

HERMAN GRATE

Refrig~rator

tho prlcel If
b-n ahopplng
l••o~o~'v•
diMttoa recently,
ou'll know thot tultot
.. lko th.to NJ11.1Iorlv

MATTRESS

$

tl"'elol

In The

dropt

MASON FURN .ITURE.
PHONE 773·5592

RUnAND,O.

choice of thret
•lg, ...utlful
7-plecesultts

RUBBER

$129!~ ~'"' ..___No_w_o_NL_Y_ ___J
ARNOLD GRATE

*
All

FOAM

LINOLEUM

PHONE 742-•121 I

OUR
SUNRAY

Volume Sales
Brings
This Better
Valuel

frost Clear

.. ,..

.,

------32 ------=-11

0

199.95

...

WITH
TRADE

Winning
Dealer

36 inch

NOW
PAY•••

..........

=

"N

The Continental Congreu of·
flelally changed the name
"United Colonies" to "United
States" on Sept. 9, 1716·

95
&lt;

75.00

Now Willl N.., lO.Year ,._,.__

~9.576

ning, an agronomlatlrillbewach-

CUBIC
FOOT

WITH TRADE

Model

I---

Less Than A Yard Wide
Regular Price • 599.95
Your. Trade·-· 200.00

(TOP FREEZER)
Regular - . 399.95

Guarantie

sehool? I mean slacks, Bermudas, ole. AU the ooUoges around
here allow this, 10 wilY -.Idn't h1gb schools eome around

REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER

Big 16 Frost-Clear
G I 8 S 0 N Refrigerator-Freezer

•

lng cla111e&amp; pertaining to mak~
ing better use rl. our grass covered hill~ and valleys,

What do you think ab&lt;x¢ girls

being allowed to wear JIBf1l8 to

FROST CLEAR

cut the price to just:

netie door cateile&amp; Wllite "'tenor, aqua interior.

•

Why oot? Pants don't distract
the male eye nearly so much
as mtni-sklrts- and ~dsave
a small !ort:tme In nylons! - H.

P•!IChiatrist.

No need to pa4 $

aa found In most much
In and see It let us
'

NO. 188 DELUXE ClllNA
EASY TERMS
41"\Y X 2Q"D X 72"li
Sliding glaos china section, electrle ouUet 20" deep work
area ~vered in heat &amp; stain rtsiJtant gold flecked plastic.

Trad•ln

too?- FOR rr
Dear F.l:

Do round balel rllllJ - "
GALLIPOLIS - About 70 per
&lt;ent of the !arm land In Gallla In • _..,., Willi
County Ia In pasture and wood· can r do to ""' ""'" ,..._
land pasture, aayd Bud Carter, trom lrQ' p a - · - I
County Extensloo Agmt, Agrl- aet a fertllher ..... a.ot !Ita
eulture. Boot cattle are Ol!oel - m,y IMiil telt r11 •nz drU•t?
Theea are tho ldDI!I ., ......
lent market vehicles for grass
and they !It well In IIUiliY Iann- tiona that will be-wertd. llml't
Ing operations ()&gt;otb part-&lt;1me mlss tbe OWOI' rfq to . , .
and lull-lime).
tho door to
During ooch seaaloo of tho Gal- beet caWo.
Its County Boo! cattle School
wblcb begins next Tuesday eve-

much beUer press and communleatlona to report it.
-Dr. Karl Menninger, noted

Buy Now! Beat Price Advances!
Save! LAYAWAY NOW fOR CHRISTMASI

Never before have we been able to ulfer such a quality
range for sueh a low, low sale price. The IIUliiUfacturer cooperated with us to bring it to
This Sunray Electric

ssg.95

than there was 100 years
ago, but that we have a

Gallia Suitabb for Beef·

TRUCK LOAD SPECIALS!

Bought Espedally To
Give You A Fabulous
Bargain, and It lsi I
has the best features women
higher priced ranges. Why
show you! You'll never find a

My own belief is that
there is less violence today

frost again.

.Mason Furniture
HERMAN· GRATE

'

:I~P•.OHIO

.

.

MASON, W.VA..,

PMONE 773-5592

J

•

�•

.

-

• · • • ..
••

..

• . ·•' • •• ••
-.--

'

•.•

' ., .-&lt;
• ~ -·

~

~

• . ' ·•
.

·•

~

.
•

.

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•

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~- ~ · .. - .. -• .. . ... - .... ~ -· ·

. .. ... ... .. ._. ... ...._......_. .... .. .. . .... .... ... ~- "tt' .... illlt . . ollll " ...

..
30 -

The Sunday Times

~

Times - Sentinel, Swxlay, November 24, 1968

Sentinel, Sundl,y ,_ ~ovember 24, 1968

SHOP

BOTH STORES At Mason Furniture, Mason, W ..Va.
FOR VALUES' At Rutland Furniture, Rutland, Ohio
DON'T TURN UP YOUR NOliE
YOUTH ASKED FOR lTl
This column is for young peo- AT E!lllldO CUSTOM, SHESAYS
ple, their problOIIIB and .Pleas- Dear Holen:
That 11UY woo aakecl llllJ' Esures, their troWies and fun. As
with the rest ft. Helen Help USI kimos IUJ noses - he should try
it welcomes laughs ·&gt;UL won't it sometime.
I read in a book that the nose
dodge a seriouB question wttJt a
is one ol the moat erogenous
brush-oft'.
Send your teenage questions (sensitive) areas fA a woman.
to YOUTHAatEDFOR tt,careft. n !IOUIIded silly, but I asked
Helen Help US! this newspaper. my boy friend to try it, and it's

GREAT NOVEMBER HOME
SALE!

no

pa011811 If

a lot better than llOilPJ' ld 11e1.

there would be

- THE NOliE HAS IT
Dear Nose:
Uke tho man lilY•: Wldch out
lor onlli.Wa. - H.
Dear Helen:
Jln't It true that every major
IOdal 'change In hillor)' hll been
acCOIIIpllllied by violence? BameUmes It im't phJsieal vlol•ee,
but there's always a big 111111
before - ' • awltch their Ideal.
Alao, loe't It uaually true that
tho violence Ia ~st just be·
fore the awltc:h.over is coq)lata,
or at least accepted b)' the ma~
jorlt;y'l Thla bocauao tldnp muat
be brOU8ht out Into tho lllht and
fought over before ''the mu1e1"
realize there is a problera?
II so, we oou1d uiUJile that

we hod t.ta1 pooco.
And we m1QIJI al• uunethat
some of our major problema wiU
10011 be aolved becauae ......,
118\'0f

!'oulhl

00 - -

ouch

Wns• before. - TIIINXER ·
Dear T.:

you'n wrong on tho
fir It uauqJtlan, rtpt on tho
aoooed. Ao lor your quootlcm:
The,y'd make a fine billa lor
I '-

cl&amp;ll dtleu11ion. -

H.

Dear Helen:

1 woold llke to aay - . . ,
In favor of tho blpplea. I have
loamod a lot - . Uvlng from
them - llld IIIII tho way youtblnl&lt;.
Many cloll't lalre druBa or .,
In lor poraonal love-Ina. ~
have a aood. .Pbllooopey. ~

aren't merelr Iller good gradoa
In oehool, but reallearnln&amp;. When
I underltood tlda, my grade a roH
!rom C to B • avorqo,
The,y love ure IDil tbo
beaula' In IIWe tblnga. II they
clre11 and look "different ,. well
whar I tbelr thine, and 'peopl~

lboulm't .iud&amp;o by ._..ances.
I know that IIOI!lo -'!edhlpJI(eo 80 too lar, but they aroo't
tbo real ...... The hi.Ppioa r
know are Intelligent, pntle, and
boneot. Everyooo woold bonellt
by talking to them a little.
Amtber tblng, hlwloa obit
juot 80 with hlpplea. There' a meln every crowd,
even -If he or she doerm't dress
tho part. - MYSELF
Dearllolom:

30" 'Gas and Electric

IEGULAR _ _ 399.95

we~ve

2. ~tU1ty drawers. 2 sp~cious st?rage shel\'es below. Mag·

$
choice of 3 superb styles:

00
No Money Down

BUY

Gibson'• patent.ld J'roat'Clear l)'llem ...
~ you no frwt eoor eon form Ia ,..
or freezu. Eliminates .IDfii:IJ
chorea forever. ADd Glbaoa'l
now 10-year Gold... Guaranlet- flnt ID
tha llldllllry - 111111'1!8 7011 of loJIIOl'
trouhle-boe aervlce.
'

, How "Foo-Bo&lt;k
7•plece dlnett•

GAS RANGES

'$88• 00

REGULAR .. ... . 239.95
YOUR TRADE . . .. 40.00

Next Year I

WITH DELUXE FEATURES
OF USUAL $110 DINETTES
Big, full-size 7•piece suites

SEE

Self.. dgod, 36x48x60 in. tables
Choice of Bronzetone or Chrome
Luxurious, gallery-topped chairs
Heavy, well-design plastic covers
Inlaid top on PfeHy oval table

ALL
SKM29GX-

November Special!

Great November
HOMESALFl

ROOM SIZE 9x12

OUR 79.95

RUGS s4.88

......

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

RUTLAND FURNITURE

A

(.

'

'

In The

purchaae

rtoll for SliO. Thoy'ro ,
ble,

beo~.tlful

qu&lt;~lity

~ ...

fovorltt

11roup.

We

con' I pl'OIIIIIO to ,.pnt
o ,,vi no like this lOOn .

95

EVERY ITEM
ON SALE AT BOTH STORES

$18. oo

Mlr~M-o lf~P

with weltH cftilro

Rutland Furniture
;lRNOI:D GRArl

.

~­
'

PHONE 742-42l1

'.

YOUR OWN COMPACT SUPERMARKET .. . Gibson Frost Clear Foodmaster
gives you full size (10.3 cu. ft.) refrigerator and a full size (185 lb. capacity)

WITH
JO-YEAR
WARRANTY

freezer, side-by-side at your fingertips. It's so compact that despite its 16
c~ic foot capacity, it's less than a yard wide .. _fits in even small kitchens.
And BOTH freezer and refrigerator are all Frost Clear . .. you'll NEYER de-

thot

they're prlcotl for a
qulclo tollout. Co"''
down, ••• all thr" , .
ond then plfll your

..

.

.

NEW 1969 MODEl

freezer I

, , , wltr-.

u,

you'll lovo. At $88,.

MASON, W.VA.

HERMAN GRATE

Refrig~rator

tho prlcel If
b-n ahopplng
l••o~o~'v•
diMttoa recently,
ou'll know thot tultot
.. lko th.to NJ11.1Iorlv

MATTRESS

$

tl"'elol

In The

dropt

MASON FURN .ITURE.
PHONE 773·5592

RUnAND,O.

choice of thret
•lg, ...utlful
7-plecesultts

RUBBER

$129!~ ~'"' ..___No_w_o_NL_Y_ ___J
ARNOLD GRATE

*
All

FOAM

LINOLEUM

PHONE 742-•121 I

OUR
SUNRAY

Volume Sales
Brings
This Better
Valuel

frost Clear

.. ,..

.,

------32 ------=-11

0

199.95

...

WITH
TRADE

Winning
Dealer

36 inch

NOW
PAY•••

..........

=

"N

The Continental Congreu of·
flelally changed the name
"United Colonies" to "United
States" on Sept. 9, 1716·

95
&lt;

75.00

Now Willl N.., lO.Year ,._,.__

~9.576

ning, an agronomlatlrillbewach-

CUBIC
FOOT

WITH TRADE

Model

I---

Less Than A Yard Wide
Regular Price • 599.95
Your. Trade·-· 200.00

(TOP FREEZER)
Regular - . 399.95

Guarantie

sehool? I mean slacks, Bermudas, ole. AU the ooUoges around
here allow this, 10 wilY -.Idn't h1gb schools eome around

REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER

Big 16 Frost-Clear
G I 8 S 0 N Refrigerator-Freezer

•

lng cla111e&amp; pertaining to mak~
ing better use rl. our grass covered hill~ and valleys,

What do you think ab&lt;x¢ girls

being allowed to wear JIBf1l8 to

FROST CLEAR

cut the price to just:

netie door cateile&amp; Wllite "'tenor, aqua interior.

•

Why oot? Pants don't distract
the male eye nearly so much
as mtni-sklrts- and ~dsave
a small !ort:tme In nylons! - H.

P•!IChiatrist.

No need to pa4 $

aa found In most much
In and see It let us
'

NO. 188 DELUXE ClllNA
EASY TERMS
41"\Y X 2Q"D X 72"li
Sliding glaos china section, electrle ouUet 20" deep work
area ~vered in heat &amp; stain rtsiJtant gold flecked plastic.

Trad•ln

too?- FOR rr
Dear F.l:

Do round balel rllllJ - "
GALLIPOLIS - About 70 per
&lt;ent of the !arm land In Gallla In • _..,., Willi
County Ia In pasture and wood· can r do to ""' ""'" ,..._
land pasture, aayd Bud Carter, trom lrQ' p a - · - I
County Extensloo Agmt, Agrl- aet a fertllher ..... a.ot !Ita
eulture. Boot cattle are Ol!oel - m,y IMiil telt r11 •nz drU•t?
Theea are tho ldDI!I ., ......
lent market vehicles for grass
and they !It well In IIUiliY Iann- tiona that will be-wertd. llml't
Ing operations ()&gt;otb part-&lt;1me mlss tbe OWOI' rfq to . , .
and lull-lime).
tho door to
During ooch seaaloo of tho Gal- beet caWo.
Its County Boo! cattle School
wblcb begins next Tuesday eve-

much beUer press and communleatlona to report it.
-Dr. Karl Menninger, noted

Buy Now! Beat Price Advances!
Save! LAYAWAY NOW fOR CHRISTMASI

Never before have we been able to ulfer such a quality
range for sueh a low, low sale price. The IIUliiUfacturer cooperated with us to bring it to
This Sunray Electric

ssg.95

than there was 100 years
ago, but that we have a

Gallia Suitabb for Beef·

TRUCK LOAD SPECIALS!

Bought Espedally To
Give You A Fabulous
Bargain, and It lsi I
has the best features women
higher priced ranges. Why
show you! You'll never find a

My own belief is that
there is less violence today

frost again.

.Mason Furniture
HERMAN· GRATE

'

:I~P•.OHIO

.

.

MASON, W.VA..,

PMONE 773-5592

J

•

�. . . . . - ..... .. . . .,.

32 -

The Sund&amp;~ Times - Sentinel, Sunday, November 24, 19611

New Lamb
Cut Plan

Millionth Ft. of Tile Laid

PT. PLEASANT - A mUestone In improved lar.:l practice - the millionth Coot of tile - na
reached li!st Monda,y in Mason Coun:y on the f3,.m or C. C. Lewis three miles north of Pt Pleas&amp;nt on Rl 62. The dignitaries presented were listed last Thursday in the routinereporL However,
above and in the two pictures below arc how they look. First row, I tor, Gus R. Douglass, Commissioncf of Agriculture; Carroll Greene, Executive Secretary, State Soil Cons. Committee; Robert t:. Quilliam, state Conservationist, Soil Consenation Service; Hill Lewis, of Oldtown Farms,
Inc.j "Rip'' Talkington, Bowerston Shale Company, Bowerston, Ohio; Floyd S. Rothlisberger, retired Area Conservationist; Woodrow Bruvm, ASCS Committeeman; .Jim Hayes, ditcher operator,
Lewisburg. Secorxi row, Charles C. Lewi.!S; Wayne W. Hughes, Chairman of Western Soil Conservation District, Ravenswood; Albert G. Middleton, retired District Conservatio nist, Pt. Pleasant;
Robert Oberholzer, of Rust' Creek Cl~ Company, Junction CiQ;, Ohio; Frank ~Hllik.en, Jr., of
Bowerston Shale Company, Bowerston; Ken Koortz, of Gar Wood IMustries, Findlay, Ohio; Glendon P. Burton, Area Conservationist, Soil Conservation Service, Parkersburg; Denver C. Yoho,
COnservation Technician, SCS, :Pt Pleasant Qives In Gallia County); C. G. Irish, of Machinery,
1... ~rlewm.

PART Of the crowd on hand to observe la.)ing the l,OOO,oooth foot or tlle ln Mason County.
This is on the Oldtmo.11 Farms of C. C. Lewis and family, three miles north of Pt. Pleasant on
ROllh~ 62. The actl1Bl installing of the tile was preceded by a ceremonial dinner at the Pleasant
Point HesorL The speakers at the dinner wert' Robert E. Quilliam, State Conservationist, Soil
Consenation S4:nicc, Carroll Greene, Executive Secretary, Slate Soil Conservation Committee,
Gus R. Douglass, W. Va. Commissioner of Agriculture, A. G. Middleton, former District Cooservationist, Woodrow Brown, ASCS cammltteeman and Vtrglm. ~ Ortlce MAMger, ASCS.

Left to right, standing are
Wayne ',V_ llug:hes, "Rip" Tal-

kington, Robert Oberholzer,
Ken Koontz, c. c;_ Irish; Seated, John Cooper, District Conservationist, Soil Conservation Service, Pt. Pleasant;
Edward Bumgarner, Western
Soil Conser.,;ationDistrict; Albert G. Middleton, fanner District Conservationist for SCS,
pt. Pleasant.

Announced

MAKE

UMer the new grading system numbers would be used to

ELBERFELD$

identify the "yield grade." A
carcass qualifyi~ for yield
grade 1, for example, would
have more than 47 per cent of
its weight In boneless, closely
trimmed retail cut!; from the
leg, loirt. rack and shoulder.
A yield grade 5 would have
less than 42 per cent or boneless, closely trimmed retail cuts
from the same areas.
B.D. Van Sta\·ern, extension
meat specialist at Ohio State
University, said the new gra~
ing system could mean to sheep
producers about $3 or more
d\(ference in value between
each yield grade - or as much
as $12 potential difference for
100 pourds o{ lamb carc.ass
within the same quality grade.
Present Grades Same
The existing quality grades
for lambs would remain unchanged.
The Agriculture Department
said the new marketing system
would provide incentive for the
production of "consumer - preferred lambs" and would result
In more revenue for the pr~
ducer since he would share in
higf1er prices paid for better
qualit,y.
One of the major beneflts of
minimum tillage system of row
crop production is a high reduction in losses from win:l and
water on highly erodible soils,
according to Dr. B. L. Schmidt,
research agronomist at the
Ohio Agriculture nesearch and
Develq&gt;ment Center in Wooster, Ohio.
Schmidt reported of the Ohio
wind erosion studies at a recent meeting of the Amerkan
Society o! Agronomy. The tests
showed wind erosion on highlyerodible sand~; and sandy loam
soils in northwestern Ohio was
reduced significantly by no tillage corn as compared to
corn planted in plowed soil.
Soil losses from witKI erosion,
measured at 107 tons per ar:re
[rom corn planted on plowed
ground, dropped to only a rraction of 111 ton per acre from
nelds planted with the no-tillage
system.
A wind tunnel was used to
help gather infonnation in the
stWies.

Flowers-An Appreciated Gift

Traditional Holly and Foliage

CHRISTMAS
SHOPPING

Now Ymi Know

CENTER

FAMOUS NAr.tE BRANDS
Our coats are all tops in styling, rabrics and r:olors. Yoo'll firwi just the
coat you want, whether il's a plain
casual coat or a fur trimmed coat..
See our selection firsl Sizes £or
Junior Petites, Regulars, Juniors,
Misses a.nd Half sizes - in all price
ranges.

Carefree

1.

1

"Whlfped ~~eam" ~
louses
Rumes, pleats and lacy trims
on your favorite blouses of
dacron polyester "whipped
cream" crepe to wear with
your favorite suits, jumpers
and skirts Choose !rom white
and delicate pastels. - The
Ideal gift.
Sizes 30 to 38 and 40 to 44

··-,\

: "I

'\)

I . \
,I

'I

\'.,,
,.

Elberfelds Are
Headquarters For
Famous Name Brand
Dresses For Women
Of All Ages
These are dresses that are
sure to please you. Dresses
and styles especially rlatterif€. DresseR for now and.
otyles for the Holida.Y Sea·
son. You•n find styles in
plaids, patterns, prlnts,
tweeds and solids. A wide
variety of fabrics - junior
petites, regulars, juniors,
misses and half sizes. -

l

'
'
'
•
•
•
•
•
•

Warm
Snowsuits
A winter wonderland of fashions
for boys and

BERKSHIRE
VICKI VAUGHN
BETTY HARTFORD
TONI TODD
LADY LAURA
STACEY AMES
BUTTE KNITS
GLENGARY KNITS
FOREVER YOUNG
by Puritan

girls in these
worm snowsuits.
Snuggly lined
jackets with
cuddly hoods,
zipper fronts,
worm contrasting
pants.

Beautiful Poinsettias

'

Moin St .

Mrs. Millard Van Meter
Free Dell•ery

Svreater Dresses
The " ,Ill-Look" for girls - bonded knit
shifts and sweater dresses in beautiful
colors, turtle necks and knit cuffs complete the sporty· dressy look- inspir·
ed by English Mods for J lo 6x and 7 to
14 fashion minded lassies.
tower serve• Australia's re·

Pomero)", 0. 1

f()f

t!.3 tfJ6X

find
1
f() '"
Swinjers

cently opened townahlp of

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

Coleambath In souther•
New South Walea. Tower

WE WIRE FLOWERS ANY WHEREI

Irrigate• rice 8eld1 Ia new
cen~r of aaUon'a rlre- bowl.

1Jrenda Bradford is
Meigs '68 ]r. Miss
ern High School senior. daughter oC Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Bra«ord ol Racine, was crowned 1969 Jomlor Miss &amp;mdaynight
in the Pomeroy Junior H I g h
School auditorium.
Mlsa Bradford, who sang &amp;
solo as her talent presentation
in the amual Junior Miss Pageant was chosen rrom a field
of10 contestants. She was crowned by Ann Holter, 1968 Meigs
County JWlior Miss.
The hooor of first-rwmerup In
the event sponsored by the Meigs
Comtt;v Jaycees, was J e n n y
Dean, an Eastern High senior,
daughter &lt;A Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Dean of near Qlester, wbo accompanied hersell at the piano
in a vocal solo as her entertainment. ~ was presented her
trophy by Ron Mt:Dade, Jaycees
president.
Sond,y Zerkle, Meigs H I g h
senior, and daughter ol Mr. and
Mrs. William Zerkle of ~··
cuse, was named second rwmerup and wu presented her trophy by Pomeroy c or c President William Grueser.
The third runner.&lt;J() trophy,
presented by Pageant General
Chairman Ralph Werry, was awarded to !ilella Childs, Meigs
Hlgh senior, and daughter ol Mr.
and Mrs. WOllam Childs of Middleport, and the fourth runnertrophy

wao won

by

Shirley

ELBERFELD&amp; IN POMIROY

oolo lor her talent, Miss Childs
pve a reading, and Miss Gueltl.g, who was given her trophy
by Ed BoB&amp;OS, Chevrolet DMalon GMC of!lclal, preoented a

vocal solo.
W!Men ol individual awards
included Miss Zerkle, poise and
a_......, and youth fitness;
ShlriiiY Guoltil, taleol; Mils
Braclord, .scholastic; M II 1
Chilcll, porPIB1111, and Kenda
c~, the oo.oieaa award. Tak.
llli por.t In the preoentatlm
: tf!ooe awards were Laurie Schall·
111811 Mill swthem o b I o;
Joic10 DIU ~dJan!el, JIQ'Cee•

ol

P AIUS (UPI) - Speculators began a new rush to buy gold on the
Paris market today and the Bank of t'rance was reported throwing
in gold from France's dwindling stocks to hold down the price aOO
combat the newest threat to the franc.
DeCaulle's refusal to devalue the franc despite pressure of the
world's richest trading nations was accompanied by a plea to speculators to eOO their "odious" attack on the franc. That plea went
Ignored today as speculators bought gold.
The price of a gold ingot (2.2 powlds) rose 300 rrancl!l ($60) today
and would have risen higher had not the Bank of France acted swiftly. A kilogram of gold was quoted at 6,448 l'rancs ($1,289) Tuesday
when the panic selling of trancs was at its peak. It climbed today and
then leveled off 300 francs higher.
The U. S. dollar was being unolOcial)l· traded at 5.30 francs instead of the normalS francs. This signified an unofficial 6 per cent
devaluation since sellers were getting 30 tentimes (six cent&amp;) more.
This dropped Ule Crane from 20 cents to 18.8 cents,
ThrC)Uihout the moujfY marketl of Weat·EurqJespeculatorswere
shying off. the franc and there was Uttle if any change.
In the last gold rush hittirc the crane France lost l4l to $2 billion
of its gold reserves whichwereaccurnulatedlargelyat 91)ense of the
U.S. dollar. It has about$4billlonlefta00 some of this was put on the
market today.
The decree eKempted from
A government decree limited
control
the travelers checks
travelers leaving t"rance to as
foreign
tourists bring into
that
little as $10 in francs. From
France.
Lille, a northern city where De
Acting to implement the
Gaulle wu born, large police
austerity
De Gaulle announced
and heavily armed national
Sunday,
the
government also
geJllaramerle forces moved to
limited
Frenchmen
to taking no
the much-crossed Belgian bormore
than
$10
on
trips
of less
der to back lll cusi.OITls men
than
a
day
to
neighborif€
counting travellers' money.
Police also took positions at nations.
De Gaulle's regime made one
major airports.
major
exception. To aid the
In the major money markets
vital
e~ort
trade and to get
of Europe, currency exchange
badly
needed
dollars, it said
markets reopened after being
French
businessmen
would be
shut for da,ys because of the
allowed
up
to
$400
for
business
French economic crisis. But
trips
abroad.
traders did relatively little
business in frant:s. Market
observers said this reflected
wu:er'-&amp;inty whether' De Gaulle's
save • the - franc drhre would
work.
The go\lernment journal said
Frenchmen, foreigners living
here and tourists can leave with
no more than $40 in Cranes and
$100 in foreign currency.

3 Traffic
Accidents
Reported

~orarity Selec~

Three trart'lc accidents, none
of which resulted in personal in-

For Tutor Group

CROWNED - Brellla Bradford, Southern High School senior aOO daughter or Mr. and Mrs. Clarenfe Bradford of Racine, is crowned the 1969 Meigs County Junior Miss by Ann
Holter, last year's pageant winner. Miss Bradford was select-ed from a field of 10 contestant&amp;. - Sentinel Photo.
Mike Zerkle, asst. chairman;
James Mees, cmtestanta chair·
man and master d ceremonies;
Roger Young, asst. contestants
chairman; Ronald McDade and
Miller, president, Ohio Junior Thomas Martin, directors; Tony
Mtas, IDe.; Mrs. Norm DeHa- Ta,ylor, William Lambert, Char·
ven, Oldo Junior Miss, Inc.;Dale les Humphreys, Richard Ht,yes
Nttzachke, assistant dean, Col- and Alan King, staging; Ralph
leg~ of Education, Ohio Univer- Werry, choreography; Earl Insity; Ralph Zinser, post Meigs gels and James Mees, adverCowrt,y Junior Miss Judge from tising; vtncent Knlllllt and Jom
Marietta, and Jeame Cogne,y, Reclovian, tickets and budget,
well-lmown radio and TV per. and WUliam McDaniel and Gene
aonaiiiJo and dean o1 the col. Riggs., awardl.
lop ol Fine Arts, Ohio Unlver.
sity. Mlaa Cagney, whose marLOCAL TEM~
ried nome 11 Mrs. Jad&lt; Morri1be ..,...,.ratuteln Plmlert&gt;Y'•
son, lB. the aiater ot actor Jim·.
downtown buolnell dlatrlct at
my
Pageant .llOIDJ1Iiltl!jiO Included 11:32 a.m. Wdll¥ wa1 42 dell'ee•,
Ralph Werry, general chairman; under SW'111Y skies.

ette Sally Ingels, A, R. Knight,
Pomeroy Motor Co. owner, and
Jack Kerr, president and general m1111q0r &lt;A WMPO Radio.
Pageant Judges were Russell

C-.

SQUAD CALLED
Racine emergency ~
were s\IJI'liiQJ8d at 4:50p.m. Saturday and tranoported Jolm Ji.
vtden, Racine, to Veterans Memorial Hospital where he was ad·
mlttod as a medical patieol.

MEIGS GENERAL HOSmAL
AdmlsliQM SIIIW'day - Ncme.
Dlacbargel SaturdiY - MP1le
Durst, Rebecca Humell, GoiCo
Cl~-•- Gear"'• Sml"' 01110
Q-~·•
.- ••
Wisellllll.

drlyen by

HU~

Madge

While,

Rt. 1, Long Bottom, and n-.
u 1M White, 41, RL S, POme-

Admlollima !Mlda.v _ Edlill · r~, polllclecl oo a curve. Ther&lt;&gt;
McCOJ, !b'racuse; 14rt'l' ~· ..., -..ate daiMp to the

cer, RaciDe.
Dladiargol !lmday -

,,....oll!alh-·
-....
...
•- arra••l

-.

.....
'·

juries, were reported by Metas
County Sheriff Robert C. Har Umbach" s department over the
weekend.
The rtrst was at 1:15 p.m. Saturda.Y on County Road t3,ooeand
nine tenths miles northeast«'the
Vlntorl and Mel.ga COUnty Une,
where Walter A. croaby, 17. DI.Ytoo, said he waa forced oil the
road by another vehicle. He
struck a telephone pole. There
was heavy tlamage to ths rront
or Crooby's Volkswagen.
SIIIW'da.Y at 11:15 p.m., a 196S
model auto operated by Robert
Sidney Marcinko, 47, ~·
Plalna, traveling east on Routea
7 and 124 500 ft. east of
the Odldrea's Hom• HUI Road.
was heavll,y domaged""enitwenl
acroaa the hllbway and lnt:D an
emb.....,._ alter the brakoa
locked.
The other, a two -vehicle colllolon. oc&lt;~~rred !lmda.v at 9:30
a;m. 011 the Eastman Rood in
Bedl'onl tolmlhlp wbore cara

Charles T. Morarlt;y, L I ncoln Heights, Pomeroy, is one
of some 100 Miami University
students certified to participate
as a tutor in a new freshman
tutorial service being offered
by the ..Uverslty.
Morarlty, a junior ln t h e
school of Applied Science, is
In the tlrst group &lt;A stud111t tu.
tor&amp; selected for the new pro.
gram. Morartty lo the am of
Mr. and Mra. Lawrence L. M.orarltJr.

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1-' 0
&lt;{&gt;

.. ~ ...
Od'$)0

da,v with occulooal rain by

111e

afternoon and little lemporoture
change.

TEN CENTS

··

· · ..

·

'

l

Gue.lt1g, a senior from Southern
High, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
lo!. F. Gueltig.
Miss Zerkle did a trumpel

GOBLET-SHAPED w at or

"~

~""

- $60 in Market Price

'
WINNER AND COURT - Brenda Bradford, 1969 Meigs County Junior Miss, third left, is sur\ rounded by the pageant runners"'-t) following the competition Sunday night in the Pomeroy Junior
High Auditorium. Lert to right are Sheila Childs, third ruiiDer-upi Shirley Gueltig, fourth runnerop; Mlss Bradford, Sarxlra Zerkle, second runner..gp, and Jennifer Doan, first runner~. -Sent~
lnel P&amp;ot&lt;&gt;.

up

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Variable cloudiness extr'eml
northeast and mostly aunny elsewhere today. Clear and eold again UJnlt!I&gt;L Low middle ZOI
to lower 30s. Molltly cloudY 'J'11No

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BY BOB WINGETT
Petite Brenda Bradford, SOuth-

Slim Jim .sportswear sets in
color - many dlllerent
fabrics, so choose your !avorltes - perfect ror the 3 to 6x
and 7 to 14 girls -

Phone 992-2039

':1.

Weather

.......... I)

2.2 Pound Ingot Jumps ·· ·· ·

Take good care of yourself from the wind and rain
in one of our All Weather Coats. Smart styling makes
our coals perfectly wearable as everyday fashion
toppers. Some with warm pile linings.
Regular and Half Sizes .

-

r;o.E'
i
Ov
..
f'
i
Owiisiior!l
I
I

Devoted To The lnlert!$lo Of 'The Meigs-MtJM)n Area

Wonderful
All Weather Coats

e~ery

Your Cold Medal Communil11 Florist

at y

'

That go to the head of the class

Gift Items

enttne

"'~ ...

.

~

Speculators Defy DeGaulle
,With New Rush to Buy G-old

Christmas Wreaths

Christmas Decorations

•

•

e

Valdez, a small Alaska town
with a poptllatlon of 1,200, is the
farthest north all-year open port
in North America.

Fashions
For Girls

Grave Blankets

trw in lenni or draotlt jected a 3.7-m.illlevy, but, three schools open.
Rejects Levy
state £unds if a proposed 24backs.
These districts are the ones
The Hamilton School District weeks later, the teachers voted
mill operating le-vy is defeated
Buckeye Valley in DolaWan
that have become troublespot.s.
for
a
new
contract
which
wiU
in Franklin County rejected a
county
will g0 on whit lo &lt;:~!~!""
Dec. 10
l3-mill tax levy, ard the boerd cost the board of education an according to the Ohio Educa- 1 "semi-euateriQ'" piCCI••
The district "put all its eggs
approxi11111te $2,8 million, which tion Association.
in one basket" Nov. 5 when it immediately cut out transportaa&lt;:cording to Stctt. RlchU'd
Serious Troubles
it says Is just not available.
asked voters to i~Jprove 1 24.3 tion. 'l'housatds of parents comRannells. He cited a need W
However,
many
otllers
!ace
C. R. C:Wlentz in Preble
miU levy. The voters rejected plained to the board that the
new busses , repairs, c :dill at'
County, which threatened to 5erious troubles. Warren School
the combination new and ro- transportation was necessary
tive
salaries, text books aad JD..
close after an issue was defeat- District voters rejected a $6.4
and it was resumed.
newallevy,
structional
materialL
But, the voters must still act ed, reversed its original deci- million construction bond issue
If Ow levy again Is rejected,
and pr~~ly lost a chance to
the district will be without Lax 1.1)00 the 13-mill levy in a spe- sion.
"When the cost of ape~
buy •·
' rgrounds, where a
About
a
week
alter
the
9-mill
funds, since it must have a local cial election Dec. 10. The board
increases and the money ~
~.:hool
would
have
levy was defeated, the board
minimum of 17.5 mills before said, if that fails, schools will
mains stable, the gap ~
round $20,000 in county tax rev·
becoming eligible for state close Jan. 1.
~ tistricts are talk~ tinues," he explained.
In Cincinnati, the voters ro- enues, enough to keep the \ ib
funds.

COLUMBUS (t:PO - Voters classes would be clos(.od. The at Toledo in neighboring Lucas
in more than 100 s&lt;:hool dis- voters rejected the lev,y each Count). But, they must find
tricts will go to the polls early Ume, ard the ~Schools will be their own transportation.
Selsonville - York in Athens
next month lO cast ballots on closed from Thanksgiving vacaschool issues which were re- tion until the nrst of the year, County will close its doors at
when the school dislrid begins Thanksgiving vacation for at
jected earlier this month.
least two weeks.
Mam· of the sehool districts a new fiscal year.
If voters fail to approve a 7otsego Schools in Wood Counare threatened with suspendirg
mill
levy, the schools wtll reclasses if the o_perating levies ty will dose Dec. 1 because or
main
closed until after the first
do not. pass in \he special elec- a lack of funds.
of
the
year,
vocational School
tions.
Marietta
CilJ School s have
However, 71 students in Wood
The Youngstown School Oi,s.
been
warned
b)· the State DeLrlct gave its voters three County will be atteMing schooL
partment
or
Education
there is
chances to approve an operat- They arc eru·olled in the Penta
no
way
to
prcYent
the
loss of
ing levy before it announced Count)· Joim Vocational School,

POMEROY
YOUR

Judging Shows

nliikay

Make Elber!.lda Ready To Wear o..
portment your headquarters for wear•
ing apparel for the women and girls
In your family. We corry a c~_mplete
stock of coats, suits, drenes, jock•
eh, skirts, sweaters, blouses, slach,
robes., dusters, millinery, coordinate
groups . Come in and let us help you
with your selections. Capable soles·
people to ouht you.

IN

Billy Bush in
COLUMBUS - The Ohio State
University's livestock judging 6man team has returned to campus
with two creditable performances
in major cootests. One of its
members il William (Billy) Bush,
Rt. 1, Gallipolis.
On Nov . 14 at Harrl sburg,
Pa., the team placed Cirst in
livestock judging at the Permsyl.
vania Livestock Exposition. It
was one of 11 teams entered.
The team also placed second in
cattle judging and swine judging Wld third in sheep judging.
other members of the team
were James Brandt, Rt. 1, Ama;
Clifford Or ley, 2297 Middleton
Rd., Hudson; Jay Penick, Rt.
I, Hebron; William Moody, Rt.
3, Fredericktown, and David Owens, Rt. I , Jeffersonville.
On Nov. 15 the team travelled to Timonium, Md., to compete in the EastemNaUonal Uvestock &amp;ow. H placed third overall, behind the UniversHy of Tennessee and Virginia Polytechnic
Institute teams.

Chance
to
Get
Second
Districts
Voters in 100 School

j"

--A..

were »-

of the accl&lt;lellll.

In

lUll'

PRESENT TRUCK - 'Ibis !HI _.._ emor..DC.Y unit tnlek will bo replaced bJ 1 CXII
in the spri ng or 1969 if a current drive tor doratlona proves successful. The truck above will be
converted into a Fire Department Rescue Truck atter the new unit is purchased.

Unit Launches Fund Drive
el, would be transformed into a
BY BOB WINGETT
The Racine Emergency Squad fire department rescue vehicle
Unit, encouraged by donatloos when the new wrlt ill put Into
from residents of Sutton, Leba- service. It would be used by the
non and Letart Townships, and by department to haul volunteers and
a series of successful money - equipment to fires and also to
making projects, Is oonducting a transport persons injured inci drive to raise still more mon- dent to them ror medical treatey to buy a new rirst aid truck. ment.
"At this time we have no veSquad leaders said the drive
hicle
available for emergency
for doMtions has already netcalls
on
occasions when our unit
ted $1,600. Hopes are high the
is
summoned
on fire calls," a
new vehicle can be purchased
spokesman
said.
"So we reel It
by oprlng.
would
be
of
great
value to use
The present truck, a 1961 modTenth District Cong. Clar·
ence E, Miller has armounced
the Bureau of Public Roads
has allotted emergency relief
!undo I&lt;&gt; repair damaged high ways in several counties ofthe
District. The damage resulted
from flooding earlier this
year.
Induded is Meigs COWl.U'
which will rea:ive $4,000, half
the coot &lt;A repairing Slate
Route 124 south c1 the Athens
county ilne.
:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:::::;:;:::::::;:::::::;::.;:;:;.;:;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::·.·

OAPSE TO MEET
Neal Retherford, field representative of the Ohio Association
PubUc School Employees. wUl be speaker ror a meetIng &lt;A the Southern Local DIS·
trict (OAPSE) Chapter Wednesday, Nov. 27, at 7:30p.m. at the
Southern High School. All members are urged to attend.

or

Logan Granted $189,000
To Help Foster Industry
Approval of a $189,000 grant
to help foster industrial growth
and create more than 200 new
jobs at Logan, Ohio, was amounced today by the Economic De velopment Administration, U. S.
Department of Commerce.
The project involves expansion or the city's sewage-treatment facilities, which will allow seven local businesses to
grow and add a total of 200 new
employees, according to the appllcant. A local hospital alsowiU
be served by the facilities and
expects to add 10 more workers
as a result.
Hocldng County ol.flcials are
actively plamlng for economic
development. A site ha! been selected Cor a new airport, a mas-

"

ter plan has been prepared for
expanding recreatioo [acilities
at Hocking Hills state Park, and
the new Tri-County Vocatl.onal
School and Teclmlcal lnstitutlt
will provide training for local
workers.
The dty is matching the IDA
funds to help meet the $378,000
total oost of the project amol.llced toda.Y.
EDA was established under tile
public Works and Economic Development Act of l96S io aid
lagging areas of the ..tlon.. Ia
addition to public 'fiOI'ka gram.
and loans, the agency provldu
business development loans and
technical and plamlng aslfa..
tance.

Quads' Father Admits Exhaustion
DEARBORN, Mich. (UPll- army of "little additions."
Brian, 6, "is very happy,"
In 24 mlnutes Sunday Gustave
Putter went £rom a father of Pulter, a Ford Motor Co.
two to 1 rather of six as his employe said. "I know he'U be
wire, Pamela, gave birth to glad to have his mom back
agaiiL ..
qllldruplets.
Pulter said he al'li hi&amp; wile
The tlther said he is
learned or the possible multiPle
exhauteci
WhUe Mrs. Putter, 31, an:l her birth In late September alii
lour black-llllired babies- three since then Mrs. Pul.ter has
daughters an:l a son- slept spent about four weeks in the
peacerull.y. Putter was worrying hoop ito!.
For the time betna. the babies
about bed&amp; for the infants, the
-who
weighed 3 pounds, 4
extra bedroom he w a n t s to
1ttach to hls three-l&gt;edroom ounces to 4 pounds, 12 ounce a at
auburbln home and hoW hls two birth- wW be placed in one
Older sons wlU react to the bedroom.

,,

'

the present truck Cor Cire department rescue unit purposes
rollowlng purchase or the new
ooe."
The Racine Emergency Squad
unit, a unit inside the volunteer
tire department, began operatioos in September of 1955. DurIng the unit's first tull year ot
aervlce in 1956, it made 68 nma.
Activity has increased gradually each y~3r, with the peak in
1967 when member! made 127
calls. The unit haa answered
(Continued on Page t[l)-

"

"I can't atrord to move,••

Pulter

said.

addition
on
possible."
The

cribs

11

We'U put

as

Pulters don't
or •ul.Mta

10011

U

aa

taw ..,
ftr . .

babies. Fer a 1.,.. IIi.
weren't sure lt lira. Nk
would bo lllle to carr)' lhlilll.
"I'm Just hcPillc IIINIIo lila. ,,
stol'es wW IOid ·, 11 things," he said.
Askod II .. IIIII 11!1
planned to ...... ....
chUdrea, Putter ........ .
UcalJy, "I hope no&amp;.'' ,

·

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