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JI-'I'IIIDID,y8 41wi,M! .... t-1' «oy,O.• Aua.:ll.ll71

Communities in Action

Rebellion Faced Down
I

.

.

WASHINGTON (UPI) ' · Faced by rebellions from
organized labor, school officials
and the governor of Tens, the
administration has declared its
wage-price freeze will be en·
forced without exceptions and
hinted at court actions against
violators. ·
The threat from the administration came as complaints
against the program to cure the
ailing economy announced Sunday by President Nil&lt;on rose in
pitch. There were these exam·
pies:
-AFL-ClO President George
Meany and his Executive Board
denounced the !llklay freeze as
"inequitable, unjust, unfair and
Wlworkable." They announced
the 13.6 million-member federa-

Austeri~y

.MEIGS THEATRE.

'.

Toniqftlthru Saturuay
August lC..ll
NOT OPEN

Sun., Mon., &amp; Tues.
August22·24
LITTLE MURDERS
(Ttchnicolorl
Elliott Gould
Donald Sutherland

R

lor.artoons'
Royal Royalty
Klondike Strikeout
Riverboat Mession
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

lonoght, Aug. 20
Double Feature Program
"A BOY NAMED
CHARLIE BROWN"
The ' Peanuts' Gang In their
first movie!

(Color)

G
-PLU5ELOORAOO
CTedonicolor)
John Wayne
Robert Mitchum
It's the big one with the big
o!

Saturday, August2t
A Bullet For
PRETTY BOY
I Color)
Fabian Forte

Tbe Ohio Valley Raelng

Jocelyn Lane

Assn., formed oaly In May,

Astrid Warner

GP
And

.

TELL ME THAT YOU
LOVE ME JUNIE MOON
IColorl
Liza Minelli

---

GP

Sun., Mon. &amp; Tues.
August n-23-24

Double Feature Program

"MONTE WALSH"

Lee"Marvln

GP
-PLU50NCE YOU KISS
A STRANGER
I Color)
Paul Burke

Carol Lynley

Spencer

reeelved two flnta aaol two
seeood placet In lbe quarterbone ra&lt;IDB allbe Meigs
County Fair 'Jbarsday.
Tile auaclatloli has a
tralaiDg lndt IIIII a four hole
aatomaUc llariiDg gate just
below MaHD, w. Va. The
group plan! lborougllbred,
qaarterborse and possibly
poay raciDcatlbe track In the
aear fmure.

Jack Palance

Pletures and Re)lllrt
· By Bob Ho,eftlcb
CJIESHIRE.- u you're too yom~g for
Medicare and too affluent for welfare, the
Gallla·Meigs Community Action Program
may just have the answer to your medical
problem.
Und01 a $411,000 grant the Community
Action Program is operating a community
center In Cheshire und01 Project Assist.
Tile program is designed to help those who
need help but can't qualify through other
agencies.
In conjunction with the Project Assist
progr8111, a clinic is operated each
Tuesday of every week. On that day
1 patients - an average of some 25 - pour
into the clinic to .be seen by a doctor,
receive any medication needed and be
served refreshments by a church group.
Making the trip to Cheshire each

Members celtlng wias at
the 'Jbanday raciDg program
were Jennings Beegle, a first
aad a second; Darryl
Stumbo, a first, aod Robert
Meier, a second.

Threatened
.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov. ai revenue deficits. Tile only
John J. Gilligan, striving to way to come up with that $411
make up a $411 millioo deficit' millioo to cover our obligalioos
caused by two one-month in- lhrough January and February
terim state budgets, bas out. is to start saving ft now, by
lined an austerity program be making cuts in state expendiwill institute if !be General As- . lures ...
sembly fails ,to adopt a bal1 ecJolalare Milt Aet
anced two-y~ budget and t.u 1be goveroor said he bas
package by Sept. 1.
warned repeatedly about the
The program, announced oo possibility of an austerity prostatewide television and radio gram. He offered a $9.1 billion
Thursday, involves the la)'off of two-year budget last March 15,
almost 3,000 state employes, but the Republican-cootrolled
saiary cuts, state part closings General Assenibly has not apafter Labor Day, and reduced proved it.
aid for elementary and second- The Ohio House adopted an
ary schools, universities and Sl billioo budget and passed
college students, welfare recipi· $1.5 billion worth of new taxes,
ents and health care.
·
including Ohio's lint personal
Gilligan also said he would income tax, to finance it but
cut his own salary .by 10 per the Senate bas not acted on
cent and asked his cabinet-level either.
personni!i to follow suit oo a
Gilligan said his austerity
voluntary basis. The governor's measures could be avoided If
annual salary is $40,000. Cabi- the legislature acts on a budget
net members- receive about by Sept. 1.
$25,1100.
"11Jere is still lime, fbere..
The governor explained in- lore, to eliminate the need to
terim budgets for July and Au- reduce the level of state servgust have cost a projected casb .ices even below what we hove
shortage of $411 million by next now," the govemCJ' said. "But
February.
the legislature - !be elected
"I can no longer accept in- rei» esentatives of the peopleterim budgets which mooth by our representatives, must act
month push this state toward now. 1 hope they do."
bankruptcy," Gilligan said. "We
Gilligan said !allure of !be
are prohibited by law from bor- legislature to act would result
rowing money to finance gener- in the layoff of 2,1140 state ein· ·
_

Minh Pulls -O ut
Wilberl Weaver Died Thursday

GP

FIREMEN CAl I ED
Middleport firemen were
called to North Seeood St. at
12:56 p. m. Thursday when a
Royal Crown BotWng Co. truck
caught fire. There were minor ,
damages. At 5:29 p. m, the
Middleport E·R squad was
called to the home of Mrs.
George Miller in Middleport.
She was Iaten to tho Holzer
Medical Center via ambulance .

To
The

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE
On The T In Middleport

We'H get you a place
to hang it.

Many Gift

H~ms

Reduced

There's no place like home. Your own. of course.
And there's no better way to get it
than with our easy·to·arrange,row·cost Mortgage Loan.

'

POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK
POMEROY

RUJIMD

Serving Meigs County
Since 1872
Merr.ber Federal Reserve :System
Member Federal Deposit, Insurance Corporation

All Accounts Insured Up To S20,000.00

Continuous Service On
Fricloys 9 a.m. to 7 p.m•.

....
••

'

....
"""" tr ..,.. ot Ike 0111o
Departmeat of Meatal
llnfeDe ud c. ledio!l teday
auoueed a 1erle1 of
sweeplq calbcb ia ex·
p m.. es ftldl 11e · uld
wOIIId uve Ike stale ...28
mUHn Ill flleal 1J7Z.
Or. lame~~! Gaftr uld lbe .
catbacb ....td btehMie • 11
pet. catbaet Ill tile lleldl of
admlal•lratlaa illeladlllc
l!llllllllhn" admlalatraU.,
cenlnl offlfta ud Adalt
Plnle . Alllberlly ftlelt
would am-1 to
a
lllDIIIII.
. ·.. ··....·.·,·.v.·,,·.·, .·.·..·.·,·.•,·,•,•.•,••,•,·.·.·.·.·
ployes, more lhan balf of them
workers in the departments of
natural resources, highways
and mental hygiene and correclion.
Spending reductions in vari·
ous governmental departments
would approD!Iate 10 per cent,
the gov~ said, and new hir·
ing would he banned escept in
crucial situations. Equipment
purchases and maintenance expenses would be curtoiled, he
said.
Gilligan said no action would
be taken which · would lower
the level of care for patients in
state mental holpitals.
Paymenta to school districta
would be cut by 3 per cent a
montll starling In September,
the governor said, and spec1al
educatiONI!Itlivllloo peYII*Jt8
would be eliminated.
Stale Wlllld!l't . . .
"1be ultimate CGII8I!qllellCe of
this situalioo will he that many
Ohio chlldren will find that the
schools in their neighborbood
will not open this year," Gilli-·
gan said.
'
. Support paymenta to ROO•
public schools would be eHml.
nated Wider the program, and
various forms of financial aid
to universities would be lennlnatell, including subsidies for
ou~~tate students and spec1al
operating supplements for
Cleveland State University 11J1d
Wright State University.
PajmeniS to scholarship stu·
dents in botll public and private
colleges and universities would
be reduced under GUIIgan 's
plan.
A health care program for
welfare recipients would be
eliminated, and welfare checks
for October would be cut by
1\io per cent per month for dependent chlldren, the aged, the
blind and the disabled.
' ''No ooe who now """'ives
healtll care will be deprived of
that care," the governor assured, "but we will limit the
amount of reimbwsement to
hospi~ and nursing homes
and curtail some expe1Jditures
for dental and comparable
~ort by instituting tighter re-

vtew standards."

Both Friday and Saturday Nights

.. . With

WIN THE

8~ ­
o~t~te ·

8Pifel

·
BAKER

BUDGET
SHOP!

.t mts

A GOod

Ti~

Your lnvitro Guest
Reaching More

Than 11,000

Devoted To .The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

Families
THREE SECTIONS

. 30 PAGES

\IOL. VI NO. 30

SUNDAY. AUGUST 22. 1971

Pomeroy-Middleport

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Fair Feature
POMEROY - Excellent races
enhanced by local owners and drivers, and
pari-mutuel betting, featured the Friday
evening twilight harness racing program
at the IOBth Meigs County Fair.
Drivers included Sidney Spencer and
his soo, Don, of Pomeroy; Don McKenzie
of Pomeroy, and Burdell McKinney of
Middleport. Don Spencer, Sidney Spencer
and Mr. a,nd Mrs. McKenzie owned horses
in the racing.
\
THE RESULTS
First race, Z.year old trot, River
Valley Colt Circuit, Sassy, ·owned by
Richard Morgan and Deail Kelby, Belpre
aJilj Waterford, "irtlh Morgan driving.
S8cond, 0 Mblieasmine, owned by Helen
Eianaugle, Jacbon, driven by F. Hess.
Third, Woodlawn's JohMie, owned by
John Fosler, Piketon, driven by C. Har-

ness. Time, 2:23.2.
Second race, 3-year-old pace,
Elimination Dash, Big Red Machine, from
the Ecker . and Spencer Stables, of
Gallipolis and Marietta, Sid Spencer,
driver. Second, Way Late, owned by
Clinton Gilmore, Washington Courthouse,
driven by Larry Richard. Third, Volante
M owned by Clayton Daughterly,
Columbus, driven by Mr. Daughterly.
Third race, 3-year old pace, 2nd
Elimination dash, winner, Strike A Beat,
owned by Penny Richard, Washington CH,
driven by Larry Richard. Second, Fair
Ellen, owned by Othello Johnson,
Gallipolis, driven by Johnson. Third, Dale
8. Quick, Don Witekl, of lfollloll, Don
Spencer, driver, given to these drivers
because of a judges inquiry. Butches

For Comfortable

Family Shopping
All' Over The Store .

.,
AN EXCELLENT HORSE HARNESS RACING PROGRAM was presented for
Meigs County Fair fans Friday evening. Local Ol'lllers and trainers took active
roles in the program. This was how it looked as tile horses neared the finish line in
one of the races.
'

Old Church Will be Restored
BY BECKY VANCO
GALI.JPOI.JS - on top ol
Friendly Ridge, off Rt. 218, a
lillie log church overlooks the
valley below. It stands guard
over a graveyard, as II
protecting its loved ones in
hock.
A huge drooping tree in the
front yard of the church
suggests that age is to be
respected here.
The cnunbling chink, and the
powdery logs, hold the
memories of many people and
the last rites of others.
Inside, remnants of !be floor
have been ravaged; now
overrun with the Uttie animals
of the woods. Pews are stacked
into one comer. The windows
have been Broken out, but the
roof remains Intact, In good
condition.
This, the St. Nick Church of
Christ, was sla7ted in 1873.
Each farmer donated one log
for building into the church,
Two years passed before the
men were able to build enough
of lhe church so the first service
could be held.
Soloman Devor preached at
the first meeting. The first seats
were boards placed on top of the
bottoms of tree lrWlks.
Young John Herman White
(Continued oo page 3)

'

Bloodmobile Day
POMEROY - Tomorrow Is
BIOlJd!noblle Day in Meigs COWlty, Aug.
23, Iron! 1 lo 6 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Elementary School.
The recipient Is protected tllrough
careful selection of donors aod by
SPecial laboratory tests of the donated
blood. From the time the blood is
ooUected It is kepi refrigerated al from
39 to 43 degrees F. A sample of the
donor's blood is collected at the time of
the donali011 and used for all tile tests
necessary. Asecond sample is attached
·to the container holding his'blood. When
the blood is delivered to the hospital,
the donor's blood sample is carefully
crossmatebed with a sample of tbe
recipient's blood to make certain they
are compatible. Everyone concerned
with haodllDg the blood has been
speclnlly trained for lhe fWlctioos be
performs.
Please remember Aug. !3. Come lo
the Pomeroy Elementary Sehool.

Contract
THE OLD SAINT Nick Cllurch on Friendly Ridge is going to be restored for use on special.
occasions and as a landmark.

'" GAWPOLIS-Four barrel$ warning There was heavy damage to his car • none Crown City, driving north losi control of
drivers of a slip on the St. 35 by-pass to Stanley·
.
his car, struck an embankment and
Two persons were. . treated and overturned. Cox also complained of minor
wasn't enoug~ for Robert W. Stanley, 57,
Rt. 1, Thurman, at 2:05a.m. Saturday.
relea_sed at the H~lzer Medical Center for injuries but was not _treated. There was
The Slate Highway Pa\rol charged inJuries suffered 10 an acc1d~n~ at 10:10 moderate damage to his car. No citation
Stanley with driving while Intoxicated p.m. on Rt. 279m Th~n. Officers sa1d was issued.
after Stanley's auto rammed into all four. . Gary Waugh, 20, Rt. 2, Bidwell, lost control
of his car while making a turn, ran off the
right side of the highway and struck a tree.
He and a passenger, Brenda Rutt,'18, Rio
Grande, had bruises and abrasions. No
GALLIPOLIS- Dave Campbell, local
POMEROY - If you are 55 or over, . citation was issued.
superintendent of the North Gallia Local
whether ' you are retired, nearing
Charles Hill, 18, Chatham Ave., com- School District, said Saturday ~gistration
.retirement or jUst starting to· think about plained of minor injuries following a single for students at Bidwell-Porter Elemenla7y
it, now is the lime to become enlightened car accident at 4 a.m. Saturday· on Mill will be held from 9 to 11:30 a.m. Monday
says Mrs. VUma Pikkoja, librarian at the Creek Rd., one and eight tenths miles through Thursday.
Meigs Bookmobile headquarters.
north of Rl. 7.
Students at Vinton Elemenlary will be
· Mrs. Plkkoja has prepared a display of
Officers said Hill lost control of his registered from I to 3 p.m. Monday
boob of particular intereat to residents car, ran off the roadway and struck the . through Thursday and high school
nearing retirement. The booka will be guardrail.' He was chlWged _with speed in students from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. daily.
available on the bookmobile this wee~. The excess of road conditions. There was slight District drivers will meet at 9:30 a.m.
booka dell with dollar and cent J,lr6blems damage to his car. .
'
Thursday at North Gallia Higfi School and
on retirement, opPortuniiles for personal
A final mishap occurred at 7:56a.m. a meeting of all district teachers is on
growth 1 and enjoyment, retirement Saturday on Rt. 7, three and eight tent~ Friday, Aug. '!1, at 9;:J(i"a.m. All county
planning, iqvestment plans, social miles south of Rt. 218.
·
schools will open for th~ 1971-72 school
~IB'ily and Income taxes •
The patrol said Freddie Cox, 18, Rt. 2, term on Monday, Aug. 30.

Registration Time Set

Now is the Time

'

Veterans Memorial Hospital
from our
ADMITTED - · Martha
Graham, Pomeroy; Ada
Cramlell, Racine; Nellie Eblin,
Pomeroy;· Goldie Huson,
Langsville; George Nickinsky,
Middleport; Harry E. Young,
, Pomeroy; Molly Talbott,
Porlland; Robert Forrest,
Rulland; Mary Cooper, Athens;
Mae Brown, Pomeroy; Elthel
•Betzing, Syracuse. ·
FURNITURE
DISCHARGED - Nannie
.Radcliff, Gary -Eynon, Mark
MIDDLEPORT; 0.
Gilkey , Helen Riggs, Mary
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.Nelson . ·
'

'IHEWAmNG l«&lt;OIaaowdtcl eldl'l'llllldly • a cliJdc to JII'Ovlde old e!
attention and medicine is CO!Iducted in O!esbire.

+

ParUy cloudy, warm. . and
humid lhzough Monday with a
chance of thundersloFms
especially In the nortll portions,
some with hail and gusty winds.
Lows Sunday night in the mid
· lill9 to low 70s. High Sunday and
Monday in the mid 80s to low
90s.

Warning Barrels on 35 Clipped

UN.Til 9

PRICES ARE RIGHT!

A patient may be seen onll' once at the
clinic or, perhaps, many limes depending
upon his health. At limes, if serious
ailments are encountered during a course
of treatment, the patient may be referred
to another agency which might be able to
finance some ~osUy treatment or surgery
which cannot be provided out of Project
Assist funds. Some are also referred to
~pecialists for consultation and possible
treatment.
Housed in a building wtnch was formerly a furniture store, the Project Assist
(Continued on page 15)

•ne.•

Elberfelds ·Are Open

to Low Low Savings

Tuesday as attending physician is Dr:
Evelyn K-emp, M.D., of South Point.
Working with Dr. Kemp on clinic day are
Mrs. Edna Russell of Middleport, RN, who
heads the Project Assist program, and
Mrs. Barbara Scites, RN, near Pomeroy,
who on other days of a week works with a
CAP commm~ity service program.
In addition, there are six aides busy
each TueSday helping with the processes
involved and transporting patients to the
clinic from their homes which can be any
place in Meigs or Gallia Counties and as a
result can be far from the Cheshire clinic.

WEATHER REPORt

Jewelry, Etc.
Great~

Project Assist Program :
' SerVice where it is Needed
In Meigs, Gallia Counties

1.

·Ratified

CHARLIE BOYD OF DOVER, Ky., e&lt;bibited the granclcbulplon IJall allbe
Southeastern Ohio Polled Hereford Sbow at !be Meigs County Fair Friday. IIDJd
also had the reserve champion bull and tile reserve champion ftmale. (See page 2
other Meigs County Fair pictures).

Grant Johnson Had
Fair's Top Steer
(See Picturt on Page%)
POMEROY - Two years ago Grant
Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gay Johnsoo,
Albany Route 3, was very ill. His illness
was diagnosed as diabetes. Far the
youngster - just two days before his 13th
birthday -it was lhe end of the world.
However, Grant decided to learn to live
with his problem. Friday nigh! his grand
champion steer was sold al the Meigs
Counly Fair Steer and Lamb Sale for top

14, raise 45 head of catUe on lbeir paren!s'
l!ikcre farm . Although he loves, lbe
outdoor life and fanning , Grant lmowS that
he must have a college educatioo to beUBlive with his handicap. He hopes to proceeds from the sale of ca\l}e he raises
toward this end.
Grant administers an insulin sbOI to
himself each morning and must earefully
wal.ch his diet at all times. He has reculm'
medicalattention to help him live with his
ailment. He's getting along fine, but lbe
disease. isn't something that be will
outgroW.
•
Amember of the Meig$ County Better
Livestock Club, tllrough whicb bis JiiiR
steer was raised - lbeprojectstartiJ:C last
January - Grant will be a sophumcae at
j\lexander High School lllis )'W'. He
.belongs to the Fulure Farmers of Arne! icll
· at !be school.
Grant has been encouraged in ~
realisti~ approach to li~ ~
because his success may inspire o!la
young folkJ who suffer unavcidable rnw-11-

MARION - Ratification by union
membership of a new two-year. contract
between the Communications Workers of
America and General Telephone Co. of
Ohio was announced Saturday by labor
and management officials.
The new agreement, valued at a record
$3,438,1100, is subject to President Nixon's
price-wage freeze, however, officials said.
ll also provides improvement of fringe
money.
benefits and certain rules changes. The
Now-15, Grant and his brother, Randy,
agreement concluded 19 weeks of labormanagement lalks. Tentative agreement
had been reached Aug. 12.
Old Man Blanda
The cost of the package will total
$1,964,1100 the first year and $1,164,000 the
Does it Again
second. Effective date was listed as April
25.
BERKELEy, Calif. (UPI)
First-year wage increases for plant
Venerable Georce Blaada, oaktond's e
employes will range from !5 to 42 cents at
year-old II·Ollder, tossed a 35-ylt'd loach-·
the top. Traffic employes will receive 25 to dowu pass to Drew Bule ud boeted 1
29 cents increases and clerical, 24 to 30
pair of field goals S.turday to boost the
cents. Increases also were established for Raiders to a 21-1 preoeasoa victory over
night-duty tours, ranging from 18 cents to
the Los Aogeles Rams.
30 cents. AU increases are on an hourly
The game was the first professioul
basis.
contest played at !be UDiversity of
Major benefits ·changes call for an
California's Memorial Stadllllll ud
additional holiday (President's Day ) in
attracted a crowd of i'l,'l'D, a new
'
1972, and improved h\)SIIitalization and Raiders borne """'fd, Tbt eld DWtr; wu
COFC 10 liBEl'
major medical plans. Also, eligible emPOMEROY- The Pauaoy 0' ' «
iit,5M aplost S.a Diego last n s •
ployes will get three weeks vacalio~ after
of Commerce will meet ...lloolay at .... "
=~~==i&lt;!-~::~:~~~~!}~~-«~»:=:.'%:-1c-.~~ Bowen Rt'SIIlniiL
(Continued on. Page 2)
.

------ - -

�'

6 CoUJits Contract
or
Forgery
. Charg~d

BYARS PACXING OOMPANY purdJ82d the gnmd cbampioo stefr owned by Grant
.i4 e ltlbellmillrFairhlSieer IOIFat Lamb Sale FridayniglttattheMeigsOnmty Fair.
'Die111p•eual 11 "4*"'1,1151bs.IDisold for 99 cents. Lr, back row, are, Vicki Carr, beef
Qn ,IW!Iir a•y v llllll Donie! Milltiff, Junior Fair King 111d QUeen, Menill Evans-of
Et-. P. Uc o ..,.,, . t Grat JohMJO, owner; front, Betty Joe Hunt and Todd Tripp,
lllip

0

1 I'* priDce B

priiK II

·· ~

Dusk Racing

(Continued from page 1)
nine years service beginning In 1972.
The plant wage.schedules are red~
to 62 'months to reach the , top 'wage
bracket, retroaclive April 25. A further
reduclion to M months . will tate effect
April 23, 1m.
Top traffic (operators) and clerical
wage schedules are reduced to 54 months,
retroactive April 25, and to 48 months,
effective April 23, 1972.
'
The contract also calls for combining
two previous wage zones into one. An In·
terval wage progression setup provides for
new wage rates to tate effect Aprll25, 1971
(aubjedto lbe 1'ai!~ freele), Nov. ;II. 19'11

GALLIPOLIS - . Gallia
County sheriff's deputies
Friday returned Beatrice
Stanley, 49, Spencer, W. Va.,
here to face six counts of
forgery on warrants .sjgned 17
months ago.
'
Extradited upon the order of
West Virginia Governor Arch A.
Moore, Jr., Mrs. Stanley is
charged with forging two r
' checks totaling $60 to the
Kroger Company. The warran!s
were signed by Robert H.
Eastman, former manager or
the Kroger Store. Other af.
fidavits were filed by Bill Mills,
manager of the Upper G. C.
Murphy Co., James McGuire,
manager of the Hi-Lo Oil Co.,
Gene Spurlock, manager of
PeMyfare and Carl Edwards
Daniels, an Ashland Service
station operator.
Deputies also investigated a
brealring and entering at the
late home of Coby Pounds, Rt. 1,
Bidwell. Officers said someone
entered two outbuildings and a
1964 Plymouth but nothing was
taken.
FROM DOWN UNDER
MIDDLEPORT- T,sgt. and
Mrs. Bobby ·spaulding of
Woomera, South Australia, and
children, Stephen, David and
Debra , are spending three
weeks with her father and
mother, Mr. and Mrs. Blaine
Carter, Sr., Rt ..J, Middleport. A
career serviceman, Sgt.
Spaulding 'will report to
Holloman AFB in Southern New
Mexico. His parents are Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Spaulding of
Gallipolis.

'

(Continued from page 1)
Brotller bad actually come In first, but
because of a teclu)icality, )lfaa put back to
sb:th, moving up· the others.
Fourth race, first heat, winner,
Diamond Saboteur, owned by Jack Wise,
Athens, Red Cortens, driver. · SecOnd,
Easter Dave, owned by Dorotha
------'--'-----and April 23, 1972.
The' CWA represents about 2,600
employes, or about 98 per'Cellt of General
of 011\o's unioo forces. The rest, all In the
Minerva area, are represented by the
International Brotherhood of Electrical

W........ .

·

McKebzle, Pomeroy, with Burdell
McKinney driver. Third, The Fabulous
Elton, owned by Bruce McKenzie of
Columbus, driven by Don McKenzie.
Fifth race, first, 0 Miatress Mine, who
won tile Swisher and Lohse' Drug Store.
trophy. (Harold Lohse preeented the
lrophy to the driver, F. Hess, and Helen
Eianaugle of Jackson, the owner). Second,
Sassy; third, Dollie Lane.
Sixth race, 3-year old pace, Final Dub,
· first, Blg Red Machine, trophy donated by
Bahr Clolbler; second, Way Late; third,
BotcheS Brother.
Final race, Easter .Dave, owned by
Dorotha McKenzie, Pomeroy, driven by
Bert McKinney, fll'llt, ~ecelved the DavisWarner Insu~ance, trophy; second;
Diainond Saboteur; third, Fabulous Elton,

THE POMEROY NATIONAL BANK purdJ82d the 1 es 9e

chtmip1on steer owned by

Mike Bened11111 at !be Junior Fair Fat Steer and Fa! Lamb Sale Friday night at the Meigs
County F~. The anilna) weighed 995lb8. and sold for 83 cents a lb. Lefi to right, back
row, Vicki Carr, beef~. Debbie Ohlinger and Daniel Midkiff, Junior Fair King and Queen,
Damillltatey, vicep-esldentoflbePomeroyNational Bank and Mike Benedum, owner; front,
Betty Jo.lllmt-.1 Todd'l'rlltP,Meigs County Fair prince and princess.
·

-.

MEIGS JtlNIOR PAIR lllllritiGD cmll!lt wbun til
year were Barbara Jordan, left, age 13 and over, and
Patncll&amp;ob•',iDIIIelltUaadlllllrlfGIIP.

Horses

Pulled
At Fair
POIIEIIOY - Wbat with lbe

stiflniiidilice, smaD itGDdti

that the - " bane poUPc

cmle!t af !be Meigs 0U11J
Fllir lasled ~mlil ahms! midoigbt Fridaji.

Teams were di'rided inlo
line weight .d•
with li9e
casb prilles awarded the wiDDel'S in eacll dass. ftizles ~
$211lllld $10.
W'umon; ill !be tigb•hlw,.eigblHrhl
dMsioo. first tllloocb fiflll,
rupee lively, lums 2,. .
pcuods and l8lder were: .HoO!W
.8tlrts, Fr autlai I, Raule I;
George ~ Jr~ 110 ......
listed GO fair itaiids; Clads
Bowersock, Dart; Dave
Seeva s, Newport Route I, and
&amp;ba1 BaD, Marielta, llouU! 5.
lliddleft:igbt %,E to
pomd '""'DS, winners 1I1ft first
lbroogb fifth, tespa:tively, Jim
HatUe, Stoddale ; D. W.
Jfig_ains, St. Mla7s, W. Va.;
Ralph Gutbrie, Gaysville llouU!
1; Witt and Son, Pitetm, and
Bill Bowersork, ReDo Star
Roule.
&amp;avyweight winners, teams
3,211 and over, first llnugb
fif1b respoctiiely wre: lboer
Storts, George Guthrie,
Guysville Route 1; Bob
Bowa:oucl, Marietta Raule 5;
Gecrge Davisscm, Millwood, W.
Va ., and Gial Killg, Route S,
Cakhr•eD.

MELANIE DEAN, left, was IJIIild r!w....... In 1be
Meigs County Fair food selectors category. With her is
JeMifer Sheets, foods judge.

. .. sc,

Harrisonville
·
Society News

:s.-

aEIIV1LD GIRL'S FACE .
'IUROI'I'ro (UPI} -SirgdiiiS

at Ule llllpilal fw Siit CUhn
line c :' Sed •••• ged the
1111 •
f!J'II liri Tbe pi :.: • rar-e cmdlliee ...Lied GC:IIIar b.fpeJ'·

,.,_.-aid

THE POMEROY NATIONAL BANK purdJased the
g,and d!ampion lamb at the Junior Fair steer and lamb sale

held at the Meigs County FairgrolDids Friday night. The
lamb was owned by Greg Donohew. The animal weighed 94
Ills. and sold for $1. 72¥z a lb. Slown with Donohew are Debbie
Qillnger and Daniel Midkiff, Junior Fair King and queen.

Hot Air Experts Flying at Fair
COLL .&gt;IBUS - Ten in·
leroalionally famous hot-air
baUoonisls will he flying high at
Elpobio "11 in the 7-Up Int~rnational Hot-Air Balloon
~- Scheduled lao- Friday,
September 3 at 12 noon, the
"silent speciacular " is the
oldesl continuous hot-air
balloon race in the country that
is sanclioned· by the Balloon
Federatioo or America . .
Ifi&amp;hli~t!ng ble event will he
the " Father of Hot-;\ir

'

Ballooning,'' Charles Dollius of
France. Dollius, who is 78 years
old, has made 506 ascents since
he began this high-rise sport in
1911. Throughout the years, he
has flown 900 miles from
Belgium to Romania, traveled
wer the United Stat&lt;:&gt;s from
souih to north and h~ has
crossed the North Atlantic
twice and the South Atlantic
three limes. In additioo,, he is an
author and founder of. the Musee
d'Air in France,
.

GALLIPOLIS - Concern
over the southern corn leaf
blighl and probl~ associated
With the polenUally senous
disease has prompted officials
of the Ohio Agricultural
Research and Development
Center to add a special blight
seminar to the program of 19'11
Swine-Agronomy Day to be held
at ibe Center's Western Branch
on Tuesday, Aug. 24.
Bud Carter, Gatlia County
agricultural agent, said the
session will start at I :30 p.m.
and will include a report on the
current Ohio disease sil uation

near Pearl Olapel in the near
future and Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Sampson will occupy their
Wayne Steimetz of St. Marys horne here .
and Edna Steimetz of Wyan: Mrs. Lawrence Donahue was
dotte, Mich. , and Louella sever~ly ~t and twelve stitches
Haning of Burlingham visited were req~ed to cli!Se the cut-in
Mrs. Earl Foit and the M A her chm m a wreck recently.
Epples recently.
· · Mr · and ~s. E. R. Carr of
It is reported that Thor Pomeroy will mo_ve back to
Carsey has sold his property in the1r home here m the near
the village
·
future. The home has been
Mrs. Av~ Gilkey v~ited the occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Clinton Gilkeys in Albany ani McGrath for the past seveo
called on Mr. and Mrs. Waller years.
· Mr· and Mrs. John Brogan
Jordan recently
Mr. and Mrs: Frank Epple have star~ repairs on the
and John and Lynn of Mid· house whtch they recently
dleport visited their parents purchased. The house was
Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Epple. ' ~:;:erly owned by Mrs. Katie
Howard Gilkey and son Joey
on.
Jay, of Qllumbus visited his Mr. and Mr~. Harold Graham
mother Ava Gilkey and and three cbildren of Dayton
brother', Clinton Gilk~y, in were weekend guests of Bessie
Albany Friday.
Graham.
Mr. Willard Faudre is a . .- - - - - - - ·
medical patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Patrick Pillot and son, Guy,.
and Robert Wiseman of
·....... vn•, Mon. &amp; 1 "iS.
Saratoga, Fla., visited their
August22-23-24
grandmother, Minnie Foit, Double Feature Program
Thursday.
"MONTE WALSH"
Mr. Harold Graham visited
Lee Marvin
Jack
Patance
Mrs. Anderson and daughter,
GP
Dorothy, and son, Paul, -PLUS-Saturday evening.
.!NCE YOU KISS
Mr. and Mrs. Will Clonch
A STRANGER
have moved back to their l!oinf
- (Colorl
Paul Bufke
here from Horner Hill.
Carol Lyntey
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Goodwin
will move to their trailer home .__ _lii!II_ _ _..;G~P..I

POMEROY-II was standing
room only, Friday night when
the annual Meigs County JIJIIIor
Fair lamb and stea' sale waa
held.
Dlaing the sale the young
participants SCI!d nine sheep and
29 steers. Area businesses
purdJased the animals.
Following Is the ronslgner,
weight of animal, prl~ paid per
pound and the p1rehaaer:
Lamb Sale
Greg Dmohew, H lbs., sold
$1.72~, to Pomeroy National
Bani.
Randy Jdmson, 1114 lbs., at
f1.70, to Vmton Bank.
Debbie W'mdon, 95 lbs., at
f!.40, to Farmera Bank.
Debbie W'mdon, 95 lbs., at
$1.10, to Riggs Brothers.
Greg Dmohew, 981bs., at $1,
to Racine H&lt;me Nalional Bani.
Keith Qilltz, 35 1b8., at $1.10,
to City Ice &amp; Fuel.
Julia Johnson, 93lbs.,'at $1, to
Vinton Cotmty Bank.
Blair Wlndoo, 95lbs., at $1.44,
to Five Points Grill.
Denise Dean (pair), 100 and
103 lba., at $1.30, to South·
eutern Equipnent, and Farmers Bani.
STEER SALE
Grant Johnson, 1025 lbll., 99c
per lb., to Evans l'l!cldng.
Mike Benedmn, 986' ibs., 82c,
Pomeroy Natlmal Bank.
Becky Windon, 980 lbs., Me,
City Ice ... Fuel.
Bobby Edwards, 935lb8., 58c,
Ohio Valley Manufact.
Dan Midiiff, 810 lbll., 48c,
Farmers Bank.
Celia McCoy, 845 lbs., 53c,
Marion Riggs Ford.
Teresa Benedwn, 935 lbs.,
45c, G &amp;:·J Auto Parts.
Paul Cross, 930 lbll., 50c,
Racine Home National.
Bryon McCoy, 885, 50c,

Tonight., Mon. &amp; Tues.
August22·24

LITTLE MURDERS
( Technicolor 1
Elliott Gould

Donald Sutherland

lorc.rloons:·

Riverboat Messlon

SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

!
I

SA.\1~

MHRiltlllOR .....

G.

Michael
Caine,N
Get Carter
Cartoon

do :fo

lOlllN\' · ·

·

.

lht'tllrP

TONIGHT- MONDAY
·TUESDAY ·&amp;' WEDNESDAY
Meet Henry &amp; Henrietta ...
the laugh riot of the year.
Paramount P1ctures presents

nefiJ Leaf"

[gj Color by MOVIELAB
~

A Paramount Picture

,

CARlOON

one' 1 perJOnal

is important to

~~~~~: studont. Paying bills
IC
provides an ·~~~~
jbo&lt;&gt;kk,oepoing sysleml I
loaves, open his cho&lt;cki~ll.
lacc:ouiol ,.ith usl

Guaranteed
To SatisfyOr Money Back

Area Deaths I

&amp;

Bays'

N[3[!l!XS(!1"

JOPPS

tunities for qualified graduates.
Send for free information and
class schedules. HURRY!

Classes Start

I

I

I

H&amp;R BLOCK

446-()JOJ

PIYse send me free information
am interested in

I Ad"'"'

ru r 1

u .oo I

Thlr Oa ilr 5efllinl l, one ru r $U.t0; s l• I
monftl l &amp;7 .25; ''"" montlls u .SO.
Tflt Unii H Prns ln ternallanl l II I ll 1
ctullv tl y ~ l i tl.a la the uH !Of I)UbliCIIion I
Dl a ll n - 1 d iU -IICt\n tr l0 1114 10 III II
...,,.~,.,.... ..,a l hO 1111 tout new• I

City -

-

- - - - --

' """'

SAVE

"FIRST BITE"

FOR YOURSELF
.
Y SOMETHING ASIDE
EVERY PAYDAY

I

GAlliPOLIS SAVINGS
AND LOAN OOMPANY
•

-

.

I
I

4

O AclvancedCoutM

C. Larimore officiating. Burial 1I
1;..
zo
will be in Beech Grove I
Asa H. Custer
1
Cemetery. Friends may can at , I Pllblilftfll ""' ' ""
"'to •a.tr Alll&gt;IIAll TODAY
~----------------~
POMEROY - Asa Hubert the funeral home anytilne.
Custer, Minersville, died
unexpectedly Friday afternoon M
0 ha H'll
1.
of apparent heart failure .
rs, rp
Mr. Custer was enroute home
RACINE - Mrs. St. Clair
from work driving his truck up (Orpha} Hill, 71, Racine, died
the Athens Hill, when he was Friday at the Holzer Medical
stricken. His truck drifted into a Center. Mrs. Hill was an active
·
' member of Lelilrt Falls United
ditch.
He was born Dec. 22, 1907, the Methodist Church and In the
son of the late Alonzo and Effie WSCS of that church.
Harden Custer. He was also She is survived by her
preceded in death by four husband, St. Clair, Racine; a
sisters and two brothers, Mrs. daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
Henry Amburger, Mrs. John and Mrs. Don Bell, Racine; a
Sauvage, Mrs. Hurl Hannahs, granddaughter, Lorna Dawn
Mrs. George Durst, and Johnny Bell, Racine; .four brothers, Bob
and Alonzo Cusler.
Burnern, Racine Route 2; Guy
Mr'. Custer was a technician Burnem, Lanham, W. Va.; the
engineer with the !'tate High· Rev. Eddie Burnem, Maysville,
way Dept. the past 20 years. He Ky., _and Edward Burnem, of
also worked for the Meigs Wheelersburg; two sisters,
County Highway Dept. several Mrs. Orla ).'homas of Lanham,
years aa a heavy equipment W, Va., and Mrs. Gladys Me~
operator. He was a member of Clain, Culler, Ohio, and several
the Syrac115e Nazarene (..'burch nieces and nephews. Mrs. Hill
and a veteran of World War II. was the daughter of the late Roy
He is slirvlved by his wife and Hattie Thomas Burnem.
ALL SAVINGS GUARANTEED IN FtilL
Thelma; one sister, Clara Funeral services will be held
•
Custer, Minersville; a brotiler, ·at 3 p.m. Monday at the Letart
Theodore Custer, Middleport, Falls United Methodist Church
and several nieces and with the Rev. Dale McClurg
nephews.
' officiating. Burial will be·in the
Fuoeral Services will be held . Letart Falls Ceme.lery. Ftlends
Opposlht Past Office Phone 441 •n O.INpollo
Monday at 1 p.m. at E'!'ing may call at the Ewing Funeral
Funeral JIGme with the 1\ev. M. Home any time.

·

12 OZ. SIZE

.;;:

NON-RETURNABLE

UNOl£UM, 9 &amp; 12 WIDTHS
e ARMSJRONG VINYL CUSHION
flOOR UNOI.IUM

BOTILES

EARLY IN THE
WEEK

PAIR

IASKETIAll

OXFORDS

$2.99
W~if e or

bl•d c:n••s

Su· c t i o n qrip sol•.
y..,,,. it . 2: boyo'
:l lf:~ -6; men 's 6!/2-11.

SOME

13th

?7Svcamore

II
I ~:*('.(aune

I Wftk .
5
I th!"t!~~~~:\~~!'~"o..ll:!:a wat i
I lo' irtJifl il, - yHr 5\1.00 ; 1i• m on lhl IP ; I
I

f:~

e ARMSIRONG VINYl QUAKERTONE

Enrollment open to men and
women of all ages. Job oppor.

t1

1

POP

Thousands are earning good

C~r~ ~f. 1..~o~E::;," ~~ . dP6t. I

montr&gt;l t.I.SO; •l sewtoer~r. 0!\lr
Il l : ~· month• U ; thr ee month l

»-:-:
1I1

money in the growing lield of
professional inccme tax service.

I Pv1Miti'I M t ¥.,-f WMIIOIY t v m lnt tJCt111 I
I S.tur!Ny Ent...-fll n ~.,d el l" m aili llQ 1
• ma rt...- •I Pomeroy, Ohio, PO'S! Olt ica .
I'
'I
TEIIM ~ OF SUtJS( IIIP TIOM
1
• • c..-r;ar oa tty ......., .SUftOa y . 50&lt; par

I ''" "

INDOOR-QUTDOOR CARPET
NOT
INCLUDED IN THIS SPECIAL!
WE ALSO HAVE

White vinyl upper
a n d molded sole,
Cushion insole.
Men's 61f2.1J; boys'
21f2-6,

LEARN BASIC OR
ADVANCED INCOME
TAX PREPARATION
FROM

PubiMecl t ¥11'Y SIIIIGtY oy the Otlloo I
P Utiii WO in! &lt;o
I
G .t.I..UPOU DA IL Y TRIIU NE
I
m Third A. t .. Gt ii iMi it., Ollicl, UUt. I

111

Minimum 20 Sq . Yds.
Nylon, Polyester. Acr ilan , Herc ulon. Over 500
colors and paHerns. to select from . Come in
toda y and make your selec tion .

99

Men's

va uer

Pullli$htd t ¥ff f wttlul i Y evenlflg e• c q~ l
s tt ~~rd t v. SeunG (tn l P ..., ,,., Pa hl at
I GI IUI* is... Ollio, lUll .
1

sq. yd.

OXFORDS

I

TIMES-SENTINEL

.95

Vinyl Athletic

- - -·
.-------------------·
SUNDAY
I

James F. Shaffer, 41, is a I
structural steel worker who has ·:
been on strike against the II
Mulach Steel Corp., in Pitts- II
burgh since Aug. 1 as a I

r-------~------------------,

~Maids
all ina row
•*riflt ROCK HUOSI»&gt;
ANGIE DII:KitiiSOft · TEllt

hurl."

Of Quite Ordinary Folks

Padding
and Labor
INCLUDED

and up

nation .
living cosls. In five years his
"The danm union guys got rent went up $30 bul increases
swatted," he says. "They have in social security covered it.
been blackmailing us the last Kinzie praised President Nix·
few years . They have been on for his action. Most of his
exploiting us 10 times worse life Kinzie has been a
than business."
Republican, and says "if I ever
Kinzie resides in a view vote democrat I hope they
studio apartment in a down· shoot me."
'
town skyscraper which is
centrally located. On rent,
garage and utilities he spends
$200 a month.
The remaining $50 of his total
income from Social Security
and a small inheritance covers
his food, which he cooks
himself. "I eat the hest," he
says.
His days largely are spent
visiting acquaintances in failing
health. Once a week he does
shopping on behalf of a blind
friend .
Kinzie said the wage-price
freeze will "step on everybody's
toes" but is a necessary slep to
save the country. Kinzie
helieves his own toes will he
hurt because he has stock. The
stock doesn't pay dividends,
and Kinzie h&lt;!sn't found it
necessary to sell any to meet

"Like a lot of other memher of local 527, Interna·
businesses I depend heavily on tional Association of Bridge,
ilnported products," he said. Structural and Ornamental Iron
"Many of the Japanese compa· Workers. He is married, father
nies say they can 'I promise de- of daughters aged 9 and 15, and
liveries, and if they can the spoke his feelings on President
customer will have to pay~ the Nixon 's economic program
10 per cent surcharge. Either while on picket duty at the
way, my business will be hurt. " struck plant.
Arher has six employes in his
"The President started the
store which also sells televi- freeze after all the big unions
sions, radios and stereos and settled their contracts," he
ha~ a full photo operation. But said. "This leaves all the other
the owner said he might have smallerunio!]S,stillnegotiating,
to lay off two or three people if out in the field."
his fears are realized.
Shaffer's local is one that has
"Big business is the only one rejected Nixon's return-to-work
that will benefit from the plea. "Nixon's wage and price
freeze ," he said. "Small freeze will cost me at least $80
businesses and the working a month in wage increases I'd
man are the ones who will have received if the. last
suffer.
company offer had been accept"We're going to survive ed by the union," he said. "If
heller than the working man we settle the strike tomorrow
but only in the old-fashioned I'd still he working on the same
way by laying off help," said wages I made a year ago. At
Arher , father of three children. the same tilDe everything"But of course the smallest . groceries, insurance, rent,
businesses don 't ha~e any help everything-has gone up."
to lay off. A lot of them won't
Shaffer has a two bedroom
make it if this goes beyond 90 apartment for which he pays
days."
$tl5 a month rent. He receives
Arher said his sales of no union henefits.
Japanese color television sets
"I have just enough money to
had increased this week "be- make it through this month,"
cause the people are afraid of he said. "After that, I don't
the 10 per cent surcharge. But know. I'll just have to live on a
that won't last once the day-to-&lt;lay bssis. Guess I'll
surcharge is passed on to the have to look for another job,
customers. The situation is doing something."
very confused and uncertain."
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI )-"It
was
the most wonderful thing
PJ'ITSBURGH (UP! ) -"Nix·
on should have tried to stop that ever happened," said J.
inflation a long time ago. I Orval Kinzie, 73. "The news
think the freeze was about the tickled me dear to my toes."
Kinzie is a retired union
only thing left to do but it
electrician
living in one of the
comes at a time when I'm on
strike and it's really going to most expensive cities in the

I

Sunday-Monday
~ and Tuesday

Opinions of a Variety

Economy in Crisis

DIVORCE ASKED
GALLIPOLIS - Charging
gross neglect of duty and ex·
treme cruelty, Stephen Lee
Harris, Rt. 2, Patriot, Friday
filed a petition in GaiDa County
Common Pleas Court seelring a
divorce from Joan Harris,
Thurman. They were married
Feb. 1965 and have three
children.

Klondike Strikeout

a

$

ASKS DIVORCE
LONG BOTI'OM - Jack L.
Frederick, Long Bouom, Rt. I,
has flied suit for divorce in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court from Linda L. Frederick,
North Third Ave., Middleport,
on charges of gross neglect of
duty.

.

R

Royal Royalty

memories that the church
brings back to many people are
worth preserving, he helieves.
Voluntary work and financial
help would be appreciated.
Those wishing to contribute to
this cause may contact Warren
White or come to the church on
Saturday morning, Aug. 28.

Warren White, son of John
White, is
trustee of the
building. He and Rev. Hartley
Patterson, pastor of the
Proctorville Church of Christ,
hope to restore the building so it
can he used for funeral services, homecomings and other
special community events. The

CARPET
SPECIAL

Since 11 9

p~.wgow.:~· ~-:::::m~~::::::::~~==::::::$:::=:=:=:=:::::::=:;;::~:~:~:~~=::~:~:::~::8::~:::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:=:::~=:=:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:=:=:=:=:=:=~-::».~~-==:::::~::s:K.::;:::::::=:=...;:::~:=:=:=:::::=:::::~::~..-;~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~===========:::::::~:::::::::::~~:

IN HOSPITAL
GALLIPOLIS - John E .
McGuire, 1Q-year old son of Mr.
and Mrs . Jimmie Dale
McGuire, Mercerville Star Rt.,
was admitted to the Holzer
Medical Center at 8:30 p.m.
Friday following a bicycle
accident. McGuire suffered a
possible concussion. He is listed
in good condition.

MEIGS lHEATRE

ooo

( Contin~ed from page i) .
stood watching as his father and
three uncles raised the four
comer posts, and others put the
bottom heams into place. John
White later built the pews with

BOSTON (UPI} -Leon Arber
pointed at the man washing the
windows of his camera store.
"See that man, I pay him $15 a
month to do that. If things get
tight I'll wash the windows
myself."
Arber 50, owner of the
goii iMt Center camera
Stln'!or the past four years,
waa expressing his pessimism
about President Nixon's wageprice freeze. He feels small
businesses and the working
man will suffer.

Village Pbariilacy.
· Kevin Anderson, 795lb8., 45c,
Pomeroy National.
Mandie Rose, 79(1, 46c,
Landmark.
Lee Hysell, 860 lbs., 46c,
Meigs Equipnent.
Randy Johnson, 1050 lbs.,
50\ic, City Ice &amp; Fuel.
Edwin Cross, 1190 lbs., 46c, .
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Martin Broderick, 980 lbs., ·
43c, D &amp;: D Meats.
Frank Broderick, 1000 lbs.,

.

Old Oturch

the help of Ora Patterson who
designed \hem.
John Herman While, now 98years old, remembers his years
as a member and deacon of the
church as some of the best of his
life. He can'tmove around as he
once did, but he is willing to help
in any way be can.

by Dr. Wayne Ellett, plant
pathologist ior OARDC and The
Ohio
University ,
and
AI. Buter ' Area Extension
and Research agronomist, will
also appear on the program. A
question and answer period will
follow the lonna! presentations.
Swine-Agronomy Day activilies will begin at 10 a.m. at
the Western Branch. Visitors
will tour field plots and swine
facililies where research
scientists and extension
specialisls will explain studies
currently underway and discUS$
the latest research findings.
The OARDC Western Branch
is located near South Charleston

MARRIAGE LICENSE
POMEROY - Roger Brent
Hill, 20, Racine, Rt. I, and
Debra Kay McMillan, 19,
Racine, Rt. I ; Calvin W'illord
Ma yle , 18, Pomeroy, and
Charolette Marie Marcinko, 19,
Minersville, Rt. I.

Frleadly Ridge Is very weD iepl It Is lbe •stbC plare of
many yellow fever victims of 1878, and is still in use .

THE ORAVEYARD behind Saint Nldt Omrdl m

EDITOR's Note: Dismay,
joy, fear, worry, uncertainty.
These are some of the emotions
with which Americans greeted
the news of President Nixon's
wage-price freeze and other
economic measures. Here are
the reactions of five people
selected at random around the
country: a small businessman,
a steelworker, a pensioner, a
blue collar man, and a
stockbroker.

Friday Lamb,
Steer.Sale
Well Attended

1¥UM#£Dt\V
M,afllihuad, W.Va . .,. one of a n1Diberofbor8emen bamessj~
-..I'Jilllt lliP'i*Ei*llllrJ'111the mm•l borse pulling rontest. Davisson's team, Bob and
.Am, I' I f-a. ia lbe llf:avyftigbt divi.slan. .

Seminar Added on Blight

toe, Evans Packing.
Tammy Pitzer, MO lbll., 38c,
Marion Riggs Ford.
Diane Benedwn, 895lb8., 39c,
Sugar .Run Mills.
Pearl Smith, 1060 Ills., 48c;.
Production Credit Assoc.
Diana Grueser, 920 lbll., 50c,
VIllage Phapnacy.
Mike Salser. '185 lbs., toe,
Riggs Brothers:
Brian W'mdon, 985 lbs., 50c,
Keith Goble Ford.
Angie Sisson, 920 lbs., 51c,:
•
Elberfelds.
Julie Rose, MO lbs., 41c,
Marion Riggs Ford.
Kay Ward, 745 lbs., toe,
Farmers Bank.
Rick Pierce, 720 lbs., toe, ,
Citizens Nalional Bank.
Edith ·woodard, 675 lbs., 3'1c,
Daily Sentinel.
Kim Pierce, 740 lbs., 50c, '
Citizens Nalional Bank.
Larry Mees, 590 lbs., 42c,
Elberfelds.

Cooperative Extensioo s.rvice.
GaDia Counly fanners in·
terested In attending and who
need transportation to the field
in Clark Coo:nty. Tbe day should conoact Bud Carter
'P""'•Ii""" field dar is span- wbo will be driving to South
sored by the Resowdl Center Charleston that day and has
and The ObioSla~ ~·s room for more people.

-

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126

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BOTH STORES IN GAWPOUS - OPEl . , . , 111 9

•

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�'

6 CoUJits Contract
or
Forgery
. Charg~d

BYARS PACXING OOMPANY purdJ82d the gnmd cbampioo stefr owned by Grant
.i4 e ltlbellmillrFairhlSieer IOIFat Lamb Sale FridayniglttattheMeigsOnmty Fair.
'Die111p•eual 11 "4*"'1,1151bs.IDisold for 99 cents. Lr, back row, are, Vicki Carr, beef
Qn ,IW!Iir a•y v llllll Donie! Milltiff, Junior Fair King 111d QUeen, Menill Evans-of
Et-. P. Uc o ..,.,, . t Grat JohMJO, owner; front, Betty Joe Hunt and Todd Tripp,
lllip

0

1 I'* priDce B

priiK II

·· ~

Dusk Racing

(Continued from page 1)
nine years service beginning In 1972.
The plant wage.schedules are red~
to 62 'months to reach the , top 'wage
bracket, retroaclive April 25. A further
reduclion to M months . will tate effect
April 23, 1m.
Top traffic (operators) and clerical
wage schedules are reduced to 54 months,
retroactive April 25, and to 48 months,
effective April 23, 1972.
'
The contract also calls for combining
two previous wage zones into one. An In·
terval wage progression setup provides for
new wage rates to tate effect Aprll25, 1971
(aubjedto lbe 1'ai!~ freele), Nov. ;II. 19'11

GALLIPOLIS - . Gallia
County sheriff's deputies
Friday returned Beatrice
Stanley, 49, Spencer, W. Va.,
here to face six counts of
forgery on warrants .sjgned 17
months ago.
'
Extradited upon the order of
West Virginia Governor Arch A.
Moore, Jr., Mrs. Stanley is
charged with forging two r
' checks totaling $60 to the
Kroger Company. The warran!s
were signed by Robert H.
Eastman, former manager or
the Kroger Store. Other af.
fidavits were filed by Bill Mills,
manager of the Upper G. C.
Murphy Co., James McGuire,
manager of the Hi-Lo Oil Co.,
Gene Spurlock, manager of
PeMyfare and Carl Edwards
Daniels, an Ashland Service
station operator.
Deputies also investigated a
brealring and entering at the
late home of Coby Pounds, Rt. 1,
Bidwell. Officers said someone
entered two outbuildings and a
1964 Plymouth but nothing was
taken.
FROM DOWN UNDER
MIDDLEPORT- T,sgt. and
Mrs. Bobby ·spaulding of
Woomera, South Australia, and
children, Stephen, David and
Debra , are spending three
weeks with her father and
mother, Mr. and Mrs. Blaine
Carter, Sr., Rt ..J, Middleport. A
career serviceman, Sgt.
Spaulding 'will report to
Holloman AFB in Southern New
Mexico. His parents are Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Spaulding of
Gallipolis.

'

(Continued from page 1)
Brotller bad actually come In first, but
because of a teclu)icality, )lfaa put back to
sb:th, moving up· the others.
Fourth race, first heat, winner,
Diamond Saboteur, owned by Jack Wise,
Athens, Red Cortens, driver. · SecOnd,
Easter Dave, owned by Dorotha
------'--'-----and April 23, 1972.
The' CWA represents about 2,600
employes, or about 98 per'Cellt of General
of 011\o's unioo forces. The rest, all In the
Minerva area, are represented by the
International Brotherhood of Electrical

W........ .

·

McKebzle, Pomeroy, with Burdell
McKinney driver. Third, The Fabulous
Elton, owned by Bruce McKenzie of
Columbus, driven by Don McKenzie.
Fifth race, first, 0 Miatress Mine, who
won tile Swisher and Lohse' Drug Store.
trophy. (Harold Lohse preeented the
lrophy to the driver, F. Hess, and Helen
Eianaugle of Jackson, the owner). Second,
Sassy; third, Dollie Lane.
Sixth race, 3-year old pace, Final Dub,
· first, Blg Red Machine, trophy donated by
Bahr Clolbler; second, Way Late; third,
BotcheS Brother.
Final race, Easter .Dave, owned by
Dorotha McKenzie, Pomeroy, driven by
Bert McKinney, fll'llt, ~ecelved the DavisWarner Insu~ance, trophy; second;
Diainond Saboteur; third, Fabulous Elton,

THE POMEROY NATIONAL BANK purdJ82d the 1 es 9e

chtmip1on steer owned by

Mike Bened11111 at !be Junior Fair Fat Steer and Fa! Lamb Sale Friday night at the Meigs
County F~. The anilna) weighed 995lb8. and sold for 83 cents a lb. Lefi to right, back
row, Vicki Carr, beef~. Debbie Ohlinger and Daniel Midkiff, Junior Fair King and Queen,
Damillltatey, vicep-esldentoflbePomeroyNational Bank and Mike Benedum, owner; front,
Betty Jo.lllmt-.1 Todd'l'rlltP,Meigs County Fair prince and princess.
·

-.

MEIGS JtlNIOR PAIR lllllritiGD cmll!lt wbun til
year were Barbara Jordan, left, age 13 and over, and
Patncll&amp;ob•',iDIIIelltUaadlllllrlfGIIP.

Horses

Pulled
At Fair
POIIEIIOY - Wbat with lbe

stiflniiidilice, smaD itGDdti

that the - " bane poUPc

cmle!t af !be Meigs 0U11J
Fllir lasled ~mlil ahms! midoigbt Fridaji.

Teams were di'rided inlo
line weight .d•
with li9e
casb prilles awarded the wiDDel'S in eacll dass. ftizles ~
$211lllld $10.
W'umon; ill !be tigb•hlw,.eigblHrhl
dMsioo. first tllloocb fiflll,
rupee lively, lums 2,. .
pcuods and l8lder were: .HoO!W
.8tlrts, Fr autlai I, Raule I;
George ~ Jr~ 110 ......
listed GO fair itaiids; Clads
Bowersock, Dart; Dave
Seeva s, Newport Route I, and
&amp;ba1 BaD, Marielta, llouU! 5.
lliddleft:igbt %,E to
pomd '""'DS, winners 1I1ft first
lbroogb fifth, tespa:tively, Jim
HatUe, Stoddale ; D. W.
Jfig_ains, St. Mla7s, W. Va.;
Ralph Gutbrie, Gaysville llouU!
1; Witt and Son, Pitetm, and
Bill Bowersork, ReDo Star
Roule.
&amp;avyweight winners, teams
3,211 and over, first llnugb
fif1b respoctiiely wre: lboer
Storts, George Guthrie,
Guysville Route 1; Bob
Bowa:oucl, Marietta Raule 5;
Gecrge Davisscm, Millwood, W.
Va ., and Gial Killg, Route S,
Cakhr•eD.

MELANIE DEAN, left, was IJIIild r!w....... In 1be
Meigs County Fair food selectors category. With her is
JeMifer Sheets, foods judge.

. .. sc,

Harrisonville
·
Society News

:s.-

aEIIV1LD GIRL'S FACE .
'IUROI'I'ro (UPI} -SirgdiiiS

at Ule llllpilal fw Siit CUhn
line c :' Sed •••• ged the
1111 •
f!J'II liri Tbe pi :.: • rar-e cmdlliee ...Lied GC:IIIar b.fpeJ'·

,.,_.-aid

THE POMEROY NATIONAL BANK purdJased the
g,and d!ampion lamb at the Junior Fair steer and lamb sale

held at the Meigs County FairgrolDids Friday night. The
lamb was owned by Greg Donohew. The animal weighed 94
Ills. and sold for $1. 72¥z a lb. Slown with Donohew are Debbie
Qillnger and Daniel Midkiff, Junior Fair King and queen.

Hot Air Experts Flying at Fair
COLL .&gt;IBUS - Ten in·
leroalionally famous hot-air
baUoonisls will he flying high at
Elpobio "11 in the 7-Up Int~rnational Hot-Air Balloon
~- Scheduled lao- Friday,
September 3 at 12 noon, the
"silent speciacular " is the
oldesl continuous hot-air
balloon race in the country that
is sanclioned· by the Balloon
Federatioo or America . .
Ifi&amp;hli~t!ng ble event will he
the " Father of Hot-;\ir

'

Ballooning,'' Charles Dollius of
France. Dollius, who is 78 years
old, has made 506 ascents since
he began this high-rise sport in
1911. Throughout the years, he
has flown 900 miles from
Belgium to Romania, traveled
wer the United Stat&lt;:&gt;s from
souih to north and h~ has
crossed the North Atlantic
twice and the South Atlantic
three limes. In additioo,, he is an
author and founder of. the Musee
d'Air in France,
.

GALLIPOLIS - Concern
over the southern corn leaf
blighl and probl~ associated
With the polenUally senous
disease has prompted officials
of the Ohio Agricultural
Research and Development
Center to add a special blight
seminar to the program of 19'11
Swine-Agronomy Day to be held
at ibe Center's Western Branch
on Tuesday, Aug. 24.
Bud Carter, Gatlia County
agricultural agent, said the
session will start at I :30 p.m.
and will include a report on the
current Ohio disease sil uation

near Pearl Olapel in the near
future and Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Sampson will occupy their
Wayne Steimetz of St. Marys horne here .
and Edna Steimetz of Wyan: Mrs. Lawrence Donahue was
dotte, Mich. , and Louella sever~ly ~t and twelve stitches
Haning of Burlingham visited were req~ed to cli!Se the cut-in
Mrs. Earl Foit and the M A her chm m a wreck recently.
Epples recently.
· · Mr · and ~s. E. R. Carr of
It is reported that Thor Pomeroy will mo_ve back to
Carsey has sold his property in the1r home here m the near
the village
·
future. The home has been
Mrs. Av~ Gilkey v~ited the occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Clinton Gilkeys in Albany ani McGrath for the past seveo
called on Mr. and Mrs. Waller years.
· Mr· and Mrs. John Brogan
Jordan recently
Mr. and Mrs: Frank Epple have star~ repairs on the
and John and Lynn of Mid· house whtch they recently
dleport visited their parents purchased. The house was
Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Epple. ' ~:;:erly owned by Mrs. Katie
Howard Gilkey and son Joey
on.
Jay, of Qllumbus visited his Mr. and Mr~. Harold Graham
mother Ava Gilkey and and three cbildren of Dayton
brother', Clinton Gilk~y, in were weekend guests of Bessie
Albany Friday.
Graham.
Mr. Willard Faudre is a . .- - - - - - - ·
medical patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Patrick Pillot and son, Guy,.
and Robert Wiseman of
·....... vn•, Mon. &amp; 1 "iS.
Saratoga, Fla., visited their
August22-23-24
grandmother, Minnie Foit, Double Feature Program
Thursday.
"MONTE WALSH"
Mr. Harold Graham visited
Lee Marvin
Jack
Patance
Mrs. Anderson and daughter,
GP
Dorothy, and son, Paul, -PLUS-Saturday evening.
.!NCE YOU KISS
Mr. and Mrs. Will Clonch
A STRANGER
have moved back to their l!oinf
- (Colorl
Paul Bufke
here from Horner Hill.
Carol Lyntey
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Goodwin
will move to their trailer home .__ _lii!II_ _ _..;G~P..I

POMEROY-II was standing
room only, Friday night when
the annual Meigs County JIJIIIor
Fair lamb and stea' sale waa
held.
Dlaing the sale the young
participants SCI!d nine sheep and
29 steers. Area businesses
purdJased the animals.
Following Is the ronslgner,
weight of animal, prl~ paid per
pound and the p1rehaaer:
Lamb Sale
Greg Dmohew, H lbs., sold
$1.72~, to Pomeroy National
Bani.
Randy Jdmson, 1114 lbs., at
f1.70, to Vmton Bank.
Debbie W'mdon, 95 lbs., at
f!.40, to Farmera Bank.
Debbie W'mdon, 95 lbs., at
$1.10, to Riggs Brothers.
Greg Dmohew, 981bs., at $1,
to Racine H&lt;me Nalional Bani.
Keith Qilltz, 35 1b8., at $1.10,
to City Ice &amp; Fuel.
Julia Johnson, 93lbs.,'at $1, to
Vinton Cotmty Bank.
Blair Wlndoo, 95lbs., at $1.44,
to Five Points Grill.
Denise Dean (pair), 100 and
103 lba., at $1.30, to South·
eutern Equipnent, and Farmers Bani.
STEER SALE
Grant Johnson, 1025 lbll., 99c
per lb., to Evans l'l!cldng.
Mike Benedmn, 986' ibs., 82c,
Pomeroy Natlmal Bank.
Becky Windon, 980 lbs., Me,
City Ice ... Fuel.
Bobby Edwards, 935lb8., 58c,
Ohio Valley Manufact.
Dan Midiiff, 810 lbll., 48c,
Farmers Bank.
Celia McCoy, 845 lbs., 53c,
Marion Riggs Ford.
Teresa Benedwn, 935 lbs.,
45c, G &amp;:·J Auto Parts.
Paul Cross, 930 lbll., 50c,
Racine Home National.
Bryon McCoy, 885, 50c,

Tonight., Mon. &amp; Tues.
August22·24

LITTLE MURDERS
( Technicolor 1
Elliott Gould

Donald Sutherland

lorc.rloons:·

Riverboat Messlon

SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

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MHRiltlllOR .....

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Michael
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Get Carter
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·TUESDAY ·&amp;' WEDNESDAY
Meet Henry &amp; Henrietta ...
the laugh riot of the year.
Paramount P1ctures presents

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CARlOON

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am interested in

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Thlr Oa ilr 5efllinl l, one ru r $U.t0; s l• I
monftl l &amp;7 .25; ''"" montlls u .SO.
Tflt Unii H Prns ln ternallanl l II I ll 1
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I

GAlliPOLIS SAVINGS
AND LOAN OOMPANY
•

-

.

I
I

4

O AclvancedCoutM

C. Larimore officiating. Burial 1I
1;..
zo
will be in Beech Grove I
Asa H. Custer
1
Cemetery. Friends may can at , I Pllblilftfll ""' ' ""
"'to •a.tr Alll&gt;IIAll TODAY
~----------------~
POMEROY - Asa Hubert the funeral home anytilne.
Custer, Minersville, died
unexpectedly Friday afternoon M
0 ha H'll
1.
of apparent heart failure .
rs, rp
Mr. Custer was enroute home
RACINE - Mrs. St. Clair
from work driving his truck up (Orpha} Hill, 71, Racine, died
the Athens Hill, when he was Friday at the Holzer Medical
stricken. His truck drifted into a Center. Mrs. Hill was an active
·
' member of Lelilrt Falls United
ditch.
He was born Dec. 22, 1907, the Methodist Church and In the
son of the late Alonzo and Effie WSCS of that church.
Harden Custer. He was also She is survived by her
preceded in death by four husband, St. Clair, Racine; a
sisters and two brothers, Mrs. daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
Henry Amburger, Mrs. John and Mrs. Don Bell, Racine; a
Sauvage, Mrs. Hurl Hannahs, granddaughter, Lorna Dawn
Mrs. George Durst, and Johnny Bell, Racine; .four brothers, Bob
and Alonzo Cusler.
Burnern, Racine Route 2; Guy
Mr'. Custer was a technician Burnem, Lanham, W. Va.; the
engineer with the !'tate High· Rev. Eddie Burnem, Maysville,
way Dept. the past 20 years. He Ky., _and Edward Burnem, of
also worked for the Meigs Wheelersburg; two sisters,
County Highway Dept. several Mrs. Orla ).'homas of Lanham,
years aa a heavy equipment W, Va., and Mrs. Gladys Me~
operator. He was a member of Clain, Culler, Ohio, and several
the Syrac115e Nazarene (..'burch nieces and nephews. Mrs. Hill
and a veteran of World War II. was the daughter of the late Roy
He is slirvlved by his wife and Hattie Thomas Burnem.
ALL SAVINGS GUARANTEED IN FtilL
Thelma; one sister, Clara Funeral services will be held
•
Custer, Minersville; a brotiler, ·at 3 p.m. Monday at the Letart
Theodore Custer, Middleport, Falls United Methodist Church
and several nieces and with the Rev. Dale McClurg
nephews.
' officiating. Burial will be·in the
Fuoeral Services will be held . Letart Falls Ceme.lery. Ftlends
Opposlht Past Office Phone 441 •n O.INpollo
Monday at 1 p.m. at E'!'ing may call at the Ewing Funeral
Funeral JIGme with the 1\ev. M. Home any time.

·

12 OZ. SIZE

.;;:

NON-RETURNABLE

UNOl£UM, 9 &amp; 12 WIDTHS
e ARMSJRONG VINYL CUSHION
flOOR UNOI.IUM

BOTILES

EARLY IN THE
WEEK

PAIR

IASKETIAll

OXFORDS

$2.99
W~if e or

bl•d c:n••s

Su· c t i o n qrip sol•.
y..,,,. it . 2: boyo'
:l lf:~ -6; men 's 6!/2-11.

SOME

13th

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5
I th!"t!~~~~:\~~!'~"o..ll:!:a wat i
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e ARMSIRONG VINYl QUAKERTONE

Enrollment open to men and
women of all ages. Job oppor.

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Thousands are earning good

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montr&gt;l t.I.SO; •l sewtoer~r. 0!\lr
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money in the growing lield of
professional inccme tax service.

I Pv1Miti'I M t ¥.,-f WMIIOIY t v m lnt tJCt111 I
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• ma rt...- •I Pomeroy, Ohio, PO'S! Olt ica .
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INDOOR-QUTDOOR CARPET
NOT
INCLUDED IN THIS SPECIAL!
WE ALSO HAVE

White vinyl upper
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Cushion insole.
Men's 61f2.1J; boys'
21f2-6,

LEARN BASIC OR
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FROM

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99

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TIMES-SENTINEL

.95

Vinyl Athletic

- - -·
.-------------------·
SUNDAY
I

James F. Shaffer, 41, is a I
structural steel worker who has ·:
been on strike against the II
Mulach Steel Corp., in Pitts- II
burgh since Aug. 1 as a I

r-------~------------------,

~Maids
all ina row
•*riflt ROCK HUOSI»&gt;
ANGIE DII:KitiiSOft · TEllt

hurl."

Of Quite Ordinary Folks

Padding
and Labor
INCLUDED

and up

nation .
living cosls. In five years his
"The danm union guys got rent went up $30 bul increases
swatted," he says. "They have in social security covered it.
been blackmailing us the last Kinzie praised President Nix·
few years . They have been on for his action. Most of his
exploiting us 10 times worse life Kinzie has been a
than business."
Republican, and says "if I ever
Kinzie resides in a view vote democrat I hope they
studio apartment in a down· shoot me."
'
town skyscraper which is
centrally located. On rent,
garage and utilities he spends
$200 a month.
The remaining $50 of his total
income from Social Security
and a small inheritance covers
his food, which he cooks
himself. "I eat the hest," he
says.
His days largely are spent
visiting acquaintances in failing
health. Once a week he does
shopping on behalf of a blind
friend .
Kinzie said the wage-price
freeze will "step on everybody's
toes" but is a necessary slep to
save the country. Kinzie
helieves his own toes will he
hurt because he has stock. The
stock doesn't pay dividends,
and Kinzie h&lt;!sn't found it
necessary to sell any to meet

"Like a lot of other memher of local 527, Interna·
businesses I depend heavily on tional Association of Bridge,
ilnported products," he said. Structural and Ornamental Iron
"Many of the Japanese compa· Workers. He is married, father
nies say they can 'I promise de- of daughters aged 9 and 15, and
liveries, and if they can the spoke his feelings on President
customer will have to pay~ the Nixon 's economic program
10 per cent surcharge. Either while on picket duty at the
way, my business will be hurt. " struck plant.
Arher has six employes in his
"The President started the
store which also sells televi- freeze after all the big unions
sions, radios and stereos and settled their contracts," he
ha~ a full photo operation. But said. "This leaves all the other
the owner said he might have smallerunio!]S,stillnegotiating,
to lay off two or three people if out in the field."
his fears are realized.
Shaffer's local is one that has
"Big business is the only one rejected Nixon's return-to-work
that will benefit from the plea. "Nixon's wage and price
freeze ," he said. "Small freeze will cost me at least $80
businesses and the working a month in wage increases I'd
man are the ones who will have received if the. last
suffer.
company offer had been accept"We're going to survive ed by the union," he said. "If
heller than the working man we settle the strike tomorrow
but only in the old-fashioned I'd still he working on the same
way by laying off help," said wages I made a year ago. At
Arher , father of three children. the same tilDe everything"But of course the smallest . groceries, insurance, rent,
businesses don 't ha~e any help everything-has gone up."
to lay off. A lot of them won't
Shaffer has a two bedroom
make it if this goes beyond 90 apartment for which he pays
days."
$tl5 a month rent. He receives
Arher said his sales of no union henefits.
Japanese color television sets
"I have just enough money to
had increased this week "be- make it through this month,"
cause the people are afraid of he said. "After that, I don't
the 10 per cent surcharge. But know. I'll just have to live on a
that won't last once the day-to-&lt;lay bssis. Guess I'll
surcharge is passed on to the have to look for another job,
customers. The situation is doing something."
very confused and uncertain."
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI )-"It
was
the most wonderful thing
PJ'ITSBURGH (UP! ) -"Nix·
on should have tried to stop that ever happened," said J.
inflation a long time ago. I Orval Kinzie, 73. "The news
think the freeze was about the tickled me dear to my toes."
Kinzie is a retired union
only thing left to do but it
electrician
living in one of the
comes at a time when I'm on
strike and it's really going to most expensive cities in the

I

Sunday-Monday
~ and Tuesday

Opinions of a Variety

Economy in Crisis

DIVORCE ASKED
GALLIPOLIS - Charging
gross neglect of duty and ex·
treme cruelty, Stephen Lee
Harris, Rt. 2, Patriot, Friday
filed a petition in GaiDa County
Common Pleas Court seelring a
divorce from Joan Harris,
Thurman. They were married
Feb. 1965 and have three
children.

Klondike Strikeout

a

$

ASKS DIVORCE
LONG BOTI'OM - Jack L.
Frederick, Long Bouom, Rt. I,
has flied suit for divorce in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court from Linda L. Frederick,
North Third Ave., Middleport,
on charges of gross neglect of
duty.

.

R

Royal Royalty

memories that the church
brings back to many people are
worth preserving, he helieves.
Voluntary work and financial
help would be appreciated.
Those wishing to contribute to
this cause may contact Warren
White or come to the church on
Saturday morning, Aug. 28.

Warren White, son of John
White, is
trustee of the
building. He and Rev. Hartley
Patterson, pastor of the
Proctorville Church of Christ,
hope to restore the building so it
can he used for funeral services, homecomings and other
special community events. The

CARPET
SPECIAL

Since 11 9

p~.wgow.:~· ~-:::::m~~::::::::~~==::::::$:::=:=:=:=:::::::=:;;::~:~:~:~~=::~:~:::~::8::~:::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:=:::~=:=:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:=:=:=:=:=:=~-::».~~-==:::::~::s:K.::;:::::::=:=...;:::~:=:=:=:::::=:::::~::~..-;~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~===========:::::::~:::::::::::~~:

IN HOSPITAL
GALLIPOLIS - John E .
McGuire, 1Q-year old son of Mr.
and Mrs . Jimmie Dale
McGuire, Mercerville Star Rt.,
was admitted to the Holzer
Medical Center at 8:30 p.m.
Friday following a bicycle
accident. McGuire suffered a
possible concussion. He is listed
in good condition.

MEIGS lHEATRE

ooo

( Contin~ed from page i) .
stood watching as his father and
three uncles raised the four
comer posts, and others put the
bottom heams into place. John
White later built the pews with

BOSTON (UPI} -Leon Arber
pointed at the man washing the
windows of his camera store.
"See that man, I pay him $15 a
month to do that. If things get
tight I'll wash the windows
myself."
Arber 50, owner of the
goii iMt Center camera
Stln'!or the past four years,
waa expressing his pessimism
about President Nixon's wageprice freeze. He feels small
businesses and the working
man will suffer.

Village Pbariilacy.
· Kevin Anderson, 795lb8., 45c,
Pomeroy National.
Mandie Rose, 79(1, 46c,
Landmark.
Lee Hysell, 860 lbs., 46c,
Meigs Equipnent.
Randy Johnson, 1050 lbs.,
50\ic, City Ice &amp; Fuel.
Edwin Cross, 1190 lbs., 46c, .
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Martin Broderick, 980 lbs., ·
43c, D &amp;: D Meats.
Frank Broderick, 1000 lbs.,

.

Old Oturch

the help of Ora Patterson who
designed \hem.
John Herman While, now 98years old, remembers his years
as a member and deacon of the
church as some of the best of his
life. He can'tmove around as he
once did, but he is willing to help
in any way be can.

by Dr. Wayne Ellett, plant
pathologist ior OARDC and The
Ohio
University ,
and
AI. Buter ' Area Extension
and Research agronomist, will
also appear on the program. A
question and answer period will
follow the lonna! presentations.
Swine-Agronomy Day activilies will begin at 10 a.m. at
the Western Branch. Visitors
will tour field plots and swine
facililies where research
scientists and extension
specialisls will explain studies
currently underway and discUS$
the latest research findings.
The OARDC Western Branch
is located near South Charleston

MARRIAGE LICENSE
POMEROY - Roger Brent
Hill, 20, Racine, Rt. I, and
Debra Kay McMillan, 19,
Racine, Rt. I ; Calvin W'illord
Ma yle , 18, Pomeroy, and
Charolette Marie Marcinko, 19,
Minersville, Rt. I.

Frleadly Ridge Is very weD iepl It Is lbe •stbC plare of
many yellow fever victims of 1878, and is still in use .

THE ORAVEYARD behind Saint Nldt Omrdl m

EDITOR's Note: Dismay,
joy, fear, worry, uncertainty.
These are some of the emotions
with which Americans greeted
the news of President Nixon's
wage-price freeze and other
economic measures. Here are
the reactions of five people
selected at random around the
country: a small businessman,
a steelworker, a pensioner, a
blue collar man, and a
stockbroker.

Friday Lamb,
Steer.Sale
Well Attended

1¥UM#£Dt\V
M,afllihuad, W.Va . .,. one of a n1Diberofbor8emen bamessj~
-..I'Jilllt lliP'i*Ei*llllrJ'111the mm•l borse pulling rontest. Davisson's team, Bob and
.Am, I' I f-a. ia lbe llf:avyftigbt divi.slan. .

Seminar Added on Blight

toe, Evans Packing.
Tammy Pitzer, MO lbll., 38c,
Marion Riggs Ford.
Diane Benedwn, 895lb8., 39c,
Sugar .Run Mills.
Pearl Smith, 1060 Ills., 48c;.
Production Credit Assoc.
Diana Grueser, 920 lbll., 50c,
VIllage Phapnacy.
Mike Salser. '185 lbs., toe,
Riggs Brothers:
Brian W'mdon, 985 lbs., 50c,
Keith Goble Ford.
Angie Sisson, 920 lbs., 51c,:
•
Elberfelds.
Julie Rose, MO lbs., 41c,
Marion Riggs Ford.
Kay Ward, 745 lbs., toe,
Farmers Bank.
Rick Pierce, 720 lbs., toe, ,
Citizens Nalional Bank.
Edith ·woodard, 675 lbs., 3'1c,
Daily Sentinel.
Kim Pierce, 740 lbs., 50c, '
Citizens Nalional Bank.
Larry Mees, 590 lbs., 42c,
Elberfelds.

Cooperative Extensioo s.rvice.
GaDia Counly fanners in·
terested In attending and who
need transportation to the field
in Clark Coo:nty. Tbe day should conoact Bud Carter
'P""'•Ii""" field dar is span- wbo will be driving to South
sored by the Resowdl Center Charleston that day and has
and The ObioSla~ ~·s room for more people.

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126

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As a kid on
Brandsleller lfeiChls it was my good
lor biDe to becGme friends with lllllllY
ILIUlls- ill addition to my Bam Gang
GAUJPOIJS -

cnmpanicDs.
Some wen Oliver Unroe, Knal
Williims, Bill and Bob OnnpbeU, Bert
Col, Russ Y91111g, Frank Lieb, Fritz

Damages Heavy in Mishaps

Blithe Spirit, Master · ·
Story Teller RecaUed

a .Sort.of Journal
BY J. A. MeXEAN .

'

closing whisUe and remembered
agba•t be's not done his chore and his
father ilrea4zy would be wending hiS

..., bome.
Simon quickly sped 10- his bouse,
stoked and lit the wood !Ire, al)d
franlically shoveled spuds into the
caldron. Wilen the blaze was roaring
real good he ran to where be could see
his father saUDtering off Vine St. onlo

PT. PLEASANT - Fo.;
accidents were investigated by
, local lawmen Friday with
damage estimates set in the
thOusands of doUars but no
serious injuries reported.
Two cars were total losses ln
a tw~af accident on the Silver
Memorial Bridge which occurred at 2:25 p.m. Friday. ·
Drivers were DarreD Dwight
Jones, Jr., 16, of Belville, in a
1961 Ford, and Patty Ann
Simpkins, 25, or Polnt Pleasant,
a 1969 Cbewolet convertible.·
According to state police,

them nice!~ as shelter for ihe nigh!. ·
Despite Eddie's feeble protests, Simon
soon had him · stashed away in one
structure and selected one nearby for
himself.
It was a refreshing, sparkling
moniing when Simon skittered out and
stroUed jauntily to his buddy's abode,
rapped briskly on the metal roof, bade
his partner a cheery top o' )he morn ...
and a huge black sow eD!erged. Simon,
starUed, heard Eddie move with a
groan · and stood by as his friend
crllwled out moaning. Eddie's clothes
were in tatters, he was bruised and
ScratChed: virtuaUy a hospital case.
" My gracious, what happened to

Swigert, the McClaskey brothers, and
Joe Meadows, the g.oce~ "y .
the levee in,ccmpany with SOOle feDow
But of the neighbors, beyond
workers. Simon ran bact, fired her
question, my favorite was Simon · some .more, lrmihled WIIil the water
Gibson, a sometime moulder, .palnter,
l'l18dled a boil, then feverishly began
paJierhanger and always a boy 's
pitchforting tbe fiery, vaporous
delight.
potatoes into the lol
Simon shai-ed with his brothers the
He related, ''You blow, an old boar
Gibson homestead south of Cbilllcothe
walked up and sniffed one of them big you?"
Road, atop the hiU rising from the
"Simon, I will never, ever, listen to
Fteaming spuds, greedily mouthed it
C!icbmauga Creek levee. Ezcept,
like a bog will. his eyes bulged fit to one of your wild schemes again," Eddie
that is, for short spells when be'd bad
pop, then be let out a loud, snorting f1!plied while ~taggering erect.
some slight differences of opinion on
"I'd about got to sleep when thst
SWOOMP, and c:barged right through
how the house was being run, or witb
the rente. And before I could move, beast stuck her head in .the door. I gave
Mayor Stormont over whether his
eightornineother bogs pulled the same ' ber a boot ln the snout but she just
liquid lnlate had been a wee bit
stupid aetand inside a minute that herd snarled real mean, showln' them big
spirltous or plaiD soda pop. He usually
was scattered ·aU over Brandstetter tusks, and came right on in like she
lost these minor altercations, . which
owned the place and maybe she did.
Heights."
bothered him not one particle. .
Needless to say, · after the ex- Anyway, I was scared to death of her.
It could not be said that Simon was citement •c:ooled. Simon was very Simon, did you know a hog lays down
pure by blue-nosed social stabdards, careful bow be sat for a few days.
like a dog- sorta twists around? wen,
but for certain be was pure Simon: free.
she had me squeezed ln a corner aU
Another lime, now a young
hearted, unrulfled by advertisy; a
Simon and a friend I shall caU Eddie night with the" door blocked. About
blithe, ijndly pixie wbo bad the good
were Mbning lhrougb central Ohio. A every 15 minutes she'd get up, smash
sense to neve.- quite grow up. And, to
and scrape me around in that corner
Dinl~yed brakeman just at dusk
the everlasting pleasure of acquain~ 'em &amp;1m a side-door pullman
with her twistin • and flop again.
tances, be was a master storyteller "Man, Ididn'tsleepawink. Look at
into a ehiU drizzle, maybe fifteen miles
me!
"
usually the -butt of his own tales.
from IIOWhete. But for the lamplight
For instance, Simon bad an inor· trim a few scattered farmbouses they
Simon replied, "Better look at thst
dlnate degree" of trouble with bogs. could bave imagiDed being ln Siberia. big old boar headed our way. Looks like
When a boy hii!melf, his iron moulder
Quietly a *.g their situation, he might be the jealous type. Let's get
father kept a sizea~ of swine and
Simon spied a colony of those orange- outta here."
it was Simon's bounden dailY. cbore to
palnle!f, movable bog.IJouses,so widely
These are only a couple of Simon
feed them. Their staple f'iire was
used in the COOl bell He leaped the samples. Sometimes I wonder how he'd
, potatoes boiled ln a great iron ketlle
rente and baslily lnvestigated several react to the society we have today.
beside the bot lot.
With magnificently hearty laugh,
and informed Eddi\l their immediate
_ One summer day Simon, engJ~ sse ~
problem was solved. Tbe houses were no doubt.
in a baaebaU game ln the creek bot- dry, spread with clean straw, bad only
tomland, was star1led by the foundry's
one small Olfliing, and would serve

SGT. MOONEY

Sgt. Mooney
Dead in Laos

l.andmark

GALUPOUS _ Sgt. First
Class Fred M09~1ey, 36, 1304
ConneD Dr., Killeen, Texas, soil
of Mr. and Mrs. George
· Mooney, Rt. 1, Northup, who
was killed in action lri Laos on
Feb. 'l/, t'¥11, was first listed as
missing
·
Accordmg to Major General
Ashley, Department of the
Army, Washington, D. C. he
was fatally injured in a
helicopter accident. An ob·
servation helicopter flew over
the crash area but due to
weapon fire and hostile ground
forces was unable to land to
pick up his body.
Sgt. Mooney was born in
Gallia County, July 19, 1934. He
had been ln the u.s. Atniy since
1955. Other survivors include
his wife, Jean, three sisters,
Mrs. Eblin (Eileane) Johnson,
Columbus; Mrs . George
(Helen) Kemper, Jr., Rt. I, and
Mrs. Arden (Eva) Queen,
Northup, three brothers,
llrs. George Merritt and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence and Leroy, both of Rt. .
Barney of Wheeling, W. Va. Jerry Dailey, of LoweD.
. Barney returned · home with

Feed Rep

them.
,Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Beegle,
daughters, Carol Ann and Mrs.

man,

a

WELI3roN - Josepb Carl
Wollam, Wellston, bas accepted
the position of Area Feed
Representati"e with Landmark, Inc., Columbus, ac·
.......,;,« to Fred McLa hlin
--...
ug •
Feed Divisiorl vice president
Wollaql will coordinate feed
~es and . promotions in
ioutbeastern Ohio for the
:N&amp;ional cooperative. He Will' be
Wlllting In Plcbway, Role.
Pike, Scioto, Lawrence,
Jackson, Vinton, Hocking,
F1irfield, Perry, Athens,
.JOE Wfiii,AM
M-eq'8IS.'• G81iia
. ' Wasbington and
&lt;~forgan Counties. RDy McCall
wbo served in Ibis area bas been almost seven years as a leed
lppointed to the position of specialist before accepting his
Poultry
Management new position. A graduate of
Specialist. ....
East Liverpool High Scbool,
A native of East Liverpool, WoDam also attended the
Wollam was associated with the College of Agriculture, Tbe Ohio
Ross County Landmark for State University.

Syracuse·News, Society
By Ada Slick
, Mr. and Mrs. William CUndiff
J and childre of
r.
n WaUbridge
spent a vacation here at the
home ol Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Teaford family and other
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. John Buchanan
Jr. and sons, Steve, of Alliance
visited his father, John E.
Buchanan Sr., and his aunt,
Mrs. Carrie Sinclair.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Scaffide
of F1eeport spent Friday night
with their daughter and solWnlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Slack, and children.
Recent guests of Mrs. Elva
Dailey were Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Autherson, Long Bottom, and
Mr. and Mrs. Pat ·Autherson,
Newark.

visited Kate Roush.
Agnes White and brother
Richard Duckworth spent ~
w k
"th h
ee w~
er son and
daughter-m-law, Mr. and Mrs
James R. White, and Mary Beth
of Dunbar. W. Va. They also
visited with her mother Mrs
Rose Schwarz of ..__ ...: and.
"""""''•
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Duckworth of Huntington.
Mr. and Mrs. William H.
Wood, sons Steven and Midiael,
of Oxnard, Calif., spent several
days bere with Mrs. Pearl
McBride, brother. David Mills,
and other relatives.
Mrs. Roy Winebrennec, son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Gordon W'mebrenner and
children and Elizabeth MeniU
spent a Sunday with Mr. and

Jenny &amp;le Lykens of Fairborn,
Mr. Teddy Beegle, Fairborn,
and Mr. Stephen Cody, CJaiis.
ville spent a weekend with
Mrs. Myrtle McBride.
Mrs. Vina Soulsby and SOD,
Jerry Soulsby, and Jerry Jr. of
Cleveland spent a few days with
Glenna Soulsby.
Mr. and~- Vll11Jon B¥tels
and Joyce and Michael of
Cincinnati spent a weekend with
his p::rents, Mr. and Mrs.
EmnrU Bartels.
Mr. and Mrs. William Cundiff
Sr. and children of WaUbridge
spent vacation here with
reallives.
Myla Hudson visited Mrs.
Juanita Hoochar and family at
Letart FaDs.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Theiss,
Tina and Timmy of Springfield
spent a weekend with his
mother, MrS. Carrie Sinclair
and John Buchanan. .
'
Carl
Duckworth
of
Pickerington visited his sister
and brother, Agnes White, and
Richard Duckworth and Mr.
and Mrs. John Hayes at Long

liDiflln.

111'1. llillsy Roush and Mrs.
Gala PatiiiCII:OIIIpanied Mrs.
Iuiie Flldllr of Morning Star to
Letart, W. V1., where they

l

DIAMONGS

GIFTLAND
Bidwell, Ohio
5 miles from Gallipolis on

'

New Beautician
•?it
lilnna sShop
.

•
: GALUPOUS - Mrs. Cindy
:SO.tm, 259 State St ., graduated
:from Na tionwide Beauty
: Academy, Columbus April 15, .
has joined the staff of
:Lanna's Beauty salon.
• She was formerly employed
:by Coiffures by Mr. Nick,
;QI!mnbus.

S4995

•

SeptemberWeddingPlanned

•

GAU.IPOUS - Mr. and Mrs. Academy High School, Miss
A. Kimball Suiter, 281 Jackson Suiter attended Capital
Pike, GaUipolis, are announc~g University in Columbus,
the engagement of their majoring in social work. She
daughter, Cathy Ann, to Karl will continue her education at
Laurence Heinke,son of Dr. and the University of Northwest
Mrs. Clarence H. Heinke, 688 Florida .
South Remington Road, Bexley,
Mr. Heinke is a graduate of
Ohio.
Bexley High School and Capital
The wedding will take place University,' where he majored
Saturday, Sept. 25, at 2:30p.m. in math and was a member of
in the First Presbyterian Kappa Iota Lambda Fraternity.
Church. Open church will be He is a second lieutenant with
observed with a reception the United States Marine Corps
following the ceremony at the Reserve stationed at Pensacola,
Gallipolis Shrine Club.
Florida.
A graduate of Gallia

•

Coming
Events

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
422 Second Ave.·
Gallipolis

Cheers for the shirt dress that
everyone loves! This season's favorite
style adds stitching up and down the
front and all around collar, sleeves and
pockets. In IOOo/o Dacron• polyester.
Plum, Red, Beige, or Black.
Sizes 8-Js: •36

We've got Fall all tied up.

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With shoes to help you and yo.ur wardrobe step
out in style. Choose your own look. You'll find
an Auditions style that was created for it.
And don't forget to ask for your free booklet,

.
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tt\lOUGR lUG•.3\st.

POMEROY - Tbe Pomeroy
E-R squad answered a caD to
the heme of Mrs. Frances
Yeager, ! Cole Sl., at 9:20p.m.
Friday. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where she was admitted for
medical treatment.

Save

"'The Sensible Woman's Guide to
Hotpants and Other Hot Fashions."

MON., TUES., WED.

Mrs. &amp;ward 0. Pauley

FAI.I. SEWERS

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GALLIPOLIS - Miss Kathy
Davies, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Davies, 414 Fourth
Ave., will represent Gallia
Academy High School in the
competition for the state's Top
Teen Seamstress at the 118th
Ohio State Fair.
Kathy has made a dressup
dress which she will model in
the style show to be held in the
Arts and Crafts Bldg. on
Monday, Sept. 6, at 2 p.m. Blue
ribbon winners in the class will
have an opportunity to compete
in an additional style show on
the same day beginning at 4
p.m.
Kathy's dress is made of
polyester crepe which she
fashioned in her own design,

•

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4 Milts West of Gallipolis on U.S. 3S

daughter and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Basel Harris of St. Albans,
W. Va .
The sayers held their reunion
a recent Sunday at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Callahan.
Recent dinner guests of Mrs.
Oral Webb were her cousin and
wife, Mr . and Mrs. Delbert
Vance and the Webbs' daughter
and husband, Mr. and Mrs.
David BaD.
Mrs. Mary Ann McCarley and
mother, Mrs. Howsrd and an
Wiele are spending a·vacation at
Cheyenne, Who.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Hill and
family of New Martinsville are
visiting · his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. B. Hill of Addison.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Tyler
were recent evening visitors of
the former's sister and
husband, Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Green and they helped MrS.
Green celebrate her birthday.

Local Girl Competes
T Oh • Stat
1n
to . e l'atr

•
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•

EI

Open Weekdays 9 to 8
Sunday 1 to 6

Miss Cathy Suiter

-•

I "II
· · d I
~0 91 e VISite G enna
Mrs Y
Daile
· va
Y spent the
weekend with her son and

1----""-------------1
Smeltzers Garden Center

Miss Kathy Davies

::me'

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white ribbon and carnations as
streamers.
Mrs . Sandra Osborne,
Gallipolis ; Miss Sue Grim ,
Gallipolis ; and Miss Nancy
Rodgers, sister of the bride,
Cheshire, served as attendants.
They wore pale blue crepe
dresses identical in design to
that of the matron of honor, blue
Dior bows with veils and
carried an old fashi oned
bouquet of white sweethear\
roses, carnations Upped in blue,
and stephanotis with white
ribbon and carnations as
streamers. The matron of honor
and attendants also wore a
single pearl necklace, a gift
from the bride.
Mr. James Callison, Dayton,
Ohio, was Mr. Pauley's best
man with Mr. Richard Lyle,
Winston·Salem , N. C., Mr.
James Osborne, Gallipolis, and
l] •
Mr. Fred Rodgers, brother of
!he bride, Columbus, serving as
ushers.
wilh the help of two patterns. For her daughter's wedding,
The American Beauty colored Mrs. Rodgers wore a yellow
dress features a fluted neckline polyester crepe dress with a
wilh shirred waist and long matching lace coat. She wore
shirred sleeves. Kathy hand off-white accessories. Mrs .
stitched the hem and the back Pauley, mother of the groom,
zipper.
chose a pink Peau De Sole dress
The winner of the second with a white lace overlay. She
show will receive $50 in cash wore pink accessories.
and other special prizes.
Both mothers wore corsages
This contest is open to junior of white roses with yellow
and senior high school girls in ribbon.
Ohio schools. Each school may Mrs. Edie Ross, organist,
have one entry. The entrant accompanied the soloist. Mr.
must be recommended by an Frank Handley Barker, Racine,
adult teacher or advisor.
W. Va., to " More " and
Kathy will be a junior at " Because.,
before
the
Gallia Academy Ibis coming ceremony and "'Tbe Lord's
school year and was recom· Prayer" during the ceremony.
mended by her teacher, Mrs. The reception was held in the
Joseph W. Clark.
church social room, which was
decorated in yellow and green .
The bride's table featured a
five-tier cake designed and
decorated by Mrs. Charles
Thompson, Cheshire. Servlng
as hostesses were Mrs. Beth
Large, Miss Sharon Cooper,
Mrs. Sherron Barnett, and Miss
Guineth Coder. Miss Ruth Casto
attended the guest book.
For her going·away dress, the
bride wore a pale blue polyester
knit dress made for ber by Mrs.
R. B. Nelson, the groom's
maternal grandmother.
After a trip to Myrtle Beach,
S. C., the couple is residing at
Plantz Subdivision, Gallipolis.

Pre-Season

c

PYRACANTHA

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U.S. 3S.

Bottom.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gibbs
and son, Mark Edwsrd, of
Decator, Ill., and Btancbe Gibbs
f

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:-SUNDAY
: ANNUAL Crast reWJion , Lake
: CI!octaw, London.
:WALNuT Ridge Church, 7:30.
)ley. llilly Payne will hold
__senkes. AU are welcome.
"MONDAY
DCSEA. regular monthly
lneeting, a p.m., 1&amp;22 Eastern
Aftlllle. Installation of new
ollkers and executive board , ·
Other important business .
Refreshments.
TUESDAY
By Mrs. MltcbeD Webb
RUMMAGE Sale , volunteer
Afamily get-together a recent
Sl!f\'ices, GSI, at St. Louis
SWJday
at the home of Mr. and
Catholic Church, 8:30 a.m.-4
Mrs. Charles Roach and family
p.m.
of
Gallipolis was in honor of
AMERICAN Legion will meet
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. Mrs. Roach's birthday and her
G. Mardli at 6:30p.m. for their parents', Mr. and Mrs. David
aDI!ual picnic. Buckeye Girls Ball's anniversary . Those
Stale delegates will give their present were Mrs. Roach's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. David
repoR.
M• :M, program at Grace BaD, their daughter, Patricia
United Methodist Church, 8 and friend, Freddie Burnett,
p.m., ..-esented by Youth of and her sister and husband, Mr.
Woodbine
Cumberland and Mrs. Raymond Robie and
Presbyterian Church, Nash· her grandmother, Mrs. Oral
Webb.
ville•. Tenn.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Tyler
WEDNESDAY
RUMMAGE sale, volunteer spent a weekend with their
sen ices, GSI, at St. Louis
Calbolic Church. 8:~ p. m. carport, Vinton sale is spon·
sored by the B.T.I. Vinton
FRIDAY
RUMMAGE sale, Alexander Baptist Church.

. b • 1•t's gonna be
Ba Y.·
4&gt;...18 1
d outs·•a .•
Ol
c
• toour
Bet.ter hurry •".

MUMS

Crow's Lake
andthey
Crossvisited
Lake.
Enroute
home
Nilalra FaDs.
Mn. Ernest Duffy visited her
lister and brother-in-law, Mr.
and Mn. John BurneD, Hun-

-GENUINE ·

Con -

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Drivers involwd ftiJd
Slover, 7t, .ofPoiDtM
t,ill
a 1912 Falcon, and Elllala Arbaugh, 56, of .Sl Albwns, a IS
M~~''« to. the 0. ... ..-...,_
"'-~~....,..
•s """"""
baugh
._,
the Ar
'"
·the curve at tbeiDta• hand
slid across the ...,.. eel!iA:::::
, _, with the Stover wbide.
Property damag~ was a!!: at
$200 with . no injnries or

BIG
DISOOUNT

Guoronleed Sole on
. signment.

Fred P. Rooney. 0-Pa., says
the" Federal Trade Commission
should require insurance companies to notify poUcy holders
that their credit card liability
insurance now is obsolete -and
to refWJd any pl'1!miums paid
for such insurance since Jan.
25.
Rooney said the new truth in
lending law limits a credit card
holder's liability to no more
than $50, and in some cases to
no liability at aU.

Streets,

road.
jciiii.tailti..
·onsl!"'. '- - - - - - •
With $2,000 property clamage
resulting, Ma.Son County Sheriff
Troy Huffman dted the driver
involved in a one-car accident
which occurred on Route 62
near the Chattin Road Market
Friday at 2 p.m.
"ON
~eith E. French: 21, of
Middlepor~ . w~s cited for
re~kless drtvmg m the Route 62
rrushap. .
.
Mcordlng_ to a wJflless at the
accid~nt site, French ~as
rounding a curve at about ~
FROM TAWNEY'S
miles per hour and he turned his
wh~ls to avoid hitting an oncommg car, lost control •. and ~t
an em~kment, ~ausmg ~
car to flip over 0 ~ Its hood.
French was drivmg a 1'¥10
Plymouth. He was not scratched. ·
. A two-car accident was in·

IT. WAS NEASE
POMEROY - In a report on
open class judglng of dairy
catUe at the Meigs County Fair,
it was reported that Donald
Mora exhibited the junior
champion Guernsey female.
This was ln error. The junior Having a Fund Raising
champion female was exhibited Event? Garage Sale?
by Daniel Nease, Minersville. .Flea Market?
We have ••.
_·GiasSW!Jre
• Toys .
• Novelties ,
• Jokes
I, Crown City and Garlan
Mooney of Columbus. A brother
and sister preceded him ln
death. He was a member of the
Dickey Chapel Church.

'=•

vestigated by cily patient
a.m. Saturday at the illtersection of "14111 a V"lalld

Ewington

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kloes and . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
son, Michael, Eleanor Robson,
Debbie Hartenbach, Mr. and
Mn. George Schneider and Mr.
and Mrs. Marvln McKelvey
spent a week at MyrUe Beach,
s. c. ..
15 Varieties of hardy
Mrs. Raymond Butcher of garden mums potted, the
Winston Salem, N. C., visited same fine qual ity we
Mr. and Mrs. James Autherson always have.
and Patricia and "was accompanied · home by her
mother, Mrs. Augusta Will.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Ebersbach and David, local, Mrs.
Ollie Roush, New Haven, Mr.
and Mrs. George Carson,
Mason, spent a week at MyrUe
Beach, S. C. They also visited
various points of interest ln N.
C. and Va.
.Mr. and Mrs. Dale WiUis
spent a two Weeks vacation at
Sharbot Lake, Ontario, Canada.
They fished in Bob's Lake,

Jones had stopped in the line of
traffic due to car trouble.
Simpkins could ·not stop and
swerved ln order to avoid
striking the car but the cars
collided.
Simpkins was cited for failure
to have. her vehicle under
control.
.TJ!e impact of the wreck
caused th~ gasoline tank of the
Joll"': vehicle to burst, spewing
g~line onto the bridge. The
Pomt Pleasant Volunteer Fire
Department was caned to the
scene to clean the highway.

In}uries were minor. Simpf twisted
0 8
tins complalned
.
iight arm.
Another accident resulted in
$200 damage but no citations or
injuries, according to local
State 'Police.
The accident occurred at 3:45
p.m. Friday on State Secondary
Route 1 near West Columbia.
Drivers were SteUa C. King,
m
19, of Letart, drivlng a 1•• 0
Plymouth, and Clall(ie D. Eblin,
24, of Pomeroy, drivlng a 1959
Ford, Their cars 1f1et at the
crest of a small hill on a gravel

INSURANCE OBSOLETE
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Rep.

GALLIPOLIS
Altar and sleeves. Her headpiece was
arrangements
of
white a pink Dior bow and veil. She
chrysanthemums enhanced carried a bouquet of white
with fern decorated the altar of sweetheart roses, carnations
the Grace United Methodist Upped in pink, stephanotis, and
Church, Gallipolis, for the . .- - - - - - - - .
candlelight wedding of Miss
Marsha A. Rodgers, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. James M.
Rodgers, Cheshire, to Mr.
Edward 0. Pauley, II, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Edward 0. Pauley
of Charleston, W. Va.
The double-ring ceremony
was performed at 7:30p.m. July
24, by the Rev. Paul Hawks.
Given· in marriage by her
parents, the bride was attired in
an empire floor length gown of
bridal satin and white chantiUy
lace. The bodice in front was
trimmed with satin and satin
buttons and styled with long
camelot sleeves and high lace
edged Victorian neckline. Her
mantiUa veil was scalloped with
We WiU
matching lace and swept
graci9usly as a chapel train.
Appreciate
The bride carried a bouquet of
Your
white sweetheart roses, white
carnations, and baby's breath
Patience
with white ribbon and car·
nalions as streamers .
Mrs. Lois Snyder, sister of the
bride, Columbus, served as
ma tron of honor. She wore a
light pink empire dress,
featuring a scoop neckline and
404 Second Ave.
Victorian sleevts with apGallipolis, Ohio
pliqued lace covering the bodice . ._ _ _ _ _ _ __,

SHAPE

S2U5

We'll Be

Closed

All This Week

August
23 thru 28
Store
Remodeling

•••

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PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS

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CATCHAll

$20.95
Mon. T-. Wed. Sit. 9-5
Thur. 9·1Z, Fri. 9-lp.m.

�I

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As a kid on
Brandsleller lfeiChls it was my good
lor biDe to becGme friends with lllllllY
ILIUlls- ill addition to my Bam Gang
GAUJPOIJS -

cnmpanicDs.
Some wen Oliver Unroe, Knal
Williims, Bill and Bob OnnpbeU, Bert
Col, Russ Y91111g, Frank Lieb, Fritz

Damages Heavy in Mishaps

Blithe Spirit, Master · ·
Story Teller RecaUed

a .Sort.of Journal
BY J. A. MeXEAN .

'

closing whisUe and remembered
agba•t be's not done his chore and his
father ilrea4zy would be wending hiS

..., bome.
Simon quickly sped 10- his bouse,
stoked and lit the wood !Ire, al)d
franlically shoveled spuds into the
caldron. Wilen the blaze was roaring
real good he ran to where be could see
his father saUDtering off Vine St. onlo

PT. PLEASANT - Fo.;
accidents were investigated by
, local lawmen Friday with
damage estimates set in the
thOusands of doUars but no
serious injuries reported.
Two cars were total losses ln
a tw~af accident on the Silver
Memorial Bridge which occurred at 2:25 p.m. Friday. ·
Drivers were DarreD Dwight
Jones, Jr., 16, of Belville, in a
1961 Ford, and Patty Ann
Simpkins, 25, or Polnt Pleasant,
a 1969 Cbewolet convertible.·
According to state police,

them nice!~ as shelter for ihe nigh!. ·
Despite Eddie's feeble protests, Simon
soon had him · stashed away in one
structure and selected one nearby for
himself.
It was a refreshing, sparkling
moniing when Simon skittered out and
stroUed jauntily to his buddy's abode,
rapped briskly on the metal roof, bade
his partner a cheery top o' )he morn ...
and a huge black sow eD!erged. Simon,
starUed, heard Eddie move with a
groan · and stood by as his friend
crllwled out moaning. Eddie's clothes
were in tatters, he was bruised and
ScratChed: virtuaUy a hospital case.
" My gracious, what happened to

Swigert, the McClaskey brothers, and
Joe Meadows, the g.oce~ "y .
the levee in,ccmpany with SOOle feDow
But of the neighbors, beyond
workers. Simon ran bact, fired her
question, my favorite was Simon · some .more, lrmihled WIIil the water
Gibson, a sometime moulder, .palnter,
l'l18dled a boil, then feverishly began
paJierhanger and always a boy 's
pitchforting tbe fiery, vaporous
delight.
potatoes into the lol
Simon shai-ed with his brothers the
He related, ''You blow, an old boar
Gibson homestead south of Cbilllcothe
walked up and sniffed one of them big you?"
Road, atop the hiU rising from the
"Simon, I will never, ever, listen to
Fteaming spuds, greedily mouthed it
C!icbmauga Creek levee. Ezcept,
like a bog will. his eyes bulged fit to one of your wild schemes again," Eddie
that is, for short spells when be'd bad
pop, then be let out a loud, snorting f1!plied while ~taggering erect.
some slight differences of opinion on
"I'd about got to sleep when thst
SWOOMP, and c:barged right through
how the house was being run, or witb
the rente. And before I could move, beast stuck her head in .the door. I gave
Mayor Stormont over whether his
eightornineother bogs pulled the same ' ber a boot ln the snout but she just
liquid lnlate had been a wee bit
stupid aetand inside a minute that herd snarled real mean, showln' them big
spirltous or plaiD soda pop. He usually
was scattered ·aU over Brandstetter tusks, and came right on in like she
lost these minor altercations, . which
owned the place and maybe she did.
Heights."
bothered him not one particle. .
Needless to say, · after the ex- Anyway, I was scared to death of her.
It could not be said that Simon was citement •c:ooled. Simon was very Simon, did you know a hog lays down
pure by blue-nosed social stabdards, careful bow be sat for a few days.
like a dog- sorta twists around? wen,
but for certain be was pure Simon: free.
she had me squeezed ln a corner aU
Another lime, now a young
hearted, unrulfled by advertisy; a
Simon and a friend I shall caU Eddie night with the" door blocked. About
blithe, ijndly pixie wbo bad the good
were Mbning lhrougb central Ohio. A every 15 minutes she'd get up, smash
sense to neve.- quite grow up. And, to
and scrape me around in that corner
Dinl~yed brakeman just at dusk
the everlasting pleasure of acquain~ 'em &amp;1m a side-door pullman
with her twistin • and flop again.
tances, be was a master storyteller "Man, Ididn'tsleepawink. Look at
into a ehiU drizzle, maybe fifteen miles
me!
"
usually the -butt of his own tales.
from IIOWhete. But for the lamplight
For instance, Simon bad an inor· trim a few scattered farmbouses they
Simon replied, "Better look at thst
dlnate degree" of trouble with bogs. could bave imagiDed being ln Siberia. big old boar headed our way. Looks like
When a boy hii!melf, his iron moulder
Quietly a *.g their situation, he might be the jealous type. Let's get
father kept a sizea~ of swine and
Simon spied a colony of those orange- outta here."
it was Simon's bounden dailY. cbore to
palnle!f, movable bog.IJouses,so widely
These are only a couple of Simon
feed them. Their staple f'iire was
used in the COOl bell He leaped the samples. Sometimes I wonder how he'd
, potatoes boiled ln a great iron ketlle
rente and baslily lnvestigated several react to the society we have today.
beside the bot lot.
With magnificently hearty laugh,
and informed Eddi\l their immediate
_ One summer day Simon, engJ~ sse ~
problem was solved. Tbe houses were no doubt.
in a baaebaU game ln the creek bot- dry, spread with clean straw, bad only
tomland, was star1led by the foundry's
one small Olfliing, and would serve

SGT. MOONEY

Sgt. Mooney
Dead in Laos

l.andmark

GALUPOUS _ Sgt. First
Class Fred M09~1ey, 36, 1304
ConneD Dr., Killeen, Texas, soil
of Mr. and Mrs. George
· Mooney, Rt. 1, Northup, who
was killed in action lri Laos on
Feb. 'l/, t'¥11, was first listed as
missing
·
Accordmg to Major General
Ashley, Department of the
Army, Washington, D. C. he
was fatally injured in a
helicopter accident. An ob·
servation helicopter flew over
the crash area but due to
weapon fire and hostile ground
forces was unable to land to
pick up his body.
Sgt. Mooney was born in
Gallia County, July 19, 1934. He
had been ln the u.s. Atniy since
1955. Other survivors include
his wife, Jean, three sisters,
Mrs. Eblin (Eileane) Johnson,
Columbus; Mrs . George
(Helen) Kemper, Jr., Rt. I, and
Mrs. Arden (Eva) Queen,
Northup, three brothers,
llrs. George Merritt and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence and Leroy, both of Rt. .
Barney of Wheeling, W. Va. Jerry Dailey, of LoweD.
. Barney returned · home with

Feed Rep

them.
,Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Beegle,
daughters, Carol Ann and Mrs.

man,

a

WELI3roN - Josepb Carl
Wollam, Wellston, bas accepted
the position of Area Feed
Representati"e with Landmark, Inc., Columbus, ac·
.......,;,« to Fred McLa hlin
--...
ug •
Feed Divisiorl vice president
Wollaql will coordinate feed
~es and . promotions in
ioutbeastern Ohio for the
:N&amp;ional cooperative. He Will' be
Wlllting In Plcbway, Role.
Pike, Scioto, Lawrence,
Jackson, Vinton, Hocking,
F1irfield, Perry, Athens,
.JOE Wfiii,AM
M-eq'8IS.'• G81iia
. ' Wasbington and
&lt;~forgan Counties. RDy McCall
wbo served in Ibis area bas been almost seven years as a leed
lppointed to the position of specialist before accepting his
Poultry
Management new position. A graduate of
Specialist. ....
East Liverpool High Scbool,
A native of East Liverpool, WoDam also attended the
Wollam was associated with the College of Agriculture, Tbe Ohio
Ross County Landmark for State University.

Syracuse·News, Society
By Ada Slick
, Mr. and Mrs. William CUndiff
J and childre of
r.
n WaUbridge
spent a vacation here at the
home ol Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Teaford family and other
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. John Buchanan
Jr. and sons, Steve, of Alliance
visited his father, John E.
Buchanan Sr., and his aunt,
Mrs. Carrie Sinclair.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Scaffide
of F1eeport spent Friday night
with their daughter and solWnlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Slack, and children.
Recent guests of Mrs. Elva
Dailey were Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Autherson, Long Bottom, and
Mr. and Mrs. Pat ·Autherson,
Newark.

visited Kate Roush.
Agnes White and brother
Richard Duckworth spent ~
w k
"th h
ee w~
er son and
daughter-m-law, Mr. and Mrs
James R. White, and Mary Beth
of Dunbar. W. Va. They also
visited with her mother Mrs
Rose Schwarz of ..__ ...: and.
"""""''•
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Duckworth of Huntington.
Mr. and Mrs. William H.
Wood, sons Steven and Midiael,
of Oxnard, Calif., spent several
days bere with Mrs. Pearl
McBride, brother. David Mills,
and other relatives.
Mrs. Roy Winebrennec, son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Gordon W'mebrenner and
children and Elizabeth MeniU
spent a Sunday with Mr. and

Jenny &amp;le Lykens of Fairborn,
Mr. Teddy Beegle, Fairborn,
and Mr. Stephen Cody, CJaiis.
ville spent a weekend with
Mrs. Myrtle McBride.
Mrs. Vina Soulsby and SOD,
Jerry Soulsby, and Jerry Jr. of
Cleveland spent a few days with
Glenna Soulsby.
Mr. and~- Vll11Jon B¥tels
and Joyce and Michael of
Cincinnati spent a weekend with
his p::rents, Mr. and Mrs.
EmnrU Bartels.
Mr. and Mrs. William Cundiff
Sr. and children of WaUbridge
spent vacation here with
reallives.
Myla Hudson visited Mrs.
Juanita Hoochar and family at
Letart FaDs.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Theiss,
Tina and Timmy of Springfield
spent a weekend with his
mother, MrS. Carrie Sinclair
and John Buchanan. .
'
Carl
Duckworth
of
Pickerington visited his sister
and brother, Agnes White, and
Richard Duckworth and Mr.
and Mrs. John Hayes at Long

liDiflln.

111'1. llillsy Roush and Mrs.
Gala PatiiiCII:OIIIpanied Mrs.
Iuiie Flldllr of Morning Star to
Letart, W. V1., where they

l

DIAMONGS

GIFTLAND
Bidwell, Ohio
5 miles from Gallipolis on

'

New Beautician
•?it
lilnna sShop
.

•
: GALUPOUS - Mrs. Cindy
:SO.tm, 259 State St ., graduated
:from Na tionwide Beauty
: Academy, Columbus April 15, .
has joined the staff of
:Lanna's Beauty salon.
• She was formerly employed
:by Coiffures by Mr. Nick,
;QI!mnbus.

S4995

•

SeptemberWeddingPlanned

•

GAU.IPOUS - Mr. and Mrs. Academy High School, Miss
A. Kimball Suiter, 281 Jackson Suiter attended Capital
Pike, GaUipolis, are announc~g University in Columbus,
the engagement of their majoring in social work. She
daughter, Cathy Ann, to Karl will continue her education at
Laurence Heinke,son of Dr. and the University of Northwest
Mrs. Clarence H. Heinke, 688 Florida .
South Remington Road, Bexley,
Mr. Heinke is a graduate of
Ohio.
Bexley High School and Capital
The wedding will take place University,' where he majored
Saturday, Sept. 25, at 2:30p.m. in math and was a member of
in the First Presbyterian Kappa Iota Lambda Fraternity.
Church. Open church will be He is a second lieutenant with
observed with a reception the United States Marine Corps
following the ceremony at the Reserve stationed at Pensacola,
Gallipolis Shrine Club.
Florida.
A graduate of Gallia

•

Coming
Events

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
422 Second Ave.·
Gallipolis

Cheers for the shirt dress that
everyone loves! This season's favorite
style adds stitching up and down the
front and all around collar, sleeves and
pockets. In IOOo/o Dacron• polyester.
Plum, Red, Beige, or Black.
Sizes 8-Js: •36

We've got Fall all tied up.

•

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With shoes to help you and yo.ur wardrobe step
out in style. Choose your own look. You'll find
an Auditions style that was created for it.
And don't forget to ask for your free booklet,

.
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•

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•

tt\lOUGR lUG•.3\st.

POMEROY - Tbe Pomeroy
E-R squad answered a caD to
the heme of Mrs. Frances
Yeager, ! Cole Sl., at 9:20p.m.
Friday. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where she was admitted for
medical treatment.

Save

"'The Sensible Woman's Guide to
Hotpants and Other Hot Fashions."

MON., TUES., WED.

Mrs. &amp;ward 0. Pauley

FAI.I. SEWERS

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL

•

Ofooff

POLYESTER
KNITS
I

STO

•3.98

yd.

MEN'S WEAR
POLYESTER KNIT

Enqlish Ivy

60"
Reg.

'7,49

·5.99yd.

FAll BONDED · . .
$349
ACRYUC PLAID &amp; SOLID.,.~··~·,·~.~ .... ,.~ ..;. yd,

LAWN PROBLEMS?
We have the answers!

REG. .J3.98 WASHABLE. 54"
.

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&lt;-"'I(

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-FRENCH CITY FABRIC SHOP
Open 'Til U 1m. Mon. &amp; Fri. Nights
Simplicity, McCallt Bulterick, Vogue Patterns
2 Complete Floors of Fabria I Notions
We Da Custom Dri!SS Making
Singer S;oln I Service

446-9255

auditionS

Rodgers-Pauley Wed

&amp;0 IN:HINE WASHABLE

15.99 YD.
FAll OOLORS

1-----------ll!!!lll"------1

1.-.-------------.1

GALLIPOLIS - Miss Kathy
Davies, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Davies, 414 Fourth
Ave., will represent Gallia
Academy High School in the
competition for the state's Top
Teen Seamstress at the 118th
Ohio State Fair.
Kathy has made a dressup
dress which she will model in
the style show to be held in the
Arts and Crafts Bldg. on
Monday, Sept. 6, at 2 p.m. Blue
ribbon winners in the class will
have an opportunity to compete
in an additional style show on
the same day beginning at 4
p.m.
Kathy's dress is made of
polyester crepe which she
fashioned in her own design,

•

--------

4 Milts West of Gallipolis on U.S. 3S

daughter and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Basel Harris of St. Albans,
W. Va .
The sayers held their reunion
a recent Sunday at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Callahan.
Recent dinner guests of Mrs.
Oral Webb were her cousin and
wife, Mr . and Mrs. Delbert
Vance and the Webbs' daughter
and husband, Mr. and Mrs.
David BaD.
Mrs. Mary Ann McCarley and
mother, Mrs. Howsrd and an
Wiele are spending a·vacation at
Cheyenne, Who.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Hill and
family of New Martinsville are
visiting · his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. B. Hill of Addison.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Tyler
were recent evening visitors of
the former's sister and
husband, Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Green and they helped MrS.
Green celebrate her birthday.

Local Girl Competes
T Oh • Stat
1n
to . e l'atr

•
•
•

EI

Open Weekdays 9 to 8
Sunday 1 to 6

Miss Cathy Suiter

-•

I "II
· · d I
~0 91 e VISite G enna
Mrs Y
Daile
· va
Y spent the
weekend with her son and

1----""-------------1
Smeltzers Garden Center

Miss Kathy Davies

::me'

I

white ribbon and carnations as
streamers.
Mrs . Sandra Osborne,
Gallipolis ; Miss Sue Grim ,
Gallipolis ; and Miss Nancy
Rodgers, sister of the bride,
Cheshire, served as attendants.
They wore pale blue crepe
dresses identical in design to
that of the matron of honor, blue
Dior bows with veils and
carried an old fashi oned
bouquet of white sweethear\
roses, carnations Upped in blue,
and stephanotis with white
ribbon and carnations as
streamers. The matron of honor
and attendants also wore a
single pearl necklace, a gift
from the bride.
Mr. James Callison, Dayton,
Ohio, was Mr. Pauley's best
man with Mr. Richard Lyle,
Winston·Salem , N. C., Mr.
James Osborne, Gallipolis, and
l] •
Mr. Fred Rodgers, brother of
!he bride, Columbus, serving as
ushers.
wilh the help of two patterns. For her daughter's wedding,
The American Beauty colored Mrs. Rodgers wore a yellow
dress features a fluted neckline polyester crepe dress with a
wilh shirred waist and long matching lace coat. She wore
shirred sleeves. Kathy hand off-white accessories. Mrs .
stitched the hem and the back Pauley, mother of the groom,
zipper.
chose a pink Peau De Sole dress
The winner of the second with a white lace overlay. She
show will receive $50 in cash wore pink accessories.
and other special prizes.
Both mothers wore corsages
This contest is open to junior of white roses with yellow
and senior high school girls in ribbon.
Ohio schools. Each school may Mrs. Edie Ross, organist,
have one entry. The entrant accompanied the soloist. Mr.
must be recommended by an Frank Handley Barker, Racine,
adult teacher or advisor.
W. Va., to " More " and
Kathy will be a junior at " Because.,
before
the
Gallia Academy Ibis coming ceremony and "'Tbe Lord's
school year and was recom· Prayer" during the ceremony.
mended by her teacher, Mrs. The reception was held in the
Joseph W. Clark.
church social room, which was
decorated in yellow and green .
The bride's table featured a
five-tier cake designed and
decorated by Mrs. Charles
Thompson, Cheshire. Servlng
as hostesses were Mrs. Beth
Large, Miss Sharon Cooper,
Mrs. Sherron Barnett, and Miss
Guineth Coder. Miss Ruth Casto
attended the guest book.
For her going·away dress, the
bride wore a pale blue polyester
knit dress made for ber by Mrs.
R. B. Nelson, the groom's
maternal grandmother.
After a trip to Myrtle Beach,
S. C., the couple is residing at
Plantz Subdivision, Gallipolis.

Pre-Season

c

PYRACANTHA

•

•

U.S. 3S.

Bottom.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gibbs
and son, Mark Edwsrd, of
Decator, Ill., and Btancbe Gibbs
f

;

•·
:-SUNDAY
: ANNUAL Crast reWJion , Lake
: CI!octaw, London.
:WALNuT Ridge Church, 7:30.
)ley. llilly Payne will hold
__senkes. AU are welcome.
"MONDAY
DCSEA. regular monthly
lneeting, a p.m., 1&amp;22 Eastern
Aftlllle. Installation of new
ollkers and executive board , ·
Other important business .
Refreshments.
TUESDAY
By Mrs. MltcbeD Webb
RUMMAGE Sale , volunteer
Afamily get-together a recent
Sl!f\'ices, GSI, at St. Louis
SWJday
at the home of Mr. and
Catholic Church, 8:30 a.m.-4
Mrs. Charles Roach and family
p.m.
of
Gallipolis was in honor of
AMERICAN Legion will meet
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. Mrs. Roach's birthday and her
G. Mardli at 6:30p.m. for their parents', Mr. and Mrs. David
aDI!ual picnic. Buckeye Girls Ball's anniversary . Those
Stale delegates will give their present were Mrs. Roach's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. David
repoR.
M• :M, program at Grace BaD, their daughter, Patricia
United Methodist Church, 8 and friend, Freddie Burnett,
p.m., ..-esented by Youth of and her sister and husband, Mr.
Woodbine
Cumberland and Mrs. Raymond Robie and
Presbyterian Church, Nash· her grandmother, Mrs. Oral
Webb.
ville•. Tenn.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Tyler
WEDNESDAY
RUMMAGE sale, volunteer spent a weekend with their
sen ices, GSI, at St. Louis
Calbolic Church. 8:~ p. m. carport, Vinton sale is spon·
sored by the B.T.I. Vinton
FRIDAY
RUMMAGE sale, Alexander Baptist Church.

. b • 1•t's gonna be
Ba Y.·
4&gt;...18 1
d outs·•a .•
Ol
c
• toour
Bet.ter hurry •".

MUMS

Crow's Lake
andthey
Crossvisited
Lake.
Enroute
home
Nilalra FaDs.
Mn. Ernest Duffy visited her
lister and brother-in-law, Mr.
and Mn. John BurneD, Hun-

-GENUINE ·

Con -

•

Drivers involwd ftiJd
Slover, 7t, .ofPoiDtM
t,ill
a 1912 Falcon, and Elllala Arbaugh, 56, of .Sl Albwns, a IS
M~~''« to. the 0. ... ..-...,_
"'-~~....,..
•s """"""
baugh
._,
the Ar
'"
·the curve at tbeiDta• hand
slid across the ...,.. eel!iA:::::
, _, with the Stover wbide.
Property damag~ was a!!: at
$200 with . no injnries or

BIG
DISOOUNT

Guoronleed Sole on
. signment.

Fred P. Rooney. 0-Pa., says
the" Federal Trade Commission
should require insurance companies to notify poUcy holders
that their credit card liability
insurance now is obsolete -and
to refWJd any pl'1!miums paid
for such insurance since Jan.
25.
Rooney said the new truth in
lending law limits a credit card
holder's liability to no more
than $50, and in some cases to
no liability at aU.

Streets,

road.
jciiii.tailti..
·onsl!"'. '- - - - - - •
With $2,000 property clamage
resulting, Ma.Son County Sheriff
Troy Huffman dted the driver
involved in a one-car accident
which occurred on Route 62
near the Chattin Road Market
Friday at 2 p.m.
"ON
~eith E. French: 21, of
Middlepor~ . w~s cited for
re~kless drtvmg m the Route 62
rrushap. .
.
Mcordlng_ to a wJflless at the
accid~nt site, French ~as
rounding a curve at about ~
FROM TAWNEY'S
miles per hour and he turned his
wh~ls to avoid hitting an oncommg car, lost control •. and ~t
an em~kment, ~ausmg ~
car to flip over 0 ~ Its hood.
French was drivmg a 1'¥10
Plymouth. He was not scratched. ·
. A two-car accident was in·

IT. WAS NEASE
POMEROY - In a report on
open class judglng of dairy
catUe at the Meigs County Fair,
it was reported that Donald
Mora exhibited the junior
champion Guernsey female.
This was ln error. The junior Having a Fund Raising
champion female was exhibited Event? Garage Sale?
by Daniel Nease, Minersville. .Flea Market?
We have ••.
_·GiasSW!Jre
• Toys .
• Novelties ,
• Jokes
I, Crown City and Garlan
Mooney of Columbus. A brother
and sister preceded him ln
death. He was a member of the
Dickey Chapel Church.

'=•

vestigated by cily patient
a.m. Saturday at the illtersection of "14111 a V"lalld

Ewington

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kloes and . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
son, Michael, Eleanor Robson,
Debbie Hartenbach, Mr. and
Mn. George Schneider and Mr.
and Mrs. Marvln McKelvey
spent a week at MyrUe Beach,
s. c. ..
15 Varieties of hardy
Mrs. Raymond Butcher of garden mums potted, the
Winston Salem, N. C., visited same fine qual ity we
Mr. and Mrs. James Autherson always have.
and Patricia and "was accompanied · home by her
mother, Mrs. Augusta Will.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Ebersbach and David, local, Mrs.
Ollie Roush, New Haven, Mr.
and Mrs. George Carson,
Mason, spent a week at MyrUe
Beach, S. C. They also visited
various points of interest ln N.
C. and Va.
.Mr. and Mrs. Dale WiUis
spent a two Weeks vacation at
Sharbot Lake, Ontario, Canada.
They fished in Bob's Lake,

Jones had stopped in the line of
traffic due to car trouble.
Simpkins could ·not stop and
swerved ln order to avoid
striking the car but the cars
collided.
Simpkins was cited for failure
to have. her vehicle under
control.
.TJ!e impact of the wreck
caused th~ gasoline tank of the
Joll"': vehicle to burst, spewing
g~line onto the bridge. The
Pomt Pleasant Volunteer Fire
Department was caned to the
scene to clean the highway.

In}uries were minor. Simpf twisted
0 8
tins complalned
.
iight arm.
Another accident resulted in
$200 damage but no citations or
injuries, according to local
State 'Police.
The accident occurred at 3:45
p.m. Friday on State Secondary
Route 1 near West Columbia.
Drivers were SteUa C. King,
m
19, of Letart, drivlng a 1•• 0
Plymouth, and Clall(ie D. Eblin,
24, of Pomeroy, drivlng a 1959
Ford, Their cars 1f1et at the
crest of a small hill on a gravel

INSURANCE OBSOLETE
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Rep.

GALLIPOLIS
Altar and sleeves. Her headpiece was
arrangements
of
white a pink Dior bow and veil. She
chrysanthemums enhanced carried a bouquet of white
with fern decorated the altar of sweetheart roses, carnations
the Grace United Methodist Upped in pink, stephanotis, and
Church, Gallipolis, for the . .- - - - - - - - .
candlelight wedding of Miss
Marsha A. Rodgers, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. James M.
Rodgers, Cheshire, to Mr.
Edward 0. Pauley, II, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Edward 0. Pauley
of Charleston, W. Va.
The double-ring ceremony
was performed at 7:30p.m. July
24, by the Rev. Paul Hawks.
Given· in marriage by her
parents, the bride was attired in
an empire floor length gown of
bridal satin and white chantiUy
lace. The bodice in front was
trimmed with satin and satin
buttons and styled with long
camelot sleeves and high lace
edged Victorian neckline. Her
mantiUa veil was scalloped with
We WiU
matching lace and swept
graci9usly as a chapel train.
Appreciate
The bride carried a bouquet of
Your
white sweetheart roses, white
carnations, and baby's breath
Patience
with white ribbon and car·
nalions as streamers .
Mrs. Lois Snyder, sister of the
bride, Columbus, served as
ma tron of honor. She wore a
light pink empire dress,
featuring a scoop neckline and
404 Second Ave.
Victorian sleevts with apGallipolis, Ohio
pliqued lace covering the bodice . ._ _ _ _ _ _ __,

SHAPE

S2U5

We'll Be

Closed

All This Week

August
23 thru 28
Store
Remodeling

•••

•
•
•
PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS

I .

' --~----'------~~------------~----------~~----------------~

CATCHAll

$20.95
Mon. T-. Wed. Sit. 9-5
Thur. 9·1Z, Fri. 9-lp.m.

�. '
.

-

'
f- The a!l!day Times· Sentinel, Slllday, Alii!. Z.:.l:r.'l.

7

~ inton

7-

•

,Aug. 22, 111'11

rvOICe-aJ&lt;;;;g--u;~adwaY-1

B. T.L Meets

GALIJPOIJS - . The B.T.I.
Class r1. tiM! Vinton Baptist
Sunday School met . fit the
church for their monthly class
meeting Thursday evening.
~-Tom Ragan was in charge
rl. the program and the table
decorations.
A ~hort program was
presented before retiring to the
fellowship room in the
basement for a poUuck supper.
Plans were made for a
nunma,ge sale to be held on

Tile....,. 'l'lmes-!lent!neJ,SIIlday

August 'l1 and 28 at the
Alemnder carport; across from.
the Vinton Banking Company.
Members' present were Mrs.
Herb Moore, M~s. Edgar
Hawks, Mrs. Thlllilas Ragan,
Mrs. Gradley Harder, . Mrs. ·
Lucy Hartsook, Mrs. Denver
Warner,
Mrs.
Ishmael
Argabright and Mrs. Laura
Brown. .
.
·
The next meeting wjll be helci
at the church on Sept 16 at 7:30
p.m.

I
BY J•(S O'BRIAN
MAYBE 'IBIII'EEI.JNG'S MUl'UEL
NEW YORK - New Yen's ·Off 'n'ack
BettingO,porati«l bu Ibis much t'Qlfillence In
lbeloc81CG!ll: lt'sliredRoimesProlection,Inc.
1!1 pard ita bet-cotten gains ... Burlesque ain't
dud: Dean Martin's bone In hls new comedy
wwlm~ W his teelb B.Ued with gold caps ....
ThereanllywedAihertFinneys (Ano'* Aimee)
bave a · ~ flub .... l•tciDe Ball wants the
lragl~. Judy Garland-lite screen role In
Nell slo-•s ''The Gingertftad.t£dy" so bad
abe CJm taste the ginger.

·-----------~---------------,

bebsviwilm" who "'rides wbat cokn and
designs are right fer racetracu _:_ in leas polite
words, wbat cokn llld ~ will make the
cuslmlen bet more ; abe's laid oo her best-bet
.
.
' colon at 1.-el in Maryland, tour II E. P.
Steve McQueen's "Le Mans" leading la!ly Tayll!f's lracb in Torontoame, Fort Erie (near
Elga Anderson watt to "21" In the bottesi1111Dill ""otic Buffalo); Yonke!'a trot track and dozens

and hraleas peeklliougb Tolbirt without a m&lt;re; and abe's pretty!
Cbet Huntley isn't quitting TV after aU : He'll
management lllW'Dll&amp;' - but tier escort didn't
make It becalllle he lacked a necktie; and that's do commercials from his Montana b«ne ....

right- no necktie Is going just too far .... Wben
Ttlnmy &amp;notbers pwthed the horizons of taste
too far and was pushed off TV, he screamed
censorsblp; hls own mother (oo the Merv
Griffincast) just opined the dolling lad ''kind of
pwthed" himself off.
·
· Unusual professioo: ~ T. Sharpe Is a
Ph.D. specializing in "color-induced

Charlotte Ford's irked at the nDIIIltS of bel'
''rcmance" with Rod McKuen and sweats it
uever was; Rod, a personal publie relatims
p11ctitiooer as well as poet, replies to nmancecpleries: "I want to get bome 10 see her as
quicldy as possible" .... Hardly seem1 a Ford in
Rod's future .... The postponement rl. Mict
Jagger and his RDIIing Stones' fall u. s. tour isn't

so mysterious: Mick Simply hasn't been deared
by u. S. lmnligralloo. Yet.
Before Teddy Kennedy jelled off to heckle
.N'wm fr~m India, he and John Tunney saw
Dlabann Can-oil perform in Bal~ - and
nert day the actress.Qnger was their Senate
dining room lunch guest .... Wecan'lfigure if it's
both lads' eye for a beautiful gal - « a way of
ingratiating themselves with her bypero&amp;tea!ly
beau, Dsvid Frost .... British actor Donald
Pleasance deplores recent foreign puldowns of
America, says the social and polltical tangles
here have deep significance to other countries lltal they surface faster in volatile America and
"ultimately caleb up with us. Ameiica suflera
them and reveals them to us, and it's outrageous
to be smug."

Eddy Schedule

MASO:-"::'~ x..'ulelb
L.Lawhorn,-ofllr.llldlln.
Carl G. Lawhorn, Fourth llld
Foglaoog street, Is oo duty at
Tan Son Nllul AB, Vlelnmn.
Sergeant Lawhon, .0 aircraft
mechanic, is a 11114 graduate of .
Pomeroy High School and attended Troy Slate UniW!I'Ility.
His wife, Brenda, Is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrt. CecU
Ward of 20\lo Mulberry Ave.,
P&lt;meroy.

POMEROY - . ·Eddy's
schedule in Meigs Cmnty this
week :
Monday - 9 a.m., Roci
Springs and Vie.
Tuesday - 12:30, Southern
and Vic.; 3:15, Dorcas; 4,
Spiller ; 5, Stiversville; 6,
Portland; 7, Racine Bank. .
Thursday - 9, Southern and
Vic.; 12:30, Rutland and VIc.;
3:30, Langsville; 4, Rutland
Main ; 5:15, Rutland Park; 6:45,
Hysell Run ; 7:45, Old Rt. Vic.; 12, Reedsville; 1:30, Long
7. Friday - 9, Catholic Church Bottom; 3:30, Keno; 4:1$,
.
and Vic.; 9:45, Riverview and Bashan.

!Helen Help Us!
.
.

I

I
I 1

I This· column is forBy Helen
Bottel
young people, their problems and

pleasures, their troubles and fun. As with the rest of Helen Help
Us! It welcomes lauglls but won 'I dodge a serious question with a
lrusb«f.
Send your teeoage questions to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
rl. Helen Help Us! this newspaper,
IS WAR FOR EOOLOGY
SLOWING DOWN?
Dear Helen:
Last winter there was a big ecology push in our town. We had
can, bottle and paper collections, clean-up drives, pollution inspection.
But I haven't heard much about It lately. And I still see factory chimneys belching smoke. Our river still smells. The air (so·
called) burns our eyes.
Are the American people sin1dng bsck to ."don't careness"?

Miss My/a Hi/ligas

Mr. and Mrs. Alan Jensen

Miss Hilligas To
:~::.t,U:f:~e:;~a:~utio:.::;v:,!~ea: Wed Harry Amsbary

govenunent a dally ''pay~ff" is cheaper than putting in new
machin~, and why shOuld the government holler when it's
mooey in their pocket?
, As for bringing out cars that don't use polluting gas and oil il would be the end of many multi-million dollar businesses, if the
internal combustion engine were replaced.
The hard facts are thai anti-pollution means fewer profits. It
also means going to a lot of ''bother," what with recycling, reusing,cleaning~aftero..-selves-and,mostofaU,makingalot
linoisesolltatthebigguyswiUcleanup,too.
There ARE ways to purify water, fight smog, turn garbage
Into landfllla Instead 9f ocean sewage. But If we drag our feel, we
can'lexpect the mooeymen to do it out of altruism.
If we want our cblldren to live without gas masks !IDd THEIR
children to live at·aU, we'd better gel on our horses again and
startscreamingf~recologyNOW.Soi'm-SCREAMJNG

·

GALUPOIJS- Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hilligas of Smithville,
Ohio, formerly rl. Pomeroy, are announcing the engagement of
their daughter Myla Jayne to Harry L. Amsbsry son of Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Amsbsry, 631 'Fourth Avenue, Ganlpolis.
Miss Hllllgas is a 1967 graduate r1. Smithville High School and
a 1971 graduate of Ohio State University. She holds a Bachelor of
Science degree in Physical Therapy and is presently fulfilling.her
twelve weeks of clinical affiliation. She is emplayed by
Professional Therapeutic Services, Inc. and will begin work at
Medicenter of Columbus oo September 20.
Mr. Amsbsry Is a 1967 graduate of Gallia Academy High
School and a 1970graduatein Zoology a! Ohio State University. He
is presently attending Ohio State University Medical School and
will receive his M.D. degree in June 1973.
No definite wedding plans have been made.

Dear Screaming: ·
So ami! Let's don't anyone slop. -H.
Dear Helen:
I got in trouble for stealing and shoplifting. Well, I quit. I
wouldn'tsteal now, even If I knew I'd never gel caught.
But our neigbhor heard about this. The other day I was al her
house.Now she'saccusingmeofliftinga $10bill that she says was
By Mrs. W. H. Thomas
om the sideboard.
Chester Jones and William
Other kids were there too, but I'm the one she blames because Staten were business visitors in
of my ''repulallon."Evenmyfamilywondersif I'm guilty.
.Oak Hill Tuesday.
Slould I take $10 out of my savings account and give to her?
Mr. and Mrs .. Alva Long and
' "Uiieffiingior sure '::.. she'll always belfevel di41 and'OnlyTinow • daughter, Mrs. Betty Moore,
1 didn't. - RYAN
,
1 ~ ~- ., •
and two childcen of West
Dear Ryan:
•lJ
.
Mansfield were recent _visitors
You'll never prove innocence by ''replacing" what you didn't of Mr. and Mrs. Francts Cardwen.
stealStay alert for the real thief (ldds usually give themselves
Mrs· Cend Parsons was
pleasantly surprised when two
away), Or perhaps It wasn't a theft al aU. Has your neighbor of her nieces, and their
husbands called on her Sunday
searched hebind the sideboard -or in her purse? -H.
Dear Helen: .
evening. They were Mr. and
1 read in your colliiiUl about the girls Who said thai to be Mrs. John Gillam of Ashland,
popular meant booze, hllchhiking, drugs, etc. Well, this is the way Ky. and Mr. and Mrs. Richard
II is in our town:
Ziegler of St. Petersburg, Fla.
About 30 kids think they're ''the popular crowd." I know
Mr. and Mrs. Alva Long and
because I was ooce with them. But they started lbrowing wild Francis Cardwell called on Mr.
parties, and that's when I dropped out.
and Mrs. William Thompson,
You know whai? -Aithough they still THINK they're the Alice.
popular bunch; WE know better. People don't respect their type.
John Fore and son, Brodie, of
Man, you can have fUn without hooze and dope. I may not be St. Albans, W. Va. spent two
popular with THEM, but I sure am with thevlher 980 kids in our days with their grandmother,
school! - HAPPY
·
Mrs. W. H. Thomas ·arid at.

Deer Creek

Plus Free!
The stay bright secret is in the
polish. Finish won't rub off.

~7 ~zes
9

· · sizes 9V2 to

dflwronB
Mi lEW jrQ()TWUJt FOR THE PAMY

JY2 to 6-$899

302 SEOOND AVENUE

Miss Julia Ann Craft

GAlliPOLIS, 0.

Craft-Butler Wedding Planned

DrummondJensen Wed

GALUPOIJS- Mr. and Mrs. James H. Craft, 275 Lower
River Road, announce the betrothal of their daughter, Julia Ann,
to Paul E. Butler, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Butler, Sr.,
Route 2, Crown Oty.
The bride-elect, a graduste of Gallia Academy, is emplayed
as a secretary and dental assistant for Dr. Gordon K. Amsbsry.
Her fiance is also a Gallia Academy graduate. He is now working
with his father on the family's farm.
The open church wedding is planned for Nov. 7 at the Ohio
Chapel United Methodist Chorch. An open reception will follow
Immediately in the fellowship room,

GALLIPOUS - Miss Joyce orchid asters on the surface,
Drummond, daughter of Mr. and greenery encircling the
Floyd H. Drummond of Ad· handle.
dison, became the bride of Neils Utlle Miss Michelle Grieves,
Alan Jensen, son of Mr. and niece of the bridegroom, was
Mrs. Neils A. Jensen of Port flower girl. She wore ·a dress
Ointon, at seven-thirty o'clock identical to the JUmor
on the evening of June 26, at the bridesmaid's and carried a
Grace United Methodist basket of pink, orchid, and
•
•
1/'f
Church.
.
purple rose petals.
~h~ Rev. Paul W. Ha~ks Master Curtis Hawkins,
.
.J'
j I I,
UJ
offtctated at the double rmg, Dayton, Ohio, served as
candlelight ceremony whjch ring bearer, and Mrs. Ruth . GALLIPOLIS - The Ladies group, and Barbara Simpkins
was preceded by 30 minutes of Gorbin of Cheshire registered Fellowship of First Baptist explained the attendance
Church met Aug. 19 at the contest.
traditional nuptial music guests.
presented by Mr. and Mrs. Mr . Dennis Jansen of church with a large group at- Mrs. Marie Edelblute read a
Merlyn Ross.
Swansea, Mass., brother of the tending.
poem, " Responsibility,"
tended the 4-H Fair.
Escorted by her father to an bridegroom, served as best
Mrs. · Russell
Sarrett, followed by prayer and
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Smith
altar accented with palms, man . Groomsmen were Mr. president, opened the meeting devotions by Margaret Hardin,
and four children of Fairborn
candelabras, and two urns filled Joseph Drummond of Addison , with a prayer and the group who read the poem, "He
spent a weekend with Mr. and 'th
h'd d
sang "To The Work ."
Maketh No Mistake," and a
Mrs. John Vance and family. wt ore 1 an purple asters, brother of the bride, Mr. Edgypsophelia, and greenery, the ward Maralta of Rio Grande,
After a prayer by Mrs. Earl Bible reading.
Mrs. Juanita Ferguson and
bride wore an empire floor· and Mr. Malcolm Orbsugh of Saunders, it was announced The ladies then went to work
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Cardwell
length gown of nylon dotted Gallipolis.
that Women's Retreat would be in the fellowship room where
spent a day with Mr. and Mrs.
swiss fashioned with a trans- For the wedding the held Sept. 24 and 25 at Sky View they sewed ·for the missionliry
Kenneth Russell, Catlettsburg,
parent yoke .-accented with, bridegroom's .mother wore a Ranch. .
. ..&lt; ~ Tefre~jun.enls were served
... - " '
'
Ky.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Parsons Venise lace styled with long blue slr~et length dress with Secret~ry and treasurer by th~ J~llowing committee,
and two sons are spending a camelot sleeves and a Victorian matching accessories and a reports were read and ap- Marie "'oelblule, Navalene
neckline. Her skirt flowed into a white corsage.
proved1 The Sunshine report North,
Eleanor
Atkins,
week's vacation with his
length
train.
Her
finger
A
reception
followed
the
was
gtven
by
May
Thivener.
Margaret
Hardin,
Meda
chapel
mother, Mrs. Cena Parsons.
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Russell, tip veil of silk illusion fell from a ceremony at the Lowe Hotel, Mrs. Julia McGhee read a letter Edelblute, Debbie Saunders,
Brooksville, are visiting headdress of Venise lace and Point Pleasant, w. Va. The from her missionary boy to the and Judy Cole.
bride's table was skirted in . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
relatives here and called on seed pearls.
Thebridecarriedabouquetof
white
linen with garlands of
Mrs. William Thomas.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Jones pink and white roses accented greenery draped around the
table. Afour-tier wedding cake,
spent Saturday and Sunday with with gypsophelia.
The
bride's
matron~f-honor
specially
designed for the bride
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Raynes
was
Mrs.
Malcolm
Orebaugh
of
by
Mrs.
Dorothy Thompson,
and family, Nitro, W. Va.
Natalle Shong, daughter of Gallipolis. Maid-of-honor was Cheshire, was the focal point.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Shong, Miss Lois Fraley of Springfield, The cake featured alternate
returned home from Holzer Ohio. Bridesmaids ·were Miss layers of purple and orchid
.
Medical Center after a ton· Patsy Schult, Patriot, Ohio; inside, white icing on white
•
silectomy operation. Her Mrs. Larry Lawhon, Laurel, outside, and clusters of grapes
Md.;
and
Mrs.
Edward
Grieves,
atop
each
tier
with
the
grandmother, Mrs. Lawrence
Shong, Gallipolis spent two days sister of the groom, from Port traditional bride and groom
Ointon, Ohio.
under crossing arches of white
with them.
Danny Thomas, Westerville, The attendants wore empire, and orchid 'flowers on the top k-::--------------------;:-,1
spent Saturday and Sunday with floor-length gowns of orchid tier . Three branch silver
his grandmothers, Mrs. John dotted swiss styled with Vic· candelabras holding orchid
Parsons and Mrs. William torian necklines and long candles with garlands of
camelot sleeves accented with greenery entwined at the base,
Thomas .
Earl Willong returned home Venise lace. They each wore further decorated . the bride's
Sunday after several days of open crown picture hats of table.Guestswereservedgrape
medical treatment at Holzer orchid straw, and carried white punch from a silver punch bowl
parasols open only enough to which featured an ice ring of
Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs . Herbert allow bouquets of orchid and grapes.
Hostesses at the reception
Thomas, Westerville, spent purple asters accented with
gypsophelia
to
flow
out.
were
Mrs. Art Hess, Midover Sunday with relatives
Miss Marta Drummond of dleporl, sister of the bride, Mrs.
here.
Logan, Ohio, niece of the bride, Gene Spaulding, Salem, Va.,
Q-What political post did served as junior bridesmaid. and Miss Carlene French,
the noted physicist Albert She wore an empire, floor· Addison . Assisting with the
E:instein once decline?
length dress of white dotted reception were Mrs. Mary
REG. •219"
A- The presidency of swiss styled with Juliet sleeves Fulton and Mrs. Margree
95
Israel in 1952. He declined and accented with purple and Lawhon.
SA•E
this honor •. insisting that he orchid lace. She carried an open
For a wedding trip to
wa~ .not fttted for such a parasol over her shoulder with Lexington, the bride changed
postllon.
an arrangement of purple and into a yellow dress trimmed in
white with white accessories.
Mrs. Jensen was graduated
from Rio Grande College. She is
presently employed by the
Kyger Creek Schools System as
• Exclusive front drop-in bobbin.
a teacher.
Mr. Jensen was graduated
• .Built-in blindstitch.
from Bowling Green State
Plus 6 other great features.
University. He completed
graduate school at Mary Manse
Even greater savings on cabinet roodels.
College, and Is presently the
Dean of Students at Rio Grande
College.
Free instructions on the use of your
Th~ couple is at home to their
new machine.
friends at South College
Avenue, f\io Grande. •

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Gallipolis, Ohio

C- NaneHe -

•
•

BLAZER REUNION
GALLIPOLIS - The Com·
miltee for the Blazer Reunion
which was held August 8 ~t Rio
Grande Campus announces the
election of one new officer, Mrs.
Jack Campbell, as secretary·
tr.easurer. The other officers
a-re tile same . •
SOGIAL PLANNED
EUREKA - An ice cream
social will be held at Eureka, ·
Mason.ic Hall Friday, Aug. 27, 9 ·
a.m.-6 p.m. ; sponsored by Jobs
Daughters, Bethel No. '/3
G1illi(l&lt;llis.

Boleti hys' SOCKS
witb a5year goarantee

Open Mon. &amp; Fri. 'Til 8 P.M•.

FRENCH CITY.·
FABRIC SHOPPE

S!Ntth ayloa socb tf,ot will be ••· ·
....... 1 lhtr don't gilte &amp;.o yoors of
,.,..,.. - . Good tan colo,._ Sites lit

Simplicity, Me Calls. Butterlck, Vogue Patterns
2 Complete Floors of Fabrics &amp; Notions
We Do Custom Dress Making

7to "·

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446·9255

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•A trBdemafkl•1 THFS!Nt .t 1Cl,..{ •M• l••'f f

"'~flltOI.Dlt.UR

'----~~~-------~--~~--------------------------

1 : ..

•

�. '
.

-

'
f- The a!l!day Times· Sentinel, Slllday, Alii!. Z.:.l:r.'l.

7

~ inton

7-

•

,Aug. 22, 111'11

rvOICe-aJ&lt;;;;g--u;~adwaY-1

B. T.L Meets

GALIJPOIJS - . The B.T.I.
Class r1. tiM! Vinton Baptist
Sunday School met . fit the
church for their monthly class
meeting Thursday evening.
~-Tom Ragan was in charge
rl. the program and the table
decorations.
A ~hort program was
presented before retiring to the
fellowship room in the
basement for a poUuck supper.
Plans were made for a
nunma,ge sale to be held on

Tile....,. 'l'lmes-!lent!neJ,SIIlday

August 'l1 and 28 at the
Alemnder carport; across from.
the Vinton Banking Company.
Members' present were Mrs.
Herb Moore, M~s. Edgar
Hawks, Mrs. Thlllilas Ragan,
Mrs. Gradley Harder, . Mrs. ·
Lucy Hartsook, Mrs. Denver
Warner,
Mrs.
Ishmael
Argabright and Mrs. Laura
Brown. .
.
·
The next meeting wjll be helci
at the church on Sept 16 at 7:30
p.m.

I
BY J•(S O'BRIAN
MAYBE 'IBIII'EEI.JNG'S MUl'UEL
NEW YORK - New Yen's ·Off 'n'ack
BettingO,porati«l bu Ibis much t'Qlfillence In
lbeloc81CG!ll: lt'sliredRoimesProlection,Inc.
1!1 pard ita bet-cotten gains ... Burlesque ain't
dud: Dean Martin's bone In hls new comedy
wwlm~ W his teelb B.Ued with gold caps ....
ThereanllywedAihertFinneys (Ano'* Aimee)
bave a · ~ flub .... l•tciDe Ball wants the
lragl~. Judy Garland-lite screen role In
Nell slo-•s ''The Gingertftad.t£dy" so bad
abe CJm taste the ginger.

·-----------~---------------,

bebsviwilm" who "'rides wbat cokn and
designs are right fer racetracu _:_ in leas polite
words, wbat cokn llld ~ will make the
cuslmlen bet more ; abe's laid oo her best-bet
.
.
' colon at 1.-el in Maryland, tour II E. P.
Steve McQueen's "Le Mans" leading la!ly Tayll!f's lracb in Torontoame, Fort Erie (near
Elga Anderson watt to "21" In the bottesi1111Dill ""otic Buffalo); Yonke!'a trot track and dozens

and hraleas peeklliougb Tolbirt without a m&lt;re; and abe's pretty!
Cbet Huntley isn't quitting TV after aU : He'll
management lllW'Dll&amp;' - but tier escort didn't
make It becalllle he lacked a necktie; and that's do commercials from his Montana b«ne ....

right- no necktie Is going just too far .... Wben
Ttlnmy &amp;notbers pwthed the horizons of taste
too far and was pushed off TV, he screamed
censorsblp; hls own mother (oo the Merv
Griffincast) just opined the dolling lad ''kind of
pwthed" himself off.
·
· Unusual professioo: ~ T. Sharpe Is a
Ph.D. specializing in "color-induced

Charlotte Ford's irked at the nDIIIltS of bel'
''rcmance" with Rod McKuen and sweats it
uever was; Rod, a personal publie relatims
p11ctitiooer as well as poet, replies to nmancecpleries: "I want to get bome 10 see her as
quicldy as possible" .... Hardly seem1 a Ford in
Rod's future .... The postponement rl. Mict
Jagger and his RDIIing Stones' fall u. s. tour isn't

so mysterious: Mick Simply hasn't been deared
by u. S. lmnligralloo. Yet.
Before Teddy Kennedy jelled off to heckle
.N'wm fr~m India, he and John Tunney saw
Dlabann Can-oil perform in Bal~ - and
nert day the actress.Qnger was their Senate
dining room lunch guest .... Wecan'lfigure if it's
both lads' eye for a beautiful gal - « a way of
ingratiating themselves with her bypero&amp;tea!ly
beau, Dsvid Frost .... British actor Donald
Pleasance deplores recent foreign puldowns of
America, says the social and polltical tangles
here have deep significance to other countries lltal they surface faster in volatile America and
"ultimately caleb up with us. Ameiica suflera
them and reveals them to us, and it's outrageous
to be smug."

Eddy Schedule

MASO:-"::'~ x..'ulelb
L.Lawhorn,-ofllr.llldlln.
Carl G. Lawhorn, Fourth llld
Foglaoog street, Is oo duty at
Tan Son Nllul AB, Vlelnmn.
Sergeant Lawhon, .0 aircraft
mechanic, is a 11114 graduate of .
Pomeroy High School and attended Troy Slate UniW!I'Ility.
His wife, Brenda, Is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrt. CecU
Ward of 20\lo Mulberry Ave.,
P&lt;meroy.

POMEROY - . ·Eddy's
schedule in Meigs Cmnty this
week :
Monday - 9 a.m., Roci
Springs and Vie.
Tuesday - 12:30, Southern
and Vic.; 3:15, Dorcas; 4,
Spiller ; 5, Stiversville; 6,
Portland; 7, Racine Bank. .
Thursday - 9, Southern and
Vic.; 12:30, Rutland and VIc.;
3:30, Langsville; 4, Rutland
Main ; 5:15, Rutland Park; 6:45,
Hysell Run ; 7:45, Old Rt. Vic.; 12, Reedsville; 1:30, Long
7. Friday - 9, Catholic Church Bottom; 3:30, Keno; 4:1$,
.
and Vic.; 9:45, Riverview and Bashan.

!Helen Help Us!
.
.

I

I
I 1

I This· column is forBy Helen
Bottel
young people, their problems and

pleasures, their troubles and fun. As with the rest of Helen Help
Us! It welcomes lauglls but won 'I dodge a serious question with a
lrusb«f.
Send your teeoage questions to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
rl. Helen Help Us! this newspaper,
IS WAR FOR EOOLOGY
SLOWING DOWN?
Dear Helen:
Last winter there was a big ecology push in our town. We had
can, bottle and paper collections, clean-up drives, pollution inspection.
But I haven't heard much about It lately. And I still see factory chimneys belching smoke. Our river still smells. The air (so·
called) burns our eyes.
Are the American people sin1dng bsck to ."don't careness"?

Miss My/a Hi/ligas

Mr. and Mrs. Alan Jensen

Miss Hilligas To
:~::.t,U:f:~e:;~a:~utio:.::;v:,!~ea: Wed Harry Amsbary

govenunent a dally ''pay~ff" is cheaper than putting in new
machin~, and why shOuld the government holler when it's
mooey in their pocket?
, As for bringing out cars that don't use polluting gas and oil il would be the end of many multi-million dollar businesses, if the
internal combustion engine were replaced.
The hard facts are thai anti-pollution means fewer profits. It
also means going to a lot of ''bother," what with recycling, reusing,cleaning~aftero..-selves-and,mostofaU,makingalot
linoisesolltatthebigguyswiUcleanup,too.
There ARE ways to purify water, fight smog, turn garbage
Into landfllla Instead 9f ocean sewage. But If we drag our feel, we
can'lexpect the mooeymen to do it out of altruism.
If we want our cblldren to live without gas masks !IDd THEIR
children to live at·aU, we'd better gel on our horses again and
startscreamingf~recologyNOW.Soi'm-SCREAMJNG

·

GALUPOIJS- Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hilligas of Smithville,
Ohio, formerly rl. Pomeroy, are announcing the engagement of
their daughter Myla Jayne to Harry L. Amsbsry son of Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Amsbsry, 631 'Fourth Avenue, Ganlpolis.
Miss Hllllgas is a 1967 graduate r1. Smithville High School and
a 1971 graduate of Ohio State University. She holds a Bachelor of
Science degree in Physical Therapy and is presently fulfilling.her
twelve weeks of clinical affiliation. She is emplayed by
Professional Therapeutic Services, Inc. and will begin work at
Medicenter of Columbus oo September 20.
Mr. Amsbsry Is a 1967 graduate of Gallia Academy High
School and a 1970graduatein Zoology a! Ohio State University. He
is presently attending Ohio State University Medical School and
will receive his M.D. degree in June 1973.
No definite wedding plans have been made.

Dear Screaming: ·
So ami! Let's don't anyone slop. -H.
Dear Helen:
I got in trouble for stealing and shoplifting. Well, I quit. I
wouldn'tsteal now, even If I knew I'd never gel caught.
But our neigbhor heard about this. The other day I was al her
house.Now she'saccusingmeofliftinga $10bill that she says was
By Mrs. W. H. Thomas
om the sideboard.
Chester Jones and William
Other kids were there too, but I'm the one she blames because Staten were business visitors in
of my ''repulallon."Evenmyfamilywondersif I'm guilty.
.Oak Hill Tuesday.
Slould I take $10 out of my savings account and give to her?
Mr. and Mrs .. Alva Long and
' "Uiieffiingior sure '::.. she'll always belfevel di41 and'OnlyTinow • daughter, Mrs. Betty Moore,
1 didn't. - RYAN
,
1 ~ ~- ., •
and two childcen of West
Dear Ryan:
•lJ
.
Mansfield were recent _visitors
You'll never prove innocence by ''replacing" what you didn't of Mr. and Mrs. Francts Cardwen.
stealStay alert for the real thief (ldds usually give themselves
Mrs· Cend Parsons was
pleasantly surprised when two
away), Or perhaps It wasn't a theft al aU. Has your neighbor of her nieces, and their
husbands called on her Sunday
searched hebind the sideboard -or in her purse? -H.
Dear Helen: .
evening. They were Mr. and
1 read in your colliiiUl about the girls Who said thai to be Mrs. John Gillam of Ashland,
popular meant booze, hllchhiking, drugs, etc. Well, this is the way Ky. and Mr. and Mrs. Richard
II is in our town:
Ziegler of St. Petersburg, Fla.
About 30 kids think they're ''the popular crowd." I know
Mr. and Mrs. Alva Long and
because I was ooce with them. But they started lbrowing wild Francis Cardwell called on Mr.
parties, and that's when I dropped out.
and Mrs. William Thompson,
You know whai? -Aithough they still THINK they're the Alice.
popular bunch; WE know better. People don't respect their type.
John Fore and son, Brodie, of
Man, you can have fUn without hooze and dope. I may not be St. Albans, W. Va. spent two
popular with THEM, but I sure am with thevlher 980 kids in our days with their grandmother,
school! - HAPPY
·
Mrs. W. H. Thomas ·arid at.

Deer Creek

Plus Free!
The stay bright secret is in the
polish. Finish won't rub off.

~7 ~zes
9

· · sizes 9V2 to

dflwronB
Mi lEW jrQ()TWUJt FOR THE PAMY

JY2 to 6-$899

302 SEOOND AVENUE

Miss Julia Ann Craft

GAlliPOLIS, 0.

Craft-Butler Wedding Planned

DrummondJensen Wed

GALUPOIJS- Mr. and Mrs. James H. Craft, 275 Lower
River Road, announce the betrothal of their daughter, Julia Ann,
to Paul E. Butler, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Butler, Sr.,
Route 2, Crown Oty.
The bride-elect, a graduste of Gallia Academy, is emplayed
as a secretary and dental assistant for Dr. Gordon K. Amsbsry.
Her fiance is also a Gallia Academy graduate. He is now working
with his father on the family's farm.
The open church wedding is planned for Nov. 7 at the Ohio
Chapel United Methodist Chorch. An open reception will follow
Immediately in the fellowship room,

GALLIPOUS - Miss Joyce orchid asters on the surface,
Drummond, daughter of Mr. and greenery encircling the
Floyd H. Drummond of Ad· handle.
dison, became the bride of Neils Utlle Miss Michelle Grieves,
Alan Jensen, son of Mr. and niece of the bridegroom, was
Mrs. Neils A. Jensen of Port flower girl. She wore ·a dress
Ointon, at seven-thirty o'clock identical to the JUmor
on the evening of June 26, at the bridesmaid's and carried a
Grace United Methodist basket of pink, orchid, and
•
•
1/'f
Church.
.
purple rose petals.
~h~ Rev. Paul W. Ha~ks Master Curtis Hawkins,
.
.J'
j I I,
UJ
offtctated at the double rmg, Dayton, Ohio, served as
candlelight ceremony whjch ring bearer, and Mrs. Ruth . GALLIPOLIS - The Ladies group, and Barbara Simpkins
was preceded by 30 minutes of Gorbin of Cheshire registered Fellowship of First Baptist explained the attendance
Church met Aug. 19 at the contest.
traditional nuptial music guests.
presented by Mr. and Mrs. Mr . Dennis Jansen of church with a large group at- Mrs. Marie Edelblute read a
Merlyn Ross.
Swansea, Mass., brother of the tending.
poem, " Responsibility,"
tended the 4-H Fair.
Escorted by her father to an bridegroom, served as best
Mrs. · Russell
Sarrett, followed by prayer and
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Smith
altar accented with palms, man . Groomsmen were Mr. president, opened the meeting devotions by Margaret Hardin,
and four children of Fairborn
candelabras, and two urns filled Joseph Drummond of Addison , with a prayer and the group who read the poem, "He
spent a weekend with Mr. and 'th
h'd d
sang "To The Work ."
Maketh No Mistake," and a
Mrs. John Vance and family. wt ore 1 an purple asters, brother of the bride, Mr. Edgypsophelia, and greenery, the ward Maralta of Rio Grande,
After a prayer by Mrs. Earl Bible reading.
Mrs. Juanita Ferguson and
bride wore an empire floor· and Mr. Malcolm Orbsugh of Saunders, it was announced The ladies then went to work
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Cardwell
length gown of nylon dotted Gallipolis.
that Women's Retreat would be in the fellowship room where
spent a day with Mr. and Mrs.
swiss fashioned with a trans- For the wedding the held Sept. 24 and 25 at Sky View they sewed ·for the missionliry
Kenneth Russell, Catlettsburg,
parent yoke .-accented with, bridegroom's .mother wore a Ranch. .
. ..&lt; ~ Tefre~jun.enls were served
... - " '
'
Ky.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Parsons Venise lace styled with long blue slr~et length dress with Secret~ry and treasurer by th~ J~llowing committee,
and two sons are spending a camelot sleeves and a Victorian matching accessories and a reports were read and ap- Marie "'oelblule, Navalene
neckline. Her skirt flowed into a white corsage.
proved1 The Sunshine report North,
Eleanor
Atkins,
week's vacation with his
length
train.
Her
finger
A
reception
followed
the
was
gtven
by
May
Thivener.
Margaret
Hardin,
Meda
chapel
mother, Mrs. Cena Parsons.
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Russell, tip veil of silk illusion fell from a ceremony at the Lowe Hotel, Mrs. Julia McGhee read a letter Edelblute, Debbie Saunders,
Brooksville, are visiting headdress of Venise lace and Point Pleasant, w. Va. The from her missionary boy to the and Judy Cole.
bride's table was skirted in . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
relatives here and called on seed pearls.
Thebridecarriedabouquetof
white
linen with garlands of
Mrs. William Thomas.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Jones pink and white roses accented greenery draped around the
table. Afour-tier wedding cake,
spent Saturday and Sunday with with gypsophelia.
The
bride's
matron~f-honor
specially
designed for the bride
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Raynes
was
Mrs.
Malcolm
Orebaugh
of
by
Mrs.
Dorothy Thompson,
and family, Nitro, W. Va.
Natalle Shong, daughter of Gallipolis. Maid-of-honor was Cheshire, was the focal point.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Shong, Miss Lois Fraley of Springfield, The cake featured alternate
returned home from Holzer Ohio. Bridesmaids ·were Miss layers of purple and orchid
.
Medical Center after a ton· Patsy Schult, Patriot, Ohio; inside, white icing on white
•
silectomy operation. Her Mrs. Larry Lawhon, Laurel, outside, and clusters of grapes
Md.;
and
Mrs.
Edward
Grieves,
atop
each
tier
with
the
grandmother, Mrs. Lawrence
Shong, Gallipolis spent two days sister of the groom, from Port traditional bride and groom
Ointon, Ohio.
under crossing arches of white
with them.
Danny Thomas, Westerville, The attendants wore empire, and orchid 'flowers on the top k-::--------------------;:-,1
spent Saturday and Sunday with floor-length gowns of orchid tier . Three branch silver
his grandmothers, Mrs. John dotted swiss styled with Vic· candelabras holding orchid
Parsons and Mrs. William torian necklines and long candles with garlands of
camelot sleeves accented with greenery entwined at the base,
Thomas .
Earl Willong returned home Venise lace. They each wore further decorated . the bride's
Sunday after several days of open crown picture hats of table.Guestswereservedgrape
medical treatment at Holzer orchid straw, and carried white punch from a silver punch bowl
parasols open only enough to which featured an ice ring of
Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs . Herbert allow bouquets of orchid and grapes.
Hostesses at the reception
Thomas, Westerville, spent purple asters accented with
gypsophelia
to
flow
out.
were
Mrs. Art Hess, Midover Sunday with relatives
Miss Marta Drummond of dleporl, sister of the bride, Mrs.
here.
Logan, Ohio, niece of the bride, Gene Spaulding, Salem, Va.,
Q-What political post did served as junior bridesmaid. and Miss Carlene French,
the noted physicist Albert She wore an empire, floor· Addison . Assisting with the
E:instein once decline?
length dress of white dotted reception were Mrs. Mary
REG. •219"
A- The presidency of swiss styled with Juliet sleeves Fulton and Mrs. Margree
95
Israel in 1952. He declined and accented with purple and Lawhon.
SA•E
this honor •. insisting that he orchid lace. She carried an open
For a wedding trip to
wa~ .not fttted for such a parasol over her shoulder with Lexington, the bride changed
postllon.
an arrangement of purple and into a yellow dress trimmed in
white with white accessories.
Mrs. Jensen was graduated
from Rio Grande College. She is
presently employed by the
Kyger Creek Schools System as
• Exclusive front drop-in bobbin.
a teacher.
Mr. Jensen was graduated
• .Built-in blindstitch.
from Bowling Green State
Plus 6 other great features.
University. He completed
graduate school at Mary Manse
Even greater savings on cabinet roodels.
College, and Is presently the
Dean of Students at Rio Grande
College.
Free instructions on the use of your
Th~ couple is at home to their
new machine.
friends at South College
Avenue, f\io Grande. •

YOU'll

SHOES
FOR

SAVE
MORE·

THE

WHEN
YOU
SHOP
AT

FAMILY

f&lt;
D
Mtsstonar'"11 TI'o...
1/
VV

,?'

COX'S
'

New Math
tor
M0 ther.
'

'169

SAVE ssooo

• J:

I'

PLUS 300 EXTRA TOP VALliE STAMPS!

A-Saddle Up - _,.., •• J
eyelet tie wllh no-slip 59le and
h~l.
Black and Brown
combination. Slze5 5-9.

8-Aspen- women's
simulated suede o.- call accenfed wifh white double
stlfchlng. Black only. Sizes S
to 9.

women' s _.

eyelef fie wilh higher heel.
Simulated krinkle patent in

burn! sugar. Sizes s to 9.

F- Piper 2-girls' wide G-Side Track- women's 4
sfrap,
side buckle shoe with strap shoe in black cherry
two-lotte leather shoe wllh eyelet tie wifh a Big Boy non-skid
and heel. red or black. Popular dress
tong wearing man-made look. Black and burnt apple Available Insole
brown.
sizes 8'h- sfyie. Medium heel. Sizes S-9.
sole. • Brown and bronco. grain leather with mant.
made sole. 8'h-J.
sizes 81h·3.
D-Campus - boys' sturdy E- Bond Sfreef- boys' 3

Boys' Famous Make

NO-IRON
SLACKS

Orion acrylic

Moe-turtle

Values To '&amp;·lD
Regulars, $]. 99
Slims
H11sldes.........$4·99

Sweater
by Russ Togs

Stylist'' zig-zag machine
with carrying case.

loy&gt;' dress jean• in a 75% po·
!yeller, 2.5% co"on permanent~
pres.ed fabric . Sim · 6 to 20 ••
green, blue, gfay, brown, ton
and block.

The spomwoar must .•. a
mac-rurtfe bock zippe...d
sweat1r in white, gn1n,,
navy or rvif. Washable, of

_,...,s;..

-~-~

SHOP THE NEW JONES BOYS'

_

~.

STREET FLOOR

Seeond Floor
Sportewear

.
....... -~~-----......, _~

Many Fall Fabrics at Special Prices.

Best Values on
Foo~ - Clothing - Hardware
- in Gallia County
Parking For Over 100 Cars
'

.J.
FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVTNGS.
137 Pine Stree1
Gallipolis, Ohio

C- NaneHe -

•
•

BLAZER REUNION
GALLIPOLIS - The Com·
miltee for the Blazer Reunion
which was held August 8 ~t Rio
Grande Campus announces the
election of one new officer, Mrs.
Jack Campbell, as secretary·
tr.easurer. The other officers
a-re tile same . •
SOGIAL PLANNED
EUREKA - An ice cream
social will be held at Eureka, ·
Mason.ic Hall Friday, Aug. 27, 9 ·
a.m.-6 p.m. ; sponsored by Jobs
Daughters, Bethel No. '/3
G1illi(l&lt;llis.

Boleti hys' SOCKS
witb a5year goarantee

Open Mon. &amp; Fri. 'Til 8 P.M•.

FRENCH CITY.·
FABRIC SHOPPE

S!Ntth ayloa socb tf,ot will be ••· ·
....... 1 lhtr don't gilte &amp;.o yoors of
,.,..,.. - . Good tan colo,._ Sites lit

Simplicity, Me Calls. Butterlck, Vogue Patterns
2 Complete Floors of Fabrics &amp; Notions
We Do Custom Dress Making

7to "·

Singer S.les &amp; Service
446·9255

se Court

St;:tt

Galllpoll•
•A trBdemafkl•1 THFS!Nt .t 1Cl,..{ •M• l••'f f

"'~flltOI.Dlt.UR

'----~~~-------~--~~--------------------------

1 : ..

•

�.I

,.

•
••

]oAnnRuttencutter is Betrothed
Air-

Davis at
Meeting
Of Board·

".

M1DDLEPORT - Mr. and Delmar W. Hoover. Columbus.
Mrs. John I. Beaver of Mooroe, Miss Ruttenculler is the
Ohio, announce the engagement ~a~~bter li Mrs. John W.
of their daughter, _Jo Ann JG_ncaid li 344 N. fourth Ave.,
Ruttem;ytter, to Mr. Richard L. Moddleport.
Hoover, son of Mr. and Mn. She is a graduate Gl Dunbar
- - - - - - - - - High School, Dunbar, W. Va.
and Is attending Miami
UnivetSity. This faD sbe wiD be
SON OWNS HORSE
POMEROY - "Fascination studying at 'the lnslitute for
Mir," which won third place in
the first and fourth races at the
Meigs County Fair Thursday,
was erroneously listed as being
owned by Sidney and Roger
Spencer of Pomeroy and Dr.
Jacob Weinberger of Gallipolis.
"Fascinati.on Mir" is owned by
Mr.andMrs. Don Spencer. DOn,
the son of Sidney, also is a
driver and trainer.

GALLIPOUS-James N. M.
Davis, Principal of Gallia
Academy High School, attended
a meeting of the Board of
Direetors of the Ohio
Association of Secondary School
Principals in Columbus Aug. 18
and 19.
~ President of the Board is
Jolm Strabam, principal of
West CarroliOh High School.
The e&gt;;ecutive secretary of
. OASSP is Ross Fleming, Cin.cinnati, former GAHS prin-

Jl'lVE GENERA'ftON F~MUJES are nolloo COOIJII(II
! but Bcbble Renee Price is a part of live generations on both
~ hermothel''sandfather's side (See picture at right). On her

!

" mother's side, Bobbie Renee, age five months, is being held
by her grea~ea~andfather, carl Autherson, age_ 73;
'" bact row, J.:r, Pamela Price, the infant's mother; V10let
~ Brewer, l!reat-grandmother, and Freda Middleswart,
• gr811dmother .

..

Ia

~•• One

ON HER FATHER's SIDE, Bobble Renee is beillg beld
by her great-great-grandmother, 96-year old Mollie Talbott·
back row, 1~. Pamela, Price, mother; Nell Mlddl~
great-grandmother, and Bill Middleswart, grandfather.

•

Bound Over; 20 are Fined

••

support charge.
Fined were Helen M.
Galloway, Gallipolis, $15 and
costs, speeding ; Jerry C.
Weaver, Middletown, and
Johnny W. Lemon, Jr., Cutler,
Ohio, $5 and costs each, no
muffler ; James H. Mullenax,
Moore, Pomeroy, RD, on a non- Minersville, and Herbert J.

:: POMEROY - One defendant
. :: was bound over to the grand
~jury, '20 were fined and three
:•others forfeiied bonds in Meigs
Eeounty Court Friday.
• Bound over to the grand jury
by Judge Frank W. Porter
under $250 bond was carl E.

White, Racine, $5 and costs
each, defective exhausts;
Donald Bartimus, Reedsville,
Rt. 1, $5 and costs, defective
brakes; Dennis M. Hackett,
Middleport, and Herman R.
Wriston, New Haven, $10 and
costs each, stop sign violation;
William Landers, Pomeroy, $10

MEIGSOOUNTY .JUNIOR FAIR food preservation, outdoor cookery and fun with foods
.chaJwll~ were ~~el~~ Friday: They are from the left, Patricia Boston, grand champion;
Ju1l jV!utebead, reserve champion, food preserilaUon; Nola Young, reserve chsmpior.: Mary
Mora, grand champion, outdoor cookery; Vickie Epple, reserve champion; Lola W"lker,
grand champion, full with foods.

and costs, disturbing the peace,
also $10 and costs, intoxication,
also six months probation,
resisting arrest; Evelyn
Maynard, Racine, $10and costs,
expired o.p erator's, license;·
Elwood Bachus, Racine, Rt. 2,
$10 and costs, expired
operator's license, also $5 and
costs, defective equipment;
Flora M. Donohue, Pomeroy,
Rt . 1' $10 an'd costs' assured
clear distance; Dale Edward
Riffle, Racine, Rt. 2, $25 and
costs, hilsklp; Donald Smith,
Vinton, $10 and costs, .assured
clear distance; Gerald E. Wells,
Racine, RC I, $10 and costs,
speeding; Charles H. Fitch,
Portland, Rt. I, $5 and costs, no
muffler; Robert J . Gibson,
Ironton, $15 and costs,
speeding; Oakley J. Fout,. Richmondale, $65 and costs, $35
suspended , overload; Earl
Riggs, Rutland, $10 and costs,
intoxication ; Eddie Taylor,
Racine, RD, $10 and cOsts,
in wxication.
Forfeiting bonds were
William Childers, Cabin Creek,
W. Va., $32.50, speeding;
Michael R. Kellner, CincinnaU,
$22.50, no mud flaps; Ralph W.
Meisler, Pomeroy, Rt. 4, $25, no
license plates.

ORIENTATION SET
RACINE - Orieolallon for
new leachen at Southern
High School will be held
Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 9:30
a.m., at the hlgb school.
For all teachen a social
period will he beld from 9:30
to It; teachen meeting at 10
with teachers meeting at
their respective schools at I
p.m.

2S2 THIRD AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
OPEN 9 A.M. ro 9 P.M. MONDAY lHRU SATURDAY

ARMOUR*STAR SELECTED PORK • U.S. lovt. I•~·

WHOLE

Pork Loins

Mr.r. Marvin Allen Fry

Hackett-Fry Vows
Taken Saturday

14-lb. Avs.

llll'liiiPIIIIPIIIIP~IRI~IRI7ioiRI\i'oM"fi'lir111:aiiii:'Cllll,.llll"'llll'~t'a~:::::....~:::

TIME TO REPORT
All new students and those
needing schedule changes at the
Eastern High School are
required to report w the school
between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m.,
Mooday or Tuesday.

lb.
~-'""SAVE

$1.()0 _ _..,.

WITH THIS COUPON
AT ANY PENNVFARE
Irish Bnnd or Swift"s Premium

U.S. Govt. lnspec18d

FULLY CHIED
CAllED HilS
89 Coupon
~: •
Siu
5-lb.

$3

I

ByTIMCooDnly
Without Coupon $4.89
Valid n,..,s,t., f!ug. :llf, 197.1

DAN THOMAS

ANt SON

U.S. No.1 Grade· ALL PURPOSE .

POTATOES
20-lb.
bag
THOROFARE

'i

GRADE A ' LARGE

aiAMPIONS 11!1 BREAD AND MEAL !ftJIIII1ltion were named Friday at the Meigs
County Junior Fair. They are from the left, Neisel Duvall, grand champion; Teresa
: Chlchellter, te~~erVe chsmploo, breads, with Miss Chichester, also reserve champion in quick
meals; Jane Whitehead, grand champion, quick meals; Jan Holter, reserve champion; Ingrid
r
Hawley, grand champion in tasty meals with Miss Hawley also reserve champion in "teenage
,,
~ entertains" category; JeMy Chapman, grand champion, teenage entertains category. Absent
: for the picture were Paula Eichinger, grand champion, and Vanessa Folmer, reserve champion, in snacking and packing category.
·

'

WHITE EGGS
Dozen

t

RICHTEX

'~

jAuto, Cycle in C~llision

SHORTENING

.

3-lb. Can
SWISH
"Lemon Scented"

!

DETERGENT
1-pt. 6-oz. bottle

I

SMUCKER'S Features

HEATING
AND CENTRAL
AIR CONDITIONING
GAS - OIL .....: ELECTRIC

I

'
P-o BIRD ON ESCORT
RACINE - Navy Petty Officer Second Class William H.
Bird, son of Mr. and Mrs.
~old W. Bird of Route 2, and
;;o:usband of the former Miss
· ~ K. Roush, all of Racine,
:rt•s reported aboard the
THE LATEST In fashions for grandmothers was
; Destroyer Escort, USS Aylwin,
modeled by Ell7.ah.cth Taylor on a rush visit to Lonl,homeported at the Fleet · don to see her son and daughter-In-law , Michael and
'TI'IIInlng Center, Newport, R. I.
lll'lh Wildin~ .. and their newborn daughter. Left , the
He is a 1966 graduate of
:m:.vo•Hr-o ld lt&lt;'lress sports white hoc•• HotPants and
ri ~ hf. Jt SIIJ)(lrmini wunm1111.
_ _
-Bouthem High School, Racine.

.___

..;,

eFREE ESTIMATES
eFREE DELIVERY
eEASY TERMS
eSALES AND SERVICE

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT
~

MIDDI.fPORT, 0.

COOKOUT HEW
MIDDlEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Sauer entertained
Sunday with a cookout. Guests
·were Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Slawter, Charles Chancey,
Ricky and Michael, Mr. and
Mrs. Preston Gibbs and Matthew, of Syracuse ; Mr. and
Mrs. John Bentley and Jennie,
Pomeroy Route 3; Mr. and Mrs .
Fenton Taylor, jody and Mrs.
Taylor's sister, Sharon Trainer
of Buckhannon, W. Va. Also
attending were the hosts '
daughters, Mary Ruth and Joy.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES ON ALL ITEMS IN THIS AD. PRICES EFFECTIVE
THRU SAT., AUGUST 28. 1971. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS.

WHITE

[ : POMEROY - A car : ·motorcycle ·accident occurred
~ Friday at 9:05 p.m. at the in·~· tersection of state routes 33, 7
, and 124 Sheriff Robert C.
,Hartenbach 's department
:' reported.
• } A motorcycle driven by
: . Theodore Clark Flood, 22,
:Athens, collided with a car
driven by Paul R. Karr, 48,
•Long Bottom, Rt. 2.
, ' Flood sustained abrasions to
: his hand, leg and head. He was
1 taken to Veterans Memorial
,Hospital by the sheriff's
department where he was·
' ll'eaied and released.
••
Y• There was heavy damage to
!• I
;.•the motorcycle and medium to
i :the car. No citations were
:Issued.
' At 4 a.m. Saturday an
• .unidentified car was driven
•' ·through the yard of Mrs. Joe
HY~~ell, Pomeroy, Rt. 2, causing
lcolislderable damage . The
ltncident is under investigation .

~;:;..:~ IJiclt

School Mr Hoover an 't;!
Ohio Slate ' university lllll Is
1 ed by lhe Pall·

~~mp~tion OIID-

.
npany li Morauoe. The " W.
will be an event li 5eptlooo•
1972.

ENJOY
OOCKTAilS, DINING
AND DANCING AT
ITS BEST

cipal.

The work agenda included
formation of policies concerning the solution of the Ohio
High School Principals'
problems, the establishment of
1971-72 goals and the planning of
in......vice principal training at
conferences and workshops.
Emphasis was placed on
training in regional discussion
groups.

American Universities,

Grape Jam .............. ''~·::"· 45c

Sweet Orcllge Mar•lade ... ···~::z· 45c
Seedless Blackberry J• .... ··~:.~·· 59c
Seedless Black RaspberiJ Jam '·'~::·· 75c
Blackberry Jelly .....••.•. ·-~:.~·- 59c
...45c
Grape JeUy • • • .• • • • • • • • • • • ..,....
.Jar
MRS. FILBERT'S

-·

~·· $].19

CAT FOODS
CHICKEN PARTS
CHICKEN PARTS
and .Liver

CHICKEN PARTS .
·. and Kidney

40011

SOFIIIAR5AI.

COFFEE

NINE LIVES
Kitty Burgers

Lobel
Hb. l'llg.

CHEF DELIGHT

ZEST

CHEESEorSPRUI
Aeg~.~lar

l ·lb.
Pkg.

SOAP

Pim~nto

69~

~· 2s~

•. ,

'·

MIDDlEPORT - Wedding
vows were exchanged by Miss
Rose Marie Hackett and Mr.
Marvin Allen Fry in a double

centers, and a st-' pinio: DJ1oo
chiffoo coat wilh full kllg
sleeves and a bigh mllar. h
wore a pink ........,.. anage.

·

:S ·

,._ .,.

styled with Viclilrian necldinc,
bishop sleeves, French cuffs,
and an A~ skirt terminating
in a chapel train. Accenting the
frontofthegownwasapanelof
wide
embroidered
lace

at. 200,.South Osteopa-, ""'•
Kirksville, Mo.
The bride is a 1967 graduate of
Middleport High ')chool and
receivedherbadoelorofsdenoe
degree from Ohio State

threaded with ribbon.
The bride's chapel length
mantilla wasalsoouUinedin the
embroidered lace and she
carried a bouquet of orange
roses and cascading white
daisies.
The !ride's attendants were
Miss Cindy Bright of Lucas,
Ohio State University roommate, maid of hooor; Miss
Miss
Uncia &amp;ae Hackett and
Melanie Anne Hackett, sisters
the bride, bridesmaids; Miss
Lori Kloes of Middleport and
Miss Laura Siddall of an-

University where she was a
member of Mortar Board,
Alpha Epsilon Delta. CJoimrs,
and participated in · sb....,t
government.Sieisastudentat
the Kirksville College of
Osteopathic Medicine.
Mr. Fry graduated from
Middleport High Scbool in 1!67
and attended Ohio Slate
University. He has been
mp1 ed
professionally e
oy
at
Riverside Melbodisllbptal as
an inhalation therapisl Be will
cwoplete bis dqt&amp; at Narlbeast Missouri State 'I&amp;Cbers

cinnati, cousins of the bride,
junior lridesmaids; and Miss
.Lynn Kloes, Middleport, the
flower girl.
The attendants wore peasant
dresses with bodices in orange,
skirts of
mullicolor stripe,
square necklines, short sleeves
With sell ruffles, and navy
sashes. They wore orange
picture hats with baCk bows,
niatchlngshoes,and11'hiteshort
gloves and carried bashts of
matching variegaied daisies.
The flower girl carried a basket
, of white rose petals.
Mr. Michael Schwa!tz,
Columbus, was best man for the
bridegnxm and ushers were
Mr. Bill Hackett, Middleport,
and Mr. Dennis Hackett,
Middleplirt.
For her daughter's wedding.
Mrs. Hackett was in a mint
green lace over silk shanlul!g
. ensemble with matching acce Jries and wore a yellow
l'l)lleliud cor 'liP..
,
J Mrs. Fry wore a pale pink
dress of silk shaniUllg tbe
bodke of which was trimmed
with
pink embroi~
flowerlets with pink pe~rl

a

lJ

.

·

Sonny's Cockbil Hour-s Til7
DAILY

Patty FOOth For
Pbone 992-7031 or See Sonny
Smith For Reservations-~~-YOUR PLEASURE IS
~_:'r"
OUR BUSINESS.

Rita Marlene Salser Betrothed
RACINE- Mr. and Mn. Grover Salser, Jr., Route I, Racine, aMounce the e~gagement of
lheirdaughler,RilaMarlene, to Mr. Charlie Myles Matthews, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Charlie
Mattbl!ws ri Racine, Route 2.
Miss Salser is a 1m graduate of Soothem High School and is enrolled this fall at Ohio
Univasity where she will major in special education. Mr. Matthews is a 1966 graduate of
Sonthem High School and recently ended a tour of duty in the U. S. Army in Vietnam. He is also
planning to attend Ohio University this fall majoring in architecture. Wedding plans are inID'lplele.

~=~~o;:r~·~:c:·~ £;t:~~~:Busy
The !ride is the daughter of OrcThehidbridellolm' in ble~~
Mr. Jllld Mn. George William
s ta ,..,_ ... a
Ha '-It, J 93 Se th A
f
tiered-"-,__, 'lh
c...,
r.,
ven
ve., our
.,...., ......- Wl an
Middleport, and the bridegroom arrangement of vartegated
·.
.
. .
isthesonofMr. andMrs. Aibert
daisies. h tier cfiv.i&lt;1ers ftle
Wesley Fry, Mill St., Mid- decoraied m 11'hite and anoge
dleporl.
and the cake waseocitdtd with
The Rev. Fr. Bernard flowers. h round table was
Krajcovic, assisted by the Rev. covered with wbite Docked
George T. SfMaJl of Cincinnati, organdy Door length and
' .
' ~
Wlcle of the bride, officiated at decorated wtlll garlands of 19)'.
, the W"''ding ~1'lle ~ -awed fnm a
Organ .selections by Mr. table ~tered with v.triegated
Neuman Burdette of Middleport daisies. h bowl was eDCirded
included "Marcile Nupliale No. with flowers and i\'Y garlands
l"fortheproc ri111al, ''Priere were featured on the table.
Wedding Mom," Organ Prelude
Miss Kathy Jungeloerg of
in D, "Ava Maria" during Berea registered the guests.
communion, and "Marche
Hostesses at the r&amp;"4Nwl
Nuptiale No. 2" for the were Mrs. lllarles E. Jonlan,
Columbus; Miss &amp;le Smart and
recessional.
The vows were read at 1:30 Mrs. Michael Gerlach, Midp.m. before the main altar dleport. Others assisting 1n5e
which was covered with a floor- Mn. Mat SaiJel', Mrs. Paul
length gold cloth and held the Casci Mrs 'Ibontas Rem
three-br1nch candelabra. Jr ~· ~ LuJa Ragers •·
Large gold vases filled with
For a ~edding trip. 1o
white carnations and bronze Missouri, the IJride cllanged into
chrysanthemiDIIS were placed a white polyester bit dress
at the sides of the main altar. with multi-pastel trim. 11or
White mum arrangements accessories were of mint grem
decllrated the side altars.
and she wore the orange
·m mamage
·
by her rose bud corsage fr om her
.
Goven
father,'tbe bride wore an A-line bridal bouq l
gciwn of chiffon over taffeta
Mr and
Fry wi11 reside

"Prime Bib of Bee/StP.IIka"
Our Speciahy

Days Show Will be Planned

DUTLAND _ When the other entries must be placed standard sys.lem .wiD_ begin at
••
Rutland · Friendly Gardeners between 9 a.m. and II a.m. with 12:30 p.m., w1th voewmg open w
meet Wednesday Aug 25 at those arriving after II a.m. to lhe general publoc between 2
'
·
d 7
ft
hi h
7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs. be marked Not For Com- p.m. an
p.m., a er w c
Tom Stewart, each member is petition. Oral judging by the time exhibits may he removed.
.
.
. .
"'bring a specunen Zllllll8 .
. Mrs. Br!U'e Da~ts, horticulture chairman,~ present
a ~per on Knowong and
Gnnnng Specimens," and Mrs.
William Willford will ellhibit
.
·
"Sh .
and
discuss,
owmg
Specimen Glad~olus, ..Roses,
Marigolds and Zinnias.
" Summer Madness •."
arrangements modern on
design, will be brought by
Open All Day Thursdays
membenforjudging, :"ithMrs.
Open Fri. Night til 9
Ho~er . Parker govong gardeniDg lips (~ November, and
Middle of Upper Block
Pomeroy
Mrs.~ Williamson offenng
devotions.
.
OAGC membershop dues for
the 1971-'12 year are payable at
this meeting. Plans will be
pulyour
Cllllpleiedn for thesh club:~Bup­
fool down
CGIIllng
ower
ow,
usy
for...
Days," which will be staged
Salurday, Sept. II , at the
Rutland Elementary School,
with Mrs.
Willford
geueral
chairman
~-" .,.,_._
M and
. Ita Mrs.
""''"' "'" ..,ty, ane • accrediied by OAGC, the judge.
The Rutland Friendly Gardenersinvitethepublic to enter
tbe
· li · ·tat' 1
two arlis c IDVI oona
rla
, "Sunday's Peace," an
interpretive design, with interpretalion to be written on a
3D card, and,. "Wednesday's :
Wishing." your favorite .

Jan-Knit "24" slim skirt,
Suitmaker jacket detailed with pockelllaps
extended to loops ior tie-bel~
Flowered shirt (83°/o Dacron, 17"/o wooll,

Jan-Knit pants,
Madly-striped jacket.

nm

.William

ffBrigade Boots"

ammgemenl
bo junior classes offered to
the public are, "Friday's
Slmnber Party,'' your favorite
arrangement, for children ove~
10, and ''Monday's Playtime,"
, _ favclrite arrangement for
those UIIIIM 10 years.
Other ' entries open 00. the
public are blooming and , non- .
IJknning housepllints, display •

of garden literature, dried
materials and specimens of
Zinnia, Marigolds, Dahlias,
MlmS and a, class for WlCollege and will be employed at classified specim&lt;ns.
the Kirksville Osteopathic
Arlislie arrangementS and
Hospital.
Among the out-of-IOwn guesls
attending the wedding were Dr·
BDrn1 ANNOUNCED
and Mrs. Charles Edward
ATHENS - Mr. and Mrs.
Jordan, Mr. and Mrs. James Robert V. Durst, Athens, anlladett, Mr. and Mrs. Mi-hael ••u«lhebirUtof a son Aug. 14
Shaffer, Mn. Mae Sauer. Mr. at RobEr Medical Center. The
Michllel Copalioo, Miss Barb infant weighed seven pounds
Osborne, Mr. and Mrs. Roaaid and 1~ ounces and has been
Hovatter,DeeDee,Slere,MiR, named Jason Ryan. GrandandGreg,Mr. ondMrs.Ooules }melts aie Mr. and Mrs.
Hughes, Miss Paula ........... JldviDBood, Pomeruy,andMr.
Miss Judy SmUIII, Miss and Mrs. Robert R. Durst, PortMelanie Ra~. Mrs. N.-:y laad. Greal,gandmothers are
Gibson , Miss !Maur}'ll WabiJ. Mrs. A. E. ~)win, Middleport
Mr. Thomas Jolmson, lliss and Mrs. Thomas Hood,
Jane Zwigard, Mr. and llrs. i'lmaoy. Mr. and. Mrs. Durst
John Boggs, all of O~o•olw'" are also the parenls of another
Mr. and Mrs. Joe 'l'rihlole, soo,Scollagefour.
Kim, Sl Albans. W. VI.; llr. - - - - - - - - and Mn. Jooopb Bri&amp;bt and
Kevin, Lucas; llr. IIIII Mrs...
REVIVAL BEGINS
Alvin Jwog&lt;berg, ller&amp;l; llr.
and Mrs. Palll II. Smart, POIIEROY - The Hiland
llarbara 111d Berta, Per- C1lapel wi11 begiD a series of
rysburg; the Rn. and rmm sa , ices Sept. 20 'fith
Mrs. Gecqe SiddaU, Jr., the evange?isl to be UlliiiiDCed.
Tim, Tom, and Lawa, Rev. Gearge Casto is pastor.
Ciacinllltl; llr. and lira.
1
F
I, P " ; -'ln. IT
7 I , tl I 6f IIlii Jahn. M..-, W. Va:

25.95

practice multiplication with
jantzen knits of dupont8 blends
16.95

Take command . Charge into your leisure
time in brigade boots. Bold 'n brawny.
Styled with gusto ... for jeans 'n things.
A great rugged manly look. Get the picture!

This close knit group leads many lives. paios up INn)' Ways to suit the time, thepla&lt;Je, the
occasion. Choose machine washable lan·Knit UC'I'/o Dacron JIOI'tester, JCifo wooll
in black, cordovan brown. nugget gold orrus.et red. sizes 8-18.

�.I

,.

•
••

]oAnnRuttencutter is Betrothed
Air-

Davis at
Meeting
Of Board·

".

M1DDLEPORT - Mr. and Delmar W. Hoover. Columbus.
Mrs. John I. Beaver of Mooroe, Miss Ruttenculler is the
Ohio, announce the engagement ~a~~bter li Mrs. John W.
of their daughter, _Jo Ann JG_ncaid li 344 N. fourth Ave.,
Ruttem;ytter, to Mr. Richard L. Moddleport.
Hoover, son of Mr. and Mn. She is a graduate Gl Dunbar
- - - - - - - - - High School, Dunbar, W. Va.
and Is attending Miami
UnivetSity. This faD sbe wiD be
SON OWNS HORSE
POMEROY - "Fascination studying at 'the lnslitute for
Mir," which won third place in
the first and fourth races at the
Meigs County Fair Thursday,
was erroneously listed as being
owned by Sidney and Roger
Spencer of Pomeroy and Dr.
Jacob Weinberger of Gallipolis.
"Fascinati.on Mir" is owned by
Mr.andMrs. Don Spencer. DOn,
the son of Sidney, also is a
driver and trainer.

GALLIPOUS-James N. M.
Davis, Principal of Gallia
Academy High School, attended
a meeting of the Board of
Direetors of the Ohio
Association of Secondary School
Principals in Columbus Aug. 18
and 19.
~ President of the Board is
Jolm Strabam, principal of
West CarroliOh High School.
The e&gt;;ecutive secretary of
. OASSP is Ross Fleming, Cin.cinnati, former GAHS prin-

Jl'lVE GENERA'ftON F~MUJES are nolloo COOIJII(II
! but Bcbble Renee Price is a part of live generations on both
~ hermothel''sandfather's side (See picture at right). On her

!

" mother's side, Bobbie Renee, age five months, is being held
by her grea~ea~andfather, carl Autherson, age_ 73;
'" bact row, J.:r, Pamela Price, the infant's mother; V10let
~ Brewer, l!reat-grandmother, and Freda Middleswart,
• gr811dmother .

..

Ia

~•• One

ON HER FATHER's SIDE, Bobble Renee is beillg beld
by her great-great-grandmother, 96-year old Mollie Talbott·
back row, 1~. Pamela, Price, mother; Nell Mlddl~
great-grandmother, and Bill Middleswart, grandfather.

•

Bound Over; 20 are Fined

••

support charge.
Fined were Helen M.
Galloway, Gallipolis, $15 and
costs, speeding ; Jerry C.
Weaver, Middletown, and
Johnny W. Lemon, Jr., Cutler,
Ohio, $5 and costs each, no
muffler ; James H. Mullenax,
Moore, Pomeroy, RD, on a non- Minersville, and Herbert J.

:: POMEROY - One defendant
. :: was bound over to the grand
~jury, '20 were fined and three
:•others forfeiied bonds in Meigs
Eeounty Court Friday.
• Bound over to the grand jury
by Judge Frank W. Porter
under $250 bond was carl E.

White, Racine, $5 and costs
each, defective exhausts;
Donald Bartimus, Reedsville,
Rt. 1, $5 and costs, defective
brakes; Dennis M. Hackett,
Middleport, and Herman R.
Wriston, New Haven, $10 and
costs each, stop sign violation;
William Landers, Pomeroy, $10

MEIGSOOUNTY .JUNIOR FAIR food preservation, outdoor cookery and fun with foods
.chaJwll~ were ~~el~~ Friday: They are from the left, Patricia Boston, grand champion;
Ju1l jV!utebead, reserve champion, food preserilaUon; Nola Young, reserve chsmpior.: Mary
Mora, grand champion, outdoor cookery; Vickie Epple, reserve champion; Lola W"lker,
grand champion, full with foods.

and costs, disturbing the peace,
also $10 and costs, intoxication,
also six months probation,
resisting arrest; Evelyn
Maynard, Racine, $10and costs,
expired o.p erator's, license;·
Elwood Bachus, Racine, Rt. 2,
$10 and costs, expired
operator's license, also $5 and
costs, defective equipment;
Flora M. Donohue, Pomeroy,
Rt . 1' $10 an'd costs' assured
clear distance; Dale Edward
Riffle, Racine, Rt. 2, $25 and
costs, hilsklp; Donald Smith,
Vinton, $10 and costs, .assured
clear distance; Gerald E. Wells,
Racine, RC I, $10 and costs,
speeding; Charles H. Fitch,
Portland, Rt. I, $5 and costs, no
muffler; Robert J . Gibson,
Ironton, $15 and costs,
speeding; Oakley J. Fout,. Richmondale, $65 and costs, $35
suspended , overload; Earl
Riggs, Rutland, $10 and costs,
intoxication ; Eddie Taylor,
Racine, RD, $10 and cOsts,
in wxication.
Forfeiting bonds were
William Childers, Cabin Creek,
W. Va., $32.50, speeding;
Michael R. Kellner, CincinnaU,
$22.50, no mud flaps; Ralph W.
Meisler, Pomeroy, Rt. 4, $25, no
license plates.

ORIENTATION SET
RACINE - Orieolallon for
new leachen at Southern
High School will be held
Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 9:30
a.m., at the hlgb school.
For all teachen a social
period will he beld from 9:30
to It; teachen meeting at 10
with teachers meeting at
their respective schools at I
p.m.

2S2 THIRD AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
OPEN 9 A.M. ro 9 P.M. MONDAY lHRU SATURDAY

ARMOUR*STAR SELECTED PORK • U.S. lovt. I•~·

WHOLE

Pork Loins

Mr.r. Marvin Allen Fry

Hackett-Fry Vows
Taken Saturday

14-lb. Avs.

llll'liiiPIIIIPIIIIP~IRI~IRI7ioiRI\i'oM"fi'lir111:aiiii:'Cllll,.llll"'llll'~t'a~:::::....~:::

TIME TO REPORT
All new students and those
needing schedule changes at the
Eastern High School are
required to report w the school
between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m.,
Mooday or Tuesday.

lb.
~-'""SAVE

$1.()0 _ _..,.

WITH THIS COUPON
AT ANY PENNVFARE
Irish Bnnd or Swift"s Premium

U.S. Govt. lnspec18d

FULLY CHIED
CAllED HilS
89 Coupon
~: •
Siu
5-lb.

$3

I

ByTIMCooDnly
Without Coupon $4.89
Valid n,..,s,t., f!ug. :llf, 197.1

DAN THOMAS

ANt SON

U.S. No.1 Grade· ALL PURPOSE .

POTATOES
20-lb.
bag
THOROFARE

'i

GRADE A ' LARGE

aiAMPIONS 11!1 BREAD AND MEAL !ftJIIII1ltion were named Friday at the Meigs
County Junior Fair. They are from the left, Neisel Duvall, grand champion; Teresa
: Chlchellter, te~~erVe chsmploo, breads, with Miss Chichester, also reserve champion in quick
meals; Jane Whitehead, grand champion, quick meals; Jan Holter, reserve champion; Ingrid
r
Hawley, grand champion in tasty meals with Miss Hawley also reserve champion in "teenage
,,
~ entertains" category; JeMy Chapman, grand champion, teenage entertains category. Absent
: for the picture were Paula Eichinger, grand champion, and Vanessa Folmer, reserve champion, in snacking and packing category.
·

'

WHITE EGGS
Dozen

t

RICHTEX

'~

jAuto, Cycle in C~llision

SHORTENING

.

3-lb. Can
SWISH
"Lemon Scented"

!

DETERGENT
1-pt. 6-oz. bottle

I

SMUCKER'S Features

HEATING
AND CENTRAL
AIR CONDITIONING
GAS - OIL .....: ELECTRIC

I

'
P-o BIRD ON ESCORT
RACINE - Navy Petty Officer Second Class William H.
Bird, son of Mr. and Mrs.
~old W. Bird of Route 2, and
;;o:usband of the former Miss
· ~ K. Roush, all of Racine,
:rt•s reported aboard the
THE LATEST In fashions for grandmothers was
; Destroyer Escort, USS Aylwin,
modeled by Ell7.ah.cth Taylor on a rush visit to Lonl,homeported at the Fleet · don to see her son and daughter-In-law , Michael and
'TI'IIInlng Center, Newport, R. I.
lll'lh Wildin~ .. and their newborn daughter. Left , the
He is a 1966 graduate of
:m:.vo•Hr-o ld lt&lt;'lress sports white hoc•• HotPants and
ri ~ hf. Jt SIIJ)(lrmini wunm1111.
_ _
-Bouthem High School, Racine.

.___

..;,

eFREE ESTIMATES
eFREE DELIVERY
eEASY TERMS
eSALES AND SERVICE

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT
~

MIDDI.fPORT, 0.

COOKOUT HEW
MIDDlEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Sauer entertained
Sunday with a cookout. Guests
·were Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Slawter, Charles Chancey,
Ricky and Michael, Mr. and
Mrs. Preston Gibbs and Matthew, of Syracuse ; Mr. and
Mrs. John Bentley and Jennie,
Pomeroy Route 3; Mr. and Mrs .
Fenton Taylor, jody and Mrs.
Taylor's sister, Sharon Trainer
of Buckhannon, W. Va. Also
attending were the hosts '
daughters, Mary Ruth and Joy.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES ON ALL ITEMS IN THIS AD. PRICES EFFECTIVE
THRU SAT., AUGUST 28. 1971. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS.

WHITE

[ : POMEROY - A car : ·motorcycle ·accident occurred
~ Friday at 9:05 p.m. at the in·~· tersection of state routes 33, 7
, and 124 Sheriff Robert C.
,Hartenbach 's department
:' reported.
• } A motorcycle driven by
: . Theodore Clark Flood, 22,
:Athens, collided with a car
driven by Paul R. Karr, 48,
•Long Bottom, Rt. 2.
, ' Flood sustained abrasions to
: his hand, leg and head. He was
1 taken to Veterans Memorial
,Hospital by the sheriff's
department where he was·
' ll'eaied and released.
••
Y• There was heavy damage to
!• I
;.•the motorcycle and medium to
i :the car. No citations were
:Issued.
' At 4 a.m. Saturday an
• .unidentified car was driven
•' ·through the yard of Mrs. Joe
HY~~ell, Pomeroy, Rt. 2, causing
lcolislderable damage . The
ltncident is under investigation .

~;:;..:~ IJiclt

School Mr Hoover an 't;!
Ohio Slate ' university lllll Is
1 ed by lhe Pall·

~~mp~tion OIID-

.
npany li Morauoe. The " W.
will be an event li 5eptlooo•
1972.

ENJOY
OOCKTAilS, DINING
AND DANCING AT
ITS BEST

cipal.

The work agenda included
formation of policies concerning the solution of the Ohio
High School Principals'
problems, the establishment of
1971-72 goals and the planning of
in......vice principal training at
conferences and workshops.
Emphasis was placed on
training in regional discussion
groups.

American Universities,

Grape Jam .............. ''~·::"· 45c

Sweet Orcllge Mar•lade ... ···~::z· 45c
Seedless Blackberry J• .... ··~:.~·· 59c
Seedless Black RaspberiJ Jam '·'~::·· 75c
Blackberry Jelly .....••.•. ·-~:.~·- 59c
...45c
Grape JeUy • • • .• • • • • • • • • • • ..,....
.Jar
MRS. FILBERT'S

-·

~·· $].19

CAT FOODS
CHICKEN PARTS
CHICKEN PARTS
and .Liver

CHICKEN PARTS .
·. and Kidney

40011

SOFIIIAR5AI.

COFFEE

NINE LIVES
Kitty Burgers

Lobel
Hb. l'llg.

CHEF DELIGHT

ZEST

CHEESEorSPRUI
Aeg~.~lar

l ·lb.
Pkg.

SOAP

Pim~nto

69~

~· 2s~

•. ,

'·

MIDDlEPORT - Wedding
vows were exchanged by Miss
Rose Marie Hackett and Mr.
Marvin Allen Fry in a double

centers, and a st-' pinio: DJ1oo
chiffoo coat wilh full kllg
sleeves and a bigh mllar. h
wore a pink ........,.. anage.

·

:S ·

,._ .,.

styled with Viclilrian necldinc,
bishop sleeves, French cuffs,
and an A~ skirt terminating
in a chapel train. Accenting the
frontofthegownwasapanelof
wide
embroidered
lace

at. 200,.South Osteopa-, ""'•
Kirksville, Mo.
The bride is a 1967 graduate of
Middleport High ')chool and
receivedherbadoelorofsdenoe
degree from Ohio State

threaded with ribbon.
The bride's chapel length
mantilla wasalsoouUinedin the
embroidered lace and she
carried a bouquet of orange
roses and cascading white
daisies.
The !ride's attendants were
Miss Cindy Bright of Lucas,
Ohio State University roommate, maid of hooor; Miss
Miss
Uncia &amp;ae Hackett and
Melanie Anne Hackett, sisters
the bride, bridesmaids; Miss
Lori Kloes of Middleport and
Miss Laura Siddall of an-

University where she was a
member of Mortar Board,
Alpha Epsilon Delta. CJoimrs,
and participated in · sb....,t
government.Sieisastudentat
the Kirksville College of
Osteopathic Medicine.
Mr. Fry graduated from
Middleport High Scbool in 1!67
and attended Ohio Slate
University. He has been
mp1 ed
professionally e
oy
at
Riverside Melbodisllbptal as
an inhalation therapisl Be will
cwoplete bis dqt&amp; at Narlbeast Missouri State 'I&amp;Cbers

cinnati, cousins of the bride,
junior lridesmaids; and Miss
.Lynn Kloes, Middleport, the
flower girl.
The attendants wore peasant
dresses with bodices in orange,
skirts of
mullicolor stripe,
square necklines, short sleeves
With sell ruffles, and navy
sashes. They wore orange
picture hats with baCk bows,
niatchlngshoes,and11'hiteshort
gloves and carried bashts of
matching variegaied daisies.
The flower girl carried a basket
, of white rose petals.
Mr. Michael Schwa!tz,
Columbus, was best man for the
bridegnxm and ushers were
Mr. Bill Hackett, Middleport,
and Mr. Dennis Hackett,
Middleplirt.
For her daughter's wedding.
Mrs. Hackett was in a mint
green lace over silk shanlul!g
. ensemble with matching acce Jries and wore a yellow
l'l)lleliud cor 'liP..
,
J Mrs. Fry wore a pale pink
dress of silk shaniUllg tbe
bodke of which was trimmed
with
pink embroi~
flowerlets with pink pe~rl

a

lJ

.

·

Sonny's Cockbil Hour-s Til7
DAILY

Patty FOOth For
Pbone 992-7031 or See Sonny
Smith For Reservations-~~-YOUR PLEASURE IS
~_:'r"
OUR BUSINESS.

Rita Marlene Salser Betrothed
RACINE- Mr. and Mn. Grover Salser, Jr., Route I, Racine, aMounce the e~gagement of
lheirdaughler,RilaMarlene, to Mr. Charlie Myles Matthews, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Charlie
Mattbl!ws ri Racine, Route 2.
Miss Salser is a 1m graduate of Soothem High School and is enrolled this fall at Ohio
Univasity where she will major in special education. Mr. Matthews is a 1966 graduate of
Sonthem High School and recently ended a tour of duty in the U. S. Army in Vietnam. He is also
planning to attend Ohio University this fall majoring in architecture. Wedding plans are inID'lplele.

~=~~o;:r~·~:c:·~ £;t:~~~:Busy
The !ride is the daughter of OrcThehidbridellolm' in ble~~
Mr. Jllld Mn. George William
s ta ,..,_ ... a
Ha '-It, J 93 Se th A
f
tiered-"-,__, 'lh
c...,
r.,
ven
ve., our
.,...., ......- Wl an
Middleport, and the bridegroom arrangement of vartegated
·.
.
. .
isthesonofMr. andMrs. Aibert
daisies. h tier cfiv.i&lt;1ers ftle
Wesley Fry, Mill St., Mid- decoraied m 11'hite and anoge
dleporl.
and the cake waseocitdtd with
The Rev. Fr. Bernard flowers. h round table was
Krajcovic, assisted by the Rev. covered with wbite Docked
George T. SfMaJl of Cincinnati, organdy Door length and
' .
' ~
Wlcle of the bride, officiated at decorated wtlll garlands of 19)'.
, the W"''ding ~1'lle ~ -awed fnm a
Organ .selections by Mr. table ~tered with v.triegated
Neuman Burdette of Middleport daisies. h bowl was eDCirded
included "Marcile Nupliale No. with flowers and i\'Y garlands
l"fortheproc ri111al, ''Priere were featured on the table.
Wedding Mom," Organ Prelude
Miss Kathy Jungeloerg of
in D, "Ava Maria" during Berea registered the guests.
communion, and "Marche
Hostesses at the r&amp;"4Nwl
Nuptiale No. 2" for the were Mrs. lllarles E. Jonlan,
Columbus; Miss &amp;le Smart and
recessional.
The vows were read at 1:30 Mrs. Michael Gerlach, Midp.m. before the main altar dleport. Others assisting 1n5e
which was covered with a floor- Mn. Mat SaiJel', Mrs. Paul
length gold cloth and held the Casci Mrs 'Ibontas Rem
three-br1nch candelabra. Jr ~· ~ LuJa Ragers •·
Large gold vases filled with
For a ~edding trip. 1o
white carnations and bronze Missouri, the IJride cllanged into
chrysanthemiDIIS were placed a white polyester bit dress
at the sides of the main altar. with multi-pastel trim. 11or
White mum arrangements accessories were of mint grem
decllrated the side altars.
and she wore the orange
·m mamage
·
by her rose bud corsage fr om her
.
Goven
father,'tbe bride wore an A-line bridal bouq l
gciwn of chiffon over taffeta
Mr and
Fry wi11 reside

"Prime Bib of Bee/StP.IIka"
Our Speciahy

Days Show Will be Planned

DUTLAND _ When the other entries must be placed standard sys.lem .wiD_ begin at
••
Rutland · Friendly Gardeners between 9 a.m. and II a.m. with 12:30 p.m., w1th voewmg open w
meet Wednesday Aug 25 at those arriving after II a.m. to lhe general publoc between 2
'
·
d 7
ft
hi h
7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs. be marked Not For Com- p.m. an
p.m., a er w c
Tom Stewart, each member is petition. Oral judging by the time exhibits may he removed.
.
.
. .
"'bring a specunen Zllllll8 .
. Mrs. Br!U'e Da~ts, horticulture chairman,~ present
a ~per on Knowong and
Gnnnng Specimens," and Mrs.
William Willford will ellhibit
.
·
"Sh .
and
discuss,
owmg
Specimen Glad~olus, ..Roses,
Marigolds and Zinnias.
" Summer Madness •."
arrangements modern on
design, will be brought by
Open All Day Thursdays
membenforjudging, :"ithMrs.
Open Fri. Night til 9
Ho~er . Parker govong gardeniDg lips (~ November, and
Middle of Upper Block
Pomeroy
Mrs.~ Williamson offenng
devotions.
.
OAGC membershop dues for
the 1971-'12 year are payable at
this meeting. Plans will be
pulyour
Cllllpleiedn for thesh club:~Bup­
fool down
CGIIllng
ower
ow,
usy
for...
Days," which will be staged
Salurday, Sept. II , at the
Rutland Elementary School,
with Mrs.
Willford
geueral
chairman
~-" .,.,_._
M and
. Ita Mrs.
""''"' "'" ..,ty, ane • accrediied by OAGC, the judge.
The Rutland Friendly Gardenersinvitethepublic to enter
tbe
· li · ·tat' 1
two arlis c IDVI oona
rla
, "Sunday's Peace," an
interpretive design, with interpretalion to be written on a
3D card, and,. "Wednesday's :
Wishing." your favorite .

Jan-Knit "24" slim skirt,
Suitmaker jacket detailed with pockelllaps
extended to loops ior tie-bel~
Flowered shirt (83°/o Dacron, 17"/o wooll,

Jan-Knit pants,
Madly-striped jacket.

nm

.William

ffBrigade Boots"

ammgemenl
bo junior classes offered to
the public are, "Friday's
Slmnber Party,'' your favorite
arrangement, for children ove~
10, and ''Monday's Playtime,"
, _ favclrite arrangement for
those UIIIIM 10 years.
Other ' entries open 00. the
public are blooming and , non- .
IJknning housepllints, display •

of garden literature, dried
materials and specimens of
Zinnia, Marigolds, Dahlias,
MlmS and a, class for WlCollege and will be employed at classified specim&lt;ns.
the Kirksville Osteopathic
Arlislie arrangementS and
Hospital.
Among the out-of-IOwn guesls
attending the wedding were Dr·
BDrn1 ANNOUNCED
and Mrs. Charles Edward
ATHENS - Mr. and Mrs.
Jordan, Mr. and Mrs. James Robert V. Durst, Athens, anlladett, Mr. and Mrs. Mi-hael ••u«lhebirUtof a son Aug. 14
Shaffer, Mn. Mae Sauer. Mr. at RobEr Medical Center. The
Michllel Copalioo, Miss Barb infant weighed seven pounds
Osborne, Mr. and Mrs. Roaaid and 1~ ounces and has been
Hovatter,DeeDee,Slere,MiR, named Jason Ryan. GrandandGreg,Mr. ondMrs.Ooules }melts aie Mr. and Mrs.
Hughes, Miss Paula ........... JldviDBood, Pomeruy,andMr.
Miss Judy SmUIII, Miss and Mrs. Robert R. Durst, PortMelanie Ra~. Mrs. N.-:y laad. Greal,gandmothers are
Gibson , Miss !Maur}'ll WabiJ. Mrs. A. E. ~)win, Middleport
Mr. Thomas Jolmson, lliss and Mrs. Thomas Hood,
Jane Zwigard, Mr. and llrs. i'lmaoy. Mr. and. Mrs. Durst
John Boggs, all of O~o•olw'" are also the parenls of another
Mr. and Mrs. Joe 'l'rihlole, soo,Scollagefour.
Kim, Sl Albans. W. VI.; llr. - - - - - - - - and Mn. Jooopb Bri&amp;bt and
Kevin, Lucas; llr. IIIII Mrs...
REVIVAL BEGINS
Alvin Jwog&lt;berg, ller&amp;l; llr.
and Mrs. Palll II. Smart, POIIEROY - The Hiland
llarbara 111d Berta, Per- C1lapel wi11 begiD a series of
rysburg; the Rn. and rmm sa , ices Sept. 20 'fith
Mrs. Gecqe SiddaU, Jr., the evange?isl to be UlliiiiDCed.
Tim, Tom, and Lawa, Rev. Gearge Casto is pastor.
Ciacinllltl; llr. and lira.
1
F
I, P " ; -'ln. IT
7 I , tl I 6f IIlii Jahn. M..-, W. Va:

25.95

practice multiplication with
jantzen knits of dupont8 blends
16.95

Take command . Charge into your leisure
time in brigade boots. Bold 'n brawny.
Styled with gusto ... for jeans 'n things.
A great rugged manly look. Get the picture!

This close knit group leads many lives. paios up INn)' Ways to suit the time, thepla&lt;Je, the
occasion. Choose machine washable lan·Knit UC'I'/o Dacron JIOI'tester, JCifo wooll
in black, cordovan brown. nugget gold orrus.et red. sizes 8-18.

�,I
o'

•

'

•

·nonna Weimann Bride o ohn ctark
da,isies, and .pastel garden wedding cake decocated wilb
Dowers tied · l'iiUl white satin · yellow daisies and topped wilb
streamers.lt was also designed bride and groom figurines.
by Mrs. Clark.
A daisy flower ring wreathed
Mr. Michael L. Warthman the cake. The skirt f&lt;r the table
was best man and lbe usbe£s was made of pleated white
were Mr. Pal Taylor and Mr. organdy trimmed wilb green
Tim Gillis.
ribbOn. Miss Susan Weimann
. A reception honoring lbe regislen!d the guests.
couple was held in lbe social Mr. and Mrs. Clark are
J1)0ID of tbe church witb Mrs. residing in Millersport.
Don W. Gillis, Mrs. J. W. ~ Mrs. Clark is a graduate of
and Mrs. Richard Gordon as Lancaster High School, class of
hostesses. The table was 1!1&amp;9, and is presenUy employed
decora~ wilb a hand carved as secretary for Nationwide
candlestick, a family heirloom Insurance of Colwnbus.
of tbe Clarks, and a two lionel
Mr. Clark, a 1969 graduate of

Walnut Township 11\gh School, wedding garter made .by Mrs.
is a senior at lbe Colwnbus C. H. Wise of Waverly, fonnerly
of Middleport.
Technical Institute.
Among the wedding guests
were Mr. ~d Mrs. Richard
B£AUTIFUL
Bailey ani! 'family, 'Mrs.
W'tlliam Demoskey and family,
Middleport; Mrs.
Alma
Greenhouse Fresh
Johnson, Springfield; Mrs. Jim
BaD and son of New Haven, w.
Va.; Mr_s. James Glassburn and
son, Bidwell; and Mrs. Thomas
Cooper, Clieshire.
· The new Mrs. Clark is a
granddaughter of Mrs. Ferne Sorvlnt GIINpoHs, ,..,...,.,
Harris, 'formerly of Middleport. Middleport, o.• &amp; MIMn c..,
For her wedding she w0re a w. Va.

lbninl Plallls
'4.00 .
'

Mr. and Mn. Norman Staats

Brenda Woods Bride
Of Norman D. Staats
MIDDLEPORT - At 7:30
p.m. on July 'II at tbe Freewill
BaptistChlrdlllf Rutland, Miss
Brenda Darlene Woods became
lbe bride of Mr. Norman
Dcwpglas Staats.
1be bride is tbe daughter Ill
Mr. and Mrs. KeiUt Woods,
M"'l!dlep«rt, and Ute bridegroom
is Ute son of Mrs. Atrida Staats
II. Brwneil Ave., Middleport,
IIIII Mr. E1sw'ootb Staats Ill New
Haftll, W. Va.
Tbe Rev. Leland Haley
performed lbe double ring

ceremony.
F&lt;r her 9"'ik!ing Ute bride
wcna wbilesnet.lmgibdress
II. ·organza and lace, with a
shoulder~ while veil Her
bouquet was of blue .and while
camations fnm wbicb lnmg
white atin streamers tied in
lover's lmots.
Miss Pamela Kay Manley Ill
Middleport ae1 ved as maid Ill
honor fill' Ute bride. Sbe was in a
pile piN elqlire waist dress

·GOLF CONTEST
•

Martin.

POMEROY
Ll
MIDDLEPORT
For Sisht Conservation Programs

Mr.r. fohn E. Clark

New Haven, W. Va. was best
man f&lt;r the bridegroom.
For her daughter's wedding,
MIDDLEPORT Miss
Mrs. Woods w&lt;re a black knit
wilb white laj."e bim and a Donna Weimann, daughter of
corsage or pink carnations. Mr . and Mrs. Sherman
Mrs. Staats was in a black lirM\n
eimann of lancaster, former
with a corsage of pink cat'dents here, was married to
nations. A reception · honoring Mr. John E. Clark, soo or 'Mr.
lbe couple was held at the home
Mrs. E!lrl Cart. Millersor the bridegroom following me_.... - on June 1% at Ute Hubert
ceremony.
Ave. Baptist Church in LanF&lt;r a short wedding lrip caster.
lbrougb West Vtrginia the bride
Two altar ar:-angemeots of
changed into a peach colored white daisy mums and pastel
dress wilb white trim. The garden llosers with candelabra
couple reside at 826 Oliver St., holding white tapers decuated
Middleport.
the church. White satin pew
The new Mrs. Staats is a bows and boxwood marked the
senior at Meigs High School and pews.
amemberoftheVIGAclub. Mr.
Mrs. Marilyn Beougher w.S
Staats attended Wahama High organist and ber selections
School, served two years in tbe included '"''be Lord's Prayer,"
U. S. Navy, and •tS employed "One Hand• One Hearl •" and
WI'th the M. and G. Transport "0 ~'e.-feet Love ..
Co.
Escorted to the altar by her
father, lbe bride was in a street
le.'lglh dress ol while, tbe skirt

of crepe wilb an overlay ol
white cbiffo:t and lbe bodice of
crepe wilb an overlay of lace.
The long sleeves were made of
the same lace and crepe.
The tradition of something
old, new, borrowed and blue
was observed by the bride who
had for her only jewelry, a pearl
bracelet, a gift of the
bridebroom. Her headpiece was
a yellow petal ribbon plateau
with daisy streamers. She
carried a nosegay of daisy
mums, garden daisies, and
white carnations wilb satin
streamers. It was designed by
the mother of lbe bridegroom.
Miss Joyce McGee was maid
of honor and she wore a mint
green street length dress
designed wilb A-line skirt and
long chiffon sleeves. Her
colonial bouquet was made or
while daisy mums, garden

Flower Arranging Marta Hubbard Ret'eals
Workshop Held Plans For H~r Wedding
Rtm.AND - The Merry
Gardeners made ceramic
ICillltainers and held a flower
arranging workshop at lbe
bome of Mrs. Bill Williamsm,
wbo lei'Ved as instrucllll' for the
• project on 'l'llesday, Aug. 10.
During Ute business meeting
lbe girls discussed making
entries in Ute Meigs Counly Fair
Flower Sbow beld last week.
Mrs. Willi-·povided the
tpeenware ceramic CGDiainers
fill' each girl to wort on, as weD
as small ceramic animal
figuriues. Each girl cbose the
color of paints sbe used oo her
container and figurine. The
greenware was first smoolbed,
glaud and !ben fired. Each girl
painted her CGD!ainer a dif.
ferent col&lt;r, mf tbe animal
figurines were painted in colors
wilb the features accented in
other colors. After tbe paint had
dried !bey used a clear spray
finish on tbem lA) make the
colon waleqlnxi. 1be gla7.e
was donated by Mrs. Tom

Ill age.
In addition, if any wish, they
may compete in educational
section Class 22, Blooming
Houseplants, or Class 23, NonBlooming Houseplants, if they
have cared for the plants
lbemselves.
They also may display in the
Class 24, Display of Garden
Literature, or in Class 25,
CoUection of natures resources
used in dried arranging.
Mrs. James Carpenter,
chairman for educational and
special displays, also urges the
juniors to make a special
display showing their year's
activities in garden club, or if
any Cf them as an individual
have a hobby using plant
material&lt;r any !bing related to
nature or natural resources to
display their craft wilb written
instructions as to how it is done.
Games were played and
refreshments served by Mrs.
Williamson. Members attending
were
Debbie
Williamson, Carla Smilb, Darla
Williamson Karla Brown
Denise Gaddis, Kelly Brown,
Autumn Ellis, and guests, Abby
and Tanuny Martin and Diane
Williamson.
A nature tour wiD be taken
and terrariums made at
nell week 's meeting , with
Mrs. Homer Parker as instruct&lt;r at her home. Each girl
is to bring her own bowl or
container for this project.

.

.

After
. the glaze dried on the
con tamers the girls had a D""er
arrangmg workshop, using
juniper and a wide variety or
Rowers from lucal gardens to
mate lbe artistic arrancernents. complimented by
the animal figurines !bey
had made.
.Mrs. Williamson said the girls
· did an excellent job ol choosing
flowers in colors 14 go wilb tbe
containers !bey had made.
Each girl also put her name oo
t11e bottom or the cootainer,
prior to painting, glazing and
firing tbem, making for easy
identification.
The Merry Gardeners have
been asked lo participate in the
POMEROY - Ray Allen
Rutland Friendly Gardeners Maxson of Keno was honored at
flower show, " Busy Days," his home recently wilb a lawn
which lfill be staged on party in observance of his sixtl1
S..turday, Sept. II, ai the birthday anniversary. Cake and
RuUand Elementary School. ice cream were served to the
The Juni&lt;r H&lt;rticultnre classes guests in the yard and pony
.-e Class 7, Zinnia ; Class 8, rides and games w~re enjoyed.
lbrigold; Class 9, Unclassified,
Auending were the honored
anit !be artistic arrangements guf.'St's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
ill C.. a, l'riday's Slwnher Raymond Mal&lt;SO!l; his brother,
'-ty, ,.... famle f&lt;r lhose . John, and his sister, Judy; Mr.
11 ,..-s ol age, and Class and Mrs. Paul E. Maxson and
21, .....,.•• Playllme, yow' WendyofParkersburg;Mr. and
,.¥'Jrilefii'.._UIIdetl0v!!llrs Mrs. Buck Calaway and

Sixth Birthday
Is Celebrated

hy

l!iJIODIM»red

and carried a bouquelof pink
and white carnations.
Mr. Richard Ernest Roush iJf

MIDDlEPORT - Plans have
been completed f&lt;rthe wedding
of Miss Marta Kay Hubbard,
daugbter or Mr. and Mrs.
Harold E. Hubbard, Mid·
dleport, to Mr. Williani Alan
Blackwood, .... 0( Mrs. Dean
Blackwood, Jr. of RuUand
Route I, and tbe late Mr. Black·
wood.
The open cbw ch wedding wiD
be an event ol Sunday, Aug. 29,
at 2:30 p.m. at lbe Middleport
First Baptist Church, following
a half-hour Ill nuptial music by
~Irs. Gerald Anlbooy. organist,

$200. Each Hole-ln·One
5 to9

PI

•
-.:a~;b dilly I dozeo 11oU
For Week • 3 TROPHIES
lodiel' Trophy. Mm'• Trophy
Jr. Trophy 16 or IUifkr

5 Balls $1.00

for his brother, and the ushers
wiD be Mr. Timolby Sayre,
RuUand; Mr. Larry GladweU,
Middleport, and Mr. Randy
Becker, Middleport.
Guests will be registered by
sisters of the groom-elect, Miss
Deanna Blackwood and Miss
Cynthia Blackwood. Miss Mary
Jane Jenkinson, Bridgeman,
Mich., and Miss Diane Welsh,
Middleport, will be the
hostesses at a reception to
foUow in lbe church social

GOESSI Ell'S JEWELRY

FULTON-THOMPSON
LANDMARK
POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO.
BLAE'JTNAR AUTO CO.
RIZER OIL COMPANY
POMEROY BOWLING LANES
MULLEN INSURANCE
DOWNING · CHILDS INSURANCE
V. D. EDWARDS INSURANCE
PAULEY INSURANCE
DAVIS WARNEll INSURANCE
POMEROY FWWER SHOP
KAER I VAN ZANDT MOTOR SALES
BROWN'S TRACTOR SALES
LOU'S ASHLAND STATION
BAILEY'S SUNOCO
MODEIIN SUPPLY
HORAK CARRY OUT
DAIRY VALLEY
DANNIE'S MOBILE HOMES
BAKER I SEYFRIED
TWIN CITY MACHINE SHOP
POMEROY ELECTRIC SHOP

•a•••

COURT STREET GRILL
CHAPMAN-CANADAY SHOE 8TORB
BLUE a GRIIY RESTAURANT
MARGUERITE'S SHOE STORE
GREEN LANTBIIN
STIFFLERS
EBERSBACH HARDWARE
SHAMMY'S DRIVE-IN
MOORES 8'1'0RE
G.t I AUTO
FABRIC SHOP
MEIGS EQUIPIIENT CO.
EWING FUNERAL HOME
SIMON'!I STORES
NORMA GOODWIN FLORISTS
EXCELSIOR OU. CO liPANY
KAPPLB SORIO STATION
GIBBS GROCII:RY
SUGAR RUN n.ouJl 11JLL
POWELL'8 SUNOOO IIBRVICE
ERWIN'S GULF 8ERVICB
OILER'S BOHIO STATION
VU.LAGE PRARIIACY
BAKER FUIINri'URE
FRANCIS FLOIUIIT8

IQLA'S IIBAIJTY a DRESs SHOPS
K I C JBWELI!RS
IIAimJ!Y SHOES
NilSON DRUGS
POIIIBIIOY BEN FRANKLIN STORE
OHIO VALLEY J'LUMBING
IIOBINIION'S DRY CLEANERS
em LOAN
.
FAIIIIER'S BAMI:
~~. 11010 NATIONAL BANK
~•.....,.'S NATIONAL BANK
POIIDOY NAnoNAL BANK
znna TRUCIING
INGElS FURNri'URE
DUrroN DRUGS
Wiliii iJt.v AUTO STORE
~UMBIA GAS OF ORJO, INC.
BLIIIIllPELIY8 IN POIIEIIOY
NEW YORK CLOTHING ROUSE
~LOHSE DRUGS
DAILY ~IAURANT

room.

and ,Miss Patricia Zeller, , . . . . . . . ._ _ _. . . .: -. .- -. . . . . . . .- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~~~
Findlay, soloist. Tbe Rev.
!liarles Simms wiD officiate.

iJA'"tltlf;
" .'-J. ~ - ·

Miss Susan Lee Seyfried wiD
be lbe maid of hmor. the
bridesmaid wiD be Miss
Rebeca Hart of Indianapolis,
and lbe juni«r bridesmaid wiD
be Miss Marianne Welsh ,
Middleport.
Mr. Owen Blackwood of
Rutland wiD serve as best man

1

-~­

~ ···

NOW I

r"

FLEXSTEEL

I

I , ....,.

-t \f

GUESr.i AT COOK.our

MIDDlEPORT - Mr. and
Irs. George White and Joy,
Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Sauer, Mary Ruth and Joy, and
Mary Roush, Oleshire, were
Friday night guests or lbe Rev.
and Mrs. C. J. Lemley of Vinton
for a cookout.

daughters, Tammy and Missie,
Coolville; Mr. and Mrs. James
Deeter and daughters, Julie,
Debby, and Tamm&gt;· or Belpre;
Mrs. Betty Gaul and sons, Mark
and David, Chesler ; Mrs.
Myrna Carpenter, Julia and
David, Mrs. Pat Thomas,
Jimmy and Jody, Mrs. Nancy
Carter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
White, Shiela Byrd, Gary
Lyons, aU of Ulng Botlool.
Sending gifts were Ray's
sister and brolber~.Jaw. Mr.
and ~Irs. James Mambourg and
nil'Cl', his grandmother, Mrs.
\!,abel Maxson of Berea, IV.
Va.; Patty Meeks or Berea, W.
Va.; Jeanine Grim or Loog
Bollom; Mr. and Mrs. Harvey
Mason, Wellsville; Mr. aJ)d
Mrs. Richard McKnight. La..-a,
IJnda and Lois, Marietta.

'"'

CoiOflial Sofa and Swivel Rocker hove maple trim

accent~ . hy btass n:'ilheods, revets i.~le T"Cusf'liOJ1s,
covered 1n lush fobncs; self..cfech, ormcops

Exhilarat ing, colorful ! Add instant ond l'lsting charm
to y ~ur -~~me • i~h these superbly coor d inated groups
and md1v1dual p•eces .. Qual ity f~otu:-es incl ude soli d
hardwood lram&lt;S, Fle.steel's ontented a:ched blue
st~el spring bases, so r~ cushion !og and n ch rcbr ics.
li.,.licity... Note.., ,...,
hand·rubbed Sal id walnut
trim on bases. Fabrict
of gay contra1t; nlf·
dedcs, G1t1C:ops, ··

Tronsitionol Sofo hos
rev... sible pillowbocks
c.~d uot cushions for
the utmost In luJ:urr.

Flex•O.I ounge~e-,edirto

CoiOf"fullobr ic is high-

ing chair in glo..,...soft
·vinyl is thiclr:ly padded,

lighttd by lheontiqued
brass coslers

Trodit •onol Sofa &amp; Compon im 01011
ge,t ly curved bock !., sw!!ep•
'"9 llf"ms, to• lored ~1c k pleat bo .. es.
Seot cusluon~ ore revers ,bll!. E•qr,n s•
1le- coveor.ngs , Wlfh armc:ops

Heodrestcovet,onncops
not flap,includ..t,
' ..

'

: ' "-\ '1-·--'r-

Co lolliol Nosquer~~ .... ,f'lsl .. ps tyto. Restful
5o fo hqs revll!'rsible seot cushions. Open1
t., lull site bed w•th innerspfing mGureu .
J..• t r ·J C i t\' e coveri119 , with ormcdps ••. .

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPO

SPEaAL SALE

Visitors Go to
Fairborn, Ohio

FOR YOUR OWN

SPECIAL

PURPOSE
Enjoy safety ... p!us'
extra earning power.

4%%

PASSBOOK RATE
Mei~

Co. Branch

~~
-

Meigs County Brandl of The
Athens County Savings &amp;
Loan Co.

296 Second St.
Pomeroy. Ohio

Member Federal Home Loon
Bank. ' nlf' •ur'lfl 1i 'lui ,(
'

- •

accounts Insured up
S20,DOO.DO.
'

11uu August

Social
Calendar

' Reunion Held at

OUR LOW

Temple Church

GAS HEATERS

Property

.

.

'--~---~-------..;....;.'·-~~~~;.;;11;:.•.:;0~·-----~-.:.-_..;.;-.;___

Wanting

M be ·

em r.r

1-.

were

•

•

..,.:(l

Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp. All

t\E~l\MG

Cand11Stf'!..ipers

Contemporary Sofa and Two Choiu af gracious

f~url!s

Installation Held

SAVE

PRICE

INQ.UDES OOMPL£TE
INSTALlATION

Includes:

Transfers

THERE NEYER WAS A BETTER TIME TO REALIZE LUXURY AND BEAUTY
IN FINE UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE BY

M~ss Smith, Mrs. Titus
and Mrs. Virgil Atkins,
Rutland.
!rlen~=Y A county fair! That's the place where old
"Homework/' interpretive
design : Mrs. Parker, Mrs.
It's really qulle amaring Ute tblngs you can learn while
Wilson Carpenter, Pomeroy;
hanging oow .the railing.aroond Ute merry-gHound.
·
and Mrs . Anna Turner,
Fol' inltance, did you !mow that John and Wilma Marie Reece
Rutland.
and their two youngaters are now quite' settled In their lotal
" Chr~tmas is Coming," Mrs.
electric hune at 211 Uncoln Hill. The old Pomeroy home waa
John Kincaid, Middleport; Mrs.
conpletely rmovated by George and Mary Morris during the past
James Carpenter, and Mrs.
yt\M', .00 the Reeces are a!BoluleJY. deUghied wilb It and tbe
Robert Canaday, Rutland,
nelgbbotbood. Jdln is the publiC affairs coordinator for the Gen.
"3:30 p.m..'' invitation class
JameS M. GaVin plant and the mine complex which will provide
for favorite arrangement: Mrs.
coal fer' the plant.
James Carpenter, Mrs.
Stewart, and Mrs. Wilson
Te!Ty,and Coleen Ohlinger just couldn't stay away from the
fair. 'lbe"couple 81ld their two year old son came back w town
Carpenter.
Junior Division
Friday 14 take In the activities. They moved earlier this monlb lA)
~~
Recess,
"
a
favorite
Pbllo wbere Terry has a principaJship. Our loss in so many ways.
arrangement : Darla
· Dick and Kayle WeD and daughter, Amy, moved this past
Williamson of the Rutland
week to Westerville. Dick has been employed 'as assistant
Merry
Gardeners, first; Denise
basketball and football coach at the Centerburg aty School, and
Dean of Pomeroy, Route 3,
Is happy to; be _back lnlo teaching. This summer be has been
second;
and Carla Smilb of
wcrling wllb l!en·Tom Construction.
Rutland, third.
·. Looking prettier titan ever was Roberta Kraeuter Maidens of .
Horticulture: Zinnias, Denise
Bellview.Robertawasberef&lt;r a few days wilb her father, Eldoo, ·
Dean, first; David Lewis,
and Blsters and, of course, took in the fair.
Pomeroy, · second.
MisRobefta will be teaching music this laD at lbe Frimont
cellaneous specimens, Deelementary 'and junior high schools alter having taken a couple
nise Dean , both first and
years off. ,
.
second.
Horticulture
UD WiliER, LIKE DAUGHTER - Bath Mn. Homer Parter of Rutland aDd ._
NEVER, BUT NEVER, have we seen a squash the size of the
Hybrid
tea rose: Mrs. Hiram
daughter, Mrs. James Carpenter of Coolville, were blue ribbon ivlnners in the artistic
me e:dliblted at the fair by Coca Moore of Point Rock. The banana.
Fisher, Minersville; Mrs.
arrangements division &lt;i the second flower show of the Meigs County Fair. Mrs. Parker toot
variety of squash was at least a yard long.
Robert Thompson, Pomeroy;
first in the ''H~mew&lt;rk" class with modern arrangement of sunflower, peacock feathers and
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis,
cattails, wldle her daughter's wi)ming entry was a period mass arrangement in pinks,
CHRISTMAS IN AUGUST
TOUCHING IS THE PICI'URE of a boy in Jr&amp;Yer painted by
Middleport, third.
lavender,
and burgundy. Mrs. Parker won lbree ribbons in lbe two flower shows, and her
Iris Kelton of Minersville . The painting is titled "Jay." He was lbe
Floribunda rose: Mrs. Fisher, - Mrs. Roberta Kraeuter
daughter won 10 ribbms.
Mrs. Audra Well, Darwin; Mrs. Maidens ol BeUvfew, former
ll!lfl of Iris and Aaron who died with polio many years ago. It was
Meigs music teacher,
Thompson.
me of several fair exhibits by Iris.
displays
the allraetlve
Zinnia: Mrs. Edison Hollon,
Mrs.
James
Carpenter
of
lbe
POMEROY - A second of lbe artistic arrangements
Nease Settlement; Mrs. Betty holiday ammgement made
AMONG THE BEAUTIFUL THINGS exhibited In the
Rutland
Friendly
Gardeners
division
were
outstanding
wilb
highly successful flower show
·aid. The
Lou Dean, Pomeroy, Route 3, by Mrs. J•~
domesUc arts department was a picture made by Ollorus Grimm.
was staged Friday at lbe 108111 the top blue ribbon winner being took first, and Mrs. Robert and Mrs. Fisher.
blue ribbon wlont. was enIt featured tbe use of a frame over 100 years old with an annual Meigs County Fair Miss Barrie Marie Smith of lbe Lewis of the Winding Trail Club
Fantasy Zinnia: Mrs. Fisher. titled "The I Jlmjnous Star"
arrugement of dried materials in natural coloc 111 a backtpvund under the capable direction of Middleport Garden Club, with of Pomeroy second in the
Gladioli: Mrs. Wilson Car· and featured wisteria and
special
exhibit
of crange burlap. Just beautiful!
of
preserved
and
three firsts.
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis.
milkweed pods, sprayed and
dried plant materials. Awards penter; Mrs. Dean, and Mrs. gUttered In gold on a black
Exhibits in the seven classes
and handcrafted containers Holter.
LT. J . B. ANKROM, Jr. and his wife, a captain in lbe U. S.
Gladioli, collection of 3: Mrs. container.
went to Mrs. Margaret Ella
Army Nurses C&lt;rps, have just returned from their second tour of
Lewis, first, and Mrs. Etta Wilson Carpenter.
duty in VIetnam and spent the past week here wilb his father, J.
Cockscomb plume: Mrs .
Cullums, second.
B. Ankrcm, Sr. and his grandmother, Mrs. Daisy B. Ankrom of
JamesCarpenter.
, .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
Winners in the artistic
Racine.
Cockscomb Crested : Mrs.
arrangements classes, listed
The two met and man-led between their time in Vlelnam and
Fisher.
POMEROY - Mrs. Mary member of resolutions ; and first, second, and third,
111 the second tour were statlooed logetber. They are Clll'relltiY
Dahlia: Mrs. Fisher, Mrs.
All
having a brief separation. Captain Anknm is at Fort Hood, Texas Martin, departemental d'Ohio Mrs . Opal Drummer, third respectively were as foUows: Wilson Carpenter, Mrs.
"Meeting
Old
Friends,"
inmember
of
ritual
and
emblem
.
and her hulband is at Ft. Sill, Okla. undergoing some addiliooal · chapeau, Eight and Forty, and
SPRING &amp;SUMMER
Mrs. Martin announced a cluding natural, untreated, Cullums.
training. He wiD be lbere three months and then wiD join his wife Mrs. MyrUe Walker, her Ia
Pompon
Dahlia:
Mrs.
Fisher,
secretaire .. cassaire, were school of instruction to be held weathered or driftwood : Miss
PERMANENT
at F&lt;rt Hood.
first; Mrs. Cullums, second.
honored guests at a meeting of Sept. 18 and 19 at the ·Neil Barrie Marie Smith, Mid·
Marigolds: Mrs. Dean, Mrs.
"UFEUKE"
BACK FROM A dellghlful tour with the Franklin Qxmty lbe Crawford County Salon 389 House. She also talked on the dleport; Mrs. James Titus, Fisher, and Mrs. Holter .
assistance program to the Rutland, and Mrs. Homer
ARRANGEMENTS
Specimen Collections
Hist&lt;rleal Society and the Center of Science and Industry are Th,:;::~a~artin served as in· National Jewish Hospital at Holter, Pomeroy, Route 3.
African .Violets: Miss Ruby
Jean and Harry Moore.
"New Teachers," modern
Denver and reported lbat Mrs.
Qt the tour were visits 14 81!8 world at Aurllra, a night In New stalling officer. for the 1971-72
Diehl,
Rutland, first; Mrs . RuUl
arrangements: Miss Smith,
Hazel Elliott is hospitalized.
Philadelphia where they saw "Trumpet in lbe Ulnd," a tour bf offtcers mcludmg Mrs. Edna
Mrs. Joan Stewart of Rutland,· Moore, Pomeroy, second.
Scboenl.-unn Vlllage and v:lalls to the
ty Historical Smeltz, chapeau; !&gt;frs. An: Gifts were presented to both
Native Trees or Shrubs : Mrs.
M DKriiJ.I.t -.=-~ ..~. tlils --"tb • na~ell~ Stral\ch, ftrst demt ~- Martin and Mrs. Walker. and Mrs. Homer Parker of Robert Hamm, Racine, Route, ·
Cente r and Me Klnle Y e ,
Rutland.
:"""""'· ~fit , .......
chapeau prenuere; Mrs. Ruth
Serving:
"School
Lunch •"
ar- first; Mrs. Earl Thoma,
they \ftllt to Beckley lo see 'Honey m the Rock and 'The Hal· Gearhart
second
demi
Pomeroy,
secQIId.
Gallipolis. Pomeroy,
rangements including fruits
fields and the McCoys."
chapeau; Mrs. Mary Annestedt,
Dish
Gardens:
Mrs.
Moore,
Middleport. Ollio
or vegetables: Mrs. Titus, Mrs.
Ia aulnooier; Alberta Swarer, Ia
&amp; Mason eo,, W.Va.
Stewart and Mrs. Carpenter. Mrs. Hamrn.
FIVE MEMBERS of the Meigs ~ty Salon 710, Eight and concierge; Mrs. Wanda Tanner,
Books:
Mrs.
Fisher.
" Band," showing rhythm:
Forty, wiD be COIIlbinlng business with pleasure when they take pouvior member; Mrs. Violet
CHESTER
Mrs.
Inez
off Tbursday trumlng fill' Teus.
Aichholz, Ia secrelaire&lt;assier;
Driving down to H01111ton f«r lbe naUooal convmtion of the Esther Wagner, !'avocate; and Pooler and her granddaughter,
Eight and F&lt;rty will be Eunle Brinker, Myrtle Walker, Pearl Mrs. Helen Miler, L'archiviste. Piana Pullens, spent four days
Other departemental officers visiting with her daughter and
Knapp, Rboda Hackett, and Mary Martin, deptirtemental
present for lbe meeting and son-in-law, Marilyn and Ray
chapeau and convention delegate. ·
Wiener, in Fairborn, Ohio.
After tbe convention the girls plan to do some sightseeing in introduced were Mrs. Audrey
While lbere, !bey visited Mr.
Glau'b, departemental !a conTexas and Mexico before coming home.
and
Mrs. Albert Pooler and
cierge; Evaline Berkley, first
daughter of Miamisburg and ,
On~!
FOR THE NEXT WEEK we will tie on vacation. Mrs. leila demi chapeau premier, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Elam of
Helen
Sloan,
Department
McKinley will again be .subalituting and society news may be
American Legion Auxilia(f Cedarville. They also went to
Call or Come In Now!
telepbmed lo her at the oDice, m-2156.
the
newly
constructed
Air
Force
'
.
presideni; Mrs. Violet Aichholz
and Bernice Christianson, Museum at Wright-Patterson
chapeau passes departemental ; Air Force Base and Dayton's
Mrs . Smeltz, department newest shopping mall.
On Sunday !bey aU drove to
chairman of partnership; Reva
Washington
Courthouse and
Cihla, chairman of constitution
•
and by-laws; Mrs. Tanner , were met by Diana's parents,
chairman of nurses scholar- Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Pullins and
CARPENTER - Relatives ship ; Mrs. Betty Fellows, lbird sister Kathy. After dinner at a
local restaurant, the visitors
·-·
from Berne, Ind., Richmond,
returned
home to Chester.
SUNDAY
Va ., Croton, Nelsonville,
99TH ANNUAL Homecoming Middleport, Athens, and tbe
of Zion Church of Christ, inunediate area were 8100118
Meigs
.Pomeroy - Harrisonville Road, those attending 'tbe annual
State Route 143 wiD be held all DaUey-Townsend reunion at the
day Sunday. Baske\ dinner at Temple United Melhodist
noon . Everyone welcome. Church on Sunday.
"
There wiD be a special concert During lbe business session,
in lbe afternoon featuring lbe plans were made to hold tbe
Gospel Harmony Boys.
reunion on lbe UUrd Sunday in .
MONDAY
August, 1972, at lbe Temple .
ISAAC WALTON family._ Olurch. OOICfli'S elected wt!re,
Sybil Ebershach to Alpha
picnic Monday at 7 p. m. at president, __ ~A Stlnso:'ti '
Smith, Lucille Smith, Lots,
farm.
.
Athens; Vlc~~ent, .Pa
McDole-Torrence Add.,
TIJESDAY
McNallb, .CrolOp; .s·ecretaryReedsville'.
JOINT meeting Tuesday, ,treasurer, Martha t.(ays; local.
•--- M R lbe
"•-•le
th 0ldest
"'""'
. II r, Comm.,
N
American Legion Auxiliary
ey -""'' r was e
Mabel L. Lee, dec'd., to v·trgif
wilb
Drew Webster Post ·39 fami!· Y mem her
R· Lee' .,.
"· Aere, Salis
'bbpresent
be'
th
· bury.
American Legion and Junior James McNa
mg
e
Sybil Ebersbach, Comm.,
Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m. at hall. youngest pre~nt. The Donald
Margaret M. W'tU, dec. 1o Alva
Becky Wright, Girls State VanDyke family~ ~ond,
C. Will, Parcels, Chester.
' Representative, guest speaker. V~ ., had trave
most
Oren Wears, JoAnn Wears to
Junior girls will serve ,refresh· miles lo attend and the Arthur
DAVE WCAB
Glen Edward Beebe
_ , Jean
ments.
1
• VanDyke family had lbe. most
Dave Lucas, evangelist Beebe 1 .. Acr Salish
· amiJ
be
from Kentact:r Clnlstlan
• ·"'
e,
ury.
RACINE American Legion f · Y mem rs present.
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co . .
,
·
College,
member
of
••
Auxiliary annual
picnic
O!leraUoa . Evaagellze from lo Paul E. Voll, Gladys W. VoU,
Tuesday, 6 p.m. Racine park.
Lot, Pomeroy.
'
ed
KeDiuclly,. will be the guest
d
Bring table service an cover
tqM!Iker ll the • "Youth
Robert .Satterfield, Marie 0.
dish. Junior members meet a\
lfjppenlq" ;..111 14 be •eld Sallerfi~ld to Rosalee Sat·
same lime .
·
'J '
,,....
terfield, 112.38 Acres, Sutton.
Beta
at lbe Zlea t'lnath of Christ
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
~~~~. %3 llmlacb Aug. Z!J.
Frank Ulyne, Broolie Layne
Sigma ~hi Soroflty, get,
services wDI Jx&gt;.belrl at 7:30 to Lillie Robinson, Jackie Ray
- 15,0110 I!TU
~-28'A•, Wklth-M*
acquainted party at ,Royal Oak
p.m. ,eacb evenlag: Area Robinson, Samuel E. Robinson,
Dool'-ll'.
HEATS UP TO 5 AOOMS
Park, Tuesday 6:30 p.m.,
POMEROY - Recrulll)l;nt of ebarc•e• are lovlted to .2$ Acre, RnUand.
.hayride and ,,.iener roast.
new members was lbe . em- parlfelpale wltb apedal
Asa A. Hoskins to Donald H.
PAST MATREONSS, ,Pompe_:: plt&amp;.isolarecenttneeting~flbe slaglag.
Diener, Helen Diener, Lot, ·
30
0
Chapter 1116, • • •• •= · •• candyst~lpers of Veterans
Pomeroy.
Flossie N. Dillon, Cecil V.
State Route 33, west side. T~ Memorial Hospital.
own table service and a ft,vonte
~ Wrf8bt conducted the
Dilloo to Clta:rles L. Fryling,,
dish. In lbe event of r~ tbe meeting during which Ume lbe
PARTY HEU&gt;
Sauqdra Fryling, Parcels,
picnic wlll be held at' the need f«r new membera was ~CINE -'' ~. and Mrs. Olive.
.
· aired and suaesUoni Jllyen 011 M!l"fis' Wolle' entertained the Anna Powell Brewer, dec. to
Temple.
WEDNESDAY
, .. how 1o aecure them." Refresh- Jqni~JfllllhoClass of lbe .Raclne' Maxine Powell, Aff. for Trans.,
MIDDLEPORT • PomerDY ments
served. · •
!(~ne Cbureh at their home Lebanon.
ARNOLD GRATE
Lions Club, Wedn~sday noon,
wilb an outbtg in honor of-their rrederick J. Stobart, Earlene
.United Methodist Church,
•
son,' Danny'$ birthday. AI· C. Stobart to Elson Spencer, 29
22 Years of Dependable Service
Pomeroy.
Wednesday thl'llugh Sunday. tending were Frances Weddle, Acrds, Suttoq.
Ph. 742-4211
'RUTLAND. 0. I
WEEKEND meeling at 7:30 p.m. The ~- George • Joy Holman,...Jim!Dy Cundiff, Don , C. Weese, Lillian 1.
1
Church of Olrist in ChrlsUan Scoll, Colwnljus, will be gues~ and the honored guest's Weese to Village of Racine, 2
Union, Pearl St., Middleport, , speaker.
brother, Jeff Wolfe.
Acres, Sutton.

Charlene Hoeflich

DUDLEY'S FLORIST

CLOSEST TO BOLE
MakW 1ft of Golf Club.

KEml GOBLE fORD, INC.
OHIO POWIIR COliPANY

Second Show at Fair Highly Success ul

Community
Corner.By
-

30% OFF

.§poa!IOrli
R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
POMEROY ROME &amp; AUTO

'

1

We IMtaU!
.We Service/

••••••••
85,000 B1U
MODE'S

ALSO
AVAILJII E

to

r.H

�,I
o'

•

'

•

·nonna Weimann Bride o ohn ctark
da,isies, and .pastel garden wedding cake decocated wilb
Dowers tied · l'iiUl white satin · yellow daisies and topped wilb
streamers.lt was also designed bride and groom figurines.
by Mrs. Clark.
A daisy flower ring wreathed
Mr. Michael L. Warthman the cake. The skirt f&lt;r the table
was best man and lbe usbe£s was made of pleated white
were Mr. Pal Taylor and Mr. organdy trimmed wilb green
Tim Gillis.
ribbOn. Miss Susan Weimann
. A reception honoring lbe regislen!d the guests.
couple was held in lbe social Mr. and Mrs. Clark are
J1)0ID of tbe church witb Mrs. residing in Millersport.
Don W. Gillis, Mrs. J. W. ~ Mrs. Clark is a graduate of
and Mrs. Richard Gordon as Lancaster High School, class of
hostesses. The table was 1!1&amp;9, and is presenUy employed
decora~ wilb a hand carved as secretary for Nationwide
candlestick, a family heirloom Insurance of Colwnbus.
of tbe Clarks, and a two lionel
Mr. Clark, a 1969 graduate of

Walnut Township 11\gh School, wedding garter made .by Mrs.
is a senior at lbe Colwnbus C. H. Wise of Waverly, fonnerly
of Middleport.
Technical Institute.
Among the wedding guests
were Mr. ~d Mrs. Richard
B£AUTIFUL
Bailey ani! 'family, 'Mrs.
W'tlliam Demoskey and family,
Middleport; Mrs.
Alma
Greenhouse Fresh
Johnson, Springfield; Mrs. Jim
BaD and son of New Haven, w.
Va.; Mr_s. James Glassburn and
son, Bidwell; and Mrs. Thomas
Cooper, Clieshire.
· The new Mrs. Clark is a
granddaughter of Mrs. Ferne Sorvlnt GIINpoHs, ,..,...,.,
Harris, 'formerly of Middleport. Middleport, o.• &amp; MIMn c..,
For her wedding she w0re a w. Va.

lbninl Plallls
'4.00 .
'

Mr. and Mn. Norman Staats

Brenda Woods Bride
Of Norman D. Staats
MIDDLEPORT - At 7:30
p.m. on July 'II at tbe Freewill
BaptistChlrdlllf Rutland, Miss
Brenda Darlene Woods became
lbe bride of Mr. Norman
Dcwpglas Staats.
1be bride is tbe daughter Ill
Mr. and Mrs. KeiUt Woods,
M"'l!dlep«rt, and Ute bridegroom
is Ute son of Mrs. Atrida Staats
II. Brwneil Ave., Middleport,
IIIII Mr. E1sw'ootb Staats Ill New
Haftll, W. Va.
Tbe Rev. Leland Haley
performed lbe double ring

ceremony.
F&lt;r her 9"'ik!ing Ute bride
wcna wbilesnet.lmgibdress
II. ·organza and lace, with a
shoulder~ while veil Her
bouquet was of blue .and while
camations fnm wbicb lnmg
white atin streamers tied in
lover's lmots.
Miss Pamela Kay Manley Ill
Middleport ae1 ved as maid Ill
honor fill' Ute bride. Sbe was in a
pile piN elqlire waist dress

·GOLF CONTEST
•

Martin.

POMEROY
Ll
MIDDLEPORT
For Sisht Conservation Programs

Mr.r. fohn E. Clark

New Haven, W. Va. was best
man f&lt;r the bridegroom.
For her daughter's wedding,
MIDDLEPORT Miss
Mrs. Woods w&lt;re a black knit
wilb white laj."e bim and a Donna Weimann, daughter of
corsage or pink carnations. Mr . and Mrs. Sherman
Mrs. Staats was in a black lirM\n
eimann of lancaster, former
with a corsage of pink cat'dents here, was married to
nations. A reception · honoring Mr. John E. Clark, soo or 'Mr.
lbe couple was held at the home
Mrs. E!lrl Cart. Millersor the bridegroom following me_.... - on June 1% at Ute Hubert
ceremony.
Ave. Baptist Church in LanF&lt;r a short wedding lrip caster.
lbrougb West Vtrginia the bride
Two altar ar:-angemeots of
changed into a peach colored white daisy mums and pastel
dress wilb white trim. The garden llosers with candelabra
couple reside at 826 Oliver St., holding white tapers decuated
Middleport.
the church. White satin pew
The new Mrs. Staats is a bows and boxwood marked the
senior at Meigs High School and pews.
amemberoftheVIGAclub. Mr.
Mrs. Marilyn Beougher w.S
Staats attended Wahama High organist and ber selections
School, served two years in tbe included '"''be Lord's Prayer,"
U. S. Navy, and •tS employed "One Hand• One Hearl •" and
WI'th the M. and G. Transport "0 ~'e.-feet Love ..
Co.
Escorted to the altar by her
father, lbe bride was in a street
le.'lglh dress ol while, tbe skirt

of crepe wilb an overlay ol
white cbiffo:t and lbe bodice of
crepe wilb an overlay of lace.
The long sleeves were made of
the same lace and crepe.
The tradition of something
old, new, borrowed and blue
was observed by the bride who
had for her only jewelry, a pearl
bracelet, a gift of the
bridebroom. Her headpiece was
a yellow petal ribbon plateau
with daisy streamers. She
carried a nosegay of daisy
mums, garden daisies, and
white carnations wilb satin
streamers. It was designed by
the mother of lbe bridegroom.
Miss Joyce McGee was maid
of honor and she wore a mint
green street length dress
designed wilb A-line skirt and
long chiffon sleeves. Her
colonial bouquet was made or
while daisy mums, garden

Flower Arranging Marta Hubbard Ret'eals
Workshop Held Plans For H~r Wedding
Rtm.AND - The Merry
Gardeners made ceramic
ICillltainers and held a flower
arranging workshop at lbe
bome of Mrs. Bill Williamsm,
wbo lei'Ved as instrucllll' for the
• project on 'l'llesday, Aug. 10.
During Ute business meeting
lbe girls discussed making
entries in Ute Meigs Counly Fair
Flower Sbow beld last week.
Mrs. Willi-·povided the
tpeenware ceramic CGDiainers
fill' each girl to wort on, as weD
as small ceramic animal
figuriues. Each girl cbose the
color of paints sbe used oo her
container and figurine. The
greenware was first smoolbed,
glaud and !ben fired. Each girl
painted her CGD!ainer a dif.
ferent col&lt;r, mf tbe animal
figurines were painted in colors
wilb the features accented in
other colors. After tbe paint had
dried !bey used a clear spray
finish on tbem lA) make the
colon waleqlnxi. 1be gla7.e
was donated by Mrs. Tom

Ill age.
In addition, if any wish, they
may compete in educational
section Class 22, Blooming
Houseplants, or Class 23, NonBlooming Houseplants, if they
have cared for the plants
lbemselves.
They also may display in the
Class 24, Display of Garden
Literature, or in Class 25,
CoUection of natures resources
used in dried arranging.
Mrs. James Carpenter,
chairman for educational and
special displays, also urges the
juniors to make a special
display showing their year's
activities in garden club, or if
any Cf them as an individual
have a hobby using plant
material&lt;r any !bing related to
nature or natural resources to
display their craft wilb written
instructions as to how it is done.
Games were played and
refreshments served by Mrs.
Williamson. Members attending
were
Debbie
Williamson, Carla Smilb, Darla
Williamson Karla Brown
Denise Gaddis, Kelly Brown,
Autumn Ellis, and guests, Abby
and Tanuny Martin and Diane
Williamson.
A nature tour wiD be taken
and terrariums made at
nell week 's meeting , with
Mrs. Homer Parker as instruct&lt;r at her home. Each girl
is to bring her own bowl or
container for this project.

.

.

After
. the glaze dried on the
con tamers the girls had a D""er
arrangmg workshop, using
juniper and a wide variety or
Rowers from lucal gardens to
mate lbe artistic arrancernents. complimented by
the animal figurines !bey
had made.
.Mrs. Williamson said the girls
· did an excellent job ol choosing
flowers in colors 14 go wilb tbe
containers !bey had made.
Each girl also put her name oo
t11e bottom or the cootainer,
prior to painting, glazing and
firing tbem, making for easy
identification.
The Merry Gardeners have
been asked lo participate in the
POMEROY - Ray Allen
Rutland Friendly Gardeners Maxson of Keno was honored at
flower show, " Busy Days," his home recently wilb a lawn
which lfill be staged on party in observance of his sixtl1
S..turday, Sept. II, ai the birthday anniversary. Cake and
RuUand Elementary School. ice cream were served to the
The Juni&lt;r H&lt;rticultnre classes guests in the yard and pony
.-e Class 7, Zinnia ; Class 8, rides and games w~re enjoyed.
lbrigold; Class 9, Unclassified,
Auending were the honored
anit !be artistic arrangements guf.'St's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
ill C.. a, l'riday's Slwnher Raymond Mal&lt;SO!l; his brother,
'-ty, ,.... famle f&lt;r lhose . John, and his sister, Judy; Mr.
11 ,..-s ol age, and Class and Mrs. Paul E. Maxson and
21, .....,.•• Playllme, yow' WendyofParkersburg;Mr. and
,.¥'Jrilefii'.._UIIdetl0v!!llrs Mrs. Buck Calaway and

Sixth Birthday
Is Celebrated

hy

l!iJIODIM»red

and carried a bouquelof pink
and white carnations.
Mr. Richard Ernest Roush iJf

MIDDlEPORT - Plans have
been completed f&lt;rthe wedding
of Miss Marta Kay Hubbard,
daugbter or Mr. and Mrs.
Harold E. Hubbard, Mid·
dleport, to Mr. Williani Alan
Blackwood, .... 0( Mrs. Dean
Blackwood, Jr. of RuUand
Route I, and tbe late Mr. Black·
wood.
The open cbw ch wedding wiD
be an event ol Sunday, Aug. 29,
at 2:30 p.m. at lbe Middleport
First Baptist Church, following
a half-hour Ill nuptial music by
~Irs. Gerald Anlbooy. organist,

$200. Each Hole-ln·One
5 to9

PI

•
-.:a~;b dilly I dozeo 11oU
For Week • 3 TROPHIES
lodiel' Trophy. Mm'• Trophy
Jr. Trophy 16 or IUifkr

5 Balls $1.00

for his brother, and the ushers
wiD be Mr. Timolby Sayre,
RuUand; Mr. Larry GladweU,
Middleport, and Mr. Randy
Becker, Middleport.
Guests will be registered by
sisters of the groom-elect, Miss
Deanna Blackwood and Miss
Cynthia Blackwood. Miss Mary
Jane Jenkinson, Bridgeman,
Mich., and Miss Diane Welsh,
Middleport, will be the
hostesses at a reception to
foUow in lbe church social

GOESSI Ell'S JEWELRY

FULTON-THOMPSON
LANDMARK
POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO.
BLAE'JTNAR AUTO CO.
RIZER OIL COMPANY
POMEROY BOWLING LANES
MULLEN INSURANCE
DOWNING · CHILDS INSURANCE
V. D. EDWARDS INSURANCE
PAULEY INSURANCE
DAVIS WARNEll INSURANCE
POMEROY FWWER SHOP
KAER I VAN ZANDT MOTOR SALES
BROWN'S TRACTOR SALES
LOU'S ASHLAND STATION
BAILEY'S SUNOCO
MODEIIN SUPPLY
HORAK CARRY OUT
DAIRY VALLEY
DANNIE'S MOBILE HOMES
BAKER I SEYFRIED
TWIN CITY MACHINE SHOP
POMEROY ELECTRIC SHOP

•a•••

COURT STREET GRILL
CHAPMAN-CANADAY SHOE 8TORB
BLUE a GRIIY RESTAURANT
MARGUERITE'S SHOE STORE
GREEN LANTBIIN
STIFFLERS
EBERSBACH HARDWARE
SHAMMY'S DRIVE-IN
MOORES 8'1'0RE
G.t I AUTO
FABRIC SHOP
MEIGS EQUIPIIENT CO.
EWING FUNERAL HOME
SIMON'!I STORES
NORMA GOODWIN FLORISTS
EXCELSIOR OU. CO liPANY
KAPPLB SORIO STATION
GIBBS GROCII:RY
SUGAR RUN n.ouJl 11JLL
POWELL'8 SUNOOO IIBRVICE
ERWIN'S GULF 8ERVICB
OILER'S BOHIO STATION
VU.LAGE PRARIIACY
BAKER FUIINri'URE
FRANCIS FLOIUIIT8

IQLA'S IIBAIJTY a DRESs SHOPS
K I C JBWELI!RS
IIAimJ!Y SHOES
NilSON DRUGS
POIIIBIIOY BEN FRANKLIN STORE
OHIO VALLEY J'LUMBING
IIOBINIION'S DRY CLEANERS
em LOAN
.
FAIIIIER'S BAMI:
~~. 11010 NATIONAL BANK
~•.....,.'S NATIONAL BANK
POIIDOY NAnoNAL BANK
znna TRUCIING
INGElS FURNri'URE
DUrroN DRUGS
Wiliii iJt.v AUTO STORE
~UMBIA GAS OF ORJO, INC.
BLIIIIllPELIY8 IN POIIEIIOY
NEW YORK CLOTHING ROUSE
~LOHSE DRUGS
DAILY ~IAURANT

room.

and ,Miss Patricia Zeller, , . . . . . . . ._ _ _. . . .: -. .- -. . . . . . . .- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~~~
Findlay, soloist. Tbe Rev.
!liarles Simms wiD officiate.

iJA'"tltlf;
" .'-J. ~ - ·

Miss Susan Lee Seyfried wiD
be lbe maid of hmor. the
bridesmaid wiD be Miss
Rebeca Hart of Indianapolis,
and lbe juni«r bridesmaid wiD
be Miss Marianne Welsh ,
Middleport.
Mr. Owen Blackwood of
Rutland wiD serve as best man

1

-~­

~ ···

NOW I

r"

FLEXSTEEL

I

I , ....,.

-t \f

GUESr.i AT COOK.our

MIDDlEPORT - Mr. and
Irs. George White and Joy,
Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Sauer, Mary Ruth and Joy, and
Mary Roush, Oleshire, were
Friday night guests or lbe Rev.
and Mrs. C. J. Lemley of Vinton
for a cookout.

daughters, Tammy and Missie,
Coolville; Mr. and Mrs. James
Deeter and daughters, Julie,
Debby, and Tamm&gt;· or Belpre;
Mrs. Betty Gaul and sons, Mark
and David, Chesler ; Mrs.
Myrna Carpenter, Julia and
David, Mrs. Pat Thomas,
Jimmy and Jody, Mrs. Nancy
Carter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
White, Shiela Byrd, Gary
Lyons, aU of Ulng Botlool.
Sending gifts were Ray's
sister and brolber~.Jaw. Mr.
and ~Irs. James Mambourg and
nil'Cl', his grandmother, Mrs.
\!,abel Maxson of Berea, IV.
Va.; Patty Meeks or Berea, W.
Va.; Jeanine Grim or Loog
Bollom; Mr. and Mrs. Harvey
Mason, Wellsville; Mr. aJ)d
Mrs. Richard McKnight. La..-a,
IJnda and Lois, Marietta.

'"'

CoiOflial Sofa and Swivel Rocker hove maple trim

accent~ . hy btass n:'ilheods, revets i.~le T"Cusf'liOJ1s,
covered 1n lush fobncs; self..cfech, ormcops

Exhilarat ing, colorful ! Add instant ond l'lsting charm
to y ~ur -~~me • i~h these superbly coor d inated groups
and md1v1dual p•eces .. Qual ity f~otu:-es incl ude soli d
hardwood lram&lt;S, Fle.steel's ontented a:ched blue
st~el spring bases, so r~ cushion !og and n ch rcbr ics.
li.,.licity... Note.., ,...,
hand·rubbed Sal id walnut
trim on bases. Fabrict
of gay contra1t; nlf·
dedcs, G1t1C:ops, ··

Tronsitionol Sofo hos
rev... sible pillowbocks
c.~d uot cushions for
the utmost In luJ:urr.

Flex•O.I ounge~e-,edirto

CoiOf"fullobr ic is high-

ing chair in glo..,...soft
·vinyl is thiclr:ly padded,

lighttd by lheontiqued
brass coslers

Trodit •onol Sofa &amp; Compon im 01011
ge,t ly curved bock !., sw!!ep•
'"9 llf"ms, to• lored ~1c k pleat bo .. es.
Seot cusluon~ ore revers ,bll!. E•qr,n s•
1le- coveor.ngs , Wlfh armc:ops

Heodrestcovet,onncops
not flap,includ..t,
' ..

'

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Pomeroy. Ohio

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11uu August

Social
Calendar

' Reunion Held at

OUR LOW

Temple Church

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THERE NEYER WAS A BETTER TIME TO REALIZE LUXURY AND BEAUTY
IN FINE UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE BY

M~ss Smith, Mrs. Titus
and Mrs. Virgil Atkins,
Rutland.
!rlen~=Y A county fair! That's the place where old
"Homework/' interpretive
design : Mrs. Parker, Mrs.
It's really qulle amaring Ute tblngs you can learn while
Wilson Carpenter, Pomeroy;
hanging oow .the railing.aroond Ute merry-gHound.
·
and Mrs . Anna Turner,
Fol' inltance, did you !mow that John and Wilma Marie Reece
Rutland.
and their two youngaters are now quite' settled In their lotal
" Chr~tmas is Coming," Mrs.
electric hune at 211 Uncoln Hill. The old Pomeroy home waa
John Kincaid, Middleport; Mrs.
conpletely rmovated by George and Mary Morris during the past
James Carpenter, and Mrs.
yt\M', .00 the Reeces are a!BoluleJY. deUghied wilb It and tbe
Robert Canaday, Rutland,
nelgbbotbood. Jdln is the publiC affairs coordinator for the Gen.
"3:30 p.m..'' invitation class
JameS M. GaVin plant and the mine complex which will provide
for favorite arrangement: Mrs.
coal fer' the plant.
James Carpenter, Mrs.
Stewart, and Mrs. Wilson
Te!Ty,and Coleen Ohlinger just couldn't stay away from the
fair. 'lbe"couple 81ld their two year old son came back w town
Carpenter.
Junior Division
Friday 14 take In the activities. They moved earlier this monlb lA)
~~
Recess,
"
a
favorite
Pbllo wbere Terry has a principaJship. Our loss in so many ways.
arrangement : Darla
· Dick and Kayle WeD and daughter, Amy, moved this past
Williamson of the Rutland
week to Westerville. Dick has been employed 'as assistant
Merry
Gardeners, first; Denise
basketball and football coach at the Centerburg aty School, and
Dean of Pomeroy, Route 3,
Is happy to; be _back lnlo teaching. This summer be has been
second;
and Carla Smilb of
wcrling wllb l!en·Tom Construction.
Rutland, third.
·. Looking prettier titan ever was Roberta Kraeuter Maidens of .
Horticulture: Zinnias, Denise
Bellview.Robertawasberef&lt;r a few days wilb her father, Eldoo, ·
Dean, first; David Lewis,
and Blsters and, of course, took in the fair.
Pomeroy, · second.
MisRobefta will be teaching music this laD at lbe Frimont
cellaneous specimens, Deelementary 'and junior high schools alter having taken a couple
nise Dean , both first and
years off. ,
.
second.
Horticulture
UD WiliER, LIKE DAUGHTER - Bath Mn. Homer Parter of Rutland aDd ._
NEVER, BUT NEVER, have we seen a squash the size of the
Hybrid
tea rose: Mrs. Hiram
daughter, Mrs. James Carpenter of Coolville, were blue ribbon ivlnners in the artistic
me e:dliblted at the fair by Coca Moore of Point Rock. The banana.
Fisher, Minersville; Mrs.
arrangements division &lt;i the second flower show of the Meigs County Fair. Mrs. Parker toot
variety of squash was at least a yard long.
Robert Thompson, Pomeroy;
first in the ''H~mew&lt;rk" class with modern arrangement of sunflower, peacock feathers and
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis,
cattails, wldle her daughter's wi)ming entry was a period mass arrangement in pinks,
CHRISTMAS IN AUGUST
TOUCHING IS THE PICI'URE of a boy in Jr&amp;Yer painted by
Middleport, third.
lavender,
and burgundy. Mrs. Parker won lbree ribbons in lbe two flower shows, and her
Iris Kelton of Minersville . The painting is titled "Jay." He was lbe
Floribunda rose: Mrs. Fisher, - Mrs. Roberta Kraeuter
daughter won 10 ribbms.
Mrs. Audra Well, Darwin; Mrs. Maidens ol BeUvfew, former
ll!lfl of Iris and Aaron who died with polio many years ago. It was
Meigs music teacher,
Thompson.
me of several fair exhibits by Iris.
displays
the allraetlve
Zinnia: Mrs. Edison Hollon,
Mrs.
James
Carpenter
of
lbe
POMEROY - A second of lbe artistic arrangements
Nease Settlement; Mrs. Betty holiday ammgement made
AMONG THE BEAUTIFUL THINGS exhibited In the
Rutland
Friendly
Gardeners
division
were
outstanding
wilb
highly successful flower show
·aid. The
Lou Dean, Pomeroy, Route 3, by Mrs. J•~
domesUc arts department was a picture made by Ollorus Grimm.
was staged Friday at lbe 108111 the top blue ribbon winner being took first, and Mrs. Robert and Mrs. Fisher.
blue ribbon wlont. was enIt featured tbe use of a frame over 100 years old with an annual Meigs County Fair Miss Barrie Marie Smith of lbe Lewis of the Winding Trail Club
Fantasy Zinnia: Mrs. Fisher. titled "The I Jlmjnous Star"
arrugement of dried materials in natural coloc 111 a backtpvund under the capable direction of Middleport Garden Club, with of Pomeroy second in the
Gladioli: Mrs. Wilson Car· and featured wisteria and
special
exhibit
of crange burlap. Just beautiful!
of
preserved
and
three firsts.
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis.
milkweed pods, sprayed and
dried plant materials. Awards penter; Mrs. Dean, and Mrs. gUttered In gold on a black
Exhibits in the seven classes
and handcrafted containers Holter.
LT. J . B. ANKROM, Jr. and his wife, a captain in lbe U. S.
Gladioli, collection of 3: Mrs. container.
went to Mrs. Margaret Ella
Army Nurses C&lt;rps, have just returned from their second tour of
Lewis, first, and Mrs. Etta Wilson Carpenter.
duty in VIetnam and spent the past week here wilb his father, J.
Cockscomb plume: Mrs .
Cullums, second.
B. Ankrcm, Sr. and his grandmother, Mrs. Daisy B. Ankrom of
JamesCarpenter.
, .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
Winners in the artistic
Racine.
Cockscomb Crested : Mrs.
arrangements classes, listed
The two met and man-led between their time in Vlelnam and
Fisher.
POMEROY - Mrs. Mary member of resolutions ; and first, second, and third,
111 the second tour were statlooed logetber. They are Clll'relltiY
Dahlia: Mrs. Fisher, Mrs.
All
having a brief separation. Captain Anknm is at Fort Hood, Texas Martin, departemental d'Ohio Mrs . Opal Drummer, third respectively were as foUows: Wilson Carpenter, Mrs.
"Meeting
Old
Friends,"
inmember
of
ritual
and
emblem
.
and her hulband is at Ft. Sill, Okla. undergoing some addiliooal · chapeau, Eight and Forty, and
SPRING &amp;SUMMER
Mrs. Martin announced a cluding natural, untreated, Cullums.
training. He wiD be lbere three months and then wiD join his wife Mrs. MyrUe Walker, her Ia
Pompon
Dahlia:
Mrs.
Fisher,
secretaire .. cassaire, were school of instruction to be held weathered or driftwood : Miss
PERMANENT
at F&lt;rt Hood.
first; Mrs. Cullums, second.
honored guests at a meeting of Sept. 18 and 19 at the ·Neil Barrie Marie Smith, Mid·
Marigolds: Mrs. Dean, Mrs.
"UFEUKE"
BACK FROM A dellghlful tour with the Franklin Qxmty lbe Crawford County Salon 389 House. She also talked on the dleport; Mrs. James Titus, Fisher, and Mrs. Holter .
assistance program to the Rutland, and Mrs. Homer
ARRANGEMENTS
Specimen Collections
Hist&lt;rleal Society and the Center of Science and Industry are Th,:;::~a~artin served as in· National Jewish Hospital at Holter, Pomeroy, Route 3.
African .Violets: Miss Ruby
Jean and Harry Moore.
"New Teachers," modern
Denver and reported lbat Mrs.
Qt the tour were visits 14 81!8 world at Aurllra, a night In New stalling officer. for the 1971-72
Diehl,
Rutland, first; Mrs . RuUl
arrangements: Miss Smith,
Hazel Elliott is hospitalized.
Philadelphia where they saw "Trumpet in lbe Ulnd," a tour bf offtcers mcludmg Mrs. Edna
Mrs. Joan Stewart of Rutland,· Moore, Pomeroy, second.
Scboenl.-unn Vlllage and v:lalls to the
ty Historical Smeltz, chapeau; !&gt;frs. An: Gifts were presented to both
Native Trees or Shrubs : Mrs.
M DKriiJ.I.t -.=-~ ..~. tlils --"tb • na~ell~ Stral\ch, ftrst demt ~- Martin and Mrs. Walker. and Mrs. Homer Parker of Robert Hamm, Racine, Route, ·
Cente r and Me Klnle Y e ,
Rutland.
:"""""'· ~fit , .......
chapeau prenuere; Mrs. Ruth
Serving:
"School
Lunch •"
ar- first; Mrs. Earl Thoma,
they \ftllt to Beckley lo see 'Honey m the Rock and 'The Hal· Gearhart
second
demi
Pomeroy,
secQIId.
Gallipolis. Pomeroy,
rangements including fruits
fields and the McCoys."
chapeau; Mrs. Mary Annestedt,
Dish
Gardens:
Mrs.
Moore,
Middleport. Ollio
or vegetables: Mrs. Titus, Mrs.
Ia aulnooier; Alberta Swarer, Ia
&amp; Mason eo,, W.Va.
Stewart and Mrs. Carpenter. Mrs. Hamrn.
FIVE MEMBERS of the Meigs ~ty Salon 710, Eight and concierge; Mrs. Wanda Tanner,
Books:
Mrs.
Fisher.
" Band," showing rhythm:
Forty, wiD be COIIlbinlng business with pleasure when they take pouvior member; Mrs. Violet
CHESTER
Mrs.
Inez
off Tbursday trumlng fill' Teus.
Aichholz, Ia secrelaire&lt;assier;
Driving down to H01111ton f«r lbe naUooal convmtion of the Esther Wagner, !'avocate; and Pooler and her granddaughter,
Eight and F&lt;rty will be Eunle Brinker, Myrtle Walker, Pearl Mrs. Helen Miler, L'archiviste. Piana Pullens, spent four days
Other departemental officers visiting with her daughter and
Knapp, Rboda Hackett, and Mary Martin, deptirtemental
present for lbe meeting and son-in-law, Marilyn and Ray
chapeau and convention delegate. ·
Wiener, in Fairborn, Ohio.
After tbe convention the girls plan to do some sightseeing in introduced were Mrs. Audrey
While lbere, !bey visited Mr.
Glau'b, departemental !a conTexas and Mexico before coming home.
and
Mrs. Albert Pooler and
cierge; Evaline Berkley, first
daughter of Miamisburg and ,
On~!
FOR THE NEXT WEEK we will tie on vacation. Mrs. leila demi chapeau premier, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Elam of
Helen
Sloan,
Department
McKinley will again be .subalituting and society news may be
American Legion Auxilia(f Cedarville. They also went to
Call or Come In Now!
telepbmed lo her at the oDice, m-2156.
the
newly
constructed
Air
Force
'
.
presideni; Mrs. Violet Aichholz
and Bernice Christianson, Museum at Wright-Patterson
chapeau passes departemental ; Air Force Base and Dayton's
Mrs . Smeltz, department newest shopping mall.
On Sunday !bey aU drove to
chairman of partnership; Reva
Washington
Courthouse and
Cihla, chairman of constitution
•
and by-laws; Mrs. Tanner , were met by Diana's parents,
chairman of nurses scholar- Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Pullins and
CARPENTER - Relatives ship ; Mrs. Betty Fellows, lbird sister Kathy. After dinner at a
local restaurant, the visitors
·-·
from Berne, Ind., Richmond,
returned
home to Chester.
SUNDAY
Va ., Croton, Nelsonville,
99TH ANNUAL Homecoming Middleport, Athens, and tbe
of Zion Church of Christ, inunediate area were 8100118
Meigs
.Pomeroy - Harrisonville Road, those attending 'tbe annual
State Route 143 wiD be held all DaUey-Townsend reunion at the
day Sunday. Baske\ dinner at Temple United Melhodist
noon . Everyone welcome. Church on Sunday.
"
There wiD be a special concert During lbe business session,
in lbe afternoon featuring lbe plans were made to hold tbe
Gospel Harmony Boys.
reunion on lbe UUrd Sunday in .
MONDAY
August, 1972, at lbe Temple .
ISAAC WALTON family._ Olurch. OOICfli'S elected wt!re,
Sybil Ebershach to Alpha
picnic Monday at 7 p. m. at president, __ ~A Stlnso:'ti '
Smith, Lucille Smith, Lots,
farm.
.
Athens; Vlc~~ent, .Pa
McDole-Torrence Add.,
TIJESDAY
McNallb, .CrolOp; .s·ecretaryReedsville'.
JOINT meeting Tuesday, ,treasurer, Martha t.(ays; local.
•--- M R lbe
"•-•le
th 0ldest
"'""'
. II r, Comm.,
N
American Legion Auxiliary
ey -""'' r was e
Mabel L. Lee, dec'd., to v·trgif
wilb
Drew Webster Post ·39 fami!· Y mem her
R· Lee' .,.
"· Aere, Salis
'bbpresent
be'
th
· bury.
American Legion and Junior James McNa
mg
e
Sybil Ebersbach, Comm.,
Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m. at hall. youngest pre~nt. The Donald
Margaret M. W'tU, dec. 1o Alva
Becky Wright, Girls State VanDyke family~ ~ond,
C. Will, Parcels, Chester.
' Representative, guest speaker. V~ ., had trave
most
Oren Wears, JoAnn Wears to
Junior girls will serve ,refresh· miles lo attend and the Arthur
DAVE WCAB
Glen Edward Beebe
_ , Jean
ments.
1
• VanDyke family had lbe. most
Dave Lucas, evangelist Beebe 1 .. Acr Salish
· amiJ
be
from Kentact:r Clnlstlan
• ·"'
e,
ury.
RACINE American Legion f · Y mem rs present.
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co . .
,
·
College,
member
of
••
Auxiliary annual
picnic
O!leraUoa . Evaagellze from lo Paul E. Voll, Gladys W. VoU,
Tuesday, 6 p.m. Racine park.
Lot, Pomeroy.
'
ed
KeDiuclly,. will be the guest
d
Bring table service an cover
tqM!Iker ll the • "Youth
Robert .Satterfield, Marie 0.
dish. Junior members meet a\
lfjppenlq" ;..111 14 be •eld Sallerfi~ld to Rosalee Sat·
same lime .
·
'J '
,,....
terfield, 112.38 Acres, Sutton.
Beta
at lbe Zlea t'lnath of Christ
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
~~~~. %3 llmlacb Aug. Z!J.
Frank Ulyne, Broolie Layne
Sigma ~hi Soroflty, get,
services wDI Jx&gt;.belrl at 7:30 to Lillie Robinson, Jackie Ray
- 15,0110 I!TU
~-28'A•, Wklth-M*
acquainted party at ,Royal Oak
p.m. ,eacb evenlag: Area Robinson, Samuel E. Robinson,
Dool'-ll'.
HEATS UP TO 5 AOOMS
Park, Tuesday 6:30 p.m.,
POMEROY - Recrulll)l;nt of ebarc•e• are lovlted to .2$ Acre, RnUand.
.hayride and ,,.iener roast.
new members was lbe . em- parlfelpale wltb apedal
Asa A. Hoskins to Donald H.
PAST MATREONSS, ,Pompe_:: plt&amp;.isolarecenttneeting~flbe slaglag.
Diener, Helen Diener, Lot, ·
30
0
Chapter 1116, • • •• •= · •• candyst~lpers of Veterans
Pomeroy.
Flossie N. Dillon, Cecil V.
State Route 33, west side. T~ Memorial Hospital.
own table service and a ft,vonte
~ Wrf8bt conducted the
Dilloo to Clta:rles L. Fryling,,
dish. In lbe event of r~ tbe meeting during which Ume lbe
PARTY HEU&gt;
Sauqdra Fryling, Parcels,
picnic wlll be held at' the need f«r new membera was ~CINE -'' ~. and Mrs. Olive.
.
· aired and suaesUoni Jllyen 011 M!l"fis' Wolle' entertained the Anna Powell Brewer, dec. to
Temple.
WEDNESDAY
, .. how 1o aecure them." Refresh- Jqni~JfllllhoClass of lbe .Raclne' Maxine Powell, Aff. for Trans.,
MIDDLEPORT • PomerDY ments
served. · •
!(~ne Cbureh at their home Lebanon.
ARNOLD GRATE
Lions Club, Wedn~sday noon,
wilb an outbtg in honor of-their rrederick J. Stobart, Earlene
.United Methodist Church,
•
son,' Danny'$ birthday. AI· C. Stobart to Elson Spencer, 29
22 Years of Dependable Service
Pomeroy.
Wednesday thl'llugh Sunday. tending were Frances Weddle, Acrds, Suttoq.
Ph. 742-4211
'RUTLAND. 0. I
WEEKEND meeling at 7:30 p.m. The ~- George • Joy Holman,...Jim!Dy Cundiff, Don , C. Weese, Lillian 1.
1
Church of Olrist in ChrlsUan Scoll, Colwnljus, will be gues~ and the honored guest's Weese to Village of Racine, 2
Union, Pearl St., Middleport, , speaker.
brother, Jeff Wolfe.
Acres, Sutton.

Charlene Hoeflich

DUDLEY'S FLORIST

CLOSEST TO BOLE
MakW 1ft of Golf Club.

KEml GOBLE fORD, INC.
OHIO POWIIR COliPANY

Second Show at Fair Highly Success ul

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President's Pep Talk to Advisors Was Preview
,

SHOP SUNDAY 12 IO 6

A Clean Swee
Of Bargains'

. IIOIDIJ 10 AM - I Pll

~address.

~ \\\

His punch line in the private
~on was dramatic: ''Whe""
· do we go from bere? What do
we do now? You get off your
buill"and g11 to work."
Aides who heard the speech
said the admonition was
directed ·both at the officials
who were faced with an
intenaiv~ ~ of planning
and at the nation as a whole.
which is faced with its most
severe econoinic problems in a
clecade.
The details of the new policy
were worked out last weekend
in a meeting at Camp David,

Special
Purchase!

\\

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llj NORMAN ·KEMPSTER
. WASHINGTON(UPI)-About
41 houri before President Nixon
reve.Jed bis · ~ economic
policy to the nation, he
deli...ered to an audience of
carefully selected advisers an
oft~ speech t!lat closely
paralleled bis Sunday night

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REG. 49'

Ill QJIIAlE

TO 6:00

OILY
MIKE BUCitNER, LEFT, and Nelson Clny of Kentucky l!lblbi.ted the reserve dtamplon
bull and tbe m ve champion female owned by Charlie Boyd of Dover, Ky., at the
Southeastern Obio Polled Hereford :Jiow Friday at the Meigs Oltnty Fair.
'

•

QIVe an .

Democrats Lay Down Stand

old room

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The The Democrats demanded
Democratic party's national more individual ta1payer relief
beadquartel'8 charged Saturday than that proposed by the
that President Nixon's new President, postponement of the
economic plan came 31 months Social Security tax increase
late and "clearly favoced scheduled for January and
C(l'pol"ate interests over those adoption of the investment tax
of the average American credit without the stepup in
family."
ptantdepreclaUonratesalready
It gave credit to the ordered.
Democratic-controlled Con- They said lhese steps would
grea fer much of the action ' mean "a far more equitable
linaiJ,y taken by tile President to and more rapid program for
ball IDflallon.
the average' American as well
''Two elements of the crisis 1!8 a more effective economic
package are long overdue and prescription to get the economy
welccme: The freeze on wages moving."
and prices and tile Ooating of Fact criticized the "cavalier
the dollar," the party said in a treatment" by the administra·
special publication of the tion of AFL-CIO President
Democratltc National Com- George Meany and of the major
mittee's Fact newsletter. "But nations engaged in foreign
even bore several caveats are trade.
·
in order: The Nixon adminlStra- Despite their support for the
lion's refusal to freeze profits, investment tax .credit, the
diYidenda and interest rates Democrats said that proposal
diacrimlnates heavily against and the accelerated depreciasalaried and hourly workers." lion allowances would mean

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"an $8 billion tax bonanza in
&lt;Joe year for big business."
''It 'is certain that congressional Democrats will fight the
Nixon decision to make the
poor and government employes
pay for this gigantic tax break
for big business;" they said.
They said the 10 per cent ,
import surtax would go far '
toward elimin;lting the balance,'
of 'payments deficit but if '
retained too long, it could raise
prices, shield inefficient domestic business and set off p world
trade war.

Chloe Whipping
Southwest Haiti
,With Gale Winds

MIAMI (UP!) _ Tropical
storm Chloe whipped the
numed Barahona peninsula of
southwest Haiti with gale~
driven rains SatUrday, blit then
lost some of its strength and
beaded on a course that would
spare the rum· island of
Jamaica.
The National HtnTicane Center ~bed the season's third
IWGCJif, Aq, %1 (UPI) - Dt S.lll Vlelllanlele .,..eme tropical twister , as ''very
~I .. IVkef'l 'lestNpjeaCaoKy•llleOet.Sp; 'ileaUal disorganized" and said It was
.....Bllllnlaj••telllldMied
lte-tiGea.DatqVu MIDh packing winds of 50 miles an
•
hour 25 mph below .hurricane
waw!Mew Ira
FrldaJ.
'
strength.
ne
e.n ~~~wet~ • • • Ptl filial- .-!lac ...
Chloe, earlier forecast to hit
pi II 1111
f .. lllll•*r~eewllllllle._tiFt " •
NJiJ- vu 'l'lllew _. Ky • lt. ne d tlwe r..1te aec 1 d Jamaica, ,was expecbld to pass
........ ~_ ......... _ . ........ _ ......lly about 100 miles to the south of
IIMllela Sa IIi.., . . . . . lllree .,. ..... of the lepllbne liH: Caribbean toufis~ island
SalW'day night.

Ky Makes Ballot
Buy Now &amp; Save!

ar
exchange, floating currency
subject to supply and demand,
or some combination of both . .
In Washingtnn, a defiant
Meany called a meeting of
lawyers of the 13.6 millionmember labor federation's 120
WJion affiliates at AFL-CIO
headquarters across Lafayette
Park from the White Ho~
next Thursday "because of the
substantial nature of the many
legal issues" raised by Nixon's
new economic policies.
Two big non-member Wlions,
the United Auto Workers and
the United Mine Workers of
America, have been invited to
attend.
Although Meany's annoWJcement did not speculate on the
outcome, an AF'L-CIO spokesman said "there obviously will
be court tests" of Nixon's
power to suspend wage boosts
coming due during the freeze
period Wlder previously negoti·
ated contracts.
Even before the meeting, the
meat cutters union announced
it would file suit early next
week in U.S. District Court
here seeking · iill injWJction
against Connally and his Cost
of Uving CoWJcil "to halt
action depriving workers of
In Los Angeles, United Auto
Workers President Leonard
Woodcock Said the UAW Wlion
would go tn court if North
American Rockwell refuses to
grant a pay increase to
aerospace workers on Oct. 2
under its existing contract.

UMIT6~

WASH
·CLOTHS

of the Council of Economic Friday night the group broke
Advisers ; CoWlcil member Her- intn subcommittees: budget and
b"ert Stein; Arthur F. Burns, faxes headed by Shultz; wages
chainnan of the Federal and prices h,eaded by Weber ;
Reserve System; Management and international monetary
and Budget (OMB) Director matters headed by Connally.
George P. Shultz; Presidential The subcommittees worked well
speech writer William Safire; past midnight, meeting in
Paul A. Volcker, treasury three-room laurel cabin next lo
undersecretary for monetary Nixon's Aspen Lodge. ·
affairs; Peter G. Peterson, But while the subcommittees
Nil&lt;on'Sfldvisedor international were working , Nixon, using
economic matters; Caspar w. three sheets of yellow lined
Weinberger, deputy director of · paper, was writing the first
OMB for budget; Arnold draft of his Sunday night
Weber, now executive director speech .
of the Cost of Uving Council ; The official was asked why
Kenneth Dan, assistant direc- the aides continued to meet
tor, management and budget; with most of the big decisions
Michael Bradfield, a treasury apparently already made.
department attorney; top White "The President is big for the
House aides John Ehrlichman devil's advocate," the official
and H.R. Haldeman ; Nixon's replied. "He likes to see people
personal secretary, Rose Mary try to poke holes into an
Woods, and Marge Acker , argument to see if they can."
another White House secretary. On Saturday, Nixon dictated

the first version of the speech
intn a tape recorder, making
adjustments in his notes as he
went along. This was turned
over tn Safire for polishing.
But Nixon continued to work
personally on the speech. As
one official said, he "honed the
words."

The officials said contingency
planning for the new program
began at least six weeks before
it was announced. Shullz
assigned a group of government
technicians to gather infonna.
tion and work out details. But
he split up the work so that no
technician could see more than
a small part of the whole
fabric .
Consumer advocate Ralph
Nader, however, testified before Congress' Joint Economic
Committee , that " it is now

clear that a number of
corporate leaders knew in

advance of pOrtions or tile
package." Nader said that OQiy
the auto indilstry rould have
provided the adminislratiGo
with the figures of 500,000 ean
sold and the creatioo of m,aoo
new jobs through a wage-price
freeze.
As Stein and Safire were
leaving the White House Friday
aftern0011 on their way to Camp
David, Stein, a historian as~
as an economist, """!~"ked :
"This may be the most
important weekend in ecooomic
history since Mare!&gt; 4, 1933."
The 1933 date was the
inauguration of President
Franklin D. Roosevelt and
marked the start of the New
Deal.
Nothing that happened during
the Camp David sessioo or the
week that followed dimmed
Stein's assessment of the
importance of Nilon's new
program.

0

I

i'

I

•·

I

t

I

PARTI'R FFYNNON, a dtoir of school teadters in

Wales, touring the United States this month, j\'ill make two

open air appearances at Rio Grande the weekend c:i August
28-29.

Welsh Choir in Gallia Concerts
~ One

of tlie, . outstandingmusicaltreatsoftheseasonwill
be heard coming from the Bob
Evans Farms Shelter House at
Rio Grande Saturday, 7:30 p.
m., Aug. 28.
It will be the first of two
concerts, the second to follow
Sunday, Aug. 29 at the same
hour and place, by the Parli'r
Ffynnon, all Welsh schoolteachers, winner of three
straight royal prizes in Wales.
·

A "cultural first" at the l!ob
Evans Farms, the choir will be
guests at the Bob Evans Farms
Restaurant, Rio Grande both
days. Members will be housed
by parishioners of the Rio
Grande Baptist Chw-ch.

In addition tn the two open air
concerts, the choir will give a
concert in Grace United
Methodist Church, Gallipolis,
Second and Cedar Sts., at8:30 a.

m. SWlday. At.JO:JQ, a.,m. its
members ·separate into Itomen
(Parti 'r Ffyonn ) and men
(Hogia 'r Wyddfa ). The women
will sing at the Rio Grande
Baptist Church, the men at the
Oak Hill Presbyterian Church ,
Tours of the Bob Evans
Farms and of the Welsh
coWJtry, including Thyn Rhos
Church and museum, will be
given the visitors.
The weekend stop in Gallia
County , sponsored by Bob

Evans Fanns, is 011e of several
the choir is making In the
United States this month. A
three-timewlnnerinWebbfolk
song cOmpetititmS at the Royal
National Eisteddfod of Wales,
the group is mainly from Flint,
Wales.
Touring with the 'eacben'
'choral group will be Hogia'r
Wyddfa (The ~ Men) a
folk-singing group from
Uanberis in Caemarvonshire,
Wales.

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freeze-he cited teacher pay
raises due next month-and
plan for orderly anti-inflationa·
ry moves once the freeze ends
on Nov. 12.
In Europe, fimincial analysts
predicted confusion when all
foreign exchange markets ex·
cept those in Switzerland open
on Monday for the first time
since Nil&lt;on ended the dollar's
convertibility into gold and let
its value "float" in relation to
other world currencies.
Lacking agreement by the
six-nation Common Markel
ministers on a joint approach,
each nation's central bank will
set its own course, with some
standing by fixed rates of

BOOKS

Low Price
SPECIAL!

SUNDAY

•

By ROBERT M. ANDREWS was a scheduled interview
WASHINGTON {UPI)-AFL- Sunday on CBS' "Face the
CIO President George Meany ·Nation"program,Smith's aides
summoned union lawyers from 8aid·he might attempt to meet
across the country Saturday to with Treasury Secretary John
plan wholesale court cballenges B. Connally and other federal
of President Nixon's wage-price officials to avoid a legal
freeze. The Democrats charged showdown. Connally is a former
that Nixon's economic policies Texas governor. The govern"clearly favored corporate in· ment plans to seek an
leresis."
injWJction against Smith in U.S.
Gov. Preston Smith of Texas, District Court in Austin on
under threat of a justice Tuesday.
department suit for awarding Senate Democratic Leader
pay raises to 132,000 teachers Mike Mansfield meanwhile
and other state employes in called for· a ''9(klay freeze on
violation of the freeze, flew to rhetoric." He invited the
W,ashington to present bis case administration to fonn a joint
on nationwide television.
conunittee with Congress tn
While the purpose of hiB trip work out inequities in the

Valvoline

THEME

OPEN

an

increase in the personal income
tax exemption now scheduled
for Jan. I, 1973.
NiJ&lt;on called the package the
most comprehensive economic
change in four decades. Few
were willing tn dispute that
assessment, especially when the
dollar is taken into accoWJI.
One official said Nixon
decided at least a month before
the Camp David meeting that if
any action were taken at all it
would be a far-reaching program.
"He became increasingly
imcomfortable with discussions
of a particular problem and
solutions to that problem
because it was not complete,"
the official said.
The Camp David meeting
was attended by what was
considered to be the bare
minimum number of persons.
Included were Nil&lt;on; Connally;
Paul W. McCracken, chainnan

~~~L~V~I-N0~.~30----~~~--=~S~UN~DA~Y~.A~UG~]=~~2~2.~19~7~1---------=~~PA._GE-13

$

• Tires: Diamond tread.

The way lhese officials
nplained it, mQSt ·of the basic
decisions were made personally
by Nlx'l" before the moWltain·
top meeting began. The assem,
bled experts spent most of their
time trying to dope out the
consequences of decisions~dy tentatively made by the
President.
"By the time he got to Camp

Meany Mounts

Service For 8

Reg. 59.95

name.

David, he had the relationship
in bis mind," one official said
in 'reference to Nixon.
He said Nixon and Treasury
Secretary John li. Co1111a!IY
oullined ·the baSic situation
wben the meeting began Friday
afternoon. After four hours of
discussion, Nixon delivered a
21kninute swnmary of hiS
televised speech, which also ran
for almost nactly 20 minutes.
That speech ended with
Nixon's call to go 'to work.
The President ultimately
frilze wages, prices and rents
for 90 days; ordered a 5 oer
cent cut in govenunent employ·
ment; put
additional 10 per
cell! tax on imports; and, in
effect, devalued the dollar. He
also asked Congress to elimin·
ate .the 7 per cent auto excise
tax, provide a 10 per cent tax
credit to help business buy
machinery and equipment and
advance by one year a $50

iunb~ ~imt!f- itntintl

TRANSISTOR

50 PIECE
DINNERWARE

the President's western Maryiand mOIDitain "'treat. Seven·
teen pei"500S attended the
session which began Friday
afternoon and ended Sunday a
few hours before Nixon ez.
plained the plan to the
television audience.
Two of the officials who
attended the meeting described
It to a small group of newsmen
in an hour-long interview in the
White House. There was an
Wlderstanding t)ult the officials
·would not be identified by

--:r

The Democratic National
Committee, in a special state•
ment issued six days after
N~.,,
announced his new
economic moves, welcomed the
wage-price freeze and the
floating of the dollar but
criticized his failure to freeze
profits, dividends and interest
rates.
The President acted "31
months late and with an
economic program that clearly
favored corporate interests
over those of the average
American family," the party's
national headquarters said.
In Tampa, Fla., on his way
back from a Virgin Islands
vacation, Sen. George S.
McGovern, D-S.D., called for an
82 per cent excess profits tax
on all corporate income exceed·
ing 1970 earnings.
"An excess profits tax is the
only way to provide some
measure of economic justice to
the working man and woman,"
McGovern said.

2 Grand Champion Awards
POMEROY -Ingrid Hawley was presented two grand
champi.., awanls and ooe reserve cbam1!4on award aod
Jennlfer Cbapmao received one graod cbampioo award and
..,ereserve cbampl411 award followlag the jodglag ol the i-H
displays In the Jimtor Fair Bulldlng Friday at tbe Meigs
County Fair.
Miss Hawley was presented die graod cbamplon award
Ia dec&lt;nJDa and qnlek meals aod reserve champion award
ill teenagers entertain, wbUe Miss Cbapmao was awarded
grand ebampioo In teenagen entertain and reserve c~­
pion in decorama. 'lbe girls are memben of Pomeroy Bend
HI. Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee is the advisor.

' ' ·. ,., · ,., , , .,., -~~t:I~lll~%Hlff~i~{[:]:)!]{:!:~f::t:@:j:W~l[l!:i:f)1!~[:}@@j~\:~:~{AWI\?%it::

Smith to Explain
AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI)-Texas abide by the Presidential order
Gov. Preston Smith flew to stopping increases in prices and '
Washingtnn Saturday ·to tell the wages for 90 days.
'
nation on television why he
"The main thing he is going
plans to grant raises tn state tn do is prepare for and appear
employes and teachers in on 'Face The Nation'," said
defiance of President Nixon's Otice Green, the governor's
price-wage freeze.
.
assistant. "It's possible we may
The governor's aides also meet with some federal offisaid he might attempt to meet cials, but that decision will be
with officials of the Nixon made on the way up there."
administration to avoid a legal
showdown. The government has ' Smith took with him two legal
annoWJced plans to file suit in advisers, two press aides, state
Austin Tuesday tn force Smith budget officer Jim Oliver and
and other state officials to Texas Secretary of Slate
Martin Dies Jr.
~~::.---~&lt;."'*':&gt;m&gt;Y.:.~~'«$.

Those 'scheduled to attend in
the American delegation were :
David Rockefeller, board chairman of the Chase Manhattan
Bank; Lynn J. Townsend,
Chrysler's board chainnan ;
Mark Shepherd, president of
Texas Instrument; Roy L. Ash,
president of Utton Industries;
fonner Agriculture Secretary
Orville Freerilan who is ·now
president of Business Internstiona! Corporation, and Carl A.
Gerstacker, board chairman of
Dow Chemical.
In addition to lwasa, the
Japanese delegation was scheduled to include Shigeo Hagano,
•cbainilan of Nippon
Steel;
._, __
Tatsuzo ~. Cn•unnan of
Mitsui, and TelZQ Horikoshi,
vice president of the.Federatlon
of Econoinic Organizations
(Keidanren).

SAIGON (UPI) - North
Vietnamese tanks were
reported close to South
Vietnam's demilitarized Zone
(DMZ)defenseliaeSatunlay.
Intense anlialroraft fire
grounded u. s. observal(9n
beiicoplers and kept the
Allies from pinpointing
locations of the tanks.
Military sources said the
tanks are believed to be
Soviet-built PT7h, wblcb
were used by the North
VleiDamese ill coliDterlag the
S.uth Vietnamese drive into
Laos ellrly this year. They
apparently were drlvea from
· tile Ho Cbi MIDh TraU ID Laos
Into Vietnam, SOVttS told
UPI c:orrespondellt Stewart
Kellerman al Qaaa« Tri
com~ base. ·

Green said the delegatiop had
made no appointments to meet
Treasury Secretary John B.
Connally, a fanner Texas
governor, or any other Nixon
official.

7 Dead in
Escape Try
SAN QUENTIN, Calif. (UPI )
-Three San Quentin Prison
guards and four inmates,
including "Soledad Brother"
George Jackson . were killed
Saturday in a bloody escape
attempt in this maximum
security penitentiary.
Three other guards were
taken to a hospital with knife
wounds, and another convict
was reported woWJded.
Jackson, 29, was one of the
three Soledad State Prison
inmates accused of killing a
guard last year in a case which
allegedly led to the Aug , 7,
1970, Marin Coun ty shootout for
which Angela Davis is charged
with murder and kidnaping.
Prison officials said Jackson
and another convict escaped
from a special · security cell·
block at 3:15p.m. PDT. Neither
made it outside the walls.
Unconfirmed reports were that
weapons were smuggled into

the prison DeJt to San
Francisco Bay aboard a tourist
bus.
An hoor later prison olfidals
said the situation was "under
control" and prison ~
Manager Irving Ritter told
newsmen :
''Three guards are dead.
Three guards are wounded.
Four inmates are dead."
Other prison officials Identified Jackson as one of the slain
inmates.
Jackson's yOIDiger brother
Jonathan , 11, was kiBed in the
August 1970 shootoul at the
Marin Cotlnty Civic Center near
the prison. He smuggled &amp;1115
into a courtroom in an attempt .
tn free three convicts who - . .
on trial. Three others, inclndinl!
a judge, died in the gunbattle.
Miss Davis, a former UCLA
philosophy instructor, was
charged with being Involved in
the plot.

Economy at a Glance

By United Pras bll!natl.al
WASifiNGTON - AFLaO Praidmt Gecqe liT 1Y
Smith reaffirmed Friday his JI'oposed a wholesale court challenge of Ft lllalt NJJ:an•a._.
decision to buck the freeze and pice freeze as Democrats claimed tile Pr!lifent's e&lt;"Aik
grant wage 'increases to the · policies favor "corporate interest&amp;."

132 000 teachers and other state
WASifiNGTON - White House ofticiala malnt.laed IIIII lNs
employes whose raises would
have been held up by the year's federal oodget deficit will be larger thin the flU billta
forecast earlier,
presidential order.

The governor said the main
issue at stake is not whether he
is patriotic or Wlpatriotic, but
whether the President can
overrule a state law , The law he
refers to is the bill passed.by the
Texas legislature which
provides for tbe pay increases
effective
Sept. 1.
\JOtifX.\\Wt!''"'""'~"W .. a~

AUSTIN, Tex.-Gov. Prestcr.Smith,in;,jndlna• IWJuaa
with the Nixon adminisll'atioo, flew to Wal'liiCWJ toe £I !e •
television why he defied the wage-price rr- bJ
planstngoaheadwithralsesfcratat..emplojlelmll 1 + L
TOKYO - Japan's ~ minister t!IIR::alallhe ..a.'l
holdings of gold and .f&lt;reijpt currency, p1 I ill' Aawlid
dollars -'- have increased to Sl1.6 billlan lie
llf lilt P s1 a
of the U. S. dollar.

�'

'

"~'

'

'

'

President's Pep Talk to Advisors Was Preview
,

SHOP SUNDAY 12 IO 6

A Clean Swee
Of Bargains'

. IIOIDIJ 10 AM - I Pll

~address.

~ \\\

His punch line in the private
~on was dramatic: ''Whe""
· do we go from bere? What do
we do now? You get off your
buill"and g11 to work."
Aides who heard the speech
said the admonition was
directed ·both at the officials
who were faced with an
intenaiv~ ~ of planning
and at the nation as a whole.
which is faced with its most
severe econoinic problems in a
clecade.
The details of the new policy
were worked out last weekend
in a meeting at Camp David,

Special
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llj NORMAN ·KEMPSTER
. WASHINGTON(UPI)-About
41 houri before President Nixon
reve.Jed bis · ~ economic
policy to the nation, he
deli...ered to an audience of
carefully selected advisers an
oft~ speech t!lat closely
paralleled bis Sunday night

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OILY
MIKE BUCitNER, LEFT, and Nelson Clny of Kentucky l!lblbi.ted the reserve dtamplon
bull and tbe m ve champion female owned by Charlie Boyd of Dover, Ky., at the
Southeastern Obio Polled Hereford :Jiow Friday at the Meigs Oltnty Fair.
'

•

QIVe an .

Democrats Lay Down Stand

old room

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The The Democrats demanded
Democratic party's national more individual ta1payer relief
beadquartel'8 charged Saturday than that proposed by the
that President Nixon's new President, postponement of the
economic plan came 31 months Social Security tax increase
late and "clearly favoced scheduled for January and
C(l'pol"ate interests over those adoption of the investment tax
of the average American credit without the stepup in
family."
ptantdepreclaUonratesalready
It gave credit to the ordered.
Democratic-controlled Con- They said lhese steps would
grea fer much of the action ' mean "a far more equitable
linaiJ,y taken by tile President to and more rapid program for
ball IDflallon.
the average' American as well
''Two elements of the crisis 1!8 a more effective economic
package are long overdue and prescription to get the economy
welccme: The freeze on wages moving."
and prices and tile Ooating of Fact criticized the "cavalier
the dollar," the party said in a treatment" by the administra·
special publication of the tion of AFL-CIO President
Democratltc National Com- George Meany and of the major
mittee's Fact newsletter. "But nations engaged in foreign
even bore several caveats are trade.
·
in order: The Nixon adminlStra- Despite their support for the
lion's refusal to freeze profits, investment tax .credit, the
diYidenda and interest rates Democrats said that proposal
diacrimlnates heavily against and the accelerated depreciasalaried and hourly workers." lion allowances would mean

new

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"an $8 billion tax bonanza in
&lt;Joe year for big business."
''It 'is certain that congressional Democrats will fight the
Nixon decision to make the
poor and government employes
pay for this gigantic tax break
for big business;" they said.
They said the 10 per cent ,
import surtax would go far '
toward elimin;lting the balance,'
of 'payments deficit but if '
retained too long, it could raise
prices, shield inefficient domestic business and set off p world
trade war.

Chloe Whipping
Southwest Haiti
,With Gale Winds

MIAMI (UP!) _ Tropical
storm Chloe whipped the
numed Barahona peninsula of
southwest Haiti with gale~
driven rains SatUrday, blit then
lost some of its strength and
beaded on a course that would
spare the rum· island of
Jamaica.
The National HtnTicane Center ~bed the season's third
IWGCJif, Aq, %1 (UPI) - Dt S.lll Vlelllanlele .,..eme tropical twister , as ''very
~I .. IVkef'l 'lestNpjeaCaoKy•llleOet.Sp; 'ileaUal disorganized" and said It was
.....Bllllnlaj••telllldMied
lte-tiGea.DatqVu MIDh packing winds of 50 miles an
•
hour 25 mph below .hurricane
waw!Mew Ira
FrldaJ.
'
strength.
ne
e.n ~~~wet~ • • • Ptl filial- .-!lac ...
Chloe, earlier forecast to hit
pi II 1111
f .. lllll•*r~eewllllllle._tiFt " •
NJiJ- vu 'l'lllew _. Ky • lt. ne d tlwe r..1te aec 1 d Jamaica, ,was expecbld to pass
........ ~_ ......... _ . ........ _ ......lly about 100 miles to the south of
IIMllela Sa IIi.., . . . . . lllree .,. ..... of the lepllbne liH: Caribbean toufis~ island
SalW'day night.

Ky Makes Ballot
Buy Now &amp; Save!

ar
exchange, floating currency
subject to supply and demand,
or some combination of both . .
In Washingtnn, a defiant
Meany called a meeting of
lawyers of the 13.6 millionmember labor federation's 120
WJion affiliates at AFL-CIO
headquarters across Lafayette
Park from the White Ho~
next Thursday "because of the
substantial nature of the many
legal issues" raised by Nixon's
new economic policies.
Two big non-member Wlions,
the United Auto Workers and
the United Mine Workers of
America, have been invited to
attend.
Although Meany's annoWJcement did not speculate on the
outcome, an AF'L-CIO spokesman said "there obviously will
be court tests" of Nixon's
power to suspend wage boosts
coming due during the freeze
period Wlder previously negoti·
ated contracts.
Even before the meeting, the
meat cutters union announced
it would file suit early next
week in U.S. District Court
here seeking · iill injWJction
against Connally and his Cost
of Uving CoWJcil "to halt
action depriving workers of
In Los Angeles, United Auto
Workers President Leonard
Woodcock Said the UAW Wlion
would go tn court if North
American Rockwell refuses to
grant a pay increase to
aerospace workers on Oct. 2
under its existing contract.

UMIT6~

WASH
·CLOTHS

of the Council of Economic Friday night the group broke
Advisers ; CoWlcil member Her- intn subcommittees: budget and
b"ert Stein; Arthur F. Burns, faxes headed by Shultz; wages
chainnan of the Federal and prices h,eaded by Weber ;
Reserve System; Management and international monetary
and Budget (OMB) Director matters headed by Connally.
George P. Shultz; Presidential The subcommittees worked well
speech writer William Safire; past midnight, meeting in
Paul A. Volcker, treasury three-room laurel cabin next lo
undersecretary for monetary Nixon's Aspen Lodge. ·
affairs; Peter G. Peterson, But while the subcommittees
Nil&lt;on'Sfldvisedor international were working , Nixon, using
economic matters; Caspar w. three sheets of yellow lined
Weinberger, deputy director of · paper, was writing the first
OMB for budget; Arnold draft of his Sunday night
Weber, now executive director speech .
of the Cost of Uving Council ; The official was asked why
Kenneth Dan, assistant direc- the aides continued to meet
tor, management and budget; with most of the big decisions
Michael Bradfield, a treasury apparently already made.
department attorney; top White "The President is big for the
House aides John Ehrlichman devil's advocate," the official
and H.R. Haldeman ; Nixon's replied. "He likes to see people
personal secretary, Rose Mary try to poke holes into an
Woods, and Marge Acker , argument to see if they can."
another White House secretary. On Saturday, Nixon dictated

the first version of the speech
intn a tape recorder, making
adjustments in his notes as he
went along. This was turned
over tn Safire for polishing.
But Nixon continued to work
personally on the speech. As
one official said, he "honed the
words."

The officials said contingency
planning for the new program
began at least six weeks before
it was announced. Shullz
assigned a group of government
technicians to gather infonna.
tion and work out details. But
he split up the work so that no
technician could see more than
a small part of the whole
fabric .
Consumer advocate Ralph
Nader, however, testified before Congress' Joint Economic
Committee , that " it is now

clear that a number of
corporate leaders knew in

advance of pOrtions or tile
package." Nader said that OQiy
the auto indilstry rould have
provided the adminislratiGo
with the figures of 500,000 ean
sold and the creatioo of m,aoo
new jobs through a wage-price
freeze.
As Stein and Safire were
leaving the White House Friday
aftern0011 on their way to Camp
David, Stein, a historian as~
as an economist, """!~"ked :
"This may be the most
important weekend in ecooomic
history since Mare!&gt; 4, 1933."
The 1933 date was the
inauguration of President
Franklin D. Roosevelt and
marked the start of the New
Deal.
Nothing that happened during
the Camp David sessioo or the
week that followed dimmed
Stein's assessment of the
importance of Nilon's new
program.

0

I

i'

I

•·

I

t

I

PARTI'R FFYNNON, a dtoir of school teadters in

Wales, touring the United States this month, j\'ill make two

open air appearances at Rio Grande the weekend c:i August
28-29.

Welsh Choir in Gallia Concerts
~ One

of tlie, . outstandingmusicaltreatsoftheseasonwill
be heard coming from the Bob
Evans Farms Shelter House at
Rio Grande Saturday, 7:30 p.
m., Aug. 28.
It will be the first of two
concerts, the second to follow
Sunday, Aug. 29 at the same
hour and place, by the Parli'r
Ffynnon, all Welsh schoolteachers, winner of three
straight royal prizes in Wales.
·

A "cultural first" at the l!ob
Evans Farms, the choir will be
guests at the Bob Evans Farms
Restaurant, Rio Grande both
days. Members will be housed
by parishioners of the Rio
Grande Baptist Chw-ch.

In addition tn the two open air
concerts, the choir will give a
concert in Grace United
Methodist Church, Gallipolis,
Second and Cedar Sts., at8:30 a.

m. SWlday. At.JO:JQ, a.,m. its
members ·separate into Itomen
(Parti 'r Ffyonn ) and men
(Hogia 'r Wyddfa ). The women
will sing at the Rio Grande
Baptist Church, the men at the
Oak Hill Presbyterian Church ,
Tours of the Bob Evans
Farms and of the Welsh
coWJtry, including Thyn Rhos
Church and museum, will be
given the visitors.
The weekend stop in Gallia
County , sponsored by Bob

Evans Fanns, is 011e of several
the choir is making In the
United States this month. A
three-timewlnnerinWebbfolk
song cOmpetititmS at the Royal
National Eisteddfod of Wales,
the group is mainly from Flint,
Wales.
Touring with the 'eacben'
'choral group will be Hogia'r
Wyddfa (The ~ Men) a
folk-singing group from
Uanberis in Caemarvonshire,
Wales.

~~g:~~::.ses :~~~~:=~~~~ :$~}ttMJW~1~liiftttMHtifiTd?!{J~I:::i~t::::{:::::K::::~~:··L::::i;;:::·

ONLY ·

Extra Heavy

12 NOON

freeze-he cited teacher pay
raises due next month-and
plan for orderly anti-inflationa·
ry moves once the freeze ends
on Nov. 12.
In Europe, fimincial analysts
predicted confusion when all
foreign exchange markets ex·
cept those in Switzerland open
on Monday for the first time
since Nil&lt;on ended the dollar's
convertibility into gold and let
its value "float" in relation to
other world currencies.
Lacking agreement by the
six-nation Common Markel
ministers on a joint approach,
each nation's central bank will
set its own course, with some
standing by fixed rates of

BOOKS

Low Price
SPECIAL!

SUNDAY

•

By ROBERT M. ANDREWS was a scheduled interview
WASHINGTON {UPI)-AFL- Sunday on CBS' "Face the
CIO President George Meany ·Nation"program,Smith's aides
summoned union lawyers from 8aid·he might attempt to meet
across the country Saturday to with Treasury Secretary John
plan wholesale court cballenges B. Connally and other federal
of President Nixon's wage-price officials to avoid a legal
freeze. The Democrats charged showdown. Connally is a former
that Nixon's economic policies Texas governor. The govern"clearly favored corporate in· ment plans to seek an
leresis."
injWJction against Smith in U.S.
Gov. Preston Smith of Texas, District Court in Austin on
under threat of a justice Tuesday.
department suit for awarding Senate Democratic Leader
pay raises to 132,000 teachers Mike Mansfield meanwhile
and other state employes in called for· a ''9(klay freeze on
violation of the freeze, flew to rhetoric." He invited the
W,ashington to present bis case administration to fonn a joint
on nationwide television.
conunittee with Congress tn
While the purpose of hiB trip work out inequities in the

Valvoline

THEME

OPEN

an

increase in the personal income
tax exemption now scheduled
for Jan. I, 1973.
NiJ&lt;on called the package the
most comprehensive economic
change in four decades. Few
were willing tn dispute that
assessment, especially when the
dollar is taken into accoWJI.
One official said Nixon
decided at least a month before
the Camp David meeting that if
any action were taken at all it
would be a far-reaching program.
"He became increasingly
imcomfortable with discussions
of a particular problem and
solutions to that problem
because it was not complete,"
the official said.
The Camp David meeting
was attended by what was
considered to be the bare
minimum number of persons.
Included were Nil&lt;on; Connally;
Paul W. McCracken, chainnan

~~~L~V~I-N0~.~30----~~~--=~S~UN~DA~Y~.A~UG~]=~~2~2.~19~7~1---------=~~PA._GE-13

$

• Tires: Diamond tread.

The way lhese officials
nplained it, mQSt ·of the basic
decisions were made personally
by Nlx'l" before the moWltain·
top meeting began. The assem,
bled experts spent most of their
time trying to dope out the
consequences of decisions~dy tentatively made by the
President.
"By the time he got to Camp

Meany Mounts

Service For 8

Reg. 59.95

name.

David, he had the relationship
in bis mind," one official said
in 'reference to Nixon.
He said Nixon and Treasury
Secretary John li. Co1111a!IY
oullined ·the baSic situation
wben the meeting began Friday
afternoon. After four hours of
discussion, Nixon delivered a
21kninute swnmary of hiS
televised speech, which also ran
for almost nactly 20 minutes.
That speech ended with
Nixon's call to go 'to work.
The President ultimately
frilze wages, prices and rents
for 90 days; ordered a 5 oer
cent cut in govenunent employ·
ment; put
additional 10 per
cell! tax on imports; and, in
effect, devalued the dollar. He
also asked Congress to elimin·
ate .the 7 per cent auto excise
tax, provide a 10 per cent tax
credit to help business buy
machinery and equipment and
advance by one year a $50

iunb~ ~imt!f- itntintl

TRANSISTOR

50 PIECE
DINNERWARE

the President's western Maryiand mOIDitain "'treat. Seven·
teen pei"500S attended the
session which began Friday
afternoon and ended Sunday a
few hours before Nixon ez.
plained the plan to the
television audience.
Two of the officials who
attended the meeting described
It to a small group of newsmen
in an hour-long interview in the
White House. There was an
Wlderstanding t)ult the officials
·would not be identified by

--:r

The Democratic National
Committee, in a special state•
ment issued six days after
N~.,,
announced his new
economic moves, welcomed the
wage-price freeze and the
floating of the dollar but
criticized his failure to freeze
profits, dividends and interest
rates.
The President acted "31
months late and with an
economic program that clearly
favored corporate interests
over those of the average
American family," the party's
national headquarters said.
In Tampa, Fla., on his way
back from a Virgin Islands
vacation, Sen. George S.
McGovern, D-S.D., called for an
82 per cent excess profits tax
on all corporate income exceed·
ing 1970 earnings.
"An excess profits tax is the
only way to provide some
measure of economic justice to
the working man and woman,"
McGovern said.

2 Grand Champion Awards
POMEROY -Ingrid Hawley was presented two grand
champi.., awanls and ooe reserve cbam1!4on award aod
Jennlfer Cbapmao received one graod cbampioo award and
..,ereserve cbampl411 award followlag the jodglag ol the i-H
displays In the Jimtor Fair Bulldlng Friday at tbe Meigs
County Fair.
Miss Hawley was presented die graod cbamplon award
Ia dec&lt;nJDa and qnlek meals aod reserve champion award
ill teenagers entertain, wbUe Miss Cbapmao was awarded
grand ebampioo In teenagen entertain and reserve c~­
pion in decorama. 'lbe girls are memben of Pomeroy Bend
HI. Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee is the advisor.

' ' ·. ,., · ,., , , .,., -~~t:I~lll~%Hlff~i~{[:]:)!]{:!:~f::t:@:j:W~l[l!:i:f)1!~[:}@@j~\:~:~{AWI\?%it::

Smith to Explain
AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI)-Texas abide by the Presidential order
Gov. Preston Smith flew to stopping increases in prices and '
Washingtnn Saturday ·to tell the wages for 90 days.
'
nation on television why he
"The main thing he is going
plans to grant raises tn state tn do is prepare for and appear
employes and teachers in on 'Face The Nation'," said
defiance of President Nixon's Otice Green, the governor's
price-wage freeze.
.
assistant. "It's possible we may
The governor's aides also meet with some federal offisaid he might attempt to meet cials, but that decision will be
with officials of the Nixon made on the way up there."
administration to avoid a legal
showdown. The government has ' Smith took with him two legal
annoWJced plans to file suit in advisers, two press aides, state
Austin Tuesday tn force Smith budget officer Jim Oliver and
and other state officials to Texas Secretary of Slate
Martin Dies Jr.
~~::.---~&lt;."'*':&gt;m&gt;Y.:.~~'«$.

Those 'scheduled to attend in
the American delegation were :
David Rockefeller, board chairman of the Chase Manhattan
Bank; Lynn J. Townsend,
Chrysler's board chainnan ;
Mark Shepherd, president of
Texas Instrument; Roy L. Ash,
president of Utton Industries;
fonner Agriculture Secretary
Orville Freerilan who is ·now
president of Business Internstiona! Corporation, and Carl A.
Gerstacker, board chairman of
Dow Chemical.
In addition to lwasa, the
Japanese delegation was scheduled to include Shigeo Hagano,
•cbainilan of Nippon
Steel;
._, __
Tatsuzo ~. Cn•unnan of
Mitsui, and TelZQ Horikoshi,
vice president of the.Federatlon
of Econoinic Organizations
(Keidanren).

SAIGON (UPI) - North
Vietnamese tanks were
reported close to South
Vietnam's demilitarized Zone
(DMZ)defenseliaeSatunlay.
Intense anlialroraft fire
grounded u. s. observal(9n
beiicoplers and kept the
Allies from pinpointing
locations of the tanks.
Military sources said the
tanks are believed to be
Soviet-built PT7h, wblcb
were used by the North
VleiDamese ill coliDterlag the
S.uth Vietnamese drive into
Laos ellrly this year. They
apparently were drlvea from
· tile Ho Cbi MIDh TraU ID Laos
Into Vietnam, SOVttS told
UPI c:orrespondellt Stewart
Kellerman al Qaaa« Tri
com~ base. ·

Green said the delegatiop had
made no appointments to meet
Treasury Secretary John B.
Connally, a fanner Texas
governor, or any other Nixon
official.

7 Dead in
Escape Try
SAN QUENTIN, Calif. (UPI )
-Three San Quentin Prison
guards and four inmates,
including "Soledad Brother"
George Jackson . were killed
Saturday in a bloody escape
attempt in this maximum
security penitentiary.
Three other guards were
taken to a hospital with knife
wounds, and another convict
was reported woWJded.
Jackson, 29, was one of the
three Soledad State Prison
inmates accused of killing a
guard last year in a case which
allegedly led to the Aug , 7,
1970, Marin Coun ty shootout for
which Angela Davis is charged
with murder and kidnaping.
Prison officials said Jackson
and another convict escaped
from a special · security cell·
block at 3:15p.m. PDT. Neither
made it outside the walls.
Unconfirmed reports were that
weapons were smuggled into

the prison DeJt to San
Francisco Bay aboard a tourist
bus.
An hoor later prison olfidals
said the situation was "under
control" and prison ~
Manager Irving Ritter told
newsmen :
''Three guards are dead.
Three guards are wounded.
Four inmates are dead."
Other prison officials Identified Jackson as one of the slain
inmates.
Jackson's yOIDiger brother
Jonathan , 11, was kiBed in the
August 1970 shootoul at the
Marin Cotlnty Civic Center near
the prison. He smuggled &amp;1115
into a courtroom in an attempt .
tn free three convicts who - . .
on trial. Three others, inclndinl!
a judge, died in the gunbattle.
Miss Davis, a former UCLA
philosophy instructor, was
charged with being Involved in
the plot.

Economy at a Glance

By United Pras bll!natl.al
WASifiNGTON - AFLaO Praidmt Gecqe liT 1Y
Smith reaffirmed Friday his JI'oposed a wholesale court challenge of Ft lllalt NJJ:an•a._.
decision to buck the freeze and pice freeze as Democrats claimed tile Pr!lifent's e&lt;"Aik
grant wage 'increases to the · policies favor "corporate interest&amp;."

132 000 teachers and other state
WASifiNGTON - White House ofticiala malnt.laed IIIII lNs
employes whose raises would
have been held up by the year's federal oodget deficit will be larger thin the flU billta
forecast earlier,
presidential order.

The governor said the main
issue at stake is not whether he
is patriotic or Wlpatriotic, but
whether the President can
overrule a state law , The law he
refers to is the bill passed.by the
Texas legislature which
provides for tbe pay increases
effective
Sept. 1.
\JOtifX.\\Wt!''"'""'~"W .. a~

AUSTIN, Tex.-Gov. Prestcr.Smith,in;,jndlna• IWJuaa
with the Nixon adminisll'atioo, flew to Wal'liiCWJ toe £I !e •
television why he defied the wage-price rr- bJ
planstngoaheadwithralsesfcratat..emplojlelmll 1 + L
TOKYO - Japan's ~ minister t!IIR::alallhe ..a.'l
holdings of gold and .f&lt;reijpt currency, p1 I ill' Aawlid
dollars -'- have increased to Sl1.6 billlan lie
llf lilt P s1 a
of the U. S. dollar.

�,,

•

.

Everybody Straining on Ohio Budget Problems
roLiliiBlJS (UPI) - Lut week, botb the American econcmy silent Scme pledged l!r'Miglngly to go along wilb lbe President.
IIIII Olllo'IIJadlet beeinlf ltraiJied to thf pW!t ......... the cbief . Manf understood lbe position ri lbe 10Yel'll!lr.
~ !be nation ml state cDncidentally gave a yank oo
Twoparticulat~o lol)by groups tied firmly to tbe budget tax
Ill! reiaL
problem Oasbed tbeir colors when tbe call came to put ''sel"
"Beet.U&amp;bleninll" and ''austerity" were the watdlwords of secom.
.
~ 1 [M NixoD aD4 Goy, Jam J . G!l!igan, wllo respectively inFrank ·King, president of lbe Ohio AFL&lt;:IO, wondered for
llliluled a ~ce freele and lhrealened a L'llthack in state quotatim wbelber President Niioo had ~ bean! of "inp;uwt aerviees.
volunlarY senitude."
·
Sarealllt t.meat
Bolbactiomwere taRn tonstorefiscalbalance. Both required
The labor organiratim' s weetly publication, ''News and
the Week (Ohio) in
views," sarcastically laDitllted tbat N"mon bad pre-empted ''Bonam.a" and the "Su!Jday Night Movie" to teD the American
fcfttln'lb~ and courage. Both necessarily would result in a
ca lain amount ri Indiscriminate bardship. And botb were taken pewle that ''someone was going to be fm;ed to make a sacrifice
tmtil Ibis nasty inflationary spiral beccmes unwoond."
by Dltll wboae polilical views are wide divl!ll!eni.
''Guess wbo?" tile pWiication inquired. ''Yep. You ... tbe
II ill U.lel tlllit\j! to note that ~ twin calls to sacrifice were
IDCIIIt poorly taken by lbe same people wbo are respmsibJe for a working peq1le of America, have once again been selected· to
majorsblreofthe bic:tering over Ohio's budget and tax problem5 make the SUJftme sacrifice.
"Mr. Niim's Sunday special boils down to Ibis: the working
-lobbyists and special interest I!I'OUPS.
Not aD the opeclal in!Best grwp&lt;prolested lo111ly. Some were people t:l America must forget about any upcuning pay raise so

-u-

Review

.

:.::

'•,

Real Blockbuster
EDJTOR'S NOTE: Dr. Pierre evaluate and criticize that men but most frequently by

.

.......·.;. '•'•

,•,

'• •,•

...... ·............•. ·.·.

Tricky Diety can get reelected "':rt Noveinber.'' the publication

groupsiJidblarWitforthecurrent~etlnq

,

Sunday Savings

are

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

.

-=:~:~:§W.&gt;z.~::z::!.•

of the the last nine monthS, govern:

F'OINT PLEASANT STORE ONLY
BOYS'
LONG SLEEVE

the Saturday wire
By UPI
arrAWA _ THE ~
States Is unjustified in applying
the 10 pet. import surcharge 'against Canada since it
. will only heighten Ibis nation's
financial problems and In no
way help resl«e the u. s.
economy, Prime Minister
Pierre Elliott Trudeau said

Sentence Correct, but Unfair

10 Die in
Political
Meeting

Baker and Gooch Show Champions

1:00 P.M. - 7:00 P.M.

.

passengers or crew.
"That pilot did a tremendOU5
-':rail If a.. N!Da ....-k to be nwnerous and their and Dr. Arthur Burns, chair- entire program that he has not ment spending has surged but
job t:l landing that aircraft,"
flillUJ •
ed AD&amp;. 15, II criticisms will have to be man of the Federal Reserve ·advocated.
the economy has not. We had to
said Herman Zak, assistant
fl I hal aad did esftoUte heard. But here is one thing to Board.
. In my judgment the Pres- Wlleash the vigor and vitaUty.of
opera lions manager of the
ol"!! tf RlilfiLdB l&amp;a Asllt- keep in mind: You need to
-The devaluation of the ident has inlroduced and the private sector because the
airportbere. The,airliner, flight
dltl!l, lllc., a 1111
" I know the prejudices and dollar was advocated by tbe proposed the m';'St comprehen- ~ublic sector couldn't do the
11'1, ~tedatBuffalo, N.Y.,
ec
le aad IJuadal c mll- credentials of the critics if you congressional jOint ecooamic SIVe, far-reaching and cou- JOb.
made a stop at Plttsbirgb, and
lac linD • 1 c U.C cea- are going to ·widerstand and subcommittee on international rageous program of my life- Three. We have moved on the
was ICbed.uled. to go on to
M
llaft l!tell PI I' k evaluate their positions.
exchange and payments headed time. Why do I enthusiastically wage and price front. The 00.
Parkersburg, CiocinnaU and
Nlua uol Jehra
The first thing to recognize is byRep.HenryReuss, 0-W'IS.
endorse and advocate his day freeze may not work but at Friday.
Indianapolis.
that the President's economic
-The 10 per cent import tax program?
least the. peopl~ ~ve seen that
"If no~ is dooe to mnove
COLUMBUS - SENATE
By PIEIUlE A. RINFRET prq~C~Sals represent tile gather- was openly advocated just a
Number of Reasons
the ~dent IS deler!!Iined ~ or prevent 111e impact of that Republican leaders are ·exWrtuea fw UPI
ing.together and amalgamation few weeks ago by Mills.
One. We have fmally gotten stop mflation. The key fact IS surcharge ... It will cause lbe ~ted to engineer a big push
At one fell swoop President of many individual prwos•ls:
-The idea of terminating our rid of the barbaric relic of gold. that . he had the courage to loss of many thousands of jobs this week to get a budget and
N"Wil vigarausly and forcefully
-The 10 per cent invesiment. willingness to buy or sell gold We have, with the border (or reverse himself and this may in Canada.'' Trudaau said in 8 tax package an m'llled fer Door
attacked our domestic as well tax: credit was originally probably came from Paul import) tax, redressed our just be successful. At least we nationwide radio-television action at least by tbe following
as international~ prob- · advocated by Sen. Vance Volcker, wder secrelarY of the international positi~n and..at- have .the courage to exper- address. HeSI!id u.s. exports ia week. Senators have been told
!ems. His Smday night SJ1 eecb Hartke, 0-Ind., and later Treasury for monetary affairs. tacked the Wlf811' competition 1n1ent. The greatest economic Canadl! are comparable to lbe torepcrtto the Statehouse early
was a blockbuster. No one I propounded by Rep. Wilbur -The entire package was from Europe and most particu- power in the world must lead combilled total of all American and be prepared to stay lata in
!maw in the professional Mills, O.Ar.
probably put together by John larly from Japan. We have the way.
sales to Japan, Germany, hopes a lll!ttiement can be
ecOIICIIIIic or Dna!'Cfal field
Tu ExemplioiiS
Connally, the secretary of the indicated decisively that we are
Britain and France.
reacbed, at least within the
expected bim to eilber pr nt -The acceleration of person- Treasury.
a major economic power to The Pre$dent has taken a
'"Withoutourmarket~U.S. upper chamber.
any pngracn &lt;r to J11 s mt as al income 1a1 eiemptions was Few people realize that the reckon with and have, there- giant step in economic affairs. economy would be in mucb The Senale has scheduled its
far-readling a program as be proposed just a few weeks ago President had the courage and fore, strengthened tile dollar.
He is striding \\'here others more seriOU5 difficulties than it first Monday afternoon Door
did Aug. 15.
by Sen. Edward Muskie, 0. the vision to take all the
Two. We have given much- have feared to tread. His now finds ltllelf," he said.
sessloo li tile year. Meetings
Now we are going into tbe Maine.
partisan proposals and put needed tax relief to corpora- actions befit the office of the
PITTSBURGH
AN llCJrt!l8[ly COOllllt!oce Mooday
MODday morning quarterback- -The wage-price freeze was tbem together in one package. lions and individuals. That tax most powerful man in the ALLEGHENY Airlines twin- nigbtorTuesday aflemooo. The
ing phase al his program. advocated on many an occasion It is important to realize Ibis money will . go for consumer world. Niionomics are great engine furbo.pump carrying 50 House will not convene fully
Pewle are being asked to by many senators and congress- beeause the inQividual critic goods and for capital goods. In economics.
pissengers lost its main right WItil Tuesday.
Senate President Pro Ternlanding gear while landing at
Parkersburg, W. Va., airport pore Theod(ft M. Gray, RJrlday nigbt. The pilot, Robert Piqua, has ~d elementary and
Raines, applied power in the secondary educatioo funds need
. midst of the landing, took off to be approved soon, and has
ICBin, and made an emergency indicated be plans . to acFr. McPHERSON, Ga. (UPI)
George w. Latimer, Calley's murdering Vietnamese development would be "inapIM!ding at greater Plttsburgl! company tbem with the rest t:l
- Ll. Gen. Albert o. Connor' attorney, said he was pleased civilians is of no significance or propria te."
airport, without injury to the budget and tax package
~of the 'lbird Army, with the reduction,. but stlll that Calley was merely
rather than enact school
Friday found Lt. William hopes to have Calley's con- carrying out official or unof- F. Lee Bailey, civilian at.
firuincing and furlber spllt the
Calley's conviction legally viction reversed.
ficial policy. Tho Pentagon's torney for C8lley's commander,
already fragmented fiscal plan.
t.anect but reduced his life The atizens Commission of handling of aU war crimes Capt. Ernest L. Medina, who is
COLUMBUS
mE
!lelllfllce for tbe murder of 22 Inquiry into U. S. War Crimes in allegations demonstraies that currently on trial for 102
NEWESI'
bomber
In
tbe
U.
S.
v..w= es civilians at My Lai Washington said CoMor, ·while lx·th assumptions have long murders, said he was not
Air Force Strategic Air Comto II years.
acknowledging Calley's legal been adhered to by the military familiar with the legal points in
mand,
lbe supersonic FB-lll,
Calley~s case "but as to tile
That means caney will be guilt, '"could have only been leadership."
will be based at Lbckbourne Air
eUB;b!e for parole in late 19'17 or acting under one of two
The Western White House reduction of sentence, I think it
Force Base near here.
o!arly 19'18.
assumptions. Either that said comment on the Calley is appropriate."
The plane, made by General
Dynamlca, is a ~lion of tbe
F-lll taclical figbler. It has
AlllMAN WltOIILEWIU
variable sweep wings f&lt;r low
AIRMAN Stephea C.
By PATRICK J. KILLEN
and high apeeds and Is capable
Wroblewsld, son of Mr. and
MANILA(UPI)-TwoexplodPOMEROY-Lynne Ba_ker annoW!cer and Bill Downie, Jr., p!Jlce, Marcia Dillard; western The trophy for the highest Mrs. Arthur Wroblewdi of ing band grenades destroyed a t:l carrying nuclear or ·coowas awarded tbe grand was ringmaster.
horses, first place, Lynne point boy was presented to GalllpoUs, wbo will leave for stage crowded with candidates ventional weapms.
champion trophy and Juli Other' results of the event Baker; second place, Cindy Matthew Dillard whiJ.e the Vlelaam oa Sept. 31, II at a political raUy in-downtown COLUMBUS - FRANIWN
Gooch took reserve champion were as follows:
Gooch ; third place, Amy trophy for the third highest girl spending a 31-day leave at Manila Sai\U'daY night in an County Conunon Pleas Court
Judge Fred J. Shoemaker has
honors in tbe Meigs CoWlty t-H Meigs t-H Ph!asure Riders Huston.
was given to Cindy Gooch.
borne. He enllated iD the Air apparent attempt to aS'!Ils•inat
Horse Show Saturday morning. and Harrisonville Wranglers,
Horsemanship, western A halter was presented to Force In Marcb aad recently the leaders of the Philllpine
Judge for the show was Duane showmanship; western ponies, ponies, first place, Juli Gooch; Matthew Dillard for having the graduated as a "protective opposition liberal party.
Plymale, area extension agent, first place, Juli Gooch; second second place, Mila Powell ; cleanest pony and Amy Huston equipment specialist," al
At least 10 persons were
while Steve Gransow served as place, Matthew Dillard; third third place, Matthew Dillard. was given a halter for showing Chanule Air Force Bale, m. . killed and scores were injured,
the cleanest horse. Halters were
including many of tbe party's
By DICK KLEINER
donated by Modern Supply
political figures. Among those
HOLLYWOOD - (N E A)
Company of Pomeroy.
injured seriously ,was Sen . -If President Nixon doesn't
1"1111"11111
Sergio
Osmena Jr., the OJ)- hurry, Kaye Stevens may
MIDDLEPORT - Mary The local salon owns many Elmhurst, lli., introduced by
ponent
of
President Ferdinand estabUsh diplomatic rela·
Martin, departemental d' Ohio trophies as awards for its ac- John Werner, and Olarles Hahn
E. Marcos in the 1969 lions with Communist China
chapeau, eight and forty, of tivities in support of the Legion Jr., .Hickville, Ohio , by
presidential
election.
.before he does.
ACCUSED SOWIER SHOT
Middleport, who organized the and its allied programs, she Blakeslee.
Marcos said the incident was It's only natural, now that
BEffiUT (UPI)- The Sudan
Meigs Salon and live otbers in said.
national tragedy" and our foreign policy towards
The club will meet next week has executed by firing squad an
Ohio,
explained
the Presiding at the meeting was
the Chinese is loosening, for
pledged the full investigative some entertainer to want to
humanitarian
programs President Charles Blakeslee, at the Heath Methodist Olurch. army private accused of
Ladies of the Feeney-Bennett shooting to death a large_
power of the govenunent in be the first American per·
inaugurated and supported by and closing it was Vicefinding those responsible.
former to work beautiful
tile organization to members of President John Will. Guests Auxiliary served a fried chicken number of pro-government
dinner.
officers
during
the
July
19
at"It
is
a
crime
against
every
downtown Shanghai (or,
the Middleport-Pomeroy were Harold Hendrickson, .
Filipino
who
believes
in
demom a yJ&gt; e, gorgeous uptown
tempted coup, tile Middle East
RolaJ'Y Club Friday evening
U--1"•·-- T.
cracy as a way of life and wbo Pekmg). The publicity value
News Agency said Friday.
following a dinner at the
lrUll.drun ~n
.
would be enormous - look
Feeney-Bennett Post American MIDDLEPORT - Medimn
~li_!yes. that democracy draws what it did for Ping·Pong.
William T. Lavender, MidLegion Hall.
Its VI~ty and strength f~. Anyhow, Kaye Stevens
damages were reported to one dleport, struck !rom the rear a
Emphasizing research in
the spin! of peaceful competi- wants to be the first to estabcar and one driver was cited to car driven by Nancy Buskirk,
tion," Marcos said. "This is !ish show business relations
such areas as tuberculosis and
CHINA HOUJJNG OUT
court as the result of an ac- 16, Middleport, who had stopped
certainly a day of shame for with mainland China. She'd
cystic fibrosis (taken on as a
HONG
KONG (UPI)
cident on North Second Ave. in in the lane of traffic.
the Filipino people."
Uke to be an ambassadorproject in 1961), the national
Communist China declared
Middleport at II :50 a.m.
The
Buskirk
car
had
mediwn
A
police
spOkesman
said
one
without·portfolio.
eight and forty - an auxiliary
Friday.
damage. There were no in- Saturday that she will not join r---------. grenade landed in the center of '"Somebody should bring
of the men's 40et 8-supports a
Police Chief J. J. Cremeans juries. Lavender was cited to the United Nations until Toder't fUNNY will ~ $1.00 fw
the stage, just behind the our cullu1e .~o th~ Chinese,"
hospital in Denver to those
oriti_. ........, .. necl. S111d ...,
said that a wrecker, owned by mayor'~ court on assured clear Nationalist China is expelled ..0
speaker's platform The second Kaye says, and It might as
ro: T~t FUHNY, 1200 Wat Dir4
purposes.
.
.
·
well be me. I've worked befrom
,
the
world
body.
Goble Ford, Inc., driven by distance charges.
st., c"""'oo~. Ot.;. .wm.
·
feU Just m front of the fore Vietnamese audiences
platform. The explosions, he and they seemed to Uke my
said apparently were timed to act-it bas a lot of movecoincide with a nearby fire- ment and action. I think the
works display being lighted Chinese wo~ld like it, too."
during a lull in the political . To get ready-and she's
speeches
' already in touch with Washly DAVID A. WIF SSI ER
to end all labor stoppages.
DDememiilili.taJi'r.ed Zone in months. The U.S. mt!itary
The biasts at the Plaza ington to get t~e necessary
.
.
documentat•on - she's
Ullll!d Preu ,biteruti-r
Texas Gov. Preston Smitb alsQ aMounced he would Comma
nnounced for the first time that U.S. B52B Miranda
came
moments
after
learned· a few words of
President NiiOn began'tbe week by amouncing the not ccmply with the freeze and would grant pay in- have been
bing inside the DMZ and the U.S. 7th liberal party President Gerar- Chinese, and she's going to
country's mast sweeJAIIg economic changes since the creases already apJI'oved for more than 100,000 Fleet offsh
in the Gulf t:l Tookln has been hitting do RoliBS had introduced the eat a lot of rice ..
da:ra of lbe New Deal. The reperCU!slons were felt teachers and state employes this fall.
Co:mmunist gets in the neutral zone·with loog range party's candidates in the Nov. 9 "Even if they don't undertbnlagbout lbe world tbe entire week.
Nixon's amouncement Sunday night sparked recml guns.
city elections.
stand the words of my
The main pW!ta lo Niim's new Jl'ograiD included a buying oo tile New Y&lt;rk Stock Excllange Mooday alld
A
similar
grenade
'
attack
songs,"
she says, "they'll
Tes ·
began in Ft. McPherson, Ga ., in the
eo.day freele oo wages, prices and rents, and end to Tuesday. Analysts predicted a healthy market for coorflllar ·
Capt. Ernest Medina, charged with killed two persons sbortiy after understand what I' say be·
•-·• f
tween my numbers. If I get
converting u.s. dollars to gold abn~~~d, prOposed 1a1 some time to come.
murdering, or allowing his troops to murder, 102 the Repubu c was cUiu.... a ler the OK, I'm going to learn
cutuilda10per Ctllt surcharge on m011tforeign goods Overseas, the U.S. dollar generally lost in value. Eu- Vietnamese civilians at My Lal.
World War II. The ' man a, lot more Chinese words."
Imparted Into the Umted States.
ropean ezchange markets stayed closed all week. Eu- The death toll in tile Northern Ireland vloleoce convicted of the assault was In her act, she passes out
The IQ9erJJDitllt apent lllOIII t:l the week explaining ropean Coounon Market ministers met in Brussels to between RCl111811 Catholics 8nd Protestants I'CIIe to 29. electrocuted.
butions that say, "Kaye
tbe 111111111 GUll of the new policy. At the week's elld, reach an agreement oo a unified monetary policy. A police detective was killed and another detective
Stevens Thinks I'm Beauti·
ful People," and she has alstill much confusiOII but mast of the nation They reached no such policy accord but decided to and an FBI agent were wounded in a JacUoo, Mias.,
ready ordered a bunch more
_ ,......~~~ for the first wagfi)rlce free1.e in 20 wen the exchanges Monday.
si!Ootout with members of the blaclt aeparatlst
to
take with her. She thinks
,..... The •to Industry announced that during the
Panic bit the Tokyo stock market for four days, RepubUc of New Africa. lev.en persons were charged
PROBE PROMISED
the Chinese will love her
freeleit..-Jd.U IJ'I2modeh at 197Jprices.
altboogh there were signs Friday that the market was with murder.
WASHINGTON (UPI)
buttons.
lilt In 1re111, the President's announcement retiounding. The United States asked Japan to revalue
Thirty-~~even American soldiers were killed In a WendeD Freeland, an attorney
"And I'm going to bring
- DGt pled fmnbly. George Meany, AFLCIO the yen upward and in anticipation of the revalualioo, helicopter' crash in Germany.
from Pittsburgh Pa. was a bunch of doggy bags with
Jl lit'l, cltth•n• ed the freeze 'lbursday and said lrading in the yen was suspended in Hong Kong, Asia's
Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace cqntinued to lest named !jaturday 'to ~ a , me,'' she says •. "because I
love Chinese food and I'll
1111101111 llboald feel free to strike if denied already largest market. ·
the federal administration's new pronouncements new Iy crea.te d government bring some home. wiU• mene~led wage bk1!M! n. Unioo leaders already oo
Conlbat in tile Vietnam War escalated during the about busing by ordering more school boards to ignore study COIIlllllsalon on medical thr left-overs are ~r~;•l
RiR llld IIIey -'d '1111 comply with Nixon's reqaeat week with some of the heaviest fighting along Ole _a C181l'l:o!:d!:l ed dm" egatioo plan. ,
malpractice.
WHI'med up... .
•

p3rts

,

,

Domestic, lntematioTUJI
ProblemS AttJJcked in ·One
·Powerful Stroke by Nrxon

A. Blafrd, whe writes tills program. The critics are going Sen. William Proxmire,' D-WIS., will attack those

1.

''Nine mmlbs ago," GIIIJgan told a Cleftlml .,.u,....., "I
Jobn H. Hall, cbif1{ lobbyistfor tbe ~o Education Asilociatioo, called togelber representailves of every fa~ ri Ohio'a IIOCiety.
wasmorepollteinsencllng2751cboolteacberslntotbe8tltebouse Every ..,.,.;ar Interest group; evecylobby, eft!' d"-' orto ''bug" their statelltlllltll'sfcrmoremoneyforeducatioo.
' pnlzaUoo was given a voice in wr Tllllk Force 011 Tu: Reform.
But he scored tile idea tlu!t it would be patriotic for tbe teachers
'"lbeele ~lewcrtedin the glare 9f publlcalteDUon -IIIII In
tlu!t glare Ill ri tbem agreed that we could 8!llve om' pnHemo; If;
, to back off in vie'tr ii tile Presldent'i message.
"They (tile aenatcrs) are going to tell you that' you
un- we were willing to sacrifice and to COIJIPI'GI!I8e and to work
patriotic if you doo't fW!ow the President's «dee'," Hall said. togetber.
"Bat now, tbe8e people have gme back into tbe dark miJDn
'"l'bey'llsay 'we've got to goalongwitb tbe President and tighten
our bell' Well, anyone wbo back away frooi getting the funds that ri the Staleboulle, 0111 of lbe glare of J11b11c atteation, llll tbey
are needed is educalionaDy ~." ,
baveablndooed thatsplrltricooperatim, thatsplritofapllmlom
Sllglltl)' lrOJde
for .our stall!.
It was sllgbtly ironic that both Jhe AFL·CIO and tbe OEA were
"We haw permitted our selfish motives, out cuicern for our-.
COO!plaining when Nixon toot action to curb tbe rocketing prices ' aelvee first and society secCIId, to creep ~ 111 again, and we see
they had img protested.
·&amp; 11wful sight of our system t:l government para1Jud by selfBatil took tile governor, for wllom both groups no doubt have doubt"
more respect, to crystalize tbe sltuaUm. Witbout D8llling names,
Tbe "glare" popped up again last week and cast an unfavlnble
the governor condemned tile "King Midas" attitude of tbe lobby Jlgbt' oo special interest groups.

rejKried.

Meigs-Gallia CAP
In Health Seroices

.

urged the elimlnatilll of lbe
grand jury system in Ohio and
tile reductim ri lbe "" 1M ri
Jur&lt;n to sit in an cues Ill a
Jetter to Ohio Supreme Col!rt
Chief Justice C. William
O'Neill.
' Shoemaker, in the letter, said
tbe grand jury system was
"inefficient and prcmolel delay .
- in addition to beq stremely costly." Grand jury
meetings are beld secretly to
bear lestimooy lraught by 1be
prosecution to · determine lf
tbere Is probable cause that
certain suspects committed
certain crimes. H it 110 determines, tbe grand jury Issues an
indictment. No defense of
defendants Is allowed lillrq a
grAnd jury proceeding.
TAMPA, FLA. - SEN.
George S. McGovern, O.S.D.,
called today for an 82 pet. tauo
"excess profits" by large
corp&lt;rations as part t:l lbe
wage-price freeze. McGovern
said he also applauda the
resistance shown by organized
labor to tile arlmird!ltratioo's
request it voluntarily accept
wage increase restrictiOIIS.
The
only
announced
Democratic presidential
candidate outlined bill olh
jections to the wage.price
freeze at a news cmference he
called bere after tliiClq a IJrlef
vacation in the Virgin hlwle.
M011t t:l tbe goall ri lbe lteae,
be said, '"will Jlol wert" and
"the Clr)lOI'Bie giants will reap
1Xg profits."
He said an excess prolila tax
was levied ~ the Korean
War and since lbe UDited Stale!
now Is at war In Vietnam and
against lnOation, "we llhwld
now institute an excess pmits
lax." He said tbe tax sbould be
-:'!Vied on corporai!CIIIS wblcb
pay the full COJporate tax: rate
110 small bminellsmen wouldn't
be hil The 1aJ: woqld be figured
oo "aU income above last year's
earnings."

POLO SHIRTS
Mi Uw I 89 fDf bod to ~och oo l . Made of
c0111lr.rcl c:ottaa, tH•lt IPn,llt~-&lt;: o l or•d s.hir-h
~ •9.1ft:. . . . .

lleck's
RICHARD SAYRE, secutlve director of tbe Gallla-Me~&amp;s 01mmun1ty Action Program,
stands beside a sign which marks the community center in Oleshire where the Project Assist
medical aid program is being carried out. The center is located in the background building
which was formerly a furniltire store.

GRACE'niOMAS,an aide with the Gallla-Meigs Project
Assist Program,, in the women's section of a clothing bank
wblcb has been established to provide good, clean used
li U• 1 tor [llltlellta villlq lbe weekly clinic in C!esbire.

foday•S FUiilo.Jiilo.JY

"a

lJaIIUige

Co'll'r.swn
•

Full Week of Worldwide 'Repercussions

$}.44

FLARE LEG

MRS. BARBARASCITES,Pomeroy, R.N., GaJlla-Meigs
CommWlity Action . Community Service Program nurse,
completes records of a patient at a Oleshire clinic wbere she
works each Tuesday In the Project Assist Program.

MRS. EDNA RUSSELL, RN, Middleport, takes blood for
testing from a patient at the Oleshire Conununity Action
Program ainic. Mrs. Russell is the regist~ nurse
M'igned to tbe JII'Olii'BID 00 a full-tim~ basis. .

DR. EVELYN KEMP, M.D., TRAVEU! from her bome
in South Point each Tuesday to conduct the medical
examinations of the Gallia - Meigs Community Action
Program's Project Assist. Here Dr. Kemp examines ond of
the approximate 25 patients visiling the weekly clinic.

T100 Resignations Given to Board

Commuirlties in
Health Services
(Continued from' page 1)
is a five day operation.
Clinic business takes up completely each Tuesday. However,
Mrs. RuSsell and a Umited staff
are on 'band the other four days
each weelt to maintain records,
do referring and offer what aid
they can in the way of providing
a doctor for clinic patients who
might need ,additional treatment before a regular clinic
day.
The $40,000 grant for the
Project Assist program was for
a 13-month period that began
Oct. 1, last year. Program officials will seek to have Project
Assist funded again. U that
fails, officials hope to secure
aome type of private or
&lt;rRan~tional financing so that

program

the medical aid program can
continue.
Each Tuesday women from a
church in Gallla or Meigs
CoWl ty are on hand for the
clinic to serve sandwiches and a
beverage to patients. Olurches
provide the , snacks and the
program is given ctedit for the
work of the women 31\d the
refreshments as a part of the
local share of the cost, which
must be provided.
In conjunction with the
Project Assist program a
clothing '"bank" has been
started. Good, clean used
clothes have been collected and
sorted. Tbey are placed on
h8ngers and put inlll upstairs
room at the center building.
Anyooe visiting the clinic in

Mr. and Mrs. Gregory A.
Gooderham, Crown City, a
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. George
A. Miller, Middleport, a soo;
and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth R.
· Fry, Henderson, a daughter.
Discharges
Stephen Burns, David Casey,
Arthur Clark, Mrs. Cllarles
Diehl, Mrs. Carrie Flack. Mrs.
Mary Goodwin, Mrs. Richard
Gruesser, Paul Higginbotham,
Lee Hulbert, Mrs. Javid Jacks

1

Carley, Virginia Stout, Carol
SmiU1, Janet Toler and Sharon
Saunders . The district still
needs an industrial arts instructor and primary special
education teacher.

~liON

$299

FOAM ICE BUCKET

needof clothing is provided for
and the garments are used also
in case a family is burned out of
its home and is in immediate·
need for ~lathing.
, •
There is no charge for any of
the services pertonned under

Heck's
Reg.

'6.99

a.EAR

DRESS HANGERS

the Project Aasist program.

(PIG. Of 8)

II'
DUPONT RAUY

CREAM

FRUTH

PHARMACY
."Point

-

Pleasanrs leading DrUg Store"

. ._ _~!"'~~'------------~

ssaa
Housewares Dept

llecl's II&amp;.

2501
JICkKHI

Hedc's Reg.
64c

TYPEWRITER
STAND

..

SEVEN. DAYS AWEEK

GUN RACK
Heck's Reg.
'3.98
Sporting Goods

Pomeroy ; Rodney Klein ,
Minersville.
DISCHARGED - Roger
SpaWI, Harrison Robinson, Lois
lieving, Philip Nichols, Paul
Miller.

9:00 A.M. nu 10:00 P.M•..

2001

COLEMAN·JUG

·PHARMACIST

COLLISION REPORTED
GALLIPOLIS - City police
investigated a rear end collision
at 11:50 a.m. Friday on Fourth
Ave. and Vine St. Officers sai.i
Julia R. Eshenaur, 18, Rt. I, hit
the rear of an auto operated by
Carlos P. Wood,27, Patriot·Star
Rt: There was minor damage.
No one was injured or cited.

SUMS--

SIZE

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Darrell
Drake, Racine; Bess Sanborn,
Middleport ; Harry Ours,
Pomeroy; Robert Jeffers,

Akers and
DannyElementary.
Ray, hoth ~--------------•'!!'!11-teachers
at Vinton
Hired were Karen Allen, Lynn ,
Burnett, Betty Jones and Larry
Shong.
Six teacher's aides employed •
were Linda lleel, Diane Me-·

AI.50 A'IAI.AIU. OlHil MODII.S
OF WIAH&amp;f.BS IN IKULAI:S,

No.

Pomeroy ; Frances Yeager,

VINTON - l'jorth GaUia 's
Local Board of Education
Friday in special session accepted the resignation of two
instructors and employed four
others. Resigning were Baxter

. .. -.0.0.--

Heck's Welcomes All
West Virginia
Welfare Requisitions
for Children's
School Clothing.

and son , Preston Jor gan ,
Wesley Kelvington, Mrs. Elsa

Kime, Mrs. Elizabeth King, .
Kimberly Knight, Joseph
Loomis, Mrs. Elza Martin, Mrs.
Glen McCall, Charles McGuire
Mrs. Larkin Napier, John On!,'
Stanley Payne, Amos Samples,
Randy Sanders, Joseph Scragg,
Mrs. Paul Steinmetz, Mrs.
Margaret Stover, Mrs . fda
Taylor, Fred VanMatre, Mrs.
Melvin Williams, Tammi
Williams, Mrs. Raymond Willis,
Mrs. Chris L. Durst, Waiter E.
Jones, and Mrs. Lelia T. Scott.
Mrs. Albert Paul Barker and
daughter, Mrs. Paul L. Barlnnn, Charles B. Berry, Steven
E. Brown, Donald E. Burchelit,
Mrs. Francis 0 . Crouse, Mrs.
David N. Ervin, Frank Farmer,
Mrs. Steve E. Frazier, Mrs.
Turley E. George and soo, Orin
William Hana, Jerry A. Hi.ll,
Mrs. Thomas E. Huddleston
and son, Michael H. James,
Mrs. Mary lipponcott, Pamela
Sue McCarty, Jennifer A.
Nibert, Mrs. Fred Prumps, Mrs.
Terry A. Shirley and daughter,
Mrs. Clareilce E. Wamsley,
Dayton A. Williams, Mrs. Paul
E. Workman and daughter,
Ernest Grimm, BreU Dodson,
Thomas Longstaff, and Mrs.
Gordon Reynolds.

JEANS
SOUDCOLOIS
.................. _...
..............
..... .................... -.....

Heck's
Reg.
'3.99

Birtbs

MRS. PURLEY KARR AND Mrs. Elizabeth Hayes of the
Clester United Methodist Church served refreshments to
)Jitients at the Tuesday · clinlc in ·Cleshire. Each week
women from various churches in Gallia and Meigs Counties
perform the senice at the clinic.

Dept

BOYS'

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7~ P.IIL
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 Ill
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.

A Show Boat to China?

Work of Eight and Forty Explained

'

R"

HOSPITAL
NEWS

'·

I think it would be fiDe for
the American Image to have
Kaye go over. Tbe only thing
that reaDy worries me is
that maybe some Washington brass would send George
Jesse! over, and that might
e n d diplomatic relations
right then.
Kaye Stevens woul![ be a
pretty good representative
American . She came up from
nothing, or very close to
that, and thus could demon·
strate that there's something to this democracy busi·
ness.
" I grew up in Cleveland,"
she says, '"in a poor family .
We always lived in base·
ments and sub-basements,
with rats and vermin, and I
was always looking aut the
window and an I could see
were peoples' shoes."
Maybe that's why ber big
goal in life wa$ always to
own tbe top of a mountain.
And she recently fulfilled tbe
goal-she is now the owner
of a mountain top near Lake
Tahoe. So far, that's all sbe
has, just the land way up at
the top. No bouse.
"'But I go up there and
picnic, " I she says, "and it's
wonderful. Now I'm going
to get an architect and have '
him design me a wonderful
house up there."
When it's finished, it'll be
her fourth bouse- she has
two in Margat~I Fla., and
one in Palos verdes, just
south of Los Angeles. Surely
the Chinese would appreci.
ate the gumption of a gal
who could go from a subbasoment in Cl~veland to a
four-house person.
They '11 also rlke her style
- her act has always been
one of the best on the night·
club circuit-and her frank·
ness. When Kaye Stevens
has something on her mind,
she doesn't beat around the
tonsils but comes out and
says it.
'
I'II take Kaye Stevf'ns
,.,.,.,. l'ing.Pong. any day.

l- 12 ond 6-1 6.

49c
1• G4L

6 PACK

GARBAGE

BRUSH
""'k's Reg. "c

ll eL

CAN

PRIZE
PENN

lledc:'s Reg.. sua

ltodc's Reg. 52.29

Hedc'&lt; Reg. $2.31

WAX

S}.38

$1.66

CAR
WASH

�,,

•

.

Everybody Straining on Ohio Budget Problems
roLiliiBlJS (UPI) - Lut week, botb the American econcmy silent Scme pledged l!r'Miglngly to go along wilb lbe President.
IIIII Olllo'IIJadlet beeinlf ltraiJied to thf pW!t ......... the cbief . Manf understood lbe position ri lbe 10Yel'll!lr.
~ !be nation ml state cDncidentally gave a yank oo
Twoparticulat~o lol)by groups tied firmly to tbe budget tax
Ill! reiaL
problem Oasbed tbeir colors when tbe call came to put ''sel"
"Beet.U&amp;bleninll" and ''austerity" were the watdlwords of secom.
.
~ 1 [M NixoD aD4 Goy, Jam J . G!l!igan, wllo respectively inFrank ·King, president of lbe Ohio AFL&lt;:IO, wondered for
llliluled a ~ce freele and lhrealened a L'llthack in state quotatim wbelber President Niioo had ~ bean! of "inp;uwt aerviees.
volunlarY senitude."
·
Sarealllt t.meat
Bolbactiomwere taRn tonstorefiscalbalance. Both required
The labor organiratim' s weetly publication, ''News and
the Week (Ohio) in
views," sarcastically laDitllted tbat N"mon bad pre-empted ''Bonam.a" and the "Su!Jday Night Movie" to teD the American
fcfttln'lb~ and courage. Both necessarily would result in a
ca lain amount ri Indiscriminate bardship. And botb were taken pewle that ''someone was going to be fm;ed to make a sacrifice
tmtil Ibis nasty inflationary spiral beccmes unwoond."
by Dltll wboae polilical views are wide divl!ll!eni.
''Guess wbo?" tile pWiication inquired. ''Yep. You ... tbe
II ill U.lel tlllit\j! to note that ~ twin calls to sacrifice were
IDCIIIt poorly taken by lbe same people wbo are respmsibJe for a working peq1le of America, have once again been selected· to
majorsblreofthe bic:tering over Ohio's budget and tax problem5 make the SUJftme sacrifice.
"Mr. Niim's Sunday special boils down to Ibis: the working
-lobbyists and special interest I!I'OUPS.
Not aD the opeclal in!Best grwp&lt;prolested lo111ly. Some were people t:l America must forget about any upcuning pay raise so

-u-

Review

.

:.::

'•,

Real Blockbuster
EDJTOR'S NOTE: Dr. Pierre evaluate and criticize that men but most frequently by

.

.......·.;. '•'•

,•,

'• •,•

...... ·............•. ·.·.

Tricky Diety can get reelected "':rt Noveinber.'' the publication

groupsiJidblarWitforthecurrent~etlnq

,

Sunday Savings

are

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

.

-=:~:~:§W.&gt;z.~::z::!.•

of the the last nine monthS, govern:

F'OINT PLEASANT STORE ONLY
BOYS'
LONG SLEEVE

the Saturday wire
By UPI
arrAWA _ THE ~
States Is unjustified in applying
the 10 pet. import surcharge 'against Canada since it
. will only heighten Ibis nation's
financial problems and In no
way help resl«e the u. s.
economy, Prime Minister
Pierre Elliott Trudeau said

Sentence Correct, but Unfair

10 Die in
Political
Meeting

Baker and Gooch Show Champions

1:00 P.M. - 7:00 P.M.

.

passengers or crew.
"That pilot did a tremendOU5
-':rail If a.. N!Da ....-k to be nwnerous and their and Dr. Arthur Burns, chair- entire program that he has not ment spending has surged but
job t:l landing that aircraft,"
flillUJ •
ed AD&amp;. 15, II criticisms will have to be man of the Federal Reserve ·advocated.
the economy has not. We had to
said Herman Zak, assistant
fl I hal aad did esftoUte heard. But here is one thing to Board.
. In my judgment the Pres- Wlleash the vigor and vitaUty.of
opera lions manager of the
ol"!! tf RlilfiLdB l&amp;a Asllt- keep in mind: You need to
-The devaluation of the ident has inlroduced and the private sector because the
airportbere. The,airliner, flight
dltl!l, lllc., a 1111
" I know the prejudices and dollar was advocated by tbe proposed the m';'St comprehen- ~ublic sector couldn't do the
11'1, ~tedatBuffalo, N.Y.,
ec
le aad IJuadal c mll- credentials of the critics if you congressional jOint ecooamic SIVe, far-reaching and cou- JOb.
made a stop at Plttsbirgb, and
lac linD • 1 c U.C cea- are going to ·widerstand and subcommittee on international rageous program of my life- Three. We have moved on the
was ICbed.uled. to go on to
M
llaft l!tell PI I' k evaluate their positions.
exchange and payments headed time. Why do I enthusiastically wage and price front. The 00.
Parkersburg, CiocinnaU and
Nlua uol Jehra
The first thing to recognize is byRep.HenryReuss, 0-W'IS.
endorse and advocate his day freeze may not work but at Friday.
Indianapolis.
that the President's economic
-The 10 per cent import tax program?
least the. peopl~ ~ve seen that
"If no~ is dooe to mnove
COLUMBUS - SENATE
By PIEIUlE A. RINFRET prq~C~Sals represent tile gather- was openly advocated just a
Number of Reasons
the ~dent IS deler!!Iined ~ or prevent 111e impact of that Republican leaders are ·exWrtuea fw UPI
ing.together and amalgamation few weeks ago by Mills.
One. We have fmally gotten stop mflation. The key fact IS surcharge ... It will cause lbe ~ted to engineer a big push
At one fell swoop President of many individual prwos•ls:
-The idea of terminating our rid of the barbaric relic of gold. that . he had the courage to loss of many thousands of jobs this week to get a budget and
N"Wil vigarausly and forcefully
-The 10 per cent invesiment. willingness to buy or sell gold We have, with the border (or reverse himself and this may in Canada.'' Trudaau said in 8 tax package an m'llled fer Door
attacked our domestic as well tax: credit was originally probably came from Paul import) tax, redressed our just be successful. At least we nationwide radio-television action at least by tbe following
as international~ prob- · advocated by Sen. Vance Volcker, wder secrelarY of the international positi~n and..at- have .the courage to exper- address. HeSI!id u.s. exports ia week. Senators have been told
!ems. His Smday night SJ1 eecb Hartke, 0-Ind., and later Treasury for monetary affairs. tacked the Wlf811' competition 1n1ent. The greatest economic Canadl! are comparable to lbe torepcrtto the Statehouse early
was a blockbuster. No one I propounded by Rep. Wilbur -The entire package was from Europe and most particu- power in the world must lead combilled total of all American and be prepared to stay lata in
!maw in the professional Mills, O.Ar.
probably put together by John larly from Japan. We have the way.
sales to Japan, Germany, hopes a lll!ttiement can be
ecOIICIIIIic or Dna!'Cfal field
Tu ExemplioiiS
Connally, the secretary of the indicated decisively that we are
Britain and France.
reacbed, at least within the
expected bim to eilber pr nt -The acceleration of person- Treasury.
a major economic power to The Pre$dent has taken a
'"Withoutourmarket~U.S. upper chamber.
any pngracn &lt;r to J11 s mt as al income 1a1 eiemptions was Few people realize that the reckon with and have, there- giant step in economic affairs. economy would be in mucb The Senale has scheduled its
far-readling a program as be proposed just a few weeks ago President had the courage and fore, strengthened tile dollar.
He is striding \\'here others more seriOU5 difficulties than it first Monday afternoon Door
did Aug. 15.
by Sen. Edward Muskie, 0. the vision to take all the
Two. We have given much- have feared to tread. His now finds ltllelf," he said.
sessloo li tile year. Meetings
Now we are going into tbe Maine.
partisan proposals and put needed tax relief to corpora- actions befit the office of the
PITTSBURGH
AN llCJrt!l8[ly COOllllt!oce Mooday
MODday morning quarterback- -The wage-price freeze was tbem together in one package. lions and individuals. That tax most powerful man in the ALLEGHENY Airlines twin- nigbtorTuesday aflemooo. The
ing phase al his program. advocated on many an occasion It is important to realize Ibis money will . go for consumer world. Niionomics are great engine furbo.pump carrying 50 House will not convene fully
Pewle are being asked to by many senators and congress- beeause the inQividual critic goods and for capital goods. In economics.
pissengers lost its main right WItil Tuesday.
Senate President Pro Ternlanding gear while landing at
Parkersburg, W. Va., airport pore Theod(ft M. Gray, RJrlday nigbt. The pilot, Robert Piqua, has ~d elementary and
Raines, applied power in the secondary educatioo funds need
. midst of the landing, took off to be approved soon, and has
ICBin, and made an emergency indicated be plans . to acFr. McPHERSON, Ga. (UPI)
George w. Latimer, Calley's murdering Vietnamese development would be "inapIM!ding at greater Plttsburgl! company tbem with the rest t:l
- Ll. Gen. Albert o. Connor' attorney, said he was pleased civilians is of no significance or propria te."
airport, without injury to the budget and tax package
~of the 'lbird Army, with the reduction,. but stlll that Calley was merely
rather than enact school
Friday found Lt. William hopes to have Calley's con- carrying out official or unof- F. Lee Bailey, civilian at.
firuincing and furlber spllt the
Calley's conviction legally viction reversed.
ficial policy. Tho Pentagon's torney for C8lley's commander,
already fragmented fiscal plan.
t.anect but reduced his life The atizens Commission of handling of aU war crimes Capt. Ernest L. Medina, who is
COLUMBUS
mE
!lelllfllce for tbe murder of 22 Inquiry into U. S. War Crimes in allegations demonstraies that currently on trial for 102
NEWESI'
bomber
In
tbe
U.
S.
v..w= es civilians at My Lai Washington said CoMor, ·while lx·th assumptions have long murders, said he was not
Air Force Strategic Air Comto II years.
acknowledging Calley's legal been adhered to by the military familiar with the legal points in
mand,
lbe supersonic FB-lll,
Calley~s case "but as to tile
That means caney will be guilt, '"could have only been leadership."
will be based at Lbckbourne Air
eUB;b!e for parole in late 19'17 or acting under one of two
The Western White House reduction of sentence, I think it
Force Base near here.
o!arly 19'18.
assumptions. Either that said comment on the Calley is appropriate."
The plane, made by General
Dynamlca, is a ~lion of tbe
F-lll taclical figbler. It has
AlllMAN WltOIILEWIU
variable sweep wings f&lt;r low
AIRMAN Stephea C.
By PATRICK J. KILLEN
and high apeeds and Is capable
Wroblewsld, son of Mr. and
MANILA(UPI)-TwoexplodPOMEROY-Lynne Ba_ker annoW!cer and Bill Downie, Jr., p!Jlce, Marcia Dillard; western The trophy for the highest Mrs. Arthur Wroblewdi of ing band grenades destroyed a t:l carrying nuclear or ·coowas awarded tbe grand was ringmaster.
horses, first place, Lynne point boy was presented to GalllpoUs, wbo will leave for stage crowded with candidates ventional weapms.
champion trophy and Juli Other' results of the event Baker; second place, Cindy Matthew Dillard whiJ.e the Vlelaam oa Sept. 31, II at a political raUy in-downtown COLUMBUS - FRANIWN
Gooch took reserve champion were as follows:
Gooch ; third place, Amy trophy for the third highest girl spending a 31-day leave at Manila Sai\U'daY night in an County Conunon Pleas Court
Judge Fred J. Shoemaker has
honors in tbe Meigs CoWlty t-H Meigs t-H Ph!asure Riders Huston.
was given to Cindy Gooch.
borne. He enllated iD the Air apparent attempt to aS'!Ils•inat
Horse Show Saturday morning. and Harrisonville Wranglers,
Horsemanship, western A halter was presented to Force In Marcb aad recently the leaders of the Philllpine
Judge for the show was Duane showmanship; western ponies, ponies, first place, Juli Gooch; Matthew Dillard for having the graduated as a "protective opposition liberal party.
Plymale, area extension agent, first place, Juli Gooch; second second place, Mila Powell ; cleanest pony and Amy Huston equipment specialist," al
At least 10 persons were
while Steve Gransow served as place, Matthew Dillard; third third place, Matthew Dillard. was given a halter for showing Chanule Air Force Bale, m. . killed and scores were injured,
the cleanest horse. Halters were
including many of tbe party's
By DICK KLEINER
donated by Modern Supply
political figures. Among those
HOLLYWOOD - (N E A)
Company of Pomeroy.
injured seriously ,was Sen . -If President Nixon doesn't
1"1111"11111
Sergio
Osmena Jr., the OJ)- hurry, Kaye Stevens may
MIDDLEPORT - Mary The local salon owns many Elmhurst, lli., introduced by
ponent
of
President Ferdinand estabUsh diplomatic rela·
Martin, departemental d' Ohio trophies as awards for its ac- John Werner, and Olarles Hahn
E. Marcos in the 1969 lions with Communist China
chapeau, eight and forty, of tivities in support of the Legion Jr., .Hickville, Ohio , by
presidential
election.
.before he does.
ACCUSED SOWIER SHOT
Middleport, who organized the and its allied programs, she Blakeslee.
Marcos said the incident was It's only natural, now that
BEffiUT (UPI)- The Sudan
Meigs Salon and live otbers in said.
national tragedy" and our foreign policy towards
The club will meet next week has executed by firing squad an
Ohio,
explained
the Presiding at the meeting was
the Chinese is loosening, for
pledged the full investigative some entertainer to want to
humanitarian
programs President Charles Blakeslee, at the Heath Methodist Olurch. army private accused of
Ladies of the Feeney-Bennett shooting to death a large_
power of the govenunent in be the first American per·
inaugurated and supported by and closing it was Vicefinding those responsible.
former to work beautiful
tile organization to members of President John Will. Guests Auxiliary served a fried chicken number of pro-government
dinner.
officers
during
the
July
19
at"It
is
a
crime
against
every
downtown Shanghai (or,
the Middleport-Pomeroy were Harold Hendrickson, .
Filipino
who
believes
in
demom a yJ&gt; e, gorgeous uptown
tempted coup, tile Middle East
RolaJ'Y Club Friday evening
U--1"•·-- T.
cracy as a way of life and wbo Pekmg). The publicity value
News Agency said Friday.
following a dinner at the
lrUll.drun ~n
.
would be enormous - look
Feeney-Bennett Post American MIDDLEPORT - Medimn
~li_!yes. that democracy draws what it did for Ping·Pong.
William T. Lavender, MidLegion Hall.
Its VI~ty and strength f~. Anyhow, Kaye Stevens
damages were reported to one dleport, struck !rom the rear a
Emphasizing research in
the spin! of peaceful competi- wants to be the first to estabcar and one driver was cited to car driven by Nancy Buskirk,
tion," Marcos said. "This is !ish show business relations
such areas as tuberculosis and
CHINA HOUJJNG OUT
court as the result of an ac- 16, Middleport, who had stopped
certainly a day of shame for with mainland China. She'd
cystic fibrosis (taken on as a
HONG
KONG (UPI)
cident on North Second Ave. in in the lane of traffic.
the Filipino people."
Uke to be an ambassadorproject in 1961), the national
Communist China declared
Middleport at II :50 a.m.
The
Buskirk
car
had
mediwn
A
police
spOkesman
said
one
without·portfolio.
eight and forty - an auxiliary
Friday.
damage. There were no in- Saturday that she will not join r---------. grenade landed in the center of '"Somebody should bring
of the men's 40et 8-supports a
Police Chief J. J. Cremeans juries. Lavender was cited to the United Nations until Toder't fUNNY will ~ $1.00 fw
the stage, just behind the our cullu1e .~o th~ Chinese,"
hospital in Denver to those
oriti_. ........, .. necl. S111d ...,
said that a wrecker, owned by mayor'~ court on assured clear Nationalist China is expelled ..0
speaker's platform The second Kaye says, and It might as
ro: T~t FUHNY, 1200 Wat Dir4
purposes.
.
.
·
well be me. I've worked befrom
,
the
world
body.
Goble Ford, Inc., driven by distance charges.
st., c"""'oo~. Ot.;. .wm.
·
feU Just m front of the fore Vietnamese audiences
platform. The explosions, he and they seemed to Uke my
said apparently were timed to act-it bas a lot of movecoincide with a nearby fire- ment and action. I think the
works display being lighted Chinese wo~ld like it, too."
during a lull in the political . To get ready-and she's
speeches
' already in touch with Washly DAVID A. WIF SSI ER
to end all labor stoppages.
DDememiilili.taJi'r.ed Zone in months. The U.S. mt!itary
The biasts at the Plaza ington to get t~e necessary
.
.
documentat•on - she's
Ullll!d Preu ,biteruti-r
Texas Gov. Preston Smitb alsQ aMounced he would Comma
nnounced for the first time that U.S. B52B Miranda
came
moments
after
learned· a few words of
President NiiOn began'tbe week by amouncing the not ccmply with the freeze and would grant pay in- have been
bing inside the DMZ and the U.S. 7th liberal party President Gerar- Chinese, and she's going to
country's mast sweeJAIIg economic changes since the creases already apJI'oved for more than 100,000 Fleet offsh
in the Gulf t:l Tookln has been hitting do RoliBS had introduced the eat a lot of rice ..
da:ra of lbe New Deal. The reperCU!slons were felt teachers and state employes this fall.
Co:mmunist gets in the neutral zone·with loog range party's candidates in the Nov. 9 "Even if they don't undertbnlagbout lbe world tbe entire week.
Nixon's amouncement Sunday night sparked recml guns.
city elections.
stand the words of my
The main pW!ta lo Niim's new Jl'ograiD included a buying oo tile New Y&lt;rk Stock Excllange Mooday alld
A
similar
grenade
'
attack
songs,"
she says, "they'll
Tes ·
began in Ft. McPherson, Ga ., in the
eo.day freele oo wages, prices and rents, and end to Tuesday. Analysts predicted a healthy market for coorflllar ·
Capt. Ernest Medina, charged with killed two persons sbortiy after understand what I' say be·
•-·• f
tween my numbers. If I get
converting u.s. dollars to gold abn~~~d, prOposed 1a1 some time to come.
murdering, or allowing his troops to murder, 102 the Repubu c was cUiu.... a ler the OK, I'm going to learn
cutuilda10per Ctllt surcharge on m011tforeign goods Overseas, the U.S. dollar generally lost in value. Eu- Vietnamese civilians at My Lal.
World War II. The ' man a, lot more Chinese words."
Imparted Into the Umted States.
ropean ezchange markets stayed closed all week. Eu- The death toll in tile Northern Ireland vloleoce convicted of the assault was In her act, she passes out
The IQ9erJJDitllt apent lllOIII t:l the week explaining ropean Coounon Market ministers met in Brussels to between RCl111811 Catholics 8nd Protestants I'CIIe to 29. electrocuted.
butions that say, "Kaye
tbe 111111111 GUll of the new policy. At the week's elld, reach an agreement oo a unified monetary policy. A police detective was killed and another detective
Stevens Thinks I'm Beauti·
ful People," and she has alstill much confusiOII but mast of the nation They reached no such policy accord but decided to and an FBI agent were wounded in a JacUoo, Mias.,
ready ordered a bunch more
_ ,......~~~ for the first wagfi)rlce free1.e in 20 wen the exchanges Monday.
si!Ootout with members of the blaclt aeparatlst
to
take with her. She thinks
,..... The •to Industry announced that during the
Panic bit the Tokyo stock market for four days, RepubUc of New Africa. lev.en persons were charged
PROBE PROMISED
the Chinese will love her
freeleit..-Jd.U IJ'I2modeh at 197Jprices.
altboogh there were signs Friday that the market was with murder.
WASHINGTON (UPI)
buttons.
lilt In 1re111, the President's announcement retiounding. The United States asked Japan to revalue
Thirty-~~even American soldiers were killed In a WendeD Freeland, an attorney
"And I'm going to bring
- DGt pled fmnbly. George Meany, AFLCIO the yen upward and in anticipation of the revalualioo, helicopter' crash in Germany.
from Pittsburgh Pa. was a bunch of doggy bags with
Jl lit'l, cltth•n• ed the freeze 'lbursday and said lrading in the yen was suspended in Hong Kong, Asia's
Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace cqntinued to lest named !jaturday 'to ~ a , me,'' she says •. "because I
love Chinese food and I'll
1111101111 llboald feel free to strike if denied already largest market. ·
the federal administration's new pronouncements new Iy crea.te d government bring some home. wiU• mene~led wage bk1!M! n. Unioo leaders already oo
Conlbat in tile Vietnam War escalated during the about busing by ordering more school boards to ignore study COIIlllllsalon on medical thr left-overs are ~r~;•l
RiR llld IIIey -'d '1111 comply with Nixon's reqaeat week with some of the heaviest fighting along Ole _a C181l'l:o!:d!:l ed dm" egatioo plan. ,
malpractice.
WHI'med up... .
•

p3rts

,

,

Domestic, lntematioTUJI
ProblemS AttJJcked in ·One
·Powerful Stroke by Nrxon

A. Blafrd, whe writes tills program. The critics are going Sen. William Proxmire,' D-WIS., will attack those

1.

''Nine mmlbs ago," GIIIJgan told a Cleftlml .,.u,....., "I
Jobn H. Hall, cbif1{ lobbyistfor tbe ~o Education Asilociatioo, called togelber representailves of every fa~ ri Ohio'a IIOCiety.
wasmorepollteinsencllng2751cboolteacberslntotbe8tltebouse Every ..,.,.;ar Interest group; evecylobby, eft!' d"-' orto ''bug" their statelltlllltll'sfcrmoremoneyforeducatioo.
' pnlzaUoo was given a voice in wr Tllllk Force 011 Tu: Reform.
But he scored tile idea tlu!t it would be patriotic for tbe teachers
'"lbeele ~lewcrtedin the glare 9f publlcalteDUon -IIIII In
tlu!t glare Ill ri tbem agreed that we could 8!llve om' pnHemo; If;
, to back off in vie'tr ii tile Presldent'i message.
"They (tile aenatcrs) are going to tell you that' you
un- we were willing to sacrifice and to COIJIPI'GI!I8e and to work
patriotic if you doo't fW!ow the President's «dee'," Hall said. togetber.
"Bat now, tbe8e people have gme back into tbe dark miJDn
'"l'bey'llsay 'we've got to goalongwitb tbe President and tighten
our bell' Well, anyone wbo back away frooi getting the funds that ri the Staleboulle, 0111 of lbe glare of J11b11c atteation, llll tbey
are needed is educalionaDy ~." ,
baveablndooed thatsplrltricooperatim, thatsplritofapllmlom
Sllglltl)' lrOJde
for .our stall!.
It was sllgbtly ironic that both Jhe AFL·CIO and tbe OEA were
"We haw permitted our selfish motives, out cuicern for our-.
COO!plaining when Nixon toot action to curb tbe rocketing prices ' aelvee first and society secCIId, to creep ~ 111 again, and we see
they had img protested.
·&amp; 11wful sight of our system t:l government para1Jud by selfBatil took tile governor, for wllom both groups no doubt have doubt"
more respect, to crystalize tbe sltuaUm. Witbout D8llling names,
Tbe "glare" popped up again last week and cast an unfavlnble
the governor condemned tile "King Midas" attitude of tbe lobby Jlgbt' oo special interest groups.

rejKried.

Meigs-Gallia CAP
In Health Seroices

.

urged the elimlnatilll of lbe
grand jury system in Ohio and
tile reductim ri lbe "" 1M ri
Jur&lt;n to sit in an cues Ill a
Jetter to Ohio Supreme Col!rt
Chief Justice C. William
O'Neill.
' Shoemaker, in the letter, said
tbe grand jury system was
"inefficient and prcmolel delay .
- in addition to beq stremely costly." Grand jury
meetings are beld secretly to
bear lestimooy lraught by 1be
prosecution to · determine lf
tbere Is probable cause that
certain suspects committed
certain crimes. H it 110 determines, tbe grand jury Issues an
indictment. No defense of
defendants Is allowed lillrq a
grAnd jury proceeding.
TAMPA, FLA. - SEN.
George S. McGovern, O.S.D.,
called today for an 82 pet. tauo
"excess profits" by large
corp&lt;rations as part t:l lbe
wage-price freeze. McGovern
said he also applauda the
resistance shown by organized
labor to tile arlmird!ltratioo's
request it voluntarily accept
wage increase restrictiOIIS.
The
only
announced
Democratic presidential
candidate outlined bill olh
jections to the wage.price
freeze at a news cmference he
called bere after tliiClq a IJrlef
vacation in the Virgin hlwle.
M011t t:l tbe goall ri lbe lteae,
be said, '"will Jlol wert" and
"the Clr)lOI'Bie giants will reap
1Xg profits."
He said an excess prolila tax
was levied ~ the Korean
War and since lbe UDited Stale!
now Is at war In Vietnam and
against lnOation, "we llhwld
now institute an excess pmits
lax." He said tbe tax sbould be
-:'!Vied on corporai!CIIIS wblcb
pay the full COJporate tax: rate
110 small bminellsmen wouldn't
be hil The 1aJ: woqld be figured
oo "aU income above last year's
earnings."

POLO SHIRTS
Mi Uw I 89 fDf bod to ~och oo l . Made of
c0111lr.rcl c:ottaa, tH•lt IPn,llt~-&lt;: o l or•d s.hir-h
~ •9.1ft:. . . . .

lleck's
RICHARD SAYRE, secutlve director of tbe Gallla-Me~&amp;s 01mmun1ty Action Program,
stands beside a sign which marks the community center in Oleshire where the Project Assist
medical aid program is being carried out. The center is located in the background building
which was formerly a furniltire store.

GRACE'niOMAS,an aide with the Gallla-Meigs Project
Assist Program,, in the women's section of a clothing bank
wblcb has been established to provide good, clean used
li U• 1 tor [llltlellta villlq lbe weekly clinic in C!esbire.

foday•S FUiilo.Jiilo.JY

"a

lJaIIUige

Co'll'r.swn
•

Full Week of Worldwide 'Repercussions

$}.44

FLARE LEG

MRS. BARBARASCITES,Pomeroy, R.N., GaJlla-Meigs
CommWlity Action . Community Service Program nurse,
completes records of a patient at a Oleshire clinic wbere she
works each Tuesday In the Project Assist Program.

MRS. EDNA RUSSELL, RN, Middleport, takes blood for
testing from a patient at the Oleshire Conununity Action
Program ainic. Mrs. Russell is the regist~ nurse
M'igned to tbe JII'Olii'BID 00 a full-tim~ basis. .

DR. EVELYN KEMP, M.D., TRAVEU! from her bome
in South Point each Tuesday to conduct the medical
examinations of the Gallia - Meigs Community Action
Program's Project Assist. Here Dr. Kemp examines ond of
the approximate 25 patients visiling the weekly clinic.

T100 Resignations Given to Board

Commuirlties in
Health Services
(Continued from' page 1)
is a five day operation.
Clinic business takes up completely each Tuesday. However,
Mrs. RuSsell and a Umited staff
are on 'band the other four days
each weelt to maintain records,
do referring and offer what aid
they can in the way of providing
a doctor for clinic patients who
might need ,additional treatment before a regular clinic
day.
The $40,000 grant for the
Project Assist program was for
a 13-month period that began
Oct. 1, last year. Program officials will seek to have Project
Assist funded again. U that
fails, officials hope to secure
aome type of private or
&lt;rRan~tional financing so that

program

the medical aid program can
continue.
Each Tuesday women from a
church in Gallla or Meigs
CoWl ty are on hand for the
clinic to serve sandwiches and a
beverage to patients. Olurches
provide the , snacks and the
program is given ctedit for the
work of the women 31\d the
refreshments as a part of the
local share of the cost, which
must be provided.
In conjunction with the
Project Assist program a
clothing '"bank" has been
started. Good, clean used
clothes have been collected and
sorted. Tbey are placed on
h8ngers and put inlll upstairs
room at the center building.
Anyooe visiting the clinic in

Mr. and Mrs. Gregory A.
Gooderham, Crown City, a
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. George
A. Miller, Middleport, a soo;
and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth R.
· Fry, Henderson, a daughter.
Discharges
Stephen Burns, David Casey,
Arthur Clark, Mrs. Cllarles
Diehl, Mrs. Carrie Flack. Mrs.
Mary Goodwin, Mrs. Richard
Gruesser, Paul Higginbotham,
Lee Hulbert, Mrs. Javid Jacks

1

Carley, Virginia Stout, Carol
SmiU1, Janet Toler and Sharon
Saunders . The district still
needs an industrial arts instructor and primary special
education teacher.

~liON

$299

FOAM ICE BUCKET

needof clothing is provided for
and the garments are used also
in case a family is burned out of
its home and is in immediate·
need for ~lathing.
, •
There is no charge for any of
the services pertonned under

Heck's
Reg.

'6.99

a.EAR

DRESS HANGERS

the Project Aasist program.

(PIG. Of 8)

II'
DUPONT RAUY

CREAM

FRUTH

PHARMACY
."Point

-

Pleasanrs leading DrUg Store"

. ._ _~!"'~~'------------~

ssaa
Housewares Dept

llecl's II&amp;.

2501
JICkKHI

Hedc's Reg.
64c

TYPEWRITER
STAND

..

SEVEN. DAYS AWEEK

GUN RACK
Heck's Reg.
'3.98
Sporting Goods

Pomeroy ; Rodney Klein ,
Minersville.
DISCHARGED - Roger
SpaWI, Harrison Robinson, Lois
lieving, Philip Nichols, Paul
Miller.

9:00 A.M. nu 10:00 P.M•..

2001

COLEMAN·JUG

·PHARMACIST

COLLISION REPORTED
GALLIPOLIS - City police
investigated a rear end collision
at 11:50 a.m. Friday on Fourth
Ave. and Vine St. Officers sai.i
Julia R. Eshenaur, 18, Rt. I, hit
the rear of an auto operated by
Carlos P. Wood,27, Patriot·Star
Rt: There was minor damage.
No one was injured or cited.

SUMS--

SIZE

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Darrell
Drake, Racine; Bess Sanborn,
Middleport ; Harry Ours,
Pomeroy; Robert Jeffers,

Akers and
DannyElementary.
Ray, hoth ~--------------•'!!'!11-teachers
at Vinton
Hired were Karen Allen, Lynn ,
Burnett, Betty Jones and Larry
Shong.
Six teacher's aides employed •
were Linda lleel, Diane Me-·

AI.50 A'IAI.AIU. OlHil MODII.S
OF WIAH&amp;f.BS IN IKULAI:S,

No.

Pomeroy ; Frances Yeager,

VINTON - l'jorth GaUia 's
Local Board of Education
Friday in special session accepted the resignation of two
instructors and employed four
others. Resigning were Baxter

. .. -.0.0.--

Heck's Welcomes All
West Virginia
Welfare Requisitions
for Children's
School Clothing.

and son , Preston Jor gan ,
Wesley Kelvington, Mrs. Elsa

Kime, Mrs. Elizabeth King, .
Kimberly Knight, Joseph
Loomis, Mrs. Elza Martin, Mrs.
Glen McCall, Charles McGuire
Mrs. Larkin Napier, John On!,'
Stanley Payne, Amos Samples,
Randy Sanders, Joseph Scragg,
Mrs. Paul Steinmetz, Mrs.
Margaret Stover, Mrs . fda
Taylor, Fred VanMatre, Mrs.
Melvin Williams, Tammi
Williams, Mrs. Raymond Willis,
Mrs. Chris L. Durst, Waiter E.
Jones, and Mrs. Lelia T. Scott.
Mrs. Albert Paul Barker and
daughter, Mrs. Paul L. Barlnnn, Charles B. Berry, Steven
E. Brown, Donald E. Burchelit,
Mrs. Francis 0 . Crouse, Mrs.
David N. Ervin, Frank Farmer,
Mrs. Steve E. Frazier, Mrs.
Turley E. George and soo, Orin
William Hana, Jerry A. Hi.ll,
Mrs. Thomas E. Huddleston
and son, Michael H. James,
Mrs. Mary lipponcott, Pamela
Sue McCarty, Jennifer A.
Nibert, Mrs. Fred Prumps, Mrs.
Terry A. Shirley and daughter,
Mrs. Clareilce E. Wamsley,
Dayton A. Williams, Mrs. Paul
E. Workman and daughter,
Ernest Grimm, BreU Dodson,
Thomas Longstaff, and Mrs.
Gordon Reynolds.

JEANS
SOUDCOLOIS
.................. _...
..............
..... .................... -.....

Heck's
Reg.
'3.99

Birtbs

MRS. PURLEY KARR AND Mrs. Elizabeth Hayes of the
Clester United Methodist Church served refreshments to
)Jitients at the Tuesday · clinlc in ·Cleshire. Each week
women from various churches in Gallia and Meigs Counties
perform the senice at the clinic.

Dept

BOYS'

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7~ P.IIL
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 Ill
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.

A Show Boat to China?

Work of Eight and Forty Explained

'

R"

HOSPITAL
NEWS

'·

I think it would be fiDe for
the American Image to have
Kaye go over. Tbe only thing
that reaDy worries me is
that maybe some Washington brass would send George
Jesse! over, and that might
e n d diplomatic relations
right then.
Kaye Stevens woul![ be a
pretty good representative
American . She came up from
nothing, or very close to
that, and thus could demon·
strate that there's something to this democracy busi·
ness.
" I grew up in Cleveland,"
she says, '"in a poor family .
We always lived in base·
ments and sub-basements,
with rats and vermin, and I
was always looking aut the
window and an I could see
were peoples' shoes."
Maybe that's why ber big
goal in life wa$ always to
own tbe top of a mountain.
And she recently fulfilled tbe
goal-she is now the owner
of a mountain top near Lake
Tahoe. So far, that's all sbe
has, just the land way up at
the top. No bouse.
"'But I go up there and
picnic, " I she says, "and it's
wonderful. Now I'm going
to get an architect and have '
him design me a wonderful
house up there."
When it's finished, it'll be
her fourth bouse- she has
two in Margat~I Fla., and
one in Palos verdes, just
south of Los Angeles. Surely
the Chinese would appreci.
ate the gumption of a gal
who could go from a subbasoment in Cl~veland to a
four-house person.
They '11 also rlke her style
- her act has always been
one of the best on the night·
club circuit-and her frank·
ness. When Kaye Stevens
has something on her mind,
she doesn't beat around the
tonsils but comes out and
says it.
'
I'II take Kaye Stevf'ns
,.,.,.,. l'ing.Pong. any day.

l- 12 ond 6-1 6.

49c
1• G4L

6 PACK

GARBAGE

BRUSH
""'k's Reg. "c

ll eL

CAN

PRIZE
PENN

lledc:'s Reg.. sua

ltodc's Reg. 52.29

Hedc'&lt; Reg. $2.31

WAX

S}.38

$1.66

CAR
WASH

�'

'

'

17 ~1be8tllda:' l'lmes-Sentlnel,Swtday,Aug. 22,1971

Pushover

·Herd

'

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UPI)
- Looldpg to the fu~ and not
to the ·past, Marsball University's new football coacb and
most ·promising quarterback
vow.ed on the opening of
practice they w9uld stun any
team that takes them too
lighUy.
"Teams tbat think they're
going to beat us 1~ better
think again," said the. coach,
Jack Lengyel. "Defeat is not
going to be a matler of course."

David Walsh, a 6-foot-1
.sophomore from Suffolk, VIi.,
now Marshall's top quarterbitck,said: "Weareouthere
to 'win. Believe me, we're going
to surprise a few people."
· Lengyel greeted 90 candidatesatpress day at Fairfield
StadilllJl. Only three lettermen
were on band.
Nate Ruffin, Ed _Carter and
·Felix Jordan were not on ,the
DCO jetliner lhat crashed on its

,.
finaJ. approach at Trl.:State VIrginia 'University's recordAirport here last Nov, 14, kJillng setting quarterback, of the last
all 7$ passengers Including three seasoN. Kelly Is a wide
virtually lhe entire Mar-..n receiver.
team and coaching slaff.
Lengyel, a former College of
Lengyel said he had some Wooster coacb, who played
"real fine athletes cODling in." .collegiate . .football at the
He noted tbal 28 of the 39 fresh- University ot Akroo under Joe
men · eandidates - who llfe McMullen, now the new Mareligible for the varsity, are on shal athletic direct«, a-realist,
full grants-in-aid.
, be conceded the Thundering
One freshman hopeful ts Kelly Herd may have to give up size
Sherwood of Bellaire, Ohio, ~~~td experience to Its opponents.
brother of Mike Sherwood, West
/

-·

Meigs Marauders Have 11 Returning Lette~T~Jen
.

.

BY CIIET TANNEHILL
ROCK SPRINGS - Eleven
lettermen and 52 other would-be
Meigs Marauder football
players got down to cracking
pads last midweek Wtder the
critical eyes of Head Coach
Charles Chancey and his staff
in preparation for the opening
game in Marauder Stadium
against Lancaster BlS.
"-This could be the best
balanced team we will have had
since the Marauders. began
competing in the Southeastern
Ohio Conference," said Coach
Chancey. But Coach Cbancey
wasn't about to predict a
for
the
championship
Marauders.
"At least four other squads
will be strong, all loaded with
more veterans than we have,''

'

Foster's Homer· Paces Cleveland

h"t' W tabclaow e-*'i. blstlng bleadJen will be
erected to the !efland right of the new seats on the home side
ri Memorial Field. The remaining seats will be used for the
band and vlsllorll' side. When all seats are in place, Memorial
Field will bave the largest seating capacity of any school In
1he eight-member Southeastern Ohio Athletic League - 4,600
persms. Theresenre seat section (in front of press box) will
be il!creased from 3eO to 750 persons Ibis year. Tlie annual
res ve seat Uctet drawing Is scheduled for Thursday, Sept.
9, at 8 p.m. on Memorial Field.

1U:W IILEAQIERS GOING UP- Valwtl!e WiiiWS.
lllder lbe supervision of 1he Ga!ljpnlis City Scbools Mainl!ena"N!Deparlmenl,lental!elpinghandThursdayaftemoon
aa wtd begu oolbe erection ri 1,500 new bleacher seats oo
Mm14!1ial Field. Friday, maintenance workers erected steel
part101111 of tbe blea cllers, and tbey will ce~~linue Ibis phase of
tbe project Monday. Another "bleacber party" is scheduled
forSp.m.,MOIIdayonMemlll'ial Field. All wltmteer wcrkers
are asked !o t.iDg a wrench and heavy duty gloves. U enough
.llboWI!P for Monday's session, cbances are the _job will be

Durko May Get
·starting Nod
-

against 11 losses.
Ted Uhlaender led off the first
inning with a single, took second
on Vada Pinson's single but was
out trying tO score on Ray
Fosse's single to left. Chicago
starter Tommy John then
walked Graig Nettles to fill the
bases and Foster followed with
his ninth homer into the leftfield
stands. ·
The Indians scored once
against reliever Joel Horleri in
the second on singles by
Uhlaender and Pinson and a
throwing error by outfielder

NAME
Ash, Rick

o .... .._..._...,

I

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...

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

..._ .........

._, .....

Boyd, Dave
Buck, Joo
Burnett, Dave
Bush. Lonny
Bush. Terry

17

58
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11
0

so

Demosky, Tim
Dixon, Roger
Hart, Brett

IS
25
2990
25

49

~rt.Gary

20

Johnson, Skipper
Lee, Stev.e
Perroud, Chic
Perry, Stan

10
0

33
8

Powell, Gene
Rilthle, Bob

Roush, John

Sheets, Kevin
Taylor, Howle
• • VanMatre, Rick

w.r,. !lob

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15

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~ First Baptist
~.Captures· Title

MOBtLE HOMES

_ _ _....

.

0

0
0
0

1
0
1

0

TR
0

HR RBI KO W

0

4

9

4

SAC
J
1
0

From the floor up _
... inside and out ... your
Forest Park home is designed for carefree
Jiving . Spacious rooms, lots of stora!Je areas,
easy to clean and maintain. If IV\odern decor is ''
your cpoice you'll like its look of-lightness that
accents easy living. Available In 60' and 65'
lengths, and a wide array of floor plans.

0
0

21
0

21

6
6

MOBILE
HOME SALES
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles

Upper Rt. 7 Next Door to Auto Auction
Phone 446-9340
Ga IIi polis. Ohio

EKSPECIALS
.
'

23 thru 28

Aw.anlf H!-~ - - 1
1

Description

5-YEAR .

Bx1-'¥s"

~399.95

SPECIAL s299.95
ALUMINUM HORIZONTAL

SLIDING WINDOW
Hera's the window lor meximiHn econom, IIIII llli of llt*lllolloor factory wutherstripped llld al4ztd ltorlzonlll roller &amp;lldltw
windows. Their U$J action oa 11Jlon llldll fumlllta flnprtlp ,
coatntl ot ventilf!lon. Vent lifts out lor .., clunlnl. His built-In
fl .... for storm P!Mis. Scr- tnd hat'dlqq 'lnclutlld.

4

BAND CAMP SET
DIVISION TO MEET
CHESTER - Charles Wills, Chairman, Ralph DiNucci,
band instructor of Eastern Higl1, Colwnbus, announces the 53rd
School, said Saturday band National ReWtion of the 37th
camp will be held as scheduled, "Buckeye Division - Imperial
9 a.m. to 4 p.m . Monday at House, West, Colwnbus, Labor
Eastern HighSchool Lunch will day Weekend, September 3, 4, 5,
be served.
6, 1971.

j_J

TM '17G
Regular

12"x12"xl/2"

\~

~WARRANTY j

~~~....-.~~~

.....
relrtger1tor
SEE US
FOR
YOUR

Plastic
Pipe
NEEDS
WE

STOCK
~II

1"
1%" ·

CEILING
TILE
ARMSTRONG
No. 360

160 PSI

Antique Beige
Fused· Plastic

REGULAR 29'

With
Screens

Sq. l=t.

SPECIAL '23C

Sq. Ft.

-:::· ~==~~-~=Jz~~
34!2.0

fURRING STRIPS '4.75 Lin
and endangers him and attributes statements about other
drivers to him which he did not
make. Foyl, who operates an
automobile dealership in
l!ouston, said he was denied a
retraction of ·the story by the
magazine.
·

c~7~~~

NOTED YACHTSMAN Edward Heath, keeping a pre·
carious balance aboard his craft "Morning Cloud" olr
tbe Isle of Wight, faces the toughest navigating cltallenge of hls career, steering Britain's Common Market
membership bid through Parliament. The vote Is In
October.

58

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.

WHERE lHE UVING IS EASY

111

FILES SUIT
HOUSI'ON (UPI)- Race car
driver A,. J. Foyt bas ·filed a
t50G,GOO libel suit against Time
Inc., for an article which ran in
Sports Illustrated Magazine
April 5. Fgyt filed the suit in
'federal court Thursday
dalming the article dlfam"ll

--

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

·~._._..__....._.

HEAD COACH Chancey, left, discusses one of the drills .
with assistant coach John Bentley.

"

games, although I was happy .
1be sixth season of Meigs County American Legion baseball,
for the guys. I didn't feel like the most surcessful of sJI in achievement, closed last week. A
part of the team."
district championship - the first - sent this club of Meigs and
So now Durko is back for Gama boys to the state tournament where they defeated Kent 9-4
another try and Monday night's and Ashtabula 74 before bowing out to Cambridge 6-5 and
game will be his first real test, Hillsboro 3-2. Ar.d from sJI I h\lllr, that loss to Cambridge is
starting in place of Ken Dyer described best in language that would eynbarrass even a
who replaced him last and .honkytonk girl.
started the first two exhibition
Business manager Doo Runnel bas prepared a summary of
games this year. both victories the season's activities in which the team traveled 1 200 miles won
over ~ .Miami Dolphins and 18 games, lost 12, and spent $1,156.72.
'
'
Now .where could you suppose that near 12 hundred roWtd
lletrott Uons.
men came from? Not out of the blue. Hunnel's books show the
Coach Paul Brown, however, Middleport Feeney-Bennett Post 128 kicked in $500, Drew Webster
wants Durko to be familiar with Post No. 39 put in· another $500, the Gallipolilj Post $50, and
both the free safety and strong miscellaneous good-bearted baseball fans, $756. Added up that
safety spots so he can be used at mates $1,206, leaving a balance of $78.14 to. begin the 1972 cameither place.
paign.
"We might want to get his
Like those Washington budgets, the bsll club's budget has
free safety work out of the way
climbed since the first team in 1966.
so we can use him some at
The RuUand post contributed $550 through the 66-67-68
strong safety, too," B~own said.
"He's going to play both spots seasons; the Racine post $200in 1966. The Gallipolis Post anted up
$50 in 1969, none in 1970.
for us."
Since 1966 the team has played 146 games against organized
"They're· just giving me a
shot to see what I can do," legion cluba,losing 59, winning 86, and tieing one. Coaches have
Durko said. "I'm trying my best been Mel Clark in 66-67-M, assisted by Russ Moore in 6Tand 68,
to win the job because I don't with George Nesselroad bead man in 69, 70 and 71, assisted by
want to sit on the bench this Mike Werry 7~71, and by Dick Werry in 1969.
1be Legion baseball commitlee (Feeney-Bennett and Drew
year."
Webster) is gearing up for a fund drive soon. The Legion believes
this is an outstanding program for this age group of boys (11;-19).
Want to argue it? I thought not. The Legions, and a ,Jot of other
pe..,Je, don't want to see this program go down the drain. The
program will need sJI the support it can get. Donations will he
accepted : msil thenttollonHunnel, RD 3, Box 19, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
And if a legionnaire is about to buttonhole you for a contribution, don't duck down an alley.
lined a clean single to center.
In this connection, there is another subject to ponder through
Johnny Callison was- credited the long winter months cluttered with footballs, hockey pucks,
with the CUbs' other hit, a and basketballs.
broken ~t single to deep short
1be Syracuse Municipal Ball Park, home diamond of the ,
m the etghth.
. . legion club, bas a great potential of being made into an outThe ~tr_os ~ed two runs m standing recreational area and ball park. Major materials needed
the !hi.,: mmng off Cub loser for fencing and lighting.
B~ Hands, ~ow l~l5. Jack Adabofcivic~lsneededherefortheSyracuseBallPark
Hiatt led off WJth his first home to become an asset in Meigs County ..
nm of the season over the left
.
.
.
field , screen. Roger Me'""er
Followmg are summanes of the J.eg1on team of the 1971
•
-.; season:
then tripled into the gap in
right-eenter and, after hands
1971 MEIGS COUNTY AMERICAN
retired Billingham and Jesus
LEGION BASE BALL TEAM
Alou, Jqe Morgan lined a triple
FINAL 1971 PITCHING STATISTICS
G S CG IN RN ERA W L His Wk KO
NAME
to left center field.
2 0 .o I 1-3 2 0.00 0 0 2 I 0
The Astros added an in- Rick Ash
3 3 2 22
9 2.45 2 0 21 5 13
Dave
Burnett
surance rwt in the ninth inning
4 3 I 17 2-3 14 3.50 I 2 IS 16 17
TlmDemosky
when Cesar Cedeno singled, Skipper Johnson
6 3 0 17 2-3 12 5.50 0 2 20 8 8
moved to second on an infield Stan Perry
14 10, 7 73
36 3.08 7 4 43 53 101
out and scored on Rich Oliles' Rick Van Maire
13 11 10 88 2-3 16 2.22 8 4 69 46 90
3 0 0 7 2-3 10 10.13 0 0 13 3 5
Gary Hart
single.
30 30 20 218 117 3.30 18 12 186 132 234
TOTALS
AB

----··

·

by Chet Tannehill

to play. 1 didn' t enjoy the

G
26
28
13

Af!drewi singled to fill the
bases. Mter tltrowing two balls
to Bill Melton, Lamb was
relieved by Farmer. Melton ·
walked, forcing In Williams but
Farmer retired the next three
batters to end the llu:eat.
A bases-loaded single by
Carlos May and a nm-llCOI'ing
pinch single by Rick Reichardt
gave the White Sox three runs in
the ninlh.

Alworth Injured,
Browns Beaten

~

Billingham
Beats Cubs ·
CHICAGO (UPI) - Jack
Blllingham, who bad not won a
game since July 16, pitched
perfect ball for sii innings
Ssturday and went on to hurl a
three-hitter as the Houston
Astros shutout the Chicago
CUbs, 3-0.
Billingham, who beat the New
York Mets 9-4 over a month ago
and then lost four in a row, gave
up three singles, two in the
seventh inning, in postiilg his
sixth triumph of the year
against 12losses. He struck out
, five and did not walt a batter.
' Don Kessinger broke up
Billingham 's perfect game
when he led off the seventh with
an infield single off the glove of
third baseman Doug Rader.
After Glenn Beckert lined into a
. double play, Billy Williams

Jay Johnston. They added three
more in the third on a walk to
Nettles, a single by Foster and
Chambliss' sixth round-tripper
into the rightfield stands.
Foster walked, s!l&gt;le second
and scored on Eddie Leon's
double for the Indians final tally
in the seventh.
Walt Williams opened the
Chicago ""venth with a single,
Pat Kelly walked and Mike

r the Sports D~sk
,.,.__

WILMINGTON, Ohio. (UPI)
-When the Cincinnati Berigals
late the field Monday nigbt in
their Riverfront Stadium
elhibi.tion game. against the
Pittsburgh Steelers, Sandy
Durto could be at the starting
free safety spot.
That's where. the former
Southern Cal star started the
regular season last_yw, as the
No. I free safety. He lasted just
14 plays.
It was against the Oakland
Raiders, and as Durko, a native
ri West Covina, Calif., tried to
&lt;ltacjde the Raiders' Hewrttt
Dilm, he was hit from the side,
tearing ligaments in his knee.
Surgery was required and he
was out of actioo for the rest of
the year, watching as his
teammates won their last seven
games to capture the American
Football Conference's Central
Division.
"I don 'I know who it was, one
ri their tackles," Durko said. "I
think it was a freak thing, but it
t«e up my knee.
"It really hurt not being able

CLEVELAND ( UPI) - ROy
Foster hit his first Major
Iiague grand slam home run in
the first inning and Chris
Chambliss chipped in with a .
three-run homer in the third
Satu~day to power the
Cleveland Indians to a 9-4
victory over Chicago and snap
the White Sox' winning streak at
six games.
Ray J,.amb, who had not won a
game since June 28, started for
Cleveland but needed relief help
· from Ed Farmer in the seventh
to notch his sixth victory

he said. Chancey listed · mosUy experienced, big, and
Gallipolis, the Wtdefeated entry quick u~ front, offensively and
of last year; Logan, Ironton, defensively, with two gaps to fill
and Jackson (with the addition in the offensive backfield and
of junior superstar Danny four vacated by graduation in
Settles of Wellston at quar- the defensive secondary .
terback), as favorites to battle Offensive starters or ' alterit out for the big trophy in nates departed are Mite Grate,
November.
slot end; Dave Boyd, slot
The Marauders, after winning guard; Roger Abbott, guard;
the championship in their first Jon Kloes, tight end; Bob
try - in 1967' - since have Werry, quarterback; Tom
finished in the first division of Hoffner, wing back, and Dennis
the eight-team loop, but haven't Boggs, tailback.
managed another title.
Defensive performers gone
Last year the Marauders are Chip Haggerty and Mike
finished with a 5-2 league Grate, deep backs; Hoffner,
record, good for a tie for &gt;;econd cornerback; Roger Abbott,
with Logan.
tackle, and Wayne Well, end.
The Marauders, training on Those are the holes Chancey
!he Salisbury Elementary is patching up.
School playground near the new Here's how the boys have
Meigs High School, will be been lining up to date, with

CASH
&amp;

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87 OLIVE ST.

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CHECK US
FOR OTHER
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Monday Tllru Friday-7 A.M. to 5 P.M.
Salurday-7 A.M. lo4 P.M.

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GALLIPoLIS, OHIO

: CHE, 'RE - The First
:: Baptist Church men's team
:: shocked the Grace United
: Methodist Red team here
: Friday night in winning a
•• thrilling upset, 2~17 to take the
~ championship of the church
: tournament.
.
~· Playing on the Kyger Creek
.: Employees diamond, the
::: Baptist snapped a 29 game
:;: winning streak compiled by the
: "Big Red" of the Methodist
::; Church. The Methodist had not
- lost in church play in two years.
:, The Baptist had lost three
~ games this year, all three, of
: course, to the Methodist's Red
!:1 team ."
: Bruce Wilson with a perfect
: four for four ; Dave Burnett and
- Beep Matthews were the major
: thorns in the upset. Burnett
: slanuned four hits in five trips
: includingahomerun. Matthews
: also had a homer in getting
: three hits in four trips. Ron
: Keenan was the winning pit: cher. Norm Stewart took the
- loss.

---

The losers were paced at the
plate by Bnmner and Mike
Allen. Both collected three hits
in four trips. Gene Wetherholt
and Jim Chestnut slammed two
hits each. Wetherholt had two
home runs.
The First Baptist made it a
clean-sweep with a 11;-13 victory
over the Methodist White team.
Leo Davis was the winning
pitcher , Brunner took the loss.
Bruce Wilson, again, paced
the at lack with four hits in five
times at the dish . Phil
Cremeens had four for five and
Dave Burnell adde'd two
homers. Rick Boone paced the
losers with three hits.
The First Baptist girls team
overran the Nazarene girls, 319. Robin Niday was the winning
hurler. Lisa Atkins had a
perfect five for five night ineluding a home run. Niday
aided her cause with four hits in
five at bat. Penny Saunders
·added three safeties. Jenny
Stroop and D. Fellure paced the
losers.

·7fourney ·Deadline
•

•
••

~Drawing
.

Closer

•• Entries for the Fifth Annual

A number of trophies and

• Southern Ohio Seniors Golf
~ Tournament will close Tuesday,
: August24. The tournament will
: be held Tuesday, August 31 at
: the Fairgreens Cowttry Club in
• Jackson County.
: Ninety-four entries for the 18:~wle handicap event have
: already signed up, according to
: ,the Co-Chairman Jack Stiffler,
:Sr. and 0. F. Sharp.
: : Pairings and starting times
' 'Will be mailed out to entries by
••August 25. All competing
: ~olfers are over 50 years of age,
: :and will compete in their
: :respective age groups with
::handicaps.
: : The events of the day include
"'breakfast
luncheon,
a
.,
•'fellowship hour and a banquet,
: :with Charles Gaskill of Wellston
: •as Toastmaster. Entertainment
; will be furnished by Hortense
~ Rhodes, Coalton.

merchandise prizes will be
awarded and exira golf earls
will be shipped in for use.
Joe Thomas, Columbus, will
be the official starter for the
tournament and will also
present the ' 'Joe Thomas
Trophy" to be player with the
day's low net score. Thomas
was Fairgreens' first golf
professional, in 1924 when the
nine-hole course was first
opened.
'
Mrs. D. E. Mtchael, Jackson,
is executive secretary of the
Southern
Ohio
Seniors
organization. Mr. and Mrs.
Dave Frame, Jackson, Route 4,
the Fairgreens pro and club
manager will assist in the
tournament management.
Members of the Fairgreens'
Women's Golf Association will
assist in scoring and other
related tournament duties.

..

Colwnbus Club

..

.

.•,
••
•

•
PROTEST FILED
• DETROIT (UP!) - The
: Milwaukee Brewers protested a
~ game Saturday with the Detroit
: Tigers for the second straight
: tlay because one of the Brewer
: pta~ers was not permitted to
: use his favorite bal.
• · The wnpiring crew, headed
: by Frank Umont, refused to
: allow Brewers centerfielder
: Jose Cardenal to use his
: Japanese manufactured bat
:friday night.
: Cal Ermer, acting Milwaukee
:manager while Dave Bristol
-serves a suspension which lasts
::W.u! Tuesday, protested that
:game and the game Saturds!y
iwhen the umpires again refused
· :the bat to he brought into play.

Ignores Orders

DALLAS (UP!) - Premier
receiver Lance Alworth,
acquired from the San Diego
Chargers in the off season,
suffered three fractured ribs in
the Cleveland game Friday
night and will be out for three to
six weeks.
A spokesman for the Cowboys
said Alworth had been treated
by the team physician and the
recovery period estimated was
the very minimum time.
Alworth and the speedy Bob
Hayes had been expected lo
give Dallas one of the best
receiving teams in pro footbsll .
Alworth was injured in the
second period of the Cowboys'
16-15 win over Cleveland when
he was sandwiched between two
defenders after catching a
Craig Morton pass on the
Cleveland 10 yard line.
Backup cornerback Mark

Washington also was declared
out for from three to four weeks
because of a sprained right knee
suffered when he attempted to
return a Cleveland kickoff.
"The opener for both of these
guys is most questionable,"
said a team spokesman. "In
fact, al this time, I would say
nei.lher one will play against
Buffalo in the first game of the
season.''
· '
The Cowboys have three more
exhibition games remaining.
Eight or ten other players
received injuries of varying
seriousness in the game.
Veteran defensive end George
Andrie suffered a pulled calf
muscle and was questionable
for Thursday night's game be·
tween Dallas and Houston, the
annual slate rivalry.
Veteran linebacker Chuck

NL Attendance Still Rising
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) With the National League
season heading into the home
stretch, altendance in the senior
circuit shows an increase of a
half million over last year's
record and the possibility that
11 of the 12 clubs will pass the
million mark.
According to figures released
Saturday by President Charles
S. (Chub) Feeney, the official
paid attendance in the N.L.
through games of Aug. 15 stood
at 13,217,003, an increase of
509,283 for the same number of
games in 1970 when the league

Hits 'n' Misses
Finish Play on
11-13 Record
Mll\IERSVILLE -The Hit 'n
Misses Girls softball team of
Minersville ended their first
season in'the Pt. Pleasant Girls'
Softball League, finishing with
a 11-13 playing record and
capturing the championship of
the annual Holiday Tournament.

Last weekend the Misses
entered competition in the
annual Gallipolis Jaycees lnvilalional Tournament at Gallla
County Junior Fairgrounds
field. In the opener they easily
defealed _Southwestern of Gallla
County by a scor,e of 11;-7 and

set an all-lime record of
16,662,198 paid admissions.
Eight clubs already have
passed the million mark with
the New York Mets showing the
way with 1,710,202. The other
clubs included Los Angeles
( 1,543,683), St. Louis (1,259,602),
Chicago (1,210,098), Pittsburgh
( 1,176 , 819) , Cincinnati
( 1,142,290) , Philadelphia
( 1,133,359) and Houston
( 1,050,090).
.
San Francisco (907,845) and
Montreal (889,838) are almost
assured of going over the
million mark and Atlanta has a
chance with a total of 775,967 on

t1i

'

Ron Boone

Inks 1971
Contract
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI ) Ron Boone, flashy fireman for
the ABA Olampion Utah Stars,
has come to terms with the club
thai he helped push to the 19?~
71 title.
The quick and deceptive
guard came off the Utah bench
many times during the regular
season and playoffs last season
to ignite a game winning rslly
or quash opponent's uprisings.
The Stars now have five of
their top sii players Wlder
contract for the 1971-72 season.
Boone joins Zelmo Beaty,
Willie Wise, Red Robbins and
Glen Combs as those who have
reached contract agreement
with Stars' president-general
manager Vince Boryla. Only
Merv Jackson remains unsigned among the club's top
players.
The 24-year-&lt;&gt;ld Boone came
to the Stars at mid.,season in a
trade that sent Donnie Freeman
and Wayne Hightower to
Dallas. 1be Stars also picked up
Combs in the deal.
The 6-3, 2()().poWld Boone was
the 23rd leading scorer in the
ABA last season wi!h an Illpoint average and he was eighth
in the league in tbreei&gt;oint
shooting, hitting on 49 of ·138
''homerun" attempts.
Boone was the Stars' thirdleading scorer in both the
regular season and the playoffs.
He averaged 17.2 points in the 18
playoff con tests.

In 1968 Pope Paul VI received
a hearty welcome in Bogota,
Colombia. It was the first visit
to Latin America by a Roman
Catholic pontiff.

followed with a win over Pl.
Pleasant Southern Slates, 20-9.
In the win over Southwestern,
Ava Sayre was the hitting star
with a single, double and home
rWl, followed by Carol Michael
with two triples. Kathy Francis
was the winning pitcher.
The Misses raced to an early
11;-1 lead over Southern States
and coasted easily to victory in
a game called after 5innings by
the IIH"Wl tournament rule. Jill
Warner led the way with a
double, triple and home run,
with Nancy Crow, Ava Sayre,
Debbie West, Carol Michael and
Angie Hubbard all having three
hits each. Hubbard was the
winning pitcher.
The team is coached by
Kenny Wiggins.

Why is There More Schu It
Mobile Homes Sold in this Area
Than Any Other Home ...
Why is Schult Mobile Homes
The Leader in its Field ...

DEFENSE

will be against Warren Local,

Ends, Morris, Larry Harmon there, beginning at 10 a.m.
and Bill Otaney'
Coach Otanceyhuyet to liP

Tackles, Fred Lee.and Mark an opponent for a seconcl
Werry cr ~ Mcklnney.
scrimmage.
Middle guard, John Thomas. The Marauders begin their
Inside linebackers, Tiny campaign with the "'l'cbbng
Williams, Dallas Weber. or Ted staff uncbanged. Penonne1 are
Lehew.
Fenton Taylor, defensive lille;

Cornerbarks, Ron Smith ,
Mark Williams, backed by
Keith Van lnwagen (Williams,
who looks like the tailback for
197t,likely will not play defense
wtless necessary).
Deep backs, Oluck Faulk,
Rick Ash, Andy Vaughan,
(lellered ), backed by Tom
Cooke and John Dillard.
TWO SCRIMIItAGES
Two scrimmages are permitted, the first on Sept. 4. This

John BenUey, defensive t.c:b;
Ben Slawter, ends; Don Dison,
offeitsive line; Slawter n
Taylor with the 'reserves;
Chuck Downie and Ed Bartels
with the freshmen; and Buldl
Meier and John Aritott, JunioF
High.
Here's how the squad looks,
name, weight, and tentative
position:
SENIORS

Name

WI. PDs.
146 Ql

Rick Ash

Martin Broderick
Jon .Budt
Tom Cooke

Grace Girls

111
"'
131
151
151

Jim Cottrill
Roger Dixon

Win Crown

Larry Harmon
Dave Krawsczyn
Fred Lee

117
115

215

Ted Lehew

160

Ron Smitlt
John Thoma•
Keith Yanlnwagen

Tiny Williams
Ed. Young

156
1lt

Vic Young
JUNIORS

Randy Chafin
. Bill Chaney
John Dillard
Chuck Faulk

166
166
1..

TimKing
Lou McKinney
Roger PNrdl
Andy Vaughan
Dallas Weber

175

C
T
G

T

174 Ql
. 174 G
244

'

T

SOPHQMORES
Mick Ash

Mike Bareswill
Lonnie Black
Ron Couch

111 WI
177 C
131 Ql

Melvin Cremeans
Charles Diehl
Robert Eason

POSTS SHUTOUT

Brian Friend
John Harrison
Robbie Harris
Carl Hendridts
Mike Hoffman
Dana Johnson
John Lehew
Keitlt Lillie
Tom Lowery
Mike McDaniel
Allen McLoughlin
Mark Morris
Charles !IlNse
Mlrk Oiler

Tom Quillon
Danny Robson

Joe Ro-b.lum

PauiSearles

Bill SLick
J. D. Story
hoy WarMr
Randy-

Mlrk Dillard

121 Tl

145 E
215 T
113 FB
141 G

145

E

1:10 . WI
116 T

121 Tl
153

G

156

G

121
145
211

E
E
T

IM Fl
111 WI
115 E

219

T

176

T

2M

T

146 TB
115 Wll
114 Ql
153' G
11J T
146 C
ID Ql
155 Fl

9TH GRADE

Randy Faulk

r-------------------...,
SPECIAL
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includes these
4 sandwiches
and 4 orders of
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1
•

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QUALITY!!!

Get your FAMILY PACit lien!.

$40.00

c

G

12J WI

liUr
18rODIJ

elements . . . by h.i.s .
In Navy Blue Corduroy.

T

G

160 TB

Rick Gaul
Sieve Jewell

SllE

Belted battle jacket with flare jeans. The
answer to "what to wear" when banling the

E
T

141 E
166 E
1:11 Ql

PICI

JOCKO SUIT

(!

150 Tl
175 FB

Mark Williams

WICIUTA, Kan. (UP!)
Mike Proffitt scattered four hits
Saturday to pull Birmingham,
Ala., to a 4-G victory over
Hutchinson, Kan ., in the
National Baseball Congress
Tournament.
Birmingham got eight bits off
four Hutchinson pitchers,
scoring two runs in !he first and
fifth innings.
Pr~ ffitt, Mississippi State
College lefthander, threw seven
strikeouts and four walks. Mark
Slone, who was relieved in the
second, look the loss.

I

BECAUSE • • •

E
G

190 E
212 T
151 WI
161 G
146 Fl

Jeff Morri•
Jim Miller

Mark Werry

Ql
G
TB

1"

John Grueser

GALLIPOLIS
Grace
United Methodist Church girls
won the church tournament
Friday night by defeating First
Baptist Omrch, la-3.
The Methodists had 15 rWts,
16 hits, and 3 errors, while the
Baptists had three runs , three
hits, and nine errors. Winning
pitcher was Ginger Ellcessor .
R. Niday look the loss.
Geri Bowling and Ginger
Ellcessor Jed the way for Grace
with three hits each. Dottie
Chestnut, Sue Thompson, Lonna
Janey, Nancy McAmsler, and
Connie Bradshaw had two hits.
Sharon Tawney and J"ohnette
Silvey bad one hit each. Dottie
Chestnut had the game's only
home run.
L. Atkins had two hits and L.
Ssunders one hi I for the · Saplists.

.--~------------.,

Aug. 15.

ffiLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Denying any " ping pong
• SERVICE
• OVERLAPPING ROOF '
diplomacy, " the Columbus
Table Tennis Club ignored
• DOUBlE INSULATION • ALL STEEL FRAME
orders from the United States
Table Tennis Association here
• HOUSE·TYPE WIRING • HEAVY DUTY BEAMS
Friday and played the Free
China ping pong team in ·an
exhibition match. ·
William Hodge, president of
the local club, said he expected
to get into trouble with the
national organization for
disobeying instructions, but
noted the Chinese team was
rated sixth in the world " ... and
.ffiohilr ltomr P.nh t. S&lt;alr•
I'm a ping pong player.''
••
The Chinese team, from
•
••
Taiwan, is currently touring the
: • A thought for today: Ameri- United Stales under-the spon':can writer Brei Harte said, sOrship of the International
:1~0ne big vice in a man Is apt Council of Christian 'Churche,s
Plu. s Eastern Ave. 'In Gallipolis, Ohio
)o keep out a great many
and
fundamentalist preacher · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
'Bmaller ones.'"
'
Cllrl Mcintire.
"

Howley, who intercepted a pass
Friday night, suffered a
strained groin muscle and a
bruised left side.
"At least half a dozen other
guys got beat up on pretty good,
but we're hopeful they can all be
back for the Houston game even
though it is a short week," the
spokesman said.
Mike Clark's 26-yard field
goal with 23 seconds remaining
pushed the Dallas Cowboys to a
16-15 victory over Cleveland.
Clark, who booted three field
goals during the contest, had
missed a 19-yard effort with
1:53 left.
Defensive end Bob Briggs
picked up a Craig Morton
fwnb1e and raced 56 yards for
Cleveland's only touchdown.
Six field goals were kicked
during the game.
Morgon, who played the
entire game at quarterback,
guided the Cowboys to the
Cleveland 15 in the third period
on a 56-yard pass to Margene
Adkins, but had to settle for a
!~yard field goal by Clark.
This p~t Dallas ahead 13-12
but Bob Hayes fumbled a
Cleveland punt on his B-yard
line minutes later and Doug
Dieken recovered.
Dan Cockroft kicked a 16-yard
field goal and Cleveland
regained the lead and maintained it.
Cowboy Calvin Hill scram.
bled 89 yards for the game's
first touchdown. Mike Phipps
quarterbacked the Browns in
the first half and was relieved
by Bill Nelson who played the
second half.

nobody baving any pOsition
altogether assured.
OFFENSE
Slot end, Jeff Morris, veteran,
backed by Bill Otaney; slot
tackle, Fred Lee, veteran ,
backed by Lou McKinney; slot
guard, Roger Dixon, veteran,
backed by John Thomas,
veteran; center, Eddie Young,
backed by John Grueser; tight
guard, Ted Lehew, veteran,
backed by Dallas Weber ; tight
tackle, Mark Werry, veteran;
tight end, Larry Harmon,
backed by Randy Chafin;
wingback, Ron Smith, veteran;
fullback, Tiny Wtlliams, 2 year
veteran; quarterback, Andy
Vaughan (lettered), backed by
Rick Ash, and tailback, Mark
Williams, defensive veteran,
backed by Oluck Faulk .

1503
EASIERII AVE.
GMUPCI.IS, H)

�'

'

'

17 ~1be8tllda:' l'lmes-Sentlnel,Swtday,Aug. 22,1971

Pushover

·Herd

'

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UPI)
- Looldpg to the fu~ and not
to the ·past, Marsball University's new football coacb and
most ·promising quarterback
vow.ed on the opening of
practice they w9uld stun any
team that takes them too
lighUy.
"Teams tbat think they're
going to beat us 1~ better
think again," said the. coach,
Jack Lengyel. "Defeat is not
going to be a matler of course."

David Walsh, a 6-foot-1
.sophomore from Suffolk, VIi.,
now Marshall's top quarterbitck,said: "Weareouthere
to 'win. Believe me, we're going
to surprise a few people."
· Lengyel greeted 90 candidatesatpress day at Fairfield
StadilllJl. Only three lettermen
were on band.
Nate Ruffin, Ed _Carter and
·Felix Jordan were not on ,the
DCO jetliner lhat crashed on its

,.
finaJ. approach at Trl.:State VIrginia 'University's recordAirport here last Nov, 14, kJillng setting quarterback, of the last
all 7$ passengers Including three seasoN. Kelly Is a wide
virtually lhe entire Mar-..n receiver.
team and coaching slaff.
Lengyel, a former College of
Lengyel said he had some Wooster coacb, who played
"real fine athletes cODling in." .collegiate . .football at the
He noted tbal 28 of the 39 fresh- University ot Akroo under Joe
men · eandidates - who llfe McMullen, now the new Mareligible for the varsity, are on shal athletic direct«, a-realist,
full grants-in-aid.
, be conceded the Thundering
One freshman hopeful ts Kelly Herd may have to give up size
Sherwood of Bellaire, Ohio, ~~~td experience to Its opponents.
brother of Mike Sherwood, West
/

-·

Meigs Marauders Have 11 Returning Lette~T~Jen
.

.

BY CIIET TANNEHILL
ROCK SPRINGS - Eleven
lettermen and 52 other would-be
Meigs Marauder football
players got down to cracking
pads last midweek Wtder the
critical eyes of Head Coach
Charles Chancey and his staff
in preparation for the opening
game in Marauder Stadium
against Lancaster BlS.
"-This could be the best
balanced team we will have had
since the Marauders. began
competing in the Southeastern
Ohio Conference," said Coach
Chancey. But Coach Cbancey
wasn't about to predict a
for
the
championship
Marauders.
"At least four other squads
will be strong, all loaded with
more veterans than we have,''

'

Foster's Homer· Paces Cleveland

h"t' W tabclaow e-*'i. blstlng bleadJen will be
erected to the !efland right of the new seats on the home side
ri Memorial Field. The remaining seats will be used for the
band and vlsllorll' side. When all seats are in place, Memorial
Field will bave the largest seating capacity of any school In
1he eight-member Southeastern Ohio Athletic League - 4,600
persms. Theresenre seat section (in front of press box) will
be il!creased from 3eO to 750 persons Ibis year. Tlie annual
res ve seat Uctet drawing Is scheduled for Thursday, Sept.
9, at 8 p.m. on Memorial Field.

1U:W IILEAQIERS GOING UP- Valwtl!e WiiiWS.
lllder lbe supervision of 1he Ga!ljpnlis City Scbools Mainl!ena"N!Deparlmenl,lental!elpinghandThursdayaftemoon
aa wtd begu oolbe erection ri 1,500 new bleacher seats oo
Mm14!1ial Field. Friday, maintenance workers erected steel
part101111 of tbe blea cllers, and tbey will ce~~linue Ibis phase of
tbe project Monday. Another "bleacber party" is scheduled
forSp.m.,MOIIdayonMemlll'ial Field. All wltmteer wcrkers
are asked !o t.iDg a wrench and heavy duty gloves. U enough
.llboWI!P for Monday's session, cbances are the _job will be

Durko May Get
·starting Nod
-

against 11 losses.
Ted Uhlaender led off the first
inning with a single, took second
on Vada Pinson's single but was
out trying tO score on Ray
Fosse's single to left. Chicago
starter Tommy John then
walked Graig Nettles to fill the
bases and Foster followed with
his ninth homer into the leftfield
stands. ·
The Indians scored once
against reliever Joel Horleri in
the second on singles by
Uhlaender and Pinson and a
throwing error by outfielder

NAME
Ash, Rick

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Boyd, Dave
Buck, Joo
Burnett, Dave
Bush. Lonny
Bush. Terry

17

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Demosky, Tim
Dixon, Roger
Hart, Brett

IS
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25

49

~rt.Gary

20

Johnson, Skipper
Lee, Stev.e
Perroud, Chic
Perry, Stan

10
0

33
8

Powell, Gene
Rilthle, Bob

Roush, John

Sheets, Kevin
Taylor, Howle
• • VanMatre, Rick

w.r,. !lob

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15

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~ First Baptist
~.Captures· Title

MOBtLE HOMES

_ _ _....

.

0

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From the floor up _
... inside and out ... your
Forest Park home is designed for carefree
Jiving . Spacious rooms, lots of stora!Je areas,
easy to clean and maintain. If IV\odern decor is ''
your cpoice you'll like its look of-lightness that
accents easy living. Available In 60' and 65'
lengths, and a wide array of floor plans.

0
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21
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21

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HOME SALES
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles

Upper Rt. 7 Next Door to Auto Auction
Phone 446-9340
Ga IIi polis. Ohio

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4

BAND CAMP SET
DIVISION TO MEET
CHESTER - Charles Wills, Chairman, Ralph DiNucci,
band instructor of Eastern Higl1, Colwnbus, announces the 53rd
School, said Saturday band National ReWtion of the 37th
camp will be held as scheduled, "Buckeye Division - Imperial
9 a.m. to 4 p.m . Monday at House, West, Colwnbus, Labor
Eastern HighSchool Lunch will day Weekend, September 3, 4, 5,
be served.
6, 1971.

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fURRING STRIPS '4.75 Lin
and endangers him and attributes statements about other
drivers to him which he did not
make. Foyl, who operates an
automobile dealership in
l!ouston, said he was denied a
retraction of ·the story by the
magazine.
·

c~7~~~

NOTED YACHTSMAN Edward Heath, keeping a pre·
carious balance aboard his craft "Morning Cloud" olr
tbe Isle of Wight, faces the toughest navigating cltallenge of hls career, steering Britain's Common Market
membership bid through Parliament. The vote Is In
October.

58

11
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4
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12 20 10
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0
3 14 13
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.

WHERE lHE UVING IS EASY

111

FILES SUIT
HOUSI'ON (UPI)- Race car
driver A,. J. Foyt bas ·filed a
t50G,GOO libel suit against Time
Inc., for an article which ran in
Sports Illustrated Magazine
April 5. Fgyt filed the suit in
'federal court Thursday
dalming the article dlfam"ll

--

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

·~._._..__....._.

HEAD COACH Chancey, left, discusses one of the drills .
with assistant coach John Bentley.

"

games, although I was happy .
1be sixth season of Meigs County American Legion baseball,
for the guys. I didn't feel like the most surcessful of sJI in achievement, closed last week. A
part of the team."
district championship - the first - sent this club of Meigs and
So now Durko is back for Gama boys to the state tournament where they defeated Kent 9-4
another try and Monday night's and Ashtabula 74 before bowing out to Cambridge 6-5 and
game will be his first real test, Hillsboro 3-2. Ar.d from sJI I h\lllr, that loss to Cambridge is
starting in place of Ken Dyer described best in language that would eynbarrass even a
who replaced him last and .honkytonk girl.
started the first two exhibition
Business manager Doo Runnel bas prepared a summary of
games this year. both victories the season's activities in which the team traveled 1 200 miles won
over ~ .Miami Dolphins and 18 games, lost 12, and spent $1,156.72.
'
'
Now .where could you suppose that near 12 hundred roWtd
lletrott Uons.
men came from? Not out of the blue. Hunnel's books show the
Coach Paul Brown, however, Middleport Feeney-Bennett Post 128 kicked in $500, Drew Webster
wants Durko to be familiar with Post No. 39 put in· another $500, the Gallipolilj Post $50, and
both the free safety and strong miscellaneous good-bearted baseball fans, $756. Added up that
safety spots so he can be used at mates $1,206, leaving a balance of $78.14 to. begin the 1972 cameither place.
paign.
"We might want to get his
Like those Washington budgets, the bsll club's budget has
free safety work out of the way
climbed since the first team in 1966.
so we can use him some at
The RuUand post contributed $550 through the 66-67-68
strong safety, too," B~own said.
"He's going to play both spots seasons; the Racine post $200in 1966. The Gallipolis Post anted up
$50 in 1969, none in 1970.
for us."
Since 1966 the team has played 146 games against organized
"They're· just giving me a
shot to see what I can do," legion cluba,losing 59, winning 86, and tieing one. Coaches have
Durko said. "I'm trying my best been Mel Clark in 66-67-M, assisted by Russ Moore in 6Tand 68,
to win the job because I don't with George Nesselroad bead man in 69, 70 and 71, assisted by
want to sit on the bench this Mike Werry 7~71, and by Dick Werry in 1969.
1be Legion baseball commitlee (Feeney-Bennett and Drew
year."
Webster) is gearing up for a fund drive soon. The Legion believes
this is an outstanding program for this age group of boys (11;-19).
Want to argue it? I thought not. The Legions, and a ,Jot of other
pe..,Je, don't want to see this program go down the drain. The
program will need sJI the support it can get. Donations will he
accepted : msil thenttollonHunnel, RD 3, Box 19, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
And if a legionnaire is about to buttonhole you for a contribution, don't duck down an alley.
lined a clean single to center.
In this connection, there is another subject to ponder through
Johnny Callison was- credited the long winter months cluttered with footballs, hockey pucks,
with the CUbs' other hit, a and basketballs.
broken ~t single to deep short
1be Syracuse Municipal Ball Park, home diamond of the ,
m the etghth.
. . legion club, bas a great potential of being made into an outThe ~tr_os ~ed two runs m standing recreational area and ball park. Major materials needed
the !hi.,: mmng off Cub loser for fencing and lighting.
B~ Hands, ~ow l~l5. Jack Adabofcivic~lsneededherefortheSyracuseBallPark
Hiatt led off WJth his first home to become an asset in Meigs County ..
nm of the season over the left
.
.
.
field , screen. Roger Me'""er
Followmg are summanes of the J.eg1on team of the 1971
•
-.; season:
then tripled into the gap in
right-eenter and, after hands
1971 MEIGS COUNTY AMERICAN
retired Billingham and Jesus
LEGION BASE BALL TEAM
Alou, Jqe Morgan lined a triple
FINAL 1971 PITCHING STATISTICS
G S CG IN RN ERA W L His Wk KO
NAME
to left center field.
2 0 .o I 1-3 2 0.00 0 0 2 I 0
The Astros added an in- Rick Ash
3 3 2 22
9 2.45 2 0 21 5 13
Dave
Burnett
surance rwt in the ninth inning
4 3 I 17 2-3 14 3.50 I 2 IS 16 17
TlmDemosky
when Cesar Cedeno singled, Skipper Johnson
6 3 0 17 2-3 12 5.50 0 2 20 8 8
moved to second on an infield Stan Perry
14 10, 7 73
36 3.08 7 4 43 53 101
out and scored on Rich Oliles' Rick Van Maire
13 11 10 88 2-3 16 2.22 8 4 69 46 90
3 0 0 7 2-3 10 10.13 0 0 13 3 5
Gary Hart
single.
30 30 20 218 117 3.30 18 12 186 132 234
TOTALS
AB

----··

·

by Chet Tannehill

to play. 1 didn' t enjoy the

G
26
28
13

Af!drewi singled to fill the
bases. Mter tltrowing two balls
to Bill Melton, Lamb was
relieved by Farmer. Melton ·
walked, forcing In Williams but
Farmer retired the next three
batters to end the llu:eat.
A bases-loaded single by
Carlos May and a nm-llCOI'ing
pinch single by Rick Reichardt
gave the White Sox three runs in
the ninlh.

Alworth Injured,
Browns Beaten

~

Billingham
Beats Cubs ·
CHICAGO (UPI) - Jack
Blllingham, who bad not won a
game since July 16, pitched
perfect ball for sii innings
Ssturday and went on to hurl a
three-hitter as the Houston
Astros shutout the Chicago
CUbs, 3-0.
Billingham, who beat the New
York Mets 9-4 over a month ago
and then lost four in a row, gave
up three singles, two in the
seventh inning, in postiilg his
sixth triumph of the year
against 12losses. He struck out
, five and did not walt a batter.
' Don Kessinger broke up
Billingham 's perfect game
when he led off the seventh with
an infield single off the glove of
third baseman Doug Rader.
After Glenn Beckert lined into a
. double play, Billy Williams

Jay Johnston. They added three
more in the third on a walk to
Nettles, a single by Foster and
Chambliss' sixth round-tripper
into the rightfield stands.
Foster walked, s!l&gt;le second
and scored on Eddie Leon's
double for the Indians final tally
in the seventh.
Walt Williams opened the
Chicago ""venth with a single,
Pat Kelly walked and Mike

r the Sports D~sk
,.,.__

WILMINGTON, Ohio. (UPI)
-When the Cincinnati Berigals
late the field Monday nigbt in
their Riverfront Stadium
elhibi.tion game. against the
Pittsburgh Steelers, Sandy
Durto could be at the starting
free safety spot.
That's where. the former
Southern Cal star started the
regular season last_yw, as the
No. I free safety. He lasted just
14 plays.
It was against the Oakland
Raiders, and as Durko, a native
ri West Covina, Calif., tried to
&lt;ltacjde the Raiders' Hewrttt
Dilm, he was hit from the side,
tearing ligaments in his knee.
Surgery was required and he
was out of actioo for the rest of
the year, watching as his
teammates won their last seven
games to capture the American
Football Conference's Central
Division.
"I don 'I know who it was, one
ri their tackles," Durko said. "I
think it was a freak thing, but it
t«e up my knee.
"It really hurt not being able

CLEVELAND ( UPI) - ROy
Foster hit his first Major
Iiague grand slam home run in
the first inning and Chris
Chambliss chipped in with a .
three-run homer in the third
Satu~day to power the
Cleveland Indians to a 9-4
victory over Chicago and snap
the White Sox' winning streak at
six games.
Ray J,.amb, who had not won a
game since June 28, started for
Cleveland but needed relief help
· from Ed Farmer in the seventh
to notch his sixth victory

he said. Chancey listed · mosUy experienced, big, and
Gallipolis, the Wtdefeated entry quick u~ front, offensively and
of last year; Logan, Ironton, defensively, with two gaps to fill
and Jackson (with the addition in the offensive backfield and
of junior superstar Danny four vacated by graduation in
Settles of Wellston at quar- the defensive secondary .
terback), as favorites to battle Offensive starters or ' alterit out for the big trophy in nates departed are Mite Grate,
November.
slot end; Dave Boyd, slot
The Marauders, after winning guard; Roger Abbott, guard;
the championship in their first Jon Kloes, tight end; Bob
try - in 1967' - since have Werry, quarterback; Tom
finished in the first division of Hoffner, wing back, and Dennis
the eight-team loop, but haven't Boggs, tailback.
managed another title.
Defensive performers gone
Last year the Marauders are Chip Haggerty and Mike
finished with a 5-2 league Grate, deep backs; Hoffner,
record, good for a tie for &gt;;econd cornerback; Roger Abbott,
with Logan.
tackle, and Wayne Well, end.
The Marauders, training on Those are the holes Chancey
!he Salisbury Elementary is patching up.
School playground near the new Here's how the boys have
Meigs High School, will be been lining up to date, with

CASH
&amp;

CARRY
87 OLIVE ST.

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-$12.30
-$14.75
-$16.75

CHECK US
FOR OTHER
SIZES

ALUMINUM BASEMENT

. NSF APPROVED
WATER PIPE

SASH ,

12x15 '4.97

15x20 '6.02

·CAR"J:ER &amp; EVANS INC.
"BUILDING SUPPLIES"
Monday Tllru Friday-7 A.M. to 5 P.M.
Salurday-7 A.M. lo4 P.M.

CASH

&amp;
CARRY

GALLIPoLIS, OHIO

: CHE, 'RE - The First
:: Baptist Church men's team
:: shocked the Grace United
: Methodist Red team here
: Friday night in winning a
•• thrilling upset, 2~17 to take the
~ championship of the church
: tournament.
.
~· Playing on the Kyger Creek
.: Employees diamond, the
::: Baptist snapped a 29 game
:;: winning streak compiled by the
: "Big Red" of the Methodist
::; Church. The Methodist had not
- lost in church play in two years.
:, The Baptist had lost three
~ games this year, all three, of
: course, to the Methodist's Red
!:1 team ."
: Bruce Wilson with a perfect
: four for four ; Dave Burnett and
- Beep Matthews were the major
: thorns in the upset. Burnett
: slanuned four hits in five trips
: includingahomerun. Matthews
: also had a homer in getting
: three hits in four trips. Ron
: Keenan was the winning pit: cher. Norm Stewart took the
- loss.

---

The losers were paced at the
plate by Bnmner and Mike
Allen. Both collected three hits
in four trips. Gene Wetherholt
and Jim Chestnut slammed two
hits each. Wetherholt had two
home runs.
The First Baptist made it a
clean-sweep with a 11;-13 victory
over the Methodist White team.
Leo Davis was the winning
pitcher , Brunner took the loss.
Bruce Wilson, again, paced
the at lack with four hits in five
times at the dish . Phil
Cremeens had four for five and
Dave Burnell adde'd two
homers. Rick Boone paced the
losers with three hits.
The First Baptist girls team
overran the Nazarene girls, 319. Robin Niday was the winning
hurler. Lisa Atkins had a
perfect five for five night ineluding a home run. Niday
aided her cause with four hits in
five at bat. Penny Saunders
·added three safeties. Jenny
Stroop and D. Fellure paced the
losers.

·7fourney ·Deadline
•

•
••

~Drawing
.

Closer

•• Entries for the Fifth Annual

A number of trophies and

• Southern Ohio Seniors Golf
~ Tournament will close Tuesday,
: August24. The tournament will
: be held Tuesday, August 31 at
: the Fairgreens Cowttry Club in
• Jackson County.
: Ninety-four entries for the 18:~wle handicap event have
: already signed up, according to
: ,the Co-Chairman Jack Stiffler,
:Sr. and 0. F. Sharp.
: : Pairings and starting times
' 'Will be mailed out to entries by
••August 25. All competing
: ~olfers are over 50 years of age,
: :and will compete in their
: :respective age groups with
::handicaps.
: : The events of the day include
"'breakfast
luncheon,
a
.,
•'fellowship hour and a banquet,
: :with Charles Gaskill of Wellston
: •as Toastmaster. Entertainment
; will be furnished by Hortense
~ Rhodes, Coalton.

merchandise prizes will be
awarded and exira golf earls
will be shipped in for use.
Joe Thomas, Columbus, will
be the official starter for the
tournament and will also
present the ' 'Joe Thomas
Trophy" to be player with the
day's low net score. Thomas
was Fairgreens' first golf
professional, in 1924 when the
nine-hole course was first
opened.
'
Mrs. D. E. Mtchael, Jackson,
is executive secretary of the
Southern
Ohio
Seniors
organization. Mr. and Mrs.
Dave Frame, Jackson, Route 4,
the Fairgreens pro and club
manager will assist in the
tournament management.
Members of the Fairgreens'
Women's Golf Association will
assist in scoring and other
related tournament duties.

..

Colwnbus Club

..

.

.•,
••
•

•
PROTEST FILED
• DETROIT (UP!) - The
: Milwaukee Brewers protested a
~ game Saturday with the Detroit
: Tigers for the second straight
: tlay because one of the Brewer
: pta~ers was not permitted to
: use his favorite bal.
• · The wnpiring crew, headed
: by Frank Umont, refused to
: allow Brewers centerfielder
: Jose Cardenal to use his
: Japanese manufactured bat
:friday night.
: Cal Ermer, acting Milwaukee
:manager while Dave Bristol
-serves a suspension which lasts
::W.u! Tuesday, protested that
:game and the game Saturds!y
iwhen the umpires again refused
· :the bat to he brought into play.

Ignores Orders

DALLAS (UP!) - Premier
receiver Lance Alworth,
acquired from the San Diego
Chargers in the off season,
suffered three fractured ribs in
the Cleveland game Friday
night and will be out for three to
six weeks.
A spokesman for the Cowboys
said Alworth had been treated
by the team physician and the
recovery period estimated was
the very minimum time.
Alworth and the speedy Bob
Hayes had been expected lo
give Dallas one of the best
receiving teams in pro footbsll .
Alworth was injured in the
second period of the Cowboys'
16-15 win over Cleveland when
he was sandwiched between two
defenders after catching a
Craig Morton pass on the
Cleveland 10 yard line.
Backup cornerback Mark

Washington also was declared
out for from three to four weeks
because of a sprained right knee
suffered when he attempted to
return a Cleveland kickoff.
"The opener for both of these
guys is most questionable,"
said a team spokesman. "In
fact, al this time, I would say
nei.lher one will play against
Buffalo in the first game of the
season.''
· '
The Cowboys have three more
exhibition games remaining.
Eight or ten other players
received injuries of varying
seriousness in the game.
Veteran defensive end George
Andrie suffered a pulled calf
muscle and was questionable
for Thursday night's game be·
tween Dallas and Houston, the
annual slate rivalry.
Veteran linebacker Chuck

NL Attendance Still Rising
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) With the National League
season heading into the home
stretch, altendance in the senior
circuit shows an increase of a
half million over last year's
record and the possibility that
11 of the 12 clubs will pass the
million mark.
According to figures released
Saturday by President Charles
S. (Chub) Feeney, the official
paid attendance in the N.L.
through games of Aug. 15 stood
at 13,217,003, an increase of
509,283 for the same number of
games in 1970 when the league

Hits 'n' Misses
Finish Play on
11-13 Record
Mll\IERSVILLE -The Hit 'n
Misses Girls softball team of
Minersville ended their first
season in'the Pt. Pleasant Girls'
Softball League, finishing with
a 11-13 playing record and
capturing the championship of
the annual Holiday Tournament.

Last weekend the Misses
entered competition in the
annual Gallipolis Jaycees lnvilalional Tournament at Gallla
County Junior Fairgrounds
field. In the opener they easily
defealed _Southwestern of Gallla
County by a scor,e of 11;-7 and

set an all-lime record of
16,662,198 paid admissions.
Eight clubs already have
passed the million mark with
the New York Mets showing the
way with 1,710,202. The other
clubs included Los Angeles
( 1,543,683), St. Louis (1,259,602),
Chicago (1,210,098), Pittsburgh
( 1,176 , 819) , Cincinnati
( 1,142,290) , Philadelphia
( 1,133,359) and Houston
( 1,050,090).
.
San Francisco (907,845) and
Montreal (889,838) are almost
assured of going over the
million mark and Atlanta has a
chance with a total of 775,967 on

t1i

'

Ron Boone

Inks 1971
Contract
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI ) Ron Boone, flashy fireman for
the ABA Olampion Utah Stars,
has come to terms with the club
thai he helped push to the 19?~
71 title.
The quick and deceptive
guard came off the Utah bench
many times during the regular
season and playoffs last season
to ignite a game winning rslly
or quash opponent's uprisings.
The Stars now have five of
their top sii players Wlder
contract for the 1971-72 season.
Boone joins Zelmo Beaty,
Willie Wise, Red Robbins and
Glen Combs as those who have
reached contract agreement
with Stars' president-general
manager Vince Boryla. Only
Merv Jackson remains unsigned among the club's top
players.
The 24-year-&lt;&gt;ld Boone came
to the Stars at mid.,season in a
trade that sent Donnie Freeman
and Wayne Hightower to
Dallas. 1be Stars also picked up
Combs in the deal.
The 6-3, 2()().poWld Boone was
the 23rd leading scorer in the
ABA last season wi!h an Illpoint average and he was eighth
in the league in tbreei&gt;oint
shooting, hitting on 49 of ·138
''homerun" attempts.
Boone was the Stars' thirdleading scorer in both the
regular season and the playoffs.
He averaged 17.2 points in the 18
playoff con tests.

In 1968 Pope Paul VI received
a hearty welcome in Bogota,
Colombia. It was the first visit
to Latin America by a Roman
Catholic pontiff.

followed with a win over Pl.
Pleasant Southern Slates, 20-9.
In the win over Southwestern,
Ava Sayre was the hitting star
with a single, double and home
rWl, followed by Carol Michael
with two triples. Kathy Francis
was the winning pitcher.
The Misses raced to an early
11;-1 lead over Southern States
and coasted easily to victory in
a game called after 5innings by
the IIH"Wl tournament rule. Jill
Warner led the way with a
double, triple and home run,
with Nancy Crow, Ava Sayre,
Debbie West, Carol Michael and
Angie Hubbard all having three
hits each. Hubbard was the
winning pitcher.
The team is coached by
Kenny Wiggins.

Why is There More Schu It
Mobile Homes Sold in this Area
Than Any Other Home ...
Why is Schult Mobile Homes
The Leader in its Field ...

DEFENSE

will be against Warren Local,

Ends, Morris, Larry Harmon there, beginning at 10 a.m.
and Bill Otaney'
Coach Otanceyhuyet to liP

Tackles, Fred Lee.and Mark an opponent for a seconcl
Werry cr ~ Mcklnney.
scrimmage.
Middle guard, John Thomas. The Marauders begin their
Inside linebackers, Tiny campaign with the "'l'cbbng
Williams, Dallas Weber. or Ted staff uncbanged. Penonne1 are
Lehew.
Fenton Taylor, defensive lille;

Cornerbarks, Ron Smith ,
Mark Williams, backed by
Keith Van lnwagen (Williams,
who looks like the tailback for
197t,likely will not play defense
wtless necessary).
Deep backs, Oluck Faulk,
Rick Ash, Andy Vaughan,
(lellered ), backed by Tom
Cooke and John Dillard.
TWO SCRIMIItAGES
Two scrimmages are permitted, the first on Sept. 4. This

John BenUey, defensive t.c:b;
Ben Slawter, ends; Don Dison,
offeitsive line; Slawter n
Taylor with the 'reserves;
Chuck Downie and Ed Bartels
with the freshmen; and Buldl
Meier and John Aritott, JunioF
High.
Here's how the squad looks,
name, weight, and tentative
position:
SENIORS

Name

WI. PDs.
146 Ql

Rick Ash

Martin Broderick
Jon .Budt
Tom Cooke

Grace Girls

111
"'
131
151
151

Jim Cottrill
Roger Dixon

Win Crown

Larry Harmon
Dave Krawsczyn
Fred Lee

117
115

215

Ted Lehew

160

Ron Smitlt
John Thoma•
Keith Yanlnwagen

Tiny Williams
Ed. Young

156
1lt

Vic Young
JUNIORS

Randy Chafin
. Bill Chaney
John Dillard
Chuck Faulk

166
166
1..

TimKing
Lou McKinney
Roger PNrdl
Andy Vaughan
Dallas Weber

175

C
T
G

T

174 Ql
. 174 G
244

'

T

SOPHQMORES
Mick Ash

Mike Bareswill
Lonnie Black
Ron Couch

111 WI
177 C
131 Ql

Melvin Cremeans
Charles Diehl
Robert Eason

POSTS SHUTOUT

Brian Friend
John Harrison
Robbie Harris
Carl Hendridts
Mike Hoffman
Dana Johnson
John Lehew
Keitlt Lillie
Tom Lowery
Mike McDaniel
Allen McLoughlin
Mark Morris
Charles !IlNse
Mlrk Oiler

Tom Quillon
Danny Robson

Joe Ro-b.lum

PauiSearles

Bill SLick
J. D. Story
hoy WarMr
Randy-

Mlrk Dillard

121 Tl

145 E
215 T
113 FB
141 G

145

E

1:10 . WI
116 T

121 Tl
153

G

156

G

121
145
211

E
E
T

IM Fl
111 WI
115 E

219

T

176

T

2M

T

146 TB
115 Wll
114 Ql
153' G
11J T
146 C
ID Ql
155 Fl

9TH GRADE

Randy Faulk

r-------------------...,
SPECIAL
Family Pack
includes these
4 sandwiches
and 4 orders of
tr~tn..-h fries.

1
•

(Ill

QUALITY!!!

Get your FAMILY PACit lien!.

$40.00

c

G

12J WI

liUr
18rODIJ

elements . . . by h.i.s .
In Navy Blue Corduroy.

T

G

160 TB

Rick Gaul
Sieve Jewell

SllE

Belted battle jacket with flare jeans. The
answer to "what to wear" when banling the

E
T

141 E
166 E
1:11 Ql

PICI

JOCKO SUIT

(!

150 Tl
175 FB

Mark Williams

WICIUTA, Kan. (UP!)
Mike Proffitt scattered four hits
Saturday to pull Birmingham,
Ala., to a 4-G victory over
Hutchinson, Kan ., in the
National Baseball Congress
Tournament.
Birmingham got eight bits off
four Hutchinson pitchers,
scoring two runs in !he first and
fifth innings.
Pr~ ffitt, Mississippi State
College lefthander, threw seven
strikeouts and four walks. Mark
Slone, who was relieved in the
second, look the loss.

I

BECAUSE • • •

E
G

190 E
212 T
151 WI
161 G
146 Fl

Jeff Morri•
Jim Miller

Mark Werry

Ql
G
TB

1"

John Grueser

GALLIPOLIS
Grace
United Methodist Church girls
won the church tournament
Friday night by defeating First
Baptist Omrch, la-3.
The Methodists had 15 rWts,
16 hits, and 3 errors, while the
Baptists had three runs , three
hits, and nine errors. Winning
pitcher was Ginger Ellcessor .
R. Niday look the loss.
Geri Bowling and Ginger
Ellcessor Jed the way for Grace
with three hits each. Dottie
Chestnut, Sue Thompson, Lonna
Janey, Nancy McAmsler, and
Connie Bradshaw had two hits.
Sharon Tawney and J"ohnette
Silvey bad one hit each. Dottie
Chestnut had the game's only
home run.
L. Atkins had two hits and L.
Ssunders one hi I for the · Saplists.

.--~------------.,

Aug. 15.

ffiLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Denying any " ping pong
• SERVICE
• OVERLAPPING ROOF '
diplomacy, " the Columbus
Table Tennis Club ignored
• DOUBlE INSULATION • ALL STEEL FRAME
orders from the United States
Table Tennis Association here
• HOUSE·TYPE WIRING • HEAVY DUTY BEAMS
Friday and played the Free
China ping pong team in ·an
exhibition match. ·
William Hodge, president of
the local club, said he expected
to get into trouble with the
national organization for
disobeying instructions, but
noted the Chinese team was
rated sixth in the world " ... and
.ffiohilr ltomr P.nh t. S&lt;alr•
I'm a ping pong player.''
••
The Chinese team, from
•
••
Taiwan, is currently touring the
: • A thought for today: Ameri- United Stales under-the spon':can writer Brei Harte said, sOrship of the International
:1~0ne big vice in a man Is apt Council of Christian 'Churche,s
Plu. s Eastern Ave. 'In Gallipolis, Ohio
)o keep out a great many
and
fundamentalist preacher · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
'Bmaller ones.'"
'
Cllrl Mcintire.
"

Howley, who intercepted a pass
Friday night, suffered a
strained groin muscle and a
bruised left side.
"At least half a dozen other
guys got beat up on pretty good,
but we're hopeful they can all be
back for the Houston game even
though it is a short week," the
spokesman said.
Mike Clark's 26-yard field
goal with 23 seconds remaining
pushed the Dallas Cowboys to a
16-15 victory over Cleveland.
Clark, who booted three field
goals during the contest, had
missed a 19-yard effort with
1:53 left.
Defensive end Bob Briggs
picked up a Craig Morton
fwnb1e and raced 56 yards for
Cleveland's only touchdown.
Six field goals were kicked
during the game.
Morgon, who played the
entire game at quarterback,
guided the Cowboys to the
Cleveland 15 in the third period
on a 56-yard pass to Margene
Adkins, but had to settle for a
!~yard field goal by Clark.
This p~t Dallas ahead 13-12
but Bob Hayes fumbled a
Cleveland punt on his B-yard
line minutes later and Doug
Dieken recovered.
Dan Cockroft kicked a 16-yard
field goal and Cleveland
regained the lead and maintained it.
Cowboy Calvin Hill scram.
bled 89 yards for the game's
first touchdown. Mike Phipps
quarterbacked the Browns in
the first half and was relieved
by Bill Nelson who played the
second half.

nobody baving any pOsition
altogether assured.
OFFENSE
Slot end, Jeff Morris, veteran,
backed by Bill Otaney; slot
tackle, Fred Lee, veteran ,
backed by Lou McKinney; slot
guard, Roger Dixon, veteran,
backed by John Thomas,
veteran; center, Eddie Young,
backed by John Grueser; tight
guard, Ted Lehew, veteran,
backed by Dallas Weber ; tight
tackle, Mark Werry, veteran;
tight end, Larry Harmon,
backed by Randy Chafin;
wingback, Ron Smith, veteran;
fullback, Tiny Wtlliams, 2 year
veteran; quarterback, Andy
Vaughan (lettered), backed by
Rick Ash, and tailback, Mark
Williams, defensive veteran,
backed by Oluck Faulk .

1503
EASIERII AVE.
GMUPCI.IS, H)

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-..
~

Jl-11117 ; J "1iiWi ,ftu $'

ft .
•;Iiiii

I

I

•

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~

.

Meri·itt Defeats
CINCINNATI ( UPI) Gecqe FOBI«'s bam lw'ed
triple in the silith. inning
cfjmgrd a low-ran ~
alld gave tile Cincinnati Reds a

bullpen after 10 Unsuccessrul

Pirates

tossed a strong four hitter at the in the seventh and another .In in seven. decisions since being year in the bottom of the
Pirates, me of the top hitting the eighth.
- called up from Charleston seventh inning as Cincinnati
teams In the majors.
erupted for three runs to put it
Dave Cash singled for Pitts- where he )VIS 11-1.
Perez gave Grimsley all the out of reach.
burgh in the third inning and in
Hot-hitting Tony Perez and the seventh, when the skidding support he needed when he May now has 71 RBI on the
steady Lee May blasted fwo.run Pirates . mounted their only drilled his 22nd home run of the campaign and the llome. run
n~.
hGmers to back up Grimsley's serious threat, Richie Hebner season in the first inning enabled him to equal his 19'10
Singles by Lee May. Tony clulcb pilchlng. The 21-year-old and AI Oliver singled.
following a single by May.
output when he also s1armned
Perez and Bench preceded Grimsley is liOW ~ on the The Pirates got their last hit The home run temporarily 34. The Birmingham Bopper is
Foster's game-winning triple in · season.
in the eighth inning when Gene lied Perez for the club lead in within easy hailing distance of
.the sixth inning, Foster raced The 6-3, 1~ lefthander, Clines singled. ·
runs-batted-in at 75.
his career high of 38 home runs,
,
home with the final I'WI oo an son of former tbicago While Former Charleston Charlies !\fay, however, went back on set in 1969. He is now second in
infield out.
Sox pitcber Ross Grimsley &amp; standout Bruce Kison was top in this depattm~nt when he ·the major league home run
Friday night, Ross ~ey gave up one hit in the
tw~ tagged with the loss, his fourth slugged his 34th homer of the

third:

DETROIT (UPI) - Mickey
Lolidl a 2ILgam'! winner lor the
lim lime in his nine year career
Saturday by pitching the
Delnlit Tigers to a protested 7-2
win over the Milwaukee
Brewus.
Dick McAuliffe drove in four
, _ with a hoole run and a

\ single as Lolich ran his record
to »f and joined Vida Blue and
Fa gusw JenkinS as l!&amp;i!ame
winners in tile Major Leagues.
Lolich, who bad woo 19 and 18
in previous seasons, pitched a
m hitter, strucll; out nine and
warted two as be went the

distance for the 21st time this
year.
Milwaukee protested the
game for the second day in a
row because Jose C8rdenal was
not allowed to uae his favorite
bat, a product of Japan which is
concave In the end where, according to umpire.in-chief
Frank Umont, it is supposed to
be rounded.
Cardenal coolended he was
allowed to use the bat in the
Natiooal League and was not
cballenged in the American
League mill Friday night.
The Brewers' Andy Kosco hit
his seventh homer of the season

Weiskoph

tWo holes to shave off two more
strokes.
On tbe 17th, be put a six-iron
approach shot 16 feet from tile
pin and s8nk the putt on the
illloa!lftellllokeleadaftertbe 18tb, It was a driver and a
thin! romd of tile $150,999 ·wedge and a six.foot putt.
flrilacle\lbia Golf Oaslic.
Weiskopf, who had been
W 'tar/1, who teed off two having trouble with his game
stnm beck of eecwc1 rotnd since be woo the Kempa' Open
I
h Dive Hill, started slowly iii a playoff, said he debaled
• with aooe-ander par front nine about taking a rest, "lor a day,
wNch included two blnlles llld a week, a year, whatever II
-bagey.Butbe""'ghtfireoo would talle" after last week's
the bedl: nine with me binles, tournament In Massachusettes
jg:lgljqg the 17th lmd 11th but then said to bjmself "'!bat's
boles, ~CI' a Mbole total of lllf, no good, it's like nnning away
121D2r par.
fnm yourself."
10, wbo bad BIIC&lt; ' ve 811 The brash Hill, saying he had
the first two dllp at tbe a ''IQ walk" ill the bot and
subaibao Whitiimill'iiJ'
ey biiDifd- weather, suffered a
Oub, • l:inlied tile 17th llld bogey oo tile sixth hole 'll'ben his
1Ith to liaiiJb wilh a 71 and a iroo approach shot '11'81 short of
lilllnllment tolaJ of '1111.
the green and he chipped up 10
&lt;a IInke baCt of Hill was foot and then mi•sed tbe putt.
George lfudtm, wilb ·a 89 and Hegotthisbackwithals.loot
. Dale Dmg'w, wbo had a 61, tudie oo tile eighth to make the
bolb at • totals.
turn at even par but lllen suf.
Lou Graham aud Jack fered a bogey oo tile next bole
II"'...._, wbo bad started the when his drive was in the left
day CJJe ~~rate elf tile pace, rough, his second shot over the
wae at at, lleftiHinder par. grem and it took him lllree Ill
tiNie Bob Mli pllf lmd Mam get down.
'
11
R Uph had 210.. Art Wall,
'lbe finishing birdies were the
Charlie Sfford and .Tun Colbert resull .of ~ the par.fiw
tnn at m.
17th
in two and two puUed
We;""'V lost a ooe«roke and then snaking a ~ter 111
advantage on the par.four the 18th.
llml!th We .._ be drove in
Asked if be thought he could
the rough, m ' I tile gre«&lt; . still capture the p),Ooo first
with his .... ~shot and then )rize mooey bere, Hill replied
bad a bed cmp, But lbell be put "Yeh, If Tom (Weiskopf)
aDiot-iroo•oJDdshol two feet doesn't show up lcmorrow."
fnm tile pin Cll tile eigjlth llld
Nictlm•• had a 70. He had a
alk that to make tbe turn at double bogey five en the rough
CJJe lllllls'.
par three fotrlh hole wben his
He started his bact nine .drive watt into a creek on the
1Jin1ie lllriDK with a 16.footer oo right.
the 13tb,lmd then ell opped in 12 But be was luckier than his
alld llfte footers ... tbe nen playing partner. Mike Hill, the

green

IUiioniol l.e1111e

S~nclings

'"igflf

Em

American Le~tu• Standings
Br United Press International
(NightCO.mes Not Included)
East

W L Pet. GB

Pittsbur'gh

O.icago
St. louis

New York

Phlladelf"ia
Montrea

Baltimore
4'12 Detroit
67 58 .536 6
Boston
60 62 ..c92 11'12 New York
Washingtoo
53 70 .431 19
51 7 .418 20'12 Cleveland

7A 53 .583
68 56 SIS

West

W. L Pc1. GB
Oilkland
San f rancisco 74 52 .587
Los Angeles
67 58 .536 6'h Kansas City
Atlanta
66 67 .S16 9 Chi.cago

Houston
67 64 .492 12
Cincinnati
67 66 .484 13
San Diego
~ 79 .373 27
S.tunlar's Resuns
Cincinnati 6 Pittsburgh 3
Houston 3 Chicago o

San Francisco at Montrea l
(night)

Los Angeles at Philadelphia
(night)

St. Louis at Atlanta (nigh t)

1 San Diego at New York (night)
Teday's GI!JMs

(All n - EDT)
Pitlsburgh at Cin&lt;:innati (2: 1S

p.m.)

Sin Francisco at Montreal
(2:15p.m.)
Los Angeles at Philadelphia

(1 :30 p.m.l

.Houston at Chicago (2: 1S

·p.m.)

p.m. )

.

W L Pet. GB
14 4S .622 ...
67 S1 .SIO 9'12
67 58 .536 10

63 62 .504 14
S3 10 .431 23
so 75 .400 27
West

W L Pet. GB

79 45 .637 . ..
63 60 .S12 15'12
61 64 .488 181'2
California
58 68 .460 22
MinnHOta
S6 66 .459 22
Milwaukee
S1 n .415 27'12
Saturday's Results
Oetroil 7 Milwaukee 2
Cleveland 9 Chicago 4
O..kland 4 Boston 1
Minnesota at Baltimore (night)
Washlngtoo at Kansas City
(night)
New York at California (night)
Sunday's CO.mes
' IAll Tilllft EDT}
Bostoo at Oakland2 (4:30p.m.!
New York at CalltOI'ni&lt;t (5 p.m.)
Washlngloo at Kansas City
(2:30p.m.)
Milwaukee at Detroit (2:30
p.m.)
Chicago at Cleveland 11 :30
p.m.)
MimHOta at BalfimOf'e (5: 30

. Sf- j,ouis at Atlanta (2: 1S p.m.)

Monday's CO.mes

San Diego at New York (2 New York at O..kland (night)

p.m.)

.

''llafry's Crntes

Los Angeles at Montreal (night )
francisco at New York

s.n

Minnesota at Detroit lnightl
!Only CO.mes Scheduled)

GEN. DAVISON PROMOTED
San Dkgo al Philadelphia
WASHINGTON ( UP!) (night}
Army Maj . Gen. Frederi~ E.
Cloidlo•ll at Chicago
Davison,
the highest ranking
Pill l glo at Allan~ 2 Uwi·
NeKro in the U. S. military
llightl
. .....,,
St. :....ouis •t Houston ~ .1..,..
·services, ~ a• been na.med
(night)

McAuliffe singled hoole a run
in the fourth to push his batting
average ab.lve .200 for one of
the few times this season.
Bill Freehan singled home
two more Tiger runs in the
seventh.

Lea~s

PHI1ADELP11IA (UPI) ~ Tcm Weiskopf, who had
Ill delale with him 'f about
playiag Ilia week, Sllqt a six·
lllllls'.,.. &amp;I Saturday' to stride

By u.ifed Press International
CO.mes fMt lnclucledl

.'
after Ron Theobald singled in
the first inning but Detroit
jumped back with four in the
third.
Aurelio Rodriguez tripled and
scored on a single by Ed Brinkman . Lolich wallted and
McAuliffe lined his 15th bcmer'
of the season into the right field
seats.
·

Field

younger brother of Daw~ om,
aiBO in the water, bad a triple
bogey after his awoach went
over the green.
Bob Rosburg, who bad st.ted
the day deadlocked with
MIK'pby at ooe stroke back of
Dave Hill, aiBO bad a triple
bogey seven oo the sixth bole
and finished With a 76 for 213.
Billy Casper, the defendng
cbamp~oo. bad a 72 for 21t"He
announced be was wilbdrawing
from next week's U. S. Match
Play Tournament In Pinelunt,
N. ();, and retlrlling IKme to
California on tile advice of a
pbysician.
Casper bad said earlier be felt
be was comi.~ down with a
virus. The doctor diagnosed it
as "acute pha.ryngitis and
pansir.usitis which bas railed to
respood to antibolic therapy."

derby, trailing the Pirates•
Willie Slargell who bas 41. .
After Perez' hamer, the Reda
scored again in the third when
Pete Rose punched a one-out
single to right and Hal McRau
followed with a single, Rose
holding at second.
Hebner, who bas been in a
near disastrous shunp; then
booted May's grounder
allowing Rose to score.
'

Brothers Have Pole Positions
TALLEDEGA; Ala. (UP!) Donnie and Bobby Allison,
Southern Stockcar Racing's
brother combo, have a pair of
1969 Mercurys on the front row
for today's Talladega 500 and an
eye on a repeat of their performance in the last major race
at Alabama International Motor
Speedway.
The Allison brothers, from
Hu~town, Ala., finished onetwo m.the Wmston 500 last May.
Donniewontheraceinthesame
Wood Brothers Mercury he has
on the pole position for today's
$120,000 race.
Bobby, the older brother,

quallfiEld at 186.444 mph: .
Richard Petty, already stock
car racing's first driver to win
$1 million, needs only to start
the Talladega 500 to become the
lint Nasear driver to win
$200,000 in a single season. His
Plymouth is in the fifth starting
position.
David Pearson failed in his
bid to give Pontiac its first
major stock car racing victory
since Joe Weatherly won at
Darlington, S.C., in 1963.
Pearson's 1971 Pontiac failed to
pass a portion of the Nascar
inspection that determines if a
race car conforms to body ·lines

The. exterior of the 5$.
foot Washington Monument,
completed in 1884, has been
cleaned and repaired from
top to bottom twice, in 1934
and 1964. according to The
World Almanac. Its interior
is swept daily. its 898 steps
cleaned weekly and its
the outside pole- position
in public.
of similar models ·sold to the
walls and windows painted . aholds
Holman-Moody
prepared
annually.
Mercury. Donnie won the pole
Behind the Allisons in the
'
with a record speed of 187.232 starting lineup for the race is
SCHOOL FUNDS
miles
per hour while Bobby Charlie Glo12bach of EdwardsWASHINGTON (UPI J
officials
have
Federal
threatened to cut off $13 million
in funds for Prince Georges
County, Md., the nation's lOth
EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 1, 1971
largest school district, for
Our SERVICE &amp; PARTS Departments will be CLOSED
failure to sulmit a school
all day on SATURDAY
desegregation plan. The Health,
We will be open THURSDAY Evenings until9:30 P.M.
Education and Welfare
We feel that fllis change will benefit both you, our
Department (HEW ) said 1 ~. 9
customer's and our Service &amp; Parts employees.
per cent of the district's t&amp;o,897
Don Watts Volkswagen, Inc.
sbadents are black and that 33
195 Upper River Road-Ohio Rl . 7
pel of them are in schools that
Gallipolis, Ohio45631
are Ill pet. or more black.
.__ _ _ _ _ _:;:Pho:=:neiil~:=i
· ·

ville, Ind., in a 1971 JJIDlor
Johnson11repared Chevrolet,
and fourth place qualifier Pete
Hamilton of Dedham, Mass., In
a Plymouth.
Grand Prix driver Rolf
Stommelen of Cologne, Germany, will be on the third row
with
Petty.
Stommelen
qualified a Mercury in sixth
place.
Others in the top 10 starting
positions are Buddy Baker of
Charlotte, N.C., in a Dodge ;
Fred Lorenzen of Elmhurst, ill.,
in a Plymouth; Friday Hassler
of Chattanooga, Tenn., In a

Chevrolet; and Maynard
Troyer of Spenceport, N. Y., lio
a Mercury.

EVERT WINS
CLEVELAND (UPI)
Young Chris Evert unleashed
her
tenacious,
double
backhanded attack to defeat
Scotland's Wlnnie Shaw ~. 6-4
Saturday in the first match of
tlie 43rd Annual W'l(!htman Cup
Tennis competition between the
United States and Great
Britain.

..

PARLOR SPECIALTIES
BANANA SPLITS, SLUSHES, PARFAITS,
STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKES, SHAKES

"THAT OLD FASHIONED GOODNESSn

j

.J •• ;

For1ner

RIO GRANDE - MAke Rouse,
the ClasS AAA Player-of.theYear in Southeastern Ohio, bas
registered for the fall semester
at Rio Grande College. Roose, a
6'5" forward, will be elegible for
varsity competition .when the.
season opens in November.
A unanimous selection on the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League (SEOAL ) First Team,
Rouse was named Player-ofthe-Year by the Associated
Press. He was also an All.Qhio
First Team pick, and was
selected to play in the NorthSouth Cage Classic.
The Jackson Jronmen, behind
season averages of 22.5 points
and 14 rebounds per game by
Rouse, finished the season with
a 14-6 mark. Rouse finished his
high school career as the
school 's all-time leading
rebounder and third leading
scorer.
He is one of two AU .Ohio First
Team . selections that will be
attending Rio Grande College
this fall. Dan Bollinger, the 6'5"
forward who led Zanesville
Bishop Rosecrans to the Stale
Class A semi.finals last year,
signed an athletic agreement
this spring to attend this fall.
Bollinger, who averaged 24
points per game for Rosecrans,
was named to the All.()hio First
Team by the United Press InternationaL He will be joined at
Rio Grande by Zanesville
teammate Dave Eppley, an AllSoutheastern Ohio Second
Team pick. Eppley, a G'l"
guard, averaged more than 10
poinis per outing last season.
Another highly-touted freshman attending Rio Grande this
fall is Jeff Tyo, a 6'3" guard,
from Meigs High School. Tyo
was a member of the AllDistrict Team last year, and
averaged 16 points per game
over his three year career.
--,. - - - - -- Depuly Chief of Staff for l'l:rSOOft\!1 ~ the U. S. Army in
Europe.

"Frost Free 17"
Side·By·Side
Refrigerator-Freezer
Model RSI71L

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. . .- .. . . . .ft

a

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.-

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011

iure Draws Bla,m e Unfairly
BY C. E. NAD!SJR
C.. EU. ~Acrt 'I e
POMEROY - Pollution
c:ontiaua to bold tile spottigbt.
A rdeue IEU!ived IIU wftt
gives 111 lnlerellillg sla~t
oo relation af ll£ric!albn to
c:ertaln forms of pollution_
It .-id ll£ric!alture is bemg
blamed lor more tbaD its sb8re
of "1!ter pollution, Terry J .
· J,.ogan of the O~o Stale
Unlverally Department of
Agronomy, made tlleatatenmt
at the am1ual meeting of the.

the NEW.in FARMING
American Society of Agronomy. process whereby algaEl in a lake in two WljyS - they can reach
lAgan just completed a two-- grow, die, and are deccmposed underground water tables by
year project investigationg by oxygen-using bacteria: leaching through soils or they
fertilizer contributions to. However, increased amounts of can be carried by eroded soil
)11-..,."'a!e pollutioo of water. phosphates and nitrates ·in particles. The main conclusion
Prompted by Ohio's con- water provide enough nutrients of his research was that the
lrihulicm to the eutrophication to speed up this piCl( m; then amount of phosphate that
of ~ ate, thi:; research algae reproduce so fast that the leaches through soil is very
determines . the effects of bacteria decomposing them minimal. Most soils, especially
rainfaD, varying soil types, take too much osygm from the mineral soils, have high
for
holding
leaching, and erosion on water, causing the death of fish capacity
pbGspbate movenient from the and other life fonnS in tile lake. phosphates, so they reach water
According
to
Logan, tables only in negligible
soil to water.

Eutropbicatioo is a natural phosphates may enter lfle water amounts.

• 17.3 cu. ft. capacity • Big
270·1b. capacity freezer •
9.60 cu. ft. capacity refrig.
erator • Completely frost free
operation • Only 31 inches
wide 1 Twin juice can dis·
pensers • Wire ·packa~e
guard in freezer for bulk star.
age • Full·width, full-depth
shelves • large vegetable
crisper holds almost Y2 bushel
• Removable egg container •
Deep door shelves are deep
enough for bulky containers
• Freezl!r door shelves keep
often-used foods up front •
Separate temperature con ·
trois in refrigerator and
freezer • Magnetic door gas·
kets for tight sealing, easy
opening

c..

BY JOliN (lOOPER
Sell
taU. Senlte
PT. ' PlEASANT - We attended the annual natiollll)
meeting of the Soil Conservation Society af America
recently. in Cohm'-15, Ohio_
This is the closest to us that tile
national meeting of this
qanizatioo bas ever ._.,

lay of the Land
SCSA is the
professional organizatioo of soil
conservationists, such as tile
NEA is
the
national
organization of teachers.
A highlight of lllis meeting
was a lour to the 0 . M. Stott
Seed ('nnpany estaNisJunent_
0 . H. Scott is nationally
recognized.forilswrri:witbtmf
grasses and tl!e many )K'"Nem•
regarding lawn establishr,_t
and maintenance.
held. The

Representatives of the
conpany 'il'ere genial basts and
showed us tbeir experimental
plots. From our observation of
the plots and discussions with
1epc mtatives of their company, it would appear to us that
a good seed miJ:ture to begin
with, e&lt;mbined with generous
fertilize.. applications, plenty of
moisture, and insect and
disea ... cootrol, all combine to
mate a beautiful lawn.
They emphasized that they
are glad to receive inquiries
from individuals directed to
their Marysville, Ohio, location.
LORIS PULLEN, ON ROIITE
2 bey011d the junction with 62,
installed an interceptor line of
tile oo tile back side of a site
prepared for a trailer location.
He dug the ditch, laid the tile
and filled the ditch parUy lull of
gravel over top the tile. The
Intercepted water was then

carried to a safe ouUet_ Denver
Yoho of scs helped biJn with
designs for this work.
·
CHARLES McCULLOCH
WHOSE farm is on Route :J5
near Five Mile Creek, cut back
several hundred feet of
woodland border along a crop
field. The crop field is between
the road and the river, and the
woodland area is along Fiye
Mile Creek which nowa through
his land. He didJhis wort with a
chain saw and later painted the
stwnps with :1+5-T. The border
is 20 to 30 feet wide.
In discussing this project Mr:
McCulloch said, "Cutting· back
these borders enlarged my
fields because of prevention of
shade and also because trees
along the crop field sap a Jot of
moisture which otherwise
would be used for the crop." In
addition to the value of
producing good crops to the

edge of a croP field , we would
add that a cutback border has a
greatvalueinprovidingwildlife
food and habitat,
WE GOT A BIG KICK OUT of
preparing a television program
with television stars Van L.
Roush, age 88, of New Haven,
Gus Henry, age 87 of Gallipolis
Ferry, and Perry A. Sayre, age
91i of Arbuckle. These men
appeared with U:S on John
Heiskell's program and were
interviewed by Ken Franks,
who was substituting· for Mr.
Heiskell who was in Columbus
at the time we prepared the
program.
While none of these men had
previously appeared on
television, they appeared at
ease and answered questions
from Mr. Franks quickly and
wittingly.

By BERNARD BRENNER
UPI Fanu EIIIW
WASHINGTON(UPI)-Farm
leaders, digesting details of
President Nixon's lle'il' ~
omic package, are now voicing
decidedly mixed views 00 tile
plan -including slnmg uneasi·
ness about what the 90 - day
price freeze may do to tile
farm economy.
ANational Grange..,....._.
said today his grtlllp . . . to
write the Preaident praising
him for "bold acticm" to solve
the nation's econ.UC woes_
"We feel that anything we
can do to s!O'II' down inllation
is going to be beneficial to
farmers,"aGrangeofficialsaid .
But from tbe American Farm
Bureau Federatioo, the Natioo-

al Farmers Unioo and the Natioml Faimers Organization
(NFO), there were remarkably
similar rumbles oo the subject
of the President's !llklay price
~order.

The order exempts raw agricultural )li'Oducts sold by farmers. Agriculture Secretary Clifford M. Hardin told a private
meelillgforagriculturebusinesso
men, food industry officials and
fmn b l'«n that tbe step was
taken because farln prices have
not ._., inRationary.

But this aemption was litUe
cunfort to Rllger B. Fleming,
bead of tile Farm Bureau's
•Wasbingtm office. Informed
SOUi'Cl!S said Fleming, speaking
upinHardin'sclose«kkoormeet-

ing, complained the farm product aemplilliiS was good but
"of limited value.n
"We ought not delude ourselves that the ceilings on processed foods won't be reflected
downward to producers," Fleming told the session.
Tony T. Dechant, president of
the National Farmers Union,
told UP!, "It's our cooclusion
that farmers really do have a
price ceiling in spite of the aemptioo. Handiers wiln,-pay a
higher price to farmers if they
can't pass it on to consumer."

Carmel N. eWS,
By the Day

Rebuilding Environment Rev . and Mrs. Marshall
Of Concern
to Eveeyone
~~~ ~=~v;m=:
dm' .
Florence Circle
a Weda.u..;!diftn Se ·

Westinghouse

Enrolls

I

1

Farm Leaders Uneasy

j~altt ·II]DJ)pt

....

Cager

JJ-TIII....~TIIIa-5 II

Seed. Company Tour Impressive

·---~---iiiiiiii"""--------

VOLKSWAGEN

Jackson

,.

.

.

'

Lolich Wins 20th ·

.

.

First · Victory

For

At the time Merritt entered
the game, the Pirates led S-1.
Johnny Bench's fourth inning
homer off .Joser Dock Ellis
pulled the Reds wilhin ooe run
~ the Pirates in the fourth in-

starts this seasoo.
His victocy Saturday came in
a relid role and kept him out of
tile reconl books since the
lo3 Yielmy 0\'1!1" tile Pjlt.!burgb Natiooal League record. for
.Pjrates Sallrily encling piIdler coosecutive losses In one se11801'1
• Jim Merritt's 11 game Josin8 without a victory is 12.
lllreak.
.
.
Merritt developed elbow .r,lerritt took over for starter
miaeries last ~ after Wayne Simpson with two out in
becomlng tile lint Red lefty to the fourth inning and limited the
win lD games in 4li years and P.irates to three bits the
• bad '-" relegated to the remainder of the game.

•

.
"

;,~. .... 1_
':'I:J.
·-

Model. RT121

Westinghouse
12 Cu. fl.

@

$249 95
•

Refrigerator
• 12 cu. ft. capacity • Auto·
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tor section • lOO·Ib. freezer,
with full·width door shelf •
Full width, full depth shelves
• Built·ineggstorage • Butter
server • Door shelf storage
m both freezer and refrigerator • Full·width vegetable
crisper • Magnetic door gas·
kets • Interior light (refrig.
erator) • Compact, quiet
mechanism.

. GALUPOUS - ·~...
rv1ce a masters REAP
a quality environment is au through County ASC Comincreasing concern of both mit12es elected by farmers and
urban and rural people, ae- rancbers in the coonty.
cording to J. Melvin Gilbert,
Each REAP practice ap• Chairman of the Gallia ASCS- JliWed by tile ASC County
. The Rural Environmental Dmmillee must have related
Assistance Program (REAP) soil and water benefits.
bas as •tts rna jor purpose the The leaf1et, ''Rebuilding a
lmpiovanent of lbe qujl(ity of ~ty Environment Through
life for all people, aawnplished Rura I En vi ronmen tal
,._,,nh a cosHharing Jllllglaal Assistance l'ro!lfam" explains
with farmers to prevent « .some of the environmental
abate agriculture • related problems encountered on farms
pollutionofwater, landandair, and ranches, the way REAP
and to conserve agricullural can help meet lllese problems,
soil, water, woodland, and andhuwpogramsineachstale
wildlife resources.
and county are developed,
"While fanners and ranchers administered, and funded.
are the ..----..
nrimuv parti.. ~nts in
''Many fannen will lind this
_,_..
REAP practices, everyone leanet will add to their
receives benefits from the knowleclge of REAP. For nonprogram," Gilbert said.
farmers, it provides an inFor all persons interested in lroduction to an environmental
helping rebuild a quality en- JI1'0ill8iil at wort in their own
vironment a leaflet oo the role . CCIIDDunity and a better unof the Rural Environmental derstanding of bow agriculture
MM....,.

througb tile
Gallia County
ASCS can
vironmental
Gilbert
Assistant
Program
is available
cmtributeeffort,"
to the total
enOffice. The Agricultural said.
Stabilization and ~lion

w

N

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SERVICE- backed by thousands
of Westinghouse-trained Service
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e

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$239,95

aboiJpers."

BeaiJ said the company has

CA'ROLINA LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
312 6th St.

Pt Pleasant, W. Va.

tabn 11ep1 to comply fully wilb
the Pr 'hi's aecutive order
Of Slnlay.
He noted that customers haft
eqir
d curiollity about two
- . will there still bP 4 ldJ

"

.

I

for real estate
Farm
Loans
j

CLYDE B. WALKER. Mgr.
19'Locust St.

G;illipolis

446-0203

POLYETHYLENE
HAS MANY USES AROUND lHE FARM AND tiJME

ALL-NEW "40-HORSE"

UTILITY TRACTOR

• 3-cylinder diesel or 4-cylinder gas engines
• lightning flash shift (8F-4R speeds) synchromesh
transmission
•~ PlaneJaJY ljnal driv~

• 181f.z gallon fuel tank

-

• More comfort- "new walk-through" styling

Bunker Silo Coller

• Live independe,t hydraulics
• Precision draft control hitch with infinite rate
response

.

.

• Hydrostatic powersteering, adjustableseat, Dynalife• clutch, hydraulic wet disc brakes, underslung
muffler
• Options include twin-shaft 540/1000 RPM IPTO
and differential lock

011

nesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smith
and family of Columbus visited

Tempora~y

with Mr. and Mrs. Dan Smith
and family recenUy.
.Mr. and Mrs. George Circle
and Mr. and Mrs. James Circle,
New Haven, W. Va., spent .
Sunday with Mrs. Mary Circle.
Mrs . Jack Follrod and
daughter, Kim, spent Tuesday
at Camden Park, Huntington,
W. Va.

d Mrs

Sunday aflemOC!II with Mr. and
Mrs . . Douglas Johnson of
RaMrcln.ean
. d Mrs. Ernest Oark of
Racine,BettyVanMeter,Shayl
Johnson • local' spent
LeAnn
Sunday evening with Eunie
Brinker.
Regena Hawltins of Middleport was guest of the Dan
Smith family recenUy.

Pond liB'

•

"YOUR FARM SUPPLY SERVICE CENTER"

Arllwr E

Jo:On~dson,Palrlct,speni

Silo Coller ·

12' x 100'- .004- Black~ ................... $11~20
16' x.100'- .004- Black ................... $14.98
20' x 100'- .004- Black ................... $18.70
24' x 100'- .004- Black ................... 522~45

INTERNATIONA[
454
toc1aJ.
stop ln. Drive one

MEIGS EQUIPMENT 00.
PH. 992-2176

POMEROY.O.

Central Soya
of Ohio
JRO &amp; SYCAMORE STREETS

.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

J---------------------------------------------------------Beat the Cold Winter and Its Costs

WITH HEATI·NG OIL
FROM LANDMAR

With President's Order
advertised specials?
"The answer is yes. Each
week we will offer items at low
sperial prices, just as,.we ·bave
in tile past. Under no cir·
cumstaooes will ..Y price be
higher than established under
the terms of . tile pn!Sident's
executi'fl! order."
Are all items in the store
included in the freeze? .
"'lbe only items not included
in tile price freeze are raw
~lm'al products, such as
eggs or fresh ftuits and
wgetables. These items will
rise and fall in price en a ~
ply-and«mand or seasonal
basis, as they have in the past. I
can~ JOU that Krager will
continoe to utilize all our
l - l t i to offer slooppet s the
benefit of the best values
nailal*."

project was done in the
laboratory, Logan said, the
quantitative results are not
exacUy the same as actual field
performance. But be adds that
qualita tively the lab performance can be expected to be
accurately repeated in the field.
And although his is the first
research set up to study this
specific problem, · other
researc hers' projects have
yielded evidence that supports
Logan's results.
In regard to 8£1:iculture's
contribution to phosphate
pollution, Logan said, "There is
no doubt that fertilizing practices cause some pollution. But
a common error often results in
agriculture being blamed for
more than its share. Statistics
on agricultural pollution are all
too often the result of an
estimated amount of industrial
and urban sewage
being subtracted from a total
phosphate figure. nus does not
take into account of pbosphale
pollution from woodlands,
construction sites, and more
sparsely populated areas that
are all part of total pollution,
but instead are lumped into the
figure given for agricultural
pollution."

FILM

Krogers.Will Cooperate
Kroger Food Stores have
pledged their cooperation in
every way toward meeting
President Nino's goal of
halting inllation. .
B. G. Beaty, vice jA '!'mtof
the Retail Food Firms
Charleston Division, said,
"Inflation is the biggest
·problem facing our nation
today. It has handicapped
customers and business alike.
Ktoaer IIICI other food siA1res
have been caught between
drastically rising costs of doin8
business and 0111' desire to bald
)Jl'ica as low as possible for

Thus, the major I;Oiltribulor
to agricultural pollution is
erosion. Moreover, soil particles that contain phosphates
may wash into streams and
!aires bOt do not necessarily
release phosphates into
solution . Sometimes the
phosphates remain part of the
sediment in the water and are
m~available as nutrients for
algae. Furthermore , Logan,
said, if the concentration of
phosphate is already higber in
the water than it is in the soil
particiles, the soil may actually
absorb phosphates from the
water, rather than release them
into 'the water.
These results were obtained
using a highly soluble
phosphate fertilizer called
mono-calcium phosphate, or
more commonly , super
phosphate. Soil samples were
representative of Ohio soils in
general, and covered a range of
textures. A silt loam from
southern Ohio had the most
phosphate capacity, a fine,
sandy loan from the Fremont
area showed the least
phosphate.nolding ability while
a clay loam from near Castalia
bad a holding capacity in between.
Rainfall did increase the
amount of phosphate leaching
through the soil, but Logan
emphasizes that it was not the
amoUDt of rainfall, but the inleusity of the rainfall that made
the difference.
Since the research for thiS

CALL (614) 992-2181

FOR THE BEST IN

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SERVING MEIGS,

POMEROY LANDMARK

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Automatic

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Duel Delivery Equipment

.

JArK W. CARSEY. MGR .
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PHONE ' 'Z'-2'31
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ft .
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I

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..

~

.

Meri·itt Defeats
CINCINNATI ( UPI) Gecqe FOBI«'s bam lw'ed
triple in the silith. inning
cfjmgrd a low-ran ~
alld gave tile Cincinnati Reds a

bullpen after 10 Unsuccessrul

Pirates

tossed a strong four hitter at the in the seventh and another .In in seven. decisions since being year in the bottom of the
Pirates, me of the top hitting the eighth.
- called up from Charleston seventh inning as Cincinnati
teams In the majors.
erupted for three runs to put it
Dave Cash singled for Pitts- where he )VIS 11-1.
Perez gave Grimsley all the out of reach.
burgh in the third inning and in
Hot-hitting Tony Perez and the seventh, when the skidding support he needed when he May now has 71 RBI on the
steady Lee May blasted fwo.run Pirates . mounted their only drilled his 22nd home run of the campaign and the llome. run
n~.
hGmers to back up Grimsley's serious threat, Richie Hebner season in the first inning enabled him to equal his 19'10
Singles by Lee May. Tony clulcb pilchlng. The 21-year-old and AI Oliver singled.
following a single by May.
output when he also s1armned
Perez and Bench preceded Grimsley is liOW ~ on the The Pirates got their last hit The home run temporarily 34. The Birmingham Bopper is
Foster's game-winning triple in · season.
in the eighth inning when Gene lied Perez for the club lead in within easy hailing distance of
.the sixth inning, Foster raced The 6-3, 1~ lefthander, Clines singled. ·
runs-batted-in at 75.
his career high of 38 home runs,
,
home with the final I'WI oo an son of former tbicago While Former Charleston Charlies !\fay, however, went back on set in 1969. He is now second in
infield out.
Sox pitcber Ross Grimsley &amp; standout Bruce Kison was top in this depattm~nt when he ·the major league home run
Friday night, Ross ~ey gave up one hit in the
tw~ tagged with the loss, his fourth slugged his 34th homer of the

third:

DETROIT (UPI) - Mickey
Lolidl a 2ILgam'! winner lor the
lim lime in his nine year career
Saturday by pitching the
Delnlit Tigers to a protested 7-2
win over the Milwaukee
Brewus.
Dick McAuliffe drove in four
, _ with a hoole run and a

\ single as Lolich ran his record
to »f and joined Vida Blue and
Fa gusw JenkinS as l!&amp;i!ame
winners in tile Major Leagues.
Lolich, who bad woo 19 and 18
in previous seasons, pitched a
m hitter, strucll; out nine and
warted two as be went the

distance for the 21st time this
year.
Milwaukee protested the
game for the second day in a
row because Jose C8rdenal was
not allowed to uae his favorite
bat, a product of Japan which is
concave In the end where, according to umpire.in-chief
Frank Umont, it is supposed to
be rounded.
Cardenal coolended he was
allowed to use the bat in the
Natiooal League and was not
cballenged in the American
League mill Friday night.
The Brewers' Andy Kosco hit
his seventh homer of the season

Weiskoph

tWo holes to shave off two more
strokes.
On tbe 17th, be put a six-iron
approach shot 16 feet from tile
pin and s8nk the putt on the
illloa!lftellllokeleadaftertbe 18tb, It was a driver and a
thin! romd of tile $150,999 ·wedge and a six.foot putt.
flrilacle\lbia Golf Oaslic.
Weiskopf, who had been
W 'tar/1, who teed off two having trouble with his game
stnm beck of eecwc1 rotnd since be woo the Kempa' Open
I
h Dive Hill, started slowly iii a playoff, said he debaled
• with aooe-ander par front nine about taking a rest, "lor a day,
wNch included two blnlles llld a week, a year, whatever II
-bagey.Butbe""'ghtfireoo would talle" after last week's
the bedl: nine with me binles, tournament In Massachusettes
jg:lgljqg the 17th lmd 11th but then said to bjmself "'!bat's
boles, ~CI' a Mbole total of lllf, no good, it's like nnning away
121D2r par.
fnm yourself."
10, wbo bad BIIC&lt; ' ve 811 The brash Hill, saying he had
the first two dllp at tbe a ''IQ walk" ill the bot and
subaibao Whitiimill'iiJ'
ey biiDifd- weather, suffered a
Oub, • l:inlied tile 17th llld bogey oo tile sixth hole 'll'ben his
1Ith to liaiiJb wilh a 71 and a iroo approach shot '11'81 short of
lilllnllment tolaJ of '1111.
the green and he chipped up 10
&lt;a IInke baCt of Hill was foot and then mi•sed tbe putt.
George lfudtm, wilb ·a 89 and Hegotthisbackwithals.loot
. Dale Dmg'w, wbo had a 61, tudie oo tile eighth to make the
bolb at • totals.
turn at even par but lllen suf.
Lou Graham aud Jack fered a bogey oo tile next bole
II"'...._, wbo bad started the when his drive was in the left
day CJJe ~~rate elf tile pace, rough, his second shot over the
wae at at, lleftiHinder par. grem and it took him lllree Ill
tiNie Bob Mli pllf lmd Mam get down.
'
11
R Uph had 210.. Art Wall,
'lbe finishing birdies were the
Charlie Sfford and .Tun Colbert resull .of ~ the par.fiw
tnn at m.
17th
in two and two puUed
We;""'V lost a ooe«roke and then snaking a ~ter 111
advantage on the par.four the 18th.
llml!th We .._ be drove in
Asked if be thought he could
the rough, m ' I tile gre«&lt; . still capture the p),Ooo first
with his .... ~shot and then )rize mooey bere, Hill replied
bad a bed cmp, But lbell be put "Yeh, If Tom (Weiskopf)
aDiot-iroo•oJDdshol two feet doesn't show up lcmorrow."
fnm tile pin Cll tile eigjlth llld
Nictlm•• had a 70. He had a
alk that to make tbe turn at double bogey five en the rough
CJJe lllllls'.
par three fotrlh hole wben his
He started his bact nine .drive watt into a creek on the
1Jin1ie lllriDK with a 16.footer oo right.
the 13tb,lmd then ell opped in 12 But be was luckier than his
alld llfte footers ... tbe nen playing partner. Mike Hill, the

green

IUiioniol l.e1111e

S~nclings

'"igflf

Em

American Le~tu• Standings
Br United Press International
(NightCO.mes Not Included)
East

W L Pet. GB

Pittsbur'gh

O.icago
St. louis

New York

Phlladelf"ia
Montrea

Baltimore
4'12 Detroit
67 58 .536 6
Boston
60 62 ..c92 11'12 New York
Washingtoo
53 70 .431 19
51 7 .418 20'12 Cleveland

7A 53 .583
68 56 SIS

West

W. L Pc1. GB
Oilkland
San f rancisco 74 52 .587
Los Angeles
67 58 .536 6'h Kansas City
Atlanta
66 67 .S16 9 Chi.cago

Houston
67 64 .492 12
Cincinnati
67 66 .484 13
San Diego
~ 79 .373 27
S.tunlar's Resuns
Cincinnati 6 Pittsburgh 3
Houston 3 Chicago o

San Francisco at Montrea l
(night)

Los Angeles at Philadelphia
(night)

St. Louis at Atlanta (nigh t)

1 San Diego at New York (night)
Teday's GI!JMs

(All n - EDT)
Pitlsburgh at Cin&lt;:innati (2: 1S

p.m.)

Sin Francisco at Montreal
(2:15p.m.)
Los Angeles at Philadelphia

(1 :30 p.m.l

.Houston at Chicago (2: 1S

·p.m.)

p.m. )

.

W L Pet. GB
14 4S .622 ...
67 S1 .SIO 9'12
67 58 .536 10

63 62 .504 14
S3 10 .431 23
so 75 .400 27
West

W L Pet. GB

79 45 .637 . ..
63 60 .S12 15'12
61 64 .488 181'2
California
58 68 .460 22
MinnHOta
S6 66 .459 22
Milwaukee
S1 n .415 27'12
Saturday's Results
Oetroil 7 Milwaukee 2
Cleveland 9 Chicago 4
O..kland 4 Boston 1
Minnesota at Baltimore (night)
Washlngtoo at Kansas City
(night)
New York at California (night)
Sunday's CO.mes
' IAll Tilllft EDT}
Bostoo at Oakland2 (4:30p.m.!
New York at CalltOI'ni&lt;t (5 p.m.)
Washlngloo at Kansas City
(2:30p.m.)
Milwaukee at Detroit (2:30
p.m.)
Chicago at Cleveland 11 :30
p.m.)
MimHOta at BalfimOf'e (5: 30

. Sf- j,ouis at Atlanta (2: 1S p.m.)

Monday's CO.mes

San Diego at New York (2 New York at O..kland (night)

p.m.)

.

''llafry's Crntes

Los Angeles at Montreal (night )
francisco at New York

s.n

Minnesota at Detroit lnightl
!Only CO.mes Scheduled)

GEN. DAVISON PROMOTED
San Dkgo al Philadelphia
WASHINGTON ( UP!) (night}
Army Maj . Gen. Frederi~ E.
Cloidlo•ll at Chicago
Davison,
the highest ranking
Pill l glo at Allan~ 2 Uwi·
NeKro in the U. S. military
llightl
. .....,,
St. :....ouis •t Houston ~ .1..,..
·services, ~ a• been na.med
(night)

McAuliffe singled hoole a run
in the fourth to push his batting
average ab.lve .200 for one of
the few times this season.
Bill Freehan singled home
two more Tiger runs in the
seventh.

Lea~s

PHI1ADELP11IA (UPI) ~ Tcm Weiskopf, who had
Ill delale with him 'f about
playiag Ilia week, Sllqt a six·
lllllls'.,.. &amp;I Saturday' to stride

By u.ifed Press International
CO.mes fMt lnclucledl

.'
after Ron Theobald singled in
the first inning but Detroit
jumped back with four in the
third.
Aurelio Rodriguez tripled and
scored on a single by Ed Brinkman . Lolich wallted and
McAuliffe lined his 15th bcmer'
of the season into the right field
seats.
·

Field

younger brother of Daw~ om,
aiBO in the water, bad a triple
bogey after his awoach went
over the green.
Bob Rosburg, who bad st.ted
the day deadlocked with
MIK'pby at ooe stroke back of
Dave Hill, aiBO bad a triple
bogey seven oo the sixth bole
and finished With a 76 for 213.
Billy Casper, the defendng
cbamp~oo. bad a 72 for 21t"He
announced be was wilbdrawing
from next week's U. S. Match
Play Tournament In Pinelunt,
N. ();, and retlrlling IKme to
California on tile advice of a
pbysician.
Casper bad said earlier be felt
be was comi.~ down with a
virus. The doctor diagnosed it
as "acute pha.ryngitis and
pansir.usitis which bas railed to
respood to antibolic therapy."

derby, trailing the Pirates•
Willie Slargell who bas 41. .
After Perez' hamer, the Reda
scored again in the third when
Pete Rose punched a one-out
single to right and Hal McRau
followed with a single, Rose
holding at second.
Hebner, who bas been in a
near disastrous shunp; then
booted May's grounder
allowing Rose to score.
'

Brothers Have Pole Positions
TALLEDEGA; Ala. (UP!) Donnie and Bobby Allison,
Southern Stockcar Racing's
brother combo, have a pair of
1969 Mercurys on the front row
for today's Talladega 500 and an
eye on a repeat of their performance in the last major race
at Alabama International Motor
Speedway.
The Allison brothers, from
Hu~town, Ala., finished onetwo m.the Wmston 500 last May.
Donniewontheraceinthesame
Wood Brothers Mercury he has
on the pole position for today's
$120,000 race.
Bobby, the older brother,

quallfiEld at 186.444 mph: .
Richard Petty, already stock
car racing's first driver to win
$1 million, needs only to start
the Talladega 500 to become the
lint Nasear driver to win
$200,000 in a single season. His
Plymouth is in the fifth starting
position.
David Pearson failed in his
bid to give Pontiac its first
major stock car racing victory
since Joe Weatherly won at
Darlington, S.C., in 1963.
Pearson's 1971 Pontiac failed to
pass a portion of the Nascar
inspection that determines if a
race car conforms to body ·lines

The. exterior of the 5$.
foot Washington Monument,
completed in 1884, has been
cleaned and repaired from
top to bottom twice, in 1934
and 1964. according to The
World Almanac. Its interior
is swept daily. its 898 steps
cleaned weekly and its
the outside pole- position
in public.
of similar models ·sold to the
walls and windows painted . aholds
Holman-Moody
prepared
annually.
Mercury. Donnie won the pole
Behind the Allisons in the
'
with a record speed of 187.232 starting lineup for the race is
SCHOOL FUNDS
miles
per hour while Bobby Charlie Glo12bach of EdwardsWASHINGTON (UPI J
officials
have
Federal
threatened to cut off $13 million
in funds for Prince Georges
County, Md., the nation's lOth
EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 1, 1971
largest school district, for
Our SERVICE &amp; PARTS Departments will be CLOSED
failure to sulmit a school
all day on SATURDAY
desegregation plan. The Health,
We will be open THURSDAY Evenings until9:30 P.M.
Education and Welfare
We feel that fllis change will benefit both you, our
Department (HEW ) said 1 ~. 9
customer's and our Service &amp; Parts employees.
per cent of the district's t&amp;o,897
Don Watts Volkswagen, Inc.
sbadents are black and that 33
195 Upper River Road-Ohio Rl . 7
pel of them are in schools that
Gallipolis, Ohio45631
are Ill pet. or more black.
.__ _ _ _ _ _:;:Pho:=:neiil~:=i
· ·

ville, Ind., in a 1971 JJIDlor
Johnson11repared Chevrolet,
and fourth place qualifier Pete
Hamilton of Dedham, Mass., In
a Plymouth.
Grand Prix driver Rolf
Stommelen of Cologne, Germany, will be on the third row
with
Petty.
Stommelen
qualified a Mercury in sixth
place.
Others in the top 10 starting
positions are Buddy Baker of
Charlotte, N.C., in a Dodge ;
Fred Lorenzen of Elmhurst, ill.,
in a Plymouth; Friday Hassler
of Chattanooga, Tenn., In a

Chevrolet; and Maynard
Troyer of Spenceport, N. Y., lio
a Mercury.

EVERT WINS
CLEVELAND (UPI)
Young Chris Evert unleashed
her
tenacious,
double
backhanded attack to defeat
Scotland's Wlnnie Shaw ~. 6-4
Saturday in the first match of
tlie 43rd Annual W'l(!htman Cup
Tennis competition between the
United States and Great
Britain.

..

PARLOR SPECIALTIES
BANANA SPLITS, SLUSHES, PARFAITS,
STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKES, SHAKES

"THAT OLD FASHIONED GOODNESSn

j

.J •• ;

For1ner

RIO GRANDE - MAke Rouse,
the ClasS AAA Player-of.theYear in Southeastern Ohio, bas
registered for the fall semester
at Rio Grande College. Roose, a
6'5" forward, will be elegible for
varsity competition .when the.
season opens in November.
A unanimous selection on the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League (SEOAL ) First Team,
Rouse was named Player-ofthe-Year by the Associated
Press. He was also an All.Qhio
First Team pick, and was
selected to play in the NorthSouth Cage Classic.
The Jackson Jronmen, behind
season averages of 22.5 points
and 14 rebounds per game by
Rouse, finished the season with
a 14-6 mark. Rouse finished his
high school career as the
school 's all-time leading
rebounder and third leading
scorer.
He is one of two AU .Ohio First
Team . selections that will be
attending Rio Grande College
this fall. Dan Bollinger, the 6'5"
forward who led Zanesville
Bishop Rosecrans to the Stale
Class A semi.finals last year,
signed an athletic agreement
this spring to attend this fall.
Bollinger, who averaged 24
points per game for Rosecrans,
was named to the All.()hio First
Team by the United Press InternationaL He will be joined at
Rio Grande by Zanesville
teammate Dave Eppley, an AllSoutheastern Ohio Second
Team pick. Eppley, a G'l"
guard, averaged more than 10
poinis per outing last season.
Another highly-touted freshman attending Rio Grande this
fall is Jeff Tyo, a 6'3" guard,
from Meigs High School. Tyo
was a member of the AllDistrict Team last year, and
averaged 16 points per game
over his three year career.
--,. - - - - -- Depuly Chief of Staff for l'l:rSOOft\!1 ~ the U. S. Army in
Europe.

"Frost Free 17"
Side·By·Side
Refrigerator-Freezer
Model RSI71L

I

I

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II

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. . .- .. . . . .ft

a

-

.-

..

• ..,

1_
011

iure Draws Bla,m e Unfairly
BY C. E. NAD!SJR
C.. EU. ~Acrt 'I e
POMEROY - Pollution
c:ontiaua to bold tile spottigbt.
A rdeue IEU!ived IIU wftt
gives 111 lnlerellillg sla~t
oo relation af ll£ric!albn to
c:ertaln forms of pollution_
It .-id ll£ric!alture is bemg
blamed lor more tbaD its sb8re
of "1!ter pollution, Terry J .
· J,.ogan of the O~o Stale
Unlverally Department of
Agronomy, made tlleatatenmt
at the am1ual meeting of the.

the NEW.in FARMING
American Society of Agronomy. process whereby algaEl in a lake in two WljyS - they can reach
lAgan just completed a two-- grow, die, and are deccmposed underground water tables by
year project investigationg by oxygen-using bacteria: leaching through soils or they
fertilizer contributions to. However, increased amounts of can be carried by eroded soil
)11-..,."'a!e pollutioo of water. phosphates and nitrates ·in particles. The main conclusion
Prompted by Ohio's con- water provide enough nutrients of his research was that the
lrihulicm to the eutrophication to speed up this piCl( m; then amount of phosphate that
of ~ ate, thi:; research algae reproduce so fast that the leaches through soil is very
determines . the effects of bacteria decomposing them minimal. Most soils, especially
rainfaD, varying soil types, take too much osygm from the mineral soils, have high
for
holding
leaching, and erosion on water, causing the death of fish capacity
pbGspbate movenient from the and other life fonnS in tile lake. phosphates, so they reach water
According
to
Logan, tables only in negligible
soil to water.

Eutropbicatioo is a natural phosphates may enter lfle water amounts.

• 17.3 cu. ft. capacity • Big
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9.60 cu. ft. capacity refrig.
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• Removable egg container •
Deep door shelves are deep
enough for bulky containers
• Freezl!r door shelves keep
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Separate temperature con ·
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freezer • Magnetic door gas·
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opening

c..

BY JOliN (lOOPER
Sell
taU. Senlte
PT. ' PlEASANT - We attended the annual natiollll)
meeting of the Soil Conservation Society af America
recently. in Cohm'-15, Ohio_
This is the closest to us that tile
national meeting of this
qanizatioo bas ever ._.,

lay of the Land
SCSA is the
professional organizatioo of soil
conservationists, such as tile
NEA is
the
national
organization of teachers.
A highlight of lllis meeting
was a lour to the 0 . M. Stott
Seed ('nnpany estaNisJunent_
0 . H. Scott is nationally
recognized.forilswrri:witbtmf
grasses and tl!e many )K'"Nem•
regarding lawn establishr,_t
and maintenance.
held. The

Representatives of the
conpany 'il'ere genial basts and
showed us tbeir experimental
plots. From our observation of
the plots and discussions with
1epc mtatives of their company, it would appear to us that
a good seed miJ:ture to begin
with, e&lt;mbined with generous
fertilize.. applications, plenty of
moisture, and insect and
disea ... cootrol, all combine to
mate a beautiful lawn.
They emphasized that they
are glad to receive inquiries
from individuals directed to
their Marysville, Ohio, location.
LORIS PULLEN, ON ROIITE
2 bey011d the junction with 62,
installed an interceptor line of
tile oo tile back side of a site
prepared for a trailer location.
He dug the ditch, laid the tile
and filled the ditch parUy lull of
gravel over top the tile. The
Intercepted water was then

carried to a safe ouUet_ Denver
Yoho of scs helped biJn with
designs for this work.
·
CHARLES McCULLOCH
WHOSE farm is on Route :J5
near Five Mile Creek, cut back
several hundred feet of
woodland border along a crop
field. The crop field is between
the road and the river, and the
woodland area is along Fiye
Mile Creek which nowa through
his land. He didJhis wort with a
chain saw and later painted the
stwnps with :1+5-T. The border
is 20 to 30 feet wide.
In discussing this project Mr:
McCulloch said, "Cutting· back
these borders enlarged my
fields because of prevention of
shade and also because trees
along the crop field sap a Jot of
moisture which otherwise
would be used for the crop." In
addition to the value of
producing good crops to the

edge of a croP field , we would
add that a cutback border has a
greatvalueinprovidingwildlife
food and habitat,
WE GOT A BIG KICK OUT of
preparing a television program
with television stars Van L.
Roush, age 88, of New Haven,
Gus Henry, age 87 of Gallipolis
Ferry, and Perry A. Sayre, age
91i of Arbuckle. These men
appeared with U:S on John
Heiskell's program and were
interviewed by Ken Franks,
who was substituting· for Mr.
Heiskell who was in Columbus
at the time we prepared the
program.
While none of these men had
previously appeared on
television, they appeared at
ease and answered questions
from Mr. Franks quickly and
wittingly.

By BERNARD BRENNER
UPI Fanu EIIIW
WASHINGTON(UPI)-Farm
leaders, digesting details of
President Nixon's lle'il' ~
omic package, are now voicing
decidedly mixed views 00 tile
plan -including slnmg uneasi·
ness about what the 90 - day
price freeze may do to tile
farm economy.
ANational Grange..,....._.
said today his grtlllp . . . to
write the Preaident praising
him for "bold acticm" to solve
the nation's econ.UC woes_
"We feel that anything we
can do to s!O'II' down inllation
is going to be beneficial to
farmers,"aGrangeofficialsaid .
But from tbe American Farm
Bureau Federatioo, the Natioo-

al Farmers Unioo and the Natioml Faimers Organization
(NFO), there were remarkably
similar rumbles oo the subject
of the President's !llklay price
~order.

The order exempts raw agricultural )li'Oducts sold by farmers. Agriculture Secretary Clifford M. Hardin told a private
meelillgforagriculturebusinesso
men, food industry officials and
fmn b l'«n that tbe step was
taken because farln prices have
not ._., inRationary.

But this aemption was litUe
cunfort to Rllger B. Fleming,
bead of tile Farm Bureau's
•Wasbingtm office. Informed
SOUi'Cl!S said Fleming, speaking
upinHardin'sclose«kkoormeet-

ing, complained the farm product aemplilliiS was good but
"of limited value.n
"We ought not delude ourselves that the ceilings on processed foods won't be reflected
downward to producers," Fleming told the session.
Tony T. Dechant, president of
the National Farmers Union,
told UP!, "It's our cooclusion
that farmers really do have a
price ceiling in spite of the aemptioo. Handiers wiln,-pay a
higher price to farmers if they
can't pass it on to consumer."

Carmel N. eWS,
By the Day

Rebuilding Environment Rev . and Mrs. Marshall
Of Concern
to Eveeyone
~~~ ~=~v;m=:
dm' .
Florence Circle
a Weda.u..;!diftn Se ·

Westinghouse

Enrolls

I

1

Farm Leaders Uneasy

j~altt ·II]DJ)pt

....

Cager

JJ-TIII....~TIIIa-5 II

Seed. Company Tour Impressive

·---~---iiiiiiii"""--------

VOLKSWAGEN

Jackson

,.

.

.

'

Lolich Wins 20th ·

.

.

First · Victory

For

At the time Merritt entered
the game, the Pirates led S-1.
Johnny Bench's fourth inning
homer off .Joser Dock Ellis
pulled the Reds wilhin ooe run
~ the Pirates in the fourth in-

starts this seasoo.
His victocy Saturday came in
a relid role and kept him out of
tile reconl books since the
lo3 Yielmy 0\'1!1" tile Pjlt.!burgb Natiooal League record. for
.Pjrates Sallrily encling piIdler coosecutive losses In one se11801'1
• Jim Merritt's 11 game Josin8 without a victory is 12.
lllreak.
.
.
Merritt developed elbow .r,lerritt took over for starter
miaeries last ~ after Wayne Simpson with two out in
becomlng tile lint Red lefty to the fourth inning and limited the
win lD games in 4li years and P.irates to three bits the
• bad '-" relegated to the remainder of the game.

•

.
"

;,~. .... 1_
':'I:J.
·-

Model. RT121

Westinghouse
12 Cu. fl.

@

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•

Refrigerator
• 12 cu. ft. capacity • Auto·
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tor section • lOO·Ib. freezer,
with full·width door shelf •
Full width, full depth shelves
• Built·ineggstorage • Butter
server • Door shelf storage
m both freezer and refrigerator • Full·width vegetable
crisper • Magnetic door gas·
kets • Interior light (refrig.
erator) • Compact, quiet
mechanism.

. GALUPOUS - ·~...
rv1ce a masters REAP
a quality environment is au through County ASC Comincreasing concern of both mit12es elected by farmers and
urban and rural people, ae- rancbers in the coonty.
cording to J. Melvin Gilbert,
Each REAP practice ap• Chairman of the Gallia ASCS- JliWed by tile ASC County
. The Rural Environmental Dmmillee must have related
Assistance Program (REAP) soil and water benefits.
bas as •tts rna jor purpose the The leaf1et, ''Rebuilding a
lmpiovanent of lbe qujl(ity of ~ty Environment Through
life for all people, aawnplished Rura I En vi ronmen tal
,._,,nh a cosHharing Jllllglaal Assistance l'ro!lfam" explains
with farmers to prevent « .some of the environmental
abate agriculture • related problems encountered on farms
pollutionofwater, landandair, and ranches, the way REAP
and to conserve agricullural can help meet lllese problems,
soil, water, woodland, and andhuwpogramsineachstale
wildlife resources.
and county are developed,
"While fanners and ranchers administered, and funded.
are the ..----..
nrimuv parti.. ~nts in
''Many fannen will lind this
_,_..
REAP practices, everyone leanet will add to their
receives benefits from the knowleclge of REAP. For nonprogram," Gilbert said.
farmers, it provides an inFor all persons interested in lroduction to an environmental
helping rebuild a quality en- JI1'0ill8iil at wort in their own
vironment a leaflet oo the role . CCIIDDunity and a better unof the Rural Environmental derstanding of bow agriculture
MM....,.

througb tile
Gallia County
ASCS can
vironmental
Gilbert
Assistant
Program
is available
cmtributeeffort,"
to the total
enOffice. The Agricultural said.
Stabilization and ~lion

w

N

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e

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aboiJpers."

BeaiJ said the company has

CA'ROLINA LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
312 6th St.

Pt Pleasant, W. Va.

tabn 11ep1 to comply fully wilb
the Pr 'hi's aecutive order
Of Slnlay.
He noted that customers haft
eqir
d curiollity about two
- . will there still bP 4 ldJ

"

.

I

for real estate
Farm
Loans
j

CLYDE B. WALKER. Mgr.
19'Locust St.

G;illipolis

446-0203

POLYETHYLENE
HAS MANY USES AROUND lHE FARM AND tiJME

ALL-NEW "40-HORSE"

UTILITY TRACTOR

• 3-cylinder diesel or 4-cylinder gas engines
• lightning flash shift (8F-4R speeds) synchromesh
transmission
•~ PlaneJaJY ljnal driv~

• 181f.z gallon fuel tank

-

• More comfort- "new walk-through" styling

Bunker Silo Coller

• Live independe,t hydraulics
• Precision draft control hitch with infinite rate
response

.

.

• Hydrostatic powersteering, adjustableseat, Dynalife• clutch, hydraulic wet disc brakes, underslung
muffler
• Options include twin-shaft 540/1000 RPM IPTO
and differential lock

011

nesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smith
and family of Columbus visited

Tempora~y

with Mr. and Mrs. Dan Smith
and family recenUy.
.Mr. and Mrs. George Circle
and Mr. and Mrs. James Circle,
New Haven, W. Va., spent .
Sunday with Mrs. Mary Circle.
Mrs . Jack Follrod and
daughter, Kim, spent Tuesday
at Camden Park, Huntington,
W. Va.

d Mrs

Sunday aflemOC!II with Mr. and
Mrs . . Douglas Johnson of
RaMrcln.ean
. d Mrs. Ernest Oark of
Racine,BettyVanMeter,Shayl
Johnson • local' spent
LeAnn
Sunday evening with Eunie
Brinker.
Regena Hawltins of Middleport was guest of the Dan
Smith family recenUy.

Pond liB'

•

"YOUR FARM SUPPLY SERVICE CENTER"

Arllwr E

Jo:On~dson,Palrlct,speni

Silo Coller ·

12' x 100'- .004- Black~ ................... $11~20
16' x.100'- .004- Black ................... $14.98
20' x 100'- .004- Black ................... $18.70
24' x 100'- .004- Black ................... 522~45

INTERNATIONA[
454
toc1aJ.
stop ln. Drive one

MEIGS EQUIPMENT 00.
PH. 992-2176

POMEROY.O.

Central Soya
of Ohio
JRO &amp; SYCAMORE STREETS

.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

J---------------------------------------------------------Beat the Cold Winter and Its Costs

WITH HEATI·NG OIL
FROM LANDMAR

With President's Order
advertised specials?
"The answer is yes. Each
week we will offer items at low
sperial prices, just as,.we ·bave
in tile past. Under no cir·
cumstaooes will ..Y price be
higher than established under
the terms of . tile pn!Sident's
executi'fl! order."
Are all items in the store
included in the freeze? .
"'lbe only items not included
in tile price freeze are raw
~lm'al products, such as
eggs or fresh ftuits and
wgetables. These items will
rise and fall in price en a ~
ply-and«mand or seasonal
basis, as they have in the past. I
can~ JOU that Krager will
continoe to utilize all our
l - l t i to offer slooppet s the
benefit of the best values
nailal*."

project was done in the
laboratory, Logan said, the
quantitative results are not
exacUy the same as actual field
performance. But be adds that
qualita tively the lab performance can be expected to be
accurately repeated in the field.
And although his is the first
research set up to study this
specific problem, · other
researc hers' projects have
yielded evidence that supports
Logan's results.
In regard to 8£1:iculture's
contribution to phosphate
pollution, Logan said, "There is
no doubt that fertilizing practices cause some pollution. But
a common error often results in
agriculture being blamed for
more than its share. Statistics
on agricultural pollution are all
too often the result of an
estimated amount of industrial
and urban sewage
being subtracted from a total
phosphate figure. nus does not
take into account of pbosphale
pollution from woodlands,
construction sites, and more
sparsely populated areas that
are all part of total pollution,
but instead are lumped into the
figure given for agricultural
pollution."

FILM

Krogers.Will Cooperate
Kroger Food Stores have
pledged their cooperation in
every way toward meeting
President Nino's goal of
halting inllation. .
B. G. Beaty, vice jA '!'mtof
the Retail Food Firms
Charleston Division, said,
"Inflation is the biggest
·problem facing our nation
today. It has handicapped
customers and business alike.
Ktoaer IIICI other food siA1res
have been caught between
drastically rising costs of doin8
business and 0111' desire to bald
)Jl'ica as low as possible for

Thus, the major I;Oiltribulor
to agricultural pollution is
erosion. Moreover, soil particles that contain phosphates
may wash into streams and
!aires bOt do not necessarily
release phosphates into
solution . Sometimes the
phosphates remain part of the
sediment in the water and are
m~available as nutrients for
algae. Furthermore , Logan,
said, if the concentration of
phosphate is already higber in
the water than it is in the soil
particiles, the soil may actually
absorb phosphates from the
water, rather than release them
into 'the water.
These results were obtained
using a highly soluble
phosphate fertilizer called
mono-calcium phosphate, or
more commonly , super
phosphate. Soil samples were
representative of Ohio soils in
general, and covered a range of
textures. A silt loam from
southern Ohio had the most
phosphate capacity, a fine,
sandy loan from the Fremont
area showed the least
phosphate.nolding ability while
a clay loam from near Castalia
bad a holding capacity in between.
Rainfall did increase the
amount of phosphate leaching
through the soil, but Logan
emphasizes that it was not the
amoUDt of rainfall, but the inleusity of the rainfall that made
the difference.
Since the research for thiS

CALL (614) 992-2181

FOR THE BEST IN

Finest Budget Pay Plan

SERVING MEIGS,

POMEROY LANDMARK

Finest Delivery Service
Automatic

rHOME HEATI

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Degree Day Delivery

Duel Delivery Equipment

.

JArK W. CARSEY. MGR .
Servmq Metgs, G• Ui ol o1 nd Mil !Win Counties
PHONE ' 'Z'-2'31
Sto~Orcn Mon .. Sa l. Ur1ftle P.M..

~

AND GALUA COUNTIES
Complete Line Of

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�. '

•

11- The Slnlay Times - Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. !!!, !&lt;17!

1 Bargains,.Bargains·and More Bargains In The Classifieds .THE WISEMAN
~ Card. Thanks . Help Wanted
Real Estah' For Sale
BA.IRD REALTY CO.
n·l·zl.on Oscar
· ird, Realtor
AGENCfUSSELL WOO
Agency
REALTOR
of

~ WE wi$h to express our thanks .BABYSITTER, 5 days a Week .

:

and appreclall011 tR
.o friJeohnds
Ph. 446-0108.
.
and neighbors. fo ev.
n
196-2
Bryant. McCoy Funeral
Horne. pallbearers, Holler REGISTERED
nurse
in
residential treatment center
Medical Center, floral of·
ferlngs and the food at fhe
tor emotionally disturbed
recent passing of our beloved
adolescent boys. Liberal
brother, James Montgomery.
benefits. Salary open and
Sadlymissedbyhisslste rs,
competitive . Housing
Mrs. Bertie Slack, Mrs. J. L.
available, if desired. Apply or
Moriarty.
wr~te to: J . T. McOlmb,
197· 1 administrator,
Edgemeade of
-~~- Box 107, Ironton . Ohio.

• -ln_Me
_m
_or
_y_.- - - -

11n.IEMOln of our son's birth196-3
day , Glen Harold Adkins. Jr .• - - - - - - - - - August 22, 1961 - d1ed Ma y "I LOVE sell ing Avon . It
changed my whole life ."
29, 1967 .
That 's the feeling shared by

•

: 'Twas feri year.s ago foday

- They laid you 1n my arms,
' You were our only son
And all our hearts you did
charm.
! God gave you to us to live,
Glenn.
And oh, what a short time.
' But those were precious years.

1

We mis~ you more and more

each day
We miss your saying "I love

!
~
!

you ."

.

thousands
. of
Avon
Representatives. You, too,
can get more out of life this

way. You'll earn good money,
win prizes, meet people, have

fun. Call or write Mrs. Helen
Yeager, Box 172. Jackson,
Ohio. Ph . 286-4028.
192·6
~ERVICE

station atfendant
needed. must be 21 . Apply in
person 723 Second Ave.,
Bonded Gas Station .
194-6

We miss your goodnight kiSs.
Everywhere we look we always
see you there,
You are beside us everywhere
::
we go,
:. We see you go to kindergarten 3 ROOM apartment. bath,

For Rent

~~

:~

each day,
We still see you runn ing up the

walk,
And hear you say " guess
what?"
Your pictures. Glenn,

~-bring

furnished, private entrance . 1

room apartment, ~itchen_ette ,
bath, private . Ava1lable m 10
days. Also farm house. Ph .
446-0168.
196-tf

B
_ a

THREE HOMES In subdivisions near town. Will
trade for rcheaper propertis.

Hobart Dillon, Reallor
Office446-2674
Howard or Lucille Brannon
Evenings446-1226

'

Office 446-3643

Evenings tall
E- M· "Ike" Wiseman 446'9796
E. N.'Wiseman 446-4500

VACANT LAND - 104 acrft
with pond, 29 acres with good
well and septic system.

School Day Special!

FARMS - 42 acres in Hun- •
ling ton Twp., 34 acres In ,
~~~:s~ounty, both with good .

IMMEDIATE O~CUPANCY
$15,300 buys this 4 BR home,
formal DR, canpeted LR, DR,
hall and playroom , full
divided basemen.! with forced

NEAl{ rOWN _ 44'12acres, five
room house, Sand Hollow
Road, tobacco base.
Oscar Baird, 446-4632
Doug Welherholt, 446-4244

air gas furnace and large
laundry room . Assume a loan
at 5112 pc1. int.

VACANT
$11 ,000. Is the price of this 6
roorn l'h bath home located in
downtown Gallipolis in
walking distance of school.
deep lot, garage.
·

MASSIE
Realtor, 32 State St
Tel 446-1998
Baby Farm

INSTANTLY APPEALING
MODERN 6 rm . house, lull
S\8,000 will place you in this
base., large liv . rm . and din.
atlracli.ve ·rancher. 3 BR,
rm ., 2 ~ms . paneled, Nearly
luxury all buil-t in kitChen 'in
new fuel oil fur . Large frame
color, DR, roomy LR, all
and metal barn, plenty water,
paneled and
carpeted,
gravify feed from spring.
finished garage, spacious well
Located on 6 A. good land. 14
landscaped lawn plus an
mi. from city. $11,500.
extra lot .

· 446~1066
· When a girl's face is her fortune, It usually rUns into an
attractive figure.
Salesman: "An~ you sure the boss isn' t in his office?"
Secretary: "Do you doubt his wocd?"

In Green Township and Gallipolis School District, a 2
bedroom horne with bath, new gas furnace and new kifchen, with full basement, with 229 teet of road frontage to
Stale Route 141. Price $11,900.00.
At Centenary, 3 bedroom house with full basement and a
lol 117'h feet front on Stale Route 141-and 200 feet deep.
Priced reduced to $16,000.00. Will finance part with lsi
morfgage.
2 lots on Neighborhood Road. price reduced to $1,500.00
each. City water and gas available.
4 bedroom home close to Holzer Hospital with full
basement, 3 baths, large living room and large lot,
42'hxl75 ft.. with double carport. Shown by appointment.
Price $23,500.00.
Office446·1066
Evenings: Call
Ron Canaday 446-3636
John I. Richards, 446-0280
Russell D. Wood, 446-4618

Thurman

MOVE IN NOW
GOOD 5 rm . home located on 1.4
$15,750. Country style kitchen
A. lot. House has had treat·
with side laundry room , 3 BR
ment for fermites . It has a
&amp; bath. carport &amp; storage
garage and ca n be bought for
room, cellar house and large
$8.000.

SJROUT REALTY

memories of the days you
were with us.
work shop - in city.
8X35 TRAILER, 2 bedroom,
Pll. _446-0008
These years of heartaches no
also sleeping rooms . Ph. 446one will ever know
' .
MOVED TO FLORIDA
IDEAL set-up. 122 A.. fertile
0349.
()&gt; this that would have been
196-3 $14,000 is the price of this one
land, all flat to gentle roll. all
STILL UNDER
your day .
floor plan, 5 room &amp; bath
tillable except 5 A. in saw
CONSTRUCTION
Happy Birthday In heaven FOR RENT or long lime lease,
home, ·all electric, paneled
timber. This land has been 6 ROOM~S'~th and garage on a
"Little man."
walls, carport, aluminum
neW brick 3 bedroom home,
improved over a generation of
nice te
· ·~ city wat.e r,
Your Mommie and Daddle,
si ding , air conditioner.
full size basement, Ph miles
good farming practices. It has
gas,
ww
ca.,
nd built-in
Shirley and Harold. sisters,
storage room &amp; storage
good fences, plenty water,
from town. Ph. 446·4127.
kitchen
.
Lissa and Stephanie Adkins,
building. an ex tra lot.
1,623 lb. fob . base., 7 rm .
196-3
ROUTE 160
Your PaPa and MaMa's.
modern home, 5 barns; block NICE flat . ready to build or
197-1 60
-X.,12- T
-R
..,.A
-=
I Lc::E:-::R:-::,-:C::-he-s::-h::-ir-e
. Ph .
POMEROY,O.
and metal dairy barn 36' x 96',
pul a t. 0 ..., . Measures
10
rooms
&amp; 3 bath home and
31 metal · stanchions, water
367-7512.
almost I ao•• {
~lenly of
apartment . Outstanding
cups, milkers and 320 gal. road frontage •
194-4
county
kitchen with coppertone
bulk tank . All bldgs. in good
water .
bu i llins ,
dishwasher,
I WILL not be responsible for TRAILER space on private lot
repair and have mefal roofs
NOT MANY LEFT
any debts other than my own
G ll 1'pol 1's Ph 675 1426
disposal , range, oven, double
less than 10 years old . Owner $10,500 - r
5 room home in
as of this date August 18, 1971.
near a
·
·
· 197 .5
ret. &amp; tri ple sink - large
grows roughage for 80 head city w,, 0{., basement,
.. Signed: Stephen Lee Harris. --..,.---.,...----family room , carpeted LR,
livestock and sells hay. Th1s IS garage, ga ~
3Ce and
an :--amazing opportunity for
home is vacant. Call Howard
-----:--;-;-;--~195·3 BRADBURY efficiency apt ..
lovely built-in Co.. 1ets.
Brannon for more in anyone interested in farming .
adults only, no pels. Available
' RALPH'S Carpet- Upholstery
Aug. 25. 729 Second Ave.
Price $40,000.
formation.
· Cleaning Service. Free
197.tf
estimates. Ph. 446-0294.
LOW
197-11 DOWNSTAIRS unfur~ . apt .. . 4
AS YOU can see, THE
--:c--::-:--:-:~:;:;-::::--;:
rooms &amp; bath, bUIIf -m kll · SEE this large 2 story file
WORLD'S LARGEST REAL
FREE . Used clothing for
chen, all utilities paid . Ph.
building with over 5000 sq. fl . 48 A. most tractor , cheap.
ESTA· TE
SALES
0322
anyone who is ln. need. Church
of floo.-space - consisting of 150 A. Farmer's farm . $16,000. ORGANIZATION is on the
446
of Christ, Bidwell. Ph. 388·
·
·
191.-11
a store. re~taurant , gas 50 A. 25 is bottom, $7,500.
move. If you have property
8-429 or 388-8787.
station, ice cream plant. 11 A. edge of town . $10,000.
197-1
for
sate, call us.
garage and tire shop. 6 room 25 A. St. Rt . 325. $7,500.
SLEEPING ROOMS weekly
LOTS OF LOTS
apartment located on a
rates, free garage parking,
WE
HAVE
lots in all directions.
' SUN VALLEY Nursery School,
corner lot on a busy highway.
Libby Hotel.
Building
lots. frailer lots and
577 Sun Valley Drive, licensed
18 A. WITH 3 houses : 1 brick, 1 campsites
Owner wishes to retire.
74-tf
with plenty of
by the State of Ohio,
block. and 1 tile block. ()lly
gas.
water
and
$22,500.
' Department
of
Public SLEEPING ROOMS, weekly
FARMS
ANY HR. 446-1998
Welfare, now providing full
rates. Park Central Hotel.
104
A.
Gallipolis
School disl.
day . care
and
child ·
308-tf EXTRA large store - doing a
EVE.: J. Fuller 446-3246
120
A.
Route
160
development program for - - - -- - - - - - ,
great business - in excellent - - -----:----:--:-::::- 160 A. - Morgan Twp.
location on state highway, NEW home - brick front , 100' x
pre-school children. infants LOOKING lora real nice room?
A. - 8 mi. from town
five room apartment. Store is 230' lot, buill -in kitchen, 212
excluded. Open 6:30a.m . to 6
Lowe Motor Hotel, Pt.
75 A. - Recreation park
Pleasa•t, , Main and 4th inwe ll stocked and well
carpeted . Will help arra~ge 15 A. - Huntington Twp.
p.m. Monday through Friday .
' Fees: $20 for full five-day
"
equipped.
financing . Barr ConstructiOn, 41 A. ~ Springfield Twp.
-N· ~ . $5 per day if less than
vites~our inspection . Singles,
16 Pine St ., Ph . 446-3746. Mon.
k
Ranny Blackburn
. five days, S3 pe~ day for
$4.50, $5, $6, $7, $8, $9, $2 for
lhr"Fri . 91o 5, Sat . 81ol2.
Brilndl Manager
morning sessions. Ph. ~exira person. Special weekly A very good vegetable and fruit _____ _ __ _ _
185-tf
3657, · Madge Hauldren,
rates. F pkg .. TV. ind. air
market, perfect location cond., soli serv. elev. Ph . 675·
Owner-Director ; John and
building &amp; equiprnent.
Loredilh
Hauldren,
2260.
1~-tf
operators.
35-tf
FURNISHED apartment. GOOD lots, boating - free
docking - call for ap .
adults only, free garage
pointment
now.
parking. Libby Hotel.
193-tf
. BLACK &amp; WHITE spotted
walker dog, lost In vicinity of
l'h ACRES wifh a large com Polkadot Creek, Scottown.
fortable retreat cottage with
Answers to name of Bandit.
woodburntng 'f ireplace on
BETTER
jobs
are
available
for
Ph. 886-5753.
fronl. Just r ight for the
water
GBC
graduates.
Enroll
now
197-3
busy family just wishing to
· to·r fall term . Gallipolis
gel away from it all .
Business College R. N. 71-02· 1 PAIR Bellone hearing aids.
0032B
.
Ph
.
446-4367.
lostat Jaycee Field Sat., Aug .
162-tf 6 ROOM house. 162 Portsmoulh
u . Please call ~~6 - 1243 .
Rd . 3 bedrooms. modern
Reward.
kitchen, w-w carpeting living
197-3

Dairy Farm

0l

0

s'

0

Notice

s-c

I

b

-

looking For A
Business?

LISTINGS
GETTING

Farms.
Vacant land

Investment

Self Serve Grocery·

t .. .
Mare.

Neal Realtj.
. -DON'T DELAY
AND BE SORRY
IF YOU are looking for a good
home in a good- location see
\his one today . This is a two
slory, 4 BR, frame dwelling
wilh 2 baths, basement and
nice lot. Located jusl3 blocks
from business district and
just across the street from
High School at 112 State

Street.
All Eleclric Home
SEE this modern all electric
home with 3 BR, Barn, plenty
of water and located on 410
acres near Rio Grande. Will
sell all or part of land with
house.

Office Phone 446-1694
Evenings
Charles M. Neal, 446· 1546
J. Michael Neal, 446-1503
50 ACRES of bottom land near
Rodney. Ph. 446·2348.
197-3

Insurance
NATIONWIDE INSURANCE
AUTO. Fire, life. ~5 Stale St..
Waldo F. Brown . W. R.
Brown. 446·1960.
24-11
FOR ALL your insurance needs
check with your Grange
agents at the Neal Ins.
1\gency, 64 State St. Agents
for auto, fire, homeowners,

hospital and general liability.
114-11

20 Acres Garden
Of Eden

Want To Get Awa·1
From It All

ADAM, TAKE YOUR EVE
BY THE HAND AND
LEAD HER · yO THIS
SEClUDED HIDE -AWAY .
LARGE SHADEO LAWN.
WONOERFUL GARDEN
AND POND. VERY NICE
HOME
WITH
HUGE
LIVING - ROOM , NICE
KITCHEN ·&amp; Dl.NlNG AND
2 BEDROOMS. HUGE
NEARLY NEW, VERY
GOOD
UTILIT Y
BUILDING PRESENTL Y
USED AS LARGE SHOP, 2
CAR
GARAGE
AND
BARN .

IF YOU'RE LOOKING
FOR A UTTLE PEACE
AND QUIET. SEE THIS
TOOAY
LOVELY
&lt;IlMMER COTTAGE AND
12 ACRES WITH A
BEAUTIFUL 2 ACRE
SPRING -FED LAKE AT
THE FRONT OOOR .
LAND tS CLEAN WITH
LOTS OF TREES.

Price Reduced
Was $12,900 Now $9,900
OWNER VERY ANXIOU S
TO SELL MODERN 3
BEDROOM HOME WITH
LARGE LIVING ROOM
AND BU IL T-IN K\T .
CHEN . NEEDS A LITTLE
WORK BUT COULD BE A
MONEY MAKER .

Match This?
No Chance
ATTRACTIVE l YR . OLD
BRICK AND FRAME
WITH FULL BASEMENT
IN AN
EXCELLENT
NEIGHBORHOOD ,
3
LARGE BEOROOMS ,
CARPETED
LIVING
ROOM AND PRETTY
KITCHEN WITH RANGE
&amp; OVEN . PLUS LOTS OF
CABINETS .
FORMAL
DIN lNG , PA"TIO DOORS
ON BASEMENT, 1 CAR
GARAGE , 1 MILE OUT
PRICED FOR QUICK
SALE .

Lots For Sale
CJ) 2.38 ACRE WOODED
ALL .
WATER
AVAILABLE .

(21 2.33 ACRE WOODED .
VERY, VERY NICE ,
WATER TAP PAID .
(312 ACRES AT EDGE OF
TOWN, S2,500. WATER &amp;
GAS AVAIL. GOOD FOR 2
OR
MORE MOBILE
HOMES .
W

S'h ACRES. LARGE

TREES A BEAUTIFUL
LOCATION , $3,900.

Cottage ....

Services Offered

, Found
FOUND Friday, man' s Bulova
wrist watch. Come fo Tribune
and identify and pay for ad .
197·3

Wanted

dis tr ict. PriceS\3,500. Ph . 4464001 after 5.
187-12

SS.OO Service Charge
Wi ll remove your dead

horse and cows
Call Jackson 286-4531

· Wanted To Do

,. Previous food service ex : perience would be halpful.

• Send resume to Box 189 c-o
: CO.IIipolis O.ily Tribune.

.

~ LADIES S~nla

.

needs heiR""
• $3.73 an hour. 7 lo 10 p.m .. nv
· : . experience necessary. ·For
• . flbllday money call Mrs .
·• Claus, Jackson 988- 270~ .
~
175-11

:•

AUOION

- Heating
Free Estimates
Stewart's Hardware
Vinton, Ohio

Sale Eve.ry
Saturday
Evenings, 7:00

144·11 .
FAIN
EXTERMINATING CO.
Termite &amp; Pest Control
Wheelersburg, Ohio
Ph . 574-6112
52-tf

Reynolds Souvenir Shop
pt,

Corner lnl &amp; Olive Ave .
We sell anything for
anybody . We also buy some
estates. For Pick-up Service

Call Knotts . Community Auction, 4462917

This is the chance of a lifetime to
own a brand new National Home.
Big

spac~

and comfort.

The very best h;ome value in town.
OPEN FRIDAY, SAT., SUN •.1-8
OTHER TIMES BY APPT.

. NO
MONEY ...

Westbrook Village

.....
$117-

Rt. 160To
Bulaville Rd.
North on Bulaville Road
114 nHie toModel Home

principal
_ _ (nt!fe!t

Rleasant

ARD FULL" APPROX. 3000 BOTTL~S
OF Y.ARIOUS ASSORTMENTS.

Whiskeys, Bitters, Medicines,
Fruit Jars, Insulators etc.
SATURDAY and SUNDAY
9to 5 Aug . 28 and 29th

THE WISEMAN.
·AGENCY

AUOION
SERVIQ
"SELL THE AUCJJON
WAY"

JAMES (JIMME)
SAYRE
PH. 446-3444

l

S17,SOOTOTAL PRICE
33 year mortgage- 363 payments
Annual percentage rate 71/4pct.

''Big Weekend Sale" 1st Of Its Kind

l

LOOKING for a bargain. This is
it . Two houses. ()le three
room . ()le four room house.
Spring water . ()le acre.
Denver K. Higley, 446-0349
Earl Winters, 446-3128
0 . D. Parsons, 446-4127

Central Air Conditioning

OPPORTUNITY

; loGII OXPIInding company.

WE ARE SELLING AT
SUCH A PACE . IT'S 1M ·
POSSIBLE TO KEEP
ENOUGH PROPERTY
LISTED TO EVEN COME
CLOSE TO SATISFYING
THE BUYERS WE HAVE
ON A WAITING LIST .' IF
YOU ARE THINKING OF
A CHANGE . CALL US
R\GH1. NOW. IF '(.O.U
WANT TO BUILD NEW ,
SEE US TO SELL YOUR
PRESENT PROPERTY .

9499. Established in 1940.
169-tf

Help Wanted

• or over to -triin for
; restaurant manager with a

We Need Your
Property To Sell

$3,200

IKE WISEMAN-THE WISEMAN AGENCY ..

cleaning and repair, al so
house wreck ing . Ph . 446 -

BABYSITTING in my home
with I or 2 children, in Rio
Grande area. Ph. 245-5067.
197-3
RAIKE'S
_B_A_B_Y
_S_I_T=T=IN
::-G
-c---:1-or- sm a II
REFRIGERATION
&amp; AIR CONDITIONING
children after 3 p. m. Ph. 446- WATER well drilling, Myers
RESIDENTIAL
commercial,
3763.
Sa les and Service.
195-3 pumps
Ph.
367-1200.
industrial.
Complete water line service
117 .If
= - - - - - -and
trenching. C. J . Lemley,
WE BUILD. remodel , repa ir , Vinton,
Ohio. Ph . 388-8543.
custom built kitchens , install
ALBERT EHMAN
114-11
biithrooms. 446-4764.
Water Delivery Service
140 -78 D. P. MARTIN &amp; Son Waler
Pa tr iot Star Rl.. Gallipolis
Ph. 379-2133
Delivery
Service.
Your
243-11
patronage will be ap preciated . Ph . 446-0463.
BlACKTOP DRIVEWAYS
WORK IN EUROPE . U. S.
7-11
&amp; PARKING LOTS
Army guarantees a 16-month
CALL
tor free estimates. All
~TE~R~M~t~T~E~
P~E7
S
~T~
t~
o"-N~TR~O
~
L
tour of Europe, after training
work guaranteed and full
(usually four months) in this FREE inspection . Call 446-3245,
insurance coverage. VAL-Ucountry. on three -year
Merrill O'Dell. Operator for
HI Black lop Co .. Inc. , 86 Main
enlistments . New higher pay
Exterminal Termite Service,
St
., Chauncey, Ohio. Ph. 725scales, exceptional benefits.
19 Belmon t Dr .
2231.
Usi ng
all
local
Ph. 446-3343.
267-11
materi al s.
197-4
173-26
TV Antenna Sales Installation
WANT L.P.N. or retired R.
- Service. Estimates. Ph .
'HORSE SHOE lNG
nurse to work in nursing
446-1673 or 446-9679.
COMPLETE
farrier service.
home. Can li ve in if desired .
63 -11
Bob Schaeffing, 446-1510.
Write: Box 313, Ironton, Ohio ,
BANKS TREE SERVICE
188-11
Rt. 1.
FREE
es
timates,
liability
in197-3
SWISHER'S
surance. Pruning ; trimming
DITCH TRENCHING
and cavi ty work. tree and
SERVICE Ph. 446-0468
slump removal. Ph . 446-4953.
MANAGEMENT
174·11
lJ.lf
•• Ambitious young man age 25

THIS LIKE NEW 3
BEDROOM HOME WITH
2'h
BATHS ,
FULL
BASEMENT AND 2 CAR
GARAGE CAN MEAN A
LIFETIME OF HAP PINESS FOR SOME
LUCKY
FAMILY .
LOCATED ON l ACRE
PLOT RUNNING TO THE
RIVER WITH A SMALL
ORCHARD AND DANDY
PLACE
FOR
BOAT .
VERY
ATTRACT IVE .
VERY WELL BUILT , AND
VERY WELL KEPT

with elecl. door. Central air
conditioning . Nice location
near new hospital. One and
half miles from town.

Services Offered

'Ditching of any kind or
complete installation
of water lines. Ph. J. P.
Holley, 446-4344.

Price Reduced
Riverside Location

JUST completed 3 bedroom
brick . 1'17 baths, kitchen,
large basement, 2 car garage

G ILLENWATER'S septic lank

, LARGE GOLD fish,~" and up . SWISHER'S Plumbing &amp;
Call 446-4416 after 6.
" Electric conl ra cto r . We
196-3 specialize in hooking up rural
- - - - - - - - : : : : -water line system to your
HOME tor 2 kittens. Ph . .w.. home. Completely build your
~5 .
ba t hroo m. Call us IoDercbeom .
1 1 1ree estimate.
196-3 pee
I rt
---:-::-- : - - :-.:--:-;
Swisher, 1809 Chestnut, Ph .
LADY TO stay with elderly 446-0468.
lady. Ph . 367-?607.
135-11
195-3 , - - - -- - - - ---,

HERE ' S A HOME THAT
WILL SUIT YOU IF YOU
WANT ELBOW ROOM ,
COUNTRY QUIETNESS
AND HANDY TO TOWN . 2
BEDROOMS . SMALL
KITCHEN AND DINING
AREA . lt. OF ACRE , 3
MILES OUT .

New Brick Home
1 To 10 Acres

room and bedroom . City
water and gas, city school

DEAD STOCK

Just Married?
Just Retired?

Farm, Village, City Properfl
First &amp; Olivo
Ph!!oe 446-1121?_

"Believe me!
I'll give you the best
home buy in town!"

Instruction

YOU JUST COULDN'T
MAKE A BETTER BUY
THAN
THIS .
3
BEDROOMS , LARGE
LIVING ROOM , FORMAL
DINING , ALL
CAR ·
PETED . l'h
Bli."T HS,
FULL BASEMENT, 2 CAR
GA~AGE ON A FLAT LOT
AT RIO GRANDE . VERY
NICE NEIGHBORHOOD
AND
VERY
AT .
TRACT\VELY PRICED .

0. D. PARSONS
JAY SHEPPARD
REAlTORS

Camp Site ...

Lost

Someone's Missing A
Bargain Of A
lifetime

31 'hoH of haderdup

We Can Also Arrange
Financing with All The
Local Banks and Mortgage Loan Co.

MORE FAMILIES LIVE IN A NATIONAL HOME THAN ANY OTHER HOME IN THE WORLD

FOR SALE
GOING
TAXI
BUSINESS
YEllOW CAB
Net income in e•cess of
over $1,000 per month.
(Man &amp; wile oper~tionl.
Must sell due lo oilier
boJsinoss inlerl!$t, Inquire
at uo Second Ave.,
CO.tlipotis, ar phone 4461456. :

lt-'l'lle' ilf:&gt;·1'lu8·•1"1 I,S

For Sale

lty,Aag.21;Jt71

F11. Sale

~ AA~Ulli~G" Blue Lustre
wlH leave your uphofsfery

beautifully ·soft and clean.
Rent electric sham- $1.
Oontral Supply Co.
197-6

--------

1970 TRAVEL trailer 17' not
self-contained,
excellent
condition, Sl,495, call245-5271.
197-4

----AMERICAN trumpet, used

PAINT DAMAGE 1971 Zio-Zog
Sewing Machines. StiTt. in
orig inal cartons. No attachments needed as our
controls are buill-ln. Sews
with 1 or 2 needl~ makes
buttonholes, sew on butt..,s.
monograms, and blind hem
stitch. Full cllsh price, $38.50
or budget plan available.
Phone 446-0665.
193-4

-=----~aboul 6 mos. Ph. 446-9226.
Vacuum
197-3 ELECTROLUX
Cleaner complete with attachments, cordwinder and
'6&lt;1 CHEVROLET SS conv ., new
paint spray. Used bur in like
top, aula., P.S.. P.B. Ph. 446new
cond1lion. Pay $31.45
0278.
cash
Or credit terms
197-3
available. Phone 446 0665.
193-4
HOUSE coat delivered. Ph. 4464393.
.
LINE of pipes and
197-12 COMPLETE
accessorieS.
GBD
and
Charatan.
Tawney
Jewelers,
1971 MODEL ztg zag sewing
42( Second Ave.
machine, buttonholes, fashion
113-lf
designs, .tile. Balance due
$26.TO. Ph. 446-9395.
197-tf AKC registered toy poodles, .
also stud service. Ph. ...._
_W_A_L_N_U_T--:ST50E50R:-E500-,- A
: -M
::-· FM 9539.
187-tf
radio, features a • position
selecfer, separate controls. -;B::-L:'iu¥
E=Da~m"=son-::-?"
· -=and
~"'Lomo=:::'bart
Balance $66.-48." Use our
plums, bring containers.
budgel terms. Call 446-1028.
Herman Brucker, Ph. 256197-3
6683.
192-4
EARLY AMERICAN STEREO,
7
AM-FM radio, • speakers, c"o"'R"'v-::E=TT=E". ""·68-=-,""b1ue
- ,- ainaufomalic 4 speed record
verfible,
350 cu. in., auto.
changer, with featherllght
trans. Call 446-0201 or 44(&gt;.
tone arm. Balance S79.32. Use
2877.
our bodget terms. Call 4461028.
197·3 USED Conn trumpet, excellent
-S-IN_G_E_R_Z-IG--Z-A_G_S-ewfng
condition. Ph . .W.OJ60.
196-6
Machine needs no cams, a II
built-In feafures, makes
&amp;
buttonholes, monograms,
fancy designs. Pay $44.31 .
Call 446-1028.
.
197 ·3 NEW nylon sofa beds SS9.9S,
--------new Early American maple
FOR BETTER cleaning, to
living room suite $149.95, , _
• keep colors gleaming, use
5 pc. d'lne11e set $39 ·95 · 8S4
BIU Lustre carpet cleaner .
'
Second (across from Texaco
Rent. electric shampooer Sl.
Sf ,. l "'9523
Lower G. C. Murphy Store.
a 'on · ·
l96-lf
197-6
--C-AM_P_E_R-,-1~F"'or-d-van, OUTBOARD motor fest tank,
1968
963
like new. takes tong shaft
pony, extra gentle. Ph. 446motors, Size 36x.WX42 deep.
9-161.
_
Complete
with exhaust fan.
197 3
Formerly Brown's Marine.
WHITE sewing machine Model
Minersville, Ohio 992-3324.
769, electronic control, price
196-3
$269, save $80, only $189. We
p
are fighting Inflation, see us U FT. fiberglass boat, 35 H
. before buying . Sheppard's · motor, 5 life lackels, 2 sets of
Sewing Machines, 862 First
skis, 2 ski bells, 3 ski ropes.
Call after s, 446-«n::.
Ave.
196-3
195-3

-----

For Sale ·

campint Equipmant

USED TRAILERS
GtGAN'tiC year end sate new 71
1960 National IOX50, 2 br.
units 2411.1 save $1,300. 22 fl.
1967 Horizon 12x50, 2 br.
1 save $1 ,225.· 20 ft. 7 save
1957 Glider 45x8, 3 br.
Sl.OJS. All boats left dealer's
1966 Namoo. 52x10, 3 br,
cost. 1972 campers 15 pel. off .
1960
Dyke, 1ox50 2 br.
Trades accepted. We service
1960 Van Dyke 10X50, 2 br.
and
guarantee. Camp Conley
1~ Kentuckian, 56&lt;10, 3 br.
Starcratt
Sates, Rt . 62. North
1962 Colonial 50xl0, 2 br ..
of
-Poinf
Pleasant. West
1960 Van Dy~e 10Xo40, 2 br.
Vlr~lnia's largest Starcraft
All tra ilers clean and recon deaer. ..
169-11
ditioned. Ready for OC ·
cupancy. Free Delivery and
sel-up. Tri-County Mobile
HomH, 446-0175.
&amp;

van

9J.If

lwantMI

Plumbing

Heating

RUSSELL'S
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
SEPTIC lank cleaning, electric
sewer cleaning,

ditching .

Gallipolis, Ohio. Ph. 446-4782.
193-11

.Plumbing &amp;H~ating

Brammer Plumbing a. H~ating
300 Fourth Ave.
Phone 446-1637
Gene Plants, Owner
298-11
DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160at Evergreen

Phone 446-2735
281 -11
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
830 Fourth Avenue

Phone 446-3888 or 446-4477
155-11
STANDARD
Plumbing &amp; Heating
215 Third Ave., 446-3782
187-11

------

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

742-4902

L_...=.......::=......:'-::c=---'
C. BRA.DFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford
5-1-lfc

ROSEBERRY Furnace installation. Free estimates on

Sheets

new furnaces, oil or gas.
Service work. Call Cecil
Roseberry. Racine, Ohio :

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MAN.YUSES

Phone 614-843-2274.

llor$1.00

Gallipolis
Daily Tribune

Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

3-29-tfc
SEPT-IC tanks cleaneo. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-tfc

125 Tllinl Ave.

Gallipolis, 0.

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancel hid?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 9922966.
6-15-lfc

orbin &amp;
w.s- s·nyder Furniture
3

-1969
_ K
_ I_R_K_
W_OO
_ D_m_ob_l_le_ h_orne, .
USED FURNITURE
3 bedroom, unfurn. Ph. 446· BEDROOM suite, wringer
washer, coli springs and
-161l .
195-3 maffress, full size.
_ _.......,:-:-:-:-:-:--::--:--=
NEW FURNITURE
1970 DATSUN pickup, good INNERSPRING mattresses
condition, new tires, never starting at $28.95. Get the rest
wrecked, $1 ,575. Ph. 992-5153, you deserve. select ~our
. Pomeroy.
mattress and box springs
19.j.l2 now . Free park1ng. Open
- - - - - - --:--:
Fridays till B. 955 Second Ave.
POMERANIAN females, 2 yr. Ph. 446-1171.
white, 9 mo. red ; 6.mo. male
197-lf
champion sired Yorkshire - - - - - - - - - : : Terrier Ph 4-46-054 after 6 BUSINESS for sale. Grand
·
·
Cafe. Ph . 446-9520 or 44l&gt;-3228.
p.m.
194-6
191-4
SPINETpiano,refrlgeratorand REMINGTON 11 00 12 ga.
gas range . Ph. 446-1142.
shotgun with 2 vent. rib
l9.j.tf barrels. Ph. 446-3881 .
197-3
-~-~
---C-H_E_V_R_O_L~E~T'"I"m-pa
~
ta, 2 ------------:-::-- dr. hardtop, call 446-JSd.
BUILT-IN GAS cook fop and
193-6 oven. good cond. Ph. 446-2281 .
---------:
197-3
HOUSE, 3 bedroom, brick, full
D
Mobile
Home
paneled basemgoodent, hu, ge u~adquarters. All size mobile
family room,
ne ~nk B &amp; s Mobile
in sloe .
borhood' close to town, City · homes
Home Sales, Second &amp; Viand,
schools. Call 446-9381 . 193-6
Pl. Pleasant, ""•' to Heck's.
67-11
SUNRAY double oven gas
range, white, almost new. IF YOU are boJifdlng a , _
horne or remodeling, see us.
S300. Call 367-7158.
We are builders. Distributor
195-tf
tor Hofpoint Appliances,
Allison Electric.
SINGER Sewing Machine Safes
154-lf
&amp; Service. All models In
.
.
stock. Free delivery. Ser~ice
guaranteed. Models ,priced
trom S69.95. French City
Fabric Shoppe, Singer ap~veil dealer, 58 Courf St.
. 446-925S.
JOB.tl 1967 OATSUN P.U .
1966 'h T. GMC P.U.
1964 '12 T. Ford P.U.
SEWING MACHINE service in 1969 Chev. 'II&lt; T. P.U.
your home Special pre-school 1965 fl.':! T. Chevrolet Truck
offer. Ct6n, . oil and adjust, 1966 '12 T. GMC P.U,
$4.99. Call 446-9353.
1969 Chev. dump truck
191-11 1952 'h T. Chev. P.U.1965 I T. GMC .
GERMAN Shepherd puppies, 1969 GMC • T. log truck
AKC reg . Happy, healthy 1962 :V. T. GMC pick ...
farm raised. Jackson 918- 1963 IT. GMC
2601.
1~ 112 T. Ford P.U.
193-6 1963 'h T. Chev. P.U.
1 T. GMC
"G~OO--D-C::-:L-:Ec:-A:-:N-:-:L:-;U~M::-;;P-and 1969
1967 '12 T. GMC P.U.
stoker coat. Cart Winters, Rio 1968 Chev. Suburban
· Grande. Phone 245-5115.
19S4 •12 T. Dodge ~u. . .
8-11 1967 :V. T. Chevrolet pick..,
1963 F600 Ford Truck
WE specialize In portrait and 1961 2 T. GMC
'
- - commercial · photography, 1964 3 T. GMC
church weddings, ret.K~ions, 1966. 112 T. Ford P.U.
etc. Tawney Studio.
18-11 1956 1'12 T. O!ev. Vall
SOMMER'S G.M.CWHITE cement, all silt$ lifo in
TR\ICKS, INCstock . 12" a. 15" field fifo,
Ill Pine 51.
I'll. 446-2532
suilablo for highway ditching,
concrete
blocks .
241-11
GALLIPOLIS BLOC!' CO.,
ph. 446-27113.
PUBLIC seating, 101a111y ldDI. .
97-11
illld chairs - resla..-.,ts,

New GMC
Truck Headquarm

churches,

organizations.

REDUCE safo and fast with ' Comptete tine of office chairs
Got e tablets and E-Vap
and desks. Simmons Pta. &amp;
Olffce Equip. Ph. 44l&gt;-l:.;).
• water pills. Gillingham Drug.
176-26
141-lf

7-22-30fc

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes, 992-2284,
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and

2(14

HARRISON 'S TV AND AN·
TENNA SERVICE . Phone
992-2522.
6-10-tfc
NEIGLER Construction. For
building or remodeling your
home . Call Guy Nelgler,
Racine, Ohio.
7-31-lfc

YES , I DIDN'T EVEN HAVE
TIME 10CAL L GRAN~

AND TELL HER Yi:D 8E
t&lt;~M= A"''EAD OF

OFFICE SUPPLIES
And

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

From fhe Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
SmaiiP.sl Heater Cl&gt;re.

BlAETTNARS

Pomoroy

Ph. 992-2143

MOTORCYClES
Mid-Summer Sale
On AII Models
Save Up To S200.00
Over 10 Percent
HAWK'S 3-DAY
CYCLE SALE
2 miles south of Athens, 0.

Rt. 33
Open Mo.n., Wed. , Fri.
10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Phone 593-8669

Real Estate For Sale

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
I

\55

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open8Ti15
Monday lhru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

CHICKEN house at Syracuse
with 2.61 acres, phone m
2684.
8-22.6tp

Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endtoader Work

Aluminum

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanks insfalled. George
(8iUI Pullins, Phone 992-W8.
4-25-ttc

Co!flp l ete
Remode.lr'ng

--"x23.,_, ...,

HOME &amp; AUTO

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates . Ph . 446-4782.
Gallipolis. John Russell ,
Owner &amp; Operator.
5-13-lfc

IOH

For Sale

EXPERIENCED.
Radiator Service

POMEROY

Mli5DLEPORT - ~room Drick
home with bath. paneling and
wall to wall carpeting . Phone
992-2540 or 992-3465.
8-20-12tc 16-FT . FIBERGLASS boat
runabout, 50 h.p. Johnson
·s iX ROOM house. bath , - full
outboard and trailer. Good
basement, 133 Butternut Ave., condition. $685. Phone 992·
just walking distance from
2881.
downlown Pomeroy . Contact
8-22-6tc
!:d Hedrick, 2137 Wadsworth - - - - - - - -Orive, Columbus, Ohio, phone, HALF RUNNER beans, S2
237 -4334, Columbus.
bushel, pick your own.
5-9-tfc
Cu cumbers and fomaloes.
Watermelons, cantaloupes.
11.16 ACRES located .. T.79 af
sweet
corn,
potatoes.
Rack Springs, close lo Mei~s
Clarence Prollitt, Porfland,
High School. Contact B1ll
Phone 843-2254.
Witte (f or L. Fields) after 5 p.
8-17-ffc
m. or on weekends, phone 9926887.
8-12-10tc 16 FT . TAGALONG travei
trailer. fully sell contained.
Ready to go, SISOO. Phone 773·
6 ROOM house and bath located
5651.
Mason, W. Va.
just outside Chesler. Phone
7-23-tfc
985-4262.
8-12-12tc
POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy,
3 B-EDROOM brick home.
Park view Kennels . Phone 9925443.
.
Choice location In Mlddleporf.
Seen by appointment only .
8-15-llc
Phone 992-5523 after ~ p.m.
..
5-7-tfc CANNING tomatoes: already
· picked, $1.25 bu., bring
containers. Geraldine
Cleland , East Main, Racine.
7-'18-tfr

-----------1
. NSQN M
. ASQNRY.

------

FOR SALE b,Y. owner. New 1970
Skyline tra1ler, 3 bedroom, 2
tots consisting of 1.17 acres
seeded lawn, 150 fl. drilled
well, plenty wafer, gravel
driveway, Jet Aeration septic
tank, lots of shade trees.
Aboul'h mile oft Rt. 7 on Bear
Run Rd. overlooking beauflful
Raccoon Creek In recreallon
area, boating, fishing and
water skiing sports. Get in
touch with Olen Kif bourne on
properly.

Plus
Parts

PHONE 992-2143

SAVE $180 on Electro H~gtene LOW, low prices on Bemco and
Serta mattresses and box
cleaner. If pays to buy at
springs. Corbin &amp; Snyder
Sheppard's, 862 First Ave.
Furn., 955 Second Ave. Ph.
195-3
446-1171.
-----].If
SHEPPARD'S Kirby Sates &amp;

195-3
-19_4_7_C_H_E_V_R_O_L-::E=T-IV:I- tor.
flatbed truck. Ph. 367-7517.
195-3

6.98

Blaettnar's

A

41111S.

240 Lincoln St., Middleport

Special
At

RICE'S NEW
USED FURNITURE

GE RANGE, 36", ( yrs old,
broiler, rotisserie, 3 storage
drawers, like new. Ph. 446-

ditiOfling .

Have Your Seasonal
Air Conditioning
Inspection and
Re-Charge

------

Kirby and parts. We service
all makes. 862 First Ave.
195-6

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co. and Anthony Plumbing &amp; Heating.
Complete
Plumbing,
Healing and Air Con-

Phone 992-2550
Insured- Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See us for Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnstalation.

-----

Service. We carry full line of

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
·WORK
SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING

O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rf . 12~.
Complete front end ser.vice,
tune up and brake service.
Wheels
balanced · electronically. · All
work
guaranteed.
Reasonable
ra te&gt;. Phone 992-3213.
7-27-tfc
AWNINGS, storm doors and•
windows , carports ,
marquees, aluminum siding

Fitr Sale

Virgil B.
TEAFORD
SR.

Broker
•10 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
NEW LISTINGS
MIDDLEPORT -10 acres with
a 6 room house and garage,
DEXTER- 6 room house wlth
2 lots. $3,500.00.
120 acres of building lots.
Chester water.
GOOD BUYS
80 ACRES- 60 or more tractor
tillable . 6 room house.
$25,000.00.
POMEROY - 7 rooms, bath,
furnace, basement. $7,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT- RURAL - 6
rooms, bath, garage. Garden.
$7,000.00.
SYRACUSE - 5 rooms, bath,
basement on 124 . Only
$6,000.00.
LETART - 5 rooms, bath,
furnace. Basement. $7,000.00.
SEE US, NEAR KROGER,
WE MAY HAVE IT.
992-3325
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE,
992-2378
8-22-6fc
----------

Cleland
Realty
608 East Main
PO~EROY

CLELAND REALTY
608 Easl Main
POMEROY
DEXTER- Level Lot 150x100,
2 story frame , 4 bedrooms, 2
porches one enclosed, . barr.
with 2 car spaces and another
storage building . GREAT
FOR THE KIDS. $8,900.

and railing . Call A. Jacob,
sales representative. For free
esfi males , phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
Johnson and,Son. Inc.
POMEROY - FAMILY HOME
5-27-tfc
CLOSE TO ELEMENTARY
SCHOOL2 s:r, frame, 1'12
R.EADY -MIX
WNCRETE
baths,
4
nice
rooms, gas
delivered right to your
forced
-air
heat.
full
pr~ject . Fast and easy . Free
basement,
porch,
garage
with
estimates . Phone 992- 328~ .
renovated room over, fine for
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co.,
office
space or utility apart Middleport, Ohio.
ment. S18,SOO.
6-30-lfc
MINERSVILLE - 1'17 story
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC SER - frame, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms,
VICE . Phone 949-4551.
bath, tile paneling, basement,
5-30-tfc
NEW ALUMINUM SIDING,
nice porch and yard. A BUY
AT JUST $10,000.
PLACE
THE SALE OF YOUR
193 ACRE stock iarm, well
PROPERTY
IN GOOD
fenced, farm pond, plenty of
HANDS.
timber and pasture, large
HENRY E. CLELAND,
barn, Implement shed and
RUlTOR
other buildings. Recently
Office "992-2259
remodeled. 4 bedroom farm
Rosidence 992-2561
home, with wall to wall
8-18-6tc
carpeting, ceramic tile bath,
full basement . Shown by
appointment Drily. Phone 992· CONVENIENT but secluded
building lots on T79 at Rock
6546.
Springs.
Within walking
8-22-12tc
diStance of Meigs High
School, aS minute drive from
NEW, 3-bedroom home In
Pomeroy . Call or see Bill,
Middleport. Buill-in kitchen,
Witte
weekends or after 5
ceramic file bath, all-electric
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992heat, good neighborhood . Can
6887.
arrange FHA financing .
7-11-tfc
Telephone 992-3600 or ~2186.
7-25-llc
1959 CHEV . pickup will trade
riOUSE. 1642 Lincoln Heights.
for a camper or motor boat. M
Call Danny Thompson, 992&amp; G Food Market, 3 miles
2196.
south of Middleport on Stale
Route 7.
7-18-ffc
8-22-3tp
DUPLEX HOME, 6 rooms and
bath. Apartment, 3 rooms and
bath. Private entrances. Ideal
for family with extra rental or
Investment property. Priced
for quick sale. Call 992-2431
after 5 p.m.
·
1-11 -lllc

Real Estate For Sale

For Trade·

- -- - 1960 G.M.C. pickup - S17Y.

Mini -bike frame $12. Phone
992-6702.
8;22-3tc

AM-

t6LONIAL style stereO;
FM radio, 4 speakers, 4 speed
record changer. Balance
$79.19. Use our budget terms.
Call 992-7085.
8-22-6tc

------

MODERN walnut stereo, AM·
FM radio features 4 speed
record changer, 4 speakers,
separate controls. Balance
$67.89. Call 992-7085.
8-22-6tc

H &amp; N day old or started
Leghorn pullets. Both floor or
cage grown available.
Poultry
housing
and
automation. Modern Poultry,
399 W. Mal~. Pomeroy, 992·
216&lt;1.
8-22-lfc
EVENING
AUCTION
Starling at 6 p.m., Friday,
August 27th on the Rutland .
Harrisonville Road, having
sold my home will sell the
following :
Hardwick Gas
Range,
Frigidaire
Refrigerator, Lg. Siegler oil
heater, Ward's elec. sewing
machine, glass door china
cabinet, upright piano, 2 pc.
living room suite, 7 pc, dinette
set, 12 x
canner,

s wool rug, pressure
student's

desk,

guitar, Maytag wringer
washer, 2 rinse tubs with legs,
picnic fable, 20' x 30' tent, 4
bicycles, 2 power lawn
mowers, U Int. ladder, step
ladder. 2 bags Insulation
(new), mefal fence posts,
Senator garden tiller, '64
Dodge Dart Station Wagon,
'64 2-dr . Rambler Classic, 2
young heifers, 11 Holstein) .
Stone jars, garden tools, some
antiques, toys. clothing and
many Items too numerous .to
mention .
Refreshments.
Owner: Amos Tillis, Auctioneer : I. 0. "Mac" Mc.COY.
l -22.61p

•

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets
' 36" X 23" X. .D09

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

.2f1

I lor 11.ao

The
Dai~

Sentinel

Ill Court Sl.
Pomoi'OJ, Ohio

�. '

•

11- The Slnlay Times - Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. !!!, !&lt;17!

1 Bargains,.Bargains·and More Bargains In The Classifieds .THE WISEMAN
~ Card. Thanks . Help Wanted
Real Estah' For Sale
BA.IRD REALTY CO.
n·l·zl.on Oscar
· ird, Realtor
AGENCfUSSELL WOO
Agency
REALTOR
of

~ WE wi$h to express our thanks .BABYSITTER, 5 days a Week .

:

and appreclall011 tR
.o friJeohnds
Ph. 446-0108.
.
and neighbors. fo ev.
n
196-2
Bryant. McCoy Funeral
Horne. pallbearers, Holler REGISTERED
nurse
in
residential treatment center
Medical Center, floral of·
ferlngs and the food at fhe
tor emotionally disturbed
recent passing of our beloved
adolescent boys. Liberal
brother, James Montgomery.
benefits. Salary open and
Sadlymissedbyhisslste rs,
competitive . Housing
Mrs. Bertie Slack, Mrs. J. L.
available, if desired. Apply or
Moriarty.
wr~te to: J . T. McOlmb,
197· 1 administrator,
Edgemeade of
-~~- Box 107, Ironton . Ohio.

• -ln_Me
_m
_or
_y_.- - - -

11n.IEMOln of our son's birth196-3
day , Glen Harold Adkins. Jr .• - - - - - - - - - August 22, 1961 - d1ed Ma y "I LOVE sell ing Avon . It
changed my whole life ."
29, 1967 .
That 's the feeling shared by

•

: 'Twas feri year.s ago foday

- They laid you 1n my arms,
' You were our only son
And all our hearts you did
charm.
! God gave you to us to live,
Glenn.
And oh, what a short time.
' But those were precious years.

1

We mis~ you more and more

each day
We miss your saying "I love

!
~
!

you ."

.

thousands
. of
Avon
Representatives. You, too,
can get more out of life this

way. You'll earn good money,
win prizes, meet people, have

fun. Call or write Mrs. Helen
Yeager, Box 172. Jackson,
Ohio. Ph . 286-4028.
192·6
~ERVICE

station atfendant
needed. must be 21 . Apply in
person 723 Second Ave.,
Bonded Gas Station .
194-6

We miss your goodnight kiSs.
Everywhere we look we always
see you there,
You are beside us everywhere
::
we go,
:. We see you go to kindergarten 3 ROOM apartment. bath,

For Rent

~~

:~

each day,
We still see you runn ing up the

walk,
And hear you say " guess
what?"
Your pictures. Glenn,

~-bring

furnished, private entrance . 1

room apartment, ~itchen_ette ,
bath, private . Ava1lable m 10
days. Also farm house. Ph .
446-0168.
196-tf

B
_ a

THREE HOMES In subdivisions near town. Will
trade for rcheaper propertis.

Hobart Dillon, Reallor
Office446-2674
Howard or Lucille Brannon
Evenings446-1226

'

Office 446-3643

Evenings tall
E- M· "Ike" Wiseman 446'9796
E. N.'Wiseman 446-4500

VACANT LAND - 104 acrft
with pond, 29 acres with good
well and septic system.

School Day Special!

FARMS - 42 acres in Hun- •
ling ton Twp., 34 acres In ,
~~~:s~ounty, both with good .

IMMEDIATE O~CUPANCY
$15,300 buys this 4 BR home,
formal DR, canpeted LR, DR,
hall and playroom , full
divided basemen.! with forced

NEAl{ rOWN _ 44'12acres, five
room house, Sand Hollow
Road, tobacco base.
Oscar Baird, 446-4632
Doug Welherholt, 446-4244

air gas furnace and large
laundry room . Assume a loan
at 5112 pc1. int.

VACANT
$11 ,000. Is the price of this 6
roorn l'h bath home located in
downtown Gallipolis in
walking distance of school.
deep lot, garage.
·

MASSIE
Realtor, 32 State St
Tel 446-1998
Baby Farm

INSTANTLY APPEALING
MODERN 6 rm . house, lull
S\8,000 will place you in this
base., large liv . rm . and din.
atlracli.ve ·rancher. 3 BR,
rm ., 2 ~ms . paneled, Nearly
luxury all buil-t in kitChen 'in
new fuel oil fur . Large frame
color, DR, roomy LR, all
and metal barn, plenty water,
paneled and
carpeted,
gravify feed from spring.
finished garage, spacious well
Located on 6 A. good land. 14
landscaped lawn plus an
mi. from city. $11,500.
extra lot .

· 446~1066
· When a girl's face is her fortune, It usually rUns into an
attractive figure.
Salesman: "An~ you sure the boss isn' t in his office?"
Secretary: "Do you doubt his wocd?"

In Green Township and Gallipolis School District, a 2
bedroom horne with bath, new gas furnace and new kifchen, with full basement, with 229 teet of road frontage to
Stale Route 141. Price $11,900.00.
At Centenary, 3 bedroom house with full basement and a
lol 117'h feet front on Stale Route 141-and 200 feet deep.
Priced reduced to $16,000.00. Will finance part with lsi
morfgage.
2 lots on Neighborhood Road. price reduced to $1,500.00
each. City water and gas available.
4 bedroom home close to Holzer Hospital with full
basement, 3 baths, large living room and large lot,
42'hxl75 ft.. with double carport. Shown by appointment.
Price $23,500.00.
Office446·1066
Evenings: Call
Ron Canaday 446-3636
John I. Richards, 446-0280
Russell D. Wood, 446-4618

Thurman

MOVE IN NOW
GOOD 5 rm . home located on 1.4
$15,750. Country style kitchen
A. lot. House has had treat·
with side laundry room , 3 BR
ment for fermites . It has a
&amp; bath. carport &amp; storage
garage and ca n be bought for
room, cellar house and large
$8.000.

SJROUT REALTY

memories of the days you
were with us.
work shop - in city.
8X35 TRAILER, 2 bedroom,
Pll. _446-0008
These years of heartaches no
also sleeping rooms . Ph. 446one will ever know
' .
MOVED TO FLORIDA
IDEAL set-up. 122 A.. fertile
0349.
()&gt; this that would have been
196-3 $14,000 is the price of this one
land, all flat to gentle roll. all
STILL UNDER
your day .
floor plan, 5 room &amp; bath
tillable except 5 A. in saw
CONSTRUCTION
Happy Birthday In heaven FOR RENT or long lime lease,
home, ·all electric, paneled
timber. This land has been 6 ROOM~S'~th and garage on a
"Little man."
walls, carport, aluminum
neW brick 3 bedroom home,
improved over a generation of
nice te
· ·~ city wat.e r,
Your Mommie and Daddle,
si ding , air conditioner.
full size basement, Ph miles
good farming practices. It has
gas,
ww
ca.,
nd built-in
Shirley and Harold. sisters,
storage room &amp; storage
good fences, plenty water,
from town. Ph. 446·4127.
kitchen
.
Lissa and Stephanie Adkins,
building. an ex tra lot.
1,623 lb. fob . base., 7 rm .
196-3
ROUTE 160
Your PaPa and MaMa's.
modern home, 5 barns; block NICE flat . ready to build or
197-1 60
-X.,12- T
-R
..,.A
-=
I Lc::E:-::R:-::,-:C::-he-s::-h::-ir-e
. Ph .
POMEROY,O.
and metal dairy barn 36' x 96',
pul a t. 0 ..., . Measures
10
rooms
&amp; 3 bath home and
31 metal · stanchions, water
367-7512.
almost I ao•• {
~lenly of
apartment . Outstanding
cups, milkers and 320 gal. road frontage •
194-4
county
kitchen with coppertone
bulk tank . All bldgs. in good
water .
bu i llins ,
dishwasher,
I WILL not be responsible for TRAILER space on private lot
repair and have mefal roofs
NOT MANY LEFT
any debts other than my own
G ll 1'pol 1's Ph 675 1426
disposal , range, oven, double
less than 10 years old . Owner $10,500 - r
5 room home in
as of this date August 18, 1971.
near a
·
·
· 197 .5
ret. &amp; tri ple sink - large
grows roughage for 80 head city w,, 0{., basement,
.. Signed: Stephen Lee Harris. --..,.---.,...----family room , carpeted LR,
livestock and sells hay. Th1s IS garage, ga ~
3Ce and
an :--amazing opportunity for
home is vacant. Call Howard
-----:--;-;-;--~195·3 BRADBURY efficiency apt ..
lovely built-in Co.. 1ets.
Brannon for more in anyone interested in farming .
adults only, no pels. Available
' RALPH'S Carpet- Upholstery
Aug. 25. 729 Second Ave.
Price $40,000.
formation.
· Cleaning Service. Free
197.tf
estimates. Ph. 446-0294.
LOW
197-11 DOWNSTAIRS unfur~ . apt .. . 4
AS YOU can see, THE
--:c--::-:--:-:~:;:;-::::--;:
rooms &amp; bath, bUIIf -m kll · SEE this large 2 story file
WORLD'S LARGEST REAL
FREE . Used clothing for
chen, all utilities paid . Ph.
building with over 5000 sq. fl . 48 A. most tractor , cheap.
ESTA· TE
SALES
0322
anyone who is ln. need. Church
of floo.-space - consisting of 150 A. Farmer's farm . $16,000. ORGANIZATION is on the
446
of Christ, Bidwell. Ph. 388·
·
·
191.-11
a store. re~taurant , gas 50 A. 25 is bottom, $7,500.
move. If you have property
8-429 or 388-8787.
station, ice cream plant. 11 A. edge of town . $10,000.
197-1
for
sate, call us.
garage and tire shop. 6 room 25 A. St. Rt . 325. $7,500.
SLEEPING ROOMS weekly
LOTS OF LOTS
apartment located on a
rates, free garage parking,
WE
HAVE
lots in all directions.
' SUN VALLEY Nursery School,
corner lot on a busy highway.
Libby Hotel.
Building
lots. frailer lots and
577 Sun Valley Drive, licensed
18 A. WITH 3 houses : 1 brick, 1 campsites
Owner wishes to retire.
74-tf
with plenty of
by the State of Ohio,
block. and 1 tile block. ()lly
gas.
water
and
$22,500.
' Department
of
Public SLEEPING ROOMS, weekly
FARMS
ANY HR. 446-1998
Welfare, now providing full
rates. Park Central Hotel.
104
A.
Gallipolis
School disl.
day . care
and
child ·
308-tf EXTRA large store - doing a
EVE.: J. Fuller 446-3246
120
A.
Route
160
development program for - - - -- - - - - - ,
great business - in excellent - - -----:----:--:-::::- 160 A. - Morgan Twp.
location on state highway, NEW home - brick front , 100' x
pre-school children. infants LOOKING lora real nice room?
A. - 8 mi. from town
five room apartment. Store is 230' lot, buill -in kitchen, 212
excluded. Open 6:30a.m . to 6
Lowe Motor Hotel, Pt.
75 A. - Recreation park
Pleasa•t, , Main and 4th inwe ll stocked and well
carpeted . Will help arra~ge 15 A. - Huntington Twp.
p.m. Monday through Friday .
' Fees: $20 for full five-day
"
equipped.
financing . Barr ConstructiOn, 41 A. ~ Springfield Twp.
-N· ~ . $5 per day if less than
vites~our inspection . Singles,
16 Pine St ., Ph . 446-3746. Mon.
k
Ranny Blackburn
. five days, S3 pe~ day for
$4.50, $5, $6, $7, $8, $9, $2 for
lhr"Fri . 91o 5, Sat . 81ol2.
Brilndl Manager
morning sessions. Ph. ~exira person. Special weekly A very good vegetable and fruit _____ _ __ _ _
185-tf
3657, · Madge Hauldren,
rates. F pkg .. TV. ind. air
market, perfect location cond., soli serv. elev. Ph . 675·
Owner-Director ; John and
building &amp; equiprnent.
Loredilh
Hauldren,
2260.
1~-tf
operators.
35-tf
FURNISHED apartment. GOOD lots, boating - free
docking - call for ap .
adults only, free garage
pointment
now.
parking. Libby Hotel.
193-tf
. BLACK &amp; WHITE spotted
walker dog, lost In vicinity of
l'h ACRES wifh a large com Polkadot Creek, Scottown.
fortable retreat cottage with
Answers to name of Bandit.
woodburntng 'f ireplace on
BETTER
jobs
are
available
for
Ph. 886-5753.
fronl. Just r ight for the
water
GBC
graduates.
Enroll
now
197-3
busy family just wishing to
· to·r fall term . Gallipolis
gel away from it all .
Business College R. N. 71-02· 1 PAIR Bellone hearing aids.
0032B
.
Ph
.
446-4367.
lostat Jaycee Field Sat., Aug .
162-tf 6 ROOM house. 162 Portsmoulh
u . Please call ~~6 - 1243 .
Rd . 3 bedrooms. modern
Reward.
kitchen, w-w carpeting living
197-3

Dairy Farm

0l

0

s'

0

Notice

s-c

I

b

-

looking For A
Business?

LISTINGS
GETTING

Farms.
Vacant land

Investment

Self Serve Grocery·

t .. .
Mare.

Neal Realtj.
. -DON'T DELAY
AND BE SORRY
IF YOU are looking for a good
home in a good- location see
\his one today . This is a two
slory, 4 BR, frame dwelling
wilh 2 baths, basement and
nice lot. Located jusl3 blocks
from business district and
just across the street from
High School at 112 State

Street.
All Eleclric Home
SEE this modern all electric
home with 3 BR, Barn, plenty
of water and located on 410
acres near Rio Grande. Will
sell all or part of land with
house.

Office Phone 446-1694
Evenings
Charles M. Neal, 446· 1546
J. Michael Neal, 446-1503
50 ACRES of bottom land near
Rodney. Ph. 446·2348.
197-3

Insurance
NATIONWIDE INSURANCE
AUTO. Fire, life. ~5 Stale St..
Waldo F. Brown . W. R.
Brown. 446·1960.
24-11
FOR ALL your insurance needs
check with your Grange
agents at the Neal Ins.
1\gency, 64 State St. Agents
for auto, fire, homeowners,

hospital and general liability.
114-11

20 Acres Garden
Of Eden

Want To Get Awa·1
From It All

ADAM, TAKE YOUR EVE
BY THE HAND AND
LEAD HER · yO THIS
SEClUDED HIDE -AWAY .
LARGE SHADEO LAWN.
WONOERFUL GARDEN
AND POND. VERY NICE
HOME
WITH
HUGE
LIVING - ROOM , NICE
KITCHEN ·&amp; Dl.NlNG AND
2 BEDROOMS. HUGE
NEARLY NEW, VERY
GOOD
UTILIT Y
BUILDING PRESENTL Y
USED AS LARGE SHOP, 2
CAR
GARAGE
AND
BARN .

IF YOU'RE LOOKING
FOR A UTTLE PEACE
AND QUIET. SEE THIS
TOOAY
LOVELY
&lt;IlMMER COTTAGE AND
12 ACRES WITH A
BEAUTIFUL 2 ACRE
SPRING -FED LAKE AT
THE FRONT OOOR .
LAND tS CLEAN WITH
LOTS OF TREES.

Price Reduced
Was $12,900 Now $9,900
OWNER VERY ANXIOU S
TO SELL MODERN 3
BEDROOM HOME WITH
LARGE LIVING ROOM
AND BU IL T-IN K\T .
CHEN . NEEDS A LITTLE
WORK BUT COULD BE A
MONEY MAKER .

Match This?
No Chance
ATTRACTIVE l YR . OLD
BRICK AND FRAME
WITH FULL BASEMENT
IN AN
EXCELLENT
NEIGHBORHOOD ,
3
LARGE BEOROOMS ,
CARPETED
LIVING
ROOM AND PRETTY
KITCHEN WITH RANGE
&amp; OVEN . PLUS LOTS OF
CABINETS .
FORMAL
DIN lNG , PA"TIO DOORS
ON BASEMENT, 1 CAR
GARAGE , 1 MILE OUT
PRICED FOR QUICK
SALE .

Lots For Sale
CJ) 2.38 ACRE WOODED
ALL .
WATER
AVAILABLE .

(21 2.33 ACRE WOODED .
VERY, VERY NICE ,
WATER TAP PAID .
(312 ACRES AT EDGE OF
TOWN, S2,500. WATER &amp;
GAS AVAIL. GOOD FOR 2
OR
MORE MOBILE
HOMES .
W

S'h ACRES. LARGE

TREES A BEAUTIFUL
LOCATION , $3,900.

Cottage ....

Services Offered

, Found
FOUND Friday, man' s Bulova
wrist watch. Come fo Tribune
and identify and pay for ad .
197·3

Wanted

dis tr ict. PriceS\3,500. Ph . 4464001 after 5.
187-12

SS.OO Service Charge
Wi ll remove your dead

horse and cows
Call Jackson 286-4531

· Wanted To Do

,. Previous food service ex : perience would be halpful.

• Send resume to Box 189 c-o
: CO.IIipolis O.ily Tribune.

.

~ LADIES S~nla

.

needs heiR""
• $3.73 an hour. 7 lo 10 p.m .. nv
· : . experience necessary. ·For
• . flbllday money call Mrs .
·• Claus, Jackson 988- 270~ .
~
175-11

:•

AUOION

- Heating
Free Estimates
Stewart's Hardware
Vinton, Ohio

Sale Eve.ry
Saturday
Evenings, 7:00

144·11 .
FAIN
EXTERMINATING CO.
Termite &amp; Pest Control
Wheelersburg, Ohio
Ph . 574-6112
52-tf

Reynolds Souvenir Shop
pt,

Corner lnl &amp; Olive Ave .
We sell anything for
anybody . We also buy some
estates. For Pick-up Service

Call Knotts . Community Auction, 4462917

This is the chance of a lifetime to
own a brand new National Home.
Big

spac~

and comfort.

The very best h;ome value in town.
OPEN FRIDAY, SAT., SUN •.1-8
OTHER TIMES BY APPT.

. NO
MONEY ...

Westbrook Village

.....
$117-

Rt. 160To
Bulaville Rd.
North on Bulaville Road
114 nHie toModel Home

principal
_ _ (nt!fe!t

Rleasant

ARD FULL" APPROX. 3000 BOTTL~S
OF Y.ARIOUS ASSORTMENTS.

Whiskeys, Bitters, Medicines,
Fruit Jars, Insulators etc.
SATURDAY and SUNDAY
9to 5 Aug . 28 and 29th

THE WISEMAN.
·AGENCY

AUOION
SERVIQ
"SELL THE AUCJJON
WAY"

JAMES (JIMME)
SAYRE
PH. 446-3444

l

S17,SOOTOTAL PRICE
33 year mortgage- 363 payments
Annual percentage rate 71/4pct.

''Big Weekend Sale" 1st Of Its Kind

l

LOOKING for a bargain. This is
it . Two houses. ()le three
room . ()le four room house.
Spring water . ()le acre.
Denver K. Higley, 446-0349
Earl Winters, 446-3128
0 . D. Parsons, 446-4127

Central Air Conditioning

OPPORTUNITY

; loGII OXPIInding company.

WE ARE SELLING AT
SUCH A PACE . IT'S 1M ·
POSSIBLE TO KEEP
ENOUGH PROPERTY
LISTED TO EVEN COME
CLOSE TO SATISFYING
THE BUYERS WE HAVE
ON A WAITING LIST .' IF
YOU ARE THINKING OF
A CHANGE . CALL US
R\GH1. NOW. IF '(.O.U
WANT TO BUILD NEW ,
SEE US TO SELL YOUR
PRESENT PROPERTY .

9499. Established in 1940.
169-tf

Help Wanted

• or over to -triin for
; restaurant manager with a

We Need Your
Property To Sell

$3,200

IKE WISEMAN-THE WISEMAN AGENCY ..

cleaning and repair, al so
house wreck ing . Ph . 446 -

BABYSITTING in my home
with I or 2 children, in Rio
Grande area. Ph. 245-5067.
197-3
RAIKE'S
_B_A_B_Y
_S_I_T=T=IN
::-G
-c---:1-or- sm a II
REFRIGERATION
&amp; AIR CONDITIONING
children after 3 p. m. Ph. 446- WATER well drilling, Myers
RESIDENTIAL
commercial,
3763.
Sa les and Service.
195-3 pumps
Ph.
367-1200.
industrial.
Complete water line service
117 .If
= - - - - - -and
trenching. C. J . Lemley,
WE BUILD. remodel , repa ir , Vinton,
Ohio. Ph . 388-8543.
custom built kitchens , install
ALBERT EHMAN
114-11
biithrooms. 446-4764.
Water Delivery Service
140 -78 D. P. MARTIN &amp; Son Waler
Pa tr iot Star Rl.. Gallipolis
Ph. 379-2133
Delivery
Service.
Your
243-11
patronage will be ap preciated . Ph . 446-0463.
BlACKTOP DRIVEWAYS
WORK IN EUROPE . U. S.
7-11
&amp; PARKING LOTS
Army guarantees a 16-month
CALL
tor free estimates. All
~TE~R~M~t~T~E~
P~E7
S
~T~
t~
o"-N~TR~O
~
L
tour of Europe, after training
work guaranteed and full
(usually four months) in this FREE inspection . Call 446-3245,
insurance coverage. VAL-Ucountry. on three -year
Merrill O'Dell. Operator for
HI Black lop Co .. Inc. , 86 Main
enlistments . New higher pay
Exterminal Termite Service,
St
., Chauncey, Ohio. Ph. 725scales, exceptional benefits.
19 Belmon t Dr .
2231.
Usi ng
all
local
Ph. 446-3343.
267-11
materi al s.
197-4
173-26
TV Antenna Sales Installation
WANT L.P.N. or retired R.
- Service. Estimates. Ph .
'HORSE SHOE lNG
nurse to work in nursing
446-1673 or 446-9679.
COMPLETE
farrier service.
home. Can li ve in if desired .
63 -11
Bob Schaeffing, 446-1510.
Write: Box 313, Ironton, Ohio ,
BANKS TREE SERVICE
188-11
Rt. 1.
FREE
es
timates,
liability
in197-3
SWISHER'S
surance. Pruning ; trimming
DITCH TRENCHING
and cavi ty work. tree and
SERVICE Ph. 446-0468
slump removal. Ph . 446-4953.
MANAGEMENT
174·11
lJ.lf
•• Ambitious young man age 25

THIS LIKE NEW 3
BEDROOM HOME WITH
2'h
BATHS ,
FULL
BASEMENT AND 2 CAR
GARAGE CAN MEAN A
LIFETIME OF HAP PINESS FOR SOME
LUCKY
FAMILY .
LOCATED ON l ACRE
PLOT RUNNING TO THE
RIVER WITH A SMALL
ORCHARD AND DANDY
PLACE
FOR
BOAT .
VERY
ATTRACT IVE .
VERY WELL BUILT , AND
VERY WELL KEPT

with elecl. door. Central air
conditioning . Nice location
near new hospital. One and
half miles from town.

Services Offered

'Ditching of any kind or
complete installation
of water lines. Ph. J. P.
Holley, 446-4344.

Price Reduced
Riverside Location

JUST completed 3 bedroom
brick . 1'17 baths, kitchen,
large basement, 2 car garage

G ILLENWATER'S septic lank

, LARGE GOLD fish,~" and up . SWISHER'S Plumbing &amp;
Call 446-4416 after 6.
" Electric conl ra cto r . We
196-3 specialize in hooking up rural
- - - - - - - - : : : : -water line system to your
HOME tor 2 kittens. Ph . .w.. home. Completely build your
~5 .
ba t hroo m. Call us IoDercbeom .
1 1 1ree estimate.
196-3 pee
I rt
---:-::-- : - - :-.:--:-;
Swisher, 1809 Chestnut, Ph .
LADY TO stay with elderly 446-0468.
lady. Ph . 367-?607.
135-11
195-3 , - - - -- - - - ---,

HERE ' S A HOME THAT
WILL SUIT YOU IF YOU
WANT ELBOW ROOM ,
COUNTRY QUIETNESS
AND HANDY TO TOWN . 2
BEDROOMS . SMALL
KITCHEN AND DINING
AREA . lt. OF ACRE , 3
MILES OUT .

New Brick Home
1 To 10 Acres

room and bedroom . City
water and gas, city school

DEAD STOCK

Just Married?
Just Retired?

Farm, Village, City Properfl
First &amp; Olivo
Ph!!oe 446-1121?_

"Believe me!
I'll give you the best
home buy in town!"

Instruction

YOU JUST COULDN'T
MAKE A BETTER BUY
THAN
THIS .
3
BEDROOMS , LARGE
LIVING ROOM , FORMAL
DINING , ALL
CAR ·
PETED . l'h
Bli."T HS,
FULL BASEMENT, 2 CAR
GA~AGE ON A FLAT LOT
AT RIO GRANDE . VERY
NICE NEIGHBORHOOD
AND
VERY
AT .
TRACT\VELY PRICED .

0. D. PARSONS
JAY SHEPPARD
REAlTORS

Camp Site ...

Lost

Someone's Missing A
Bargain Of A
lifetime

31 'hoH of haderdup

We Can Also Arrange
Financing with All The
Local Banks and Mortgage Loan Co.

MORE FAMILIES LIVE IN A NATIONAL HOME THAN ANY OTHER HOME IN THE WORLD

FOR SALE
GOING
TAXI
BUSINESS
YEllOW CAB
Net income in e•cess of
over $1,000 per month.
(Man &amp; wile oper~tionl.
Must sell due lo oilier
boJsinoss inlerl!$t, Inquire
at uo Second Ave.,
CO.tlipotis, ar phone 4461456. :

lt-'l'lle' ilf:&gt;·1'lu8·•1"1 I,S

For Sale

lty,Aag.21;Jt71

F11. Sale

~ AA~Ulli~G" Blue Lustre
wlH leave your uphofsfery

beautifully ·soft and clean.
Rent electric sham- $1.
Oontral Supply Co.
197-6

--------

1970 TRAVEL trailer 17' not
self-contained,
excellent
condition, Sl,495, call245-5271.
197-4

----AMERICAN trumpet, used

PAINT DAMAGE 1971 Zio-Zog
Sewing Machines. StiTt. in
orig inal cartons. No attachments needed as our
controls are buill-ln. Sews
with 1 or 2 needl~ makes
buttonholes, sew on butt..,s.
monograms, and blind hem
stitch. Full cllsh price, $38.50
or budget plan available.
Phone 446-0665.
193-4

-=----~aboul 6 mos. Ph. 446-9226.
Vacuum
197-3 ELECTROLUX
Cleaner complete with attachments, cordwinder and
'6&lt;1 CHEVROLET SS conv ., new
paint spray. Used bur in like
top, aula., P.S.. P.B. Ph. 446new
cond1lion. Pay $31.45
0278.
cash
Or credit terms
197-3
available. Phone 446 0665.
193-4
HOUSE coat delivered. Ph. 4464393.
.
LINE of pipes and
197-12 COMPLETE
accessorieS.
GBD
and
Charatan.
Tawney
Jewelers,
1971 MODEL ztg zag sewing
42( Second Ave.
machine, buttonholes, fashion
113-lf
designs, .tile. Balance due
$26.TO. Ph. 446-9395.
197-tf AKC registered toy poodles, .
also stud service. Ph. ...._
_W_A_L_N_U_T--:ST50E50R:-E500-,- A
: -M
::-· FM 9539.
187-tf
radio, features a • position
selecfer, separate controls. -;B::-L:'iu¥
E=Da~m"=son-::-?"
· -=and
~"'Lomo=:::'bart
Balance $66.-48." Use our
plums, bring containers.
budgel terms. Call 446-1028.
Herman Brucker, Ph. 256197-3
6683.
192-4
EARLY AMERICAN STEREO,
7
AM-FM radio, • speakers, c"o"'R"'v-::E=TT=E". ""·68-=-,""b1ue
- ,- ainaufomalic 4 speed record
verfible,
350 cu. in., auto.
changer, with featherllght
trans. Call 446-0201 or 44(&gt;.
tone arm. Balance S79.32. Use
2877.
our bodget terms. Call 4461028.
197·3 USED Conn trumpet, excellent
-S-IN_G_E_R_Z-IG--Z-A_G_S-ewfng
condition. Ph . .W.OJ60.
196-6
Machine needs no cams, a II
built-In feafures, makes
&amp;
buttonholes, monograms,
fancy designs. Pay $44.31 .
Call 446-1028.
.
197 ·3 NEW nylon sofa beds SS9.9S,
--------new Early American maple
FOR BETTER cleaning, to
living room suite $149.95, , _
• keep colors gleaming, use
5 pc. d'lne11e set $39 ·95 · 8S4
BIU Lustre carpet cleaner .
'
Second (across from Texaco
Rent. electric shampooer Sl.
Sf ,. l "'9523
Lower G. C. Murphy Store.
a 'on · ·
l96-lf
197-6
--C-AM_P_E_R-,-1~F"'or-d-van, OUTBOARD motor fest tank,
1968
963
like new. takes tong shaft
pony, extra gentle. Ph. 446motors, Size 36x.WX42 deep.
9-161.
_
Complete
with exhaust fan.
197 3
Formerly Brown's Marine.
WHITE sewing machine Model
Minersville, Ohio 992-3324.
769, electronic control, price
196-3
$269, save $80, only $189. We
p
are fighting Inflation, see us U FT. fiberglass boat, 35 H
. before buying . Sheppard's · motor, 5 life lackels, 2 sets of
Sewing Machines, 862 First
skis, 2 ski bells, 3 ski ropes.
Call after s, 446-«n::.
Ave.
196-3
195-3

-----

For Sale ·

campint Equipmant

USED TRAILERS
GtGAN'tiC year end sate new 71
1960 National IOX50, 2 br.
units 2411.1 save $1,300. 22 fl.
1967 Horizon 12x50, 2 br.
1 save $1 ,225.· 20 ft. 7 save
1957 Glider 45x8, 3 br.
Sl.OJS. All boats left dealer's
1966 Namoo. 52x10, 3 br,
cost. 1972 campers 15 pel. off .
1960
Dyke, 1ox50 2 br.
Trades accepted. We service
1960 Van Dyke 10X50, 2 br.
and
guarantee. Camp Conley
1~ Kentuckian, 56&lt;10, 3 br.
Starcratt
Sates, Rt . 62. North
1962 Colonial 50xl0, 2 br ..
of
-Poinf
Pleasant. West
1960 Van Dy~e 10Xo40, 2 br.
Vlr~lnia's largest Starcraft
All tra ilers clean and recon deaer. ..
169-11
ditioned. Ready for OC ·
cupancy. Free Delivery and
sel-up. Tri-County Mobile
HomH, 446-0175.
&amp;

van

9J.If

lwantMI

Plumbing

Heating

RUSSELL'S
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
SEPTIC lank cleaning, electric
sewer cleaning,

ditching .

Gallipolis, Ohio. Ph. 446-4782.
193-11

.Plumbing &amp;H~ating

Brammer Plumbing a. H~ating
300 Fourth Ave.
Phone 446-1637
Gene Plants, Owner
298-11
DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160at Evergreen

Phone 446-2735
281 -11
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
830 Fourth Avenue

Phone 446-3888 or 446-4477
155-11
STANDARD
Plumbing &amp; Heating
215 Third Ave., 446-3782
187-11

------

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

742-4902

L_...=.......::=......:'-::c=---'
C. BRA.DFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford
5-1-lfc

ROSEBERRY Furnace installation. Free estimates on

Sheets

new furnaces, oil or gas.
Service work. Call Cecil
Roseberry. Racine, Ohio :

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MAN.YUSES

Phone 614-843-2274.

llor$1.00

Gallipolis
Daily Tribune

Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

3-29-tfc
SEPT-IC tanks cleaneo. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-tfc

125 Tllinl Ave.

Gallipolis, 0.

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancel hid?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 9922966.
6-15-lfc

orbin &amp;
w.s- s·nyder Furniture
3

-1969
_ K
_ I_R_K_
W_OO
_ D_m_ob_l_le_ h_orne, .
USED FURNITURE
3 bedroom, unfurn. Ph. 446· BEDROOM suite, wringer
washer, coli springs and
-161l .
195-3 maffress, full size.
_ _.......,:-:-:-:-:-:--::--:--=
NEW FURNITURE
1970 DATSUN pickup, good INNERSPRING mattresses
condition, new tires, never starting at $28.95. Get the rest
wrecked, $1 ,575. Ph. 992-5153, you deserve. select ~our
. Pomeroy.
mattress and box springs
19.j.l2 now . Free park1ng. Open
- - - - - - --:--:
Fridays till B. 955 Second Ave.
POMERANIAN females, 2 yr. Ph. 446-1171.
white, 9 mo. red ; 6.mo. male
197-lf
champion sired Yorkshire - - - - - - - - - : : Terrier Ph 4-46-054 after 6 BUSINESS for sale. Grand
·
·
Cafe. Ph . 446-9520 or 44l&gt;-3228.
p.m.
194-6
191-4
SPINETpiano,refrlgeratorand REMINGTON 11 00 12 ga.
gas range . Ph. 446-1142.
shotgun with 2 vent. rib
l9.j.tf barrels. Ph. 446-3881 .
197-3
-~-~
---C-H_E_V_R_O_L~E~T'"I"m-pa
~
ta, 2 ------------:-::-- dr. hardtop, call 446-JSd.
BUILT-IN GAS cook fop and
193-6 oven. good cond. Ph. 446-2281 .
---------:
197-3
HOUSE, 3 bedroom, brick, full
D
Mobile
Home
paneled basemgoodent, hu, ge u~adquarters. All size mobile
family room,
ne ~nk B &amp; s Mobile
in sloe .
borhood' close to town, City · homes
Home Sales, Second &amp; Viand,
schools. Call 446-9381 . 193-6
Pl. Pleasant, ""•' to Heck's.
67-11
SUNRAY double oven gas
range, white, almost new. IF YOU are boJifdlng a , _
horne or remodeling, see us.
S300. Call 367-7158.
We are builders. Distributor
195-tf
tor Hofpoint Appliances,
Allison Electric.
SINGER Sewing Machine Safes
154-lf
&amp; Service. All models In
.
.
stock. Free delivery. Ser~ice
guaranteed. Models ,priced
trom S69.95. French City
Fabric Shoppe, Singer ap~veil dealer, 58 Courf St.
. 446-925S.
JOB.tl 1967 OATSUN P.U .
1966 'h T. GMC P.U.
1964 '12 T. Ford P.U.
SEWING MACHINE service in 1969 Chev. 'II&lt; T. P.U.
your home Special pre-school 1965 fl.':! T. Chevrolet Truck
offer. Ct6n, . oil and adjust, 1966 '12 T. GMC P.U,
$4.99. Call 446-9353.
1969 Chev. dump truck
191-11 1952 'h T. Chev. P.U.1965 I T. GMC .
GERMAN Shepherd puppies, 1969 GMC • T. log truck
AKC reg . Happy, healthy 1962 :V. T. GMC pick ...
farm raised. Jackson 918- 1963 IT. GMC
2601.
1~ 112 T. Ford P.U.
193-6 1963 'h T. Chev. P.U.
1 T. GMC
"G~OO--D-C::-:L-:Ec:-A:-:N-:-:L:-;U~M::-;;P-and 1969
1967 '12 T. GMC P.U.
stoker coat. Cart Winters, Rio 1968 Chev. Suburban
· Grande. Phone 245-5115.
19S4 •12 T. Dodge ~u. . .
8-11 1967 :V. T. Chevrolet pick..,
1963 F600 Ford Truck
WE specialize In portrait and 1961 2 T. GMC
'
- - commercial · photography, 1964 3 T. GMC
church weddings, ret.K~ions, 1966. 112 T. Ford P.U.
etc. Tawney Studio.
18-11 1956 1'12 T. O!ev. Vall
SOMMER'S G.M.CWHITE cement, all silt$ lifo in
TR\ICKS, INCstock . 12" a. 15" field fifo,
Ill Pine 51.
I'll. 446-2532
suilablo for highway ditching,
concrete
blocks .
241-11
GALLIPOLIS BLOC!' CO.,
ph. 446-27113.
PUBLIC seating, 101a111y ldDI. .
97-11
illld chairs - resla..-.,ts,

New GMC
Truck Headquarm

churches,

organizations.

REDUCE safo and fast with ' Comptete tine of office chairs
Got e tablets and E-Vap
and desks. Simmons Pta. &amp;
Olffce Equip. Ph. 44l&gt;-l:.;).
• water pills. Gillingham Drug.
176-26
141-lf

7-22-30fc

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes, 992-2284,
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and

2(14

HARRISON 'S TV AND AN·
TENNA SERVICE . Phone
992-2522.
6-10-tfc
NEIGLER Construction. For
building or remodeling your
home . Call Guy Nelgler,
Racine, Ohio.
7-31-lfc

YES , I DIDN'T EVEN HAVE
TIME 10CAL L GRAN~

AND TELL HER Yi:D 8E
t&lt;~M= A"''EAD OF

OFFICE SUPPLIES
And

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

From fhe Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
SmaiiP.sl Heater Cl&gt;re.

BlAETTNARS

Pomoroy

Ph. 992-2143

MOTORCYClES
Mid-Summer Sale
On AII Models
Save Up To S200.00
Over 10 Percent
HAWK'S 3-DAY
CYCLE SALE
2 miles south of Athens, 0.

Rt. 33
Open Mo.n., Wed. , Fri.
10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Phone 593-8669

Real Estate For Sale

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
I

\55

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open8Ti15
Monday lhru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

CHICKEN house at Syracuse
with 2.61 acres, phone m
2684.
8-22.6tp

Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endtoader Work

Aluminum

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanks insfalled. George
(8iUI Pullins, Phone 992-W8.
4-25-ttc

Co!flp l ete
Remode.lr'ng

--"x23.,_, ...,

HOME &amp; AUTO

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates . Ph . 446-4782.
Gallipolis. John Russell ,
Owner &amp; Operator.
5-13-lfc

IOH

For Sale

EXPERIENCED.
Radiator Service

POMEROY

Mli5DLEPORT - ~room Drick
home with bath. paneling and
wall to wall carpeting . Phone
992-2540 or 992-3465.
8-20-12tc 16-FT . FIBERGLASS boat
runabout, 50 h.p. Johnson
·s iX ROOM house. bath , - full
outboard and trailer. Good
basement, 133 Butternut Ave., condition. $685. Phone 992·
just walking distance from
2881.
downlown Pomeroy . Contact
8-22-6tc
!:d Hedrick, 2137 Wadsworth - - - - - - - -Orive, Columbus, Ohio, phone, HALF RUNNER beans, S2
237 -4334, Columbus.
bushel, pick your own.
5-9-tfc
Cu cumbers and fomaloes.
Watermelons, cantaloupes.
11.16 ACRES located .. T.79 af
sweet
corn,
potatoes.
Rack Springs, close lo Mei~s
Clarence Prollitt, Porfland,
High School. Contact B1ll
Phone 843-2254.
Witte (f or L. Fields) after 5 p.
8-17-ffc
m. or on weekends, phone 9926887.
8-12-10tc 16 FT . TAGALONG travei
trailer. fully sell contained.
Ready to go, SISOO. Phone 773·
6 ROOM house and bath located
5651.
Mason, W. Va.
just outside Chesler. Phone
7-23-tfc
985-4262.
8-12-12tc
POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy,
3 B-EDROOM brick home.
Park view Kennels . Phone 9925443.
.
Choice location In Mlddleporf.
Seen by appointment only .
8-15-llc
Phone 992-5523 after ~ p.m.
..
5-7-tfc CANNING tomatoes: already
· picked, $1.25 bu., bring
containers. Geraldine
Cleland , East Main, Racine.
7-'18-tfr

-----------1
. NSQN M
. ASQNRY.

------

FOR SALE b,Y. owner. New 1970
Skyline tra1ler, 3 bedroom, 2
tots consisting of 1.17 acres
seeded lawn, 150 fl. drilled
well, plenty wafer, gravel
driveway, Jet Aeration septic
tank, lots of shade trees.
Aboul'h mile oft Rt. 7 on Bear
Run Rd. overlooking beauflful
Raccoon Creek In recreallon
area, boating, fishing and
water skiing sports. Get in
touch with Olen Kif bourne on
properly.

Plus
Parts

PHONE 992-2143

SAVE $180 on Electro H~gtene LOW, low prices on Bemco and
Serta mattresses and box
cleaner. If pays to buy at
springs. Corbin &amp; Snyder
Sheppard's, 862 First Ave.
Furn., 955 Second Ave. Ph.
195-3
446-1171.
-----].If
SHEPPARD'S Kirby Sates &amp;

195-3
-19_4_7_C_H_E_V_R_O_L-::E=T-IV:I- tor.
flatbed truck. Ph. 367-7517.
195-3

6.98

Blaettnar's

A

41111S.

240 Lincoln St., Middleport

Special
At

RICE'S NEW
USED FURNITURE

GE RANGE, 36", ( yrs old,
broiler, rotisserie, 3 storage
drawers, like new. Ph. 446-

ditiOfling .

Have Your Seasonal
Air Conditioning
Inspection and
Re-Charge

------

Kirby and parts. We service
all makes. 862 First Ave.
195-6

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co. and Anthony Plumbing &amp; Heating.
Complete
Plumbing,
Healing and Air Con-

Phone 992-2550
Insured- Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See us for Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnstalation.

-----

Service. We carry full line of

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
·WORK
SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING

O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rf . 12~.
Complete front end ser.vice,
tune up and brake service.
Wheels
balanced · electronically. · All
work
guaranteed.
Reasonable
ra te&gt;. Phone 992-3213.
7-27-tfc
AWNINGS, storm doors and•
windows , carports ,
marquees, aluminum siding

Fitr Sale

Virgil B.
TEAFORD
SR.

Broker
•10 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
NEW LISTINGS
MIDDLEPORT -10 acres with
a 6 room house and garage,
DEXTER- 6 room house wlth
2 lots. $3,500.00.
120 acres of building lots.
Chester water.
GOOD BUYS
80 ACRES- 60 or more tractor
tillable . 6 room house.
$25,000.00.
POMEROY - 7 rooms, bath,
furnace, basement. $7,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT- RURAL - 6
rooms, bath, garage. Garden.
$7,000.00.
SYRACUSE - 5 rooms, bath,
basement on 124 . Only
$6,000.00.
LETART - 5 rooms, bath,
furnace. Basement. $7,000.00.
SEE US, NEAR KROGER,
WE MAY HAVE IT.
992-3325
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE,
992-2378
8-22-6fc
----------

Cleland
Realty
608 East Main
PO~EROY

CLELAND REALTY
608 Easl Main
POMEROY
DEXTER- Level Lot 150x100,
2 story frame , 4 bedrooms, 2
porches one enclosed, . barr.
with 2 car spaces and another
storage building . GREAT
FOR THE KIDS. $8,900.

and railing . Call A. Jacob,
sales representative. For free
esfi males , phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
Johnson and,Son. Inc.
POMEROY - FAMILY HOME
5-27-tfc
CLOSE TO ELEMENTARY
SCHOOL2 s:r, frame, 1'12
R.EADY -MIX
WNCRETE
baths,
4
nice
rooms, gas
delivered right to your
forced
-air
heat.
full
pr~ject . Fast and easy . Free
basement,
porch,
garage
with
estimates . Phone 992- 328~ .
renovated room over, fine for
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co.,
office
space or utility apart Middleport, Ohio.
ment. S18,SOO.
6-30-lfc
MINERSVILLE - 1'17 story
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC SER - frame, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms,
VICE . Phone 949-4551.
bath, tile paneling, basement,
5-30-tfc
NEW ALUMINUM SIDING,
nice porch and yard. A BUY
AT JUST $10,000.
PLACE
THE SALE OF YOUR
193 ACRE stock iarm, well
PROPERTY
IN GOOD
fenced, farm pond, plenty of
HANDS.
timber and pasture, large
HENRY E. CLELAND,
barn, Implement shed and
RUlTOR
other buildings. Recently
Office "992-2259
remodeled. 4 bedroom farm
Rosidence 992-2561
home, with wall to wall
8-18-6tc
carpeting, ceramic tile bath,
full basement . Shown by
appointment Drily. Phone 992· CONVENIENT but secluded
building lots on T79 at Rock
6546.
Springs.
Within walking
8-22-12tc
diStance of Meigs High
School, aS minute drive from
NEW, 3-bedroom home In
Pomeroy . Call or see Bill,
Middleport. Buill-in kitchen,
Witte
weekends or after 5
ceramic file bath, all-electric
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992heat, good neighborhood . Can
6887.
arrange FHA financing .
7-11-tfc
Telephone 992-3600 or ~2186.
7-25-llc
1959 CHEV . pickup will trade
riOUSE. 1642 Lincoln Heights.
for a camper or motor boat. M
Call Danny Thompson, 992&amp; G Food Market, 3 miles
2196.
south of Middleport on Stale
Route 7.
7-18-ffc
8-22-3tp
DUPLEX HOME, 6 rooms and
bath. Apartment, 3 rooms and
bath. Private entrances. Ideal
for family with extra rental or
Investment property. Priced
for quick sale. Call 992-2431
after 5 p.m.
·
1-11 -lllc

Real Estate For Sale

For Trade·

- -- - 1960 G.M.C. pickup - S17Y.

Mini -bike frame $12. Phone
992-6702.
8;22-3tc

AM-

t6LONIAL style stereO;
FM radio, 4 speakers, 4 speed
record changer. Balance
$79.19. Use our budget terms.
Call 992-7085.
8-22-6tc

------

MODERN walnut stereo, AM·
FM radio features 4 speed
record changer, 4 speakers,
separate controls. Balance
$67.89. Call 992-7085.
8-22-6tc

H &amp; N day old or started
Leghorn pullets. Both floor or
cage grown available.
Poultry
housing
and
automation. Modern Poultry,
399 W. Mal~. Pomeroy, 992·
216&lt;1.
8-22-lfc
EVENING
AUCTION
Starling at 6 p.m., Friday,
August 27th on the Rutland .
Harrisonville Road, having
sold my home will sell the
following :
Hardwick Gas
Range,
Frigidaire
Refrigerator, Lg. Siegler oil
heater, Ward's elec. sewing
machine, glass door china
cabinet, upright piano, 2 pc.
living room suite, 7 pc, dinette
set, 12 x
canner,

s wool rug, pressure
student's

desk,

guitar, Maytag wringer
washer, 2 rinse tubs with legs,
picnic fable, 20' x 30' tent, 4
bicycles, 2 power lawn
mowers, U Int. ladder, step
ladder. 2 bags Insulation
(new), mefal fence posts,
Senator garden tiller, '64
Dodge Dart Station Wagon,
'64 2-dr . Rambler Classic, 2
young heifers, 11 Holstein) .
Stone jars, garden tools, some
antiques, toys. clothing and
many Items too numerous .to
mention .
Refreshments.
Owner: Amos Tillis, Auctioneer : I. 0. "Mac" Mc.COY.
l -22.61p

•

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets
' 36" X 23" X. .D09

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

.2f1

I lor 11.ao

The
Dai~

Sentinel

Ill Court Sl.
Pomoi'OJ, Ohio

�VOLKSWAGEN~

"DOC"

DID YOU
THAT BUICK
·OUTSOLD FORD AND QtijROLET IN
GALLIA COUNTY FOR THE MONTH
OF JULY?? HOW ABOUT THAT!

I

SMITH

69. OLDS
...................................................... $2795
.

'

Delta Custom 2 Pr. HT,IIght green with green vinyl fop, automatic, P. Sleering, P. Brakes.
.p, Antenna, AM Radio, automatic Temp. Control. air conditioner, Tilt Steering Wheel, New
setol white tires. This Is a local mint green car in mint condition, 100 pet. Guarantee.

y ·EN 0 M
,SALE

p

•

•

1969 BUICK ELECTRA 2 DR. HDTP.

69 IMPALA...................................................$2488

Factory air, P·. Wind., vinyl trim.- blue black vinyl top.
Sharp, 36 months to pay.

Custom 2 Dr. HT, Black ".inyl top, black Inferior, Mar iner blue paint, aulomatic tem·
perature control, air con d., P.S .. P.B., tinted glass.'AM-FM stereo radio. white tires, V8 - 4
I2H!!,_ This Is a local car in excellent cond. Dealer Guarantee.

1969 PONTIAC FIREBIRD

Light Blue2 Dr. HT. •mall V8englne. automatic trans., P. Steering, new tires, AM r~dlo and
Factory Air Conditioning. This Is a local car trade-in In perfect condition. You must see. to
appreciate. 100 pet. Guarantee, ·
·

•·

$2495

2 Dr. Hdtp, vinyl top, ~uta., other extras, white. hat
special.

2 DR
white with blue Interior, V8 Automatic Trans., P. Steering, P. Brakes, AM radio,
white tires, wire wheel .:;overs. A beautiful car in excellent con d.

1961 DODGE

None nicer.

65 PLYMOUTH............................... ~ ................ $795

1

1967 BUICK LeSABRE 4 DR. HDTP.

Belv 112 Dr. HT, red with red interior, small V8, automatic trans. , P. Steering, AM radio,
white !Ires. This car is in real nice condition. A local trade-in.
67 FiatiiOO Series-65 Mustang 6 Cyl Auto-65 Mercury -64 Olds - 59 Chev.

1967 aiEV. IMPALA 4 DR.

ALSO 15 USED VOLKSWAGENS
69 v.w.. ______ ;. ________________•1988

v.w. ~---------------------~1888
'68 v.w. ·----------------------'1688

White, red _interior. Extra nice for the year. Nice sec

~r .

White Bug, auto. trans., red leather interior, radiO. We have put th is car in A-1 condition and
guarantee 11100 per centfor 30 days or 1,000 mlies. ·

'1695

MANY MORE

GMC TRUCKS
PONTIAC
118 Ye~rs of Continuous Busine~~
PHONE992-2143
POMEROY, OHIO

SALES-SERVICE

eq~pped.

8-20-3tc

DODGE Polara, excellent
c:mdition. air conditioning,

SI.&amp;SO. Ph&lt;lne 9115-3310, Long
Bullom, Ohio.
8-22-Jtp

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

THEY'RE GOING FAST. DON'T WAIT OR YOU'LL BE TOO LATE.

INC.

Open Eves. Til~Til5 P.M. Sat.

-

34

off old 33 on right. second lane
on left. Irvin Miller .
8-20-31p

the Middleporl Hill Area

between noon and 4 p.m.,

Thursday, August 19. Contact
James Brewer. 1275 Vine

IRISH Cobbler potatoes .
Thomas D. Sayre, Great
Bend, Phone 843-2436.
8-20-3tp

original
cartons.
No
atfachments needed as our
controls are built in. Sews
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes, sew on bu1tons,
monograms, and blind hem

stitch. Full cash price, S38.SO
or

budget

plan

available.

ELECTROLUX ' Vacuum
cleaner complete with attachments, cordwinder and

paint spray. Used but in like
new condition . Pay $37.45
cash

or

credit

terms

available. Phone 992-5641.
8-18-6tc

+A43

... 754
WEST (D)

EAST

4111108
.3
+KQ10985

411197542
.KJ1075
tJ76
... Void

... J 1062
SOUTH

.AK
.AQ84

Going to Europe? Take delivery there. Ask about it now.

AUl HO/IlZlO
QU.Ltll

19S Upper River Rd. IOhio Rl. 71 , Gallipolis, Ohio - Phone (614) 446-98.0.
Open : Sales. Mon .. Fri. 81o 8; Sat. 8-5-Service, Parts &amp; Office Mon .. Fri. 8-S, Sa': 8-12

~..vAL.

·'MITH

· expensive carpet, clean with

Blue Lu.tre. Rent electric ·
shampooar, Sl. Baker Furniture Company.
8-18-6tc

Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
A.9.Hc

12X50. SCH(J LTZ 2-bedroom
mobile home loca fed On
torner of Third and AdaJ!I s,
Mason, W. V;,. See Martin

CORONA

typewriter,

like

Phone _992-2922.

$75 .

8-22-Jtc

RIDING horses. Phone 949-3196.
8-22-6tc

APPLES-Peaches. Fitzpalrick
Orchards, State Roule 689,
Graham, Zuspan Sl., fllason,
phone Wilkesville, 669-3785.
W. Va.
·
8·15-tfc
8-17-6tc

---·--- -- -

Wcsl

Norlh

Easl

Soulh

3t

Pass

4t

5•

Dble

Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening )ead- t K

·

87

40---S..sonlna:
41-Household

-

PLESIV

'1195

WOOD MOTOR SALES

I

[)

1...::.-:-1

GALLI POLIS, 0.

Now arranplhe chdoollotlon
tor. . tbe . .,.1w ••·•
.....

[TIDIDN'T(

lir doe ..... -

H

For Rent

Ynlft'day'•
Auwen

..

If &amp;My ~···~

I tl

I I I][ I I)
('

Ju,.W.., IXACT 1WINI CIIICUS UDIUS

.
SALESMEN needed Work full
to!d ;rou West holds all {our or parttlme. No dOor to door
m1ssmg clubs. The best you sales.
Advancement opcan do with that line of play portunlty. Call collect 593··
is to take 10 tricks.
5079.
Can you make 11?
8-18-61c
It looks as if you can b u t - ---:--::::--::---.,...
you must play most unusu·
Wanted To Buy
.
d h
ally. You let West hoi t e ANTIQUES, telephones, brass
trick. He continues dia- beds, clocks, dishes. old
monds, which is as good as furniture, etc. Write M. D.
anything else, and you play Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
low from dummy anl.l ruff in Call 992-6271 .
7-9-tfc
your han d ·
R
Then you cash your three F
high trumPs, ace-king of or
ent
spades and ace of hearts and BX 35 TRAILER, country
throw West in with his last local! on. Phone 992-3954.
8-22-3tc
trump.
W t t t d 'th 10
d
. es s are WI
car s TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
m the mmors. He followel) to '1&gt;-mlie north of new Meigs
two spades, so· his last heart High School. Phone 992-2941.
8-22-llc
has gone away and he must
FUt you in dummy for the
.
.
.
rest of the tricks.
2 BEDROOM mob1ie home. M &amp;
G Food Market, 3 miles south
Neat, b ~ t no t qu!·te cor· of
Middleport on State Route
reeL West IS also a hger. He 7
·
8-22-Jip
dropped the six, 10 and ·jack
of clubs on the ace, king and - - - - - - - - queen and you can't throw THREE ROOM FURNISHED
him in since he holds the APARTMENT, AIR CONdeuce '
DITIONED. REASONABLE,
.
~
CAN BE SEEN BY APtNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
POINTMENT,
IF
IN TERESTED. CALL 992-2053. ,
8·22-llp

28--M ends

34-Girl'~ name
35-let it stand
37-8ri!ltle
39--f\l.athlemetal

Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio.

Help wanted

86--Grinding
in z iRlll

...........
32--former RIIHian

[l I I I
J

~

24-Repealed
26--lnstructor

ruk!n
3]-..,Ak:oholjc
bew:rap

2 Dr. hardtop. 283 cu. in. V-8 engine. radio &amp;
heater, standard trans., p. steering, Cameo
ivory finish with red vinyl &amp; nylon Interior. W·
s-w tires. Looks and runs like new!

.82-&amp;rilon at sea

29--Nothine

66 CHEV. IMPALA

h.l die __,. ~

...,,.,_.~,

......,,

'

«"- · '

1•

FURNISHED and unfurnished·
apartments. Close to school.,
Phone 992-5434.
10-18-tfc

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

~
75--lslands In

80--Gid"s~

21-Sea ecle
22-5tuH

~puchin

135 Rc J &amp;ts

.Bl-4::onredl!tate

(pl.)

.....

RlJE1!f

EASTERN AVE.

shrine
It MKCII
19-Citrus fruit

23--Ftendl resort

one letter to taeh IIOjllllft, to
form four _onllnar1 wordo.

Seaiesof

89-A mte (•bbrJ
llcca..,
·~

5'5

prmentr;

5'8
99

S'rin a.n-t
Caral islands

101----tn..tin·rank
103-H.atnhl
104 R . allettuc:e
105 S brdisl
1 06---Eldam.atio
. 107~
•

-

(-J

42-Ant..red
.animal

108 Ge man tide
110 M • ·

~neintwo

lll~IM•tw's

46-:-Tr.dt: fortr10f11!1
musure
47-Trte trunk
112-H..,._ SihoeS
48---Calumniate
lU Piclbil dudi:
50-£m-,
115 B I )kwo•o
collectively
deitJ
52-Me.U::..S
117---hcttof~
53--Printer's
119---P.Irt of
measur.
"1D be..
55-Wife of
120 SUn at fnit
Gtraint
121 · S buul
57-A state {abbrJ
m50Ci.W
58-Want
124 St)lish
59-Animal skin
126--Caunby a1
tiO Ri lift In
Asia
Siberia
127-God of i:»w
62-Weaken
128-Teac:hets
64 Stalk
130-Juncturt
66 Conjunction
132~ JEJ earth
611--t11brew 1ett:er
133-Pai'CII'I of~
69

1 HEDRoo'M trailer aparttonment, Ideal for couples.
tact McClure's Dairy Isle
992-5248 or 992-3436.
'
8 20
-::--------:..·:.:·6lc

Leaal Notice

Mees

WMP0/1390

Spoken

134

":vrwe

137-Ut fali-

lP-Beasts af

S~Man's

."""' bUrdiri
"'
- n1~ame
20-0ceans
90-South Americ3n
23-Coin
animals
140 faint af moon
25-Expires
91-Residue
141-Nitive
27--Crate
92-Unusual
E'gptians
28--Stream
93--lterale
143--&amp;rmese
31-Wallt
94-Prefix: not
domons
33-Brick
96-Appellation of
1C5-Chinese pagoda
structure
Athena
146-S.ah of
36-Story
97-Bridge term
nitric acid
38-Genus of
lOG-Preposition
148 (O..oe.gin&amp;
m.ilples
102-Man's name
.... ... J .
40-Sow
105-lnterjection
150-Common41-Jacket
l~heers
weallhs
43--Firearms
112-Fur·bearin&amp;
152--Mountain
45--Ascended
mammal
46-U:pel air
113-Narrow
153--NeQpieces
fOrcibly
openinc
114-Bars legally
1 M-Repe:titiGn
throuah nose
I 56-Nimbuses
47-Waming device 116-Tiny particle
49--Girt's name
1S7--Remains at
118-Told falsehood
51-Counlry of
120-Buccaneers
Asia
lSI-Animal coop
121-Harvest
asg Scorch
52-Rents
122-Mumbles
UiO--Siyle of
53-Brother of
123-lreland
Jacob
125-'Funny picture
~nting
54-Principal
126-Sarcasm
DOWN
56-Con~crated
127-0therwise
129-Peruse
59-Gave
)-Wolfhounds
flO-Unlock
Ill-Groaner
61-foundation
132-landed estale
63-Jails
3-Eadi&gt;ho&gt;
133-Piaces
4-Frendt tor
65-Additional
134-0in
67-Poem
136-Greenland
69-Conjunction
5-Fseulement
70-Pi&amp; iron
6-ComOO&gt;&gt;
138-0ut
of date
72-Retail
point
establishment 14D-Uncouth
7-Worthlns
persons
74-Note of scale
l41-5hort falk
76-Faroe lslan'ds
whirlwind
142-Piumllke fruit
10-Yellow piament 77-AppOrllon
144-Antlered
79-Gun:to·s high
JJ-Warpd
animal
note
12 Distant
147-Rodent
83--Unit of
B---Srmbollor
148-Cry of dove
Siamese
Antarium
149-Music: as
currency
14 Sl eeul!less
written
8S-Hi&amp;h e•plosive
151-Suffix:
like
86-P$haw!
IS CaD:eclton of
153-Before Christ
87-Fresh-w.ilter
(abbr.)
16 pexf:s
88-Sacred image
17-C!Y:stise
I 55-Teutonic deity
139--Philippine ·

...
....
..,..

......._.
---

·-·.....

.......,._

-o&amp;l"&gt;

...

~c:-=~:"'1::':"1

-+-+-+--+-1
t-+-+--1-+-+-i

Card of Thanks

TO THE surgeon Dr. Telle, Dr.
Blazewicz, and all the nurses
on the medical staff. at
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
who with their skillful hands
pulled me thr.ough the
shadows. Webster does 'not
have the words for me to
express "lY thanks and
gratitude. May God reserve
~is choice blessings for each
ot you. Your past pallent and
friend, Eber Carpenter,
Portland, Ohio.
1·22-llc

Auto Sales

\

1970 DATSUN pick-up, . good
cond 111on, new tires, l'lever "

wrecked. S1,57S. Phone 992.
5153.
,
8-18-12tc

.-t--1-1

See()ur New
65'x14' Wide
With Deluxe

Furniture
Package.

65Xl2.

-t-+---1
.

VAN DYKE
Completely equipped
home with deluxe
furnishings._Priced 'from

SAVE UP TO

$1500
ON KING HOMES
Step Ioo, call .,. wrHe or toll! to O.n
Lavendor or Jolin Ketc:IIU.

~]11011.

, _,

KEITH GOBLE
MOBILE HOME SALES

An•-·

It No
~-3422
Lqt Ph. m-7004
Daily _12 to 9, ~nctay 1 to 6

OPPOSITE GOBLE'S USEP CAR LOT

-OHIO

SALE

992-2152

notice is hereby &amp;iven lhat The
_ITEM: Morning. A OhinPublic
Bell Telephone Compa ny has filed
with The Publ1c Utilities Commissioa ol
'zestful time for some Ohio
a n A~ication statins that the Company i1 enutled, because of the reuons
people. Double dismal set
forth in uid Application, torcasoatblc:
and cquiltble increases and adjusunmu
for others. Jim
Us rates and dtar1es ror exch~ tete·
somehow gets ·· us all inpllonc
service, intraaate messa1e toll telephone service, intrastate mobile: telephone
together every day.
~ice, intrastale private line xnices aDd
intrastate wide aru telecommunicatioM
service, and to c hange the regulations and
J?O!clices afleo;;tina 1he same, and to revise
tts bchan1e Rate Tuifl P.U.C.O. No.3, its
General Exchange Taritr P.U.C.O. No. 4,
111 Meuaae Toll Telephone Scnice Taril'f
P.U.C.O. No. 7. ita Mobile Tdephone
·Service Tariff P.u.c.o. No. 2. its Priowate
~!!!!!!fiiii-IJ!IIIIJ!!II!!!!!!!!!!I!!IIf!l-· UM SerTice: Tariff P.U.C.O. No. 2, and
ils Wide Area Telecommunications Service
·•• --Tariff P.U.C.O. No. I, to effect such Increases, adjustmenu. and chanacs, all 11
more rully set forth .in .the Appl.iealloa on
file with the: Comm1SS~on and 1n the ea·
bibltl thereto attached and made 1 pan

-------·

I WISH to thank everyone who
called on Cleo Adams during
his last Illness also for the
cards he received. I thank all
of the stall at Velerans
Memorial Hospital, Ewing's
Funeral Home for their ef·
llcienf service, Gerald Powell
for the music, Rev. Charles
Norris for his consoling
message, the pallbearers all
"'7::-::-::-c::--:-:-:---lhi&gt;se who sent the beautiful
The bidding has been:
2 BEDROOM mobile home with
Wesl
North
F.ast
South air conditioning In Racine flowers, food and onyone else
area. Phone 992·6329.
who helped In any way. Your
1
Pass
1•
Pas5 . 3 +
8-17-51c kmdness will never be
ond may GOd bless
Pass
4+
Pass ' ?
T~R=-:-A~IL-;E:-R:-L-:0-T~S. -B-ob-:,-s -,.,
~bile torgotlen
y~u all. Emma Adams, wife,
You, Soulh. hnld:
Courl, Rl. 124, Syrocuse,
h1s brothers and sisters.
.AKS7 .Al +KQ9 .K643 Ohio. 992-2951.
8-22-llp
4-2-lfc
Whal do . you do now?

16 FT .. 25 H.P . Sea-King &amp; new 128-poge book '" J" c 0 a y
frailer . $250. Phone 1-667-3031. MODERN . For. rour copy .sent $1
8-22·31p with your nome, oJrJreu anJ zip
FINE COOKING and eating corle fo : "Win at Bridge," (c/o tlris
apples . Ask for quantity price newspoper), P.O. Box 489, Radio City
or small lol, iust"'eJf of Stale Stotio~J. New Yofk, N.Y. 10019.
Route 124, Welchfown Road .
Hosmer Roush.
8-19-3tp . elec t to (ry a conservalive
A-Hid the same fou1· ~padcs. - - - - - - - - - five clubs . Much to yo ur sur·
11 is up tu ~·uur parlner to ~p
.
prise. yo u get doubled at pasl
game if there is a slam. 2 BEDROOM mobile home,
For Sale or Tra~e
this contracl.
nearly new, furnished ' in
57 FORD •;, ton pickup, good
TODAY'S QUESTION
West open~ lhe king of dia·
Mason, W. Va. Call Robert
condition, sell $250 or trade monds and you study awhile .
Ht· bids fiw dub!t: 'you ~1i{l Dixon at Meigs Mobile Home
lor· good used car. Jack The sinwle play is )o win in fiVl' hcl.l'tS and he hid~ ~ix dit~ · Sales, Tuppers Plains fil&gt;7·
Layne ,
Prospecl
Hill,
3891.
dummy and take a heart fi. monds. What clo .vou c1,. 1mw':
Pomeroy.
8-19-31c
8-19·31p nesse, but the double has

--------

c:

u........welhaefourJwnltla.

'*'

portabl e
new,

... AKQ983
' North-South vulnerable

foumo'menf-winning techniques in o

•

NICE NOi!MANDY clarinel
with case, $60. Phone 742-4211
after 5 p.m. 742-5163 or see
Wendell Grate, Rutland,
8-20·31c

t2

BEAGLE PUPS, sired by By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Pearson Creek slock, $15.
Keith Ridenour , Chester. Ohio
Jeremy Flint undoubtedly
985-4175.
concocted today's hand for
8-22-3tp his book, "Tiger Bridge. "
1971'12 Honda 350 ss. gold color, , You are tiger South. After
high riSe bars, crash bars and tiger West opens three dia·
sissy bar, under 3,000 miles, monds, his partner raises
show room coridition. always him to four . You consider all
garaged. Priced to sell. Phone sor ts of bids and eventually
evenings only 992-7173 or 9927066.
8-19.-Jtc Americo's top e•pert~ exp1oin their

en,II 1lgn oppaan only in tor1 u1ecfed by your V'N deoler.

For Sale

21

NORTH

• QJ63
.962

8-18-6tc

For Sale

NEED lady for housecleaning 1
or 2 days a week. Reply c-o

When Two Tigers Tangle

Phone 992-5641.

For Sale ·

8-1-J{]jp

- ------WIN ,...
A'T BRIDGE

PAINT
DAMAGE,
1971
Zig
Zag
Sewing
Machines,
still
in

•

or

Davisburg , Mich. 48019.

A.K.C. Miniature dachshund . call 992-2343.
8-19-6\p
Phone 992-5473.
8-22-31c
8-22-6tc - - - - - - - - NEED SOMEONE to do
SAVE UP to one half. Bring housework and cook for
12x60 LIBERTY trailer. cenlral
your sick TV lo Chuck's TV elderly couple. No laundry,
air conditioned, 3 bedrooms.
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave., and need not stay nights; 6
Phone 992-5548 .
Pomeroy.
•·
days a week . Phone 992-3014.
8-20-3tp
4-23·1fc
8-22-Jtp
ONE PULL TYPE corn
oicker. New Idea No. 10.
Phone 992-6214.
8-20-6tc

DON WATTS VOLKSWAGEN, INC.

c11UUWID~~~.~~ =" ,.-

envelopes . Rush stamped

sell -addressed envelope. The
Ambrose Co. , 4325 Lakeborn,

70 R
l
71-Vedlbltes

77---SimiMI$
78-.Jo;n

1~oslem

ANTIQUE player piano, ext ra

good wheelbarrow, side
boards. home made, many REWARD for any information
other articles; chain saw, $20.
leadinq to the arrest of the
Come see, on County Road 163
persons who shot a horse in

•
1-Suft.&lt;lriodbrid&lt;

6---flo.d in _.,

IANAUG4 OHIO

GUNSHOOT. Aug. 22, 1 p.m . KOSCOT Kosmetlcs, July Mile Hill Road, '12 hog, hams,
August special. Kare Kon nice finish . Phone 742-5042 .
bacon, by Racine Fire Dept. dition oil $5. Value now only
8-22-Jtc
8-18-4tc $2.50. Disfributors, Brown's,
phone 992-5113.
i9i9 FORD 4 doo. , ,..
I WILL not be responsible lor
7-4-tfc
1947 tadlllac pickup. $150. 20 debts contracted br any .one
lb. gas trailer tanks, $10 each. other than mysel . Signed,
Help Wanted
1959 Chev. 2 door, perfect Ja ck Frederick .
EARN
AT home addressing
running condition, $125. One
8-2 2-3tp

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

ACROSS

1~dkrbr;

Smith Auto Sates

Notice

Notice

For Sale

reassuring words
about used cars
. from.your
·Volkswagen dealer.

BE GENTLE, be kind, to that

....,

Middleport, o.

SUNDAY, AUGUST 22, 1971

GMACFIMIICI111Avollillllo
"You'll LlkeOur~llty Way of Doing Business"

· Drlftetlll r ...
111111 d1 allllllt:

11m estone . Excelsior

-•Y

m-5341

GARAGE

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS

NEW71 CHEVY KINGSWOOD WAGON. Color sea aqua,

tinted glass, floor mafs, door ed. guards, "season air, 255
H.P. 4 cu. in . engine, wh. covers. Comfortilf st. wheel., ww tires, E. Oock, P. B., radio, turbo hydrometlc, power
s1eerlng &amp; brakes, luggage carrier . Retail S$041

SAVINGS PRICE S444l.

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE ........

C.diU.c - Okhm 1laile

•··'*-

Works. £. Main St..

SPECIAL lhi!;weekal Tom Ru,
Motors. 1963 Ford Pickup.
8-15-tfc

.llOI.J.!l'IOS

1971 •oDEL CLOSE ·OD'T

Pontiac.

factory air conditioning, full
one toc:al owner.
!'hone 992-5871.

The #1 aelllng

1111 ..:lo • 'mllel per gll1on tor work .nd
plaJ•.TOJ'IIon Nr froniiUIFIRIIan.
I fool II IIIII bid. Durlble, diJIIIllllbll.
.LcWf !llllniiMIICI, high null. Tlikll
• Cllmpel', too.

0,.:

~-all

1968 GRAND Prix

YEAR·END

See the" Dependables" at Rawlings
Pearl Ash. Emerson Jones, Hilton Wolfe,
Wallace Amberger. Dick Rawlings.

992-2151

Auto Sales

......~ Import truck
~lint .. HP owlltlnd CMI engine,

o

Outing Our Annual·.

Wagon. V-8, t-flile, p-si., needs a home.

BLAEnNARS

- ~for90"of

nd

Door sedan, six cylinder. standard trans.

1966 Dodge Coronet

See Ceward Calvert or Fred Blaeftnar.

'

......

4 Door. 352 V-8, standard shift, new paint.

4 Door Sedan, V-8, f -flite, p-sf. Very, very nice.

Now•40" more

Ulftllr .........

2 ~ Sedan

Six cyl., standard trans.

4

2 dr. hardtop. one local owner.

~

B~yne

1966 Comet '202'
$J95
1967 Dodge Polara

65 Buick LeSabre

ONLY'9 - 1971 BUICKS LEFT!

2 - 68 FAST BACK, 67 FAST BACK, 67 SQ. BACK, 66 SQ. BACK,
66 BUG, 65 BUG, . 64 BUG, 2 - 63 BUG, 62 BUG

~ WATIS WI.KSWAGEN,
•v,o.-amr ... (cat.IIL71,"&lt;\

$7495

Upper Rt. 7
Phone 446-060Sor 446-0842
, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

25 MORE TO DtOOSE FROM
36 MONlliS FINANCING 68, 69, 70 MODElS

Beige Sq. Back. Beige leather interior, 4 speed trans., radio , front disc brakes. fuel inlectlon, etc. A very sharp new car trade-in with 100 per cent warranty, parts &amp; labor, for 30
or
·

Th~eek

1966

1965 Ford Galaxie 500

Sports Fury. 2 dr. hanltop, original dark blue
with matching vinyl bucket seats. and full
oj)erating console. Automatic trans. &amp; power
steering. E;xtra nice.

NORRIS DODGE

1963 T. BIRD

69

INded wilh exbas.

S1095

Rebel SST 2 dr. hardtop, two-tone finish, V-8 motor.
automatic transmission, power steering. Ready to go.

sggs

9 pass., auto, P.S., P. B., maroon, nice.

Red Bug with 4-speed trans. Black leather Int., radio and white waifs .. New car trade-in.
Completely checked oot &amp; ready to go wilh a100 per cent warranty parts &amp; labor tor 30 days
or 1,000 miles.
·

::s

66 Plymouth VI

4 Door, V-8, automatic, p. -steering, readv .

BUICK

1965 BUICK SPORTSWAGON

· · 69 V.W.·----------------------~1788

l'.anli~e~~tal

'1995

68 RAMBLER

$1395

Auto, , P.S., P. B.. new prem tires, sharp.

While Squareback, leather lnf., radio. 4 speed, white walls, front disc brakes and fuel In·
lectlon. Local I owner car with less than 30,000 miles. Very, very sharp car with HiO per cent
warranty for 30 days or 1,000 miles.

1971 LINCOLN

Coronet 500 2 dr. hardtop, beautiful maroon finish with
black vinyl root, V-8 motor, radio, bucket seals, console
automatl.c transmission &amp; power steering, low mileage.
·
· .
Real nice.

$}495

2 to choose from, was $1695. Nice family cars.

Skylark .4 dr. Sedan. Uke new finish. sharp inside. one c.areful local owner.

'

Maverlck2 dr. sedan, green finish, 6 cyl., std. shift. Real
nice.

Vinyl top, auto., small V8, P.S., these are hard to find.

2 Dr. HT, Dark blue with light blue interior. Small V8 auto. trans., factory air cond .. bucket
seats, radio and new tires.

Used Car Special

•1795

.10 FORD

1969 PLY. SATELLITE 2 DR. HDTP.

66 .DART........................................................$1188

Interior, V-8 motor, automatic transmission, radio &amp;
power steering, extra sharp. One careful owner.

..•. YOU'LL
NEVER FORGET
THE SAVINGS I

aufomatic, p-st. , p-br ., air con-

4 J?oor Sedan , six cylinder, standard shift. less than 9,000
m1les.

Impal-a 2 dr. hordtop, beautiful red finish with matching

1971 DODGE SWINGER

65 tiT,BUICK RIVIERA .....................................$1295

SAVE '1000

-

4 Dr. HT, V-8, 1-flite, p-st., p-br .. sharp.

9 Pass. wagon,
ditioned. Very nice.

'2395

••••

$2295 1964 Chrysler New Yorker
"Greenbrier" VB Station Wagon. 01e careful
local owner. Low mileage - extra sharp.
1969 Chevrolet Townsman
v.a,
69 Ford 6 cyl. .
s1595
Falcon 2 dr. Sedan: Low mileage. a beautiful car,
1970 Hornet SST
. new Buick trade-in.
.$}095 1967 Chevrolet Belair
66 Buick V8
69 Chevrolet

'2495

1969 CHEVROLO

Custom 4 Dr Sedan, dark brown, light interior. V8, automatic trans., power steering, AM
·radio, white tires In perfeclcondltion. 100 pet. Guarantee.

·MMna Money SaVing. To)'ou--- ·

Montego MX4 Dr. Sedan, dark green finish with matching
green vinyl roof, V-8 motor. automatic transmission,
radio, power steering &amp; air conditioning, only 31,000 miles
by a careful local owner.

Vinyl top, factory air, P.S.. P.B., automatic, low miles,
1
ne~ Goodyear Billboard tires. XX sharp.

68 BUICK SKYLARK...................................$1988

OR ORDER YOUR 7'/s N«M!

~·

owner.

1969 ·MERCURY

68 .fORD TORIN0 .....................................}1888

~

Polara 4 dr. hardtop, turquoise color with black vinyl roof.
white vinyl seats, V-8 motor, automatic transmission,
radio; poiNer steering &amp; automatic transmission•. radio,
power steering &amp; air conditioning, low mileage. One local

We're getting a little crow•d on sharp late
model trades. so we're seHing the pace on
prices with this sale ... price your choic~t
elsewhere and then come to us for the best
deal ever.

BEITER'HURRY.
- ••
'

. Backwnl&amp; or Fo11Ml'fls' Tltis

1969 DODGE

nDEPENDABLE CITY''
USED CAR "SALE

·ONLY
12- '71's LEn

NEW71 CHEVY ST. WAGON, Concours Estale, color red,
deluxe bells, tinted glass, power tailgate, floor mats. rear

The proposed revisions wiU ctrect iDaeascs and adjustmentS in rates and
clla~c:s and chanBCS in the reaulad001 and
pracliCCI affecting the same lhrouahoul the
lerritory in which the Compuy operates.
"'
The prayei Of the Application _requesu
the Commission to do lht followiDJ :
(a) Apphlvc: lhe proposed rates and
char~es and chanJd applied ror in said
Application;
(b) Approve the filin1 of the proposed
schedule sheets in the form attacbed
to the Application, modified 10 rdlect
such revisions thereof as may become
tfiCC'live, pun:uanl to ordm of the CommiMion, durina the interim between lhe
filing or the Appl ication and lhe dale
upon which said proposed schedule sbects
bttome el!ective;
(c) Eslablish an ctrective date for u.id
proposed schedule s.heets; and
(d) Grant such other and further relid .u Applicant ia reasonably entilled
to in the premises.
A oopy of lhe
of tho

at any
Company.
The rorm of this notice
proved by The Public Utilities
of Ohio.
THE OHIO BELL
TELEPHONE COMPANY
B,.: C. K. Esler,

air deflector, 4 season air condi1ioning, turbo hydromatlc;,

307 V-8 engine, luggage carrier, power steering, 671-w.
wall tires, wh. covers, P.B., r~io, lrt. &amp; reer guard\): •

Relail $4684.4! · &gt;'AIIOIGS PRICEi4249.

NEW71 CHEVY GREENBRIER ST. WAGON. Color med.
blue, F &amp; R floor mats, rear window deflector, turbo
hydromatic, power steering, 307 V-Bengine, G-78 while
wall fires, wh. covers, P.B., radio, luggage carrier. Rttoll
53877.15 · SAYINGS PRICE S3491.
NEW 71 CHEVY VEGA WAGON. 90 H.P. engine,
aulomatic trans., body side mldg., AlB whitewall tires,
P. B., radio, choice of color, sandalwood or bright green.
Relail; S2740.
.

'71 CAMAROS
71 CAMARO HT CPE. Color black. custom sport equip.,
sports mirror. tilt steering wheel, deluxe belts, floor mats,
P. B., radio, Rally wheels, accent group, style trim group,
power steering, turbo hydromatic. console, F70 w-wtlres.
Retail S3904.7S • SAVINGS PRICE 13491.

c.,.;;;.;;;..r.;-, I

Vicf' l'rf'Jldf'lll

Aug . 22, 29, Sept. 5

Reedsville
News~ Notes
By Mrs. L Balderson
Mrs. Donald Putman, Sunday
school teacher of the primary
claS$ of the M.E. Church, held a
wiener roast at her home
Thursday evening for her class
members. Games were played
and prizes awarded. A small
prize.-was given to each guest.
Those atlending were l;licky
Boring, Darrell Henderson,
Scott Dillon, Carla Cowdery,
Donald Putman, Ricky Put.
man, and the hosts, Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Putman. Refresh·
ments of hot dogs, potato chips,
marshmallows, cupcakes, pop
and wheelbarrow favor cups
fiUed with candy.
A get-together of old friends
was held at Forked Run State
Park Thursday evening. AI·
tending were Mrs. Doris Fick of
Colmnbus and children Beth
Ann and Dennis, and Dana Fick
of Chester, Mrs. Helen Wolf of
Chesler, Mrs. Frances Reed
and son Bryan, Mrs. Grace
Weber,
Mrs.
Maxine
Whitehead, and daughters,
Jean, Jane and Juli, and Mrs.
Ruth Anne Balderson and
daughter, Kay.
Mr. and Mrs . Howard
Shmnway of Peoria visited with
Mrs. Helen Archer and other
friends recently.
Mrs. Rose Thomas and Mrs.
Opal Randolph spent a day at
Gahanna with Mrs. Gladys
Baughman.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Congrove of
New Brighton, Pa., visited with
Mrs. Lena Pickering and at the
Williams-Balderson home

'

71 CAMARO HT CPE. Color Classic copper, consol.,, air
spoiler equipped, turbo hydromallc, power steering,
electric clock, super sport equipped, P.B., radio. Rallr
wheels, Rally sport equipment. Retail 54119.30· SAVINGS
PRICE 53721.

BYE NOW '71

'11 SAVINGS HEADQUARTE~S

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. TILB
PH. 992-2126

Saturday.
. Dorsel Riebel is a patient 'at
the Camden-Clark Hospital,
Parkersburg, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Schrim·
sher of Hartford, W.Va., called
on Mrs. Bess Larkins:
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Hoffma·
of Morehead, Ky., have been
visiting with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. John Helm'.
Overnight guests of Kay
Balderson were Susan Hannmn
of Long Bottom and Kim Reed.
Jane Whitehead· was an
overnight guest of Janice Holter
of Pomeroy.
Mrs. Eunice Sprague is a
patient at the C8Jnden.Ciark
Hospital, Parkersburg, W. Va.
Recen.t visitors ol Andet'son
B. Kibble were Mr. and Mrs.
Brian Kibble of Akron and Mrs.
Glen Mllhoen . and niece of
Parkersburg, W. Va.
Dale Smith has returned

POMEROY

home after workinc fGr the U.S.
Government in Alaslla.
Mrs. Leah stildl and Mrs.
Emogene. Hickson of Abeln
visited Sunday al the WillillmaBalderson home.

fte Ah
e
8y Ullltedl'rell lldefu'i I
~oday is Sunday. Aug. :12, lbe
234th day of mt.
The moon 1s·betweer1 ila phase and first qurter'
.
The momin&amp; stan are
and Saturn.
The evening stars are Meftu.
ry,- Mars and .htpiter.
Those. bam Gil this . , Wider the sian of Vlrp.
American ph)'llc:!st Olille.
Jenkins • • barD AIIIJ:. :12, 1111.
On this day ill IIIIItui 1:
In 19ft Nallnlapllldu
·J
Ill the IIIUkirta of I I 3-1111 ill

v-

Rllllia durin&amp; w.td W. D.

�VOLKSWAGEN~

"DOC"

DID YOU
THAT BUICK
·OUTSOLD FORD AND QtijROLET IN
GALLIA COUNTY FOR THE MONTH
OF JULY?? HOW ABOUT THAT!

I

SMITH

69. OLDS
...................................................... $2795
.

'

Delta Custom 2 Pr. HT,IIght green with green vinyl fop, automatic, P. Sleering, P. Brakes.
.p, Antenna, AM Radio, automatic Temp. Control. air conditioner, Tilt Steering Wheel, New
setol white tires. This Is a local mint green car in mint condition, 100 pet. Guarantee.

y ·EN 0 M
,SALE

p

•

•

1969 BUICK ELECTRA 2 DR. HDTP.

69 IMPALA...................................................$2488

Factory air, P·. Wind., vinyl trim.- blue black vinyl top.
Sharp, 36 months to pay.

Custom 2 Dr. HT, Black ".inyl top, black Inferior, Mar iner blue paint, aulomatic tem·
perature control, air con d., P.S .. P.B., tinted glass.'AM-FM stereo radio. white tires, V8 - 4
I2H!!,_ This Is a local car in excellent cond. Dealer Guarantee.

1969 PONTIAC FIREBIRD

Light Blue2 Dr. HT. •mall V8englne. automatic trans., P. Steering, new tires, AM r~dlo and
Factory Air Conditioning. This Is a local car trade-in In perfect condition. You must see. to
appreciate. 100 pet. Guarantee, ·
·

•·

$2495

2 Dr. Hdtp, vinyl top, ~uta., other extras, white. hat
special.

2 DR
white with blue Interior, V8 Automatic Trans., P. Steering, P. Brakes, AM radio,
white tires, wire wheel .:;overs. A beautiful car in excellent con d.

1961 DODGE

None nicer.

65 PLYMOUTH............................... ~ ................ $795

1

1967 BUICK LeSABRE 4 DR. HDTP.

Belv 112 Dr. HT, red with red interior, small V8, automatic trans. , P. Steering, AM radio,
white !Ires. This car is in real nice condition. A local trade-in.
67 FiatiiOO Series-65 Mustang 6 Cyl Auto-65 Mercury -64 Olds - 59 Chev.

1967 aiEV. IMPALA 4 DR.

ALSO 15 USED VOLKSWAGENS
69 v.w.. ______ ;. ________________•1988

v.w. ~---------------------~1888
'68 v.w. ·----------------------'1688

White, red _interior. Extra nice for the year. Nice sec

~r .

White Bug, auto. trans., red leather interior, radiO. We have put th is car in A-1 condition and
guarantee 11100 per centfor 30 days or 1,000 mlies. ·

'1695

MANY MORE

GMC TRUCKS
PONTIAC
118 Ye~rs of Continuous Busine~~
PHONE992-2143
POMEROY, OHIO

SALES-SERVICE

eq~pped.

8-20-3tc

DODGE Polara, excellent
c:mdition. air conditioning,

SI.&amp;SO. Ph&lt;lne 9115-3310, Long
Bullom, Ohio.
8-22-Jtp

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

THEY'RE GOING FAST. DON'T WAIT OR YOU'LL BE TOO LATE.

INC.

Open Eves. Til~Til5 P.M. Sat.

-

34

off old 33 on right. second lane
on left. Irvin Miller .
8-20-31p

the Middleporl Hill Area

between noon and 4 p.m.,

Thursday, August 19. Contact
James Brewer. 1275 Vine

IRISH Cobbler potatoes .
Thomas D. Sayre, Great
Bend, Phone 843-2436.
8-20-3tp

original
cartons.
No
atfachments needed as our
controls are built in. Sews
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes, sew on bu1tons,
monograms, and blind hem

stitch. Full cash price, S38.SO
or

budget

plan

available.

ELECTROLUX ' Vacuum
cleaner complete with attachments, cordwinder and

paint spray. Used but in like
new condition . Pay $37.45
cash

or

credit

terms

available. Phone 992-5641.
8-18-6tc

+A43

... 754
WEST (D)

EAST

4111108
.3
+KQ10985

411197542
.KJ1075
tJ76
... Void

... J 1062
SOUTH

.AK
.AQ84

Going to Europe? Take delivery there. Ask about it now.

AUl HO/IlZlO
QU.Ltll

19S Upper River Rd. IOhio Rl. 71 , Gallipolis, Ohio - Phone (614) 446-98.0.
Open : Sales. Mon .. Fri. 81o 8; Sat. 8-5-Service, Parts &amp; Office Mon .. Fri. 8-S, Sa': 8-12

~..vAL.

·'MITH

· expensive carpet, clean with

Blue Lu.tre. Rent electric ·
shampooar, Sl. Baker Furniture Company.
8-18-6tc

Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
A.9.Hc

12X50. SCH(J LTZ 2-bedroom
mobile home loca fed On
torner of Third and AdaJ!I s,
Mason, W. V;,. See Martin

CORONA

typewriter,

like

Phone _992-2922.

$75 .

8-22-Jtc

RIDING horses. Phone 949-3196.
8-22-6tc

APPLES-Peaches. Fitzpalrick
Orchards, State Roule 689,
Graham, Zuspan Sl., fllason,
phone Wilkesville, 669-3785.
W. Va.
·
8·15-tfc
8-17-6tc

---·--- -- -

Wcsl

Norlh

Easl

Soulh

3t

Pass

4t

5•

Dble

Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening )ead- t K

·

87

40---S..sonlna:
41-Household

-

PLESIV

'1195

WOOD MOTOR SALES

I

[)

1...::.-:-1

GALLI POLIS, 0.

Now arranplhe chdoollotlon
tor. . tbe . .,.1w ••·•
.....

[TIDIDN'T(

lir doe ..... -

H

For Rent

Ynlft'day'•
Auwen

..

If &amp;My ~···~

I tl

I I I][ I I)
('

Ju,.W.., IXACT 1WINI CIIICUS UDIUS

.
SALESMEN needed Work full
to!d ;rou West holds all {our or parttlme. No dOor to door
m1ssmg clubs. The best you sales.
Advancement opcan do with that line of play portunlty. Call collect 593··
is to take 10 tricks.
5079.
Can you make 11?
8-18-61c
It looks as if you can b u t - ---:--::::--::---.,...
you must play most unusu·
Wanted To Buy
.
d h
ally. You let West hoi t e ANTIQUES, telephones, brass
trick. He continues dia- beds, clocks, dishes. old
monds, which is as good as furniture, etc. Write M. D.
anything else, and you play Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
low from dummy anl.l ruff in Call 992-6271 .
7-9-tfc
your han d ·
R
Then you cash your three F
high trumPs, ace-king of or
ent
spades and ace of hearts and BX 35 TRAILER, country
throw West in with his last local! on. Phone 992-3954.
8-22-3tc
trump.
W t t t d 'th 10
d
. es s are WI
car s TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
m the mmors. He followel) to '1&gt;-mlie north of new Meigs
two spades, so· his last heart High School. Phone 992-2941.
8-22-llc
has gone away and he must
FUt you in dummy for the
.
.
.
rest of the tricks.
2 BEDROOM mob1ie home. M &amp;
G Food Market, 3 miles south
Neat, b ~ t no t qu!·te cor· of
Middleport on State Route
reeL West IS also a hger. He 7
·
8-22-Jip
dropped the six, 10 and ·jack
of clubs on the ace, king and - - - - - - - - queen and you can't throw THREE ROOM FURNISHED
him in since he holds the APARTMENT, AIR CONdeuce '
DITIONED. REASONABLE,
.
~
CAN BE SEEN BY APtNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
POINTMENT,
IF
IN TERESTED. CALL 992-2053. ,
8·22-llp

28--M ends

34-Girl'~ name
35-let it stand
37-8ri!ltle
39--f\l.athlemetal

Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio.

Help wanted

86--Grinding
in z iRlll

...........
32--former RIIHian

[l I I I
J

~

24-Repealed
26--lnstructor

ruk!n
3]-..,Ak:oholjc
bew:rap

2 Dr. hardtop. 283 cu. in. V-8 engine. radio &amp;
heater, standard trans., p. steering, Cameo
ivory finish with red vinyl &amp; nylon Interior. W·
s-w tires. Looks and runs like new!

.82-&amp;rilon at sea

29--Nothine

66 CHEV. IMPALA

h.l die __,. ~

...,,.,_.~,

......,,

'

«"- · '

1•

FURNISHED and unfurnished·
apartments. Close to school.,
Phone 992-5434.
10-18-tfc

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

~
75--lslands In

80--Gid"s~

21-Sea ecle
22-5tuH

~puchin

135 Rc J &amp;ts

.Bl-4::onredl!tate

(pl.)

.....

RlJE1!f

EASTERN AVE.

shrine
It MKCII
19-Citrus fruit

23--Ftendl resort

one letter to taeh IIOjllllft, to
form four _onllnar1 wordo.

Seaiesof

89-A mte (•bbrJ
llcca..,
·~

5'5

prmentr;

5'8
99

S'rin a.n-t
Caral islands

101----tn..tin·rank
103-H.atnhl
104 R . allettuc:e
105 S brdisl
1 06---Eldam.atio
. 107~
•

-

(-J

42-Ant..red
.animal

108 Ge man tide
110 M • ·

~neintwo

lll~IM•tw's

46-:-Tr.dt: fortr10f11!1
musure
47-Trte trunk
112-H..,._ SihoeS
48---Calumniate
lU Piclbil dudi:
50-£m-,
115 B I )kwo•o
collectively
deitJ
52-Me.U::..S
117---hcttof~
53--Printer's
119---P.Irt of
measur.
"1D be..
55-Wife of
120 SUn at fnit
Gtraint
121 · S buul
57-A state {abbrJ
m50Ci.W
58-Want
124 St)lish
59-Animal skin
126--Caunby a1
tiO Ri lift In
Asia
Siberia
127-God of i:»w
62-Weaken
128-Teac:hets
64 Stalk
130-Juncturt
66 Conjunction
132~ JEJ earth
611--t11brew 1ett:er
133-Pai'CII'I of~
69

1 HEDRoo'M trailer aparttonment, Ideal for couples.
tact McClure's Dairy Isle
992-5248 or 992-3436.
'
8 20
-::--------:..·:.:·6lc

Leaal Notice

Mees

WMP0/1390

Spoken

134

":vrwe

137-Ut fali-

lP-Beasts af

S~Man's

."""' bUrdiri
"'
- n1~ame
20-0ceans
90-South Americ3n
23-Coin
animals
140 faint af moon
25-Expires
91-Residue
141-Nitive
27--Crate
92-Unusual
E'gptians
28--Stream
93--lterale
143--&amp;rmese
31-Wallt
94-Prefix: not
domons
33-Brick
96-Appellation of
1C5-Chinese pagoda
structure
Athena
146-S.ah of
36-Story
97-Bridge term
nitric acid
38-Genus of
lOG-Preposition
148 (O..oe.gin&amp;
m.ilples
102-Man's name
.... ... J .
40-Sow
105-lnterjection
150-Common41-Jacket
l~heers
weallhs
43--Firearms
112-Fur·bearin&amp;
152--Mountain
45--Ascended
mammal
46-U:pel air
113-Narrow
153--NeQpieces
fOrcibly
openinc
114-Bars legally
1 M-Repe:titiGn
throuah nose
I 56-Nimbuses
47-Waming device 116-Tiny particle
49--Girt's name
1S7--Remains at
118-Told falsehood
51-Counlry of
120-Buccaneers
Asia
lSI-Animal coop
121-Harvest
asg Scorch
52-Rents
122-Mumbles
UiO--Siyle of
53-Brother of
123-lreland
Jacob
125-'Funny picture
~nting
54-Principal
126-Sarcasm
DOWN
56-Con~crated
127-0therwise
129-Peruse
59-Gave
)-Wolfhounds
flO-Unlock
Ill-Groaner
61-foundation
132-landed estale
63-Jails
3-Eadi&gt;ho&gt;
133-Piaces
4-Frendt tor
65-Additional
134-0in
67-Poem
136-Greenland
69-Conjunction
5-Fseulement
70-Pi&amp; iron
6-ComOO&gt;&gt;
138-0ut
of date
72-Retail
point
establishment 14D-Uncouth
7-Worthlns
persons
74-Note of scale
l41-5hort falk
76-Faroe lslan'ds
whirlwind
142-Piumllke fruit
10-Yellow piament 77-AppOrllon
144-Antlered
79-Gun:to·s high
JJ-Warpd
animal
note
12 Distant
147-Rodent
83--Unit of
B---Srmbollor
148-Cry of dove
Siamese
Antarium
149-Music: as
currency
14 Sl eeul!less
written
8S-Hi&amp;h e•plosive
151-Suffix:
like
86-P$haw!
IS CaD:eclton of
153-Before Christ
87-Fresh-w.ilter
(abbr.)
16 pexf:s
88-Sacred image
17-C!Y:stise
I 55-Teutonic deity
139--Philippine ·

...
....
..,..

......._.
---

·-·.....

.......,._

-o&amp;l"&gt;

...

~c:-=~:"'1::':"1

-+-+-+--+-1
t-+-+--1-+-+-i

Card of Thanks

TO THE surgeon Dr. Telle, Dr.
Blazewicz, and all the nurses
on the medical staff. at
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
who with their skillful hands
pulled me thr.ough the
shadows. Webster does 'not
have the words for me to
express "lY thanks and
gratitude. May God reserve
~is choice blessings for each
ot you. Your past pallent and
friend, Eber Carpenter,
Portland, Ohio.
1·22-llc

Auto Sales

\

1970 DATSUN pick-up, . good
cond 111on, new tires, l'lever "

wrecked. S1,57S. Phone 992.
5153.
,
8-18-12tc

.-t--1-1

See()ur New
65'x14' Wide
With Deluxe

Furniture
Package.

65Xl2.

-t-+---1
.

VAN DYKE
Completely equipped
home with deluxe
furnishings._Priced 'from

SAVE UP TO

$1500
ON KING HOMES
Step Ioo, call .,. wrHe or toll! to O.n
Lavendor or Jolin Ketc:IIU.

~]11011.

, _,

KEITH GOBLE
MOBILE HOME SALES

An•-·

It No
~-3422
Lqt Ph. m-7004
Daily _12 to 9, ~nctay 1 to 6

OPPOSITE GOBLE'S USEP CAR LOT

-OHIO

SALE

992-2152

notice is hereby &amp;iven lhat The
_ITEM: Morning. A OhinPublic
Bell Telephone Compa ny has filed
with The Publ1c Utilities Commissioa ol
'zestful time for some Ohio
a n A~ication statins that the Company i1 enutled, because of the reuons
people. Double dismal set
forth in uid Application, torcasoatblc:
and cquiltble increases and adjusunmu
for others. Jim
Us rates and dtar1es ror exch~ tete·
somehow gets ·· us all inpllonc
service, intraaate messa1e toll telephone service, intrastate mobile: telephone
together every day.
~ice, intrastale private line xnices aDd
intrastate wide aru telecommunicatioM
service, and to c hange the regulations and
J?O!clices afleo;;tina 1he same, and to revise
tts bchan1e Rate Tuifl P.U.C.O. No.3, its
General Exchange Taritr P.U.C.O. No. 4,
111 Meuaae Toll Telephone Scnice Taril'f
P.U.C.O. No. 7. ita Mobile Tdephone
·Service Tariff P.u.c.o. No. 2. its Priowate
~!!!!!!fiiii-IJ!IIIIJ!!II!!!!!!!!!!I!!IIf!l-· UM SerTice: Tariff P.U.C.O. No. 2, and
ils Wide Area Telecommunications Service
·•• --Tariff P.U.C.O. No. I, to effect such Increases, adjustmenu. and chanacs, all 11
more rully set forth .in .the Appl.iealloa on
file with the: Comm1SS~on and 1n the ea·
bibltl thereto attached and made 1 pan

-------·

I WISH to thank everyone who
called on Cleo Adams during
his last Illness also for the
cards he received. I thank all
of the stall at Velerans
Memorial Hospital, Ewing's
Funeral Home for their ef·
llcienf service, Gerald Powell
for the music, Rev. Charles
Norris for his consoling
message, the pallbearers all
"'7::-::-::-c::--:-:-:---lhi&gt;se who sent the beautiful
The bidding has been:
2 BEDROOM mobile home with
Wesl
North
F.ast
South air conditioning In Racine flowers, food and onyone else
area. Phone 992·6329.
who helped In any way. Your
1
Pass
1•
Pas5 . 3 +
8-17-51c kmdness will never be
ond may GOd bless
Pass
4+
Pass ' ?
T~R=-:-A~IL-;E:-R:-L-:0-T~S. -B-ob-:,-s -,.,
~bile torgotlen
y~u all. Emma Adams, wife,
You, Soulh. hnld:
Courl, Rl. 124, Syrocuse,
h1s brothers and sisters.
.AKS7 .Al +KQ9 .K643 Ohio. 992-2951.
8-22-llp
4-2-lfc
Whal do . you do now?

16 FT .. 25 H.P . Sea-King &amp; new 128-poge book '" J" c 0 a y
frailer . $250. Phone 1-667-3031. MODERN . For. rour copy .sent $1
8-22·31p with your nome, oJrJreu anJ zip
FINE COOKING and eating corle fo : "Win at Bridge," (c/o tlris
apples . Ask for quantity price newspoper), P.O. Box 489, Radio City
or small lol, iust"'eJf of Stale Stotio~J. New Yofk, N.Y. 10019.
Route 124, Welchfown Road .
Hosmer Roush.
8-19-3tp . elec t to (ry a conservalive
A-Hid the same fou1· ~padcs. - - - - - - - - - five clubs . Much to yo ur sur·
11 is up tu ~·uur parlner to ~p
.
prise. yo u get doubled at pasl
game if there is a slam. 2 BEDROOM mobile home,
For Sale or Tra~e
this contracl.
nearly new, furnished ' in
57 FORD •;, ton pickup, good
TODAY'S QUESTION
West open~ lhe king of dia·
Mason, W. Va. Call Robert
condition, sell $250 or trade monds and you study awhile .
Ht· bids fiw dub!t: 'you ~1i{l Dixon at Meigs Mobile Home
lor· good used car. Jack The sinwle play is )o win in fiVl' hcl.l'tS and he hid~ ~ix dit~ · Sales, Tuppers Plains fil&gt;7·
Layne ,
Prospecl
Hill,
3891.
dummy and take a heart fi. monds. What clo .vou c1,. 1mw':
Pomeroy.
8-19-31c
8-19·31p nesse, but the double has

--------

c:

u........welhaefourJwnltla.

'*'

portabl e
new,

... AKQ983
' North-South vulnerable

foumo'menf-winning techniques in o

•

NICE NOi!MANDY clarinel
with case, $60. Phone 742-4211
after 5 p.m. 742-5163 or see
Wendell Grate, Rutland,
8-20·31c

t2

BEAGLE PUPS, sired by By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Pearson Creek slock, $15.
Keith Ridenour , Chester. Ohio
Jeremy Flint undoubtedly
985-4175.
concocted today's hand for
8-22-3tp his book, "Tiger Bridge. "
1971'12 Honda 350 ss. gold color, , You are tiger South. After
high riSe bars, crash bars and tiger West opens three dia·
sissy bar, under 3,000 miles, monds, his partner raises
show room coridition. always him to four . You consider all
garaged. Priced to sell. Phone sor ts of bids and eventually
evenings only 992-7173 or 9927066.
8-19.-Jtc Americo's top e•pert~ exp1oin their

en,II 1lgn oppaan only in tor1 u1ecfed by your V'N deoler.

For Sale

21

NORTH

• QJ63
.962

8-18-6tc

For Sale

NEED lady for housecleaning 1
or 2 days a week. Reply c-o

When Two Tigers Tangle

Phone 992-5641.

For Sale ·

8-1-J{]jp

- ------WIN ,...
A'T BRIDGE

PAINT
DAMAGE,
1971
Zig
Zag
Sewing
Machines,
still
in

•

or

Davisburg , Mich. 48019.

A.K.C. Miniature dachshund . call 992-2343.
8-19-6\p
Phone 992-5473.
8-22-31c
8-22-6tc - - - - - - - - NEED SOMEONE to do
SAVE UP to one half. Bring housework and cook for
12x60 LIBERTY trailer. cenlral
your sick TV lo Chuck's TV elderly couple. No laundry,
air conditioned, 3 bedrooms.
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave., and need not stay nights; 6
Phone 992-5548 .
Pomeroy.
•·
days a week . Phone 992-3014.
8-20-3tp
4-23·1fc
8-22-Jtp
ONE PULL TYPE corn
oicker. New Idea No. 10.
Phone 992-6214.
8-20-6tc

DON WATTS VOLKSWAGEN, INC.

c11UUWID~~~.~~ =" ,.-

envelopes . Rush stamped

sell -addressed envelope. The
Ambrose Co. , 4325 Lakeborn,

70 R
l
71-Vedlbltes

77---SimiMI$
78-.Jo;n

1~oslem

ANTIQUE player piano, ext ra

good wheelbarrow, side
boards. home made, many REWARD for any information
other articles; chain saw, $20.
leadinq to the arrest of the
Come see, on County Road 163
persons who shot a horse in

•
1-Suft.&lt;lriodbrid&lt;

6---flo.d in _.,

IANAUG4 OHIO

GUNSHOOT. Aug. 22, 1 p.m . KOSCOT Kosmetlcs, July Mile Hill Road, '12 hog, hams,
August special. Kare Kon nice finish . Phone 742-5042 .
bacon, by Racine Fire Dept. dition oil $5. Value now only
8-22-Jtc
8-18-4tc $2.50. Disfributors, Brown's,
phone 992-5113.
i9i9 FORD 4 doo. , ,..
I WILL not be responsible lor
7-4-tfc
1947 tadlllac pickup. $150. 20 debts contracted br any .one
lb. gas trailer tanks, $10 each. other than mysel . Signed,
Help Wanted
1959 Chev. 2 door, perfect Ja ck Frederick .
EARN
AT home addressing
running condition, $125. One
8-2 2-3tp

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

ACROSS

1~dkrbr;

Smith Auto Sates

Notice

Notice

For Sale

reassuring words
about used cars
. from.your
·Volkswagen dealer.

BE GENTLE, be kind, to that

....,

Middleport, o.

SUNDAY, AUGUST 22, 1971

GMACFIMIICI111Avollillllo
"You'll LlkeOur~llty Way of Doing Business"

· Drlftetlll r ...
111111 d1 allllllt:

11m estone . Excelsior

-•Y

m-5341

GARAGE

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS

NEW71 CHEVY KINGSWOOD WAGON. Color sea aqua,

tinted glass, floor mafs, door ed. guards, "season air, 255
H.P. 4 cu. in . engine, wh. covers. Comfortilf st. wheel., ww tires, E. Oock, P. B., radio, turbo hydrometlc, power
s1eerlng &amp; brakes, luggage carrier . Retail S$041

SAVINGS PRICE S444l.

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE ........

C.diU.c - Okhm 1laile

•··'*-

Works. £. Main St..

SPECIAL lhi!;weekal Tom Ru,
Motors. 1963 Ford Pickup.
8-15-tfc

.llOI.J.!l'IOS

1971 •oDEL CLOSE ·OD'T

Pontiac.

factory air conditioning, full
one toc:al owner.
!'hone 992-5871.

The #1 aelllng

1111 ..:lo • 'mllel per gll1on tor work .nd
plaJ•.TOJ'IIon Nr froniiUIFIRIIan.
I fool II IIIII bid. Durlble, diJIIIllllbll.
.LcWf !llllniiMIICI, high null. Tlikll
• Cllmpel', too.

0,.:

~-all

1968 GRAND Prix

YEAR·END

See the" Dependables" at Rawlings
Pearl Ash. Emerson Jones, Hilton Wolfe,
Wallace Amberger. Dick Rawlings.

992-2151

Auto Sales

......~ Import truck
~lint .. HP owlltlnd CMI engine,

o

Outing Our Annual·.

Wagon. V-8, t-flile, p-si., needs a home.

BLAEnNARS

- ~for90"of

nd

Door sedan, six cylinder. standard trans.

1966 Dodge Coronet

See Ceward Calvert or Fred Blaeftnar.

'

......

4 Door. 352 V-8, standard shift, new paint.

4 Door Sedan, V-8, f -flite, p-sf. Very, very nice.

Now•40" more

Ulftllr .........

2 ~ Sedan

Six cyl., standard trans.

4

2 dr. hardtop. one local owner.

~

B~yne

1966 Comet '202'
$J95
1967 Dodge Polara

65 Buick LeSabre

ONLY'9 - 1971 BUICKS LEFT!

2 - 68 FAST BACK, 67 FAST BACK, 67 SQ. BACK, 66 SQ. BACK,
66 BUG, 65 BUG, . 64 BUG, 2 - 63 BUG, 62 BUG

~ WATIS WI.KSWAGEN,
•v,o.-amr ... (cat.IIL71,"&lt;\

$7495

Upper Rt. 7
Phone 446-060Sor 446-0842
, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

25 MORE TO DtOOSE FROM
36 MONlliS FINANCING 68, 69, 70 MODElS

Beige Sq. Back. Beige leather interior, 4 speed trans., radio , front disc brakes. fuel inlectlon, etc. A very sharp new car trade-in with 100 per cent warranty, parts &amp; labor, for 30
or
·

Th~eek

1966

1965 Ford Galaxie 500

Sports Fury. 2 dr. hanltop, original dark blue
with matching vinyl bucket seats. and full
oj)erating console. Automatic trans. &amp; power
steering. E;xtra nice.

NORRIS DODGE

1963 T. BIRD

69

INded wilh exbas.

S1095

Rebel SST 2 dr. hardtop, two-tone finish, V-8 motor.
automatic transmission, power steering. Ready to go.

sggs

9 pass., auto, P.S., P. B., maroon, nice.

Red Bug with 4-speed trans. Black leather Int., radio and white waifs .. New car trade-in.
Completely checked oot &amp; ready to go wilh a100 per cent warranty parts &amp; labor tor 30 days
or 1,000 miles.
·

::s

66 Plymouth VI

4 Door, V-8, automatic, p. -steering, readv .

BUICK

1965 BUICK SPORTSWAGON

· · 69 V.W.·----------------------~1788

l'.anli~e~~tal

'1995

68 RAMBLER

$1395

Auto, , P.S., P. B.. new prem tires, sharp.

While Squareback, leather lnf., radio. 4 speed, white walls, front disc brakes and fuel In·
lectlon. Local I owner car with less than 30,000 miles. Very, very sharp car with HiO per cent
warranty for 30 days or 1,000 miles.

1971 LINCOLN

Coronet 500 2 dr. hardtop, beautiful maroon finish with
black vinyl root, V-8 motor, radio, bucket seals, console
automatl.c transmission &amp; power steering, low mileage.
·
· .
Real nice.

$}495

2 to choose from, was $1695. Nice family cars.

Skylark .4 dr. Sedan. Uke new finish. sharp inside. one c.areful local owner.

'

Maverlck2 dr. sedan, green finish, 6 cyl., std. shift. Real
nice.

Vinyl top, auto., small V8, P.S., these are hard to find.

2 Dr. HT, Dark blue with light blue interior. Small V8 auto. trans., factory air cond .. bucket
seats, radio and new tires.

Used Car Special

•1795

.10 FORD

1969 PLY. SATELLITE 2 DR. HDTP.

66 .DART........................................................$1188

Interior, V-8 motor, automatic transmission, radio &amp;
power steering, extra sharp. One careful owner.

..•. YOU'LL
NEVER FORGET
THE SAVINGS I

aufomatic, p-st. , p-br ., air con-

4 J?oor Sedan , six cylinder, standard shift. less than 9,000
m1les.

Impal-a 2 dr. hordtop, beautiful red finish with matching

1971 DODGE SWINGER

65 tiT,BUICK RIVIERA .....................................$1295

SAVE '1000

-

4 Dr. HT, V-8, 1-flite, p-st., p-br .. sharp.

9 Pass. wagon,
ditioned. Very nice.

'2395

••••

$2295 1964 Chrysler New Yorker
"Greenbrier" VB Station Wagon. 01e careful
local owner. Low mileage - extra sharp.
1969 Chevrolet Townsman
v.a,
69 Ford 6 cyl. .
s1595
Falcon 2 dr. Sedan: Low mileage. a beautiful car,
1970 Hornet SST
. new Buick trade-in.
.$}095 1967 Chevrolet Belair
66 Buick V8
69 Chevrolet

'2495

1969 CHEVROLO

Custom 4 Dr Sedan, dark brown, light interior. V8, automatic trans., power steering, AM
·radio, white tires In perfeclcondltion. 100 pet. Guarantee.

·MMna Money SaVing. To)'ou--- ·

Montego MX4 Dr. Sedan, dark green finish with matching
green vinyl roof, V-8 motor. automatic transmission,
radio, power steering &amp; air conditioning, only 31,000 miles
by a careful local owner.

Vinyl top, factory air, P.S.. P.B., automatic, low miles,
1
ne~ Goodyear Billboard tires. XX sharp.

68 BUICK SKYLARK...................................$1988

OR ORDER YOUR 7'/s N«M!

~·

owner.

1969 ·MERCURY

68 .fORD TORIN0 .....................................}1888

~

Polara 4 dr. hardtop, turquoise color with black vinyl roof.
white vinyl seats, V-8 motor, automatic transmission,
radio; poiNer steering &amp; automatic transmission•. radio,
power steering &amp; air conditioning, low mileage. One local

We're getting a little crow•d on sharp late
model trades. so we're seHing the pace on
prices with this sale ... price your choic~t
elsewhere and then come to us for the best
deal ever.

BEITER'HURRY.
- ••
'

. Backwnl&amp; or Fo11Ml'fls' Tltis

1969 DODGE

nDEPENDABLE CITY''
USED CAR "SALE

·ONLY
12- '71's LEn

NEW71 CHEVY ST. WAGON, Concours Estale, color red,
deluxe bells, tinted glass, power tailgate, floor mats. rear

The proposed revisions wiU ctrect iDaeascs and adjustmentS in rates and
clla~c:s and chanBCS in the reaulad001 and
pracliCCI affecting the same lhrouahoul the
lerritory in which the Compuy operates.
"'
The prayei Of the Application _requesu
the Commission to do lht followiDJ :
(a) Apphlvc: lhe proposed rates and
char~es and chanJd applied ror in said
Application;
(b) Approve the filin1 of the proposed
schedule sheets in the form attacbed
to the Application, modified 10 rdlect
such revisions thereof as may become
tfiCC'live, pun:uanl to ordm of the CommiMion, durina the interim between lhe
filing or the Appl ication and lhe dale
upon which said proposed schedule sbects
bttome el!ective;
(c) Eslablish an ctrective date for u.id
proposed schedule s.heets; and
(d) Grant such other and further relid .u Applicant ia reasonably entilled
to in the premises.
A oopy of lhe
of tho

at any
Company.
The rorm of this notice
proved by The Public Utilities
of Ohio.
THE OHIO BELL
TELEPHONE COMPANY
B,.: C. K. Esler,

air deflector, 4 season air condi1ioning, turbo hydromatlc;,

307 V-8 engine, luggage carrier, power steering, 671-w.
wall tires, wh. covers, P.B., r~io, lrt. &amp; reer guard\): •

Relail $4684.4! · &gt;'AIIOIGS PRICEi4249.

NEW71 CHEVY GREENBRIER ST. WAGON. Color med.
blue, F &amp; R floor mats, rear window deflector, turbo
hydromatic, power steering, 307 V-Bengine, G-78 while
wall fires, wh. covers, P.B., radio, luggage carrier. Rttoll
53877.15 · SAYINGS PRICE S3491.
NEW 71 CHEVY VEGA WAGON. 90 H.P. engine,
aulomatic trans., body side mldg., AlB whitewall tires,
P. B., radio, choice of color, sandalwood or bright green.
Relail; S2740.
.

'71 CAMAROS
71 CAMARO HT CPE. Color black. custom sport equip.,
sports mirror. tilt steering wheel, deluxe belts, floor mats,
P. B., radio, Rally wheels, accent group, style trim group,
power steering, turbo hydromatic. console, F70 w-wtlres.
Retail S3904.7S • SAVINGS PRICE 13491.

c.,.;;;.;;;..r.;-, I

Vicf' l'rf'Jldf'lll

Aug . 22, 29, Sept. 5

Reedsville
News~ Notes
By Mrs. L Balderson
Mrs. Donald Putman, Sunday
school teacher of the primary
claS$ of the M.E. Church, held a
wiener roast at her home
Thursday evening for her class
members. Games were played
and prizes awarded. A small
prize.-was given to each guest.
Those atlending were l;licky
Boring, Darrell Henderson,
Scott Dillon, Carla Cowdery,
Donald Putman, Ricky Put.
man, and the hosts, Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Putman. Refresh·
ments of hot dogs, potato chips,
marshmallows, cupcakes, pop
and wheelbarrow favor cups
fiUed with candy.
A get-together of old friends
was held at Forked Run State
Park Thursday evening. AI·
tending were Mrs. Doris Fick of
Colmnbus and children Beth
Ann and Dennis, and Dana Fick
of Chester, Mrs. Helen Wolf of
Chesler, Mrs. Frances Reed
and son Bryan, Mrs. Grace
Weber,
Mrs.
Maxine
Whitehead, and daughters,
Jean, Jane and Juli, and Mrs.
Ruth Anne Balderson and
daughter, Kay.
Mr. and Mrs . Howard
Shmnway of Peoria visited with
Mrs. Helen Archer and other
friends recently.
Mrs. Rose Thomas and Mrs.
Opal Randolph spent a day at
Gahanna with Mrs. Gladys
Baughman.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Congrove of
New Brighton, Pa., visited with
Mrs. Lena Pickering and at the
Williams-Balderson home

'

71 CAMARO HT CPE. Color Classic copper, consol.,, air
spoiler equipped, turbo hydromallc, power steering,
electric clock, super sport equipped, P.B., radio. Rallr
wheels, Rally sport equipment. Retail 54119.30· SAVINGS
PRICE 53721.

BYE NOW '71

'11 SAVINGS HEADQUARTE~S

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. TILB
PH. 992-2126

Saturday.
. Dorsel Riebel is a patient 'at
the Camden-Clark Hospital,
Parkersburg, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Schrim·
sher of Hartford, W.Va., called
on Mrs. Bess Larkins:
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Hoffma·
of Morehead, Ky., have been
visiting with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. John Helm'.
Overnight guests of Kay
Balderson were Susan Hannmn
of Long Bottom and Kim Reed.
Jane Whitehead· was an
overnight guest of Janice Holter
of Pomeroy.
Mrs. Eunice Sprague is a
patient at the C8Jnden.Ciark
Hospital, Parkersburg, W. Va.
Recen.t visitors ol Andet'son
B. Kibble were Mr. and Mrs.
Brian Kibble of Akron and Mrs.
Glen Mllhoen . and niece of
Parkersburg, W. Va.
Dale Smith has returned

POMEROY

home after workinc fGr the U.S.
Government in Alaslla.
Mrs. Leah stildl and Mrs.
Emogene. Hickson of Abeln
visited Sunday al the WillillmaBalderson home.

fte Ah
e
8y Ullltedl'rell lldefu'i I
~oday is Sunday. Aug. :12, lbe
234th day of mt.
The moon 1s·betweer1 ila phase and first qurter'
.
The momin&amp; stan are
and Saturn.
The evening stars are Meftu.
ry,- Mars and .htpiter.
Those. bam Gil this . , Wider the sian of Vlrp.
American ph)'llc:!st Olille.
Jenkins • • barD AIIIJ:. :12, 1111.
On this day ill IIIIItui 1:
In 19ft Nallnlapllldu
·J
Ill the IIIUkirta of I I 3-1111 ill

v-

Rllllia durin&amp; w.td W. D.

�..
2f-The Slllday Times. Sentinel, Slllday' Aui!.IZ, 1171

Nixon Economics Bears WorldWide
s.

BY Wn.I.JAM
WHrl'E
WASHINGTON - The whitest light of pubUc interest in .
President Nixoo's vast new economic program understandably
beats upon the Improvement in the jobs arid business poaitloo here
at home that it will abnost certainly bring. It Is natural that it iB
the tread-alii-butter and tbe here-alii-now which will preoccupy
the public.
SWI, the enduring significance here Is world-wide and will

associates in defenlie pscia Who picked up tbe bill fc.-lbe miUtary
security of all- and now .and again, u in Kc.-ea and tlien in
Vietnam, alsodldllled,ybc to maintain that security.
So lbe oilier fellowB, again notably Germany and JaJIID,
wu:ed fst. And, becauae of an eJ:cesaiveiy Indulgent atutude oo
our side they began to ccmpele with Ill in trade with both bands
while, as the President b'- eH bas put it, AlJ¥!ric8 bad to
.......,,..te wilh one hand lied bebirid bei' bact."
._,...
()u' apc.-ts tillS declined in a long arc; and sbnultaneously
those wbo were 110 deeply in OlD" debt began a running attack upoo
the WHITE paper
the value of the American ,dollar. ·
So, to ccme- to lbe I* rt, lbe Pr jrleo!t bas said tbere
loog survive what are pro~biy oo1y temjiOrary price and wage.
freezes, which the Admblistration is putung lnto force urider
leglslatioo long since approved by a Democratic Congrei!S.
For the heart of lhe matter is thjlt Mr. Nixoo bas made here a
fereign policy revolutloo which might be trutbfuUy, if perbaps
somewbat crudely, described as putung an erid to the circumstance _that Uncle Sam bas also for decades been Uncle Sugar
to much d the rest of the earth. Wbat Is being undertaken at hOme
Is a powerful counter-attack upori both inflation and WJelllployment. Wbat iB being undertaken abroad iB lncomparabiy
more lmpcrtsnt.
'lbe.President Is mOVing, in short, to reassert and massively
to protect the American national interest in every aspect d
foreign affairs, whether it be ln doUars arid cents arid world trade
&lt;r ln the whole appl!l'Rius of collective miUtary security for the
anti-Communist world in such associations as the North Atlantic
Treaty &lt;k'ganizalion.
·
He Is in no sense entering upoo "isolatiooi:lm." He is,
however, saylng that he iB overtired of a kind of internatlooalism .
in which the United states bas borne the burden and its partners
bave, for the most part, reaped the unearned profits of a long,
loog free ride under the shelter d. the American umbrella ln both ·
the economic and the military senses.
In order to understand wbat be is doing and why, ooe must go
back many years. At the end of the secood World War this natioo
with unexampled generosfty rebuUt the broken countries without ,
NO GENERATION GAP- Vltus Hartley, Jr., )lftlldenl
regard ID whelher IIley had been friends or foes. This was both a
d
the
Peoples Bank of Point Pleasant, far right, presented a
decent and a necessary thing. 'lbetroubleis that ina sense we did
check Friday evening that CUW~Ieted the local bank's $1,000
it
too weU.
donation this year to belp finance Circle K Clubs on 17 West'
For, notably in Germany and Japan, the erstwbUe archVIrginia college camp•ses. Jobn Pack, Jr., lieutenant
enemies, we provided new indwltrial plants that became in
governor d West Virginia Circle K Clubs, third frcm right, is
some ways more efficient and m.re productive than our own. At
shown accepting the cbeck during tbe ~ Annual District
lhe same time, and year upon year, it was we and not our postwar
Kiwanis Convention ln Huntington. Looking oo as Hartly,

an

FIRST IS BORN
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs.
Donald B. Harden, Second St., ·
announce the birth of their first
child, a seven pound, 13 oz. son,
Donald Bennett, Jr., Aug. 19 at
Holzer Medical Center.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.

will ·be no mere ·of this -~mere lilting of the trade balance
against us, nli mere specuistors' emclment by 8818ultaupoo the
dollar. Two steps ~ annCJUDCed (and It sbould be empbasiiM that·tbeae are not the oo1y steps that concei.Vllbly could
be taken) fell the story as d now. Tbere iB lbe 10 pet. tempc.-ary
surcbarge 111 imparts into this COIDIIry. 'lbere Is the tu: cretit
scheme to strengthen the colleclive plant, and thus the competitive position, of American industry.
AtbirdpWitismore subUe: It lila warning to aU·abroad that
unless they begin at lq last to fake up 1111 tmest oar in tbe boat
d collective security Waslllngton is mt without power to make
reappraislls beyCIIId lbe me DOW In DM!Ilm.
·

•

j

-

AIRMAN 1-C JACK JAOOBS, a Security Policeman in
, lbe 6551st Security Police Squa«on, was the subject of a
"Patrick Pniile" in a recent issue of tbe l'alridt Air Fcrc:e
· News. Abov~, he directs traffic during the dally 4:16p.m.
rasb on tbe. base. As a security policeman, Airman Jacobe
· .also rep«ts accidents and di8lriert and aldi in ........
c.-der Ill tbe base arid in the bOIIIiDg are811. 11le ~-old
airman, son d Mr. arid Mrs. Cllffprd Jacobi of I'Wdoy,
enjoys footbaD, baseballRDd bowlillg. He and his wile, Jane,
live in central bousing. Airmllll Jacoba is a graduate of lfelp
Higb School.

DiatrktiKhmiiiiLt.Gonmcrllllleo-Waflbecmv•tlcla
wi1h three Huntington clubs.- a1tards the dlect are Roy
Abrabam, president of the Huntington East Kiwani:l Club,
far left and Doyle Bias, Lt. Governc.--elect d. District &amp;.
OrcleKis lbe college level d Kiwanis. Pack, a fc.-mer Point
Pleasant resident, Is tbe son d Ripley High School Principal
andMrs.JobnW.Pack,Sr.JohnattendsWVUandtsajunllr
majoring in industrial management.

SERVICES SET
GALLIPOLIS - ·Funeral
services will be held at 2 p.m.
Monday from the McCoyWetherholt Funeral Home for
Mrs. Celestlne (Brown) St.
Clair, 74, who died Thursday ln
the Rest Haven Convalescing
Home. Rev. Ronald Justice will
officiate. Burial will be in

Mound Hill Cemetery. Calling
hours will be held ill the funt.TRI
home from :1-4 and 7.$ today,
KUJ ED ON 1-n
ASHLAND, Ohio (UP!)
Paul J. Fischer, 311, Mensfield,
killed Friday night ln
car accident oo Interstate n,
about five miles east c#. here.

was

a--

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

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

and Mrs. Richard Fink,'
Cheshire ; paternal grand·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Norris ·
Harden,
local;
greatgrandparents, Mrs. Laice Fink
and Mrs. Wilbur Wlnes, both of
Cheshire, and Mrs. F1orence ·
Potts, local.

CORRECTION!
FRIDArS ADVERTISEMENT
SHOULD HAVE. READ

75
=YERS $}3
3 GAL SIZ£

GALLIA ROLLER MILLS
GRAPE ST.

RODNEY HAN~N. Wellston, tetelved the R. H. Raw~ Soos Co. trop11y blanket after
successful wins with "Lovely Filly" in Thursday's hc.-se harness racing. With HaiL'!On are his
wife and daughter and Bill Smith wbo made the presentation. Smith is a fair board member
serving 00 the speed committee.

.·'

GALUPOLIS, 0.

Kyger

Waiting for the Wraps to
Come Off the New Cars?
But you won't need to wait to get one of the
best
deals in town when it comes to the finan•
cing. Whatever car you choose, we can tailor the
loan to your budget . . . and f•t Talk to us I
"THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

'

_.

home with them after spending
a week with their grandparents.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Rupe were
recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrenee Rupe.
Mrs. Luther Coleman and
Betty visited relatives in
Grundy, Va .
Mr. and Mrs. WendeU Roush
called on Mrs. SterUe Roush, ·
who is a patient at Holzer
Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. BiU Price
visited their son, Jim, at
Robbins Air Force Base,
Georgia, recenUy.

BY RITA WRIGHT
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jarvis,
Columbus, were recent
weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Oxyer and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Miller,
Columbus, were recent Sunday
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Casto.
Mrs. Neva GWller is visitlng
her sister and husband, Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Casto. Other
weekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. CasiD were Mrs. Frank
GWlter and daughter, Becky
Burke and Susan and David Homecomlng was held at the
GWlter, Charleston.
Old Kyger Baptist Clmrch Aug.
CarroU Tate, Columbus, spent 15. A large crowd attended the
a weekend with his parents, Mr. Songfest held recenUy at tl!e
and Mrs. Charles Tate, and church. Featured slngers were
sons.
the "Revelators."
Jim Wright was a recent Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wright,
SWlday overnight visitor of his Hockingport, were recent
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
supper guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Wright, Hockingport.
Jim Wright.
Mr. and Mrs. F1oyd Casto and
Mrs. Bessie Athey and AUce
daughter, Debbie, Columbus, Euler, Middleport, were recent
were recent weekend visitors of callers of Mrs. Dennis L. Spires.
Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Casto and Mr. and Mrs. Ronial Jividen
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Casto.
were recent Sunday visitors of
Miss Rhonda Bales, fourteenMr. and Mrs. Raymond Parsons
year-&lt;&gt;id daughter of Mr. and
and Mrs. Minor Parsons, at
Mrs. Mayo R. Bales, has been
Rock Castle, W. Va.
accepted as a "Candystriper"
at Pleasant VaUey Hospital, Pl. Mr. and Mrs. David Jividen
Pleasant. Rhonda will be a . spent a week with her parents
Freshman at Kyger Creek High Mr. and Mrs. Jack Phillips:
School. .
. Clarksburg, W. Va .
Mrs.. Wtlma Jean Garc1a Mr. and Mrs. Hortie Roush
hosted a Tupperwar~ party at and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
her home. Attendmg were Tom Erickson and ·sons
Kathryn Shoemaker, Jenevtve returned home after a threeJ~nes, Patsy Spire~, Gail week visit through the western
· Sisson, _Kay Hockman, Becky states. They visited Mr. and
and Btiiy, and the demon- Mrs. E. M. Roush, at Pendleton,
slralor.
Ore., and W. and Mrs. Ura
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Spears Swisher and Mr. and Mrs. Paul
attended the 'lbompson-Beeson Smith Price Utah and toured
reunion at UtUe Kyger Church many 'points 'or interest.
grounds,_Aug. 8:
Mr. and Mrs. Ballard Easton,
Miss ~ana Spll'~ spent a few Tampa, Fla., are visiting Mrs.
days With her cousm, Dora Ann Lexie Easton and other
Doerfer, Rutland .
relatives and friends.
Recent Sunday visitors of Mr. .'J'lle Kyger Women's Society
and Mrs. Edward .Spears were mt. recenUy at the Lodge Hall
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Spears, Mrs. for 8n all day meetlng.
Audrey Spears, Rose ,arid Beth Mrs. Virglnia McDaniel was a
Ann, Roseville, Rt. 2.
recent weekend guest of MI;.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Jlupe arid and Mrs. Larry Weimann and
"!r: and Mrs. William Reynolds family .
,
VISited Mr. arid Mrs. Glenn Mr. and Mrs. Dale Sisson
Rupe, Huntington. Kimberly ¢ailed on Mr. arid Mrs. Joe
and Karen Reynolds returned Stewart.

_,_

X.ANCELOT'

The ROOMMATE

Modtl *158-R
15• dl-.o:n-1 pkture

Meet the portable thats the
perfect bedroom companion.
The .Roommate TV with Remote Control and Earphone.
• Who wants to jump up and change channels when he or she is snug
in a warm bed? With this RCA Sportabout you can be as lazy as you
want. The remote hand unit does all your channel changing for .
you. There's also an earphone so you can watch and listen to the
late late Show without disturbing a sleeping spouse. Come in for
a demonstiation-you'lllike what you see.

Be sure to see ail the other 1972 models. RCA Black and White and
Color Televisions · Portable and Console models. We'll gladly
demonstrate any set you'd like. Also. in the music department, 2nd
floor - the new 1972 RCA Stereos - Radios - Portable Record Players
· Tape Players and Tape Recorders. Use our sensible credit service
to purchase what you want.

ELBERFELDS .IN POMEROY

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2f-The Slllday Times. Sentinel, Slllday' Aui!.IZ, 1171

Nixon Economics Bears WorldWide
s.

BY Wn.I.JAM
WHrl'E
WASHINGTON - The whitest light of pubUc interest in .
President Nixoo's vast new economic program understandably
beats upon the Improvement in the jobs arid business poaitloo here
at home that it will abnost certainly bring. It Is natural that it iB
the tread-alii-butter and tbe here-alii-now which will preoccupy
the public.
SWI, the enduring significance here Is world-wide and will

associates in defenlie pscia Who picked up tbe bill fc.-lbe miUtary
security of all- and now .and again, u in Kc.-ea and tlien in
Vietnam, alsodldllled,ybc to maintain that security.
So lbe oilier fellowB, again notably Germany and JaJIID,
wu:ed fst. And, becauae of an eJ:cesaiveiy Indulgent atutude oo
our side they began to ccmpele with Ill in trade with both bands
while, as the President b'- eH bas put it, AlJ¥!ric8 bad to
.......,,..te wilh one hand lied bebirid bei' bact."
._,...
()u' apc.-ts tillS declined in a long arc; and sbnultaneously
those wbo were 110 deeply in OlD" debt began a running attack upoo
the WHITE paper
the value of the American ,dollar. ·
So, to ccme- to lbe I* rt, lbe Pr jrleo!t bas said tbere
loog survive what are pro~biy oo1y temjiOrary price and wage.
freezes, which the Admblistration is putung lnto force urider
leglslatioo long since approved by a Democratic Congrei!S.
For the heart of lhe matter is thjlt Mr. Nixoo bas made here a
fereign policy revolutloo which might be trutbfuUy, if perbaps
somewbat crudely, described as putung an erid to the circumstance _that Uncle Sam bas also for decades been Uncle Sugar
to much d the rest of the earth. Wbat Is being undertaken at hOme
Is a powerful counter-attack upori both inflation and WJelllployment. Wbat iB being undertaken abroad iB lncomparabiy
more lmpcrtsnt.
'lbe.President Is mOVing, in short, to reassert and massively
to protect the American national interest in every aspect d
foreign affairs, whether it be ln doUars arid cents arid world trade
&lt;r ln the whole appl!l'Rius of collective miUtary security for the
anti-Communist world in such associations as the North Atlantic
Treaty &lt;k'ganizalion.
·
He Is in no sense entering upoo "isolatiooi:lm." He is,
however, saylng that he iB overtired of a kind of internatlooalism .
in which the United states bas borne the burden and its partners
bave, for the most part, reaped the unearned profits of a long,
loog free ride under the shelter d. the American umbrella ln both ·
the economic and the military senses.
In order to understand wbat be is doing and why, ooe must go
back many years. At the end of the secood World War this natioo
with unexampled generosfty rebuUt the broken countries without ,
NO GENERATION GAP- Vltus Hartley, Jr., )lftlldenl
regard ID whelher IIley had been friends or foes. This was both a
d
the
Peoples Bank of Point Pleasant, far right, presented a
decent and a necessary thing. 'lbetroubleis that ina sense we did
check Friday evening that CUW~Ieted the local bank's $1,000
it
too weU.
donation this year to belp finance Circle K Clubs on 17 West'
For, notably in Germany and Japan, the erstwbUe archVIrginia college camp•ses. Jobn Pack, Jr., lieutenant
enemies, we provided new indwltrial plants that became in
governor d West Virginia Circle K Clubs, third frcm right, is
some ways more efficient and m.re productive than our own. At
shown accepting the cbeck during tbe ~ Annual District
lhe same time, and year upon year, it was we and not our postwar
Kiwanis Convention ln Huntington. Looking oo as Hartly,

an

FIRST IS BORN
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs.
Donald B. Harden, Second St., ·
announce the birth of their first
child, a seven pound, 13 oz. son,
Donald Bennett, Jr., Aug. 19 at
Holzer Medical Center.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.

will ·be no mere ·of this -~mere lilting of the trade balance
against us, nli mere specuistors' emclment by 8818ultaupoo the
dollar. Two steps ~ annCJUDCed (and It sbould be empbasiiM that·tbeae are not the oo1y steps that concei.Vllbly could
be taken) fell the story as d now. Tbere iB lbe 10 pet. tempc.-ary
surcbarge 111 imparts into this COIDIIry. 'lbere Is the tu: cretit
scheme to strengthen the colleclive plant, and thus the competitive position, of American industry.
AtbirdpWitismore subUe: It lila warning to aU·abroad that
unless they begin at lq last to fake up 1111 tmest oar in tbe boat
d collective security Waslllngton is mt without power to make
reappraislls beyCIIId lbe me DOW In DM!Ilm.
·

•

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AIRMAN 1-C JACK JAOOBS, a Security Policeman in
, lbe 6551st Security Police Squa«on, was the subject of a
"Patrick Pniile" in a recent issue of tbe l'alridt Air Fcrc:e
· News. Abov~, he directs traffic during the dally 4:16p.m.
rasb on tbe. base. As a security policeman, Airman Jacobe
· .also rep«ts accidents and di8lriert and aldi in ........
c.-der Ill tbe base arid in the bOIIIiDg are811. 11le ~-old
airman, son d Mr. arid Mrs. Cllffprd Jacobi of I'Wdoy,
enjoys footbaD, baseballRDd bowlillg. He and his wile, Jane,
live in central bousing. Airmllll Jacoba is a graduate of lfelp
Higb School.

DiatrktiKhmiiiiLt.Gonmcrllllleo-Waflbecmv•tlcla
wi1h three Huntington clubs.- a1tards the dlect are Roy
Abrabam, president of the Huntington East Kiwani:l Club,
far left and Doyle Bias, Lt. Governc.--elect d. District &amp;.
OrcleKis lbe college level d Kiwanis. Pack, a fc.-mer Point
Pleasant resident, Is tbe son d Ripley High School Principal
andMrs.JobnW.Pack,Sr.JohnattendsWVUandtsajunllr
majoring in industrial management.

SERVICES SET
GALLIPOLIS - ·Funeral
services will be held at 2 p.m.
Monday from the McCoyWetherholt Funeral Home for
Mrs. Celestlne (Brown) St.
Clair, 74, who died Thursday ln
the Rest Haven Convalescing
Home. Rev. Ronald Justice will
officiate. Burial will be in

Mound Hill Cemetery. Calling
hours will be held ill the funt.TRI
home from :1-4 and 7.$ today,
KUJ ED ON 1-n
ASHLAND, Ohio (UP!)
Paul J. Fischer, 311, Mensfield,
killed Friday night ln
car accident oo Interstate n,
about five miles east c#. here.

was

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

and Mrs. Richard Fink,'
Cheshire ; paternal grand·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Norris ·
Harden,
local;
greatgrandparents, Mrs. Laice Fink
and Mrs. Wilbur Wlnes, both of
Cheshire, and Mrs. F1orence ·
Potts, local.

CORRECTION!
FRIDArS ADVERTISEMENT
SHOULD HAVE. READ

75
=YERS $}3
3 GAL SIZ£

GALLIA ROLLER MILLS
GRAPE ST.

RODNEY HAN~N. Wellston, tetelved the R. H. Raw~ Soos Co. trop11y blanket after
successful wins with "Lovely Filly" in Thursday's hc.-se harness racing. With HaiL'!On are his
wife and daughter and Bill Smith wbo made the presentation. Smith is a fair board member
serving 00 the speed committee.

.·'

GALUPOLIS, 0.

Kyger

Waiting for the Wraps to
Come Off the New Cars?
But you won't need to wait to get one of the
best
deals in town when it comes to the finan•
cing. Whatever car you choose, we can tailor the
loan to your budget . . . and f•t Talk to us I
"THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

'

_.

home with them after spending
a week with their grandparents.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Rupe were
recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrenee Rupe.
Mrs. Luther Coleman and
Betty visited relatives in
Grundy, Va .
Mr. and Mrs. WendeU Roush
called on Mrs. SterUe Roush, ·
who is a patient at Holzer
Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. BiU Price
visited their son, Jim, at
Robbins Air Force Base,
Georgia, recenUy.

BY RITA WRIGHT
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jarvis,
Columbus, were recent
weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Oxyer and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Miller,
Columbus, were recent Sunday
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Casto.
Mrs. Neva GWller is visitlng
her sister and husband, Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Casto. Other
weekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. CasiD were Mrs. Frank
GWlter and daughter, Becky
Burke and Susan and David Homecomlng was held at the
GWlter, Charleston.
Old Kyger Baptist Clmrch Aug.
CarroU Tate, Columbus, spent 15. A large crowd attended the
a weekend with his parents, Mr. Songfest held recenUy at tl!e
and Mrs. Charles Tate, and church. Featured slngers were
sons.
the "Revelators."
Jim Wright was a recent Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wright,
SWlday overnight visitor of his Hockingport, were recent
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
supper guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Wright, Hockingport.
Jim Wright.
Mr. and Mrs. F1oyd Casto and
Mrs. Bessie Athey and AUce
daughter, Debbie, Columbus, Euler, Middleport, were recent
were recent weekend visitors of callers of Mrs. Dennis L. Spires.
Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Casto and Mr. and Mrs. Ronial Jividen
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Casto.
were recent Sunday visitors of
Miss Rhonda Bales, fourteenMr. and Mrs. Raymond Parsons
year-&lt;&gt;id daughter of Mr. and
and Mrs. Minor Parsons, at
Mrs. Mayo R. Bales, has been
Rock Castle, W. Va.
accepted as a "Candystriper"
at Pleasant VaUey Hospital, Pl. Mr. and Mrs. David Jividen
Pleasant. Rhonda will be a . spent a week with her parents
Freshman at Kyger Creek High Mr. and Mrs. Jack Phillips:
School. .
. Clarksburg, W. Va .
Mrs.. Wtlma Jean Garc1a Mr. and Mrs. Hortie Roush
hosted a Tupperwar~ party at and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
her home. Attendmg were Tom Erickson and ·sons
Kathryn Shoemaker, Jenevtve returned home after a threeJ~nes, Patsy Spire~, Gail week visit through the western
· Sisson, _Kay Hockman, Becky states. They visited Mr. and
and Btiiy, and the demon- Mrs. E. M. Roush, at Pendleton,
slralor.
Ore., and W. and Mrs. Ura
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Spears Swisher and Mr. and Mrs. Paul
attended the 'lbompson-Beeson Smith Price Utah and toured
reunion at UtUe Kyger Church many 'points 'or interest.
grounds,_Aug. 8:
Mr. and Mrs. Ballard Easton,
Miss ~ana Spll'~ spent a few Tampa, Fla., are visiting Mrs.
days With her cousm, Dora Ann Lexie Easton and other
Doerfer, Rutland .
relatives and friends.
Recent Sunday visitors of Mr. .'J'lle Kyger Women's Society
and Mrs. Edward .Spears were mt. recenUy at the Lodge Hall
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Spears, Mrs. for 8n all day meetlng.
Audrey Spears, Rose ,arid Beth Mrs. Virglnia McDaniel was a
Ann, Roseville, Rt. 2.
recent weekend guest of MI;.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Jlupe arid and Mrs. Larry Weimann and
"!r: and Mrs. William Reynolds family .
,
VISited Mr. arid Mrs. Glenn Mr. and Mrs. Dale Sisson
Rupe, Huntington. Kimberly ¢ailed on Mr. arid Mrs. Joe
and Karen Reynolds returned Stewart.

_,_

X.ANCELOT'

The ROOMMATE

Modtl *158-R
15• dl-.o:n-1 pkture

Meet the portable thats the
perfect bedroom companion.
The .Roommate TV with Remote Control and Earphone.
• Who wants to jump up and change channels when he or she is snug
in a warm bed? With this RCA Sportabout you can be as lazy as you
want. The remote hand unit does all your channel changing for .
you. There's also an earphone so you can watch and listen to the
late late Show without disturbing a sleeping spouse. Come in for
a demonstiation-you'lllike what you see.

Be sure to see ail the other 1972 models. RCA Black and White and
Color Televisions · Portable and Console models. We'll gladly
demonstrate any set you'd like. Also. in the music department, 2nd
floor - the new 1972 RCA Stereos - Radios - Portable Record Players
· Tape Players and Tape Recorders. Use our sensible credit service
to purchase what you want.

ELBERFELDS .IN POMEROY

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THEY 6A.Y DCJ&lt;a5

GUZI J!M I&lt;ING
INTH~

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"I KNOW , , , YOU TEI:I. YOUR MOTHER MY MOTH,liS LIVING WITt!
US AI'ID I'LL TELL MY MOTHEl YOU!\ MOTHEliS. OKAY1"

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by~cikuUWE l)lf)N'T OIG

DO VOU Tillfill&lt; l-IEU

M'i li.XPLA.NATION,
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AGIUSE 1"0 A &amp;AAII•I
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.BUGS BUNNY

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Ot7R BOARDING BOUSE
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H\I&lt;E INTO iOWN

AAD BUY
SOME.!

NO PROBLEM, UNCLE
fAM05J fMPE 50ME

WOOvEN ONES!

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FLPOR!

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CERTAINLY! KOW
WILl. 'ri7U LE,t.,RN
C/J..MP UIUSS
~YOU

�Sherry lndestad Wins 7th
.

Miss

Sherry lndestad,
Puwttvy, Glle of Oljo's few
WCIIJI!II hameas bene trainers
llllldlivtlli,·CUJe lllroullliku
fil:st ~ in the IIDaJ ncing
!R"ogl&amp;m of the Meig$ County
Fair Satunt.y lf1lemoon.
ImiDg Gig! B., owned by the
~ S'eNee of PQ:ueroy.
Miss IDdes1H drove to first
place banors in the seventh

.

.

·

10 Units in Youth Revue
Ten organizations were
•epresentedlntbe Junior Revue
held as a part of the junior fair
activities on Wednesday night.
Mrs. Harold Sauer, chair·
man, introduced Ol'ganization
~ntatives with eccb one
speaking briefly on the
enrollment, activities, and
purpose of the group.
Participating were Maureen
Hennesy for lhe Junior
American Legion Amiliary of
Drew-Webster
Post 39,
Pomeroy; Kathy Boyd for the
Southern Local FHA; Patty

Marks Hi Tide ·
seem! and Parma Montata was . was seem! and Noble Star .,..
third in the .seventh race.
third. Real Fancy won the
Pomeroy Gdf Coone llopbJ
In the first and fifth nees, the IR"I!sented by Hugh Custer.
Obillco Pace, aD fiVI! entries
came in the same position in In the fourth race, first place
both races. First place was Miss winner of the non-winning
Ca!boctm, owned by E. J. pacers of $t500, second
Booth, Zanesville, and driven elimination ·division; was
by Jim Morgan. Secmd was Sarah's Kiss, owned and driven
Miss Kay Volo, owned and by Paul Johnson of Ironlcll.
driven by Ray Newhart of Second place went to W'illow
Mariettaandtbirdwaswaving Queen owned by Blanche
Time, owned by L. P. Vallery Staten, Wellston, and driven by
and J. H. Hines of WaVerly and C. Oyer. Tbird was Adi&lt;8 Aim,'
driven by Hines. The Edwin owned by Jack McQonald and
Davis and Sons Co., Langsville, Howard Coburn of P&lt;rtsmwtb
provided tbe trophy blal*et and driven by D. French. In the
presentA!d by Re:l 91enefield. eighth race, Willow ~n waa
first, Adi&lt;8 Aim 1l'8ll second and
In tbe secmd race, fw trot- Sarah's Kiss was third. Willow
ters, first place was won by ~een won tbe tropby blal*et
Marks m Tide, owned. and ~rovided by the Oty lee and
driven by James Markham, Fila eo. of Middleport and
Jackson. Secmd place went to Point Pleasant.
Real Fancy, owned by }fay
Newhart, Marietta, and driven
Jun Ed Brown and the Gems
by R. Mcrgan. Third was Noble played to a full house Saturday
Star, owned and driven by.Ray night to round wt the 1011tb
Newhart. In the sixth race Real annual Meigs County Fair.

race. Earlier, in the third rilce1 JohnSon. Eba Bay

she had placed third, also with
Gjgi H.
.
First place in .the third race
was won by Eba Bay Lady
owned by horsemen of Piketm,
Waverly and Elm Grove with
Jim Hines driving. Second place
went io Pama Monlala, owned
by Genevieve N. Riley of
Ironton and driven by A.

Dyer, star Junior Grange;
Becky Wright, Veterans
Memorial Candystripers;
Brenda Taylor, Bethel 62, International Order of Jobs
Daughters; Bever I~ Smith,
Modern Woodmen; Cheryl
Simpson, R~cine American
Legion Auxiliary Juniors;
Marie Pickens, , Racine Girl
Scout Troop 137; the Rev.
Forest Donley, director of the
Meigs County United Methodist
Youth Fellowship, and Margie
Jeffers, 4-H.

Rae~

Lady was Fancy was first;

MISS SHERRY INDESTAD of Pmleroy, ooe of Ohio's
few women horse harness trainers and driven, won a first ,
place and a third when she drove Salunlay at the 101th annual Meigs County Fair.

NO. XXIV NO. 91

Devoted To 1'Jae lnlere~b Of'I'Jae Meigi-MOMm Area
POMEROY-MIDDLEPO~T. OHJP
MONDAY, AUGUST 23, 1971
_PH~ON_E_9_
92_
·21_
56_ _ _ _ _ TEN CENTS

Mutiny Put

What TiineDoThe ®

tflk' Balloons Go Up?
IS A RED-BLOODED AMERICAN OCJ'I
LIKE YO;BOB HO-GONNA LEAVE

A PU"RJN&amp;A .BEAT US AT

. . .. .. '

P:LI 00 .FONG ?

r---

'

""/o· &amp;E.TCMA!! ALLTHIS
AMERICAN BLOOD IS
GONNA STAY RIGHT IN .

HO!!UO!!-YOU AMELICANS '
..ME YELLOW!!

THIS

· BOY.~'

so '/OJ ACC.EPT
CHARRENGE,'IOU
CLAZ'/ 'IANKEE!!

THE FLING FONG BATTLE

15 ON!! AN'/ OTHER
QUESTIONS?

as "a ruse designed to cir·
cumvent public opinion and to
mislead lhe courts ..."
Wolman said the ACLU W~'lld
file suit in federal court in
Columbus "within days , if not
within hours" after Gov. John J.
Gilligan signed such legislation.
"It is clear the courts will not
pennit public funds to be used
for unconstitutional purposes and the mainlenance of a
network of church-operated
schools at taxpayers exj)ense is
certainly an unconstitutional
goal," said Wohnan.
"One of the worse-learned
lessons of history is that
government controls always
follow government aid, and
budget will
provide
reim·
bursemenl
through
a system
of ~=·"&lt;'·w·:···········w·········:·:·:·:·:·
""'' &gt;.w, MWo•.W,W,' ' ' • ' those who think that public
vouchers or tax-credits.
98 Descendants funds will help their cause will
discover some day they bave
Wolman said under a voucher
XENIA, Ohio ( UPI I lost their right to free exercise
syslem, parents would receive a
Sixteen great-great graod- of religion in the process." .
cbildreo,
53
greatgraudcbildreo, 26 grandcbildren
and three children
Considerable cloudiness,
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
windy and cooler today. High survive Mrs. Sidoey Sandford
The Middleport E-R squad
middle 70s to lower Ms. Partly Hanling.
was sununoned Sunday at 3:37
Mrs. Harding died last p. m. for Frank Niggrneyer,
cloudy and cooler tonight. Low
mid 50s to near 60s. Tuesday Fridoy at the age oliOS. When Middleport, who was having
mostly sunny and little tem- she was 100, sbe was blinded difficulty breathing, He was
perature change. High mid 70s in one eye chopping .,.ood.
taken to Velerans Memorial
to lower Ms.
Hospital and admitted,

PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (UP!.) slate-issued certificate for $100
- The American Civil Uberties for each child enrolled in a
Union (ACLU) today charged parochial church-operated
church - operated schools in school which could be redeemed
Ohio were "laying the ground· for cash by the slate . The lax·
work to double their level of credit plan would allow the $!()().
state aid through a new but ... a-child tuition to be deducted
unconstitutional scheme."
!rom stale taxes with the money
ACLU Ohio Executive then turned over to the school.
Director Benson Wolman, Wolman said that since June,
Columbus, in an address when the U, S. Supreme Court
prepared for delivery til the banned parochial school
local Rotary Club here, said teacher salary subsidies
lobbyists for parochial schools similar to those in effect last
have advised church-related year in Ohio, the advocales for
schools in Ohio i.o set a such aid bad searched for
minimwn tuition fee of $100 for another plan .
all students with the ex- The ACLU official tenned the
pectation that the new state voucher or the tax credit plans

JUST ONE-WHY DID 'IOU

.SEND FOR SPORTS WRITE~S'?

,

ISFOR."ffiE

Weather

BEPUBLICAN OONG. CLARENCE E. MUJ.ER, right, Tenth District, gets away from a
busy Washingfm Scbemle to 'Visit the people in his district to learn wbat tbe voters in southeast
Olli.o tbb*abwtstateand national issues. Each fair in his district bas a "Miller booth" where
the public is invited to amwer a poll which shows thinking on important·questions. Important
shifts 11 Gpilioa in soulbeasl.em Ohio are uocovered by the Miller polls. Above, Cong. Miller
viaits with Roy Holter, Pomeroy RD. Miller's booth was in the Commercial Building.

29 Killed
SEOUL (UPI ) - Twenty-lbree inmates of a military prison on a
tiny island near Inchon staged a IRiltiny in wbio:b 12 !rison guards
were murdered and then tried to drive to Seoul in a stolen bus
before they were interceptA!d by soldiers who thought they were
North Korean spies.
A total of 29 persons died in the abortive escape, t5 of them
escaped South Korean prisoners who blew lhemoelves up &lt;11 ~hi;
hos. Another escapee was sbot and tilled In l'ncbwl and another
was shot and trilled near Seoul. Seven prism ctficials were llsted
as missing
Because the prisoners came Korean agent$ trying to raid
ashore by boat South Korean Seoul.
officials at first reported they
Jung said the bandits were
were North Korean agents en from the air force prison on
route to Seoul. The a'll- Sbilmi 1sland off Inchon 20
nouncement was rescinded miles west of Seoul. They
later and Defense Minister Jung staged a mutiny al6 am. today,
Nae-hiuk indicated he would he said.
resign.
Jung said three wounded
The bandits liilled 12 prison
bandits were captured in Inchon officials and wllWided another,
and four others wounded in the according to lhe defense
bus explosions were caplured. minister. Seven other prison
Firing at potice boxes and officials were missing, Jung
checkpoints on their trip tbe said.
escaped prisoners got as far as
The bandits then com·
a southern suburban district of mandeered a civilian boat to
the capital when they were sail to Inchon, Jung said. They
hailed by anny troops, police seized a bus in Inchon at 1:10
squads and militiamen who had p.m. and then began their drive
been told they were North to the capital, he said.

·Nixon Aide Expects Unions to Give-in
CAPTAIN EASY
AHoAT

GlllfT ltJ WA5H'5

FtOOMt

NOW IF I CAN

~DOWN
WAK~THAT

WASHINGTON - SIGNS OF BLACK LUNG disease have
been found among to pet. of the first 4,200 coal miners x...ayed in
the start of a new national cbecbip, it was disclosed today. The
linding.sarepartofstudies that will eventually reach alliOO,OOO of
the natt&lt;11's underground miners by Ibis fall, in health imIR"Ovement elf&lt;rl! uDier the federal Coal Mine Health and Safety
Act of 1969.
InareporltoCongress on the situation the Health, Education
and Welfare Department (HEW) released preliminary data on
cbesl :r...ays givmto miners al16 locations in Pennsylvania and
West Vuginia last year. 1be statistical breakdown showed
evidence of mild to severe forms of black lung were uncovered in
t,681 of ~ it.nys in the two states.

.I: MU?T WARN

Pit. tc:RAVATT THAT
THe MAN P051NG PG
M'l ?ON·IN·L.AW 1!7
ACTUAL!,.'/ THe- MRP
~TRIIN6LER!

Lette;:Carries Want Exemption
TOLEDO CBIO - 'lHE FEDERAL government cannot
expect
to hon&lt;r their contract if the ~rice-wag~ freeze
robs them of pay raises they would ttave gotten otherwJSe, the
head of the National.\ssociation of Leiter Carriers lias warned.
James n. Rademadler, pnsident of the 220,000 member
1111&lt;11 said here Saturday mail workers were due to receive a $250
ann~ pay st.epup on Ocl20 aol periodic step increases based &lt;11
years of service lb'ing the freeze, which extends to Nov. 12. ~e
said the 1111«1 would ask Congress to ewnpl the union employes
from thefederalonler'"'l""""l byPresidentNil:on last week. The
claim to an sempli&lt;ll, be said would be based on the contention
that
ftt the pay increases was carried out undet a
p-ocedUre called f&lt;r by Congress after th~ Post Office Departmentnscmverledlothe u.s. Postal SemceJuly I.
.

wcne:.s

fW!:NT.., MINUTE~ LAT5R ...
TH!; HOU~S

GRE:AT!&gt;COTn
PO I HEAR SOME:·
Or.!S MOVJN&amp;
AIW1JT~

l. cAN PEEP:.
AROUNP TtiS DOORWAY

WITHOUT BEING
7E:SN!

OH·EitM'/. BOY~ WHAr

A~S VOU 001~6

1JP Ar TJ.IIB&gt;

HQLllt'!=

harP•

Hanoi Posiliom Bombarded
SAIGON -u.s. SHIPS, JET ~t~-bcm~ ~nd. artillery

bomiJU'ded Nlrlh Vll'INn 1

pa!itims m the Demilitarized Zone
(~) 8JndaY In Glle of the heaviest poundings of the regl.oo in
recent wI Is, millt.J ............. said today. AU. S. spoktra~
said tbe targe11 were focket.&amp;ing poalllans, troop concen hons
and ar1ilJerY sites in the aoutbem poriioo of the SU(Ip(lledly
·neutral W&amp;r - between Nlrlb 81111 South Vietnam.. .
South v~ewr 1s !lpiiRIP"eel np4rled govenunent infantry
troop! {CIIIIIIIbe badies II 71 OJnvmlllist troops today near Fire
Bale Fuller and about 1m! tDues 11011th of the DMZ in an area that
imd beell bit by 852 lvmbers. A Communist platoon killed two
AmericaDI pel .-.led four SllldaY in aa attack on a U. S. armored unit~ security for South Vietqamese lroop5 at a

WASHINGTON (UPI)-A top
administration labor official
predicted that fear of both
inflation and foreign competilion will lead rank and file
union workers to a general
acceptance of President Nixon's
wage freeze.
Assistant Labor Secretary
William J. Usery Jr. offered
that assessment as the !MHiay
freeze on wages, rents and
prices went into its second
week.
In Europe, the money markets prepared to open for the
ftrst time since Nil:on untied
the dollar from its set gold
price, allowing its uchange
value to float in comparison to
other currencies. The day's
trading will detennine what the
dollar is worth in exchange for

the British pound, the French ed his battle to give stale opposition it ennWJciated last concerned about inflation and
also bave been concerned about
franc and other currencies.
workers a pay raise could go week.
Usery, in a UPI " Washinglan e&lt;mpetition in the industry in
The economic freeze conti- all the way to the Supreme
nued to draw criticism from Court. Organized labor eased Window" interview ' said "the wbidl he may work.
"As (fas as} the individual
several quarlers, including the its verbal attack, although working man or the union
governor of Te:ras who indicat- presumably not the basic member lias been \'ery, very member might relate to the
President's message ... I think
ll will be generally accepted,"
Usery said. ''il will hurt, but 1
•
think overall, if it is for the

BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
(UPI)-The Keck brothers from
Michigan dominated the fifth annual national tractor pullin~
cbaQlpionsbips at the Wood
County Fairgrounds here.
Blaine Keck of Monroe, Mich.,
I
won the 7,000 pound modified
class with a pull of 255 feet, 6
inches and then won the 12,000
pound fteH'or.all by taking the
pulloff from two others who also
bad polled the muimwn 300
pounds. ·
His brother John from LaSale,
Mich. won the 9,000 poundmodified pull with a distance of 28:i
teet, 6 inches as 20,000 persons
watched the Sunday event sponsored by the Wood County Agricullure.Society.
·
The Kecks also placed in several of the other five classes.
RexfrwnlickofJeromesville
Ohio, won the S,CJOO.pound stock
class with a pull of 2ll:i feer, 1
inch and Paul Bosse of Ada, An Athens County man was
Ohi~. toOk the 5,000 jlound modi· found dead lying across the door
fie&lt;l title with a pull of 240 feet of his car at the Ridgeview
t inch. Richard Lon.eilberger of,Store in Alblmy Sunday . at
Bluffton, Ind., won the 9,000. approximately 10 . a.m., the
pound stock division with a pull Meigs
County, Sheriff's
of 247 feet. Kenny Smith of Ma- department reported.
rion Ohlo too1t the 12,1J09ilound Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ray
stock till~ with a pull of 268 Facemeyer, who live nearby
feet, :; inches.
and operate the Ridgeview
store, said a car pulled in their
driveway, turned around, went
PATROL TO MEE1'
back along the roadway and
A safety patrol meeting will slopped. Us horn sounded.
TADNG TOP HONORS AT THE Meigs "County 4-H H&lt;rse Show Saturday m&lt;rbe held Wednesday at 7 p.m. in When Mrs. Facemeyer went to W!gwere~Baker, right, and Aimee Huston, bolli ofSyracuse. Miss Baker woo the grand
Room no at Meigs Juilior High the store she found the man champlcm trophy for first place in showmanship and horsemanship. Miss Huston receiwd the
School in Middleport. All lying across the door of his car.
r 11 ve dlunpion ·in horsemanship, third in showmanship and was presented a halter f&lt;r
sevenlh graders inlerested are. The victim was identified as
ba..U. the belt gtoomed horse. 'nle hailer was donated by Modern SUpply Colllpan)' of
urged to atlend. Parents are Dwight Deavers, 57, Congress . l"CimaOJ. Mia Baker will compete in the f.ll bone show al the Ohio Slate Fair Wtdi ky.

Man Dies ·in
Auto

Sun~y

wa~.

~t,AlheM.

good of the llation and good for
business where there can be
more jobs, I think it will be
generally accepted by the union
member.··

Usery declined to predict
wbal would happen when the
91klay period ends but "whatever the future holds I hope that
it will be equally across the
board ... and thai we can gel
out of the economy an order as
it should be."
Organiled labor's oppo5itioo
has reniered on the lack of a
profits freeze. Usery said the
President bad no authority to
freeze profits, adding "it's very
hopeful that profits will be
plo..ed back into the company
so that we can create lliGI'e
jobs."

Vehicles Scraped
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. inveslipted an .ac.-ddlrtt
•I the Meig.s CUllY fldJ i1 ....
Sunday •t 12:11i LID.
Kirmit K. campbell, 14,
Jbrielta, ~ • lrildllrtrailer up the lliD cmlll the
fairgrculdl, laildl ..... lbe
midway lllld bia ri&amp; ... «k •
pDiip lr'uck owi&lt;td bJ llallill
0. Hoova.
SCI aped the IJifl llide a( U.
shaifl's a I . 1llln ligbt dmt fl Ill btlll I I '=&gt;
nanellltbell L,MoeM M

w""'•t, _.

•.

I

'

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