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· -'1'111 o.i1J 8eDIInel. IIIMepart-1\aiwOJ,O., Aug. 27,1f71 •
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j&gt;'

1~~
\li

.

DoriaPounding

.

a

WILMINGTON, N.C. (UPI)'l'rl\)lcalstorm Doria, building
toward hurricane strength,
llung Its 85 mile per holD' winds
at lhe North Carolina coast
today. A 11JG.mlle stretch of
resort beaches and fishing
vUlages was placed on hurricane watch.
Stroog winds, rain and heavy
surf~an ~the coast this
mornl.ng in advance of the
storm.

Tbe National Hurricane Cen·
ter at Miami said Doria
wobablf would be allurrlcane,
with peak winds of 75 to 80
m.p.h., when it struck land near
WilmingiDn around noon EDT
today.
At 6 a.m., Doria's center was
located near latitude 32.6 north,
loogitude T/.2 west, 1r about 115
miles southotioutheast of Wil·

.MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Saturday
August 27-28
TASH rHt. BLOOD
OF DRACULA
(Technicolorl
Christopher Lee
Geoffrey Keen

TROG
(Technicolorl

GP

Joan Crawford
Michael Gough

:

SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

GP

SecondReferend11m

[e ·

t1rom

M..:

Two Accidents
Lnves,;a.llted

========~m!a:Jored:·
~m-heal-th•an-d~pb~y~si~ca~l
educatton.

King Builders Supply Co.
992-3748

on
wet highway,
intothe
a ditch
and went skidded
on 125
before coming to a stop. There
was medium damage to.lhe car.
No citation was issued.
Thursday at5 p.m. on SR 248,
William H. Coleman, 53,
' Pickerington, was driving
northeast when a car driven by
Verda Niada Stout, 64, Long
Bottom, Rt. 1, pulled into bis
path. There was ligbtdamageto
'both vehicles. Mrs. Stout cited to court on charges of
failure to yield right of way·
Veterans Memorial Hospl1al
ADMISSIONS Larry
Dugan, Pwteroy; Robin Wills,
Reedsville; Clara Friend, MI.
Alto, W, Va. ; Beatrice Nice,
Racine; Cheryl Hudson,
Mason; Mary Ford, Lelarl, W.
Va.
DISCHARGES - Creston
Newland, Bard~! Smith, Pam
Theiss, John Smith, &lt;ltarles
Yost, Sara Diddle.
GRANGE TO MEET
The Rock Springs Grange will
meet Monday at 8 p.m. at the
grange hall.

Sou

good taste are neallleas, sltilpliclty and app'O(II'iateness.
Tbe f~~ are considered
inappO)I'iate8J1C) unacceptaUe
fGr girls to wear to scbool:
Et&lt;bEme bairdll!l, et&lt;trelne
balr colcring, hair curlers or
pins to set hair (eJI!I!pt wben
permitted by the principal )l'ior
tospedalsocialevents),lowcut
dresses, sheer blouses, tightfilling sweaters, T-shirts,
aborts, bot pants and Bernnrla•. Girls and parents are ID
use diactetion in selecting the
lengtb ~ clOibing.
Clean, neat slacks, jeans,
levis and pant suits may be
worn· to school at any time .
Shirttails must be worn imRde
tbese slacks, etc., et&lt;cepl ftr a
square cut shirttail. Girls are
not ID COOib 1beir hair or put on
makHpin claasrooms or balls.
Restrooms sbould be used for
all such acts fl grooming.
Tbe foil~ · are considered
inapp O)l'iate and unacceplaUe
ftr boys ID wear to school:

Insignia · of 11D8pproved
organizationi on clolbbtg, ·
cWlan of regular style siD1s
openmwe than oaebutbtfrom
lite IDp, outdoor type jackets In
a classroom eJI!I!pt with tbe
approval of the classr.oom
teacher, shirttails oulllide tbe
trwsers e:rcept fGr !lljiiiU'I! cut
shirttails, l!lltremely tight..
fi~ 1r oocJeen b01 s of
any type (boys are eiiCOin£ed
ID wear dress slacks or dean
washable trousers, i!M')nclng
blue jeans, or ~ to
acbool), neck pendan'B, beads,
medals on chains, etc. worn
outside the shirt if they are
noisy, unaafe, or inappO)I'iate.
Bop are to wear SOlD with
appropriate ~. Senda)s
may be worn wilbout socks.
Bop are not to comb their hair
in cla881'001118 or balls.
Restrooms sbould be used for
all such acts fl 8f"'O''ing
This dre8a code lltall lie
reviewed anmglly by the board ,
of education. Sttggeallons for

Grim, Jimmy Queen, M. L.
Kelly.
.
Blnalene M. Kelly, MfTOD
BaiJeY,DcinSayre,BeltySayrt,
Oma Nelaoo, Alberta Koehler,
John Nub, Alma R. Fltdl,
Mary E. ll;ylell, Michael E.
JllaiDe, Lawteoce Manley, Jr.,
FranCes Manley, RoDe Oiler,
Mrs. Ernest Bowles, Mary
Frazier, Nancy Ac~, W.
D. Bricldes, LQcllle Haggerty,
Myrtle Warren, Dorothy L.
Wright, Thelma McDaniel,
Nellie Price, Mrs. Mae Lewis,
E. B, Yost, Lucille DaVis, Kitty
M. Lowe, Florence Custer, E. C.
Haggerty, Martha Haggerty,
William E. Slater, Bertha
Knapp, Iva Turner, Eddie
Burkett, Bob Pooler, Lillian
McGhee, Dorothy Baker, Paul
Haynes, Jolui Blosser.

LOCAL TEMPS

I

Trust us.

Raymond St. Jacques

R

-PiusGeraldine Chaplin

(Color)

GP

Saturday Only
Augusl28
Double Feature
PIECES OF
DREAMS

Labor Invited into Decisions

Lauren Hutton
you can trus t us Ia co me up wilh lhe right answers.
And help you solVe them .

POMEROY
. NATIONAL BANK
POMEROY

Robert

Forster

GP
- Plus-

WHICH WAY
TO THE FRONT?
Jerry Lewis
Jan Murry

(Color)

WEDNESDAY'S NEWSPAPER AD
SHOULD HAVE •AD •·.. •

Member Federal Reserve ~ystem
Ml!mber Federal Deposi t Insurance Corporafion

•

.,

.

•· • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
.

••
Shoe Box Friends! •
••
e
••
• WE ARE NOT VERY CLEAN
••
• OUR WINDOWS ARE BOARDED UP
•
BUT
••
•
OUR atEERFUL SERVICE IS THE SAME •
•
••
:
••
••
•
•• We Will Be Open Saturday ·Aug. 28 ••
••
•
For
Regular
Selling
••
••
•
••
:•
Watch F"' O~r .Fin Sale
.• THE SHOE BOX, MIDDLE~RT
••
............................... .•
e•
•

•
•

•

'

.

''SIIOU FOR F.REE .CLUB" IS GOING. FULi. TILT

Since 1872

Fridays 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.

·

AND

CORRECTION!

On

.

WASHINGTON - DEMONSTRATING ITS concern over •
stroog unioo oppositiCII ID Its eeonomlc plan, the admi'listra~ , •
bas invited organi....t labor to help draft lite aecGIICI pbaae of the
)l'ogram, wlicb will follow the current !Mklay wage-price fn!ele. •
The offer. was carried personally . nwr.lay by Labor •
secretary James D. Bodgsoo to AFI,.CIO President ·Geoqe •
Meany, lhe leader of a cb.lrus of labor CCIIIplain1a tile e&lt;&gt;mmic •
wogram favors big business at the expenae of worting people.
·
It was lbe first time theadminlstratioo had clllllllted labor on •

RUTLAND

All Accounts Insured Uo To S20,000.00

Elberfelds l.n Pom~roy

;:~;;::::::::G~~th~e;)l'~ogram;;;·~ann~~~ed~by~~~;
·~t:Ntt;GII~A;~;·~lS:·~. . . :

Serving Meigs Counry

Continuous Service

MONTGOMERY, ALA. - GOV. GEORGE C. WaDace called
whether their cbildniubould lie
Wsed to scbools against their wiD and be asked tile Alabamt!
legislaliD'e to pass ll!lantibusing law. Accelerating bls pwb to test
President Nb:on's ''sincerity" oo the busing Issue, Wallaoe went
befcre the state bouse of representatiVes and SU~~Kested parems
rather than federal judges rmcl federal agencies know wbetber
their cbildreD sbould attend schools they ...., assigned under
federal court orders.
Be aaid parents sbould make that delermlnation and if basing
was detrimental to their clildren'a welfare to ask school officiah
to admit them to the schools they attended last year. "I am not
advocating civil disobedience," he said.
~paren1aTIIIl'sday. to decide

"THE HAWAIIANS"

Whatever yo ur linancial problems or oeeds may be,

n.3

2 PIECE RUBBER CAR MATS
No. 2310

FROftf .
QNLY

Hecll's Reg.

'3.99

•2·"

.

-

~

Neil Sanders, prlndpal of Wubingbln !Jcbonl, llllllllllditlty fundi In -•a t •
classroom into a modem library for lbe elementary scbool. The old library was In
a hallway with no reading space. One thousand children will ha-.e a new reading
lilrary ftr the small sum of $800.

Your lnvikd Guest

tmts

Oearing and cooler looigbl
Low in 41111 to low liGI. Mastly
sunny Sunday and Mmday.
1fi8bs in mid 70s to Ills. Fair and
cool Sunday night. Low In 41111 to
low 50s north and 5GB to low fill

Reaching More

TMn 11,000

Devoted To The Greaur Middle Ohio Valley

south.

VOL VI

BY HOBART WIL80N, JR.
G~POUS - Approximately 3,000
pupils returning to classrOOIIIS for lhe 1971'12 school term lit the Galllpolis District
"I day wiD note more than $15,000 in
liltlding and equipment im)l'ovements
.._ clesses adJourned In June.
'lbill, coupled with many new services
and ~. b the result of an all.out
effort by the Gallipolis Board of
Education, lite lldmlnistratlon and school
employees to develop a school system
which will have educational opportunities
for every student in lhe district.
New services and wograms are :
A speech and hearing therapist wbo
will work with elementary cbUdren;
kindergarten clrsses at every elementary
school; eight new vocational p-ograma
which will encourage students to learn
while they earn (SS students will be
working in the community and attending
school one.Jtalf day while another 44 pupils
will be working part-time in school).
Also, five new courses are available
for high school pupils, giving GAHS a total
of 79oflerlngs. Too, art in both elementary
grades and high school will be greatly
enhanced .with another part-time art in(Continued on page 2)

+

WEAlltER REPORT

SUNDAY, AUGUST 29, 1971

Pomeroy-Middleport

NO. 31

Families

FOUR SECTIONS

36 PAGES

Ne:rt:o 15 CENTS

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Dealers Get R elie
WASBlNGTON (UPI) -&amp;oplte !be
wapp'ice freere, tile Cost of Uring
Owtdl ruled Saturday that car dealers
may raise tile pril:ea of trnmodels to the
liglwst level they cbll'ged for lf7l
modela.
Tbe councll made the dedllaa in
lelll'llst to complo!nll from car dealers,
l'eP't operators, farm ....... and otbets
wbo said f!ley were caQibt in 1111 oat.of1 ""' low prille or wage period Aug. 14
when Prs'!ftlt Niml aNWUJCed tbe

rre-.

new programs are introduced in the faD,
and farm workers wh09e wages fluctuate
between harvest seasons.
Weber said the government had
received about 1,700 complaints since the
free7.e s~ but that most "evaporated"
wben Pfi'SOIIS understood the rules.
He said officials of the Office of
Emergency Preparedness and the in·
ternal Revenue Service, who enforce and
explain lhe ~. bave bad ''remarkable
auccess In wbat you might caD Jawboninl!"
-convincing penons ID abide by the rules
without laking legal action.
The council said firms could choose
eilber of tw.o period&amp; In determining their
aeanal prices -the lime between lite .
usual seasonal rise rmcl Nov. 13, 1970, 1r
(Continued on page 2)

first official tracing there since Friday
when tile yen was allowed ID float. That
1181 slill10per Ct!!lt above the point where
NiDin reportedly would like the dollar to
setll.e in reiatbt ID the Jap:neee currency.
IMing a briefing, Arnold R. Weber, tile
council's et&lt;ecutlve director, said that
firms that ordinarily raise prices during
the period when lite 9Gday ~ Is In
effect may do ao, provided:
- The raise Is large rmcl n'Miciated with
a sperlflrdale,'sucb u the introduction of
new cars in the fall, higher prices oo the
labor Day weekend or the start of a

F1 wbere on the -·mlc frmt :
-QpniJed labor CCIIlinued to aiticiJe banest-.

sb'alegy for 'WO"ng lbe . ~ lbe Southwest and tile Caribbean, which
tradtilllally raise their room rates during
policy.
-Jn Japan, ibeclolbr"'"lhel $to I )HI' the winter se non, broadcast networks
Ceilt in relatioo to tile Jopa' ymln tile wbocbarge ligber aclvertilling ra'- wllm

Georgia Parents to Decide

Double F.. ture Program
COTTON COMES TO
HARLEM
(Color)
Godfrey Cambridge

---

announced today.
Ferguson said low bidder for the entire amount of bollds wu
0tase Manhattan Bank, New York and First National Bat* fl
Oticago and Associates. Tbe auditor said actual interest to be
paid on the bonds ranged from 6 pel. fGr
million to mature in
1973, to4pet.for$5.3miUion,IDmalurein1992.
'

stale department, created out of old unused ball space. The
offtces...., constructed by acbool maintenance persoMel at
a cost of $700.

n.,...,..,

A good time for comfortable family shopping all over the
store - Furniture and carpet and accessories on the 13rd
Floor- Womens and Girls and Infants wear . Dress fabrics sewing notions - upholstery - slipcovers. draperies. curtains
- luggage · Kirsch drapery hardware • window shades • bed
spreads ·small rugs and the complete Music Departmentall on the 2nd floor. Mens and Boys wear • complete
housewares • handbags - jewelry . billfolds • hosiery _
stationery • school supplies - watches &amp; clocks • Hallmark
cards and wrappings· candy- lingerie. sheets. pillow casestowels and domestics- all on the 1st Floor.

Temperature in downtown Ohio Bonds Go at 5.068%
COLUMBUS - 01110 'ii'IIL SElL $100 millioo in bigbway
Pomeroy Friday at 11 a.m. was
70 degrees under partly cloudy improvemellt bonds to a group of invesbnenl firms fer a Jaw net
interest rate fl SJI689 pet., state AlldiiDr Joseph T. F~
skies.

Mrs. Janet Welbabcit, llealtb Occupations Coordinator,
and Roger Brmn'IH', OccupaUoaal Work Elperience
Coordinator, are in their - oflkes now required by the

l!!lf1!ciWI of the ~tlan'• ......,jr -'lbe lnc:r " baa been made for the
....-. 'ftle Aamcat ..... ''m of put 1bree years.
lltate, C:O.ty and Mmldpal
In additioo to car dealers, tbe ruling Is
met in MinrwepolJa, Minn.. to din• Cijitt!ted to lltlllist resor1a, In F1orl!la and

Elberfelds Are Open
· Until9 Tonight
and Saturday Night

News••. in Briefs

!f

y en Fl..0ftl
·

Speak_ing of Schools

.

.

Ge«ge Quillen, 011"1' FOu., Margaret• Jutice, Tbomu
Ge«ge. E. Batey, Jerr)' E. Justice, YYOIIIIe Wllaon, Glenn
Fooderick, F1ora Bailey,~ B. Limbert.

Francis, Leonard Burney,
Edward R. MarUD. 'JbomN
Wi1JU¥n Wyatt, Marjorie B. R. RAialb, DurulbJ ll R \
Grogan, Sue Grogan, ~ MiS. Shawn A. Glbbl, Bmrilr
Aull, Patricia ~. Celes- WhitllngiOn, Wanda Sdmler,
1a Bulb, . JCII!n (k"ovea, John 1bcmu, Nell DeWees,
Palrlcia Grovee, George Blct· Floyd 0. Boyer, Margaret
ett, Sr., Rbodil Bactett, Boyer, Thelma Bo,er, Bellie
Sr., Mn!. ·J. w. Morris, l W. Ashley, JGiul Bigellnr,l)orothy
Morris, Richard Wilt, Louise Bl&amp;elow, Naomi H..mr, Mrs.
Rhodes, Nellie Winston, Cherole Racbel Qoaic, Mrs. Racbel G.
Burdette, Eva Barlley, Jan 0 . .W'dson, Clyde H. WlDes, Glacb'a
Durst, Mrs. Ellen Smilli, Wm. W'mes, Qlrtls Roalb, DoU,y
F. Slnith, Robby R. Roush, Mowery,lda Mae Martin, Rosa
Elaine Hart, Dorothy McCloud, Searls, Am~*~. ·RIChards, A.
Charles McCloud, Jo Ann Grueser, Anna S. Grueaer,
While, Ann c. Bailey, 'Betty Jo Phoebe Lee, Sara Boyles,
Martin, Ralph G, Martm, Er· .Louise Sldersble rmcl ooe name
nest WeDs, Cecil Ray See.
indeciP!Jefa . , ~
Russell E. Miller, Della L.
Miller, J. F. Sanders, Uzzle M.
Davidson, Larry L Gladwell,
· "
.
Mn!. M. D. Bricldes, Keimie Theresa . Becker, Charles
·(Continued from page 1l
See, Kim Neal, Cafl Neal, McElhinny, Gertrude third of all Japanese exports.
Rosemary . HyseU, Marie McElhinny, Paul McDaniel, Upwardrevaluali..,,oftheyen
Manley, Donna Polcyn, Ancil David c. Jacks, Margaret would make Ibis much feared
Crites, WOOdrow Call, Grace McDaniel, Mary Baily, Judith trade war W)III!CI!SII8l'.
Call, Donald H..Call, W'tlliam R. Fraaer, M7fon R. Mill~, Mary Tbe Nlxoo p ognm 118elf waa
Biggs, Carolyn L. Biggs, Roger, Mary Neutzliilg, Ann a damagiD(I blow to Prime
· Russell, Morris Neiltzllng, Minister Eisaku Sato wbo has
SetBessieAihey,AliceEuler,Ruby built his career on aligning ·
e
.
RusseU, Robert W. Richardson, Japan's foreign policy to that fl
Dolores M. Richardson, lhe United.Slates. Ills prestige
Frances A. Parker, Ruth E. suffered wben Nixon 8IIIIOUIICed
revlsiCIIaballbesougbtfromall Johnson, Isabel Wlnebrenner, '8 visit to Peking and wben he
ClOIICel'lled.
Mrs. John Tyree, Mrs. Annie announced the new economic
IlwiDbetherespCIISibUityfl Ohlinger, Minnie Jackson, policy Aug. lS.
every professional staff
member to enforce the
)l'ovisi- of t1is dreaa code. A
special nill"'idblli\Y for dW!g
so belongs to the hcmeroom
(Continued from page 1)
leacber wbo Is tile flnt to see
'
we
can
Uve wllb In grades 7-12. If you doo't unlite student each dav.
In
the
'
enfcneM!t of Ibis code the
derstand the code, call your lldlool and they will give
~ patliern of procedlZ'I!s
you tis ~C1'D18tl111. We loot fanrard to tile
111ta11 be fallowed,
cooperatioo of paren1a, ~ts, """""" and adAll violatlclls wiD be reported
mlnilltrators in succeasfully Implementing tbla
to lbe principal promptly and In '
revilled code. Part of the code requires Ill! 811!"181
written form.
study of II. 'lbls will be an on-eWig !A'OC! ss darllw the
First violation, warning to the
school year.
student by the principal.
DIDO'S SUPEIUNTENDENTS were called to
Set&lt;llllhiolatiCII,COIIlactwith
Columbua Wedneeday foc a~ wltb Dr. Eua,
the pareot by lite principal.
our Stale Superlnoendent. Frlllll tis meeting we
'l1ird violatiOD, puop•nsJ!Ii of
learned that there Ia slill great CCIIfullon repnllns
the student by the principal.
lite total impllcatl01111 II. tile national Rfleilrice
~.
.
~ details and forms to
lqlement Sec;tion -.111'.1 sba11
We also gained SCIIIe inlllgl!t Into the fi!N!!Jd•l
be develGped by tile building
problems that we will face • a reeult of the state
principals. The profesalonal
austerity program amQU!Ced by Goven!or Gllllun.
staff will lllve lhe complete
'lbls move wiD signlfiCIII11)' rMmlnlllh lbe ~
support of tbe board of
Inadequate lllale IUpporl of education. 'lbill ill a
education in the immatter of reelly grave c:onvan.
p!emontation of the provisillll
Attending litis meeting from Melga County were
of the dress code.
. Mr. Bowen, Mr. Riebel, Mr. Morrlaoo and .,aelf.

RACINE - ~rs . Earl General Hospital.
Holman, Racine, is a patient al
Tbe identification of the pilot and COililot were wilbbekl
Holzer Medical Center awaiting pending notificatioo of ned of kin, autllorilies aaid. Roger
surgery. Her room number is Rhodes, 30, a son of the victim, was able to climb out of the rubble
234.
of the borne but escaped unhurt.

Tonight, Aug. 27

Improved Schools Ready

-

(Continued from page 1)

DRIVE· IN

B~ot

c0 d

Dr

IN HOLZER

M~SON

o n ·N o v e m b e r

'

=ul ~~ · ~
A .aecoocl referendwn today Jill' Turner, Mildred Nub, Dal
oast
~ e .or lhe
• ' . : had challenged lhe recent ac- HyaeU, WllliamE.II;ylell, Ellie
.
.
remam ~ ~elp tioo of Middleport council to E. Montgomery, Mary Jo
ge . le de~·
'd i"'P""" a $5 permissive auto Pooler, J!)mnett RaWSIIII, Zora
mington, and moving north'::tn n . n
license tax for street main- J. RaWSIIII, Ora Rice, Nellie R.
ward at 20 m.p.~.
y.
~.:-: 11 Y tenance and coos1ruction in Bel!, Daniel R. Rice, Marjorie
Gale wmds extended 200 and ::second~ 11 . 45 ::::·•. Middleport. . ..,
E. Taylor, John Dill. Kelmelb
miles ID lite east and 75 mil
.
·
· Last year ' a referendum LitUe, COllene Dunfee, Belen
lhe west fl the siOrm's center. to 2· 15 p.m.
decisively eraaed a similar Carpenter, Patricia Ridman,
A hurricane watch was in EASTERN IHGH Scbliol will action by council. Tbe tu this Dorlba Jenkinson, Louise
effect from Cape Fear below hold classes all day M!lllday, year was approved in ordinance Queen.
WilmingiDn to Cape Lookout on with the bus schedule to remain No, 977-n on July 26th.
the famed Outer Banks. Gale
Petitions filed with Mid- Susie Blaine, Jolm Coolpton,
warnings extended from the the same, John !Uebel, Eastern dleport c;terk·Treasurer Gene Naomi Com.pton, Dennis
l)outh Carolina border ID Cape Local superintendent, said Gralesbow Ralph Martin, Mary Saelens, Mary 4'on, Ar,thur H.
May, N.J. . .
.
today.
ijysell, Eddie Martin, Michael Skinner, Genevieve E. Fanner,
Tbe area 18 storm-WISe from
Blaine, Anna S. Gru~ and Bessie Oliver, Lee&lt;ma WOod;
many past encounters with &amp;JUTHERN LOCAL Scbliol Bobby .E. Payne lhe committee Mary Wells, Betty Lane, Mabel
lurricanes, but residents went District will hold classes all day that filed the petition for the Hysell, Bannab Greenlee, Jane
~h'barotteug~ thde P~~cauti~ntiary ~~=Y th~~~~'!; : ~ . new referendmn. Their legal D. Stover, Lucy MeKinney,
.
~ own opera ons schools of the district, Letart, agent was lhe .Athens lawyer James J. Haggerty, Paulinl: M.
wben Doria became a threat to
Paul J. Gerig.
·
Reuter, LarryJeffeis,SarabM.
the coast Th
. ursday. .
Racine, Syracuse, Southern ~rale said today the Smith, Dorothy !lmdl, Bertba
The N tiona! Hurri
Cen Junior High and lhe Senior
. a . , . cane.
• Hi h
referendmn . will be on the Baley, Ben R. Batey, L9uise
ler smd Dorias winds will be
~ce of lunches will be the Middleport ballot Nov. 2.
McElhinny, EmmeUBugbes,C.
slow ID diminish after itstrik~s
Ia
ts Signers of the petition were P. Bradbury, C. P. C,allagber,
26
land.beca~ part of the Cll'· =~:eb~t.J:'.dewill~ Verner H. See, Iva M. See, CarlaSaelens,W. H.Dunfee,D.
culation~remam?verwater,
Pauline Anderson, Cathy Er- A. Milam, Ethel Milam, Louise
from whi~b the troptcal storms ~":::.:~ =~ ! : : t : win, Karen Sprouse, T. F. Johnson, Jobn W. Sprouse, Dm
draw their .strength. .
Hawkins, Roma Hawkins, Mrs. M. Ervin, Emerson J&lt;mes, John
Heavy rams of fOU: mches or same stops, it was reported. Edgar Wolfe, Haiel VanCooney, Lyons, R'"""'''lry Lyons, Julia
more were .predtcted for
.
.
eastern portto~s of North
th
Carolb!a, Virginia, !'ftll'Yland
ern
ess
and Delaware, causmg some
flooding.
"'"e'
AWARDED DEGREE
Two accidents were inA school dress code for l!lllnmelyl.mg tr nnrJean hair.
Janet
E.
Humphrey, vestigaled Thursday by the Southern Local Junior and All balr wiD be cut and 'WU'II
Pomeroy, was one of 138 Meigs County Sheriff's Dept. Senior Bigb Schools has been abovetheeyes,a~theears,
students of atmberland College with no injuries reported in adopted by lite Sol!lbem Local and a~ tile collar; beuds,
who received !heir bachelor either.
Scbool Board.
mutacbes, sideburns that
degree during commencement On SR 124 Thursday at 2 a.m. The 'code sbesses that all ''l!llteod more than e11e lDdl
ex.er.cises on Aug . 21 at 1zry D. Circle, 23, Racine, Rt. students are encouraged to use below the bottamfltlleearlolte
W111
b
K
J
good taste in dress and in lr are IIICJI'e lhan two incbee In
·tam~ urg,
y. anet 1• rounding a curve lost control grooming. Important aspects of width, underwear type T-t!Uta,

Car0 lin C
·

•

fSchooiNotesl

.

Carpenter
Homemaker
Of the Year

Guns Stolen
From Homes
POMEROY - The Meigs County
lherlfrs deparbnent is investigating the
breaking and entering of two homes in
wlich five guns were stolen some time
Friday.
Mrs. &lt;ltarles Salser, Bunker Hill,
Pomeroy, Rl 2, reported a Stevens single
bsireJ 12 gauge shotgun was 1aken froo1
ber home some time between 5:30 and 9
p.m. 'l1tere was no ooe borne at lite time.
There was no sign of forcible entry. The
house had not been locted.
Mrs. Lomle Hudson, Kingsbury Rd.,
npcrlied that entry was ftrced Into her
bame tmougb a ballroom door locted by a
bolt 111111 cbaln. ApparenUy 1aken were a
.22 cal. RemlngiOn rifle with scope, a .22
Rem1ngtm rifle with a clip, a 2Q.ga~e
llingJe barrel sbotgun and a 12 or 16 single
barrel sbolgun.
MCIIey and a camera were not
touched. Tbe incident occurred between
7:38 a.m. and 7 p.m.

RIITLAND - Mrs. James Carpenter,
Coolville, a native fl Rolland, Is tile new
Ohio Hcmemaker fl tile Year crowned at
lhe Stale Fair In Coltnnbus Saturday.
Mn!. Carpenter, whose lwt"'and ...
'principal at Federal-Bockillg lli8b Scbool,
Is the da~ht.er of Mr; and Mrs. ll«mrr

Parker. Rutland.
Mrs. Carpenter, formt!rly SIISJ'
Parker, and ber lntsband, Jim, are tile
parenia of fOlD' year old Jay. James
Carpenter is the soo mMr. and Mrs. w. R.
Carpenter, Mulberry Ave., l'liudoy.
Mn!. Carpenter was awarded $1110 In
cash, a silver cofflle and tea service valued
at more than $3110, the traditional bouquet
of carnations and a c:ca-sage.
In weeks to CGme, Mrs. Carpmter wiD
make appearances on radio and televlsim.
Her picture will als9 be used in tile IGA
promoti1111 througbout Ohio. IGA was the
sponsor of the coolest.
After winning, Mn!. Carpen~ bad ber
picture taken with Mrs. John Gilligan, the
governtr's wife, and LaiU'el l.ft Schafer,
Miss Ohio.

Budget Dose

1

11fE SILVER SPADE was one of many giant earthmoving machines viewed by 47 GaUipolls LiCliiB and guests
who chartered two special buses ID Cadiz, Ohio Thursday to
IDur Hanna Coal Co., strlpmine operations. Wblle deep

I

TB · Testing
POMEROY - The Meigs County
Health Department will conduct an lmmunizatioo and TB testing JI'Oiflllll in lite
Meigs Local School District chuing lite
1m-12 school year. Tbe Meigs Local
Board of Educatioo, meeting last week,
granted a release ID Debme MaPles to
·attend Kyger Creek Local School lllstrict
and appointed Mn!. Nancy White, Mrs.
Doris Buckly and Charles Bartels,
teachers. Tbe board commended lhe
custodial atall for lhe fine Job they did In

-

JoHN li. CASEY, an ~ of
lbe Gllllia County District Ubrary lbe
put 12 years, wiD retire at the end of
tis DICIIIb. Prior to Joining the library
stall, Mr. casey aerved the GaDipollo
l'lllt Olflce as a letter carrier for 35
;,e. ., retiring Dac. 31, 19119. (See story

ADDISON - Law enforcenent of-

Gnf'l&amp;ie I),

'Saturday into a possible boating accident
In the Ohio River behind lite Kyger Creek
Power 1'18111.
SearchoperatiWISwere cooducted late
Friday night for three boya reported to
llave been clinging ID a c"""....t boat.
Middleport 811d Gallipolis volunteer
Bremen, Kyger Creek Plant employees,
tbe U. S. Coast Guard, and Gallia County
Qvll Defeme volunteers aearcbed the
mer for awroDm&amp;lely three bouts befcre
ll!lting their operaUOIIB in thick fog.

,..__l

The board pnted Anlett Smith,
(Cattinlled Cll pace I)

'
GAWPOUS - The Gallla County
Board of Commissioners are codefendants in a $101,4&amp;o damage action
filed Friday in Coounort Pleas Court.
Kemeth w. Boster, 1121 Second Ave.,
filed the actioo u a reeult of a traffic
accident Aug. 29, 19118, on Vine SL Named
as co-defendant was James L. Waugh,

130 Lifted from Bag
Of Newspaper Change

Crown City.
According to the petition, Boster was
s•..vd in a line of tralflc oo Vine St.,
waiting to liD'n left into the Gal11polls Boat
Club when his
was struck In the .... by
a Gallia County Bigbway Department ·

car

truck operated by Waugh.
Boster aays his car was damaged In
lhe UIIGIIIII fl$480 and lle suffered injuries
which required medical eiJ)eltsel fl $1,000.
He aeelts $101,410 for datnages, Injuries
Md lea of inclme incurred. Be demands a
jury trial.

•

preparing the buildings for the opening of
school.
Jolui Arnott wu granted a leave of
abaence to do his student leaching, and
Leo Kennedy, Sr., was appcinted to
replace Amott ftr six weeb . The board
also granted Amll!l Tillis, bus driver, a •
day leave of abaence and adopted a
revilled luncbroom policy,
The board considered a request fnm
F. C. Taylor tolay a gas One across tbeend
zone of lite foo1baU field in Rutland. Tbe
request Is being referred ID lite county.
wosecutor.
FolD' requests for early graduatioo
were postponed. Proposaio to improve 1be

llc'tals cootinued an investigation !ale

Creel!

Included in that amount was
$710,nt.IIOin the General Fund, $)30,162 50
in bonds and $4t,8'15.110for the LwcbrOCIIl
Account.
I
The board aasigned Mrs. Mila Woods
u remedial redng inltrul:br, and Title I
aides employed Wd'e Mrs. Martha Kelley
and Mrs. Sara Plants at Addaville
Eletnenlary; Mrs. c.rot Buck Jllld Mrs.
N•ncy Preston at Cbeshire-Kyger
Elementary' Otbers .... Died for the
!A'ogn.tl were Gary MiniAlll, Gnidance
Coonselor; Mrs. Esther Gordon,
lJoctieeper; Mrs. Doris Roush, clerll;
Mrs. Robefta Kail and Nina Dillanl,
aecrellries.
The resiiPwtion of Harry~.
a bul cktftl', - ......... Mn.'flaJ
Th-• ••• -piOJed ..1 bla

Program

Assured
playgiWII! •t Satio!on1 IIIII PUtnetOJ
were g.. d, but no aciCII was liken.
The boaniiiMrd a repcrt CGIICt!l1ling
the fire sllaplsber in1pectiGn and tbe
oprniqfof&amp;dralnfrom thealdminubaft
located •bove PomerOJ Elementary
Scbool.
'l1te bowel a1ao di•'lSS d tile em. ploymeutofei&amp;btCCIIDiy..,...WedacatiCII
project t:mtiOJ 1:11, -4- tile CGIIIei)UeDCell
of the wJCt price freele and Gov.
Gllllpn's austerity IA'GII
Al!e•Jbc were Fral* w. Poria', .
:sittnt;
Virgil King, Hlnm Sinter,
11
Joe Sayre, George Barpa- ..... inlendenl, IIIII Larry Mcarlatt, Aast. Sapt.

wu.

Ohio River Searched

To Sl Million County .Party to
budget totaling
Friday mplln a
special
of
Kyger
Board 8101,4()0 Action
of Education.
·

CHESHIRE - A
SIM0,941.50 was approved
meeting the

mining Is 9peeled to IDa
' (Q In lie ,....,, Mdp
area, with the cJaef deve10)I'nent bBnl at Salem Ceder,
principally to 81WlY the new Garin Pilot at a...blre, tbe
market for stripped coal aho is9peeled to Improve.

'

OOG\Pl'AIN8 - Dennlo ElciUJCW, left, and Jim AmsiJary, rigltt, are cocaptalna of the EaPern Eaglet wbo will open dtfe,.. of tbelr Soatbern Valley
Canfereoce title In aboat two -lal. C.ter ill new bead coach Roger Kirkhart,
wbo ftl!t to lcboolln lbe ENtern Dlatrlct until he was ln10 bla 8th grade year in
lqb llritool. tbell moved away. Elc:hl...- ill• eenlor, lbree..year letterman, at end
and fullliack. A""'-'7 Is tbe quarterblc~ .

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
sheriff's deputies Friday investigated a
breaking and entering atlhe residence of
Mrs. Peggy Hale, Vinton. Mrs. Bale
reported someone took approximately ~
from her daughter's newspaper change
bag. Nothing else waa taken.
Deputies investigated a sbooting allhe
residence of Mrs, T!w•n1-. Rt. S25, wbo
said scmeooe sbot • bole In the rur glaas
of bel' cw pulled near ber illlllle. '!1ley
also went to the Green Glblee to Jn..
vestig11te a fight but made no art'dlll .

'fbeaearcbbepnaft!r aD II*'Wfi4ifitd
wcanan caller tdd 1be G.llla Olunty

ilbeiilf's dtt*lmeit that 1bree bo)'l bad
been beard yelling fir belp dinglng to •
caPBIIed ''Jn'lllboal" IJehin! the Itner
Cleek Plantllftl' toward the West VlrgiDia
shore•
Jay Crat w, a ditpalicba', IIIDIIIICIIed lbe Mldd'epnrl Fire Dtpw bnent .
wtacb ills a CCIIIract with Qwslthe Twp.

~=- -

Mlddlep«t
hmGurd
lbe
Gallipolll
Fire
t, o.t
and GaUla Catmly Qtlllhi I .
Ofllcla1a _.., tdill• MlkC SaWdey
fo Jee if IDJ mj [ftl pel- tiporll t.J
been filed . .

HURT ON SANDWI'
GAWPOUS- Larry D. Balloll'ttoera, 12,
son of Mr. and Mrs. RIIII,J W. Baver,
Eurelta Star RL, wu almiUed at the
Holier Medical Center at t: :5 p.m. Fridly
foil~ an acddmt.m the~~- Tral:e
High Sc:hooll Foolball Field. Baver wu
injured during I SlllldJot ' !biD pme·

�1-Tbs So""ayTimea-Senllnel,SUnday,Aug, 29,1971

.

Qualifiers

Starting Times in Elementary Schools, High School, Set

Improved Schools

Announced

(Continued frOm page 1)

IPdal pl'll8l'aDII for primarr IJGiipl
aDdu- will leu1d!C" *llltlea abou1d

. uiQg aperlenc•
for }qlill who need lndivkmal u.tructlm.
In lb! put, }qllls have bem acocustcmed to repainted cfil!,. and waill
and refinished Doors at lbe apentng of
~. Not.ao Ilia year.
Among llie many bulldlng lmJ)I'Oftmellts are:
.
·New occupational wort experleDce
41ftkes, coostructed by achool maiD. IIIIlance pa8!011e], f1110; cafelierla
equipment at Clay and Waahl.Dgtml
EJeneatary and GA!m totsllqc . . . of
wJacb 75 pet Will ll!nded by tile slllle.
A new drlver's edDcallon· ~rake
ohmd•l«, !!"'"""&lt;! by tbe slllte;wUI be
blalled sbortly· at GABS, permltlq
approximately 400 students to take
ctiver's educatim IIJ'Qagllwt tile year.
Only local C&lt;Bt la IDainlenance, .,nllm
llld insurance. 'lbe limutat« will be
abared with area achool districts.
PUrcbase of a new pbyslcal eurclae
mac!Dne for $2,7110, in cooperstioo will tbe
atbletic department, la .19peeted to aid
Individuals participating in physical
educstim progralils. ~
New wcatiCII81 f'CI'•ipment ctWtq
$17,000 will help train 31 students in
vocational aulllnecbanics. Neil Sanden,
WllllbiJislon FJementsry pri~~'ipll, used
activity lunda to coovert a c1assrolm Into
a modern library fer elementary ~.
The new library will sene 1,000 }qllls at a
C&lt;Bt of $1100.
Kenlm Adkins bas been employed as
ICbool psycb~oglst. An old hallway bas
been cooverted Into an atlractlve mvdtw
area fer parents and students who wlsb to
cmfer with Mr. Adkins.
Six thousand dollars of new vocatiCII81.
business education equipDiint, with IOp:l
fuDding frcm the state, bas been pi!'·
cbased fer tile blgh school vo-&lt;!d bouin ss

'

J)I'O¥e to be ucellent II

.HAROLD WISEMAN illllpeclll new cafeteria equipment .wblcb bas been inllllled at 08)' Elementary, WllllbiJislon Elementary and Gallla Academy. The
-.ooototal project was 75 pet. funded by tbe state. Tbe new blgb school cafeteria
.m be In operalicll m Tue8day proriciiDgafuDbot lunch rc.: licma.

'

..

room.

New de8ts and boob totaling .,;.

have been purcbased. More thaD balf of
Ibis CIJSI ($1.,800) came fnm the sale of t*l
desks and books during the smmw

mmtbs.

•

1be healing system in tile junior blgb
building was completed this swmner at a
c:oat of $25,000. This will greatly imp ove
tbe beallb conditiOIIS of students and belp
1 nmove pollutim from tbe community.
'lbe coal storage area has been made Into
an equipment room and pbysical fibless

Ralald iheta, new vocatlCII8lauliiipthnl... lllltnlciGr Is abown llellln8 up
tbe- abap wJacb will provide two- classes to lbe juniors and seniors of Gallia
An·""''l· Tbe- vocaticlull equipment cost $17,000, a small price to train 38
JOIIIII men.

room.

r

Additional parking space was
devel~ in the rear of Gallla
lligb School for acmwustrators and faculty

,ole........,

-

•

Otris-Craft Boat Division

James N. M. Davis, bigh school principal Is shown In the
newly equipped high school wcatiiX\81 business room. SiJ:
'

In the fullre, llbrary facllities will be
inslllled at Clay and Rio Grande
Elementary """Ms.
Belole tbe lfl6.71 achool term ended,
Memorial Field· received new goal posts
(n:quiled by 19'11 rules) and the gridirm

was tu;ceded.
Wilbln.tbe past lwo weeks, new grid
bleachers wen: installed at a cost of ~
]OtUimalely fl,OOO. Coupled with existing
aeats, Memorla1 Field now bas the largest
aealiDg capacity of any school In the
&amp;lutbeastem Ohio League - 4,800 per...... Tlis was made poiiSible by the
atbletic department, In cooperatim With

Budget
(~llnued

from !M'ge 1)
cUstodian at Addavllle, a four months
leave of absence. Luther Amos was hired
as his ~ary replacement.
· The board will accept bids on a 1962
Ford pick-up until noon, Sept. 7: The truck
will be SGid to the highest bidder.
MORE LESSONS

Charg
· e of ·::c:~::yit!':O~~~~;~:

,.

1

~

POMEROY - The Meigs
Local Board of Educallon
Saturday announced a free
luncb policy for. Meigs Local
achool children unable to pay
the fuD price of a meal. Local
IChool afflctals have adopted
the following family size and
inc&lt;me scale to assist them in
determining eligibility (No. in
. family, income range in which
free
lunches
will
be
authorized):
1 - from $2,1141 to $2,670.
2 - from $2,671 to $3,310.
3 - from $3,311 to $3,!HO.
4 - from $3,1141 to $4,530.
5 - from $4,531 to $5,110.
6 - from $5,111 to $5,640.
7 - from $5,641 to $6,170.
8 - from $6,171 to $6,650.
9 - from $6,651 to $7,120.
10 - from $7,121 to $7,600
II - from $7,601 to $8,080.
12 - $8,081 to $8,:;60.
For each additional family
member, add: $410 per year to
the income level.
Eligibility determinations are
made on a family basis, that is,
all the children in the same
family attending schools under
tbe jurisdiction of the same
school food authority are to
receive the same benefits.
Families falling within this
scale (s) or those suffering from
unusual circumstances or

13 Attended
Institute
POMEROY-Thirteen Meigs
County youths attended a fourday institute m ''Teenage Jn.
stillle mAlcoholand Drugs" at
Ohio Dominican College,
Cohnnbus, in mid-August.
Nearly all of those attending
participated
through
ICbalanl1pa provided by their
IJChonll, PI'AI, 4-H Clubs, ciYic
and service clubs, industries,
twmie•-dal establishments and
health agencies an&lt;' ' ~art ­
menm.
Attending were Ann&lt; ... ,
Burke, Racine; Torn ,Han
Qisp, lAngsville; Cb.Juy Carol
lkbarl, Racine; Karle Robin
3 ••IIley, Reedaville; Debra
Jo 11aJ, Rulland; Christine
Rf.,"HHI. Mlddlepwt; Cmnie
ElaiDe Warner, Minersville;
'fll4ma1 Roy Cassell, Middllpart; . John
William
I' " 1 , 8)ftculle; Julla Ann
IMIIi, P1.meJ 0)' ; John Harold
Dll, Mlcld!ep«t; Milisa K.
• ..... PwwaO)', and Linda
81Lin 1 Rape, Pomeroy.

' hardships may apply for free
llmches for their children. They
may do so by filling in the appljcation forms sent home in a
:letter to parents. Additional
copies are available at the
princlpal's office in each school.

Apple Grove
NeWS, EVents
·
Friends were sorry to lose a
good neighbor and friend, Mrs.
Orpha Hill. Mrs. Hill was a
faithful member of the _Letart
Fal!-' church and was Janttor
assisted by her granddaughter,
Lorna Bell, of the church for
several years. Funeral semces
were held at the church Monday
afternoon with the Rev. Dale
McClurg officiating. Interment
was in. Letart Falls Cemetery
by Ewmg Funeral Home.
Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Jesse Anderson were Mr ·
and Mrs. Everette Clark .and
children, Shelia and Paul, of
Cottageville, W. Va., Mr. and
Mrs. Lloyd Sayre and son,
Chad, of Minersville and Mrs.
Zelpha Boggess.
Mr. and Mrs. Nornian Roush
and three children of
Charleston spent a weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Don Beegle
and children at Racine..
·
Mr. and Mrs. John Sl!DpSGn
and daughter, Joni, returned to
Pasadena, Texas, after a ten
dayvisitwithMr.andMrs. Ray
Hayman .
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Warner
spent Wednesday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Norris.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hayman
and son , Tate, of Colwnbus
spent Saturday with Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Hayman.~ and
Mrs. Bob Sayre and two
children of Beaver Falls spent
Sunday with the Haymans.
Other ·guets were Mr. and Mrs.
Duane Porter of Industry, Pa.
m Thursday. ,__
•
Mr. •nd Mrs. Hoyt Ferguson
of New Haven and Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Warner enjoyed cam·
ping al Shady Rest Park over
the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernesl Bush
and Mrs. Joe Manuel were
shopping in Parkersburg
Sao urday .

Applications may be sulxnitted _
any time during the school year.
The information provided on the
application will 'be confidential
and will be used only for the
purpose ' of determining
eligibility.
Under the proYisions of the
policy the Assistant Superlntendent will review applications
and determine eligibility. If a
parent is dissatisfied with the
ruling of the local official he
may make a request . either
orallyorinwritingforahearing
to appeal the decision.
George Hargraves,
Superintendent, whose address
is 3rd Street, Middleport; has
been designated as the Hearing
Official. Hearing procedures
are outlined In 'the policy. The
•policy also provides that there
will be no identification of or
discrimination against any
student unable to pay the full
cost of a lunch.
A complete copy of the policy
is on file in each school and in
the office of the Clerk where it
may he reviewed b~any interested person.

l..eamillg Hours

Switched flnnn
-r"'~

Public lJe11UJnd

PT. PLEASANT - Mrs.
Naomia Woodard; teachercoordinator of the Mason
County Learning Center at tbe
Vocational Center on Ohio
River Road, said Saturday
public demand has made
changes In the hours the
Learning Center will be open
necessary. These are, Mmday,
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. to
9:30p.m.; Tuesday, 9a.m. to 4
p.m.; Wednesday, 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. and 6 p.m. to 9:30p.m.;
Thursday, 9a.m. to 4 p.m. and
Friday, closed all day.
These new hours will bee&lt;me
effective this week, be!dnnin.1l
with Monday, Aug. 30.
The Adult Learning Center
offers luilim free claaaes in
Adult Basic Educa~on. subjects
of general in teres!, vocational
subjects, job )l'e[lflratim, and
such hobbles 'as aYiation and
chess. Further lnformatim oo
these classes may be obtained
(,)- Wlwr&gt; umull! you an·
by
calling the Vocational
su;er l,he !e,f:phnne by .')aying
Center,~. Too Center will
PrtJHI.tJ' '"'
\ .~ In l!uly. "Pronto" be closed m Mmday, Sept. 6,
Ill Pans ·' rt•:ldy. •·
Labor Day, a legal· holiday.
1

_,WJ Mad

thouaand dollars of neW vocational businesses educstim
equipment was purchased with 80 pet. funding from the State
Vocationa1 Department.

the Blue Devll Booaters Club. Too, the
]I' essbox was re.!JOV&amp;ted at a cost of $1,300,
making It me of tbe finest In the SEOAL.
OOJclals hope to improve the gridirm
llgbliDg system before the 1971 grid
camii'IP beglna, and next year, the
boosters club will undertake a project to
expand and bnprove the dressing rooms oo
Memorial Field.
&amp;apl Paul F. Kuhn pointed out that
du.e to tile fact Gallipolis bas one of the
better teachers and employees salary
schedules In Southeastern Oblo, new
teachers were selected from 146 applicants.

Kuhn asked, "It is the sincere desire of
the Gallipolis board of educaUm, adminiatraUm and employees to develop a
scliool system whleh will have educational
opportunities for all. We hope that the
cmununlty realizes that all of the many
Improvements have taken place without
requesliDgany additional lases this year."
These are the majiJ!' im]l'ovemenm
which will be noted by slldenla and
parenta In the city school district this fall.
Residents are iDvlted to visit the schooi.S
and ln!pect the district's lmprovemenm.

Car Dealers·

(CmtinuecHrcm page'"IT
the 30dayspreceding,Aug. 14.-'Jbe latter is
GALLIPOUS - A fire of un- the ''base period" m which nonseasonal
determined origin leveled the seven room firms must figure their wages and ]rices.
frame house of the Roger· Vyer family
The specific ieU!ng price la based m the
Friday evening on Blessing Rd., one hall amount received on a ''substantial" (at
mile south of the Northup-Patriot Rd., in least 10 per cent) nwnber of transaction.
Harrison Twp. Gallipolis volunteer
Weber said that based m the anfiremen were called to the scene but were nouncement firms could raise their ]rices
unable to save the structure. Damage was without specific government ap)I'Oval but
listed at $6,000 to the bullding and $3;000 to must be prepared to hack up their actim
its cqntents. Fourteen men and lwo trucks wilb aP]I'oprlate records.
responded to the emergency alarm..
The council also said that the pice
change could not take place earlier than it
had in 1970 unless It was tied to a specific
event, such as the Introduction of a new
ATTEND FAIR
teleYislon program . ., ., · ·~
Attending the Ohio State Fair Friday
In a separate· rulilig,•·the councll lud
and taking part in the Ohio High Schools clubs, unions and asaoCiationa may ;bor
Marching Band Day were members of the increase a member's dues during .~e
Meigs High School Marching Band.
freeze.
HOUSE DESTROYED

members.

Ft ee Lunch ·Policy Revealed

on Tuesday.
Rio Grande School - 10:30
a.m. to 3:40p.m. Tuesday. 8:55
a.m. to 3:30p.m. Regular Full
Day. Kindergarten parents
bring child on Tuesday-to meet
the teacher. Kingergarten one·
haH day each day of !he week.
First haH day on Wednesday for
Kindergarten. No cafeteria on
Tuesday.
Green School - 9:15 a.m. to
3:20 p.m. 8 a.m. to' 3:20 p.m.
Monday, Wednesday and
Friday will start schoo! Friday.
Tuesday and Thursday Thursday, start Tuesday.

aifl!rd !'!llows, New_~ident

MIDDLEPORT - Adult swimming
classes will be given at the · Middleport
----------=----~=---~=-----=---:-•fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij Pool beginning Monday from 12:30 to 2:30
p.m. Ruby Vaughan, park director, an-

;•

: GAUJ110IJS - Oty Schools Morning cluss parents bring
·~Superintendent Paul F. Kuhn child to school between 8 a.m.,
·~ Sallrday reminded individuals and :i p.m., tO meet the teacher
: of starllng time for students and afternoon class parents
~ who Wl1l attend school in. the bring child to school between 8
: city distiict this year,
-~ a.m., and 3 p.m., Th ursday to
~ The district has four meet the teacher.' First regular
• elementuy Schools and one day for classes will be Sept. 3.
; high school.
·
,
Clay School - 9:15 a.m. to
• Clasaes will resume Tuesday. 3:20p.m. Tuesday. 7:55a.m. to
; Here's the first day schedule, •3:20 p.m. Regular Day. Kin. .followed by the regular day dergarten parents bring child
schedule:
on Tuesday to meet the teacher.
• Waabing14n Elementary - First full day Wednesday .
10:30 a.m., to 2 p.m. - Kindergarten will operate
' Tuesday; 8:30a.m., to3:40 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Wed• ~regular day; ~garten- nesday full days. No cafeteria

'•

atrucl«.

Wednesday 3-6, Thursday 3-5, Friday 3-6,
Saturday, Sunday and Monday (Labor
Day) from 1 to 6.

p ast Recalled b y
b
Sal
.
Ro son
esman .

GAWPOIJS - Joseph H. ·
Ferrell, 23, Rt. 2, Vinton, was
charged with DWI following a
sin_glecaraccidentatlO:lOp.m.
Friday on Rt. 554, four tenths of
'
a mile east of Rt. 325.
According to the Gallla-Meigs MIDDLEPORT - Sights,
Post State Highway Patrol, sounds, and smells - plain
Ferrell lost contrul of his car, nostalgia-of30yearsagoand
ran off the highway .into a ditdl. more were revived by Jack
His car was demolished.
Robson Friday night in inA Gallia County highway formal remarks to the Mid·
department truck and a farm dleport • Pomeroy Rotary Club
tractor were involved in a at Heath United Methodist
collision at 12:20 p.m. Friday on Church following dinner.
Rt. 218, one and four tenths Robson, who bas been emmiles south of RL 7.
ployed more than 40 years as a
Officers said Gary L. Fellure, wholesale grocery outside
14, Eureka, driYing a farm salesman for the A. D. Weed &amp;
tractorattemptedtomakealeft Son
Wholesale
Grocer
torn just as a highway depart- . Distributors of Pomeroy, and a
ment truck operated by Arnold member of Rotary over a
R. BelYille, 49, Rt. 2, Crown quarter of a century, described
City, attempted to pass. Belville how such vehicles as the Stutz,
sustained minor injuries but the Hupmobile, the Cord, Model
·was not immediately treated. T, and dozens of other breeds of
There was moderate damage to long-forgotten four-wheeled
the truck. No charges were creations looked and drove.
filed.
He recalled that the middle
A final mishap occurred. on Ohio River Valley people In the
the Crouse-Beck RJl., DJne ~d days bought - and aptenths of a mile south of Rt. 5811 parently chewed - more
where vehicles driven by Roger · tobacco than any other como. Fisher, 39, Rt. 2, Patriot, and
Richard L. Wolford, 17, Rt. 2,
cissolliu'edded
.. Again, no citallon was
I

.
·
parable region in the nation.
Why? He was not sure. And he
remembered when Maxwell
House Coffee was 15 cents per
pound.
Vice President .John Will
opened the meeting. President
Charles Blakeslee presided
following dinner served by
ladies of the church. Attorney
Ham Johnson of Pt. Pleasant
wail a guest.
Lee McComas accepted the
chairmanship of the annual
football banquet for the Meigs
Marauders to be sponsored by
the club Nov. 15.
Program Chairman Will said
next Friday evening a singing
and performing group will give
the program, and on Sept. 10
Miss Anita Fultz and Duane
Will, 1971 graduates of Meigs
High, will describe experiences
inEI!I'Opethissummerwhenon
tour with the Ohio Stale Youth
Chorus.

16 Fme
• d ·Fn•day

·•
right to apply for licen~e
suspended for six months,
reckless operation; Harold A.
Reeves,Pomeroy,Rt.4, $15and
costs, no operators lieense;
Hubert Bustin, no address
recorded, restitution, costs
only, insufficient funds; Uoyd
W. Awalt, Sneads, Fla., $10 and
costa, Improper backing.
Forfeiting bonds were Alan
Johnson, Middleport, $27.50,
.disturbing the peace; William
Conway, Manchestet, $22.50,
defective muffler; Paul E.
Hoffman, Pomeroy, Rt. 3,
$257.50, driving while Intoxicated; Wnliam Yardley,
Shadyside, •12.50, ~~eeding;
Harold Dar• .utland, RD, $25,
disturbing , peace; Jolly J .
Ashcraft, East Liverpool,
$27.50, following too close;
Michael A. Riley, Louisville,
Ky., $27.50, failure wyield right
of way.

POMEROY
Sixteen
~ ·
r; •____ J •
defendants were fined and
~ tDO ~11]~ Ill seven others forfeited bonds In
Meigs County Court Friday.
r;r~J-y .
Fined by Judge Frank W.
W l
£ rJ.U1J
Pt.-ter were Richard Robinson,
Guysville, • 10 and costs,
SJl eeling; Phillip Weatherholt,
GALUPOUS - Two persons Rio Grande, $10 and C&lt;Bia, left
were injured i,n a collisioo a~ ol center; Ronald W. Brinker,
7:34p.m. Friday on First Ave. Racine, and E ! - . Utile,
City JM!Iice said the accident Middleport, $5 and costs each,
occurredwhenLladaL.Adams, defective mufDer; Robert M.
18, Gallipolis, failed to stop and Newell, Cheshire, Rt.J, $15,and
struck the rear end of an auto CQSis, speeding; Roger Davis,
operated by James V. Sands, 42. Nelsonville, $10 and ClJSts, no
Charla Whit~ 10,2145 Eastern drivers liceme; Harold Utile,
Ave., and Gloria Hyman both Middleport, 30 days probation,
suffered minor Injuries. They intoxication, restllution and
were passengers in the Sands cosls, 30 days pro ~ ; ion,
auto. Miss Adams was charged destruction of property, ~ - " and
with failure to stop within the CQSts, disturbing the peace;
assured clear distance. There Michael T. Marcinllo, Tuppers
was moderate damage to bolb Plains, $10 and costs, 8Siured
cars.
clear distance; Monte Ray
A final mishap occurred at Wolfe, Racine, Rl. 2, $5 and
8 :~ p.m. Friday on the Shake C&lt;Bts, no muftler; Pa!rick W.
Shoppe parking lot. Olllcers Mullen, Mlddlepor~ $1.0 and
said Louis A. Whip, 45, CQSls, passing over yellow linei
springfield, hacked his car into Sharon K. Callahan, Long
BIKE REnJRNED
an auto driven by John H. BoltGm, Rt. I, $15and costa, no POMEROY - Pomeroy
Roush, 16, Rt. I, Cheshire. operators license; tnc~ Older, police Saturday returned a
There was min()( damage to Racine, Rt. 2, J25 and ClJSia, no misSing bicycle 10 its owner,
Roush's car:
.,ntors Hcense, $25andCIISis, Tom Hen11es9Y, Mulberry Ave.

IY.!.reck .

'

'

' GALUPOIJS - Clifford M.
Fellows has been named
president of Chris-Craft Corporation, the Boat Division of
Chris-Craft Industries, Inc. by
James J. RochllS.
Fellows succeeds James J.
Rochlis who continues with the
parent company as an
executive vice president where
he will supervise important
·· development programs for the
·' boat division and as president of
the Industrial Division.
:. lWcblis said, "Mr. Fellows
has made an outstanding
contribution since joining the
· Boat Division almost three
years ago when he came to
" Chris-Craft from the Ford
Motor Company." At Ford,
• Fellows was national program
sales manager of the AutoliteFord Parts Division. With Ford
RENOVATION SHELVED
CINCINNATI (UPI) - A
$40,000 renovation of the
statehouse office of Gov. John J.
Gilligan "has been shelved"
. because of a state austerity
, program, to become effective
.. Sept. 1. Gilligan, however,
defended the project against
- criticism that the cost of
.. renovation is too expensive. He
noted the location of electrical
outlets even prevented the use
of dictaphones in the office.

MEIGS THEATRE 1
'"

Tonight, Mon. &amp; Tues.
August 29-lD-31
,,. " ,. ~ NEW LEAF '
CTtchnicolorl
Waller Matthau
Elaine May
Give Me Liberty

How to Relax
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

.
Middleport, Ohio
''The Open Letter to Middleplll't Otlzens" in the paper on
Aug. 24 was indeed Interesting.· I also have seen the Mlcjdleport
aty CouncU In "action." I observed the same thing, no actlm. I
also have obtained, and absocbed, some reasons why tbere Is ''no
actlm." There is one member on the council who is always
llatened to by lbe other followers . Mayer and councU seemed to be
)l'ogrammed as to what to say and do. Moet of the time they can
bluff tbeir way through with no questions asked directly of them.
We people of Middleport are guilty of one thing, letting them
get away with it. I too hope Citizens of Middleport will demaad
things such as why a "closed" apecial Councll meeting? '\'illY are
the lrdlnances and laws not open to any rilember of the public?
''The Mayor's Law Book," I've heard It called. Why? Wb,y are
they opposed to even trying to obtain policemen wlth good morals
811d character and believe in honesty? Perhaps he would be one of
the ''little people" who llkes being an honest, good man better
than bending down to meet lower standards to keep a job directed
by tbe men of those lesser standards, tho more money.
Everyone tallts about It, few have even tried to really do
anything about it. Let's change that. The ''little people" can clean
this up.
One of those
Utile People ·
Name withheld b: better
reaclJon and action.

Eddy's Schedule
POMEROY
Eddy
Educator's schedule in Meigs
County thl.s week:
MONDAY- &amp;-9:30, Rutland;
1().11:30, Salem Center.
TUESDAY - 8:30..2:30,
Pomeroy Ele.; 3-3:30, PCilleroy
library.
. WEDNESDAY - 9-9:15,
Catbolic Church; 9:45-11:30,
Riverview; 12-1, Reedsville;
1: 30-3, Lmg Bottcm ; 3: 31).4,
Keno; 4:15-4:30, Bashan.
PLAN NEW PLANT
CLEVELAND (UP!)- Eaton
Corp. will construct a $35
million truck axle manufacturing plant in the Glascow,
Ky., area, it was rev~led
Friday.
.
STEPPED ON NAIL
MIDDLEPORT Mrs.
Robert Musser was removed
from her home at 11:57 a.m.
Saturday to the office of Dr. R.
L. Slack after stepping on a
rusty nail, by the Middleport E. R unit . .

UNIT CALLED
MIDDLEPORT
The
Middleport E-R squad was
called Friday at6: 11 p.m. to the
Friendly Tavern for A. L. Bush,
Middleport, who had fallen.
Bush wa~ taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. and admitted.

..

(Color)
William Holden
Ernest Borgnlne
-PlusTHE SWEET BODY
OF DEBORAH
(Color)
Carroll Baker
Jean Sorel

R

R

COLO\\

I /:.·ulr•·

Tonight thru
Wednesday

Disney Short

,ACCIDENT MINOR
POMEROY
Pollee
reported a minor car aceident ·
Friday at 9:25p.m. on Court St.,
where David Goodwin, 51,
Pomeroy, In attempting ·to
back, struck a parked car
belonging to Terry Phalin,
Pomeroy. There was minor
dama~e; no arrest, or Injuries.
DIVORCE ASKED
GALLIPOLIS - Cbargln~
gross neglect of duty and ex:
treme cruelty, Dottle Jf.an
Nicholson, Rodney, Frlclay flled
a petition in Gallla COunty
Common Pleas Court seeking a
divorce from Charles E. ·
Nicholson, same address. They
were married July 2§, 1989 and .
have no chllren.

HOUSTON ( UPI) - Carl
Thomas, a senior at UCLA, and
Jerry Heidenreich, a senior at
Southern Methodist, were the
top qualifiers Saturday in the
100-meter Men's Individual
Medley and the 100-meter
Freestyle at the National AAU
Swimming Championships.
'

'
Thomas, 21, of the Santa
Clara, Calif., swim club, raced
w a 2: 11.34 in the individual
medley while defending
champion Gary Hall of Garden
Grove, Calif., qualified fourth
with a lime of 2:11 .50.
·

leading BaHers
National League
G. AB R. H. Pet•
Torre, St.L 132 513 79 185 .361
Bckrt, Chi 123 495 78 174 .352
ClmnL Pit 109 437 72 148 .339
Garr, Att
128 525 85 175 .333
Jones, NY 110 419 49 136 .325
Snglln , Pitt 116 448 53 145 .324
HAarn, All 116 406 78 131 .323
Brock, St .L 127 514 101165 .321
Davis, LA 126 508 65 160 .315
Alou, St. L 123 504 66 157 .312

Heidenreich, a native of
Dallas, swam a 52.58 seconds in
the 100-meter freestyle to edge
Mark Spitz of Sacramento,
Calif., for top qualifying honors.
Spitz, the world record holder in
the event with a 51.9, was
second in 52.88.

American League

28 to 60 feet· luxurious
.
'
alwnmum Roamer yachts, 60 to
73 feet; mahogany classic
Constellation s with double·
planked bottoms, from 42 to 57
feet;
competitively-priced
fiberglass Catalina cruisers, 26
to 33 feet ; fiberglass Aqua·
Homes, 34 and 46 feel; 26 to 33·
foot
plywood
Futuras;
fiberglass Sport Boats - 16 to
·w·
23-foot Lancers, Gu II wg
Transdrives, luxury XK models
and offshore overnighters· and
.
'lbo '
35-foot fiberglass sal ats.

G. AB R. H. Pet.
. Oliva, Min 107 418 63 147 .352
Murcer, NY 127 4&lt;11 80 149 .323
Rttmnd. Bll 109 375 67 115 .307
O!is, KC
120 466 69 142 .305
Tovar, Min 125524 79 159 .303
Ro1as, KC lll 414 56 124 .300
Horton , Del lll436 62 127 .291
Rchrdt, Chi 111405 45118 .291
Carew, Min 120 471 71 136 .299
Buford, B~o~i ~e:nsBB 112 .288
.National league: Stargell,
P1tt 42; H. Aaron, All 38; May.
Cm. 36 ; Johnson , Phol 28 ;
Williams, All and Robertson,
Pitt 26.
American League : Melton,
Chi 27 ; Smi th, Bos and Cash,
Del 26 ; Jackson, Oak 24 ;
Murcer , NY 23.

Defending champion Frank
Heck!, 21, a senior at Southern
California, qualified third in
53.29.

An HI-year-old Osaka, Japan
swimmer was the top qualifier
in the Women's 200-Meter Individual Medley in 2:25.6 breaking her own Japanese
National record of 2:25.8.

IDURNAMENT CHAMPS - First Bapllst Church of Gallipolis captured the recent
Church League Tournament slow pitch championship by defeating Grace United Methodist
Church in the finals. Pictured above, front row, left wright are: Chuck Perroud, Bobby Pegg,
Larry Sanders, Jim Saunders, Beep Matthews and Bruce Wilson. Rear row - Dave Burnette,
Bill Pegg, Leo Davis, Tom Sanders, Lloyd Danner and manager Ron Keenan.

SAVE ON FABULOUS FASHIONS, FABRICS AND HOME ITEMS NOW AT MURPHY'S!

WE ARE

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MON., TUES., WED.

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ON
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By United Press International
American League

Boston
000 000 ooo- 0 4 I
California 100 000 OOx- I 7 0
Siebert (14-9) and Montgome·
ry ; Messersmith, Allen (8) and
Torborg . WP-Messersmith 114·
12).
Chicago 001 000 OIQ- 2 5 2
Detroil
003 000 Olx- 4 11 0
Hinton. Romo (3), Kealey (7)
and Herrmann ; Coleman (14·8)

and Freehan. LP- Hinton 12·3).
HRs- Johnstone (12th I. Stanley
l3rd I.

MISSES' SOLID OR STRIPE

DENIM FLARES

Minnesota 000 130 31Q- 8 11 0
Cleveland 300 000 01o- 4 9 0
Blyleven (11.15) and Roof ;
Dunning, Paul (1), Colberl {8)
Fosse. LP- Dunning (8.12) .
land
HRs-Killebrew (2), (17th 8.
1SthJ .

REB.
$2.99

2.''
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Carefree cotton denim flare5 with

button or fly front) pockets. Bold
colors. Site 8· 16.

A Trip
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94
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$

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14,94 YARD

SdYe now on 56/60" width double
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Guaranteed to refain shape and
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--------------------,
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Natioi1a I League

. Atlanta 000 000 ooo- 0 5 1
diicago 002 001 oox- 3 6 0
Reed, Upshaw {8) and E.
Williams ; Pappas (16-11) and
Cannizzaro. LP- Reed (12-10).
HR- B. Williams (25th I.

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Cincinnati 000 300 005- 8 10 0
Sl.louis 020 021 IIQ- 7 13 1
Simpson, Merritt (61. Granger (7), Gibbon (9) and Bench ;
Reuss, Santorini (9) , Linzy (9),
Shaw (9) ·and Simmons. WPGranger 15-4). LP- linzy (4-3) .
HRs- Cruz (7th). T~rre (22nd) .

ORLON "1 BABY AFGHANS
REG.

san

Pitlsbrgh 000 400 21Q- 7 11 2
Houston 010 000 101- 3 9 1
Ellis, Giusti (9) and Sangull·
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Culver (7), Harris {B) and
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los Angls at N.Y., ppd, rain
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San Fran at Phila. ppd, rain

.OUR OWN~pjy.J•
13 .

__.......__

for aU new teachers will be held
at 7 a.m ., at Circle's Cafeteria:
Following brief meetings
from 8 until 11:45 a.m., all
teachers will attend the annual
Rotary luncheon at Grace
United Methodist Church .
Afternoon workshops will
complete the day's activities.

Major league leaders

•

/

R

...

in homeroom . 9:30 a.m .
Dismissal 3:08 p.m. Regular
day 8 :15 a.m. Students in
homeroom. Dismissal 3:08p.m.
Cafeteria lunches served on
Tuesday, 25 cents .
.A general meeting for all
teachers in the city system is
scheduled Monday. A breakfast

Washngtn 000 001 001- 2 6 2
Oakland
303 000 OOx 6 8 1
Gogolewskl , Shellenback 15),
Rlddleberger (7) and Billings;
Ddom (9-9) and Duncan . LPGogolewski (3·3). HRs- Biefary
(6th), Mangual Wh), Burroughs (4th).
'

Tonight, Mon. &amp; Tues.
August 29·30·31
Double Feature Program
THE WILD
BUNCH

Agrees with Earlier Letter

with some students attending on
Monday, Wednesday and
Friday . Their classes will begin
on Friday, Sept. 3. Parents to
meet the teacher Wednesday,
Sept. l. No cafeteria on
Tuesday.
GaWa Academy High School
-First day, Aug. 31. Students

By United Press ln.terna1ional

New York 000 000 ooo- 0 3 1
KanCity 002 000 llx- 4 8 0
Bahnsen, McDaniel 181 and
Munson ; Splittorff (7-6) and
May . .LP- Bahnsen (10-10).

Cotorcortoons:

Coulradlw !.ellen · of ~. ID 1ood lute, .,_
welcomed. The edl1or merv• tbe rtpllo Uorkll ~.
AD !ellen mall be lllgned, wltb a filii addrw, aht•tlt'
IDIIIall may be l!led apoa reqaefi,

since 1952, Fellows first was in
the Manufacturing Service~
Department as a budget
analyst, finance staff in the
Forward Plans Department;
product analyst, Product and
Voiwne Analysis Department;
supervisor, Forward Plans
Section of the Forward Planning Department; founder and
manager of Product Profit
Analysis Department; and on
the finance staff as manager,
Forward Plans Department.
In nine plants and facilities
throughout the United States, in
Italy and Taiwan, Chris-Craft
produces 52 models in eight
lines: the premier line
fiberglass Commanders, from

Kindergarten will be full day
with some students attending on
Tuesday and Thursday. Their
classes will begin on Thursday,
Sept. 2. ParentS to meet the
teacher Tuesday, Aug . 31.
Kindergarten will be full day

PLAYERS CITED
HAMILTON ( UPI ) - Two
members of the Hamilton
Tiger-Cats of the Canadian
Football
League
were
remanded to Sept. 28 after
appearing in Provincial Court
Friday on charges of possession
of marijuana.
Steve Worster , 22-year-old
All-American running back
from the University of Texas
and Seth Miller, 23, a cornerback from Arizona, were
charged Wednesday after police
raided the apartment they
shared. Their arrests came less
than a week, after another
Tiger-Cat, Wayne Philbrick,
was charged with pOS!\ession of
$12,000 worth of marijuana for
the purpose of trafficking.
~ -- - ----------- - - ---·

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II WI a! .... ...11&gt;!.!1

.'

I 'll.rg ln l• , on• 'l'tlt t!J.OO ; $h; month l II ;
I three montlls U .50. tlltvrhert, on• Vtlf

I

IIJ .

~·1

!fti)IIIIIS

"~

' "'' ' 11'10111111

'5 " '

Oi lly ~ entlnt l, Oftl r . . r SII,QCI ; I lK
1 ma1M
n tM t7 n , Tl'trH months S..5CI.

I

1

'"

Cartoon

'"

,.
·-------~-

'"'"

Un otl'li Pru1 lnlerntlictnll il n

~~ w ~l n t, mtitled ICitlltP wlt tor Otibllut oon
01 Ill l!t'•S (lltCIIIChll (leci iiiO ICI IIIII

1 n-spt~r

1110

II""

1111

IIKII

11 . .1

I pul)lllh.cl llere ln

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

BOTH STORES IN GALLIPOLIS - OPEN

AND-FRIDAYS

•

~'~--~--~------~--~~~----~~--~--~_.--------~~--~----~--~ ~----~~--------------------------~~--~--~----------~----~----~----~----------~~----~~~

�1-Tbs So""ayTimea-Senllnel,SUnday,Aug, 29,1971

.

Qualifiers

Starting Times in Elementary Schools, High School, Set

Improved Schools

Announced

(Continued frOm page 1)

IPdal pl'll8l'aDII for primarr IJGiipl
aDdu- will leu1d!C" *llltlea abou1d

. uiQg aperlenc•
for }qlill who need lndivkmal u.tructlm.
In lb! put, }qllls have bem acocustcmed to repainted cfil!,. and waill
and refinished Doors at lbe apentng of
~. Not.ao Ilia year.
Among llie many bulldlng lmJ)I'Oftmellts are:
.
·New occupational wort experleDce
41ftkes, coostructed by achool maiD. IIIIlance pa8!011e], f1110; cafelierla
equipment at Clay and Waahl.Dgtml
EJeneatary and GA!m totsllqc . . . of
wJacb 75 pet Will ll!nded by tile slllle.
A new drlver's edDcallon· ~rake
ohmd•l«, !!"'"""&lt;! by tbe slllte;wUI be
blalled sbortly· at GABS, permltlq
approximately 400 students to take
ctiver's educatim IIJ'Qagllwt tile year.
Only local C&lt;Bt la IDainlenance, .,nllm
llld insurance. 'lbe limutat« will be
abared with area achool districts.
PUrcbase of a new pbyslcal eurclae
mac!Dne for $2,7110, in cooperstioo will tbe
atbletic department, la .19peeted to aid
Individuals participating in physical
educstim progralils. ~
New wcatiCII81 f'CI'•ipment ctWtq
$17,000 will help train 31 students in
vocational aulllnecbanics. Neil Sanden,
WllllbiJislon FJementsry pri~~'ipll, used
activity lunda to coovert a c1assrolm Into
a modern library fer elementary ~.
The new library will sene 1,000 }qllls at a
C&lt;Bt of $1100.
Kenlm Adkins bas been employed as
ICbool psycb~oglst. An old hallway bas
been cooverted Into an atlractlve mvdtw
area fer parents and students who wlsb to
cmfer with Mr. Adkins.
Six thousand dollars of new vocatiCII81.
business education equipDiint, with IOp:l
fuDding frcm the state, bas been pi!'·
cbased fer tile blgh school vo-&lt;!d bouin ss

'

J)I'O¥e to be ucellent II

.HAROLD WISEMAN illllpeclll new cafeteria equipment .wblcb bas been inllllled at 08)' Elementary, WllllbiJislon Elementary and Gallla Academy. The
-.ooototal project was 75 pet. funded by tbe state. Tbe new blgb school cafeteria
.m be In operalicll m Tue8day proriciiDgafuDbot lunch rc.: licma.

'

..

room.

New de8ts and boob totaling .,;.

have been purcbased. More thaD balf of
Ibis CIJSI ($1.,800) came fnm the sale of t*l
desks and books during the smmw

mmtbs.

•

1be healing system in tile junior blgb
building was completed this swmner at a
c:oat of $25,000. This will greatly imp ove
tbe beallb conditiOIIS of students and belp
1 nmove pollutim from tbe community.
'lbe coal storage area has been made Into
an equipment room and pbysical fibless

Ralald iheta, new vocatlCII8lauliiipthnl... lllltnlciGr Is abown llellln8 up
tbe- abap wJacb will provide two- classes to lbe juniors and seniors of Gallia
An·""''l· Tbe- vocaticlull equipment cost $17,000, a small price to train 38
JOIIIII men.

room.

r

Additional parking space was
devel~ in the rear of Gallla
lligb School for acmwustrators and faculty

,ole........,

-

•

Otris-Craft Boat Division

James N. M. Davis, bigh school principal Is shown In the
newly equipped high school wcatiiX\81 business room. SiJ:
'

In the fullre, llbrary facllities will be
inslllled at Clay and Rio Grande
Elementary """Ms.
Belole tbe lfl6.71 achool term ended,
Memorial Field· received new goal posts
(n:quiled by 19'11 rules) and the gridirm

was tu;ceded.
Wilbln.tbe past lwo weeks, new grid
bleachers wen: installed at a cost of ~
]OtUimalely fl,OOO. Coupled with existing
aeats, Memorla1 Field now bas the largest
aealiDg capacity of any school In the
&amp;lutbeastem Ohio League - 4,800 per...... Tlis was made poiiSible by the
atbletic department, In cooperatim With

Budget
(~llnued

from !M'ge 1)
cUstodian at Addavllle, a four months
leave of absence. Luther Amos was hired
as his ~ary replacement.
· The board will accept bids on a 1962
Ford pick-up until noon, Sept. 7: The truck
will be SGid to the highest bidder.
MORE LESSONS

Charg
· e of ·::c:~::yit!':O~~~~;~:

,.

1

~

POMEROY - The Meigs
Local Board of Educallon
Saturday announced a free
luncb policy for. Meigs Local
achool children unable to pay
the fuD price of a meal. Local
IChool afflctals have adopted
the following family size and
inc&lt;me scale to assist them in
determining eligibility (No. in
. family, income range in which
free
lunches
will
be
authorized):
1 - from $2,1141 to $2,670.
2 - from $2,671 to $3,310.
3 - from $3,311 to $3,!HO.
4 - from $3,1141 to $4,530.
5 - from $4,531 to $5,110.
6 - from $5,111 to $5,640.
7 - from $5,641 to $6,170.
8 - from $6,171 to $6,650.
9 - from $6,651 to $7,120.
10 - from $7,121 to $7,600
II - from $7,601 to $8,080.
12 - $8,081 to $8,:;60.
For each additional family
member, add: $410 per year to
the income level.
Eligibility determinations are
made on a family basis, that is,
all the children in the same
family attending schools under
tbe jurisdiction of the same
school food authority are to
receive the same benefits.
Families falling within this
scale (s) or those suffering from
unusual circumstances or

13 Attended
Institute
POMEROY-Thirteen Meigs
County youths attended a fourday institute m ''Teenage Jn.
stillle mAlcoholand Drugs" at
Ohio Dominican College,
Cohnnbus, in mid-August.
Nearly all of those attending
participated
through
ICbalanl1pa provided by their
IJChonll, PI'AI, 4-H Clubs, ciYic
and service clubs, industries,
twmie•-dal establishments and
health agencies an&lt;' ' ~art ­
menm.
Attending were Ann&lt; ... ,
Burke, Racine; Torn ,Han
Qisp, lAngsville; Cb.Juy Carol
lkbarl, Racine; Karle Robin
3 ••IIley, Reedaville; Debra
Jo 11aJ, Rulland; Christine
Rf.,"HHI. Mlddlepwt; Cmnie
ElaiDe Warner, Minersville;
'fll4ma1 Roy Cassell, Middllpart; . John
William
I' " 1 , 8)ftculle; Julla Ann
IMIIi, P1.meJ 0)' ; John Harold
Dll, Mlcld!ep«t; Milisa K.
• ..... PwwaO)', and Linda
81Lin 1 Rape, Pomeroy.

' hardships may apply for free
llmches for their children. They
may do so by filling in the appljcation forms sent home in a
:letter to parents. Additional
copies are available at the
princlpal's office in each school.

Apple Grove
NeWS, EVents
·
Friends were sorry to lose a
good neighbor and friend, Mrs.
Orpha Hill. Mrs. Hill was a
faithful member of the _Letart
Fal!-' church and was Janttor
assisted by her granddaughter,
Lorna Bell, of the church for
several years. Funeral semces
were held at the church Monday
afternoon with the Rev. Dale
McClurg officiating. Interment
was in. Letart Falls Cemetery
by Ewmg Funeral Home.
Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Jesse Anderson were Mr ·
and Mrs. Everette Clark .and
children, Shelia and Paul, of
Cottageville, W. Va., Mr. and
Mrs. Lloyd Sayre and son,
Chad, of Minersville and Mrs.
Zelpha Boggess.
Mr. and Mrs. Nornian Roush
and three children of
Charleston spent a weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Don Beegle
and children at Racine..
·
Mr. and Mrs. John Sl!DpSGn
and daughter, Joni, returned to
Pasadena, Texas, after a ten
dayvisitwithMr.andMrs. Ray
Hayman .
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Warner
spent Wednesday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Norris.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hayman
and son , Tate, of Colwnbus
spent Saturday with Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Hayman.~ and
Mrs. Bob Sayre and two
children of Beaver Falls spent
Sunday with the Haymans.
Other ·guets were Mr. and Mrs.
Duane Porter of Industry, Pa.
m Thursday. ,__
•
Mr. •nd Mrs. Hoyt Ferguson
of New Haven and Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Warner enjoyed cam·
ping al Shady Rest Park over
the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernesl Bush
and Mrs. Joe Manuel were
shopping in Parkersburg
Sao urday .

Applications may be sulxnitted _
any time during the school year.
The information provided on the
application will 'be confidential
and will be used only for the
purpose ' of determining
eligibility.
Under the proYisions of the
policy the Assistant Superlntendent will review applications
and determine eligibility. If a
parent is dissatisfied with the
ruling of the local official he
may make a request . either
orallyorinwritingforahearing
to appeal the decision.
George Hargraves,
Superintendent, whose address
is 3rd Street, Middleport; has
been designated as the Hearing
Official. Hearing procedures
are outlined In 'the policy. The
•policy also provides that there
will be no identification of or
discrimination against any
student unable to pay the full
cost of a lunch.
A complete copy of the policy
is on file in each school and in
the office of the Clerk where it
may he reviewed b~any interested person.

l..eamillg Hours

Switched flnnn
-r"'~

Public lJe11UJnd

PT. PLEASANT - Mrs.
Naomia Woodard; teachercoordinator of the Mason
County Learning Center at tbe
Vocational Center on Ohio
River Road, said Saturday
public demand has made
changes In the hours the
Learning Center will be open
necessary. These are, Mmday,
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. to
9:30p.m.; Tuesday, 9a.m. to 4
p.m.; Wednesday, 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. and 6 p.m. to 9:30p.m.;
Thursday, 9a.m. to 4 p.m. and
Friday, closed all day.
These new hours will bee&lt;me
effective this week, be!dnnin.1l
with Monday, Aug. 30.
The Adult Learning Center
offers luilim free claaaes in
Adult Basic Educa~on. subjects
of general in teres!, vocational
subjects, job )l'e[lflratim, and
such hobbles 'as aYiation and
chess. Further lnformatim oo
these classes may be obtained
(,)- Wlwr&gt; umull! you an·
by
calling the Vocational
su;er l,he !e,f:phnne by .')aying
Center,~. Too Center will
PrtJHI.tJ' '"'
\ .~ In l!uly. "Pronto" be closed m Mmday, Sept. 6,
Ill Pans ·' rt•:ldy. •·
Labor Day, a legal· holiday.
1

_,WJ Mad

thouaand dollars of neW vocational businesses educstim
equipment was purchased with 80 pet. funding from the State
Vocationa1 Department.

the Blue Devll Booaters Club. Too, the
]I' essbox was re.!JOV&amp;ted at a cost of $1,300,
making It me of tbe finest In the SEOAL.
OOJclals hope to improve the gridirm
llgbliDg system before the 1971 grid
camii'IP beglna, and next year, the
boosters club will undertake a project to
expand and bnprove the dressing rooms oo
Memorial Field.
&amp;apl Paul F. Kuhn pointed out that
du.e to tile fact Gallipolis bas one of the
better teachers and employees salary
schedules In Southeastern Oblo, new
teachers were selected from 146 applicants.

Kuhn asked, "It is the sincere desire of
the Gallipolis board of educaUm, adminiatraUm and employees to develop a
scliool system whleh will have educational
opportunities for all. We hope that the
cmununlty realizes that all of the many
Improvements have taken place without
requesliDgany additional lases this year."
These are the majiJ!' im]l'ovemenm
which will be noted by slldenla and
parenta In the city school district this fall.
Residents are iDvlted to visit the schooi.S
and ln!pect the district's lmprovemenm.

Car Dealers·

(CmtinuecHrcm page'"IT
the 30dayspreceding,Aug. 14.-'Jbe latter is
GALLIPOUS - A fire of un- the ''base period" m which nonseasonal
determined origin leveled the seven room firms must figure their wages and ]rices.
frame house of the Roger· Vyer family
The specific ieU!ng price la based m the
Friday evening on Blessing Rd., one hall amount received on a ''substantial" (at
mile south of the Northup-Patriot Rd., in least 10 per cent) nwnber of transaction.
Harrison Twp. Gallipolis volunteer
Weber said that based m the anfiremen were called to the scene but were nouncement firms could raise their ]rices
unable to save the structure. Damage was without specific government ap)I'Oval but
listed at $6,000 to the bullding and $3;000 to must be prepared to hack up their actim
its cqntents. Fourteen men and lwo trucks wilb aP]I'oprlate records.
responded to the emergency alarm..
The council also said that the pice
change could not take place earlier than it
had in 1970 unless It was tied to a specific
event, such as the Introduction of a new
ATTEND FAIR
teleYislon program . ., ., · ·~
Attending the Ohio State Fair Friday
In a separate· rulilig,•·the councll lud
and taking part in the Ohio High Schools clubs, unions and asaoCiationa may ;bor
Marching Band Day were members of the increase a member's dues during .~e
Meigs High School Marching Band.
freeze.
HOUSE DESTROYED

members.

Ft ee Lunch ·Policy Revealed

on Tuesday.
Rio Grande School - 10:30
a.m. to 3:40p.m. Tuesday. 8:55
a.m. to 3:30p.m. Regular Full
Day. Kindergarten parents
bring child on Tuesday-to meet
the teacher. Kingergarten one·
haH day each day of !he week.
First haH day on Wednesday for
Kindergarten. No cafeteria on
Tuesday.
Green School - 9:15 a.m. to
3:20 p.m. 8 a.m. to' 3:20 p.m.
Monday, Wednesday and
Friday will start schoo! Friday.
Tuesday and Thursday Thursday, start Tuesday.

aifl!rd !'!llows, New_~ident

MIDDLEPORT - Adult swimming
classes will be given at the · Middleport
----------=----~=---~=-----=---:-•fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij Pool beginning Monday from 12:30 to 2:30
p.m. Ruby Vaughan, park director, an-

;•

: GAUJ110IJS - Oty Schools Morning cluss parents bring
·~Superintendent Paul F. Kuhn child to school between 8 a.m.,
·~ Sallrday reminded individuals and :i p.m., tO meet the teacher
: of starllng time for students and afternoon class parents
~ who Wl1l attend school in. the bring child to school between 8
: city distiict this year,
-~ a.m., and 3 p.m., Th ursday to
~ The district has four meet the teacher.' First regular
• elementuy Schools and one day for classes will be Sept. 3.
; high school.
·
,
Clay School - 9:15 a.m. to
• Clasaes will resume Tuesday. 3:20p.m. Tuesday. 7:55a.m. to
; Here's the first day schedule, •3:20 p.m. Regular Day. Kin. .followed by the regular day dergarten parents bring child
schedule:
on Tuesday to meet the teacher.
• Waabing14n Elementary - First full day Wednesday .
10:30 a.m., to 2 p.m. - Kindergarten will operate
' Tuesday; 8:30a.m., to3:40 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Wed• ~regular day; ~garten- nesday full days. No cafeteria

'•

atrucl«.

Wednesday 3-6, Thursday 3-5, Friday 3-6,
Saturday, Sunday and Monday (Labor
Day) from 1 to 6.

p ast Recalled b y
b
Sal
.
Ro son
esman .

GAWPOIJS - Joseph H. ·
Ferrell, 23, Rt. 2, Vinton, was
charged with DWI following a
sin_glecaraccidentatlO:lOp.m.
Friday on Rt. 554, four tenths of
'
a mile east of Rt. 325.
According to the Gallla-Meigs MIDDLEPORT - Sights,
Post State Highway Patrol, sounds, and smells - plain
Ferrell lost contrul of his car, nostalgia-of30yearsagoand
ran off the highway .into a ditdl. more were revived by Jack
His car was demolished.
Robson Friday night in inA Gallia County highway formal remarks to the Mid·
department truck and a farm dleport • Pomeroy Rotary Club
tractor were involved in a at Heath United Methodist
collision at 12:20 p.m. Friday on Church following dinner.
Rt. 218, one and four tenths Robson, who bas been emmiles south of RL 7.
ployed more than 40 years as a
Officers said Gary L. Fellure, wholesale grocery outside
14, Eureka, driYing a farm salesman for the A. D. Weed &amp;
tractorattemptedtomakealeft Son
Wholesale
Grocer
torn just as a highway depart- . Distributors of Pomeroy, and a
ment truck operated by Arnold member of Rotary over a
R. BelYille, 49, Rt. 2, Crown quarter of a century, described
City, attempted to pass. Belville how such vehicles as the Stutz,
sustained minor injuries but the Hupmobile, the Cord, Model
·was not immediately treated. T, and dozens of other breeds of
There was moderate damage to long-forgotten four-wheeled
the truck. No charges were creations looked and drove.
filed.
He recalled that the middle
A final mishap occurred. on Ohio River Valley people In the
the Crouse-Beck RJl., DJne ~d days bought - and aptenths of a mile south of Rt. 5811 parently chewed - more
where vehicles driven by Roger · tobacco than any other como. Fisher, 39, Rt. 2, Patriot, and
Richard L. Wolford, 17, Rt. 2,
cissolliu'edded
.. Again, no citallon was
I

.
·
parable region in the nation.
Why? He was not sure. And he
remembered when Maxwell
House Coffee was 15 cents per
pound.
Vice President .John Will
opened the meeting. President
Charles Blakeslee presided
following dinner served by
ladies of the church. Attorney
Ham Johnson of Pt. Pleasant
wail a guest.
Lee McComas accepted the
chairmanship of the annual
football banquet for the Meigs
Marauders to be sponsored by
the club Nov. 15.
Program Chairman Will said
next Friday evening a singing
and performing group will give
the program, and on Sept. 10
Miss Anita Fultz and Duane
Will, 1971 graduates of Meigs
High, will describe experiences
inEI!I'Opethissummerwhenon
tour with the Ohio Stale Youth
Chorus.

16 Fme
• d ·Fn•day

·•
right to apply for licen~e
suspended for six months,
reckless operation; Harold A.
Reeves,Pomeroy,Rt.4, $15and
costs, no operators lieense;
Hubert Bustin, no address
recorded, restitution, costs
only, insufficient funds; Uoyd
W. Awalt, Sneads, Fla., $10 and
costa, Improper backing.
Forfeiting bonds were Alan
Johnson, Middleport, $27.50,
.disturbing the peace; William
Conway, Manchestet, $22.50,
defective muffler; Paul E.
Hoffman, Pomeroy, Rt. 3,
$257.50, driving while Intoxicated; Wnliam Yardley,
Shadyside, •12.50, ~~eeding;
Harold Dar• .utland, RD, $25,
disturbing , peace; Jolly J .
Ashcraft, East Liverpool,
$27.50, following too close;
Michael A. Riley, Louisville,
Ky., $27.50, failure wyield right
of way.

POMEROY
Sixteen
~ ·
r; •____ J •
defendants were fined and
~ tDO ~11]~ Ill seven others forfeited bonds In
Meigs County Court Friday.
r;r~J-y .
Fined by Judge Frank W.
W l
£ rJ.U1J
Pt.-ter were Richard Robinson,
Guysville, • 10 and costs,
SJl eeling; Phillip Weatherholt,
GALUPOUS - Two persons Rio Grande, $10 and C&lt;Bia, left
were injured i,n a collisioo a~ ol center; Ronald W. Brinker,
7:34p.m. Friday on First Ave. Racine, and E ! - . Utile,
City JM!Iice said the accident Middleport, $5 and costs each,
occurredwhenLladaL.Adams, defective mufDer; Robert M.
18, Gallipolis, failed to stop and Newell, Cheshire, Rt.J, $15,and
struck the rear end of an auto CQSis, speeding; Roger Davis,
operated by James V. Sands, 42. Nelsonville, $10 and ClJSts, no
Charla Whit~ 10,2145 Eastern drivers liceme; Harold Utile,
Ave., and Gloria Hyman both Middleport, 30 days probation,
suffered minor Injuries. They intoxication, restllution and
were passengers in the Sands cosls, 30 days pro ~ ; ion,
auto. Miss Adams was charged destruction of property, ~ - " and
with failure to stop within the CQSts, disturbing the peace;
assured clear distance. There Michael T. Marcinllo, Tuppers
was moderate damage to bolb Plains, $10 and costs, 8Siured
cars.
clear distance; Monte Ray
A final mishap occurred at Wolfe, Racine, Rl. 2, $5 and
8 :~ p.m. Friday on the Shake C&lt;Bts, no muftler; Pa!rick W.
Shoppe parking lot. Olllcers Mullen, Mlddlepor~ $1.0 and
said Louis A. Whip, 45, CQSls, passing over yellow linei
springfield, hacked his car into Sharon K. Callahan, Long
BIKE REnJRNED
an auto driven by John H. BoltGm, Rt. I, $15and costa, no POMEROY - Pomeroy
Roush, 16, Rt. I, Cheshire. operators license; tnc~ Older, police Saturday returned a
There was min()( damage to Racine, Rt. 2, J25 and ClJSia, no misSing bicycle 10 its owner,
Roush's car:
.,ntors Hcense, $25andCIISis, Tom Hen11es9Y, Mulberry Ave.

IY.!.reck .

'

'

' GALUPOIJS - Clifford M.
Fellows has been named
president of Chris-Craft Corporation, the Boat Division of
Chris-Craft Industries, Inc. by
James J. RochllS.
Fellows succeeds James J.
Rochlis who continues with the
parent company as an
executive vice president where
he will supervise important
·· development programs for the
·' boat division and as president of
the Industrial Division.
:. lWcblis said, "Mr. Fellows
has made an outstanding
contribution since joining the
· Boat Division almost three
years ago when he came to
" Chris-Craft from the Ford
Motor Company." At Ford,
• Fellows was national program
sales manager of the AutoliteFord Parts Division. With Ford
RENOVATION SHELVED
CINCINNATI (UPI) - A
$40,000 renovation of the
statehouse office of Gov. John J.
Gilligan "has been shelved"
. because of a state austerity
, program, to become effective
.. Sept. 1. Gilligan, however,
defended the project against
- criticism that the cost of
.. renovation is too expensive. He
noted the location of electrical
outlets even prevented the use
of dictaphones in the office.

MEIGS THEATRE 1
'"

Tonight, Mon. &amp; Tues.
August 29-lD-31
,,. " ,. ~ NEW LEAF '
CTtchnicolorl
Waller Matthau
Elaine May
Give Me Liberty

How to Relax
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

.
Middleport, Ohio
''The Open Letter to Middleplll't Otlzens" in the paper on
Aug. 24 was indeed Interesting.· I also have seen the Mlcjdleport
aty CouncU In "action." I observed the same thing, no actlm. I
also have obtained, and absocbed, some reasons why tbere Is ''no
actlm." There is one member on the council who is always
llatened to by lbe other followers . Mayer and councU seemed to be
)l'ogrammed as to what to say and do. Moet of the time they can
bluff tbeir way through with no questions asked directly of them.
We people of Middleport are guilty of one thing, letting them
get away with it. I too hope Citizens of Middleport will demaad
things such as why a "closed" apecial Councll meeting? '\'illY are
the lrdlnances and laws not open to any rilember of the public?
''The Mayor's Law Book," I've heard It called. Why? Wb,y are
they opposed to even trying to obtain policemen wlth good morals
811d character and believe in honesty? Perhaps he would be one of
the ''little people" who llkes being an honest, good man better
than bending down to meet lower standards to keep a job directed
by tbe men of those lesser standards, tho more money.
Everyone tallts about It, few have even tried to really do
anything about it. Let's change that. The ''little people" can clean
this up.
One of those
Utile People ·
Name withheld b: better
reaclJon and action.

Eddy's Schedule
POMEROY
Eddy
Educator's schedule in Meigs
County thl.s week:
MONDAY- &amp;-9:30, Rutland;
1().11:30, Salem Center.
TUESDAY - 8:30..2:30,
Pomeroy Ele.; 3-3:30, PCilleroy
library.
. WEDNESDAY - 9-9:15,
Catbolic Church; 9:45-11:30,
Riverview; 12-1, Reedsville;
1: 30-3, Lmg Bottcm ; 3: 31).4,
Keno; 4:15-4:30, Bashan.
PLAN NEW PLANT
CLEVELAND (UP!)- Eaton
Corp. will construct a $35
million truck axle manufacturing plant in the Glascow,
Ky., area, it was rev~led
Friday.
.
STEPPED ON NAIL
MIDDLEPORT Mrs.
Robert Musser was removed
from her home at 11:57 a.m.
Saturday to the office of Dr. R.
L. Slack after stepping on a
rusty nail, by the Middleport E. R unit . .

UNIT CALLED
MIDDLEPORT
The
Middleport E-R squad was
called Friday at6: 11 p.m. to the
Friendly Tavern for A. L. Bush,
Middleport, who had fallen.
Bush wa~ taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. and admitted.

..

(Color)
William Holden
Ernest Borgnlne
-PlusTHE SWEET BODY
OF DEBORAH
(Color)
Carroll Baker
Jean Sorel

R

R

COLO\\

I /:.·ulr•·

Tonight thru
Wednesday

Disney Short

,ACCIDENT MINOR
POMEROY
Pollee
reported a minor car aceident ·
Friday at 9:25p.m. on Court St.,
where David Goodwin, 51,
Pomeroy, In attempting ·to
back, struck a parked car
belonging to Terry Phalin,
Pomeroy. There was minor
dama~e; no arrest, or Injuries.
DIVORCE ASKED
GALLIPOLIS - Cbargln~
gross neglect of duty and ex:
treme cruelty, Dottle Jf.an
Nicholson, Rodney, Frlclay flled
a petition in Gallla COunty
Common Pleas Court seeking a
divorce from Charles E. ·
Nicholson, same address. They
were married July 2§, 1989 and .
have no chllren.

HOUSTON ( UPI) - Carl
Thomas, a senior at UCLA, and
Jerry Heidenreich, a senior at
Southern Methodist, were the
top qualifiers Saturday in the
100-meter Men's Individual
Medley and the 100-meter
Freestyle at the National AAU
Swimming Championships.
'

'
Thomas, 21, of the Santa
Clara, Calif., swim club, raced
w a 2: 11.34 in the individual
medley while defending
champion Gary Hall of Garden
Grove, Calif., qualified fourth
with a lime of 2:11 .50.
·

leading BaHers
National League
G. AB R. H. Pet•
Torre, St.L 132 513 79 185 .361
Bckrt, Chi 123 495 78 174 .352
ClmnL Pit 109 437 72 148 .339
Garr, Att
128 525 85 175 .333
Jones, NY 110 419 49 136 .325
Snglln , Pitt 116 448 53 145 .324
HAarn, All 116 406 78 131 .323
Brock, St .L 127 514 101165 .321
Davis, LA 126 508 65 160 .315
Alou, St. L 123 504 66 157 .312

Heidenreich, a native of
Dallas, swam a 52.58 seconds in
the 100-meter freestyle to edge
Mark Spitz of Sacramento,
Calif., for top qualifying honors.
Spitz, the world record holder in
the event with a 51.9, was
second in 52.88.

American League

28 to 60 feet· luxurious
.
'
alwnmum Roamer yachts, 60 to
73 feet; mahogany classic
Constellation s with double·
planked bottoms, from 42 to 57
feet;
competitively-priced
fiberglass Catalina cruisers, 26
to 33 feet ; fiberglass Aqua·
Homes, 34 and 46 feel; 26 to 33·
foot
plywood
Futuras;
fiberglass Sport Boats - 16 to
·w·
23-foot Lancers, Gu II wg
Transdrives, luxury XK models
and offshore overnighters· and
.
'lbo '
35-foot fiberglass sal ats.

G. AB R. H. Pet.
. Oliva, Min 107 418 63 147 .352
Murcer, NY 127 4&lt;11 80 149 .323
Rttmnd. Bll 109 375 67 115 .307
O!is, KC
120 466 69 142 .305
Tovar, Min 125524 79 159 .303
Ro1as, KC lll 414 56 124 .300
Horton , Del lll436 62 127 .291
Rchrdt, Chi 111405 45118 .291
Carew, Min 120 471 71 136 .299
Buford, B~o~i ~e:nsBB 112 .288
.National league: Stargell,
P1tt 42; H. Aaron, All 38; May.
Cm. 36 ; Johnson , Phol 28 ;
Williams, All and Robertson,
Pitt 26.
American League : Melton,
Chi 27 ; Smi th, Bos and Cash,
Del 26 ; Jackson, Oak 24 ;
Murcer , NY 23.

Defending champion Frank
Heck!, 21, a senior at Southern
California, qualified third in
53.29.

An HI-year-old Osaka, Japan
swimmer was the top qualifier
in the Women's 200-Meter Individual Medley in 2:25.6 breaking her own Japanese
National record of 2:25.8.

IDURNAMENT CHAMPS - First Bapllst Church of Gallipolis captured the recent
Church League Tournament slow pitch championship by defeating Grace United Methodist
Church in the finals. Pictured above, front row, left wright are: Chuck Perroud, Bobby Pegg,
Larry Sanders, Jim Saunders, Beep Matthews and Bruce Wilson. Rear row - Dave Burnette,
Bill Pegg, Leo Davis, Tom Sanders, Lloyd Danner and manager Ron Keenan.

SAVE ON FABULOUS FASHIONS, FABRICS AND HOME ITEMS NOW AT MURPHY'S!

WE ARE

FniJa.y's

3 DAYS ONLY

OPEN

MON., TUES., WED.

Tlll9

Linescores

ON
MONDAY

By United Press International
American League

Boston
000 000 ooo- 0 4 I
California 100 000 OOx- I 7 0
Siebert (14-9) and Montgome·
ry ; Messersmith, Allen (8) and
Torborg . WP-Messersmith 114·
12).
Chicago 001 000 OIQ- 2 5 2
Detroil
003 000 Olx- 4 11 0
Hinton. Romo (3), Kealey (7)
and Herrmann ; Coleman (14·8)

and Freehan. LP- Hinton 12·3).
HRs- Johnstone (12th I. Stanley
l3rd I.

MISSES' SOLID OR STRIPE

DENIM FLARES

Minnesota 000 130 31Q- 8 11 0
Cleveland 300 000 01o- 4 9 0
Blyleven (11.15) and Roof ;
Dunning, Paul (1), Colberl {8)
Fosse. LP- Dunning (8.12) .
land
HRs-Killebrew (2), (17th 8.
1SthJ .

REB.
$2.99

2.''
.

Carefree cotton denim flare5 with

button or fly front) pockets. Bold
colors. Site 8· 16.

A Trip
To Murphy's
Will Pay You.
Complete
School Needs.

CARE-FREE, NO-IRON POLYESTER

DOUBLE KNITS

94
YARD

$

REGULAR

14,94 YARD

SdYe now on 56/60" width double
knit 100~~ teaturized polyeder.
Fancy, no-iron wash11ble iacqudrds .
Guaranteed to refain shape and
color. All the latest .f a~hion colors
for fall sewing!

--------------------,
FOR FASHIONS YOU REALLY WANT TO WEAR .•

Natioi1a I League

. Atlanta 000 000 ooo- 0 5 1
diicago 002 001 oox- 3 6 0
Reed, Upshaw {8) and E.
Williams ; Pappas (16-11) and
Cannizzaro. LP- Reed (12-10).
HR- B. Williams (25th I.

SWING WITH SIMPLICITY!
SEE OUR COMPLETE PATTERN SELECTION

SAVE 93c SHELL &amp; RIPPLE STITCH

Cincinnati 000 300 005- 8 10 0
Sl.louis 020 021 IIQ- 7 13 1
Simpson, Merritt (61. Granger (7), Gibbon (9) and Bench ;
Reuss, Santorini (9) , Linzy (9),
Shaw (9) ·and Simmons. WPGranger 15-4). LP- linzy (4-3) .
HRs- Cruz (7th). T~rre (22nd) .

ORLON "1 BABY AFGHANS
REG.

san

Pitlsbrgh 000 400 21Q- 7 11 2
Houston 010 000 101- 3 9 1
Ellis, Giusti (9) and Sangull·
len ; Billingham , Ray (6),
Culver (7), Harris {B) and
Edwards. WP- EIIIs (18-71. LP
- Bill ingham 16-13).

zat

CHARGE
IT!

Kit contains five 2·oz. pull skeins of I00'/. DuPont
Orion · yarn. Choose beautiful p11tel cDtor combinations of pink, blue 1nd white or soft green, yeflo...,
end white. Complete instructions included.
"Reg. TM ol DuPont

los Angls at N.Y., ppd, rain
San Diego at Monti , ppd, rain
San Fran at Phila. ppd, rain

.OUR OWN~pjy.J•
13 .

__.......__

for aU new teachers will be held
at 7 a.m ., at Circle's Cafeteria:
Following brief meetings
from 8 until 11:45 a.m., all
teachers will attend the annual
Rotary luncheon at Grace
United Methodist Church .
Afternoon workshops will
complete the day's activities.

Major league leaders

•

/

R

...

in homeroom . 9:30 a.m .
Dismissal 3:08 p.m. Regular
day 8 :15 a.m. Students in
homeroom. Dismissal 3:08p.m.
Cafeteria lunches served on
Tuesday, 25 cents .
.A general meeting for all
teachers in the city system is
scheduled Monday. A breakfast

Washngtn 000 001 001- 2 6 2
Oakland
303 000 OOx 6 8 1
Gogolewskl , Shellenback 15),
Rlddleberger (7) and Billings;
Ddom (9-9) and Duncan . LPGogolewski (3·3). HRs- Biefary
(6th), Mangual Wh), Burroughs (4th).
'

Tonight, Mon. &amp; Tues.
August 29·30·31
Double Feature Program
THE WILD
BUNCH

Agrees with Earlier Letter

with some students attending on
Monday, Wednesday and
Friday . Their classes will begin
on Friday, Sept. 3. Parents to
meet the teacher Wednesday,
Sept. l. No cafeteria on
Tuesday.
GaWa Academy High School
-First day, Aug. 31. Students

By United Press ln.terna1ional

New York 000 000 ooo- 0 3 1
KanCity 002 000 llx- 4 8 0
Bahnsen, McDaniel 181 and
Munson ; Splittorff (7-6) and
May . .LP- Bahnsen (10-10).

Cotorcortoons:

Coulradlw !.ellen · of ~. ID 1ood lute, .,_
welcomed. The edl1or merv• tbe rtpllo Uorkll ~.
AD !ellen mall be lllgned, wltb a filii addrw, aht•tlt'
IDIIIall may be l!led apoa reqaefi,

since 1952, Fellows first was in
the Manufacturing Service~
Department as a budget
analyst, finance staff in the
Forward Plans Department;
product analyst, Product and
Voiwne Analysis Department;
supervisor, Forward Plans
Section of the Forward Planning Department; founder and
manager of Product Profit
Analysis Department; and on
the finance staff as manager,
Forward Plans Department.
In nine plants and facilities
throughout the United States, in
Italy and Taiwan, Chris-Craft
produces 52 models in eight
lines: the premier line
fiberglass Commanders, from

Kindergarten will be full day
with some students attending on
Tuesday and Thursday. Their
classes will begin on Thursday,
Sept. 2. ParentS to meet the
teacher Tuesday, Aug . 31.
Kindergarten will be full day

PLAYERS CITED
HAMILTON ( UPI ) - Two
members of the Hamilton
Tiger-Cats of the Canadian
Football
League
were
remanded to Sept. 28 after
appearing in Provincial Court
Friday on charges of possession
of marijuana.
Steve Worster , 22-year-old
All-American running back
from the University of Texas
and Seth Miller, 23, a cornerback from Arizona, were
charged Wednesday after police
raided the apartment they
shared. Their arrests came less
than a week, after another
Tiger-Cat, Wayne Philbrick,
was charged with pOS!\ession of
$12,000 worth of marijuana for
the purpose of trafficking.
~ -- - ----------- - - ---·

i

SUNDAY
TIMES-SENTINEL

~

PvDIII~M •VN'f Sund•y br lht Ohio I

VIlifY P ubllih l..., Co.
I
GALLIPOLIS OAILY fiiiiiUNE
I
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Delicious ~assort- REG
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REG.

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ACRYLIC RUG YARN

94c
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Select one of the many f.uhion shade,

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P~tltl""" •vtrr WflU•r '"'"''"' nupt

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II

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S.t urur Etllitrltd •s~ond dnt mt il il'lliJ
lflllltF II P(lmltroy . OhiD . POll QII!Ct .
TERAU ,01' SUI5CRtP"'tON
e, '"''''' 1:1tiiW trill SuonCin. SOo:: P'!'
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Moi.IL SUIS CRtPTtON RA1'EI
Tfle Galfipolll Tr lbun• In Oh iO •ml Wtll

'

ta
on.

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II WI a! .... ...11&gt;!.!1

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I 'll.rg ln l• , on• 'l'tlt t!J.OO ; $h; month l II ;
I three montlls U .50. tlltvrhert, on• Vtlf

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~·1

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I

1

'"

Cartoon

'"

,.
·-------~-

'"'"

Un otl'li Pru1 lnlerntlictnll il n

~~ w ~l n t, mtitled ICitlltP wlt tor Otibllut oon
01 Ill l!t'•S (lltCIIIChll (leci iiiO ICI IIIII

1 n-spt~r

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1111

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

BOTH STORES IN GALLIPOLIS - OPEN

AND-FRIDAYS

•

~'~--~--~------~--~~~----~~--~--~_.--------~~--~----~--~ ~----~~--------------------------~~--~--~----------~----~----~----~----------~~----~~~

�li
'

J

Oh-Kan ·Wanderers
I.

NC.HA .
Campout ·

•

To Host Campout
..-:-

.--·-

I

., ""
.~

••

•

•

;.;:·
...
~

~·

'
GALUPOIJS-TREo.c.s.EA
' w· ...4!1 -• for
.
••
thee~ year. Tbey~fnmlefttonpt: F~BordeD,
mstalling officer; WUliam Persinger, II' 1•1ot; Mrs.

u

..

_.__
, 1leet1
i*fiJ!DQWI,EhMM

'

'·
··
'bC;DgneM()an,tllrd

·
GALLIPOLJS-1RREih:IANI§II)AJU)IIJ!PD1hers

vice I* ·•rot; Durvtby Nibert, &amp;eel 'ary; Wilber Waddell,
first v1&lt;e I* ·•rot, and Henrie liB llwn:b, treasurer.

peae11t on Aug, 23 for UJ&amp;t•Datim me flun left to rlgbt :
Fred HarrtngiGo, lVIII Mayo Kenneth Swain Grace Roacb

-~ ---~...¢:¢'~-~

r-- -~--~----------------------------------.

. .

! Voice along Broadway !Our Eatmg
•

· Habits Do
BV JACI O'BRIAN
HAIR BOX OmCE FACES
11IE BALD TRUTII

NEW YORK - Tbe "Hair" piodiiCei (a
Buller did it) willlry to resuscitate tile bloop~
Jirsute grtBf :a oo Bdwy. and elawhere with
111898ive ~ty; but It's bad tbat ... If Jailmly
Qlrsm weds Johanna Holland, 'lib Ave. dress
mfgr., Mollie Pamis sbould get a Iinder's fee :
Qlrsm IDDired La Hnllanc! ooe Digbt in "21 "so
Mollie bddly 8ppiOBched the beauty (we ~t­
cbed it) and started tile ball rolling .... Tbe
prestigious, even clllc Brody Corp. (nms the
Rainbow Room, Rainbow Grill, L'EtoU~,
Gallagher's etc.) operates five of those umIJ!ellaed rolling cars you aee m Manhattan
streels:
diopemes Mnlcan tacos, tamales,
cbili dogs lo: chili ; another fieldS evf!t:)1
imaginable ltaliaJi bero sandwich· tbe
"Americiiii" ~ .pitdl hotdogs, ~tcb,
cbili dogs and sausages; mice cream cart offers
10 delicious Oavors etc. (tbe pt&amp;Jcar1s' trade
name: AI Fn;sca) .... Bmny Borman, wbo sqs
at the Apartment spot, sports the dubious
dlstinc lim of being the lirst l'I!CGI'dlng artist ever
banned on IBraeli radio: Says bis LP ''Belmy
Berman's Tales FIUII tile Bible" did the trick,
and llemty's a sabra yet.
'lbe iiai Prince office swears lis "Hddler oo
the Roof'' SJDpob won't setlie for just~ the
lmgest.ruming Bdwy. mwDcal ever - they
illlist it will become the loogeat.nUming Bdwy.
show ever by next lllid,Jme, pe....q ''Ute With
Father" ... Its burd1e - the. already finisbed
''Fiddler" film due this winlel" .... 'lbey're
calUng Met tenor Franco Corel1l the new
Diamond Jim Brady: Franco tipped the Biancbi
&amp; Margberita club's operHingers $50 ....
Ve_teran, 911JgWriters ci ~IJits drop
qwelly miD Rosela!l!l where lbe~·
'
oldies
get live performances Jligbtly: • · Lane
(''OJ a Clear Day," ''Bow're · in G1oca
Mcra/' "I like N. Y. in June.'' c'Old Deril
Mom" etc.) brought in bis l'amily to bend their
ears baclt alter an ear-jangle elsewhere fnm
roclt-twisted qulddes.
Max Ka.se tells 1111 NFL grid players in 20
years bave exploded in all direetlms: FIUII 511% In '51 they've averaged up to &amp;-.2; and fnm
197, theyw avoirdiiJIORied the scales to 2331bs.
average .... Max says golfer Jaclt Nlcldaus is
lidding 'to CIMlWD a possible Tampa, F1a., Nat1
Football League frandlise.
Haw: the Miss Heavenly Body em test was
held in a L!l!g Island motel .... Bemy Yol1lg1118D
says motel spelled backwards is 1etom •••• Tbe
Jl'oatie-clearup in midtown came too late to siGp
cancellatioo ri several cooventioos at loP botels
(Tbe Bilton &amp; Americans thus bave been vice
victims) .... TbeFBidiscovereda de.Oynew .32
calilre handgun camouflaged as a mecbanical

one

(

pencil: Twist to fire .... Bemy (;oodnum's We at
the Rainbow GriD Ibis fall .... Bwg ss Meredith
(who owns 'IOacreain upstate l'lmooa, N. V.) is
Otto Preminger'ssummer landlord .... (You will

IOWI!I' the n:ut!)

Allmtic City figures legal gambling is a
siJniH matter ri lime, and witb that an BOO
attracliool«oning, there's a pusb on to CQVel' the
entire lmgtb of the famed boardwalk with a
plastic bUJble rori ... SlwJdd go great witb the
Harold Arlen - Yip IJarlug - Billy Role "It's
QJiy a Paper Mcm llai!!ng (Ner. a Cardbo&amp;'d
Sea" .... Dergm Durbin is wbiooqe~ all the
way from Paris that llbe doesn't not CGimnlia
Records to reissue her old-movie bit songs as
part fi tbe very definite oootalgte wave.
Tunesmitb Mitch Lee will wed
millioobeiress Abllie Kimmelman .... Burt
Bacbaracb's newest raceborse (be owns 14) is
''&lt;II, Bello" .... Ed Sillivm's 20 years in 1V
i!M'hvled ooe ~ rating champ: Tbe sbow with
Julius La Rosa after Goclrey fired Julius ..•. 'lbe
airlines last y- spent fiOD,OOO,OOO m meals;
$Z.M a serving ,••• New Woman mag ~RrVeyed
the gals,- and d!e,l'eiiU!t ·~ ''Women are 1111151
imp'eSI!IId with bald, lnlielligent, bairyJcbesled,
modest, cooversant ~~~&lt;~~" .... Imt we're not bald!
.... Look mag's sports ed, l.eciluri Scbecbter
barred fnm the &lt;lncy Bengal•
camp: Boss Paul Brown openly feared a team-

traininti

panlciing ''batchet job."

Top ackr claim• the status-peak liecause be
bas ooe psychiatrist in ll'wood and another oo
Part Ave. -OI!car Lmmt bad two socii !brim:ends 25 years ago .... Oacar's 001 1V lalk~
remain the rbamps for fascinating kook,yintellecb•alism .... Jane ~·s Interested in
the play "Wbat Are You Do~ in My Lire" for
Bdwy. nerl
Joe Pepitood's ex-wife
Diane,now living in Ft. lee, N.J., wuuld lite ~
baHrtar to visit the kids llllft often .... Wlml!ll's
lip Betty Friedan and a-bqobam Carl don't
speak - because Carl called ber ''the most
masculine Wlllllllll I've ever met" .... Society's
Dennistm Sater f1lllowed the U %-00..- ...-gecy
with another lasting five boars; be's figllling the
most gallant battle with a lllllile; outside.

=- . .

Helen Bottel-YOUTH .ASKED FoR IT!
Tbis colwnn is for young people, their problems rmd
pleasures, tbeir troubles and fun. As witb lbe rest ci Helen Help
Us! it welc&lt;mes laughs but woo't dodge a serious qnesti.m with a
lrush.off.
Send your teenage questioos to YOtrl'll ASKED FOR rr, care
~ Helen Help Us! Ibis newspaper.
COllEGE IS MORE THAN BOOKS
Dear Readers :
With college days !l'actically upoo 1111, I tbought you'd lite the
following excerpts from a letter written to a friend by her
daughter. I think it rates A-Plus.
WHAT IS COLLmE?

Ulllege toaay IS a CO!Iflllling, d;YD8DIIc l»dge-podge ci
seemingly trivial phUosoplties that just might cbange the Wlll'ld
some day.
It is an underlined, dog-eared, peanut butter-cneared
philosophy book which tells you that evf!t:)1tbing you ever lbougbt
is wroog, but doesn 'I tell you wbat to think instead .
It is the most amazing combination of total freedrm and
minimal responsibility, the biggest conflict ri complete innocence
and extensive elpOSUI'e you'll ever bave again.
Tbe University is power without direclion.
It is direction Without support.
It is all of a sudden discovering you reelly can think: you
really did create that theory all oo your own.
'
It Is also discovering you can't think - in the middle of your
philosophy final !
It is the awe Of sitting in a clasarooin and realiZing you know
ooly one hundred-lbousancJ.billionth of tbe things there are to

know.

·Big "U" is tile giggle of girls sitting amid tennis racq~etS Ski
boots, formals, biking gear and dirty underwear, discussing' tbe
ta_'rlble technique Of some poor guy beld in mutual acquaintance.
It IS tears and tact- fomd too late after a big discussion on pot,
the war, morals and racial prejudice.
.
It Is also 3a.m. -and llmorrowyou have an &amp;o'clock .
II is the damn alarm clock.
,
II is thesamedamnalarmclockhalfan hour later.
'
Itis feelings-pride, inferiority,pain, accomplisbment, blrl,
joy.
It is effort, will~r, giving-lip, 1115ing, winning and tr}oing
all O¥er again. It is a thougbt, uniquely your own,

,.

eouege ill believing -

and becaiiSe I believe in a world so
mucllgreater tban the mel !mow (and I know aonelJO great) - it
II tile happiest tune of my life. - DARCI THOLE, UNIVERSITY
OF ffilfiRAOO . OOUI.OF.R ffilll

·------~-------- l

By GAYNOR MADDOX

Tbe Jeftetson Airplane gro"' ck'Oj4led an
applicatim to visit Red China because Did:
lfmJO's gaing; if they pafum as IIIey did oo the
l'eiTy Omo TV sperlala aellliOD or ao bac1t, tbey
wouldn'tevengetin .... Tbe Bealles' altmnsjust
we:e bamed in Singapore: ''Binnfui Western
influence," said cops raiding sbGps ••.• But 001
BeaUe all•m• dm't die; they dm't even fade
away: "Sgt.l'qlper's l.ooeJy Hearts Onb Band"
is hotcalring aJqJg at $0,000 copies a montb four
years alter Its release.

HElEN HElP US!

Not Improve

CarmeI .News,
By th e Day
Florence Circle visited ber
aunt, Laura Eiselstein and son,
Cecil, of Pmneroy recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl arcle and
daughter,
Patrice,vacation
of Colmnbus
spent
a week's
with .
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Circle and
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Yost and
family of Oak Grove.
Tbere were 24 present for
Sunday School on August 22.
Offering was Sl3.18.
Dixie arcle of Oeveland
spenl several days with ber
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Circle, and other relatives.
Rev. and Mrs. Richard YoWlg
and family of Sidney spent the
weekend witb Mr. and Mrs.
Edson Rousb.
Margaret Ann Johnson and
daughter. Sheryl Lee Ann, and
Betty Van Meter called on Mary
Circle on Monday evening.
Mrs. Homer Circle, Dixie
Circle, Mrs. Robert Harden and
children visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Virgil Wilson and family of
Mt. Sterling recently.
J]dr. and Mrs. Melvin Circle
and family of CoiWDbus and Mr.
and Mrs. George Circle of New
Haven visited with Mary Circle
on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Clark of
Racine, Mrs. Cecil Hill of Lima
and Mrs. Eunie Brinker attended the fwleral of Everett E.
Ours at the Tbomas Funeral
Home in ~ton Friday.
LBJ'S BIRTIIDAY

STONEWALL, Tex. (UPI) Former Rresident Lyndon B.
Johnson quietly celebrated his
63rd birthday Friday playing
with his three grandchildren at
the tre«haded LBJ ranch.

•

Wby don't our diets im·
prove? Wby did tbey drop in
quality between 1955 and
1965 wben tbey showed an
increase in snaclt foods,
more bakery products, more
prqcessed foods and a drop
in use of vegetables?
Part of tbe explanation of
this lowering of nutritional
quality lies in !,be increase in
broken families, more chil·
dren left to tbeir own eating
devices, more working mothers. AU of. tbis in!plies an
era of
dinners and break·
fasts, if any, on tbe run.
It may point also to sometbing else-tbe fact tbe nu·
tritional scientists, tbough
knowledgeable, h a v e not
been able to motivate the
consumer on wha~ foods his
~Y n~ to. tbrive on. .
I don t think we nutri·
tion.al scient!sts hav_e been
saymg anything particularly
arresting. We don't em·
pbasize tbe pleasure to be
obtained by eating good
meals," says Horace L. Sippie, executive secretary of
tbe Nutrition Foundation.
Dr. Sipple adds: "Sometime I think our teaching of
nutrition sounds like teach·
log some moral rbUosopy'
not of tbe facts o life. We

:rv

orc-,;o:A
ll
. '
. \A)~. lnSta ~ Officers
1. .

GALUPOIJS - 'lbe Gallia
Chapter of tbe Ohio CivU Service Employees Association
met in regular moolbly sessioo
,on Monday, Aug. 23. In addilioo
to·lbe regular business Officers
and Chapter Executive Board
members were installed and
given lbe oath of office by State
Executive Board Member
Forrest Borden.
Tbose elected to office were,
William Persinger, president;
Wilber WaddeD, first vice

Sdxons Announce
Bt'rth 0;,f C'ht~a
,,~

0

president; Mrs. Margaret EiJ..
man, R.N., second vice
president; Donald Ours, third
m president; Dorotby Nibert,
R.N., secretary, and Henrietta
lllllrch, treasurer.
Appointee{ and approved
Chapter Executive Board
members were, Mrs. Loretta I..
Hayner, Mrs. Grace Roach,
James D. Holmes, Jobn Hood,
Fred Harrington, James
Sbawver,HcmerBrannon, Rev.
Erie Cox, Edgar Rutherford
and Forrest Borden. All offices
are for a two year term.
Also all plans ,.ere rmallzed
for the 25tb annual picnic which
will be a covered dish affair.
Tbe lllapter will furnish the
meat (cbict and bam) and cold
and bot drinks.
Families and friends of
OCSEA members are invited
and are asked to bring a
woaed dish ci their choice and
table service to the " Bob
Evans" Shelter house, Rio
Grande on Saturday, Sept. 4.
Tbe dinner hour is approximately 6:30 p.m . .

GALUPOIJS-Mr. andMrs.
Ernest C. Saxon (the fmmer
Sandra Adkins), Route 1
Northup, are announcing tbe
b' th 0 f the. second child
tr
tr .
• a soo
at Holzer Hospttal on Aug. 17 at
12:56 p.m.
Tbe baby bas been named
Brett AleDDder. He weighed 8
lbs. and was 20% inches long.
Brett is being welcooled IHme
by bis one-year old brother
Eric Olristopber
'
·
Maternal gran.dparents ~ 0 R T. A ..,... M t
Mr. and Mrs. Hillard Adllins,
' . • . J. 0
ee
Gallipolis. Paternal grand- Tbe Gallia County Cha te 0f
mother is Mrs. Carrie Saxon ri Ohio
R r d
T P hr
Addison.
. . e t~e
eac ers
Association will meet on Sept. 2
at Camp Francis-Asbary near
Rio Grande. A covered dish
~::::::::~:::::x:::::::::::Wth:W-Z$·~ dinner will be served at noon.
VISitors are welcoole.

Seen and Heard

teach correcUy as far as ::;:::;;:;;;:::::;;;:.:::::::::;o;:;:;;.-:;;:;;;:;;W~

science is concerned. But we
don't seem able to make peopie rea1i2e the fac(!l of exist·
ence-tbat tbey live, grow
and stay bealtby depends
largely on what tbey eat."
He refers ~ a situation at
tbe UmverSJty of Montana
w be r e nutritionists in·
structed members of a Head
Start group on wbat foods
constitute a balanced diet.
One mother passed tbe test
bigbly. But a month later,
wben one of tbe teachers
visited her borne, she found
that the motber bas not
changed her family meals in
one smgle way.
"To motivate them, we
should call on members of
tbe social sciences. They
migbt be able to teacb us
bow to reacb people, to get
and bold tbeir attention. I
think tbe social scientists
should help us prepare material in a way that would
stimulate the children. Tbey
seem to understand these
tbings better tban we."
Tbe dread of drug abuse
and its consequences bas
taken public ~~ntion awak
~~r'::ru~=n. c=t ~
wreck lives. Dr. Sipple says.

'

GALLII'OIJS - Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Glassbw-n and Mr. and
Mrs. Lowen Glassburn returned
home Friday from a visit with
relatives and friends at
Fostoria and Tiffm.
---------"I am not without bope. I
am worried. We must reacb
tbe cbUdren and strive to
motivate tbem to eat good
food . I do not know tbe complete answer. But I bope at
least, that if cbUdren te8m ·
to enjoy f:ood foods tbey may
be less mclined to drugs "
Dr. Sipple says.
'
(NfWSPAPfl ENTIII'IISE ASSJU

Having a Fund Raising
Event? Garage Sale?
.Flea Market?
We have •..
•Glassware
• Toys
• Novelties
·Jokes
~uarantud

. Sltnment.

S.l~

on

con-

GIFTLAND
miles11l~:'~ 11 G~~/rpons

s
u.s. 35.

WE WILL

BE

OPEN
AS USUAL

MONDAY,

AUGUSJ30
AT

9 A.M.
Thanks for your
patience during
our remodeling.

PAUL

DAVIES
JEWELERS

oa

404 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

.lames D, Holmes, and Jolm Hood. Tboae absent were
Loretta L. Hayner, James Shaver, Rev. Erie Cox, Edgar
R!Jtberford, and Homer Brannon.
Guest speakers from the
ColWDbus office will be on ~
for questions and answers, also
Senator Collins and Representative
Welker are
being invited.
O.C.S.E.A. enjoys membership in nearly every branch

of Public Employee Services in

.the county and city and like the
annual public Spring dinner, the
fall picnic is about as well attended.
Tbe next regular meeting of
the chapter is September 'll at
7:30p.m.

.,

..

...
··'""

., ...

At R'Omtry
"/ R :JI

Mrs. Michael T McTigue

·Miss Geremesz

d
es

JJ J

FAC

~~

n News

;.~
: :::
' :;:.
.• ' '::'
::

~

.::
:.:,
-

••
-

:::
:::
::
--.

REG. '219"
&amp;"! F

'169"

SAVE ssooo

R PD"lStration
•
• · Set

For P.M. Courses

SMist* 'zig-zag .maclni ne -·
with carrying case. ·

Even greater savings
on cabinet.models.
.

on the use of your

SEE

Bob Evans
Bobbies

SOON!

Many r'all Fabrics at Special Rrices.

followin&amp;

Silas Hamilton, llllldren ...
Youth ; Mrs. Aldeth White,
Community Service; Mn. Dill
Tabor, CivU Defente; Dololht
Hecker, Foreign RelaU..;
Mabel Brown, Junl« '
tlvlties; Wanda 1'lll
Legislation ; Dorothy •
National Security; I
Butterfield, Memberilblp; ()pit
Davis, Poppy Chairman;
Aldeth White, Publicity;
Margaret Bradbury, Veterans
Affairs, Inez Marchi, Flowers
and Cards.
Mrs. Wesley 0. Meeb, of
Gallla County and Dayton wu
accepted as a new member. 'lbe
club now has 28 paid membln
for the year of 1972. Tbey bougbt
a gift for lbeir State President,
Mrs . Raymond Sloan, Alhlancl,
Ohio.
Tbe next meeting will be Sept•
28, 7:30p.m. Legion Hall.

Shop!
Compare/
NO tOWER

Ye Olde Village Garden Club
met at the home of Rev. and
Mrs. Marion Williams for the
family ptcntc Thursday
evening. Pra.yer was given by
Rev. Williams.
Attending were Mrs. NatUda
VanCuren, Lancaster, sister to
Mrs. Williams, and Mr. C. W.
Rife, her father; Mrs. Betty
Plymale, Joy and Rex; Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Allman, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Davis, Carma and
Coby; Mr.andMrs. John Byers,
Tony and John; Mrs. Wilina
Haycraft, Mr. and Mrs. John H.
Reese.
Tbe next meeting will be held
Thursday, Sept. 2, at the home
of Mrs. Reese, at 7:30p.m.

ANYWHERE

LADIES

DIAMONDS

TAWNEY

KILUi HER FAMILY
PONTIVV, France (UPI) Raymonde Jouhanno, 35, killed
her husband and three children
with an ax as IIley slept: lben
took ber own life by leaping into
a wen, police said today.

JEWELERS
422 Second Ave;
Gilllipolis

Garden Club Held

Fl..:~&gt;k

v--

The Kicky Young . Seen inNEP

Open Mon. &amp; Fri. 'lil 8 P.M.

FRENCH. CITY
FABRIC SHOPPE
Simplicity, Me Calls. Butterick, Vogue Patterns .
2 Complete Floors of Fabrics·&amp; Notions
We Do Custom Dress Making Singer Sate. &amp; Service

Things In
Unifonns

J?irec!or

44H2S5

51 Court

GallipoliS

eCREST
eBARCO

======

.....,..,IIIIOIRO&lt;ALER

OF CALIFORNIA
ePAUL JONES

eaS\JiiVini
lace-up

Along with our
Usual Line of

eWHITE SWAN

: effect of President Nixon's
: : economic measures on Ohio,
: said the new policies could
"result in substantial sbort-run
benefits for Ohio business and
COIISUIIlers, but postpones lbe
need for widH'anging, longterm solutions to the problems
'1( Inflation and unemployment

eBRESSLER BROS. :
e1QAS$1C
AND OTHERS.

the triumphant tie
takes on a fresh new
approach this season.
Full of free 'n' easy
fashion fun~ .
it's just like you II

·.

DAN THO.MAS
&amp;SON

jI

1

I'

I!

'SERVING YOU SiNCE 1936" .

FA filE S.M.

"Across fr!im the

Shipment of Bob Evans
Trends Smocks!

Post Office"

'

Ill'

If ifs from
H's Palte(ned for

Ga.llipolis, ()hio

aamrea

in the state. n

Last Respects
To Ted Lewis

• WRIT DENIED ANGELA
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Angela Davis, whose murder conspiracy - kidnap trial is set
to begin in one month, was
denied a writ ri habeas corpus

~ues~toc:elif':!:

and a
~--w.::::lt:m~!ll'.~::!MI
.. !l!ll!ll881'll!;~;!.Ill;';a~-~o:cm~!*;;~;~;;'&lt;&gt;:::I'll.m~-w;~&lt;.&lt;i-d ri AppeaL
'

- .'• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

KORELL PLUS.SIZ!!S
FIT YOU PERFECTLY

CIRCLEVILLE, Ohio (UPI)
- Tbe body of "sbowman" Ted
Lewis was shipped bere fr(Jm
New York Friday nigbt to allow
hundreds ri friends who grew
up with him to pay their last
respects.
Circleville Mayor Richard
Gehrhardt
issued
a
proolamatioo in honor Of its
hometown celebrity, declaring
Monday, tbe day Lewis will be
buried in Forest Cemetery bere,
as a day ri tribute. Lewis' body
can be viewed at the Mader
Funeral Home from 1 p.rn.-9
p.m. Saturday and 9a.m.-9 p.m.
Sunday.

The Uniform Center ·

L---~--~--~------~--~----------~---~-------

Family Picnic

the

commJttee: Amer,...pn, Mra.

Introducing. ·..

·THEM

new machine.

'A lrademarl&lt;oiTiiE SI NGMCOMPANY

Garden Club Has

announced-

·

·Exclusive front drop-in bobbin.
• Built-in blindstitch.
Plus 6 other great features.

Free

r

1_____.:_:__.:._~=~======~~~~~~~~~~~============1

324 SEOOND AVENUE
GAlLIPOLIS, OHIO

GALLIPOLIS
Tbe
American Legion alld Auxiliary
beld llleir annual plcnle and
family plelilc at the home of L.
G. Marclii, Otllllcolbe Road.
Gallipolis Post 'll was in attendance. Tbe program was
given abo~t Girls State.
·Attending were Nancy
Ro.lAers, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. James M. Rodgers,
Cheshire, Kyger Creek High
School. City Council ·Beth
Mackenzie, daughter.of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert T. Mackenzie, 315
- 4th Ave . G.A.H.S. City
Treasurer , Clare Markely,
daughter of Dr. and Mrs. John
C. Markley , 130 Garfield
Heights, Gallia Academy High
School. Susan Sprow, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Sprow,
35 Portsmouth Road, G.A.H.S.
secretary to the mayor.
Mr. J. J. Pannabaker, action
chairman for the legion ,
presented two young men, John
Day, and John Bagshaw, who
gave the report for Boys State.
President Margaret Topping

PT. PLEASANT - 'lbe Oh- 'lbeStateOificersofN.C.H.A.
ltan Wanderers of Point are: State President, Owen and
Pleasant will host the Slate FaU Audra
Powell,
Cardi·
· Campout at Mason County Fair nals, Mannington· Vice • PT. PLEASANT - Tbe West Activities Oil Saturday were
Grounds, .September 10, 11 and President, Ed and Lavada Virginia Chapters of National ·camp fenowsbip , ball game,
12.
Crook, Woodpeckers
- · Campers
and
Hikers and a meetmg of chapter
Committees have been ap- Parkersburg; Secretary and Association held a special birth- presidents, "'~ Earl ~ynolds,
pointed and work details are Treasurer_ Ron and Montey day campout recently (August W.Va.statedlreclor, mcharge.
tebeduled to make Ibis one of Metz,
Woodpeckers
:1»-22) at Krodel Park, Pt. A poUuclt su~ was beld
the finestcampouts in the state. Parkersburg
and
State Pleasant. Approximately Saturday evenmg and two
Tbe following eighteen clubs Directors _ Earl and Katy seventy-five (75) WJits from beautiful cakes were served .
In West Virginia have already Reynolds, MoWJtain Doers _ Kentucky, Ohio, West Virginia Along with Marie Clugh, ~
registered:
Huntington.
and Pennsylvania attended Ibis other ~ampers celebra~ btrth·
Adventurers - Hunliogtoo;
Included in the activities campout. Honored guests were days m August. Followmg lbe
American Roamers - Trin- planned for the Fall Campout Bill and Marie Clugb of potluck supper, a supper was
delphia and Wellsburg; Boone there will be square dancing, Harrisburg, Pa., Immediate held . The Clughs · were
Mountain Winders -Madison; drawings for prizes, group past President of N.C.H.A. Tbe presented an engraved .P~que
Cardinab- Mannington; Jolly singing around the campftre, occaSion was m honor. of Marie from the West Vtrgtnla
Roners - Clarksburg; Maple 111eetings, games, chapter Clug~ who celebrated a birth- N.C.H.A. chapters. Tbey ":ere
Leaf - Fairmont; Mountain project sales, Oea sales, and day m August. Also attending also presented a West V1rglnl8
Doers and Mountaineers - church services on Sunday.
were Gene and Edith Moore of memory book SJgned by all
Huntington.
Harrisburg, Pa., guests of the members attending lbe campOh-Kan Wanderers - Point
Oagbs.
out.
Pleasant; Pitch and Pull Slides of various campouts Church services on Sunday
Charleston; Rhododendron throughout the United States were conducted by Rev. Gerald
Morgantown; Shawnee _
and Canada were sbown Friday S. Hobart. Rev. Hobart's wife,
Dunbar; Stonewall Roamersrl night. Don Thompson, member Marie , conducted Sunday
Weston;
Teays
Valley
'(l
of the Oh-Kan Wanderers School for the children. Tbe
Roadrunners- Teays ValleyChapter, Pt. Pleasant, assisted HobartsarefromEastLynn, W.
Scott Depot and Tent and Tow GALLIPOIJS - Mrs. Cora with the slide program.
Va., and are serving as West
YV
-St. Albans.
Hall, 728 Second Ave., en·
Virginia N.C.H.A. state
Weir Happy Wheels - tertained 30 guests for dinner li©~'l .~..xl5.!Y~~"'"'"'"'"'"'''~'"'~~ chaplain. Fonowing dinner, all
Weirton; Woodpeckers - last Wednesday evening.
;~
campers bade farewen, and
Parkersburg ; :and Mingo
f
departed for their respective
GALUPOLIS - MIJs Janice · McTigue, Birmingham, brother Renegates -Williamson.
Mrs. Hall's nepbew, Earl
homes .
S. Geremesz, daugh\tr of Mr. of the groom, Raymond Ayres
Ohio chapters registered are Dathvish, from llticago is visiting '.:,.';·.,,.':.·.
Coming events for N.C.H.A.
and Mrs. Stepben. Geremesz, and Michael Hoben, friends of as fonows : Roadnumers Sport WI
er.
'·
campers are:
358 Debby Drive, Gallipolis, and the groom, botb of Adrian, Club - Euclid; Canton Can
West Virginia N.C.H.A. state
Micbael T. McTigui, son of Mr.· Mich.
Openers _ Canton; Rainbows Others attending were Mr. ;&gt;;
,.. fall campout, Mason County
and Mrs. Leo B. ~cTigue, 633
Areception was held after the End - East liverpool and and' Mrs. Leslie llall, Peggy,
Fairground, Pl. Pleasant, Sept.
HuppCrossRoad, Birmlngbam, wedding at Kingsley Inn, Wellsville; Free Way Ramblers Tina, and Scottie, Lancaster;
Tbrougb September - 111-12. Host Chapter, Oh·Kan
Michigan were united in holy Birmingbam, Mich.
- East liverpool; Born Free_ Mr. and Mrs. Steve SaWlders Gertrude Ward Exhibit.
Wanderers of Pt. Pleasant.
matrimony Aug 20 at 6:30 in the
Tbe couple will reside in St. Clairsville and French City and Walter Wbite, Huntington;
Tuesday, Sept. 7 - Classes Tri.State Harvest Campout,
St. Louise ca(hollc Church, Sterling Heights, Mict. Campers_ Gallipolis.
Mr.andMrs.AlfredDailey,Mr. begin.
Oct. 1-3, Celestial Valley
Warren, Micbi&amp;'an.
following a honeymoon trip to To date there are 166 units and Mrs. Jobn D. Davis and
Saturday, Sept. Z5 - 10 a.m.· CampgroWld, Grayson, Ky.
Father Thq\nas Lumpkin ·Florida.
and 365 persons from the above Lorna Jo, Oak Ilill; Mr. and 12 noon, Poaster Workshop.
Second annual Thanksgiving
performed t~e double ring
mentioned parts of West Mrs. Judson Daily, Nortbup ;
Oetober - Eastman ' Kodak campout, Mason County
ceremony. /
Mitchells Welcome Virginia and Ohio already Mr. and Mrs. Philip Roberts, Photographic Award Wmner's Fairgrounds, Pt. Pleasant, Nov.
registered and registrations are Patriot; Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Exhibit. ~
12-14, with Oh-Kan Wanders
"nJe bride
given away by
her father Mr. Stephen
·
still being received.
Folden, Gallipolis; Mr. and OetoJX.r (Early)- FAC Arts hosting. Tbere will be a potluck
Geremeaz.
New Daughter
Mrs. Joe :t'\Iompoon. Mr. and &amp; Crafts Fair and Auctiim.
supper Saturday evening. No
Mrs. Leauna Jackson, Mr. and Riverby is open as usual on registration required but
Mls9 Jeaone M. Geremesz,
Hoffman
Reenlists
Gallipolis, · fister of the bride,
Mrs. John Plymale, Mr. and Saturdays and SWldays from 1-5 campers win be charged $1 per
GALLII'OIJS- Mr. and Mrs.
served as inald of. honor, and Fred Mitchell, Smyrna, Ga., S. Sgt. and Mrs. Jack Hoff· Mrs. Paul Ptymsle, Marcia, p.m.
night camping. All N.C.H.A.
Mrs. Willll¥n Geremesz, sister- announce the birth of lbeir man spent the past week with Barry, and Jody, Gallipolis.
There is no admission charge. chapters welcome.
Annual
N.C.H . A.
second
child,
a
daughter,
Aug.
his
parents,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
in.Jaw Of the bride, served as
Thanksgiving
campout,
Lake
.
matron of honor. Tbe Irides &amp;. She bas been named Jennifer .Willlam Hoffman, 136 State St.
Cumberland State Park, 5 miles
maid" were Miss Maureen Lynn, and weighed 10 lbs., 14\2
S. Sgt. Hoffman has been at
south of Jamestown, Ky., Nov.
McTigue, sister Of the groom, ounces. She is being welcomed K. I. Sawyer, A.F.B., Michigan,
24-28.
home
by
a
brother,
Frederick
for
the
past
year,
and
has
been
"'e...
.
and Mi.sli Marilyn E. Duncan,
Each campout everyone
transferred to Homestead
Sterling Heights, Mich., a friend Todd, age 6.
in good fellowship, good
sbares
Tbe maternal grandparenls A.F.B. In Miami, Fla. He bas
of the bride.
food, and good fwl.
Patrick T. McTigue, Troy, are Mr. P. T. Pritchett of already spent four years in the
Mich., brother of the groom, Roswell, Ga., and tbe late Mrs. Air Force, spending some time
Pritchett. Tbe paternal grand- in Thailand, and has ~nllsted.
served as best man.
On their way to Miami they
Tbe ahers were Willlam S. parenls are Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence
A.
MitcheU
of
Lower
will
visit relatives of Mrs. RIO GRANDE - Late al· health and physical education,
Geremesz, St. Clair, Mich.,
River Rd.
H ff
in Texas
d temoon and evening classes at history, mathematics and GALLIPOIJS _ Tbe Vinton
brother of tbe bride, Garry L.
~uis~;~·.
an Rio Grande College first philosophy, as well as physics, Friendly Garden Club met
semesterwlllolfercoursesin IS political science, psychology, recently at the home of Mrs.
areas for whicb registration will social science, sociology and Lucy Hartsook with 10 membe Tuesday evening, Aug. 31, speech .
bers present.
from 6:30 to 8 in Community Classes will begin Wed- Mrs. Hazel Harmon gave
Hall.
nesday, Sept. I, with fmal devotions, "'d CecU Thompson
Tbe courses are in business examinations set for Dec. 13 read tbe first 12 verses of
administration, economics, through 16. Tbe ftrSt semester Proverbs 22. Prayer was given
education, English, French, officially ends Saturday, Dec. by Edna Woodruff. Roll call
18
1
Jlen,./:h&gt;
Evening classes at Rio ;:;:.mt have blooming this
IK&gt;J....., Grande College, according to The secretary's report was
Roy E. Holmes, director of given by Mrs. Eleanor White
student teaching and extension and approved.
education, are an integral part Tbe officers elected for next
of lbe
. regular college
. program. year were : preS!'den t , Mrs .
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio Thetr .purpose IS to . offer Lowell
McCarley;
vice
businessmen and conswners educattonal opportumt1es to i president Mrs Chester White ·
will benefit from tbe individuals who, through work secretary' Mrs. John Downard'
President's new economic commitments
or
other and tre~sure~ Mrs Peari
policies oo a short-term scale obtigations, are unable to attend George. Mrs. ~ Hartsook
andpossibly50,000newjobswill conege on a full-time basis." was elected club cbalnnan.
be sparked, but long-term Tbe normal tuition charge of Mrs. Jessie Houchins was
reactions will not be determined $70 per credit hour for up to 12 elected second vice president.
Prices Begin At
until the OO&lt;Jay wage-price hours, covers the ~te afternoon · Tbe program theme was the
freeze is lifted,
Ohio classes. Tbe evenmg-clasa rate growing of house plants and
Develop~nt
David C. of $55 per hour covers classes Mrs. Jessie Houchins ga~e the
Sweet saJd Friday.
thatbe~matorafter&amp;pnl. For winter care of house plants.
Also Introducing
Sweet, who had his depart- more mformat1on vtslt or· Refreshments were served to
: ment make an analysis Of the telepbone Mr. Holmes.
everyone.

Mr.r. HaJI Hosts

'

Legion Picnic

• . . with 110 alte~:atio•
if you're s•s• or under!
No one will pass you
when you're
this machine
Dacron• Polyester
jumper with its
front slot seam, and
ble hip tabs.
OLORS.:
Turquoise,

Oloose your
favorite and
match or mix them

120"

eBiouses
• Knit Tops
/

m~s•
428 Second Ave.
Gallipolis

eVests

.slacks
eSkirts ·

412-414 Second Ave.

C

Gallipolis. Ollie

�li
'

J

Oh-Kan ·Wanderers
I.

NC.HA .
Campout ·

•

To Host Campout
..-:-

.--·-

I

., ""
.~

••

•

•

;.;:·
...
~

~·

'
GALUPOIJS-TREo.c.s.EA
' w· ...4!1 -• for
.
••
thee~ year. Tbey~fnmlefttonpt: F~BordeD,
mstalling officer; WUliam Persinger, II' 1•1ot; Mrs.

u

..

_.__
, 1leet1
i*fiJ!DQWI,EhMM

'

'·
··
'bC;DgneM()an,tllrd

·
GALLIPOLJS-1RREih:IANI§II)AJU)IIJ!PD1hers

vice I* ·•rot; Durvtby Nibert, &amp;eel 'ary; Wilber Waddell,
first v1&lt;e I* ·•rot, and Henrie liB llwn:b, treasurer.

peae11t on Aug, 23 for UJ&amp;t•Datim me flun left to rlgbt :
Fred HarrtngiGo, lVIII Mayo Kenneth Swain Grace Roacb

-~ ---~...¢:¢'~-~

r-- -~--~----------------------------------.

. .

! Voice along Broadway !Our Eatmg
•

· Habits Do
BV JACI O'BRIAN
HAIR BOX OmCE FACES
11IE BALD TRUTII

NEW YORK - Tbe "Hair" piodiiCei (a
Buller did it) willlry to resuscitate tile bloop~
Jirsute grtBf :a oo Bdwy. and elawhere with
111898ive ~ty; but It's bad tbat ... If Jailmly
Qlrsm weds Johanna Holland, 'lib Ave. dress
mfgr., Mollie Pamis sbould get a Iinder's fee :
Qlrsm IDDired La Hnllanc! ooe Digbt in "21 "so
Mollie bddly 8ppiOBched the beauty (we ~t­
cbed it) and started tile ball rolling .... Tbe
prestigious, even clllc Brody Corp. (nms the
Rainbow Room, Rainbow Grill, L'EtoU~,
Gallagher's etc.) operates five of those umIJ!ellaed rolling cars you aee m Manhattan
streels:
diopemes Mnlcan tacos, tamales,
cbili dogs lo: chili ; another fieldS evf!t:)1
imaginable ltaliaJi bero sandwich· tbe
"Americiiii" ~ .pitdl hotdogs, ~tcb,
cbili dogs and sausages; mice cream cart offers
10 delicious Oavors etc. (tbe pt&amp;Jcar1s' trade
name: AI Fn;sca) .... Bmny Borman, wbo sqs
at the Apartment spot, sports the dubious
dlstinc lim of being the lirst l'I!CGI'dlng artist ever
banned on IBraeli radio: Says bis LP ''Belmy
Berman's Tales FIUII tile Bible" did the trick,
and llemty's a sabra yet.
'lbe iiai Prince office swears lis "Hddler oo
the Roof'' SJDpob won't setlie for just~ the
lmgest.ruming Bdwy. mwDcal ever - they
illlist it will become the loogeat.nUming Bdwy.
show ever by next lllid,Jme, pe....q ''Ute With
Father" ... Its burd1e - the. already finisbed
''Fiddler" film due this winlel" .... 'lbey're
calUng Met tenor Franco Corel1l the new
Diamond Jim Brady: Franco tipped the Biancbi
&amp; Margberita club's operHingers $50 ....
Ve_teran, 911JgWriters ci ~IJits drop
qwelly miD Rosela!l!l where lbe~·
'
oldies
get live performances Jligbtly: • · Lane
(''OJ a Clear Day," ''Bow're · in G1oca
Mcra/' "I like N. Y. in June.'' c'Old Deril
Mom" etc.) brought in bis l'amily to bend their
ears baclt alter an ear-jangle elsewhere fnm
roclt-twisted qulddes.
Max Ka.se tells 1111 NFL grid players in 20
years bave exploded in all direetlms: FIUII 511% In '51 they've averaged up to &amp;-.2; and fnm
197, theyw avoirdiiJIORied the scales to 2331bs.
average .... Max says golfer Jaclt Nlcldaus is
lidding 'to CIMlWD a possible Tampa, F1a., Nat1
Football League frandlise.
Haw: the Miss Heavenly Body em test was
held in a L!l!g Island motel .... Bemy Yol1lg1118D
says motel spelled backwards is 1etom •••• Tbe
Jl'oatie-clearup in midtown came too late to siGp
cancellatioo ri several cooventioos at loP botels
(Tbe Bilton &amp; Americans thus bave been vice
victims) .... TbeFBidiscovereda de.Oynew .32
calilre handgun camouflaged as a mecbanical

one

(

pencil: Twist to fire .... Bemy (;oodnum's We at
the Rainbow GriD Ibis fall .... Bwg ss Meredith
(who owns 'IOacreain upstate l'lmooa, N. V.) is
Otto Preminger'ssummer landlord .... (You will

IOWI!I' the n:ut!)

Allmtic City figures legal gambling is a
siJniH matter ri lime, and witb that an BOO
attracliool«oning, there's a pusb on to CQVel' the
entire lmgtb of the famed boardwalk with a
plastic bUJble rori ... SlwJdd go great witb the
Harold Arlen - Yip IJarlug - Billy Role "It's
QJiy a Paper Mcm llai!!ng (Ner. a Cardbo&amp;'d
Sea" .... Dergm Durbin is wbiooqe~ all the
way from Paris that llbe doesn't not CGimnlia
Records to reissue her old-movie bit songs as
part fi tbe very definite oootalgte wave.
Tunesmitb Mitch Lee will wed
millioobeiress Abllie Kimmelman .... Burt
Bacbaracb's newest raceborse (be owns 14) is
''&lt;II, Bello" .... Ed Sillivm's 20 years in 1V
i!M'hvled ooe ~ rating champ: Tbe sbow with
Julius La Rosa after Goclrey fired Julius ..•. 'lbe
airlines last y- spent fiOD,OOO,OOO m meals;
$Z.M a serving ,••• New Woman mag ~RrVeyed
the gals,- and d!e,l'eiiU!t ·~ ''Women are 1111151
imp'eSI!IId with bald, lnlielligent, bairyJcbesled,
modest, cooversant ~~~&lt;~~" .... Imt we're not bald!
.... Look mag's sports ed, l.eciluri Scbecbter
barred fnm the &lt;lncy Bengal•
camp: Boss Paul Brown openly feared a team-

traininti

panlciing ''batchet job."

Top ackr claim• the status-peak liecause be
bas ooe psychiatrist in ll'wood and another oo
Part Ave. -OI!car Lmmt bad two socii !brim:ends 25 years ago .... Oacar's 001 1V lalk~
remain the rbamps for fascinating kook,yintellecb•alism .... Jane ~·s Interested in
the play "Wbat Are You Do~ in My Lire" for
Bdwy. nerl
Joe Pepitood's ex-wife
Diane,now living in Ft. lee, N.J., wuuld lite ~
baHrtar to visit the kids llllft often .... Wlml!ll's
lip Betty Friedan and a-bqobam Carl don't
speak - because Carl called ber ''the most
masculine Wlllllllll I've ever met" .... Society's
Dennistm Sater f1lllowed the U %-00..- ...-gecy
with another lasting five boars; be's figllling the
most gallant battle with a lllllile; outside.

=- . .

Helen Bottel-YOUTH .ASKED FoR IT!
Tbis colwnn is for young people, their problems rmd
pleasures, tbeir troubles and fun. As witb lbe rest ci Helen Help
Us! it welc&lt;mes laughs but woo't dodge a serious qnesti.m with a
lrush.off.
Send your teenage questioos to YOtrl'll ASKED FOR rr, care
~ Helen Help Us! Ibis newspaper.
COllEGE IS MORE THAN BOOKS
Dear Readers :
With college days !l'actically upoo 1111, I tbought you'd lite the
following excerpts from a letter written to a friend by her
daughter. I think it rates A-Plus.
WHAT IS COLLmE?

Ulllege toaay IS a CO!Iflllling, d;YD8DIIc l»dge-podge ci
seemingly trivial phUosoplties that just might cbange the Wlll'ld
some day.
It is an underlined, dog-eared, peanut butter-cneared
philosophy book which tells you that evf!t:)1tbing you ever lbougbt
is wroog, but doesn 'I tell you wbat to think instead .
It is the most amazing combination of total freedrm and
minimal responsibility, the biggest conflict ri complete innocence
and extensive elpOSUI'e you'll ever bave again.
Tbe University is power without direclion.
It is direction Without support.
It is all of a sudden discovering you reelly can think: you
really did create that theory all oo your own.
'
It Is also discovering you can't think - in the middle of your
philosophy final !
It is the awe Of sitting in a clasarooin and realiZing you know
ooly one hundred-lbousancJ.billionth of tbe things there are to

know.

·Big "U" is tile giggle of girls sitting amid tennis racq~etS Ski
boots, formals, biking gear and dirty underwear, discussing' tbe
ta_'rlble technique Of some poor guy beld in mutual acquaintance.
It IS tears and tact- fomd too late after a big discussion on pot,
the war, morals and racial prejudice.
.
It Is also 3a.m. -and llmorrowyou have an &amp;o'clock .
II is the damn alarm clock.
,
II is thesamedamnalarmclockhalfan hour later.
'
Itis feelings-pride, inferiority,pain, accomplisbment, blrl,
joy.
It is effort, will~r, giving-lip, 1115ing, winning and tr}oing
all O¥er again. It is a thougbt, uniquely your own,

,.

eouege ill believing -

and becaiiSe I believe in a world so
mucllgreater tban the mel !mow (and I know aonelJO great) - it
II tile happiest tune of my life. - DARCI THOLE, UNIVERSITY
OF ffilfiRAOO . OOUI.OF.R ffilll

·------~-------- l

By GAYNOR MADDOX

Tbe Jeftetson Airplane gro"' ck'Oj4led an
applicatim to visit Red China because Did:
lfmJO's gaing; if they pafum as IIIey did oo the
l'eiTy Omo TV sperlala aellliOD or ao bac1t, tbey
wouldn'tevengetin .... Tbe Bealles' altmnsjust
we:e bamed in Singapore: ''Binnfui Western
influence," said cops raiding sbGps ••.• But 001
BeaUe all•m• dm't die; they dm't even fade
away: "Sgt.l'qlper's l.ooeJy Hearts Onb Band"
is hotcalring aJqJg at $0,000 copies a montb four
years alter Its release.

HElEN HElP US!

Not Improve

CarmeI .News,
By th e Day
Florence Circle visited ber
aunt, Laura Eiselstein and son,
Cecil, of Pmneroy recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl arcle and
daughter,
Patrice,vacation
of Colmnbus
spent
a week's
with .
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Circle and
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Yost and
family of Oak Grove.
Tbere were 24 present for
Sunday School on August 22.
Offering was Sl3.18.
Dixie arcle of Oeveland
spenl several days with ber
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Circle, and other relatives.
Rev. and Mrs. Richard YoWlg
and family of Sidney spent the
weekend witb Mr. and Mrs.
Edson Rousb.
Margaret Ann Johnson and
daughter. Sheryl Lee Ann, and
Betty Van Meter called on Mary
Circle on Monday evening.
Mrs. Homer Circle, Dixie
Circle, Mrs. Robert Harden and
children visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Virgil Wilson and family of
Mt. Sterling recently.
J]dr. and Mrs. Melvin Circle
and family of CoiWDbus and Mr.
and Mrs. George Circle of New
Haven visited with Mary Circle
on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Clark of
Racine, Mrs. Cecil Hill of Lima
and Mrs. Eunie Brinker attended the fwleral of Everett E.
Ours at the Tbomas Funeral
Home in ~ton Friday.
LBJ'S BIRTIIDAY

STONEWALL, Tex. (UPI) Former Rresident Lyndon B.
Johnson quietly celebrated his
63rd birthday Friday playing
with his three grandchildren at
the tre«haded LBJ ranch.

•

Wby don't our diets im·
prove? Wby did tbey drop in
quality between 1955 and
1965 wben tbey showed an
increase in snaclt foods,
more bakery products, more
prqcessed foods and a drop
in use of vegetables?
Part of tbe explanation of
this lowering of nutritional
quality lies in !,be increase in
broken families, more chil·
dren left to tbeir own eating
devices, more working mothers. AU of. tbis in!plies an
era of
dinners and break·
fasts, if any, on tbe run.
It may point also to sometbing else-tbe fact tbe nu·
tritional scientists, tbough
knowledgeable, h a v e not
been able to motivate the
consumer on wha~ foods his
~Y n~ to. tbrive on. .
I don t think we nutri·
tion.al scient!sts hav_e been
saymg anything particularly
arresting. We don't em·
pbasize tbe pleasure to be
obtained by eating good
meals," says Horace L. Sippie, executive secretary of
tbe Nutrition Foundation.
Dr. Sipple adds: "Sometime I think our teaching of
nutrition sounds like teach·
log some moral rbUosopy'
not of tbe facts o life. We

:rv

orc-,;o:A
ll
. '
. \A)~. lnSta ~ Officers
1. .

GALUPOIJS - 'lbe Gallia
Chapter of tbe Ohio CivU Service Employees Association
met in regular moolbly sessioo
,on Monday, Aug. 23. In addilioo
to·lbe regular business Officers
and Chapter Executive Board
members were installed and
given lbe oath of office by State
Executive Board Member
Forrest Borden.
Tbose elected to office were,
William Persinger, president;
Wilber WaddeD, first vice

Sdxons Announce
Bt'rth 0;,f C'ht~a
,,~

0

president; Mrs. Margaret EiJ..
man, R.N., second vice
president; Donald Ours, third
m president; Dorotby Nibert,
R.N., secretary, and Henrietta
lllllrch, treasurer.
Appointee{ and approved
Chapter Executive Board
members were, Mrs. Loretta I..
Hayner, Mrs. Grace Roach,
James D. Holmes, Jobn Hood,
Fred Harrington, James
Sbawver,HcmerBrannon, Rev.
Erie Cox, Edgar Rutherford
and Forrest Borden. All offices
are for a two year term.
Also all plans ,.ere rmallzed
for the 25tb annual picnic which
will be a covered dish affair.
Tbe lllapter will furnish the
meat (cbict and bam) and cold
and bot drinks.
Families and friends of
OCSEA members are invited
and are asked to bring a
woaed dish ci their choice and
table service to the " Bob
Evans" Shelter house, Rio
Grande on Saturday, Sept. 4.
Tbe dinner hour is approximately 6:30 p.m . .

GALUPOIJS-Mr. andMrs.
Ernest C. Saxon (the fmmer
Sandra Adkins), Route 1
Northup, are announcing tbe
b' th 0 f the. second child
tr
tr .
• a soo
at Holzer Hospttal on Aug. 17 at
12:56 p.m.
Tbe baby bas been named
Brett AleDDder. He weighed 8
lbs. and was 20% inches long.
Brett is being welcooled IHme
by bis one-year old brother
Eric Olristopber
'
·
Maternal gran.dparents ~ 0 R T. A ..,... M t
Mr. and Mrs. Hillard Adllins,
' . • . J. 0
ee
Gallipolis. Paternal grand- Tbe Gallia County Cha te 0f
mother is Mrs. Carrie Saxon ri Ohio
R r d
T P hr
Addison.
. . e t~e
eac ers
Association will meet on Sept. 2
at Camp Francis-Asbary near
Rio Grande. A covered dish
~::::::::~:::::x:::::::::::Wth:W-Z$·~ dinner will be served at noon.
VISitors are welcoole.

Seen and Heard

teach correcUy as far as ::;:::;;:;;;:::::;;;:.:::::::::;o;:;:;;.-:;;:;;;:;;W~

science is concerned. But we
don't seem able to make peopie rea1i2e the fac(!l of exist·
ence-tbat tbey live, grow
and stay bealtby depends
largely on what tbey eat."
He refers ~ a situation at
tbe UmverSJty of Montana
w be r e nutritionists in·
structed members of a Head
Start group on wbat foods
constitute a balanced diet.
One mother passed tbe test
bigbly. But a month later,
wben one of tbe teachers
visited her borne, she found
that the motber bas not
changed her family meals in
one smgle way.
"To motivate them, we
should call on members of
tbe social sciences. They
migbt be able to teacb us
bow to reacb people, to get
and bold tbeir attention. I
think tbe social scientists
should help us prepare material in a way that would
stimulate the children. Tbey
seem to understand these
tbings better tban we."
Tbe dread of drug abuse
and its consequences bas
taken public ~~ntion awak
~~r'::ru~=n. c=t ~
wreck lives. Dr. Sipple says.

'

GALLII'OIJS - Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Glassbw-n and Mr. and
Mrs. Lowen Glassburn returned
home Friday from a visit with
relatives and friends at
Fostoria and Tiffm.
---------"I am not without bope. I
am worried. We must reacb
tbe cbUdren and strive to
motivate tbem to eat good
food . I do not know tbe complete answer. But I bope at
least, that if cbUdren te8m ·
to enjoy f:ood foods tbey may
be less mclined to drugs "
Dr. Sipple says.
'
(NfWSPAPfl ENTIII'IISE ASSJU

Having a Fund Raising
Event? Garage Sale?
.Flea Market?
We have •..
•Glassware
• Toys
• Novelties
·Jokes
~uarantud

. Sltnment.

S.l~

on

con-

GIFTLAND
miles11l~:'~ 11 G~~/rpons

s
u.s. 35.

WE WILL

BE

OPEN
AS USUAL

MONDAY,

AUGUSJ30
AT

9 A.M.
Thanks for your
patience during
our remodeling.

PAUL

DAVIES
JEWELERS

oa

404 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

.lames D, Holmes, and Jolm Hood. Tboae absent were
Loretta L. Hayner, James Shaver, Rev. Erie Cox, Edgar
R!Jtberford, and Homer Brannon.
Guest speakers from the
ColWDbus office will be on ~
for questions and answers, also
Senator Collins and Representative
Welker are
being invited.
O.C.S.E.A. enjoys membership in nearly every branch

of Public Employee Services in

.the county and city and like the
annual public Spring dinner, the
fall picnic is about as well attended.
Tbe next regular meeting of
the chapter is September 'll at
7:30p.m.

.,

..

...
··'""

., ...

At R'Omtry
"/ R :JI

Mrs. Michael T McTigue

·Miss Geremesz

d
es

JJ J

FAC

~~

n News

;.~
: :::
' :;:.
.• ' '::'
::

~

.::
:.:,
-

••
-

:::
:::
::
--.

REG. '219"
&amp;"! F

'169"

SAVE ssooo

R PD"lStration
•
• · Set

For P.M. Courses

SMist* 'zig-zag .maclni ne -·
with carrying case. ·

Even greater savings
on cabinet.models.
.

on the use of your

SEE

Bob Evans
Bobbies

SOON!

Many r'all Fabrics at Special Rrices.

followin&amp;

Silas Hamilton, llllldren ...
Youth ; Mrs. Aldeth White,
Community Service; Mn. Dill
Tabor, CivU Defente; Dololht
Hecker, Foreign RelaU..;
Mabel Brown, Junl« '
tlvlties; Wanda 1'lll
Legislation ; Dorothy •
National Security; I
Butterfield, Memberilblp; ()pit
Davis, Poppy Chairman;
Aldeth White, Publicity;
Margaret Bradbury, Veterans
Affairs, Inez Marchi, Flowers
and Cards.
Mrs. Wesley 0. Meeb, of
Gallla County and Dayton wu
accepted as a new member. 'lbe
club now has 28 paid membln
for the year of 1972. Tbey bougbt
a gift for lbeir State President,
Mrs . Raymond Sloan, Alhlancl,
Ohio.
Tbe next meeting will be Sept•
28, 7:30p.m. Legion Hall.

Shop!
Compare/
NO tOWER

Ye Olde Village Garden Club
met at the home of Rev. and
Mrs. Marion Williams for the
family ptcntc Thursday
evening. Pra.yer was given by
Rev. Williams.
Attending were Mrs. NatUda
VanCuren, Lancaster, sister to
Mrs. Williams, and Mr. C. W.
Rife, her father; Mrs. Betty
Plymale, Joy and Rex; Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Allman, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Davis, Carma and
Coby; Mr.andMrs. John Byers,
Tony and John; Mrs. Wilina
Haycraft, Mr. and Mrs. John H.
Reese.
Tbe next meeting will be held
Thursday, Sept. 2, at the home
of Mrs. Reese, at 7:30p.m.

ANYWHERE

LADIES

DIAMONDS

TAWNEY

KILUi HER FAMILY
PONTIVV, France (UPI) Raymonde Jouhanno, 35, killed
her husband and three children
with an ax as IIley slept: lben
took ber own life by leaping into
a wen, police said today.

JEWELERS
422 Second Ave;
Gilllipolis

Garden Club Held

Fl..:~&gt;k

v--

The Kicky Young . Seen inNEP

Open Mon. &amp; Fri. 'lil 8 P.M.

FRENCH. CITY
FABRIC SHOPPE
Simplicity, Me Calls. Butterick, Vogue Patterns .
2 Complete Floors of Fabrics·&amp; Notions
We Do Custom Dress Making Singer Sate. &amp; Service

Things In
Unifonns

J?irec!or

44H2S5

51 Court

GallipoliS

eCREST
eBARCO

======

.....,..,IIIIOIRO&lt;ALER

OF CALIFORNIA
ePAUL JONES

eaS\JiiVini
lace-up

Along with our
Usual Line of

eWHITE SWAN

: effect of President Nixon's
: : economic measures on Ohio,
: said the new policies could
"result in substantial sbort-run
benefits for Ohio business and
COIISUIIlers, but postpones lbe
need for widH'anging, longterm solutions to the problems
'1( Inflation and unemployment

eBRESSLER BROS. :
e1QAS$1C
AND OTHERS.

the triumphant tie
takes on a fresh new
approach this season.
Full of free 'n' easy
fashion fun~ .
it's just like you II

·.

DAN THO.MAS
&amp;SON

jI

1

I'

I!

'SERVING YOU SiNCE 1936" .

FA filE S.M.

"Across fr!im the

Shipment of Bob Evans
Trends Smocks!

Post Office"

'

Ill'

If ifs from
H's Palte(ned for

Ga.llipolis, ()hio

aamrea

in the state. n

Last Respects
To Ted Lewis

• WRIT DENIED ANGELA
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Angela Davis, whose murder conspiracy - kidnap trial is set
to begin in one month, was
denied a writ ri habeas corpus

~ues~toc:elif':!:

and a
~--w.::::lt:m~!ll'.~::!MI
.. !l!ll!ll881'll!;~;!.Ill;';a~-~o:cm~!*;;~;~;;'&lt;&gt;:::I'll.m~-w;~&lt;.&lt;i-d ri AppeaL
'

- .'• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

KORELL PLUS.SIZ!!S
FIT YOU PERFECTLY

CIRCLEVILLE, Ohio (UPI)
- Tbe body of "sbowman" Ted
Lewis was shipped bere fr(Jm
New York Friday nigbt to allow
hundreds ri friends who grew
up with him to pay their last
respects.
Circleville Mayor Richard
Gehrhardt
issued
a
proolamatioo in honor Of its
hometown celebrity, declaring
Monday, tbe day Lewis will be
buried in Forest Cemetery bere,
as a day ri tribute. Lewis' body
can be viewed at the Mader
Funeral Home from 1 p.rn.-9
p.m. Saturday and 9a.m.-9 p.m.
Sunday.

The Uniform Center ·

L---~--~--~------~--~----------~---~-------

Family Picnic

the

commJttee: Amer,...pn, Mra.

Introducing. ·..

·THEM

new machine.

'A lrademarl&lt;oiTiiE SI NGMCOMPANY

Garden Club Has

announced-

·

·Exclusive front drop-in bobbin.
• Built-in blindstitch.
Plus 6 other great features.

Free

r

1_____.:_:__.:._~=~======~~~~~~~~~~~============1

324 SEOOND AVENUE
GAlLIPOLIS, OHIO

GALLIPOLIS
Tbe
American Legion alld Auxiliary
beld llleir annual plcnle and
family plelilc at the home of L.
G. Marclii, Otllllcolbe Road.
Gallipolis Post 'll was in attendance. Tbe program was
given abo~t Girls State.
·Attending were Nancy
Ro.lAers, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. James M. Rodgers,
Cheshire, Kyger Creek High
School. City Council ·Beth
Mackenzie, daughter.of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert T. Mackenzie, 315
- 4th Ave . G.A.H.S. City
Treasurer , Clare Markely,
daughter of Dr. and Mrs. John
C. Markley , 130 Garfield
Heights, Gallia Academy High
School. Susan Sprow, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Sprow,
35 Portsmouth Road, G.A.H.S.
secretary to the mayor.
Mr. J. J. Pannabaker, action
chairman for the legion ,
presented two young men, John
Day, and John Bagshaw, who
gave the report for Boys State.
President Margaret Topping

PT. PLEASANT - 'lbe Oh- 'lbeStateOificersofN.C.H.A.
ltan Wanderers of Point are: State President, Owen and
Pleasant will host the Slate FaU Audra
Powell,
Cardi·
· Campout at Mason County Fair nals, Mannington· Vice • PT. PLEASANT - Tbe West Activities Oil Saturday were
Grounds, .September 10, 11 and President, Ed and Lavada Virginia Chapters of National ·camp fenowsbip , ball game,
12.
Crook, Woodpeckers
- · Campers
and
Hikers and a meetmg of chapter
Committees have been ap- Parkersburg; Secretary and Association held a special birth- presidents, "'~ Earl ~ynolds,
pointed and work details are Treasurer_ Ron and Montey day campout recently (August W.Va.statedlreclor, mcharge.
tebeduled to make Ibis one of Metz,
Woodpeckers
:1»-22) at Krodel Park, Pt. A poUuclt su~ was beld
the finestcampouts in the state. Parkersburg
and
State Pleasant. Approximately Saturday evenmg and two
Tbe following eighteen clubs Directors _ Earl and Katy seventy-five (75) WJits from beautiful cakes were served .
In West Virginia have already Reynolds, MoWJtain Doers _ Kentucky, Ohio, West Virginia Along with Marie Clugh, ~
registered:
Huntington.
and Pennsylvania attended Ibis other ~ampers celebra~ btrth·
Adventurers - Hunliogtoo;
Included in the activities campout. Honored guests were days m August. Followmg lbe
American Roamers - Trin- planned for the Fall Campout Bill and Marie Clugb of potluck supper, a supper was
delphia and Wellsburg; Boone there will be square dancing, Harrisburg, Pa., Immediate held . The Clughs · were
Mountain Winders -Madison; drawings for prizes, group past President of N.C.H.A. Tbe presented an engraved .P~que
Cardinab- Mannington; Jolly singing around the campftre, occaSion was m honor. of Marie from the West Vtrgtnla
Roners - Clarksburg; Maple 111eetings, games, chapter Clug~ who celebrated a birth- N.C.H.A. chapters. Tbey ":ere
Leaf - Fairmont; Mountain project sales, Oea sales, and day m August. Also attending also presented a West V1rglnl8
Doers and Mountaineers - church services on Sunday.
were Gene and Edith Moore of memory book SJgned by all
Huntington.
Harrisburg, Pa., guests of the members attending lbe campOh-Kan Wanderers - Point
Oagbs.
out.
Pleasant; Pitch and Pull Slides of various campouts Church services on Sunday
Charleston; Rhododendron throughout the United States were conducted by Rev. Gerald
Morgantown; Shawnee _
and Canada were sbown Friday S. Hobart. Rev. Hobart's wife,
Dunbar; Stonewall Roamersrl night. Don Thompson, member Marie , conducted Sunday
Weston;
Teays
Valley
'(l
of the Oh-Kan Wanderers School for the children. Tbe
Roadrunners- Teays ValleyChapter, Pt. Pleasant, assisted HobartsarefromEastLynn, W.
Scott Depot and Tent and Tow GALLIPOIJS - Mrs. Cora with the slide program.
Va., and are serving as West
YV
-St. Albans.
Hall, 728 Second Ave., en·
Virginia N.C.H.A. state
Weir Happy Wheels - tertained 30 guests for dinner li©~'l .~..xl5.!Y~~"'"'"'"'"'"'''~'"'~~ chaplain. Fonowing dinner, all
Weirton; Woodpeckers - last Wednesday evening.
;~
campers bade farewen, and
Parkersburg ; :and Mingo
f
departed for their respective
GALUPOLIS - MIJs Janice · McTigue, Birmingham, brother Renegates -Williamson.
Mrs. Hall's nepbew, Earl
homes .
S. Geremesz, daugh\tr of Mr. of the groom, Raymond Ayres
Ohio chapters registered are Dathvish, from llticago is visiting '.:,.';·.,,.':.·.
Coming events for N.C.H.A.
and Mrs. Stepben. Geremesz, and Michael Hoben, friends of as fonows : Roadnumers Sport WI
er.
'·
campers are:
358 Debby Drive, Gallipolis, and the groom, botb of Adrian, Club - Euclid; Canton Can
West Virginia N.C.H.A. state
Micbael T. McTigui, son of Mr.· Mich.
Openers _ Canton; Rainbows Others attending were Mr. ;&gt;;
,.. fall campout, Mason County
and Mrs. Leo B. ~cTigue, 633
Areception was held after the End - East liverpool and and' Mrs. Leslie llall, Peggy,
Fairground, Pl. Pleasant, Sept.
HuppCrossRoad, Birmlngbam, wedding at Kingsley Inn, Wellsville; Free Way Ramblers Tina, and Scottie, Lancaster;
Tbrougb September - 111-12. Host Chapter, Oh·Kan
Michigan were united in holy Birmingbam, Mich.
- East liverpool; Born Free_ Mr. and Mrs. Steve SaWlders Gertrude Ward Exhibit.
Wanderers of Pt. Pleasant.
matrimony Aug 20 at 6:30 in the
Tbe couple will reside in St. Clairsville and French City and Walter Wbite, Huntington;
Tuesday, Sept. 7 - Classes Tri.State Harvest Campout,
St. Louise ca(hollc Church, Sterling Heights, Mict. Campers_ Gallipolis.
Mr.andMrs.AlfredDailey,Mr. begin.
Oct. 1-3, Celestial Valley
Warren, Micbi&amp;'an.
following a honeymoon trip to To date there are 166 units and Mrs. Jobn D. Davis and
Saturday, Sept. Z5 - 10 a.m.· CampgroWld, Grayson, Ky.
Father Thq\nas Lumpkin ·Florida.
and 365 persons from the above Lorna Jo, Oak Ilill; Mr. and 12 noon, Poaster Workshop.
Second annual Thanksgiving
performed t~e double ring
mentioned parts of West Mrs. Judson Daily, Nortbup ;
Oetober - Eastman ' Kodak campout, Mason County
ceremony. /
Mitchells Welcome Virginia and Ohio already Mr. and Mrs. Philip Roberts, Photographic Award Wmner's Fairgrounds, Pt. Pleasant, Nov.
registered and registrations are Patriot; Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Exhibit. ~
12-14, with Oh-Kan Wanders
"nJe bride
given away by
her father Mr. Stephen
·
still being received.
Folden, Gallipolis; Mr. and OetoJX.r (Early)- FAC Arts hosting. Tbere will be a potluck
Geremeaz.
New Daughter
Mrs. Joe :t'\Iompoon. Mr. and &amp; Crafts Fair and Auctiim.
supper Saturday evening. No
Mrs. Leauna Jackson, Mr. and Riverby is open as usual on registration required but
Mls9 Jeaone M. Geremesz,
Hoffman
Reenlists
Gallipolis, · fister of the bride,
Mrs. John Plymale, Mr. and Saturdays and SWldays from 1-5 campers win be charged $1 per
GALLII'OIJS- Mr. and Mrs.
served as inald of. honor, and Fred Mitchell, Smyrna, Ga., S. Sgt. and Mrs. Jack Hoff· Mrs. Paul Ptymsle, Marcia, p.m.
night camping. All N.C.H.A.
Mrs. Willll¥n Geremesz, sister- announce the birth of lbeir man spent the past week with Barry, and Jody, Gallipolis.
There is no admission charge. chapters welcome.
Annual
N.C.H . A.
second
child,
a
daughter,
Aug.
his
parents,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
in.Jaw Of the bride, served as
Thanksgiving
campout,
Lake
.
matron of honor. Tbe Irides &amp;. She bas been named Jennifer .Willlam Hoffman, 136 State St.
Cumberland State Park, 5 miles
maid" were Miss Maureen Lynn, and weighed 10 lbs., 14\2
S. Sgt. Hoffman has been at
south of Jamestown, Ky., Nov.
McTigue, sister Of the groom, ounces. She is being welcomed K. I. Sawyer, A.F.B., Michigan,
24-28.
home
by
a
brother,
Frederick
for
the
past
year,
and
has
been
"'e...
.
and Mi.sli Marilyn E. Duncan,
Each campout everyone
transferred to Homestead
Sterling Heights, Mich., a friend Todd, age 6.
in good fellowship, good
sbares
Tbe maternal grandparenls A.F.B. In Miami, Fla. He bas
of the bride.
food, and good fwl.
Patrick T. McTigue, Troy, are Mr. P. T. Pritchett of already spent four years in the
Mich., brother of the groom, Roswell, Ga., and tbe late Mrs. Air Force, spending some time
Pritchett. Tbe paternal grand- in Thailand, and has ~nllsted.
served as best man.
On their way to Miami they
Tbe ahers were Willlam S. parenls are Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence
A.
MitcheU
of
Lower
will
visit relatives of Mrs. RIO GRANDE - Late al· health and physical education,
Geremesz, St. Clair, Mich.,
River Rd.
H ff
in Texas
d temoon and evening classes at history, mathematics and GALLIPOIJS _ Tbe Vinton
brother of tbe bride, Garry L.
~uis~;~·.
an Rio Grande College first philosophy, as well as physics, Friendly Garden Club met
semesterwlllolfercoursesin IS political science, psychology, recently at the home of Mrs.
areas for whicb registration will social science, sociology and Lucy Hartsook with 10 membe Tuesday evening, Aug. 31, speech .
bers present.
from 6:30 to 8 in Community Classes will begin Wed- Mrs. Hazel Harmon gave
Hall.
nesday, Sept. I, with fmal devotions, "'d CecU Thompson
Tbe courses are in business examinations set for Dec. 13 read tbe first 12 verses of
administration, economics, through 16. Tbe ftrSt semester Proverbs 22. Prayer was given
education, English, French, officially ends Saturday, Dec. by Edna Woodruff. Roll call
18
1
Jlen,./:h&gt;
Evening classes at Rio ;:;:.mt have blooming this
IK&gt;J....., Grande College, according to The secretary's report was
Roy E. Holmes, director of given by Mrs. Eleanor White
student teaching and extension and approved.
education, are an integral part Tbe officers elected for next
of lbe
. regular college
. program. year were : preS!'den t , Mrs .
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio Thetr .purpose IS to . offer Lowell
McCarley;
vice
businessmen and conswners educattonal opportumt1es to i president Mrs Chester White ·
will benefit from tbe individuals who, through work secretary' Mrs. John Downard'
President's new economic commitments
or
other and tre~sure~ Mrs Peari
policies oo a short-term scale obtigations, are unable to attend George. Mrs. ~ Hartsook
andpossibly50,000newjobswill conege on a full-time basis." was elected club cbalnnan.
be sparked, but long-term Tbe normal tuition charge of Mrs. Jessie Houchins was
reactions will not be determined $70 per credit hour for up to 12 elected second vice president.
Prices Begin At
until the OO&lt;Jay wage-price hours, covers the ~te afternoon · Tbe program theme was the
freeze is lifted,
Ohio classes. Tbe evenmg-clasa rate growing of house plants and
Develop~nt
David C. of $55 per hour covers classes Mrs. Jessie Houchins ga~e the
Sweet saJd Friday.
thatbe~matorafter&amp;pnl. For winter care of house plants.
Also Introducing
Sweet, who had his depart- more mformat1on vtslt or· Refreshments were served to
: ment make an analysis Of the telepbone Mr. Holmes.
everyone.

Mr.r. HaJI Hosts

'

Legion Picnic

• . . with 110 alte~:atio•
if you're s•s• or under!
No one will pass you
when you're
this machine
Dacron• Polyester
jumper with its
front slot seam, and
ble hip tabs.
OLORS.:
Turquoise,

Oloose your
favorite and
match or mix them

120"

eBiouses
• Knit Tops
/

m~s•
428 Second Ave.
Gallipolis

eVests

.slacks
eSkirts ·

412-414 Second Ave.

C

Gallipolis. Ollie

�..

,,,'

78 Attend 1940
Class Reunion

The Poet's ·
Corner
I I I - ALL Ttl_,IE: TRAILS
I " - aH lhe lralls In lhe

........

a • Ill
U.uelhe reresl perfumes~

Gallia Academy High Scboo1
Class of 1!HO recently held a
reunion at tbe Gallipolis Elks
.l..cJ9!!ellall with Class President
Dr. Robert Morgan of Clnclnnati presiding. Class
member Charles Leonard
McKinney of Grove City asked
tbe blessing and dinner was
aerved by the Gallipolis Emblem Oub to 78 members and
guests.
Other class members atlending were Alfred Gabrielli,
Dexter Saunders Roach, Neal
B. Clark, Daryl Shoemaker,
Mary Clendenin, . Freda
Gilmore Felker, Teressa
Joh!ison Q-emeans, Elizabeth
farley Mills, Rebecca Cornell
Boggs, Howard B. Saund..-.,
Dick Thomas, and Alma
Wallace, Gallipolis ; Orland
Elliott,
Louise
Loucks
and
Orville
Chevalier
Shoemaker, Columbus: Ray
Hively, Cleveland; Clara
Cooper Kuhns, Meadville, Pa.;
Donald Judy, St. Petersburg,
Fla.: Thelma White Loucks,
Zanesville; Mary Fierbaugh,
Glilt, Ashville; Glenn Judy,

11le IIIIIs 'IMhB'e min beauty Is
mweiid
And all h
land:

r - ways of ..,,

all the ·trees and lhelr .
wvels

I -

AndwllorethewlldblrdlloveiD

nst;

I -whore the rocks shine so
pnlly
.
And
of lhe ev81ing is

h....,.

boSI.

1 tcr.. ..-.. the wild beasts
-playing
1And the mulll.._,s love 11101t_
- ill hkle;
I tcr.. 'IMhB'e the mosses an
-lng

Auldlhebro'*swherewlld terns

.---

Wh!!re the wild roses are
dlmblng

llouetsudle$ on lhe hills tar

~shlideandlhepinelrees
..::: r:!!N...-will sings Ill
his mate.
I cMi tell you about
llanle..ld

my

Andallllerarebeauty I'd find.
But ID tell you llelruth, mostis

hidden.
Folewerlnthebackof my mind.
In wlnllr

-'lakes

I wait for

.

the

That ..._ all the pine on the
hill;
It rem- 1M so much of a
Olrislmas
Wluere the kiddles are playing
there still.

Following tbe dinner, Dr.
Morgan called the business
meeting to order and the class
members voted to have another
reunion in 1975.

Plans Completed

.

IMI- Wickline- Wuchte .United

wi:IR.
In the stillness o1 evening the
ripe. -

--_.,,

In the Iaiii walt far the autumn

That calor the red lrees far and

..ar.

-

I visit new lands I get

I miss my hills and all that's
there.

All lhe

GALUPOUS - Plans are
completed for an open church
wedding uniting Miss Bonnie
Wealherholl, daught.et of Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Weatherholt,
Rio Grande, and Donald
Saunders, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Saunders of Lecta.
,
The wedding 9ill take place
of Eau Gallie High School. He Sunday, Sept 5, at lhe Okey
attended Johnson Bible College Chapel Church off Rt. 715 at
in Knoxville, Tenn. and is a· Lecta.
sophomore at Brevard Com- The Rev. Elmer Geiser will
munity College, Melbourne, perform the ceremony. WedF1a. He is presently employed ding music will be presented by
at the Williams' I.G.A. in Indialantic.
The new Mrs. Wuchteisa 1969
graduate of Gallia Academy
High School, Gallipolis, Ohio.
She has compleled one year at
Brevard Community· College
and is presently a medical
secretary for Dr. Kendall Beck·
man.
After returning from their
SUNDAY
honeymoon through lhe Wesl
GUEST musicians will be
Coast of F1orida, lhe new Mr. Parlir FfynnoD Choir ol Ji'llntand Mrs. Wuchle will reside al shire, Wales. CIIJrcb school
115 Mindel! Gardens Apart9:30, worsllip service 10:45 a.m.
ments, Apartment 105, Wesl·
Seminole, Melbourne, F1orida. at Calvaty Baptist.
THE REV. Earnest Baker will
be ..-eacbing at Walnut Ridge
Omrch,
Sunday, 7:30p.m.
.
T .R.I. ADVISORY family
picnic will be held at tbe WoodThomas Cabin, Cora, Sunday,
12 noon.
TUESDAY
I
MIXED Bowling League
general meeting, 7:30, !Jkyline
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio ( UPI) Ulnes.
~ A wildcat strike al the local
General Telephone Co. here WEDNESDAY
CALVARY Baplisl Cburcb
ended Friday after confusion
choir rebearsal. 7:30.
over President Nixon's wage--

Mrs. Richard E Wuchte

In the summer I love the hot
SMds
Wluere daisies awered

a-!dets
And all of the fruits sweet and

r*' "

I walked as a

...... child.
All the slorle$ my kind parents

1alcL

rtt tell you right here's most

like....._
With goU: 1 memories untold.
By Olive o ..Swain
Feb. 17. 1968

Crown City, Ohio

Apple Grove
News, Events
Jlflln.WR.-.
Mr. and Mrs. Erwin
Gloet•w ~ their
grandcbildren, Dalmy and

OlriatiDe Radge!y to Ocean
aty, lid., wbft they were
joined by llr. aod Jlrs. Larry
Bldg b of hirfu, Va. and
enjoJel a ncatiCin. Dlnny and
&lt;kisline spent a week with tbe

GALIJPOLIS -On August28
al 2 p.m. at the First Baplisl
Church of Indialantic, F1orida,
Miss Susanne Wickline,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Donovan Wickline of 141 Coral
Way, Satellite Beach, F1orida,
andMr.RichardD. Wuchte,son
of Mr. and. Mrs. Richard E.
Wucbte of 1036 Creel St., Eau
Gallie, Florida, were united in
holy inalrimony. The Rev. John
G. Green officiated tbe doublering ceremony.
The family pews were
lrimmed wjlh while salin bows.
The altar flowers were while
gladioli, daisies, and aqua
carnations. One hall hour of
music preceded lhe ceremony
with Mrs. Belly Miller as
organist and Mr. Thomas
Strong as vocalist Miss Annette
Wi~e. sister of lhe bride,
and Miss Denise Wuchte, sister
ol the groom, registered the
guests.
The bride, given in marriage
by her father, ~hose an A-line,
formal lenglh gown of chiffon
and Vehice lace over bridal
taffeta. Her detachable
cathedral-length train · was
edged with matching lace. Her
elbow-length veil of illusion was
held by a lace profile edged wilh
seed pearls. She carried a
cascade of daisies and
:nlnlalure aqua carnations.
The bride's sister, Miss
Jeannene Wickline, was maid of
honor. Sbe wore a fonnallenglh

Gb&amp;'es.
11.-.an:l Mrs. Ernest Fiaber of
Ripley,~- Va, vi.siled Mr. and
Mrs. EnriD Gloeclmer on
llmday. Mrs. GJoe l•w accompanied the fishers lo
O:arlestan and vi.siled Mr. and
Mn. Riduu-d Fisher.
11r. and Mrs. Marbsall
Adams, Mrs. Larry O'Brien and
J"mmy, Linda and Carol Ann,
vitiled llr. and Mrs. Vernon
Cady at West Jefferson on
Wednesday nigbl On Thursday
By Jonalhan E. Louden
tliey left for Jefferson , John M. Casey, a long-time
W"LlKWSill and vi.siled Mr. and employee of the Gallia County
llrs. Getlrge Slrobush, Mrs. District Ubraty, for lhe'pastl2
Fred C8dle and son. They years retires this monlh. Mr.
retuen_ed home Sa~y -~1. Casey is well-known to county
. ~ Gloedner 15 VISIIing . residents as lhe "Bookmobile
sisler, llr. _and Mrs. Larry Driver" for tbe library. He
gi!IJ al FairfaJ:, Va.
piloted the mobile unit over the
llr. aod Mrs. Oarence Roush county roads and by-ways for
and 5011, TIDIILly, of W"tnfi~, some eighl years. During lhat
w_. Va., opent Sabrday evenmg time the children and adults
Wltb Mr- and Mrs. Herbert became familiar with his warm
Rousb and called on friends.
smile and friendly manner. Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Roush of Casey covered approximately
Greensboro, N. C., vustled 40 thousand miles while on lhe
recenUy with the former's scheduled rounds.
pareDis, Mr. and ~- Virgil
About three years ago Mr.
Rousb lllld Jolin Sbain.
Casey transferred to the
~.andllrs. RalpbDursland material processing departc:lil*erl, Mary Ami, J~ Ann, ment of lhe library. In lhal
and JilllY_ ~· of Gallipolis, position he has accessioned,
lira. V"~ Oeerlurf and two stamPed and applied plastic
gandcbildren of Bradbury covers lo nearly 10 thousand
rall!d on Mr. and Mrs. Herbert new books . He has also
ROillll and Roger Thm-sday processed the magazines and
umiug.
newspapers, and repaired
EtriD Gloeekner, Nancy nearly two thousand films
lluRU,
J•dy
Roberts, borrowed from lhe Ubrary.
llarprel Gloeeb\er, Pete
Mr Ca
Ia
1 ·
Rev. Edward Griffith
. sey p ns on re axmg
•
and visiting with his in·
ud Nor• Pearsoll all numerable friends In lhe area.
u • 'nled .........__ recenlly.
- -~
The following new books were
released Thursday:
Miss Loreua o..-s ot MidFICTION
clepar l~P!f~l Saturday with her
Theirs was the Kingdom, by
aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Roy R. F. Oelderfield; They Do It in
Dulilllltw.
Church, by Topsy Gregory ; The
Genenl Hall is a medical Treasure of lhe Chisos, by John
p!ltiel:t at Verenn Memorial H. Culp; A Fragile Bark, by
IIDipllll.
· Joseph P. Benante: Secrets, by
...._ Bert dllllt was relilrned Nancy Hate·.
to t.r ~ S.IIWday from lhe
NON-FICTION
• Iu".
My Face for lhe World to See,

.. *

,

a

Mrs. Sarah Winters of Rio
Grande.
Miss Judy Young will serve as
maid of honor, wilh Mr. David
Saunders, cousin of tbe groom,
as best man. The ushers will be
Mr. George Hays, Vmton, and
Terry Saunders, brother of tbe
groom. .

Coming ·
Events

W'ddcat Strike

.Barely Favor

Miss Christina Faye Hall

Miss Hall Engaged

One Does not Walk Alone •••

GALIJPOUS- Mr. and Mrs. tinglon National Bank of
Jay Hall, Sr. of Cheshire an· Columbus.
Wedding plans are innounce the engagement of their
daughter, au-;stina faye, to complete.
Mr. Randy Louks, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Louks' of
Columbus. The brid~lect is a
graduate of Nationwide College
of Commerce and is presently
employed_ as · assistant
secretary at Nationwide Beauty
Academy. Mr. Louks is
presently employed al Hun·

tM

~

&gt;

•••
~

.

~

I •

t.

~

I

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE HAS
AFTERNOON AND EVENING
CLASSES FOR EVERYONE

But it is ~lso aware the GOP Is
In lhe minority on the reapportionment board and that the federal guidelines ore likely to prevail.
The Gilligan administration;
for the lime bel1!g, professes to
be dra(ting ideal and equal dislricts, refusing lo exercise a
heavy hand even though II holds
control of the board.
Most of Ohio's House and Sen.
ate dislricts are still reasonably
well conformed to lhe "one-man,
one-vote" principle from !heir
realignment of four years ago.
This factor, along wilh the .
legal tangles and the apparent"
desire of both Par-ties to satisfy
court requirements, may serve
to blunt any attempts al sharp
gerrymandering Ibis year.
Every Patriotic Amerlun
Should See

OVERVIEW

lows ror "zero 11 deviation to in·

sure equal representation for all A film st'r l p ttlat Is • superb
summaritatlon
of
the
Ohioans.
n ist
conspiracy.
The Ohio Constitution requires commu
Thursday, September 2, 7:30
reapportionment to follow polil· p.m . at Galli a County Junior
Fair Grounds In the Civic
ical bOundary lines - an impos- Bu
il ding .
sibility if "zero" deviation is to
Sponsored by the Gallla .
be achieved.
Mason Chapter of the John
Brown's office is setting up Birch Society .
some reapportionment maps
Admission Free
heavily favoring Republicans. ' - - - - - - - - - - - - '

· - - - - - - - - - -. . . . . . . . CU~AND MAIL TODAY . . . . . ...

I

I

send for

II

fREE

~

.

information :

Now you can learn income Ia• preparation from
H&amp;R Block. Thousands are earning gOod money as
tax preparers. Enrollment open to men and women
1of all ages. Job opportunities for qualified graduates.
I Classes Start Sept. 14

I H&amp;R BLOCK

I~
~~~~~

~

i

1
,. .

II ~.:!c.:•:: i:;~:!,~,::llipolis, Ohio
I Nome
I Add!OSS

•

.3

i..
I
I

~M

I

I

Zip

.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~....... CLIP AND MAIL TOOAVil• • • • #

CARPET
SPECIAL

theme, "Someone touched me."
· Some touched briefly on
mothers and grandmothers, bul
especially olher than these, on
who had some good influence on
their lives; The beautiful lhing
about il was lhat !hose folk were
just being themselves in !heir
daily. walk of life, neve~
realizing some one was
watching, and listening.
Some in the group were
surprised to have been that one.
To mention a few: Jane Johnson
remembered a beloved stepfather who always gave' her
good advice when she was
young: and coming to lhe
church, a new bride a few years
ago, she found in Eula Profitl a
wonderful, understanding
friend who talked to her and
listened when she was seeking
to know more about !he church;
Cas Bissell, who is affiliated
with no single church, spoke of
some of our folk she'd known
si~e childhood, and though! of
favorably, and Goldie Gillilan,
who spoke of many folk,
especially Brother, Cummings
of Vales Mills, who befriended
her son, Dr. Ronald Gillilan
through his college years al
Ohio University in Athens, to
lhe point of taking him into his
home, antl whal ..a blessing it
·was to have that $ecurily for a
young man away from home for
U1e first time.
Beulah Roush mentioned,
among others, Golda Gillilan
and Lucy Taylor, sisters and
neighbOr. Sqlne spoke of
missionaries, paslors and other
members, Bessie Johnson and
•

Since 1859

Guaranteed.
To SatisfyOr loner Back

SUBTERFUGE ENDED
COLUMBUS (UPI)
William Nye, state Natural
Resources · Department
director, said the use of a staleowned station wagon on a
recent vacation was perfecUy
legal and personal lise of slate
cars by cabinet officers has
been a practice for more lhan 20
years in Ohio.
He added previous stale officials used regular license
plates on lhe CI!J"S, so lhe
practice was not noticed by lhe
public. He said Gov. John J.
Gilligan had directed state
plates be used "so taxpayers
should know which vehicles are
state cars." Nye's auto was
seen on Kelley's Island on Lake
Erie.

one vote" requiremimt has pro- :
duced some conflicts wilh Ohio
constitutional guidlines for remapping.
There are so many legal snarls
lhal Republican Secretary of
Stale Ted W. Brown, frustrated
by what he calls lhe "practically impossible task" of meeting
bolh federal and slate requirements, has submitted a series
of questions on lhe subject for
interpretation by Attorney Genera I William J. Brown, a Oemocrat.
Perplexed By Problems
Even the Gilligan administration is perplexed by the knotty
legal problems and thus. far Is
proceeding cautiously in its preliminary drafts.
There is the question of how
much deviallon Is allowed in the
size of a dislrict. SeCretary o!
State Brown's office says the
"one-man one-vote"principleal-

$i.75, installed.

J

FOR BIG DISWUNT SA

eliminate lhe possibility lhal reapportionment can be tied to
budget-taxnegotialions.
The shorter lhe lime period
for public discussion of lhe var·
ions reapportionment plans, the
less chance !here is for a largescale political hassle. The DemoeraIs have lhe votes, and can
send their plan over to lhe court
to stand on its merits.
But all is not as simple as it
seems. The federal "one-man,

r---------------------------------------------------

1940 PLYMOUTH

Entkd Friday

lmprovernenb of your home

pay for them1elves by giving
)'Olp better li ving! And we how
the 1money avoilablelo finonot
your prCJiect. Time payments
may be arranged to suit yow

budgoil Come in NOW foo- all
details!

Coffee
3 lb. bag

l'.! .

J,.OOnorulents

A-line gown with an empire
bodice made of aqua taffela
with an organza overlay. She
carried a nosegay of ~es and
aqua carnations and wore a
matching headpiece.
The junior bridesmaid was
Miss Usa Beckman, daughter
of Dr. and Mrs: Kendall Beck·
man of Melbourne Beach,
F1orida. Tbe flower girl was
Miss Jill Williams, daughter o(
Mr. and Mrs. David Williams of
lndialanllc. They wore identical
gowns of thai of the maid of
honor's of aqua and yellow
respe_ctively wilh · ma~hing
Loaded Full of Merchandise!
bouquetS· ii!ul beildpieces.
The best inan was E. Richard
Seaman of Eau Gallie. Ushers
TO IE GIVEN AWAY
were Mark Ostrander of
Satellite Beach and'Paul Lewis
SEPT. 3 AT 11 P.M.
of Eau Gallie.
After the wedding, a recepNo Purchase Necessary, Just Register!
tion was held in the church's
Fellowship Hall. The bride's
table was draped in white linen
and blue net The centerpiece
consisted of the lhree lier
wedding cake decoraled in blue
and white accenled on either
side wilh silver candelabras
and lighted blue candles.
Assisting al lhe reception were
Mrs. Sandra Smilh, Mrs. Doris
137 PlUM Strftl
Jones, Mrs. Evelyn Searcy, and
Glillitiolls,
Ohio
Mrs. Bobbi Williams.
For her going--away outfit, lhe
new Mrs. Wuchle chose a red,
About
200 members
of Local · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -...
freeze
was clarified.
while, and blue dress with price
4372
of lhe Communications
matching accessories.
Workers of America struck the
Mr. Wuchte is a 1969 graduate
company, reportedly because
lbey believed management
employes were receiving wage
increases. "All employes, bolh
management and union, who
were to receive a pay increase
Aug. 8, received lhat increase in
FIRST SEMESTIR 1971:72
today's paycheck," GE Division
Time
Days
Dept.
Class
Credit
Manager J. C. Sharp said
6:30-8:00
TTh
3
Bus. Ad.-223 Business Communications
by Liz Renay; Birthdays, Friday. Local President Robert
4:00
MWF
Bus. Ad.-233 Marketing I
3
Holidays and Other Disasters, Arnett verified Sharp's
6:30-8:00
MW
Econ.- 203 American Economy
by Thomas Mullen; The Busy statement.
3
4:00-5:30
TTh
Man's Old Testament, by Leslie
Econ.- 233 Macroeconomics
3
4:00
MWF
Econ. - 403 Economic Thought
3
D. Weatherhead; Peopl~ I have mi't;;;~:e~/o:d t~~e~:
6:30
Th
2
Educ. - 402 Tchng. Soc. Sci. in Sec. Ed.
Loved, Known, or Admir~, by A-The changing of water
6:30--8:30
TTh
Leo Rosten; Forests of Lilliput, into wine at the wedding
Educ. -433 Tchng. P.E. in Sec. Ed.
3
4:00
M-F
by John Bland; J9lral Ministry feast at Cana of Galilee.
Eng. - 055 Remedial Eng Iish
5
and lhe Changing Community,
4:00
M· F
Eng. -105 English Composition
5
by Rockwell Smilh: Incredible
4:00
MWF
Eng. - 233 Children's Literature
3
Collectors, Weird Anllques, and
6:00-7:30
MW
Eng. - 323 Seminar in Cont. Lit.
3
Odd Hobbies, by Carmichael:
4:00
MWF
Eng.-413 Shakespeare
3
Pictorial 'Astronomy, by Alter;
4:00
MWF
French -103 Elementary French I
3
I Read, You Read, We Read, by
6:30-9:30
w
HPE 8243 Treatment of Injuries
3
American Ubrary Association:
4:00
M- F
5
Hist. - 105 Western Civilization
The Symbols Speak, by Mc6:00--7:15
M-Th
Math -104 Fundamentals of Math.
4
Cutcheon: Personal Faith for
4:00
MWF
3
Phi 1. - 403 Ethics
Human CriSes, by Alvin N.
6:30-8:00
MW
Physics- 303 Mechanics
3
Rogness; Civil Uberties and lhe
4: 10
MW
Physics -104 Introduction to Physics
4
Constitution, by Lucius Barker;
3:00::S:10
TTh
Lab
Blowout at PlaUorm A, by Lee
6:00-8:00
TTh
Lab
Dye; Your Child and His Art, by
4:00
M·F
Pol. Sci.-105 American Government
5
Viktor Lowenfeld: Looking for
6:30-8:00
TTh
Pol. Sci.-443 Public Administration
3
Ideas:, by Wallick; How to
4:00
MWF
P$ych.-303 Individual Differences
3
Make Colonial Furniture, by
6:30-9:30
w
Psych. - 333 Applied Psychology .
3
Franklin H. Gottshall: WinEight O'Clock
4:30-6:00
TTh
Soc. Sci .-203 Principles of Geography
3
chell, by Bob Thomas; The Art
6:30-9:30
T
Soc.-213 Sociology of Education
of Sicilian .Cooking, by Anna
3
4:00
M·F
Muffoletto; The Chinese Menu
Sp.- 105 Fundamentals of Speech
·5
4:00
MWF
Cookbook, by Chang: Selected
Sp.- 323 Stagecraft
3
6:30-9:30
Readings in Right of Way; More
M
Sp. - 353 Persuasion
3
Pop!, by Schmeiser; Modem
Patchwork, by Martens;
Vegetable Gardening, by Sunset
'
Editors; Songs for Our Times
from the Joan Baez Songbook;
The Best of Folk Music; Career
Opportunities, Ecology, Conservation, and Environmental
Control; Ferguson Guide to
Two-Year College Programs;
EVENING TUITION RAlES ($55 PER CREDIT HOUR)
How to Use the Fine Arl of
Questioning, by Philip Groisser.
APPLY·TO aASS£S BEGINNING AT OR AFTER 6

John M• .Casey Retires
From District Library

:!.

Republicans. And the Ohio Su·
preme Courl, which will heat
any appeals and which may end
up drawing the map itself if
there is a stalemate, is 7-4 Republican.
SCript Seems Plain
On tbe .surface, lhe script
would seem plain enough. The
Oemocratic board under the direclion of Gov. John J. Gilligan
gerrymanders enough RepubliJIW cO luCS
can legislators to take control of
Ma:iy limes !here is room for lhe House in 1m and throw the
l_Dmpromiseandtrading,bultbe "Senate into a_virtual deadlock.
final version of lhe map usual- The Repvblican · dorrunated
ly reflects the parly controlling court nuiHies this plan and
lhe reapportionment agency or reassures tbe GOP control of
lhe courts.
bolh chambers..
.
There are i{idicalions full ap- Some SJgns poml to this conplication of lhe "one man, one elusiOn. The governor lias ~de
vole" edict of lhe federal gov· no moye to call the reapportionernmenl may change this silua· menI board .together •perhaps to
lion. Moreover, there are so
many twists and !urns to re·
apportionment in Ohio ~!lis year
r~
COMMERCIAL PRODucriON of fly-ash bricks, developed by.West Virginia Univefl&gt;ity 's
that it is all but impossible to
Coai Research Bureau, sooo will be underway in Edmonton, Canada. The bricks can be made
predict lhe outcome.
solid or cored and ln a variety ol colors and teztures. They are tighter aild stronger than conFor openers, lhe five-man re-ventlooal clay-lace bri!!ks. Pmessor Joseph W. Leonard (left), director of lhe wvu.Coal
apportionment board which will Gra~,.A rr
Research Bureau, Charles F. Cockrell (center) and Professor Kenneth K. Humphreys, who are
realign Ohio's House and Sen·
up-c. .1. IJXBS
assistant directors, are three of tbe principal developers ol Oy-asb bricks.
ate districts is controlled 3 • 2
by lhe Democrats. The House CO~UMBUS(UPI)-As?'"vey
and Senate are controlled by of Ohio mdependenl b~ess"
men, conducled by the Nabonal
Not a Penny for
Federation of Independent Business, showed 54 per cent favor
Businu of Punils a gradualed personal income
·-e
r
tax in tbe slate and strongly
oppose
a flat rate similar kind
BY GOLDIE CLENDENIN Grover Harris (now decea~d) . local· district teachers, "One WASHINGTON (UPI)
PORTLAND - The Emma Juanita Cozart of Norlh Branch just never knows, does one?," None of $62 million being made of lax.
Smith Circle of the Reorganized at Columbus thought of llab who is watching or looking for available by lhe government The survey,adrninistration of.
Church of Jesus Chris! of Rousb as one she'd like to be an example to pattern after!
this year to aid school districts ficials said, showed lhal of !hose
L8tter-day Saints, met Thurs- like, because of her unBeulah Roush read the in desegregating may be used responding to questions, 54 faday evening with Goldie derstanding and dedication to secretary's report, and we for pupil busing, the ad- vored a gradualed personal tax,
47 opposed il and 26 had no
Oend~nin and Juanita Cozart, her church and family .
touched briefly on attending ministration said Friday.
her daughter, of Colwnbus who
Lucy Taylor especially reunion at church camp . The Office of Education opinion. Only 32 favored a flat
is vacationing and camping on thought of Oarence Proffitt as "Bountiful" near Jackson next announced lheawardofthe first rate income lax, 63 opposed it
Shade River this week near did lhe rest of us. He was our monlh. Nothing will be decided $22.5 million of tbe funds, which and 32 had no opinion.
Long Bottom.
pastor for several of lhe pasl40 until our sojourners return.
will go to 41 school districts in 14 The survey also reportedly
Juanita's sister-in-law Cas years or so and was never too
We were happy to have ·Pearl states. "There is not one penny showed businessmen silpporled
(Kathleen Hayman) Bissell also !ired or busy (for aU he owns Proffitt back wilh us who had for pupil transportation," repealing the present corporate
attended. The girls came at and operates a big farm on been ill at our last meeting. She Herman R. Goldberg said franchise lax, with 53 agreeing,
noon, baked pies and cake, Portland Boltomj to listen to is quiet but always contributes Friday. Goldberg is an 34 disagreeing and 40 offering
made sandwiches, fresh peach our problems, advise us: or to our meetings just by her associate commissioner of no opinion.
ice cream and iced tea for come day or night to administer presence and is a walking en- education. He said there also On tbe question of a corpo-to our sick and pray for us in cyclopedia on the Bible and would be no money for busing in rate i!Jcome lax, 43 favored il,
evening refreshments .
Absent and very much missed every walk of life; and his good church history.
lhe remaining $39.S million of 52 opposed il and 32 had no
opinion.
from the group were MyrUe wife Myrtle always by his side.
So ended our devotional and grants.
Proffit!, who isn't feeling well Neither is well now, bul !heir business meeting. Cas and Nita
this swruner; Pat White, and influence and example will served refreshments and we
Nancy Adams, whose daughter always be felt by many of us. visited and enjoyed a miniLori cut her foot on glass; also, Oarence has been the kind of rwnmage sale which netted
some non-member friends, and man who, although his neigh- $5.65.
Ravenswood ferry is still
Dah Roush, who is visiting her bors may not agree wilh his
daughter and son-in.Jaw, lhe religion, but if they wanllo buy running 7 a.m. to 7 p.m,, but not
Mike Diehls in Tacoma, Wash., corn or tomatoes they go to him open at 11:30 any more due lo
and Ruth Bradford, busy gel- who gives measure full and the river ordinance by the Coast
tlni ready to take ber daughter, running over in his fair dealings Guard. New management is
prompt, courteous and literally
Brenda,! back to Graceland wilh others.
Brother Oarence officiated at whizzes the cars over and back.
(Chore~) College at Lamoni,
our
weddings, baptisms,
Iowa.
This community is grateful funerals, blessed our babies,
Q-Which is the deepest
helped
us
back
on
lhe
right
lake
in the United States?
for the beautiful summer
weather, bountiful harvest of track when we faltered ; prayed A-Crater Lake in Oregon,
with a depth of about 2,000
the season, and vacation time, wilh and for us and always gave feet.
There are no known
but it's hard to gel any group us good advice.
outlets
no streams flowDuring our mother's last ing intoand
together just now.
the lake.
Cas is on vacation from her years he and his wife came fo
job in Parkersburg, loo, and our home to administer to her
lhey are all enjoying a campfire many limes in the dark of night
at evening, cooking oul, when she would ask for him:
roasting potatoes and com: just and it jusl couldn't have been
visiUng, swimming and fishing any one else for her funeral, or
my husband's (Arnie Clen·
in tbe daytime.
denin),
who wasn't a church·
Thursday afternoon lhe girls
called on Iva and Oarence minded man, but admired and
Lawrence al the Portland Post respected Bro. Proffitt more
Office. (Bet that was a gabfest lhan any one I know of.
All of which proves we should
as !hey used to gel tog'\lher
DAN
be
careful how, where, and with
evenings for cards and fun when
AND SON
whom we walk in Ibis road of
the children were small.
..
Serving
'you since 1936""
life.
The meeting was opened by
· (.~llipofls, Oftio
Goldie Clendenin, leader, who To quote one of our Southern
"offered lhe evening prayer.
Oevotions were testimonies by ·
each and every one on, "He or
she whose life bas touched my
own," in keeping wilh lhe study

\

.:J~.....,... .., the hills far
.

By LEE LEONARD
UPl Steteboule Reporter
COLUMBUS(UPl)-Nonnally when lhe time comes to re-~pportion stale legislative cJis.
lricts, lhe majority party rolls
up its sleeves, draws · a plan
heavily in its own favor and sits
back while lhe minority party
lakes potshots and flies a lawsuit.
_
_
,L'
D

Coshocton; Helen White
Bodimer and Velma Rue Dillon, ·.
class secretary-treasurer,
Middleport; .Rose Riggs Bliss,
Ken!; Thelma Fife Crosley,
Kettering; Wendell Lloyd,
Detroit; Jeanne Jones Davis
and Gerry Davis, AUanta, Ga.;
Virginia
Sleele
Burke,
Charleston;· Tom Urwin,
Waverly; Genevieve Bush
Nutter, Lancaster; Ruby Bunce
Cbarcbok, LoweD, Ind.; Ruth
Bunce Dickson, Temple City,
Calif.; Fredie Baker, Gahanna;
Maryanne Plymale Durkin,
Ironton; Marybelle Youn11
Laughlin, Fraser, Mich.;
Mildred Tbevenin Blank,
Cleveland Hls.; Richard ·
Bosler, Santa Maria, Calif.;
Helen Rinehart Cowden,
Wapakoneta; Frances Candee
Levoff, Valley Stream, N. Y.,
and
Margaret
Pickens
Margolis, New Haven, Conn.

And In spring I wait for the

I :::U,..the- dove calling,
A warm summer breeze
na.tluug my -Y·

Reapportionment at Ohio Road.Block

Qasses Begin Wednesday, September 1, 1971
REGISTRATION FOR EVENING ClASSES
IS TUESDAY, AUGUST 31, 1971
OOMMUNITY HAU. 6:30 - 8 p.m.,

p.m.

••
•
•

~

$

.95
sq. yd

and up

Padding
and Labor
INCLUDED

.
Minimum 2Q Sq. Yds.
Nylon, Polyester. Acrilan, Herculon. Over 500
colors and patterns to select from. Come m
today and make your selection. __

- INDOOR-OUTDOOR CARPET
NOT
INCLUDED IN THIS SPECIAL!
WE ALSO HAVE ; ..
1

e ARMSTRoNG VJNYL QUAKERTONE
UNOLEUM. 9 &amp; 12 WIDTHS

e ARMSTRONG VINYL CUSHION
H.uOR UNOLEUM·
...

It's true. When you move into your
new home, we'll install this many
- phones for $9. 75.•
But only if you have them installed
at the same time.
The point is, if you're moving or
planning to hi the near future, it's
worth your while to decide how many

phones you'll need, now. Before you
move.
Because if you ask us to come back
again later, there's an additional
charge.
So call your service representative
ahead of time.
She'll explain 'charges, help you

•This ia.our tiDc1•1inrt r..td.nc. intta11ation rate. how.vn. added one-tim. char1e1 •pply to cf!rtain equipment .

plan your new service and, of course,
stop your old.
And, with a little advance notice,
she'll have our installer at your doot
the day you move in.
As we say. lt ·pays to phone ahead.
I

@Ohioeea
-·

.'

�..

,,,'

78 Attend 1940
Class Reunion

The Poet's ·
Corner
I I I - ALL Ttl_,IE: TRAILS
I " - aH lhe lralls In lhe

........

a • Ill
U.uelhe reresl perfumes~

Gallia Academy High Scboo1
Class of 1!HO recently held a
reunion at tbe Gallipolis Elks
.l..cJ9!!ellall with Class President
Dr. Robert Morgan of Clnclnnati presiding. Class
member Charles Leonard
McKinney of Grove City asked
tbe blessing and dinner was
aerved by the Gallipolis Emblem Oub to 78 members and
guests.
Other class members atlending were Alfred Gabrielli,
Dexter Saunders Roach, Neal
B. Clark, Daryl Shoemaker,
Mary Clendenin, . Freda
Gilmore Felker, Teressa
Joh!ison Q-emeans, Elizabeth
farley Mills, Rebecca Cornell
Boggs, Howard B. Saund..-.,
Dick Thomas, and Alma
Wallace, Gallipolis ; Orland
Elliott,
Louise
Loucks
and
Orville
Chevalier
Shoemaker, Columbus: Ray
Hively, Cleveland; Clara
Cooper Kuhns, Meadville, Pa.;
Donald Judy, St. Petersburg,
Fla.: Thelma White Loucks,
Zanesville; Mary Fierbaugh,
Glilt, Ashville; Glenn Judy,

11le IIIIIs 'IMhB'e min beauty Is
mweiid
And all h
land:

r - ways of ..,,

all the ·trees and lhelr .
wvels

I -

AndwllorethewlldblrdlloveiD

nst;

I -whore the rocks shine so
pnlly
.
And
of lhe ev81ing is

h....,.

boSI.

1 tcr.. ..-.. the wild beasts
-playing
1And the mulll.._,s love 11101t_
- ill hkle;
I tcr.. 'IMhB'e the mosses an
-lng

Auldlhebro'*swherewlld terns

.---

Wh!!re the wild roses are
dlmblng

llouetsudle$ on lhe hills tar

~shlideandlhepinelrees
..::: r:!!N...-will sings Ill
his mate.
I cMi tell you about
llanle..ld

my

Andallllerarebeauty I'd find.
But ID tell you llelruth, mostis

hidden.
Folewerlnthebackof my mind.
In wlnllr

-'lakes

I wait for

.

the

That ..._ all the pine on the
hill;
It rem- 1M so much of a
Olrislmas
Wluere the kiddles are playing
there still.

Following tbe dinner, Dr.
Morgan called the business
meeting to order and the class
members voted to have another
reunion in 1975.

Plans Completed

.

IMI- Wickline- Wuchte .United

wi:IR.
In the stillness o1 evening the
ripe. -

--_.,,

In the Iaiii walt far the autumn

That calor the red lrees far and

..ar.

-

I visit new lands I get

I miss my hills and all that's
there.

All lhe

GALUPOUS - Plans are
completed for an open church
wedding uniting Miss Bonnie
Wealherholl, daught.et of Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Weatherholt,
Rio Grande, and Donald
Saunders, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Saunders of Lecta.
,
The wedding 9ill take place
of Eau Gallie High School. He Sunday, Sept 5, at lhe Okey
attended Johnson Bible College Chapel Church off Rt. 715 at
in Knoxville, Tenn. and is a· Lecta.
sophomore at Brevard Com- The Rev. Elmer Geiser will
munity College, Melbourne, perform the ceremony. WedF1a. He is presently employed ding music will be presented by
at the Williams' I.G.A. in Indialantic.
The new Mrs. Wuchteisa 1969
graduate of Gallia Academy
High School, Gallipolis, Ohio.
She has compleled one year at
Brevard Community· College
and is presently a medical
secretary for Dr. Kendall Beck·
man.
After returning from their
SUNDAY
honeymoon through lhe Wesl
GUEST musicians will be
Coast of F1orida, lhe new Mr. Parlir FfynnoD Choir ol Ji'llntand Mrs. Wuchle will reside al shire, Wales. CIIJrcb school
115 Mindel! Gardens Apart9:30, worsllip service 10:45 a.m.
ments, Apartment 105, Wesl·
Seminole, Melbourne, F1orida. at Calvaty Baptist.
THE REV. Earnest Baker will
be ..-eacbing at Walnut Ridge
Omrch,
Sunday, 7:30p.m.
.
T .R.I. ADVISORY family
picnic will be held at tbe WoodThomas Cabin, Cora, Sunday,
12 noon.
TUESDAY
I
MIXED Bowling League
general meeting, 7:30, !Jkyline
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio ( UPI) Ulnes.
~ A wildcat strike al the local
General Telephone Co. here WEDNESDAY
CALVARY Baplisl Cburcb
ended Friday after confusion
choir rebearsal. 7:30.
over President Nixon's wage--

Mrs. Richard E Wuchte

In the summer I love the hot
SMds
Wluere daisies awered

a-!dets
And all of the fruits sweet and

r*' "

I walked as a

...... child.
All the slorle$ my kind parents

1alcL

rtt tell you right here's most

like....._
With goU: 1 memories untold.
By Olive o ..Swain
Feb. 17. 1968

Crown City, Ohio

Apple Grove
News, Events
Jlflln.WR.-.
Mr. and Mrs. Erwin
Gloet•w ~ their
grandcbildren, Dalmy and

OlriatiDe Radge!y to Ocean
aty, lid., wbft they were
joined by llr. aod Jlrs. Larry
Bldg b of hirfu, Va. and
enjoJel a ncatiCin. Dlnny and
&lt;kisline spent a week with tbe

GALIJPOLIS -On August28
al 2 p.m. at the First Baplisl
Church of Indialantic, F1orida,
Miss Susanne Wickline,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Donovan Wickline of 141 Coral
Way, Satellite Beach, F1orida,
andMr.RichardD. Wuchte,son
of Mr. and. Mrs. Richard E.
Wucbte of 1036 Creel St., Eau
Gallie, Florida, were united in
holy inalrimony. The Rev. John
G. Green officiated tbe doublering ceremony.
The family pews were
lrimmed wjlh while salin bows.
The altar flowers were while
gladioli, daisies, and aqua
carnations. One hall hour of
music preceded lhe ceremony
with Mrs. Belly Miller as
organist and Mr. Thomas
Strong as vocalist Miss Annette
Wi~e. sister of lhe bride,
and Miss Denise Wuchte, sister
ol the groom, registered the
guests.
The bride, given in marriage
by her father, ~hose an A-line,
formal lenglh gown of chiffon
and Vehice lace over bridal
taffeta. Her detachable
cathedral-length train · was
edged with matching lace. Her
elbow-length veil of illusion was
held by a lace profile edged wilh
seed pearls. She carried a
cascade of daisies and
:nlnlalure aqua carnations.
The bride's sister, Miss
Jeannene Wickline, was maid of
honor. Sbe wore a fonnallenglh

Gb&amp;'es.
11.-.an:l Mrs. Ernest Fiaber of
Ripley,~- Va, vi.siled Mr. and
Mrs. EnriD Gloeclmer on
llmday. Mrs. GJoe l•w accompanied the fishers lo
O:arlestan and vi.siled Mr. and
Mn. Riduu-d Fisher.
11r. and Mrs. Marbsall
Adams, Mrs. Larry O'Brien and
J"mmy, Linda and Carol Ann,
vitiled llr. and Mrs. Vernon
Cady at West Jefferson on
Wednesday nigbl On Thursday
By Jonalhan E. Louden
tliey left for Jefferson , John M. Casey, a long-time
W"LlKWSill and vi.siled Mr. and employee of the Gallia County
llrs. Getlrge Slrobush, Mrs. District Ubraty, for lhe'pastl2
Fred C8dle and son. They years retires this monlh. Mr.
retuen_ed home Sa~y -~1. Casey is well-known to county
. ~ Gloedner 15 VISIIing . residents as lhe "Bookmobile
sisler, llr. _and Mrs. Larry Driver" for tbe library. He
gi!IJ al FairfaJ:, Va.
piloted the mobile unit over the
llr. aod Mrs. Oarence Roush county roads and by-ways for
and 5011, TIDIILly, of W"tnfi~, some eighl years. During lhat
w_. Va., opent Sabrday evenmg time the children and adults
Wltb Mr- and Mrs. Herbert became familiar with his warm
Rousb and called on friends.
smile and friendly manner. Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Roush of Casey covered approximately
Greensboro, N. C., vustled 40 thousand miles while on lhe
recenUy with the former's scheduled rounds.
pareDis, Mr. and ~- Virgil
About three years ago Mr.
Rousb lllld Jolin Sbain.
Casey transferred to the
~.andllrs. RalpbDursland material processing departc:lil*erl, Mary Ami, J~ Ann, ment of lhe library. In lhal
and JilllY_ ~· of Gallipolis, position he has accessioned,
lira. V"~ Oeerlurf and two stamPed and applied plastic
gandcbildren of Bradbury covers lo nearly 10 thousand
rall!d on Mr. and Mrs. Herbert new books . He has also
ROillll and Roger Thm-sday processed the magazines and
umiug.
newspapers, and repaired
EtriD Gloeekner, Nancy nearly two thousand films
lluRU,
J•dy
Roberts, borrowed from lhe Ubrary.
llarprel Gloeeb\er, Pete
Mr Ca
Ia
1 ·
Rev. Edward Griffith
. sey p ns on re axmg
•
and visiting with his in·
ud Nor• Pearsoll all numerable friends In lhe area.
u • 'nled .........__ recenlly.
- -~
The following new books were
released Thursday:
Miss Loreua o..-s ot MidFICTION
clepar l~P!f~l Saturday with her
Theirs was the Kingdom, by
aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Roy R. F. Oelderfield; They Do It in
Dulilllltw.
Church, by Topsy Gregory ; The
Genenl Hall is a medical Treasure of lhe Chisos, by John
p!ltiel:t at Verenn Memorial H. Culp; A Fragile Bark, by
IIDipllll.
· Joseph P. Benante: Secrets, by
...._ Bert dllllt was relilrned Nancy Hate·.
to t.r ~ S.IIWday from lhe
NON-FICTION
• Iu".
My Face for lhe World to See,

.. *

,

a

Mrs. Sarah Winters of Rio
Grande.
Miss Judy Young will serve as
maid of honor, wilh Mr. David
Saunders, cousin of tbe groom,
as best man. The ushers will be
Mr. George Hays, Vmton, and
Terry Saunders, brother of tbe
groom. .

Coming ·
Events

W'ddcat Strike

.Barely Favor

Miss Christina Faye Hall

Miss Hall Engaged

One Does not Walk Alone •••

GALIJPOUS- Mr. and Mrs. tinglon National Bank of
Jay Hall, Sr. of Cheshire an· Columbus.
Wedding plans are innounce the engagement of their
daughter, au-;stina faye, to complete.
Mr. Randy Louks, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Louks' of
Columbus. The brid~lect is a
graduate of Nationwide College
of Commerce and is presently
employed_ as · assistant
secretary at Nationwide Beauty
Academy. Mr. Louks is
presently employed al Hun·

tM

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&gt;

•••
~

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~

I •

t.

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I

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE HAS
AFTERNOON AND EVENING
CLASSES FOR EVERYONE

But it is ~lso aware the GOP Is
In lhe minority on the reapportionment board and that the federal guidelines ore likely to prevail.
The Gilligan administration;
for the lime bel1!g, professes to
be dra(ting ideal and equal dislricts, refusing lo exercise a
heavy hand even though II holds
control of the board.
Most of Ohio's House and Sen.
ate dislricts are still reasonably
well conformed to lhe "one-man,
one-vote" principle from !heir
realignment of four years ago.
This factor, along wilh the .
legal tangles and the apparent"
desire of both Par-ties to satisfy
court requirements, may serve
to blunt any attempts al sharp
gerrymandering Ibis year.
Every Patriotic Amerlun
Should See

OVERVIEW

lows ror "zero 11 deviation to in·

sure equal representation for all A film st'r l p ttlat Is • superb
summaritatlon
of
the
Ohioans.
n ist
conspiracy.
The Ohio Constitution requires commu
Thursday, September 2, 7:30
reapportionment to follow polil· p.m . at Galli a County Junior
Fair Grounds In the Civic
ical bOundary lines - an impos- Bu
il ding .
sibility if "zero" deviation is to
Sponsored by the Gallla .
be achieved.
Mason Chapter of the John
Brown's office is setting up Birch Society .
some reapportionment maps
Admission Free
heavily favoring Republicans. ' - - - - - - - - - - - - '

· - - - - - - - - - -. . . . . . . . CU~AND MAIL TODAY . . . . . ...

I

I

send for

II

fREE

~

.

information :

Now you can learn income Ia• preparation from
H&amp;R Block. Thousands are earning gOod money as
tax preparers. Enrollment open to men and women
1of all ages. Job opportunities for qualified graduates.
I Classes Start Sept. 14

I H&amp;R BLOCK

I~
~~~~~

~

i

1
,. .

II ~.:!c.:•:: i:;~:!,~,::llipolis, Ohio
I Nome
I Add!OSS

•

.3

i..
I
I

~M

I

I

Zip

.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~....... CLIP AND MAIL TOOAVil• • • • #

CARPET
SPECIAL

theme, "Someone touched me."
· Some touched briefly on
mothers and grandmothers, bul
especially olher than these, on
who had some good influence on
their lives; The beautiful lhing
about il was lhat !hose folk were
just being themselves in !heir
daily. walk of life, neve~
realizing some one was
watching, and listening.
Some in the group were
surprised to have been that one.
To mention a few: Jane Johnson
remembered a beloved stepfather who always gave' her
good advice when she was
young: and coming to lhe
church, a new bride a few years
ago, she found in Eula Profitl a
wonderful, understanding
friend who talked to her and
listened when she was seeking
to know more about !he church;
Cas Bissell, who is affiliated
with no single church, spoke of
some of our folk she'd known
si~e childhood, and though! of
favorably, and Goldie Gillilan,
who spoke of many folk,
especially Brother, Cummings
of Vales Mills, who befriended
her son, Dr. Ronald Gillilan
through his college years al
Ohio University in Athens, to
lhe point of taking him into his
home, antl whal ..a blessing it
·was to have that $ecurily for a
young man away from home for
U1e first time.
Beulah Roush mentioned,
among others, Golda Gillilan
and Lucy Taylor, sisters and
neighbOr. Sqlne spoke of
missionaries, paslors and other
members, Bessie Johnson and
•

Since 1859

Guaranteed.
To SatisfyOr loner Back

SUBTERFUGE ENDED
COLUMBUS (UPI)
William Nye, state Natural
Resources · Department
director, said the use of a staleowned station wagon on a
recent vacation was perfecUy
legal and personal lise of slate
cars by cabinet officers has
been a practice for more lhan 20
years in Ohio.
He added previous stale officials used regular license
plates on lhe CI!J"S, so lhe
practice was not noticed by lhe
public. He said Gov. John J.
Gilligan had directed state
plates be used "so taxpayers
should know which vehicles are
state cars." Nye's auto was
seen on Kelley's Island on Lake
Erie.

one vote" requiremimt has pro- :
duced some conflicts wilh Ohio
constitutional guidlines for remapping.
There are so many legal snarls
lhal Republican Secretary of
Stale Ted W. Brown, frustrated
by what he calls lhe "practically impossible task" of meeting
bolh federal and slate requirements, has submitted a series
of questions on lhe subject for
interpretation by Attorney Genera I William J. Brown, a Oemocrat.
Perplexed By Problems
Even the Gilligan administration is perplexed by the knotty
legal problems and thus. far Is
proceeding cautiously in its preliminary drafts.
There is the question of how
much deviallon Is allowed in the
size of a dislrict. SeCretary o!
State Brown's office says the
"one-man one-vote"principleal-

$i.75, installed.

J

FOR BIG DISWUNT SA

eliminate lhe possibility lhal reapportionment can be tied to
budget-taxnegotialions.
The shorter lhe lime period
for public discussion of lhe var·
ions reapportionment plans, the
less chance !here is for a largescale political hassle. The DemoeraIs have lhe votes, and can
send their plan over to lhe court
to stand on its merits.
But all is not as simple as it
seems. The federal "one-man,

r---------------------------------------------------

1940 PLYMOUTH

Entkd Friday

lmprovernenb of your home

pay for them1elves by giving
)'Olp better li ving! And we how
the 1money avoilablelo finonot
your prCJiect. Time payments
may be arranged to suit yow

budgoil Come in NOW foo- all
details!

Coffee
3 lb. bag

l'.! .

J,.OOnorulents

A-line gown with an empire
bodice made of aqua taffela
with an organza overlay. She
carried a nosegay of ~es and
aqua carnations and wore a
matching headpiece.
The junior bridesmaid was
Miss Usa Beckman, daughter
of Dr. and Mrs: Kendall Beck·
man of Melbourne Beach,
F1orida. Tbe flower girl was
Miss Jill Williams, daughter o(
Mr. and Mrs. David Williams of
lndialanllc. They wore identical
gowns of thai of the maid of
honor's of aqua and yellow
respe_ctively wilh · ma~hing
Loaded Full of Merchandise!
bouquetS· ii!ul beildpieces.
The best inan was E. Richard
Seaman of Eau Gallie. Ushers
TO IE GIVEN AWAY
were Mark Ostrander of
Satellite Beach and'Paul Lewis
SEPT. 3 AT 11 P.M.
of Eau Gallie.
After the wedding, a recepNo Purchase Necessary, Just Register!
tion was held in the church's
Fellowship Hall. The bride's
table was draped in white linen
and blue net The centerpiece
consisted of the lhree lier
wedding cake decoraled in blue
and white accenled on either
side wilh silver candelabras
and lighted blue candles.
Assisting al lhe reception were
Mrs. Sandra Smilh, Mrs. Doris
137 PlUM Strftl
Jones, Mrs. Evelyn Searcy, and
Glillitiolls,
Ohio
Mrs. Bobbi Williams.
For her going--away outfit, lhe
new Mrs. Wuchle chose a red,
About
200 members
of Local · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -...
freeze
was clarified.
while, and blue dress with price
4372
of lhe Communications
matching accessories.
Workers of America struck the
Mr. Wuchte is a 1969 graduate
company, reportedly because
lbey believed management
employes were receiving wage
increases. "All employes, bolh
management and union, who
were to receive a pay increase
Aug. 8, received lhat increase in
FIRST SEMESTIR 1971:72
today's paycheck," GE Division
Time
Days
Dept.
Class
Credit
Manager J. C. Sharp said
6:30-8:00
TTh
3
Bus. Ad.-223 Business Communications
by Liz Renay; Birthdays, Friday. Local President Robert
4:00
MWF
Bus. Ad.-233 Marketing I
3
Holidays and Other Disasters, Arnett verified Sharp's
6:30-8:00
MW
Econ.- 203 American Economy
by Thomas Mullen; The Busy statement.
3
4:00-5:30
TTh
Man's Old Testament, by Leslie
Econ.- 233 Macroeconomics
3
4:00
MWF
Econ. - 403 Economic Thought
3
D. Weatherhead; Peopl~ I have mi't;;;~:e~/o:d t~~e~:
6:30
Th
2
Educ. - 402 Tchng. Soc. Sci. in Sec. Ed.
Loved, Known, or Admir~, by A-The changing of water
6:30--8:30
TTh
Leo Rosten; Forests of Lilliput, into wine at the wedding
Educ. -433 Tchng. P.E. in Sec. Ed.
3
4:00
M-F
by John Bland; J9lral Ministry feast at Cana of Galilee.
Eng. - 055 Remedial Eng Iish
5
and lhe Changing Community,
4:00
M· F
Eng. -105 English Composition
5
by Rockwell Smilh: Incredible
4:00
MWF
Eng. - 233 Children's Literature
3
Collectors, Weird Anllques, and
6:00-7:30
MW
Eng. - 323 Seminar in Cont. Lit.
3
Odd Hobbies, by Carmichael:
4:00
MWF
Eng.-413 Shakespeare
3
Pictorial 'Astronomy, by Alter;
4:00
MWF
French -103 Elementary French I
3
I Read, You Read, We Read, by
6:30-9:30
w
HPE 8243 Treatment of Injuries
3
American Ubrary Association:
4:00
M- F
5
Hist. - 105 Western Civilization
The Symbols Speak, by Mc6:00--7:15
M-Th
Math -104 Fundamentals of Math.
4
Cutcheon: Personal Faith for
4:00
MWF
3
Phi 1. - 403 Ethics
Human CriSes, by Alvin N.
6:30-8:00
MW
Physics- 303 Mechanics
3
Rogness; Civil Uberties and lhe
4: 10
MW
Physics -104 Introduction to Physics
4
Constitution, by Lucius Barker;
3:00::S:10
TTh
Lab
Blowout at PlaUorm A, by Lee
6:00-8:00
TTh
Lab
Dye; Your Child and His Art, by
4:00
M·F
Pol. Sci.-105 American Government
5
Viktor Lowenfeld: Looking for
6:30-8:00
TTh
Pol. Sci.-443 Public Administration
3
Ideas:, by Wallick; How to
4:00
MWF
P$ych.-303 Individual Differences
3
Make Colonial Furniture, by
6:30-9:30
w
Psych. - 333 Applied Psychology .
3
Franklin H. Gottshall: WinEight O'Clock
4:30-6:00
TTh
Soc. Sci .-203 Principles of Geography
3
chell, by Bob Thomas; The Art
6:30-9:30
T
Soc.-213 Sociology of Education
of Sicilian .Cooking, by Anna
3
4:00
M·F
Muffoletto; The Chinese Menu
Sp.- 105 Fundamentals of Speech
·5
4:00
MWF
Cookbook, by Chang: Selected
Sp.- 323 Stagecraft
3
6:30-9:30
Readings in Right of Way; More
M
Sp. - 353 Persuasion
3
Pop!, by Schmeiser; Modem
Patchwork, by Martens;
Vegetable Gardening, by Sunset
'
Editors; Songs for Our Times
from the Joan Baez Songbook;
The Best of Folk Music; Career
Opportunities, Ecology, Conservation, and Environmental
Control; Ferguson Guide to
Two-Year College Programs;
EVENING TUITION RAlES ($55 PER CREDIT HOUR)
How to Use the Fine Arl of
Questioning, by Philip Groisser.
APPLY·TO aASS£S BEGINNING AT OR AFTER 6

John M• .Casey Retires
From District Library

:!.

Republicans. And the Ohio Su·
preme Courl, which will heat
any appeals and which may end
up drawing the map itself if
there is a stalemate, is 7-4 Republican.
SCript Seems Plain
On tbe .surface, lhe script
would seem plain enough. The
Oemocratic board under the direclion of Gov. John J. Gilligan
gerrymanders enough RepubliJIW cO luCS
can legislators to take control of
Ma:iy limes !here is room for lhe House in 1m and throw the
l_Dmpromiseandtrading,bultbe "Senate into a_virtual deadlock.
final version of lhe map usual- The Repvblican · dorrunated
ly reflects the parly controlling court nuiHies this plan and
lhe reapportionment agency or reassures tbe GOP control of
lhe courts.
bolh chambers..
.
There are i{idicalions full ap- Some SJgns poml to this conplication of lhe "one man, one elusiOn. The governor lias ~de
vole" edict of lhe federal gov· no moye to call the reapportionernmenl may change this silua· menI board .together •perhaps to
lion. Moreover, there are so
many twists and !urns to re·
apportionment in Ohio ~!lis year
r~
COMMERCIAL PRODucriON of fly-ash bricks, developed by.West Virginia Univefl&gt;ity 's
that it is all but impossible to
Coai Research Bureau, sooo will be underway in Edmonton, Canada. The bricks can be made
predict lhe outcome.
solid or cored and ln a variety ol colors and teztures. They are tighter aild stronger than conFor openers, lhe five-man re-ventlooal clay-lace bri!!ks. Pmessor Joseph W. Leonard (left), director of lhe wvu.Coal
apportionment board which will Gra~,.A rr
Research Bureau, Charles F. Cockrell (center) and Professor Kenneth K. Humphreys, who are
realign Ohio's House and Sen·
up-c. .1. IJXBS
assistant directors, are three of tbe principal developers ol Oy-asb bricks.
ate districts is controlled 3 • 2
by lhe Democrats. The House CO~UMBUS(UPI)-As?'"vey
and Senate are controlled by of Ohio mdependenl b~ess"
men, conducled by the Nabonal
Not a Penny for
Federation of Independent Business, showed 54 per cent favor
Businu of Punils a gradualed personal income
·-e
r
tax in tbe slate and strongly
oppose
a flat rate similar kind
BY GOLDIE CLENDENIN Grover Harris (now decea~d) . local· district teachers, "One WASHINGTON (UPI)
PORTLAND - The Emma Juanita Cozart of Norlh Branch just never knows, does one?," None of $62 million being made of lax.
Smith Circle of the Reorganized at Columbus thought of llab who is watching or looking for available by lhe government The survey,adrninistration of.
Church of Jesus Chris! of Rousb as one she'd like to be an example to pattern after!
this year to aid school districts ficials said, showed lhal of !hose
L8tter-day Saints, met Thurs- like, because of her unBeulah Roush read the in desegregating may be used responding to questions, 54 faday evening with Goldie derstanding and dedication to secretary's report, and we for pupil busing, the ad- vored a gradualed personal tax,
47 opposed il and 26 had no
Oend~nin and Juanita Cozart, her church and family .
touched briefly on attending ministration said Friday.
her daughter, of Colwnbus who
Lucy Taylor especially reunion at church camp . The Office of Education opinion. Only 32 favored a flat
is vacationing and camping on thought of Oarence Proffitt as "Bountiful" near Jackson next announced lheawardofthe first rate income lax, 63 opposed it
Shade River this week near did lhe rest of us. He was our monlh. Nothing will be decided $22.5 million of tbe funds, which and 32 had no opinion.
Long Bottom.
pastor for several of lhe pasl40 until our sojourners return.
will go to 41 school districts in 14 The survey also reportedly
Juanita's sister-in-law Cas years or so and was never too
We were happy to have ·Pearl states. "There is not one penny showed businessmen silpporled
(Kathleen Hayman) Bissell also !ired or busy (for aU he owns Proffitt back wilh us who had for pupil transportation," repealing the present corporate
attended. The girls came at and operates a big farm on been ill at our last meeting. She Herman R. Goldberg said franchise lax, with 53 agreeing,
noon, baked pies and cake, Portland Boltomj to listen to is quiet but always contributes Friday. Goldberg is an 34 disagreeing and 40 offering
made sandwiches, fresh peach our problems, advise us: or to our meetings just by her associate commissioner of no opinion.
ice cream and iced tea for come day or night to administer presence and is a walking en- education. He said there also On tbe question of a corpo-to our sick and pray for us in cyclopedia on the Bible and would be no money for busing in rate i!Jcome lax, 43 favored il,
evening refreshments .
Absent and very much missed every walk of life; and his good church history.
lhe remaining $39.S million of 52 opposed il and 32 had no
opinion.
from the group were MyrUe wife Myrtle always by his side.
So ended our devotional and grants.
Proffit!, who isn't feeling well Neither is well now, bul !heir business meeting. Cas and Nita
this swruner; Pat White, and influence and example will served refreshments and we
Nancy Adams, whose daughter always be felt by many of us. visited and enjoyed a miniLori cut her foot on glass; also, Oarence has been the kind of rwnmage sale which netted
some non-member friends, and man who, although his neigh- $5.65.
Ravenswood ferry is still
Dah Roush, who is visiting her bors may not agree wilh his
daughter and son-in.Jaw, lhe religion, but if they wanllo buy running 7 a.m. to 7 p.m,, but not
Mike Diehls in Tacoma, Wash., corn or tomatoes they go to him open at 11:30 any more due lo
and Ruth Bradford, busy gel- who gives measure full and the river ordinance by the Coast
tlni ready to take ber daughter, running over in his fair dealings Guard. New management is
prompt, courteous and literally
Brenda,! back to Graceland wilh others.
Brother Oarence officiated at whizzes the cars over and back.
(Chore~) College at Lamoni,
our
weddings, baptisms,
Iowa.
This community is grateful funerals, blessed our babies,
Q-Which is the deepest
helped
us
back
on
lhe
right
lake
in the United States?
for the beautiful summer
weather, bountiful harvest of track when we faltered ; prayed A-Crater Lake in Oregon,
with a depth of about 2,000
the season, and vacation time, wilh and for us and always gave feet.
There are no known
but it's hard to gel any group us good advice.
outlets
no streams flowDuring our mother's last ing intoand
together just now.
the lake.
Cas is on vacation from her years he and his wife came fo
job in Parkersburg, loo, and our home to administer to her
lhey are all enjoying a campfire many limes in the dark of night
at evening, cooking oul, when she would ask for him:
roasting potatoes and com: just and it jusl couldn't have been
visiUng, swimming and fishing any one else for her funeral, or
my husband's (Arnie Clen·
in tbe daytime.
denin),
who wasn't a church·
Thursday afternoon lhe girls
called on Iva and Oarence minded man, but admired and
Lawrence al the Portland Post respected Bro. Proffitt more
Office. (Bet that was a gabfest lhan any one I know of.
All of which proves we should
as !hey used to gel tog'\lher
DAN
be
careful how, where, and with
evenings for cards and fun when
AND SON
whom we walk in Ibis road of
the children were small.
..
Serving
'you since 1936""
life.
The meeting was opened by
· (.~llipofls, Oftio
Goldie Clendenin, leader, who To quote one of our Southern
"offered lhe evening prayer.
Oevotions were testimonies by ·
each and every one on, "He or
she whose life bas touched my
own," in keeping wilh lhe study

\

.:J~.....,... .., the hills far
.

By LEE LEONARD
UPl Steteboule Reporter
COLUMBUS(UPl)-Nonnally when lhe time comes to re-~pportion stale legislative cJis.
lricts, lhe majority party rolls
up its sleeves, draws · a plan
heavily in its own favor and sits
back while lhe minority party
lakes potshots and flies a lawsuit.
_
_
,L'
D

Coshocton; Helen White
Bodimer and Velma Rue Dillon, ·.
class secretary-treasurer,
Middleport; .Rose Riggs Bliss,
Ken!; Thelma Fife Crosley,
Kettering; Wendell Lloyd,
Detroit; Jeanne Jones Davis
and Gerry Davis, AUanta, Ga.;
Virginia
Sleele
Burke,
Charleston;· Tom Urwin,
Waverly; Genevieve Bush
Nutter, Lancaster; Ruby Bunce
Cbarcbok, LoweD, Ind.; Ruth
Bunce Dickson, Temple City,
Calif.; Fredie Baker, Gahanna;
Maryanne Plymale Durkin,
Ironton; Marybelle Youn11
Laughlin, Fraser, Mich.;
Mildred Tbevenin Blank,
Cleveland Hls.; Richard ·
Bosler, Santa Maria, Calif.;
Helen Rinehart Cowden,
Wapakoneta; Frances Candee
Levoff, Valley Stream, N. Y.,
and
Margaret
Pickens
Margolis, New Haven, Conn.

And In spring I wait for the

I :::U,..the- dove calling,
A warm summer breeze
na.tluug my -Y·

Reapportionment at Ohio Road.Block

Qasses Begin Wednesday, September 1, 1971
REGISTRATION FOR EVENING ClASSES
IS TUESDAY, AUGUST 31, 1971
OOMMUNITY HAU. 6:30 - 8 p.m.,

p.m.

••
•
•

~

$

.95
sq. yd

and up

Padding
and Labor
INCLUDED

.
Minimum 2Q Sq. Yds.
Nylon, Polyester. Acrilan, Herculon. Over 500
colors and patterns to select from. Come m
today and make your selection. __

- INDOOR-OUTDOOR CARPET
NOT
INCLUDED IN THIS SPECIAL!
WE ALSO HAVE ; ..
1

e ARMSTRoNG VJNYL QUAKERTONE
UNOLEUM. 9 &amp; 12 WIDTHS

e ARMSTRONG VINYL CUSHION
H.uOR UNOLEUM·
...

It's true. When you move into your
new home, we'll install this many
- phones for $9. 75.•
But only if you have them installed
at the same time.
The point is, if you're moving or
planning to hi the near future, it's
worth your while to decide how many

phones you'll need, now. Before you
move.
Because if you ask us to come back
again later, there's an additional
charge.
So call your service representative
ahead of time.
She'll explain 'charges, help you

•This ia.our tiDc1•1inrt r..td.nc. intta11ation rate. how.vn. added one-tim. char1e1 •pply to cf!rtain equipment .

plan your new service and, of course,
stop your old.
And, with a little advance notice,
she'll have our installer at your doot
the day you move in.
As we say. lt ·pays to phone ahead.
I

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Mason Board Bas Dress Code to Decide
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By Jeaa Waner
suits may be worn to school any
PI'. PLEASANT - Mason time. Shirttails must be worn
Counl)i's Board of Edlication inside slacks, etc., exCj!pl for a
will consider a dress code for square cut shirttail. Girls are
junior and senior high school not to comb their hair or put on
•~~~dents after such a plan was ma~p in classroolll$ or halls.
IIUbmltted tq each member at a Re~trooms should be used for
regular board meeting Friday all such acts as grooming.
night.
,
"The following are con·
Acting Superintendent sidered inappropriate ~nd
Michael Whalen, presenting the unacceptable for boys to wear
plan, commented, "it is a very to school: Extremely long or
lll2efal dress cOde." He noted unclean hair (all hair will be cut
tllat clothes have already been and worn above the eyes, above
purchased for this school term the ears, and above the collar);
and said this had been taken beards, mustaches; sideburns
into consideration when the that extend more than one ineh
guidelines were prepared. below the bottom of the ear lobe
However, he added that a new or are more than two inches in
dress code will be studied for width;underweartypeTshirts;
ned year and particulars insignia · or unapproved
concerning this will be made organizations on clothing;
known before Chrisbnas pili'· collars of regular sl)ile shirts
open more than one button from
chases are made.
The code spelled the rules the top; outdoor type jackets in
although the board had not a classroom except with the
reached a decision concerning approval of the classroom
them.
teacher; shirttails outside the
In official action, on a 4-1 trousers except for square cut
vote, the board agreed to seek shirttails; extremely tightadvice from its legal advisor on fitting or unclean trousers of
a dress code and directed the any type (boys are encouraged
acting superintendent to inquire to wear dress slacks or clean
as to whether or not the board washable trousers, including
has any type of immunil)i to blue jeans, or wranglers to
federal guidelines in regards to school) neck pendants, beads,
equalization of students in medals on chains, etc., worn
reference to the problem of outside the shirt if they are
segregation.
noisy, unsafe, or inappropriate.
Member
Bill
Withers "Boys are to wear socks with
presented this motion and in the appropriate footwear. &amp;in&amp;als
voting Harry Siders opposed. may be worn without socks.
Discussion followed after Boys are not to comb their·hair
presentation of the plan by in classrooms or halls .
Whalen. Withers said he felt thls Restrooms shoUld be used for
should come from various all such acts of grooming.
principals becauae "what mlght ''Enforcement
of
the
be good in one school maybe provisions of the dress code
will not be in another."
shall be the responsibility of
The code which Whalen asked every professional staff
the board to 'approve was member to enforce the
presented as follows :
provisions of the code. A special
"A dress code for students in responsibility for doing so
the junior and senior high belongs to the homeroom
schools emphasizes good taste teacher who is the first to see
in dress and grooming. It the student each day. In the
stresses that important aspects enforcement of the Code the
of good taste are neatness, following pattern of procedures
simplicll)i.and appropriateness. shall be followed:
"The following are con· "All violations will be
side red inappropriate and · reported to the principal
unacceptable for girls to wear . prompUy and in written form.
to school: extreme hairdos; First violation, warning to the
extreme hair coloring; hair student by the principal;
curlers or pins to set hair Second violation, contact with
(except when permitted by the the parent by the principal, and
principal prior to special social Third violation, suspension of
events); low cut dresses; sheer the student by the principal.
biOWies; Ught.fitting sweaters, "The professional slaff will
Toflhirts, 'sweatshirts, shorts, have the complete support of
••hot pants, and bermudas.
the board of education in the
, ''Girls and parents are to use ~mplementation
of
the
di.scretion in selection of the provisions of the dress code.
length of clothing. Clean, neat "In addition to the above
slacks, jeans, levis, and pant code, no student shall interfere

with the learning of another
student. Also, no student shall
impose physical harm on
another student."
HARTFORD PROJECT
Fields asked the board for
a~ditional construction at
Hartford School when he
pointed out the necessity for
closing the walkway between
the old and new sections. The
motion passed in a 3-2 vote with
Siders and Stevens voting
against it. It was stipulated that
this is to be done only if funds
are available.
Action concerning garbage
pickups at Point Pleasant
Junior High and the Vocational
School took an unusual turn.
Siders mad~ ,the motion that
the board award A." 0. Powers
of Glenwood a contract for this
aild Eshenaur gave the second.
After discussion however,
Eshenaur apparently saw
reason to change his thinking
and although he had given the
second said "no 11 when Stevens
called for a vote on the motion.
Others casting " no" votes to

defeat the motion were Withers
and Fields. Stevens and Siders
voted in favor of it.
According to Whalen, Powers
asked the board for $135 per
month to make daily pickups at
the junior high and three times
a week at the Vocational School.
Withers
labeled
this
"outrageous" and asked the
board to make an effort to see if
such service could be obtained
cheaper. He compared this cost
with that of pickups on nine
other schools and noted it "can 'I
justify."
Eshenaur asked Supt. Whalen
for a rec 0mmendatlon for the
positlon of assistant principal at
Point Pleasant High School
since Ed Sommer accepted the
directorship of the Vocational
Center. Whalen disclosed that
two persons have made application although others are
expected. He said he will go
along with the principal's
recommendation on this and
will present it to the board later.
have
been
Applications
received from Walter Copley, a
teacher at Wahama, and Bright
McCausland, a local eaucator
and farmer.
In other action the board:
- Agreed to make allocations
equally to libraries in Point
Pleasant and New Haven. The
board was informed that $1,000
has been budgeted for this.
Siders voted against the
measure, since he did know how
this compared with last year's
figure.

Employed: Edward Elementary :teacher substitute
Chapman, Jr., at Hannarr Ust.
Elementary ef!ective August
-EmployedThomasChristy,
30; L. D. Rutt, teacher Qrd. Worthy Long, Lewis Scarbee,
nance, effective August 31· Presley Roush and J)avid
Harley Cloud, substitut~ Oldaker for extended emteacher; Doris McDaniel (RN) ployment as maintenance men.
to be hired full lime teacher of a
Nurse's Aide Class for - Agreed to supplemen I
Vocational
School; . Ira salaries of cooks, "janitors and
Adkinson, teacher Wahama secretaries from hot lunch
High to replace Ben Roush and programs as requested by
Dale Miller to be added to certain principals.
r----------------~--~------,

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Area Deaths

John Ireland Jr.

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. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -... Daytona Beach, Fla., last
Wednesday morning, will be
held 1 p.m., Monday at Miller's
Home for Funerals with Rev.
Glen R. Hueholt officiating.
Burial will be in Mound Hill
Cemetery.
Mrs. Harrison was born in
Gallipolis on Sept. 'Zl, 1896,
daughter of the late Charles
(Pete) an.d Addie Edwards
Smeltzer.
She spent most of her life in
Gallipolis. She attended the
Gallipolis schools and the First
Presbyterian ·Church.
She
married
Edward
Harrison on Feb. '15, 1913. He
survives, along with two sons
and one daughter, Lawrence,
Vandalia, Ohio; Eugene,
Orlando, Fla ., and Mrs. Iris
Sowards, Daytona Beach. One
son, Robert, preceded her in
death. Nine grandchildren and
one great-grandchild survive.
Two brothers survive, Meade
Smeltzer, Sl. Pe ters burg, Fla .,
and Lawrence Smeltzer,
The above aerial photograph Is a proposed new
Gallipolis. Friends m~y call at
the funeral home after 4 p.m.,
development and was formerly the Wyman Caldwell
Sunday.
farm, located on Rt. 35, just four miles west of the new

Rodney Village

Holzer Medical Center and the Gallia County Junior
Fairgrounds.

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A study was made for the maximum use of this 196 acre
development and it shpwed that town houses, garden
apartments, trailers, , condominioms, single family
residence and a shopping center were all feasible. ·

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The water line is adjacent to the property. Base streets
and sewer lines are in the planning stage. At least 100 lots
will be auctioned on a Saturday in September, 1971, by
the Fulks Land Co. Watch your local newspaper· for
details.

If

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- 4 Mi.--j
+-f.Mi _

NEW

lo!OL~I.I&amp;.
lllo•PIT~

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Rodney Village
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

.C8J

Funeral services will be
conducted Monday at 2 p.m.
from the Pleasant Valley
Community Church by the Rev.
Herman Jordan. Burial will be
in M.t. Flower Cemetery at
Leon.
Mr. Snyder was born July 10,
1899, at Leon, a son of the late
George and Margaret Shields
Snyder.
Survivors include four sons,
Barney Snyder in California;
Floyd Snyder of Letart, and
Earl Franklin Snyder and
Engene Snyder; two sisters,
Mrs. Lola Scarberry of Nitro
and Mrs. Flossie Mattox of Leon
and several grandchildren.
Friends may call at the
Stevens Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant after 2 p.m., Sunday.

Memoir

John H. Busch

Today's \

Big Unions

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Hurlers
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By United Press tn.,.natiCINII

My mind is like an hourglass and
·life provides the sand.
1be fallen grain'! are scars I wear
and relics of the. time I share:
some, bits of joy but more despair'
-a fraction of them planned.
Long ago my world was fresh - each
day a new vignette.
SO many streams to fish or swim,
and fields to roam and ice to skim,
my senses tuned to nature's hymn
-1 could not see the threat
Suddenly the sky turned gray - mY
gentle g-tise must cease.
Mankind's threat became unstrung
and glol)al war engulfed the young,
my song of youth would not be sung
-and stUI there is no peace.

GALLIPOLIS - John Ed·
ward Ireland; Jr., four-year-old
son of John Edward and Viola
M. Griffith Ireland, 312 South
Yellow Springs St., Springfield,
Ohio, died unexpectedly Friday
Relentlessly my sand flows by with
morning at his parents' home in
Httle yet to spend.
Springfield.
He was born July 30, 1967, in
I can merely wonder at the drain,
ud If this ·world is mad or sane,
Gallipolls. Surviving besides his
parents is one brother, James,
ud of the things I can't explain
at home. Maternal grand·
-and how it aU will end.
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Ed·
ward Griffiih, Gallipolis.
-John Anderson McKeaa
Paternal grandmother sur·
GiV'fil.., Ollie (1171)
viving is Mrs. Ruth Starkey,
Gallipolls.
Funeral services will be
conducted 10:30 a.m., Monday
at the McCoy Funeral Home in
Vinton with Rev. Elmer Geiser
Alva Hokanson
J
officiating.
DETROIT
(UP!)
The dianapolis while pitcher Dennis
Burial will be in Memorial PT. PLEASANT - Last rites
Gardens in Jackson. Friends for Miss Alva Hokanson, 73, Detroit Tigers and Chicago O'Toole and outfielder Ken
may call at the funeral home Point Pleasant, who died White Sox announced Saturday Hollman will be cominb up
Friday after a long illness, will they are calling up five and from Asheville,
today from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
be given Monday at 2 p.m. from seven players respectively,
Dead at Birth
the Chapman Mortuary. Burial from their minor league
NAMED SPORTS EDITOR
will be in the Suncrest systems at the conclusion of the
EUGENE, Ore . (UPI) GALLIPOLIS - Graveside Memorial Gardens. The Rev. youngsters' seasons.
Bill
Gilbreth
and
Blaine
R. Newnharn, 29, a
Pitchers
services · for the stillborn Arthur Lund of Pomeroy, will
Chuck Seelbach, plus catchers sports reporter for the Oakland
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David officiate . .
Roush, Rt. 1, Vinton, were held Miss Hokanson was born Feb. Tim Hosley and Gene Lamont Tribune for five years, will
Saturday evening at Kirkland 3, 1898 at Three-Rivers, Mich., a are being recalled by Detroit become sports editor of the
Pt. daughter of Gustav and from its Toledo Farm Club Eugene Register-Guard in
Memorial Gardens,
Pleasant.
Amanda Hokanson, natives of while first baseman John Young about mid .s ep tern be r1•
The infant is survived by its Sweden, She was a retired is being purchased from the Newnham, a graduate of the
University of California and
parents, and two brothers, bookkeeper and secfE'ta•y of the Tigers' Montgomery team.
Wendell Scott Roush and David Malleable Iron Company in The White Sox are recalling assistant sports information
William Roush, both at home. Point Pleasant; a member of shortstop Lee Richard, first director. at UC from 1963 to 1,965,
Maternal grandparents are Mr. the Lutheran Church and Point baseman Bob Spence, along · also worked for the Hay'fioard
and Mrs. Willi~ Fruth, Pt. Pleasant Chapter 75, Order with pitchers rion Eddy and Review in Hayward, Calif. He
Stan Percanowski from Tucson. will replace Jerry Uhrhammer,
Pleasant, and paternal grand· Eastern Star.
mother is Mrs. Arlene Tracy,
Survivors include an ·aunt, First baseman Tony Muser is ,ecenUy named the paper's
Rio Grande.
Mrs. Olive E. Hawkinson, and a joining Chicago from In- environmental editor.
Services were under the cousin, Mildred Hawkinson,
direction of the McCoy Funeral both of Kansas City.
Home.
Friends may call at the
Mortuary today from 2 to 4 p.m: ·
and 7 to 9 p.m.
Mrs. Harrison
She was preceded in death by
GALLIPOLIS - Funeral her parents, the late Gusta and
services for Mrs. Genevieve L. Amanda Hokanson and one
Harrison, 74, who died in brother, Elmer Hokanson .

Choice Building Sites Available

•
I'

!

·a Sort of Journal

Tigers, Orlsox Call Up Players

Amoric.n Ltagut
Boston ( Lonborg 7-51 . at
California (May 8-9) • •
New York ( Keklch 8-7) at
Kansas CitY (Drago 15-7).
Chicago (Wood 17-10) at
Detroit &lt;Lollch 21,9) ,
Minnesota (Perry• 1~- l~l at
Cleveland !McDowell, 11·11l .
Milwaukee ("Parsons 11·.15
and Slaton 8-51 at Baltimore
(Dobson 16-6 and LfOilhtrd 2.()),

Go Along
By DAVID A. WEISSLER
UDIIed Press Iaternatlonal

Organized labor strongly cri·
licized President Nixon's 9lklay
wage-price freeze this week but
said it would go along with it as
a upractical matter." The

2.

Washington I Broberg 3-~ and
McLain 9·16) at Qakla~d I Blue
22·6 and Hunter 16·11!.22·
Nllillllll Lug-,
Siln Diego (Norman ~-111 at
Montreal &lt;Renko 12-13).,
Los Angeles (Downing 15-8 or
Singer 1-15) af New York
(McAndrew 0.5 or Sadeekl S.S).
San Francisco (Perry 13-10)
at Philadelphia (Wise 13-10).
Atlanta (Kelley 7-Sl at
Chicago (Hands 10.16).
Cincinnati IGullett 1(1.5) at St.
Louis ICieveland 11-10) . .
Pittsburgh (Moose 8-7 or
Johnson 8-9) · at Houston
(Biaslngarnel .

lft~llon dlniler !Jonorlng lotb ~ ~ Clarence E. Miller. Featund
s]ieiter for tbe dinner at Lancaater High School will be Republican National Olalrman, U.
S. Sen. Robert Dole li Kansas. The CGllllllttee cbalrman, Mrs. Muine Olarllm, Lancaslef',
laiddles with other members of her clmlllittee,l to r, Walter Arrowsmith, Fairfield CouniY
; 'I'Icllet Chalrlnan, Jobn Huddle of Lancaster, Finance Olalrman of the Clti%ens fOr Miller
Conuultlee and Clarence BIOISer li Logan, IOlh District Ticket Cilalrman. Persons wishing
to purchase tickets fir the dinner.can do 110 by contacting Bernard Fultz, 129 Fairlane Dr.,
iMlddleport, or Roger Barron, 122 Bastlani, Dr., GalllpoliB.
' .

Jnternotlonal Leogue Standings
By United Presslntern•tton•l

W L Pel. GB

Ch:ou Has Summit Agenda

Rochester
80 S3 .602
Tidewater
75 58 .56-4 S
Charleston
73 58 .557 6
Syracuse
70 63 .526 10
Richmond
68 65 .511 12
Louisville
66 68 .493 14'h
Toledo
56 78 .418 24 1h
Winnipeg
43 88 .328 36
Friday's Results
Charleston 7 Toledo ~ ·
Winnipeg 11 Louisville 10
Syracuse at Tidewater, ppd,

China's 11\0re outgoing foreign two super powers and Its
policy was a "threat to division by them," he told
Vjesnik. He said the rapEurope."
"China is on,ly opposed to prochment, logically, should
domination of the world by the have no effect on Europe.

BELGRADE (UPI)
Chinese leaders will ask
President Nixon to withdraw all
American
troops
from
Southeast Asia, Japan, For·
mosa and South Korea, Chinese
Premier Chou En-lal said
Saturday in an interview with a
Yugoslav newspaper.
If Nixon refuses to end the
Indichina fighting, "China
would support those peoples'
struggle until their final victory," the newspaper, Vjesnik,
quoted Chou as saying. "We
have told the Vietnamese
comrades that China is
prepared for the biggest
national sacrifice."
The newspaper reported that
Chou said that "In case of a U.
S. negative posture, China
would support those peoples'
struggle until their final vic·

rain

Rochester at Richmond, ppd,

rain

TIE
LONDON (UPI) - Sheffield
United, newly promoted to the
first Division, was held to a
scoreless tie Saturday by West
Bromwich Albion. Sheffield had
won its first four matches of the
young Engllsh Soccer League
season.
SCORE~

TreeRIpe. ned
,
White &amp; YeUow Peaches
Bring your own baskets
Pick Your Own or Buy
Already Picked

Dime Robber Killed
CLEVELAND (UPI) -A
Russian · immigrant pleaded
guilty to "killing" a vending
machine which took hls two
dimes and failed to give him
any soda pop. The judge,
however, was sympathetic and
suspended a nne and 'sentence.
Henry Kolmio, 52, was
arrested and charged with
malicious destruction of proper·
ty for destroying s. soft drink
vending machine.
Judge Frnak J . Gorman was
told that Kolmio had driven
into a gas staiion, told the
attendent to fill up his car, then
went into the station to buy a
soft drink.
"While inside he fed the
machine two dimes and got an

tory."
Chou denied the contention of
newspapers in Hungary and
CZechoslovakia that the SinoAmerican rapprochmenl and

IIAISER
FRUIT FARM
Rt. 7,1Mile
Below Athalls

electric shock but no pop," the
prosecutor said. "Then he
deliberately kicked and punched
the machine, knocking it to the
ground.
"On the way out he calmly
admitted to the attendant, 'I
just · killed that onHI'IIIed
bandit' and hurriedly drove
away."

Kolmio, who speaks broken
English, admitted his crime to
the judge.
"We all feel lilte smashing
vending machines at limes, but
we must learn to con~fol our
temper," the judge said.
"I sentence you to 30 days in
the workhouse and fine you
$100; days and fine suspended,"
he said.

administration, seeking a united
front behind· its new economi"
program, invited labor to help
draft the second. phase of the
program.
AFL-CIO President George
Meany and Leonard Woodcock,
president of the United Auto
Workers, met Wednesday to
discuss the unions' reaction to
the program. Mterwards, they
threatened some action if
policies were not changed after
the 9!klay period.
The administration's message, carried personally Thurs.
day by Labor Secretary James
D. Hodgson, was sent to
Meany. Hodgson said he got a
"cordial" reception. Meany did
not comment publicly.
It was the first lime since
Nixon announeed the new
program two weeks ago that
the administration had consult. 1 d
ed Iabor. Th e unton
ea ers
t
li
. ed th
I
c rum
e curren po cy
favors big business at the
expense of working peopIe.
Housing Secretary George
Romney recommended creation
.
. board
of a wage.pnce
revtew
when the current freeze ends.
He said the lime has come for
government curbs on the
"abuse of accumulated power"
in business and organized labor.
Romney said the review board
should have the power to put a
lid on ptofits as well as wages:
E opean currency exchan·
ges,urwhich were closed the
week immediately after Nixon
-

1!1

Family Resta~:~rants

TM

1503
EASTERN AVE.
GAWPOUS, OHIO

Three Triumphs

Super Shef

rger

2for99c

wifh this coupon

NEED. A LOW-COST
AUTO LOAN ON A- NEW
1971 MODEL?

%
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-of
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100% treah ground beef, broiled

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IT'S- NEARING
THE END,
OF THE
Y.AR
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FOR NEW 1971 MODEL
CARS.
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THE DEALERS ARE NOW GIVING •• ,
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with tllis coupon

Tlolo b ltoo 110 -1 A foil
chol.. 1-d llool, llroiltd
toastH N. witt. lettuce,

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SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
featured ninth race at Scioto
Downs Friday night, a $6,000
invitation trot over one mile,
was won by Buzz Uff in 2:021-5,
returning $16, $7.80 and $3.80.
Second was Flower Child,
paying $3.60 and $2.60, with Doc
McBean in the show position,
returning $3.20.
A 2·6 daily double combination of Bright Sand and
Herbert Scotch paid $107.80.
Attendance was 6,995 and the
handle was $340,140.

PORTLAND-TheRev. John
H. Busch, 76, Portland, died
Friday evening at Holzer
Medical Center. Rev. Busch, a
retired minister, was a member
of the Free Will Baptist Church
at Silver Run and a veteran of
World War I.
He is survived by his wife,
Irene; three sons, John H.,
Nanty Glo, J;'a.; Edward H.,
Newport News, Va., and James
ITALIAN WINS RACE
W., Copperas Cove, Texas; two COWE§, Isle of Wight (UPI)
brothers, Roy and Edward, of -The 245 miles Daily Express
Racme; one stster, May Powerboat Race off the Isle of
Brewer, Racine; six grand· Wight was won Saturday by 22childrdn,
two
great· year .Old Italian student Ronny
grandchildren , and several Bonelli in Lady Nara.
nieces and nephews. .
Young Boneili had to ·be
Funeral servtces wtll be held carried ashore with a leg injury.
Monday at I p.m. at the Stiver Thirty-two miles from the
Run Free Will Baptist Church finish his boat hit ·a big wave
with the Rev. Lawrence Bqslt and 'he was knocked unand .the Rev . W. E. _ Curf~n conscious. His 61-year-old coofftctalmg. Burtal Will be m driver Commander Allilio
J--i.e.larl Cemetery. Friends may Petroni drove the boat for the
call at Ewing Funeral Home · rest of the race.
any time.
FUND DRIVE;
BOSTON (UPI) - Boston
Harry Snyder
Bruins President Weston
Adams Jr. will give 3,000
PT. PLEASANT - !larry
tickets to both t11e Republican
Tom Snyder, 72, of Leon Route
and Democratic . parties for
1, · died Friday In Pleasant
lhem to sell as a fund raising
Valley Hospital.
campaign.

Week in Review

CIU.. r. Miller C«rnmltt uen above ~re rw~nl..r tiebt sales fer the Sept. 10 ap-

Americans Bag

KIEL, Germany (UPI)
American yachting men today
bagged three victor.ies in the
curtain..-aising event of a PreOlympic Sailing Regatta in Kiel
Bay·
Fighting winds running up to
44 mph , Glen Foster, the
reigning world champion, came
home first in the Tempest Class.
His countryman James M.
Schoonmaker crossed the line
first in the star boat race, while
Donald S. Cohan won the
opening Dragon event.
Hans Fogh of Denmark took
first place in the Flying Dotchman Race in which Rodney
Pattison of Britain, ihe 1968
Olympic Gold Medallst, had to
·setUe for seventh place.

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Thin, golden-brown l~eho FrenCh

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Blue Bird or lnnour* Star-U.S. &amp;ort. Inspected

FULLY COOKED HAMS

Shank Half

Y• m

VJSI George Jackson: were
killed. Bmgham was believed to
have been the person who gave

J~c=..a gun.

.. a
was "?.e of three
Soledad Brothers .charged m
the murder of a pnson guard.
The other two "~!hers" ":"""!
through a pretrial hearing,
which they disrupted several
times.
A total of 34 persons were
killed Monday when a group of
23 prisoners tried to escape in
Seoul, Soulh Korea.
A group of military and
civilian leaders took over
control of the Bolviain govern·
menl from Gen. Juan Jose
Torres, who had to nee wilh his
foUowers.
An agreement was reached
on a draft text involving the
slatus of West Berlin. The
agreement would end the East·
West confrontation over the
city which has prevailed sioce
World War U. The agreement
must be. sulmitted to the
governments of the United
Stales, Soviet Union, Britain
and France.
Iilinois Assistant State Allor·
ney Edward V. Hanraban and
12 policemen were indicted oo
charges of obstructing justice
in a Chicago Black Panther
raid that left two Panther
leaders dead.
In politics, Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew said he was not
worried about Treasury Secretary John B. Connally laking
over his job in 19'n and said the
Republicans would pick the best
man for the job. Sen. George
McGovern, who is serH,g the
Democratic nomination, said to
get away from the image as a
uone-issue" candidate he would
on issues other
than the Vietnam War. Sen.
EdwardKennedy,D-Mass.,said
he would support no candidate
until the nominating coovenlion.
The Campbell Soup Co. said
it was recalling all chicken
vegetable soup p:~cked by its
Paris, Tex., plant because
botulism contamination was
found in part ·of one day's
output.

WASHINGTON (UPII Last

year BousiaK Sectduy

Geoq:e Romaey nlualarily
took. %5 pd. cut ia bls . . . .
a year ulary to set u
eum!ft Ill tile fi&amp;ht •K•iasl
Inflation,
Bat llemlley said Friday M
Is drawial: Ills fall salary W.
year becaasnobody fo!knfed ·
his eumple.
" I dlda't tlllu II was
lllviDC aay died," tile idf·
made mllllouire exploiwell

with this coupon
Two

OPEN 9 A.M. 10 9 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

cSanonnecQutiontin
. wtPrisonth
. the attempted
en
escape m
which three guards and three
.
.
din black
.
mmates, me1u g
acti-

..

.b.laar

252 THIRD AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

from.

·.·.·.·.:.·.·.·.·.·,·:.·,•,·,·,·:.·:.·: ·.·:·.·:::·.·:.·:·.·

.~

"THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

made his pronouncement ,
opened Monday and the dollar
showed a steady decline
throughout the week. The New
York Stock Exchange, however,
advanced.
In the first major world
victory for Nixon's economic
program, Japan Friday announced it was Boating the yen
beginning Saturday.
The European Common
Market called the 10 per cent
surcharge on foreign goods
imported into the United States
unfair and asked for its repeal.
The market threatened possible
retaliation.
In Vietnam, Vice President
Nguyen Cao Ky announced he
was withdrawing from the
South Vi,etnamese presidential
election because ~ considered
11 ngged: His wtthdrawal left
President Nguyen Van Thieu
un(llposed.
.
All 220•000 U.S. troops '"
Sout~ Vtetnam were ~~ .on
aler " for posstbly . the high
potnl of Communist attacks
expec~ to . COIDCJde wt th
Sundays parbamentary e1ection, The U.S.. ~
reported 10 Amencans killed '"
Vte~. the lowest weekly
total smce 1965.
Calif .
th . . began
orrua au onties
a
h f Stephe M B.
hamsearc or
Ia n
1118, a young wyer
a
. 1 litical famil .

HURT IN WRECJ[ •
MIDDLEPORT - Lydia
Gilkey, 47, Rt. 1, Middlqxrt,
was admitted at Hom Medical
Center ThurSday for injwles
·receiV&lt;!d in a two-car accident
ooSR 7. 1lwasreportetl thai she
was treated and released. Mrs.
Gilkey sustained broken ribs
and possible internal injw-ies.

SOUND RIPE

At a Special low Price

*
1.0\'./

STATE FARE

WIENER OR SANDWICH

PRICE
SPECI AL

*
*
LO\'/
PRICE
SPECIAL

UNS
Pkg. of 8
THOROFARE

ICE CREA
ALL FLAVORS

% Gallon Pkg.

*
*
L0 \'/

THOROFARE

BEVERAGES

PRICE
SPECIAL

ALL fi.A VORS

*

lb.

12-oz. can

KRAn FEATURES

SANDWICH SPREAD ............ ·.. ';:· 51c
THOUSAND ISLAND DRESSING .•. ~: 41c
di:,E THOUSAND ISLAND DRESSING ~: 41 c
REGULAR MIRAQ.E MARGARINE :_c.:: ~::: 33c
PARKAY WHIPPED MARGARINE
~:~ 45c

PILLSBURY
REFRIGERATED BISCUITS

Country St,le ................. 4 r'~ 43c
lllittennllk . . .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 .';:. 43c
Eatra Ught ................... 4 ,';:;, 45c

BALLARD
REFRIGERATED BISCUITS

...
leHJ
........

6

11-&lt;Jz.
Tubes

59~
,

BO PEEP
AMMONIA
%-Gal.
Bot.

43~

MAGIC · ~

BLEACH
1·Gal..
Jug

49c

. '

MAXWELL HOUSE

COFFEE
2-lb.
Can

.,..

~

W£•£.iE.IIYETME liGHT TOUMITQUANTtTit.SON ALL ITEMS IN THIS. AD. PI ICES EFFICTIYI TMaU IATUROAY. SE.PT. 4. Wl- NOlliE SOLD TO DEAlERS.

�'

Mason Board Bas Dress Code to Decide
.

'

By Jeaa Waner
suits may be worn to school any
PI'. PLEASANT - Mason time. Shirttails must be worn
Counl)i's Board of Edlication inside slacks, etc., exCj!pl for a
will consider a dress code for square cut shirttail. Girls are
junior and senior high school not to comb their hair or put on
•~~~dents after such a plan was ma~p in classroolll$ or halls.
IIUbmltted tq each member at a Re~trooms should be used for
regular board meeting Friday all such acts as grooming.
night.
,
"The following are con·
Acting Superintendent sidered inappropriate ~nd
Michael Whalen, presenting the unacceptable for boys to wear
plan, commented, "it is a very to school: Extremely long or
lll2efal dress cOde." He noted unclean hair (all hair will be cut
tllat clothes have already been and worn above the eyes, above
purchased for this school term the ears, and above the collar);
and said this had been taken beards, mustaches; sideburns
into consideration when the that extend more than one ineh
guidelines were prepared. below the bottom of the ear lobe
However, he added that a new or are more than two inches in
dress code will be studied for width;underweartypeTshirts;
ned year and particulars insignia · or unapproved
concerning this will be made organizations on clothing;
known before Chrisbnas pili'· collars of regular sl)ile shirts
open more than one button from
chases are made.
The code spelled the rules the top; outdoor type jackets in
although the board had not a classroom except with the
reached a decision concerning approval of the classroom
them.
teacher; shirttails outside the
In official action, on a 4-1 trousers except for square cut
vote, the board agreed to seek shirttails; extremely tightadvice from its legal advisor on fitting or unclean trousers of
a dress code and directed the any type (boys are encouraged
acting superintendent to inquire to wear dress slacks or clean
as to whether or not the board washable trousers, including
has any type of immunil)i to blue jeans, or wranglers to
federal guidelines in regards to school) neck pendants, beads,
equalization of students in medals on chains, etc., worn
reference to the problem of outside the shirt if they are
segregation.
noisy, unsafe, or inappropriate.
Member
Bill
Withers "Boys are to wear socks with
presented this motion and in the appropriate footwear. &amp;in&amp;als
voting Harry Siders opposed. may be worn without socks.
Discussion followed after Boys are not to comb their·hair
presentation of the plan by in classrooms or halls .
Whalen. Withers said he felt thls Restrooms shoUld be used for
should come from various all such acts of grooming.
principals becauae "what mlght ''Enforcement
of
the
be good in one school maybe provisions of the dress code
will not be in another."
shall be the responsibility of
The code which Whalen asked every professional staff
the board to 'approve was member to enforce the
presented as follows :
provisions of the code. A special
"A dress code for students in responsibility for doing so
the junior and senior high belongs to the homeroom
schools emphasizes good taste teacher who is the first to see
in dress and grooming. It the student each day. In the
stresses that important aspects enforcement of the Code the
of good taste are neatness, following pattern of procedures
simplicll)i.and appropriateness. shall be followed:
"The following are con· "All violations will be
side red inappropriate and · reported to the principal
unacceptable for girls to wear . prompUy and in written form.
to school: extreme hairdos; First violation, warning to the
extreme hair coloring; hair student by the principal;
curlers or pins to set hair Second violation, contact with
(except when permitted by the the parent by the principal, and
principal prior to special social Third violation, suspension of
events); low cut dresses; sheer the student by the principal.
biOWies; Ught.fitting sweaters, "The professional slaff will
Toflhirts, 'sweatshirts, shorts, have the complete support of
••hot pants, and bermudas.
the board of education in the
, ''Girls and parents are to use ~mplementation
of
the
di.scretion in selection of the provisions of the dress code.
length of clothing. Clean, neat "In addition to the above
slacks, jeans, levis, and pant code, no student shall interfere

with the learning of another
student. Also, no student shall
impose physical harm on
another student."
HARTFORD PROJECT
Fields asked the board for
a~ditional construction at
Hartford School when he
pointed out the necessity for
closing the walkway between
the old and new sections. The
motion passed in a 3-2 vote with
Siders and Stevens voting
against it. It was stipulated that
this is to be done only if funds
are available.
Action concerning garbage
pickups at Point Pleasant
Junior High and the Vocational
School took an unusual turn.
Siders mad~ ,the motion that
the board award A." 0. Powers
of Glenwood a contract for this
aild Eshenaur gave the second.
After discussion however,
Eshenaur apparently saw
reason to change his thinking
and although he had given the
second said "no 11 when Stevens
called for a vote on the motion.
Others casting " no" votes to

defeat the motion were Withers
and Fields. Stevens and Siders
voted in favor of it.
According to Whalen, Powers
asked the board for $135 per
month to make daily pickups at
the junior high and three times
a week at the Vocational School.
Withers
labeled
this
"outrageous" and asked the
board to make an effort to see if
such service could be obtained
cheaper. He compared this cost
with that of pickups on nine
other schools and noted it "can 'I
justify."
Eshenaur asked Supt. Whalen
for a rec 0mmendatlon for the
positlon of assistant principal at
Point Pleasant High School
since Ed Sommer accepted the
directorship of the Vocational
Center. Whalen disclosed that
two persons have made application although others are
expected. He said he will go
along with the principal's
recommendation on this and
will present it to the board later.
have
been
Applications
received from Walter Copley, a
teacher at Wahama, and Bright
McCausland, a local eaucator
and farmer.
In other action the board:
- Agreed to make allocations
equally to libraries in Point
Pleasant and New Haven. The
board was informed that $1,000
has been budgeted for this.
Siders voted against the
measure, since he did know how
this compared with last year's
figure.

Employed: Edward Elementary :teacher substitute
Chapman, Jr., at Hannarr Ust.
Elementary ef!ective August
-EmployedThomasChristy,
30; L. D. Rutt, teacher Qrd. Worthy Long, Lewis Scarbee,
nance, effective August 31· Presley Roush and J)avid
Harley Cloud, substitut~ Oldaker for extended emteacher; Doris McDaniel (RN) ployment as maintenance men.
to be hired full lime teacher of a
Nurse's Aide Class for - Agreed to supplemen I
Vocational
School; . Ira salaries of cooks, "janitors and
Adkinson, teacher Wahama secretaries from hot lunch
High to replace Ben Roush and programs as requested by
Dale Miller to be added to certain principals.
r----------------~--~------,

!
I

Area Deaths

John Ireland Jr.

!

'•

. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -... Daytona Beach, Fla., last
Wednesday morning, will be
held 1 p.m., Monday at Miller's
Home for Funerals with Rev.
Glen R. Hueholt officiating.
Burial will be in Mound Hill
Cemetery.
Mrs. Harrison was born in
Gallipolis on Sept. 'Zl, 1896,
daughter of the late Charles
(Pete) an.d Addie Edwards
Smeltzer.
She spent most of her life in
Gallipolis. She attended the
Gallipolis schools and the First
Presbyterian ·Church.
She
married
Edward
Harrison on Feb. '15, 1913. He
survives, along with two sons
and one daughter, Lawrence,
Vandalia, Ohio; Eugene,
Orlando, Fla ., and Mrs. Iris
Sowards, Daytona Beach. One
son, Robert, preceded her in
death. Nine grandchildren and
one great-grandchild survive.
Two brothers survive, Meade
Smeltzer, Sl. Pe ters burg, Fla .,
and Lawrence Smeltzer,
The above aerial photograph Is a proposed new
Gallipolis. Friends m~y call at
the funeral home after 4 p.m.,
development and was formerly the Wyman Caldwell
Sunday.
farm, located on Rt. 35, just four miles west of the new

Rodney Village

Holzer Medical Center and the Gallia County Junior
Fairgrounds.

r•
'

A study was made for the maximum use of this 196 acre
development and it shpwed that town houses, garden
apartments, trailers, , condominioms, single family
residence and a shopping center were all feasible. ·

'

!~
j

J
r

•

The water line is adjacent to the property. Base streets
and sewer lines are in the planning stage. At least 100 lots
will be auctioned on a Saturday in September, 1971, by
the Fulks Land Co. Watch your local newspaper· for
details.

If

I

- 4 Mi.--j
+-f.Mi _

NEW

lo!OL~I.I&amp;.
lllo•PIT~

'·

r

t)

Rodney Village
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

.C8J

Funeral services will be
conducted Monday at 2 p.m.
from the Pleasant Valley
Community Church by the Rev.
Herman Jordan. Burial will be
in M.t. Flower Cemetery at
Leon.
Mr. Snyder was born July 10,
1899, at Leon, a son of the late
George and Margaret Shields
Snyder.
Survivors include four sons,
Barney Snyder in California;
Floyd Snyder of Letart, and
Earl Franklin Snyder and
Engene Snyder; two sisters,
Mrs. Lola Scarberry of Nitro
and Mrs. Flossie Mattox of Leon
and several grandchildren.
Friends may call at the
Stevens Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant after 2 p.m., Sunday.

Memoir

John H. Busch

Today's \

Big Unions

' I

.

Hurlers
~I
.
.

.

I

By United Press tn.,.natiCINII

My mind is like an hourglass and
·life provides the sand.
1be fallen grain'! are scars I wear
and relics of the. time I share:
some, bits of joy but more despair'
-a fraction of them planned.
Long ago my world was fresh - each
day a new vignette.
SO many streams to fish or swim,
and fields to roam and ice to skim,
my senses tuned to nature's hymn
-1 could not see the threat
Suddenly the sky turned gray - mY
gentle g-tise must cease.
Mankind's threat became unstrung
and glol)al war engulfed the young,
my song of youth would not be sung
-and stUI there is no peace.

GALLIPOLIS - John Ed·
ward Ireland; Jr., four-year-old
son of John Edward and Viola
M. Griffith Ireland, 312 South
Yellow Springs St., Springfield,
Ohio, died unexpectedly Friday
Relentlessly my sand flows by with
morning at his parents' home in
Httle yet to spend.
Springfield.
He was born July 30, 1967, in
I can merely wonder at the drain,
ud If this ·world is mad or sane,
Gallipolls. Surviving besides his
parents is one brother, James,
ud of the things I can't explain
at home. Maternal grand·
-and how it aU will end.
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Ed·
ward Griffiih, Gallipolis.
-John Anderson McKeaa
Paternal grandmother sur·
GiV'fil.., Ollie (1171)
viving is Mrs. Ruth Starkey,
Gallipolls.
Funeral services will be
conducted 10:30 a.m., Monday
at the McCoy Funeral Home in
Vinton with Rev. Elmer Geiser
Alva Hokanson
J
officiating.
DETROIT
(UP!)
The dianapolis while pitcher Dennis
Burial will be in Memorial PT. PLEASANT - Last rites
Gardens in Jackson. Friends for Miss Alva Hokanson, 73, Detroit Tigers and Chicago O'Toole and outfielder Ken
may call at the funeral home Point Pleasant, who died White Sox announced Saturday Hollman will be cominb up
Friday after a long illness, will they are calling up five and from Asheville,
today from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
be given Monday at 2 p.m. from seven players respectively,
Dead at Birth
the Chapman Mortuary. Burial from their minor league
NAMED SPORTS EDITOR
will be in the Suncrest systems at the conclusion of the
EUGENE, Ore . (UPI) GALLIPOLIS - Graveside Memorial Gardens. The Rev. youngsters' seasons.
Bill
Gilbreth
and
Blaine
R. Newnharn, 29, a
Pitchers
services · for the stillborn Arthur Lund of Pomeroy, will
Chuck Seelbach, plus catchers sports reporter for the Oakland
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David officiate . .
Roush, Rt. 1, Vinton, were held Miss Hokanson was born Feb. Tim Hosley and Gene Lamont Tribune for five years, will
Saturday evening at Kirkland 3, 1898 at Three-Rivers, Mich., a are being recalled by Detroit become sports editor of the
Pt. daughter of Gustav and from its Toledo Farm Club Eugene Register-Guard in
Memorial Gardens,
Pleasant.
Amanda Hokanson, natives of while first baseman John Young about mid .s ep tern be r1•
The infant is survived by its Sweden, She was a retired is being purchased from the Newnham, a graduate of the
University of California and
parents, and two brothers, bookkeeper and secfE'ta•y of the Tigers' Montgomery team.
Wendell Scott Roush and David Malleable Iron Company in The White Sox are recalling assistant sports information
William Roush, both at home. Point Pleasant; a member of shortstop Lee Richard, first director. at UC from 1963 to 1,965,
Maternal grandparents are Mr. the Lutheran Church and Point baseman Bob Spence, along · also worked for the Hay'fioard
and Mrs. Willi~ Fruth, Pt. Pleasant Chapter 75, Order with pitchers rion Eddy and Review in Hayward, Calif. He
Stan Percanowski from Tucson. will replace Jerry Uhrhammer,
Pleasant, and paternal grand· Eastern Star.
mother is Mrs. Arlene Tracy,
Survivors include an ·aunt, First baseman Tony Muser is ,ecenUy named the paper's
Rio Grande.
Mrs. Olive E. Hawkinson, and a joining Chicago from In- environmental editor.
Services were under the cousin, Mildred Hawkinson,
direction of the McCoy Funeral both of Kansas City.
Home.
Friends may call at the
Mortuary today from 2 to 4 p.m: ·
and 7 to 9 p.m.
Mrs. Harrison
She was preceded in death by
GALLIPOLIS - Funeral her parents, the late Gusta and
services for Mrs. Genevieve L. Amanda Hokanson and one
Harrison, 74, who died in brother, Elmer Hokanson .

Choice Building Sites Available

•
I'

!

·a Sort of Journal

Tigers, Orlsox Call Up Players

Amoric.n Ltagut
Boston ( Lonborg 7-51 . at
California (May 8-9) • •
New York ( Keklch 8-7) at
Kansas CitY (Drago 15-7).
Chicago (Wood 17-10) at
Detroit &lt;Lollch 21,9) ,
Minnesota (Perry• 1~- l~l at
Cleveland !McDowell, 11·11l .
Milwaukee ("Parsons 11·.15
and Slaton 8-51 at Baltimore
(Dobson 16-6 and LfOilhtrd 2.()),

Go Along
By DAVID A. WEISSLER
UDIIed Press Iaternatlonal

Organized labor strongly cri·
licized President Nixon's 9lklay
wage-price freeze this week but
said it would go along with it as
a upractical matter." The

2.

Washington I Broberg 3-~ and
McLain 9·16) at Qakla~d I Blue
22·6 and Hunter 16·11!.22·
Nllillllll Lug-,
Siln Diego (Norman ~-111 at
Montreal &lt;Renko 12-13).,
Los Angeles (Downing 15-8 or
Singer 1-15) af New York
(McAndrew 0.5 or Sadeekl S.S).
San Francisco (Perry 13-10)
at Philadelphia (Wise 13-10).
Atlanta (Kelley 7-Sl at
Chicago (Hands 10.16).
Cincinnati IGullett 1(1.5) at St.
Louis ICieveland 11-10) . .
Pittsburgh (Moose 8-7 or
Johnson 8-9) · at Houston
(Biaslngarnel .

lft~llon dlniler !Jonorlng lotb ~ ~ Clarence E. Miller. Featund
s]ieiter for tbe dinner at Lancaater High School will be Republican National Olalrman, U.
S. Sen. Robert Dole li Kansas. The CGllllllttee cbalrman, Mrs. Muine Olarllm, Lancaslef',
laiddles with other members of her clmlllittee,l to r, Walter Arrowsmith, Fairfield CouniY
; 'I'Icllet Chalrlnan, Jobn Huddle of Lancaster, Finance Olalrman of the Clti%ens fOr Miller
Conuultlee and Clarence BIOISer li Logan, IOlh District Ticket Cilalrman. Persons wishing
to purchase tickets fir the dinner.can do 110 by contacting Bernard Fultz, 129 Fairlane Dr.,
iMlddleport, or Roger Barron, 122 Bastlani, Dr., GalllpoliB.
' .

Jnternotlonal Leogue Standings
By United Presslntern•tton•l

W L Pel. GB

Ch:ou Has Summit Agenda

Rochester
80 S3 .602
Tidewater
75 58 .56-4 S
Charleston
73 58 .557 6
Syracuse
70 63 .526 10
Richmond
68 65 .511 12
Louisville
66 68 .493 14'h
Toledo
56 78 .418 24 1h
Winnipeg
43 88 .328 36
Friday's Results
Charleston 7 Toledo ~ ·
Winnipeg 11 Louisville 10
Syracuse at Tidewater, ppd,

China's 11\0re outgoing foreign two super powers and Its
policy was a "threat to division by them," he told
Vjesnik. He said the rapEurope."
"China is on,ly opposed to prochment, logically, should
domination of the world by the have no effect on Europe.

BELGRADE (UPI)
Chinese leaders will ask
President Nixon to withdraw all
American
troops
from
Southeast Asia, Japan, For·
mosa and South Korea, Chinese
Premier Chou En-lal said
Saturday in an interview with a
Yugoslav newspaper.
If Nixon refuses to end the
Indichina fighting, "China
would support those peoples'
struggle until their final victory," the newspaper, Vjesnik,
quoted Chou as saying. "We
have told the Vietnamese
comrades that China is
prepared for the biggest
national sacrifice."
The newspaper reported that
Chou said that "In case of a U.
S. negative posture, China
would support those peoples'
struggle until their final vic·

rain

Rochester at Richmond, ppd,

rain

TIE
LONDON (UPI) - Sheffield
United, newly promoted to the
first Division, was held to a
scoreless tie Saturday by West
Bromwich Albion. Sheffield had
won its first four matches of the
young Engllsh Soccer League
season.
SCORE~

TreeRIpe. ned
,
White &amp; YeUow Peaches
Bring your own baskets
Pick Your Own or Buy
Already Picked

Dime Robber Killed
CLEVELAND (UPI) -A
Russian · immigrant pleaded
guilty to "killing" a vending
machine which took hls two
dimes and failed to give him
any soda pop. The judge,
however, was sympathetic and
suspended a nne and 'sentence.
Henry Kolmio, 52, was
arrested and charged with
malicious destruction of proper·
ty for destroying s. soft drink
vending machine.
Judge Frnak J . Gorman was
told that Kolmio had driven
into a gas staiion, told the
attendent to fill up his car, then
went into the station to buy a
soft drink.
"While inside he fed the
machine two dimes and got an

tory."
Chou denied the contention of
newspapers in Hungary and
CZechoslovakia that the SinoAmerican rapprochmenl and

IIAISER
FRUIT FARM
Rt. 7,1Mile
Below Athalls

electric shock but no pop," the
prosecutor said. "Then he
deliberately kicked and punched
the machine, knocking it to the
ground.
"On the way out he calmly
admitted to the attendant, 'I
just · killed that onHI'IIIed
bandit' and hurriedly drove
away."

Kolmio, who speaks broken
English, admitted his crime to
the judge.
"We all feel lilte smashing
vending machines at limes, but
we must learn to con~fol our
temper," the judge said.
"I sentence you to 30 days in
the workhouse and fine you
$100; days and fine suspended,"
he said.

administration, seeking a united
front behind· its new economi"
program, invited labor to help
draft the second. phase of the
program.
AFL-CIO President George
Meany and Leonard Woodcock,
president of the United Auto
Workers, met Wednesday to
discuss the unions' reaction to
the program. Mterwards, they
threatened some action if
policies were not changed after
the 9!klay period.
The administration's message, carried personally Thurs.
day by Labor Secretary James
D. Hodgson, was sent to
Meany. Hodgson said he got a
"cordial" reception. Meany did
not comment publicly.
It was the first lime since
Nixon announeed the new
program two weeks ago that
the administration had consult. 1 d
ed Iabor. Th e unton
ea ers
t
li
. ed th
I
c rum
e curren po cy
favors big business at the
expense of working peopIe.
Housing Secretary George
Romney recommended creation
.
. board
of a wage.pnce
revtew
when the current freeze ends.
He said the lime has come for
government curbs on the
"abuse of accumulated power"
in business and organized labor.
Romney said the review board
should have the power to put a
lid on ptofits as well as wages:
E opean currency exchan·
ges,urwhich were closed the
week immediately after Nixon
-

1!1

Family Resta~:~rants

TM

1503
EASTERN AVE.
GAWPOUS, OHIO

Three Triumphs

Super Shef

rger

2for99c

wifh this coupon

NEED. A LOW-COST
AUTO LOAN ON A- NEW
1971 MODEL?

%
·,..""
-of
..,,_ ..............

100% treah ground beef, broiled

.,., .,.. "'""' ,..w4

over open-tlam... topped with

IT'S- NEARING
THE END,
OF THE
Y.AR
. .
FOR NEW 1971 MODEL
CARS.
.
. -.
THE DEALERS ARE NOW GIVING •• ,
.

.

with tllis coupon

Tlolo b ltoo 110 -1 A foil
chol.. 1-d llool, llroiltd
toastH N. witt. lettuce,

'

SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
featured ninth race at Scioto
Downs Friday night, a $6,000
invitation trot over one mile,
was won by Buzz Uff in 2:021-5,
returning $16, $7.80 and $3.80.
Second was Flower Child,
paying $3.60 and $2.60, with Doc
McBean in the show position,
returning $3.20.
A 2·6 daily double combination of Bright Sand and
Herbert Scotch paid $107.80.
Attendance was 6,995 and the
handle was $340,140.

PORTLAND-TheRev. John
H. Busch, 76, Portland, died
Friday evening at Holzer
Medical Center. Rev. Busch, a
retired minister, was a member
of the Free Will Baptist Church
at Silver Run and a veteran of
World War I.
He is survived by his wife,
Irene; three sons, John H.,
Nanty Glo, J;'a.; Edward H.,
Newport News, Va., and James
ITALIAN WINS RACE
W., Copperas Cove, Texas; two COWE§, Isle of Wight (UPI)
brothers, Roy and Edward, of -The 245 miles Daily Express
Racme; one stster, May Powerboat Race off the Isle of
Brewer, Racine; six grand· Wight was won Saturday by 22childrdn,
two
great· year .Old Italian student Ronny
grandchildren , and several Bonelli in Lady Nara.
nieces and nephews. .
Young Boneili had to ·be
Funeral servtces wtll be held carried ashore with a leg injury.
Monday at I p.m. at the Stiver Thirty-two miles from the
Run Free Will Baptist Church finish his boat hit ·a big wave
with the Rev. Lawrence Bqslt and 'he was knocked unand .the Rev . W. E. _ Curf~n conscious. His 61-year-old coofftctalmg. Burtal Will be m driver Commander Allilio
J--i.e.larl Cemetery. Friends may Petroni drove the boat for the
call at Ewing Funeral Home · rest of the race.
any time.
FUND DRIVE;
BOSTON (UPI) - Boston
Harry Snyder
Bruins President Weston
Adams Jr. will give 3,000
PT. PLEASANT - !larry
tickets to both t11e Republican
Tom Snyder, 72, of Leon Route
and Democratic . parties for
1, · died Friday In Pleasant
lhem to sell as a fund raising
Valley Hospital.
campaign.

Week in Review

CIU.. r. Miller C«rnmltt uen above ~re rw~nl..r tiebt sales fer the Sept. 10 ap-

Americans Bag

KIEL, Germany (UPI)
American yachting men today
bagged three victor.ies in the
curtain..-aising event of a PreOlympic Sailing Regatta in Kiel
Bay·
Fighting winds running up to
44 mph , Glen Foster, the
reigning world champion, came
home first in the Tempest Class.
His countryman James M.
Schoonmaker crossed the line
first in the star boat race, while
Donald S. Cohan won the
opening Dragon event.
Hans Fogh of Denmark took
first place in the Flying Dotchman Race in which Rodney
Pattison of Britain, ihe 1968
Olympic Gold Medallst, had to
·setUe for seventh place.

.

Ol

a

ICNHto,

mellod

chem

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J~ cn8f:

•

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Big Shef

Fish Sandwich

..GOOD DEALS"

2for49c

You re probably wondering about the best
..
.
.
way to finance it. We're here to tell you
that Bank Financing Costs You Less,
and is tailored to your budget• ..
So shop around and get yourself a goOd buy

with this coupon

with tflis coupon

'

our Bli1Quet on 1 Bun! Two openflame broiled bHtburoera topped

with melted chtell, our 1pecial
aauce ond chopped lottuco.

Flaky 1lsh llllet, detp'.fried· and.
aeryed on • touted bun with our ~
..,.CIII lairlar UUCII.

on a new 1971 model then come to us for
the financing.

French ·Fries

'

·Double Cheeseburger

2fcir29c

2 69c
for

with·this coupon
Thin, golden-brown l~eho FrenCh

Frill tllallltllln Y9Ur moulh.

patties of open-

,.

I
I

I

'

I,

••

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flame broiled ground beef. and • ~
lopping ol 010111011 ~h-, on a

l!*lod bun.

1'

promm~n

~

blolr
.

Chllf:'
......

Blue Bird or lnnour* Star-U.S. &amp;ort. Inspected

FULLY COOKED HAMS

Shank Half

Y• m

VJSI George Jackson: were
killed. Bmgham was believed to
have been the person who gave

J~c=..a gun.

.. a
was "?.e of three
Soledad Brothers .charged m
the murder of a pnson guard.
The other two "~!hers" ":"""!
through a pretrial hearing,
which they disrupted several
times.
A total of 34 persons were
killed Monday when a group of
23 prisoners tried to escape in
Seoul, Soulh Korea.
A group of military and
civilian leaders took over
control of the Bolviain govern·
menl from Gen. Juan Jose
Torres, who had to nee wilh his
foUowers.
An agreement was reached
on a draft text involving the
slatus of West Berlin. The
agreement would end the East·
West confrontation over the
city which has prevailed sioce
World War U. The agreement
must be. sulmitted to the
governments of the United
Stales, Soviet Union, Britain
and France.
Iilinois Assistant State Allor·
ney Edward V. Hanraban and
12 policemen were indicted oo
charges of obstructing justice
in a Chicago Black Panther
raid that left two Panther
leaders dead.
In politics, Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew said he was not
worried about Treasury Secretary John B. Connally laking
over his job in 19'n and said the
Republicans would pick the best
man for the job. Sen. George
McGovern, who is serH,g the
Democratic nomination, said to
get away from the image as a
uone-issue" candidate he would
on issues other
than the Vietnam War. Sen.
EdwardKennedy,D-Mass.,said
he would support no candidate
until the nominating coovenlion.
The Campbell Soup Co. said
it was recalling all chicken
vegetable soup p:~cked by its
Paris, Tex., plant because
botulism contamination was
found in part ·of one day's
output.

WASHINGTON (UPII Last

year BousiaK Sectduy

Geoq:e Romaey nlualarily
took. %5 pd. cut ia bls . . . .
a year ulary to set u
eum!ft Ill tile fi&amp;ht •K•iasl
Inflation,
Bat llemlley said Friday M
Is drawial: Ills fall salary W.
year becaasnobody fo!knfed ·
his eumple.
" I dlda't tlllu II was
lllviDC aay died," tile idf·
made mllllouire exploiwell

with this coupon
Two

OPEN 9 A.M. 10 9 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

cSanonnecQutiontin
. wtPrisonth
. the attempted
en
escape m
which three guards and three
.
.
din black
.
mmates, me1u g
acti-

..

.b.laar

252 THIRD AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

from.

·.·.·.·.:.·.·.·.·.·,·:.·,•,·,·,·:.·:.·: ·.·:·.·:::·.·:.·:·.·

.~

"THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

made his pronouncement ,
opened Monday and the dollar
showed a steady decline
throughout the week. The New
York Stock Exchange, however,
advanced.
In the first major world
victory for Nixon's economic
program, Japan Friday announced it was Boating the yen
beginning Saturday.
The European Common
Market called the 10 per cent
surcharge on foreign goods
imported into the United States
unfair and asked for its repeal.
The market threatened possible
retaliation.
In Vietnam, Vice President
Nguyen Cao Ky announced he
was withdrawing from the
South Vi,etnamese presidential
election because ~ considered
11 ngged: His wtthdrawal left
President Nguyen Van Thieu
un(llposed.
.
All 220•000 U.S. troops '"
Sout~ Vtetnam were ~~ .on
aler " for posstbly . the high
potnl of Communist attacks
expec~ to . COIDCJde wt th
Sundays parbamentary e1ection, The U.S.. ~
reported 10 Amencans killed '"
Vte~. the lowest weekly
total smce 1965.
Calif .
th . . began
orrua au onties
a
h f Stephe M B.
hamsearc or
Ia n
1118, a young wyer
a
. 1 litical famil .

HURT IN WRECJ[ •
MIDDLEPORT - Lydia
Gilkey, 47, Rt. 1, Middlqxrt,
was admitted at Hom Medical
Center ThurSday for injwles
·receiV&lt;!d in a two-car accident
ooSR 7. 1lwasreportetl thai she
was treated and released. Mrs.
Gilkey sustained broken ribs
and possible internal injw-ies.

SOUND RIPE

At a Special low Price

*
1.0\'./

STATE FARE

WIENER OR SANDWICH

PRICE
SPECI AL

*
*
LO\'/
PRICE
SPECIAL

UNS
Pkg. of 8
THOROFARE

ICE CREA
ALL FLAVORS

% Gallon Pkg.

*
*
L0 \'/

THOROFARE

BEVERAGES

PRICE
SPECIAL

ALL fi.A VORS

*

lb.

12-oz. can

KRAn FEATURES

SANDWICH SPREAD ............ ·.. ';:· 51c
THOUSAND ISLAND DRESSING .•. ~: 41c
di:,E THOUSAND ISLAND DRESSING ~: 41 c
REGULAR MIRAQ.E MARGARINE :_c.:: ~::: 33c
PARKAY WHIPPED MARGARINE
~:~ 45c

PILLSBURY
REFRIGERATED BISCUITS

Country St,le ................. 4 r'~ 43c
lllittennllk . . .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 .';:. 43c
Eatra Ught ................... 4 ,';:;, 45c

BALLARD
REFRIGERATED BISCUITS

...
leHJ
........

6

11-&lt;Jz.
Tubes

59~
,

BO PEEP
AMMONIA
%-Gal.
Bot.

43~

MAGIC · ~

BLEACH
1·Gal..
Jug

49c

. '

MAXWELL HOUSE

COFFEE
2-lb.
Can

.,..

~

W£•£.iE.IIYETME liGHT TOUMITQUANTtTit.SON ALL ITEMS IN THIS. AD. PI ICES EFFICTIYI TMaU IATUROAY. SE.PT. 4. Wl- NOlliE SOLD TO DEAlERS.

�'

II- Tbe Sunday Times. SeDIIDel. &amp;nll7. Aq. •.trn.

Baxter~ Williams

Social
Calendar

Vows Solemnized
ISYRACUSE - In a can·
dlellgbt service against a
backgrbund of palms and
baSkets ol. flowers, Miss Judith
Ann Baxter, daughter ol. Mr.
and Mrs. Oarence w. Baxter,
R.D. 2, Cameron, W. Va.,
became the bride ol John
ThCID8ll Willia!!l!l, SCII ol Mr.
John P. W'illlams and the late
Betty Jane Wllllams of
Syracuse.
The .event took place at 6:30
o'clock Saturday evening Aug.
28 at First Christian Churdl at
• Cameron. The double ring
.: ceremony was read by the Rev.
' Wesley Morgan.
Pre.flllpt!al music rendered
by organist Jo Ellen Kuhn in·
: eluded, "A Time for Us,"
~ ''Theme frcm Love St«y,"
• "He" HI Believe" and "Theme
; frcm •R&lt;111e0 sod Juliet." Tbe
:; soloist, Carolyn Sue Bmar,
1 sang, ''More", "The Lord's
l Prayer" and "Whither Thou
1 Goost."
The bride, given in marriage
~ by ber father, . wore a Ooor
' length gown of unported sheer
~ silk organza designe4 with a
J portrait scalloped nect1ine and
: camelot sleeves. Tbe bodice
: waBfashionedriaOaralpatlern
~ of venise lace which also
~ lrlmmed the cuffs, and sleeves
•: of her gown. A venise lace
4covered ~otonet headpiece
: enhanced with llny seed pearls
: beld her delachable chapel
: length mantilla wblch was
~ edged ln matching lace. She
carried a -coliiiitaJ bouquet with
streamers.
Mary Jo Baxter, maid o1

f

•

1

honor, Cameron, sister. of the
bride, wore a pale apricot floor
length gown ol. sheer organza,
styled with a high neckline '
IUb~ sleeves and a soCtly
galhered skirt. Velvety stripe.!
trimmed the solid sheer
organza m the sleeves and.fron:
o1. the bodice, with bsnds ol.
venise lace at the high waist,
neck line and sleeves. An
apricot Camelot headpiece
lrimmed In matching lace held
tbewalstlengthwhiteslx-tiered
illusion vell. She carried a
basket of flowers with
streamers.
Bridesmaids were Mrs. Uncia
Sewell, Marietta; Miss Ann
Baxter, Proctor, W. Va.; Mrs·
Robin Quigley, Cameron; Mrs.
&lt;llarlotte Knicely, Glenville;

Mrs. Linda Bahrer, New
Martinsville; and Mrs. DoiUI8
Jo Morrison, Washington, D. C.
· They wore Identical gowns and
bead pieces of turquoise and
carried baskets ol. flowers with
streamers.
Best man was Ralston D.
Hemsley, Danrin; ushers were
Harold Roush, New Haven;
James Clifford, Jr., Syracuse;
Gene McMahan, ColnmhJS, and
Rod Baxter, Cameron.
The bride's mother was attired in a pink polyester streetlength dre88 trimmed with
venise lace at the neck line,
and venise lace long sleeves,
and wore a ccnage ol deep pink
flowers.
~ollowing the ceremooy ' a
recepl!on was held in the
fellowship rooms ri the church.
The bride's four-tiered cake

Family, 'Friends Picnic
POMEROY - Relativ.S and and Lisa of Cheshire; Mr. and
mends of Mrs. E. G. Robie and Mrs. Eddie Carutbers and Mr.
son John of Mesa, Ark., 'and Mrs. Mark Tannehill and
gatheredatthehomeofMr.and son Bryan of Middleport; Mrs.
Mrs. Lewis Taylor for a picnic. James Bumgarner, Ryan and
Present were Mr. and Mrs. Roger of New Haven, W. Va.,
Wayne Oxyer, Kim, Kelly and and Tom Krautter.
Kyle, Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Harrison, Mark, Greg, Sheena calling later in the day were
and Sherri of Cheshire; Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Taylor of
Mrs. Ray Jarvis and Debbie of Elyria, . Tim (Butch) and
&lt;;olumbus; Sue and Tressa Lonnie (Boots), Mr. and Mrs.
'faylor and Mr. and Mrs. Thor Everett Plantz of Cheshire;
Oirsey of Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Koneta Taylor of Mesa,
Mrs. Robert Taylor, Rusly, Lori Ariz., and Ralph Caruthers.

Party Given
joe-joe Fields
.POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Jll8eJlh R. Fields gave a pll'ly
Saturday afternoon in Ob·
~ervance of the 4th· birthday
anniversary ri their 100 JC~Noe ·
at the home o1 Ids grandparents, Mr. and Mr$. John W.
Mullord at Oteshlre.
Joe-Joe's brother, Greg,
joined in the celebratioo. Ice
cream and . cake were ~
and each guest receiVed a pll'ly
favor. Games were pia~.
Guests were Tina, Rily J. and
Laura Smith, Earl and Sheila
Wmes, Amy Beth Halley, Bruce
·and Rlchle Gilmore, Terry
Gardner, ·Jeff and Tamle
Gilkey, Mrs. Frank Gilkey, Jr.,
Mrs. Carl Gardner and Miss
Sandy Mulford.
Later in the afternoon cake
and ice cream were enjoyed by
Joe-Joe's grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Fields, and
.Jeff, of Pomeroy at their home.

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT CUB Scout
Troop :!45 wiener roast 'and
party Sunday from 6 to 9 p.m. at
· Middleport Municipal Park.
Each scout must be accompanied by at least one
parent.
. SUNDAY SCifOOL at Racine .
Wesleyan United Methodist
Church at II a.m. instead of 10
a,m. due to · communion services.

., I

MONDAY
ANNUAL MEETfNG of the
Meigs County Unit of tbe.
American Cancer Society
Monday at 7: 30 p.m . . ai
. Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Com11any meeting
room.

.· ~·~

PARENTS OF Kindergarten
students of Southern Local
School District to meet Monday ·
between 9 and 11 a. m. in the
kindergarten room. Children
MEET nJESDAY
are not 1o report at this time.
POMEROY - The Meigs
Classes will begin Tuesday.
County American Cancer
(Miss
E. Mees)
ROCK SPRINGS- Grange
Sociely will meet Tuesday at
Monday 8 p.m. at Grange Hall.
7:30p.m. not on Monday as wu
THURSDAY
previously announced.
RED CROSS Thursday, Sept.
2at 7:30p.m. in the cafeteri~ of
(Judith Ann Baxter)
Veterans Memortal Hospital.
DAUGIITER BORN
Alfred Justus, Red Cross
SYRACUSE -Mr. am Mrs.
and flowers graced the bride's College where she was a representative from Columbus,
Bruce Teaford of Syracuse
table. Mrs. Unda Stout, New member ol Delta Theta Chi will be present.
POMEROY - Miss Janet E. Alvin Smith, brother of the announce the blrtb ol. their first
Martinsville, and Miss Rets socorily, a cheerleader, and
Mees, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. groom, served as best man.
child, Sherri I.,ynn, 7 lb. 4 oz.,
Clegg, Proctor, registered member of the Golden Girls.
Richard Mees, Rt. 2 Pomeroy, The new Mrs. Smith is a 1969 August f1 at Holzer holpital.
The groom attended Rio
guests.
became the bride of Edward F. graduate of Meigs High School Paternal grandparents are Mr.
The new Mr. and Mrs. Grande College, where he was a
Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. and is presently employed at and Mrs. VIrgil Teaford,
Williams will reside oo Fourth member ol Pi Sigma fraternily
Ehno Smith, Rt. 2, Pomeroy. the Meigs County Courthouse. Syracuse, maternal grandand graduated from Mountain
Street in Syracuse.
The double ring ceremony took Mr. Smith, also a 1969 graduate parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ollrles
The bride attended West State College. He is employed
place at Helen Mauck of Meigs High School, Buctley of MlnersviiJe; greatVirginia Universll)' and was by the State ol. Ohio, Division ol.
Galbreath Memorial Chapel on graduated from Tri-County grandparents, Mrs. Edith
graduated fnm Mountain State Banks.
June 19, at 4 p.m. at Athens, Technical College at Nelsonville Teaford, Mlnemllle; Mr. and
Ohio. The Rev. Claude Sandlin in June and ls presently serving Mrs. George Casto, MIMlep«rt
officiated.
with the U. 's. Army at Fort R.D. and Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Miss Jean Mees and Miss Knox, Ky .
RACINE - The Racine
Priddy, Rutland, R.D.
American Legion Auxiliary Pamela Mees, sisters of the
Unit held its annual picnic bride, served as maid of honor . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
recently at the Racine park.
and junior bridesmaid. Mr.
Martha Lou Beegle and
Jeanette lawre~ce, who
PICNIC ENJOYED
By Katie Crow~
assisted at the Red Cross
MIDDLEPORT
The
bloodmobile, gave their report. Middleport W.C.T.U. held Its
Art Classes for D' Artiste Gallery, 525 N. 2nd
The Racine unit will serve the annual picnic Friday evening at
St., , Middleport, ,_Ohio,..--Ru!_h Gosney, In·
Canteen at tjleir next visit in the Legion park. Present were
strudor. Beginninilei)tembel"-6 • December
POMEROY - Pleasantly surprised recently was Mrs. December.
Betty
Cline, Iva Turner, Beulah
2, 1971. 13 week courses.
Dorothy Roller, Middleport, with a visit from Mr. and Mrs. John
A large box ol. ribbons from White, Inez Turner, Isabel
Beeson and famlly ol MI. Gilead.
funeral baskets was reported Winebrenner
Lena
and
Mr. Beeson is the son of Cora Jones Beeson and the late Leo sent to the V.A.C. hospital at McKinley. Guests were Denette
Evening Classes-7-10 p.m.
Beeson and grandson ol the late William Beeson who operated tbe Dayton where blind veterans and Sandra See. Blessing was
Priode ·Lumber Company in Middleport with his brother, the late weave them into rugs.
given by Inez Turner. Following
A communication from the meal tentaUve plans were
Bob Beeson.
Monday- Graphics and water color pointing.
The Priode I.Aunber Company was purchased by the Valley district president Geraldine made for the aruma! county
Tuesday-Oil painting and grophics fer leonogers - 13
Kessinger announced the Fall meeting to be held in SepI.Aunber Ccmpany.
thru 19 ye~rs.
Wednesday-oil
painting ond grophlcs from llfe-111
conference
in
Athens,
district
The Beesons made the trip especially for their children to
tember.
ages.
view the former heme o1. his parents and grandparents and to Oct. 7. An invitation was exThursday-Oil painting ond graphlco-men only.
reminisce a little over days that used to he. TheBeesons see many tended the group to attend the
BORN fN JULY
Afternoon Classes
reception and dinner for
changes in Meip County and hope to return to the area again.
Tuesday-Oil palntlngond graphics--1 · 4 p.m.-ollagos.
NEW HAVEN - Mr. and
Wednesday- Children ctasser.-4:30 to 6 p.m.
Mr. Beeson reported that his mother, who Is 87 years old, still department president Mrs . Mrs. David Simpson of New
Rilymond
Sloan
at
Ashland
Haven announce the birth of a
manages to gosh~ing at least once a week.
Sept. 25. Acontribution for a gift daughter Staci Lyn, July 4 at
was made. Mrs. Virgil Walker Pleasant Valley Hospital,
All tuilioo except children's are $39.00 for the 13 week
IT CERTAINLY WAS GOOD to see Charles R. Karr, Sr.,
will attend.
course, payable on registration.
weighing 9 pounds 4% ounces.
Meigs County Cmunissioner, back on the job after an illness of
Mrs. Jo Robinson was ap- Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Tuition for Children's classes are $19.50 lor the 13 week
three montlls.
course. payable on reglstra11on.
pointed JUnior Activity
Mr. Karr, who has had four severe heart attacks, has had chalnnan and began plans for Carl Gardner, Jr. of New
All necessary materials may be purchased olthe gallery
lor aPf)rox. $20.00 for the 13 weeks.
surgery toplaceanangiostatover his heart. The device regulates favors for veterans hospitals. Haven, and Mr. and Mrs. Paul
the beart beat am blood pressure. We sincerely wish you con- Total membership in the Unit is Simpson, Sr. of Pomeroy.
Maternal great-grandparents
llnued good health and it's good to have you back.
Registration will be accepted on SAturday, September 4,
eighty.&lt;Jne, fifty-three are paid are Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gardner,
6·9 p.m. at the Gallery .
up members.
Sr.
and
Mrs.
Park
McDaniel,
BELATED BIRTHDAY WISHES to Eskey Hill who
Mrs. Walker and Mrs. Eunie Sr., of Point Pleasaht.
celebrated his 75th Monday.
Brinker are attending the
EBkey has the largest pony farm in Meigs County. His days National Convention . In
are never dull, keeping up with the chores that have to be done on Houston, Tex. this week.
Abenefit dance for the U.S.O.
a farm and entertaining his 17 grandchildren.
Speaking of birthdays, Mrs. Annie Hudson, Syracuse, was sponsored Saturday night.
celebrated ber 94th birthday Aug. 7 while a patient at Veterans Mrs. lawrence is chairman for
the U.S.O. in this area. The
Memorial Hospital.
.
Mrs. Hudson suffered a fractured hip on July 20. Prior to her !raveling prize, donated by Mrs.
injury she managed to sew and make qullts without the aid of Beegle, was awarded Mrs. 'Opal
glasses. Isn't that a marvelous accomplishment? Beller late than Diddle.
never - "Happy Birthday".
TWO DAY SALE
RUTLAND - The Auxiliary
AT THE CLOSE OF THIS YEAR'S season, labor Day, Coney of the Rutland Fire Department
Island, Cincinnati, closes Its doors and turns out its tights forever. will hold a rummage sale
'
Frequent Ohio River flooding, lack of room to expand, and Friday and Saturday, Sept. 10
To kick away the blahs. Tied to your
Increasing nearby traffic problems have forced the closing ol the and II at the Rutland Fire
liking, cut for your kind of life. A kicky little
Anyone
having
park. But to the more than 50 ml111on persons who visited Coney House .
shoe with the new "now" look.
Island the past 85 yeara, the park will remain a warm flow of donations or wish donations to
be picked up are to contact Mrs. ·
happiness In their memory.
••
However, a new park will take its place. Many of the more Virginia Michael at Miller
popular rides will be dlsmanlled and moved to Kings Island, a $30 Brothers Store, 741.-5024.
ml111on, 1,600 acre amusement park complex now under construction at King Mills, Ohio.
Coney Island will continue tOtive, at least in part, at Kings
Island. The ·new park, about 20 minutes north of Cincinnati on
Interstate 7lis scheduled to open next spring.

Mr. and JArs. &amp;ward F Smith

Janet

Mrs. ]olm Thomas Williams

Mar:ne• d ]une
19

Reports
Given at
Picnic

Katie's Korner

NOTICE

r.::

The stomp kicker

WHERE
tOU SAVE

Homemakers at Picnic
HEATING
AND CENTRAL
AIR CONDITIONING
GAS - OIL - ELECTRIC
. eFREE ESTIMATES
eFREE DELIVERY
,eEASY TERMS
.SALES AND SERVICE

NEW HAVEN - Haven
Homemakers held their annual
family picnic at the park in New
Haven Aug. 7. Coffee and
cookies were served following
dinner. Pictures of the group
were taken by Mrs. Harry
Vickers. Games were played
and prizes awarded.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Wise, Mrs. Jesse Maynard,
Mrs. David Zirkle and
daughters Terri and Debbie,

SALE PLANNED
POMEROY - The Women's
Missionary Society of the 'Mt.
Hermon Church will hold a
rummage sale Friday, Sept. 3,
sl&lt;l rting at 8:30 a.m. Items will
be sold from the back of a truck
on Pomeroy's Main Street. In
MIDDLEPORT,
O.
case of rain the sale will be held
111!1__________
.,.________
., .Saturday.

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT

Mrs. Russell Maynard, Mrs.
AI Sprouse and daughter Marsha, Mrs . Emory Hart, . Mrs . Harry
Vickers, Jr. and son Matthew,
and Mrs. Sadie Warth.
The September meeting will
be held at the home of Mrs.
Russell Maynard in Point
Pleasant.

Beautiful

blOOming Plants
$4.00 up
Dudley's Aorist
Serving: Gallipolos,
Middleport &amp; Pomeroy, 0.
and Mason Co., w. Va.

DOES MAKE A

DIFFERENCE

n-•• ,,.....,_,,a : ·-•lfll
•

lit . . . .

.

Club Theme Knowing, Growing, ·showing Specimens
.

Rtn'LAND - A program,
"KnowlJII, Growing and
Showing Specimens ,"
I*
1ted by Mns. Bruce Davis
alid Mrs. WUUam Willford
Ng!dlghied the~ meelint!

of the Rutland Friendly Gvdeners at thehomeoiMrs. Tom
Stew_.-t Wedneay evening.
. Mrs. Larry Ednrds, vice

s".tvt

was given by the group, and

DINING

tr--·-·--·-,..·---··-·-·••·-·--·-····-·--·-"f

tm:

Curtis Reunion Held
In Alexandria, Ohio

Fri_gidaire
Skinnr. Mini.
f"ds a most
anywhere.
{Only 2 feet wide)

•389'5

BAKER

. lJeti'l., a1ion

C'lub

Meip eo; Branch

..@
flit Alhons tou~ty

Slvlngs &amp; Loon Co.
2ft Socond St.
Pomorov. O!Iio
Member Federal
Hom• Loan Bank

Member Ftdtral Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corporation.
All accounts Insured up to
120,000.00

'I

.

CHAPMAN'S SHOES
M~IN

ST.

POIIERUY

FURNITURE

'T'Oihfc
'J'"

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B

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and
Mrs.
Carpenter, penetration into the root area.
educational chairman asked for Mrs . Bruce Davis, horentries In the educational ticulture chairman, gave a talk
department of the show.
on knowing and - growing
specimens. Mrs. Davis said the
six things in knowing a
specimen !lowe ~. such as
marigolds, zinnias, calendulas,
peonies, asters or oriental
Julie, Mesa, Ariz.; Mr. and poppies was the following :
Mrs. Arthur Rose and Steven,
Form, the flower is in its most
Belpre; Mrs. Walter Marich ~rfect stage, center should be
and son Robert, Mr. and Mrs. J .
H. Rose and Richard, of
Diamond, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Flaugher, Bloomdale,
With Their
Ohio; Ima Role, Mrs. Fredda
Shook, and Harry R-. Akron;
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Rose
and grandson, Pa~ Adams,
Tenderly SAy
Willard, Ohio; MI'S. Mabel
" We Share Your Grief"
Leathers, Mansfield; Mr. and
Mrs. Wilbur Rose, Toledo; Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Wolfe, Colum·
Strvlnt : GIIIHpols,
bus, and Mr. and Mr$. Olelter
Mlddleper:t
&amp; " - " " · 0.
Rose, North canton,
anc1 Ma- ea .• w. Va.

In Navy, Golden
Brown Suede

.,..

Rose-Moore Families Reunited
RATE

studying to he an accredited same. Mrs. Willford noted that with Mrs. James Clrpealer coO.A.G.C. judge presented a the revised O.A.G.C. rules state hostess. lnstallatloo of oftlcea&amp;
demonstration showing flowers that tlW! variety for a specimen ~,197bel-72naoun
' wi~ be held0hlo.
RollblrdcaD•.
8 80
she had brought, and told why must be named in nexi year's .. w
they were or weren't sllows, or they will ool be Mrs. Richard Fetty, Jr. II to
specimens. She noted that a judged. She said it-is best to have the garde~ lipe far,
gladiola should have a straight leave as much foliage on any October. Mrs. Howard lllrch.
stem, the flowers should be well specimen as possible and field will present 1 paper on
spaced with colO.. showing in ail always disbud ..Sbe closed her "Attracting Birds to your ·
the buds. If any spent bloom remarks, urging more mem- Garden," Mrs. Harold Wolfe
need be removed, the sheath is bers to display in horticulture will have an exhiblt of a variely
to be left on as well as some classes.
of bird feeders.
foliage. She said if any of the
Mrs. Stewart served refresh" September · Song,"
florettes bloom out of line they ments at the close of the arrangements showing rhythm,
can be worked into straight meeUng.
using mums, will be brough~ by
position with the wannth of
The next meeUng will be held members for judging. This will
your hand. The bloom should be at the home of Mrs. Homer complete the i97().71 garden
60 pet. the height of the Parker,September;l:l. 7:30 p.m. club year.
specimen and the stem 40 pet.
Gladiola color is determined by
number, and the size is by 100,
200, etc. For eumple a 100 is
the small miniature, 2% in.
florette. For Dahlias, make
11ft
sure the container is big enough
to show the blooms facing the
same direction, fresh, stem as
long as posaible, making sure
you disbud completely.
OUR SPECIALTY
Mrs. Willford noted that a
PR.ME RIB OF BEEF
specimen rose should have
three sets of leaves, fresh
STEAKS
bloom, well opened out. If it is
not out, you can blow your
Sonny 's Cocktail Hour- 5 Til7
breath into it to open it a little
DAILy
more. Make sure foliage is
clean, if necessary wash with
sudsy water. Disbud and have a
good length stem.
The zinnia should have three
sets of leaves, no yellow
showing in center, if it does,
take tweezers and pull out. It is
better if the center is closed, if a
collection, they must be same
size, same color, opened out the

It was noted that the sho\V well developed.

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. PASSBOOK

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Mrs. Howard Birchfield read must have an average of five Substance, fresh, "not soft,"
two poeins, "Autumn is entries by each met_Dber (in the or old, petals should be crisp,
Owning," and one oo gar- artistic and horhculture or not bruised.
president, conducted the dening, for devotions.
edu~ation, combined) to gain'
Color, should be brilliant,
~ meeting. '!be Collect
Members showed a specimen the full points allowed for clear, pure color, no sunDnnia for roll eall. Mrs. Bill participation . Ways of im- burning, or fading of bloom.
gave
the proving the show were Color does not mean what color
Williamson
lleCretary's report and Mrs. discussed.
but rather clearness.
Birchfield the treasurer and The traveling prize donated Size, depending on variety of
flower fund reports.
by Mrs. Fred Wi111amson was flower, should be average, not
The group completed plans won by 'Mrs. Bruce Davis and und~rsize or oversized.
for a rummage sale the Mrs. Rarold WoHe received the Foliage, on StelJl should he
weekend of Oct. 1-2 ai the Fry door prize.
present, good color, no.rmal
building in Middleport. If The following club acUviUes size, and to be in good condition,
anyone has articleS to donate ,to for August were reported : bank no tears, bruises or evidence of
11 they may eal1 any club flower arrangements were spray or dust.
member for pickup.
made by Mrs. carpenter, Mrs. Stem, be in good proportion to
Mrs. Wlllfonl reported on the Willford , Mrs. Davis, Mrs . the bloom, straight and strong.
pop bottle cap proceeds to be Parker and Mrs. Edwards.
Evidence of recent disbudding
Ulled for Dower show expenses. Mrs. Carpenter made for the or disfiguring counts off on
It was ooted that Mrs. Bruce Rutland Churches of Christ m\d points.
May and Mrs. Jerry Eads have the Nazarenes and the Rutland Mrs. Davis noted that spike,
resigned. Mrs. May will fu1fil1 Post Office.
stalk, or multiple flowered stem
her part in the Dower show to
Making entries in the Meigs such as gladioli, the same rules
c:omplete ber year's activities. County Fair flower show were apply but stressed that spacing
She is preparing ribbons for the Mrs. Stewart, Mrs. Carpenter, offlowers should be regular and
winners of the show. . .
Mrs. Willford, Mrs. Parker, well spaced . She said the
A nature !bur and ptcruc has Mrs. Bill Williamson, Mrs. Fred number of flowers and buds
been tentatively set for Sept. 16 W'tlllamson, Mrs. Birchfield and with color showing and tight
at Forked Run State. Park. Mrs. Mrs. Bruce Davis. The entries buds, they should he in good
James Carpenter will complete won 17 of the tota142 rtb~ns for proportion and present a
arrangements. .Mrs. ~wards artistic arr~gements With f1ve pleasing balance. Mrs. Davis
conducted discusSIOn on of them bemg blue for ftrst noted that growing takes
.
printing of
program ~k for places.
.
_ months of work and planning
mi:GENERAtWMB 'IPin . . fhe amallllllla
19'11-~ ~ 1t was d~1ded. to
In addition .two blue rtbbons and your blue ribbon ones come
tile family rl Mn. , _ Pooler. 8'1, front, rl Chesla' the
have 1t ?""ted by Quality Pr_lnt were won in horticulture, one from good soi\ and culture with
&amp;Mt.crelltcmdnothel'; back row, 1-1', Mrs. Carol Roush,
Shop With. ea~ member paymg blue for junk container,.one blue 10 pet. coming from special
~. W. Va.; great-granddaughter, hdding T8111111J
.
for wildflower collection, one touch and your loving care.
a fee for 11.
Mrs. Rarold WoHe, preSident, blue for dried and preserved The five important factors in
Roolb, ~ge 2, &amp;n~t.creatcranddau8hter; Mrs. Marilyn
read
a letter from Mrs. Robert flower collection, and one white growing are :
W1eaer, Fa1rbGm, Wo, grmMaughler, holdi•lila Roush;
(Dulcie) Reibel of Morristown, for a picture or plaque made Soil should have organic
grut.creat.gaudcWd, and W'illlam Pooler, Sr., !0, Mrs.
a former member of the from preserved materials.
mate;ials such as manure,
Plloler'B - rl Oleller.
Rutland Garden Clu.b, who Four
members,
Mrs. crops or 'peat, with plenty of
requested _that an article and Willford, Mrs. Parker, Mrs. moisture and mulched carefully
picture concerning the. many· Edwards and Mrs. Carpenter and have good drainage.
honors of the club durmg the attended the state convention of Fertility, fed properly as
'
recent state convention of the the Ohio Association of Garden necessary, in small doses
O.A.G.C: be sent to the Garden Clubs held at the Neil House, frequently, beware of high in
·Path Editor, Mrs. Ralph White. Columbus, August 1().11-12, nitrogen fertilizers as they will
Mrs. Reibel noted that Mrs. Roy attending workshops for force green growth and not the
Snowden, president of the publicity, program, flower Dower . .
Rutland club, had attended to show, therapy.
Room, the greatest fault is
POMEROY - Tbe 65th an- and Sandra Rathburn, Dayton. accept a second place state . The following members that most of us don't allow
nua1 CUrlis Reunion ci the Also, Mrs. Douglas Bissell, award for the program book - 5erved as instructors for the enough room for growth. They
descendants o1. Hoit and Mary Brian, Mike, Royce a[\d Brent, her daughter, Mrs. Homer junior club, the Merry Gar- should be transplanted early
FGSier Curlis W8ll beld at Tuppers Plains; Dana Johnson, Parker. had received the deners, Mrs. carpenter COD· and begin dis budding and
Parker Park in Alexandrta, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Davis and honorable menUon award for dueled a workshop on making deshooting early as possible.
OhioSunday,Aq. 22,with10in Aimee Kay, Granville; Mrs. the publicity book and her pictures
using
burlap She stressed that annuals
• lnst•ll It wher1 the wash 11. •~chon, both, nursery . • . tnywht,..
attenclanee.
Stella catanzaro, Cincinnati; granddaughter, Mrs. James backgrounds with designs from demand sun for good growth.
you can Pt adtqUIIII wl~nl. plumfl.
Al1eDding were Mrs. Mollie Mrs. Sara Thompson and Carpenter, the ftrst pl~ce dried flowers and plant Most important, buy good
iftlondventinc.
Pullins, Mrs. Ralph Bowman, Tommie Jean, Escondido, garden therapy award durmg materials; Mrs. Willford, a seeds bulbs, or plants; there
• Wnhor end dryer Nell do t ltmiiy·liZO lood It the umt tillll or I')"
Reid Rose, Harold Rose, Mr. Calif.; Gail Roberts and Wendy the convention. Mrs. Parker flower arranging workshop and are ~o bargains in plants or
depa.-.tty.
am Mrs. Donald Griffith and and Ina Sanford, Johnstown, and Mrs. Carpenter accepted how to grow, show and groom seeds; keep a record book, grow
• 2·S,.ed Wtshtr. Ro1ulor plus
David, Mr. and Mrs. Wade Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Brian the' awards on behaH of. thetr specimens; Mrs. Parker and enough to insure good selection
Delic:lte - i"ll lor the hoaibility t
Moreland, Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Bradford, Wooster; Mr. and club, The Rutland Friendly Mrs. Carpenter, a nature tour of of blooms. The easiest way to
fomily washormusthtvt.
,
.
•
Permanent
Pta'
s
C1r1
in
both
Crispin, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Mrs. Curtis Bradford and G~.
.
the Leading Creek ar~a in- grow specimens is in a row ln
Woshor ond llryef.
Curlis, Mr. and Mrs. Gonion Wayne, Arlington, Ohio; Mr. · Mrs. Reibel observed this :was eluding, Titus Cave, a tour of cutting or vegetable garden.
"
Rose, Randy and Elinor, aD ol and Mrs. Otto Bradford and . unusual, that three generations FortMeigsandpicnickingwhile She stressed that staking is
Newark; Elijah Johnson and Clarence Bradford, Racine ; were present to accept awards. there; placing an educational most important. After you
Joe Johnson, Wayne, Ohio; Keith Johnson and Mrs. Mereda
The Rutland Club was the display of plant materials in the select a flowe r for your
Mrs. HazelCurtis,Mr.andMrs. Withrow, Columbus; Mr. and sponsor for organiz~ng the window of the Rutland Branch, specimen, place two or three
Perry Curtis and Sandra, Mr. Mrs. Hubert Johnson and Earl, Friendly Gardeners, m Aug. Pomeroy National Bank, and stakes around it taller than the
bloomandputapaperorplastic
and Mrs. John Brewer, ~.and Mrs. Kennit Anderson, 1960. Mrs. Carpehter had also making terrariums.
Reedsvllle; Mr. and Mrs. Caroline, Robert and David, received a second place state The club has subscribed to the bag to protect it from hail, rain
Charles Curlis and Chris, Mr. Mr. and M_rs· Kenneth Duke, award in the O.A.G.C. Home Garden and Flower or smt until you do cut it to take
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
and Mrs. Paul Curtis, Donna, Carol, Jackie and Annette, Mr. Kodachrome slide contest in Grower magazine. Mrs. to the show as a specimen.
Gary, and Alban Ray, Mr. and and Mrs. Eugene Johnson, all of class II, a Bird Bath.
Howard Birchfield will prepare Mrs. William Willford who is
During the state convention it the Green Thumb column for p4"'CC....,_ _ _..,.••_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . ,
Mrs. AI. Pooler and Julia, Mr. IAlexandria.
was also noted that the club will the Daily Sentinel, Sept. 13.
and Mrs. David E. Seals, Ricky
receive ·the following regional "Summer Madness," flower
awards, first in publicity, first arrangements modern in design
C'
in garden therapy, third ~or the were brought by designated
l l j f/.J
~
/,;
). j
l9fi9..70programbook, third for members for judging by Mrs.
the flower show, Fill Your Carpenter, Mrs. Edwards and
House With F1owers, and first Mrs. Parker with Mrs. Tom
MINERSVILLE _ "Herbe made .ol this ·, Bl ue n.bbons for
the SCJP project, Let's Keep Stewart rece1vmg first place
and How to Grow Them," was were gtven Mrs. HHomerl HoMrlter, Rutland A Bloomin' Clean and Mrs. Howard Birchfield
the topic used by Mrs. Edison Mrs. Denver o ter,
s. Town
d
Holloo who presided at a recent Edison Hollon and Mrs. Alfred
~. Bruce Davis, Mrs. Bill secon · TlPS GlVEN
meeting of the Wildwood Yeauger.
Williamson, Mrs . James Mrs. Parker gave gardening
Garden Club held at the heme of
Guests were Mrs. Robert Carpenter and Mrs. Rarold tips for September, suggesting
Mrs. A1fred Yeauger.
Hamm, Mrs. Stacey Arnold, Wolfe were named to furnish now is the best time to prepare
FollowlngrollcaDoofavorite and Mrs. Don Grueser. Mrs. floral arrangements for the andseedanewlawnorremake
berbsand their use Mrs. Hollon ~vid Nease received the door bank during September. Mrs. an established lawn. Work in
Open All Day Tllursdays
pointed out that !bey make ~. A dessert course . was Wolfe named the regional humus or fertilizer and leave
Open Fri. Nighttil9
beautiful gardena, told how to served by
hos~: 8SSISted meeUng delegates for 1971-72 as the surface level. Improved
grow each and named a few by Mrs. Clifford Phillips.
Mrs. Birchfield, Mrs. Edwards, strains of Kentucky bluegrass
BankAmericard Available
including thyme, chives, sage,
Mrs. Carpenter and Mrs. or fine fescues make the best
Middle of Upper Block .
parsley, dill, lavender and
SON BORN
Parker.
lawn. Water in well and keep
Pomeroy
rosemary. Also hiSBop, a MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs. Willford, general moist. A light mulch will
medictnal herb.
Mrs. David Carroll Jacks, Sr. of chairman for the flower show, prevent rapid drying out and
Devotionals in cbarge ol Mrs. Middleport announce the birth "BUSY Days" to be presented encourage germinalion.
Carl Gnl r !Minded poems of a SCII, David CarroD, Jr. at Saturday, .Sept. II, at the New evergreens balled and
and a prayer.
Holzer Medical Center, Augast Rutland Elementary School, burlapped can be planted riow,
Mrs. Paul Fisher gave a 16, weighing 6 pounds m1 oz. said Mrs. Fr&amp;nk Christy,' an as well as crocus and narcissus
demonstration oo how to make Mrs. Jacks is the former Joyce accredited O.A.G.C. judge, will bulbs. For the latter, the soil
a "hollyhock" doll. Mrs. David McDaniel. Grandparents are judge the event. Members were should be well drained and
Nease presented gardening tips Mr. and Mrs. PaulL. McDaniel, assigned to prepare fpod to be planting depth should be three
for the month. She said Sr. of Middleport, Mr. and Mrs. served at the judge's luncheon times the diameter of bulb.
chryaanthemum clumps may Clair E. Jacks, Salem center. which may be attended by Chrysanthmum plants in full
be purchaaed now and selfjll' Great-grandparents are Mr . D)elllbers ol the club. She bloom can be set out. Water in
Tlwy' 111 tlw bootl you
fall blooming, that narcissus, and Mrs. Arthur C. Barr ,........requested that aD members well to prevent loss of bloom.
undetltMd. Tlw ones that
crocllsandtuilpbulbsshouldbe MiddlfllClrt, ~. ~ Ja~, meetFridayafternoon,Sept.lO, Day-lilies can be planted and
planted · now for spring Ala'on. Mrs. Vtrguua McDaniel to do the 'staging; that all old clumps can be divided and
make it
to flit •round
blooming. NewlaWDSshouldbe and the. late George A. Me- members enter horticulture reset. lawns should be ferin your WOfld ... to look
seeded and evag1ta1S set if Daniel of Cheshire. Great- specimensandtheybeplacedin tilized now, as freezing and
the way you w.n to look.
they are balled and burlaped. great-grandmother is Mrs. botUes without writing on them, thawing
permit
their
Roaes should ·receive their last Floca Ann Barr of Rock Castle,
feeding this month.
W. Va ., and great-great.Arrangemell~ foc
month grandfather is Roscoe E. Holloo
were called Memones are . of Chester.

We pay you to
land the pay is 11~&gt;.

'

POMERoY ·- The RoseMoore l'dllllcm was held Sunday Aug.22; atthehemeo1Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Keller,
l'umeiO). Rose famil;y ol.llceia
elected were,J&amp; 5 'ml, Harlow
. Roae, vice I* t•~&amp;. Hlrry
Roae and aecrelllry41
wer,
Janei Lou Marich. 'the reunlGn
' tn 1972 will be at the heme ri
Waller Marich in Akron.
Moore family olfkers elected
were, ' president,
Cecil
Eiaelsteln; vice j&amp; .IIden!, Paui
Moore
and
secretary~ Mrs. Bertha Smith.
Theil'...;u_ln 19'12 wiD be at
the Slll1Ain cluch. ·

Attending wer I• . and Ml:s.
Archie Rose, Mr. •nd Mrs. Earl
Dean, Jenny, Melanie, and
Denise; cecil Eiselstein, Paul
Moore, Mr. and Mrs. ~ohn J .
Rose, Mandie and Julie, Mr.
and Mrs. David Koblent:&amp;, Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Keller, Randy,
Rodney. and Russell, Mr. and
Mrs. George Genhelmer, Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Rose, Mr.
and Mrs. Law1ence Rose, Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Orr, Florence
Circle, Mr. and Mra. Dnnglas
Circle, Larry D. Circle, Klm
Follrod, Don Rose, Joyce
l'nlffill, Mrs. Roger Rose and

c. Ghillie r11 Boot
In Dark
Brown Suede

.,•.

Sympathy lbrels

I

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D. Dark Blown
Suede •16•

Dudley's Fbid

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II- Tbe Sunday Times. SeDIIDel. &amp;nll7. Aq. •.trn.

Baxter~ Williams

Social
Calendar

Vows Solemnized
ISYRACUSE - In a can·
dlellgbt service against a
backgrbund of palms and
baSkets ol. flowers, Miss Judith
Ann Baxter, daughter ol. Mr.
and Mrs. Oarence w. Baxter,
R.D. 2, Cameron, W. Va.,
became the bride ol John
ThCID8ll Willia!!l!l, SCII ol Mr.
John P. W'illlams and the late
Betty Jane Wllllams of
Syracuse.
The .event took place at 6:30
o'clock Saturday evening Aug.
28 at First Christian Churdl at
• Cameron. The double ring
.: ceremony was read by the Rev.
' Wesley Morgan.
Pre.flllpt!al music rendered
by organist Jo Ellen Kuhn in·
: eluded, "A Time for Us,"
~ ''Theme frcm Love St«y,"
• "He" HI Believe" and "Theme
; frcm •R&lt;111e0 sod Juliet." Tbe
:; soloist, Carolyn Sue Bmar,
1 sang, ''More", "The Lord's
l Prayer" and "Whither Thou
1 Goost."
The bride, given in marriage
~ by ber father, . wore a Ooor
' length gown of unported sheer
~ silk organza designe4 with a
J portrait scalloped nect1ine and
: camelot sleeves. Tbe bodice
: waBfashionedriaOaralpatlern
~ of venise lace which also
~ lrlmmed the cuffs, and sleeves
•: of her gown. A venise lace
4covered ~otonet headpiece
: enhanced with llny seed pearls
: beld her delachable chapel
: length mantilla wblch was
~ edged ln matching lace. She
carried a -coliiiitaJ bouquet with
streamers.
Mary Jo Baxter, maid o1

f

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1

honor, Cameron, sister. of the
bride, wore a pale apricot floor
length gown ol. sheer organza,
styled with a high neckline '
IUb~ sleeves and a soCtly
galhered skirt. Velvety stripe.!
trimmed the solid sheer
organza m the sleeves and.fron:
o1. the bodice, with bsnds ol.
venise lace at the high waist,
neck line and sleeves. An
apricot Camelot headpiece
lrimmed In matching lace held
tbewalstlengthwhiteslx-tiered
illusion vell. She carried a
basket of flowers with
streamers.
Bridesmaids were Mrs. Uncia
Sewell, Marietta; Miss Ann
Baxter, Proctor, W. Va.; Mrs·
Robin Quigley, Cameron; Mrs.
&lt;llarlotte Knicely, Glenville;

Mrs. Linda Bahrer, New
Martinsville; and Mrs. DoiUI8
Jo Morrison, Washington, D. C.
· They wore Identical gowns and
bead pieces of turquoise and
carried baskets ol. flowers with
streamers.
Best man was Ralston D.
Hemsley, Danrin; ushers were
Harold Roush, New Haven;
James Clifford, Jr., Syracuse;
Gene McMahan, ColnmhJS, and
Rod Baxter, Cameron.
The bride's mother was attired in a pink polyester streetlength dre88 trimmed with
venise lace at the neck line,
and venise lace long sleeves,
and wore a ccnage ol deep pink
flowers.
~ollowing the ceremooy ' a
recepl!on was held in the
fellowship rooms ri the church.
The bride's four-tiered cake

Family, 'Friends Picnic
POMEROY - Relativ.S and and Lisa of Cheshire; Mr. and
mends of Mrs. E. G. Robie and Mrs. Eddie Carutbers and Mr.
son John of Mesa, Ark., 'and Mrs. Mark Tannehill and
gatheredatthehomeofMr.and son Bryan of Middleport; Mrs.
Mrs. Lewis Taylor for a picnic. James Bumgarner, Ryan and
Present were Mr. and Mrs. Roger of New Haven, W. Va.,
Wayne Oxyer, Kim, Kelly and and Tom Krautter.
Kyle, Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Harrison, Mark, Greg, Sheena calling later in the day were
and Sherri of Cheshire; Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Taylor of
Mrs. Ray Jarvis and Debbie of Elyria, . Tim (Butch) and
&lt;;olumbus; Sue and Tressa Lonnie (Boots), Mr. and Mrs.
'faylor and Mr. and Mrs. Thor Everett Plantz of Cheshire;
Oirsey of Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Koneta Taylor of Mesa,
Mrs. Robert Taylor, Rusly, Lori Ariz., and Ralph Caruthers.

Party Given
joe-joe Fields
.POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Jll8eJlh R. Fields gave a pll'ly
Saturday afternoon in Ob·
~ervance of the 4th· birthday
anniversary ri their 100 JC~Noe ·
at the home o1 Ids grandparents, Mr. and Mr$. John W.
Mullord at Oteshlre.
Joe-Joe's brother, Greg,
joined in the celebratioo. Ice
cream and . cake were ~
and each guest receiVed a pll'ly
favor. Games were pia~.
Guests were Tina, Rily J. and
Laura Smith, Earl and Sheila
Wmes, Amy Beth Halley, Bruce
·and Rlchle Gilmore, Terry
Gardner, ·Jeff and Tamle
Gilkey, Mrs. Frank Gilkey, Jr.,
Mrs. Carl Gardner and Miss
Sandy Mulford.
Later in the afternoon cake
and ice cream were enjoyed by
Joe-Joe's grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Fields, and
.Jeff, of Pomeroy at their home.

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT CUB Scout
Troop :!45 wiener roast 'and
party Sunday from 6 to 9 p.m. at
· Middleport Municipal Park.
Each scout must be accompanied by at least one
parent.
. SUNDAY SCifOOL at Racine .
Wesleyan United Methodist
Church at II a.m. instead of 10
a,m. due to · communion services.

., I

MONDAY
ANNUAL MEETfNG of the
Meigs County Unit of tbe.
American Cancer Society
Monday at 7: 30 p.m . . ai
. Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Com11any meeting
room.

.· ~·~

PARENTS OF Kindergarten
students of Southern Local
School District to meet Monday ·
between 9 and 11 a. m. in the
kindergarten room. Children
MEET nJESDAY
are not 1o report at this time.
POMEROY - The Meigs
Classes will begin Tuesday.
County American Cancer
(Miss
E. Mees)
ROCK SPRINGS- Grange
Sociely will meet Tuesday at
Monday 8 p.m. at Grange Hall.
7:30p.m. not on Monday as wu
THURSDAY
previously announced.
RED CROSS Thursday, Sept.
2at 7:30p.m. in the cafeteri~ of
(Judith Ann Baxter)
Veterans Memortal Hospital.
DAUGIITER BORN
Alfred Justus, Red Cross
SYRACUSE -Mr. am Mrs.
and flowers graced the bride's College where she was a representative from Columbus,
Bruce Teaford of Syracuse
table. Mrs. Unda Stout, New member ol Delta Theta Chi will be present.
POMEROY - Miss Janet E. Alvin Smith, brother of the announce the blrtb ol. their first
Martinsville, and Miss Rets socorily, a cheerleader, and
Mees, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. groom, served as best man.
child, Sherri I.,ynn, 7 lb. 4 oz.,
Clegg, Proctor, registered member of the Golden Girls.
Richard Mees, Rt. 2 Pomeroy, The new Mrs. Smith is a 1969 August f1 at Holzer holpital.
The groom attended Rio
guests.
became the bride of Edward F. graduate of Meigs High School Paternal grandparents are Mr.
The new Mr. and Mrs. Grande College, where he was a
Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. and is presently employed at and Mrs. VIrgil Teaford,
Williams will reside oo Fourth member ol Pi Sigma fraternily
Ehno Smith, Rt. 2, Pomeroy. the Meigs County Courthouse. Syracuse, maternal grandand graduated from Mountain
Street in Syracuse.
The double ring ceremony took Mr. Smith, also a 1969 graduate parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ollrles
The bride attended West State College. He is employed
place at Helen Mauck of Meigs High School, Buctley of MlnersviiJe; greatVirginia Universll)' and was by the State ol. Ohio, Division ol.
Galbreath Memorial Chapel on graduated from Tri-County grandparents, Mrs. Edith
graduated fnm Mountain State Banks.
June 19, at 4 p.m. at Athens, Technical College at Nelsonville Teaford, Mlnemllle; Mr. and
Ohio. The Rev. Claude Sandlin in June and ls presently serving Mrs. George Casto, MIMlep«rt
officiated.
with the U. 's. Army at Fort R.D. and Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Miss Jean Mees and Miss Knox, Ky .
RACINE - The Racine
Priddy, Rutland, R.D.
American Legion Auxiliary Pamela Mees, sisters of the
Unit held its annual picnic bride, served as maid of honor . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
recently at the Racine park.
and junior bridesmaid. Mr.
Martha Lou Beegle and
Jeanette lawre~ce, who
PICNIC ENJOYED
By Katie Crow~
assisted at the Red Cross
MIDDLEPORT
The
bloodmobile, gave their report. Middleport W.C.T.U. held Its
Art Classes for D' Artiste Gallery, 525 N. 2nd
The Racine unit will serve the annual picnic Friday evening at
St., , Middleport, ,_Ohio,..--Ru!_h Gosney, In·
Canteen at tjleir next visit in the Legion park. Present were
strudor. Beginninilei)tembel"-6 • December
POMEROY - Pleasantly surprised recently was Mrs. December.
Betty
Cline, Iva Turner, Beulah
2, 1971. 13 week courses.
Dorothy Roller, Middleport, with a visit from Mr. and Mrs. John
A large box ol. ribbons from White, Inez Turner, Isabel
Beeson and famlly ol MI. Gilead.
funeral baskets was reported Winebrenner
Lena
and
Mr. Beeson is the son of Cora Jones Beeson and the late Leo sent to the V.A.C. hospital at McKinley. Guests were Denette
Evening Classes-7-10 p.m.
Beeson and grandson ol the late William Beeson who operated tbe Dayton where blind veterans and Sandra See. Blessing was
Priode ·Lumber Company in Middleport with his brother, the late weave them into rugs.
given by Inez Turner. Following
A communication from the meal tentaUve plans were
Bob Beeson.
Monday- Graphics and water color pointing.
The Priode I.Aunber Company was purchased by the Valley district president Geraldine made for the aruma! county
Tuesday-Oil painting and grophics fer leonogers - 13
Kessinger announced the Fall meeting to be held in SepI.Aunber Ccmpany.
thru 19 ye~rs.
Wednesday-oil
painting ond grophlcs from llfe-111
conference
in
Athens,
district
The Beesons made the trip especially for their children to
tember.
ages.
view the former heme o1. his parents and grandparents and to Oct. 7. An invitation was exThursday-Oil painting ond graphlco-men only.
reminisce a little over days that used to he. TheBeesons see many tended the group to attend the
BORN fN JULY
Afternoon Classes
reception and dinner for
changes in Meip County and hope to return to the area again.
Tuesday-Oil palntlngond graphics--1 · 4 p.m.-ollagos.
NEW HAVEN - Mr. and
Wednesday- Children ctasser.-4:30 to 6 p.m.
Mr. Beeson reported that his mother, who Is 87 years old, still department president Mrs . Mrs. David Simpson of New
Rilymond
Sloan
at
Ashland
Haven announce the birth of a
manages to gosh~ing at least once a week.
Sept. 25. Acontribution for a gift daughter Staci Lyn, July 4 at
was made. Mrs. Virgil Walker Pleasant Valley Hospital,
All tuilioo except children's are $39.00 for the 13 week
IT CERTAINLY WAS GOOD to see Charles R. Karr, Sr.,
will attend.
course, payable on registration.
weighing 9 pounds 4% ounces.
Meigs County Cmunissioner, back on the job after an illness of
Mrs. Jo Robinson was ap- Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Tuition for Children's classes are $19.50 lor the 13 week
three montlls.
course. payable on reglstra11on.
pointed JUnior Activity
Mr. Karr, who has had four severe heart attacks, has had chalnnan and began plans for Carl Gardner, Jr. of New
All necessary materials may be purchased olthe gallery
lor aPf)rox. $20.00 for the 13 weeks.
surgery toplaceanangiostatover his heart. The device regulates favors for veterans hospitals. Haven, and Mr. and Mrs. Paul
the beart beat am blood pressure. We sincerely wish you con- Total membership in the Unit is Simpson, Sr. of Pomeroy.
Maternal great-grandparents
llnued good health and it's good to have you back.
Registration will be accepted on SAturday, September 4,
eighty.&lt;Jne, fifty-three are paid are Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gardner,
6·9 p.m. at the Gallery .
up members.
Sr.
and
Mrs.
Park
McDaniel,
BELATED BIRTHDAY WISHES to Eskey Hill who
Mrs. Walker and Mrs. Eunie Sr., of Point Pleasaht.
celebrated his 75th Monday.
Brinker are attending the
EBkey has the largest pony farm in Meigs County. His days National Convention . In
are never dull, keeping up with the chores that have to be done on Houston, Tex. this week.
Abenefit dance for the U.S.O.
a farm and entertaining his 17 grandchildren.
Speaking of birthdays, Mrs. Annie Hudson, Syracuse, was sponsored Saturday night.
celebrated ber 94th birthday Aug. 7 while a patient at Veterans Mrs. lawrence is chairman for
the U.S.O. in this area. The
Memorial Hospital.
.
Mrs. Hudson suffered a fractured hip on July 20. Prior to her !raveling prize, donated by Mrs.
injury she managed to sew and make qullts without the aid of Beegle, was awarded Mrs. 'Opal
glasses. Isn't that a marvelous accomplishment? Beller late than Diddle.
never - "Happy Birthday".
TWO DAY SALE
RUTLAND - The Auxiliary
AT THE CLOSE OF THIS YEAR'S season, labor Day, Coney of the Rutland Fire Department
Island, Cincinnati, closes Its doors and turns out its tights forever. will hold a rummage sale
'
Frequent Ohio River flooding, lack of room to expand, and Friday and Saturday, Sept. 10
To kick away the blahs. Tied to your
Increasing nearby traffic problems have forced the closing ol the and II at the Rutland Fire
liking, cut for your kind of life. A kicky little
Anyone
having
park. But to the more than 50 ml111on persons who visited Coney House .
shoe with the new "now" look.
Island the past 85 yeara, the park will remain a warm flow of donations or wish donations to
be picked up are to contact Mrs. ·
happiness In their memory.
••
However, a new park will take its place. Many of the more Virginia Michael at Miller
popular rides will be dlsmanlled and moved to Kings Island, a $30 Brothers Store, 741.-5024.
ml111on, 1,600 acre amusement park complex now under construction at King Mills, Ohio.
Coney Island will continue tOtive, at least in part, at Kings
Island. The ·new park, about 20 minutes north of Cincinnati on
Interstate 7lis scheduled to open next spring.

Mr. and JArs. &amp;ward F Smith

Janet

Mrs. ]olm Thomas Williams

Mar:ne• d ]une
19

Reports
Given at
Picnic

Katie's Korner

NOTICE

r.::

The stomp kicker

WHERE
tOU SAVE

Homemakers at Picnic
HEATING
AND CENTRAL
AIR CONDITIONING
GAS - OIL - ELECTRIC
. eFREE ESTIMATES
eFREE DELIVERY
,eEASY TERMS
.SALES AND SERVICE

NEW HAVEN - Haven
Homemakers held their annual
family picnic at the park in New
Haven Aug. 7. Coffee and
cookies were served following
dinner. Pictures of the group
were taken by Mrs. Harry
Vickers. Games were played
and prizes awarded.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Wise, Mrs. Jesse Maynard,
Mrs. David Zirkle and
daughters Terri and Debbie,

SALE PLANNED
POMEROY - The Women's
Missionary Society of the 'Mt.
Hermon Church will hold a
rummage sale Friday, Sept. 3,
sl&lt;l rting at 8:30 a.m. Items will
be sold from the back of a truck
on Pomeroy's Main Street. In
MIDDLEPORT,
O.
case of rain the sale will be held
111!1__________
.,.________
., .Saturday.

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT

Mrs. Russell Maynard, Mrs.
AI Sprouse and daughter Marsha, Mrs . Emory Hart, . Mrs . Harry
Vickers, Jr. and son Matthew,
and Mrs. Sadie Warth.
The September meeting will
be held at the home of Mrs.
Russell Maynard in Point
Pleasant.

Beautiful

blOOming Plants
$4.00 up
Dudley's Aorist
Serving: Gallipolos,
Middleport &amp; Pomeroy, 0.
and Mason Co., w. Va.

DOES MAKE A

DIFFERENCE

n-•• ,,.....,_,,a : ·-•lfll
•

lit . . . .

.

Club Theme Knowing, Growing, ·showing Specimens
.

Rtn'LAND - A program,
"KnowlJII, Growing and
Showing Specimens ,"
I*
1ted by Mns. Bruce Davis
alid Mrs. WUUam Willford
Ng!dlghied the~ meelint!

of the Rutland Friendly Gvdeners at thehomeoiMrs. Tom
Stew_.-t Wedneay evening.
. Mrs. Larry Ednrds, vice

s".tvt

was given by the group, and

DINING

tr--·-·--·-,..·---··-·-·••·-·--·-····-·--·-"f

tm:

Curtis Reunion Held
In Alexandria, Ohio

Fri_gidaire
Skinnr. Mini.
f"ds a most
anywhere.
{Only 2 feet wide)

•389'5

BAKER

. lJeti'l., a1ion

C'lub

Meip eo; Branch

..@
flit Alhons tou~ty

Slvlngs &amp; Loon Co.
2ft Socond St.
Pomorov. O!Iio
Member Federal
Hom• Loan Bank

Member Ftdtral Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corporation.
All accounts Insured up to
120,000.00

'I

.

CHAPMAN'S SHOES
M~IN

ST.

POIIERUY

FURNITURE

'T'Oihfc
'J'"

!he

B

-v

and
Mrs.
Carpenter, penetration into the root area.
educational chairman asked for Mrs . Bruce Davis, horentries In the educational ticulture chairman, gave a talk
department of the show.
on knowing and - growing
specimens. Mrs. Davis said the
six things in knowing a
specimen !lowe ~. such as
marigolds, zinnias, calendulas,
peonies, asters or oriental
Julie, Mesa, Ariz.; Mr. and poppies was the following :
Mrs. Arthur Rose and Steven,
Form, the flower is in its most
Belpre; Mrs. Walter Marich ~rfect stage, center should be
and son Robert, Mr. and Mrs. J .
H. Rose and Richard, of
Diamond, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Flaugher, Bloomdale,
With Their
Ohio; Ima Role, Mrs. Fredda
Shook, and Harry R-. Akron;
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Rose
and grandson, Pa~ Adams,
Tenderly SAy
Willard, Ohio; MI'S. Mabel
" We Share Your Grief"
Leathers, Mansfield; Mr. and
Mrs. Wilbur Rose, Toledo; Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Wolfe, Colum·
Strvlnt : GIIIHpols,
bus, and Mr. and Mr$. Olelter
Mlddleper:t
&amp; " - " " · 0.
Rose, North canton,
anc1 Ma- ea .• w. Va.

In Navy, Golden
Brown Suede

.,..

Rose-Moore Families Reunited
RATE

studying to he an accredited same. Mrs. Willford noted that with Mrs. James Clrpealer coO.A.G.C. judge presented a the revised O.A.G.C. rules state hostess. lnstallatloo of oftlcea&amp;
demonstration showing flowers that tlW! variety for a specimen ~,197bel-72naoun
' wi~ be held0hlo.
RollblrdcaD•.
8 80
she had brought, and told why must be named in nexi year's .. w
they were or weren't sllows, or they will ool be Mrs. Richard Fetty, Jr. II to
specimens. She noted that a judged. She said it-is best to have the garde~ lipe far,
gladiola should have a straight leave as much foliage on any October. Mrs. Howard lllrch.
stem, the flowers should be well specimen as possible and field will present 1 paper on
spaced with colO.. showing in ail always disbud ..Sbe closed her "Attracting Birds to your ·
the buds. If any spent bloom remarks, urging more mem- Garden," Mrs. Harold Wolfe
need be removed, the sheath is bers to display in horticulture will have an exhiblt of a variely
to be left on as well as some classes.
of bird feeders.
foliage. She said if any of the
Mrs. Stewart served refresh" September · Song,"
florettes bloom out of line they ments at the close of the arrangements showing rhythm,
can be worked into straight meeUng.
using mums, will be brough~ by
position with the wannth of
The next meeUng will be held members for judging. This will
your hand. The bloom should be at the home of Mrs. Homer complete the i97().71 garden
60 pet. the height of the Parker,September;l:l. 7:30 p.m. club year.
specimen and the stem 40 pet.
Gladiola color is determined by
number, and the size is by 100,
200, etc. For eumple a 100 is
the small miniature, 2% in.
florette. For Dahlias, make
11ft
sure the container is big enough
to show the blooms facing the
same direction, fresh, stem as
long as posaible, making sure
you disbud completely.
OUR SPECIALTY
Mrs. Willford noted that a
PR.ME RIB OF BEEF
specimen rose should have
three sets of leaves, fresh
STEAKS
bloom, well opened out. If it is
not out, you can blow your
Sonny 's Cocktail Hour- 5 Til7
breath into it to open it a little
DAILy
more. Make sure foliage is
clean, if necessary wash with
sudsy water. Disbud and have a
good length stem.
The zinnia should have three
sets of leaves, no yellow
showing in center, if it does,
take tweezers and pull out. It is
better if the center is closed, if a
collection, they must be same
size, same color, opened out the

It was noted that the sho\V well developed.

.®Jo

tm:

. PASSBOOK

.

.·

Mrs. Howard Birchfield read must have an average of five Substance, fresh, "not soft,"
two poeins, "Autumn is entries by each met_Dber (in the or old, petals should be crisp,
Owning," and one oo gar- artistic and horhculture or not bruised.
president, conducted the dening, for devotions.
edu~ation, combined) to gain'
Color, should be brilliant,
~ meeting. '!be Collect
Members showed a specimen the full points allowed for clear, pure color, no sunDnnia for roll eall. Mrs. Bill participation . Ways of im- burning, or fading of bloom.
gave
the proving the show were Color does not mean what color
Williamson
lleCretary's report and Mrs. discussed.
but rather clearness.
Birchfield the treasurer and The traveling prize donated Size, depending on variety of
flower fund reports.
by Mrs. Fred Wi111amson was flower, should be average, not
The group completed plans won by 'Mrs. Bruce Davis and und~rsize or oversized.
for a rummage sale the Mrs. Rarold WoHe received the Foliage, on StelJl should he
weekend of Oct. 1-2 ai the Fry door prize.
present, good color, no.rmal
building in Middleport. If The following club acUviUes size, and to be in good condition,
anyone has articleS to donate ,to for August were reported : bank no tears, bruises or evidence of
11 they may eal1 any club flower arrangements were spray or dust.
member for pickup.
made by Mrs. carpenter, Mrs. Stem, be in good proportion to
Mrs. Wlllfonl reported on the Willford , Mrs. Davis, Mrs . the bloom, straight and strong.
pop bottle cap proceeds to be Parker and Mrs. Edwards.
Evidence of recent disbudding
Ulled for Dower show expenses. Mrs. Carpenter made for the or disfiguring counts off on
It was ooted that Mrs. Bruce Rutland Churches of Christ m\d points.
May and Mrs. Jerry Eads have the Nazarenes and the Rutland Mrs. Davis noted that spike,
resigned. Mrs. May will fu1fil1 Post Office.
stalk, or multiple flowered stem
her part in the Dower show to
Making entries in the Meigs such as gladioli, the same rules
c:omplete ber year's activities. County Fair flower show were apply but stressed that spacing
She is preparing ribbons for the Mrs. Stewart, Mrs. Carpenter, offlowers should be regular and
winners of the show. . .
Mrs. Willford, Mrs. Parker, well spaced . She said the
A nature !bur and ptcruc has Mrs. Bill Williamson, Mrs. Fred number of flowers and buds
been tentatively set for Sept. 16 W'tlllamson, Mrs. Birchfield and with color showing and tight
at Forked Run State. Park. Mrs. Mrs. Bruce Davis. The entries buds, they should he in good
James Carpenter will complete won 17 of the tota142 rtb~ns for proportion and present a
arrangements. .Mrs. ~wards artistic arr~gements With f1ve pleasing balance. Mrs. Davis
conducted discusSIOn on of them bemg blue for ftrst noted that growing takes
.
printing of
program ~k for places.
.
_ months of work and planning
mi:GENERAtWMB 'IPin . . fhe amallllllla
19'11-~ ~ 1t was d~1ded. to
In addition .two blue rtbbons and your blue ribbon ones come
tile family rl Mn. , _ Pooler. 8'1, front, rl Chesla' the
have 1t ?""ted by Quality Pr_lnt were won in horticulture, one from good soi\ and culture with
&amp;Mt.crelltcmdnothel'; back row, 1-1', Mrs. Carol Roush,
Shop With. ea~ member paymg blue for junk container,.one blue 10 pet. coming from special
~. W. Va.; great-granddaughter, hdding T8111111J
.
for wildflower collection, one touch and your loving care.
a fee for 11.
Mrs. Rarold WoHe, preSident, blue for dried and preserved The five important factors in
Roolb, ~ge 2, &amp;n~t.creatcranddau8hter; Mrs. Marilyn
read
a letter from Mrs. Robert flower collection, and one white growing are :
W1eaer, Fa1rbGm, Wo, grmMaughler, holdi•lila Roush;
(Dulcie) Reibel of Morristown, for a picture or plaque made Soil should have organic
grut.creat.gaudcWd, and W'illlam Pooler, Sr., !0, Mrs.
a former member of the from preserved materials.
mate;ials such as manure,
Plloler'B - rl Oleller.
Rutland Garden Clu.b, who Four
members,
Mrs. crops or 'peat, with plenty of
requested _that an article and Willford, Mrs. Parker, Mrs. moisture and mulched carefully
picture concerning the. many· Edwards and Mrs. Carpenter and have good drainage.
honors of the club durmg the attended the state convention of Fertility, fed properly as
'
recent state convention of the the Ohio Association of Garden necessary, in small doses
O.A.G.C: be sent to the Garden Clubs held at the Neil House, frequently, beware of high in
·Path Editor, Mrs. Ralph White. Columbus, August 1().11-12, nitrogen fertilizers as they will
Mrs. Reibel noted that Mrs. Roy attending workshops for force green growth and not the
Snowden, president of the publicity, program, flower Dower . .
Rutland club, had attended to show, therapy.
Room, the greatest fault is
POMEROY - Tbe 65th an- and Sandra Rathburn, Dayton. accept a second place state . The following members that most of us don't allow
nua1 CUrlis Reunion ci the Also, Mrs. Douglas Bissell, award for the program book - 5erved as instructors for the enough room for growth. They
descendants o1. Hoit and Mary Brian, Mike, Royce a[\d Brent, her daughter, Mrs. Homer junior club, the Merry Gar- should be transplanted early
FGSier Curlis W8ll beld at Tuppers Plains; Dana Johnson, Parker. had received the deners, Mrs. carpenter COD· and begin dis budding and
Parker Park in Alexandrta, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Davis and honorable menUon award for dueled a workshop on making deshooting early as possible.
OhioSunday,Aq. 22,with10in Aimee Kay, Granville; Mrs. the publicity book and her pictures
using
burlap She stressed that annuals
• lnst•ll It wher1 the wash 11. •~chon, both, nursery . • . tnywht,..
attenclanee.
Stella catanzaro, Cincinnati; granddaughter, Mrs. James backgrounds with designs from demand sun for good growth.
you can Pt adtqUIIII wl~nl. plumfl.
Al1eDding were Mrs. Mollie Mrs. Sara Thompson and Carpenter, the ftrst pl~ce dried flowers and plant Most important, buy good
iftlondventinc.
Pullins, Mrs. Ralph Bowman, Tommie Jean, Escondido, garden therapy award durmg materials; Mrs. Willford, a seeds bulbs, or plants; there
• Wnhor end dryer Nell do t ltmiiy·liZO lood It the umt tillll or I')"
Reid Rose, Harold Rose, Mr. Calif.; Gail Roberts and Wendy the convention. Mrs. Parker flower arranging workshop and are ~o bargains in plants or
depa.-.tty.
am Mrs. Donald Griffith and and Ina Sanford, Johnstown, and Mrs. Carpenter accepted how to grow, show and groom seeds; keep a record book, grow
• 2·S,.ed Wtshtr. Ro1ulor plus
David, Mr. and Mrs. Wade Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Brian the' awards on behaH of. thetr specimens; Mrs. Parker and enough to insure good selection
Delic:lte - i"ll lor the hoaibility t
Moreland, Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Bradford, Wooster; Mr. and club, The Rutland Friendly Mrs. Carpenter, a nature tour of of blooms. The easiest way to
fomily washormusthtvt.
,
.
•
Permanent
Pta'
s
C1r1
in
both
Crispin, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Mrs. Curtis Bradford and G~.
.
the Leading Creek ar~a in- grow specimens is in a row ln
Woshor ond llryef.
Curlis, Mr. and Mrs. Gonion Wayne, Arlington, Ohio; Mr. · Mrs. Reibel observed this :was eluding, Titus Cave, a tour of cutting or vegetable garden.
"
Rose, Randy and Elinor, aD ol and Mrs. Otto Bradford and . unusual, that three generations FortMeigsandpicnickingwhile She stressed that staking is
Newark; Elijah Johnson and Clarence Bradford, Racine ; were present to accept awards. there; placing an educational most important. After you
Joe Johnson, Wayne, Ohio; Keith Johnson and Mrs. Mereda
The Rutland Club was the display of plant materials in the select a flowe r for your
Mrs. HazelCurtis,Mr.andMrs. Withrow, Columbus; Mr. and sponsor for organiz~ng the window of the Rutland Branch, specimen, place two or three
Perry Curtis and Sandra, Mr. Mrs. Hubert Johnson and Earl, Friendly Gardeners, m Aug. Pomeroy National Bank, and stakes around it taller than the
bloomandputapaperorplastic
and Mrs. John Brewer, ~.and Mrs. Kennit Anderson, 1960. Mrs. Carpehter had also making terrariums.
Reedsvllle; Mr. and Mrs. Caroline, Robert and David, received a second place state The club has subscribed to the bag to protect it from hail, rain
Charles Curlis and Chris, Mr. Mr. and M_rs· Kenneth Duke, award in the O.A.G.C. Home Garden and Flower or smt until you do cut it to take
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
and Mrs. Paul Curtis, Donna, Carol, Jackie and Annette, Mr. Kodachrome slide contest in Grower magazine. Mrs. to the show as a specimen.
Gary, and Alban Ray, Mr. and and Mrs. Eugene Johnson, all of class II, a Bird Bath.
Howard Birchfield will prepare Mrs. William Willford who is
During the state convention it the Green Thumb column for p4"'CC....,_ _ _..,.••_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . ,
Mrs. AI. Pooler and Julia, Mr. IAlexandria.
was also noted that the club will the Daily Sentinel, Sept. 13.
and Mrs. David E. Seals, Ricky
receive ·the following regional "Summer Madness," flower
awards, first in publicity, first arrangements modern in design
C'
in garden therapy, third ~or the were brought by designated
l l j f/.J
~
/,;
). j
l9fi9..70programbook, third for members for judging by Mrs.
the flower show, Fill Your Carpenter, Mrs. Edwards and
House With F1owers, and first Mrs. Parker with Mrs. Tom
MINERSVILLE _ "Herbe made .ol this ·, Bl ue n.bbons for
the SCJP project, Let's Keep Stewart rece1vmg first place
and How to Grow Them," was were gtven Mrs. HHomerl HoMrlter, Rutland A Bloomin' Clean and Mrs. Howard Birchfield
the topic used by Mrs. Edison Mrs. Denver o ter,
s. Town
d
Holloo who presided at a recent Edison Hollon and Mrs. Alfred
~. Bruce Davis, Mrs. Bill secon · TlPS GlVEN
meeting of the Wildwood Yeauger.
Williamson, Mrs . James Mrs. Parker gave gardening
Garden Club held at the heme of
Guests were Mrs. Robert Carpenter and Mrs. Rarold tips for September, suggesting
Mrs. A1fred Yeauger.
Hamm, Mrs. Stacey Arnold, Wolfe were named to furnish now is the best time to prepare
FollowlngrollcaDoofavorite and Mrs. Don Grueser. Mrs. floral arrangements for the andseedanewlawnorremake
berbsand their use Mrs. Hollon ~vid Nease received the door bank during September. Mrs. an established lawn. Work in
Open All Day Tllursdays
pointed out that !bey make ~. A dessert course . was Wolfe named the regional humus or fertilizer and leave
Open Fri. Nighttil9
beautiful gardena, told how to served by
hos~: 8SSISted meeUng delegates for 1971-72 as the surface level. Improved
grow each and named a few by Mrs. Clifford Phillips.
Mrs. Birchfield, Mrs. Edwards, strains of Kentucky bluegrass
BankAmericard Available
including thyme, chives, sage,
Mrs. Carpenter and Mrs. or fine fescues make the best
Middle of Upper Block .
parsley, dill, lavender and
SON BORN
Parker.
lawn. Water in well and keep
Pomeroy
rosemary. Also hiSBop, a MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs. Willford, general moist. A light mulch will
medictnal herb.
Mrs. David Carroll Jacks, Sr. of chairman for the flower show, prevent rapid drying out and
Devotionals in cbarge ol Mrs. Middleport announce the birth "BUSY Days" to be presented encourage germinalion.
Carl Gnl r !Minded poems of a SCII, David CarroD, Jr. at Saturday, .Sept. II, at the New evergreens balled and
and a prayer.
Holzer Medical Center, Augast Rutland Elementary School, burlapped can be planted riow,
Mrs. Paul Fisher gave a 16, weighing 6 pounds m1 oz. said Mrs. Fr&amp;nk Christy,' an as well as crocus and narcissus
demonstration oo how to make Mrs. Jacks is the former Joyce accredited O.A.G.C. judge, will bulbs. For the latter, the soil
a "hollyhock" doll. Mrs. David McDaniel. Grandparents are judge the event. Members were should be well drained and
Nease presented gardening tips Mr. and Mrs. PaulL. McDaniel, assigned to prepare fpod to be planting depth should be three
for the month. She said Sr. of Middleport, Mr. and Mrs. served at the judge's luncheon times the diameter of bulb.
chryaanthemum clumps may Clair E. Jacks, Salem center. which may be attended by Chrysanthmum plants in full
be purchaaed now and selfjll' Great-grandparents are Mr . D)elllbers ol the club. She bloom can be set out. Water in
Tlwy' 111 tlw bootl you
fall blooming, that narcissus, and Mrs. Arthur C. Barr ,........requested that aD members well to prevent loss of bloom.
undetltMd. Tlw ones that
crocllsandtuilpbulbsshouldbe MiddlfllClrt, ~. ~ Ja~, meetFridayafternoon,Sept.lO, Day-lilies can be planted and
planted · now for spring Ala'on. Mrs. Vtrguua McDaniel to do the 'staging; that all old clumps can be divided and
make it
to flit •round
blooming. NewlaWDSshouldbe and the. late George A. Me- members enter horticulture reset. lawns should be ferin your WOfld ... to look
seeded and evag1ta1S set if Daniel of Cheshire. Great- specimensandtheybeplacedin tilized now, as freezing and
the way you w.n to look.
they are balled and burlaped. great-grandmother is Mrs. botUes without writing on them, thawing
permit
their
Roaes should ·receive their last Floca Ann Barr of Rock Castle,
feeding this month.
W. Va ., and great-great.Arrangemell~ foc
month grandfather is Roscoe E. Holloo
were called Memones are . of Chester.

We pay you to
land the pay is 11~&gt;.

'

POMERoY ·- The RoseMoore l'dllllcm was held Sunday Aug.22; atthehemeo1Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Keller,
l'umeiO). Rose famil;y ol.llceia
elected were,J&amp; 5 'ml, Harlow
. Roae, vice I* t•~&amp;. Hlrry
Roae and aecrelllry41
wer,
Janei Lou Marich. 'the reunlGn
' tn 1972 will be at the heme ri
Waller Marich in Akron.
Moore family olfkers elected
were, ' president,
Cecil
Eiaelsteln; vice j&amp; .IIden!, Paui
Moore
and
secretary~ Mrs. Bertha Smith.
Theil'...;u_ln 19'12 wiD be at
the Slll1Ain cluch. ·

Attending wer I• . and Ml:s.
Archie Rose, Mr. •nd Mrs. Earl
Dean, Jenny, Melanie, and
Denise; cecil Eiselstein, Paul
Moore, Mr. and Mrs. ~ohn J .
Rose, Mandie and Julie, Mr.
and Mrs. David Koblent:&amp;, Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Keller, Randy,
Rodney. and Russell, Mr. and
Mrs. George Genhelmer, Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Rose, Mr.
and Mrs. Law1ence Rose, Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Orr, Florence
Circle, Mr. and Mra. Dnnglas
Circle, Larry D. Circle, Klm
Follrod, Don Rose, Joyce
l'nlffill, Mrs. Roger Rose and

c. Ghillie r11 Boot
In Dark
Brown Suede

.,•.

Sympathy lbrels

I

..

D. Dark Blown
Suede •16•

Dudley's Fbid

•

•

..

�-•

Q

'

.

12- Tile """'ayTtna-Sa•h•J,, 'Q,AIII- a,lfll

NLLY'S ·POINI'EBS .

Personal Notes

. Snap-on Dress Collars
By POLLY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY-Like Mrs. 0. E . R. , I, too, particularly
like dresses with while or light-colored collars. When I
buy a new dress .with such a collar, I carefully rip it off
and sew snaps to .the collar edge, then match them to the
dress neck edge. Wheri a collar becomes soiled, I sim(:ly
unsnap it, launder and snap back on. Saves many a
cleaning bilL- MRS. L. F. A.

!Pl---m

Jackson EUlogized as Martyr

. .
. POMQOY-Mn.CII8r*
POMEROY _ -~ .,a;.tb
·~ hame of
. Mr._IIIII Mrl_~ ,.._
_ .. ·
Tbe Reclllr, Mr. ind Mrs. Bill BlebsJee 111111 Mn.. Gayle '
• .., ...,..
.....IIIOIIell,........ns.beld ,JobnsoO and family, ·Mr. lllld Prke are at Xaot state 8lliiUil reunim ri !be Joeepb WUI, Pomeroy. Gnee. WIJ
"''*1, A114- 21 at 1he farm Mrs. Gary J~. Brian and Ualvenlty · t•_Ia weebad ancl Etbel Wbldan tamiiy -... given by lla)Uilllld Wlndan.
bamnl Mrs. ~ Recllut Brady, Carrolllal; Mr._ and att-'la&amp; die _. ·~ ·held $mday, Alii!. 2Z at tbe A~ . wen llrL Ray
~- A llcam~ ~ Mrs. Johnny . Gedach and , &lt;ilaJe . F.Mallea AIHclatloa
·
· ·
Wlndcm,Mr. andMn. Rloami
Mrs. Henry .Q!oper, David, diaaetatDOCII_ftllmjoJedwttb Darla, Mr. and ;Mr!l· W. A. tede'!11' Caldermre. They
Wlndcm, Mr. and lin. Lawllll
· Doug, and Janet left Friday fir bible graee gma by Mn. BiD Broob. and t.mily, Mr. and are delepleS of die MeteS
JNSPECI'ION ~
Windon, Uoyd, LIDCe and Dill;
their horne in LaGrange, ID~ Jo..,..~",. .
. . . . Mrs. Harry Ba-oob and family, ·Co.ty Teadaen' AuJL Mn. · CARPENTER - . Annual Mr.andMn. Milel Mchr!IDd,
afterseveraldaysvisit,.ithber . Al»s•·•"~Mr.aJidMrs. Mr.andMrs.CiydeGerlachSr., 8'¥....., 11 )ll'ei'Jdeid ol the Jilspection was f:Oiwlucted by ()&gt;lnmhua; ·Mr.*ndJirS. ,W,.tt
mother, Mrs. Eva Hllrtley and PauiPGIItelwaile, -Tom; Bill Letart; Mr. and Mrs. Odell ....,.;w.., 11111 Mrs. Price, i)eputy State Muter, Virgil WiD, Tenr and Gl!y, Qrove
grandmother; Mrs. James lli"OIII!, Mr_. *lid_ Jibs. W. B. Recti.- and. Lavonne ~· -re''-: They _wm retom Atkins and Junior · Dl:puty OI.Y; Mn. ·VIrPU BaJIGr,
Faulkher
·
11ro1111 Jr Ievin and Mike ear oilton Mrs Chri tm -- _,
Paulirie Atkins, when ColUmbia ~. Went!eU, · Rlllb . 81111
Miss Frances Glaze of llrollll;
·
·•
·
r
'
·
·
·
s
a
lids
eventng
Grange
No: .243$ beld tbeir Ql"-,
Mr. and Jlts. Roberl Marshall, Mr. and Mn. Ronald
. ..
- Addin,l; Mr. ud Mn.
Lancaster was the recent guest Waid, Weirloa; Mr. ~ Mrs. Wooda, Florence, Pa.
llllll)lllilllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllltii!RM Augl!st meeting Saturday I..arrY Clay, Ypai)lnli, Midi.;
of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Zirkle, l&gt;arl'ell Recbw 8Dd family, Unable to attend were Hazel
OPEN HOUSE SEt
, evening. The Cbocola": Dale Mn. WaJI! ~. Mr. IIIII
Mr. and Mn. Ira Ray But- Millal Pa.. ~ and $Jree Bowell LOOdina of Fontana
OOOLvn'LE _ Open house Cake contest was held w1th five . Mn. Vlrgil WlndQII, DeWe.
· cher,Pat,Pam,Mikelll!dPaula Howell, .;.. Paul Bagbes, .Calif. and Mr. 'Jake Bowen:
f M .enlries. Ruth.'Ann Jordan had Brian, Becky and Blair; Mr.
of Jacksonville Beach, Fla . .are .....n...._.-n.. · "'-'··, ...:..· _..... ..__ ~--tlon "'ty, Obi"o.
wUI be obseryed or rs. th winnln
. ·g en""' · and · Will and lin D J ..,_.,. ·Mr and
............, uwv .,.. ...,.. .... ""'"'
"'
Blanche Pullins, R.J;I. 2 . e
·
""'
. ··
· · · · ,.._.,..... - ~
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Ira Ray Gedadl, a..; Pat, and
Coolville Saturclay; Sept. 4 re~resent the 1\'ange at the. Mrs.J.M.Ga~IIIIIVIddte;llr.
Butcher and Mn. Jake Betz. ·Frank, PUwell,
Mr- and
DAUGllTER BORN ·
celebrating her ·90th birthday county contest m September. and Mrs. James WiD, ~aD·
Mr.andMrs. JamesHQYI and Mrs, Thomas Bowell, EQt PoMEROY -Mr. and Mn. anniversary. Houts are 2 p.m. Mrs. ~I Greenlees .had an -Brenda, Bev«ly and Briail,
family of Columbus are spen- Uvspool.; Mr. and Mrs. Dale Paul ~on, Jr. of Columbus,
·.
entry m the Cape contest and of Pomeroy.
ding .the weekend with Mr. and Rousb and family Point announce the birth of a :~:~~~u!oo ~ends·v;~·~ Will . a15? represent Columbia
Mrs. Curtis Jenkinson and Mrs. Pleasa'nt; Myla Hudson, daughter, Joan Marie, August 2 "led" and gifts• 'tied n ..... Grange lD the POOlona Contest.
DEMOLITION BEGINS
OIDl
• .,....,..
•
IGrange session
. ~
.
J ake Belz.
SyraWSf;; Mr. IIIII Mrs. Lloyd. a t Mt .· Carme·1 Hospl"tal , VI
will 'be appreciated
and
she The Nationa
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lucas Smilb, lUill son, N.,. BaYI!Il; Columbus,weigbingapoundsi3 would like to see ber many Charleston, w.. Va., m COLUMBUS (UPI)
of Caledonia, 0., were recent Mr. and Mrs. Fred RDUIIII and ODllces. They have another fri nds
November was discussed and DeiDOiition work on the. oldest
e ·
~State Grang~ meetings building on the. Obiu State
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bomer family,Milhrood; Mrs.D!lrolby daughter, Valerie Lynn, age 3.
Jones.
.
Mcl'JermoU,,.. Cui. Ml Allll; Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
IN HOSPITAL·
for candidates were listed. The University t:aJllPU8, lbe 9S-year·
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Mr. IIIII Mrs. ()elbert Recti.- Paul Simpson, Sr., and Mr, and SYRACUSE William closest session for this 8rea will old University Hall, started
McElhinny left today for In- andfamily,Mr. andMrs. David Mrs.GeorgeHorakMPomeroy; Thuenerisamedicalpatientin be at Frankfort, Ross County, Friday and was ezpectecl to
lake. about
diaila, Pa. to visit ber siste_r, Rousbaodfamily, Mr:-Ridlard and Leo Zwilling of Columbus. room 232 at·Holzer Hospital. on October 2.
. 45 days.
.
Mrs, lfilda Rose, who will ·
,
return with them.
"Miss
Debra
Hunnell,
·daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John
E. Hunnell, Pomeroy, has
passed ller examinations before
the Ohio State Board of
·Cosmetology at Columbus. Miss
Hunnell is a 1971 graduate of
Meigs High School. She has
accepted employment at Kay's
Beauty Salon in Middleport.
· ·• · ·
lETART, W. Va. -

.She Makes Her Own

'

.,. ~ Eighth Windon Reunion·

.Howell Reunion

Middleport

j.

Polly's Pfoblem - - --

DEAR POLLY- I would like to know how to remove stains from our alwninUin storm door off my .
husband's shirts. Nothing I have tried has helped.
-LeVERNE
'

p.m..OO&gt;,

Qllif. (tlPI}-In
111 EpiacopaJ. dudl llalll 'iritb
a Black Panther t _,,
Gectae Jackwm - -+19.,.,
In rioleDt wunls • a ~ Gl

1be ~left Saunay,
1 nekafler be -ldlled In a
blOody aborted escape at San
Quentin Priaoo.
llndelgtOI!lld temJrist born-

31Burn
on ·Ferry

Ohio;

DEAR POLLY- Many men's shirts and socks are on
display in plastic )lags in shops so I wish the color of the
item could be printed on the package. This would be most
helpful to color·bllnd people espe&lt;:ially. Also the same
needs to be done to thread spools. Many a trip made back
to the store could be avoided if the spool had been
marked. Brown and black look so much alike in their
shiny cellophane wrappers.- W. S.
DEAR POLLY- If you have a closet with lightweight
hollow panel sliding doors, try ~sing one of these doors
for a large cutting board when sewing. Lift, tilt and remove the door; then place
on the dining room table
which is .protected with a
pad or cover. If the inside
of the door is painted, black
patterns and pins will be
that much easier to see.
When putting up curtain
rod brackets, tape them in
place before inserting nails
or screws. This makes the
job easier and the tape is
.,.
easily removed when they
.
are fastened .
Toucb-up scratches, nicks and scuffs in plastic-covered
furniture with a matching color shoe polish liquid. Be
sure to remove any surplus that remains on the plastic
after the backing is dyed. This really helps to bide any
defects.-LINDA SUE
DEAR POLLY-There are husbands who dislike paper
napkins and wives who dislike ironing so buy a yard of
45-lnch wide terry cloth, cut off the selvages and cut out
six nice-sized napkins. Fringe the edges.-MARIE

BRINDISI, Italy (UPI) -A
. ~ fercy 'irith lllllft than
1,000 petiMill aboanl bwned
fnm stem to atem Satunlay iD
the Adriatic Sea. Hundres of
panic-~tricken passengers
leaped overboard and llflllll to

rescue reu

-

-·,

Pomeroy....

Personal .Notes

Mn. James Sleets (JemHer
Lohse). left Wednesday for
Columbus wbere she is a judge
You wiU receive. a dollar If Polly uses your favorite at Ohio State Fair for 4-H
bomematlng Idea, .P et Peeve, PoUy's Problem or- aolu- nutritim interviews for county
tlon to a problem. Wdle Polly In care of thl1 newspaper.
rwtmers fer the stale li Obio. It
iS held at the Lausche building.
Mrs. Mary Klwem._n is the
guest of her aon John and family
In Sl Louis, Mo.
Mrs. Helene Mullen iS a
medical patient in Holzer
Holzer Medical Center, First Gerald Scott, Kelly ~ton, Don ;Medical Center.
Shaffer, Deborah Sheline, Mrs.
Ave. and Cedar St.
General visiting hours 2-4 and Robert Yerian and Lew
7.:S p.m. Maternity visiting Dempsey.
hours '2:30 to 4:30p.m. Parents
Veterans Memorial Hospital
only on Pediatrics Ward. ,
ADMISSIONS - Ella Schultz,
Discharges
Barbara Baer,
• James Bradbury, . Mrs. Racin,e;
Minemville
;
Mary Marcinko,
Clinton Conger, Mrs. Orville
Crooks, Margaret ·Culpepper, Tuppers Plains; Arville Bush,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Icenhower
Mrs. Kenneth .F ry and Middleport; Norman Lehew,
and Eddy of East Liverpool,
daughter, Mrs. Sidney Hayman Portland; Norma Goodwin,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jeffers,
and son, Mrs. Russell Hill and Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES
May Syracuse, Mr. and Mrs. Orner
aon, Mrs. Sally Litchfield, Mrs.
Dailey, local, and Mrs. Sandra
Thomas Lowe and daughter, Cooper, Clarence Hayman,
Peyton, Syracuse, visited Mr.
Johnnie Meadows, Mrs. Loren Delores Lyons, Laura Grant,
and Mrs. Homer Icenhower.
Parks, Mrs. Earl Phelps and Anna Burton, Mary Armes,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald
·
son, Mrs. Charles. Poling, Mrs. Leota Cooper.
Cremeans of near Tuppers
Guy Priddy, Mrs. Della Riffle,
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Plains called on Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Dora Roush, Mrs. Phyllis
ADMISSIONS : Cynthia Maywood Johnston.
Rowland, J. Everett Saunders,
Smith, H~nderson, and Everett
Mr. and Mrs. Alban Taylor
and two daughters, Edith
Tucker, Hometown.
DISCHARGES : Audrey Taylor and three children, Mr.
VACATION ENDED
Davis,
Mrs. Virgil Plants, Mrs. and Mrs. William Ables and
CARPENTER - Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Jeffers and Elmer Endicott, Eugene Holter, children visited Mr. and Mrs.
daughters have returned from Mrs. Robert Stevens, Mrs . Dillon Taylor.
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Pauley,
an extended vacation trip to the' Garland Bostic, Charles
West Cosst during the past Westmoreland and Mrs. Jay local, ·Mr. Clifford Icenhower,
Pomeroy Route, visited Mr. and
three weeks. They journeyed to Stone.
Mrs. Homer Icenhower.
New Bct~ton, IDinois, where
PHOTOLADY DIES
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Carter of
they were joined by bis brotberSTAMFORD, Conn. (UP!) I!Haw and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Margaret Bourke-White, a Long Bottom, visited Mr. and
John Dunham and family, and pioneer woman photojournalist Mrs. Lawrence Johnston.
Rev. John Busch remains in
· together they traveled to who was one of the original slaff
California where they were photographers
for
Life the hospital.
gueais of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Magazine, died Friday of Mr. Dillon Taylor remains
Jeffers and family, Bakersfield, Parkinson's Disease. She was about the same.
Several from aro1llld here
Calif; and Mr. and Mrs. John 67. Starting with the first cover
Cordray, Loo Angeles, Claif., of Life, Margaret Bourke-Wbite attended the Meigs County
and Mrs. Jeffers' brother, Dana contributed hundreds of Fair. '
-May Johnston
Bailey, Jr., who is stationed photographs and dozens of
with the U. S. Almy there , phol&lt;H!ssays to Life.
joined the group for a visit. The
group viewed many points of
MARRIAGE UCENSE
Interest aloog the way. Most
POMEROY - James Swan
outstanding sights included Stettler, 18, Chester, and
Carlsbad Caverns and The Pamela Sue Griffin, I9, Long
Grand Canyon.
Bottom.
Charles and Kevin Knapp
spent a few days with their
grandmother, Mrs. Lena Knapp
of Langsville.
Franklin Russell of Midbetween your first and last paychecks
dleport visited recently with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln
TOTAL EARNINGS OV En 1 H ~ Yf ". II ~
Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson
. ...... 1
I
~
I
'"'"""··~
visited
recently with Mr. Albert
~~='--I~ ":..:~::·~ J lG Ye&gt;Jn }S : : : _ ~~~ rr•:• ! -,__ '" •_
•:
Beilman.
• ' ' "1
' ''
!
"'"
'
"
"
J '1 ·1" ' '. 1
.., IF-A oon
1
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reed of
~(lfl
lliJ (llor&gt; I I 70 1100
Ho/1 flO&lt;'
: !10.\'1\ '
'll oJ.fl!'t'
111
1-rn.J
IIHI IIUIJ
1~11 0()()
lil/ [)(Ill 11li'&gt;IJNI
l '• ) ' "
Hemlock Grove were Sunday
] QI)
1}6 :JQI )
11'.8 000
l ) d i)oY)
-;r,,
1
I JII('l
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Guy
•
f'IOil
H1 . 0()(l
1':1? .0UO : ~~· tJil'"l
) )I'"! •'11 " i
1""1&lt;1 1)&lt; ''1
Sargent:
avtl
lli,OOIJ
216 .00H
:&gt;Ji; 't·P·
.,, \ HW• ~ '\ ''1t•h''
1
Rhonda Jean Haning visited
!f!ltll
I I:IOVUO
/11) .00')
:&lt;ll(\111&gt;':
"·1!111~' I '.)•)nolfl
l .&lt;:lM'
"J f; lt l{ll ) I .l GCI\!Qfl 1 1t;llr'I!!O
1:,-sOtJfll' I r.tr"lfln.'}
with her aunt and uncle, Mr.
and Mrs. Brady Knotts and
grandmother, Anna Scott of
BUT HOW MUCH WILL
King
Hill.
YOU HAVE LEFT AT RETIREMENT?
Mr. Bill McElroy of Columbus
spent a few days with bil
Doesn 't It make good sense, then, to puf some•of if.away
each payday info savings? We think so and suggest fhaf
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
yOu place it in our care where it will not only enjoy
McElroy.
unusually high ear n ings but excellent ·security. And
Weekend visitors of Mr. and
remember .no one has ever had to wa it for their money.
Mrs.
Howard Thoma and
Give us a call today !
Patricia were Mr. and Mrs.
Frank.Sarver, John and Eddie
ALL SAVINGS GUARANTEED IN FULL
of Bridgeman, Mich., and Mrs.
Larry Barr and children of
Rutlan.d.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sarver
and children of Bridgeman,
Mich. visited with grandGallipolis
Phone 446-3832
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Johnson,

I

! HOSPITAL NEWS

Old Town

Elherfelds when you see
our beautiful collection

Flats News

of Fall and Back To

find them all here in the

I

I

' \t~l

Go back to school in our easy care
knits in dresses, jumpers, ensembles, suits, coordinates. Don't
miss the exciting fashions in pants
suits in your favorite fabrics. See
our complete coat collection- pea
coats, short trench coats, jackets,
pants coats, casual full length
coats - an outstanding group of
matching coordinates in polyester
knits, flannels, tweeds - a large
selection of blouses in many styles
and fabrics. Select several of our
skirts and matching sweaters latest in fabrics and new fall
colors.

1

GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS
AND LOAN COMPANY

plac;e

Due

new

Chief of State
Punster, Bennett Cerf Dead On Quiet ·Cruise

Gagster,

em

a

Doria, Work

Elberfelds Jn Pomeroy
I

zn

Europe

Be sure to look around in our
Children's Department.
You'll find complete size
ranges from tots to teens
and the hard to fit chubby ·
girls. You'll find an outstanding selection of girls
coats, car coats, jackets,
slacks, skirts, .91ouses,
sweaters, vests, western
jeans - dresses - ju'mpers.
Shop the main floor for your
important · accessories including jewelry, hosiery,
handbags, lingerie, knit
caps and scarfs the
stationery department for
your school supply needs the mens and boys department for an odstanding
selection of- jackets, . shirts,
trousers, coats, · swe~ters, .
vests, underwear, ties. Stop
in and look around and let us
1\el p you with your selections.

I

•

Seek UN
Debates

Furor in ,.,.......

•

HI~

Egypt to

L te refatio
n 'P
n
Of
iOr

Busing Accepted
. As Necessary

1

'zns

h

.

accessones.

I

,~,,#.oou

..:...:=...o.:.........;_ _~----------......;.-----'----------------"-- 000 people but an ocean of
oil. · The mlnlstrale's anAt least 3I persons were
nual oil Income runs to '$34
ldUed In the inferM or
miWon.
&amp;owned. Scores lDilr'l! were
lnjlired, Italian naVII autbcri·
ties said.
'11lere wen !Ill pa qets
97 UEWillEil aboard the
ferry "Helerna" wbeiJ tbe
fire, wbicll llrob nut In lbe
titcbm, swept tliroQgh the
vesael as it follond its ooone
abo!lt 25 miles IMrih. Gl this
)l(l't city on the heel .of Italy's
boat.
Merchant ships and fishing
boats diverted ClOUI'8e to reBy United Press International
8p(lld to tbe sos aent by the
ferry's captain. Along wltb
wblcb
was
in
Its
third
day,
fea·
Mrs.
Carpenter,
24,
was
II'•·
A
team
from
Oakwood
School
Egypt's United Nations am·
OOLUMBU'i (UPI) - The
Italian navy reacue boats and Inamu.w tract~.- Pulling fured tbe yoong rock group sented witb a silver tea service In Canlal placed second In the bassador will leave for New
helicopters, they worked Omtest, wan by Jolm ~. 11 .1 Jackaon Five and acrobatlc and $100. She said she was FFA ccmpetitlm.
York Monday to direct a
throughout the day fisbing 1be bighljghl of lbe Obio Slate Dave Merrifield.
surprised to come out ahead of Don &amp;lttan, Gerald Matthews diplomatic offensive through
pa 1 qers frcm the calm Fair bere Satnrda7 as The Flnt Lady of Ohio, Mrs. the other 10 (inalists.
and Rusty Miller were the which Egypt hopes to bring
waters and taking them to ..._., of vllllllln cmtinued John J. Gilligan, was bmored at
''I was so shocked to wm;· TrumbuU County learn winners about a full..cale debate on the
ports up and down the Adriatic Ill allilnd grandstand sblnts, a tea prior to her presentation li s11e said. ''I was !be yOUDgest 1n the 4-H divislm of the hor- Middle East when the Security
ticultural contest. Second place Council meets next month,
coast
-tcll ediibltions and par- the Obio Homemaker li lbe entered lillbe coolest."
Nancy Rbynard li Fra'*lln was taken by a learn from government sources said SaturPurt officials at Brindisi said licipate in bwdreds ri eVI!llts. Year Awanl to Mrs. Linda
"Suzy;,
Carpenter
of
Coolville.
was
hunt seat equllatim cham· Sandusky Colliii.Y.
· day.
all but about 1011!1 tbe peiSOIIS
~. II FarmiagtCII, ,Iowa,
Mrs. Gillig_an has domestic pion out 11 a field of more than 1n the Junior Divison Steer The council is to meet to
111 board had been accounted wan 1he I1,011"{Mvld stoclt class
help
In tbe governor's mansim, 400 entries in the 4-H Hor- Show, the grand champion discuss a Jordanian complaint
for by 4 p.m., but that an euct wben bis DR I rractGr puDed
but ccmtlmies to enjoy making semanship and Equitation rosette was placed on a 1,07(). about Israel's action in Jerusa.
head eow~t was difficult be- 32,'1011 P"IID 300 feel
borne-cooked
meals
for
her
Horse shows.
pound . Charolais-Angus cross lem.
cause many pan tgera bad
Ed Miller of RockpOI"t., Iowa,
Debbie Diehl and Linda Kohl, steer, Tucker . Tucker was Sources in Cairo, quoted by SAIGON (UP!) -U.S. war- Soviet-made I22nun rockets
been taken to small villages flni!!hed _..m. His ~ A.C, family.
"'Ibe family gets a lot li plea- both of Montgomery were shown by Julie Townsley, 17, of the semiofficial newspaper AI
along the !;OilSL
palled ZiD.2 feel
planes struck CommuniSt posi- into Camp Fuller four miles
Abram, said Egyptian Ambas- tions in both halves of the south of the DMZ, South
The ferry, an a JCbeduled run 111e 12,0011 pound modified sure fr001 home cooking," Mrs. named reserve champions. Cedarville.
.
sador Mohammed Hassan el Demilitarized Zone (DMA) Vietnamese spokesmen said.
from Corfu to Ancona, was dul-... wan by Bob Bend ri Gilligan said. "In fact, my fam. Crys Flnfroclt toot the western
ily
bas
urged
me
to
cook
ewr
boriemarwhip competition and
Zayyat would try to expand the separating North and South The 201kound shelling attack
built In 1954 as a tan1ter but 111e Alti.m Team, Paw Paw,
discussions Into consideration of Vietnam while the govern- was the heaviest against the
was refitted In 11&amp;'1 and billed BiiiR--+ofFcnst,&lt;llio,-... since we've moved Into tbe Becky Scott of Scioto woo !be
mansion. I tNnk homemakl~ is saddle seat equltalim chamv.
.t,
a resolution to halt Israel's ment's northern defense line northern defense line In a week,
as "the largest fen:)" in lhi! tlell'ao!.
plonsbip.
L' ree%e
"aggressive acts in Jerusalem was reported hit by the but spokesmen said there were
Gr••!s!and shows at !be fair, a very special art."
world" by its Greek owlli!iS,
A team frun Ceveland West ,
which are aimed at Judaizing heaviest shelling in a week.
. Costas Eftymiadla of Piraeus.
no casualties. Fuller was
Tech 111gb School won the first .1. eac ers
the city."
i The shlp owners said I54
A U.S. Air Force F4 phantom overrun by Communists June
automobiles and !rUCks also
In lbe FFA divislcm of lbe COLUMBUS (UPI) _ State . They said Egypt also would jet fighter-bomber was fired on 23-24 but since recapture two
were aboard the ferry.
Natillllll JunlDr' Horllcullural school Superintendent Dr Mar- ask to take part in the debate, by a 37mm antiaircraft gun days later it has been rebuilt
judging cmtest. The team, coo- li E
'dSaturd th. uS although not a council member. while on a bombing mission with concrete bunkers.
Smoke billowed from the
slsHna of Mike Karn Teresa n ssex 881
ay e . . H .
.
prow of the shlp and many of
~...
'
Office of education was preparthiS was approved, 1t would over the Ho Chi Minh supply In Saigon, terrorist hurled a ·
the paaaengers watched it for
Oleung and ~ Beyduk scor- ing an interpretation of the presi- mean three Arab nations would trail in Laos, spokesmen said. fire bomb Into a Natimalist
llllllle lime before the Dames
ed !be most pomts In answering delltial wage-price freeze order be represented in the debate- The plane streaked across the Chinese embassy truclt Saturlapped up oil deck lUill shot
queslians on !be II'oductim and as it applied to schools and uni- Egypt, council member Syria frontier into the northern haH day evening while It was
marketing of fruillts, vege·u
and Jordan which lodged the
down cabin walls. Screams and
of the supposedly . neutral parked outside a U.S. agnecy
tables Rowers and Dr'llmlllllent.. versl es.
. .
' .
panic broke out and hundreds
'
Essex
said
the
Interpretations
original
cornplamt.
buffer, and destroyed the gun for International Development
GAJit!EsVIILE, Fla. (UPI) -Florida Gov. Reubln .Askew
li pa 111gen lept into the sea
als.
should be mailed by Monday In September, the Egyptians emplacement with bombs, they compound in downtown Saigon,
SlldSalunlaymassive busing of students to achieve integraUoo iS
to escape the Dames.
and lie would have a copy by also plan to seek a General said. it was the 53rd ''protec- spokesmen said.
''an •tillrja) and ina~te inatrument ri change" but must be . . . .· ·.. •.·• ·..· .. .·. ·.. ·.·.·.·.· .·. Tuesday.
Assembly resolu~on c~ndemn- tive reaction" strike over North The fire-bombing was the
.-1 nnUI ID•tioo can be brGadened community-wide.
Essex said the Interpretation m~ Israel for 1ts failure to Vietnamese territory so far this only Incident reported in the
END OF FREEZE
Speaklpg at University of Florida commencement
would
be the first set of pro- Withdraw from occupied Arab year. The U.S. Command has capital on the eve of national
WASHINGTON (UPI)
ceremoniel, Alkew said lbe ..,dug of scllnola ned week could
visions as applicable to schools lands.
.
authorized them as a sell- assembly elections, although
brillg a crisis In scbool des gregaUan uJlless Floridians "act The Office of Emergency districts since the freeze was
In Anunan Saturday, King defense measure.
U.S. and other Allied troops
Preparedness (OEP) bas
ibly "
ordered Aug. 15.
Hussein of Jordan said his u.s. 852 bombers
two have been ordered off the
"I'Hblps lbe IDCilt crucial September In tbe long and decided that tbe !lt.day freeze
He
said
one
segment
would
coun~y
was
prepared
to
ta~
raids
in
the
southern
haH
of
the streets for lear of stepped-up
l'l!lllal'bble bis1GrJ ri our public JCbools will be upon us In a on waces, prices and rent wiD activate a new salary schedule part m. c~ncerted ~ab r~•s­ six-mile-wide DMZ, and Allied CommuniSt attacks.
· maltlr' of clays," Asbw ald. "How sad it will be if the emotiCIIS e:lpire offlclally at mldnlgbl for an entire category of tea- lance ~Side lsraelioOCCUpled fighter-bombers, artillery and
In Cambodia, Communist
Nov. 13.
of lbeboarbeeome tbelepcyofageneralion."
naval batteries pounded Com· troops trying to ambush a large
OEP Director Geerge A; chers if one person in that cate- temtones ..
Aaltew said h!sfq was an undesinble metbod, but since no
gorywereworkingunderthenew
But
the
king
also
warned
that
munillt troop locations, supply truck COOIIOY m Highway 4
IJDroln said tbe freeze did not
LONDON (UPI)
Karl
betatnolntiCIISbad beien J1QIIC'8ell,ltwould bave to be used until
schedule
prior
to
Aug.
15.
any
attempt
to
isolate
J~r~ areas and Infiltration routes In attacked two Cambodian coSchiller, West Germaliy's
take effeet autll 12:01 a.m. on
it eoald be replaced by 1 bnad commomlty..wfde desegregation Aug. 11 even though
He also said cafeteria prices would amount to a renunciation the area, spokesmen said.
muanies early Saturday but
economics miniSter, glared
llllCIIIWi+lij...,e
ol cooperaliCII.
In
effect
at
the time of the of the Arab cause.
Communist
gunners
Saturday
were
driven off by American
angrily at the dilpatcb tbrougb
Presldeat Nb:on aDDounced
freeze
would
prevail,
meaning
S~ia and Iraq _have closed poured a 9fJ.rnlnute barrage of planes, military sources said.
'l1le
guuulllll' added, '"lbe Jaw demands, and rightly so, that
lmposllioa of It In a nallonally
bis blaclt born-rimmed specthat unless a cafeteria were therr borders With Jordan.
In
111r society."
•
weputanmd
ID:Jegreplim
br9adcast address on the
tacles. Then be exploded
functioning
under new prices Syria, Libya. and ~eria have
Ni1mt called an the grN!ating students to use their abilities preeedlag evening.
It was a news agency n:port
prior to Aug. 15, then the old broken. relations With Amman,
distributed -tier this week "lo lllliit lbe broad t .... u•••nlty dmgregalioo and cooperation
and Libya · and Kuw&amp;t have
. ····=· ·-:·: :· ··::-:-:-:·.•..·.· ·· .·· . :··:-· .· prices would prevail.
saying the International wtacb ultimately will mate busing umecesaary."
suspended financial aid.
Mmetary Fund.(JMF) favored
substantial revaluation of ~
West German mark and other
major c:urrendes against the
'
American dollar. From his
office on the outskirts of Bmn,
Schilll:r huul"''iately issued a MOUNT IL"Xl, N.Y. (UPI)
A tall pipHm'*lng, well· Francis and Dorothy Kilgallen on the New York Herald Voltaire's "Candide"
statement denounc:ing any such -l!elD'U Cerf, tbe publisher tailored man with an urbane and modera!Gr JOOil Olarles Tribune and his second was illuslrated by RockweU Kent. In . SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. typified the President's low key
suggestion as "totally lllliUI.'' who c:of,.u """ Randcm HOUle ma.._ and Cbesblre cat grin, Daly on the loagol'unning 'irith a Wall Street brokerage two and a half yean they had (UP!) - President Nixon took a nine-day sojourn here.
bat ..-best~ to millions
headed me of lbe nalicm'a &amp;lnday night televisim show firm, but with le third-as vice made back their Initial In- break from official duties He will remain at "La Cas&amp;
Other European officials of AmuicaDa fir lia joUboob mCllt proeperous and prestl- that won bim personal fame. president of the publishing firm veslmenl
Saturday and went for an ex- Pacifica" until Friday when he
Botll
May
25,
1898,
in
New
of
Boni
&amp;
Uveright-be
found
sbared bi1 anger They assailed and lelieviiiGD IIIP""'8JlCieS as giOIII publloblng houses for
moved from !be post of tended weekend pleasure cruise makes a campaign style swing
President N~'s new trade pu-.....--«&lt;CD"Wbat'BMy moretbanfourdecades:Bislist Ycrk OI.Y to a Utbograpber and bis field.
president of Random Bouse In on a plush 15-loot yacht along back to Washington with
protectionist measures and Une!"diedlaatFridB,yulgbtat li autbcrs Included Eugene 1be daughter ri a wealthy In 1925; Cerf and a boyhood 1966, beCIIl)!ng chairman and the coastal waters of southern speaking stops al Dayton, Obio
OjljlC*d bil bopes fat early lia Wtilfdleslti Cuunty bome. O'NeW, William Faulln...., Sln- tobacco dealer, Cerf was a Phi friend, Donald S. Klopfer, cbief executive officer. "It Ill California.
and Chicago.
Kappa
graduall:
li
ColumboughtBonl
&amp;Liverlght's
list
ri
Beta
substanti.ll revaluation of their Be . . '13.
clair Lewis, Jolul O'Hara,
time for a new group to lake
Nixon cruised aboard the Ziegler said the Presl~t will
Ilia
College,
where
be
edited
lbe
109
Modem
Ubrary
titles
for
over while the old crOwd Is still sleek white and blue "Mojo" be continuing bil review of ~
own currencies, increasing Cerf, who bad been r+e'led Truman CaPote.· Cll1iq.ber
their value 80 as to ma2 the .,tier Ilia week frcm Norlber n lshentood and Andre Malraux. bumDr' mapzine, the Jester, $225,000. Two yean later. they around~ that there woo't ~ owned by multi-ml)llonalr~ 1971and1972fiacalyearfederal
dollar cbeaper abroad and give Wes*'l*'lti HC18plllll, calla(Nd
But it was his lectures, and wrote a column for lbe begsn publisbing books "at any "!'ernigbt executive crisis, Hollywood businessman Frank budgets. He also will be conAmerican exports a price ad- . . lb before llljdnjgbt llld columna, 14 anthologies of caiiiPIS newspaper, !be Specta- random" -hence the name li ~. sa1d.
Muller in the company of his suiting often Ill the coming days
their new publishing house - delcl by lbe time an am- burner aDd bil regular appea· !Gr.
"lbe ~ may come when companion, Charles G. "Bebe" with national aecurity affairs
vantage.
h!Jaace. anlved at Ibis bcml!; · ruces wltb panelists Arlene - His first job was as a repcrter starting wi Ill a version of autbcn looting for a publisher· Rebozo
adviser H
A KIBsing
willsbunmebecausetbeythink
Be h~aded for the Newport The ~":lent;s jollrne~· to
On Friday, thec furor in
I am too Ubusythelr~- mbey own Beach area where the annual Peking iS In the plannlns stage
Europe was overshadowed,
eg1111 to
se
....,..., ooce • "Ch. aracter Boat Para
· de" was and
believed
-•
however, by the reluctant
said.
"Butthathasn'thapPened
. 1·t was.
. lha tmany ...
t When ltd · I Wdroplbe bemg staged. The . parade his talks With KISalnger are to
decillion of .Jtpan - after a
yejok.
books, oes, "
leatures a contest among boat hammer out the. ccmplicaled
stubborn holdout of aJmost two
engineers
opened
nine
flood
e
·
.
owners
for the most lllllquely details.
'
weeks _ to allow tbe y!n to ~N ( UPl) -:- Tropical · miles an hour.
eluding many hired from
For
Cerf,
who
COIISldered
that
decorated
craft
The
bqats
are
He
had
no
CCIIIIDI!Ilt
•on the
Ooat, In effect malainll: the ym s111rm Doria .:.lowly loling its ·. No deatha were reported private conlrac!Grs, were caUed control reservoirs in Ma&amp;.a.
11
p11inted
and
colorfully recent colnments by AFL.c!O
and devalning lbe daiJar. And punch -moved 8a'OS8 New Sa,turc!ay frol!l the storm.
out to restore power throughout cbusetts and ConnecUcut to "a hearty _belly-laugh is _one
finalicial experts pni8eci the England Saturday, leaving
Scores · of communities in' the slx•tate area. One work- store runoff from the heavy the beautiful aowlds m !be decorated to look like people George Meany that Nixon is a
world,'' that time never came. and animals:
"knee jerlt politician."
move as 1 polllible first step to Qooded streets, uprooted trees Connecticut and Massachusetts man in Broclrton, r,Jass., was rains.
At the Western White House,
setting the int.emationallllCileY and power outages in its nte. lost pOwer for as long as hospitalized when be .touched a The storm dumped almost 6
Inches of rain on New York
Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler
crisis
·
Doria, the fGurtb lnlpical several hours as winds BUSiil)g· downed power line.
·
slmm of the 1 1,.., caused uP to 75 miles per hour toppled UprQOted trees blocked roads City In a 24-hour period before
.
told reporters ''this will provide
BODY RECOVERED
DRIVER lUlLED
the President his fll'St up. HONG KONG ( UPJ)
''What a lot ri AmOricans wide pead damage as it cut trees and power lines.
In dozens of · dlmmunities. PaSSing Into western . New
don'taeem to ..oclalllald is that through New Jeney and New · Power outages affected about S!lctions of the Connecticut England. Sections Of southeast: . AUCANTE,Spaln (UP!) - A portunity to bre•k away from Another body -... retatlled
.
from the harbor Friday, l'lillnl
Nt&amp;m w•tltbe dollar deYallled Yort beroi e daWll and then 10,000 penCilS in the Bos19.D Turnpike were closed Saturday t:rn New York state recorded minor traffic accidental a local work.~'
more than 8 Inches of rain in U intersection resulted in the
Be said Nixon carried aboard the nlDDber ol confirmed del'hs
batbew-'tnntlobelbeone moved acnlss New England area 'many miles from the morning.
hours.
murder
of
one
of
the
drivers,
·
a
briefcase
of official papers for from Typhoon Role Ill 1... a
to do U beeS• Ibis _,. be · into New Hampsbire and center of the storm. Virtually Many streets were flooded
politically p1 ; J•llaell: bame," .Maine.
· every city in the stale 1'Bp!ll'ted when ' drain SYStems couldn't The storm was blamed in police said Saturday. They said a bit ol reading on sblplioard. govetnment sp+•n• llld
At I p.m. the CUller of the at least minor blackouts.
cope with ~ heavy rains. part for sjx deslhs In Maryland Vicente Garcia, 36, was shot to Ziegler said that Nixon nen Saturday. A lotll n• • l
a Brllilh hiL.W. said. ''He
wants the Europeans and s10n11-... located In soulhwes- Sevel:al ·radio slations wete ·Small streams overflowed in Friday-three on rain-tlllcked death after he began to argue week wlll be following apo11esman llld 11
highways and three In the crash With the three occupants of the . "basi~ally the same pattern •: tf lORI . Were
ud
;lipan to do it far hi,m by Lem New fl!.nqi$Nre, It d!d knocked oft the air.
many areas. · ·
of
a
light
plane
In
Oakland.
other
car.
work
and
play
whleh
h¥
)II
awned
dead.
nnlnil!lllheir own aa•aw:les. ~atabout 30 Thousands ri w01~, in- ~ tl.S. Army corps of
le

m.

latest fall fashions and·

Notes

:d :J;.

0 n DMZ L.m
• es

School Fashions - you'll

You Will Earn a Fortune
I

' .,.,Vo-=--L~
. ~VI-NO. .~3-~--------::S-UN::-:D-:-A-:-Y,-:A::-:U-:-GU:-:::ST=-:2-:-9.-1-:-9-::-71:----------P-A-GE-13 ~esq~~r!rt:u~&amp;

TOKYO (UP! ) -,-The value of .revaluation.
the U.S. dollar declined from 5 The obj rate that had
to 6 per cent in relation to the prevailed for 20 years was 360
Japanese yen Saturday in the yen to the dollar.
first trading since thiS nation's The Bank of Japan Intervened
currency was freed from during the trading period by
controls and allowed to Ooat.
purchasing dollars to keep the
Trading was heavy during the yen close to the level of m to
thre!! hours the markets were the dollar.
open, and financial sources
esUmated that transactions The Tokyo . stock market.
which also opened Saturday,
tolaled at least $200 million.'
The decrease In the value of absorbed the !!hock of the yen's
the dollar meant an equal unofficial revaluation after an
increase in the value of the initial sell-off of export-oriented
yen. It was still far short of Industrial stocks. The DowPresident Nixon's reported goal Jones index .closed at 2,276.67,
for a I2 to 15 per cent up 8.48 from the close Friday.
revaluation of Japan's curren: Nixon's new economic policy
that temporarily suspended the
cy.
After nearly two weeks of convertibility of the dollar for
trying to avoid it, the Japanese gold and imposed a IO per cent
government announced Friday surcharge on imports was
that the yen would be allowed designed to induce the United
to float within unspecified States' Asian and European
limits.
.
trading partners to revalue
The conversion rate at their currencies In relation to
foreign exchange banks ranged the dollar. Such action would
from 342.20 to 342.40 yen to the favorably influence the U.S.
dollar, representing a 5 per balance of payments by making
cent yen revaluation . .For spot American exports less expen·
transactions in hotels and on sive to foreign purchasers and
ihe street, the rate was 338 yen foreign imports more expensive
to th~ dollar, or 6 1M'• cent for American purchasers.

ACt IOn
• · surges

Wolfpen
New~

.

NEWLY INDEPENDENT ·
Bahrein's Sbelkb Ina Bin
Sulelman AI Kballfa Is one
of . the world's richest
rulers. His Persian Gulf
Island, w b I c b bas renouncea Us long depend- ·

ractor

New ·wardrobe -from

•'

nving

zn

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

r----------L----------------.

*'

Jackson was "The unjust will adminiSters California's 12 pribe criiicized by the weapon. · soners, as weU as a corrections
The oppressor will get tired." office In San Francisco and a
Jackson was sbot to death at slate Rehabilitation DepartSan Quentin Aug. 2I after he ment office in Sim Mateo.
allegedly pulled a smuggled gun
Total damage was estimated
in the prison "adjustment at more than $100,000. There
.center" and touched off a were nil injuries.
bloody rampage in which the
Anonymous telephone call$ in
center's prisoners were re- Sa~ramento and San FranCisco,
leased, and three white guards and a letter received by the
and two while convicts were Sim Francisco Eilll1llner indi·
slashed, ·beaten, garrotted and cated the bombings were the
shot to death.
work of Weathermen, the
Early Saturday, bombs uderground terrorist organizawrecked the Sacramento head- lion. The letter said the acts
quarters of the · state Depart- were to express "outrage" over
ment of Corrections, which Jackson's "assassination."

•

You'll Want A Complete

-

ben pUI bim their 01in ~ black ~ priest, called
by l!lowillC up three state · Jac~n "a fire ever liurnlng"
olfi! es aaoa llGI1hl!m Califor· for black freedom, .00 Black
Ilia._
Panther Co.foll!lder Huey NewFwtnd
vita fir the 30- loll said "the oppressor will get
J*-&lt;lld. black. revolutionary Ured SOOle day" and "the
W8e held at St. Augusilne's people will ~ bil kneecaps
f¥••pl a..dlln Oakland's off .,. we'U slit every throat of
black ghetto, behind an bonor the people who oppress us."
gDiri of 40 Black Panthers and Jwitice In America said the
'irith a blue-and-lllaet Panther Rev. Fr. Earl Neil, pastor of
11q
frcm the tlip of the St. Augustine's ill a monstrous
clocll'.
system enslaving . blacks
An estimated 1,J!O persons _through all-white juries and
attended, spilliDK out of the "while IJ.enchmen known as
clwrdl and acr!ll8 the lntersec- racists."
tiCII ri two streets outside.
l)!ewton said the last stateThe presiding minjster, 11 ment be ever heard from

Yen Climbs
5-6%
in 1st
.
Trading Day

em

D~ne,

Out to Sea

*
,...
mi...

r.

•

•

I

1

�-•

Q

'

.

12- Tile """'ayTtna-Sa•h•J,, 'Q,AIII- a,lfll

NLLY'S ·POINI'EBS .

Personal Notes

. Snap-on Dress Collars
By POLLY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY-Like Mrs. 0. E . R. , I, too, particularly
like dresses with while or light-colored collars. When I
buy a new dress .with such a collar, I carefully rip it off
and sew snaps to .the collar edge, then match them to the
dress neck edge. Wheri a collar becomes soiled, I sim(:ly
unsnap it, launder and snap back on. Saves many a
cleaning bilL- MRS. L. F. A.

!Pl---m

Jackson EUlogized as Martyr

. .
. POMQOY-Mn.CII8r*
POMEROY _ -~ .,a;.tb
·~ hame of
. Mr._IIIII Mrl_~ ,.._
_ .. ·
Tbe Reclllr, Mr. ind Mrs. Bill BlebsJee 111111 Mn.. Gayle '
• .., ...,..
.....IIIOIIell,........ns.beld ,JobnsoO and family, ·Mr. lllld Prke are at Xaot state 8lliiUil reunim ri !be Joeepb WUI, Pomeroy. Gnee. WIJ
"''*1, A114- 21 at 1he farm Mrs. Gary J~. Brian and Ualvenlty · t•_Ia weebad ancl Etbel Wbldan tamiiy -... given by lla)Uilllld Wlndan.
bamnl Mrs. ~ Recllut Brady, Carrolllal; Mr._ and att-'la&amp; die _. ·~ ·held $mday, Alii!. 2Z at tbe A~ . wen llrL Ray
~- A llcam~ ~ Mrs. Johnny . Gedach and , &lt;ilaJe . F.Mallea AIHclatloa
·
· ·
Wlndcm,Mr. andMn. Rloami
Mrs. Henry .Q!oper, David, diaaetatDOCII_ftllmjoJedwttb Darla, Mr. and ;Mr!l· W. A. tede'!11' Caldermre. They
Wlndcm, Mr. and lin. Lawllll
· Doug, and Janet left Friday fir bible graee gma by Mn. BiD Broob. and t.mily, Mr. and are delepleS of die MeteS
JNSPECI'ION ~
Windon, Uoyd, LIDCe and Dill;
their horne in LaGrange, ID~ Jo..,..~",. .
. . . . Mrs. Harry Ba-oob and family, ·Co.ty Teadaen' AuJL Mn. · CARPENTER - . Annual Mr.andMn. Milel Mchr!IDd,
afterseveraldaysvisit,.ithber . Al»s•·•"~Mr.aJidMrs. Mr.andMrs.CiydeGerlachSr., 8'¥....., 11 )ll'ei'Jdeid ol the Jilspection was f:Oiwlucted by ()&gt;lnmhua; ·Mr.*ndJirS. ,W,.tt
mother, Mrs. Eva Hllrtley and PauiPGIItelwaile, -Tom; Bill Letart; Mr. and Mrs. Odell ....,.;w.., 11111 Mrs. Price, i)eputy State Muter, Virgil WiD, Tenr and Gl!y, Qrove
grandmother; Mrs. James lli"OIII!, Mr_. *lid_ Jibs. W. B. Recti.- and. Lavonne ~· -re''-: They _wm retom Atkins and Junior · Dl:puty OI.Y; Mn. ·VIrPU BaJIGr,
Faulkher
·
11ro1111 Jr Ievin and Mike ear oilton Mrs Chri tm -- _,
Paulirie Atkins, when ColUmbia ~. Went!eU, · Rlllb . 81111
Miss Frances Glaze of llrollll;
·
·•
·
r
'
·
·
·
s
a
lids
eventng
Grange
No: .243$ beld tbeir Ql"-,
Mr. and Jlts. Roberl Marshall, Mr. and Mn. Ronald
. ..
- Addin,l; Mr. ud Mn.
Lancaster was the recent guest Waid, Weirloa; Mr. ~ Mrs. Wooda, Florence, Pa.
llllll)lllilllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllltii!RM Augl!st meeting Saturday I..arrY Clay, Ypai)lnli, Midi.;
of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Zirkle, l&gt;arl'ell Recbw 8Dd family, Unable to attend were Hazel
OPEN HOUSE SEt
, evening. The Cbocola": Dale Mn. WaJI! ~. Mr. IIIII
Mr. and Mn. Ira Ray But- Millal Pa.. ~ and $Jree Bowell LOOdina of Fontana
OOOLvn'LE _ Open house Cake contest was held w1th five . Mn. Vlrgil WlndQII, DeWe.
· cher,Pat,Pam,Mikelll!dPaula Howell, .;.. Paul Bagbes, .Calif. and Mr. 'Jake Bowen:
f M .enlries. Ruth.'Ann Jordan had Brian, Becky and Blair; Mr.
of Jacksonville Beach, Fla . .are .....n...._.-n.. · "'-'··, ...:..· _..... ..__ ~--tlon "'ty, Obi"o.
wUI be obseryed or rs. th winnln
. ·g en""' · and · Will and lin D J ..,_.,. ·Mr and
............, uwv .,.. ...,.. .... ""'"'
"'
Blanche Pullins, R.J;I. 2 . e
·
""'
. ··
· · · · ,.._.,..... - ~
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Ira Ray Gedadl, a..; Pat, and
Coolville Saturclay; Sept. 4 re~resent the 1\'ange at the. Mrs.J.M.Ga~IIIIIVIddte;llr.
Butcher and Mn. Jake Betz. ·Frank, PUwell,
Mr- and
DAUGllTER BORN ·
celebrating her ·90th birthday county contest m September. and Mrs. James WiD, ~aD·
Mr.andMrs. JamesHQYI and Mrs, Thomas Bowell, EQt PoMEROY -Mr. and Mn. anniversary. Houts are 2 p.m. Mrs. ~I Greenlees .had an -Brenda, Bev«ly and Briail,
family of Columbus are spen- Uvspool.; Mr. and Mrs. Dale Paul ~on, Jr. of Columbus,
·.
entry m the Cape contest and of Pomeroy.
ding .the weekend with Mr. and Rousb and family Point announce the birth of a :~:~~~u!oo ~ends·v;~·~ Will . a15? represent Columbia
Mrs. Curtis Jenkinson and Mrs. Pleasa'nt; Myla Hudson, daughter, Joan Marie, August 2 "led" and gifts• 'tied n ..... Grange lD the POOlona Contest.
DEMOLITION BEGINS
OIDl
• .,....,..
•
IGrange session
. ~
.
J ake Belz.
SyraWSf;; Mr. IIIII Mrs. Lloyd. a t Mt .· Carme·1 Hospl"tal , VI
will 'be appreciated
and
she The Nationa
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lucas Smilb, lUill son, N.,. BaYI!Il; Columbus,weigbingapoundsi3 would like to see ber many Charleston, w.. Va., m COLUMBUS (UPI)
of Caledonia, 0., were recent Mr. and Mrs. Fred RDUIIII and ODllces. They have another fri nds
November was discussed and DeiDOiition work on the. oldest
e ·
~State Grang~ meetings building on the. Obiu State
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bomer family,Milhrood; Mrs.D!lrolby daughter, Valerie Lynn, age 3.
Jones.
.
Mcl'JermoU,,.. Cui. Ml Allll; Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
IN HOSPITAL·
for candidates were listed. The University t:aJllPU8, lbe 9S-year·
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Mr. IIIII Mrs. ()elbert Recti.- Paul Simpson, Sr., and Mr, and SYRACUSE William closest session for this 8rea will old University Hall, started
McElhinny left today for In- andfamily,Mr. andMrs. David Mrs.GeorgeHorakMPomeroy; Thuenerisamedicalpatientin be at Frankfort, Ross County, Friday and was ezpectecl to
lake. about
diaila, Pa. to visit ber siste_r, Rousbaodfamily, Mr:-Ridlard and Leo Zwilling of Columbus. room 232 at·Holzer Hospital. on October 2.
. 45 days.
.
Mrs, lfilda Rose, who will ·
,
return with them.
"Miss
Debra
Hunnell,
·daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John
E. Hunnell, Pomeroy, has
passed ller examinations before
the Ohio State Board of
·Cosmetology at Columbus. Miss
Hunnell is a 1971 graduate of
Meigs High School. She has
accepted employment at Kay's
Beauty Salon in Middleport.
· ·• · ·
lETART, W. Va. -

.She Makes Her Own

'

.,. ~ Eighth Windon Reunion·

.Howell Reunion

Middleport

j.

Polly's Pfoblem - - --

DEAR POLLY- I would like to know how to remove stains from our alwninUin storm door off my .
husband's shirts. Nothing I have tried has helped.
-LeVERNE
'

p.m..OO&gt;,

Qllif. (tlPI}-In
111 EpiacopaJ. dudl llalll 'iritb
a Black Panther t _,,
Gectae Jackwm - -+19.,.,
In rioleDt wunls • a ~ Gl

1be ~left Saunay,
1 nekafler be -ldlled In a
blOody aborted escape at San
Quentin Priaoo.
llndelgtOI!lld temJrist born-

31Burn
on ·Ferry

Ohio;

DEAR POLLY- Many men's shirts and socks are on
display in plastic )lags in shops so I wish the color of the
item could be printed on the package. This would be most
helpful to color·bllnd people espe&lt;:ially. Also the same
needs to be done to thread spools. Many a trip made back
to the store could be avoided if the spool had been
marked. Brown and black look so much alike in their
shiny cellophane wrappers.- W. S.
DEAR POLLY- If you have a closet with lightweight
hollow panel sliding doors, try ~sing one of these doors
for a large cutting board when sewing. Lift, tilt and remove the door; then place
on the dining room table
which is .protected with a
pad or cover. If the inside
of the door is painted, black
patterns and pins will be
that much easier to see.
When putting up curtain
rod brackets, tape them in
place before inserting nails
or screws. This makes the
job easier and the tape is
.,.
easily removed when they
.
are fastened .
Toucb-up scratches, nicks and scuffs in plastic-covered
furniture with a matching color shoe polish liquid. Be
sure to remove any surplus that remains on the plastic
after the backing is dyed. This really helps to bide any
defects.-LINDA SUE
DEAR POLLY-There are husbands who dislike paper
napkins and wives who dislike ironing so buy a yard of
45-lnch wide terry cloth, cut off the selvages and cut out
six nice-sized napkins. Fringe the edges.-MARIE

BRINDISI, Italy (UPI) -A
. ~ fercy 'irith lllllft than
1,000 petiMill aboanl bwned
fnm stem to atem Satunlay iD
the Adriatic Sea. Hundres of
panic-~tricken passengers
leaped overboard and llflllll to

rescue reu

-

-·,

Pomeroy....

Personal .Notes

Mn. James Sleets (JemHer
Lohse). left Wednesday for
Columbus wbere she is a judge
You wiU receive. a dollar If Polly uses your favorite at Ohio State Fair for 4-H
bomematlng Idea, .P et Peeve, PoUy's Problem or- aolu- nutritim interviews for county
tlon to a problem. Wdle Polly In care of thl1 newspaper.
rwtmers fer the stale li Obio. It
iS held at the Lausche building.
Mrs. Mary Klwem._n is the
guest of her aon John and family
In Sl Louis, Mo.
Mrs. Helene Mullen iS a
medical patient in Holzer
Holzer Medical Center, First Gerald Scott, Kelly ~ton, Don ;Medical Center.
Shaffer, Deborah Sheline, Mrs.
Ave. and Cedar St.
General visiting hours 2-4 and Robert Yerian and Lew
7.:S p.m. Maternity visiting Dempsey.
hours '2:30 to 4:30p.m. Parents
Veterans Memorial Hospital
only on Pediatrics Ward. ,
ADMISSIONS - Ella Schultz,
Discharges
Barbara Baer,
• James Bradbury, . Mrs. Racin,e;
Minemville
;
Mary Marcinko,
Clinton Conger, Mrs. Orville
Crooks, Margaret ·Culpepper, Tuppers Plains; Arville Bush,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Icenhower
Mrs. Kenneth .F ry and Middleport; Norman Lehew,
and Eddy of East Liverpool,
daughter, Mrs. Sidney Hayman Portland; Norma Goodwin,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jeffers,
and son, Mrs. Russell Hill and Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES
May Syracuse, Mr. and Mrs. Orner
aon, Mrs. Sally Litchfield, Mrs.
Dailey, local, and Mrs. Sandra
Thomas Lowe and daughter, Cooper, Clarence Hayman,
Peyton, Syracuse, visited Mr.
Johnnie Meadows, Mrs. Loren Delores Lyons, Laura Grant,
and Mrs. Homer Icenhower.
Parks, Mrs. Earl Phelps and Anna Burton, Mary Armes,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald
·
son, Mrs. Charles. Poling, Mrs. Leota Cooper.
Cremeans of near Tuppers
Guy Priddy, Mrs. Della Riffle,
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Plains called on Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Dora Roush, Mrs. Phyllis
ADMISSIONS : Cynthia Maywood Johnston.
Rowland, J. Everett Saunders,
Smith, H~nderson, and Everett
Mr. and Mrs. Alban Taylor
and two daughters, Edith
Tucker, Hometown.
DISCHARGES : Audrey Taylor and three children, Mr.
VACATION ENDED
Davis,
Mrs. Virgil Plants, Mrs. and Mrs. William Ables and
CARPENTER - Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Jeffers and Elmer Endicott, Eugene Holter, children visited Mr. and Mrs.
daughters have returned from Mrs. Robert Stevens, Mrs . Dillon Taylor.
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Pauley,
an extended vacation trip to the' Garland Bostic, Charles
West Cosst during the past Westmoreland and Mrs. Jay local, ·Mr. Clifford Icenhower,
Pomeroy Route, visited Mr. and
three weeks. They journeyed to Stone.
Mrs. Homer Icenhower.
New Bct~ton, IDinois, where
PHOTOLADY DIES
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Carter of
they were joined by bis brotberSTAMFORD, Conn. (UP!) I!Haw and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Margaret Bourke-White, a Long Bottom, visited Mr. and
John Dunham and family, and pioneer woman photojournalist Mrs. Lawrence Johnston.
Rev. John Busch remains in
· together they traveled to who was one of the original slaff
California where they were photographers
for
Life the hospital.
gueais of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Magazine, died Friday of Mr. Dillon Taylor remains
Jeffers and family, Bakersfield, Parkinson's Disease. She was about the same.
Several from aro1llld here
Calif; and Mr. and Mrs. John 67. Starting with the first cover
Cordray, Loo Angeles, Claif., of Life, Margaret Bourke-Wbite attended the Meigs County
and Mrs. Jeffers' brother, Dana contributed hundreds of Fair. '
-May Johnston
Bailey, Jr., who is stationed photographs and dozens of
with the U. S. Almy there , phol&lt;H!ssays to Life.
joined the group for a visit. The
group viewed many points of
MARRIAGE UCENSE
Interest aloog the way. Most
POMEROY - James Swan
outstanding sights included Stettler, 18, Chester, and
Carlsbad Caverns and The Pamela Sue Griffin, I9, Long
Grand Canyon.
Bottom.
Charles and Kevin Knapp
spent a few days with their
grandmother, Mrs. Lena Knapp
of Langsville.
Franklin Russell of Midbetween your first and last paychecks
dleport visited recently with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln
TOTAL EARNINGS OV En 1 H ~ Yf ". II ~
Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson
. ...... 1
I
~
I
'"'"""··~
visited
recently with Mr. Albert
~~='--I~ ":..:~::·~ J lG Ye&gt;Jn }S : : : _ ~~~ rr•:• ! -,__ '" •_
•:
Beilman.
• ' ' "1
' ''
!
"'"
'
"
"
J '1 ·1" ' '. 1
.., IF-A oon
1
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reed of
~(lfl
lliJ (llor&gt; I I 70 1100
Ho/1 flO&lt;'
: !10.\'1\ '
'll oJ.fl!'t'
111
1-rn.J
IIHI IIUIJ
1~11 0()()
lil/ [)(Ill 11li'&gt;IJNI
l '• ) ' "
Hemlock Grove were Sunday
] QI)
1}6 :JQI )
11'.8 000
l ) d i)oY)
-;r,,
1
I JII('l
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Guy
•
f'IOil
H1 . 0()(l
1':1? .0UO : ~~· tJil'"l
) )I'"! •'11 " i
1""1&lt;1 1)&lt; ''1
Sargent:
avtl
lli,OOIJ
216 .00H
:&gt;Ji; 't·P·
.,, \ HW• ~ '\ ''1t•h''
1
Rhonda Jean Haning visited
!f!ltll
I I:IOVUO
/11) .00')
:&lt;ll(\111&gt;':
"·1!111~' I '.)•)nolfl
l .&lt;:lM'
"J f; lt l{ll ) I .l GCI\!Qfl 1 1t;llr'I!!O
1:,-sOtJfll' I r.tr"lfln.'}
with her aunt and uncle, Mr.
and Mrs. Brady Knotts and
grandmother, Anna Scott of
BUT HOW MUCH WILL
King
Hill.
YOU HAVE LEFT AT RETIREMENT?
Mr. Bill McElroy of Columbus
spent a few days with bil
Doesn 't It make good sense, then, to puf some•of if.away
each payday info savings? We think so and suggest fhaf
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
yOu place it in our care where it will not only enjoy
McElroy.
unusually high ear n ings but excellent ·security. And
Weekend visitors of Mr. and
remember .no one has ever had to wa it for their money.
Mrs.
Howard Thoma and
Give us a call today !
Patricia were Mr. and Mrs.
Frank.Sarver, John and Eddie
ALL SAVINGS GUARANTEED IN FULL
of Bridgeman, Mich., and Mrs.
Larry Barr and children of
Rutlan.d.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sarver
and children of Bridgeman,
Mich. visited with grandGallipolis
Phone 446-3832
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Johnson,

I

! HOSPITAL NEWS

Old Town

Elherfelds when you see
our beautiful collection

Flats News

of Fall and Back To

find them all here in the

I

I

' \t~l

Go back to school in our easy care
knits in dresses, jumpers, ensembles, suits, coordinates. Don't
miss the exciting fashions in pants
suits in your favorite fabrics. See
our complete coat collection- pea
coats, short trench coats, jackets,
pants coats, casual full length
coats - an outstanding group of
matching coordinates in polyester
knits, flannels, tweeds - a large
selection of blouses in many styles
and fabrics. Select several of our
skirts and matching sweaters latest in fabrics and new fall
colors.

1

GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS
AND LOAN COMPANY

plac;e

Due

new

Chief of State
Punster, Bennett Cerf Dead On Quiet ·Cruise

Gagster,

em

a

Doria, Work

Elberfelds Jn Pomeroy
I

zn

Europe

Be sure to look around in our
Children's Department.
You'll find complete size
ranges from tots to teens
and the hard to fit chubby ·
girls. You'll find an outstanding selection of girls
coats, car coats, jackets,
slacks, skirts, .91ouses,
sweaters, vests, western
jeans - dresses - ju'mpers.
Shop the main floor for your
important · accessories including jewelry, hosiery,
handbags, lingerie, knit
caps and scarfs the
stationery department for
your school supply needs the mens and boys department for an odstanding
selection of- jackets, . shirts,
trousers, coats, · swe~ters, .
vests, underwear, ties. Stop
in and look around and let us
1\el p you with your selections.

I

•

Seek UN
Debates

Furor in ,.,.......

•

HI~

Egypt to

L te refatio
n 'P
n
Of
iOr

Busing Accepted
. As Necessary

1

'zns

h

.

accessones.

I

,~,,#.oou

..:...:=...o.:.........;_ _~----------......;.-----'----------------"-- 000 people but an ocean of
oil. · The mlnlstrale's anAt least 3I persons were
nual oil Income runs to '$34
ldUed In the inferM or
miWon.
&amp;owned. Scores lDilr'l! were
lnjlired, Italian naVII autbcri·
ties said.
'11lere wen !Ill pa qets
97 UEWillEil aboard the
ferry "Helerna" wbeiJ tbe
fire, wbicll llrob nut In lbe
titcbm, swept tliroQgh the
vesael as it follond its ooone
abo!lt 25 miles IMrih. Gl this
)l(l't city on the heel .of Italy's
boat.
Merchant ships and fishing
boats diverted ClOUI'8e to reBy United Press International
8p(lld to tbe sos aent by the
ferry's captain. Along wltb
wblcb
was
in
Its
third
day,
fea·
Mrs.
Carpenter,
24,
was
II'•·
A
team
from
Oakwood
School
Egypt's United Nations am·
OOLUMBU'i (UPI) - The
Italian navy reacue boats and Inamu.w tract~.- Pulling fured tbe yoong rock group sented witb a silver tea service In Canlal placed second In the bassador will leave for New
helicopters, they worked Omtest, wan by Jolm ~. 11 .1 Jackaon Five and acrobatlc and $100. She said she was FFA ccmpetitlm.
York Monday to direct a
throughout the day fisbing 1be bighljghl of lbe Obio Slate Dave Merrifield.
surprised to come out ahead of Don &amp;lttan, Gerald Matthews diplomatic offensive through
pa 1 qers frcm the calm Fair bere Satnrda7 as The Flnt Lady of Ohio, Mrs. the other 10 (inalists.
and Rusty Miller were the which Egypt hopes to bring
waters and taking them to ..._., of vllllllln cmtinued John J. Gilligan, was bmored at
''I was so shocked to wm;· TrumbuU County learn winners about a full..cale debate on the
ports up and down the Adriatic Ill allilnd grandstand sblnts, a tea prior to her presentation li s11e said. ''I was !be yOUDgest 1n the 4-H divislm of the hor- Middle East when the Security
ticultural contest. Second place Council meets next month,
coast
-tcll ediibltions and par- the Obio Homemaker li lbe entered lillbe coolest."
Nancy Rbynard li Fra'*lln was taken by a learn from government sources said SaturPurt officials at Brindisi said licipate in bwdreds ri eVI!llts. Year Awanl to Mrs. Linda
"Suzy;,
Carpenter
of
Coolville.
was
hunt seat equllatim cham· Sandusky Colliii.Y.
· day.
all but about 1011!1 tbe peiSOIIS
~. II FarmiagtCII, ,Iowa,
Mrs. Gillig_an has domestic pion out 11 a field of more than 1n the Junior Divison Steer The council is to meet to
111 board had been accounted wan 1he I1,011"{Mvld stoclt class
help
In tbe governor's mansim, 400 entries in the 4-H Hor- Show, the grand champion discuss a Jordanian complaint
for by 4 p.m., but that an euct wben bis DR I rractGr puDed
but ccmtlmies to enjoy making semanship and Equitation rosette was placed on a 1,07(). about Israel's action in Jerusa.
head eow~t was difficult be- 32,'1011 P"IID 300 feel
borne-cooked
meals
for
her
Horse shows.
pound . Charolais-Angus cross lem.
cause many pan tgera bad
Ed Miller of RockpOI"t., Iowa,
Debbie Diehl and Linda Kohl, steer, Tucker . Tucker was Sources in Cairo, quoted by SAIGON (UP!) -U.S. war- Soviet-made I22nun rockets
been taken to small villages flni!!hed _..m. His ~ A.C, family.
"'Ibe family gets a lot li plea- both of Montgomery were shown by Julie Townsley, 17, of the semiofficial newspaper AI
along the !;OilSL
palled ZiD.2 feel
planes struck CommuniSt posi- into Camp Fuller four miles
Abram, said Egyptian Ambas- tions in both halves of the south of the DMZ, South
The ferry, an a JCbeduled run 111e 12,0011 pound modified sure fr001 home cooking," Mrs. named reserve champions. Cedarville.
.
sador Mohammed Hassan el Demilitarized Zone (DMA) Vietnamese spokesmen said.
from Corfu to Ancona, was dul-... wan by Bob Bend ri Gilligan said. "In fact, my fam. Crys Flnfroclt toot the western
ily
bas
urged
me
to
cook
ewr
boriemarwhip competition and
Zayyat would try to expand the separating North and South The 201kound shelling attack
built In 1954 as a tan1ter but 111e Alti.m Team, Paw Paw,
discussions Into consideration of Vietnam while the govern- was the heaviest against the
was refitted In 11&amp;'1 and billed BiiiR--+ofFcnst,&lt;llio,-... since we've moved Into tbe Becky Scott of Scioto woo !be
mansion. I tNnk homemakl~ is saddle seat equltalim chamv.
.t,
a resolution to halt Israel's ment's northern defense line northern defense line In a week,
as "the largest fen:)" in lhi! tlell'ao!.
plonsbip.
L' ree%e
"aggressive acts in Jerusalem was reported hit by the but spokesmen said there were
Gr••!s!and shows at !be fair, a very special art."
world" by its Greek owlli!iS,
A team frun Ceveland West ,
which are aimed at Judaizing heaviest shelling in a week.
. Costas Eftymiadla of Piraeus.
no casualties. Fuller was
Tech 111gb School won the first .1. eac ers
the city."
i The shlp owners said I54
A U.S. Air Force F4 phantom overrun by Communists June
automobiles and !rUCks also
In lbe FFA divislcm of lbe COLUMBUS (UPI) _ State . They said Egypt also would jet fighter-bomber was fired on 23-24 but since recapture two
were aboard the ferry.
Natillllll JunlDr' Horllcullural school Superintendent Dr Mar- ask to take part in the debate, by a 37mm antiaircraft gun days later it has been rebuilt
judging cmtest. The team, coo- li E
'dSaturd th. uS although not a council member. while on a bombing mission with concrete bunkers.
Smoke billowed from the
slsHna of Mike Karn Teresa n ssex 881
ay e . . H .
.
prow of the shlp and many of
~...
'
Office of education was preparthiS was approved, 1t would over the Ho Chi Minh supply In Saigon, terrorist hurled a ·
the paaaengers watched it for
Oleung and ~ Beyduk scor- ing an interpretation of the presi- mean three Arab nations would trail in Laos, spokesmen said. fire bomb Into a Natimalist
llllllle lime before the Dames
ed !be most pomts In answering delltial wage-price freeze order be represented in the debate- The plane streaked across the Chinese embassy truclt Saturlapped up oil deck lUill shot
queslians on !be II'oductim and as it applied to schools and uni- Egypt, council member Syria frontier into the northern haH day evening while It was
marketing of fruillts, vege·u
and Jordan which lodged the
down cabin walls. Screams and
of the supposedly . neutral parked outside a U.S. agnecy
tables Rowers and Dr'llmlllllent.. versl es.
. .
' .
panic broke out and hundreds
'
Essex
said
the
Interpretations
original
cornplamt.
buffer, and destroyed the gun for International Development
GAJit!EsVIILE, Fla. (UPI) -Florida Gov. Reubln .Askew
li pa 111gen lept into the sea
als.
should be mailed by Monday In September, the Egyptians emplacement with bombs, they compound in downtown Saigon,
SlldSalunlaymassive busing of students to achieve integraUoo iS
to escape the Dames.
and lie would have a copy by also plan to seek a General said. it was the 53rd ''protec- spokesmen said.
''an •tillrja) and ina~te inatrument ri change" but must be . . . .· ·.. •.·• ·..· .. .·. ·.. ·.·.·.·.· .·. Tuesday.
Assembly resolu~on c~ndemn- tive reaction" strike over North The fire-bombing was the
.-1 nnUI ID•tioo can be brGadened community-wide.
Essex said the Interpretation m~ Israel for 1ts failure to Vietnamese territory so far this only Incident reported in the
END OF FREEZE
Speaklpg at University of Florida commencement
would
be the first set of pro- Withdraw from occupied Arab year. The U.S. Command has capital on the eve of national
WASHINGTON (UPI)
ceremoniel, Alkew said lbe ..,dug of scllnola ned week could
visions as applicable to schools lands.
.
authorized them as a sell- assembly elections, although
brillg a crisis In scbool des gregaUan uJlless Floridians "act The Office of Emergency districts since the freeze was
In Anunan Saturday, King defense measure.
U.S. and other Allied troops
Preparedness (OEP) bas
ibly "
ordered Aug. 15.
Hussein of Jordan said his u.s. 852 bombers
two have been ordered off the
"I'Hblps lbe IDCilt crucial September In tbe long and decided that tbe !lt.day freeze
He
said
one
segment
would
coun~y
was
prepared
to
ta~
raids
in
the
southern
haH
of
the streets for lear of stepped-up
l'l!lllal'bble bis1GrJ ri our public JCbools will be upon us In a on waces, prices and rent wiD activate a new salary schedule part m. c~ncerted ~ab r~•s­ six-mile-wide DMZ, and Allied CommuniSt attacks.
· maltlr' of clays," Asbw ald. "How sad it will be if the emotiCIIS e:lpire offlclally at mldnlgbl for an entire category of tea- lance ~Side lsraelioOCCUpled fighter-bombers, artillery and
In Cambodia, Communist
Nov. 13.
of lbeboarbeeome tbelepcyofageneralion."
naval batteries pounded Com· troops trying to ambush a large
OEP Director Geerge A; chers if one person in that cate- temtones ..
Aaltew said h!sfq was an undesinble metbod, but since no
gorywereworkingunderthenew
But
the
king
also
warned
that
munillt troop locations, supply truck COOIIOY m Highway 4
IJDroln said tbe freeze did not
LONDON (UPI)
Karl
betatnolntiCIISbad beien J1QIIC'8ell,ltwould bave to be used until
schedule
prior
to
Aug.
15.
any
attempt
to
isolate
J~r~ areas and Infiltration routes In attacked two Cambodian coSchiller, West Germaliy's
take effeet autll 12:01 a.m. on
it eoald be replaced by 1 bnad commomlty..wfde desegregation Aug. 11 even though
He also said cafeteria prices would amount to a renunciation the area, spokesmen said.
muanies early Saturday but
economics miniSter, glared
llllCIIIWi+lij...,e
ol cooperaliCII.
In
effect
at
the time of the of the Arab cause.
Communist
gunners
Saturday
were
driven off by American
angrily at the dilpatcb tbrougb
Presldeat Nb:on aDDounced
freeze
would
prevail,
meaning
S~ia and Iraq _have closed poured a 9fJ.rnlnute barrage of planes, military sources said.
'l1le
guuulllll' added, '"lbe Jaw demands, and rightly so, that
lmposllioa of It In a nallonally
bis blaclt born-rimmed specthat unless a cafeteria were therr borders With Jordan.
In
111r society."
•
weputanmd
ID:Jegreplim
br9adcast address on the
tacles. Then be exploded
functioning
under new prices Syria, Libya. and ~eria have
Ni1mt called an the grN!ating students to use their abilities preeedlag evening.
It was a news agency n:port
prior to Aug. 15, then the old broken. relations With Amman,
distributed -tier this week "lo lllliit lbe broad t .... u•••nlty dmgregalioo and cooperation
and Libya · and Kuw&amp;t have
. ····=· ·-:·: :· ··::-:-:-:·.•..·.· ·· .·· . :··:-· .· prices would prevail.
saying the International wtacb ultimately will mate busing umecesaary."
suspended financial aid.
Mmetary Fund.(JMF) favored
substantial revaluation of ~
West German mark and other
major c:urrendes against the
'
American dollar. From his
office on the outskirts of Bmn,
Schilll:r huul"''iately issued a MOUNT IL"Xl, N.Y. (UPI)
A tall pipHm'*lng, well· Francis and Dorothy Kilgallen on the New York Herald Voltaire's "Candide"
statement denounc:ing any such -l!elD'U Cerf, tbe publisher tailored man with an urbane and modera!Gr JOOil Olarles Tribune and his second was illuslrated by RockweU Kent. In . SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. typified the President's low key
suggestion as "totally lllliUI.'' who c:of,.u """ Randcm HOUle ma.._ and Cbesblre cat grin, Daly on the loagol'unning 'irith a Wall Street brokerage two and a half yean they had (UP!) - President Nixon took a nine-day sojourn here.
bat ..-best~ to millions
headed me of lbe nalicm'a &amp;lnday night televisim show firm, but with le third-as vice made back their Initial In- break from official duties He will remain at "La Cas&amp;
Other European officials of AmuicaDa fir lia joUboob mCllt proeperous and prestl- that won bim personal fame. president of the publishing firm veslmenl
Saturday and went for an ex- Pacifica" until Friday when he
Botll
May
25,
1898,
in
New
of
Boni
&amp;
Uveright-be
found
sbared bi1 anger They assailed and lelieviiiGD IIIP""'8JlCieS as giOIII publloblng houses for
moved from !be post of tended weekend pleasure cruise makes a campaign style swing
President N~'s new trade pu-.....--«&lt;CD"Wbat'BMy moretbanfourdecades:Bislist Ycrk OI.Y to a Utbograpber and bis field.
president of Random Bouse In on a plush 15-loot yacht along back to Washington with
protectionist measures and Une!"diedlaatFridB,yulgbtat li autbcrs Included Eugene 1be daughter ri a wealthy In 1925; Cerf and a boyhood 1966, beCIIl)!ng chairman and the coastal waters of southern speaking stops al Dayton, Obio
OjljlC*d bil bopes fat early lia Wtilfdleslti Cuunty bome. O'NeW, William Faulln...., Sln- tobacco dealer, Cerf was a Phi friend, Donald S. Klopfer, cbief executive officer. "It Ill California.
and Chicago.
Kappa
graduall:
li
ColumboughtBonl
&amp;Liverlght's
list
ri
Beta
substanti.ll revaluation of their Be . . '13.
clair Lewis, Jolul O'Hara,
time for a new group to lake
Nixon cruised aboard the Ziegler said the Presl~t will
Ilia
College,
where
be
edited
lbe
109
Modem
Ubrary
titles
for
over while the old crOwd Is still sleek white and blue "Mojo" be continuing bil review of ~
own currencies, increasing Cerf, who bad been r+e'led Truman CaPote.· Cll1iq.ber
their value 80 as to ma2 the .,tier Ilia week frcm Norlber n lshentood and Andre Malraux. bumDr' mapzine, the Jester, $225,000. Two yean later. they around~ that there woo't ~ owned by multi-ml)llonalr~ 1971and1972fiacalyearfederal
dollar cbeaper abroad and give Wes*'l*'lti HC18plllll, calla(Nd
But it was his lectures, and wrote a column for lbe begsn publisbing books "at any "!'ernigbt executive crisis, Hollywood businessman Frank budgets. He also will be conAmerican exports a price ad- . . lb before llljdnjgbt llld columna, 14 anthologies of caiiiPIS newspaper, !be Specta- random" -hence the name li ~. sa1d.
Muller in the company of his suiting often Ill the coming days
their new publishing house - delcl by lbe time an am- burner aDd bil regular appea· !Gr.
"lbe ~ may come when companion, Charles G. "Bebe" with national aecurity affairs
vantage.
h!Jaace. anlved at Ibis bcml!; · ruces wltb panelists Arlene - His first job was as a repcrter starting wi Ill a version of autbcn looting for a publisher· Rebozo
adviser H
A KIBsing
willsbunmebecausetbeythink
Be h~aded for the Newport The ~":lent;s jollrne~· to
On Friday, thec furor in
I am too Ubusythelr~- mbey own Beach area where the annual Peking iS In the plannlns stage
Europe was overshadowed,
eg1111 to
se
....,..., ooce • "Ch. aracter Boat Para
· de" was and
believed
-•
however, by the reluctant
said.
"Butthathasn'thapPened
. 1·t was.
. lha tmany ...
t When ltd · I Wdroplbe bemg staged. The . parade his talks With KISalnger are to
decillion of .Jtpan - after a
yejok.
books, oes, "
leatures a contest among boat hammer out the. ccmplicaled
stubborn holdout of aJmost two
engineers
opened
nine
flood
e
·
.
owners
for the most lllllquely details.
'
weeks _ to allow tbe y!n to ~N ( UPl) -:- Tropical · miles an hour.
eluding many hired from
For
Cerf,
who
COIISldered
that
decorated
craft
The
bqats
are
He
had
no
CCIIIIDI!Ilt
•on the
Ooat, In effect malainll: the ym s111rm Doria .:.lowly loling its ·. No deatha were reported private conlrac!Grs, were caUed control reservoirs in Ma&amp;.a.
11
p11inted
and
colorfully recent colnments by AFL.c!O
and devalning lbe daiJar. And punch -moved 8a'OS8 New Sa,turc!ay frol!l the storm.
out to restore power throughout cbusetts and ConnecUcut to "a hearty _belly-laugh is _one
finalicial experts pni8eci the England Saturday, leaving
Scores · of communities in' the slx•tate area. One work- store runoff from the heavy the beautiful aowlds m !be decorated to look like people George Meany that Nixon is a
world,'' that time never came. and animals:
"knee jerlt politician."
move as 1 polllible first step to Qooded streets, uprooted trees Connecticut and Massachusetts man in Broclrton, r,Jass., was rains.
At the Western White House,
setting the int.emationallllCileY and power outages in its nte. lost pOwer for as long as hospitalized when be .touched a The storm dumped almost 6
Inches of rain on New York
Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler
crisis
·
Doria, the fGurtb lnlpical several hours as winds BUSiil)g· downed power line.
·
slmm of the 1 1,.., caused uP to 75 miles per hour toppled UprQOted trees blocked roads City In a 24-hour period before
.
told reporters ''this will provide
BODY RECOVERED
DRIVER lUlLED
the President his fll'St up. HONG KONG ( UPJ)
''What a lot ri AmOricans wide pead damage as it cut trees and power lines.
In dozens of · dlmmunities. PaSSing Into western . New
don'taeem to ..oclalllald is that through New Jeney and New · Power outages affected about S!lctions of the Connecticut England. Sections Of southeast: . AUCANTE,Spaln (UP!) - A portunity to bre•k away from Another body -... retatlled
.
from the harbor Friday, l'lillnl
Nt&amp;m w•tltbe dollar deYallled Yort beroi e daWll and then 10,000 penCilS in the Bos19.D Turnpike were closed Saturday t:rn New York state recorded minor traffic accidental a local work.~'
more than 8 Inches of rain in U intersection resulted in the
Be said Nixon carried aboard the nlDDber ol confirmed del'hs
batbew-'tnntlobelbeone moved acnlss New England area 'many miles from the morning.
hours.
murder
of
one
of
the
drivers,
·
a
briefcase
of official papers for from Typhoon Role Ill 1... a
to do U beeS• Ibis _,. be · into New Hampsbire and center of the storm. Virtually Many streets were flooded
politically p1 ; J•llaell: bame," .Maine.
· every city in the stale 1'Bp!ll'ted when ' drain SYStems couldn't The storm was blamed in police said Saturday. They said a bit ol reading on sblplioard. govetnment sp+•n• llld
At I p.m. the CUller of the at least minor blackouts.
cope with ~ heavy rains. part for sjx deslhs In Maryland Vicente Garcia, 36, was shot to Ziegler said that Nixon nen Saturday. A lotll n• • l
a Brllilh hiL.W. said. ''He
wants the Europeans and s10n11-... located In soulhwes- Sevel:al ·radio slations wete ·Small streams overflowed in Friday-three on rain-tlllcked death after he began to argue week wlll be following apo11esman llld 11
highways and three In the crash With the three occupants of the . "basi~ally the same pattern •: tf lORI . Were
ud
;lipan to do it far hi,m by Lem New fl!.nqi$Nre, It d!d knocked oft the air.
many areas. · ·
of
a
light
plane
In
Oakland.
other
car.
work
and
play
whleh
h¥
)II
awned
dead.
nnlnil!lllheir own aa•aw:les. ~atabout 30 Thousands ri w01~, in- ~ tl.S. Army corps of
le

m.

latest fall fashions and·

Notes

:d :J;.

0 n DMZ L.m
• es

School Fashions - you'll

You Will Earn a Fortune
I

' .,.,Vo-=--L~
. ~VI-NO. .~3-~--------::S-UN::-:D-:-A-:-Y,-:A::-:U-:-GU:-:::ST=-:2-:-9.-1-:-9-::-71:----------P-A-GE-13 ~esq~~r!rt:u~&amp;

TOKYO (UP! ) -,-The value of .revaluation.
the U.S. dollar declined from 5 The obj rate that had
to 6 per cent in relation to the prevailed for 20 years was 360
Japanese yen Saturday in the yen to the dollar.
first trading since thiS nation's The Bank of Japan Intervened
currency was freed from during the trading period by
controls and allowed to Ooat.
purchasing dollars to keep the
Trading was heavy during the yen close to the level of m to
thre!! hours the markets were the dollar.
open, and financial sources
esUmated that transactions The Tokyo . stock market.
which also opened Saturday,
tolaled at least $200 million.'
The decrease In the value of absorbed the !!hock of the yen's
the dollar meant an equal unofficial revaluation after an
increase in the value of the initial sell-off of export-oriented
yen. It was still far short of Industrial stocks. The DowPresident Nixon's reported goal Jones index .closed at 2,276.67,
for a I2 to 15 per cent up 8.48 from the close Friday.
revaluation of Japan's curren: Nixon's new economic policy
that temporarily suspended the
cy.
After nearly two weeks of convertibility of the dollar for
trying to avoid it, the Japanese gold and imposed a IO per cent
government announced Friday surcharge on imports was
that the yen would be allowed designed to induce the United
to float within unspecified States' Asian and European
limits.
.
trading partners to revalue
The conversion rate at their currencies In relation to
foreign exchange banks ranged the dollar. Such action would
from 342.20 to 342.40 yen to the favorably influence the U.S.
dollar, representing a 5 per balance of payments by making
cent yen revaluation . .For spot American exports less expen·
transactions in hotels and on sive to foreign purchasers and
ihe street, the rate was 338 yen foreign imports more expensive
to th~ dollar, or 6 1M'• cent for American purchasers.

ACt IOn
• · surges

Wolfpen
New~

.

NEWLY INDEPENDENT ·
Bahrein's Sbelkb Ina Bin
Sulelman AI Kballfa Is one
of . the world's richest
rulers. His Persian Gulf
Island, w b I c b bas renouncea Us long depend- ·

ractor

New ·wardrobe -from

•'

nving

zn

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

r----------L----------------.

*'

Jackson was "The unjust will adminiSters California's 12 pribe criiicized by the weapon. · soners, as weU as a corrections
The oppressor will get tired." office In San Francisco and a
Jackson was sbot to death at slate Rehabilitation DepartSan Quentin Aug. 2I after he ment office in Sim Mateo.
allegedly pulled a smuggled gun
Total damage was estimated
in the prison "adjustment at more than $100,000. There
.center" and touched off a were nil injuries.
bloody rampage in which the
Anonymous telephone call$ in
center's prisoners were re- Sa~ramento and San FranCisco,
leased, and three white guards and a letter received by the
and two while convicts were Sim Francisco Eilll1llner indi·
slashed, ·beaten, garrotted and cated the bombings were the
shot to death.
work of Weathermen, the
Early Saturday, bombs uderground terrorist organizawrecked the Sacramento head- lion. The letter said the acts
quarters of the · state Depart- were to express "outrage" over
ment of Corrections, which Jackson's "assassination."

•

You'll Want A Complete

-

ben pUI bim their 01in ~ black ~ priest, called
by l!lowillC up three state · Jac~n "a fire ever liurnlng"
olfi! es aaoa llGI1hl!m Califor· for black freedom, .00 Black
Ilia._
Panther Co.foll!lder Huey NewFwtnd
vita fir the 30- loll said "the oppressor will get
J*-&lt;lld. black. revolutionary Ured SOOle day" and "the
W8e held at St. Augusilne's people will ~ bil kneecaps
f¥••pl a..dlln Oakland's off .,. we'U slit every throat of
black ghetto, behind an bonor the people who oppress us."
gDiri of 40 Black Panthers and Jwitice In America said the
'irith a blue-and-lllaet Panther Rev. Fr. Earl Neil, pastor of
11q
frcm the tlip of the St. Augustine's ill a monstrous
clocll'.
system enslaving . blacks
An estimated 1,J!O persons _through all-white juries and
attended, spilliDK out of the "while IJ.enchmen known as
clwrdl and acr!ll8 the lntersec- racists."
tiCII ri two streets outside.
l)!ewton said the last stateThe presiding minjster, 11 ment be ever heard from

Yen Climbs
5-6%
in 1st
.
Trading Day

em

D~ne,

Out to Sea

*
,...
mi...

r.

•

•

I

1

�. ..

'

..

Weaver, Rodgers
In.Pro PlayOff
PINEHURST, N.C. (UPI) Dewitt Weaver, winless in
aeveq years on the pro tour, and
Phil ·Rodgers_, seeking his first
victory in five years, won
semifinal matches Saturday in
the $200,000 U, .S,. Ptofessional
Match Play championship.
Weaver shot a fiv~Ver-par

.
.
'
Qlft liNG READY - Two _..,.,..., of the W•bama
Willie Fa1coas 1971 foolball team are shown "taking their
lmmps" In IftpsraUm for tiJe sea11011 opener Sept. 3against
Wlrt 111gb atEIIzabetiJ. Bact David Morgan Is pictured going
Into Rick HerilOII, holding blocking dllllliDY.

Meigs, Pointers·
In Practice ·Tilt
BY KEITH WISECUP
ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs Marauders bumped
beads with the SoutiJ Point
I"WWters lllst night at Middleport Stadlwn, ·gtvlng each
coach an idea of what is to come
thiB season.
Ullually In the first scrimmage of tbe year, mistakes are
common. These are wh&amp;t the
practice games are for, to
minimize errors. Scoring 'is low
In most of tiJese games because
tbe offense lags behind the
d!*nae tbe first few weeks.
A acrlmmage game Is unique.
There are no punts, kickoffs, or
quarters. The first team witiJ
tbe baD starts from Its own 40,
keeping the ball unW IIIey fall to
make a.first down.
_
Tile team with tiJe ball can
decide to go for tiJe necessary
Yupardastbe ~~af'!~}amowne dorecig~ded
·ve

tailback; Ron Smith (150 lb.
Senior) wingback; Jeff Morris
(150 lb. Senior) and Larry
Hannon (187lb. Senior), ends;
Fred lee (206 lb. Senior) and
Mark Werry ( 244 lb. Junior)
tackles; Ted Lehew ( 160 lb.
'Senior) and Roger Dixon (151
lb. Senior) guards, and Ed
Young (156 lb. Senior) center.
On Defense, Morris and
Hannon, 'ends; lee and John
Grueser (199 lb. Senior, or Lou
McKinney ( 175 lb. Junior)
tackles; John Thomas (162 lb.
Senior) middle guard; T.
Williams and Dallas Weber (174
lb. Junior) or Lehew,
linebackers; Smith and Keith
Van lnwagen ( 146 lb. Senior)
cornerbacks, and Rick Ash (146
lb. Senior), and Chuck Faulk
(160 lb. Junior) or Vaughan,
deep backs.

T
- dl"ans
J.ll____
downfield, uaually 30
,.rda.
serves as
punt Outlast
U and when a team scores,
attempts tbe atra point, then
.
gives
t.ll back to tile op- · T
•
)IOIIitlon on the opposition's
wms

By Ulliled Press lntematloaal
PRINCETON,
N.J.-Halfback lee l!ouggesa plunged
one-yard for one touchdown and
brok~ away for 52 yards for
another,
to }ead _ the
Philadelphia Eagles to a 26-14
victory over the New York
Giants in NFL pre season
football Saturday. The Giants,
playing their first game in New
Jersey since they announced
Thursday they would move to
tiJe state, lost tiJeir fourth
straight pre-season game,
despite tile Wtisan cheers of
New Jersey Gov. William T.
~ill and most of _the crowd at
Prln~ton Umverstty's Palmer
Stadiwn.
Quarterback Fran ~arken~
was shut out by Philadelphia
unW the final quarter, when .he
connected on a 33-yard tou_chdown pass to Grambling
't Y rook'Le C0 Ieman
·
Umvem
Zeno.
BEARS WIN
NOTRE DAME, Ind. - The
Chicago Bears held off a fourth
quarter comeback by the
winless Cleveland Browns for a
20-19 exhibition game victory
Saturday in the first
professional football game ever
played in Notre Dame stadiwn.
The Bears grabbed a ~ 12
fourth quarter lead on Packer
castoff Jim Grabowski's 47-

....., ,... •..,

dlslana!
This

the

It

· American League Standings

%~~:'i:a~'e:~l!l~!~~~:~l
1

the

4Gyard Une. Also, coaches and
Immediate substitutes stand on
_the lleld behind their own team.
This gives a coach a better look
at his team. In most caaes, tile
first alringers PIa Y one another
for about '?I hour, or a
stipulated se!1es of downs. ~
reserves fmish up, averagmg
also about an hour.
The probable, or possible
lineups last night for the
Marauders were,
A~dy
Vaughan, (174 _ lb. Ju~tor)
quarterback; TinY Williams •(175lb. Senior) fullback; Mark
Williams (150 lb. Senior)

AllENTION
BCM'LERS!

Bowling shirts can be
ordered. Cleek with us
for all your sporting
uniform needs!

THE

UNIFORM CENTER
Across From
Gallipolis,

P.o.
o.

:AST

.
CLEVELAND (UPI) _ Ray
Foose~• grand slam, a three-run
homer by Vada Pinson and John
Lowenstein's two-run shot
.
helped rookie Mark Ballinger
pick up his first Major League
Yictory Saturday · as the
Cleveland Indians outlasted the
Minnesota Twina, 9-8.
A pair of homers by Rich
Reese and a solo homer by Tony
Oliva propelled the Twins to an
11-6lead after five innings. IM
Pinson who was the onl9
starting player without a hit,
smacked his ninth homer off

: reliver Ray Corbin in tbe sixth
to put Cleveland ahead, 9-8. .
• n 1 d · tile
Th e Tw,ms took a""
ea m
first inning on singles by Rod
'ld itch d
Carew,
Oliva,
a
WI p
an
Reese's two-run homer. They
added three more in tile third on
solo homers by Oliva, Reese
and_ a run-scoring double by
Gralg Nettles.
. .
.. Lowenstein belted hiS fll'st
homer of the year in the second
·
and Foose's second _MaJOr
League grand slammer tied the
score at 6-6 in the third.
:

:
:
:
:
:

Pet. GB
-~ ll'l2
:519 15
.496 18 .
·&lt;123 27112
,3973 1

L

~ ~

Boston
68 113
· New York
65 ~
WCiash 1ingtdon 5525 79
eve an
WEST
w L
~~~~~dCity ~ · !~
Chicago
62 69
California
62 70
Minnesota
58 71

Pet. GB

:~) 15
.473 22
.470 22'12
.450 25
Mllwa~'i::rdai•! ~e~uit~ 2 28 '12
Cleveland 9 Minnesota 8
Oetroit,5 Chicago 4
Oakland
10 Washington 6
Balli. 9 Mllw.
4
(lsi Twilight)
Milwaukee at Baltimore
!2ndKans
Night)
NY at
City (Nig ht)
Boston at California ( Nlghtl
Suncioy's Games
Washington at Oakland (21
14 30
1
' p. em. f (
)
Boston
at
all S P- m.
Nej York at Kans City (2:30 p.

: ARE YOU READY
: FOR wINTER? :_
CHECK YOUR
:
'

-

~hicago at Detroit (2, 30 P· m.) his 14th victory against three

Minnesota at cleveland (1 :30
· ~\l'.Jaukee at Baltimore (5, 30
p. m,)
Monday's Game
Kansas City at Baltimore
!night)
. (On ly game scheduled)

e::'

·

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1
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1
1•
1

,

STO.RM ·DOORS
STORM WINDOWS
INSULATION
fiNAL PAINJJNG
ROO-fiNG-

caro1ma• Lumber &amp;
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o

S.turd1y's Resurts

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,

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...--

......

.,. ... r

...,_· ~·
~­

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'6.99

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49'

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.-;·....... *. •*** •••• ****** ••••

I bbMIS

110296 DEWXE MIRROMAflC

Sunday's Games

San Diego at Montreal 12:15

·-...
••
,.

88

j ~~:fngeles at New York (2:05

:• San
Francisco af Philadelphia
(1:35p.m.)
: Aflanta at Chicago 12:15 ·p.m.i
1 ~-~~~~nnall at St. Louis (1 : 25

0-

·,.-...-.
~

~

Hardware

'

'14·•

'• .

..

SCREENS

Pittsburgh at Houston 13 p.m.)
Monday's Games
:, •
y
Philadelphia at Piftsburgh
.
· Montreal at Chicago
'
• New York at Sf. Louis (night)
San Diego af cinclnnal) (night)
~
Los Angeles af Houston (night)
£••••••••• ,,, .. ,, ,, ,,,,,,~ ... ,.~,, ....... ,,, ,,,,,,, ,,, , ,, ,, 1 COnly g•rnis schedutldJ

:,

POINT PLEASANT :

Factory Cost S3162.74
'101' Pak 101.00

--

lid's Rec.

••

••
"•

••

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-..,•
.... ,
~

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GRASS SEED

...-·-

Heck's Reg.
'1.24

-...

Factory Cosl$3099.69
'101' Pak 101.00

.,

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.....

2 GAlLON

PHARM.CY

'1.61

'1

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"Point Pleasinrs Leading Drug Store"

-

See the "Dependables"

'3200.69

"OHIO'S OLDEST DODGE DEALER"
.

S. Second Ave.
. 992·2151 - 992-2152 Middleport, Ohio
'

•

•

$3533.71

-R. H. Rawlings _
Sons Co.

at Rawlings
PEARL ASH
EMERSON JONES
HILTON JONES
WALLACE AMBERGER
DICK RAWLINGS

POLARA
Factory Cost $3432.71
'101' Pak 101.00

lX1 all Am er ican Motors new 1971 cars in stock - our factory has announ ced they
will send the 7 per cent Fed. Excise tax directly to you - WHE.THER OR NOT
Congress passes the Tax removal. You are assured that on any 1971 Amer,ican
Motors Car -purchased from us that you will.get a check in the mail within 45 days
for the tax refund - there's no way to lose on this fantastic promotion from
American Motors. 11-1971 American Motors units in stock ready to go .

~

FRUTH

YA'U HURRY NOW

2

41b.Bag

Heel's RIJ&amp;.

$326174

r

-~

•. . ....

2501

We will also have 1972 models in our showroom - however
this '101' Sale will not apply to them, even though the '72
models will have '71 prices for at least 90 days during the
"freeze" - after the 90 day period - ??? - buy now while
you are assured of the best deal ever from "Dependable
City" .

-- If you should have a 196B Chevrolet Impala 2 Dr. H.-Top, VB,
~- p.-steering, automatic, average or above, your loan value of
;-: your car would be $1075.00. D~uct this from the_$3503.61 and
..-::- your balance will be $2428.61 dtffe~ence by tradmg yo~r car
· • to us on the above model ... All pnces, of course, sub1ect to
:_ state sales tax and filing fees.

Hlidwn

MOTOR OIL

SALE ENDS 5:00P.M. SEPT. 29th.

••
"

66'• J222Z

.J!ne.

SALE STARTS SEPT. 1st, 8:00A.M.

·~

9!' ID$177

,_

OUR '101' PAK------------• 101 .00

•

FOLDING
ASST. SJZFS
lAWN
BEDS SPRINKLER WINDOW
Hid's Reg.
·'5.48

WHILE THIS 4 WEEK SALE IS ON.

,'"__

COOLER
Heel's Reg.
'19.99

OUR COST ON THIS UNIT--!3402.61

·-••- =~~ ~~-~---~----13503.61

THERMOS

SEVEN DAYS AWEEK

SEE THE "DEPENDABLE$" AT RAWLINGS

- ~

NO. 7751

ROCKET

FOR THE '71 MODEL OF YOUR CHOia

·~

'

9:00 A.M. nlllO:OO P.ll.

READY TO GO.

:; 1971 Dodge Coronet Custom 4 Door Sedan, VB engine, radio,
·-; p-steering, tinted glass, air conditioning, vinyl roof, w-s;:_ walls, all the standard items included from the factory---

Heel's RIJ&amp;, '15.99

PHARMACIST
•

13-1971 DODGE UNITS IN STOCK

.

'

Hedl's Ree. 13.88

ALL OF OUR 1971 NEW CARS IN STOCK WILL REFLECT
THESE PRICES ... WE WILL SHOW YOU OUR COST· ...
SHOW YOU YOUR TRADE IN THE N.A.D.A. BOOK AND
GO FROM THERE ... UPTO YOU TO DO THE REST ...

t we are starting our 101st year in business in Meigs County and Wt •. . •1 celebrate
]his achievement this way: 01 all 1971 models in stock we will show you our
- actual cost price from factory and add ! 101 to this cost and sel l the car to you .
'.'This can only apply to NO TRADE deals; if you have a trade, we will allow you
· Joan value of your trade (taken from the August N.A. D. A. 13ook) and f igure the
·]leal the same way. If this sounds confusing look at the example below.

•3.88

1

'2177.98

..

~ -

Heck's IIJ&amp;. IJ..49

'13·

If Congress passes the 7 per cent Federal Excise tax removal, this will be passed
on to you by the factories by check in your name and sent direct to you !probable
time expiring between Congress passing the measure and you receiving the
check in 90 days). This will amount to another $200 per new car deal you will get
back .

To help us clear a path for the 1972 models, we're going to
have a '101' sale on all1971 m!)dels in stock ... no gimmicks,
hidden charges, everything on the open and above side ...
~ here is whatthis will mean to vou ...
·

99°

OOOKER

Rawlings 'Dependable City' Announces
A '101' Sale

•

aiEST

PRESSURE

-·

2

UNDER BED STORAGE

SKILLET SET

If You Can Keep This Quiet,
You'll Get First Pick

·--·--

lied's'11.44

CABINET
1 oz.. so cr.

...... ...*******************************************

•s·
$8.6&amp;
.., ..
33e

Heck's Ree.

!
'•

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS co.

~

•

lien
tile
11
derway, il GalllpellaUdMlqet
FHlball
llld 3SI
f tile 00_72 :
,.: illdlvldaal
::::... Ale wiD
week wltiJ b 11 Dr) 'I _.
1
1140
tile drive. Tile &amp;al .... year 11
1,... ladlvldulb Sau4
members.
Meaawlalle, Be
en,
cbalrmaa •f tlae llulaeaa
membenlllp eampalp uaeaaeed 155 I I 111 &amp;.. Ill
tiJe dty lldiMI 1111 let 11a
pardwed , 11

,,

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TYPEWRmR
. - - .r - -

--ed

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:

l, 112 SIXTH SJ,

PL~NT

POINT

6~

4 Chicago
3
• Atlanta
New York
9 Los Angeles
2 (1st I
: New York 2 Los Angeles I l2ndl
: San Francisco 5 Philadelphia 2
(1st twilight)
: ' San
Francisco at Philadelphia
• , (2nd night)
Clncinnafi at St. Louis (night)
: PittsburgH dl Houston (night)
~~~Diego at Montreal 121 ppd

:,=

1s00 P.M. - 71110 P.M.

~~:am:e:s~.

:

o

TIGERS WIN
DETROIT (UPI) - Gatea
Br own raced ........,
~-- W1w
..._ tbe
winningrunwbenfintbapman
Mike Andrews dropped au
attempted double play tbrow
from catcher Tom Egan
Saturday to give tbe Detroit
Tigers a 5-4 victmy over tbe
Chicago White Soz.
'llllli8liiii8IIIIB----•
Ill
·
·
Ell New
GAlLIPOLIS •
cbalrnwl of Clle llhle omio
Boosters
Clab'a laoUrldul
embenllip drive,
m tania atter.. lllld are.

~

Sunda1 Savings

w;

·.=;-·

:

:

He mov~ Into the aemlflnal
roundbymestnkewitlla 71_72
win over Lou Graham
Crampton's quarterfinal
tory was a 18-72 triumph over
Arnold Palmer.
"It was a mentalletdmm for
him and, I guess, for me, too,"
said Wea'lier discussing tbe
higb«&lt;ring ~Hodgen, wba8e last vicDy
· tbe ''91&amp; Bakt ~
came
m
• ...t;ng..,.....,
had little trouble
SliD,
who had five bogeys and a
birdi' ,..,_ sank fl birds
e.•.......,~.
ve
and bogeyed am, twice for his
best round G( the kunament.
The blond, 331Tear-old San
Diego native eiJ)Ialned his
showing as a "Fortunate day on
tiJe green."
"We played similarly,"
Rodgers said. "Be didn't play
tiJat badly."
He eliminated George
Knudson ro-73 earlier in the day
while Still was nipping Tom
Weiskopf in an atra bole after
tying at 71-71.
•
"I don't mind double rounds
_ especially If I'm winning,"
said Rodgers. "I've always
enjoyed this type of COOl·
petition."
Smnyskiescoveredt1Je6,myard course for Sabriay's 3&amp;
holes of play.
In the quarll!rfinal romd,
Crampton forged ahead of
Palmerontbeaeouldbolewben
he sank a :ID-foot putt and never
fell behind.

2

'

0..

tomorrow ,

='

.

~

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=

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.....

zZ(-i'81'd F

~_!__ ....._ .&amp;.L... ............. ,_ """' ,...

r

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....

losses.
BALTIMORE-Elrod Hendricks drove in five runs with a
three-run homer and a double
and DaveMcNally,16-4, won his
lOth strat'ght game Wl'th om'·~
wr
inning relief help from Eddie
Nationol League Standings
Watt as the Baltimore Orioles
BY United Presslnternati_onal scored a 1M victory over the
,
'
(Night Games Not Included)
f~!Uwa';lkee Brewers Saturday
L Pet. GB mght m the first game of a
Pittsburgh
78 ss .586
doubleheader. For the Orioles, tiJe
m ,.:.
1
St. Louis
71 60 .542 6
the victory was tbeir sixth in a
.::
., _ afiK
Chicago
70 60 .538 6'12 row and nintiJ in their last 10 -com --L- __. -AO11 • . _
New York
65 64 .504 11
lwo ,.~ • ..,..,,._
11

•

:

TAIWAN WINS
WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. Cbin-Mu Hsu pitched no-hlt, norun baseball for eight innings
Saturday after giving up tiJree
runs in tile first inning as
Taiwan scored nine runs in tiJe
9lh inning to defeat Gary, Ind.,
12-3 and win tbe 25th Little
League World Series championship.
Earlier Hawaii downed
Madrid, Spain, 3-1 for the
consolation win before a Major
League Size crowd of 32,000 at
Lamade Stadium.
· Hsu gave up three runs to
Gary before he settled down as
Taiwan picked its second World
Series title in three years. Hsu
. the
struck out 23 ba tters durmg
next eight innings and the
fartliest Gary got was one
runner on third base in tile
seventh inning.
OAKLAND WINS
OAKLAND - Sal Bando,
back in the Uneup after missing
three games because of an
· ·~
injury, drove In five runs WI"'
his fourth career grand slam
and a single Saturday as tile
Oakland A's routed the
Washington Senators, 10-6.
Bando's home.r capped a fiverun second mning rally tllat
gave the A's a 7-3 lead and
rewarded Chuck Doubson WI··~
w

&gt;

;
1'--

:• Monfreal
Philadelphia 54
56 73 .434
_ _ _ _ _ _. : : : : : ; : ; : : : :
.425 20
21
:
West
:
W L Pet. GB
San Francisco 77 55 .583 .
Los Angeles 69 63 .523 8
Atlanta
69 67 .507 10
• .,... ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,. _
66 68 .481
.49611'12
: Cincinnati
Ho~ston
63
13112
: San Diego
49 82 . .374 27'12

•

:
:

~l~.:i'te

w

GIANTs WIN
PIULADELPHIA - Willie
Mays hit his 17th home 1'lill of
the season Saturday night and
came up with a clutch catch to
lead the San Francisco Giants
to a ~2 victory over t1Je
Philadelphia Pbilliesin the first
game of a doublehea~.
Ma '
lch
in the
ys ca
came
bottom of tbe tiJird inning after
the Giants broke on top 2-0 In
their half of the frame on a walk
to Chris Speier, a stolen base,
an RBI singles by Alan
Gallagher and Ken Henderson.
The Pbillies had runners on tiJe
corners ·with one out as Terry
Harmon and losing pitcher
Woody Fryman singled.

-~

,__
·~·

$17. . in tbe lola'DaiiB!t.
Weaver, a 31.,_-Gid Allata
resident who bas De'RI' . , . a
professional tournament,
mana ed to beat am, •the
first iwe. Be ~ded tbree
bogeys and ooe triple qey
hicb came 00 the
111 bole. .
"I e::"yed awfully bad, but
P
.,
'd
~ruce played worse, 881
~~~ win witiJ a 71 today
maybe 1 C8JI win witiJ a

:ree .

•

•

·-.....

·= :=::

yard touchdown run and an
eight-yard TD !lY ~ ~y,
before Cleveland rallied behind
Vete~an quarterback, Bill
Nelsen.
.
Nelsen engineered a 96-yard
drive, capped by a 27-ym:"
touchdown pass to Danker F811'
Hooker at 6:54 of the final
quarter. He then quickly
lrought tiJe surging BNwiD
bsck to tiJe Chicago ~· but Will
llnrarted when Beer linebao ker
Doug Buffooe picked oft a Dat
pass Intended for fnllba~ Bo
ScO!t·witiJ mly 2:03 remaning
In tile game.

.

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

.

,,.......29 1m
.Ana

•

......

77 to edge Australiail Bruce up a ""';'•_
down f..- the Sli,_OIII
Crampton by a single stroke. first pme Somday. 1be 1i11e
Rodgers fired a three41der 69 maldl,alao televised, 1!ill begin
for a seven-&lt;~troke margin over at 2:10 p. m. (EOT).
Ken Still.
Cr~~~~~p!lm, the 1971 W~ .
The matches, played before a ()pen champion, and Sti!l,
gallery of &amp;,300 at the countryJ Winner ~ last .~·· ~
club .of NortiJ CaroUna and a ,&lt;Ji!en, will aq-e !Ill Ill a
national television aUdience, :Set cmsolatioo maldl _llartiQg_ lO
llllnute8 belen tbe Iitle cDl

Saturday Roundup

~-'l
. ---BIBI'-111-1-uau
t &amp;~'"*'
wi,S "

. ...

..

•

l

.)

�. ..

'

..

Weaver, Rodgers
In.Pro PlayOff
PINEHURST, N.C. (UPI) Dewitt Weaver, winless in
aeveq years on the pro tour, and
Phil ·Rodgers_, seeking his first
victory in five years, won
semifinal matches Saturday in
the $200,000 U, .S,. Ptofessional
Match Play championship.
Weaver shot a fiv~Ver-par

.
.
'
Qlft liNG READY - Two _..,.,..., of the W•bama
Willie Fa1coas 1971 foolball team are shown "taking their
lmmps" In IftpsraUm for tiJe sea11011 opener Sept. 3against
Wlrt 111gb atEIIzabetiJ. Bact David Morgan Is pictured going
Into Rick HerilOII, holding blocking dllllliDY.

Meigs, Pointers·
In Practice ·Tilt
BY KEITH WISECUP
ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs Marauders bumped
beads with the SoutiJ Point
I"WWters lllst night at Middleport Stadlwn, ·gtvlng each
coach an idea of what is to come
thiB season.
Ullually In the first scrimmage of tbe year, mistakes are
common. These are wh&amp;t the
practice games are for, to
minimize errors. Scoring 'is low
In most of tiJese games because
tbe offense lags behind the
d!*nae tbe first few weeks.
A acrlmmage game Is unique.
There are no punts, kickoffs, or
quarters. The first team witiJ
tbe baD starts from Its own 40,
keeping the ball unW IIIey fall to
make a.first down.
_
Tile team with tiJe ball can
decide to go for tiJe necessary
Yupardastbe ~~af'!~}amowne dorecig~ded
·ve

tailback; Ron Smith (150 lb.
Senior) wingback; Jeff Morris
(150 lb. Senior) and Larry
Hannon (187lb. Senior), ends;
Fred lee (206 lb. Senior) and
Mark Werry ( 244 lb. Junior)
tackles; Ted Lehew ( 160 lb.
'Senior) and Roger Dixon (151
lb. Senior) guards, and Ed
Young (156 lb. Senior) center.
On Defense, Morris and
Hannon, 'ends; lee and John
Grueser (199 lb. Senior, or Lou
McKinney ( 175 lb. Junior)
tackles; John Thomas (162 lb.
Senior) middle guard; T.
Williams and Dallas Weber (174
lb. Junior) or Lehew,
linebackers; Smith and Keith
Van lnwagen ( 146 lb. Senior)
cornerbacks, and Rick Ash (146
lb. Senior), and Chuck Faulk
(160 lb. Junior) or Vaughan,
deep backs.

T
- dl"ans
J.ll____
downfield, uaually 30
,.rda.
serves as
punt Outlast
U and when a team scores,
attempts tbe atra point, then
.
gives
t.ll back to tile op- · T
•
)IOIIitlon on the opposition's
wms

By Ulliled Press lntematloaal
PRINCETON,
N.J.-Halfback lee l!ouggesa plunged
one-yard for one touchdown and
brok~ away for 52 yards for
another,
to }ead _ the
Philadelphia Eagles to a 26-14
victory over the New York
Giants in NFL pre season
football Saturday. The Giants,
playing their first game in New
Jersey since they announced
Thursday they would move to
tiJe state, lost tiJeir fourth
straight pre-season game,
despite tile Wtisan cheers of
New Jersey Gov. William T.
~ill and most of _the crowd at
Prln~ton Umverstty's Palmer
Stadiwn.
Quarterback Fran ~arken~
was shut out by Philadelphia
unW the final quarter, when .he
connected on a 33-yard tou_chdown pass to Grambling
't Y rook'Le C0 Ieman
·
Umvem
Zeno.
BEARS WIN
NOTRE DAME, Ind. - The
Chicago Bears held off a fourth
quarter comeback by the
winless Cleveland Browns for a
20-19 exhibition game victory
Saturday in the first
professional football game ever
played in Notre Dame stadiwn.
The Bears grabbed a ~ 12
fourth quarter lead on Packer
castoff Jim Grabowski's 47-

....., ,... •..,

dlslana!
This

the

It

· American League Standings

%~~:'i:a~'e:~l!l~!~~~:~l
1

the

4Gyard Une. Also, coaches and
Immediate substitutes stand on
_the lleld behind their own team.
This gives a coach a better look
at his team. In most caaes, tile
first alringers PIa Y one another
for about '?I hour, or a
stipulated se!1es of downs. ~
reserves fmish up, averagmg
also about an hour.
The probable, or possible
lineups last night for the
Marauders were,
A~dy
Vaughan, (174 _ lb. Ju~tor)
quarterback; TinY Williams •(175lb. Senior) fullback; Mark
Williams (150 lb. Senior)

AllENTION
BCM'LERS!

Bowling shirts can be
ordered. Cleek with us
for all your sporting
uniform needs!

THE

UNIFORM CENTER
Across From
Gallipolis,

P.o.
o.

:AST

.
CLEVELAND (UPI) _ Ray
Foose~• grand slam, a three-run
homer by Vada Pinson and John
Lowenstein's two-run shot
.
helped rookie Mark Ballinger
pick up his first Major League
Yictory Saturday · as the
Cleveland Indians outlasted the
Minnesota Twina, 9-8.
A pair of homers by Rich
Reese and a solo homer by Tony
Oliva propelled the Twins to an
11-6lead after five innings. IM
Pinson who was the onl9
starting player without a hit,
smacked his ninth homer off

: reliver Ray Corbin in tbe sixth
to put Cleveland ahead, 9-8. .
• n 1 d · tile
Th e Tw,ms took a""
ea m
first inning on singles by Rod
'ld itch d
Carew,
Oliva,
a
WI p
an
Reese's two-run homer. They
added three more in tile third on
solo homers by Oliva, Reese
and_ a run-scoring double by
Gralg Nettles.
. .
.. Lowenstein belted hiS fll'st
homer of the year in the second
·
and Foose's second _MaJOr
League grand slammer tied the
score at 6-6 in the third.
:

:
:
:
:
:

Pet. GB
-~ ll'l2
:519 15
.496 18 .
·&lt;123 27112
,3973 1

L

~ ~

Boston
68 113
· New York
65 ~
WCiash 1ingtdon 5525 79
eve an
WEST
w L
~~~~~dCity ~ · !~
Chicago
62 69
California
62 70
Minnesota
58 71

Pet. GB

:~) 15
.473 22
.470 22'12
.450 25
Mllwa~'i::rdai•! ~e~uit~ 2 28 '12
Cleveland 9 Minnesota 8
Oetroit,5 Chicago 4
Oakland
10 Washington 6
Balli. 9 Mllw.
4
(lsi Twilight)
Milwaukee at Baltimore
!2ndKans
Night)
NY at
City (Nig ht)
Boston at California ( Nlghtl
Suncioy's Games
Washington at Oakland (21
14 30
1
' p. em. f (
)
Boston
at
all S P- m.
Nej York at Kans City (2:30 p.

: ARE YOU READY
: FOR wINTER? :_
CHECK YOUR
:
'

-

~hicago at Detroit (2, 30 P· m.) his 14th victory against three

Minnesota at cleveland (1 :30
· ~\l'.Jaukee at Baltimore (5, 30
p. m,)
Monday's Game
Kansas City at Baltimore
!night)
. (On ly game scheduled)

e::'

·

:,o

1
:•
1
1•
1

,

STO.RM ·DOORS
STORM WINDOWS
INSULATION
fiNAL PAINJJNG
ROO-fiNG-

caro1ma• Lumber &amp;
• ( suppIy c0.
o

S.turd1y's Resurts

,C". ·

..

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·:---

STORE ON~Y

,

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'6.99

'5·~·
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BAR
STOOLS ~

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POLE
LAMPS
•

'6.99

REOORD
Hid's
Ree.
49'

FOAM CUPS·

Hli

~-

_,

.-;·....... *. •*** •••• ****** ••••

I bbMIS

110296 DEWXE MIRROMAflC

Sunday's Games

San Diego at Montreal 12:15

·-...
••
,.

88

j ~~:fngeles at New York (2:05

:• San
Francisco af Philadelphia
(1:35p.m.)
: Aflanta at Chicago 12:15 ·p.m.i
1 ~-~~~~nnall at St. Louis (1 : 25

0-

·,.-...-.
~

~

Hardware

'

'14·•

'• .

..

SCREENS

Pittsburgh at Houston 13 p.m.)
Monday's Games
:, •
y
Philadelphia at Piftsburgh
.
· Montreal at Chicago
'
• New York at Sf. Louis (night)
San Diego af cinclnnal) (night)
~
Los Angeles af Houston (night)
£••••••••• ,,, .. ,, ,, ,,,,,,~ ... ,.~,, ....... ,,, ,,,,,,, ,,, , ,, ,, 1 COnly g•rnis schedutldJ

:,

POINT PLEASANT :

Factory Cost S3162.74
'101' Pak 101.00

--

lid's Rec.

••

••
"•

••

--~
• A

-..,•
.... ,
~

-

GRASS SEED

...-·-

Heck's Reg.
'1.24

-...

Factory Cosl$3099.69
'101' Pak 101.00

.,

••

.....

2 GAlLON

PHARM.CY

'1.61

'1

~

·-..
h

•

.31

..
~

•

.
:
w

r

-_•,

"Point Pleasinrs Leading Drug Store"

-

See the "Dependables"

'3200.69

"OHIO'S OLDEST DODGE DEALER"
.

S. Second Ave.
. 992·2151 - 992-2152 Middleport, Ohio
'

•

•

$3533.71

-R. H. Rawlings _
Sons Co.

at Rawlings
PEARL ASH
EMERSON JONES
HILTON JONES
WALLACE AMBERGER
DICK RAWLINGS

POLARA
Factory Cost $3432.71
'101' Pak 101.00

lX1 all Am er ican Motors new 1971 cars in stock - our factory has announ ced they
will send the 7 per cent Fed. Excise tax directly to you - WHE.THER OR NOT
Congress passes the Tax removal. You are assured that on any 1971 Amer,ican
Motors Car -purchased from us that you will.get a check in the mail within 45 days
for the tax refund - there's no way to lose on this fantastic promotion from
American Motors. 11-1971 American Motors units in stock ready to go .

~

FRUTH

YA'U HURRY NOW

2

41b.Bag

Heel's RIJ&amp;.

$326174

r

-~

•. . ....

2501

We will also have 1972 models in our showroom - however
this '101' Sale will not apply to them, even though the '72
models will have '71 prices for at least 90 days during the
"freeze" - after the 90 day period - ??? - buy now while
you are assured of the best deal ever from "Dependable
City" .

-- If you should have a 196B Chevrolet Impala 2 Dr. H.-Top, VB,
~- p.-steering, automatic, average or above, your loan value of
;-: your car would be $1075.00. D~uct this from the_$3503.61 and
..-::- your balance will be $2428.61 dtffe~ence by tradmg yo~r car
· • to us on the above model ... All pnces, of course, sub1ect to
:_ state sales tax and filing fees.

Hlidwn

MOTOR OIL

SALE ENDS 5:00P.M. SEPT. 29th.

••
"

66'• J222Z

.J!ne.

SALE STARTS SEPT. 1st, 8:00A.M.

·~

9!' ID$177

,_

OUR '101' PAK------------• 101 .00

•

FOLDING
ASST. SJZFS
lAWN
BEDS SPRINKLER WINDOW
Hid's Reg.
·'5.48

WHILE THIS 4 WEEK SALE IS ON.

,'"__

COOLER
Heel's Reg.
'19.99

OUR COST ON THIS UNIT--!3402.61

·-••- =~~ ~~-~---~----13503.61

THERMOS

SEVEN DAYS AWEEK

SEE THE "DEPENDABLE$" AT RAWLINGS

- ~

NO. 7751

ROCKET

FOR THE '71 MODEL OF YOUR CHOia

·~

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9:00 A.M. nlllO:OO P.ll.

READY TO GO.

:; 1971 Dodge Coronet Custom 4 Door Sedan, VB engine, radio,
·-; p-steering, tinted glass, air conditioning, vinyl roof, w-s;:_ walls, all the standard items included from the factory---

Heel's RIJ&amp;, '15.99

PHARMACIST
•

13-1971 DODGE UNITS IN STOCK

.

'

Hedl's Ree. 13.88

ALL OF OUR 1971 NEW CARS IN STOCK WILL REFLECT
THESE PRICES ... WE WILL SHOW YOU OUR COST· ...
SHOW YOU YOUR TRADE IN THE N.A.D.A. BOOK AND
GO FROM THERE ... UPTO YOU TO DO THE REST ...

t we are starting our 101st year in business in Meigs County and Wt •. . •1 celebrate
]his achievement this way: 01 all 1971 models in stock we will show you our
- actual cost price from factory and add ! 101 to this cost and sel l the car to you .
'.'This can only apply to NO TRADE deals; if you have a trade, we will allow you
· Joan value of your trade (taken from the August N.A. D. A. 13ook) and f igure the
·]leal the same way. If this sounds confusing look at the example below.

•3.88

1

'2177.98

..

~ -

Heck's IIJ&amp;. IJ..49

'13·

If Congress passes the 7 per cent Federal Excise tax removal, this will be passed
on to you by the factories by check in your name and sent direct to you !probable
time expiring between Congress passing the measure and you receiving the
check in 90 days). This will amount to another $200 per new car deal you will get
back .

To help us clear a path for the 1972 models, we're going to
have a '101' sale on all1971 m!)dels in stock ... no gimmicks,
hidden charges, everything on the open and above side ...
~ here is whatthis will mean to vou ...
·

99°

OOOKER

Rawlings 'Dependable City' Announces
A '101' Sale

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aiEST

PRESSURE

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2

UNDER BED STORAGE

SKILLET SET

If You Can Keep This Quiet,
You'll Get First Pick

·--·--

lied's'11.44

CABINET
1 oz.. so cr.

...... ...*******************************************

•s·
$8.6&amp;
.., ..
33e

Heck's Ree.

!
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R. H. RAWLINGS SONS co.

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lien
tile
11
derway, il GalllpellaUdMlqet
FHlball
llld 3SI
f tile 00_72 :
,.: illdlvldaal
::::... Ale wiD
week wltiJ b 11 Dr) 'I _.
1
1140
tile drive. Tile &amp;al .... year 11
1,... ladlvldulb Sau4
members.
Meaawlalle, Be
en,
cbalrmaa •f tlae llulaeaa
membenlllp eampalp uaeaaeed 155 I I 111 &amp;.. Ill
tiJe dty lldiMI 1111 let 11a
pardwed , 11

,,

-

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0

TYPEWRmR
. - - .r - -

--ed

_

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l, 112 SIXTH SJ,

PL~NT

POINT

6~

4 Chicago
3
• Atlanta
New York
9 Los Angeles
2 (1st I
: New York 2 Los Angeles I l2ndl
: San Francisco 5 Philadelphia 2
(1st twilight)
: ' San
Francisco at Philadelphia
• , (2nd night)
Clncinnafi at St. Louis (night)
: PittsburgH dl Houston (night)
~~~Diego at Montreal 121 ppd

:,=

1s00 P.M. - 71110 P.M.

~~:am:e:s~.

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TIGERS WIN
DETROIT (UPI) - Gatea
Br own raced ........,
~-- W1w
..._ tbe
winningrunwbenfintbapman
Mike Andrews dropped au
attempted double play tbrow
from catcher Tom Egan
Saturday to give tbe Detroit
Tigers a 5-4 victmy over tbe
Chicago White Soz.
'llllli8liiii8IIIIB----•
Ill
·
·
Ell New
GAlLIPOLIS •
cbalrnwl of Clle llhle omio
Boosters
Clab'a laoUrldul
embenllip drive,
m tania atter.. lllld are.

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Sunda1 Savings

w;

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He mov~ Into the aemlflnal
roundbymestnkewitlla 71_72
win over Lou Graham
Crampton's quarterfinal
tory was a 18-72 triumph over
Arnold Palmer.
"It was a mentalletdmm for
him and, I guess, for me, too,"
said Wea'lier discussing tbe
higb«&lt;ring ~Hodgen, wba8e last vicDy
· tbe ''91&amp; Bakt ~
came
m
• ...t;ng..,.....,
had little trouble
SliD,
who had five bogeys and a
birdi' ,..,_ sank fl birds
e.•.......,~.
ve
and bogeyed am, twice for his
best round G( the kunament.
The blond, 331Tear-old San
Diego native eiJ)Ialned his
showing as a "Fortunate day on
tiJe green."
"We played similarly,"
Rodgers said. "Be didn't play
tiJat badly."
He eliminated George
Knudson ro-73 earlier in the day
while Still was nipping Tom
Weiskopf in an atra bole after
tying at 71-71.
•
"I don't mind double rounds
_ especially If I'm winning,"
said Rodgers. "I've always
enjoyed this type of COOl·
petition."
Smnyskiescoveredt1Je6,myard course for Sabriay's 3&amp;
holes of play.
In the quarll!rfinal romd,
Crampton forged ahead of
Palmerontbeaeouldbolewben
he sank a :ID-foot putt and never
fell behind.

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tomorrow ,

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losses.
BALTIMORE-Elrod Hendricks drove in five runs with a
three-run homer and a double
and DaveMcNally,16-4, won his
lOth strat'ght game Wl'th om'·~
wr
inning relief help from Eddie
Nationol League Standings
Watt as the Baltimore Orioles
BY United Presslnternati_onal scored a 1M victory over the
,
'
(Night Games Not Included)
f~!Uwa';lkee Brewers Saturday
L Pet. GB mght m the first game of a
Pittsburgh
78 ss .586
doubleheader. For the Orioles, tiJe
m ,.:.
1
St. Louis
71 60 .542 6
the victory was tbeir sixth in a
.::
., _ afiK
Chicago
70 60 .538 6'12 row and nintiJ in their last 10 -com --L- __. -AO11 • . _
New York
65 64 .504 11
lwo ,.~ • ..,..,,._
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TAIWAN WINS
WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. Cbin-Mu Hsu pitched no-hlt, norun baseball for eight innings
Saturday after giving up tiJree
runs in tile first inning as
Taiwan scored nine runs in tiJe
9lh inning to defeat Gary, Ind.,
12-3 and win tbe 25th Little
League World Series championship.
Earlier Hawaii downed
Madrid, Spain, 3-1 for the
consolation win before a Major
League Size crowd of 32,000 at
Lamade Stadium.
· Hsu gave up three runs to
Gary before he settled down as
Taiwan picked its second World
Series title in three years. Hsu
. the
struck out 23 ba tters durmg
next eight innings and the
fartliest Gary got was one
runner on third base in tile
seventh inning.
OAKLAND WINS
OAKLAND - Sal Bando,
back in the Uneup after missing
three games because of an
· ·~
injury, drove In five runs WI"'
his fourth career grand slam
and a single Saturday as tile
Oakland A's routed the
Washington Senators, 10-6.
Bando's home.r capped a fiverun second mning rally tllat
gave the A's a 7-3 lead and
rewarded Chuck Doubson WI··~
w

&gt;

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:• Monfreal
Philadelphia 54
56 73 .434
_ _ _ _ _ _. : : : : : ; : ; : : : :
.425 20
21
:
West
:
W L Pet. GB
San Francisco 77 55 .583 .
Los Angeles 69 63 .523 8
Atlanta
69 67 .507 10
• .,... ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,. _
66 68 .481
.49611'12
: Cincinnati
Ho~ston
63
13112
: San Diego
49 82 . .374 27'12

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~l~.:i'te

w

GIANTs WIN
PIULADELPHIA - Willie
Mays hit his 17th home 1'lill of
the season Saturday night and
came up with a clutch catch to
lead the San Francisco Giants
to a ~2 victory over t1Je
Philadelphia Pbilliesin the first
game of a doublehea~.
Ma '
lch
in the
ys ca
came
bottom of tbe tiJird inning after
the Giants broke on top 2-0 In
their half of the frame on a walk
to Chris Speier, a stolen base,
an RBI singles by Alan
Gallagher and Ken Henderson.
The Pbillies had runners on tiJe
corners ·with one out as Terry
Harmon and losing pitcher
Woody Fryman singled.

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$17. . in tbe lola'DaiiB!t.
Weaver, a 31.,_-Gid Allata
resident who bas De'RI' . , . a
professional tournament,
mana ed to beat am, •the
first iwe. Be ~ded tbree
bogeys and ooe triple qey
hicb came 00 the
111 bole. .
"I e::"yed awfully bad, but
P
.,
'd
~ruce played worse, 881
~~~ win witiJ a 71 today
maybe 1 C8JI win witiJ a

:ree .

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yard touchdown run and an
eight-yard TD !lY ~ ~y,
before Cleveland rallied behind
Vete~an quarterback, Bill
Nelsen.
.
Nelsen engineered a 96-yard
drive, capped by a 27-ym:"
touchdown pass to Danker F811'
Hooker at 6:54 of the final
quarter. He then quickly
lrought tiJe surging BNwiD
bsck to tiJe Chicago ~· but Will
llnrarted when Beer linebao ker
Doug Buffooe picked oft a Dat
pass Intended for fnllba~ Bo
ScO!t·witiJ mly 2:03 remaning
In tile game.

.

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.Ana

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77 to edge Australiail Bruce up a ""';'•_
down f..- the Sli,_OIII
Crampton by a single stroke. first pme Somday. 1be 1i11e
Rodgers fired a three41der 69 maldl,alao televised, 1!ill begin
for a seven-&lt;~troke margin over at 2:10 p. m. (EOT).
Ken Still.
Cr~~~~~p!lm, the 1971 W~ .
The matches, played before a ()pen champion, and Sti!l,
gallery of &amp;,300 at the countryJ Winner ~ last .~·· ~
club .of NortiJ CaroUna and a ,&lt;Ji!en, will aq-e !Ill Ill a
national television aUdience, :Set cmsolatioo maldl _llartiQg_ lO
llllnute8 belen tbe Iitle cDl

Saturday Roundup

~-'l
. ---BIBI'-111-1-uau
t &amp;~'"*'
wi,S "

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�L11

j'f __
.,...___
- .,
17'nlek
TIIII·~:-1~·~·~1~
~,~,~·~~~·.A~'II:-~·~~·lfll~---~-.,.l

Bobcats Score Once,

l,Dateline

.Blank CBS Panthers

II

.

CHESAPEAKE - s.....;... .QeetBobcals a one touchdown Collins' touchdown clime
la!flwd&lt; c.y Oifins ......., advantag~ over the Panthers in after sophomore tackle Ten-y
!IIIV8"frllll tbe
;adlll!!ll!ft lbe firs! scrimmage of ltl'/1 for ~Is picked up a Qlesapeake
SalaW,J 1o pe lbe ltfto!!" bolb clqbs. It was a repeat fumble and returned it to the
one yard stripe.
·
peifomwJce of 1!1'/0.
Tbe attempt fOF the eitra
poillts failed. Tbe gaine's ooly
touChdown came in the third
period.
Chesapeake' s offense
collected 10 first llotPm but did
. not score. Its ooly major threat
came midway in 'the, second
quarter when Black broke lOose
ST_ LOOJS (OPI) - 0. single_
oo. a 50 yard gallop. 'Jbe play,
cinDali Rllied in lbe llinlll ill- Sl Louis scored first in the however was nullifled on a
ning FriUy aigllt.ID 1lip lbe St. Stdlllll inning when Cruz belted clippillg 'penalty_
LoUis CWdi•'*'s, a.:r.
a hro-run homer.
Another sccriDg threat ended
''lb! lllllls •·• ' heo!m ping
the Qmlinals tied the game when the Bobcats Rick Smith
into the illaia£ t\ida.f in the sixth wben Lou Brock recovered a Panther fumble.
nigbt, - bu't piDda biller Jim :singled, went to second on a The Bobcat defense _was also
.Stewartbipled IIIIIDe llnenms ground oul and scored on Matty credited with two inJereeptioos,
and then wed • a nnifite Alou's. double. Cincinnati one ·by sophomore George
By by Pek! Hme as Cli• - eti starte£ Wayne Simpsoo was Curry and the oth!er by .eorallied 1Gr tm. .-s_
• relieved by Wayne Granger in captaiD, senior Ten-y Moles.
Stewart's triple ~ after the si:a:tb.
KC - will · scrimmage
Woody Woodaad • D ' with
Nelsooville-York Wj!dnesday on
the bases .....,, Ill fame ill
its home field.
.Jol!mzy B&lt;:ucb wilh lbe fnt nm
in lhe lillal li:aDe. S'
l's
blast aued Gearee FUster,
Tommy fL JnK .-d Wwlwad..
Foster ud Hdms bad
reacbed ba9e 1111 IIKt..........
singles_
Earlier tbe lllllls bad rallied
145, halfback; Mart Darst, 14ti,
in the foul1l&gt; iuillg Jir line
guard; and Lou Louden, 151,
runs 1oo era!le a U Coodiual
. ..'
halfhad.
lead
Sopbom«ns who lettered last
BANANA SPLITS, SLUSHES, PARFAITS,
Hal McJbe si•cW. Taay
year are Ten-y Sbeels, a 110 lb.
Perel doubled. Md Ill! R•
STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKES, SHAKES
tackle-guard and Lawrence
sccred on a guuMI .._ Wbell
Tabor, 1tt-pound halfback.
Jose 01111 diapped I'
·s 0,
Others vying fGr positions are
KennyJ!Ianltrnship,a Ulpound ball ill a!lli!r fio!ld, Fastrr senicr; MW: Bgglrs, 145 lb. safe on third alll Psu fial..
"THAT OLD FASHIONED
Faster us+ «et bome ... a ' ns"
halfhad; ManbaJJ Ftencb, 135
lb_ balfbact; Brian 'l'uctl!r, 115
pound tackle, Rife and Baird,
all juniors. Other soptvuvre
lqlefuls, their ftigbts and
positioos are Dwight Thompsoo, lto, guard; Darid day,
2'111, tackle; Roo . Roush, 145,
tackle; Clay Hudson, 151,
center; John Rnmley, 146, end;
Mark Lawhon, 2211, tackle;
CiN!nm Smith, 2115, fullbact;
Eddie Q!•ggs, 125, halfback;
Keith Sargent, 15Ci, guard and
Rick Smith_

the Sports

By

Desk

running hacks Gary Saunders
and Jerry Hill and linemm
Kenny Brown and Wade Hen!;on, · the club's Most Valuable
Player.
Also missiDg are four players,
all seniors, who were expected
to start this fall. They are David
Wbite, speedy wingback, who
has transferred to Gallipolis;
Mike Beebe and Roy Thompson,
both Unemen and quarterback
Mike Johnson, wbo did not
report this fall .
Kyger Creek's major
problems may be depth and
oilerali experience. Several
sophomores are apected to
start at several key positions.
Right now, four players are
fighting a fierce hattie fer the
starting nod at quarterback..
They are Glenn Smith, a 165
pounder who was !creed tO sit
out the entire 1!1'/0 seasoo with a
fractured leg sustained in a Flesluuen candidates, their
motorcycle accident; Bill Rife, weigh!_sandPQiiilioosare David
a junior transfer from Rife, 134, end; WendeD Baylor,
Columbus ~; 112,Ii.aUbact;JoeStidham,147, ·
Rick Smith, a 110 pound quarterback; Doug Cottrell,
sophomore and John Baird, a 112, end; David Meaige, 1&amp;11,
small, but scrappy junior at 127 tackle; Darid Wise, 135,1ackle;
pounds.
Mike Rife, 135, end; Bob
Senior lettermen are Gary DonneU, 14%, end; Tim HmnCollins, a 1~ lb. halfbact; pbreys, 121, haHback; Jeff
Terry Moles, ItS lb. guard; Bill Icard, 109, halfback; Dave
Roush, 165 lb. tackle; Dan Slrood, 115, halfback and Steve
Swisher, 16'/lb. center; Ricllard Harrison, 145, Iackie. Kyger
Rumley, 146lb.-.end and Smith. o-eet opens"ils 19'11 campaign
Junior lettermen, their Sept. 11 at Wahama
weights and positions inclUde Here is the ·Bobcats' 19'11
John Roush, 145, halfback; schedule:
David Stump, 130, fullback; SqL 11111 W h Ol-land Cremeans, 195, tackle; SqL 11 u
• ~
Jim Bias, 1~, fullhack; George SqL Zt 111 S 'hu
Curry. 170, end; Greg III:Oii1y. OrL lid Nertlo Gdla
OrL IEuten
OrL 15 at Solilnraten
Od. !!Ale•
I
o.L Zl at Gftf:ll
Nev-fF......

a

II

'"'~

•

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WYANDOTI'E, Mich. (UPI)
- Archbold, Ohio, banded
Gah5burg, m., a 74 defeat
Friday to push the Illinois team
out of compelitioo ill the Great
Lakes regional ct the American
Legion National Baseball

o...-

SPORT SHIRTS ·•••••
• H.J.S_
•McGREGOR
•ARROW

KC OO.ACHES - .Jamee Arledge, Jell, and RldJn
(Dicli) Adams are the new coaches at Kyger Creek High
School. Arledge is the bead basketball and assistant football
coach. Adams is the head football aoo assistant cage coacb_

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•PIIIwin

·--=---·
SWUTEIS·..

.-rs...••.

•ARROI
•~t:GREGOR

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•SALVATORE.'

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GAHS GRID RECORDS
llt25-7t)

Coach C.. L. (1ohnny)
Ecker will billdhis 1971 grid squad aroiUid 13 JeltermeD bad;
fr1111 last year's undefeated and untied !qll8ll Blne Devils
relurliqtodefend their 1!1'/0 Soutbeastan!Jiio Lellguegrid
lille are, !rootrow, left to rigbt- Mike Berridlle, Kev Sheets,
GAIJlPOLIS VETERANS -

News
"BULLETIN"

Pete Neal and Cbuck Wood, CCH:aplains; Dave White, who
lettered at Kyger creek last year and Larry Snowden. Hear
- Pal Basler, Eric Saunders, .rnn Miller, John Davis, Keo
Wamsley, Mike Wolfe and Bud Sanders_ Tbe Blue Devils
scrimmaged Cbillicothe Saturday nigbl First regular season
coolest Is Friday, Sept. 10, at South Point.

KANAUGA
Mobile Home Sales
Announces •••

Olympic Prospect Jim Keane
Works Out In Old French City
BY DALE R0111GEB
GALLIPOLIS- A member of

the United States National
Speed Skating team worked out
vigcrously here last week in
attempt to stay ill top physical
condition for the U. S. Olympic

trials, slated Dec. 11).211 al
Milwaukee_ .
Jim Keao, 2%, Fairview
Park, Ohio, a junicr at Bowling
Green University, was here
visiting his sister, Mrs_ Sieve
Carta", I&amp; Edgemont Dr_

Keane, a skater since 1958,
continued bis !raiDing during
the week by ruoning up and
down Fortification Hill and
around Memorial Field.
During the trials in
December, he.will compete for
one ct the 10 positions on the
United States team.

We M Dealers For All New

Young Keane specializes ill
the 500 meter sprillt, the
shortest race. He bas alrfady
participated in the North
American Junicr Speed Skating
Championship at Lake Placid,
New Ycrk; the National Intermediate Championsllip at
Olampagne, Ill.; the u. s. Open
at Billgham, N. Y.; the World's
Sprint Cham_pionship at
Milwaukee in 1!1'10 and bas
toured Europe in recent
months_ Keane rec«ded the
secood best time for his team ill
Europe ill the 5011 meter event
He is S[llliiSired by Bonnie Bell
Cosmetics.

Rami~~~»

Oakbrook,

&amp; Mnchester

Mobile Homes. Priced Ftum

$3,79500
to

~,595

But Before Y_ou Buy •

Check Our Prices
Also Saeral Used Homes To Select fnlm
• Bank Financil&amp;
CAU. 446-9662

Kanauga Mobile tune Sales

y

AUGUST 3Ma THR
See Our

FORMICA

Stole

STANDARD

Mana&amp;er

1/16" PAMRNS

Halllld L Dalis

SPECIAL SALE

He

snings
flliroughout

lh• sto't

sq. ft.

29'

will be
more
than
happy to help
you in any of
your building
needs.

Stop And See The
Friendly Ones At Carter &amp; Evans

See Us
For Your

Where Your Patronage
Is Greatly Appreciated.

' l•. I

¥HRE lHE UVING IS EASY

':

.JACIEIS ••._

SlACKS••••
• H.I.S.
•FARRAH

..•:
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Our SERVICE &amp; PARTS o.,.f111011ts will be CLOSED
all dar on .SATURDAY
We will be open THURSDAY Evlllillgs ,..lilt:ll P.MWe feel !hoi lllis chlnge will lleloefit both ,.,., our
·
customer's and our Service &amp; P_,s emplopees.

••
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Don Watts , . ..., lie.
ROIMf--Oiiie Rtf •

OPO FRIDAY 'Til I P.II.

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Fr:om the floor up ... Inside and out --- your
Forest Park home is designed tor carefree
·living. Spacious rooms, lots of storage areas.
easy to clean and maintain. If Nodern decor is
your choice you'll like its look of lightness that
accents easy living. Available in 60' and 65'
lengths, and a wide array o! floor plans.

NEEDS
SELF RIMMED
STAINLESS STEEL SINK

25.95

5

Q7JYAd ~tf'
MOBiLE
HOME
$11
ES
See
Joe
Jim Staats or

Giles

Upper Rt- 7 Next Door to Auto Auction
PIPhhl10111ne• 446-9340

~lfipoHs. 0111o

REGULAR PRICE $3US

··-

- ; , 10 • ·· ,. 1t., 21 ._ 1

WHITE

SPECIAL

.27'n' .l.iL fl

beauty is baked on to stay

of added

CASH
&amp;
CARRY
17 OLIVE ST.

I

CARTER &amp;

00

Shop Around •.•

Keane ' s conditioning
pogtam continues throughout
tbe year. It includes bike ridillg,
running and differeot ice
skating
patterns
and
lechniqiii!S.
He uses skates wilh 16~ incb
blades for the 400 meter
Olympic events. ''This type of
sports requires a lot of power ill
the legs," Keane said.
A sociology major, Keane
plans to continue his education
if he does not make the Olympic
team this wiota". "1 can try
again in four years," he replied
wilh a very confident smile.

Jill DANE

MOBILE HOMES

GAllS VS, SEOAL OPPONENTS
(Jm.'lll
W L T PCT3 0 0 1.0110
Neismville-Ylrl
1 0 0 1.0110
, Waverly
33 t 3 Jill
Nelamville
31 13 2 _'/IM
Wellston
22 I&amp; 0 -5'11
Mictlleport
211 I&amp; 5 .505
Pomeroy I
21 17 0 .552
Logan
ftO.SOO
Newllclltoo
18
19 f . •
Jacbm
17 23 2 .402
Albelll &lt;
2 4 0 .333
Irootoo
1 3 II .250
Meigs
010.0110
Pwllmoulb
17.1 1211 . II .Ill
'i'OTALS '

.

'

Howard, 19621.
Most Net Yards Rushing_ In
One Season - 1,~ (Br Dan
Howard, 1962).
Most Career Times Carried
GABS GRID COACBES
Ball - .t2• .(By Dan Howard,
oun.
1960, 1961, 1962J.
(HZ5-701
Most Losses In One Year- 9 Most Career Net Yards
SEAOL
Yeus
All
Gamet
1196-4).
.
Rushing - 2229 I By Dan
WLT WLT
Most Consecutive Games Howard, 1960, 1961, 1962).
Scoring - 25 (19.0, 19-18, 198)_ Most Pass Attempts In One
~27--Isaac Cooper
14-l.M 10- ~I 3
Opponents Most Consecutive Game- 21 &lt;Br Rod Gilker vs.
1928-31&gt;-Games Sccring..:.. 22 (19SI, 19SS, Pomeroy, 1966 .
1956).
Most Pass Completions In x-Lotlie Myers
ti-33-6 27-H-2 9
Most Consecutive Games One Season - 19 (By Rod
193'1..fCI....Gar Griffith
Zl-JU 14-~ f
Without Scoring - 5 (1933).
Gilkey, 1966).
1911-{leu-ge
Blackburn
Opponenl&gt; Most Consecutive Most Pass Completions In
4-" 3- 44 I
Games Without Scoring - 5 OneGame-13 (By Rod Gilkey
1912-43-Woody Wills
:;. ~I I~
t-7~
(19311.
vs. Wellston, 19661.
1!M3-Marshall Boggs
1- %of 2-U ~
Most Shutouts In One Season Most Yards Gained Passing
1911 ~rles Swanson
S.ll-2 :;. ~I 2
- 6 !1927, 1931, 19-18).
In One Season - I, m (By Rod
Opponents Most Shutouts In Gilkey, 1966).
1-l!HMI---.TIDIHalderman
2l- ~I ~4-1 3
One Season - 5 (1927, 19-15, Most Yards Gained Passing
19f9.--Doo
Souder
l- :0.1 1- :0.1 1
l9.j6) .
In One Game - 289 (By Rod
1950-Wayne Gibson
:;. 3-1 :;. 1-1 1
Most Points Scored Br One Gilkey vs. Wellston, 1966).
•
Teem In One Game- 86 (GAHS Most Touchdown Passes In
1951-42 Rank Schroth
~ 1).1 10- 44 2
86, Nelsonville o, 19-18).
One Season - 10 &lt;Br Rod
15-18-,l
1953-a--Oarence
Tb&lt;mpson
14-IU f
Most Poinb Scored By OJ!,. Gilkey, 1966).
ponenl In One Game _- Sl &lt;Br Mos) Touchdown Passes In
1957-5t-Bob Sang
13-144 n-~ 3
Ravenswood, 1927).
One Game- :1 IBr Rod Gilkey
19&amp;11-Most Team Points Scored In vs. Wellston, 1966).
x--Cbnck
Stobart
t- ~ 7- ~ I
One Season - l53 (19-18).
Longest Touchdown Pass
Most Opponents Points From Scrimmage - 80 Yards
1961.$-Scored In one Season - 2011 (From l!od Gilkey To John :o--,lack Olcott
14- :0.1 11- u 2
(19-l!il.
Walker Vs. Pl. Pleasant. 1966).
l!IC-Karl Justus
:;. u 4- 1-2 1
Least Poinh Scored In One Most Yards Gained Br
Season - :u (1927) .
Receiver In One Season - 286
196U6--Terry Hansley
J5.J5.0 10-ll.e 3
Least Opponents Points (By Larry Mitchell, 1966).
19674-Gienn Trout
10-1~
~~ 2
Scored In one Season - 18 Longest Pass Interception
(1U1) .
.
Rooback For Touchdown- 1110 :o 1969 Jobn Ecker
14- 5-0 10- 44 2
Most Yards (Nell Rushing In Yards (By Dave Burnell Vs. TOTAL'!
One Season - 2,190 (19ol8) .
Ironton, 1969).
Most Yards Passing In One Opponents Longest Pass x - Coached ChampiCIIShip Teams.
Season- 1.177 (1966).
Interception Runback For
M&lt;m VAWABLE PLAYERS
Most Total Yards (Rush-Pass) Touchdown - 89 Yards (By
In One Season - 3,2SI (19-181. South Poinrs Vince Champan, 1914 - HilDer Burtm
1958 - Jay Simms
Most First Downs In One 19701.
1945
Vance
Johnson
1959 - Tom Hogan
Season- 139 119601.
Longest Lateral Interception
_ Most Net Yards Rushing In Rooback For Touchdown - 95 1!116 - Jim Simms
19&amp;Q - Diet Roderick
One Game - oi60 · (Vs. Yards (By Guy Lewis vs. 1947 - Bill Johnson
1961 - Andy Gilmcft
Nelsonville, 19-181.
Middleport, 19361.
1948
Bob
Marchi
1962 - Dan Howard
Most Yards Passino In One Longest Touchdown Run
G,ame - 289 (Vs. Wellston, From Scrimmage - 95 Yards 1949 - Bill Hogan
1963 - Larry Fraley
1966).
I By Jackie Jackson Vs. 1950 - Jackie Jackson
196f - Bill Wamsley
Most Yards Rushing-Passing Wellston, 19511.
1951
Jackie
Jackson
In One Game - -187 (Vs. Most Pass Interceptions In
1965 - Pete Andeisw
Nelsonville, 19-18).
One Season - 5 (By Bruce· 1!152 - James Holley
1966 - Dan Davies
Most Yards Gained On Pool Smilh, 1966 and By Dave
1!152
Dan
Beabout
1967 - .fUD Gilmcft
RetUrns In One Season - 313 llwnell, 1969 and 19701.
195f
Jack
Simms
(1960).
Most Points Scored In One
1968 - Rick Mosley
Mos t Yards Gained On Game- 37 (By Bill Smith Vs. J.95li - Car) Jettins - X
1969 - Tim Hemswoa tb
Kickoff Returns In One Season Middleport, 1937).
195&amp;
Bert
Smith
1!1'/0 - Dave Burnett
- 376 (1960).
Most Consecutive Extra
Most Yards Gained On Pass _Points From Placement - 12 1957 - Roo carr
1!1'/1 Interceptions In One Season - (By Gene Welherholt, 19.0 and
159 (1969) .
again In 19-181.
Most Poinh Scored In One Most Ex,tra Points From
Quarter In One Game -32 IVs. Placement In One Season - .«J
Nelsonville In Second Quarter, (By GeneWelherholl, who hii.«J
19ol8). ,
out of .'iO in 19-18).
Most Points Scored In One Most Times Carried ~II In
Game Br Two Teams - 79 One Gjlllle-29 (By Pete Neal
IGAHS 61, Pomeroy 18, 1951). Vs. Logan, 1970).
Most Fumbles ln·One Season Most Yards Rushing In One
- 27 (1958) .
Game - 198 &lt;By Paul Evans
()pponenb Most Fumbles In Vs. Pl. Pleasant, 19601 .
One Season - 28 (19-181.
loogesl Pool l!elum For
Most Yards Penalized In C.... Touchdown-65 Yards (By Bill
Season - 523 (19601.
Conley Vs. Jackson, 1~1 .
Southeastern Ohio Allllelic longest Kickoll Return For
League Championships- 1931, Touchdown - 85 Yards (By
1932, 1947, 19-411, 1960. 1962, 1970. Did&lt; Roderick, Vs. Pomeroy,
(INDIVIDUALl
19601.
Most Consecutive Games Most Yards Gained By Pool
Played- 39 (By Larry Fraley, Returns In 0... Seascn - 162
1960, •1961, 1962, 1963). l8 (By (By Bill Conley, 1960).
Bill Joe Johnson, 19-15, 19.j6, Most Yards Gained by"
19.0, 19-18).
Kickoff Relurns- J:u CBr Jim
Most Polnn Scored In One Gilmore, 1966).
Season - 114 (By Bill Joe Best Pooling Average For
Johnson, 19~71 .
One Season - 36.6 (By Tom
Most Touchdowns In One Spencer, 19611).
Season - 19 (By Bill Joe . Most Yards Pooling In One
Johnson, 19~71.
Season - 1,326 (By Tom
Most Points Scored In Career Spencer, 19671.
- 271 CBr Bill Joe Johnson. Longest Pool From Line 01
19-15, 19.j6, 1947, i9oll).
Scrimmage - 59 Yards (By
Most Times Carried Ball In Tom Spencer Vs. Coal Grove,
Oiie Season - 198 I By Dan 19611).

••
•• TEAM

EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 1.1971

GaiiWpolis, Ollio456ll ·

++++++

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VOLKSWAGEN

195

1 1 1 II
Tbe IJS1 Blue DevD cha.... slill111n1 three wds. the 1932
co.dwmpr .,... one mart. Tbe 19f1 cbampmnp squad OlrDS
line leCO!ds, the 11&amp;11 cbampioos 10, and the U6Z eleftn, paced by
fullback llamy Howard, OWIIS siJ: marb. Tbe defeudiJW SEOAL
champs picked up f01r Jut faD_

:
ITEAM!
Most Consecutive Wins- 21
_ {i9•7, 19-18, 198).
•
Most Consecutive Defeats- 9
• !196-4).
:
Most Wins In One Year- 10

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figlftl......,oed by Blue ml Wbile W81Tion dwiiJi the paat ~
:veara w111 prove mtatlling, eapecia)Jy to lhlllle wbo hrlped
establllb 11111e ollbe marb81M11Ilolle wbo played with the ret&gt;ad
makers_
I I I I+
WE came up with 33 team ret-cads .00 34 iDdivicU1 effarls_
'lbere's plmlf mere, ol cmne, but lbe ooes we have listed may
be found in most ligb acbool OF mlhlll! laocluaes. We WGUid ~
to - ol the r«adll printed in tbe (l,a))j-· IIIIIDe grid
)II"Oii"aiDS- Wellston, lroollm, Jacbon and other SEOAL schools
do IIU, aDd
them as
I I I I+
OF the 331eam reuads, the 1M8 Blue DevU powerilouse still
holds 12. ne 19116 team, wtacb Bnfslw! second 1o COiierence
play. balds llindlvldual marb_ Together, lbe 1M8 squad- 16
let-cads. the UII6IQIIICI is next with 11 Rod Gillley, outstanding
fJW"Ierback Ill lbe .. Jearn, OWIIS the most indivimaJ marb eigbt.

:
REOORDS are made to be brotm. ne 19'11 Blue Devil squad
• baa a cbance to maR a D8llle fGr itaelf in the GABS record book•
: But enough ol that fGr now. Here's what we came up with
" recently:

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SHOES

I I I I+

srATISTIO! may be a IMre to most people, but we feel tbe

.en

~

tournament
Earlier in
the day,
Springfield, Mo., defeated
Archbcjld 1~ iD tbe dn•bleelimination tournament. In
other actioo, Uncoln Pad,
Mich_, toot a Z-lt wiD frllll
Janesville, W"IS.
,
Ardlbold went into the third
inning ll'ailing Ga' bw g 6-0,
but then exploded fer six runs
led by Richard Selgo's ~!rand­
slam hooler iD the thinl Selgo
also pitched the final two
scm-eless jnnjngs
In the opener, Kelley Sllider's
bases-loaded single in the
bottom of the ninth brought
Springfield the victmy. W"mning
pitcher &lt;luis Petersoo scat.
tered eight bits, slnick out four
and walked fourThe tournament continues
through today.

1I I I 1

Wll'lltbe 1J7lllrid opmerm.....-Jesa than two weebaway ,11111ris a
good lime to itview tbe Gelli•ll8 team and iDilridual ~
61ce lbe Soolheoslem Oblo Atblelic Lague ... fomel in a;
.

I

You will find your entire warchbe in lhe ·... "TRADITIONAL SH6P'"~I !t
the Haskins- Til!wlf!! Co- The 71: season's handsome new colors and
styles. All you guys will befhe head of the class with the newest classics
from
c:nmplele mllection!

Wins 7-6
Decision

md figures up lo d..e.

··

Tbe Tornadoes, being outweighed by as much as 30
pounds per man, let Coacb Dave
Boston's boys tnow they bad
been in a hall game. Tbe
Buckeyes appear to have one of
their fmest teams in recent
years.
Mike Nease scored the
Tornadoes' ooly touchdown, a
seven yard jaunt. Nease played
brilliantly both offensively and
defensively, once intercepting a
Buckeye pass on the goal line
and zigzagging his way back to
midfield , breaking several
lackles along tbe way.
Tbe Tornadoes will scrimmage Meigs reserves Ibis
Wednesday and the Buckeyes
will scrimmage tbe Eastern
Eagles next Saturday.

NELSONVILLE The
Southern Local Tornadoes
scrimmaged the Nelsonville
York Buckeyes at Nelsonville
Saturday morning with the
Buckeyes walking away with a
7-1 touchdown edge over the
Meigs countians .
Coach Bruce Wallace's
Tornadoes were slighUy outclassed by Jhe ( AA ) Buckeyes,
but held their own ground most
of Jhe time during the two and a
half
hour
scrimmage.
Southern 's light but quick
hitting eleven held the
Buckeye's first team to only
four scores while the reserves
allowed the Buckeye seconds
only three sccres. Southern's
first team scored their only
llluchdown.

WHILE oo vacatloo rec:m!Q&gt;, we had a cbaM:e to go U.IJICb
' our ,.....,n JW«ds and brine the GABS Blue Devils grid fads

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Archbold

"!

PENGUINS SIGN BINKLEY
PITI'SBURGH (UPI} - The
Pittsburgh Penguins of Jhe
National Hockey League announced Friday the signing of
goaltender Les Binkely, who
allowed an average of 2.85
goals in 34 games ·before being
sidelined with a knee injury last
season .

i4nppr

I

could ....
Reaction to the Southeastern Ohio Athletic League's recent
decision to return to round robin (seven games) play in baseball
next spring hasn't been too favorable among sCribes around tbe
circuit.
'
In all . probability, bad weather will force cancellation ol
several cooference games next year. "can you imagine wgan
going aU the way to Ironton for a seven inning contest. Tbe Chiefs
arrive, get in two or three innings, then it raiDs. Sounds like it will
be very cosUy to SEOALclubs. The division play, which began in
1950, was good solution to cut down spring spcrts CIISis.
Another reason officials adoPted the division policy was that
when round robin play was in effect, several gl!mes were postponed, and never made up, due to loog-dislance traveling. In
other words, if Logan played five games and was unbeaten, but
('.aUipWis played seven, and owned a 1).1 record, Logan would be
clec1ared the league champion. That doesn't seem fair.
One reasoo for tbe return to round robin play was the number
ol pmes played. However, if aU teams play their entire league
achedule, that means seven games. In tbe past 21 years, teams
played six games, then the two division kingpins played a seventh
~ for tbe overall cllampionship. ·
·
Ollly Cilia! in the past 21 yeats (last spring) has there been
tbi a way tie for tbe divisioo champiooship. Thus, three extra
• - we-e required to determine the southern division champi• lilt May. Too,going_intotheflnal weekct the 1!1'/1 campaign,
fheoftbeeigbtSEOAL 1e81118 were stiUconlenders fer the leagllf
dll!lnplonsbip. We faver the dlvisioo policy. ftow 'bout you?'

PARLOR SPECIALTIES .
t~akt

GBllia

\

Kyger .Creek BObcats
Will Have New LoDk

Tbe Bobcats will be led by a
new coaching slaff, headed by
Richard E. (Dick) Adams, 23,
former AII.SOutbeastern Ohio
and All Mid-American gridder.
Adams succeeded another
former Mid-American Conference star, Howard Lee
Miller.
Adams, twice the Most
Valuable Player of the MAC, is
assisted by James K. Arledge,
formerly an assistant coach at
Waverly.
Holding two-a-day drills since
Chet Tan,nehiU
his appointment Aug. 16, Coach
Adams has been busymoldillg a
and Junior Wilson
different offensive
and
defensive pattern for the
Bobcats, near-perennial
champions of the Southern
It's conside!"ed good form amoog football coaches to bad; Valley Athletic Conference.
mouth their own team's chances ill a conference race just enough,/ "No matter who plays us, if we
(a) Not to discourage their own boys, and (b) Not to alert other win or lose, they will know they
CGICbes oo your upcCIIIiDg schedule that you really have a block have been in a football game,"
Imler. Tbis double whammy uiom is the basis for all cryillg he said.
Known for his hard-bitting
. toweljolles. In otherwcrds, theyplayitcool.
Maybe different rules apply fer the coacb takiog on a par- aggressive play during his last
cularly ,IIH,fipli\ sj,luatioo, where the J!~yers '!Jill student body two years as an .outstanding
nen11t lulve lio!en down for two cr nllre years. H the boys have defensive back for the Miami
- been pretty much creamed for two cr three years, coacb has to Redskins, Adams is illstilling
change their emotional direclioo. Discounting the boys' chances that trait into his ball club.
Kyger Creek fmished secQnd
to win would be worse than stupid.
in
league play last season
Bruce WaDace at Southern High, takiDg over after a season ill
mcb theTcrnadoeswooonegame, tnowshis boys have a big job behind the Eastern Eagles.
ahead if they are to be cmnpetitive ill the Southern Valley Coo- Overall, the Bobcats compiled a
5-4 mark.
ference (Class A). He must - and should - look forward to
Since 1960, Kyger Creek bas
vicllries.
captured six conference tiUes
Mr. &lt;has. Chancey out at Rock Springs has fillished four
and Shared two others. Eastern
league seasoos with tbe Maraud..-s always a cootender and one won Jhe league championship in
cbampiooship_ But if Charlie had a 19'11-versioo of Hex Kern at 1960 and 1966.
quarterback and John Brockington at fnllbaclr, It's doubtful if
Fifteen returning lettermen
he'd predict an outright cbampiooshipandan IDiefeated season. form the nucleus of the 1!1'/1
Down ill Gampolis where Mr. Jdmny Ecller guides the Big football squad of « players.
Blne, just oil a brilliant, undefeated seasoo and championship, Lost via graduation were
there is a similar pattern. It would awear Ecker has been taking
lessons fr1111 Chancey. To wbit:
Olancey, last week: '"'bis league will be strong this year.
Especially tough will be Gallipolis, Irontoo, Logan, Jackson ... "
Ecker, last week ill public remarks before two local groups
(ill eslleDCe): '"'bis league will be slronK this year. Especially ·
lllugh will be Meigs, !roo ton, Logan, Jaclqlon ... "
WeD and good.
·
But downriver in lrooton, opening its fourth f•mpaig~~ (in
modem limes) in the SEOAL, there is a different wind blowing.
Coacb Bob Bruney, beginning his sixth season there, predicts a
Southeastern Ohio League championship /md a possible undefeated season.
Wrote Harold Roach in the lrontoo Tribune:
'"11lat I~ prediction last week by Coach Bob Bruoey both
pleased and s1unned Ironton High School fans who are e:a:pecting a
good seasoo but perhaps not an undefeated ooe. Some fans have
even asked· us if we quoted Bruney rigbt, if that predictim
(really) did come from him!
"(Bruoey) e:q&gt;ressed his total optimism ill writing on a
questioonaire sen tout by theTribunesportsdepartment.lf any of
you want to see it in black and wbite Clllle on up. We bave it
mounted m the wall. Fer tho5e ct you who don't want to climb the
stairs, we'llreiteratee:a:acUywhat the coach wrote down:
" 'Predicted finish': 1st, Predicted reccrd: I~; Predicted
SEOAL willner, Irooton; Runnerup, Logan; Possible All..state
Selections frCIII Ironton, Hal Spears, Bobby Smith.' "
Coach Bruney could look like a genius come November. 01" be

Buckeyes. Get 7
Touchdowns

I ,

Reds Rally, Nip
,CardiJUJls, B~ 7

RETURNING LETTERMEN- The Kyger Creek
Bobcats hope to bnprove last
season's :i-4 mark behind
these returning lettermen.
They are (front row, left to
right) John Roush, Greg
McCarty, David Stump,
Kenny Blankenship, Jim Bias
and Terry Sheets. Second
row, (I tor) Glenn Smith, Bill
Roush, Danny Swisher, Lou
Louden, Ge&lt;lrge Curry, Terry
BY DALE RO'I'IIGEB, J1l
Moles, Richard Rumley and
CHFSHIRE - Kyger Creek
Gary Collins. Absent-Orland High School foolball will have
Cremeans and Lawrence an all new look on the gridiron
Tabor.
this fall.

1

EVA~s·

INC.

"BUILDING SUPPLIES''
- r 11lnt Fridor-1 A.M. to S P.M.
511-y- 7 A.M- to • P.MPIIONE«6-4tl5

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�L11

j'f __
.,...___
- .,
17'nlek
TIIII·~:-1~·~·~1~
~,~,~·~~~·.A~'II:-~·~~·lfll~---~-.,.l

Bobcats Score Once,

l,Dateline

.Blank CBS Panthers

II

.

CHESAPEAKE - s.....;... .QeetBobcals a one touchdown Collins' touchdown clime
la!flwd&lt; c.y Oifins ......., advantag~ over the Panthers in after sophomore tackle Ten-y
!IIIV8"frllll tbe
;adlll!!ll!ft lbe firs! scrimmage of ltl'/1 for ~Is picked up a Qlesapeake
SalaW,J 1o pe lbe ltfto!!" bolb clqbs. It was a repeat fumble and returned it to the
one yard stripe.
·
peifomwJce of 1!1'/0.
Tbe attempt fOF the eitra
poillts failed. Tbe gaine's ooly
touChdown came in the third
period.
Chesapeake' s offense
collected 10 first llotPm but did
. not score. Its ooly major threat
came midway in 'the, second
quarter when Black broke lOose
ST_ LOOJS (OPI) - 0. single_
oo. a 50 yard gallop. 'Jbe play,
cinDali Rllied in lbe llinlll ill- Sl Louis scored first in the however was nullifled on a
ning FriUy aigllt.ID 1lip lbe St. Stdlllll inning when Cruz belted clippillg 'penalty_
LoUis CWdi•'*'s, a.:r.
a hro-run homer.
Another sccriDg threat ended
''lb! lllllls •·• ' heo!m ping
the Qmlinals tied the game when the Bobcats Rick Smith
into the illaia£ t\ida.f in the sixth wben Lou Brock recovered a Panther fumble.
nigbt, - bu't piDda biller Jim :singled, went to second on a The Bobcat defense _was also
.Stewartbipled IIIIIDe llnenms ground oul and scored on Matty credited with two inJereeptioos,
and then wed • a nnifite Alou's. double. Cincinnati one ·by sophomore George
By by Pek! Hme as Cli• - eti starte£ Wayne Simpsoo was Curry and the oth!er by .eorallied 1Gr tm. .-s_
• relieved by Wayne Granger in captaiD, senior Ten-y Moles.
Stewart's triple ~ after the si:a:tb.
KC - will · scrimmage
Woody Woodaad • D ' with
Nelsooville-York Wj!dnesday on
the bases .....,, Ill fame ill
its home field.
.Jol!mzy B&lt;:ucb wilh lbe fnt nm
in lhe lillal li:aDe. S'
l's
blast aued Gearee FUster,
Tommy fL JnK .-d Wwlwad..
Foster ud Hdms bad
reacbed ba9e 1111 IIKt..........
singles_
Earlier tbe lllllls bad rallied
145, halfback; Mart Darst, 14ti,
in the foul1l&gt; iuillg Jir line
guard; and Lou Louden, 151,
runs 1oo era!le a U Coodiual
. ..'
halfhad.
lead
Sopbom«ns who lettered last
BANANA SPLITS, SLUSHES, PARFAITS,
Hal McJbe si•cW. Taay
year are Ten-y Sbeels, a 110 lb.
Perel doubled. Md Ill! R•
STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKES, SHAKES
tackle-guard and Lawrence
sccred on a guuMI .._ Wbell
Tabor, 1tt-pound halfback.
Jose 01111 diapped I'
·s 0,
Others vying fGr positions are
KennyJ!Ianltrnship,a Ulpound ball ill a!lli!r fio!ld, Fastrr senicr; MW: Bgglrs, 145 lb. safe on third alll Psu fial..
"THAT OLD FASHIONED
Faster us+ «et bome ... a ' ns"
halfhad; ManbaJJ Ftencb, 135
lb_ balfbact; Brian 'l'uctl!r, 115
pound tackle, Rife and Baird,
all juniors. Other soptvuvre
lqlefuls, their ftigbts and
positioos are Dwight Thompsoo, lto, guard; Darid day,
2'111, tackle; Roo . Roush, 145,
tackle; Clay Hudson, 151,
center; John Rnmley, 146, end;
Mark Lawhon, 2211, tackle;
CiN!nm Smith, 2115, fullbact;
Eddie Q!•ggs, 125, halfback;
Keith Sargent, 15Ci, guard and
Rick Smith_

the Sports

By

Desk

running hacks Gary Saunders
and Jerry Hill and linemm
Kenny Brown and Wade Hen!;on, · the club's Most Valuable
Player.
Also missiDg are four players,
all seniors, who were expected
to start this fall. They are David
Wbite, speedy wingback, who
has transferred to Gallipolis;
Mike Beebe and Roy Thompson,
both Unemen and quarterback
Mike Johnson, wbo did not
report this fall .
Kyger Creek's major
problems may be depth and
oilerali experience. Several
sophomores are apected to
start at several key positions.
Right now, four players are
fighting a fierce hattie fer the
starting nod at quarterback..
They are Glenn Smith, a 165
pounder who was !creed tO sit
out the entire 1!1'/0 seasoo with a
fractured leg sustained in a Flesluuen candidates, their
motorcycle accident; Bill Rife, weigh!_sandPQiiilioosare David
a junior transfer from Rife, 134, end; WendeD Baylor,
Columbus ~; 112,Ii.aUbact;JoeStidham,147, ·
Rick Smith, a 110 pound quarterback; Doug Cottrell,
sophomore and John Baird, a 112, end; David Meaige, 1&amp;11,
small, but scrappy junior at 127 tackle; Darid Wise, 135,1ackle;
pounds.
Mike Rife, 135, end; Bob
Senior lettermen are Gary DonneU, 14%, end; Tim HmnCollins, a 1~ lb. halfbact; pbreys, 121, haHback; Jeff
Terry Moles, ItS lb. guard; Bill Icard, 109, halfback; Dave
Roush, 165 lb. tackle; Dan Slrood, 115, halfback and Steve
Swisher, 16'/lb. center; Ricllard Harrison, 145, Iackie. Kyger
Rumley, 146lb.-.end and Smith. o-eet opens"ils 19'11 campaign
Junior lettermen, their Sept. 11 at Wahama
weights and positions inclUde Here is the ·Bobcats' 19'11
John Roush, 145, halfback; schedule:
David Stump, 130, fullback; SqL 11111 W h Ol-land Cremeans, 195, tackle; SqL 11 u
• ~
Jim Bias, 1~, fullhack; George SqL Zt 111 S 'hu
Curry. 170, end; Greg III:Oii1y. OrL lid Nertlo Gdla
OrL IEuten
OrL 15 at Solilnraten
Od. !!Ale•
I
o.L Zl at Gftf:ll
Nev-fF......

a

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WYANDOTI'E, Mich. (UPI)
- Archbold, Ohio, banded
Gah5burg, m., a 74 defeat
Friday to push the Illinois team
out of compelitioo ill the Great
Lakes regional ct the American
Legion National Baseball

o...-

SPORT SHIRTS ·•••••
• H.J.S_
•McGREGOR
•ARROW

KC OO.ACHES - .Jamee Arledge, Jell, and RldJn
(Dicli) Adams are the new coaches at Kyger Creek High
School. Arledge is the bead basketball and assistant football
coach. Adams is the head football aoo assistant cage coacb_

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SWUTEIS·..

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•ARROI
•~t:GREGOR

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•SALVATORE.'

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GAHS GRID RECORDS
llt25-7t)

Coach C.. L. (1ohnny)
Ecker will billdhis 1971 grid squad aroiUid 13 JeltermeD bad;
fr1111 last year's undefeated and untied !qll8ll Blne Devils
relurliqtodefend their 1!1'/0 Soutbeastan!Jiio Lellguegrid
lille are, !rootrow, left to rigbt- Mike Berridlle, Kev Sheets,
GAIJlPOLIS VETERANS -

News
"BULLETIN"

Pete Neal and Cbuck Wood, CCH:aplains; Dave White, who
lettered at Kyger creek last year and Larry Snowden. Hear
- Pal Basler, Eric Saunders, .rnn Miller, John Davis, Keo
Wamsley, Mike Wolfe and Bud Sanders_ Tbe Blue Devils
scrimmaged Cbillicothe Saturday nigbl First regular season
coolest Is Friday, Sept. 10, at South Point.

KANAUGA
Mobile Home Sales
Announces •••

Olympic Prospect Jim Keane
Works Out In Old French City
BY DALE R0111GEB
GALLIPOLIS- A member of

the United States National
Speed Skating team worked out
vigcrously here last week in
attempt to stay ill top physical
condition for the U. S. Olympic

trials, slated Dec. 11).211 al
Milwaukee_ .
Jim Keao, 2%, Fairview
Park, Ohio, a junicr at Bowling
Green University, was here
visiting his sister, Mrs_ Sieve
Carta", I&amp; Edgemont Dr_

Keane, a skater since 1958,
continued bis !raiDing during
the week by ruoning up and
down Fortification Hill and
around Memorial Field.
During the trials in
December, he.will compete for
one ct the 10 positions on the
United States team.

We M Dealers For All New

Young Keane specializes ill
the 500 meter sprillt, the
shortest race. He bas alrfady
participated in the North
American Junicr Speed Skating
Championship at Lake Placid,
New Ycrk; the National Intermediate Championsllip at
Olampagne, Ill.; the u. s. Open
at Billgham, N. Y.; the World's
Sprint Cham_pionship at
Milwaukee in 1!1'10 and bas
toured Europe in recent
months_ Keane rec«ded the
secood best time for his team ill
Europe ill the 5011 meter event
He is S[llliiSired by Bonnie Bell
Cosmetics.

Rami~~~»

Oakbrook,

&amp; Mnchester

Mobile Homes. Priced Ftum

$3,79500
to

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Also Saeral Used Homes To Select fnlm
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Our SERVICE &amp; PARTS o.,.f111011ts will be CLOSED
all dar on .SATURDAY
We will be open THURSDAY Evlllillgs ,..lilt:ll P.MWe feel !hoi lllis chlnge will lleloefit both ,.,., our
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customer's and our Service &amp; P_,s emplopees.

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Don Watts , . ..., lie.
ROIMf--Oiiie Rtf •

OPO FRIDAY 'Til I P.II.

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Fr:om the floor up ... Inside and out --- your
Forest Park home is designed tor carefree
·living. Spacious rooms, lots of storage areas.
easy to clean and maintain. If Nodern decor is
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NEEDS
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Shop Around •.•

Keane ' s conditioning
pogtam continues throughout
tbe year. It includes bike ridillg,
running and differeot ice
skating
patterns
and
lechniqiii!S.
He uses skates wilh 16~ incb
blades for the 400 meter
Olympic events. ''This type of
sports requires a lot of power ill
the legs," Keane said.
A sociology major, Keane
plans to continue his education
if he does not make the Olympic
team this wiota". "1 can try
again in four years," he replied
wilh a very confident smile.

Jill DANE

MOBILE HOMES

GAllS VS, SEOAL OPPONENTS
(Jm.'lll
W L T PCT3 0 0 1.0110
Neismville-Ylrl
1 0 0 1.0110
, Waverly
33 t 3 Jill
Nelamville
31 13 2 _'/IM
Wellston
22 I&amp; 0 -5'11
Mictlleport
211 I&amp; 5 .505
Pomeroy I
21 17 0 .552
Logan
ftO.SOO
Newllclltoo
18
19 f . •
Jacbm
17 23 2 .402
Albelll &lt;
2 4 0 .333
Irootoo
1 3 II .250
Meigs
010.0110
Pwllmoulb
17.1 1211 . II .Ill
'i'OTALS '

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Howard, 19621.
Most Net Yards Rushing_ In
One Season - 1,~ (Br Dan
Howard, 1962).
Most Career Times Carried
GABS GRID COACBES
Ball - .t2• .(By Dan Howard,
oun.
1960, 1961, 1962J.
(HZ5-701
Most Losses In One Year- 9 Most Career Net Yards
SEAOL
Yeus
All
Gamet
1196-4).
.
Rushing - 2229 I By Dan
WLT WLT
Most Consecutive Games Howard, 1960, 1961, 1962).
Scoring - 25 (19.0, 19-18, 198)_ Most Pass Attempts In One
~27--Isaac Cooper
14-l.M 10- ~I 3
Opponents Most Consecutive Game- 21 &lt;Br Rod Gilker vs.
1928-31&gt;-Games Sccring..:.. 22 (19SI, 19SS, Pomeroy, 1966 .
1956).
Most Pass Completions In x-Lotlie Myers
ti-33-6 27-H-2 9
Most Consecutive Games One Season - 19 (By Rod
193'1..fCI....Gar Griffith
Zl-JU 14-~ f
Without Scoring - 5 (1933).
Gilkey, 1966).
1911-{leu-ge
Blackburn
Opponenl&gt; Most Consecutive Most Pass Completions In
4-" 3- 44 I
Games Without Scoring - 5 OneGame-13 (By Rod Gilkey
1912-43-Woody Wills
:;. ~I I~
t-7~
(19311.
vs. Wellston, 19661.
1!M3-Marshall Boggs
1- %of 2-U ~
Most Shutouts In One Season Most Yards Gained Passing
1911 ~rles Swanson
S.ll-2 :;. ~I 2
- 6 !1927, 1931, 19-18).
In One Season - I, m (By Rod
Opponents Most Shutouts In Gilkey, 1966).
1-l!HMI---.TIDIHalderman
2l- ~I ~4-1 3
One Season - 5 (1927, 19-15, Most Yards Gained Passing
19f9.--Doo
Souder
l- :0.1 1- :0.1 1
l9.j6) .
In One Game - 289 (By Rod
1950-Wayne Gibson
:;. 3-1 :;. 1-1 1
Most Points Scored Br One Gilkey vs. Wellston, 1966).
•
Teem In One Game- 86 (GAHS Most Touchdown Passes In
1951-42 Rank Schroth
~ 1).1 10- 44 2
86, Nelsonville o, 19-18).
One Season - 10 &lt;Br Rod
15-18-,l
1953-a--Oarence
Tb&lt;mpson
14-IU f
Most Poinb Scored By OJ!,. Gilkey, 1966).
ponenl In One Game _- Sl &lt;Br Mos) Touchdown Passes In
1957-5t-Bob Sang
13-144 n-~ 3
Ravenswood, 1927).
One Game- :1 IBr Rod Gilkey
19&amp;11-Most Team Points Scored In vs. Wellston, 1966).
x--Cbnck
Stobart
t- ~ 7- ~ I
One Season - l53 (19-18).
Longest Touchdown Pass
Most Opponents Points From Scrimmage - 80 Yards
1961.$-Scored In one Season - 2011 (From l!od Gilkey To John :o--,lack Olcott
14- :0.1 11- u 2
(19-l!il.
Walker Vs. Pl. Pleasant. 1966).
l!IC-Karl Justus
:;. u 4- 1-2 1
Least Poinh Scored In One Most Yards Gained Br
Season - :u (1927) .
Receiver In One Season - 286
196U6--Terry Hansley
J5.J5.0 10-ll.e 3
Least Opponents Points (By Larry Mitchell, 1966).
19674-Gienn Trout
10-1~
~~ 2
Scored In one Season - 18 Longest Pass Interception
(1U1) .
.
Rooback For Touchdown- 1110 :o 1969 Jobn Ecker
14- 5-0 10- 44 2
Most Yards (Nell Rushing In Yards (By Dave Burnell Vs. TOTAL'!
One Season - 2,190 (19ol8) .
Ironton, 1969).
Most Yards Passing In One Opponents Longest Pass x - Coached ChampiCIIShip Teams.
Season- 1.177 (1966).
Interception Runback For
M&lt;m VAWABLE PLAYERS
Most Total Yards (Rush-Pass) Touchdown - 89 Yards (By
In One Season - 3,2SI (19-181. South Poinrs Vince Champan, 1914 - HilDer Burtm
1958 - Jay Simms
Most First Downs In One 19701.
1945
Vance
Johnson
1959 - Tom Hogan
Season- 139 119601.
Longest Lateral Interception
_ Most Net Yards Rushing In Rooback For Touchdown - 95 1!116 - Jim Simms
19&amp;Q - Diet Roderick
One Game - oi60 · (Vs. Yards (By Guy Lewis vs. 1947 - Bill Johnson
1961 - Andy Gilmcft
Nelsonville, 19-181.
Middleport, 19361.
1948
Bob
Marchi
1962 - Dan Howard
Most Yards Passino In One Longest Touchdown Run
G,ame - 289 (Vs. Wellston, From Scrimmage - 95 Yards 1949 - Bill Hogan
1963 - Larry Fraley
1966).
I By Jackie Jackson Vs. 1950 - Jackie Jackson
196f - Bill Wamsley
Most Yards Rushing-Passing Wellston, 19511.
1951
Jackie
Jackson
In One Game - -187 (Vs. Most Pass Interceptions In
1965 - Pete Andeisw
Nelsonville, 19-18).
One Season - 5 (By Bruce· 1!152 - James Holley
1966 - Dan Davies
Most Yards Gained On Pool Smilh, 1966 and By Dave
1!152
Dan
Beabout
1967 - .fUD Gilmcft
RetUrns In One Season - 313 llwnell, 1969 and 19701.
195f
Jack
Simms
(1960).
Most Points Scored In One
1968 - Rick Mosley
Mos t Yards Gained On Game- 37 (By Bill Smith Vs. J.95li - Car) Jettins - X
1969 - Tim Hemswoa tb
Kickoff Returns In One Season Middleport, 1937).
195&amp;
Bert
Smith
1!1'/0 - Dave Burnett
- 376 (1960).
Most Consecutive Extra
Most Yards Gained On Pass _Points From Placement - 12 1957 - Roo carr
1!1'/1 Interceptions In One Season - (By Gene Welherholt, 19.0 and
159 (1969) .
again In 19-181.
Most Poinh Scored In One Most Ex,tra Points From
Quarter In One Game -32 IVs. Placement In One Season - .«J
Nelsonville In Second Quarter, (By GeneWelherholl, who hii.«J
19ol8). ,
out of .'iO in 19-18).
Most Points Scored In One Most Times Carried ~II In
Game Br Two Teams - 79 One Gjlllle-29 (By Pete Neal
IGAHS 61, Pomeroy 18, 1951). Vs. Logan, 1970).
Most Fumbles ln·One Season Most Yards Rushing In One
- 27 (1958) .
Game - 198 &lt;By Paul Evans
()pponenb Most Fumbles In Vs. Pl. Pleasant, 19601 .
One Season - 28 (19-181.
loogesl Pool l!elum For
Most Yards Penalized In C.... Touchdown-65 Yards (By Bill
Season - 523 (19601.
Conley Vs. Jackson, 1~1 .
Southeastern Ohio Allllelic longest Kickoll Return For
League Championships- 1931, Touchdown - 85 Yards (By
1932, 1947, 19-411, 1960. 1962, 1970. Did&lt; Roderick, Vs. Pomeroy,
(INDIVIDUALl
19601.
Most Consecutive Games Most Yards Gained By Pool
Played- 39 (By Larry Fraley, Returns In 0... Seascn - 162
1960, •1961, 1962, 1963). l8 (By (By Bill Conley, 1960).
Bill Joe Johnson, 19-15, 19.j6, Most Yards Gained by"
19.0, 19-18).
Kickoff Relurns- J:u CBr Jim
Most Polnn Scored In One Gilmore, 1966).
Season - 114 (By Bill Joe Best Pooling Average For
Johnson, 19~71 .
One Season - 36.6 (By Tom
Most Touchdowns In One Spencer, 19611).
Season - 19 (By Bill Joe . Most Yards Pooling In One
Johnson, 19~71.
Season - 1,326 (By Tom
Most Points Scored In Career Spencer, 19671.
- 271 CBr Bill Joe Johnson. Longest Pool From Line 01
19-15, 19.j6, 1947, i9oll).
Scrimmage - 59 Yards (By
Most Times Carried Ball In Tom Spencer Vs. Coal Grove,
Oiie Season - 198 I By Dan 19611).

••
•• TEAM

EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 1.1971

GaiiWpolis, Ollio456ll ·

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VOLKSWAGEN

195

1 1 1 II
Tbe IJS1 Blue DevD cha.... slill111n1 three wds. the 1932
co.dwmpr .,... one mart. Tbe 19f1 cbampmnp squad OlrDS
line leCO!ds, the 11&amp;11 cbampioos 10, and the U6Z eleftn, paced by
fullback llamy Howard, OWIIS siJ: marb. Tbe defeudiJW SEOAL
champs picked up f01r Jut faD_

:
ITEAM!
Most Consecutive Wins- 21
_ {i9•7, 19-18, 198).
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Most Consecutive Defeats- 9
• !196-4).
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Most Wins In One Year- 10

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figlftl......,oed by Blue ml Wbile W81Tion dwiiJi the paat ~
:veara w111 prove mtatlling, eapecia)Jy to lhlllle wbo hrlped
establllb 11111e ollbe marb81M11Ilolle wbo played with the ret&gt;ad
makers_
I I I I+
WE came up with 33 team ret-cads .00 34 iDdivicU1 effarls_
'lbere's plmlf mere, ol cmne, but lbe ooes we have listed may
be found in most ligb acbool OF mlhlll! laocluaes. We WGUid ~
to - ol the r«adll printed in tbe (l,a))j-· IIIIIDe grid
)II"Oii"aiDS- Wellston, lroollm, Jacbon and other SEOAL schools
do IIU, aDd
them as
I I I I+
OF the 331eam reuads, the 1M8 Blue DevU powerilouse still
holds 12. ne 19116 team, wtacb Bnfslw! second 1o COiierence
play. balds llindlvldual marb_ Together, lbe 1M8 squad- 16
let-cads. the UII6IQIIICI is next with 11 Rod Gillley, outstanding
fJW"Ierback Ill lbe .. Jearn, OWIIS the most indivimaJ marb eigbt.

:
REOORDS are made to be brotm. ne 19'11 Blue Devil squad
• baa a cbance to maR a D8llle fGr itaelf in the GABS record book•
: But enough ol that fGr now. Here's what we came up with
" recently:

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SHOES

I I I I+

srATISTIO! may be a IMre to most people, but we feel tbe

.en

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tournament
Earlier in
the day,
Springfield, Mo., defeated
Archbcjld 1~ iD tbe dn•bleelimination tournament. In
other actioo, Uncoln Pad,
Mich_, toot a Z-lt wiD frllll
Janesville, W"IS.
,
Ardlbold went into the third
inning ll'ailing Ga' bw g 6-0,
but then exploded fer six runs
led by Richard Selgo's ~!rand­
slam hooler iD the thinl Selgo
also pitched the final two
scm-eless jnnjngs
In the opener, Kelley Sllider's
bases-loaded single in the
bottom of the ninth brought
Springfield the victmy. W"mning
pitcher &lt;luis Petersoo scat.
tered eight bits, slnick out four
and walked fourThe tournament continues
through today.

1I I I 1

Wll'lltbe 1J7lllrid opmerm.....-Jesa than two weebaway ,11111ris a
good lime to itview tbe Gelli•ll8 team and iDilridual ~
61ce lbe Soolheoslem Oblo Atblelic Lague ... fomel in a;
.

I

You will find your entire warchbe in lhe ·... "TRADITIONAL SH6P'"~I !t
the Haskins- Til!wlf!! Co- The 71: season's handsome new colors and
styles. All you guys will befhe head of the class with the newest classics
from
c:nmplele mllection!

Wins 7-6
Decision

md figures up lo d..e.

··

Tbe Tornadoes, being outweighed by as much as 30
pounds per man, let Coacb Dave
Boston's boys tnow they bad
been in a hall game. Tbe
Buckeyes appear to have one of
their fmest teams in recent
years.
Mike Nease scored the
Tornadoes' ooly touchdown, a
seven yard jaunt. Nease played
brilliantly both offensively and
defensively, once intercepting a
Buckeye pass on the goal line
and zigzagging his way back to
midfield , breaking several
lackles along tbe way.
Tbe Tornadoes will scrimmage Meigs reserves Ibis
Wednesday and the Buckeyes
will scrimmage tbe Eastern
Eagles next Saturday.

NELSONVILLE The
Southern Local Tornadoes
scrimmaged the Nelsonville
York Buckeyes at Nelsonville
Saturday morning with the
Buckeyes walking away with a
7-1 touchdown edge over the
Meigs countians .
Coach Bruce Wallace's
Tornadoes were slighUy outclassed by Jhe ( AA ) Buckeyes,
but held their own ground most
of Jhe time during the two and a
half
hour
scrimmage.
Southern 's light but quick
hitting eleven held the
Buckeye's first team to only
four scores while the reserves
allowed the Buckeye seconds
only three sccres. Southern's
first team scored their only
llluchdown.

WHILE oo vacatloo rec:m!Q&gt;, we had a cbaM:e to go U.IJICb
' our ,.....,n JW«ds and brine the GABS Blue Devils grid fads

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PENGUINS SIGN BINKLEY
PITI'SBURGH (UPI} - The
Pittsburgh Penguins of Jhe
National Hockey League announced Friday the signing of
goaltender Les Binkely, who
allowed an average of 2.85
goals in 34 games ·before being
sidelined with a knee injury last
season .

i4nppr

I

could ....
Reaction to the Southeastern Ohio Athletic League's recent
decision to return to round robin (seven games) play in baseball
next spring hasn't been too favorable among sCribes around tbe
circuit.
'
In all . probability, bad weather will force cancellation ol
several cooference games next year. "can you imagine wgan
going aU the way to Ironton for a seven inning contest. Tbe Chiefs
arrive, get in two or three innings, then it raiDs. Sounds like it will
be very cosUy to SEOALclubs. The division play, which began in
1950, was good solution to cut down spring spcrts CIISis.
Another reason officials adoPted the division policy was that
when round robin play was in effect, several gl!mes were postponed, and never made up, due to loog-dislance traveling. In
other words, if Logan played five games and was unbeaten, but
('.aUipWis played seven, and owned a 1).1 record, Logan would be
clec1ared the league champion. That doesn't seem fair.
One reasoo for tbe return to round robin play was the number
ol pmes played. However, if aU teams play their entire league
achedule, that means seven games. In tbe past 21 years, teams
played six games, then the two division kingpins played a seventh
~ for tbe overall cllampionship. ·
·
Ollly Cilia! in the past 21 yeats (last spring) has there been
tbi a way tie for tbe divisioo champiooship. Thus, three extra
• - we-e required to determine the southern division champi• lilt May. Too,going_intotheflnal weekct the 1!1'/1 campaign,
fheoftbeeigbtSEOAL 1e81118 were stiUconlenders fer the leagllf
dll!lnplonsbip. We faver the dlvisioo policy. ftow 'bout you?'

PARLOR SPECIALTIES .
t~akt

GBllia

\

Kyger .Creek BObcats
Will Have New LoDk

Tbe Bobcats will be led by a
new coaching slaff, headed by
Richard E. (Dick) Adams, 23,
former AII.SOutbeastern Ohio
and All Mid-American gridder.
Adams succeeded another
former Mid-American Conference star, Howard Lee
Miller.
Adams, twice the Most
Valuable Player of the MAC, is
assisted by James K. Arledge,
formerly an assistant coach at
Waverly.
Holding two-a-day drills since
Chet Tan,nehiU
his appointment Aug. 16, Coach
Adams has been busymoldillg a
and Junior Wilson
different offensive
and
defensive pattern for the
Bobcats, near-perennial
champions of the Southern
It's conside!"ed good form amoog football coaches to bad; Valley Athletic Conference.
mouth their own team's chances ill a conference race just enough,/ "No matter who plays us, if we
(a) Not to discourage their own boys, and (b) Not to alert other win or lose, they will know they
CGICbes oo your upcCIIIiDg schedule that you really have a block have been in a football game,"
Imler. Tbis double whammy uiom is the basis for all cryillg he said.
Known for his hard-bitting
. toweljolles. In otherwcrds, theyplayitcool.
Maybe different rules apply fer the coacb takiog on a par- aggressive play during his last
cularly ,IIH,fipli\ sj,luatioo, where the J!~yers '!Jill student body two years as an .outstanding
nen11t lulve lio!en down for two cr nllre years. H the boys have defensive back for the Miami
- been pretty much creamed for two cr three years, coacb has to Redskins, Adams is illstilling
change their emotional direclioo. Discounting the boys' chances that trait into his ball club.
Kyger Creek fmished secQnd
to win would be worse than stupid.
in
league play last season
Bruce WaDace at Southern High, takiDg over after a season ill
mcb theTcrnadoeswooonegame, tnowshis boys have a big job behind the Eastern Eagles.
ahead if they are to be cmnpetitive ill the Southern Valley Coo- Overall, the Bobcats compiled a
5-4 mark.
ference (Class A). He must - and should - look forward to
Since 1960, Kyger Creek bas
vicllries.
captured six conference tiUes
Mr. &lt;has. Chancey out at Rock Springs has fillished four
and Shared two others. Eastern
league seasoos with tbe Maraud..-s always a cootender and one won Jhe league championship in
cbampiooship_ But if Charlie had a 19'11-versioo of Hex Kern at 1960 and 1966.
quarterback and John Brockington at fnllbaclr, It's doubtful if
Fifteen returning lettermen
he'd predict an outright cbampiooshipandan IDiefeated season. form the nucleus of the 1!1'/1
Down ill Gampolis where Mr. Jdmny Ecller guides the Big football squad of « players.
Blne, just oil a brilliant, undefeated seasoo and championship, Lost via graduation were
there is a similar pattern. It would awear Ecker has been taking
lessons fr1111 Chancey. To wbit:
Olancey, last week: '"'bis league will be strong this year.
Especially tough will be Gallipolis, Irontoo, Logan, Jackson ... "
Ecker, last week ill public remarks before two local groups
(ill eslleDCe): '"'bis league will be slronK this year. Especially ·
lllugh will be Meigs, !roo ton, Logan, Jaclqlon ... "
WeD and good.
·
But downriver in lrooton, opening its fourth f•mpaig~~ (in
modem limes) in the SEOAL, there is a different wind blowing.
Coacb Bob Bruney, beginning his sixth season there, predicts a
Southeastern Ohio League championship /md a possible undefeated season.
Wrote Harold Roach in the lrontoo Tribune:
'"11lat I~ prediction last week by Coach Bob Bruoey both
pleased and s1unned Ironton High School fans who are e:a:pecting a
good seasoo but perhaps not an undefeated ooe. Some fans have
even asked· us if we quoted Bruney rigbt, if that predictim
(really) did come from him!
"(Bruoey) e:q&gt;ressed his total optimism ill writing on a
questioonaire sen tout by theTribunesportsdepartment.lf any of
you want to see it in black and wbite Clllle on up. We bave it
mounted m the wall. Fer tho5e ct you who don't want to climb the
stairs, we'llreiteratee:a:acUywhat the coach wrote down:
" 'Predicted finish': 1st, Predicted reccrd: I~; Predicted
SEOAL willner, Irooton; Runnerup, Logan; Possible All..state
Selections frCIII Ironton, Hal Spears, Bobby Smith.' "
Coach Bruney could look like a genius come November. 01" be

Buckeyes. Get 7
Touchdowns

I ,

Reds Rally, Nip
,CardiJUJls, B~ 7

RETURNING LETTERMEN- The Kyger Creek
Bobcats hope to bnprove last
season's :i-4 mark behind
these returning lettermen.
They are (front row, left to
right) John Roush, Greg
McCarty, David Stump,
Kenny Blankenship, Jim Bias
and Terry Sheets. Second
row, (I tor) Glenn Smith, Bill
Roush, Danny Swisher, Lou
Louden, Ge&lt;lrge Curry, Terry
BY DALE RO'I'IIGEB, J1l
Moles, Richard Rumley and
CHFSHIRE - Kyger Creek
Gary Collins. Absent-Orland High School foolball will have
Cremeans and Lawrence an all new look on the gridiron
Tabor.
this fall.

1

EVA~s·

INC.

"BUILDING SUPPLIES''
- r 11lnt Fridor-1 A.M. to S P.M.
511-y- 7 A.M- to • P.MPIIONE«6-4tl5

'

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-

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II " loo
I II
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1t'll

Guns Point At Farmers ·

Three Local Sales to Feature Feeder Calves
E.~N.&amp;U" 1 .EE

According · to Extension · make up the J!Jllior Division of Class entries may be made with accepted.
'
Animal Scieoce SJlE:cialist the show, Adults arid others not ·the Show and Sale ~et.
Calves must be dropped after
RichardO. Smith, calves sold at enroUoo In .4-H club or FFA Each exhibitor may enter .ip to January I, 1971 and must weigh
the Roundup last year brought projects will compete in the six calves, and an entry fee of $3 from · :J:i0.600 pounds at the
$35-450moreperheadthanthey OpenCiassDivisionoftheshow. per head must accompany all weigh-in iif the show.
would have at most other feeder
To consign · calves, junior entries.
Sponsored by· the Ohio
calf sales. 'Ibis year's show and members must complete an
To be eligible for show and Cooperative Extension Service,
sale will lie held at the Ohio entry blank with their county sale, calves must be · sired by the Roundup is financially
Expositions Center Beef Barn in agents on or bef~re September purebred Ang~s. Charolais, · supported by Ohio Rural
Columbus oo September 30, 10. FFA members should enler Hereford, or Shorthorn bulls out Electric CooperaUves, Inc. By
October 1, and October 2.
calves through their Vocational of good grade or purebre&lt;l beef providing a good ouUet for
feeders, will be held this faJI grader, sleers are all castrated,
FFA and 4-H members will Agriculture instructors. Open cows. No dairy breeding will be calves, the Roundup will
in•telld of tbe hro IHll1ll8!ly and they are sold in WlifOJ"!II
hopefully encourage cow-calf
held.
gr aded lots. Many buyers
operations ' in areas of
The sale at thE: Athens return to these sales each year
Southeastern Ohio that are
lJvestoclt Yard will be to secure the needoo calves to
suitOO for it
Tueaday, Ocl $, with • head put in their feedlot.
The show and sale also
ezpeciE:d to be sold starting at 1 Consignments to these three
provides a source of quality
p.Di. AI the Atbel\s Yard lhe sales may be made .to the
livestock for FFA and 4-H fair
Cllves~IDODMonday,Oct. secretary, Paul Baer, Route 1
projects, as well as for finishing
4, are graded and grouped Minersville, Ohio, 45763; or to
and breOOing operations ID the
~ to quality, and sold any of the officers or directors
grain11roduclng areas of NorthWASHINGTON (UPI)- Two L. Freeman, who pressed hard Rosenthal 5aid Thursday the
011 'l'ueadaY.
in the five counties of Athens,
weslern and Western Ohio.
Tbe two sales at the Ohio Galli&amp;, Lawrence, Meigs, and former govemcrs, a Kentuclty for expanded rural develop- FDA failed to inspect the Bon Calves should be brought to
Democrat arid a Nebraslta ment efforts during hiS eight Vivant plant in Newark, N. J.
Valley Livestoet Yards at Vinton.
the Beef Barn between 3 p.m. on
for at least four years prior to
C'•llipo!is are ev1!llin8 wes, the . Officers of the Southeaslern Republican, have taken the lead years in office.
Thursday, September 30, and 9
the death of a man who ate
6rst at I o'clock, 'l'uesday, Oct. Ohio Beef Cattle Improvement in an effort to form a new
a .m., Friday, Ocl Lit might be
· tainted vichyssoise.
12, and the secutd at I p.m., Assn., which conducts the sale, national organizatioo to press
wise to . bring the calves
He said the Agriculture
'l'lwraday, Nov. 4. At the laltel" include Leo Story, president; for slepped-up economic WASHINGTON (UPI) _Rep.
Thursday evening to give them
twowesthe calves are brought W. S. Michael, vice president, development of America's rural . Benjamin s..Rosenthal, D-N.Y., Department allowed Camp- lime to settle down before the
.
proposed removing food in· bell's chicken vegetable soup to show.
in the lilorniDg of the sale, and Baer, secretary-treasurer. areas.
Everythmg a~ut . t~e spection authority from the be shippe&lt;l from a Texas plant,
weigbed, graded, and grouped Directors are Athens County,
Lodging and meal facilities
pr~.
new _org_aruzalion IS Agriculture department and the even though tests IDdicated are available at the Youth
according to quality, and sold John s. Blazier and W. A.
that evenillg.
LaFollette; Galli a County, te~talivemcluding1tsname~ Food and Drug AdmiDistration some cans in the lot were Center. ·n.e charge for lodging
This is to reduce the time Wayne Jividen; Lawrence exiStence, a spokesman S:Ud because of their allegoo failure contaminated with botulism. will be $2.25 per night for
between the farm 011 which the County, Joe Woodard and today. But the~ group, bemg to prevent the marketing of two The shipment was later recalloo exhibitors that are Ill-years old
Cllves are pnxluced and the William Gayle; Vmton County, calloo the Coalilioo for Rural brands of contaminated soup. by the company.
and under; older participants
feedlot where they will be fOO Thomas Rannells and Lemuel America, hopes to get off the
must 'pay $S per night. Breakout Into choice or prime steers · Fuller, an~ Meigs County, Leo ground wben some 40 to 50 infast is $1.~. lunch is $2 .~. and
vited leaders meet bere Sept. 7
and heifers. In some eases Story and
Michael.
dinner $2.50. Arrangements
at the invitatioli of former
owners may wisb to deliver
ANNUAL RO~UP
should
be made along with
their calves to the yards "' the
Another opportunity to sell governors Edward T. Breathitt
entry blanks. Meal tickets and
aflemoon or ev1!llin8 before. high quality fee&lt;ler calves is the of Kenluclty and Norbelt T.
lodging assignments can be
COLUMBUS .(UPI) - Of· Steven WesUake, Marysville, picked up at the Beef Barn
'Ibis is possible if ~Is 5th Annual Ohio Fee&lt;ler Calf Tiemann of Nebraska.
One source bere said the ficials at the Ohio Stale Fair, loo the field of 91 entries in the
are made with the yardso
Round-up.
organization Breathitt and wbere atlendance after two pen of three market lambs Office just before the show.
Entry blank and fact sheets
Tiemann hope to form wouid days is down about 34,000 class. WesUake also won the about the show and sale may be
be designed in a general way as persons from last year, said purebred wether pen top award.
from
county
a rural counterpart for the today they hoped sunny and First junior pen of five obtained
Urban Coalitioo, a group which clear weekend weather would market lambs honors went to cooperative extension semce
offices or from Vocational
tries to mobilize citizen bring out a big crowd and wipe Janeen Lutz of· the Crawford
pressure in support of efforts to out the deficit. Results of County community of Chatfield. Agriculture instructors.
Don't forget to get entries in
improve the lot of the city competition Friday were:
Kathy Johnson of Fred- by Sept. 10.
dwellers.
.
Tractor pulling, AI Isch of ericktown won a grand
Invitations to the Sept.. 7 Bluffton, Ind., won the 5,000 championship with her shortsession, called to discuss · the pound stock division with a pull hom spring yearling heifer in
feasibility of new organization, of 190-feet-2-inches. Gaylord junior fair competition. Eddie
have gone to a "cross section" zechman, Green Springs, Ohio, Forsythe of Mowrystown was
of leaders in industry, won the 500 modifioo division the big winner In the junior GALLIPOLIS
Ternagriculture, labor, minority with a 248-feet ~ch pull.
division beef show with his perature, precipitation and
groups and others involve&lt;l in Heavier 9,000 pound stock grand champion, reserve weather conditions for each 24
local rural development efforts. class, Reuben Tingley's pull of champion, four class winners hour period as recordoo by Pete
Among those who have in- 241-f~~ches took first while and two runner-iip animals in McCormick, Fairfield weather
dicated interest is former Blaine Kech of Monroe, Mich. the hereford classes.
observer :
Agriculture Secretary Orville won the 7,000 pound modifioo Froorick M. Penick, Hebron, Day
Wgb Low Prec.
hot rods with a 280-feet-~ch won the silver trophy with his Sunday
84
65
.18
pull.
grand champion Angus heifer Monday
80 68
.58
7
7
James Davidson of New "Stardust Annie" at the junior Tuesday
8 4
LIVESTOCK SALES
CLEVE LAND (UP I)
Carlisle in Clark County won the division show. Jon Widman, an Wednesday
83 60
Liveslock (Salurdayl:
.30
82 62
·-~~
Qrow
Cattle: 700. Market 25 cents 4-H tractor operator's contest. 11-year-&lt;&gt;ld from Fremont, won Thursday
.03
Mahogany Farms of HoweU, the champion Guernsey award. Friday
80 62
lower. Prime steers 30.50-35.50,
cllolce 31.50-3-4, good 28.75-32, Mich., took most of the awards Dan Kellogg of Rome took the Saturday
66 57
standard 2•.50-21, choice heifers for their enbies in the Belgian Jersey championship. .
Average high temperature for
28-32, good 25.50-29, standard
draft
horse
classes.
MahOGany
Judith
Boggs,
,
Pataskala,
week
this year -79. Last year
13
2•.50-28. Commercial cows
7
18.50-20.50, utility 22-23, cutters exhibited the grand champion won the grand championship in - 86 · ·
23·2•, canners 16-19.50, bologna and reserve grand champion the polled Hereford show . Average low temperature for
bulls 28-29.50. fat bulls 23-25.
senior Champion pen of the Future week this year- 60.1. Last year
Vine street
Calves: 25. Market steady. stallion, reserve
Gallipolis.
Choice vealers til-~. good 30-37, champioo stallion and took first Farmers of America poultry - 58.8.
standard 20-26. utllily 16-19.
place honors in the Belgian classes was shown by Denny
Total precipitation for week
Hogs: 150. Market sfeady to
Miller, 18, Laura, winning the this year - 1.09 inches. Last
weak, 2011-220 lb. 18.50-19, 22(1.2~ stallion futurity.
lb. 18.25-19. 2tll-280 lb. 16.50Eddie Thompson Jr., of eventforthelhirdyearina row. year- .90 inch .
18.25, sows all weights 13.2S. Ostrander in Delaware County, The Karnes _ family of Total precipitation to dale
H.75.
Sheep and lambs: 25. Markel showoo his ll().pound lamb to Highland County , perennial this year - 2Ul6 inches. Last
steady. Prime lambs 25-27. the grand championship in the winners in the fruit division of year - 27.18 inches.
choice 22-25, feeders 19·2•. ewes Junior Market Lamb Show. the horticulture show since 1963,
Normal average precipitation
J.9.
did it again Friday. Mr. and annually - 40.99 inches.
Mrs. William "Pat" Kartles and
sons, Greenfield, exhibitOO 45
"firsts" and took the sweepTAXES MANDATORY
stakes
award.
The landscape horticulture
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Slate
POMEROY - Meigs Area
Debbie
Darling,
17,
of
Wellsmini-lectures
include
the
use
of
Tax
Commissioner Robert J.
homeowners and professional
Jon
in
Jackson
County,
won
the
Kosydar said Friday a personal
Lurfgrass and landscape trees, best of the crabspples,
4-H
·
girls'
safety
speaking
income tax and addoo taxes on
technicians are invited to atlend pruning trees, · systemic
I
a Turf and Landscape Day fungicides, and color in the conlest and Jack Arnold, 18, of business are mandatory to
Tuesday, Sept. 14, beginning at summer landscape . Wagon Franklin in Warren County, was provide a balance in the state's
lOam. at the Ohio Agricultural lours will include bluegrass top speaker in the 4-H boys' " antiquated" tax structure.
Research and Development variety trials, rose garden, safety speaking competition. Kosydar said an increase in the
Mrs. Effie Pierce of Green- present sales tax would be
flowering crabapples, shade
Center in Wooster.
field
and Harvey Knapp of "intolerable" and would
• 3-cylinder diesel or 4-cylinder gas engines
Included ID the program will tree evaluation, maples and
Portsmouth won the daily present more of a tax burden to
be turfgrass mini-lectures on junipers.
• Lightning flash shift (8F-4R speeds) synchromesh
seed size and quality , Acopy of the program may be senior citizens' dance contest. persons with low income.
transmission
fungicides, wee&lt;l and insect obtained from your county Mrs. Martha Yoder, Columbus;
Mrs. Emma Heisel, Columbus,
extension office.
control, and fertilization .
• Planetary final drive
and Mrs. Ethel Bohl, Mowrystown, were winners in the
• 181'.! gallon fuel tank
cookie bake.&lt;J!I.
• More comfort- " new walk-through"" styling

These three sales, along with
Eli.~ Aerie r: ••
· 19 ol!ien in"the stale, mak~ up
P01IEROY - Feeder calf .the Ohio Approve&lt;~ Feeder Calf
producers wiD be planning to Sales to be held "in 1971. These
IDirlet lhdr calves Gf tbe fa)) salesareallbeefsales (nodairy
r
'l'llftelocal cross-breeds are permitted).
· sales, aelling Obio approved n.ey are graded by a state

BY C.

·

,.,_,slatly.

New in Farming

Agricultural Notes

Down on Farm··

Fair Winners

sam

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
manufacturers are "aiming
their ·
directly at Ohio
farmers"
by
opposing
legislation establish ing
mediatioo procedures and good
.faith bargaining sleps, the Ohio
Farm Bureau Fooeration "said
Friday.
Robert Swnmer of Tiffin,
president of the board of
trustees , said the bureau
denounce&lt;~ the lobbying efforts
of the Ohio Manufacturer's
association in atlempt.lng to
defeat the bill.

mms

---------POULTRY REPORT
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Poultry
- Paid to Ohio country packing
plants lor eggs delivered to
major Ohio cifies, Detroit and
Pltlsburgh Saturday. Cases
Included, consumer grades ,

By Mn, Evelya Brlcklei
Sunday Sehoul attendance at
the .UnitOO Methodist Church
August 22, .was :i6 and the offering $14.92. Worship at. tendance was 31 with offering

"We simply can't figure out
why the big manufacturing
complinies are opposing the
bill," Summer said.
"Tbese companies are aiming
their guns direcUy at Ohio
"farmers wben they oppose this
bill," ·he cootin~ed . "There
action· are sensel~:SS, when you
consider that farmers are their
biggest customers."

$20.11.
C. 0. Newland underwent
surgery at Veterans Memorial
Hospi\1¥ in Pomeroy and
recovering satisfactorily.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Kuhn and
family of Little Hocking were
calling oo his mother, Mrs.

. lUNG IS DEAD
ClEVELAND (UPI) - King
Features news syndicate here,
"the Central Press Association,
will close Oct. 1, after 61 years
of service, it was announce&lt;~
Friday.
" King Features simply
decided to get out of the news
mat business," said Courtlan&lt;l
C. Smith, managing editor.
"For some years now costs
have been going up and it's just
a matter of economics,"

Grace Kuhn Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Taylor of
UtUe Hocking were Sunday
afternoon guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Brickles.
· Mrs. Doris Koenig and
brother, Norman Weber, of
Tuppers Plains ahd sister ,
Barbara Sargent of Chester,
went to Akron to the Stample
Funeral Home to pay respects
to their uncle Orvil Stansbury
who passed away in Akron.
They also visited their sister,

Mr .. and Mrs. S. B. Haught of
Cuyahoga Falls.
Mrs. Ruth Ann Golden and
daughler of Athens spent a
couple of days here with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Way
Clark.
Mts. Maxine Marcinko and
daughler, Marie, calloo on Mr.
and Mrs. Wayn~ Brickles
Wednesday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Babcock
and Mrs. Leota Massar were
Saturday evening guests of Mr.
and Mrs. C. W. Taitt of Little
Hocking.
Herman Clark of Monroe,

j

Week$ Weather

e Fall FJeld Seeds

product Is sold In locations such as offices, employee

1

IM'fBE 1 Q..IGMTA F'ACI'( A LITT LE
LUI1CM .,. 'SEEIn' AS HOW ~ . J(JIS/Jf.rlt
LOOKS t..t&lt;f HI! COUL D Sl AI10 A HELPIM"

Pointing

• Hydrostatic power steering, adjustable seat, Dynalile• clutch, hydraulic wet disc brakes, underslung
muffler

Begun

• Options include twin-shaft 540/ 1000 RPM IPTO
and differential lock

I

••
..... Ill.

om. -

for real estate

454

Farm
Loans

locfa1.

MEIGS EQUIPMENT 00.
PH. 992-2176

POMEROY, 0 .

CL YOE B. WALKER, Mgr.
tt·Locust St.

446-0203

Gallipolis

~en1ng .\.nwrll ,l' f.HnH'r"' Pro\uft•r, nl Plt'nh
'

cOLUMBUS (UPI) - Thi
failure of the General Assembly
to pass less than 4 pel. of bills
introduce&lt;l during the eightmonth legislative session has
been blamoo on Republicans.
House Minority Leader A. G.
Lancione, D-Bellaire, said 1,404
bills have been introduce&lt;~ in the
House and Senate since
January, but only SO have been
signed into law by Gov. John J. ·
Gilligan.
" Only the GOP-controlled
General Assembly can take
credit and the blame for such
inactivity and delay," said
Lancione. ''The Republicans
are resorting to the timeworn
tactic of putting everything off
until the last minute of the .
session:
"They are rapidly setting an
unenviable record for ineptness
and political cowa'1!ice in the
handling of their elected
responsibility," .added the
Democratic leader.

J

0 ' VITIIM IMS !

lor

I

\'r~lt"rti•~ ·~~

Centenary area. Ph . 446-4352
after 6 p.m.

203-3
invalid lady, live in, would

II

WHERE AN ACl::IR M16HT
HAVE A P'AR"T IN

INDUSTRY
Now arranr• t.he circloo tellero

to form the surprise answer, u

auggested by the above eartoon.

Waitress, 10 p.m. to 6 a.m.
shill. Good pay, paid
vacatiOn,

Pliaunr 'wOrking"'

condilions. Apply in perS&lt;&gt;n,
Bob Evans Steak House.

BETTER jobs are available for
GBC graduales. Enroll now
for fall term. Gallipolis
Business College R. N. 71-02·
0032B . Ph. 4&lt;16·4367.
loser trade play because it _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,1,62;:,-IIJ_.
trades a heart loser for a dia·
mond loser. Both the loser Wanted To Rent
on loser play and this loser SPACE for 12x65 privately
trade play are forms of the owned mobile home within or
avoidance play which is de· near city limits. 2 adulls.
References upon request. Ph .
signed to keep the dangerous
446·4278.
hand from gaining the lead.
201-6

Winner Trades on Losers

Furnaces
Finest Budget Pay Plan
WEST

Finest Delivery Service
Automatic
Degree Day Delivery
Duel Delivery Equipment

28

EAST

.4
.103
.KQJ1087
.9652
+1083
+QJ9
.AQ4
.JI093
SOUTH (D)
.AQJ765

.3+

Pomeroy
Landmark

-

c.,.,.-

JACK W. CARSE\', MGR.
Serving Meigs, Galli a and Mason Coonlies
PHONE 992-2181
Store Open Mon . . Sat. Unti16 P.M.

K72
• K87
Both wlnerahle
North Easi South

I.4.

I~EWSPAPER

ENTERPRISE ASSH.l

For Rent
The bidding has been:
West
North
East

Ph. 446-9255.

3.

Pass

IT WA'S IN n.IE

BQOT OF" OH'E OF

FENCE

fWE TRIPLETS.

ePOULTRY

eGATES eSTAPLES

"YOUR FARM SUPPLY SERVICE ciNTER"

Central Soya

MASTER

. of Ohio.
GALLI
POll
•

•.

3 BEDROOM brick duplex
apartment,
garage,
breezeway, basement, excel.

location, Pt. Pleasant. Ph .
675-44.10 or 675-4091.
203-3

- - - ---

I

l

.'

•'

machine. buttonholes, fashion
desians. etc. Balance due
$26.10. Ph . «6-9353.
197-tt

Netr GMt·
Truck Heaclqunrs

.:.

c

•
•

•

i'

Ph. 446-2532

2•1-lf

----;--- - - -

424 Second Ave.

173-tf
.
.
1970 HONDA CBI75, 11 e new,

1970

VW station wagon, like
new, $2,200, prlvale .
Ph•.f~"AW\"'
416dlt.
.-

i:"'

l

20J.J

1275 miles. Ph. 446-2535.

==:--::-:--:-::-:-:201 -3 STEREO,
Walnul rlnlsMd,
conlemporary cabinet, •
10 LEVEL lots, Heallh apspeaker sound system, •
proved, water, gas by,
speed changer. Balance
sewered. Will sell one, or
$69.57. Use our budgel plen.
wholesale all to builders. on
Call 416-1028.
north S. R. 7. Write Box 40,
20J.J
Addison, Ohio for appt.
:-::-:-:-:-:--::--:---:-202 -6 STEREO. Early American
cabinet wllh ANI-FM r.cllo, •
27 AND 23 herd of Holstein
speaker sound system, 4
heifers, will freshen in Sep· speed changer, Balance
!ember. Ph. 614-2116-2496.
$72.39. Use oor budgel plan.
202-3
Call 416-1028.
CANNING tomatoes. S2 bushel .
Bring conlalner. Call tor SAVE Big! Doyourownrugand .
order, 245-5121.
upholslery cleaning wllh Blue
202-3
Lustre.
Rent
electric
~------

- -- - ----

USED FURNITURE
'
TV, 2 wood dinette sets. 2 living

.,

- -- - - - -

~mpooerst. eentratsupply

:zo:u

--------INTERNATIONAL No. 16
chopper with corn head, extra
good cond .. 5700. Straw 50c
.,le. Ph. 2-15-5007.
m.l

room suites- 1 less lhan a
year old, 2 lawn mowers - I
elect. and I gas, 2 rockers. gas
range like btwra~d newttr, roll·
away bed, 2 1n rna esses
and spring, basslnel. Rice's :--:-:---::-=:-:-:-:-:-:-New &amp; Used Furn. , 85-4 Second 10X50 2 BEDROOM mobile
(across from Texaco Station) . h
Ph ~ 0650
4&lt;16-9523.
orne. · •·

- - - - -- -

Gallipolis
Daily Tribune

What You Need

=--:-:-::-=-=-1971 MODEL zig -zag-sewing

Charatan. Tawney Jewelers,

2()4

We Have

HOUSE coal delivered. Ph. 4464393.
197-12

your home. Special pre-school
offer . Clean, oil and adjust,

For Sale ·
Aluminum
Sheets

eLAWN

-=-=-=--~--GE
RANGE, 40" white, 4 yrs.
old, broiler, rolisserle, 3
storage drawers, like new.
Ph . ~-488.5.
201-3

USED TRAILERS
1960 National 10x50, 2 br.
1967 Horizon 12x50, 2 br.
1957 Glider &lt;5x8, 3 br.
1966 Namco, 52x10, 3 br .
1960 Van Dyke, 10x50 2 br.
1960 Van Dyke 10x50, 2 br.
1965 Kentuckian, 56x10, 3 br.
1962 Colonial 50x10, 2 br.
1960 Van Dyke 10x40, 2-br.
All !railers clean and rKon·
di1ioned . Ready for OC· ·
cupancy. Free Delivery end.
se1-up . Tri -County Mobile
Homes, ~175 .

a

OJCI[ TiUCY

-:--

1970 350 HONDA, lots of extru,
good condlllon. Ph. «6-9050.
201.jl

J08.1f

2 N.T.
Pass
You, South, hold:
:-:-=-:-:-- - -.AK87 •Az +KQ9 .K643 LARGE furnished room with
Pass
kilchen privileges, Gallipolis.
What do you do now?
202-tt
Pass
Pass
Ph . 446-9244.
A--Bid three spades to get
203-1 10,000 BTU Gibson air conOpening lead-· K
some more information.
TODAY'S QUESTION
LOOKING fora real nice room? dllloner. Ph. «6-4648.
202-3
Your
partner
goes
to
three
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Lowe Motor Hotel. Pl.
no~trump . What do you do
Pleasanl, Main and 4lh In- 7 ROOM home. complele1y
vites your inspection. Singles,
The student went up with now?
furnished with air con~.50, SS, S6, $7, $8, $9; $2 for
Answer Monday
dummy's ace of hearts, led
ditioning, washer and dryer
exira person. Special weekly
spade to his ace and a Sec·
with large lot. Located at
rates. F pkg., TV, ind. air
Gallipolis
Ferry. Ph. «6-9662.
ond spade back to dummy's
cond., sell serv . elev. Ph. 675.
202-3
king. Then he led dummy's
2260.
Th
Aim
four of hearts. East, who had
e
ansc
1$8-lf
GOOD CLEAN LUMP and
·played the deuce of hearts By Unlled Press lnlernallonsl
coal. Carl Winters, Rio
Today is Sunday, Aug. 29, the SLEEPING ROOMS weekly sioker
at his first turn, produced the
Grande.
Phone 2-45-5115.
24Jst day of 1971.
rates, free garage parking.
five spot.
8-tt
Libby Hotel.
The moon is between its first
74-11
The student thought a
WE specialize in por1rait and
while and threw away his quarler and full phase. ·.
commercial pholography,
deuce of diamonds. West
The morning stars are Saturn NEW lurnjshed aparlmenl
church weddings, reunions,
won the trick and did the and Mercury.
(never used). five rooms up.
Tawney Studio.
elc.
witl rent to one or two,
best he could by leading a
88·11
diamond, but the student The evening stars are Mars, working couple. loeated near
Kanauga. Also have for sale,
won with his king ; led a dia· Jupiler and Venus.
'59 8x40 housetrailer. Write
mood to the ace; ruffed a
Those born on this day are Box 40, .Addison, Ohio.
diamond high ; entered dum· under the sign of Virgo.
202-6
~~~X 23" X.~
my with a trump and disAmerican poet Oliver Wendell - -, - - -- - -carded a club on the 13th HoimeswasbomAug. 29,1809. FURNISHED aparlment.
dia111ond. He still had to lose
On this day in hisotry :
adulls only, free garage
parking. Libby Holel.
two clubs, but he had made
In 1852 Brigham Young
193-lf
his game.
proclaimoo the "celestial law of .- - - -- - - - - USED OFFSET PLATES
He turned to the Professor marriage," thus signifying his LARGE lrailer lot, 70x150, 5
' HAVE
and said, "That was a loser approval of the practice of miles N. of Pl. Pleasanlon Rl.
MANY
USES
on loser play td keep East
2. Sewage &amp; water, SJ5 mo. or
polygamy among Mormons.
will consider land con1ract.
out of the lead, wasn't it?"
In 1960 the premier of Jordan Ph. 675-3679.
"You are learning," re· ~nd 11 others were kiUed when
198·6
llor suo
plied the Professor. "You
chucked the hand at trick a lime bomb explodoo ID his SLEEPING ROOMS. weekly
rates. Park Cenlral Holel.
one but recovered nicely office.
In
1962
President
John
308-11
when East forgot to play his
Kennedy appointed Arthur - : - - -- - - Goldberg to fill the Supreme BRAD BUR I' e If i c len c y
.apartmenl, adulls only. no
ArMrico's fop ex-perts txploirt their
pets. 729 Sec'Qnd Ave.
us Third Ave.
tourlttlntftt-winllinf teclutiqutJ in o Court vacancy left ·by the
teUrement
of
Felix
Frankfur202-lf
Gallipolis~ 0.
J21-pcogo looak ~n JA C 0 II'
ter.
MODERN. Fo. roor co, Mnt $J
HOUSE, 6 rooms and balh. 104 \ t__.:__ _ _ _ _ _ _.;...._,
wHir rar IHIIM, oddrtn orul rip
In 1965 American astronauts 3rd Ave,. Kanauga. Ph. 4&lt;16· USED
Mobil
H
4322
·
e
orne
code to: "Wi• or lridpe," lc/o this Gor,don Cooper and Charles
·
Headquarlers. All size mobile
202_3
-•-•}, ,.0. lox 419, /t..Jio City Conrad landed safely to end the
homes in slock. B &amp; S Mobile
Sl9tion, Now York, H. Y. JOOJ9.
Home Sales, Second I. Viand,
eight-day orbital flight of
Pl. Pleasant, nexl lo Heck's.
Gemini V.
For Sale
67-11
nine of hearts at trick four .
-·-·WHITE
cemenl,
all
sizes
tile
In
Now see if you can figure out A thoughl for today: Ameri·
stock. 12" &amp; 15" field tile, IF YOU •re ooilding a nN
the correct play."
suitable for highway dilchlng, home or remodeling, see us.
can poet Oliver Wendell Holmes
One hour later, the student Silid, "Put not your trust in
concrele . blocks . We are builders. Distributor
GALLIPOLIS BLOCK . CO., lor Hotpoinl Appliances;
worked it o,ut. He should money, but put your money in
Allison Electric.
ph. 446-2783.
have let West hold the first
154·11
97-11
trick. We might call this the trust."
West

= -:-::-:-::::-:-::-:--

93-tf
14.1"1. Call «6-9353.
Helen Yeager. Box 172,
191 -11
Jackson, Ohio. Ph. 286-4028.
12X60 TRAILER, good con·
- - -di lion. Ph. 256-6559.
198-6 COMPLETE LINE of pipes and
203-3
accessories.
GBO
and

lnstructiort

WIN AT BRIDGE

storage space .underneath4'

sliding doors In bad&lt;. C:lark's·
Jewelry Siore, Ph. 446-2691.
201-3
::
ST:-A;:R; :C::R::A-::F-::T-c-am
- per. Ph::. 4161124.
201 ·3

proved dealer, SB Court St.

SUNRAY double oven gas
range, white, almost new,
175-11
SJOO. Call 367-7158.
195-11
GEl MORE oul of life! More - --=-- == ::-money, more friends, more SEWING MACHINE service ~ ~
fun . Call now and learn about
being an Avon Representative . Call or write /Ws.

2 TABLE lopdiH&gt;Iay cases wllh

19'1-6 1967 DATSUN P.U.
1966 1;, T. (:.MC .P.U.
~~~--­
VACUUM Cleaner brand new 1964 1;, T. Ford P.U.
1971 model. Comple1e with all 1969 Chev. '4 T, P.U.
cleaning loots. Small painl 1965 l'h T. Chevrolet Truck
damage in shipping . Will1ake 1966 111 T. GMC P.U,
S27 cash or budget terms 1969 Chev. dump truck
available . Phone 446-066.5. ·
1952 v, T. Chev. P.U.
19'1 -6 1965 1 T. GMC
1969 GMC • T. log truck
1942 FORD. 2 dr . coupe. ex. 1962 1/.o T_ GMC plckup
cellent condition . One owner, 1963 I T. GMC
63.200 aciual miles . $900 firm . 1965 1h T. Ford P.U.
1963 1;, T. Chev . P.U.
446-4973 atler 5 p.m.
19'1-6 1969 IT. GMC
1967 '12 T. GMC P.U.
1968 Chev. Suburban
AKC r~istered toy poodles
also sud serv ice . Ph. 446: 1954 1/2 T. Dodge P.U.
1967 'f• T. Chevrolel pickup
953'1.
187-11 1963 F600 Ford Truck
~~:-::--:---:-:--:-:----::
1961 2 T. GMt" · · ···~·
SINGER Sewing Machine Sales 1964 3 T. GMC
&amp; Service. All models in .1966 v, T. Ford P.U.
stock . Free delivery . Serv(ce 1956 11;, T. Chev. van
guaranteed. Models priced
SOMMER'S G.M.C.
from $69 .95 . French City
TRUCKS, INC.
Fabric Shoppe. Singer ap133 Pint St.

Claus. Jackson 988-2705.

An~'••rr: Tl1i11 rtlf'f' m4fl11 bf' uuly 11 rrunii-1'1' - A "HEAT''

NORTH
.K982
.A4
+ASH
• 652

ac -

experience necessary. For
Hoi iday money call Mrs .

II

tj

Trade -Ins
cepled. Phone 446·0665.

consider married couple. - -- - - - - - - Salary. Ph . 446-3760.
1970 DATSUN pickup, gOOd
203-3 condition , new tires, never
wrecked. $1 ,575. Ph . 1"12·5153.
LADIES San Ia needs helpers
Pomeroy.
$3.73 an hour. 7 to 10 p.m.. no
194-112

Junoioi••' ESSAY HUMAN MISFIT CARNAL

* Siegler Fuel Oil Heaters and

3RD&amp; SYCAMORE STREETS

time working at home for us.
Anyone who can read and
write can qualify. Weekly

0 . . ..

I .....- -... I IN A 0-[lil I J-0

NO PRICE INCREASE YETI

e FIELD

WILL PAY well for your spare

SOMEONE lo care tor semi·

r J
r) I

8 ·""

• Precision draft control hitch with infinite rate

response

My k;,gdom

I HUTOY

Complete Line Of

r.

203-4

BABYSITTER, 5 days a week.

one letter to each square, -to
form four ordinary words.

"RED BRAND FENCE"

Finger

3343.

Un~~enmblethese four Jumbles,

SERVING MEIGS, MASON AND GALLIA COUNTIES

'

• Live independlint hydraulics

times monthly. Earnings can grow to $25,000 annually and
up. We will consider part-fime applicants. Write tor
complelelnformation, Including phone number and Area
Code. All Inquiries slrictiJ contidenllal.
CONSOLIDATED CHEMICAL CORPORATION
Freeze Dried Products Division
3815 Montrose Blvd., Suite 215
Houston, Texas 77006

FOR THE BEST IN HOME HEAT

Turf, I.andscape Day

higher pay scales. All
Beneli1s . Immediate

203-6
- - - - - - -- -

CALL (614) 992-2181

o.

Army Corps offers assiqn ments In a wide choice of
countries and U.S. areas. New
assignment to responsible
job . Excellent training in
office professional and
techn ical skills . No ex perience necessary. Ph . .446-

(AAn•er• ~Iunday)

J. D. North Produce Co.

TRAVEL . GOOD PAY . TOP
BENEFITS. The Women"s

salary. Delails: Write James
Bliss Co.. P. 0. Box 324 Depl.
K487. Levittown. Pa . 19053.

LANDMARK

.• - ·purina
• .... Goods (Padraged)

ava i lable .

The distributor we select will be responsible lor maintaining these locations and restocking inventory . All
locations are establish~ by our company, a 10 year old
company. We need a dependable dlslrlbutor. male or
female, in this area with $1,595 minimum lo Invest In
equipment and inventory, which will turn over about two

FROM

T.luln·

RALPH'S Carpet - Upholstery ACREAGE. S lo 100 acres.
under Gl loan, Pr.efer PUBLIC seating. folding tables
Cleaning Service. Free
and chairs - re$taurants,
Gallipolio or Kyger Creek
esllmates. Ph. 4&lt;16-0294.
churches,
organ i zations.
School
Dlstrlcl.
Ph.
256-6075.
197-11
Comple1e line of office chairs
202-3
and desks. Simmons "Pig. &amp;
SUN VALLEY Nursery School, "to,-x"'so~Hou-se
-,lrai""le-r-."'
olcd: er- -model
Offi ce Equip. Ph . 446-13'17.
577 Sun Valley Drive, licensed
In good condition. Harold E.
141 -lf
by the State . of Olrio,
Thomas. Cheshire. 367-767 1.
Deparlment of Public
201-6
Welfare. now providing full
1969 CHEVROLET. :v. T.
day
care
and
child
pic kup. price 11 .850. Ph. 446·
development program for Wanted To Do
177 1.
pre-school children. Infants
202-3
GRADUATE
Licensed
Nurse
exclud~ . Open 6:30a.m. lo 6
-p.m . Monday lhrough Friday . will care for elderly bed 1966 CHEV. 1h T. Fleetside
patient in my home. Doctor's
Fees: S20 tor full flve-d~y
pickup. 6 cyi. eng ine. new
or~rs stri ctly followed. Ph .
week . S5 per day If less than
pain!. $1.050. Ph . 446-4572.
2~5 -5472.
five days, SJ per day for
202--3
203·5
morning sessions. Ph . 4463657 .
Madge Hauldren, -:-:-::-=-==-=- 30" COAL furnace, can be hand
Owner · Dtrector ; John and WE BUILD. remodel , repa ir,
tired . or stoker . Auger .
c~stom buil l kilchens. Install
Loredlth
Hauldren ,
blower and all controls in·· bathrooms. 446-4764.
, operators.
cluded. Good condition, Call
J40.7S
_ _ __ _ __ __35-tl
367-7120.
19'1-6
FREE . used clothing for
anyone who Is in need . Church Help Wanted
1971 DIAL &amp; SEW Zig.Zag
ol Chrisl. Bidwell. Ph . J8S. WANT L.P.N. or retired R.
sewing mach ine left In
8429 or 388-8787.
layaway . Beaut i ful pastel
nurse
to
work
in
nursing
203-1
color. lull size model. All
home. Can live in if desired.
- - - - - - -built-in to buttonhole, over Write: Box 313. Ironton. Ohio,
casl and fancy stitch. Pay ius I
Rl
.
1.
Opportunities
203·3 148 .75 cash or terms

lounges in retail stores, financial Institutions, small
manufaduring plants, warehouses, schools and hospitals.

1

For Sale

FOr Sale

Wanted To Buy ·

area. This is not a cotn operated vending route. Our

HEATING OIL

e Vattiii!S
e Pcdby Cl1d Animal Hea1U1

Notice

WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTOR WANTED
To sell to company, established, all cash accounls In lhis

WITH

• Electric Fence Supplies

Bargains, Bargains and ·More Bargains

- - - -- --

Beat the
Cold Winter
and Its Costs

e

Mich., and son, Mr. ·and Mrs.
Dave Clark of Warren, spent a
couple of days here with Mr.
and Mrs. Roland Torrence .
Mr. and Mrs. Eldre&lt;l Grimes
and her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Harle Williams of Athens and
Mr. Howard Griioes of Idaho,
who was visiting in Athens, aU
visltOO Mrs. Neisel Weatherman. Saturday.
Mrs. Audrey Torrence and
Darlene Guthrie and children
spent Sunday with Mrs. Harry
Allison of Racine who is just
home from the hospital and
somewhat improvoo.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Brooks of
North Carolina spent the
weekend here with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Fon Halsey.
Mr. and Mrs. John Hensley
and family have moved·into the
former John Kaylor property.
Mr.andMrs. Martin Pushkin
and two children of Blackbilrg,
Va., spent the weekend here
with her grandmother, Mrs.
Myrtle Boggess.

Business

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

• Klelu'lle Daily Sanilatioo Products

• -Foods

Tuppers Plains Society News

including U. S. grades.
minimum 50 case lots: cartoned
A large 32-35, A medium 27-29. A
small 21·22.
Ohio hens, lurkeys and other
CORONA SUFi
classes of poultry, paid al farm :
YUBA
CITY, Calif. (UP1) llghl lype hens 6-61!• .
Ready to cook hens, delivered The attorney for accused mass
to major Ohio cities, ice packed, slayer Juan Corona has filoo a
Grade A &amp; U.S. Grade A, cenls $100 million claim on behalf of
per lb.: 5 lbs. and over 26-31 ,
his client contebding false
under 4 lbs. 19-23.
·imprisonment and mistreatment in jail. Richard Hawk said
NERVE GAS REMOVED
after
filing the document
NAHA, Okinawa (UP!) - A
U. S. Nayy cargo ship sailed Friday that the case against
Saturday for Johnston Island in Corona, charged with hacking
the mid-Pacific with 2,800 tons 25 farm laborers to death, was
of nerve gas shells. .The United "a sham."
Stales is removing poison gas
weapons from Okinawa before
Q-In cowboy terminal·
the Western Pacific island is ogy, whot is a maverick?
returned to Japanese rule, A- An unbranded cow
expected next year.
whose owner is unknown.

lOOKING FOR SUPPLIES!

Paulby Equipment
e Baler Twine
• Barb Wire

'v"nmee-liHoheJ,IImda),Aug. 29,1971

20J.J
-"68 FORD XL A-1 cond. wllh

air; also lightweight cheln
saw, exira good . Ph. 367-72641.

20J.3

-16--::F:-T.--=R~U~NA~B~O::U~T::.-M--HP

Mercury and trailer, upright
plano, Conn wood clllrlnet, all
good cond. Ph. 446-3771. 6211
4th Ave.

:m-3

::-:-=-:--:-::--:---

EXCELLENT. efficient,
economical,. . Blue Lustre
carpet cleaner. Rent electric
sham~ S1. lower G. C.
Murphy Store.

:zo:u

~960
-.,CH
_E_V
_R...,O~L-E_T_p_lc_k_up-.

«6-019..

Ph.

.

:m-3
-=-s~
tG~N-:-s=-.--N-o--h-un_t_ln-,g- or
lrespassing or others. Prof1ict
your rights. Simmons Pig. &amp;

Office Equip.

m.tt

Corbin &amp;
s·nyder Furniture
. . USED FURNITORE
BEDROOM suite, wringer
washer, coli springs and
mattress, lull size.
NEW FURNITURE
INNERSPRING mattresses
slartlng at $28.95. Gellhe rest
you deserve, seiKt your
mattrHS and box Sjlrings
now. Free parking. Open
Fridays Iiiii. 955 Second A,..
Ph.

~- 1171.

.

1W·If

�'

II --- ... ,
-

·-

..,

- -

II " loo
I II
I

-

..

..... ...

•

•-Tilt s .

..
.,_
4 .........
1t'll

Guns Point At Farmers ·

Three Local Sales to Feature Feeder Calves
E.~N.&amp;U" 1 .EE

According · to Extension · make up the J!Jllior Division of Class entries may be made with accepted.
'
Animal Scieoce SJlE:cialist the show, Adults arid others not ·the Show and Sale ~et.
Calves must be dropped after
RichardO. Smith, calves sold at enroUoo In .4-H club or FFA Each exhibitor may enter .ip to January I, 1971 and must weigh
the Roundup last year brought projects will compete in the six calves, and an entry fee of $3 from · :J:i0.600 pounds at the
$35-450moreperheadthanthey OpenCiassDivisionoftheshow. per head must accompany all weigh-in iif the show.
would have at most other feeder
To consign · calves, junior entries.
Sponsored by· the Ohio
calf sales. 'Ibis year's show and members must complete an
To be eligible for show and Cooperative Extension Service,
sale will lie held at the Ohio entry blank with their county sale, calves must be · sired by the Roundup is financially
Expositions Center Beef Barn in agents on or bef~re September purebred Ang~s. Charolais, · supported by Ohio Rural
Columbus oo September 30, 10. FFA members should enler Hereford, or Shorthorn bulls out Electric CooperaUves, Inc. By
October 1, and October 2.
calves through their Vocational of good grade or purebre&lt;l beef providing a good ouUet for
feeders, will be held this faJI grader, sleers are all castrated,
FFA and 4-H members will Agriculture instructors. Open cows. No dairy breeding will be calves, the Roundup will
in•telld of tbe hro IHll1ll8!ly and they are sold in WlifOJ"!II
hopefully encourage cow-calf
held.
gr aded lots. Many buyers
operations ' in areas of
The sale at thE: Athens return to these sales each year
Southeastern Ohio that are
lJvestoclt Yard will be to secure the needoo calves to
suitOO for it
Tueaday, Ocl $, with • head put in their feedlot.
The show and sale also
ezpeciE:d to be sold starting at 1 Consignments to these three
provides a source of quality
p.Di. AI the Atbel\s Yard lhe sales may be made .to the
livestock for FFA and 4-H fair
Cllves~IDODMonday,Oct. secretary, Paul Baer, Route 1
projects, as well as for finishing
4, are graded and grouped Minersville, Ohio, 45763; or to
and breOOing operations ID the
~ to quality, and sold any of the officers or directors
grain11roduclng areas of NorthWASHINGTON (UPI)- Two L. Freeman, who pressed hard Rosenthal 5aid Thursday the
011 'l'ueadaY.
in the five counties of Athens,
weslern and Western Ohio.
Tbe two sales at the Ohio Galli&amp;, Lawrence, Meigs, and former govemcrs, a Kentuclty for expanded rural develop- FDA failed to inspect the Bon Calves should be brought to
Democrat arid a Nebraslta ment efforts during hiS eight Vivant plant in Newark, N. J.
Valley Livestoet Yards at Vinton.
the Beef Barn between 3 p.m. on
for at least four years prior to
C'•llipo!is are ev1!llin8 wes, the . Officers of the Southeaslern Republican, have taken the lead years in office.
Thursday, September 30, and 9
the death of a man who ate
6rst at I o'clock, 'l'uesday, Oct. Ohio Beef Cattle Improvement in an effort to form a new
a .m., Friday, Ocl Lit might be
· tainted vichyssoise.
12, and the secutd at I p.m., Assn., which conducts the sale, national organizatioo to press
wise to . bring the calves
He said the Agriculture
'l'lwraday, Nov. 4. At the laltel" include Leo Story, president; for slepped-up economic WASHINGTON (UPI) _Rep.
Thursday evening to give them
twowesthe calves are brought W. S. Michael, vice president, development of America's rural . Benjamin s..Rosenthal, D-N.Y., Department allowed Camp- lime to settle down before the
.
proposed removing food in· bell's chicken vegetable soup to show.
in the lilorniDg of the sale, and Baer, secretary-treasurer. areas.
Everythmg a~ut . t~e spection authority from the be shippe&lt;l from a Texas plant,
weigbed, graded, and grouped Directors are Athens County,
Lodging and meal facilities
pr~.
new _org_aruzalion IS Agriculture department and the even though tests IDdicated are available at the Youth
according to quality, and sold John s. Blazier and W. A.
that evenillg.
LaFollette; Galli a County, te~talivemcluding1tsname~ Food and Drug AdmiDistration some cans in the lot were Center. ·n.e charge for lodging
This is to reduce the time Wayne Jividen; Lawrence exiStence, a spokesman S:Ud because of their allegoo failure contaminated with botulism. will be $2.25 per night for
between the farm 011 which the County, Joe Woodard and today. But the~ group, bemg to prevent the marketing of two The shipment was later recalloo exhibitors that are Ill-years old
Cllves are pnxluced and the William Gayle; Vmton County, calloo the Coalilioo for Rural brands of contaminated soup. by the company.
and under; older participants
feedlot where they will be fOO Thomas Rannells and Lemuel America, hopes to get off the
must 'pay $S per night. Breakout Into choice or prime steers · Fuller, an~ Meigs County, Leo ground wben some 40 to 50 infast is $1.~. lunch is $2 .~. and
vited leaders meet bere Sept. 7
and heifers. In some eases Story and
Michael.
dinner $2.50. Arrangements
at the invitatioli of former
owners may wisb to deliver
ANNUAL RO~UP
should
be made along with
their calves to the yards "' the
Another opportunity to sell governors Edward T. Breathitt
entry blanks. Meal tickets and
aflemoon or ev1!llin8 before. high quality fee&lt;ler calves is the of Kenluclty and Norbelt T.
lodging assignments can be
COLUMBUS .(UPI) - Of· Steven WesUake, Marysville, picked up at the Beef Barn
'Ibis is possible if ~Is 5th Annual Ohio Fee&lt;ler Calf Tiemann of Nebraska.
One source bere said the ficials at the Ohio Stale Fair, loo the field of 91 entries in the
are made with the yardso
Round-up.
organization Breathitt and wbere atlendance after two pen of three market lambs Office just before the show.
Entry blank and fact sheets
Tiemann hope to form wouid days is down about 34,000 class. WesUake also won the about the show and sale may be
be designed in a general way as persons from last year, said purebred wether pen top award.
from
county
a rural counterpart for the today they hoped sunny and First junior pen of five obtained
Urban Coalitioo, a group which clear weekend weather would market lambs honors went to cooperative extension semce
offices or from Vocational
tries to mobilize citizen bring out a big crowd and wipe Janeen Lutz of· the Crawford
pressure in support of efforts to out the deficit. Results of County community of Chatfield. Agriculture instructors.
Don't forget to get entries in
improve the lot of the city competition Friday were:
Kathy Johnson of Fred- by Sept. 10.
dwellers.
.
Tractor pulling, AI Isch of ericktown won a grand
Invitations to the Sept.. 7 Bluffton, Ind., won the 5,000 championship with her shortsession, called to discuss · the pound stock division with a pull hom spring yearling heifer in
feasibility of new organization, of 190-feet-2-inches. Gaylord junior fair competition. Eddie
have gone to a "cross section" zechman, Green Springs, Ohio, Forsythe of Mowrystown was
of leaders in industry, won the 500 modifioo division the big winner In the junior GALLIPOLIS
Ternagriculture, labor, minority with a 248-feet ~ch pull.
division beef show with his perature, precipitation and
groups and others involve&lt;l in Heavier 9,000 pound stock grand champion, reserve weather conditions for each 24
local rural development efforts. class, Reuben Tingley's pull of champion, four class winners hour period as recordoo by Pete
Among those who have in- 241-f~~ches took first while and two runner-iip animals in McCormick, Fairfield weather
dicated interest is former Blaine Kech of Monroe, Mich. the hereford classes.
observer :
Agriculture Secretary Orville won the 7,000 pound modifioo Froorick M. Penick, Hebron, Day
Wgb Low Prec.
hot rods with a 280-feet-~ch won the silver trophy with his Sunday
84
65
.18
pull.
grand champion Angus heifer Monday
80 68
.58
7
7
James Davidson of New "Stardust Annie" at the junior Tuesday
8 4
LIVESTOCK SALES
CLEVE LAND (UP I)
Carlisle in Clark County won the division show. Jon Widman, an Wednesday
83 60
Liveslock (Salurdayl:
.30
82 62
·-~~
Qrow
Cattle: 700. Market 25 cents 4-H tractor operator's contest. 11-year-&lt;&gt;ld from Fremont, won Thursday
.03
Mahogany Farms of HoweU, the champion Guernsey award. Friday
80 62
lower. Prime steers 30.50-35.50,
cllolce 31.50-3-4, good 28.75-32, Mich., took most of the awards Dan Kellogg of Rome took the Saturday
66 57
standard 2•.50-21, choice heifers for their enbies in the Belgian Jersey championship. .
Average high temperature for
28-32, good 25.50-29, standard
draft
horse
classes.
MahOGany
Judith
Boggs,
,
Pataskala,
week
this year -79. Last year
13
2•.50-28. Commercial cows
7
18.50-20.50, utility 22-23, cutters exhibited the grand champion won the grand championship in - 86 · ·
23·2•, canners 16-19.50, bologna and reserve grand champion the polled Hereford show . Average low temperature for
bulls 28-29.50. fat bulls 23-25.
senior Champion pen of the Future week this year- 60.1. Last year
Vine street
Calves: 25. Market steady. stallion, reserve
Gallipolis.
Choice vealers til-~. good 30-37, champioo stallion and took first Farmers of America poultry - 58.8.
standard 20-26. utllily 16-19.
place honors in the Belgian classes was shown by Denny
Total precipitation for week
Hogs: 150. Market sfeady to
Miller, 18, Laura, winning the this year - 1.09 inches. Last
weak, 2011-220 lb. 18.50-19, 22(1.2~ stallion futurity.
lb. 18.25-19. 2tll-280 lb. 16.50Eddie Thompson Jr., of eventforthelhirdyearina row. year- .90 inch .
18.25, sows all weights 13.2S. Ostrander in Delaware County, The Karnes _ family of Total precipitation to dale
H.75.
Sheep and lambs: 25. Markel showoo his ll().pound lamb to Highland County , perennial this year - 2Ul6 inches. Last
steady. Prime lambs 25-27. the grand championship in the winners in the fruit division of year - 27.18 inches.
choice 22-25, feeders 19·2•. ewes Junior Market Lamb Show. the horticulture show since 1963,
Normal average precipitation
J.9.
did it again Friday. Mr. and annually - 40.99 inches.
Mrs. William "Pat" Kartles and
sons, Greenfield, exhibitOO 45
"firsts" and took the sweepTAXES MANDATORY
stakes
award.
The landscape horticulture
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Slate
POMEROY - Meigs Area
Debbie
Darling,
17,
of
Wellsmini-lectures
include
the
use
of
Tax
Commissioner Robert J.
homeowners and professional
Jon
in
Jackson
County,
won
the
Kosydar said Friday a personal
Lurfgrass and landscape trees, best of the crabspples,
4-H
·
girls'
safety
speaking
income tax and addoo taxes on
technicians are invited to atlend pruning trees, · systemic
I
a Turf and Landscape Day fungicides, and color in the conlest and Jack Arnold, 18, of business are mandatory to
Tuesday, Sept. 14, beginning at summer landscape . Wagon Franklin in Warren County, was provide a balance in the state's
lOam. at the Ohio Agricultural lours will include bluegrass top speaker in the 4-H boys' " antiquated" tax structure.
Research and Development variety trials, rose garden, safety speaking competition. Kosydar said an increase in the
Mrs. Effie Pierce of Green- present sales tax would be
flowering crabapples, shade
Center in Wooster.
field
and Harvey Knapp of "intolerable" and would
• 3-cylinder diesel or 4-cylinder gas engines
Included ID the program will tree evaluation, maples and
Portsmouth won the daily present more of a tax burden to
be turfgrass mini-lectures on junipers.
• Lightning flash shift (8F-4R speeds) synchromesh
seed size and quality , Acopy of the program may be senior citizens' dance contest. persons with low income.
transmission
fungicides, wee&lt;l and insect obtained from your county Mrs. Martha Yoder, Columbus;
Mrs. Emma Heisel, Columbus,
extension office.
control, and fertilization .
• Planetary final drive
and Mrs. Ethel Bohl, Mowrystown, were winners in the
• 181'.! gallon fuel tank
cookie bake.&lt;J!I.
• More comfort- " new walk-through"" styling

These three sales, along with
Eli.~ Aerie r: ••
· 19 ol!ien in"the stale, mak~ up
P01IEROY - Feeder calf .the Ohio Approve&lt;~ Feeder Calf
producers wiD be planning to Sales to be held "in 1971. These
IDirlet lhdr calves Gf tbe fa)) salesareallbeefsales (nodairy
r
'l'llftelocal cross-breeds are permitted).
· sales, aelling Obio approved n.ey are graded by a state

BY C.

·

,.,_,slatly.

New in Farming

Agricultural Notes

Down on Farm··

Fair Winners

sam

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
manufacturers are "aiming
their ·
directly at Ohio
farmers"
by
opposing
legislation establish ing
mediatioo procedures and good
.faith bargaining sleps, the Ohio
Farm Bureau Fooeration "said
Friday.
Robert Swnmer of Tiffin,
president of the board of
trustees , said the bureau
denounce&lt;~ the lobbying efforts
of the Ohio Manufacturer's
association in atlempt.lng to
defeat the bill.

mms

---------POULTRY REPORT
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Poultry
- Paid to Ohio country packing
plants lor eggs delivered to
major Ohio cifies, Detroit and
Pltlsburgh Saturday. Cases
Included, consumer grades ,

By Mn, Evelya Brlcklei
Sunday Sehoul attendance at
the .UnitOO Methodist Church
August 22, .was :i6 and the offering $14.92. Worship at. tendance was 31 with offering

"We simply can't figure out
why the big manufacturing
complinies are opposing the
bill," Summer said.
"Tbese companies are aiming
their guns direcUy at Ohio
"farmers wben they oppose this
bill," ·he cootin~ed . "There
action· are sensel~:SS, when you
consider that farmers are their
biggest customers."

$20.11.
C. 0. Newland underwent
surgery at Veterans Memorial
Hospi\1¥ in Pomeroy and
recovering satisfactorily.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Kuhn and
family of Little Hocking were
calling oo his mother, Mrs.

. lUNG IS DEAD
ClEVELAND (UPI) - King
Features news syndicate here,
"the Central Press Association,
will close Oct. 1, after 61 years
of service, it was announce&lt;~
Friday.
" King Features simply
decided to get out of the news
mat business," said Courtlan&lt;l
C. Smith, managing editor.
"For some years now costs
have been going up and it's just
a matter of economics,"

Grace Kuhn Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Taylor of
UtUe Hocking were Sunday
afternoon guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Brickles.
· Mrs. Doris Koenig and
brother, Norman Weber, of
Tuppers Plains ahd sister ,
Barbara Sargent of Chester,
went to Akron to the Stample
Funeral Home to pay respects
to their uncle Orvil Stansbury
who passed away in Akron.
They also visited their sister,

Mr .. and Mrs. S. B. Haught of
Cuyahoga Falls.
Mrs. Ruth Ann Golden and
daughler of Athens spent a
couple of days here with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Way
Clark.
Mts. Maxine Marcinko and
daughler, Marie, calloo on Mr.
and Mrs. Wayn~ Brickles
Wednesday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Babcock
and Mrs. Leota Massar were
Saturday evening guests of Mr.
and Mrs. C. W. Taitt of Little
Hocking.
Herman Clark of Monroe,

j

Week$ Weather

e Fall FJeld Seeds

product Is sold In locations such as offices, employee

1

IM'fBE 1 Q..IGMTA F'ACI'( A LITT LE
LUI1CM .,. 'SEEIn' AS HOW ~ . J(JIS/Jf.rlt
LOOKS t..t&lt;f HI! COUL D Sl AI10 A HELPIM"

Pointing

• Hydrostatic power steering, adjustable seat, Dynalile• clutch, hydraulic wet disc brakes, underslung
muffler

Begun

• Options include twin-shaft 540/ 1000 RPM IPTO
and differential lock

I

••
..... Ill.

om. -

for real estate

454

Farm
Loans

locfa1.

MEIGS EQUIPMENT 00.
PH. 992-2176

POMEROY, 0 .

CL YOE B. WALKER, Mgr.
tt·Locust St.

446-0203

Gallipolis

~en1ng .\.nwrll ,l' f.HnH'r"' Pro\uft•r, nl Plt'nh
'

cOLUMBUS (UPI) - Thi
failure of the General Assembly
to pass less than 4 pel. of bills
introduce&lt;l during the eightmonth legislative session has
been blamoo on Republicans.
House Minority Leader A. G.
Lancione, D-Bellaire, said 1,404
bills have been introduce&lt;~ in the
House and Senate since
January, but only SO have been
signed into law by Gov. John J. ·
Gilligan.
" Only the GOP-controlled
General Assembly can take
credit and the blame for such
inactivity and delay," said
Lancione. ''The Republicans
are resorting to the timeworn
tactic of putting everything off
until the last minute of the .
session:
"They are rapidly setting an
unenviable record for ineptness
and political cowa'1!ice in the
handling of their elected
responsibility," .added the
Democratic leader.

J

0 ' VITIIM IMS !

lor

I

\'r~lt"rti•~ ·~~

Centenary area. Ph . 446-4352
after 6 p.m.

203-3
invalid lady, live in, would

II

WHERE AN ACl::IR M16HT
HAVE A P'AR"T IN

INDUSTRY
Now arranr• t.he circloo tellero

to form the surprise answer, u

auggested by the above eartoon.

Waitress, 10 p.m. to 6 a.m.
shill. Good pay, paid
vacatiOn,

Pliaunr 'wOrking"'

condilions. Apply in perS&lt;&gt;n,
Bob Evans Steak House.

BETTER jobs are available for
GBC graduales. Enroll now
for fall term. Gallipolis
Business College R. N. 71-02·
0032B . Ph. 4&lt;16·4367.
loser trade play because it _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,1,62;:,-IIJ_.
trades a heart loser for a dia·
mond loser. Both the loser Wanted To Rent
on loser play and this loser SPACE for 12x65 privately
trade play are forms of the owned mobile home within or
avoidance play which is de· near city limits. 2 adulls.
References upon request. Ph .
signed to keep the dangerous
446·4278.
hand from gaining the lead.
201-6

Winner Trades on Losers

Furnaces
Finest Budget Pay Plan
WEST

Finest Delivery Service
Automatic
Degree Day Delivery
Duel Delivery Equipment

28

EAST

.4
.103
.KQJ1087
.9652
+1083
+QJ9
.AQ4
.JI093
SOUTH (D)
.AQJ765

.3+

Pomeroy
Landmark

-

c.,.,.-

JACK W. CARSE\', MGR.
Serving Meigs, Galli a and Mason Coonlies
PHONE 992-2181
Store Open Mon . . Sat. Unti16 P.M.

K72
• K87
Both wlnerahle
North Easi South

I.4.

I~EWSPAPER

ENTERPRISE ASSH.l

For Rent
The bidding has been:
West
North
East

Ph. 446-9255.

3.

Pass

IT WA'S IN n.IE

BQOT OF" OH'E OF

FENCE

fWE TRIPLETS.

ePOULTRY

eGATES eSTAPLES

"YOUR FARM SUPPLY SERVICE ciNTER"

Central Soya

MASTER

. of Ohio.
GALLI
POll
•

•.

3 BEDROOM brick duplex
apartment,
garage,
breezeway, basement, excel.

location, Pt. Pleasant. Ph .
675-44.10 or 675-4091.
203-3

- - - ---

I

l

.'

•'

machine. buttonholes, fashion
desians. etc. Balance due
$26.10. Ph . «6-9353.
197-tt

Netr GMt·
Truck Heaclqunrs

.:.

c

•
•

•

i'

Ph. 446-2532

2•1-lf

----;--- - - -

424 Second Ave.

173-tf
.
.
1970 HONDA CBI75, 11 e new,

1970

VW station wagon, like
new, $2,200, prlvale .
Ph•.f~"AW\"'
416dlt.
.-

i:"'

l

20J.J

1275 miles. Ph. 446-2535.

==:--::-:--:-::-:-:201 -3 STEREO,
Walnul rlnlsMd,
conlemporary cabinet, •
10 LEVEL lots, Heallh apspeaker sound system, •
proved, water, gas by,
speed changer. Balance
sewered. Will sell one, or
$69.57. Use our budgel plen.
wholesale all to builders. on
Call 416-1028.
north S. R. 7. Write Box 40,
20J.J
Addison, Ohio for appt.
:-::-:-:-:-:--::--:---:-202 -6 STEREO. Early American
cabinet wllh ANI-FM r.cllo, •
27 AND 23 herd of Holstein
speaker sound system, 4
heifers, will freshen in Sep· speed changer, Balance
!ember. Ph. 614-2116-2496.
$72.39. Use oor budgel plan.
202-3
Call 416-1028.
CANNING tomatoes. S2 bushel .
Bring conlalner. Call tor SAVE Big! Doyourownrugand .
order, 245-5121.
upholslery cleaning wllh Blue
202-3
Lustre.
Rent
electric
~------

- -- - ----

USED FURNITURE
'
TV, 2 wood dinette sets. 2 living

.,

- -- - - - -

~mpooerst. eentratsupply

:zo:u

--------INTERNATIONAL No. 16
chopper with corn head, extra
good cond .. 5700. Straw 50c
.,le. Ph. 2-15-5007.
m.l

room suites- 1 less lhan a
year old, 2 lawn mowers - I
elect. and I gas, 2 rockers. gas
range like btwra~d newttr, roll·
away bed, 2 1n rna esses
and spring, basslnel. Rice's :--:-:---::-=:-:-:-:-:-:-New &amp; Used Furn. , 85-4 Second 10X50 2 BEDROOM mobile
(across from Texaco Station) . h
Ph ~ 0650
4&lt;16-9523.
orne. · •·

- - - - -- -

Gallipolis
Daily Tribune

What You Need

=--:-:-::-=-=-1971 MODEL zig -zag-sewing

Charatan. Tawney Jewelers,

2()4

We Have

HOUSE coal delivered. Ph. 4464393.
197-12

your home. Special pre-school
offer . Clean, oil and adjust,

For Sale ·
Aluminum
Sheets

eLAWN

-=-=-=--~--GE
RANGE, 40" white, 4 yrs.
old, broiler, rolisserle, 3
storage drawers, like new.
Ph . ~-488.5.
201-3

USED TRAILERS
1960 National 10x50, 2 br.
1967 Horizon 12x50, 2 br.
1957 Glider &lt;5x8, 3 br.
1966 Namco, 52x10, 3 br .
1960 Van Dyke, 10x50 2 br.
1960 Van Dyke 10x50, 2 br.
1965 Kentuckian, 56x10, 3 br.
1962 Colonial 50x10, 2 br.
1960 Van Dyke 10x40, 2-br.
All !railers clean and rKon·
di1ioned . Ready for OC· ·
cupancy. Free Delivery end.
se1-up . Tri -County Mobile
Homes, ~175 .

a

OJCI[ TiUCY

-:--

1970 350 HONDA, lots of extru,
good condlllon. Ph. «6-9050.
201.jl

J08.1f

2 N.T.
Pass
You, South, hold:
:-:-=-:-:-- - -.AK87 •Az +KQ9 .K643 LARGE furnished room with
Pass
kilchen privileges, Gallipolis.
What do you do now?
202-tt
Pass
Pass
Ph . 446-9244.
A--Bid three spades to get
203-1 10,000 BTU Gibson air conOpening lead-· K
some more information.
TODAY'S QUESTION
LOOKING fora real nice room? dllloner. Ph. «6-4648.
202-3
Your
partner
goes
to
three
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Lowe Motor Hotel. Pl.
no~trump . What do you do
Pleasanl, Main and 4lh In- 7 ROOM home. complele1y
vites your inspection. Singles,
The student went up with now?
furnished with air con~.50, SS, S6, $7, $8, $9; $2 for
Answer Monday
dummy's ace of hearts, led
ditioning, washer and dryer
exira person. Special weekly
spade to his ace and a Sec·
with large lot. Located at
rates. F pkg., TV, ind. air
Gallipolis
Ferry. Ph. «6-9662.
ond spade back to dummy's
cond., sell serv . elev. Ph. 675.
202-3
king. Then he led dummy's
2260.
Th
Aim
four of hearts. East, who had
e
ansc
1$8-lf
GOOD CLEAN LUMP and
·played the deuce of hearts By Unlled Press lnlernallonsl
coal. Carl Winters, Rio
Today is Sunday, Aug. 29, the SLEEPING ROOMS weekly sioker
at his first turn, produced the
Grande.
Phone 2-45-5115.
24Jst day of 1971.
rates, free garage parking.
five spot.
8-tt
Libby Hotel.
The moon is between its first
74-11
The student thought a
WE specialize in por1rait and
while and threw away his quarler and full phase. ·.
commercial pholography,
deuce of diamonds. West
The morning stars are Saturn NEW lurnjshed aparlmenl
church weddings, reunions,
won the trick and did the and Mercury.
(never used). five rooms up.
Tawney Studio.
elc.
witl rent to one or two,
best he could by leading a
88·11
diamond, but the student The evening stars are Mars, working couple. loeated near
Kanauga. Also have for sale,
won with his king ; led a dia· Jupiler and Venus.
'59 8x40 housetrailer. Write
mood to the ace; ruffed a
Those born on this day are Box 40, .Addison, Ohio.
diamond high ; entered dum· under the sign of Virgo.
202-6
~~~X 23" X.~
my with a trump and disAmerican poet Oliver Wendell - -, - - -- - -carded a club on the 13th HoimeswasbomAug. 29,1809. FURNISHED aparlment.
dia111ond. He still had to lose
On this day in hisotry :
adulls only, free garage
parking. Libby Holel.
two clubs, but he had made
In 1852 Brigham Young
193-lf
his game.
proclaimoo the "celestial law of .- - - -- - - - - USED OFFSET PLATES
He turned to the Professor marriage," thus signifying his LARGE lrailer lot, 70x150, 5
' HAVE
and said, "That was a loser approval of the practice of miles N. of Pl. Pleasanlon Rl.
MANY
USES
on loser play td keep East
2. Sewage &amp; water, SJ5 mo. or
polygamy among Mormons.
will consider land con1ract.
out of the lead, wasn't it?"
In 1960 the premier of Jordan Ph. 675-3679.
"You are learning," re· ~nd 11 others were kiUed when
198·6
llor suo
plied the Professor. "You
chucked the hand at trick a lime bomb explodoo ID his SLEEPING ROOMS. weekly
rates. Park Cenlral Holel.
one but recovered nicely office.
In
1962
President
John
308-11
when East forgot to play his
Kennedy appointed Arthur - : - - -- - - Goldberg to fill the Supreme BRAD BUR I' e If i c len c y
.apartmenl, adulls only. no
ArMrico's fop ex-perts txploirt their
pets. 729 Sec'Qnd Ave.
us Third Ave.
tourlttlntftt-winllinf teclutiqutJ in o Court vacancy left ·by the
teUrement
of
Felix
Frankfur202-lf
Gallipolis~ 0.
J21-pcogo looak ~n JA C 0 II'
ter.
MODERN. Fo. roor co, Mnt $J
HOUSE, 6 rooms and balh. 104 \ t__.:__ _ _ _ _ _ _.;...._,
wHir rar IHIIM, oddrtn orul rip
In 1965 American astronauts 3rd Ave,. Kanauga. Ph. 4&lt;16· USED
Mobil
H
4322
·
e
orne
code to: "Wi• or lridpe," lc/o this Gor,don Cooper and Charles
·
Headquarlers. All size mobile
202_3
-•-•}, ,.0. lox 419, /t..Jio City Conrad landed safely to end the
homes in slock. B &amp; S Mobile
Sl9tion, Now York, H. Y. JOOJ9.
Home Sales, Second I. Viand,
eight-day orbital flight of
Pl. Pleasant, nexl lo Heck's.
Gemini V.
For Sale
67-11
nine of hearts at trick four .
-·-·WHITE
cemenl,
all
sizes
tile
In
Now see if you can figure out A thoughl for today: Ameri·
stock. 12" &amp; 15" field tile, IF YOU •re ooilding a nN
the correct play."
suitable for highway dilchlng, home or remodeling, see us.
can poet Oliver Wendell Holmes
One hour later, the student Silid, "Put not your trust in
concrele . blocks . We are builders. Distributor
GALLIPOLIS BLOCK . CO., lor Hotpoinl Appliances;
worked it o,ut. He should money, but put your money in
Allison Electric.
ph. 446-2783.
have let West hold the first
154·11
97-11
trick. We might call this the trust."
West

= -:-::-:-::::-:-::-:--

93-tf
14.1"1. Call «6-9353.
Helen Yeager. Box 172,
191 -11
Jackson, Ohio. Ph. 286-4028.
12X60 TRAILER, good con·
- - -di lion. Ph. 256-6559.
198-6 COMPLETE LINE of pipes and
203-3
accessories.
GBO
and

lnstructiort

WIN AT BRIDGE

storage space .underneath4'

sliding doors In bad&lt;. C:lark's·
Jewelry Siore, Ph. 446-2691.
201-3
::
ST:-A;:R; :C::R::A-::F-::T-c-am
- per. Ph::. 4161124.
201 ·3

proved dealer, SB Court St.

SUNRAY double oven gas
range, white, almost new,
175-11
SJOO. Call 367-7158.
195-11
GEl MORE oul of life! More - --=-- == ::-money, more friends, more SEWING MACHINE service ~ ~
fun . Call now and learn about
being an Avon Representative . Call or write /Ws.

2 TABLE lopdiH&gt;Iay cases wllh

19'1-6 1967 DATSUN P.U.
1966 1;, T. (:.MC .P.U.
~~~--­
VACUUM Cleaner brand new 1964 1;, T. Ford P.U.
1971 model. Comple1e with all 1969 Chev. '4 T, P.U.
cleaning loots. Small painl 1965 l'h T. Chevrolet Truck
damage in shipping . Will1ake 1966 111 T. GMC P.U,
S27 cash or budget terms 1969 Chev. dump truck
available . Phone 446-066.5. ·
1952 v, T. Chev. P.U.
19'1 -6 1965 1 T. GMC
1969 GMC • T. log truck
1942 FORD. 2 dr . coupe. ex. 1962 1/.o T_ GMC plckup
cellent condition . One owner, 1963 I T. GMC
63.200 aciual miles . $900 firm . 1965 1h T. Ford P.U.
1963 1;, T. Chev . P.U.
446-4973 atler 5 p.m.
19'1-6 1969 IT. GMC
1967 '12 T. GMC P.U.
1968 Chev. Suburban
AKC r~istered toy poodles
also sud serv ice . Ph. 446: 1954 1/2 T. Dodge P.U.
1967 'f• T. Chevrolel pickup
953'1.
187-11 1963 F600 Ford Truck
~~:-::--:---:-:--:-:----::
1961 2 T. GMt" · · ···~·
SINGER Sewing Machine Sales 1964 3 T. GMC
&amp; Service. All models in .1966 v, T. Ford P.U.
stock . Free delivery . Serv(ce 1956 11;, T. Chev. van
guaranteed. Models priced
SOMMER'S G.M.C.
from $69 .95 . French City
TRUCKS, INC.
Fabric Shoppe. Singer ap133 Pint St.

Claus. Jackson 988-2705.

An~'••rr: Tl1i11 rtlf'f' m4fl11 bf' uuly 11 rrunii-1'1' - A "HEAT''

NORTH
.K982
.A4
+ASH
• 652

ac -

experience necessary. For
Hoi iday money call Mrs .

II

tj

Trade -Ins
cepled. Phone 446·0665.

consider married couple. - -- - - - - - - Salary. Ph . 446-3760.
1970 DATSUN pickup, gOOd
203-3 condition , new tires, never
wrecked. $1 ,575. Ph . 1"12·5153.
LADIES San Ia needs helpers
Pomeroy.
$3.73 an hour. 7 to 10 p.m.. no
194-112

Junoioi••' ESSAY HUMAN MISFIT CARNAL

* Siegler Fuel Oil Heaters and

3RD&amp; SYCAMORE STREETS

time working at home for us.
Anyone who can read and
write can qualify. Weekly

0 . . ..

I .....- -... I IN A 0-[lil I J-0

NO PRICE INCREASE YETI

e FIELD

WILL PAY well for your spare

SOMEONE lo care tor semi·

r J
r) I

8 ·""

• Precision draft control hitch with infinite rate

response

My k;,gdom

I HUTOY

Complete Line Of

r.

203-4

BABYSITTER, 5 days a week.

one letter to each square, -to
form four ordinary words.

"RED BRAND FENCE"

Finger

3343.

Un~~enmblethese four Jumbles,

SERVING MEIGS, MASON AND GALLIA COUNTIES

'

• Live independlint hydraulics

times monthly. Earnings can grow to $25,000 annually and
up. We will consider part-fime applicants. Write tor
complelelnformation, Including phone number and Area
Code. All Inquiries slrictiJ contidenllal.
CONSOLIDATED CHEMICAL CORPORATION
Freeze Dried Products Division
3815 Montrose Blvd., Suite 215
Houston, Texas 77006

FOR THE BEST IN HOME HEAT

Turf, I.andscape Day

higher pay scales. All
Beneli1s . Immediate

203-6
- - - - - - -- -

CALL (614) 992-2181

o.

Army Corps offers assiqn ments In a wide choice of
countries and U.S. areas. New
assignment to responsible
job . Excellent training in
office professional and
techn ical skills . No ex perience necessary. Ph . .446-

(AAn•er• ~Iunday)

J. D. North Produce Co.

TRAVEL . GOOD PAY . TOP
BENEFITS. The Women"s

salary. Delails: Write James
Bliss Co.. P. 0. Box 324 Depl.
K487. Levittown. Pa . 19053.

LANDMARK

.• - ·purina
• .... Goods (Padraged)

ava i lable .

The distributor we select will be responsible lor maintaining these locations and restocking inventory . All
locations are establish~ by our company, a 10 year old
company. We need a dependable dlslrlbutor. male or
female, in this area with $1,595 minimum lo Invest In
equipment and inventory, which will turn over about two

FROM

T.luln·

RALPH'S Carpet - Upholstery ACREAGE. S lo 100 acres.
under Gl loan, Pr.efer PUBLIC seating. folding tables
Cleaning Service. Free
and chairs - re$taurants,
Gallipolio or Kyger Creek
esllmates. Ph. 4&lt;16-0294.
churches,
organ i zations.
School
Dlstrlcl.
Ph.
256-6075.
197-11
Comple1e line of office chairs
202-3
and desks. Simmons "Pig. &amp;
SUN VALLEY Nursery School, "to,-x"'so~Hou-se
-,lrai""le-r-."'
olcd: er- -model
Offi ce Equip. Ph . 446-13'17.
577 Sun Valley Drive, licensed
In good condition. Harold E.
141 -lf
by the State . of Olrio,
Thomas. Cheshire. 367-767 1.
Deparlment of Public
201-6
Welfare. now providing full
1969 CHEVROLET. :v. T.
day
care
and
child
pic kup. price 11 .850. Ph. 446·
development program for Wanted To Do
177 1.
pre-school children. Infants
202-3
GRADUATE
Licensed
Nurse
exclud~ . Open 6:30a.m. lo 6
-p.m . Monday lhrough Friday . will care for elderly bed 1966 CHEV. 1h T. Fleetside
patient in my home. Doctor's
Fees: S20 tor full flve-d~y
pickup. 6 cyi. eng ine. new
or~rs stri ctly followed. Ph .
week . S5 per day If less than
pain!. $1.050. Ph . 446-4572.
2~5 -5472.
five days, SJ per day for
202--3
203·5
morning sessions. Ph . 4463657 .
Madge Hauldren, -:-:-::-=-==-=- 30" COAL furnace, can be hand
Owner · Dtrector ; John and WE BUILD. remodel , repa ir,
tired . or stoker . Auger .
c~stom buil l kilchens. Install
Loredlth
Hauldren ,
blower and all controls in·· bathrooms. 446-4764.
, operators.
cluded. Good condition, Call
J40.7S
_ _ __ _ __ __35-tl
367-7120.
19'1-6
FREE . used clothing for
anyone who Is in need . Church Help Wanted
1971 DIAL &amp; SEW Zig.Zag
ol Chrisl. Bidwell. Ph . J8S. WANT L.P.N. or retired R.
sewing mach ine left In
8429 or 388-8787.
layaway . Beaut i ful pastel
nurse
to
work
in
nursing
203-1
color. lull size model. All
home. Can live in if desired.
- - - - - - -built-in to buttonhole, over Write: Box 313. Ironton. Ohio,
casl and fancy stitch. Pay ius I
Rl
.
1.
Opportunities
203·3 148 .75 cash or terms

lounges in retail stores, financial Institutions, small
manufaduring plants, warehouses, schools and hospitals.

1

For Sale

FOr Sale

Wanted To Buy ·

area. This is not a cotn operated vending route. Our

HEATING OIL

e Vattiii!S
e Pcdby Cl1d Animal Hea1U1

Notice

WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTOR WANTED
To sell to company, established, all cash accounls In lhis

WITH

• Electric Fence Supplies

Bargains, Bargains and ·More Bargains

- - - -- --

Beat the
Cold Winter
and Its Costs

e

Mich., and son, Mr. ·and Mrs.
Dave Clark of Warren, spent a
couple of days here with Mr.
and Mrs. Roland Torrence .
Mr. and Mrs. Eldre&lt;l Grimes
and her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Harle Williams of Athens and
Mr. Howard Griioes of Idaho,
who was visiting in Athens, aU
visltOO Mrs. Neisel Weatherman. Saturday.
Mrs. Audrey Torrence and
Darlene Guthrie and children
spent Sunday with Mrs. Harry
Allison of Racine who is just
home from the hospital and
somewhat improvoo.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Brooks of
North Carolina spent the
weekend here with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Fon Halsey.
Mr. and Mrs. John Hensley
and family have moved·into the
former John Kaylor property.
Mr.andMrs. Martin Pushkin
and two children of Blackbilrg,
Va., spent the weekend here
with her grandmother, Mrs.
Myrtle Boggess.

Business

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

• Klelu'lle Daily Sanilatioo Products

• -Foods

Tuppers Plains Society News

including U. S. grades.
minimum 50 case lots: cartoned
A large 32-35, A medium 27-29. A
small 21·22.
Ohio hens, lurkeys and other
CORONA SUFi
classes of poultry, paid al farm :
YUBA
CITY, Calif. (UP1) llghl lype hens 6-61!• .
Ready to cook hens, delivered The attorney for accused mass
to major Ohio cities, ice packed, slayer Juan Corona has filoo a
Grade A &amp; U.S. Grade A, cenls $100 million claim on behalf of
per lb.: 5 lbs. and over 26-31 ,
his client contebding false
under 4 lbs. 19-23.
·imprisonment and mistreatment in jail. Richard Hawk said
NERVE GAS REMOVED
after
filing the document
NAHA, Okinawa (UP!) - A
U. S. Nayy cargo ship sailed Friday that the case against
Saturday for Johnston Island in Corona, charged with hacking
the mid-Pacific with 2,800 tons 25 farm laborers to death, was
of nerve gas shells. .The United "a sham."
Stales is removing poison gas
weapons from Okinawa before
Q-In cowboy terminal·
the Western Pacific island is ogy, whot is a maverick?
returned to Japanese rule, A- An unbranded cow
expected next year.
whose owner is unknown.

lOOKING FOR SUPPLIES!

Paulby Equipment
e Baler Twine
• Barb Wire

'v"nmee-liHoheJ,IImda),Aug. 29,1971

20J.J
-"68 FORD XL A-1 cond. wllh

air; also lightweight cheln
saw, exira good . Ph. 367-72641.

20J.3

-16--::F:-T.--=R~U~NA~B~O::U~T::.-M--HP

Mercury and trailer, upright
plano, Conn wood clllrlnet, all
good cond. Ph. 446-3771. 6211
4th Ave.

:m-3

::-:-=-:--:-::--:---

EXCELLENT. efficient,
economical,. . Blue Lustre
carpet cleaner. Rent electric
sham~ S1. lower G. C.
Murphy Store.

:zo:u

~960
-.,CH
_E_V
_R...,O~L-E_T_p_lc_k_up-.

«6-019..

Ph.

.

:m-3
-=-s~
tG~N-:-s=-.--N-o--h-un_t_ln-,g- or
lrespassing or others. Prof1ict
your rights. Simmons Pig. &amp;

Office Equip.

m.tt

Corbin &amp;
s·nyder Furniture
. . USED FURNITORE
BEDROOM suite, wringer
washer, coli springs and
mattress, lull size.
NEW FURNITURE
INNERSPRING mattresses
slartlng at $28.95. Gellhe rest
you deserve, seiKt your
mattrHS and box Sjlrings
now. Free parking. Open
Fridays Iiiii. 955 Second A,..
Ph.

~- 1171.

.

1W·If

�a-TiltS 7; nm.-11 r ',S 5;.AIII-a,Jm

21- TbeSUndayTimes-Sentinel,Sunday, Aug. 29,1971

'

For
Fast
Results
Use
The
Su.
n
day
Times.
Sentinel
Classifieds
..
•
I

Real Estate For Sale

; Rea1 tstate For Sale

!

Neal R_eaHJ

I

•

•
IUSINUS
:
OPPOJITUN ITY
' EVERYTHING you , _ to go
f Into tile business. fn ; dudes buildings, .equipment,
I·
a 5 room houw Mel inventory.
: Call - Y for delalls.
•
PRIME LOCATION
: IF LOCATION toults see this
1
taur _ _ , ......,. located
! across from tile high school at
; 112 Slele Street. Ollldren can
1
walk to school Mel parents
' can walk to grocery and
i- business district.

.• '

• 17 ACRES vacant land ~ $5,000.
1
Office l'lllint-16M

I
I

e.....,..

a..r1es M. NeiL -1546
J. ~Udlael NeaL --1503

'

l
I

I

•

AHOMEISAGOOD
INVE5TMENT
BUYING OR
SELLING
CALL THE Dll.LON AGENCY

Large
Two story double located on
First Ave . A real money
maker ~ Call fGr tnore inf«mat ion.

low

down

payment and assume a G. I.
loan .

AUCTION

Sale Every
Saturday
Evenings, 1:00
c:.noti-"ird &amp; Olive Aw.
We

Dillool. Rallar
Office -2674
Haw•nlw LiN:illo llrilnno.,
Enn_i---12:2'

apar tment.

.• ~~~

••.

-rt

10 Aa-es with 5 room - 3 BR
home, basement. Home is in
good condition, deep well. 2
car garage with 4 room

LOW, low prices on Bernco and
Serla mattresses and box
springs. Carbin &amp; Snyder
Fum., 955. Second Ave. I'll.
446-1171.
3-lf

'

_Dillon
Agency

Good Country Living

For Sale

•
l

Real Estate For Sale

Looks Great
This most attractive ranch
home is located on a corner
lot wllh an exira lot. All
rooms

are paneled

and

carpeted. beautiful kitchen,
attached garage. Immediate
JX'SSPSSion.

On Three Acres

sell

anything for
anybody. We also buy !some
ooteles. For Pick-up Servioe

Pf Land
One st ory 2 BR home, large
comtry kitchen wilh plenty

Call KnoHs Community Auction, 4462917

cabinets

-

located

on

blacktop road on Raccoon
Creek, a number of large

shade trees.

NOTICE TO DfE PUBLIC
We are proud to announce that we have addedto our sales force MR. KENNETH SWAIN of

Eureka Star Route, in Gal!ipolis, Ohio, as illl
apprentice AUCTIONEER. I am ·sure that
Kenneth Swain wi II be indeed a great assetto
our sales force. If at anytime either of us can
be of assistance to anyone. p!ease feel free to
call.

Real Estate For Sale

.MASSIE·

USSELL

Reii!Dr. 32 state si.
Tel 446-19!18 ·
7 MI . from new Gavin Plant ; 6
nice rms .. bath and base., 3
r ms. and bath paneled, H. W.
floors , coppe,. plumbing ,
plenty good soft water from
dr. well. Located on 1.21 A.
lot. This house is 12 yr : old and
in good repair . See today.
Price $18,500.

Baby Farm
MOOERN 6 rm . house, full
base., large li v. rm. and din .
rm ., 2 rms. paneled, Nearly
new fuel oil fur. Large frame
and metal barn. plenty water,
gravity feed from spring .
Located on 6 A. good land. 1~
m i. from city. $11 ,500.

Thurman

'I•

GOOD 5 r m . home located on
A. lot. Hou5e has had treatment for termites. It has a
garage and can be bought for
$8,000 .

Dairy Farm

'

~tioneering

block, and I tile block. Oily

522.500.

·

'

ANY HR. 446-1991
EVE. : J. Fuller 446-3246

G IGANfl C year end sale new 7!'
units 24ft. 7 save 51.300. 22ft.
1 save $1 ,22S. 20 ft. 7 save
Sl ,lll5. All boats lett dealer' s
cost. l9n campers 15 pet. oft ..
Trad@s accepted. We service
and guarantee. Camp Conley
Starcrall Sales. Rl. 62. North
of Point Pleasant. West
dealer.
169-tt

Sabrday • Sept 4 . 11:00 lll.
Locatiolt--1 mllu- o1 Gallipolis, Ollio on Route 511 at ·
Rednty.
Will sell at Auclllln. former estate of Marie Volbom
Ewing, consisting in part ol:
3 pc. oak bednmm suite, cherry bed, marble top table, oak
kHchen cupboard. pie sale, 2 wicker rock"!"· Joy - burning aJOking stove (mfl'd in Galh":"'osl , d~leilf
table, Ash table. set of I chairs. setol5 sprndle charrs. set
of 4 straight chairs (drilled for cane seatsl ._ 2 trea~le
sewing madlines (fancy cabinets) . Philco upnght rad10,
oak wash stand. oak '14 bed. 1 Belknaps and I Elk - burning hating stoves (nice), old pordl selfee. 8-&lt;lay
mantel dock. s1one jan, jugs, crocks. dlurns. hand-made
quilts. Hanley Ironstone (several pieCeS), cut glass. old
dllna. oil tamps, pictures and frames. 1858 mason and
other collector jars-wicker baskets - 1881 German New
Testament. fe111her ticks, family phofo album. fa~il y
Blbie wilh ancesfGrial history to 1822, old advertiSing
containers. misc. loots, kegs, etc. etc. too nurneruus to list.
Terms: C.sh
lunch on grounds
Not responsible for accidents
MR. &amp; MRS. PAUL BURNETTE, OwriWS
LEMLEY AUCTION SERVICES
Andrew Lemlr(-Auct.
Auct. Nlote: Some uoellont Antiques ......,_

-

-

bam, lair fences. 925 lbs. tobacco base, rounty water lap.
Sl8,000.00.
260 acres in Addison Township, 90 acres bottom land.
pasture and timber 170 acres. 3 gas wells and two houses.
I rents for $50.00 per month and one lor $25.00 per month.
Gas well pays S95.00 every 3 months.
1 . 2 bedroom house in City limits S17,000. Shown by ap-

JX,Jintment
I - 2 bedroom house at Centenary S17,900 • Shown by appointment
.
I - 3 bedroom house at Centenary 516,000 - Shown by appointment
1 - 4 bedroom house in City $23,500 - Shown by appointment

18 A. WITH 3 houses ; I brick, 1 LISTINGS NEEDED -

Virginia's largest Starcraft

AUCTION

·1 Farm, 92 acres land, some paper wood timber and large

- ~_ REALll

«6-- -

Services Offered

If you
HORSE SHOEING
want action on your property,
list with Baird Re~~lty Co. We COMPLETE farrier service.
Bob Schaeffing, 446-1510.
have many prospects for
188-lf
farms and homes throughout
the city and county.
Oscar Bainl, 446 4632
BOOKKEEPING, accounting,
Doug Welhertlolt, 446-4244
tax reports of all kind. I'll.
4&lt;16-3309.
FOR SALE by owner, 2 story
200~
brick at 452 First Ave. 7
"'H
::-::E::::R::::'S,--rooms. 2 baths. gas hot air -----,-,sw,-,iffi
furnace,
present
DITCH TRENCHING
arrangement 2 apartments.
SERVICE Ph.~46-0468
Easily converted to one
174-lf
family dwelling . Asking
535 ,000 shown by· ap- SWISHER'S
Plumbing . &amp;
pointment. I'll. 4&lt;16-0208.
Electric
contractor
. We
199-H
specialize In hookin~ up rural
water I ine system to your
NEWhorne ...:-liiick front. 100' x
home. Completely build your
230 ' lot , buill -in kitchen.
bathroom . tall us for com carpeted. Will help arrange
plete free estimate. Delbert
financing . Barr Construction,
Swisher, 1809 Chestnut, I'll.
16 Pine Sl., I'll. 446-3746. Mon.
4&lt;16-0468.
lhru Fri . 9 to 5, Sat. 81o 12.
135-11
185-11

VOLKSWAGEN ~
69 OLDS------------------- •2788 .

:leila ' 88' 2 dr. hardtop, light green with dark green vinyl roof, factory A-C,- automatic
trans .. power steer. &amp; brakes, etc. A beautiful car.

69 IMPALA--------------- •2488
Custom hardtop. light blue with black vinyl top and seats, Comfort-Control A-C., power
steer. &amp; brakes, AM-FM. stereo radio, tinted glass. 427 V-8 with 4 speed and rear wheel
sanders. A beautiful, loaded car.

67 PONTIAC--------------- '1788
Grand Prix 2 door hardtop, silver with black vinyl top and seafs, finf. glass, A-C. automatic
trans .• power steer. &amp; brakes. A beautiful sporty, luxury car.

67 FIAT--------------------- •595
11 00~

Or. Sedan, a locally owned, economy ~door .

66 DART------------------- •1188
Blue GT. 2 dr. hardtop. V-8. automatic trans .• radio. A-C.

PUBLIC
SALE
THURSDAY MORNING, SEPT. 9

65 PLY.---------------------· •788
Red Belv. 2 dr . H. Top, 318 V-8, aulo,...tic trans., power steer.• radio. A very attractive car.

Rt. 218- 11h miles from Rt. 7 below Gallipolis.
Sel!ing two households nice furniture and
;mtiques. Owners, Mr. Clan Cox and ~lfred
Sheets- Reason for selling : moving into new
home.
Antique organ. sewing machine. 2 chest . of drawe_rs.
refrigerator, freezer - upright, table &amp; ~ charrs. S r_odung
chairs, 1 electric vibralor charr, 2 end tables, p ano &amp;
bench. 1 coudl. radio, 1 antique wall clock. 1 elecfr l ~ wa ll
ctock. fool stool. antique dlurns - rron ware - d•~·
pictures. 3 stand tables, antique pitcher &amp; bowl, ban;o.
violin. floor lamp, lhrow rugs. bed clothing. 3 platform
rockers. 1 blonde 3 pc. bedroom su ite-bookcase bed, I
blonde wood bed. 3 swivel bar stools, 1 nylon coudl &amp;
chair 1 blue nylon rug, 1 reel nylon rug w ith pad, I blue
n-~ rug-- with pad, 1 electric stove wit~ top oven.
1 coppertonerefrigeralor, 1 d inette suite wrth stx char,-,;, 1
china closet, 1 step table, 1 wringer w~. 1 d ryer. 1
stand table-antique, 2 antique cha irs matchrng ( rock er straight) , 1 room divider, I door m rrror,_1 tread"~':__,'Ype
-lng madllne. 1 bathroom space savec,..brdsiji'eads,
drapes. lhrow rugs, dishes, bookcase. ~ of Encyclopedias. 1 set of do-if-yourself Encyclopedtas. t etec.
, griddle. 1 toaster, 1 elec. colfee pol, 1 utility table. 2 table
t.mps 2 vanity lamps 1 lamp &amp; matdling ash tra y. 1
elecfrl~ wall clock. _bread box &amp; cannister set, I_ card
table. 1 ice cream freezer. 2 nail kegs, fire scr~ &amp; r':""s·
2 ,.lndow fans, record player &amp; stand, porFh swrng. ~rcn rc
table. lawn chill,-,;, stone jars, jug. oil lamp. a&gt;ffee grtnder
.,.. many other items.

Terms of Sale: cash Refreshments Available
Col. R. E. KnoHs, Auctioneer, assisted by Col.
Jimmy Sayre.
·
NWs.R.E.KnoHs.C~k

Auctioneer Remarks: lllis is an ex~ra g~ lot
of items, come early and bring a ram coat 1us1

In case.

••

w. --------~----------· •1788
69 v. w. ------------------- •1888
69 v.

STARTING AT 9:30

·

and cavity work, · tree and
slump removal. I'll. 446-&lt;1953,,
,73-11-

Pluinhinl! &amp; Heatina
· Brammer Plum-bing &amp; Heating-,
300 Fourth Ave.&gt;
Phone 446-1637' •
Gene Plants, Owner

298-tt'

Of Eden
ADAM , TAKE YOUR EVE
BY THE HAND AND
· LEAD HER TO THIS
SECLUDED HIDE -AWAY .
LARGE SHADED LAWN ,
WONDERFUL GARDEN
AND POND . VERY NICE
HOME
WITH
HUGE
liVING ROOM . NICE
KkTCHEN &amp; DINING AND
2 BEDROOMS . HUGE
NEARLY NEW , VERY
Goo ·o
UTILITV
BUILDING PRESENTLY
USED AS LARGE SHOP. 2
CAR
GARAGE
AND
BARN .

'IF YOU'RE LOOKING
FOR A LITTLE PEACE
AND QUIET, SEE THIS
TODAY
LOVELY
'IlMMER COTTAGE AND
12 ACRES WITH
A
BEAUTIFUL 2 ACRE
SPR ING -FED LAKE AT
THE
FRONT
DOOR.
LAND IS CLEAN WITH
LOTS OF TREES .

Someone's Missing A
Bargain Of A
Lifetime
YOU JUST COULDN'T
MAKE A BETTER BUY
THAN
THIS .
3
BEDROOMS , LARGE
LIVING ROOM, FORMAL
DINING.
ALL
CAR PETED , l'h
BATHS,
FULL BASEMENT , 2 CAR
GARAGE ON A FLAT LOT
AT RIO GRANDE . VERY
NICE NEIGHBORHOOD

Prt~e Reduced
WI$ $12,900 Now $9.900
OWN6R VERY ANXIOUS
TO SELL MODERN 3
BEDROOM HOME WITH
LARGE LIVING ROOM
AND
BUll T -IN KIT CHEN . NEEDS A LITTLE
WORK BUT COULD BE A
MONEY MAKER .

Match This?
No Otance
ATTRACTIVE
BRICK

~YR .

AND

DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Roule160 at Evergreen
Phone4&lt;16-2735
281 -11

Want To Get Away
From HAll

20 Acres Garden

Lots on black·top roo~. with city water ard gas availabl,e.
89.4x222.7, Gallipolis School District, within_ l'h mile of
City limits . Price 52.200.00.

BAIRD REALTY CO.
Oscar Baird, Realtor

BANKS TREE SERVICE
FREE esllm•tes. liability Insurance. Pruning, trimming

E .--N~ Wiseman 446-4~

Where there' s a will, there's a lawsuit.

--------'

Campi111 Equipment

is my business, my only
BUSINESS

-

-

Services Offered

Office 446-3643
Evenings Call
E--M. "Ike" Wiseman 446.S796

A man hopes that his lean years are behind him ~ a
woman hopes hers arl!!' ahead.

IDEAL set-up. 122 A.• fertile
land. all flat to gentle roll. all
1i llable except 5 A. in saw
Office 446-1 0611
timber. This lard has been
Evenings: C. II
improved over a generation of
Ron Canaday 446-3636
good'farm ing practices. II has
good fences. plenty water,
John I. RichaniS446-0280
1.623 lb. lob. base., 7 . rm .
Russell D. Wood446-4618
modern home, 5 barns ; block
and metal dairy barn 36' x 96' ,
31 metal stanchions, water
cups. milkers and 320 gal.
.Pii.
bulk tank . All bldgs. in good
repair and have metal roofs
less than 10 years old. Owner
STROUT Really will be closed
for vacation August 25 thru
grows roughage for 80 head
450 Se&lt;GIId Ave.
Sept. 2.
livestock and sells hay . This is
Ph. 446-4n5
Ranny Blackbum
an amazing opportunity for EDGE OF TOWN Three
· Branch Manager
anyone interested In farming . luxury homes. Priced from
Prrce s«l,OOO.
·
521,500 up, all with city water ,
city schools, paved streets.
Farms,
excellent locations.
HOUSE by owner. 5 rooms,
bath, new kitchen, forced air
Vacant Land
46 ACRES - Only three miles
heat, storm doors and win.ell A. most tractor, cheap.
from town on Sand Hollow
dows, 1 A. ground, 5 miles
150 A. Farmer's farm . $16,000.
Road.
from town on Lower .River
50 A. 25 is bolfom, $7,500.
Rd. Ph. -446-4648.
II A. edge of town . $10,000.
&lt;42 ACRES - Nice two story
. 202-3
25 A. St. Rf . 325. S7,500.
house with three bedrooms. - - - - - - - - Investment
tun bath.

lex a

'

446-1066
-

Estate For Sale

TllE WISEMAN
AGENCY

·REALTOR

St. Rt. 554
(Eno)

llennelh Sail
0.11 HilL Ollie
_
612-:1795 , .... 6141

R~l

OLD

FRAME

WITH FULL BASEMENT
IN
AN
EXCELLENT
NEIGHBORHOOD,
3
LARGE BEDROOMS ,
CARPETED
LIVING
ROOM AND PRETTY
KITCHEN WITH RANGE
&amp; OVEN . PLUS LOTS OF
CABINETS .
FORMAL
DINING . PATIO DOORS ON BASEMENT, I CAR
GARAGE, 1 MILE OUT
PRICED FOR QUICK
SALE .

AND

VERY

AT -

TRACTIVELY

PRICED .

Just Married?
Just Retired?
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 . '% OF ACRE , 3
MILES OUT .

Price Reduced
Riverside Location
THIS

LIKE

NEW

J

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 ' ACRE
PLOT RUNNING TO THE
RIVER WITH A SMALL

ORCHARD AND DANDY
PLACE
FOR
BOAT .
VERY
ATTRACTIVE ,
VERY WELL BUILT , AND

Lots For Sale

VERY WELL KEPT .

2.38 ACRE WOODED
ALL .
WATER
AVAILABLE .
{l)

(2) 2.33 ACRE WOODED ,
VERY . VERY NICE ,
WATER TAP PAID .
I312ACRESATEDGEOF
TOWN. $2,500. WAT.ER &amp;
GAS AVAIL. GOOD FOR 2.
OR
MORE
MOBILE
HOMES .

W 5'12 ACRES. LARGE
TREES A BEAUTIFUL
LOCATION, S3,900 .

We Need Your
Property To Sen
WE ARE SELLING AT
SUCH A PACE. IT ' S IM 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
RIGHT NOW . IF YOU
WANT TO BUILD NEW ,
SEE US TO SELL YOUR
PRESENT PROPERTY .

"
- - - - -- - - -- - - - -- - - - - - - . J
'
HOUSE, 9.1 Second Ave . ,

duplex, .. rooms &amp; bath. Write
Joann Patrick, 521 Riley
Blvd .• Franklr'n, Ohio ·~s .
""""
199-12
- - -- -- - - -

Services Offered

Services Offered

cleaning and repair,

117-lf

ALBERT EHMAN
Water Delivery Service
Patriot Star Rl., Gallipolis
I'll. 379-2133
243-tl

DEAD STOCK

$5.00 Service Charge
Will remove your dead
horse and cows
Call Jackson 286-4531

67 v'

•

one to fully

ap-

w. ------------------- •1488

Red square-back , v inyl interior, radio, -4 speed. fuiiiOO pe,.centwarranty.

MANY OTHERS - All MAKES &amp; MODELS
DOl MilS aa.EI,_IIIC.
•u,.r.,_Mt~M~a7).c

.... 1..11.

. 193-11 '

llis~nlice

.

NATIONWIDE INSURANCE
AUTO, Fire, life. 45 Stale 51 ..
Waldo F. Brown, W. R.
Brown. 4&lt;16-1'160.
24-lf
FOR. ALL your Insurance needs
check with your· Grange
agents at the Neal Ins. ,
Agency, 64 State St. Ajjents·
for auto, fire, homeowners,
hospital and 'general llablllly.
Uti

Public notice is herebY live:n that 1bc
Ohio Bell TeleoboDe Companyml...
ul ~
with The Public Utilities Com
Oft uo
Ohio a.a AttPiicadOD ataliaalhat tbe Company is eDtitJed, becat~~e of tbc rai01ll
set fortb In Aid Application, to IUIODable
and equitable increases and adjUICmeall
in lu rates aDd dlli'ICI for exeh-. • •
phone ~rvicc, lnuasule ~~­
phone service, lnuutate mobile -"""ne
tenlcc. Intrastate private tine ICIYicel and
intrastate wide area telttommuolcaUont
service, and to chanae the n:auJatlou and
practice1 aftectina: the pme and to revile
Its EKhanae Rate Ta:ril P.U'.c.o. No..], ita
General Exchanae Tarift P.U.C.O. No. •if

II&amp; Mesuae Toll TekJibODC Servl" Tarl
P.u.c.o. No. 7 lu Mobile Teleobone
Senlce Tulfl' P.U.c.o. No. 2. lu trlntc
UDe Service Tnlff P.U.C.O. No. 1, aad

Its Wide An:a Telccommunlcatlont. Senke
Tarlft' P.U.C.O. No. I, to effect IUCll Ill·
c:reases, adjUIImenu and c~ all II

more fully sa fonh in the A

catloa on

file with the Commisalon
lD tile exhibits thereto attached and made a part
thereof.
The propoled rcYIIiDfll will effect lacreaiCI ud adius.tmuu in rat-. and
cbup and chanaet hi the tep.l.atioDI ud
prKtiL'CI afl'ecthla the AlnC lhrouabOUI the
lertitory in which the Company operata.
The prayer of the AppUcatlon requea~
the Commiuion to do the foUowtna:
(a) Apptoye 1be pr~poaed rates and
chu.a and cbanaes ap-plied for In uld

AppUc:adon ;
(b) Approve the ftllna of tile propoK&lt;I
achcdu1e abecu in tbe form attamed
to the Application, modifted to n:flect
such rcYishms thereof a1 ma.y become
efl'ective. punuant to orden of the Com·
minion, duriaa the Interim betwta the
ftlina of the Applie~tion aDd tho date
upon wbichu.id propoecd lthedu.le lhcett
became elfecUvc;
(c) Establiah u elfectlve date ror uld
proposed tchedule lheeu; and.
(d) Grant such other and fun.her ,.
lid as Applicaut it rcuoaabty entitled
to in the prcmi~a .
A copy dlhe Appli&lt;ldon, l~
a copy of the present and propole!d
•

e

~~c:~~:~n:~~':':~=i

LOCAtiON: Gallipolis take 141 to Centenary,
turn leit go through Northup. cross bridge, go
straight up over hill 112 mile.
This sale consists of:
Ill Head! CATTLE (13 H~adl
a cows with ~alf by side, These calves wi!l
weigh 3 to 4 hundred lbs .. 2 Holstein heifers.
good; 2 Holstein steers. i Hereford bull, good
work horse, SO model pickup truck, Farma!l
Cub B tractor with turning plow &amp; cultivator,
power chain saw. 2 sets of pick-up truck racks.
lumber &amp; 2x4 log chains. small hand tools.
Auctioneer's Note: This is a clean sale. These
cattle
are extra nice. Dl!ln't miss this sale.
l

CMNER LEWIS aAIG
0.

~- &amp;

J. A.

Fr~nch.

Auctioneers

OOMPLETE
---

BATH OUTFIT
INQ.UDES

TUB - COMMODE
24" VANm •
LAVATORY

COMPLETE

$24995
Everyday Low' Price

•.

STANLEY Home Products APPLES-Peaches. Fitzr:trlck
Orchards, State Rou e 689.
needs 5 fall and Christmas
phone Wilkesville, 669-3785.
representatives.
Car
8-15-lfc
necessary . Write Mrs. Libman, 3-4 W. Carpenter St.,
Athens or call 893-8854.
REFRIGERATOR, stove, 18cu . ff. upright freezer, couch,
8-29~tc
2 chairs, set of end tables,
coffee table, two table lamps, SOMEONE needed to stay with
one floor lamp, ullllty stand.
invalid s; days a week, some
one used clarinet, hair dryer,
nights. Phone 992-7155. ·
kitchen cabinet, all In good
8-29-61c
condition. Phone 247-2135.
8-29-21c
GIRL NEEDED five days a
week and slay nights .
Evenings and weekends free.
No work. Good home and 3 BEDROOM home. Elec1ric
wages. Phone 992-5207 after 3
heat, remodeled recently
p.m.
inside, 7th street, New Haven.
8-29-31p
Owner transferred . Phone
882-2263.
8-29~tc
EA~N · AT home addressing
envelopes. Rush stamped
sell-addressed envelope. The 'SIX ROOM house, bath; . fuli
baseme~l,.l33Jlullernut Ave.,
Ambrose Co.• 432S Lakeborn.
just . walking distance from•
Davisburg, Mich . 48019.
downtown Pomeroy. Contact
8-l-3Dip
'::d Hedr.ick, 2137 Wadsworlh,
L),.ive, Columbus, Ohio, phone!
CAR HOP and wallress. Apply
237-4334, Columbus.
in person . Crow•s Steak House.
- 5-9-lfG

65X12

65'X14' Wide
With Deluxe
Furniture

Completely
equipped
home
with
deluxe
furnishiq,gs. Priced from

Packag~.

of Thanks

1969 BUICK LeSABRE COST. 4 DR. HDTP.

'6495

Air Cond .• lime g,.een, dark green vinyl top. New
Electra trade .

1970 PLY. BARRACUDA
Auto., P.S., P. B., Factory air cond ., vinyl top. Was

SAVE UP TO

$2795.

$1500

1971 DODGE SWINGER

ON KING HOMES'

------

NEW, 3-bedroom home in
Middleport.. Buill-in kitchen,
ceramic tile bath, all-electric
heal, good neighborhood. tan

Air cond .• one owner, marlin blue. black vinyl top.
Sha r p.

VAN DYKE ·

Real Estate For Sale _

8-24-6tc

= - - - -- -

"--I ill,

Auto . trans .• vinyl top, Was SJ200.

call or write or talk to Dan Thompson, Tom ·
Lavender or John Ketdlka .

KEITH GOBLII=
MOBILE HOME SALES
~ 1 Ph . 991-7004

Daily

to

Auto .. P.S.• P. B.• bucket seals. Wa s 52895.

If No Answer, 991-3422

_
12

1970 PONTIAC G.T.O. CONV•

9,

Sunday

I

to

6

1969 PLY. SATELLITE 2 DR. HDTP.

OPPOSITE GOBLE'S USE_D CAR, LOT

Auto .. P.S.. viny l top. 32.000 miles . Expecl lhe best .

1968 atEVEUE 2 DR. HDTP.

Dannie's Mobile Homes

Notice

Oeland

Male or Female
Help Wanted

----~-

. SAVE UP lo one half. Brl ng
your sick TV to Chuck' s TV WILL PAY well for your spare
time working at horne for us.
Shop, lSI Butternut Ave .•
Anyone who can read and
Pomeroy.
'"
write
can qualify . Weekly
~-23-llc
salary. For details write,
James Bliss Co.• P . 0 . Box
PLEASE REQUEST your
324,
Dept. K 479, Levilfown,
favorite disc jockey to playPa
.•
19053.
"God and I" - B-W - "The
8-27-6tc
Glory of The Angels," Action
Records No. AC 1014A,
published by Souvenir Songs
(ASCAPJ. free recording to
DJs. Address, John Mohler,
ATHENS business couple
Rt. 1, Box 210, Middleport,
transferring to Pomeroy . ·
Ohio 45760, phone 992-6903.
Would like house or apart8,-25-12tp
ment In Pomeroy or Middleport.
No children. Ex""'WJ%'Nt'Eoi\'lgh 11\~ If tellfiot G lrl
cellent
reference.
Phone Vera
Scout troop. Contact Mrs.
Eblen at 593-7783 or 593-3710.
Roscoe Wise at 992-2675 .
8-29-61c
8-26-31c

Wanted To Rent

----BEGINNING Sept. 1 I will be

For Rent

returning to work In my
beauty shop. Shop hours will TRAILER space on old Rl. 33,
be Wednesday. Thursday and
'h- mile north of new Meigs
Friday, 9 a .m . to 5 p.m . and
High School. Phone 992-29~1 .
saturday 9 a.m. to l p.m .
8-29-llc
Ruth
Barnhart,
Ruth's ~-------Beauty Shop, Bradb_ury . J ROOM unfurnished apartPhone 992-3971.
ment. Phone 992-2288.
8-26-31c
8-29-tlc
GUN SHOOT, Aug. 29, Sunday,
1 p.m . at Racine Gun Club.
8-25-41c
ANY
BEAUTY operators
needing a beautician, I have
my license and am In need of
work . Phone 992-5972.
8-27-3tc

Realty

608 East Main

307 Eng ., auto .• P.S.• local widow ' s trade-i n. Extr a
nice.

MIDDLEPORT- HERE IS A
BUY FOR YOU - l'h story
brick, living room, dining
room, CARPETED, nice
' kitchen. bath, 2 bedrooms,
storage building. JUST $6,950.
RACINE - 1 story frame. 3
large bedrooms with closets.
bafh. nice kitchen, large
living room, CARPETED,
large garage with shop, .75
acre, LIKE NEW. $20,500.
__.

t

'

'

'

POMEROY- l'h story frame,
3 bedrooms, bath, living
room,
dining
room ,
basement, porch, large lot.
Storm doors, windows. ALL
IN GOOD CONDITION.
BARGAIN AT JUST S7,000.
PLACE THE SALE OF
YOUR PROPERTY IN
CAPABLE HANDS
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Residence 992-2568
8-29~tc

I

BEDROOM trailer apartment , Ideal lor couples .
Contact McClure' s Dairy Isle,
992-5248 or 992-3-436.
8-29~tc

PRiVATE trailer lol in Chesler
with utility bu ilding . Phone
985-4106 .
8-27-61c

SAW
$2949

Virgil B.
TEAFORD·
SR.

HAROLD BREWER.
1 AUCT.IONEER

STONE.FACE·

SIDING .'

Busines~ Opportunities

FOR TRAILER
UNDERPINNING

$221 S~EE~
FRENOI CITY
BUILDERS
SUPPLY·
750 lsi
'lALLIPOCIS, 0 ..

STEREO-TAPE
DISTRIBUTORSHIP
FULL DR PART TIME
SEIWICE LOCAL AC·
,COUNTS
Total Investment of 52660
co,v ered by merchandise.
Guaranteed sale or total
invesfment
re-purchased.
Call or wrlle Mr. Johnson,
Allied Productions, Inc ..
P.O. Box 267. East Point
lAIIantal. Georgia, 30344,
Pllone (&lt;104) 762-8469 .

For Sale

WALNUT stereo-radio com bination. Four speed' in·
termlxed changer. Four
speaker sound system, dual
volume control. Balance
$67.40. Use our budget terms.
Call 992-7085.
8-29-61c
BEAUTIFUL colonial maple
slereo, AM &amp; FM radio, four
speakers. 4 speed automa.t ic
~ha~ger, separate controls.
Balance $80.99. Use our
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
8-29-61c

WAS

OF POMEROY, INC.

RT. 7 BYPASS new 5
bedroom home, l'h baths. 4

acres.
NEW HOME - 3 spacious
bedrooms. gas heal, large
living and kitchen. $19,500.00.
INVESTMENT - your own
home and business with
ren.lal. Store with stock and
fixtures.
INVESTMENT ..: 2 stories large rental on first floor - 2
on second. 218 E. Main .
992-3325
Helen L. Tulord
AssociAte

H&amp;N day-old or slarled Leghorn
pullets. Both floor or cage
, 8-29~tc
grown available. Poullry
housing
&amp; automalion. 193 ACRE stock farm, -well
Modern Poultry, 399 W. Main,
fenced, farm pond, pl_enty ol
Pomeroy, 992-1164.
timber and paslure, large
8-29-llc
barn, implement shed and
· other . buildings .. Recently
2 DOOR G. E. Refrigerator•
remodeled. 4 bedroom farm
Magic Chef Gas range,
home, with wall to wall
Miracle Water Softener,
carp&lt;lting, ceramic tile bath,
breakfasl set, table and 4
full basement. Shown by
chairs . Call 985-3536 or con appointment only. Phone 992·
lacl Bill Allen, Chester.
6546.
8-29-31p
_8 -22-~lc

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-7195

Business Services

Auto Sales

IS

1965 BUICK SPORTSWAGON .................. •1095. '800
1965 BUICK SKYLARK ..............................•895. '600
196~ OLD$ CUTLASS 2 DR. HDTP...............•895. 1500
1965 CORY AIR 2 DR. HDTP...................... .•595. *400
1965 FORD STA. WAGON .........................'895 .'600
1965 FORD SEDAN ................................... '695. 1400
1964 MERCURY CONY.
1954 CHEV. TUDOR............... ,. , ................ '100

DANNIE'S MOBILE HOME SALES

1965 MUSTANG, 289, 3 speed. AWNINGS. storm doors and •
windows , carports .
Contact Butch Grover, Bailey
marquees, aluminum siding
Run Rd.
and railing . Call A. Jacob,
8-29-31p

- - -- - -

'51 FORD '12-lon pickup truck,
•64 Corvai r Monza. 4 speed
transmission . Phone 742-5042.
8-29-Jtc

'66 DODGE Polaro 500 con vertible
383 ;
4-barrel ,

automatic console, bucket
seafs, excellent condition,

Business Services

sales representative. For free
esfimates, phone Charles
Lisle , · Syracuse. V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
5-27-tfc

C. BRADFORD. Auctioneer
Complele Service
Phone 94'1-3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford
5-1-tfc

==---- - - - -

SEWING MACHINES. Repa ir
service, all makes, 992-22&amp;4,
Th F b · Sh
e a rrc
op, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
J-29-lfc
----,-,---- -- - HARRISON ' S TV AND AN
TENNA SERVICE . Phont
992-2522 .
• -10-11·
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart. Ohio. Ph .
662-3035.
2-12-lfc

PUBLIC AUCTION
Friday, Sept 3, 1971
11:00 A.M.
Due to change of employment, I will sell the
following at the farm located on Ball Run Rd.,
app. 3 miles north of SR 143 from SR 124 bypass in Pomeroy, Ohio. Watch for sate signs
from SR 143.
CATTLE
35 Head of Herefords
8 cows with calves, balance of cows due before first of
year ; calves are Charolais cross ; "Ole Jtrz" a fam ily
cow-due In late Sept.
MACHINERY
3000 Ford---p .s .• live pto, power space wheels. dilferentlal
lock, 675 hrs., '69 model, gas. NH 273 baler-super sweep,
new in '71, baled less than 2,000 bales. MF 5' 3 pt. bush hog ,
MF 3 pl. wheel rake, Ford 501 3 pt. mo"!er, Ford 9DJ post
hole digger, Ford W' 3 pt3-Bplow, l6" 3 ptl -B plow, Ford
6' 3 pl. Flex-o-hilch disk, Ford lift pole, MF 3 pt. blade, MF
3 pt. 2 row cultivator, MF wagon and.sideboards, MM 3 pl.
corn planter. broad jelsprayer 3 pl., Herd 3 pl. seeder, 20'
hay-o-vator. (19S7 Doldge truck · 1 ton) .
HORSES
2 yr. old reg. Tenn. walker gelding ; 18 mo. old pa lomino
stud; 2 western saddles.
MISC. - Loading chute, stock oiler and oi l, head hold, 2
12' gates, 8 hole hog Ieeder, hog crate, 2 rolls 32" woven
wire, 5 rolls barb wire. 1 lot 3" pipe, 1 lot oak lumber, 1 lot
fence posts. 1 lot cement blocks, tractor chains. cable,
lurfle trap, feed sacks, dehorner, chain binders. log~lng
(ongs. ladders. IS bu . corn, 750-1000 bales of hay, kerosene
stove, picnic table. Misc-. hand tools and small items.
BUTCHERING EQUIP. : IBM electric meat grinder .
electric meal saw, meal slicer.
OWNER: Lawrence A. Napper
Terms: C.5h
Lunch Available

CARNAHAN AUCTION SERVICE
949-27ot--J. C.rnahan

'

·B usin_e ss Services

.

EXPERIENCED
Radiator SeiVice ·

D. Smi-'149-2033

Racine, Ohio
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS OR LOSS OF
PROPERTY.
I

' .

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom 516,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment a slow as $65.00 for a family with a base
salary of 55.000 .00 and three children. 7 1/o Pet. annual
pez•cetlla!je rale .

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Healer Core.

BLAETTNARS
Pomeroy

Ph. 992-2143

•
I

WHOLESALE QDSE.OUT. THESE CARS HAVE TO BE SOlD.
OOME PREPARED TO BUY.

HOURS : 8 To 8 Mon. thru Fri.
9 To 5 Saturday-! to 5 Sunday

• 708 W. Main St.

$1495

Two to choose from . Nice fam ily cars.

"Ohio's Oldest Mobile Home Dealer"

-----

Harold German Farm
at Long Bottom, Ohio.
Watch for Our Ad
Sunday, Sept. 5

28160

71 MODELS
SAVE AS MUCH AS • • •
'1500

43,000 actual miles $1,095.
3 BEDROOM brick home .
Phone 992-5278.
Choice location in Middleporl. ·
8-26-tfc
Seen by appoinlmenl only. - - - - -- - -Phone 992-5523 after 4 p.m .
1970 DATSUN pick-up. good
5-7-tfc
condition, new tires, never
wrecked. Sl ,57S. Pllone 992tONVENIENT but secluded
5153.
building lots on n9 at Rock
8-IB-121c
Springs. Within walking
distance of . Meigs High
School, a 5 minute drive from
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
Wille weekends or after 5- QUEEN AND Shamblin Const.
Roofing,
remodeling ,
p .m . weekdays. Phone 992aluminum siding. Phone 9926887.
7324 or 742-ll'119.
7-11-llc
8-25-tfc

KOSCOT Kosmellcs . September
Sales
Special: 5 ROOMS, furnished. t-'hone
Kreamy Lip Kole 52 now
Mrs. A. R. Knight, 992-2.03 or
$1.50, Frosllucenl· Lip Kole
992-2883.
52.50 now $2, 23 delicious
8-26-61p
colors. Call 992-5113 or come
see at 161 112 N. 5th Ave .• 2 BEDROOM trailer, available
Middleport, Ohio.
soon. Utilities paid. Phone
8-29-tfc
992-7384.
8-26-Jic
I WOULD like lo do tr.plng in
my home. Reasonab e rates .
12x60 TRAILER. 2 bedroom,
Phone 992-3497.
nicely furnished, all new, S
8-29-6tc
miles above Pomeroy, own
lot, city water, electric range.
Good location lor school
teachers. Call 985-4143.
OLD Furniture. dishes, clocks,
8-26~tc
and-or complete households.
Write M. D. Miller, Pomeroy,
Broker
Ohio. Call 992-6271.
110 Mechanic Streel
FURNISHED ·and unlurnlshed
'
8-25-tlc
Pomeroy, Ohio
apartments. Close to school. .
Phone 992-5&lt;134.
100 TO 300 ACRES, old farm,
10-18-lfc SYRACUSE -4 rooms, nice lot.
abandoned farm or vacanf
$1,800.00. .
land with all rights . Will pay to
$5,000 cash . Wrlle lo John TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Huffman, 1500 Semlnola,
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse, RUTLAND - 6 rooms, bath,
basement, nice lot. $3,500.00.
Akron, Ohio 44305.
Ohio. 992-2951.
8-27-61p
4-2-lfc
~HESTER , AREA
2
bedrooms,
nice
kitchen
and
10-INCH'bencli saw. Phone 992living . Only $7,600.00.
6675, Don.
8-29-3ID
FOR SMALLER house, a large MIDDLEPORT- 4 bedrooms,
house (2 apls.) corner of
balh, large living, garage.
Pearl &amp; Park Sts.. MidOnly $7,500.00.
dleport.
8-29-6tc COUNTRY LIVING - new 4
bedroom, 2 bath, double
garage, 15 acres. $37,500.00.

PUBLIC SALE
, SATURDAY,
• SEPT. 11

1967 BUICK LeSABRE 4 DR. SEDAN

ON THE SPOT FINANCING!

PO~EROY

GREATEST DISCOUNTS
IN THE OHIO VALLEY.
COMPARE AND SEE ! ! !

1969 BUICK ELECJRA 2 DR. HDTP.

WE WISH lo express our sin- LADY to do housework, 1 day a
cere thanks to Drs. Berklch,
week, 152 Butternut, Phone
arrange FHA financing .
Holzer, Brady and Sattler,
992-5080.
Telephone 992-J600 or 992nurses and nurses aides at
8-26-61c
Holzer Hospital. Ewing
7-25-tlc · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
2186.
Funeral Home, Rev. Eugene
OPPORTUNITY
Underwood; pallbearersi EARNINGS $10,800 to $15,800 HOUSE. 1642 Lincoln Heights.
Mrs. Mildred Miller, Loca
tall Danny Thompson, 992plus car allowance and frlnnP
No. BJ Boiler Makers Union,
2196.
benefits.
Must
stand
_riQid:
friends and neighbors for
IN POMEROY
7-18-lfc
background inspection, and
llowers, food and cards,
-----~
service selected accounts .
during the Illness and death of
· Only married men, over 25, 11 .16 ACRES localed T-79 at
Joe B. Hatfield. Your kindwith successful backg_round
Rock Springs, close to Mei9s
ness wi II never be forgollen.
should
apply. Write P. 0 . Box
High School. Contact Brll
Wife, Ethel and children.
SOl.
t;&gt;alllpolls,
Ohio,
Zip
Wilfe-lor
L. Fields-after 5
8-29-llc
45631, or call 446-9445 lor
p.m. or on weekends 992-6887.
personal Interview. Calling
8-27-lotc
hours 9:30a. m . tillll : 30a. m.
Monday lhru Friday.
R"EVIVAL,
Eagle
Ridge
8-27-Jic
Community Church, August
25, 26, 27, 28. Rev . Roy Deeter,
Evangelist.
8-23-61p

'

' .

For Sale

For Sale or Trade

,(v,.

•

Card

Help Wanted

WE

SMITH
SAYS:
· 5ee0ur New

Wante{T o Buy

61!2" SKIL

TIME: 12:30 P.M.

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
_5 ~.M. Qay Before Publlcallon
··
Mandav Deadllne9a.m.
Canqlli!iQII.J.SQrrectlanJ' ·wm bea~:cepted unlll9a.m.r
· DiW of Publication
.
IIEGULATIONS
. Th~ Publisher reserves the
'righf to edit or reject aoy ads
'deem'd objectional
Thei
publisher will not be res~slble:
for _ more than one lncorrectJ
Insert ion . · .
RATES
•- For W4n'l Ad Service
5 cents pbr Word one Insertion
• Minimum Charge 7Sc
1.2 cents per word thr""t
aMlse(vlive Insertions.
18 e&lt;!nts per word six consecutive Insertions.
.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
· &amp;OBITUARY
$1.50 tor 50 word minimum.·
liach additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
AddiiiOf)al 25c Charge per
AdverliSeflllltlt.
OFfiCE HOURS
8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p:m . Dally,
8:30 a . m . to 12:00 Noon'
Saturday.

"DOC"

FINAL CLEARANCE ON All

Letll Natlce

Double lnsullttd

DATE: SEPT. 9th ·

su · .....

~:lllii,-..N.I ..i;IILN.
.. If ............................

•

SKIL
114" DRILL

PUBLIC SALE

Red sq. back, black vinyl interior, 4 speed. factory A-~. radio, vent shades, bu~per guarqs,
tra iler hi tch, wh ife-wall fires, locally owned car w1th only 8.000 miles on 1t. New car
warr anty. ~ve a lot of money over a show-room car.

Beige square-back . Beige vinyl interior, radio, 4 speed. Have to see this
preciate . Full 100 per cent warranty.

RUSSELL'S
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
SEPTIC tank clea~lng. electric
sewer cleaning. ditching .
Gallipolis. Ohio. I'll. 446-4782.

alSo

house wr ecking . Ph . 446 Central Air Conditioning
9499. Established In 1940.
-Huting
169-lf
Free Estimates
Stewart's Honlware
Vinton, Ohio
WATER well drilling, Myers
1&lt;1-4-11
pumps Sales and Service.
Complete
water line service
·'
FAIN
and trenching . C. J . Lemley,
EXTERMINATING CO.
Vinlon, Ohio. I'll. 388-854J.
Termite &amp; Pest Control
ll'-Jf
Wheelersburg. Ohio
Ph. 57U112
D. P. ' MARTIN &amp; Son Water
52-11
Delivery Service . Your
patronage will be apRAIKE&lt;S
precraled . Ph . 446-~3.
REFRIGERATION
7-lf
&amp; AIR CONDITIONING
RESIDENTIAL. commercial ,
industrial. I'll. 367-7200.

71 V.W.--------------------•3095

v.w. --------------------•1988
68 v. w··--------------~----•1688

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
830 Fourth Avenue
Phone 4&lt;16-3888 or 446-&lt;1-477
155-lf

J D's Radio &amp; TV Service. TV Anlenna Sales lnslallallon of Ohio.
THE OHIO BELL
Serving Gallipolis &amp; Pl.
- Service. Estimates. Ph.
TELEPHONE COMPANY
Pleasant, reasonable rates,
446-1673 or 446-9679.
. ,, C. K. """·
prompt service. Also evening
63-lf
VIet l*ttJidtttt
calls. Ph. 675-5220.
Aug
.
22.
29,
Sept
.
5
203-6 GILLENWATER' S septic tank

White Beetle. automatic trans., red vinyl seats. radio. 100 per cent parts &amp; labor warranty
for 30 days or 1,000 miles.

While square back. A bei.ut ilul , low-m ileage new car trade-in. Nicely equipped with 100 per
cent parts &amp; lab&lt;&gt;r warranty for 1.000 miles or 30days.

187-11

chan'ed rale or c~!~~1 and a ttal:
1
TERMITE PEST CONTROL descrobloa the.,.,...., chon... Ia
FREE inspection. Call «6-3245, lations and practices atfectlna ratee and
charJoet, maybe lnlpc.cted bY any lmetested ·
Merrill O'Dell, Operator for party at the office of the Commillloa, 111
Exterminal Termite Service, North Hiab Street, Columbu.l Ohio, &amp;Dd
19 Belmont Or.
al any public buaine11 ofhce of the
Company.
267-11
The form of 1hi1 aotice hu been a~
proved by llle P\l.bllc Utilitla CommiuJon

Reel Beetle, black vinyl seals, radio, white walls. 4 speed trans .• 100 per cent parts &amp; labor
warranty for 30 days or 1.000 miles.

69

STANDARD
Plumbing &amp; Healing ·
21S Third Ave .• 446-3782

Sunday Times-Sentinel
,
Class.ifieds Get Results •

PdMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
992-2094
6&lt;M

E. Main

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

BILL NELSON
992-3657

HILTON WOLFE

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK

'5.55

ROOF PAINnNG

.SPOUTING,

~ GUARANTEED­

And

Phone 992-2094

FURNITURE

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

Have Your Seasonal
Air CondiOOning
Inspection and
Re-tharge
Special
AI

6.98

Plus
Parts

Blaettnar's
PHONE 992-2143
READY -MIX

Open I Til 5
Monday lhru Saturdily
606 E . Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

.KIINSON MASONRY
Couwlete
Remodeling
Kitchens, Balhs
Room Additions
And P.1tias ·
Backhoe And
Endloader Work

.

CONCRETEdelivered r igh t to your SEPTIC TANKS CLEAN EO
prQje_c l. Fast and easy . Free Reasonable rales. Ph. •46-•782,
eslimales. Phone 992-3284.
Gall ipol is .. John Russell ,
Goegle in Ready -Mix Co ..
O..ner &amp; Operator.
Middle porl, Ohio.
5-13-lfc
6-30-tlc
----::-- --~

BACKHOE AN[), DOZER work .
Septic tanks Installed . George
i Bill) J;'ull i_n s. Phone 992-2478 .
• 4-25-tlc

Phone 992-2550
Insured - Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See us lor f(ee
Estimate on Furnace
lnstalation.
SEWING machine service in
your home. Clean, oil and
adjust. S4. Phone 992-7085.
Twin City Sewing Madllne
ComP.,ny .
8-24-6fc

Septic Tanks
And LNdl Beds.

742-4902

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;
ConstructiOfl Co. and Anthony Plumbint &amp; tte.ting.
Complet,.
Plumbing,
Heating . and A,ir Con·
ditioni"Q.
240 Lincoln St., Middlopol1 ,

O' DELL WHEEL alignlllenl
located al a-os,.oads, Rt. 124.
Complete front end service, t
lune up and brake servl,..
Wheels
b&lt;~lanced
elttctronlcally .
All
work
guaranleed.
Reas_.,.e
ra les. Phone 992-3213.
1-:U·Ifc

--

NEIGLER Construction . For AUTOMOBILE lnsurana-.
cancelled?
~ost
Yt'll'
building or remodeling your
operator ' s license? e.g: ttJ.
home . Call Guy Neigler ,
2966.
Racine, Ohio.
7-JI -IIc

�a-TiltS 7; nm.-11 r ',S 5;.AIII-a,Jm

21- TbeSUndayTimes-Sentinel,Sunday, Aug. 29,1971

'

For
Fast
Results
Use
The
Su.
n
day
Times.
Sentinel
Classifieds
..
•
I

Real Estate For Sale

; Rea1 tstate For Sale

!

Neal R_eaHJ

I

•

•
IUSINUS
:
OPPOJITUN ITY
' EVERYTHING you , _ to go
f Into tile business. fn ; dudes buildings, .equipment,
I·
a 5 room houw Mel inventory.
: Call - Y for delalls.
•
PRIME LOCATION
: IF LOCATION toults see this
1
taur _ _ , ......,. located
! across from tile high school at
; 112 Slele Street. Ollldren can
1
walk to school Mel parents
' can walk to grocery and
i- business district.

.• '

• 17 ACRES vacant land ~ $5,000.
1
Office l'lllint-16M

I
I

e.....,..

a..r1es M. NeiL -1546
J. ~Udlael NeaL --1503

'

l
I

I

•

AHOMEISAGOOD
INVE5TMENT
BUYING OR
SELLING
CALL THE Dll.LON AGENCY

Large
Two story double located on
First Ave . A real money
maker ~ Call fGr tnore inf«mat ion.

low

down

payment and assume a G. I.
loan .

AUCTION

Sale Every
Saturday
Evenings, 1:00
c:.noti-"ird &amp; Olive Aw.
We

Dillool. Rallar
Office -2674
Haw•nlw LiN:illo llrilnno.,
Enn_i---12:2'

apar tment.

.• ~~~

••.

-rt

10 Aa-es with 5 room - 3 BR
home, basement. Home is in
good condition, deep well. 2
car garage with 4 room

LOW, low prices on Bernco and
Serla mattresses and box
springs. Carbin &amp; Snyder
Fum., 955. Second Ave. I'll.
446-1171.
3-lf

'

_Dillon
Agency

Good Country Living

For Sale

•
l

Real Estate For Sale

Looks Great
This most attractive ranch
home is located on a corner
lot wllh an exira lot. All
rooms

are paneled

and

carpeted. beautiful kitchen,
attached garage. Immediate
JX'SSPSSion.

On Three Acres

sell

anything for
anybody. We also buy !some
ooteles. For Pick-up Servioe

Pf Land
One st ory 2 BR home, large
comtry kitchen wilh plenty

Call KnoHs Community Auction, 4462917

cabinets

-

located

on

blacktop road on Raccoon
Creek, a number of large

shade trees.

NOTICE TO DfE PUBLIC
We are proud to announce that we have addedto our sales force MR. KENNETH SWAIN of

Eureka Star Route, in Gal!ipolis, Ohio, as illl
apprentice AUCTIONEER. I am ·sure that
Kenneth Swain wi II be indeed a great assetto
our sales force. If at anytime either of us can
be of assistance to anyone. p!ease feel free to
call.

Real Estate For Sale

.MASSIE·

USSELL

Reii!Dr. 32 state si.
Tel 446-19!18 ·
7 MI . from new Gavin Plant ; 6
nice rms .. bath and base., 3
r ms. and bath paneled, H. W.
floors , coppe,. plumbing ,
plenty good soft water from
dr. well. Located on 1.21 A.
lot. This house is 12 yr : old and
in good repair . See today.
Price $18,500.

Baby Farm
MOOERN 6 rm . house, full
base., large li v. rm. and din .
rm ., 2 rms. paneled, Nearly
new fuel oil fur. Large frame
and metal barn. plenty water,
gravity feed from spring .
Located on 6 A. good land. 1~
m i. from city. $11 ,500.

Thurman

'I•

GOOD 5 r m . home located on
A. lot. Hou5e has had treatment for termites. It has a
garage and can be bought for
$8,000 .

Dairy Farm

'

~tioneering

block, and I tile block. Oily

522.500.

·

'

ANY HR. 446-1991
EVE. : J. Fuller 446-3246

G IGANfl C year end sale new 7!'
units 24ft. 7 save 51.300. 22ft.
1 save $1 ,22S. 20 ft. 7 save
Sl ,lll5. All boats lett dealer' s
cost. l9n campers 15 pet. oft ..
Trad@s accepted. We service
and guarantee. Camp Conley
Starcrall Sales. Rl. 62. North
of Point Pleasant. West
dealer.
169-tt

Sabrday • Sept 4 . 11:00 lll.
Locatiolt--1 mllu- o1 Gallipolis, Ollio on Route 511 at ·
Rednty.
Will sell at Auclllln. former estate of Marie Volbom
Ewing, consisting in part ol:
3 pc. oak bednmm suite, cherry bed, marble top table, oak
kHchen cupboard. pie sale, 2 wicker rock"!"· Joy - burning aJOking stove (mfl'd in Galh":"'osl , d~leilf
table, Ash table. set of I chairs. setol5 sprndle charrs. set
of 4 straight chairs (drilled for cane seatsl ._ 2 trea~le
sewing madlines (fancy cabinets) . Philco upnght rad10,
oak wash stand. oak '14 bed. 1 Belknaps and I Elk - burning hating stoves (nice), old pordl selfee. 8-&lt;lay
mantel dock. s1one jan, jugs, crocks. dlurns. hand-made
quilts. Hanley Ironstone (several pieCeS), cut glass. old
dllna. oil tamps, pictures and frames. 1858 mason and
other collector jars-wicker baskets - 1881 German New
Testament. fe111her ticks, family phofo album. fa~il y
Blbie wilh ancesfGrial history to 1822, old advertiSing
containers. misc. loots, kegs, etc. etc. too nurneruus to list.
Terms: C.sh
lunch on grounds
Not responsible for accidents
MR. &amp; MRS. PAUL BURNETTE, OwriWS
LEMLEY AUCTION SERVICES
Andrew Lemlr(-Auct.
Auct. Nlote: Some uoellont Antiques ......,_

-

-

bam, lair fences. 925 lbs. tobacco base, rounty water lap.
Sl8,000.00.
260 acres in Addison Township, 90 acres bottom land.
pasture and timber 170 acres. 3 gas wells and two houses.
I rents for $50.00 per month and one lor $25.00 per month.
Gas well pays S95.00 every 3 months.
1 . 2 bedroom house in City limits S17,000. Shown by ap-

JX,Jintment
I - 2 bedroom house at Centenary S17,900 • Shown by appointment
.
I - 3 bedroom house at Centenary 516,000 - Shown by appointment
1 - 4 bedroom house in City $23,500 - Shown by appointment

18 A. WITH 3 houses ; I brick, 1 LISTINGS NEEDED -

Virginia's largest Starcraft

AUCTION

·1 Farm, 92 acres land, some paper wood timber and large

- ~_ REALll

«6-- -

Services Offered

If you
HORSE SHOEING
want action on your property,
list with Baird Re~~lty Co. We COMPLETE farrier service.
Bob Schaeffing, 446-1510.
have many prospects for
188-lf
farms and homes throughout
the city and county.
Oscar Bainl, 446 4632
BOOKKEEPING, accounting,
Doug Welhertlolt, 446-4244
tax reports of all kind. I'll.
4&lt;16-3309.
FOR SALE by owner, 2 story
200~
brick at 452 First Ave. 7
"'H
::-::E::::R::::'S,--rooms. 2 baths. gas hot air -----,-,sw,-,iffi
furnace,
present
DITCH TRENCHING
arrangement 2 apartments.
SERVICE Ph.~46-0468
Easily converted to one
174-lf
family dwelling . Asking
535 ,000 shown by· ap- SWISHER'S
Plumbing . &amp;
pointment. I'll. 4&lt;16-0208.
Electric
contractor
. We
199-H
specialize In hookin~ up rural
water I ine system to your
NEWhorne ...:-liiick front. 100' x
home. Completely build your
230 ' lot , buill -in kitchen.
bathroom . tall us for com carpeted. Will help arrange
plete free estimate. Delbert
financing . Barr Construction,
Swisher, 1809 Chestnut, I'll.
16 Pine Sl., I'll. 446-3746. Mon.
4&lt;16-0468.
lhru Fri . 9 to 5, Sat. 81o 12.
135-11
185-11

VOLKSWAGEN ~
69 OLDS------------------- •2788 .

:leila ' 88' 2 dr. hardtop, light green with dark green vinyl roof, factory A-C,- automatic
trans .. power steer. &amp; brakes, etc. A beautiful car.

69 IMPALA--------------- •2488
Custom hardtop. light blue with black vinyl top and seats, Comfort-Control A-C., power
steer. &amp; brakes, AM-FM. stereo radio, tinted glass. 427 V-8 with 4 speed and rear wheel
sanders. A beautiful, loaded car.

67 PONTIAC--------------- '1788
Grand Prix 2 door hardtop, silver with black vinyl top and seafs, finf. glass, A-C. automatic
trans .• power steer. &amp; brakes. A beautiful sporty, luxury car.

67 FIAT--------------------- •595
11 00~

Or. Sedan, a locally owned, economy ~door .

66 DART------------------- •1188
Blue GT. 2 dr. hardtop. V-8. automatic trans .• radio. A-C.

PUBLIC
SALE
THURSDAY MORNING, SEPT. 9

65 PLY.---------------------· •788
Red Belv. 2 dr . H. Top, 318 V-8, aulo,...tic trans., power steer.• radio. A very attractive car.

Rt. 218- 11h miles from Rt. 7 below Gallipolis.
Sel!ing two households nice furniture and
;mtiques. Owners, Mr. Clan Cox and ~lfred
Sheets- Reason for selling : moving into new
home.
Antique organ. sewing machine. 2 chest . of drawe_rs.
refrigerator, freezer - upright, table &amp; ~ charrs. S r_odung
chairs, 1 electric vibralor charr, 2 end tables, p ano &amp;
bench. 1 coudl. radio, 1 antique wall clock. 1 elecfr l ~ wa ll
ctock. fool stool. antique dlurns - rron ware - d•~·
pictures. 3 stand tables, antique pitcher &amp; bowl, ban;o.
violin. floor lamp, lhrow rugs. bed clothing. 3 platform
rockers. 1 blonde 3 pc. bedroom su ite-bookcase bed, I
blonde wood bed. 3 swivel bar stools, 1 nylon coudl &amp;
chair 1 blue nylon rug, 1 reel nylon rug w ith pad, I blue
n-~ rug-- with pad, 1 electric stove wit~ top oven.
1 coppertonerefrigeralor, 1 d inette suite wrth stx char,-,;, 1
china closet, 1 step table, 1 wringer w~. 1 d ryer. 1
stand table-antique, 2 antique cha irs matchrng ( rock er straight) , 1 room divider, I door m rrror,_1 tread"~':__,'Ype
-lng madllne. 1 bathroom space savec,..brdsiji'eads,
drapes. lhrow rugs, dishes, bookcase. ~ of Encyclopedias. 1 set of do-if-yourself Encyclopedtas. t etec.
, griddle. 1 toaster, 1 elec. colfee pol, 1 utility table. 2 table
t.mps 2 vanity lamps 1 lamp &amp; matdling ash tra y. 1
elecfrl~ wall clock. _bread box &amp; cannister set, I_ card
table. 1 ice cream freezer. 2 nail kegs, fire scr~ &amp; r':""s·
2 ,.lndow fans, record player &amp; stand, porFh swrng. ~rcn rc
table. lawn chill,-,;, stone jars, jug. oil lamp. a&gt;ffee grtnder
.,.. many other items.

Terms of Sale: cash Refreshments Available
Col. R. E. KnoHs, Auctioneer, assisted by Col.
Jimmy Sayre.
·
NWs.R.E.KnoHs.C~k

Auctioneer Remarks: lllis is an ex~ra g~ lot
of items, come early and bring a ram coat 1us1

In case.

••

w. --------~----------· •1788
69 v. w. ------------------- •1888
69 v.

STARTING AT 9:30

·

and cavity work, · tree and
slump removal. I'll. 446-&lt;1953,,
,73-11-

Pluinhinl! &amp; Heatina
· Brammer Plum-bing &amp; Heating-,
300 Fourth Ave.&gt;
Phone 446-1637' •
Gene Plants, Owner

298-tt'

Of Eden
ADAM , TAKE YOUR EVE
BY THE HAND AND
· LEAD HER TO THIS
SECLUDED HIDE -AWAY .
LARGE SHADED LAWN ,
WONDERFUL GARDEN
AND POND . VERY NICE
HOME
WITH
HUGE
liVING ROOM . NICE
KkTCHEN &amp; DINING AND
2 BEDROOMS . HUGE
NEARLY NEW , VERY
Goo ·o
UTILITV
BUILDING PRESENTLY
USED AS LARGE SHOP. 2
CAR
GARAGE
AND
BARN .

'IF YOU'RE LOOKING
FOR A LITTLE PEACE
AND QUIET, SEE THIS
TODAY
LOVELY
'IlMMER COTTAGE AND
12 ACRES WITH
A
BEAUTIFUL 2 ACRE
SPR ING -FED LAKE AT
THE
FRONT
DOOR.
LAND IS CLEAN WITH
LOTS OF TREES .

Someone's Missing A
Bargain Of A
Lifetime
YOU JUST COULDN'T
MAKE A BETTER BUY
THAN
THIS .
3
BEDROOMS , LARGE
LIVING ROOM, FORMAL
DINING.
ALL
CAR PETED , l'h
BATHS,
FULL BASEMENT , 2 CAR
GARAGE ON A FLAT LOT
AT RIO GRANDE . VERY
NICE NEIGHBORHOOD

Prt~e Reduced
WI$ $12,900 Now $9.900
OWN6R VERY ANXIOUS
TO SELL MODERN 3
BEDROOM HOME WITH
LARGE LIVING ROOM
AND
BUll T -IN KIT CHEN . NEEDS A LITTLE
WORK BUT COULD BE A
MONEY MAKER .

Match This?
No Otance
ATTRACTIVE
BRICK

~YR .

AND

DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Roule160 at Evergreen
Phone4&lt;16-2735
281 -11

Want To Get Away
From HAll

20 Acres Garden

Lots on black·top roo~. with city water ard gas availabl,e.
89.4x222.7, Gallipolis School District, within_ l'h mile of
City limits . Price 52.200.00.

BAIRD REALTY CO.
Oscar Baird, Realtor

BANKS TREE SERVICE
FREE esllm•tes. liability Insurance. Pruning, trimming

E .--N~ Wiseman 446-4~

Where there' s a will, there's a lawsuit.

--------'

Campi111 Equipment

is my business, my only
BUSINESS

-

-

Services Offered

Office 446-3643
Evenings Call
E--M. "Ike" Wiseman 446.S796

A man hopes that his lean years are behind him ~ a
woman hopes hers arl!!' ahead.

IDEAL set-up. 122 A.• fertile
land. all flat to gentle roll. all
1i llable except 5 A. in saw
Office 446-1 0611
timber. This lard has been
Evenings: C. II
improved over a generation of
Ron Canaday 446-3636
good'farm ing practices. II has
good fences. plenty water,
John I. RichaniS446-0280
1.623 lb. lob. base., 7 . rm .
Russell D. Wood446-4618
modern home, 5 barns ; block
and metal dairy barn 36' x 96' ,
31 metal stanchions, water
cups. milkers and 320 gal.
.Pii.
bulk tank . All bldgs. in good
repair and have metal roofs
less than 10 years old. Owner
STROUT Really will be closed
for vacation August 25 thru
grows roughage for 80 head
450 Se&lt;GIId Ave.
Sept. 2.
livestock and sells hay . This is
Ph. 446-4n5
Ranny Blackbum
an amazing opportunity for EDGE OF TOWN Three
· Branch Manager
anyone interested In farming . luxury homes. Priced from
Prrce s«l,OOO.
·
521,500 up, all with city water ,
city schools, paved streets.
Farms,
excellent locations.
HOUSE by owner. 5 rooms,
bath, new kitchen, forced air
Vacant Land
46 ACRES - Only three miles
heat, storm doors and win.ell A. most tractor, cheap.
from town on Sand Hollow
dows, 1 A. ground, 5 miles
150 A. Farmer's farm . $16,000.
Road.
from town on Lower .River
50 A. 25 is bolfom, $7,500.
Rd. Ph. -446-4648.
II A. edge of town . $10,000.
&lt;42 ACRES - Nice two story
. 202-3
25 A. St. Rf . 325. S7,500.
house with three bedrooms. - - - - - - - - Investment
tun bath.

lex a

'

446-1066
-

Estate For Sale

TllE WISEMAN
AGENCY

·REALTOR

St. Rt. 554
(Eno)

llennelh Sail
0.11 HilL Ollie
_
612-:1795 , .... 6141

R~l

OLD

FRAME

WITH FULL BASEMENT
IN
AN
EXCELLENT
NEIGHBORHOOD,
3
LARGE BEDROOMS ,
CARPETED
LIVING
ROOM AND PRETTY
KITCHEN WITH RANGE
&amp; OVEN . PLUS LOTS OF
CABINETS .
FORMAL
DINING . PATIO DOORS ON BASEMENT, I CAR
GARAGE, 1 MILE OUT
PRICED FOR QUICK
SALE .

AND

VERY

AT -

TRACTIVELY

PRICED .

Just Married?
Just Retired?
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 . '% OF ACRE , 3
MILES OUT .

Price Reduced
Riverside Location
THIS

LIKE

NEW

J

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 ' ACRE
PLOT RUNNING TO THE
RIVER WITH A SMALL

ORCHARD AND DANDY
PLACE
FOR
BOAT .
VERY
ATTRACTIVE ,
VERY WELL BUILT , AND

Lots For Sale

VERY WELL KEPT .

2.38 ACRE WOODED
ALL .
WATER
AVAILABLE .
{l)

(2) 2.33 ACRE WOODED ,
VERY . VERY NICE ,
WATER TAP PAID .
I312ACRESATEDGEOF
TOWN. $2,500. WAT.ER &amp;
GAS AVAIL. GOOD FOR 2.
OR
MORE
MOBILE
HOMES .

W 5'12 ACRES. LARGE
TREES A BEAUTIFUL
LOCATION, S3,900 .

We Need Your
Property To Sen
WE ARE SELLING AT
SUCH A PACE. IT ' S IM 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
RIGHT NOW . IF YOU
WANT TO BUILD NEW ,
SEE US TO SELL YOUR
PRESENT PROPERTY .

"
- - - - -- - - -- - - - -- - - - - - - . J
'
HOUSE, 9.1 Second Ave . ,

duplex, .. rooms &amp; bath. Write
Joann Patrick, 521 Riley
Blvd .• Franklr'n, Ohio ·~s .
""""
199-12
- - -- -- - - -

Services Offered

Services Offered

cleaning and repair,

117-lf

ALBERT EHMAN
Water Delivery Service
Patriot Star Rl., Gallipolis
I'll. 379-2133
243-tl

DEAD STOCK

$5.00 Service Charge
Will remove your dead
horse and cows
Call Jackson 286-4531

67 v'

•

one to fully

ap-

w. ------------------- •1488

Red square-back , v inyl interior, radio, -4 speed. fuiiiOO pe,.centwarranty.

MANY OTHERS - All MAKES &amp; MODELS
DOl MilS aa.EI,_IIIC.
•u,.r.,_Mt~M~a7).c

.... 1..11.

. 193-11 '

llis~nlice

.

NATIONWIDE INSURANCE
AUTO, Fire, life. 45 Stale 51 ..
Waldo F. Brown, W. R.
Brown. 4&lt;16-1'160.
24-lf
FOR. ALL your Insurance needs
check with your· Grange
agents at the Neal Ins. ,
Agency, 64 State St. Ajjents·
for auto, fire, homeowners,
hospital and 'general llablllly.
Uti

Public notice is herebY live:n that 1bc
Ohio Bell TeleoboDe Companyml...
ul ~
with The Public Utilities Com
Oft uo
Ohio a.a AttPiicadOD ataliaalhat tbe Company is eDtitJed, becat~~e of tbc rai01ll
set fortb In Aid Application, to IUIODable
and equitable increases and adjUICmeall
in lu rates aDd dlli'ICI for exeh-. • •
phone ~rvicc, lnuasule ~~­
phone service, lnuutate mobile -"""ne
tenlcc. Intrastate private tine ICIYicel and
intrastate wide area telttommuolcaUont
service, and to chanae the n:auJatlou and
practice1 aftectina: the pme and to revile
Its EKhanae Rate Ta:ril P.U'.c.o. No..], ita
General Exchanae Tarift P.U.C.O. No. •if

II&amp; Mesuae Toll TekJibODC Servl" Tarl
P.u.c.o. No. 7 lu Mobile Teleobone
Senlce Tulfl' P.U.c.o. No. 2. lu trlntc
UDe Service Tnlff P.U.C.O. No. 1, aad

Its Wide An:a Telccommunlcatlont. Senke
Tarlft' P.U.C.O. No. I, to effect IUCll Ill·
c:reases, adjUIImenu and c~ all II

more fully sa fonh in the A

catloa on

file with the Commisalon
lD tile exhibits thereto attached and made a part
thereof.
The propoled rcYIIiDfll will effect lacreaiCI ud adius.tmuu in rat-. and
cbup and chanaet hi the tep.l.atioDI ud
prKtiL'CI afl'ecthla the AlnC lhrouabOUI the
lertitory in which the Company operata.
The prayer of the AppUcatlon requea~
the Commiuion to do the foUowtna:
(a) Apptoye 1be pr~poaed rates and
chu.a and cbanaes ap-plied for In uld

AppUc:adon ;
(b) Approve the ftllna of tile propoK&lt;I
achcdu1e abecu in tbe form attamed
to the Application, modifted to n:flect
such rcYishms thereof a1 ma.y become
efl'ective. punuant to orden of the Com·
minion, duriaa the Interim betwta the
ftlina of the Applie~tion aDd tho date
upon wbichu.id propoecd lthedu.le lhcett
became elfecUvc;
(c) Establiah u elfectlve date ror uld
proposed tchedule lheeu; and.
(d) Grant such other and fun.her ,.
lid as Applicaut it rcuoaabty entitled
to in the prcmi~a .
A copy dlhe Appli&lt;ldon, l~
a copy of the present and propole!d
•

e

~~c:~~:~n:~~':':~=i

LOCAtiON: Gallipolis take 141 to Centenary,
turn leit go through Northup. cross bridge, go
straight up over hill 112 mile.
This sale consists of:
Ill Head! CATTLE (13 H~adl
a cows with ~alf by side, These calves wi!l
weigh 3 to 4 hundred lbs .. 2 Holstein heifers.
good; 2 Holstein steers. i Hereford bull, good
work horse, SO model pickup truck, Farma!l
Cub B tractor with turning plow &amp; cultivator,
power chain saw. 2 sets of pick-up truck racks.
lumber &amp; 2x4 log chains. small hand tools.
Auctioneer's Note: This is a clean sale. These
cattle
are extra nice. Dl!ln't miss this sale.
l

CMNER LEWIS aAIG
0.

~- &amp;

J. A.

Fr~nch.

Auctioneers

OOMPLETE
---

BATH OUTFIT
INQ.UDES

TUB - COMMODE
24" VANm •
LAVATORY

COMPLETE

$24995
Everyday Low' Price

•.

STANLEY Home Products APPLES-Peaches. Fitzr:trlck
Orchards, State Rou e 689.
needs 5 fall and Christmas
phone Wilkesville, 669-3785.
representatives.
Car
8-15-lfc
necessary . Write Mrs. Libman, 3-4 W. Carpenter St.,
Athens or call 893-8854.
REFRIGERATOR, stove, 18cu . ff. upright freezer, couch,
8-29~tc
2 chairs, set of end tables,
coffee table, two table lamps, SOMEONE needed to stay with
one floor lamp, ullllty stand.
invalid s; days a week, some
one used clarinet, hair dryer,
nights. Phone 992-7155. ·
kitchen cabinet, all In good
8-29-61c
condition. Phone 247-2135.
8-29-21c
GIRL NEEDED five days a
week and slay nights .
Evenings and weekends free.
No work. Good home and 3 BEDROOM home. Elec1ric
wages. Phone 992-5207 after 3
heat, remodeled recently
p.m.
inside, 7th street, New Haven.
8-29-31p
Owner transferred . Phone
882-2263.
8-29~tc
EA~N · AT home addressing
envelopes. Rush stamped
sell-addressed envelope. The 'SIX ROOM house, bath; . fuli
baseme~l,.l33Jlullernut Ave.,
Ambrose Co.• 432S Lakeborn.
just . walking distance from•
Davisburg, Mich . 48019.
downtown Pomeroy. Contact
8-l-3Dip
'::d Hedr.ick, 2137 Wadsworlh,
L),.ive, Columbus, Ohio, phone!
CAR HOP and wallress. Apply
237-4334, Columbus.
in person . Crow•s Steak House.
- 5-9-lfG

65X12

65'X14' Wide
With Deluxe
Furniture

Completely
equipped
home
with
deluxe
furnishiq,gs. Priced from

Packag~.

of Thanks

1969 BUICK LeSABRE COST. 4 DR. HDTP.

'6495

Air Cond .• lime g,.een, dark green vinyl top. New
Electra trade .

1970 PLY. BARRACUDA
Auto., P.S., P. B., Factory air cond ., vinyl top. Was

SAVE UP TO

$2795.

$1500

1971 DODGE SWINGER

ON KING HOMES'

------

NEW, 3-bedroom home in
Middleport.. Buill-in kitchen,
ceramic tile bath, all-electric
heal, good neighborhood. tan

Air cond .• one owner, marlin blue. black vinyl top.
Sha r p.

VAN DYKE ·

Real Estate For Sale _

8-24-6tc

= - - - -- -

"--I ill,

Auto . trans .• vinyl top, Was SJ200.

call or write or talk to Dan Thompson, Tom ·
Lavender or John Ketdlka .

KEITH GOBLII=
MOBILE HOME SALES
~ 1 Ph . 991-7004

Daily

to

Auto .. P.S.• P. B.• bucket seals. Wa s 52895.

If No Answer, 991-3422

_
12

1970 PONTIAC G.T.O. CONV•

9,

Sunday

I

to

6

1969 PLY. SATELLITE 2 DR. HDTP.

OPPOSITE GOBLE'S USE_D CAR, LOT

Auto .. P.S.. viny l top. 32.000 miles . Expecl lhe best .

1968 atEVEUE 2 DR. HDTP.

Dannie's Mobile Homes

Notice

Oeland

Male or Female
Help Wanted

----~-

. SAVE UP lo one half. Brl ng
your sick TV to Chuck' s TV WILL PAY well for your spare
time working at horne for us.
Shop, lSI Butternut Ave .•
Anyone who can read and
Pomeroy.
'"
write
can qualify . Weekly
~-23-llc
salary. For details write,
James Bliss Co.• P . 0 . Box
PLEASE REQUEST your
324,
Dept. K 479, Levilfown,
favorite disc jockey to playPa
.•
19053.
"God and I" - B-W - "The
8-27-6tc
Glory of The Angels," Action
Records No. AC 1014A,
published by Souvenir Songs
(ASCAPJ. free recording to
DJs. Address, John Mohler,
ATHENS business couple
Rt. 1, Box 210, Middleport,
transferring to Pomeroy . ·
Ohio 45760, phone 992-6903.
Would like house or apart8,-25-12tp
ment In Pomeroy or Middleport.
No children. Ex""'WJ%'Nt'Eoi\'lgh 11\~ If tellfiot G lrl
cellent
reference.
Phone Vera
Scout troop. Contact Mrs.
Eblen at 593-7783 or 593-3710.
Roscoe Wise at 992-2675 .
8-29-61c
8-26-31c

Wanted To Rent

----BEGINNING Sept. 1 I will be

For Rent

returning to work In my
beauty shop. Shop hours will TRAILER space on old Rl. 33,
be Wednesday. Thursday and
'h- mile north of new Meigs
Friday, 9 a .m . to 5 p.m . and
High School. Phone 992-29~1 .
saturday 9 a.m. to l p.m .
8-29-llc
Ruth
Barnhart,
Ruth's ~-------Beauty Shop, Bradb_ury . J ROOM unfurnished apartPhone 992-3971.
ment. Phone 992-2288.
8-26-31c
8-29-tlc
GUN SHOOT, Aug. 29, Sunday,
1 p.m . at Racine Gun Club.
8-25-41c
ANY
BEAUTY operators
needing a beautician, I have
my license and am In need of
work . Phone 992-5972.
8-27-3tc

Realty

608 East Main

307 Eng ., auto .• P.S.• local widow ' s trade-i n. Extr a
nice.

MIDDLEPORT- HERE IS A
BUY FOR YOU - l'h story
brick, living room, dining
room, CARPETED, nice
' kitchen. bath, 2 bedrooms,
storage building. JUST $6,950.
RACINE - 1 story frame. 3
large bedrooms with closets.
bafh. nice kitchen, large
living room, CARPETED,
large garage with shop, .75
acre, LIKE NEW. $20,500.
__.

t

'

'

'

POMEROY- l'h story frame,
3 bedrooms, bath, living
room,
dining
room ,
basement, porch, large lot.
Storm doors, windows. ALL
IN GOOD CONDITION.
BARGAIN AT JUST S7,000.
PLACE THE SALE OF
YOUR PROPERTY IN
CAPABLE HANDS
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Residence 992-2568
8-29~tc

I

BEDROOM trailer apartment , Ideal lor couples .
Contact McClure' s Dairy Isle,
992-5248 or 992-3-436.
8-29~tc

PRiVATE trailer lol in Chesler
with utility bu ilding . Phone
985-4106 .
8-27-61c

SAW
$2949

Virgil B.
TEAFORD·
SR.

HAROLD BREWER.
1 AUCT.IONEER

STONE.FACE·

SIDING .'

Busines~ Opportunities

FOR TRAILER
UNDERPINNING

$221 S~EE~
FRENOI CITY
BUILDERS
SUPPLY·
750 lsi
'lALLIPOCIS, 0 ..

STEREO-TAPE
DISTRIBUTORSHIP
FULL DR PART TIME
SEIWICE LOCAL AC·
,COUNTS
Total Investment of 52660
co,v ered by merchandise.
Guaranteed sale or total
invesfment
re-purchased.
Call or wrlle Mr. Johnson,
Allied Productions, Inc ..
P.O. Box 267. East Point
lAIIantal. Georgia, 30344,
Pllone (&lt;104) 762-8469 .

For Sale

WALNUT stereo-radio com bination. Four speed' in·
termlxed changer. Four
speaker sound system, dual
volume control. Balance
$67.40. Use our budget terms.
Call 992-7085.
8-29-61c
BEAUTIFUL colonial maple
slereo, AM &amp; FM radio, four
speakers. 4 speed automa.t ic
~ha~ger, separate controls.
Balance $80.99. Use our
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
8-29-61c

WAS

OF POMEROY, INC.

RT. 7 BYPASS new 5
bedroom home, l'h baths. 4

acres.
NEW HOME - 3 spacious
bedrooms. gas heal, large
living and kitchen. $19,500.00.
INVESTMENT - your own
home and business with
ren.lal. Store with stock and
fixtures.
INVESTMENT ..: 2 stories large rental on first floor - 2
on second. 218 E. Main .
992-3325
Helen L. Tulord
AssociAte

H&amp;N day-old or slarled Leghorn
pullets. Both floor or cage
, 8-29~tc
grown available. Poullry
housing
&amp; automalion. 193 ACRE stock farm, -well
Modern Poultry, 399 W. Main,
fenced, farm pond, pl_enty ol
Pomeroy, 992-1164.
timber and paslure, large
8-29-llc
barn, implement shed and
· other . buildings .. Recently
2 DOOR G. E. Refrigerator•
remodeled. 4 bedroom farm
Magic Chef Gas range,
home, with wall to wall
Miracle Water Softener,
carp&lt;lting, ceramic tile bath,
breakfasl set, table and 4
full basement. Shown by
chairs . Call 985-3536 or con appointment only. Phone 992·
lacl Bill Allen, Chester.
6546.
8-29-31p
_8 -22-~lc

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-7195

Business Services

Auto Sales

IS

1965 BUICK SPORTSWAGON .................. •1095. '800
1965 BUICK SKYLARK ..............................•895. '600
196~ OLD$ CUTLASS 2 DR. HDTP...............•895. 1500
1965 CORY AIR 2 DR. HDTP...................... .•595. *400
1965 FORD STA. WAGON .........................'895 .'600
1965 FORD SEDAN ................................... '695. 1400
1964 MERCURY CONY.
1954 CHEV. TUDOR............... ,. , ................ '100

DANNIE'S MOBILE HOME SALES

1965 MUSTANG, 289, 3 speed. AWNINGS. storm doors and •
windows , carports .
Contact Butch Grover, Bailey
marquees, aluminum siding
Run Rd.
and railing . Call A. Jacob,
8-29-31p

- - -- - -

'51 FORD '12-lon pickup truck,
•64 Corvai r Monza. 4 speed
transmission . Phone 742-5042.
8-29-Jtc

'66 DODGE Polaro 500 con vertible
383 ;
4-barrel ,

automatic console, bucket
seafs, excellent condition,

Business Services

sales representative. For free
esfimates, phone Charles
Lisle , · Syracuse. V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
5-27-tfc

C. BRADFORD. Auctioneer
Complele Service
Phone 94'1-3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford
5-1-tfc

==---- - - - -

SEWING MACHINES. Repa ir
service, all makes, 992-22&amp;4,
Th F b · Sh
e a rrc
op, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
J-29-lfc
----,-,---- -- - HARRISON ' S TV AND AN
TENNA SERVICE . Phont
992-2522 .
• -10-11·
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart. Ohio. Ph .
662-3035.
2-12-lfc

PUBLIC AUCTION
Friday, Sept 3, 1971
11:00 A.M.
Due to change of employment, I will sell the
following at the farm located on Ball Run Rd.,
app. 3 miles north of SR 143 from SR 124 bypass in Pomeroy, Ohio. Watch for sate signs
from SR 143.
CATTLE
35 Head of Herefords
8 cows with calves, balance of cows due before first of
year ; calves are Charolais cross ; "Ole Jtrz" a fam ily
cow-due In late Sept.
MACHINERY
3000 Ford---p .s .• live pto, power space wheels. dilferentlal
lock, 675 hrs., '69 model, gas. NH 273 baler-super sweep,
new in '71, baled less than 2,000 bales. MF 5' 3 pt. bush hog ,
MF 3 pl. wheel rake, Ford 501 3 pt. mo"!er, Ford 9DJ post
hole digger, Ford W' 3 pt3-Bplow, l6" 3 ptl -B plow, Ford
6' 3 pl. Flex-o-hilch disk, Ford lift pole, MF 3 pt. blade, MF
3 pt. 2 row cultivator, MF wagon and.sideboards, MM 3 pl.
corn planter. broad jelsprayer 3 pl., Herd 3 pl. seeder, 20'
hay-o-vator. (19S7 Doldge truck · 1 ton) .
HORSES
2 yr. old reg. Tenn. walker gelding ; 18 mo. old pa lomino
stud; 2 western saddles.
MISC. - Loading chute, stock oiler and oi l, head hold, 2
12' gates, 8 hole hog Ieeder, hog crate, 2 rolls 32" woven
wire, 5 rolls barb wire. 1 lot 3" pipe, 1 lot oak lumber, 1 lot
fence posts. 1 lot cement blocks, tractor chains. cable,
lurfle trap, feed sacks, dehorner, chain binders. log~lng
(ongs. ladders. IS bu . corn, 750-1000 bales of hay, kerosene
stove, picnic table. Misc-. hand tools and small items.
BUTCHERING EQUIP. : IBM electric meat grinder .
electric meal saw, meal slicer.
OWNER: Lawrence A. Napper
Terms: C.5h
Lunch Available

CARNAHAN AUCTION SERVICE
949-27ot--J. C.rnahan

'

·B usin_e ss Services

.

EXPERIENCED
Radiator SeiVice ·

D. Smi-'149-2033

Racine, Ohio
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS OR LOSS OF
PROPERTY.
I

' .

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom 516,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment a slow as $65.00 for a family with a base
salary of 55.000 .00 and three children. 7 1/o Pet. annual
pez•cetlla!je rale .

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Healer Core.

BLAETTNARS
Pomeroy

Ph. 992-2143

•
I

WHOLESALE QDSE.OUT. THESE CARS HAVE TO BE SOlD.
OOME PREPARED TO BUY.

HOURS : 8 To 8 Mon. thru Fri.
9 To 5 Saturday-! to 5 Sunday

• 708 W. Main St.

$1495

Two to choose from . Nice fam ily cars.

"Ohio's Oldest Mobile Home Dealer"

-----

Harold German Farm
at Long Bottom, Ohio.
Watch for Our Ad
Sunday, Sept. 5

28160

71 MODELS
SAVE AS MUCH AS • • •
'1500

43,000 actual miles $1,095.
3 BEDROOM brick home .
Phone 992-5278.
Choice location in Middleporl. ·
8-26-tfc
Seen by appoinlmenl only. - - - - -- - -Phone 992-5523 after 4 p.m .
1970 DATSUN pick-up. good
5-7-tfc
condition, new tires, never
wrecked. Sl ,57S. Pllone 992tONVENIENT but secluded
5153.
building lots on n9 at Rock
8-IB-121c
Springs. Within walking
distance of . Meigs High
School, a 5 minute drive from
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
Wille weekends or after 5- QUEEN AND Shamblin Const.
Roofing,
remodeling ,
p .m . weekdays. Phone 992aluminum siding. Phone 9926887.
7324 or 742-ll'119.
7-11-llc
8-25-tfc

KOSCOT Kosmellcs . September
Sales
Special: 5 ROOMS, furnished. t-'hone
Kreamy Lip Kole 52 now
Mrs. A. R. Knight, 992-2.03 or
$1.50, Frosllucenl· Lip Kole
992-2883.
52.50 now $2, 23 delicious
8-26-61p
colors. Call 992-5113 or come
see at 161 112 N. 5th Ave .• 2 BEDROOM trailer, available
Middleport, Ohio.
soon. Utilities paid. Phone
8-29-tfc
992-7384.
8-26-Jic
I WOULD like lo do tr.plng in
my home. Reasonab e rates .
12x60 TRAILER. 2 bedroom,
Phone 992-3497.
nicely furnished, all new, S
8-29-6tc
miles above Pomeroy, own
lot, city water, electric range.
Good location lor school
teachers. Call 985-4143.
OLD Furniture. dishes, clocks,
8-26~tc
and-or complete households.
Write M. D. Miller, Pomeroy,
Broker
Ohio. Call 992-6271.
110 Mechanic Streel
FURNISHED ·and unlurnlshed
'
8-25-tlc
Pomeroy, Ohio
apartments. Close to school. .
Phone 992-5&lt;134.
100 TO 300 ACRES, old farm,
10-18-lfc SYRACUSE -4 rooms, nice lot.
abandoned farm or vacanf
$1,800.00. .
land with all rights . Will pay to
$5,000 cash . Wrlle lo John TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Huffman, 1500 Semlnola,
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse, RUTLAND - 6 rooms, bath,
basement, nice lot. $3,500.00.
Akron, Ohio 44305.
Ohio. 992-2951.
8-27-61p
4-2-lfc
~HESTER , AREA
2
bedrooms,
nice
kitchen
and
10-INCH'bencli saw. Phone 992living . Only $7,600.00.
6675, Don.
8-29-3ID
FOR SMALLER house, a large MIDDLEPORT- 4 bedrooms,
house (2 apls.) corner of
balh, large living, garage.
Pearl &amp; Park Sts.. MidOnly $7,500.00.
dleport.
8-29-6tc COUNTRY LIVING - new 4
bedroom, 2 bath, double
garage, 15 acres. $37,500.00.

PUBLIC SALE
, SATURDAY,
• SEPT. 11

1967 BUICK LeSABRE 4 DR. SEDAN

ON THE SPOT FINANCING!

PO~EROY

GREATEST DISCOUNTS
IN THE OHIO VALLEY.
COMPARE AND SEE ! ! !

1969 BUICK ELECJRA 2 DR. HDTP.

WE WISH lo express our sin- LADY to do housework, 1 day a
cere thanks to Drs. Berklch,
week, 152 Butternut, Phone
arrange FHA financing .
Holzer, Brady and Sattler,
992-5080.
Telephone 992-J600 or 992nurses and nurses aides at
8-26-61c
Holzer Hospital. Ewing
7-25-tlc · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
2186.
Funeral Home, Rev. Eugene
OPPORTUNITY
Underwood; pallbearersi EARNINGS $10,800 to $15,800 HOUSE. 1642 Lincoln Heights.
Mrs. Mildred Miller, Loca
tall Danny Thompson, 992plus car allowance and frlnnP
No. BJ Boiler Makers Union,
2196.
benefits.
Must
stand
_riQid:
friends and neighbors for
IN POMEROY
7-18-lfc
background inspection, and
llowers, food and cards,
-----~
service selected accounts .
during the Illness and death of
· Only married men, over 25, 11 .16 ACRES localed T-79 at
Joe B. Hatfield. Your kindwith successful backg_round
Rock Springs, close to Mei9s
ness wi II never be forgollen.
should
apply. Write P. 0 . Box
High School. Contact Brll
Wife, Ethel and children.
SOl.
t;&gt;alllpolls,
Ohio,
Zip
Wilfe-lor
L. Fields-after 5
8-29-llc
45631, or call 446-9445 lor
p.m. or on weekends 992-6887.
personal Interview. Calling
8-27-lotc
hours 9:30a. m . tillll : 30a. m.
Monday lhru Friday.
R"EVIVAL,
Eagle
Ridge
8-27-Jic
Community Church, August
25, 26, 27, 28. Rev . Roy Deeter,
Evangelist.
8-23-61p

'

' .

For Sale

For Sale or Trade

,(v,.

•

Card

Help Wanted

WE

SMITH
SAYS:
· 5ee0ur New

Wante{T o Buy

61!2" SKIL

TIME: 12:30 P.M.

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
_5 ~.M. Qay Before Publlcallon
··
Mandav Deadllne9a.m.
Canqlli!iQII.J.SQrrectlanJ' ·wm bea~:cepted unlll9a.m.r
· DiW of Publication
.
IIEGULATIONS
. Th~ Publisher reserves the
'righf to edit or reject aoy ads
'deem'd objectional
Thei
publisher will not be res~slble:
for _ more than one lncorrectJ
Insert ion . · .
RATES
•- For W4n'l Ad Service
5 cents pbr Word one Insertion
• Minimum Charge 7Sc
1.2 cents per word thr""t
aMlse(vlive Insertions.
18 e&lt;!nts per word six consecutive Insertions.
.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
· &amp;OBITUARY
$1.50 tor 50 word minimum.·
liach additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
AddiiiOf)al 25c Charge per
AdverliSeflllltlt.
OFfiCE HOURS
8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p:m . Dally,
8:30 a . m . to 12:00 Noon'
Saturday.

"DOC"

FINAL CLEARANCE ON All

Letll Natlce

Double lnsullttd

DATE: SEPT. 9th ·

su · .....

~:lllii,-..N.I ..i;IILN.
.. If ............................

•

SKIL
114" DRILL

PUBLIC SALE

Red sq. back, black vinyl interior, 4 speed. factory A-~. radio, vent shades, bu~per guarqs,
tra iler hi tch, wh ife-wall fires, locally owned car w1th only 8.000 miles on 1t. New car
warr anty. ~ve a lot of money over a show-room car.

Beige square-back . Beige vinyl interior, radio, 4 speed. Have to see this
preciate . Full 100 per cent warranty.

RUSSELL'S
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
SEPTIC tank clea~lng. electric
sewer cleaning. ditching .
Gallipolis. Ohio. I'll. 446-4782.

alSo

house wr ecking . Ph . 446 Central Air Conditioning
9499. Established In 1940.
-Huting
169-lf
Free Estimates
Stewart's Honlware
Vinton, Ohio
WATER well drilling, Myers
1&lt;1-4-11
pumps Sales and Service.
Complete
water line service
·'
FAIN
and trenching . C. J . Lemley,
EXTERMINATING CO.
Vinlon, Ohio. I'll. 388-854J.
Termite &amp; Pest Control
ll'-Jf
Wheelersburg. Ohio
Ph. 57U112
D. P. ' MARTIN &amp; Son Water
52-11
Delivery Service . Your
patronage will be apRAIKE&lt;S
precraled . Ph . 446-~3.
REFRIGERATION
7-lf
&amp; AIR CONDITIONING
RESIDENTIAL. commercial ,
industrial. I'll. 367-7200.

71 V.W.--------------------•3095

v.w. --------------------•1988
68 v. w··--------------~----•1688

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
830 Fourth Avenue
Phone 4&lt;16-3888 or 446-&lt;1-477
155-lf

J D's Radio &amp; TV Service. TV Anlenna Sales lnslallallon of Ohio.
THE OHIO BELL
Serving Gallipolis &amp; Pl.
- Service. Estimates. Ph.
TELEPHONE COMPANY
Pleasant, reasonable rates,
446-1673 or 446-9679.
. ,, C. K. """·
prompt service. Also evening
63-lf
VIet l*ttJidtttt
calls. Ph. 675-5220.
Aug
.
22.
29,
Sept
.
5
203-6 GILLENWATER' S septic tank

White Beetle. automatic trans., red vinyl seats. radio. 100 per cent parts &amp; labor warranty
for 30 days or 1,000 miles.

While square back. A bei.ut ilul , low-m ileage new car trade-in. Nicely equipped with 100 per
cent parts &amp; lab&lt;&gt;r warranty for 1.000 miles or 30days.

187-11

chan'ed rale or c~!~~1 and a ttal:
1
TERMITE PEST CONTROL descrobloa the.,.,...., chon... Ia
FREE inspection. Call «6-3245, lations and practices atfectlna ratee and
charJoet, maybe lnlpc.cted bY any lmetested ·
Merrill O'Dell, Operator for party at the office of the Commillloa, 111
Exterminal Termite Service, North Hiab Street, Columbu.l Ohio, &amp;Dd
19 Belmont Or.
al any public buaine11 ofhce of the
Company.
267-11
The form of 1hi1 aotice hu been a~
proved by llle P\l.bllc Utilitla CommiuJon

Reel Beetle, black vinyl seals, radio, white walls. 4 speed trans .• 100 per cent parts &amp; labor
warranty for 30 days or 1.000 miles.

69

STANDARD
Plumbing &amp; Healing ·
21S Third Ave .• 446-3782

Sunday Times-Sentinel
,
Class.ifieds Get Results •

PdMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
992-2094
6&lt;M

E. Main

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

BILL NELSON
992-3657

HILTON WOLFE

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK

'5.55

ROOF PAINnNG

.SPOUTING,

~ GUARANTEED­

And

Phone 992-2094

FURNITURE

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

Have Your Seasonal
Air CondiOOning
Inspection and
Re-tharge
Special
AI

6.98

Plus
Parts

Blaettnar's
PHONE 992-2143
READY -MIX

Open I Til 5
Monday lhru Saturdily
606 E . Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

.KIINSON MASONRY
Couwlete
Remodeling
Kitchens, Balhs
Room Additions
And P.1tias ·
Backhoe And
Endloader Work

.

CONCRETEdelivered r igh t to your SEPTIC TANKS CLEAN EO
prQje_c l. Fast and easy . Free Reasonable rales. Ph. •46-•782,
eslimales. Phone 992-3284.
Gall ipol is .. John Russell ,
Goegle in Ready -Mix Co ..
O..ner &amp; Operator.
Middle porl, Ohio.
5-13-lfc
6-30-tlc
----::-- --~

BACKHOE AN[), DOZER work .
Septic tanks Installed . George
i Bill) J;'ull i_n s. Phone 992-2478 .
• 4-25-tlc

Phone 992-2550
Insured - Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See us lor f(ee
Estimate on Furnace
lnstalation.
SEWING machine service in
your home. Clean, oil and
adjust. S4. Phone 992-7085.
Twin City Sewing Madllne
ComP.,ny .
8-24-6fc

Septic Tanks
And LNdl Beds.

742-4902

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;
ConstructiOfl Co. and Anthony Plumbint &amp; tte.ting.
Complet,.
Plumbing,
Heating . and A,ir Con·
ditioni"Q.
240 Lincoln St., Middlopol1 ,

O' DELL WHEEL alignlllenl
located al a-os,.oads, Rt. 124.
Complete front end service, t
lune up and brake servl,..
Wheels
b&lt;~lanced
elttctronlcally .
All
work
guaranleed.
Reas_.,.e
ra les. Phone 992-3213.
1-:U·Ifc

--

NEIGLER Construction . For AUTOMOBILE lnsurana-.
cancelled?
~ost
Yt'll'
building or remodeling your
operator ' s license? e.g: ttJ.
home . Call Guy Neigler ,
2966.
Racine, Ohio.
7-JI -IIc

�·lltniiDei,SWI7; Alii- •• Jt7J

, '•'71'1111•·"''
.._ • ,lfll
• - ._. . .
.••••, 117,111111117
• IIJ,c.~
'

SAVE

A.UGUST

END OF SUMMER
'2595

1969 DODGE

Polara~ dr. hardtop, turquoise color with black vinyl roof,
white vinyl seats, V-B motor, •utomatlc transmission,
radio, power sieering &amp; automatic trarasmlsslon, radio,

power steering &amp; air conditioning, low mileage. One local
owner.

•2495

1969 MERCURY

Montego MX~ Dr. Sedan, dark green finish with matching
green vinyl roof, V-8 motor, automatic transmiSSI_on.
radio, power steering &amp; air conditioning, only 31,000 m1les
by a· careful local owner.

-•2395

1969 CHEVROLn

Impala 2 dr. hardtop. beautiful red finish with matching
Interior, V~s motor, automatic transm ission, radio &amp;
power steering, extra sharp. One careful owner.

•1795

70 FORD

Maverick 2 dr. sedan, green finish , 6 cyl., std. shift. Real

nice.

1968DODGE

•1995

Coronet 500 2 dr. hardtop, beautiful maroon finish with
black vinyl roof, V-8 motor, radio, bucket seats, console
automatic transmission &amp; power steering, low mileage.
Real nice.

'1695

68 RAMBLER

Rebel SST 2 dr. hardtop. two-tone finish, V-B motor,
automatic transmission, power steering. Ready to go.

NORRIS DODGE
Upper Rt. 7

Phone 446-0605 or 446-0842
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Now•40"
lnore
..
for90%of
..,....jobs
~--~
.
Ulftllr
• #1
•-rr- ·

1969 Torino

s1995

Convertible V-8, P.S., auto. transmission, red with white ·
Interior.

S1595

1968 Fairlane GT

Convertible V-8,_ standard, red with white Interior -and · ·

1969 Chevrolet

s1995

Belair, 4 door sedan, _P,S., P.B., automatic trans., factory
·
air cond.

$1495

1968 Ford

4 Door sedan, V-8 auiomatic transmission, P.S., P.B.

1968 Road Runner

$1795

383, 4 speed, P.S.

1968 Olds Delta 88.

SJ895

· 2 Door hardtop, V-8, P.S., P. B.

$2295

AND TRUCKS···
70 GMC lAI Ton Pickup

$3,195

.
. . SJ95
1964
FcrdGalaxl 500--------4 Door, VB engine, automatic trans., power steering,

Four wheel drive, low mileage, 4 sp. trans. One~local _
owner.

radio, clean Interior, radio, good tires, red ·over while
fini•h.

69 Chevrolet V8 Station Wagon
307 cu. ln. VB engine. Like new condition.

$2,295

1968 Dodge Dart 4 Door.------'1495

69 Ford Falcon 2 Dr. Sedan
6 cyl. std. shift, low mileage.

$1,595

68 Dodge V8 Super" B"

$1,595

leiS fh4n 11,000 miles I. •-ranee of 71 made!. Rl!lly
Sport equlplli'd, Classic copper with Nlldllwaod hlllrlar,
tlnllld glass, fadory air
spor1l mi.....,
console, air spoiler, hwbo
poww ....,..... •
brakes, :1541 cu. ln. V-1
Really Sharp.

pr.

67 Pontiac GT02 Dr. Hard Top

.4 Doari--.,;;~·-

$1,395

His-Hers shift, automatic and std. Shows good care.

66 Buick V8 Wildcat 2 Dr. Hard Top

Less.lhan 10,000 mllei by loa~ I - . Sharp .. - I n a_ll
·ways, white over gold finish, 350 Vol~ englp. piiiiiW
steering, radio, white-walls, wh. cown· .

$1,195

. 66 Rambler Station Wagon
66 Plymouth V8 Fury 2 Or.

2 Door sedan, V-s standard.
2 Dr. hardtop.
D:;:::;/ cyl.,

s495
s295
S295

1966 a.. 2 Ton--:..-~--- '1150.
U' cab to axle, good 125lao tires, 2 Sf*d ,.r •~,._.lnl, • .
cab !Ike new truck, 6 cyl. 292 cu. ln. tng. A Nil ciMn

terior .

owner: -

4

1970 Canm Cpe.;.;_.,._:,.. __ ..;..,'&lt;j~

$2,·195
67 Buick Riviera V8 ~
Hardtop. factory' air condition. Buick's finest. One local
owner.

6 cyl. Shows good care.

63 Pontiac
63 Chevrolet

270 Series; vinyl roof, white finish, all good tires, 6 cyl.,
automatic trans. , radio, clean inferior.
·

2 Dr. hardtop, auto. trans. Extra nice.

4 Dr. hardtop, V-8, P.S., P.B., factory air. One local

$795
$1,095

truck.

Hardtop. an exceptional car in every way.

66 Buick Special V8 4 Dr. Sedan

1966 Chevrolet lmPIIa:-------IJ.39S

$795

Conv. cpe.. ioc.li owner &amp; low mileage. Vinyl Interior,
dark blue finish, white lop, air conditioned, V-8 engine,
automatic trans., power steerinQ, radio. A nice car.

$1,095

1966 Buick WildCit tpe. ______ '1115

One of the sharpest '66 anywhere.

65 Buick Le5abre2 Dr. Hard Top
Hardtop, one careful local owner.

65 Buick Wildcat Custom V8

Convertible coupe, factory air conditioning, four new w-s-·
w tires, bucket seats and full console. Sharp.

Automatic tra.ns.. power stHrlng I. llrakei, good •"!
tires, radlo,_healer, white finish, dun lntorlor. '!1111· Jll'b
$1395.00. 'Special.

$795

Hardtop, extra nice inside and out .

65 Pontiac Catalina V8

The
selling
'Import truck

Pollnl'• HP ofllfllld CMI engine,
11111 upJo B 'miiM per geiDft lor work and
pi8J. :tonlon blr front •llf'lll'llon.
1 rool'.lt
Dunbll, dljMincl8bll.
Low lllllntlftiiiCI, high rull•. Tlk•

1967'
Ford LTD------------·'~595
4 Door Sedan, J&gt;OW'r steering I. brok-. vinyl Inlet lor, lllk.

$395

-4 Dr. sedan, runs swell.

64 Ford V8 2 Dr. Hard Top

$595

63 Olds. Super 88 2 Dr-

$150

69 PONTIAC CATALINA

MANY MORE
See Ceward Calvert or Fred Blaeffnar . .

2 Dr . hardtop. radio &amp; heater, auto. transmission, p. steering, p. brakes, midnight
green, metallic finish with matching interior,
blk. vinyl top, w-s-w tires, 18,000 act . miles .
Like new cond.

!!!!!W~•:

Smith Auto Sales
.

EASTERN AVE.

.

BLAETTNARS'·

1963 Chevrolellmpala H.T. Cpe ___ 135r

BUICK

PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS'
118 Years of Continuous Busine~~
PHONE 992 -21~•
POMEROY, OHIO

1963 Chevrolet Impala 4 Dr.----- '245•
1962 Olds "88" 4 Door________'295•
1963 .Ford

GALLI POLIS. o.

1969 Chev.

For Sale

For Sale

8-24-6tc

YARD SALE on Larkin St. ,
Rutland, Friday and Satur- POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
Park view Kennels . Phone 992day . School dresses and

sweaters.

8-26-3tc

PERMANENT reg lstered
Appaloosa mare. Phone 991·
3118.

B-16-6tp

t b'AI, II meston'e. Excelsior
. ~all Works, E. Main St.,
Pomeroy . Phone 991-3891 .
A.9.ttc

5~3 .

furnace,

complete,

reasonable. Wm. H. Cleland,
Racine, phone 949-2963.
8-25-61c

Special
engine,
radio,
owner.
Int.

Custom ~ Door, V-8
automatic trans.,
good tires, local
White finish, clean

EVERYBODY
Shops the

'

4 IN ONE

cadillac - Oldsmobile

500 SHEET

'here's a Time To lux
a fime To SDvel

Open Eves. Til a- Til5 P.M. Sat.
GMAC Financing Avoitoble
Pomeroy
"You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business"

99H342

·Now-Do lotlt!

,
,
S.u nday Times-Sentinel Classifieds Get Action • •
WANT AD WAY

98~

NOTE BOOK

New ·•71 Chevrolets

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

Reg.

SPIRAL

OoOil tires,

OUR CLEARANCE
ISON

. NOI.J.[) .. OS
For Sale or lease

'

'21951965 Buick

6 Cyl. engine, std. trans .. air c:ondlflonlng,
clean Interior, dark oreen flnlsll.

8-15-tfc PET squirrel monkey and cage, GENERAL STORE and service
station across from Portland
SJO. Must sell by Sun&lt;lay.
Park. Phone 843-1491.
CANNING tomatoes, already· Phone 991-390~.
8-27-6tc
picked , $1.25 bu., bring
8-27-2tp
containers . Geraldine
Cleland, East Main, Racine. BEAGLE, 5 months old, A.K.C.
7-18-fk
registered. Has had all shots
S40. Phone 991-3594 after 5
R.C.A. COLOR T.V., console
p.m.
model. Phone 742·50~2.
B-29-Jtc
a-2'1-6tc

- -- - - -- -

4 Door·~ Air,.__,]_.

Townsman 2-seat wagon,
dark bh~e, black vinyl Int.,
2-way tall gate with elec.
window. V-8, auto.. P.S ..
like new w-s-w, radio, clean
&amp; ready to travel .

SALES-SERVICE

guitar,
two
2 EXTRA nice Hereford heifers, HALF RUNNER beans, $2 ELECTRIC
bushel , pick your own .
pickups, amplifier, eight-inch
20 months old. Could have
speaker, two Inputs, SSO.
Cucumbers and tomatoes .
been registered, S150 each.
Watermelons,
cantaloupes,
Phone 992-5445.
Phone 247-2521 or 247-2063.
sweet
corn,
potatoes .
8-17-Jtp
Clifford Hill. Letart Falls,
Clarence Proffitt, Portland,
Cillo.
Phone 843-2254.
GIRL SCOUT uniform, size
B-16-3tc
8-17-ttc
10112 ; Brownie Uniform, size
10, complete, like new. Phone
ONE PUREBRED Hereford
949-3022 after 4 p. m.
bull, 15 months old, $160. 17- 1971 ZIG ZAG sewing machine,
8-27-Jtc
month old Hereford heller, buttonholes, fancy designs ,
etc. Full price $27.30. Phone
1100. Phone 742-4459.
8-16-3tc 992-7085.
21" LENNOX forced air coal

~i

=

IANAUGA, OHIO
For Sale

88

1963 Chevy II H.T. Cpe ·-------'395•

•2495
WOOD MOTOR SALES

11...

OMll

OUTSTANDING BUYS
IN CHEAPER CARS

Hardtop on rough side but runs good.

• Cllnpll', too.

G~\.\.Oft.

• vinyl roof, mar..,., finish. radio, w-w lira. v...automatlc trans. &amp; factory air Condfllanhll ;.... ·$ileclal,
Special.

Extra sharp for model.

at••••·

·

$1,095

65 Pontiac Ventura V82 Dr.

.

Drift. aD (I

-

'

Hardtop, like new finish, beautiful all vinyl custom in-

1968 Buick
65 Comet

I
•

pAPER

CRAYONS

PRICES WILL NEVERIE.LOWERI

64

CHILDREN•s
THERMOS
LUNCH
KITS·

al()RS

I

Pomeroy Motor Co.

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

Your Chevy ·Dealer

SUNDAY, AUGUST 29, 1971
15-Aquath:
mammals
16-Aftemoon
party
17- Piural endlna:
21- Vulaar
22-Proportlonal
23- Boy attendant
25-Ben lgn tumor
27-0id o,rder of
birds
28-Russlan plains
30-Eurapun
31-Matal
33--Gem welaht
35-Warmth
36-Decorate
37- Rubber tubes
39-And 50 forth
(abbr.)
·U- Scorch
42- Bibllcal weed
4.C- 8ond

126-Mualc: as
wrinen
127-Strips of leather
1- /nvestilltlon
129-Deprivt of
6-0rudee
office
11- Advance in rank
131-Rip
18-Ranled
132- Part of 111
19-J u ry list
133- Small bird
76-Cosmetlc
20-Tell•
134-Slmlan
prepanl lon
21---Conf/rmtd
136--Unusual
79-Joln
23-Time 1ona by
137-Sphtrotd
81--&lt;:apUc:hln
2'-Reverence
138-Remaln erecl
26-PIIaster
monkey
139--A continent
27-Rupees (abbr.)
82- Pan::el of land
(ebbr.)
a.t--ln want
29-Anon
14o-5eed coatlfll
85-Eama
30-frult cekt
141-trritete
31-Ciiemlcel aufflx 87-Puts on,
142-lncllned
as clothes
(pl.)
roadvuy
90-Hold an opinion
32-For shame!
143--Strtps of lllthtr
92-Command to
33-Househo/d pet
144-P.rtalnlnc to
horse .
34-Short jacket
Italy
93-Cholce pjrt
35-Vast
146-Wom away
95--Loop
36-lDM8, narrow
97-Country of Aala 148-Mep
ditch
4 7-Alcohollc
149-Ha'llnl made a
98-Pronoun
38-Fold
btverage
will
99-A
slate
(abbr.)
40-Prohlblt
48-Fallh
J5o-Troplc•l fruit
101-Sinl
41-Withered
-49-Attach
(pl.1
tremuklus/y
42-Joa
50-Rapulse
I 51- American
103- Man's nama
43-Eiectritied
5-'- «Jibllcal city
admlrtl
104- Unlt ot Chinese
partiCII
5~Arrow pal aon
currency
45-Sharpen
56-THtlfy
DOWN
105-Adh..lve
.C6-Ibldem (abbr.)
59-l.tlli writ
aubst1nce
.C7- Bird's bill
1-Nucl..r
~llnl devlcet
108-Abatrect btlnl
48-Preclpltatlon
constituent
61- Pronoun
49-Gin us of Jette 1 !0-Geometrlc
2-Biackblrd
C:UI'VI
51-Cavil
63-Evliultt
.
3-Above
112-Specka
52-Man's
66-Heb,.w
/titer
4-Min's
Ill-Distress •lln•l
nlckn1me
67--A ltlte(lbbr.)
114-Conjunctlon
nlc:knam•
$)-Dine
.68-Mitlaaie
5-Men's
115- Man's
5of- Mic:robe
7o-Vasuls
nickname ,
nlcknaml
65- Ciassilied
6-E•tra
'117- Embanltment
71-Worthleu
57-Golf mound
7- Final
· indivi du al
58-At po lime
118-European
8- Emmet
(slant)
60-Abtadlng tool
capital
9-Brothel'of
61- Hostelry
72-Sullix:
11 9- Dispat ched
Odin 1"'
62-Staae edra
pertalnln&amp; to
120-Chalde.n city
10;-KI{e /
•
(colloq.)
73-Ret
reat
121- Macaw
tl - rsol• ~
64-Steamshlp
75-W•teftld
silks
123Nothlns:
12- Noui Of t;cale
(;~bbr . )
71- Poem
l
i'4Aicoh'11
ir:
13Mall':.
n•m
~
'65- TeutQfl k rf(lil'l'
78- Drood of
14 - /ncllned to
66--Buddh l&lt;~.t
p.,eaunta ·
madness
dlltlecl

ACROSS

67-P.-.clpltous
69-Part of flower
71- Storale
compartment
73- Backed out
(colloq.)
74- Test {colloq.)

Open Eves. Til 8

80-Tip
83-Aiv.r duck
86-Qulet
88-0in
89-Palnful
90---Exlst

:-:-1--1'--+--f ·--~~--11!'!11111!!!11- VACUUM

CLEANER brand
new 1971 model. Complete
with all cleaning tools. Small
paint damage In shipping.
Will take S27 cash or budget
plan available. Phone 9915641.
8-25-6tc

98!-Spu

99-Mtlls
lOG-Siuaalshness
102-Biack and blue
1~taV)' volume
105-Bod)' of water
106-Givin&amp; tips
(colloq.)

U' • 14' • 24' • WIDE

107-Commlsslons
109-B.. in
111-Women's capt
112-Acc:omptlshed

1220 Washington Blvd ..
Belpre, Ohio
TREE RIPENED white and
leilow peac~s at Mason
Peach Orchard. Priced .from
$2 to $~.50. One mile above
Mason Bridge; turn right and
follow signs.
8-25-6tc
·---'---~

1971 DIAL, 'N SEW zig-zag
sewing

1-+-4-+--+--1

machlne1 left

in

layaway . Beautiful pastel
color, full size model. All
built-in to buttonhole, overcast and fancy stitch. Pay just
$~8.75
cash or terms
available. Trade-Ins accepted. Phone 992-5641.
8-25-61C

•

,,

D-mN
16 Ol iJX

VOLKSWAGEN camper, good
condition. Less than 20,000
miles. 439 Lincoln St .• Middleport, Paul Scott.
8-25-ffc

MILLER
MOBIL£, HOMES

113- Scarch
116-Period of time
118-Ascend
119- Fur·b..rin&amp;
marnmll
122- Th,...banded
armtdillos
124-Labortd
125-Su.;cor
126-Shaek
128-CIUIId to
overflow
j 30-Equlllty
131-0omestlcttes
132-Retlil estsbllshment
135-Lamb's ptn
name
137-foundatlon
138-lrish dramatist
I.Co-Oe110ured
142- Decay
143-0eflnlte article
144-Pronoun
145-Near
147-Sun aod
148-Symbol for
cadmium

f'vmeroy

For Sale

For Sale

91-Verb neuter
(abbr.)
9~1~'1 name
96-A continent
1 (abbr.)

992-2126

~

HI, NEIGHBOR! Tried Blue
Lustre for cleaning carpets?
It's · super. Renf electric ,.
shampooer, $1 , Baker Furniture Company.
l-25-61c
SOFA BED and matching chair.
Phone 991-664-4 after 5 p.m.
8-26-ltp
GRAVELY
TRACTOR
DE'MONSTRATOR CLEARANCE
1
demon-

.......... ,,

.. ~ ····

, , . ~·

,.

.....··:· ......

O~EN

SUNDAY 12-6
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

strator Sl.!ptr C-1 w-mower,

1 demonstrator super C-1
w' mower and dual wheels,
$750;' 1 demonstrator Model a
riding trador, W 34" mower,
$750; I new 10 h.p. rldiiiQ
tractor with -40" mOII\fer, $1.190.
.Gravely Tractor
Sales,
•
Pomeroy. 992-&lt;975.
1-24-5tr'
$650;

,I

•

•

�·lltniiDei,SWI7; Alii- •• Jt7J

, '•'71'1111•·"''
.._ • ,lfll
• - ._. . .
.••••, 117,111111117
• IIJ,c.~
'

SAVE

A.UGUST

END OF SUMMER
'2595

1969 DODGE

Polara~ dr. hardtop, turquoise color with black vinyl roof,
white vinyl seats, V-B motor, •utomatlc transmission,
radio, power sieering &amp; automatic trarasmlsslon, radio,

power steering &amp; air conditioning, low mileage. One local
owner.

•2495

1969 MERCURY

Montego MX~ Dr. Sedan, dark green finish with matching
green vinyl roof, V-8 motor, automatic transmiSSI_on.
radio, power steering &amp; air conditioning, only 31,000 m1les
by a· careful local owner.

-•2395

1969 CHEVROLn

Impala 2 dr. hardtop. beautiful red finish with matching
Interior, V~s motor, automatic transm ission, radio &amp;
power steering, extra sharp. One careful owner.

•1795

70 FORD

Maverick 2 dr. sedan, green finish , 6 cyl., std. shift. Real

nice.

1968DODGE

•1995

Coronet 500 2 dr. hardtop, beautiful maroon finish with
black vinyl roof, V-8 motor, radio, bucket seats, console
automatic transmission &amp; power steering, low mileage.
Real nice.

'1695

68 RAMBLER

Rebel SST 2 dr. hardtop. two-tone finish, V-B motor,
automatic transmission, power steering. Ready to go.

NORRIS DODGE
Upper Rt. 7

Phone 446-0605 or 446-0842
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Now•40"
lnore
..
for90%of
..,....jobs
~--~
.
Ulftllr
• #1
•-rr- ·

1969 Torino

s1995

Convertible V-8, P.S., auto. transmission, red with white ·
Interior.

S1595

1968 Fairlane GT

Convertible V-8,_ standard, red with white Interior -and · ·

1969 Chevrolet

s1995

Belair, 4 door sedan, _P,S., P.B., automatic trans., factory
·
air cond.

$1495

1968 Ford

4 Door sedan, V-8 auiomatic transmission, P.S., P.B.

1968 Road Runner

$1795

383, 4 speed, P.S.

1968 Olds Delta 88.

SJ895

· 2 Door hardtop, V-8, P.S., P. B.

$2295

AND TRUCKS···
70 GMC lAI Ton Pickup

$3,195

.
. . SJ95
1964
FcrdGalaxl 500--------4 Door, VB engine, automatic trans., power steering,

Four wheel drive, low mileage, 4 sp. trans. One~local _
owner.

radio, clean Interior, radio, good tires, red ·over while
fini•h.

69 Chevrolet V8 Station Wagon
307 cu. ln. VB engine. Like new condition.

$2,295

1968 Dodge Dart 4 Door.------'1495

69 Ford Falcon 2 Dr. Sedan
6 cyl. std. shift, low mileage.

$1,595

68 Dodge V8 Super" B"

$1,595

leiS fh4n 11,000 miles I. •-ranee of 71 made!. Rl!lly
Sport equlplli'd, Classic copper with Nlldllwaod hlllrlar,
tlnllld glass, fadory air
spor1l mi.....,
console, air spoiler, hwbo
poww ....,..... •
brakes, :1541 cu. ln. V-1
Really Sharp.

pr.

67 Pontiac GT02 Dr. Hard Top

.4 Doari--.,;;~·-

$1,395

His-Hers shift, automatic and std. Shows good care.

66 Buick V8 Wildcat 2 Dr. Hard Top

Less.lhan 10,000 mllei by loa~ I - . Sharp .. - I n a_ll
·ways, white over gold finish, 350 Vol~ englp. piiiiiW
steering, radio, white-walls, wh. cown· .

$1,195

. 66 Rambler Station Wagon
66 Plymouth V8 Fury 2 Or.

2 Door sedan, V-s standard.
2 Dr. hardtop.
D:;:::;/ cyl.,

s495
s295
S295

1966 a.. 2 Ton--:..-~--- '1150.
U' cab to axle, good 125lao tires, 2 Sf*d ,.r •~,._.lnl, • .
cab !Ike new truck, 6 cyl. 292 cu. ln. tng. A Nil ciMn

terior .

owner: -

4

1970 Canm Cpe.;.;_.,._:,.. __ ..;..,'&lt;j~

$2,·195
67 Buick Riviera V8 ~
Hardtop. factory' air condition. Buick's finest. One local
owner.

6 cyl. Shows good care.

63 Pontiac
63 Chevrolet

270 Series; vinyl roof, white finish, all good tires, 6 cyl.,
automatic trans. , radio, clean inferior.
·

2 Dr. hardtop, auto. trans. Extra nice.

4 Dr. hardtop, V-8, P.S., P.B., factory air. One local

$795
$1,095

truck.

Hardtop. an exceptional car in every way.

66 Buick Special V8 4 Dr. Sedan

1966 Chevrolet lmPIIa:-------IJ.39S

$795

Conv. cpe.. ioc.li owner &amp; low mileage. Vinyl Interior,
dark blue finish, white lop, air conditioned, V-8 engine,
automatic trans., power steerinQ, radio. A nice car.

$1,095

1966 Buick WildCit tpe. ______ '1115

One of the sharpest '66 anywhere.

65 Buick Le5abre2 Dr. Hard Top
Hardtop, one careful local owner.

65 Buick Wildcat Custom V8

Convertible coupe, factory air conditioning, four new w-s-·
w tires, bucket seats and full console. Sharp.

Automatic tra.ns.. power stHrlng I. llrakei, good •"!
tires, radlo,_healer, white finish, dun lntorlor. '!1111· Jll'b
$1395.00. 'Special.

$795

Hardtop, extra nice inside and out .

65 Pontiac Catalina V8

The
selling
'Import truck

Pollnl'• HP ofllfllld CMI engine,
11111 upJo B 'miiM per geiDft lor work and
pi8J. :tonlon blr front •llf'lll'llon.
1 rool'.lt
Dunbll, dljMincl8bll.
Low lllllntlftiiiCI, high rull•. Tlk•

1967'
Ford LTD------------·'~595
4 Door Sedan, J&gt;OW'r steering I. brok-. vinyl Inlet lor, lllk.

$395

-4 Dr. sedan, runs swell.

64 Ford V8 2 Dr. Hard Top

$595

63 Olds. Super 88 2 Dr-

$150

69 PONTIAC CATALINA

MANY MORE
See Ceward Calvert or Fred Blaeffnar . .

2 Dr . hardtop. radio &amp; heater, auto. transmission, p. steering, p. brakes, midnight
green, metallic finish with matching interior,
blk. vinyl top, w-s-w tires, 18,000 act . miles .
Like new cond.

!!!!!W~•:

Smith Auto Sales
.

EASTERN AVE.

.

BLAETTNARS'·

1963 Chevrolellmpala H.T. Cpe ___ 135r

BUICK

PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS'
118 Years of Continuous Busine~~
PHONE 992 -21~•
POMEROY, OHIO

1963 Chevrolet Impala 4 Dr.----- '245•
1962 Olds "88" 4 Door________'295•
1963 .Ford

GALLI POLIS. o.

1969 Chev.

For Sale

For Sale

8-24-6tc

YARD SALE on Larkin St. ,
Rutland, Friday and Satur- POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
Park view Kennels . Phone 992day . School dresses and

sweaters.

8-26-3tc

PERMANENT reg lstered
Appaloosa mare. Phone 991·
3118.

B-16-6tp

t b'AI, II meston'e. Excelsior
. ~all Works, E. Main St.,
Pomeroy . Phone 991-3891 .
A.9.ttc

5~3 .

furnace,

complete,

reasonable. Wm. H. Cleland,
Racine, phone 949-2963.
8-25-61c

Special
engine,
radio,
owner.
Int.

Custom ~ Door, V-8
automatic trans.,
good tires, local
White finish, clean

EVERYBODY
Shops the

'

4 IN ONE

cadillac - Oldsmobile

500 SHEET

'here's a Time To lux
a fime To SDvel

Open Eves. Til a- Til5 P.M. Sat.
GMAC Financing Avoitoble
Pomeroy
"You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business"

99H342

·Now-Do lotlt!

,
,
S.u nday Times-Sentinel Classifieds Get Action • •
WANT AD WAY

98~

NOTE BOOK

New ·•71 Chevrolets

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

Reg.

SPIRAL

OoOil tires,

OUR CLEARANCE
ISON

. NOI.J.[) .. OS
For Sale or lease

'

'21951965 Buick

6 Cyl. engine, std. trans .. air c:ondlflonlng,
clean Interior, dark oreen flnlsll.

8-15-tfc PET squirrel monkey and cage, GENERAL STORE and service
station across from Portland
SJO. Must sell by Sun&lt;lay.
Park. Phone 843-1491.
CANNING tomatoes, already· Phone 991-390~.
8-27-6tc
picked , $1.25 bu., bring
8-27-2tp
containers . Geraldine
Cleland, East Main, Racine. BEAGLE, 5 months old, A.K.C.
7-18-fk
registered. Has had all shots
S40. Phone 991-3594 after 5
R.C.A. COLOR T.V., console
p.m.
model. Phone 742·50~2.
B-29-Jtc
a-2'1-6tc

- -- - - -- -

4 Door·~ Air,.__,]_.

Townsman 2-seat wagon,
dark bh~e, black vinyl Int.,
2-way tall gate with elec.
window. V-8, auto.. P.S ..
like new w-s-w, radio, clean
&amp; ready to travel .

SALES-SERVICE

guitar,
two
2 EXTRA nice Hereford heifers, HALF RUNNER beans, $2 ELECTRIC
bushel , pick your own .
pickups, amplifier, eight-inch
20 months old. Could have
speaker, two Inputs, SSO.
Cucumbers and tomatoes .
been registered, S150 each.
Watermelons,
cantaloupes,
Phone 992-5445.
Phone 247-2521 or 247-2063.
sweet
corn,
potatoes .
8-17-Jtp
Clifford Hill. Letart Falls,
Clarence Proffitt, Portland,
Cillo.
Phone 843-2254.
GIRL SCOUT uniform, size
B-16-3tc
8-17-ttc
10112 ; Brownie Uniform, size
10, complete, like new. Phone
ONE PUREBRED Hereford
949-3022 after 4 p. m.
bull, 15 months old, $160. 17- 1971 ZIG ZAG sewing machine,
8-27-Jtc
month old Hereford heller, buttonholes, fancy designs ,
etc. Full price $27.30. Phone
1100. Phone 742-4459.
8-16-3tc 992-7085.
21" LENNOX forced air coal

~i

=

IANAUGA, OHIO
For Sale

88

1963 Chevy II H.T. Cpe ·-------'395•

•2495
WOOD MOTOR SALES

11...

OMll

OUTSTANDING BUYS
IN CHEAPER CARS

Hardtop on rough side but runs good.

• Cllnpll', too.

G~\.\.Oft.

• vinyl roof, mar..,., finish. radio, w-w lira. v...automatlc trans. &amp; factory air Condfllanhll ;.... ·$ileclal,
Special.

Extra sharp for model.

at••••·

·

$1,095

65 Pontiac Ventura V82 Dr.

.

Drift. aD (I

-

'

Hardtop, like new finish, beautiful all vinyl custom in-

1968 Buick
65 Comet

I
•

pAPER

CRAYONS

PRICES WILL NEVERIE.LOWERI

64

CHILDREN•s
THERMOS
LUNCH
KITS·

al()RS

I

Pomeroy Motor Co.

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

Your Chevy ·Dealer

SUNDAY, AUGUST 29, 1971
15-Aquath:
mammals
16-Aftemoon
party
17- Piural endlna:
21- Vulaar
22-Proportlonal
23- Boy attendant
25-Ben lgn tumor
27-0id o,rder of
birds
28-Russlan plains
30-Eurapun
31-Matal
33--Gem welaht
35-Warmth
36-Decorate
37- Rubber tubes
39-And 50 forth
(abbr.)
·U- Scorch
42- Bibllcal weed
4.C- 8ond

126-Mualc: as
wrinen
127-Strips of leather
1- /nvestilltlon
129-Deprivt of
6-0rudee
office
11- Advance in rank
131-Rip
18-Ranled
132- Part of 111
19-J u ry list
133- Small bird
76-Cosmetlc
20-Tell•
134-Slmlan
prepanl lon
21---Conf/rmtd
136--Unusual
79-Joln
23-Time 1ona by
137-Sphtrotd
81--&lt;:apUc:hln
2'-Reverence
138-Remaln erecl
26-PIIaster
monkey
139--A continent
27-Rupees (abbr.)
82- Pan::el of land
(ebbr.)
a.t--ln want
29-Anon
14o-5eed coatlfll
85-Eama
30-frult cekt
141-trritete
31-Ciiemlcel aufflx 87-Puts on,
142-lncllned
as clothes
(pl.)
roadvuy
90-Hold an opinion
32-For shame!
143--Strtps of lllthtr
92-Command to
33-Househo/d pet
144-P.rtalnlnc to
horse .
34-Short jacket
Italy
93-Cholce pjrt
35-Vast
146-Wom away
95--Loop
36-lDM8, narrow
97-Country of Aala 148-Mep
ditch
4 7-Alcohollc
149-Ha'llnl made a
98-Pronoun
38-Fold
btverage
will
99-A
slate
(abbr.)
40-Prohlblt
48-Fallh
J5o-Troplc•l fruit
101-Sinl
41-Withered
-49-Attach
(pl.1
tremuklus/y
42-Joa
50-Rapulse
I 51- American
103- Man's nama
43-Eiectritied
5-'- «Jibllcal city
admlrtl
104- Unlt ot Chinese
partiCII
5~Arrow pal aon
currency
45-Sharpen
56-THtlfy
DOWN
105-Adh..lve
.C6-Ibldem (abbr.)
59-l.tlli writ
aubst1nce
.C7- Bird's bill
1-Nucl..r
~llnl devlcet
108-Abatrect btlnl
48-Preclpltatlon
constituent
61- Pronoun
49-Gin us of Jette 1 !0-Geometrlc
2-Biackblrd
C:UI'VI
51-Cavil
63-Evliultt
.
3-Above
112-Specka
52-Man's
66-Heb,.w
/titer
4-Min's
Ill-Distress •lln•l
nlckn1me
67--A ltlte(lbbr.)
114-Conjunctlon
nlc:knam•
$)-Dine
.68-Mitlaaie
5-Men's
115- Man's
5of- Mic:robe
7o-Vasuls
nickname ,
nlcknaml
65- Ciassilied
6-E•tra
'117- Embanltment
71-Worthleu
57-Golf mound
7- Final
· indivi du al
58-At po lime
118-European
8- Emmet
(slant)
60-Abtadlng tool
capital
9-Brothel'of
61- Hostelry
72-Sullix:
11 9- Dispat ched
Odin 1"'
62-Staae edra
pertalnln&amp; to
120-Chalde.n city
10;-KI{e /
•
(colloq.)
73-Ret
reat
121- Macaw
tl - rsol• ~
64-Steamshlp
75-W•teftld
silks
123Nothlns:
12- Noui Of t;cale
(;~bbr . )
71- Poem
l
i'4Aicoh'11
ir:
13Mall':.
n•m
~
'65- TeutQfl k rf(lil'l'
78- Drood of
14 - /ncllned to
66--Buddh l&lt;~.t
p.,eaunta ·
madness
dlltlecl

ACROSS

67-P.-.clpltous
69-Part of flower
71- Storale
compartment
73- Backed out
(colloq.)
74- Test {colloq.)

Open Eves. Til 8

80-Tip
83-Aiv.r duck
86-Qulet
88-0in
89-Palnful
90---Exlst

:-:-1--1'--+--f ·--~~--11!'!11111!!!11- VACUUM

CLEANER brand
new 1971 model. Complete
with all cleaning tools. Small
paint damage In shipping.
Will take S27 cash or budget
plan available. Phone 9915641.
8-25-6tc

98!-Spu

99-Mtlls
lOG-Siuaalshness
102-Biack and blue
1~taV)' volume
105-Bod)' of water
106-Givin&amp; tips
(colloq.)

U' • 14' • 24' • WIDE

107-Commlsslons
109-B.. in
111-Women's capt
112-Acc:omptlshed

1220 Washington Blvd ..
Belpre, Ohio
TREE RIPENED white and
leilow peac~s at Mason
Peach Orchard. Priced .from
$2 to $~.50. One mile above
Mason Bridge; turn right and
follow signs.
8-25-6tc
·---'---~

1971 DIAL, 'N SEW zig-zag
sewing

1-+-4-+--+--1

machlne1 left

in

layaway . Beautiful pastel
color, full size model. All
built-in to buttonhole, overcast and fancy stitch. Pay just
$~8.75
cash or terms
available. Trade-Ins accepted. Phone 992-5641.
8-25-61C

•

,,

D-mN
16 Ol iJX

VOLKSWAGEN camper, good
condition. Less than 20,000
miles. 439 Lincoln St .• Middleport, Paul Scott.
8-25-ffc

MILLER
MOBIL£, HOMES

113- Scarch
116-Period of time
118-Ascend
119- Fur·b..rin&amp;
marnmll
122- Th,...banded
armtdillos
124-Labortd
125-Su.;cor
126-Shaek
128-CIUIId to
overflow
j 30-Equlllty
131-0omestlcttes
132-Retlil estsbllshment
135-Lamb's ptn
name
137-foundatlon
138-lrish dramatist
I.Co-Oe110ured
142- Decay
143-0eflnlte article
144-Pronoun
145-Near
147-Sun aod
148-Symbol for
cadmium

f'vmeroy

For Sale

For Sale

91-Verb neuter
(abbr.)
9~1~'1 name
96-A continent
1 (abbr.)

992-2126

~

HI, NEIGHBOR! Tried Blue
Lustre for cleaning carpets?
It's · super. Renf electric ,.
shampooer, $1 , Baker Furniture Company.
l-25-61c
SOFA BED and matching chair.
Phone 991-664-4 after 5 p.m.
8-26-ltp
GRAVELY
TRACTOR
DE'MONSTRATOR CLEARANCE
1
demon-

.......... ,,

.. ~ ····

, , . ~·

,.

.....··:· ......

O~EN

SUNDAY 12-6
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

strator Sl.!ptr C-1 w-mower,

1 demonstrator super C-1
w' mower and dual wheels,
$750;' 1 demonstrator Model a
riding trador, W 34" mower,
$750; I new 10 h.p. rldiiiQ
tractor with -40" mOII\fer, $1.190.
.Gravely Tractor
Sales,
•
Pomeroy. 992-&lt;975.
1-24-5tr'
$650;

,I

•

•

�I

.

. ~-The Sunday Times •Sentinel, SIDiay, Aug. 211, m1 ·

'

1

'

'

I.

IT'S YOUR I.G.A. FOODLINER ANNIVERSARY SALE
1ST BIG WEEIC LONG SALE.

..
.
.

•

.

WE HAVE RFFN IIJYIIIG SPECII.S AI WEEKS 10 PASS 01110 lOU

..

Ollt 2 BIG -WEDS OF 0111 ANNIVERSARY S'E
I

........•
...
....
.·.·..
..
.

.

-~

ST.

PRIZE
PANASONIC
~

STEREO-RADIO
8 TRACK TAPE PLAYER
FM-AM RADIO
2-6~

I

· • 3-way enjoyment. Travels along_ with
you on battery operation. Plays on regular house cwrent or directly off
your car or boat battery with optional
adaptor.
* FMI AMIFM Stereo Reception.
• Built-In FMI AM Antennas pull in both
· local and distant stations loud and clear .
.• 8·Track Stereo Tape Player.
• Lighted Channel Indicators.
• Separate twin speaker enclosures, hous·
ing' two, 61h" PM dynamic speakers.
• Slide-Touch Volume Control.
* Antennas: FM Whip
AM Ferrite Core.

OF OLD
FASHION

DYNAMIC SPEAKERS

.

-

NO. PRIZE
PANASONIC
FM/AM

FIRST BIG WEEK

AC or Battery operation. Built-In adaptor permits operation
on house current or AA Batteries.
Slide rule tuning .
Built-In FM-AMantennas. FM telescope whip and AM ferrite
core antennas built into the radio pull-i n both local and
distant F M and AM stations, loud and clear.

Full-range dynamic speaker. A 311 speaker assures strong,

full-bodied sound.
Earphone for private listening .
Special FM-AM selector switch.
Twostep tone control of troble and bass tone to please your
own particular. taste.
Solid state reliability.
.
Midnight black leather grain fi nish trimmed in si lver .
Size: SW' high, 6-17-32" wide, 2-11 -32" deep.

PORTABLE
RADIO

JOI THE
.•

•

RD. PRIZE

~

..

A ll:'fE
CRGWDS
AT ·youR J.G.

'
POP·UP SIDE BURN TRIMMER
• Compact design with a high-impact easy-grip plastic casing.
Built-in mirror cap for on-the-go shaving.
• Opera.tcs on "D" ceU battery.
• Safety-switch prevents battery drain.
• Precision-engineered magnetic clutch between shaver and
• rrimmer.
• Micro-thin turret shaving head and floating carbon steel

PANASON.IC
CORDLESS
SHAVER

rotary blades.

iiiiiijii;:;;;;;;;;iiiii

• Fits into black, lcathercttc carrying case, complete with
dean~ brush.
• Size , S~" high.
•
: Black

FOO LINER STO E.
[

DO AS '1HOUSA D OF
•

WHO 51 VE MO

'

E'SAVI GS

Just A FetD Of Our Anniversary Prree.

STARTS SUNDAY

CASES OF

AUGUST 29th· 12 NOON
r-------------------- ~------•------~--~-~~!~!~!!Q~_fJ!~~-~!FJ..~---I

.

,

.

'I ADDRESS
..................................................................... .
PHONE NO....................................................................
I

12 OZ. BOtTLES

NAME··········································································

'

.I

NOTICE

.. ·I AGE ··············-································~·· ··························· I.

I

I
I
., 1

MUST BE 16 YEARS OF 'AGE TO WIN
'
NOTHING TO BUY.
YOU DO NOT HAVE TO BE PRESENT TO WiN
DRAWING SAT. SEPT. 11th
DROP IN BOX AT BARGAINI.AND OR FOODLINER

M &amp; R SHOPPING CENTER

..

I
I
I

~L---------~--------------- ---------·

I

'

WATCH FOR 6 PAGE·.AD
IN ·TODAY'$ PAPER

•

MIDDLEPORT
OHIO
.

I.G.A. FOODLINER and M &amp; R BARGAINLAND
·'

..

·....

'

,

Y DAY,

�I

.

. ~-The Sunday Times •Sentinel, SIDiay, Aug. 211, m1 ·

'

1

'

'

I.

IT'S YOUR I.G.A. FOODLINER ANNIVERSARY SALE
1ST BIG WEEIC LONG SALE.

..
.
.

•

.

WE HAVE RFFN IIJYIIIG SPECII.S AI WEEKS 10 PASS 01110 lOU

..

Ollt 2 BIG -WEDS OF 0111 ANNIVERSARY S'E
I

........•
...
....
.·.·..
..
.

.

-~

ST.

PRIZE
PANASONIC
~

STEREO-RADIO
8 TRACK TAPE PLAYER
FM-AM RADIO
2-6~

I

· • 3-way enjoyment. Travels along_ with
you on battery operation. Plays on regular house cwrent or directly off
your car or boat battery with optional
adaptor.
* FMI AMIFM Stereo Reception.
• Built-In FMI AM Antennas pull in both
· local and distant stations loud and clear .
.• 8·Track Stereo Tape Player.
• Lighted Channel Indicators.
• Separate twin speaker enclosures, hous·
ing' two, 61h" PM dynamic speakers.
• Slide-Touch Volume Control.
* Antennas: FM Whip
AM Ferrite Core.

OF OLD
FASHION

DYNAMIC SPEAKERS

.

-

NO. PRIZE
PANASONIC
FM/AM

FIRST BIG WEEK

AC or Battery operation. Built-In adaptor permits operation
on house current or AA Batteries.
Slide rule tuning .
Built-In FM-AMantennas. FM telescope whip and AM ferrite
core antennas built into the radio pull-i n both local and
distant F M and AM stations, loud and clear.

Full-range dynamic speaker. A 311 speaker assures strong,

full-bodied sound.
Earphone for private listening .
Special FM-AM selector switch.
Twostep tone control of troble and bass tone to please your
own particular. taste.
Solid state reliability.
.
Midnight black leather grain fi nish trimmed in si lver .
Size: SW' high, 6-17-32" wide, 2-11 -32" deep.

PORTABLE
RADIO

JOI THE
.•

•

RD. PRIZE

~

..

A ll:'fE
CRGWDS
AT ·youR J.G.

'
POP·UP SIDE BURN TRIMMER
• Compact design with a high-impact easy-grip plastic casing.
Built-in mirror cap for on-the-go shaving.
• Opera.tcs on "D" ceU battery.
• Safety-switch prevents battery drain.
• Precision-engineered magnetic clutch between shaver and
• rrimmer.
• Micro-thin turret shaving head and floating carbon steel

PANASON.IC
CORDLESS
SHAVER

rotary blades.

iiiiiijii;:;;;;;;;;iiiii

• Fits into black, lcathercttc carrying case, complete with
dean~ brush.
• Size , S~" high.
•
: Black

FOO LINER STO E.
[

DO AS '1HOUSA D OF
•

WHO 51 VE MO

'

E'SAVI GS

Just A FetD Of Our Anniversary Prree.

STARTS SUNDAY

CASES OF

AUGUST 29th· 12 NOON
r-------------------- ~------•------~--~-~~!~!~!!Q~_fJ!~~-~!FJ..~---I

.

,

.

'I ADDRESS
..................................................................... .
PHONE NO....................................................................
I

12 OZ. BOtTLES

NAME··········································································

'

.I

NOTICE

.. ·I AGE ··············-································~·· ··························· I.

I

I
I
., 1

MUST BE 16 YEARS OF 'AGE TO WIN
'
NOTHING TO BUY.
YOU DO NOT HAVE TO BE PRESENT TO WiN
DRAWING SAT. SEPT. 11th
DROP IN BOX AT BARGAINI.AND OR FOODLINER

M &amp; R SHOPPING CENTER

..

I
I
I

~L---------~--------------- ---------·

I

'

WATCH FOR 6 PAGE·.AD
IN ·TODAY'$ PAPER

•

MIDDLEPORT
OHIO
.

I.G.A. FOODLINER and M &amp; R BARGAINLAND
·'

..

·....

'

,

Y DAY,

�. .-.r-•

lbJday '1'11111!1 -.Smanol. -

.-

..

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.
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DOM
.
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l LB. .
*
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.

. suGAF!
.
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· ONLY ·

REAL VALUE

•

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,

VIETTI
·. ~
.

--

BOUNTY
TOWELS·

·~

HOT·_ DOG SAUCE

PEAS. MIXED VEGRABLES
CUT
BEANS, AND ·
W.K. or a.AM STYU CORN

-~

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.

.

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oz.

15 Ol·
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· GIANT BONUS JAR
MAXWELL HOUSE

JUMBO

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ONLY ·

SAUCE
MEDIUM
HOT
-

BANANA

.

$

EXPIRES .
LG.A. FOODLINER

.

23~

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WHITE or YELLOW

--

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2lB.BMi

15 Ol.
lOih 01. CAN

COLA

OR ·

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49~

ROOT -BEER
GRAPE .

•

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2LB.
BAG

WRH THIS CXMJPOI

EXPIRES SEPT. mt 1971

WRH CXMJPOII 011 THIS PAGE

-

12·02. CNIS

8 OZ.
CANS .

JOY

· STOKELY'S.
.

PEARS
16 Ol
CANS

99~ ~%,~

TOPPs ·

. CAMPBELLS
VEGETABLE
· ·SOUP
~J.I~)I' PILLSBURY

•

802.

•'

PEPPERS
32 Ol. .

Mustard

WITH

COFFEE

..

AUNT

WfTH THIS COUPON WHEN

·COFFEE

ONLY

.

Squeeze

30•

IAxlirt. .

INSTANT

. APPLE
. 16
Ol
.
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,

KRAFT

YOU BUY A.U.OZ. JAR OF

ROU.S

· CANS

\'.\1.1'.\BIJ I OIPO\

FRENOt

.

~Ol.

JOY LIQUID
. 22 Or.IIJIILE

29C
WITH aJUPOII.

DRESSING

-

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LIQUID

I

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29C ·

LG.A. RJOOUNER
EXPIRES SEPT. 4TH 1971

22 Ol BOTJLE

C'M

. WI1H ·mlfON ON 1HIS P&amp;

VAN CAMPS ·
.·. BEEf STEW
.
.
24 oz.

KING ·SIZE

LG.A.

•

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'

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llAtmX ·

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CAN

LU. RIOIIUIIER

W11H CDIIOII

.

.

WllH OOUPON ON THIS PAGE
•

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EXPIIES SEPJ. 41H lt11

5 lb. 4 Oz. BOX

·,

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· ONLY ·

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,

VIETTI
·. ~
.

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TOWELS·

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PEAS. MIXED VEGRABLES
CUT
BEANS, AND ·
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oz.

15 Ol·
-CANS

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MAXWELL HOUSE

JUMBO

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MEDIUM
HOT
-

BANANA

.

$

EXPIRES .
LG.A. FOODLINER

.

23~

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lOih 01. CAN

COLA

OR ·

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•

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BAG

WRH THIS CXMJPOI

EXPIRES SEPT. mt 1971

WRH CXMJPOII 011 THIS PAGE

-

12·02. CNIS

8 OZ.
CANS .

JOY

· STOKELY'S.
.

PEARS
16 Ol
CANS

99~ ~%,~

TOPPs ·

. CAMPBELLS
VEGETABLE
· ·SOUP
~J.I~)I' PILLSBURY

•

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•'

PEPPERS
32 Ol. .

Mustard

WITH

COFFEE

..

AUNT

WfTH THIS COUPON WHEN

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ONLY

.

Squeeze

30•

IAxlirt. .

INSTANT

. APPLE
. 16
Ol
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YOU BUY A.U.OZ. JAR OF

ROU.S

· CANS

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FRENOt

.

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JOY LIQUID
. 22 Or.IIJIILE

29C
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-

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I

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29C ·

LG.A. RJOOUNER
EXPIRES SEPT. 4TH 1971

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•

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CHICKEN
TURKEY
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8 OZ. SIZE

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46 oz.
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Now You Know

Mostly sunny and warm
today. Highs in the mid and
upper Ms. Partly cloudy toolgllt
and Tuesday. Lows looighl mid
~ to low 66!1. Cooler Tuesday.
Highs in the 70s north and upper
70s and low 80s south. · ·

The city Pf Los Angeles has
mPre cars 1egistered 1 545 000
than are registered i:J s~te~
of the wtion.

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Devoted To The lntereall Of The Meigi-MtJMJn Area

VOL. XXIV

NO. 96

MONDAY, AUGUST 30, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

. ··:·:·:·.·.•:•.•,•,•.·,•,•.·.·.-.·.·.·.·.·.--·.·.·.•,•,·,··,·.·-·.·

By United Press
Inlernatloaal
Ohio . Extended Weather
Outlook
Wednesday
through Friday:
Fair weather with warming
trend through Friday, Highs
in the 70s Wedaesday, rising
to the 80s Friday. Overnight
lows In the 50s and lower 60s.
·.·.··-·.·. ·.·.-.·.-.·.·.·.·-·---·.·.·.·,·.·.·.·.·.·=·.·.·.·:-:-:·:-:

Art Oasses
Will Be
Offered

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. : l,Wf'l HONOR THE MAYOR, ·
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JULIE GOOCH 100X RESERVE CHAMPION honors in the Meigs County 4-H Horse Show
Saturday at the Meigs County Fair. Julie took first place in showmanship, western ponies and
first place in horsemanship western ponies. Julie is the daughter of Mrs. C. K. Nease and the
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Eskey HilL The pony which Julie trained in three months time
was a gift from her grandfather Eskey Hill.

'IOU WAJ.ITA
6U'f RETURN ·
TICKETTO .

ACCO?.DING TO THE RULES,
THEY ' MUST ASCEND TO THE

TOP OF THE -5HvO&amp;&gt;ER!!-

Cl-llt.JACHEAP? ·

, EMPIRE

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SAIGON - SOUI'II VIETNAMESE AUI'IIORITIES reported

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that96 "enemy-initiated incidents" including .54 rocket or mortar
attacks took place in the 49-hour spanendingat6a.m. today.'.. all
of them aimed at harassing the National Assembly elections. The
spokesmen added lha t the attacks failed in their purpose, and that
78.'5 per cent of the little more than seven million eligible voters
turned out at the polls. The worst blow occurred in the province of
Binh Dlnh, where a terrorists' grenade killed seven and wounded
36 in a voting station.

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RIGHT

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SAN FRANCISCO -A NEGRO YOUI'II fired a barrage of'
shotgun and pistol bullets at the Ingleside pollee station Sunday
night, ldlllng a sergeant and wounding a woman dispatcher.
F1oodlights were hauled in to light up the park surrounding the
~latloo, and police aided by dogs launched an intensive manhunt.

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PRE'IIDENT ANWAR SADAT OF EGYPT staled Sunday
that large numbers of U. S. weapons have been pouring into
Jordan. He said they included heavy tanks and hinted they were
for use against Syria .

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by

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THAT .STIJFFE:D 131RD! WITIJ
IT'~

MOSOOW - THE SOVIET NEWS AGENCY Tass said today
that President Nikolai V. Podgoerny will make a ''visit of
friendship" to North Vietnam early next month. The chief
eJ:ecutive, who is going to Hanoi at the invitation of the North
Vietnamese government, is expected to carry assurances of
continued Russian support of North Vietnam.

Crooks &amp; Lawrence·

Meigs Wheat Farmers
Have Choice--Chase

t&gt;.IECK STAANGL-e:R-

TWI'7TEJ'1...HE:Hri-IE:H ... AN

ECCE:kiT~fC JOK!=,PSRHAP5!

·

Meigs County farmers may, if
they choose, prove their wheat
yield per acre rather than accept the yield established by the
County Agricultural
Stabilization and Conservation
(ASC) Committee on a
judgment basis.
This is ooe of the basic
provisions
under
the
Agricultural Act of 1970, according to Wayne H. ~ ~
chairman ,of the Meigs County
ASC Committee.
The yield figure is important
to a farmer Chase said, since
growers participa ling in ~
wheat program receive
marketing certificate payments
based oo their domestic wheal

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WASHINGTON (UPI)
There were new signs today
that the administration is at
least debating the idea of
adding some form of profit
control to its economic wea·
pons.
Three of President Nixon's
cabinet members have now
suggested the possibility of
something more than the
volwttary hold on profits,
dividends and interest rates
which the President asked for
when he imposed the current
wage-price-rent freeze.
With the freeze now in its
third week, discussion centered
on the profits question as the
Joint Economic Committee of
Congress swnmoned Paul W.
McCracken, chairman of the
President's Council of Economic Advisers, and George A.
Lincoln, head of the Office of

The French Art Colony is
preparing classes for another
successful semester. The
drawing class which begins
Sept. 7 from 8-10 a.m. has two
vacancies: Beginning painting
for oil and acrylic students is
from 6-8 p. m. on the same day.
• Interested students may still
enroll. The advanced painters
will report from IHl p. m.
Wednesday, Sept. 8.
No more than 12 students will
be taken into these classes. Silk
~e
Screen classes will be held on
Thursday, Sept. 9, 8-10 p. m.
This project affords one the
opportwtity to make your own
note paper, Christmas cards One person was slightly inand an original print. The jured in a tra!!ic accident at
Lettering and Layout class 7:22p.m. Swtday on Rocky Run
which begins Sept. 13 from 11-10 Rd., six-tenths of a mile east of
has reached its enrollment, Rt. 218.
however, another class will be . According to the Gallipolis
held from IHl P- m. if enough Post State Highway Patrol,
Steve A. Slone, 16, Kanauga,
students enrolL
Students accepted in these lost control of his car, ran off
classes include 9thgradeand all the left side of the highway over
adults wishing to enroll . .Each an .embankment and struck a
student IS taught accordmg to
. bil't'
Cl
2 tree. James Fisher, 15,
th etr
a ' tes. asses are. Gallipolis, a passenger,
hours e~ch on a 12 week basts. sustained minor abrasions of
Fees wtll be $24 per 12 weeks the body . There was moderate
course to French Art Colony damage to the car . No citation
members and $30 to non- was issued.
members.
Asingle car mis' lP occurred
F:ees . are . due . upon ·at 10 , u p. m. Saturday on old
regtstratwn . Regtstrallon may Rt. 35 , 100 feel east of RL 35
be made by calling Mrs. ~ohn where David Altizer,' 22, RL 2,
Byers 446-1903, or mathng Patriot,lostcontrolofhiscaron
checks to Mrs. Byers, 162 a curve and ran off the road·
Woodland
. , no charges were
. 45631 Drtve ' Galhpohs ' way. Agam
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A final mishap was in-

Accidents

Throug(J the
Sidewalks
of New York-~

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their
allotment
times
established farm yield.
In order to prove yield for use
in the 1972 wheal program, a
farmer must have hsrvesled
wheat in 1968, 1969, and 1970 and
'provide reliable evidence of the
amount of production from the
harvested acreage.
"Acceptable evidence is
limited to bin measurements,
sales or warehouse receipts and
summarization of receipts, or
sale tickets and summarization
of scale tickets from warehouse
or scales Used by the general
public," Chase said.
Special provision has been
made to include wheat
produced on a farm and used for
seed, even though weight
tickets or other evidence of
production is not available.
To prove wheat yield for use
in the 1972 program a producer
must file a request at the county
ASCS office between Sept. 1 and
Sept. 15. My producer filing
during this periud will be given
~easonable time to obtain proof
· of acreage and production,
Chase said. The county ASC
committee will review and
notify the producer of proven
yield by Sept. 22.
1

SQUADSCALLEDSUNDAY
The Middleport Emergency
squad answered a call at 1:54
p.m. Sllnday to the residence of
Harrison Robinson, Sr., Letart,
w. Va. Robinson, who was
having difficulty breathing, was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he was admitted
1or treatment.
·
· While Middleport was on the
'call a second call was received
at 2:13 p.m. for Myrtle Fife,
Storys Run Road. Pomeroy's
emergency squad accepted the
MARRIAGE LICENSE
1calL An ambulance was sum·
John Edward German, 21,
moned and Mrs. File was taken Rutland, and Florence Evelyn
to the Holzer Medical Center. Tulley, 31, Rulland.

Emergency Preparedness, to a
hearing today .
Last week Housing Secretary
George Romney advocated restraint on interest rates and
corpor~te profits. Sunday Commerce secretary Maurice H.
Stans and Labor Secretary
James D. Hodgson agreed that
such a course of action might
be possible once the initial 00day freeze period is over.
"With respect to profits,"
Stans said, "I think the matter
here depends upon how long the
process takes to eliminate the
inflationary characteristics of
th_s economy.
" If it's a short period, I don't
think it makes any sense to
apply excess profits rates on
profits. Over a long period of
time, certainly It might be
necessary in order to provide
equity," he said.
He prefaced his remarks,
however , by saying that it was
entirely too soon to say whether
controls would eventually be
needed on profits or interest
rates.
Hodgson said a profits ceiling
"certainly has to be one of the
things we consider during

Phase II " -the period
following the IMklay freeze .
But both cabinet members
were unspecific about what
Phase II would consisL or,
particularly what forms of
wage-price-rent control, ir any,
would remain . Stans said some
still-undecided restraints would
continue, but hopefully for less
than one year.
Stans made the comments on
CBS TV's "Face The Nation"
while Hodgson appeared on
ABC's "Issues and Answers."
The legislation which gave
Nixon standby authority to
freeze wages, rents and prices
did not cover profits, and the
President would have to go to
Congress to request such power
if he wants it when the
lawmakers return from their
summer recess Sept. 8.
The profits question continued
to be at the heart or organized
labor's criticism of the new
economic plan . Jerry Wurf,
president of the 525,000-member
American Federation of State,
County and Mwticipal Em·
ployes, AFL-CJO, said his union
had backed an overall freeze.
"Instead of handing down

that sort of plan," Wur! said,
"the administration has given a
tremendous tax sop to big
business, while freezing the
wages of working men and

women. ''
Wurf made the comments in
Minneapolis where leaders of
the union were meeting to draft
a policy statement opposing the

freeze.
In Tokyo, Assistant Secrelar}
of Slate Philip H. Trezise

arrived on his mission· to
explain U.S. monetary policies
to the Japanese government.
Nixon's decision to untie the
dollar from its fixed gold base
has been producing the desired
effect in Japan, where the
government was forced to float
the yen.
The yen grew in value by 5.2
per cent, in relation to the
dollar, Saturday. The change
means that it takes more
dollars now to buy yen, or any
other Japanese product. And an
importer in the United Slatesand eventually American shoppers - will have to pay more
for the previously lower priced
Japanese consumer items such
as television sets and textil~

Record Crowd Auends
Ohio Fair On Sunday
COLUMBUS(UPI)- Smiled
upon by sunny skies and pleas·
ant tefllperatures, the 1971 Ohio
State Fair had a record crowd
of 253,659 vt'.st'tors Sunday dur·

a field of 12 girls. She is the
daughter of the Denslow Ever·
soles, who live on a 500-acre
catUe and sheep raising farm .
Runnerup was Julie Merkle,
Cincinnati.
In the grandstand, the James
Gang and Dave Merrifield, helicopter acrobat, entertained free
of charge during IJI'O performances. The FHth Dimension en·
tertained at 4:30 and 8:30p.m.
today .
Record Lamb Sale
An all-time record of 891
head was sold in the market

lamb sale for an average of
$32.09 per hWldredweighl. The
total was $2JI,588.44.
The grand champion lamb, a
105-powtd Hampshire eshibiled
by Ohio State University, set a
single high when it sold for
$12.75 per pound.
In poultry judging, champion
water fowl WBB an African can·
der · shown by J.R. Emlcka of
Greenville; champion standard
chicken, white Cohen hen, by
Robert L. Fleming of Grove
City; and bantam championship, a black rose comb hen,
by Dan Aultman of Xenia.

ing the fourth day of the 12day festivaL
The day's gate lopped the
prior record of 249,500 set in
· 1970 for a single day and boosted the total thus far. this year
to 820,673, about 3,000 behind
the crowd at this point last
year.
Today's events included the
first of three days of harness
racing, junior fair breeding
sheep show, wool style show,
commercial cattle and jwtior
PLAN BARBEQUE
vestigated at 12 midnight fair steer sale and the All-Ohio
'lbe Olester fire department
Sunday on Rl. 7, six-tenths of a Boy's Band.
will
spl11801' a cblcken harbequt
mile south of RL 143 in Meigs
Highlights Sunday included
Monday, LaiKr Day.
Cowtty. The patrol said Brenda the crowning of another queen,
Serving will begin at 11 a.m.
~. 20, Pomeroy, lost control of Jill Ann Eversole of Fairfield
Pomeroy police investigated in addition to . barbequed
her car when the muffler fell County as Miss Wool of Ohio. two weekend accidents in which
off. The auto went off the
The 19-year-&lt;lld Baltimore, two drivers were ciled to the chicken, spare ribs wtll alao be
served.
One person was hospilalized 'roadway into an embankment. Ohio, brunette was chosen from mayor's court.
Aparade will be held at 1p.m.
following a two car accident
At 10:45 p.m. Saturday oo and a garden tracbr pull at 1
Sunday at 1:15 p. m. on SR 7,
West Main St. a car driven by
All traclllrs may be weigJwlln
one-tenth of a mile north of the
Richard Garfield, '11, Pmneroy, at the Dale Kautz farm.
Pomeroy corporation limit. The
waiting to make a left tum into
Donatioos ol pies and caba
Meigs
County
sheriff's
Crow's Steak House, was slruck will be appreciated.
deparbnent reported.
by a car driven by Linda
Leonard S. Erwin, 20,
Reeves, 18, Ptmeroy, mtlng
SPECIAL MEETING
Pomeroy, Rt. 3, was traveting
from the west driveway at the There will be a special
north on SR 7 when a vehicle in
Steak House. Damages were meeting of Racine Lodge No.
~ont slowed down to make _a CEDARVILLE,Ohio(UPI)- ing. While they were holding light and there were no injuries. 461 F &amp; AM Monday at 7:30 p.
nght hand turn off of 7. Erwm A
·ted h th' 1 ulled
The driver of the Reeves vehicle m. There will be work in E.-A.
was apparently traveting too suspec
og te P . a the trio, Myers pulled out a gwt
was cited to court oo an assured degree.
fast. He was unable to slop. gwt. on a deputy ~ fled m hts and held it to the head of Dep·
clear
distance charge.
When Erwin applied his brakes cruu;o:r ~d was fmally caught uty Loren Wise, the sheriff's
Al 3 a. m. Sunday, a car
FINED IN COllRT
the car skidded into' the path of up wtth !lve h~urs later after office said.
a car traveling south driven by 1~ lawmen usmg helicopters,
Myers then jumped into driven by Keith Phalln, Fined In the court o1 Pameroy
Imogene D. McKinunie, 49, arrplanes and dogs tracked hun the deputy's wtmarked cruiser Pomeroy, slruck a parked car Mayor Olarles Lepr SaturdaJ
on Mulberry Ave. Phatin told night were William Jmr-,
Parkersburg
down.
.
and left without his companpolice the transmissioo on his Pomeroy, $5 and costa, left of
Layman Dotson, Vienna, a William Myers, 18,_ Clifton, ions.
car went out allowing the car to center;
Larry
RCIIIIIDe,
passenger in the McKimmie was charged after hiS arrest
drill
backward
into
the
parked
Pomeroy, II!J!!dl.. , $1$ -~
Deputies from several councar, sustained a possible broken Saturday wtth assault wtth a
Phalin
was
cited
for
falling
car.
Cll'lts;
Robert Johnaoo, $5 :lnd
hip, head and nose injuries.
deadly weapon, auto theft a~d ties and Ohio Highway Patrol· to have his vehicle under
Cll'lts, Improper backing, no
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"'• · ed grand larceny . He was held m men participated in the manMrs. MCnuuuue
COml""m
. il
$10 OOO bo d
were
medium
control.
There
address-listed
on court records,
hunt, which ended just five
of pains in the neck and throat. Ja on •
n ·
. ,
damages. 'lbe owner of the
Both were taken to Veterans The G~eene Cou_nty shenff s miles away after he abandoned parked car was no~ identified. and Wl111am Klein, Pcmeroy, $5
and cosbl, open !last cbarile.
Memorial Hospital by the offtce sa1d the senes of events the cruiser and hid.
Greene Cowtty Sheriff Russell
Pomeroy emergency squad. thaL led to Myers' capture be·
Bradley
said Myers was conMrs. McKlmmie was treated gan lhts way·
and released.
Two separato: thefts of hogs trite after being caught and
Erwin was cited to court on was reported m the area, 10 o!!ered to buy dinner for all the
charges of failure to keep from one farm Bfld 45 from an· lawmen who had sought him.
Dice was charged with grand
vehicle on right half of road- other· . .
.
and held on · $2,500
larceny
Depulles stopped a ptckup
way.
l&gt;qnd.
The
1~year-&lt;lld was reBoth cars were heavily truck in which Myers, Dennis leased to the custody of his par·
Dice, 19, Xenia, and an unidendamaged.
Gallia County Sheriff Denver Charles Masters, 228 'nllrd Ave.
tified 15-year-&lt;lld boy were rid· ents.
A. Walker said today SaLur- Sands appeared in Munlclpal
day's alleged boating accident Court this morning but his call!
in the Ohio River behind the was delayed until WedneiiCIIy.
kyger Creek Power Plant was Bond was set at $2,000.
an apparent hoax. Walker said Other arrests were John 0.
no missing person reports have Baker, 30, Pt. Pleasant, booked
been filed and no boat has been for three counts of intent to
brother, Jonathan, 17, killed was knocked to the ground and of, the shoveling, was attacked. found .
defraud; Aaron Hysell, 40,
lasL July in a· shootout at the roughed up by a group of Black Two of his cameras were
Area officials Friday night Pomeroy, non-.upport; Jobn ·
Marin County Courthouse in Panthers who objected to his damaged and the panthers conducted search operations for Gilbert Daniels, 24, Rt. I,
San Rafael, Calif., is buried taking pictures of the burial destroyed the film in those three boys reported to have Gallipolis, intoxicaLlon; 0,..
cameras.
nearby - his grave still un· site.
been clinging to a capsized boat, Caldwell, 64, Galllpotis, uc1
Fred Sweet, a black photogra- Middleport and Gallipolis Kenneth R. Bloomer, SZ,
marked.
About 60 persons turned out
The ceremony was short, but for Lhe service. Representatives pher for the St. Louis Post· volunteer firemen, Kyger Creek Gallipolis, both IntoxlcaUon.
emotional. At one point, Mrs. of the Black Panther Party and Dispatch, came to aid Torres PlanL employees, the U. S. James Edward Wills, 22, RL 1,
Jackson interrupted one speak· the, National United Front read and was threatened but not Coast Guard and Gallia County Gallipo)is, was cited •• a
injured.
er, Joe Swift of Washillllton and statements at the graveside.
Civil Defense searched the river suspicious person.
said:
After Mrs. Jackson ordered
for about three hours before
A breaking and enlerini 11'11
the casket lowered, a truck
Jackson, 30, was a native of halting their operations in a reported at the resideltte a1
"Please stop. My son didn't carrying dirt pulled along side Chicago. He was sentenced to heavy fog .
Everett Kemper, Porter.
the
grave
and
supporters
took
one year to life imprisonment In oth~r deparunent activity, Deputies s a i d - •llwid
like preachers. I asked you to
lurns
pitching
shovels
full
of
in 1960 for a $70 robbery. In Jam,es Herbert Sands, 42, Mr. Kemper's tool "iHI 1 bf
say a few words .but I don't
dirt on top of the casket.
1969, he ' was ~ccused 0! Gallipolis, was arrested Sunday prying off .the lock on lhe frc1lt
wa~lany preaching. "
It
was
at
this
point
that
murdering a guard at Soledad, on charges of malicious cutting. door. NoLhin~ was r q ar'tld
. A United Press International
The warrant was signed by missing.
photographer, Bruno Torres, Torres, trying to take pictures Calif., state prison .

Passenger

Two Cited After

Hospitalized

Auto Accidents

In Accident

FRANKLIN M. RIZER, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Franldln M.
Rizer or 738 E. Malo St.,
Pomeroy, is one of 1,249
freshmen cadets who have
entered Lhe U.S. Air Force
Academy class of 1975. Cadet
Rizer was accepted into Lhe
cadet wing after completing
seven weeks of basic training,
including field training at a
simulated frontline combat
base near the academy,
strenuous physical con·
dlllonlng and survival In·
structlon. · The cadet now
begins a !our-year course of
study leading to an Air Force
commission and a bachelor of
science degree with an
academic major in one of 27
fields of Interest provided In
the curriculum. Cadet Rizer
Is a 1971 graduate of Meigs
High School, Rock Springs,
Ohio, where he was a
member or the National
Honor Society and lettered in
wrestling.
CORRECliON
The Meigs Chapter of the
American Cancer Society will
hold its annual meeting
Tuesday instead of Monday as
was previously Bll{IOUnced.

Suspect .Caught

Following Otase

ackson Is Buried
MOUNT VERNON, ill. (UP!)
-Slain Soledad Brother George
Jackson was buried Sunday,
eight days after an escape
attempt from San Quentin
Prison that Jell five other
persons dead.
"The reason George died Is
that one black man had done
enough ·talking about the
conditions in prisons," said 'his
mother, Mrs. Georgia Jackson,
who with his father, Lester, had
accompanied the body from
California .
George was buried about a
mile south of here in a family
plot a1 Bethel Cemetery. His

.'
•'

CENTS

Profit Control Sought

One lnJ" ured
Jn Thr

•

TEN

PHONE 992-2156

Boating Accident
Is Apparent Hoax

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