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Cub Scouts Like · Learning Culinary Art

10-Tile Daily Sentillei,Mldlleport-PGmeroy, 0., Sept. 24,1971

Cross .Elected Grange Master
Officers elected recently by
·the Racine Grange were Earl
Cross, master; c. s. Moms,
overseer; Emma Adams,
lecturer; Jean Alkire, steward;
June &lt;\Shley, assil!tantsteward;
Mary Easterday, chaplain;
Bertha Spencer, treasurer;
Leatha Morris, secretary;
Robert Ashley, gatekeeper;
Mary K. Yos~ ceres; Dorothy
Smith, pomona; Mattie Yost,
flora ; Geraldine Cross, lady
assistant steward; Mattie
Circle, Pianist, and Clifford
Morris, legislative agent.
A round-f'obin letter was sent
to Belle Theiss, a patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and a donation of $10 was voted
to the county museum fund.
.-

.MEIGS lHEATR£
Tonig~tthru

Tuesday

September 24-28 ·

.Wall Disney's

"SI,OOO,OOO DUCK"

!Technicolorl
Dean Jones
Sandy DIH!can
"G"

Walt Disney's
BONGO
CTechnicolor 1 .

"G"
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

~=======~
I , ..

Tonight, Sat. &amp;.sun.
Sept. 24-25-U
Double Feature Program
"THE ARRANGEMENT"

Kirk Douglas
Deborah Kerr
Rated R

Plans were discussed to attend
!he national grange meeting in

Charlestoo; w. va. Two applicalions for membership were
accepted.
Following the close, all
members assembled at the
home of a charter member,
Mrs. Lela Easterday, to
celebrate her birthday.
Refreshments of homemade ice
cream, cake, candy and fruits
were served.

Of Furnace,

Rods and Hubs

Articles valued at app-omnately $850 have been
taken in a burglary of an
IDioccupied home owned by the
Ohio Power C~mpany m Stingy
Creek Rd., In O!esbire Twp.
G. A. Busb, an Ohio Power
representaiive, told the Gallla
County Sheriff's Departmenl
Sllllleone has entered the old
Rouah farm and had taken a
wall furnaCe, lransmissloo rods
and 200 oak hubs. Entry wu
made by gOing through the back
door.
Sheriff's deputies Thursday
evening investigated a two
vehicle collisioo at the Intersection of Rl. 35 and 325.
Accwdlng to tile report, Melvin
B. Freeman, 33, Rl. 1, Mid·
dleport, driving a tractortraDer outfit struck a stalled
aulo operated by George T.
Newson, 22, Rt. 4, Jackson.
There was minor damage 1o the

Girls' State
Report Made
To Sorority

Mrs. Thompson
Dies in Fire

Rood, J[ea c.ldwell. WiLa R ...... All:. w • W L Hcmer Cole. Absent were Cbarle! C)jljns, Iqer Barnett and
Howie Caldwell. The team, sptDSOI'ed by Bill RilcQe, owner
of Meadowgteen Gardens, also placed fcmth in district
ccmpetitim and secmd in tbe K a. K 'l'olnamenl Hart's
Used Cars of New.Haven was league &lt;bampion.

.~l6wt.-:·ilf'oW·•='=Avsc=m~

(Continued &amp;um Page 1)
ern llGRiinees, Clement Haynesworth and G. Harrold Carswell.
The Washington Post said
today Attorney General Jmn N.
Mitdlell told the newspaper in
an inta wiew Nhoo was "very
seriOU&gt;J.J" considering ncminating a WGOl8D lo tbe court.
Mr. and Mn. Robert Ashley,
At the same lime, the White
Letart Falls, and ~le tbe
son of Mr. BJHI Mrs. Bob House llllllOUIIC."et of Harlan's retirement carefully
Beegle, Racine.
,
, avoided saying Nixon was
II!Jbdd ~:M
looking for a man to replace
Harlan, as it did when Black
resigned.

Ronald L. Ziegler, the White
House press secretary, said
Nixon would try "to find highly
qualified persons for these
posi lions."

Mtss

Once you've made your decision, make another Important one
And come to us for your Auto Loan.
'
You'll find our rates are tow. And our oervice 11 fast.

POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK
POMEROY

Refresher Course
Howard Logan, 201 Condor
St., Pomeroy, a customer
serviceman for Columbts Gas of
Ohio, Inc. in tbe Middleport
area, has completed a weeklong refresher course at tile
Columbia Gas System Service
Corp. training school in
Columbus. The course Is one of
a series designed to keep gas
company servicemen abreast of
advances in modern natural gas
appliances and equipment.
Logan has been with the
company here 19 years.

RUJI.AND

Serving Meigs County
Since 1872
111\ember Federal Reserve System
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
All ~counts Insured Up ToS20,ooo.oo·

RECEIPTS IN
Retail sales ta:r receipts in
Meigs County for 1be month of
Au gus t were up ..,
••,738.119, Mrs.
Gertrude Donahey, stale
treasurer,
The receipts

Contlnu~us

Service On
Fridays 9 a.m. to 7 p.m•.

4.

aDill!

Co

' ·
......;.

111e j gal bribe .,.,.. by tbe U.S. _...ity

11!!1
Ext:baaCt 0"*' · ., • cbilc

its iuo •ipliaa into t11o Ale
and &amp;au...lrnt 1DIIIipalatiaJ 111
IIDiegisltitd stnrt. bela 5!
.._,.. • and J)ew••A

•" aD g! m ' "!.'!!I
"" '
mo.. the
~ the sd*i•• wu (leo 11..
financier t7n'* w. Shup. :
;.
•

Riley And .·

=

Back

:;:i::b
during a federal investigatim of
·
~udulent stock-manipulations
m Texas.
·--e•
The grand jury also issued a
~11 (UPI) -DdmreportcriticizingTexaspolitical siwe backs Ken Riley and
figures.
Fleldlor Smitb ~ apeded lo
"If is the opinion of the be badt in the lineap when tbe
grand jury that some Tens Benpls meet the Sl le s at
lawmakers, who have been PiUsburgb Sllllllay.
elected by the voters d. Tellis Riley bas otoRatd &amp;om "
to the high position of 1n1st, collarboDe Injury and will pia,
were too busy granting political at rigbt ru-bd:. Smith~
favors and being influenced in shakpn .., in last Swiat's fl.
exchange for turning a fast If win .,.... p!pl~hia but Is
buck,'' the grand jury's report 1101r rally to go at sin+ g T
said.
safely.
"We deplore this fact and Riley said be'll lave to lie
would hope that these practices
the baD" lo deftod tt..
wDl cease, so that our stale passing ~ Pilblagb's barilmay no longer be embarrassed throwing Terry lliadsba•. _
before the nation,'' the report "He bas a quiet r+-x "
said.
Riley said. ..,. ..., a 1o1
The other officials indicted boob and with his quid rewere:
lease w•n la-.e 1o be om the
Rep. Thomas C. Shannon, 61, ball."
'
a Fort W&lt;rth Democrat, the The Steekrs also are ....-.
speaker pro tempore ~ the fled about tbe BeqgaJs' i ·ng
House and a close friend and attack.
political ally of Mutscher.
Onrinnati ~ Vllgil
Stinnan Rush McGinty, 32, Carta- n+t.,rlel D ~ » pus..
es for 27.1 fmds and tbrft

rePorts.
i=================:!.!fr:om~A:ug~.~3!1o~A~ug~.3~1!la~st~y=ear~

Fri • alre
f"ds a most

anywhere.

(Only 2feet wide)
• ln,tall It *htrt tht with 11kilehen, both, nurNry . . . en,.,.,.,
you con PI • .,l•at• wirint. pluml&gt;

lnJond ..ntlnJ.

• Wo- ond dryer Nd1 do • forri-

lly-lizo IOid 11 tho ,.,. time or ln-

Historic Listing
To Starl Friday

FOUJl!S DA'IE SET

ONE ACCIDENT
The slate patrol, reporting
one Meigs County auto mishap
Thursday , said a vehicle
operated by Clarence A. Cornell, 60, Rt. 1, Portland, backed
into an auto driven by John L.
Gillian, 42, Pomeroy, at 9:35
a.m. on Rt.l2feastof Pomeroy.
No citations were Issued. Tbere
were no injuries.

X

• 2·Speod Wllhtr. RoJulor piUI
DIIICito llltinp fOf tho llo•ibillty 1

tomiiJ -hor muat " -·
• Permanent Prt~s Cart In both
Wuhot ond Dryer.

'38991
MIDDLIPOIT, 0 • .

•

·r

·::...

. -:::;

WAS!llNGTON (UPI) - The Cost of
Living Council served notice Saturday that
tougber hold-the-line action will be taken if
necessary to prevent violations of
Presidept Nixon's price-wage freeze.
Council E:recutive Director Arnold B.
Weber announced that in addition to twu
c:ourt actions already initiated, three
Others are under consideration, including
Cllle agaiJ\,."l a professional football team.
&lt;~ Today's

BURIED IN 1IUD - '11M huge -.:thoe ~ the MtftJ
OlostructiUt linn, main cmlractor for the Northwest
lninag1e jNujtd under OIIStruction !rim the Holzer
Medlral &lt;Uta- in dolmtown G.Uipdis 1o lbe oeor hospital m
Rl » ,became lodged in apjrOZ!malely eigbtleet of mud late

PI'. PLEASANT
The local State
Plllice Dttadllnent, A. E. BalDDgarmer,
Ttoopa; J. R. Smith, trooper and Jack
Pa SCIIS, sergeant, have been named
deftodalts in a aw action with the
plaintiff being tbe Stale of West Virginia,
a nl UoJd Ward and Katherine Ward,
dba On:bid Inn No. %.
Plaintill:s ask j1Kipnent against each
deftodalt In the llillOIAit of $200,0110 and
punitive dam&amp;gllS ill amolllt of $200,1100
IIIII c!emwMfs a trial by jury.
The ....,plaint alleges that on about
Sepl. a. lt'IO, deftodalts Ballllgardner
liiCI Smith bepllo mate regular visits to
tbe Wards tavern witllom first being
called, the fl*pose_lllll effect of said visits
being to arrest, harass llld intimidate
cuslimers a1 the lawfully operated tavern
10 tbe end of l'llinillg plpjnliffs' hleshess
IIIII m ooresMm they arrested custaners
ct11 plaintill:s' pmnises wilhom having
nlid o
to believe crime oras being
cmunjlte1f lo wit:
- an ... abom September a, 1!170
.:rated.J"un Tider, J. D. Wbeata'aft and
- On or aliod: No~
.:rated W"llliao ~·

ByUailtiiPfta' ' utioal

Mao Tse-tang, ljietator,
guerrilla leader, military
stratepl, Manis! theoretician
and &lt; nt, has '-! at war
11105t of bis Tl years!
He bas foagbt IPf"' 01ineJe
warlord dominance and
'ftlllemiulion, agAinst Olaing
KaHshek na~. Japimese
imperialism , American
c~pi'alism
and Russian

SAME DAY
SERVICE
~se Ou~ FrM P1rting lot

Robinson's aeanas
216 E. 2nd, Pomerey

tram tbe A!pDt Molle!, dncliy heJWnd the Bille ' I ifilllw.
W&lt;ri:ersused tlree build~ lo res:ue lbe '*"''*¥mast~
the night Friday, hut me•x: 'tly. IJ•+ilt; Old' the
siluaticn early Saturday tDOr11ing _ , !.any Miller of tbe
Mll"t!Y firm, Randy and Charles Whitley. Wbat to try nst, is
the questi&amp;~.

-

On or about December 3, 1970

defendant BalDDgardner in company of
two troopers from Putnam County
arrested Oflie Spencer, Joe Jeffers,
Wendell Craig and Tom llolley.
On or about March 5, 1m, arrested
Vernon Scantlin and in all aforesaid occasions the arrests were made without
warrants or reason lo believe a crime was .
X

runmiUed.
1be plaintiff's claim each of the men
were charged with public inlo:Dcation with

none of them being noisy, boistm&gt;us or
other indications of public into:rication
with all these actions intended to have
effects
customers of making them
uncomfortable and take their trade

'*'

elsewhere.

On September 27, 1970, the action said
the plaintiff COOlplained to defendant
Parsons of actions of Ttoopers and in

resp "''"' Parsons threatened lo ruin the
Orchid Inn No. 2 business and defendants
Ballllgardner and Smith were after
September 27 acting in a conspiracy
together 1o harass customers to the end of
ruining a lawful business.
.
6, 1m
The plaintiff's attorney is Harvey M.
Coben of Hmtingloo.

Young Bidwell

Driver Cited
POMEROY - AJO'*'Il Bidwdl ckiver

was arrested fullowing a singk car

992-5116

1

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

..

problem we have lo solve - economic
stability
is a serious one and we are
serious about it."
The previously announced federal
c:ourt actions sought injunctions to force
lhe Jefferson Parish school board in
ll&gt;uisiana to rescind teacher pay raises
and to compel a San Antonio, Te:r., landlord to roll back rent increases.
.Weber said similar crackdowns may
he forthcoming against the unidentified
pro football team for refusing to make
refm.ds; another Texas landlord for
lllauthorized rent increases and another
school board for teacher pay infractions.
Weber announced there were 16 other
instances in which local officials were
mable to obtain voluntary compliance but
the threat of legal action at the regional

~

cident Saturday morning at 1:15 a.m. oo
oomty road 5. tbe Meigs Couoly SJerill's
Department reprted..
Donald R. Casey, 19, was lnYeling
north on comty road 5 when his Cllr 'ftilt
off the highway m the rigiJt llld slnJcl&lt; a
mailbox owned by Slmley Doss IIIII El'·
nest Barnhart, slidded aaODthe bigbway
m the lett, and slnJcl&lt; a jMled trud:
belonging to Doss, gl-.ced oil the Ind.
and hit a plow llld fence.
There was heavy damage to the Inlet
and car. Smith was •• osttd dlorges of
failure 1o keep bis car
rigbl ball of
roadway. He was DOt in)red.
Friday at &amp;::ill p.m. Jolin G. HaJeS,
Middleport, was lraft!iing west wbel be
lost control in loose gtaM.. 1he car 'ftilt
off the highway the rigbt Do a ditcb.
There ild'e no ilijlnes '*' ansts.. MIDIIID
damage to tbe car.
·
Under lnvestigalion is a
car
fomd cowtly road~~ 18 Rmh
Ann West, Middlepoot, Rt. 1. 1he car,

'*'

'*'

'*'

'*'

driver

••txled

.mmrtm, appll'eiiii,J

baveling

north, romded a .,...... IIIII slid oil the
highway m tbe right iniD a ditcb. 1be
wlndsbield of the- was bobnlllll the
left front lire was danllgtd.

Tse-Tung Fighter All His Life

FINISHING

announcement .. . em-

X

Willilm~.

SHiftt

These included a howling alley in a
western stale, a west coast restaurant, a
chain of food stores in an eaetern city, a
western state trailer park, several midwestern school boards and landlords of
apartments and bousing in various sectors
of the country.
The council said a summary showed
2,60!1 complaints were received In the week
ending Sept. 21 with a heavy percentage
involving food price bikes.
"Almost two-thirds of retail complaints concerned food prices," the report
said. "No other consumer item accoll!led
for any substantial proportion of the
complaints."
The summary also noted that New
England with an estimated 5 pet. of the
population accomted for 15 pet. of the
complaints.

wben necessary," Weber said. "'lbe

"*'

totaled $28,519.65 while receipls
frUil Aug. 2 to Aug. 31, this
year, totaled $36,251.34. The
increase was· 27.13 pel

level did.

pbasizes our intention to be more forceful

X

..

15 CENTS

Much Tougher

State Police Suit

Trust ·Your Home Heat To.• •

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant ,

.

600,000 Asked in

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Families

Council to Get

1

Be lhrifly! Sale AI of Your ·Saleslips F.

Than 11,000

Costo Living
••

Elberfelds Are Open Tonight,

;

Chris Woods were the corn and potato scallop
dish learn in preparing a dinner. Absent wu
Ronnie Cullums.

Your Invited Guest
Reaching More

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1971

•

FridayootheRandyWhilley~, locatedacrossRl35

Wearing apparel for your family and funaWaing.
for your home.

SCOt I McKINNEY, Slew WIJHanw and

THREE SECTIONS

Pomeroy-Middleport

VOL Yl NO. 35

can Footlall Clalftittlt¥.

on all three floors-

TODD MORRISON, right, goes at the
carrots with Oifford Kennedy assisting as
these two youngsters p-epared candied
carrots during a cub scout cooking school.

34 PAGES

•14\

A Good time for family 3hopping and •11ing

\l..,

IJnJoted To 'llle Greater Middle Ohio Valley

c

Friday and Saturday Until

•

tmts

tiJI&gt;+i+.,_ns in the ' ' • will.
Sleeler COld! a.ct Noll said
he has ' - ' ~ tms 1lftl

In At 9-0ut At 5

FURNITURE

MosUy doudy with a cbance
~ showers and 6Uie ltinperabre change &amp;mday and
Mooday. Higb Sunday and
Monday mJddle 60s to lower 70s.
Low Sunday night in the 50s.

m defeolilw: tbe um.t r ·ng
game" of the .......
Oncirmti wide reuiva (ljp
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - Myers lad a mst leGiGitd
Army offlcials hope to end the &amp;um his left III1D nusday
decades-old practice of monthly and said be bapes 1o be ahle
draft calls with the new draft to play in abollt tine weeb.
announcement expected next A Cincinnati substillltl! .,..
weet. They expect to switdl lo peeled to - CIIIISideraWe ~~~:­
quarterly calls.
tim SnnrlaJ is Ella JoA
In the wate of Jl"""ag~ of the a n•10ing 1ac1t wbo pined lU
new draft law Tueaday, Pen- yards ill eight cames ill tbe
tagoo officials are working up vict..-y .,.... the Eagle
new calls for the rest of the That perfCJrii!MM'O' ;n. •wlrd •
year. Total calls for Octoba', a.,..ro .... ID•o · .., and
November and December frill helped p11 ...~ • ..,. Ia llinl
be no more than 19,500, officials p1aee io "'"'i•c in the Ameri-

Go to Quarters

1be ''Fall Follies" ~ tiJe Big
Bend Minslreal APndalicm, an
an mill mosical bas been set for
•
Saturday, Nov. 13, in the Meigs
High School auditmum UDder
the sp+•enhip of the Meigs
Local Albletic Boosters.
indicaled.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
employers doing business with
the federal government wnt be
required to list job openings
with the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services starting
Friday, OBES Administrator
William E. Garnes announced
today.
Garnes, terming !he move
"historic and significant" said
the new requirement may make
DANCE TONIGHT
thousands of additional job RUTLAND
The Rutland
listings available to Vietnam
Fire Department will sponsor a
veterans.
square dance tonight at the
Rutland High School gym
PLEASANT VALLEY
beginning at 8:30 p.m. Ad·
ADMITTED - Leonard mission is $1 fdr adults, 50 cents
McDaniel, Leon ; Mrs. Gordon for children with children under
Beatty, New Haven; Charles 12 free . Proceeds will be used to
purchase a new fire truck.
Warner,Leon;
Robertsburg;
Jesse
Legg,
Nora C. Clark,
Point Pleasant ; Mrs. Paul
Smith, Point Pleasant; Wesley
Withrow; Leon; James Pyle,
New Haven; Ben Kestennan,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Charles
McCulloch, ill, Point Pleasant.
DISCHARGES Mrs. Mike
Messner, Mrs. Milt Pearson,
Jeffery Berkley, Delphia
Thornton, Early Thornton,
Carrie Higginbotham.
x

Draft Calls May

d

+

WEAnD REPORT

d

doiltftdently.

BAKER ·

ONDER 'DIE DIRECI'I&lt;fi d. Mlsll JoAnna lllsller, left, lmle ecciiGibist of lb. IWgmhns
IIIIISOUitlemOiaoEieclricOI.,Malt Casto, Rict Blaettnar and Danny Thlmas, !rim the left,
.e whipping up lb. ap crisp dessert ala CIDscoutcooki•g school in Middleport.

"'*'

Court

Playing Ia Olaio UDiversity's marcbiag baad
Satunlay at Peden Stadium
wDl be two fresbmenstndents
from the Racille area, Keith
Asbley aad BID Beegle.
Ashley BJHI ~le are U71
graduates of Southern 111gb
Sc"-'
....... Asldey is '"·
""' ·- - of

Long Termers
JFJ.:ill be
ved

THIS ON~f

l

For JJenuals

LEAGUE RUNNERSUP- The Meadowgteen Garden
team, nmnersup in the Meigs-Masm Slow-Pitdl Softball
League this year, display tbeir individual and team trophies
received recently from League President Kellll)' W"aggins.
Front, fnm left, Charles Barnhart, Don Gulbrle, Jim
Caldwell, Don Filcll, Gary Durst; back, Keith Fltdl, Jack

have the faith too ..._ they ate the
IIY BOB IIOEI'Ual
I'OIIEROY Og memhe,-s of food they had prepared at the
J&gt;weoy Olb SI:Oit Pa.:t 249 end of the session.
A four-week course in all,
baft lbe nnw a to lbt women's
lib mo&lt;dlltlll? Or, perllaps, next week the boys will. tackle ,
tbey . , jNtpaing ... the day meatballs and spaghetti and
wbeo · the movemeot frees during the final session will
stage a tea for their mothers.
fnlm tiJe llitdleo.
Mrs. Eugene McKinney Is den
'WIIIIteftr lile caR, members
mother of Den IV and Mrs.
~the pack's Den I IIIII IV anal
(Continued on page 2)
leastta•ting om 111e Bo)' Seoul
motlo of ' "bejN'tplftd" tbroug)l
their (OO .. iltll scbooi being beld
a the tollllllllus IIIII Southern
HOUSE RANSACKED
Olio Fledric 0.. in Middleport.
Under iDvesUgation by the
l'llwer "'ADpMMJ' 4'0 '""mist
Meigs
Conoly Sberlff's
lfiss Jo Aooa Distle: is meeting
O..parlmentaadthe Bureau of
wilh members of lile two dens
CrimiDa1
Investigation is a
f8dl nell to instnlrt lhem in
food preparation. Millll Distler house burglary that ..,.,UJTtd
at tbe bome of Howard
finds the bor.; enlbu!iaslic even
CaldweU, Jr., south of Tuptbougb lbey might be a bit
·
p
ers Plains, sometime Friday
!riing in l«hnieaa bow-bow
night betweea &amp;:45 and 10:»
Sl prepaiag c6dFS
p.m. The bouse was I'IIIIS8cked
At their first m 'iug twu
and
an undetermined amount
weeks ,_go, tbe bo)'S just wal·
died the lllllli&lt; ~ Mis5 Distler. of money stolen.
llniewes ~ Walr lay. tbey dug
Qgbt in lD fl'l'll'll1' a meal. They

~ fl, le's lei'! lh'e
aid's
:0
JabB om., e, • !lu
fa-llalei we
siODI!I' and fG- IN · b'l iil
Nau-1 Ill!+ s LiCe -.,..

~~Smith

Mrs. Eva Jones Thompson,
62, Belle, W. Va., formerly of
Debbie May, RutJand, Middleport, died Thursday
morning, apparently of smoke
outlined her experience at inhalation.
.
Girls' Stale
.in Xi
Columbus
· forma 1ton
summer
when
Gamma last
Mu Accor d"mg Io lR
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi met received here, there was an
Thursday night at the home of explosion in Mrs. Thompson's
Nellie Brown, near Rock home which then caught fire.
Springs. Miss May thanked tile Unable to get out, she suffocaled, it is reported.
chapier for selecting her as a M
Th
delegate.
rs.
ompson was born
2
1909
Arummage sale was planned Feb. •
In Middleport, the
Oct. I and 2 at the Coates daughter of the late Thurman
Edith Frazier Jones. She
lll
Bu1.1d.tng in Middleport. and
was preceded in death by her W'
1r1.0
Members are to lake rummage
and by her late
to the sale location Thursday, parents
husband, John Wesley Thomp- LIMA, Ohio (UPI) - Allen
Sept. 30, from 6 to 7' p.m.
son, also formerly of Mid- County Probate Court Thursday
It 1fas announced that dleport, in 1961.
ordered 12 inmates of tbe_Siate
members will meet at tile World Surviving are a son John of Hospttal for the Criminally
B~zaar Bldg. 10 German Tucson Ariz • a daughter
Insane, who had been held for
Village, Columbus, at" 11:30 Joanrhom~ofLancaste . periods ranging from 5 to 36
a.m. on Oct. 14 for a luncheon to . sister Mrs Theresa Ha ~a years although never convicted
be fo~owed by a walking tour of St. Peters Mo. and a ~ • of the crime for which they were
the Village. .
.
Douglas ThomPson.
' charged, transferred to slate
Due to tile tri~ on Oct. H the Funeral services will be held mental hospitals.
next meeting will not be. held atlp.m.Saturdayat tbeFidler- Among those ordered transunUJ Oct. 28. Hostesses will be Frame' Funeral Home at Belle ferred lo hospitals of lesser
Teresa Swatzel and Vera Crow. Graveside services wDl foil..; security was James Phipps, 41,
Joe Welker also sent a thank· at 3,30 p.m. Saturday at !he who was committed in 1949
you note to the sorority for Riverview Cemetery in Mid· from CrawfQrd County on a
sponsoring.him to Boys' Slate. dleport. The Rev. Denver c~e of. operating a motor
Through hiS attendance there Blevins will officiate. In lieu of vehicle Without the owner's
he was offered a $500 flowers friends are requested consenl
scholarship lo Ashland College. by the' family to make con- Allen Jenks, 62, Akron, was
tributions to the Belle charged With sodomy when he
Presbyterian Church of which was. sent to tbe hospital in 1937
Mrs.
Thompson was a member. unttl he was . ·restored to
Logan Completes
reason" and could stand trial.

MARRIAGE LICENSE
Lloyd Dennis Moore, 2(
Pomeroy, and Cathy Jean
Winebrenner, 18, Syracuse.

Rated R

'*'

,.

filed.

Starring
Marianne Failhfull
Alain Oeion

ily ANN AIINOIJ)
AUSTIN, Ttt. (UPIJ -Gas
FrantJin Mubcher, the J:lo:mo&gt;.
cratic spe•ker al the Teus
House of Rl!ptmnlatives, was
indicted Thlll'3day a ·c~~uge
al accepting a bribe lo pus two
banking bills during a sporio!
legislative sessi&amp;~ · two years
ago.
"This just makes me so mad
I could spit," said Mutscber's
wife, the former Donna Axum
and the 1964 Miss America
from El Dorado , Art..
" I am confident I wDl be
acquitted," said Mutscber, 31,
~ Brenhah.
.
The Travis County grand jury
indicted Mutscher anotbellegislator, a ~tfu, aide and
a former state insuiance

House Robbed

Newsonaulo.No~geswere

-PLUS"NAKED UNDER
LEATHER"

Grand Jury Nalls
Texas Democrats

oevisionism. Where others have
failed, Mao has sucreeded even
against the goeatest of odds.
Born in Hunan Province. Dec.
a, li!B, the peasant son of a
Confucian ,father and a Buddhist mother, Mao gii!W up
rebellious to all who opposed
him. Today he rules more than
a quarter of the world's
population as a god-like, rarely
seen dictator, haled, feared and

oftenlllisunderstood ilY millions ......Y by IU bitteoest enemy,
in the Western World.
Chiang Kai-shelt and . the
He was educated as a Marxist Kuomintang Nafimaljsls Mtny.
and joined the newly !ouned His sinlggle spead lo two
Communist Party d. China in fronts in 1936, against lbiaiC om
1921. Most of the time !rim then ooe side and the ~
until 1949, when be established Japanese m the other. A year
!he People's Republic of China. la1er he jcjned forces with the
he was "" the run.
alionalists to set up a united
In 1934 he led his peasanL froltagainst the kpa11 s! . Tile
guerrillas on the incredible fr&lt;ont el'dured cmy four }1!8rs
"1""'g March," ravaged all the
{Continued om j..ge2)

GUEST
Jack K. IIIU,
Westerville, direclor of education and
community services for the Ohio Farm
Bureau Federation, Inc., will be the
principal spea~
~ 7 ·- annual dJnner mee!Utl of IINi O.W.
County Fann Bureau Federation. 1be
session will be held at Green
Elementary School, begiilnlng at 7:30
p.m.

u-u. "'

Burglars in

Two Capers

BACKFIRE BLAMED

GALLIPOLIS
Damage was
GAU.JPOLlS
Articles valued at •
estimated at $Sin an auto fire at 1:54 a.m. $700 were taken in two separate brea)!ing
Saturday on Second Ave. across from the and enterings investigated Friday night by '
Libby Hotel. A backfire through the the Gallia .County sheriff's department.. .
carburetor was blamed for the blaze in a
Deputies were called first to the
1967 Sunbeam owned by Ted Morrow of Richard Avis rdsidence on Van Zan! Rd.,
Lancaster. Five men responded to the Rt. 1, Bidwell, where aomeooe had Iaten
emergency call.
an 8mm movie camera, a tape recorder, a
bank containing $50 cash, two carlon8 of •
cigareties and a telescope.
Two suitcases, eight women's do eaaea, :
eight men's shirts and $15 cash ws-e .
reported missing in an apparent burglary
at the James Schoolcraft home on Ward
Rd., Rt. I, Vmtoo. Entry was made by
walking through the bact door.
will be at 7 p.m.
Deputies Investigated a burglary
Tickets for the dinner may be obtained Saturday at the Willow Bible Conference
from precinct committeemen or by Camp located on Tom Jones Rd., 'live
calling tn-3189 or 91t-2ffl.
miles west of Vinton. The camp's main
house was ranascked throughly. An act al
vandalism was reported by Carroll
Belcher of Dry Ridge Rd., Greenfield Twp.
Belcher said someone poured qar In tbe
gaaotine tank of his 1963 Cbevrolet aedlll.
X

x

Jones Will Speak
MIDDLEPORT - John E. Jones,
executive director of the Ohio Democratic
party, will be the speaker at a dinner lo be
sponsored on Wednesday evening, Oct. 13,
in the social rooms of the Middleport
Masonic Temple.
Jones came to his post as executive
director in the spring of 1971 following
years of political management experience
&amp;um the precinct level up. His notable
string of successes in Franklin Colllty firat
won the public eye in 1963 when be
managed Mayor M. E. Sensenlrenner's
campaign to defeat the Republican incumbent.
Jones also managed the Ma:yor's
suetbSful bid for nH!Iection in 1967.
He attributes Democratic successes in
Franklin ·Colllty to an abundance of
pncinct workers who are methodically
recruited, motivated, and properly
directed. One of his main objectives,
becoming ttecutive director, bas '-! to
revitalize the principle of precinct
org;mization for the benefit of Democratic
candidates throughout Ohio.
Jones' experience goes far beyond the
politicai. He has a liberal backgromd in
business and personnel management. In
addition, be finds time lo be affiliated with
the American Management Society, Lions,
Ohio State University Association,
Fraternal Order of PoUce Associatioo, and
the Loyal Order of Moose.
Jones, 42, Is a native of CoiWlbus IIIII
a former member of the U. S. Marine
Corps. He and his wife, Helen, are the
parents of £qui- children.
A mnnl of 200 to 300 is e:rpected to
hear the Columbus Democrat when he ·
comes to Middleport October 13. Dinner

ru

"

Grid Scores
MlcbipJI 3l UCLA

t

Nordnoeolenl IZ Syncae I
Nebnsb l4 Teus ABI 7
Notre Dime I Parillle 7
ManbaD U Xavier 13
Cottrado Zl OIIM Stale 14
Olilo Ulllvenlly flldll Stile Zl
Capital • Oide 1'11181 I 7

'*'

. WlttftberJ IS C&amp;ll'cala Stile I

.,

~::::=:==:;..

..

EYE IWRT IN rAU.
POMEROY - "Charles Cramir, . . . •
Pomeroy, was taken to Velei'UI7 • •
Memorial Hospital bJ the 1'11-1· · ;.•
Emergency Squad at 5:25 p.m. · rrldiT•:where he was RnlUtd far a
cl-" ·
the eye rec:elved wbel lie fell Clll 1111
pll!'king lot Friday ~·
•

'**' .,.,.

.
.•

NO IIBB11NG
,·
POMEROY - 1be Famer1 Q
-..;
Adminlltnlian will DOt lllllt Ia p
4

JOliN l!l. JONa

thlsweekclaetoulalfm• hcillaJIItllt

in Mother locaJII)'.

~

�ji

,_ Tbe Sll1day Tilnes&amp;nfillei.Sunday,Sept. 2S,1971

Cubs in the 5 Accidents are Minor
.
.
'
GALUPOLIS - No one was GaUipolis, failed to step and
injured or cited in five traffic struck the rear end of an auto
Kitchen
mishaps investigated here driven by' Brady Cox, 46,

.' '

.

MARK NORTON, David Lewis and Greg 'J'Iwi!as, fnm
lbe left, accepted the respoosibllity of creamed peas as they
helped prt!p8fe a meal during the cooking class.

Mao

(Continued from page I)
un Lil triangular fighting broke
out again between Communists,
Nationalists and Japanese.
Not until alter the World War
II did the fighting stop. And for
two years a cease-fire existed
between Communists and
Nationalists while Gen. George
C. Marshall attempted unsuccessfully to bring the two
sides together.
War resumed in 1947 and
raged on unlil 1949 when the
Kuomintang was defeated and
exiled to Formosa. On Oct. 1,
Mao stood at Pelting's "Gate of
Celestial
Peace"
and
proclaimed China as a Communist nation.
"The Chinese nation will
never be insulted again," he
said, "We have stood up! Let
the world tremble!"
Between 1949 and 1957, Mao
ruled China ruthlessly, purging
his adversaries and liquidating
the property owners until the
STEVE GARVERICK
old warlord class was virtually
wiped out. During Ibis period,
is a member of the marching China's economic growth was
and symphonic bands.
slow but steady.
Mts. Garverick, a student at
In 1957 he called for open
Ohio State University where she discussion and criticism or' the
is working on her Pb. D. In Chinese Communist system and
Psychology, also is a substitute said, "Let a hundred flowers
teacher in Lexington schools. bloom together, Jet a hundred
schools of thought contend."
But his "freedom," lasted only
a few months.
He called for a "great leap
forward" a year l~ter and
stepped-up iron and steel
production at the expense of
agriculture, but it, too, failed,
plunging the world's most
populous nation Into three years
of economic chaos.
'
flY 1958, Mao was ll!aking an
. opieil bid for •leadersliilf in the
international Communist
movement. In.' the 1~. while
continuing to .atfa'cl( the United
States and capitalism, he
turned his back on the Soviet
Union,' calling the Russians
revisionists.
Mao's philosophy that only
war can achieve victory for
world communism bas been felt
at home and abroad. Since the
entry of Communist China as a
nuclear (IQWer In 1964, the world
has never turned its back on the
Red Chinese or their leader,
Mao Tse-tung.
Although he often bas been
reported ill over the past five
years, the Western nations-in
particular the United Slates and
the Soviet Union-know that
should he die, his successor
mostlike1y will remain Maoist.
And they recall a song sung by
the school children of Peking:

High Marks In Algebra
CHESTER - Fourteen-year·
old Steve Garverick of
Lexington. grandson of Mr. and
Mrs. Olarles Bissell of Olester,
is proof that a boy can be active
in sports and maintain a higb
scholastic standing.
The 30n of Mr. and Mrs.
Sheldon Garverick, the former
Helen Bissell, Ste1·e received a
letter from the Ohio Testing
Services, congratulating him oo
gaining statewide recognition
fo r his outstan ding per·
formance . in Algebra 1. Io a
testing (lrogram or Algebra I
students, Steve ranked first in
ruchland County and ninth in
Ohio.
Steve bas been an honor
student for three years at
Lexington and previoW!Iy was
on the honors list at Sbelby.
'!be past summer, he played
baliebaU in the pony league and
dlring the past year was a
member of the laington eighth
grade football and basketball
teams. He plays saxophone and

ONE EfFECT of lbe 10 per ceal tax on lm(Hirl5 IniAl
the United Slates lm(Hised In President Nixon's eco·
nomic program Is evident 8,181 miles away. Japane&amp;e
shoppers (Hire over table ulensUs originally produ~'ed
for the U.S. mutet but no_w on bargain sale in Tokyo.

.....·.

,•

,•,

...... ....

·.

IN COLUMBUS
CHESmRE - John Wickline, prin. cipal at Kyger Creek High School, attended the Ohio Athletic Commission's
High School principals meeting Friday in
Cohmbus. The group met with the State
Board of Education .

Tbe sun rises and the sun
sets, but Mao Tse-lwlg bas
risen and wiD never set!"

F1o\vers, 22,
Evans,
W.Va.,
Involved
in an
accident
at was
the
Ohio Valley Bank driveway on
Third Ave. 'F1owers pulling into
the bank,' struck a car operated
by Janet Ruth Hogan, 33,
Gallipolis . Again , minor
damage resulted and no
charges were filed.
.A backing mishap occurred at
4:35 p.m. on First Ave., where
an auto operated by Helen
Francis Brumfield, 58, Rt. 2,
Crown City·, backed into a car
rlriven by Donald Eugene
Stover, 23, Pt. Pleasant. A hitskip occurred on Pine St. at
Jones Boys.
. Gerald Lee Provens, 23,
Gallipolis, reported his car was
struck by an unknown motorist.
State patrol officers investigated a minor two car
collision at 3 a.m . Saturday on
Rt. 7, one and nine tenths miles
north of Gallipolis.
Officers said Ray Smith, 18,

HOSPITAL NEWS

SUPER MARKIITS.

252 THIRD AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
OPEN9A.M. T09 P.M. MONDAYTHRUSATURDAY

PORK -LOI SALE!
PORK
CHOPS
9 to .11 Chops Per Pkg.

ONE WEEK

Ton.ighf thru
Wednesday

Center &amp; End Chops

Tom laughlin

U.~

NEW ALL-PURPOSE

WHITE

POTATOES

•

THRU SAT. OCT I, 1171-A.TTHIS STORE ONLY. NONE SOLD T O DEALERS.

THOROFARE
GRADE A- MEDIUM

WHITE EGGS
STATE FARE .
SLICED
---')

ITE BREAD
1~1b.

Loaves

MAXWELL HOUSE

.•

3-lb. Can

I

••

I

JIF

PEMIIIUITEI
IIMOOTH ar CRUNCHY

~;.

l1c

BI.UE BONNET

STICK WHIPPED

•

I

Band'sShOW

al!lyoothel'resideol'sremarks,
many ana(Jsts c:auliooed there
still is co:ISidttahil! uncertainty
thai net!ds do be cleared up,
SDch as lbe final format of
phase tero and ils effect on

oeupwale profils and the econwny in gentJal
Fer the 1l'ftl, lhe NYSE Common Stocflndeuh....ed a loss
cl D_. at 54..2&amp;. Standard &amp;
Poor's 51111 Slid index dropped
do 1.11 to 91..15, while the Dow
Jones lndusbial Average feU
W1 do •.3l.Dedinesoutnumbered ~ 1,.%40 to 437

l·

: :·

IIIIIBJ.- n•.•LI
ISIIII CIIR
' $182

·:;•

::
'•

•.'•
•••
•••'
••

••••
••••
••••
'••••
••'•
;·•

'·'•

RZFE

!"'·

·::..

4 ~·75c

••••
'•

::

.••••

five day trip to Sl Petersburg, Fla., IAJ visit with her slsler, Mrs.
Helen Healey and is entlalaiaslic about ber pleasant jaunt.
Flying by whisper jet out of Columta1s, Janet landed at
Tampa. She and ber slater visited the "Den" which is the Lenny
Dee super club. 'Wie they Wl!fC at the club, Lellny lntmluced
special villlillg gueat.s amoog whom was Mrs. Marianne CampbeD, ~. fCI'l!ler !lllllllger of WJEH Radio where Janel is
now employed. Mrl. Cauljlbellls natiooal president of American
wcmen in radio and television and was in St. Petersburg IAJ attend
a eclllfes ence of tbe group. II was old bome·weelt lime for Janel
and Marianne who were quite surprised to find themselves in
Florida at the same place at the 8llllle time.
Janel ard Mrs. Healey attended a showing of "Paris Is Out",
a stage JrO!Iw:tlm starring the long4amoua Pat O'Brien with his
wife, Ellile,playlllg opposite biDL Tbeywereatthe ''Sbowboat",
111 a tlractlve IIIJIIJ)er club just outside of st. Peleraburg.
On tbe beaCh the sisters visited aquatarlwn with perfamiances by dolpblns and seals and strolled through Pirates
Hideaway which featured live alligators, sinister sharks,
penguilll, huge turtles and otters.
Janet was quite lmpr ud with the wax I!llllelllll which
lea lured figures from Joeepline Tufll!mlnd's coUecUon. IDcluded
were 'lbamas Jelfei'SII, George w~. Jolm Adams,
Benjamlu Franklin, and a Culfederale scene featuring Stooewall
JadaiOO, Robert E. lAle and Jelfenoo Davis. Jauet folmd real
lighligbta, however, In a scene with flglres fl. astraunaut.s NeU
Armlltrmg, Ed1liD Aldren and Michael Collilll, the fint team on
tbe MCMIII; a IICCDe ol the While House with a figurer#. Mrs. Jactie
Kennedy ttandq In I!IOIIPiing attire witb the face of ber 1'11s!Jand
sloerly fadq In and out of the scene, IIIII IJN'dn oo his death bed
slowly bi'Mibing.lf you have visited a Tulllaud wax museum you
are aware, ri COIII'Ie, that the figures are scellent.

training~

CERTAINLY AN INTEREST in art
demonstralled 'l1lnday nlcht allbe Pomeroy EleJnenlary School iiben
82 J111111P1ers - BIW. up their free time - reaislered for a
coune wblch wDl be Ulldenray for ~everal 1110111111. Mrs.
Marpnl EDa Leerla, Melp High School art inllnleiAir' will he
tea :Nne lbe 1111110111. 'nle·elemintary lchool PTA Ia ...., biK
lleCWiiiwblchlldzrill""lcl'IAMim.. oflbatpll'tlealarlchool.
B d..,., &amp;trial up their free lime, tbe J"'ll&amp;l'fil'll 1111111 pay •
~lion fee, 111cwlde !IICI8t et their
and
illve VIIIIP'* tallon. So the lnll!relt Is certainly there.

""
~ -u
~

.'•
I,

:!-'•

Is he the Only Born Loser?
Dear Sir:
W'ill Rogers once said. "I only tno,. what I read in lbe
newspaper."
I do mt IJICStion Mr. R~ers. I just bave dilf'ICDity In re1ying
on the news-media in bactq up what I thonght I knew, for
example: lbd'ines (allrred a Itt by temper):
''TRICKY DICKY" ANNOUNCES WAGE AND PRICE

EARLY IN WEEK
SPECIALS
~

MON.-TUES.-WED.

,

MURPHYS

ARE OPEN
MONDAY

TILL 9

juggling," Scptemberdoesnotkd: any better. (Amelic811 Motors
will raise inmelia tely), wl*h is just an exaiql!e of fair aJid just
cooperatioo that TD. called for.
, This m«nnog (Sepl Z3) the mail man (they rUed auly)
Woaghtme my bill for autcmoblle inallraDce. Bet you ca't gwa.
''Yet, it also rai8ed."
- ldidnoticethalwelfaregotmorein lbe "few:day"bmlget;
"a habit ri the Oli.o's I.eglsle'¥re," than ed!Jcalion. Tempi~ •
!ella to ''jcin up," closl'tit? '!bat is tax free," !read.
- Tlirleen ri 16 items at a cillin store (local) inCI
I 2 ID
JOe each last week. "Ah, - t blls:s. Wbo !mows wbat lWIUIIOW
will bring!''
Name 'Wilhbeld oo Req t

own.,,...._

IS
PIECE GOODS

REMNANT
DAY
SAVE TO

50%
ON REMIMTS

, , . 'I t

Bne 5..e· A

'x

.....

,,.,

Or.,.,

Te S&amp;lisft.

Driver Hurt In Accident
POMEROY - W'llbert C.
Richmond, 57, of near ~.
!~~~i~talto VSaeterans
....;....,.,...
1..-day
afternoon for treatment of injuries received when his c.-

MONIMY

the lbrallller J!'i&amp;bt Song.
DiredGr af the . . . is David
BoWUI, assisted bJ Lewis

BCIIb h&amp;lan''s Q•eeD
Eljphplh Prioce Pbilip
are
1
dant.s
af QueeD
FREEZE"
V.ll!blria.. 1he qt
is a
Resulm to .the bCI'n loser:
great - great- gr 'dnghter
- My salary was not mly frozen, I do not receive state and · tile dille is a greatminimum salary asgt'lllted by the leg!•leluresevendyearsago, ~afQI !Ill VICIIIria..
in spite of a signed contract prier to the freeze.
-My prolessiooal mes (cWiected in Sept.) wa-e rUd..
-Laslmgbt(Sepl. 22) national T.V. news: ''The COlli of li'rinc
rose during the month of August. Uuless there is ''slatistic'll

wheel .
Taken 1AJ the ilcJipit.l by lbe
Micldleport E-R q =, Ridlmond suffttal pnwitile iiita1ll!l
in}lries ..ct alacenuw of lbe
1111Mb. 0omages to · the a t
~a tree off the New Lima ..-e heavy. The .,.. v 4 Road mthe Rulla!ld area.
wned at 2:31pm.
Richmond was traveling At 2:1M pm. the ~
north when his car wmt olt of squad wmt 1AJ lit l'lrl st. iii
UNDOUBTEDLY, cONGREGATION members of the cootrol striking the tree. He bed MiMieport. Wl!ld!l lbilll MkMleplrta.rdl ol Oliiatare proud d. their new acldltloa erbich been lmder medical lrealment taken ID Veta- M , ial
wu relining home Iller Rolpilal where a'.e - 81J.
wiD bedilplayed at a dedlcalloo and open bola! to be belclat 2this and
visiting a doctor. It was milled for medit-al IIH ws'll.
altemoon.
.
believed that be fainted at the ·

•

I'

Letters of

trois just as they are now.
IAelkd f'avwably
Allhoagh lht financial com..Uty genenJir looted lavor-

,.47

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES .ON ALL ITEMS IN THIS A.D. PRICES EFFECTIVIIE

Fll IEWTIIS • • • • • .. • • • 2 :.! ...
IIW IIIILU WIFEIS
~ 3..
CIIPSTEIS NTITI SllCIS ••
31"

dlbe...

3

among 1,842 issues crossing the
tape .
Turnover for the five days aggregated 61,173,000 shares, up
from 54,068,910 shares a week
eartier, but sharply below the
84,422,450 shares traded during
the year ago period.
GeneraUy speaking, the implications of Nixon's speech are
constructive becalll!l! it suggests
a continued great degree of determination on the part &lt;t the
administration ID contain inOa·
lion." said Fred Anshel, director of research lor Josephthal
&amp; Co.
Anschel added, however, that
economic statistics still do not
make good reading and as long
as there is a cross-current of
developments the market is lilrely to continue to move in a sideways patlers.

ms

20-lbl Bag

NABISCO FEATURES

POINT PI EASANT, W. VA.

ANEW liiKlRSEPOWER Evinrude motor was INteJied
on the beat fl. lhe Middlepcrt Etne~y Squad Saturday
lid nillf; II)' JGIII Schwarzel, left, of tbe SchiiliiUl Marine
Sales, IIi• lh«&amp;Mrt With Schwane! are, center, Middleport
lllaJcr C. 0 . Fi!ber, and Pete Kloes, chairman of the pur'· ·ng canmilfee. The motor, which retails at S5211, was
51111d1Dlbelltiddlepcrlsquadatcost by Scbwanel. The motor
. . _ , by tile squad was 17 years old.

Investors Show Doubts

D

SMUCKER'S FEATURES
Blackberry Jel~ . . .:"'· 39' Sbawberry Jel~ . . . . . . ~- 39'.
Elderberry Jel~ ... ~- 35' Peach Butter •••.•• !~b.~..... sr
Grape Jel~ . . . . . ~ 31 Goober Peanut Butter &amp;Jel~;:.s9'

312 SIXTH ST.

Ad-•.

~ ·f of the Bend

1 Grade

I

SJ'ANDFORD, Clllif. (UPI) A SlaDdford University
Jlilll a ...ring retirement
1p 1111 be p11ns to ~ an
~.....,.Mient CGIIege for older

+++++

: Beat....

i4nppr

Carolina Lumber &amp; Supply Co.

+++++

OIBEilliR safely lips listed in the pamphlet are : ~
..te•bed. .twaJs keep matcbes out ri reach ri little c:biloln!n.
dll!dt•wiliolgtoseeifitis adequate, never ~loadeledrical
d!Qils, dan"lli!l pase ll(iilllno!ate 00 or in stove, avoid using
&amp; .. eepl!le &amp; ,ah far borne deani~ jobs, clean out t1ings yon,.
..... -., dD DDt store pajnl.s and other combustibles 11W the
r.- and lleftl' Is-we clUiren at heme alme.

r---------------------·-----1"

TEACHING HERE

()()U.BGE FOR I!'JJ)ERLY

btdi-dilarsdcadallight.,s -Plan meeting place ontsidr. '
- c.n lbe lift deputmenl

Is Standout

Visit The

BOOSTERS TO MEET
MASON - The White Falcon
Athletic Boosters will meet
Monday, September 'll; at 7:30
pm. at Wahama High School.

SINCE FIIIE Pleoenlion Week (Oct. 3-9) is Olllliq: ap
U gki it WIUI be wise to list the siJ; plans for borne
In llidJ. 11RJ are: I - Family dismssi"« exit plan. 2 IJ!! . 4• raa 3 - PIP secondary way out of ·h&lt;me. t - Kftp

•llu-11)'"'. w

m1on

FAVORITE BEVERAG£S

GRANDCHJU)REN
SURVIVE
GALUI!OUS - Mrs. Gladys
Marie Boston is survived also
by two grandchildren omitted in
an earlier notice.

+++++

• •

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

l

1'\e: ,.,. Bu- Gillie State Fire Marshal's oiOOe, dislribatal
llllme 1ft safe1J ...., ..Jets to mend'n of the Gallipolis u..
a.b lal T !ao;y Jjghl wbilie addressing the local organiuliaa.

1

eFOORONGS
eFRENQI FRIES
eALL YOUR

POMEROY
Harry
Guenther, a native of Kettering,
Ohio, is doing his student
leaching in Instrumental music
in the Meig&gt;l Local School
District. He is a senill' in Education at Ohio Universtty.

• .,. wruioN. JR.

IWI!ihi YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily 'l'rihu!P
JDd • I b Ga11ia 1bikS .... Cecil C. Halley, 70, ex..teacher JDd
APPALACIIIAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT JD1em1 iilltiic In the CJiiD Valley
aid far IC'd dlilf, cbjJned by death .... Forty new lx!ildiq: siles
Dis~ct Ibis •nmmer discUss potential for the area's ecmcmic gtowlb with Gov. Jobn J .
wu;alfcr r._., Snbdivision project .... Bobby Wa1son takes
Gfll1gan. Pictured left ID right are DmaJd Buckley, executive direcllr for the Ohio Valley
first plate iii beehlwm.mship at Gallia County Junlcr Fair ....
Regional Development Commission; Dan Balmert, Portsmouth· Mike Cervey Kettering ·
8Gb Jl;adli, 011iD Uui1asily fullback IOISt to squad for .... _
Gov. GiDigan; and Robert Walker, Portsmouth,
'
'
'
l1lllcJelq Jae iiijary .... Jackie Fowler races 17 yards in first
Department-of Development. Dan Balmert, 20, Portsmouth, a planning, funding and technical qurW to gi¥e l'l " sanl Big Blacks 7~ grid win over host
The three students working in junior at Notre Dame; Michael services for the &lt;llio VaHey GABS Bille Derus.
the Ohio Valley District were Cervey, 20, Kettering, a junior District encompassing ClerHighat the University of Cincinnati, mont, Brown,
and Robert Walker, 21, Port· land, Ross, Pike, SciPartition Asked
Lawrence,
Gallia,
smoutb, a senior at the Ohio oto,
Jackson and Vinton counState University.
GALLIPOUS - Franklin
Tbe Ohio Valley Regional ties. Donald M. Buckley is BJIIOWABD LIIXDiBERG city'sEconomicClubNIX&lt;lllsaid
Real Estate Company, Canton,
Development
Commission the Commission 's executive
UPI
Wrm
now is a good time to buy
Friday filed a land partition suit
director.
coordinates
development
NEW
YORK
(UPI)
Presistocks
because "I am coofidemt
in Gallia County Common Pleas
dent N'l1l!ll Ill'"' a ping to the about the future of the .\mlri.
Court against Lois Callison,
stod&lt; martel Ibis ftek at a can economy and cmfidml
address amknown if living or her
hnsi1
••ninaledp;melinl}er about the future of America."
Pictures Shown
unknown heirs, legatees or legal
!roil, lout nalhing ""'!ld dis&lt;Uade
Wall Street, however, was
representatives.
.
c:aulioasino
III'Sandthestock
moreconcernedaboutwbatthe
Of Holy Land
Plaintiff bas legal title to an
: marht fi11jd ..l luln!r fll' the President had in mind fll' phase
undivided one half interest in
: lhinl cw
utive week.
two of his program Ia slimulale
MIDDLEPORT- The Rev. sii acres located in section 14 of
llefwe an andieno• of about business and cootain inllalillll.
Edward B. Fischer showed O!eshire Twp. Plaintiff says it
11 Wii4M1 s of the mol«
5,11111
To Ibis Nixon replied that the
slides of his trip to the Holy obtained the title from James
90-day wage-price freeze, Hich
Land to members of the Mid· Roland and Betty Ann Callison
expires Nov. 13, will be foll!IWdleport - Pomeroy Rotary aub on Dec. 10, 1970. The defendant
ed by a system of ()Oillrols that
Friday night at Heath United and her heirs own the other
will last until inflation is cllectMethodist Church following amdivided one half interest.
ed.
He said they will oover the
dinner.
The real estate firm which
entire economy, althllll!lh he
Tbe speaker, who is a con- secures property lor Ohio
indicated pr ofits would be
vention evangelist with the Ohio Power seeks partition of the
exempt from post-freeze conBaptist Convention, Granville, real estate. Plaintiff asks that
POJIEROY - 1be Meigs
Ohio, gave a commentary with the land be appraised and sold
¥ aadasmadliug bmd was
his pictures. Vice President with the proceeds divided
falaed in a well 1ec:eited
John W'ill presided.
among the parties.
balftime sm. • the Ml!igs91.U.... pme Friday night .
•. .• __.. .
.
.
To the Editor, and IAJall voters of the Southwestern"""""'~ ·.
&amp;n;)W....,
Fallue:ilc thS' lr'alitim of
1
As never beftre, the American peq~le are clllcemed witb the
opeaiag
their
halftime
1 educatioo of exceptional chikftn and youths .
tllilat wiiJle.,.LtA••river
li
But what about lbe slo!r Ieamer!
• .-...• tbe '"'lllllihiiiiiii!WD•
moved
u
~
In the life ri every clullbere comes a lime w11en aU lbo11glts dllem &amp;Ill Ill ....... ,.... the
turn to his gomg to school. And what a thrill to ride the big :re0ow &amp;bet £. teeD IIebe IJCiiOC
1
bus,
and bow they look up wilb Jrije at the "bus dlivet" behind iniD • •m. dmce rcdine ID
•I
t the wbeel.
the lead bit a-. "Bank 0'
J By Rob Hoeflich
1
BUt wbal about the slow Ieamer? Are there da
In Gill' Fill.
Jg lbeir !l)'le. the
I
I schools ftr him? Wbalcan be be elpeCted ID learn In scbool? How tw ' ,.,, pa:iallll!d a slow
t
I is he taught?
balf-lime IMR:b *P to one cl
Wake..,, Soutbweslem. Are we ready IAJmeel tbe ~? the . . hils af lbe Carpenters.'
1be coogregatlon d. the Pcmeroy Clalrch &lt;t &lt;llrist will obJ'h.- ~ I '
h
,.,
Every child bas the right to the best itJdivQW sludy '~A--·-~ ..-:~oa ... •• '&lt;JS.
serve open bouae from 1 to 4 next &amp;lllday, Oct. 3, IAJ show to the
available, and general answers are not eoougb iiben the .ms of Majarelk Swsya flllin&amp;w was
IUblic the newly redecorated upstairs of the chureb which bad to
an individual child is at slake. Where is our P"5161S? It seems we the ,__ed lwirltt.
be remodeled due IAJa fire at the churchlastAprill3.
11'&amp;1111
are lacking. Is it due to a shortage of adequately .prfpai'Cd IF'Miu« in. &amp;'"*lwiJie roraine
Guided tours will be featured during the open house. Tbe
teachers? Difficult problems fl. school adminisln~ oc IDa._IMR:bmdditidtdinto
coogregatioo has been using the basement of the cburcb for
finances? Let's get with it.
two bb "· the . . . plaJft
services since the fair .
~ial education is the .... way to meet the educaliooal ~' M wby.• db the
needs ria slow Ieamer. Every slow Ieamer is a""""""' of tbe majaelte eurps feD! ed. 'lhe
REG 'l47
TOO BAD MORE PEOPLE doo't get the opportunity to see
democracy and each bas the right that goes with lbat mem- grDIIp • hsz"s 9mt) King.
Knit 0&lt; crodorl worm.
· the tremendous job members of Ohio Eta Pit Olapler of Bela bership.
bead majaelte; Jill Harris,
dec.CW"1fi¥e
• f 9 h • n s'!
Sigma Pli Sorority do in preparing costuming for their aJIIllal
Eoch lrit cOIIIoins
Beftre you, the voters of the Soullnreslml District _ . Kanl! 1'\b, llilisa llillr, Leta
rush party.
-~&lt;/&gt; puro wool to
your decision in regard to the tu levy ID s..,port ~ u..J li1oJd, 1111 mdOI TaJial, Jemie
mok1
1 45•60" of.
This year the theme for the party was "around the world" so
ScbociofMenlal
Relardatloo,lbeg
yoo,
to
looklcng
111111
dl!tp into O.apmu. Jlllia Bitdlison,
.;..,..
3 Polti!M.
JDI'ITiben weren't Umlled in what they could come up with. Tbe
the eyes and soul of a little child who has bad his lftams sbat- Soap &lt;II§ gs mol Bact as
Instructions.
range ri costuml~ was scmetbing!
tered; a slow learner, who bas been placed in a retarded lchool Mll'lll mol Dlrta N ld*C·
1'lle bad CUDdD!Ied its
Namewithbeld m,.,.,..... . petfwu .,... IIJ -'*« off to
MRS. JANET KORN, POMEROY, has returned home fnm a

.4SELECTED .PORI-:-U~S. lowt. Inspected

PWS

t~altt

I
'

IUCiiARD IIEAGIN, lire prevention speri•list for the fire ·

Obio Department of Devdop.
ment, and the Midwestern
Advisory Committee on Higher
Education of the Council of
State Gilvernments.
According to the Dr. Qavid C.
Sweet, director of the Ohio
Department of Development,
tbe RDIP "reflects the Gilligan
administration's cmunilment
to bring the lnteUigence of
yomg people Into the political
system to help meet the needs of
Ohio's people."
The summer work-study
program sent nloe Ohio Interns
iniAl the field to work with the
Ohio Valley, Tuscarawas
Valley, and Buckeye HillsHocking Valley district plari~
ning offices in building a
regional approach to the
development of the slate's
Appalachian areas. Each intern
gathered basic data on industrial sites, recreational
potential or commwtity ser·
vices and facilities of their
dislric15.
A lOth intern worked with the
Development Department in
coordinating the program and
gathering data on all similar
state and local programs.
Completed reports will be
compiled and printed by the
RDIP and made available to the
three districts and the

BILLY JACK

FUNERAL HE! D

MIDDLEPORT - Funeral
services Ill' Heslop Russell of
Reading, formerly of Middleport, were cooducted Friday
at Reading. He Is survived by
his wife and three children, and
a slsler, Mrs. Harry Mll1s of
Middlep!l't. Mr. RusseU was the
SCIIl of the late Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Russell of Middleport.

the .Ohio Valley Regional

WHOLE OR EITHER HALF
OR FAMILY PAK

· FOIDI

••I

Gallia
ft _

Development Commissidn the

TOnight, Sept. 26 .

in
HolZer Medical Cenler, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-ll pm.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 pm. Parents only on · - ·
··...;Caiiii.rt;;;o11
o;;,n---·
Pediatrics Ward.
'
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E.
Barlow, Wellston, a son; Mr.
and Mrs. William E. Bartels,
Pomeroy, a daughter; Mr. and
Mrs, Jerrold Lee Burns, BidweD, a daughter; Mr. and Mrs.
Sunday
Merle Neal Morris, Jackson, a
son; Mr. and Mrs. Ronald F.
Reynolds, Pmteroy, a son; Mr.
and Mrs. Donald E. Roush,
Letart, W. Va., a son, and Mr.
and Mrs. Lewis Martin Warren,
Jackson, a daughter.
Discharges
Mrs. Robert G. ~Ieber, Mrs.
James W. Butterick and
daughter, Gayle Duane Edwards, Mrs. Roger lf . French,
Mrs. Donald Galll'her, Mrs.
Herchel L. Gilkey, Michaelle L.
Holley, James A. Julltice, Mrs.
Allen L. King and daughter,
Amy Dawn Lawson, Mrs.
•-TWI _
_ .,.,...
w•Chesler J. Lemley, Mrs .
PATRICK McGOOHAN
Charles E. Markins, Mrs.
RICHARD WIDMAR!&lt;
Alexander E. May, Brenda K.
Mayes, Miss Betty S. McGuire,
PLUS
Mrs. Ronald Nicholas, Roy
RusseU, Mrs. Tbeo Shelbrack,
HENRY
Mrs. Arthur R. Trout, Mrs. Paul
B. Warren and son, Mrs. Waller
Webb, Alfred B. Weiner,
Christopher S. Young and
Cyndra Nitz.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
John
Thompson, Rutland; Olarles
Cramer, Pomeroy; Hazel
Stone, New Boston.
DISCHARGED - Irene
Cartoon
Russell, David Darst, Kevin _ _ _ _ _;,;,;._ __
Holter, Lena Howard.

I
L
I

Program (RDIP) sponaored by

ii;;;;;:~

Qouble Feature Program
"THE ARRANGEMENT"
Kirk Douglas
Deborah Kerr
Rated R
- -PLU5''NAKED UNDER
LEATHER"
Starring ·
Marianne Failhlull
Alain Oelon
Rated R

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

1bree oollege students, two of
Portamoutb and one of Ket·
terinc. last week completed the
Appabcbian Resource
Development · Internship

(Continued fr&lt;lm page 1)
Friday by city police officers. Columbus. Minor damage
Robert Lewis, assisted by Mrs. · The first occurred on LoCust resulted. Smith was charged
Don Thomas; the den mother of St. near Attorney Robert s, with failure to stop within the
Den r.
·
Betz's office. According IAJ the ·assured clear distance.
FoOd for the school is report, Marilyn L. Olilders, 16, . .- - - - - -.....
provided by the power company Rt. 2, backed her car .into a
r ATft£
and there Is no charge to the . parking space and struck a
uun
cubs.
parked auto owned by the
Tonighllhru Tuesday
uWhat 's coo kin'?'' is a very Utility Leasing Corp. There was
September 26-28
literal question these days for minor damage to both cars.
· ·walt Disney's
A second accident was inmembers of the den. Don't ask
"$1,000,000 ;DUCK"
(Technicolorl
'em, 'cause they can leU you not vestigated on Third Ave., in
front
of
the
Gallipolis
Electric
Dean Jones
ooly what, but how.
Sandy Duncan
Shop where a car driven by May
"G"
Thivener, 57, struck a truck
owned by James Ti-out Sohio
Wa~g~~~y's
Inc. There was slight damage ID
&lt;Tec~nicolorl
. the Thivener auto. No citation
. .
• "G''
was Issued. David Wayne
SHOW START$7 P.M.

MEIGS lH'

...

Resource Interns Complete Job Dateline

O'Clock

Coffee
•..

OUI-

BECIRIC
SINGLE OONTROL
ms FULl1llWIN

.99
UMIT 2
OOIOWH

!IUII.WCHR.

DIIIIKG
WOBSTW

76~·~
lao% wiagiu wool woritad.
4 lllr. 4 .._ ........ F..tlian
ce~.B..I .. k-.

�ji

,_ Tbe Sll1day Tilnes&amp;nfillei.Sunday,Sept. 2S,1971

Cubs in the 5 Accidents are Minor
.
.
'
GALUPOLIS - No one was GaUipolis, failed to step and
injured or cited in five traffic struck the rear end of an auto
Kitchen
mishaps investigated here driven by' Brady Cox, 46,

.' '

.

MARK NORTON, David Lewis and Greg 'J'Iwi!as, fnm
lbe left, accepted the respoosibllity of creamed peas as they
helped prt!p8fe a meal during the cooking class.

Mao

(Continued from page I)
un Lil triangular fighting broke
out again between Communists,
Nationalists and Japanese.
Not until alter the World War
II did the fighting stop. And for
two years a cease-fire existed
between Communists and
Nationalists while Gen. George
C. Marshall attempted unsuccessfully to bring the two
sides together.
War resumed in 1947 and
raged on unlil 1949 when the
Kuomintang was defeated and
exiled to Formosa. On Oct. 1,
Mao stood at Pelting's "Gate of
Celestial
Peace"
and
proclaimed China as a Communist nation.
"The Chinese nation will
never be insulted again," he
said, "We have stood up! Let
the world tremble!"
Between 1949 and 1957, Mao
ruled China ruthlessly, purging
his adversaries and liquidating
the property owners until the
STEVE GARVERICK
old warlord class was virtually
wiped out. During Ibis period,
is a member of the marching China's economic growth was
and symphonic bands.
slow but steady.
Mts. Garverick, a student at
In 1957 he called for open
Ohio State University where she discussion and criticism or' the
is working on her Pb. D. In Chinese Communist system and
Psychology, also is a substitute said, "Let a hundred flowers
teacher in Lexington schools. bloom together, Jet a hundred
schools of thought contend."
But his "freedom," lasted only
a few months.
He called for a "great leap
forward" a year l~ter and
stepped-up iron and steel
production at the expense of
agriculture, but it, too, failed,
plunging the world's most
populous nation Into three years
of economic chaos.
'
flY 1958, Mao was ll!aking an
. opieil bid for •leadersliilf in the
international Communist
movement. In.' the 1~. while
continuing to .atfa'cl( the United
States and capitalism, he
turned his back on the Soviet
Union,' calling the Russians
revisionists.
Mao's philosophy that only
war can achieve victory for
world communism bas been felt
at home and abroad. Since the
entry of Communist China as a
nuclear (IQWer In 1964, the world
has never turned its back on the
Red Chinese or their leader,
Mao Tse-tung.
Although he often bas been
reported ill over the past five
years, the Western nations-in
particular the United Slates and
the Soviet Union-know that
should he die, his successor
mostlike1y will remain Maoist.
And they recall a song sung by
the school children of Peking:

High Marks In Algebra
CHESTER - Fourteen-year·
old Steve Garverick of
Lexington. grandson of Mr. and
Mrs. Olarles Bissell of Olester,
is proof that a boy can be active
in sports and maintain a higb
scholastic standing.
The 30n of Mr. and Mrs.
Sheldon Garverick, the former
Helen Bissell, Ste1·e received a
letter from the Ohio Testing
Services, congratulating him oo
gaining statewide recognition
fo r his outstan ding per·
formance . in Algebra 1. Io a
testing (lrogram or Algebra I
students, Steve ranked first in
ruchland County and ninth in
Ohio.
Steve bas been an honor
student for three years at
Lexington and previoW!Iy was
on the honors list at Sbelby.
'!be past summer, he played
baliebaU in the pony league and
dlring the past year was a
member of the laington eighth
grade football and basketball
teams. He plays saxophone and

ONE EfFECT of lbe 10 per ceal tax on lm(Hirl5 IniAl
the United Slates lm(Hised In President Nixon's eco·
nomic program Is evident 8,181 miles away. Japane&amp;e
shoppers (Hire over table ulensUs originally produ~'ed
for the U.S. mutet but no_w on bargain sale in Tokyo.

.....·.

,•

,•,

...... ....

·.

IN COLUMBUS
CHESmRE - John Wickline, prin. cipal at Kyger Creek High School, attended the Ohio Athletic Commission's
High School principals meeting Friday in
Cohmbus. The group met with the State
Board of Education .

Tbe sun rises and the sun
sets, but Mao Tse-lwlg bas
risen and wiD never set!"

F1o\vers, 22,
Evans,
W.Va.,
Involved
in an
accident
at was
the
Ohio Valley Bank driveway on
Third Ave. 'F1owers pulling into
the bank,' struck a car operated
by Janet Ruth Hogan, 33,
Gallipolis . Again , minor
damage resulted and no
charges were filed.
.A backing mishap occurred at
4:35 p.m. on First Ave., where
an auto operated by Helen
Francis Brumfield, 58, Rt. 2,
Crown City·, backed into a car
rlriven by Donald Eugene
Stover, 23, Pt. Pleasant. A hitskip occurred on Pine St. at
Jones Boys.
. Gerald Lee Provens, 23,
Gallipolis, reported his car was
struck by an unknown motorist.
State patrol officers investigated a minor two car
collision at 3 a.m . Saturday on
Rt. 7, one and nine tenths miles
north of Gallipolis.
Officers said Ray Smith, 18,

HOSPITAL NEWS

SUPER MARKIITS.

252 THIRD AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
OPEN9A.M. T09 P.M. MONDAYTHRUSATURDAY

PORK -LOI SALE!
PORK
CHOPS
9 to .11 Chops Per Pkg.

ONE WEEK

Ton.ighf thru
Wednesday

Center &amp; End Chops

Tom laughlin

U.~

NEW ALL-PURPOSE

WHITE

POTATOES

•

THRU SAT. OCT I, 1171-A.TTHIS STORE ONLY. NONE SOLD T O DEALERS.

THOROFARE
GRADE A- MEDIUM

WHITE EGGS
STATE FARE .
SLICED
---')

ITE BREAD
1~1b.

Loaves

MAXWELL HOUSE

.•

3-lb. Can

I

••

I

JIF

PEMIIIUITEI
IIMOOTH ar CRUNCHY

~;.

l1c

BI.UE BONNET

STICK WHIPPED

•

I

Band'sShOW

al!lyoothel'resideol'sremarks,
many ana(Jsts c:auliooed there
still is co:ISidttahil! uncertainty
thai net!ds do be cleared up,
SDch as lbe final format of
phase tero and ils effect on

oeupwale profils and the econwny in gentJal
Fer the 1l'ftl, lhe NYSE Common Stocflndeuh....ed a loss
cl D_. at 54..2&amp;. Standard &amp;
Poor's 51111 Slid index dropped
do 1.11 to 91..15, while the Dow
Jones lndusbial Average feU
W1 do •.3l.Dedinesoutnumbered ~ 1,.%40 to 437

l·

: :·

IIIIIBJ.- n•.•LI
ISIIII CIIR
' $182

·:;•

::
'•

•.'•
•••
•••'
••

••••
••••
••••
'••••
••'•
;·•

'·'•

RZFE

!"'·

·::..

4 ~·75c

••••
'•

::

.••••

five day trip to Sl Petersburg, Fla., IAJ visit with her slsler, Mrs.
Helen Healey and is entlalaiaslic about ber pleasant jaunt.
Flying by whisper jet out of Columta1s, Janet landed at
Tampa. She and ber slater visited the "Den" which is the Lenny
Dee super club. 'Wie they Wl!fC at the club, Lellny lntmluced
special villlillg gueat.s amoog whom was Mrs. Marianne CampbeD, ~. fCI'l!ler !lllllllger of WJEH Radio where Janel is
now employed. Mrl. Cauljlbellls natiooal president of American
wcmen in radio and television and was in St. Petersburg IAJ attend
a eclllfes ence of tbe group. II was old bome·weelt lime for Janel
and Marianne who were quite surprised to find themselves in
Florida at the same place at the 8llllle time.
Janel ard Mrs. Healey attended a showing of "Paris Is Out",
a stage JrO!Iw:tlm starring the long4amoua Pat O'Brien with his
wife, Ellile,playlllg opposite biDL Tbeywereatthe ''Sbowboat",
111 a tlractlve IIIJIIJ)er club just outside of st. Peleraburg.
On tbe beaCh the sisters visited aquatarlwn with perfamiances by dolpblns and seals and strolled through Pirates
Hideaway which featured live alligators, sinister sharks,
penguilll, huge turtles and otters.
Janet was quite lmpr ud with the wax I!llllelllll which
lea lured figures from Joeepline Tufll!mlnd's coUecUon. IDcluded
were 'lbamas Jelfei'SII, George w~. Jolm Adams,
Benjamlu Franklin, and a Culfederale scene featuring Stooewall
JadaiOO, Robert E. lAle and Jelfenoo Davis. Jauet folmd real
lighligbta, however, In a scene with flglres fl. astraunaut.s NeU
Armlltrmg, Ed1liD Aldren and Michael Collilll, the fint team on
tbe MCMIII; a IICCDe ol the While House with a figurer#. Mrs. Jactie
Kennedy ttandq In I!IOIIPiing attire witb the face of ber 1'11s!Jand
sloerly fadq In and out of the scene, IIIII IJN'dn oo his death bed
slowly bi'Mibing.lf you have visited a Tulllaud wax museum you
are aware, ri COIII'Ie, that the figures are scellent.

training~

CERTAINLY AN INTEREST in art
demonstralled 'l1lnday nlcht allbe Pomeroy EleJnenlary School iiben
82 J111111P1ers - BIW. up their free time - reaislered for a
coune wblch wDl be Ulldenray for ~everal 1110111111. Mrs.
Marpnl EDa Leerla, Melp High School art inllnleiAir' will he
tea :Nne lbe 1111110111. 'nle·elemintary lchool PTA Ia ...., biK
lleCWiiiwblchlldzrill""lcl'IAMim.. oflbatpll'tlealarlchool.
B d..,., &amp;trial up their free lime, tbe J"'ll&amp;l'fil'll 1111111 pay •
~lion fee, 111cwlde !IICI8t et their
and
illve VIIIIP'* tallon. So the lnll!relt Is certainly there.

""
~ -u
~

.'•
I,

:!-'•

Is he the Only Born Loser?
Dear Sir:
W'ill Rogers once said. "I only tno,. what I read in lbe
newspaper."
I do mt IJICStion Mr. R~ers. I just bave dilf'ICDity In re1ying
on the news-media in bactq up what I thonght I knew, for
example: lbd'ines (allrred a Itt by temper):
''TRICKY DICKY" ANNOUNCES WAGE AND PRICE

EARLY IN WEEK
SPECIALS
~

MON.-TUES.-WED.

,

MURPHYS

ARE OPEN
MONDAY

TILL 9

juggling," Scptemberdoesnotkd: any better. (Amelic811 Motors
will raise inmelia tely), wl*h is just an exaiql!e of fair aJid just
cooperatioo that TD. called for.
, This m«nnog (Sepl Z3) the mail man (they rUed auly)
Woaghtme my bill for autcmoblle inallraDce. Bet you ca't gwa.
''Yet, it also rai8ed."
- ldidnoticethalwelfaregotmorein lbe "few:day"bmlget;
"a habit ri the Oli.o's I.eglsle'¥re," than ed!Jcalion. Tempi~ •
!ella to ''jcin up," closl'tit? '!bat is tax free," !read.
- Tlirleen ri 16 items at a cillin store (local) inCI
I 2 ID
JOe each last week. "Ah, - t blls:s. Wbo !mows wbat lWIUIIOW
will bring!''
Name 'Wilhbeld oo Req t

own.,,...._

IS
PIECE GOODS

REMNANT
DAY
SAVE TO

50%
ON REMIMTS

, , . 'I t

Bne 5..e· A

'x

.....

,,.,

Or.,.,

Te S&amp;lisft.

Driver Hurt In Accident
POMEROY - W'llbert C.
Richmond, 57, of near ~.
!~~~i~talto VSaeterans
....;....,.,...
1..-day
afternoon for treatment of injuries received when his c.-

MONIMY

the lbrallller J!'i&amp;bt Song.
DiredGr af the . . . is David
BoWUI, assisted bJ Lewis

BCIIb h&amp;lan''s Q•eeD
Eljphplh Prioce Pbilip
are
1
dant.s
af QueeD
FREEZE"
V.ll!blria.. 1he qt
is a
Resulm to .the bCI'n loser:
great - great- gr 'dnghter
- My salary was not mly frozen, I do not receive state and · tile dille is a greatminimum salary asgt'lllted by the leg!•leluresevendyearsago, ~afQI !Ill VICIIIria..
in spite of a signed contract prier to the freeze.
-My prolessiooal mes (cWiected in Sept.) wa-e rUd..
-Laslmgbt(Sepl. 22) national T.V. news: ''The COlli of li'rinc
rose during the month of August. Uuless there is ''slatistic'll

wheel .
Taken 1AJ the ilcJipit.l by lbe
Micldleport E-R q =, Ridlmond suffttal pnwitile iiita1ll!l
in}lries ..ct alacenuw of lbe
1111Mb. 0omages to · the a t
~a tree off the New Lima ..-e heavy. The .,.. v 4 Road mthe Rulla!ld area.
wned at 2:31pm.
Richmond was traveling At 2:1M pm. the ~
north when his car wmt olt of squad wmt 1AJ lit l'lrl st. iii
UNDOUBTEDLY, cONGREGATION members of the cootrol striking the tree. He bed MiMieport. Wl!ld!l lbilll MkMleplrta.rdl ol Oliiatare proud d. their new acldltloa erbich been lmder medical lrealment taken ID Veta- M , ial
wu relining home Iller Rolpilal where a'.e - 81J.
wiD bedilplayed at a dedlcalloo and open bola! to be belclat 2this and
visiting a doctor. It was milled for medit-al IIH ws'll.
altemoon.
.
believed that be fainted at the ·

•

I'

Letters of

trois just as they are now.
IAelkd f'avwably
Allhoagh lht financial com..Uty genenJir looted lavor-

,.47

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES .ON ALL ITEMS IN THIS A.D. PRICES EFFECTIVIIE

Fll IEWTIIS • • • • • .. • • • 2 :.! ...
IIW IIIILU WIFEIS
~ 3..
CIIPSTEIS NTITI SllCIS ••
31"

dlbe...

3

among 1,842 issues crossing the
tape .
Turnover for the five days aggregated 61,173,000 shares, up
from 54,068,910 shares a week
eartier, but sharply below the
84,422,450 shares traded during
the year ago period.
GeneraUy speaking, the implications of Nixon's speech are
constructive becalll!l! it suggests
a continued great degree of determination on the part &lt;t the
administration ID contain inOa·
lion." said Fred Anshel, director of research lor Josephthal
&amp; Co.
Anschel added, however, that
economic statistics still do not
make good reading and as long
as there is a cross-current of
developments the market is lilrely to continue to move in a sideways patlers.

ms

20-lbl Bag

NABISCO FEATURES

POINT PI EASANT, W. VA.

ANEW liiKlRSEPOWER Evinrude motor was INteJied
on the beat fl. lhe Middlepcrt Etne~y Squad Saturday
lid nillf; II)' JGIII Schwarzel, left, of tbe SchiiliiUl Marine
Sales, IIi• lh«&amp;Mrt With Schwane! are, center, Middleport
lllaJcr C. 0 . Fi!ber, and Pete Kloes, chairman of the pur'· ·ng canmilfee. The motor, which retails at S5211, was
51111d1Dlbelltiddlepcrlsquadatcost by Scbwanel. The motor
. . _ , by tile squad was 17 years old.

Investors Show Doubts

D

SMUCKER'S FEATURES
Blackberry Jel~ . . .:"'· 39' Sbawberry Jel~ . . . . . . ~- 39'.
Elderberry Jel~ ... ~- 35' Peach Butter •••.•• !~b.~..... sr
Grape Jel~ . . . . . ~ 31 Goober Peanut Butter &amp;Jel~;:.s9'

312 SIXTH ST.

Ad-•.

~ ·f of the Bend

1 Grade

I

SJ'ANDFORD, Clllif. (UPI) A SlaDdford University
Jlilll a ...ring retirement
1p 1111 be p11ns to ~ an
~.....,.Mient CGIIege for older

+++++

: Beat....

i4nppr

Carolina Lumber &amp; Supply Co.

+++++

OIBEilliR safely lips listed in the pamphlet are : ~
..te•bed. .twaJs keep matcbes out ri reach ri little c:biloln!n.
dll!dt•wiliolgtoseeifitis adequate, never ~loadeledrical
d!Qils, dan"lli!l pase ll(iilllno!ate 00 or in stove, avoid using
&amp; .. eepl!le &amp; ,ah far borne deani~ jobs, clean out t1ings yon,.
..... -., dD DDt store pajnl.s and other combustibles 11W the
r.- and lleftl' Is-we clUiren at heme alme.

r---------------------·-----1"

TEACHING HERE

()()U.BGE FOR I!'JJ)ERLY

btdi-dilarsdcadallight.,s -Plan meeting place ontsidr. '
- c.n lbe lift deputmenl

Is Standout

Visit The

BOOSTERS TO MEET
MASON - The White Falcon
Athletic Boosters will meet
Monday, September 'll; at 7:30
pm. at Wahama High School.

SINCE FIIIE Pleoenlion Week (Oct. 3-9) is Olllliq: ap
U gki it WIUI be wise to list the siJ; plans for borne
In llidJ. 11RJ are: I - Family dismssi"« exit plan. 2 IJ!! . 4• raa 3 - PIP secondary way out of ·h&lt;me. t - Kftp

•llu-11)'"'. w

m1on

FAVORITE BEVERAG£S

GRANDCHJU)REN
SURVIVE
GALUI!OUS - Mrs. Gladys
Marie Boston is survived also
by two grandchildren omitted in
an earlier notice.

+++++

• •

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

l

1'\e: ,.,. Bu- Gillie State Fire Marshal's oiOOe, dislribatal
llllme 1ft safe1J ...., ..Jets to mend'n of the Gallipolis u..
a.b lal T !ao;y Jjghl wbilie addressing the local organiuliaa.

1

eFOORONGS
eFRENQI FRIES
eALL YOUR

POMEROY
Harry
Guenther, a native of Kettering,
Ohio, is doing his student
leaching in Instrumental music
in the Meig&gt;l Local School
District. He is a senill' in Education at Ohio Universtty.

• .,. wruioN. JR.

IWI!ihi YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily 'l'rihu!P
JDd • I b Ga11ia 1bikS .... Cecil C. Halley, 70, ex..teacher JDd
APPALACIIIAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT JD1em1 iilltiic In the CJiiD Valley
aid far IC'd dlilf, cbjJned by death .... Forty new lx!ildiq: siles
Dis~ct Ibis •nmmer discUss potential for the area's ecmcmic gtowlb with Gov. Jobn J .
wu;alfcr r._., Snbdivision project .... Bobby Wa1son takes
Gfll1gan. Pictured left ID right are DmaJd Buckley, executive direcllr for the Ohio Valley
first plate iii beehlwm.mship at Gallia County Junlcr Fair ....
Regional Development Commission; Dan Balmert, Portsmouth· Mike Cervey Kettering ·
8Gb Jl;adli, 011iD Uui1asily fullback IOISt to squad for .... _
Gov. GiDigan; and Robert Walker, Portsmouth,
'
'
'
l1lllcJelq Jae iiijary .... Jackie Fowler races 17 yards in first
Department-of Development. Dan Balmert, 20, Portsmouth, a planning, funding and technical qurW to gi¥e l'l " sanl Big Blacks 7~ grid win over host
The three students working in junior at Notre Dame; Michael services for the &lt;llio VaHey GABS Bille Derus.
the Ohio Valley District were Cervey, 20, Kettering, a junior District encompassing ClerHighat the University of Cincinnati, mont, Brown,
and Robert Walker, 21, Port· land, Ross, Pike, SciPartition Asked
Lawrence,
Gallia,
smoutb, a senior at the Ohio oto,
Jackson and Vinton counState University.
GALLIPOUS - Franklin
Tbe Ohio Valley Regional ties. Donald M. Buckley is BJIIOWABD LIIXDiBERG city'sEconomicClubNIX&lt;lllsaid
Real Estate Company, Canton,
Development
Commission the Commission 's executive
UPI
Wrm
now is a good time to buy
Friday filed a land partition suit
director.
coordinates
development
NEW
YORK
(UPI)
Presistocks
because "I am coofidemt
in Gallia County Common Pleas
dent N'l1l!ll Ill'"' a ping to the about the future of the .\mlri.
Court against Lois Callison,
stod&lt; martel Ibis ftek at a can economy and cmfidml
address amknown if living or her
hnsi1
••ninaledp;melinl}er about the future of America."
Pictures Shown
unknown heirs, legatees or legal
!roil, lout nalhing ""'!ld dis&lt;Uade
Wall Street, however, was
representatives.
.
c:aulioasino
III'Sandthestock
moreconcernedaboutwbatthe
Of Holy Land
Plaintiff bas legal title to an
: marht fi11jd ..l luln!r fll' the President had in mind fll' phase
undivided one half interest in
: lhinl cw
utive week.
two of his program Ia slimulale
MIDDLEPORT- The Rev. sii acres located in section 14 of
llefwe an andieno• of about business and cootain inllalillll.
Edward B. Fischer showed O!eshire Twp. Plaintiff says it
11 Wii4M1 s of the mol«
5,11111
To Ibis Nixon replied that the
slides of his trip to the Holy obtained the title from James
90-day wage-price freeze, Hich
Land to members of the Mid· Roland and Betty Ann Callison
expires Nov. 13, will be foll!IWdleport - Pomeroy Rotary aub on Dec. 10, 1970. The defendant
ed by a system of ()Oillrols that
Friday night at Heath United and her heirs own the other
will last until inflation is cllectMethodist Church following amdivided one half interest.
ed.
He said they will oover the
dinner.
The real estate firm which
entire economy, althllll!lh he
Tbe speaker, who is a con- secures property lor Ohio
indicated pr ofits would be
vention evangelist with the Ohio Power seeks partition of the
exempt from post-freeze conBaptist Convention, Granville, real estate. Plaintiff asks that
POJIEROY - 1be Meigs
Ohio, gave a commentary with the land be appraised and sold
¥ aadasmadliug bmd was
his pictures. Vice President with the proceeds divided
falaed in a well 1ec:eited
John W'ill presided.
among the parties.
balftime sm. • the Ml!igs91.U.... pme Friday night .
•. .• __.. .
.
.
To the Editor, and IAJall voters of the Southwestern"""""'~ ·.
&amp;n;)W....,
Fallue:ilc thS' lr'alitim of
1
As never beftre, the American peq~le are clllcemed witb the
opeaiag
their
halftime
1 educatioo of exceptional chikftn and youths .
tllilat wiiJle.,.LtA••river
li
But what about lbe slo!r Ieamer!
• .-...• tbe '"'lllllihiiiiiii!WD•
moved
u
~
In the life ri every clullbere comes a lime w11en aU lbo11glts dllem &amp;Ill Ill ....... ,.... the
turn to his gomg to school. And what a thrill to ride the big :re0ow &amp;bet £. teeD IIebe IJCiiOC
1
bus,
and bow they look up wilb Jrije at the "bus dlivet" behind iniD • •m. dmce rcdine ID
•I
t the wbeel.
the lead bit a-. "Bank 0'
J By Rob Hoeflich
1
BUt wbal about the slow Ieamer? Are there da
In Gill' Fill.
Jg lbeir !l)'le. the
I
I schools ftr him? Wbalcan be be elpeCted ID learn In scbool? How tw ' ,.,, pa:iallll!d a slow
t
I is he taught?
balf-lime IMR:b *P to one cl
Wake..,, Soutbweslem. Are we ready IAJmeel tbe ~? the . . hils af lbe Carpenters.'
1be coogregatlon d. the Pcmeroy Clalrch &lt;t &lt;llrist will obJ'h.- ~ I '
h
,.,
Every child bas the right to the best itJdivQW sludy '~A--·-~ ..-:~oa ... •• '&lt;JS.
serve open bouae from 1 to 4 next &amp;lllday, Oct. 3, IAJ show to the
available, and general answers are not eoougb iiben the .ms of Majarelk Swsya flllin&amp;w was
IUblic the newly redecorated upstairs of the chureb which bad to
an individual child is at slake. Where is our P"5161S? It seems we the ,__ed lwirltt.
be remodeled due IAJa fire at the churchlastAprill3.
11'&amp;1111
are lacking. Is it due to a shortage of adequately .prfpai'Cd IF'Miu« in. &amp;'"*lwiJie roraine
Guided tours will be featured during the open house. Tbe
teachers? Difficult problems fl. school adminisln~ oc IDa._IMR:bmdditidtdinto
coogregatioo has been using the basement of the cburcb for
finances? Let's get with it.
two bb "· the . . . plaJft
services since the fair .
~ial education is the .... way to meet the educaliooal ~' M wby.• db the
needs ria slow Ieamer. Every slow Ieamer is a""""""' of tbe majaelte eurps feD! ed. 'lhe
REG 'l47
TOO BAD MORE PEOPLE doo't get the opportunity to see
democracy and each bas the right that goes with lbat mem- grDIIp • hsz"s 9mt) King.
Knit 0&lt; crodorl worm.
· the tremendous job members of Ohio Eta Pit Olapler of Bela bership.
bead majaelte; Jill Harris,
dec.CW"1fi¥e
• f 9 h • n s'!
Sigma Pli Sorority do in preparing costuming for their aJIIllal
Eoch lrit cOIIIoins
Beftre you, the voters of the Soullnreslml District _ . Kanl! 1'\b, llilisa llillr, Leta
rush party.
-~&lt;/&gt; puro wool to
your decision in regard to the tu levy ID s..,port ~ u..J li1oJd, 1111 mdOI TaJial, Jemie
mok1
1 45•60" of.
This year the theme for the party was "around the world" so
ScbociofMenlal
Relardatloo,lbeg
yoo,
to
looklcng
111111
dl!tp into O.apmu. Jlllia Bitdlison,
.;..,..
3 Polti!M.
JDI'ITiben weren't Umlled in what they could come up with. Tbe
the eyes and soul of a little child who has bad his lftams sbat- Soap &lt;II§ gs mol Bact as
Instructions.
range ri costuml~ was scmetbing!
tered; a slow learner, who bas been placed in a retarded lchool Mll'lll mol Dlrta N ld*C·
1'lle bad CUDdD!Ied its
Namewithbeld m,.,.,..... . petfwu .,... IIJ -'*« off to
MRS. JANET KORN, POMEROY, has returned home fnm a

.4SELECTED .PORI-:-U~S. lowt. Inspected

PWS

t~altt

I
'

IUCiiARD IIEAGIN, lire prevention speri•list for the fire ·

Obio Department of Devdop.
ment, and the Midwestern
Advisory Committee on Higher
Education of the Council of
State Gilvernments.
According to the Dr. Qavid C.
Sweet, director of the Ohio
Department of Development,
tbe RDIP "reflects the Gilligan
administration's cmunilment
to bring the lnteUigence of
yomg people Into the political
system to help meet the needs of
Ohio's people."
The summer work-study
program sent nloe Ohio Interns
iniAl the field to work with the
Ohio Valley, Tuscarawas
Valley, and Buckeye HillsHocking Valley district plari~
ning offices in building a
regional approach to the
development of the slate's
Appalachian areas. Each intern
gathered basic data on industrial sites, recreational
potential or commwtity ser·
vices and facilities of their
dislric15.
A lOth intern worked with the
Development Department in
coordinating the program and
gathering data on all similar
state and local programs.
Completed reports will be
compiled and printed by the
RDIP and made available to the
three districts and the

BILLY JACK

FUNERAL HE! D

MIDDLEPORT - Funeral
services Ill' Heslop Russell of
Reading, formerly of Middleport, were cooducted Friday
at Reading. He Is survived by
his wife and three children, and
a slsler, Mrs. Harry Mll1s of
Middlep!l't. Mr. RusseU was the
SCIIl of the late Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Russell of Middleport.

the .Ohio Valley Regional

WHOLE OR EITHER HALF
OR FAMILY PAK

· FOIDI

••I

Gallia
ft _

Development Commissidn the

TOnight, Sept. 26 .

in
HolZer Medical Cenler, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-ll pm.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 pm. Parents only on · - ·
··...;Caiiii.rt;;;o11
o;;,n---·
Pediatrics Ward.
'
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E.
Barlow, Wellston, a son; Mr.
and Mrs. William E. Bartels,
Pomeroy, a daughter; Mr. and
Mrs, Jerrold Lee Burns, BidweD, a daughter; Mr. and Mrs.
Sunday
Merle Neal Morris, Jackson, a
son; Mr. and Mrs. Ronald F.
Reynolds, Pmteroy, a son; Mr.
and Mrs. Donald E. Roush,
Letart, W. Va., a son, and Mr.
and Mrs. Lewis Martin Warren,
Jackson, a daughter.
Discharges
Mrs. Robert G. ~Ieber, Mrs.
James W. Butterick and
daughter, Gayle Duane Edwards, Mrs. Roger lf . French,
Mrs. Donald Galll'her, Mrs.
Herchel L. Gilkey, Michaelle L.
Holley, James A. Julltice, Mrs.
Allen L. King and daughter,
Amy Dawn Lawson, Mrs.
•-TWI _
_ .,.,...
w•Chesler J. Lemley, Mrs .
PATRICK McGOOHAN
Charles E. Markins, Mrs.
RICHARD WIDMAR!&lt;
Alexander E. May, Brenda K.
Mayes, Miss Betty S. McGuire,
PLUS
Mrs. Ronald Nicholas, Roy
RusseU, Mrs. Tbeo Shelbrack,
HENRY
Mrs. Arthur R. Trout, Mrs. Paul
B. Warren and son, Mrs. Waller
Webb, Alfred B. Weiner,
Christopher S. Young and
Cyndra Nitz.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
John
Thompson, Rutland; Olarles
Cramer, Pomeroy; Hazel
Stone, New Boston.
DISCHARGED - Irene
Cartoon
Russell, David Darst, Kevin _ _ _ _ _;,;,;._ __
Holter, Lena Howard.

I
L
I

Program (RDIP) sponaored by

ii;;;;;:~

Qouble Feature Program
"THE ARRANGEMENT"
Kirk Douglas
Deborah Kerr
Rated R
- -PLU5''NAKED UNDER
LEATHER"
Starring ·
Marianne Failhlull
Alain Oelon
Rated R

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

1bree oollege students, two of
Portamoutb and one of Ket·
terinc. last week completed the
Appabcbian Resource
Development · Internship

(Continued fr&lt;lm page 1)
Friday by city police officers. Columbus. Minor damage
Robert Lewis, assisted by Mrs. · The first occurred on LoCust resulted. Smith was charged
Don Thomas; the den mother of St. near Attorney Robert s, with failure to stop within the
Den r.
·
Betz's office. According IAJ the ·assured clear distance.
FoOd for the school is report, Marilyn L. Olilders, 16, . .- - - - - -.....
provided by the power company Rt. 2, backed her car .into a
r ATft£
and there Is no charge to the . parking space and struck a
uun
cubs.
parked auto owned by the
Tonighllhru Tuesday
uWhat 's coo kin'?'' is a very Utility Leasing Corp. There was
September 26-28
literal question these days for minor damage to both cars.
· ·walt Disney's
A second accident was inmembers of the den. Don't ask
"$1,000,000 ;DUCK"
(Technicolorl
'em, 'cause they can leU you not vestigated on Third Ave., in
front
of
the
Gallipolis
Electric
Dean Jones
ooly what, but how.
Sandy Duncan
Shop where a car driven by May
"G"
Thivener, 57, struck a truck
owned by James Ti-out Sohio
Wa~g~~~y's
Inc. There was slight damage ID
&lt;Tec~nicolorl
. the Thivener auto. No citation
. .
• "G''
was Issued. David Wayne
SHOW START$7 P.M.

MEIGS lH'

...

Resource Interns Complete Job Dateline

O'Clock

Coffee
•..

OUI-

BECIRIC
SINGLE OONTROL
ms FULl1llWIN

.99
UMIT 2
OOIOWH

!IUII.WCHR.

DIIIIKG
WOBSTW

76~·~
lao% wiagiu wool woritad.
4 lllr. 4 .._ ........ F..tlian
ce~.B..I .. k-.

�Green School
PTA Held Meet

,

Etta Jamison

Sew-So Held Met
GALLIPOIJS- The Sew and
So Cub met at the heme of Mrs.
Jolm Ostergretit for their Sept.
Zl meetq. Devotlma were
given by Mrs. Monvll Swain
wbo read, "Rlgbteoua IJvlng ...
Games were played and
IX'iRI wm by Mn. ·r.wsm
Dalley. Guests attending were
lin. Fonst Sanden aDd Mn.
Beryl Rutb mn. Blrtbdays
celebrated were Mrs. Jobn
Olteqreen aDd Mn. Olarles
At the cloae of the

.. ~~:Wu.:mwm&gt;WA&lt;U:

Seen and Heard

W.¥M&gt;Zml/////HXrK~···rtr··~

GAIJJPOIJS - Mr. and Mrs.
Everett Hunter, Sarasota, Fla.
Visited with Mrs. Clara Richmond, 1062 Second Ave. They
left on Thursday morning.
·

CENTENARY - Mrs. Carl
Gillespie, president, presided
over the first meeting of tbe
school year of . the Gree;,
Elementary PTA. Mrs.
Gillespie extended a welcome to
everyone present, especially
the new parents.
Devotions chairman, Mrs.
Kurt Rutz, recited a poem "The
Great Guest," and read ·from
Matthew 25.
·
Mrs. Gary Steele, vicepresident, was introduced and
told the group of the plans for
the coming y~. Mrs. Gillespie .
also introduced Mrs. Marion
Caldwell, secretary, and .Mr. ·
Lester Plymale, treasurer, whO
gave their respective reports.
RIO GRANDE-THE STtlDENT ACl'lVITIES COMMITI'EE II Rio Grande Is sponsoring
Green Elementary School
a
show
which will be giVl!ll by the t)nega• at the Paul R.l,yne Center m Sept. 30al9p.m. The
principal, James Baughman,
was introduced and welcomed Omegas are 111e of Pittsburgh's most recent gi'OI.,a to bit the Midwest Entertainment scene.
Although a nine-piece group they JI'O(Dce a big band sound, The group Is successful in both
each parent to come to his office
,l.iw.~
at any time for diacussion or concerts or sOcial functims ..The Omegas couple present a truly p:vfessional show with their
counselling. Mr. Baughman expert mualclanship to make lbem a bit.
presented each teacher to the
Students going to the show must show their I .D.'s while admissi'lll to the public Is $1 at the
group as follows : Mrs. Joyce door.
Myers, kindergarten ; Mrs.
Diana Leith and Mrs. Kathryn
•
•
.
:
wa-ihaAL = :A.
•
Carter,firstandsecondgrades;
'l'UESDAY
SALES AT $39,118
·~:
Mrs. Barbara Myers, S«lCCnd
THE GOLDEN Circle, an
POMEROY - The sale of :
:
:
grade;Mrs. BettyFinney,third
organization for the senior Series E and H United states
~t:L;
citizens of Gallipolis, will meet Savings Bonds in Meigs County •
grade; Mrs. l..ouise Greenlee
•
and Mrs. Geraldine Gibson,
at the Grace United Methodist for the month of Augw;t totaled ·: --lfllll-. ft a - ~:
third and fourth grades; Mrs.
Church at 1:30 p.m.
$39,160, Theodore T. Reed, Jr.,
:
RIVERSIDE Study Club, 1 county volunteer savings bonds :
Earnestine Spriegel, fifth
:
.
:
grade; Mr. C. A. Doncan, sixth
p.m., with Mrs. Howard chainnan, has reported. The
grade ; Mr. Jerry Davis,
Leimann.
county achieved 65.6 pet. of its
•
seventh grade, an~ Miss =:~SCHOOL will be held , AME_RIC~ Legion Auxiliary yearly sales goal at the end of
!fll'aDDt•e "atNfiS
Marlene Hoffman, mUSic.
tC ksCha IStmda 2
meetingwillbeheldal7:30p.m. August.
Committee chairmen a 00
pe
y, p.m._ at the hall.
recognized wer~: Mrs. Plli1 MONDAY
..
WEDNESDAy
Pope and Mrs. Ricard Sterrett, THE LAPIES A~ to the WOMEN'S GOLF Association
hospitality ; Mrs. Ronnie H811ey Veterans of Foreign Wars will G t da rolls and coffee 9
and Mrs. R. R. Dennison, meet 7 p.m. This is a ues dytee-o!
, f time 9.30 am
.
f
thisaman
.
··
membership; Mrs. Jerry rescheduled meeting or
· ·
Myers, magazin~ ;
Mrs. month only.
·
Lawrence Wilcoxon, Mrs. THE ORDER of Eastern Star
Hobart Foster, and Mrs. Paul :1ll3willholdFriendshipNigbtat
D. Niday, nominating;_'?'dMrs. its regular meeting, 7:30 p,m.
Armenian Dlab
Lester Plymale, publiCity.
All chapters invited.
Shish kebab is an ArmenOn Oct. 7 the PTA will serve O.C.S.E.A. Gallia Chapter will ian dish of lamb, tomatoes.
the annual Farm Bureau meet in regular and Special peppers and onions , cooked
banquet. The homeroom monlhlybusinessal7:30p.m. at together on a skewer. The
dish, with variations, has bemothers will be asked to assist 1622 Eastern Ave. Grande come a popular meal of peoat this banquet.
Square's aub Rooms. Refreoh. ple in the United States,
"Wonderful World of Ohio," ments and Grocery BINGO.
Canada and other countries.
the Ohio Bell film narrated by
Ed Ames was used as the
evening's program.
Mrs. Kathryn Carter's first
TtE BIGGEST SINGER SALE OF ntE YEAR
TtE BIGGEST SINGER SAL£ OF lltE YEAR
and second grade room had the
largest percentage of parents
present and was presented the
attendance prize.

SOLID HEADS

·The Omegas

GSI Volunteer
OJ The Month
GAIJ.lPOIJS - Mrs. Etta
Jamison has been elected as
volunleer of the month for
AUgust. She has been assisting
in the Occupational Therapy
program at the Gallipolis State
Institute for many years. She
has made diapers bY the dozen
for the crib awards, draperies
for cottages and aprons for the
residenta to embroider. Mrs.
Jamison received a certificate
• at the Volunteer Tea held this
month.
Mrs. Elizabeth Phillips,
Volunteer and Medical Records
Ubrarian of the Gallipolis State
Institute, has been chosen as
vol1jllteer of the month lor
September. Mrs. Phillips has
been very active with the
Garden Therapy program. Her
duties consist of the coordination of the program with
areagardenclubs,planningand
programming.
Twenty
residents benefit from this
program annually.

\

5- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 2li,l971_

.

...

....
.
....
,.
l isajiJ

.

! , .....

~

:.. Id..... :..

I·

Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Copeland

Couple United In
Afternoon Service

an e~re waistline. The
detac!Wble chapel length tram
was edged in lace. Her elbowlength veil was held with a
headed hairpiece with pearl
teardrops. She carried a
cascade of while and yellow
daisies on a while Bible. Her
only jewelry was a pair of pearl
earrings.
Miss Lana Armstrong, sister
of the bride, was maid of honor .
She wore a purple polyester knit
dress accented with while at the
neck and white sash. She wore a
gold net head cover accented
with gold bows. She carried a
nosegay of small while and gold

Medical Center.
Mr. Copeland is a 1970
graduate of Jefferson High
School, Dayton. He was employild at the Chrysler Air Tent
before entering the Navy Jan.
14, 1971.

Com'l·ng
Even tS

..

I

......

.: tt;:t•
•

. .
___
P5 5

. . .

:

il :·
- ·

: ....,.••••=
" :,
............
.
....__

AREMEIIT

A_UC.rv.d

CROWN CITY - Miss Marian presently employed at Holzer

Armstrong, daughter fl. Mrs.
Margaret Armstrong, Teen$
R~ R?Bd, ~ City, was
united m marnage Aug. I~ to
UTCA Doyle_Copeland, Jr., U.
S. Navy, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Doyle Copeland,_Sr., Dayton.
The double nng ceremony
was performed bY Rev. James
Morgan, associate pastor of the
Holy Temple Church of God in
Christ, Dayton, and brother-inlaw of the bride, at the bride's
home, Teens Run Road at 1:30
p.m.
As the couple's mothers were
being seated, Miss Jocelyn
Smith, New York City, cousin of
tlie bride, played "The Love
Story." Mrs. Wilbert Stoney,
Gallipolis ,
played
the
traditional wedding march.
The bride, given in marriage
by her oldest ·brother, Earl
Armstrong, Jr., wore a floorlength gown of white silk
organza and peau-de-ange lace.

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

LB.

After a brief honeymoon, Mr.
Copeland will be stationed in
Argentia, Newfoundland where
he will be joined shortly by his
bride.
Rela tives and friends attending were, Mr. and Mrs.
Doyle Copeland, Sr., Deboria
Ragland, Mrs. Anglia Hickman,
Rev. and Mrs. James Morgan
and family, Mr . and Mrs. David
Crim and family , Dayton.
Charles Williams, Ralph
Dimi tt, Wydell
Gainer ,
Columbus ; Mr . and Mrs.
Stanford Armstrong and sons,
Dennis Anthony, Compton,
Calif.; S. Sgt. and Mrs. Earl
Armstrong, Jr. and daughter,
AIDS MANEUVERS
Offutt Air Force Base, Neb.;
R
.
~ ~eqnet Smitj) and
mME OY - Airman Roy C,
dilughter, New York Ci~'; Mr. 'Lyons, son ' of Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Gene Armstrong and Charles R_. Lyons., of Rt: 2,
family, Bidwell: •Mrs.· Wilbert POJIIeroy, IS parUctpatlng_m a
NATO f trammg
Stoney and daughters ' Julia masstve
. be'
d ted .
mg co~ uc . . m
Carr and Bobby Dean Gordon, exerciSe
Gallipolis.
West Germany. He 1B a vehicle
.
repairman on the Holloman
AFB, N. M.,team supporting FSeismologists generally 4 Phantom aircrews flying in
agree that at present there Is the month-long maneuvers.
no means of reliably predicting an earthquake any- Lyons Is a '71 graduate of Meigs
High School.
where.

FAMILY SIZE

10 LB. 11

IAN
AND SON

Now! CUt prices on
OneTouch Sewing and a
•Pacesetter cabinet, too.
A new Touch &amp; Sew•
zig-zag machine.
7 stretch stitches,
buttonholer.
nger exclusive
Push-Button
Bobbin I
Reg. :1379.95

Have the Fashion Mate• machine
in a Kingston cabinet (what a
plus atthis price!) Sews forward,.
reverse, mends and dams.
Or gel the Fashion Mate•
i
machine that sews ·
buHonholes, sews on
buHons and has its own
carrying case. Singer
quality-what a plus!

STOKELYS

TOMATO

oz

8 oz. CANS

SAUCE

NOW

299.95'

1

.a Sermonette

GAIJJPOIJS - Mrs. Ralph
Hughes, llrlllel' resident II
Kanauga, called on Mrs.
Jl1orence R. Houck of CoJnmbua
Sept. 21, to belp Mn. Houck
Blockades to Spiritual Blessings
celelnte her blrtbday.
BY HOYT ALLEN
Tbey wwe once nelgbbcn In pompons.
Mr.
David
Armstrong,
Pastor,
Pomeroy
Cburcb of Christ
Kanauga. Mrs. Hughes, brother of the bride, served as
buband and two cbUdren, best man.
·
POMEROY - The Apostle Paul in Rlxnans 6:4 says th.ese
Scotty IIIII Sarah, live at 2260
For her daughter's wedding, words, "Therefore we are buried with him by baplism Into death :
Buctley st., ColnmhJS.
Mrs. Armstrong wore an aqua that like as Ou-isl was raised up from the dead by the glory of the
blue polyester crepe with silver Father, evensowealsoshould walkinnewnessoflife."
RIO GRANDE - Mrs. Marie jeweled midriff and long sheer
All Bible believing Christians take this verse 0! Scripture to
Richards, Rio Grande, returned sleeves. Her accessories were mean that when a person is raised from the watery grave of
Wednesday from attending a · white. She wore a corsage of baptism,hei.stowalkinanewwayoflife.
Women United· Church con- white daisies.
God promises His children (Christians ) spiritual blessings.
ference meeting which was held
The groom's mother, Mrs. But, as Ou-istians are free to choose rather or not to be faithful to
for I Y.t days at Proctor Farms Copeland, wore a light green God,lhey can pulup "blockades" to shut themselves off from His
near London.
satin dress with pleated spiritual blessings.
'
overskirt ol nylon and long
Two ri these blOCkades are :
VINTON- Mr. and Mrs. Ray sheer sleeves. She wore white
Selflshness: Selfish people think only of themselves. The
Clark, Vinton, and Mr. Ralph
accessories and a corsage of Gospel according to Luke, chapter 12, tells of a man which God
Macomber, Dexter, were
calls a "fool" (v. :lfl). This man had a great harvest on his farm. In
weekend guests of Mrs. Lula white daisies.
Immediately following the fact, his barns would not even hold all of his harvest. Instead of
Evans, Mr. and Mrs. Elsworth
ceremony the reception was the man sharing his crops with those in need, be thought only of
Graham and Mr. and Mrs.
George Evans, 811 of Fostoria. held on the lawn. The bride's hlmseH. The modern day version of this Incident wOuld very likely
table was covered with a white read, "This (fool) wanted to build up a large checking account."
linen cloth and featured a two- Selfish people only resp what they sow, and II can senre as a
tier wedding cake with yellow blockade to spiritual blessings.
"Bet IJ.De"
Tbe s.c811ed "Hot IJne" roses lopped with a miniature
Prayerlessness: Prayerless people are trouble people and
Is a two-way telegraph tele- bride and groom. Presiding at
~~•ft••
printer linking Washington, ihe bride's table were Mrs. they soon become disobedient to God's tea~~.... Olrislians
should be willing to pray allessl in the morning, at mealtimes,
D.C., and Moscow. -The line
Bobby
Gordon
and
Mrs.
d bed time A ood
· -ill Is
dful thing " ·
makes it possible for the Margaret Armstrong.
_an a 1 .
. g . prayer e a nee
m everPresident of the U n i t e d
A eddlng dinner was served body's life. A non.praymg church will not grow. Ukewise, a nmStates and the Russian J!re- follo:ing tJ\e reception.
. prayilig Cbrlslian w~ rema_ina babe in Christ unless they are in a
mier to communicate if a
The
new
Mrs.
Copeland
is
a
good relatimshlp With _thell' Heavenly Father thr~ _prayer.
crisia arises.
1970 graduate of Gallia Truly, lack of prayer will cause a blockade to the Ouislian, and
Academy Hi~h· School and is will shut off spiritual blessings.

WORLD~C

SATURDAY and SUNDAY
SEPTEMBER 25th &amp; 26th

CAMDEN PARK'S

I.G.A.
FALL FABRIC: SPECIA~S

45"

Permanent
Press
Prints
'2.98
to

Reg.

FLOUR

SAVE15%

25 LB. BAG

yd.

Pin Wale Cordu
'1.98
Prints

45" machine wash

KAHN'S

WHOLE
OR HALF

SLAB

SLICED

AMERICAN
BEAUTY

BACON

OLD FASHIONED

SLABS

BACON

SMAllER
PlEas

ONLY

39'1B.

Reg. '3.98

Bond~d

Acrylic

Plaids &amp; Solids, 54" machine wash

Reg. s4.49 yd. -------~---Reg, '2.25 Yd.

No

le Cordu

45"

Reg. '3.69 yd.

,...L....ux~u~P~_Ie_- AI:-;;IJiic~~~~~--==~..J
60
-"

ANNUAL

"APPRECIATION DAYS''
The pulfm, or sea parrot,
II a ebunty bird whlch is
an -neat swimmer and
diver but is clumsy on land
and Ia fllgbt. The World
Almanac notes that its
larp, triangular blll is
adarted to carrying SeV·
era flab It one time.

YOUR CHOICE OF
REDUCED PRICE lTICKETS
OR

•3.00 HAND

STA&amp;~~»

GOOD FOR ALL Rl DEsALL DAY- ll:OOa.m. TillO:OOp.m.

French City_Fabrl·c Shoppe
OPEN 'TILl P.M. MON. &amp; FRI. NIGHTS
Simplicity, Me Calls. Butterick, Vogue Patterns-2 Complete Floors
of Fabrics &amp; Notions
. We Do Custom Dress Making-Singer Sales &amp; Service

58 Court Street

OHIO

Phone 446-9255

1

..

•

•

~ ~----~----~------- 1~~--~--~~----------------------._--~---.~~-~~-----j_~----~~----~----~----------------~------------~ L--~----~------~~---

�Green School
PTA Held Meet

,

Etta Jamison

Sew-So Held Met
GALLIPOIJS- The Sew and
So Cub met at the heme of Mrs.
Jolm Ostergretit for their Sept.
Zl meetq. Devotlma were
given by Mrs. Monvll Swain
wbo read, "Rlgbteoua IJvlng ...
Games were played and
IX'iRI wm by Mn. ·r.wsm
Dalley. Guests attending were
lin. Fonst Sanden aDd Mn.
Beryl Rutb mn. Blrtbdays
celebrated were Mrs. Jobn
Olteqreen aDd Mn. Olarles
At the cloae of the

.. ~~:Wu.:mwm&gt;WA&lt;U:

Seen and Heard

W.¥M&gt;Zml/////HXrK~···rtr··~

GAIJJPOIJS - Mr. and Mrs.
Everett Hunter, Sarasota, Fla.
Visited with Mrs. Clara Richmond, 1062 Second Ave. They
left on Thursday morning.
·

CENTENARY - Mrs. Carl
Gillespie, president, presided
over the first meeting of tbe
school year of . the Gree;,
Elementary PTA. Mrs.
Gillespie extended a welcome to
everyone present, especially
the new parents.
Devotions chairman, Mrs.
Kurt Rutz, recited a poem "The
Great Guest," and read ·from
Matthew 25.
·
Mrs. Gary Steele, vicepresident, was introduced and
told the group of the plans for
the coming y~. Mrs. Gillespie .
also introduced Mrs. Marion
Caldwell, secretary, and .Mr. ·
Lester Plymale, treasurer, whO
gave their respective reports.
RIO GRANDE-THE STtlDENT ACl'lVITIES COMMITI'EE II Rio Grande Is sponsoring
Green Elementary School
a
show
which will be giVl!ll by the t)nega• at the Paul R.l,yne Center m Sept. 30al9p.m. The
principal, James Baughman,
was introduced and welcomed Omegas are 111e of Pittsburgh's most recent gi'OI.,a to bit the Midwest Entertainment scene.
Although a nine-piece group they JI'O(Dce a big band sound, The group Is successful in both
each parent to come to his office
,l.iw.~
at any time for diacussion or concerts or sOcial functims ..The Omegas couple present a truly p:vfessional show with their
counselling. Mr. Baughman expert mualclanship to make lbem a bit.
presented each teacher to the
Students going to the show must show their I .D.'s while admissi'lll to the public Is $1 at the
group as follows : Mrs. Joyce door.
Myers, kindergarten ; Mrs.
Diana Leith and Mrs. Kathryn
•
•
.
:
wa-ihaAL = :A.
•
Carter,firstandsecondgrades;
'l'UESDAY
SALES AT $39,118
·~:
Mrs. Barbara Myers, S«lCCnd
THE GOLDEN Circle, an
POMEROY - The sale of :
:
:
grade;Mrs. BettyFinney,third
organization for the senior Series E and H United states
~t:L;
citizens of Gallipolis, will meet Savings Bonds in Meigs County •
grade; Mrs. l..ouise Greenlee
•
and Mrs. Geraldine Gibson,
at the Grace United Methodist for the month of Augw;t totaled ·: --lfllll-. ft a - ~:
third and fourth grades; Mrs.
Church at 1:30 p.m.
$39,160, Theodore T. Reed, Jr.,
:
RIVERSIDE Study Club, 1 county volunteer savings bonds :
Earnestine Spriegel, fifth
:
.
:
grade; Mr. C. A. Doncan, sixth
p.m., with Mrs. Howard chainnan, has reported. The
grade ; Mr. Jerry Davis,
Leimann.
county achieved 65.6 pet. of its
•
seventh grade, an~ Miss =:~SCHOOL will be held , AME_RIC~ Legion Auxiliary yearly sales goal at the end of
!fll'aDDt•e "atNfiS
Marlene Hoffman, mUSic.
tC ksCha IStmda 2
meetingwillbeheldal7:30p.m. August.
Committee chairmen a 00
pe
y, p.m._ at the hall.
recognized wer~: Mrs. Plli1 MONDAY
..
WEDNESDAy
Pope and Mrs. Ricard Sterrett, THE LAPIES A~ to the WOMEN'S GOLF Association
hospitality ; Mrs. Ronnie H811ey Veterans of Foreign Wars will G t da rolls and coffee 9
and Mrs. R. R. Dennison, meet 7 p.m. This is a ues dytee-o!
, f time 9.30 am
.
f
thisaman
.
··
membership; Mrs. Jerry rescheduled meeting or
· ·
Myers, magazin~ ;
Mrs. month only.
·
Lawrence Wilcoxon, Mrs. THE ORDER of Eastern Star
Hobart Foster, and Mrs. Paul :1ll3willholdFriendshipNigbtat
D. Niday, nominating;_'?'dMrs. its regular meeting, 7:30 p,m.
Armenian Dlab
Lester Plymale, publiCity.
All chapters invited.
Shish kebab is an ArmenOn Oct. 7 the PTA will serve O.C.S.E.A. Gallia Chapter will ian dish of lamb, tomatoes.
the annual Farm Bureau meet in regular and Special peppers and onions , cooked
banquet. The homeroom monlhlybusinessal7:30p.m. at together on a skewer. The
dish, with variations, has bemothers will be asked to assist 1622 Eastern Ave. Grande come a popular meal of peoat this banquet.
Square's aub Rooms. Refreoh. ple in the United States,
"Wonderful World of Ohio," ments and Grocery BINGO.
Canada and other countries.
the Ohio Bell film narrated by
Ed Ames was used as the
evening's program.
Mrs. Kathryn Carter's first
TtE BIGGEST SINGER SALE OF ntE YEAR
TtE BIGGEST SINGER SAL£ OF lltE YEAR
and second grade room had the
largest percentage of parents
present and was presented the
attendance prize.

SOLID HEADS

·The Omegas

GSI Volunteer
OJ The Month
GAIJ.lPOIJS - Mrs. Etta
Jamison has been elected as
volunleer of the month for
AUgust. She has been assisting
in the Occupational Therapy
program at the Gallipolis State
Institute for many years. She
has made diapers bY the dozen
for the crib awards, draperies
for cottages and aprons for the
residenta to embroider. Mrs.
Jamison received a certificate
• at the Volunteer Tea held this
month.
Mrs. Elizabeth Phillips,
Volunteer and Medical Records
Ubrarian of the Gallipolis State
Institute, has been chosen as
vol1jllteer of the month lor
September. Mrs. Phillips has
been very active with the
Garden Therapy program. Her
duties consist of the coordination of the program with
areagardenclubs,planningand
programming.
Twenty
residents benefit from this
program annually.

\

5- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 2li,l971_

.

...

....
.
....
,.
l isajiJ

.

! , .....

~

:.. Id..... :..

I·

Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Copeland

Couple United In
Afternoon Service

an e~re waistline. The
detac!Wble chapel length tram
was edged in lace. Her elbowlength veil was held with a
headed hairpiece with pearl
teardrops. She carried a
cascade of while and yellow
daisies on a while Bible. Her
only jewelry was a pair of pearl
earrings.
Miss Lana Armstrong, sister
of the bride, was maid of honor .
She wore a purple polyester knit
dress accented with while at the
neck and white sash. She wore a
gold net head cover accented
with gold bows. She carried a
nosegay of small while and gold

Medical Center.
Mr. Copeland is a 1970
graduate of Jefferson High
School, Dayton. He was employild at the Chrysler Air Tent
before entering the Navy Jan.
14, 1971.

Com'l·ng
Even tS

..

I

......

.: tt;:t•
•

. .
___
P5 5

. . .

:

il :·
- ·

: ....,.••••=
" :,
............
.
....__

AREMEIIT

A_UC.rv.d

CROWN CITY - Miss Marian presently employed at Holzer

Armstrong, daughter fl. Mrs.
Margaret Armstrong, Teen$
R~ R?Bd, ~ City, was
united m marnage Aug. I~ to
UTCA Doyle_Copeland, Jr., U.
S. Navy, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Doyle Copeland,_Sr., Dayton.
The double nng ceremony
was performed bY Rev. James
Morgan, associate pastor of the
Holy Temple Church of God in
Christ, Dayton, and brother-inlaw of the bride, at the bride's
home, Teens Run Road at 1:30
p.m.
As the couple's mothers were
being seated, Miss Jocelyn
Smith, New York City, cousin of
tlie bride, played "The Love
Story." Mrs. Wilbert Stoney,
Gallipolis ,
played
the
traditional wedding march.
The bride, given in marriage
by her oldest ·brother, Earl
Armstrong, Jr., wore a floorlength gown of white silk
organza and peau-de-ange lace.

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

LB.

After a brief honeymoon, Mr.
Copeland will be stationed in
Argentia, Newfoundland where
he will be joined shortly by his
bride.
Rela tives and friends attending were, Mr. and Mrs.
Doyle Copeland, Sr., Deboria
Ragland, Mrs. Anglia Hickman,
Rev. and Mrs. James Morgan
and family, Mr . and Mrs. David
Crim and family , Dayton.
Charles Williams, Ralph
Dimi tt, Wydell
Gainer ,
Columbus ; Mr . and Mrs.
Stanford Armstrong and sons,
Dennis Anthony, Compton,
Calif.; S. Sgt. and Mrs. Earl
Armstrong, Jr. and daughter,
AIDS MANEUVERS
Offutt Air Force Base, Neb.;
R
.
~ ~eqnet Smitj) and
mME OY - Airman Roy C,
dilughter, New York Ci~'; Mr. 'Lyons, son ' of Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Gene Armstrong and Charles R_. Lyons., of Rt: 2,
family, Bidwell: •Mrs.· Wilbert POJIIeroy, IS parUctpatlng_m a
NATO f trammg
Stoney and daughters ' Julia masstve
. be'
d ted .
mg co~ uc . . m
Carr and Bobby Dean Gordon, exerciSe
Gallipolis.
West Germany. He 1B a vehicle
.
repairman on the Holloman
AFB, N. M.,team supporting FSeismologists generally 4 Phantom aircrews flying in
agree that at present there Is the month-long maneuvers.
no means of reliably predicting an earthquake any- Lyons Is a '71 graduate of Meigs
High School.
where.

FAMILY SIZE

10 LB. 11

IAN
AND SON

Now! CUt prices on
OneTouch Sewing and a
•Pacesetter cabinet, too.
A new Touch &amp; Sew•
zig-zag machine.
7 stretch stitches,
buttonholer.
nger exclusive
Push-Button
Bobbin I
Reg. :1379.95

Have the Fashion Mate• machine
in a Kingston cabinet (what a
plus atthis price!) Sews forward,.
reverse, mends and dams.
Or gel the Fashion Mate•
i
machine that sews ·
buHonholes, sews on
buHons and has its own
carrying case. Singer
quality-what a plus!

STOKELYS

TOMATO

oz

8 oz. CANS

SAUCE

NOW

299.95'

1

.a Sermonette

GAIJJPOIJS - Mrs. Ralph
Hughes, llrlllel' resident II
Kanauga, called on Mrs.
Jl1orence R. Houck of CoJnmbua
Sept. 21, to belp Mn. Houck
Blockades to Spiritual Blessings
celelnte her blrtbday.
BY HOYT ALLEN
Tbey wwe once nelgbbcn In pompons.
Mr.
David
Armstrong,
Pastor,
Pomeroy
Cburcb of Christ
Kanauga. Mrs. Hughes, brother of the bride, served as
buband and two cbUdren, best man.
·
POMEROY - The Apostle Paul in Rlxnans 6:4 says th.ese
Scotty IIIII Sarah, live at 2260
For her daughter's wedding, words, "Therefore we are buried with him by baplism Into death :
Buctley st., ColnmhJS.
Mrs. Armstrong wore an aqua that like as Ou-isl was raised up from the dead by the glory of the
blue polyester crepe with silver Father, evensowealsoshould walkinnewnessoflife."
RIO GRANDE - Mrs. Marie jeweled midriff and long sheer
All Bible believing Christians take this verse 0! Scripture to
Richards, Rio Grande, returned sleeves. Her accessories were mean that when a person is raised from the watery grave of
Wednesday from attending a · white. She wore a corsage of baptism,hei.stowalkinanewwayoflife.
Women United· Church con- white daisies.
God promises His children (Christians ) spiritual blessings.
ference meeting which was held
The groom's mother, Mrs. But, as Ou-istians are free to choose rather or not to be faithful to
for I Y.t days at Proctor Farms Copeland, wore a light green God,lhey can pulup "blockades" to shut themselves off from His
near London.
satin dress with pleated spiritual blessings.
'
overskirt ol nylon and long
Two ri these blOCkades are :
VINTON- Mr. and Mrs. Ray sheer sleeves. She wore white
Selflshness: Selfish people think only of themselves. The
Clark, Vinton, and Mr. Ralph
accessories and a corsage of Gospel according to Luke, chapter 12, tells of a man which God
Macomber, Dexter, were
calls a "fool" (v. :lfl). This man had a great harvest on his farm. In
weekend guests of Mrs. Lula white daisies.
Immediately following the fact, his barns would not even hold all of his harvest. Instead of
Evans, Mr. and Mrs. Elsworth
ceremony the reception was the man sharing his crops with those in need, be thought only of
Graham and Mr. and Mrs.
George Evans, 811 of Fostoria. held on the lawn. The bride's hlmseH. The modern day version of this Incident wOuld very likely
table was covered with a white read, "This (fool) wanted to build up a large checking account."
linen cloth and featured a two- Selfish people only resp what they sow, and II can senre as a
tier wedding cake with yellow blockade to spiritual blessings.
"Bet IJ.De"
Tbe s.c811ed "Hot IJne" roses lopped with a miniature
Prayerlessness: Prayerless people are trouble people and
Is a two-way telegraph tele- bride and groom. Presiding at
~~•ft••
printer linking Washington, ihe bride's table were Mrs. they soon become disobedient to God's tea~~.... Olrislians
should be willing to pray allessl in the morning, at mealtimes,
D.C., and Moscow. -The line
Bobby
Gordon
and
Mrs.
d bed time A ood
· -ill Is
dful thing " ·
makes it possible for the Margaret Armstrong.
_an a 1 .
. g . prayer e a nee
m everPresident of the U n i t e d
A eddlng dinner was served body's life. A non.praymg church will not grow. Ukewise, a nmStates and the Russian J!re- follo:ing tJ\e reception.
. prayilig Cbrlslian w~ rema_ina babe in Christ unless they are in a
mier to communicate if a
The
new
Mrs.
Copeland
is
a
good relatimshlp With _thell' Heavenly Father thr~ _prayer.
crisia arises.
1970 graduate of Gallia Truly, lack of prayer will cause a blockade to the Ouislian, and
Academy Hi~h· School and is will shut off spiritual blessings.

WORLD~C

SATURDAY and SUNDAY
SEPTEMBER 25th &amp; 26th

CAMDEN PARK'S

I.G.A.
FALL FABRIC: SPECIA~S

45"

Permanent
Press
Prints
'2.98
to

Reg.

FLOUR

SAVE15%

25 LB. BAG

yd.

Pin Wale Cordu
'1.98
Prints

45" machine wash

KAHN'S

WHOLE
OR HALF

SLAB

SLICED

AMERICAN
BEAUTY

BACON

OLD FASHIONED

SLABS

BACON

SMAllER
PlEas

ONLY

39'1B.

Reg. '3.98

Bond~d

Acrylic

Plaids &amp; Solids, 54" machine wash

Reg. s4.49 yd. -------~---Reg, '2.25 Yd.

No

le Cordu

45"

Reg. '3.69 yd.

,...L....ux~u~P~_Ie_- AI:-;;IJiic~~~~~--==~..J
60
-"

ANNUAL

"APPRECIATION DAYS''
The pulfm, or sea parrot,
II a ebunty bird whlch is
an -neat swimmer and
diver but is clumsy on land
and Ia fllgbt. The World
Almanac notes that its
larp, triangular blll is
adarted to carrying SeV·
era flab It one time.

YOUR CHOICE OF
REDUCED PRICE lTICKETS
OR

•3.00 HAND

STA&amp;~~»

GOOD FOR ALL Rl DEsALL DAY- ll:OOa.m. TillO:OOp.m.

French City_Fabrl·c Shoppe
OPEN 'TILl P.M. MON. &amp; FRI. NIGHTS
Simplicity, Me Calls. Butterick, Vogue Patterns-2 Complete Floors
of Fabrics &amp; Notions
. We Do Custom Dress Making-Singer Sales &amp; Service

58 Court Street

OHIO

Phone 446-9255

1

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~ ~----~----~------- 1~~--~--~~----------------------._--~---.~~-~~-----j_~----~~----~----~----------------~------------~ L--~----~------~~---

�-

1- The Sunday Times SenliDei,SUnday, Sept. :s,tm

,.

-

I

••

7-' The Sunday Tlmes&amp;ntinel, Sunday, SepUII,lf71

· CANNON:~? ·

WINDSHIELD
.

'

· PRICES

f

.

I
I

•·

.

GOOD
ALL

CGAL&gt;

WASHER
ANTI-FREEZE

'

LIMIT -~

.

TO APERSON(;

WEEK
LONG

I

I,.

EA.

coo ER
FRYER

l

ONLY

MAGNETIC

PHOTO

·oR TILL
SUPPLY
IS GONE.

LBUM

2

EA.
.

HYFRY

•

NOT

ASPHALT ASBESTOS

LIQUID ROOF

COATING

EA

JA"xlOO'

PLASTIC

PIPE

WALL TO·WALL

K

•

BATH CARPETING
WITH MATCHING LID COVER
100% NYLON
REG. 8.98
5'x6'

500 SHEETS

5 GAL. CAN

99

BLACK

WHITE FINISHED. ALLUM.
REG. 2· 79 ONLY

'

.

TRUC

CALIFORNIA:WALNUT
OR CAR.AMEL

LO.AD SALE
SUNSET GOLD

PANELING

I

.f

12''

4'x8'

1 .

SHEETS
SAVE NOW

I'
I

,I

. I

,

I

\

12"
IN~GRID

FOR
- SUSPENDED

'

,.·~

\ CEIU~G

'

II

,

GENI .SUMP
PUMP · .
88

X

GOLD BOND DROP
. ,

GOLD BOND .

GUSHER SUMP

'

~"

-

2'x .4'

'

.

EACH

CEILING TILE

ALLUMINUM

U53 ·

s

\

I
I

.

'

I

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EA.

�.

• - Ttlt Sunday 'flli8.8enlinel, SUnday. Sepl. 26,1

BtU, B
I, llr. 8111 Joh. Lewis Md2d'E a.8111Joh.

Annual Russell Reunion
Observed
.
.~

I',1

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Mr. and Mrs. Vinton Rankin

.~

r
I

ar.ce sa.t,llr. ul lb. Mae!
R D llr. DIIIl'G . . .
-Alai...,; Lee R ' . .

dughl!t Lila, r.e R "
IIIII - l!ldwln Lee, ul Jeor,
aDC1 Jlrs. Noul e-n,
dnctller 1flrJ Am ul rrt d,
MiR StDII!ellll, BeY. IIIII IIn.
IWr)' · Rnnell aDCI hro

claaplr:!'s.

Wilen
some of
tile bills ·
are

Coordinator
Is Selected

~

j;

-·

Bob Jeffries, and hro
daughters, Mr.tnd Mrs. RlrrJ
J'OI1s li F1crida; Mr. and )Irs,
Olarlie Rawlins and dlqblr:!';
Mr. and Mrs. Harold S1Dwr and
two sons; Debbie Roush, l!frs.
Pbillip ~usseD, Jeff, aDd
Angela; Mr. and Mrs. J81111!S
RullseU,Jim and Tina; Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Grate, New wwd and_

vsa r.,,11r. _. ....

Rankins Celebrate
~5th Anniversary
CROWN CITY -

Mr. and

. Mrs. Vinton Rankin, Crown
City, will celebrate their 25th
wedding anniversary on Sept.
30, They are the parenls of three
children, a son, Terry Michael,
who lives in Colwnbus ; two

daughters, Charlotte Rankin,
and Mrs. Connie Bailey,.both of
Gallipolis.
The Rankins have four
grandchildren. They will hold
open house Oct. 3 for their
lriends and neighbors. ·

TAKES EMPLOYMENT

POMEROY - Mrs. Dennis
Smith, the former Beverly
Beaver, has accepted em·
ployment with the Avon Gilrus

Bank of Avon Park, Fla. Sgt.
Smith is stationed at the Avon
Park Air Force Bombing Range
there.

paid

by
~

the
family

R l'ty
#
omen
C'
Held Meet

•
•
•
•
•

OPEN SUNDAY 1 P.M. to 6 P.M.

Adult Class Met

"DAN RIVER" - NO IRON

PILLOW CASES
"DANTREL"- FORTREL &amp; COTTON!
EVERYDAY
PRICE IS $1.22

M:s.

PAIR
SUNDAY ONLY!

Orgilli ze Them!

10 PIECE ·.

FAMILY
COMB
SET

'

SUNDAY
ONLY!

DECORATED
SCHOOL
BOXES
FOR lllE
LOWER ·- .'lADES!

10~

l6~ACH

SUNDAY ONLY 1P.M. TO 6 P.M.!

BOYS SHOES
SIZES 8~ TO 3

$}00

OFF

THE
EyERYDAY
RET All PRICE!

SUNDAY ONlYl P.M. TO 6P.M.
ALL WOMENS REG. $12.88

.CAR COATS
$ . 0.0

CORDUROY·SIZE
8 TO 18

*PT. PLEASANT
*GALliPOLIS
*MASON

CARPET
SPECIAL
.95

Note of Thanks
KANAUGA - Mrs. Florence
R. Houck of Colwnbus, for·
merly a Kanauga resident,
celebrated her 90th birthday on
Sept. 21. She wishes to take this
method of thanking her many
friends in Kanauga , Gallipolis
and Gallia County for all the
beautiful cards, notes and gifts
she received from relatives and
lifetime friends. She wishes that
all could have been in Columbus
lor a face to face reunion and to
share her beautiful cake and
goodies, and to see all her lovely
gifts and greetings which she
enjoyed receiving very much.
Despite poor health she
manages her meditations each
evening and gives thanks to her
divine creator for bringing her
through so many years of
sulferlng. She still manages to

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 in
today and make your selection.

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

e ARMSTRONG VINYL QU8KE~TONE
LINOLEUM, 9 &amp; 12 WIDTHS
e A~MSTRONG VINYL CUSHION
FLOOR UNOLEUM

'

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~

GAI,LIPOIJS -lin. 'fdvin ·bnab to - a g e fading !mW background, usefUl for their
lmeltzer entertained the !be 1 · ed effect is achieved. fnlit and for birda, seed pods for
:"
J'teoch Qty GirdeD Qub at be£ Allow io *J, lllen cover with a arrangements and decorations
- · ..._ Taelday eveuiDg for its aiat al atilt rain ... a coat of and fragrance of their
npWI!JGDtbly m! 'ing . Mrs. glue. Mrs. FnmliD displayed a bloo&amp;IIWI•
•
lfllle ~ was co-boltea. collage llbe bad made.
'lbere are · many kinds of
"!'
Mrs.
Harley
George, An • • N ge, lll!e said, is Dowering trees, magnolias,
k
preaident, presided at the an
nhlins of related Obo ftovrt!ring cherries, ilowering
·•
m li&amp;l- lin. Smeltlel; pye jed!. a "still life" arrangement crabapples and · DogwoOd are
: devotiona by reading tile poem is · m emnp1e of an anem· examples. Before planting
:
''Reaaioo" by Marian Fulton· blage, ..- a group of CGDtainers study tile soli and what the tree
_ Doqett, . and the gronp SDCb as bottles, vues, pots and is planted for and then consult a ,
"
itjiellled the Lord's Pra)'!l' in p!mS, etc.
nurseryman. Watering is iJn,
uni- ·
· Anoble Is an aTangeoient of portanl in growing a tree and all
'lbe lreuurer's . ~ was marm.Js in SDCb a ID8IIIIel' that trees need air to the roots.
'giftu by Min Maie Meal and all parts move wbm I1IIPfllded Mrs. John Reese, retiri,ng
:
Mrs. Smeltzer read the fnm the ...,,ing ..- a wall Regional Director, installed the
• lleCI'eiiiY• ~ IIIII minutes bracbt.
·
officers for the coming year
~of the 1as1 m tiq.lfrs. Jewell Mrs. Moore demonslraled a with a candlelight service. To
~e, reporting for the modlm .a1angemml using a the president, Mrs. Harley
... •""iting cwnmittee, rqJOrted dart· brown container with. George, she handed a red
the boob and ~ accomt tbree ..,-lhtgs Ill wbich she candle
which
denotes
were in t.laace. 'lbere ap- iJMl a furled bralcb, a em ved dominance, she said, similar to
f l I. ed to be DO biDs to be paid. braJch, three red geranium the office Mrs, George had been
~
AcardwasreadiiiiiOUilcingthe hlonms Aid gei'Aiilm foliage. sei!!Cted to fill.
GSl Vol111teer Annual Tea held Modemarnagmg,llbesaid,lsa To the vice president, Mrs.
recently.
breating away fnm tradilional Jewell Moore, slie handed a
Plims were completed for the arranging_ There are four pink candle, equally importani
•
club to host the Regional things na ary for a bea•¢ifu1 as she assumes responsibilities
• mt !l'ng al Gardea Dubs on arrangement: beauty, sim- with the president.
Saturday, Oct. 30 at 9 a.m. pUcity, harmony and out- To the treasurer, Miss Marie
• beginning with a coffee bolll', standing
and
distorted Meal, she gave a gold candle,
llllltobeheldin the W881liagton materials_
"A miser is known to hoard his
Sc:lm1 cafeteria. Mrs. Earl Neff -The COillpositioD of a modem gold" she said, and so is the
will be gfDS'BI chairman and amq;ement C'U'sists al four treasurer to guard the club's
Mrs. ~ will be in charge principal parts. 1. Line, ..- money.
• al the 11ii1Cbeml.
design, form ..- shape. 2. Fill in To the secretary, Mrs: Melvin
Boll call was taken by eacb ..- aeale, unity and Bl!l:eill. 3. Smeltzer, whose task requires
member naming a plant !hal Balmce. 4. Harmony or thy- ·accuracy, she gave a blue
bad IOillelbing wrong with it. Ibm.
candle, denoting "true blue."
Mrs. Frantlin discuued
Mrs. G«lrge stated a book Sle instructed each officer of
modein ln!Dda in Ocral design bad been placec! in the Ulrary, her duties and the other
with empbasis on coDages, "The Owaplrte Boot of Flo'ftl' members of their respon·
• " emblqes and mobUs. Preservation" , by Geneol sibilities to their officers.
Collages A1! made, she said by Condon. Mrs. Flaeuc:e Trainer Mrs. Blain M.' Wallace and
"'iding layss of tom pieces of gave an inta ung discussloiJ Mrs. Owen Cantrell were
tinae to • rigid bw:lrground, al ''Trees" by Robert aart. welcomed as new members.
• llliag equal parts of white glue Careful plannin8 of planting There being no further
Aid water, the nlmher of the treescangivebeaJjyforweeks. business, the meeting ad,
laf'!I'S of tinae determined by They can be planted to form a journed after refreshmenll
the coiOi' Aid elfec:t desired. beautiful
picture
or were served by the hostesses•
1Mb paper with a wet !pODge .,..

"

and

••
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some

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oftfte
bills
are

paid

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•

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by
the
other

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What's the answer?

HIS and HERS

No Service Charge
Checking Accounts#
No Minimrim Balance Required .
'lHE OW BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

IIRS.IIARTIIA u.aa. wbo bu peWed IFie ,_for the
~ li ,~ !*Pie at Vlirtm wbo baft united 1D form Clle

nroagb Septe~_ber Gertrude Ward Elhibit.
s.tmlay, Sept. Z5- 10 a.m.·
12 noon, Poasler Workshop.
Odeber ':"' Eastman Koda,k
RGger Bloomer, news repor- Ph~phic Award W'mner s
ten.
.
~(Early) -FAC Arls
Mrs. llartba BuaUey, Main
. d A 11•
00
Slreet, vobmteered to paint the " Crafts F811'
an ucusual
.
.
Riverby
bus for the group.
IS open a.s
on
The group bas m.my taieated Saturdays and Sundays fnm 1-5
~wbopa:loomlllllgive p.m.
rim.
.
1
..,..;.; talmlll m tlnp
ThereJSnoa_IS&amp;OD.~ge.
'lbe group .,., travels to
Nancy J. Koehler-elbibil will
other IRU to lllend chwdl be a. "Macrame" which will go
Aid other ,oath ptberinga••
on displa~ after the Ward..Jodd
9hibit is removed.
Friday, Oct. 1-A membn
ptevi,ew will be held from 8-10
p.m.
"U
Saturday and Sunday, a
~ ~e
.
De!Qonstratioo of a tlnue paper
ADDISON - The Ad!hsm Coll81e. '
WSCSmetrecentl,y at the home

:. Youth Groups Unite
.:
"'

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VINTON - Three youth
pcqll from the' Pllrler United
" tbodlst. Weslermal Unital
Methodist, and the Vinlon
United Methodist Churches
!Bited to form - !awe groap
a( )'0111111 wbo meet W! ey.
'lbe I""IP !Joocb1 a bus In
wbldl to get
wbo
hne I lnnlpca'talloa problem.
'lbis llooe way for ,outh 1D belp
-the .-11 al a CIIEIIIuniiJ

!heir"""'"'"

•

~~~to getalaag witb Addison

:

Appulmllely 50 attended
the firll mee'il'11 cba1ni wbidl
' lhey elected officers and
, arganind for the ,_.. Their
~ officers are Linda Taylor,

~':

i

I

..jj)

GAi.i.IrolJS - FOUR MOTHER'S Leagues were reJnsented at a meeting Thursday
morning at the Grace United Methodist amrch for the discussion of the Cystic Fibrosis Fund
Drive. They were Mrs. Richard Brown, seated; Progressive Mother's League. and from left to
right, Mrs. Robert Brandenberry, Rio Grande Mothers League ; Mrs. Silas Hamilton, from 8 et
41l,andMrs. Arlllll' Rupe of Toddlers to Tassels.

Cystic Fibrosis
Fund Drive Begins
GALlJPOlJS - Four groups and clubbing at ends of fingers.
will begin a fund drive to coli!!Ct One out of 25 is a carrier of

money with which to help
combat the dreaded lung
disease of cystic fibrosis in the
future. The signs for Cystic
Fibrosis are , recurrent
wheezing, a cough heard every
day for more than two months,
pnewnonia more than once
during childhood, excessive
appetite with poor weigbt gain,

Cystic Fibrosis.
With early diagnosis and a
strict schedule of treatment
many C-F children may now
live into their teens.
Treatment for other lung
conditions and damage are
much the same . The previous
life expectancy was two years
now it is 12 to 14 so progress is
being made.
The Rio Grande Mothers
League wl1l begin collecting on
Wednesday, Sept. 29 and the
Gallipolis Progressive on Oct. 3.
It would be appreciated if
everyone would be home and

give generously to this cause.

GOLDEN CIRCLE
GALLIPOLIS - The Golden
Circle will meet at 1:30 p.m.
Tuesday, Sept. 28, at Grace
United Methodist Church. This
will be the first meeting ol the
group since their luncheon and
program last June 29.
·No reservations are needed.
Cookies and coffee or tea will be
served. If transportation is
Mrs. Ward
needed , call Ann White (4463219) or the church office. The
Golden Circle is for members
and lriends of Grace Church 50
GALlJPOIJS - This is the years of age and older.
last week of the Gertrude Ward·
Nyla Judd Exhibit now on
display at Riverby. The pain·
lings will remain on display
!mW the end of the weekend.
Rlverby will be open to the
public free of charge from 1-5 on
Saturday and Sunday.

{-HUDQMmi~1
HEADQUIIIIEI$

RJI

DIAIIOIUJS
She 'II Love These

f79'A
TAWNEY
JEWElERS
422 Second Ave .
Gallipolis. Ollio

'· '

Q(AOOI&amp;\Q8
326 SECOND AVE,

GAlliPOLIS, 0.

ONE GROUP
LADIES FALL
TRANSITIONAL

DRESSES
DACRON POLYESTER
&amp;
COTION
'ASSORTED COLORS
SIZE.8-18
VAL~ES

TO •30

SPECIAL

last Chance

'
•

•

WSCS'
ld Meettng
.'

GALUPOlJS - The fourth
annual faU meeting of the
Southeastern District of the
Ohio
Retired
Teachers .
Association wl1l be held at Burr
Oak Lodge on Wednesday, Oct.
6. A social hour will be held
from II a.m. • noon with a
luncheon followuig.
The main speaker will be
Robert Hell Lancaster the
designer of 'the Ameri~ 50
Star Flag.
A patriotic theme wiD prevail

~hout

the meeting. Miss

Mildred Baver, a member of the
board slate organJZB
· tion, will
discuss the financial aid for

Ohio Retired Teachers.
Arrangements for this meeting
are being made by the 12
chapters in Southeastern
district, Athens, Gallia,
Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence,
Meigs, Morgan, Perry, Pike,
Scioto V'mlon and Washington
COIIltl~.
'
All members are ·welcome
and urged to get their reser·
vations to their chapter
president before Sept. 30.

president; HolliJ Brumfield, of Mrs. M:arv1J1 GindleoiJurger. . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
Y1teiJi
I !rut· Lea Thetiafr, Mrs. Ray II!JCbes pi IDled the
~eCHlarJ; Tom Brumfield, secretary's report and Mrs.
treuarer· George Honaker,
10111 Feader; Ricky Joy,
lEO !len; and Mite Pope IIIIi
. '

·

SJmpllt flaias
'The Gentle Tooch
That Means So Much

llllllfs Flaiit
1 f,t:l!l{. U:
,•Senie
••.
...,.c:.. w.a.v
rt

. . I.

•

Jlllilb &amp;fOIIP.

992-5561
QFIIUI F«
Y-f-Need,l

..::!!::::~::::::::::::

~

the new fall schedule and
discussing plans for future
meetings. Some manuscripts
were read and evaluated, and
writers reported on their
current projects as well as work
accomplished over the summer
111onths. It ls hoped that other
working writers who wish to
join will contact the group, or
attend the next meeting on
September 27. We are in·
terested in sharing the
problems encountered in our
literary work, learning from
each other's . experience and
skill in poetry wrttlng, fiction,
non-fiction and newspaper
work.
The faD schedule through the
end of the year has been set lor
meeting on the second and
fourth Mondays each month,
7: ~9 :30 p.m. in th'o...Gallia
County library basement.
Anyone interested may
contact Mrs. Ruth Mullineaux

Bu" Oak Scene
For Luncheon

•
•

446-lm

smile occasionally in spite of \ . .
being crippled.
l

..,...........,

Thomas Host
Council Meet
.

5

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1

GAUJPOlJS - The September meeting of the Morfield
Advisory Council was held at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Maurice M. Thoma.s for lhla
month's meeting. Mrs. ArleDe
Tracy, vice-chairman, was Ill
charge of !he meeting .
A program was given !rom
Pla1ms 19, verses 7-14 and
euerpts from Secret Place
Book, which was used. A song
was given then the meeting was
turned over for dilocussion by
the leader, Mrs. Bernice McMahon whose topic was health,
Medicare .md Ho:lpltal ' costs.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
~ McMahan, Mr. and
Mrs. James Evans and four
cbildren, Rev. and Mrs. Luther
Tracy and the host family, Mr .
and Mrs. Maurice M. Thomas .
Refreshments were served. The
ilexl meeting will be beld Oct. 9
II the home of Mr. and Mrs.
James Evans.

u•

evenings,
"M; ., llu.
Susan a.te, .......... .
maniiiCript to Ibn wllb 111e
GALIJPOIJS - The Writers group. Mn. '&gt;sfl1• ~.
Workshop met on Sept. U with Convener.
seven present. This was an
organizational meeting setting

Writet:l' Held Meet

: Mrs. Smeltzer Hosts The
Fren:ch. City ·Garden ·club .

•

.Church Group
Held Meeting
\

•

s llllei.SindiiJ,Sept.a.1m

a

Peggy -Baker

,.;•
••
;r;

and Mrs. Larry Russell and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Hersman and hro daqblers,
Mr. and _Mrs. Ernie McGlllthlin
and family, Mrs. Lura Gee and
son ViJID, guest of hooor, Mr.
Emes• B. lluslleD, V'mtoa; Mr.
and Mrs. Jerry Schroeder and
~· Mr. and _Mrs. Albert Jef•
fries, and family, Mr. and Mrs.

PNrt

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VINTON - The 18th annual Sarah Dilloo Meade. Mr. Oe&lt;li
RusseUreunioilwaBheldSepl.~ McGlothlin, son of Mr. Lewis
at the btme of Rev. and Mrs. and Uedo Russell McGiothliJi;
Noble Russell, Route 1, Vintoo. oo Apr. 24, married DOyle Irene
Approximately 31 families Gerhart at 7:30 p.m:, Wesley
.attending brought weD-filled . Meth"odist Church, Marion.
baskebi !(food and all enjoyed a Larry Levon Russell, son of Mr.
cafeteria style meal at 12 noon. Norwood and Betty Clark
Artificial faD flowers were RusseU, oo July 9, married
used as a centerpiece Marla I. Wray, daughter of Mr.
deco-ation for the table.
Denver and Josephine Altier
Only two of Mr. Rll'lsell's Wray, at Christ the King
\
children were ab!ent from the Church, Livingston Ave.,
reunion.
Columbus, at 6:30 p.m. Pemy
~
F:amilies came from. Athens, ·Sue Jeffers, daughter of Mr.
Bidwell, Blacklick, Carroll, Albert and Annabel RusseU
Cbancey, Columbus, Gallipo]js, Jeffries, on July 12, married
Grove City, Jackson, Marioo, Jerry Schroader.
MCliTal, Thornville, Toledo and Births recorded as follows :
V'mton, Ohio. Mler a wooderful Blaine Alan, son of Penny Sue
meal a few enjoyed horseshoe Jeffries, was b1r11 Feb. .4, at
and others visited and some Toledo, grandparents are Mr . .
took pictures. A business and Mrs. Albert Jeffries.
meeting was called to order by Samuel Jefferson, son of Paul
the chairman, the Rev. Novel and Linda Kemper Burnett, .
LIMA The United RusseU of Athem. The reunim born Feb. 8. grandparenbi are
Telephone Corrwany of Ohio has is to be held next year, same Mr. and Mrs. Everett Kemper.
named Peggy Baker Com- date and 1ime. The place is Usa Joe, daughter of Larry
munity Relations Coordinator uncertain.
' O'Dell and Debbie Vansicle
f&lt;r the l..iiruj Division. The
Betty Clark Russell, wife li RusseD, born May 24, grand~
announcement was made by w. Norwood Russell, is to serve as parenls are Mr. and Mrs. Olin
A. Brinley, Lima Division sea-etary and treasurer for one RusseU. Gregory Loren RusseU,
Manager for the utiUty.
m..-e year, rilaking a total of born Aug. 3 to Loren and
Mrs. Baker, a native of Rio five years.
Geraldine Weaver Russell, the
Grande, joined the Public
Marriages recorded were as grandparenlsareRev.andMrs,
RelationsDeparbnent of United follows: Jan. 25 in Tampa, Noble Russell. Todd Eugene to
two years ago and has six and Florida, Gary Rawlins, SOli al Eugene and DoDy McGiolblin
one-haH years of experience in Mrs. Lenora Barnett, married Fryman, lxlrn Nov. 11, grandthe field of public relations.
Ra;e Cotterman, daughter of parenls are Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
In her new position she wl1l be Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Cotterman. McGiolhlin. A son was lxlrn to
responsible for news media Larry O'Dell Russell, son of Mr. Beverley and Michael RusseU,
relations, coordinating special and Mra. Olin Russell m Feb. named Curtis, proud greatprograms for presentation by 22, in Sparta, N. C., married grandparents Mr. and Mrs.
company employees to em- Debbie Vansickle, daughter of Noel Russell .
ployee and public groups, audio· Mr. and Mrs. Foster and Rennie In military service is F1em
visual aids, and be an active Vansicle. Brenda Darlene Meade, husband of Brenda
member of the speakers Kemper, daughter of Mr . Kemper Meade, who is
bureau.
Everett and Daisy Rl!ssell stationed in Germany with
She is a graduate of South· Kemper, Apr. 6, married Flem green beret, and Raymond
western High School, Gallipolis Meade, son of Mr. Robert and Martin, husband of Shirley
Business College and attended
TJ'T
Grate Martin, is stati&lt;lled in
1
Rio Grande CoUege. She has OCU
1'1'
S Thailand.
also participated in company
School Gradua lions - Sheryl
1.. L
sponsored training seminars.
IUU
Ann McGlothlin, daughter li
Peggy is the daughter of Mr. RIO GRANDE - The Sep- Billy Wayne and Harriet
and Mrs. David WiDiams, Rio tember meeting of the Rio Mosher McGlothlin, graduated
Grande. Sh!! and her husband, Grande Faculty WOillell's Qub from Bloomington High School,
Roger, reside in Ada where was held at lhe home of thAJr. Calif. in June. Terry Grate, son
Roger is attending the Ohio Alphus Christensen 00 Wed· of Paul and Leron Russell
Northern University College of nesday, Sept. 22, ai 7:30p.m. Grate, graduated in Ju;&gt;e from
Law.
Approximately 28 members Pleasant High School, Marioo.
attended. As the fii'St meeting of Mary Ann Russell, daughter of
the new semester a social get- Rev. Novel and Alice Russell,
together was plaMed. The club graduated from Athens High
president, Alice Marotta, School, Athens in June.
The following families signed
conducted a brief business
sessioo first.
the register: Mr. and Mrs.
Saundra Koby ouUined details Vernon Russell, Kern, Steve and
GALUPOLIS- The Faithful for the style show planned for Vicki, Mr. and Mrs. Paul E.
Workers{society o(, the Poplar Oct.28attheco11egedininghall• . Ijussell, Kenny and, .Paula, Mr. .
Ridge Free-Will Baptist Cliurch Plans for the style show are weD and Mrs. Olin RusaeU; Tetcy11
met recently at the home of 00 the way _ publicity and and. Teddy, Mr. ·and Mrs :
Mrs. Ola Mae Arrow_ood fill' the hospitality committees are Woodrow
Russell-"· anll ·
Sept~mber meehng.
The working 00 their parts of the daughters, Daisy Kemper, Mr.
meeting was called to order by show, and models were selected
the president, Mrs. Rosetta from among the student
J~nes,,:n'd the group~· "He fraternities and sor&lt;rities.
Uves, .and the Lords t:rayer Models wl1l show styles from
was said by all. A scnpture Amy's and Haskin Tanner
GALLIPOlJS - The Young
reading by the hostess was Ciothiers, in Gallipolis . Adult Class of the First Olurch
taken !rom Romans, 2nd Memberstookho:me tickets for ofGodmetSept. 19atthehome
Chapler.
advancesaleat$1each ; tickets of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Kessel.
The roll was called and ~ues will also be 011 sale at the door.
Devotions were given by Tom
colle~led. Records of preVIOUS
Jean Curtis, program Kessel and a poem was read by
meetmg were read by the chairman for the evening and Avalee Stanley.
sea:etary, Mrs: Grace Leml~y club secretary, introduced two
During the business meeting,
stating ~t ~ills were pa1d. members whose husbands have class proj!!Cis were discussed
Nettie Swisher, Mrs. Ellen newly joined the faculty, Mrs. and approved. Plans were made
Glibe_rl and M~s . Alz~da James Clark and Mrs. Edward for the Halloween Costume
Halfhill received b1r~y gills Sofranko. Three games played Party to be held next month,
from their mystery SISters.
helped everyooe to become after which the meeting was
Mrs. Theresa Reynolds was better acquainted and refresh. closed with a prayer by Carol
welcomed as a_ new member ments were served afterwards. Kessel.
and a card was Sl!lned to be sent Hostesses were Sherry Ram- Refreshments of tea, Kool·
to Mrs. Jess1e Brothers. sey, Shirley Golgi and Lois Aid and cookies were served to
Readings were gJVen by Mrs. Forshey
10 adults and five children
Alma Hix "The Kind of Dad I'd
·
·
Buy," "Evolution," Mrs. Pearl
Lemley, song by litUe Christi
Lemley entitled "Can't No
Grave Hold My Body Down,"
and Lori and Susan McCoy sang
"Down on My Knees."
Abible quiz was conducted by
Mrs . Arrowood; reading,
"Mother Had a Utile Boy,"
Dottie McCoy; reading,
"Consolation," Mrs . Mae
Arrowood. The group was
dismissed
by
singing,
"Amazing Grace," and prayer
by Mrs. Pearl Lemley.
Next meeting will be at the
home of Mrs. Grace Lemley.
Refreshmenls were served to 22
members and guests.

~n:e vsa

,_.,.....,,j,

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Hood gave the
lrea!urer's report. Mrs. Joe
Drummond, Mrs. Ed '!'lvmpson .
and Mrs. Ray Hughes reported
on the fall w..-bbop wbich was
·held recenlly at camp Francis
ADley. '!'be group made plans
for a money-making projecl
Mrs. Lewis ilqbes g 1ve
devotions by readin8 the 12th
chlpter al ROIIIIIIIS and lbe
groap Did the Lord's !'raJer.
AI the ckJee of the meetinc •
LaiTy

while elephant l8le pri..-

to refreshmeilts.

bdd

The nest meeting will be held
al ththc.meofMrs. Ray Hughes

on OcL 27.

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OUR SPORTIIG ·GOODS DEPT.
FEATURES

.. VIlElY.,., ....

lll s.-1 A11.

tllllilolls, 0.

Mon., Tuu., Wid., Slit. 9-5 .
Thun. 9·12, Fri. 9-1 p.m.

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• - Ttlt Sunday 'flli8.8enlinel, SUnday. Sepl. 26,1

BtU, B
I, llr. 8111 Joh. Lewis Md2d'E a.8111Joh.

Annual Russell Reunion
Observed
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Mr. and Mrs. Vinton Rankin

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ar.ce sa.t,llr. ul lb. Mae!
R D llr. DIIIl'G . . .
-Alai...,; Lee R ' . .

dughl!t Lila, r.e R "
IIIII - l!ldwln Lee, ul Jeor,
aDC1 Jlrs. Noul e-n,
dnctller 1flrJ Am ul rrt d,
MiR StDII!ellll, BeY. IIIII IIn.
IWr)' · Rnnell aDCI hro

claaplr:!'s.

Wilen
some of
tile bills ·
are

Coordinator
Is Selected

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Bob Jeffries, and hro
daughters, Mr.tnd Mrs. RlrrJ
J'OI1s li F1crida; Mr. and )Irs,
Olarlie Rawlins and dlqblr:!';
Mr. and Mrs. Harold S1Dwr and
two sons; Debbie Roush, l!frs.
Pbillip ~usseD, Jeff, aDd
Angela; Mr. and Mrs. J81111!S
RullseU,Jim and Tina; Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Grate, New wwd and_

vsa r.,,11r. _. ....

Rankins Celebrate
~5th Anniversary
CROWN CITY -

Mr. and

. Mrs. Vinton Rankin, Crown
City, will celebrate their 25th
wedding anniversary on Sept.
30, They are the parenls of three
children, a son, Terry Michael,
who lives in Colwnbus ; two

daughters, Charlotte Rankin,
and Mrs. Connie Bailey,.both of
Gallipolis.
The Rankins have four
grandchildren. They will hold
open house Oct. 3 for their
lriends and neighbors. ·

TAKES EMPLOYMENT

POMEROY - Mrs. Dennis
Smith, the former Beverly
Beaver, has accepted em·
ployment with the Avon Gilrus

Bank of Avon Park, Fla. Sgt.
Smith is stationed at the Avon
Park Air Force Bombing Range
there.

paid

by
~

the
family

R l'ty
#
omen
C'
Held Meet

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OPEN SUNDAY 1 P.M. to 6 P.M.

Adult Class Met

"DAN RIVER" - NO IRON

PILLOW CASES
"DANTREL"- FORTREL &amp; COTTON!
EVERYDAY
PRICE IS $1.22

M:s.

PAIR
SUNDAY ONLY!

Orgilli ze Them!

10 PIECE ·.

FAMILY
COMB
SET

'

SUNDAY
ONLY!

DECORATED
SCHOOL
BOXES
FOR lllE
LOWER ·- .'lADES!

10~

l6~ACH

SUNDAY ONLY 1P.M. TO 6 P.M.!

BOYS SHOES
SIZES 8~ TO 3

$}00

OFF

THE
EyERYDAY
RET All PRICE!

SUNDAY ONlYl P.M. TO 6P.M.
ALL WOMENS REG. $12.88

.CAR COATS
$ . 0.0

CORDUROY·SIZE
8 TO 18

*PT. PLEASANT
*GALliPOLIS
*MASON

CARPET
SPECIAL
.95

Note of Thanks
KANAUGA - Mrs. Florence
R. Houck of Colwnbus, for·
merly a Kanauga resident,
celebrated her 90th birthday on
Sept. 21. She wishes to take this
method of thanking her many
friends in Kanauga , Gallipolis
and Gallia County for all the
beautiful cards, notes and gifts
she received from relatives and
lifetime friends. She wishes that
all could have been in Columbus
lor a face to face reunion and to
share her beautiful cake and
goodies, and to see all her lovely
gifts and greetings which she
enjoyed receiving very much.
Despite poor health she
manages her meditations each
evening and gives thanks to her
divine creator for bringing her
through so many years of
sulferlng. She still manages to

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 in
today and make your selection.

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

e ARMSTRONG VINYL QU8KE~TONE
LINOLEUM, 9 &amp; 12 WIDTHS
e A~MSTRONG VINYL CUSHION
FLOOR UNOLEUM

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GAI,LIPOIJS -lin. 'fdvin ·bnab to - a g e fading !mW background, usefUl for their
lmeltzer entertained the !be 1 · ed effect is achieved. fnlit and for birda, seed pods for
:"
J'teoch Qty GirdeD Qub at be£ Allow io *J, lllen cover with a arrangements and decorations
- · ..._ Taelday eveuiDg for its aiat al atilt rain ... a coat of and fragrance of their
npWI!JGDtbly m! 'ing . Mrs. glue. Mrs. FnmliD displayed a bloo&amp;IIWI•
•
lfllle ~ was co-boltea. collage llbe bad made.
'lbere are · many kinds of
"!'
Mrs.
Harley
George, An • • N ge, lll!e said, is Dowering trees, magnolias,
k
preaident, presided at the an
nhlins of related Obo ftovrt!ring cherries, ilowering
·•
m li&amp;l- lin. Smeltlel; pye jed!. a "still life" arrangement crabapples and · DogwoOd are
: devotiona by reading tile poem is · m emnp1e of an anem· examples. Before planting
:
''Reaaioo" by Marian Fulton· blage, ..- a group of CGDtainers study tile soli and what the tree
_ Doqett, . and the gronp SDCb as bottles, vues, pots and is planted for and then consult a ,
"
itjiellled the Lord's Pra)'!l' in p!mS, etc.
nurseryman. Watering is iJn,
uni- ·
· Anoble Is an aTangeoient of portanl in growing a tree and all
'lbe lreuurer's . ~ was marm.Js in SDCb a ID8IIIIel' that trees need air to the roots.
'giftu by Min Maie Meal and all parts move wbm I1IIPfllded Mrs. John Reese, retiri,ng
:
Mrs. Smeltzer read the fnm the ...,,ing ..- a wall Regional Director, installed the
• lleCI'eiiiY• ~ IIIII minutes bracbt.
·
officers for the coming year
~of the 1as1 m tiq.lfrs. Jewell Mrs. Moore demonslraled a with a candlelight service. To
~e, reporting for the modlm .a1angemml using a the president, Mrs. Harley
... •""iting cwnmittee, rqJOrted dart· brown container with. George, she handed a red
the boob and ~ accomt tbree ..,-lhtgs Ill wbich she candle
which
denotes
were in t.laace. 'lbere ap- iJMl a furled bralcb, a em ved dominance, she said, similar to
f l I. ed to be DO biDs to be paid. braJch, three red geranium the office Mrs, George had been
~
AcardwasreadiiiiiOUilcingthe hlonms Aid gei'Aiilm foliage. sei!!Cted to fill.
GSl Vol111teer Annual Tea held Modemarnagmg,llbesaid,lsa To the vice president, Mrs.
recently.
breating away fnm tradilional Jewell Moore, slie handed a
Plims were completed for the arranging_ There are four pink candle, equally importani
•
club to host the Regional things na ary for a bea•¢ifu1 as she assumes responsibilities
• mt !l'ng al Gardea Dubs on arrangement: beauty, sim- with the president.
Saturday, Oct. 30 at 9 a.m. pUcity, harmony and out- To the treasurer, Miss Marie
• beginning with a coffee bolll', standing
and
distorted Meal, she gave a gold candle,
llllltobeheldin the W881liagton materials_
"A miser is known to hoard his
Sc:lm1 cafeteria. Mrs. Earl Neff -The COillpositioD of a modem gold" she said, and so is the
will be gfDS'BI chairman and amq;ement C'U'sists al four treasurer to guard the club's
Mrs. ~ will be in charge principal parts. 1. Line, ..- money.
• al the 11ii1Cbeml.
design, form ..- shape. 2. Fill in To the secretary, Mrs: Melvin
Boll call was taken by eacb ..- aeale, unity and Bl!l:eill. 3. Smeltzer, whose task requires
member naming a plant !hal Balmce. 4. Harmony or thy- ·accuracy, she gave a blue
bad IOillelbing wrong with it. Ibm.
candle, denoting "true blue."
Mrs. Frantlin discuued
Mrs. G«lrge stated a book Sle instructed each officer of
modein ln!Dda in Ocral design bad been placec! in the Ulrary, her duties and the other
with empbasis on coDages, "The Owaplrte Boot of Flo'ftl' members of their respon·
• " emblqes and mobUs. Preservation" , by Geneol sibilities to their officers.
Collages A1! made, she said by Condon. Mrs. Flaeuc:e Trainer Mrs. Blain M.' Wallace and
"'iding layss of tom pieces of gave an inta ung discussloiJ Mrs. Owen Cantrell were
tinae to • rigid bw:lrground, al ''Trees" by Robert aart. welcomed as new members.
• llliag equal parts of white glue Careful plannin8 of planting There being no further
Aid water, the nlmher of the treescangivebeaJjyforweeks. business, the meeting ad,
laf'!I'S of tinae determined by They can be planted to form a journed after refreshmenll
the coiOi' Aid elfec:t desired. beautiful
picture
or were served by the hostesses•
1Mb paper with a wet !pODge .,..

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oftfte
bills
are

paid

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by
the
other

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What's the answer?

HIS and HERS

No Service Charge
Checking Accounts#
No Minimrim Balance Required .
'lHE OW BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

IIRS.IIARTIIA u.aa. wbo bu peWed IFie ,_for the
~ li ,~ !*Pie at Vlirtm wbo baft united 1D form Clle

nroagb Septe~_ber Gertrude Ward Elhibit.
s.tmlay, Sept. Z5- 10 a.m.·
12 noon, Poasler Workshop.
Odeber ':"' Eastman Koda,k
RGger Bloomer, news repor- Ph~phic Award W'mner s
ten.
.
~(Early) -FAC Arls
Mrs. llartba BuaUey, Main
. d A 11•
00
Slreet, vobmteered to paint the " Crafts F811'
an ucusual
.
.
Riverby
bus for the group.
IS open a.s
on
The group bas m.my taieated Saturdays and Sundays fnm 1-5
~wbopa:loomlllllgive p.m.
rim.
.
1
..,..;.; talmlll m tlnp
ThereJSnoa_IS&amp;OD.~ge.
'lbe group .,., travels to
Nancy J. Koehler-elbibil will
other IRU to lllend chwdl be a. "Macrame" which will go
Aid other ,oath ptberinga••
on displa~ after the Ward..Jodd
9hibit is removed.
Friday, Oct. 1-A membn
ptevi,ew will be held from 8-10
p.m.
"U
Saturday and Sunday, a
~ ~e
.
De!Qonstratioo of a tlnue paper
ADDISON - The Ad!hsm Coll81e. '
WSCSmetrecentl,y at the home

:. Youth Groups Unite
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VINTON - Three youth
pcqll from the' Pllrler United
" tbodlst. Weslermal Unital
Methodist, and the Vinlon
United Methodist Churches
!Bited to form - !awe groap
a( )'0111111 wbo meet W! ey.
'lbe I""IP !Joocb1 a bus In
wbldl to get
wbo
hne I lnnlpca'talloa problem.
'lbis llooe way for ,outh 1D belp
-the .-11 al a CIIEIIIuniiJ

!heir"""'"'"

•

~~~to getalaag witb Addison

:

Appulmllely 50 attended
the firll mee'il'11 cba1ni wbidl
' lhey elected officers and
, arganind for the ,_.. Their
~ officers are Linda Taylor,

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GAi.i.IrolJS - FOUR MOTHER'S Leagues were reJnsented at a meeting Thursday
morning at the Grace United Methodist amrch for the discussion of the Cystic Fibrosis Fund
Drive. They were Mrs. Richard Brown, seated; Progressive Mother's League. and from left to
right, Mrs. Robert Brandenberry, Rio Grande Mothers League ; Mrs. Silas Hamilton, from 8 et
41l,andMrs. Arlllll' Rupe of Toddlers to Tassels.

Cystic Fibrosis
Fund Drive Begins
GALlJPOlJS - Four groups and clubbing at ends of fingers.
will begin a fund drive to coli!!Ct One out of 25 is a carrier of

money with which to help
combat the dreaded lung
disease of cystic fibrosis in the
future. The signs for Cystic
Fibrosis are , recurrent
wheezing, a cough heard every
day for more than two months,
pnewnonia more than once
during childhood, excessive
appetite with poor weigbt gain,

Cystic Fibrosis.
With early diagnosis and a
strict schedule of treatment
many C-F children may now
live into their teens.
Treatment for other lung
conditions and damage are
much the same . The previous
life expectancy was two years
now it is 12 to 14 so progress is
being made.
The Rio Grande Mothers
League wl1l begin collecting on
Wednesday, Sept. 29 and the
Gallipolis Progressive on Oct. 3.
It would be appreciated if
everyone would be home and

give generously to this cause.

GOLDEN CIRCLE
GALLIPOLIS - The Golden
Circle will meet at 1:30 p.m.
Tuesday, Sept. 28, at Grace
United Methodist Church. This
will be the first meeting ol the
group since their luncheon and
program last June 29.
·No reservations are needed.
Cookies and coffee or tea will be
served. If transportation is
Mrs. Ward
needed , call Ann White (4463219) or the church office. The
Golden Circle is for members
and lriends of Grace Church 50
GALlJPOIJS - This is the years of age and older.
last week of the Gertrude Ward·
Nyla Judd Exhibit now on
display at Riverby. The pain·
lings will remain on display
!mW the end of the weekend.
Rlverby will be open to the
public free of charge from 1-5 on
Saturday and Sunday.

{-HUDQMmi~1
HEADQUIIIIEI$

RJI

DIAIIOIUJS
She 'II Love These

f79'A
TAWNEY
JEWElERS
422 Second Ave .
Gallipolis. Ollio

'· '

Q(AOOI&amp;\Q8
326 SECOND AVE,

GAlliPOLIS, 0.

ONE GROUP
LADIES FALL
TRANSITIONAL

DRESSES
DACRON POLYESTER
&amp;
COTION
'ASSORTED COLORS
SIZE.8-18
VAL~ES

TO •30

SPECIAL

last Chance

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WSCS'
ld Meettng
.'

GALUPOlJS - The fourth
annual faU meeting of the
Southeastern District of the
Ohio
Retired
Teachers .
Association wl1l be held at Burr
Oak Lodge on Wednesday, Oct.
6. A social hour will be held
from II a.m. • noon with a
luncheon followuig.
The main speaker will be
Robert Hell Lancaster the
designer of 'the Ameri~ 50
Star Flag.
A patriotic theme wiD prevail

~hout

the meeting. Miss

Mildred Baver, a member of the
board slate organJZB
· tion, will
discuss the financial aid for

Ohio Retired Teachers.
Arrangements for this meeting
are being made by the 12
chapters in Southeastern
district, Athens, Gallia,
Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence,
Meigs, Morgan, Perry, Pike,
Scioto V'mlon and Washington
COIIltl~.
'
All members are ·welcome
and urged to get their reser·
vations to their chapter
president before Sept. 30.

president; HolliJ Brumfield, of Mrs. M:arv1J1 GindleoiJurger. . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
Y1teiJi
I !rut· Lea Thetiafr, Mrs. Ray II!JCbes pi IDled the
~eCHlarJ; Tom Brumfield, secretary's report and Mrs.
treuarer· George Honaker,
10111 Feader; Ricky Joy,
lEO !len; and Mite Pope IIIIi
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SJmpllt flaias
'The Gentle Tooch
That Means So Much

llllllfs Flaiit
1 f,t:l!l{. U:
,•Senie
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rt

. . I.

•

Jlllilb &amp;fOIIP.

992-5561
QFIIUI F«
Y-f-Need,l

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the new fall schedule and
discussing plans for future
meetings. Some manuscripts
were read and evaluated, and
writers reported on their
current projects as well as work
accomplished over the summer
111onths. It ls hoped that other
working writers who wish to
join will contact the group, or
attend the next meeting on
September 27. We are in·
terested in sharing the
problems encountered in our
literary work, learning from
each other's . experience and
skill in poetry wrttlng, fiction,
non-fiction and newspaper
work.
The faD schedule through the
end of the year has been set lor
meeting on the second and
fourth Mondays each month,
7: ~9 :30 p.m. in th'o...Gallia
County library basement.
Anyone interested may
contact Mrs. Ruth Mullineaux

Bu" Oak Scene
For Luncheon

•
•

446-lm

smile occasionally in spite of \ . .
being crippled.
l

..,...........,

Thomas Host
Council Meet
.

5

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1

GAUJPOlJS - The September meeting of the Morfield
Advisory Council was held at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Maurice M. Thoma.s for lhla
month's meeting. Mrs. ArleDe
Tracy, vice-chairman, was Ill
charge of !he meeting .
A program was given !rom
Pla1ms 19, verses 7-14 and
euerpts from Secret Place
Book, which was used. A song
was given then the meeting was
turned over for dilocussion by
the leader, Mrs. Bernice McMahon whose topic was health,
Medicare .md Ho:lpltal ' costs.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
~ McMahan, Mr. and
Mrs. James Evans and four
cbildren, Rev. and Mrs. Luther
Tracy and the host family, Mr .
and Mrs. Maurice M. Thomas .
Refreshments were served. The
ilexl meeting will be beld Oct. 9
II the home of Mr. and Mrs.
James Evans.

u•

evenings,
"M; ., llu.
Susan a.te, .......... .
maniiiCript to Ibn wllb 111e
GALIJPOIJS - The Writers group. Mn. '&gt;sfl1• ~.
Workshop met on Sept. U with Convener.
seven present. This was an
organizational meeting setting

Writet:l' Held Meet

: Mrs. Smeltzer Hosts The
Fren:ch. City ·Garden ·club .

•

.Church Group
Held Meeting
\

•

s llllei.SindiiJ,Sept.a.1m

a

Peggy -Baker

,.;•
••
;r;

and Mrs. Larry Russell and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Hersman and hro daqblers,
Mr. and _Mrs. Ernie McGlllthlin
and family, Mrs. Lura Gee and
son ViJID, guest of hooor, Mr.
Emes• B. lluslleD, V'mtoa; Mr.
and Mrs. Jerry Schroeder and
~· Mr. and _Mrs. Albert Jef•
fries, and family, Mr. and Mrs.

PNrt

,"O:11r.......

'l

•,,

j:.:

VINTON - The 18th annual Sarah Dilloo Meade. Mr. Oe&lt;li
RusseUreunioilwaBheldSepl.~ McGlothlin, son of Mr. Lewis
at the btme of Rev. and Mrs. and Uedo Russell McGiothliJi;
Noble Russell, Route 1, Vintoo. oo Apr. 24, married DOyle Irene
Approximately 31 families Gerhart at 7:30 p.m:, Wesley
.attending brought weD-filled . Meth"odist Church, Marion.
baskebi !(food and all enjoyed a Larry Levon Russell, son of Mr.
cafeteria style meal at 12 noon. Norwood and Betty Clark
Artificial faD flowers were RusseU, oo July 9, married
used as a centerpiece Marla I. Wray, daughter of Mr.
deco-ation for the table.
Denver and Josephine Altier
Only two of Mr. Rll'lsell's Wray, at Christ the King
\
children were ab!ent from the Church, Livingston Ave.,
reunion.
Columbus, at 6:30 p.m. Pemy
~
F:amilies came from. Athens, ·Sue Jeffers, daughter of Mr.
Bidwell, Blacklick, Carroll, Albert and Annabel RusseU
Cbancey, Columbus, Gallipo]js, Jeffries, on July 12, married
Grove City, Jackson, Marioo, Jerry Schroader.
MCliTal, Thornville, Toledo and Births recorded as follows :
V'mton, Ohio. Mler a wooderful Blaine Alan, son of Penny Sue
meal a few enjoyed horseshoe Jeffries, was b1r11 Feb. .4, at
and others visited and some Toledo, grandparents are Mr . .
took pictures. A business and Mrs. Albert Jeffries.
meeting was called to order by Samuel Jefferson, son of Paul
the chairman, the Rev. Novel and Linda Kemper Burnett, .
LIMA The United RusseU of Athem. The reunim born Feb. 8. grandparenbi are
Telephone Corrwany of Ohio has is to be held next year, same Mr. and Mrs. Everett Kemper.
named Peggy Baker Com- date and 1ime. The place is Usa Joe, daughter of Larry
munity Relations Coordinator uncertain.
' O'Dell and Debbie Vansicle
f&lt;r the l..iiruj Division. The
Betty Clark Russell, wife li RusseD, born May 24, grand~
announcement was made by w. Norwood Russell, is to serve as parenls are Mr. and Mrs. Olin
A. Brinley, Lima Division sea-etary and treasurer for one RusseU. Gregory Loren RusseU,
Manager for the utiUty.
m..-e year, rilaking a total of born Aug. 3 to Loren and
Mrs. Baker, a native of Rio five years.
Geraldine Weaver Russell, the
Grande, joined the Public
Marriages recorded were as grandparenlsareRev.andMrs,
RelationsDeparbnent of United follows: Jan. 25 in Tampa, Noble Russell. Todd Eugene to
two years ago and has six and Florida, Gary Rawlins, SOli al Eugene and DoDy McGiolblin
one-haH years of experience in Mrs. Lenora Barnett, married Fryman, lxlrn Nov. 11, grandthe field of public relations.
Ra;e Cotterman, daughter of parenls are Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
In her new position she wl1l be Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Cotterman. McGiolhlin. A son was lxlrn to
responsible for news media Larry O'Dell Russell, son of Mr. Beverley and Michael RusseU,
relations, coordinating special and Mra. Olin Russell m Feb. named Curtis, proud greatprograms for presentation by 22, in Sparta, N. C., married grandparents Mr. and Mrs.
company employees to em- Debbie Vansickle, daughter of Noel Russell .
ployee and public groups, audio· Mr. and Mrs. Foster and Rennie In military service is F1em
visual aids, and be an active Vansicle. Brenda Darlene Meade, husband of Brenda
member of the speakers Kemper, daughter of Mr . Kemper Meade, who is
bureau.
Everett and Daisy Rl!ssell stationed in Germany with
She is a graduate of South· Kemper, Apr. 6, married Flem green beret, and Raymond
western High School, Gallipolis Meade, son of Mr. Robert and Martin, husband of Shirley
Business College and attended
TJ'T
Grate Martin, is stati&lt;lled in
1
Rio Grande CoUege. She has OCU
1'1'
S Thailand.
also participated in company
School Gradua lions - Sheryl
1.. L
sponsored training seminars.
IUU
Ann McGlothlin, daughter li
Peggy is the daughter of Mr. RIO GRANDE - The Sep- Billy Wayne and Harriet
and Mrs. David WiDiams, Rio tember meeting of the Rio Mosher McGlothlin, graduated
Grande. Sh!! and her husband, Grande Faculty WOillell's Qub from Bloomington High School,
Roger, reside in Ada where was held at lhe home of thAJr. Calif. in June. Terry Grate, son
Roger is attending the Ohio Alphus Christensen 00 Wed· of Paul and Leron Russell
Northern University College of nesday, Sept. 22, ai 7:30p.m. Grate, graduated in Ju;&gt;e from
Law.
Approximately 28 members Pleasant High School, Marioo.
attended. As the fii'St meeting of Mary Ann Russell, daughter of
the new semester a social get- Rev. Novel and Alice Russell,
together was plaMed. The club graduated from Athens High
president, Alice Marotta, School, Athens in June.
The following families signed
conducted a brief business
sessioo first.
the register: Mr. and Mrs.
Saundra Koby ouUined details Vernon Russell, Kern, Steve and
GALUPOLIS- The Faithful for the style show planned for Vicki, Mr. and Mrs. Paul E.
Workers{society o(, the Poplar Oct.28attheco11egedininghall• . Ijussell, Kenny and, .Paula, Mr. .
Ridge Free-Will Baptist Cliurch Plans for the style show are weD and Mrs. Olin RusaeU; Tetcy11
met recently at the home of 00 the way _ publicity and and. Teddy, Mr. ·and Mrs :
Mrs. Ola Mae Arrow_ood fill' the hospitality committees are Woodrow
Russell-"· anll ·
Sept~mber meehng.
The working 00 their parts of the daughters, Daisy Kemper, Mr.
meeting was called to order by show, and models were selected
the president, Mrs. Rosetta from among the student
J~nes,,:n'd the group~· "He fraternities and sor&lt;rities.
Uves, .and the Lords t:rayer Models wl1l show styles from
was said by all. A scnpture Amy's and Haskin Tanner
GALLIPOlJS - The Young
reading by the hostess was Ciothiers, in Gallipolis . Adult Class of the First Olurch
taken !rom Romans, 2nd Memberstookho:me tickets for ofGodmetSept. 19atthehome
Chapler.
advancesaleat$1each ; tickets of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Kessel.
The roll was called and ~ues will also be 011 sale at the door.
Devotions were given by Tom
colle~led. Records of preVIOUS
Jean Curtis, program Kessel and a poem was read by
meetmg were read by the chairman for the evening and Avalee Stanley.
sea:etary, Mrs: Grace Leml~y club secretary, introduced two
During the business meeting,
stating ~t ~ills were pa1d. members whose husbands have class proj!!Cis were discussed
Nettie Swisher, Mrs. Ellen newly joined the faculty, Mrs. and approved. Plans were made
Glibe_rl and M~s . Alz~da James Clark and Mrs. Edward for the Halloween Costume
Halfhill received b1r~y gills Sofranko. Three games played Party to be held next month,
from their mystery SISters.
helped everyooe to become after which the meeting was
Mrs. Theresa Reynolds was better acquainted and refresh. closed with a prayer by Carol
welcomed as a_ new member ments were served afterwards. Kessel.
and a card was Sl!lned to be sent Hostesses were Sherry Ram- Refreshments of tea, Kool·
to Mrs. Jess1e Brothers. sey, Shirley Golgi and Lois Aid and cookies were served to
Readings were gJVen by Mrs. Forshey
10 adults and five children
Alma Hix "The Kind of Dad I'd
·
·
Buy," "Evolution," Mrs. Pearl
Lemley, song by litUe Christi
Lemley entitled "Can't No
Grave Hold My Body Down,"
and Lori and Susan McCoy sang
"Down on My Knees."
Abible quiz was conducted by
Mrs . Arrowood; reading,
"Mother Had a Utile Boy,"
Dottie McCoy; reading,
"Consolation," Mrs . Mae
Arrowood. The group was
dismissed
by
singing,
"Amazing Grace," and prayer
by Mrs. Pearl Lemley.
Next meeting will be at the
home of Mrs. Grace Lemley.
Refreshmenls were served to 22
members and guests.

~n:e vsa

,_.,.....,,j,

'

'

Hood gave the
lrea!urer's report. Mrs. Joe
Drummond, Mrs. Ed '!'lvmpson .
and Mrs. Ray Hughes reported
on the fall w..-bbop wbich was
·held recenlly at camp Francis
ADley. '!'be group made plans
for a money-making projecl
Mrs. Lewis ilqbes g 1ve
devotions by readin8 the 12th
chlpter al ROIIIIIIIS and lbe
groap Did the Lord's !'raJer.
AI the ckJee of the meetinc •
LaiTy

while elephant l8le pri..-

to refreshmeilts.

bdd

The nest meeting will be held
al ththc.meofMrs. Ray Hughes

on OcL 27.

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OUR SPORTIIG ·GOODS DEPT.
FEATURES

.. VIlElY.,., ....

lll s.-1 A11.

tllllilolls, 0.

Mon., Tuu., Wid., Slit. 9-5 .
Thun. 9·12, Fri. 9-1 p.m.

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�,
10-The&amp;nlayTimes-SeniWI. Swlday, sept. S,IJ71

CARPET-LAND, INC. WELCOMES EVERYONE AGAIN

·Mr. and Mrs. Patd .Weimer

First Baptist Church
Hosts Conference
''

Mrs. Gearold Ashley

Mrs. Charles Paisley

Clark-Ashley
1
Exchange Vows
f

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GALLIPOLIS - Miss Billie
Jo Clark and Mr. Gearold
Ashley exchanged wedding
vows Sept. 10,6 p.m. at the First
United Methodist Church, South
Shore, Ky. The Rev. Ronald
Masters officiated at the double
ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. H. ~ Clark,
Hurricane, W. Va., formerly of
Cheshire. The groom is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Gaytan Ashley,
Wheelersburg.
Escorted to the altar by her
father, Miss Clark wore
a floor length gown of
white lace over polyester, fashioned
with a
filled bodice, scoop neckline
and short sleeves. The waist
was accented with a large satin
bow. Her bridal veil was
shoulder length attached to a
dior bow. She wore a single
strand of pearls and carried a
white Bible lopped with white
carnations
and
yellow
streamers.

Her only attendant, Mrs.
Charles Leach of Gallipolis, was
matron of honor. She wore a
pink floor-length gown. with
matching headpiece and
carried a nosegay of white
carnations tipped in pink and
pink streamers.
Mr. Gaylan Lee Ashley,
brother of the groom, was best

Couple United In
Candlelight Service

man .
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Clark chose a navy knit
with white accessories and a
corsage of white carnations.
Mrs. Ashley, mother of the
groom, wore a gray knit with
red accessories and a whi'e
carnation corsage.
There was a reception
honoring the couple at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ashley,
Wheelersburg.
The new Mrs. Ashley is a
graduate of Carmichaels High
School, Carmichaels, Pa., and
is now attending Portsmouth
Beauty College. Mr. Ashley
graduated from Bloom High
School and is employed at
Foodland in Portsmouth.
Mr. and Mrs. Ashley are
residing at Route I, Wheelersburg.

Child Welcomed,

•
GALUPOLIS-Mr. and Mrs.
F. Jo ~n Morris, Washington
CourtliOuse are announcing the
birth of a daughter, Janna
Marie, Sept. 17 at the Fayette
Memorial Hospital. She is being
welcomed by a sister, Julia.
Maternal grandparent is Mrs.
Virgil Craft, Gallipolis.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. W. D. Morris,
Delaware, Ohio.

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~i t! Generation Rap \ill
~•y

@i!i!!i

••••

By Helen and Sue Bottel

~\\~

(Got a problem? Or a subject for dlsC11BSIOII, twO-«&lt;Deratloo
style? Direct yoor quesUous to ellber Sae or Helea Bolle! -or
both, if you want a comblnaUoa mother-daugbter aaswer.)
WHEN YOU SAY THAT SNICKER; BETTER YET : DON'T!
Hi, You Two:
I have a managing maiden aunt. She's great at bossing, and
she makes uncalled-lor remarks that my folks don't like, but put
up with. As she lives next door, I can'tavoid her.
.... Uke about snacks. Mom Jets us eat when we come IKme
from school. AunUe says this will "spoil our dinner." It doesn '1. H
I've heard it once I've heard ita hundred times: "Sandy, are YOU
into the candy (or wha tever) AGAIN???" Being it's none &lt;1 her
business - and Mom agrees but is too palite to say so-what's a
good comeback? -SANDY
Dear Sandy :
How about, "No, Ute candy's into ME! (T&lt;Hlee-61lickersnicker)" - SUE
Dear Sandy:
.... And get standard maiden aunt lecture No. 353 on "The
Impudence of the Younger Generation, Tsk, Tsk! !"? (Which
YOU might enjoy, but your mother wouldn't.)
In the interests of good family relaUons, I'd say: smile and
-a:alk away - chewing. - HELEN
NarE TO READERS: Writing a column with your teenage
daughter is sometimes like square-dancing to rock music: we
don't always agree abou t the beat, but we usually end up on -{If
near - Ute same chord. - HELEN
Dear Sue and Helen :
I'm sending you my picture so you 'II see the problem. See, my
Dad doesn't understand thallong hair for guys is just a fad - like
wide Ues and bell bottoms. He thinks "hair" means you're a
hippie dope fiend. Mine isn't even half way over my ears and it's
neat and trimmed , but he (Mom, too) insists I get it cut-{)r
else!
My grades are High-Band I don 't even smoke. The smartest
and most active, leader-type guys in sch9ol are longhairs - and
mine 's only medium yet. Please help if you can.- HAIR LOVl);ll
Dear Hair :
(Thanks for the pic.)
If it's any help: I LIKE your hair-and so do my girl friends,
• who agree IO!Jg hair on guys is fine, just so it's neat, clean- and
not longer than ours.
·
And it doesn't mean you're a "shaggy mull" (Mother version), or "Hippi~ag-doper " (Father's worry). As you say,
"hair" Is justa fad. You 'dlook like a real Delber~ these days, ina
crew cut. - SUE
Dear Father of "Hair Lover":
Com on, Pop, buy yourself a wide, wild tie, grow sideburns,
Sl!l YC URhair styled instead of sheared - and look back to those
1940 school days when teen fads also drove paren~ bonkers.
r;;verybody survived, remember?
. You have a son to be proud II. (Just ask the girls who read his
leiter and saw his picture!) - HELEN

GALLIPOUS- Miss Mary
Lee Neal, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Lorean R. Neal, Bidwell,
and Mr. Charles Michael
Paisley, son of Mr. and Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Paisley, Ewington,
were married in a formal
candlelight service July 17 at I
p.m. in the Porter Methodist
Church. The Rev. Kirby Oiler,
of the Vinton Baptist Church,
performed the double ring
ceremony before a candlelighled altar, with an arch
decorated with white mums.
The parents' pew was
decorated with candles and the
family pews with white satin
bows and baby's breath.
A half-hour of nuptial music
was presented by Mrs. Jack
Adams and Mr. Carl HunUey
whose
selections
were
"Because," and uThe Lord's

Prayer."
.
The bride was escorted down
a white carpeted aisle by her
father . She ' was given in
marriage by both her parents.
The bride wore a Door-length
gown of bridal satin covered
with chantilly lace. It was
fashioned with' elbow length
sleeves and a jewel neckline.
The detachable chapel train of
chantilly lace was edged with
scallops and accented with
smaU seed pearls. The bride
chose to wear a large wedding
picture hat with white satin
bows, and she carried a cascade
of white carnations and daisies
with a white ribbon .
Miss Neal chose Miss Linda
Blackburn, CollllDbus, for her
maid of honor. Miss Kathleen
Griffin, Miss Darlene Szalai,
and Mrs. Terry Harder, all of
Columbus, as bridesmaids.
The bridal attendants wore
rainbow colored floor-lengih
pants dresses of taffeta covered
with chiffon with empire
necklines and had long sleeves.
The attendants carried baskets
of daisies accented with ribbons

in rainbow colored ribbons.
Miss Stephanie Lynn Harder
was Dower girl. Her pink floorlength gown was similar to the
bridesmaids' and she carried a
white basket of pinlt: rose
petals. Master Kenny Ray Neal,
brother of the bride, served as
ringbearer.
Mr. Terry Harder, CollllDbus,
was best man for the groom.
Mr. William Snedegar, Mr.
Gary Eugene Adkins and Mr.
Edward Brabham served as
ushers.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Neal wore an apritol
ensemble with beige accessories and a corsage of white
carnations tinted in apricot.
Mrs. Paisley, mother of the
groom, wore an aqua dress with
matching accessories and a
corsage of white carnations
tinted in aqua.
Immediately following the
ceremony a reception was held
in the church felloWship room.
The bride's table featured a
three tiered wedding cake
decorated with white doves and
pink roses and the traditional
bride and groom. The cake was
baked by Mrs. Denver Walker
as a wedding gift for the bride
and groom.
Hostesses for the reception
were Miss Debbie Dinunizo,
Mrs. · David Hannah , Miss
Pamela Hall and Miss Kim
Budd, assisted by Mrs. Paul
Saunders and Mrs. Marshall
McClaskey.
Guests were registered by
Mrs. Virgil Harrison. After a
honeymoon in Kentucky, the
couple will reside in Columbus.
The new Mrs. paisley is a
graduate of North· Gallla High
School and is employed by the
City National Bank of CoiiiiDbus.
Mr. Paisley is a graduate of
North Gallia High School and is
now employed at
the
Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad
of Columbus.

CROWDS CAME

GALLIPOLIS- The four-day medical work. Rev. Zimprogram of the First Baptist merman will . speak to the
Church Missionary Conference Clllllbined adult Sunday School
was released ,by Associate classes at 9:15 a.m. The 10:30
Pastor, Harry E. Cole. morning worship service will
Beginning with a Teen have Dr. Hopewell giving the
Spaghetti Supper Saturday Bible message.
evening, the Baptist youth were All of the missionary guests
introduced to the missioilary will lake part in the 6:30 p.m.
guests with an informal lime II youth fellowship meetings. The
fellowship and fun .
.
7:.30 ~y evening service
The Misstonary Conference will provide an 'WOftumty for
speakers are Dr. and Mrs. · Rev. Zimmennan to show some
William .J. Hopewe!l,_ Jr., of his p~turesof ministry in
representing the Assocoation of West Africa, while the evening's
Baptist For World Ev~~ message ~ be given by. Rl!v.
where Dr. Hopewell IS thetr Paul Wetmer. The Wetmers
Deputation Secretary; the Rev. have served in Alaska for 17
and Mrs. Paul Weimer serving years, as thef have founded,
asmissionariesinAiaskaunder &lt;rganized and .help construct
Baptist Mid-Missions, and the New Testament Baptist
Evangelical Baptist Missions Churches in the 49th state
have the Rev. and Mrs. Daniel WhentheyrelumtoAiaskanext
Zimmerman
as
their spring, they will lake with them
representatives. The Zim- a new airplane wherein they
mermans have served as will carry on an extensive
missionaries in West Africa for evangelistic ministry in
over 20 years. During the past America's most northern state.
four year term in Africa they
A Pastor's-Missionary lunhave managed a Bible Boolt: cheon will be held Monday at
Store al)d helped construct an noon with many Southeastern
Optical Building wherein they Ohio Baptist pastors pressupplied over 500 people with ent to meet and to
needed eye glasses. The Zim- bear the mission'lfY guests.
mennansalsoministeredon the Eaclt evening Monday through
Niger Gospel boat along the Wednesday at 7:30 will
Niger
River
doing find one of the missionaries
evangelization, colportage and showing their fibr.s, while.

We Appologize
Due to the many people who came to our
store who were anxious ·to shop - and
couldn't get waited on, Carpet-Land
decided to repeat our Grand Opening
performance·especially for those of you
who we were unable to wait on. This
week we have a new shipment of crazy
size rugs, fresh from our warehouse -

Miss Paula Young
t.'J("J("
oun~ u
6

M • y;
Rtans
dd
•
·
zn~u ~
11\'VTov·nmb·nr Tile
YY
6 :
j

.

«;r

OPEN TODAY 1 P.M. TO 6 P.M.

j
GALLIPOLIS _ Mr. and Mrs. Russell Yotq 103 !!a.Uaal :

Avenue.
.
,
MissYouDjpsa 19lilgratblte of Gallla Academy HlgbSdlooL
andbasatlendedOlioStateUaivenityandisp e-tlyemployed ·,
wilb GaDipdl• Parlll Wareboaae.
.,
Mr. Magnusaen Is a 196'1 graduate II Gallla Academy 111gb '.
School. He also atlellded &lt;*o Stale Univenlty and received a ~
Bachelor of Science Degree In It'll.
,
Mr. Magi" t is preeently employed wilb the Eli Lilly ~
Qmpany of~. Indiana. The graci0111 cualcm of Gpell ';
cln.-chwillbeoiJeel"lledmNovemher27at7:30p.m.attheGnce ;
United Melbodlst arurclJ.
'
- - - - -·- - - - - - - - - - - - another brings a missionary nesday evening service.
Bible message. A missionary The public is invited to attend
panel consisting of Rev. and any or all of the missionary
Mrs. Paul Weimer and Rev. and conference services at the First :
Mrs. DanielZimmennan will be Baptist Church.
conducted during the Wed-

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NEW LISTING

~------------------------------------~·-

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12x23-5 Royal Blue &amp; Grn., Luxury wt., Acr:ilan

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'
\ 12x11-6 Avocado Green Heavy NYlon Shag
, 12x12-4 Bronze Gold-Cobblestone Patt. 501 Nylon
•

~

12x13-2 Sage Wild Shag-Kodel Polyester
• 12x12-7 Wedgewood Blue-Plush Acrilan
12x12 Lt. Blue Grn., Miracle Polyester
; 12x17-6 Bronze Green Sculptured Nylon
' 12x13-6 Turquoise-Tight Cobblestone Nylon

'

12x16-10 Fire Red Heavy Text., 501 Nylon

;' 15x15-10 Ruby Red-Long Lasting 501 Nylon

••
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'•
'
'

..

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9x15 Orange Super Weight Polyester
12x21 Avocado Heavy 501 DuPont Nylon

.' 12x19 Avocado Heavy 501 DuPont Nylon
, 12x17 Gold Heavy 501 DuPont Nylon

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••

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'

.LONG PEASANT GOWNS ••• $11

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t

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STORE.S''

Clio

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"

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:"ONE OF OHIO'S

HOURS:

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"'•
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149
140
159
170
145
159

SUNDAY 1-6 ~~·:K
MON.-FRI. 9·9
. TUES. WED~ - 9-5
\ THUR. 9-1

Register For A Free
9x 12-501 Dupont Nylon
Carpet
No Purchase Necessary
Drawing Sat. Noon 10-2-)1

BRAND NAMES
YOU RECOGNIZE
MOHAWK • OZITE
• GULISTAN • PATCRAFT
•
TREND
Shop And Compare Our Fine ValU&amp;

99

79
98
89
99

HEAVY WEIG"T.
POLYESTER

12'x15' width. Polyester Pile
Carpet. Outstanding resilience.
quick recovery from crush
marks. Non -a llergen ic . Easy
removal of spots and stains.
resistant.
Color
Abrasion
retention throughout the life of the
carpet.

Grand Opening Price
Compare at $9.95

6

.95
Sq. Yd.

KITCHEN·· Nylon
CARPETS
No more waxing and scrubbing!
Stain resistant. Easy to dean!
Enjoy the luxury underfoot of a
carpeted kitchen. All with high
density rubber backing .
Grand Opening Price
Compare At $6.95

who want an inexpensive. easy to care for

floor covering for kitchens. baths# rec.
rooms, basement, patios, etc .

•1

161
182
140
196
175
165

'

Clll1e In Q- Cal 44&amp;-1641

11

•
Sq. Yd•

Long, windy, heavyweiqhl, wild shaQs, set
mood for any deal&lt;. Model n.
Traditional, or Contemporary. rhls nylon
shag is beyond your fondest dreaf!! In
luxurv living. You must see It to beheve.

Fire red, While Gold. True Blue.

Grand Opening Price

"

Compare at S7.9S

sq. yd.

SHORTY
REMNANTS
2'xl2' up to 7'xl2'
•s• to •35
00

These little fellows will look fine
in your small bedroom, entrance
foyer, hallway, stairs or make a
stunning area rug. Many odd sizes
and colors to choose from. Hurry!

"501"

DUPONT Weitltt
NYLON

Heavy
Here it is: Heavy weight super Nylon 12 &amp;
15 wldlhs, In a galaxy of beautiful &lt;Dklrs.
This Is a labeled Dupont 301 Nylon Carpel
that

meets

government

.

------~------~- l ~~--~----------------------

and

agency

Compare at $6.95

aJOKIES

"

_sq. Jd.

EARLY BIRD GETS THE BEST PICK!
ADDITIONAL SALES PERSONNEL ON SUNDAY
TO SERVE YOU BE11'ER!
BANKAMERICARD OR CONVENIENT TERMS

SHOP-AT-HOME
Day or Evenl• Appolnlii!lnt
'

Carpet Land Representatives will gladly bring
carpet samples to your .home where you can
see and compare them with your furnishings.
They'll measure your II~. make helpful
suggestions and quote an · accurate cost
estimate, all free at no obligation.

,

-

""·

•

Gallipolis, Ohio

~II Collect iihd O.r
Representatives Will Come To Your name
Day' or Nigllt.

Out-Of-Townen:

CALL TODAY I SUNDAY) 1-6

446-1641

PIMIIe 446-1641 '

~

.

R.C. ·COLA

requirements. Long wearing in tweeds and
solids, all lhis is designed for lhe big
family lralfic and poor mans pocket book.
Grand Opening· Price

''

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•

1-6

· the

Grand Opening Price

Compare at S3.95
Limited Stock

4

SUNDAY

SHAG

INDOOR-OUTDOOR
Rough, tough, go anywhere indoor-outdoor
carpet. Won't fade or mildew. spots zip otf,
extra long wearing . A great buy for those

_,__..-OPEN

No more slippery, greasy floors !

119

12x8-4 Frosty Mint-Miracle Kodel

"•

HOT PANTS .... $7

139

12x19 Blue Green Pet Proof Herculon
12x31 Candy Stripe Green Nylon Rubber Back

•
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SHIFT GOWNS ... SS

117
112

"'
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Class of the First Baptist
Church sang some of the older VINTON - The BTl Class
goapel hymns at their Sep- met at '!'e V:mton Baptist
!ember meeting in the Church With rune mem~
fellowship room of the church. present. Laura Brown, m
Mrs. Julia Hammond led the charge of the program gave a
singing of "Onward O!ristian reading of "Joy," preceding a
Soldiers," " ! Am Thine 0 song of "Face to Face" which
Lord," "When the RoU Is Called. was sung by Ute group. Each
Up Yonder" and "The Old member told of some~g good
Rugged Cross" accompanied at that had happened to him and
the plano by Mrs. Bert repeated a favorite scripture
Harrison.
verse.
Mrs . Gus Steele, the Sue Ragan gave a acripture
president, presided over the reading from ~ 0 and a
business session. The opening prayer was pven by Nancy
prayer was offered by Mrs. Oiler. Preceding~ co~ break
Julia Hammond foUowed by another song of Brighten the
devotions given by Mrs. Julia Comer" was sung by the group.
MCGhee who read from the 95th Final plans were made for the
Psalm foUowed with prayer. dedication of Vinton Baptist's
Mrs. McGhee also read a poem new addition on Sept. 26, and the
titled "The Lord and Me " auction to be held at the Town
preceding a reading "Why N~t Hall on Oct. 9. .
Be Kind" given by Mrs. Julia The class will serve the
Hammond.
refreshments for the Men's
Miss Gusta Rose who was in FeUowship on Oct. 21, and
charge of the p~gram, con- Virginia Harder will. be in
dueled an interesting Bible charge
of
the
table
quiz. Miss Rose also gave a arrangements.
reading "Jesus Never Fails."
The social hour that followed
was spent in conversation while
WORKSHOP
being served refreshments by GALLIPQLIS - A parentthe hostesses, Miss Gusta Rose, child workshop will be held
chairman; Mrs. Faye Rose, today at Riverby beginning at 3
Mrs . Julia McGhee, Mrs. p.m. No charge, ~veryone is
Margaret Hardin and Mrs. invited. Mrs. John Ashcralt will
be the instrucior.
Julia Hammond.

79

15x9-8 Olive Heavy Texture501 DuPont Nylon

•

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Bible Class Met
GALLIPOLIS - The mem- At TT' to
bers of Ute Ann Judson Bible
V tn n

99

•

f

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Ann judson Bibk
Class Held Meet

12x14-4 Wheat Gold-Comm. Stain Proof Here.

: 12x10-5 Avocado Tiqht Weav~ Kitchen Nylon
...•
• 12x 11-7 Light Gold Heavy Sculpture Acrilan

''

'59
59

79

&lt;,

•

NOW

12x8 Grn. &amp; Gold Tones, Smooth Nylon

170

CARPEl

f£A1URlN&amp;.

39
49

77

'' 12x14-11 Raspberry Lush Shag Nylon
•••
•
'~ 12x12 Mint Green-Plush Acrilan
t fsxto-iRe.t'Heavyweight Tip Shear Kodel
'i

FOR SLEEP OR LOUNGING ..•

WASH 'N WEAR, DRIP DRY!

COMPARE
$ 95
95

"
••' 12x19-9 Bronze Gold-Tight Weave Acrilan

9'x 12'

How can we thank you! For the fine reception we
received during the 1st week of our Grand Opening.
Every member of our hard working staff thank you, and
promise to do the best possible iob helping you that is
humanly possible.

SAVE 30% - 40% - 50% - up to 60%

.SIZE
DESCRIPTION
9x12 Avocado Heavyweight501 Nylon
9x12 Celery Green Textured 501 Nylon
12x7-10 Blue-Green Stain Proof Herculon

FREE

DEAR PUBLIC:

CRAZY SIZE SALE

Magm a n,sooofDr.andMra.MarcusJ. Magnussen,611Fourtb ·.

OPEN TODAY 1 P.M. TO 6 P.M.

SALE CONTINUES All WEEK

SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT

RUG RIOT

"

Drive, are plea~ to announce theenpgement and approaclmlg ~
marriage II their daughter, Paula Jean, to Mr. John David ;,

FUN FWWERS! OVER-PRINTED PETITE CALICO TWIN PRINTS
IN SUNNY AUTUMN HAZE YELWW . ..
EASY CARE 100% COTTON BROADCWTH . . .

All the good sizes and colors you need to
pretty up the house for fall.
These get acquainted prices may not
be repeated. If you're only faintly
thinking about carpet, this may be the
opportunity you've been waiting for.
Anyway, come on in, have a free R.C.
Cola and cookies and browse around.

•.

«;r

'

SAW - - BOUGHT

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�,
10-The&amp;nlayTimes-SeniWI. Swlday, sept. S,IJ71

CARPET-LAND, INC. WELCOMES EVERYONE AGAIN

·Mr. and Mrs. Patd .Weimer

First Baptist Church
Hosts Conference
''

Mrs. Gearold Ashley

Mrs. Charles Paisley

Clark-Ashley
1
Exchange Vows
f

'

GALLIPOLIS - Miss Billie
Jo Clark and Mr. Gearold
Ashley exchanged wedding
vows Sept. 10,6 p.m. at the First
United Methodist Church, South
Shore, Ky. The Rev. Ronald
Masters officiated at the double
ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. H. ~ Clark,
Hurricane, W. Va., formerly of
Cheshire. The groom is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Gaytan Ashley,
Wheelersburg.
Escorted to the altar by her
father, Miss Clark wore
a floor length gown of
white lace over polyester, fashioned
with a
filled bodice, scoop neckline
and short sleeves. The waist
was accented with a large satin
bow. Her bridal veil was
shoulder length attached to a
dior bow. She wore a single
strand of pearls and carried a
white Bible lopped with white
carnations
and
yellow
streamers.

Her only attendant, Mrs.
Charles Leach of Gallipolis, was
matron of honor. She wore a
pink floor-length gown. with
matching headpiece and
carried a nosegay of white
carnations tipped in pink and
pink streamers.
Mr. Gaylan Lee Ashley,
brother of the groom, was best

Couple United In
Candlelight Service

man .
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Clark chose a navy knit
with white accessories and a
corsage of white carnations.
Mrs. Ashley, mother of the
groom, wore a gray knit with
red accessories and a whi'e
carnation corsage.
There was a reception
honoring the couple at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ashley,
Wheelersburg.
The new Mrs. Ashley is a
graduate of Carmichaels High
School, Carmichaels, Pa., and
is now attending Portsmouth
Beauty College. Mr. Ashley
graduated from Bloom High
School and is employed at
Foodland in Portsmouth.
Mr. and Mrs. Ashley are
residing at Route I, Wheelersburg.

Child Welcomed,

•
GALUPOLIS-Mr. and Mrs.
F. Jo ~n Morris, Washington
CourtliOuse are announcing the
birth of a daughter, Janna
Marie, Sept. 17 at the Fayette
Memorial Hospital. She is being
welcomed by a sister, Julia.
Maternal grandparent is Mrs.
Virgil Craft, Gallipolis.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. W. D. Morris,
Delaware, Ohio.

.. i~~j*i;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~;~~~~~~~~~;~~~~;;~1;~~fJ~~~~;~;~;~~;~~~~~~~;~;;;;~~;~~~1~~~!j~~~;~~f~*~*~~~~~~lili;~
::::···:..
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~i t! Generation Rap \ill
~•y

@i!i!!i

••••

By Helen and Sue Bottel

~\\~

(Got a problem? Or a subject for dlsC11BSIOII, twO-«&lt;Deratloo
style? Direct yoor quesUous to ellber Sae or Helea Bolle! -or
both, if you want a comblnaUoa mother-daugbter aaswer.)
WHEN YOU SAY THAT SNICKER; BETTER YET : DON'T!
Hi, You Two:
I have a managing maiden aunt. She's great at bossing, and
she makes uncalled-lor remarks that my folks don't like, but put
up with. As she lives next door, I can'tavoid her.
.... Uke about snacks. Mom Jets us eat when we come IKme
from school. AunUe says this will "spoil our dinner." It doesn '1. H
I've heard it once I've heard ita hundred times: "Sandy, are YOU
into the candy (or wha tever) AGAIN???" Being it's none &lt;1 her
business - and Mom agrees but is too palite to say so-what's a
good comeback? -SANDY
Dear Sandy :
How about, "No, Ute candy's into ME! (T&lt;Hlee-61lickersnicker)" - SUE
Dear Sandy:
.... And get standard maiden aunt lecture No. 353 on "The
Impudence of the Younger Generation, Tsk, Tsk! !"? (Which
YOU might enjoy, but your mother wouldn't.)
In the interests of good family relaUons, I'd say: smile and
-a:alk away - chewing. - HELEN
NarE TO READERS: Writing a column with your teenage
daughter is sometimes like square-dancing to rock music: we
don't always agree abou t the beat, but we usually end up on -{If
near - Ute same chord. - HELEN
Dear Sue and Helen :
I'm sending you my picture so you 'II see the problem. See, my
Dad doesn't understand thallong hair for guys is just a fad - like
wide Ues and bell bottoms. He thinks "hair" means you're a
hippie dope fiend. Mine isn't even half way over my ears and it's
neat and trimmed , but he (Mom, too) insists I get it cut-{)r
else!
My grades are High-Band I don 't even smoke. The smartest
and most active, leader-type guys in sch9ol are longhairs - and
mine 's only medium yet. Please help if you can.- HAIR LOVl);ll
Dear Hair :
(Thanks for the pic.)
If it's any help: I LIKE your hair-and so do my girl friends,
• who agree IO!Jg hair on guys is fine, just so it's neat, clean- and
not longer than ours.
·
And it doesn't mean you're a "shaggy mull" (Mother version), or "Hippi~ag-doper " (Father's worry). As you say,
"hair" Is justa fad. You 'dlook like a real Delber~ these days, ina
crew cut. - SUE
Dear Father of "Hair Lover":
Com on, Pop, buy yourself a wide, wild tie, grow sideburns,
Sl!l YC URhair styled instead of sheared - and look back to those
1940 school days when teen fads also drove paren~ bonkers.
r;;verybody survived, remember?
. You have a son to be proud II. (Just ask the girls who read his
leiter and saw his picture!) - HELEN

GALLIPOUS- Miss Mary
Lee Neal, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Lorean R. Neal, Bidwell,
and Mr. Charles Michael
Paisley, son of Mr. and Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Paisley, Ewington,
were married in a formal
candlelight service July 17 at I
p.m. in the Porter Methodist
Church. The Rev. Kirby Oiler,
of the Vinton Baptist Church,
performed the double ring
ceremony before a candlelighled altar, with an arch
decorated with white mums.
The parents' pew was
decorated with candles and the
family pews with white satin
bows and baby's breath.
A half-hour of nuptial music
was presented by Mrs. Jack
Adams and Mr. Carl HunUey
whose
selections
were
"Because," and uThe Lord's

Prayer."
.
The bride was escorted down
a white carpeted aisle by her
father . She ' was given in
marriage by both her parents.
The bride wore a Door-length
gown of bridal satin covered
with chantilly lace. It was
fashioned with' elbow length
sleeves and a jewel neckline.
The detachable chapel train of
chantilly lace was edged with
scallops and accented with
smaU seed pearls. The bride
chose to wear a large wedding
picture hat with white satin
bows, and she carried a cascade
of white carnations and daisies
with a white ribbon .
Miss Neal chose Miss Linda
Blackburn, CollllDbus, for her
maid of honor. Miss Kathleen
Griffin, Miss Darlene Szalai,
and Mrs. Terry Harder, all of
Columbus, as bridesmaids.
The bridal attendants wore
rainbow colored floor-lengih
pants dresses of taffeta covered
with chiffon with empire
necklines and had long sleeves.
The attendants carried baskets
of daisies accented with ribbons

in rainbow colored ribbons.
Miss Stephanie Lynn Harder
was Dower girl. Her pink floorlength gown was similar to the
bridesmaids' and she carried a
white basket of pinlt: rose
petals. Master Kenny Ray Neal,
brother of the bride, served as
ringbearer.
Mr. Terry Harder, CollllDbus,
was best man for the groom.
Mr. William Snedegar, Mr.
Gary Eugene Adkins and Mr.
Edward Brabham served as
ushers.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Neal wore an apritol
ensemble with beige accessories and a corsage of white
carnations tinted in apricot.
Mrs. Paisley, mother of the
groom, wore an aqua dress with
matching accessories and a
corsage of white carnations
tinted in aqua.
Immediately following the
ceremony a reception was held
in the church felloWship room.
The bride's table featured a
three tiered wedding cake
decorated with white doves and
pink roses and the traditional
bride and groom. The cake was
baked by Mrs. Denver Walker
as a wedding gift for the bride
and groom.
Hostesses for the reception
were Miss Debbie Dinunizo,
Mrs. · David Hannah , Miss
Pamela Hall and Miss Kim
Budd, assisted by Mrs. Paul
Saunders and Mrs. Marshall
McClaskey.
Guests were registered by
Mrs. Virgil Harrison. After a
honeymoon in Kentucky, the
couple will reside in Columbus.
The new Mrs. paisley is a
graduate of North· Gallla High
School and is employed by the
City National Bank of CoiiiiDbus.
Mr. Paisley is a graduate of
North Gallia High School and is
now employed at
the
Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad
of Columbus.

CROWDS CAME

GALLIPOLIS- The four-day medical work. Rev. Zimprogram of the First Baptist merman will . speak to the
Church Missionary Conference Clllllbined adult Sunday School
was released ,by Associate classes at 9:15 a.m. The 10:30
Pastor, Harry E. Cole. morning worship service will
Beginning with a Teen have Dr. Hopewell giving the
Spaghetti Supper Saturday Bible message.
evening, the Baptist youth were All of the missionary guests
introduced to the missioilary will lake part in the 6:30 p.m.
guests with an informal lime II youth fellowship meetings. The
fellowship and fun .
.
7:.30 ~y evening service
The Misstonary Conference will provide an 'WOftumty for
speakers are Dr. and Mrs. · Rev. Zimmennan to show some
William .J. Hopewe!l,_ Jr., of his p~turesof ministry in
representing the Assocoation of West Africa, while the evening's
Baptist For World Ev~~ message ~ be given by. Rl!v.
where Dr. Hopewell IS thetr Paul Wetmer. The Wetmers
Deputation Secretary; the Rev. have served in Alaska for 17
and Mrs. Paul Weimer serving years, as thef have founded,
asmissionariesinAiaskaunder &lt;rganized and .help construct
Baptist Mid-Missions, and the New Testament Baptist
Evangelical Baptist Missions Churches in the 49th state
have the Rev. and Mrs. Daniel WhentheyrelumtoAiaskanext
Zimmerman
as
their spring, they will lake with them
representatives. The Zim- a new airplane wherein they
mermans have served as will carry on an extensive
missionaries in West Africa for evangelistic ministry in
over 20 years. During the past America's most northern state.
four year term in Africa they
A Pastor's-Missionary lunhave managed a Bible Boolt: cheon will be held Monday at
Store al)d helped construct an noon with many Southeastern
Optical Building wherein they Ohio Baptist pastors pressupplied over 500 people with ent to meet and to
needed eye glasses. The Zim- bear the mission'lfY guests.
mennansalsoministeredon the Eaclt evening Monday through
Niger Gospel boat along the Wednesday at 7:30 will
Niger
River
doing find one of the missionaries
evangelization, colportage and showing their fibr.s, while.

We Appologize
Due to the many people who came to our
store who were anxious ·to shop - and
couldn't get waited on, Carpet-Land
decided to repeat our Grand Opening
performance·especially for those of you
who we were unable to wait on. This
week we have a new shipment of crazy
size rugs, fresh from our warehouse -

Miss Paula Young
t.'J("J("
oun~ u
6

M • y;
Rtans
dd
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zn~u ~
11\'VTov·nmb·nr Tile
YY
6 :
j

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OPEN TODAY 1 P.M. TO 6 P.M.

j
GALLIPOLIS _ Mr. and Mrs. Russell Yotq 103 !!a.Uaal :

Avenue.
.
,
MissYouDjpsa 19lilgratblte of Gallla Academy HlgbSdlooL
andbasatlendedOlioStateUaivenityandisp e-tlyemployed ·,
wilb GaDipdl• Parlll Wareboaae.
.,
Mr. Magnusaen Is a 196'1 graduate II Gallla Academy 111gb '.
School. He also atlellded &lt;*o Stale Univenlty and received a ~
Bachelor of Science Degree In It'll.
,
Mr. Magi" t is preeently employed wilb the Eli Lilly ~
Qmpany of~. Indiana. The graci0111 cualcm of Gpell ';
cln.-chwillbeoiJeel"lledmNovemher27at7:30p.m.attheGnce ;
United Melbodlst arurclJ.
'
- - - - -·- - - - - - - - - - - - another brings a missionary nesday evening service.
Bible message. A missionary The public is invited to attend
panel consisting of Rev. and any or all of the missionary
Mrs. Paul Weimer and Rev. and conference services at the First :
Mrs. DanielZimmennan will be Baptist Church.
conducted during the Wed-

These are ends of rolls and first quality remnants. 1he vt'ry best money can buy! Save

like never bel..-e. Most all sizes, colors, and textures. These are great for any area in
your home ..- business. Balhs. kitchens, sleirs, runners, bedrooms. office and some
are large enough to do a living room and dining room. Many more lo choose from . All
subject to pri..- sale.
NEW LISTING

~------------------------------------~·-

Petite Calico print on a ground of sunny Autumn Haze
Yellow ... overprinted for an embroidery look etched
in black . Black crochet edgings for a so-feminine
flair, black decorative gripper snaps ... self-fabric
double rufflings! Fun 'n fashion in sizes P. S.M. L.

•

"•
•
"

•
''

230

129

200

119

159

98
89
69
79
79
109
169
179
79
79
109
59

149

•

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12x23-5 Royal Blue &amp; Grn., Luxury wt., Acr:ilan

239
299

12x13-2 Bl. Grn., Rubber Back, Kitchen Carpet

126

12x11-2 Fire Red " 501 Nylon-Tracery Patt.

119

't

n

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12x13-9 Med. &amp; Dk. Blue Commercial Weave Nylon 189
12x9-7 Coin Gold-Tight-Smooth Text., Acrilan
95

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\ 12x11-6 Avocado Green Heavy NYlon Shag
, 12x12-4 Bronze Gold-Cobblestone Patt. 501 Nylon
•

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12x13-2 Sage Wild Shag-Kodel Polyester
• 12x12-7 Wedgewood Blue-Plush Acrilan
12x12 Lt. Blue Grn., Miracle Polyester
; 12x17-6 Bronze Green Sculptured Nylon
' 12x13-6 Turquoise-Tight Cobblestone Nylon

'

12x16-10 Fire Red Heavy Text., 501 Nylon

;' 15x15-10 Ruby Red-Long Lasting 501 Nylon

••
"

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'

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9x15 Orange Super Weight Polyester
12x21 Avocado Heavy 501 DuPont Nylon

.' 12x19 Avocado Heavy 501 DuPont Nylon
, 12x17 Gold Heavy 501 DuPont Nylon

•',_
••

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.LONG PEASANT GOWNS ••• $11

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.'•

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t

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STORE.S''

Clio

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:"ONE OF OHIO'S

HOURS:

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149
140
159
170
145
159

SUNDAY 1-6 ~~·:K
MON.-FRI. 9·9
. TUES. WED~ - 9-5
\ THUR. 9-1

Register For A Free
9x 12-501 Dupont Nylon
Carpet
No Purchase Necessary
Drawing Sat. Noon 10-2-)1

BRAND NAMES
YOU RECOGNIZE
MOHAWK • OZITE
• GULISTAN • PATCRAFT
•
TREND
Shop And Compare Our Fine ValU&amp;

99

79
98
89
99

HEAVY WEIG"T.
POLYESTER

12'x15' width. Polyester Pile
Carpet. Outstanding resilience.
quick recovery from crush
marks. Non -a llergen ic . Easy
removal of spots and stains.
resistant.
Color
Abrasion
retention throughout the life of the
carpet.

Grand Opening Price
Compare at $9.95

6

.95
Sq. Yd.

KITCHEN·· Nylon
CARPETS
No more waxing and scrubbing!
Stain resistant. Easy to dean!
Enjoy the luxury underfoot of a
carpeted kitchen. All with high
density rubber backing .
Grand Opening Price
Compare At $6.95

who want an inexpensive. easy to care for

floor covering for kitchens. baths# rec.
rooms, basement, patios, etc .

•1

161
182
140
196
175
165

'

Clll1e In Q- Cal 44&amp;-1641

11

•
Sq. Yd•

Long, windy, heavyweiqhl, wild shaQs, set
mood for any deal&lt;. Model n.
Traditional, or Contemporary. rhls nylon
shag is beyond your fondest dreaf!! In
luxurv living. You must see It to beheve.

Fire red, While Gold. True Blue.

Grand Opening Price

"

Compare at S7.9S

sq. yd.

SHORTY
REMNANTS
2'xl2' up to 7'xl2'
•s• to •35
00

These little fellows will look fine
in your small bedroom, entrance
foyer, hallway, stairs or make a
stunning area rug. Many odd sizes
and colors to choose from. Hurry!

"501"

DUPONT Weitltt
NYLON

Heavy
Here it is: Heavy weight super Nylon 12 &amp;
15 wldlhs, In a galaxy of beautiful &lt;Dklrs.
This Is a labeled Dupont 301 Nylon Carpel
that

meets

government

.

------~------~- l ~~--~----------------------

and

agency

Compare at $6.95

aJOKIES

"

_sq. Jd.

EARLY BIRD GETS THE BEST PICK!
ADDITIONAL SALES PERSONNEL ON SUNDAY
TO SERVE YOU BE11'ER!
BANKAMERICARD OR CONVENIENT TERMS

SHOP-AT-HOME
Day or Evenl• Appolnlii!lnt
'

Carpet Land Representatives will gladly bring
carpet samples to your .home where you can
see and compare them with your furnishings.
They'll measure your II~. make helpful
suggestions and quote an · accurate cost
estimate, all free at no obligation.

,

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Gallipolis, Ohio

~II Collect iihd O.r
Representatives Will Come To Your name
Day' or Nigllt.

Out-Of-Townen:

CALL TODAY I SUNDAY) 1-6

446-1641

PIMIIe 446-1641 '

~

.

R.C. ·COLA

requirements. Long wearing in tweeds and
solids, all lhis is designed for lhe big
family lralfic and poor mans pocket book.
Grand Opening· Price

''

•
•

1-6

· the

Grand Opening Price

Compare at S3.95
Limited Stock

4

SUNDAY

SHAG

INDOOR-OUTDOOR
Rough, tough, go anywhere indoor-outdoor
carpet. Won't fade or mildew. spots zip otf,
extra long wearing . A great buy for those

_,__..-OPEN

No more slippery, greasy floors !

119

12x8-4 Frosty Mint-Miracle Kodel

"•

HOT PANTS .... $7

139

12x19 Blue Green Pet Proof Herculon
12x31 Candy Stripe Green Nylon Rubber Back

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•
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SHIFT GOWNS ... SS

117
112

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,

Class of the First Baptist
Church sang some of the older VINTON - The BTl Class
goapel hymns at their Sep- met at '!'e V:mton Baptist
!ember meeting in the Church With rune mem~
fellowship room of the church. present. Laura Brown, m
Mrs. Julia Hammond led the charge of the program gave a
singing of "Onward O!ristian reading of "Joy," preceding a
Soldiers," " ! Am Thine 0 song of "Face to Face" which
Lord," "When the RoU Is Called. was sung by Ute group. Each
Up Yonder" and "The Old member told of some~g good
Rugged Cross" accompanied at that had happened to him and
the plano by Mrs. Bert repeated a favorite scripture
Harrison.
verse.
Mrs . Gus Steele, the Sue Ragan gave a acripture
president, presided over the reading from ~ 0 and a
business session. The opening prayer was pven by Nancy
prayer was offered by Mrs. Oiler. Preceding~ co~ break
Julia Hammond foUowed by another song of Brighten the
devotions given by Mrs. Julia Comer" was sung by the group.
MCGhee who read from the 95th Final plans were made for the
Psalm foUowed with prayer. dedication of Vinton Baptist's
Mrs. McGhee also read a poem new addition on Sept. 26, and the
titled "The Lord and Me " auction to be held at the Town
preceding a reading "Why N~t Hall on Oct. 9. .
Be Kind" given by Mrs. Julia The class will serve the
Hammond.
refreshments for the Men's
Miss Gusta Rose who was in FeUowship on Oct. 21, and
charge of the p~gram, con- Virginia Harder will. be in
dueled an interesting Bible charge
of
the
table
quiz. Miss Rose also gave a arrangements.
reading "Jesus Never Fails."
The social hour that followed
was spent in conversation while
WORKSHOP
being served refreshments by GALLIPQLIS - A parentthe hostesses, Miss Gusta Rose, child workshop will be held
chairman; Mrs. Faye Rose, today at Riverby beginning at 3
Mrs . Julia McGhee, Mrs. p.m. No charge, ~veryone is
Margaret Hardin and Mrs. invited. Mrs. John Ashcralt will
be the instrucior.
Julia Hammond.

79

15x9-8 Olive Heavy Texture501 DuPont Nylon

•

..

Bible Class Met
GALLIPOLIS - The mem- At TT' to
bers of Ute Ann Judson Bible
V tn n

99

•

f

'

Ann judson Bibk
Class Held Meet

12x14-4 Wheat Gold-Comm. Stain Proof Here.

: 12x10-5 Avocado Tiqht Weav~ Kitchen Nylon
...•
• 12x 11-7 Light Gold Heavy Sculpture Acrilan

''

'59
59

79

&lt;,

•

NOW

12x8 Grn. &amp; Gold Tones, Smooth Nylon

170

CARPEl

f£A1URlN&amp;.

39
49

77

'' 12x14-11 Raspberry Lush Shag Nylon
•••
•
'~ 12x12 Mint Green-Plush Acrilan
t fsxto-iRe.t'Heavyweight Tip Shear Kodel
'i

FOR SLEEP OR LOUNGING ..•

WASH 'N WEAR, DRIP DRY!

COMPARE
$ 95
95

"
••' 12x19-9 Bronze Gold-Tight Weave Acrilan

9'x 12'

How can we thank you! For the fine reception we
received during the 1st week of our Grand Opening.
Every member of our hard working staff thank you, and
promise to do the best possible iob helping you that is
humanly possible.

SAVE 30% - 40% - 50% - up to 60%

.SIZE
DESCRIPTION
9x12 Avocado Heavyweight501 Nylon
9x12 Celery Green Textured 501 Nylon
12x7-10 Blue-Green Stain Proof Herculon

FREE

DEAR PUBLIC:

CRAZY SIZE SALE

Magm a n,sooofDr.andMra.MarcusJ. Magnussen,611Fourtb ·.

OPEN TODAY 1 P.M. TO 6 P.M.

SALE CONTINUES All WEEK

SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT

RUG RIOT

"

Drive, are plea~ to announce theenpgement and approaclmlg ~
marriage II their daughter, Paula Jean, to Mr. John David ;,

FUN FWWERS! OVER-PRINTED PETITE CALICO TWIN PRINTS
IN SUNNY AUTUMN HAZE YELWW . ..
EASY CARE 100% COTTON BROADCWTH . . .

All the good sizes and colors you need to
pretty up the house for fall.
These get acquainted prices may not
be repeated. If you're only faintly
thinking about carpet, this may be the
opportunity you've been waiting for.
Anyway, come on in, have a free R.C.
Cola and cookies and browse around.

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«;r

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SAW - - BOUGHT

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12-'l"'lt' lsi Till IS llaeJS . I J,~.a,lt71 ' .

.Cub A wards Made
A_..

Social Calendar

,

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r

Personalitj,Profile ~

IIIDDl.EPORT .~
iiCoull.
ftre . I*
!eel at a bmlly 'lbe flag ceemoojto opl!ll the .
"
· ·
Olltiac at Fort lleicl of llld:-. meeting was COildllcted by Ml'a.
SUNDAY Quurlerly birllldays· In be· o1r
' dlepart C'llb ~ Plrk .H i Frances Wlnttln&amp;tGD'• Den 2
HOCKING DISTRICT Sunday ...,,-ved, poUuck refresbments.
'l1nnl!aJ _ , .
· with Keith Doaa, Lealie Whit, . Sc~andBTUIIII!tilutewlllbe PAST MATRONS, Plimeroy
Iii the.at liCe of S. T. Smith, tinclon aJid Troy JolcDeDiel held •.t the Naomi llapUst O.apter 188, OES1 n-l.ay,
. mother had before that time. This has
BY CJlARLENE HOEFLICJl
all' nrtn,llllfordiJyitllgave tUin8 part.
.
Church Sunday at 1:4$ p.m. 7:30 p:m. at the home of Mrs.
been desigriated
the Ail!en8 Co~mty
TUPPERS PLAIN$~ Delving Into
awards to Mu Geary, a W!IIJ .· ·A bonfire was buill with an Sunday SChool, 9:30 with Alfred Crow, !\~~cine. Mra.
Hlstqncal Society.
.
to-.,n and family hiatory ~ Mra. Agnes
pntdi; .TGnySeott,~bob!:atpin; Indian dance bein8 pr
•led worshipall)a.m.withtheRev. Glenn Dill, president. ·
Mrs. Hill also has a Van Zant Bibl8
C. Hill 'a idea of a delightful way to
Keith 8lac:k, a .bear paldl; arotmd it bj the den as Danny Samuel Jackson, pastor
OHIO ETA PHI O.apter, Beta
spend an evening, a weekend or
a
which llbe plans to COiltribute to . the
vacation. ·
Meigs CoiDity Pioneer and Historical
sa-n Canon..' a bobca1 pin·, Smi'lli played
. '"•
speakiog.
·
· · ' "'"6''~·-· · Phi Sororit
· 8:15 p.m.
""' drum.
..
y..
Her entlmsiasin for things of the . Society
· ~,.,.,.,a bear patcll; · llysell esplained to the
HOMECOMING ·at Eagle Tuesday, . Columbus and
lJC10II as . the mwleilm Is
past ·. and her dedication to recOrding . completed. · · .
.Tmue So:ally, a wolf patch, a parents attending thenecmity Ridge Community . Church Southern Ohio Electric Co.
QlrrenUy MrS. Hillis worliing lib.
happenings and events . for !uture ·
belrboot,a~!II!'IP,anda ofpaylncdueSallyeararomd · Sunday. Sunday SchOol at 10 social room. Program on
re~ert~nce Is apparent. Mrs.·Hill adn!its . the history of jhe StoUt fi!mllY o~ Meigs .
pomt; Mark Tyree, to.. finance the scoqting a.ni,, b&amp;sket dinrier at noon: speech, to be given by Mn.
to becoming so engfiiiiSed in research· and Albens Counties. A copy of this will
a bobcal pm md a .bear book. program, Mni. Larry ~ Afternqon services 2 p.m . . Donna Byer and Mrf!• Edwtria
that she has liWe time 'for other hob- · go to both the Athel)s and Meigs County
Mils. AGNES BI1J., .
Webeloa receiving awa~ds e1p; H d !IS' appie"'atlon Cor featuring Bissell Brothers, All Scott. Hostesses, Mrf!; J_.tte
were Don Geary, a l'eCr1lller CC!OI*'atiDg duriDg ber wert special singers invited to Thomas, Mrs. JQdy Qwks, and
Historical I!!K:ieties. She Is also combies.
patch; 111!1 Dean Spencer, a With the pack.
participate.
Everyone Mrs. Carolyn Satterfield.
One must wonder how she has time
piling her own fi!nily history and has
Hatch Diary, 1791-11147; which are of
recrull.er pa_lch, scholar, ·~ 3 ..d 4 had the cJosing welcome.
AMERICAN . LEGION
for her history writing. Sbe has been . found three ancestors wbo were
historicill significance.
ll8tlnlist, .,-list, sportsmen, With all the cub 1C01D joining In
MONDAY
Auxiliary, Drew We)Isler Post · employed lull-time at. the .lliapman
Revolutionary War .soldiers.
Mrs. Hill came to Tupper$ Plains
"Ofte fol!ght for the British and had
and scientist.
a living cirde arotmd the lire.
MEIGS BAND Booilters, 8 39, 7:30 Tuesday night at the · Bros. Store in Coolville the past II
as a leen'Ber after her father, a con·
to lake the Oath · of Fidelity;" she
lllllny Smith .and llorsel Plana were. 8DJMQiced Cor a p.m. Monday, Meigs High hall. Program by -Mrs.
years, takes an active role In the North
strllctibn worker at Marmet, W. Va.,
Th(wnas were advanced into the webeloa wiener tout at the School. Refreshments. Special Catherine
Welsh, music
Betbel United Methodist lliurch where
recalled.
was killed and her rnbther l't!lllllined.
she teaches Stmday Scbool and is Its
wehelos and eacb of the boys American Legion Roadside invitation to new members.
chairman. Members asked· to
She bas compiled a histOrY of
She graduated from high School at
assistant treasurer, and is active in !be
Coolville, .18111-1968, which .includes ~ . 'Tuppers Plillns and SOlin after married
recei-,ed riiddleport uniform Park Monday 6 p.m.
MEIGS COUNTY Garden take table p~s for card party
replace
the
Tri
.,._,_
·
copy of the Original plat of the town as
-..............,
Club~! Assn. fall county meeting, to be held Oct. 21.
'
Meigs Co111ty Pioneer and Historical
Robert Hill. They were !he parents ·of
Society,
the
Athens
Co111ty
lliatorical
Cotmdl ooe.
8 p.m. Monday at the Pomeroy .POMEROY LODGE 184,
drawn jn 1818 for Ashel Cooley, a copy
four cbildren, David of BelPf!'; Mrs.
Mrs. Linda Lane, Mrs. Tom
United Methodist Church. F&amp;AM special meeting 'l'uellday
Society, of which ~ Is retiring vice
of the originill miDutes, a picture of the
Doris Jean Epling, Reedsville, Delbert
Kelly, and Mrs. Nellie
Members of garden clubs In- 7:30 p.m. Past Masters high!.
president, and the Upper Vanda'iia
first mayor, and a copy of lhe first b)'•
Hill of W8shlngton, W. Va., and Mn.
Historical Society of Putiwn Co111ty,
ltiws.as written when the vlllllge was Darlene Quivey, Sariosota, Fla. Mrs.
lfrE!lwwy were introduced as
vited to attend.
All Past Masters urged to atnew den mothers, and Paul
te d All M ster Mason ·
W.Va.
incorporated in 1835. Her history of the
Hill has 13 grandchlldren.
Mei&gt;!!::::-,TroyMcDanleland
BOY SCOUT Troop 245 _n ·
a
s mlu
addltloa,
sbe
does
her
OWJI
vlllllge
also
includes
j)lcture8
taken
. Over the Labor Day weekend, Mrs.
-.r
R',-,#1-.... J Monday, Middleport Legion YJted.
hOUJeWOrk, keeplaa au.-.ctlve yard
d(iring the ell'lY 1900's and information
Tammy 1tel1y as new cub .
-~UT~u Hall, 7 p.m. Any boy 11 years or ~~INE AMERJCAN Legion
Hill took her first air flight, a trip to
wltb bloomiac . flowers, palata
on churches, organizations and
older interested In becoming a Auxiliary Tueaday 7:30p.m. at
Florida for a visit With her daQghter,
whatever
~
paJ,IIag,
aad
does
businesses
which
nourished
through
Darlene and family.
RUTLAND - CaBers at the scout is welcome accompanied hall.
the years; ·
·
her OWil cupe~~ter ~!
During her . two days there she
, C'-- D..;- Au~u.
home of \!.ona McKnlgbt and by his ~ather. Contact Charles sou-r:~~~tYBoosters
Her
appreciation
of
old
things,
An
Ohio
,History
of
the
1913
Flood
visited
the Ringling Museum, the
.xn1 DUTT#
C).
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Stan""'ry Byers, Harold Hood or Norman
particularly family beirloOms, extends
has also been goUen together by Mrs. Urcus Museum, the Ringling Home,
have been Mrs. Ruby Halliday, YeaQger.
WedDesday 7:30p.m. at the high
into
an
antique
collection
with
many
of
Hill
who also has some lnfOI'mation on the Antique Car and Music Museum In
POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs. local; Mr. and Mrs. Ho1Jia MEIGS TEMPLE 153, staff school.
· her valued items ~g more than a
the Georg~ and Jobn Warth Indian Sarasota, the Sunken Gardens In St.
ll8bert Cbarles Vendula, Sr., Grate, Langsville; Mr. and andofficers,Mondayathomeof
THURSDAY
century
old.
Scouts
and the first U.S. Diall carriers Petersburg, Fie. and the beach.
liiii!IE. ~St., c::'evelllld, are Mrs. &lt;hick Corder, Ptmeroy; Mrs. Philip Meinhart. Co- _RIVERVIEW GARDEN &lt;:'ub
One of her prizes pass s!ions Is a
on western waters.
!rer whirlWind activity in ·Florida
111110111cmg the birth of a nlne Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hill, hostess is Mrs. Elizabeth will meet Thursday everung,
royal
blue
teapot
With
gold
trbn
whiCh
She
has
completed
histories
on
the
typifies the enthusiastic and energetic
potmd. 111 omce sm, Robert Fairborn; lberin Morris, Allman.
Sept. 30, at 7:30 at the~ of
belonged to Dr. and Mrs. Rol G~a~der of
Quivey and Dodcieta families of the approach to everyday living taken by
&lt;:bides Veadul!l, Sr.,~ AQg. Langsville; NanDan WID, local;
Mrs. Carl Buckley, With Mrs.
Coolville. Dr. Gunder was bc,lrn ln)869,
Tuppers Plains area and has &amp;eCIU'ed the genlill Mrs. Hill, who finds life
31, at boll Road Hospital in Mrs. NeDie Ville, Albmy; Mi.
TUESDAY
Donald Putnam as co-hostess.
and the teapot was one which his
·
several books, including the Elijah ·anything but dull.
Ce\leland..
and Mrs. Dale Stansbury, CHESTER LODGE 323, D. of lrislallallon of officers will be
Gra Ips ents are Mr. and ~ville, and Mrs. Lena A., 8 p.m. Tuesday at haD. held.
-:.: .·.·.· ....... ·.·.·..·.....·.·.·.·. ·.·. ·. ·..•.•,·.·.· .·.··
Ill'; Andrew V•ndnla, 6'1011 Pickens ·and Mn. Carroll
Metro Pad Inve, Mllyfield Plckena, Malon, W. Va.
B "&amp;Jt,,aua,indMr.mdMrs.
Mrs. McKnigbt and Mr. and
O!cil .ll.,,
Ptmeroy Route Mrs. Stansbury 1pe11t the day
1 llamlt! E. Slmmona, Red With Mr. and Mrs. a. ester
" - · W. Va., ia the · great- Houghland in McArthur
MASON - Miss !.Dis Ann the ceremony.
Vicki Rizer, Margaret Rizer, Brenda Sayre, Debbie Hudriall,
gr• Nber. 'lbe infJDt will be recently and 1RIIt to the bome
Rizer,Mason, was honored With The gift table was centered Carolyn Sayre, Jeany Rizer and Iris Payne, Ruth E. Roush and
c:llri*lled bJ Fatber GoUagbo.r of Mr. Houghland in a.Diicothe.
a pre-bridal shower Tuesday With a bride decoration. Miss and Andrea Dawn, Vu-ginia Mrs. Murl Burton.
at St. F'un.Wof Anjej O.urch Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Kanaw,
evening at the home of ber Rizer received many wedding W'llliams, Mary Dudding.
on Mayfield Road · iD Galea New Albany, also were recent
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse parents present was won b . grandmother, Mrs. Eller Roush gifts.
Frances Stewart, Pam
Sav
lliQe, O!io; with Dinps and Yiaitors at the home of Vona
Linda JleiW&amp;auer, Ollwnbus, McKnlgbt and Mr. and Mrs. C. Elementary School room Miss Price's second grade. y · here. Assisting was Mrs. Ed- Those attending were Miss Kearns, Joann Harmon, Nina
and activity com- Homeroom mothers named ward Ryan of Mason.
Rizer, Nancy Eads, Mae Styles, Jean Grueser, Kathy
llllf'I'J
_,
as god-jiM euts.
w. Stansbury in Rulland, ana. mothers
mitleeS were appointed at the are (first named the chair- Miss Rizer was to be Grueser, Sharon Keams and Rizer, Rita Ryan, Eller Roush,
or
first meeting of the 71-72 term man): First grade, Mary married on September 24, Sonya, Kay Ryan, Thelma Terry L. Deem, Marion Rizer,
recenUy.
Chancey, Nancy Patterson, at 8:30 p.m. at the· Henry, Ruth Ebershach, Erma Mrs. Minnie Rizer, and
With A
David Flagg, president, Doris Friend Faye Clifford home of her parents, Mr. Jesse, Mindy Davis.
hostesses, Mrs. Roush and Mrs.
Vase Arrangement
called the meeting to order with Shirley HubW:rd.
' and Mrs. Marion Rizer In Gloria Whitlatch, Phyllis Ryan.
the PTA ~yer. The pledge to Second grade, Dee Brown, Mason to Terry Deem, son of Young, Viv:lan Fry, Sybil Sending gifts were Kay
Designed By
the Amencan flag was led by Barbara Chapman, Janice Mr. and Mrs. James Deem of Allison, Levla Roush, Fay Gum Platter, !relen Davis, BUlle
Boy Scout Troop 242. Members Deem Darlene Jeffers Mildred Coolville, Ohio. The Rev. and Glenda, Beulah Bocook and Jean Dawson, Norma Riggs, .
ffiJ
of Judy Riggs' baton classes Pierc~, Opal :rerkle. '
.
Parker Hinzman performed Paula,AnnaAvls,EmmaRyan, .Peggy Anderson, Patty and
=.~:~~:!rt·
gave
exhibitions.
The Third grade, Louise Frank,
RoHaushl, MaryMari~mnlllRier, Vernon Roush, Mary Neutzllng,
&amp; IMson eo., w. va.
By Katie Crow
secretary'sreportwasglvenby Jane Barnett Susie Grueser
a
wey,
e zer, Rhea Will, Bernice Grueser, . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _•
Mrs. Janice Deem and the Minnie H~;ris, Emogen~
FIRST SON BORN
treasurer's
_by
Mrs.
Jane
Holstein,
Linda
Hubbard,
Janet
POMEROY
- Mr. and MrS.
POIIEBOY - Like to re•wk
a geHreD
Ronald F. Reynolds, Pomeroy
eani?J bow jalt tbeJN5sm: ve..-Neue, wbobas been in and Barnett. DaVId Nease, school Nease.
board member, was guest Fourth grade, Dorothy Route 3, are announcing the
ont If tbe lapflill au a ill 111111!1 IIIII yar is a patient at
speaker.
Amberger, Betty Ash, Jeanette birth of their first chDd, a nine
Bablr Vd'rill Calter. Mr. Neue, wbD is a clodlrated member of
Business included discW:Sion Duffy, Judy Flagg, Helen poiDid, 12 ounce son, Ronald
tbeilelp a.pter of tbe American lied a-11111 blood ..
of plans for the fall carmval. Hubbard.
Fran kl'm, J r., on Sept. 23 at the
c:blirmaD, ccdd - ch !ring up. His I'OIDI mmber is 3K Mrs . Daisy
· Patterson and Mrs. Fifth grade, Marcia Arnold, Holzer Medical
Center.
Etta Mae Norton were named Beverly Chapman, Janella GrandparentsareMr.andMrs.
VERY PROUD TO ANNOUNCE that lbree 19'11 graduates, as the prize committee. Mrs. Davis, Faye Hsmilton, Shirley W'illiam Reynolds, Pomeroy,
two fram Sallllw:rn IIIII cme fram Melp, are in the !llll'cblng !relen Hubbard was appointed Huston, Carolyn Roush.
and Mr. and Mrs. Walter
bu* at tbe ml'egu they are attenill"tt.
chairman of the "Country Sixth grade, Lou Ferrell, ' Wilson, Pomeroy. GreatFn* Girdami, 1011 of Mr. IIIII Mrs. Guido Glrtllami, Kitchen," and Mr. and Mrs. Mary Guinther,
Ettamae grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Pwasoy, a lleip pdulte, Ia p1aylnc in the band at Bowling Charles Hamilton, David Flagg, Norton, Mrs. Bobby Ord, Joyce Harold King of Pomeroy, MrS.
Gnal, while K!ilb Albley,IOII Gf Mr.lllll Mra. Robert Albley, Shirley Huston, and Joyce Thoren, Marybelle Warner, Pat Minnie Clark Pomeroy and
WF'alll,lllll BID B &amp;le,IOII ofMr.IIIIIMrs. Robert Beegle, Thoren,- on the organization Winebrenner.
John R. Long,' Hensley,
va.
Ra!lne, are Ia the Olio Uuhenlty Iliad. Qqralulallons -we committee.
The sixth grade will serve Mrs. Rena Ughlfoot, Pomeroy,
A
1ft ftrJ lllpiiJ Ill Jar a~,_llueacconnpli*nrut.
Delegations to the County refres. hments at the October is the great.geat-grandmother.
""
1IIIILE ~ 'I1IROOOB IKlNE old dlpplngs my very Council named were Mrs. meew.g.
Norton,
Mrs.
Deem,
Mrs
.
«- maftw.m.ln, Mrl. Tam (Jolly) CZow, came aCI'OIS an
Barnett, Mrs. Thoren, and Mrs.
alide U.t J 11111* you readen JD1cbt enjoy.
Put on a crushy-soft
ltisadbatGb ao lrue. Iamao bappy IDbavespa~tlhe lime I Betty Ash. Alternates were
VISITS TURNERS
crepe-soled
tie and teelllke
SON IS BORN
dd wilbmy late molber IIIII was able to do for ber the thiDgs I did, Mrs. Jeanette Duffy, Mrs.
. MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
you're walking down a country lane!
Patterson, Mrs. Hamilton, Mrs.
POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Dale K. Roush aM
A. Metal eyeletghlllle In Dark
lovqftt:r)'IPI'I"''l
Huston,
Mrs.
Marybelle
Brown
naked
glove leather uppers, Sl4.
H.
K.
Gould,
Ravneswood,
the
daughter,
Kathy
of
Apple
· '11* Is a leiter that waa printed IICIIDetime ago from a mother
B. Multi-eyelet tie In
Warner. Other committee former Oleryl Williams, are Creek, spent the past weekend
lhatliells a limy for the~ II. retired parents. 'l'be writer of chairmen
Brown
named
were announcing the birth of a 1011 here With Mr. and Mrs. Ben
•
crinkle-Blue
crinkle
and
tbe lelfcl' is ...UWu. ,
legislation, Mrs. Judy Flagg; Brian Keith, at St. Joseph Turner. Mr. Roush went to the
Black
crinkle-Plum
It l'&amp;ldl as fallon, '1 bad been an attentive and thoogblful magazine, Mrs. Marcia Arnold
Hospital In Parkersburg on Owen Watson farm at Racine to
cr.lnkle, $15
daacllter. Bat J was De8lecliDB to villi my para!Is as cileu as J and membership, Mrs. Gloria
Sept. 19. Grandparents are Mr. hunt squirrels. On Saturday
Cllllld -J had 1 fii'OiriDI fiiJDI)y II. my 111111 and was busy wilb Michaels and Mrs. Dorothy and Mrs. Harry Gould of
evening they visited With Mr.
u.y .,.,.. on my time IIIII energy.
Amberger.
Florida and Mrs. Pearl and Mrs. Millon Roush,
"I lheg&amp;Jt about a criUUJII I bad read about adult cNidren of
'The room count of most WUUams of Pomeroy.
MinersviBe.
ctier IJKeDis eoc:ouratioC them to be more kind and more
lboa&amp;bhl ADd to keep remembering what their par&amp;lls had
diu •• than.
to the cmclJwlon that I wasgiy!ng mG8l of my lime to
frifrimlsilllllids aad -.aiatancea to wbml I did not really matter. I
•a•wmber that my paraoll Daed to apeak 1oviDciY II. my parblarloftfnrflowen,saying lbatevenbefore I could talk, wben
llleyWI!IIid talteme out,ln tbe haby buggy, I would get wry a:dled wben I saw a floftr.
1 m'l 1 bow sudl tbinp about 'me meant 10 'Vei'J' mudl to
myparaoll .... while my friends couldli•tc:are less.
"'delamined llatlwouldstulthen to give more of my lime
Ill lbaleiDwbom Imallered- to my pirents.
"'am ftrJ bam today that lalo!Jped IIIII lhougbt because
my paldlla are both gcme oow and I did 10111elbing about them
limn! It was too illle.
"'tisao&amp;OIJI! Ill teD today's adult childralllat "You'll be s+
i'-r-f it yon ~~~Pel,_ retired parails. Or to wait liD years, until
lie boot is on the other foot,ands.y 'I told you so. •
"PaiD&amp; - ' acbes lbat come with the later yean of life ate
8
liM. The I •• ed Wille) lliat c:omel with retiraumt is bid. But
retired pll'eDis as a rule carry no cross thatlalrta Wlll'8e than lbe
indllhreoce Gf lhelr dlllcken.
"Iii _.., lheie parents have nolbing left to matter
a:mpt 111m- dildno.
.
"After relh&amp;ldllndolgences that would let them forget are
ao Jrns pnalble. Only their childral are left. ADd never since
llieCflllltll'tlbecbil*en IIICll'e bJ4Alflanl lban oow- ·
"lwilb aome IIi the '-Y and ambilloull clildralln their a
_. • . -far.._ bun home, could aee their par611a wallting
lit tbe
~. kl!ging for a letter fram them,
._ n'l' 1 bKit ...a, Into the..,_ withoQt one. Orwatcllthe
SALE SPECIAL
wartheyrefniDfnm llling the lelepbone in !be evening- jut in
'
eae - IIi lbe dl!l\lral calli.
''Or . . . . . . J7iDg lbroul!b their teeth to their Delglihon,
fliouln, and lbe flli1Jlle 111an about ule wooderful m . p they
.
'
jail pl , _ . . _
. . .fill dlillken-"
Open All Day-Thursdays
IF TWO AIMLT am.DREN of \WO retired couples pbone
MIDDLff'!)RT, OHIO
Open Fri. Ni~ht Ti19
.,_, 'JNblo
lllll . . lbeii.....,belbe~PH~IIilamluma
llal llbll .. ID lbe paper will be worthWhile.

ror

even

as

gold.,_:

c.

.,.._ t
.o

Betty Shaffer to Wed

.Severa/ CaJJ at

R

,

ome In

Jl

Committees for
Carnival Named

"*'•

October Wedding Planned

....

Mrs. Ronald Orr
..

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Fife of Pomeroy are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their
daughter, Jenny, to Mr. Roy Allen Roush, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry C. Roush of Mason, W.Va. ·
The bride-elect is a graduate of Meigs High School, class of
lOOs,andis employed at the Blue and Grey Bus Depot. Mr. Roush
is a·t968 graduate of Wahama High Scbool and has served three
years With the U.S. Marine Corps. He is now employed with the
ffiEWin Clarksburg, W.Va. An October wedding is planned.

(Miss Edna McCoy)
Account of wedding on page 14

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_Double Ring Ceremony on Sept. 4

Miss Lois Ann Rizer Honored at Pre-Bridal Shower

Katie's Korner

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u..- BirtiJ.I-

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Happy Anniwlsafy

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Dud._,S florist

POMEROY - lri a double the altar of East Fultonham
'
Church, Miss
ring ceremony solemnized Sept. United Methodist
4 at 2:30p.m. Saturday before Carol Jeilison, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Jellison,
became the bride of Mr. Paul L.
Smith, son of Rev. and Mrs.
MEET TONIGHT
Stanten Smith of Pomeroy,
MIDDLEPORT - The Youth Route 3.
Fellowship of the Middleport The vows were exchanged
and Rutland Methodist Chur- before the groom's father,
ches will meet this evening at 7 assisted by Rev. Willard Noce.
p.m. The banner started last The couple will reside In East
week will be completed for the Fultonham.
County Rally. Leaders are Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Cassell, MidOnly asteroid that ever bedleport, and Mrs . Billy
comes bright enough to be
Williamson, Rutland. Youth of seen with the naked eye is
all ages of both churches are Vesta, the third largest in
Invited to attend.
size.

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RACINE- Mr. and Mrs. Fred E . Smith of Racine are announcing. the engagement and approaching marriage of her
daughter,BetlyLouise8haffer, to Mr. Ronald Lee Wagner, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wagner of Racine. The wedding will be an
event of Friday, Oct. I, at haH psst seven o'clock at the Wesleyan
United MethOdist Church of Racine. The Rev. Martha Mattner
and the Rev. Dale McClurg will officiate at the open church
wedding.
Miss Shaffer is a 1970 graduate of Southern Local High Scbool
and a 1971 graduate of Vogue Career College. She plans to seek
employment in management and public relalions. Mr. Wagner
also graduated from Southern Local High Scbooi in 1970 and is a
1971 graduate of the Nashville Auto Diesel College. He is presently
employed as assistant manager of sales for the W. w. Williams
Company of Maumee.
·

Phyllis Davidson Betrothed
RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs. Leo DeU Davidson, Rollte 1,
Rutland, are announcing Q)e engagement of their dal!ghlel'
Phyllis Virgene, lo Mr. James D. Reed, Columbus, soo of Mr. and
Mrs. James M. Reed, Middleport, Route t
The bride-elect is a 19116 graduate of Rolland Higb School and
is eiiJployed at the Ohio Inspection Bureau; Columbus. Mr. Reed
is a 1962 graduate of Middleport High Scbool and Is employed at
the Addressograph·Multigraph Corp., Columbus. A June wedding
Is planned .
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Wedding Date is Set

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POMEROY - Plans have and Mr. Kenneth Wiggins,
been completed for the wedding soloist. The ceremony will be
of Miss Marsha Pugh, daughter conducted by lhe,Rev. Wendell
of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Pugh, Stutler and the Rev. Ji'omst
Dye and Miss Misti Ward. to Mr. Ted Russell, son of Mr. Donley. Areception will be beld
Flower girl will be Karen and Mrs. William Russell.
at the home of the bride and
Porter .
The ceremony will be an groom in Minersville im·
Mr. Don Roush will serve as event of Sunday, Oct. 3 at 2:30 mediately folloWing the wedbest man for his brother. The p.m. at the Minersville United ding.
ushers will be Mr · Larry Methodist Church . The gracious
Clevenger' Mr. Lynnie Tennant, custom of open church Will be
Mr. Danny Abbott, and Mr. Bob observed.
Whitmore . Ralphie Thompson
Mrs. Robert Codner will serve
ATTEND CONFERENCE
wiD serve as ringbearer ·
as matron of honor for the
POMEROY - Mrs. Glenu
Mrs. Patricia Steele will bride. Mr. Wayne Russell will Dill, president of the Meigs
provide a half-hour of nuptial be best man for the bridegroom. County Tuberculoilia and
music preceding the ceremony · The flower girl will be Miss Respiratory Association, and
Soloist will he Mrs. William Sherri McClintock and Mrs. Mrs. Charles Hayes, the
DeMoss. Miss Marcie Lidei will Wayne Russell will register the executive 3eCI'elary, were In
register guests. A reception guests. Mr. Alan Pugh and Mr. Marietta Wednesday for a
will he held in the church social Jon Grueser will serve as · district conference. Plana for
room immediately following the ushers.
the Olrlslmas seal sille Were
ceremony. The gracious cus(Om Mllsj'C ,will be provided by discussed. ,Theme this year Is
of open church will·be observed. Mrs." 'li1!ter' Bentz, organist, "HbW~Gret!n 'ill OOr Valley." •

Couple Will Marry on October 1st
NEW HAVEN- Final plans
have been completed for the
wedding of Miss Charlotte Ann
Clevenger, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Ellon G. Clevenger, to Mr.
Rex Earl Roush, son of
Mr .
and
Mrs.
Walter D. Roush. The doublering ceremony will be an
event of Friday, Oct. 1, at 7:30
p.m. at the New Haven United
MethOdist Church. The Rev.
William DeMoss will officiate.
Mrs. Cheryl Roush, sister-inlaw, will serve as matron of
honor. Bridesmaids will be Mrs.
Lore Whitmore, Miss Janet
Porter, Miss Debbie Laney, and
Miss Jaqet Smith. Junior
bridesmaids will he Miss Linda

I
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.,!lei..,

.,.am

w.

Mr. and Mrs. Roger R. Black
(Miss Karolyn Soulsby)
Account of wedding on page 14

Here's an exciling story
for fall in three
well-chosen parts :
Doubletwill by Jan tze n,
all texture interest
and marvelous

tailoring, accented
with double seaming.
Machine washable
100% Dac ron:t polyester
in black, coppertone,
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Flowe red shirt, $17.00

conn1e

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2 Pt LIVING ROOM SUITES

-""'"every

$79.95

UP

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

Middle of Upper Blocii-PomUOJ

Christine.f3ailey to Wed
'
MJi&gt;DLEPORT- Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bailey, Middleport,
announce the engagement snd approaching marriage of their
daughfllr, Christine, to Mr. Gary Sampaon, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Randall Sampson of 607 Edgela..,n St., Parkersburg, W. Va.
Miss Blliley, a graduate of the Middleport High School, class
of 19116, is a 1111111 graduate of St. Joseph School of Nursing,
Parkersburg, va. and Is employed in the coronary unit of St.
Joaeph Hospital.
Mr.Sampsoots a graduate of Parkersburg High School, class of
1981i.BeBIS vedln thdfarineCorpsfot two years and'is presenUy
.atlendlng Plrkeraburg Ommunily College, while employed as
aaslstant manager of the Holiday Inn at Marietta. An open church
wedding Is planned for Nov. 20 at the South Parkersburg United
Methodist Church in South Parkersburg.

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Stripes go on a sand blast,
in Jantzen's new aliDacron• polyester knits.
Alternating bands of sand,
black, White and jewel
tones of emerald, sapphire ·
.or copper make the
.rounds of !his long,
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Doubletwill pants, $19.00
Ali in sizes 8-18.

antzen:l
.

antzet¥

BAHR CLOTHIERS

w.

•

r .

In lhe greal drama of 1971,
Jantzen knits play
many parts .. . and you
have ali the best lines.
The action opens on
twilislripe pants and
vesl, fashioned of
machine washable
100'/o Dacron" polyester.
The colors : black,
coppertone,
emerald or
sapphire,
alight with
white.
Sizes 8-18.
The vest, $28.00
Twillstripe pants,
$18.00
Shirt, $16.__00

"YOUR FASHION CENTER''

2nd AVENUE
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MIDDLIPOIII', ·o.

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12-'l"'lt' lsi Till IS llaeJS . I J,~.a,lt71 ' .

.Cub A wards Made
A_..

Social Calendar

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Personalitj,Profile ~

IIIDDl.EPORT .~
iiCoull.
ftre . I*
!eel at a bmlly 'lbe flag ceemoojto opl!ll the .
"
· ·
Olltiac at Fort lleicl of llld:-. meeting was COildllcted by Ml'a.
SUNDAY Quurlerly birllldays· In be· o1r
' dlepart C'llb ~ Plrk .H i Frances Wlnttln&amp;tGD'• Den 2
HOCKING DISTRICT Sunday ...,,-ved, poUuck refresbments.
'l1nnl!aJ _ , .
· with Keith Doaa, Lealie Whit, . Sc~andBTUIIII!tilutewlllbe PAST MATRONS, Plimeroy
Iii the.at liCe of S. T. Smith, tinclon aJid Troy JolcDeDiel held •.t the Naomi llapUst O.apter 188, OES1 n-l.ay,
. mother had before that time. This has
BY CJlARLENE HOEFLICJl
all' nrtn,llllfordiJyitllgave tUin8 part.
.
Church Sunday at 1:4$ p.m. 7:30 p:m. at the home of Mrs.
been desigriated
the Ail!en8 Co~mty
TUPPERS PLAIN$~ Delving Into
awards to Mu Geary, a W!IIJ .· ·A bonfire was buill with an Sunday SChool, 9:30 with Alfred Crow, !\~~cine. Mra.
Hlstqncal Society.
.
to-.,n and family hiatory ~ Mra. Agnes
pntdi; .TGnySeott,~bob!:atpin; Indian dance bein8 pr
•led worshipall)a.m.withtheRev. Glenn Dill, president. ·
Mrs. Hill also has a Van Zant Bibl8
C. Hill 'a idea of a delightful way to
Keith 8lac:k, a .bear paldl; arotmd it bj the den as Danny Samuel Jackson, pastor
OHIO ETA PHI O.apter, Beta
spend an evening, a weekend or
a
which llbe plans to COiltribute to . the
vacation. ·
Meigs CoiDity Pioneer and Historical
sa-n Canon..' a bobca1 pin·, Smi'lli played
. '"•
speakiog.
·
· · ' "'"6''~·-· · Phi Sororit
· 8:15 p.m.
""' drum.
..
y..
Her entlmsiasin for things of the . Society
· ~,.,.,.,a bear patcll; · llysell esplained to the
HOMECOMING ·at Eagle Tuesday, . Columbus and
lJC10II as . the mwleilm Is
past ·. and her dedication to recOrding . completed. · · .
.Tmue So:ally, a wolf patch, a parents attending thenecmity Ridge Community . Church Southern Ohio Electric Co.
QlrrenUy MrS. Hillis worliing lib.
happenings and events . for !uture ·
belrboot,a~!II!'IP,anda ofpaylncdueSallyeararomd · Sunday. Sunday SchOol at 10 social room. Program on
re~ert~nce Is apparent. Mrs.·Hill adn!its . the history of jhe StoUt fi!mllY o~ Meigs .
pomt; Mark Tyree, to.. finance the scoqting a.ni,, b&amp;sket dinrier at noon: speech, to be given by Mn.
to becoming so engfiiiiSed in research· and Albens Counties. A copy of this will
a bobcal pm md a .bear book. program, Mni. Larry ~ Afternqon services 2 p.m . . Donna Byer and Mrf!• Edwtria
that she has liWe time 'for other hob- · go to both the Athel)s and Meigs County
Mils. AGNES BI1J., .
Webeloa receiving awa~ds e1p; H d !IS' appie"'atlon Cor featuring Bissell Brothers, All Scott. Hostesses, Mrf!; J_.tte
were Don Geary, a l'eCr1lller CC!OI*'atiDg duriDg ber wert special singers invited to Thomas, Mrs. JQdy Qwks, and
Historical I!!K:ieties. She Is also combies.
patch; 111!1 Dean Spencer, a With the pack.
participate.
Everyone Mrs. Carolyn Satterfield.
One must wonder how she has time
piling her own fi!nily history and has
Hatch Diary, 1791-11147; which are of
recrull.er pa_lch, scholar, ·~ 3 ..d 4 had the cJosing welcome.
AMERICAN . LEGION
for her history writing. Sbe has been . found three ancestors wbo were
historicill significance.
ll8tlnlist, .,-list, sportsmen, With all the cub 1C01D joining In
MONDAY
Auxiliary, Drew We)Isler Post · employed lull-time at. the .lliapman
Revolutionary War .soldiers.
Mrs. Hill came to Tupper$ Plains
"Ofte fol!ght for the British and had
and scientist.
a living cirde arotmd the lire.
MEIGS BAND Booilters, 8 39, 7:30 Tuesday night at the · Bros. Store in Coolville the past II
as a leen'Ber after her father, a con·
to lake the Oath · of Fidelity;" she
lllllny Smith .and llorsel Plana were. 8DJMQiced Cor a p.m. Monday, Meigs High hall. Program by -Mrs.
years, takes an active role In the North
strllctibn worker at Marmet, W. Va.,
Th(wnas were advanced into the webeloa wiener tout at the School. Refreshments. Special Catherine
Welsh, music
Betbel United Methodist lliurch where
recalled.
was killed and her rnbther l't!lllllined.
she teaches Stmday Scbool and is Its
wehelos and eacb of the boys American Legion Roadside invitation to new members.
chairman. Members asked· to
She bas compiled a histOrY of
She graduated from high School at
assistant treasurer, and is active in !be
Coolville, .18111-1968, which .includes ~ . 'Tuppers Plillns and SOlin after married
recei-,ed riiddleport uniform Park Monday 6 p.m.
MEIGS COUNTY Garden take table p~s for card party
replace
the
Tri
.,._,_
·
copy of the Original plat of the town as
-..............,
Club~! Assn. fall county meeting, to be held Oct. 21.
'
Meigs Co111ty Pioneer and Historical
Robert Hill. They were !he parents ·of
Society,
the
Athens
Co111ty
lliatorical
Cotmdl ooe.
8 p.m. Monday at the Pomeroy .POMEROY LODGE 184,
drawn jn 1818 for Ashel Cooley, a copy
four cbildren, David of BelPf!'; Mrs.
Mrs. Linda Lane, Mrs. Tom
United Methodist Church. F&amp;AM special meeting 'l'uellday
Society, of which ~ Is retiring vice
of the originill miDutes, a picture of the
Doris Jean Epling, Reedsville, Delbert
Kelly, and Mrs. Nellie
Members of garden clubs In- 7:30 p.m. Past Masters high!.
president, and the Upper Vanda'iia
first mayor, and a copy of lhe first b)'•
Hill of W8shlngton, W. Va., and Mn.
Historical Society of Putiwn Co111ty,
ltiws.as written when the vlllllge was Darlene Quivey, Sariosota, Fla. Mrs.
lfrE!lwwy were introduced as
vited to attend.
All Past Masters urged to atnew den mothers, and Paul
te d All M ster Mason ·
W.Va.
incorporated in 1835. Her history of the
Hill has 13 grandchlldren.
Mei&gt;!!::::-,TroyMcDanleland
BOY SCOUT Troop 245 _n ·
a
s mlu
addltloa,
sbe
does
her
OWJI
vlllllge
also
includes
j)lcture8
taken
. Over the Labor Day weekend, Mrs.
-.r
R',-,#1-.... J Monday, Middleport Legion YJted.
hOUJeWOrk, keeplaa au.-.ctlve yard
d(iring the ell'lY 1900's and information
Tammy 1tel1y as new cub .
-~UT~u Hall, 7 p.m. Any boy 11 years or ~~INE AMERJCAN Legion
Hill took her first air flight, a trip to
wltb bloomiac . flowers, palata
on churches, organizations and
older interested In becoming a Auxiliary Tueaday 7:30p.m. at
Florida for a visit With her daQghter,
whatever
~
paJ,IIag,
aad
does
businesses
which
nourished
through
Darlene and family.
RUTLAND - CaBers at the scout is welcome accompanied hall.
the years; ·
·
her OWil cupe~~ter ~!
During her . two days there she
, C'-- D..;- Au~u.
home of \!.ona McKnlgbt and by his ~ather. Contact Charles sou-r:~~~tYBoosters
Her
appreciation
of
old
things,
An
Ohio
,History
of
the
1913
Flood
visited
the Ringling Museum, the
.xn1 DUTT#
C).
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Stan""'ry Byers, Harold Hood or Norman
particularly family beirloOms, extends
has also been goUen together by Mrs. Urcus Museum, the Ringling Home,
have been Mrs. Ruby Halliday, YeaQger.
WedDesday 7:30p.m. at the high
into
an
antique
collection
with
many
of
Hill
who also has some lnfOI'mation on the Antique Car and Music Museum In
POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs. local; Mr. and Mrs. Ho1Jia MEIGS TEMPLE 153, staff school.
· her valued items ~g more than a
the Georg~ and Jobn Warth Indian Sarasota, the Sunken Gardens In St.
ll8bert Cbarles Vendula, Sr., Grate, Langsville; Mr. and andofficers,Mondayathomeof
THURSDAY
century
old.
Scouts
and the first U.S. Diall carriers Petersburg, Fie. and the beach.
liiii!IE. ~St., c::'evelllld, are Mrs. &lt;hick Corder, Ptmeroy; Mrs. Philip Meinhart. Co- _RIVERVIEW GARDEN &lt;:'ub
One of her prizes pass s!ions Is a
on western waters.
!rer whirlWind activity in ·Florida
111110111cmg the birth of a nlne Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hill, hostess is Mrs. Elizabeth will meet Thursday everung,
royal
blue
teapot
With
gold
trbn
whiCh
She
has
completed
histories
on
the
typifies the enthusiastic and energetic
potmd. 111 omce sm, Robert Fairborn; lberin Morris, Allman.
Sept. 30, at 7:30 at the~ of
belonged to Dr. and Mrs. Rol G~a~der of
Quivey and Dodcieta families of the approach to everyday living taken by
&lt;:bides Veadul!l, Sr.,~ AQg. Langsville; NanDan WID, local;
Mrs. Carl Buckley, With Mrs.
Coolville. Dr. Gunder was bc,lrn ln)869,
Tuppers Plains area and has &amp;eCIU'ed the genlill Mrs. Hill, who finds life
31, at boll Road Hospital in Mrs. NeDie Ville, Albmy; Mi.
TUESDAY
Donald Putnam as co-hostess.
and the teapot was one which his
·
several books, including the Elijah ·anything but dull.
Ce\leland..
and Mrs. Dale Stansbury, CHESTER LODGE 323, D. of lrislallallon of officers will be
Gra Ips ents are Mr. and ~ville, and Mrs. Lena A., 8 p.m. Tuesday at haD. held.
-:.: .·.·.· ....... ·.·.·..·.....·.·.·.·. ·.·. ·. ·..•.•,·.·.· .·.··
Ill'; Andrew V•ndnla, 6'1011 Pickens ·and Mn. Carroll
Metro Pad Inve, Mllyfield Plckena, Malon, W. Va.
B "&amp;Jt,,aua,indMr.mdMrs.
Mrs. McKnigbt and Mr. and
O!cil .ll.,,
Ptmeroy Route Mrs. Stansbury 1pe11t the day
1 llamlt! E. Slmmona, Red With Mr. and Mrs. a. ester
" - · W. Va., ia the · great- Houghland in McArthur
MASON - Miss !.Dis Ann the ceremony.
Vicki Rizer, Margaret Rizer, Brenda Sayre, Debbie Hudriall,
gr• Nber. 'lbe infJDt will be recently and 1RIIt to the bome
Rizer,Mason, was honored With The gift table was centered Carolyn Sayre, Jeany Rizer and Iris Payne, Ruth E. Roush and
c:llri*lled bJ Fatber GoUagbo.r of Mr. Houghland in a.Diicothe.
a pre-bridal shower Tuesday With a bride decoration. Miss and Andrea Dawn, Vu-ginia Mrs. Murl Burton.
at St. F'un.Wof Anjej O.urch Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Kanaw,
evening at the home of ber Rizer received many wedding W'llliams, Mary Dudding.
on Mayfield Road · iD Galea New Albany, also were recent
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse parents present was won b . grandmother, Mrs. Eller Roush gifts.
Frances Stewart, Pam
Sav
lliQe, O!io; with Dinps and Yiaitors at the home of Vona
Linda JleiW&amp;auer, Ollwnbus, McKnlgbt and Mr. and Mrs. C. Elementary School room Miss Price's second grade. y · here. Assisting was Mrs. Ed- Those attending were Miss Kearns, Joann Harmon, Nina
and activity com- Homeroom mothers named ward Ryan of Mason.
Rizer, Nancy Eads, Mae Styles, Jean Grueser, Kathy
llllf'I'J
_,
as god-jiM euts.
w. Stansbury in Rulland, ana. mothers
mitleeS were appointed at the are (first named the chair- Miss Rizer was to be Grueser, Sharon Keams and Rizer, Rita Ryan, Eller Roush,
or
first meeting of the 71-72 term man): First grade, Mary married on September 24, Sonya, Kay Ryan, Thelma Terry L. Deem, Marion Rizer,
recenUy.
Chancey, Nancy Patterson, at 8:30 p.m. at the· Henry, Ruth Ebershach, Erma Mrs. Minnie Rizer, and
With A
David Flagg, president, Doris Friend Faye Clifford home of her parents, Mr. Jesse, Mindy Davis.
hostesses, Mrs. Roush and Mrs.
Vase Arrangement
called the meeting to order with Shirley HubW:rd.
' and Mrs. Marion Rizer In Gloria Whitlatch, Phyllis Ryan.
the PTA ~yer. The pledge to Second grade, Dee Brown, Mason to Terry Deem, son of Young, Viv:lan Fry, Sybil Sending gifts were Kay
Designed By
the Amencan flag was led by Barbara Chapman, Janice Mr. and Mrs. James Deem of Allison, Levla Roush, Fay Gum Platter, !relen Davis, BUlle
Boy Scout Troop 242. Members Deem Darlene Jeffers Mildred Coolville, Ohio. The Rev. and Glenda, Beulah Bocook and Jean Dawson, Norma Riggs, .
ffiJ
of Judy Riggs' baton classes Pierc~, Opal :rerkle. '
.
Parker Hinzman performed Paula,AnnaAvls,EmmaRyan, .Peggy Anderson, Patty and
=.~:~~:!rt·
gave
exhibitions.
The Third grade, Louise Frank,
RoHaushl, MaryMari~mnlllRier, Vernon Roush, Mary Neutzllng,
&amp; IMson eo., w. va.
By Katie Crow
secretary'sreportwasglvenby Jane Barnett Susie Grueser
a
wey,
e zer, Rhea Will, Bernice Grueser, . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _•
Mrs. Janice Deem and the Minnie H~;ris, Emogen~
FIRST SON BORN
treasurer's
_by
Mrs.
Jane
Holstein,
Linda
Hubbard,
Janet
POMEROY
- Mr. and MrS.
POIIEBOY - Like to re•wk
a geHreD
Ronald F. Reynolds, Pomeroy
eani?J bow jalt tbeJN5sm: ve..-Neue, wbobas been in and Barnett. DaVId Nease, school Nease.
board member, was guest Fourth grade, Dorothy Route 3, are announcing the
ont If tbe lapflill au a ill 111111!1 IIIII yar is a patient at
speaker.
Amberger, Betty Ash, Jeanette birth of their first chDd, a nine
Bablr Vd'rill Calter. Mr. Neue, wbD is a clodlrated member of
Business included discW:Sion Duffy, Judy Flagg, Helen poiDid, 12 ounce son, Ronald
tbeilelp a.pter of tbe American lied a-11111 blood ..
of plans for the fall carmval. Hubbard.
Fran kl'm, J r., on Sept. 23 at the
c:blirmaD, ccdd - ch !ring up. His I'OIDI mmber is 3K Mrs . Daisy
· Patterson and Mrs. Fifth grade, Marcia Arnold, Holzer Medical
Center.
Etta Mae Norton were named Beverly Chapman, Janella GrandparentsareMr.andMrs.
VERY PROUD TO ANNOUNCE that lbree 19'11 graduates, as the prize committee. Mrs. Davis, Faye Hsmilton, Shirley W'illiam Reynolds, Pomeroy,
two fram Sallllw:rn IIIII cme fram Melp, are in the !llll'cblng !relen Hubbard was appointed Huston, Carolyn Roush.
and Mr. and Mrs. Walter
bu* at tbe ml'egu they are attenill"tt.
chairman of the "Country Sixth grade, Lou Ferrell, ' Wilson, Pomeroy. GreatFn* Girdami, 1011 of Mr. IIIII Mrs. Guido Glrtllami, Kitchen," and Mr. and Mrs. Mary Guinther,
Ettamae grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Pwasoy, a lleip pdulte, Ia p1aylnc in the band at Bowling Charles Hamilton, David Flagg, Norton, Mrs. Bobby Ord, Joyce Harold King of Pomeroy, MrS.
Gnal, while K!ilb Albley,IOII Gf Mr.lllll Mra. Robert Albley, Shirley Huston, and Joyce Thoren, Marybelle Warner, Pat Minnie Clark Pomeroy and
WF'alll,lllll BID B &amp;le,IOII ofMr.IIIIIMrs. Robert Beegle, Thoren,- on the organization Winebrenner.
John R. Long,' Hensley,
va.
Ra!lne, are Ia the Olio Uuhenlty Iliad. Qqralulallons -we committee.
The sixth grade will serve Mrs. Rena Ughlfoot, Pomeroy,
A
1ft ftrJ lllpiiJ Ill Jar a~,_llueacconnpli*nrut.
Delegations to the County refres. hments at the October is the great.geat-grandmother.
""
1IIIILE ~ 'I1IROOOB IKlNE old dlpplngs my very Council named were Mrs. meew.g.
Norton,
Mrs.
Deem,
Mrs
.
«- maftw.m.ln, Mrl. Tam (Jolly) CZow, came aCI'OIS an
Barnett, Mrs. Thoren, and Mrs.
alide U.t J 11111* you readen JD1cbt enjoy.
Put on a crushy-soft
ltisadbatGb ao lrue. Iamao bappy IDbavespa~tlhe lime I Betty Ash. Alternates were
VISITS TURNERS
crepe-soled
tie and teelllke
SON IS BORN
dd wilbmy late molber IIIII was able to do for ber the thiDgs I did, Mrs. Jeanette Duffy, Mrs.
. MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
you're walking down a country lane!
Patterson, Mrs. Hamilton, Mrs.
POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Dale K. Roush aM
A. Metal eyeletghlllle In Dark
lovqftt:r)'IPI'I"''l
Huston,
Mrs.
Marybelle
Brown
naked
glove leather uppers, Sl4.
H.
K.
Gould,
Ravneswood,
the
daughter,
Kathy
of
Apple
· '11* Is a leiter that waa printed IICIIDetime ago from a mother
B. Multi-eyelet tie In
Warner. Other committee former Oleryl Williams, are Creek, spent the past weekend
lhatliells a limy for the~ II. retired parents. 'l'be writer of chairmen
Brown
named
were announcing the birth of a 1011 here With Mr. and Mrs. Ben
•
crinkle-Blue
crinkle
and
tbe lelfcl' is ...UWu. ,
legislation, Mrs. Judy Flagg; Brian Keith, at St. Joseph Turner. Mr. Roush went to the
Black
crinkle-Plum
It l'&amp;ldl as fallon, '1 bad been an attentive and thoogblful magazine, Mrs. Marcia Arnold
Hospital In Parkersburg on Owen Watson farm at Racine to
cr.lnkle, $15
daacllter. Bat J was De8lecliDB to villi my para!Is as cileu as J and membership, Mrs. Gloria
Sept. 19. Grandparents are Mr. hunt squirrels. On Saturday
Cllllld -J had 1 fii'OiriDI fiiJDI)y II. my 111111 and was busy wilb Michaels and Mrs. Dorothy and Mrs. Harry Gould of
evening they visited With Mr.
u.y .,.,.. on my time IIIII energy.
Amberger.
Florida and Mrs. Pearl and Mrs. Millon Roush,
"I lheg&amp;Jt about a criUUJII I bad read about adult cNidren of
'The room count of most WUUams of Pomeroy.
MinersviBe.
ctier IJKeDis eoc:ouratioC them to be more kind and more
lboa&amp;bhl ADd to keep remembering what their par&amp;lls had
diu •• than.
to the cmclJwlon that I wasgiy!ng mG8l of my lime to
frifrimlsilllllids aad -.aiatancea to wbml I did not really matter. I
•a•wmber that my paraoll Daed to apeak 1oviDciY II. my parblarloftfnrflowen,saying lbatevenbefore I could talk, wben
llleyWI!IIid talteme out,ln tbe haby buggy, I would get wry a:dled wben I saw a floftr.
1 m'l 1 bow sudl tbinp about 'me meant 10 'Vei'J' mudl to
myparaoll .... while my friends couldli•tc:are less.
"'delamined llatlwouldstulthen to give more of my lime
Ill lbaleiDwbom Imallered- to my pirents.
"'am ftrJ bam today that lalo!Jped IIIII lhougbt because
my paldlla are both gcme oow and I did 10111elbing about them
limn! It was too illle.
"'tisao&amp;OIJI! Ill teD today's adult childralllat "You'll be s+
i'-r-f it yon ~~~Pel,_ retired parails. Or to wait liD years, until
lie boot is on the other foot,ands.y 'I told you so. •
"PaiD&amp; - ' acbes lbat come with the later yean of life ate
8
liM. The I •• ed Wille) lliat c:omel with retiraumt is bid. But
retired pll'eDis as a rule carry no cross thatlalrta Wlll'8e than lbe
indllhreoce Gf lhelr dlllcken.
"Iii _.., lheie parents have nolbing left to matter
a:mpt 111m- dildno.
.
"After relh&amp;ldllndolgences that would let them forget are
ao Jrns pnalble. Only their childral are left. ADd never since
llieCflllltll'tlbecbil*en IIICll'e bJ4Alflanl lban oow- ·
"lwilb aome IIi the '-Y and ambilloull clildralln their a
_. • . -far.._ bun home, could aee their par611a wallting
lit tbe
~. kl!ging for a letter fram them,
._ n'l' 1 bKit ...a, Into the..,_ withoQt one. Orwatcllthe
SALE SPECIAL
wartheyrefniDfnm llling the lelepbone in !be evening- jut in
'
eae - IIi lbe dl!l\lral calli.
''Or . . . . . . J7iDg lbroul!b their teeth to their Delglihon,
fliouln, and lbe flli1Jlle 111an about ule wooderful m . p they
.
'
jail pl , _ . . _
. . .fill dlillken-"
Open All Day-Thursdays
IF TWO AIMLT am.DREN of \WO retired couples pbone
MIDDLff'!)RT, OHIO
Open Fri. Ni~ht Ti19
.,_, 'JNblo
lllll . . lbeii.....,belbe~PH~IIilamluma
llal llbll .. ID lbe paper will be worthWhile.

ror

even

as

gold.,_:

c.

.,.._ t
.o

Betty Shaffer to Wed

.Severa/ CaJJ at

R

,

ome In

Jl

Committees for
Carnival Named

"*'•

October Wedding Planned

....

Mrs. Ronald Orr
..

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Fife of Pomeroy are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their
daughter, Jenny, to Mr. Roy Allen Roush, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry C. Roush of Mason, W.Va. ·
The bride-elect is a graduate of Meigs High School, class of
lOOs,andis employed at the Blue and Grey Bus Depot. Mr. Roush
is a·t968 graduate of Wahama High Scbool and has served three
years With the U.S. Marine Corps. He is now employed with the
ffiEWin Clarksburg, W.Va. An October wedding is planned.

(Miss Edna McCoy)
Account of wedding on page 14

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_Double Ring Ceremony on Sept. 4

Miss Lois Ann Rizer Honored at Pre-Bridal Shower

Katie's Korner

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u..- BirtiJ.I-

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Happy Anniwlsafy

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Dud._,S florist

POMEROY - lri a double the altar of East Fultonham
'
Church, Miss
ring ceremony solemnized Sept. United Methodist
4 at 2:30p.m. Saturday before Carol Jeilison, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Jellison,
became the bride of Mr. Paul L.
Smith, son of Rev. and Mrs.
MEET TONIGHT
Stanten Smith of Pomeroy,
MIDDLEPORT - The Youth Route 3.
Fellowship of the Middleport The vows were exchanged
and Rutland Methodist Chur- before the groom's father,
ches will meet this evening at 7 assisted by Rev. Willard Noce.
p.m. The banner started last The couple will reside In East
week will be completed for the Fultonham.
County Rally. Leaders are Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Cassell, MidOnly asteroid that ever bedleport, and Mrs . Billy
comes bright enough to be
Williamson, Rutland. Youth of seen with the naked eye is
all ages of both churches are Vesta, the third largest in
Invited to attend.
size.

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RACINE- Mr. and Mrs. Fred E . Smith of Racine are announcing. the engagement and approaching marriage of her
daughter,BetlyLouise8haffer, to Mr. Ronald Lee Wagner, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wagner of Racine. The wedding will be an
event of Friday, Oct. I, at haH psst seven o'clock at the Wesleyan
United MethOdist Church of Racine. The Rev. Martha Mattner
and the Rev. Dale McClurg will officiate at the open church
wedding.
Miss Shaffer is a 1970 graduate of Southern Local High Scbool
and a 1971 graduate of Vogue Career College. She plans to seek
employment in management and public relalions. Mr. Wagner
also graduated from Southern Local High Scbooi in 1970 and is a
1971 graduate of the Nashville Auto Diesel College. He is presently
employed as assistant manager of sales for the W. w. Williams
Company of Maumee.
·

Phyllis Davidson Betrothed
RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs. Leo DeU Davidson, Rollte 1,
Rutland, are announcing Q)e engagement of their dal!ghlel'
Phyllis Virgene, lo Mr. James D. Reed, Columbus, soo of Mr. and
Mrs. James M. Reed, Middleport, Route t
The bride-elect is a 19116 graduate of Rolland Higb School and
is eiiJployed at the Ohio Inspection Bureau; Columbus. Mr. Reed
is a 1962 graduate of Middleport High Scbool and Is employed at
the Addressograph·Multigraph Corp., Columbus. A June wedding
Is planned .
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Wedding Date is Set

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POMEROY - Plans have and Mr. Kenneth Wiggins,
been completed for the wedding soloist. The ceremony will be
of Miss Marsha Pugh, daughter conducted by lhe,Rev. Wendell
of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Pugh, Stutler and the Rev. Ji'omst
Dye and Miss Misti Ward. to Mr. Ted Russell, son of Mr. Donley. Areception will be beld
Flower girl will be Karen and Mrs. William Russell.
at the home of the bride and
Porter .
The ceremony will be an groom in Minersville im·
Mr. Don Roush will serve as event of Sunday, Oct. 3 at 2:30 mediately folloWing the wedbest man for his brother. The p.m. at the Minersville United ding.
ushers will be Mr · Larry Methodist Church . The gracious
Clevenger' Mr. Lynnie Tennant, custom of open church Will be
Mr. Danny Abbott, and Mr. Bob observed.
Whitmore . Ralphie Thompson
Mrs. Robert Codner will serve
ATTEND CONFERENCE
wiD serve as ringbearer ·
as matron of honor for the
POMEROY - Mrs. Glenu
Mrs. Patricia Steele will bride. Mr. Wayne Russell will Dill, president of the Meigs
provide a half-hour of nuptial be best man for the bridegroom. County Tuberculoilia and
music preceding the ceremony · The flower girl will be Miss Respiratory Association, and
Soloist will he Mrs. William Sherri McClintock and Mrs. Mrs. Charles Hayes, the
DeMoss. Miss Marcie Lidei will Wayne Russell will register the executive 3eCI'elary, were In
register guests. A reception guests. Mr. Alan Pugh and Mr. Marietta Wednesday for a
will he held in the church social Jon Grueser will serve as · district conference. Plana for
room immediately following the ushers.
the Olrlslmas seal sille Were
ceremony. The gracious cus(Om Mllsj'C ,will be provided by discussed. ,Theme this year Is
of open church will·be observed. Mrs." 'li1!ter' Bentz, organist, "HbW~Gret!n 'ill OOr Valley." •

Couple Will Marry on October 1st
NEW HAVEN- Final plans
have been completed for the
wedding of Miss Charlotte Ann
Clevenger, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Ellon G. Clevenger, to Mr.
Rex Earl Roush, son of
Mr .
and
Mrs.
Walter D. Roush. The doublering ceremony will be an
event of Friday, Oct. 1, at 7:30
p.m. at the New Haven United
MethOdist Church. The Rev.
William DeMoss will officiate.
Mrs. Cheryl Roush, sister-inlaw, will serve as matron of
honor. Bridesmaids will be Mrs.
Lore Whitmore, Miss Janet
Porter, Miss Debbie Laney, and
Miss Jaqet Smith. Junior
bridesmaids will he Miss Linda

I
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.,!lei..,

.,.am

w.

Mr. and Mrs. Roger R. Black
(Miss Karolyn Soulsby)
Account of wedding on page 14

Here's an exciling story
for fall in three
well-chosen parts :
Doubletwill by Jan tze n,
all texture interest
and marvelous

tailoring, accented
with double seaming.
Machine washable
100% Dac ron:t polyester
in black, coppertone,
emerald or sa pphire,
sizes 8-18.
Vest, $28.00
22" A- line skirt.
$16.00
Flowe red shirt, $17.00

conn1e

"'c:mne

2 Pt LIVING ROOM SUITES

-""'"every

$79.95

UP

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

Middle of Upper Blocii-PomUOJ

Christine.f3ailey to Wed
'
MJi&gt;DLEPORT- Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bailey, Middleport,
announce the engagement snd approaching marriage of their
daughfllr, Christine, to Mr. Gary Sampaon, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Randall Sampson of 607 Edgela..,n St., Parkersburg, W. Va.
Miss Blliley, a graduate of the Middleport High School, class
of 19116, is a 1111111 graduate of St. Joseph School of Nursing,
Parkersburg, va. and Is employed in the coronary unit of St.
Joaeph Hospital.
Mr.Sampsoots a graduate of Parkersburg High School, class of
1981i.BeBIS vedln thdfarineCorpsfot two years and'is presenUy
.atlendlng Plrkeraburg Ommunily College, while employed as
aaslstant manager of the Holiday Inn at Marietta. An open church
wedding Is planned for Nov. 20 at the South Parkersburg United
Methodist Church in South Parkersburg.

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Stripes go on a sand blast,
in Jantzen's new aliDacron• polyester knits.
Alternating bands of sand,
black, White and jewel
tones of emerald, sapphire ·
.or copper make the
.rounds of !his long,
tailored jacket. $35.00
Doubletwill pants, $19.00
Ali in sizes 8-18.

antzen:l
.

antzet¥

BAHR CLOTHIERS

w.

•

r .

In lhe greal drama of 1971,
Jantzen knits play
many parts .. . and you
have ali the best lines.
The action opens on
twilislripe pants and
vesl, fashioned of
machine washable
100'/o Dacron" polyester.
The colors : black,
coppertone,
emerald or
sapphire,
alight with
white.
Sizes 8-18.
The vest, $28.00
Twillstripe pants,
$18.00
Shirt, $16.__00

"YOUR FASHION CENTER''

2nd AVENUE
'

MIDDLIPOIII', ·o.

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&gt;

�I

K-'I'll a

: s11

s IID!l. e , z.llpt.

•.lfll

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Sou/shy-Black Vows Missionary is ~

McCoy-OrrWedding .Shower Given· Community
I'OIIEIIOY - 1be 01ester carried ' similar white baskets

liletlloclist lllurcb was the with pale pink bow and
• r 1 for lbe .hlle 2li can' ''$1" w1 Mi"'l of lfiss Edna
~. daagbter of Mr. and
lira. 1. 0. McCoy of Reedsville,
lllie.l , llld Mr. Raulld Ott,
• of Mr. llld Mrs. Bill Ott,

Beednillt:
Ali

.

.m c:andelabni,

JiDan

white

lo!Jped wilb lftS liUed
wilb pint cJadjoli and mmns.
llld tall patted palms decorated

lbealtar. 'lbefamilypewswere
m.ked with .single pink asters
llld white satin bows.
The bride was given in
IDII'I'iage by ber father. ~
a Door-length gown of
white Iridal· satin fashioned
. with ., empire bodice of lace
over satin. A ..,.u.l""' lace
IIIIDdiip collar and full sbeer
1h ;es with wide Jace.&lt;&gt;verIISin cuffs were featwes of the
.• JOWD. 'l1le A-line skirt flowed
Into a m•pelleoglb train with
ICalloped lace ~ the
11om of both the dress and the
train.
'l1le bride's mantilla sbeer
'ftlling edged with matcl!ing

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ICalloped lace was beld with a
headpiece of lace and dacron
petals trimmed with circlets of
leed pearls. b
carried a
bouquet of pink sweetbearl
roaes, blue and white miniature
' Clrnllt:ions and baby's breath.
OOiciating at the double ring
ceremony was the Rev. Robert
R. Card. Music was provided by
Mrs. Horace Karr, organist,
and Miss Jemifer Dean, soloist.
'lbeirselect:ions included "Walk
Band in Band," "More," and
'"lbe ·wedding Prayer."
Serving as maid of honor for
the bride was ber sister, Miss
Celia McCoy. b wore a floocleugtb gown of white IIDcked
.._, over pink taffeta. II was
fashioned with an empire
waisted bodice mel bad a scoop
_.kline, sbcrl puffed slee;es
and a pink satin sasb. Sbe 1IIUre
a pink piC:ue hat with pint
satin streamers and carried a
white basket of pink sweetheart
roses, blue miniature carnations and baby's breath. Dark
pink bow and streamers
decorated the basket.
'l1le lridesmaids were Mrs.
LarrySmiUt,Belleview, W. Va.,
sister oftbe bride; Mrs. William
Bucldey, Pomeroy; and Mrs.
Gary WoH, Columbus. They
Wlll'l! dr esm of the same design
as the maid of hooor with blue
llocked sheer over blue taffeta,
, " IPIIIdrlng sash and hats; and
·"J"'"" .. ~,..r..,·v
I

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Streamers. The gowns were
fashioned by the bride and her
mother. fJI of the attendants
wore s ilver heart-shaped
necklaces' containing two small
birthstones. a gift of the bride.
Mr. Thomas Osborne, U:Jng
Bottom, was best man and the
wllers were Mr. Byron McCoy,
&amp;ute 1, Reedsville, brother of
the !ride ; Mr. Randy Orr,
Reedsville, brother of the
groom, and Mr. Jim Buckley,
Westerville, cousin of the
groom.
For her daughter'$ wedding,
Mrs. McCoy wore a white knit
dreSs trimmed in biue and pink,
and blue and white accessories.
Mrs. Ott was in a green chiffon
dreSs with green and white
accessories; and both mothers
had corsages of pink and white
rosebuds.
A reception was held
following the ceremony in the
social room of the church .
Hostesses were Mrs. Betty
Dean, Mrs. Sina Murphy, Miss
Carol Nichols and Miss Patricia
Smith. Mrs. Julia Cochran,
sister of the bride, registered
the guests.
The bride's three tiered
wedding cake was decorated
with blue .and· pink rosebuds.
White ·cupid pillars separated
the tiers. The cake was topped
with a silver bowl engraved
with the bride and groom's
niunes and their wedding date.
It was fill~d with pink
sweetheart roses and baby's
breath. Flanking the cake were
two three-branch silver candelabra wiUt arrangements of
pink roses encircling the center
candle on each. Nuts, mints,
~d rice basket favors completed the table setting.
Foc her wedding trip to
Moootain Lake, Va., the bride
cl!anged into a blue knit dress
with black patent accessories.
The new Mrs. Orr is a 1967
graduate of Eastern High and is
a senior at Ohio University,
currenUy doing a year's in·
ternship at MI. Cannel Hospital
iu Colmnbus for a degree in
medical teChnology. She is a.
member of Alpha Lambda
Della, fr eshman women 's
honorary and Phi Kappa Phi,
national senior honorary .
Mr. Ott is also a 1967
graduate of Eastern High
School and graduated in Jtme
with honors fr om Ohio
University with a degree in

B'_:~~-to-b•o
T'~Ue-

ltl

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Comer By

POMEROY - Miss Belly
Charlene Hoeflich
Shaffer, !ride-elect of Ronald L. .
Wagner, was honored TUesday
POMEROY - Judith Wyant Gutlam IS b&lt;me after spending
evening with a bridal shower at several days iii Honolulu with her husband, S. Sgt. Harold 'L.
the' Racine 'American Legion Gilliam, there on his R. and R. !roo\ Vietnam. The ~ouple's
hall. Hostesses were · Mrs. daughter, Teresa Am, made.the trip with her mother lllld while in
Evelyn Young, Mrs. Dorothy Hawaii celelrated her fifth birthday.
Smith, and Mrs. 'Charles
•
Wagner.
GOOD 'I'HlNGS are happening in several churches today.
Attending were Mrs. Ruth
Afterweeksandweeks of wailing for repairs and renovations,
Hill, Mrs . Ora Hill, Mrs.
Ute
congregation
of the PO!neroy Church of Christ moved back
Mildred lhle, Mrs. Ruth Smith,
·
Miss Gail Shaffer, Mrs. Dorothy into the sauctuary.
Fire struck the church last spring and since that lime worship
Spencer, Mrs. Joan Goeglein,
services
have been held in the basement. An open house has
Miss Mildred Carnahan, Mrs.
Kathy Fausnaugh, · Mrs. tentatively been set foc Oct. 3.
An!! for months an.d months the Middleport, Harrisonville and
Dorothy McKenzie, Mrs. Doris
Syracuse
First United Presbyterian Church charge has awaited a
Hensler, ' Mrs. Joyce Hoback,
Mrs. Marge Crow, Mrs. Francis full lime pastor, Today the Rev. Dwight Zavitz assumes the
Goeglein, Mrs. Beverly Codner, pastorate.
An in!IUction service will be held at 8 p.m. tonight with a
Mrs. Jill Lawrence, Mrs. Betty
Theiss, Mrs. Jackie Wagner, reception to follow and members of all three churches will be on
Miss Becky Crow, and James hand to give a rOYal welcome to the new minister and his wife who
Smith.
moved to Middleport this week from Indiana.
Others presenting gifts to the
The Middleport and Harrisonville churches have had only
bride-elect were Miss Mary interim parWime ministers siree the late Rev. Howard Ruppelt
Smith, Mrs. Mary Ann Fowler, moved to a Central Ohio church about two years ago.
Mrs. Pat Brown, Mrs. Phyllis
And today at the Middleport Clurch of Christ, a dedicatioo of
Harris, Mrs. Clara Grueser, the new $90,000 addition is taking place. The public is invited to
Mrs. Pauline Collins, Mrs. the 2 p.m. dedication service and the open house which follows.
Donna lhle, Mrs. Belly Sayre,
Mrs. Margaret West, Mrs.
OFF TO ICELAND today to join Navyman Charles Ball are
Shirley Dugan, Mrs. Virgil his wife, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Frick, and their children.
&amp;ush, Mrs. Dortha Salser, For thepaslyear the family has resided in Pomeroy:They expect
Mrs. Aline Weaver, Mrs. otis
to be in Iceland for perhaps two years.
McClintock, Mrs. Chris Shane,
Mrs. Beulah Bradford, Mrs.
FERNE B. HAYMAN EXTENDS a big "thank you" to all
Sarah Neigler, Mrs. Etta Mae
those
frcends and neighbors .who sent cards and flowers during
Hill, Mrs. Inez Hill, Mrs. Doris
Adams , Mrs. Margaret Iter recent hospitalization.
Ferne is now home and making satisfactory, although slow,
Houdahseit, Mrs. Ruth TUcker,
progress.
Her daughter, June Wickersham, and several neighMrs. Vinas Lee; Mrs. Jeanette
Lawrence, Mrs. Delores bors are lending a hand until she gets back on her feel. F~e was
Cleland, and Mrs. Dallas Hill . in the coronary intensive care section for several days and then
- -- -- - - - - - spent three more weeks at the ,hospital.
botany. He is currently serving
with the U. S. Army at Fort
Knox, Ky.
Out-of-town guests at the
COLUMBUS - State legislators, upset and
wedding and reception included
disgusted over the closing of state parks, according to
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph . Turner
Sen. Oakley Collins (R-Jronlon ), have introduced a
and Lori, Westerville ; Mrcand
resolution asking Ute governor tor~ the parks. The
Mrs. John U:Jdwick, West
administration
has admitted that all appropriations
Jefferson ; Mr. and Mrs. Steve
are adequate to maintain state services at past levels
Lodwick and Mr. and Mrs. Gary
and that it was an administration decision to close the
Wolf, Columbus; Mrs. Erma!
parks, he said.
Park, Canal Winchester; Mr.
The resolution, which is the only course of action
and Mrs. Clay Cochran, Mr. and
available io the legislature, declares Ohio's state parks
Mrs. WendeD Camp, Mr. and
Mrs. LesCochran, Mr. and Mrs.
were closed· in reprisal against the public and
Larry Smith, Parkersburg, W.
legislators who do not agree with the administration on
Va.; Steve Landerman and
certain portions of the governor's budget proposals.
Bryan Stonbruner, Crooksville;
The resolution also noted that the General Assembly in
Mrs. Lena Post, Burnsville, W.
interim budgets provided a 33 pet. increase in apVa.; Mrs. Ercei Beall, Pico, W.
propriations foc Ute Department of Natural Resources.
Va.; Carl Powell, Fairborm&gt;
"Only a gross sense of fiscal mismanagement
Mrs. Ted WiHong, Regina and
would cause the administralioo to close the parks" the
Mike Wilfong, Mrs. Bruce
Cayton, Clarksburg , W. Va.

Resolution Hits Closing

..·-

·•

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]OF Speaker :

PURPLE

POMEROY- Vaaes of white Salisbury Elementary School
gladioli flanked by two seven- auditoriiDD. A three-tiered cake
POMEROY - 11&amp;1 PeArl
branch .candelabra decorated decorated with pink roses and
the altar of the La..-el Cliff Free topped with the traditional Hoffman, a miallonarY from Methodist Church for the bride •nd groom figurines West Pakistan, ·w~s guest ~
wedding of Mis8 Karolyn Kay centered the bride's table. Pink spe~r at a recenfmeetlng of -:
Soulsby to Mr. &amp;ger Ray and white lace with pink forget· the JOF Class of the Pomeroy •
Black.
lllOHlots surrotmded the base of United Methocll8t Clurch. : . '
The bride is the daughter of the cake. Hostesses for the · Attired in native COI!Iime&gt; llbe •
Mr. and Mrs. William T. · reception were Mrs. Kathy presllllted a program on the :
Soulsby: Pomeroy, Route 2, and Pullins, ·Mrs. James Gilmore, missionary work in .that area .:
the bridegroom Is the son of Mr. Poineroy; Miss Sally Schaaf, and showed slides taken during '
and Mrs. Warren D. Black of Athens ; and Mrs. Adrian her eight years in South Asia. •
Rutland.
Carson ; Middleport; Miss She was accompanied here by
The wedding was an event of Deborah Black, sister of the Mrs. Gladys Smith of Bar· July ,! at 7 p.m. with Rev. groom, presided at the guest berton. .
.
••
During the meeting con- ::
Eugene Gill officiating. A half- book.
hour of nuptial music preceded For . il wedding trip into dueled by Mrs. Glenn Dill• Plan• ';
the ceremony . . This was Kentucky, the bride changed were made for a soup diJiner on ;:
presented by Miss Patty E)llln into a pink knit dress With white EJection Day. Punch and •
and Mrs. Gerald Pullins whose accesSories mid a white car- cookies were served tO ~e 14 ;
members and tWQ
at- .,
selections included "A Wedding nation corsage.
Prayer," "I'll Walk Beside The couple reside in Rutland. tending.
\
~
You,'' "Because," and uOh The new Mrs. Black is a
•
•
Promise Me."
graduate of Meigs High School
'
Given in marriage by her and the Gallipolis Business
ANNOUNCE WEDD~
father, the bride was attired in College where she completed a
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
an empire style gown of chiffon secretarial course. Mr. Black &amp;bert W. Wolfe, Racine, are
satapeau featuring a chantilace graduated from Rutland High annotmcing ·the marriage of
covered bodice. The colla:r was School in 1968 and is presently their granddaughter, ;Judith
highlighted by pearls in a rose employed with the Rutland Shain, to Mr. David Flowers,
design, and the sheer canoelot Fm:niture Co.
son of Mrs. Olena Anderson,
sleeves and cliffs had lace Out-of-town guests at the Midland, Pa. The wedding was
accents. The bride's cathedral wedding were Miss Sally E. an event of Sept. 21 at Greenup,
length veil edged with matching Schaaf, Miss Mary Kay Vin- Ky.
lace was held in place by a bow. cent, Miss Barbara Lightfoot,
She carried an arrangement of Athens; Mrs. Lester Bungard,
baby pink roses encircled with Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Kanode,
11
'white carnations on a white U:Jgan; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Bible.
•
Carter, Rockbridge; Mr. Leo
Mrs. Roberta Cox of Point Hill, Racine; and Mr. and Mrs.
Pleasant, W. Va. served as &amp;bert Barton, Chester.
maid ofhoilor. She wore a Door&gt;
length gown of pink crepe
fashioned with a scoop neckline,
short sleeves and an empire
waist. Embroidered pink rose
•
RHODES PROMOTED
here and watch it
braid trimmed the neckline and
RACINE- Gary M. Rhodes,
"bloom"! Earn at our ••
sleeves. Her veil was attached son of Mr. and Mrs. Orville
•
passbook rate of
to a Oat pink bow and she Rhodes, Racine. Rt. 1, Wllll
carried a bouquet of white recentiy promoted to the rank of
•
carnations and pink baby roses. sergeant by the U. S. Air Force.
Mr . Perry Kennedy of Sgt. Rhodes is an aircraft
ON
Rutland served as best man, mechanic on duty with the
PASSBOOK SAVINGS
and the ushers were Mr. Lynn Aerospace Defense Command
Black, brother of the groom, at K. I. Sawyer Air Force Base
Rutland, and Mr. William · T. in upper Michigan. A 1969
Soulsby, Jr., brother of the . graduate of Southern High
bride, Pomeroy.
School, Sgt. Rhodes recenUy
For her daughter's wedding, spent a 15-day leave .at home
Mrs. Soulsby wore a navy and with his family and friends.
white polyester dress with white
Meigs County Branch of
The Athens County Savings
accessories. Her corsage was of
&amp; loan Co.
while carnations.
296 Second St.
ASK TO WED
Mrs. Black was in a gray and
Pomeroy,
Ohio
GALLIPOUS - Ronald E.
white knit dress with black
Member Feperal Home Loan
accessories and also had a Huffman, 21, Gallipolis, station
Sank.
manager and Clara Mae
white carnation corsage.
Member Federal Savings
Immediately following the Lambert, 21, Vinton, applied for
Loan Insurance Corp. AI
ceremony a reception honoring a marriage license Saturday in
accounts
Insured up t
the couple was held in tbe Gallia County Probate Court.
s2o,ooo.or

gucsp
,

rr BACKFIRED -

YOUR
MONEY

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4%%

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._:_::.:::_.c:.:.
VOL VI _ __
NO. 35
_:__ __ _ _ _ __

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Pres·
ident Nixon, the legal world and
the nation mourn¢ the death
Saturday of Hugo L. Black,
eight days after he resigned
from the Supreme Court where
he was a liberal pillar and
champion of civil rights for a
third of a century.
Black died at 1 a.m. EDT
Saturday at Bethesda Naval
Hospital, Md., of inflammation
of the arteries and a severe
"' stroke which he soffered last
Sunday. He was 85.
AI his bedside were his
immediate family, including ·his
second wife, Elizabeth Demeritte Black; his two lawyer sons,
Hugo Jr. of Miauti and Sterling
F. Black of Alb~querque, N.M.,
and a daughter, Mrs. Mario
Pesaresi of Hackensack, N.J.
Black entered Bethesda Aug.
28 and resigned Sept. 17. His
stroke two days later marked
the start of a quickly deteriorating physicat condition . The
hospital said he died "peacefully."
A funeral service will be held
at 2 p.m. Tuesday at Washington Cathedral. Burial arrangements were incomplete.
Two Vacancies
The President, who now has
two court vacancies to fill with
the retirement of ailing Justice
· John M. Harlan, 72, last
Thursday said Black h~d "such
mdependence, tenactly and
total .integrity of mind that his
tmprmt on the court and on our
nation will be indelible."
Said Nixon: "Justice Black
believed that the primary
responsibility of the judiciary
was that of giving force and
effect to constitutional liberties
... his faith in the United States
constitution was absolute and
so his convictions were rooted
absolutely.
"Mrs. Nixon and I join the
nation in mourning at the death
of Ibis noble American."
Chief Justice Warren E.
Burger termed the sharecropper's son from Clay County,
Ala., "one of the authentic legal
philosophers of our lime: He
will be sorely mised, not only
on the court but in American

,..

URNITURE
'%

•

•

Behind every

piece of beautiful Flexsteel furn~ure stands a giant industrial complex of manufacturing plants, machines, materials and
highly-qualified men with years of experience dedicated to the pursuit of excellence - excellence in design, in quality,
in construction, comfort and performance.

•

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•
•

~

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•·'

judges who deserved to be cotmsel for needy def~ndants
and the landmark reqmrement
Black, who carried a well- ~at state legiSI~tures must be
thumbed copy of the constitu- pporttoned eqmtably ·
tion in his pocket, fought most
Hi~ 34 years and 28 days of
consistently for a literal inter- servtce on the Supreme Court
pretation of its guarantees of were ex.c eeded by only two
freedom of speech and press, men, Chtef J~tce John Marand opposed anti-obscenity and shall and Justtce Stephen J .
anti-Jibellaws as unconstitution- Fteld. Only two men served to
a greater age: Chtef Justice
al.
Among his dissents which Roger B. Taney' who dted m
eventually became the Jaw of of~tce at age 87 and Justice
the land were a ruling that Oltver Wendell Holmes, who
required states to provide legal rettred at 90.
•

called 'Your Honor.'"

Attica Death Count 42
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI )-The
death toll in the Attica prison
rebellion climbed io 42 Satur·
day with the death of another
injured inmate.
A spokesman for the State
Correctional Services Depart·
ment said Edward Menefi, 21 ,
of Parksville died in Meyer
Memorial Hospital in Buffalo.
The cause of death was not
revealed.
Menefi 's death raised to 32
the number of prisoners who
died in the insurrection , which

O .
.
h10 DelegatiOn
United on Issue
Of Unfair Split

MARIETTA - An agreement
was signed here Friday between the State Highway
Department, Divjson 10 and the
Ohio Civil Service Employees
Association ( OCSEA) at
· Division Headquarters.
.
, .
The .' agreement, ~hlch
recog~tzes OCSEA as t~e
bargaming agent for tis
members who are employees of
the state agency, was signed by
Max R. FIll'Iey' Divis!on Deput Y
.Director; Mr. Dick Young,
Administrative Assistant; Karl
E. stewart, OCSEA Special
Assistant for Government
Relations; Dean Stevens,

' •'

I

who was a fellow senator when
President Franklin D. Roosevelt plucked Black from the
Senate in 1937 to join the high
court, said Black "leaves as his
imperishable legacy a better
and more free America which
he, as a statesman and jurist,
so much helped to build."
Publisher Ralph Ginzburg;
who figured in obscenity cases
before the court, said that "in
an age when living by principle
has all but vanished, Hugo
Black ... was one of the few

•1 0'hway
H-e·

veraallte tran sitional tt)1 1n;. Reversible

It is the total capability of men, :naterial and machines that keeps Flexsteel in the forefront of the indusb).

over on the weekend to preserve
it.
Seventeen Republicansexactiy the number needed for
passage, voted for the bill, while
all
Democrats
except
Kilpatrick opjtosed it.
While the budget adopted by
the Senate is far below Gilli·
gan 's original proposal of $9.2
billion, it approaches the $7.8
billion measure adopted by the
House last May 28.
Sen. Robert R. Shaw, R.Q&gt;Jumbus, chairman of the Senate
Finance Committee, said the
budget represents a 39.4 per
cent increase in spending over
the last biennium.
The $789 million in new revenues required compares with
$1.4 billion adopted by the House
and $2.1 billion requested by
Billigan. However, there is no
general property tax relief included as there was in the gov·
ernor's and House's plans.
"I'm surprised the Republicans have not come up with
any tax reform they can call
their own," said Senate Minority
Leader Anthony 0. Calabrese,
D-Cieveland, in announcing his

opposition to the giant 281-page
bill revised constantly until the
moment it hit the Senate floor
at 1:42 p.m. Saturday.
Sen. Oakley C. Collins, RIronton, chairman of the Senate
Education Committee, pointed to
$371 million worth of new spending for education which he said
represented a 34 to 38 per cent
increase ove4 current spending.
But Senate Minority Whip Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron, expressed
disappointment that $114 million
for education was cut from the
House version .
"This is $500 miJlion less than
the governor asked for," Ocasek
said. "That which you are about
to do, you should do quickly,
because it is not well done."
Three Republican senators,
&amp;bin T. Turner of Marion,
Paul R Malia of Westlake and
David S. Holcomb of Dayton,
voted in opposition to the package.
"There is nobody in this room
who is going to be entirely satisfied with this tax package,"
said Senate Majority Whip
Michael J. Maloney, R- Cincinnati, chairman of the Ways and
Means Committee which shaped
the tax portion of the bill.
"But I think everyone must
realize, particularly with events
of the last two weeks, that this
is the best possible biJI we could
have produced to get17 votes. "

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1971 _ __ ______~'_:'~~
PAGE 15
Aside from the sales tax in·
_:::.:_:.:::_:.:.!_,:::__:.::_::=:::.:_::.!.....:::..:...
· ::_ crease, the tax section includes:

WASHINGTON (UPI)
Ohio's entire congressional
delegation, Republicans and
Democrats alike have asked the
U. S. Department of Labor to
institute a more equitable
distribution of Emergency
Employment Act funds.
The 24 congressmen and two
Senators, in a Jetrer. to Labor
Secretary James D. Hodgson,
said Ute present distribution of
the funds is "unfair."
The present distribution
formula provides sharply increased aid in three states
where unemployment exceeds
the na tionaI average of 4.5 per
cent. However, Michigan,
which has slightly higher
unemployment than Ohio, has
life."
been receiving twice as much
· !\lade America Better
Rep. Claude Pepper, D-Fla., money as the Buckeye State.

•

Exceptional comfort seal and back cushions.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio Senate Saturday claiffiax·
eel more than 2'h months of
wrangling over the budget and
!axes by approving a $7.677 bil·
lion biennial budget requiring
$798 miUion worth of new taxes,
including a 1.5 per cent increase
in the sales tax.
The vote was 18-lo, with Sen.
Bishop Kilpatrick, D • Warren,
joining 17 Republicans in favor
of the package, finalized during
three solid days of conferences
which closed out the week.
The measure now must be re·
turned to the House for concurrence in the drastic changes
made by the Senate. Agreement
is not expected, and a joint
House-Senate conference committee is expected to go to work
on the fiscal program early next
week.
Senate Republican leaders, unable or unwilluig to put together
the votes to pass a personal in·
come tax as proposed by Gov.
John J. Gilligan last March Ia
and approved by the House last
July 14, put together a fragile
agreement on the sales tax
package and held members

Black's Death Mourned

...

Caul com~ with rich wood finish. padded and buUotHufl ed
arms. .... llld b1111:t.

Logan football fans went all out last

week to prepare for Gallipolis' invasion of Hilltop Stadium
where the UfS Chieftains hoped to snap the mue Devils long
winning streak. Signs at every city enlrance and throughout
the downtown area such as the one above greeted French
City visitors, but to no avail. GAHS won its 15th straight
contest over a three-year period, 28-20. Above, GAHS booster
Jtm Bloomer points thumbs down to tlte Purple Power sign
shortly after arriving in Logan Friday evening.

PLANT''.

•••

·-'THE STOil'Y OF F

'PO'WER

Senate Passes
2-Year Budget

began with a riot Sept. 9 and
ended Sept. 13 when state
police stormed the sprawling
correctional facility near the
village of Attica, 25 miles east
of Buffalo. Ten prison workers
also died .
As Menefi's death was
announced, ftmeral services
were held in the BedfordStuyvesant section of Brooklyn
for six other Attica inmates.
The services at the Cornerstone Baptist Church were to
follow a street procession .
Also in New York, a branch
of the Chase Manhattan Bank
was firebombed, apparently to
protest the storming of Attica
by police. Damage to the

Courts Bogged
Unnecessarily
COLUMBUS (UPI) - U. S.
Attorney William Miilignn said
drunk and disorderly charges
waste the lime of courts, are
crimes which "are really not
crimes," and should be dealt
with in other ways.
The federal official urged
stare courts to revamp their
systems so they could deal with
people ''who really hurt and
damage society."
"If I could make a heart felt
plea io legislators it would be to
reslrict .the acts which are
classified as crimes to those
which are really crill)es,"
Milligan said.

of OCSEA are covered.
This is the second series of
agreements negotiated between
the Highway Department and
OCSEA, Stewart pointed out.
The first set was signed in 1967,
he said.
·' ·
"We firmly believe in
maintaining good employee
relations by keeping the lines of
communication open," Farley
said. "These agreements put
our feelings in writing."
Farley added that the new
. negotiating councils will "give
Only non-management em- the employees a stronger voice
pioyees (as defined by the at the Division level."
con~ract) of the Highw~;y
· The agreelflent provides
Department who are members collective negotiating councils

Nixon Finds Dock
Fus s
Intolerable
ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE
IUPI)- President Nixon, saying
the government "cannot tolerate" further delay in ending the
west coast dock strike, called
both sides together in Portland
Saturday to "make a renewed
and determined effort" at
settlement.
"We cannot tolerate a continuation of this pattern of dehiy
and slow progress toward an
ultimate settlement," Nixon
said in a statement issued from
the presidential plane, Air
Force One.
The President was enroute to
Kalispell, Mont ., to open a
weekend visit to the Pacific
Northwest culminating in a
meeting with Emperor Hirohito
of Jpan in Anchorage, Alaska
Sunday.
" I am acutely aware of the
severe economic and human
impact of the west coast
longshoreman 's strike and
keenly disappointed at the
continued failure of the parties
to Utat dispute to resolve their
differences through collective
bargaining," Nixon said.
"The time is overdue for the
parties involved to live up to

structure was slight, authorities
said.
An anonymous cailer told
UP! the bombing was in
retaliation for the assault,
which was made with the
approval of Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller, brother of Chase
Manhattan Board Chairman
David Rockefeller .
ATHENS, Ohio ( UPI ) - A
Common Pleas Court Judge
"Rocky will pay," the caller
satd and hung up.
.
Saturday ordered 900 striking
In U:Js Angeles, a bomb that
non-academic workers at Ohio
apparently was placed near the
University to return to their jobs
Chase Manhattan International
AUnion official said they would
Banking Corp. offices in the
stay on strike until the non·
Tishman B.uilding also explod- By KENNEm J. BRADDICK wage issues are resolved.
ed. II too, was linked to Attica. SAIGON (UPI)- U.S. fighter The preliminary injunction,
A caller to the U:Js Angeles -bombers struck mio North the court order issued this
Times said, "This is for Vietnam , for the fifth day week, was handed down by
Attica."
.
SaH1rday tn the most prolonged visiting Judge Howard GoldThe prison scene was quiet, senes of atr attacks on the sherry of Chillicothe. The strike
Saturday. Lawyers entered in north since bombing was halted has threatened to shut down the
pairs to visit inmates.
nearly three years ago.
University which has an
Commtmist forces in turn enroliment of 19,000.
·stepped up rocket and mortar ·n.estrikewhich began Thurs·
~
attacks in ~u~h Vietnam and day, was called by local 1699
Cambodia, htttmg at least four of the A.Olerican Federation of
Am~rican bases, including two State,CountyandMunicipaiEmatrftelds.
.
. ployees.
~,.
.l '
In Cambodta, mortar. ftre The University at that time
.
destr?yed a large quanttty of obtained a restraining order in
COLUMBUS-Amajor state- avtatton fuel stored. at Neak ' an attempt to halt the strike
wide automotive safety Luong, the Mekong River ferry but it was ignored.
program will be launched in crossing 32 miles southeast of Local President Oscar McGee
Columbus TUesday, under tbe Phnom Penh.
.
,
said Saturday after the
co-sponsorship of the Ohio
U.S. Air Force Jets btl truck preliminary injunction was
Department of Insurance and convoys movmg from North issued : "The strike will conLiberty Mutual Insurance Vietnam through the Mu Gia tinue tmtil it's been resolved."
Companies for stare, county and Pass in Laos Saturday morning McGee said a meeting had
municipal officlals.
when they ca~e under fire been set for Saturday at 5:30
The program will consist of from gtms a mtle across the p.m. to discuss the latest court
two presenlations - Decision border.
order.
Driving and Skid Conlrol - and Two F4 Phantom fighter- The preliminary injunction
will run through Friday, Oct. 1. ~mbers turned into North handed down by Goldsberry,
Vtetnam and bombed the sitting in . for Judge Lowell
empla~ements:
triggering an Howard who disqualified
e~loston that mdtcated ammu- himself from the case because
.
mtion or .fuel was hit, he is a former OU faculty
in each division, composed of spokesmen satd.
member, ordered the union to
one unit steward from each The planes were not damaged take down pickets and return to
county in the division and one in . that exchange of . .fir•. 78 work for two weeks.
from ·the division office. The miles north of the Demililartzed
councils will make recom- Zone. It was the 64th "protecmendations to the division live reaction" strike reported
safety committee and the by the U.S. comman~ this year
TOURS THEATER .
OCSEA negotiating committee and foiiowe~ a suml~r thrust
WASHINGTON
(UP!)
to improve health and safety mt? North Vtetnam Frtday by a
Mamie Eisenhower will tour the
practices in the division and to patr of Phantoms.
new Eisenhower Theater at the
recommend procedures for U.S. spokesmen said the
John F. Kennedy Center foc the
resolving operational attacks on Amertcan bases m
South Vietnam were insignifi- Perftrming Arts Monda) . The
emergencies.
Uteater will be unvelled ofAlso attending the signing cant because no casualties or ficially Oct. 18. The former
were R. · J . Shipka, Special damage occurred. One attack First Lady has approved as a
Assistant to Highway Director was against the big coastal gift to the Uteater the original
J. Phillip Richley . and Steve Ph an Rang air base, 165 miles large metal engraving of the
Clapp, his assistant, both of northeast of Saigon, where new Eisenhower dollar coin.
three 107mm rockets hit.
Columbus .

Attacks

Continue

Safety Program
nn,;ns ,.,uesday

work ers St·gn Agreement.
chairman of Negotiating
Council and Ed Walters, Chief
Steward.
The basic agreement is a
prototype ; similar agreements
for the other geographic
division have been signed, with
the five Central Office divisions
slated for signing within the
next few weeks. They will be
administered at the local level
b
· · ·
Y~~p1oyee counctis wttht~ ~e
dlvtstons and the dtvtston
De t H' h
Di t
pu y tg way rec ors.

- A net increase in cigarette
taxes of three cents a pack.
- A penny tax on cigars.
- Elimination of the corporate
franchise tax of five mills and
installation of a 312 per cent
corporate net income tax on in·
comes up to $25,000 and a· 612
per cent rate on all income
above that figure .
- Broadening the base of the
sales tax to include certain services such as sign painting,
photo finishing , telephone answering services and leasing of
office equipment.
- Real estate tax reductions
for persons over 65, but no generai property tax relief.
On the spending said, the
package includes $1.3 blllion fo r
public welfare, including $546
million to raise payments for
families on welfare with dependent children. This is a cut
of $580 million. from Gilligan's
welfare request.
The package also includes $610
million for higher education,
compared with $654 million requested by the governor, and
$1.9 billion for elementary and
secondary education, compared
with $2.2 billion requested by
GilJigan .

FALL MAJORE'ITE QUEENS - Foor girls were crowned queen Saturday at the AllTrophy Baton Twirling Contest beld at Eastern High School. Left to right are Usa Kuhn,
Belpr.e, ~class ; Shauna Malone, Belpre, 7-10 class; Diana Guthrie, Coolville, 11·14, and
Debbte Jeffers, Minersville, l!i-20 age group. The contest, sanctioned by the National Baton
Twirling Assn., was sponroed by the Chester PI'A. Director of tbe contest was Mrs. Rudy
Riggs.

their responsibilities to the
American people and to work
diligently- and urgently- tow·
ard that settlement."
Nixon said he had asked J.
Curtis Cowtts, head of the
National Mediation Service,
Labor Secretary James Hodg·
son and Budget Director
George Shultz to meet with
negotiators for the International
U:Jngshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union and the
Pacific Maritime Association in
Portland.
They will "discuss how the
parties can best be brought to
recognize and meet their
responsibilities," Nixon said.
"This strike has gone on too
long already. I expect the
parties to make a renewed and
determined effort to see that it
is ended and ended quickly." ·
Counts had been meeting with
ILWU and PMA negotiators in
San Francisco for 10 days. But
little progress has been reported .
Counts, ILWU President Harry Bridges and PMA negotiator
Ed Flynn started meeting at
the Benson hotel in Portland.
Deputy White House Press

Union Ignores
Court's Order
Members of the union were in
the courtroom at the time of
the hearing for Ute injtmction
and Goldsberry warned them
not "to take a light view" of
the court order.
Goldsberry said if they refuseel to obey Ute injunction and
were arrested he hoped '~hey
would have the slamina and
pride to not ask the court for
mercy.
"Don 't come in and ask not
to be p1lllished," he said.
The union said it was protesting discrimination against women in cafeteria work, supervisors working in non-1
supervisory roles and the
failure of the university to
submit a list of workers laid off
Ibis summer.
ou -President Claude Sowle
saidearliertbeschool wouldhave
to be closed if the strike con·
tinued.
"We could be forced to close
down the tmiversity since we
would be faced with major problems concerning food, refuse
andotbernecesszryoperations,"
Sowle said.

Secretary Gerald L. Warren
indicated Nixon might personally meet with the group during
his overnight stay in Oregon.
Nixon 's ftrst slop on his trip
was at Kalispell for a look at
the $236 million Ubby Dam
tmder construction on Montana's Kootenai River.
Then the President planned to
Dy to PorUand to brief
northwestern editors and publishers on national and interns,
tional affairs and to slop
overnight.
Sunday he will Oy to Walla
WalJa, Wash., to inspect the
Hanford atomic reactor plant,
and then on to Alaska for his
visit with Hirohito in a pinkcarpeted, velvet-lined U.S. Air
Force hangar.
11 was a goodwill tour for
Nixon in many ways. The visit
with Hirohlto at the start of Ute
emperor's first trip alroad was
intended to soothe Japanese
feelings hurt by Nixon's new
policies on mainland Cbina and
world trade.
Nixon plans to visit Cblna
before next May, and one of the
Communist government's big·
gest fears in Peking has been
Ute growing strength of Japan
_since World War n. Nilon's
economic strategy was intended
in part to strengthen the United
States' trading situation in the
light of sharply rising lmporlll
from Japan.
While in Anchorage, Nlmn
was invited to a reception at.
the home of Walter J. Hickel,
whom he fired as secretary ol
the interior on Thanksgiving
eve last year.
One of Nixon's traveJinll
companions Saturday was Sen·
ate Democratic leader Mike
Mansfield, subject of a White
House rumor a few days ago.
PresidentialspeechwriterWUJiam Safire told several ne,..
men he had been tipped that
Mansfield threatened to cut off
campaign funds to any Demoeratic senator who did not
support the Mansfield antlwltr
amendment on the draft bill.
Democrats angrily denied it.

Successor of
Mayor Stokes
To be Selected

Teachers Vote to
Strike on Monday
YOUNGSTOWN (UP!) - The
Youngstown Education
Association, representing
nearly all of the local 1,100
public school teachers, has
voled to strike on Monday.
Mrs. Matilda Wren, president
of the associaUon, said more
than 74 per cent of ballots cast
in a special referendum Friday
approved of a Monday
classroom boycoU. She said the
strike would continue ''until a
dispute over a master contract
is resolved." She accuaed the
board of not bargaining in good
fai Ut and not responding io
proposals submitted by the
association .

CLEVELAND (UPI)
Republicans and Dcmocfala
vote Tuesday to nominate
candidates to oppoae the man
Mayor Carl D. Stokes would like
to see succeed Jim.
Stokes, the ·first black to be
elected mayor of majcr u. s..
city, is ending his foor year jab
as chief e:leCUtive of the largest
city of Ohio, He isn't saJini
publicly what, if any, bls
poUtical future holds except
that he might accept a draft l'or
the presidency if, poor tllld
minority
groups areD'I
adequately repesented.
Democrats will cboctle ammc
thtce men : City Couadl
President Anthony J. Gardoll,
att.rney and developer J M. Carney, and PI Irick L.
GeriiY, the dty's f«mer p6:e
chief, The Republlc\o• .m
chose between CuJ•bal• .
CouniY Audllllr Ralph J, ;.It

a

and state Rep. Gecrp V,
Volnovteh.

THIEVES SENIW&amp;D
MOSCOW(UPI)-A-.tk'o
Soviet Kazrkbltw bu
tenced 52 1*110111 to
lmns of up to .. ,_.

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eatniliC faetol , •

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Sou/shy-Black Vows Missionary is ~

McCoy-OrrWedding .Shower Given· Community
I'OIIEIIOY - 1be 01ester carried ' similar white baskets

liletlloclist lllurcb was the with pale pink bow and
• r 1 for lbe .hlle 2li can' ''$1" w1 Mi"'l of lfiss Edna
~. daagbter of Mr. and
lira. 1. 0. McCoy of Reedsville,
lllie.l , llld Mr. Raulld Ott,
• of Mr. llld Mrs. Bill Ott,

Beednillt:
Ali

.

.m c:andelabni,

JiDan

white

lo!Jped wilb lftS liUed
wilb pint cJadjoli and mmns.
llld tall patted palms decorated

lbealtar. 'lbefamilypewswere
m.ked with .single pink asters
llld white satin bows.
The bride was given in
IDII'I'iage by ber father. ~
a Door-length gown of
white Iridal· satin fashioned
. with ., empire bodice of lace
over satin. A ..,.u.l""' lace
IIIIDdiip collar and full sbeer
1h ;es with wide Jace.&lt;&gt;verIISin cuffs were featwes of the
.• JOWD. 'l1le A-line skirt flowed
Into a m•pelleoglb train with
ICalloped lace ~ the
11om of both the dress and the
train.
'l1le bride's mantilla sbeer
'ftlling edged with matcl!ing

I

I
I
JI
I

"

I

l
I
I

ICalloped lace was beld with a
headpiece of lace and dacron
petals trimmed with circlets of
leed pearls. b
carried a
bouquet of pink sweetbearl
roaes, blue and white miniature
' Clrnllt:ions and baby's breath.
OOiciating at the double ring
ceremony was the Rev. Robert
R. Card. Music was provided by
Mrs. Horace Karr, organist,
and Miss Jemifer Dean, soloist.
'lbeirselect:ions included "Walk
Band in Band," "More," and
'"lbe ·wedding Prayer."
Serving as maid of honor for
the bride was ber sister, Miss
Celia McCoy. b wore a floocleugtb gown of white IIDcked
.._, over pink taffeta. II was
fashioned with an empire
waisted bodice mel bad a scoop
_.kline, sbcrl puffed slee;es
and a pink satin sasb. Sbe 1IIUre
a pink piC:ue hat with pint
satin streamers and carried a
white basket of pink sweetheart
roses, blue miniature carnations and baby's breath. Dark
pink bow and streamers
decorated the basket.
'l1le lridesmaids were Mrs.
LarrySmiUt,Belleview, W. Va.,
sister oftbe bride; Mrs. William
Bucldey, Pomeroy; and Mrs.
Gary WoH, Columbus. They
Wlll'l! dr esm of the same design
as the maid of hooor with blue
llocked sheer over blue taffeta,
, " IPIIIdrlng sash and hats; and
·"J"'"" .. ~,..r..,·v
I

•

Streamers. The gowns were
fashioned by the bride and her
mother. fJI of the attendants
wore s ilver heart-shaped
necklaces' containing two small
birthstones. a gift of the bride.
Mr. Thomas Osborne, U:Jng
Bottom, was best man and the
wllers were Mr. Byron McCoy,
&amp;ute 1, Reedsville, brother of
the !ride ; Mr. Randy Orr,
Reedsville, brother of the
groom, and Mr. Jim Buckley,
Westerville, cousin of the
groom.
For her daughter'$ wedding,
Mrs. McCoy wore a white knit
dreSs trimmed in biue and pink,
and blue and white accessories.
Mrs. Ott was in a green chiffon
dreSs with green and white
accessories; and both mothers
had corsages of pink and white
rosebuds.
A reception was held
following the ceremony in the
social room of the church .
Hostesses were Mrs. Betty
Dean, Mrs. Sina Murphy, Miss
Carol Nichols and Miss Patricia
Smith. Mrs. Julia Cochran,
sister of the bride, registered
the guests.
The bride's three tiered
wedding cake was decorated
with blue .and· pink rosebuds.
White ·cupid pillars separated
the tiers. The cake was topped
with a silver bowl engraved
with the bride and groom's
niunes and their wedding date.
It was fill~d with pink
sweetheart roses and baby's
breath. Flanking the cake were
two three-branch silver candelabra wiUt arrangements of
pink roses encircling the center
candle on each. Nuts, mints,
~d rice basket favors completed the table setting.
Foc her wedding trip to
Moootain Lake, Va., the bride
cl!anged into a blue knit dress
with black patent accessories.
The new Mrs. Orr is a 1967
graduate of Eastern High and is
a senior at Ohio University,
currenUy doing a year's in·
ternship at MI. Cannel Hospital
iu Colmnbus for a degree in
medical teChnology. She is a.
member of Alpha Lambda
Della, fr eshman women 's
honorary and Phi Kappa Phi,
national senior honorary .
Mr. Ott is also a 1967
graduate of Eastern High
School and graduated in Jtme
with honors fr om Ohio
University with a degree in

B'_:~~-to-b•o
T'~Ue-

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Comer By

POMEROY - Miss Belly
Charlene Hoeflich
Shaffer, !ride-elect of Ronald L. .
Wagner, was honored TUesday
POMEROY - Judith Wyant Gutlam IS b&lt;me after spending
evening with a bridal shower at several days iii Honolulu with her husband, S. Sgt. Harold 'L.
the' Racine 'American Legion Gilliam, there on his R. and R. !roo\ Vietnam. The ~ouple's
hall. Hostesses were · Mrs. daughter, Teresa Am, made.the trip with her mother lllld while in
Evelyn Young, Mrs. Dorothy Hawaii celelrated her fifth birthday.
Smith, and Mrs. 'Charles
•
Wagner.
GOOD 'I'HlNGS are happening in several churches today.
Attending were Mrs. Ruth
Afterweeksandweeks of wailing for repairs and renovations,
Hill, Mrs . Ora Hill, Mrs.
Ute
congregation
of the PO!neroy Church of Christ moved back
Mildred lhle, Mrs. Ruth Smith,
·
Miss Gail Shaffer, Mrs. Dorothy into the sauctuary.
Fire struck the church last spring and since that lime worship
Spencer, Mrs. Joan Goeglein,
services
have been held in the basement. An open house has
Miss Mildred Carnahan, Mrs.
Kathy Fausnaugh, · Mrs. tentatively been set foc Oct. 3.
An!! for months an.d months the Middleport, Harrisonville and
Dorothy McKenzie, Mrs. Doris
Syracuse
First United Presbyterian Church charge has awaited a
Hensler, ' Mrs. Joyce Hoback,
Mrs. Marge Crow, Mrs. Francis full lime pastor, Today the Rev. Dwight Zavitz assumes the
Goeglein, Mrs. Beverly Codner, pastorate.
An in!IUction service will be held at 8 p.m. tonight with a
Mrs. Jill Lawrence, Mrs. Betty
Theiss, Mrs. Jackie Wagner, reception to follow and members of all three churches will be on
Miss Becky Crow, and James hand to give a rOYal welcome to the new minister and his wife who
Smith.
moved to Middleport this week from Indiana.
Others presenting gifts to the
The Middleport and Harrisonville churches have had only
bride-elect were Miss Mary interim parWime ministers siree the late Rev. Howard Ruppelt
Smith, Mrs. Mary Ann Fowler, moved to a Central Ohio church about two years ago.
Mrs. Pat Brown, Mrs. Phyllis
And today at the Middleport Clurch of Christ, a dedicatioo of
Harris, Mrs. Clara Grueser, the new $90,000 addition is taking place. The public is invited to
Mrs. Pauline Collins, Mrs. the 2 p.m. dedication service and the open house which follows.
Donna lhle, Mrs. Belly Sayre,
Mrs. Margaret West, Mrs.
OFF TO ICELAND today to join Navyman Charles Ball are
Shirley Dugan, Mrs. Virgil his wife, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Frick, and their children.
&amp;ush, Mrs. Dortha Salser, For thepaslyear the family has resided in Pomeroy:They expect
Mrs. Aline Weaver, Mrs. otis
to be in Iceland for perhaps two years.
McClintock, Mrs. Chris Shane,
Mrs. Beulah Bradford, Mrs.
FERNE B. HAYMAN EXTENDS a big "thank you" to all
Sarah Neigler, Mrs. Etta Mae
those
frcends and neighbors .who sent cards and flowers during
Hill, Mrs. Inez Hill, Mrs. Doris
Adams , Mrs. Margaret Iter recent hospitalization.
Ferne is now home and making satisfactory, although slow,
Houdahseit, Mrs. Ruth TUcker,
progress.
Her daughter, June Wickersham, and several neighMrs. Vinas Lee; Mrs. Jeanette
Lawrence, Mrs. Delores bors are lending a hand until she gets back on her feel. F~e was
Cleland, and Mrs. Dallas Hill . in the coronary intensive care section for several days and then
- -- -- - - - - - spent three more weeks at the ,hospital.
botany. He is currently serving
with the U. S. Army at Fort
Knox, Ky.
Out-of-town guests at the
COLUMBUS - State legislators, upset and
wedding and reception included
disgusted over the closing of state parks, according to
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph . Turner
Sen. Oakley Collins (R-Jronlon ), have introduced a
and Lori, Westerville ; Mrcand
resolution asking Ute governor tor~ the parks. The
Mrs. John U:Jdwick, West
administration
has admitted that all appropriations
Jefferson ; Mr. and Mrs. Steve
are adequate to maintain state services at past levels
Lodwick and Mr. and Mrs. Gary
and that it was an administration decision to close the
Wolf, Columbus; Mrs. Erma!
parks, he said.
Park, Canal Winchester; Mr.
The resolution, which is the only course of action
and Mrs. Clay Cochran, Mr. and
available io the legislature, declares Ohio's state parks
Mrs. WendeD Camp, Mr. and
Mrs. LesCochran, Mr. and Mrs.
were closed· in reprisal against the public and
Larry Smith, Parkersburg, W.
legislators who do not agree with the administration on
Va.; Steve Landerman and
certain portions of the governor's budget proposals.
Bryan Stonbruner, Crooksville;
The resolution also noted that the General Assembly in
Mrs. Lena Post, Burnsville, W.
interim budgets provided a 33 pet. increase in apVa.; Mrs. Ercei Beall, Pico, W.
propriations foc Ute Department of Natural Resources.
Va.; Carl Powell, Fairborm&gt;
"Only a gross sense of fiscal mismanagement
Mrs. Ted WiHong, Regina and
would cause the administralioo to close the parks" the
Mike Wilfong, Mrs. Bruce
Cayton, Clarksburg , W. Va.

Resolution Hits Closing

..·-

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]OF Speaker :

PURPLE

POMEROY- Vaaes of white Salisbury Elementary School
gladioli flanked by two seven- auditoriiDD. A three-tiered cake
POMEROY - 11&amp;1 PeArl
branch .candelabra decorated decorated with pink roses and
the altar of the La..-el Cliff Free topped with the traditional Hoffman, a miallonarY from Methodist Church for the bride •nd groom figurines West Pakistan, ·w~s guest ~
wedding of Mis8 Karolyn Kay centered the bride's table. Pink spe~r at a recenfmeetlng of -:
Soulsby to Mr. &amp;ger Ray and white lace with pink forget· the JOF Class of the Pomeroy •
Black.
lllOHlots surrotmded the base of United Methocll8t Clurch. : . '
The bride is the daughter of the cake. Hostesses for the · Attired in native COI!Iime&gt; llbe •
Mr. and Mrs. William T. · reception were Mrs. Kathy presllllted a program on the :
Soulsby: Pomeroy, Route 2, and Pullins, ·Mrs. James Gilmore, missionary work in .that area .:
the bridegroom Is the son of Mr. Poineroy; Miss Sally Schaaf, and showed slides taken during '
and Mrs. Warren D. Black of Athens ; and Mrs. Adrian her eight years in South Asia. •
Rutland.
Carson ; Middleport; Miss She was accompanied here by
The wedding was an event of Deborah Black, sister of the Mrs. Gladys Smith of Bar· July ,! at 7 p.m. with Rev. groom, presided at the guest berton. .
.
••
During the meeting con- ::
Eugene Gill officiating. A half- book.
hour of nuptial music preceded For . il wedding trip into dueled by Mrs. Glenn Dill• Plan• ';
the ceremony . . This was Kentucky, the bride changed were made for a soup diJiner on ;:
presented by Miss Patty E)llln into a pink knit dress With white EJection Day. Punch and •
and Mrs. Gerald Pullins whose accesSories mid a white car- cookies were served tO ~e 14 ;
members and tWQ
at- .,
selections included "A Wedding nation corsage.
Prayer," "I'll Walk Beside The couple reside in Rutland. tending.
\
~
You,'' "Because," and uOh The new Mrs. Black is a
•
•
Promise Me."
graduate of Meigs High School
'
Given in marriage by her and the Gallipolis Business
ANNOUNCE WEDD~
father, the bride was attired in College where she completed a
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
an empire style gown of chiffon secretarial course. Mr. Black &amp;bert W. Wolfe, Racine, are
satapeau featuring a chantilace graduated from Rutland High annotmcing ·the marriage of
covered bodice. The colla:r was School in 1968 and is presently their granddaughter, ;Judith
highlighted by pearls in a rose employed with the Rutland Shain, to Mr. David Flowers,
design, and the sheer canoelot Fm:niture Co.
son of Mrs. Olena Anderson,
sleeves and cliffs had lace Out-of-town guests at the Midland, Pa. The wedding was
accents. The bride's cathedral wedding were Miss Sally E. an event of Sept. 21 at Greenup,
length veil edged with matching Schaaf, Miss Mary Kay Vin- Ky.
lace was held in place by a bow. cent, Miss Barbara Lightfoot,
She carried an arrangement of Athens; Mrs. Lester Bungard,
baby pink roses encircled with Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Kanode,
11
'white carnations on a white U:Jgan; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Bible.
•
Carter, Rockbridge; Mr. Leo
Mrs. Roberta Cox of Point Hill, Racine; and Mr. and Mrs.
Pleasant, W. Va. served as &amp;bert Barton, Chester.
maid ofhoilor. She wore a Door&gt;
length gown of pink crepe
fashioned with a scoop neckline,
short sleeves and an empire
waist. Embroidered pink rose
•
RHODES PROMOTED
here and watch it
braid trimmed the neckline and
RACINE- Gary M. Rhodes,
"bloom"! Earn at our ••
sleeves. Her veil was attached son of Mr. and Mrs. Orville
•
passbook rate of
to a Oat pink bow and she Rhodes, Racine. Rt. 1, Wllll
carried a bouquet of white recentiy promoted to the rank of
•
carnations and pink baby roses. sergeant by the U. S. Air Force.
Mr . Perry Kennedy of Sgt. Rhodes is an aircraft
ON
Rutland served as best man, mechanic on duty with the
PASSBOOK SAVINGS
and the ushers were Mr. Lynn Aerospace Defense Command
Black, brother of the groom, at K. I. Sawyer Air Force Base
Rutland, and Mr. William · T. in upper Michigan. A 1969
Soulsby, Jr., brother of the . graduate of Southern High
bride, Pomeroy.
School, Sgt. Rhodes recenUy
For her daughter's wedding, spent a 15-day leave .at home
Mrs. Soulsby wore a navy and with his family and friends.
white polyester dress with white
Meigs County Branch of
The Athens County Savings
accessories. Her corsage was of
&amp; loan Co.
while carnations.
296 Second St.
ASK TO WED
Mrs. Black was in a gray and
Pomeroy,
Ohio
GALLIPOUS - Ronald E.
white knit dress with black
Member Feperal Home Loan
accessories and also had a Huffman, 21, Gallipolis, station
Sank.
manager and Clara Mae
white carnation corsage.
Member Federal Savings
Immediately following the Lambert, 21, Vinton, applied for
Loan Insurance Corp. AI
ceremony a reception honoring a marriage license Saturday in
accounts
Insured up t
the couple was held in tbe Gallia County Probate Court.
s2o,ooo.or

gucsp
,

rr BACKFIRED -

YOUR
MONEY

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._:_::.:::_.c:.:.
VOL VI _ __
NO. 35
_:__ __ _ _ _ __

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Pres·
ident Nixon, the legal world and
the nation mourn¢ the death
Saturday of Hugo L. Black,
eight days after he resigned
from the Supreme Court where
he was a liberal pillar and
champion of civil rights for a
third of a century.
Black died at 1 a.m. EDT
Saturday at Bethesda Naval
Hospital, Md., of inflammation
of the arteries and a severe
"' stroke which he soffered last
Sunday. He was 85.
AI his bedside were his
immediate family, including ·his
second wife, Elizabeth Demeritte Black; his two lawyer sons,
Hugo Jr. of Miauti and Sterling
F. Black of Alb~querque, N.M.,
and a daughter, Mrs. Mario
Pesaresi of Hackensack, N.J.
Black entered Bethesda Aug.
28 and resigned Sept. 17. His
stroke two days later marked
the start of a quickly deteriorating physicat condition . The
hospital said he died "peacefully."
A funeral service will be held
at 2 p.m. Tuesday at Washington Cathedral. Burial arrangements were incomplete.
Two Vacancies
The President, who now has
two court vacancies to fill with
the retirement of ailing Justice
· John M. Harlan, 72, last
Thursday said Black h~d "such
mdependence, tenactly and
total .integrity of mind that his
tmprmt on the court and on our
nation will be indelible."
Said Nixon: "Justice Black
believed that the primary
responsibility of the judiciary
was that of giving force and
effect to constitutional liberties
... his faith in the United States
constitution was absolute and
so his convictions were rooted
absolutely.
"Mrs. Nixon and I join the
nation in mourning at the death
of Ibis noble American."
Chief Justice Warren E.
Burger termed the sharecropper's son from Clay County,
Ala., "one of the authentic legal
philosophers of our lime: He
will be sorely mised, not only
on the court but in American

,..

URNITURE
'%

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•

Behind every

piece of beautiful Flexsteel furn~ure stands a giant industrial complex of manufacturing plants, machines, materials and
highly-qualified men with years of experience dedicated to the pursuit of excellence - excellence in design, in quality,
in construction, comfort and performance.

•

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•·'

judges who deserved to be cotmsel for needy def~ndants
and the landmark reqmrement
Black, who carried a well- ~at state legiSI~tures must be
thumbed copy of the constitu- pporttoned eqmtably ·
tion in his pocket, fought most
Hi~ 34 years and 28 days of
consistently for a literal inter- servtce on the Supreme Court
pretation of its guarantees of were ex.c eeded by only two
freedom of speech and press, men, Chtef J~tce John Marand opposed anti-obscenity and shall and Justtce Stephen J .
anti-Jibellaws as unconstitution- Fteld. Only two men served to
a greater age: Chtef Justice
al.
Among his dissents which Roger B. Taney' who dted m
eventually became the Jaw of of~tce at age 87 and Justice
the land were a ruling that Oltver Wendell Holmes, who
required states to provide legal rettred at 90.
•

called 'Your Honor.'"

Attica Death Count 42
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI )-The
death toll in the Attica prison
rebellion climbed io 42 Satur·
day with the death of another
injured inmate.
A spokesman for the State
Correctional Services Depart·
ment said Edward Menefi, 21 ,
of Parksville died in Meyer
Memorial Hospital in Buffalo.
The cause of death was not
revealed.
Menefi 's death raised to 32
the number of prisoners who
died in the insurrection , which

O .
.
h10 DelegatiOn
United on Issue
Of Unfair Split

MARIETTA - An agreement
was signed here Friday between the State Highway
Department, Divjson 10 and the
Ohio Civil Service Employees
Association ( OCSEA) at
· Division Headquarters.
.
, .
The .' agreement, ~hlch
recog~tzes OCSEA as t~e
bargaming agent for tis
members who are employees of
the state agency, was signed by
Max R. FIll'Iey' Divis!on Deput Y
.Director; Mr. Dick Young,
Administrative Assistant; Karl
E. stewart, OCSEA Special
Assistant for Government
Relations; Dean Stevens,

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I

who was a fellow senator when
President Franklin D. Roosevelt plucked Black from the
Senate in 1937 to join the high
court, said Black "leaves as his
imperishable legacy a better
and more free America which
he, as a statesman and jurist,
so much helped to build."
Publisher Ralph Ginzburg;
who figured in obscenity cases
before the court, said that "in
an age when living by principle
has all but vanished, Hugo
Black ... was one of the few

•1 0'hway
H-e·

veraallte tran sitional tt)1 1n;. Reversible

It is the total capability of men, :naterial and machines that keeps Flexsteel in the forefront of the indusb).

over on the weekend to preserve
it.
Seventeen Republicansexactiy the number needed for
passage, voted for the bill, while
all
Democrats
except
Kilpatrick opjtosed it.
While the budget adopted by
the Senate is far below Gilli·
gan 's original proposal of $9.2
billion, it approaches the $7.8
billion measure adopted by the
House last May 28.
Sen. Robert R. Shaw, R.Q&gt;Jumbus, chairman of the Senate
Finance Committee, said the
budget represents a 39.4 per
cent increase in spending over
the last biennium.
The $789 million in new revenues required compares with
$1.4 billion adopted by the House
and $2.1 billion requested by
Billigan. However, there is no
general property tax relief included as there was in the gov·
ernor's and House's plans.
"I'm surprised the Republicans have not come up with
any tax reform they can call
their own," said Senate Minority
Leader Anthony 0. Calabrese,
D-Cieveland, in announcing his

opposition to the giant 281-page
bill revised constantly until the
moment it hit the Senate floor
at 1:42 p.m. Saturday.
Sen. Oakley C. Collins, RIronton, chairman of the Senate
Education Committee, pointed to
$371 million worth of new spending for education which he said
represented a 34 to 38 per cent
increase ove4 current spending.
But Senate Minority Whip Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron, expressed
disappointment that $114 million
for education was cut from the
House version .
"This is $500 miJlion less than
the governor asked for," Ocasek
said. "That which you are about
to do, you should do quickly,
because it is not well done."
Three Republican senators,
&amp;bin T. Turner of Marion,
Paul R Malia of Westlake and
David S. Holcomb of Dayton,
voted in opposition to the package.
"There is nobody in this room
who is going to be entirely satisfied with this tax package,"
said Senate Majority Whip
Michael J. Maloney, R- Cincinnati, chairman of the Ways and
Means Committee which shaped
the tax portion of the bill.
"But I think everyone must
realize, particularly with events
of the last two weeks, that this
is the best possible biJI we could
have produced to get17 votes. "

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1971 _ __ ______~'_:'~~
PAGE 15
Aside from the sales tax in·
_:::.:_:.:::_:.:.!_,:::__:.::_::=:::.:_::.!.....:::..:...
· ::_ crease, the tax section includes:

WASHINGTON (UPI)
Ohio's entire congressional
delegation, Republicans and
Democrats alike have asked the
U. S. Department of Labor to
institute a more equitable
distribution of Emergency
Employment Act funds.
The 24 congressmen and two
Senators, in a Jetrer. to Labor
Secretary James D. Hodgson,
said Ute present distribution of
the funds is "unfair."
The present distribution
formula provides sharply increased aid in three states
where unemployment exceeds
the na tionaI average of 4.5 per
cent. However, Michigan,
which has slightly higher
unemployment than Ohio, has
life."
been receiving twice as much
· !\lade America Better
Rep. Claude Pepper, D-Fla., money as the Buckeye State.

•

Exceptional comfort seal and back cushions.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio Senate Saturday claiffiax·
eel more than 2'h months of
wrangling over the budget and
!axes by approving a $7.677 bil·
lion biennial budget requiring
$798 miUion worth of new taxes,
including a 1.5 per cent increase
in the sales tax.
The vote was 18-lo, with Sen.
Bishop Kilpatrick, D • Warren,
joining 17 Republicans in favor
of the package, finalized during
three solid days of conferences
which closed out the week.
The measure now must be re·
turned to the House for concurrence in the drastic changes
made by the Senate. Agreement
is not expected, and a joint
House-Senate conference committee is expected to go to work
on the fiscal program early next
week.
Senate Republican leaders, unable or unwilluig to put together
the votes to pass a personal in·
come tax as proposed by Gov.
John J. Gilligan last March Ia
and approved by the House last
July 14, put together a fragile
agreement on the sales tax
package and held members

Black's Death Mourned

...

Caul com~ with rich wood finish. padded and buUotHufl ed
arms. .... llld b1111:t.

Logan football fans went all out last

week to prepare for Gallipolis' invasion of Hilltop Stadium
where the UfS Chieftains hoped to snap the mue Devils long
winning streak. Signs at every city enlrance and throughout
the downtown area such as the one above greeted French
City visitors, but to no avail. GAHS won its 15th straight
contest over a three-year period, 28-20. Above, GAHS booster
Jtm Bloomer points thumbs down to tlte Purple Power sign
shortly after arriving in Logan Friday evening.

PLANT''.

•••

·-'THE STOil'Y OF F

'PO'WER

Senate Passes
2-Year Budget

began with a riot Sept. 9 and
ended Sept. 13 when state
police stormed the sprawling
correctional facility near the
village of Attica, 25 miles east
of Buffalo. Ten prison workers
also died .
As Menefi's death was
announced, ftmeral services
were held in the BedfordStuyvesant section of Brooklyn
for six other Attica inmates.
The services at the Cornerstone Baptist Church were to
follow a street procession .
Also in New York, a branch
of the Chase Manhattan Bank
was firebombed, apparently to
protest the storming of Attica
by police. Damage to the

Courts Bogged
Unnecessarily
COLUMBUS (UPI) - U. S.
Attorney William Miilignn said
drunk and disorderly charges
waste the lime of courts, are
crimes which "are really not
crimes," and should be dealt
with in other ways.
The federal official urged
stare courts to revamp their
systems so they could deal with
people ''who really hurt and
damage society."
"If I could make a heart felt
plea io legislators it would be to
reslrict .the acts which are
classified as crimes to those
which are really crill)es,"
Milligan said.

of OCSEA are covered.
This is the second series of
agreements negotiated between
the Highway Department and
OCSEA, Stewart pointed out.
The first set was signed in 1967,
he said.
·' ·
"We firmly believe in
maintaining good employee
relations by keeping the lines of
communication open," Farley
said. "These agreements put
our feelings in writing."
Farley added that the new
. negotiating councils will "give
Only non-management em- the employees a stronger voice
pioyees (as defined by the at the Division level."
con~ract) of the Highw~;y
· The agreelflent provides
Department who are members collective negotiating councils

Nixon Finds Dock
Fus s
Intolerable
ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE
IUPI)- President Nixon, saying
the government "cannot tolerate" further delay in ending the
west coast dock strike, called
both sides together in Portland
Saturday to "make a renewed
and determined effort" at
settlement.
"We cannot tolerate a continuation of this pattern of dehiy
and slow progress toward an
ultimate settlement," Nixon
said in a statement issued from
the presidential plane, Air
Force One.
The President was enroute to
Kalispell, Mont ., to open a
weekend visit to the Pacific
Northwest culminating in a
meeting with Emperor Hirohito
of Jpan in Anchorage, Alaska
Sunday.
" I am acutely aware of the
severe economic and human
impact of the west coast
longshoreman 's strike and
keenly disappointed at the
continued failure of the parties
to Utat dispute to resolve their
differences through collective
bargaining," Nixon said.
"The time is overdue for the
parties involved to live up to

structure was slight, authorities
said.
An anonymous cailer told
UP! the bombing was in
retaliation for the assault,
which was made with the
approval of Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller, brother of Chase
Manhattan Board Chairman
David Rockefeller .
ATHENS, Ohio ( UPI ) - A
Common Pleas Court Judge
"Rocky will pay," the caller
satd and hung up.
.
Saturday ordered 900 striking
In U:Js Angeles, a bomb that
non-academic workers at Ohio
apparently was placed near the
University to return to their jobs
Chase Manhattan International
AUnion official said they would
Banking Corp. offices in the
stay on strike until the non·
Tishman B.uilding also explod- By KENNEm J. BRADDICK wage issues are resolved.
ed. II too, was linked to Attica. SAIGON (UPI)- U.S. fighter The preliminary injunction,
A caller to the U:Js Angeles -bombers struck mio North the court order issued this
Times said, "This is for Vietnam , for the fifth day week, was handed down by
Attica."
.
SaH1rday tn the most prolonged visiting Judge Howard GoldThe prison scene was quiet, senes of atr attacks on the sherry of Chillicothe. The strike
Saturday. Lawyers entered in north since bombing was halted has threatened to shut down the
pairs to visit inmates.
nearly three years ago.
University which has an
Commtmist forces in turn enroliment of 19,000.
·stepped up rocket and mortar ·n.estrikewhich began Thurs·
~
attacks in ~u~h Vietnam and day, was called by local 1699
Cambodia, htttmg at least four of the A.Olerican Federation of
Am~rican bases, including two State,CountyandMunicipaiEmatrftelds.
.
. ployees.
~,.
.l '
In Cambodta, mortar. ftre The University at that time
.
destr?yed a large quanttty of obtained a restraining order in
COLUMBUS-Amajor state- avtatton fuel stored. at Neak ' an attempt to halt the strike
wide automotive safety Luong, the Mekong River ferry but it was ignored.
program will be launched in crossing 32 miles southeast of Local President Oscar McGee
Columbus TUesday, under tbe Phnom Penh.
.
,
said Saturday after the
co-sponsorship of the Ohio
U.S. Air Force Jets btl truck preliminary injunction was
Department of Insurance and convoys movmg from North issued : "The strike will conLiberty Mutual Insurance Vietnam through the Mu Gia tinue tmtil it's been resolved."
Companies for stare, county and Pass in Laos Saturday morning McGee said a meeting had
municipal officlals.
when they ca~e under fire been set for Saturday at 5:30
The program will consist of from gtms a mtle across the p.m. to discuss the latest court
two presenlations - Decision border.
order.
Driving and Skid Conlrol - and Two F4 Phantom fighter- The preliminary injunction
will run through Friday, Oct. 1. ~mbers turned into North handed down by Goldsberry,
Vtetnam and bombed the sitting in . for Judge Lowell
empla~ements:
triggering an Howard who disqualified
e~loston that mdtcated ammu- himself from the case because
.
mtion or .fuel was hit, he is a former OU faculty
in each division, composed of spokesmen satd.
member, ordered the union to
one unit steward from each The planes were not damaged take down pickets and return to
county in the division and one in . that exchange of . .fir•. 78 work for two weeks.
from ·the division office. The miles north of the Demililartzed
councils will make recom- Zone. It was the 64th "protecmendations to the division live reaction" strike reported
safety committee and the by the U.S. comman~ this year
TOURS THEATER .
OCSEA negotiating committee and foiiowe~ a suml~r thrust
WASHINGTON
(UP!)
to improve health and safety mt? North Vtetnam Frtday by a
Mamie Eisenhower will tour the
practices in the division and to patr of Phantoms.
new Eisenhower Theater at the
recommend procedures for U.S. spokesmen said the
John F. Kennedy Center foc the
resolving operational attacks on Amertcan bases m
South Vietnam were insignifi- Perftrming Arts Monda) . The
emergencies.
Uteater will be unvelled ofAlso attending the signing cant because no casualties or ficially Oct. 18. The former
were R. · J . Shipka, Special damage occurred. One attack First Lady has approved as a
Assistant to Highway Director was against the big coastal gift to the Uteater the original
J. Phillip Richley . and Steve Ph an Rang air base, 165 miles large metal engraving of the
Clapp, his assistant, both of northeast of Saigon, where new Eisenhower dollar coin.
three 107mm rockets hit.
Columbus .

Attacks

Continue

Safety Program
nn,;ns ,.,uesday

work ers St·gn Agreement.
chairman of Negotiating
Council and Ed Walters, Chief
Steward.
The basic agreement is a
prototype ; similar agreements
for the other geographic
division have been signed, with
the five Central Office divisions
slated for signing within the
next few weeks. They will be
administered at the local level
b
· · ·
Y~~p1oyee counctis wttht~ ~e
dlvtstons and the dtvtston
De t H' h
Di t
pu y tg way rec ors.

- A net increase in cigarette
taxes of three cents a pack.
- A penny tax on cigars.
- Elimination of the corporate
franchise tax of five mills and
installation of a 312 per cent
corporate net income tax on in·
comes up to $25,000 and a· 612
per cent rate on all income
above that figure .
- Broadening the base of the
sales tax to include certain services such as sign painting,
photo finishing , telephone answering services and leasing of
office equipment.
- Real estate tax reductions
for persons over 65, but no generai property tax relief.
On the spending said, the
package includes $1.3 blllion fo r
public welfare, including $546
million to raise payments for
families on welfare with dependent children. This is a cut
of $580 million. from Gilligan's
welfare request.
The package also includes $610
million for higher education,
compared with $654 million requested by the governor, and
$1.9 billion for elementary and
secondary education, compared
with $2.2 billion requested by
GilJigan .

FALL MAJORE'ITE QUEENS - Foor girls were crowned queen Saturday at the AllTrophy Baton Twirling Contest beld at Eastern High School. Left to right are Usa Kuhn,
Belpr.e, ~class ; Shauna Malone, Belpre, 7-10 class; Diana Guthrie, Coolville, 11·14, and
Debbte Jeffers, Minersville, l!i-20 age group. The contest, sanctioned by the National Baton
Twirling Assn., was sponroed by the Chester PI'A. Director of tbe contest was Mrs. Rudy
Riggs.

their responsibilities to the
American people and to work
diligently- and urgently- tow·
ard that settlement."
Nixon said he had asked J.
Curtis Cowtts, head of the
National Mediation Service,
Labor Secretary James Hodg·
son and Budget Director
George Shultz to meet with
negotiators for the International
U:Jngshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union and the
Pacific Maritime Association in
Portland.
They will "discuss how the
parties can best be brought to
recognize and meet their
responsibilities," Nixon said.
"This strike has gone on too
long already. I expect the
parties to make a renewed and
determined effort to see that it
is ended and ended quickly." ·
Counts had been meeting with
ILWU and PMA negotiators in
San Francisco for 10 days. But
little progress has been reported .
Counts, ILWU President Harry Bridges and PMA negotiator
Ed Flynn started meeting at
the Benson hotel in Portland.
Deputy White House Press

Union Ignores
Court's Order
Members of the union were in
the courtroom at the time of
the hearing for Ute injtmction
and Goldsberry warned them
not "to take a light view" of
the court order.
Goldsberry said if they refuseel to obey Ute injunction and
were arrested he hoped '~hey
would have the slamina and
pride to not ask the court for
mercy.
"Don 't come in and ask not
to be p1lllished," he said.
The union said it was protesting discrimination against women in cafeteria work, supervisors working in non-1
supervisory roles and the
failure of the university to
submit a list of workers laid off
Ibis summer.
ou -President Claude Sowle
saidearliertbeschool wouldhave
to be closed if the strike con·
tinued.
"We could be forced to close
down the tmiversity since we
would be faced with major problems concerning food, refuse
andotbernecesszryoperations,"
Sowle said.

Secretary Gerald L. Warren
indicated Nixon might personally meet with the group during
his overnight stay in Oregon.
Nixon 's ftrst slop on his trip
was at Kalispell for a look at
the $236 million Ubby Dam
tmder construction on Montana's Kootenai River.
Then the President planned to
Dy to PorUand to brief
northwestern editors and publishers on national and interns,
tional affairs and to slop
overnight.
Sunday he will Oy to Walla
WalJa, Wash., to inspect the
Hanford atomic reactor plant,
and then on to Alaska for his
visit with Hirohito in a pinkcarpeted, velvet-lined U.S. Air
Force hangar.
11 was a goodwill tour for
Nixon in many ways. The visit
with Hirohlto at the start of Ute
emperor's first trip alroad was
intended to soothe Japanese
feelings hurt by Nixon's new
policies on mainland Cbina and
world trade.
Nixon plans to visit Cblna
before next May, and one of the
Communist government's big·
gest fears in Peking has been
Ute growing strength of Japan
_since World War n. Nilon's
economic strategy was intended
in part to strengthen the United
States' trading situation in the
light of sharply rising lmporlll
from Japan.
While in Anchorage, Nlmn
was invited to a reception at.
the home of Walter J. Hickel,
whom he fired as secretary ol
the interior on Thanksgiving
eve last year.
One of Nixon's traveJinll
companions Saturday was Sen·
ate Democratic leader Mike
Mansfield, subject of a White
House rumor a few days ago.
PresidentialspeechwriterWUJiam Safire told several ne,..
men he had been tipped that
Mansfield threatened to cut off
campaign funds to any Demoeratic senator who did not
support the Mansfield antlwltr
amendment on the draft bill.
Democrats angrily denied it.

Successor of
Mayor Stokes
To be Selected

Teachers Vote to
Strike on Monday
YOUNGSTOWN (UP!) - The
Youngstown Education
Association, representing
nearly all of the local 1,100
public school teachers, has
voled to strike on Monday.
Mrs. Matilda Wren, president
of the associaUon, said more
than 74 per cent of ballots cast
in a special referendum Friday
approved of a Monday
classroom boycoU. She said the
strike would continue ''until a
dispute over a master contract
is resolved." She accuaed the
board of not bargaining in good
fai Ut and not responding io
proposals submitted by the
association .

CLEVELAND (UPI)
Republicans and Dcmocfala
vote Tuesday to nominate
candidates to oppoae the man
Mayor Carl D. Stokes would like
to see succeed Jim.
Stokes, the ·first black to be
elected mayor of majcr u. s..
city, is ending his foor year jab
as chief e:leCUtive of the largest
city of Ohio, He isn't saJini
publicly what, if any, bls
poUtical future holds except
that he might accept a draft l'or
the presidency if, poor tllld
minority
groups areD'I
adequately repesented.
Democrats will cboctle ammc
thtce men : City Couadl
President Anthony J. Gardoll,
att.rney and developer J M. Carney, and PI Irick L.
GeriiY, the dty's f«mer p6:e
chief, The Republlc\o• .m
chose between CuJ•bal• .
CouniY Audllllr Ralph J, ;.It

a

and state Rep. Gecrp V,
Volnovteh.

THIEVES SENIW&amp;D
MOSCOW(UPI)-A-.tk'o
Soviet Kazrkbltw bu
tenced 52 1*110111 to
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Sentinel SUrxlly1 Sept. 21,lfll

.,

r
--------------•--------~
~------------------

'Cats Rally To Nip Southern, 14-12

! Voice along Broadway !

I
' I

I

.

I

BY JACK O'BRIAN
SON OF '"DIE GODFA111ER"
IS ABCIRNING
,.
NEW YORK ...:. .Mario Puzo's hard at worlt
'wrillng a aequei to his •-The Godfather"; It'll be
the title character's soo Michael C«leoae,
tHing him from the lime "'lbe Godfatbel-"
·ended in 1!165 to 1971 .... Henry · Kissingel'
resumed dating Hope Lange, who broke off with
Glenn Fml wbeD she discovered Gle.m was
beaulng Rlkk! Revsoo .... Geraldine Brooks
vialted her alma mater 'lbe American Academy
of Dramatic Arts and then i.ent upstairs to have
~ anortat the VIP restaurant - m whose 1V
screen was playing Gerry's 1947 movie "Cry

here the other night: a man in the frmt row beld
a moosehred in bis lap right thl'Gugh the PE!I'"
formanc.oe •... New Yorker Hotel management
swe.rs it will not be sold to Plilyclinlc Hospital,
or anyone .•.. Wllr1l"r Broo., in this negativefiscal film age, l'epOI"Is its biggest year- rentals
at $2,0001000 a week .••• Ruby Keeler, who spent
herearlydnemalifcat Warner's, will cut a cake
marldng the 1,5001h Warner , movie &lt;"Skin
Game," opening atLoew's onl!dwy. next week).
Many Las Vegas casinos are run by desede~rise types but not the big Tropicana: Pres.
J. K. HQJ.SIIels Jr. is a West Point grad, ·now a ·
lawyel', and was born in Vegas ...• The 1V
Acildemy's having a Celebrity House Tour (a
Tbe Rev. ll!nd MrS. l)wigot L. Zavltz
popular flmiH"aisel' for N. Y. charities) and pads
THE REV. DWIGHT ZAVITZ is tbe new pastor of lbe
to be toured Oel. 19 include Joe Namath's
Middleport, Syracuse and Harrisonville First United
passion pit and the spteudid ManhaUan
Presbyterian Cburches. An induction service will be held this
townbouae of Edward Durell Slme (who
evening fer the Rev. Zavitz at the Middleport Church at 8
designed the JFK culture center).
p.m. cmducted by the Rev. Rwlsell Lester. 'lbe
'lbe DPimmico Hotel 1111 Park Ave. will try
congregatims of the Syracuse and Harrisonville Churches
entertainment again: its new room, to be called
will join the Middleport Group. The Rev. Javitz and his wife,
Nico's, will have cootemporary jaiZ, s~
Ruth, have moved to Middleport from Ossian, Ind. He
wilb Chid!; Hamilton's group as well as "now"
graduated from Marion College, Marim, Ind., and United
discos for dancing ...• David Jay, 10, ol the
Tbeologlcal Seminary, Richmond, Va. 'lbey have two sons,
"Godot" revival bas been so successful a kid
Dwighl, Jr., who is a graduate ol McCormick Seminary,
actor in 1V cOOllllerCials and daytime serials
Qlicago, now working oo his doctors degree and teaching at
that already be has more than enough mmey
Indiana University, and John wbo graduated from Earlham
trust.lunded ·to COVel' four yea111 of cdlege.
Seminary, Richmond, Ind., and presently attends Louisville,
Gloria Swanson's entry into the deligbtful
Kentucky Presbyterian Seminary.
"Butterflies Are Free" ga.., lbat loogn8l hit a
$10,000 a week boxoffice boost •••• Playboy Mag
ned invades the music hndness witb a recml
film, publishing- and personal management of
entertainel's .... Souads like a nice little
mooopcly aborning, what wilb so many Playboy
Clubs also ~ acts fer their floor shows ...•
Purses for males have become popular, and next
(trim Kaiser-Roth) comes a bag for males slulw
from a belt like a pistol holster, tied at the thigh
wilb a thong.
.
.
Mamie Eisenhower celebrated her 75th
lirlhday Sept. 'D .... Songstress Freda Payne (at
the Cope) says sbe dales Omar Sharif. Omar
gels around to more gals than the late Ali Khan
in bis brief prime ..•• Famed Jekel model
Verusc!D dropped her Italian photog boy friend
and wrapped Gel'man musician Holgel' Tru1zb
around her pinky •.•. Lob ol Long Island
supermarkets wm't cash $100 bills, and even
$5415, $Mil and $1115 must be awrove&lt;~ by the
managers.

Wolf.''

Banker Charles Allen (Fortune Mag rated
him w&lt;rth $150 million) is in the hospital for the
6th time this year: heart .~.. Kessinger wasn't
with Hope Lange at dinner Sat. night in "21" but
sat like a satisfied owl· between two lovely
blondes, one the CBS aasoclate ~r be
escorted to the JFK CUltural Center premiel'e .••.
'lbe publicity the CBS gal rec'd paid off fast:
she's switching to the other side of the 1V
cameras shortly •.•• the other blonde was a tall,
composed, beautiful Ingrid Bergman-type: Doug
Fairbanks Jr. also dined with Henry •... Hosey
Schinazi of the realty-money family married
Jack O'Brien (don't look at us; another JOB).
P. J. Clarke's owner D!IMY Lavezzo went to
a New Jersey track, lost a buncDe, slopped
overnight at a nearby motel - and was sneakthieved of his last $101 .... Walter Wincbell,
seriwsly ill lately, is lots better: Damon Runyoo
Fund executive director Dorothy Moore visited
WW in L.A. wbere his doctors told her be's made
an "amazing recovery."
Nat'l Ass'n ol Catholic Conference directors
will have their ilext national meeting in N. Y.
Slate -but NOT in New York City; because "as
lllman beings we are disgusted'' with the pornography and other degrading manifestations in
Gotham •... Our good friend Bob Tisch, president
ol Loew's hotels and theaters, blamed lbe media
fu- emphasizing the town's siltul aspects, but
it's precisely the media which has brought the
politicians up fr1m tbetr cuallmary c.)'llical
apathy to the point a few efforts are being made
at last to clean things up.
"Waiting for Godot" is mystifying enough,
but not even author Samuel Becket could have
foreseen lbe first-row spectacle at its revival

SUNDAY . ONLY
100PM 10 JPM
POiNT PLIASANT STOll ONLYI

PAMPERS
DAYTIME 15's
OVERNITE
12's ·
-

placement of 46 persons In
gainful employment during
August when there were 129 new
work applications received . of
·

EAQI

JOHN SONS

BABY LOTION

tflll-------------~

b~

--....
lotion

BED
PILLOWS

9:00 A.M. Till 10:00 P.M.
SEVEN DAYS AWEEK
2501

FRUTH
PHARMACY

· Jacbon

AIL

WELCOME MAT
HEAD MAJORE'M'E - Waltama High Head Majorette
Beverly Knapp goes tlrough a baton routine during the
Falcon Band's halftime show Friday night. The show,
directed by Gel'ald Simmons and Charles Yeago, was
heartily received.

HECK'S REG. 99•

•

Crahtree to Lead Grange
CARPENTER _ Columbia
Grange No. 2435, electing officers for the ensuing year
Friday evening, selected Arthur
Crabtree as master. Other
officers named were overseer

====--:-:=-::::·-:-::-=-=·

,---------------------------"'
This announcement Is neither an offer to sell nor a solicitation of an offer to buy the Units.

The offer is made only by the Offering Circular.

Lobsters are m a r in e
crustaceans with large pincerlike claws of unequal
size adapted to crushing
their prey. The World Almanac notes that growing
lobsters must "shed" their
shells before increasing in
size, which .leaves them
vulnerable until the new
shell forms. They have a
remarkable ability to restore a lost le or claw.

Mm 19, 1971

New Issue

$2,250,000 of Umited Pa baship Units

GREATER OHIO REALTY COMPANY
TAX SHELTERED

Carl Greenlees ; lecturer,
Bertha Cnpp.en; ste~ard ,
Menda l Jordan; .ass1~tant
s leward , Larry Birchfield ;
chaplam , Murl Galaway;
treasurer, Earl Starkey;
secretary, Westina Crabtree;
gatekeeper, Lee Wood ; ceres,
Ava Greenlees; pomona, Oma
Starkey; flora, Kathy Cheadle;
lady assistant sU,ward, Ruth
Ann Jordan; women's activities
chairman, Elizabeth Jordan;
junior chairman, Jane Jordan,
and youth chairman, Waller
Jordan.
The Women's Activities
Chairman, Murl Galaway, read
a letter of thanks for a donation

A copy of the Offering Circular giving complete details may be obtained
from the undersigned : ·

26 oz.
RAIN BARREL

Telephone (614) 228-2525
The offering of Units is limited to. and s~les will . be ma~e only to, bona
fide residents of the State of Olio who wtll purcha.se for mve~tment and
not with a view to resale or other transfer to nonresidents of 0"110.

I

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Nothing compares to the
peace of mind that
comes from having cash
in reserve t~at earns a
fine return ... money
that you can get your
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without sacrifice or
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Heck's Reg. '2.77

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.99

GUN RACK
Heck's Reg. 13.99

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COLEMAN
FUEL
Heck's Reg.

$1.39

., .oo
GAL

Wlodsbleld Heck's Reg.
He

,

-

Prize Penn

Heck's Reg.

$2.38
MOTOR
GLORY LIQUID,· ~~r·

Reg.

·2 Gal.

5 .lb.
6

$J.ii

!7 liZ.

Sl.lt

PI!.

~Op-p~-s~~-~-stLO-Off-~~-Ph-~-~-6!_~~N_G!_"~p WiSSSUMIWiiiiiiA
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.

Ervin, a 102lb. freshman called
the signals. Nick lhle, 160 lb.
junior speedster, was cqnverted
from an end til tailback. All
three players made Coach
Wallace's game plan go.
Coach Dick Adams' Bobcats
jumped into an 3.Q lead with
~ 21 left in initial period.
(,juarterback Glenn Smith
scored on a one-yard p1mge
capping a ~yard drive in 12
plays. A pass to Curry was good
for the extra points.
The drive featured hard
running by Gary Collins, senior
fullback; Jim Bias, a junior
fullback and Rick Smith, the
Bobcats' leading scorer, a
sophomore tailback.
Southern refused to roll over
and play dead. The Tornadoes,
behind the bard running of the
Nease brothers and lhle, moved
back into the game, moving 60
yards In six plays for their first
score.
Mitch Nease on a fourth down
situalion at lbe 21.,an1 liDe

squirted around his right end
and outraced the Bobcat
secondary to the end f.OI'Ie. A run
for tbe conversion failed: .
Southern, then " sky high,"
attempted a modified an-Ilide
kick which was recovel'ed by
the Bobcats. The Tornadoes
held on three downs forcing KC
to punt.
Following
an
Orland
Cremeans' boot, Ely, behind a
huge hole opened by his interior
line, scampered 61 yards up the
middle for the final Southern
touchdown. That electrifying
run shocked the Bobcats into
realizing that the Tornadoes
meant business.
KC could not move the ball
Wltil the closing seconds of the
first half. A pass interference
call placed the ball at the 30
yard line. Smith fired a pass to
Collins but he was forced oul of
bounds at the 15.
SECOND HALF
Both teams apparently
received • ,._ leue 1111 life"

BARBOUIISVILLE - In the
wmls of the contemporary

nated with Rick Pickens as play
director, sparked the Big
Blacks on a 51-yard march to
the Barboursville 11. It took lS
plays to do it, with Steve Evans,
Oluck Adkins, steve Miller and
McGinnis chopping off short
yardage to put together four
straight first downs.
But, on fourth down,
McGinnis slipped going back to
pass and the locals bad to cough
up the ball on the 18.
Once more Rody Harden got
his foot into some pretty punts,
getting off one boot of 52 yards
and another of 43, plus lesser
impressive yardage.
Steve Evans was the top
rusher for the Blacks, cracking
for '5 yards in 10 cracks. Steve
Miller added 22 in seven tries,
Qluck Adkins 15 ln seven and
Bill Nance 13 ln three. But wild
pitchouts subtracted from the
total offensive yardage and the
locals bad to settle for only 46
net overall . The Bucs put
together 150 on the gromd.
Rick Pickens completed
passes of 13 yards ' to Steve
Miller and 9 to Jay Wiseman.
McGinnis hit Evans with a 4yarder.
By.Quarters:
Big Blacks
00 00--0
Barboursville
0 7 14 6--27

philosopher, Jack Park;
Sometimes JOU get the bear,
aid aomelimes the bear gets
you.
Friday night, down on Barboursville'~ King Field, the
bear got tbe Point Pleasant Big
Jllacb, Z7.
RidiDg lbe passing arm of
qua-terback Steve Leach, wbo
amplell!d eight aerials for 210
yards, Coach Dick Allen's
busily Pirates pulled away from
a close 7-G first to hand the
Blacks tbeir fourth defeat of the
,.....
..,
... and 6ftb in a row,
daling back Ill last year.
'lbe Buccaneers, now unhealeD in to..., travel to HuntiDg1on East next Friday while
lbe Blacb IUe a week off to
lidt tbeir wvlllds and lay plans
for tbeir encounter with Milllln
two weeks bellce.
Halfback Bob Huff, 16$-pound.
senior, llbared offensive honors
1lilb QB Lracb, scortng on a ~
yard pl~~~ge and a 67-yard
pUop with a pass interception.
Be alao caught three pa
for
1• yards, 1'llllled for 24 more,
aid turned in a fine defensive.
performance.
Lracb sneaked one-yard for a
m, carried for 31 net yards,
md did all of lba1 nifty passing.
STATISTICS
l'bilip a.ry busted off the left Department
BB Barb.
side for to.. yards and anothel' 1st Downs
10 11
touclldown. Larry McCoy Net Yds Rush
46 150
boolm One of four placement Passes
11 11
tries.
Intercepted By
0 2
Clo m• the Biacb came to Yards Passing
26 210
lllOiing was in the second Scrimmage Yds
72 310
stanza. Rody Harden had Return Ydge.
98 129
punted from the coffin corner to Fumbles
2 4
his own 31, the Pirates fumbled, Fumbles Lost
0 4
mdJayWi""""'"recovel'edfor Punts, Yds. Ave.
6-37 2-29
PoinL
Penalties, Yds.
25 120
Mike Mdlinnis, who alter- Offensive Plays
59 SI

JI1.·kr,·n~s
j

good throughout the game, but
BY MIKE WISE
shone
especially in the third
MERCERVILLE - The
H-man Trace Wikk:ats came quarter. HT made the Vikings
c:be to winning their fin&amp; game struggle through 15 plays
cllbe sea- tee Friday night without bitting paydlrl. ·
The Wildcats also broke
"'PiMl 1be S1mmes Valley
Vikings. Tbe final score was 12- through the line several times to
make the tackles behlnd the line
0 in fa- of lbe V'Jkings.
Hannan rr&amp;re received the of scrimmage. The Wildcat
..u 00 the opening kickoff. 'lbe offense, behind the big efforts of
Vikings held the Wildcats halfback Delbert Cisco and end
u ing lbe lint period, enabling Don Wells, came close to
lbe Vi1ling ollallll! to make its scoring about three times, but
ij1ijQ
. . -. 'l'be end of tbe due to penalties assessed, could
qua-ll!r found Symmes Valley not make cross the goal line.
within two yards of a touch- Symmes Valley ran another
down, mter bein8 cootained by touchdown across in the fourth
1be strihloi 0 Wi1dcal defense. quarter alter picking up a
Hannan Trace, determined to fumble by HT, but a clipping
bep lbe V'lkings from scoring, penalty on the Vikings nullified
the run.
beld.
Sl
1QurtK
The plngakin see-sawed back
After a:oalll msuo:cessful and forth between both teams
..,,,.,. Ill ·IeWing, Symmes the rest of the game. 'lbe final
Vlllley filially br'oke through to play bad liT running the ball
maRatondldnnoo alone run from about its own 10-yard line.
..,. J1iR Bolda by. 'lbe ldcll: for
BY QUARTERS:
1be Cllrit&amp;:sicln blocked. S. Valley
0 12 0 0--12
'lbe ~ !Diied their last H. Trace
o o o0-- 0
1M+ bolown tale ill lbe aecmdSTATISTICS
SV HT
.. .. 011 a p.!eline nm by Department
19 5
'hrrjl'IDe. 'l'be-oasion was First.Downs
160
28
1 ""' .pa.
Rusbmg Yard.
A .:oN0 HALF ·
Passing Yard.
1 25
The WiJdcal cld.- Jooted Pasaea Attempted
13 ' 8

-·

RFSI'ING - An midentified Southern Local player appears to he lakq it easy during
action in Kyger Creek's thrilling 14-12 victory over the Tornadoes. Other players are George
Curry (85); Mark Darst (82); Terry Sheets (63) and the Tornadoes' Greg Middleswart (36 ) and
Mike Codner (50).
·

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1l

4

Gallia Shuts Out

sw 38-0 For First Win
BY MIKE WISE
time.
VINTON - Coach John Southwestern's defense held
Blake's North Gallia Pirates Wltillate ln the third quarter.
captured their first grid win of Brown scored again, this time
1971 here Friday night 38-0 over on a four-yard pass from John
Coach Mel Carter's South-. Eggleton, substitute quarwestern Highlanders.
terback, who relieved Jackie
Southwestern's defense held Smith at that posit!on.
the Pirates' offense .almost an · Smith was moved into the
of the first quarter without backfield. The extra points
scoring. With 22 seconds left on failed .
the clock, North Gallia scored
The fourth quarter saw the
on a two-yard run by Phil Pirates' offense running wild,
Hollenbaugh. 'lbe pass for the scorlng a total of twenty points
extra points failed.
in the last stanza.
Throughout the game, SouthWith 11:02 remaining, Smith
western's offense could not get scored on a five yard run. The
started.
conversion was stopped.
Late in the second stanza the Hallenbaugh seared again with
Pirates scored again on a 42- 4:11 remaining on a two-yard
yard punt return by speedy run. 'lbe.conversion failed.
Harvey Brown with 2:3lleft in
Two touchdowns by North
the half. The conversion failed, Gallla were recalled because of
making the score, 12-4 at half penalties.
•

It seemed as if South-

westem'sdefensehadsputtel'ed
to a halt, as Brown scored on a
43-yard pass from Eggleton late
in the game. The pass from
Eggleton to Hollenbaugh for the
extra points was good, making
the final sco.-e North Gallia 38,
Southwestern 0.
Friday North Gallia plays
Kyger Creek at home. Southwestern plays Symmes Valley
at home.
.
BY QUARTERS
NorthGallia
6 6 6 20--38
Southwestern
0 0 0 0-- 0
Departmeal
NG SW
First Downs
IS 6
Rushing Yardage
154 128
Passing Yardage
210 21
Passes Attempted
13 10
Passes Completed 8 3
Penalties
55 55

Jackson Romps 41-0, Still
u
nh
I
u
d
u
p 1·n12-0
ea en, nscore . pon

Loss On HT

2Z.yard line.
The Tornadoes were. stopped
cold by the determined Bobcat
defense.
Kyger Creek started its
winning driv~ on the 50-yard
line. Collins, moving the ball
like a machine, quickly drove to
the five . Smith faced with a five
yard, fourth down situation,
caught Curry open in the right
side of the end zone for .the
score. A third down pass, his
other end Mark Darst just
missed.
The six-pointe!' apparently
rekindled the Bobcat defense.
Southern after taking the
kickoff on the 22 yard line was'
spilled for losses totaling Jl
yards.
The Adamsmen moved the
ball to the six yard line as the
clock ran out.
Coach Bruce Wallace, in a
post game interview, said his
club played weU enough to win.
"Our mistakes cost us. We
earned everything we made and

executed well."
He specifically cited th~ wort ·
of lhle and !he two Nease
b-others on ·offense anti paid ·
tribute to Middleswart, Smith
and Lawson on defense.
Coach Dick Adams said be
was happy to see his team come
from behind. " Now they know
they can fight back. Southei'R
has a good ball club and is weD
coached," he said.
Collins finished as the game's
leading ground gainer with 117
yards in 18 carries.
BY QUARTERS:
Kyger freek
8 0 0 6 14
Soulhern
0 12 0 0 12
STATISTICS
Department
KC S
First Downs
18 7
Yards Rushing
210 196
Yards Passing
45 0
.12
0
Passes Attempted
Passes Completed
' 0
Fumbles
2 I
Fumbles Lost
I 0
Penalized
25 30

SF6-5

Pirates Bomb Point
Big Blacks, 27-0
BY JACI: ROGERS

at halftime. Each came out with
a determined will ID win, but
neither was able to score in lh4i
third stanza.
The Bobcats drove to the
Tornado 33 before running out
of downs. A big 23-yard screen
pass from Smith to Collins
placed the ball at the 33 yard
stripe. A big defensive charge
le&lt;l by Greg Middleswart, Jim
Smith, and Ed Lawson halted
the drive.
Southern's runnlng game was
somewhat throttled the second
half. The Bobcat defense led by
Curry, Dan Swisher, Terry
Moles, Bill Roush and Terry
Sheets began plugging the huge
holes opened during the first
half.
Kyger freek, following a
Tornado pmt, marched from its
23-yard stripe to the Southern 20
behind the bull.Uke running of
Collins. The drive, however,
was temporarily halted on a
fumble. Southern's Middleswart covered the ball at the

Reds
Trip

JIADSCRAMBLE -Point Pleasant End Randy Jackson .
{H) is siiOim as he battled an unidentified Barboursville
player for a pass in Friday night's g11111e. Host Barboursville
woo, n.a. --PhoiD by Sam Nichols m.

Y

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(Wdh Battely) ·

GALLIPOLIS ·SAVINGS

I am a resident of the State of Ohio.

~·

LANTERN

All Savmgs Guaranteed In Full

~

)#~
.... ,"'/

Heck's Reg, 83'

THE MOMENT
ITS NEEDED

Columbus, Ohio 43215

HOT
POT

WATER
SOANER

GREATER OHIO REALTY INVESTMENTS
50 West Broad Street, Suite 2410

ALUMINUM

lo Panama Care Project. New
cun!ests were announced.
Bertha Crippen, who reci mtly
. spent two months visiting her
sister in Kuala Lumpur,
Malaysia, showed slides and
gave an interesting account of
her trip. She visited in Hong
Kong, Tokyo, and Singapore,
enroute. She displayed beautiful
handmade articles which she
purchased while on her trip.

ON
TAP

An Ohio Limited Partnership formed to acquire, own, operate and
manage real estate and interests therein .

Please send me a copy of the Offering Circular of
Greater Ohio Really Investments.

12 inches ., 22 inchts

RUBBER

.The Secret Service of the
Treasury Department is lbe
organization responsible for
tbe safety of the U.S. President.

"Point Pleasanfs I P.lllling Drug Store"

$137

$},99

would involve employers
having facilities to provide
adequate training and having a
need for tbe workers when
training is completed. Employers Wl8ble to empl~ additional workers due to the
added expense involved in
training should contact the local
office for detailed Information.
Smith suggests that unemployed persons interested in
trainingshouldregisterwith the
local office so that potential
employers may know skills
memployed persons are interested in learning.
. 'lbe annual ES High School
Vocational Counseling Program
will be available to area high
school seniors during the
current school term. This
program will involve students
who otherwise have not made a
job or vocational choice.

PHARMACIST

JP

goz
Heck's Reg.
$1.08

Heck's Reg.

which 33 were by veterans.
Jack L. Smith, manager, said
his CJ!!i~ is l~g for op·portunities to assiSt employers
in providing OJT training. 'Ibis

e

~

48 Placed In Paying Employment
PT. PLEASANT - Tbe local
office of the West Virginia
Department of Employment
Security reported this week the .

By DALE R0'111GEB JR.
RACINE - A clutch fourth
down, five-yatd touchdown
reception by junior end George
Curry gave the Kyger Creek
Bobcats a come-from-beblnd,
14-12 victory over the upsetminded Southern Tornadoes in
a thrilling Southern Valley
Athletic Conference contest
here Friday night.
The winning score came with
5:116 remaining in the game.
Apparently remem~ring a·
humiliating 70-14 Bobcat victory last year, Coach Bruce
Wallace's "fired-up" Purple
and White played outstanding
ball from the opening kickoff to
the final whistle.
The Tornadoes in no way,
resembled the same team
which were wracked solidly by
their opposition last season.
Offensively, Coach Wallace
made several changes which
proved beneficial. Mitch Nease,
a 160 pound freshman quarterback-fullback and Eddy

JACKSON _ Coach Ben
Buckles' Jackson lronmen
roUed to their third consecutive
shutout of the season Friday
night as they belted visiting
Waverly 41-G in the SEOAL
opener for both teams.
The .41 • score now gives the
""
powerful Ironmen a 148-0
margin over their first three
ents
opl:is Ondera a 182-pound
end enjoyed bid best game as
an ironmen as be caught two
om
touch down passes fr

Hunt Scores First
Major Golf Victory
EDINBURGH (UPI) Bernard Hunt, lanky 41-yearold veteran British Ryder Cup
player, scored his first major
victory of the season Saturday
when he won the $24,000 Wills
Open Golf Tournament by four
strokes.
,
Hmt, who went into the fmal
18holes at the 6,67'1 yards par 72
Dahnaboy Course with a sevensiroke edge, shot a final round
73 for a- 72-hole total of 276 - 12
under par - and a $4,800 first.
•
•
prize.

PasSes Completed
Penalties

,,

3 5
90 110

Mik B kl
169-po d
. e . uc ey, 8 a :::'ts
semor, kicked the ~ po
to ""!'d the fronmen mto a 28..()
halftime .lead.
third
Followmg a scorelsteess Ri
: : : ~~or
Y , ck aised
down and Buckley sIll r
the matgln to ~.
th
. ked
his
~:C.: plcf th up
third to
wn
e game
when he raced 83 yards for the
final Jackson TD.
d
h
11 was repothenrte left! ~t
Waverly's team
e
field with just seconds
remaining and no extra point
was attempted following the
. he
final score. k "bbed J ksd
Today•s Probabl~ P1lc
rs
By United Press International
'lbe ro~ -rl
ac n
iAm~rican Luguel
defense sunply throttled tbe
Milwaukee (Lockwood 1o.W Tigers as they warted all
at Oakland ·(Blue 23,8) .
evening for four first downs
Chicago (Wood 21 -13) at
'
california (May 10-t21 .
just three yards rusbtng, and
New York (Peterson 14·13lal completedthreeofl5pe e1 for
Detroit (lolich 25-121 .
yards with four of those
Baltimore !Polmer 19·9) at 57
•
Cleveland !Colbert 6·6).
aerials picked off by Jackaon.
Wos~lnglon (Bosman 12-tSI
Meanwhile the "big red
at Boston !Lonborg 9·71 .
machine" of Jackson netted 14
Mlnn...,to (Perry 16·17 and
.
Corbin 8,1t) at Kansas City first downs, 251 yards rushing,
&lt;Montgomery 2·0 and Drago 17- and bit siJ: of 10 pa es for 117
101 2
da "th one interctptioll
' · 1National Lugue)
yar Wl •
•
Pittsburgh I Blass 15·7) at The . Tigers drew tbr~e
New York (Seaver i8·10) .
penalties for 36 yards while
Philadelphia !Wise 16·1•1 at Jacksonwascalledsistimesfor
Chicago (Decker J.1) .
ds
Los Anqeles (Osteen tJ.lll at 80 yar ·
Atlanta (Slone 6.7).
Meadows was the top ball
San Francisco !Marlc!&gt;al 16· carrier with 62 yards in 13
ttl at Cincinnati !Nolan 12·W .
. f Jackson
Montreal &lt;Stoneman 17·141 at cames or
·
St Louis (Gibson 16.13) .
The score by quarters:
Houston !Richard2-11a1San Waverly
0 00 0--0
Diego (Norma~ 3,121 .
Jackson
7 21 0 l~l

quarterback Eddie Hughes and
sped 83 yards from scrimmage
for the rmal Jackson touchdown.
Ondera tallied his first TD on
a . 53-yard pass from .Hughes
IRldway m the first period With
Mike Buckley kicking the extra
.1
porn·
Dave Ruggles, a 177-pound
tackle tallied on a 13-yard run
with ~ recovered fumble and
then Hughes bit Ondera with a
36-yard touchdown pass.

'

:"toO:

°

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Hal
McRae socked two home runs
and Lee May and George Foster
chipped' in with one apiece to
lead the Cincinnati Reds to a 6-li
victory over the San Francisco
Giants Saturday afternoon.
Ed Sprague, the last of four
Reds pitchers, cut short a giant
uprising in tbe seventh inning
and then blanked the Western
Division leader the last two
innings to pick up his ftrat
victory since being recalled
from the Reds' Indianapolls
Farm Club.
May's 39th homer of the
season, a career high, gave the
Reds a 1-G lead in the f1rst inning. 'lbe Reds added two more
runs on conseculive homers by
McRae and Foster off Giants'
starter John Cumberland in tbe
.
second inning.
The Giants got two of the nma
·~· ''
\
'
"'
~
·
~
back In the third inning on
doubles by Tito Fuentes, Bobby
EAGLE POWER - Freshman fullbed[ Omclr Neill iii
Bonds and Dave Kingman off
Gallipolis,
is e:rpected to see heavy action this fall for
Red starter Don Gullet.
The Giants tied the game in · Mcrebead State University's Eagles, pre roo- fawrlte for
the Ohio Valley Conference football crown. A former stanthe top of the Jixth when Dick
doutatGallla Academy, the l!l61Jou.nder was redahlrled last
Dietz singled, went to second on
year Ill gain maturity. "Chu.S Is a powerful young man 'lrilb
a sacrifice and came home
a bright fulure ln our football program," said MSU Head
when pinchhitter .T!Ill Hart's
Coach Jake Hallum, He is the son ol Mr. and Mrs. Albert
ground ball went through Red
third baserruin Tony Perez' legs
Neal, 1136 Third Ave., Gallipolis.
for an error.
McRae's second homer of the
game and ninth of the season,
coming off Dan McMahon after ching, the Giants pulled within replaced Granger and was
a single by May and a walk to one run of the Reds in the greeted by pinchbltter Wlllie
Johnny Bench, shoved the Reds seventh, scoring twice. McCovey's double which scored
ahead 6-3 in the bottom of the ·Kingman'stbirdstraigbtdouble Dietz. Sprague then took over
sixth.
and a single by Dietz accounted and retired Chris Speiel' to end
With Wayne Granger pit- for one run. Joe Gibbon then the inning.

.

"'. .,

Three Days Left To Register.
For PP&amp;K Contest In Gallia
GALUPOIJS - Tbere are in the finals, which this year yOtllglter lr yCIIq!Sten
just three short days relllaining will be held at the Super Bowl bere in Gallla Co., but IIley
fer boys in Gallla Crunty to Game 'on January 16. Here should reglslel' right now," the
dealer concluded.
'Ibis Is the 11th year PPK
Harland Martin, Ford Dealer tour of fabulous New Orleans, has been 8p&lt;lliOI"ed by lbe Ford
sponsoring the popular youth enjoy a Banquet of Champioos Dealers of America and lbe
activity in this area, said that celebration, and have the Natimal Football I eap. Ill
registrations would be taken chance to meet SOOle oflbe top tbat time IIIOI'e lban 7,110a,OOD
throogh Thursday, Sepl30. Tbe profesalonal players and boya haft tabn part ill PPK,
Gallia County PP&amp;K Com- COBcbea.
lllllklJIIIt ~ blgeat and belt
petition is scheduled for Ocl 4, "Registering for PPI!K rigbt youth activity ol Ill kind lD
at 6 30 p.m on Memona·I Field ~ in our dealenbip or at America.
:
·
· ·~w
"Although time is growing school could mean Ill that for
sltort,anyboysJI.13yearsolage
canslill compete," said Marlin.
"All be needs to do is ccme into
our showroom, accunpallied by
a parent ,.. guardian, and fill
College Football Resuns
out the PPI!K registration
Rutgers 33 Princeton 18
By United Press tn-tlon.l Springfield .Q Amhorst 21
lso
fll'lll. He mayr a
secure an
Eat
Williams 3S TrinlZ,.(Conn.) 10'
Dartmouth
31
MassachuseHs 7 Cu~ 39 Western •ledlcut o
application at school. There's Bo-in 3S Worcester
Tech 14
Island :U Brown 21
no entry fee or charge of any Delawar~ 40 New Hampshire 0 R
Middlebury
3S Northeestern 28
kind, and that goes for all siJ: Coast Guard 2• Colby 13
to
and Bri~l 10 Northeastern 7 Michigan 31 UCLA 0
level.!o of cunpetilion, up
Northwestern 12 Syracuse 6
finals Virg!R1a Commmwe&lt;~lth !6
Nebraska J.l Texas A&amp;M 7
ilrludlng the national
·"
St. VIncent o Notre Dame I PUrdue 7
'lbe Ford Dealeqwuted 0111 Holy Cross 21 Harvard 16
Muhlenberg 17
.
that lSI, 2nd and 3rd place Bucknell 10 Vermont 6
·
Johns !iel*lns 13
tr hies ...m be arded in the Hof51ra 28 Main 22
Oklahoma St. 24
&lt;&gt;-gla
28
Clemson
o
campewwfiu.:~
each
of
the
Virginia Tech 16
1
Duke 21 Vifl1lnla o
siJ: age grou]l!l. Increasing the Mississippi J.l Kentucky 20
bo • bances of..;ftft;.4 one .. North Carolina 3S Maryland u
ys c
"u.......,
"" Boston Coli . .fl Navy 6
the 111rqJ!ies is tbe fact that Oklahoma ss Pittsburgh 29
FI'WaJ'• FIPI ilenlla
Mch boy ccmpetes agalnlt Val~ 23 Connecticut o
ByUlllledPraol'lltermU I
other boyS his own age And Tufts 3S Bates 7
•
Marshall 15 Xavier (()hlol 13
ANAHEIM, Cllllf. {UPI) ~~is no ~ycootact, a Allegheny 21
Lewil, 147, 1M
Hedgemon
1
Case Western Reserve 7
boy sswns not as imporlan as
lis ability to punt, pass IIIli Washington &amp; Jeffe~.Q
Ang~les, 1uJocted oat J011
Camegl, lon 27 Gablno, 14e, Medea {ll;
placNict f distance 'lritb
«"
American International Q
NorwkhO Georse Davia, 111, OeM 1o
accuracy.
.
Allred
J.l
Rense!laer
Poly 12
Clllf., knocbd- ....
"Winnera can keep ngbt &lt;11
g0;,.., up thrH•"" the zone Lafayette J Columbia D
118, Glftrltle, Clllf.,
"'"'.
-·
. . . • William &amp; Mary 40
Davl0sonl4 Wlllte, 17t, vu a,'
district, area and diVISIOn
contestants to the national lwmy 16 ~Ia Tech 13
finals " the Fml Dealer said. Auburn 10 T..,•m• •
, ' ·ble that
of Cornell 31 CGigate 20
wlnl
C.lifwalll
Eat 5............. _14
ltspOiiSI ,
oneoriiiOI'e
"--•ManldalrSI.7 '-•1 a lpt tJIIt..
ourlllCllhnnnerscouldwindup

~::J::.Punt,Plw ::.:~:::.;,;~

Saturday's Results

0:

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11-Tile SUnday Tin

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Sentinel SUrxlly1 Sept. 21,lfll

.,

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

'Cats Rally To Nip Southern, 14-12

! Voice along Broadway !

I
' I

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BY JACK O'BRIAN
SON OF '"DIE GODFA111ER"
IS ABCIRNING
,.
NEW YORK ...:. .Mario Puzo's hard at worlt
'wrillng a aequei to his •-The Godfather"; It'll be
the title character's soo Michael C«leoae,
tHing him from the lime "'lbe Godfatbel-"
·ended in 1!165 to 1971 .... Henry · Kissingel'
resumed dating Hope Lange, who broke off with
Glenn Fml wbeD she discovered Gle.m was
beaulng Rlkk! Revsoo .... Geraldine Brooks
vialted her alma mater 'lbe American Academy
of Dramatic Arts and then i.ent upstairs to have
~ anortat the VIP restaurant - m whose 1V
screen was playing Gerry's 1947 movie "Cry

here the other night: a man in the frmt row beld
a moosehred in bis lap right thl'Gugh the PE!I'"
formanc.oe •... New Yorker Hotel management
swe.rs it will not be sold to Plilyclinlc Hospital,
or anyone .•.. Wllr1l"r Broo., in this negativefiscal film age, l'epOI"Is its biggest year- rentals
at $2,0001000 a week .••• Ruby Keeler, who spent
herearlydnemalifcat Warner's, will cut a cake
marldng the 1,5001h Warner , movie &lt;"Skin
Game," opening atLoew's onl!dwy. next week).
Many Las Vegas casinos are run by desede~rise types but not the big Tropicana: Pres.
J. K. HQJ.SIIels Jr. is a West Point grad, ·now a ·
lawyel', and was born in Vegas ...• The 1V
Acildemy's having a Celebrity House Tour (a
Tbe Rev. ll!nd MrS. l)wigot L. Zavltz
popular flmiH"aisel' for N. Y. charities) and pads
THE REV. DWIGHT ZAVITZ is tbe new pastor of lbe
to be toured Oel. 19 include Joe Namath's
Middleport, Syracuse and Harrisonville First United
passion pit and the spteudid ManhaUan
Presbyterian Cburches. An induction service will be held this
townbouae of Edward Durell Slme (who
evening fer the Rev. Zavitz at the Middleport Church at 8
designed the JFK culture center).
p.m. cmducted by the Rev. Rwlsell Lester. 'lbe
'lbe DPimmico Hotel 1111 Park Ave. will try
congregatims of the Syracuse and Harrisonville Churches
entertainment again: its new room, to be called
will join the Middleport Group. The Rev. Javitz and his wife,
Nico's, will have cootemporary jaiZ, s~
Ruth, have moved to Middleport from Ossian, Ind. He
wilb Chid!; Hamilton's group as well as "now"
graduated from Marion College, Marim, Ind., and United
discos for dancing ...• David Jay, 10, ol the
Tbeologlcal Seminary, Richmond, Va. 'lbey have two sons,
"Godot" revival bas been so successful a kid
Dwighl, Jr., who is a graduate ol McCormick Seminary,
actor in 1V cOOllllerCials and daytime serials
Qlicago, now working oo his doctors degree and teaching at
that already be has more than enough mmey
Indiana University, and John wbo graduated from Earlham
trust.lunded ·to COVel' four yea111 of cdlege.
Seminary, Richmond, Ind., and presently attends Louisville,
Gloria Swanson's entry into the deligbtful
Kentucky Presbyterian Seminary.
"Butterflies Are Free" ga.., lbat loogn8l hit a
$10,000 a week boxoffice boost •••• Playboy Mag
ned invades the music hndness witb a recml
film, publishing- and personal management of
entertainel's .... Souads like a nice little
mooopcly aborning, what wilb so many Playboy
Clubs also ~ acts fer their floor shows ...•
Purses for males have become popular, and next
(trim Kaiser-Roth) comes a bag for males slulw
from a belt like a pistol holster, tied at the thigh
wilb a thong.
.
.
Mamie Eisenhower celebrated her 75th
lirlhday Sept. 'D .... Songstress Freda Payne (at
the Cope) says sbe dales Omar Sharif. Omar
gels around to more gals than the late Ali Khan
in bis brief prime ..•• Famed Jekel model
Verusc!D dropped her Italian photog boy friend
and wrapped Gel'man musician Holgel' Tru1zb
around her pinky •.•. Lob ol Long Island
supermarkets wm't cash $100 bills, and even
$5415, $Mil and $1115 must be awrove&lt;~ by the
managers.

Wolf.''

Banker Charles Allen (Fortune Mag rated
him w&lt;rth $150 million) is in the hospital for the
6th time this year: heart .~.. Kessinger wasn't
with Hope Lange at dinner Sat. night in "21" but
sat like a satisfied owl· between two lovely
blondes, one the CBS aasoclate ~r be
escorted to the JFK CUltural Center premiel'e .••.
'lbe publicity the CBS gal rec'd paid off fast:
she's switching to the other side of the 1V
cameras shortly •.•• the other blonde was a tall,
composed, beautiful Ingrid Bergman-type: Doug
Fairbanks Jr. also dined with Henry •... Hosey
Schinazi of the realty-money family married
Jack O'Brien (don't look at us; another JOB).
P. J. Clarke's owner D!IMY Lavezzo went to
a New Jersey track, lost a buncDe, slopped
overnight at a nearby motel - and was sneakthieved of his last $101 .... Walter Wincbell,
seriwsly ill lately, is lots better: Damon Runyoo
Fund executive director Dorothy Moore visited
WW in L.A. wbere his doctors told her be's made
an "amazing recovery."
Nat'l Ass'n ol Catholic Conference directors
will have their ilext national meeting in N. Y.
Slate -but NOT in New York City; because "as
lllman beings we are disgusted'' with the pornography and other degrading manifestations in
Gotham •... Our good friend Bob Tisch, president
ol Loew's hotels and theaters, blamed lbe media
fu- emphasizing the town's siltul aspects, but
it's precisely the media which has brought the
politicians up fr1m tbetr cuallmary c.)'llical
apathy to the point a few efforts are being made
at last to clean things up.
"Waiting for Godot" is mystifying enough,
but not even author Samuel Becket could have
foreseen lbe first-row spectacle at its revival

SUNDAY . ONLY
100PM 10 JPM
POiNT PLIASANT STOll ONLYI

PAMPERS
DAYTIME 15's
OVERNITE
12's ·
-

placement of 46 persons In
gainful employment during
August when there were 129 new
work applications received . of
·

EAQI

JOHN SONS

BABY LOTION

tflll-------------~

b~

--....
lotion

BED
PILLOWS

9:00 A.M. Till 10:00 P.M.
SEVEN DAYS AWEEK
2501

FRUTH
PHARMACY

· Jacbon

AIL

WELCOME MAT
HEAD MAJORE'M'E - Waltama High Head Majorette
Beverly Knapp goes tlrough a baton routine during the
Falcon Band's halftime show Friday night. The show,
directed by Gel'ald Simmons and Charles Yeago, was
heartily received.

HECK'S REG. 99•

•

Crahtree to Lead Grange
CARPENTER _ Columbia
Grange No. 2435, electing officers for the ensuing year
Friday evening, selected Arthur
Crabtree as master. Other
officers named were overseer

====--:-:=-::::·-:-::-=-=·

,---------------------------"'
This announcement Is neither an offer to sell nor a solicitation of an offer to buy the Units.

The offer is made only by the Offering Circular.

Lobsters are m a r in e
crustaceans with large pincerlike claws of unequal
size adapted to crushing
their prey. The World Almanac notes that growing
lobsters must "shed" their
shells before increasing in
size, which .leaves them
vulnerable until the new
shell forms. They have a
remarkable ability to restore a lost le or claw.

Mm 19, 1971

New Issue

$2,250,000 of Umited Pa baship Units

GREATER OHIO REALTY COMPANY
TAX SHELTERED

Carl Greenlees ; lecturer,
Bertha Cnpp.en; ste~ard ,
Menda l Jordan; .ass1~tant
s leward , Larry Birchfield ;
chaplam , Murl Galaway;
treasurer, Earl Starkey;
secretary, Westina Crabtree;
gatekeeper, Lee Wood ; ceres,
Ava Greenlees; pomona, Oma
Starkey; flora, Kathy Cheadle;
lady assistant sU,ward, Ruth
Ann Jordan; women's activities
chairman, Elizabeth Jordan;
junior chairman, Jane Jordan,
and youth chairman, Waller
Jordan.
The Women's Activities
Chairman, Murl Galaway, read
a letter of thanks for a donation

A copy of the Offering Circular giving complete details may be obtained
from the undersigned : ·

26 oz.
RAIN BARREL

Telephone (614) 228-2525
The offering of Units is limited to. and s~les will . be ma~e only to, bona
fide residents of the State of Olio who wtll purcha.se for mve~tment and
not with a view to resale or other transfer to nonresidents of 0"110.

I

1

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Nothing compares to the
peace of mind that
comes from having cash
in reserve t~at earns a
fine return ... money
that you can get your
hands on immediately
without sacrifice or
principal .

1
Name ••••••••• ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• j .I

______________ __
------------ ............. . .

St eet Address.••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• ··········F'hone •••••• :· •••••••••
,..
State •••••••••••••••••••• Zip .••••••••
Y
1

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'-•···

Heck's Reg. '2.77

'

.99

GUN RACK
Heck's Reg. 13.99

r

~;:~•3·33 '~

COLEMAN
FUEL
Heck's Reg.

$1.39

., .oo
GAL

Wlodsbleld Heck's Reg.
He

,

-

Prize Penn

Heck's Reg.

$2.38
MOTOR
GLORY LIQUID,· ~~r·

Reg.

·2 Gal.

5 .lb.
6

$J.ii

!7 liZ.

Sl.lt

PI!.

~Op-p~-s~~-~-stLO-Off-~~-Ph-~-~-6!_~~N_G!_"~p WiSSSUMIWiiiiiiA
...
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'

.

Ervin, a 102lb. freshman called
the signals. Nick lhle, 160 lb.
junior speedster, was cqnverted
from an end til tailback. All
three players made Coach
Wallace's game plan go.
Coach Dick Adams' Bobcats
jumped into an 3.Q lead with
~ 21 left in initial period.
(,juarterback Glenn Smith
scored on a one-yard p1mge
capping a ~yard drive in 12
plays. A pass to Curry was good
for the extra points.
The drive featured hard
running by Gary Collins, senior
fullback; Jim Bias, a junior
fullback and Rick Smith, the
Bobcats' leading scorer, a
sophomore tailback.
Southern refused to roll over
and play dead. The Tornadoes,
behind the bard running of the
Nease brothers and lhle, moved
back into the game, moving 60
yards In six plays for their first
score.
Mitch Nease on a fourth down
situalion at lbe 21.,an1 liDe

squirted around his right end
and outraced the Bobcat
secondary to the end f.OI'Ie. A run
for tbe conversion failed: .
Southern, then " sky high,"
attempted a modified an-Ilide
kick which was recovel'ed by
the Bobcats. The Tornadoes
held on three downs forcing KC
to punt.
Following
an
Orland
Cremeans' boot, Ely, behind a
huge hole opened by his interior
line, scampered 61 yards up the
middle for the final Southern
touchdown. That electrifying
run shocked the Bobcats into
realizing that the Tornadoes
meant business.
KC could not move the ball
Wltil the closing seconds of the
first half. A pass interference
call placed the ball at the 30
yard line. Smith fired a pass to
Collins but he was forced oul of
bounds at the 15.
SECOND HALF
Both teams apparently
received • ,._ leue 1111 life"

BARBOUIISVILLE - In the
wmls of the contemporary

nated with Rick Pickens as play
director, sparked the Big
Blacks on a 51-yard march to
the Barboursville 11. It took lS
plays to do it, with Steve Evans,
Oluck Adkins, steve Miller and
McGinnis chopping off short
yardage to put together four
straight first downs.
But, on fourth down,
McGinnis slipped going back to
pass and the locals bad to cough
up the ball on the 18.
Once more Rody Harden got
his foot into some pretty punts,
getting off one boot of 52 yards
and another of 43, plus lesser
impressive yardage.
Steve Evans was the top
rusher for the Blacks, cracking
for '5 yards in 10 cracks. Steve
Miller added 22 in seven tries,
Qluck Adkins 15 ln seven and
Bill Nance 13 ln three. But wild
pitchouts subtracted from the
total offensive yardage and the
locals bad to settle for only 46
net overall . The Bucs put
together 150 on the gromd.
Rick Pickens completed
passes of 13 yards ' to Steve
Miller and 9 to Jay Wiseman.
McGinnis hit Evans with a 4yarder.
By.Quarters:
Big Blacks
00 00--0
Barboursville
0 7 14 6--27

philosopher, Jack Park;
Sometimes JOU get the bear,
aid aomelimes the bear gets
you.
Friday night, down on Barboursville'~ King Field, the
bear got tbe Point Pleasant Big
Jllacb, Z7.
RidiDg lbe passing arm of
qua-terback Steve Leach, wbo
amplell!d eight aerials for 210
yards, Coach Dick Allen's
busily Pirates pulled away from
a close 7-G first to hand the
Blacks tbeir fourth defeat of the
,.....
..,
... and 6ftb in a row,
daling back Ill last year.
'lbe Buccaneers, now unhealeD in to..., travel to HuntiDg1on East next Friday while
lbe Blacb IUe a week off to
lidt tbeir wvlllds and lay plans
for tbeir encounter with Milllln
two weeks bellce.
Halfback Bob Huff, 16$-pound.
senior, llbared offensive honors
1lilb QB Lracb, scortng on a ~
yard pl~~~ge and a 67-yard
pUop with a pass interception.
Be alao caught three pa
for
1• yards, 1'llllled for 24 more,
aid turned in a fine defensive.
performance.
Lracb sneaked one-yard for a
m, carried for 31 net yards,
md did all of lba1 nifty passing.
STATISTICS
l'bilip a.ry busted off the left Department
BB Barb.
side for to.. yards and anothel' 1st Downs
10 11
touclldown. Larry McCoy Net Yds Rush
46 150
boolm One of four placement Passes
11 11
tries.
Intercepted By
0 2
Clo m• the Biacb came to Yards Passing
26 210
lllOiing was in the second Scrimmage Yds
72 310
stanza. Rody Harden had Return Ydge.
98 129
punted from the coffin corner to Fumbles
2 4
his own 31, the Pirates fumbled, Fumbles Lost
0 4
mdJayWi""""'"recovel'edfor Punts, Yds. Ave.
6-37 2-29
PoinL
Penalties, Yds.
25 120
Mike Mdlinnis, who alter- Offensive Plays
59 SI

JI1.·kr,·n~s
j

good throughout the game, but
BY MIKE WISE
shone
especially in the third
MERCERVILLE - The
H-man Trace Wikk:ats came quarter. HT made the Vikings
c:be to winning their fin&amp; game struggle through 15 plays
cllbe sea- tee Friday night without bitting paydlrl. ·
The Wildcats also broke
"'PiMl 1be S1mmes Valley
Vikings. Tbe final score was 12- through the line several times to
make the tackles behlnd the line
0 in fa- of lbe V'Jkings.
Hannan rr&amp;re received the of scrimmage. The Wildcat
..u 00 the opening kickoff. 'lbe offense, behind the big efforts of
Vikings held the Wildcats halfback Delbert Cisco and end
u ing lbe lint period, enabling Don Wells, came close to
lbe Vi1ling ollallll! to make its scoring about three times, but
ij1ijQ
. . -. 'l'be end of tbe due to penalties assessed, could
qua-ll!r found Symmes Valley not make cross the goal line.
within two yards of a touch- Symmes Valley ran another
down, mter bein8 cootained by touchdown across in the fourth
1be strihloi 0 Wi1dcal defense. quarter alter picking up a
Hannan Trace, determined to fumble by HT, but a clipping
bep lbe V'lkings from scoring, penalty on the Vikings nullified
the run.
beld.
Sl
1QurtK
The plngakin see-sawed back
After a:oalll msuo:cessful and forth between both teams
..,,,.,. Ill ·IeWing, Symmes the rest of the game. 'lbe final
Vlllley filially br'oke through to play bad liT running the ball
maRatondldnnoo alone run from about its own 10-yard line.
..,. J1iR Bolda by. 'lbe ldcll: for
BY QUARTERS:
1be Cllrit&amp;:sicln blocked. S. Valley
0 12 0 0--12
'lbe ~ !Diied their last H. Trace
o o o0-- 0
1M+ bolown tale ill lbe aecmdSTATISTICS
SV HT
.. .. 011 a p.!eline nm by Department
19 5
'hrrjl'IDe. 'l'be-oasion was First.Downs
160
28
1 ""' .pa.
Rusbmg Yard.
A .:oN0 HALF ·
Passing Yard.
1 25
The WiJdcal cld.- Jooted Pasaea Attempted
13 ' 8

-·

RFSI'ING - An midentified Southern Local player appears to he lakq it easy during
action in Kyger Creek's thrilling 14-12 victory over the Tornadoes. Other players are George
Curry (85); Mark Darst (82); Terry Sheets (63) and the Tornadoes' Greg Middleswart (36 ) and
Mike Codner (50).
·

h

1\. TOrt

1l

4

Gallia Shuts Out

sw 38-0 For First Win
BY MIKE WISE
time.
VINTON - Coach John Southwestern's defense held
Blake's North Gallia Pirates Wltillate ln the third quarter.
captured their first grid win of Brown scored again, this time
1971 here Friday night 38-0 over on a four-yard pass from John
Coach Mel Carter's South-. Eggleton, substitute quarwestern Highlanders.
terback, who relieved Jackie
Southwestern's defense held Smith at that posit!on.
the Pirates' offense .almost an · Smith was moved into the
of the first quarter without backfield. The extra points
scoring. With 22 seconds left on failed .
the clock, North Gallia scored
The fourth quarter saw the
on a two-yard run by Phil Pirates' offense running wild,
Hollenbaugh. 'lbe pass for the scorlng a total of twenty points
extra points failed.
in the last stanza.
Throughout the game, SouthWith 11:02 remaining, Smith
western's offense could not get scored on a five yard run. The
started.
conversion was stopped.
Late in the second stanza the Hallenbaugh seared again with
Pirates scored again on a 42- 4:11 remaining on a two-yard
yard punt return by speedy run. 'lbe.conversion failed.
Harvey Brown with 2:3lleft in
Two touchdowns by North
the half. The conversion failed, Gallla were recalled because of
making the score, 12-4 at half penalties.
•

It seemed as if South-

westem'sdefensehadsputtel'ed
to a halt, as Brown scored on a
43-yard pass from Eggleton late
in the game. The pass from
Eggleton to Hollenbaugh for the
extra points was good, making
the final sco.-e North Gallia 38,
Southwestern 0.
Friday North Gallia plays
Kyger Creek at home. Southwestern plays Symmes Valley
at home.
.
BY QUARTERS
NorthGallia
6 6 6 20--38
Southwestern
0 0 0 0-- 0
Departmeal
NG SW
First Downs
IS 6
Rushing Yardage
154 128
Passing Yardage
210 21
Passes Attempted
13 10
Passes Completed 8 3
Penalties
55 55

Jackson Romps 41-0, Still
u
nh
I
u
d
u
p 1·n12-0
ea en, nscore . pon

Loss On HT

2Z.yard line.
The Tornadoes were. stopped
cold by the determined Bobcat
defense.
Kyger Creek started its
winning driv~ on the 50-yard
line. Collins, moving the ball
like a machine, quickly drove to
the five . Smith faced with a five
yard, fourth down situation,
caught Curry open in the right
side of the end zone for .the
score. A third down pass, his
other end Mark Darst just
missed.
The six-pointe!' apparently
rekindled the Bobcat defense.
Southern after taking the
kickoff on the 22 yard line was'
spilled for losses totaling Jl
yards.
The Adamsmen moved the
ball to the six yard line as the
clock ran out.
Coach Bruce Wallace, in a
post game interview, said his
club played weU enough to win.
"Our mistakes cost us. We
earned everything we made and

executed well."
He specifically cited th~ wort ·
of lhle and !he two Nease
b-others on ·offense anti paid ·
tribute to Middleswart, Smith
and Lawson on defense.
Coach Dick Adams said be
was happy to see his team come
from behind. " Now they know
they can fight back. Southei'R
has a good ball club and is weD
coached," he said.
Collins finished as the game's
leading ground gainer with 117
yards in 18 carries.
BY QUARTERS:
Kyger freek
8 0 0 6 14
Soulhern
0 12 0 0 12
STATISTICS
Department
KC S
First Downs
18 7
Yards Rushing
210 196
Yards Passing
45 0
.12
0
Passes Attempted
Passes Completed
' 0
Fumbles
2 I
Fumbles Lost
I 0
Penalized
25 30

SF6-5

Pirates Bomb Point
Big Blacks, 27-0
BY JACI: ROGERS

at halftime. Each came out with
a determined will ID win, but
neither was able to score in lh4i
third stanza.
The Bobcats drove to the
Tornado 33 before running out
of downs. A big 23-yard screen
pass from Smith to Collins
placed the ball at the 33 yard
stripe. A big defensive charge
le&lt;l by Greg Middleswart, Jim
Smith, and Ed Lawson halted
the drive.
Southern's runnlng game was
somewhat throttled the second
half. The Bobcat defense led by
Curry, Dan Swisher, Terry
Moles, Bill Roush and Terry
Sheets began plugging the huge
holes opened during the first
half.
Kyger freek, following a
Tornado pmt, marched from its
23-yard stripe to the Southern 20
behind the bull.Uke running of
Collins. The drive, however,
was temporarily halted on a
fumble. Southern's Middleswart covered the ball at the

Reds
Trip

JIADSCRAMBLE -Point Pleasant End Randy Jackson .
{H) is siiOim as he battled an unidentified Barboursville
player for a pass in Friday night's g11111e. Host Barboursville
woo, n.a. --PhoiD by Sam Nichols m.

Y

.99
(Wdh Battely) ·

GALLIPOLIS ·SAVINGS

I am a resident of the State of Ohio.

~·

LANTERN

All Savmgs Guaranteed In Full

~

)#~
.... ,"'/

Heck's Reg, 83'

THE MOMENT
ITS NEEDED

Columbus, Ohio 43215

HOT
POT

WATER
SOANER

GREATER OHIO REALTY INVESTMENTS
50 West Broad Street, Suite 2410

ALUMINUM

lo Panama Care Project. New
cun!ests were announced.
Bertha Crippen, who reci mtly
. spent two months visiting her
sister in Kuala Lumpur,
Malaysia, showed slides and
gave an interesting account of
her trip. She visited in Hong
Kong, Tokyo, and Singapore,
enroute. She displayed beautiful
handmade articles which she
purchased while on her trip.

ON
TAP

An Ohio Limited Partnership formed to acquire, own, operate and
manage real estate and interests therein .

Please send me a copy of the Offering Circular of
Greater Ohio Really Investments.

12 inches ., 22 inchts

RUBBER

.The Secret Service of the
Treasury Department is lbe
organization responsible for
tbe safety of the U.S. President.

"Point Pleasanfs I P.lllling Drug Store"

$137

$},99

would involve employers
having facilities to provide
adequate training and having a
need for tbe workers when
training is completed. Employers Wl8ble to empl~ additional workers due to the
added expense involved in
training should contact the local
office for detailed Information.
Smith suggests that unemployed persons interested in
trainingshouldregisterwith the
local office so that potential
employers may know skills
memployed persons are interested in learning.
. 'lbe annual ES High School
Vocational Counseling Program
will be available to area high
school seniors during the
current school term. This
program will involve students
who otherwise have not made a
job or vocational choice.

PHARMACIST

JP

goz
Heck's Reg.
$1.08

Heck's Reg.

which 33 were by veterans.
Jack L. Smith, manager, said
his CJ!!i~ is l~g for op·portunities to assiSt employers
in providing OJT training. 'Ibis

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48 Placed In Paying Employment
PT. PLEASANT - Tbe local
office of the West Virginia
Department of Employment
Security reported this week the .

By DALE R0'111GEB JR.
RACINE - A clutch fourth
down, five-yatd touchdown
reception by junior end George
Curry gave the Kyger Creek
Bobcats a come-from-beblnd,
14-12 victory over the upsetminded Southern Tornadoes in
a thrilling Southern Valley
Athletic Conference contest
here Friday night.
The winning score came with
5:116 remaining in the game.
Apparently remem~ring a·
humiliating 70-14 Bobcat victory last year, Coach Bruce
Wallace's "fired-up" Purple
and White played outstanding
ball from the opening kickoff to
the final whistle.
The Tornadoes in no way,
resembled the same team
which were wracked solidly by
their opposition last season.
Offensively, Coach Wallace
made several changes which
proved beneficial. Mitch Nease,
a 160 pound freshman quarterback-fullback and Eddy

JACKSON _ Coach Ben
Buckles' Jackson lronmen
roUed to their third consecutive
shutout of the season Friday
night as they belted visiting
Waverly 41-G in the SEOAL
opener for both teams.
The .41 • score now gives the
""
powerful Ironmen a 148-0
margin over their first three
ents
opl:is Ondera a 182-pound
end enjoyed bid best game as
an ironmen as be caught two
om
touch down passes fr

Hunt Scores First
Major Golf Victory
EDINBURGH (UPI) Bernard Hunt, lanky 41-yearold veteran British Ryder Cup
player, scored his first major
victory of the season Saturday
when he won the $24,000 Wills
Open Golf Tournament by four
strokes.
,
Hmt, who went into the fmal
18holes at the 6,67'1 yards par 72
Dahnaboy Course with a sevensiroke edge, shot a final round
73 for a- 72-hole total of 276 - 12
under par - and a $4,800 first.
•
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prize.

PasSes Completed
Penalties

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3 5
90 110

Mik B kl
169-po d
. e . uc ey, 8 a :::'ts
semor, kicked the ~ po
to ""!'d the fronmen mto a 28..()
halftime .lead.
third
Followmg a scorelsteess Ri
: : : ~~or
Y , ck aised
down and Buckley sIll r
the matgln to ~.
th
. ked
his
~:C.: plcf th up
third to
wn
e game
when he raced 83 yards for the
final Jackson TD.
d
h
11 was repothenrte left! ~t
Waverly's team
e
field with just seconds
remaining and no extra point
was attempted following the
. he
final score. k "bbed J ksd
Today•s Probabl~ P1lc
rs
By United Press International
'lbe ro~ -rl
ac n
iAm~rican Luguel
defense sunply throttled tbe
Milwaukee (Lockwood 1o.W Tigers as they warted all
at Oakland ·(Blue 23,8) .
evening for four first downs
Chicago (Wood 21 -13) at
'
california (May 10-t21 .
just three yards rusbtng, and
New York (Peterson 14·13lal completedthreeofl5pe e1 for
Detroit (lolich 25-121 .
yards with four of those
Baltimore !Polmer 19·9) at 57
•
Cleveland !Colbert 6·6).
aerials picked off by Jackaon.
Wos~lnglon (Bosman 12-tSI
Meanwhile the "big red
at Boston !Lonborg 9·71 .
machine" of Jackson netted 14
Mlnn...,to (Perry 16·17 and
.
Corbin 8,1t) at Kansas City first downs, 251 yards rushing,
&lt;Montgomery 2·0 and Drago 17- and bit siJ: of 10 pa es for 117
101 2
da "th one interctptioll
' · 1National Lugue)
yar Wl •
•
Pittsburgh I Blass 15·7) at The . Tigers drew tbr~e
New York (Seaver i8·10) .
penalties for 36 yards while
Philadelphia !Wise 16·1•1 at Jacksonwascalledsistimesfor
Chicago (Decker J.1) .
ds
Los Anqeles (Osteen tJ.lll at 80 yar ·
Atlanta (Slone 6.7).
Meadows was the top ball
San Francisco !Marlc!&gt;al 16· carrier with 62 yards in 13
ttl at Cincinnati !Nolan 12·W .
. f Jackson
Montreal &lt;Stoneman 17·141 at cames or
·
St Louis (Gibson 16.13) .
The score by quarters:
Houston !Richard2-11a1San Waverly
0 00 0--0
Diego (Norma~ 3,121 .
Jackson
7 21 0 l~l

quarterback Eddie Hughes and
sped 83 yards from scrimmage
for the rmal Jackson touchdown.
Ondera tallied his first TD on
a . 53-yard pass from .Hughes
IRldway m the first period With
Mike Buckley kicking the extra
.1
porn·
Dave Ruggles, a 177-pound
tackle tallied on a 13-yard run
with ~ recovered fumble and
then Hughes bit Ondera with a
36-yard touchdown pass.

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CINCINNATI (UPI) - Hal
McRae socked two home runs
and Lee May and George Foster
chipped' in with one apiece to
lead the Cincinnati Reds to a 6-li
victory over the San Francisco
Giants Saturday afternoon.
Ed Sprague, the last of four
Reds pitchers, cut short a giant
uprising in tbe seventh inning
and then blanked the Western
Division leader the last two
innings to pick up his ftrat
victory since being recalled
from the Reds' Indianapolls
Farm Club.
May's 39th homer of the
season, a career high, gave the
Reds a 1-G lead in the f1rst inning. 'lbe Reds added two more
runs on conseculive homers by
McRae and Foster off Giants'
starter John Cumberland in tbe
.
second inning.
The Giants got two of the nma
·~· ''
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back In the third inning on
doubles by Tito Fuentes, Bobby
EAGLE POWER - Freshman fullbed[ Omclr Neill iii
Bonds and Dave Kingman off
Gallipolis,
is e:rpected to see heavy action this fall for
Red starter Don Gullet.
The Giants tied the game in · Mcrebead State University's Eagles, pre roo- fawrlte for
the Ohio Valley Conference football crown. A former stanthe top of the Jixth when Dick
doutatGallla Academy, the l!l61Jou.nder was redahlrled last
Dietz singled, went to second on
year Ill gain maturity. "Chu.S Is a powerful young man 'lrilb
a sacrifice and came home
a bright fulure ln our football program," said MSU Head
when pinchhitter .T!Ill Hart's
Coach Jake Hallum, He is the son ol Mr. and Mrs. Albert
ground ball went through Red
third baserruin Tony Perez' legs
Neal, 1136 Third Ave., Gallipolis.
for an error.
McRae's second homer of the
game and ninth of the season,
coming off Dan McMahon after ching, the Giants pulled within replaced Granger and was
a single by May and a walk to one run of the Reds in the greeted by pinchbltter Wlllie
Johnny Bench, shoved the Reds seventh, scoring twice. McCovey's double which scored
ahead 6-3 in the bottom of the ·Kingman'stbirdstraigbtdouble Dietz. Sprague then took over
sixth.
and a single by Dietz accounted and retired Chris Speiel' to end
With Wayne Granger pit- for one run. Joe Gibbon then the inning.

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Three Days Left To Register.
For PP&amp;K Contest In Gallia
GALUPOIJS - Tbere are in the finals, which this year yOtllglter lr yCIIq!Sten
just three short days relllaining will be held at the Super Bowl bere in Gallla Co., but IIley
fer boys in Gallla Crunty to Game 'on January 16. Here should reglslel' right now," the
dealer concluded.
'Ibis Is the 11th year PPK
Harland Martin, Ford Dealer tour of fabulous New Orleans, has been 8p&lt;lliOI"ed by lbe Ford
sponsoring the popular youth enjoy a Banquet of Champioos Dealers of America and lbe
activity in this area, said that celebration, and have the Natimal Football I eap. Ill
registrations would be taken chance to meet SOOle oflbe top tbat time IIIOI'e lban 7,110a,OOD
throogh Thursday, Sepl30. Tbe profesalonal players and boya haft tabn part ill PPK,
Gallia County PP&amp;K Com- COBcbea.
lllllklJIIIt ~ blgeat and belt
petition is scheduled for Ocl 4, "Registering for PPI!K rigbt youth activity ol Ill kind lD
at 6 30 p.m on Memona·I Field ~ in our dealenbip or at America.
:
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"Although time is growing school could mean Ill that for
sltort,anyboysJI.13yearsolage
canslill compete," said Marlin.
"All be needs to do is ccme into
our showroom, accunpallied by
a parent ,.. guardian, and fill
College Football Resuns
out the PPI!K registration
Rutgers 33 Princeton 18
By United Press tn-tlon.l Springfield .Q Amhorst 21
lso
fll'lll. He mayr a
secure an
Eat
Williams 3S TrinlZ,.(Conn.) 10'
Dartmouth
31
MassachuseHs 7 Cu~ 39 Western •ledlcut o
application at school. There's Bo-in 3S Worcester
Tech 14
Island :U Brown 21
no entry fee or charge of any Delawar~ 40 New Hampshire 0 R
Middlebury
3S Northeestern 28
kind, and that goes for all siJ: Coast Guard 2• Colby 13
to
and Bri~l 10 Northeastern 7 Michigan 31 UCLA 0
level.!o of cunpetilion, up
Northwestern 12 Syracuse 6
finals Virg!R1a Commmwe&lt;~lth !6
Nebraska J.l Texas A&amp;M 7
ilrludlng the national
·"
St. VIncent o Notre Dame I PUrdue 7
'lbe Ford Dealeqwuted 0111 Holy Cross 21 Harvard 16
Muhlenberg 17
.
that lSI, 2nd and 3rd place Bucknell 10 Vermont 6
·
Johns !iel*lns 13
tr hies ...m be arded in the Hof51ra 28 Main 22
Oklahoma St. 24
&lt;&gt;-gla
28
Clemson
o
campewwfiu.:~
each
of
the
Virginia Tech 16
1
Duke 21 Vifl1lnla o
siJ: age grou]l!l. Increasing the Mississippi J.l Kentucky 20
bo • bances of..;ftft;.4 one .. North Carolina 3S Maryland u
ys c
"u.......,
"" Boston Coli . .fl Navy 6
the 111rqJ!ies is tbe fact that Oklahoma ss Pittsburgh 29
FI'WaJ'• FIPI ilenlla
Mch boy ccmpetes agalnlt Val~ 23 Connecticut o
ByUlllledPraol'lltermU I
other boyS his own age And Tufts 3S Bates 7
•
Marshall 15 Xavier (()hlol 13
ANAHEIM, Cllllf. {UPI) ~~is no ~ycootact, a Allegheny 21
Lewil, 147, 1M
Hedgemon
1
Case Western Reserve 7
boy sswns not as imporlan as
lis ability to punt, pass IIIli Washington &amp; Jeffe~.Q
Ang~les, 1uJocted oat J011
Camegl, lon 27 Gablno, 14e, Medea {ll;
placNict f distance 'lritb
«"
American International Q
NorwkhO Georse Davia, 111, OeM 1o
accuracy.
.
Allred
J.l
Rense!laer
Poly 12
Clllf., knocbd- ....
"Winnera can keep ngbt &lt;11
g0;,.., up thrH•"" the zone Lafayette J Columbia D
118, Glftrltle, Clllf.,
"'"'.
-·
. . . • William &amp; Mary 40
Davl0sonl4 Wlllte, 17t, vu a,'
district, area and diVISIOn
contestants to the national lwmy 16 ~Ia Tech 13
finals " the Fml Dealer said. Auburn 10 T..,•m• •
, ' ·ble that
of Cornell 31 CGigate 20
wlnl
C.lifwalll
Eat 5............. _14
ltspOiiSI ,
oneoriiiOI'e
"--•ManldalrSI.7 '-•1 a lpt tJIIt..
ourlllCllhnnnerscouldwindup

~::J::.Punt,Plw ::.:~:::.;,;~

Saturday's Results

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·-Tile• ''IJ'n" OS Sea'mei,Sunday,Sept.ll,l971

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11-'nle&amp;mdaYTimes-8entinei,Sulllay, Sept. 26, 1971

•0

__..c:k

COLUMBUS

tate

~ second leadllig rushing

(UPI)

team,

minulesremalniJlllnthegame.

Ia"*'!,wbollftw .onlyseven

~... IIIII !lllllllater eyes'runnlngallackmostlilbe toes' firit win OVI!I" Ln•jsj•u

OII!Branelu·acedllyarda with
a punt rerun for another
saturday as .eighth ranked
Colorado .defeated fifth ranked
Oblo State 11-14.
'111e lllugh Colndo defeme
ablpped Ohi~ State, the natim•s

afternoon.
Both Ohio Slate touchdowns
came in the final ~od when
quarterback Don T.amki scored
onaoneyardplungeandpasaed
14 yards to tigh! elll Rick
Middletm with a llttle.over two

Bra!lch,wbobubeenclocked
State, was not supposed to play In u lltCGIIdB in tbe 100 yard
but was a surprise s~Jrter.
dash, loot a punt oo bla oWn 32
He got the. firit Colorado yard line In !be aecmd period,
touchdown in the first period oo eluded me taclder and raced
a seven-yard keeper play and down the slclelines untouched.
the third Buffalo loUCbd111m Halfback Cllartie Davis was
1\'ith 3:30remaining in the game

In 16 plaY. and a toucbdown
times in the. Buckeye's
had ·the biiU in the Sticond half IQI was m!lllfled by' a
win OVI!I"Iowa,hlt20 li 33 passes 1they drove fr001 their OWl! 22 1'1 penalty.'
'
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fir ~ yanls.
the Colndo 2 where fullback
Ohio State, wblcb lWei pined
Ohio State.bad Its only sus- John Bieda .was siDJiped on a
myatdll ~ apinlt row&amp;,
talned drive of the first half late fourth-and.j)llll sltuatioo.
Willi beld 1'1 Cllly 145 tarda by
In the secmd quarter wbere
Tbe third drive was ·fnm tbe
ColCII'adO.
,
they were·stopped after driving OSU one yard line after tackle
CCioredo
gained 285 yatdll a59 yards In ·14 playa to tbe Shad wuuama recovl!l"ed a gainlt tbe natlm's fifth !ranked
Buffaloes' four yard line.
Johnson . fumble. The Bucks
team In I'Ullblng defense.
Tbe first time the Buckeyes marched to the Colndo seven

opentnS

the leading rusher for Colorado
and tbe workhorse of the Buf·
falo backfield 1\'ith 118 yards
rushing in 18 carries.
The powerful Colorado
defense time and apin blunted
ObioState's l'!IJIIIing attact and
forced the Buckeyes to go to the
air _ ..methlng which . they
don't do very often.

bo!illns

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Bobcats Jn Irish Eke Out 8-7 Grid
37-21 Win
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A'l'HENS, Ohio (UPI) Qllafletback Dave .Juenger hii
Bob Allen fOr two scoring passes, then · scored a. tOuchdown
hlmaeH 88 Ohio University rebounded lor a 37 • 21 win over
Kent Slate in the Mid-American
Conflnnce Saturday.
Allen mared a Juenger pass
. for a two-yard score and later
ooe from 44 yards ·om io. give
the Bobcats a 1~ lead at haD·.
time of tbe regionally televised.
game.
Juenger goi his touchdown in
the ieCOiid quarter along with
one from sophomore tailback
J1m Klzloinld, who rim over
from the three to put the Bobcats oui In front 27-ll ai the half.
Kent goi rolling In the second
half on a touchdown from quai-.

LAFAYETTE, IND. (UPI)Pat Steenberge's looping pass
through a driving rain was
pl!lled in by Mike Creaney fOr 'a
terback Larry Hayes from 13 two-point conversilln after a
yards ·out.
'
fumble recover)' in the end l'.lllle
Hayes then hit' tsilback Eddie to give Notre Dione an 8-7 win
Woodard with an eight • yard ovl!l" Purdue in what almost
scoring plunge by Eddie Hod· turned out to be a shocking
gon to put the game out of upset.
reach.
The fighting Irish, No. 2
Kicking specialist Dave ranked and a 20-point favorite
Green, who was four for five on going into the game, were
extra points, booted a 29-yard outplayed almost !ill the way by
field goal to finish the scoring the Boilennakers, and but for a
for thl! Bobcabl.
last-minute break, Purdue
Ki!lowski played for the in· would have held on.
jured tailback Bill Gary, who It rained before the game and
was eighth in the nation In rush· almost constanUy during the
ing last year.
contest, and the wet field and
Kozlowski rushed 32 times for. the rain had as much to do with
178yards, while the quarterback the outcome as either team.
was four for nine in passing for Y~t, until only 2:58 remained,
65 yards and two touchdowns. netther team had fllllibled. Then
Hayes bit on 10 of 21 attempts fortune kicked the Boiler·
and was Intercepted once.

played lor a tie ' against
makers in the bead.
With the ball on the Purdue 14 Michigan State in a batUe of the
and the Boilermakers In front 7- lop ranked teams a few years
0, Scott Lougbee!l stood on his ago.
·g oaJilnetopuntoutofdanger- He ordered a try for a 'tiroa . feat .be bad performed 11 point .conversion and the rain
times previously with no feU heavier than ~er.
Steenberge dropped back and
problem.
This time, center Bob Creaney, cuiting acrOBS the end
Hoidahl's snap 11!'88 low and to ZDI!e, was wide open 88 the ball
the side and the wet ball slipped
from Ltmgb .ed's bands•
He picked it up, but before he
could put his foot to the ball,
Notre Dame's 235-pound
defensive end Walt Patulsld
crasbed into hilil and the ball . PITl'SBuRGH (UPI) .- Jack
bomded free in the end l'.lllle MiJdren and Joe Wylie scored
wbl!l"e Fred S~eildsen, ~ o~ three touchdowns each and
end on the Irish defensl~ untt, Greg Pruitt rushed for li8
feU oo it for a touchdown.
yards Saturday as 11th ranted
'lbat put the pussure on Oklahoma behind a swift'
Notre ~ame_'s ~oacb Ara offense, w.illoped Pitt, 55-29.
Pais gluan, s1i11 mindful of the
criticism be received when the
The Sooners spotted Pitt an
Irish ran out the clock and early field goal before Wylie's
m&gt;-yard kickoff return started a
string of seven straight touch·
doWIIs for their first-61ring
offense.

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The Dodgers were trailing 3-2
when Sims homered over the
center field fence, in the sixth.
Jim Brewer pitched scoreless
ball the final 2 2-3 innings to
preserve Don Sutton's sixth
victory against 12 losses.
The Braves, who had been
shut out by the Dodgers for 29
straight innings, jumped to a 2-0
lead in the third on singles by
Sonny Jackson, Felix. Millan,
1111d Ralph Garr. Garr's hit kept
alive a 20-game hitung streak.
The Dodgers got a run back in
the fourth when M!mny Mota
tripled in WUile CrawfOrd, who

had reached on a fielder's
choice.
Atlanta's Darrell Evans
homered over the right field
fence in the fourth to make it 3-1
Atlanta.
Los Angeles rallied in the
sixth when Crawford singled in
Richie Allen who had doubled.
Mota then singled and Sims
cleared the bases with his
fourth homer of the season,
chasing Bcaves' starter Ron
Reed and putting the Dodgers
ahead $-3.
The Braves got a run in the
sixth on singles by Mike Lum

Noire Dame had trouble
getung acroBS midfield and
often gave uiJ the ball on a punt
from deep In ibl own territory.
With leas than five minutes
left In the game the lrlllh finally
penetrated 'deep into Purdue
territory,
reaching
the
Boilermaker 13 and then,
despite two penalties, reaching

'

the5beforesteenbergeluml\led
and Chuck Plebes recovered for
the · Boilermakers on the• 8,
apparenUy stopping the Irish
for good and all.
i
Bui that was before the twist
ofluck which gave Notre Dame
its second win without a )l)lllllnd
banded Purdue its secobd
straight defeai.

Sooners Roll .Over Pitt

Dodgers Only One Game Out After 5-4 Triumph
ATLANTA (UPI) - IJukil
Sims blasted a three-run homer
Satwday to give Los Allgeles a
S-4 victory over lite AUanta
Bcaves and bring the Dodgers
to within a game of first-place
San Francisco In the National
League's hot West Division
race.
The Dodgl!l"s, who opened
their Atlanta series threegames behind the Giants, took
their secood stralght while the
Gilmts were losing their second
atralgllt to Cincinnati 6-0.
Each conlendl!l" now bas four
~.ea to play.

lopped to him for the 1\'inning
poinbl.
Purdue had scored with 3:40
left In .the first haD when Otis
Annstrong dashed 26 yards
after , taking a pass from
quarterback G~y Danielson.
Mike Renle place kicked the
conversion and the Purdue
defense took it from there.

zn~.

the enSUing kickoff on his ISyard line, cut to the right and
sprinted down the sideline in
front of the Sooners' bench
without being tOuched.
Three plays alter the next
kickoff, Albert Qllalls recovered
a Pitt fmnble at the Panthers;
33-yard line and Mildren took
Oklahoma in for lis second
'touchdown on a four-play drive.
Mildren scored on a two-yard

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·Block while third stringl!l" Bob
Medwid scored ·on a two-yard
quarterback sneak and John
Chatman scored on a three· yard run.
Oklahoma held a 42-171ead at
halftime, scoring every time it
had the ball except once when
the Sooners' second-team backs
were in the game.
Mildren had 71 yards rushing
' in seven carries and Wylie had
54 yards in six carries.

-yard run by Lee Clymer.
Lyons hit on 9 of 13 passes
for 147 yards and rushed for 49
yards.
Myers, Mlo caught another
scoring toss from Lyons in the
third quarter, had four receplions for 101 yards.
Kentucky quarterback Bernie
Scruggs ran nine yards
for one touchdown and passed
for a touchdown and a two·
point conversion. He completed
9 of 19 passes for 144 yards, but

Kentucky dropped its 14th
straight
Southeastern
Conference game and second
game this year against one
victory.
Mississippi won for the third
time 1\'ithout a loss under new
head coach Billy Kinard.
Greg Ainsworth, on a fouryard run, and Rickey Havard,
on a nine-yard pass from
Lyons, accounted for Mlaslssippi's other scores.

B ea,~*en B y.Ole '1u1
'llzs·s

and Evans and a ground ball by Wylie also scored on rWIB of
Jackson. Brewer came on with
a man on and one out in the
seventh and preserved the dren, directing the wishbone-T · LEXINGTON, Ky. (UPi)attack Dawlessly, scored on Sophomore quarterback Kenny
victory.
runs of 2, 4 and 16 ~ards.
Lyons passed for three
PrwU, Mlo carrted the ball touchdowns and ran for a
only nme tunes_. scored on a 3t fourth Saturday to lead Missisyard run and Tim Welch scored sippi over Kentucky, 34-20.
VILLANOVA TRIUMPHS
on_a 16-yard run as Oklahoma
Lyons scored Mlssi"'lippi's
VlLLANOVA, Pa. (UPI) - gamed425 yards~ the ground. first touchdown on a one-yard
~back Daryl Woodring
Pitt never _was m_ the game plunge in the first quarter, and
threwhisfirit pass 21 yards for ~Iter Ertc Knisley climaaed the hit Randy Myers with a 69-yard
a touchdown to Mike Siani first drive of the day with a 32-' scoring bomb In the second
~turday and VIllanova sur· yard ~eld goal.
.
.quarter to put Mlasl!!!!lppi
~~a balt!e of ltn~vl!l"s with Wylie, ~ quarter-miler for ahead for good after Kentucky
Virginia Military Institute, 13-3. Oklahoma s track team, took_ had tied the score at 6-6 on a 13

~~~~:u~~!e~~~~.n.en

·keeper 8fter throwing a 23-yard
pas.!! to Wylie.
The next time .the Soon!lfl
had· the ball, they drove 60
yards In five plays for a
touchdown.'Pruitt went the rmai
32 for a 21-3 lead after Wylie
sprung him 1\'ith a good block in
the backfield.
Dave Havem, Pitt's No. 2
quarterback, threw touchdown
passes of five yards to Bill
.Englert and seven yards io Les
.

BY KEmi WISECUP
WELISI'ON - Playing their
finest of the young season, the
Meigs Marauders shot the
WeUston Golden Rockeis into
orbit, 38-ll, here Friday night in
one of the fine Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League openers.
Coach Charles Chancey's
Marauders · played • near
errorless ball throughout the
game for a 3-ll record overall
and 1·0 in league play.
WeUston, co-coached by Tom
Baker and Mark Mullen, leU to
1-2 overaU and ~1 in the league.
· The Marauders, scoring in
eYI!I"Y quarter, roUed for 305
yards on the ground and 348
total yards while racking up 20
first downs. WeUston was held
io a meager 68 total yards, -15
rushing and 83 net passing!
Mark WUilams, 150 lb. senior
tsilback, ran with such enth~aSm that . he scored 16
poipbl, rushed for 138 yards, and
left many bruises on some
Wellston defenders.
Ron Smith, another 150 lb.
senior, seldom runs from his
wingback position. That was not

·the case Friday. Smith, a twoyear starter, ran for a careerhigh 74 yards and played
magnificently on defense. (He
would get my player-of-theweek award). Said Coach
Olancey after the game of
Smith : "We didn't think he'd
ever scored a touchdown in high
school before. This was the
night to do it ....
Words don't describe the play
of the Marauder offensive and
defensive lines. They were
spectacular. The offense was
anchored by Ed YoWlg, 156 lb.
senior center, Ted Lehew, 160
lb. senior guard, Hilger Dixon,
!51 lb. senior guard, Fred Leti,
205 lb. senior tackle, Dave
Krawsczyn , 167 lb. senior
tackle, Larry Harmon, 187 lb.
senior end, and Jeff Morris, 190
lb. senior endc. -John Grueser, 199 lb. senior
defensive tackle, led the
defensive line. He was aided by
100 lb. senior · middle guard,
John Thomas.
The Marauder defensive
backfield held Wellston quar·
terback, Danny Settles, to only

Meigs Giid Statistics
Meigs Wells.
KICKOFF RETURNS:
20 s Meigs, Faulk, 1-24, 24.0.
16 2 Wellston, Martin, 3-57, 19.0;
3 2 Stewart, 2·35, 17.5; Hul1
1 chingson, 1-7, 7.0.
From Scrimmage
69 53
PUNT RETURNS : Meigs, R.
Yards Rushing
305 -15 Ash, 1.1, 1.0; Faulk, n, 3.5.
Yards Passing
43 83 Wellston, Stewarl, 1· 11-Sl. -5.0.
Total Yards
348 68
INTERCEPTION
'11 19 RETURNS: Meigs, Cooke, 1-2,
Pass. Attempts
Pass Completions
3 8 2.0. Wetlslon, Arthur, 1-31, 31.0.
l
1
. Interceptions
INDIVIDUAL SCORING
3
3 Meigs
Total Fumbles
TD E P TP
Fumbles Lost
2
3 M. Williams
2 4 16
J.67 S.l72 T. Williams
Punts
2 o 12
22.3 34.4 Morris
0
2
2
Penalties
4-61 5-65 Smith
1 0 6
INDIVIDUAL RUSHING
o 2 2
R. Ash
TC Yds Av9.
19 138 7.3 Wellston, none.
M. Williams
5 17 3.4 Score bY quarters :
T. Williams
8 28 3.5 Meigs
B 16 6 8-38
Van lnwagen
12 74 6.2 Wellston
o 0 o o- o
Smith
5 25 5.0
Vaughan
1 1 1.0
M. Ash
3 12 4.0
Mclaughlin
TWINS TOP ROYALS
1 10 10.0
Faulk
KANSAS
CITY (UPI)
54 305 5.5
TOTALS
Hannon Killebrew's two-run
WELLSTON
Stewart
ll 26 2.4 homer lifted the Minnesota
Martin
5 12 2.4
Settles
10 -51 ·S.1 Twins to a 7-1 victory over the
Hatten
l 2 2.0 Kansas City Royals in the first
TOTALS
27 IS -0.6 game a doubleheader Saturday.
INDIVIDUAL RECEIVING:
Meigs, Morris, 2·21, 10.5; M.
Ash, 1-23, 23 .0. Wellston,
ROOKIE PACES TIGERS
McK!nnlss, ~-38, 9.5; Hatten, 1DETROIT (UPI) - Rookie
18, 18.0; Stewart 2-13, 6.5;
Marlin, 1-14, 14.0.
catcher Tim Hosley, making his
INDIVIDUAL PASSING:
Meigs, Vaughan, 2-8, ,35 yards; second start of the season,
R. Ash, 1·3, 9 yards/ Wellstoo, slammed two home runs
Settles, 7·17, 69 yards; Stewart, Saturday to account '!or five
1-2, u yards.
INDIVIDUAL PUNTING: runs and lift the Detroit Tigers
Meigs, Van lnwagen 3-67, 22.3. past the New York Yankees I~
Wellston, Pattoo. 5-172. 34.4.
7.
First Downs
By Rushing
By Passing
By Penalty

7-17 in passing for 83 yards, far
below his average. In the b8ckfield was Rick Ash, 146 lb.
senior, Tom Cooke, 137 lb.
senior, Keilh Van Inwagen, 146
lb. senior, and Chuck Faulk, 160
lb. junior.
Said Chancey: "We executed
much better tonight. But there's

room for_improvement.• •
HOW IT WENT
The Marauders kicked off.
Right off, they went 1Q work.
After holding WeUston without a
first down, M. Williams ram.
bled 55 yards on the Marauders'

second play from scrimmage to
score the. game's fli'St TD. He
also ran in the extras and with
9:02 left in the first quarter,
Meigs was oo top 8-ll.
Behind the arm of SetUes, the
Rockets pushed their way io the
Meigs 43. But on fourth and one,
Morris recovered a stray
pitchout on the
Wellston
48.
Meigs
went
nowhere as a 15 yard
penaily, two unsuccessful runs,
and an incomplete pass forctd
Vanlnwagen to punt. The
Rockets took over their own 31.

Settles started passing again.
lie 'bit Randy Hatten for II
yards to the WeU.ston i$. On
third and seven, Settles rolled
out and was hemmed in for a 13
yard loss. J.D. Patton punted~
yards to the Meigs II.
The Marauders then played
bali control. They held onto it
over nine minutes, running 21
plays and going 89 yards to
score. The biggest gainers was
a 13 yard run by Smith, a 12
yard reception by Morris on a
crucial third down, and a 13yarder by M. Wllliams, who ran

Ironton Thumps Athens
28·7 In SEOAL Opener

in from the .18 once but was
disalloweclbecauseofaclipping
perllllty.
Tiny WllliiUDS, 11li lb. senior
fullback, playing only · occasionally on offense, rammed
it in from one yard out to cap the
dri1 M. Williams added the
extr on a run and with 4:38
left in the half, Meigs led 16-0.
After an incomplete pass,
Settles dropped back and was
thrown for a 16 yard loss to his
own'17. He then threw complete
to Terry Stewart, but Stewart
fumbled at the 20 and :Thomas
pounced on the loose bali for the
Marauders.
M. Williams ran lor six to the
H, Faulk sped 10 to the 4, M.
Willfams lost two back to the
six, and T. Wllliams scored his
second six--pointer within three
minutes, taking it o\•er from the
six. Vaughan bit Morris for the
extras and at the one minute
mark of the firit half, Meigs
jumped out to a 24-0 lead. The
Rockets had three passes fall
incomplete as the half ended.
SECOND HALF
Meigs took over first and len
at the Metgs 34. Van Inwagen
cracked the mtddie for rune but
Smith lost the handle on the
neil play and . WeUston took
over on their own 42. (The
Rockets were a essed a 15
yard penalty on the play ).
The Marauders defense dug
in. Besides being thrown lor a
large loss, the Rockets Wl!l"e
caUed for another personal foul,
puiting the ball back on the

.

SEPT, 27-21-29-30 OCTOBER 1·2-3 4 5 6 7-84ntl 9th

•

PREFINISHED
··PANELING

StoreMinagor
Harold O.vis

SUSPENDED CEILING·

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2x4xlf2 Sculptured

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Includes, tile,
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SEO Standings

10 Pes. Paneling
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The above aerial photograph
development and was formerly
farm located on Rt. 35, just four
Holz~r Medical Center and the
Fairgrounds.

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2nd PRIZE
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PREFINISHED MOOLDING

MD NAilS ro MATQf.
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Pum mCKs .29 EA.

CRESTWALL

REGULAR
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On Odd Lots

PRIC.E

With Lemon

CASH
CARRY

19.95
Carter &amp; Evans, name ·a familiar to all, 15
business.
at 87 Olive
the

SPUN GOLD
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the Wyman Caldwell
miles west of the new
Gallia County Junior

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.
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CASH

White and Gold Vinyl Moulding
and Adhesives In Stock.

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.Rodney Village

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
PHONE 446 4905

__ ___________

', ..__.

..._

Dunbar 0

Piqua 31 Dayton Stivers 13
Beavercreek 26 Fairborn Baker
7

Covington 24 Northeastern 0
Cedarville 51 The Plains 0
Toledo Whitmer 28 Sidney 7
Franklin 28 Springberg 6
Lancaster 32 Sprlnglleld South 0
Miami Trace 42 Columbus
Ready o
Cols. East 40 Cols. Wehrle 8
Meigs 38 Wellston o
Ironton 28 Athens 7
North Union 20 Highland 0
Springfield Shawnee 13
Clark Southeastern 0
Whitehall 18 Delaware 13
Groveport 28 Hilliard 0
Bexley 16 London U
Amanda Clearcreek 32 Carroll6
Watkins Memorial 20 Northridge IS
Lakewood 26 Johnstown 18
Chillicothe 34 Greenfield 0
16 Hamilton
Circleville
TownshipO
Newark 27 Toledo Walle 6
Cenlerb.Jrg 24 New Albany U
St. Charles 19 Piketon 0
Washington C.H. 26 Franklin
Heights 9
Cols. Brookhaven 15 Oublln 6
Hillsboro 34 Unloto 14
Jonathan Alder 20 Me&lt;:hanicsburg 0
Cols. Walnut Ridge 16 Columbus
South 0
Cols. Eastmoor 28 Cols. West 0
Cols. Mohawk u Cols. Marloo
Franklin 13
Cols. Westland u Reynoldsburg
0

I

B.UILDING SUPPLIES

MONDAY lHRU FRIDAY 7 A.M. ro 5 P.M.
SATURDAY'7 A.M. 10 4 P.M.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Westerville 7 Gahanna 7, tie
-Marysville 21 Grandview 7
C:ols. ·Mifflin 13 Grove City 7
West Jefferson 4 Olentangy 0
Millersport 29 Fairfield Union
13
Cols . Northland 28 Dayton
Roosevelt 0
' Cals. North 16 Cols. Hartley 12 ·
Belpre U Parkersburg. W. Va.
Catholic 8
Ravenswood, W. Va. 21 Warren
Local 10
South Point 32
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Huntington, W. Va. Vlnson21
Garfield Heights 17 Brush o
S..,ker Hel!lhls 32 Lllk- 8
Elyria 3! Cleve. East Tech o ·
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A study was made for the maximum use of this 196 acre
development· and it showed th~t .town h~uses, gard~n ·
apartments, trailers, condom1moms, smgle . fam1ly
, 1 residence and a shopping center were all feas1ble.

Baked On E.el StJieboard:::::;;-1-,!=.;:

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Value

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•tiiiiiiiiiii"

Friday's Grid Scores

0

-1st PRIZE

Own
A
of
The

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Cambridge 25 St. Clairsville 18
Dayton Wright -16 Daytun Kiser
18
Dayton O.aminade 33 Dayloo

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shanked off the side of his 1~. ball em downs.
going only five yards to the
With li1I05IIy tbe ' lla_.
Meigs 43.
r
ves playin«, · Meigs drO\'e
SetUes was thrown for a two 65 yards in 14 ~ lbltb
yard loss and a !~yard penalty sand the Meigs' !!U-pnP«er
put the ball on the 30. After lrtm the one ..R Ash s:ared the
SetUes was thrown for an 111- em-as on a nm. Willi nile
yard loss, Cooke intercepted SI!Ctttcb; nmaining, Meigs was
SetUes' nell pass at the Meigs m top, 31-0. The game mded
30.
follo'Wing Louis McKinney's
Meigs fumbled three plays kickoff.
·
later and Patton recovered on
Nal..-edt the Marauders will
the Meigs 22. Again, with t.'leir play the tougb 'l'igers.ol ~loa
backs to the waD, the Meigs at Marauder- Sl.ad.ium . .The
defense held on . The Rockets Tigers, c:oadled by Bob Bruny,
got but one yard in four plays. are three games on the way of
The Marauders took over on the having their pl'edicted 104,
21.
bal'ing wilacted Albens Friday
Meigs then went 79 yards in 27-7. Wellston lravels to I.Gg~m
only nine plays. the big gainers to meet U.~&lt;llieftains.losers 1),
being a 21 yard run by Vaughan 28 to Gallipolis.
and a 23 yard pass from
Vaughan to 137 lb . sophomore I
I
wingback, Mick Ash who got to
1
the one foot line. M. Williams I
1
galloped in fr om there. I
1
Vaughan's pass to Harmon in I
the end zone for the extras was . I
I
wide and with 16 seronds I
I
remaining in the third quarter, 1
I
Meigs led, 30-0.
.
1
DU.....
I
WeUston plUlted the next two 1
I" R:lloC
I
times it had the ball and Meigs I
D-.-1..
I
in !heir time with the football.
Ill~
1
..This exchanging of plUlts gave DARWIN E PETRIE 1
Meigs the bali on their own 41. 1
Special
t
1
R Ash became the Meigs' .I
R 'd
en
I
new. quarterback. After one I
esr ence
play, Alan Arthur intercepted 1
P.O. Box271
1.
Ash's pass and ran 31 yards io 1 Gallipolis, Ohio45631 I
the Meigs 34. Once again the 1 Telephone: 446-4153 I
Meigs defense clung on and '
·I
forced WeUston to choke up the

IRONTON - A 98-yard made it 14-7 at the 1:51 mark. yards, but was headed straight
kickoff return by Jim Payne This score stood throughout through the uprights.
and the fantastic passing of the remainder of the first half Each team netted 13 first
quarterback Hal Spears carried as both teams struggled be- downs but Ironton roUed up 1&amp;1
the Ironton Tigers to a con-. tween the 30 yard stripes with yards on the ground and Spears
vincing · 28·7 victory over the Tigers eventually driving to completed eight of 11 passes for
visiting Athens Friday night. the Athens 15 ~ard line late in 134 yards and two touchdowns.
For Coach Bob Bruney's the second period.
The Bulldogs fVOund out 166
Tigers it was their third win of This drive died when two yards rushing and completed
the yoWlg season and marked straight incomplete passes four of eight passes for just nine
also their third consecutive forced them to tum the bali yards with one intercepted.
over.
Only four penalties were
victory over the Bulldogs.
Tile loss was disappointing for
Midway in the third quarter called in the hard fought contest
Gerald Inbody, who replaced Ironton pushed Off on a 69 yard as Athens drew just one five
Don Eskey after 14 years as the drive that consumed eight plays yarder Mlile Ironton was caUed
Bulldog mentor, as he had with Boykin chugging 25 yards three times for only 13 yards.
guided his team to two opening for the touchdown. Howard's Bobby Smith, 188-pound
•
wins.
kick widened the gap to 21-7 senior fullback, led the Ironton
RocketonII.two
WeUston
19 . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Many of the fans at Tank with2:03leftinthethirdperiod. rush with 50 yards in eight yards
passesgained
but that
Stadiwn were not in their seats The Tigers wrapped up their carries while Boykin, a 200- still left them far sOOrt. Patton
when the Tigers struck for the third straight win with a 111·-play pound senior tailback, picked punted 30, with Faulk returning
first touchdown as they look the 55-yard drive in the fourth up 42 yards in six tries.
it six. (Faulk was injured at this
opening kickoff on their 13.
quarter as Payne grabbed a Fullback Don Wood led
point, but walked off the field on
leaning on Ktopman
On the first play Spears ran quick nine yard touchdown pass Athens with 72 yards in 17 his own power).
for 17 yards, then fumbled for a from Spears and Howard kicked carries.
A yard gain and two inCibada Cloth lor his
four yard gain on the next play, the point.after to make it 23-7 Friday, Ironton, picked as the complete passe- forced Van
and then rified a dazzling 66- with 5:42 remaining in the team io heat for the tiUe, will lnwagen to p1Dtt. His kick was
Chelsea suit
yard touchdown pass to fl!llback contest.
travel to Meigs for its second
Rick Boy kin . Jell Howard
With just five seconds consecutive crucial test.
Cibada Cloth is a new idea in men's
kicked the extra point and remaining in the game Jeff The score by quarters:
suiting fabrics. and you can trust
Ironton led 7-ll with 10:19 left. Howard attempted a 4&amp;-yard Athens
7 0 0 ll- 7
Johnny CaiSOn to be in there with the
The Bulldogs battled back to field goal that feU short by HI· Ironton
14 0 7 7-28
(All Games)
lie the score on a 15-play 7!1-yard
:atest. It's a two-way texturized 100%
TEAM
W L T p OP
Jackson
J o o ua o
drive that culminated with
Celanese• Fortret• polyester that igIronton
3 0 0 95 21
halfback Paul Scarmack
nores wrinkles but keeps the trm iines
Meigs
3 o 0 90 20
driving two yards for a touchGallipolis
3 0 0 88 S2
of Chelsea styllng In lasting great
Athens
2 1 0 73 S9
down. Gary Snow's kick split
Cleve. St. Edward 38 Cleve. Logan
1 2 o 100 69
By
United
Presslntemation.JI
the uprightS and it was 7-7 with Lima Senior 18 Marion Harding
shape. Wide deep-notch lapels, but·
West Tech 0
Wellston
1 2 o 52 56
2:03 left.
Barberton 13 Lorain 0
Waverly
. o 3 o 14 105
0
ton-on scalloped Rap pockets, deep
Cleveland
Heights
.
I~ Euclid 0
Portsmouth
13
Cals.
Linden
13
On the ensuing kickoff, Jim
center vent.
$105.00
(SEOAL Only)
West 28 Lucasville Fairview 8 Avoo Lake 7
Payne, a 169-pound wide Portsmouth
North
Olmsted
30
Medina
15
TEAM
W
L
T
p
OP
Valley 14
•
receiv.er on offense, took the New Bostun u Wheelersburg 12 Ashtabula St. John 8 Ashtabula Jackson
1 o o " o
Cooi'IIIMI•d
II II ill for ...
Edge. 0
Meigs
1 0 o 38 0
ball on the Ironton two yard line St. Marys 20 Lima Bath u
Steubenville
39
Cleve.
Glenville
lrinlon
1
o
o
28
7
CGmpl1t1 Johnny C... Loolr
and sped 98-yards for a touch· Dover 35 Mansfield Malabar 22
Shelby o Bellevue 0, tie
16
·
Gallipolis
1 0 0 28 20
down that probably broke the Loudooville 14 Plymouth 8
Mentor 27 St. Joseph 0
Logan
0 l o 20 28 ~=~~
0 1 0 7 28
Bulldogs' back. Howard's kick Bucyr~s 22 Upper Sandusky 8 Marlins Ferry 6 Bridgeport 6, Athens
tie
Wellston
0
1 0 0 38
Doylestown 29 Hillsdale 0
Waverly
0 . 1 0 o ~1
Zanesville 21 New Philadelphia Fort Frye 42 Beallsville 1~
Ada 30 Columbus Grove 0
TOTALS
4 4 o 162 162
20
FRIDAY'S RESULTS:
New Lexington 20 Tri Valley 6 Allen East 22 Spencerville 0
Delphos Jeffersoo 2~ Perry 12 Gallipolis 28 Logan 20
Crooksville 9 Maysville 0
Pandora Gilboa 20 Leipsic 6
Meigs 38 Wellston 0
Morgan 20 Sheridan 12
Worthington 36 MI. Vernon 14 Jacksoo 41 Waverly o
West Muskingum 19 Philo 8
New Concord J. G. u Licking Cols. Watterson 24 Cols . !rontoo 28 Alhens 1
Whetslone 7
Coo I Grove 32 Rock Hill 18
Valley 0
Cols. DeSales 38 Cols. Central 0 South 32 Huntingtun Vinson
Barnesville 22 Woodsfield 6
21
Canton Lincoln 44 Canton Granville 35 Heath 18
Ashland 6 Coshocton 0
Portsmouth 13 Columbus
Timken o
Riverview 7 Claymont 0
Linden
Alliance 27 Toledo Scott 7
Gallipolis 28 Logan 20
McKinley 13
Perry 26 Cantoo South 14
Jackson
~1
Waverly
0
OCTOBER
1 GAMES:
Louisville 26 Jacksoo 0
Gallipolis at Waverly
East Canton 28 South Range 6 Miller 28 Federal-Hocking 6
Yorkville 28 Warren Con· Nelsonville-York 58 Glouster 0 Ironton at Meigs
Eastern 41 Frontier Local 6
Jacksoo at Athens
solldaled 6
Reemlln 24 Alexander 22
Wellston at Logan
Wellsville 29 T«ooto 8
Coal Grove 32 Rock Hill 18
Cadiz 6 Scio.Jewett 6, tie
Adenz 12 MI. Pleasant 6
Springfield Local 13 Beaver
Local 0
Southern Local 26 Stanton Local
26, lie
East Liverpool H Cleve.
Kennedy 0
Massillon 20 Cleve. Benedictine

Choice Building Sites Available

I"~
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ellston

in at

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•

Ken Jolul!on, wbo three times Jriaide the 10 yard JohnsCIII, wbo suffered a wrist oo a S,lnl 1'1!11 to mab tbe
....,•t•'fll!llledfoplay,l'lllfor line and bottled up tbe Buck· Injury In !be undefeated Buffa. score 1),7,

'-o

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· Your Cash &amp; Carry DixoUIIt

Headquarters

French City Builders Supp~
750 1st Avenue
Gallipolis. Ohio .

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·-Tile• ''IJ'n" OS Sea'mei,Sunday,Sept.ll,l971

'• '

11-'nle&amp;mdaYTimes-8entinei,Sulllay, Sept. 26, 1971

•0

__..c:k

COLUMBUS

tate

~ second leadllig rushing

(UPI)

team,

minulesremalniJlllnthegame.

Ia"*'!,wbollftw .onlyseven

~... IIIII !lllllllater eyes'runnlngallackmostlilbe toes' firit win OVI!I" Ln•jsj•u

OII!Branelu·acedllyarda with
a punt rerun for another
saturday as .eighth ranked
Colorado .defeated fifth ranked
Oblo State 11-14.
'111e lllugh Colndo defeme
ablpped Ohi~ State, the natim•s

afternoon.
Both Ohio Slate touchdowns
came in the final ~od when
quarterback Don T.amki scored
onaoneyardplungeandpasaed
14 yards to tigh! elll Rick
Middletm with a llttle.over two

Bra!lch,wbobubeenclocked
State, was not supposed to play In u lltCGIIdB in tbe 100 yard
but was a surprise s~Jrter.
dash, loot a punt oo bla oWn 32
He got the. firit Colorado yard line In !be aecmd period,
touchdown in the first period oo eluded me taclder and raced
a seven-yard keeper play and down the slclelines untouched.
the third Buffalo loUCbd111m Halfback Cllartie Davis was
1\'ith 3:30remaining in the game

In 16 plaY. and a toucbdown
times in the. Buckeye's
had ·the biiU in the Sticond half IQI was m!lllfled by' a
win OVI!I"Iowa,hlt20 li 33 passes 1they drove fr001 their OWl! 22 1'1 penalty.'
'
'
fir ~ yanls.
the Colndo 2 where fullback
Ohio State, wblcb lWei pined
Ohio State.bad Its only sus- John Bieda .was siDJiped on a
myatdll ~ apinlt row&amp;,
talned drive of the first half late fourth-and.j)llll sltuatioo.
Willi beld 1'1 Cllly 145 tarda by
In the secmd quarter wbere
Tbe third drive was ·fnm tbe
ColCII'adO.
,
they were·stopped after driving OSU one yard line after tackle
CCioredo
gained 285 yatdll a59 yards In ·14 playa to tbe Shad wuuama recovl!l"ed a gainlt tbe natlm's fifth !ranked
Buffaloes' four yard line.
Johnson . fumble. The Bucks
team In I'Ullblng defense.
Tbe first time the Buckeyes marched to the Colndo seven

opentnS

the leading rusher for Colorado
and tbe workhorse of the Buf·
falo backfield 1\'ith 118 yards
rushing in 18 carries.
The powerful Colorado
defense time and apin blunted
ObioState's l'!IJIIIing attact and
forced the Buckeyes to go to the
air _ ..methlng which . they
don't do very often.

bo!illns

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Bobcats Jn Irish Eke Out 8-7 Grid
37-21 Win
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A'l'HENS, Ohio (UPI) Qllafletback Dave .Juenger hii
Bob Allen fOr two scoring passes, then · scored a. tOuchdown
hlmaeH 88 Ohio University rebounded lor a 37 • 21 win over
Kent Slate in the Mid-American
Conflnnce Saturday.
Allen mared a Juenger pass
. for a two-yard score and later
ooe from 44 yards ·om io. give
the Bobcats a 1~ lead at haD·.
time of tbe regionally televised.
game.
Juenger goi his touchdown in
the ieCOiid quarter along with
one from sophomore tailback
J1m Klzloinld, who rim over
from the three to put the Bobcats oui In front 27-ll ai the half.
Kent goi rolling In the second
half on a touchdown from quai-.

LAFAYETTE, IND. (UPI)Pat Steenberge's looping pass
through a driving rain was
pl!lled in by Mike Creaney fOr 'a
terback Larry Hayes from 13 two-point conversilln after a
yards ·out.
'
fumble recover)' in the end l'.lllle
Hayes then hit' tsilback Eddie to give Notre Dione an 8-7 win
Woodard with an eight • yard ovl!l" Purdue in what almost
scoring plunge by Eddie Hod· turned out to be a shocking
gon to put the game out of upset.
reach.
The fighting Irish, No. 2
Kicking specialist Dave ranked and a 20-point favorite
Green, who was four for five on going into the game, were
extra points, booted a 29-yard outplayed almost !ill the way by
field goal to finish the scoring the Boilennakers, and but for a
for thl! Bobcabl.
last-minute break, Purdue
Ki!lowski played for the in· would have held on.
jured tailback Bill Gary, who It rained before the game and
was eighth in the nation In rush· almost constanUy during the
ing last year.
contest, and the wet field and
Kozlowski rushed 32 times for. the rain had as much to do with
178yards, while the quarterback the outcome as either team.
was four for nine in passing for Y~t, until only 2:58 remained,
65 yards and two touchdowns. netther team had fllllibled. Then
Hayes bit on 10 of 21 attempts fortune kicked the Boiler·
and was Intercepted once.

played lor a tie ' against
makers in the bead.
With the ball on the Purdue 14 Michigan State in a batUe of the
and the Boilermakers In front 7- lop ranked teams a few years
0, Scott Lougbee!l stood on his ago.
·g oaJilnetopuntoutofdanger- He ordered a try for a 'tiroa . feat .be bad performed 11 point .conversion and the rain
times previously with no feU heavier than ~er.
Steenberge dropped back and
problem.
This time, center Bob Creaney, cuiting acrOBS the end
Hoidahl's snap 11!'88 low and to ZDI!e, was wide open 88 the ball
the side and the wet ball slipped
from Ltmgb .ed's bands•
He picked it up, but before he
could put his foot to the ball,
Notre Dame's 235-pound
defensive end Walt Patulsld
crasbed into hilil and the ball . PITl'SBuRGH (UPI) .- Jack
bomded free in the end l'.lllle MiJdren and Joe Wylie scored
wbl!l"e Fred S~eildsen, ~ o~ three touchdowns each and
end on the Irish defensl~ untt, Greg Pruitt rushed for li8
feU oo it for a touchdown.
yards Saturday as 11th ranted
'lbat put the pussure on Oklahoma behind a swift'
Notre ~ame_'s ~oacb Ara offense, w.illoped Pitt, 55-29.
Pais gluan, s1i11 mindful of the
criticism be received when the
The Sooners spotted Pitt an
Irish ran out the clock and early field goal before Wylie's
m&gt;-yard kickoff return started a
string of seven straight touch·
doWIIs for their first-61ring
offense.

I

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t •'

I ,:

II' , :,

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The Dodgers were trailing 3-2
when Sims homered over the
center field fence, in the sixth.
Jim Brewer pitched scoreless
ball the final 2 2-3 innings to
preserve Don Sutton's sixth
victory against 12 losses.
The Braves, who had been
shut out by the Dodgers for 29
straight innings, jumped to a 2-0
lead in the third on singles by
Sonny Jackson, Felix. Millan,
1111d Ralph Garr. Garr's hit kept
alive a 20-game hitung streak.
The Dodgers got a run back in
the fourth when M!mny Mota
tripled in WUile CrawfOrd, who

had reached on a fielder's
choice.
Atlanta's Darrell Evans
homered over the right field
fence in the fourth to make it 3-1
Atlanta.
Los Angeles rallied in the
sixth when Crawford singled in
Richie Allen who had doubled.
Mota then singled and Sims
cleared the bases with his
fourth homer of the season,
chasing Bcaves' starter Ron
Reed and putting the Dodgers
ahead $-3.
The Braves got a run in the
sixth on singles by Mike Lum

Noire Dame had trouble
getung acroBS midfield and
often gave uiJ the ball on a punt
from deep In ibl own territory.
With leas than five minutes
left In the game the lrlllh finally
penetrated 'deep into Purdue
territory,
reaching
the
Boilermaker 13 and then,
despite two penalties, reaching

'

the5beforesteenbergeluml\led
and Chuck Plebes recovered for
the · Boilermakers on the• 8,
apparenUy stopping the Irish
for good and all.
i
Bui that was before the twist
ofluck which gave Notre Dame
its second win without a )l)lllllnd
banded Purdue its secobd
straight defeai.

Sooners Roll .Over Pitt

Dodgers Only One Game Out After 5-4 Triumph
ATLANTA (UPI) - IJukil
Sims blasted a three-run homer
Satwday to give Los Allgeles a
S-4 victory over lite AUanta
Bcaves and bring the Dodgers
to within a game of first-place
San Francisco In the National
League's hot West Division
race.
The Dodgl!l"s, who opened
their Atlanta series threegames behind the Giants, took
their secood stralght while the
Gilmts were losing their second
atralgllt to Cincinnati 6-0.
Each conlendl!l" now bas four
~.ea to play.

lopped to him for the 1\'inning
poinbl.
Purdue had scored with 3:40
left In .the first haD when Otis
Annstrong dashed 26 yards
after , taking a pass from
quarterback G~y Danielson.
Mike Renle place kicked the
conversion and the Purdue
defense took it from there.

zn~.

the enSUing kickoff on his ISyard line, cut to the right and
sprinted down the sideline in
front of the Sooners' bench
without being tOuched.
Three plays alter the next
kickoff, Albert Qllalls recovered
a Pitt fmnble at the Panthers;
33-yard line and Mildren took
Oklahoma in for lis second
'touchdown on a four-play drive.
Mildren scored on a two-yard

v

tu ck .y

·Block while third stringl!l" Bob
Medwid scored ·on a two-yard
quarterback sneak and John
Chatman scored on a three· yard run.
Oklahoma held a 42-171ead at
halftime, scoring every time it
had the ball except once when
the Sooners' second-team backs
were in the game.
Mildren had 71 yards rushing
' in seven carries and Wylie had
54 yards in six carries.

-yard run by Lee Clymer.
Lyons hit on 9 of 13 passes
for 147 yards and rushed for 49
yards.
Myers, Mlo caught another
scoring toss from Lyons in the
third quarter, had four receplions for 101 yards.
Kentucky quarterback Bernie
Scruggs ran nine yards
for one touchdown and passed
for a touchdown and a two·
point conversion. He completed
9 of 19 passes for 144 yards, but

Kentucky dropped its 14th
straight
Southeastern
Conference game and second
game this year against one
victory.
Mississippi won for the third
time 1\'ithout a loss under new
head coach Billy Kinard.
Greg Ainsworth, on a fouryard run, and Rickey Havard,
on a nine-yard pass from
Lyons, accounted for Mlaslssippi's other scores.

B ea,~*en B y.Ole '1u1
'llzs·s

and Evans and a ground ball by Wylie also scored on rWIB of
Jackson. Brewer came on with
a man on and one out in the
seventh and preserved the dren, directing the wishbone-T · LEXINGTON, Ky. (UPi)attack Dawlessly, scored on Sophomore quarterback Kenny
victory.
runs of 2, 4 and 16 ~ards.
Lyons passed for three
PrwU, Mlo carrted the ball touchdowns and ran for a
only nme tunes_. scored on a 3t fourth Saturday to lead Missisyard run and Tim Welch scored sippi over Kentucky, 34-20.
VILLANOVA TRIUMPHS
on_a 16-yard run as Oklahoma
Lyons scored Mlssi"'lippi's
VlLLANOVA, Pa. (UPI) - gamed425 yards~ the ground. first touchdown on a one-yard
~back Daryl Woodring
Pitt never _was m_ the game plunge in the first quarter, and
threwhisfirit pass 21 yards for ~Iter Ertc Knisley climaaed the hit Randy Myers with a 69-yard
a touchdown to Mike Siani first drive of the day with a 32-' scoring bomb In the second
~turday and VIllanova sur· yard ~eld goal.
.
.quarter to put Mlasl!!!!lppi
~~a balt!e of ltn~vl!l"s with Wylie, ~ quarter-miler for ahead for good after Kentucky
Virginia Military Institute, 13-3. Oklahoma s track team, took_ had tied the score at 6-6 on a 13

~~~~:u~~!e~~~~.n.en

·keeper 8fter throwing a 23-yard
pas.!! to Wylie.
The next time .the Soon!lfl
had· the ball, they drove 60
yards In five plays for a
touchdown.'Pruitt went the rmai
32 for a 21-3 lead after Wylie
sprung him 1\'ith a good block in
the backfield.
Dave Havem, Pitt's No. 2
quarterback, threw touchdown
passes of five yards to Bill
.Englert and seven yards io Les
.

BY KEmi WISECUP
WELISI'ON - Playing their
finest of the young season, the
Meigs Marauders shot the
WeUston Golden Rockeis into
orbit, 38-ll, here Friday night in
one of the fine Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League openers.
Coach Charles Chancey's
Marauders · played • near
errorless ball throughout the
game for a 3-ll record overall
and 1·0 in league play.
WeUston, co-coached by Tom
Baker and Mark Mullen, leU to
1-2 overaU and ~1 in the league.
· The Marauders, scoring in
eYI!I"Y quarter, roUed for 305
yards on the ground and 348
total yards while racking up 20
first downs. WeUston was held
io a meager 68 total yards, -15
rushing and 83 net passing!
Mark WUilams, 150 lb. senior
tsilback, ran with such enth~aSm that . he scored 16
poipbl, rushed for 138 yards, and
left many bruises on some
Wellston defenders.
Ron Smith, another 150 lb.
senior, seldom runs from his
wingback position. That was not

·the case Friday. Smith, a twoyear starter, ran for a careerhigh 74 yards and played
magnificently on defense. (He
would get my player-of-theweek award). Said Coach
Olancey after the game of
Smith : "We didn't think he'd
ever scored a touchdown in high
school before. This was the
night to do it ....
Words don't describe the play
of the Marauder offensive and
defensive lines. They were
spectacular. The offense was
anchored by Ed YoWlg, 156 lb.
senior center, Ted Lehew, 160
lb. senior guard, Hilger Dixon,
!51 lb. senior guard, Fred Leti,
205 lb. senior tackle, Dave
Krawsczyn , 167 lb. senior
tackle, Larry Harmon, 187 lb.
senior end, and Jeff Morris, 190
lb. senior endc. -John Grueser, 199 lb. senior
defensive tackle, led the
defensive line. He was aided by
100 lb. senior · middle guard,
John Thomas.
The Marauder defensive
backfield held Wellston quar·
terback, Danny Settles, to only

Meigs Giid Statistics
Meigs Wells.
KICKOFF RETURNS:
20 s Meigs, Faulk, 1-24, 24.0.
16 2 Wellston, Martin, 3-57, 19.0;
3 2 Stewart, 2·35, 17.5; Hul1
1 chingson, 1-7, 7.0.
From Scrimmage
69 53
PUNT RETURNS : Meigs, R.
Yards Rushing
305 -15 Ash, 1.1, 1.0; Faulk, n, 3.5.
Yards Passing
43 83 Wellston, Stewarl, 1· 11-Sl. -5.0.
Total Yards
348 68
INTERCEPTION
'11 19 RETURNS: Meigs, Cooke, 1-2,
Pass. Attempts
Pass Completions
3 8 2.0. Wetlslon, Arthur, 1-31, 31.0.
l
1
. Interceptions
INDIVIDUAL SCORING
3
3 Meigs
Total Fumbles
TD E P TP
Fumbles Lost
2
3 M. Williams
2 4 16
J.67 S.l72 T. Williams
Punts
2 o 12
22.3 34.4 Morris
0
2
2
Penalties
4-61 5-65 Smith
1 0 6
INDIVIDUAL RUSHING
o 2 2
R. Ash
TC Yds Av9.
19 138 7.3 Wellston, none.
M. Williams
5 17 3.4 Score bY quarters :
T. Williams
8 28 3.5 Meigs
B 16 6 8-38
Van lnwagen
12 74 6.2 Wellston
o 0 o o- o
Smith
5 25 5.0
Vaughan
1 1 1.0
M. Ash
3 12 4.0
Mclaughlin
TWINS TOP ROYALS
1 10 10.0
Faulk
KANSAS
CITY (UPI)
54 305 5.5
TOTALS
Hannon Killebrew's two-run
WELLSTON
Stewart
ll 26 2.4 homer lifted the Minnesota
Martin
5 12 2.4
Settles
10 -51 ·S.1 Twins to a 7-1 victory over the
Hatten
l 2 2.0 Kansas City Royals in the first
TOTALS
27 IS -0.6 game a doubleheader Saturday.
INDIVIDUAL RECEIVING:
Meigs, Morris, 2·21, 10.5; M.
Ash, 1-23, 23 .0. Wellston,
ROOKIE PACES TIGERS
McK!nnlss, ~-38, 9.5; Hatten, 1DETROIT (UPI) - Rookie
18, 18.0; Stewart 2-13, 6.5;
Marlin, 1-14, 14.0.
catcher Tim Hosley, making his
INDIVIDUAL PASSING:
Meigs, Vaughan, 2-8, ,35 yards; second start of the season,
R. Ash, 1·3, 9 yards/ Wellstoo, slammed two home runs
Settles, 7·17, 69 yards; Stewart, Saturday to account '!or five
1-2, u yards.
INDIVIDUAL PUNTING: runs and lift the Detroit Tigers
Meigs, Van lnwagen 3-67, 22.3. past the New York Yankees I~
Wellston, Pattoo. 5-172. 34.4.
7.
First Downs
By Rushing
By Passing
By Penalty

7-17 in passing for 83 yards, far
below his average. In the b8ckfield was Rick Ash, 146 lb.
senior, Tom Cooke, 137 lb.
senior, Keilh Van Inwagen, 146
lb. senior, and Chuck Faulk, 160
lb. junior.
Said Chancey: "We executed
much better tonight. But there's

room for_improvement.• •
HOW IT WENT
The Marauders kicked off.
Right off, they went 1Q work.
After holding WeUston without a
first down, M. Williams ram.
bled 55 yards on the Marauders'

second play from scrimmage to
score the. game's fli'St TD. He
also ran in the extras and with
9:02 left in the first quarter,
Meigs was oo top 8-ll.
Behind the arm of SetUes, the
Rockets pushed their way io the
Meigs 43. But on fourth and one,
Morris recovered a stray
pitchout on the
Wellston
48.
Meigs
went
nowhere as a 15 yard
penaily, two unsuccessful runs,
and an incomplete pass forctd
Vanlnwagen to punt. The
Rockets took over their own 31.

Settles started passing again.
lie 'bit Randy Hatten for II
yards to the WeU.ston i$. On
third and seven, Settles rolled
out and was hemmed in for a 13
yard loss. J.D. Patton punted~
yards to the Meigs II.
The Marauders then played
bali control. They held onto it
over nine minutes, running 21
plays and going 89 yards to
score. The biggest gainers was
a 13 yard run by Smith, a 12
yard reception by Morris on a
crucial third down, and a 13yarder by M. Wllliams, who ran

Ironton Thumps Athens
28·7 In SEOAL Opener

in from the .18 once but was
disalloweclbecauseofaclipping
perllllty.
Tiny WllliiUDS, 11li lb. senior
fullback, playing only · occasionally on offense, rammed
it in from one yard out to cap the
dri1 M. Williams added the
extr on a run and with 4:38
left in the half, Meigs led 16-0.
After an incomplete pass,
Settles dropped back and was
thrown for a 16 yard loss to his
own'17. He then threw complete
to Terry Stewart, but Stewart
fumbled at the 20 and :Thomas
pounced on the loose bali for the
Marauders.
M. Williams ran lor six to the
H, Faulk sped 10 to the 4, M.
Willfams lost two back to the
six, and T. Wllliams scored his
second six--pointer within three
minutes, taking it o\•er from the
six. Vaughan bit Morris for the
extras and at the one minute
mark of the firit half, Meigs
jumped out to a 24-0 lead. The
Rockets had three passes fall
incomplete as the half ended.
SECOND HALF
Meigs took over first and len
at the Metgs 34. Van Inwagen
cracked the mtddie for rune but
Smith lost the handle on the
neil play and . WeUston took
over on their own 42. (The
Rockets were a essed a 15
yard penalty on the play ).
The Marauders defense dug
in. Besides being thrown lor a
large loss, the Rockets Wl!l"e
caUed for another personal foul,
puiting the ball back on the

.

SEPT, 27-21-29-30 OCTOBER 1·2-3 4 5 6 7-84ntl 9th

•

PREFINISHED
··PANELING

StoreMinagor
Harold O.vis

SUSPENDED CEILING·

'

'2.69

Celotex No. 170
2x4xlf2 Sculptured

lay·ln Panels.
12x12 Room

•39.M
.
Includes, tile,
system
metal.
hanging wire.

Will Welcome You

'4.95
'4.95

'4.35
•4.35

lay-In) ; ..ot
and ~,.l- 1

SEO Standings

10 Pes. Paneling
'

The above aerial photograph
development and was formerly
farm located on Rt. 35, just four
Holz~r Medical Center and the
Fairgrounds.

'

'56.90

2nd PRIZE
-

PREFINISHED MOOLDING

MD NAilS ro MATQf.
PANEL ADH£$1V~ .99 EA.
Pum mCKs .29 EA.

CRESTWALL

REGULAR
PRICE

Kit

SALE

Check Ow Price
On Odd Lots

PRIC.E

With Lemon

CASH
CARRY

19.95
Carter &amp; Evans, name ·a familiar to all, 15
business.
at 87 Olive
the

SPUN GOLD
AVOCADO
GOLD LACE

•1.95

will

'

'

is a proposed new
the Wyman Caldwell
miles west of the new
Gallia County Junior

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.
/

CASH

White and Gold Vinyl Moulding
and Adhesives In Stock.

experience in the building

CARTER AND EVANS INC.
87 OLIVE STREET

=~~! ·~.68

&amp;

I

.,_GJMi -

CARRY

_-4Mi.~

1

Ef3

,J

I.

' "

.Rodney Village

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
PHONE 446 4905

__ ___________

', ..__.

..._

Dunbar 0

Piqua 31 Dayton Stivers 13
Beavercreek 26 Fairborn Baker
7

Covington 24 Northeastern 0
Cedarville 51 The Plains 0
Toledo Whitmer 28 Sidney 7
Franklin 28 Springberg 6
Lancaster 32 Sprlnglleld South 0
Miami Trace 42 Columbus
Ready o
Cols. East 40 Cols. Wehrle 8
Meigs 38 Wellston o
Ironton 28 Athens 7
North Union 20 Highland 0
Springfield Shawnee 13
Clark Southeastern 0
Whitehall 18 Delaware 13
Groveport 28 Hilliard 0
Bexley 16 London U
Amanda Clearcreek 32 Carroll6
Watkins Memorial 20 Northridge IS
Lakewood 26 Johnstown 18
Chillicothe 34 Greenfield 0
16 Hamilton
Circleville
TownshipO
Newark 27 Toledo Walle 6
Cenlerb.Jrg 24 New Albany U
St. Charles 19 Piketon 0
Washington C.H. 26 Franklin
Heights 9
Cols. Brookhaven 15 Oublln 6
Hillsboro 34 Unloto 14
Jonathan Alder 20 Me&lt;:hanicsburg 0
Cols. Walnut Ridge 16 Columbus
South 0
Cols. Eastmoor 28 Cols. West 0
Cols. Mohawk u Cols. Marloo
Franklin 13
Cols. Westland u Reynoldsburg
0

I

B.UILDING SUPPLIES

MONDAY lHRU FRIDAY 7 A.M. ro 5 P.M.
SATURDAY'7 A.M. 10 4 P.M.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Westerville 7 Gahanna 7, tie
-Marysville 21 Grandview 7
C:ols. ·Mifflin 13 Grove City 7
West Jefferson 4 Olentangy 0
Millersport 29 Fairfield Union
13
Cols . Northland 28 Dayton
Roosevelt 0
' Cals. North 16 Cols. Hartley 12 ·
Belpre U Parkersburg. W. Va.
Catholic 8
Ravenswood, W. Va. 21 Warren
Local 10
South Point 32
'
Huntington, W. Va. Vlnson21
Garfield Heights 17 Brush o
S..,ker Hel!lhls 32 Lllk- 8
Elyria 3! Cleve. East Tech o ·
•

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A study was made for the maximum use of this 196 acre
development· and it showed th~t .town h~uses, gard~n ·
apartments, trailers, condom1moms, smgle . fam1ly
, 1 residence and a shopping center were all feas1ble.

Baked On E.el StJieboard:::::;;-1-,!=.;:

PA,ELMATE .

&amp;

CEILING TILE
12"x12'' or 12"x24"

'Ag

_________...

a::

Rodney Village

Value

1

0
•tiiiiiiiiiii"

Friday's Grid Scores

0

-1st PRIZE

Own
A
of
The

I

Cambridge 25 St. Clairsville 18
Dayton Wright -16 Daytun Kiser
18
Dayton O.aminade 33 Dayloo

No Purchase Necessary to Register

r-••••••••••

!!---••

-

Stop In and Register ·
For Door PtUe

shanked off the side of his 1~. ball em downs.
going only five yards to the
With li1I05IIy tbe ' lla_.
Meigs 43.
r
ves playin«, · Meigs drO\'e
SetUes was thrown for a two 65 yards in 14 ~ lbltb
yard loss and a !~yard penalty sand the Meigs' !!U-pnP«er
put the ball on the 30. After lrtm the one ..R Ash s:ared the
SetUes was thrown for an 111- em-as on a nm. Willi nile
yard loss, Cooke intercepted SI!Ctttcb; nmaining, Meigs was
SetUes' nell pass at the Meigs m top, 31-0. The game mded
30.
follo'Wing Louis McKinney's
Meigs fumbled three plays kickoff.
·
later and Patton recovered on
Nal..-edt the Marauders will
the Meigs 22. Again, with t.'leir play the tougb 'l'igers.ol ~loa
backs to the waD, the Meigs at Marauder- Sl.ad.ium . .The
defense held on . The Rockets Tigers, c:oadled by Bob Bruny,
got but one yard in four plays. are three games on the way of
The Marauders took over on the having their pl'edicted 104,
21.
bal'ing wilacted Albens Friday
Meigs then went 79 yards in 27-7. Wellston lravels to I.Gg~m
only nine plays. the big gainers to meet U.~&lt;llieftains.losers 1),
being a 21 yard run by Vaughan 28 to Gallipolis.
and a 23 yard pass from
Vaughan to 137 lb . sophomore I
I
wingback, Mick Ash who got to
1
the one foot line. M. Williams I
1
galloped in fr om there. I
1
Vaughan's pass to Harmon in I
the end zone for the extras was . I
I
wide and with 16 seronds I
I
remaining in the third quarter, 1
I
Meigs led, 30-0.
.
1
DU.....
I
WeUston plUlted the next two 1
I" R:lloC
I
times it had the ball and Meigs I
D-.-1..
I
in !heir time with the football.
Ill~
1
..This exchanging of plUlts gave DARWIN E PETRIE 1
Meigs the bali on their own 41. 1
Special
t
1
R Ash became the Meigs' .I
R 'd
en
I
new. quarterback. After one I
esr ence
play, Alan Arthur intercepted 1
P.O. Box271
1.
Ash's pass and ran 31 yards io 1 Gallipolis, Ohio45631 I
the Meigs 34. Once again the 1 Telephone: 446-4153 I
Meigs defense clung on and '
·I
forced WeUston to choke up the

IRONTON - A 98-yard made it 14-7 at the 1:51 mark. yards, but was headed straight
kickoff return by Jim Payne This score stood throughout through the uprights.
and the fantastic passing of the remainder of the first half Each team netted 13 first
quarterback Hal Spears carried as both teams struggled be- downs but Ironton roUed up 1&amp;1
the Ironton Tigers to a con-. tween the 30 yard stripes with yards on the ground and Spears
vincing · 28·7 victory over the Tigers eventually driving to completed eight of 11 passes for
visiting Athens Friday night. the Athens 15 ~ard line late in 134 yards and two touchdowns.
For Coach Bob Bruney's the second period.
The Bulldogs fVOund out 166
Tigers it was their third win of This drive died when two yards rushing and completed
the yoWlg season and marked straight incomplete passes four of eight passes for just nine
also their third consecutive forced them to tum the bali yards with one intercepted.
over.
Only four penalties were
victory over the Bulldogs.
Tile loss was disappointing for
Midway in the third quarter called in the hard fought contest
Gerald Inbody, who replaced Ironton pushed Off on a 69 yard as Athens drew just one five
Don Eskey after 14 years as the drive that consumed eight plays yarder Mlile Ironton was caUed
Bulldog mentor, as he had with Boykin chugging 25 yards three times for only 13 yards.
guided his team to two opening for the touchdown. Howard's Bobby Smith, 188-pound
•
wins.
kick widened the gap to 21-7 senior fullback, led the Ironton
RocketonII.two
WeUston
19 . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Many of the fans at Tank with2:03leftinthethirdperiod. rush with 50 yards in eight yards
passesgained
but that
Stadiwn were not in their seats The Tigers wrapped up their carries while Boykin, a 200- still left them far sOOrt. Patton
when the Tigers struck for the third straight win with a 111·-play pound senior tailback, picked punted 30, with Faulk returning
first touchdown as they look the 55-yard drive in the fourth up 42 yards in six tries.
it six. (Faulk was injured at this
opening kickoff on their 13.
quarter as Payne grabbed a Fullback Don Wood led
point, but walked off the field on
leaning on Ktopman
On the first play Spears ran quick nine yard touchdown pass Athens with 72 yards in 17 his own power).
for 17 yards, then fumbled for a from Spears and Howard kicked carries.
A yard gain and two inCibada Cloth lor his
four yard gain on the next play, the point.after to make it 23-7 Friday, Ironton, picked as the complete passe- forced Van
and then rified a dazzling 66- with 5:42 remaining in the team io heat for the tiUe, will lnwagen to p1Dtt. His kick was
Chelsea suit
yard touchdown pass to fl!llback contest.
travel to Meigs for its second
Rick Boy kin . Jell Howard
With just five seconds consecutive crucial test.
Cibada Cloth is a new idea in men's
kicked the extra point and remaining in the game Jeff The score by quarters:
suiting fabrics. and you can trust
Ironton led 7-ll with 10:19 left. Howard attempted a 4&amp;-yard Athens
7 0 0 ll- 7
Johnny CaiSOn to be in there with the
The Bulldogs battled back to field goal that feU short by HI· Ironton
14 0 7 7-28
(All Games)
lie the score on a 15-play 7!1-yard
:atest. It's a two-way texturized 100%
TEAM
W L T p OP
Jackson
J o o ua o
drive that culminated with
Celanese• Fortret• polyester that igIronton
3 0 0 95 21
halfback Paul Scarmack
nores wrinkles but keeps the trm iines
Meigs
3 o 0 90 20
driving two yards for a touchGallipolis
3 0 0 88 S2
of Chelsea styllng In lasting great
Athens
2 1 0 73 S9
down. Gary Snow's kick split
Cleve. St. Edward 38 Cleve. Logan
1 2 o 100 69
By
United
Presslntemation.JI
the uprightS and it was 7-7 with Lima Senior 18 Marion Harding
shape. Wide deep-notch lapels, but·
West Tech 0
Wellston
1 2 o 52 56
2:03 left.
Barberton 13 Lorain 0
Waverly
. o 3 o 14 105
0
ton-on scalloped Rap pockets, deep
Cleveland
Heights
.
I~ Euclid 0
Portsmouth
13
Cals.
Linden
13
On the ensuing kickoff, Jim
center vent.
$105.00
(SEOAL Only)
West 28 Lucasville Fairview 8 Avoo Lake 7
Payne, a 169-pound wide Portsmouth
North
Olmsted
30
Medina
15
TEAM
W
L
T
p
OP
Valley 14
•
receiv.er on offense, took the New Bostun u Wheelersburg 12 Ashtabula St. John 8 Ashtabula Jackson
1 o o " o
Cooi'IIIMI•d
II II ill for ...
Edge. 0
Meigs
1 0 o 38 0
ball on the Ironton two yard line St. Marys 20 Lima Bath u
Steubenville
39
Cleve.
Glenville
lrinlon
1
o
o
28
7
CGmpl1t1 Johnny C... Loolr
and sped 98-yards for a touch· Dover 35 Mansfield Malabar 22
Shelby o Bellevue 0, tie
16
·
Gallipolis
1 0 0 28 20
down that probably broke the Loudooville 14 Plymouth 8
Mentor 27 St. Joseph 0
Logan
0 l o 20 28 ~=~~
0 1 0 7 28
Bulldogs' back. Howard's kick Bucyr~s 22 Upper Sandusky 8 Marlins Ferry 6 Bridgeport 6, Athens
tie
Wellston
0
1 0 0 38
Doylestown 29 Hillsdale 0
Waverly
0 . 1 0 o ~1
Zanesville 21 New Philadelphia Fort Frye 42 Beallsville 1~
Ada 30 Columbus Grove 0
TOTALS
4 4 o 162 162
20
FRIDAY'S RESULTS:
New Lexington 20 Tri Valley 6 Allen East 22 Spencerville 0
Delphos Jeffersoo 2~ Perry 12 Gallipolis 28 Logan 20
Crooksville 9 Maysville 0
Pandora Gilboa 20 Leipsic 6
Meigs 38 Wellston 0
Morgan 20 Sheridan 12
Worthington 36 MI. Vernon 14 Jacksoo 41 Waverly o
West Muskingum 19 Philo 8
New Concord J. G. u Licking Cols. Watterson 24 Cols . !rontoo 28 Alhens 1
Whetslone 7
Coo I Grove 32 Rock Hill 18
Valley 0
Cols. DeSales 38 Cols. Central 0 South 32 Huntingtun Vinson
Barnesville 22 Woodsfield 6
21
Canton Lincoln 44 Canton Granville 35 Heath 18
Ashland 6 Coshocton 0
Portsmouth 13 Columbus
Timken o
Riverview 7 Claymont 0
Linden
Alliance 27 Toledo Scott 7
Gallipolis 28 Logan 20
McKinley 13
Perry 26 Cantoo South 14
Jackson
~1
Waverly
0
OCTOBER
1 GAMES:
Louisville 26 Jacksoo 0
Gallipolis at Waverly
East Canton 28 South Range 6 Miller 28 Federal-Hocking 6
Yorkville 28 Warren Con· Nelsonville-York 58 Glouster 0 Ironton at Meigs
Eastern 41 Frontier Local 6
Jacksoo at Athens
solldaled 6
Reemlln 24 Alexander 22
Wellston at Logan
Wellsville 29 T«ooto 8
Coal Grove 32 Rock Hill 18
Cadiz 6 Scio.Jewett 6, tie
Adenz 12 MI. Pleasant 6
Springfield Local 13 Beaver
Local 0
Southern Local 26 Stanton Local
26, lie
East Liverpool H Cleve.
Kennedy 0
Massillon 20 Cleve. Benedictine

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Ken Jolul!on, wbo three times Jriaide the 10 yard JohnsCIII, wbo suffered a wrist oo a S,lnl 1'1!11 to mab tbe
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•-TIIeSonlayTin n Szu1nei,SWidlly, Sept. 26,1971

LOGAN - Pe~ Nel!), 181pcutd aenlor tailback, rushed
.... Yards in rT trips, both
ICbool recurds, 8COFed four
toucbdowna and two extra point
~nveralons to pace Gallia
• ,Academy High School's Blue
Dmls to a thrilling 21-20 Southeutern Obio Athletic League
grid trilllljlb over l.Dgan at
HIBtcJp Stadium here Friday
night. NNrly 4,000 fans viewed
the 47th SEOAL sea!IQII opener.
Displaying an awesome
grog~d attack, Coach C. L.
(Johnny) Ecker's defending
SEOAL champions scored twice
in the first period, once in the
aecond and again in the final
st.nza to cbalk up their 15tl1
COIIIeCUtive triumph over a
lbree-year period.
R was also the Galllans' loth
lllralgbt conference win, and
flllrth trillll!ph in a row over the
Olieftains, giving the Galllans a

21- The Snnc!ay Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 26, 1971

22-17 advantage in the long to 112 net yards rushing in 37 yards rushing ill oue &amp;arne
series between the two schools. · plays. The Oliefs completed (previous mart was 1911 set.
BHIDd tolld blockiDg by four of eight aerials for 49 by Paul Evans agamst Pl
tbe GABS forward wall, Blue yards, giving the Mikesmen.Ul P~t in 1•1 pkked up 55
DevU bacb raced for 319 total yards for the game.1JIS .... yards in 1• trips in the first
yards 1u 51 groUDd plays. had 13 first downs, three by peried. He was li.ve lor 18 in
Quu1erba•k Larry Saewdeo, penalties.
the secmul, seven for 43 in tbe
puslug only wbeo be had to,
Rick Krebs, 186-pom~d senior tblnl, aod in tbe final quarter,
bit three for three for zs tailback, top rusher in Ute · Neal carried a falllastlc 15
yards, givlug the visitors 391 SEOAL last year as a junior, · times for 89 yards.
total yards for the night. Tbe was limited to 86 yards in 29
By eon trolling the ball during
BIDe DevOs rolled up 2% first carries by the GAHS defense. the first and fmal periods,
downs, tt by rushing, ooe by Ken Culbertson; 201-pbund GAifS managed 62 plays from
~N~UiDg 81111 one by a Logan jmior fullback, second top loop scrimmage. l.Dgan had it 45
peoalty.
rusher in 1970, carried only four plays. In the second and third
Meanwhile, Coach Dick times for 18 yards.
quarters,
Logan
outMikes' Big Purple Machine,
Neal, In setting scbuol possessioned GAHS, 33-23.
obviously fired-up for the records for moot carriell ID
John Davis, 161-poWld senior
French City eleven, put 20 big ooe game (be bettered bls wingback, enjoyed bis best
points on the board. The ,Oliefs on. Zt effort aptn.. LopD ilight of the season with 64 yards
bounced back · with two six- lut yar by eflldl Mil . . t in sis: trips. Kev Sleets, I~
pointers in the second period,
and added another ill the fmal
canto.
l.Dgan, however, was limited

pound j..Uor fullback added 42
yards in seven trips. John
Walter, Who filled in for Neal
fow tirpes on offense, added 23
yards and ·Qil Snowden finished
with nine yards in four trips.
Dave White, split end, carried
only once, for 25 yards, and
that, according to Coach Mikes,
was the game's most decisive
play.
On. the receiving end, Davis
caught two Snowden passes for
18 yards. liheets caught one for
10 yards.
Defensively, C.ud: Wood,
%18-powld sealor ~·plain
was at hill peak against tbe
Chieftaluo. He ~ Rict
KreiJo oa the GABS four oa
..... dna .. llle lldnl

GAHS Grid Statistics
INDIVIDUAL NET
Davidson, 18-yard pass from
YARDS RUSHING
Smith, 6:35, fourth, (run fall).
OFFICIALS - Dick Reese,
IG.IIipolis)
PLAYER-Pos. TCB YG AVG Steve Brudzinski, Henry Smith
Dave While, RE
1 25 25.0 and AI Deuschle. (Chapter
John Davis. RH
6 6.4 10.6 unknown I.
Kev Sheets, FB
7 42 6 .0
TEAM STATISTICS
John Walter. LH
4 23 5.7 SCORE BY QUARTERS
Pete Nfllll, LH
37 206 5.5 Gallirf/ilis
14 8 0 6--28
Larry ~den, Q8 4 9 2.2 Logan
. . o 14 0 6--20
TOTALS
59 369 6.2 FIRST DOWNS
· II.Oaanl ·
Gallipolis
6 5 4 7-22
PlayM'--Pos.
TCB YG Avg Logan
2 7 3 1~13
Chuck Hellier, RH 1 5 5.0 YARDS GAINED RUSHING
K C I.._.___ FB 4 18 4 5 Gallipolis
124 70 60 127-381
. u """'""''
. 29 86 2·9 Logan
7 58 51 IG--126
Rick Krebs, LH
· YARD$ LOST RUSHING
1 2 2·0 Gallipolis
Greg Smith, QB
2 0 10 G--12
John Carby, HB
1 1 1.0 Logan
o o 7 7_ 14
1 O O.O NET YARDS RUSHING
C. Davidson, HB
TOTALS
37 112 3.0
INDIVIDUAL PASSING
Gallipolis
122 70 50 127-369
(G.IIipolis)
Logan
7 58 4.4 3--112
PLAYER
C-A 1 YG TD PASSES ATTEMPTED
Snowden
3-3 0 · 28 0 Gallipolis
2 0 1 G--3
3 1
TOTALS (loganf O 28. O ~':ssnES COMPLE~E D 3--8
PLAYER
C-A 1 YG TD Gallipolis
2 0 1 G--3
Logan
0 3 0 1~
Smith
3 6 0 ,.
Krebs
1:2 0
~ PASSES INTERCEPTED
TOTALS
~ o 49 2 Gallipolis
o o 0 (}-0
BIG NIGHT FOR PETE - QaWpolls' Pete Neal, barely
INDIVIDUAL RECEPTIONS ~c::~s GAINED ~A~S~NG(}-0
(G.IIipolisl
visible (No.ll,darkjersey)atlower left, plows over goallioe
PLAYER
C-A YG TD Gallipolis
18 0 10 G--28
for one li his four touchdowns and four extra points against
Davis
2-2 18 o Logan
o 31 0 18--49
Sheets
'1 l IO O TOTAL YARDS (Rush-Pass(
l.Dgan Friday night. GAHS wm, 21-20 to remain unbeaten in
TOTALS
3-l 21 o Gallipolis 140 70 60 127-397
three starts this fall, and 15 over a three year period. Failing
(Logan I
· Logan
7 89 44 21-161
PLAYER
C-A YG TD RETURN YARDAGE
Helber
2-S 24 1 Gallipolis
15 32 0 G-- 47
B. Davidson
1-1 IB 1 Logan
41 17 30 17-105
Shaw
1 2 7 o PLAY FROM SCRIMMAGE
TOTALS
" 49 2 Gallipolis
18 11 12 21'-62
PASS INTERCEPTIONS
Logan
6 19 14 6--45
RUNBACKS
FUMBLES
0 ~ ~ l-l
IG.IIipolisl
Gallipolis
LOGAN - Gallipolis' fresh- Robinson on ·a fourth and· 10
1
PLAYER
PT YG TD ~~:.~LES LDST
G--l men came friiD behind three situatim with 28 secmds left in
~
0 0 0
TQTALS
o o o rall~ls,. • . ~ 0 0 1-1 timestobandbostl.Dgana2Z-20 the game tied the score at 2tklll.
J
IL091nl
.
P~N&amp;LTIES
o· 0 G--l ' ielback al"HIIltop Stsdium Niday, on an option play,
slammed into the ermooe for
:!YER
P~ y~ T~ Gallipolis (51 45 o 15 15-75 Saturday morning.
TOTALS
Logan
(21
15
0
0
5-20
It
was
lbe
third
Gallipolis
the 1riming two points.
0 0 0
LINEUPS
f
tball
·
,_
Logan
Logan had taken a 20-14 lead
KICKOFF RETURNS
IG II' r15 )
00
vtc~. 1 over a
·
IG.llipolis I
a. opo
team
m· that
da
On with 1:27left in the game on a
PLAYER
KO fG TD
E.NDS-. Eroc Saunders, Dave
many ys.
E. Saunders
1 16 0 Whole, Rock ~rymes, Dean Thursday, the Gallipolis Junior quarterback sneak from the
Wamsley
1 15 o Rees, Leon Smith.
High tnpped the LitUe Chiefs 2(). four.
Waller
1 16 0 TACKLES - Chuck Wood, 6. On Friday, GABS outlasted
Logan led 6-0 following a
Neal
1 0 0 (cc), Jim Miller, Jo.hn
quarterback sneak with 5:52left
TOTALS
4 47
0 Bagshaw, Mall Epling, Dave the Chieftain varsity , 28-20.
(logan)
Kerns.
It was the opening game for
Major Leogue Leaders
PLAYER
KO YG TD
GUARDS - Ken Wamsley, both teams Salurda
Pat Boster, Mike Wolfe.
Y•
By United Press-lnternalional
~~ILS
~ ;:
CENTERS - Bud Sanders.
A 56-yard pass from QB Jim
Leoding Batters
Nalional League
PUNT RETURNS
Brett Epling, Fred Ford.
Niday to split end Wayne
BACKS - LarrJ. Snowden.
G. AB R. H. Pet.
IG.IIipolisl
Pete Neal (eel; ohn Davis,
Torre. St.L. 157 618 94 225 .364
PLAYER
• PR YG TD Kev Sheets, John Walter. Chuck
Bckrl . Chi 131 530 80 181 .342
~ALS
~ ~ ~ Perrouci Mike Berridge. Chris 51 LP-Koosman (6-liJ . HR~ Clmnt. Pii 130 517 81 177.342
Fisher.
Stargell (~7th) Jorgenson (5th) . Garr, All
151 626 1(10 212 .339
(logan I
Log•nl
(
Aaron,
All
136 483 93 159 .329
PLAYER
PR YG TD
1st game 21 innings
ENDS
Brian
Davidson,
Snglin,
Pit
136 525 59 168 .320·
Krebs
I 6 0 George Shaw, Jess Stewart.
Houston 000 100 000 000 000 Jones, NY 131 486 61 153 .317
TOTALS
I 6 0
000 001- 2 11 I Dvs, La
TACKLES - Mike Moizer,
153 620 BA 196 .316
RECOVERED
ENEMY Mike
San Diego 010 000 000 000 000 Brck. St.L 152 619 123 195 .315
Page,
Dave
Rauch.
·
FUMBLES - GAHS - Mike
000 GOO- 1 12 1 Alou, St.L
GUARDS - Roger Monk,
H6 600 81 188 .313
WGife; Logan - Jeff Poling .
Forsch. Ray (14), Culver Staub, Mont 157 578 92 181 .313
Dan
Sigler,
John
Bachus,
Chris
PUNTS-GAHS: Snowden, 2(17), Grief (19) , Guinn (21) and
American League
62 131.01; Logan: Moizer, 2-78 Miller, Greg Culbertson.
Edwards, Howard (17). Kirby,
CENTERS
Keith
Porter,
G. AB. R. H. Pet.
(39.01.
Poling, Tim Perry, Brian Kelley (16), Severinsen (17), Olva, Min
126 &lt;187 73 164 .317
SCORING-GAHS - Neal, 2 Jeff
Ross (19) and Barton . WP- Mrcr, Ny
Nihiser,
Bill
Kazee.
142
513 92 169 .329
- yard run. 7:55 first, (pass
Grief
11·11.
LPRoss
\1-31.
HR
BACKS
Greg
Smith,
Rick
RtmndBal
136
&lt;169
79 loiS .316
fall); Neal, 2-yard run, 1:01 Krebs. Chuck Helber, Ken - Chiles (2nd).
Tvr, Min
150 628 89 191 .304
first, I Neal, runl ; Neal. 3-yard Culbertson, Kev Berry, Craia
Otis, KC
145 547 80 165 .302
run, 5:33, second, INeal runl ; Davidson, Randy Matheny, (2nd game)
Carew.
Min
141 553 86 166 .JOO
Neal. 2-yard run. 9:31 fourth. John Smart, John Corby, Roger Houston 010 030 GOO- 4 10 2
May,Chi
137 &lt;189 63 145 . 2'11
(run fall) . L911an-Krebs, 6San Diego 020 011 001- 5 13 1 Ulndr, Clev 138 &lt;185 52 140 .289
yard run, 9: 58, second I B. Shaw.
Spinks, Rar 161, Grief (81. Smith, Bos 154 60'2 82 172 .286
Davidson. pass from Smith) ;
Gladding
(9 and Howard; White, NY 142 ~7 79 145 .286
Helber,9-yardpass from Krebs. at NEXTGAHSGAME-Oct.l,
Roberts
(
1~· 16) and Kendall. Jhnsn Bal
Waverly.
139 500 65 143 .286
0: 54, second, I pass fa ill ; B.
LP- Giadding (~-5).
Atou. Ny
1?9 461 51 132 .286

·
· uteu11jf 35 lll!aJIIds on
period, key play as far as tile WolfeandWoodgotthe LJfS ace Sl~ Jlllll .
Galllans were COII&lt;enled. It for a minus one in the third and the clock. GAIL'! bad tbe baU on ·
stopped a sastalaed LePa Grymes and Sanders caught Ute Loti!ID's rr w1te11 the final g111
. m&amp;Kb of 4Z yards follewlag fine l.Dgan runner for a yard sounded'lkc-'•RJ'~Y.•Iar
tbe third period kk:koff.
loss in the third. Grymes ~ught
coaRick · Grymes, 165-pound . Krebs from behind early m the .. c.dl Mas ~eraed,
caae
wltlt
live
sophomore defensive end, Bud' third stanza to P_teYent a LHS
JDlgtes 1!fL oa a •
'
ud
Sanders, 174-pound senior touchdown.
tackle, Jim Miller, 205-pound Craig David9Qn, Jeff Stewart, twe lltaatila •llle IAcu M,
senior defensive end, Mike . Krebs and Dave Rauch got a GABS - p aUm! bad to
thelJIS~Spllt.t Dave
Wolfe, 166ixJund junior middle majority of l.Dgan's tackles.
81'11111111
guard, · Eric Saunders, 170- Five !:&gt;-yard penalties ·burt . White, .. tile play,
sujWiaed
f!le
Qlle&amp;
pound senior linebacker and the Gallians considerably.
Dave White, l~und. ~nior Three of the GABS infractions with a 25-ya... aeamper,
safety along with Neal were came in the first stanza. LHS glviDg tile Gallla• a first
outstanding on defense, was penalized twice for 20 dowa OD tbe 32.
· "Weq~StaDweekWO!tilc
especially in the third period. yarils.
Neal stopped Craig David!IQII . Other than the penalties, oa that play," said a dejede4
for no gain midway in the first GAHS played errorless ball Mikes after tile pmt, "ud
period. Miller snagged Krebs . until the final quarter. A they 111111 bnte It • ._ I
for a five yard loss in the tblnl, fumbled punt run~ set up caa't believe ft." (Twt
similar playa by GABS
l.Dgan's final touchdown.
GAHS · last the services of helped beat the~ .. Jut
aenior guard Ken Wamsley with year'l tide g&amp;mel11 :05left in tile game. WamsleY . For GABS, Neal 8COFed on
runs of two, two, three and two.
auffered a lmee injury.
After Logan reduced the For l.Dgan, Krebs SCOied once
count 21-20 with 6:35 left in the from six yards out, then paJSed
game, .GAHS was not to be to Oluck Helber lOr nine yards
siJ: pointer. Final IJIS
denied. Pete Neal was ruled for
down oo tbe, UJS eight followiilg tally came on an 1'-yard pass
Brian Nihiser's ensuing kickoff. from QB Greg Smith to eed
QB Snowden, sbowing the Brian Davidson.
Gallipolis journeys k
poise of a veteran signal caller,
directed the Galllans up field 65 Waverly Friday. l.Dgan will
yards, using up the remaining host Wellston.

a

In Stock • Act Now

·-------

I.
I

r

i

.

t
'•

'
,,

'

(

'

to atop Neal 111 tbla play are, left to rigbt, Rick Krebs (45 ),
Brian Davidson (16) and Randy Matheny (32) and an
unidentified tackler. GAHSguard on right is Pat Boster (4ll).
Ken Wamsley (55) is on grOIDid on lower right, and QB Larry
Snowden ( IZ) "signals" a score for the visiting Galllpolltans.
(Photo by Sieve Wllsoo).

"Beat The Higher Prrees"

GAHS Frosh Rallies To Nip Logan

I.

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'l' 't

. .'
, I

.. '
.. .'
j i

g

Friday's Line Scores
Mlolor Lltague Rasults
By Unild Press lnt..-n•lional
Amoriaon LHgue
Mlmesola at Kansas City
(Ppd, rain)
Chicago 002 000 OIG-- 3 B 2
Calllarnla 000 000 121- 4 9 2

Forster, Horlen (61 , Hinton
(7), Kealy Ill, Perzanowskl (91
and Herrmann; Messersmith
119-131 'and Torborg. Kusnyer
(II, Stephenson 191. LPPerzanowskl (0-1) .
Milwaukee

1 SUPER ·sHEF

Boslon
001 210 OOx- 4 7 0
Broberg, Riddelberger (51.
Lindblad (7) and Billings;
Morel (OJ and Fisk . LPBraberg (5-9) .

Old Pre-Tariff Prices
"In addition. any customer who has taken
delive~y of a ~e~ automobile after August lS,
1971 wrll be elrg1ble for Excise Tax Refund in
the e.vent the Excise Tax is repealed by
Congress.

DON WATIS VOIJ(SWAGEN,
-~-- Gollipolis,
lt5UpporRivorlld. (OIIioRI7)
'1llllt
Ololo
""W-(614)

..n~.......

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WONDERFUL- WIDE SELECTION!

In A Brand New Department at Landmark

BY FAMOUS BIG YANK

MOD STYLES
REGULAR STYLES
SIZES FOR ALL
Including

WOMEN

4.10

7.00

PAIR

EverY Sunday

Pomeroy La
Serving Meigs, Gollio and Mason Qll•nlio•
JACK W. CARSEY, Mgr.
PHONE 1192-2181

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1639 Eastern Ave.

Store 0,... MN. T11n1 Sll. 1Mtil6:•
YOUcanW,•t LANDMAIK- IEYEIYONECANI

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Gall1'pol15,'

Ohio

_ ___,_'-----·- - - - - - - - - - - - •

With ]1:45 to go in the first
hall, Amshary passed 50 yards
to Boring for another score.
Haube~(s kick failed, and
Eastern went on top Z'(-0. Am·
sbary .Dipped another touchdown pass, this one to Boring
from 40 yards away with 5:25
left in the half. Hauber split the
uprights to make it 34-0.
Frontier then scored before
the half came to a close .
.
SECOJI!D HALF
After a scoreless third
quarter, Amsbary threw his
third and final toilcbdown pass,
this one covering 25 · yards to
Bob Caldwell, Eastern's 160 lb.
senior end . Hauber again
kicked the extra and .Eastern
pulled to a 41-6 lead.
The Eagles' reserves played
part of the second quarter and
almost all of the second ball.
Next week the Eagles host Ute
Glouster Tomcats at Eastern in
the EBgles homecoming. The
non-league game could prove to
be more of a match for the
powerful Eagles.
E F'
15
13
First Downs
155 151
Yards Rushing
lSI
0
Yards Passing
316 151
Total Yards
6 5
Pass At!.
4 0
PassComp.
3 0
Interceptions By
I
3
Flmbles
I Z
Furilbles l.Dst
115
75
Penalties
2for None
Punting
38.0avg
Score by quarters:
21 13 0 7-41
Eastern
Frontier
0 6 0 0- 6

Falcons Rally, Nip DuvallS-14
Wabama White Falcons of
Coach Dorl Van Meter. Wllj!ll
the final gun bad 80UJIIed the
fans at Bacbtel Stadium lVld
seen one of the most exciting
games in the hlsl«)' of the
school.
Tbe White Falcoos made a
last minute comeback to eke out
a 1~14 win.
'
Tbe second caoto pretty much
the same as the first. Tbe
1lahaDia defeoae, tertt cornh•
up with the big play and kept the
Yellow Jackelll from scoring. It
was in tbe secllld quarter wbell
Wabama's Millard Morris
blocked a Duval punt wblch
gave the White Falcons the baD
111 the Duval 42 yard line but the
W!ate Falcons still couldn't )jt
paydirt.
Wahama saw their second big
treat also CQIIle In the second
quarter when Randy Crawford
quick kicked for 45 yanlir to the
Duval 41 .yard lioe. On lbe
second play Mike White intercepted a Olarles McKinney
pass and returned it to the
Duval 35 yard line. Willi 0:33
left in the balf. Mike Wte )jt
Curtis Roush for a pass to the 211
yard line. .
On the next play, White again
)jt Curtis Rllustffor a 14 yard
gain to the 14 fard line. On
neil play the Falcons lock ran
out as White's pass was intercepted by McKimey. Tbe
half ended with the score G-O.
With 2:00 to go in the third
quarter the White Falcons
managed to get on the board
when Mike White bit Qlester
Roush O¥er the middle with a
short !DIS and be carried the
ball 45 J8rds ewer the goal line
to ccmplete a 50 yard scoring
pass. The extra point attempt
was good when While ooce
again wnrteda pass to Randy
Clark for ,the two point em- version. Tbe third quarter
ended with the While Falcons

tbescoreUwith3:461eft ~ the

(ALL DAY)

Geo••

Coach Roger Kirkhart, in his
first year as a bead coach, still
hasn't tasted the agony of
defeat and it may be awhile
before be does. The Eagles are
running roughshod over
everyone.
Eastern pounded the Frontier
defense for three six-pointers in
low minutes opening the first
quarter. All were scored by
Sanders. The first was with 6:41
remaining in the quarter on a
run of 24 yards. Sanders atPLEASE LET GO - An umdmtified Frmlier Local
tempted the emas too, but was
player grabs an Eastern Eagle during action in Eastern's 41stopped.
6 victory Friday night The win gave Eastero a perfect 3-0
With 5:43 remaining in the
slate.
opening period, Sanders scooted · ·

W!ate fumbled and Steve
Walls recovaed for Duval 111
· their own 31 yard line with 4:21
left in the game.
Tbe
Yellow
Jackets
proceeded to IJIII'Ch down the
field and lbe climal came when
McKinney bit Walls for a 211
yard loochdown to pull Duval to
within two poinlll I to 6. The
extra !Mint run was good tO tie

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Once again, Dick SteWer, 170
lb. juDior, and Alan Holter, *Xi
lb. senior the tsckles, led the
Eagle defe~~~~t. 'lbeY have been
the top defenders.for the Eagles

saw just ab011t everything
bappen.
Fumblel, pass interceptic.ur,
peullies, bonecnrthing tackles
::.. .00 tine touchdolma .and two
exira poinlllarejulta few lithe
exciting tlinga tbat went m in

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pass play. Then came the fourth
perio«! fireworks . Gallla ' s
winning drive covered 65 yards
in less than four plays.
Galllpolis played without the
services li its regular guard
Scott Epling, who is Ill, and
Wtmton Saunders, fullback:, out
with a sore back. Q-aig Fisher
filled in for Saunders in the
backfield.
Next GABS tilt is Oct. 7,
Wellston b001e.
By Quarters :
0688-ZZ
Galllpolis 9th
6608-20
Logan 9th

Wild

GIRLS-BOYS

N•flonal League
San Francisco
300 100 001- 5 10 1
Cincinnati 000 031 20x- 6 10 0
Carrithers, Johnson (5) and
Healy ; Grimsley, McGiolhl in
(1), Sprague (6) , Carroll (71
and Bench. WP-Carroll (10-41.
LP- Johnsan ( 12·8) . HR- Bench
(271h), Foster (12th) .

000 010 GOO- 1 10 0
Ookland 000 000 ooo- o 5 o
Slaton (10-7) and Porter ; 10 Innings
Segul, Locker (6), Grant (8) Mon
000 011 103 ~ 6 15 o
and Duncan. LP--Segui (10-B). St. Lous
000 012 300 4--10 9.2
HR-Auerbach (lstJ.
Renko, McGinn (8) Marshall
(91 and Boccabella; Cartlon.
list ..- )
, Williams (9), Shaw (9). DraS.Himore 002 OSI OIG-- 9 12 1 bowsky (91. Taylor 1101 and
Cleveland 200 000 GOO- 2 8 2 Simmons. WP- Taylor !3·11.
Cuellar (20-91 end Etchebar- LP- Marshall (4-81. HR- Atou
'*'• Hendricks (5I; McDowell, 17th I. Hague. (16th I.
..._...n (5), Balll119er 181 and
F -. LP-McDowelt 112-171. Philadelphia
HRs-Fosse (12th I, Johnson
210 000 201-- 6 11 0
lllthJ, F. Robinson (2Bihl. Chicago 001 000 GOO- 1 5 1
l'llwelt !22ndl.
Lersch (5-14) and McCarver;
Pappas, Gura (71. Bonham (B),
121111 ..mtl
Regan (9) and Rudolph. LPS.lflrilore 200 100 OIG-- 7 10 0 Pappos ( 17·141. HR- Montanez
Cleve~ "' 11110 1100 GOO- 0 6 2 (17th), Anderson (lsi) .
D I r 120-11 an!l Etchebar'*'; Paul, Lamb ·111. Farmer Los Angeles
(6), Hennl.. n (II and Suarez.
000 100 1110- 2 6 0
LP--,..ul (2-7).
Atlanta
000 000 ooo- o B I
Downing 120-81 and Hailer ;
New York 005 1100 GOO- 5 II 1 tltekro, Upshaw (Bl and Wil·
Dd olt
001 1100 70x- B 13 1 Iiams. LP-Niekro (H- 1~1 . HR
llaiiiM!yre, C I osIer (7). - Davis (10th) .
(I) and Munson ;
CaiiiiWI. $diet man (8) and Pittsburgh
1'1 ....... Wll-Coleman (19-9)
100 001 DIG- 3 6 0
New York 100 000 1110- 2 4 0
LfL-Sftttlemyre ( I.S.12) .
Klson, Miller (8) and Sanguil."
len ; Koosma~ . Frisella (9) and
Wlllllngton.
11000000!10--0 ~2 Grate, Dyer (9o. WP- Kison (6. f

in lbe first period.
With 6:07 left in the second
period, QB Niday hitJohn Groth
with an eigbl1'ard strike to lmot
lbe count at 6-6. Logan regained
lbe lead 1U on a 46-yard pass
just bef~n intermission.
Galllp008 forged ahead for
the first time in the third period
by marcOOig 6li yards in 12
plays. Tbe drive was capped by
a five-yard pass from Niday to
Jolm Myers for tbe touchdown.
That came with 4:24lelt in the
third stanza. Niday then hit
Groth for the extra points on a

BY KEI11I WISECUP
for 46 yards and another score.
Tlie East"MM Eagles rolled to Ams~ry ran lit Ute extras to
Uieir third straight win with a ·make 11 IW.
41-li deci•ion over Frontier
With 2:26 left in the quarter,
LDCal at Eastern Friday nlght. Sanders r~m aeven y.-ds. This
The noo-league tilt upped the
Eagles' Jecord to 3-G in the new
season. Tbe teucbdown scored
bY Frontier was the first points
allowed by the lremendoua
Eastern defense this year. ·
Rick Sanders, 160 lb. sellipr .
lialfback, .00 Randy Boiing,
140 lb. junior halfback, paCed
the offenae for the Eagles.
Sanders scored 11 points on nm
and Borng balanced the of,
fensive punch with 12 points on
pa es from Jim Amsbary, 160
lb. senior quarterback. Am·
sbary also threw a third TD

BY GARY CLARK
MASON - 1be orange and
lilack of Duval Higb Scbool (3-G)
came to Mason to lake m the

"9

I

Eagles Win Third, 41-6 POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO
.Pomeroy, 0.

Be.t Qu~"'·· Of Counet .
FuUy Glipl'WIIII!ee

game.
1
On the enning kickoff
Clester Rousb returned lbe baU
to the Walwnl 35 yard line
where be fldbled and RAn*
s-Is came up witli the ball for
Duval. On lbe nut play
-llcKiniJey 1bmr a 35 yard TD
only to have It nullified by
a cllpph~ peralty.
· Tbla pw lbe Wlile Falcclna
_ new •
u they were g!Vdl
·
uother
: 'lance.
DuVIll

=· ....

FINDS RUNNING ROOM- WaJwma's Rlib l,amboorl (421 ro..t !rim-If liOlne running
room m this play in the White Falcons tbrilling lS-14 victory over visiting Duval Friday night.
The Wahama playeropeningupthebolefor lambertisTom SamseJ (81).

TOP FLITE

managed to make it tO the ZZ
yard line and then Robbie
Lambert threw the quarterback
for a 10 yard loss ooly to have it
wllified also by a piling on
penalty which put the ball on the
IZ yard line li Wahama. Two
plays later Rod Politino went
five yards for a score that put
the Yellow Jackets ahead 14-8
with just 1:49left in the game.
1be extra point was oo good
wben the Duval baU carrier was
stqlped short li the goal by
Mike White and Dmnie Macbir.
The score now stood: Duval 14
Wabama 8.
Duval kicked Iii' to Wahama.
limy Harris returned to the
WabaDIB Z9 yard line. Mike
Wte then tried to lit Curtis
Roush with a pass but was
unauu:easful.
Qnthenextplay,withl:03left
in the game, Mike White moe
again faded back to pass and ID
a delperatim heave Jet oce go
Intended for Randy Clark.
A Duval defensive man
battered it 011t of Clark's arms
and into the waiting anns li
Diester Roush who ran for tbe
touchdown to tie the game. It
11'88 a 71 yard pass play . Tbe
exira point kick by Mike White
with Chester Roush llolcling j111l
made It over the crossbar by
inches to give the White Falcons
a me point lead 1~14.
Terry Smith kicked cd to
Duval and the return was to the
Duval 4Z yard line. A c001plete
pass look the baU into Wahama
territory. Another complete
pass look lbe Yellow Jackets
down to the White Fakon 39
I Continued cin page 221

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,.I

•-TIIeSonlayTin n Szu1nei,SWidlly, Sept. 26,1971

LOGAN - Pe~ Nel!), 181pcutd aenlor tailback, rushed
.... Yards in rT trips, both
ICbool recurds, 8COFed four
toucbdowna and two extra point
~nveralons to pace Gallia
• ,Academy High School's Blue
Dmls to a thrilling 21-20 Southeutern Obio Athletic League
grid trilllljlb over l.Dgan at
HIBtcJp Stadium here Friday
night. NNrly 4,000 fans viewed
the 47th SEOAL sea!IQII opener.
Displaying an awesome
grog~d attack, Coach C. L.
(Johnny) Ecker's defending
SEOAL champions scored twice
in the first period, once in the
aecond and again in the final
st.nza to cbalk up their 15tl1
COIIIeCUtive triumph over a
lbree-year period.
R was also the Galllans' loth
lllralgbt conference win, and
flllrth trillll!ph in a row over the
Olieftains, giving the Galllans a

21- The Snnc!ay Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 26, 1971

22-17 advantage in the long to 112 net yards rushing in 37 yards rushing ill oue &amp;arne
series between the two schools. · plays. The Oliefs completed (previous mart was 1911 set.
BHIDd tolld blockiDg by four of eight aerials for 49 by Paul Evans agamst Pl
tbe GABS forward wall, Blue yards, giving the Mikesmen.Ul P~t in 1•1 pkked up 55
DevU bacb raced for 319 total yards for the game.1JIS .... yards in 1• trips in the first
yards 1u 51 groUDd plays. had 13 first downs, three by peried. He was li.ve lor 18 in
Quu1erba•k Larry Saewdeo, penalties.
the secmul, seven for 43 in tbe
puslug only wbeo be had to,
Rick Krebs, 186-pom~d senior tblnl, aod in tbe final quarter,
bit three for three for zs tailback, top rusher in Ute · Neal carried a falllastlc 15
yards, givlug the visitors 391 SEOAL last year as a junior, · times for 89 yards.
total yards for the night. Tbe was limited to 86 yards in 29
By eon trolling the ball during
BIDe DevOs rolled up 2% first carries by the GAHS defense. the first and fmal periods,
downs, tt by rushing, ooe by Ken Culbertson; 201-pbund GAifS managed 62 plays from
~N~UiDg 81111 one by a Logan jmior fullback, second top loop scrimmage. l.Dgan had it 45
peoalty.
rusher in 1970, carried only four plays. In the second and third
Meanwhile, Coach Dick times for 18 yards.
quarters,
Logan
outMikes' Big Purple Machine,
Neal, In setting scbuol possessioned GAHS, 33-23.
obviously fired-up for the records for moot carriell ID
John Davis, 161-poWld senior
French City eleven, put 20 big ooe game (be bettered bls wingback, enjoyed bis best
points on the board. The ,Oliefs on. Zt effort aptn.. LopD ilight of the season with 64 yards
bounced back · with two six- lut yar by eflldl Mil . . t in sis: trips. Kev Sleets, I~
pointers in the second period,
and added another ill the fmal
canto.
l.Dgan, however, was limited

pound j..Uor fullback added 42
yards in seven trips. John
Walter, Who filled in for Neal
fow tirpes on offense, added 23
yards and ·Qil Snowden finished
with nine yards in four trips.
Dave White, split end, carried
only once, for 25 yards, and
that, according to Coach Mikes,
was the game's most decisive
play.
On. the receiving end, Davis
caught two Snowden passes for
18 yards. liheets caught one for
10 yards.
Defensively, C.ud: Wood,
%18-powld sealor ~·plain
was at hill peak against tbe
Chieftaluo. He ~ Rict
KreiJo oa the GABS four oa
..... dna .. llle lldnl

GAHS Grid Statistics
INDIVIDUAL NET
Davidson, 18-yard pass from
YARDS RUSHING
Smith, 6:35, fourth, (run fall).
OFFICIALS - Dick Reese,
IG.IIipolis)
PLAYER-Pos. TCB YG AVG Steve Brudzinski, Henry Smith
Dave While, RE
1 25 25.0 and AI Deuschle. (Chapter
John Davis. RH
6 6.4 10.6 unknown I.
Kev Sheets, FB
7 42 6 .0
TEAM STATISTICS
John Walter. LH
4 23 5.7 SCORE BY QUARTERS
Pete Nfllll, LH
37 206 5.5 Gallirf/ilis
14 8 0 6--28
Larry ~den, Q8 4 9 2.2 Logan
. . o 14 0 6--20
TOTALS
59 369 6.2 FIRST DOWNS
· II.Oaanl ·
Gallipolis
6 5 4 7-22
PlayM'--Pos.
TCB YG Avg Logan
2 7 3 1~13
Chuck Hellier, RH 1 5 5.0 YARDS GAINED RUSHING
K C I.._.___ FB 4 18 4 5 Gallipolis
124 70 60 127-381
. u """'""''
. 29 86 2·9 Logan
7 58 51 IG--126
Rick Krebs, LH
· YARD$ LOST RUSHING
1 2 2·0 Gallipolis
Greg Smith, QB
2 0 10 G--12
John Carby, HB
1 1 1.0 Logan
o o 7 7_ 14
1 O O.O NET YARDS RUSHING
C. Davidson, HB
TOTALS
37 112 3.0
INDIVIDUAL PASSING
Gallipolis
122 70 50 127-369
(G.IIipolis)
Logan
7 58 4.4 3--112
PLAYER
C-A 1 YG TD PASSES ATTEMPTED
Snowden
3-3 0 · 28 0 Gallipolis
2 0 1 G--3
3 1
TOTALS (loganf O 28. O ~':ssnES COMPLE~E D 3--8
PLAYER
C-A 1 YG TD Gallipolis
2 0 1 G--3
Logan
0 3 0 1~
Smith
3 6 0 ,.
Krebs
1:2 0
~ PASSES INTERCEPTED
TOTALS
~ o 49 2 Gallipolis
o o 0 (}-0
BIG NIGHT FOR PETE - QaWpolls' Pete Neal, barely
INDIVIDUAL RECEPTIONS ~c::~s GAINED ~A~S~NG(}-0
(G.IIipolisl
visible (No.ll,darkjersey)atlower left, plows over goallioe
PLAYER
C-A YG TD Gallipolis
18 0 10 G--28
for one li his four touchdowns and four extra points against
Davis
2-2 18 o Logan
o 31 0 18--49
Sheets
'1 l IO O TOTAL YARDS (Rush-Pass(
l.Dgan Friday night. GAHS wm, 21-20 to remain unbeaten in
TOTALS
3-l 21 o Gallipolis 140 70 60 127-397
three starts this fall, and 15 over a three year period. Failing
(Logan I
· Logan
7 89 44 21-161
PLAYER
C-A YG TD RETURN YARDAGE
Helber
2-S 24 1 Gallipolis
15 32 0 G-- 47
B. Davidson
1-1 IB 1 Logan
41 17 30 17-105
Shaw
1 2 7 o PLAY FROM SCRIMMAGE
TOTALS
" 49 2 Gallipolis
18 11 12 21'-62
PASS INTERCEPTIONS
Logan
6 19 14 6--45
RUNBACKS
FUMBLES
0 ~ ~ l-l
IG.IIipolisl
Gallipolis
LOGAN - Gallipolis' fresh- Robinson on ·a fourth and· 10
1
PLAYER
PT YG TD ~~:.~LES LDST
G--l men came friiD behind three situatim with 28 secmds left in
~
0 0 0
TQTALS
o o o rall~ls,. • . ~ 0 0 1-1 timestobandbostl.Dgana2Z-20 the game tied the score at 2tklll.
J
IL091nl
.
P~N&amp;LTIES
o· 0 G--l ' ielback al"HIIltop Stsdium Niday, on an option play,
slammed into the ermooe for
:!YER
P~ y~ T~ Gallipolis (51 45 o 15 15-75 Saturday morning.
TOTALS
Logan
(21
15
0
0
5-20
It
was
lbe
third
Gallipolis
the 1riming two points.
0 0 0
LINEUPS
f
tball
·
,_
Logan
Logan had taken a 20-14 lead
KICKOFF RETURNS
IG II' r15 )
00
vtc~. 1 over a
·
IG.llipolis I
a. opo
team
m· that
da
On with 1:27left in the game on a
PLAYER
KO fG TD
E.NDS-. Eroc Saunders, Dave
many ys.
E. Saunders
1 16 0 Whole, Rock ~rymes, Dean Thursday, the Gallipolis Junior quarterback sneak from the
Wamsley
1 15 o Rees, Leon Smith.
High tnpped the LitUe Chiefs 2(). four.
Waller
1 16 0 TACKLES - Chuck Wood, 6. On Friday, GABS outlasted
Logan led 6-0 following a
Neal
1 0 0 (cc), Jim Miller, Jo.hn
quarterback sneak with 5:52left
TOTALS
4 47
0 Bagshaw, Mall Epling, Dave the Chieftain varsity , 28-20.
(logan)
Kerns.
It was the opening game for
Major Leogue Leaders
PLAYER
KO YG TD
GUARDS - Ken Wamsley, both teams Salurda
Pat Boster, Mike Wolfe.
Y•
By United Press-lnternalional
~~ILS
~ ;:
CENTERS - Bud Sanders.
A 56-yard pass from QB Jim
Leoding Batters
Nalional League
PUNT RETURNS
Brett Epling, Fred Ford.
Niday to split end Wayne
BACKS - LarrJ. Snowden.
G. AB R. H. Pet.
IG.IIipolisl
Pete Neal (eel; ohn Davis,
Torre. St.L. 157 618 94 225 .364
PLAYER
• PR YG TD Kev Sheets, John Walter. Chuck
Bckrl . Chi 131 530 80 181 .342
~ALS
~ ~ ~ Perrouci Mike Berridge. Chris 51 LP-Koosman (6-liJ . HR~ Clmnt. Pii 130 517 81 177.342
Fisher.
Stargell (~7th) Jorgenson (5th) . Garr, All
151 626 1(10 212 .339
(logan I
Log•nl
(
Aaron,
All
136 483 93 159 .329
PLAYER
PR YG TD
1st game 21 innings
ENDS
Brian
Davidson,
Snglin,
Pit
136 525 59 168 .320·
Krebs
I 6 0 George Shaw, Jess Stewart.
Houston 000 100 000 000 000 Jones, NY 131 486 61 153 .317
TOTALS
I 6 0
000 001- 2 11 I Dvs, La
TACKLES - Mike Moizer,
153 620 BA 196 .316
RECOVERED
ENEMY Mike
San Diego 010 000 000 000 000 Brck. St.L 152 619 123 195 .315
Page,
Dave
Rauch.
·
FUMBLES - GAHS - Mike
000 GOO- 1 12 1 Alou, St.L
GUARDS - Roger Monk,
H6 600 81 188 .313
WGife; Logan - Jeff Poling .
Forsch. Ray (14), Culver Staub, Mont 157 578 92 181 .313
Dan
Sigler,
John
Bachus,
Chris
PUNTS-GAHS: Snowden, 2(17), Grief (19) , Guinn (21) and
American League
62 131.01; Logan: Moizer, 2-78 Miller, Greg Culbertson.
Edwards, Howard (17). Kirby,
CENTERS
Keith
Porter,
G. AB. R. H. Pet.
(39.01.
Poling, Tim Perry, Brian Kelley (16), Severinsen (17), Olva, Min
126 &lt;187 73 164 .317
SCORING-GAHS - Neal, 2 Jeff
Ross (19) and Barton . WP- Mrcr, Ny
Nihiser,
Bill
Kazee.
142
513 92 169 .329
- yard run. 7:55 first, (pass
Grief
11·11.
LPRoss
\1-31.
HR
BACKS
Greg
Smith,
Rick
RtmndBal
136
&lt;169
79 loiS .316
fall); Neal, 2-yard run, 1:01 Krebs. Chuck Helber, Ken - Chiles (2nd).
Tvr, Min
150 628 89 191 .304
first, I Neal, runl ; Neal. 3-yard Culbertson, Kev Berry, Craia
Otis, KC
145 547 80 165 .302
run, 5:33, second, INeal runl ; Davidson, Randy Matheny, (2nd game)
Carew.
Min
141 553 86 166 .JOO
Neal. 2-yard run. 9:31 fourth. John Smart, John Corby, Roger Houston 010 030 GOO- 4 10 2
May,Chi
137 &lt;189 63 145 . 2'11
(run fall) . L911an-Krebs, 6San Diego 020 011 001- 5 13 1 Ulndr, Clev 138 &lt;185 52 140 .289
yard run, 9: 58, second I B. Shaw.
Spinks, Rar 161, Grief (81. Smith, Bos 154 60'2 82 172 .286
Davidson. pass from Smith) ;
Gladding
(9 and Howard; White, NY 142 ~7 79 145 .286
Helber,9-yardpass from Krebs. at NEXTGAHSGAME-Oct.l,
Roberts
(
1~· 16) and Kendall. Jhnsn Bal
Waverly.
139 500 65 143 .286
0: 54, second, I pass fa ill ; B.
LP- Giadding (~-5).
Atou. Ny
1?9 461 51 132 .286

·
· uteu11jf 35 lll!aJIIds on
period, key play as far as tile WolfeandWoodgotthe LJfS ace Sl~ Jlllll .
Galllans were COII&lt;enled. It for a minus one in the third and the clock. GAIL'! bad tbe baU on ·
stopped a sastalaed LePa Grymes and Sanders caught Ute Loti!ID's rr w1te11 the final g111
. m&amp;Kb of 4Z yards follewlag fine l.Dgan runner for a yard sounded'lkc-'•RJ'~Y.•Iar
tbe third period kk:koff.
loss in the third. Grymes ~ught
coaRick · Grymes, 165-pound . Krebs from behind early m the .. c.dl Mas ~eraed,
caae
wltlt
live
sophomore defensive end, Bud' third stanza to P_teYent a LHS
JDlgtes 1!fL oa a •
'
ud
Sanders, 174-pound senior touchdown.
tackle, Jim Miller, 205-pound Craig David9Qn, Jeff Stewart, twe lltaatila •llle IAcu M,
senior defensive end, Mike . Krebs and Dave Rauch got a GABS - p aUm! bad to
thelJIS~Spllt.t Dave
Wolfe, 166ixJund junior middle majority of l.Dgan's tackles.
81'11111111
guard, · Eric Saunders, 170- Five !:&gt;-yard penalties ·burt . White, .. tile play,
sujWiaed
f!le
Qlle&amp;
pound senior linebacker and the Gallians considerably.
Dave White, l~und. ~nior Three of the GABS infractions with a 25-ya... aeamper,
safety along with Neal were came in the first stanza. LHS glviDg tile Gallla• a first
outstanding on defense, was penalized twice for 20 dowa OD tbe 32.
· "Weq~StaDweekWO!tilc
especially in the third period. yarils.
Neal stopped Craig David!IQII . Other than the penalties, oa that play," said a dejede4
for no gain midway in the first GAHS played errorless ball Mikes after tile pmt, "ud
period. Miller snagged Krebs . until the final quarter. A they 111111 bnte It • ._ I
for a five yard loss in the tblnl, fumbled punt run~ set up caa't believe ft." (Twt
similar playa by GABS
l.Dgan's final touchdown.
GAHS · last the services of helped beat the~ .. Jut
aenior guard Ken Wamsley with year'l tide g&amp;mel11 :05left in tile game. WamsleY . For GABS, Neal 8COFed on
runs of two, two, three and two.
auffered a lmee injury.
After Logan reduced the For l.Dgan, Krebs SCOied once
count 21-20 with 6:35 left in the from six yards out, then paJSed
game, .GAHS was not to be to Oluck Helber lOr nine yards
siJ: pointer. Final IJIS
denied. Pete Neal was ruled for
down oo tbe, UJS eight followiilg tally came on an 1'-yard pass
Brian Nihiser's ensuing kickoff. from QB Greg Smith to eed
QB Snowden, sbowing the Brian Davidson.
Gallipolis journeys k
poise of a veteran signal caller,
directed the Galllans up field 65 Waverly Friday. l.Dgan will
yards, using up the remaining host Wellston.

a

In Stock • Act Now

·-------

I.
I

r

i

.

t
'•

'
,,

'

(

'

to atop Neal 111 tbla play are, left to rigbt, Rick Krebs (45 ),
Brian Davidson (16) and Randy Matheny (32) and an
unidentified tackler. GAHSguard on right is Pat Boster (4ll).
Ken Wamsley (55) is on grOIDid on lower right, and QB Larry
Snowden ( IZ) "signals" a score for the visiting Galllpolltans.
(Photo by Sieve Wllsoo).

"Beat The Higher Prrees"

GAHS Frosh Rallies To Nip Logan

I.

.; I
'l' 't

. .'
, I

.. '
.. .'
j i

g

Friday's Line Scores
Mlolor Lltague Rasults
By Unild Press lnt..-n•lional
Amoriaon LHgue
Mlmesola at Kansas City
(Ppd, rain)
Chicago 002 000 OIG-- 3 B 2
Calllarnla 000 000 121- 4 9 2

Forster, Horlen (61 , Hinton
(7), Kealy Ill, Perzanowskl (91
and Herrmann; Messersmith
119-131 'and Torborg. Kusnyer
(II, Stephenson 191. LPPerzanowskl (0-1) .
Milwaukee

1 SUPER ·sHEF

Boslon
001 210 OOx- 4 7 0
Broberg, Riddelberger (51.
Lindblad (7) and Billings;
Morel (OJ and Fisk . LPBraberg (5-9) .

Old Pre-Tariff Prices
"In addition. any customer who has taken
delive~y of a ~e~ automobile after August lS,
1971 wrll be elrg1ble for Excise Tax Refund in
the e.vent the Excise Tax is repealed by
Congress.

DON WATIS VOIJ(SWAGEN,
-~-- Gollipolis,
lt5UpporRivorlld. (OIIioRI7)
'1llllt
Ololo
""W-(614)

..n~.......

.......

WONDERFUL- WIDE SELECTION!

In A Brand New Department at Landmark

BY FAMOUS BIG YANK

MOD STYLES
REGULAR STYLES
SIZES FOR ALL
Including

WOMEN

4.10

7.00

PAIR

EverY Sunday

Pomeroy La
Serving Meigs, Gollio and Mason Qll•nlio•
JACK W. CARSEY, Mgr.
PHONE 1192-2181

.
1639 Eastern Ave.

Store 0,... MN. T11n1 Sll. 1Mtil6:•
YOUcanW,•t LANDMAIK- IEYEIYONECANI

,

Gall1'pol15,'

Ohio

_ ___,_'-----·- - - - - - - - - - - - •

With ]1:45 to go in the first
hall, Amshary passed 50 yards
to Boring for another score.
Haube~(s kick failed, and
Eastern went on top Z'(-0. Am·
sbary .Dipped another touchdown pass, this one to Boring
from 40 yards away with 5:25
left in the half. Hauber split the
uprights to make it 34-0.
Frontier then scored before
the half came to a close .
.
SECOJI!D HALF
After a scoreless third
quarter, Amsbary threw his
third and final toilcbdown pass,
this one covering 25 · yards to
Bob Caldwell, Eastern's 160 lb.
senior end . Hauber again
kicked the extra and .Eastern
pulled to a 41-6 lead.
The Eagles' reserves played
part of the second quarter and
almost all of the second ball.
Next week the Eagles host Ute
Glouster Tomcats at Eastern in
the EBgles homecoming. The
non-league game could prove to
be more of a match for the
powerful Eagles.
E F'
15
13
First Downs
155 151
Yards Rushing
lSI
0
Yards Passing
316 151
Total Yards
6 5
Pass At!.
4 0
PassComp.
3 0
Interceptions By
I
3
Flmbles
I Z
Furilbles l.Dst
115
75
Penalties
2for None
Punting
38.0avg
Score by quarters:
21 13 0 7-41
Eastern
Frontier
0 6 0 0- 6

Falcons Rally, Nip DuvallS-14
Wabama White Falcons of
Coach Dorl Van Meter. Wllj!ll
the final gun bad 80UJIIed the
fans at Bacbtel Stadium lVld
seen one of the most exciting
games in the hlsl«)' of the
school.
Tbe White Falcoos made a
last minute comeback to eke out
a 1~14 win.
'
Tbe second caoto pretty much
the same as the first. Tbe
1lahaDia defeoae, tertt cornh•
up with the big play and kept the
Yellow Jackelll from scoring. It
was in tbe secllld quarter wbell
Wabama's Millard Morris
blocked a Duval punt wblch
gave the White Falcons the baD
111 the Duval 42 yard line but the
W!ate Falcons still couldn't )jt
paydirt.
Wahama saw their second big
treat also CQIIle In the second
quarter when Randy Crawford
quick kicked for 45 yanlir to the
Duval 41 .yard lioe. On lbe
second play Mike White intercepted a Olarles McKinney
pass and returned it to the
Duval 35 yard line. Willi 0:33
left in the balf. Mike Wte )jt
Curtis Roush for a pass to the 211
yard line. .
On the next play, White again
)jt Curtis Rllustffor a 14 yard
gain to the 14 fard line. On
neil play the Falcons lock ran
out as White's pass was intercepted by McKimey. Tbe
half ended with the score G-O.
With 2:00 to go in the third
quarter the White Falcons
managed to get on the board
when Mike White bit Qlester
Roush O¥er the middle with a
short !DIS and be carried the
ball 45 J8rds ewer the goal line
to ccmplete a 50 yard scoring
pass. The extra point attempt
was good when While ooce
again wnrteda pass to Randy
Clark for ,the two point em- version. Tbe third quarter
ended with the While Falcons

tbescoreUwith3:461eft ~ the

(ALL DAY)

Geo••

Coach Roger Kirkhart, in his
first year as a bead coach, still
hasn't tasted the agony of
defeat and it may be awhile
before be does. The Eagles are
running roughshod over
everyone.
Eastern pounded the Frontier
defense for three six-pointers in
low minutes opening the first
quarter. All were scored by
Sanders. The first was with 6:41
remaining in the quarter on a
run of 24 yards. Sanders atPLEASE LET GO - An umdmtified Frmlier Local
tempted the emas too, but was
player grabs an Eastern Eagle during action in Eastern's 41stopped.
6 victory Friday night The win gave Eastero a perfect 3-0
With 5:43 remaining in the
slate.
opening period, Sanders scooted · ·

W!ate fumbled and Steve
Walls recovaed for Duval 111
· their own 31 yard line with 4:21
left in the game.
Tbe
Yellow
Jackets
proceeded to IJIII'Ch down the
field and lbe climal came when
McKinney bit Walls for a 211
yard loochdown to pull Duval to
within two poinlll I to 6. The
extra !Mint run was good tO tie

AT UM lMDMARI PRICES

onlY

this year.

the finai1JU111er.

$
10

Once again, Dick SteWer, 170
lb. juDior, and Alan Holter, *Xi
lb. senior the tsckles, led the
Eagle defe~~~~t. 'lbeY have been
the top defenders.for the Eagles

saw just ab011t everything
bappen.
Fumblel, pass interceptic.ur,
peullies, bonecnrthing tackles
::.. .00 tine touchdolma .and two
exira poinlllarejulta few lithe
exciting tlinga tbat went m in

Everybody I$ talking about lhls new
slacks departmenl at Landmark ... and
our big selection. In fact, the largest
selection In the area. And another big ·
shipment lust arrived. Sizes for alii
Styles for alii Colors far all ... plains,
slrlpes, combinations, patch pockels,
elc. COMEI
SEE!

GIRLS - TEENS

pass.

_- leeding &amp;-e.
- 1be exci~ fourth quarter

Overall Pants or
Jeans For Alii

YOUNG MEN

lime Rick Haubes-, 110 lb. senior
·guard, kicked the extra point to
make it 11-0 Ea;;lern at the end
of the first quarter.
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E. Main St
992-2094
Is Proud To Announce Their • • •

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Thru OCT. 2

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of New V.W.'s at the

pass play. Then came the fourth
perio«! fireworks . Gallla ' s
winning drive covered 65 yards
in less than four plays.
Galllpolis played without the
services li its regular guard
Scott Epling, who is Ill, and
Wtmton Saunders, fullback:, out
with a sore back. Q-aig Fisher
filled in for Saunders in the
backfield.
Next GABS tilt is Oct. 7,
Wellston b001e.
By Quarters :
0688-ZZ
Galllpolis 9th
6608-20
Logan 9th

Wild

GIRLS-BOYS

N•flonal League
San Francisco
300 100 001- 5 10 1
Cincinnati 000 031 20x- 6 10 0
Carrithers, Johnson (5) and
Healy ; Grimsley, McGiolhl in
(1), Sprague (6) , Carroll (71
and Bench. WP-Carroll (10-41.
LP- Johnsan ( 12·8) . HR- Bench
(271h), Foster (12th) .

000 010 GOO- 1 10 0
Ookland 000 000 ooo- o 5 o
Slaton (10-7) and Porter ; 10 Innings
Segul, Locker (6), Grant (8) Mon
000 011 103 ~ 6 15 o
and Duncan. LP--Segui (10-B). St. Lous
000 012 300 4--10 9.2
HR-Auerbach (lstJ.
Renko, McGinn (8) Marshall
(91 and Boccabella; Cartlon.
list ..- )
, Williams (9), Shaw (9). DraS.Himore 002 OSI OIG-- 9 12 1 bowsky (91. Taylor 1101 and
Cleveland 200 000 GOO- 2 8 2 Simmons. WP- Taylor !3·11.
Cuellar (20-91 end Etchebar- LP- Marshall (4-81. HR- Atou
'*'• Hendricks (5I; McDowell, 17th I. Hague. (16th I.
..._...n (5), Balll119er 181 and
F -. LP-McDowelt 112-171. Philadelphia
HRs-Fosse (12th I, Johnson
210 000 201-- 6 11 0
lllthJ, F. Robinson (2Bihl. Chicago 001 000 GOO- 1 5 1
l'llwelt !22ndl.
Lersch (5-14) and McCarver;
Pappas, Gura (71. Bonham (B),
121111 ..mtl
Regan (9) and Rudolph. LPS.lflrilore 200 100 OIG-- 7 10 0 Pappos ( 17·141. HR- Montanez
Cleve~ "' 11110 1100 GOO- 0 6 2 (17th), Anderson (lsi) .
D I r 120-11 an!l Etchebar'*'; Paul, Lamb ·111. Farmer Los Angeles
(6), Hennl.. n (II and Suarez.
000 100 1110- 2 6 0
LP--,..ul (2-7).
Atlanta
000 000 ooo- o B I
Downing 120-81 and Hailer ;
New York 005 1100 GOO- 5 II 1 tltekro, Upshaw (Bl and Wil·
Dd olt
001 1100 70x- B 13 1 Iiams. LP-Niekro (H- 1~1 . HR
llaiiiM!yre, C I osIer (7). - Davis (10th) .
(I) and Munson ;
CaiiiiWI. $diet man (8) and Pittsburgh
1'1 ....... Wll-Coleman (19-9)
100 001 DIG- 3 6 0
New York 100 000 1110- 2 4 0
LfL-Sftttlemyre ( I.S.12) .
Klson, Miller (8) and Sanguil."
len ; Koosma~ . Frisella (9) and
Wlllllngton.
11000000!10--0 ~2 Grate, Dyer (9o. WP- Kison (6. f

in lbe first period.
With 6:07 left in the second
period, QB Niday hitJohn Groth
with an eigbl1'ard strike to lmot
lbe count at 6-6. Logan regained
lbe lead 1U on a 46-yard pass
just bef~n intermission.
Galllp008 forged ahead for
the first time in the third period
by marcOOig 6li yards in 12
plays. Tbe drive was capped by
a five-yard pass from Niday to
Jolm Myers for tbe touchdown.
That came with 4:24lelt in the
third stanza. Niday then hit
Groth for the extra points on a

BY KEI11I WISECUP
for 46 yards and another score.
Tlie East"MM Eagles rolled to Ams~ry ran lit Ute extras to
Uieir third straight win with a ·make 11 IW.
41-li deci•ion over Frontier
With 2:26 left in the quarter,
LDCal at Eastern Friday nlght. Sanders r~m aeven y.-ds. This
The noo-league tilt upped the
Eagles' Jecord to 3-G in the new
season. Tbe teucbdown scored
bY Frontier was the first points
allowed by the lremendoua
Eastern defense this year. ·
Rick Sanders, 160 lb. sellipr .
lialfback, .00 Randy Boiing,
140 lb. junior halfback, paCed
the offenae for the Eagles.
Sanders scored 11 points on nm
and Borng balanced the of,
fensive punch with 12 points on
pa es from Jim Amsbary, 160
lb. senior quarterback. Am·
sbary also threw a third TD

BY GARY CLARK
MASON - 1be orange and
lilack of Duval Higb Scbool (3-G)
came to Mason to lake m the

"9

I

Eagles Win Third, 41-6 POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO
.Pomeroy, 0.

Be.t Qu~"'·· Of Counet .
FuUy Glipl'WIIII!ee

game.
1
On the enning kickoff
Clester Rousb returned lbe baU
to the Walwnl 35 yard line
where be fldbled and RAn*
s-Is came up witli the ball for
Duval. On lbe nut play
-llcKiniJey 1bmr a 35 yard TD
only to have It nullified by
a cllpph~ peralty.
· Tbla pw lbe Wlile Falcclna
_ new •
u they were g!Vdl
·
uother
: 'lance.
DuVIll

=· ....

FINDS RUNNING ROOM- WaJwma's Rlib l,amboorl (421 ro..t !rim-If liOlne running
room m this play in the White Falcons tbrilling lS-14 victory over visiting Duval Friday night.
The Wahama playeropeningupthebolefor lambertisTom SamseJ (81).

TOP FLITE

managed to make it tO the ZZ
yard line and then Robbie
Lambert threw the quarterback
for a 10 yard loss ooly to have it
wllified also by a piling on
penalty which put the ball on the
IZ yard line li Wahama. Two
plays later Rod Politino went
five yards for a score that put
the Yellow Jackets ahead 14-8
with just 1:49left in the game.
1be extra point was oo good
wben the Duval baU carrier was
stqlped short li the goal by
Mike White and Dmnie Macbir.
The score now stood: Duval 14
Wabama 8.
Duval kicked Iii' to Wahama.
limy Harris returned to the
WabaDIB Z9 yard line. Mike
Wte then tried to lit Curtis
Roush with a pass but was
unauu:easful.
Qnthenextplay,withl:03left
in the game, Mike White moe
again faded back to pass and ID
a delperatim heave Jet oce go
Intended for Randy Clark.
A Duval defensive man
battered it 011t of Clark's arms
and into the waiting anns li
Diester Roush who ran for tbe
touchdown to tie the game. It
11'88 a 71 yard pass play . Tbe
exira point kick by Mike White
with Chester Roush llolcling j111l
made It over the crossbar by
inches to give the White Falcons
a me point lead 1~14.
Terry Smith kicked cd to
Duval and the return was to the
Duval 4Z yard line. A c001plete
pass look the baU into Wahama
territory. Another complete
pass look lbe Yellow Jackets
down to the White Fakon 39
I Continued cin page 221

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23- The~ ~llnel.s.u.tay, Sept.2i:l,

lii-Tbe IMidaJ1'im5&amp;Dtlnel,Siuday,SepU&amp;, 1!'ll

.

.

.

Tests Show 100 Bushel Per Acre Wheat Yields Are. Possible

.....

BVC.B.~
~
~

POMEROY- 'l1le Bessian Oy.free wbeat planting dale fOr
llelp CGUnty II Ocl 5. V«J little Hessian By damage is evideni
Ill wheatDIIWbecaUilehrmersobeerve the fl7.free planting date

... plant Helllian By reaislaDt straDds.
This :rear live Meigs Coonty f1nners are lield· testing five
wheat . varieties fumisbed by the ·Olio, Oql ~ement
AIIOcllilioo. All five
incblded in tile pre .nt wbe&amp;t recom-

.,

are

j

the NEW in FARMING

•

: :.:oowrieties list. 1bey are ArtiU, lAgan, M11100, Redcoat,

0::.

··

'nlefi~farmers"'. ·•.......
. tbeselmbe!JotsareEdson
· Roush
.· ·•

•'
,_.,......,
~ Paul$ayre, Dale~tz,Eartlleanandlle&amp;!lhenefleld:.
:;:
Scientists fi.Gm the Ollio Agricul1lnl Researdl and
-; DevelctJinentOeilterplintontlbatlumdtedbu.1belper acre yields
·' .&amp;un ObioW1Dier wheatmaylllitbe toofaroff if the 19'11 winter
wbeal variety lestresullaa,e a tzue indiratioo of potential yields.

••

low test weight and saseeplibility to Hessian fly and to leaf rust.
Noctb Caroiina wheat breeders have eliminated smre of theSe
p-oblemsfua new variety called lllueboy U,howeverthisline will
not be commerclally available for seileral years.
Included in the 1971 winlef wbeat tests were a balf dozen
. experimelital lines develqled in ()bio. Lafever describes the test
lines
moderately sbort and moderately early matwilig. If
these cootinue to s11qw np well, the best performing line will
p-obably be selected Ill' future release.
Wevertepm"ts tbatOIIlltwbeatin lbe Buckeye Stale entered
.lbe winter in good coaditioo even though some seeding was
delayedby\vetweatber.OIISiderablebeavydamage occurred in
some areas dJ!rjng fela'uary and Mardi and Lafever says much
.. "'- beat · ;......u -· m· av~•e cooditioo oc below at the
,.....,w
a-..,..,e---..
beginning of lbe spr~ng· growlb.

as

ural
.

othersWld!!r~coaditioas.1'lllis,l....,_efa;a p~at bestllllllel-~timsofligbfertilitywllereloiiCiJWisa~.
N

cur;~te ~-

·

}

:·,, ..

Dr. H. N. Wever, agrGil4miSt din!eliag wbeat llreeding
researdl at lbe Obio Agrimlliual R
th aad Developnent
Center, repocts lhat the tGp yields were barves!All! at the Center's
Noclb Oeillrill Brancb, me of Dine sites wberevariety test.nrere
conducted iD 1971.

·':

;~

By Uliled P-. bteraaUIIIBI
WASHINGTON -REP.W. R.I'OAGE,D-Tex., chairman of'
lbe House Agriculture ()wnmitlee, said Wedilesday he is drawing
up a bill fll open the way foc more loans to rural areas for

.•
deveJor,menL
•.
~
::;:
Arllm(al'lftuMevelllped variety)aadiAgan(develqled
As!milarbillisbeingbeanliliSenalecommittee.
:•; by OARDC agronomisls) CCIItinued fll outproduce older
'l1le bill Poage is drafliag would ezpand Fanners Home
' d
·
lies
8
al
--'~tal
Obi
Ad
· ·
tioo autbori·ty to let it make more loans, primarily
1
" recomne&gt;- vane . owever, sever ....,....~.
ommt&lt;tra
."; lines are clGie belind in the Jield rare.
insured loans, fCit industrial and other development of rural
,..
In average yields fCit the Dine sites, Lopn raDted second with areas.
11.7 bushels per acre and Arthur l'l!llked JID1b aU7.3 bushels per
'!be bill would "P'Ind the powb'S of the Soil Cooservatioo
•i
acre. Average test weight of Arlbur was 61.2 pounds per bushel, Service to lelilsbare in paying fw m1micipal am imuslrial water
"""lid -• •·
lal "• ~-'s ,_. -'""
waneqoenmen
rw&lt; • ....,.... """ • .._twas an
suppliesandprojeclsfcrsoilandwaterpdlutioocoolrol.
•JetODdwuY
evenlllpmqlsperblisbel,goodfll'nintbranki•ofallvarieties
'l1le bill would also ueale a farm land development cor•' tested
poratim to
· laD!. tired .__ f
·
... _ ed
of
.
.
. , acqwre
re
....... armmg on Y.., ges
~
Highest average yields b the Sill "'"' ,ear in a ""' were cities and tum it into parks, wildlife refuges and reereation areas.
1. barvested frun Blueboy, a N.rtb c.oJiDa wriety. Blueboy
. PULLMAN, WASH. -'l'IIREENocthwestern experimental
'•· ,.._._anaverage,~peracre
__.,..,...
"""""cl617 1Ju.1bel.
but. ranked a t sta tioos have developed a oowvariely of winlef barley that will
lbe bottom iD test weigbt (57.1 (ll+uob per l1nlrl average Ill' U.. , jroduce yieldsabootlOpct. bjgbertban present strains.
.,.. line Illes).
.
Dr.JamesNielson,direcbir 1i Wasbingtoo State University's
...
............
Llfeversays......,...,isliot""'IJIII!PI¥fediDObiobeeauseof ~lure Re9eareh Cenler, .said the new variety, called
Kamu!\;,wouldreplacetheHgd-strain, "particularlyiDareas
wberewinlerbardinessisrequiredfocmazimumprocmctioo."
LH
!/:1_~ !2
'111e new six-1'011' winter barley strain was developed by
:
UniversityeqoerimentstatioosinWasbingtm,IdaboandOregoo.
\
WASHINGTON -MEAT RAVIOLI need have only 10 pet.
'\
meat, ac"«dillg 1D Agriculture Department standard&lt;;,
Butlasaguawithmeatsaucemustbecomprisedofatleastl2
•
pel meat, and atleastooe.fourth of a meat pie must be meat.

.r

J

~

Ij •'

if

SUP.·,vu S' ,. 1....,1.,

.

l.

I

I

I,

'

!

I.
I

Deer Bolts Into Auto

I

f

PT. PLEASANT - Two
ll:aflic mishaps have been investigated by tbe Sheriff
Department resulting in a deer
killed and a parked vebicle

&gt;

l

struck.

Marian Room, !dart, told
offij:ersbe was driving on Route
33 near Letart at 10:30 p.m.,
I

New

f
I'

•

i....

''I ,
. ,.
;'
I,

:~

'
' J

,I

~

·: I
'I

:

I

..
• i

'·

!

'
• I

M.F. 135 TRACI'OR SALE!
Below Dealer Cost Until Oct. 1st!

!

; I

.

i.

Falcons

Lots of Used T13CIIrs and Equipment
of All Descriptions!

Your Massey fettusGn Delln

GAWPOLIS
TRACTOR

MF
~.~

. -., • F.

." . - .

Upper Route 7 Phone 446-1044

i::.. .-----------------------------------,
)o
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i.,,.
;.
I'

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2
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i

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(Continued from page 21 )
when lbe clock ran out.
Statistic wise CUrtis Roush
was the Jeading ground gai!Er
by picking up ~ yards in eight
carries. Cbet Roush bad 18
yards u{ seven carries and
Robije I amber! bad 36 yards iD
six carries. Passing wise Mike
While threw eight for 14 and
QletRousb ftlltOfll' 2. Olester
Roush caught three pa
for .
m yarm. Randy Clark three
foc 22 yards and Curtis Roush
caught two' pa
fer 31 yards.
'!be whole Wahama defense is
to be L1llllllleDded once again fCit
its superb performance. Mike
White, Barry Harris, Rob
Lambert, Audie McFarland,
Curlis Roush and Chester
Rousb were just a few wm did
oulstanding jobs. Mike While
had 15 individual tackles wDie
Barry Harris • 01rtis Roush and
Audie McFarland bad 10, 9 and
9 respectively.
Friday, the While Falcoos
b:avel to Racine where they will
Pltlbeir unbeaten rec&lt;ll'd of~
I oo lbe line wben they lake oo
lbe Southern Tonladoes.
STATISrla!
Department
WHS lllmll
Total YIE
llli5 Zi8
Rushing Y&lt;E.
107 151
First Down:l
6 13
Inlerceptions
2 2

...•.

I
i

Is now the'time'to
build or improve?
A new home, modern buildintlS. increased
efficiency for bandling livestock:, land improvements
-investments like these are too imporlant to
postpone. A Federal Land Bank loan, made for
·extra years and at reasonable rosl, makes such
things possible for many who might otherwise be
forced to deiay them.

Let wi analyze your plans for housing or expansion
and come up with a practical way to meet your
pia. We usually can find ways to get you started
toward greater income·and more eomforlable
livinl without unnecessary waitinc.
Oyde

B. Walker.

Manager
'

__

1f Locust St.

CO.IIipolis. Ohio

..._

PT. PLEASANT _ We
mentioned in Ibis coltmln
earlierthatwehadvisitedtbe
o. M, Scott Researcb Oeilter at
Marysville, Ohio, north of
Colmnbus. The ~n for this
tour was part of the program at
lbe national
of the Soil
~·
Conservation Society of wbich
we are members.
We were very much impressed with the work that Scott

~eeting

Penalties

of

.

.
grass 00 a four.iocb tbidl 'lbisf!mgicideis put on early in reported that a pond wblcb be
concrete )Nil!.
the spring 1111d late in the fall. had buill some time ago and at

I wrolefll&amp;nasiDIDDe sn
'"-'..r bad -.. .._ ............, on
"""-~
this plot beliae iepali!c it.
They repated u..t t11eJ bad
started this turf poftlg oo the
concrete in 1!&amp;5. 1be Winds&amp;
Kenludlf llluqjt
sad was
started
IIICl was
cut in arglllir:
...,
to a .WO&gt;I
,. """""
"-·-"'-,_._
--~
the
wwwo ·O
UUL
. . , . was
-~
_
_._,_,
..........
amomt of ...,...._._,..
Cll the Cllllimte. No wMj!iiYl
soil was added Sioae. that time

w....

......,...

.L ~..., ...__

llesl!jddes have been used in
isolated cases to take care of a
few undesirable weeds. A
weekly mowing scbedule is
mam·1ained at PL
.,. inches in
beigbt and the area is inigated
as needed to prevent it from
ckying out.
When we saw this sod on
.....,
A • we walked on it and
__could
....,
we
not teD it from any
other sad on their groiUids.
Aller explain~ fll us their

McARTIIUR _ A free arr

show,foUowedbyaskydiving
cuntestareamong the activities
slated for the dedication of the
new Vinton County Airport
administration building Sun·

weather

ceremony will take place at I
p.m., followed by a spectacular
GALLIPOLIS .
Tem-d free a1r
· s how and sky di vmg
.
perature. precipl 1ation an c••ntest. Between events 1.1 IS
.
weather conditions for each 24hour period as recorded by Pete hoped that visitors will find
McCormick, Fairfield weather time to visit the antique and
observer.
Day
High Low Prec. hume-builtaircraftdisplay area

~~ · ~ :~ :~is~:~lo~c~ui::g."ew

the thiree-lourtbs incbes of
mgaoic soil had been increased
to a tliidness of about Jl'z incbes by the addition of organic
matier composed of the roots
~-s
.....eu
sadplllllgrowlh.
We are wondering if they will
WASHINGlON-~nls ligweoulbowtogrowbairona
are being 8Cill!pted by Olug. lilliard ball, and on bald heads.
Clarence E. Miller for· EVERETT SULLIVAN,
nomination to the Air Fan:r whose farm is on Tribble Road,
Academy, the Nav.ll Arndemy,

the time was leaty bad been
sealed by the use of volclay ·
lela ·
fin cia

"

:~~~cb~partie'cl~

of silt and sand, somewhat
int
that
111
e same manner
cemen
seals the spaces iD between
S8Jidspreadand
was
over
.......,
at the ....._ 0 f 00e
.....,.,d area
"'""
po111 per square foot--"'
IWU was
lowed do lind packed with a
P
wn bas
wheel tractor. Volclay
a
capability of swe1llng fll eight
timesitsoriginalsizewben·ltis
completely saturated with
water.
1
CARL A. SEAGER, wbose
th
fann is beyond Uplancl 00 e
Milton Road developed a
cmservalionplanfll'biafann.
He was belped with Ibis plan by
_Denver Yoho lind John Cooper
of SCS. Mr. Seager bas already
limed and fertiiUed 8 tm-acn
ridge _meadow 6eld and bas
bal~ II using the !'6101 bales
whicb are left Jymg oo the
gromd,lindwillletbialivestock
eat them in place. Mr. Seager
raises purebreed Angus cattle.

gravel.lbe~·~,.;
....,..L_

MAIGE CONTROL

1t pia at lbt . - o l - l b t mitoo that liYO on"" IIRdor tho
ilia 0.. il&gt;arouP appticrotioa ..,..Uy d I OJI - p atlo
ud lela your ae••lo Ml -~ JNiPl qaiL
.... ,.., ......h dop, IIDd inr.tod ..
..... apra:rlal.
lliM • c. or lic;at.l oill[lriDJdinc.

J. D. North Produce
---------.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii._______,
•

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..'
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HI

•
•
••
"

•
•
a'
•
a

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:,

FALL
SPECIAL

OOMBIOTIC
PER ·lOOCC BOrn£

•2·75

~·

-.-.

lHIBENZOI.E- CAmE V«)RMER

CENTRAL
SOYA
"The Food Power People''
GALLIPOLIS; OHIO

••

New utility tractOIS
New big diesels-with more po~er,less noise, less.smoke
New big Hydros
New wide chOice of gas, diesel, turbo, non-turbo, gear drive and Hydro
Two new cabs-with and wilhO!i1 air conditioning .
New IH IS&lt;lMOU'IT isolators to reduce vibration
New operaling ease and comfort
Mqre choice, more prorluclivity, more tractor value-now

I

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•&lt;
..
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•

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•
••
w
•,.

GoiHRed

..

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\

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Meigs Equipment CO.

I

••
•

.
..•
.*•
~

••

Ph. 992-2176

•

,.

(

I '

AUTOMATIC Warm Morning
wood heater, \ike new, $150.
Ph. «6-31W9.
225·3
-:-:-:-::-~--

1970 VIRGINIAN 12x60 mobile
home, Ph. 379-2255.
225-3

------

1961 SUBURBAN station
wagon, mechanically good.
Priced lor quick sale. Ph. 367·
7135.
225·3

------

1971 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass S,
automatic pOwer-disc- brakes,
power steering, sport steering

whee\ , 350 cu. ln . eng\ne,

IF YOU are building a new
home or remodeling, see us.
We are builders. Distributor

224-6

for Hotpoint Appliances.
Allison Electric.
154-11
WHITE cemen1, all sizes tile in
stock. 12" &amp; 15" field lite.

suitable lor highway ditching,
concrete

I"''

GALLIPOLIS BLOCK CO.•
ph. 446-2783.
97-11

24 ACRES on Brick Road 2
miles from Addison. Several
excellent building lois. Ph.
367-7598.
204-lt
COMPLETE LINE ot pipes and
accessories.

USEO

.

!

.

·

w.

and

Mobile

Home

Headquarters. All size mobile

homes in slack. B &amp; S Mobl\e
Home Sales, Second &amp; Viand,
Pl. Pleasant, next lo Heck's.
67-lf
SIGNS. No hunllng or
lrespasslng or others. Protect
your rights. Simmons Pig, &amp;
Office Equip.
203-11

Aluminum ·
Sheets

Gallipolis
~ill Tribune

GBD

Charatan. Taw"'!Y Jewelers,
•2• Second. Ave.
173-tl

------

211

blocks .

GOOO CLEAN LUMP and
sloker coal. Carl Winters, Rio
Grande. Phone 2~5115.

8-11

WE specialize in portrait and

commercial photography ,
church weddings, reunions,
etc. Tawney Studio.

AREA ,

some repairs.

BATHS ,

and ga s.

basement, one mi. from city.

A nice lot and a cheap house on P\ne Street, Lot 42 If. by
about 200 ft. deep. Price s.5.000.00.
In Harrison Township, 53 acres land. large barn, '12 acre
tobacco base, small pond and an 8 room house thai needs
some repair.

NICE

In Addison Township, 260 acre farm, 90 acre bot1om land,
1;, acre tobacco base, 21 acre cOrn base, has a fair barn
and 2 houses. 3 gas wells tl•al pa,s l$5.00 every 3 months
and will furnish gas for 6 houses. 1 house rents for SSO.OO

per monlh ; 1 for 525.00 per month. 26 acres cO&lt;n that will
not go with farm this year . Price $40,000.00.

,.

STROUT REAllY
INVESTOR'S SPI:CIAL
30 A. AT Rodney ripe lor
de-velopment. Land is mostly
flat with county water . Ap.
proved by state as site for
trailer park.

HOSPITAL.

2112

BUll T

BATHS ,

CARPETED
LIVING
ROOM , VERY NICE
KITCHEN
( RANGE .
REFRIG,) , LOTS OF
CLOSETS &amp; CABINETS,
FULL BASEMENT WITH
WOOD
BURNING
FIREPLACE, 2 CAR
GARAGE AND' OF THE
PRETTIEST ACRES ON
THE RIVER . BE SURE
ANO SEE THIS .

NEW

2

2 EXTRA large clean lots oo St.

Rl. 160, 4 miles from new
hospital. rural water line
instal led. Paul Denney.
Bidwell. Ph. J88.8649.
225-3
---------

BUY LIKE RENT - One floor,
three BR. full basement brfck
with l'h baths and attached
garage. Payments just like
monfllty rent. Owner will help
1\nance.
EDGE OF TOWN lUXURY Two beautiful homes, one
ranch, line split level, both
with hot water heal, stone and
frame, l'h baths, two car
garage. Owners will trade or
help finance.

clean, mostly

rolling pastureland .

60 A. Grade B dairy, plenty of
buildings, •;, A. lob., large
pond. good 6 room home,
close to Vinton.

INVES.TMENT
PROPERTY

41/:.z A. -

Route 160, modern

home, pond.

ON

UPPER 2ND AVE. RENTS
FOR SIOO PER MONTH .

owN E R AN X10 u s To
Sf;LL.

garage, gas furnace, good
location, shown by appointment . Mrs . Claude

Evans. ~&lt;16-2605. Cal\ after 4
p.m.
222.0
.
.
1 ACRE tusl 7 m1\es from new
power plant, 500 II. ott Addlson-Bu\avi\\e Rd. Approved
septic system hookup lor 2
trailers, drilled well. water
lap available. Ph. 367-7645
between 9 a.m. and 8 P-~2-6

BAIRD REALTY CO. .
Osc1r
a.1r•1 Realtor
.NEW 3 bedroom home in Plantz
,
·
451 SecGnd Ave.
Ph. 446-477$

extta

tillable, 2 ponds.

31 A. - 7 room home, 40 x 60
barn, 11• A. lob. $8,800,

1970 HONDA 350 road bike. FOR SALE by owner 2 story
frame house, 6 rooms &amp; bath.
priced right. Ph. 446-0655.

Reat Estate For Sale

grqund,

50 A. - Morgan, S BR home.
$13,500.

BEDROOM HOME WITH
NICE KITCHEN ON 11h
ACRE LOT , 2 MILES
NORTH OF RIO GRANDE
ON RT . 325. WILL NOT
RENT TO A FAMILY
WITH CHILDREN .
DEPOSIT
REQUt REO .

IT ' S A DOUBLE

tool shop • .aluminum siding .
THE Dillon Agency has been a
member of the Local &lt; Stale
and National Association of
REALTORS since Jan. 1942,
we have listed existing homes
and I arms all these years on a
FIVE (Sf percent commission
basis. Why pay more. list with
the DILLON AGENCY. It
pays.
COTTAGE .for sale or lease by
owner . 6 rooms, bath ,
basement, nice yard . See

Wayne Amsbary, 631 Fourth
Ave.
218-11
•

AUCTION
SERVICE

SUbdlv., good location, in city
school district. W\\\ be
finished soon. Ph. Delbert
Clark, 446-0390.
208-tf

Rultor, 32 Slate Sl

Tel 446-1998
Fairview
Sub.-Div.

163 ACRE
BEAUTIFUL brick, with cen.
FARMER'S FARM
air, 1'h baths, 3 big bdrms.,
56 A. R \CH bottom land, \00 A.
huge liv. rm ., kitchen has
rolling pas1ureland, 2 barns,
disposal. d\swasher. bar.
several other good buildings,
ran9e, and many nice
nice 4 B. R. home setting on a
cabmets. A\\ h.w. lloors
shady lawn.
covered with the best car·
LAND CONTRACT
peling, patio. 2 car base. gar.
BUILDING lots in an excellent
with e\ec. eye door. Located
location. We also have nice
on a large land-scaped lot.
large lo1s for mobile homes
Hurry! this \s the kind you
with all utilities.
seldom see on the market.
FARMS
100 A. LEVEL and · rolling
Edge ~ity
2\2 A. -

FOR SALE OR
RENT
NEARLY

storage room and finished

MASSIE

Pli. 446·0008

THIS
LOVELY
3
BEDROOM HOME . IT
INCLUDES

CHILLICOTHE Rd. 3 BR and
bath. large modern kitchen
and storage rooin, carport,

3

GARAGE

O'DELL

Vacant

Office •46 :1066
Evenings: Call
Ron Canaday 446-!636
· John I. Richards446-0280
Russell D. Wood446-4618

--------------~~~If· ~~~--------~
221-6
---------

In Green Township, 92 acre farm, 925 lb. tobacco base •
fair fences, 5 room house with aluminum siding. County
water tap paid. Pr_ice $18,000.00.
WANTED: 25 to 50 acre farm. Some farming \and.
Building no1 too important.

LARGE

4 ACRES ON
RIVER
JOHN

kitchef'\, w~w carpet, part

On Edgemont Drive a nice 2 bedroom house with full

AND BASEMENT ON A
LARGE LOT JUST 1 MI .
FROM NEW

Storr_ clll electric brick home.

3 BR. 1'1• bath, all buill-In

basement and nice level lot. Price $16,000.00.

NEW ,

S-p-r-e-a-d 0-u-t
.\N THIS nice comiortabte one

At Cen'tenary, we haVe a five room cottage on a large lot.

LARGE BEDROOMS .
VERY PRETTY BUILT ·
IN
KITCHEN WITH
RANGE.J OVEN. DISH WASHEK . AND LOTS OF
CABINETS . DINING
AREA , W TOW CARPET
IN LARGE LIVING ROOM
11J2

forlcibte ~ih;:hen with oven

and range. carpeted LR; full
basemenl, aluminum siding.
·deep .lol85' x 200' new vacan t.

229,JI. road frontage on Stale Route 141 , wilh city water

NEW LISTING
BRICK WITH
BASEMENT
LIKE

What A View!

THIS hillside _home offer• ·a
pic turesque view of the river,
2 bedrooms and. bath, com-

' $25,000.00. \t is a double brick in good location. Needs

3

LIVING ROOM. LOTS OF
CLOSETS. HARDWOOD
FLOORS, GARAGE , AN
EXCELLENT
VIEW .
FULL PRICE $19,900.

JUST

Office 446·267~

The price on this home has had the price reduced to

NEW

AT EDGE OF TOWN IN
VERY GOOD NEIGH ·
BORHOOD. PRETTY
BUILT -IN KITCHEN ,
DINING

Hob.lrl Dillon, R..Jior

You will always stay young if you live honestly, eat
slowly , sleep sufficiently, and lie about your age.

NEW LISTING
NEW 3 BEDROOM

------

Rd. Ph. 256-6518.

s1age is dids and did nots.

ATTRACTIVE
RANCH

ROOM,

f-Irs~

Haves- and have nots- are the second s1ate. The

KITCHEN .AND UTILITY
ROOM . GOOD FLAT LOT,
FULL P-RICE Sl5,500.

LOW, low prices on Bemco and
Serta mattresses and box
springs. Corbin &amp; Snyder
AKC Toy Poodles and Siamese
Furn,, 955 Second Ave. Ph.
kittens. Ph. 2.56-6247.
446·1171.
223-6
3-tf
Hereford Farm, Lower River

446-1066

Off. 446-3643
Eve. 446-3796
446-4500

LIVING

225·3

·.For Sale

------

REALTOR

CONVENIENTLY
lOCATED ON RT . 160
HALF WAY BETWEEN
CITY
AND
NEW
HOSPITAL
3
BEDROOMS PANELED

10,000. Ph. «6-0224.

----STRAWand hay tor sale. Buller

USSELL WOOD·, Dillon ·
.REALTOR
Agency,

EXCELLENT
LOCATION

241-ff

Color: lime green, mileage

Real Estate For Sale

BEDROOM HOME , VERY
N I CE
KITCHEN ,
UNUSUALLY
PRETTY
BATH ,
ATTACHED
GARI&lt;GE . HOME IS IN
EXCELLENT
CON ·
DITtON ON LARGE FLAT
LANDSCAPED LOT 2 MI .
OUT . $18,500 .

SOMMER"S G.M.C.
TRUCKS, INC.
lUPine St.
Ph..446-25Jl

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CENTRAL SOYA ••••

HEADQUA~TERS

225-6
--~---

Real Estate For Sail!

The WISEMAN
Agency

NEARLY

1'1117 DATSUN P.U.
1966 "' T. GMC P.U.
1969 Plymouth Roadrunner
1969 Chev. &gt;r. T. P.U.
1963 ciso Fard truck
1965 1h T. GMC P.U.
1969 Chev. dump truck
1952 1h T. Chev. P.U.
1965 fT. GMC
1969 GMC • T. log truck
1962 '14 T. GMC pickup
1957 1h T. GMC P,U.
1965 1h T. Ford P.U.
1963 'h T. Chev. P.U.
1969 I T. GMC
1967 'h T. GMC P.U.
1968 Chev. Suburban
1966 :If. T. Chev. P.U.
1967 'Vo T. Chevrotel pickup
1963 F600 Ford Truck
196i 2 T: GMc· •·•··••
1964 3 T. GMC
1967 F700 Ford dump truck

SEWING and alterations. Mrs. STEREO.Rad\0 Combination, USED FURNITURE
Dudley Eggleton. 446-4766.
lovely WALNUT finish, four
22•-3
speed \nlermlxed changer, 4 2 PC. living room suite like
brand new, 2 beds, 2 rockers,
speaker sound system.
dresser,
6 col\ springs,
BULLDOZING work by the
Balance $63.99. Use our
bassinet,
roll-away
bed, 2
hour or job. Call J. L. Hal·
budget terms. Call «6-1028.
dinette sets, end tables, 2 foot
f\eld • .19 Spruce St. 446-0205.
226-3
stools, lamps, anl\que marble
225-6
lop dresser with m\rror and
1 TRAILER, 8x40. Ph. 367·7329.
tw\n bed In excel. cond., auto.
226-6
gas dryer. Rice's New &amp; Used
Help Wanted
Furn.. 854 Second (across
1955 CHEVROLET, excel .
from
Texaco Station I. 446·
cond.• $350 or best offer. Ph.
9523.
If you're my man or woman,
446-3871.
225-1(
I will start you wtth $600 a
226-1
· month, guarantNd. Send - - - - - you to school for 2 WHits
HOOVER spin dry washing PUBLIC seating, folding tables·
•xpoMeS p111d, ttain you In
machine, hall price. Ph. 446and chairs - restaurants,
the field of selling and ser.
3626 .
churches,
organizations.
226-3
vicing .etlablishtd accounts.
Complete line of ofllce chairs
Mutt be over 21, have car,
and desks. Simmons Pig. &amp;
bondible, ambitious and 7 HEIFER calves and 2 bulls.
Office Equ\p, Ph. 446·1397.
Pony and saddle. Ph. VInton
141 -lf
sports
minded.
388-8631.
226-3
Hospltalizaticln and ~MRSion
program. Please call Donald CARPETS alright? Make them
FelVer, ~f521.
a beautiful s\ghl with Blue
·. ~, X 23" ~.oat
Lustre.
Rent
electric
shampooer $1. Central Supply
WILL pay well for your spa.re
Co.
t\me working at home for us.
226·6·
Anyone who can read and
write can qualify. Weekly
'
salary. Detalls write: James 1971 ZIG-ZAG sewing machine
USED OFFSET PLATES
Bliss Co., P. 0 . Box 124, Dept. tell \n layawar· · Beautiful
HAVE
K487, Levittown. Pa. 19053. pastel color, lui size modeL
I
223·12 All buill-In to buttonhole,
MANY USES
overcast ' and fancy sl\lch.
Pay
$48,75 cash or terms
IF YOU would like an exdl\ng
aval able. Trade-I ns ac.
career tn the promising worlil
ltor$1.110
cepted. Phone 446-0665.
of Beauty .-...:utlure \n a
m.o
program which has full
government .financing, . write ~~---Cleaner brand new
to Beauty, 609 Third Ave., VACUUM
.
'
1971
model.
Complete with all
Chesapeake, Ohio, or call
cleaning
tools.
Small
paint
'I
collecl304-525·4826 between 9
damage In sh\pptng. Wi\llake
and 2 p.m.
222·12
$27 cash · or budget plan
available. Phone 446,0665,
125 T!rinl Ave.
Gallipolis~ 0 .
WHY p\nch penn!es when you -~--~----222·6
'
can earn dollars selling guaranteed . Avon producls?
USED TRAILERS
And it ts easy to gel started 1970 VOLKSWAGEN, auto.
1960
National
10x50. 2 br.
trans..
radio,
e\ec.
defrost,
right In your own community.
1967
Horizon
12x50,
2 br,
blue,
while
Interior,
675dark
Call or . wr\le Mrs. Helen
1957
Gilder
.c5x8,
3
br.
Yeager, Box tn, Jackson. 5203.
222·6 1966 Namco, '2x10, 3 br,
OhiQ:. ..
Ph. 286-o4028.
1960 Van Dy~e. 10x50 2 br .
221-6' - - - - - ' -- -- 1960 Van Dyke 10xS0,-2 br.
1%5 Kentuckian, '6xl0, 3 br.
196i Colonial SOxiO, 2 br.
BUsiness Opport111ities
1960 Van ·Dyke IOx40, 2·br.
All
lral!ers clean and recon· WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTOR WANTED
.
dltloned
. Ready for- oc·
To sell to company, established, all cash accounts In this
~upancy.
Free Delivery and
area This Is not i coin operated .vending route. Our
set:up. Tri-County Mobile
odi.d Is sold \n lOCations such as offices. employe(!
Homet, 446-0175. ·
ro..nves tn retail stores. financial tnslltullons, small
93-11
manylactu•tng plants. warehouses. schools and hospitals.
The 'illstrlbulor we HI~ 'will be responsible tor main·
'-lnl
·these tocallcrts · and nostocklng Inventory. All
tocall:ns are established !&gt;Y our company, a 10 )'l!ar old
we· need e ·dependable distributor, rnale or
SINGER Sew\ng Machine Sales
::,'~""'n this area with $1,1195 minimum to Invest In .
&amp; Service. All models in
equl man! and Inventory. which will tum over about two
slock.
Free dellvlfy. Service
11m.: m0111tlly. Earnings can grow to $25,000 annually arw;t
guaranteed.
Models priced
u we \VIII consider Pllrl·flme applicants. Write lor
from 169,95. French City
• J;.,pletelnlormatlon, lnclu~ !&gt;hone number and Area
Fabrlt Shoppe. Singer approved dealer, 58 Cilurl St.
CodtctJ'J&amp;.,.J;'l'fes:ri~EMIC~~~iPGRATION
Ph' 446-9255.
Fnoeu Drlld Preducts Division
308-tf
, ·· :1115 MontroY Blvd., Sorlie 215
ltouston. Texas 771106

..
....-·
-..

•
•
•
•
•
.•
•
•

Truck Headquartels

FO.R SALE by owner - 1968
CuHass, 1910 Maverfx, both
automatic, both excellent
condltiOh. Ph. 446-2228.
223-6
~=.,..-:--=--.,.......::
1971 CHEV. 11• T. pickup, V-8
std. sh\11. 8 fl. bed, 4,000 actual miles, Ph. 446-2'149 alter
5.

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

VINE ST. GAlliPOLIS, 0.

Real Estate FIf Sale

New GMt

-..--'-----

For Sale

-------

Sao ,. today for l'wnlltJ J l - c..w.l.

Tractors

FURNISHED apartment.
references required. Inquire
at 631 Fourth Ave.

-----

PURIIA-

9 Great

For Rent

arid

IIAI&amp;E

forms, BR&gt;iiranls shcwdd write
to Cong. Clareoce E. Miller, 121
Cannoo House Olfice Bgjlding,
Washinglao. D. C. :1115!5.

---~-----

For Sale

. .
·~LEAI!N TO. READ MUSIC IN Corb.i.n. &amp;
..
ONE EVI;NING! Amazing
~w book shows how, only SJ. Snyder Furniture ·
.M
' oney. Back G uaran 1ee. "
· USED FURNITURE
Write p , 0. Box 4188, 7 PC. breakfasl set, bedroom
Parkersburg. w. Va. 2~r~ . suile, relrigi!raiO&lt;, full site
_ _ _ _ __ :.....__ · coil springs &amp; mattress •
TWO GREAT
ki Ichen ·ulllily ~"f,binel .
. PIANO VALUES
_elecNtrEicW
. ranFgeR.NITURE
·
U
FROM: CARl'S KEYBOARD INNERSPRING ' maliresses
CENTER. BaldWins: Eby.
starling at $28.95. 6111 the rest
Rag. '""·
$8.!5 - $695; Wal . R_eo.
$7-45, Hollett &amp; DavTs
you deserve. se Iec I your
5895
T
mattress and box springs
Spinel&gt;: rad. Ea. Am., &amp; Fr.
now. Free parking. Open
Prov. Styles. Retail Value
Fridays till B. 955 Second Ave.
$875- Spec. $645 !Includes
Ph
1171
free del.. luning &amp; matching
· 446·
217-11
benchl . CALL CARL'S
COL~ECT
485 - 6931 ,
Parkersburg .
223-4

------

.

community leaders fralq each
(){ the 13 Cllllllios in the U!h
C
Dis . L
ongressiona1
!riC
A
1
November derclliM !las beell
set loc accepling ap-a!ions.
To be eligible, 1 JIDII: man
must be .a , . ._,1 ~the lOib
..._ ,. _.... ._
Coo......,;onal............,
r:.a.._.... ........ .aa~ ...,.
Ju1 1, 1-be tleastl7aadool
y ~·· '"
yet 22 years cl age. Fill' additional information ,
catalogues, and application'

LADIES Santa needs helpers~
$3.ll an hour. 7to 10 p.m., no
experience necessary. For
H \'d
mone call M
Cl~~s~~ackson ~2705. rs.
·
175-lf

For Sale

SMALL
apartment
BETTER lobs are available for 18 fl . MOBILE home, can be
refrigerator. \ike new. Call
used as camper, Ph. 446-1044.
446-4052 alter 5,
. ~BC graduates. Enroll now
226-1
· rf:; 1 next term. Gallipolis
~~ssPhCollage R. N. 71-G:l.
1 TON GMC truck, dual wheels, 1967 MERCURY Comet 4 dr.•
'
. . 446-4367.
auto. trans., clean, new tires,
162-11 . good cattle racks, runs good.
Ph. «6-1044.
good condll\on, priced . lor
226·1 quick sale. Ph. 379-2412.
Wanted
224.0
GOOD PAY. TOP BENEFITS, 1969 FORD Torino, excellent
JOB SECURITY. FOR
condition. Ph. 446-4871 .
PORTABLE SINGER sew\ng
SKILLED OR UNS~ILLED.
machine. W\11 sell for repair
U. S. Army. Wide choice of ~-----226.0
bill. $18.44, Ph. 446-9353.
tralnt.ng and .educational 1970 CADILLAC sed. DeVIlle,
219-tt
opportunities. All Nrn-wh\fe.
tully equipped, low m\leage.
you-learn . ·Full pay and
Ph. Pl. Pleas. 675-4283 after 6, -SEWING machine service in
allowances. Top · fringe
226-lf
your home. Clean, oil and
benefits. Ph. 446·3343.
adlust,
$4.99. Call 446-9353.
~--------:226 · 4 WEIMARANER puppies, AKC,
219-11
CHRISTMAS Is jus! around the
9 wks. Dam twice 4-H -----~
~
corner 'Hive-a'f&gt;feyho!lse TW'" ""obedlence·champlon;Jop bird 28FT. lANilEM dllmp·lril\ler.
Padv
receive tree toys,
&amp; watch dogs. George
C. C. Mollohan, 367:7571.
Ph. 2~5126.
.
Woodward, 379-2597.
222-5
226·3
226-1
_ ___,.:..-=--CU. IN. Pontiac. engine with
'NEVER. used anything like 389transmission.
Ph . 446-9386.
\1.'" say users of lllue Lustre
Wanted To Buy
225·3
carpel cleaner. Rent electric
FARM ·with ·35 or 40 acres,
-~~-shampooer $1. Lower G. C.
llllal&gt;\e with plenty of water &amp;
CHINCHILLA sale, My animals
Murphy Store.
barn. David Shelby, Rt. 1,
are outgrowing their quar·
226-6
McArthur, Oh\o ol5651 . Ph.
ters. Will trade for anything
------59&lt;1-4270,
or
sell at most reasonable
224·3 EARLY AMERICAN Stereo,
rates. Gordon Wooten, 446·
AM-F M rad\o, 4 speed
2655.
changer, 4 speaker sound
_
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _225·3
Wanted To Do
system, Balance $79.32. Use
our
budget
terms.
Call
446·
In
my
WILL do babysitting
HAY tor sale. Ph. 446-2226.
1028.
home. Ph. 446-1549.
225 _3
226·3
226-3

...

IJo.wling

YOUR ANIMAL HEALTH

Instruct ion

STOP

,.,_1

-------~-226-3

------

and
the forcla
Merchant Marine • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ·
Academy
entering iJi
June, l97!.
In lhat the loll cpMI1a of the
!Oih district 1 i!enls wbo 1\111
be appointed lllrolq:h the
Congressman's aflice are
presenlly enrolled in the lJDi1m
)
..Stales Mililary AI !eli.,, ~~~left
can be l10 "Arinlnlenls DDde
by lbe Cuagi
"" rar West
•
p . 1 1 Ibis lime.
~tb:u,gh applications for
dem • ....n,,_,ls dwmld
aca
Y ......-- - be directed to his af1i1:e, Millet
pointed out that 1be acblal
selection of oominees and

•-· IS
. ma...,
_._ by a
a Iterna~
selection boaAI ...
cl

lfelp Wanted.

WA"l
·
I' ed R
. n ·l . P.N. or re"
.
Nurse ·IO work \n nursing
hllme. can live ln. 11 destred,
Write: Box 313. Ironton,· Ohio.
Rl. 1.

YARD sale, Tues. &amp; Wed., Sept.
~II
28 &amp; 29
. , 10:30 a.m. to 7 p.m . .C...:..----~
Frank &amp; Jean Belville's
spaces with walk$ &amp;
residenCe on Bob-McCorm \ck TRAILER
patios,
water
turn. Henderson
Rd. Bottles, baby fumilure
Tra\\er
Court,
end ol Silver
and other treasures.
Memorial
Brldge.
Ph. 675·
226·2
3886.
---:-'---~~
224-3
REDUCE safe and fast with
• Gobese tablets and E-Vap FURN. APT,_, 1 bedroom, all
water pills. Gillingham Orug.
utllltles paid, 5 m\les N, of
&gt;,
'
223-26
Galltj&gt;olls on St. Rt. 7. Call
4&lt;16-4170 alter 3.
RALPH'S Carpel - Upholstery
224-3
Cleaning Service. Free
eSIIII)ales. Ph. 446-0294.
197-11 BRADBURY efficiency apt.
Adults only, no pOls. 729
Second Ave. Avallab\e Sept.
SUN VALLEY Nursery School,
27.
577 Sun Valley Drive, licensed
223-tl
by .the Stale of Ohio,
Department of
Public
Welfare, now providing full lOOK.INGfor a real nice room?
Lowe Motor Hotel; PL
dey
care and
child
Pleasant, Main and 4th In·
development program for
v\tes your inspection. Singles,
pre-school chlldren, infants
u.so, $5, $6, $7, $8, $9, ·$2 for
excluded. Open 6:30a.m. to 6
extra
person. Special weekly
~.m . Monday through Friday .
rates.
F pkg .• TV, Ind. air
Fees: $20 for full five-dliy
cond
.•
sell
serv. elev. Ph. 675·
week. $5 per day \f less than
2260.
1\ve days, $3 per day for
. 1~·11
morning sessions, Ph. 4463657. Madge Hauldren,
Owner-0\reclor; John and SLEEPING ROOMS, weekly
rates. Park Central Hotel.
Loredllh
Hauldren,
308-11
operators.
35-11
APARTME:NT. ~ r,oms &amp; bath,
stove furnished and carpeled,
Business Opporlunities
part utilities. Ph. 446-2282 .
217-tf
HIGH voiume. Ashland service
=
=
station for lease . Paid SLEEPING ROOMS weekly
training. Call 992-5221 or «6·
rates, free garage parking,
1065 or Martella 373·8412.
Libby Hole!.
211 -11
74·11

on almost Anything

Air ShOW' .
Divmg
. Will ..nppUCliUUfllj
'
To ACJJdenaiBs
Fea·l ure Day_ Jln.iw.,..Jn....:....:6
.·

Notice

.

•m.

Y

:.,"':,YY

•minstt-wls pi-efei-red, Reed is lbebeslclloke- ~bas an
outstandingyinoltecCII'dandismtrewinler)iard)'lbananyofthe
oa.;,. reN+IIflM"Pdeoi varieties.
.
Ouqlleie ili!lfllllltiOO, oo variety ~ and
·r_,....,.....,..._. cui~..:&gt;, ·practices are Jlllblis!wl iii U.. 19'16-71
_____...,..
........
Agrm&lt;my Guide; .available tJrougb CQUDty otlices
the
O•taallw .Eiiensloo Sertlce.
·
. ··
'l1le 1i'n. yield tests were C!XIducted at sites iii the lo11owillli Ohio
counties: Erie, Wayne, Franklin, Clark, Wood,MabclliDg; Meig:s,
i1rown, and Ucking.

is doing in grass research. One
....... of
.
for . the
particular 30 x 50 fl. plot that tbeirmainlftiiiM:el*+IIDbas me.....U
carmg
II,
interested us very much was consisted
fl.
line
4Yi'
guide
pulled
up
a
corner
the
d two
pad lind sbowed us theof lll·
1 1 rtiURr
one wtiere they are growing :lica~ions of :'e ~ derneatb side of it whicb in·
~"~"""" •L- roots and the adftalgicideecmbjn!ljm per Jell'. - - ""'
dilional organic matter whicb
•
.4.,. I! _ _.:___
bad formed. 11 appeared that

ad74
52
Tuesday
All area residents are urged
Wed..,sday
74
50
Thursday
73
62
tu spend· an exciting day at the
1 Vinton
74
52
County Airport six
Friday
Saturday
56 42
\ .1
h
'
Average high temperature for m1 es nor! of McArthur.
-this year - 71.0. Last year
T :--:: _T
- 87.2.
LOCal
Average low temperature for
Early Wednesclily
weel&lt;this year - 54.7. Last year
Mixed league
- 64.0.
Sept. 15, 1971
Total precipitation for week
$landings
this year - .15 inch. Last year
Team
WL
-.59 inch.
16 8
Total precipitation to dale Young's Markel
14 10
th\s year - 22.76 inches. Last Oiler's Sohio
Team No. 6
14 10
year - 2'1.3.4 inches.
10 ;4
Normal
Ave ·rage Zide's Sport Shop
10 14
~cipitalion annually - 40.99 Team No. 4
Team No.5
, 8 16
1nches.
Men High Individual GameBob Couch 198.
Women High Ind. Game Passover Observance
Carolyn
Bachner 210.
Christians in the 1st cen·
Men
High
tury continued to celebrate Phelps 541. Series - Junior
the Passover without draw·
Women High Series iDg any distinction between Carolyn Bachner 556.
a Christian and Jewish ob- Team High G~me- Team
4 0 servance. This ~ontinued No. 5 721.
3 0 until the destruction of Jeru- Team High Series - Team
No. 5 1m.
tl 50 salem iD A.D. 70.

Fumbles
Fumbles'L&lt;IIt

'

So:~=·==ce

Ocl. 10.
Friday when a deer ran onto the day,
A full day of activities will
road into the right front corner begin with airplane rides ov~
of his car. Roush said he . Vmlun C?unty at 8 a.m. B~
swerved to miss the deer but the Abele, arrporl manager, will
animal bolted back across the have fuur aircraft including one
highway into his car resulting in twin engine, one . seven
$150 damage to the vehicle.
passenger smgle engme,_ and
G. Richard Lindsey, I&amp;, two_ fou_r passenger smgl~Southside, was cited for failure engme aircraft operating until
to !!ave vehicle mder oontrol 11 p.m. to accommodate .an
following a mishap at 5, 15 •-Ill· . who WISh to see the beautiful
Saturday. Undsay was driving Vinton County fall foliage from
bia car near the 4-H Cam- the air.
All " EarlY Bini" breakfast
pgroiUid when be reacbed down
to pick np a pack of cigarettes will be available for pilots flying
from the Door and lost control of 101" Vmton County from B-I0:30
his car striking a parked bus a.m. and
will be followed at 11
b
h. ck
barbecue
belonging to Lakin State a.m.
a c 1 en
Hospital. Property damage served from a 35.foot long pit.
was estimated at $1,150 to the Chicken, ham sandwiches, soft
two vehicles.
drinks and coffee will be
available throughout the day.
The official dedication

week~

rar mast.;

In tests since 1966 (HeeptArtiw~bas~ ~sial:e
1!168), average )'ields iD ObiO'$five NI'"MI . . led wheat ftrie1ies
rank as follows · ' -•n li46busbels - - · · - ""• " - '
· • ....,...., · .
..-~~ .............., ; •......,
49.9; ~oat, 4J.3; and Moooo, 47.4. ·
A new variety, Arthur 71, bas bema!lded mille Jist of 11ae
reeommended for Ohio. This variety, -ty idelllil:al to Artllar
was released in July by the · Pm1lue llniwasitr ~
~ntal Stalioo.

1 ::-~:=:.;t~:;::!:~~:~,.=:a: More R
Deve opment the Lay of the I .and
=~te::~.!~:e=ty~y~~= Proposed by Rep. Poage Next: Hair
:;

IN LOVING · memory of iny
dear _Aunt . Katie . S_ayre,
·Cheshl
Ohl 0
h
.
• w o passed
· .
re,
away
len so
years
agoby
today,
Mlsse«j
mf!Ch
niece,
Stella.
. 226-1
--------IN LOViNG memory ol my
dtwhoar h~!~nd, AISex Jones.
pa ..... away eptember
25, 1969. " Gone'.' but will
never be forgotten.
Sadl y. mlssed by wIfe, Mrs.
Callie Jones.
226-1
---------

...-r-.....,

severallocalioos f!ll' a 11U1Dber of years is

Memory

In

· andbelownormalmoislureinAj)ril.GmeraiiJfa-.b!ewallla- lban Artlwandbasflelded~tl)' Jlllftlban_Artl!ur,dl.mlthe
.n June aad during harvelst resulted in Jie1i1s m1 test weiciU liSt two se.oos. Lafever .III1W lhataeed fCit Arllm 71 ~be ·
consitjerably above recent aV«a&amp;eS iD Olio. · ·
generally available frun ctrllflllll aeed .,owen iD tm ~ 1t73.
. Wever pOOils out lhat wriety
oot be
Oilier cmsideratioos besides 7ieJd lbould be IUeD iDID. acjUdged oo the basis of a Single 11!11'. ~taUatarsGftm countwbench!MJsingaWinterwbeat-..rietJ,For~MCIIOO
affectyielclandotbercbara~.clavarietr_,._._ i111be.eartiestli lbe mmunellded varietieS fol)mred cllllely by
inano~.Anyoflbe~urietiesaaCIIi)iddU.. · ArtliJr. Arliu' is the sborlest variety and akqprith RedcoRt Ia

A.......:,.r.Jture Notes

ne•""

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

~~~ greater r1!ldslaDce to HelliaD 117 llld.IMI rust

Early May rains hl:lped wheat .--JnmwiD• ......,

im

SAME as new, 5 nice rms. and

bath, H.W. floors, Cathedral
ceiling. carport, and a kitchen
the Mrs. w\\1 like. Large .
landscaped
lot. il$16,500.
S pel.
Loan possible,
you quaflly.

City

EXCELLENT residential sec. 2
story, 6 big rms. bath and
utility rm . storm drs. and win .

partial base. II you are
looking for comfort, location
and price don't fall lo see this
one. On market a short lime.
$14,750.

Cheap Housing

15 A. NORTH of Rio Grande, all
tractor, good fences, modern
house. $15,000.

Ranny Blackburn
Branch Manager

PH. 446-3444

AUCTION
·
Sale Every
Saturday
Evenings, 7:00
Cor•r lrd a, 011.. A...
We

sell

anything

for

~~ · We a\10 buy~
'istallis: For Plc:k ·If lift!!»·
r

""""

Call
Knotts
Community Auction, 44629JT
·---------'

..

PUBLIC
SALE
Sal, Oct 2
12 Noon
Personal property of
tfle estate of A. E.
Hussell, deceased.
Farmall " H" trader wllll
plows, cultivators and 7 It.
mower, wagon on rubber.
disc, spreader on steel, JO It.
PTO elevator, drag harrow,
5 hp garden tractor with
rolarv mower attachment·,
feed a-usher, Iron keftle.
lard pr•ss. , scalding pan,
ladders. lnlernallonal boll..,
No. oiS, 3 cream separators.
complete blacksmith lhap
with forge, anvil. drill prea,
etc., 1 hp 220 electric 1TIOior,
grinder. one lot hand tools
and mlsc.llaneous 111111.
Several Items of household
furniture, living roOm suite.
dining table and chlllrs. ·

3 mi 1es Ent of Pt•

156 A. Farmer's tarm. $33,000.

Pleuant on

48 A. MOST tractor. $8,500.

Road.

II A. Oevelop. $10,000.

Now - almost every
family can own their
own home!.

JAMES (JIMME)
SAYRE

-

CITY - Older home
10 A. - Gallipolis School dis!. CROWN
completely
remodeled, 2
Vacant.
large lots, 5 nice rms. bath
and utility, new carpeting
75 A. - Recreation park. 9'h A.
over H.W. floors, new alum.
lake.
s\ding and new fur . Ideal lor
fhe newlywed or retiree.
30 A. - 5 room home, large
Pr\ce $13,500.
pond, Morgan,
•
PORTER - Neal 4 rms., bath
71/:.z A. - U. S. 35. Business si1e.
and ut\\lly . H.W , floors
with carpel. II has a
covered
10 A. - Pines, nice campsite
carport
and
located on a large
$2,500.
lot
Price
$9,500
.
BARGAINS
3 ROOMS on 160, nice flat lot,
VINTON - Remodeled older
$5.000,
home, S rms., balh and utility,
tns\de most new. Onty $5,500.
8 ROOM home, large tot,
garage, $5,500.
Farms
122
A.
Al.L
lraclor,
one ol Gallla
AODISON Twp. - 2 homes,
Co. best. Generation of good
$12,900.
farming methods. May be
used as dairy, beet or crop.
13 ROOMS in city, 2 garages.
now
operated as dairy.
$15.000.
Potential net Income of
$15,000 to $25,000,
8 ROOM home In Morgan Twp.
$11,000~

"SEll THE AlJCilOI
WAY"

so A.• Remodeled house. $9.500.

ANY HR. +16-1M
Mr. Wlnien 446-.:1121
Eve.: J. Fuller 446-3246

Sand

Hill

Velm• Osllel, Adm11.
Estate of
A. E. Hussell, dec'd.
John McNeill
Auctioneer

42 ACRES, GOOD HOUSE -

Hunlingloh Twp. w\lh 10
acres bollom land, plenty of
water, small outbuildings and
good bam. House has furnace, lull bath. carpeted
living room.

PUBLIC AUOION
Located 2 miles North of O.k Hill, Ohio. 0. Slille Route 93.
Across lrom Grin! Trucldnt ~· Watch for Signs.

'

MEMBERS of the National,
slate, and local real estate
boards and have for years
operated on a commission
rate of five m percent. If you
want to buy or sell, deal with a
realtor who adheres to the
standards of professional
practice.
Oscar Balnl, 446-4632
Doug Welherlloll, 446-4244

FOR SALE by owner. 2 story
brick at 452 First Ave. 7
rooms. 2 baths, gas hoi air
furnace.
present
arrangement 2 apartments.
Easily conver!ed to' one
family dwelling . Ask•ng
$35,000 shown by appointment. Ph. 446-0208.
199-lf

HOUSE, 3 bedroom, 1'n balh, 2
fireplaces, on '12 acre lol. Ph.
675-5704.
223·6

THURSDAY, SEmMlER 30, 1971

Starting at 1100 P.M.
Consisting ol 2 Oearbcrn natural gas healers wllll lhllr·
mostatlc controls and blowers, hoUsehold fllmlture lbalh
modern and anllquel . coat cook stove &amp; ~. Pl!llco
' rolrigeralor. Ptlllco electric ranoe, eledriQI appl'- ·
of all k!nds, antique and collectcr"s Items. caW. and
glessware,·bench vise, MilbUrn'- drawn farm 11an
.
(maybel.
OTHER ITEMS TOONUMiiiROUS TO MENtiON
Rt. 1HTo
lulavllltRd .
North on Bvlavllltl!oad

v. mile to -et Home

.

The Wieman . . -·

,..,

bf~;g)

MG11 fAIIIUES liV£ .. A Mlfi).Al ttOM£ THAI AN'f OTKll\ HOME II Till: "WOilO

'

TERMS: CASH

FRED.J. HUGHES.
J•mesL.M....,Osl17
DlrylAIIIM
-AUCTIOttii:RS.
NOT RESI'ONSIILt FOil

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23- The~ ~llnel.s.u.tay, Sept.2i:l,

lii-Tbe IMidaJ1'im5&amp;Dtlnel,Siuday,SepU&amp;, 1!'ll

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Tests Show 100 Bushel Per Acre Wheat Yields Are. Possible

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BVC.B.~
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POMEROY- 'l1le Bessian Oy.free wbeat planting dale fOr
llelp CGUnty II Ocl 5. V«J little Hessian By damage is evideni
Ill wheatDIIWbecaUilehrmersobeerve the fl7.free planting date

... plant Helllian By reaislaDt straDds.
This :rear live Meigs Coonty f1nners are lield· testing five
wheat . varieties fumisbed by the ·Olio, Oql ~ement
AIIOcllilioo. All five
incblded in tile pre .nt wbe&amp;t recom-

.,

are

j

the NEW in FARMING

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: :.:oowrieties list. 1bey are ArtiU, lAgan, M11100, Redcoat,

0::.

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'nlefi~farmers"'. ·•.......
. tbeselmbe!JotsareEdson
· Roush
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~ Paul$ayre, Dale~tz,Eartlleanandlle&amp;!lhenefleld:.
:;:
Scientists fi.Gm the Ollio Agricul1lnl Researdl and
-; DevelctJinentOeilterplintontlbatlumdtedbu.1belper acre yields
·' .&amp;un ObioW1Dier wheatmaylllitbe toofaroff if the 19'11 winter
wbeal variety lestresullaa,e a tzue indiratioo of potential yields.

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low test weight and saseeplibility to Hessian fly and to leaf rust.
Noctb Caroiina wheat breeders have eliminated smre of theSe
p-oblemsfua new variety called lllueboy U,howeverthisline will
not be commerclally available for seileral years.
Included in the 1971 winlef wbeat tests were a balf dozen
. experimelital lines develqled in ()bio. Lafever describes the test
lines
moderately sbort and moderately early matwilig. If
these cootinue to s11qw np well, the best performing line will
p-obably be selected Ill' future release.
Wevertepm"ts tbatOIIlltwbeatin lbe Buckeye Stale entered
.lbe winter in good coaditioo even though some seeding was
delayedby\vetweatber.OIISiderablebeavydamage occurred in
some areas dJ!rjng fela'uary and Mardi and Lafever says much
.. "'- beat · ;......u -· m· av~•e cooditioo oc below at the
,.....,w
a-..,..,e---..
beginning of lbe spr~ng· growlb.

as

ural
.

othersWld!!r~coaditioas.1'lllis,l....,_efa;a p~at bestllllllel-~timsofligbfertilitywllereloiiCiJWisa~.
N

cur;~te ~-

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Dr. H. N. Wever, agrGil4miSt din!eliag wbeat llreeding
researdl at lbe Obio Agrimlliual R
th aad Developnent
Center, repocts lhat the tGp yields were barves!All! at the Center's
Noclb Oeillrill Brancb, me of Dine sites wberevariety test.nrere
conducted iD 1971.

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By Uliled P-. bteraaUIIIBI
WASHINGTON -REP.W. R.I'OAGE,D-Tex., chairman of'
lbe House Agriculture ()wnmitlee, said Wedilesday he is drawing
up a bill fll open the way foc more loans to rural areas for

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deveJor,menL
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Arllm(al'lftuMevelllped variety)aadiAgan(develqled
As!milarbillisbeingbeanliliSenalecommittee.
:•; by OARDC agronomisls) CCIItinued fll outproduce older
'l1le bill Poage is drafliag would ezpand Fanners Home
' d
·
lies
8
al
--'~tal
Obi
Ad
· ·
tioo autbori·ty to let it make more loans, primarily
1
" recomne&gt;- vane . owever, sever ....,....~.
ommt&lt;tra
."; lines are clGie belind in the Jield rare.
insured loans, fCit industrial and other development of rural
,..
In average yields fCit the Dine sites, Lopn raDted second with areas.
11.7 bushels per acre and Arthur l'l!llked JID1b aU7.3 bushels per
'!be bill would "P'Ind the powb'S of the Soil Cooservatioo
•i
acre. Average test weight of Arlbur was 61.2 pounds per bushel, Service to lelilsbare in paying fw m1micipal am imuslrial water
"""lid -• •·
lal "• ~-'s ,_. -'""
waneqoenmen
rw&lt; • ....,.... """ • .._twas an
suppliesandprojeclsfcrsoilandwaterpdlutioocoolrol.
•JetODdwuY
evenlllpmqlsperblisbel,goodfll'nintbranki•ofallvarieties
'l1le bill would also ueale a farm land development cor•' tested
poratim to
· laD!. tired .__ f
·
... _ ed
of
.
.
. , acqwre
re
....... armmg on Y.., ges
~
Highest average yields b the Sill "'"' ,ear in a ""' were cities and tum it into parks, wildlife refuges and reereation areas.
1. barvested frun Blueboy, a N.rtb c.oJiDa wriety. Blueboy
. PULLMAN, WASH. -'l'IIREENocthwestern experimental
'•· ,.._._anaverage,~peracre
__.,..,...
"""""cl617 1Ju.1bel.
but. ranked a t sta tioos have developed a oowvariely of winlef barley that will
lbe bottom iD test weigbt (57.1 (ll+uob per l1nlrl average Ill' U.. , jroduce yieldsabootlOpct. bjgbertban present strains.
.,.. line Illes).
.
Dr.JamesNielson,direcbir 1i Wasbingtoo State University's
...
............
Llfeversays......,...,isliot""'IJIII!PI¥fediDObiobeeauseof ~lure Re9eareh Cenler, .said the new variety, called
Kamu!\;,wouldreplacetheHgd-strain, "particularlyiDareas
wberewinlerbardinessisrequiredfocmazimumprocmctioo."
LH
!/:1_~ !2
'111e new six-1'011' winter barley strain was developed by
:
UniversityeqoerimentstatioosinWasbingtm,IdaboandOregoo.
\
WASHINGTON -MEAT RAVIOLI need have only 10 pet.
'\
meat, ac"«dillg 1D Agriculture Department standard&lt;;,
Butlasaguawithmeatsaucemustbecomprisedofatleastl2
•
pel meat, and atleastooe.fourth of a meat pie must be meat.

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Deer Bolts Into Auto

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PT. PLEASANT - Two
ll:aflic mishaps have been investigated by tbe Sheriff
Department resulting in a deer
killed and a parked vebicle

&gt;

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struck.

Marian Room, !dart, told
offij:ersbe was driving on Route
33 near Letart at 10:30 p.m.,
I

New

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M.F. 135 TRACI'OR SALE!
Below Dealer Cost Until Oct. 1st!

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Falcons

Lots of Used T13CIIrs and Equipment
of All Descriptions!

Your Massey fettusGn Delln

GAWPOLIS
TRACTOR

MF
~.~

. -., • F.

." . - .

Upper Route 7 Phone 446-1044

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(Continued from page 21 )
when lbe clock ran out.
Statistic wise CUrtis Roush
was the Jeading ground gai!Er
by picking up ~ yards in eight
carries. Cbet Roush bad 18
yards u{ seven carries and
Robije I amber! bad 36 yards iD
six carries. Passing wise Mike
While threw eight for 14 and
QletRousb ftlltOfll' 2. Olester
Roush caught three pa
for .
m yarm. Randy Clark three
foc 22 yards and Curtis Roush
caught two' pa
fer 31 yards.
'!be whole Wahama defense is
to be L1llllllleDded once again fCit
its superb performance. Mike
White, Barry Harris, Rob
Lambert, Audie McFarland,
Curlis Roush and Chester
Rousb were just a few wm did
oulstanding jobs. Mike While
had 15 individual tackles wDie
Barry Harris • 01rtis Roush and
Audie McFarland bad 10, 9 and
9 respectively.
Friday, the While Falcoos
b:avel to Racine where they will
Pltlbeir unbeaten rec&lt;ll'd of~
I oo lbe line wben they lake oo
lbe Southern Tonladoes.
STATISrla!
Department
WHS lllmll
Total YIE
llli5 Zi8
Rushing Y&lt;E.
107 151
First Down:l
6 13
Inlerceptions
2 2

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Is now the'time'to
build or improve?
A new home, modern buildintlS. increased
efficiency for bandling livestock:, land improvements
-investments like these are too imporlant to
postpone. A Federal Land Bank loan, made for
·extra years and at reasonable rosl, makes such
things possible for many who might otherwise be
forced to deiay them.

Let wi analyze your plans for housing or expansion
and come up with a practical way to meet your
pia. We usually can find ways to get you started
toward greater income·and more eomforlable
livinl without unnecessary waitinc.
Oyde

B. Walker.

Manager
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1f Locust St.

CO.IIipolis. Ohio

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PT. PLEASANT _ We
mentioned in Ibis coltmln
earlierthatwehadvisitedtbe
o. M, Scott Researcb Oeilter at
Marysville, Ohio, north of
Colmnbus. The ~n for this
tour was part of the program at
lbe national
of the Soil
~·
Conservation Society of wbich
we are members.
We were very much impressed with the work that Scott

~eeting

Penalties

of

.

.
grass 00 a four.iocb tbidl 'lbisf!mgicideis put on early in reported that a pond wblcb be
concrete )Nil!.
the spring 1111d late in the fall. had buill some time ago and at

I wrolefll&amp;nasiDIDDe sn
'"-'..r bad -.. .._ ............, on
"""-~
this plot beliae iepali!c it.
They repated u..t t11eJ bad
started this turf poftlg oo the
concrete in 1!&amp;5. 1be Winds&amp;
Kenludlf llluqjt
sad was
started
IIICl was
cut in arglllir:
...,
to a .WO&gt;I
,. """""
"-·-"'-,_._
--~
the
wwwo ·O
UUL
. . , . was
-~
_
_._,_,
..........
amomt of ...,...._._,..
Cll the Cllllimte. No wMj!iiYl
soil was added Sioae. that time

w....

......,...

.L ~..., ...__

llesl!jddes have been used in
isolated cases to take care of a
few undesirable weeds. A
weekly mowing scbedule is
mam·1ained at PL
.,. inches in
beigbt and the area is inigated
as needed to prevent it from
ckying out.
When we saw this sod on
.....,
A • we walked on it and
__could
....,
we
not teD it from any
other sad on their groiUids.
Aller explain~ fll us their

McARTIIUR _ A free arr

show,foUowedbyaskydiving
cuntestareamong the activities
slated for the dedication of the
new Vinton County Airport
administration building Sun·

weather

ceremony will take place at I
p.m., followed by a spectacular
GALLIPOLIS .
Tem-d free a1r
· s how and sky di vmg
.
perature. precipl 1ation an c••ntest. Between events 1.1 IS
.
weather conditions for each 24hour period as recorded by Pete hoped that visitors will find
McCormick, Fairfield weather time to visit the antique and
observer.
Day
High Low Prec. hume-builtaircraftdisplay area

~~ · ~ :~ :~is~:~lo~c~ui::g."ew

the thiree-lourtbs incbes of
mgaoic soil had been increased
to a tliidness of about Jl'z incbes by the addition of organic
matier composed of the roots
~-s
.....eu
sadplllllgrowlh.
We are wondering if they will
WASHINGlON-~nls ligweoulbowtogrowbairona
are being 8Cill!pted by Olug. lilliard ball, and on bald heads.
Clarence E. Miller for· EVERETT SULLIVAN,
nomination to the Air Fan:r whose farm is on Tribble Road,
Academy, the Nav.ll Arndemy,

the time was leaty bad been
sealed by the use of volclay ·
lela ·
fin cia

"

:~~~cb~partie'cl~

of silt and sand, somewhat
int
that
111
e same manner
cemen
seals the spaces iD between
S8Jidspreadand
was
over
.......,
at the ....._ 0 f 00e
.....,.,d area
"'""
po111 per square foot--"'
IWU was
lowed do lind packed with a
P
wn bas
wheel tractor. Volclay
a
capability of swe1llng fll eight
timesitsoriginalsizewben·ltis
completely saturated with
water.
1
CARL A. SEAGER, wbose
th
fann is beyond Uplancl 00 e
Milton Road developed a
cmservalionplanfll'biafann.
He was belped with Ibis plan by
_Denver Yoho lind John Cooper
of SCS. Mr. Seager bas already
limed and fertiiUed 8 tm-acn
ridge _meadow 6eld and bas
bal~ II using the !'6101 bales
whicb are left Jymg oo the
gromd,lindwillletbialivestock
eat them in place. Mr. Seager
raises purebreed Angus cattle.

gravel.lbe~·~,.;
....,..L_

MAIGE CONTROL

1t pia at lbt . - o l - l b t mitoo that liYO on"" IIRdor tho
ilia 0.. il&gt;arouP appticrotioa ..,..Uy d I OJI - p atlo
ud lela your ae••lo Ml -~ JNiPl qaiL
.... ,.., ......h dop, IIDd inr.tod ..
..... apra:rlal.
lliM • c. or lic;at.l oill[lriDJdinc.

J. D. North Produce
---------.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii._______,
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FALL
SPECIAL

OOMBIOTIC
PER ·lOOCC BOrn£

•2·75

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lHIBENZOI.E- CAmE V«)RMER

CENTRAL
SOYA
"The Food Power People''
GALLIPOLIS; OHIO

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New utility tractOIS
New big diesels-with more po~er,less noise, less.smoke
New big Hydros
New wide chOice of gas, diesel, turbo, non-turbo, gear drive and Hydro
Two new cabs-with and wilhO!i1 air conditioning .
New IH IS&lt;lMOU'IT isolators to reduce vibration
New operaling ease and comfort
Mqre choice, more prorluclivity, more tractor value-now

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GoiHRed

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Meigs Equipment CO.

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Ph. 992-2176

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AUTOMATIC Warm Morning
wood heater, \ike new, $150.
Ph. «6-31W9.
225·3
-:-:-:-::-~--

1970 VIRGINIAN 12x60 mobile
home, Ph. 379-2255.
225-3

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1961 SUBURBAN station
wagon, mechanically good.
Priced lor quick sale. Ph. 367·
7135.
225·3

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1971 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass S,
automatic pOwer-disc- brakes,
power steering, sport steering

whee\ , 350 cu. ln . eng\ne,

IF YOU are building a new
home or remodeling, see us.
We are builders. Distributor

224-6

for Hotpoint Appliances.
Allison Electric.
154-11
WHITE cemen1, all sizes tile in
stock. 12" &amp; 15" field lite.

suitable lor highway ditching,
concrete

I"''

GALLIPOLIS BLOCK CO.•
ph. 446-2783.
97-11

24 ACRES on Brick Road 2
miles from Addison. Several
excellent building lois. Ph.
367-7598.
204-lt
COMPLETE LINE ot pipes and
accessories.

USEO

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w.

and

Mobile

Home

Headquarters. All size mobile

homes in slack. B &amp; S Mobl\e
Home Sales, Second &amp; Viand,
Pl. Pleasant, next lo Heck's.
67-lf
SIGNS. No hunllng or
lrespasslng or others. Protect
your rights. Simmons Pig, &amp;
Office Equip.
203-11

Aluminum ·
Sheets

Gallipolis
~ill Tribune

GBD

Charatan. Taw"'!Y Jewelers,
•2• Second. Ave.
173-tl

------

211

blocks .

GOOO CLEAN LUMP and
sloker coal. Carl Winters, Rio
Grande. Phone 2~5115.

8-11

WE specialize in portrait and

commercial photography ,
church weddings, reunions,
etc. Tawney Studio.

AREA ,

some repairs.

BATHS ,

and ga s.

basement, one mi. from city.

A nice lot and a cheap house on P\ne Street, Lot 42 If. by
about 200 ft. deep. Price s.5.000.00.
In Harrison Township, 53 acres land. large barn, '12 acre
tobacco base, small pond and an 8 room house thai needs
some repair.

NICE

In Addison Township, 260 acre farm, 90 acre bot1om land,
1;, acre tobacco base, 21 acre cOrn base, has a fair barn
and 2 houses. 3 gas wells tl•al pa,s l$5.00 every 3 months
and will furnish gas for 6 houses. 1 house rents for SSO.OO

per monlh ; 1 for 525.00 per month. 26 acres cO&lt;n that will
not go with farm this year . Price $40,000.00.

,.

STROUT REAllY
INVESTOR'S SPI:CIAL
30 A. AT Rodney ripe lor
de-velopment. Land is mostly
flat with county water . Ap.
proved by state as site for
trailer park.

HOSPITAL.

2112

BUll T

BATHS ,

CARPETED
LIVING
ROOM , VERY NICE
KITCHEN
( RANGE .
REFRIG,) , LOTS OF
CLOSETS &amp; CABINETS,
FULL BASEMENT WITH
WOOD
BURNING
FIREPLACE, 2 CAR
GARAGE AND' OF THE
PRETTIEST ACRES ON
THE RIVER . BE SURE
ANO SEE THIS .

NEW

2

2 EXTRA large clean lots oo St.

Rl. 160, 4 miles from new
hospital. rural water line
instal led. Paul Denney.
Bidwell. Ph. J88.8649.
225-3
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BUY LIKE RENT - One floor,
three BR. full basement brfck
with l'h baths and attached
garage. Payments just like
monfllty rent. Owner will help
1\nance.
EDGE OF TOWN lUXURY Two beautiful homes, one
ranch, line split level, both
with hot water heal, stone and
frame, l'h baths, two car
garage. Owners will trade or
help finance.

clean, mostly

rolling pastureland .

60 A. Grade B dairy, plenty of
buildings, •;, A. lob., large
pond. good 6 room home,
close to Vinton.

INVES.TMENT
PROPERTY

41/:.z A. -

Route 160, modern

home, pond.

ON

UPPER 2ND AVE. RENTS
FOR SIOO PER MONTH .

owN E R AN X10 u s To
Sf;LL.

garage, gas furnace, good
location, shown by appointment . Mrs . Claude

Evans. ~&lt;16-2605. Cal\ after 4
p.m.
222.0
.
.
1 ACRE tusl 7 m1\es from new
power plant, 500 II. ott Addlson-Bu\avi\\e Rd. Approved
septic system hookup lor 2
trailers, drilled well. water
lap available. Ph. 367-7645
between 9 a.m. and 8 P-~2-6

BAIRD REALTY CO. .
Osc1r
a.1r•1 Realtor
.NEW 3 bedroom home in Plantz
,
·
451 SecGnd Ave.
Ph. 446-477$

extta

tillable, 2 ponds.

31 A. - 7 room home, 40 x 60
barn, 11• A. lob. $8,800,

1970 HONDA 350 road bike. FOR SALE by owner 2 story
frame house, 6 rooms &amp; bath.
priced right. Ph. 446-0655.

Reat Estate For Sale

grqund,

50 A. - Morgan, S BR home.
$13,500.

BEDROOM HOME WITH
NICE KITCHEN ON 11h
ACRE LOT , 2 MILES
NORTH OF RIO GRANDE
ON RT . 325. WILL NOT
RENT TO A FAMILY
WITH CHILDREN .
DEPOSIT
REQUt REO .

IT ' S A DOUBLE

tool shop • .aluminum siding .
THE Dillon Agency has been a
member of the Local &lt; Stale
and National Association of
REALTORS since Jan. 1942,
we have listed existing homes
and I arms all these years on a
FIVE (Sf percent commission
basis. Why pay more. list with
the DILLON AGENCY. It
pays.
COTTAGE .for sale or lease by
owner . 6 rooms, bath ,
basement, nice yard . See

Wayne Amsbary, 631 Fourth
Ave.
218-11
•

AUCTION
SERVICE

SUbdlv., good location, in city
school district. W\\\ be
finished soon. Ph. Delbert
Clark, 446-0390.
208-tf

Rultor, 32 Slate Sl

Tel 446-1998
Fairview
Sub.-Div.

163 ACRE
BEAUTIFUL brick, with cen.
FARMER'S FARM
air, 1'h baths, 3 big bdrms.,
56 A. R \CH bottom land, \00 A.
huge liv. rm ., kitchen has
rolling pas1ureland, 2 barns,
disposal. d\swasher. bar.
several other good buildings,
ran9e, and many nice
nice 4 B. R. home setting on a
cabmets. A\\ h.w. lloors
shady lawn.
covered with the best car·
LAND CONTRACT
peling, patio. 2 car base. gar.
BUILDING lots in an excellent
with e\ec. eye door. Located
location. We also have nice
on a large land-scaped lot.
large lo1s for mobile homes
Hurry! this \s the kind you
with all utilities.
seldom see on the market.
FARMS
100 A. LEVEL and · rolling
Edge ~ity
2\2 A. -

FOR SALE OR
RENT
NEARLY

storage room and finished

MASSIE

Pli. 446·0008

THIS
LOVELY
3
BEDROOM HOME . IT
INCLUDES

CHILLICOTHE Rd. 3 BR and
bath. large modern kitchen
and storage rooin, carport,

3

GARAGE

O'DELL

Vacant

Office •46 :1066
Evenings: Call
Ron Canaday 446-!636
· John I. Richards446-0280
Russell D. Wood446-4618

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221-6
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In Green Township, 92 acre farm, 925 lb. tobacco base •
fair fences, 5 room house with aluminum siding. County
water tap paid. Pr_ice $18,000.00.
WANTED: 25 to 50 acre farm. Some farming \and.
Building no1 too important.

LARGE

4 ACRES ON
RIVER
JOHN

kitchef'\, w~w carpet, part

On Edgemont Drive a nice 2 bedroom house with full

AND BASEMENT ON A
LARGE LOT JUST 1 MI .
FROM NEW

Storr_ clll electric brick home.

3 BR. 1'1• bath, all buill-In

basement and nice level lot. Price $16,000.00.

NEW ,

S-p-r-e-a-d 0-u-t
.\N THIS nice comiortabte one

At Cen'tenary, we haVe a five room cottage on a large lot.

LARGE BEDROOMS .
VERY PRETTY BUILT ·
IN
KITCHEN WITH
RANGE.J OVEN. DISH WASHEK . AND LOTS OF
CABINETS . DINING
AREA , W TOW CARPET
IN LARGE LIVING ROOM
11J2

forlcibte ~ih;:hen with oven

and range. carpeted LR; full
basemenl, aluminum siding.
·deep .lol85' x 200' new vacan t.

229,JI. road frontage on Stale Route 141 , wilh city water

NEW LISTING
BRICK WITH
BASEMENT
LIKE

What A View!

THIS hillside _home offer• ·a
pic turesque view of the river,
2 bedrooms and. bath, com-

' $25,000.00. \t is a double brick in good location. Needs

3

LIVING ROOM. LOTS OF
CLOSETS. HARDWOOD
FLOORS, GARAGE , AN
EXCELLENT
VIEW .
FULL PRICE $19,900.

JUST

Office 446·267~

The price on this home has had the price reduced to

NEW

AT EDGE OF TOWN IN
VERY GOOD NEIGH ·
BORHOOD. PRETTY
BUILT -IN KITCHEN ,
DINING

Hob.lrl Dillon, R..Jior

You will always stay young if you live honestly, eat
slowly , sleep sufficiently, and lie about your age.

NEW LISTING
NEW 3 BEDROOM

------

Rd. Ph. 256-6518.

s1age is dids and did nots.

ATTRACTIVE
RANCH

ROOM,

f-Irs~

Haves- and have nots- are the second s1ate. The

KITCHEN .AND UTILITY
ROOM . GOOD FLAT LOT,
FULL P-RICE Sl5,500.

LOW, low prices on Bemco and
Serta mattresses and box
springs. Corbin &amp; Snyder
AKC Toy Poodles and Siamese
Furn,, 955 Second Ave. Ph.
kittens. Ph. 2.56-6247.
446·1171.
223-6
3-tf
Hereford Farm, Lower River

446-1066

Off. 446-3643
Eve. 446-3796
446-4500

LIVING

225·3

·.For Sale

------

REALTOR

CONVENIENTLY
lOCATED ON RT . 160
HALF WAY BETWEEN
CITY
AND
NEW
HOSPITAL
3
BEDROOMS PANELED

10,000. Ph. «6-0224.

----STRAWand hay tor sale. Buller

USSELL WOOD·, Dillon ·
.REALTOR
Agency,

EXCELLENT
LOCATION

241-ff

Color: lime green, mileage

Real Estate For Sale

BEDROOM HOME , VERY
N I CE
KITCHEN ,
UNUSUALLY
PRETTY
BATH ,
ATTACHED
GARI&lt;GE . HOME IS IN
EXCELLENT
CON ·
DITtON ON LARGE FLAT
LANDSCAPED LOT 2 MI .
OUT . $18,500 .

SOMMER"S G.M.C.
TRUCKS, INC.
lUPine St.
Ph..446-25Jl

------

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

CENTRAL SOYA ••••

HEADQUA~TERS

225-6
--~---

Real Estate For Sail!

The WISEMAN
Agency

NEARLY

1'1117 DATSUN P.U.
1966 "' T. GMC P.U.
1969 Plymouth Roadrunner
1969 Chev. &gt;r. T. P.U.
1963 ciso Fard truck
1965 1h T. GMC P.U.
1969 Chev. dump truck
1952 1h T. Chev. P.U.
1965 fT. GMC
1969 GMC • T. log truck
1962 '14 T. GMC pickup
1957 1h T. GMC P,U.
1965 1h T. Ford P.U.
1963 'h T. Chev. P.U.
1969 I T. GMC
1967 'h T. GMC P.U.
1968 Chev. Suburban
1966 :If. T. Chev. P.U.
1967 'Vo T. Chevrotel pickup
1963 F600 Ford Truck
196i 2 T: GMc· •·•··••
1964 3 T. GMC
1967 F700 Ford dump truck

SEWING and alterations. Mrs. STEREO.Rad\0 Combination, USED FURNITURE
Dudley Eggleton. 446-4766.
lovely WALNUT finish, four
22•-3
speed \nlermlxed changer, 4 2 PC. living room suite like
brand new, 2 beds, 2 rockers,
speaker sound system.
dresser,
6 col\ springs,
BULLDOZING work by the
Balance $63.99. Use our
bassinet,
roll-away
bed, 2
hour or job. Call J. L. Hal·
budget terms. Call «6-1028.
dinette sets, end tables, 2 foot
f\eld • .19 Spruce St. 446-0205.
226-3
stools, lamps, anl\que marble
225-6
lop dresser with m\rror and
1 TRAILER, 8x40. Ph. 367·7329.
tw\n bed In excel. cond., auto.
226-6
gas dryer. Rice's New &amp; Used
Help Wanted
Furn.. 854 Second (across
1955 CHEVROLET, excel .
from
Texaco Station I. 446·
cond.• $350 or best offer. Ph.
9523.
If you're my man or woman,
446-3871.
225-1(
I will start you wtth $600 a
226-1
· month, guarantNd. Send - - - - - you to school for 2 WHits
HOOVER spin dry washing PUBLIC seating, folding tables·
•xpoMeS p111d, ttain you In
machine, hall price. Ph. 446and chairs - restaurants,
the field of selling and ser.
3626 .
churches,
organizations.
226-3
vicing .etlablishtd accounts.
Complete line of ofllce chairs
Mutt be over 21, have car,
and desks. Simmons Pig. &amp;
bondible, ambitious and 7 HEIFER calves and 2 bulls.
Office Equ\p, Ph. 446·1397.
Pony and saddle. Ph. VInton
141 -lf
sports
minded.
388-8631.
226-3
Hospltalizaticln and ~MRSion
program. Please call Donald CARPETS alright? Make them
FelVer, ~f521.
a beautiful s\ghl with Blue
·. ~, X 23" ~.oat
Lustre.
Rent
electric
shampooer $1. Central Supply
WILL pay well for your spa.re
Co.
t\me working at home for us.
226·6·
Anyone who can read and
write can qualify. Weekly
'
salary. Detalls write: James 1971 ZIG-ZAG sewing machine
USED OFFSET PLATES
Bliss Co., P. 0 . Box 124, Dept. tell \n layawar· · Beautiful
HAVE
K487, Levittown. Pa. 19053. pastel color, lui size modeL
I
223·12 All buill-In to buttonhole,
MANY USES
overcast ' and fancy sl\lch.
Pay
$48,75 cash or terms
IF YOU would like an exdl\ng
aval able. Trade-I ns ac.
career tn the promising worlil
ltor$1.110
cepted. Phone 446-0665.
of Beauty .-...:utlure \n a
m.o
program which has full
government .financing, . write ~~---Cleaner brand new
to Beauty, 609 Third Ave., VACUUM
.
'
1971
model.
Complete with all
Chesapeake, Ohio, or call
cleaning
tools.
Small
paint
'I
collecl304-525·4826 between 9
damage In sh\pptng. Wi\llake
and 2 p.m.
222·12
$27 cash · or budget plan
available. Phone 446,0665,
125 T!rinl Ave.
Gallipolis~ 0 .
WHY p\nch penn!es when you -~--~----222·6
'
can earn dollars selling guaranteed . Avon producls?
USED TRAILERS
And it ts easy to gel started 1970 VOLKSWAGEN, auto.
1960
National
10x50. 2 br.
trans..
radio,
e\ec.
defrost,
right In your own community.
1967
Horizon
12x50,
2 br,
blue,
while
Interior,
675dark
Call or . wr\le Mrs. Helen
1957
Gilder
.c5x8,
3
br.
Yeager, Box tn, Jackson. 5203.
222·6 1966 Namco, '2x10, 3 br,
OhiQ:. ..
Ph. 286-o4028.
1960 Van Dy~e. 10x50 2 br .
221-6' - - - - - ' -- -- 1960 Van Dyke 10xS0,-2 br.
1%5 Kentuckian, '6xl0, 3 br.
196i Colonial SOxiO, 2 br.
BUsiness Opport111ities
1960 Van ·Dyke IOx40, 2·br.
All
lral!ers clean and recon· WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTOR WANTED
.
dltloned
. Ready for- oc·
To sell to company, established, all cash accounts In this
~upancy.
Free Delivery and
area This Is not i coin operated .vending route. Our
set:up. Tri-County Mobile
odi.d Is sold \n lOCations such as offices. employe(!
Homet, 446-0175. ·
ro..nves tn retail stores. financial tnslltullons, small
93-11
manylactu•tng plants. warehouses. schools and hospitals.
The 'illstrlbulor we HI~ 'will be responsible tor main·
'-lnl
·these tocallcrts · and nostocklng Inventory. All
tocall:ns are established !&gt;Y our company, a 10 )'l!ar old
we· need e ·dependable distributor, rnale or
SINGER Sew\ng Machine Sales
::,'~""'n this area with $1,1195 minimum to Invest In .
&amp; Service. All models in
equl man! and Inventory. which will tum over about two
slock.
Free dellvlfy. Service
11m.: m0111tlly. Earnings can grow to $25,000 annually arw;t
guaranteed.
Models priced
u we \VIII consider Pllrl·flme applicants. Write lor
from 169,95. French City
• J;.,pletelnlormatlon, lnclu~ !&gt;hone number and Area
Fabrlt Shoppe. Singer approved dealer, 58 Cilurl St.
CodtctJ'J&amp;.,.J;'l'fes:ri~EMIC~~~iPGRATION
Ph' 446-9255.
Fnoeu Drlld Preducts Division
308-tf
, ·· :1115 MontroY Blvd., Sorlie 215
ltouston. Texas 771106

..
....-·
-..

•
•
•
•
•
.•
•
•

Truck Headquartels

FO.R SALE by owner - 1968
CuHass, 1910 Maverfx, both
automatic, both excellent
condltiOh. Ph. 446-2228.
223-6
~=.,..-:--=--.,.......::
1971 CHEV. 11• T. pickup, V-8
std. sh\11. 8 fl. bed, 4,000 actual miles, Ph. 446-2'149 alter
5.

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

VINE ST. GAlliPOLIS, 0.

Real Estate FIf Sale

New GMt

-..--'-----

For Sale

-------

Sao ,. today for l'wnlltJ J l - c..w.l.

Tractors

FURNISHED apartment.
references required. Inquire
at 631 Fourth Ave.

-----

PURIIA-

9 Great

For Rent

arid

IIAI&amp;E

forms, BR&gt;iiranls shcwdd write
to Cong. Clareoce E. Miller, 121
Cannoo House Olfice Bgjlding,
Washinglao. D. C. :1115!5.

---~-----

For Sale

. .
·~LEAI!N TO. READ MUSIC IN Corb.i.n. &amp;
..
ONE EVI;NING! Amazing
~w book shows how, only SJ. Snyder Furniture ·
.M
' oney. Back G uaran 1ee. "
· USED FURNITURE
Write p , 0. Box 4188, 7 PC. breakfasl set, bedroom
Parkersburg. w. Va. 2~r~ . suile, relrigi!raiO&lt;, full site
_ _ _ _ __ :.....__ · coil springs &amp; mattress •
TWO GREAT
ki Ichen ·ulllily ~"f,binel .
. PIANO VALUES
_elecNtrEicW
. ranFgeR.NITURE
·
U
FROM: CARl'S KEYBOARD INNERSPRING ' maliresses
CENTER. BaldWins: Eby.
starling at $28.95. 6111 the rest
Rag. '""·
$8.!5 - $695; Wal . R_eo.
$7-45, Hollett &amp; DavTs
you deserve. se Iec I your
5895
T
mattress and box springs
Spinel&gt;: rad. Ea. Am., &amp; Fr.
now. Free parking. Open
Prov. Styles. Retail Value
Fridays till B. 955 Second Ave.
$875- Spec. $645 !Includes
Ph
1171
free del.. luning &amp; matching
· 446·
217-11
benchl . CALL CARL'S
COL~ECT
485 - 6931 ,
Parkersburg .
223-4

------

.

community leaders fralq each
(){ the 13 Cllllllios in the U!h
C
Dis . L
ongressiona1
!riC
A
1
November derclliM !las beell
set loc accepling ap-a!ions.
To be eligible, 1 JIDII: man
must be .a , . ._,1 ~the lOib
..._ ,. _.... ._
Coo......,;onal............,
r:.a.._.... ........ .aa~ ...,.
Ju1 1, 1-be tleastl7aadool
y ~·· '"
yet 22 years cl age. Fill' additional information ,
catalogues, and application'

LADIES Santa needs helpers~
$3.ll an hour. 7to 10 p.m., no
experience necessary. For
H \'d
mone call M
Cl~~s~~ackson ~2705. rs.
·
175-lf

For Sale

SMALL
apartment
BETTER lobs are available for 18 fl . MOBILE home, can be
refrigerator. \ike new. Call
used as camper, Ph. 446-1044.
446-4052 alter 5,
. ~BC graduates. Enroll now
226-1
· rf:; 1 next term. Gallipolis
~~ssPhCollage R. N. 71-G:l.
1 TON GMC truck, dual wheels, 1967 MERCURY Comet 4 dr.•
'
. . 446-4367.
auto. trans., clean, new tires,
162-11 . good cattle racks, runs good.
Ph. «6-1044.
good condll\on, priced . lor
226·1 quick sale. Ph. 379-2412.
Wanted
224.0
GOOD PAY. TOP BENEFITS, 1969 FORD Torino, excellent
JOB SECURITY. FOR
condition. Ph. 446-4871 .
PORTABLE SINGER sew\ng
SKILLED OR UNS~ILLED.
machine. W\11 sell for repair
U. S. Army. Wide choice of ~-----226.0
bill. $18.44, Ph. 446-9353.
tralnt.ng and .educational 1970 CADILLAC sed. DeVIlle,
219-tt
opportunities. All Nrn-wh\fe.
tully equipped, low m\leage.
you-learn . ·Full pay and
Ph. Pl. Pleas. 675-4283 after 6, -SEWING machine service in
allowances. Top · fringe
226-lf
your home. Clean, oil and
benefits. Ph. 446·3343.
adlust,
$4.99. Call 446-9353.
~--------:226 · 4 WEIMARANER puppies, AKC,
219-11
CHRISTMAS Is jus! around the
9 wks. Dam twice 4-H -----~
~
corner 'Hive-a'f&gt;feyho!lse TW'" ""obedlence·champlon;Jop bird 28FT. lANilEM dllmp·lril\ler.
Padv
receive tree toys,
&amp; watch dogs. George
C. C. Mollohan, 367:7571.
Ph. 2~5126.
.
Woodward, 379-2597.
222-5
226·3
226-1
_ ___,.:..-=--CU. IN. Pontiac. engine with
'NEVER. used anything like 389transmission.
Ph . 446-9386.
\1.'" say users of lllue Lustre
Wanted To Buy
225·3
carpel cleaner. Rent electric
FARM ·with ·35 or 40 acres,
-~~-shampooer $1. Lower G. C.
llllal&gt;\e with plenty of water &amp;
CHINCHILLA sale, My animals
Murphy Store.
barn. David Shelby, Rt. 1,
are outgrowing their quar·
226-6
McArthur, Oh\o ol5651 . Ph.
ters. Will trade for anything
------59&lt;1-4270,
or
sell at most reasonable
224·3 EARLY AMERICAN Stereo,
rates. Gordon Wooten, 446·
AM-F M rad\o, 4 speed
2655.
changer, 4 speaker sound
_
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _225·3
Wanted To Do
system, Balance $79.32. Use
our
budget
terms.
Call
446·
In
my
WILL do babysitting
HAY tor sale. Ph. 446-2226.
1028.
home. Ph. 446-1549.
225 _3
226·3
226-3

...

IJo.wling

YOUR ANIMAL HEALTH

Instruct ion

STOP

,.,_1

-------~-226-3

------

and
the forcla
Merchant Marine • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ·
Academy
entering iJi
June, l97!.
In lhat the loll cpMI1a of the
!Oih district 1 i!enls wbo 1\111
be appointed lllrolq:h the
Congressman's aflice are
presenlly enrolled in the lJDi1m
)
..Stales Mililary AI !eli.,, ~~~left
can be l10 "Arinlnlenls DDde
by lbe Cuagi
"" rar West
•
p . 1 1 Ibis lime.
~tb:u,gh applications for
dem • ....n,,_,ls dwmld
aca
Y ......-- - be directed to his af1i1:e, Millet
pointed out that 1be acblal
selection of oominees and

•-· IS
. ma...,
_._ by a
a Iterna~
selection boaAI ...
cl

lfelp Wanted.

WA"l
·
I' ed R
. n ·l . P.N. or re"
.
Nurse ·IO work \n nursing
hllme. can live ln. 11 destred,
Write: Box 313. Ironton,· Ohio.
Rl. 1.

YARD sale, Tues. &amp; Wed., Sept.
~II
28 &amp; 29
. , 10:30 a.m. to 7 p.m . .C...:..----~
Frank &amp; Jean Belville's
spaces with walk$ &amp;
residenCe on Bob-McCorm \ck TRAILER
patios,
water
turn. Henderson
Rd. Bottles, baby fumilure
Tra\\er
Court,
end ol Silver
and other treasures.
Memorial
Brldge.
Ph. 675·
226·2
3886.
---:-'---~~
224-3
REDUCE safe and fast with
• Gobese tablets and E-Vap FURN. APT,_, 1 bedroom, all
water pills. Gillingham Orug.
utllltles paid, 5 m\les N, of
&gt;,
'
223-26
Galltj&gt;olls on St. Rt. 7. Call
4&lt;16-4170 alter 3.
RALPH'S Carpel - Upholstery
224-3
Cleaning Service. Free
eSIIII)ales. Ph. 446-0294.
197-11 BRADBURY efficiency apt.
Adults only, no pOls. 729
Second Ave. Avallab\e Sept.
SUN VALLEY Nursery School,
27.
577 Sun Valley Drive, licensed
223-tl
by .the Stale of Ohio,
Department of
Public
Welfare, now providing full lOOK.INGfor a real nice room?
Lowe Motor Hotel; PL
dey
care and
child
Pleasant, Main and 4th In·
development program for
v\tes your inspection. Singles,
pre-school chlldren, infants
u.so, $5, $6, $7, $8, $9, ·$2 for
excluded. Open 6:30a.m. to 6
extra
person. Special weekly
~.m . Monday through Friday .
rates.
F pkg .• TV, Ind. air
Fees: $20 for full five-dliy
cond
.•
sell
serv. elev. Ph. 675·
week. $5 per day \f less than
2260.
1\ve days, $3 per day for
. 1~·11
morning sessions, Ph. 4463657. Madge Hauldren,
Owner-0\reclor; John and SLEEPING ROOMS, weekly
rates. Park Central Hotel.
Loredllh
Hauldren,
308-11
operators.
35-11
APARTME:NT. ~ r,oms &amp; bath,
stove furnished and carpeled,
Business Opporlunities
part utilities. Ph. 446-2282 .
217-tf
HIGH voiume. Ashland service
=
=
station for lease . Paid SLEEPING ROOMS weekly
training. Call 992-5221 or «6·
rates, free garage parking,
1065 or Martella 373·8412.
Libby Hole!.
211 -11
74·11

on almost Anything

Air ShOW' .
Divmg
. Will ..nppUCliUUfllj
'
To ACJJdenaiBs
Fea·l ure Day_ Jln.iw.,..Jn....:....:6
.·

Notice

.

•m.

Y

:.,"':,YY

•minstt-wls pi-efei-red, Reed is lbebeslclloke- ~bas an
outstandingyinoltecCII'dandismtrewinler)iard)'lbananyofthe
oa.;,. reN+IIflM"Pdeoi varieties.
.
Ouqlleie ili!lfllllltiOO, oo variety ~ and
·r_,....,.....,..._. cui~..:&gt;, ·practices are Jlllblis!wl iii U.. 19'16-71
_____...,..
........
Agrm&lt;my Guide; .available tJrougb CQUDty otlices
the
O•taallw .Eiiensloo Sertlce.
·
. ··
'l1le 1i'n. yield tests were C!XIducted at sites iii the lo11owillli Ohio
counties: Erie, Wayne, Franklin, Clark, Wood,MabclliDg; Meig:s,
i1rown, and Ucking.

is doing in grass research. One
....... of
.
for . the
particular 30 x 50 fl. plot that tbeirmainlftiiiM:el*+IIDbas me.....U
carmg
II,
interested us very much was consisted
fl.
line
4Yi'
guide
pulled
up
a
corner
the
d two
pad lind sbowed us theof lll·
1 1 rtiURr
one wtiere they are growing :lica~ions of :'e ~ derneatb side of it whicb in·
~"~"""" •L- roots and the adftalgicideecmbjn!ljm per Jell'. - - ""'
dilional organic matter whicb
•
.4.,. I! _ _.:___
bad formed. 11 appeared that

ad74
52
Tuesday
All area residents are urged
Wed..,sday
74
50
Thursday
73
62
tu spend· an exciting day at the
1 Vinton
74
52
County Airport six
Friday
Saturday
56 42
\ .1
h
'
Average high temperature for m1 es nor! of McArthur.
-this year - 71.0. Last year
T :--:: _T
- 87.2.
LOCal
Average low temperature for
Early Wednesclily
weel&lt;this year - 54.7. Last year
Mixed league
- 64.0.
Sept. 15, 1971
Total precipitation for week
$landings
this year - .15 inch. Last year
Team
WL
-.59 inch.
16 8
Total precipitation to dale Young's Markel
14 10
th\s year - 22.76 inches. Last Oiler's Sohio
Team No. 6
14 10
year - 2'1.3.4 inches.
10 ;4
Normal
Ave ·rage Zide's Sport Shop
10 14
~cipitalion annually - 40.99 Team No. 4
Team No.5
, 8 16
1nches.
Men High Individual GameBob Couch 198.
Women High Ind. Game Passover Observance
Carolyn
Bachner 210.
Christians in the 1st cen·
Men
High
tury continued to celebrate Phelps 541. Series - Junior
the Passover without draw·
Women High Series iDg any distinction between Carolyn Bachner 556.
a Christian and Jewish ob- Team High G~me- Team
4 0 servance. This ~ontinued No. 5 721.
3 0 until the destruction of Jeru- Team High Series - Team
No. 5 1m.
tl 50 salem iD A.D. 70.

Fumbles
Fumbles'L&lt;IIt

'

So:~=·==ce

Ocl. 10.
Friday when a deer ran onto the day,
A full day of activities will
road into the right front corner begin with airplane rides ov~
of his car. Roush said he . Vmlun C?unty at 8 a.m. B~
swerved to miss the deer but the Abele, arrporl manager, will
animal bolted back across the have fuur aircraft including one
highway into his car resulting in twin engine, one . seven
$150 damage to the vehicle.
passenger smgle engme,_ and
G. Richard Lindsey, I&amp;, two_ fou_r passenger smgl~Southside, was cited for failure engme aircraft operating until
to !!ave vehicle mder oontrol 11 p.m. to accommodate .an
following a mishap at 5, 15 •-Ill· . who WISh to see the beautiful
Saturday. Undsay was driving Vinton County fall foliage from
bia car near the 4-H Cam- the air.
All " EarlY Bini" breakfast
pgroiUid when be reacbed down
to pick np a pack of cigarettes will be available for pilots flying
from the Door and lost control of 101" Vmton County from B-I0:30
his car striking a parked bus a.m. and
will be followed at 11
b
h. ck
barbecue
belonging to Lakin State a.m.
a c 1 en
Hospital. Property damage served from a 35.foot long pit.
was estimated at $1,150 to the Chicken, ham sandwiches, soft
two vehicles.
drinks and coffee will be
available throughout the day.
The official dedication

week~

rar mast.;

In tests since 1966 (HeeptArtiw~bas~ ~sial:e
1!168), average )'ields iD ObiO'$five NI'"MI . . led wheat ftrie1ies
rank as follows · ' -•n li46busbels - - · · - ""• " - '
· • ....,...., · .
..-~~ .............., ; •......,
49.9; ~oat, 4J.3; and Moooo, 47.4. ·
A new variety, Arthur 71, bas bema!lded mille Jist of 11ae
reeommended for Ohio. This variety, -ty idelllil:al to Artllar
was released in July by the · Pm1lue llniwasitr ~
~ntal Stalioo.

1 ::-~:=:.;t~:;::!:~~:~,.=:a: More R
Deve opment the Lay of the I .and
=~te::~.!~:e=ty~y~~= Proposed by Rep. Poage Next: Hair
:;

IN LOVING · memory of iny
dear _Aunt . Katie . S_ayre,
·Cheshl
Ohl 0
h
.
• w o passed
· .
re,
away
len so
years
agoby
today,
Mlsse«j
mf!Ch
niece,
Stella.
. 226-1
--------IN LOViNG memory ol my
dtwhoar h~!~nd, AISex Jones.
pa ..... away eptember
25, 1969. " Gone'.' but will
never be forgotten.
Sadl y. mlssed by wIfe, Mrs.
Callie Jones.
226-1
---------

...-r-.....,

severallocalioos f!ll' a 11U1Dber of years is

Memory

In

· andbelownormalmoislureinAj)ril.GmeraiiJfa-.b!ewallla- lban Artlwandbasflelded~tl)' Jlllftlban_Artl!ur,dl.mlthe
.n June aad during harvelst resulted in Jie1i1s m1 test weiciU liSt two se.oos. Lafever .III1W lhataeed fCit Arllm 71 ~be ·
consitjerably above recent aV«a&amp;eS iD Olio. · ·
generally available frun ctrllflllll aeed .,owen iD tm ~ 1t73.
. Wever pOOils out lhat wriety
oot be
Oilier cmsideratioos besides 7ieJd lbould be IUeD iDID. acjUdged oo the basis of a Single 11!11'. ~taUatarsGftm countwbench!MJsingaWinterwbeat-..rietJ,For~MCIIOO
affectyielclandotbercbara~.clavarietr_,._._ i111be.eartiestli lbe mmunellded varietieS fol)mred cllllely by
inano~.Anyoflbe~urietiesaaCIIi)iddU.. · ArtliJr. Arliu' is the sborlest variety and akqprith RedcoRt Ia

A.......:,.r.Jture Notes

ne•""

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

~~~ greater r1!ldslaDce to HelliaD 117 llld.IMI rust

Early May rains hl:lped wheat .--JnmwiD• ......,

im

SAME as new, 5 nice rms. and

bath, H.W. floors, Cathedral
ceiling. carport, and a kitchen
the Mrs. w\\1 like. Large .
landscaped
lot. il$16,500.
S pel.
Loan possible,
you quaflly.

City

EXCELLENT residential sec. 2
story, 6 big rms. bath and
utility rm . storm drs. and win .

partial base. II you are
looking for comfort, location
and price don't fall lo see this
one. On market a short lime.
$14,750.

Cheap Housing

15 A. NORTH of Rio Grande, all
tractor, good fences, modern
house. $15,000.

Ranny Blackburn
Branch Manager

PH. 446-3444

AUCTION
·
Sale Every
Saturday
Evenings, 7:00
Cor•r lrd a, 011.. A...
We

sell

anything

for

~~ · We a\10 buy~
'istallis: For Plc:k ·If lift!!»·
r

""""

Call
Knotts
Community Auction, 44629JT
·---------'

..

PUBLIC
SALE
Sal, Oct 2
12 Noon
Personal property of
tfle estate of A. E.
Hussell, deceased.
Farmall " H" trader wllll
plows, cultivators and 7 It.
mower, wagon on rubber.
disc, spreader on steel, JO It.
PTO elevator, drag harrow,
5 hp garden tractor with
rolarv mower attachment·,
feed a-usher, Iron keftle.
lard pr•ss. , scalding pan,
ladders. lnlernallonal boll..,
No. oiS, 3 cream separators.
complete blacksmith lhap
with forge, anvil. drill prea,
etc., 1 hp 220 electric 1TIOior,
grinder. one lot hand tools
and mlsc.llaneous 111111.
Several Items of household
furniture, living roOm suite.
dining table and chlllrs. ·

3 mi 1es Ent of Pt•

156 A. Farmer's tarm. $33,000.

Pleuant on

48 A. MOST tractor. $8,500.

Road.

II A. Oevelop. $10,000.

Now - almost every
family can own their
own home!.

JAMES (JIMME)
SAYRE

-

CITY - Older home
10 A. - Gallipolis School dis!. CROWN
completely
remodeled, 2
Vacant.
large lots, 5 nice rms. bath
and utility, new carpeting
75 A. - Recreation park. 9'h A.
over H.W. floors, new alum.
lake.
s\ding and new fur . Ideal lor
fhe newlywed or retiree.
30 A. - 5 room home, large
Pr\ce $13,500.
pond, Morgan,
•
PORTER - Neal 4 rms., bath
71/:.z A. - U. S. 35. Business si1e.
and ut\\lly . H.W , floors
with carpel. II has a
covered
10 A. - Pines, nice campsite
carport
and
located on a large
$2,500.
lot
Price
$9,500
.
BARGAINS
3 ROOMS on 160, nice flat lot,
VINTON - Remodeled older
$5.000,
home, S rms., balh and utility,
tns\de most new. Onty $5,500.
8 ROOM home, large tot,
garage, $5,500.
Farms
122
A.
Al.L
lraclor,
one ol Gallla
AODISON Twp. - 2 homes,
Co. best. Generation of good
$12,900.
farming methods. May be
used as dairy, beet or crop.
13 ROOMS in city, 2 garages.
now
operated as dairy.
$15.000.
Potential net Income of
$15,000 to $25,000,
8 ROOM home In Morgan Twp.
$11,000~

"SEll THE AlJCilOI
WAY"

so A.• Remodeled house. $9.500.

ANY HR. +16-1M
Mr. Wlnien 446-.:1121
Eve.: J. Fuller 446-3246

Sand

Hill

Velm• Osllel, Adm11.
Estate of
A. E. Hussell, dec'd.
John McNeill
Auctioneer

42 ACRES, GOOD HOUSE -

Hunlingloh Twp. w\lh 10
acres bollom land, plenty of
water, small outbuildings and
good bam. House has furnace, lull bath. carpeted
living room.

PUBLIC AUOION
Located 2 miles North of O.k Hill, Ohio. 0. Slille Route 93.
Across lrom Grin! Trucldnt ~· Watch for Signs.

'

MEMBERS of the National,
slate, and local real estate
boards and have for years
operated on a commission
rate of five m percent. If you
want to buy or sell, deal with a
realtor who adheres to the
standards of professional
practice.
Oscar Balnl, 446-4632
Doug Welherlloll, 446-4244

FOR SALE by owner. 2 story
brick at 452 First Ave. 7
rooms. 2 baths, gas hoi air
furnace.
present
arrangement 2 apartments.
Easily conver!ed to' one
family dwelling . Ask•ng
$35,000 shown by appointment. Ph. 446-0208.
199-lf

HOUSE, 3 bedroom, 1'n balh, 2
fireplaces, on '12 acre lol. Ph.
675-5704.
223·6

THURSDAY, SEmMlER 30, 1971

Starting at 1100 P.M.
Consisting ol 2 Oearbcrn natural gas healers wllll lhllr·
mostatlc controls and blowers, hoUsehold fllmlture lbalh
modern and anllquel . coat cook stove &amp; ~. Pl!llco
' rolrigeralor. Ptlllco electric ranoe, eledriQI appl'- ·
of all k!nds, antique and collectcr"s Items. caW. and
glessware,·bench vise, MilbUrn'- drawn farm 11an
.
(maybel.
OTHER ITEMS TOONUMiiiROUS TO MENtiON
Rt. 1HTo
lulavllltRd .
North on Bvlavllltl!oad

v. mile to -et Home

.

The Wieman . . -·

,..,

bf~;g)

MG11 fAIIIUES liV£ .. A Mlfi).Al ttOM£ THAI AN'f OTKll\ HOME II Till: "WOilO

'

TERMS: CASH

FRED.J. HUGHES.
J•mesL.M....,Osl17
DlrylAIIIM
-AUCTIOttii:RS.
NOT RESI'ONSIILt FOil

•

:'

1

~

•

�.•
•

••

I

II- The Sunday Times.S.ntinel, Sunday, Sept. 26, 1911

For Fas·t Results Use The ·sunday Times-sBntinel Classifieds

''

'

..

'

•

BY.THE V.W•.·PEOPLE
70 Torino, red with black vinyl top, Sm. V-8, automatic, P.S.,
P. B., mint cond.
$2588
69 Datsun pickup, A-1 condition, mileage 2,800 (Actual). $1595
69 Olds Delta 88, 2 dr. H. T., air, P.S., P.B., vinyl top. Sharp.
$2788
6'1 Impala Custom, 4 speed, air, vinyl top, AM-FM. Reduced
to $1988
69 Ford Country Sed., sta. wgn., automatic, radio, rack, P.S.,
&amp; P.B.
$l995
67 Plymouth Fury Ill, 4 dr. H..T., yellow, P.S., radio, white
tires.
$1288
67 Gran Prix, 2 dr. H.T., silver, black vinyl top, P.S., P.B.,
radio.
· $1788 ·
67 Pont. Lemans,2 dr. H. T., auto., P.S., P.B., air cond. (mint
shape)
$1695
67 Chrysler Newport, 4 dr. auto., P.S., P.B., air, radio. (Real
$1388
nice family carl
67 Fiat-1100, 4 Dr., 4-speed. Good work car.
$695
66 Pontiac Sta. Wgn., auto., .P.S., P.B., air, light blue, white ·
top &amp; rack.
$1395
66 Ford Gal., Conv., V-8, auto., P.S. A real nice car, new
top.
$1095 ·
· 65 Electra 225, 4 dr ., P.S., P.B., air, radio, two-fone. (Sharp)
$1188
65 Mercury 4 Dr. H.T., P.S., P.B., auto.
Reduced to $488
65 Mustang Conv., 6 cyl., auto.~ radio. Nice car for son or
daughter.
$895
64 Olds F-85, 4 dr., auto., P.S., P.B., radio.
$588
63 Olds 88, 2 Dr. H. T., P.S., P.B., radio. Runs fine.
$395
63 Ford Custom 4 dr ., auto. Good work car.
$288
61 Chev.lmpala,4dr.,auto.,P.S.,workcar.
$288

.The Small Ca&lt; Expe&lt;t bas Two and Four-Door
fam ily Sedans. Five-Door Wagons and Sport
Coupes. Pickup T&lt;Ucks, too.- With su~h standard equipment a s tinted glass, wh1te~alls,
&lt;eclining buckets, salety front disc brakes, mdependent rea &lt; suspension and overhead cam
engines, dependi ng on the model you choose.
Admit it . You' ve got a , lot of good reasons
to see the Small Car Expert.
D&lt;ive a Datsun .. . then decide.

'

DATSUN

FROM NISSAN WITH PRIDE

SMITH AUTO SALES

Neal Realty

, I

~. l I

/~~ '1. ~~

barn , and located only J m iles
from Rio Grande. Oh io. Make

' , I

us an offer.

li I'

DOWNTOWN LOCATION

This house is presently in 2 GILLENWATER'S sepllt lank
cleaning and repair, also
apar tments: 6 rooms and
house
wrecking . Ph . 446·
bath on I side and 2 rooms and

I

bath on other side. Full
ba' ement. Located at 112
Slate Street across trom High
School.
Olfice Phone - 446-1694

:, :I

,, 1

,, I

1,' I

, I

Evenings

Cha rles M. Neai446-IS46
J. Michael Neal441&gt;-t503

I

'

Stewart's Hardware
Vinton, Ohio

9499. Established In 1940.
169-tf

- - - -- -

Camping Equipment
STARCRAFT
SEE lhe 1972 travel trailers and
campers in stock. 15 per cent
plus discount. 1 71 trailer .

' .,'

deal er's cost. We stock all

Services Offered
TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FREE ins pection . Call 446-3245,
Merr ill O' Del l. Operator for

j,

Exter minal Termite Ser vice,
19 Belmont Dr .

accessories, service what we
se ll and guarantee. Camp

Conley Starcraft Sales, Rt. 62.
Nor th of Point Pleasant, W.

Va .

205-lf

267-11

SWI SHER ' S

Plum bing

&amp;

Insurance

cont r ac tor . We
speci al ize in hooking up rural
NATIONWIDE INSURANCE
water line system to your AUTO, Fire, Iile, 45 Slate St ..
Electric

home. Completely build your

bathroom . Call us for com-

plete tree estimate. Delbert

Waldo F. Brown , W. 'R .
Brown , 446-1960.

24-lf

Swisher, Add ison. Ph. 3677475 .
_ FOR ALL your Insurance needs
135 11
chec k with your Grange

'
''

HOLLEY' S DITCHING
OF ANY type and complete
water

line

installation,

ag ents at the Neal Ins .
Agency, 64 State St. Agents
for auto, fire , homeowners,

@

BANKS TREE SERVICE
FREE estim ates, liability in·
sur ance. Pruning, tr imming
and cavity work, tree and

stum p removal. Ph. 446-4953,
(.
,73-11
SWISHER'S
DITCH TRENCHING
SERVICE Ph. 367-7475

174-tr

WATER well drilling, Myers

••• Evans
437 Second Ave.
(Opposite Post

Deliver y Service . Your
be appatronage wi ll
preciated. Ph. 446-0463.
7 .If

DEAD STOCK
ss.oo Service Charge
Will remove your dead
horse and cows
Call Jack.son 286·4531
FRENCH
CITY
Buil&lt;lers
Supply, 750 lsi Ave.• 446· f4YY.
Paint, paneling, hardware,
plumbi ng and e lec tr ica l
s uppli es . Hou r s, 7 to 5,

Thurs&lt;lay 7 to 12.
HOR)t: &gt;HOEING
COMPLEl E farrier servke.
Bob Schaefffng, 446-1510.
188-lf

LARRY
EVANS

. Howard B.
Slunclors

FOR All YOUR
INSURANCE NEfDS
•Automobile
eHome Owners

•Mobile tunes
•Business .Boats
•Uability eTrip
eFanns •Bonds
•Life

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

.,

•

Custom, air cond .• lime green, dark
green vinyl top. Sharp.

•

S

;
~

1969 Pontiac·Firebird

t.

•

:

400 Eng., air cond .• power steering &amp;
-brakes, vinyl top. new Prem
Billboard tires, None nicer.

D's Radio &amp; TV Servoce.
Serv in g Ga lli polis &amp; Pt.

Pleasan t. reasonable r ates,
prom~t service . Also evening

calls. Ph. 675-5220.

STANDARD
Plumbing &amp; Healing
215 Third Ave., 446-3782
181-11

•

pi

Avenue

Dr. Hdtp., air cond., vinyl top, 72
Buick trade. Clean.

4

I

c ose

permanent l!odget," NJe said.
" Yet here we are, a days after
lhe CIIITe!ll fiscal year began,
and still .no aclicln fnm the
legislature 011 811 adequate
permanent budgel
'

" II is .inac tion

by the
legislature that resulted in
cloSing of the parks, and only
action by the legislator~ will
bring about their reopenil)g.
" Mowing lhe Slate House
Lawn won't gel them reopened,

di s tributing m isleading
financial information to the
press and pubtic won't gel them
reopened and setting .records
for the length of a nanproductive legislative session
won't gel them reopened."

s ·• 2£ AnT ini-•• sup- has had to adqJI because ita
a'
laiJ cw- merenCium Petition members can't agree oo a
1U.r be praimltd iD Rpa.rate parts
put aluU eonlaln a fult budget and tax program," Nye
..... CWJ«I CCIPJ' of tbe uue. and said
tal ~ 1lle m... Rdkm or item
·

"The appropriations
De P: 4
I . law 01' proposed
'
I ID the canst!luUon. however, have been for more
~ lliper of llQ' initiative, sup- money than Ohio's nislj=
1 "7 . . ftferendw:n petition
..
---&amp;
..- .. m of the state and taxes are producing. in esa a
Jllall. plate Oil IUiCh Ptti.tioD after
·
'
ldo lbe dam ot and the General Assembly bas'-!
of resld....._ A oilner telling
to ,__,
I , fhl ODbide of a munieipallb'
US
~ 1 "" J't 8S if yGII
_ , to be referred, or

-

Open nl 1aJ P.M.

1965 Skylark Sedan Above average. '600
1965 GMC Pickup Runs good, body rough. '600
1964 Dodge Dart Auto. Extra Nice.
•575
1965 Ford St. Wag. 9 Pass., average.

m

temporary aJIIliopriatioo bills it

ARTICLE D

OLDER.MODEL CLEARANCE

money,

TRAP AND still shoot, Sunday,
Sept. 26, 1 p.m .. Rutland Gun
Club, on New Lima Rd.
9-2J.3tc

;uN SHOOT, Sunday, Seplember 26, 1 p.m., Racine Gun
Club.
9·22-41c

pennanen
e
vo
new taxes that will make up line
difference.'
"It's like a man who rnak•
-ae ~
• "'wtUdt
""'" dicbvtt
..., otoroalures
"' $8' 000 a year telling his wife kl
ahall c:on·
u.

.tnK and number, i1
- · at "'" a • t • · Tbo ...... on
.Wlftim
... - eadJ.pelitloas
IIWl
be
Ia Ink..
JiiJlU for
htmadf.. To Mdll part of IRlCh pret:ttlon
......_
a.. • 11 ' ' the alBd.av:it of the

PIANO tuning, reference,
Meigs Local Schools. Phone
992-550'1.
9-26-3tp

·=.== :.n

•=ber of spend $10,000 a year because be h~cilc4-l
"":~,"!...
~ hopes to get a $10,00k.year job
.., ,
• • • •l:lacbi!d to mm part in the next few monthS."
. , . IIDCie 1D tile pftRilct of the
•
•
... "'"' to 111o beo1 of bls
Nye said 80010 hand-wringlssB
h .-' 2 ..,., W
ooteh oflroa· legislators
laimin
' g ,_
IID'e GD !RICh part IS the •enuine•
art C
.._,
e .r t11e penon wbose name can' t ever remember Ohio
II .........
...have
- · oilned
... - It
·..
. 2'ts paru
L. bef
- ...
_,.,
uo cl06lllll
ore.
..
.r:;...,
12&gt;a1
_
,
ao
'""'..,
,.,d
"I
can
only
reply
thatl
can't ·
IW1 11h e -.ftb. ~of the COD-tbe ~
- lhal
each " ' - ever remember
a
........_
GD the date Rated
· Obio entering
.
cs ,... Jds name-; aDd no other new fiscal year before wttboat
- • "'*

1 a1 111e

ell tbaeto man be req,uJnd.
ne petiliao. mid atpaturs upon
-

1- lo btt• Ira . .n
.respeds
.. Uiad.
allaDIUf
..
7

-

,.... !loan lori;Y
wise
event
"JII'Oftd
' " - aDd m· 1ucb
Pllhall
be

PEP-UP with new Zlppies iron
pills. Non-habit tormong. Only
$1.98, Nelson Drugs.
9·22-301p

Over· 100 at

_ , _ b, _ p e l i l l o n b e
lilr iasull!cl..,ey.
U..
oupplaumlar)'
- a oB
, - potllloou
pno.,.....

=""".,.
or - -

!::i.t_ ";"~ '::

ofto

':1:

ot the .....,.
-1bt- ...,..
or ,..
otote.
peU-.
- 011e.....
at aat
- . than
-"',..
'"",...,..,_. of
t:11re z lwa u1 llldl c:ountr. A crue
~ ol. :0 -..s .- pre;
d laWs or
..., _ •
....-..

-h*t wt0t "'ISle
an arpmeDt

ai
... _
.........
••a
t. • • z! nt:IDO.arboth.
;e' ,.. - . - .. _...s.

101ft~1 ,.·•• or np~..S:.C,

""-.
"''"''eJec:ton:
- . tocftWt -10 1M
5

DODGE!

uxl tile penDDII

.. .-:11

jwlll h
..., ,._e
ISle

~ ••

OPEN HOUSE TUESDAY SEPT. 28th

-

--·or
7

?:ED

•

I •

. . .~ aKiiDD.

&amp;
DONUTS

tD tbl

tn the

CARPENTER - More thaD
100 members and guests par- ·
ticipated in the 150th anniversary celebration here 011 •
Sunda y at the Temple Um'ted. • ·
Melhodist Church.
Several former pastors and .
the'rr famili'es, includin g the
Re
Da 'd White Frankfort
VS).
VI U G'
;
Ear Russe , ood Hope;
Richard Jarvis, Lancaster, and
Oscar King ' Lancaster I were
present for the basket dinner mt
. tn
. the
noon and specia1 semces

e e

..

-

...

~~:

_ . ., lltift huDdled

•

U:.~:
~m=

~

~ •-,.,. ... .,....,..

-

pi
J ~ "'"lllllftl.-a.eraJ
-·
lll.t-...-.ewar:
u

:..:' ::t...:' 0::,:"' ~...":

-.., - --·
z
....... ., ilote -

pmoldal

~ . . . . . . . . . . apaa. tbe t.Dotl.

Special music was pres nled

I • 1D pam1t M aftlnna~
I' Ilia ftlllr upGD each

Gf P ..

or

item in

aMrs

-.-ed 1....
1 .....
"" ,.....
• ...,
,. -t ·
.....:odlneat
.. ISle
,._,_ Tbo ...le of

all .._ ....utW b J' tniU.tlve

...
I I
'"'' peli- IIWl
be: ~ H e, kd bJ the Peopleor ao - 1 or llldo," OUid of all
II f'
Omrntl : ""&amp; lt

a

- - -- - -

--

waa

_

U-11 U

I1osts
l un.o,~nwares R·Artry
!...,."-'&gt;
•

rJUH

~"'~"'

U:.

·

_..,.,.._..,1hostate
n.e 'MIIII: apaa wbldt 1he

·11. •

tlif '*Ilk.•

:..,. .,;: - .. ":,,;;:~..,.'11

·WOOD MOTOR SALES

DODGE CORONET The -lienee car. The .perfect ideaforafanilycarbec-•Corouet is d lg~.S
solely to be a lour-door lanitw ..tM. FuR .,.,... lor site PeoPle. and styling !hal you'll be proud of.

20 NEW 1972 DODGE fMS &amp; TRUCIS
ON DISPLAY

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE INC.
50 STATE STREET

SYRACUSE- A housewares

MIWR

at . - ..,.. party h~ted by Mrs. Jean HaD,
or.,,..tJatftlor.
,.. ' 1 The
""'
was held attheD. Ul • UUU6"'

w

-

.,..
a. Fa .n-1

-"A,,.,_

.=-··:=m-•;::

MOBII£, t(OME$

...u

or """ hall Thursday afternoon with
a .... ,..,- Lawo Mrs. Margaret Fortune · of
llut 1a ao ..,. 1fmit1DI Raci' ne RD the UQJ-10
.....
-f·~~=
A-tra·-

...

I • ,. ••-

..._.. Pte Mil-puc do&amp;. oapt •

-

...
::,.,;:".!
'\:.

Games were played ~ith
prizes won by Ada Slack, Unda
Parsons, and Elizabelln Rice
DiiLIIV&amp; DAD AND RllPIAL and' the door prize to Dctis
1
• ~""C:
Friend. Refreshments were
J:...., n.
served to the above and Eleanor
1.: .. . . . - o or lbo CaawUtotloat Buhram, Clara Lavender.
.,1,~-bell
' - Mary Pi'•.......ens,
.&amp;.
7 "we--..
te 0IU6Cl,
• ,
Olarlolle Nease, Eileen Clark.
U1iiUD srADS OF AMEPIICA Edith Hood, •~ While, and
. srA'JS or omo
-~
Mildred Pierce.
w

aiL

=:": Vl :i!t
-._:.a....::;0:

'"""""'"""'Mar'

-----7.

nmnt,.ILE""' Of' 'IIIB SICRETAliY
mo,sr.&amp;D

l 'ftD W . B&amp;IJWH~ Secfttai'J of

-or--fiOIIID,daltoft-

117 _ . , 1llat 1k fw
I ia
• . . ...,; til: Amended Sellte
..-..... .... J llld Ia tbe

-,.,.
•

or 111am-

,.~ . . . . . . . lee'C
n • • e1 Olalo.

- - .t ee
•
i D I W I ..,...,.., I
.... .....
... 7 ....d ..,. ,__,.

PI'

•

ENDS BASIC
.,,. ••• ...,.

.n •.aftQiftlll&amp;

-

N

AY)'

Seaman App:aidce n..:d:•
B•
.,.,.._

_ - _ - -.·• eo- l!eam,sonfllllr.811dlln.n.le
....
.,.. .,.,. ., Sop. - - . Beam &lt;1 sa 2llh Sl, ...
ftiJ W. BROWN gradaaled

' s

~

"c· ..,
. r ··oum

-

aiiU7

a

SR.

Crabtree, was read by ~Howard Mayne. Speciallribnte
was paid to Hollis Towusennl,
Cleveland, who recently pa I
away and to Bessie Rutherford
Strong, also deceased, for ·
special contributions to innpro y emenls m
' -~t
1.~1;0&amp;1 ya•-

'*

aluminum siding and storm

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

up to dale by Mrs· Artlu'

- . 1- .....or• - -4 .-... amendment
· .. pro- 111e Rev. Earl Russell
laa 121e
to . . IAibmltlod. speaker for the program.
Be ..... IIIIo a - die bellatl 10 1o

Cleland
Realty

- - -----

.

-

4" •
wtl?l the orau·
- - . . aadl eq'atkml,. not ex~

WIPO/

rrom recnsillnninin&amp;

or Stole at lhe Nam Training Center'

· , . Ocl. J. lt. 17, 14 Great

JAkes, lll.

w~~.-

•
''

'

$2.300 WILL buv 23 acres in
Bedford Township, Wollpen
Road . 20 minutes !rom
Pomeroy . '4 of land In limber,
balance In pasture. No
bolldlngs. Call 992-2152 and
ask lor Dick.
9.22-tlc

------

the missionaries, Haydmboth. ville· The Ml Union Clmrcb
01' iiaD.. 8Ub'
.
b&gt; .......,_ choir, and the Rev. Earl
u his fll the cburds,
.£;r";;
·!as
from :

PD=
- ':•. .:r=:.=.=
, . ..

'SIX ROOII\ house, balh, .lull
basement, 133 Bullern'!' Ave .~
just walking distance from·
downtown Pomeroy. Contact!
:d Hedrick, 2137 WadswOtlht
o)rlve, Columbus, Olllo, phone'
237·4334, Columbus.
·
5-9-lfd

&lt;!oars and wln£19ws, large ·
SAVE up to one hall. Bring your 70,000 B.T.U. floor fu~nace, like
fronl porch, 3 largo o.t
sick TV to Chuck' s TV&lt; Shop, • new. 4 clrculetln!toes heaters
bedrooms, blllh. THIS IS AN
151 Bu!tcrnut Ave., Pomeroy, from 30,000 to 6!,000 B.T. U.,
EXCEPTIONAL
BUY AT
phone 992-5080.
com mode, drop In double
JUST
55.1100.
9-24-lfc sink. Albert Hill, Racine,
~-------'·
a&gt;lo, phone 949-2261.
RACINE - 1 story frame, 3
WILL DO light hauling, phone
9-24-.ltc
bedrooms, sforage space
galpre, ·carpeted, bath, nk:&amp;
992-6870.
roAL II
..
9-24-Jtp ,.
' mestoore . Excels to~.
kitchen. large gar111e, .75
- - -- - - -- . ~all Work&gt;, E. Main St.•i ACRE of ground, IN FIRST
o&gt;omeroy. Phone 992-.:1891. 1 CLASS COliDITION. GOING
Mal H Ip Wnted
"-9.1fc;
AT S10,500. THIS YOU
INCREASE
YOUR
INMUST SEE.
COME: Add SIS to $25 POODLE puppies,' Sto;,oir o'oy,
commission earnings every
Parkvlew Kennels. Phone- 992- HAVE
A
SELLING
, week by showing Hanover
5443.
THE
PROBLEM7
PLACE
8-15-lfc
shoes to friends, neighbors.
SALE
OF
YOUR
and associates. 196 slvles for
PROPERTY
IN
COMmen and women. Work spare '6S V. W. ENGINE, runs good PETENT HANDS.
time or full lime. Write for $135. Phone 985-3310.
HENRY E. CLELAND
free sales kit. Hanover Shoe, ____ _ _ _ _ _9·.::_21-6tp
REALTOR
Depl. SOH, Hanover, Pa.
Ollice m.mf
"STAR" kills rats quickly.
17331.
Residence m-u.t
9-26-ltp Sure. 2112 pounds, $1.69 .
9-2Utc
Ebersbach Hardware, Sugar
Run Mills, Pickens HardIMMEDIATE opening lor a
man over 21 years old to work ware, Mason.
9-21-JOtp
in our slore. Must have good
persona lily, ' like to meet .
'
public, willing to assume WALNUT, modern style,
responsibility, vacation plan, ster~radlo, AM· FM radio, 4
hospitalization plan and other speak.e r sound system, 4
fringe benefits. Please slate speed aulomatlc changer,
salary requirements. Send separate controls. Balance
resume of present and past $63.97. Use our budget terms.
employers to Box 729-L, c.&lt;J Call 992-7085.
The Dally Senllnel, Pomeroy,
9·20-6tc
~r
Olllo.
110 Mechanic StrMI
9-26-12tc MAPLE. beaulllul early
P~Nneroy, Ollio
American slyle, stereo-radio
oomblnatloo, AM-FM radio, 4
. Help Wanted
speaker sound system, • NEW LISTING -6 room frame
WANTED - Person for partspeed automal'lc changer . home. Garl!l". 1 acre Ill
lime work In exciting new
Balance S71.59. Use our Burlingham. $4,500.00.
business in area. Must be able
budget terms. Call 992-7015.
to read and wrlle English
9-20-6tc NEW LISTING- 2 apaoolments
language with moderate
- one 6 rooms, bath, ll!rge
proficiency, lype a little, and FARM and home latex house porch, down. Oilier 5 room&amp;.
provide transportation. Hours
up.
Middleport.
paint sale. King Builders bath,
.aboul 10-3 dally. Wrlle P. 0 . · Supply,
123,500.00.
I
Middleport.
Box 106, Pt. Pleasant, or call
9·2-24tc LUXURIOUS
675-3398.
COUNTRY
9-22-71c
HOME - Norw 4 btdrooms; 2
baths, family room with
fireplace. 2 car garage. 15
CERTIFIED firemen, equal
acres. Asking 137,500.00.
opportunity, employment
Galllr,otis, Pt. Pleasant,
POMEROY
Business
Midd eport areil. Ideal
building with 3 rentals.
work lng conditions. Modern
Ask lng $25,000.00.
equJpment. Inquiries confidential. Reply Box 729-S, e-o
·
The Dally s.inllnel, Pomeroy,
14' • 24' • WIDE' 120 ACRES - Dlslry farm.
Ollio.
· ·"
Clean and productive. Pt.nly
of bllm and building space. 5
9' 23-Jip
bedroom ·home. 2 ponds,
woMEN to do housework In
drilled well, and Chester
Pomeroy area. Write Fran,
waler . A REAL FARM.
1'0,000.00.
Box 23, Pomeroy, Olllo.
·trioWashl--n
9-24-llp
...... ••~ ..'
Belpre, Ollio
STORE- 2 houHs.
WOMAN to live In, light . ._ _ _ina____.. GENERAL
storage building. 2 car
housek:flng and cooking, 1965 ELCAR, 2 bedroom mobile . garage. One acre. LOCK.
~ea~-~~d, weekly pay.
home, awnings, cement STOCK, and BARREL Oily
porch, garage, . storage SJO,OOO.OO.
9_21 -.ltc
building, frull trees, 'QI?rden
area, on approxlmalely 2 TO BUY OR SELL CALl m.
acres - Langsville 667·3971, ln5«H2-U11
Auto Sales
HElEN L TEAFORD,
9-21-.ltc
1962 FORD 112 ton pickup truck
ASSOACIATE
SASO. Phone 949-o1S51 ,
'i GAS tlrculatlng heaters.
Phone 992·:1262 evenings.
·
1910 DODGE Darl Swinger, V-8,
9-21-tfc
automatic, 20,000 miles.
Phone 992-7092.
9-26-31&lt;: 1971 ZIG-ZAG sewing machl,.
1e11 tn layewa
Batsutlfvl
- - - - -- pastel
color,
lui
siM
~1.
1969 CHEVROLET pickup,
All
buill-In
10
bullllllhale,
topper Included, auloma?lc. a
.,.,.-C?Ist and laney stitch.
cyt., 21.000 actual miles.
Pay jusl Soll.75 cllh or twnns
spotlights, foallghts, $2,300.
avat
able. Tr••·lns acPhone 992-6029 or •see at
cepted.
Phone 992-5641.
Waller Wilson's on Peach
f.21-6k
Fork Road.
9._
2'- 31P VACUUM t ' - brand _ __ _ _ _ _ _
'63 FORD van Truck - sus, .65
1971 - 1. Compt.te with all
cleaning tooh. Small pelnl
Mustang - $200, '66 A-1 Ford
- ' uoo. Contact Albert damage In shipping. Wlll take
"- h K
cash Phone
or budGet
Roseber ry·.....
s all- eno Rd ·• S27
available.
99f-5641.plan
Long Bottom.
9_21 _.11:
- -- - - . , 9-_
26-3tp - - - - - - - -

·

afternoon

3 BEDROOM brick home
Choice IOcaliO!IIn Middleport
Seen by appointment ooly.
Phone 992-S523 after 4 p.m.
S-7-Hc

NEW, 3-bedroom home In
Middleport. . Buill-In kitchen,
ceramic tile bath, all-electric'
heal. good neighborhood. can
black rotary mowers-S220
arrange
FHA financing .
and $260. New Imea 2-way did
Telephone
992-3600 or 992scoop-$100. Ermel Luckefl,
2186.
Albany 698-3032.
7-25-ffc
9-23-Jic
tO room house and
16 CHINCHILLAS, 9 males and RACINE,
Two
lots, basement,
bath.
7 females with cages, S250.
garage.
PhOfle
949-4313 otter
Phone 992-7305.
5:30p.m.
9-23·3fp
9-23-121p
8 ROOM house on Union Ave. HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
Phone 992-56AI.
Call Danny Thompson, 9929-23·61p
2196.
7-18-ttc
FOAM mattress and In ·
nersprings for twin bed, goo&lt;!
condition, S20 for the set.
Phone 985-3900.
9-24-3tp

8-29-lfc

"'*'
I:;".!:'H!:. Zl l:!
!:::. ~pared . ~
ISle I
ol
N;r, If In - ·
- nr''!;;.!r u.. materialcollectedbyBollisaau
: •.. ·;-~ ~ n . • "ito the =~ Uoyd Townsend, and brougbt
.. ,.. 2
5

-

COFFEE

,..,.,.

Real Estate For Sale

'I•

.:"--•,.t",::;:;. ~ by

... -

FREE

or ....

_..,,

• both. ror- IIQ' ptupcwred

..... -2·•'* :::r, be -

CHARGER The Dodge idea of what a fam-

or
bJ

poll- ....,. .. ...,..,

9-22-ltc

- - -...!!...- -

- - -- --,--

orndd an ac-

fill .- ptOC'Ufed; nor
....U tile te:IK.._ Ill aD.T Ww aub-

- - -- - - - ,

CONN trumpet and 52" f'V"Y• P
Myla Powell. 992-2622.
REDUCE safe and fasl with
9-24-Jtc
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
601 Eosl Main
Water Pills. Nelson Drugs.
POMEROY
9-22-JOtp EARl'! AT home a&lt;ldressing TOWNSHIP ROAD T-29 -11.26
envelopes. Rush stamped
ACRES, beautiful site lor
KOSCOT 'Kosmetics. Sep- self-addressed envelope. The
housin'l pro\·ect or trailer
Ambrose Co .. 4325 Lakeborn,
tember Sates Special :
court, odeal s te for exclusive
Davisburg, Mich., 48019.
Kreamy lip Kote S2 now
ALMOST
IN
home .
9-8-JOtp
$1.50, Frostlucent Lip Kole
POMEROY AND LEVEL.
$2.50 now $2; 23 delicious
Just $12.900.
colors. Call 992-5113 or come DAVENPORT and chair $20.
Frigidaire refrigerator, SJO.
see at 161'12 '' ·•h Ave ..
RUTLAND ACRE. aood
Phone 992-3874.
Middleport, on
neighborhood,
N~W
9-24-Jtp

1
E..6£'::.i~~~15Q
h.
.. :.: II =::"::"u."3~
,"hC''-~·""'
f.IUt ~
=w;;;,r;;• i A, , •
:::n ~.:e...:J... :::. :~: nnzversar11
J
....

For Sale

Will be""cepltd unll! 9a.in. tor
·tanted To Buy ·
H &amp; N DAY OLD or started
08'( of PubiJcatton
Leghorn pulltls. Both 11- or
OLD Furniture, dlshk, .clocks,
. REGULAYIONS
cage grown available.
The Publisher reserves lhe· and·or complete households.
Poullry
housing
and
right to edit or reject any ads
Write M. D. Miller, Pomeroy,
automation. Modern Poultry,
Ohio. Call 992-6271.
deemed objectional, The
8-25-lfc
399 w. Main, Pomer!l'f, 992·
publisher will not be res~slble
for more than one Incorrect
2144.
9-26-lk
Insertion.
For
Sale
RATES
16 FT. SWISS Colony ·travel HALF RUNNER beans, $1.50
ForWtnl Ad Service
trailer, good condition, 19'15.
5 cents ~r Word one insertion
bushel, pi &lt;.k ·your ·awn.
Phone 992-6329.
. Minimum Charge 7Sc
Potatoes. Clarence ProtfiH,
Porlian&lt;l. Phone 843-2254. · .
12 tents per word three.
9-20-61c

Notice

-lie1honsldi!L
-·
&lt;o='&gt;
Ia wllldl
A and
resident
of had it' and one &lt;1 ~ •da,.
~ ..; It~-=.'!.=: we'll get art oundbudg to
andadopm:.:
1
pdl;r.

Ca~llatton J. Corr~lons

Wanted ,

SECOND-HAND riding mower, APPLES - t-iltpetrld&lt; Or·
Ray Hartley. Racl,., pl\one
chards, State Route 619,
949-28$5.
phone Wilkesville, 669·3715.·
9-26-31p
9-3-lfc

2 BLACK miniature poo&lt;lle
puppies. male. Phone 99225 Per Cent Discount on paid
6329.
9-20-61c
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp;OBITUARY
23 CU. FT. deep freeze, ping
$1.50 for 50 word minimum.
pong
table.
complete
Each a&lt;lditlonal word 2c.
bedroom suite with new
BLIND ADS
mattress, 2 end tables and
Additional 2Sc Charge · per
~!ia~t
1ng coffee table. Phone
Advertisemf!nt.
·
9-23-Jic
OFfiCE HOURS
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,
1: 30 a.m. to 12: 00 Noon GRAND Champions and
Saturday.
Reserve
Champions ·in
O.V.H . S . A .
and
S.E.O.H.E.A.-Horses and
·In Memory
ponf_
es which have won in
IN LOVING memory of my
halter, showmanship ,
husband, John R. Davis, who
pleasure, trail . r eining.
passed away Sept. 26, 1955: At
horsemansh ip and conies!.
evening when twilight hour
Four mares and three
draws near, And sunset
geldings . ages: yearling to 9
flames the sky. I think of you
years old. Some have been
and the harpy days gone by:
shown by a 1 year old boy .
Thoughts o you come drilling
$200 and up. Jr. Kennedy,
back, Within my dreams lo
Ml&lt;ldleport, Ohio 742-4540 .
say, To know thai you are
., 9-23-3tp
resting, When the twlllghl
ends lhe day. His wife. Edllh. fERGUSON. 20 tractor-$675.
9-26·11C
New 4 II. and 5 II. 3-polnt

parks.

Ul

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
s P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a.m. ·

consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word six con·
secutive insertions.
•

•

of Ohio tD nad u foUowa : speoomg

ajlil ""

36 Month Financing 100% Warranty

DEPEND ON IT!

m

the..........
..,.;...tunbavingenac•-'
.... a

Oose

"II is· true the General
T
-":! mn. • pnopau1 to amend Assembly has aulborll4!4
. . al Anlcle n of tbe Con-• ·
-' the
. lbe ·

with red interior, w-s-w tires, 37,000 act . miles.

·

203-lt

...,.. lltale in 1he manner
1 .., •• the ,..,....
,
"' be SWd on the lint
• J' after the Ant llmuiQ" in

• ·'IIDIS -

2 Dr. Hardtop, radio and heater, P. steering,
P. brakes, aut. transmission, desert beige

Oo this dale in history :
In 1959 the worst typhoon in
In I
British troops occu- Japanese history left 4:464
pied Philadelphia during the dead.
American Revolutionary War.
In 1950 United Nations troops
A lhoughl for lhe day:
The Almanac
look Seoul, the capital of South American clergyman ReinJJoid
By United Press International Korea . from North Korean N' b
Today is Sunday, Sept. 26, the Communist forces.
te uhr said, " Man's capacity
269th day of 1971 wi'Lh 96 to 1 1955 h N
fur justice makes democracy
n
t e ew York Stock P'•ssible but man 's ·inclination
follow.
Exchange suffered ils worst to injustice
k d
The moon is approaching ils price break since lhe 1929 necessar ,. rna es emocracy
first quarter (21th ).
Collapse. The Monday reaction
y.
The morning slats are foll~"~ed news that President , Acc?rding to legeild, triiMcrcury and Saturn.
Dw1~:ht D. Eisenhower had hum ts the Oower said to
The evening stars are Venus , · •offered a ·heart aUack in ~ake the robin 's song. The
M:ws and Ju11il cr.
Color~" I" ••n Saturday .
.. ow~r
popularly &lt;·ailed
Fourt~

Phone 446-3888or 446-4477
155-tl

.xv

l~ot

: - . ~!"' .....,._ tt&gt; the dec· therefore there was no reason to

ily-sized sports car should be. It's laoge enough 10
seat six, and its sporty styling adds a new d imension
to the old-fashioned fam ily cara.~
. Cl
::;:.;*;::
; k.::il:..:out=:.:'od=ay!.:!_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....,

CARTER' S PLUM bi NG
AND HEATING

.

lhXft.. ..,...a on"'
~.--· ..
"'
.....,..,.
oiocl.d
tt&gt;
Nalunil
Resoun:a
and lhat
......... ~therein, tbat
'

1968 Olds Cutlass Supreme

DOD~E

Ga ltipolis, o.

.

- a t - state on Oblo

.,.
-

Eastern Ave.

.· '

•i
-

~ -

*1195

. .·

LEGAL

i!

.1969 Buick LeSabre 4 dr. H.T.

66 CHRYSLER NEWPORT

298-11

.

''"

be 121e

DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone 446·2735
28\-lf

830

I

Jnr.

300 Fourth Ave.
Phone 446-1637
Gene Plants, Owner

I

~ 1*
fbie •

Brammer Plumbing &amp; Heating

and trenching . C. J. Lemley,
Vinton, 011io . Ph . 388-8543.
114-11
D. P. MARTIN &amp; Son Water

:

1:

:
:

Plumbing &amp; Heating

Insurance Inc.

.

.

charged Friday,
l
8lld Lt. Goveinor
·•Some fll ~ l8lile ~
Jelul BrlllOD are using are self-styled paragons of
mid djng linancial In· 'fiscal responsibility,' ., said
r--tian in atteq,ls to give a Nye. "But their .statements.
r.lleiqa '1111ballherecenl together wilh ·the legi•l•lors'
' · C cf stale parks was not Inaction an a ~~ budget
y, Nallnl Resources -andtaxprogram,aretheheigbl
Oirftlllr William B. Nye of fiscal irresponsibility ·
urging illegal dc:ficit spendi&lt;e,
"What they are ~eating is
NOTICE
that it's perteclly an rigbt for
the state to spend money it
jA
..lll•=mlollltllaolullon doesn'thave,ifcWngsowiUget
.... 2)
the legl.slators off the boot for
zoun RlfSOlllTioN
not IIPi&lt;e their OWll jolls."
2
1
• Ai- UtaOl~c-m-",. !:: Nye aid the legislators 111111
. . - o r a.too .. - . . ....... the lieutenant governor have
. . . . . . . . of ..u .uc. of
.._ ., ,.., •• made statements lbat tbe
..... :: :h:.....!"":"* General Assembly baa~
., . . 2 ·, .,
• provided enough money for
a. II a..OSo.o d b T the General Asti' -' the n...• .........,t _.
........,_,.,..

:

DON WAITS WUSWAGEN, INC.

RUSSELL'S
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
SEPTIC tank cleaning, electric
sewer cleaning, ditching .
Gall ipolis, Ollio. Ph. 446-4782.
. 193-11

.

..i ,.... .....,.,., - ~-erai slate

-

m Upper River Ita. lURID Rt. 11, Gallipolis, Oltio
Phone (614)446-9100
Service- Parts -Office
Mon., Tues., w..t., Fri.- I A.M. 1D 5:00 P.M.
Thur. 1:10 A.M.to9:30 P.M.-Closed sat.

.

• '*'

power windows. vinyl top. Nice.

70 Sq. Back - Clementine with black int., 4 speed, radio.
Sharp.
$2295
69 Bug, red, black int., 4 speed, radio, white tires. Nice clean
·car.'
'
Reduced to $1688 "'"'
2-69 Bugs, 1 white, 1 light blue. Radio, automatic stickshift,
leatherette, white tires.
Each $1688
69 Sq. Back, white, black leatherette, radio, white tires, 4speed. This is a local car, in mint cond.
$1995
68 Bug, light blue, 4 speed, radio, white tires, new paint. $1395
68 Sq. Back, beige, leatherette, radio, 4 speed. A real sharp
car.
$1695
68 Fast Back, white, red interior, 4-speed. One owner tradein. (Sharp) .
$1488
68 Sq. Back, light blue, leatherette, 4-speed. One owner,
$1495
average car.
67 Fast Back, red, 4-speed. This car has been completely
rebuilt. (Nice carl
$1388
67 Sq. Back, red, black int., 4-speed, local trade-in. A nice
car.
$1495
67 Sta. Wgn., (Bus), red &amp; white, a real nice unit traded in by
a lady. This may be the one you've been waiting for.
$1688
66 Bug, light blue, 4-speed. Has been completely redone
mechanically.
$995
65 Bug, white, 4-speed, body is damaged but runs out fine
(work carl.
$395
2-63 Bugs. Both cars have been completely redone cPerfect
shape).
Each $995

Saunders

pumps Sales and Service.
Compl ete water line service

J

1969
Buick
Elecba
2 Dr. hdfp., one owner, air cond.,

OLD VOLKS HOME .

guaranteed. Ph. J. P. Holley,
84-tf
245-5018 or 446·4344.
_ __ _ _ _ _ __
219-tf

Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

i Nye Rehutts GOP Claims Parks Need

:
:

VOLKSWAGEN @

hospital and general liability.

- -.........

=

Pllone (614)-Service- l'llrls- Ollke
Mon., Tues., Wed., Fri.-II A.M. ID5:10 P.M.
Thur. 8:00A.M. tol:30 P.M.-Closed Sit.

RAIKE'S
REFRIGERATION
&amp; AIR CONDITIONING
RESIDENTIAL, commercial ,
COUNTRY LIVING
industrial. Ph. 367-7200.
NEAR TOWN
nnf
If you are looking for· .a~h~
ou~se~-:-:=i:i'i~;:;:-~iM/INwilh li llie maintenance ••e
-ALBERT EHMAN
!h is 2 BR home wi th
Water Delivery Service
Patriot Star Rt., Gallipolis
aluminum siding on a 1 acre
lot near Centenary. Also has a
Ph. 379-2133
garage and carpor t. Fu ll
243-tf
price only S10,000.
Centr•l Air Conditioning
40ACRE FARM
,., . i7~illllo ...,, '
Ho~~~ I Qye,r.~/'l;e ~ av~ the place
t-rH Estimates
flir. y&lt;lu. MOOern 3 BR home,

!:

. No~IIIDaiJ.

Services Offered

Real Estate For Sale

I

ii. Jl'~0
.i

. -~-,h..,,r,11,_n1&amp;11

:

· 195DON
WATTS VOliSWAGEN. INC.
Upper River Rd. IOI!Io Rt. 7), Gallipolis, Oltio

KANAUGA, OHIO

i
i',.

.. s.diJ. .

SMITH
SAYS:

COME IN AND SEE THE GIANT CARS CAPTURED

j

Came In IIIII Blil• ._.

"DOC''

new.

I

I

l

expert

The small
has

•

•

'

'

•

�.•
•

••

I

II- The Sunday Times.S.ntinel, Sunday, Sept. 26, 1911

For Fas·t Results Use The ·sunday Times-sBntinel Classifieds

''

'

..

'

•

BY.THE V.W•.·PEOPLE
70 Torino, red with black vinyl top, Sm. V-8, automatic, P.S.,
P. B., mint cond.
$2588
69 Datsun pickup, A-1 condition, mileage 2,800 (Actual). $1595
69 Olds Delta 88, 2 dr. H. T., air, P.S., P.B., vinyl top. Sharp.
$2788
6'1 Impala Custom, 4 speed, air, vinyl top, AM-FM. Reduced
to $1988
69 Ford Country Sed., sta. wgn., automatic, radio, rack, P.S.,
&amp; P.B.
$l995
67 Plymouth Fury Ill, 4 dr. H..T., yellow, P.S., radio, white
tires.
$1288
67 Gran Prix, 2 dr. H.T., silver, black vinyl top, P.S., P.B.,
radio.
· $1788 ·
67 Pont. Lemans,2 dr. H. T., auto., P.S., P.B., air cond. (mint
shape)
$1695
67 Chrysler Newport, 4 dr. auto., P.S., P.B., air, radio. (Real
$1388
nice family carl
67 Fiat-1100, 4 Dr., 4-speed. Good work car.
$695
66 Pontiac Sta. Wgn., auto., .P.S., P.B., air, light blue, white ·
top &amp; rack.
$1395
66 Ford Gal., Conv., V-8, auto., P.S. A real nice car, new
top.
$1095 ·
· 65 Electra 225, 4 dr ., P.S., P.B., air, radio, two-fone. (Sharp)
$1188
65 Mercury 4 Dr. H.T., P.S., P.B., auto.
Reduced to $488
65 Mustang Conv., 6 cyl., auto.~ radio. Nice car for son or
daughter.
$895
64 Olds F-85, 4 dr., auto., P.S., P.B., radio.
$588
63 Olds 88, 2 Dr. H. T., P.S., P.B., radio. Runs fine.
$395
63 Ford Custom 4 dr ., auto. Good work car.
$288
61 Chev.lmpala,4dr.,auto.,P.S.,workcar.
$288

.The Small Ca&lt; Expe&lt;t bas Two and Four-Door
fam ily Sedans. Five-Door Wagons and Sport
Coupes. Pickup T&lt;Ucks, too.- With su~h standard equipment a s tinted glass, wh1te~alls,
&lt;eclining buckets, salety front disc brakes, mdependent rea &lt; suspension and overhead cam
engines, dependi ng on the model you choose.
Admit it . You' ve got a , lot of good reasons
to see the Small Car Expert.
D&lt;ive a Datsun .. . then decide.

'

DATSUN

FROM NISSAN WITH PRIDE

SMITH AUTO SALES

Neal Realty

, I

~. l I

/~~ '1. ~~

barn , and located only J m iles
from Rio Grande. Oh io. Make

' , I

us an offer.

li I'

DOWNTOWN LOCATION

This house is presently in 2 GILLENWATER'S sepllt lank
cleaning and repair, also
apar tments: 6 rooms and
house
wrecking . Ph . 446·
bath on I side and 2 rooms and

I

bath on other side. Full
ba' ement. Located at 112
Slate Street across trom High
School.
Olfice Phone - 446-1694

:, :I

,, 1

,, I

1,' I

, I

Evenings

Cha rles M. Neai446-IS46
J. Michael Neal441&gt;-t503

I

'

Stewart's Hardware
Vinton, Ohio

9499. Established In 1940.
169-tf

- - - -- -

Camping Equipment
STARCRAFT
SEE lhe 1972 travel trailers and
campers in stock. 15 per cent
plus discount. 1 71 trailer .

' .,'

deal er's cost. We stock all

Services Offered
TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FREE ins pection . Call 446-3245,
Merr ill O' Del l. Operator for

j,

Exter minal Termite Ser vice,
19 Belmont Dr .

accessories, service what we
se ll and guarantee. Camp

Conley Starcraft Sales, Rt. 62.
Nor th of Point Pleasant, W.

Va .

205-lf

267-11

SWI SHER ' S

Plum bing

&amp;

Insurance

cont r ac tor . We
speci al ize in hooking up rural
NATIONWIDE INSURANCE
water line system to your AUTO, Fire, Iile, 45 Slate St ..
Electric

home. Completely build your

bathroom . Call us for com-

plete tree estimate. Delbert

Waldo F. Brown , W. 'R .
Brown , 446-1960.

24-lf

Swisher, Add ison. Ph. 3677475 .
_ FOR ALL your Insurance needs
135 11
chec k with your Grange

'
''

HOLLEY' S DITCHING
OF ANY type and complete
water

line

installation,

ag ents at the Neal Ins .
Agency, 64 State St. Agents
for auto, fire , homeowners,

@

BANKS TREE SERVICE
FREE estim ates, liability in·
sur ance. Pruning, tr imming
and cavity work, tree and

stum p removal. Ph. 446-4953,
(.
,73-11
SWISHER'S
DITCH TRENCHING
SERVICE Ph. 367-7475

174-tr

WATER well drilling, Myers

••• Evans
437 Second Ave.
(Opposite Post

Deliver y Service . Your
be appatronage wi ll
preciated. Ph. 446-0463.
7 .If

DEAD STOCK
ss.oo Service Charge
Will remove your dead
horse and cows
Call Jack.son 286·4531
FRENCH
CITY
Buil&lt;lers
Supply, 750 lsi Ave.• 446· f4YY.
Paint, paneling, hardware,
plumbi ng and e lec tr ica l
s uppli es . Hou r s, 7 to 5,

Thurs&lt;lay 7 to 12.
HOR)t: &gt;HOEING
COMPLEl E farrier servke.
Bob Schaefffng, 446-1510.
188-lf

LARRY
EVANS

. Howard B.
Slunclors

FOR All YOUR
INSURANCE NEfDS
•Automobile
eHome Owners

•Mobile tunes
•Business .Boats
•Uability eTrip
eFanns •Bonds
•Life

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

.,

•

Custom, air cond .• lime green, dark
green vinyl top. Sharp.

•

S

;
~

1969 Pontiac·Firebird

t.

•

:

400 Eng., air cond .• power steering &amp;
-brakes, vinyl top. new Prem
Billboard tires, None nicer.

D's Radio &amp; TV Servoce.
Serv in g Ga lli polis &amp; Pt.

Pleasan t. reasonable r ates,
prom~t service . Also evening

calls. Ph. 675-5220.

STANDARD
Plumbing &amp; Healing
215 Third Ave., 446-3782
181-11

•

pi

Avenue

Dr. Hdtp., air cond., vinyl top, 72
Buick trade. Clean.

4

I

c ose

permanent l!odget," NJe said.
" Yet here we are, a days after
lhe CIIITe!ll fiscal year began,
and still .no aclicln fnm the
legislature 011 811 adequate
permanent budgel
'

" II is .inac tion

by the
legislature that resulted in
cloSing of the parks, and only
action by the legislator~ will
bring about their reopenil)g.
" Mowing lhe Slate House
Lawn won't gel them reopened,

di s tributing m isleading
financial information to the
press and pubtic won't gel them
reopened and setting .records
for the length of a nanproductive legislative session
won't gel them reopened."

s ·• 2£ AnT ini-•• sup- has had to adqJI because ita
a'
laiJ cw- merenCium Petition members can't agree oo a
1U.r be praimltd iD Rpa.rate parts
put aluU eonlaln a fult budget and tax program," Nye
..... CWJ«I CCIPJ' of tbe uue. and said
tal ~ 1lle m... Rdkm or item
·

"The appropriations
De P: 4
I . law 01' proposed
'
I ID the canst!luUon. however, have been for more
~ lliper of llQ' initiative, sup- money than Ohio's nislj=
1 "7 . . ftferendw:n petition
..
---&amp;
..- .. m of the state and taxes are producing. in esa a
Jllall. plate Oil IUiCh Ptti.tioD after
·
'
ldo lbe dam ot and the General Assembly bas'-!
of resld....._ A oilner telling
to ,__,
I , fhl ODbide of a munieipallb'
US
~ 1 "" J't 8S if yGII
_ , to be referred, or

-

Open nl 1aJ P.M.

1965 Skylark Sedan Above average. '600
1965 GMC Pickup Runs good, body rough. '600
1964 Dodge Dart Auto. Extra Nice.
•575
1965 Ford St. Wag. 9 Pass., average.

m

temporary aJIIliopriatioo bills it

ARTICLE D

OLDER.MODEL CLEARANCE

money,

TRAP AND still shoot, Sunday,
Sept. 26, 1 p.m .. Rutland Gun
Club, on New Lima Rd.
9-2J.3tc

;uN SHOOT, Sunday, Seplember 26, 1 p.m., Racine Gun
Club.
9·22-41c

pennanen
e
vo
new taxes that will make up line
difference.'
"It's like a man who rnak•
-ae ~
• "'wtUdt
""'" dicbvtt
..., otoroalures
"' $8' 000 a year telling his wife kl
ahall c:on·
u.

.tnK and number, i1
- · at "'" a • t • · Tbo ...... on
.Wlftim
... - eadJ.pelitloas
IIWl
be
Ia Ink..
JiiJlU for
htmadf.. To Mdll part of IRlCh pret:ttlon
......_
a.. • 11 ' ' the alBd.av:it of the

PIANO tuning, reference,
Meigs Local Schools. Phone
992-550'1.
9-26-3tp

·=.== :.n

•=ber of spend $10,000 a year because be h~cilc4-l
"":~,"!...
~ hopes to get a $10,00k.year job
.., ,
• • • •l:lacbi!d to mm part in the next few monthS."
. , . IIDCie 1D tile pftRilct of the
•
•
... "'"' to 111o beo1 of bls
Nye said 80010 hand-wringlssB
h .-' 2 ..,., W
ooteh oflroa· legislators
laimin
' g ,_
IID'e GD !RICh part IS the •enuine•
art C
.._,
e .r t11e penon wbose name can' t ever remember Ohio
II .........
...have
- · oilned
... - It
·..
. 2'ts paru
L. bef
- ...
_,.,
uo cl06lllll
ore.
..
.r:;...,
12&gt;a1
_
,
ao
'""'..,
,.,d
"I
can
only
reply
thatl
can't ·
IW1 11h e -.ftb. ~of the COD-tbe ~
- lhal
each " ' - ever remember
a
........_
GD the date Rated
· Obio entering
.
cs ,... Jds name-; aDd no other new fiscal year before wttboat
- • "'*

1 a1 111e

ell tbaeto man be req,uJnd.
ne petiliao. mid atpaturs upon
-

1- lo btt• Ira . .n
.respeds
.. Uiad.
allaDIUf
..
7

-

,.... !loan lori;Y
wise
event
"JII'Oftd
' " - aDd m· 1ucb
Pllhall
be

PEP-UP with new Zlppies iron
pills. Non-habit tormong. Only
$1.98, Nelson Drugs.
9·22-301p

Over· 100 at

_ , _ b, _ p e l i l l o n b e
lilr iasull!cl..,ey.
U..
oupplaumlar)'
- a oB
, - potllloou
pno.,.....

=""".,.
or - -

!::i.t_ ";"~ '::

ofto

':1:

ot the .....,.
-1bt- ...,..
or ,..
otote.
peU-.
- 011e.....
at aat
- . than
-"',..
'"",...,..,_. of
t:11re z lwa u1 llldl c:ountr. A crue
~ ol. :0 -..s .- pre;
d laWs or
..., _ •
....-..

-h*t wt0t "'ISle
an arpmeDt

ai
... _
.........
••a
t. • • z! nt:IDO.arboth.
;e' ,.. - . - .. _...s.

101ft~1 ,.·•• or np~..S:.C,

""-.
"''"''eJec:ton:
- . tocftWt -10 1M
5

DODGE!

uxl tile penDDII

.. .-:11

jwlll h
..., ,._e
ISle

~ ••

OPEN HOUSE TUESDAY SEPT. 28th

-

--·or
7

?:ED

•

I •

. . .~ aKiiDD.

&amp;
DONUTS

tD tbl

tn the

CARPENTER - More thaD
100 members and guests par- ·
ticipated in the 150th anniversary celebration here 011 •
Sunda y at the Temple Um'ted. • ·
Melhodist Church.
Several former pastors and .
the'rr famili'es, includin g the
Re
Da 'd White Frankfort
VS).
VI U G'
;
Ear Russe , ood Hope;
Richard Jarvis, Lancaster, and
Oscar King ' Lancaster I were
present for the basket dinner mt
. tn
. the
noon and specia1 semces

e e

..

-

...

~~:

_ . ., lltift huDdled

•

U:.~:
~m=

~

~ •-,.,. ... .,....,..

-

pi
J ~ "'"lllllftl.-a.eraJ
-·
lll.t-...-.ewar:
u

:..:' ::t...:' 0::,:"' ~...":

-.., - --·
z
....... ., ilote -

pmoldal

~ . . . . . . . . . . apaa. tbe t.Dotl.

Special music was pres nled

I • 1D pam1t M aftlnna~
I' Ilia ftlllr upGD each

Gf P ..

or

item in

aMrs

-.-ed 1....
1 .....
"" ,.....
• ...,
,. -t ·
.....:odlneat
.. ISle
,._,_ Tbo ...le of

all .._ ....utW b J' tniU.tlve

...
I I
'"'' peli- IIWl
be: ~ H e, kd bJ the Peopleor ao - 1 or llldo," OUid of all
II f'
Omrntl : ""&amp; lt

a

- - -- - -

--

waa

_

U-11 U

I1osts
l un.o,~nwares R·Artry
!...,."-'&gt;
•

rJUH

~"'~"'

U:.

·

_..,.,.._..,1hostate
n.e 'MIIII: apaa wbldt 1he

·11. •

tlif '*Ilk.•

:..,. .,;: - .. ":,,;;:~..,.'11

·WOOD MOTOR SALES

DODGE CORONET The -lienee car. The .perfect ideaforafanilycarbec-•Corouet is d lg~.S
solely to be a lour-door lanitw ..tM. FuR .,.,... lor site PeoPle. and styling !hal you'll be proud of.

20 NEW 1972 DODGE fMS &amp; TRUCIS
ON DISPLAY

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE INC.
50 STATE STREET

SYRACUSE- A housewares

MIWR

at . - ..,.. party h~ted by Mrs. Jean HaD,
or.,,..tJatftlor.
,.. ' 1 The
""'
was held attheD. Ul • UUU6"'

w

-

.,..
a. Fa .n-1

-"A,,.,_

.=-··:=m-•;::

MOBII£, t(OME$

...u

or """ hall Thursday afternoon with
a .... ,..,- Lawo Mrs. Margaret Fortune · of
llut 1a ao ..,. 1fmit1DI Raci' ne RD the UQJ-10
.....
-f·~~=
A-tra·-

...

I • ,. ••-

..._.. Pte Mil-puc do&amp;. oapt •

-

...
::,.,;:".!
'\:.

Games were played ~ith
prizes won by Ada Slack, Unda
Parsons, and Elizabelln Rice
DiiLIIV&amp; DAD AND RllPIAL and' the door prize to Dctis
1
• ~""C:
Friend. Refreshments were
J:...., n.
served to the above and Eleanor
1.: .. . . . - o or lbo CaawUtotloat Buhram, Clara Lavender.
.,1,~-bell
' - Mary Pi'•.......ens,
.&amp;.
7 "we--..
te 0IU6Cl,
• ,
Olarlolle Nease, Eileen Clark.
U1iiUD srADS OF AMEPIICA Edith Hood, •~ While, and
. srA'JS or omo
-~
Mildred Pierce.
w

aiL

=:": Vl :i!t
-._:.a....::;0:

'"""""'"""'Mar'

-----7.

nmnt,.ILE""' Of' 'IIIB SICRETAliY
mo,sr.&amp;D

l 'ftD W . B&amp;IJWH~ Secfttai'J of

-or--fiOIIID,daltoft-

117 _ . , 1llat 1k fw
I ia
• . . ...,; til: Amended Sellte
..-..... .... J llld Ia tbe

-,.,.
•

or 111am-

,.~ . . . . . . . lee'C
n • • e1 Olalo.

- - .t ee
•
i D I W I ..,...,.., I
.... .....
... 7 ....d ..,. ,__,.

PI'

•

ENDS BASIC
.,,. ••• ...,.

.n •.aftQiftlll&amp;

-

N

AY)'

Seaman App:aidce n..:d:•
B•
.,.,.._

_ - _ - -.·• eo- l!eam,sonfllllr.811dlln.n.le
....
.,.. .,.,. ., Sop. - - . Beam &lt;1 sa 2llh Sl, ...
ftiJ W. BROWN gradaaled

' s

~

"c· ..,
. r ··oum

-

aiiU7

a

SR.

Crabtree, was read by ~Howard Mayne. Speciallribnte
was paid to Hollis Towusennl,
Cleveland, who recently pa I
away and to Bessie Rutherford
Strong, also deceased, for ·
special contributions to innpro y emenls m
' -~t
1.~1;0&amp;1 ya•-

'*

aluminum siding and storm

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

up to dale by Mrs· Artlu'

- . 1- .....or• - -4 .-... amendment
· .. pro- 111e Rev. Earl Russell
laa 121e
to . . IAibmltlod. speaker for the program.
Be ..... IIIIo a - die bellatl 10 1o

Cleland
Realty

- - -----

.

-

4" •
wtl?l the orau·
- - . . aadl eq'atkml,. not ex~

WIPO/

rrom recnsillnninin&amp;

or Stole at lhe Nam Training Center'

· , . Ocl. J. lt. 17, 14 Great

JAkes, lll.

w~~.-

•
''

'

$2.300 WILL buv 23 acres in
Bedford Township, Wollpen
Road . 20 minutes !rom
Pomeroy . '4 of land In limber,
balance In pasture. No
bolldlngs. Call 992-2152 and
ask lor Dick.
9.22-tlc

------

the missionaries, Haydmboth. ville· The Ml Union Clmrcb
01' iiaD.. 8Ub'
.
b&gt; .......,_ choir, and the Rev. Earl
u his fll the cburds,
.£;r";;
·!as
from :

PD=
- ':•. .:r=:.=.=
, . ..

'SIX ROOII\ house, balh, .lull
basement, 133 Bullern'!' Ave .~
just walking distance from·
downtown Pomeroy. Contact!
:d Hedrick, 2137 WadswOtlht
o)rlve, Columbus, Olllo, phone'
237·4334, Columbus.
·
5-9-lfd

&lt;!oars and wln£19ws, large ·
SAVE up to one hall. Bring your 70,000 B.T.U. floor fu~nace, like
fronl porch, 3 largo o.t
sick TV to Chuck' s TV&lt; Shop, • new. 4 clrculetln!toes heaters
bedrooms, blllh. THIS IS AN
151 Bu!tcrnut Ave., Pomeroy, from 30,000 to 6!,000 B.T. U.,
EXCEPTIONAL
BUY AT
phone 992-5080.
com mode, drop In double
JUST
55.1100.
9-24-lfc sink. Albert Hill, Racine,
~-------'·
a&gt;lo, phone 949-2261.
RACINE - 1 story frame, 3
WILL DO light hauling, phone
9-24-.ltc
bedrooms, sforage space
galpre, ·carpeted, bath, nk:&amp;
992-6870.
roAL II
..
9-24-Jtp ,.
' mestoore . Excels to~.
kitchen. large gar111e, .75
- - -- - - -- . ~all Work&gt;, E. Main St.•i ACRE of ground, IN FIRST
o&gt;omeroy. Phone 992-.:1891. 1 CLASS COliDITION. GOING
Mal H Ip Wnted
"-9.1fc;
AT S10,500. THIS YOU
INCREASE
YOUR
INMUST SEE.
COME: Add SIS to $25 POODLE puppies,' Sto;,oir o'oy,
commission earnings every
Parkvlew Kennels. Phone- 992- HAVE
A
SELLING
, week by showing Hanover
5443.
THE
PROBLEM7
PLACE
8-15-lfc
shoes to friends, neighbors.
SALE
OF
YOUR
and associates. 196 slvles for
PROPERTY
IN
COMmen and women. Work spare '6S V. W. ENGINE, runs good PETENT HANDS.
time or full lime. Write for $135. Phone 985-3310.
HENRY E. CLELAND
free sales kit. Hanover Shoe, ____ _ _ _ _ _9·.::_21-6tp
REALTOR
Depl. SOH, Hanover, Pa.
Ollice m.mf
"STAR" kills rats quickly.
17331.
Residence m-u.t
9-26-ltp Sure. 2112 pounds, $1.69 .
9-2Utc
Ebersbach Hardware, Sugar
Run Mills, Pickens HardIMMEDIATE opening lor a
man over 21 years old to work ware, Mason.
9-21-JOtp
in our slore. Must have good
persona lily, ' like to meet .
'
public, willing to assume WALNUT, modern style,
responsibility, vacation plan, ster~radlo, AM· FM radio, 4
hospitalization plan and other speak.e r sound system, 4
fringe benefits. Please slate speed aulomatlc changer,
salary requirements. Send separate controls. Balance
resume of present and past $63.97. Use our budget terms.
employers to Box 729-L, c.&lt;J Call 992-7085.
The Dally Senllnel, Pomeroy,
9·20-6tc
~r
Olllo.
110 Mechanic StrMI
9-26-12tc MAPLE. beaulllul early
P~Nneroy, Ollio
American slyle, stereo-radio
oomblnatloo, AM-FM radio, 4
. Help Wanted
speaker sound system, • NEW LISTING -6 room frame
WANTED - Person for partspeed automal'lc changer . home. Garl!l". 1 acre Ill
lime work In exciting new
Balance S71.59. Use our Burlingham. $4,500.00.
business in area. Must be able
budget terms. Call 992-7015.
to read and wrlle English
9-20-6tc NEW LISTING- 2 apaoolments
language with moderate
- one 6 rooms, bath, ll!rge
proficiency, lype a little, and FARM and home latex house porch, down. Oilier 5 room&amp;.
provide transportation. Hours
up.
Middleport.
paint sale. King Builders bath,
.aboul 10-3 dally. Wrlle P. 0 . · Supply,
123,500.00.
I
Middleport.
Box 106, Pt. Pleasant, or call
9·2-24tc LUXURIOUS
675-3398.
COUNTRY
9-22-71c
HOME - Norw 4 btdrooms; 2
baths, family room with
fireplace. 2 car garage. 15
CERTIFIED firemen, equal
acres. Asking 137,500.00.
opportunity, employment
Galllr,otis, Pt. Pleasant,
POMEROY
Business
Midd eport areil. Ideal
building with 3 rentals.
work lng conditions. Modern
Ask lng $25,000.00.
equJpment. Inquiries confidential. Reply Box 729-S, e-o
·
The Dally s.inllnel, Pomeroy,
14' • 24' • WIDE' 120 ACRES - Dlslry farm.
Ollio.
· ·"
Clean and productive. Pt.nly
of bllm and building space. 5
9' 23-Jip
bedroom ·home. 2 ponds,
woMEN to do housework In
drilled well, and Chester
Pomeroy area. Write Fran,
waler . A REAL FARM.
1'0,000.00.
Box 23, Pomeroy, Olllo.
·trioWashl--n
9-24-llp
...... ••~ ..'
Belpre, Ollio
STORE- 2 houHs.
WOMAN to live In, light . ._ _ _ina____.. GENERAL
storage building. 2 car
housek:flng and cooking, 1965 ELCAR, 2 bedroom mobile . garage. One acre. LOCK.
~ea~-~~d, weekly pay.
home, awnings, cement STOCK, and BARREL Oily
porch, garage, . storage SJO,OOO.OO.
9_21 -.ltc
building, frull trees, 'QI?rden
area, on approxlmalely 2 TO BUY OR SELL CALl m.
acres - Langsville 667·3971, ln5«H2-U11
Auto Sales
HElEN L TEAFORD,
9-21-.ltc
1962 FORD 112 ton pickup truck
ASSOACIATE
SASO. Phone 949-o1S51 ,
'i GAS tlrculatlng heaters.
Phone 992·:1262 evenings.
·
1910 DODGE Darl Swinger, V-8,
9-21-tfc
automatic, 20,000 miles.
Phone 992-7092.
9-26-31&lt;: 1971 ZIG-ZAG sewing machl,.
1e11 tn layewa
Batsutlfvl
- - - - -- pastel
color,
lui
siM
~1.
1969 CHEVROLET pickup,
All
buill-In
10
bullllllhale,
topper Included, auloma?lc. a
.,.,.-C?Ist and laney stitch.
cyt., 21.000 actual miles.
Pay jusl Soll.75 cllh or twnns
spotlights, foallghts, $2,300.
avat
able. Tr••·lns acPhone 992-6029 or •see at
cepted.
Phone 992-5641.
Waller Wilson's on Peach
f.21-6k
Fork Road.
9._
2'- 31P VACUUM t ' - brand _ __ _ _ _ _ _
'63 FORD van Truck - sus, .65
1971 - 1. Compt.te with all
cleaning tooh. Small pelnl
Mustang - $200, '66 A-1 Ford
- ' uoo. Contact Albert damage In shipping. Wlll take
"- h K
cash Phone
or budGet
Roseber ry·.....
s all- eno Rd ·• S27
available.
99f-5641.plan
Long Bottom.
9_21 _.11:
- -- - - . , 9-_
26-3tp - - - - - - - -

·

afternoon

3 BEDROOM brick home
Choice IOcaliO!IIn Middleport
Seen by appointment ooly.
Phone 992-S523 after 4 p.m.
S-7-Hc

NEW, 3-bedroom home In
Middleport. . Buill-In kitchen,
ceramic tile bath, all-electric'
heal. good neighborhood. can
black rotary mowers-S220
arrange
FHA financing .
and $260. New Imea 2-way did
Telephone
992-3600 or 992scoop-$100. Ermel Luckefl,
2186.
Albany 698-3032.
7-25-ffc
9-23-Jic
tO room house and
16 CHINCHILLAS, 9 males and RACINE,
Two
lots, basement,
bath.
7 females with cages, S250.
garage.
PhOfle
949-4313 otter
Phone 992-7305.
5:30p.m.
9-23·3fp
9-23-121p
8 ROOM house on Union Ave. HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
Phone 992-56AI.
Call Danny Thompson, 9929-23·61p
2196.
7-18-ttc
FOAM mattress and In ·
nersprings for twin bed, goo&lt;!
condition, S20 for the set.
Phone 985-3900.
9-24-3tp

8-29-lfc

"'*'
I:;".!:'H!:. Zl l:!
!:::. ~pared . ~
ISle I
ol
N;r, If In - ·
- nr''!;;.!r u.. materialcollectedbyBollisaau
: •.. ·;-~ ~ n . • "ito the =~ Uoyd Townsend, and brougbt
.. ,.. 2
5

-

COFFEE

,..,.,.

Real Estate For Sale

'I•

.:"--•,.t",::;:;. ~ by

... -

FREE

or ....

_..,,

• both. ror- IIQ' ptupcwred

..... -2·•'* :::r, be -

CHARGER The Dodge idea of what a fam-

or
bJ

poll- ....,. .. ...,..,

9-22-ltc

- - -...!!...- -

- - -- --,--

orndd an ac-

fill .- ptOC'Ufed; nor
....U tile te:IK.._ Ill aD.T Ww aub-

- - -- - - - ,

CONN trumpet and 52" f'V"Y• P
Myla Powell. 992-2622.
REDUCE safe and fasl with
9-24-Jtc
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
601 Eosl Main
Water Pills. Nelson Drugs.
POMEROY
9-22-JOtp EARl'! AT home a&lt;ldressing TOWNSHIP ROAD T-29 -11.26
envelopes. Rush stamped
ACRES, beautiful site lor
KOSCOT 'Kosmetics. Sep- self-addressed envelope. The
housin'l pro\·ect or trailer
Ambrose Co .. 4325 Lakeborn,
tember Sates Special :
court, odeal s te for exclusive
Davisburg, Mich., 48019.
Kreamy lip Kote S2 now
ALMOST
IN
home .
9-8-JOtp
$1.50, Frostlucent Lip Kole
POMEROY AND LEVEL.
$2.50 now $2; 23 delicious
Just $12.900.
colors. Call 992-5113 or come DAVENPORT and chair $20.
Frigidaire refrigerator, SJO.
see at 161'12 '' ·•h Ave ..
RUTLAND ACRE. aood
Phone 992-3874.
Middleport, on
neighborhood,
N~W
9-24-Jtp

1
E..6£'::.i~~~15Q
h.
.. :.: II =::"::"u."3~
,"hC''-~·""'
f.IUt ~
=w;;;,r;;• i A, , •
:::n ~.:e...:J... :::. :~: nnzversar11
J
....

For Sale

Will be""cepltd unll! 9a.in. tor
·tanted To Buy ·
H &amp; N DAY OLD or started
08'( of PubiJcatton
Leghorn pulltls. Both 11- or
OLD Furniture, dlshk, .clocks,
. REGULAYIONS
cage grown available.
The Publisher reserves lhe· and·or complete households.
Poullry
housing
and
right to edit or reject any ads
Write M. D. Miller, Pomeroy,
automation. Modern Poultry,
Ohio. Call 992-6271.
deemed objectional, The
8-25-lfc
399 w. Main, Pomer!l'f, 992·
publisher will not be res~slble
for more than one Incorrect
2144.
9-26-lk
Insertion.
For
Sale
RATES
16 FT. SWISS Colony ·travel HALF RUNNER beans, $1.50
ForWtnl Ad Service
trailer, good condition, 19'15.
5 cents ~r Word one insertion
bushel, pi &lt;.k ·your ·awn.
Phone 992-6329.
. Minimum Charge 7Sc
Potatoes. Clarence ProtfiH,
Porlian&lt;l. Phone 843-2254. · .
12 tents per word three.
9-20-61c

Notice

-lie1honsldi!L
-·
&lt;o='&gt;
Ia wllldl
A and
resident
of had it' and one &lt;1 ~ •da,.
~ ..; It~-=.'!.=: we'll get art oundbudg to
andadopm:.:
1
pdl;r.

Ca~llatton J. Corr~lons

Wanted ,

SECOND-HAND riding mower, APPLES - t-iltpetrld&lt; Or·
Ray Hartley. Racl,., pl\one
chards, State Route 619,
949-28$5.
phone Wilkesville, 669·3715.·
9-26-31p
9-3-lfc

2 BLACK miniature poo&lt;lle
puppies. male. Phone 99225 Per Cent Discount on paid
6329.
9-20-61c
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp;OBITUARY
23 CU. FT. deep freeze, ping
$1.50 for 50 word minimum.
pong
table.
complete
Each a&lt;lditlonal word 2c.
bedroom suite with new
BLIND ADS
mattress, 2 end tables and
Additional 2Sc Charge · per
~!ia~t
1ng coffee table. Phone
Advertisemf!nt.
·
9-23-Jic
OFfiCE HOURS
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,
1: 30 a.m. to 12: 00 Noon GRAND Champions and
Saturday.
Reserve
Champions ·in
O.V.H . S . A .
and
S.E.O.H.E.A.-Horses and
·In Memory
ponf_
es which have won in
IN LOVING memory of my
halter, showmanship ,
husband, John R. Davis, who
pleasure, trail . r eining.
passed away Sept. 26, 1955: At
horsemansh ip and conies!.
evening when twilight hour
Four mares and three
draws near, And sunset
geldings . ages: yearling to 9
flames the sky. I think of you
years old. Some have been
and the harpy days gone by:
shown by a 1 year old boy .
Thoughts o you come drilling
$200 and up. Jr. Kennedy,
back, Within my dreams lo
Ml&lt;ldleport, Ohio 742-4540 .
say, To know thai you are
., 9-23-3tp
resting, When the twlllghl
ends lhe day. His wife. Edllh. fERGUSON. 20 tractor-$675.
9-26·11C
New 4 II. and 5 II. 3-polnt

parks.

Ul

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
s P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a.m. ·

consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word six con·
secutive insertions.
•

•

of Ohio tD nad u foUowa : speoomg

ajlil ""

36 Month Financing 100% Warranty

DEPEND ON IT!

m

the..........
..,.;...tunbavingenac•-'
.... a

Oose

"II is· true the General
T
-":! mn. • pnopau1 to amend Assembly has aulborll4!4
. . al Anlcle n of tbe Con-• ·
-' the
. lbe ·

with red interior, w-s-w tires, 37,000 act . miles.

·

203-lt

...,.. lltale in 1he manner
1 .., •• the ,..,....
,
"' be SWd on the lint
• J' after the Ant llmuiQ" in

• ·'IIDIS -

2 Dr. Hardtop, radio and heater, P. steering,
P. brakes, aut. transmission, desert beige

Oo this dale in history :
In 1959 the worst typhoon in
In I
British troops occu- Japanese history left 4:464
pied Philadelphia during the dead.
American Revolutionary War.
In 1950 United Nations troops
A lhoughl for lhe day:
The Almanac
look Seoul, the capital of South American clergyman ReinJJoid
By United Press International Korea . from North Korean N' b
Today is Sunday, Sept. 26, the Communist forces.
te uhr said, " Man's capacity
269th day of 1971 wi'Lh 96 to 1 1955 h N
fur justice makes democracy
n
t e ew York Stock P'•ssible but man 's ·inclination
follow.
Exchange suffered ils worst to injustice
k d
The moon is approaching ils price break since lhe 1929 necessar ,. rna es emocracy
first quarter (21th ).
Collapse. The Monday reaction
y.
The morning slats are foll~"~ed news that President , Acc?rding to legeild, triiMcrcury and Saturn.
Dw1~:ht D. Eisenhower had hum ts the Oower said to
The evening stars are Venus , · •offered a ·heart aUack in ~ake the robin 's song. The
M:ws and Ju11il cr.
Color~" I" ••n Saturday .
.. ow~r
popularly &lt;·ailed
Fourt~

Phone 446-3888or 446-4477
155-tl

.xv

l~ot

: - . ~!"' .....,._ tt&gt; the dec· therefore there was no reason to

ily-sized sports car should be. It's laoge enough 10
seat six, and its sporty styling adds a new d imension
to the old-fashioned fam ily cara.~
. Cl
::;:.;*;::
; k.::il:..:out=:.:'od=ay!.:!_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....,

CARTER' S PLUM bi NG
AND HEATING

.

lhXft.. ..,...a on"'
~.--· ..
"'
.....,..,.
oiocl.d
tt&gt;
Nalunil
Resoun:a
and lhat
......... ~therein, tbat
'

1968 Olds Cutlass Supreme

DOD~E

Ga ltipolis, o.

.

- a t - state on Oblo

.,.
-

Eastern Ave.

.· '

•i
-

~ -

*1195

. .·

LEGAL

i!

.1969 Buick LeSabre 4 dr. H.T.

66 CHRYSLER NEWPORT

298-11

.

''"

be 121e

DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone 446·2735
28\-lf

830

I

Jnr.

300 Fourth Ave.
Phone 446-1637
Gene Plants, Owner

I

~ 1*
fbie •

Brammer Plumbing &amp; Heating

and trenching . C. J. Lemley,
Vinton, 011io . Ph . 388-8543.
114-11
D. P. MARTIN &amp; Son Water

:

1:

:
:

Plumbing &amp; Heating

Insurance Inc.

.

.

charged Friday,
l
8lld Lt. Goveinor
·•Some fll ~ l8lile ~
Jelul BrlllOD are using are self-styled paragons of
mid djng linancial In· 'fiscal responsibility,' ., said
r--tian in atteq,ls to give a Nye. "But their .statements.
r.lleiqa '1111ballherecenl together wilh ·the legi•l•lors'
' · C cf stale parks was not Inaction an a ~~ budget
y, Nallnl Resources -andtaxprogram,aretheheigbl
Oirftlllr William B. Nye of fiscal irresponsibility ·
urging illegal dc:ficit spendi&lt;e,
"What they are ~eating is
NOTICE
that it's perteclly an rigbt for
the state to spend money it
jA
..lll•=mlollltllaolullon doesn'thave,ifcWngsowiUget
.... 2)
the legl.slators off the boot for
zoun RlfSOlllTioN
not IIPi&lt;e their OWll jolls."
2
1
• Ai- UtaOl~c-m-",. !:: Nye aid the legislators 111111
. . - o r a.too .. - . . ....... the lieutenant governor have
. . . . . . . . of ..u .uc. of
.._ ., ,.., •• made statements lbat tbe
..... :: :h:.....!"":"* General Assembly baa~
., . . 2 ·, .,
• provided enough money for
a. II a..OSo.o d b T the General Asti' -' the n...• .........,t _.
........,_,.,..

:

DON WAITS WUSWAGEN, INC.

RUSSELL'S
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
SEPTIC tank cleaning, electric
sewer cleaning, ditching .
Gall ipolis, Ollio. Ph. 446-4782.
. 193-11

.

..i ,.... .....,.,., - ~-erai slate

-

m Upper River Ita. lURID Rt. 11, Gallipolis, Oltio
Phone (614)446-9100
Service- Parts -Office
Mon., Tues., w..t., Fri.- I A.M. 1D 5:00 P.M.
Thur. 1:10 A.M.to9:30 P.M.-Closed sat.

.

• '*'

power windows. vinyl top. Nice.

70 Sq. Back - Clementine with black int., 4 speed, radio.
Sharp.
$2295
69 Bug, red, black int., 4 speed, radio, white tires. Nice clean
·car.'
'
Reduced to $1688 "'"'
2-69 Bugs, 1 white, 1 light blue. Radio, automatic stickshift,
leatherette, white tires.
Each $1688
69 Sq. Back, white, black leatherette, radio, white tires, 4speed. This is a local car, in mint cond.
$1995
68 Bug, light blue, 4 speed, radio, white tires, new paint. $1395
68 Sq. Back, beige, leatherette, radio, 4 speed. A real sharp
car.
$1695
68 Fast Back, white, red interior, 4-speed. One owner tradein. (Sharp) .
$1488
68 Sq. Back, light blue, leatherette, 4-speed. One owner,
$1495
average car.
67 Fast Back, red, 4-speed. This car has been completely
rebuilt. (Nice carl
$1388
67 Sq. Back, red, black int., 4-speed, local trade-in. A nice
car.
$1495
67 Sta. Wgn., (Bus), red &amp; white, a real nice unit traded in by
a lady. This may be the one you've been waiting for.
$1688
66 Bug, light blue, 4-speed. Has been completely redone
mechanically.
$995
65 Bug, white, 4-speed, body is damaged but runs out fine
(work carl.
$395
2-63 Bugs. Both cars have been completely redone cPerfect
shape).
Each $995

Saunders

pumps Sales and Service.
Compl ete water line service

J

1969
Buick
Elecba
2 Dr. hdfp., one owner, air cond.,

OLD VOLKS HOME .

guaranteed. Ph. J. P. Holley,
84-tf
245-5018 or 446·4344.
_ __ _ _ _ _ __
219-tf

Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

i Nye Rehutts GOP Claims Parks Need

:
:

VOLKSWAGEN @

hospital and general liability.

- -.........

=

Pllone (614)-Service- l'llrls- Ollke
Mon., Tues., Wed., Fri.-II A.M. ID5:10 P.M.
Thur. 8:00A.M. tol:30 P.M.-Closed Sit.

RAIKE'S
REFRIGERATION
&amp; AIR CONDITIONING
RESIDENTIAL, commercial ,
COUNTRY LIVING
industrial. Ph. 367-7200.
NEAR TOWN
nnf
If you are looking for· .a~h~
ou~se~-:-:=i:i'i~;:;:-~iM/INwilh li llie maintenance ••e
-ALBERT EHMAN
!h is 2 BR home wi th
Water Delivery Service
Patriot Star Rt., Gallipolis
aluminum siding on a 1 acre
lot near Centenary. Also has a
Ph. 379-2133
garage and carpor t. Fu ll
243-tf
price only S10,000.
Centr•l Air Conditioning
40ACRE FARM
,., . i7~illllo ...,, '
Ho~~~ I Qye,r.~/'l;e ~ av~ the place
t-rH Estimates
flir. y&lt;lu. MOOern 3 BR home,

!:

. No~IIIDaiJ.

Services Offered

Real Estate For Sale

I

ii. Jl'~0
.i

. -~-,h..,,r,11,_n1&amp;11

:

· 195DON
WATTS VOliSWAGEN. INC.
Upper River Rd. IOI!Io Rt. 7), Gallipolis, Oltio

KANAUGA, OHIO

i
i',.

.. s.diJ. .

SMITH
SAYS:

COME IN AND SEE THE GIANT CARS CAPTURED

j

Came In IIIII Blil• ._.

"DOC''

new.

I

I

l

expert

The small
has

•

•

'

'

•

�)0:;:·

•

.'

.

•

i

a-ftllll!-.l'll!iJTITI-Ia•a::·'s..IIIMIII!eli,,8S•"~r.lllpl. .. 11'11

~-~

·

••'

li

.•

An Invitation

,.

To See

I'
l

l'

;

,,I'·
I

'.
'I

EVERY CAR
UST BE SOLD
REGARDLESS
·Qf,PRICE·
ACOMPLETE
OUT SALE

;:

"·

.I'.

I•

i

''.••

!'

':
1:
''
'

'
''..

CHEVROLET

l l~ SAVE
,;

'I

'''
'
It

Now
On _
DiSplay
At
R'OmeroJ Motor Co..

I

i'

'

I

liNG - Bfl MONT

.
;

..'

Camaro

Stop in, call or write or lltlk to Dan
Lawnder or Jolin Ketchlca.

Tllam-.

i·

C:pe.

Cllevelle • Dr. with

lmp•la H.T.

with air
2 St. Wagon Models
witll air
24' Piclcup Trucks

MOBILE HOME SALES

I

H.T.

air
Monte Carlo 4
with air

Tom

KEITHGOIU
'•'

Lot. Ph.tft-7114

11No......,.,992-3422
Doll, 121D '· Sullday 1t116
OPPOSITE GOBLE'S USED tAR LOT

'

'·
•·•·
'
""
'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

POMEROY ·MOTOR CO.

t

'

Business Services

I.

Business Services

IIPEii - - Ill

C. BRADFORD. Auctioneer
Complete Service

,."'

Phane,.-3121
Rec:lne, 0111o
Crllf Bradford

j •

,4

I

5-1-ttc

15.55
-GUARANTEED-

THE SHOP, Custom meat
cuffing, Pleasant RldatO Roed.
Pomeroy. Dick Vaughan, 992·
337• and Dale Little. 992~.
• 9·12·30fc

,__,

;t .
,

BACKHOE AND DOZER work
Septic lanks h11tallld. Geora.!·

;I

,J

CBilll

"L

,.•'

I

·!
j

I'
1

c..n.r
lillian ......
ondSIItte Rt.7

tto.n
A.11111Uy, Tuesday,
WedRuday- F....,y
•l:llo.m. ID6p.m.
TllondaJ
IOa.m. lol::llp.m.

or

S.lwrdato1Yp.m.

P - E tft-JOt

l '

AWNINGS, storm ~ and
windows. carports.
marq..-, aluminum siding
and railing. can A. Jacob,
'.' sales
repoesenlattve. For free
estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
'
Johnson and Son. Inc.
'
5-27-ltc
''

•
,.

I

••
I
I
I

.

'

'

POMEROY

HOME&amp; AUTO ·

• ConJijtioning .

OffiCE SUPPU£S

Spoc~l
AI

FURNITUI£
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

6.98

'.
''

,.

..........

1-tnvtntorof

6-Part of fireplace

I '

~:

1•

I:
t•

I .

I

1

I:
1

I,

~r

'I

J J-wofth
16--SHat.
21-unloch
U-Partof

79--Mindmum

stona
24-Balan~

82-Herbina:er

macnrttlzetion

--

84-Provlde,
prtpar1 and

26-VIpld

211---Aooo.......,d
30--fi'NC.Ipitatfon

32-comp.n.s. point
1 ' U-Tautonlc dei1;)'
34 Ear
lS--Man'1 nickname
36--fluff

lll-£&lt;fiblo
hAl
ll
132--Male
133--EII..it
135 01 un of
fllries
1li31,_Fewnm•le ruff
139-fin•l
1141-i;!Wriod of time
142--A sta~t~ (lbbr.)
143--Kinl: of Beshan .
144--A wHhlnc

20-Thlnls
27 Aotl 1 hiD
29 Riwr in
SIIM!ria
31-Conjunction
36--Wift of JICOb

42--F~malt:

145--Uollifiet

. ,..ltlvet
4:J.--Herve network

147--FipN of

44-Ceuctal

85-SHd coatlnl
86-Joumey

•peech
149-EquaUty

•Ff diP
46--Prwfb:: not

81-Trllnlacllon
89--F'acts
go.....cleric:al collar
92--Ate to let thin

150--Ctletlenpd
152--Pitchen

48--HWt card&amp;

1!54--Pftdpitaus

156-Cou...pous

49 I'DsMu
S0-8ucUt
51 Newspapers,

37-Total

1Sa.-.t.yrical pMm
15~rocrutindon

gg.....cries like

52-t..ao

38--Sintlln middle

160--a.art•r
161-foundld

53-f'Puiftlln ,.ys
SS-Fracnunts

DOWN

56 SDfl lhM.-wn
57-Venetian

--

m ountllin

e'"t

.....

l~T1k1

unlawfully

42-HepUve~

102-stap whisper

.fl-Musical
lnl1rument
44--Crnata
45-lone of bodJ
47-Reeover

103-The urial

50--Sh•ltow WIHI
51-Schoolbook
54-Ftas.h-wlter

....

5..........
$6-&lt;.11..

104--Yeltow ocher

....

105--Man.h bhd

~~

101-Larp bird
109-Riwrln
8'beria
llo.--Htbr.w letter
Ill-Tropical t,..
112-Throb
rhythmically
11"-Foreip ald

59--fdp

,...., Qnk.)

a._..,.._

60-0rdin1nee

lUi

S2-Nisle1d

117-Pirt of ~det

M-Stirup
65-No.. ot K~'­

1 It-Mountain

.....

M-albyloni•n

-

J-8urrowfrw
ll'imlfs

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

...._,.ruh dffnll:
t ' Symbol for
t1ntatum

10-f"11-.MenterYint

12-MeturH
1:1-Y_ ...

.,...

lt-Gufdo•• In

122---Confunclion

16-Part Df

124--DrtvouNd
125-Small vall•y

69-l-

121--Aetreal

10--AttUII

1~

GHIIc

--

........

5~---ft~ert.fnlftl tD

.._..........
.... "'

15--Weirder

67-"Mrln
Scotlond

wiJectiwly

2--Musleal dram• . 61--flac
63-Grftnfand
l--Sook
4-S,mbal tor tin
5-Wotm
f-MON JOIIImn
7-Told
publication

120--Ci-

12'1-Upi,.

lllony Plumbing &amp; Htattng.'

Complete
Plumbing,
Healing and A.lr Conditioning.
240 Lincoln St., Middleport

Phone 992-2550
Insured- Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See us for Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnstalation.

1967 Cay Pickup Truck ........... s1645
V-8, auto. trans;, P.S.• P. B.

firepteee

17-M•awreof
wti&amp;ht .
18-Thtet.10e1f
slo&lt;h
19- -s.nd forth

70--l.et ..

.......

71--rfvl
73-kettJectrum
74-lec•l ont.r
1So--Painful apats
17--lstand-.,
lleditt-rrM.an
71 Opcuiftc In

-

~n11af

&amp; .....

81-fnsect . .
8l-Eihiopi1n tit ..

84-Ar""-'t
87-0a.npn ,
89---4nfer

Ph.992·2143

V-8, standard trans.

on it.

Vinyl top, auto. trans., P.S., P. B., air con·
dition .

'

1968 Volkswagen Fast Back ........ s1495

Rt.2

SALES.SERVICE

Racine,O.

SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
.
2-12-ttc

1971 CADILLAC
E' 'ORA'O COUPE
Almond Firemlst finish , mafchlng lnlerior, full power
equipment, AM-FM radio, Climate Confrol air conditioning, one owner, low mileage.

'7495
KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
992·S3ft
&amp;MAC Fllllnd.. Avatlalllt
Pume•J
"You'll LlkeOur&lt;Nallly:tftiyoi.Dolng llual'*l"

Tempest••

92---Fite
93---r.rfanns

Business Services

95-MitiSUnl

Fer

TRAILER space with utility
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
building In Chest~, phone
985-.106.
located at Crossroads, Rt. 12•.
Complete front end service
9-22-4fc
tune up and brake service:
· · Wheels
bit/anced elec - 3 ROOMS and bath. turniShed, ·
Ironically. · All
work
170'12 Mulberry, phone 992·
guaranteed.
Reasonable
201 after S p.m.
rates. Phone 992-3213.
9·23-tfc
7"27 ·1fc APARTMi::N f, IUmished room '
~ONl:M.E 1 E ~~~h, phone 992-2780 or
READY-MIX
delivered rlghl to your
9. 17.1fc
pro/eel. Fast and easy. Free =:cc-:--::c:-----....:.
est mates. Phone 992-328•. TRAILER, Brown's Trailer
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co
Park, Minersville, phone
. - .
"
...
Middleport, atlo.
332~.
6-JO.ffc:
9·19-4tc
)twiHb MAI.:HINES. Repait · ~T::R:-A:-1:-L-::E:-:R.,..
__s_p_a=ce-.-de_s___:lrable
service, all makes, 992-2214,
neighborhood phone 992-a..
The FabriC Shop, Pomeroy
'
9 19 If .
Authorized Singer Sales and
· • c
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. FURNISHED end unfurnished.
--.,.-------=3-.,:29.:._·1fc
apartmenb. o- to school.
. .
Phone 992-504.
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
10.18-lfc
Service, Phone 992-2522.
6-10-ttc TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
_ _ _ _ _ _ ___:.:._
Court, Rt. 12•, SyracuiA,
011/o. 992·2951 .
..
· 4-2-lfc

du,.tion of
W Dll1n pin

97-sword
99-Kindof

eab-

101-Sqth
10S-Wesh

106-Buirush
107-let it ~lind
111--Man's
nkknllme

112--Gomo ployed
on horsebaclt
113--Creat Like
115-Asslstant
116--tnttrjlction
Ill-Comfort

ug_v..ieto
121--Commanded
123 Noll of ICIIe
125-Spnttt.f
126-EYaiUIIt
127-A continent

129-Wure••r
130--Royal

131-Make IKe
132-Untldy
134-Heleflear
136--Century plant

137--ltlveet.d
139-Tftt. of
'*"PtCI

14o-Girl's name
144-SuppUute
14S-L.,-n.,.,.
146--Gl.ant plane
ConJ:tesS

......
--"

Real Estate

I BEDROOM trailer apart:
mont, Ideal for couples.
Contad McClure's Dairy Isla,
HOUSE - Two apts., • rooms
992-52&lt;41 or 992-306.
and baH1 each, near new
9-21-Sic
housing project. Trade tor
smaller house. Phone 992 . FURNISHED apartment on
2608.
Lincoln Hill, suitable for I or 2
- l e. Phon" 992-3419.
9-26-JOfc
9·21-ftc

For Sale cr Trade

147-Artlrnoon
:41-Recldtl

14g._Dance step
151-Note ot sale
153--Pronoun
155- lnifial$ ol 2'6th

a,..onw. Inc.

1969 Volkswagen Bug ............... 1595

The top performers are rolling in for action.

.

In the spotlight are the bold ones .for '72. They've

WIN AT BRIDGE

cors are marked for excellence. Made with built-in

North Has No Heart at All
South won the trump lead
in his hand and studied the
situation carefully. "There
are so many ways to make

NOR'M (D)
.KJ96

..

quality craftsmanship. Designed to get a grip on the

•void

tK1873
.A86'

road. Engineered to give safe, ·smooth handling. And,
they're ready to make a grand entrance right here.

America's top trperts tJplain their

• K953 2
tQ!09

AQ874

52

.J75

.Ql03

S9llTH

.AQ!OB
.Jl06
t A64
.K92
Both vulnerable
West North East
It
Pass
Pass
Pass 4 \'
Pass
Pass 5 t
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass Pass
Opening lead-• 2

-

They loolr bssured." Becii\Jse.Jhey know

121-pogo book on JACOBY

MODER.H. For your copy

s~nt SJ

are. The styling is right on the line for a look that's all

newspoperJ, P.O. Box 4A:9.. Radio Citr
Stotion, Now Yo&lt;k, N.Y. 10019.

today and part of tomorrow. Hurry in and be part of

this contract," he remarked ,
" that I will look silly if I
go down."
:
South
After thai peroration he
•
1•
4 N.T.
ruffed one heart in dummy;
•
5 N.T.
•
led a diamond to his ace ; a
•
second diamond to dummy's
king and let East win a third
-·
diamond with his queen.
East led back a second
~ ~----------l
trump.
South won in his
~ Ry Oswald &amp; James Jacoby ·
hand ; ruffed a second heart ;
•
· • North's jump to four hearts returned to his hand with the
: is a very modern gadget king of clubs ; drew trumps
: known as a super- splinter and claimed his contract
. bid. Two hearts would have since his third club and third
~ been a one-round force in the heart could be discarded on
• system used by North and dummy's good diamonds .
• Soutb. It also would be a
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE, ASSN.)
; prosaic bid designed to show
·• hearts as well as diamonds.
•• Three hearts would be a
: splinter. It would establish
The bidding has been:
• spades as the final trump
West
North
East South
: suit and show one heart.
~ Thus, four hearts was a
2•
Pass 2+
super-splinter and showed no Pass
' '
Pass
3•
Pass
hearts .
You, South, hold:
This is a dangerous bid to .Jt74Z
tAK1087 .AQ
try with a new partner, but
What do you do now?
is safe if you are sure your A-Bid loar spades. This conpartner will know the mean· tnd should prove very satis..
in g.
fJtCtury.
After the super • splinter,
TODAY'S QUESTION
·· South went into Blackwood.
Instead
bidding three
• His partner's responses ac- spades your ofpartner
bid two
• counted for all aces and hearts over your twohas
diamonds:
~ kings outside of the heart
~ suit but South settled for the What do you do now?
small slam.

.

.

6.

American
Mutc:s

the welcoming commiHee for the 72's!

REFRESHMENTS WHILE
YOU'RE CAR WATCHING.

6.

R.H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
I oaner
Car

IIIDDI.EPOIT, 0.

992-2151 or 992·2152

P,u4eclioll Pion
,.American
Molols

ENJOY 3 DAYS

•z

~lJ)J-~IJ,J

Dependable City

~

1.

OF CAR
WATCHING

D
B

SEPTEMBER
28-29-30

•...•• ~.~ .-l , _

HAVE THEIR

WELCOME

llnecramblt thele (ourJumbltl.
Ont letter lo tKh ........, lo
for• four ordinary words.

MAT OUT!

--

I FITEB •*"=-Auction

[l

j

II
~LL

FEEL5URE

OF '{OUFfSEl..F
IF '10\J HAVE IT.

J

r

j
I . ..- -.. 1.[ 11 I 11111 I)

(.... wen lle.iloy)

y·-~,...,··1

J......... AlOMA VOCAL PIIMIT IUMI'il

' ...........- .....

. Aa• ""

rtrey-- ··...;· ,.. _

wiflt your ftDnte~ adJren ond zip
code to: 'Win crt 8rid9e," (c/o tllis

..,-AN -()AI.oATOI'•

SPECIAL AUCTION
SUN., SEPT.26,1971-I p.m.
KUHL'S AUCTION BARN
St. Rt. 7-at caution light
Tuppers Plains, Ohio
THE FOLLOWING is a partial
listing of the merchandise to
be sold: FURNITURE : brass
bed; pie sale; library !abies;
mahogany cedar chest :
bachelor's chest. other
chesls; old cherry sola bed,
matching rock;er &amp; arm

'
ERYONE ! Terms . (.ash ;
single-barrelled ~hotguns ; lg.
all
sales
final.
NOT
Gestetner
m1meograph
assorted tables &amp; old chairs ;
RESPONSIBLE
FOR
AC·
machine; good snow tires ;
rockers, including child's oak.
CIDENTS. Billy D. Kuhl.
portable typewriter; Vidory
sewing. lg. oak, others: baby
Owner. Fred Vosbel of
marbles; lantern candy
items; la mps ; beds, com·
Williamstown. W.
Va . •
container ; wooden toy truck ;
plete ;
dinette
sets ;
AUCTIONEER
·
tinware.
advertising
,
fair
refrigerators; gas &amp; electric
9-26-lfc
exposition Items: stereoscope
ranQ;es; TV's ; oil furnace
&amp; Keystone view cards; 4 (proceeds lobe dona led to the
star flags ; steamer &amp; other
T. P .
M. E.
Church).
The .,Personal
irunks ; clothing such as AUCTION .
Glassware inc luding
properly
in
tt.e
lormer Rufus
velvet smolting jacket (new),
depression. ruby, Heisey.
Hite
Home
on
Salem St,,
luxedo, muskrat coat, velvet
Cambridge, si lver deposit,
Rutland.
Ohio
Wllich
has lleeft
flapper
dress
;
bottles,
inassorted s1emware !some
sold,
will
be
sold
at
Auction,
cluding Avons such as pipe,
etched).
Hand -cralled
Saturday.
Oclobet
l.
1971.
' 67 Xmas ornament, pump
ceramics, ather china . FARM
11
:
00
a
.m
.
Consisting
of:
ltull,
bo•ed),
clock
IF-BJ;
COLL ECTIBLES such as
Frigidaire
Refrig«ator,..
9
pc.
slulfed loys. doll•, elc.; linens
grinder. cream separator.
dinette
S&lt;'t
old
cupboard,
including old reversible
kraut cutter, corn planter,
utility "Cabinet. sink and
bedspread, quills. blankets,
apptebulter s1irrer. horse
cabinet, Maytag w.-inger
tapestries.
etc.
:
many
small
hames. brass scales. old tools.
washer. 2 gas healers (1 lg.
~1ppll~nces
&amp;
hou\f'hold
wooden planes, wagon seat,
Warm Mornl ngl. metal
QOOds;
MUCH
MIS·
lanlern,, jars . cr,' cks. MISC. :
wardrobe,
recliner and olher
SOME·
tELLANEOUS.
insula toros. ,
old
double
chairs. pole lamp. platform
THING
FOR
EVbarrelled, side- hammer &amp; old
swivel

ch~ir,

with caned side panels; 3
piece split cane set {couch, 2
chairs): dining room table, 6

chairs ; buflet ; wicker chair :
4 windsor ctu:.irs; pr . wrough t

iron chairs ; several kitchen
cabi nets; 53'' round walnut

table with Queen A~ne legs :
drop leaf !able; claw.looted

· plano s tool bottom ; oak

office

armchair;

••
f
' ij

I

Getting Better and
Better All the Time

5

•••

Open Eves. TII&amp;-TiiS P.~. Sat.

91-Spfrft In '"l"M

•· Presutent
l!li7-c;un MOtf

OF PROGRESS

1965 Dlevrolet Pickup Truck ....... ..1995
1968 Dodge Comet 500 ............. $}445.

•

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

949-4551

NOI.J.!l'IOS

...

96

CREATED IN THE TRADITION

1967 GMC Pickup Truck ..•••...•. ..Sl545

•
•

Residential.
Commercial
and
Industria I Wiring
24 Hour Service

Kllchtns, Baths
Room Additions
And Patlo1
Backhoe And
Endloader Woril

...._.;,.

37-Tt~ntCJftMI

39---He,.,. end
lollll40 Sols of Adam
U-Mihf oplettve

M-DKJ•q,tions
91---Sea In Asia

49-a.lsten to

j

74---Wildemns
76---Allonquian
Indian
n-Averap
71--Aivtrin
Arizona

lol'tiflclldon
23-Stml-predous
2~rmlt

i'
i

·-

71-S.ume
72-Mulk:: IS

engine.

0

C.dlllac • 01 I m..llo

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1971
ACROSS

From the largest Truck or.
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Hnter Core.

4 speed, 396

· Blue with white vinyl top, white interior, P. S.,
P. B.• 4 speed.

ElfcrRIC SERVICE

BUE11NARS

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
'' .

NEW &amp; OLD WORK'
All W.ather Roofing &amp;
Consfruction Co. and An-

Re.mot1eting

Plus
Paris

Blaellnar's

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
Business 1Senlces
WORK
SPOUTING,
O'BRIEN
ROOF PAINTING

Complete

Re-Oial&amp;t

------

'
I·

EXPERIENCED

1..-:tion and

'!

And

Service work . Call Cecil
Roseberry , Racine, Ohio.
Phone 614-BC-227•.
9-8-JOip

HILTON WOLF'

r---:-.-:-:
. .::-. -:-.-:-.- - - ,
IIIII Yaur 5 mal

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

'.
• ROSEBERRY furnace InFree estimates on
''· stallation.
new furnaces, oil or gas.
,.
'
,.

BILL NELSON
992-3657

_
1 :-a.m.

7-31-lfc ' ~~~~~~~~~!
;.

Racine, &lt;Jtlo.

''
I

OptnlliiS ·

BEMIIY SIIIP

6-15-ttc

, . SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
: Reasonable rates. Ph. ~.
Ga II"1po 1i s . J o h n Russe 11 ,
•
••
Owner &amp; Operator.
~;
5-ll-lfc
•..
:: NEIGLER Consfrucllon. For
'·
building
r~ling your
h ome. Ca II Guy Ne Ig Ier,

rt

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 $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
salary of ss.ooo.oo and three children. 7•r. Pd. annual
Olta!lll rate.

11111rs

2M6.

•

Convertible,

•

llami I Ant

Pullins, Phone 992-20.
4-25-ffc ~;;~;-~llla;r;"";;•;S.;;"';'•~r~
"'E. Mailt, PMwour.O.

AUTOMOBILE'Insuran.:e·been
cancelled?
Los I
your
operator's license? Call 992·

1967 C1evelle Malabu ............... 51695

come a long woy since cronk-up·lhe-lizzie days. These

IUJCK PONTIAC GMC TRUCKS
119 Years of Continuoru BruiAea
PHONE 992·21
POMEROY, OHIO

Busi.it_ess Services

Phane 992-2094

maroon.

1968 Buick Skylark................... $1995

BLAETTNARS

EXPERT
Nleel Alillment

I ,

Dr:- H. T.,

4

See the new 1972 Pontiac and Buicks now on.display.

~.Gil

I

'

•
•

Pontiac Catalina Brougham 4 dr. Hard Top.
Factory air. Low mileage demo.
~
71 Pontiac Catalina ·4 dr. Sedan.
Oloice of white one without air and metallic green with air cond. New
cars.
71 Buick LeSabre 4 .dr. Sedan.
Factory air and vinyl top. New car.
10 GMC va l!ickup .
4 Wheel drive. New mud and snow 8 ply tires, low mileage. Uke new.
70 Buick V8 Custom LeSabre 2 dr. hardtop.
Factory air. Only 19,345easy miles- ~owroom clean.
70 Ford LTD 4 dr. Sedan.
Factory air cond.• vinyl top. one careful local owner, fully equipped.
68 Dodge Super Bee 2 dr. Hard Top.
67 Pontiac Overhead cam 6 2 dr. H. T.
66 Plymouth Super Sport 2. dr. Hard Top.
66 Rambler 6 cyl. Classic Sta. Wagon.
67 Chevrolet Impala 2 dr. Hard Top.
65 Pontiac V8 Catalina 2 dr. Hard Top.
64 Ford V8 Conv. Cpe.
64 Buick LeSabre Conv. Cpe.
61 Olds "88" 2 dr. H. T.

Wagon

'995

io ••••••••••••••••••••

1965 Ponliac BoniMNille............ s1195

NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED
,
O_
RDER YOUR 1972 NOW!

DISCOUNT PRICES
Vega Cpo. &amp; St.

BE SURE TO
SEE THE

4 Dr·! standard trans., real dean.

USED CARS.

At .

50' m65' lfNGTHS

I

·1965 l)c)clge ••••••••

71

12' and 14' WIDES
....

ON
ALL·
. USED
_CARS &amp;TRUCKS

ON ·1971 ancl1972 BUICKS, PONnACS &amp;

VAll DYI£ - LI8ERTY

1.9'/1

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Class·ifieds
'·'
••

.....,'J'Imot hlll!el; Sluxlay. Sept.ll6,

' '

I

.

•

�)0:;:·

•

.'

.

•

i

a-ftllll!-.l'll!iJTITI-Ia•a::·'s..IIIMIII!eli,,8S•"~r.lllpl. .. 11'11

~-~

·

••'

li

.•

An Invitation

,.

To See

I'
l

l'

;

,,I'·
I

'.
'I

EVERY CAR
UST BE SOLD
REGARDLESS
·Qf,PRICE·
ACOMPLETE
OUT SALE

;:

"·

.I'.

I•

i

''.••

!'

':
1:
''
'

'
''..

CHEVROLET

l l~ SAVE
,;

'I

'''
'
It

Now
On _
DiSplay
At
R'OmeroJ Motor Co..

I

i'

'

I

liNG - Bfl MONT

.
;

..'

Camaro

Stop in, call or write or lltlk to Dan
Lawnder or Jolin Ketchlca.

Tllam-.

i·

C:pe.

Cllevelle • Dr. with

lmp•la H.T.

with air
2 St. Wagon Models
witll air
24' Piclcup Trucks

MOBILE HOME SALES

I

H.T.

air
Monte Carlo 4
with air

Tom

KEITHGOIU
'•'

Lot. Ph.tft-7114

11No......,.,992-3422
Doll, 121D '· Sullday 1t116
OPPOSITE GOBLE'S USED tAR LOT

'

'·
•·•·
'
""
'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

POMEROY ·MOTOR CO.

t

'

Business Services

I.

Business Services

IIPEii - - Ill

C. BRADFORD. Auctioneer
Complete Service

,."'

Phane,.-3121
Rec:lne, 0111o
Crllf Bradford

j •

,4

I

5-1-ttc

15.55
-GUARANTEED-

THE SHOP, Custom meat
cuffing, Pleasant RldatO Roed.
Pomeroy. Dick Vaughan, 992·
337• and Dale Little. 992~.
• 9·12·30fc

,__,

;t .
,

BACKHOE AND DOZER work
Septic lanks h11tallld. Geora.!·

;I

,J

CBilll

"L

,.•'

I

·!
j

I'
1

c..n.r
lillian ......
ondSIItte Rt.7

tto.n
A.11111Uy, Tuesday,
WedRuday- F....,y
•l:llo.m. ID6p.m.
TllondaJ
IOa.m. lol::llp.m.

or

S.lwrdato1Yp.m.

P - E tft-JOt

l '

AWNINGS, storm ~ and
windows. carports.
marq..-, aluminum siding
and railing. can A. Jacob,
'.' sales
repoesenlattve. For free
estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
'
Johnson and Son. Inc.
'
5-27-ltc
''

•
,.

I

••
I
I
I

.

'

'

POMEROY

HOME&amp; AUTO ·

• ConJijtioning .

OffiCE SUPPU£S

Spoc~l
AI

FURNITUI£
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

6.98

'.
''

,.

..........

1-tnvtntorof

6-Part of fireplace

I '

~:

1•

I:
t•

I .

I

1

I:
1

I,

~r

'I

J J-wofth
16--SHat.
21-unloch
U-Partof

79--Mindmum

stona
24-Balan~

82-Herbina:er

macnrttlzetion

--

84-Provlde,
prtpar1 and

26-VIpld

211---Aooo.......,d
30--fi'NC.Ipitatfon

32-comp.n.s. point
1 ' U-Tautonlc dei1;)'
34 Ear
lS--Man'1 nickname
36--fluff

lll-£&lt;fiblo
hAl
ll
132--Male
133--EII..it
135 01 un of
fllries
1li31,_Fewnm•le ruff
139-fin•l
1141-i;!Wriod of time
142--A sta~t~ (lbbr.)
143--Kinl: of Beshan .
144--A wHhlnc

20-Thlnls
27 Aotl 1 hiD
29 Riwr in
SIIM!ria
31-Conjunction
36--Wift of JICOb

42--F~malt:

145--Uollifiet

. ,..ltlvet
4:J.--Herve network

147--FipN of

44-Ceuctal

85-SHd coatlnl
86-Joumey

•peech
149-EquaUty

•Ff diP
46--Prwfb:: not

81-Trllnlacllon
89--F'acts
go.....cleric:al collar
92--Ate to let thin

150--Ctletlenpd
152--Pitchen

48--HWt card&amp;

1!54--Pftdpitaus

156-Cou...pous

49 I'DsMu
S0-8ucUt
51 Newspapers,

37-Total

1Sa.-.t.yrical pMm
15~rocrutindon

gg.....cries like

52-t..ao

38--Sintlln middle

160--a.art•r
161-foundld

53-f'Puiftlln ,.ys
SS-Fracnunts

DOWN

56 SDfl lhM.-wn
57-Venetian

--

m ountllin

e'"t

.....

l~T1k1

unlawfully

42-HepUve~

102-stap whisper

.fl-Musical
lnl1rument
44--Crnata
45-lone of bodJ
47-Reeover

103-The urial

50--Sh•ltow WIHI
51-Schoolbook
54-Ftas.h-wlter

....

5..........
$6-&lt;.11..

104--Yeltow ocher

....

105--Man.h bhd

~~

101-Larp bird
109-Riwrln
8'beria
llo.--Htbr.w letter
Ill-Tropical t,..
112-Throb
rhythmically
11"-Foreip ald

59--fdp

,...., Qnk.)

a._..,.._

60-0rdin1nee

lUi

S2-Nisle1d

117-Pirt of ~det

M-Stirup
65-No.. ot K~'­

1 It-Mountain

.....

M-albyloni•n

-

J-8urrowfrw
ll'imlfs

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

...._,.ruh dffnll:
t ' Symbol for
t1ntatum

10-f"11-.MenterYint

12-MeturH
1:1-Y_ ...

.,...

lt-Gufdo•• In

122---Confunclion

16-Part Df

124--DrtvouNd
125-Small vall•y

69-l-

121--Aetreal

10--AttUII

1~

GHIIc

--

........

5~---ft~ert.fnlftl tD

.._..........
.... "'

15--Weirder

67-"Mrln
Scotlond

wiJectiwly

2--Musleal dram• . 61--flac
63-Grftnfand
l--Sook
4-S,mbal tor tin
5-Wotm
f-MON JOIIImn
7-Told
publication

120--Ci-

12'1-Upi,.

lllony Plumbing &amp; Htattng.'

Complete
Plumbing,
Healing and A.lr Conditioning.
240 Lincoln St., Middleport

Phone 992-2550
Insured- Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See us for Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnstalation.

1967 Cay Pickup Truck ........... s1645
V-8, auto. trans;, P.S.• P. B.

firepteee

17-M•awreof
wti&amp;ht .
18-Thtet.10e1f
slo&lt;h
19- -s.nd forth

70--l.et ..

.......

71--rfvl
73-kettJectrum
74-lec•l ont.r
1So--Painful apats
17--lstand-.,
lleditt-rrM.an
71 Opcuiftc In

-

~n11af

&amp; .....

81-fnsect . .
8l-Eihiopi1n tit ..

84-Ar""-'t
87-0a.npn ,
89---4nfer

Ph.992·2143

V-8, standard trans.

on it.

Vinyl top, auto. trans., P.S., P. B., air con·
dition .

'

1968 Volkswagen Fast Back ........ s1495

Rt.2

SALES.SERVICE

Racine,O.

SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
.
2-12-ttc

1971 CADILLAC
E' 'ORA'O COUPE
Almond Firemlst finish , mafchlng lnlerior, full power
equipment, AM-FM radio, Climate Confrol air conditioning, one owner, low mileage.

'7495
KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
992·S3ft
&amp;MAC Fllllnd.. Avatlalllt
Pume•J
"You'll LlkeOur&lt;Nallly:tftiyoi.Dolng llual'*l"

Tempest••

92---Fite
93---r.rfanns

Business Services

95-MitiSUnl

Fer

TRAILER space with utility
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
building In Chest~, phone
985-.106.
located at Crossroads, Rt. 12•.
Complete front end service
9-22-4fc
tune up and brake service:
· · Wheels
bit/anced elec - 3 ROOMS and bath. turniShed, ·
Ironically. · All
work
170'12 Mulberry, phone 992·
guaranteed.
Reasonable
201 after S p.m.
rates. Phone 992-3213.
9·23-tfc
7"27 ·1fc APARTMi::N f, IUmished room '
~ONl:M.E 1 E ~~~h, phone 992-2780 or
READY-MIX
delivered rlghl to your
9. 17.1fc
pro/eel. Fast and easy. Free =:cc-:--::c:-----....:.
est mates. Phone 992-328•. TRAILER, Brown's Trailer
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co
Park, Minersville, phone
. - .
"
...
Middleport, atlo.
332~.
6-JO.ffc:
9·19-4tc
)twiHb MAI.:HINES. Repait · ~T::R:-A:-1:-L-::E:-:R.,..
__s_p_a=ce-.-de_s___:lrable
service, all makes, 992-2214,
neighborhood phone 992-a..
The FabriC Shop, Pomeroy
'
9 19 If .
Authorized Singer Sales and
· • c
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. FURNISHED end unfurnished.
--.,.-------=3-.,:29.:._·1fc
apartmenb. o- to school.
. .
Phone 992-504.
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
10.18-lfc
Service, Phone 992-2522.
6-10-ttc TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
_ _ _ _ _ _ ___:.:._
Court, Rt. 12•, SyracuiA,
011/o. 992·2951 .
..
· 4-2-lfc

du,.tion of
W Dll1n pin

97-sword
99-Kindof

eab-

101-Sqth
10S-Wesh

106-Buirush
107-let it ~lind
111--Man's
nkknllme

112--Gomo ployed
on horsebaclt
113--Creat Like
115-Asslstant
116--tnttrjlction
Ill-Comfort

ug_v..ieto
121--Commanded
123 Noll of ICIIe
125-Spnttt.f
126-EYaiUIIt
127-A continent

129-Wure••r
130--Royal

131-Make IKe
132-Untldy
134-Heleflear
136--Century plant

137--ltlveet.d
139-Tftt. of
'*"PtCI

14o-Girl's name
144-SuppUute
14S-L.,-n.,.,.
146--Gl.ant plane
ConJ:tesS

......
--"

Real Estate

I BEDROOM trailer apart:
mont, Ideal for couples.
Contad McClure's Dairy Isla,
HOUSE - Two apts., • rooms
992-52&lt;41 or 992-306.
and baH1 each, near new
9-21-Sic
housing project. Trade tor
smaller house. Phone 992 . FURNISHED apartment on
2608.
Lincoln Hill, suitable for I or 2
- l e. Phon" 992-3419.
9-26-JOfc
9·21-ftc

For Sale cr Trade

147-Artlrnoon
:41-Recldtl

14g._Dance step
151-Note ot sale
153--Pronoun
155- lnifial$ ol 2'6th

a,..onw. Inc.

1969 Volkswagen Bug ............... 1595

The top performers are rolling in for action.

.

In the spotlight are the bold ones .for '72. They've

WIN AT BRIDGE

cors are marked for excellence. Made with built-in

North Has No Heart at All
South won the trump lead
in his hand and studied the
situation carefully. "There
are so many ways to make

NOR'M (D)
.KJ96

..

quality craftsmanship. Designed to get a grip on the

•void

tK1873
.A86'

road. Engineered to give safe, ·smooth handling. And,
they're ready to make a grand entrance right here.

America's top trperts tJplain their

• K953 2
tQ!09

AQ874

52

.J75

.Ql03

S9llTH

.AQ!OB
.Jl06
t A64
.K92
Both vulnerable
West North East
It
Pass
Pass
Pass 4 \'
Pass
Pass 5 t
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass Pass
Opening lead-• 2

-

They loolr bssured." Becii\Jse.Jhey know

121-pogo book on JACOBY

MODER.H. For your copy

s~nt SJ

are. The styling is right on the line for a look that's all

newspoperJ, P.O. Box 4A:9.. Radio Citr
Stotion, Now Yo&lt;k, N.Y. 10019.

today and part of tomorrow. Hurry in and be part of

this contract," he remarked ,
" that I will look silly if I
go down."
:
South
After thai peroration he
•
1•
4 N.T.
ruffed one heart in dummy;
•
5 N.T.
•
led a diamond to his ace ; a
•
second diamond to dummy's
king and let East win a third
-·
diamond with his queen.
East led back a second
~ ~----------l
trump.
South won in his
~ Ry Oswald &amp; James Jacoby ·
hand ; ruffed a second heart ;
•
· • North's jump to four hearts returned to his hand with the
: is a very modern gadget king of clubs ; drew trumps
: known as a super- splinter and claimed his contract
. bid. Two hearts would have since his third club and third
~ been a one-round force in the heart could be discarded on
• system used by North and dummy's good diamonds .
• Soutb. It also would be a
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE, ASSN.)
; prosaic bid designed to show
·• hearts as well as diamonds.
•• Three hearts would be a
: splinter. It would establish
The bidding has been:
• spades as the final trump
West
North
East South
: suit and show one heart.
~ Thus, four hearts was a
2•
Pass 2+
super-splinter and showed no Pass
' '
Pass
3•
Pass
hearts .
You, South, hold:
This is a dangerous bid to .Jt74Z
tAK1087 .AQ
try with a new partner, but
What do you do now?
is safe if you are sure your A-Bid loar spades. This conpartner will know the mean· tnd should prove very satis..
in g.
fJtCtury.
After the super • splinter,
TODAY'S QUESTION
·· South went into Blackwood.
Instead
bidding three
• His partner's responses ac- spades your ofpartner
bid two
• counted for all aces and hearts over your twohas
diamonds:
~ kings outside of the heart
~ suit but South settled for the What do you do now?
small slam.

.

.

6.

American
Mutc:s

the welcoming commiHee for the 72's!

REFRESHMENTS WHILE
YOU'RE CAR WATCHING.

6.

R.H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
I oaner
Car

IIIDDI.EPOIT, 0.

992-2151 or 992·2152

P,u4eclioll Pion
,.American
Molols

ENJOY 3 DAYS

•z

~lJ)J-~IJ,J

Dependable City

~

1.

OF CAR
WATCHING

D
B

SEPTEMBER
28-29-30

•...•• ~.~ .-l , _

HAVE THEIR

WELCOME

llnecramblt thele (ourJumbltl.
Ont letter lo tKh ........, lo
for• four ordinary words.

MAT OUT!

--

I FITEB •*"=-Auction

[l

j

II
~LL

FEEL5URE

OF '{OUFfSEl..F
IF '10\J HAVE IT.

J

r

j
I . ..- -.. 1.[ 11 I 11111 I)

(.... wen lle.iloy)

y·-~,...,··1

J......... AlOMA VOCAL PIIMIT IUMI'il

' ...........- .....

. Aa• ""

rtrey-- ··...;· ,.. _

wiflt your ftDnte~ adJren ond zip
code to: 'Win crt 8rid9e," (c/o tllis

..,-AN -()AI.oATOI'•

SPECIAL AUCTION
SUN., SEPT.26,1971-I p.m.
KUHL'S AUCTION BARN
St. Rt. 7-at caution light
Tuppers Plains, Ohio
THE FOLLOWING is a partial
listing of the merchandise to
be sold: FURNITURE : brass
bed; pie sale; library !abies;
mahogany cedar chest :
bachelor's chest. other
chesls; old cherry sola bed,
matching rock;er &amp; arm

'
ERYONE ! Terms . (.ash ;
single-barrelled ~hotguns ; lg.
all
sales
final.
NOT
Gestetner
m1meograph
assorted tables &amp; old chairs ;
RESPONSIBLE
FOR
AC·
machine; good snow tires ;
rockers, including child's oak.
CIDENTS. Billy D. Kuhl.
portable typewriter; Vidory
sewing. lg. oak, others: baby
Owner. Fred Vosbel of
marbles; lantern candy
items; la mps ; beds, com·
Williamstown. W.
Va . •
container ; wooden toy truck ;
plete ;
dinette
sets ;
AUCTIONEER
·
tinware.
advertising
,
fair
refrigerators; gas &amp; electric
9-26-lfc
exposition Items: stereoscope
ranQ;es; TV's ; oil furnace
&amp; Keystone view cards; 4 (proceeds lobe dona led to the
star flags ; steamer &amp; other
T. P .
M. E.
Church).
The .,Personal
irunks ; clothing such as AUCTION .
Glassware inc luding
properly
in
tt.e
lormer Rufus
velvet smolting jacket (new),
depression. ruby, Heisey.
Hite
Home
on
Salem St,,
luxedo, muskrat coat, velvet
Cambridge, si lver deposit,
Rutland.
Ohio
Wllich
has lleeft
flapper
dress
;
bottles,
inassorted s1emware !some
sold,
will
be
sold
at
Auction,
cluding Avons such as pipe,
etched).
Hand -cralled
Saturday.
Oclobet
l.
1971.
' 67 Xmas ornament, pump
ceramics, ather china . FARM
11
:
00
a
.m
.
Consisting
of:
ltull,
bo•ed),
clock
IF-BJ;
COLL ECTIBLES such as
Frigidaire
Refrig«ator,..
9
pc.
slulfed loys. doll•, elc.; linens
grinder. cream separator.
dinette
S&lt;'t
old
cupboard,
including old reversible
kraut cutter, corn planter,
utility "Cabinet. sink and
bedspread, quills. blankets,
apptebulter s1irrer. horse
cabinet, Maytag w.-inger
tapestries.
etc.
:
many
small
hames. brass scales. old tools.
washer. 2 gas healers (1 lg.
~1ppll~nces
&amp;
hou\f'hold
wooden planes, wagon seat,
Warm Mornl ngl. metal
QOOds;
MUCH
MIS·
lanlern,, jars . cr,' cks. MISC. :
wardrobe,
recliner and olher
SOME·
tELLANEOUS.
insula toros. ,
old
double
chairs. pole lamp. platform
THING
FOR
EVbarrelled, side- hammer &amp; old
swivel

ch~ir,

with caned side panels; 3
piece split cane set {couch, 2
chairs): dining room table, 6

chairs ; buflet ; wicker chair :
4 windsor ctu:.irs; pr . wrough t

iron chairs ; several kitchen
cabi nets; 53'' round walnut

table with Queen A~ne legs :
drop leaf !able; claw.looted

· plano s tool bottom ; oak

office

armchair;

••
f
' ij

I

Getting Better and
Better All the Time

5

•••

Open Eves. TII&amp;-TiiS P.~. Sat.

91-Spfrft In '"l"M

•· Presutent
l!li7-c;un MOtf

OF PROGRESS

1965 Dlevrolet Pickup Truck ....... ..1995
1968 Dodge Comet 500 ............. $}445.

•

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

949-4551

NOI.J.!l'IOS

...

96

CREATED IN THE TRADITION

1967 GMC Pickup Truck ..•••...•. ..Sl545

•
•

Residential.
Commercial
and
Industria I Wiring
24 Hour Service

Kllchtns, Baths
Room Additions
And Patlo1
Backhoe And
Endloader Woril

...._.;,.

37-Tt~ntCJftMI

39---He,.,. end
lollll40 Sols of Adam
U-Mihf oplettve

M-DKJ•q,tions
91---Sea In Asia

49-a.lsten to

j

74---Wildemns
76---Allonquian
Indian
n-Averap
71--Aivtrin
Arizona

lol'tiflclldon
23-Stml-predous
2~rmlt

i'
i

·-

71-S.ume
72-Mulk:: IS

engine.

0

C.dlllac • 01 I m..llo

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1971
ACROSS

From the largest Truck or.
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Hnter Core.

4 speed, 396

· Blue with white vinyl top, white interior, P. S.,
P. B.• 4 speed.

ElfcrRIC SERVICE

BUE11NARS

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
'' .

NEW &amp; OLD WORK'
All W.ather Roofing &amp;
Consfruction Co. and An-

Re.mot1eting

Plus
Paris

Blaellnar's

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
Business 1Senlces
WORK
SPOUTING,
O'BRIEN
ROOF PAINTING

Complete

Re-Oial&amp;t

------

'
I·

EXPERIENCED

1..-:tion and

'!

And

Service work . Call Cecil
Roseberry , Racine, Ohio.
Phone 614-BC-227•.
9-8-JOip

HILTON WOLF'

r---:-.-:-:
. .::-. -:-.-:-.- - - ,
IIIII Yaur 5 mal

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

'.
• ROSEBERRY furnace InFree estimates on
''· stallation.
new furnaces, oil or gas.
,.
'
,.

BILL NELSON
992-3657

_
1 :-a.m.

7-31-lfc ' ~~~~~~~~~!
;.

Racine, &lt;Jtlo.

''
I

OptnlliiS ·

BEMIIY SIIIP

6-15-ttc

, . SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
: Reasonable rates. Ph. ~.
Ga II"1po 1i s . J o h n Russe 11 ,
•
••
Owner &amp; Operator.
~;
5-ll-lfc
•..
:: NEIGLER Consfrucllon. For
'·
building
r~ling your
h ome. Ca II Guy Ne Ig Ier,

rt

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 $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
salary of ss.ooo.oo and three children. 7•r. Pd. annual
Olta!lll rate.

11111rs

2M6.

•

Convertible,

•

llami I Ant

Pullins, Phone 992-20.
4-25-ffc ~;;~;-~llla;r;"";;•;S.;;"';'•~r~
"'E. Mailt, PMwour.O.

AUTOMOBILE'Insuran.:e·been
cancelled?
Los I
your
operator's license? Call 992·

1967 C1evelle Malabu ............... 51695

come a long woy since cronk-up·lhe-lizzie days. These

IUJCK PONTIAC GMC TRUCKS
119 Years of Continuoru BruiAea
PHONE 992·21
POMEROY, OHIO

Busi.it_ess Services

Phane 992-2094

maroon.

1968 Buick Skylark................... $1995

BLAETTNARS

EXPERT
Nleel Alillment

I ,

Dr:- H. T.,

4

See the new 1972 Pontiac and Buicks now on.display.

~.Gil

I

'

•
•

Pontiac Catalina Brougham 4 dr. Hard Top.
Factory air. Low mileage demo.
~
71 Pontiac Catalina ·4 dr. Sedan.
Oloice of white one without air and metallic green with air cond. New
cars.
71 Buick LeSabre 4 .dr. Sedan.
Factory air and vinyl top. New car.
10 GMC va l!ickup .
4 Wheel drive. New mud and snow 8 ply tires, low mileage. Uke new.
70 Buick V8 Custom LeSabre 2 dr. hardtop.
Factory air. Only 19,345easy miles- ~owroom clean.
70 Ford LTD 4 dr. Sedan.
Factory air cond.• vinyl top. one careful local owner, fully equipped.
68 Dodge Super Bee 2 dr. Hard Top.
67 Pontiac Overhead cam 6 2 dr. H. T.
66 Plymouth Super Sport 2. dr. Hard Top.
66 Rambler 6 cyl. Classic Sta. Wagon.
67 Chevrolet Impala 2 dr. Hard Top.
65 Pontiac V8 Catalina 2 dr. Hard Top.
64 Ford V8 Conv. Cpe.
64 Buick LeSabre Conv. Cpe.
61 Olds "88" 2 dr. H. T.

Wagon

'995

io ••••••••••••••••••••

1965 Ponliac BoniMNille............ s1195

NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED
,
O_
RDER YOUR 1972 NOW!

DISCOUNT PRICES
Vega Cpo. &amp; St.

BE SURE TO
SEE THE

4 Dr·! standard trans., real dean.

USED CARS.

At .

50' m65' lfNGTHS

I

·1965 l)c)clge ••••••••

71

12' and 14' WIDES
....

ON
ALL·
. USED
_CARS &amp;TRUCKS

ON ·1971 ancl1972 BUICKS, PONnACS &amp;

VAll DYI£ - LI8ERTY

1.9'/1

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Class·ifieds
'·'
••

.....,'J'Imot hlll!el; Sluxlay. Sept.ll6,

' '

I

.

•

�I

•

'

*•

· -'ftll Si•._Times-Senlinel,

Procnutination In
Apportionment
Uweled to Brown

•
'

1

.a Sort

of Journal

COLUMBUS (UPI)
Boggs, tackles; Ingles and Lewis, ends;
BY J. A. McKEAN
8leretary of Stale Ted W.
Beard, quarterback; Dailey, fullback;
Brown bas been cbarged with
Frazier and Amsbury, halfbacks.
(Series Coolbwed 1
"llellbenltely procrastinating"
But Monday's 'liibune reported:
GAUJPOUS - The uniforms
In bls failure to produce
"Visitors W'm Both Games Here
worn by GAllS footballers, being
requlml ward and precinct %perfectly acceptable in the '20s, would Saturday Before Large Crowd. GAHS
maps lor lbe stale apbe ruled off the field today. Coach Isaac 'Flmked' By Portsmouth in First Half.
portklln..,.t board
Cooper provided shoes for a few Rio Grande Gives Hard Battle To
Tbe ~was made Friday
selected players. Most bought their own Mo!TiS Harvey . Portsmouth 32-7.
by the aecntary of the board
had work-types adapted for the Morris Harvey 3~."
and gubernatorial assistant
"The biggest crowd ever assem~:,~~~~~AD~
were ankle height with bled on a local athletic field witnessed
John C. Mdlmald McDonald ~1:·
~:l
, wedge-shaped leather
sald Btolm'sstalmlellls thai he
; cleats. The Danner ~oe Shop handled !be contests. Garnpolis got away to a
doesu'tba'll!aud can't get maps
bad start. .Perhaps the. greatest obmost repair and adaptation.
showing i970 political subThe trousers were tan duck canvas stacle in the path of a conference
division boundaries. "don't
with ~uilt-in knee and thigh pads, sman championship is what is scientifically
make any senlll!·"
·leathe1r pa,tch•es at stress points, a short termed 'inferiority complex.' Coach
"Mr. Brawn is fond of
and kidney pads attached COoper suspects this has . been
rem!ud!ug anyone who will
above 'the waistline. Jerseys were dark superinduced by the process of
listen that be is the state's cbiel
blue, long sleeves, with narrow white suggestion in public gathering places
election oflic'ial," said Mcfrequented by local pigskin artists.
~ipes circling the anns. ~oulder
Donald.
.
pads were so slight as to be nearly Frazier made the lone Gallipolis touch''But," McDonald 'added, "I
indistinguishable, and hip pads were a down and Bill McKean dfop kicked the .
find It inccmceivable that the
extra poiitl."
sometime thing.
state's chief electim dficial
"Rio Grande put up a stiff opIt's ·questionable if the brown;
does not bave in his )MlSSI!ssiM
leather helmets .were an asset or a position to the fleet Morris Harvey
sometliug as t.sic as ward and
liability. Elaborately designed of heavy outfit and th~ game was a struggle from
lftCiucl maps."
cowmde and ca::•'llS, the ear-flaps were start to finish. Both elevens fought
far too snug, thus constituting a distinct bitterly as they always do ·in the,annual
hazard to aile with overly protruding classic.
The local reporter was rapidly and
ears. The caged flK:e mask had yet to be
PIRATE RAID
assuredly
losing his cool. Gallipolis
invented, and would have been scorned
NEW DELHI, India (UPI) by both fans and players alike. Long, went on the road the next week and his
A baad of riYef pirates raided a
blue-striped sox (somewhat optional) acco!Uit react:
cargo sam.pan on the swollen
"GHS Drops Another Game To
completed the player's gear.
Ganges•. bo1Did passengers .and
Jackson.
Apathy of L&lt;lcals Appears as
. High anticipation gripped area
crew hand and loot and threw
pigskin followers as Saturday, October Cause of Defeat. Score 32-0."
them overboard, survivors
"Gallia Academy's blue and white
15 approached. Friday, the sheets of
reported Saturday. Six persons
warriors
tasted the drugs of defeat
canvas barrier were slrlDig from the
were feared drowned.
broom factory on Stale St. around to the again Saturday .... In the game a week
ago the locals were seemingly asleep in
high school ticket gate, and a like
section across the northwest zone, to · the first half, staging a good comeback .
deny free viewing to non-paying . in the second, but this week they mixed
: spectators. (The factory workers, from their playing and loafmg a little more,
· their high windows, had the best seats allowing Jackson to run up a good
margin of points.''
: in the bouse.)
Now, while a football squad is
· A festival crowd would attend
dropping
2 consecutive games by 31).
Saturday's doubleheader.
Rio Grande had beaten Cell.arviDe the odd points each, in a low scoring era,
previous week. Morris Harvey was some sleep will be induced. Say, like
expected to rely on an aerial game. But from getting stomped. And, tOO, one
the elements weren't cooperating. The does appear to be loafing if unHuntington
Herald-Dispatch conscious, or bearing assorted beDs so
pretty that concentration on vulgar
proclaimed:
blocking
and teaching duties is
"It may be good weather for ducks
palpably ill-mannered. But, sportbut it certainly is not so good for a
football team that is banking strong on swriters never bear beDs and fullbacks
never report games, so there will ever
its passing attack."
Coach Cooper stated his probable be a communications gap.
Gallipolis continued its staunch but
siarting lineup to be: McKean, center;
unendowed play, losing at home to
Mills and Fraley, guards; Jividen and
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You Can't Get to There
From Here No More
Nelsonville, 13-7, on October 29. The
news accoL-11 staled:
"GAHS Loses to Enemies Air Sttack. Gallipolis lost ... in a game hard
fought from start to finish ... Lack of
adequate forward pasS defense was
responsible for the Blue and White
defeat. Gallipolis scored in the first
quarter 011 a fumble picked up by Ingles
on the ten yard line. Both
'lqeJsonviDe
I
.
scores were made in the second hall on
passes. Herschal Pope, Wellston,
refereed. Robinson and Ghrist were
lineman and umpire."
There must be a hundred ways to
lose 11 football game.
But an was not despair. Early in
November Nelsonville's Princip_al
Horton Informed Gallipolis' Superintendent Vermillion in a forthright letter
that the apparent 13-7 victory was being
forfeited. due to Nelsonville's use of an
ineligible (unlisted) player. He wrote,
"Every man whose named appeared on
the eligibility list is eligible and I am ·
humiliated to tears to think we must
bear the name of being crooked.''
Some man, Mr. Horton. That's
laying it on the line. But he should've
checked the grade records at GAHS
before writing that letter. The rumor
persists today that one prominent
GAllS player never did complete his
eighth grade English. But you take 'em
however you gel 'em, I guess.
There must be a hundred ways to
WIN a football game.
Friday, the paper announced:
"New Boston Meets 'Blue Devils'
Here Saturday. The Iocais should take
ijle New Boston crew into camp if they
only get into the game and give their
best. The locals have the ability but
sometimes they seem to lack the pep
and go that is so necessary.''
This was the first public mention
of a GAHS alblellc team as the 'Blue '
Devils'.
Research and inquiry revealed only :
that Coach Cooper musl've h1Dig the tag :
on GAHS binlself. Perhaps the a!)pellation was a double inlendre, for be
surely was having his troubles, and the
author by very close association,
though a mere lad, recalls this squad
quite weD. More likely, however, 'Blue
Devils' evolved from Cooper's alma
mater - Marietta College - and he
hoped the name would psyche 'em up a
mite.
(To Be Continued I

·2 of 40 First Year Nurses
At Holzer School are Men
to 96, the largest census in the
school's history.
·
Freshmen sisters entering
are Jenetta Lambert, sister of
Cathy Lambert of Patriot Star
~ute, and Linda McDougle,
sister of Janice McDougle of
'Belpre. The cousin of a 1970
graduate is Francis Simon of
lt~ining.
The 40 new students wiD bring Wheelersburg, . cousin of Ann
lhe tolal enrolled at Davis HaD Eubanks.

GALLIPOLIS -Two sisters
IJf senior students, a cousin of a
1970 graduate, and two male
stud en Is are among the 40 new
freshmen due to arrive at
'Holzer Medical Centers School
of · Nursing in Gallipolis
tomorrow to begin nurses

14 Draw Fines
POMEROY - .Fourteen dlesberger, Gallipolis, $10 and
defendants were fined and five costs, overwidth load; Iva M.
forfeited bonds in Meigs County Stack, Radcliff, $10 and costs,
Court Friday.
expired operator's license;
Fined by Judge Franl!: W. Charles E. · Henig, Jr .,
Porter were Clarence l,l. Columbus, $13 and costs,
Koehler, Tuppers Plains, $10 speeding; Walter King, · Carand costs, intoxication; Robert penter, 30 ·days confinement,
C. Rawlings, Middleport, $10 confinement suspended, six
and costs, stop sign violation; months probation, assault, $10
Beverly J, Dowell, Racine, and and costs, intoxicat.ion; Gerald,
Danny Lee ~ain, Racine, Rl. Z, Batrett, no address, 10 days
$5 and costs, each, unsafe confinement, nine
days
vehicle; Thomas Hughes, suspended, eosts only, larceny.
Jackson, Rt. 3, $199 and costs, Carl Lanear Redmon, Tom
$109 suspended, overload; Don Maseryk Uycheck, Brian Murl
R. Hill, Racine, Rt. 2, $125 and Thomas and Tony Robert
costs, $8S suspended, overload; Blockum, all of Pomeroy, Rt. 4,
Christopher Dingus ·s , assessed costs only and make
·
Langsville, rt. I, $10 and costs, restitution, larcen.y; Andria
failure to keep on right half of Jeffers, Pomeroy, costs only,
roadway, $25 and costs, license ·intoxication.
da
kl
suspended for 60 ys, rec ess Forfeiting bonds were Gary
operation,$25andcosts,eluding Lee Gibbs, Mason, $34.55
officer; Gerald B. Arnold, posted, bunting without a
Pomeroy, $150 and costs, three license; Kenneth N. Barnett,
da~s confineme~t, license Langsville, Rt. 1, $250, driving
suspended for s1x months, while intoxicated, $50, no
driving while intoxicated, $15 operator's license; Clyde
an d costs, no operator•s 11cense; Hubbard, Syracuse, $50, assault
Calvin Imboden, Minersville, and battery·, Mary C. Fowler,
$10 and costs, intoxication; Coolville, Rt. 2, $308, driving
Louis A. Altier, Coming, $10 and while intoxicated; William J.
costs, speeding; Clyde Gin- Pike, Dayton, $27.50, speeding.

~Is.

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Exterminating Company for
pest control in an schools at
$1,728 annually and Arab's bid
of $581 annual for tennite
control.
The next action on the agenda
was approved of the board's
participation in the Governor's
Emergency Employment
Program. Whalen said he
sulmitted a proposal to the
governor's office this past
Monday in the amount of
$210,774.80. He said if it is a!)proved the board will be given
90 per 'cent funds for labor to
complete the construction of the
New Haven and Mason projects
and hopefuDy the necessary
labor to bring the remainder of
the schools in first class
maintenance condition. The
board's share in the program
would be an "in kind" expense

of $26,300.80.
The board approved the
School Breakfast Program
agreement under the Child
Nutrition Act, several transportation requests and salary
adjustments on cooks so all of
them, both ·run and part time,
will be paid $1.71 hourly.
The board granted Mrs.
Imogene Moore, teaching
principal at West Columbill
Elementary, a leave of absence
due to ill health and hired
Maudie Lynn Burnette at Point
Pleasant Junior High, Barbara
Butcher at Leon Elementary
and Mrs. Virginia Carlisle as
full time Home BoWld teacher.
Danny Lee Ray was also
employed as a substitute
elementary teacher and
Carolyn Johnson as a substitute
secondary education teacher.

Wtthers, ·actmg supenntendent _of the system briefly
early tins year, and a former
P~int_ Pleasant High School
pnnctpal, was elected to the
post on a 3-1 vote following a
motion by Olarles Eshenaur,
and a second by Ray Fields, at
Friday evening's two hour
session.
EshenaiD', Fields and Board
President Ted Stevens voted in
favor of the motion while Harry
Siders cast a "nay" vote and
Bill Withers, brother of the new
superintendent, abstained.
Eshenaur's motion came on
the heels of the reading of a r-----------------~--------,
letter by President Stevens 1
1
from the board's legal counsel, I
I
Edward H. Greene, who gave I
I
an opinion that I. Brooks Smith I
"abandoned his contract with Susan Miller
Bryan NeighborgaD.
the Board of Education of
She
married
Ralph
Mason County by accepting
GALUPOUS - Susan Marie Shoemaker in Kentucky on
employment in Jackson
Miller, 18, li 29 East Lakeview March 22, 1922. He preceded her
County."
. in death on Sept. 6, 1965.
bus
killed m
Withers' tenure as superin- Ave., Colurn , was
an automObile accident at 1:45 She is survived by three sons,
tendent will begin Monday, a.m., Saturday in Columbus. Frank, Gallipolis; George,
Sept. 'J:1 and continue through A waitress a 1 the Harvest Hilliaril, and Lester, Pompano
June 30, t975, Eshenaur's House Restauranl,sbewas born Beach, Fla., and two daughters,
prepared two-page motion fixed
Dec. 24 1952 in Waterloo Mrs. Eva Gardner, and Mrs.
Wither's salary at $15,600 daugbte~ of R~l and •
Sadie Bright, both of Galli~lis.
during the federal wage-price
Dillon Miller. The mother One son, Woodrow, was killed
freeze and then $18,500 resides at 139 State St. in during World War IT. Two
following U1e lifting of freeze on Gallipolis.
'
daughters died in infancy.
•
wages.
She graduated from Gallia Also surviving an: a brother
Siders' only comment on the Academy Higb School in 1970. and two sisters, Thomas Bryan,
employment action was that be ~e Is survived by her parents Mrs. Sarah Shoemaker and
"questions the legality of it." and three sisters, Mrs. Lucion Mrs: Emmag~ne Poston, all li
No action was taken regar(Judy) Barcus Gallipolis· Huntington.
ding new placement of Michael Janice and ~ise both at Funeral services wiD be held
Whalen who bas been serving as home.
'
2 p.m., Monday at the Addison
acting superintendent since She had been in Columbus the Freewill Baptist Church with
Don't let the lack of ma
Smith's second ouster.
past ·13 months. She was a Rev. Walter Patterson in
cause you to neglect nee•de~
OTIIER ACI'MTY
member of the Waterloo charge. Burial will be in
repairs to your home.
The only other action of the Methodist Church.
Reynolds Cemetery in Addison.
property is an investment
meeting, which a split vote Flmeral services will be held . Friends may call at Miller's
resulted, was on the budgetary 1p.m., Tuesday at the Waterloo H&lt;me for Funerals between 2-4
it deserv•s the protection
proper me~in'tenance. Mal&lt;el transfers and approval of Methodist Church with Rev. and 7-9 on Sunday.
requisitions. Siders vot~d
those repairs NOW!
Damon Stapletm officiating.
"nay" on the budgetary transfers part of a motion and· in Burial will be in F1ag Springs Delma Greene
Cemetery.
favor of the requisitions · a!)- Friends may caD at the
proval. The other four members Waugh-Hf!Dey-Wood Funeral GALUPOUS - Mrs. Delma
voted in favor of both sections of Home between 2-4 and 7-9 p.m., Greene, 71, a former resident of
the action.
Ute Patriot Community, died
oo Monday.
Whalen during the session
Friday at 10 a.m., at the home
reported that Mr. Keefer
li ber daughter, Mrs. Beatrice
Mary
Shoemak_er
delivered materials for
Hanley, Bay City, Fla.
She was born Jan. 24, 1900, at
bleacher improvements at GALLIPOLIS
Mary
Wahama Junior High and that Elizabeth Shoemaker, 71, Rt. 2, Pineville, W. Va. She married
several other areas needing Cheshire, died about 10 a.m ., Otto Greene. He preceded her in
maintenance work are being Friday at her home .
death in 1965.
handled.
Surviving are a son, Edgar,
She was born June 14, 1900, in
The board voted unanimously Cabell County, W. Va., daughter Gallipolis; senn grandto accept the bid of Standard li the late Albert and Annetta children, a brother, Carl Cook,

Area Death S

lmprovemald'l

Making

USE OUR
MONEY!

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The 'two men in the class art
Roderick Hook of Rio, Grandi!
and Raymond Madore of
Scottown, Ohio. Both youna
men have worked at Holzefl
Madore as a .licensed practical
nurse and Hook as an orderJt
and phlebotonisl.
• ·
Two Gallipolis girls eurolli!l
in this year's class, are Bever!$
Rowland and Judith Flsbet;
Three }\{ason County gl~lif,
Teresa Gardner and Linda
Lieving of Point Pleasant, and
Cheryl Pearson of . hallipoliS
Ferry, are scheduled to enroD
Monday.
·
A number of students will Uv,e
at home or in the communi~!
this year instead of ·in Dav~
. HaiL Davis Hllll can ac•
commodate 82 students.
:
Freshmen are Bridget C:
Baker, Teresa Ailn Barket:;
Patricia Jean Botta, Mary
Elizabeth Bradbury, Beverly

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Branham, Judy Carleton, Alin,t
Clark, Jane M. Cochran, Kareli
Lynne Evans, Judith K. FisiMi,
Jamie G. Folsom, Teresa E.
Gardner, Debora!! Gollibu~
Deborah Greene, Emily Grose';
Mary Sue Hacker, Sharon su~
Hall Rod · k A H00k Betw
'
enc ·
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-{
Hughes,DeborahHunter,Cath~
Hutchison, Alicia Jeffers,
Und
Jeanetla J. Lambert,
a.
Lieving, Gwendolyn Sue
Llewellyn, Debra Lorbach_,
.Mary K. Lucas, Patricia J;
Lucas, Linda McDougle,
Raymond Madore, Deborah
Kaye Mitchell, Cheryl L.
Pearson, Beverly 1. Rowland,

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I CAN'i
BELIEVE

sROWN~tJAJ...

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Schar lotte Runyon, .Frances
Simon, Marcia Smith,. Barbara
Ellen Taylor, Connie Jo Tucker,
Glenda L. Wilcoxon and Debbie
Wood.

by

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BUT lt'OU DON'T VNDER~TAN.D, CHARLIE

BROWN ...I REPREs;ENT AN ORGAN IZATlON,

ANt' I.'M HOLDING THI~ 6AL.I.. A'G A
RI:PRE:SENTATIVE OF THAT ORGANIZATIOt.l

Texture Tells a New
Fashion Story
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CHA~Lte

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CHARLIE 6ROWN 1 I'LL HOLD
v,.,...... AND '(Oll COME
·up AND KICK IT ... .

Withers .Gets 4-Year Contract
PT. PLEASANT - Veteran
educator Charles Withers, who
bas ~ serving _this tenn as
Sunnyside Elementary prmcipal, was name.i Friday night
loa four year contract as Mason
County Superintendent of

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IF 5HE REPREGENT5
AN OR6ANIZA110N,-~·
iHEN I GUE$5.
5HE MLI~T BE

61NCERE-

m~~~ l~~~

'
CIIARLEil WrtHERS

'6 to '50 More
Benefits ·Voted
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Legislation granting a $6 to $50
increase in mon.lbly benefits for
public employes who were
disabled or retired before July
1, 1968, has been unanimously
adopted by the Slate Senate.
Although the bill had already
passed the House, II must be
returned to the lower cbamber
for cmcurrence. The Senate
included an amendment
eliminating a f23 millim a!)propristion to finance the increase am placed the burden li
fun'dlng the measure on
retirement systems.
Tbe bill would apply to former
members lithe Slate Teachers
Retirement System, School
Employes Retirement System,
Public Employes Retirement
System, Police and Firemen's
Disability and Pensim Flmd
and the state Highway Patrol
Retirement System.
CANCER KILL'! DOG
MERIDEN, Conn. (UPI) Meriden's only police dog,
Baron II, died Thursday of
blood cancer. Saturday his son
King was named to lake his
place.
Delbartm, W.Va.; two sisters,
Mrs. Opal Byrd, Marion, Va.,
and Mrs. Gaye Lambert,
Pineville.
Funeral services will be at
Miller's H&lt;me for Funerals 2
p.m., Tuesday. Burial will be in
Salem Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home between 2-4 and 7-9 p.m., Monday.

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J\11!1

LANCELOT

J

-

by Coker &amp;

Elberfe/ds Are
Headquarters For
Mary lane Coats
For Women
and Teens

.'
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• t\

·Up to the minute styling in the5e beautiful fur trim and casual coats
- in these coats you' ll find a great assortment of fashion. There's
sure to be just the style for you in fabric and color. Many Mary Lane
Coats· are water repellent - some styled In washable nylons and
CDlY plies - fashion coats with the very newest in lines and fabrics.
You'll love Mary Lane's sensible prices.

Size range i~cludes ·6 to 20
and 38 to 46.
Car Coats, Pants Coats, Dressy Fur Trimmed Coats and
casual Coats. See them all in the busy Ready To Wear
!)epartment

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
I

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Pen~~;-..:;

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· -'ftll Si•._Times-Senlinel,

Procnutination In
Apportionment
Uweled to Brown

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.a Sort

of Journal

COLUMBUS (UPI)
Boggs, tackles; Ingles and Lewis, ends;
BY J. A. McKEAN
8leretary of Stale Ted W.
Beard, quarterback; Dailey, fullback;
Brown bas been cbarged with
Frazier and Amsbury, halfbacks.
(Series Coolbwed 1
"llellbenltely procrastinating"
But Monday's 'liibune reported:
GAUJPOUS - The uniforms
In bls failure to produce
"Visitors W'm Both Games Here
worn by GAllS footballers, being
requlml ward and precinct %perfectly acceptable in the '20s, would Saturday Before Large Crowd. GAHS
maps lor lbe stale apbe ruled off the field today. Coach Isaac 'Flmked' By Portsmouth in First Half.
portklln..,.t board
Cooper provided shoes for a few Rio Grande Gives Hard Battle To
Tbe ~was made Friday
selected players. Most bought their own Mo!TiS Harvey . Portsmouth 32-7.
by the aecntary of the board
had work-types adapted for the Morris Harvey 3~."
and gubernatorial assistant
"The biggest crowd ever assem~:,~~~~~AD~
were ankle height with bled on a local athletic field witnessed
John C. Mdlmald McDonald ~1:·
~:l
, wedge-shaped leather
sald Btolm'sstalmlellls thai he
; cleats. The Danner ~oe Shop handled !be contests. Garnpolis got away to a
doesu'tba'll!aud can't get maps
bad start. .Perhaps the. greatest obmost repair and adaptation.
showing i970 political subThe trousers were tan duck canvas stacle in the path of a conference
division boundaries. "don't
with ~uilt-in knee and thigh pads, sman championship is what is scientifically
make any senlll!·"
·leathe1r pa,tch•es at stress points, a short termed 'inferiority complex.' Coach
"Mr. Brawn is fond of
and kidney pads attached COoper suspects this has . been
rem!ud!ug anyone who will
above 'the waistline. Jerseys were dark superinduced by the process of
listen that be is the state's cbiel
blue, long sleeves, with narrow white suggestion in public gathering places
election oflic'ial," said Mcfrequented by local pigskin artists.
~ipes circling the anns. ~oulder
Donald.
.
pads were so slight as to be nearly Frazier made the lone Gallipolis touch''But," McDonald 'added, "I
indistinguishable, and hip pads were a down and Bill McKean dfop kicked the .
find It inccmceivable that the
extra poiitl."
sometime thing.
state's chief electim dficial
"Rio Grande put up a stiff opIt's ·questionable if the brown;
does not bave in his )MlSSI!ssiM
leather helmets .were an asset or a position to the fleet Morris Harvey
sometliug as t.sic as ward and
liability. Elaborately designed of heavy outfit and th~ game was a struggle from
lftCiucl maps."
cowmde and ca::•'llS, the ear-flaps were start to finish. Both elevens fought
far too snug, thus constituting a distinct bitterly as they always do ·in the,annual
hazard to aile with overly protruding classic.
The local reporter was rapidly and
ears. The caged flK:e mask had yet to be
PIRATE RAID
assuredly
losing his cool. Gallipolis
invented, and would have been scorned
NEW DELHI, India (UPI) by both fans and players alike. Long, went on the road the next week and his
A baad of riYef pirates raided a
blue-striped sox (somewhat optional) acco!Uit react:
cargo sam.pan on the swollen
"GHS Drops Another Game To
completed the player's gear.
Ganges•. bo1Did passengers .and
Jackson.
Apathy of L&lt;lcals Appears as
. High anticipation gripped area
crew hand and loot and threw
pigskin followers as Saturday, October Cause of Defeat. Score 32-0."
them overboard, survivors
"Gallia Academy's blue and white
15 approached. Friday, the sheets of
reported Saturday. Six persons
warriors
tasted the drugs of defeat
canvas barrier were slrlDig from the
were feared drowned.
broom factory on Stale St. around to the again Saturday .... In the game a week
ago the locals were seemingly asleep in
high school ticket gate, and a like
section across the northwest zone, to · the first half, staging a good comeback .
deny free viewing to non-paying . in the second, but this week they mixed
: spectators. (The factory workers, from their playing and loafmg a little more,
· their high windows, had the best seats allowing Jackson to run up a good
margin of points.''
: in the bouse.)
Now, while a football squad is
· A festival crowd would attend
dropping
2 consecutive games by 31).
Saturday's doubleheader.
Rio Grande had beaten Cell.arviDe the odd points each, in a low scoring era,
previous week. Morris Harvey was some sleep will be induced. Say, like
expected to rely on an aerial game. But from getting stomped. And, tOO, one
the elements weren't cooperating. The does appear to be loafing if unHuntington
Herald-Dispatch conscious, or bearing assorted beDs so
pretty that concentration on vulgar
proclaimed:
blocking
and teaching duties is
"It may be good weather for ducks
palpably ill-mannered. But, sportbut it certainly is not so good for a
football team that is banking strong on swriters never bear beDs and fullbacks
never report games, so there will ever
its passing attack."
Coach Cooper stated his probable be a communications gap.
Gallipolis continued its staunch but
siarting lineup to be: McKean, center;
unendowed play, losing at home to
Mills and Fraley, guards; Jividen and
11

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You Can't Get to There
From Here No More
Nelsonville, 13-7, on October 29. The
news accoL-11 staled:
"GAHS Loses to Enemies Air Sttack. Gallipolis lost ... in a game hard
fought from start to finish ... Lack of
adequate forward pasS defense was
responsible for the Blue and White
defeat. Gallipolis scored in the first
quarter 011 a fumble picked up by Ingles
on the ten yard line. Both
'lqeJsonviDe
I
.
scores were made in the second hall on
passes. Herschal Pope, Wellston,
refereed. Robinson and Ghrist were
lineman and umpire."
There must be a hundred ways to
lose 11 football game.
But an was not despair. Early in
November Nelsonville's Princip_al
Horton Informed Gallipolis' Superintendent Vermillion in a forthright letter
that the apparent 13-7 victory was being
forfeited. due to Nelsonville's use of an
ineligible (unlisted) player. He wrote,
"Every man whose named appeared on
the eligibility list is eligible and I am ·
humiliated to tears to think we must
bear the name of being crooked.''
Some man, Mr. Horton. That's
laying it on the line. But he should've
checked the grade records at GAHS
before writing that letter. The rumor
persists today that one prominent
GAllS player never did complete his
eighth grade English. But you take 'em
however you gel 'em, I guess.
There must be a hundred ways to
WIN a football game.
Friday, the paper announced:
"New Boston Meets 'Blue Devils'
Here Saturday. The Iocais should take
ijle New Boston crew into camp if they
only get into the game and give their
best. The locals have the ability but
sometimes they seem to lack the pep
and go that is so necessary.''
This was the first public mention
of a GAHS alblellc team as the 'Blue '
Devils'.
Research and inquiry revealed only :
that Coach Cooper musl've h1Dig the tag :
on GAHS binlself. Perhaps the a!)pellation was a double inlendre, for be
surely was having his troubles, and the
author by very close association,
though a mere lad, recalls this squad
quite weD. More likely, however, 'Blue
Devils' evolved from Cooper's alma
mater - Marietta College - and he
hoped the name would psyche 'em up a
mite.
(To Be Continued I

·2 of 40 First Year Nurses
At Holzer School are Men
to 96, the largest census in the
school's history.
·
Freshmen sisters entering
are Jenetta Lambert, sister of
Cathy Lambert of Patriot Star
~ute, and Linda McDougle,
sister of Janice McDougle of
'Belpre. The cousin of a 1970
graduate is Francis Simon of
lt~ining.
The 40 new students wiD bring Wheelersburg, . cousin of Ann
lhe tolal enrolled at Davis HaD Eubanks.

GALLIPOLIS -Two sisters
IJf senior students, a cousin of a
1970 graduate, and two male
stud en Is are among the 40 new
freshmen due to arrive at
'Holzer Medical Centers School
of · Nursing in Gallipolis
tomorrow to begin nurses

14 Draw Fines
POMEROY - .Fourteen dlesberger, Gallipolis, $10 and
defendants were fined and five costs, overwidth load; Iva M.
forfeited bonds in Meigs County Stack, Radcliff, $10 and costs,
Court Friday.
expired operator's license;
Fined by Judge Franl!: W. Charles E. · Henig, Jr .,
Porter were Clarence l,l. Columbus, $13 and costs,
Koehler, Tuppers Plains, $10 speeding; Walter King, · Carand costs, intoxication; Robert penter, 30 ·days confinement,
C. Rawlings, Middleport, $10 confinement suspended, six
and costs, stop sign violation; months probation, assault, $10
Beverly J, Dowell, Racine, and and costs, intoxicat.ion; Gerald,
Danny Lee ~ain, Racine, Rl. Z, Batrett, no address, 10 days
$5 and costs, each, unsafe confinement, nine
days
vehicle; Thomas Hughes, suspended, eosts only, larceny.
Jackson, Rt. 3, $199 and costs, Carl Lanear Redmon, Tom
$109 suspended, overload; Don Maseryk Uycheck, Brian Murl
R. Hill, Racine, Rt. 2, $125 and Thomas and Tony Robert
costs, $8S suspended, overload; Blockum, all of Pomeroy, Rt. 4,
Christopher Dingus ·s , assessed costs only and make
·
Langsville, rt. I, $10 and costs, restitution, larcen.y; Andria
failure to keep on right half of Jeffers, Pomeroy, costs only,
roadway, $25 and costs, license ·intoxication.
da
kl
suspended for 60 ys, rec ess Forfeiting bonds were Gary
operation,$25andcosts,eluding Lee Gibbs, Mason, $34.55
officer; Gerald B. Arnold, posted, bunting without a
Pomeroy, $150 and costs, three license; Kenneth N. Barnett,
da~s confineme~t, license Langsville, Rt. 1, $250, driving
suspended for s1x months, while intoxicated, $50, no
driving while intoxicated, $15 operator's license; Clyde
an d costs, no operator•s 11cense; Hubbard, Syracuse, $50, assault
Calvin Imboden, Minersville, and battery·, Mary C. Fowler,
$10 and costs, intoxication; Coolville, Rt. 2, $308, driving
Louis A. Altier, Coming, $10 and while intoxicated; William J.
costs, speeding; Clyde Gin- Pike, Dayton, $27.50, speeding.

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Exterminating Company for
pest control in an schools at
$1,728 annually and Arab's bid
of $581 annual for tennite
control.
The next action on the agenda
was approved of the board's
participation in the Governor's
Emergency Employment
Program. Whalen said he
sulmitted a proposal to the
governor's office this past
Monday in the amount of
$210,774.80. He said if it is a!)proved the board will be given
90 per 'cent funds for labor to
complete the construction of the
New Haven and Mason projects
and hopefuDy the necessary
labor to bring the remainder of
the schools in first class
maintenance condition. The
board's share in the program
would be an "in kind" expense

of $26,300.80.
The board approved the
School Breakfast Program
agreement under the Child
Nutrition Act, several transportation requests and salary
adjustments on cooks so all of
them, both ·run and part time,
will be paid $1.71 hourly.
The board granted Mrs.
Imogene Moore, teaching
principal at West Columbill
Elementary, a leave of absence
due to ill health and hired
Maudie Lynn Burnette at Point
Pleasant Junior High, Barbara
Butcher at Leon Elementary
and Mrs. Virginia Carlisle as
full time Home BoWld teacher.
Danny Lee Ray was also
employed as a substitute
elementary teacher and
Carolyn Johnson as a substitute
secondary education teacher.

Wtthers, ·actmg supenntendent _of the system briefly
early tins year, and a former
P~int_ Pleasant High School
pnnctpal, was elected to the
post on a 3-1 vote following a
motion by Olarles Eshenaur,
and a second by Ray Fields, at
Friday evening's two hour
session.
EshenaiD', Fields and Board
President Ted Stevens voted in
favor of the motion while Harry
Siders cast a "nay" vote and
Bill Withers, brother of the new
superintendent, abstained.
Eshenaur's motion came on
the heels of the reading of a r-----------------~--------,
letter by President Stevens 1
1
from the board's legal counsel, I
I
Edward H. Greene, who gave I
I
an opinion that I. Brooks Smith I
"abandoned his contract with Susan Miller
Bryan NeighborgaD.
the Board of Education of
She
married
Ralph
Mason County by accepting
GALUPOUS - Susan Marie Shoemaker in Kentucky on
employment in Jackson
Miller, 18, li 29 East Lakeview March 22, 1922. He preceded her
County."
. in death on Sept. 6, 1965.
bus
killed m
Withers' tenure as superin- Ave., Colurn , was
an automObile accident at 1:45 She is survived by three sons,
tendent will begin Monday, a.m., Saturday in Columbus. Frank, Gallipolis; George,
Sept. 'J:1 and continue through A waitress a 1 the Harvest Hilliaril, and Lester, Pompano
June 30, t975, Eshenaur's House Restauranl,sbewas born Beach, Fla., and two daughters,
prepared two-page motion fixed
Dec. 24 1952 in Waterloo Mrs. Eva Gardner, and Mrs.
Wither's salary at $15,600 daugbte~ of R~l and •
Sadie Bright, both of Galli~lis.
during the federal wage-price
Dillon Miller. The mother One son, Woodrow, was killed
freeze and then $18,500 resides at 139 State St. in during World War IT. Two
following U1e lifting of freeze on Gallipolis.
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daughters died in infancy.
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wages.
She graduated from Gallia Also surviving an: a brother
Siders' only comment on the Academy Higb School in 1970. and two sisters, Thomas Bryan,
employment action was that be ~e Is survived by her parents Mrs. Sarah Shoemaker and
"questions the legality of it." and three sisters, Mrs. Lucion Mrs: Emmag~ne Poston, all li
No action was taken regar(Judy) Barcus Gallipolis· Huntington.
ding new placement of Michael Janice and ~ise both at Funeral services wiD be held
Whalen who bas been serving as home.
'
2 p.m., Monday at the Addison
acting superintendent since She had been in Columbus the Freewill Baptist Church with
Don't let the lack of ma
Smith's second ouster.
past ·13 months. She was a Rev. Walter Patterson in
cause you to neglect nee•de~
OTIIER ACI'MTY
member of the Waterloo charge. Burial will be in
repairs to your home.
The only other action of the Methodist Church.
Reynolds Cemetery in Addison.
property is an investment
meeting, which a split vote Flmeral services will be held . Friends may call at Miller's
resulted, was on the budgetary 1p.m., Tuesday at the Waterloo H&lt;me for Funerals between 2-4
it deserv•s the protection
proper me~in'tenance. Mal&lt;el transfers and approval of Methodist Church with Rev. and 7-9 on Sunday.
requisitions. Siders vot~d
those repairs NOW!
Damon Stapletm officiating.
"nay" on the budgetary transfers part of a motion and· in Burial will be in F1ag Springs Delma Greene
Cemetery.
favor of the requisitions · a!)- Friends may caD at the
proval. The other four members Waugh-Hf!Dey-Wood Funeral GALUPOUS - Mrs. Delma
voted in favor of both sections of Home between 2-4 and 7-9 p.m., Greene, 71, a former resident of
the action.
Ute Patriot Community, died
oo Monday.
Whalen during the session
Friday at 10 a.m., at the home
reported that Mr. Keefer
li ber daughter, Mrs. Beatrice
Mary
Shoemak_er
delivered materials for
Hanley, Bay City, Fla.
She was born Jan. 24, 1900, at
bleacher improvements at GALLIPOLIS
Mary
Wahama Junior High and that Elizabeth Shoemaker, 71, Rt. 2, Pineville, W. Va. She married
several other areas needing Cheshire, died about 10 a.m ., Otto Greene. He preceded her in
maintenance work are being Friday at her home .
death in 1965.
handled.
Surviving are a son, Edgar,
She was born June 14, 1900, in
The board voted unanimously Cabell County, W. Va., daughter Gallipolis; senn grandto accept the bid of Standard li the late Albert and Annetta children, a brother, Carl Cook,

Area Death S

lmprovemald'l

Making

USE OUR
MONEY!

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The 'two men in the class art
Roderick Hook of Rio, Grandi!
and Raymond Madore of
Scottown, Ohio. Both youna
men have worked at Holzefl
Madore as a .licensed practical
nurse and Hook as an orderJt
and phlebotonisl.
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Two Gallipolis girls eurolli!l
in this year's class, are Bever!$
Rowland and Judith Flsbet;
Three }\{ason County gl~lif,
Teresa Gardner and Linda
Lieving of Point Pleasant, and
Cheryl Pearson of . hallipoliS
Ferry, are scheduled to enroD
Monday.
·
A number of students will Uv,e
at home or in the communi~!
this year instead of ·in Dav~
. HaiL Davis Hllll can ac•
commodate 82 students.
:
Freshmen are Bridget C:
Baker, Teresa Ailn Barket:;
Patricia Jean Botta, Mary
Elizabeth Bradbury, Beverly

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Branham, Judy Carleton, Alin,t
Clark, Jane M. Cochran, Kareli
Lynne Evans, Judith K. FisiMi,
Jamie G. Folsom, Teresa E.
Gardner, Debora!! Gollibu~
Deborah Greene, Emily Grose';
Mary Sue Hacker, Sharon su~
Hall Rod · k A H00k Betw
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Hughes,DeborahHunter,Cath~
Hutchison, Alicia Jeffers,
Und
Jeanetla J. Lambert,
a.
Lieving, Gwendolyn Sue
Llewellyn, Debra Lorbach_,
.Mary K. Lucas, Patricia J;
Lucas, Linda McDougle,
Raymond Madore, Deborah
Kaye Mitchell, Cheryl L.
Pearson, Beverly 1. Rowland,

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BELIEVE

sROWN~tJAJ...

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Schar lotte Runyon, .Frances
Simon, Marcia Smith,. Barbara
Ellen Taylor, Connie Jo Tucker,
Glenda L. Wilcoxon and Debbie
Wood.

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BUT lt'OU DON'T VNDER~TAN.D, CHARLIE

BROWN ...I REPREs;ENT AN ORGAN IZATlON,

ANt' I.'M HOLDING THI~ 6AL.I.. A'G A
RI:PRE:SENTATIVE OF THAT ORGANIZATIOt.l

Texture Tells a New
Fashion Story
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CHARLIE 6ROWN 1 I'LL HOLD
v,.,...... AND '(Oll COME
·up AND KICK IT ... .

Withers .Gets 4-Year Contract
PT. PLEASANT - Veteran
educator Charles Withers, who
bas ~ serving _this tenn as
Sunnyside Elementary prmcipal, was name.i Friday night
loa four year contract as Mason
County Superintendent of

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IF 5HE REPREGENT5
AN OR6ANIZA110N,-~·
iHEN I GUE$5.
5HE MLI~T BE

61NCERE-

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CIIARLEil WrtHERS

'6 to '50 More
Benefits ·Voted
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Legislation granting a $6 to $50
increase in mon.lbly benefits for
public employes who were
disabled or retired before July
1, 1968, has been unanimously
adopted by the Slate Senate.
Although the bill had already
passed the House, II must be
returned to the lower cbamber
for cmcurrence. The Senate
included an amendment
eliminating a f23 millim a!)propristion to finance the increase am placed the burden li
fun'dlng the measure on
retirement systems.
Tbe bill would apply to former
members lithe Slate Teachers
Retirement System, School
Employes Retirement System,
Public Employes Retirement
System, Police and Firemen's
Disability and Pensim Flmd
and the state Highway Patrol
Retirement System.
CANCER KILL'! DOG
MERIDEN, Conn. (UPI) Meriden's only police dog,
Baron II, died Thursday of
blood cancer. Saturday his son
King was named to lake his
place.
Delbartm, W.Va.; two sisters,
Mrs. Opal Byrd, Marion, Va.,
and Mrs. Gaye Lambert,
Pineville.
Funeral services will be at
Miller's H&lt;me for Funerals 2
p.m., Tuesday. Burial will be in
Salem Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home between 2-4 and 7-9 p.m., Monday.

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J\11!1

LANCELOT

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by Coker &amp;

Elberfe/ds Are
Headquarters For
Mary lane Coats
For Women
and Teens

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·Up to the minute styling in the5e beautiful fur trim and casual coats
- in these coats you' ll find a great assortment of fashion. There's
sure to be just the style for you in fabric and color. Many Mary Lane
Coats· are water repellent - some styled In washable nylons and
CDlY plies - fashion coats with the very newest in lines and fabrics.
You'll love Mary Lane's sensible prices.

Size range i~cludes ·6 to 20
and 38 to 46.
Car Coats, Pants Coats, Dressy Fur Trimmed Coats and
casual Coats. See them all in the busy Ready To Wear
!)epartment

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
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Pen~~;-..:;

�ALLBY ·o oP

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bJ" Dick Cavalli .

WINTHROP

O&lt;AY, Y~.-ME AN'
00P'S GOT 9JMPJN
- 1Q DISCUSS!-

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HI... ROBBIE.

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... auT r AM . f~-L~' I WANT
10 MAKE THIS VJ::KY 0 E"'R.... .

OUR
RELA110NSHIP

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Oft••• H~WINTI-IR:JP.
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. ANDY CAPP'

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PRISCILLA'S.

BANG
G0£45 A FNER.
1

WHAT'S SO ODD
A!30UT !3UYING
50 POUNDS OF .
APPk..E 'SEEDS?

PLEASE,
POP, CAN
WE DO
LIKE HE
DID?

li S rRIGHTE'N IN' -!

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J'OBNNY WONDER. .

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by Dick Rogers·
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" W~~:r:' COUN'T'~Y
JlifiiPE:!S 'l'HI!l UN11'SO
S'T'A1'S6 15 A!.SO
"NO, MISS lWINKLE ISN'T ALWAYS MAKING SUinE HlN11
AIOUT PRESENTS • • • SHE NEYER H£AKD OF THE WOKO SUint!"

KNOWN At; fHE:

"'T'S A THWTENING LmY. JUNIOR SAYS ·IF WE OON'T

SEND MONEY, HE'S,COMING ,HOME FKOM COLLEGEr'

'I'We AVSRW:S ~RICAN

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A~M051' ~

POUNP6

· OF tON' ·A '/SA~.

( ei&amp; JmWt~t eo'!l )

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THIS WEEK'S TOP
PRIZE QUESTION:
H£Y,
GIOUPf

A1111••"•..;...r...
questiolliUJO .....

'

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editiDII of tile W..W

Al•o•oc hr the -.t
. , . best! SeM ...
tioM to:
"WitUl WW YOU WIIOI TIIHNit;A(iQ IIAU WUE AHUJ»'"

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"'lY! DID I EVB GET UP ON THE WlONG SIDE Of lEO TltiS MOUIINGr

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·9d-•"f IJMtiJtv

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(c/o tWs wq•••rl

TltfY GOT MOll INVISIEO IN Mt!"

P.O. lex1335 (SUNDY)

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THE BORN

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\(.ETCitUNEtJtJ'/~

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' NOT TO MENTION BIOLOGY b48,
. SECTION 2; ANI&gt; POLiTICAl.
SCIENC£ 7ZS!
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OtJ5 OTHER rJJi 00 '1HE PIER lD TAlK TO
NJ' H~ C::ON'T ~AK. NO EN"t..tSH!
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by Stoffel &amp;- Heinl.dahl

by Les Carroll

OtJR BOAB])ING 110l1SE

iEMPTATIONS,

Bl&amp; 00\HEiS

A'T '1HE OWLS
a..u&amp;. MJIWOR!
WE'RE ...

i"EMP~"TION!t!

8UT E\'ERY

cetrr ~ 1-\f&gt;.VE

\5 FOR MAit'!'AA'S

l'REtiENT!

M4, ME~ MAH 14
'BUT MORTP..U ~
MU&amp;T t\URRV
LEST t.

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COME U~LUEO

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WQPLO "t)KETOO
M\fGH~TO

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�Church Addition
Dedicated Su~day
Approximately 200 personS included selectims by a 1rio of
witnessed the dedication of the Mrs. Debbie Gerlach, Miss
ti3,000 addition to lhe Mid- Peggy McKinney, and L. R.
clepor.t Clunh of Cllist &amp;in- W"tley. Wilbur TheobOI led in
day.
the responsive reading. InDr. Lowell Lusby, JRsident lroduced were lbe out«-tmm
· of lbe Kentucky Christian guests including Mrs. Freda
College ·at Graysm College, Welling of Punta Gorda, F1a.;
pve tbe address after Om Mrs. Clara ~. Ceveland:
Erwin, architect of tbe building, Mrs. Bruce Ward, Akron, and
had the dedication.
the Rev. ·c. E. Shepherd,
The call to worship was given Winston Salem College, a
by tbe Rev. Raullin Moyer, former pastw rlthe clurch.
pastor, after an crgB.Jiiliano William Tolbert gave the
JRlude by Mrs. Olester Erwin benediction wilb the choir
and Mrs. Harold Lohse, and the concluding lbe dedicatory
Jrocessional ol the choir.
program planned by Mrs. Pearl
Following the welcome by Reynolds with "Tbe LArd's
Tbm~as Kelly, special music Prayer."

Tb~

Homebuilders Class

under the cbainnanship of Mrs.

William Grueser and Mrs.
[)elner Rice had Charge of the
feDowsbip hour. While refresbmenta were served, Mrs. Alice
Roo esm )llayed the organ.
Baskets of Dowers sent by tbe
Barr Comtructim Co., emlracf.CI's of ~ buildif«, the
Pomeroy FloWer Shop and
Dudley Florists were ~~e~~t to the
sict aDd sbut-i.n rnem""'} of the
dllftiL
Copies rl the church

biStwy

deticated in mem&lt;ry of Mrs.
William Bradford, long-time
primary supervisor, were
distributed at the service.

DR. LOWEU LOSBY, right, president of Kentucky Clristian College, Grayson, Ky.,
congratulated Dm Erwin, Middleport, •ho designed tbe new addition to the Middlll)l&lt;lit ChUrch
of Oris! dedieated &amp;1nday aflernom. At left ill the Rev. Raullin Moyer, pastor of the church.
Dr. Lusby was speaker f« tbe dedication service.

MRS. PEARL REYNOLDS, left, general chairman f~
lhe dedicati.m and q1e11 house of the new $93,000 addition to
lhe MiddlepCI't Olurc:h of Olrist, takes a 1um at lhe punch
bowl during lbe q1e11 hruse, to sene Mrs. Stella Grueaser,
Minersville, whomakesber homeatjll'esentwithber son and
cllqhter.tn.law, Mr. aDd Mrs. W"Jlllam " - ·

NO.

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NO. 115

DeiiOiftl To '17ulln~Nesb Of'l7ul ~-MfiiOII Area
POMEROY-MIDDlfPORT. OH!O
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1971
PHONE 992·2156

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INE.I4AD A ·RUN O' ,HAR.t&gt;
TtMES-50 WE HAD ,T01 •

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UPI)
-President Nixon flew back to
Washington today after a swing
through four Northwestern
states, some high-level initiatives on the Western economy
and an historic meetiag with
Japan's Emperor Hirohito.
Tbe President was to arrive
at Andrews Air Force Base
outside Washington at 7:50p.m.
EDT after a six-hour flight in
Air Force One from Ebnendorf
AFB near Anchora~e .
- The meeting in Anchorage,
Alaska, between Nixon and

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iT.GiOTTt,l ¢q.,MI¢:'
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WJVf.l'-llt&gt;~~

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CALLS ME A

MATTf'.£65
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0\/ERSI.EEP?

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AH KIN DO THAT!!
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NATURA~-eoRN ~I

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TESTER!!-HE WAS ASLEEP
MALF·WA't
10 THE MATTRESS!!
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Last Ditch Conference
LONDON - THE PRIME MINISJ'ERS of Great Britain,
Ncrthem Ireland and tbe Irish Republic conferred together for

the first time today in a last ditch bid to save the violence-torn
NcrthfrCIII tbe tlftatof civil war. Tbeymetatnoonat Chequers,
British Prime Minister Edward Heath's official country
residence. Each was acccmpanied by me adviser.
The talks were espected to cmtinue all day today and to end
Tuesday afternoon. Northem Ireland Prime Minister Brian
Faulkner had a preliminary tbree-bwr meeting at Chequers
&amp;lnday evening with Heath, Home Sec{etary Reginald Maudling
and Defense Secletary LOrd Carrington.

Aspinall's Strip Bill Backed

CAPTAIN EASY

by· Cr~oks &amp; Lawrence.

ome

Alllmic Energy Commission's
Hanford, Wash., facility. He
look the occasion to announce
the U.S. government, in conjunction with private business,
would build two prototype
''fast-breeder" reactors to bar·
ness the atom for peaceful

uses.
to build one prototype,
costing about $500 million, were
announced in June but the
decision to expand the project
Plans

NIXon coupled his trip to
Alaska with down-~th stops
during the weekend in Montana,
Oregon and Washington.
The President staged another
first when he stopped Saturday
in PorUand. He interceded in
the 8lklay-old West Coast dock
strike. It was the first time
ever that Nixon had personaUy
become involved in strike
negotiaUons in his capacity as
President.
His 2().minute meeoog with
longshore labor leader Harry
Bridges and shippers negotiator
Ed F1ynn brought pledges from
them to try and end the strike
by this weekend.
The strike by 15,000 members
of the InternaUonal Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's
Union (ILWU) has tied up 25
West Coast ports and idled

Pr. PLEASANT -The Union
Carbide mine at Elmwood in
Mason County today shut down
production
leaving
ap. proximately IM to a.l perslliiS
jobless.
A Union Carbide official said
lhe mine for the time being will
be on a standby, or ''motbhall"
basis. J . L. Knight, minir«
manager for Unim Carbide
Corp., Ferro-Alloy Division,
said when workmen reported at
work today at 8 a.m., they were
noUfied of the closing.
He said, " this was made
necessary wben lbe last order
was filled for American
Electric Power Corp., which
had been the mine's only·
customer the past four to six
months." He said AEP bas

placed no new orders for the
COi'J being produced there, a
bituminws product with high
ash CU).Ienl.
The deep mine began
producing coal early in 1969
wilb normal production
averaging 50 000 tons per
mmth.
'
Knight aplained the ''mothhall basis" as one in which
productimcouldberesumed in
a shcrl lime. The office will be
open and a smaD force of employes for maintenance will be
retained.
NOW YOU KNOW
English is the most widely
used language in the PhiliPpines, although Tagalog is the
rfflciallanguage.

Es~pes
RACINE - Dan Ericb. l9,
Columbus, escaped probable
death early today when he

managed to cra..t out a rear
window of his car after it was
swept into a raiJHrwollm aeek
the "'---les vost farm
011
''
near
here "'""
~ department ol Sheriff

:

CLEVELAND tUPI) - Jdla Salllvu piDcbed
. . limself lo mate sure, bat deelded medkare olflclall
:
wen wreag wbea lbey notified 1111 wife he w• dad.
:
Mn.Salllvupltllltdblmalwori;recenllyloiDfOnllblm
:
lba tlllltdlcare bad refilled payme~~lfor a ·~ldedor bW.
:.
''Oar lft~uolbow
-a..
lbe heaeficlary aamed above II
·
de~" tbe nollee uld, addlag ~~~GaP. thai Mn.
Slllllvu was enUIIed 1o .-e ID barial beaeflla.
Viii tiDe tbe Soelal Secm1ty offlee, u rlflclal told the
Slllliva. ·"BalUmcre woUld bave to be CODtacted
~- tbal's where flies of deceued pen111111 lllat bad
beelt covered by medicare 1ft kept
''llllllmlft bu decided 1omelaow tllat yon are
d£ftued," tbe rlfldal !tid bJm.. '"BBat I'm 111ft
somelltD&amp; co be worlled eat. Leave everylldJic 1o me.
G• bae aad fqetahoatlt." Sall1vu llu •lded te
hftgo lbe bviiJ beueflll, f~ DOW.
=
·

:,~:;:

==t:::!:;.:

23· The swiftly moving wata'
washed his auto into the c:r t ,
then down its coarse approximately 100 feet. Eridl

!'i:';!.eda! =b~~;a'

Weather
Partly cloudy aod warm
tanight and Tues'ay. O!ance ol
lbowas IICI'Ih portim tonight
lnd Tuesday. Lows lmigbt in
the upper 58s and as. Higbs
Tuesday in the upper "Ills aDd

a.

WASHINGTON - FORMER FIRST Lady Mamie
Eisenhower, radiant as ever, will be honored tonight by many ~
ber admirers with a "Diamond Jubilee" dinner and establl.shmentofascholarshipfundinbername. President and Mrs. Nixon
were expected tore1umfromtheirtrip through the Pacific Northwest in time to put in a late appearance at the $101Hl-plate affair.
Proceedw friiD the benefit will go into the scholarship fund to
help studeilta at Eisenhower College, Seneca Falls, N. Y. Mrs.
Eisenhower long has been active in eff~ts to aid the school, which
was named after ber lusband, President Dwight D. Eisenhower.

~

oil:

~
.-.

i

:·}

J~
:~

Judge Howard issued a temporary injuncUon requested by
the university when the strike
started,buttheworkersremalned off their jobs and reaffirmed
their intentim to stay off In a
vote held Saturday. McGee was
es bact to w~k.
cited for cmtempt of lbe court
Cmmim Pleas Court Judge order for urging the strike
llonrd Goldsberry from Ross to cmtinue and Goldsberry
CouoJewastopresideata hearing
today on a cmtempt of warned more cltaUons may be
cow1citationissuedagalnst0s- in·~~·re. hound to prooeed
car McGee, president of the against the order of the court,
lllim m strike.
don't come bact and ask for
G&lt;+JF.a 17 was called into the mercy," GoiA•.._, sat"d.
Albelts County court at the reSowle, who suggested the
·quest of Judge Lowell Howard, union go to courl to show ita diswbo disqualified himself from pleasure over dealings with the
bearing the trikMelated
.
formerly::
a laculty member at the 19,000 that they had voted to cmtinue
student university.
. the strike into this week.
The walkout by the some 900 The union aCCU3eS the univa-members ol_LOca11699, Ameri- sity of diacriminating against
can Fedaatim of State, County women in cafeteria work, a1Jo.
and Municipal Employes, last ing supervisors to wort in non11ullday over nm - monetary supervisory paeltions and failing
grievances so far bas had little to submit a list of workers laid
~ ~ tbe state: supported off this summer.
~~~~YWS~ty, but President Claude Sowle, however, countered
Sowle has warned the campus that it was his belief the
wuuld he closed by a prolmged university "had acted within
a••"' of janitors, service the letter and spirit of the
wriers,clertsandstenograph- agreement" witb the union.
ers.
He said tbe unlm, instead of
- - - - - - - - - striking, should seek an injunction If it felt tbe school was not
TAG DAY SET
Tbe anm1al Tag Day of the carrying out Its responsibility
for grievance procedures and ,
Meigs High SdJool Band will he
obseued Saturday. As has been promised the university "will
tbe custom the past few years, definitely abide by a court ...~
during Ibis week members of der on that issue."
"We could be forced to cJoee
the Meigs Band Boosters will
down
the university since we
contaet business houses in
Ptma OJ, Rutland and Mid- would be faced with major~
dlepcrt to aa:ept cmlribuUons lema concemlng food, refue
and
olber
necessary
hNpescmpu want to mal:e.
operations," Sowle said In
warning qainst a long walllout.
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) -With

sludentslllld~inV.tratorscm,;..,;- to take - the jobs of
-.......
-·
s1riking blue and white collar
wriers at Ohio University toREobehrt C. 8dri~~nba~~. suugh
"d day, the cow1 JJIOC-eeded in its
rtc was
VtDg "" 0
efforts 1o force the 900 employ-

telephone pole and a fire
llydrant near the Don Lisle
ty before moving bact
::"'the highway. The vdticle
turned over 00 its lop acn155 the
rwdway. It was a total loss.
McFarland was cited 1o the
court of Syracuse Mayor
Berman Lmdcm m a charge o1
a:c:essive speed fOi' conditioos.

at Dinner

~

OU Stalemated

-·r

=~t r;,ew. : :!-.!•; ~~he

MORGNATOWN, W. Va.-SEAROIERScombed the rugged
terrain of Cooper's Rock Stale F~st today for two missing boys
who wandered frCIII the family's campsite.
The boys, Billy Smythe, 8, Alliance, Ohio, and Oluclde
CUnningham.9, Weirtm,werelastseenatnom&amp;lmlay.
An estimated 150 police and volunteer searchers, aided by a
bloodhound,spentmostof tbe night in the area.
Police said some tracks were foond at midnight, about four
milesfriiD the main cmcessimarea ol the state fQrest.

LOCAL~

The tenJpeAtln .in downtown
Pomeroy al u a.m. Monday
was 73 degi es IRlCier d:Judy

Iiles.

::r:~::e~' :: ~:::~

Real HeU o[Fire

Krek 'l'hreatened

IMF Session in Crisis Air
WASIIINGtON - WITH TREASURY Secretary John B.
Cmnally aY!ng "flexibility and fairness" fer the dollar, the 111
members o1 the faternatimal Mmetary Fund began their arullal
mee- today in search rl a new wcrkl currency system. Six
weea lifter President Nixon eDded the internaUmal payments
syatem that hu prevailed since Wm-ld War n by Slllpellding the
cmverliblllty rl dolllrs into gold, the JMF delegates gathered in
what Canadian Finance Minister Edgar J. Benson described

afternoon, said tberehadbeennocbangein the U. S.paellion.

made it possible lo order
production of the first "fastbreeder" nuclear reactor.
Scientists believe tbe reactor
offers tbe hope of avoiding a
global energy crisis within 50
years. "Fast-«"eeder" reactors
produce their own fuel by
turning nm.fissimable unminm
into fissionable plvtonimn and
offer tbe prospect ol adequate
supplies of non-polluting tDti &amp;7 •

w• ......-_

Boys Sought in Forest

&amp;lnclay. u a "aisla" allnOIIphere.
BeiiiOII predicted the outbreak of a trade war among the
1118j« eccJUIII)c powers If their currencies continued to ':tJoat"
outalde the parities fixed by the IMF. And, Bensm added, "there
woo 't be a realignment of currencies ao long as the U. 1). Import
111rlu Ia there." But CCIIIIIlly, taiJriDI with reporters &amp;lnday

:!E =~:E1-;;,~;:;;t;:;:;;;;;:··:u;·

Erich •s lruslt with tragedy
OCCUlTed at 6·45 p.m.
At 2:30 a~ Sunday, "an Slate
' Route 1.24 in Syraaase 8 car
driven by Otarles

WASHINGTON -THE UNITED Mine Wcrkers (UMW) have
endorsed "with enthusiasm" the prO)lOISed strip mine cmtrol act
of 1971 introduced by Rep. Wayne Aspinall, D-Colo., chairman ol
lhe House Interior Ommit1ee. UMW President W. A. "Tony"
Boyle said the legislation "is consistent with the environmental,
energy and ecmmlic needs of the nation." Resaid it would create
needed new jobs through cleanup of stripped out lands and protect
lhe jobs ol thousands ol miners.
Boyle said ''Tbe craters of tbe moon are duplicated in the
Minnesota iron range and the copper mines · of Montana.
Envirorunental considerations af!! as serious in these areas
as In Appalachia and lbe need f~ effective land restorati.on is 11
great."

Mamie Center Stage

to two was new.

ine Closed Driver

En~::i.:r:::~e~ 1111
'~ I

MRS. AIJCE R0Bf3&gt;N presented subdued
crgan selectims Sunday afternoon during an open house held
following the dedicaijm of tbe new addiijm to the Middleport
Olurcb of Clrilt.

I

nearly 2011 ships since July 1.
Nixon said his face.to.fa ce
meeting was "to bring to their
attention the urgency of reaciJ..
ing a settlement."
If East Coast dock worker.;
strike when their contract
expires Thursday, said tbe
President, he would consider it
a national emergency and
invoke the ll().day "cooling off"
injunction provisions of the
Taft-Hartley Act.
Sunday, Nixon toured tbe

TEN CENTS .

SAIGOO (UPI)-Narly two dlvililiii alliCI'th
· ~~e•
u replar hapnuteda "raJ hell rl
lire" today Ill the •• JUred Salilb VIet.
••r eWer len aflleCw•• arlilnJilllber tan
clink, cut tlteiruainliJIIIII)I ID8Dd8(11118nd
tit be tryinclo6ift lltaaGIItaf&amp;u•.ma
The SolllhVII'INm iGt•w•., ill thesaid i t - the ...... fl&amp;bliic Pee the ....
rlfensi~ into CaJnhedie to 4I1XV the
IIUiist IIIII:% ia lhn ia Jill.
"bt the IIIII• ~,.- ..te item lilq
UDder a real heB II fft," GeiL lfpJa x.t
Tl.nh, CCIIIDJPnder II the S.th V'11:1Mn
25lb

'

GRANDOIAMPION-DilllaGutJD,detgN«ofllr. Pidllrs.eer.JdGalhrie,Oiolville
Route 3, was the grand cMIIIpiOD ol Salllrday's
twilling contest at E•d )II High School.
MlsaGulhrie, receiving tbe champicllllblp troplly from Mrs. Judy Rigs, cantestdirecl«, won
10 flnt places, one aecond, and received tbe rN.n4i+Nwhip II UjiiJ, U in .U for ber Saturday
particlpati.on. She now ownsapprolimate)J' 2251lv,lblesaa twirlinghiDn.. Sbe'also received a
$25 savings bond for wlnt!q Saturday's championship. The ct +- PrA spu1WEd the contest. (See Page 2f« pcture of traveling sisters.)

•ton

"

f .

cam.

Divis1011, said In an Interview at bJa headqaar- · ·
ten in Tey Nlnb City, acna the bcadtr fnm
Ink in South VIetnam.
He delc:ribed tlte Qi.m.nlot allaaft, wl*b
hepn •!!Jnley. 881D\ft .nc.llu the drift
wllicb p•+e.t 11te s.th yjplnr- aat of a 1,
1111111w hilld pllillallaa town about • mllaa
..,. rt II Ink,
lti* Ia lllout. miles Jalli:aert of Ba)J I ..S
ei&amp;ftl llillll
the ,bwda. Tbe .... alitlaaal lbse are the llllr iiiiiiD 11rce·811111
V!e
11!it IIIII ill Cw• .. !Ia
''11!t wlll!a114111 II mon - - . lha lr ztI "

last...,,

es•

I'

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