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10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,O., 1-'riday, Nov. 1, 1974

Tougher jaw~_
oning threaten~d
•
By United Press International
The administration

is

bringing verbal pressure and hinting at stronger action

.- to narrow the gap between
what the. farmer gets for his
crop and what the citizen pays
for his food.
Treasw-y Secretary William
E. Simon said Thw-sday that
this gap is widening as the

price margins going to middle-

men

-

fo9d

pr ocessors.

shippers , wholesalers and
retailers - increase. "With
times as dirficult as they are,

Negotiato-r s .hopeful of
avoiding miners' strike

we cannot permit one segment ' lly CIIARLES E. FLlNNER

of the economy to reap unjust
enrichment at the expense of
everyone else," Simon told the
National · Press Club in
Washington.
Simon said the White House
Council on Price and Wage
Stability will investigate the
spread between prices of raw
and refined sugar.
Federal Trade Commission
official Wesley J. Liebler told a
Washington conference of
farmers, consw-ners and labor,
government and industry officials that the FTC intends to
start using antitrust laws in
cases where the spread between farm and consw-ner
prices is unwarranted.

WASHINGTON (UP!) Guy Farmer, the coal companies' chief neg.otiator, said
Thw-sday a tentative contract
agreement could be reached
with the Uni.tect Mine Workers
union by the end of this
weekend,
averting
a
threa tened Nov. 12 walkout.
"I've been optimistic since
the beginning," Farmer told a

news conference.

~'We've

(ied up in ribbons," he said .
· Asked if an agreement could
be reached this week, he
responded positiyely and then
added, "Give us the weekend."
The curt;enl ·contract, covering aboul 120,000 miners, 1,200

mines and some 70 per cent of
the nation 's coal production ,

expires Nov. 12.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
. Sunday through Tuesday,
partly cloudy Sunday and
Monday wllh a chance of
showe~s Tuesday. Mild
wealh . with hlgbs Sunday
in the s and lows in the 50s.
Highs by Tuesday will be in
the 50s and lows in the 40s.

said

that time was our biggest
enemy. 11

•He said the negotiators were
"pretty much in substantial
agreement" on fiv e main
issues, but some items were

likely to remain undecided
until the final day of talks.
"There's no neat little package there that we can say is all

$1 MILLION SPENT
COLUMBUS ( UP!)
Democratic Senatorial candidate John Glenn has spent
about $1 million in his primary
and fall campaigns with debts
~ of about $100,000 according to
reports filed Thw-sday with the
Secretary of State's office . By
comparison, the reports show
Glenn's opponent, Cleveland
Mayor Ralph Perk, has spent
only $189,957 with unpaid debts
of $58 ooo
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Gillig
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Farmer·arid the chairman of
the Bitwninous Coal Operators
Association, Nicholas T. C3!1licia, reviewed the status of
negotiations ·with President
Ford at a White House meeting
ea rlier in the day. Farmer then
briefed the executive board of
the BCOA before he retw-ned to
the bargaining table.
He said Ford, who met
earlier this week with UMW
president Arnold Miller, asked
how negotiations were going.
" We gave him a report, "

Farmer said. "We said we
thought they were going pretty
well. We said we still had some
problems but we hoped to get
them resolved in time to get it

membership, a proce.S which
could . take an estimated 1.0
days. Without a contract, the
miners would walk off the job
Nov. 12, causing wl)at·experts
beliPVe could be ano,ther severe
winter energy shortage.
Asked if the subject of usirig
the Taft-Hartley to halt a strike
had been raised at the White
House , Farmer replied,
"We're not even thinking about
Taft~Hartley. We're thinking
positively about getting an

said, '~ As long ~s we're making

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there.''

Continued from page 1
Tuesday to prevent the party from suffering "a crippUng blow."
Paul R. Haerle, vice chairman of the GOP state central committee, said he made his public appeal because just sllghtly more·
than haU of the state's registered Republicans voted in last June
primary -the lowest percentage turnout in 30 years .

ratified. ''

WASHINGTON- RECOVERING FROM A one-month dip,
average prices for raw farm products in the inonth ending Oct. 15
jwnped 4 per cent above mid-september to resume a recovery
that started when harvest prospects began fading in July, the
Agriculture Department reports.
The increase for all farm products as, a group, l!9Wever,
concealed
a tightening squeeze on many livestock producers
NOW YOU KNOW
The first neon tube ad- whose prices declined or held relatively steady while prices for
vertising sign in the United key livestock feeds like corn and soybeans advanced.
. New price records'for corn and other livestock feed grains,
States was installed at the
Cosmopolitan Theatre in New plus higher prices for wheat, soybeans, milk, hogs and cotton led
York in July, 1923, to advertise the October advance which left prices averaging 0.5 per cent
the play "Little Old New above a year earlier. The increases were partly offset by lower
prices for cattle, calves and potatoes.
York.''

Under the UMW constiMion,
any tentative agreement must
be ratified by the entire

o·
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3 ..
20%

BLOUSES. SWEATERS
.KNIT TOPS
ALL LADIES

PANT

DRESS

~UITS
...........-...

LO~G S~EEVE

DRESS SHIRTS

.

20%

·CAR COATS
JACI(ETS

·TURTLENECK

.LEVI'S
PERMANENT PRESS DENIMS

I, Maxine Griffith, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare
that this report of condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and
belief.
. Maxine Gtifflth

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. We, the undersigned dir~tors attest the correctness of this report of condition and declare that it has beeri examined by us and to the best of our
knowledge a,nd belief is true and correct.
'
Edison Hobstetler
'
R. E. Boice - Directors
Roger Morgan

Straight or. Flare

lVALUES TO $1

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonighl-'~af- SUn.

MEN'$ WORK

·

NOV.. 1·2·3

.,

,,

· CONRACK
I·Tochnlcolorl
John .Yolghl
PGI'

,.

Colorcartaons:
Spooco Cowboy

Harpoon .
~how Stilrts 7 p.m.

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B~MR ·. CLC):TH.I-ERS
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$6~9

FLANNEL .SHUll'S . .. ,..._uE
~~--"""--~--MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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surpnse to many
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and help out a lot. But a lot of it
is the company you drive for. I
might · qpit If . i could find
something else I'd rather do
but ldon't know' what it would
be."
The liberation movement has
affected the trucking business
to some degree, Anna believes,
but had nothing to do with her
joining the ranks of women
drivers . Her father had
previously employed a woman
and when that girl 'departed
after a brief stay, he trained
Anna to lake the job.
The money is good - she
makes 25 pet. of her father's
gross - and the hours are long
and some Pf the experiences
are pretty ·hairalslng.
One time a load of steel
slipped on the bed as Anna was
driving and the rig tilted to the
right. The bed was sitting on
the trailer's front right duals
jllld tore all the rubber off
before she got it to a crane to
have it straightened.
Anna said that .Ill~ ·word
among truckers Is that ·Ohio is
the worst place to drive,
Continued on P!ll!e 2

I

By LEE LEONARD
roadblock will have been
UP! Statehouse Reporter . eliminated for government
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The programs tailored for the
uncertainties of next Tuesday's . Democrats.
Pro g.re ssi ve
soc i a 1
general election in Ohio are
enough to make most state legislation may rush untouched voters to see a candidate's
politicians ~nervulL'l , especially . to the governor's desk Ul)less income tax returns, net worth
Republicans.
the Democrats begin fighting statements and campaign
lt is a landmark e.lection, and among . lhemselves, as they finance reports? Or could they·
the results could have a also -are capable of doing.
care less? Tuesday should
longtime effect on Ohio politics
The Democrats also can be furnish some clues. ·
' ·
and goverrunent.
expected to ·realign the boun- Gov. John J . GU!lg8n bu
For example, Ohioans ap- dartes of congressional placed a premium on ftnanclal
pear ready to launch a new star districts with a majority in disclosure clairnlng the pubUc;
into the political heavens of the both legislative chambers is entitl;;f· to know what ltlr ·.
perhaps squeezing out two 0; officials own or who owtll;' ·
tiJree
qlore pro-Democratic them. Former Gov. J81Jl!!l•A.:··
Ohio politics
districts in the HolL'le.
Rhodes follows tiN! law but; '
But the governor's race will goes no further, believing it•a &lt;
nation. A big victory by John
be the most telling of all about JlQbody's Wslnesa and ~ 't:• :
Glenn in the Senate race could
bow Ohioans want their state to matter U he does his J&lt;!b rlll!t.; ·
projlel him into the national
.
be run aM where they stand 1n Ohio voters wW make up ·
limelight in 1976.
the middle of the 1970s.
their own minds. They •llo, for, ':
Aside frpm that, Glenn would
This Is the first election In a the first time, wW have a:'·
probably figure in· a restruc- post-Watergate situation, and referendw-n on Gllllpn. 'Ibe; ?•
turmg of the state Democratic
the turnout alone should teU governor's illcome taJ: an ~:
party leadership and who gets whether Ohioans are turned off issue ill1972. Jt was upheld, 1-1,. &gt;
tapped to run for governor in by politics.
· but was not a true lildex ot tbe' ·
1971.
'
Furthermore, many of the governor's populatlty bee&amp;l1•: :
ln legislative races, If the statewide campaigns have the question was poorly wcr.", ,
Democr11ts ga/lJ control ,of the been waged on the basis of ded.
Senate and hold 'the House, as.jt "honesty, openness and inFinally, the Gilligan-Rhodes
looks like they will, the last tegrlty ." Does It Impress the
Continued 9n page 2

Your Invited Guest

IS:fOINT PLEASANT
~

Reaching More .
Than 12,000 ·
Families

·' Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1974

·Mi&lt;Jdleport·P~omeroy

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Medi~are

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PRICE 20 CENTS

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creases In hospital costs. He noted that lhe
Jaw ~;eqiJires an annual review of hospital
coots under Medicare and an adjustment
of the portion of the bill lor which a
Medicare . beneliciary is responsible, If
these costs have rtsen substantially.
The law provides a formul8 for
deterJlllning tlie amoWJt of any adjustment
in the deductible amount.
The hospital deductible amount is Ulre
the deductible amounts specified in many
auto Insurance policies, where the car ·
owner pa~s the first $00 or $100 on a repalr
bill, and the lnsw-ant;e pollcy covers the
rest.
When a Medicare . beneficiary has a
hospltsl stay of more than 60 days, be will
pay $23 a day for tlie 6lal through the 90th
day, up from tbe ptesent$21 per day. If he
,hssa post'h91111ltal stay of.over 20 days in a
'Skilled nuralng facllity, he will pay $11.50

.,.

per day to~Vard the cost of the 21st day
through the tOOth day, up from the present
$10.50 per day.
If a beneficiary uses · his "lifetime
reserve" days, the extra 60 hospital days a
beneficiary can· uae when he needsinore
than 90 days !'f hospital care In the same
benefit pertod, he will pay $46 for each
reserve day .used, Instead of the present
t42 per day.

' bel~\~~=tb,:;-~ move far

t.i!Y

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COLUMBUS (UI'I) - Ohio Tw-npike
Commission Chairman James W.
Shocknessy said Saturday a new toll audit
system which wW pr~I!S transactions on
the tollroad "laster than ever before" will

Hea' d Start· aSk.S Space
..
0 £1er

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OOLUM!IUS - Gov. 3o1m J . Gillig~ tile governcr. ·
Sall!rd!'Y announced an .-.ooograntto the
•Gov, Qillig8n said the grant· "wl)l
Ohio Bureau of Employment Services and · provide job training
the unemployed,
the Ohio Department or · Edu,callon, anchrill conlrlbute to the national effort
.vocatlonai education diviSion, fOr a mlne lowBI"!IIncreulng energy supplies,"
machlnei'ym~han~ training program in Gwddines for the grant were written by
Ga!Ua and Meigs countle!J.
the Department .or Eeonomlc and . Com·
The grant will provide funds £or class- munlty '· Developme!lt's Manpower
,,. room ...,.....ence
_,.
1n mine mac,h,.._,,
·
__ , 'Deve1Gpq&gt;ent Division.
·'
mechanlcs for 15 econoinlcally dl.sad' v·A•··ed
..., - ·L
--.. penons. Trainees 1n the ..
..,_on wW be ·taught mine heallh and
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.. POMEROY - ·The Conununity Action and rest room . faclllties . An outside
safety laws, malntenalli:e and repair or
•' mine machlhery, ~ Interpretation of Agency .·, Ia preJiadng a request playground area 1.s a requirement.
.
, schematic drawlnga, blueprint• and · I(\ ,have Head Start .in Gallla
loa ·part of the Head Start budget,
maintenance manuals. ·
·•
and Meigs Countlea on a ' nine Umlted 'renovation .costs are allowable for
'I'll, p-ant wW be rilade from the · months balliJ. In ai-der to hsve the the Jllll1*e or meetlrig safety and health
Governor's DlacretioOaty Funcl for 1isCa1 Office of OliJd Development Regional · reaulatiCJIII.
year 11'16 under 11tle l of the Com- Office ~e this request, IL will be
· Individuals, churches, schools,
prehelllive Empleyment and TralnJnC neceaary to ~ow. tbat·llllitable ~tea are graog18, .or other 'agenCies having a
• Act of 18'13 (CE'I'A). The GoveniOf'l av~ble In the ~ty area
llllitable area dealrlng to make it available
:' Dlicrellclnary Fund IIIDide Up off per .
space ae~ted m~ ~t local · 1o the Head Start Program are asked -to
:1 . ceal of aU CETA lrMit)l CGIIilng lnlo the . requii'einenta or health and afety · In notify the.CAP Office, box .686, 1Pomeroy,
. alate. The ·~llld totala tl.lmiiUCin for lisCal addillon lo baYing · satllfactory · c~ Ohio 46788, «call 448-1780 in Gallipolis, or
, 1~ ~Use of .the money ~ d-etermined by . I'OOIDa, avatlablekltcbe~~ dining rpact, ~ 1n Pomeroy, as soon as possible.

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New toll audit system
to speed' turnpike . work

more quickly through the toll gates than is
now · possible," said Shocknessy .
ShOCknessy said studies show the existing
system installed 1• yeari·ago was deemed
inadequate ·to handle tr~c between now
and 1910or 111111 when the turnpike is due to
become a free road.
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' TOMB REOPENED
• MOSCOW (!JPI)- The tomb of V. I.
Cenin, . foimdei'_..!lf · the Soviet state,
reopened· ·to the public Saturday alter
being
~•. clased f or. six mon,,_
.... for re,.......

~aining . frtnded

·: Mine

. RONALD CAJJIOUN

cost up $8 -January 1

GAL.LIPOLIS
Beginning next
January I a· person who goes to the
hospital Wider Medicare .wiU be respon.
sible for the first $92 of his hospital biU.
The present deductible. of $84 wlll remain
in effect for Medicare ltaipltal admissions
durlpg !he' rest or this year.
In iumounclng the $92 deductible,
HEW Secre,lary Caspar W. Weinberger
said this amOiint is equivalent to the
average cost of cine day or hOSpital care.
The deductible Is the patt of the hospital
bill for ,.-h!Ch the beneficiary is respon.
sible for the first 60 lhiYB or hospltai care.in
each benefit period. Medla!re ' pays the
rest or the costs of covered services.
At present, the average hospital stay
under Medicare is about 1112 days; at a
coot of over $1,000.
, Weinberger said the ' Increase . In the
deductible results from contlnuinl{ · in·

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. . GALLJPOUS - Four hotlt-contested Qem~ratlc le.aders are openly bacltlng member llf the·Kyger Creek Local Board. the Bciiird of El~: lior1s .
races are ai!Sured bea:e ~ay ill the .,:Republican Attorney James BenneU and,
G. Gordon Fisher, Rt1 I,
.J)?..-ster
bo.ard
Nov~r (leneral ~- A&amp; c~-' ·€alh0111 bas ·bec&lt;.me an lil~t '
members
was
welder at the Kyger .Greek
paiCJ)big goes in.fl! II!J fllW ~· . s, GBni candidate who is expected to ~ SupfX!l'te4
t'Lint.
former member the
Co1lli 118ns will have lo llliike several major by DeJ11ocrats and Republi~, ~ 11
declllonabeforethepollscloseat 7:30p.m. ~net~. ,. . I·
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Tuesday.
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A W&lt;IDE:ePEN ll.f!CE jS
Planl; oi"r~~~~;~:r:
Olfidals at the GGII!a Coflliijl BOard of the Galli!~ ~ty1loard qt
2,
a ttucli:
long and short terms.'
~ectlona report that 1.1,257 persons have parhsan ballot.
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and
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president
~a!IIJ- Weal
As If ,nine waldatei1weren't enOu,li
-. regis~ lo vote, {Jnder a ne,w sll!te law, . Under the ·terms of COI!I!Oiidatiiln, all Bolird of '·Elluo;ation; Bruce Sto.Ji, Rt. 1, to l!lllke .an Interesting r-~~ • .the ballot
all38 ~IJ!mly precinci!J Will be opened from mcwnbept~bers must seek ret!lection. Bidwell, a -'fOreman · ~t the Kyg~r Creek received. -additional pubiJCi.ty Thursday•
&amp;:.30 a,.m. fo 7:30p.m.
.
The ~unty tioard has charge of the newly . l'&lt;nyer Plint and lilrmer ·member of the when it was learned that onelof the' many
MajOt' ra~ this f.a!1 are the Conunon consolidatl!!l Gallla C01mty Weal &amp;hool8.. North GaJIIa. Boar~: now ·servillg on the printed . ballots being circulated
Pleas Court JullgeStilp, ·~ Gallia County
All school board cimdldates with the county' boar~ ; J. E. !'Dick" Cremeens, Rt. throUghout the county may be. illegalllfld
Local Board of Education, Gallla County exception of ·one, , Forrest Smith of 1, Crown City, !l.t.farmer and •former hadatleaatthreeposslblevtolationsiiJ!der
AQC!Itor,and Gallia Couniy Commissioner. Cheshlre, have previous experience as . presidept of the Hal,han Trace 119111'11 and tbe')lew Ohio ·Election Laws. &lt;' · ·
,
rn Galli~, all eyes will be focused !Joard members,
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current cOUilty ~ .member, Gr~P~vllle
1~ the. Gallia Cowity Audi~'s race, ··
on the ~on :Pleas Jooge race where
.Candidates are· Murray Olqrch.of·Rt. Burnette, Rt. I, P~triot, a retired farmer Dorijthy Cobdee, a Democrat,,Ji lopposlng
party Unes have split l!lllie sup~rt of two 1, Crolvri €tty, a rormer teacher and and businessman,');ow in his sixtH year as Repul)lican Joe Alley. Mrs. OOndee, a
candidates.
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member of the Hannan Trace U&gt;cal Board a member of .the 'Gallia County Board of former e!flploy!!e of the Holzer Medical
Judge Ronald R. Calhoun was elected of Education; J. C. Mitchell, Rt. 1, Bid- Education .
Center, ran Wlopposed in the May
to the post six years ago after he came to well, an ~•mployee of Evans Packlng
According to attorney Lee Wurster of Primary.
.
Alley, an assistant to Gallia County
Gallia CoWlty I!POO the eocota'agement Company and former ~ember of the North the Elecilon Division, Secretary of State's
and support of the .Do!mQct·atic Party.
Gallla Board of Education; Dale Rothgeb, office,. members elected to the board of Engil'!eer Gletlll Smith, defeated Worthy
Now, there Is reported 'to•be a major Jr., Rt. 1, Gallipolis, Assistant City Editor education in Tuesday's election will F;vans and Charles Jones in the GOP
split between the party imd C8lhoun. Some of the Gallipolis TribWle and former assume duties following certification by
Continued on page 2

A1L LADIES

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F~ur~· ~ttd contests predicted in ·6:aBia County

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Voting .
I landmark: electi?n ~as to shape
politiCians IJ!'nerved ·future
of Oh.·o

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VOL g, NO. 40

BAHR CLOTHIER-s·- - - MI~AUTUMN

~~~~~"REDUCED

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~ Uncertainties of this

+

Cloudy and wanp today,
cbance ·of showers 211 percent
with highs in the !Ws, Conditions continuing ~?11M
into Monday. Highs tbinorrow
in the !Ws.

Elberfelds In Pom·eroy

CAR COATS

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DRIED
FLOWER
ARRANGEMENTS
*5,95
Dudley's Florist

LADIES

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Weatlier ·

Save During November Bargain
Days This Week End

POMEROY ·NATIONAL BANK

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By Jan Couatryman . , regular Iliad for the young
Jt started out to be a normal ' woman, who started driving
rainy Wednesday l!lomlng a! · with Central and Southern, she
Ohi~ VaHey Publishing Co.'s says they'll haul anything.
· ' "Paper Is harder to inove";
plant in Gallipolis:
There was a )oad of Jk&gt;water · she observed, "but I haven't
newsprint walling on' Third figured out why yet."
~
Ave., the driver OfAhe truck,
Although Anna never thought
curled ln)o the .w,rmth•of the . much about driving unUl she
eab,.w~ asleep W!jl~ng for· the re~tci)ed maturity, she insists
plant to open. ..~
·..
shecan'tstop,evenafteronlya
No one .thougbt too • much . 0 year 01). lhe ro-d and four to
,!lbout ·u ·untii'/OV..P ·empJilye fi:ve months of. soJo ·drlving.
Otho 1\lat~. · pr,ess'room
'·'Other drivers who have
foreman, w~,llfOI!t · to ·wal!e the been on the road a long time
lruclt dr!vet. All was routine. say it gets in )'0111' blood," she
!llllt~·!"9Wlted 1111! side of the
coinmented. "'I'h!ey're right.
..Vtilt, Gl&gt;!C cab, Ia~ on the Some days It feels like the
,
Window, and then ~q back whole world is conilng down .on
appalled. ·
~t ·
you 'and you think you'd like to
The driver_!W!~Jlli lady.
quit, but the next day is always
That was ,l!JW Anna Lltch- different, and then it's an right
fCirli, a ~ .brunette from
again."
Na~hviiJe:r,fiTenn . , was InAnna said there are a lot of
trl)duce&lt;l:-to GJillipolis.
women drivll'!g rigs now, but
'J'he. ~year old divorcee tll8t most of them work In
IT'S A BIG STEP_ Anna U:ldlford ·
GMC r!l · .drl~_lli!" foi- Ugon, using a rig
partnership
with · their
visiter,! GaWpolis early Wednesday ·
·
After ;~~~c- ~,.lYhich belongs to her father. He husbands. In the year·she has
cesafull).' swinging the 46,000 pound rtg ,-ith its 211 top.,l9ad11( taught he; to _dr~ve and owns a
been on·the roa~ $&lt;: has seen
paper irito the docli: l!t Ohio Valley Publishing . - poeed for Oeet .of ~ b1g trucks.,Anna's
only one other gll'lliriving solo.
one of the pictures her mother cl!n't belle\'~~ver taken. rig ~e1ghs 46,000 pounds
It doesn't bother her very .
Driving l.s in th!! famlly and Anna saysher,mCit!ler doean't see. ell!p~•.-Loaded, 1t's a different
m~ch.
It a5 a novelty.
·•'
~ and wh1le steel Is the
People are usually real nice

Open Friday and Saturday Until 8 P.M.

.BAKER FURNITURE

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Elberfelds In Pomeroy

SAVE ON TV's AND
STEREOS NOW

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in Briefs

KIDS LOVE MAYOR
NEW YORK (UP! )- Mayor
Abe Beame took a walking tow! ontii Hil•d from page 1
of Brooklyn Thw-sday, in the supporting the Natw-al Remidst of hundreds of trick-or- sources Director wbo has been
treaters. At one point Beame widely quoted as saying the
was surrounded by a group of state would be better off
youngsters in Halloween garb without a gas or coal industry.
~clamorin~ for his autograph,
In the race for the U.S.
prompting a lady to tell the Senate seat currently held by
mayor, " the kids love you."
lame duck Sen. Howard M.
"They're
my
size,'' Metzenbawn, IU&gt;hio, Republiresponded the five-foot one- can candidate Ralph J. Perk
loch mayor.
attacked a poll printed by. his
PAPER STRUCK
hometown newspaper, the
CLEVELAND
(UP!) - The
Cleveland Plain Dealer, which
Cleveland
Chapter
of the
indicated
Democratic
OLIVIER IS ILL ·
Newspaper
Guild
tOday
struck
7037P
BRIGHTON, England (UP!) nominee, John Glenn, would the Plain Dealer, Ohio's
- Actor -director Lord Olivier, win by a wide margin.
Perk's campaing manager, largest newspaper , after
director of Britain's National
rejecting the morning paper's
Theater, has been hospitalized Rrobert T. Bennett, said the latest contract offer. Guild
for the past two weeks suf- po11 " consisted of 600 in- members set up picket lines at
fering from muscular in- terviews across the state, 14 the newspaper at 6 a.m. EST,
flammation, the Sussex per cent of which were from six' bow-s after the old pact be·
Hospital said Thursday. Cuyahoga CoWJty."
"That would be 84 people tween the Guild and the news·
17" (dlag. meas.) Super-Solarcolor TV ·
Olivier, 67, was listed in "fair"
from the ·almost two million paper expired.
As modern as today in styling, as advanced as
condition.
people in the COWlty, hardly a
tomorrow in performance. Admiral Super-SolarBig savings on womens fur trimmed coats- womens
CONDITION SERIOUS
reasonable sample to deter.
color for purity in color, power and performance.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
blouses - womens pants - misses blue denim western
mine Mayor Perk's true
Carrying handle for convenience in carrying
COLORfUL .
jackets. Luggage on sale.
support in the area," Bennett son of Pittsburgh Pirates
from room to room . Wa lnut grained finish on
President
Dan
Galbreath,
polystyrene.
·
said .
Glenn, ·on the other hand, Squire Galbreath, 14, remained
Boys slacks and Fashion jeans V2 price sale- mens
Rolla bout Stand Inc I uded
apparently enjoying his report- in serious condition today at a "
and boys winter iackets - mens $9.00 to $12.00 shirts for
ed wide lead in the race, went local hospital following brairi
The
boy
was
admitted
surgery.
$6.99- Western jeans for men. Sale Qric.e!i on mens ties
to a Polish picnic Thursday.
Glenn attended a backyard Sunday to Riverside Methodist
-and special sale prices on Tonka Toys at the Toy Store.
lunch at the borne of Mrs. Anna Hospital after complaining of a
From
Up
Tomaszel&lt;, . 80, and her son, severe headache following a
Walter, on Cleveland's east bike ride near his home here .
Shop Friday and Saturday Nights Till 8 P.M.
side.
59 N. Second St.
Included on the menu were
REVfV AL BEGINS
IN MIDDLEPORT .
Middleport, o.
kielbasa, homemade Polish
DEXTER - A week's
soup, pork chops, mashed revival will begin Sunday, Nov.
potatoes, sauerkraut, string 3 at the Old Dexter Chw-ch.
beans, fresh tomatoes and Services will be at 7:30 p.m.
Polish apple cake.
· Everyone is welcome to attend.
Call No. 491
CharterNo.191W
National Bank Region No.4
The former astronaut spoke
briefly following the dinner to
REPORT OF CONDriiON, CONSOLIDATING
about 200 children at St.
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES, OF THE
Hyacinth's School and at the
Alliance of Poles' headquarters.
State Auditor Joseph T.
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Ferguson denied Thursday
of Pomeroy in tbe Station of Ohio, at the close of business on October 15 1974
charges by Republican candipabllshed in response to call made by Comptroller of the currency under''rille
12, United States Code, Seelion 161.
.
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date for state auditor, Roger
W. Tracy, that there has been
oo audit of the state WeUare
ASSETS
MEN'S Sizes 35 to SO
· Department in three and oneCash and due from hanks - - -. • - - - • . - - • . . . • . • • $ 1,556,841. 79
half
years.
U.S. Treasw-y secw-ities • · • - - ••. - - - - - • 3 0391160.57
Obligations of other U.S. Government
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"H, as he ignorantly clalms,
agencies and corporations : - • . • • . • . 1.56,028.50
the Auditor's office has not
REDUCED
audited the WeUare DepartObligation ~ of States and political subdivisions - • - . - - - -. 2,250,104.66
20%
20%
ment in the last three and•one~
Other securities - - - - - , - - - • - • - - - • . . • • • 37,742.50
. '
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
half years, how is it that my
1 RACK LADIES'
under ab'l'eements to resell - - . . . - .
• . • •
exan\lners have ref,used to
6,575,000.00
MEN'S
.
approve payment of over $9
.L oans-·-····· ·· - - · · · · · · · · 7,771,163.07
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
million in welfare bills?"
REDUCED .
REDUCED
.· ·.
.~
other assets representing bank premises - - • .
Ferguson asked.
• 288,983.82
Kmts
·
/(,
By Lady Manhattan.
V
Other assets . . . • . - • . . . • . . .
· Ferguson, whose SQll Tom is
- . 6,531.98
TOTAL ASSETS • • • · - - - • . . . opposing Tracy in Tuesday's
$21,681,456.89
~~~~~==~;; ~~~~~~~~
s~i:ze:s~35~to~5o~. .
election,
said Tracy's charges.
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
show the GOP candidate was
MEN'S
REDUCED ·
and corporations • • - - - - • - - . • . . . . .
"totally
ignorant
of
the
opera·
$4,822,162.61
lions of both the state auditor's
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
COLORED
3
REDUCED
office
and the state Welfare
partnerships, and corporations - - - . • - • • • . • ~ 12,462,864.87
Department."
Deposits of United States Government • - • - - . . - . • • 58,1160.19
.
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Tracy, meanwhile, said
Deposits of States and political subdivisions - ••• - •• - • • · 2,321,366.1W
Certified and officers' checks, etc. - • . . - • • • • • • - - 36,374.09
refusal to release an audit of
MEN'S
Warren Public Scbools so the
TOTAL DEPOSITS - - - - • • - • - $19,700,828.56
Long Sleeve Pullover
voters~ can have the facts
(a) Total demand deposits - •• - • • $ 6,2!6,799.45
before Tuesday amounts to
(b) Total'time and savings deposits • • •• - $13,484 029,11
REDUCED
Other liabilities • - • • . • - - . • - - • • • . • • 231,68Q,__66
misfeasance of office on tiJe
DRESSESREDUCED30% Turtl&lt;&gt;. Crew Neck and
part . of Auditor Joseph
TOTAL UABIUTIES · - - • • - " • • - • - • - • $19,932,515.42
Ferguson.
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
· Tracy said the voters in a
Reserve for. bad debt losses on loans
.. .
·school district . "absolutely·
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) . . - • ' • • - . • . • • - 91,207.82
have a right to know where
TOTAL RESERVES 01)1 LOANS,AND SECURITIES . • •
• $91,207.82
. CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
!heir l!chools $nd financially'
REDUCED20%
Equity capital-total • - - • . • •
and whether or not the schools
- $1,657,733;65
R.EDUC!D
Leather, Nylons
Col)Uilon Stock-total par value • . • . - • ·
have the flindl to ke!!P their
. 200,000.00
Wools,
,
No. shares authorized 8,000
doors open." .
No. shares outstanding 8,000
Tracy llllid he agreed the
l LOT MEN'S
auditor llliould put a mor!torl·
Surplus -- . · · ·- • • ·- · - - · - - - • •• -. •• - 1000000.00
PERMANENT PRESS
·urn on politically motivated
· Undivided profits • • - • - • . . • - - - , ••.'457;733;65
VALUES
audits a month before the .
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
. $1,657,733.116
TO
$14.00
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
electloli, "But I think that
NOW
refusal to ,report to the people
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS - - •
$21,681~456.89
on the financial status of their
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar
sChool districts is a major
days ending with call date . • • - . • •
exception and should be
$19,793,211.25
remedied today by Auditor
Average of total •loans' for the 15 calendar
, days ending with call date • . • . . ••
Ferguson."
,
$ ,7,740,459.32

,~ ..'·'·;:;.•.-;s•;o~~······~·~~x...
·····"··~
· •.•,.,.,,., ....•.·::-~·
· ''·:·:::::&lt;'&gt;~::::;:::::--m.
;:: ..Chit i.i.IY T . .i r;;;;;;; ; ; ;m

T;he lady~ ~ the ·rig

the progress we are, there's no
reason to haw a third party· in

Farmer said that both sides
had exchanged revisions of
proposals on Wednesday and
subcommittees still were
meeting on the unresolved
issues of benefits, surface
mining problems and . wage
classifications.
He said thafthe cost of livtng
proposal
by the union W!lS one
agreement. ''
of
those
items
which may be
Asked if the negotiators
might also seek the help of unresolved unUI the last day.

News.

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federal mediators, Farmer

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rwc&gt; PERSoNS WERE JN.niJum

~~e ~:::n~ ~:::

;::roth:
. County Friday afternoon.

Pilot, daugh,ter hurt all
I
h
m sm ' p ane eras
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POMEROY- A pilot of a small single
engine plane and his daughter were Iii•
jured _ neither apparently seriously when tbe plane crashed near here on
Cherry JUdge, Township Road&lt;247; Frlday
afternoon.
,
OaDitM'Ia
·
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach said the
Mn.llaat.la iD Ualvetalty Hoapltal,
accident occurred at about 2:30p.m. when
.Colatil
. ArM, wbere abe · '"
•- ...,_.
="'=lo"'~
.... · the single engine plane, piloted by John
~ Wi'!li· Voluateen wlaldai lo
Hansen', 54, of Fort Lauderdale, Fla.,
cloaale lllled abould Coataet Red er.acoompanl'ed by his daughter, Chris, 23,
OftHn'l nt Rober Medical "-·r
Gaillp6.
~- Ia
also of Fort Laooerdale, attempted'to land
on Hansen's farm on Cherry· Ridge,
· Bedford Township. Hansen told Sheriff
Hartenbach he misjudged his ppproach
and his plane crossed Township Road 247
TllltFrSREPORTED
~ 1111d hit an embankment.
·GAU.li'OLIS - Gallia sheriff's
Hansen bacl:'a severe cut on his right
deputies Friday Investigated a brealdng · wrist and his daUghter suffered bruises
and ea~~er~a&amp; at the home of Ethel Hill on ancl taeeratlons. They were taken to
·LoWer Rlv.- Rd. .Someone stole a coal ·veterans Memorial Hospl·tal by• the
_. heater, clotba,'.groceries, tWo rugs .and., PO!lltroy Emergency Squad.
lt!'o woolllllnlllta. Bob Keyser .of Kerr also
· Doral Hili, Pomeroy Route 3, a neighreported the lbeft of a fl'ont door taken off bor, who obaerved the era$, ~ailed the
.a
~let parked ~t his home. . . . . . sheriff'• ottp and the 'Pomeroy Squad.
URGENT APPEAL
GAlLIPOLIS - Aa lll'ICDt appeal
for
of A·Neptlve type blood
wu .... S.IIIrdaybyrelallvelofMn.
"*- ~ of UU Eutem Ave.,

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· The Federal Aviation Authortliei were
notified Immediately and periillssion
obtained to mwe the plane.
.·
llansenadvisedSheriffHartenbeehbe
had been DYing since he was II. Ha1u1en
was :reated. and relealied at the hospital. ·
· Miss Hansen was admitted for further
treatment.
WANT)'IIIEUTO~UIT

SAIGON (UP!) - ' Demands for
President Nguyen Van Thieu•a reolgllaUon ·
picked up · 11101nentwn Saturday Wi1h a
petition dri)le in both houses or the South
Vietnamese Nation&amp;! Assembly,

TREATIES SOUGHT
,
MADRID (UPI)- U. &amp;, ~at- '
large Rob!ri McCioili:ey arriVed Satarday .~
ontbeflntlegoran~atorymisa!Oilto ;
secure renewal · of treaties grantin«. tbe , ..
Unlleji 'Statea the ~ or mllltary b8lea ill ~
,spain and In ~ ~- ·

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�2- Thr Sunbay Tinws. St&gt;nlinel, Sunday, Nuv . :1. lHJ ~

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3 - The sunday times -Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 3, 1974

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PemJ.y Fare ·

Jq.dge Calhoun .
IS stopping

First champions
honored ·at g~e
'

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Judge Calhoun, 42, his wife stand by them. There may be
Merl~ine arid daughter reside tiines when his decisions ~
in McGuire SubdiviSion on Rt. be unpopular with the people\){ .
141. His oldest son is now a the county, but as I have said
junior in college. Mrs. Calhoun before. I believe it is the
is ·a teacher · at Washington judge's duty to make honest
and fair decision:; and to
Elemeniary SchooI.
' Judge Calhoun, who moved operate his court in an irn·
·
to Gallia Courity with his partial manner.
Judge Calhoun feels being a
family more than six years
ago, has two degrees from the judge is not only a position, but
Ohio State University, a a resporu;ibility and a trust for
Bachelor of Science in the people of the county, a
Business Administration and a position wherein the man
Juris Doctor Degree from the holding office should endeavor
College of Law. He was ad- in his personal life to do that
mitted to the practice of law in which upholds the office; the
19~.
responsibility to follow the law
Prior to assuming duties in his decisions and fairly
here, he served as secretary of consider the evidence and a
the Onio Boarit.of Tax Appeals, trust to be faithful to the people
was counsel for the Columbus of the county."
Bar Association, trial counsel
Judge Calhoun is a member
for the Pioneer lruJurance Co., of the Gallipolis Lions Club
and was legislative consultant (and a past president of that
for the Ohio Education organization) and is a member
Association.
of the Luther il. Turner Lodge
During the Korean cOnflict, No. 732; West Gate Chapter,
he served as an aidman in the No. 216; West Gate Council,
u.s. Army.
No. 121; Columbus ComCallioun is proud of his first mandery No . 69; Aladdin
term as Gallia County Com- Temple, Gallipolis Shrine
mon Pleas Court Judge. He has Club; American Legion;
received six awards for Gallipolis Elks; Gallia County
judicial service since 1958.
Conservation Society; Gailia
Said Calhoun : "I am vitally County Community
Iminterested in arriving at fair provement Corporation;
and just decisions, and it is my Gallipolis Golf Club; Ohio State
firm belief a judge should give Bar Association; American
careful consideration to any Bar Association; National
matter before he makes a Association of Bar Council;
decision.
Ohio
Gun
Colleclora
."1 am just as firmly con- Association; a past member of
vinced that when a man ac- the
Columbus
,Jaycees,
cepts the responsibilities of Columbus Ski Club and a
judge that he must nlake his graduate of the National
own decisions and he must College of State Trial Judges.

Atty. Bennett

PmSBURGH
Effective
Monday, November 4, Penny
Fare Markets will not Increase
the price of any item that has
been previously price-marked.
This ex~ludes all items
regulated by law.
When it becomes necessary
to increase prices on new stock
the higher priced iterru; will be
stocked at the back of the shelf
and the product already pricemarked will be moved to the
front and remain for sale at the
lower price, a Penny Fare
spokesman said.
The only exception to this
policy will be sale iterru; that
will be returned to regular
price at the conclusion of the
sale period.
When items are reduced in
price que to lower costs, ail
higher priced merchandise on
the shelf will be changed to the
new lower price.

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Redmen harriers 4-1

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Prosecution hits delays from ·big oU

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try's energy probelms by
smothering competlton In the
development of · gasoline
refineries.
Friday the lawyers filed
papers with the colll!DisSion
asking that ground rules for
taking . .depositions
REDS ~!DING HIGH
questioning the firms ·- be
MOSCOW (UP!) - Premier
changed to tleip theiri learn the
Alexei
N. ~osygin said today
facts. They S!lid the present
ihe Western world is gripped
by ·economic and political
,,
crisis but the· Soviet Union has
'
·. · enteri!d a new high ·stage of
development. · Kosygin

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up~idto'educatton,insttiutea

vanety of health service
programs, rewrite the public
schOol subsidy formula,
liberalize
benefits
for
organized labor and weight.
It is Rhodes' Idea that if
industry prospers and everybody has .a job, and a school
.,nearby, and a park to go to and
: a highway to get there, thtngs
· will pretty much take care of
themselves and . goveriunent
should stay the devil out of the
way.
It is Gilligan's idea that
. government must appeal to
higher human instincts and
ch~llenge i&gt;eople to help their
fellowmen. It must spend
money, plen~y if necessary, in
trying to build a better quality
of life, especially for those who
wouldn't have it otherwise.
Gilligan believes if people
don't agr"!! with him, they'll
throw him out. By Wednesday
morning, we'll know which
road Ohioans have chosen.

, Veterans.Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
· Davina
·Mathews, . Pomeroy; Esther
.
K tssell,
Middleport; Jennie
Newmyer, ., Wilkesville; Cora
ClBrl Racine; Terry Williams,
··Racine; 1 Steve
Eblin,
Pomeroy ; Christy Hensen,
Fort Lauderdale;
Edith
Heines, Pomeroy; Otillia
Mull
ins, Cheshire.
DISCHARGED Doris
H
U da w · ht H IIi
aynes, n
rtg • Y a
Eblin, Salem Yates, Frances
Hewetson, . Dallas Edwards,
Dorset Miller, . Augu. s, tin~
rules allow the companies to
challenge each attempt to Foiirod, Lonnie Taylor, Gladys
.
obtain information and would Knotts.
result in the qliestioning taking
•.
10 years.

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Continued from page 1
race is a classic confrontation
of two sharply contcasting
candidates, poles apart on the
issues and even on what the
Bernard Tilley, improving real issues are.
·
each week and holding the No.
The choice seems cJear .
1 position on the team, placed Either the voters want Ohio to
second with a 27:02 time . Dan go hack to what it was prior .to
Maloney of Kettering as first 1970 with low taxes, reduced
with 26 :56. Other Riod runners services, lots of highway
under 28 minutes were Chuck cOnstruCtion and factory opeSchoeppner (27 : 13 ); Bruce nings, or they want increased
Melton,
( 27 :37 ) ;
Stacy taxes, more government pro.
Osborne, (27 :45); and Greg grams and bureaucracy, improved hwnan services and
Baldwin, (27:55 ).
The course record at Walsh more money for schools.
Naturally, the clock can't be
College was broken by four Rio
Grande runners Tuesday. turned all the way back. For
Bruce Melton and Bernard example, the income tax is
Tilley both registered a win- here to stay and so is the $5
ning time of 26 :34 as the first billion annual expenditure of
five places were taken by the money. Gilligan saw to that
Rio Grande team. Greg . during the last four years.
But Rhodes has threatened to
Baldwin placed third (26 :43),
followed by Chuck Schoeppner slice some of the 9,000 em(26 :47 ), and Stacy Osborne ployes Gilligan has added to
the state payroll, especially
(26 :58 ).
The Redmen travel to public relations people; cut
Malone for the League meet down the Environmental ProSaturday and then prepare tection Agency; step uphighnext week for the District No . way and bridge building; and
redirect money from welfare
22 meet at Cedarville.
prqgrams to education.
..
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Hmtinglitn Twp.
. Coiltlnued from page I
Residents of Raccoon Twp. ;\Viii ·also
Primary last ·May. lnctunbent auditor
Morton L. Dickey. is retifing at the end of decide four local option questions perthesy""'.
. 'taining to tile sale or liquor and a one mill
Another interesting blittie will lle.the levy is sought in Clay Twp. for fire
..
Galiia Coun~ Commissioners' race be· protection .'
. In·.addition b) the local races, Gallians
tween l;!epublican John Belville. and
Demricrat Willilup Walters. Belville edged will help deCide the outcome of the ·
inCIIIIibent commissioner Denver Walker Governor's rac;e between incwnbent John'.
by just two .vo!ei i\1 the May Primar)l'. J. Gilligan and former Governor James A.
·
··
Belville is farmer and re8ides on Rt. I, · Rhodes.
Oiher
contests
with
mait.r
emphasis
Cro.im a!Y· 'alters, 't painter, lives. in

'

Voting .

"Well It's One F?roduction ·Line &gt;lhat's Moving!" ··

or:

I

Chapman, Joyce Hutcllison, Jo Chafin, Babs Witte, Vickie Brauer, Barb
Fultz, and Marcelia Charles; third row, Ovid Moore, Ken Hoffman, Kim
Browning, Ric Couch, Faye Riebel, Teresa Bur.chett and Joy White. Director
of the band is Dwight Goins and Fred Ruth is the assistant. Senior band
member that was absent was Terri Bumgardner who was ill.

SENIOR BAND MEMBERS HONORED - Meigs High School senior
band members honored Friday night at pre-game ceremonies at the MeigsJackson game. Members honored were, front row, l:C, Debbie Priddy,
Barbara Price, Sharon Bing, Ann Colwell, Cindi Garnes, Debbie
McLaughlin, Carol Lewis and Linda uerarn; second row, Judy Owen, Jenny

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College harriers finished their
season with a 4-1 dual meet
record, after defeating the
Kettering Striders 16-23 last
Saturday, and sweeping · the
Walsh meet Tuesday, 11;.46,
Well-pleased with both team
performances, Coach Rod
O'Donnell said aubut the
Redmen out·running the in·
dependent Dayton Group , "It
was a good experience ior ,
team members to run against
runners with such good
backgrounds." For the first
time in Rio Grande's cross·
country history, five (RGC )
runners ran under 28 minutes.
However, with onl y four
Kettering participants, Rio
Grande counted their first four
runners across the line for the
score. A good crowd was on
hand for the . second and last
home meet for Rio Grande,
with Parents' Weekend in full
swing by Saturday afternoon.

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SuDdaJ

SUO

SUilSCII1PI'JON RATES

'rbe G.alipolll Tribane in Ol!.io lftd

because of the strict speed
limit enforcement. Although
she doesn't have a CB radio
now, she's going to get one. Her
.father, like many other
company men , doesn ' t like
tickets . She likes to run about
70 with the 'loaded rig and says
that the best l!r!,ying ip ,at nigh't
when the road is 'e"lpty.
There is uncertainty in the
life of any trucker and to
combat it Anna has "taken up
,o igarettes. She carries ~j,tlt her
a little blue book of 'phqne
numbers that she rings when
she arrives at her destination
to find out )"here she 's goin~
next. Sfie stm·- didn ' t know'
where she was bound for when
the rig was unloaded Wednesday, so decided to go have
breakfast befor.e trying her
dispatcher again.
Anna's few trips to Ohio
(she'salready been all over the
country in her occupation )
have mostly been Cleveland.
She drives a lot of interstate
highways and was confused by
Gallipolis. "When I looked at it
on the map, I couldn't figure
ollt ~ow to. get here" .
W~~n she's not driving , Anna
spendshertimeatherparents'
home in Chapman.sboro, Tenn.,
with her four year old son. She
has no specific hobbies, admilling that after getting off ·
the road the nicest thing is to be
able to sit down and rest.
Bur the truck is comfortable,
she insists, equipped with air
conditioning and
power
steering and the like. She says
she only uses the clutch to start

SEOEMS
has charter

:·

"f;. .......

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r:

ONE WEEK
TONIGHTTHRU
TUESDAY

- ~·

honored prior to Friday•s
Gallipolis-Wellstoil 'football
game be!\ft a Parents Night
crowd of appi'~tely 3,000.
Thirteeri·members Or the ~
man squad, coached by Ralph
Raach, were on h8nd for the
event, l)eld in connection with
the 50$ . aril)lversary of the
foundit\g of tile' SEOAL in ·1925.
The 1928 Gqideri . Rockels
compiled a 6-1-1 season record,
1 including a IHI victory over the
Blue
Devils,
: Gallipolis
,t')iday's Golden Rocket opponents.
· .~
Halftime ceremonies
fe~tured two sparidlilg band
sh"!!'S by the Gailipolia and
Well(lton musicians.
.

. ,..,

residence following an

e)( ·

!ended Ill ness .
·
· ·Mr. Wood ,was born· Oc!. 18,
19011n Meigs Coun!y !o the, la!e
James and Doris Pearl Baker

Wood. and morrled Doris
Edmls!on of Vln!on In 1928. His ·
Wifesurvlves,along With a sOn,

Jimmy Lee '(iood of Wells!on.
two

ffrandsor\s,

one

'

I

., .

•.

,

COME IN AND SEE OUR WALL OF IDEAS AT

Peddler's Pantry
Street - -----Gallipolis,

·------------·-----------·----~

THE
UNIFORM CENTER

ROBES

to

zn

Nylon Crepe, Brushed Nylon, Fleece Poodle
Curl, Flannel and Quilt

Come Look At These"

. BRCMN. BUJE AND Rm
REG. VALUE
'15.99
,lf&gt; '

Blue

Green

Spice
Teal
Pink
Patchwork
Small. Medium, Large and Extra sizes too.
Royal

*

(PGJ

''STOP IN AND SEE OUR
SWEAT SHIRT ROBE"

BETTER FCJOrWEAR

At

i

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

OPEN SUNDAY 1 TIL 5

SILVER BRIDGE PUlA

/

and consequenUy · receives a

kind of apecial treatment.
Drivers of other Bowater
••
rigs arriving in Gallipolis have ·•
had to cajole and sweat their ~
way through the unloading , ·,
process with minimal help ' ·
while the l,lioo pound roils
come,off the trucks. Not Anna.
,
.
The entire crew was on hand to
unlQad her rig while she sat,
quietly smoking a cigarette,
and
seeking
h~r
new

THE EMPIRE'S

.
~.- '~·

·~

""~
;-. ~

~'"~ ~

.
. .
. ....
THE. AREA'S LARGEST
SELECTION OF

..!

destination .

'

.

Leifheit, 72, Pomeroy, Rt. 2,

HIDE-A-BEDS
COMPANY
STARTING AT

STARTING AT

i'

''•

:I•
~

~'

I'

FOR ALL YOUR HOLIDAY

SOFA &amp;CHAIR

:
11

Howell.

•29995
SJRATOI.OUNGER
DINING.ROOM BASSETT &amp; LANE
.FiJ'RN·ITURE' RECLINERS
eBIG
SAVINGS

..
r

.''

SALES NOTED
GALLIPOLIS - September
1974 sales of Series · E &amp; H
I
United States Savings Bonds in
Ohio were $34.1 million. At the
end or' September, the State
attained 76.8 percent of \Is 1974 --~: 1
sales goal. C: Leon Saunders,
Gajlia County Volunteer
·Savings · Bonds Chairman,
reported September sales of
Savings Bonds in the county
were $14,379. The ' county
achieved 67.2 percent of its
annual sales goal September
30.

FRENCA,

'

.

SPANISH,

. CONTEMPORARY

-·

•
•

Silper-capacily
5-cycle washer

.

• Washes up lo 18 lbs.
of heavy garmenls
• MAGIC CLEAN• sell-cleaning
filter•
• 5 automatic cycles: NORMAL,
GENTLE, PERMANENT PRESS,
SUPER WASH and KNIT
• Cool-down care lor Permanent
Press and Knit garments
• Variable load-size water-level'
selector
• 5 pushbullon wash/rinse water

$8995
I.AY-AW~Y

MCM fOR ·

temps

GIFTS

.

grand·

ISSUE REMINDER
GALLIPOLIS ....: .Gailia
A.cademy HighSchool stude·nts
''
wh,o ordered Gailian yearbooks
Thursday were reminded
&lt;~ttorday that' they must pay .
""'
for the ~nuals on Tue.Sdity. •
Yearbook nioiley will be !
collected iti each' .liorberoom.
. ··
·
.S!ud.e nts . who are abs·e nt e '
l'uel!lay will , be expe(:ted to c •
turn theil' monell i.n W
, ed' ~
17
. nesday.
'

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.'eGIGANTIC.
·.-SAVINGS

•
• •
,I
\.

,

•

•••
••e

'HI-performance
S·temp dryer ,
LAE 7880
• A new drying drum- the largest
we've ever offered
• Our largest tumbling area and
greatest air volume tor more
elficient drying
• 5 drying temps include: HEAVY,
PERMANENT PRESS, KNITS,
DEUCA TE and FLUFF for drying
wilhout Ileal
• Custom Dry control shuts dryer
off when clothes reach
pre-seiected dryness
• Cool-down care for Permanent
Press fabrics
• End-of-cycle buzzer
• Full-width hamper door for easy
loading
• Convenient drying iack
• Interior light

:·•:11:•·_;·~-------~~~

accumulati On could clog the laundry
:":'

.aJRIO ..

lAMPS &amp; OCCASIONAL TABLES·
.

''

••
•
••

'Note: 11 your was her drams 1nto 8 lau~ r;try tub ,
periodlclilly check the dra in stra iner. , ,nee lint

HOM.E

•

•••
•

• Bleach and Iabrie soflener
•
dispensers
• 2 wash speeds and spin speeds
•
•
• Buill-in pump guard

FOR .THE

1HE AREA'S lARGEST SFI EcnON
Of

••
••
••
•

LAA 7880

'fROM,

eEARLY AMERICAN,

t

.t .

SIMMONS '&amp; BASSETr

~

••'

Mrs. Leifheit was preceded
in death by her" parents •. Dana
and Matilda Huggins Howell . 'r
One daughter. Thelma Virginia "
Leifheit and one sister, Thelma

!

I

LIVING ROOM
'FU.RNITURE

•
1•
.-

LILLIAN LEIFHEIT
ROMEROY ,
Lillian

:'!

. JAMES A'. WOOD .
VINTON -James A. Wood,
73, of Wilkesville, .passed away
Friday evening at
his

lI

CHRISTMAS
GIFTS

Red

MON. THRU THURS.
NOV. 4-7
NOT OPEN

'She is survived by her
husband, VIctor, four sons.
Frank of Maraloma, C... III.;
Edwin, Grove City; Wilbur of
~
Racine
and _Russell
of ...-..
Pomeroy, Rt . 2; two sisters,
.. ~
Irene Bun toff, Barberton, acd
i
Hattie Stewart, Columbus -;
,.
Mrs .. Inez Roger Camden, eight grandchildren and three "" ,
Point Pleasan!; one daugh!er. grea! . grandchildren and &gt;. ~
Retha
Camden,
Point several nieces. and nephews. • : .-,
Pleasant ; two sons, Charles,
Funeral services will be held : r
Point Plea san!, and . David . . Monday at 2. p.m . at Ewing ~ i;
Harden, Mon!ana; four sls!ers. funeral Home.Burial will be In
~
Mrs ; lrlez Gleason, Mrs . Beech
Grove
Cemetery, • • "'
V irginia Blankenship, Mrs . Friends may call at f!le funeral ~~ r
Violet Farley Md Pauline home at ar,.y .time.
'
~

Camden. a ll of Poln! Pleasan!;
three bro!hers, Joe, Bidwell.
0.; James, Wllllams!own, w.
· Va., and Frank, Columbus, 0 .,
and four grandchildren.
Funer~l services will be
conduc!ed Monday a! 1:30 p .m.
from !he Wilcoxen Funeral
Home with !he Rev. Paul E.
Jarrell officiating. Burial will
be in Sun crest Cel)le!ery, Poll\!
. Pleasant Graveside riles will
be conducted by !he American
Legion Pos! 23. Vlsl!atlon
hours will be a! !he funeral
home atler 6 P·m· Sunday.

MAKE YOUR OWN

LADIES
BICYCLE
.
OXFORDS

s- Starts 7p.m.

died Friday a! !he Arcadia
Valley · Nu(slng Hol)1e.

He was born July e. 1896, a!

BOARD TO MEET
CHESHIRE - The GailiaMeigs Community Mtion
Agency Executive Board will
hold its regular monthly
meeting Thursday Nov. 7, at
7:30 p.m. at the Cheshire
Community Center. All board
members are urged to attend .

HAS

'''You'll Have

•

Ambrosia, a SD!1 of the late
Robert and Clara Brown
Camden. He was a member of
the Church of Christ, Veteran
WW 1; American Legion Post
23, Point Pleasant, and was aretired .emp loye of the former
Marietta
Manufacturing
Company after 40 years service.
Sur,vivors include his wife,

I

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Coloratrtoons:
Space Cowboy
Harpoon

Area Deaths I "••

p.m. in Pleasant
HOspital following an illness of
six years.

21 cases settled

SUNDAY
ONLY SPECIAL!
.
.

Tonight, Nov. 3
CONRACK .
( Technlcoior)
John Voight

r---- -- -------------------. .·'·'
•
CHARLES CAMDEN
PT. PLEASANT - Charles
Camden, 78, 2302 Monroe
Avenue, died Friday a! 11:55

(jullia

NAME OMIITED
Sherry
GALLIPOLIS Hill's name was omitted in
Friday's report on winners of
the
American
Legion's
Halloween costume contest.
She participated in the 1-7 age
division.

.

PO CLOSED DOWN
CLEVELAND ·. (UPI)
There waa no Saturday edition
of the '
Dealer today
~allse of a strike by Ute
Newspaper Guild, but a new
rotmd' of contract negotiations
was scheduled with a Judge
servillfas mediator.
·

MEIGS lHEATRE

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Instructors hav~ chance to requalify

musicians, in one of their finest
performances of· the 1974
season, received a good hand
for their efforts. The GAHS
band went· to Huntington
Saturday to take part in
halftime ceremonies of the
Marshall-Kent State grid game
at Fairfield Staditun.
Wellaton's 107.piece band,
under the direction of. ·Dane
Heitzman, dean of · SEOAL
band instructors, presepted an .
outstanding show. The Rocket ·
musicians, with the grid lights
turned off, staged . sev~ral
colooful maneuvers.

.

h,mghl

Coolville, $62.50, speeding;
Robert Raig'uel, ~dsville,
$25, disorderly · conduct;
Manoah Cameron, Zanesville
Ronald Gene W111s, Gallipolis,'
Thomas D. Hopkins, Jr .,
Belpre, Richard Lee Slack, Pt.
Pleasant, C. Michael Dunfee,
Southside, W. Va. and Steven
B. White, Athens, $27.50 each,
speeding; Howard T. Norris,
Racine, Rt. 2, $37.50, speeding;
Raymond J. Hupp, steuben·
ville, $350, driving while intoxicated.
NOW YOU KNOW
· The first police department
to use fingerprinting was that
.or St. Louis, Mo. on Oct. 28,
1904.

a

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GALLIPOI.IS · - According
POMEROY
- ' · Eight Wilson, Pomeroy, $25 and
to the Titlo! Division of the defendants were fined and 13 costs, three months probation,
Gailia County Clerk of Courts · otl!ers forfeited bonds in Meigs resisting arrest, $15 and costs,
Office, 86 · new cars were . County Court Friday.
disorderly conduct; William
COLUMBUS - SeCreta;; of
purchased in the.county during
Fi~ed by Judge Frank w. Eakins, Racirie, Rt . 2, $10 and
Sta~ Ted W. Brown announced .
. the month of October. •
: ~rtet were &lt;ltarles F . Mehi, C(ISts, _ failure to give signal
Saturda,Y'his office has, iasuec! a
, Dealers sWI 26 ilew trucks, · B&lt;alpre, $15 and costs, when passing.
charter to Southeast Ohio ·
. 116usedcars, 29used trucks, 20, speeding; ~jamin P . ffickel,
Forfeiting bonds were
Emergency Medical . Se~ces.
new trailers, · eight· used Ha~tford, $8 · and costs, Richard L. Stewart, Cheshire,
Inc. to operate as niln.profil
lcallers, seven .l)ew ·: motor- ,speeding; Carl A. Wilson , $22.50, unsafe vehicle; Charles
corporation iri Ohio. The .·.
cycles, live used motorcycles . Rutland, Richard .Lee Warn- R. Weekley, Guysville, $27.50,
p!;jncipal office ·of Ute corand · a motor home. Clerks siey, 'Racine Rt. 1 and Jerry unable to stop Within assured
poration will. be located ·in
, issued 1,163 titl~. made ~ · Sexton, Belpre, $10 and costs ~ lear distance; · Jennings
Gallipolis. . .
notati~n of liens, 297 can- each, speeding; Billy E.
The corporation was ·fm:med cellatton of lieJIII, 19 dupUcate Harless, Dexter, Rt. 1, t5 and Mollohan, Coolville, $350,
driving while intoxicated, $150,
"To own, ,o perate and maintain
. liUes. and one replacement.
costs, no brakes; Thomas hit skip; Frank Smeeks.
a comprehensive emer11eney
medical and ambulance ser;
vice inclnding but riot }imited
to components · of com"
munlcalion, teacue, .car.e. and
treatment, trana,Portatlon,
Participants in this program
RIO GRANDE- Rio Grande to 9 p.m. in Allen Hall, Room
invalid
tran.ter, • ad· College's Continuing 212, Rio Grande College.
must pre-register at the
ministration, training and Education Program will offer a
Anyone interested in taking College Admissions Office
staffing, community education course in requallfying First the 12 hours of certified before the first class meeting
and evaluation for . the benefit Aid Instructors B!lllctioned and classwork must already have a and the total cost per enrollee
Of the whole public 'In -and taught by Bill Mlller, Safety current authorized American is $3 plus any book costs which
around the counties of Athens,
Director of the American Red Red Cross instructor's cer- will be determined by the inGalila, Hocking, Jackson,
Cross-Columbus Area Chapter. Uflcate on any level except the structor. For further inLawrence, Meigs and Vinton,
formation, call Dr. George A.
Miller will hold cl•s- on Basic First Ald.
in Uti. State of Ohio ... "
Miller
will
also
accept
Wolfe, Director Health,
Thursday, November 7, 14, 21,
J. E. Farrington, 0. J. Loyd and Decerilber 5. Each class current authorized Emergency Physical Education, and
and E. H. Plummer, all of One will begin at 6 p.m. and extend Medical . Teehniclans ( EMT) Recreation, Rio Grande
Blue Line Avenue, Athens, 0.,
into the course. The American College.
45701 will serve the corporation
Red Cross has resiructured its
as trustees. Kenneth Morgan,
Richard Henry Lee and entire certificable programs
415 Vinton Pike, Gallipolis, has Francis Lightfoot' Lee were since Januarr. 1974; therefore,
been appointed to act as the only brothers to sign the currently, there exists a lack of
Statutory Agent.
Declaration of Independence. qualified instructors in south. eastern Ohio.

Director-~ Tolliver's GABS

,.

up and to back the rig, and :,.;~~l
there isn't any problem wittf
having sore legs from pushin~~;
it. The sh.ifting is done ac,.t.,
cording to revolutions per
·minute and doesn't disturb the
muscles of her arm either.
There are rewards to
trucking , Anna says, even
though it is often dangerous '''•
and was rather nerveracking&gt; •"'f
during the strikes earlier this~
year..
.-.:
" You learn a lot and you see~
a lot. Every day is new. But the "~
best thing is when a whole :1
carload of people goes around
you and everybody turns
around and looks back. They
simply can ' t believe they saw
tne up there by myself."
To become a trucker isn't as ··•
complicated as it has often
)leen made to sound, the lady
says, and reported that
requirements vafy from one
company t'o another. There is a
standard
entrance
examination, however, and
many companies require
drivers to be at least 25 •
because of insurance costs.
Anna adml ts to being a
novelty most places she goes

daugMer, and !hr.ee ~!ep- .
granddaughters.
Mr. Wood, a retired mer·
chan! In ' W!lf\es¥ille, w,;s 8 ;
member of the · Wilkesville
Pre•byterlan Church, of Qr.
phans Friend F and AM
Masonic Lodge. 275, and of !he
Ba1s'. Club of Ohio.
·.
Fune~al l &amp;ervlces- wlll be held
'.
' ' Monday at 2 p.m. at !he Me·
- -- -- - - -,.-- Coy.MoQre Funer.al Homewi!h
••
..
.
the Rev. '· Russell Woltz of·
nawau. A 1959 graduate ot .. flclatlng . Burial wjll be In the
Western ' ~Us High Sctlooi ·· Vl~!on . Memorial
Pa_rk.
anclnnati he joined the,.; ' Fnends may call Svn~ay a!the
· ·:r _ ·'
paW ·~ funeral home from 2-4 and 7.9 ·
m tme 1960. ·
Jl p.'m:
, .·
·

...

daiJI and
IDe
r«a"
per mq:Uil.
IIAJL

Lady in the rig

FIGHT FOR FREE
CHiCAGO
(UP!)
Muhammad 'Ali, basl\ing in a ·
hometown hero's welcom.e ,
said Friday he would .'defend
his world h~a~eight boxing
championship for tree if. his
prize money went toward a
Black l\'IUSiillJ hospital in
· Chicago. His offer cullnlnated ·
an elusive, day-long dance of
words. about his ' future plans ·.
,while he completed the long ·
trip home from .Tuesday
·night's victory . over George
Foreman in Zaire, Afrlcs..

renewed the sQviet.call for a
are the senatorial race of the
district, collective security. system in
the 92nd district representative's race an.d Asia to serve as the basis for. a
the lOth district congressm~n's race.
, constru.ctiv~ peace program.
Oakley C. Collins, Ironton Republican,
·"
is opposing Chillicothe Denu.~rat Grant..., . ' ,_ ON DESTROYER
McDonald for state seantor. ·
,..
.· " CHESTER-NavyGuilner's
. _ Youthful Ron James of Proc!drville, a Mate Second Class Dennis W.
Democrat, is challenging ve!era'l Ralph'- · Lyons, · son of Mr. and Mrs . .
Welker of Pomeroy for the pO,st of ~tate James c. Lyons has deployed
representative and H. Kent Bumpass, an · to the western Pacific aboard
Athens Democrat , opposes Republican Ute· USS Benj811)in Stoddert; ·a "
. mcumbent con gre ssman Clarence Ei. guided n\i~sile .. d~stronr
· Mtiier.
hon'leporlell' at Pe•ri Harbor'.
I
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COLUMBUS - William H.
Davis, acting director of . the
Ohio Department of Mental
Health and Mental Retar·Jation, today announced· the
appointment of Leonard
Inglese as distcict manager for
the Division of Mental
Retardation and Developmental Disabilities District 8,
effective Monday, November 4.
Inglese, 46, will supervise the
district office providing mental
retardation services to Atheru;,
Hocking, Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan, Noble, Perry and
Washington counties. The
office provides education
programming,
protective
services, information and
referral services and con.
ilultation to local agencies,
individuals, the mentally
relarded and developmentally
disabled and their families in
the 'a rea. It also provides preadmission and after care
services for Gallipolis State
Institute.

F. our cIose races .

Cll'r1lr
Molar

,._.,'

on year in dual meets

WASHINGTON (UP!) Federal Trade Commission
lawyers say their prosecution
of alleged antitrust violations
by the country's eight largest
oil companies has met so many
delays it has "ground to a
virtual halt."
Fifteen months ago the staff
lawyers accused the companies of adding to the coun-

-·

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District 8 has
new director

1

SUIIDAY nMES.sOOINB. ·

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WELLSTON - Wellston's .
(irst Southeastern Ohio League
championship football team,
the 1928 Golden Rockets, was

• •
re•pncmg

Attorney James A. Bennett is Gailia County Bar Assn.
the Republican candidate for
Mrs. Bennett is an · active
the office of Common Pleas member of AAUW, JWC and
Judge . He and his wife, has served as a Girl Scout
Kathryn and their two children leader. The Bennett children
live on a farm~n Raccoon Twp. are active in Scouting and 4-H.
Attorney Bennett grew up in All the Bennetts are members
rural Indiana and graduated of the Gailia County Riding
from Columbus High School in Club and the Gallia County
Columbus, Ind., in 19~. After Dramatic Arts Society, and
receiving his AB degree from were members of the cast of
Franklin College of Indiana in the Society's production of
1962 he entered law school. In "Gallia Country" . this past
1967 he was granted the degree summer.
of Juris Doctor by the Chase
Attorney sennett believes
law School of Cincinnati. He that his generril practice of law
was admltted to the practice of has prepared him the variety
law by the Supreme Court of of cases he would hear as
Ohio in October 1967.
Common Pleas "Judge. His
.TIH! Bennetlll were married former business experience
in 1962. · They 'moved to Cin- and his current clvll practice
climali in 1963 ·'where he have given him experience
coqipleted his law training and with the type of civil cases that
was employed. wbile attending come under the Court's
law,, school !IY Proctor and jurisdiction. His pooition as
· Gamble l!lld then b'y Osborne • assistant prosec11ting attorney
Kemper • Thoma, where he for' 31&gt; years gave him · exwa~ credit manager.
perience in the · handling of
E~rly in 1969 the Bennetts criminal cases.
beg.n to look for a community
At\Orney Bennett feels that
where they could make their his basic philosophy conpem'lanent home befor.e their cerning the separation of the
' chililren· entered school. After Court and the function of the
deciding to begilla·generai law judge varies greatly !rom that
practice, · Attorney Bennett of the incumbent. He believes
joined Hamlin King and that aa an elected public Of~
established' the law ,firm of ficial, a
judge should
Bennett and King, His wife, remember that the court
Kathryn, has taught the last should be operated for the
fpur years at Gallia Academy benefit and convenience of the •
High School.
citizens of Gallla County. The
The · Bennetts soon became judge of a court ahould have an
active and involved members attitude of cooperation with all
of ihe Gallia County Corn- clients and their attorneys who
come before the court.
munity. ·
They are members of' Grace
He believes that an attitu!ie
Unt'ted ' Methodist Church. that the Cout should be
Attorney Bennett has been a operated to "keep the lawyers
member of the Gallipolis Lions in line" actually impedes the
Club over five years and has orderly process of justice so
held ·the offices of secretary, that in the final analysis it is
3rd vice:president and 2rJd vice the public who suffers.
Attorney Bennett beli~ves
president. He was chairman of
the · District Convention that the current overall con.
·committee when the Gallipolis dltion 'of the . Common Pleas
Lions . hosted the district CQw't has been brought about '
convention in April 1974.
by judicial inaction which
He has twice been Chairman accounts for the increase in the
uie Gallla County March of . backiog of cases duri11g 1974 of
Dimes arid has participated in 28.5 plircent. Despite the fact .
many other · charitable fund that 20.9 percent of all cases
ratslng drives. He is preseotly pending ate now over one year
on the advisory committee of old, there have 'been only 21
Cub Scout pack 205. He · has contested , cases tried in the
been active in the Ga\lia Conurion Pleas Court in the
County Young Republicans and first nine months of 1974. He
. was .. president · · of that feels that the situation wlll .not
organization before resigning be improved until a judge is
tO beeome a judicial candidate. elected who takes the office
He is a member of the Ad, with a goal of public service.
visorY Corruriittee, Practical Attorney Bennett pledges that
Nursing School of Buckeye be will accept this obligation
Hills career Ce~!er . He . is required of a public servant
presently vice-clull1'llUUI of the and pledges eqll81 justice to
~Very citizen.

.f.

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H(, llt.~W UUIOM ·

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WPf\\CE

.
oUC10RY LO
S"~E\ \M1'R0 . .

fMINETS
~. eGUN. . ·
·' · CABINETS

. ...

S49~

CASES.

~-.

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�2- Thr Sunbay Tinws. St&gt;nlinel, Sunday, Nuv . :1. lHJ ~

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3 - The sunday times -Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 3, 1974

•••

·•..

PemJ.y Fare ·

Jq.dge Calhoun .
IS stopping

First champions
honored ·at g~e
'

'

Judge Calhoun, 42, his wife stand by them. There may be
Merl~ine arid daughter reside tiines when his decisions ~
in McGuire SubdiviSion on Rt. be unpopular with the people\){ .
141. His oldest son is now a the county, but as I have said
junior in college. Mrs. Calhoun before. I believe it is the
is ·a teacher · at Washington judge's duty to make honest
and fair decision:; and to
Elemeniary SchooI.
' Judge Calhoun, who moved operate his court in an irn·
·
to Gallia Courity with his partial manner.
Judge Calhoun feels being a
family more than six years
ago, has two degrees from the judge is not only a position, but
Ohio State University, a a resporu;ibility and a trust for
Bachelor of Science in the people of the county, a
Business Administration and a position wherein the man
Juris Doctor Degree from the holding office should endeavor
College of Law. He was ad- in his personal life to do that
mitted to the practice of law in which upholds the office; the
19~.
responsibility to follow the law
Prior to assuming duties in his decisions and fairly
here, he served as secretary of consider the evidence and a
the Onio Boarit.of Tax Appeals, trust to be faithful to the people
was counsel for the Columbus of the county."
Bar Association, trial counsel
Judge Calhoun is a member
for the Pioneer lruJurance Co., of the Gallipolis Lions Club
and was legislative consultant (and a past president of that
for the Ohio Education organization) and is a member
Association.
of the Luther il. Turner Lodge
During the Korean cOnflict, No. 732; West Gate Chapter,
he served as an aidman in the No. 216; West Gate Council,
u.s. Army.
No. 121; Columbus ComCallioun is proud of his first mandery No . 69; Aladdin
term as Gallia County Com- Temple, Gallipolis Shrine
mon Pleas Court Judge. He has Club; American Legion;
received six awards for Gallipolis Elks; Gallia County
judicial service since 1958.
Conservation Society; Gailia
Said Calhoun : "I am vitally County Community
Iminterested in arriving at fair provement Corporation;
and just decisions, and it is my Gallipolis Golf Club; Ohio State
firm belief a judge should give Bar Association; American
careful consideration to any Bar Association; National
matter before he makes a Association of Bar Council;
decision.
Ohio
Gun
Colleclora
."1 am just as firmly con- Association; a past member of
vinced that when a man ac- the
Columbus
,Jaycees,
cepts the responsibilities of Columbus Ski Club and a
judge that he must nlake his graduate of the National
own decisions and he must College of State Trial Judges.

Atty. Bennett

PmSBURGH
Effective
Monday, November 4, Penny
Fare Markets will not Increase
the price of any item that has
been previously price-marked.
This ex~ludes all items
regulated by law.
When it becomes necessary
to increase prices on new stock
the higher priced iterru; will be
stocked at the back of the shelf
and the product already pricemarked will be moved to the
front and remain for sale at the
lower price, a Penny Fare
spokesman said.
The only exception to this
policy will be sale iterru; that
will be returned to regular
price at the conclusion of the
sale period.
When items are reduced in
price que to lower costs, ail
higher priced merchandise on
the shelf will be changed to the
new lower price.

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Redmen harriers 4-1

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Prosecution hits delays from ·big oU

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try's energy probelms by
smothering competlton In the
development of · gasoline
refineries.
Friday the lawyers filed
papers with the colll!DisSion
asking that ground rules for
taking . .depositions
REDS ~!DING HIGH
questioning the firms ·- be
MOSCOW (UP!) - Premier
changed to tleip theiri learn the
Alexei
N. ~osygin said today
facts. They S!lid the present
ihe Western world is gripped
by ·economic and political
,,
crisis but the· Soviet Union has
'
·. · enteri!d a new high ·stage of
development. · Kosygin

.•, :, .

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up~idto'educatton,insttiutea

vanety of health service
programs, rewrite the public
schOol subsidy formula,
liberalize
benefits
for
organized labor and weight.
It is Rhodes' Idea that if
industry prospers and everybody has .a job, and a school
.,nearby, and a park to go to and
: a highway to get there, thtngs
· will pretty much take care of
themselves and . goveriunent
should stay the devil out of the
way.
It is Gilligan's idea that
. government must appeal to
higher human instincts and
ch~llenge i&gt;eople to help their
fellowmen. It must spend
money, plen~y if necessary, in
trying to build a better quality
of life, especially for those who
wouldn't have it otherwise.
Gilligan believes if people
don't agr"!! with him, they'll
throw him out. By Wednesday
morning, we'll know which
road Ohioans have chosen.

, Veterans.Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
· Davina
·Mathews, . Pomeroy; Esther
.
K tssell,
Middleport; Jennie
Newmyer, ., Wilkesville; Cora
ClBrl Racine; Terry Williams,
··Racine; 1 Steve
Eblin,
Pomeroy ; Christy Hensen,
Fort Lauderdale;
Edith
Heines, Pomeroy; Otillia
Mull
ins, Cheshire.
DISCHARGED Doris
H
U da w · ht H IIi
aynes, n
rtg • Y a
Eblin, Salem Yates, Frances
Hewetson, . Dallas Edwards,
Dorset Miller, . Augu. s, tin~
rules allow the companies to
challenge each attempt to Foiirod, Lonnie Taylor, Gladys
.
obtain information and would Knotts.
result in the qliestioning taking
•.
10 years.

.,.

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Continued from page 1
race is a classic confrontation
of two sharply contcasting
candidates, poles apart on the
issues and even on what the
Bernard Tilley, improving real issues are.
·
each week and holding the No.
The choice seems cJear .
1 position on the team, placed Either the voters want Ohio to
second with a 27:02 time . Dan go hack to what it was prior .to
Maloney of Kettering as first 1970 with low taxes, reduced
with 26 :56. Other Riod runners services, lots of highway
under 28 minutes were Chuck cOnstruCtion and factory opeSchoeppner (27 : 13 ); Bruce nings, or they want increased
Melton,
( 27 :37 ) ;
Stacy taxes, more government pro.
Osborne, (27 :45); and Greg grams and bureaucracy, improved hwnan services and
Baldwin, (27:55 ).
The course record at Walsh more money for schools.
Naturally, the clock can't be
College was broken by four Rio
Grande runners Tuesday. turned all the way back. For
Bruce Melton and Bernard example, the income tax is
Tilley both registered a win- here to stay and so is the $5
ning time of 26 :34 as the first billion annual expenditure of
five places were taken by the money. Gilligan saw to that
Rio Grande team. Greg . during the last four years.
But Rhodes has threatened to
Baldwin placed third (26 :43),
followed by Chuck Schoeppner slice some of the 9,000 em(26 :47 ), and Stacy Osborne ployes Gilligan has added to
the state payroll, especially
(26 :58 ).
The Redmen travel to public relations people; cut
Malone for the League meet down the Environmental ProSaturday and then prepare tection Agency; step uphighnext week for the District No . way and bridge building; and
redirect money from welfare
22 meet at Cedarville.
prqgrams to education.
..
..,,.. G~P )lfls Plllns, , within
,
..
_
11
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· existing tax structures, lo beef

•

·
·
Hmtinglitn Twp.
. Coiltlnued from page I
Residents of Raccoon Twp. ;\Viii ·also
Primary last ·May. lnctunbent auditor
Morton L. Dickey. is retifing at the end of decide four local option questions perthesy""'.
. 'taining to tile sale or liquor and a one mill
Another interesting blittie will lle.the levy is sought in Clay Twp. for fire
..
Galiia Coun~ Commissioners' race be· protection .'
. In·.addition b) the local races, Gallians
tween l;!epublican John Belville. and
Demricrat Willilup Walters. Belville edged will help deCide the outcome of the ·
inCIIIIibent commissioner Denver Walker Governor's rac;e between incwnbent John'.
by just two .vo!ei i\1 the May Primar)l'. J. Gilligan and former Governor James A.
·
··
Belville is farmer and re8ides on Rt. I, · Rhodes.
Oiher
contests
with
mait.r
emphasis
Cro.im a!Y· 'alters, 't painter, lives. in

'

Voting .

"Well It's One F?roduction ·Line &gt;lhat's Moving!" ··

or:

I

Chapman, Joyce Hutcllison, Jo Chafin, Babs Witte, Vickie Brauer, Barb
Fultz, and Marcelia Charles; third row, Ovid Moore, Ken Hoffman, Kim
Browning, Ric Couch, Faye Riebel, Teresa Bur.chett and Joy White. Director
of the band is Dwight Goins and Fred Ruth is the assistant. Senior band
member that was absent was Terri Bumgardner who was ill.

SENIOR BAND MEMBERS HONORED - Meigs High School senior
band members honored Friday night at pre-game ceremonies at the MeigsJackson game. Members honored were, front row, l:C, Debbie Priddy,
Barbara Price, Sharon Bing, Ann Colwell, Cindi Garnes, Debbie
McLaughlin, Carol Lewis and Linda uerarn; second row, Judy Owen, Jenny

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College harriers finished their
season with a 4-1 dual meet
record, after defeating the
Kettering Striders 16-23 last
Saturday, and sweeping · the
Walsh meet Tuesday, 11;.46,
Well-pleased with both team
performances, Coach Rod
O'Donnell said aubut the
Redmen out·running the in·
dependent Dayton Group , "It
was a good experience ior ,
team members to run against
runners with such good
backgrounds." For the first
time in Rio Grande's cross·
country history, five (RGC )
runners ran under 28 minutes.
However, with onl y four
Kettering participants, Rio
Grande counted their first four
runners across the line for the
score. A good crowd was on
hand for the . second and last
home meet for Rio Grande,
with Parents' Weekend in full
swing by Saturday afternoon.

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Continued from page I

SuDdaJ

SUO

SUilSCII1PI'JON RATES

'rbe G.alipolll Tribane in Ol!.io lftd

because of the strict speed
limit enforcement. Although
she doesn't have a CB radio
now, she's going to get one. Her
.father, like many other
company men , doesn ' t like
tickets . She likes to run about
70 with the 'loaded rig and says
that the best l!r!,ying ip ,at nigh't
when the road is 'e"lpty.
There is uncertainty in the
life of any trucker and to
combat it Anna has "taken up
,o igarettes. She carries ~j,tlt her
a little blue book of 'phqne
numbers that she rings when
she arrives at her destination
to find out )"here she 's goin~
next. Sfie stm·- didn ' t know'
where she was bound for when
the rig was unloaded Wednesday, so decided to go have
breakfast befor.e trying her
dispatcher again.
Anna's few trips to Ohio
(she'salready been all over the
country in her occupation )
have mostly been Cleveland.
She drives a lot of interstate
highways and was confused by
Gallipolis. "When I looked at it
on the map, I couldn't figure
ollt ~ow to. get here" .
W~~n she's not driving , Anna
spendshertimeatherparents'
home in Chapman.sboro, Tenn.,
with her four year old son. She
has no specific hobbies, admilling that after getting off ·
the road the nicest thing is to be
able to sit down and rest.
Bur the truck is comfortable,
she insists, equipped with air
conditioning and
power
steering and the like. She says
she only uses the clutch to start

SEOEMS
has charter

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ONE WEEK
TONIGHTTHRU
TUESDAY

- ~·

honored prior to Friday•s
Gallipolis-Wellstoil 'football
game be!\ft a Parents Night
crowd of appi'~tely 3,000.
Thirteeri·members Or the ~
man squad, coached by Ralph
Raach, were on h8nd for the
event, l)eld in connection with
the 50$ . aril)lversary of the
foundit\g of tile' SEOAL in ·1925.
The 1928 Gqideri . Rockels
compiled a 6-1-1 season record,
1 including a IHI victory over the
Blue
Devils,
: Gallipolis
,t')iday's Golden Rocket opponents.
· .~
Halftime ceremonies
fe~tured two sparidlilg band
sh"!!'S by the Gailipolia and
Well(lton musicians.
.

. ,..,

residence following an

e)( ·

!ended Ill ness .
·
· ·Mr. Wood ,was born· Oc!. 18,
19011n Meigs Coun!y !o the, la!e
James and Doris Pearl Baker

Wood. and morrled Doris
Edmls!on of Vln!on In 1928. His ·
Wifesurvlves,along With a sOn,

Jimmy Lee '(iood of Wells!on.
two

ffrandsor\s,

one

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COME IN AND SEE OUR WALL OF IDEAS AT

Peddler's Pantry
Street - -----Gallipolis,

·------------·-----------·----~

THE
UNIFORM CENTER

ROBES

to

zn

Nylon Crepe, Brushed Nylon, Fleece Poodle
Curl, Flannel and Quilt

Come Look At These"

. BRCMN. BUJE AND Rm
REG. VALUE
'15.99
,lf&gt; '

Blue

Green

Spice
Teal
Pink
Patchwork
Small. Medium, Large and Extra sizes too.
Royal

*

(PGJ

''STOP IN AND SEE OUR
SWEAT SHIRT ROBE"

BETTER FCJOrWEAR

At

i

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

OPEN SUNDAY 1 TIL 5

SILVER BRIDGE PUlA

/

and consequenUy · receives a

kind of apecial treatment.
Drivers of other Bowater
••
rigs arriving in Gallipolis have ·•
had to cajole and sweat their ~
way through the unloading , ·,
process with minimal help ' ·
while the l,lioo pound roils
come,off the trucks. Not Anna.
,
.
The entire crew was on hand to
unlQad her rig while she sat,
quietly smoking a cigarette,
and
seeking
h~r
new

THE EMPIRE'S

.
~.- '~·

·~

""~
;-. ~

~'"~ ~

.
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THE. AREA'S LARGEST
SELECTION OF

..!

destination .

'

.

Leifheit, 72, Pomeroy, Rt. 2,

HIDE-A-BEDS
COMPANY
STARTING AT

STARTING AT

i'

''•

:I•
~

~'

I'

FOR ALL YOUR HOLIDAY

SOFA &amp;CHAIR

:
11

Howell.

•29995
SJRATOI.OUNGER
DINING.ROOM BASSETT &amp; LANE
.FiJ'RN·ITURE' RECLINERS
eBIG
SAVINGS

..
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SALES NOTED
GALLIPOLIS - September
1974 sales of Series · E &amp; H
I
United States Savings Bonds in
Ohio were $34.1 million. At the
end or' September, the State
attained 76.8 percent of \Is 1974 --~: 1
sales goal. C: Leon Saunders,
Gajlia County Volunteer
·Savings · Bonds Chairman,
reported September sales of
Savings Bonds in the county
were $14,379. The ' county
achieved 67.2 percent of its
annual sales goal September
30.

FRENCA,

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SPANISH,

. CONTEMPORARY

-·

•
•

Silper-capacily
5-cycle washer

.

• Washes up lo 18 lbs.
of heavy garmenls
• MAGIC CLEAN• sell-cleaning
filter•
• 5 automatic cycles: NORMAL,
GENTLE, PERMANENT PRESS,
SUPER WASH and KNIT
• Cool-down care lor Permanent
Press and Knit garments
• Variable load-size water-level'
selector
• 5 pushbullon wash/rinse water

$8995
I.AY-AW~Y

MCM fOR ·

temps

GIFTS

.

grand·

ISSUE REMINDER
GALLIPOLIS ....: .Gailia
A.cademy HighSchool stude·nts
''
wh,o ordered Gailian yearbooks
Thursday were reminded
&lt;~ttorday that' they must pay .
""'
for the ~nuals on Tue.Sdity. •
Yearbook nioiley will be !
collected iti each' .liorberoom.
. ··
·
.S!ud.e nts . who are abs·e nt e '
l'uel!lay will , be expe(:ted to c •
turn theil' monell i.n W
, ed' ~
17
. nesday.
'

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.'eGIGANTIC.
·.-SAVINGS

•
• •
,I
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,

•

•••
••e

'HI-performance
S·temp dryer ,
LAE 7880
• A new drying drum- the largest
we've ever offered
• Our largest tumbling area and
greatest air volume tor more
elficient drying
• 5 drying temps include: HEAVY,
PERMANENT PRESS, KNITS,
DEUCA TE and FLUFF for drying
wilhout Ileal
• Custom Dry control shuts dryer
off when clothes reach
pre-seiected dryness
• Cool-down care for Permanent
Press fabrics
• End-of-cycle buzzer
• Full-width hamper door for easy
loading
• Convenient drying iack
• Interior light

:·•:11:•·_;·~-------~~~

accumulati On could clog the laundry
:":'

.aJRIO ..

lAMPS &amp; OCCASIONAL TABLES·
.

''

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•
••

'Note: 11 your was her drams 1nto 8 lau~ r;try tub ,
periodlclilly check the dra in stra iner. , ,nee lint

HOM.E

•

•••
•

• Bleach and Iabrie soflener
•
dispensers
• 2 wash speeds and spin speeds
•
•
• Buill-in pump guard

FOR .THE

1HE AREA'S lARGEST SFI EcnON
Of

••
••
••
•

LAA 7880

'fROM,

eEARLY AMERICAN,

t

.t .

SIMMONS '&amp; BASSETr

~

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Mrs. Leifheit was preceded
in death by her" parents •. Dana
and Matilda Huggins Howell . 'r
One daughter. Thelma Virginia "
Leifheit and one sister, Thelma

!

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LIVING ROOM
'FU.RNITURE

•
1•
.-

LILLIAN LEIFHEIT
ROMEROY ,
Lillian

:'!

. JAMES A'. WOOD .
VINTON -James A. Wood,
73, of Wilkesville, .passed away
Friday evening at
his

lI

CHRISTMAS
GIFTS

Red

MON. THRU THURS.
NOV. 4-7
NOT OPEN

'She is survived by her
husband, VIctor, four sons.
Frank of Maraloma, C... III.;
Edwin, Grove City; Wilbur of
~
Racine
and _Russell
of ...-..
Pomeroy, Rt . 2; two sisters,
.. ~
Irene Bun toff, Barberton, acd
i
Hattie Stewart, Columbus -;
,.
Mrs .. Inez Roger Camden, eight grandchildren and three "" ,
Point Pleasan!; one daugh!er. grea! . grandchildren and &gt;. ~
Retha
Camden,
Point several nieces. and nephews. • : .-,
Pleasant ; two sons, Charles,
Funeral services will be held : r
Point Plea san!, and . David . . Monday at 2. p.m . at Ewing ~ i;
Harden, Mon!ana; four sls!ers. funeral Home.Burial will be In
~
Mrs ; lrlez Gleason, Mrs . Beech
Grove
Cemetery, • • "'
V irginia Blankenship, Mrs . Friends may call at f!le funeral ~~ r
Violet Farley Md Pauline home at ar,.y .time.
'
~

Camden. a ll of Poln! Pleasan!;
three bro!hers, Joe, Bidwell.
0.; James, Wllllams!own, w.
· Va., and Frank, Columbus, 0 .,
and four grandchildren.
Funer~l services will be
conduc!ed Monday a! 1:30 p .m.
from !he Wilcoxen Funeral
Home with !he Rev. Paul E.
Jarrell officiating. Burial will
be in Sun crest Cel)le!ery, Poll\!
. Pleasant Graveside riles will
be conducted by !he American
Legion Pos! 23. Vlsl!atlon
hours will be a! !he funeral
home atler 6 P·m· Sunday.

MAKE YOUR OWN

LADIES
BICYCLE
.
OXFORDS

s- Starts 7p.m.

died Friday a! !he Arcadia
Valley · Nu(slng Hol)1e.

He was born July e. 1896, a!

BOARD TO MEET
CHESHIRE - The GailiaMeigs Community Mtion
Agency Executive Board will
hold its regular monthly
meeting Thursday Nov. 7, at
7:30 p.m. at the Cheshire
Community Center. All board
members are urged to attend .

HAS

'''You'll Have

•

Ambrosia, a SD!1 of the late
Robert and Clara Brown
Camden. He was a member of
the Church of Christ, Veteran
WW 1; American Legion Post
23, Point Pleasant, and was aretired .emp loye of the former
Marietta
Manufacturing
Company after 40 years service.
Sur,vivors include his wife,

I

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Coloratrtoons:
Space Cowboy
Harpoon

Area Deaths I "••

p.m. in Pleasant
HOspital following an illness of
six years.

21 cases settled

SUNDAY
ONLY SPECIAL!
.
.

Tonight, Nov. 3
CONRACK .
( Technlcoior)
John Voight

r---- -- -------------------. .·'·'
•
CHARLES CAMDEN
PT. PLEASANT - Charles
Camden, 78, 2302 Monroe
Avenue, died Friday a! 11:55

(jullia

NAME OMIITED
Sherry
GALLIPOLIS Hill's name was omitted in
Friday's report on winners of
the
American
Legion's
Halloween costume contest.
She participated in the 1-7 age
division.

.

PO CLOSED DOWN
CLEVELAND ·. (UPI)
There waa no Saturday edition
of the '
Dealer today
~allse of a strike by Ute
Newspaper Guild, but a new
rotmd' of contract negotiations
was scheduled with a Judge
servillfas mediator.
·

MEIGS lHEATRE

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Instructors hav~ chance to requalify

musicians, in one of their finest
performances of· the 1974
season, received a good hand
for their efforts. The GAHS
band went· to Huntington
Saturday to take part in
halftime ceremonies of the
Marshall-Kent State grid game
at Fairfield Staditun.
Wellaton's 107.piece band,
under the direction of. ·Dane
Heitzman, dean of · SEOAL
band instructors, presepted an .
outstanding show. The Rocket ·
musicians, with the grid lights
turned off, staged . sev~ral
colooful maneuvers.

.

h,mghl

Coolville, $62.50, speeding;
Robert Raig'uel, ~dsville,
$25, disorderly · conduct;
Manoah Cameron, Zanesville
Ronald Gene W111s, Gallipolis,'
Thomas D. Hopkins, Jr .,
Belpre, Richard Lee Slack, Pt.
Pleasant, C. Michael Dunfee,
Southside, W. Va. and Steven
B. White, Athens, $27.50 each,
speeding; Howard T. Norris,
Racine, Rt. 2, $37.50, speeding;
Raymond J. Hupp, steuben·
ville, $350, driving while intoxicated.
NOW YOU KNOW
· The first police department
to use fingerprinting was that
.or St. Louis, Mo. on Oct. 28,
1904.

a

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GALLIPOI.IS · - According
POMEROY
- ' · Eight Wilson, Pomeroy, $25 and
to the Titlo! Division of the defendants were fined and 13 costs, three months probation,
Gailia County Clerk of Courts · otl!ers forfeited bonds in Meigs resisting arrest, $15 and costs,
Office, 86 · new cars were . County Court Friday.
disorderly conduct; William
COLUMBUS - SeCreta;; of
purchased in the.county during
Fi~ed by Judge Frank w. Eakins, Racirie, Rt . 2, $10 and
Sta~ Ted W. Brown announced .
. the month of October. •
: ~rtet were &lt;ltarles F . Mehi, C(ISts, _ failure to give signal
Saturda,Y'his office has, iasuec! a
, Dealers sWI 26 ilew trucks, · B&lt;alpre, $15 and costs, when passing.
charter to Southeast Ohio ·
. 116usedcars, 29used trucks, 20, speeding; ~jamin P . ffickel,
Forfeiting bonds were
Emergency Medical . Se~ces.
new trailers, · eight· used Ha~tford, $8 · and costs, Richard L. Stewart, Cheshire,
Inc. to operate as niln.profil
lcallers, seven .l)ew ·: motor- ,speeding; Carl A. Wilson , $22.50, unsafe vehicle; Charles
corporation iri Ohio. The .·.
cycles, live used motorcycles . Rutland, Richard .Lee Warn- R. Weekley, Guysville, $27.50,
p!;jncipal office ·of Ute corand · a motor home. Clerks siey, 'Racine Rt. 1 and Jerry unable to stop Within assured
poration will. be located ·in
, issued 1,163 titl~. made ~ · Sexton, Belpre, $10 and costs ~ lear distance; · Jennings
Gallipolis. . .
notati~n of liens, 297 can- each, speeding; Billy E.
The corporation was ·fm:med cellatton of lieJIII, 19 dupUcate Harless, Dexter, Rt. 1, t5 and Mollohan, Coolville, $350,
driving while intoxicated, $150,
"To own, ,o perate and maintain
. liUes. and one replacement.
costs, no brakes; Thomas hit skip; Frank Smeeks.
a comprehensive emer11eney
medical and ambulance ser;
vice inclnding but riot }imited
to components · of com"
munlcalion, teacue, .car.e. and
treatment, trana,Portatlon,
Participants in this program
RIO GRANDE- Rio Grande to 9 p.m. in Allen Hall, Room
invalid
tran.ter, • ad· College's Continuing 212, Rio Grande College.
must pre-register at the
ministration, training and Education Program will offer a
Anyone interested in taking College Admissions Office
staffing, community education course in requallfying First the 12 hours of certified before the first class meeting
and evaluation for . the benefit Aid Instructors B!lllctioned and classwork must already have a and the total cost per enrollee
Of the whole public 'In -and taught by Bill Mlller, Safety current authorized American is $3 plus any book costs which
around the counties of Athens,
Director of the American Red Red Cross instructor's cer- will be determined by the inGalila, Hocking, Jackson,
Cross-Columbus Area Chapter. Uflcate on any level except the structor. For further inLawrence, Meigs and Vinton,
formation, call Dr. George A.
Miller will hold cl•s- on Basic First Ald.
in Uti. State of Ohio ... "
Miller
will
also
accept
Wolfe, Director Health,
Thursday, November 7, 14, 21,
J. E. Farrington, 0. J. Loyd and Decerilber 5. Each class current authorized Emergency Physical Education, and
and E. H. Plummer, all of One will begin at 6 p.m. and extend Medical . Teehniclans ( EMT) Recreation, Rio Grande
Blue Line Avenue, Athens, 0.,
into the course. The American College.
45701 will serve the corporation
Red Cross has resiructured its
as trustees. Kenneth Morgan,
Richard Henry Lee and entire certificable programs
415 Vinton Pike, Gallipolis, has Francis Lightfoot' Lee were since Januarr. 1974; therefore,
been appointed to act as the only brothers to sign the currently, there exists a lack of
Statutory Agent.
Declaration of Independence. qualified instructors in south. eastern Ohio.

Director-~ Tolliver's GABS

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up and to back the rig, and :,.;~~l
there isn't any problem wittf
having sore legs from pushin~~;
it. The sh.ifting is done ac,.t.,
cording to revolutions per
·minute and doesn't disturb the
muscles of her arm either.
There are rewards to
trucking , Anna says, even
though it is often dangerous '''•
and was rather nerveracking&gt; •"'f
during the strikes earlier this~
year..
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" You learn a lot and you see~
a lot. Every day is new. But the "~
best thing is when a whole :1
carload of people goes around
you and everybody turns
around and looks back. They
simply can ' t believe they saw
tne up there by myself."
To become a trucker isn't as ··•
complicated as it has often
)leen made to sound, the lady
says, and reported that
requirements vafy from one
company t'o another. There is a
standard
entrance
examination, however, and
many companies require
drivers to be at least 25 •
because of insurance costs.
Anna adml ts to being a
novelty most places she goes

daugMer, and !hr.ee ~!ep- .
granddaughters.
Mr. Wood, a retired mer·
chan! In ' W!lf\es¥ille, w,;s 8 ;
member of the · Wilkesville
Pre•byterlan Church, of Qr.
phans Friend F and AM
Masonic Lodge. 275, and of !he
Ba1s'. Club of Ohio.
·.
Fune~al l &amp;ervlces- wlll be held
'.
' ' Monday at 2 p.m. at !he Me·
- -- -- - - -,.-- Coy.MoQre Funer.al Homewi!h
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the Rev. '· Russell Woltz of·
nawau. A 1959 graduate ot .. flclatlng . Burial wjll be In the
Western ' ~Us High Sctlooi ·· Vl~!on . Memorial
Pa_rk.
anclnnati he joined the,.; ' Fnends may call Svn~ay a!the
· ·:r _ ·'
paW ·~ funeral home from 2-4 and 7.9 ·
m tme 1960. ·
Jl p.'m:
, .·
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daiJI and
IDe
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per mq:Uil.
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Lady in the rig

FIGHT FOR FREE
CHiCAGO
(UP!)
Muhammad 'Ali, basl\ing in a ·
hometown hero's welcom.e ,
said Friday he would .'defend
his world h~a~eight boxing
championship for tree if. his
prize money went toward a
Black l\'IUSiillJ hospital in
· Chicago. His offer cullnlnated ·
an elusive, day-long dance of
words. about his ' future plans ·.
,while he completed the long ·
trip home from .Tuesday
·night's victory . over George
Foreman in Zaire, Afrlcs..

renewed the sQviet.call for a
are the senatorial race of the
district, collective security. system in
the 92nd district representative's race an.d Asia to serve as the basis for. a
the lOth district congressm~n's race.
, constru.ctiv~ peace program.
Oakley C. Collins, Ironton Republican,
·"
is opposing Chillicothe Denu.~rat Grant..., . ' ,_ ON DESTROYER
McDonald for state seantor. ·
,..
.· " CHESTER-NavyGuilner's
. _ Youthful Ron James of Proc!drville, a Mate Second Class Dennis W.
Democrat, is challenging ve!era'l Ralph'- · Lyons, · son of Mr. and Mrs . .
Welker of Pomeroy for the pO,st of ~tate James c. Lyons has deployed
representative and H. Kent Bumpass, an · to the western Pacific aboard
Athens Democrat , opposes Republican Ute· USS Benj811)in Stoddert; ·a "
. mcumbent con gre ssman Clarence Ei. guided n\i~sile .. d~stronr
· Mtiier.
hon'leporlell' at Pe•ri Harbor'.
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COLUMBUS - William H.
Davis, acting director of . the
Ohio Department of Mental
Health and Mental Retar·Jation, today announced· the
appointment of Leonard
Inglese as distcict manager for
the Division of Mental
Retardation and Developmental Disabilities District 8,
effective Monday, November 4.
Inglese, 46, will supervise the
district office providing mental
retardation services to Atheru;,
Hocking, Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan, Noble, Perry and
Washington counties. The
office provides education
programming,
protective
services, information and
referral services and con.
ilultation to local agencies,
individuals, the mentally
relarded and developmentally
disabled and their families in
the 'a rea. It also provides preadmission and after care
services for Gallipolis State
Institute.

F. our cIose races .

Cll'r1lr
Molar

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on year in dual meets

WASHINGTON (UP!) Federal Trade Commission
lawyers say their prosecution
of alleged antitrust violations
by the country's eight largest
oil companies has met so many
delays it has "ground to a
virtual halt."
Fifteen months ago the staff
lawyers accused the companies of adding to the coun-

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new director

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WELLSTON - Wellston's .
(irst Southeastern Ohio League
championship football team,
the 1928 Golden Rockets, was

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Attorney James A. Bennett is Gailia County Bar Assn.
the Republican candidate for
Mrs. Bennett is an · active
the office of Common Pleas member of AAUW, JWC and
Judge . He and his wife, has served as a Girl Scout
Kathryn and their two children leader. The Bennett children
live on a farm~n Raccoon Twp. are active in Scouting and 4-H.
Attorney Bennett grew up in All the Bennetts are members
rural Indiana and graduated of the Gailia County Riding
from Columbus High School in Club and the Gallia County
Columbus, Ind., in 19~. After Dramatic Arts Society, and
receiving his AB degree from were members of the cast of
Franklin College of Indiana in the Society's production of
1962 he entered law school. In "Gallia Country" . this past
1967 he was granted the degree summer.
of Juris Doctor by the Chase
Attorney sennett believes
law School of Cincinnati. He that his generril practice of law
was admltted to the practice of has prepared him the variety
law by the Supreme Court of of cases he would hear as
Ohio in October 1967.
Common Pleas "Judge. His
.TIH! Bennetlll were married former business experience
in 1962. · They 'moved to Cin- and his current clvll practice
climali in 1963 ·'where he have given him experience
coqipleted his law training and with the type of civil cases that
was employed. wbile attending come under the Court's
law,, school !IY Proctor and jurisdiction. His pooition as
· Gamble l!lld then b'y Osborne • assistant prosec11ting attorney
Kemper • Thoma, where he for' 31&gt; years gave him · exwa~ credit manager.
perience in the · handling of
E~rly in 1969 the Bennetts criminal cases.
beg.n to look for a community
At\Orney Bennett feels that
where they could make their his basic philosophy conpem'lanent home befor.e their cerning the separation of the
' chililren· entered school. After Court and the function of the
deciding to begilla·generai law judge varies greatly !rom that
practice, · Attorney Bennett of the incumbent. He believes
joined Hamlin King and that aa an elected public Of~
established' the law ,firm of ficial, a
judge should
Bennett and King, His wife, remember that the court
Kathryn, has taught the last should be operated for the
fpur years at Gallia Academy benefit and convenience of the •
High School.
citizens of Gallla County. The
The · Bennetts soon became judge of a court ahould have an
active and involved members attitude of cooperation with all
of ihe Gallia County Corn- clients and their attorneys who
come before the court.
munity. ·
They are members of' Grace
He believes that an attitu!ie
Unt'ted ' Methodist Church. that the Cout should be
Attorney Bennett has been a operated to "keep the lawyers
member of the Gallipolis Lions in line" actually impedes the
Club over five years and has orderly process of justice so
held ·the offices of secretary, that in the final analysis it is
3rd vice:president and 2rJd vice the public who suffers.
Attorney Bennett beli~ves
president. He was chairman of
the · District Convention that the current overall con.
·committee when the Gallipolis dltion 'of the . Common Pleas
Lions . hosted the district CQw't has been brought about '
convention in April 1974.
by judicial inaction which
He has twice been Chairman accounts for the increase in the
uie Gallla County March of . backiog of cases duri11g 1974 of
Dimes arid has participated in 28.5 plircent. Despite the fact .
many other · charitable fund that 20.9 percent of all cases
ratslng drives. He is preseotly pending ate now over one year
on the advisory committee of old, there have 'been only 21
Cub Scout pack 205. He · has contested , cases tried in the
been active in the Ga\lia Conurion Pleas Court in the
County Young Republicans and first nine months of 1974. He
. was .. president · · of that feels that the situation wlll .not
organization before resigning be improved until a judge is
tO beeome a judicial candidate. elected who takes the office
He is a member of the Ad, with a goal of public service.
visorY Corruriittee, Practical Attorney Bennett pledges that
Nursing School of Buckeye be will accept this obligation
Hills career Ce~!er . He . is required of a public servant
presently vice-clull1'llUUI of the and pledges eqll81 justice to
~Very citizen.

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WPf\\CE

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oUC10RY LO
S"~E\ \M1'R0 . .

fMINETS
~. eGUN. . ·
·' · CABINETS

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CASES.

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�Miss Sanders, Allen Hanson marry·
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Allen, Pl. P]eaAAnt . W .. v.~
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En~lish illUsion. The

bridal

Ba uer, Colwnbus, and Bpbby

son, F.dgemont Dr., and J,owell bou_quet was a col oni a l
· arrangement of pink a nd whi Le
Allen, Rt . 2.
Given in marriage by her carnations with matc hin g

La wson, cousin of the bride.
A. reception was held

followin g the wedding in the

streamers.
Mrs. Marvin C. Schumm ,
Schumm, the bride wore an
empire gown of powder blue Newark , was her s is te r' s
double knit polyester. The matron of honor and only atgown was styled with a v- tendant. Mrs. Schumm wore an

the bride 's aun t, Mi ss
Dora Skiver.
Aftei' a wedding trip through
the wes lern sta les, the new Mr.
and Mrs . Hanso n will reside at

empire gown in yellow double
knit polyester styled similarly
to the pride 's. Her headpiece
encircled the waistline a nd was als o yellow and she
cuffs of the sleeves. A ma t- carried a bouquet of yellow and
ching camelot cap held . the white carnations with matbouffant bridal veil of imported ching streamers.
J oseph Hanson, Colwnbus ,
brother of the groom, was best
man. Us he rs were Dann y

707 San Fernando Valley Way,

is the nephew of James Han-

GALLIPOLIS - The wedding of Rita Kay Sanders,
S&lt;luth Shore, Ky., and· Allen F.
Hanson, .Portsmouth , took
place Oct. 5 at the Church of
God, South. Shore.'
Tile bride is the youngest
daughter of Mrs . Lester
Quillen,. South Shore, and the
late Mr. Quillen. The groom is
' son of Mr. 'anq, Mrs .
the eldest
Burt Hanson , Poi-tsmOu.th ,
former residents of Gallipolis.
He is the grandson ol . M&lt;S.
Frances Hanson, · First Ave.,
and the late Mr. a~d Mr~1 .J\. W.

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brother-in-law, Marvin

C.

neckline, large collar, long
fitted sleeves and a controlled
a-line skirt. White venice lace

rJ.lta

Cub .Pack 204 meets
OOMPLETION NEAR -The new slstershlp to ihe Delta
rises In the be,ckground while a workman applies a
welder's arc to steel. at the yards of Jeffboat, Inc., Jel'
fersonville, Ind. The $17 million, all steel, steamboat will he
launched Into the Ohio Rlv..- this winter and will begin her
cruises early in 1976. The boat will carry 400 passengers in
~een

lower berths and will Include such features as a sauna,
swimming pool, movie theater' passenger elevators and a
beauty parlor. Reservations are being accepted for the new
boat's inaUgural ctuises with a deposit of $100 per person .
Reservations and brochUres may be obtained by writing The
Delta ~een Steamboat Co~, 322.E.' Fourth St., Cincinnati,
45202.

Delta Queen ,brochures available
schedule out of the Port of J:lew
Orleans· will continue to April
18, and the fall-Winter cruises
will be in operation from Nov. 4
PLANS COMPLETED -The marriage of Cathy Louise
to Jan . 2, 1976.
Searles and William-Henry Ward will be an event of Nov. 7.
The Delta Queen this year
Miss Searles is the daughter of Veva Searles, Rt. 1, RuUand,
expanded
its fall schedule out
and Rolland Searles, Rt. 1 Middleport. She is a 1971 graduate
of New Orleans to include
of. Meigs High School. Ward is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
December. The New Orleans
Ward, Middleport. He attended Middleport High School and
cruises · will include the
served in the U.S. Navy receiving his discharge in October,
weekend cruises with Saturday
1973. The couple ·will reside in RuUand following their
marriage.
• • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • .. • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • •.• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• shor:e stop and tours at some of
:
: the lower Mississippi's most
~~
beautiful plantations and the
l:;
Jill .
:.:. five-night
cruises to such
historic and beautiful ports as
1
Natchez and Vicksburg.
:
:
Both the full-season and New
; · Orleans brochures may be
CINClNNATl - After two seminar has been scheduled : ·
years of research, planning, for late November . .Plans are
: obtained by writing The Delta
developm ent,
and
con- now underway to bring :
Gallipolis-Point Pleasant
Pomeroy-Middleport
; , Queen steamboat eo., 322 E:
sultations involving nearly together authoritative · ;
b·l34l
992·2156
; _Fourth St. , Cincinnati, 45202.
44
1,000 persons in the arts, the speakers and the arts to ex· .:
Arts Council of the Ohio River plore the subject of "The

1vfiss Cathy Louise
Searles
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€INCINNAT - Brochures
are available for the 1975 Delta ·
Queen cruise season which
opens with a Mardi Gras, Feb.
11 cruise out of the Port of New
Orleans.
Two brochures are available.
One outlines the entire cruise
season from February through
December while the other is

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Mr. and Mrs. Allen F. Hanson

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Arts council formed

devoted to the Delta Queen's
schedule out of the Port of New
Orleans in the spring.
The Steamer Delta Queen,
last of the overnight paddlewheelers, will embark on a
total of 67 cruises on the Ohio
and Mlsslssipp;" l\ivel'll during
1975. These include the popular
weekend cruises out of the

0 man

Dorothy Countryman

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~~:~! ~s ·~opened·

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Delta Queen 's major port
cities, to the week-long cruises.
There also will he three 20-&lt;lay
Cincinnati • New Oreleans
round trips, and one 1JI.day St.
Louis. New Orleans round trip.
In addition, the Delta Queen
will continue its recently ex·
panded New Orleans schedule.
The Delta Queen 's spring

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Charlene Hoeflich

Meius countians attend meetinu

Big~.:%~ ~R~~s ~~~

Sgt. and Mrs. William E. Oller

GALLIPOLIS - A military
wedding at the Fori Myer Post
Chapel, Aug . 31, joined Miss
Roberta
Lynn
Sievers,
daughter of Mrs. Robert · L.
Sievers, Fourth-Ave., and Sgt.
William Edward Oller, s6n of
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Oller,
Gurnee, m. ·
. Dr. Robert L. Mole, &lt;USN,
performed the double ring

.&lt;C~-mw.;*?-;m='*'9cmt;::S:~==
~=*=wun
_~.~~~wt__

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i
'CO....Der By Charlene Hoeflich
y

ceremony and William· Heasley
presented nuptial music ineluding "Colour My World,"
"What the World Needs Now,"
"Love is Blue" and "We've
Only Just · BegiDI.~'
Willimb Woodall, brother-in·
Iawolthebrlde,escortedberto
the altar. She was attired In an
organza gown with long. lull
$leeves gathered into a deep
cotton laC!! cuff. with blue satin
ribbon. The empire waist was

~u::~wi: :~p.:~ ":~

lor·
w
ACORV is not a fund-raising services, chairwoman Phyllis
0 '
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cented by cotton lace and blue
organization . It is a unique non- Weston said, "One ol the most
~' satin ribbon. A sweep train
profit service organization for significant achievements
POMEROY - Mrs. Charles of Education.
.
Blerut, Parma P. T.A., Parma
·
!* drifted behind· and her waist
arts ACORV can pursue is the Goeglein_, president of the
Three resolutions were Council: Beverly lvanT!e,
length veU fell from a wide
individual . artists,
organizations, and individuals Granlsinanshlp Office because
~eigs County Council of ·appr~ed by lhe con~ention. _. ~;~~~rs~~~.;.,c~r'yn.:''ife:g;
~ bal)d of corded silk, cotton lace
in communities in the region the potential sources of unParents and Teachers, Mrs. The f1rst giVes the Oh10 PTA Lakewood P.T.A., Lakewood
.1. .
1!1J and tiriy pearls. She carried a
encompassing S&lt;Juthern Ohio, tappedfundlngaresodiverselt Robert Dugan ol the Salem the
responsibility
for Council.
j semi-nosegay of w)llte orchids
Center PTA, and Mrs. Rlchai-d publishing infoi'mation on the RaL~JvE~:~i~~;,: J~~~~~t~;
and blue carnations. ·
Northern Kentucky, Eastern requires full-time scanning to
· Indiana and portions of West be aware of the many op-- Vaughan, Middleport, the qualif1cat1ons and dulles of Dulles P.T.A., Hamilton
POMEROY - Marcia Karr, Syracuse, Is one of those
Mrs. Sandra Woodall served
Virginia . The first arts council portunitles . .Few of the area's District 16 director, attended candidates to \!le nonpartisan County . Council.
Steven "forever- young at heart" people, and there's probably no one ail her sister's matron of honor.
of its kind, ACORV is a national arts resources can undertake 'the 69th annual conV.ntjon of State Board of Education,
Golem btewskl,
Dunham aro'·"dwho enjoys birthdays more than she.·Her friends always Mrs. Ka"tle Fowler w88 brld••~
•
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P. T.A.,
Maple
Heights
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model for organizing the arts this task · alone. ACORV can
the Ohio PTA this past week at
A second .res ullon urges Council : Vicki Godby, J. F. see that it's a very special lime..
matron. Their gowns we~, of
on a re gional level. Support for help bring additional outside
the Netherland Hilton Hotel, &lt;rthove&lt;llc screening for high Burns P.T.A., Valley Area
While her 84th birthday was last Sunday, the celebrating really ligh~ blue chiffon with empire
the ACORV concept began two funding for the arts to our Cincinnati.
scboo\ athletes, a b~ on the C'\"~~~~RMEDIATE : ' Mala started on the Saturday before when Mr. and Mrs. Carl Weese waists and long full, corded,
years ago under lfle leadership region."
AbrQ8d legislative program technique of bloc)ung and Adla Kha, Frank Ohl P. T.A., tookber for a drive tO view the beautiful foliage . S~y m9flllng sheer aleeves. The eritplre
of Mrs. Fred ' Lazarus m,
ThiS . was underscored by to guide the organiZation's lackllpg in football known as Austintown Council: Janet she received special recotinition at tlie ASbury United Methodist waist, collar and cuffs were
current chairwoman of the Clark ' Mitze ·of the National efforts before the 111th Ohio "spearing," and lhe adoption Durick, St~ .S treet School Church, and lhat evening the Eagles Class which sbe has taught trimmed in ruffles. They
Ohio Arts Coun,cil . The for- Endowment for the Arts when .__ General Assembly .was ol ~inimum standards of t.;.i.;~··w;~d~,~~:,~uC~~ . for the past 12 years entertained with a party in her honor.
c&amp;rried semi-nosegays of light
· The class meniberspresentedberW!th a white gold watcli, and and dark blue carnations. Miss
mation of "ACORV took place he explained in Cincinnati that ' adopted. The delegates called certification for coaches by the P. T.A., Norwood Council. .
under the aegis of the Natiolll!l special funds
otherwise for a redesigned school Ohio High School Athletic
JUNIOR HIGH: Jim Ruble; there was a bouquet of red rosebuds from Mr. and Mrs. Millard stephanie Woodall, nl~ of lhe
Endowment for the Arts, the unavailable fo~ . individual fo~ildation formula w,hich Association.
.
~~cr.;ghE~~-~!l'"~~=~~~t Van Meter. There was singing, picture taking and a decorated bride,. served as flower girl.
Ohio ~ts Council·,, the Ken- organizations, are available _ includes an "annual adA bicycle · safety resolution Thornton Junior High P.T.A., cake for the occasion.
_ Alain, Oller, .Columbus AFB,
tucky and . :· Indiana Arts through an arts cpuncUsuch as !uslment in state aid to meet. also was passed which calls lor Akron
Council:
Cindy
· Then Thursday at tbeSenior Citizens Center birthday party, Mlsa., was best man. Ushers
_ !Jon the-"·u
Product
Dahlberg, Council.
Struthers P.T.A., Miss Karr reeelved an orchid for being the oldest having&amp; birth- ' ·were Sgt. LanfordFowier, sn
Commissions . in order to ACORV, and by increasing inflationary costs of. educa
.
. Struthers·
'T'•
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develop an increasing spirit of inter.. tate programming.
.baaed on the consumer price Safety ,Commission to retam
HIGH SCHOOL :
Lora day in October, and Mrs. Ulllan Sinlth, Middleport, surprised Michael Hopkins and Francis
community"among the at!:! of
MOillbers and . officers of Index;" and "built-in in- Jan. I, 1975, as tile comll'lance Gregory, . Filch
P. T.A., her with a red sunbonnet. Gifts, cards and letters drifted In all Oller, brother of the g~
'.
the region. ACORV Intends to ACORV's Board of Directors
cenllves lor school districts date for mandatory bicycle Austintown Council: Cathl week ... averyspecial·linl!'forMissKarr.
Curtis Oller-, brother of
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Spalding, Norfhwes1 Senior
serve as a catalyst for, com- are: Mrs. Leo,F. Weston, Jr., 1""' rna e ex a e for in safety
regulations . by High P.T.A., Hamilton County
groom, served as ringbearel".
m u n i cation ,
growth , chairwoman, Cincinnati Arts SI!Pporling tax Issues at the -manufacturers.
Council .
DEATH AND taxes, neither can be avoided, or so they say.
Membel'll of the Presiden~
promotion, and sharing of lhe Leader; Lawrence H. HOrwitz, local level." ·
During the annual conGeorge
Hargraves •
So ... while the Pomeroy United Methodist Church paator Honor Guard providing , tile
of theattended
Meigs deala with ,..._
~ de th th
•
arts regionally. , .
president and director, Cin- , The conven IIon, which beg an ven \"10n banque, I .Tuesd ay superlnter\dent
Local School District,
.. ~ s. ubje"c t u.
a , o women of the. church malte cross saber arch were ~Among the programs and clnnati; Mrs. Michael G. Neal, last Sunday and continued night, the new state secretary, Tuesday sessions of the con- ready to deal with the matter of taxes.
Philip Young, Sgt. Dan
services offered by ACORV vtce president, MadisOn, Ind.
through Wednesday drew new stste lreasurer and seven venllon and was scheduled to
And fl1at brings us to the annual Election Day dinner to be Neumnrt, Sgt. Steven Rue~,
· ·Grants Advisory Ser- arts leader; Dr. Wllliam nearIY!
1300de.e.ga
I tes who took dl s trl c t dl rec t ors were In- . appear
on for
a panel,
"Pointing
a , held a tthechurch. All proceedswill go to ward pay ing thecburch
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are : A
Direction
Action".
Due to
.
SFC
George Deady, SP-4 ~
vice to assist members in Parsons, Northern Kentucky
the official position, putUng the stalled for two-year terms. the heavy legislative program, taxes.
Diamond and SP-4 Mike Deag.
finding funding for programs ; State College, Highland Ohio PTA ori record as op-- / Other state officers were the panel time was chan~ed
From 11 a.m. to 3 pm; the women will serve sandwiches, Capt. Bruce Erion called II!'
a Workshop . Seminar Series to Heights, Ky., also a VP, Lowell posing "strikes or any form of chosen for two-year terms last ~~:!..::i'f~:~,~~· d~guf~ 01 n'~~ soup, salads, pie and colfei!. There will also be all sorta of bazaar commands. _
,
enable regional participants to Engelking, Indiana mem- work stoppage 88 a means of year.
participate.
type items for sale. Arid if you're interested In taking a quart or
I!' traditional military sty!,,
explore mutual problems and bersbipchalrman, President of settllltg disputes between
The new secretary is Mrs.
AmonP. the speakers ot the twoofsouphomefor~per,justtakeyourcontainers, ' ' ·
a black marriage carrlag
issues with knowledgable Engelking Pattern Co.,
boards of education and any of Charles (Barbara) Sprague convent on were _Dr. Martin w.
drawn by two whl~ ·horses w•
•
•
'
Essex, state superintendent of
·
Ia
be hed led Is th
11
thetr employes.
Mansfield, and the hew public Instruction; on "Margin
AND SPEAKING of bazaars, the test to sc u
e provided . by the CassioliJI
experts ; Information , Com- Columbus, Ind.; Charles
munication, and Reference Fleischmann, Cincinnati Art:!
The position on strikes also treasurer is Mrs. Joseph of Excellence"; John R. 'one at the senior Citizens Center.Itwill be Nov. 21 and22.
Platoon of the Old Guard, U.!t.
Services to facilitate increased Leader,
secretary
and
urges the PTA to "assist in (Madlene) Jayne Brookfield Meckstroth, president of the
Arm
.
th
t
d
h
h
'
State'llepartmenl
of
Education
THERE'S
hlng
ifl
disc
ling
bout
·
·
to
Y·
•
.
'
I
te
1
1
inter-communication, plan- treasurer; Mrs. Vincent pro c mg
e sa e y an
w o was I e . outgo ng who talked on "Who's
• • some\
a tr e
oncer
a
gomg m
. Sidealtarsofthechapel weri
ning, and sharing of ideas and Bolling, Dayton, Arts Leader;
welfare of the children by secretary.
Responsible for Teocher stores and seeing the Halloween masks next to the Christmas dec&lt;rated with arrangements
resources; Special Referral Paul Flohr, promjJient Ports- urging appropriate action by
A feature of the convention Education? ~:
Rev .
Fr · decorations, and one wonders if a .few years from nOJV we'll be of white mums.
'ty
.
_,1 al
I
~-•
Richard Connelly, chaplain,
1 tin
"
·tree ornamen
'
ts · A gust
' •
R
ber the daY when·
Is
Services for practicing ar\Jsts mouth, businessman; Charles
paren , contmunl agencies was a cw\ur arlo uncucvn at Clnclnn.oll Bengals sPeaker on se ec g
m u
. emem
For ber daagl!ter;s wedding,
and volunteer groupa, but "not which time s\ste wlnnel'llin the "There's No TornO.: row" at the . Christmas decorations weren't put on store shelves until after Mrs. Stevel'll chose a blue
addre ssing their speclfi~ Holmond, creative arts
to take sides in the dispute" areasofmll8ic, visual arts, and Tuesday night banquet.
Thanli:sgiylng!
polyester gown. The collar and
needs; the formation l.'f . an director, Seven Hills Neigh1 ~ panel
·
Topics
considered,
Education Division aimed at borhood Houses Ass'n., Cin- and "not stsff classrooms or literature · were announced
.
, · discussions Included school
cuffs were of white chiffon
enlarging the inter-change of cinnati; James M. E. Mixter,
take on any tasks lor wblch the The winning p1eces of disruptions, health, home and
ruffles- trlnuned in blue. Her
arts resources of the region's D. H. Baldwin eo:, Cincinnati;
J&gt;'!'Amembersltrenotcertified literature illld music were f~mily life concerns, h""lth
' SEEN AND HEARD
::::::~~::::~::::&lt;w.:&gt;$~::::::::::&gt;'=l.·,fmllt'l'l~i!l corsage W!IS a white orchlcj.
educational institutions; the Dr. George Rleveschl, jiDlior
cir fully qualllled."
presented "live" and 'the blue .conarns, the drug scene and
GALLIPOLIS Mr M 1 ·
~J. &lt;'
11
· ther of the
1
fostering
of
auxiliary vice president of Sp•clal
The delegates also adopted a ribbon pieces of art were ~~~.c&amp;r:~'!f'~ ~~r.l:.t Smeltzer and ~- ,!;d · ~~ j~
:"oo'm~ ~~:U pink ctufron
organizations beneficial to the Projecla of the UniverSity of
position on teacher education displayed.
presided at the conventloh, : ' "Phil Sny~er attended open !ii
e
·- a
.JAr
. gown with pleated skirt. H..standards and certification.
Winners, rn order, were:
The Almahouse at the Romall J. !!:: .
TUUJ.
corsage w88 .a white orchid.
arla such as a local unit of Cinclnattl; Henry Stock,
Volunteer Lawyers for the Cincinnati recreation com"Recognizing· the need for
MUSIC: PRIMARY, Joyce
· ·
·
looal aaprood
_ s, Hilis Floral SI!PP.ly
·
1 11 ed the
Arts.
mission, Dr. Thomas A.
change, tlleOhioPTAapplauds H'!n, Case P.T.A.' Akron By Uolted Preulatemat
d Walter J E 1 In&lt;! 1
POMEROY ~-',The Meigs
A recepllon
ow
The organizational frame··'Spragens, President of Cenlre
and su~ports the Ohio State Council: Nell Rothstein, Essex
Today Is SUnda,Y, Nov. 3• the an
· · nge ' 1 ., hn Senior CitiZens Center located ceremony at ~~~ort McNair •
th d
Board of Ed 11
d Ohi
P.T.A., .Akron Council .
.·
307th day o1 1974 with 58 to Columbus, Sunday. n t e . the P
J
Hi h NCO aub, wasruitgton, D. c.
work , as we II as
e ues Co11ege of.Kentucky, Danville,
uca on an
o
INTERMEDIATE:
Sha!ly · follow
1 afternoon they enjoyed a 10
omeroy · un1or g . Miss
Sheila . Staggers .
structur~ of ACORV were Ky.; Albert K. Webster,
State
Department
of St~honsori, , Forest . VIew
'llle.
~bet . 1"ts full designschoolwlthBIJ:Hixonas School is ~n 9 a.m . . 4 p.m. registered the guests and
moon · ween
d 1
d
1
Mon~ay thrQMh
Friday.
Education's current on~oing P. .A.. Valley Ar~ C:O....cll;
d'esigned specifically to Insure general manager Cinc"1nnatl'
• .
Jane Hoeflich, Bradbury ~ apd last quarter. '
es gner an commen a1or.
· ,
assisted at the ·receptron. The · ·
that "services, programs; and Symphony Orchestra. Twenty
~forts to reform and redes1gn P. T.A., Meigs County C:O....cll.
The 'morning stars · are Hixson ls a 'l eading in·
Activities Include :
bridal table w88 deCorated
·the direction of the council additional board members will
teacher education s\sndards
JUNIOR HIGH: · Margaret ·
V
M
· d tematlonal designer. from ' the
Monday, Nov. 4, Square
whl
reflect and respond to the be elected at ACORV;s next
and certification," the position Grlebllng, Litchfield Junior ; Mercury, enos, . ars ,an
u•-son School o( Design· in · Dancing.
with a .centerpiece of · .te
,,
b
al
·
"d
High P.T.A,, Akron C:O....cil: , Saturn.
""'
Tu sd
N
Elect!
mums, green and white car·
needs of lis mem ers, 1urge annu meeting in November.
sal .
Kurt . GIHtion, Forest Park
The evening star Is Jupiter; aeyeland and W88 sponsored . , . e ay, ov. 5'
on llllti!"'s and while~~- Music
The Arts Council of the Ohio
The teacher ~ducatlon Middle P.T.A., Val!ev ArH
Thoae ·born.on this date are by Walter J. Engel, Inc.
' Day! Vote! Cllorits 12;30 • 2 w88 provided at _the recepttqn
- and small.
Annual membership dues Rlv~r Valley is the recipient of
positio.n calls lor "mcreasing Co~~~ SCHOOL: Karen . IDid..- \lie sign o1 Scorp!o. .
p.m. Cards and Games. .
by membel'll ol 'tile U. S.-Army
are nominal : $15 for in· grants from the National
financial support to colle~es Grlebllng, Firestone Son lor
American poet William
Wednesday, Nov. 8, Craft Band. ·
·
.
.
dividuals,
$30
for Endowment for the Arts and
and umvers1ties preparmg High P.T:A.. ,Akron Council;_ Culliin Bryant w&amp;a,born Nov.
. .
MCana~~~g., , ~QUilting ; Chitir
.The riew Mrs.
is 8 1970
organizations, and $50 or more lhe Ohio Arls Council. The
teachers" and supports con. Tom .Mo:&gt;aY!IO"dV~ Breckovllle 3rd" 17!H
GOING ON VISIT
-..,
a...duate of Gallla Academy
.for charter members. "Let's Kentucky and Indiana Arts
tlnued control of teacher eJlr!:""ar'!l':vte';,/c!;.c~Ck~
day in history:
MASON, W. Va. ~ Mrs.
Thursday, Nov. ·7, , Craft
"School. She is employed
Help Each Other" is the thel]le Commissions also endorse
education _standards and
VISUAl, liRT$ WINNERS:
xJ, 1783 ·with Amerlc:an In- Landon Smith will go by plane . Making, Cards and Games. '
with the capital. ~a Per·
of the membership campaign ACORV. ·
certificationbytheS\steBoard PRIMARY, GMn $chneJU.., ' ~assUred alter the from Columbus, Thurll'day to
Frlday, Nov. 8, Bowling i..a sonnet Services Office_ Navy
. wh1'ch ACORV hopes to enlist
Gtlhs-Sweet P.T.A.. Fairview
""-.,;._• · visit...,. -vera! days with her p.m
. .
,
Park Ci&gt;oncll; · Douglu Bly.- Revolutionary Wat, ""'. . ""'
•u• Dept.; Arlinston; Va., 88 a
'"
individual
artists,
atts
Richmond , P.T.A., · E'dlson orderlid the cOOtlnental' Ariny . brolher and famlly; Mr. and
sOnlor Citizens -Lunch clerical recrultar. Sgt. Oller Is
organizations, universities ,
Council; La.... Kelmc..!,•"· demobii!Zed
Mrs. Charles King at Wolf- Pr&lt;~gram 11:30 a.m. ; 12:30 a graduate of Warren Twp., '
c!ubs, galleries, special in·
_
wmTlR14DI~ _,.::;
In !917, A'iner1cans at home forth, Tex. ·and with lier sister p.m. -~onday thtoug~. Friday. Cwnee, 01. 8l)d has attencied
teres\ groups, and others
RA_CINE - A costmne. par"ty
Sandy J-ie$sel, No! wood VIew lear.nedofthellrst World 'War I and husband, .Mr. and MrS.
the Unive~tty o1 n
_"-""'·. He is·
· the was held Wednesday night at McLain, Carol Mor~, fenny ·P .T.A., N~rwood
•
Count II : deatbsofU.S.
·
·
OBSERVANCE TODAY
·•
.......,..
concerned a bo ut thear Is '"
sclldierslightlng Paul
, Ba"l
1ey at San· Antomo,
~sentlysl!ltlonectatFt.Myer
region . Additional information the home of Charles and Joan =thMe~~a~~!~~~~~: ~~~::,~r~~~=~iton0.~~ in Nancy, Fr8Jice.
Tex.
.
· GALLIPOLIS . ~ Church alid Ia a member of lhe
about membership
and McLain, Racine. Games were
,
Council. . , .
, ·.· In 1,..., Franklin D. RooseWomen . !Jnlted of Gallia ,__, ..-'tlal Honar' Guard
. , an
·
Howard, 'Brice · Hart, Jim
will
w ld "~""""'
la
ACORV may, -be ob ined by played and refreshments
J UN lOR · HIGH:
Stan velt was ·rwle_cted presld__ent
County
8poi)SOr a · or
elite ,;,.,~"Y of the Army's
111
( 513) 6211818
Howard, ' Jeromy
Joe Ramage White O.k J10&gt;lor
Cornimatit)' ,D aycibaen.,ceal
·-·....-·
ca ng .
, •
' or sei'Veddurlng lite evening.
Lawrence,
Johnny
Bill High, : Homl"uorl
County for a second 1..-rn.
'
. GUESTS. HERE
.
•L- First u.o....,._._ ......~ Old Guard. '
,
writing .ACORV c-o P.O. Box
. Gu.Sts ~re Bec]cy Crow, · Hoback, Jim McLain, Mike Council; Debbie Romell, Deer
In 11164, LYndon Johnson W88
·
""'
• ,....,, _ _ "''"""''•;
The couple . reilldes ill
73, Cincinnati, 45201.
Lisa .Warner, Janis Canlahan,
Park Junior-Senior . p;T.A.. elected president by the largest · M~N. W. ·Va. -Mr. and state !Jt., GalJIPitil, at Z p.m. AleDitdrla va
'" resp,onse . to num~rous
·
~--- c 11 ; .hlnel majority.lnhls\OI')'totblttdate Mrs . "'-'
,..
Sharoli. Hill, Annette· Mills, McLain; Mickey Hoback, Bill Va 11 ey Aru .......
, ..,~ TriPP were SUnday today. The
. meeting Is open to ,
' .' · "
rtJ&lt;juests 'from · ACORV's first · Teresa Ervin, ~nda Glenn, 1 ~,::c~a~~!-. Lawrence and ~"d'::;;.., t,",;;,d.'l:~ P.T.A.. defeating ·-Republican Sen: di~ guests of Mr. arid j)frs~ lhe public and everyOne is ·
~·
, nM!mbers, \he first specific _ Br~nd*- Jol)nson, . Beverly ·
,
SENIOR HIG"H: 'Mike Barcy ~dwater:. .. .'
Landon Smith. ··
Wlllcqrne.
' '
,! , ,

vr.

c·
•
. ttzzens

..

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.. ,!;

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WASHINGTON, D. C. - The
1975 official Bicentennial
Medal commemorating the
famous ·midnight ride of Paul
Revere, and the battles of
Lexington and Concord, will be
designed by
Sculptress
Margaret Grigor, Steilocoom,
Wash.
Miss Grigor was one' of the
semi-finalists in the recent
Bureau of the Mint Bicentennial coin design competition.
.... ,
MlssGrigor,Scottlsh-bom, is
a veteran of 40 years in her
profession, and has won
numerou.s honors over the

IJ i.J years. -T hemostrecentwasthe
~~ ~

1972 Alumqae Assodation
hn. award of her alma mater,

.o: Mount Holyoke College, for
~ ·'' outstanding achievement in
~~~ her field.
1&gt;-1 She "is also recipient of the
~iJ Stimson Prize and William
o:.
~ •

DIAMOND
VALUES

3 .,

,

'

·

....

Beautiful .

DIAMOND CWSTER
e

'395 110

&gt;.

·'

.,

'14 cl

. •18f1M'

'

ouer

mitt

On uu,;

Set

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
422 Second Ave .
Gallipolis, Ohio
&lt;·

Tawney , Ken Clark,

Mclains host costume party

r .

f.

1·
..,

,.

rwiJ....--..;.

.I

·· •

·' · ·

_:

..

·_1

.'

:

Brian

Tabit, Mark Cwnmons, Rickie
Rockwell, Mike Pa squale,
Jerry Eutsler; outdoorsman
aquanat , one and two year
pin s, J im Fanning, Jamie Hill ;
two year pin, athlete , aquanat,
outdoorsman and sportsman ;
Richie Ste ele , sports m a n,

reminded everyone that the

pack meetings will be held on
the first Monday of each month
from now on. There will be a athlete, outdoorsman and two
special ' meeting in December ye ar pin ; Steve Malcomb,
Emeln Cresson Traveling · when can.ned goods will be aquanat, a tht'ete , outdoorsman
Fellowship awarded ,by the collected and donated to a and two year pin ; John Moore,
Pennsylvania Academy of Fine needy family in the area . outdoorsman, athlete, aquanat
Arts in 1973; the Undsey Fanning also reminded all the and two year pin ; Barry
Morris Prize for best bas relief, boy~ that Cubs will again sell Nelson, 2 year pin , outdoorspresented by . the National Christmas candles.
man, athlete , scholar a nd
Sculpture Society , j~ 1969, and
Fanning presented the sportsman.
prizes received in several awards earned by the CUbs this
This past month the Wcbelos
group !;hO)VS in New York and past month .
went on an · overnight hike,
Tacoma, Washington.
Receiving a wards were: Den cookout and campout at the
Following her graduation 1, John Gloss, one year pin.
VFW Farm. The buys had a
from Mount Holyoke in S&lt;luth'&lt;
Bobcat pins and badges : great time and earned their
Hadley, Massachusetts, where Mike Wallen, Sherman Green, outdoorsman and sportsman
she received her BA degree in Tndd Teimund, Chris Elcessor, awards while they were there.
history of, art in 1934, Miss Todd Smith, Jeff Rathburn, The adults who accompanied
Grigor ·studied under Walter Jim Beaver, Steve Patterson these boys are to be lhanked.
'Hancock and Albert Laessle at and Ken ,Russell.
Chuckie Dillon wh o is now a
·· the Pennsylvania Academy of
Boy
Scout receiveO the
Den n, one year pin, Rusty
Fine Arts ove.~ .... ~ fjve year Moore; one y~ar pin, one gold following awards which he
period.
arrow and one silver arrow, earned dW'ing the summer
Miss Grigor has completed Jim Parsons; Wolf badge and before he becam e 11 years of
many importan't commissions pin, one gold arrow and one age : aquanat , two silver
in the medallic field. Among silver arrow, Brent Adkins; arrows, three year pin,
these are the Garvan Medal, Bobcat pins and badges, Billy forester ,
t ra vele r
and
aWarded annually to an out- Marrah, Chris Nelson, Kevin engineer.
standing woman scientist Carter and Brian Burlingame.
Den n prese nted a skit based
(1937); the American Transit
Den III, one year pin, Robbie on the Cub Scout theme of the
Safety Award plaque ( 1942) ; Hill ; one silver arrow, Tony month, "Folklore and Story
Telling". They no t only
the
American
Medical
Association Medal, awarded
followed this, theme but tied In
annually to an outstanding
, the celebration of Halloween.
general practitioner (.1947 );
'The skit was titled "Midnight •
the Rickey Medal, awarded by
in the Gallia County Library" ..
,the American Society of Civil
Cubs were·introduced to many
Engineers ( 1948); and the
characters who came alive
American ·camelli~ Society's
from the books. Some of these
John P. nlges Medal ( 1948) .
RIO GRANDE - Events of .were The Headless Horseman,
Also, the ·Traffic Safety R.G.C. Campus for the week of ·one of the La st of the
Award Plaque, awar~ed by the Nov. 4 include :
Mohigans, the Scarecrow from
Theodore M. Watson Memorial
Nov. 5, Bloodmobile, 12:30 the pages of "The Wizard of
Fund (19&gt;6) : the Air Traffic p.m . • 5 p.m., Davis Hall.
· .Oz" , a pirate from "Treasure
Control . Associatil:m's Air
Nov. 5, Speaker,John Bryan Island", Paul Bunyan, the
Safety Award plaque · ( 1958) ; from Goodyear. Topic : "Head · wick'ed witch from " Hansel
the Society of Medalists' 7ls\ 'Em Off at the Gap". Time : and Gretel", and Tarzan of the
issue marking the statehood of 1:40 p.m . at the Dining Hall. Apes.
Alaska and Hawaii ( 1965); the
Nov. 6, Movies: " Monkey
Each of the dens competed in
-Benjamin Franklin Medal for Business" with the Marx a balloon blowing and bursting
the Chase Commemorative Brothers, "My Little Chick a contest with the grand prize
Society (1966) ; and the reverse Dee" with W. C. Fields. Time: going to the windiest and
of the National Sculpture 7:30 p.m. in the Dining Hall. quickest boy ;n the entire pack,
Society' s 75th Anniversary
These events will take place Brian Burlingame.
medal (1968).
on the Rio Grande College
The boys paraded in their
Other medallic works by Campus. People from the various costumes and the
Miss Grigor include the college community are invited judges selected · the following
Mississippi River · Parkway to at~nd.
boys as winners: prettiest,
IOOth Anniversary medal
Tony Dillon of Den Ill, dressed
( 1970) ;
the
Alexander
as Little Bo Peep; ugliest,
Hamilton medal for the Hall of Sculpture Society, American Richie Steele of Webelos for his
Fame for Great Amecicans Artists' Professional League costume of the Wolfman ; most
(1971) ; the Tacoma Rotary and the National Association of original, Headless Horseman,
Association 's medal (1972) ; Women Artists, Miss. Grigor's better known as Brian
and the George C. Marshall work is in the permanent Burlingame ; of Den II; and
medal for the International collections of the Smithsonian funniest costume, Den I, Mike
Fraternal Commemorative Institution, Mount Holyoke Wallen in his scarecrow outfit.
College and · the tnu Mau
Society (1973 ). · '
Den .Ill showed the
A member of the National Village in Honolulu.
Halloween centerpiece and the
masks they made this past
mOnth in den meetings. The

masks were made from
styrofoam paper plates. Pack·
master Fanning adjourned the
meeting after the closing and
the boys· served refreshments.

u

..
,,.

DINNER PLANNED

MIDDLEPORT - Feeney •
Bennett Post 128, Arilerican
Legion , with 'John Fultz as
commander, will hold a birthday dinner at 6:30 p:m., Nov .
11, the traditional Veteran's
Day, at the post home. The
auxiliar y, headed by Mrs.
-William Hendricks, will
prepare and serve the dinner
which is for post members and
theii- families. Frank Vaughan,
district Americanism chair- ·
man, will !peak briefly.

'i.

''·•
'
.,

'

lhe look you love!

..,.

The Right Lift To Today's Fashions
'

. ELECT
MURRAY E.
CHURCH

,·

s iepping light, stepping _lively' that's how you'll walk'
in Johlli.S"n' s newest delectable pump . Fa shione ~ in ·
and pl'ped in gold, you'll welcome this shoe of
refined taste to your new fall wardrobe.

'
·'

.S3J,99 .

,

A Man Who Is
'Capable· Dependable
. &amp; Well Cualified' ·

·'Iii~
.

•.
I

IMft. &amp; Fri. 9,30 to I p.in_-:. '
•· nits. Wed . ut. 9: 30 til s p.m.
· Thuuctav 9:Jo til 12 ~~~?on

i.uldlll(lali

·
.... IIC =II..,...., . . . . . . . . C1M10

-GAWA COUNTY
-BOARD ·OF ··
EDUCAOON
Pd. Pol. Adv .

'
/.

D.

H a nso n,

Hen -

Bobby, of the Mason-Gallia
area .

·cLOSED
SUNDAYS

ho~e of

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
MON- FRI. 10 AM TIL 9 PM
SATURDAY'S 10 AM TIL 6 PM

'Vallejo, Calif., where Hanson
is s ta tioned with the U.S. Navy
aboard the submarine Trieste
II at Mare Island Na val Ship-

COX'S•••A GOOD PLACE
TO SHOP FOR NICE
THINGS TO WEAR.

yard.
The groom atte nded Gali ia
Academy Hi gh School.
Out..of-town guests attending
the ceremony included Mrs.

Jeff Tabit ; and one silver

arrow , Ferrell Miller.
Webelo~ received their two
year pins, outdoorsinan and
athlete, Dewey Rhodes, Ron

°

't

J ;J mes

dersunv ille, Ten n., a nd Mr1,.,1and
Mr s. I.owetJ Allen, Pam and

Have you ever said, "If that item
was on sale, I would buy it?"
Here is your opportunity to
purchase that item during
The Style Center's 15% OFF
~ftJJ&lt;:!

TOMORROW

MONDAY
THROUGH
THURSDAY

Rio lists
activities

'"

·

James H. Hanson and Maria,
Rick Boone, Mr . a nd Mrs.

Dillon: Wolf and one year pin,

GALIJPOLIS - Cub -Scout
Pack · 204 ' held ito regular
monthly meeting M,onday, Oct.
28, at the Presbyterial\ Church
and celebrated Halloween .
Packmaster Robert Fanning
called the meeting to order and
Den 1 led the Pledge 'of
Allegiance and they repeated
the Law of the Pack.
Fanning assigned duties for
the coming month and

Medal sculptress chosen

Military wedding joins
Miss Stevers, Sgt. Oller

Frances Hanson , Mr. and Mrs.

I, .

•'

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COATS
•WINTER
COATS
•DRESSES
. •SPORTS
WEAR
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Regular Purchase 110 ................ •8.50
Regular Purchase 115.............. •12.75
Regular Purchase 120..............'17.00
R~ular Purchase 130 .............. '25.50
Regular Purchase 140.............. •34.00
Regular Purchase 150...............'42.50.
'

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. SHOP FOR X'MAS

�Miss Sanders, Allen Hanson marry·
'

-

'

i
.,

:\

Allen, Pl. P]eaAAnt . W .. v.~
'

...

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'

En~lish illUsion. The

bridal

Ba uer, Colwnbus, and Bpbby

son, F.dgemont Dr., and J,owell bou_quet was a col oni a l
· arrangement of pink a nd whi Le
Allen, Rt . 2.
Given in marriage by her carnations with matc hin g

La wson, cousin of the bride.
A. reception was held

followin g the wedding in the

streamers.
Mrs. Marvin C. Schumm ,
Schumm, the bride wore an
empire gown of powder blue Newark , was her s is te r' s
double knit polyester. The matron of honor and only atgown was styled with a v- tendant. Mrs. Schumm wore an

the bride 's aun t, Mi ss
Dora Skiver.
Aftei' a wedding trip through
the wes lern sta les, the new Mr.
and Mrs . Hanso n will reside at

empire gown in yellow double
knit polyester styled similarly
to the pride 's. Her headpiece
encircled the waistline a nd was als o yellow and she
cuffs of the sleeves. A ma t- carried a bouquet of yellow and
ching camelot cap held . the white carnations with matbouffant bridal veil of imported ching streamers.
J oseph Hanson, Colwnbus ,
brother of the groom, was best
man. Us he rs were Dann y

707 San Fernando Valley Way,

is the nephew of James Han-

GALLIPOLIS - The wedding of Rita Kay Sanders,
S&lt;luth Shore, Ky., and· Allen F.
Hanson, .Portsmouth , took
place Oct. 5 at the Church of
God, South. Shore.'
Tile bride is the youngest
daughter of Mrs . Lester
Quillen,. South Shore, and the
late Mr. Quillen. The groom is
' son of Mr. 'anq, Mrs .
the eldest
Burt Hanson , Poi-tsmOu.th ,
former residents of Gallipolis.
He is the grandson ol . M&lt;S.
Frances Hanson, · First Ave.,
and the late Mr. a~d Mr~1 .J\. W.

II

.

brother-in-law, Marvin

C.

neckline, large collar, long
fitted sleeves and a controlled
a-line skirt. White venice lace

rJ.lta

Cub .Pack 204 meets
OOMPLETION NEAR -The new slstershlp to ihe Delta
rises In the be,ckground while a workman applies a
welder's arc to steel. at the yards of Jeffboat, Inc., Jel'
fersonville, Ind. The $17 million, all steel, steamboat will he
launched Into the Ohio Rlv..- this winter and will begin her
cruises early in 1976. The boat will carry 400 passengers in
~een

lower berths and will Include such features as a sauna,
swimming pool, movie theater' passenger elevators and a
beauty parlor. Reservations are being accepted for the new
boat's inaUgural ctuises with a deposit of $100 per person .
Reservations and brochUres may be obtained by writing The
Delta ~een Steamboat Co~, 322.E.' Fourth St., Cincinnati,
45202.

Delta Queen ,brochures available
schedule out of the Port of J:lew
Orleans· will continue to April
18, and the fall-Winter cruises
will be in operation from Nov. 4
PLANS COMPLETED -The marriage of Cathy Louise
to Jan . 2, 1976.
Searles and William-Henry Ward will be an event of Nov. 7.
The Delta Queen this year
Miss Searles is the daughter of Veva Searles, Rt. 1, RuUand,
expanded
its fall schedule out
and Rolland Searles, Rt. 1 Middleport. She is a 1971 graduate
of New Orleans to include
of. Meigs High School. Ward is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
December. The New Orleans
Ward, Middleport. He attended Middleport High School and
cruises · will include the
served in the U.S. Navy receiving his discharge in October,
weekend cruises with Saturday
1973. The couple ·will reside in RuUand following their
marriage.
• • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • .. • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • •.• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• shor:e stop and tours at some of
:
: the lower Mississippi's most
~~
beautiful plantations and the
l:;
Jill .
:.:. five-night
cruises to such
historic and beautiful ports as
1
Natchez and Vicksburg.
:
:
Both the full-season and New
; · Orleans brochures may be
CINClNNATl - After two seminar has been scheduled : ·
years of research, planning, for late November . .Plans are
: obtained by writing The Delta
developm ent,
and
con- now underway to bring :
Gallipolis-Point Pleasant
Pomeroy-Middleport
; , Queen steamboat eo., 322 E:
sultations involving nearly together authoritative · ;
b·l34l
992·2156
; _Fourth St. , Cincinnati, 45202.
44
1,000 persons in the arts, the speakers and the arts to ex· .:
Arts Council of the Ohio River plore the subject of "The

1vfiss Cathy Louise
Searles
..

€INCINNAT - Brochures
are available for the 1975 Delta ·
Queen cruise season which
opens with a Mardi Gras, Feb.
11 cruise out of the Port of New
Orleans.
Two brochures are available.
One outlines the entire cruise
season from February through
December while the other is

.~

'

Mr. and Mrs. Allen F. Hanson

'

.

Arts council formed

devoted to the Delta Queen's
schedule out of the Port of New
Orleans in the spring.
The Steamer Delta Queen,
last of the overnight paddlewheelers, will embark on a
total of 67 cruises on the Ohio
and Mlsslssipp;" l\ivel'll during
1975. These include the popular
weekend cruises out of the

0 man

Dorothy Countryman

..

~~:~! ~s ·~opened·

l,'

'·.

'·r:

''

••'·
: {,

'. '~t·.

·,

0

!' •
I

ti

•'

'\

:)

:.. 'I,

•

I

i

.• ~

l'

s

J

Delta Queen 's major port
cities, to the week-long cruises.
There also will he three 20-&lt;lay
Cincinnati • New Oreleans
round trips, and one 1JI.day St.
Louis. New Orleans round trip.
In addition, the Delta Queen
will continue its recently ex·
panded New Orleans schedule.
The Delta Queen 's spring

0 l(J :
f

Charlene Hoeflich

Meius countians attend meetinu

Big~.:%~ ~R~~s ~~~

Sgt. and Mrs. William E. Oller

GALLIPOLIS - A military
wedding at the Fori Myer Post
Chapel, Aug . 31, joined Miss
Roberta
Lynn
Sievers,
daughter of Mrs. Robert · L.
Sievers, Fourth-Ave., and Sgt.
William Edward Oller, s6n of
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Oller,
Gurnee, m. ·
. Dr. Robert L. Mole, &lt;USN,
performed the double ring

.&lt;C~-mw.;*?-;m='*'9cmt;::S:~==
~=*=wun
_~.~~~wt__

0
i
'CO....Der By Charlene Hoeflich
y

ceremony and William· Heasley
presented nuptial music ineluding "Colour My World,"
"What the World Needs Now,"
"Love is Blue" and "We've
Only Just · BegiDI.~'
Willimb Woodall, brother-in·
Iawolthebrlde,escortedberto
the altar. She was attired In an
organza gown with long. lull
$leeves gathered into a deep
cotton laC!! cuff. with blue satin
ribbon. The empire waist was

~u::~wi: :~p.:~ ":~

lor·
w
ACORV is not a fund-raising services, chairwoman Phyllis
0 '
0
cented by cotton lace and blue
organization . It is a unique non- Weston said, "One ol the most
~' satin ribbon. A sweep train
profit service organization for significant achievements
POMEROY - Mrs. Charles of Education.
.
Blerut, Parma P. T.A., Parma
·
!* drifted behind· and her waist
arts ACORV can pursue is the Goeglein_, president of the
Three resolutions were Council: Beverly lvanT!e,
length veU fell from a wide
individual . artists,
organizations, and individuals Granlsinanshlp Office because
~eigs County Council of ·appr~ed by lhe con~ention. _. ~;~~~rs~~~.;.,c~r'yn.:''ife:g;
~ bal)d of corded silk, cotton lace
in communities in the region the potential sources of unParents and Teachers, Mrs. The f1rst giVes the Oh10 PTA Lakewood P.T.A., Lakewood
.1. .
1!1J and tiriy pearls. She carried a
encompassing S&lt;Juthern Ohio, tappedfundlngaresodiverselt Robert Dugan ol the Salem the
responsibility
for Council.
j semi-nosegay of w)llte orchids
Center PTA, and Mrs. Rlchai-d publishing infoi'mation on the RaL~JvE~:~i~~;,: J~~~~~t~;
and blue carnations. ·
Northern Kentucky, Eastern requires full-time scanning to
· Indiana and portions of West be aware of the many op-- Vaughan, Middleport, the qualif1cat1ons and dulles of Dulles P.T.A., Hamilton
POMEROY - Marcia Karr, Syracuse, Is one of those
Mrs. Sandra Woodall served
Virginia . The first arts council portunitles . .Few of the area's District 16 director, attended candidates to \!le nonpartisan County . Council.
Steven "forever- young at heart" people, and there's probably no one ail her sister's matron of honor.
of its kind, ACORV is a national arts resources can undertake 'the 69th annual conV.ntjon of State Board of Education,
Golem btewskl,
Dunham aro'·"dwho enjoys birthdays more than she.·Her friends always Mrs. Ka"tle Fowler w88 brld••~
•
J~ ~
o1 . •
P. T.A.,
Maple
Heights
'"'
~
model for organizing the arts this task · alone. ACORV can
the Ohio PTA this past week at
A second .res ullon urges Council : Vicki Godby, J. F. see that it's a very special lime..
matron. Their gowns we~, of
on a re gional level. Support for help bring additional outside
the Netherland Hilton Hotel, &lt;rthove&lt;llc screening for high Burns P.T.A., Valley Area
While her 84th birthday was last Sunday, the celebrating really ligh~ blue chiffon with empire
the ACORV concept began two funding for the arts to our Cincinnati.
scboo\ athletes, a b~ on the C'\"~~~~RMEDIATE : ' Mala started on the Saturday before when Mr. and Mrs. Carl Weese waists and long full, corded,
years ago under lfle leadership region."
AbrQ8d legislative program technique of bloc)ung and Adla Kha, Frank Ohl P. T.A., tookber for a drive tO view the beautiful foliage . S~y m9flllng sheer aleeves. The eritplre
of Mrs. Fred ' Lazarus m,
ThiS . was underscored by to guide the organiZation's lackllpg in football known as Austintown Council: Janet she received special recotinition at tlie ASbury United Methodist waist, collar and cuffs were
current chairwoman of the Clark ' Mitze ·of the National efforts before the 111th Ohio "spearing," and lhe adoption Durick, St~ .S treet School Church, and lhat evening the Eagles Class which sbe has taught trimmed in ruffles. They
Ohio Arts Coun,cil . The for- Endowment for the Arts when .__ General Assembly .was ol ~inimum standards of t.;.i.;~··w;~d~,~~:,~uC~~ . for the past 12 years entertained with a party in her honor.
c&amp;rried semi-nosegays of light
· The class meniberspresentedberW!th a white gold watcli, and and dark blue carnations. Miss
mation of "ACORV took place he explained in Cincinnati that ' adopted. The delegates called certification for coaches by the P. T.A., Norwood Council. .
under the aegis of the Natiolll!l special funds
otherwise for a redesigned school Ohio High School Athletic
JUNIOR HIGH: Jim Ruble; there was a bouquet of red rosebuds from Mr. and Mrs. Millard stephanie Woodall, nl~ of lhe
Endowment for the Arts, the unavailable fo~ . individual fo~ildation formula w,hich Association.
.
~~cr.;ghE~~-~!l'"~~=~~~t Van Meter. There was singing, picture taking and a decorated bride,. served as flower girl.
Ohio ~ts Council·,, the Ken- organizations, are available _ includes an "annual adA bicycle · safety resolution Thornton Junior High P.T.A., cake for the occasion.
_ Alain, Oller, .Columbus AFB,
tucky and . :· Indiana Arts through an arts cpuncUsuch as !uslment in state aid to meet. also was passed which calls lor Akron
Council:
Cindy
· Then Thursday at tbeSenior Citizens Center birthday party, Mlsa., was best man. Ushers
_ !Jon the-"·u
Product
Dahlberg, Council.
Struthers P.T.A., Miss Karr reeelved an orchid for being the oldest having&amp; birth- ' ·were Sgt. LanfordFowier, sn
Commissions . in order to ACORV, and by increasing inflationary costs of. educa
.
. Struthers·
'T'•
· . S. Consumer
develop an increasing spirit of inter.. tate programming.
.baaed on the consumer price Safety ,Commission to retam
HIGH SCHOOL :
Lora day in October, and Mrs. Ulllan Sinlth, Middleport, surprised Michael Hopkins and Francis
community"among the at!:! of
MOillbers and . officers of Index;" and "built-in in- Jan. I, 1975, as tile comll'lance Gregory, . Filch
P. T.A., her with a red sunbonnet. Gifts, cards and letters drifted In all Oller, brother of the g~
'.
the region. ACORV Intends to ACORV's Board of Directors
cenllves lor school districts date for mandatory bicycle Austintown Council: Cathl week ... averyspecial·linl!'forMissKarr.
Curtis Oller-, brother of
·
1
.... _t
k
tr
1 1
·
Spalding, Norfhwes1 Senior
serve as a catalyst for, com- are: Mrs. Leo,F. Weston, Jr., 1""' rna e ex a e for in safety
regulations . by High P.T.A., Hamilton County
groom, served as ringbearel".
m u n i cation ,
growth , chairwoman, Cincinnati Arts SI!Pporling tax Issues at the -manufacturers.
Council .
DEATH AND taxes, neither can be avoided, or so they say.
Membel'll of the Presiden~
promotion, and sharing of lhe Leader; Lawrence H. HOrwitz, local level." ·
During the annual conGeorge
Hargraves •
So ... while the Pomeroy United Methodist Church paator Honor Guard providing , tile
of theattended
Meigs deala with ,..._
~ de th th
•
arts regionally. , .
president and director, Cin- , The conven IIon, which beg an ven \"10n banque, I .Tuesd ay superlnter\dent
Local School District,
.. ~ s. ubje"c t u.
a , o women of the. church malte cross saber arch were ~Among the programs and clnnati; Mrs. Michael G. Neal, last Sunday and continued night, the new state secretary, Tuesday sessions of the con- ready to deal with the matter of taxes.
Philip Young, Sgt. Dan
services offered by ACORV vtce president, MadisOn, Ind.
through Wednesday drew new stste lreasurer and seven venllon and was scheduled to
And fl1at brings us to the annual Election Day dinner to be Neumnrt, Sgt. Steven Rue~,
· ·Grants Advisory Ser- arts leader; Dr. Wllliam nearIY!
1300de.e.ga
I tes who took dl s trl c t dl rec t ors were In- . appear
on for
a panel,
"Pointing
a , held a tthechurch. All proceedswill go to ward pay ing thecburch
··r-·
•
are : A
Direction
Action".
Due to
.
SFC
George Deady, SP-4 ~
vice to assist members in Parsons, Northern Kentucky
the official position, putUng the stalled for two-year terms. the heavy legislative program, taxes.
Diamond and SP-4 Mike Deag.
finding funding for programs ; State College, Highland Ohio PTA ori record as op-- / Other state officers were the panel time was chan~ed
From 11 a.m. to 3 pm; the women will serve sandwiches, Capt. Bruce Erion called II!'
a Workshop . Seminar Series to Heights, Ky., also a VP, Lowell posing "strikes or any form of chosen for two-year terms last ~~:!..::i'f~:~,~~· d~guf~ 01 n'~~ soup, salads, pie and colfei!. There will also be all sorta of bazaar commands. _
,
enable regional participants to Engelking, Indiana mem- work stoppage 88 a means of year.
participate.
type items for sale. Arid if you're interested In taking a quart or
I!' traditional military sty!,,
explore mutual problems and bersbipchalrman, President of settllltg disputes between
The new secretary is Mrs.
AmonP. the speakers ot the twoofsouphomefor~per,justtakeyourcontainers, ' ' ·
a black marriage carrlag
issues with knowledgable Engelking Pattern Co.,
boards of education and any of Charles (Barbara) Sprague convent on were _Dr. Martin w.
drawn by two whl~ ·horses w•
•
•
'
Essex, state superintendent of
·
Ia
be hed led Is th
11
thetr employes.
Mansfield, and the hew public Instruction; on "Margin
AND SPEAKING of bazaars, the test to sc u
e provided . by the CassioliJI
experts ; Information , Com- Columbus, Ind.; Charles
munication, and Reference Fleischmann, Cincinnati Art:!
The position on strikes also treasurer is Mrs. Joseph of Excellence"; John R. 'one at the senior Citizens Center.Itwill be Nov. 21 and22.
Platoon of the Old Guard, U.!t.
Services to facilitate increased Leader,
secretary
and
urges the PTA to "assist in (Madlene) Jayne Brookfield Meckstroth, president of the
Arm
.
th
t
d
h
h
'
State'llepartmenl
of
Education
THERE'S
hlng
ifl
disc
ling
bout
·
·
to
Y·
•
.
'
I
te
1
1
inter-communication, plan- treasurer; Mrs. Vincent pro c mg
e sa e y an
w o was I e . outgo ng who talked on "Who's
• • some\
a tr e
oncer
a
gomg m
. Sidealtarsofthechapel weri
ning, and sharing of ideas and Bolling, Dayton, Arts Leader;
welfare of the children by secretary.
Responsible for Teocher stores and seeing the Halloween masks next to the Christmas dec&lt;rated with arrangements
resources; Special Referral Paul Flohr, promjJient Ports- urging appropriate action by
A feature of the convention Education? ~:
Rev .
Fr · decorations, and one wonders if a .few years from nOJV we'll be of white mums.
'ty
.
_,1 al
I
~-•
Richard Connelly, chaplain,
1 tin
"
·tree ornamen
'
ts · A gust
' •
R
ber the daY when·
Is
Services for practicing ar\Jsts mouth, businessman; Charles
paren , contmunl agencies was a cw\ur arlo uncucvn at Clnclnn.oll Bengals sPeaker on se ec g
m u
. emem
For ber daagl!ter;s wedding,
and volunteer groupa, but "not which time s\ste wlnnel'llin the "There's No TornO.: row" at the . Christmas decorations weren't put on store shelves until after Mrs. Stevel'll chose a blue
addre ssing their speclfi~ Holmond, creative arts
to take sides in the dispute" areasofmll8ic, visual arts, and Tuesday night banquet.
Thanli:sgiylng!
polyester gown. The collar and
needs; the formation l.'f . an director, Seven Hills Neigh1 ~ panel
·
Topics
considered,
Education Division aimed at borhood Houses Ass'n., Cin- and "not stsff classrooms or literature · were announced
.
, · discussions Included school
cuffs were of white chiffon
enlarging the inter-change of cinnati; James M. E. Mixter,
take on any tasks lor wblch the The winning p1eces of disruptions, health, home and
ruffles- trlnuned in blue. Her
arts resources of the region's D. H. Baldwin eo:, Cincinnati;
J&gt;'!'Amembersltrenotcertified literature illld music were f~mily life concerns, h""lth
' SEEN AND HEARD
::::::~~::::~::::&lt;w.:&gt;$~::::::::::&gt;'=l.·,fmllt'l'l~i!l corsage W!IS a white orchlcj.
educational institutions; the Dr. George Rleveschl, jiDlior
cir fully qualllled."
presented "live" and 'the blue .conarns, the drug scene and
GALLIPOLIS Mr M 1 ·
~J. &lt;'
11
· ther of the
1
fostering
of
auxiliary vice president of Sp•clal
The delegates also adopted a ribbon pieces of art were ~~~.c&amp;r:~'!f'~ ~~r.l:.t Smeltzer and ~- ,!;d · ~~ j~
:"oo'm~ ~~:U pink ctufron
organizations beneficial to the Projecla of the UniverSity of
position on teacher education displayed.
presided at the conventloh, : ' "Phil Sny~er attended open !ii
e
·- a
.JAr
. gown with pleated skirt. H..standards and certification.
Winners, rn order, were:
The Almahouse at the Romall J. !!:: .
TUUJ.
corsage w88 .a white orchid.
arla such as a local unit of Cinclnattl; Henry Stock,
Volunteer Lawyers for the Cincinnati recreation com"Recognizing· the need for
MUSIC: PRIMARY, Joyce
· ·
·
looal aaprood
_ s, Hilis Floral SI!PP.ly
·
1 11 ed the
Arts.
mission, Dr. Thomas A.
change, tlleOhioPTAapplauds H'!n, Case P.T.A.' Akron By Uolted Preulatemat
d Walter J E 1 In&lt;! 1
POMEROY ~-',The Meigs
A recepllon
ow
The organizational frame··'Spragens, President of Cenlre
and su~ports the Ohio State Council: Nell Rothstein, Essex
Today Is SUnda,Y, Nov. 3• the an
· · nge ' 1 ., hn Senior CitiZens Center located ceremony at ~~~ort McNair •
th d
Board of Ed 11
d Ohi
P.T.A., .Akron Council .
.·
307th day o1 1974 with 58 to Columbus, Sunday. n t e . the P
J
Hi h NCO aub, wasruitgton, D. c.
work , as we II as
e ues Co11ege of.Kentucky, Danville,
uca on an
o
INTERMEDIATE:
Sha!ly · follow
1 afternoon they enjoyed a 10
omeroy · un1or g . Miss
Sheila . Staggers .
structur~ of ACORV were Ky.; Albert K. Webster,
State
Department
of St~honsori, , Forest . VIew
'llle.
~bet . 1"ts full designschoolwlthBIJ:Hixonas School is ~n 9 a.m . . 4 p.m. registered the guests and
moon · ween
d 1
d
1
Mon~ay thrQMh
Friday.
Education's current on~oing P. .A.. Valley Ar~ C:O....cll;
d'esigned specifically to Insure general manager Cinc"1nnatl'
• .
Jane Hoeflich, Bradbury ~ apd last quarter. '
es gner an commen a1or.
· ,
assisted at the ·receptron. The · ·
that "services, programs; and Symphony Orchestra. Twenty
~forts to reform and redes1gn P. T.A., Meigs County C:O....cll.
The 'morning stars · are Hixson ls a 'l eading in·
Activities Include :
bridal table w88 deCorated
·the direction of the council additional board members will
teacher education s\sndards
JUNIOR HIGH: · Margaret ·
V
M
· d tematlonal designer. from ' the
Monday, Nov. 4, Square
whl
reflect and respond to the be elected at ACORV;s next
and certification," the position Grlebllng, Litchfield Junior ; Mercury, enos, . ars ,an
u•-son School o( Design· in · Dancing.
with a .centerpiece of · .te
,,
b
al
·
"d
High P.T.A,, Akron C:O....cil: , Saturn.
""'
Tu sd
N
Elect!
mums, green and white car·
needs of lis mem ers, 1urge annu meeting in November.
sal .
Kurt . GIHtion, Forest Park
The evening star Is Jupiter; aeyeland and W88 sponsored . , . e ay, ov. 5'
on llllti!"'s and while~~- Music
The Arts Council of the Ohio
The teacher ~ducatlon Middle P.T.A., Val!ev ArH
Thoae ·born.on this date are by Walter J. Engel, Inc.
' Day! Vote! Cllorits 12;30 • 2 w88 provided at _the recepttqn
- and small.
Annual membership dues Rlv~r Valley is the recipient of
positio.n calls lor "mcreasing Co~~~ SCHOOL: Karen . IDid..- \lie sign o1 Scorp!o. .
p.m. Cards and Games. .
by membel'll ol 'tile U. S.-Army
are nominal : $15 for in· grants from the National
financial support to colle~es Grlebllng, Firestone Son lor
American poet William
Wednesday, Nov. 8, Craft Band. ·
·
.
.
dividuals,
$30
for Endowment for the Arts and
and umvers1ties preparmg High P.T:A.. ,Akron Council;_ Culliin Bryant w&amp;a,born Nov.
. .
MCana~~~g., , ~QUilting ; Chitir
.The riew Mrs.
is 8 1970
organizations, and $50 or more lhe Ohio Arls Council. The
teachers" and supports con. Tom .Mo:&gt;aY!IO"dV~ Breckovllle 3rd" 17!H
GOING ON VISIT
-..,
a...duate of Gallla Academy
.for charter members. "Let's Kentucky and Indiana Arts
tlnued control of teacher eJlr!:""ar'!l':vte';,/c!;.c~Ck~
day in history:
MASON, W. Va. ~ Mrs.
Thursday, Nov. ·7, , Craft
"School. She is employed
Help Each Other" is the thel]le Commissions also endorse
education _standards and
VISUAl, liRT$ WINNERS:
xJ, 1783 ·with Amerlc:an In- Landon Smith will go by plane . Making, Cards and Games. '
with the capital. ~a Per·
of the membership campaign ACORV. ·
certificationbytheS\steBoard PRIMARY, GMn $chneJU.., ' ~assUred alter the from Columbus, Thurll'day to
Frlday, Nov. 8, Bowling i..a sonnet Services Office_ Navy
. wh1'ch ACORV hopes to enlist
Gtlhs-Sweet P.T.A.. Fairview
""-.,;._• · visit...,. -vera! days with her p.m
. .
,
Park Ci&gt;oncll; · Douglu Bly.- Revolutionary Wat, ""'. . ""'
•u• Dept.; Arlinston; Va., 88 a
'"
individual
artists,
atts
Richmond , P.T.A., · E'dlson orderlid the cOOtlnental' Ariny . brolher and famlly; Mr. and
sOnlor Citizens -Lunch clerical recrultar. Sgt. Oller Is
organizations, universities ,
Council; La.... Kelmc..!,•"· demobii!Zed
Mrs. Charles King at Wolf- Pr&lt;~gram 11:30 a.m. ; 12:30 a graduate of Warren Twp., '
c!ubs, galleries, special in·
_
wmTlR14DI~ _,.::;
In !917, A'iner1cans at home forth, Tex. ·and with lier sister p.m. -~onday thtoug~. Friday. Cwnee, 01. 8l)d has attencied
teres\ groups, and others
RA_CINE - A costmne. par"ty
Sandy J-ie$sel, No! wood VIew lear.nedofthellrst World 'War I and husband, .Mr. and MrS.
the Unive~tty o1 n
_"-""'·. He is·
· the was held Wednesday night at McLain, Carol Mor~, fenny ·P .T.A., N~rwood
•
Count II : deatbsofU.S.
·
·
OBSERVANCE TODAY
·•
.......,..
concerned a bo ut thear Is '"
sclldierslightlng Paul
, Ba"l
1ey at San· Antomo,
~sentlysl!ltlonectatFt.Myer
region . Additional information the home of Charles and Joan =thMe~~a~~!~~~~~: ~~~::,~r~~~=~iton0.~~ in Nancy, Fr8Jice.
Tex.
.
· GALLIPOLIS . ~ Church alid Ia a member of lhe
about membership
and McLain, Racine. Games were
,
Council. . , .
, ·.· In 1,..., Franklin D. RooseWomen . !Jnlted of Gallia ,__, ..-'tlal Honar' Guard
. , an
·
Howard, 'Brice · Hart, Jim
will
w ld "~""""'
la
ACORV may, -be ob ined by played and refreshments
J UN lOR · HIGH:
Stan velt was ·rwle_cted presld__ent
County
8poi)SOr a · or
elite ,;,.,~"Y of the Army's
111
( 513) 6211818
Howard, ' Jeromy
Joe Ramage White O.k J10&gt;lor
Cornimatit)' ,D aycibaen.,ceal
·-·....-·
ca ng .
, •
' or sei'Veddurlng lite evening.
Lawrence,
Johnny
Bill High, : Homl"uorl
County for a second 1..-rn.
'
. GUESTS. HERE
.
•L- First u.o....,._._ ......~ Old Guard. '
,
writing .ACORV c-o P.O. Box
. Gu.Sts ~re Bec]cy Crow, · Hoback, Jim McLain, Mike Council; Debbie Romell, Deer
In 11164, LYndon Johnson W88
·
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The couple . reilldes ill
73, Cincinnati, 45201.
Lisa .Warner, Janis Canlahan,
Park Junior-Senior . p;T.A.. elected president by the largest · M~N. W. ·Va. -Mr. and state !Jt., GalJIPitil, at Z p.m. AleDitdrla va
'" resp,onse . to num~rous
·
~--- c 11 ; .hlnel majority.lnhls\OI')'totblttdate Mrs . "'-'
,..
Sharoli. Hill, Annette· Mills, McLain; Mickey Hoback, Bill Va 11 ey Aru .......
, ..,~ TriPP were SUnday today. The
. meeting Is open to ,
' .' · "
rtJ&lt;juests 'from · ACORV's first · Teresa Ervin, ~nda Glenn, 1 ~,::c~a~~!-. Lawrence and ~"d'::;;.., t,",;;,d.'l:~ P.T.A.. defeating ·-Republican Sen: di~ guests of Mr. arid j)frs~ lhe public and everyOne is ·
~·
, nM!mbers, \he first specific _ Br~nd*- Jol)nson, . Beverly ·
,
SENIOR HIG"H: 'Mike Barcy ~dwater:. .. .'
Landon Smith. ··
Wlllcqrne.
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WASHINGTON, D. C. - The
1975 official Bicentennial
Medal commemorating the
famous ·midnight ride of Paul
Revere, and the battles of
Lexington and Concord, will be
designed by
Sculptress
Margaret Grigor, Steilocoom,
Wash.
Miss Grigor was one' of the
semi-finalists in the recent
Bureau of the Mint Bicentennial coin design competition.
.... ,
MlssGrigor,Scottlsh-bom, is
a veteran of 40 years in her
profession, and has won
numerou.s honors over the

IJ i.J years. -T hemostrecentwasthe
~~ ~

1972 Alumqae Assodation
hn. award of her alma mater,

.o: Mount Holyoke College, for
~ ·'' outstanding achievement in
~~~ her field.
1&gt;-1 She "is also recipient of the
~iJ Stimson Prize and William
o:.
~ •

DIAMOND
VALUES

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Beautiful .

DIAMOND CWSTER
e

'395 110

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'14 cl

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On uu,;

Set

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
422 Second Ave .
Gallipolis, Ohio
&lt;·

Tawney , Ken Clark,

Mclains host costume party

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Brian

Tabit, Mark Cwnmons, Rickie
Rockwell, Mike Pa squale,
Jerry Eutsler; outdoorsman
aquanat , one and two year
pin s, J im Fanning, Jamie Hill ;
two year pin, athlete , aquanat,
outdoorsman and sportsman ;
Richie Ste ele , sports m a n,

reminded everyone that the

pack meetings will be held on
the first Monday of each month
from now on. There will be a athlete, outdoorsman and two
special ' meeting in December ye ar pin ; Steve Malcomb,
Emeln Cresson Traveling · when can.ned goods will be aquanat, a tht'ete , outdoorsman
Fellowship awarded ,by the collected and donated to a and two year pin ; John Moore,
Pennsylvania Academy of Fine needy family in the area . outdoorsman, athlete, aquanat
Arts in 1973; the Undsey Fanning also reminded all the and two year pin ; Barry
Morris Prize for best bas relief, boy~ that Cubs will again sell Nelson, 2 year pin , outdoorspresented by . the National Christmas candles.
man, athlete , scholar a nd
Sculpture Society , j~ 1969, and
Fanning presented the sportsman.
prizes received in several awards earned by the CUbs this
This past month the Wcbelos
group !;hO)VS in New York and past month .
went on an · overnight hike,
Tacoma, Washington.
Receiving a wards were: Den cookout and campout at the
Following her graduation 1, John Gloss, one year pin.
VFW Farm. The buys had a
from Mount Holyoke in S&lt;luth'&lt;
Bobcat pins and badges : great time and earned their
Hadley, Massachusetts, where Mike Wallen, Sherman Green, outdoorsman and sportsman
she received her BA degree in Tndd Teimund, Chris Elcessor, awards while they were there.
history of, art in 1934, Miss Todd Smith, Jeff Rathburn, The adults who accompanied
Grigor ·studied under Walter Jim Beaver, Steve Patterson these boys are to be lhanked.
'Hancock and Albert Laessle at and Ken ,Russell.
Chuckie Dillon wh o is now a
·· the Pennsylvania Academy of
Boy
Scout receiveO the
Den n, one year pin, Rusty
Fine Arts ove.~ .... ~ fjve year Moore; one y~ar pin, one gold following awards which he
period.
arrow and one silver arrow, earned dW'ing the summer
Miss Grigor has completed Jim Parsons; Wolf badge and before he becam e 11 years of
many importan't commissions pin, one gold arrow and one age : aquanat , two silver
in the medallic field. Among silver arrow, Brent Adkins; arrows, three year pin,
these are the Garvan Medal, Bobcat pins and badges, Billy forester ,
t ra vele r
and
aWarded annually to an out- Marrah, Chris Nelson, Kevin engineer.
standing woman scientist Carter and Brian Burlingame.
Den n prese nted a skit based
(1937); the American Transit
Den III, one year pin, Robbie on the Cub Scout theme of the
Safety Award plaque ( 1942) ; Hill ; one silver arrow, Tony month, "Folklore and Story
Telling". They no t only
the
American
Medical
Association Medal, awarded
followed this, theme but tied In
annually to an outstanding
, the celebration of Halloween.
general practitioner (.1947 );
'The skit was titled "Midnight •
the Rickey Medal, awarded by
in the Gallia County Library" ..
,the American Society of Civil
Cubs were·introduced to many
Engineers ( 1948); and the
characters who came alive
American ·camelli~ Society's
from the books. Some of these
John P. nlges Medal ( 1948) .
RIO GRANDE - Events of .were The Headless Horseman,
Also, the ·Traffic Safety R.G.C. Campus for the week of ·one of the La st of the
Award Plaque, awar~ed by the Nov. 4 include :
Mohigans, the Scarecrow from
Theodore M. Watson Memorial
Nov. 5, Bloodmobile, 12:30 the pages of "The Wizard of
Fund (19&gt;6) : the Air Traffic p.m . • 5 p.m., Davis Hall.
· .Oz" , a pirate from "Treasure
Control . Associatil:m's Air
Nov. 5, Speaker,John Bryan Island", Paul Bunyan, the
Safety Award plaque · ( 1958) ; from Goodyear. Topic : "Head · wick'ed witch from " Hansel
the Society of Medalists' 7ls\ 'Em Off at the Gap". Time : and Gretel", and Tarzan of the
issue marking the statehood of 1:40 p.m . at the Dining Hall. Apes.
Alaska and Hawaii ( 1965); the
Nov. 6, Movies: " Monkey
Each of the dens competed in
-Benjamin Franklin Medal for Business" with the Marx a balloon blowing and bursting
the Chase Commemorative Brothers, "My Little Chick a contest with the grand prize
Society (1966) ; and the reverse Dee" with W. C. Fields. Time: going to the windiest and
of the National Sculpture 7:30 p.m. in the Dining Hall. quickest boy ;n the entire pack,
Society' s 75th Anniversary
These events will take place Brian Burlingame.
medal (1968).
on the Rio Grande College
The boys paraded in their
Other medallic works by Campus. People from the various costumes and the
Miss Grigor include the college community are invited judges selected · the following
Mississippi River · Parkway to at~nd.
boys as winners: prettiest,
IOOth Anniversary medal
Tony Dillon of Den Ill, dressed
( 1970) ;
the
Alexander
as Little Bo Peep; ugliest,
Hamilton medal for the Hall of Sculpture Society, American Richie Steele of Webelos for his
Fame for Great Amecicans Artists' Professional League costume of the Wolfman ; most
(1971) ; the Tacoma Rotary and the National Association of original, Headless Horseman,
Association 's medal (1972) ; Women Artists, Miss. Grigor's better known as Brian
and the George C. Marshall work is in the permanent Burlingame ; of Den II; and
medal for the International collections of the Smithsonian funniest costume, Den I, Mike
Fraternal Commemorative Institution, Mount Holyoke Wallen in his scarecrow outfit.
College and · the tnu Mau
Society (1973 ). · '
Den .Ill showed the
A member of the National Village in Honolulu.
Halloween centerpiece and the
masks they made this past
mOnth in den meetings. The

masks were made from
styrofoam paper plates. Pack·
master Fanning adjourned the
meeting after the closing and
the boys· served refreshments.

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DINNER PLANNED

MIDDLEPORT - Feeney •
Bennett Post 128, Arilerican
Legion , with 'John Fultz as
commander, will hold a birthday dinner at 6:30 p:m., Nov .
11, the traditional Veteran's
Day, at the post home. The
auxiliar y, headed by Mrs.
-William Hendricks, will
prepare and serve the dinner
which is for post members and
theii- families. Frank Vaughan,
district Americanism chair- ·
man, will !peak briefly.

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lhe look you love!

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The Right Lift To Today's Fashions
'

. ELECT
MURRAY E.
CHURCH

,·

s iepping light, stepping _lively' that's how you'll walk'
in Johlli.S"n' s newest delectable pump . Fa shione ~ in ·
and pl'ped in gold, you'll welcome this shoe of
refined taste to your new fall wardrobe.

'
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.S3J,99 .

,

A Man Who Is
'Capable· Dependable
. &amp; Well Cualified' ·

·'Iii~
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IMft. &amp; Fri. 9,30 to I p.in_-:. '
•· nits. Wed . ut. 9: 30 til s p.m.
· Thuuctav 9:Jo til 12 ~~~?on

i.uldlll(lali

·
.... IIC =II..,...., . . . . . . . . C1M10

-GAWA COUNTY
-BOARD ·OF ··
EDUCAOON
Pd. Pol. Adv .

'
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D.

H a nso n,

Hen -

Bobby, of the Mason-Gallia
area .

·cLOSED
SUNDAYS

ho~e of

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
MON- FRI. 10 AM TIL 9 PM
SATURDAY'S 10 AM TIL 6 PM

'Vallejo, Calif., where Hanson
is s ta tioned with the U.S. Navy
aboard the submarine Trieste
II at Mare Island Na val Ship-

COX'S•••A GOOD PLACE
TO SHOP FOR NICE
THINGS TO WEAR.

yard.
The groom atte nded Gali ia
Academy Hi gh School.
Out..of-town guests attending
the ceremony included Mrs.

Jeff Tabit ; and one silver

arrow , Ferrell Miller.
Webelo~ received their two
year pins, outdoorsinan and
athlete, Dewey Rhodes, Ron

°

't

J ;J mes

dersunv ille, Ten n., a nd Mr1,.,1and
Mr s. I.owetJ Allen, Pam and

Have you ever said, "If that item
was on sale, I would buy it?"
Here is your opportunity to
purchase that item during
The Style Center's 15% OFF
~ftJJ&lt;:!

TOMORROW

MONDAY
THROUGH
THURSDAY

Rio lists
activities

'"

·

James H. Hanson and Maria,
Rick Boone, Mr . a nd Mrs.

Dillon: Wolf and one year pin,

GALIJPOLIS - Cub -Scout
Pack · 204 ' held ito regular
monthly meeting M,onday, Oct.
28, at the Presbyterial\ Church
and celebrated Halloween .
Packmaster Robert Fanning
called the meeting to order and
Den 1 led the Pledge 'of
Allegiance and they repeated
the Law of the Pack.
Fanning assigned duties for
the coming month and

Medal sculptress chosen

Military wedding joins
Miss Stevers, Sgt. Oller

Frances Hanson , Mr. and Mrs.

I, .

•'

•RAIN
COATS
•WINTER
COATS
•DRESSES
. •SPORTS
WEAR
*ROBES

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*LINGERIE
*ACCESSORIES

ON EVERYTHING YOU 9UY

·JAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS
FOUR DAY ONLY SALE

, 3 Ways To Buy
At Style Center's
Low Prices

THE MORE YOU BUY-TltE MORE YOU SAVE!

Regular Purchase 110 ................ •8.50
Regular Purchase 115.............. •12.75
Regular Purchase 120..............'17.00
R~ular Purchase 130 .............. '25.50
Regular Purchase 140.............. •34.00
Regular Purchase 150...............'42.50.
'

On your

*Charge orBankAmerlcard
,Master Charge
• - lay A·Way AT
·No
EXTRA CHARGE
I ,

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BUY FOR NOW •••

'

. SHOP FOR X'MAS

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Guorallt"~

To Satisfr•
Or
SULTANA

PORK &amp;

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37

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ATHENS - The only per·
manent ensemble regularly
performing
a
classical
repertory lntthe United States
will stage Jean Anouilh's
"Orchestra" and Samuel
Beckett's "Play" 8 p .m.
Wednesday, Nov. 13 at
Memorial Auditorium, Athens.
• 'lhe City Center Acting
Company, an outgrowth of the
:Drama Division of the Julliard
:School, ·Lincoln Center in .New
:York, is an inde~ndent nonprofit organi~a.tion devoted
primarily to performing in
universities and regional
:theatres. Prior to their first
professional public performance, the group spent four
~ears In . training. In their
~nlng 1972-1973 season, the
troup received the OBIF
A.ward (Off Broadway).
'
: Artistic Director, John
llouseman,
is
director
producer, author and actor. He
and Orson Welles founded the
Mercury Theatre, which did
lbe radio version of "Men from
During World War II,
llouseman
created
and
.~ised production of Voice
!If America. He has received
three Emmy awards, has done
dr&amp;ma work at Vassar and
Barnard colleges and has
lectured
to
numerous
universities. Before starting
with the City Center Acting
Company, he was producing director for, .the APA Repertqry
Company and the Phoenix
Theatre, both theatrical troups
based in New York.
In addition to Its public
appem:ances, the troup performs an educational function.
Besides touring colleges and
universities they bring their
repertory to many New York
high schools. In the course of
their touring they hold classes,
workshops, and demonstrations. The City Center
Acting Company will be

'.

Keeney named
to school post

~~·!!!!!!!!!!!!!.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~

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Gal'l;(J firms

Mars."

contribute

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Classic .

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Fashioned
for everywhere.

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One of the most versatile shoes' you can
own .. . a Natura.lizer walker with 1/le good looks
you want, the comfort you deserve.

3

Thanks to special features like soft leather,
combination last and padded insoJ!!, too:
Navy Blue, Camel

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. MARGUERITE'S SHOES

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BETTY OHLINGER
102 E. MAIN
,
POMEROY

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JO.D N'·:. GLENN
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STATE REPRESENTATIVE ··
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C. ALLEN, CHRM.

Thl· new Mrs: Eblin i~ a
se nior tjt Galli::~ Academy High
Hi~h and is emp loyed at
Federal Mogul. Eblin is ernlll oyed at the Standard Oil

Service Center, Kanauga .
Out--&lt;Jf·town ~ue.sts were Mr.
and Mr s . Jack l.nzier ,
C o~umbu s;

ft'nwei s

donderry; Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
Ro"" , Laurelville ; Mrs. L.
Sommers Ashworth and Jeff,
Marion ; Mrs . Lesta Gatewood,
Crown City.

Rev. and Mrs .
Grl;lham,
Lon·

Mr. and Mrs. Michael G. Eblin

OBSERVE ANNIVERSARY -Rev. and Mrs : Andrew
Parsons, Rt. 1, Ga!llpolis, were honored with an anniversary
reception by their children, Oct. 20. The reception was held at
the couple's former residence in Man, W. Va: Mapy friellds
and relatives came throug)lout the afternoon to help the
couple celebrate their 35th anniversary. Rev. and Mrs. ·
Parsons were married Oct. 23, 1939, at Belfry, Ky., by ·R ev.

By Judith Burton Gerkin
the sweather which doubles as
WEST BADEN, In&lt;l, - If a coat; with or without fur to be
H. C. Frazier,
the
you're wrapping up for the casual by day and elegant by
parents
of Mrs. ,They
Joyceare
Grimwinter months, there's a great night. .
melle, Mrs.. Anna ·Runyons,
new way to wrap - and it's
The shirt - jacket continues
Mrs. Lorene Sigman, Mrs.
sensational - fully sen- its country - look popularity,
Peggy Yeauger, Ja~.Parsons, ·~~
sational.
capes are free-swinging and
Dennis Parsons and . James
Full, free, flowing and handsome toppers for the
Parsons. Rev. and Mr.s.
flaring· - good descriptive current two-pieces dresses as
Parsons bave lived at Rt. 1,
Sandra Wood, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Randy Williams, Dan- · words for winter coats this well as for pants.
Gallipolis, for the past 13
Roy Christy, Mr. and Mrs. vllle.
year. Some have bias cuts,
A
show-stopping
acyeBI'I!. He is overseer of the
Cia)(ton Allen, Mr : and Mrs.
Sending 'gifts were Mr. and · some have dropped shoulders, companimentfor evening wear
Silver Memorial Freewill
Hobart Smalley: Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Harold Newell, Mr. and many are wrap.and-tie, and all is the fur or feather boa Baptist Churcli.
Albert Martin, Mrs. Susanne Mrs. Roy Betzing, Mr. and are roomier and comfortable. guaranteed to convert the
"But what If you bought a gown you'd considered a staple
COUNCIL TO MEET
Beeler and Brian, Mrs. Ross Mrs. Earl Dean, Mrc and Mrs.
Cleland, Mrs. Lawrence · Donald Mora, Mr. and Mrs.. new coat only last winter and it into a stunner.
POMEROY _ The Meigs
Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Horace Karr, ·Mr. and Mrs. must do for thls~ear too?" one
If you have a personal CoWJty Council of Parents and
Machir, Mrs. Freda Miller, Jack Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. of my sophomore fashion fashion question, don 't hesitate Teachers will meet Thursday
Mrs. J . M. Gaul, Mrs. John Robert Burke; Mr. and Mrs. merchandisting students here 'to address it to me. Such at 7, 30 p.m. at the Rutland
Wickham, Mrs. Ronald Clay, Virgil Roush, Mr: a~d Mf'l!. at Northwood aSked me last ' questions will be a part of the Elementary School, Mrs.
Mr·. and Mrs. Richard Barton Donald Roush, Mr. and.. Mrs. week.
business world my students . Charles Goeglein, president,
and Kevin, carolyn and Hobart Newell, l'tfr. ··and 'Mrs.
Fortunlately, I told her, will soon encounter, and we announced. The program will
Mara!
Mr Delmar Ba
Larry Hill W F Hill Mr
urn, .
• · ·
• · and accessories and tricks of the welcome them. .
include a skit presented at the
yn,
s.
Mrs. David Smith, all of Mrs. Lindsey Lyons, Mr. and fashion trade can· bridge the
state convention, "I'm Glad
.Chester; Mr. and \lfrs. Harold · Mrs. Virgll Wood; Ml'l!. Ada gap. In these cost-conscious
You Brought that Up".
Hawk, Mark, Dean and Krist!, Mortis, Mr. and Mrs. George limes, here are the tricks to
~~.
Representatives of aU units are
·Grant Newland, Tupp'ers Grate, Mr. and Mrs. Rex know if you're wearing last
urged to attend.
Plains; Mrs. Harold Brewer Belley, Mr. and Mrs. James year's coat.
and Jene, Long Bottom; Mr. Ridenour, Mr. and Mrs .
-Wear a long, long muffler
' ,.
and Mrs . Don Betzing, RlchBrdGaul,Mrs. GayeGaul, outside your coat. Turn up your
ADDRESS
LISTED
Hemlock Grove; . Mrs. Mary Mr. and Mrs. Pat M~y. coat collar and loop the muffler
' POMEROY .- · Mrs. ConCox, Mr. and l'tfrs. Carrel Cox, Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Milhoan, in front.
· '·
COLUMBUS
Con- stance Shields is residing althe
·Mr. and Mrs. Bi'arcy Cox, Pt. · Mr. !llld Mrs. Ivan Wood •and
:..._ Inside the ' coat, wear a
tributions from the first week Meigs Inn, Room 102.
Pleasant; Bill Belley, Racine; .Mrs. Emma Hayman.
scarf or aholher muffler.
d solicitations are hegin~ing to
· -.. _.,...Or simpler.put yow: dress come into the Columbus
. ~ blouse collar atop your coat headquarters of the Ohio areas , personal visits on
:business leaders will be made
collar, outside.
Foundation of Independent in smaller cities in Ohio. In
- Hats, Including berets and CoQeges, reports the president,
each major area, the visits are
knits, are great costume Dr. · Carl
C.
Bracy . ·sponsored by a comlnittee of
rejuvenators. So are leather Representatives from Ohio's 35
•local business atid professional
gloves.
..
private colleges completed leaders
concerned
with
.,.... Acquire a "pulled- 'their initial solicitations in two
maintaining
these
independent
logellier•: look by adding pants li Ohio's major cities - Akron
colleges in Ohio. ·
·. -Gr. skirt which match your coat.
and Can ton. The final week of
Contributions received from
.
Even if this Is not the year for the fall's solicitations will be
Gallipolis
during October ina Big CfH!t Purchase, you may conducted in Cincinnati and
cluded
the
Holzer Medical
want 81! outer-wear addition Dayton, Nov. 19, 20 and 21.
Cunic and The Ohio Valley
that's blldgetable. A good bet is
In addition to these major · Bank Co.
. '

Shower honors Mr.,Mrs.
CHESTER - A reception
and shower honoring Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Lynn Wood, who
were married May 4, in
Waycross. Ga., was held at the
Chesler Fire House recently.
Fall fiowers W.re used in
decorating the hall and games
. were played with prizes
awarded to ·the winners.
After the couple opened their
gifts, refreslunents of cake,
coffee, punch, nuts and mints
were served from a table
centered with an arrangement
&lt;( mums and lighted candles.
Assisting with the serving were
Mrs. Roy Christy, Mrs. Harold
Hawk, Mrs. Randy Williams,
Miss Debbie Wood, Miss Jane
Ann Karr, Miss Jane Brewer
and Miss Sandra Wood.
The guests attending were
• ' Mfl! . .Helen Barnhart, mother
· of Mrs. Wood, Racine; Mr. and
Mrs. Rober\ P. Wood, Miss
•

Wrap-and-tie is new look

BEANS
Rev. and Mrs. Andrew Parsons

Sla· ~. ·;•nwd ;, ~i·jt.· o •r -• .hl Sayre &lt;.-ud Mi!is I .ori Howley
rf!gistering guests.
. The refreshment table W(:j S
decoflated with a wedding ring
of the Oel. 12 wedding of Miss muin s.
Judy Lynn Whittington,
· MiHs fl&lt;:bbit• Mulf11rd served !.;.1hlcclo!h and l..'l'nli~red with ~J
daughter of Mr. and Mr!ii . as maid of hunur . She wurc a ftHU" !icr CHkC . The t:&lt;lkc Wi.lS
James Whillin glio n, 216:1 burgundy t polyester crep e dceunal.rd with pink , burgundy ,
Eastern Ave. , and •· Michael gown featuring satin nora! 4Jrange and yellow icing mwns.
Glenn Eblin. son of Mr. and print 'o;ash and carried a pink Pillows twirling the cake were
e nhaneed with cherubs, and
Mrs, Glenn Eblin, 2145 Eastern and a ·burgundy mun1.
Ave.
Brides maids were Mi ss the ca ke wa s lopped with a ·
Rev. George Jones, pastor of Anita DeVaul I and Miss Charla large bride and groom with
the church, read the vows at Whitt . :rhey wore pink cupid and candles. In fron t of
the 4:30p.m. ceremony bj!fore. polyester crepe gowns with the tier ca ke was a Bible cake
an altar decorated wit~ a table satin floral prin t sashes and in scribed "The Lord is My
Shepherd," and "What God has
centered with. a lru:ge Bible · . carried burgundy mums.
,.. backed by a cross, ;Jnd flanked
Richard Eblin, brother of the Joined Together, Let no Man
.by burning ca.n dles . . 'rwo groom, served as best man . put Asunder." Names of the
~asl\ets of gpider .ffiwns and Keith · Eblin and Wilmer bridal couple were inscribed in
vari-eolored aslet,l! completed Parsons served as ushers and hearts on the top tier. Both
ca1kes were made by the bride's
the setting. FamilY' pews were groomsmen.
mother,
decorated With green fern tied
For her daughter:s wedding,
Mrs. Richard Eblin, Mrs.
l8rge while satin bows.
Mrs . Whittington chose a l on~
. Preceding the ceremony a sleeved Ooral polyester acetate Keith Ebli n, Mrs. Conme
half ~our of nuptial music was gown with corsage of pink Par sons aitd Mr s . James
presented by Mrs . Coilnie carnations. The groom 's Sisson served th e refre s h·
•: Parsons, sister of the bride. mother wore a long sleeves ments .
Following a short trip to
James Sisson, brother-in-law aqua polyester knit gown with
Grecn ~ ill e Lake, Greenup,
of the bride, sang "I Believe·" corsage of pink carnations .
and " We've Onlx ifust Begun"
A reception at the home of Ky ., the couple resides in their
preceding the ceremony and · the bride's parents followed· the new mobile home at 2145
'
'
;,The Wedding Prayer" while wedding with Miss Jennifer Eastern Ave.
the CO\Iple knelt at the altar.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a white
Second Avenu~ ·
eyelet gown featuring cwnherland waist, high neck and
juliet sleeves . The chapel .
Introduceslength train of while tulle was
louring over 20 's tales in their trinimed in white eyelet lace .
The veil attached to the trRin
1974-1975 season.
Patrons will be seated until 8 was held by a headpiece
p.m. Late comers will be trimmed with large white satin
sealed at the first break in tile office I to 4 p.m. weekdays.
program.
Tickets are 75 cents (or
Tickets are· available at the · students and $4 general adMemorial Auditorium box mission.
GALI.IPOI.fS

Gallipolis Churdl of "'Chl'i :il in
Christian Uni.;m wa~ lht• Sl'enc

Enrythlng

NEW LOOK- Tht new roomier wrap..and.Ue coat is the
choice of Northwood of Iild.iana's Jo Ann Weber, fashion
major from Evansvllle, Ind. The campus is in the backgroWJd.

I

Couple exchanges vows Oct. 12

TEACHERS TO MEET
GAWPOUS - The Gallia
County Retired . Teachers
Ass'n., wlll meet at 12 noon,
TueSday, Nov ,· 111t.the Holiday
Inn. Mrs, Hortense EPling will
:.be' the guest speaker.

:SincelS$9
.
"

ENROLLED - -Practical Nursing School of Buckeye HU1s Career Center ehrolls 35
students In 1974-75 class. Pictured above are: Olarlotte Aldridge, Gallipolis; Katlryn Baker,
Jackson; Louella Blaine, West Virginia; Betty J:loggs, Pedro; Ina Bradley, West Virginia;
Hulda Brown, Gallipolis; Sylvia Cannan, Pomeroy; Pamela Caudill, Ostrander; Vicki Conley,
Jackson ; Virginia Cooper, Gallipolis; Imogene Crabtree, Jackson; Catherine Darst,
Reynoldsburg; Eva Donley, Ironton; Terre Gandee, West Virginia; Kandy Glndlesberger,
GaUipolis; Jacqueline Halley, Crown City; Marcella Harrison, Gallipolis; Carrie Horton, Oak
Hill; Genevieve Jasis, Gallipolis; Barbara Jordan, Pomeroy; Janet Kearns, Jackson; Marceline Kerns, Gallipolis; Judith Love, West Virginia; Susan Morgan, Jackson; Paulette Nibert,
Gallipolis; Nancy Ohlinger, West Virginia; Vicki Poetker, Jackson; Autumn Reasor, Hamden;
Cathie Roseberry, jackson; Rita Scarberry, Jackson; Judith See, West Virginia; Talni Snider,
Wellston; Brenda Whitley,Rutland; Jean Wilcoxon, Gallipolis; Rachel Wlllls, Addison.

I

1- TIM' Sunday T\m"" - So&gt;riline I, SundH)', Nov:

',.

,,,

BRAPLEY, W. Va. - Jack
Keeney, owner and operator of
the Faith Book Stores in
Hunt.i ngton, W. Va., and
Gallipolis, has been appointed
as chaiiman of the finance
comlnitlee of the Appalachian
Bible Institute at Bradley, W.
Va. This action was taken
recently at the annual ineeting
of the board of directors.
Keeney, who has ~n a
member of the board since
1~, will head a conunitlee of. ·
six. ms position is par!ICularly
impc:ldant as the Appalachian
Bible 1nsUtute commences its
15 year plan for campus
development. Under the plan,
announced at the institute's
25th anniversary banquet,
campus acreage will be increased.from the present 1.10 to
nearly 280, and a number of
new structures will be erecte&lt;l.
~ flrat new building will be
a gymnasium:auditorium, to
he followed by additional
clasarooms, .resource center,
student center and student
residences. Enlargement is
made necessary by the ~on­
tinulng . Increase · in student
enrollment, which is up '10 pet.
over llllit year to a present
enrollment of 274. Anticipated '
enrollment for 1980 is expected,
to be in excess of 500.
. The ' Appalachian Bible In,
stltute ·ta · the only accredited
Bible cllllege in West Vfrginla
and lilis· graduates and former
. students serving In ~any
' states and nwnber of foreign '
· rDtsalon posts.

FIRE ISLANDER

SPORTSWEAR SEPARATES
SIZE 8·18
IN BLACK ANO CHERRY FOR THE HOLIDAY

. ·-- &amp;tc. :

Forest guide avaikzble.
.
.

COLUMBUS - A guide to
Ohio's state forestry facilities
h311 been published by the
Department
of
Natural
Resources and is now available
to the public.
The publication contains a
map and an alphabetical
listing of the 18 state 'forests,

three tree ·nurseries, two
reclamation areas and one
nature preserve. It is designed
for use with a highway map in
determining the exact location
of each facility.
"The' guide provides a wealth
of information about the areas
maintained by our 4ivision of

forests ·and pr:eserves/' said
Natural Resources Director
William B. Nye.
. "It is the first publication
dealing. strictly . with the
facilities and services provided
in our slate forests," he added .
The guide includes information such as the nearest
town or city and the nearest
state route for each area.
It also lists the total nwnber
of acres at each facility; the
nearest state park and state
park lodge; mihis of hiking and
horse trails; interpretive
nature and all-purpose vehicle
trails; whether or not hunting '
is permitted, and if camping or

guided tours are offered,
The publication, tilled "Ohio
State Fore~ts." js available
without charge from the 'Ohio
Department
of
Natural
Resources, Publica tions
Center, Fountain Square,
Columbus 43224, or the
respective
state
fores.t
headquarters.

"IN THE LAFA YEnE MALL"
300 Second Avenue

Gallipolis, Ohio

f

BlUE
GVJSS

DAUGHTER BORN
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs .
Robert
Custer,
Morgantown, W. Va ., are
announcing the birth of a
daughter, Jennifer Marie,
.Thursday, Oct. 31,. at the
Morgantown Medical Center.
Thelnfantweighed Tlbs., 2ozs. '
Mr. and Mrs. Custer, the
former Dianne Criswell,
Middleport, have a son, Bart,
who will be four years old New
Year's Day. Grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. James Criswell,
Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Custer, Sr., Belle, W.
Va. Bart has spent the past
week In Middleport with his
gl'l!ndparents and will return to
Morgantown today with his
grandmother, Mrs. Criswell,
who will remain there for a
week.

'BEAUTY

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"BEAUTY CLUES" -

looking and feeling more terrill&lt;. Your "Beauty
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BODY SHAMPOO; VELVA MOISTURE FILM;
HIGH· LIGHTS ACCENTING CREAM; SALON
FORMULA NAIL LACQUER " Ginger Jam"; and
CONDITIONING LASH THICKENER " Very
Black" .
1

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Red with ivory trim,
Teal with ivory
Regency Rose with
trim . P-S~M- l.
XL-XXL. $29 .

001

PERSONAL SKIN CARE SYSTEM
Norma I to Dry Skin

BLUE GRASS

LiquldJIAorning or Night Cream. A rich.
· 24-hour moisture care program for the
overly dry complexiof) . 2 fl. oz .
SS.SO

s.oo

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'

Perfection Cream
4oz. .
7.00
8oz.
10.50

)

ALL SKIN TYPES
.
Velva Molstur'~ Film. Prol(ldes all day
moisture protection wit!'t or without
makeup.
6.oo·
4 fl.oz.
&amp;fl. oz. 10.00
16 fl. oz.
16.00
lle-.uty Sleep
2 01. ' ' 1.50
4 oz.

12.50

Skin Deep Milky Clean?er
·
·
lfl.oz.

4.00

· 16fl.·oz •.
2511. oz.

Undermakeup Wrinkle Lotion

!IIi

Apply before makeup

• r r,S.\

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and moisturizer to
help smooth wrinkles

oil day.

MEMOIRE CHERIE
Very warm, very sophisticated .
Flower Mist

Perfume Mist

2 fl . oz.
4fl. oz.
2 02'.

4.00
5.75

oz.

1.50

4oz.

4 00
'

a fl . oz.

6.oo

3%

l)usling Powcjor
Moisture Bath Lotion
for the bOdy
'

~ a

6~

10.00

4 fl. oz.
17 .so
A blend of hydrolyzed collagen ~~~:!~~111ne,

•vocado oil ilnd specialized

em;inent

-----------------------I

IBERNADINES INC.
t300 Second Avenue
·
lGallipolis •. Ohio, 45631

I

Name

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SKIN DYNAMICS
Multlple·Actlon Cleansing. An e.traordl~ary. I
super·cleansing discovery that outperforms both a l City
l.
cleanser and a mask.
4 oz.

SKIN DYNAMtC:S

6.00

CASH

State
,
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Zip
CHECK

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I Add 4 Pet. Sales Tax.
1
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l supp.l y lasts . . Prices subj~ct to .change.l

CompleJtion ReneWal Lotion '
I Send me the "Beauty Clues" kit- my bonus with!
A gentl~sluiflng lotloh that liberates skin of dulling I any. Eliiabeth Arden purchue of 6.00 or more. My 1
dead surfa~e tells.
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1c1r~er · Is. markili above.
1
6 fl. oz.
6.00
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7.50

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BYE· LINES!rl
A whole new way to cop.e!

"Ready-to-Wear"' Perfume Spray

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NORMAL TO OILY SKIN
Creamgel OII·Removing Cleanser. This
fluffy pink gel llqulfies quickly to clear
away excess oil and clogging dirt ,as well
makeup. a H. oz.
..
55.00
Clarifying Astringent .
a fl. oz. S5.00 Velva Cream Mask
4'12 oz.
$6.00

REPLENISHING

A deep-penetrating, firming moisture treatment .

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BY·LINES!rl
LOTION

Rejoice w i th the fresh, free -spirited fragrance.
Flower Mist
4 fl. oz.
4.00
611. oz.
5.50
Perfume Mist
2 oz.
5.75
Jl/4 Ol.
8. SO

Fluffy Cleansing Cream
Boz.
6.00
16 oz.
10.00

8fl.oz.

I.'

Black'

_:;
ELIZABETH ARDEN TAKES THE MYSTERY 'OUT
OF WHAT TREATMENT OR FRAGRANCE PRODUCTS ARE RIGHT FOR YOU.

· Fragile Skin Toner

·'&lt;

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Ivory with sable brown

GaFiMJi. -. •

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" Wrap Session" makes fasl1ioo•l
talk with an Oriental flair in
long wrap by Kayser. Mad&lt;t
of "Splendalour" polyester tleece-1
The smart contrasting
trl'm says "today" in any lant!U•I!el

428 SECOND
AVENUE

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HEAD TO TOE BODY SHAMPOO
eVELVA MOISTURE fiLM
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•SALON fORMUlA NAIL lACQUER

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Elizabeth Arden puf.chase of 6.00 or more. Five
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Or
SULTANA

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'·

ATHENS - The only per·
manent ensemble regularly
performing
a
classical
repertory lntthe United States
will stage Jean Anouilh's
"Orchestra" and Samuel
Beckett's "Play" 8 p .m.
Wednesday, Nov. 13 at
Memorial Auditorium, Athens.
• 'lhe City Center Acting
Company, an outgrowth of the
:Drama Division of the Julliard
:School, ·Lincoln Center in .New
:York, is an inde~ndent nonprofit organi~a.tion devoted
primarily to performing in
universities and regional
:theatres. Prior to their first
professional public performance, the group spent four
~ears In . training. In their
~nlng 1972-1973 season, the
troup received the OBIF
A.ward (Off Broadway).
'
: Artistic Director, John
llouseman,
is
director
producer, author and actor. He
and Orson Welles founded the
Mercury Theatre, which did
lbe radio version of "Men from
During World War II,
llouseman
created
and
.~ised production of Voice
!If America. He has received
three Emmy awards, has done
dr&amp;ma work at Vassar and
Barnard colleges and has
lectured
to
numerous
universities. Before starting
with the City Center Acting
Company, he was producing director for, .the APA Repertqry
Company and the Phoenix
Theatre, both theatrical troups
based in New York.
In addition to Its public
appem:ances, the troup performs an educational function.
Besides touring colleges and
universities they bring their
repertory to many New York
high schools. In the course of
their touring they hold classes,
workshops, and demonstrations. The City Center
Acting Company will be

'.

Keeney named
to school post

~~·!!!!!!!!!!!!!.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~

·'

I

Gal'l;(J firms

Mars."

contribute

': I''

·'
I

Classic .

i

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Fashioned
for everywhere.

r
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. ·I

One of the most versatile shoes' you can
own .. . a Natura.lizer walker with 1/le good looks
you want, the comfort you deserve.

3

Thanks to special features like soft leather,
combination last and padded insoJ!!, too:
Navy Blue, Camel

I
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. MARGUERITE'S SHOES

I
I

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BETTY OHLINGER
102 E. MAIN
,
POMEROY

'I

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ELECT

_., .

JO.D N'·:. GLENN
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.

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STATE REPRESENTATIVE ··
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PO: BY .COM. TO ELECT.

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· 'R. JAMES,

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Ensemble to perform

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C. ALLEN, CHRM.

Thl· new Mrs: Eblin i~ a
se nior tjt Galli::~ Academy High
Hi~h and is emp loyed at
Federal Mogul. Eblin is ernlll oyed at the Standard Oil

Service Center, Kanauga .
Out--&lt;Jf·town ~ue.sts were Mr.
and Mr s . Jack l.nzier ,
C o~umbu s;

ft'nwei s

donderry; Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
Ro"" , Laurelville ; Mrs. L.
Sommers Ashworth and Jeff,
Marion ; Mrs . Lesta Gatewood,
Crown City.

Rev. and Mrs .
Grl;lham,
Lon·

Mr. and Mrs. Michael G. Eblin

OBSERVE ANNIVERSARY -Rev. and Mrs : Andrew
Parsons, Rt. 1, Ga!llpolis, were honored with an anniversary
reception by their children, Oct. 20. The reception was held at
the couple's former residence in Man, W. Va: Mapy friellds
and relatives came throug)lout the afternoon to help the
couple celebrate their 35th anniversary. Rev. and Mrs. ·
Parsons were married Oct. 23, 1939, at Belfry, Ky., by ·R ev.

By Judith Burton Gerkin
the sweather which doubles as
WEST BADEN, In&lt;l, - If a coat; with or without fur to be
H. C. Frazier,
the
you're wrapping up for the casual by day and elegant by
parents
of Mrs. ,They
Joyceare
Grimwinter months, there's a great night. .
melle, Mrs.. Anna ·Runyons,
new way to wrap - and it's
The shirt - jacket continues
Mrs. Lorene Sigman, Mrs.
sensational - fully sen- its country - look popularity,
Peggy Yeauger, Ja~.Parsons, ·~~
sational.
capes are free-swinging and
Dennis Parsons and . James
Full, free, flowing and handsome toppers for the
Parsons. Rev. and Mr.s.
flaring· - good descriptive current two-pieces dresses as
Parsons bave lived at Rt. 1,
Sandra Wood, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Randy Williams, Dan- · words for winter coats this well as for pants.
Gallipolis, for the past 13
Roy Christy, Mr. and Mrs. vllle.
year. Some have bias cuts,
A
show-stopping
acyeBI'I!. He is overseer of the
Cia)(ton Allen, Mr : and Mrs.
Sending 'gifts were Mr. and · some have dropped shoulders, companimentfor evening wear
Silver Memorial Freewill
Hobart Smalley: Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Harold Newell, Mr. and many are wrap.and-tie, and all is the fur or feather boa Baptist Churcli.
Albert Martin, Mrs. Susanne Mrs. Roy Betzing, Mr. and are roomier and comfortable. guaranteed to convert the
"But what If you bought a gown you'd considered a staple
COUNCIL TO MEET
Beeler and Brian, Mrs. Ross Mrs. Earl Dean, Mrc and Mrs.
Cleland, Mrs. Lawrence · Donald Mora, Mr. and Mrs.. new coat only last winter and it into a stunner.
POMEROY _ The Meigs
Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Horace Karr, ·Mr. and Mrs. must do for thls~ear too?" one
If you have a personal CoWJty Council of Parents and
Machir, Mrs. Freda Miller, Jack Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. of my sophomore fashion fashion question, don 't hesitate Teachers will meet Thursday
Mrs. J . M. Gaul, Mrs. John Robert Burke; Mr. and Mrs. merchandisting students here 'to address it to me. Such at 7, 30 p.m. at the Rutland
Wickham, Mrs. Ronald Clay, Virgil Roush, Mr: a~d Mf'l!. at Northwood aSked me last ' questions will be a part of the Elementary School, Mrs.
Mr·. and Mrs. Richard Barton Donald Roush, Mr. and.. Mrs. week.
business world my students . Charles Goeglein, president,
and Kevin, carolyn and Hobart Newell, l'tfr. ··and 'Mrs.
Fortunlately, I told her, will soon encounter, and we announced. The program will
Mara!
Mr Delmar Ba
Larry Hill W F Hill Mr
urn, .
• · ·
• · and accessories and tricks of the welcome them. .
include a skit presented at the
yn,
s.
Mrs. David Smith, all of Mrs. Lindsey Lyons, Mr. and fashion trade can· bridge the
state convention, "I'm Glad
.Chester; Mr. and \lfrs. Harold · Mrs. Virgll Wood; Ml'l!. Ada gap. In these cost-conscious
You Brought that Up".
Hawk, Mark, Dean and Krist!, Mortis, Mr. and Mrs. George limes, here are the tricks to
~~.
Representatives of aU units are
·Grant Newland, Tupp'ers Grate, Mr. and Mrs. Rex know if you're wearing last
urged to attend.
Plains; Mrs. Harold Brewer Belley, Mr. and Mrs. James year's coat.
and Jene, Long Bottom; Mr. Ridenour, Mr. and Mrs .
-Wear a long, long muffler
' ,.
and Mrs . Don Betzing, RlchBrdGaul,Mrs. GayeGaul, outside your coat. Turn up your
ADDRESS
LISTED
Hemlock Grove; . Mrs. Mary Mr. and Mrs. Pat M~y. coat collar and loop the muffler
' POMEROY .- · Mrs. ConCox, Mr. and l'tfrs. Carrel Cox, Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Milhoan, in front.
· '·
COLUMBUS
Con- stance Shields is residing althe
·Mr. and Mrs. Bi'arcy Cox, Pt. · Mr. !llld Mrs. Ivan Wood •and
:..._ Inside the ' coat, wear a
tributions from the first week Meigs Inn, Room 102.
Pleasant; Bill Belley, Racine; .Mrs. Emma Hayman.
scarf or aholher muffler.
d solicitations are hegin~ing to
· -.. _.,...Or simpler.put yow: dress come into the Columbus
. ~ blouse collar atop your coat headquarters of the Ohio areas , personal visits on
:business leaders will be made
collar, outside.
Foundation of Independent in smaller cities in Ohio. In
- Hats, Including berets and CoQeges, reports the president,
each major area, the visits are
knits, are great costume Dr. · Carl
C.
Bracy . ·sponsored by a comlnittee of
rejuvenators. So are leather Representatives from Ohio's 35
•local business atid professional
gloves.
..
private colleges completed leaders
concerned
with
.,.... Acquire a "pulled- 'their initial solicitations in two
maintaining
these
independent
logellier•: look by adding pants li Ohio's major cities - Akron
colleges in Ohio. ·
·. -Gr. skirt which match your coat.
and Can ton. The final week of
Contributions received from
.
Even if this Is not the year for the fall's solicitations will be
Gallipolis
during October ina Big CfH!t Purchase, you may conducted in Cincinnati and
cluded
the
Holzer Medical
want 81! outer-wear addition Dayton, Nov. 19, 20 and 21.
Cunic and The Ohio Valley
that's blldgetable. A good bet is
In addition to these major · Bank Co.
. '

Shower honors Mr.,Mrs.
CHESTER - A reception
and shower honoring Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Lynn Wood, who
were married May 4, in
Waycross. Ga., was held at the
Chesler Fire House recently.
Fall fiowers W.re used in
decorating the hall and games
. were played with prizes
awarded to ·the winners.
After the couple opened their
gifts, refreslunents of cake,
coffee, punch, nuts and mints
were served from a table
centered with an arrangement
&lt;( mums and lighted candles.
Assisting with the serving were
Mrs. Roy Christy, Mrs. Harold
Hawk, Mrs. Randy Williams,
Miss Debbie Wood, Miss Jane
Ann Karr, Miss Jane Brewer
and Miss Sandra Wood.
The guests attending were
• ' Mfl! . .Helen Barnhart, mother
· of Mrs. Wood, Racine; Mr. and
Mrs. Rober\ P. Wood, Miss
•

Wrap-and-tie is new look

BEANS
Rev. and Mrs. Andrew Parsons

Sla· ~. ·;•nwd ;, ~i·jt.· o •r -• .hl Sayre &lt;.-ud Mi!is I .ori Howley
rf!gistering guests.
. The refreshment table W(:j S
decoflated with a wedding ring
of the Oel. 12 wedding of Miss muin s.
Judy Lynn Whittington,
· MiHs fl&lt;:bbit• Mulf11rd served !.;.1hlcclo!h and l..'l'nli~red with ~J
daughter of Mr. and Mr!ii . as maid of hunur . She wurc a ftHU" !icr CHkC . The t:&lt;lkc Wi.lS
James Whillin glio n, 216:1 burgundy t polyester crep e dceunal.rd with pink , burgundy ,
Eastern Ave. , and •· Michael gown featuring satin nora! 4Jrange and yellow icing mwns.
Glenn Eblin. son of Mr. and print 'o;ash and carried a pink Pillows twirling the cake were
e nhaneed with cherubs, and
Mrs, Glenn Eblin, 2145 Eastern and a ·burgundy mun1.
Ave.
Brides maids were Mi ss the ca ke wa s lopped with a ·
Rev. George Jones, pastor of Anita DeVaul I and Miss Charla large bride and groom with
the church, read the vows at Whitt . :rhey wore pink cupid and candles. In fron t of
the 4:30p.m. ceremony bj!fore. polyester crepe gowns with the tier ca ke was a Bible cake
an altar decorated wit~ a table satin floral prin t sashes and in scribed "The Lord is My
Shepherd," and "What God has
centered with. a lru:ge Bible · . carried burgundy mums.
,.. backed by a cross, ;Jnd flanked
Richard Eblin, brother of the Joined Together, Let no Man
.by burning ca.n dles . . 'rwo groom, served as best man . put Asunder." Names of the
~asl\ets of gpider .ffiwns and Keith · Eblin and Wilmer bridal couple were inscribed in
vari-eolored aslet,l! completed Parsons served as ushers and hearts on the top tier. Both
ca1kes were made by the bride's
the setting. FamilY' pews were groomsmen.
mother,
decorated With green fern tied
For her daughter:s wedding,
Mrs. Richard Eblin, Mrs.
l8rge while satin bows.
Mrs . Whittington chose a l on~
. Preceding the ceremony a sleeved Ooral polyester acetate Keith Ebli n, Mrs. Conme
half ~our of nuptial music was gown with corsage of pink Par sons aitd Mr s . James
presented by Mrs . Coilnie carnations. The groom 's Sisson served th e refre s h·
•: Parsons, sister of the bride. mother wore a long sleeves ments .
Following a short trip to
James Sisson, brother-in-law aqua polyester knit gown with
Grecn ~ ill e Lake, Greenup,
of the bride, sang "I Believe·" corsage of pink carnations .
and " We've Onlx ifust Begun"
A reception at the home of Ky ., the couple resides in their
preceding the ceremony and · the bride's parents followed· the new mobile home at 2145
'
'
;,The Wedding Prayer" while wedding with Miss Jennifer Eastern Ave.
the CO\Iple knelt at the altar.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a white
Second Avenu~ ·
eyelet gown featuring cwnherland waist, high neck and
juliet sleeves . The chapel .
Introduceslength train of while tulle was
louring over 20 's tales in their trinimed in white eyelet lace .
The veil attached to the trRin
1974-1975 season.
Patrons will be seated until 8 was held by a headpiece
p.m. Late comers will be trimmed with large white satin
sealed at the first break in tile office I to 4 p.m. weekdays.
program.
Tickets are 75 cents (or
Tickets are· available at the · students and $4 general adMemorial Auditorium box mission.
GALI.IPOI.fS

Gallipolis Churdl of "'Chl'i :il in
Christian Uni.;m wa~ lht• Sl'enc

Enrythlng

NEW LOOK- Tht new roomier wrap..and.Ue coat is the
choice of Northwood of Iild.iana's Jo Ann Weber, fashion
major from Evansvllle, Ind. The campus is in the backgroWJd.

I

Couple exchanges vows Oct. 12

TEACHERS TO MEET
GAWPOUS - The Gallia
County Retired . Teachers
Ass'n., wlll meet at 12 noon,
TueSday, Nov ,· 111t.the Holiday
Inn. Mrs, Hortense EPling will
:.be' the guest speaker.

:SincelS$9
.
"

ENROLLED - -Practical Nursing School of Buckeye HU1s Career Center ehrolls 35
students In 1974-75 class. Pictured above are: Olarlotte Aldridge, Gallipolis; Katlryn Baker,
Jackson; Louella Blaine, West Virginia; Betty J:loggs, Pedro; Ina Bradley, West Virginia;
Hulda Brown, Gallipolis; Sylvia Cannan, Pomeroy; Pamela Caudill, Ostrander; Vicki Conley,
Jackson ; Virginia Cooper, Gallipolis; Imogene Crabtree, Jackson; Catherine Darst,
Reynoldsburg; Eva Donley, Ironton; Terre Gandee, West Virginia; Kandy Glndlesberger,
GaUipolis; Jacqueline Halley, Crown City; Marcella Harrison, Gallipolis; Carrie Horton, Oak
Hill; Genevieve Jasis, Gallipolis; Barbara Jordan, Pomeroy; Janet Kearns, Jackson; Marceline Kerns, Gallipolis; Judith Love, West Virginia; Susan Morgan, Jackson; Paulette Nibert,
Gallipolis; Nancy Ohlinger, West Virginia; Vicki Poetker, Jackson; Autumn Reasor, Hamden;
Cathie Roseberry, jackson; Rita Scarberry, Jackson; Judith See, West Virginia; Talni Snider,
Wellston; Brenda Whitley,Rutland; Jean Wilcoxon, Gallipolis; Rachel Wlllls, Addison.

I

1- TIM' Sunday T\m"" - So&gt;riline I, SundH)', Nov:

',.

,,,

BRAPLEY, W. Va. - Jack
Keeney, owner and operator of
the Faith Book Stores in
Hunt.i ngton, W. Va., and
Gallipolis, has been appointed
as chaiiman of the finance
comlnitlee of the Appalachian
Bible Institute at Bradley, W.
Va. This action was taken
recently at the annual ineeting
of the board of directors.
Keeney, who has ~n a
member of the board since
1~, will head a conunitlee of. ·
six. ms position is par!ICularly
impc:ldant as the Appalachian
Bible 1nsUtute commences its
15 year plan for campus
development. Under the plan,
announced at the institute's
25th anniversary banquet,
campus acreage will be increased.from the present 1.10 to
nearly 280, and a number of
new structures will be erecte&lt;l.
~ flrat new building will be
a gymnasium:auditorium, to
he followed by additional
clasarooms, .resource center,
student center and student
residences. Enlargement is
made necessary by the ~on­
tinulng . Increase · in student
enrollment, which is up '10 pet.
over llllit year to a present
enrollment of 274. Anticipated '
enrollment for 1980 is expected,
to be in excess of 500.
. The ' Appalachian Bible In,
stltute ·ta · the only accredited
Bible cllllege in West Vfrginla
and lilis· graduates and former
. students serving In ~any
' states and nwnber of foreign '
· rDtsalon posts.

FIRE ISLANDER

SPORTSWEAR SEPARATES
SIZE 8·18
IN BLACK ANO CHERRY FOR THE HOLIDAY

. ·-- &amp;tc. :

Forest guide avaikzble.
.
.

COLUMBUS - A guide to
Ohio's state forestry facilities
h311 been published by the
Department
of
Natural
Resources and is now available
to the public.
The publication contains a
map and an alphabetical
listing of the 18 state 'forests,

three tree ·nurseries, two
reclamation areas and one
nature preserve. It is designed
for use with a highway map in
determining the exact location
of each facility.
"The' guide provides a wealth
of information about the areas
maintained by our 4ivision of

forests ·and pr:eserves/' said
Natural Resources Director
William B. Nye.
. "It is the first publication
dealing. strictly . with the
facilities and services provided
in our slate forests," he added .
The guide includes information such as the nearest
town or city and the nearest
state route for each area.
It also lists the total nwnber
of acres at each facility; the
nearest state park and state
park lodge; mihis of hiking and
horse trails; interpretive
nature and all-purpose vehicle
trails; whether or not hunting '
is permitted, and if camping or

guided tours are offered,
The publication, tilled "Ohio
State Fore~ts." js available
without charge from the 'Ohio
Department
of
Natural
Resources, Publica tions
Center, Fountain Square,
Columbus 43224, or the
respective
state
fores.t
headquarters.

"IN THE LAFA YEnE MALL"
300 Second Avenue

Gallipolis, Ohio

f

BlUE
GVJSS

DAUGHTER BORN
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs .
Robert
Custer,
Morgantown, W. Va ., are
announcing the birth of a
daughter, Jennifer Marie,
.Thursday, Oct. 31,. at the
Morgantown Medical Center.
Thelnfantweighed Tlbs., 2ozs. '
Mr. and Mrs. Custer, the
former Dianne Criswell,
Middleport, have a son, Bart,
who will be four years old New
Year's Day. Grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. James Criswell,
Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Custer, Sr., Belle, W.
Va. Bart has spent the past
week In Middleport with his
gl'l!ndparents and will return to
Morgantown today with his
grandmother, Mrs. Criswell,
who will remain there for a
week.

'BEAUTY

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CONDITIONING LASH THICKENER " Very
Black" .
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Teal with ivory
Regency Rose with
trim . P-S~M- l.
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001

PERSONAL SKIN CARE SYSTEM
Norma I to Dry Skin

BLUE GRASS

LiquldJIAorning or Night Cream. A rich.
· 24-hour moisture care program for the
overly dry complexiof) . 2 fl. oz .
SS.SO

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4oz. .
7.00
8oz.
10.50

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ALL SKIN TYPES
.
Velva Molstur'~ Film. Prol(ldes all day
moisture protection wit!'t or without
makeup.
6.oo·
4 fl.oz.
&amp;fl. oz. 10.00
16 fl. oz.
16.00
lle-.uty Sleep
2 01. ' ' 1.50
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12.50

Skin Deep Milky Clean?er
·
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4.00

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2511. oz.

Undermakeup Wrinkle Lotion

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Apply before makeup

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help smooth wrinkles

oil day.

MEMOIRE CHERIE
Very warm, very sophisticated .
Flower Mist

Perfume Mist

2 fl . oz.
4fl. oz.
2 02'.

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A blend of hydrolyzed collagen ~~~:!~~111ne,

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t300 Second Avenue
·
lGallipolis •. Ohio, 45631

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Name

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Multlple·Actlon Cleansing. An e.traordl~ary. I
super·cleansing discovery that outperforms both a l City
l.
cleanser and a mask.
4 oz.

SKIN DYNAMtC:S

6.00

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CHECK

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CompleJtion ReneWal Lotion '
I Send me the "Beauty Clues" kit- my bonus with!
A gentl~sluiflng lotloh that liberates skin of dulling I any. Eliiabeth Arden purchue of 6.00 or more. My 1
dead surfa~e tells.
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1
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makeup. a H. oz.
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a fl. oz. S5.00 Velva Cream Mask
4'12 oz.
$6.00

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OF WHAT TREATMENT OR FRAGRANCE PRODUCTS ARE RIGHT FOR YOU.

· Fragile Skin Toner

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Ivory with sable brown

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talk with an Oriental flair in
long wrap by Kayser. Mad&lt;t
of "Splendalour" polyester tleece-1
The smart contrasting
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428 SECOND
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eVELVA MOISTURE fiLM
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'
8 - The Swlday Tim~• · &amp;&gt;ntinei,Sunday, Nuv. 3,197~

First female ship's offiCer contented

jan's Side

By HAY PAULEY
UPI Wumcn's Edilor
HAMILTON, Bermuda
(UP!) - Arja Tytti Marjatta
Rauramo claims no pioneering
part in careers for women in
her role as first officer aboard
a luxury passenger ship.
Miss Rauramo already has
finished her formal training for

by
'

Dr. Thomas named to fellowship ·

Dorotby ]. Cormlryman·

master's license, which means
she'll be qualified to skipper
GALUPOUS - I knew we were involved in a nostalgia
ships.
craze but when Dale Whiit and Tommy Spencer started playing
"I'm not the first in the whole
the Witch Doctor song with Dave Seville and the Chipmunks the
world,"
said this lovely
other morning,! nearly went out of my head.
brunette of 29 years. " ln
It was the cuhnination of a great deal of daydreaming for me.
Russia , the men .and women
Zorro blessed us with his avenging sword Tuesday evening and
·
have always been equal in the
l''(e been tickled by the number of people who've come up to me
maritime. ! just happened to be
and rP.marked on how much they enjoyed it. The black swoop of
the
first woman in Finland."
his cape called up memories of a childhood long past when 1 sat
'
Her
employer, Flagship
starry-eyed arid ever so much in love with Guy Williams on the
Cruises,
believes she is the first
Wednesday evening serial.
Perhaps I'm the last flank,
It were, of a gone generation.
NO BIDS TAKEN
My sisters assure me that "Blueberry Hill" is not music , and
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
who, for trying out loud, ever heard of the Four Seasons. Zorro is
Agriculture Director · Gene
just a fairy tale and Elvis Presley is a much older man to them.
Abercrombie .said Thursday
Give them Evel Knievel and strains of Elton John. They never
only
domestically produced
heard of Faljl Domino. .
.
beef and beef products will be
Nevertheless my memories of Zorro took me wandering to
purchased for state institutions ·
the library where we turned up the meaning of his name : the
and
bids for imported beef or ·
grey fox, and that another, totally unrelated Zoro was a magician
beef
products will not be acin the mid-16th century in Asia Minor. The magician was cursed
cepted.
by a man named Magduk who hated him so that he caused Zoro
Abercrombie said the action
to be engulfed in flames. The ashes were reincarnated as a
was
the first step toward
beautiful woman who later marries Magduk.
easing the situation which
The remake of "The Mark of Zorro" got us wondering
plagues the cattle industry in
whether it was Tyrone Power or Douglas Fairbanks who apthe state, and was prompted by
peared in the original flick. Marie and I are holding out for
the fmancial squeeze that the
Fairbank&amp;. Frank Langella played the caped crusader for
cattle industry in ·the state
Tueoday night's session.
In his way even Zorro was a magician, blessed with the faces.
tralnlllg of a Spanish background, finishing school and service in
MINER KILLED
the Madrid military school. The legend seems to resurrect itself
PHILUPPI, W. Va. (UP!)
every few years, but seems never to have changed in the way
One coal miner was killed and
other legends do.
another injured Thursday in a
Unfortunately we haven't·been able to pin the exact origin of
roof fall inside the Badger Coal
the Zorro legend and Diego "Francaise Vega has certainly
Co. No. 13 mine near here.
managed to escape the perusal of the average mythological
Killed in the accident was Fred
historian. Nevertheless they used to tell us the story started in
Bragg, 54, of the Barbour
Spain where the ilon of a wealthy landowner was wronged by
County
community
of
emissaries of the Klng'-and took his revenge, draped in the now
Longview. Hospitalized here in
famous black costume, in the wee hourS of the night.
satisfactory condition was
When Zorro came to California his story. improved. He
Greg PhilUps, 24, of Philippi.
became a fighter for the rights of the people he had so long been
disaiiiJOClaled with and made his rounds on a horse named Diablo
wbo could jump higher and run faster than any other stallion in
the New World.
Is there any truth to it all? We don 't really know, and the
Vegaa have alllong aince disappeared from the·face of the earth.
They may have taken Diego's secret with them, or there niay not
bave been a Diego at all. It's hard teUing, but it makes a good
lrory.
.

to attain lirst officer rank in
Scandinavia as well as in the·
whole world of cruise ships.
In Cjllltrast, . the maritime
industry in the United States
has just opened its doors to
women, permitting enrollment
in the four-ye!II' course at the
U.S. Maritime Academy,
Kings Point, N.Y.
The rule that women might
work toward a commission in
the U.S. Naval Reserve came
from the Commerce Department, which runs the service
academy. The fourteen women
who entered Kings Point last

August are still there studying
with 320 men In the first year
class.
She is the first mariner in the
family. A grandfather was a
priest, other relatives were
lawyers, her father teaches
languages.
Sl)e look secretarial courses
and trained for law before,
COQlpelled "by something I'd
always wanted to do," she went
to sea.
Aboard the 626-passenger
Sea Venture she ranks with two
~e first officers, aU of whOm
share duties rangirfg from

computerized · satellite
navigating to checking ilu()plies to flying bridge duty when
moving in, and out of port.
Her. apparel on boan,l is a
tailored, gold-butfoned jacket,
skirt (just covering the knee)
in white or navy, with the
visored cap traditional for
officer uniforms.
Her below.Qloulder

:=

'

,f!ii:

never hurts." '

, men.

t

-~

(BESIDE TH~ )~AILROAD .TRACKS)
•h·
!·

•(

~
' . -,., .·

'

'·-

Pcirlt and Shop In Comfort
..
We Are Looking Forward To Seeing You At
\

SHOPPING BECAUSE-

Our NEW LOCATION

,.. -You Have A Better Selection

EVERYTHING IN • • •

WALLPAPER -SUPPLIES

,.. -You Stretch Your Christmas Budget ·

.·.·
)-

COMPLETE SELECTION •••

,.. -You AWiid The Last Minute Rush

PAUL DAVIES JEWELERS
Gallipolis, Ohio

VOTE REPUBLICAN

For Governor

I,

(Vote for not more than one)

'

'

Bulova
Accutron·

I

M~~e .it

For Chief Justice of the SiJI~feJ;Ile

"

.

.

.l

X

JOHN J. GILLIGAN
Democrat

,.

TUESDAY is election day in Ohio and around the nation. I
hope that all of you.who are quaUfled will find time - .in fact,
Ume - to go to"the polls during the day. and vote. It is
eetlniated that more elections are won or lost on the nwnber of
wterii wbo stay.home than on those who go to the polls. And while
apathy has been the ~t of the times, surely It f8 obvious from ~
recent goverrunent developments that we can .no looger afford to
be apathetic. Do get out and vote.

JOHN GLENN

NANCY BROWN LAZAR

For Justice of the Supreme Court

Republican

-·

th~n

JOHN W; BROWN

X

Democrat

X

NCE E. MILLER

SHE DON A. TAFT
lean

f

socks,

'

Democrat

Democrat

HERMAN KIRSCH

'

I

l

I

'

X
X

OAKLEY C. COLLINS
Republican

GEORGE C. SMITH

·

lean

RALPH Q.

ROGER W. TRACY, JR.

.

'

.

'

THQMAS E. FERGUSON

Pigskin Hush Pup pie,. shOe on

a thick slice of crepe Sole. You11

SHOPPING
I;ARL Y!

1

18.00

1\.p.P,!~§.~ are your oods.best friends! .
..

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Complete Line of Men's,
Women's and Children's.

.

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:ilO E. MAl N ST. .
POMEROY,
..
Open All Day Thursday
Friday Nlgl)t Tll8
.
'

.
.

.

X

TED.W. BROWN
.
.

Democrat

~

X

· Republican

;·

GERTRUDE W. DONAHEY

lilr not moro than one)

.

.'·

.

~

-

"·

4%-7653

UAZZll
13l'
~1()1--jf

Here's a fabulous look for
gala evenings. A little
elegance with flash to
dazzle your man. Soft
peau de soie uppers in
silver or go ld

• • •

MID-AUTUMN

.

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MEN'S Sizes 35 to 50

~'~~"~!:,.REDUCED2

CAR COATS REDIJC£D 2 0 %

=sMfrEA~~~CED 3

"What A Friend We Have in
Jesus" and a prayer by Mrs.
Joseph Cook. Reports were

given; and Mrs. Warner 's
devotions were titled "Investment and Inventory" with
from Duet. 6: 4-10.

0%

I)

MEN'S

0%

.

...

DREss ~mTs REDUCEDL

0OJlO·

Manhatta;.n.~.
ii ~:.!.\:l:..:::..:::..:..::,. ,:Po~ly~e~st~e~r:,K•n•t•ts_ _ _ _ _ _,:;::.,!~,:Sizes 35 to 50

B? Lady

MEN'S

AU. .lADIES

PANT

REDUCED .

~~rns:iu:n

REDUCED 2 0 %

AU. LADIES

30%

MEN'S
Long Sleeve Pullover

·

KNITS

REDUCED

Turtle. Crew Neck and
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4

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LADIES -CREW .&amp;

CAR COATS
JACKETS

REDUCED20%

·

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Leather, Nylons

REWCED20%

'

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GUARANTII
"For IWO ,._,.
•fi•r deiiYifY. ·
we'll nx eny·

thing thll'l our
~t..H."

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Save I 100% aolld state moduler challis wtth eully r•
. placeable ~.;,.. • · "HBndl-011" tunlog • Sui*
i!lack t,latrlx picture tu~ • Phllco Picture Glllftl Syltam • l,_,t play lor piOturl end IOUIKI • JMuti!UI
Contemporary cabinet. Qlllihld Ia .match Walnut
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TO S14.00

PANT AND REDUCED30't PANTS
COATS
. /(, .Size 29 to 42

NOW

~~E~S--------~----4-.·1~-------~----------

0NE ·

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REDUCED

5O.t t

=:Err~:Ess

/(,

Straight or Flare
&lt;VALUES TO S1
$7.50

FLANNEL SHIRTS . VALUE

~650 With Trade

$6

DENIMs

$649
.

BAH.R· CLOTHIERS
'

MIDDLEPORT, Q,

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&lt;

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PERMANENT PRESS

MEN'S WORK

•'

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State Chaaals . ·

MilTS .ue LAIGII

1 LOT MEN'S

.

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100CJr. Sollcl

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MIDDLEPORT, 0 • .

*******************·*********·:.
·****"************'*** -· Pd. Pol : Adv. '
I .

Phllco .25"•.......-.
Color TV with

LADIES All WEATJIER

·fOREMAN ·&amp;.ABBOTT

-When You··vote on ~tiw Day .

I

·.

To .Take This sam~ a.flot: ··
. .·
.· .
to~ p~~-:
..

A. BUE.HL

Democrat
~

·

Ewl}Ciay low prius on FRENCH FRIES, HOl
DOGS. MILK·- SHAKES &amp; .DAIRY ISLE
SPECIALS.

'

. ·.. '

·

For County
(Unexpired Te~m Ending :January 2, r9n)

RIS '

.

'

•. J

HOWARD E•. FRANK

(Vote for not more !lien ontl

RICHARD H.

•

.· 49e

PWS. ..

'.

...

Republican : ·

.HAMBURGERS

,,
~ *****************~"'"**~******
.
'.

'
JAMES E. ROUSH

For Treasurer of state

HARTLEY'S
SHOES
'

SPECIAL

I Vo" for not more than one)

,.

42 Court St.

MIDDLEI&gt;ORT, OHIO

LADIES

Model C2510EWA

For County Auditor

P. HA

Hush

KRIS KRISTOFFERSON
'
&amp; RITA COOLIDGE
NOV. 16

Wools.

Democrat

IVoie for not more lhati onel

tors, pioneered among national
medical groups requiring
members to take continuing
study, a minimum of 150 accredi~d hours every three
years.
The
AAFP,

SALE C.ONTINUES

Commissioner
(FullTerm)

GORDON ' H•. CALDWEL

For Secretary of State

feel like you're walking on air.
Steel shank support.

10

Your Tom MeAn Store

BAHR CLOTHIERS

(Vole for not moro !hail one! ·

Republican

Democrat

soft supple Breathin' Brushed

POEMROY
"New
Horizons in Family Standards"
was the program topic of Mrs.
Robert Warner, program
. chairwoman at the Wednesday
meeting of the Women's
Christian Temperance Union
at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. ·
.
Mrs. Warner read a report
from Rev. Lew1s C. Burger,
~xecutlve director of the Ohio
Councii on Alcohol Problems
regardmg the message he
brought at the WCTU cen~nnial convention recently in
Cleveland.
The annual Christmas dinner
was announced for Dec. 4 at the
home of Mrs. Warner.
Acknowledgement of a contribution to the department
headquarters for repair on the
building was acknowledged. It
was noted that dues are
payable now. '
The

TURRENECK

HENRY WELLS
Give your toes a treat in thiS

are WCTU topic

)

for not more Ill an onel

Republican

Family standards

. Fqr
Judge
Court
.
- · ofthe County
,
.

(Vote tor not more than oneJ

For ·

.

RE'S ,

''

Republican
oemocrat

Gospel - that there is a kind of
life that brings joy, a sense of
security and usefulness to
one's brethren, a kind of
existence that brings selfrespect. I tell you, there's still
a place for a preaching
.ministry."
base."
There is a place also for the
"We preachers," he added,
laity
in ministry, the bishop
"must help these people to get
rid of what's spoiling their con~nded . He said :
"Ours is an inclusive
lives. The Bible says the most
minis!ry
... we have a place In
important reason is sin selfishness, failing to live up to our ministry for both the
our ideals, distrust in the trained minister and for those
promises of God, hopelessness lay people not ordained but
"
wanting to serve the church."
He explained further :
He added: "I'd say that the
"All men are ordained of God
greatest need in the world
today is for comfort. Against whether they've taken vows or
all these things that darken not. Every man's life is a plan
life , we have the word of the of God. The physician, the
mother with her brood, the
policeman
defending
a
sleeping city - they are all
God's servants and are performing a part in His
beauty of the colorfUl trees and ministry.' '
As he travels throughout the
foliage was a favori~.
conference, Bishop Ensley will
It was vo~d lo retain the 1974
address an estimated 6,000 of
officers for the next year. After
his constituents from Lake
the business session readings
Erie to the Ohio River. The 13th
given included ~~Autumn" by
dinner wili be Thursday
Mrs. Fred Sisson ; "Let Us
evening in the Cincinnati
Give l'hanks," Mrs. Leona
District. The 14th and final one
Spires; "One Day at a Time, H
will be in the Portsmouth
Miss Mollie Johnson ; "One
District Nov . 3.
Cross'·' by Mrs . Gardner;
"F ll
h" n d "A W
., r Rev . .James McCormack,
e ows IP an ·
oman s Athens District superin·
Viewpoint'_' by_Mrs: Edward tendent , was host to the
Spears. Bible questions from Wednesday occasion.
!he book of "Ruth" were asked
by Mrs. Spears:
Mrs. Hortie Roush will
prepare questions from the
book of Esther for the
November meeting which will
he Nov . 21 at the home of Mrs.
Fred Sisson.
Jt was reported that Mrs.
Etta Darst, a charter member,
was a . patient at Holzer
Medical Center and would be
remembered by the group. The
Golden Rule class was
organized 37 years ago and
Mrs. Rupe served a decorated
birthday cake sherbet mints
and lemonad~ . The ~eetlng
was closed by singing "Blest
Be the Tie." Mrs. Spears was
presented a door prize by the
hos~ss .
1 RACK LADIES'

churches, a total of over 300.
Bishop Ensley said:
"Good preaching can help
these people, suffering hurts of
life and the troubles of fear,
frustration, disappointmentsmost of them spiritual in

Golden Rule class meets
KYGER - The Golden Rule
Class of Old Kyger met Thursday with Mrs. Ben Rupe. The
meeting was opened by singing
" 'Tis So Sweet to Trust in
Jesus. " Mrs . George Gardner
read the scripture from Psalm
128.
.
After prayer by the president
the roll call was answered by
members telling what they
liked about the fall season of
the year. It was agreed the

The Alcove

heritage house

. D .R ESSESREDUCED30%

E. STEPLI
1

--~R~O~N~A~
. ~LD~H~.~J~A~M~E~S~---

For Auditor of State

mittens,

denomination's largest con-

15 upon some 3,000 members of headquartered in Kan~s City
the academy in conjunction ,ts the largest of medicine'~
with the AAFP's annual specialty groups.
convention and scientific
assembly in Los Angeles.
' on Sale at
Ceremonies were held in the
Tickets
Shrine Auditorium in Los
Angeles before more than 7,000
perso ns. Fellowship candidates wore academic robes
LOGGINS &amp; MESSINA
and mortarboard caps. They
were rec ognized according to
slate chapter groups and the
NOV.
oath of fellowship was recited
en masse.
Also
The academy, representing
more than 36,000 family doc-

Gallipolis, Ohio

Bishop addresses dinner

Democrat

WILLIAM J. BROWN
1

Ave.
Ohio

FRANKLiN T. GERLACH

(Vote ·k.r not m~ri lhon onel

--....t.·Oe-in.9t•r•at_ _ _...;._ _ _ _,§_
, ·x··

342 Second

( V_o ta for not more than one l ·

.,

For Sta.t e Representative
( 92nd District)

Republican

X

Q.ARK'S
·JEWELRY STORE .

---:c--t-...-;--;;-;--=-:::-:~=-=~::7::--------"--~S For Judge of Court of Appeals, 4th

!Vole for not mora than one)

gloves,

smoking materials, large size
men's belts, may send or bring
them to Athens Mental Health
Cen~r. in care of "Operation:
Santa Claus," Attention :
Recreation Department.
Persons wishing lo help by
giving monetary donations
may send them to the Athens
Mental
Health
Center
Auxiliary, in care of Rosemary
Shay, Treas.urer, 108 N.
Congress, Athens 45701.
All donations should be
received by December I, so
· that they can be sorted·,
shopping done and wrapped .

CLIFFORD F. B

WElL, MAY~E ... may express the fedings of the youngster, a patient in.pediatrics at
Holzer Medical Center, who was visited by a ghost, a rotund pumpkin and a happy clown,
Thursday afternoon. The spooks are members of Gallia Academy's DHO class and made the
trip during their class period. Earlier in the week senior .students of the Holzer Medical Center
School of Nursing made the rounds, visiting pediatrics patients with bags of goodies and
assorted magic tricks.

ference . The occasion was the
12th in a series of 14 Bishop's
Churchmanship Dinners, an
annual function, held in 'Baker
.Center
Ballroom,
Ohio
University, Athens.
His audience included
ministers and their wives of the
198 Uni~d Methodist Churches
in the Athens District, and lay
men and wompn from those

and women's handkerchiefs,
•

..

TUESDAY
ELECTION Day, polls open
from6a.m. to 7:30p.m . Get out
and vo~.
REGULAR meeting,
Southeastern Ohio Gospel
Music .Ass'n., potlU~k. 6· p.m.,
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Springfield
Grange Hall, SR 160 north of
Gallipolis. Everyone welcome .
HUN'&amp;INGTON Regional
Bloodinobile will visit Rio
Grande College, 12:30 to 5 p.m.
in pavis Hall Basement.
PEMBROKE Club meets with
Winifrede Knight, 8 p .m .
VINTON. Masonic Lodge 131,
potluck fellowship meal, 6:30
p.m. Regl,llar meeting , 7:30
p.m.
WAYSIDE Garden Club meets
with Mrs. Huber FUlton, 7:30
p.m . Plant and food sale.

periume, aftershave, men's

·

!Vole for not more than one)

Democrat

RICHARD F. CELESTE

I

..

\

ATHENS
" Untold
thousands of people in our land
today need ' the Christian
Gospel to take the hurt out of
· their lives, " the United
Methodist bishop of the West
Ohio Conference said Wednesday night.
The speaker was Bishop F.
Gerald Ensley, Columbus,
episcopal leader of the

ATI;IENS - The Athens
Mental
Health
Center
Auxiliary is again sponsoring
" Operation : Santa Claus."
"Operation: Santa Claus"
benefi Is the clients of the
Mental Health Center by
helping provide Christn\as
gifts for those who might
otherwise be overlooked.
Persons having new or
unused items such as jewe!ry,

For Justice ofthe Supreme Court
H. KENT BUMPASS

'!

!

precise that
accuracy is
S:L!Branteed
to within
a minute
a ·month.•
See our full ,
range of
Accutron
styles.
From

.

•

Republican

·i'

,

FRANK D. CELEBREZZE

For Representative to Congress
(loth District)

one)

.

(Vote for not more th•n one!

RICI:tARD B. KAY ·

I Vole for not more than onel

I,

Republican

KATHLEEN G. HARROFF

JAMES A. RHODES

(Vote for not more

CWILLIAM 0' Ell:L
E; O'NEILL

For Lieutenant Governor

H!vs-a nice week!

Accutron watch
by Bulova. So

Democrat

make.

X

x.

Republican

-'

a memor·

.,,

MONDAY ·
GALLIA Academy High School
band boosters meet in the Land
room at 7:27 p.m.
GALLIA . County bAPSE
Chap~r 682 will meet at 7:30
p.m . at Kyger Creek High
School. School board candida.tes will attend and all
members are urged to be
present.

.Operation:
Santa Claus
scheduled

able gift. ·
Give him an

.

(Vole for not more than one) ··

RALPH J. PE

,:~

lAY-AWAY NOW
FOR CHRiSTMAS

NON-PARTISAN

Fort ·United States Senator
(Vote for not more than one&gt;

Coming
Events

MONDAY
FRENCH qolony Chapter,
Daughters of the American
Revolution, meet at 1:30 p.m.
with Catherine Hayward.
Cross
AMERICAN " Red
Volunteer Luncheon, 12:45
p.m. in the Holzer Medical
P.,nter Cafeteria .

UNOFFICIAL SAMPLE BAU.OT ISSUED BY TJIE MEIGS COUNTY REPUBLICAN EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, LESLIE F. FULTZ, CHAIRMAN
110 HIGH STREET,
POMEROY,·
'45769

OOMMUNITY Relations at Holzer Medical Center rings my
phone every morning and Lenore an!klr Marianne and I have
our regular cbat over the discharges. They tell me about the
weather (I have no windows in my office) and I tell them about
•he Iouay phone service.
However, Lenore assures me that Wednesday night she
loolled out her window in Rio Grande and saw the headless
horaanan. When I told her this wasn't New England she insisted
that some fellow had come riding into the town square, as it
were, in alifack cape with a pumpkin on his head.
Jchabod Crane, beware of Rio Grande.

FRIENDS - Thursday afternoon members of Gallia

SUNDAY
71ST ANNIVERSARY of MI.
Carmel Baptist Church and
fifth anniversary of pastor
Rev. Vance Watson. Morning
wor~hip, 10 :45 a.m. fellowship
hour to follow. Rev. D. L.
Latham ,
Ironton , guest
speaker.

PAINT '&amp; SUPPLIES

See Our Layaw,a y Windows
For Christmas Gift Ideas
At

404 Second Ave.

\}..

Academy's Diversified Health Occupations Class visited the
Jlediatrics ward of Holzer Medical Center for some " Trick or
~eating." The clown, a sad-face hobo and a friendly witch
were greeted at the door by this young spook, who is one of
the patients at the hospital.

..Where You Cah

IS SMART

KANSAS City, Mo. - Homer _
B. Thoma s , M.D ., of t he
Gallipolis area has been named
a Fellow of the American
Academy
of
Family
Physicians.
The degree of fellowship may
be attained in either of two
ways:successfw completion of
600 or more hours of accredited
con tinulng medical study, or
achi,evement of diplomate
status in the specialty of family
medicine as a result of passing
a certifying examination adminis~red by the American
Board of Family Practice.
Fellowship entitles the
conferee to use the title
"Fellow of the American
Academy
of
Family
Physicians," or " FAAFP."
The degree was conferred Oct.

. .

Duly on a 'ctuitle .ship is li . There's only one sailor in
much cleaner job than th081!. · port for. her, a Finnish se.;;:·
she;s had on cargo runs wl!ere:. ca_p taln based In New Orleans'',
she added ' up Years ol sea · "who's waited for me six ::
experience , plying th~ paris·· y~ars, although we don't get·to• ..
along the 'Atlant,tc and Gulf ~ each other often."
~

OF SEOOND AVENUE AND SPRUCE STREET
.

..

---·

;

wind and troushers while '
she chipped rust, painted and
climbed right a\gngslde the

l\

as

.. .
. .·

coasts. Then it was dirt and:;

hair, except for . bangs, is
tucked up under the· cap when
she's on duty. And certainly
she wears lipstick ....:"a little

..

.OORNER

.

''

�'.

'
8 - The Swlday Tim~• · &amp;&gt;ntinei,Sunday, Nuv. 3,197~

First female ship's offiCer contented

jan's Side

By HAY PAULEY
UPI Wumcn's Edilor
HAMILTON, Bermuda
(UP!) - Arja Tytti Marjatta
Rauramo claims no pioneering
part in careers for women in
her role as first officer aboard
a luxury passenger ship.
Miss Rauramo already has
finished her formal training for

by
'

Dr. Thomas named to fellowship ·

Dorotby ]. Cormlryman·

master's license, which means
she'll be qualified to skipper
GALUPOUS - I knew we were involved in a nostalgia
ships.
craze but when Dale Whiit and Tommy Spencer started playing
"I'm not the first in the whole
the Witch Doctor song with Dave Seville and the Chipmunks the
world,"
said this lovely
other morning,! nearly went out of my head.
brunette of 29 years. " ln
It was the cuhnination of a great deal of daydreaming for me.
Russia , the men .and women
Zorro blessed us with his avenging sword Tuesday evening and
·
have always been equal in the
l''(e been tickled by the number of people who've come up to me
maritime. ! just happened to be
and rP.marked on how much they enjoyed it. The black swoop of
the
first woman in Finland."
his cape called up memories of a childhood long past when 1 sat
'
Her
employer, Flagship
starry-eyed arid ever so much in love with Guy Williams on the
Cruises,
believes she is the first
Wednesday evening serial.
Perhaps I'm the last flank,
It were, of a gone generation.
NO BIDS TAKEN
My sisters assure me that "Blueberry Hill" is not music , and
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
who, for trying out loud, ever heard of the Four Seasons. Zorro is
Agriculture Director · Gene
just a fairy tale and Elvis Presley is a much older man to them.
Abercrombie .said Thursday
Give them Evel Knievel and strains of Elton John. They never
only
domestically produced
heard of Faljl Domino. .
.
beef and beef products will be
Nevertheless my memories of Zorro took me wandering to
purchased for state institutions ·
the library where we turned up the meaning of his name : the
and
bids for imported beef or ·
grey fox, and that another, totally unrelated Zoro was a magician
beef
products will not be acin the mid-16th century in Asia Minor. The magician was cursed
cepted.
by a man named Magduk who hated him so that he caused Zoro
Abercrombie said the action
to be engulfed in flames. The ashes were reincarnated as a
was
the first step toward
beautiful woman who later marries Magduk.
easing the situation which
The remake of "The Mark of Zorro" got us wondering
plagues the cattle industry in
whether it was Tyrone Power or Douglas Fairbanks who apthe state, and was prompted by
peared in the original flick. Marie and I are holding out for
the fmancial squeeze that the
Fairbank&amp;. Frank Langella played the caped crusader for
cattle industry in ·the state
Tueoday night's session.
In his way even Zorro was a magician, blessed with the faces.
tralnlllg of a Spanish background, finishing school and service in
MINER KILLED
the Madrid military school. The legend seems to resurrect itself
PHILUPPI, W. Va. (UP!)
every few years, but seems never to have changed in the way
One coal miner was killed and
other legends do.
another injured Thursday in a
Unfortunately we haven't·been able to pin the exact origin of
roof fall inside the Badger Coal
the Zorro legend and Diego "Francaise Vega has certainly
Co. No. 13 mine near here.
managed to escape the perusal of the average mythological
Killed in the accident was Fred
historian. Nevertheless they used to tell us the story started in
Bragg, 54, of the Barbour
Spain where the ilon of a wealthy landowner was wronged by
County
community
of
emissaries of the Klng'-and took his revenge, draped in the now
Longview. Hospitalized here in
famous black costume, in the wee hourS of the night.
satisfactory condition was
When Zorro came to California his story. improved. He
Greg PhilUps, 24, of Philippi.
became a fighter for the rights of the people he had so long been
disaiiiJOClaled with and made his rounds on a horse named Diablo
wbo could jump higher and run faster than any other stallion in
the New World.
Is there any truth to it all? We don 't really know, and the
Vegaa have alllong aince disappeared from the·face of the earth.
They may have taken Diego's secret with them, or there niay not
bave been a Diego at all. It's hard teUing, but it makes a good
lrory.
.

to attain lirst officer rank in
Scandinavia as well as in the·
whole world of cruise ships.
In Cjllltrast, . the maritime
industry in the United States
has just opened its doors to
women, permitting enrollment
in the four-ye!II' course at the
U.S. Maritime Academy,
Kings Point, N.Y.
The rule that women might
work toward a commission in
the U.S. Naval Reserve came
from the Commerce Department, which runs the service
academy. The fourteen women
who entered Kings Point last

August are still there studying
with 320 men In the first year
class.
She is the first mariner in the
family. A grandfather was a
priest, other relatives were
lawyers, her father teaches
languages.
Sl)e look secretarial courses
and trained for law before,
COQlpelled "by something I'd
always wanted to do," she went
to sea.
Aboard the 626-passenger
Sea Venture she ranks with two
~e first officers, aU of whOm
share duties rangirfg from

computerized · satellite
navigating to checking ilu()plies to flying bridge duty when
moving in, and out of port.
Her. apparel on boan,l is a
tailored, gold-butfoned jacket,
skirt (just covering the knee)
in white or navy, with the
visored cap traditional for
officer uniforms.
Her below.Qloulder

:=

'

,f!ii:

never hurts." '

, men.

t

-~

(BESIDE TH~ )~AILROAD .TRACKS)
•h·
!·

•(

~
' . -,., .·

'

'·-

Pcirlt and Shop In Comfort
..
We Are Looking Forward To Seeing You At
\

SHOPPING BECAUSE-

Our NEW LOCATION

,.. -You Have A Better Selection

EVERYTHING IN • • •

WALLPAPER -SUPPLIES

,.. -You Stretch Your Christmas Budget ·

.·.·
)-

COMPLETE SELECTION •••

,.. -You AWiid The Last Minute Rush

PAUL DAVIES JEWELERS
Gallipolis, Ohio

VOTE REPUBLICAN

For Governor

I,

(Vote for not more than one)

'

'

Bulova
Accutron·

I

M~~e .it

For Chief Justice of the SiJI~feJ;Ile

"

.

.

.l

X

JOHN J. GILLIGAN
Democrat

,.

TUESDAY is election day in Ohio and around the nation. I
hope that all of you.who are quaUfled will find time - .in fact,
Ume - to go to"the polls during the day. and vote. It is
eetlniated that more elections are won or lost on the nwnber of
wterii wbo stay.home than on those who go to the polls. And while
apathy has been the ~t of the times, surely It f8 obvious from ~
recent goverrunent developments that we can .no looger afford to
be apathetic. Do get out and vote.

JOHN GLENN

NANCY BROWN LAZAR

For Justice of the Supreme Court

Republican

-·

th~n

JOHN W; BROWN

X

Democrat

X

NCE E. MILLER

SHE DON A. TAFT
lean

f

socks,

'

Democrat

Democrat

HERMAN KIRSCH

'

I

l

I

'

X
X

OAKLEY C. COLLINS
Republican

GEORGE C. SMITH

·

lean

RALPH Q.

ROGER W. TRACY, JR.

.

'

.

'

THQMAS E. FERGUSON

Pigskin Hush Pup pie,. shOe on

a thick slice of crepe Sole. You11

SHOPPING
I;ARL Y!

1

18.00

1\.p.P,!~§.~ are your oods.best friends! .
..

.

.

~

Complete Line of Men's,
Women's and Children's.

.

'

:ilO E. MAl N ST. .
POMEROY,
..
Open All Day Thursday
Friday Nlgl)t Tll8
.
'

.
.

.

X

TED.W. BROWN
.
.

Democrat

~

X

· Republican

;·

GERTRUDE W. DONAHEY

lilr not moro than one)

.

.'·

.

~

-

"·

4%-7653

UAZZll
13l'
~1()1--jf

Here's a fabulous look for
gala evenings. A little
elegance with flash to
dazzle your man. Soft
peau de soie uppers in
silver or go ld

• • •

MID-AUTUMN

.

.

MEN'S Sizes 35 to 50

~'~~"~!:,.REDUCED2

CAR COATS REDIJC£D 2 0 %

=sMfrEA~~~CED 3

"What A Friend We Have in
Jesus" and a prayer by Mrs.
Joseph Cook. Reports were

given; and Mrs. Warner 's
devotions were titled "Investment and Inventory" with
from Duet. 6: 4-10.

0%

I)

MEN'S

0%

.

...

DREss ~mTs REDUCEDL

0OJlO·

Manhatta;.n.~.
ii ~:.!.\:l:..:::..:::..:..::,. ,:Po~ly~e~st~e~r:,K•n•t•ts_ _ _ _ _ _,:;::.,!~,:Sizes 35 to 50

B? Lady

MEN'S

AU. .lADIES

PANT

REDUCED .

~~rns:iu:n

REDUCED 2 0 %

AU. LADIES

30%

MEN'S
Long Sleeve Pullover

·

KNITS

REDUCED

Turtle. Crew Neck and
·'

4

'

LADIES -CREW .&amp;

CAR COATS
JACKETS

REDUCED20%

·

•

.

\) l

Leather, Nylons

REWCED20%

'

.

.'

; r

.'

r •

GUARANTII
"For IWO ,._,.
•fi•r deiiYifY. ·
we'll nx eny·

thing thll'l our
~t..H."

·

Save I 100% aolld state moduler challis wtth eully r•
. placeable ~.;,.. • · "HBndl-011" tunlog • Sui*
i!lack t,latrlx picture tu~ • Phllco Picture Glllftl Syltam • l,_,t play lor piOturl end IOUIKI • JMuti!UI
Contemporary cabinet. Qlllihld Ia .match Walnut
..

ONLY

(

'

.

VALUES
TO S14.00

PANT AND REDUCED30't PANTS
COATS
. /(, .Size 29 to 42

NOW

~~E~S--------~----4-.·1~-------~----------

0NE ·

~~=

LADI

REDUCED

5O.t t

=:Err~:Ess

/(,

Straight or Flare
&lt;VALUES TO S1
$7.50

FLANNEL SHIRTS . VALUE

~650 With Trade

$6

DENIMs

$649
.

BAH.R· CLOTHIERS
'

MIDDLEPORT, Q,

·. I J:

I

.'
&lt;

.

,.
''

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~

•

•·!'

I

PERMANENT PRESS

MEN'S WORK

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State Chaaals . ·

MilTS .ue LAIGII

1 LOT MEN'S

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100CJr. Sollcl

I-'flAil

MIDDLEPORT, 0 • .

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·****"************'*** -· Pd. Pol : Adv. '
I .

Phllco .25"•.......-.
Color TV with

LADIES All WEATJIER

·fOREMAN ·&amp;.ABBOTT

-When You··vote on ~tiw Day .

I

·.

To .Take This sam~ a.flot: ··
. .·
.· .
to~ p~~-:
..

A. BUE.HL

Democrat
~

·

Ewl}Ciay low prius on FRENCH FRIES, HOl
DOGS. MILK·- SHAKES &amp; .DAIRY ISLE
SPECIALS.

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·

For County
(Unexpired Te~m Ending :January 2, r9n)

RIS '

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•. J

HOWARD E•. FRANK

(Vote for not more !lien ontl

RICHARD H.

•

.· 49e

PWS. ..

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...

Republican : ·

.HAMBURGERS

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JAMES E. ROUSH

For Treasurer of state

HARTLEY'S
SHOES
'

SPECIAL

I Vo" for not more than one)

,.

42 Court St.

MIDDLEI&gt;ORT, OHIO

LADIES

Model C2510EWA

For County Auditor

P. HA

Hush

KRIS KRISTOFFERSON
'
&amp; RITA COOLIDGE
NOV. 16

Wools.

Democrat

IVoie for not more lhati onel

tors, pioneered among national
medical groups requiring
members to take continuing
study, a minimum of 150 accredi~d hours every three
years.
The
AAFP,

SALE C.ONTINUES

Commissioner
(FullTerm)

GORDON ' H•. CALDWEL

For Secretary of State

feel like you're walking on air.
Steel shank support.

10

Your Tom MeAn Store

BAHR CLOTHIERS

(Vole for not moro !hail one! ·

Republican

Democrat

soft supple Breathin' Brushed

POEMROY
"New
Horizons in Family Standards"
was the program topic of Mrs.
Robert Warner, program
. chairwoman at the Wednesday
meeting of the Women's
Christian Temperance Union
at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. ·
.
Mrs. Warner read a report
from Rev. Lew1s C. Burger,
~xecutlve director of the Ohio
Councii on Alcohol Problems
regardmg the message he
brought at the WCTU cen~nnial convention recently in
Cleveland.
The annual Christmas dinner
was announced for Dec. 4 at the
home of Mrs. Warner.
Acknowledgement of a contribution to the department
headquarters for repair on the
building was acknowledged. It
was noted that dues are
payable now. '
The

TURRENECK

HENRY WELLS
Give your toes a treat in thiS

are WCTU topic

)

for not more Ill an onel

Republican

Family standards

. Fqr
Judge
Court
.
- · ofthe County
,
.

(Vote tor not more than oneJ

For ·

.

RE'S ,

''

Republican
oemocrat

Gospel - that there is a kind of
life that brings joy, a sense of
security and usefulness to
one's brethren, a kind of
existence that brings selfrespect. I tell you, there's still
a place for a preaching
.ministry."
base."
There is a place also for the
"We preachers," he added,
laity
in ministry, the bishop
"must help these people to get
rid of what's spoiling their con~nded . He said :
"Ours is an inclusive
lives. The Bible says the most
minis!ry
... we have a place In
important reason is sin selfishness, failing to live up to our ministry for both the
our ideals, distrust in the trained minister and for those
promises of God, hopelessness lay people not ordained but
"
wanting to serve the church."
He explained further :
He added: "I'd say that the
"All men are ordained of God
greatest need in the world
today is for comfort. Against whether they've taken vows or
all these things that darken not. Every man's life is a plan
life , we have the word of the of God. The physician, the
mother with her brood, the
policeman
defending
a
sleeping city - they are all
God's servants and are performing a part in His
beauty of the colorfUl trees and ministry.' '
As he travels throughout the
foliage was a favori~.
conference, Bishop Ensley will
It was vo~d lo retain the 1974
address an estimated 6,000 of
officers for the next year. After
his constituents from Lake
the business session readings
Erie to the Ohio River. The 13th
given included ~~Autumn" by
dinner wili be Thursday
Mrs. Fred Sisson ; "Let Us
evening in the Cincinnati
Give l'hanks," Mrs. Leona
District. The 14th and final one
Spires; "One Day at a Time, H
will be in the Portsmouth
Miss Mollie Johnson ; "One
District Nov . 3.
Cross'·' by Mrs . Gardner;
"F ll
h" n d "A W
., r Rev . .James McCormack,
e ows IP an ·
oman s Athens District superin·
Viewpoint'_' by_Mrs: Edward tendent , was host to the
Spears. Bible questions from Wednesday occasion.
!he book of "Ruth" were asked
by Mrs. Spears:
Mrs. Hortie Roush will
prepare questions from the
book of Esther for the
November meeting which will
he Nov . 21 at the home of Mrs.
Fred Sisson.
Jt was reported that Mrs.
Etta Darst, a charter member,
was a . patient at Holzer
Medical Center and would be
remembered by the group. The
Golden Rule class was
organized 37 years ago and
Mrs. Rupe served a decorated
birthday cake sherbet mints
and lemonad~ . The ~eetlng
was closed by singing "Blest
Be the Tie." Mrs. Spears was
presented a door prize by the
hos~ss .
1 RACK LADIES'

churches, a total of over 300.
Bishop Ensley said:
"Good preaching can help
these people, suffering hurts of
life and the troubles of fear,
frustration, disappointmentsmost of them spiritual in

Golden Rule class meets
KYGER - The Golden Rule
Class of Old Kyger met Thursday with Mrs. Ben Rupe. The
meeting was opened by singing
" 'Tis So Sweet to Trust in
Jesus. " Mrs . George Gardner
read the scripture from Psalm
128.
.
After prayer by the president
the roll call was answered by
members telling what they
liked about the fall season of
the year. It was agreed the

The Alcove

heritage house

. D .R ESSESREDUCED30%

E. STEPLI
1

--~R~O~N~A~
. ~LD~H~.~J~A~M~E~S~---

For Auditor of State

mittens,

denomination's largest con-

15 upon some 3,000 members of headquartered in Kan~s City
the academy in conjunction ,ts the largest of medicine'~
with the AAFP's annual specialty groups.
convention and scientific
assembly in Los Angeles.
' on Sale at
Ceremonies were held in the
Tickets
Shrine Auditorium in Los
Angeles before more than 7,000
perso ns. Fellowship candidates wore academic robes
LOGGINS &amp; MESSINA
and mortarboard caps. They
were rec ognized according to
slate chapter groups and the
NOV.
oath of fellowship was recited
en masse.
Also
The academy, representing
more than 36,000 family doc-

Gallipolis, Ohio

Bishop addresses dinner

Democrat

WILLIAM J. BROWN
1

Ave.
Ohio

FRANKLiN T. GERLACH

(Vote ·k.r not m~ri lhon onel

--....t.·Oe-in.9t•r•at_ _ _...;._ _ _ _,§_
, ·x··

342 Second

( V_o ta for not more than one l ·

.,

For Sta.t e Representative
( 92nd District)

Republican

X

Q.ARK'S
·JEWELRY STORE .

---:c--t-...-;--;;-;--=-:::-:~=-=~::7::--------"--~S For Judge of Court of Appeals, 4th

!Vole for not mora than one)

gloves,

smoking materials, large size
men's belts, may send or bring
them to Athens Mental Health
Cen~r. in care of "Operation:
Santa Claus," Attention :
Recreation Department.
Persons wishing lo help by
giving monetary donations
may send them to the Athens
Mental
Health
Center
Auxiliary, in care of Rosemary
Shay, Treas.urer, 108 N.
Congress, Athens 45701.
All donations should be
received by December I, so
· that they can be sorted·,
shopping done and wrapped .

CLIFFORD F. B

WElL, MAY~E ... may express the fedings of the youngster, a patient in.pediatrics at
Holzer Medical Center, who was visited by a ghost, a rotund pumpkin and a happy clown,
Thursday afternoon. The spooks are members of Gallia Academy's DHO class and made the
trip during their class period. Earlier in the week senior .students of the Holzer Medical Center
School of Nursing made the rounds, visiting pediatrics patients with bags of goodies and
assorted magic tricks.

ference . The occasion was the
12th in a series of 14 Bishop's
Churchmanship Dinners, an
annual function, held in 'Baker
.Center
Ballroom,
Ohio
University, Athens.
His audience included
ministers and their wives of the
198 Uni~d Methodist Churches
in the Athens District, and lay
men and wompn from those

and women's handkerchiefs,
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TUESDAY
ELECTION Day, polls open
from6a.m. to 7:30p.m . Get out
and vo~.
REGULAR meeting,
Southeastern Ohio Gospel
Music .Ass'n., potlU~k. 6· p.m.,
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Springfield
Grange Hall, SR 160 north of
Gallipolis. Everyone welcome .
HUN'&amp;INGTON Regional
Bloodinobile will visit Rio
Grande College, 12:30 to 5 p.m.
in pavis Hall Basement.
PEMBROKE Club meets with
Winifrede Knight, 8 p .m .
VINTON. Masonic Lodge 131,
potluck fellowship meal, 6:30
p.m. Regl,llar meeting , 7:30
p.m.
WAYSIDE Garden Club meets
with Mrs. Huber FUlton, 7:30
p.m . Plant and food sale.

periume, aftershave, men's

·

!Vole for not more than one)

Democrat

RICHARD F. CELESTE

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\

ATHENS
" Untold
thousands of people in our land
today need ' the Christian
Gospel to take the hurt out of
· their lives, " the United
Methodist bishop of the West
Ohio Conference said Wednesday night.
The speaker was Bishop F.
Gerald Ensley, Columbus,
episcopal leader of the

ATI;IENS - The Athens
Mental
Health
Center
Auxiliary is again sponsoring
" Operation : Santa Claus."
"Operation: Santa Claus"
benefi Is the clients of the
Mental Health Center by
helping provide Christn\as
gifts for those who might
otherwise be overlooked.
Persons having new or
unused items such as jewe!ry,

For Justice ofthe Supreme Court
H. KENT BUMPASS

'!

!

precise that
accuracy is
S:L!Branteed
to within
a minute
a ·month.•
See our full ,
range of
Accutron
styles.
From

.

•

Republican

·i'

,

FRANK D. CELEBREZZE

For Representative to Congress
(loth District)

one)

.

(Vote for not more th•n one!

RICI:tARD B. KAY ·

I Vole for not more than onel

I,

Republican

KATHLEEN G. HARROFF

JAMES A. RHODES

(Vote for not more

CWILLIAM 0' Ell:L
E; O'NEILL

For Lieutenant Governor

H!vs-a nice week!

Accutron watch
by Bulova. So

Democrat

make.

X

x.

Republican

-'

a memor·

.,,

MONDAY ·
GALLIA Academy High School
band boosters meet in the Land
room at 7:27 p.m.
GALLIA . County bAPSE
Chap~r 682 will meet at 7:30
p.m . at Kyger Creek High
School. School board candida.tes will attend and all
members are urged to be
present.

.Operation:
Santa Claus
scheduled

able gift. ·
Give him an

.

(Vole for not more than one) ··

RALPH J. PE

,:~

lAY-AWAY NOW
FOR CHRiSTMAS

NON-PARTISAN

Fort ·United States Senator
(Vote for not more than one&gt;

Coming
Events

MONDAY
FRENCH qolony Chapter,
Daughters of the American
Revolution, meet at 1:30 p.m.
with Catherine Hayward.
Cross
AMERICAN " Red
Volunteer Luncheon, 12:45
p.m. in the Holzer Medical
P.,nter Cafeteria .

UNOFFICIAL SAMPLE BAU.OT ISSUED BY TJIE MEIGS COUNTY REPUBLICAN EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, LESLIE F. FULTZ, CHAIRMAN
110 HIGH STREET,
POMEROY,·
'45769

OOMMUNITY Relations at Holzer Medical Center rings my
phone every morning and Lenore an!klr Marianne and I have
our regular cbat over the discharges. They tell me about the
weather (I have no windows in my office) and I tell them about
•he Iouay phone service.
However, Lenore assures me that Wednesday night she
loolled out her window in Rio Grande and saw the headless
horaanan. When I told her this wasn't New England she insisted
that some fellow had come riding into the town square, as it
were, in alifack cape with a pumpkin on his head.
Jchabod Crane, beware of Rio Grande.

FRIENDS - Thursday afternoon members of Gallia

SUNDAY
71ST ANNIVERSARY of MI.
Carmel Baptist Church and
fifth anniversary of pastor
Rev. Vance Watson. Morning
wor~hip, 10 :45 a.m. fellowship
hour to follow. Rev. D. L.
Latham ,
Ironton , guest
speaker.

PAINT '&amp; SUPPLIES

See Our Layaw,a y Windows
For Christmas Gift Ideas
At

404 Second Ave.

\}..

Academy's Diversified Health Occupations Class visited the
Jlediatrics ward of Holzer Medical Center for some " Trick or
~eating." The clown, a sad-face hobo and a friendly witch
were greeted at the door by this young spook, who is one of
the patients at the hospital.

..Where You Cah

IS SMART

KANSAS City, Mo. - Homer _
B. Thoma s , M.D ., of t he
Gallipolis area has been named
a Fellow of the American
Academy
of
Family
Physicians.
The degree of fellowship may
be attained in either of two
ways:successfw completion of
600 or more hours of accredited
con tinulng medical study, or
achi,evement of diplomate
status in the specialty of family
medicine as a result of passing
a certifying examination adminis~red by the American
Board of Family Practice.
Fellowship entitles the
conferee to use the title
"Fellow of the American
Academy
of
Family
Physicians," or " FAAFP."
The degree was conferred Oct.

. .

Duly on a 'ctuitle .ship is li . There's only one sailor in
much cleaner job than th081!. · port for. her, a Finnish se.;;:·
she;s had on cargo runs wl!ere:. ca_p taln based In New Orleans'',
she added ' up Years ol sea · "who's waited for me six ::
experience , plying th~ paris·· y~ars, although we don't get·to• ..
along the 'Atlant,tc and Gulf ~ each other often."
~

OF SEOOND AVENUE AND SPRUCE STREET
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wind and troushers while '
she chipped rust, painted and
climbed right a\gngslde the

l\

as

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coasts. Then it was dirt and:;

hair, except for . bangs, is
tucked up under the· cap when
she's on duty. And certainly
she wears lipstick ....:"a little

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SUNDAY
OPEN House , 11 a .m. to 4:30
p.m., at new comm unity
building and fire department
headquarters in Weatherman
Addition ·at Tuppers Plains.
Refreshments .will be served. ·

It
rt

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~

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Mr. and Mrs. Okey VanMeter

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DOOR MIRRORS l SOFA
·'6.95
. BEDS

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original; Scott French, preltlest; Brad Johnston, funniest;
Todd Sheela, ugliest.

1 Used

WURUTZER ELECTRIC ORGAN

·.MICHAEL WHALEN
FOri THE S'END AREA
FOR
MASON COUNTY
" 'COMMISSIONER

$}38
... .
$88
.
.

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.~;-~E~ ._$_3_8_..1.1~-~-~_k_~~-~_RATOR_$1_9_9

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S.,ecial Values on al} size Bedding.

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FIJRNITU RE, Ml DOLE PORT

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are cordially invited to attend

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Christmas Open House

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Ten until Nine
'•

Country Fare

•w

Spring Valley Plaza

•i~

~~;:?J::.awpcwJ, Oh.~io~., ~~

•

Santry System eliminated the•need ot prevlqus
energy consuming voltage regulating clrcullly. ·
The Power Sentry automatically compensatea
IO&lt; chaligea tn houoehold vollage-knpe your
plcturellherp unde.r.varyi"ll voltage conditions
-protects components-gulltds your chassis
and ·piCture tube-saves money.

The fl!&lt;lriTEOO • 1!1744W
Mocterutyled·.tutl ~ console. Culer,a.
Oil llnillhect Walnut v~neers on top and
ends. Front of olmutated wood. material.
Sotld-State. Super Gold Yldoo Gulltd
' 82-Channet Tuning Syttem. Synchromatlc
70-Pooltlon· UHF Chann.l SeleciO&lt;.
One-button Chromatic Tuning. AFC .
6' Oval Speaker. VHF/UHF Deluxe
Spolllte Panels.

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r.
100% Sollcl-•11~ Ttian 300H. Clutlllo •..
IL4il most powerful Zonlth hlstO&lt;y!
I~

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REVI~AL

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. Holiday Hours:
·· Mon.-Sat.

.Refreshments

:•

Door PrizeS
·- .

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1'"11 , _ Sonay Syot- .• , .
ILoJ t.eaturlng Zentth'o unique voltage
ragulatO&lt;!

SLATED
MT. HERMON- A·revival
will be held at lhe Mt. Hermon
U. B. Chtlrch, five miles n/Jrth •
east of Five Points, beginning
tod~y through Nov. 17. Ser·
vices. will be at 7:30 p.m.
nightly. Rev. Bud Hatfield will
·be the speaker. Everyone.
, wekome to attend.

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RIDENOUR
.985-3307

We

rV i.

APPLIANCES
GAS SERVICE
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What We Sel
I .

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1.0-9

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Sold New For sl49.95

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(3) New 15 Cu. A. Frost free.

'399.95

GIBSON FREEZE
$

·New Was s299.95

SOFA BED &amp; CHAIR..•. 24

(1)

s

c.Green-Big 'Oven $239.95

NRAY RAN E••••••••!.168
Reg.
$249.95

MIDDLEPORT - Hobby
night will be held Tuesday
when the TOPS Club meets at 7
p.m. at tile Middleport Legion
'
.
Hall.
'
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crowned queen of the week
ill last week's meeting was
Mrs. Helen Hill. Betty Fife was
the runner-up In weight loss .
MrS. Hill was atso honored for
having lost the most weight
during the month. Mrs. Betty
ClaJ:k presided at the '"'"ling
which opened with devotions .
and the TOPS lOll(!. Memben
are asked to .take their hobbles
to the "Tuesday night meeting to ·
share with lhe other members.

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CHESTER, 0. ·

SALES NOTED
POMEROY - SePtember
1974 sales of Series E 1: H
United States Savings Bondi in
Ohio were $34.1 million. At the
end of september' the state
attained 76.8 percent of i\11 1974
sales goal. Theodore T. Reed,
Jr., Meigs County Volunteer
Savings Bo,n ds Chairman,
teported SePieljlber ~ale• of
Savings Bonds in the . C:~~
were ·$24,836. The ' C&lt;
~;eceived 98.9 percent.' of Ill
annual sales goal SePtember

.30.

\fER .SWEEPERS As~ '58~
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sac
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95

Tank or Upright

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'18.8. 00.

1 BEDRO·O M SUITE...~299

1'"11 Advonced Chramacalar Picture T - • •.
ILtrJ the- picture we've over brought youl

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95
BREAKFAST ·SET.························69:
$

·(1) Used Excellent COndition 7 Pc.

Cubs enjoy Halloween

-

zenlth'o tOO% Sotld~State' Titan 300H Chauls
combined with Zenllh'a Power Sentry Voltage
Regulator~a magnetically sell-regulallng
transtormei-provld• YP..t~ 28% reducllon In
power conaumpllon u compared with prevtouo
- Zenith 25' diagonal S9fld-State Color TV.without Poviei Sentry Zenith's remarkable Power

Saturday, November the ninth
•

most

, OVER PREVIOUS ZENITH" 2s· SOLID-STATE
.
.COLOR TV WITHOUT POweR SENTRY

1:

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REFRIGERATORS ·

r, Eric Barnette, prettiest; Ryan Moore, funniest; David
Bostic, ugliest; Mike ThompKJn,
original.

TOPS plans
hobby night-

u·ca

You and Your Family

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YEU.OW RIBBONS- Third place was awarded to, l to

GALi.JPOLIS - The Cub Ragland, Pat and Andy
Scouts of Pack 205 and their DIClemente, Bryan Clark and •
families enjoyed an evening of Tim Bush.
Michael Whalen taught at Wahama High
Halloween activities at their
Gold ribbons were given ~
School from 1964 - 1970. He knows the needs
monthly pack meeting Oct. 28. Mike Thompson, David Bostic
·and the people of the £\end. He knows that they
Mra. Jackie killen, Gene West Ryan Moore and Eric Bar
" have not received their fair share of the tax
an&lt;! Ed Danit!s served as nette.
·
revenue contributed by the Bend Area tax
judges for the costumes woni
Cubmaster George French
payers.
· by ihe youngsters and awarded then presented badges to the
12 ribbons to the following following scouts:
patches
were
Have a representative for the Bend Area. Vote
boys:
. . Pedro
for Michael Whalen • County Commissioner.
Blue ribbons went tO Scott presented to Mike Thompson,
. French·, Larry Miller, Brad Michael Colllns, Gregory
Pd . Pol Ad v.
SheetS, Ray Tope, Pat Tackett
...--------------~--. . Johnson and Todd Sheets.
Red ribbons W.rit to Gentry and Bobby Remey.
Scouts who achieved lhe •
rank of Bobcat were Mike
Thompson, Carl Palsly, David
Fountain, Ray Tope and David
Persinger. ..
Webelos scouts earned the ·.
following badges: James
Fountain, athlete and scientist
and a two year service star;
David Bostic, scientist and
athlete; Larry Miller, scientist
and athlete; Eddie Barnette,
scientist.
One year service stars were ·
presented to Pat DIClemente,
Ryan Moore, Timmy Bush and
Scott French .
Following the awards
presentations there were
refreshments for all and
dunking for apples .
Pack 205 is cCH!ponsored by
St. Peter's Episcopal and New ,
Life Luthem Churches .

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19995 .

WITH ZEMITH'I.UMIQU.

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JUST LIKE NEW

(15) G~od Used (3) Side-by-Sides

SAVE

A thought fot the day :
American novelist Dorothy
· Can held Fisher said, "A
mother is not a person to lean
.on, but- a person to make
leaning unnecessary."

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FULL SIZE

tl'l Used ll Cu. Ft.
.$
UPRIGHT FREEZER................

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

,

t

-

Used Items

5 PC. DINmE p PC.
'58
BR SUITES
·-----------.J

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BLUE RIBBONS - First prize in lhe Cub Pack 205
. Halloween judging went to, I to r, Larry Miller, most

•···--··-r·-

Visit Our ·Budget Shop

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REDRIBBONS-Secondplace prizes went to,! tor, Tim
BwJII, uglieit; · Bryan · Clark, fl!nniest; Pat and Andy
DIClemente, III08t original; Gentry Ragland, prettiest.

ODDS &amp;.ENDS
ONE OF A KIND
FLOOR SAMPLES
Rutland Furniture
Rutland, 0.
MARK DOWNS FROM STOCK
DISCOUNTS ON ALL CHAI
IN STOCK!

Costume winners named

•••

''

Birthday
observed

MONDAY
HARRISO]'fVILLE PTO,
7:30 p.m . at Harrisonville
Elementary School with Susan
Fleshman, Pomeroy . Middleport Librarian, speaker.
EASTERN Athletic Boosters
7:30p.m. at high school . Plans
for football banquet. Films will
be shown .
SALEM CENTER PTA at
7:30 p.m. Mrs. Wilson's sixth
grade class will present
program . Refreshments .
Public invited.

RUTLAND - Ricky Wise
POMEROY Chamber of
celeb1·ated his seventh birth- Commerce, noon, M,eigs Inn .
day Friday with a. party at the
RACINE Chapter 134, OES,
home of his parents, Mr. and
meeting,
regular session at
Mrs. Gene Wise, Rutland.
temple. Past officers to be
Costume prizes were awardhonored
and plans for ined to Christie Black, the
stallation
will be made; all
prettiest; Tommy Simmons,
members
urged
to attend .
the funniest ; and Penny
MIDDLEPORT Garden
Dewhurst, the ugliest. Games
were played and favors were Club, 7:30p.m. in the lounge of
given to the children. Cake. the Middleport fire sta tion.
NEW HAVEN John persons
attending
the chips and Kool-Aid were Robert Byer, . fire· chief,
Stewart, son of Mr. and Mrs. Halloween festivities . Mer- served .
speaker. Other guests will be
John Stewart, New Haven, was chants
donating
were
Guests at the party were Mrs. Aaron Kelton, regional
judged "The Best Over All" at Argabrite Jewelers , Ben Sonya Wise, Missy Wise, Pinky director, and Mrs. Robert
lhe New Haven Conununity Franklin· store, Burris Barber Whitt , Ruth Whitt , Darin . Lewis, who will talk on the
Halloween Party Thursday Shop, Dairy Hav,e n, Drake's Drenner, Stacy Tyree, Tammy county holiday flower show.
evening at lhe Conununity American, .Farmers Store, Tyree, Todd Dosie , Pam Members to take six party
Building. He received a $25 Flesher's Service Center, Wyatt, Robbie . Eads, Mary sandwiches and six cookieS.
Savings Bond.
Green Sales, Hart's Used Cars; Jacobs, John Jacobs, Penny
BASEMENT SALE, EnThe goblins paraded around Tbe Hut, Mason County Bank, Dewhurst, cathy Morris, Tara terprise UM Church, Rt. 33,
the community building and Miller's Market, New Haven Morris, Janet Morris, Greta north of Pomeroy. 9 a. m . to 4
were judged. First place Furniture,New Haven Market, Kennedy, Laurie Bowling .
p. m. Good quality merwinners were given $!i; second Pizza Hut and Sayre's Hard- Darrell Mitchell, Eric Mit- chandise.
place $2; and third place $1. ware.
chell, Christie Black, Brian
TUESDAV
Melissa Roney won first place
At lhe conclusion of the Denny, Becky Drenner, Wayne
BASEMENT SALE, EnIn the prettiest category; masquerade cookies and Kool· Peterson, Michelle Peterson,
terprise UM Church, Rt. 33,
second
place,
Michael ·Aid were served. These were ' Timmy Peterson, Joyce north of Pomeroy, 9 a.m . to 4
Snodgrass; third place, 'Kelly furnished
by
various
Peterson, Tommy Simmons, p. m.
Javis.
'
organizations.
Gene. Jacobs, Tamm)l Welch,
REGULAR meeting,
Judged the ugliest was first
A large crowd of adults and
Robbie Hatfield and Grace
Southeastern
Ohio Gospel
place, Ma !thew Thompson; children attended this annual
Welch. Sending gifts were his
Music
Ass'n.,
potluck,
6 p.m.;
second place, Mark Roush; affair.
gr~ndmother, Mrs. Geneva
third place, Mark Thompson.
A Halloween party for preWise and an aunt, Fonda Whitt, meeting follows at 7:30 p.m.
Springfield Grange Hall, SR
Most original, first place school children was held in the
Middleport.
160 north of Gallipolis .
went to Jamie Roush, second, upstairs of the Community
ELECTION Day, polls open
Marsha Thorn; third, Vicki Building.
from
6 a.m. to 7:30p.m. Get out
Yoho.
Mrs . Wayne Carter was in
and
vote
.
Funniest, first place to charge and · those assisting
BECOMES
CHIEF
FOREST
Run
United
Matthew Scott; second place, were Debbie White, Wendy
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
Louis
Methodist
Church
Ladies
host
Carl Allensworth and third Divers, Frances Haeberle and
Mazzoli of· Wheeling, W. Va., a soup dinner .at the church.
place, Kendall Weaver .
Diane Divers . Refreshments
Monday will become chief of Menu includes soup, sand·
Prizes were donated by were served and prizes
.
operatrons for lhe northern . wiches, pie and .cake.
.merchants and won by many awarded.
' part Ohlb for the f?ivi sion of '
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
Ment~l Retardation and Beta Sigma Phi Sorority 7:30
Developmental
Disabilities. p.m., Columbus and Southern
Leo~rd .Ingle~e ·of Mingo Ohio Electric Co ., office.
J~ction will be.clome dtst_rict Pledge training. Mrs. Dottie
~·~llg~r ~o?day for the Musser and Linda Sauvage,
For Inexpensive Home Furnishings
divisions Distnct 8rn southern hostesses; cultural rej)ort by
Ohm.
,
·
Janet Pickens and Barbara
I
·
Both appointments were an- Logan.
nounced Thursday by William
P 0 ME R 0 y
u nited
H.
Davis,
acting
director
of
the
Methodist
Church
Women's
I
Department of Mental Health annual Election .Day dinner,
16"x48"
r----------~and Mental Retardation.
serving, 11 a.ll'\. to 3 p.m .
Sandwiches, soup, salads, pie .
•.
Bazaar table. Soup available .
I
by the quart.

'•

•

RICKY WISE

OBSERVE ANNIVERSARY- Mr. and Mrs. Okey Van
Meter, Mason, celebrated their 58th wedding anniversary
Oct. 27 with relatives and friends. Helping lhem celebrate
were Mr. and Mrs. Jackie Van Meter and Jeff, Mr. and Mrs.
Everett Keryvood and Tommy, Lillian Gibbs, Debbie Lee and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Jeffers, Greg Branham and
JohnOrd. Out-of-town visitors enjoying the day were Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Gibbs, Raymond and Donnie White, Barberton .
Not attending were Mr. and Mrs. James Van Meter, Jimmy,
Timmy and Jeanine, Boston, Mass.; Mr. and Mrs. Jessie
Brewster, Mellissa, George, Kathy and Angie Stobart,
Davin, W. Va .

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II- The Sunda.vTimes-Sentinel. Sundav. Nov. 3_tA74

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SUNDAY
OPEN House , 11 a .m. to 4:30
p.m., at new comm unity
building and fire department
headquarters in Weatherman
Addition ·at Tuppers Plains.
Refreshments .will be served. ·

It
rt

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Mr. and Mrs. Okey VanMeter

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DOOR MIRRORS l SOFA
·'6.95
. BEDS

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original; Scott French, preltlest; Brad Johnston, funniest;
Todd Sheela, ugliest.

1 Used

WURUTZER ELECTRIC ORGAN

·.MICHAEL WHALEN
FOri THE S'END AREA
FOR
MASON COUNTY
" 'COMMISSIONER

$}38
... .
$88
.
.

__

.~;-~E~ ._$_3_8_..1.1~-~-~_k_~~-~_RATOR_$1_9_9

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---.----------iiiii;,:.;
___
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S.,ecial Values on al} size Bedding.

'!',

FIJRNITU RE, Ml DOLE PORT

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are cordially invited to attend

....-..

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f

Christmas Open House

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Ten until Nine
'•

Country Fare

•w

Spring Valley Plaza

•i~

~~;:?J::.awpcwJ, Oh.~io~., ~~

•

Santry System eliminated the•need ot prevlqus
energy consuming voltage regulating clrcullly. ·
The Power Sentry automatically compensatea
IO&lt; chaligea tn houoehold vollage-knpe your
plcturellherp unde.r.varyi"ll voltage conditions
-protects components-gulltds your chassis
and ·piCture tube-saves money.

The fl!&lt;lriTEOO • 1!1744W
Mocterutyled·.tutl ~ console. Culer,a.
Oil llnillhect Walnut v~neers on top and
ends. Front of olmutated wood. material.
Sotld-State. Super Gold Yldoo Gulltd
' 82-Channet Tuning Syttem. Synchromatlc
70-Pooltlon· UHF Chann.l SeleciO&lt;.
One-button Chromatic Tuning. AFC .
6' Oval Speaker. VHF/UHF Deluxe
Spolllte Panels.

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100% Sollcl-•11~ Ttian 300H. Clutlllo •..
IL4il most powerful Zonlth hlstO&lt;y!
I~

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REVI~AL

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. Holiday Hours:
·· Mon.-Sat.

.Refreshments

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Door PrizeS
·- .

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1'"11 , _ Sonay Syot- .• , .
ILoJ t.eaturlng Zentth'o unique voltage
ragulatO&lt;!

SLATED
MT. HERMON- A·revival
will be held at lhe Mt. Hermon
U. B. Chtlrch, five miles n/Jrth •
east of Five Points, beginning
tod~y through Nov. 17. Ser·
vices. will be at 7:30 p.m.
nightly. Rev. Bud Hatfield will
·be the speaker. Everyone.
, wekome to attend.

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RIDENOUR
.985-3307

We

rV i.

APPLIANCES
GAS SERVICE
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What We Sel
I .

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1.0-9

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Sold New For sl49.95

-

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(3) New 15 Cu. A. Frost free.

'399.95

GIBSON FREEZE
$

·New Was s299.95

SOFA BED &amp; CHAIR..•. 24

(1)

s

c.Green-Big 'Oven $239.95

NRAY RAN E••••••••!.168
Reg.
$249.95

MIDDLEPORT - Hobby
night will be held Tuesday
when the TOPS Club meets at 7
p.m. at tile Middleport Legion
'
.
Hall.
'
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crowned queen of the week
ill last week's meeting was
Mrs. Helen Hill. Betty Fife was
the runner-up In weight loss .
MrS. Hill was atso honored for
having lost the most weight
during the month. Mrs. Betty
ClaJ:k presided at the '"'"ling
which opened with devotions .
and the TOPS lOll(!. Memben
are asked to .take their hobbles
to the "Tuesday night meeting to ·
share with lhe other members.

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CHESTER, 0. ·

SALES NOTED
POMEROY - SePtember
1974 sales of Series E 1: H
United States Savings Bondi in
Ohio were $34.1 million. At the
end of september' the state
attained 76.8 percent of i\11 1974
sales goal. Theodore T. Reed,
Jr., Meigs County Volunteer
Savings Bo,n ds Chairman,
teported SePieljlber ~ale• of
Savings Bonds in the . C:~~
were ·$24,836. The ' C&lt;
~;eceived 98.9 percent.' of Ill
annual sales goal SePtember

.30.

\fER .SWEEPERS As~ '58~
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sac
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95

Tank or Upright

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'18.8. 00.

1 BEDRO·O M SUITE...~299

1'"11 Advonced Chramacalar Picture T - • •.
ILtrJ the- picture we've over brought youl

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95
BREAKFAST ·SET.························69:
$

·(1) Used Excellent COndition 7 Pc.

Cubs enjoy Halloween

-

zenlth'o tOO% Sotld~State' Titan 300H Chauls
combined with Zenllh'a Power Sentry Voltage
Regulator~a magnetically sell-regulallng
transtormei-provld• YP..t~ 28% reducllon In
power conaumpllon u compared with prevtouo
- Zenith 25' diagonal S9fld-State Color TV.without Poviei Sentry Zenith's remarkable Power

Saturday, November the ninth
•

most

, OVER PREVIOUS ZENITH" 2s· SOLID-STATE
.
.COLOR TV WITHOUT POweR SENTRY

1:

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REFRIGERATORS ·

r, Eric Barnette, prettiest; Ryan Moore, funniest; David
Bostic, ugliest; Mike ThompKJn,
original.

TOPS plans
hobby night-

u·ca

You and Your Family

•i
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YEU.OW RIBBONS- Third place was awarded to, l to

GALi.JPOLIS - The Cub Ragland, Pat and Andy
Scouts of Pack 205 and their DIClemente, Bryan Clark and •
families enjoyed an evening of Tim Bush.
Michael Whalen taught at Wahama High
Halloween activities at their
Gold ribbons were given ~
School from 1964 - 1970. He knows the needs
monthly pack meeting Oct. 28. Mike Thompson, David Bostic
·and the people of the £\end. He knows that they
Mra. Jackie killen, Gene West Ryan Moore and Eric Bar
" have not received their fair share of the tax
an&lt;! Ed Danit!s served as nette.
·
revenue contributed by the Bend Area tax
judges for the costumes woni
Cubmaster George French
payers.
· by ihe youngsters and awarded then presented badges to the
12 ribbons to the following following scouts:
patches
were
Have a representative for the Bend Area. Vote
boys:
. . Pedro
for Michael Whalen • County Commissioner.
Blue ribbons went tO Scott presented to Mike Thompson,
. French·, Larry Miller, Brad Michael Colllns, Gregory
Pd . Pol Ad v.
SheetS, Ray Tope, Pat Tackett
...--------------~--. . Johnson and Todd Sheets.
Red ribbons W.rit to Gentry and Bobby Remey.
Scouts who achieved lhe •
rank of Bobcat were Mike
Thompson, Carl Palsly, David
Fountain, Ray Tope and David
Persinger. ..
Webelos scouts earned the ·.
following badges: James
Fountain, athlete and scientist
and a two year service star;
David Bostic, scientist and
athlete; Larry Miller, scientist
and athlete; Eddie Barnette,
scientist.
One year service stars were ·
presented to Pat DIClemente,
Ryan Moore, Timmy Bush and
Scott French .
Following the awards
presentations there were
refreshments for all and
dunking for apples .
Pack 205 is cCH!ponsored by
St. Peter's Episcopal and New ,
Life Luthem Churches .

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19995 .

WITH ZEMITH'I.UMIQU.

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JUST LIKE NEW

(15) G~od Used (3) Side-by-Sides

SAVE

A thought fot the day :
American novelist Dorothy
· Can held Fisher said, "A
mother is not a person to lean
.on, but- a person to make
leaning unnecessary."

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FULL SIZE

tl'l Used ll Cu. Ft.
.$
UPRIGHT FREEZER................

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

,

t

-

Used Items

5 PC. DINmE p PC.
'58
BR SUITES
·-----------.J

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BLUE RIBBONS - First prize in lhe Cub Pack 205
. Halloween judging went to, I to r, Larry Miller, most

•···--··-r·-

Visit Our ·Budget Shop

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REDRIBBONS-Secondplace prizes went to,! tor, Tim
BwJII, uglieit; · Bryan · Clark, fl!nniest; Pat and Andy
DIClemente, III08t original; Gentry Ragland, prettiest.

ODDS &amp;.ENDS
ONE OF A KIND
FLOOR SAMPLES
Rutland Furniture
Rutland, 0.
MARK DOWNS FROM STOCK
DISCOUNTS ON ALL CHAI
IN STOCK!

Costume winners named

•••

''

Birthday
observed

MONDAY
HARRISO]'fVILLE PTO,
7:30 p.m . at Harrisonville
Elementary School with Susan
Fleshman, Pomeroy . Middleport Librarian, speaker.
EASTERN Athletic Boosters
7:30p.m. at high school . Plans
for football banquet. Films will
be shown .
SALEM CENTER PTA at
7:30 p.m. Mrs. Wilson's sixth
grade class will present
program . Refreshments .
Public invited.

RUTLAND - Ricky Wise
POMEROY Chamber of
celeb1·ated his seventh birth- Commerce, noon, M,eigs Inn .
day Friday with a. party at the
RACINE Chapter 134, OES,
home of his parents, Mr. and
meeting,
regular session at
Mrs. Gene Wise, Rutland.
temple. Past officers to be
Costume prizes were awardhonored
and plans for ined to Christie Black, the
stallation
will be made; all
prettiest; Tommy Simmons,
members
urged
to attend .
the funniest ; and Penny
MIDDLEPORT Garden
Dewhurst, the ugliest. Games
were played and favors were Club, 7:30p.m. in the lounge of
given to the children. Cake. the Middleport fire sta tion.
NEW HAVEN John persons
attending
the chips and Kool-Aid were Robert Byer, . fire· chief,
Stewart, son of Mr. and Mrs. Halloween festivities . Mer- served .
speaker. Other guests will be
John Stewart, New Haven, was chants
donating
were
Guests at the party were Mrs. Aaron Kelton, regional
judged "The Best Over All" at Argabrite Jewelers , Ben Sonya Wise, Missy Wise, Pinky director, and Mrs. Robert
lhe New Haven Conununity Franklin· store, Burris Barber Whitt , Ruth Whitt , Darin . Lewis, who will talk on the
Halloween Party Thursday Shop, Dairy Hav,e n, Drake's Drenner, Stacy Tyree, Tammy county holiday flower show.
evening at lhe Conununity American, .Farmers Store, Tyree, Todd Dosie , Pam Members to take six party
Building. He received a $25 Flesher's Service Center, Wyatt, Robbie . Eads, Mary sandwiches and six cookieS.
Savings Bond.
Green Sales, Hart's Used Cars; Jacobs, John Jacobs, Penny
BASEMENT SALE, EnThe goblins paraded around Tbe Hut, Mason County Bank, Dewhurst, cathy Morris, Tara terprise UM Church, Rt. 33,
the community building and Miller's Market, New Haven Morris, Janet Morris, Greta north of Pomeroy. 9 a. m . to 4
were judged. First place Furniture,New Haven Market, Kennedy, Laurie Bowling .
p. m. Good quality merwinners were given $!i; second Pizza Hut and Sayre's Hard- Darrell Mitchell, Eric Mit- chandise.
place $2; and third place $1. ware.
chell, Christie Black, Brian
TUESDAV
Melissa Roney won first place
At lhe conclusion of the Denny, Becky Drenner, Wayne
BASEMENT SALE, EnIn the prettiest category; masquerade cookies and Kool· Peterson, Michelle Peterson,
terprise UM Church, Rt. 33,
second
place,
Michael ·Aid were served. These were ' Timmy Peterson, Joyce north of Pomeroy, 9 a.m . to 4
Snodgrass; third place, 'Kelly furnished
by
various
Peterson, Tommy Simmons, p. m.
Javis.
'
organizations.
Gene. Jacobs, Tamm)l Welch,
REGULAR meeting,
Judged the ugliest was first
A large crowd of adults and
Robbie Hatfield and Grace
Southeastern
Ohio Gospel
place, Ma !thew Thompson; children attended this annual
Welch. Sending gifts were his
Music
Ass'n.,
potluck,
6 p.m.;
second place, Mark Roush; affair.
gr~ndmother, Mrs. Geneva
third place, Mark Thompson.
A Halloween party for preWise and an aunt, Fonda Whitt, meeting follows at 7:30 p.m.
Springfield Grange Hall, SR
Most original, first place school children was held in the
Middleport.
160 north of Gallipolis .
went to Jamie Roush, second, upstairs of the Community
ELECTION Day, polls open
Marsha Thorn; third, Vicki Building.
from
6 a.m. to 7:30p.m. Get out
Yoho.
Mrs . Wayne Carter was in
and
vote
.
Funniest, first place to charge and · those assisting
BECOMES
CHIEF
FOREST
Run
United
Matthew Scott; second place, were Debbie White, Wendy
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
Louis
Methodist
Church
Ladies
host
Carl Allensworth and third Divers, Frances Haeberle and
Mazzoli of· Wheeling, W. Va., a soup dinner .at the church.
place, Kendall Weaver .
Diane Divers . Refreshments
Monday will become chief of Menu includes soup, sand·
Prizes were donated by were served and prizes
.
operatrons for lhe northern . wiches, pie and .cake.
.merchants and won by many awarded.
' part Ohlb for the f?ivi sion of '
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
Ment~l Retardation and Beta Sigma Phi Sorority 7:30
Developmental
Disabilities. p.m., Columbus and Southern
Leo~rd .Ingle~e ·of Mingo Ohio Electric Co ., office.
J~ction will be.clome dtst_rict Pledge training. Mrs. Dottie
~·~llg~r ~o?day for the Musser and Linda Sauvage,
For Inexpensive Home Furnishings
divisions Distnct 8rn southern hostesses; cultural rej)ort by
Ohm.
,
·
Janet Pickens and Barbara
I
·
Both appointments were an- Logan.
nounced Thursday by William
P 0 ME R 0 y
u nited
H.
Davis,
acting
director
of
the
Methodist
Church
Women's
I
Department of Mental Health annual Election .Day dinner,
16"x48"
r----------~and Mental Retardation.
serving, 11 a.ll'\. to 3 p.m .
Sandwiches, soup, salads, pie .
•.
Bazaar table. Soup available .
I
by the quart.

'•

•

RICKY WISE

OBSERVE ANNIVERSARY- Mr. and Mrs. Okey Van
Meter, Mason, celebrated their 58th wedding anniversary
Oct. 27 with relatives and friends. Helping lhem celebrate
were Mr. and Mrs. Jackie Van Meter and Jeff, Mr. and Mrs.
Everett Keryvood and Tommy, Lillian Gibbs, Debbie Lee and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Jeffers, Greg Branham and
JohnOrd. Out-of-town visitors enjoying the day were Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Gibbs, Raymond and Donnie White, Barberton .
Not attending were Mr. and Mrs. James Van Meter, Jimmy,
Timmy and Jeanine, Boston, Mass.; Mr. and Mrs. Jessie
Brewster, Mellissa, George, Kathy and Angie Stobart,
Davin, W. Va .

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II- The Sunda.vTimes-Sentinel. Sundav. Nov. 3_tA74

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12- The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Sunday, Nov. :l. 1974

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Homemakers visit Ripley NEW HAVEN The
members of ' the .Cherokee
Homemakers·Ciubdlned out at
the McCoy's Molor Lodge in
Ripley, 'Moqday evening, Oct.
28. Mter dinner the members
came ba&lt;;k to the home of Mrs.
Oscar Casto, New Haven, for
their re-organizatlonal
meeting.
Officers elected for the
coming year were Mrs. Ollie

· Browning, president; Mrs. K.
K. Scites, vice president;
.secretary-treasurer and
reporter, Mrs. Oscar Casto;
devotional leader, Mr~ . Luther
Smith; recreational leader,
Mrs. David Dewhurst.
Committee · chairwomen
named for the club Included
Mrs. Grace White, citizenship;
cultural . arts, Mrs. Joseph
Scites; health, Mrs. Gerald
Clark; family life, Mrs.

....'•'•

Charles Stone ; International
· relatjops, lifrs,. Luther Smith; '
and
. public information
projects, Mrs..K. K. Scltes; ,
telephone, Mrs: Charles Stone. ,,.
'
. Those· enjoying the., evening ,
were Mrs. OWe 8fllWillng, '
Mrs. Gerald Clark, Mrs. K. K. .
Scites; Mrs. Luther Smith, • ·
Mrs. Charles Stone, M~s . ..•
Grace W!Ute, Mrs. Oscar Casto
anq chlldj'e11, Shelly and
· Kimberly.
'

says-

Sewral yein ago the Evangelical Brethren and Methodists merged and the
.church is now !he Enterpise United Methodist Church.

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NOW FOR CHRISTMAS

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''
. I'm sharing my knowledge ..Here's my guide tq good friends :
I. •'ind someone wlx&gt; makes you happy .. not just for laughs, ·
but happy inside : ordered, not confused.
2. SorllfO!l~ who preferably has your standardS, morally,
.By:
and
. erpotionallY and religiously' ..... or if he or she doesn't , at'leaSL
MIDDLEPORT Two
doesn't try to forte theni on you. If she's !he pushy type, sheii social . affairs were held in
The Controversr Never Ends . ·
,drag you to her level; no matter how hard yo~ think' you're ·honor of Mr.,and Mrs. Chester
Rap : '
.
holding on. I know!
. · "'' · .
A. Sexton, Mill St., in honor of
!'agree with the Angry Male wh.o doesn't want girls in Little
3. Someone who never asks or expects yoia to lie for her.
their 35th wedding anLeague buSeiJilll .l'm a female, under 20, and I've played on girls ' ·
4. SomeOne who is always !ruthful to YOU, who is dependable nlversary'.
softball teams, so I'm not . a frilly weakling. I think women.' s
and trust worthy.
,
.
. .
A dinner was held at the
sports shoitld have the same prestige, but I believe In "separate
5.
Someone .you can stand back from , look at like a l9tal Holiday Inn near · Gallipolis
but equal." Why must they compete with men?
stranger and say,· "I'm glad she's my friend ." .lf·you~ parents during which the couple was
· Any boY "~ntlng to join a girls' athletic team would be
voice a strong dislike - r~ember they know qidt~ lot ~ and ~esenled with gifts and cards.
labeled a s!ilSy, 9!i I feel that girls wanting to join all-male teams
they
can see thmgs you rruss.
·
"'\ l'llotographs were taken and
should be pegged female chauvinisls. ·
·
6. Someone who has a,rni11d and will of her own·. If you feel "Anniversarl' Waltz" was
Where do you find the most unfeminine girls ? They 're ·either
like you:remarried to your friend, bettertakeano!her look at No. · played on the organ lo honor
Intellects or atjlletes. I can't see anytliing appealing about the
5 (My ''friend" threatened .suicide when 1 went away for six the couple. Attending were Mr.
strident Rosemary CaS!~~!! or the conceited Billie Jean King (who . weeks and She couldn't go ,)
·
.
·
and Mrs. Bill Chapman,
wouldu't'have won if she was up against a 'man her age, inStead
7. Last put not least, a' friend is someone w1i0 makes you the Langsville; Mr. and Mrs.
of burnedo()ut Bobby). - HAPPY TO BE FEMALE
best you can be, makes you strive to do better, and Is thoughtful ·Terry Adkins, Rock Springs ;
of your beliefs, yow opinl6ns an\1 your feelings. '
Mrs. Dale Willis, Racine; Mrs.
HTBF:
And remembet, it's always easier to go down than up. If your
·
intellects unfeminine? Maybe you haven't read tha1 ·;he new
firend is considerably farther down than you are ,.be sure it's you
MiSs America, Shirley Cothren, won her Masters Degree at age who changes her, not the other way around. But remember too,
21 an&lt;\ is now a. doctoral candiqate.
wanting to change.someone Is· a rotten reason lobe friends. LUNA 23 IN ORBIT
And I can't think of anyone more feminine than little Olga
WST (AND FOUND) -' IN WGAN
'
'
'
MOSCOW
(UP!) - The
Cotbut of tt:apeze fame.
Soviets'
automated
spacecraft ·
.. You've aright to your opinions, but please don't stereotype.
+++
Luna
23
went
in
orbit
around
- HELEN AND SUE
+++
For yow copy of '·'What Is a Crush-First Love - Gelling to the moon today, the official
Know Yourself" send.-a LONG, STAMPED, self-addressed en- Tass news agency said. The
Rap :
velope to Helen and Sue Bolle!, Box 23057, Sacramento, Calif., space ship was launched last
I'm not.an old lady who's seen her kids go down the drain
Monday to explore the surface
95823.
because of bad friends. I'm 17 1 and have found out for myself, so
of the moon.
·m?"..::::-.::::::::&gt;."-::::!¢.::::::::~~==~~«~#.::::~

.tGeneration Rap
H~len

S~e Bott~l

I
~l

.,

SUPERIORS·
SMOKED

..
.,
'

........
i"'

~.

.WE HAVE RESTOCKED
AND ltAVE A LARGE
SELECTION

Belly Harrison, 'kanauga and
Mr . and Mrs. Sexton.
Oct. 'rl, their ,daughter, Mrs.

;,

.

~

GIRLS HOLIDAY
DRESSES
.
By Qnderelle, Nannette
.
Girls Slack sets, SHirt

Vickie Adkins, entertained
with a dinner In their honor at
her home at Rock Springs. A

with the. dinner. Attending
were Mrs . Adkin!, her·
husband ; Terry and their
daughler, Tammie, and Mr.
and Mrs. Sexton.

- F'REE

TO THE HARD
OF ·HEARING •••
A TELEPHONE
. AMPLiFIER

Tlll1 dtr II llmlftd II tt1e H1n

.,_....rlnt •lr. .lust fill out ,_
CGV!IDII Mlow lnd mall. Our
IUpply II . llillflld 10 RUlli tilt
NOWI

•

IIAIIE
ADDRESS

em -------=·~-=-~...=.:::-=--.!!~--'"'"'-"=

- ,.,

·;

•

•

POLISH
SAUSAGE

......

large cake Inscribed "Happy

35th Anniversary" was serVed

'

'

..=

-·

Sextons anniversary marked

a

~

:!

-·

,,

·---EtC.

FASHIONS· FOR KIDS

POMEROY - The En- choir and the adult choir of the recollections of years past.
memory of their son, Robert . this year, with many interp'rise United Methodist chwch. Presiding at the serThe · Enterprise United . Russell Davis, both of whom dividuals and organizations .
Church ·w111 observe, its cen- vices, which will begin at 9 Brethren Church Society was died dwing World War II.
tennlal Sunday, Nov. 10, with a.m. will be Rev. D. William organized In the school house . The art class windows in the dOnating time and money, have ·
InclUded a new roof, exterior
an all-day celebration.
Sydenstricker, pastor. ·
on Rose Hlll in'August, 1871, by doors were presented by painting, planting of. new
Guest speaker for the
At noon there will be a carry- ~v. James Windon. FoU&lt;!Wing Emmett G. Will in memory of
celebration will be Rev. Walter in dinner in the church several revivals and a growth his wife, Norma Will, and by shrubbery; new carpeting,
W. Arnold, pastor of the Faith basement. The afternoon In the congregation, work on a Phyll[s Jean Weeks in memory removal of a wall between the
United MethOdist Church at services will begin at I :30 p.m. church was begun In the of her mother, Mrs. Maude choir loft and the pulpit area,
Dayton, who . entered , the and featured will be the summer of 1874. The dedication Weeks . The art glass window floor refinishing, and organ
repairs.
ministry from the Enterprise Emeralds Quartet, Parkers- took place Nov. 8, · 1874, with over the doors was presented
The United Methodist
Church. Special music will be burg, W.Va. Former ministers Rev. Milton Wrlgh(, Dayton, by Mr. and Mrs. Eldon E.
Women,
the Youth Fellowship, '
provided by the children 's . and oihers will be recognized father of the Wright Brothers, Weeks. A rededication took
the
Willing
Workers Class, the
· -and . invited to ·
their officiating. The chiU'ch was place July 17, 1949, and Dr. C.
Men's ' Fellowship and the
.constructed on land donated by M. Bowman, then Conference Young Adult Helping Hands
Mr. Wyllls -P omeroy, who superintendent, came to speak are the organizations active in
reportedly also gave a liberal ·at the service.
the church development.
. gift of money.
·
The next change In the
Through the guidance of the
Cost of tne cnurcn building ch\U'ch's appearance began in church, three men have gone
1953 when new pews were in- into the ministry. They are
was $1,300.
In 1922 a full basement was stalled, three years later the Rev. A. N. Grueser, and Rev.
put under the chwch and. a Sunday . school rooms were Floyd Davis, both deceased,
furnace was Installed. Much of added, and in 1958 new pulpit and Rev. Walter W. Arnold,
the work was donated · by the furniture, a new furance, piano present
of Faith United
'
men 0( the community, and the and organ were-purchased.
women. contributed through
In October, 1962, the· church ·
various 'fund ralaing activities. • purchased the Verrion .Evans
'During_the sutnmer 'of 1949, •' properly, formerly the l!ilbert ··
the chiU'cb was remodeled, . Weeks home, for a new parNew art glass windows were ' sonage. Extensive remodeling
Installed, two Sunday school look place, and a full basement
rooms were added, new steps and garage were added. Last
were built and other repairs November at the annual
·•
were completed. Tbe art glass homecoming, the parsonage·
windows were presented by mortgage note was burned.
. OAh T-HOMAS
Mrs. Earl W. Brown in
The Centennial prompted a
memory of her son, Earl grand refurbi~hing of : the
AND SON
Raymond Brown, and by Mr. church building.
&lt;•
"Serving YOu since 1934"
Repairs and improvements .__ _G•a•lli•po•l•ls•,O•h•io_ _. .

•

r---------------·
HOLIDAY

Enterprise church in lOOth year

and Mrs. Robert Davis in

I

.. ..

MEETING SET
GALLIPOLIS
Open
meeting for the French City;
Garden Club will be at 7:30
p.m. Nov. 12 at the Grace
United Methodist Church.

This 1807
Enterprise
United Brethren 'Church
.,.pboto of the
v
and its congregation shOws the original cbwch structure erected In 1874.

'

13 - Th&lt;' Sunday Times- Sentinel. Sunday, Nov. 3. 1974
'

,.

CLUB TO MEET
GAILIPOUS-' The English
• Club will meet Tuesday, Nov. 5
~ al 7 p.m. at the home of Irene
;Brannon in . Rio Grande .
Hostess will be Mrs. Irene
Brannon with Mrs. Marie
Richards as co-hostess. The
program will be gjven by Mrs.
Isabelle Bias.
·

'

AT THE
SAVINGS
FROM IGA

LB.

'

RIGHT

12 QZ. PKG.

and Slack Separates
By C.trters, Health Tex,
Teddy Gee, Country Aire .

LIM IT QUANTITIES

REG. PRICE

PAJ~As By Carters

'129

'l

SIZES 1 lhru 14

. BOYS SLACKs-by Carten, Healtll Ttx, lilly the Kid.
SHIRT5-Iy Carttra, Ht•ltll Ttx, Rob Roy.
._.
Boys JNns •nd Jioon J•clctts by Healtll Ttx. llllr.lht
,, ,;' ,
Kid.

COME IN AND LAY-AWAY
FO~ TH~ HOLIDAV.S ·

.socKS

KIDS ARE .N O.1 AT

eTIGHTS

THE

'

WHITE

..

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KIMBlE$· ..
OVERNIGHT ·

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1-LB. BOX

TO.DDL'ER

SUPERIORS

FRANKIE$

1

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'\

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''

a, r 1
i

4oz.

BATH SIZE

20 LB.

BAG

SAUER 32oz.
kRAUT JAR

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JERGEN'S.
SOAP

VLASIC .

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K'AHN'S

All MEAT

BOLOGNA .BEEF 80Z.69~
PKG.

12 oz.
PKG.

-·B A.RTS
.

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ARTS
..
BE~CHES
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303 CAN

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,•

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._• "
I

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'

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.·4·

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'! ,

~----

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-

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. I

~

i
·. I

...

'

BLACK
PEPPER

D
R

.,

·can

ENTERPRISE United Methodl.st Qnlrch In 1974, the

....

.

'

'

'

'·
DALE

,.,

.GALLI A COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD
Former member of the Kyger Creek Board of

'
reporting of

~~~~ .

Has been as5oclated with the
school business for the past 10 y~ars.
.
While a m~mber of the Kyger .Creek Board of ,
Education was elected to the Southeastern
Olio School Board Association
Is. dedicated to the betterment of the tot~ I
educational program
.
.
Is 11 leader, not a follower .
. .
.·
A person capable o.f making a dec1s1on on h1s
ciwri and a oe~$on not run by othe,r ~eoP.Ie. ~
BE

'

/'.

"

YOUNG, _CAPAaLE &amp; EXPERIENCED

YOUR SUPPoRT
'

'.

. Has De(achable ."Giare Guard" Filter.
. Wal~ut Qral~ finish on ~lgh impact plastic.
Model WP5530LN
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Special
'low .
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OPE N·..OPEN THURSDAY.ALL DAY .
.

24

OZ. PKG.

ORANGE-PINEAPPLE .

sOLE Fl LLETS

HI C.

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·wAYSIDE·'fURNITURE·

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.,

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'l,
'

0

',

••

..

,.' . '' t:
:
.,

'

~

'

.

,

'!

·,'

APPREcrATim

./

:i

BooTH BREADED
~del

STEW

.

'I

.

•

·..

PANGAKE
Mil
·.
~
2i.B. BOX .

~

FOR

DINTY MOORE
VEGOABLE

IGA .

.•••

ROTH~EB, JR.

'

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~.

·\

.·

,..

ROJATOES '·
~

""'----------------~~--~!!""'--~----

·'

U~ S. NO.1

.

•I

MAISON

, .
MIDDLEPORT

•

'

~ riiM,Arci

V,

.·KIDDI·E SHOP.PE

Centennial year.

~~

BUCKEYE

DIXIE PRIDE

''
r CAMPBELL'S
'

'

'

.GLDVES ,I
eHATS

•''

RESERVED TO

.

)

..

· FRUIT
' DRINK

46 OZ. CAN

- 49~'

�.,

.

'
12- The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Sunday, Nov. :l. 1974

.,

'

,•

·····

Homemakers visit Ripley NEW HAVEN The
members of ' the .Cherokee
Homemakers·Ciubdlned out at
the McCoy's Molor Lodge in
Ripley, 'Moqday evening, Oct.
28. Mter dinner the members
came ba&lt;;k to the home of Mrs.
Oscar Casto, New Haven, for
their re-organizatlonal
meeting.
Officers elected for the
coming year were Mrs. Ollie

· Browning, president; Mrs. K.
K. Scites, vice president;
.secretary-treasurer and
reporter, Mrs. Oscar Casto;
devotional leader, Mr~ . Luther
Smith; recreational leader,
Mrs. David Dewhurst.
Committee · chairwomen
named for the club Included
Mrs. Grace White, citizenship;
cultural . arts, Mrs. Joseph
Scites; health, Mrs. Gerald
Clark; family life, Mrs.

....'•'•

Charles Stone ; International
· relatjops, lifrs,. Luther Smith; '
and
. public information
projects, Mrs..K. K. Scltes; ,
telephone, Mrs: Charles Stone. ,,.
'
. Those· enjoying the., evening ,
were Mrs. OWe 8fllWillng, '
Mrs. Gerald Clark, Mrs. K. K. .
Scites; Mrs. Luther Smith, • ·
Mrs. Charles Stone, M~s . ..•
Grace W!Ute, Mrs. Oscar Casto
anq chlldj'e11, Shelly and
· Kimberly.
'

says-

Sewral yein ago the Evangelical Brethren and Methodists merged and the
.church is now !he Enterpise United Methodist Church.

~

'·

NOW FOR CHRISTMAS

'

'

''
. I'm sharing my knowledge ..Here's my guide tq good friends :
I. •'ind someone wlx&gt; makes you happy .. not just for laughs, ·
but happy inside : ordered, not confused.
2. SorllfO!l~ who preferably has your standardS, morally,
.By:
and
. erpotionallY and religiously' ..... or if he or she doesn't , at'leaSL
MIDDLEPORT Two
doesn't try to forte theni on you. If she's !he pushy type, sheii social . affairs were held in
The Controversr Never Ends . ·
,drag you to her level; no matter how hard yo~ think' you're ·honor of Mr.,and Mrs. Chester
Rap : '
.
holding on. I know!
. · "'' · .
A. Sexton, Mill St., in honor of
!'agree with the Angry Male wh.o doesn't want girls in Little
3. Someone who never asks or expects yoia to lie for her.
their 35th wedding anLeague buSeiJilll .l'm a female, under 20, and I've played on girls ' ·
4. SomeOne who is always !ruthful to YOU, who is dependable nlversary'.
softball teams, so I'm not . a frilly weakling. I think women.' s
and trust worthy.
,
.
. .
A dinner was held at the
sports shoitld have the same prestige, but I believe In "separate
5.
Someone .you can stand back from , look at like a l9tal Holiday Inn near · Gallipolis
but equal." Why must they compete with men?
stranger and say,· "I'm glad she's my friend ." .lf·you~ parents during which the couple was
· Any boY "~ntlng to join a girls' athletic team would be
voice a strong dislike - r~ember they know qidt~ lot ~ and ~esenled with gifts and cards.
labeled a s!ilSy, 9!i I feel that girls wanting to join all-male teams
they
can see thmgs you rruss.
·
"'\ l'llotographs were taken and
should be pegged female chauvinisls. ·
·
6. Someone who has a,rni11d and will of her own·. If you feel "Anniversarl' Waltz" was
Where do you find the most unfeminine girls ? They 're ·either
like you:remarried to your friend, bettertakeano!her look at No. · played on the organ lo honor
Intellects or atjlletes. I can't see anytliing appealing about the
5 (My ''friend" threatened .suicide when 1 went away for six the couple. Attending were Mr.
strident Rosemary CaS!~~!! or the conceited Billie Jean King (who . weeks and She couldn't go ,)
·
.
·
and Mrs. Bill Chapman,
wouldu't'have won if she was up against a 'man her age, inStead
7. Last put not least, a' friend is someone w1i0 makes you the Langsville; Mr. and Mrs.
of burnedo()ut Bobby). - HAPPY TO BE FEMALE
best you can be, makes you strive to do better, and Is thoughtful ·Terry Adkins, Rock Springs ;
of your beliefs, yow opinl6ns an\1 your feelings. '
Mrs. Dale Willis, Racine; Mrs.
HTBF:
And remembet, it's always easier to go down than up. If your
·
intellects unfeminine? Maybe you haven't read tha1 ·;he new
firend is considerably farther down than you are ,.be sure it's you
MiSs America, Shirley Cothren, won her Masters Degree at age who changes her, not the other way around. But remember too,
21 an&lt;\ is now a. doctoral candiqate.
wanting to change.someone Is· a rotten reason lobe friends. LUNA 23 IN ORBIT
And I can't think of anyone more feminine than little Olga
WST (AND FOUND) -' IN WGAN
'
'
'
MOSCOW
(UP!) - The
Cotbut of tt:apeze fame.
Soviets'
automated
spacecraft ·
.. You've aright to your opinions, but please don't stereotype.
+++
Luna
23
went
in
orbit
around
- HELEN AND SUE
+++
For yow copy of '·'What Is a Crush-First Love - Gelling to the moon today, the official
Know Yourself" send.-a LONG, STAMPED, self-addressed en- Tass news agency said. The
Rap :
velope to Helen and Sue Bolle!, Box 23057, Sacramento, Calif., space ship was launched last
I'm not.an old lady who's seen her kids go down the drain
Monday to explore the surface
95823.
because of bad friends. I'm 17 1 and have found out for myself, so
of the moon.
·m?"..::::-.::::::::&gt;."-::::!¢.::::::::~~==~~«~#.::::~

.tGeneration Rap
H~len

S~e Bott~l

I
~l

.,

SUPERIORS·
SMOKED

..
.,
'

........
i"'

~.

.WE HAVE RESTOCKED
AND ltAVE A LARGE
SELECTION

Belly Harrison, 'kanauga and
Mr . and Mrs. Sexton.
Oct. 'rl, their ,daughter, Mrs.

;,

.

~

GIRLS HOLIDAY
DRESSES
.
By Qnderelle, Nannette
.
Girls Slack sets, SHirt

Vickie Adkins, entertained
with a dinner In their honor at
her home at Rock Springs. A

with the. dinner. Attending
were Mrs . Adkin!, her·
husband ; Terry and their
daughler, Tammie, and Mr.
and Mrs. Sexton.

- F'REE

TO THE HARD
OF ·HEARING •••
A TELEPHONE
. AMPLiFIER

Tlll1 dtr II llmlftd II tt1e H1n

.,_....rlnt •lr. .lust fill out ,_
CGV!IDII Mlow lnd mall. Our
IUpply II . llillflld 10 RUlli tilt
NOWI

•

IIAIIE
ADDRESS

em -------=·~-=-~...=.:::-=--.!!~--'"'"'-"=

- ,.,

·;

•

•

POLISH
SAUSAGE

......

large cake Inscribed "Happy

35th Anniversary" was serVed

'

'

..=

-·

Sextons anniversary marked

a

~

:!

-·

,,

·---EtC.

FASHIONS· FOR KIDS

POMEROY - The En- choir and the adult choir of the recollections of years past.
memory of their son, Robert . this year, with many interp'rise United Methodist chwch. Presiding at the serThe · Enterprise United . Russell Davis, both of whom dividuals and organizations .
Church ·w111 observe, its cen- vices, which will begin at 9 Brethren Church Society was died dwing World War II.
tennlal Sunday, Nov. 10, with a.m. will be Rev. D. William organized In the school house . The art class windows in the dOnating time and money, have ·
InclUded a new roof, exterior
an all-day celebration.
Sydenstricker, pastor. ·
on Rose Hlll in'August, 1871, by doors were presented by painting, planting of. new
Guest speaker for the
At noon there will be a carry- ~v. James Windon. FoU&lt;!Wing Emmett G. Will in memory of
celebration will be Rev. Walter in dinner in the church several revivals and a growth his wife, Norma Will, and by shrubbery; new carpeting,
W. Arnold, pastor of the Faith basement. The afternoon In the congregation, work on a Phyll[s Jean Weeks in memory removal of a wall between the
United MethOdist Church at services will begin at I :30 p.m. church was begun In the of her mother, Mrs. Maude choir loft and the pulpit area,
Dayton, who . entered , the and featured will be the summer of 1874. The dedication Weeks . The art glass window floor refinishing, and organ
repairs.
ministry from the Enterprise Emeralds Quartet, Parkers- took place Nov. 8, · 1874, with over the doors was presented
The United Methodist
Church. Special music will be burg, W.Va. Former ministers Rev. Milton Wrlgh(, Dayton, by Mr. and Mrs. Eldon E.
Women,
the Youth Fellowship, '
provided by the children 's . and oihers will be recognized father of the Wright Brothers, Weeks. A rededication took
the
Willing
Workers Class, the
· -and . invited to ·
their officiating. The chiU'ch was place July 17, 1949, and Dr. C.
Men's ' Fellowship and the
.constructed on land donated by M. Bowman, then Conference Young Adult Helping Hands
Mr. Wyllls -P omeroy, who superintendent, came to speak are the organizations active in
reportedly also gave a liberal ·at the service.
the church development.
. gift of money.
·
The next change In the
Through the guidance of the
Cost of tne cnurcn building ch\U'ch's appearance began in church, three men have gone
1953 when new pews were in- into the ministry. They are
was $1,300.
In 1922 a full basement was stalled, three years later the Rev. A. N. Grueser, and Rev.
put under the chwch and. a Sunday . school rooms were Floyd Davis, both deceased,
furnace was Installed. Much of added, and in 1958 new pulpit and Rev. Walter W. Arnold,
the work was donated · by the furniture, a new furance, piano present
of Faith United
'
men 0( the community, and the and organ were-purchased.
women. contributed through
In October, 1962, the· church ·
various 'fund ralaing activities. • purchased the Verrion .Evans
'During_the sutnmer 'of 1949, •' properly, formerly the l!ilbert ··
the chiU'cb was remodeled, . Weeks home, for a new parNew art glass windows were ' sonage. Extensive remodeling
Installed, two Sunday school look place, and a full basement
rooms were added, new steps and garage were added. Last
were built and other repairs November at the annual
·•
were completed. Tbe art glass homecoming, the parsonage·
windows were presented by mortgage note was burned.
. OAh T-HOMAS
Mrs. Earl W. Brown in
The Centennial prompted a
memory of her son, Earl grand refurbi~hing of : the
AND SON
Raymond Brown, and by Mr. church building.
&lt;•
"Serving YOu since 1934"
Repairs and improvements .__ _G•a•lli•po•l•ls•,O•h•io_ _. .

•

r---------------·
HOLIDAY

Enterprise church in lOOth year

and Mrs. Robert Davis in

I

.. ..

MEETING SET
GALLIPOLIS
Open
meeting for the French City;
Garden Club will be at 7:30
p.m. Nov. 12 at the Grace
United Methodist Church.

This 1807
Enterprise
United Brethren 'Church
.,.pboto of the
v
and its congregation shOws the original cbwch structure erected In 1874.

'

13 - Th&lt;' Sunday Times- Sentinel. Sunday, Nov. 3. 1974
'

,.

CLUB TO MEET
GAILIPOUS-' The English
• Club will meet Tuesday, Nov. 5
~ al 7 p.m. at the home of Irene
;Brannon in . Rio Grande .
Hostess will be Mrs. Irene
Brannon with Mrs. Marie
Richards as co-hostess. The
program will be gjven by Mrs.
Isabelle Bias.
·

'

AT THE
SAVINGS
FROM IGA

LB.

'

RIGHT

12 QZ. PKG.

and Slack Separates
By C.trters, Health Tex,
Teddy Gee, Country Aire .

LIM IT QUANTITIES

REG. PRICE

PAJ~As By Carters

'129

'l

SIZES 1 lhru 14

. BOYS SLACKs-by Carten, Healtll Ttx, lilly the Kid.
SHIRT5-Iy Carttra, Ht•ltll Ttx, Rob Roy.
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Boys JNns •nd Jioon J•clctts by Healtll Ttx. llllr.lht
,, ,;' ,
Kid.

COME IN AND LAY-AWAY
FO~ TH~ HOLIDAV.S ·

.socKS

KIDS ARE .N O.1 AT

eTIGHTS

THE

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OVERNIGHT ·

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ENTERPRISE United Methodl.st Qnlrch In 1974, the

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DALE

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.GALLI A COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD
Former member of the Kyger Creek Board of

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reporting of

~~~~ .

Has been as5oclated with the
school business for the past 10 y~ars.
.
While a m~mber of the Kyger .Creek Board of ,
Education was elected to the Southeastern
Olio School Board Association
Is. dedicated to the betterment of the tot~ I
educational program
.
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Is 11 leader, not a follower .
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A person capable o.f making a dec1s1on on h1s
ciwri and a oe~$on not run by othe,r ~eoP.Ie. ~
BE

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U~ S. NO.1

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MAISON

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MIDDLEPORT

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Centennial year.

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BUCKEYE

DIXIE PRIDE

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1~- The Sunday Times· Sen(inel, Sunday, Nov. J, 1974

Halloween party enjoyed i

RACINE - Approximately pop, cider, popcorn and do'1Js
200 persons attended the · served.. We. wish to thank _!II

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HALLOWEEN - Bobbing for apples occupied the time of Community Nursery &amp;boo!
Students in Gallipolis, during the month of Octobel'.

PETS AND THlNGS -Some furry cats and tiny gerbils gave the children a session of fun
during one nursery school day.

ursery students enjoy studies
GALLIPOLIS - Signs of
Fall, festivals , travel, pets and
Halloween - these are a few of
the things that have been
happening in October a\ the
Community Nursery School
located
at
the
First
Presbyterian Church.
The morning class has really
been busy this month. Their
studies were broken down into
units each week. Oct. i • 11 -

"Signs of Fall"-ever wonder

•

if the trees are sad when they
lose their beautiful colored
clothes in the fall ? Our boys
and girls asked this · question.
They decided that the new
clothes in the spring would
make up for it. Leaves, leaves,
everywhere, after everyone
had a chance to gather some
!llld bring to school. They used
them for mounting - to test the
energy of the sun . They
mounted the leaves on dark
sheets of construction paper,
placed the paper in the sunshine for a few days, then

removed the leaves, there was brought into class. They did
an outline or inprint of the pictw-es of trains, cars, boats,
leaves where the sun had planes. They played with small
bleached the paper around cars, trucks, campers, boats,
them. They painte&lt;! and tra~ed and planes. One day we took a
pictures of leaves and sang a walk for a few blocks, to see
song about leaves falllng from how many different types of
the trees , in the fall wind.
travel we could see. We walked
Friday, Oct. 11 the to the sch.ool and saw a school
children were taken to the bus and going aroand the
opening of the Bob Evans block, , we saw a telephone
Farm Festival. They saw how truck, a dump truck, · a cattle
butler used to be churned, how truck '·and lots of cars. We
soap, applebutter, quilts and stopped to see the Greyhound
molasses were made. They bus come in and then walked
saw lots of crafts and heard the over ·to the back of the post
band play. They also saw all office to ·see a mail truck.
the animals at the festival. Thanks Mrs. Gary Steel for
Thanks to Mrs. Mike Allen, helping us out.
Mrs. Mike Davis, Mrs. Richard
Oct. 21-25, "Pets ". This week
McKenzie, Mrs : Donald was spent learning about pets.
O'Rourke and Mrs. Edward Each child told about his or her
Berkich for transportation.
pet. They brought in pictures of
Ort. 4-18 - "Travel" . Dif- pets. We adopted a gold · fish,
ferent types of travei were which the children named
studied : from travel by foot to Goldielocks. They made bird
travel in a jet plane. Pictures · feeders and painted thein for
were cut out of magazines and their friends , the hungry birds.

Senior citizens program
POMEROY- All but $420 of amounts ranging from $55 to $1
the $8,400 needed as the local were as folloWs :
share for operation of the
Pearl . Reynolds, Eleanor
Senior Citizens Program in Crow, Elizabeth Vigar, BenMeigs County through May 31, jamin. Quisenberry, Ruth
1975, has been raised, ac- Circle, · Lavenna Ebershach;
cordiAg ·to the report of Mrs. Mr. and MrS. F . C. Taylor,
Eleanor Thomas, director of Edward and
King, Nina
the Meigs County Council on Bland, Everett Horner, Wilbur .
Aging. Reminder of the Logan, Bertha Parker, · Violet
operating funds is provided MiUhone, Ethel Grueser, C.C,
through Title Ill of the Older CUckler, Eugene McElroy, Mr.
Americans Act.
and Mrs. L. E. Piersall, Mr.
Of the $8,400, the Meigs and Mrs. Fred Blaettnar, Mr.
County Commissioners gave · and Mrs. James Euler, Edith
$3,500 in county funds with Jividen, Gertrude Mitchell,
Middleport and Pomeroy
VIllages each contributing
$500, Rutland, 350; Racine,
HOMEMAKERS MEET
$100, and Syracuse, $200. The
GALLIPOLIS - The FairLeading Creek Conservancy view
Spring
Valley
District gave $200, and Mount Homemakers Ciub held its
Union Baptist Church, $200, October meeting at the home or
and the Preceptor Chapter, Cathy Bostic with one guest
Beta Sigma Phi, $50.
present, Mrs. Coyne. Devotions
The Lebanon Senior Citizens were given and .a poem read by
Club and the Harrisonville ·Mrs. ·Bostic, 1 'Grandmothers
Senior • Citizens Club each IAre for Hugging" . Guest
gave $25, with the Smith- I speakers for the evening were
Nelson Motors contributing Carr,oll Waugh and Jack
$20, the East Letart United Simms, discussing "Christian
Methodist Church, $15 and the Adults for Teens". Next
Dyesvtlle Union Sunday· month's meeting will be at ·the
&amp;boo!, $5.
home of Lucy Turner, 493
. Individuals contributing in Maple Dr.

·x.eona·

SIDE GLANCES

· by Gill Fox

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· "Thafs Iunny. I was trying to dial grandma and somebocjy
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!ii!ld· 'AiohaT' ·
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the Racine vi)lage . reside~
who helped ,with donat!Oilll liiid
all those that helped ·with i(ie
party to make it a gre11t sill;;
cess.
....

: Halloween party, sponsored by
the Racine VIllage officials, at
the new addition of the lire
house. Sack treats were given
to 180 children.
P"rlzes were awarded to
prettiest, Terre Woods, first
place; Melanie Lyons, Tammie
Lee, Altsa Willford, &amp;ott Hill,
second places. Youngest prize
went to Tim Parry, Ugliest
prize went to Brian Diehl, first
place; Kevin Curfman, Bryan
Wolfe, Wendall Clark, &amp;ott
Gheen, all second places. Most
original was Russel Cummlns,
Diana · Cleland, Jill Parry,
Tracy Cleland, Scott Justice,
Vincent Minnix and Tayna
Cummins tO(Ik second places.
Funniest was Randy Lee with
Allen Pope, Lainya Salser,
Luke Pickens and James
Gheen, ' all second places.
There were other prizes
awarded throughout the party.
There were refreshments of

Then on Wednesday and
Thursday they had a pet
parade. Wednesday was the
day for cats and small animals.
There were three cats and two
gerbils. On Thursday we had
seven dogs and one game bird .
Oct.
28
Nov .
I,
" Halloween". This week was
spent in making Halloween
masks , jack-o-lanterns ( r.amed
Eeek and Amy), and getting
ready for our pa rty . The
Halloween party was on
Wednesday , the children were
ln costume . Games were
played and trick or treat \Jags
were filled . For the snack, they
were served orange jello with
marshmallows. On the day "the
.pumpkin s were cut, the
children tried the taste of raw
pumpkin anrl next day roasted
the seeds !rom them to eat.
The afternoon class1 did
puzzle pic tures, -;~nl~d
pwnpkins with orange paint,
,cut; pasted, and did lots of

pictures. They had stories on They filled iheir trick or treat
the flannel board .and learned . bags with candy, apple, sucker
lots of songs . The '{wo favo;:ites and Crackerjacks.
being "Jack-0-Lantern",. ard ,•
Laura Ray also brought her
"Johnny Works with . ·one ~ cat "Lucky" to share with her
Hammer ".
friends one afternoon.
They had a Halloween party
The school also observed
and each child wore his or her National Education week Oct.
mask ·they made in Art class. · 27- Nov. 2.

Katz -

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makes debut

PRICES GOOD THRU 11-9·74
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

&lt;~

Monday thru Saturday 8 AM to 10 PM
Sundays 10 AM to 10 PM
NEW OFFICERS-Onirch Women United ~lected and
inatalled new officers with Mrs. campbell Harper, left,
· ~.· retiring president in charge . They are, I tor, Mrs. Thomas
: · Bent~, Enterprise United Methodist Church, president; Mrs.

' PoMEROY- Mrs. Thomas
Bentz was 'elected president of
Qiureh · Women United of
1: ~:~~~ County at the annual
,.•
Comniuni.ty Day libserv·
Friday afternoon at the
Paul's Lutheran Church.
"'A member of the Enterprise
.Uflilted Methodist"Church, Mrs.
will serve a three year
succeeding Mrs. CjlmpHarper.
Other officers elected were
. William Downie, St.
~ l'llul's Lutheran Church, vice
Mrs. Allen HampNaoml Baptist Church,
~InerO}, secretary; and Mrs.
~::a Hunnel, Enterprise
1.1
Methodist, treasurer.
new officers were installed
Mrs. Harper who expressed
·
for cooperation 1
her during the past three

or .

Movie Star

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J5e;rvi11g on the nominating
C'\l'nmHte:l!
· · were Mrs. Ben
, Mrs. Patrick
and Mrs. Arnold

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of World Community
program was "Discover
Aspiring Majority,". a
PriiU'am geai'&lt;:&lt;l to examine
values and goals of women
to discOver the aspirations
bind them together.
Downie was the leader
rot:the worship service which
women attending to
in hope and joy, Jo be
h~!est · about concerns and
failures, to face realities of
tr4j!edy and of broken dreams,
rut to help find cause for
celebration.
~riptures relating to the
joia or living were read by
Mf!i. 0. B. Stout, Grace
E!jscopal Church ; Mrs .
ph Cook, Pomeroy First
. tist; Mr~. Dwight Wallace,
M . dleport Presbyterian. .
. ldng parts in a segment
tl* "Prayer for a True Sense
of :Ya!ues" were Mrs. Robert
B~~~~~~~~r, Heath United
~
·Middleport; Mrs.
,ell, Heath United
Mrs. KBrl Grueser,
United Methodist;
Mrs . Donald Hunnel,
Enjrrpnse . United ,Methodist.
Arnold Richards, Mt.
M&lt;l!)aJl Baptist, read "What is
\sp~rlng Majority?" with
Searls MidFirst Baptist: Mrs.
H~J~~:~~: ·, Mrs .
Walter
B
Racine Baptist;
Gerald Wildermuth,
Po;;lleroy United Methodist,

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Holiday confections . ..
fluid, flowing
lingerie. With
lacy icing ...
· delicate gentle
touches. In
colors, soft
fabrics.

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=:lCrtswfi!.

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THE
MOVIE

STAR
()NLY

'5.99

and Mrs. Ne)ltzllng, Trinity,

Africa and the United States.
Churches purchased $3' gift
responsive
reading
of certificates to be used for aid in
reflections on the theme.
four
categories
· William C. Mlddleswarth, rehabilitation projects in warpastor of the host church gave . torn countries; seed money
the benediction. An offering . and training to assist women In
was taken for programs of· self-help projects; disaster
social
and
economic relief through immediate. help
deve1opment among women in with blankets; food , shelter,
Lebanon, the Caribbean, health and other services.
Women of the host church

being the ~'voices"

iO a

Lucy Taylor and Eula Proffitt.
ByGOLDIECLENDENfN
Church folk have been busy
PORTLAND
The
Reorganized Church of Jesus with fall cleaning and getting
Christ of Latter-Day-Saints the church bus ready to be
beld tbeir annual · business painted. Many helped on the
meeting on Oct. 20, in charge of sanding off. The paint job will
David Curnutt; assistant to Joe be done at Bill's Body Shop at
Williams, Southeast Ohio Dist. Ravenswood where he and his
leader. Those retained through twin sons work.
Later, women will probably
Church Appointment at In·
do
tbe cleaning inside: They've
dependence, Mo. and will serve
been busy working on cleaning
in the following year are :
Bill Roush , · pastor ; !lah inside the church. Getting
Roush, librarian and Book auditorium floor wax off,
Steward;
Lucy
Taylor, window washed - kitchen and
secretary and ' treasurer; social room done, then class
Denny Evans, ~&gt;burch School rooms and nursery .
director ; Goldie Clendenin,
Joe Stobart finished showing
a
series of slides Sunday. .
publiCity chairman; Joe
On Saturday evening a
Stobart,
teacher
and
missionary woPk, and · Mer- HalloWeen party for all ages
cedes Condon, Music Director. was beld at the church. It was
Ones newly appointed are: well attended - :i5 children
Ruth Bradford, Women's and two adults were masked.
Entertainment was, haunted
Leader; Jim Cleland and
Danny Roush, youth leaders.
Phyllis Stobart et el, Building
and Maintenance Committee ;
Eula
Proffjtt,
higher
education.
..
On Thursday evening, Nancy
NEW HAVEN - Larry
Adams who usually has the Sawyers, Waharna High &amp;hool
Emma Smith Circle for
principal, and James Page,
Christmas had uie meeting at
vice principal, were guests .of
her home this month as she
the New Haven Woman's Club
gets ready to go to Florida for
re·c ently. An informative
Christmas.
question and answer session
We always have a good Ume was held .. The meeting was
at Nancy's. Decorations were held In the social room of the
·in keeping with Halloween this New Haven Publlc Library.
year and delicious refreshMrs. Donald Rousb was in
men Is were served cafeteria charge of the devotions.
style.
Mrs. Kenneth Thompson,
The Women's lfOader, Ruth president, announced that two
Bradford, presided over the new members were accepted.
business meeting and chose for They are Lois Robinson and
ber assistant, Linda Evans.
Wendy Divers.
Retained as secretary was
The ladies were reminded to
. Beulah Roush, Jane JohnSOn bring cookies to give to the
·treasurer; Lucy Taylor, UNICEF workers and for the
teacher; assistant, Eula community HalloWeen party
Proffitt, worship chairwoman, Oct. 31.
Goldie Clendenin, year book
Officers of the club served as
chairwoman, Goldie Gillilan, hostesses and they are Mrs.

OF

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Starting At -

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NOW! .

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SHOP EARLY-AVOID
THE RUSH
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412-414 SECOND AVE.

GAWPOU$,- OHIO

Cciurt Sl.

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,BRUN,CARDI_MUSIC .CO.

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Ph. 446-0681
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MIXED

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FRYER PARTS ................•

Aid.

Kenneth (Donna) Thompson,
Mrs. Wayne (Connie) Carter,
Mrs. Joseph (Beacher) Neenan
and Mrs. John (Rose) Wolfe.
'

Gallia
county
gar4eners
to meet

VALLEY

LARGE EG

CHESHIRE - The fall
meeting of the Gallia County
Garden Club will-be Npv. B at
7:30 p.m. at Cheshire" in the
fellowship room of Cheshire
Baptist Church.
, Wayside Garden Club will be
the hostess club. Rio Grande
Garden aub hall contacted
Mrs. Joe Bolin, Rutland, .to be
speaker and demonstrator.
Mrs. Bolin is past director of
Region 11, accredited judge
and member of the Rutland
Friendly Garden Club. ·
For turther infonnatlon call
· Mrs . Paul M. Shoemaker,
County Contact chairWoman cir
Mrs. Hortle Roush, Wayside
Gardeil Club, Oleshlre.

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PIANOS
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house, .ghosts, hobgoblins,
spooks, witches, games and
judgment of costumes bubble gum blowing and Go for
Apples.
Joan Prof(Ut's little granddaughter
won
prettiest
costume prize, Shawn Diddle
and Monica Jordan, the
Clarance Bradfords' granddaughter of Columbus, won the
gum and apple contest.
Many thanks to Linda Evans,
Nancy Adams , Phyllis Stobart,
and Pamela Diddle who helped
with decorations and refresh'
.
ments.
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Also a Mrs. Grueser who
baked a cake in the shape of a
witCh's head and was won by
one of Mr. and Mrs. Junior
Smith's twins of Sharon Rd.
Refreshments were cookies,
candy, sweet cider and Kool·

Women hear principals

~lANDS
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served cookies, mlnts, tea and
cOffee following the service.
Mrs. Lochary presided at the
tea service, Mrs . Fred
Blaettr)ar at tbe .silver coffee
service. An arrangement of
pink carnations flanked by
white tapers decorated the
table. Mrs. Blaettnar was
~rganist for the World Com.
munity Day observance .

Saints ' activities reported

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· Allen Hainpton, Naomi Buptist Church, Pomeroy, se~etary;
and Mrs. Donald Hunrlel, Enterprise Church, treasurer. Mrs.
William Downie, ~ptheran Church, vice president, was not
·available for the picture.

hurch women name new officers

wiU

She'll love each selection.

NO SAL£S TO DEALERS

Store Hours:

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Executive
to address
DAR ladtes
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POMEROY, OHIO

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MIDDLEPORT - "New
Testament Direction" . a hep
five mlnute radio program :oh
WMPO, is being sponsored Jijt
the Middleport · C,hurch !pi
Christ. George Glaze, mlnister
of the Church of Christ, and tfie
speaker on the pr~grarn~· lri~ ·
dicated that ·the time will vafy, ~
as it wiD ,be a_lred jUst befQIJ;
sign off each Saturday. This
will be approximately 5: 15
p.m .
The theme song for the "New .
Testament Direction" is
"Tw-n It Over To Jesus", a
modern sound by the Gospel
ROAST HELD
Lads
Quartet.
RIO GRANDE - An old
'•
fashioned wiener roast was
held Thursday night for the
Raccoon Creek CamelS Club
BAZAAR SET
cast members. Approximately
GALUPOLIS - The Gallia
50 members attended, helping County s.!nior Citizens
to keep alive the spirit and hold a bazaar Nov. 7 and 8 at.
· interest generated by their the center. Those who wish to
participation in "Gallia do so may bring arfs and crafts.'
County" In July. Costumes items to. be :Sold with .IO pet. 9f. .
were judged by the bonfire and the sales gQing to the center.
Roger Williams won the first Bring arUcles . Wednesday· .
prize for a bearskin coat and Thursdi.y by 10 a.m. to uie ,
jug hat ; Edna Whitely, hillbilly center .at 2211 Jackson Pike. A"
girl, second prize; Kim bake sale will be held , in con..
Saunders took third dressed as junction with bazaar with . all
a woodsman .
profits going to the center.
·

PhilMaid - Miss Elaine -

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Seniors enjoy party

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glowing gift ·
idea...

Faehnle, Mrs. Frances Ewing,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Massar,
Mrs. Emma Findling, Clara
Karr, Edith Belzling, Mr. and
Mrs. Trell Schoenloeb, Sam
WiUiams, Ava Gilkey, Mildred
Circle, Nor111a Cliapman, .
F1orence Rhodes, Lena Wolfe; .
Gladys CUckler, LuJa Mae
Lynch, Helen Yeauger, Mr.
and Mrs. 'l. S. Michael, Emma
Wayland; Mary Shu1er, Stella
Grueser .
Not listed are individuals and
churches wbo have donated
money toward certain ac·
tivities, such as 'the County
Rair and birthday parties.
Also, noi listed are Individuals
who have donated quilts, crafts
and other items that can be
sold.

POME!tOY - Nearly 200 Wolfe, 52nd.
.senior citizens attended a
masked Halloween party
Thursday at the Senior Citizens
Center.
Costume
prizes
were
awarded during the grand
march with Jewell Curtis
Winning for the most ·original ;
Garnet Ervine, ·the prettiest,
' and Ethel Johnson, the ugliest. .
.
Several games were played
~and the senior citizens bobbed
' ·
for apples. Cider, made by · POMEROY '""7 ~au! Gottfried
· Wilbur Logan; and donuts were Eich, an executive with Exxon
served and the group enjoyed . Corp., for 30 . years, will be
. speaker on "National Defense"
square dancing. ·
.Those with birthdays and . ~t a meeting of Return
anniversilries · were honored. Jonathan Meigs ·,.C.hapter,
Mlss .Marci8 Karr, S)'l'acuse·, · Daughter ·or. the Americ~n
received an orchid.corSage as Revolution, at 2. p.m.,-Fridl!y,
the old~! person celebrat!Jig a , at tbe home ..ot: :Mrs. Dm" .
birthday iri .. October. ,:.others &amp;haefer, Lincoln IUD. . .
.
recognized
·were :., Bob
E;ich has lived in . 11181)Y
McElhinny, : Jessie Houchins, ·.S!luntries having IIJ)tn~ several ·
Lillian · Smith, . Jim Euler, .years in South AfrlCl' and the
Bessie Ashley, Teresa .Byer last 12 yearS'in U~ya, North:
and Marion McGuire, Mid- · Africa. He will bring a .. wi4e
dlepcirt; Etta Will, . Pom~roy; range of oti!ei-vatlon and .'exRich;ai'd Duckworth, Syracuse ; perience t~ ·,his ~c "1'hlch :he, '
Almit While, Qlngsvllle ; Jestle will discuss from an,. ID' ·,
Molden, Rutland ; Gladys ternalional point cif view .. · .
Deem, · Portland;
Erma
A natlve.bom ··SwisS now
Wilson ' Letart· Clifford applying for· United ' Stales
Christy; " Rock ~rings; ·ahd citizenship, Etch' and Iii$ wife,
Gene McElroy, -Rose Ginther, the former Grace Crow, are
and Eva Hollon, CheSter.
residing in Letart Fall8. The'y
Observfng anniversaries ,expect to move to their newlywere Mr . . and Mrs. ·· Glenn purchaSed home in Pomeroy
Lamber,t,J 43i'd; Willlijm and !oon.. . '
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Assisting hoste~ Jor the
Beima Grueser, 53rd; Eva and
·Roscoe Hollon
·
fourth·
.Etta
.
Friday
~eetlng
:will be Mrs.
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I
11
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and Harold W:ill, ;tourth; · Edison Hlibstetter, Mrs: A: R ,
Clinton .and Ethel · Johruior\, 1 K~Ig'!t . and ,Mrs , Patrl.c k
5011), ·and CUrtiS and Goldie · Lochary.

298 SECOND ST

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Radio program . :;
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•••

n~ear god!

Marie Custer, Clarence
Nichols, Victor Swain, A. C.
Will, Alma While, Stella Kloes,
Norman
Lee,
Lucille
Swackhamer, Kathryn (Sis
Wise, Phyllis Rowan, Charles
Neumann, Grace Colwell,
Ge.nevieve Guthrie , Sidney
Durst, Marcia Denison and
Grace Gloeckner.
Clarence. McNeal, Grace
Wagner, Mr. and Mrs. Pearl
Mora, Harry Keiser, Della
Stahl, Leo Stqry ,.Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Goeglein; Joseph Guess,
Mr.
and
Mrs.: Gerald
Wildermuth, Rev ..• and Mrs.
Dwight Zavitz, Leona Leiving,
Mildred Gaul; · Gertrude
cabeen, Pauline Roush, Robey
and Gladys WillilliQll, Mr. and
Mrs. Merle Davis, Frieda

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Gallipolis, Ohio
''

PARTY HELD
KANAUGA-Cheryl, Peggy
and Janie Baird hosted the
KBnauga
MYF . annual
Halloween party Saturday
evening, Games were played
during the masked party with
pri%es going to Brerida Patrick,
Peggy Baird, Teresa Feustel
and Cheryl Baird. Prize tor the
prettiest. went to Brenda
Harrison; ugliest, Tonya
Planiz; most original, Joyce
Harrison. Refreshments were
served Including donuts,
cupcakes, pola!O cblpa, apples
and orange Kool-Ald. A large
group .attended. The MYF
thanks Mr. and Mrs. ()orU!ld
. Baird {91' hosting the P,lrty .'
\

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POWELL'S .,,.........M. 11,9-74

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1~- The Sunday Times· Sen(inel, Sunday, Nov. J, 1974

Halloween party enjoyed i

RACINE - Approximately pop, cider, popcorn and do'1Js
200 persons attended the · served.. We. wish to thank _!II

..

HALLOWEEN - Bobbing for apples occupied the time of Community Nursery &amp;boo!
Students in Gallipolis, during the month of Octobel'.

PETS AND THlNGS -Some furry cats and tiny gerbils gave the children a session of fun
during one nursery school day.

ursery students enjoy studies
GALLIPOLIS - Signs of
Fall, festivals , travel, pets and
Halloween - these are a few of
the things that have been
happening in October a\ the
Community Nursery School
located
at
the
First
Presbyterian Church.
The morning class has really
been busy this month. Their
studies were broken down into
units each week. Oct. i • 11 -

"Signs of Fall"-ever wonder

•

if the trees are sad when they
lose their beautiful colored
clothes in the fall ? Our boys
and girls asked this · question.
They decided that the new
clothes in the spring would
make up for it. Leaves, leaves,
everywhere, after everyone
had a chance to gather some
!llld bring to school. They used
them for mounting - to test the
energy of the sun . They
mounted the leaves on dark
sheets of construction paper,
placed the paper in the sunshine for a few days, then

removed the leaves, there was brought into class. They did
an outline or inprint of the pictw-es of trains, cars, boats,
leaves where the sun had planes. They played with small
bleached the paper around cars, trucks, campers, boats,
them. They painte&lt;! and tra~ed and planes. One day we took a
pictures of leaves and sang a walk for a few blocks, to see
song about leaves falllng from how many different types of
the trees , in the fall wind.
travel we could see. We walked
Friday, Oct. 11 the to the sch.ool and saw a school
children were taken to the bus and going aroand the
opening of the Bob Evans block, , we saw a telephone
Farm Festival. They saw how truck, a dump truck, · a cattle
butler used to be churned, how truck '·and lots of cars. We
soap, applebutter, quilts and stopped to see the Greyhound
molasses were made. They bus come in and then walked
saw lots of crafts and heard the over ·to the back of the post
band play. They also saw all office to ·see a mail truck.
the animals at the festival. Thanks Mrs. Gary Steel for
Thanks to Mrs. Mike Allen, helping us out.
Mrs. Mike Davis, Mrs. Richard
Oct. 21-25, "Pets ". This week
McKenzie, Mrs : Donald was spent learning about pets.
O'Rourke and Mrs. Edward Each child told about his or her
Berkich for transportation.
pet. They brought in pictures of
Ort. 4-18 - "Travel" . Dif- pets. We adopted a gold · fish,
ferent types of travei were which the children named
studied : from travel by foot to Goldielocks. They made bird
travel in a jet plane. Pictures · feeders and painted thein for
were cut out of magazines and their friends , the hungry birds.

Senior citizens program
POMEROY- All but $420 of amounts ranging from $55 to $1
the $8,400 needed as the local were as folloWs :
share for operation of the
Pearl . Reynolds, Eleanor
Senior Citizens Program in Crow, Elizabeth Vigar, BenMeigs County through May 31, jamin. Quisenberry, Ruth
1975, has been raised, ac- Circle, · Lavenna Ebershach;
cordiAg ·to the report of Mrs. Mr. and MrS. F . C. Taylor,
Eleanor Thomas, director of Edward and
King, Nina
the Meigs County Council on Bland, Everett Horner, Wilbur .
Aging. Reminder of the Logan, Bertha Parker, · Violet
operating funds is provided MiUhone, Ethel Grueser, C.C,
through Title Ill of the Older CUckler, Eugene McElroy, Mr.
Americans Act.
and Mrs. L. E. Piersall, Mr.
Of the $8,400, the Meigs and Mrs. Fred Blaettnar, Mr.
County Commissioners gave · and Mrs. James Euler, Edith
$3,500 in county funds with Jividen, Gertrude Mitchell,
Middleport and Pomeroy
VIllages each contributing
$500, Rutland, 350; Racine,
HOMEMAKERS MEET
$100, and Syracuse, $200. The
GALLIPOLIS - The FairLeading Creek Conservancy view
Spring
Valley
District gave $200, and Mount Homemakers Ciub held its
Union Baptist Church, $200, October meeting at the home or
and the Preceptor Chapter, Cathy Bostic with one guest
Beta Sigma Phi, $50.
present, Mrs. Coyne. Devotions
The Lebanon Senior Citizens were given and .a poem read by
Club and the Harrisonville ·Mrs. ·Bostic, 1 'Grandmothers
Senior • Citizens Club each IAre for Hugging" . Guest
gave $25, with the Smith- I speakers for the evening were
Nelson Motors contributing Carr,oll Waugh and Jack
$20, the East Letart United Simms, discussing "Christian
Methodist Church, $15 and the Adults for Teens". Next
Dyesvtlle Union Sunday· month's meeting will be at ·the
&amp;boo!, $5.
home of Lucy Turner, 493
. Individuals contributing in Maple Dr.

·x.eona·

SIDE GLANCES

· by Gill Fox

''

· "Thafs Iunny. I was trying to dial grandma and somebocjy
,

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!ii!ld· 'AiohaT' ·
' f .

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the Racine vi)lage . reside~
who helped ,with donat!Oilll liiid
all those that helped ·with i(ie
party to make it a gre11t sill;;
cess.
....

: Halloween party, sponsored by
the Racine VIllage officials, at
the new addition of the lire
house. Sack treats were given
to 180 children.
P"rlzes were awarded to
prettiest, Terre Woods, first
place; Melanie Lyons, Tammie
Lee, Altsa Willford, &amp;ott Hill,
second places. Youngest prize
went to Tim Parry, Ugliest
prize went to Brian Diehl, first
place; Kevin Curfman, Bryan
Wolfe, Wendall Clark, &amp;ott
Gheen, all second places. Most
original was Russel Cummlns,
Diana · Cleland, Jill Parry,
Tracy Cleland, Scott Justice,
Vincent Minnix and Tayna
Cummins tO(Ik second places.
Funniest was Randy Lee with
Allen Pope, Lainya Salser,
Luke Pickens and James
Gheen, ' all second places.
There were other prizes
awarded throughout the party.
There were refreshments of

Then on Wednesday and
Thursday they had a pet
parade. Wednesday was the
day for cats and small animals.
There were three cats and two
gerbils. On Thursday we had
seven dogs and one game bird .
Oct.
28
Nov .
I,
" Halloween". This week was
spent in making Halloween
masks , jack-o-lanterns ( r.amed
Eeek and Amy), and getting
ready for our pa rty . The
Halloween party was on
Wednesday , the children were
ln costume . Games were
played and trick or treat \Jags
were filled . For the snack, they
were served orange jello with
marshmallows. On the day "the
.pumpkin s were cut, the
children tried the taste of raw
pumpkin anrl next day roasted
the seeds !rom them to eat.
The afternoon class1 did
puzzle pic tures, -;~nl~d
pwnpkins with orange paint,
,cut; pasted, and did lots of

pictures. They had stories on They filled iheir trick or treat
the flannel board .and learned . bags with candy, apple, sucker
lots of songs . The '{wo favo;:ites and Crackerjacks.
being "Jack-0-Lantern",. ard ,•
Laura Ray also brought her
"Johnny Works with . ·one ~ cat "Lucky" to share with her
Hammer ".
friends one afternoon.
They had a Halloween party
The school also observed
and each child wore his or her National Education week Oct.
mask ·they made in Art class. · 27- Nov. 2.

Katz -

' ,,

makes debut

PRICES GOOD THRU 11-9·74
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

&lt;~

Monday thru Saturday 8 AM to 10 PM
Sundays 10 AM to 10 PM
NEW OFFICERS-Onirch Women United ~lected and
inatalled new officers with Mrs. campbell Harper, left,
· ~.· retiring president in charge . They are, I tor, Mrs. Thomas
: · Bent~, Enterprise United Methodist Church, president; Mrs.

' PoMEROY- Mrs. Thomas
Bentz was 'elected president of
Qiureh · Women United of
1: ~:~~~ County at the annual
,.•
Comniuni.ty Day libserv·
Friday afternoon at the
Paul's Lutheran Church.
"'A member of the Enterprise
.Uflilted Methodist"Church, Mrs.
will serve a three year
succeeding Mrs. CjlmpHarper.
Other officers elected were
. William Downie, St.
~ l'llul's Lutheran Church, vice
Mrs. Allen HampNaoml Baptist Church,
~InerO}, secretary; and Mrs.
~::a Hunnel, Enterprise
1.1
Methodist, treasurer.
new officers were installed
Mrs. Harper who expressed
·
for cooperation 1
her during the past three

or .

Movie Star

••

J5e;rvi11g on the nominating
C'\l'nmHte:l!
· · were Mrs. Ben
, Mrs. Patrick
and Mrs. Arnold

'"
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of World Community
program was "Discover
Aspiring Majority,". a
PriiU'am geai'&lt;:&lt;l to examine
values and goals of women
to discOver the aspirations
bind them together.
Downie was the leader
rot:the worship service which
women attending to
in hope and joy, Jo be
h~!est · about concerns and
failures, to face realities of
tr4j!edy and of broken dreams,
rut to help find cause for
celebration.
~riptures relating to the
joia or living were read by
Mf!i. 0. B. Stout, Grace
E!jscopal Church ; Mrs .
ph Cook, Pomeroy First
. tist; Mr~. Dwight Wallace,
M . dleport Presbyterian. .
. ldng parts in a segment
tl* "Prayer for a True Sense
of :Ya!ues" were Mrs. Robert
B~~~~~~~~r, Heath United
~
·Middleport; Mrs.
,ell, Heath United
Mrs. KBrl Grueser,
United Methodist;
Mrs . Donald Hunnel,
Enjrrpnse . United ,Methodist.
Arnold Richards, Mt.
M&lt;l!)aJl Baptist, read "What is
\sp~rlng Majority?" with
Searls MidFirst Baptist: Mrs.
H~J~~:~~: ·, Mrs .
Walter
B
Racine Baptist;
Gerald Wildermuth,
Po;;lleroy United Methodist,

!hi

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Holiday confections . ..
fluid, flowing
lingerie. With
lacy icing ...
· delicate gentle
touches. In
colors, soft
fabrics.

~

=:lCrtswfi!.

:

THE
MOVIE

STAR
()NLY

'5.99

and Mrs. Ne)ltzllng, Trinity,

Africa and the United States.
Churches purchased $3' gift
responsive
reading
of certificates to be used for aid in
reflections on the theme.
four
categories
· William C. Mlddleswarth, rehabilitation projects in warpastor of the host church gave . torn countries; seed money
the benediction. An offering . and training to assist women In
was taken for programs of· self-help projects; disaster
social
and
economic relief through immediate. help
deve1opment among women in with blankets; food , shelter,
Lebanon, the Caribbean, health and other services.
Women of the host church

being the ~'voices"

iO a

Lucy Taylor and Eula Proffitt.
ByGOLDIECLENDENfN
Church folk have been busy
PORTLAND
The
Reorganized Church of Jesus with fall cleaning and getting
Christ of Latter-Day-Saints the church bus ready to be
beld tbeir annual · business painted. Many helped on the
meeting on Oct. 20, in charge of sanding off. The paint job will
David Curnutt; assistant to Joe be done at Bill's Body Shop at
Williams, Southeast Ohio Dist. Ravenswood where he and his
leader. Those retained through twin sons work.
Later, women will probably
Church Appointment at In·
do
tbe cleaning inside: They've
dependence, Mo. and will serve
been busy working on cleaning
in the following year are :
Bill Roush , · pastor ; !lah inside the church. Getting
Roush, librarian and Book auditorium floor wax off,
Steward;
Lucy
Taylor, window washed - kitchen and
secretary and ' treasurer; social room done, then class
Denny Evans, ~&gt;burch School rooms and nursery .
director ; Goldie Clendenin,
Joe Stobart finished showing
a
series of slides Sunday. .
publiCity chairman; Joe
On Saturday evening a
Stobart,
teacher
and
missionary woPk, and · Mer- HalloWeen party for all ages
cedes Condon, Music Director. was beld at the church. It was
Ones newly appointed are: well attended - :i5 children
Ruth Bradford, Women's and two adults were masked.
Entertainment was, haunted
Leader; Jim Cleland and
Danny Roush, youth leaders.
Phyllis Stobart et el, Building
and Maintenance Committee ;
Eula
Proffjtt,
higher
education.
..
On Thursday evening, Nancy
NEW HAVEN - Larry
Adams who usually has the Sawyers, Waharna High &amp;hool
Emma Smith Circle for
principal, and James Page,
Christmas had uie meeting at
vice principal, were guests .of
her home this month as she
the New Haven Woman's Club
gets ready to go to Florida for
re·c ently. An informative
Christmas.
question and answer session
We always have a good Ume was held .. The meeting was
at Nancy's. Decorations were held In the social room of the
·in keeping with Halloween this New Haven Publlc Library.
year and delicious refreshMrs. Donald Rousb was in
men Is were served cafeteria charge of the devotions.
style.
Mrs. Kenneth Thompson,
The Women's lfOader, Ruth president, announced that two
Bradford, presided over the new members were accepted.
business meeting and chose for They are Lois Robinson and
ber assistant, Linda Evans.
Wendy Divers.
Retained as secretary was
The ladies were reminded to
. Beulah Roush, Jane JohnSOn bring cookies to give to the
·treasurer; Lucy Taylor, UNICEF workers and for the
teacher; assistant, Eula community HalloWeen party
Proffitt, worship chairwoman, Oct. 31.
Goldie Clendenin, year book
Officers of the club served as
chairwoman, Goldie Gillilan, hostesses and they are Mrs.

OF

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Starting At -

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THE RUSH
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GAWPOU$,- OHIO

Cciurt Sl.

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,BRUN,CARDI_MUSIC .CO.

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Ph. 446-0681
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MIXED

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lb.

FRYER PARTS ................•

Aid.

Kenneth (Donna) Thompson,
Mrs. Wayne (Connie) Carter,
Mrs. Joseph (Beacher) Neenan
and Mrs. John (Rose) Wolfe.
'

Gallia
county
gar4eners
to meet

VALLEY

LARGE EG

CHESHIRE - The fall
meeting of the Gallia County
Garden Club will-be Npv. B at
7:30 p.m. at Cheshire" in the
fellowship room of Cheshire
Baptist Church.
, Wayside Garden Club will be
the hostess club. Rio Grande
Garden aub hall contacted
Mrs. Joe Bolin, Rutland, .to be
speaker and demonstrator.
Mrs. Bolin is past director of
Region 11, accredited judge
and member of the Rutland
Friendly Garden Club. ·
For turther infonnatlon call
· Mrs . Paul M. Shoemaker,
County Contact chairWoman cir
Mrs. Hortle Roush, Wayside
Gardeil Club, Oleshlre.

.,

PIANOS
'·..

house, .ghosts, hobgoblins,
spooks, witches, games and
judgment of costumes bubble gum blowing and Go for
Apples.
Joan Prof(Ut's little granddaughter
won
prettiest
costume prize, Shawn Diddle
and Monica Jordan, the
Clarance Bradfords' granddaughter of Columbus, won the
gum and apple contest.
Many thanks to Linda Evans,
Nancy Adams , Phyllis Stobart,
and Pamela Diddle who helped
with decorations and refresh'
.
ments.
~
•
Also a Mrs. Grueser who
baked a cake in the shape of a
witCh's head and was won by
one of Mr. and Mrs. Junior
Smith's twins of Sharon Rd.
Refreshments were cookies,
candy, sweet cider and Kool·

Women hear principals

~lANDS
'·

served cookies, mlnts, tea and
cOffee following the service.
Mrs. Lochary presided at the
tea service, Mrs . Fred
Blaettr)ar at tbe .silver coffee
service. An arrangement of
pink carnations flanked by
white tapers decorated the
table. Mrs. Blaettnar was
~rganist for the World Com.
munity Day observance .

Saints ' activities reported

..,

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· Allen Hainpton, Naomi Buptist Church, Pomeroy, se~etary;
and Mrs. Donald Hunrlel, Enterprise Church, treasurer. Mrs.
William Downie, ~ptheran Church, vice president, was not
·available for the picture.

hurch women name new officers

wiU

She'll love each selection.

NO SAL£S TO DEALERS

Store Hours:

•

Executive
to address
DAR ladtes
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POMEROY, OHIO

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MIDDLEPORT - "New
Testament Direction" . a hep
five mlnute radio program :oh
WMPO, is being sponsored Jijt
the Middleport · C,hurch !pi
Christ. George Glaze, mlnister
of the Church of Christ, and tfie
speaker on the pr~grarn~· lri~ ·
dicated that ·the time will vafy, ~
as it wiD ,be a_lred jUst befQIJ;
sign off each Saturday. This
will be approximately 5: 15
p.m .
The theme song for the "New .
Testament Direction" is
"Tw-n It Over To Jesus", a
modern sound by the Gospel
ROAST HELD
Lads
Quartet.
RIO GRANDE - An old
'•
fashioned wiener roast was
held Thursday night for the
Raccoon Creek CamelS Club
BAZAAR SET
cast members. Approximately
GALUPOLIS - The Gallia
50 members attended, helping County s.!nior Citizens
to keep alive the spirit and hold a bazaar Nov. 7 and 8 at.
· interest generated by their the center. Those who wish to
participation in "Gallia do so may bring arfs and crafts.'
County" In July. Costumes items to. be :Sold with .IO pet. 9f. .
were judged by the bonfire and the sales gQing to the center.
Roger Williams won the first Bring arUcles . Wednesday· .
prize for a bearskin coat and Thursdi.y by 10 a.m. to uie ,
jug hat ; Edna Whitely, hillbilly center .at 2211 Jackson Pike. A"
girl, second prize; Kim bake sale will be held , in con..
Saunders took third dressed as junction with bazaar with . all
a woodsman .
profits going to the center.
·

PhilMaid - Miss Elaine -

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Seniors enjoy party

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glowing gift ·
idea...

Faehnle, Mrs. Frances Ewing,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Massar,
Mrs. Emma Findling, Clara
Karr, Edith Belzling, Mr. and
Mrs. Trell Schoenloeb, Sam
WiUiams, Ava Gilkey, Mildred
Circle, Nor111a Cliapman, .
F1orence Rhodes, Lena Wolfe; .
Gladys CUckler, LuJa Mae
Lynch, Helen Yeauger, Mr.
and Mrs. 'l. S. Michael, Emma
Wayland; Mary Shu1er, Stella
Grueser .
Not listed are individuals and
churches wbo have donated
money toward certain ac·
tivities, such as 'the County
Rair and birthday parties.
Also, noi listed are Individuals
who have donated quilts, crafts
and other items that can be
sold.

POME!tOY - Nearly 200 Wolfe, 52nd.
.senior citizens attended a
masked Halloween party
Thursday at the Senior Citizens
Center.
Costume
prizes
were
awarded during the grand
march with Jewell Curtis
Winning for the most ·original ;
Garnet Ervine, ·the prettiest,
' and Ethel Johnson, the ugliest. .
.
Several games were played
~and the senior citizens bobbed
' ·
for apples. Cider, made by · POMEROY '""7 ~au! Gottfried
· Wilbur Logan; and donuts were Eich, an executive with Exxon
served and the group enjoyed . Corp., for 30 . years, will be
. speaker on "National Defense"
square dancing. ·
.Those with birthdays and . ~t a meeting of Return
anniversilries · were honored. Jonathan Meigs ·,.C.hapter,
Mlss .Marci8 Karr, S)'l'acuse·, · Daughter ·or. the Americ~n
received an orchid.corSage as Revolution, at 2. p.m.,-Fridl!y,
the old~! person celebrat!Jig a , at tbe home ..ot: :Mrs. Dm" .
birthday iri .. October. ,:.others &amp;haefer, Lincoln IUD. . .
.
recognized
·were :., Bob
E;ich has lived in . 11181)Y
McElhinny, : Jessie Houchins, ·.S!luntries having IIJ)tn~ several ·
Lillian · Smith, . Jim Euler, .years in South AfrlCl' and the
Bessie Ashley, Teresa .Byer last 12 yearS'in U~ya, North:
and Marion McGuire, Mid- · Africa. He will bring a .. wi4e
dlepcirt; Etta Will, . Pom~roy; range of oti!ei-vatlon and .'exRich;ai'd Duckworth, Syracuse ; perience t~ ·,his ~c "1'hlch :he, '
Almit While, Qlngsvllle ; Jestle will discuss from an,. ID' ·,
Molden, Rutland ; Gladys ternalional point cif view .. · .
Deem, · Portland;
Erma
A natlve.bom ··SwisS now
Wilson ' Letart· Clifford applying for· United ' Stales
Christy; " Rock ~rings; ·ahd citizenship, Etch' and Iii$ wife,
Gene McElroy, -Rose Ginther, the former Grace Crow, are
and Eva Hollon, CheSter.
residing in Letart Fall8. The'y
Observfng anniversaries ,expect to move to their newlywere Mr . . and Mrs. ·· Glenn purchaSed home in Pomeroy
Lamber,t,J 43i'd; Willlijm and !oon.. . '
.
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Assisting hoste~ Jor the
Beima Grueser, 53rd; Eva and
·Roscoe Hollon
·
fourth·
.Etta
.
Friday
~eetlng
:will be Mrs.
'
I
11
, '
and Harold W:ill, ;tourth; · Edison Hlibstetter, Mrs: A: R ,
Clinton .and Ethel · Johruior\, 1 K~Ig'!t . and ,Mrs , Patrl.c k
5011), ·and CUrtiS and Goldie · Lochary.

298 SECOND ST

.
Radio program . :;
..·"
•••

n~ear god!

Marie Custer, Clarence
Nichols, Victor Swain, A. C.
Will, Alma While, Stella Kloes,
Norman
Lee,
Lucille
Swackhamer, Kathryn (Sis
Wise, Phyllis Rowan, Charles
Neumann, Grace Colwell,
Ge.nevieve Guthrie , Sidney
Durst, Marcia Denison and
Grace Gloeckner.
Clarence. McNeal, Grace
Wagner, Mr. and Mrs. Pearl
Mora, Harry Keiser, Della
Stahl, Leo Stqry ,.Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Goeglein; Joseph Guess,
Mr.
and
Mrs.: Gerald
Wildermuth, Rev ..• and Mrs.
Dwight Zavitz, Leona Leiving,
Mildred Gaul; · Gertrude
cabeen, Pauline Roush, Robey
and Gladys WillilliQll, Mr. and
Mrs. Merle Davis, Frieda

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Gallipolis, Ohio
''

PARTY HELD
KANAUGA-Cheryl, Peggy
and Janie Baird hosted the
KBnauga
MYF . annual
Halloween party Saturday
evening, Games were played
during the masked party with
pri%es going to Brerida Patrick,
Peggy Baird, Teresa Feustel
and Cheryl Baird. Prize tor the
prettiest. went to Brenda
Harrison; ugliest, Tonya
Planiz; most original, Joyce
Harrison. Refreshments were
served Including donuts,
cupcakes, pola!O cblpa, apples
and orange Kool-Ald. A large
group .attended. The MYF
thanks Mr. and Mrs. ()orU!ld
. Baird {91' hosting the P,lrty .'
\

·MAXWEU

HOUS~ ·
'

COFFEE·
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'

'

'

3 lb.

.,

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C&gt;
C&gt;

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&lt;:&gt;

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. ~ WITH COUPON

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· WITHTHISCOUPO~WHEN

YOU BUY A

3 lb. CA~ OF

MAXWELL HOUSE" COFFEE

,,

'

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lb CANONL~S,2"··
, -t •
'
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WITH

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, ,I ()101 COUPON K M

POWELL'S .,,.........M. 11,9-74

..

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.,
.l.. •

.'

•'

.....

Lettero -of oplnloo •~ welrontrd. They should bt leu
thu 300 words long (or be sub joel to ~ucdoo by the
~ltorJ and must be. signed " 'llh thr signee's addn!ll.
Names may b• withheld upon publl~atlon. lfo.wever, on
requeat, names will be dllrlosed. Lellers should be In lood
·taate, addreaalng I11Ue1. aot personalldes.

B~

.

.

Dear Sir :
.
We are appealing to you on behslf of Hughie ... and David ...
and Mark ... and Penny ... and Debbie .. . and Scott ... and Benny
... and Etta Mae ... and Arthur ... and the many other children
and adults busUy and hsppily occupied with Community School
and Wor~op activities. These are our children too, our special
children.
Perhaps more than normal children, our special children
look forward to the yellow school bus stopping each morning. In a
spedal way perhaps they have learned to love and be loved by
their teachers and to love and be accepted by their classmates.
They are developing social graces and pracdcal skills which·
hsve opened up a whole new world for them. The Meigs County
Community School has given them a niche to fill, a new purpose
for each day, and a sense of being important to 9011leone outside
their own families.
Do YOU care? We would Uke to think you do. We would like to
think that the voters of lhia county.will stop and consider that the
amount of 2. 75 mills ls.very small in comparlson to the 24 or more
mills they now pay to educate normal children. We would like to
thlnlt that f9rtunate parents of fortunate children reallzo! that
their education, In part, has been Dnanced by parents of unfortlD!ate chDdren. We would like to think that these fortunate
parents and grandParents might coiiBkler themselves privileged
to be able to help our special children in lhia small way.
Hughie and David and Marlt and Penny and all the rest are
looking up to you and your organizatloo for help. PLEASE don •t
look the other way!
Vote YES on the MR levy!
Fay Sauer
Fay Sauer, chairman; Ruth Karr, co-chairman; Nora Rice,
Jessie Might, Carol DldcDe, Wilma Parker, Ruth Bufflnllt9n,
Rea Roush, Maxine Goeglein, Maxine Whitehead, Phyllia
Skinner.

Boosters serve Meigs High

1
r

f:
•~

Dear Sir:
.
I am a member of the Melga Athletic Booaters A8soclation,
mother of a varsity baakelball player ,mother of a member of the
gymnaatlc team, secretary of the Melga Athletic Boosters, and I
have something I'd Uke to share with you and your readers.
Football season is coming to the close of a season, but the
~s Athletic Boosters are just geldng wound up for the year.
The boosters have chalked up IIWiy years as an active group and
down through the years have "been there" when the sports,
Including football, basltetball, ba8eball, golf, track, wreslling
.and cheerleaders have needed help or a "pal on the back."
Boys ad fed, uniforms provided, Greyhounds are rented and
many other details are taken care of. They have purchased
movie cameras to film the footbali. games, a projector to show
the film; the Pomeroy field was redone; a paint machine for field
UBe was bought, and a sturdy concession stand built and equip.
ped. n- are a few of the larger undertaltlngs.
'lbe latelll project being tackled by the boostera is the purchallnp. of an Audio VIsual Machine to tape, film and project
ballketball games or any other sport, play, or school funcdon.
Thla machine will be at the disposal of Melga High School under
the ~ of the Athletic Depl.
We may be a small active gro.up blat we bave great b&amp;cking in
our community. The aports fans·arenevertoo bu.oytolend a hand
or be generoll8 wllh their money and support. :Ibese parents,
·
frienda and follOwers are Whatlt is all about.
'lbe Athletic Department is headed by Coach Charies

i" .
:
•

i•
~
:
:
••
•
·•

i
~

~
:
•
;
~

~

_,

!*

I.

supporters of candidates

for courts, school

To those who care ;

; Otanges
in poll places anno11Ilced
.

Election fever brings out

'

••• ?Itt- li~i~Dt:...u--

:;:;•·:o:«•:&gt;:•:•

•XIO»:•T.&gt;:.O:.•:OK•'-X•;~;:-:;-;o;!&gt;S•
'o'o...•• ,;.: • • • ··~;
Q~:x
• "'I: . Y.I&gt;XIIX~•X•&gt;".o»:&gt;:O:&gt;:o;;o,--.;;o,o,
~J.•.•.o'!il!o.•

~

~

board..~

""~

~
Olancey with a capable group tnCIUIIIng Don Wolfe, Roger
Brauer, John Bentley, Sam Crow, Fenton· Taylor, Don Dixon,
Ron Logan, Ray Goodman, John Arnold and Jolin Krawsczyn, .
Junior High.
The new field al the Meigs High school will be in full
swing next school year or perhaps before. Weare indeed proud of
our new field and if you haven't been keeping tabs on it, believe
me it is shaping up nicely. Once again hats off to the boosters.
They had a halid in its success.
Being a woman,! must speak my piece on the Girls' Athletic
Asaociation alao. They work equally as hard headed by Mrs. Joy
Bentley, girls' athletic director. They joined forces thls year with
the boosters and had a pizza shop at the home football games and
will be selling pizzas at tbe home basketball games.
Editor, If you think I have been selling Meigs A!hletic
Boosters, I hsve !
There is nothing sweeter to my ears than the thumping of a
basketball or the tmnbling of a gymnast. I am prejudiced but
then what is more important in thls land of ours than our young
adulia of tomorrow . Booster tickets are still on sale - want one.
We want ·you ! ! ·

Marjorie M. Walburn.

Auditor defends position
I am James E. Roush, your Meigs County Auditor. i read the
comments made by Mr. Frank at the.Republican Rally, October
30, 1974.
Mr. Frank stales that he has done more auditor's work than
treasurer's since he has. been in . office. He alao made other
StatEments which are certainly contradictory to that statement.
If he lmew the auditor's office's business thai well, surely he
would not have made the erroneous statements concerning the
county tax dollar nor the bUdget commission. Any one of my
deputies could have told Mr. Frank that our evaluation is figured ·
oo 35 pet. evaluation lilstelld of 40 pet. on 22,000 parcels of land,
and thateachhsd to be typed on the lax duplicate.
Aril~ of the Budget Commission can not be held unlll all
pertinent Information for the ~&amp;x rate Is received by the auditor.
The Public Utility certification from tbe State of Ohio did not
arrive at my office illllll October 25, 1974; therefore, the tax rate
could not be figured uniU I received the certification.
Mr. Frank further stated "J:loll'l be nilaled by last minute
letters or radio announcements by hls opposition."
You voted to aid the Tri County Mental Health service by
voting .2mlllso~ yo_ur taxes, but on the treasurer's tu rate sheet
thiayearyoupald .38mllls for lhia public service. Why? Only the
public hal a rjght to raise a lax levy and that Is by vote.
While Mr. Frank has supJ&gt;OSI!dly run the auditor's office for
all these · years arid a18o the treasurer's office, why has he
allowed the tax delinquency to raise 16 pet. This means that U6
out of every •100 you pay is for somebody else's taxes. Further,
on October 30, 1972, Mr. Caldwell, the Meigs County Auditor,
certified the delinquent properties· to the treasurer's office and
they were publlahed In the Daily Sentinel. One year from the date
of publlcatloo, according to law, the property was to be sold for
taxes. It Is now October 31, 1974, and the land is still oo the tax
books.
'
· Mr. Frank cau1d h.ave further de~ our tax burden by
alloldng to the Local Schoo) Districts their share of the inside 10
mill levy.
This COUld go on. There could be an investigation Into
complaints of irregul.ari.des in vouchers fUed by public officials,
safety deposit boxes bejng overlook~, county hourly-paid emplo~ campaigning for candidates When they should be
working, poor fiScal oontrol, moving money from one townahlp to
another for political favors, overlooking personal 'propecly taxes
of a certain business In Sutton Twp.
.
How can one be l1lialed by any of my letters or radio an-

'

PT . . PLEASANT ~ There

have been, several changes in
voting places for Tuesday's
General Election according to
L. W. Gelty,county clerk. Polls
Tuesday will open at 6:30a.m.
and close at 7:30p.m.
Voting places will include the
following :
ARBUCKLE - 2, Beech Hill,
Beech Hill SchOQ.I ; 3, Block,
Block.
·
CLENDENIN - 5, Henderson, City

Rn11riin '!:

ll,

.Wyoma, Wyoma Schoolhopse;
/, .Woods, Woods Schoolhouse;
8, Buckle, Watterson's Store; 9,
Hogsett, Mrs. Henry Duncan
residence; 10, Beale, Beale
Schoolhouse.
COLOGNE - 12, Leon, Leon
School; 13, Mt. Flower, MI.
Flower Scl)ool.
COOPER - 15, Letart,
Letart Grade School; 16, Flat
Rock, Walter Johnson Store;
17, Eight Mile, Former Bissell

nouncements when I base my statements on facts? Truth is
based on fact and integrity is based on truth .
· ·
One queslin remains to be answered, why is Mr. Frank
running for the Auditor's office? He has three years left on his
present term of Treasurer (expires August 1977). There is $100
difference in the jobe; To lhls point Mr. Frank has evaded an
answer to lhls question. Wby?
~ames E. Roush

Grocery.
.
GRAHAM - 19, Hartford, ·
City Building ; 20, New Haven,
New flaven School;· 21,
Graham,
Old
Graham
Schoolhouse; 22, Union, White
Church Community Building;
23, New Haven, New J-ll:lven
City Building.
HANNAN - 24, Mt. OUve,
Mt. Olive School; 25, Glenwood, Old Post Office
Building; ~. Hannan, Hannan
High School.
LEWIS .;_ 30, Courthouse
MeiJlorial Park Building; 31,
Central Grade School, 1200
Main St.; 32, Heights, Heights
Unlpn Hali; 33, Hickory
Chapel, Roo~evelt Grade

an increase of

•

'

I'

'

j

'

ES

".,.....

DINING ROOM ,
·SU
REG.
S3· 9995
$499.95
..

.....
.....
..
..•..."".
..
....,•"'
.....,
:::1

ITifsAvE •1oo.oo

~

FOR
STATE REPRESENTATIVE

.

WESTMINSTER

.c..
",..
....

TilE

...
c:

ELECT A FULL-TIME STATE REPRESENT AliVE
THE 92nd DISTRICT HAS NEVER HAD A REPRESENTATIVE

70

ONE WALNUT·8-PIECE

..,'"..
...•

. ON A FULL-TIME BASIS. WE NOT ONLY NEED ONE,

6200

•·
...
"'
"".."
••'..

.

Elegant
cabinetry
available
In
these
popular
finishes:
American
Walnut· Pecan·
White Oak-Pine
ahd Maple. The
finest Imported
black
for,est
movement
chimes the half
hour and the
correct
hour.
Key ....,ound. This
14 day Oil mer ts
trouble free, no
pul.ltng · of.
'tlelghts to .foul
up. ,
Fully
assembled.
Weight: 65 lbs. ·

'"•.•.
,.

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SAVE lsso

..
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BA'ITERY SALE

•-•
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~

Guaranteed 48 Months .

.

SAID, "WE
HOPE
.
. EVERYONE
. ' WHO. SUPPORTS JOHN GLENN
WU,L ALSO SUPPORi RON JAMES."

•

ONLY

•

to check ovr

.

'•I·,

'

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1._'

.

'

SEARS. HAS' A
. CREDIT PlAN
TO

'

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JA

Hlfh Voltqt .........

•Lral,hl· throuah·

"~ ......... Cwil'lt

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,

A RECENT ANNOU_NCEMENT FROM .GLENN'S HEADQUARTERS

WAS 136.00

••

...

.

.

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'•·"'
•.

•'

I
'

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.

'

'

I

CHAIRS
SAVE UP
TO

•5.0 00 :0FF

SEALY .

TWIN BEDS
COMPLETE WITH
MATTRESS, BOXSPRINGS
AND HEADBOARD

ALL

ALL CHAIRS MARKED DOWN

CARPET SAlE\

NOWI SAVE UP TO
'

S4QOO

~~~

DINETTE
SETS
All
FOR
SALE

'5995
12xl2 REG. '99.95 '7995 SAVE
SALE PRICE
'20.00
12xl5 REG. 109.95
SALE PRICE •a 995 .::.::

ZENITH

HIDE-A-BEDS

OFF

ON

REDUCED

QUICK

1

(2 TO.SELL)
REGUlAR '299.95

14" 'COLOR TV
WITH FREE CART
ONLY

•22995

NOW
ONLY

LAY-AWAY FOR X-MAS

19" ZENITH
COLOR TV
FREE
95
ONLY
•399
STAND

'3495

GAS R'ANGE

WHITE

95
•1.69

SAVE

CHOICE OF COLORS

'20.00

CONSOLE STEREO

25''
ZENITH
COLOR TV

AM/FM RADIO ~ 4 .SPEED
DtANGER, &amp;.TRACK TAPE PlAYER
•

REGULAR •69~95

MATTRESSES AND
BOX SPRINGS
NOW
ONLY

'

· CONSOLE MODEL

SAVE '50.00

BEAN BAGS

NEW SHIPMEN.TI

I'

'24995

30" SUNRAY

ONLY

'4995 EA.

SAVE •40.00 ON THE SET

ONE BASSm SPANISH

DINING ROOM
SUITE
~~~95 '49995

•

20%

Off

ON ALL

TABLE LAMPS

$22500 L.~ON::LY~--~~_!~~~----~~~Y~O~U~'L~L!SA~V:E~·1~00~N~O~W~I~--~~~~=-------~-.------u
•599.· ~s

t ..

'

' FOR

'

SILVQt BRIDGE PI,AlA ·
. , PHoNE 446-2770 , .
.. '

'

SALE I

VAUGHN BASSETT,
MANY OTHERS

HEffiLOOM

~

WE DESE~VE A FULL-TIME STATE REPRESENTATIVE.

ALL
BEDROOM SUITES

BASSEIT, AMERICAN DREW, SINGER,

eQUAUAm ·

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

STARTING AT $139.95

REDUCED NOW FOR
QUICK SALE!
-UP TO Sl 00 OFF

50

eAGGRESSIVE .

AGENCY, WHERE HE LEARNED HOW TO CUT THROUGH
RED TAPE TO GET THINGS DONE. HE WANTS TO I;ISE THAT
KNOWLEDGE FOR SOUTHEASTERN . OHIO

...........

.

,.••

PRICES!

~

tht-)llaftitioa c.ll ron..
IMe&amp;oft deliver mor.
laitlt.l ataki111' po.,..
than aa ntharwiM
'identleal hatter,.
wiU. •p.and-ov.-cell ·

OFF

YOU OfECK

HE HAS 2% YEARS EXPERIENCE WITH A GOVERNMENTAL

."MERCK VETERiNARY
MANUAl"

BEAT INRATION!

'

-~

A1k

Reduced Prices

LOVE· SEATS

DO NOT PURatASE A
LIVING ROOM SUITE
ANYWHERE BEFORE

Pd. lor by Orange Twp. Vol. Fire Dept.

RON JAMES IS A GRADUATE OF MARSHALL UNIVERSITY.

All KIN~S OF.
MEDICAL
SUPPLIES &amp;
ANTIBIOTICS
FOR ANIMALS

BEAUTIFUL

Twp. Volunteer Fire Department.

.I

Was~uo

• Twin fiber glass belts help
keep tread flat and open for
good winter traction
• 2 ·tough nylon cord body plies
plus double fiber glass belts

Y2

of providing and maintaining Orange

..

A7&amp;.13 Whltaw•ll Tire Eoch,

FRANK REAL111Y
POMEROYMeigs County
~
• Treasurer Howard Frank said
~ Saturday that he Ia "able and
~ hearty" af~~ reports clrO culated on Friday, par.ticularly
~ in eastern Meigs County, lhat
: he was a palient at the Holzer
C Medical Center.

'

REDUCED UP TO

Mill for the purpme

eHARD WORKING

'5 to ·'l9 OFF ON PAIRS

••

.

WE HAVE

BUY FOR CHRISTMAS AT

TO CHOOSE FROM

70

~

~

MAKE A DEPOSIT, WE'LL
HOLD YOUR CHOICE

LIVING ROOM
SU.ITES

It is a renewal .of a tax of ~ Mill and

•ACTIVE

Belted Snow Tires, Now ·

Prices Include lnstallat!Gn Shipping &amp; Blll•nclng

'

ELECT .A 'FRESH, ENERGETIC
STATE REPRESENTATIVE

Sears Our Bes~-selling Fih~r Glass

~

New merchandise has arrived and we
decided to give you some more real
values now!

You Can
Lay Away Any
Item For Otristmas!

'·

r-----~----~--~--~

2for'48

If you're new in the· area visit us and
stay away from high prices. You'll
always find the best values across the
bridge in Mason.

NOVEMBER

Vote For and Support ·
Orange Twp. Fire Levy

'

SUITS'FILED
P.OMEROY - An action
asking judgment for money
and a suit for divorce have
been filed in Meigs County
Common
Pleas
Court.
Pomero)o National Bank asks
judgment for money in the
amount of ,1,278.20 against ·
James D. Saffel, Winfield, W.
Va., and. Dennis L. Collins,
Rutland, 'lUed for divorce, no
grounds, against · Mildred
Collins, Worthington, W. Va.

MASON.
. .
RNITURE'S ·

..

VtJte with good judgment
Dear Sir :
On November 5, the voters of GaUia County will bave the
opportunity to vote for a comlete school hoard for the first time
since our rural county areas have been coosolidated into one
district. Therefore I am asking aU interested parties to please
study.the situation, and vote for the ones who will bring a quality
education to our children: I believe thai when taxpayers know
their children are receiving quality education levies and bonds
will be passed when they are needed.
·
It has been my privilege to meet and know some of the young
men running for Jlublic office in thls election . It is refreshing to
see eager young people wllllng to give their lime and efforts to
Continued on page 18

School; 34, N. Pl. Pleasant, N.
Pt. Pleasant Grade School; ~.
Sr. High School, Senior High
School ; 38, Lewilo, 'Ordnance
Sch0&lt;1l Annex; 37 ·ordnance,
otdnanq! .SChool,·. ',. .
ROBINSON - 50,· Jr. High
School, Pl. Pleasant Jr, High
School; • 51, Mason Co.
Fairgrounds,
fairgrounds
Office.Buildlng. '
UNION .;,.. 39, Union, Lillian
Miller reside~; 40, EhnWood,
John Harmon residence; 41,
Stevens, Jay Stone Bulldl!ig;
42, Arbuckle, Arbuck)e School.
WAGGENER - 44, ' Valley
City, Hartford School; 45,
Mason, Mason Grade School;
46, ' Clifton, Danny ~earns
Offlc.e Bldg.; 47, West
Columbia, West Columbia
School; 48, !4ason, Mason
Volunteer Fire Dept.

~

'

,.

•'

•'

lAYAWAY FOR atRlsrMAS

�,I

.,
.l.. •

.'

•'

.....

Lettero -of oplnloo •~ welrontrd. They should bt leu
thu 300 words long (or be sub joel to ~ucdoo by the
~ltorJ and must be. signed " 'llh thr signee's addn!ll.
Names may b• withheld upon publl~atlon. lfo.wever, on
requeat, names will be dllrlosed. Lellers should be In lood
·taate, addreaalng I11Ue1. aot personalldes.

B~

.

.

Dear Sir :
.
We are appealing to you on behslf of Hughie ... and David ...
and Mark ... and Penny ... and Debbie .. . and Scott ... and Benny
... and Etta Mae ... and Arthur ... and the many other children
and adults busUy and hsppily occupied with Community School
and Wor~op activities. These are our children too, our special
children.
Perhaps more than normal children, our special children
look forward to the yellow school bus stopping each morning. In a
spedal way perhaps they have learned to love and be loved by
their teachers and to love and be accepted by their classmates.
They are developing social graces and pracdcal skills which·
hsve opened up a whole new world for them. The Meigs County
Community School has given them a niche to fill, a new purpose
for each day, and a sense of being important to 9011leone outside
their own families.
Do YOU care? We would Uke to think you do. We would like to
think that the voters of lhia county.will stop and consider that the
amount of 2. 75 mills ls.very small in comparlson to the 24 or more
mills they now pay to educate normal children. We would like to
thlnlt that f9rtunate parents of fortunate children reallzo! that
their education, In part, has been Dnanced by parents of unfortlD!ate chDdren. We would like to think that these fortunate
parents and grandParents might coiiBkler themselves privileged
to be able to help our special children in lhia small way.
Hughie and David and Marlt and Penny and all the rest are
looking up to you and your organizatloo for help. PLEASE don •t
look the other way!
Vote YES on the MR levy!
Fay Sauer
Fay Sauer, chairman; Ruth Karr, co-chairman; Nora Rice,
Jessie Might, Carol DldcDe, Wilma Parker, Ruth Bufflnllt9n,
Rea Roush, Maxine Goeglein, Maxine Whitehead, Phyllia
Skinner.

Boosters serve Meigs High

1
r

f:
•~

Dear Sir:
.
I am a member of the Melga Athletic Booaters A8soclation,
mother of a varsity baakelball player ,mother of a member of the
gymnaatlc team, secretary of the Melga Athletic Boosters, and I
have something I'd Uke to share with you and your readers.
Football season is coming to the close of a season, but the
~s Athletic Boosters are just geldng wound up for the year.
The boosters have chalked up IIWiy years as an active group and
down through the years have "been there" when the sports,
Including football, basltetball, ba8eball, golf, track, wreslling
.and cheerleaders have needed help or a "pal on the back."
Boys ad fed, uniforms provided, Greyhounds are rented and
many other details are taken care of. They have purchased
movie cameras to film the footbali. games, a projector to show
the film; the Pomeroy field was redone; a paint machine for field
UBe was bought, and a sturdy concession stand built and equip.
ped. n- are a few of the larger undertaltlngs.
'lbe latelll project being tackled by the boostera is the purchallnp. of an Audio VIsual Machine to tape, film and project
ballketball games or any other sport, play, or school funcdon.
Thla machine will be at the disposal of Melga High School under
the ~ of the Athletic Depl.
We may be a small active gro.up blat we bave great b&amp;cking in
our community. The aports fans·arenevertoo bu.oytolend a hand
or be generoll8 wllh their money and support. :Ibese parents,
·
frienda and follOwers are Whatlt is all about.
'lbe Athletic Department is headed by Coach Charies

i" .
:
•

i•
~
:
:
••
•
·•

i
~

~
:
•
;
~

~

_,

!*

I.

supporters of candidates

for courts, school

To those who care ;

; Otanges
in poll places anno11Ilced
.

Election fever brings out

'

••• ?Itt- li~i~Dt:...u--

:;:;•·:o:«•:&gt;:•:•

•XIO»:•T.&gt;:.O:.•:OK•'-X•;~;:-:;-;o;!&gt;S•
'o'o...•• ,;.: • • • ··~;
Q~:x
• "'I: . Y.I&gt;XIIX~•X•&gt;".o»:&gt;:O:&gt;:o;;o,--.;;o,o,
~J.•.•.o'!il!o.•

~

~

board..~

""~

~
Olancey with a capable group tnCIUIIIng Don Wolfe, Roger
Brauer, John Bentley, Sam Crow, Fenton· Taylor, Don Dixon,
Ron Logan, Ray Goodman, John Arnold and Jolin Krawsczyn, .
Junior High.
The new field al the Meigs High school will be in full
swing next school year or perhaps before. Weare indeed proud of
our new field and if you haven't been keeping tabs on it, believe
me it is shaping up nicely. Once again hats off to the boosters.
They had a halid in its success.
Being a woman,! must speak my piece on the Girls' Athletic
Asaociation alao. They work equally as hard headed by Mrs. Joy
Bentley, girls' athletic director. They joined forces thls year with
the boosters and had a pizza shop at the home football games and
will be selling pizzas at tbe home basketball games.
Editor, If you think I have been selling Meigs A!hletic
Boosters, I hsve !
There is nothing sweeter to my ears than the thumping of a
basketball or the tmnbling of a gymnast. I am prejudiced but
then what is more important in thls land of ours than our young
adulia of tomorrow . Booster tickets are still on sale - want one.
We want ·you ! ! ·

Marjorie M. Walburn.

Auditor defends position
I am James E. Roush, your Meigs County Auditor. i read the
comments made by Mr. Frank at the.Republican Rally, October
30, 1974.
Mr. Frank stales that he has done more auditor's work than
treasurer's since he has. been in . office. He alao made other
StatEments which are certainly contradictory to that statement.
If he lmew the auditor's office's business thai well, surely he
would not have made the erroneous statements concerning the
county tax dollar nor the bUdget commission. Any one of my
deputies could have told Mr. Frank that our evaluation is figured ·
oo 35 pet. evaluation lilstelld of 40 pet. on 22,000 parcels of land,
and thateachhsd to be typed on the lax duplicate.
Aril~ of the Budget Commission can not be held unlll all
pertinent Information for the ~&amp;x rate Is received by the auditor.
The Public Utility certification from tbe State of Ohio did not
arrive at my office illllll October 25, 1974; therefore, the tax rate
could not be figured uniU I received the certification.
Mr. Frank further stated "J:loll'l be nilaled by last minute
letters or radio announcements by hls opposition."
You voted to aid the Tri County Mental Health service by
voting .2mlllso~ yo_ur taxes, but on the treasurer's tu rate sheet
thiayearyoupald .38mllls for lhia public service. Why? Only the
public hal a rjght to raise a lax levy and that Is by vote.
While Mr. Frank has supJ&gt;OSI!dly run the auditor's office for
all these · years arid a18o the treasurer's office, why has he
allowed the tax delinquency to raise 16 pet. This means that U6
out of every •100 you pay is for somebody else's taxes. Further,
on October 30, 1972, Mr. Caldwell, the Meigs County Auditor,
certified the delinquent properties· to the treasurer's office and
they were publlahed In the Daily Sentinel. One year from the date
of publlcatloo, according to law, the property was to be sold for
taxes. It Is now October 31, 1974, and the land is still oo the tax
books.
'
· Mr. Frank cau1d h.ave further de~ our tax burden by
alloldng to the Local Schoo) Districts their share of the inside 10
mill levy.
This COUld go on. There could be an investigation Into
complaints of irregul.ari.des in vouchers fUed by public officials,
safety deposit boxes bejng overlook~, county hourly-paid emplo~ campaigning for candidates When they should be
working, poor fiScal oontrol, moving money from one townahlp to
another for political favors, overlooking personal 'propecly taxes
of a certain business In Sutton Twp.
.
How can one be l1lialed by any of my letters or radio an-

'

PT . . PLEASANT ~ There

have been, several changes in
voting places for Tuesday's
General Election according to
L. W. Gelty,county clerk. Polls
Tuesday will open at 6:30a.m.
and close at 7:30p.m.
Voting places will include the
following :
ARBUCKLE - 2, Beech Hill,
Beech Hill SchOQ.I ; 3, Block,
Block.
·
CLENDENIN - 5, Henderson, City

Rn11riin '!:

ll,

.Wyoma, Wyoma Schoolhopse;
/, .Woods, Woods Schoolhouse;
8, Buckle, Watterson's Store; 9,
Hogsett, Mrs. Henry Duncan
residence; 10, Beale, Beale
Schoolhouse.
COLOGNE - 12, Leon, Leon
School; 13, Mt. Flower, MI.
Flower Scl)ool.
COOPER - 15, Letart,
Letart Grade School; 16, Flat
Rock, Walter Johnson Store;
17, Eight Mile, Former Bissell

nouncements when I base my statements on facts? Truth is
based on fact and integrity is based on truth .
· ·
One queslin remains to be answered, why is Mr. Frank
running for the Auditor's office? He has three years left on his
present term of Treasurer (expires August 1977). There is $100
difference in the jobe; To lhls point Mr. Frank has evaded an
answer to lhls question. Wby?
~ames E. Roush

Grocery.
.
GRAHAM - 19, Hartford, ·
City Building ; 20, New Haven,
New flaven School;· 21,
Graham,
Old
Graham
Schoolhouse; 22, Union, White
Church Community Building;
23, New Haven, New J-ll:lven
City Building.
HANNAN - 24, Mt. OUve,
Mt. Olive School; 25, Glenwood, Old Post Office
Building; ~. Hannan, Hannan
High School.
LEWIS .;_ 30, Courthouse
MeiJlorial Park Building; 31,
Central Grade School, 1200
Main St.; 32, Heights, Heights
Unlpn Hali; 33, Hickory
Chapel, Roo~evelt Grade

an increase of

•

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I'

'

j

'

ES

".,.....

DINING ROOM ,
·SU
REG.
S3· 9995
$499.95
..

.....
.....
..
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..
....,•"'
.....,
:::1

ITifsAvE •1oo.oo

~

FOR
STATE REPRESENTATIVE

.

WESTMINSTER

.c..
",..
....

TilE

...
c:

ELECT A FULL-TIME STATE REPRESENT AliVE
THE 92nd DISTRICT HAS NEVER HAD A REPRESENTATIVE

70

ONE WALNUT·8-PIECE

..,'"..
...•

. ON A FULL-TIME BASIS. WE NOT ONLY NEED ONE,

6200

•·
...
"'
"".."
••'..

.

Elegant
cabinetry
available
In
these
popular
finishes:
American
Walnut· Pecan·
White Oak-Pine
ahd Maple. The
finest Imported
black
for,est
movement
chimes the half
hour and the
correct
hour.
Key ....,ound. This
14 day Oil mer ts
trouble free, no
pul.ltng · of.
'tlelghts to .foul
up. ,
Fully
assembled.
Weight: 65 lbs. ·

'"•.•.
,.

."
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•'

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SAVE lsso

..
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BA'ITERY SALE

•-•
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~

Guaranteed 48 Months .

.

SAID, "WE
HOPE
.
. EVERYONE
. ' WHO. SUPPORTS JOHN GLENN
WU,L ALSO SUPPORi RON JAMES."

•

ONLY

•

to check ovr

.

'•I·,

'

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.

'

SEARS. HAS' A
. CREDIT PlAN
TO

'

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JA

Hlfh Voltqt .........

•Lral,hl· throuah·

"~ ......... Cwil'lt

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,

A RECENT ANNOU_NCEMENT FROM .GLENN'S HEADQUARTERS

WAS 136.00

••

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.

.

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•.

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'

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.

'

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CHAIRS
SAVE UP
TO

•5.0 00 :0FF

SEALY .

TWIN BEDS
COMPLETE WITH
MATTRESS, BOXSPRINGS
AND HEADBOARD

ALL

ALL CHAIRS MARKED DOWN

CARPET SAlE\

NOWI SAVE UP TO
'

S4QOO

~~~

DINETTE
SETS
All
FOR
SALE

'5995
12xl2 REG. '99.95 '7995 SAVE
SALE PRICE
'20.00
12xl5 REG. 109.95
SALE PRICE •a 995 .::.::

ZENITH

HIDE-A-BEDS

OFF

ON

REDUCED

QUICK

1

(2 TO.SELL)
REGUlAR '299.95

14" 'COLOR TV
WITH FREE CART
ONLY

•22995

NOW
ONLY

LAY-AWAY FOR X-MAS

19" ZENITH
COLOR TV
FREE
95
ONLY
•399
STAND

'3495

GAS R'ANGE

WHITE

95
•1.69

SAVE

CHOICE OF COLORS

'20.00

CONSOLE STEREO

25''
ZENITH
COLOR TV

AM/FM RADIO ~ 4 .SPEED
DtANGER, &amp;.TRACK TAPE PlAYER
•

REGULAR •69~95

MATTRESSES AND
BOX SPRINGS
NOW
ONLY

'

· CONSOLE MODEL

SAVE '50.00

BEAN BAGS

NEW SHIPMEN.TI

I'

'24995

30" SUNRAY

ONLY

'4995 EA.

SAVE •40.00 ON THE SET

ONE BASSm SPANISH

DINING ROOM
SUITE
~~~95 '49995

•

20%

Off

ON ALL

TABLE LAMPS

$22500 L.~ON::LY~--~~_!~~~----~~~Y~O~U~'L~L!SA~V:E~·1~00~N~O~W~I~--~~~~=-------~-.------u
•599.· ~s

t ..

'

' FOR

'

SILVQt BRIDGE PI,AlA ·
. , PHoNE 446-2770 , .
.. '

'

SALE I

VAUGHN BASSETT,
MANY OTHERS

HEffiLOOM

~

WE DESE~VE A FULL-TIME STATE REPRESENTATIVE.

ALL
BEDROOM SUITES

BASSEIT, AMERICAN DREW, SINGER,

eQUAUAm ·

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

STARTING AT $139.95

REDUCED NOW FOR
QUICK SALE!
-UP TO Sl 00 OFF

50

eAGGRESSIVE .

AGENCY, WHERE HE LEARNED HOW TO CUT THROUGH
RED TAPE TO GET THINGS DONE. HE WANTS TO I;ISE THAT
KNOWLEDGE FOR SOUTHEASTERN . OHIO

...........

.

,.••

PRICES!

~

tht-)llaftitioa c.ll ron..
IMe&amp;oft deliver mor.
laitlt.l ataki111' po.,..
than aa ntharwiM
'identleal hatter,.
wiU. •p.and-ov.-cell ·

OFF

YOU OfECK

HE HAS 2% YEARS EXPERIENCE WITH A GOVERNMENTAL

."MERCK VETERiNARY
MANUAl"

BEAT INRATION!

'

-~

A1k

Reduced Prices

LOVE· SEATS

DO NOT PURatASE A
LIVING ROOM SUITE
ANYWHERE BEFORE

Pd. lor by Orange Twp. Vol. Fire Dept.

RON JAMES IS A GRADUATE OF MARSHALL UNIVERSITY.

All KIN~S OF.
MEDICAL
SUPPLIES &amp;
ANTIBIOTICS
FOR ANIMALS

BEAUTIFUL

Twp. Volunteer Fire Department.

.I

Was~uo

• Twin fiber glass belts help
keep tread flat and open for
good winter traction
• 2 ·tough nylon cord body plies
plus double fiber glass belts

Y2

of providing and maintaining Orange

..

A7&amp;.13 Whltaw•ll Tire Eoch,

FRANK REAL111Y
POMEROYMeigs County
~
• Treasurer Howard Frank said
~ Saturday that he Ia "able and
~ hearty" af~~ reports clrO culated on Friday, par.ticularly
~ in eastern Meigs County, lhat
: he was a palient at the Holzer
C Medical Center.

'

REDUCED UP TO

Mill for the purpme

eHARD WORKING

'5 to ·'l9 OFF ON PAIRS

••

.

WE HAVE

BUY FOR CHRISTMAS AT

TO CHOOSE FROM

70

~

~

MAKE A DEPOSIT, WE'LL
HOLD YOUR CHOICE

LIVING ROOM
SU.ITES

It is a renewal .of a tax of ~ Mill and

•ACTIVE

Belted Snow Tires, Now ·

Prices Include lnstallat!Gn Shipping &amp; Blll•nclng

'

ELECT .A 'FRESH, ENERGETIC
STATE REPRESENTATIVE

Sears Our Bes~-selling Fih~r Glass

~

New merchandise has arrived and we
decided to give you some more real
values now!

You Can
Lay Away Any
Item For Otristmas!

'·

r-----~----~--~--~

2for'48

If you're new in the· area visit us and
stay away from high prices. You'll
always find the best values across the
bridge in Mason.

NOVEMBER

Vote For and Support ·
Orange Twp. Fire Levy

'

SUITS'FILED
P.OMEROY - An action
asking judgment for money
and a suit for divorce have
been filed in Meigs County
Common
Pleas
Court.
Pomero)o National Bank asks
judgment for money in the
amount of ,1,278.20 against ·
James D. Saffel, Winfield, W.
Va., and. Dennis L. Collins,
Rutland, 'lUed for divorce, no
grounds, against · Mildred
Collins, Worthington, W. Va.

MASON.
. .
RNITURE'S ·

..

VtJte with good judgment
Dear Sir :
On November 5, the voters of GaUia County will bave the
opportunity to vote for a comlete school hoard for the first time
since our rural county areas have been coosolidated into one
district. Therefore I am asking aU interested parties to please
study.the situation, and vote for the ones who will bring a quality
education to our children: I believe thai when taxpayers know
their children are receiving quality education levies and bonds
will be passed when they are needed.
·
It has been my privilege to meet and know some of the young
men running for Jlublic office in thls election . It is refreshing to
see eager young people wllllng to give their lime and efforts to
Continued on page 18

School; 34, N. Pl. Pleasant, N.
Pt. Pleasant Grade School; ~.
Sr. High School, Senior High
School ; 38, Lewilo, 'Ordnance
Sch0&lt;1l Annex; 37 ·ordnance,
otdnanq! .SChool,·. ',. .
ROBINSON - 50,· Jr. High
School, Pl. Pleasant Jr, High
School; • 51, Mason Co.
Fairgrounds,
fairgrounds
Office.Buildlng. '
UNION .;,.. 39, Union, Lillian
Miller reside~; 40, EhnWood,
John Harmon residence; 41,
Stevens, Jay Stone Bulldl!ig;
42, Arbuckle, Arbuck)e School.
WAGGENER - 44, ' Valley
City, Hartford School; 45,
Mason, Mason Grade School;
46, ' Clifton, Danny ~earns
Offlc.e Bldg.; 47, West
Columbia, West Columbia
School; 48, !4ason, Mason
Volunteer Fire Dept.

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lAYAWAY FOR atRlsrMAS

�r

19 _ 'fhz Sunday 'l'inlt's·- St•nliru•l. Sund:ay . Nuv. :1 . Wi 4

represent us.
So when you, parents, friends, taxpayers, etc ., go to the polls
Tuesday, think of the children. Shouldn't their needs be foremost
in our minds when we choose the people who will formulate the
educational policies of their young lives ? Let's give them the
best, and vote with ;:ood common judgement, oot tic.U.c-loe. ·
Mrs. Philip Foster

Dear Sir: :
During' the past nine months I have gotten quite an education
as to how a few "so-called Jl9liticians" more or less run the
"show" in Gallia County. My primary concernat this time is the
election of five men to the Gailia County !Mal School District
Board of Education. This past summer I was told by certain
people that these five men elected this fall would be those who a
certain "so-called political leader" and his "group" wanted to
fill these positions. Such a statement came as quite a shock to me
in that Gallia County seems to have so much political involvement in the county schools.
In the past week I believe that this political involvement has
become and is becoming more and more apparent with the
distribution of a "supposedly official ballot". This ballot has
marked the names of five gentlemen. These names are the same ·
ones that I was told last swnmer who would be the "choseri five" .
The "official ballot" indicated thatthese (ive had been chosen by
a "Committee for Better Schools", but no one seems to know
anything about this committee. Where are the Ieade~ of this
committee? Are they afraid to come out into the open? I believe
· they are. I, as well as others, feel that the committee or "group"
prefers to operate behind the scenes as they have done for so
many years.lf there is such a committee, I believe that it should
be renamed, "The Committee for the Better Control of Schools".
I think that It is ttme that the people of Gailia County open
· their eyes as to what is happening and has happened in the past.
Most of the County District voters don't realize what type of
political involvements and the behind the scene actions that took
place prior to and during consolidation . I honestly feel that if the
general public had been made fully aware of "consolidation
deals", that today most taxpayers and voters of the district
would not give consideration to certain candidates who are now
running for the Board of Education. Also, many may be won- ·
dering why a former COWlty &amp;iperintendenL is so concerned
about certain people being elected to the new Board of
Education. You the voters and taxpayers are the ones who should
be concerned and not someone who is no longer associated with
the GaUia County Local School District. Besides, the ones who
seem to be making the endorsements for the "chosen five" don't
even live in the scl)ool district for the most part.
One other facet that needs to be explained is the fact that one
of the five men that was endoned has stated consistentiy that he
did not and would not be endorsed by the "group". Apparently,
the "group" so chose to do so, thinking that this gentleman would
flex and bend thelt way .
I think the time has arrived that the citizens of the Gailia
County Local School District rise to the occasion and select a
Board of Education that can think and reason open-mindedly
without feeling an inner political obligation to a "group" that
expects them to orient their decisions to anotber's cailse instead
of the "kids" 'or children of the Gailia County Loclli School
District.
·
William R. Bahr, President,
GaWa County !Mal Teachers Assoc.

Plug for Ron }ames
.'

Dear Sir:
Southeastern Ohio needs a full-ltme representative. We've
never had one before. Finally, we have a man who wants to
represent us all the ttme. His name is Ronald H. James, of
Proctorville, Ohio. Ron James is aggressive and hard working,
and he'll work full time for you. Ron believes that the people of
the 92nd District need a fresh, new figure as their representative
... someone with the energy to perform the enormous amount of
hard work it takes to be a true representative.
Ron is a graduate of Marshall University and bad over two
years experience in a governmental agency. He has received
endorsement from the United Transportation Unloo, Ashland
Area Labor Council, Brotherhood of M of W Employees, United
Auto Workers, Brotherhood of Railway, Airline Oerks, John
Halliday, and John Glenn.
Let's make sure southeastern Ohio gets its fair share of
representation. Please elect my friend, Ron James for state
representative. He'll be a full ttme representative· that will
represent all the people.
Jeff Cook, Bob McCormick Rd., Gallipolis

ball.
Grant McDonald is a fine Christian man, and he is fully
capable of handling the responsibilities of being a state
legislator.
Please join in the effort to make Grant McDonald our next
State Senator.
Floyd E. Wright

More small
car plants

•

m fossil to ·oil problem
'.
By HERBERT SPARROW
FRANKFORT, Ky. ( UPI ) The Commonwealth of Kentucky, as the nation's leading
coa l produc"er, now has the
responsibility of finding a w&amp;y
to convert the fossil fuel into

Meigs
Property

liquid crude oiL

Transfers

are closing
DETROIT ( UPI) The
Ford Motor Co. announced
.Friday that it will shut three
small car assembly plants nex t
week and cut output at 10 parts
facilities, idling 13,000 workers
- 1,000 of them indefinitely.
The cutbacks are the indus·
try's latest response to the
lagging 1975 model car sales
which have shown the poorest
introductory sales in 10 years.
Together with layoffs announced by Chrysler and
General Motors, the industry in
the next two weeks will have
nearly 31,000 workers on in·
definite layoffs.
Donald Bastian, Ford vice
president for manufacturing,
said the cutbacks of three
small car assembly plants
were needed to help balance
inventories . The plants build
Mustang lis and · Pintos
·which are overstocked.
The FOI'd assembly line oneweek shuldowns will affect
4,950 hourly workers at the
Dearborn, Mich ., assembly
plant; · 3,450 at Mentuchen,
N.J .; and 3,250 at San Jose
Calif. In addition , .one-week
layoffs are slated for 475
workers at two Michigan
manufacturing facilities.
Another 1,000 workers will be
trimmed indefinitely at manufacturing plants in New York,
Ohio, Michigan, Illinois and ·
Indiana. As of Monday, Ford
will have 7,025 workers on
indefinite layoffs.
Chrysler plans to shut its
Newark, Del., assembly plant
for two weeks beginning Monday, idling 3,800 workers . The
No. 3 automaker has 7,700
workers indefinitely idled.
At General Motors, 6,000
workers are scheduled to begin
.indefinite layoffs at four small
car assembly plants Nov. 11,
bringing to 36,000 the niJ!Ilher
of w&lt;!rkers idled permanently
at the No. I auto company.

Herbert L. Hail, Marilyn L.
Hall to Ronald V. Jones, Mary
M. Jones, Lot, Syracuse .
Randolph Fraley Jr. to
Theodore Whittington, Life
Estate, .37 Acre, SalisbW"y.
Richard N. McMahon,
Mildred B. McMahon to Phyllis
Loui se Kasper, 1.64 Acre,
Pomeroy.
Harold
R.
Osborne,
Josephine Osbome. Ronald E.
Osborne, Ella Osborne, Pa·ul E.
Osborne, Carol Osborne to
Paul a J. Brewer, 35.98 Acres,
Chester.
Harold
R.
Osborne,
Josephine Osborne. Ronald E.
Osborne, Ella Osborne, Paul E.
Osborne. Carol Osborne to
Harold R. Osborne, Josephine
Osborne, .JO Acre, Chester .
Clyde J. Morlan , Ethel M.
Morlan to Robert E. Sams,
Judith A. Sams. Parce ls,
Orange.
Delia Riffle, dec'd. to
Charles E . Riffle, Lillian V.
Vicker s,
Janice
Maxine
Reuter, Clarice Jean Stra uss, ·
Cert. of Trans., Bedford .
Charles E. Riffle, Bernice E.
Riffle, Lillian Vickers. Clarice
Jean Strauss, William L.

Kentucky officials were notified by Washington Friday the
nation's first pilot plant to test
the fea sibility of making such a
change and ending some of the
country 's reliance on foreign
oil will be built in an area of
eastern Kentucky bordering
West Virginia a nd Ohio.
In the present energy shortage, it is recognized that coal
is the most abundant fossil
fuel this counu·y has. As the
leadin g coal producer, it is
appropriate that the Bluegrass
State sho uld lead in the
.development of coa l as a
. usable energy source.
The test plant will be built in
the tiny Boyd County, Ky.',
town of Ca tlettsburg, Ky., near
the Ashland Oil Co.''s major
eastern Kentucky refinery.
Joining Ashland in the project
will be SWl Oil Co., Atlantic

Indiana.
·lor :uie proJ.I\Ct and state
The slates of Iilinois and c~mfnitme!lts ·to provid e
Oklahoma also competed for assistance ' with access · roads
the lest plant , which will be and other necessary . im·
financed by federal and state provements to the 'plant.
Kentucky also will pQr,
government and private industry.
.
ticipate in the Initial design
conversion.
. First phase of the project will . P.hase of the plant, bot to what
The Catlettsburgh plant
t n c I u de
p r e I i min a r y extent 'it has not yet been
engineering and design work, deterniilled.
•
primarily will pruduce synthetic crude oil to be used as a
development of specifications · Money for \he state 's part of
and. environmental · impact the project will come from the
feedstock for refineries in
, studies. The next phase will $50 million the last Kentucky
producing gasoline and· other
consist of actua.l construction legislature pledged over the
hi g h-grad e
petroleum
of the plant, with the next step next three bienniums to help
products. It probably would not
be used for the purpose of
sending the proJ!'CI into actual the state gain approval for
making home heating fuel.
operalton.
liquefaction and gasification
Total cost of the project will
be around $80 million, with the
federal government picking up
VOTE FOR
two-lhirds of the cost.
Kentucky's participation in ·
the project will consist of five
parts: $3 million toward con- ·
struction of the plant, $25,000 a
REPUBLI,CAN NOMINEE
month during its operation for
up to three years, contribution
For
of 88,000 tons of the states coal
Common Ple11
for startup purposes, establishment of a coal cost equalization
fund of a little more than $2
million for the purchase of coal
Pd . Pol. Adv.

I l.'fl.:ur£

01

ISAKM.4/)

r

JUDGE

GRAN.D OLE OPRY SHOW

Yellow jackets hide their
nests in abandoned rodent
burrows uriderground or in
hollow .tree stumps. A nest
usually co ntains 2,000 to 3,000
wasps, but may hold as many
as 10,000 wasps .

STATE REPRESENTATIVE

SATURDAY~

* Graduate of Marshall University
* 2'12 Years governmental agency experience
*Endorsed by United Mine Workers, United .
Auto Workers, AFL-CIOand many more labor
&amp; business groups .

For Sunday. Nov. 3 , 1974
ARIES (March 21-Aprlt 191
Ideas you 're toy ing with at this
l ime that are in\lenlive Or pro ·
gressive have the best chance
ol fruition. Dated plans are less
·reliable .

FOR
State Representative
Pd . By Committee to
Elect R. James, C. Allen Chr.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)

SCORPIO (Oct. 24 · Nov. 221

Something you didn't c ount on
or probably won 't even be
aware of for awhile is go ing on
behind the scenes. It will be for
your ult imate benefit.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·

Dec. 21) This is a day when
Quick decisions count for more
than u~ual. The way you
decide on issues will greatly
influence others.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 -Jan.

19) For the time being , your
most-mark ed advances w ill
come through the use of new
techniques. Experiment a bit "to
see what can be improved.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.

Elect A Family Man ·As.Your SENATOR

19) Youngsters will respond
more readily to what you have
to teach them now if you use
imaginative methods to arouse
their interests .

...

'FROM THE
17th DISTRICT

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PISCES (Feb. 2!1-March 20)

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BULLET
TODAY

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HARVARD ROMPS
CAMBRIDGE, Mass , (UP!)
- Milt Holt scored one touchdown and passed to split end
Pat Mclnally for another
Saturay as Harvard stWlned
Pe nnsylvania 39-ll in a battle of
Ivy League Wlbeatens.

1974 by NEA , Inc

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BEAnBAGS
$2995

TO

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lounge in it

$5995

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2

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South

2•

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rap in it

&lt;

.. ,~.

..~ ·

You bid three spades and your
partner bids three notr ump. What

,.

do you do now?

·~·

....
;

The average American
eats 1,500 pounds of food each
year.

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' , 1''

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• ' ;&gt;J
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firewOod ·

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Fun Furnishings.

'Ll

bv

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oecorion"'

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•••
••

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Ric:hard; underwriter's manager for D.airylal)d lnsurancet Jerry, ·
assistant. coatar opt~rator, Mead; Barbara I.I:,Pwelll, ~ ~Cir•tary.
Wear· Ever; Jack·, ' 'Chillicothe TelephPne Co.,; Pamela • CFree), . ·
ciuhi.e r, Hi!lley's Foodland; BiH, eKecutive ,teacher at Cincinnati
Princeton High School and now working t.P ward ~- 0; , ~oj)ert,
carpenter ancl farmer; Theresa.• freshman at Adena High, 1972

Grant McDonald family, back .row. left to right: Richard, Jerry,
!iJarbara. Jack, Pam ala, Bill, Robert; front' rpw, left to right: :
Theresa, Grant Tommy, Betty, Jillne and nmmy.

Help me.so I
can help you!

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Y.

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God gra.nt me the serenity to accept the things t

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cannot change, tho cou~age to, change the things
t can, and. the wosdomt~knowlhe .dlflerence. ,
!Last sentence of prayer by -Dr., Reinhold
Ni~buhrl
,

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queen ·s attendant; Grant; Tommy, senior at
ena High ·School;
. Betty Jane and Timmy, 7th grade Clarksburg 'Jr •. High Call star little
. league baseball, pll!yed on . undefeated ' i!nd unscored-oh fopfball
team at Clarksburg Jr, 'H igh). Bill and Jerry made the All-Ohio First

..

::::;;,~~ basketbaii •. Bill1961 2~.5 avg., pPints, Jerry

. Soflone'" .mulfler ma~es the '
Sup~r E-Z fun to use. A~to­
.
S
mat1c bar ancl cham oiling,
. Automatic Ch!lln aw. too;- ·
Just .push ·one button to .set
See for yourself'-t;ome In
and hold the controls · in · and ask lor· a free demonstarting position without the ! !ration_
chain turning:
. . '
(
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)
You cut ,with ~ase . .Homelite's excellent b&amp;illnce, ~
-·
~
thick rubber coated handle .·
bar and pistol grip, plus . CHAIN SAWS

?ehed

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HD'I ELITE su'PER E·Z,.

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1962. led state in

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· Jolln ·Services What He· Sells
985-3308
9!estef,
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f·RE.E! FREE!
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eFOOT STOOL OR FLOOR CUSHION
WITH THE .PURCHA$~ OF . ANY BEANBAG~
WHILE THEY LAST!

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Long S izes ·542.50

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RIDENOUR. SUPPLY
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with a

HQMFI II E

1

ONE GOOD 'MAN CAN MAKE A biFFERENCE

A stitcher in time will
keep you warm .all win·
.ter. McGregor's Super
Stitcher of Dacron •
polyester and cotton is
snugly lined , In .Orl~m·
acrylic pile. You'll 'like
the detail stitching, big
. roomy pockets, and zipper closures. S4o.oo

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Ad

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Paid For By Committee, To ~lee~ McDonald, ~~stin . E. W~ward , Trea~. ,·.

h

...

Super Stitcher
. . No eweat

good

,..

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supply of

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Bag a world
of fun and
comfort!
Decortons
·
.
famous

Awinter

'I

Plug. fur Mr. McDonald J

,11:

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AFr:,:

daydream in it

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'SKINS ROLL ON
OXFORD, Ohio ( UPI )- The
Miaflli Redskins, led by jWlior
quarterback Sherman Smith,
clinched no less than a tie for
the Mid-American Conference
football championship and "
their second strai ght trip to the
Tangerine Bowl with a 31·0
victory over Western Michigan
here Saturday.

''

G\lllipolis, Ohio, RU
.
.
. Oct. 31, 1974
I urge everyone to vote for Grant McDonald for the 17th Ohio ·
State Senate ·District.
Grant McDonald, 54, was born in Cbi!Ucotbe, Ohio and Ia a llfe:l~g · resident of Ross County. McDonald, hiS Wife and ten
children own a 250 acre fanri and are bivolved .ID a local coinoperated laundry. McDonsld is a veteran of World War U and
belonf!S to VFW Post 108 and American Legion 62. He is currently .
serviilg a oecond term as Ross County Conunissiooer and 11'88
elected first vice1"'esident of the County Commiasioners
.
Aasoc:btion of Ohio.
, Grant McoOOald will work hard for Southeastern Ohio. He
has been endor!led by the Teamsters, United Mine Workers
I!IHk l.ung Association, Alwlllnwn Workers of America
CIO Auto and Communlcat~ Workent, the Chillicothe Gazette
and Jolin Glenn. AltboUih the OEA etldur!led his !JPPOOent they
staled ·that McDonald's education recOril is ju1i as
McDonald ~ !!~ugh~ rcational agrlcul~ and
b\lsket-

snooze in it

'1
Pass
You, South, hold :
•AK84 "K2 +Q 5 44AQ 54
What do you do now?
A-Bid three spades Elnd see
what happens.

Nov. 3, 1974

.

East
Pass
Pass

West

This year you will be helped by
· frieilds in two areas where you
hope to advance your self -in terests. The manner in which
this wil l' unto ld wi ll be unique

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UN IT CALLED
RACINF. - The Racine ER
squad was ca lled ~' riday at
12:45 p.m. for Gaynell Oark,
Racine , a medical patient, who
was ta ke n to Vete r ans
Memorial Hosp ital. At 8:55
a .m . Saturday Doyle Quin,
Racine , Rl. 2, who had a
laceration to his left hand, was
taken to Veterans Memoria l
Hospital.

SF..ARCH NARROWED
PASADENA, Tex. (UP!) Police trying to find out who
h.1nded out Halloween candy
laced with cyanide that caused
the death of an 8-y ear-old boy
narrowed their searc h today to
reside nts of about 10 houses .
The victim , Timothy Mark
O'Bryan, died shortly after
swallowing cyan ide ~ran ul es
mixed with powered candy in a
straw Thursday.

pamphlet.
Teaford, who was on his way
to represent state Sen. Tony P.
Hall, D·Dayton, at an Elections
Olmmissions hearing was
treated at Grant Hospital and
released .
Hall
is
the
Democratic candida te for Ohio
secretary of state.
A commtu1i cations aide in
the gove rnor 's office, Pat
Grosek, said Dav ies passed out
a
phamplet
entitl ed
" Watergate-Doubters
Lib,"
and the last line s tated
"something to the effect that
he would kill the first person he
saw wearing a vest." Davies
was a " regular visitor, " said a
spokesman for the governor's
office.
"He comes in here every
week with some printed
material and always asks to
see the governor," the spokes·
man sa id. "He came in about 9
a.m . and asked for the
governor. When he was told the
governor wasn't in, he left the
printed pamphlet 'as usual."

TODAY'S QUESTION

''Meet
.the-McDonalds''
Family Photo Taken In January 1969
·The McDonald Family In October 1972
1

Pass

The bidding has been:

......

T

CHAH LESTON,
W.Va.
(UP! ) - Some high school
st udents , upset over a nine·
COLUMBUS rUPI) - Albert
week parental protest aga inst Norman Davies, 29, Colwnbus ,
"dirty" textbooks, have called described as a '' regular visifor
for the books to be returned to t(l the governor's Statehouse
the classrooms.
offi ce." was in c ustody
"We have been denied the Saturday for the Friday
riglllto a free education," said stabbing of a Columbus at·
a sta tement Friday from Wyatt torney on the St.alchou'IC steps,
Hanna, student body president accordin g to the Oh io Highway
at Stonewall Jackson High Pa trol.
School. "We have been the
The patrol sa id Davies, who
victims of the lowest form of turned himself in after the
expr~ssi~n of an~,society -and incident, had sa id in a pam·
that os v1olenee.
phlet he distributed that he
Stonewall and other sclu':"ls · would kill anyone he sa w
pla ced newspaper ads calling wearing a vest Nov . 1.
for a ret.urn of new texts which
Hamilton Teaford, who was
were removed rrom the Kana- wearing a vest Friday. was
wha County schools several stabbed in the upper left arm
weeks ago m a ban-the-books when he refused to take a
crusade which has provoked
shootings, bomb ings and other
violence.

Lz:an :1 ~~at3 :1

You 're lucky now in situations
where relatives or members of
your immediate family are in volved . Something oul of the
ordinary is about to pop.

GRANT McDONALD
.

Pass

Some declarers lik e to
show off and make a lot of
overtricks. Others, including
pr actica lly ai'l s uc cess ful
rubbe r bridge players, go
·after their contrac t fir st and
work on overtricks later.
With everything breaking
perfectly and all fi nesses
working. South ca n ma ke six
notrump. A pessimist s~es
that bad breaks can beat
three notrump, unless great
care is taken.
· So our pess imistic expe rt
wins the heart lead in hi s own
hand; he leads a diamond to
dummy's ace and a second
diamond toward his hand.
This is a standard sa fety play
designed to produce four diamond tric ks against any 4·1
diamond break. Of cou rse.
there are always four tricks
against any 3-2 brea k.
Assuming East plays low.
South s ticks in: his nine;
cashes the king; r et urns to
dummy with the ace of
spades and knocks out East's
queen of diamonds.
This insures nine tricks,
but if East leads back a
·heart, South can come to 10.
He wins in dummy; cashes
the last diamond; cashes hi s
last high spade and if he h"s
kept count can throw West "'
with a heart and make .h im
lead to the ace· qu een . ·J f
clubs.

Lay aside things that are of a
routine nature today . Try
something new You 've been
wanting to do but haven't got ten around to yet

SPONSORED BY THE FRATERNAL ORDER OF POLICE

3 N. T.

trial for conspiracy to conceal
lop-level involvement in
W:tlergah•. '
The Nc a i·Stein exchange
took place with the jury of eight
blacks and four whiles out of
the courtroom . Neil sa id he
was not objectin g to the
grueling
cross-examination,
but tiM it had "the effect of
making this hoy a victim."
" This hoy ... has done a grea t
deal of preaching from the
witness st~nd, and I have to
meet it, " said Stein, who
represents Parkinson.
As soon as the jury was back
in, Stein asked, l'You committed any number of immoral
acts, didn't you?"
Magruder replied that the
acts had been enumerated in
his one-count charge of conspirac-y to obstruct justice, and
acknowledged, " it's quite a
lengthy list."
Stein sought to depict Magruder, one of the first to break
ranks and· start cooperating
with the prosecutors, as a
" liar 11 with "sticky fingers."
"! never took any money
from the committee and you
know that, Mr . Stein ,"
Magruder said. " That is just
part of the efforts of U1e
defendanis to ma ke me a
sca pegoat."
Magruder said he was
" deeply ashamed" of his role
in planning · Watergate and
helping to cover it up.

Attorney stabbed
near Statehouse

WINNERS NAMED
COLUMBUS (UP!) -"Peter
KwnmWlt of Amherst Steel
won individual hon ors in the
Ohio Hi gh School Athletic
Associa tion cross-coWl try state
meet at Ohio State Universitv
Satwday while Findlay took
team honors 'i n Class AAA ,
Elyria Catholic won Class AA
hon ors and Plymouth took th'e
Class A title .

South

East

BITE A

Lady Luck is likely to reward
you materially at this time in a
way that is rather unusual.
Don 't turn down what appears
to be a white elephant.

PH. 446-96~5

on by-pass

Pass
Opening tead-Q"

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

FOR McDONALD ·-VOTE

_:_

Pass

CANCER (June 21·JUif 22)

...

North

(;(-ucral Robert C. Mard ian
ancl Kenneth W. Parkinson,.
who was . hired by the reelection committee after the
Walergi;ile break-in. are on

I N,T.

Don't sit on any hunches thai
c ome to you today reg arding
memberS ol your family. You' ll
sense things they're not aware

'

Dear Sir:
We choose those who are to govern us by voting. We jealously
guard the right to vote. There are good people on "both sides of
the fence," and today the judiciary is noniJ8111san.
As a wife, l am undoubtedly prejudiced in favor of my
husband . But over the past six years, I have watched htm clean
~ a backlog of cases (some ten to eighteen years old). There
.mast always be some cases pending, allowing llhe attorneys to
ge,t things prepared. For example, the Supreme Court seta a two-year limit for personal injury cases.
Most cases in' our county are civil disputes and divorces. We
are lucky that we have few felony cases. A case is a
disagreeme!'lt -two sides arguing -so they come to court. Will
both sides be happy with the result? Rarely! Ron is knoWll
throughout Ohio for his, ability to help people get together and
reach a settleme~t. This results in many dismissals. Is this easY
to do? No.
Statistics can. be twisted lll8JlY ways,. ~hether It concerns
pr~bation, backlogs, courtroom use, whatever. The few ·rumors
that. I have heard have been amazing. I have seen my friends
support our opponent nwrely on this bSsls. YotJ peopie will
be)ieve what you want. But cases filed and crimes committed
will not change with a new judge. U you think that someone else
would handle these things more efficiently, that is.fine. I only ask
that. you consider the candidates and their backgrounds and
proven abilities, then vote - that is yoilr right.
Mrs. Ronald B. Calhoun
366 Debby Drive, Gallipolis

West

Your budget will appreciate it
if you do more things of a service nature tor yourself. rather
than farm them out and pay another.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) A
good day to get in touch with
one you've met recentl y who
impressed you as being a per son ol unusual interests .
Knowledge will be gained.

Genera l

Jnlm N. Mitcht• ll , former While
House a ides H. R. Haldeman
and .J ohn D. Ehr li chm a n,
former Ass is ta n t Atto~ney

Berry's World

Both vulnerab le

get a spur-at-the-moment im pulse to get in touch with a pal.
do so. lt will tu m a dull day into
somethif19 exciting .

ADVANCED TICK£TS..............................~2~00

AUTHOR

+

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

GALLIPOLIS HIGH SCHOOL ·

JAMES

FAMISH

+

.,

prliS('eul.iun witnc~s.
Former Attorney

rl ircctor , probably will fini'h

Another a ccident was inGALLIPOLIS - A deer was
killed in an acciden t at 4:45 vestigated on Wood's Mill Rd .
a.m. Saturday on the Rt. 35 Bv· five tenths of a mile south of
Pass hwere the animal ran into Mt. Olive Rd. where cars
the path of a ca r operated by driven by Mildred M. McGraw;
Eddie A. Green, 27, Hartville, 52, Bidwell , and Ricky B.
Tiwmas, 23, Gallipolis Ferry,
Ohio.
The Gallia-Meigs Post State W. Va. went into ditches to
Hi ghwa y Patrol investigated a avoid a collision. There was no
si ngle car accident at 9:35p.m. contact between the vehicles.
'
Friday on R\, 588. fo ur tenths of
a mile west of Bob McCormi ck
VIRGINIA LOSES
Rd. where the left rear tire
CHAPEL
HILL. N. C. t UP!)
blew on a ca r·operated by Tony
Quarterback
Chris Kupec
Lee Slone, 19, of Ga llipolis .
The in cident caused Slone to .ran fo r one touchdown and
lose control of his vehicle passed for another Saturday,
which ran off the highw ay. leadi ng North Carolina to a 24Slone complained of minor 10 Atlantic Coast Conference
victory over Virginia .
injuries.

NORTH
2
• A74
'K8
AJ532
"'75 3
WEST
EAST
. 92
.QJ10 5
, 632
' QJ!094
+4
+Qt08 7
"'Kto864
"'J9
SOUTH IDI
• K863
'A7 5
K116
"'AQ 2

ot.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) II you

NOVEM.BER 23rd

his l t·~ tiu u my Monday as;~ key

making th is hoy a victim."
Defense lawyer Jacob A. Stein
replied that •'this
has
done a great dea l of preaching
from the witness stand ."
Neal and Stein traded the
retorts dw·ing Stein's sharp

Deer killed

xxr r

\n,••••·r: I ·,,wll11 mmlt • llfl hflrl'llrllt'II.' ~ FACES

..

JIM BLACKSTONE

"Elect A Full Time Representative "

Support urged of husband

CURRY

'

AND

GLENN

PEACE

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

TENNESSEE
WALKERS
'

FOR

1 'T

Safety play can save contract

AND THE

examination had "the effect nf

to form the surpriSE~ answer, as

WIN AT BRIDGE

BILLY WALKER

books' return

Friday as the
Waterga~e conspiracy ,trial
complet ed its fifth week .

1,\n . .. .. r. ''"'"'" ·' •

JIIIUIIII· ... :

..;,;

Mc1grud('r, 39, who w;.ts former
PreRi dcnt H.ichard \1 . Nixon's
de pu ty
· 1972
ca mpuign

:-;ow arran•• the rirded lette"

Plitt lite 51•= ANSWER here

. I

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

Richfield and Standard Oil of
Strauss to Janice Maxine
Reuter, 1.2 Acre , Bedford.
Paul Simon, Allee Simon to
Robert J . Eynon , Caralyn Sue
Eynon, Parcel, Ches ler. ·

By WESLEY G. PIPPERT
WA ~ HI N! ;TON ( UPI) G11 ief trial prosecutor James~·.
Neal
said
the
cross-

Magruder

~=s~~~~~~~~~,~·=ug=g=•=•tJed by tnt abon cartoon.
....... to •nlu• ·,.
.

Students as}&lt;.

qu es tionin g of J eb Stuart

60 ' !MCK ANl7 FOI&lt;:TH
TE~~IN6 JOKES.

I

L

JUDY HUNT

JOHN

I

yA.;
T¥/]..A_(;_t,......J~-,.--,

PLUS

ENDORSED
BY

I I

Magruder victimized ·says lawyer

boy ...

..

JAMES

'

l lns(' ramblt•lht•st• f1M.Ir Jumhlt•s,
' one lt•tlt•r to t"nch squnrc, t~ •
form four ordinar)' ~ ..-·urds.
'

JAMES A. BENNETT

RONALD H.

The oldest and mos t important order of English knight·
hood is the Order of the
Garter, founded in 1346 by
King Edward Ill.

JIWI~~;-;:;;;,i~=r:::.

plants.
The state Is ·also working in '
conjunction with Texas Gas •
TransmissiOn Corp., Owens·
horo, Ky., to obtain federal
help in locating a pilot plllllt to
make natura l gas.out of coal in
western Kentucky.
The pilot plant in eastern
Kentucky will bW"n 500 tons of
l'Oal eaCh day and will test the
fossil fuel brought · in from
other areas of the country.
Technicians say they can
obtain from one and one-third
to one and one-half barrels of
oil from each ton of coal in the

·t

�r

19 _ 'fhz Sunday 'l'inlt's·- St•nliru•l. Sund:ay . Nuv. :1 . Wi 4

represent us.
So when you, parents, friends, taxpayers, etc ., go to the polls
Tuesday, think of the children. Shouldn't their needs be foremost
in our minds when we choose the people who will formulate the
educational policies of their young lives ? Let's give them the
best, and vote with ;:ood common judgement, oot tic.U.c-loe. ·
Mrs. Philip Foster

Dear Sir: :
During' the past nine months I have gotten quite an education
as to how a few "so-called Jl9liticians" more or less run the
"show" in Gallia County. My primary concernat this time is the
election of five men to the Gailia County !Mal School District
Board of Education. This past summer I was told by certain
people that these five men elected this fall would be those who a
certain "so-called political leader" and his "group" wanted to
fill these positions. Such a statement came as quite a shock to me
in that Gallia County seems to have so much political involvement in the county schools.
In the past week I believe that this political involvement has
become and is becoming more and more apparent with the
distribution of a "supposedly official ballot". This ballot has
marked the names of five gentlemen. These names are the same ·
ones that I was told last swnmer who would be the "choseri five" .
The "official ballot" indicated thatthese (ive had been chosen by
a "Committee for Better Schools", but no one seems to know
anything about this committee. Where are the Ieade~ of this
committee? Are they afraid to come out into the open? I believe
· they are. I, as well as others, feel that the committee or "group"
prefers to operate behind the scenes as they have done for so
many years.lf there is such a committee, I believe that it should
be renamed, "The Committee for the Better Control of Schools".
I think that It is ttme that the people of Gailia County open
· their eyes as to what is happening and has happened in the past.
Most of the County District voters don't realize what type of
political involvements and the behind the scene actions that took
place prior to and during consolidation . I honestly feel that if the
general public had been made fully aware of "consolidation
deals", that today most taxpayers and voters of the district
would not give consideration to certain candidates who are now
running for the Board of Education. Also, many may be won- ·
dering why a former COWlty &amp;iperintendenL is so concerned
about certain people being elected to the new Board of
Education. You the voters and taxpayers are the ones who should
be concerned and not someone who is no longer associated with
the GaUia County Local School District. Besides, the ones who
seem to be making the endorsements for the "chosen five" don't
even live in the scl)ool district for the most part.
One other facet that needs to be explained is the fact that one
of the five men that was endoned has stated consistentiy that he
did not and would not be endorsed by the "group". Apparently,
the "group" so chose to do so, thinking that this gentleman would
flex and bend thelt way .
I think the time has arrived that the citizens of the Gailia
County Local School District rise to the occasion and select a
Board of Education that can think and reason open-mindedly
without feeling an inner political obligation to a "group" that
expects them to orient their decisions to anotber's cailse instead
of the "kids" 'or children of the Gailia County Loclli School
District.
·
William R. Bahr, President,
GaWa County !Mal Teachers Assoc.

Plug for Ron }ames
.'

Dear Sir:
Southeastern Ohio needs a full-ltme representative. We've
never had one before. Finally, we have a man who wants to
represent us all the ttme. His name is Ronald H. James, of
Proctorville, Ohio. Ron James is aggressive and hard working,
and he'll work full time for you. Ron believes that the people of
the 92nd District need a fresh, new figure as their representative
... someone with the energy to perform the enormous amount of
hard work it takes to be a true representative.
Ron is a graduate of Marshall University and bad over two
years experience in a governmental agency. He has received
endorsement from the United Transportation Unloo, Ashland
Area Labor Council, Brotherhood of M of W Employees, United
Auto Workers, Brotherhood of Railway, Airline Oerks, John
Halliday, and John Glenn.
Let's make sure southeastern Ohio gets its fair share of
representation. Please elect my friend, Ron James for state
representative. He'll be a full ttme representative· that will
represent all the people.
Jeff Cook, Bob McCormick Rd., Gallipolis

ball.
Grant McDonald is a fine Christian man, and he is fully
capable of handling the responsibilities of being a state
legislator.
Please join in the effort to make Grant McDonald our next
State Senator.
Floyd E. Wright

More small
car plants

•

m fossil to ·oil problem
'.
By HERBERT SPARROW
FRANKFORT, Ky. ( UPI ) The Commonwealth of Kentucky, as the nation's leading
coa l produc"er, now has the
responsibility of finding a w&amp;y
to convert the fossil fuel into

Meigs
Property

liquid crude oiL

Transfers

are closing
DETROIT ( UPI) The
Ford Motor Co. announced
.Friday that it will shut three
small car assembly plants nex t
week and cut output at 10 parts
facilities, idling 13,000 workers
- 1,000 of them indefinitely.
The cutbacks are the indus·
try's latest response to the
lagging 1975 model car sales
which have shown the poorest
introductory sales in 10 years.
Together with layoffs announced by Chrysler and
General Motors, the industry in
the next two weeks will have
nearly 31,000 workers on in·
definite layoffs.
Donald Bastian, Ford vice
president for manufacturing,
said the cutbacks of three
small car assembly plants
were needed to help balance
inventories . The plants build
Mustang lis and · Pintos
·which are overstocked.
The FOI'd assembly line oneweek shuldowns will affect
4,950 hourly workers at the
Dearborn, Mich ., assembly
plant; · 3,450 at Mentuchen,
N.J .; and 3,250 at San Jose
Calif. In addition , .one-week
layoffs are slated for 475
workers at two Michigan
manufacturing facilities.
Another 1,000 workers will be
trimmed indefinitely at manufacturing plants in New York,
Ohio, Michigan, Illinois and ·
Indiana. As of Monday, Ford
will have 7,025 workers on
indefinite layoffs.
Chrysler plans to shut its
Newark, Del., assembly plant
for two weeks beginning Monday, idling 3,800 workers . The
No. 3 automaker has 7,700
workers indefinitely idled.
At General Motors, 6,000
workers are scheduled to begin
.indefinite layoffs at four small
car assembly plants Nov. 11,
bringing to 36,000 the niJ!Ilher
of w&lt;!rkers idled permanently
at the No. I auto company.

Herbert L. Hail, Marilyn L.
Hall to Ronald V. Jones, Mary
M. Jones, Lot, Syracuse .
Randolph Fraley Jr. to
Theodore Whittington, Life
Estate, .37 Acre, SalisbW"y.
Richard N. McMahon,
Mildred B. McMahon to Phyllis
Loui se Kasper, 1.64 Acre,
Pomeroy.
Harold
R.
Osborne,
Josephine Osbome. Ronald E.
Osborne, Ella Osborne, Pa·ul E.
Osborne, Carol Osborne to
Paul a J. Brewer, 35.98 Acres,
Chester.
Harold
R.
Osborne,
Josephine Osborne. Ronald E.
Osborne, Ella Osborne, Paul E.
Osborne. Carol Osborne to
Harold R. Osborne, Josephine
Osborne, .JO Acre, Chester .
Clyde J. Morlan , Ethel M.
Morlan to Robert E. Sams,
Judith A. Sams. Parce ls,
Orange.
Delia Riffle, dec'd. to
Charles E . Riffle, Lillian V.
Vicker s,
Janice
Maxine
Reuter, Clarice Jean Stra uss, ·
Cert. of Trans., Bedford .
Charles E. Riffle, Bernice E.
Riffle, Lillian Vickers. Clarice
Jean Strauss, William L.

Kentucky officials were notified by Washington Friday the
nation's first pilot plant to test
the fea sibility of making such a
change and ending some of the
country 's reliance on foreign
oil will be built in an area of
eastern Kentucky bordering
West Virginia a nd Ohio.
In the present energy shortage, it is recognized that coal
is the most abundant fossil
fuel this counu·y has. As the
leadin g coal producer, it is
appropriate that the Bluegrass
State sho uld lead in the
.development of coa l as a
. usable energy source.
The test plant will be built in
the tiny Boyd County, Ky.',
town of Ca tlettsburg, Ky., near
the Ashland Oil Co.''s major
eastern Kentucky refinery.
Joining Ashland in the project
will be SWl Oil Co., Atlantic

Indiana.
·lor :uie proJ.I\Ct and state
The slates of Iilinois and c~mfnitme!lts ·to provid e
Oklahoma also competed for assistance ' with access · roads
the lest plant , which will be and other necessary . im·
financed by federal and state provements to the 'plant.
Kentucky also will pQr,
government and private industry.
.
ticipate in the Initial design
conversion.
. First phase of the project will . P.hase of the plant, bot to what
The Catlettsburgh plant
t n c I u de
p r e I i min a r y extent 'it has not yet been
engineering and design work, deterniilled.
•
primarily will pruduce synthetic crude oil to be used as a
development of specifications · Money for \he state 's part of
and. environmental · impact the project will come from the
feedstock for refineries in
, studies. The next phase will $50 million the last Kentucky
producing gasoline and· other
consist of actua.l construction legislature pledged over the
hi g h-grad e
petroleum
of the plant, with the next step next three bienniums to help
products. It probably would not
be used for the purpose of
sending the proJ!'CI into actual the state gain approval for
making home heating fuel.
operalton.
liquefaction and gasification
Total cost of the project will
be around $80 million, with the
federal government picking up
VOTE FOR
two-lhirds of the cost.
Kentucky's participation in ·
the project will consist of five
parts: $3 million toward con- ·
struction of the plant, $25,000 a
REPUBLI,CAN NOMINEE
month during its operation for
up to three years, contribution
For
of 88,000 tons of the states coal
Common Ple11
for startup purposes, establishment of a coal cost equalization
fund of a little more than $2
million for the purchase of coal
Pd . Pol. Adv.

I l.'fl.:ur£

01

ISAKM.4/)

r

JUDGE

GRAN.D OLE OPRY SHOW

Yellow jackets hide their
nests in abandoned rodent
burrows uriderground or in
hollow .tree stumps. A nest
usually co ntains 2,000 to 3,000
wasps, but may hold as many
as 10,000 wasps .

STATE REPRESENTATIVE

SATURDAY~

* Graduate of Marshall University
* 2'12 Years governmental agency experience
*Endorsed by United Mine Workers, United .
Auto Workers, AFL-CIOand many more labor
&amp; business groups .

For Sunday. Nov. 3 , 1974
ARIES (March 21-Aprlt 191
Ideas you 're toy ing with at this
l ime that are in\lenlive Or pro ·
gressive have the best chance
ol fruition. Dated plans are less
·reliable .

FOR
State Representative
Pd . By Committee to
Elect R. James, C. Allen Chr.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)

SCORPIO (Oct. 24 · Nov. 221

Something you didn't c ount on
or probably won 't even be
aware of for awhile is go ing on
behind the scenes. It will be for
your ult imate benefit.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·

Dec. 21) This is a day when
Quick decisions count for more
than u~ual. The way you
decide on issues will greatly
influence others.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 -Jan.

19) For the time being , your
most-mark ed advances w ill
come through the use of new
techniques. Experiment a bit "to
see what can be improved.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.

Elect A Family Man ·As.Your SENATOR

19) Youngsters will respond
more readily to what you have
to teach them now if you use
imaginative methods to arouse
their interests .

...

'FROM THE
17th DISTRICT

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PISCES (Feb. 2!1-March 20)

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BULLET
TODAY

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HARVARD ROMPS
CAMBRIDGE, Mass , (UP!)
- Milt Holt scored one touchdown and passed to split end
Pat Mclnally for another
Saturay as Harvard stWlned
Pe nnsylvania 39-ll in a battle of
Ivy League Wlbeatens.

1974 by NEA , Inc

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BEAnBAGS
$2995

TO

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lounge in it

$5995

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South

2•

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rap in it

&lt;

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You bid three spades and your
partner bids three notr ump. What

,.

do you do now?

·~·

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The average American
eats 1,500 pounds of food each
year.

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' , 1''

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firewOod ·

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Fun Furnishings.

'Ll

bv

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oecorion"'

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Ric:hard; underwriter's manager for D.airylal)d lnsurancet Jerry, ·
assistant. coatar opt~rator, Mead; Barbara I.I:,Pwelll, ~ ~Cir•tary.
Wear· Ever; Jack·, ' 'Chillicothe TelephPne Co.,; Pamela • CFree), . ·
ciuhi.e r, Hi!lley's Foodland; BiH, eKecutive ,teacher at Cincinnati
Princeton High School and now working t.P ward ~- 0; , ~oj)ert,
carpenter ancl farmer; Theresa.• freshman at Adena High, 1972

Grant McDonald family, back .row. left to right: Richard, Jerry,
!iJarbara. Jack, Pam ala, Bill, Robert; front' rpw, left to right: :
Theresa, Grant Tommy, Betty, Jillne and nmmy.

Help me.so I
can help you!

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Y.

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God gra.nt me the serenity to accept the things t

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cannot change, tho cou~age to, change the things
t can, and. the wosdomt~knowlhe .dlflerence. ,
!Last sentence of prayer by -Dr., Reinhold
Ni~buhrl
,

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queen ·s attendant; Grant; Tommy, senior at
ena High ·School;
. Betty Jane and Timmy, 7th grade Clarksburg 'Jr •. High Call star little
. league baseball, pll!yed on . undefeated ' i!nd unscored-oh fopfball
team at Clarksburg Jr, 'H igh). Bill and Jerry made the All-Ohio First

..

::::;;,~~ basketbaii •. Bill1961 2~.5 avg., pPints, Jerry

. Soflone'" .mulfler ma~es the '
Sup~r E-Z fun to use. A~to­
.
S
mat1c bar ancl cham oiling,
. Automatic Ch!lln aw. too;- ·
Just .push ·one button to .set
See for yourself'-t;ome In
and hold the controls · in · and ask lor· a free demonstarting position without the ! !ration_
chain turning:
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You cut ,with ~ase . .Homelite's excellent b&amp;illnce, ~
-·
~
thick rubber coated handle .·
bar and pistol grip, plus . CHAIN SAWS

?ehed

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HD'I ELITE su'PER E·Z,.

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1962. led state in

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· Jolln ·Services What He· Sells
985-3308
9!estef,
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f·RE.E! FREE!
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eFOOT STOOL OR FLOOR CUSHION
WITH THE .PURCHA$~ OF . ANY BEANBAG~
WHILE THEY LAST!

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Long S izes ·542.50

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RIDENOUR. SUPPLY
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with a

HQMFI II E

1

ONE GOOD 'MAN CAN MAKE A biFFERENCE

A stitcher in time will
keep you warm .all win·
.ter. McGregor's Super
Stitcher of Dacron •
polyester and cotton is
snugly lined , In .Orl~m·
acrylic pile. You'll 'like
the detail stitching, big
. roomy pockets, and zipper closures. S4o.oo

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Ad

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Paid For By Committee, To ~lee~ McDonald, ~~stin . E. W~ward , Trea~. ,·.

h

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Super Stitcher
. . No eweat

good

,..

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supply of

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Bag a world
of fun and
comfort!
Decortons
·
.
famous

Awinter

'I

Plug. fur Mr. McDonald J

,11:

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AFr:,:

daydream in it

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'SKINS ROLL ON
OXFORD, Ohio ( UPI )- The
Miaflli Redskins, led by jWlior
quarterback Sherman Smith,
clinched no less than a tie for
the Mid-American Conference
football championship and "
their second strai ght trip to the
Tangerine Bowl with a 31·0
victory over Western Michigan
here Saturday.

''

G\lllipolis, Ohio, RU
.
.
. Oct. 31, 1974
I urge everyone to vote for Grant McDonald for the 17th Ohio ·
State Senate ·District.
Grant McDonald, 54, was born in Cbi!Ucotbe, Ohio and Ia a llfe:l~g · resident of Ross County. McDonald, hiS Wife and ten
children own a 250 acre fanri and are bivolved .ID a local coinoperated laundry. McDonsld is a veteran of World War U and
belonf!S to VFW Post 108 and American Legion 62. He is currently .
serviilg a oecond term as Ross County Conunissiooer and 11'88
elected first vice1"'esident of the County Commiasioners
.
Aasoc:btion of Ohio.
, Grant McoOOald will work hard for Southeastern Ohio. He
has been endor!led by the Teamsters, United Mine Workers
I!IHk l.ung Association, Alwlllnwn Workers of America
CIO Auto and Communlcat~ Workent, the Chillicothe Gazette
and Jolin Glenn. AltboUih the OEA etldur!led his !JPPOOent they
staled ·that McDonald's education recOril is ju1i as
McDonald ~ !!~ugh~ rcational agrlcul~ and
b\lsket-

snooze in it

'1
Pass
You, South, hold :
•AK84 "K2 +Q 5 44AQ 54
What do you do now?
A-Bid three spades Elnd see
what happens.

Nov. 3, 1974

.

East
Pass
Pass

West

This year you will be helped by
· frieilds in two areas where you
hope to advance your self -in terests. The manner in which
this wil l' unto ld wi ll be unique

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UN IT CALLED
RACINF. - The Racine ER
squad was ca lled ~' riday at
12:45 p.m. for Gaynell Oark,
Racine , a medical patient, who
was ta ke n to Vete r ans
Memorial Hosp ital. At 8:55
a .m . Saturday Doyle Quin,
Racine , Rl. 2, who had a
laceration to his left hand, was
taken to Veterans Memoria l
Hospital.

SF..ARCH NARROWED
PASADENA, Tex. (UP!) Police trying to find out who
h.1nded out Halloween candy
laced with cyanide that caused
the death of an 8-y ear-old boy
narrowed their searc h today to
reside nts of about 10 houses .
The victim , Timothy Mark
O'Bryan, died shortly after
swallowing cyan ide ~ran ul es
mixed with powered candy in a
straw Thursday.

pamphlet.
Teaford, who was on his way
to represent state Sen. Tony P.
Hall, D·Dayton, at an Elections
Olmmissions hearing was
treated at Grant Hospital and
released .
Hall
is
the
Democratic candida te for Ohio
secretary of state.
A commtu1i cations aide in
the gove rnor 's office, Pat
Grosek, said Dav ies passed out
a
phamplet
entitl ed
" Watergate-Doubters
Lib,"
and the last line s tated
"something to the effect that
he would kill the first person he
saw wearing a vest." Davies
was a " regular visitor, " said a
spokesman for the governor's
office.
"He comes in here every
week with some printed
material and always asks to
see the governor," the spokes·
man sa id. "He came in about 9
a.m . and asked for the
governor. When he was told the
governor wasn't in, he left the
printed pamphlet 'as usual."

TODAY'S QUESTION

''Meet
.the-McDonalds''
Family Photo Taken In January 1969
·The McDonald Family In October 1972
1

Pass

The bidding has been:

......

T

CHAH LESTON,
W.Va.
(UP! ) - Some high school
st udents , upset over a nine·
COLUMBUS rUPI) - Albert
week parental protest aga inst Norman Davies, 29, Colwnbus ,
"dirty" textbooks, have called described as a '' regular visifor
for the books to be returned to t(l the governor's Statehouse
the classrooms.
offi ce." was in c ustody
"We have been denied the Saturday for the Friday
riglllto a free education," said stabbing of a Columbus at·
a sta tement Friday from Wyatt torney on the St.alchou'IC steps,
Hanna, student body president accordin g to the Oh io Highway
at Stonewall Jackson High Pa trol.
School. "We have been the
The patrol sa id Davies, who
victims of the lowest form of turned himself in after the
expr~ssi~n of an~,society -and incident, had sa id in a pam·
that os v1olenee.
phlet he distributed that he
Stonewall and other sclu':"ls · would kill anyone he sa w
pla ced newspaper ads calling wearing a vest Nov . 1.
for a ret.urn of new texts which
Hamilton Teaford, who was
were removed rrom the Kana- wearing a vest Friday. was
wha County schools several stabbed in the upper left arm
weeks ago m a ban-the-books when he refused to take a
crusade which has provoked
shootings, bomb ings and other
violence.

Lz:an :1 ~~at3 :1

You 're lucky now in situations
where relatives or members of
your immediate family are in volved . Something oul of the
ordinary is about to pop.

GRANT McDONALD
.

Pass

Some declarers lik e to
show off and make a lot of
overtricks. Others, including
pr actica lly ai'l s uc cess ful
rubbe r bridge players, go
·after their contrac t fir st and
work on overtricks later.
With everything breaking
perfectly and all fi nesses
working. South ca n ma ke six
notrump. A pessimist s~es
that bad breaks can beat
three notrump, unless great
care is taken.
· So our pess imistic expe rt
wins the heart lead in hi s own
hand; he leads a diamond to
dummy's ace and a second
diamond toward his hand.
This is a standard sa fety play
designed to produce four diamond tric ks against any 4·1
diamond break. Of cou rse.
there are always four tricks
against any 3-2 brea k.
Assuming East plays low.
South s ticks in: his nine;
cashes the king; r et urns to
dummy with the ace of
spades and knocks out East's
queen of diamonds.
This insures nine tricks,
but if East leads back a
·heart, South can come to 10.
He wins in dummy; cashes
the last diamond; cashes hi s
last high spade and if he h"s
kept count can throw West "'
with a heart and make .h im
lead to the ace· qu een . ·J f
clubs.

Lay aside things that are of a
routine nature today . Try
something new You 've been
wanting to do but haven't got ten around to yet

SPONSORED BY THE FRATERNAL ORDER OF POLICE

3 N. T.

trial for conspiracy to conceal
lop-level involvement in
W:tlergah•. '
The Nc a i·Stein exchange
took place with the jury of eight
blacks and four whiles out of
the courtroom . Neil sa id he
was not objectin g to the
grueling
cross-examination,
but tiM it had "the effect of
making this hoy a victim."
" This hoy ... has done a grea t
deal of preaching from the
witness st~nd, and I have to
meet it, " said Stein, who
represents Parkinson.
As soon as the jury was back
in, Stein asked, l'You committed any number of immoral
acts, didn't you?"
Magruder replied that the
acts had been enumerated in
his one-count charge of conspirac-y to obstruct justice, and
acknowledged, " it's quite a
lengthy list."
Stein sought to depict Magruder, one of the first to break
ranks and· start cooperating
with the prosecutors, as a
" liar 11 with "sticky fingers."
"! never took any money
from the committee and you
know that, Mr . Stein ,"
Magruder said. " That is just
part of the efforts of U1e
defendanis to ma ke me a
sca pegoat."
Magruder said he was
" deeply ashamed" of his role
in planning · Watergate and
helping to cover it up.

Attorney stabbed
near Statehouse

WINNERS NAMED
COLUMBUS (UP!) -"Peter
KwnmWlt of Amherst Steel
won individual hon ors in the
Ohio Hi gh School Athletic
Associa tion cross-coWl try state
meet at Ohio State Universitv
Satwday while Findlay took
team honors 'i n Class AAA ,
Elyria Catholic won Class AA
hon ors and Plymouth took th'e
Class A title .

South

East

BITE A

Lady Luck is likely to reward
you materially at this time in a
way that is rather unusual.
Don 't turn down what appears
to be a white elephant.

PH. 446-96~5

on by-pass

Pass
Opening tead-Q"

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

FOR McDONALD ·-VOTE

_:_

Pass

CANCER (June 21·JUif 22)

...

North

(;(-ucral Robert C. Mard ian
ancl Kenneth W. Parkinson,.
who was . hired by the reelection committee after the
Walergi;ile break-in. are on

I N,T.

Don't sit on any hunches thai
c ome to you today reg arding
memberS ol your family. You' ll
sense things they're not aware

'

Dear Sir:
We choose those who are to govern us by voting. We jealously
guard the right to vote. There are good people on "both sides of
the fence," and today the judiciary is noniJ8111san.
As a wife, l am undoubtedly prejudiced in favor of my
husband . But over the past six years, I have watched htm clean
~ a backlog of cases (some ten to eighteen years old). There
.mast always be some cases pending, allowing llhe attorneys to
ge,t things prepared. For example, the Supreme Court seta a two-year limit for personal injury cases.
Most cases in' our county are civil disputes and divorces. We
are lucky that we have few felony cases. A case is a
disagreeme!'lt -two sides arguing -so they come to court. Will
both sides be happy with the result? Rarely! Ron is knoWll
throughout Ohio for his, ability to help people get together and
reach a settleme~t. This results in many dismissals. Is this easY
to do? No.
Statistics can. be twisted lll8JlY ways,. ~hether It concerns
pr~bation, backlogs, courtroom use, whatever. The few ·rumors
that. I have heard have been amazing. I have seen my friends
support our opponent nwrely on this bSsls. YotJ peopie will
be)ieve what you want. But cases filed and crimes committed
will not change with a new judge. U you think that someone else
would handle these things more efficiently, that is.fine. I only ask
that. you consider the candidates and their backgrounds and
proven abilities, then vote - that is yoilr right.
Mrs. Ronald B. Calhoun
366 Debby Drive, Gallipolis

West

Your budget will appreciate it
if you do more things of a service nature tor yourself. rather
than farm them out and pay another.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) A
good day to get in touch with
one you've met recentl y who
impressed you as being a per son ol unusual interests .
Knowledge will be gained.

Genera l

Jnlm N. Mitcht• ll , former While
House a ides H. R. Haldeman
and .J ohn D. Ehr li chm a n,
former Ass is ta n t Atto~ney

Berry's World

Both vulnerab le

get a spur-at-the-moment im pulse to get in touch with a pal.
do so. lt will tu m a dull day into
somethif19 exciting .

ADVANCED TICK£TS..............................~2~00

AUTHOR

+

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

GALLIPOLIS HIGH SCHOOL ·

JAMES

FAMISH

+

.,

prliS('eul.iun witnc~s.
Former Attorney

rl ircctor , probably will fini'h

Another a ccident was inGALLIPOLIS - A deer was
killed in an acciden t at 4:45 vestigated on Wood's Mill Rd .
a.m. Saturday on the Rt. 35 Bv· five tenths of a mile south of
Pass hwere the animal ran into Mt. Olive Rd. where cars
the path of a ca r operated by driven by Mildred M. McGraw;
Eddie A. Green, 27, Hartville, 52, Bidwell , and Ricky B.
Tiwmas, 23, Gallipolis Ferry,
Ohio.
The Gallia-Meigs Post State W. Va. went into ditches to
Hi ghwa y Patrol investigated a avoid a collision. There was no
si ngle car accident at 9:35p.m. contact between the vehicles.
'
Friday on R\, 588. fo ur tenths of
a mile west of Bob McCormi ck
VIRGINIA LOSES
Rd. where the left rear tire
CHAPEL
HILL. N. C. t UP!)
blew on a ca r·operated by Tony
Quarterback
Chris Kupec
Lee Slone, 19, of Ga llipolis .
The in cident caused Slone to .ran fo r one touchdown and
lose control of his vehicle passed for another Saturday,
which ran off the highw ay. leadi ng North Carolina to a 24Slone complained of minor 10 Atlantic Coast Conference
victory over Virginia .
injuries.

NORTH
2
• A74
'K8
AJ532
"'75 3
WEST
EAST
. 92
.QJ10 5
, 632
' QJ!094
+4
+Qt08 7
"'Kto864
"'J9
SOUTH IDI
• K863
'A7 5
K116
"'AQ 2

ot.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) II you

NOVEM.BER 23rd

his l t·~ tiu u my Monday as;~ key

making th is hoy a victim."
Defense lawyer Jacob A. Stein
replied that •'this
has
done a great dea l of preaching
from the witness stand ."
Neal and Stein traded the
retorts dw·ing Stein's sharp

Deer killed

xxr r

\n,••••·r: I ·,,wll11 mmlt • llfl hflrl'llrllt'II.' ~ FACES

..

JIM BLACKSTONE

"Elect A Full Time Representative "

Support urged of husband

CURRY

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AND

GLENN

PEACE

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

TENNESSEE
WALKERS
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FOR

1 'T

Safety play can save contract

AND THE

examination had "the effect nf

to form the surpriSE~ answer, as

WIN AT BRIDGE

BILLY WALKER

books' return

Friday as the
Waterga~e conspiracy ,trial
complet ed its fifth week .

1,\n . .. .. r. ''"'"'" ·' •

JIIIUIIII· ... :

..;,;

Mc1grud('r, 39, who w;.ts former
PreRi dcnt H.ichard \1 . Nixon's
de pu ty
· 1972
ca mpuign

:-;ow arran•• the rirded lette"

Plitt lite 51•= ANSWER here

. I

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

Richfield and Standard Oil of
Strauss to Janice Maxine
Reuter, 1.2 Acre , Bedford.
Paul Simon, Allee Simon to
Robert J . Eynon , Caralyn Sue
Eynon, Parcel, Ches ler. ·

By WESLEY G. PIPPERT
WA ~ HI N! ;TON ( UPI) G11 ief trial prosecutor James~·.
Neal
said
the
cross-

Magruder

~=s~~~~~~~~~,~·=ug=g=•=•tJed by tnt abon cartoon.
....... to •nlu• ·,.
.

Students as}&lt;.

qu es tionin g of J eb Stuart

60 ' !MCK ANl7 FOI&lt;:TH
TE~~IN6 JOKES.

I

L

JUDY HUNT

JOHN

I

yA.;
T¥/]..A_(;_t,......J~-,.--,

PLUS

ENDORSED
BY

I I

Magruder victimized ·says lawyer

boy ...

..

JAMES

'

l lns(' ramblt•lht•st• f1M.Ir Jumhlt•s,
' one lt•tlt•r to t"nch squnrc, t~ •
form four ordinar)' ~ ..-·urds.
'

JAMES A. BENNETT

RONALD H.

The oldest and mos t important order of English knight·
hood is the Order of the
Garter, founded in 1346 by
King Edward Ill.

JIWI~~;-;:;;;,i~=r:::.

plants.
The state Is ·also working in '
conjunction with Texas Gas •
TransmissiOn Corp., Owens·
horo, Ky., to obtain federal
help in locating a pilot plllllt to
make natura l gas.out of coal in
western Kentucky.
The pilot plant in eastern
Kentucky will bW"n 500 tons of
l'Oal eaCh day and will test the
fossil fuel brought · in from
other areas of the country.
Technicians say they can
obtain from one and one-third
to one and one-half barrels of
oil from each ton of coal in the

·t

�'.

•

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;Ford pleads .for .voters
': iQ reject hig spenders

l

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'

~.~~CIIARDLAKE LERNER
CITY·(UPI) - ·
, """' .
J A tired . PJ'esident Ford barn; stormed hla way home SatW'.. day on a JI!JIIl GOP campll.ign
. swing . through the West,
exbortlilg
to reject th~
: ,Congresmonal 'big spe~.ers
~-- ~d save .~rica from rag· ..~ lnfla\inn. ·
. fo~d wound up hls !!tree-day
IAlUr 11) !he grand whist~e:&amp;op
. , style of tradiUonal Pl?hlicsflying from his ovenught stop
·at Portland, Ore.; to Salt Lake
:.. City for a spee.ch and a r~Uy
·and then retlll'nmg to Washmgton via stops at Gra~d Junelion, Colo., and Wtclnta, Kan.
;At the Salt Lake City airport
·be was met by two of his sons,
. .Jack, 22, a forestry senior at
·•

Utah State University, and'
Steven,J8, ":ho ls working as a
ranch hand m Lolo, Mont.
The President showed signs
Of strain-his eyes a bit reddened, his complexion pale as he ~rrived in Salt Lake City
m brtght sunshme · to help
Mayor Jake Gam in a close ·
Senate
race
agamst
Democratic Rep . Wayne
OwellB .
.
Ford has campaigned in 19
states over 24 days in his efforts to prevent heavy Demoera tic
gains ' in
the
CongresSional and statehouse
elections Tuesday. and he
hammered away at hts favortte
them inflation - again
Saturday In a speech prepared
for delivery to a Utah GOP

•1

votet;s

SUNDAY
&amp;
MONDAY

'

Plenty Of .·
Free

OPEII

SUNDAY
1-7

NOVEMBER 3 &amp; 4

Pa.,-king

1•••

BOYS PERM-PRESS

LADIES NYLON

SLACi&lt;S

SHIRTS

Sizes 4-7
Solid &amp;

Sizes

Fancies

S-M-L

VINYL PONCHO

:O ffice. staffs ·
:worrying hard·
~:about election

BODY

Poly &amp; Colton

~.·-~:.~.-~.=G_;______

........

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

$199

s_-. .

Heck's Reg. s2.58

WRANGLER
SLEEPING
BAG
.
.

3PAIR

"'

Sports Dept.

Heck's
'·

Reg. •3.88

'1599

Cfothlng !)ept.

· · · "It'~ lo!Jgh on the nerves,' 111 .....
tell ·you," · ~q~ld · Roy Jtilian,
"You have to realize It's not
; adlilinlstr.ive assistant to Rep. the- beginning and end of the
· Dick ·Shoup, R-Mont. "You world," said Ann Monahan
' never)lliow what way It'll go.'' Javita' special assistant. Sh~
: Obllervers rate Shoup's race was a staff aide to Sen. Charles
. against Democrat Max S. Goodell, R·N.Y.., when he lost
Baucus a tossup.
to Jamea Buckley in '1970,
" AJ!Qther . mail considered In
She said the Javits' staff was
· troUble .. is Rep. Joseph J. "all optimistic ... but .the year
Marazltl, R·N.J ., a vocal ·· of Watergate-who knows what
: supDOrieJ. of, fonner President they're going to do when they
\ ~d·•M. Wixon during the enter the voting bbQth:•• . : '
Hotiae ' lmpe;~clun'ent lnqufry.
The atmosphere In the office
Sarah Brady, manager of his of Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kans.,
Washington office, said she was was opllmlstic because recent
"really nervous" about the polls have showed him gaining.
Tuesday outcome, but "not
" Our (mood) Is very upbeat,"
· · anticipating a loss."
said Mike Barody, an aide.
"We ali have home mort- "We think we're going to win. "
But he added : "It's a close
-gages to make,"· sh!! .added.,
~ "There will be a Jot of Htll race."
·
peaple with no place to go." · Johanns Schrambling, press
·She said' olher government assistant to Sen. Marlow w.
agencies appeared swamped Cook, R-Ky., said news pr~dicwith applications.
lions that Cook would lose were
At the office of Sen. Jacob'K. · "sort of demoralizing.
Javits, R-N.Y., who Is favored
"But we don't think he's
by lite polls, there were fears a going to lose. Nobody's made
Dem~tic gubernatorial land- any contingent plans."
Asked whether she were
slide could give Javits' Senate
oeat to hls opponent, Ramsey nervous, she nodded her head
Clark.
'
silently.

HECK'S REG. 123.88

$289
'

Brand ·

$588
Hardware Dept.

I

TROUBLE LIGHT
WITH 25 FT. CORD
UL APPROVED
MIN. SO PSI STORE

''t

$177

~ · ~..
. ~

HARDWARE DEPT.

l'

CosmetiC Dept•.

'""

Heck's Reg. 84•
Cosmetic Dept.

·Cosmetic .

14' OZ. DUPONT

RALLY .
CREAM
. WAX

69'

$100

Heck's Reg.

• Fine line brush
• Eaay 10 apply

99¢

Heclr's Reg. $2.19

(

Reg, 13.24

'1.47

15 oz. Net
Dupont
ENGINE
CLEANER

...

Heck'~

Heck's Reg. '·

Park

.

By JOANNA FIRESTONE .' ,
DETROIT (UPI) - Gov.
Wllllam · G. • Milliken · said
Saturday he will not disavow or
.clump his:running. mate, James
J. : ~. !he center of
.explosive conflict of interest
cbarges. ·' .
· Enierglng from a day of
seclusion and oonsultatlon in
Lansing, the GOP Incumbent
Said be reviewed all charges
and conSidered them baseless.
· Dlnlmall, grim faced and
harleM claiped behind hls back'
iltood ~ to Milliken as the
gOVlii'IIOI' battled the gravest
-criail ' of his )iollttcal .career'
with only 72 hours to go before

IIB'T.

Model

71LC

PORTABLE

VAC

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T.V. SNACK
TABLE .
KOTEX
40's

Heck's Reg.
SI9.96

Housewares Dept.

LINTICULAR

'14"

A truly ch;orl'!"ling feeder wifh glon '
pa_nel on bofh sides ond an adj usfo·
ble· roof for 8osy feed refill.
9'' x'9 " x9".

320L

STEP SAVER

c...k.~· ~ .,._·, Worb w1t11 .... '-..til'fi"'i inilt ..
o.li- .....,.,.. ........................ RMt . . . • ,.......
•• • 10 W,. . . . 4 s-It ...,.. fer .n ....,.,.,.... ,

CIOICE

'

.

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O.R

""lo$ti119

Heck's Reg. 12.39

99(

VANWYCK

·$11 77

CAN OPENER &amp;

.

KNIFE SHARPENER

'UTTEIGUARD
Aluminum Gutter Guari:l
mea~"ring · 6"x25' Pre-·
vents leaves and BrcinC:h·
es fram Collecting in
Gutters. ·
.

$2.44

~-Ali-T.

. HECK'S REG.

$5.44

NAftWA/11/IIJIT. .

. • 799

'

• Heck's .Rea- s10.96
' Jewelly Dept.

i

(

••

..

.•
\

I'

§:: . .

Rhodes asks
honest vole

SALT LAKE CITY (UPI)- President Ford had a happy
rellllioo with two of hls sons during a campaign villi to Utah
Saturday. "J.iow are you doing oo the job?" Jack FOrd asked
u he grasped his father 's arm affectionately, The President
just laughed.
·
Jack, Z%, Is a forestry studeot at Utah Slate Uolverslty.
Steven, 18, a ranch band near LoJo, Mont., wore a much
uaed pair of faded Levla, cowboy boots and a brown Stelloo
hat when he greeted his father, "I should have woro my
cowboy hat," Ford said as he glanced at hls youuger soo's
attire. Thursday In Fresno, Calif., Mayor Denills Pringle of
Clovll, Calif., gave Ford a 10i!aUon hat to make him a "real

westem cowboy."
Ford took Sleven's hat and tried It oa himself. "It looks
better on me than oo you,'' the Presldeotoald.

"He remains at bed rest and
Is being enCouraged to cough
and deep breathe In order to
maintain good respiratory
functlop and expansion." .
!

Lungren said that barring
any Significant change the next
health report would he Issued
aro!Uld 9 a.m. PST Sunday
(noon E;ST) .
·

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Albert expects
GOP beating
WASHINGTON (UP!) - HoUJe Speaker Carl
Albert said Saturday President Ford's "hard sell"
campaigning will not spare the Republicans a
terrific beating at the polls this week, because voters
have inflation on their minds "and tlley blame ~he
administration."
"·
-.. ···· '
Aild while you might expect Mr. Democrat to
say that, he has beet! checking voter sentiment
lately - traveling, in fact, aboard an Air Force

/a
t
.L' a,,.,z y zncome p
n ge s
look by administration f!:e~~d~~~v~~~~-on a pay-as-you-fly basis by, well,
V

...!., ~~

•

WASHINGTON (UP!) the aged, blind and disabled.
President Ford ls considering
These would be replaced by a
ilcrapp.ing most of the nstion's government cash payment of
welfare system .and sub- $3,600a year to a famUy of (OW'
stituting a guaranteed family having no other income. If a
Income plan.
famlly member finds work, the
Assistant Press Secretary payment would continue !Ul!U
Larry Speakes said Friday that ihe family income reached
Ford has circulated the $'1,200.
proposal for comment among
The proposal seemed to
·government officials but has follow the general lines Of
not decided whether to send It guaranteed income plallB sup.
to Congress.
ported under other names and
The tentative "income with different features by
supplement program," drafted former President Richard
at Ford's request, would Nixon and Sen. George S.
replace
three
welfare McGov,e rn,
the
1972
programs which Ford con· Democratic presidential
siders wa steful and in- candidate.
flationary --lood stamps, aid to
The Nixon administration's
dependent children and sup. jjFamily Assistance Plan "
plemental security Income for passed the House, with the
·
backing of Ford, then House
Republican floor leader, but
dled In the Senate. It provided
$2,400 ·a year for a family of
four. One criticism leveled
against It by Democrats was
that no family could live on
that
amount.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
·President
Lyndon B. Johnson
Kentucky town just over the
West VIrginia border was also supported Income mtaranchosen Friday as the site for im tee proposals In various areas
$8.1 ~illlon plant to change but never sent a proposal to
Congress.
coal Into Hquid fuel.
·Sen, Marlow W. Cook,I\-Ky.,
making the .announcement
. '
said the town of CatlettsbW'g in
Boyd county has been chosen
FIRST TO DIE
by the Interior Department as
BERKELEY,
Calif. I UP!) Ute site for the pilot-type plant.
A young man jumped in front
Both the U. S. government and
&lt;1 a Bay Area Rapid Transit
private industry would share
train Friday and became the
the cost of the construction of
first suicide in the two-year
the plant, Cook said, with the
government paying $5.4 mlllion hlslllry of the rail system. The
victim was Identified as
and private Industry paying
Stephen Zelonls, 24, Berkeley.
$2.7•million.
·

Cat1ettsburg to
get pllot plant

.

Martha says Nixonites spread lies

,.

..

'

are concerned, he Is on their
critical list because the
doctors have ordered critical
care
and
have
given nuroes a list of
dangers. UnW the point of the
dangers Is passed, he Is going
to be on their critical list.
"This applies to former
.
Presidents
or Mr. Jones-W
bulletin said !he former
Pre.Sident had no mdlcations o( anyooe."
Of the dramatic meeting
fW'ther intenJal bleeding and
Friday
between Nixon and
that he would be given light
Ford,
Lungren
said,
oral feeding for the first time
Slnce .he lapsed into shock and " President Gerald FOrd's visit
almos! .died following an Friday was a therapeutic boost
for former President Nixon."
operation last Tueaday. ·
Mrs. Nixon told White House
'"!be former President of the
United States remains under phySician Dr. Wllliam Oukash
critical care at Memorial that she thought the Ford visit
Hospital Medical qmter of to her husband's bedside had
1
Long Beioch,'' said" \he Btate- dohe him' a lot ol gj&gt;OO.
Since the operatlon to Insert
ment Signed l!Y pr. John
Lungren, Nixon's personal a plastlc clip to block
movement of blood clots and
physician.
·
"He had a fairly restful the relapse afterward, Nixon
night. AU vital Signs this had. been given noW'Ishment
morning are stable and satls- intravenously.
Lungren said that he would
factory."
Almost 96 hours had passed now be given liquids and such
Since Tuesday.' s crisis and It foods as Jello and consomme
had been anticipated from orally,
The former President also
previous doctors' stat~ents
that the 61-year-old Ntxon had 'ecelved six units of red
might be removed from the cell blood tranafuSions. The
SatW'day bulletin said he had
critical category by now.
Newsmen pressed hospital required no additional blood
spoke~ Norm Nager on since ThW'sday;
" There are no indications of
th~t pomt.
continued
oozing of blood and
Some o( the information
this mo~.nlng w~s en- the hematoma or msss of blood
In hls ,left Oarik shows no
couragmg, Nager SBld.
"11!11 as far as our personnel evidence of enlar~~." It said.

.forced layoffs

HICK'S RIG •.

IIKX'IIIM:

Spirits up

PA~E_2_1

Happy reunion with two sons

17,000 begin

$166

UCI ..
&lt;

MOVIE SCREEN

Heck's Reg. .
SI5.96

SHINE ·

!

a critical election.
whlle a Troy city official in the
The newspaper said DamMilliken handpicked the 41- late 1960s.
man and several other
year-old suburl1an Troy buS!·
Milliken 8nd DaJJiman halted members · of the Troy city
nessman as his candidate for . campaigning early ·Friday to council secretly purchased
lieutenant governor, but Dam· deal with the crlsls.
prOJierty while helping dral" up
man's political future was
"It Is my strong belief that a master zoning plan for the
clouded by reports he abused Mr. Damman, as . a - public Detroit suburb.
hls office and enriched himself servant, did not violate the
The governor said his ' inpublic trust, did not use hls vestigation showed that
office for personal gain 8Dd did Damman earned about $5,000
not abuse his.,.,_.,.. Milliken over a five-year period as a
result of land pW'chases he
said.
.
But he' C&lt;lllceded that the made in Troy ,
"I believe anyone who might
charges may dlimage his OWn
be
governor must meet the test
nH!lectlon ~specta Tuesday.
Milliken ls engaged In a tight of . public scrutiny," MUUken
battle with Doimocratlc chal:' con~uded. "My running mate,
EAST lJVERPOOL, ' Ohio Ienger Sander M. Levin, .!,Yho · Jim Damman, · has met the
. '
(UP!) - Eorriter Gov. Jamea · lost to Milliken four years ago test. ~'
A. Rhodes, campaigning for a by 44,000 votes.
The ·political shoek that
third tenn, Saturday called for
ALARM ANSWERED
Ohioans to "vote yoW' honest erupted with the Damman
GALLIPOLIS
Fire
,coovictions" in TueSday's gen- affair eVer! led Levin to cancel ·
fighters here Saturday moreral electloo in which he is two engagements Friday night · ning answered · an alarm to
attempting to unseat Gov. John to await' developments.
Cottage R at the GSI. Ac· i&gt;E'l'R6rr (UPI) - Nearly J . GUilgan. ·
Levin said earlier he would cording to the deparbnent, a
17,000 u. s. auto workers begin
"There are vital Issues to. he withhold ' conunent untU after malfunction sounded the
forced layoffs Monday because . decided by Ohioans, and for Milliken sPolte.
alarm.
their bollles. mlljudged the Ohioans," Rhodeit aald 1n a
Milliken 8lao said he 1s
reception the higher-priced campaign stop bere, ''Never IW'nlng over all Information·he
llllall cars WOuld ·get from · was It more Important for the reviewed to the a~torney
economy-minded AmeriC8lll. · futW'e of thls. great state that general's office, which aald ·
' Three' Ford Motor Co. Its people \lote Ute!r convic· Thuradayltlslilvestlga!lngthe
planta and ' one Chrysler Corp. Ilona.
·
case.
CHICAGo (UPI) - Marlha
1111a11 car usembly plan! will
"Whether you are RepubHe asked Attorney General Mitchell says rumors of her
be elosed one week with llcan, Democrat, or Indepen- Frarik. J . Kelley a Demooa-at excessive drinking were
G.neraJ Motors cutting blicll:. dent;'' RhOdes said, '"If you do . who a11o Ia -~ I'Hiectlon, sj,read by members of the
aGiput at filar 1111811 car planls not vote yoW' honest convlc- to make public his review as Nixon admlnlatratlon, but that
the lollowlnll Monday. Nearl7 lions, tho! burning lasiles of this earlyasposSble ''hopefully no a talk show boat's questioo on
. JI,!IOO "'fl'bs'a wiD be laid off campaign will be decided by ·later than the ~ of Nonm- her drinking · Is not what
te•q•..arlly,wlthanotilei'I,OOO thefewforthemany."
ber."·
· started hei' crying after the
kiled IDdeflDitely, to pulh the
Rhodes said that OhiO&amp;IlB
Milliken Gl)elled the news . ihow tl)ls week.
npnbet of pennanent layotra must decide If they want to conference by rea~ sevenMrs.•Mitchell, wife of former
'to 51,0oo In the nat two weeks. .k~ the state Income tax from page statement tlilit outlined Attorney Gena:al JOhn MltchFord;a sinall car~~~ fac:e beinB doubled; if they ·Wlffit ~ the case against Daoiman, as . ell, starled crying ThW'Sday
and one week off make .'l""~ all of ~ state · .published by tbe Detroit Free after. the production of a
00e
operatiGIII the remalncler of income ta,lt money · gc:'"s· to Presa, .
. . ·
_, Chicago television show,
llteyelltaspartofanl'NhJIIry- aehools •d If they feellt Is a · The newapaJier alleged that' ·Kennedy &amp; Company.
wide cut~ 100,000 c~ from better policy to create jobs DaJ;IIIllan was guilty of
During" the show, Mrs .
, plalined fourth
. . quarter ~lead of fllllil!! up welfare "sublerfuge, proOteer!n8 aRc! Mitchell 1i!as asked to comproclu&lt;fon sc~Jles.
rolls.
rtlr• abuse 1of power."
.
" I

. .

ALUMINUM

BIRD.FEEDER ·.

'N.

HAIR.SETTER

\.·

_RIDWOOD

KLEAN

SCHICK MIST

King Size
$119

•129
Reg. s2.01 ·

. J50L

MORE STREETS PAVED - The MGM Paving Company of Gallipolis has been working for the past week doing
hotofllix paving in the Village of Syracuse. A total of over
$9,500 was spent by the vUhlge on the paving project . MGM
Pavmg workers are shown above laying asphaltic concrete in
the new upper addition of ~usti~ Hills. in the smaller pictW'e,
Ro":' Br.~nham of Harrtsonville, superintendent for the
pavmg fil'm, operates a roller on the project.

_VO_L_
. 9_ N0_._
40_ _ __ _ _ ·~S_UN_D_AY_
, _NO_V_EM_B_ER_ 3_
, 1_97_4___ _ _ __

M]llikin stands with Damman

AIITOIIIOTWI

Automotive Dept.

oi

events.
·
"He ls very tir~," Press
Secretary Ronald Nessen told
reporters. '"lbere's no doubt
about it."
In the Utah 'speech, Ford also
said the . feder!l' bureacracy
must be decentralized.
'"!be, day Is. past when an
octclpJ!S·Iike government In
Washington can slretch Its
tentacles across the natiOn and
squeeze Itself mote and more
power,',' he.-id; "Now we have
to chop off thOse tenta~s.
"And as each of those ten·
tacles withers we have to
return the po~ and the
revenues they have grasped .
back to the states and
Ioealities."
By the time he reiW'ns to
Washlilgton, Ford will have
traveled 16,68S miles In hls ·
month-long campaigning.

Cosmetic Dept.

Heck's Reg. s1.47

'1.89 .

Heck's Reg. s1.59

84'

'119

HECK'S
REG.

meetil)g. .
"Du! Jesson of the past few
decades has been 8 basic one- .
We cannot spi,nd our way to
happiness but . we can spend
ourselves into debt and we can
spend the nation ~alght · into
raging inflation," he said.
"That Is why ~ing the past
few weeks 1 have been
speaking out for realistic,
flSC8lly responsible Congres,
sional candidates.
" ...If the big spenders win
heavlly on Nov·. 5 we are in
danger of electing~ vetoiJI'oof
rather than an inflation proof
Congress."
. Ford began thls Dna! campalgn swing Thursday with
stops in Iowa and c8lltornia
keeping up a hectic pace
attendance at civic gatherings,
political meetings, fund·
raising dinners and public

WASHINGTON &lt;UPI&gt; - One large, Republican,.flavored tranquilizer is needed badly on Capitol Hill.
.
Not so much for the 14 GOP senators and 187
; House members seeking re-election, but for their
LONG BEACH, Calif. (UP!)
thousands of office staffers.
·
· -Given a "therapeutic boost"
If predictions of Republican losses are by the surprise visit of
J IDY.Where near the mark, many of them will be out President Ford, Richard :M.
Nixon was reported SatW'day
.. ¢work·- just when the unemployment rate is rising to be showing stable and
.,anil the .nation beset by inflation.
satisfactory vital sigllB but
,, A-bout 6,000 House employes and 1,000 Senate Stu.! on tbe critical list.
' empl()yes could be affected by Tuesday's election.
The morning medical

GREAT-lAsli
kit

'

'

.~

$.500

HECK'S REG. S2.99
_ _.sP.-ORTS DEPT.

....

--.

Perfect for ra iny doy ~unting a nd watchini}
or playing your fa vorite outdoor sport.

i

J ;~./ Jl

teiHng about getting an lnvitatl~n to deliver a speech -that
Is to preach -at the largest
synagogue In America, and
that made me emotlooal just
thinking about It and·! started
crying."
She said rumors spread
about her drtrdtlng were falae
and ."part of · the (Nixon) admlnlstration's policy to
discredit women .~' Some
people in the· Nixon Wi'Jte
House, , she said, also had
Friday.
spread
nunors that Betty Ford
~ said she' began' crying
had
a
problem
with
because .\'at the end of the show
I was ~ed about going oo a tranquilizers and ·that .Manile
lectW'e ,JWr and 'I s~ Eiaenhowerc~t&amp;aDk ·to ex~; ,

mont on reports concerning her
c;onsumptlon of
alcoholic
beverages. She replied that
Individuals In the Nixon admlnistra lion had spread
rumors that she was a heavy
drinker.
·
"Yes, it'S true I staited
crying. Butit wasn't because of
any talk about liqoor and any
'l"wspaper story that says that
iS wrong, n 1 she said in a
telephone ln\efview with UP!

'

''

"We're going to have a solid victory," Albert
said in an interview. "Better than average. · We'll
pick up 25 seats at least, problably more, maybe 30."
Democrats now occupy 248 of
the 450 HOuse seats.
"Economic Issues are oo the
minds of the biggest segment
of the population," sald Alber!,
fresh from a two-week campalgn swing through Nebraska,
Dlinois, West Virginia, Texas,
Ohio and his home ·state of
Oklahoma.
"Their pocketbooks have
really been clipped and they
blame the administration."
When Ford came under the
criticism of Democrats
recently for campaigning
Intensively for Republicans
aboard Air Force I, he replied
bY offering Albert -and only
Albert-the use of a government plane to do, in · effect,
some equal-time stumping for
the Democrats. ·
But Albert said he was using
the Air Force jet because the
Secret Service- which protects
him since he II next In Une for
the presidency.· in the absence
of a vice president--believed It
would enhance security, ·
Albert pays a fee which he
believes will be _higheg than
comparable first class com·
mercia! fare. The money
comes out of Democratic
campalgn fun&amp;!.
Both Ford and Albert started
campaigning In earnest after .
Congress recessed Oct. 17.
Their long«andlng friendship,
liullt dW'Ing the years when
they were opposing House
party leaders, was slrained
when Ford warned In a speech
that
a · "veto
proof"
Democratic Congress might

hW'I chances for world peace.
Albert retaliated angrily,
accusing Ford of dlvlalveness
and rhetoric !Ulbecoming a
President.
"I got a letter from him
saying be !Ul&lt;!erstood that I
was sore about what he said in
Denver,"saidAlbert,whowas.
"That (speech) did not do
him any good at all. He has
tried the hard oell and he has
not sold very well."
"The President II not 8s
popular as he was. He has not
hit inflation as hard as he
should and there Is still sorite
resentment about ·the pardon
(of Nixon)," Albert aald.
He said there Is liWe talk
about Watergate or Nixon's
resignation but he did "hear a
lot of grumbling" QVer Ford's
nomination
of
Nelson
Rockefeller for vice president.
"Some people 1ay be lhould
not he confirmed. Some of
them talk ' about the (Aflhur)
Goldberg book and others
about gifts to public ofllclala.
I'm not going to lll8l!e any
statement about It (the
nomination). I still think be
will be conflrmed,"l said
Albert.
Rockefeller belatediy admitted he was aware of Rockefell·
er money going Into a book that
was critical of the former
Supreme Court justice when he
opposed Rockefeller for the
New York gowernonhlp. Rock·
efeller has also admitted
maklog C4Jb gl.'ls to some alate
lind
national
political
Ogw-es.

New Israeli war is near
ByUoltedPresslnternaUonal
The chief spokesman · of the
Palestine Liberation Organization said Saturday another
Arab Will' with Israel "Is
coming soon."
Vasser Abclel Rabbo, the
PLO's director of information,
· outlined at a Beirut news
conference his reasons for
predicting renewed fighting.
They included Israel's refusal
. to withdraw from ocCjipled
Arab territory and tp recognize
.PalestlniaJ) "Identity" in general. and the PLO in particular.
. ."Don't all these points point
· the way to a fifth (.\fab-IS'aeliJ

war?" he asked. "In OW' view
the fifth war is coming soon."
A SovleWIIade Kathyuaha
rncket fired from Lebanese
terrilllry hit the north ls'aeli
town Or Qiryat Shemona Sabir·
d8y but the military command
said there was no damag~ or . ·

casualties.

·

The rocket, capping a week
of Incidents~ both sides of the .
Lebanese border, landed 1$
miles north of. the of
Galllee collective farm where
French Foreign Minister Jean
·Sauvagnarguel spent the laat
night &lt;1 ~ · frlctiOIHIIIItked
laraen visit '
• . '
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;Ford pleads .for .voters
': iQ reject hig spenders

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~.~~CIIARDLAKE LERNER
CITY·(UPI) - ·
, """' .
J A tired . PJ'esident Ford barn; stormed hla way home SatW'.. day on a JI!JIIl GOP campll.ign
. swing . through the West,
exbortlilg
to reject th~
: ,Congresmonal 'big spe~.ers
~-- ~d save .~rica from rag· ..~ lnfla\inn. ·
. fo~d wound up hls !!tree-day
IAlUr 11) !he grand whist~e:&amp;op
. , style of tradiUonal Pl?hlicsflying from his ovenught stop
·at Portland, Ore.; to Salt Lake
:.. City for a spee.ch and a r~Uy
·and then retlll'nmg to Washmgton via stops at Gra~d Junelion, Colo., and Wtclnta, Kan.
;At the Salt Lake City airport
·be was met by two of his sons,
. .Jack, 22, a forestry senior at
·•

Utah State University, and'
Steven,J8, ":ho ls working as a
ranch hand m Lolo, Mont.
The President showed signs
Of strain-his eyes a bit reddened, his complexion pale as he ~rrived in Salt Lake City
m brtght sunshme · to help
Mayor Jake Gam in a close ·
Senate
race
agamst
Democratic Rep . Wayne
OwellB .
.
Ford has campaigned in 19
states over 24 days in his efforts to prevent heavy Demoera tic
gains ' in
the
CongresSional and statehouse
elections Tuesday. and he
hammered away at hts favortte
them inflation - again
Saturday In a speech prepared
for delivery to a Utah GOP

•1

votet;s

SUNDAY
&amp;
MONDAY

'

Plenty Of .·
Free

OPEII

SUNDAY
1-7

NOVEMBER 3 &amp; 4

Pa.,-king

1•••

BOYS PERM-PRESS

LADIES NYLON

SLACi&lt;S

SHIRTS

Sizes 4-7
Solid &amp;

Sizes

Fancies

S-M-L

VINYL PONCHO

:O ffice. staffs ·
:worrying hard·
~:about election

BODY

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~.·-~:.~.-~.=G_;______

........

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$199

s_-. .

Heck's Reg. s2.58

WRANGLER
SLEEPING
BAG
.
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3PAIR

"'

Sports Dept.

Heck's
'·

Reg. •3.88

'1599

Cfothlng !)ept.

· · · "It'~ lo!Jgh on the nerves,' 111 .....
tell ·you," · ~q~ld · Roy Jtilian,
"You have to realize It's not
; adlilinlstr.ive assistant to Rep. the- beginning and end of the
· Dick ·Shoup, R-Mont. "You world," said Ann Monahan
' never)lliow what way It'll go.'' Javita' special assistant. Sh~
: Obllervers rate Shoup's race was a staff aide to Sen. Charles
. against Democrat Max S. Goodell, R·N.Y.., when he lost
Baucus a tossup.
to Jamea Buckley in '1970,
" AJ!Qther . mail considered In
She said the Javits' staff was
· troUble .. is Rep. Joseph J. "all optimistic ... but .the year
Marazltl, R·N.J ., a vocal ·· of Watergate-who knows what
: supDOrieJ. of, fonner President they're going to do when they
\ ~d·•M. Wixon during the enter the voting bbQth:•• . : '
Hotiae ' lmpe;~clun'ent lnqufry.
The atmosphere In the office
Sarah Brady, manager of his of Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kans.,
Washington office, said she was was opllmlstic because recent
"really nervous" about the polls have showed him gaining.
Tuesday outcome, but "not
" Our (mood) Is very upbeat,"
· · anticipating a loss."
said Mike Barody, an aide.
"We ali have home mort- "We think we're going to win. "
But he added : "It's a close
-gages to make,"· sh!! .added.,
~ "There will be a Jot of Htll race."
·
peaple with no place to go." · Johanns Schrambling, press
·She said' olher government assistant to Sen. Marlow w.
agencies appeared swamped Cook, R-Ky., said news pr~dicwith applications.
lions that Cook would lose were
At the office of Sen. Jacob'K. · "sort of demoralizing.
Javits, R-N.Y., who Is favored
"But we don't think he's
by lite polls, there were fears a going to lose. Nobody's made
Dem~tic gubernatorial land- any contingent plans."
Asked whether she were
slide could give Javits' Senate
oeat to hls opponent, Ramsey nervous, she nodded her head
Clark.
'
silently.

HECK'S REG. 123.88

$289
'

Brand ·

$588
Hardware Dept.

I

TROUBLE LIGHT
WITH 25 FT. CORD
UL APPROVED
MIN. SO PSI STORE

''t

$177

~ · ~..
. ~

HARDWARE DEPT.

l'

CosmetiC Dept•.

'""

Heck's Reg. 84•
Cosmetic Dept.

·Cosmetic .

14' OZ. DUPONT

RALLY .
CREAM
. WAX

69'

$100

Heck's Reg.

• Fine line brush
• Eaay 10 apply

99¢

Heclr's Reg. $2.19

(

Reg, 13.24

'1.47

15 oz. Net
Dupont
ENGINE
CLEANER

...

Heck'~

Heck's Reg. '·

Park

.

By JOANNA FIRESTONE .' ,
DETROIT (UPI) - Gov.
Wllllam · G. • Milliken · said
Saturday he will not disavow or
.clump his:running. mate, James
J. : ~. !he center of
.explosive conflict of interest
cbarges. ·' .
· Enierglng from a day of
seclusion and oonsultatlon in
Lansing, the GOP Incumbent
Said be reviewed all charges
and conSidered them baseless.
· Dlnlmall, grim faced and
harleM claiped behind hls back'
iltood ~ to Milliken as the
gOVlii'IIOI' battled the gravest
-criail ' of his )iollttcal .career'
with only 72 hours to go before

IIB'T.

Model

71LC

PORTABLE

VAC

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TABLE .
KOTEX
40's

Heck's Reg.
SI9.96

Housewares Dept.

LINTICULAR

'14"

A truly ch;orl'!"ling feeder wifh glon '
pa_nel on bofh sides ond an adj usfo·
ble· roof for 8osy feed refill.
9'' x'9 " x9".

320L

STEP SAVER

c...k.~· ~ .,._·, Worb w1t11 .... '-..til'fi"'i inilt ..
o.li- .....,.,.. ........................ RMt . . . • ,.......
•• • 10 W,. . . . 4 s-It ...,.. fer .n ....,.,.,.... ,

CIOICE

'

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Heck's Reg. 12.39

99(

VANWYCK

·$11 77

CAN OPENER &amp;

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KNIFE SHARPENER

'UTTEIGUARD
Aluminum Gutter Guari:l
mea~"ring · 6"x25' Pre-·
vents leaves and BrcinC:h·
es fram Collecting in
Gutters. ·
.

$2.44

~-Ali-T.

. HECK'S REG.

$5.44

NAftWA/11/IIJIT. .

. • 799

'

• Heck's .Rea- s10.96
' Jewelly Dept.

i

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§:: . .

Rhodes asks
honest vole

SALT LAKE CITY (UPI)- President Ford had a happy
rellllioo with two of hls sons during a campaign villi to Utah
Saturday. "J.iow are you doing oo the job?" Jack FOrd asked
u he grasped his father 's arm affectionately, The President
just laughed.
·
Jack, Z%, Is a forestry studeot at Utah Slate Uolverslty.
Steven, 18, a ranch band near LoJo, Mont., wore a much
uaed pair of faded Levla, cowboy boots and a brown Stelloo
hat when he greeted his father, "I should have woro my
cowboy hat," Ford said as he glanced at hls youuger soo's
attire. Thursday In Fresno, Calif., Mayor Denills Pringle of
Clovll, Calif., gave Ford a 10i!aUon hat to make him a "real

westem cowboy."
Ford took Sleven's hat and tried It oa himself. "It looks
better on me than oo you,'' the Presldeotoald.

"He remains at bed rest and
Is being enCouraged to cough
and deep breathe In order to
maintain good respiratory
functlop and expansion." .
!

Lungren said that barring
any Significant change the next
health report would he Issued
aro!Uld 9 a.m. PST Sunday
(noon E;ST) .
·

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Albert expects
GOP beating
WASHINGTON (UP!) - HoUJe Speaker Carl
Albert said Saturday President Ford's "hard sell"
campaigning will not spare the Republicans a
terrific beating at the polls this week, because voters
have inflation on their minds "and tlley blame ~he
administration."
"·
-.. ···· '
Aild while you might expect Mr. Democrat to
say that, he has beet! checking voter sentiment
lately - traveling, in fact, aboard an Air Force

/a
t
.L' a,,.,z y zncome p
n ge s
look by administration f!:e~~d~~~v~~~~-on a pay-as-you-fly basis by, well,
V

...!., ~~

•

WASHINGTON (UP!) the aged, blind and disabled.
President Ford ls considering
These would be replaced by a
ilcrapp.ing most of the nstion's government cash payment of
welfare system .and sub- $3,600a year to a famUy of (OW'
stituting a guaranteed family having no other income. If a
Income plan.
famlly member finds work, the
Assistant Press Secretary payment would continue !Ul!U
Larry Speakes said Friday that ihe family income reached
Ford has circulated the $'1,200.
proposal for comment among
The proposal seemed to
·government officials but has follow the general lines Of
not decided whether to send It guaranteed income plallB sup.
to Congress.
ported under other names and
The tentative "income with different features by
supplement program," drafted former President Richard
at Ford's request, would Nixon and Sen. George S.
replace
three
welfare McGov,e rn,
the
1972
programs which Ford con· Democratic presidential
siders wa steful and in- candidate.
flationary --lood stamps, aid to
The Nixon administration's
dependent children and sup. jjFamily Assistance Plan "
plemental security Income for passed the House, with the
·
backing of Ford, then House
Republican floor leader, but
dled In the Senate. It provided
$2,400 ·a year for a family of
four. One criticism leveled
against It by Democrats was
that no family could live on
that
amount.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
·President
Lyndon B. Johnson
Kentucky town just over the
West VIrginia border was also supported Income mtaranchosen Friday as the site for im tee proposals In various areas
$8.1 ~illlon plant to change but never sent a proposal to
Congress.
coal Into Hquid fuel.
·Sen, Marlow W. Cook,I\-Ky.,
making the .announcement
. '
said the town of CatlettsbW'g in
Boyd county has been chosen
FIRST TO DIE
by the Interior Department as
BERKELEY,
Calif. I UP!) Ute site for the pilot-type plant.
A young man jumped in front
Both the U. S. government and
&lt;1 a Bay Area Rapid Transit
private industry would share
train Friday and became the
the cost of the construction of
first suicide in the two-year
the plant, Cook said, with the
government paying $5.4 mlllion hlslllry of the rail system. The
victim was Identified as
and private Industry paying
Stephen Zelonls, 24, Berkeley.
$2.7•million.
·

Cat1ettsburg to
get pllot plant

.

Martha says Nixonites spread lies

,.

..

'

are concerned, he Is on their
critical list because the
doctors have ordered critical
care
and
have
given nuroes a list of
dangers. UnW the point of the
dangers Is passed, he Is going
to be on their critical list.
"This applies to former
.
Presidents
or Mr. Jones-W
bulletin said !he former
Pre.Sident had no mdlcations o( anyooe."
Of the dramatic meeting
fW'ther intenJal bleeding and
Friday
between Nixon and
that he would be given light
Ford,
Lungren
said,
oral feeding for the first time
Slnce .he lapsed into shock and " President Gerald FOrd's visit
almos! .died following an Friday was a therapeutic boost
for former President Nixon."
operation last Tueaday. ·
Mrs. Nixon told White House
'"!be former President of the
United States remains under phySician Dr. Wllliam Oukash
critical care at Memorial that she thought the Ford visit
Hospital Medical qmter of to her husband's bedside had
1
Long Beioch,'' said" \he Btate- dohe him' a lot ol gj&gt;OO.
Since the operatlon to Insert
ment Signed l!Y pr. John
Lungren, Nixon's personal a plastlc clip to block
movement of blood clots and
physician.
·
"He had a fairly restful the relapse afterward, Nixon
night. AU vital Signs this had. been given noW'Ishment
morning are stable and satls- intravenously.
Lungren said that he would
factory."
Almost 96 hours had passed now be given liquids and such
Since Tuesday.' s crisis and It foods as Jello and consomme
had been anticipated from orally,
The former President also
previous doctors' stat~ents
that the 61-year-old Ntxon had 'ecelved six units of red
might be removed from the cell blood tranafuSions. The
SatW'day bulletin said he had
critical category by now.
Newsmen pressed hospital required no additional blood
spoke~ Norm Nager on since ThW'sday;
" There are no indications of
th~t pomt.
continued
oozing of blood and
Some o( the information
this mo~.nlng w~s en- the hematoma or msss of blood
In hls ,left Oarik shows no
couragmg, Nager SBld.
"11!11 as far as our personnel evidence of enlar~~." It said.

.forced layoffs

HICK'S RIG •.

IIKX'IIIM:

Spirits up

PA~E_2_1

Happy reunion with two sons

17,000 begin

$166

UCI ..
&lt;

MOVIE SCREEN

Heck's Reg. .
SI5.96

SHINE ·

!

a critical election.
whlle a Troy city official in the
The newspaper said DamMilliken handpicked the 41- late 1960s.
man and several other
year-old suburl1an Troy buS!·
Milliken 8nd DaJJiman halted members · of the Troy city
nessman as his candidate for . campaigning early ·Friday to council secretly purchased
lieutenant governor, but Dam· deal with the crlsls.
prOJierty while helping dral" up
man's political future was
"It Is my strong belief that a master zoning plan for the
clouded by reports he abused Mr. Damman, as . a - public Detroit suburb.
hls office and enriched himself servant, did not violate the
The governor said his ' inpublic trust, did not use hls vestigation showed that
office for personal gain 8Dd did Damman earned about $5,000
not abuse his.,.,_.,.. Milliken over a five-year period as a
result of land pW'chases he
said.
.
But he' C&lt;lllceded that the made in Troy ,
"I believe anyone who might
charges may dlimage his OWn
be
governor must meet the test
nH!lectlon ~specta Tuesday.
Milliken ls engaged In a tight of . public scrutiny," MUUken
battle with Doimocratlc chal:' con~uded. "My running mate,
EAST lJVERPOOL, ' Ohio Ienger Sander M. Levin, .!,Yho · Jim Damman, · has met the
. '
(UP!) - Eorriter Gov. Jamea · lost to Milliken four years ago test. ~'
A. Rhodes, campaigning for a by 44,000 votes.
The ·political shoek that
third tenn, Saturday called for
ALARM ANSWERED
Ohioans to "vote yoW' honest erupted with the Damman
GALLIPOLIS
Fire
,coovictions" in TueSday's gen- affair eVer! led Levin to cancel ·
fighters here Saturday moreral electloo in which he is two engagements Friday night · ning answered · an alarm to
attempting to unseat Gov. John to await' developments.
Cottage R at the GSI. Ac· i&gt;E'l'R6rr (UPI) - Nearly J . GUilgan. ·
Levin said earlier he would cording to the deparbnent, a
17,000 u. s. auto workers begin
"There are vital Issues to. he withhold ' conunent untU after malfunction sounded the
forced layoffs Monday because . decided by Ohioans, and for Milliken sPolte.
alarm.
their bollles. mlljudged the Ohioans," Rhodeit aald 1n a
Milliken 8lao said he 1s
reception the higher-priced campaign stop bere, ''Never IW'nlng over all Information·he
llllall cars WOuld ·get from · was It more Important for the reviewed to the a~torney
economy-minded AmeriC8lll. · futW'e of thls. great state that general's office, which aald ·
' Three' Ford Motor Co. Its people \lote Ute!r convic· Thuradayltlslilvestlga!lngthe
planta and ' one Chrysler Corp. Ilona.
·
case.
CHICAGo (UPI) - Marlha
1111a11 car usembly plan! will
"Whether you are RepubHe asked Attorney General Mitchell says rumors of her
be elosed one week with llcan, Democrat, or Indepen- Frarik. J . Kelley a Demooa-at excessive drinking were
G.neraJ Motors cutting blicll:. dent;'' RhOdes said, '"If you do . who a11o Ia -~ I'Hiectlon, sj,read by members of the
aGiput at filar 1111811 car planls not vote yoW' honest convlc- to make public his review as Nixon admlnlatratlon, but that
the lollowlnll Monday. Nearl7 lions, tho! burning lasiles of this earlyasposSble ''hopefully no a talk show boat's questioo on
. JI,!IOO "'fl'bs'a wiD be laid off campaign will be decided by ·later than the ~ of Nonm- her drinking · Is not what
te•q•..arlly,wlthanotilei'I,OOO thefewforthemany."
ber."·
· started hei' crying after the
kiled IDdeflDitely, to pulh the
Rhodes said that OhiO&amp;IlB
Milliken Gl)elled the news . ihow tl)ls week.
npnbet of pennanent layotra must decide If they want to conference by rea~ sevenMrs.•Mitchell, wife of former
'to 51,0oo In the nat two weeks. .k~ the state Income tax from page statement tlilit outlined Attorney Gena:al JOhn MltchFord;a sinall car~~~ fac:e beinB doubled; if they ·Wlffit ~ the case against Daoiman, as . ell, starled crying ThW'Sday
and one week off make .'l""~ all of ~ state · .published by tbe Detroit Free after. the production of a
00e
operatiGIII the remalncler of income ta,lt money · gc:'"s· to Presa, .
. . ·
_, Chicago television show,
llteyelltaspartofanl'NhJIIry- aehools •d If they feellt Is a · The newapaJier alleged that' ·Kennedy &amp; Company.
wide cut~ 100,000 c~ from better policy to create jobs DaJ;IIIllan was guilty of
During" the show, Mrs .
, plalined fourth
. . quarter ~lead of fllllil!! up welfare "sublerfuge, proOteer!n8 aRc! Mitchell 1i!as asked to comproclu&lt;fon sc~Jles.
rolls.
rtlr• abuse 1of power."
.
" I

. .

ALUMINUM

BIRD.FEEDER ·.

'N.

HAIR.SETTER

\.·

_RIDWOOD

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King Size
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•129
Reg. s2.01 ·

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MORE STREETS PAVED - The MGM Paving Company of Gallipolis has been working for the past week doing
hotofllix paving in the Village of Syracuse. A total of over
$9,500 was spent by the vUhlge on the paving project . MGM
Pavmg workers are shown above laying asphaltic concrete in
the new upper addition of ~usti~ Hills. in the smaller pictW'e,
Ro":' Br.~nham of Harrtsonville, superintendent for the
pavmg fil'm, operates a roller on the project.

_VO_L_
. 9_ N0_._
40_ _ __ _ _ ·~S_UN_D_AY_
, _NO_V_EM_B_ER_ 3_
, 1_97_4___ _ _ __

M]llikin stands with Damman

AIITOIIIOTWI

Automotive Dept.

oi

events.
·
"He ls very tir~," Press
Secretary Ronald Nessen told
reporters. '"lbere's no doubt
about it."
In the Utah 'speech, Ford also
said the . feder!l' bureacracy
must be decentralized.
'"!be, day Is. past when an
octclpJ!S·Iike government In
Washington can slretch Its
tentacles across the natiOn and
squeeze Itself mote and more
power,',' he.-id; "Now we have
to chop off thOse tenta~s.
"And as each of those ten·
tacles withers we have to
return the po~ and the
revenues they have grasped .
back to the states and
Ioealities."
By the time he reiW'ns to
Washlilgton, Ford will have
traveled 16,68S miles In hls ·
month-long campaigning.

Cosmetic Dept.

Heck's Reg. s1.47

'1.89 .

Heck's Reg. s1.59

84'

'119

HECK'S
REG.

meetil)g. .
"Du! Jesson of the past few
decades has been 8 basic one- .
We cannot spi,nd our way to
happiness but . we can spend
ourselves into debt and we can
spend the nation ~alght · into
raging inflation," he said.
"That Is why ~ing the past
few weeks 1 have been
speaking out for realistic,
flSC8lly responsible Congres,
sional candidates.
" ...If the big spenders win
heavlly on Nov·. 5 we are in
danger of electing~ vetoiJI'oof
rather than an inflation proof
Congress."
. Ford began thls Dna! campalgn swing Thursday with
stops in Iowa and c8lltornia
keeping up a hectic pace
attendance at civic gatherings,
political meetings, fund·
raising dinners and public

WASHINGTON &lt;UPI&gt; - One large, Republican,.flavored tranquilizer is needed badly on Capitol Hill.
.
Not so much for the 14 GOP senators and 187
; House members seeking re-election, but for their
LONG BEACH, Calif. (UP!)
thousands of office staffers.
·
· -Given a "therapeutic boost"
If predictions of Republican losses are by the surprise visit of
J IDY.Where near the mark, many of them will be out President Ford, Richard :M.
Nixon was reported SatW'day
.. ¢work·- just when the unemployment rate is rising to be showing stable and
.,anil the .nation beset by inflation.
satisfactory vital sigllB but
,, A-bout 6,000 House employes and 1,000 Senate Stu.! on tbe critical list.
' empl()yes could be affected by Tuesday's election.
The morning medical

GREAT-lAsli
kit

'

'

.~

$.500

HECK'S REG. S2.99
_ _.sP.-ORTS DEPT.

....

--.

Perfect for ra iny doy ~unting a nd watchini}
or playing your fa vorite outdoor sport.

i

J ;~./ Jl

teiHng about getting an lnvitatl~n to deliver a speech -that
Is to preach -at the largest
synagogue In America, and
that made me emotlooal just
thinking about It and·! started
crying."
She said rumors spread
about her drtrdtlng were falae
and ."part of · the (Nixon) admlnlstration's policy to
discredit women .~' Some
people in the· Nixon Wi'Jte
House, , she said, also had
Friday.
spread
nunors that Betty Ford
~ said she' began' crying
had
a
problem
with
because .\'at the end of the show
I was ~ed about going oo a tranquilizers and ·that .Manile
lectW'e ,JWr and 'I s~ Eiaenhowerc~t&amp;aDk ·to ex~; ,

mont on reports concerning her
c;onsumptlon of
alcoholic
beverages. She replied that
Individuals In the Nixon admlnistra lion had spread
rumors that she was a heavy
drinker.
·
"Yes, it'S true I staited
crying. Butit wasn't because of
any talk about liqoor and any
'l"wspaper story that says that
iS wrong, n 1 she said in a
telephone ln\efview with UP!

'

''

"We're going to have a solid victory," Albert
said in an interview. "Better than average. · We'll
pick up 25 seats at least, problably more, maybe 30."
Democrats now occupy 248 of
the 450 HOuse seats.
"Economic Issues are oo the
minds of the biggest segment
of the population," sald Alber!,
fresh from a two-week campalgn swing through Nebraska,
Dlinois, West Virginia, Texas,
Ohio and his home ·state of
Oklahoma.
"Their pocketbooks have
really been clipped and they
blame the administration."
When Ford came under the
criticism of Democrats
recently for campaigning
Intensively for Republicans
aboard Air Force I, he replied
bY offering Albert -and only
Albert-the use of a government plane to do, in · effect,
some equal-time stumping for
the Democrats. ·
But Albert said he was using
the Air Force jet because the
Secret Service- which protects
him since he II next In Une for
the presidency.· in the absence
of a vice president--believed It
would enhance security, ·
Albert pays a fee which he
believes will be _higheg than
comparable first class com·
mercia! fare. The money
comes out of Democratic
campalgn fun&amp;!.
Both Ford and Albert started
campaigning In earnest after .
Congress recessed Oct. 17.
Their long«andlng friendship,
liullt dW'Ing the years when
they were opposing House
party leaders, was slrained
when Ford warned In a speech
that
a · "veto
proof"
Democratic Congress might

hW'I chances for world peace.
Albert retaliated angrily,
accusing Ford of dlvlalveness
and rhetoric !Ulbecoming a
President.
"I got a letter from him
saying be !Ul&lt;!erstood that I
was sore about what he said in
Denver,"saidAlbert,whowas.
"That (speech) did not do
him any good at all. He has
tried the hard oell and he has
not sold very well."
"The President II not 8s
popular as he was. He has not
hit inflation as hard as he
should and there Is still sorite
resentment about ·the pardon
(of Nixon)," Albert aald.
He said there Is liWe talk
about Watergate or Nixon's
resignation but he did "hear a
lot of grumbling" QVer Ford's
nomination
of
Nelson
Rockefeller for vice president.
"Some people 1ay be lhould
not he confirmed. Some of
them talk ' about the (Aflhur)
Goldberg book and others
about gifts to public ofllclala.
I'm not going to lll8l!e any
statement about It (the
nomination). I still think be
will be conflrmed,"l said
Albert.
Rockefeller belatediy admitted he was aware of Rockefell·
er money going Into a book that
was critical of the former
Supreme Court justice when he
opposed Rockefeller for the
New York gowernonhlp. Rock·
efeller has also admitted
maklog C4Jb gl.'ls to some alate
lind
national
political
Ogw-es.

New Israeli war is near
ByUoltedPresslnternaUonal
The chief spokesman · of the
Palestine Liberation Organization said Saturday another
Arab Will' with Israel "Is
coming soon."
Vasser Abclel Rabbo, the
PLO's director of information,
· outlined at a Beirut news
conference his reasons for
predicting renewed fighting.
They included Israel's refusal
. to withdraw from ocCjipled
Arab territory and tp recognize
.PalestlniaJ) "Identity" in general. and the PLO in particular.
. ."Don't all these points point
· the way to a fifth (.\fab-IS'aeliJ

war?" he asked. "In OW' view
the fifth war is coming soon."
A SovleWIIade Kathyuaha
rncket fired from Lebanese
terrilllry hit the north ls'aeli
town Or Qiryat Shemona Sabir·
d8y but the military command
said there was no damag~ or . ·

casualties.

·

The rocket, capping a week
of Incidents~ both sides of the .
Lebanese border, landed 1$
miles north of. the of
Galllee collective farm where
French Foreign Minister Jean
·Sauvagnarguel spent the laat
night &lt;1 ~ · frlctiOIHIIIItked
laraen visit '
• . '
' '

·.:
•.•

..
~:·
.•.

·.·.•

:•.

...

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�..

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22 - Tl!e Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 3, 1974

Bucks rip lllini 49-7
Greene, a six-yard pass from
Greene, the Buckeyes' quickGreene to tight end Doug footed junior quarterback,
France, an eight yard pass · completed eight of 12 passes
from Greene to Mike Bar- for 143 yards and also rushed
toszek, a 311-yard run by Ray for 126 more yards in 25
Griffin , Archie 's younger carries.
Griffin picked up his 144
brother, and a 53-yard run by
Lenny Willis.
yard.! 00 20 carries while
Olinoi~ • only score came on
the first play of the second
quarter when tailback Tracy
campbell fired a five yard pass
to wingback Frank Johnson to
tie the sc&lt;X'e at 7-7.
The Buckeyes, however, who
fumbled twice and had a pass
intercepted in the first 30
minutes, put together two long
touchdown drives going 74yards in 13 plays, climaxed by
Greene's 15 yard touchdown
run and 80 yards in 10 plays
with Greene six · yards to
France with only 17 seconds
left in the half.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Archie Griffin rushed for 144
yards and two touchdowns in a
record breaking performance
Saturday to lead top-ranked
Ohio State to a 49-7 victory over
Illinois, giving Buckeye Coach
Woody Hayes his 200th
collegiate coaching victory .
It was the 18th straight
regular season game in which
the junior All-American and
Heisman Trophy candidate
rushed for 100 or more yards,
breaking the former record set
by Steve Owens of Oklahoma .
Griffin, who raced 16 yards
for Ohio State's firs t score
midway in the first quarter,
broke the record with a 22-yard
scoring burst up the middle
early in the third period.
Ohio State's other touchdowns came on a lf&gt;-yard run
by quarterback Cornelius

'

·'

brother Ray, a freshman, had 1951. Hayes joins Alabama 's
116 yards in eight tries.
Bear Bryant as ihe only active
The victory was the 200th of coaches with 200 or more
Hayes' c ollegiate coachin g vic tories .
career, which began at
Ohio State is now 8-0 and f&gt;-0
Denison University in !946. His in the Big Ten and Olinois. is 4overall record is 200-611-8, 167- 3-1 overall and 2-2-1 in the Big
49-Ssince ~oing to Ohio State In Ten.

23 -;- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 3, 1974

~--

FOR THE BUDGET MINDED. SMOPPEII
.

.OPEN DAILY 9 TIL 9 - CLOSED SUNDAY
252 THIRD AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS

SAVE

.........

We reserve Ilie rig!! I to lim II quanlilles on illll !I ems in I hit. •d. Prices elfeclive fhru S.t., Nov. ' · 1974. None sold to dtoalers.

' . FAMILY PAK

.

EN'· PARIS "

from bluegrdss to new grdss....

Includes: 3 Breast ·Ouarters w/Backs
3 leg Quarters w/Backs
2 Pkgs. Giblets and 2 Necks.

A
5 pm. tonight

.a u

·RE-ELECT FOR SECOND TERM

Michigan drops Indiana
Bl.OOMINGTON,lnd. (UP[) its field.
Tailback Gordon Bell
After a scoreless third
crashed for two second quarter period, the Hoosiers scored
touchdowns !ll'd second ranked fh&lt;lir only touchdown on a fiveMichigan then held off aroused yard pass from Terry Jones to
Indiana far a 21-7 Big Ten Trent Smock to narrow the
· margin to 14-7.
victory Saturday.
Bell, a slender 175 pounder
It wasn't until 36 seconds
from Troy, Ohio, gained 149 remained to be played in the
yard.! in 23 attempts and was game that Michigan scored Its
sent across the goal line twice clincher on a one-yard run by
when veteran quarterback wingback Gil Chapman.
Dennis Franklin took over
The Wolverines extended
from Mark Elzinga to open the · their perfect string to eight
second period.
games and f&gt;-0 in the Big Ten to
But Indiana, which has won remain tied for the lead with
only from Minnesota in eight Ohio State.
They permitted the lowly
games, refused to be blown off
Hoosiers only II yards rushing
;smn.e.m.u.t.&amp;.n. . no::t&gt;.a.nm;e: in the first half. But Indiana
remained in the game until
Chapman's TD put it out of
Alumni game
reach for them.
Bell's first touchdown, a 12is considered
yard-run, climaxed a 93-yard

drive in 12 plays the fourth
time the Wolverines had
possession . On their very next
march, totaling 80 yards,
Franklin sent his No. 2 tailback
across from the three yard
line.
· Indiana, 1-4 in Big Ten play,
launched ils 8().yard scoring
drive late in the third period.
The touchdown was set up by a .
16-yard pass from Jones to '·
Smock. Three plays later the
rangy split end scored on a
five-yard pass.
Michigan launched its final
touchdown drive from the m.
48. Chapman's touchdown run
was setup by Bell's 27-yard run
to the Indiana 2.
Franklin completed three of
just six passes for 36 yards
while Jones hit on 12 of 18 for
the Hoosiers, ga ining · 137
yards.

EARL E. STEPHENSON
TO
COURT OF APPEALS
Vote For

Earl E. Stephenson j
Present Presiding Judge
Fourth District Court of Appeals

'

Previously Served as:

'I

Common Pleas Judge
Municipal Judge
· CitY Prosecutor
Special Agent F.B.I.
Education:
Ohio State University

~

Colleges of Commerce and Law
Issued By:

•

-~1/4" MAS~OiiNHITnE;.....;~~

'

SWEET

Aller · S.le Price $1.07

CORN

2 Gal.
•r-........
•s.. ...... ........
·~

......... ..

•c:o:..;,-

•w..r-• .....

REGULAR '9.75
SALE'

SALE

$775

•3.4.5

I .

EACH

Perfect insulation for
hot or cold water pipes .
Halts sweating or
I
25 ff. ol
3"
and·25 ft. of
2"
wrap. ( SP-

'

••1

Ovl11d0 ,ip••o l;&lt;&gt;" by
or i"•id• b'y 11 t~v111 b tvrn .
lg ll " lte iG r~ !t l&gt;&lt;!o d "'
d~o d ! cc~ ~d by on nor bu tton
!do~l tor• •op lo&lt; o"'""' '
0,
..... , ., , ,~ u ., r ; cn o

REGULAR $4.95

SALE 69•
RELY-oN

CAULKING , ~
CAITIIDGES

28"l(60"
REGULAR

11-\.S .......""" fliS • · ... ~ ..,, slap -~lostlc.

•3.99 SHEET

--...;SALE-.,..:

-·

SHEET

...

REG.

SUPER SPECIALS
'l:lx4x8

year"

' FURNACE FILTERS

PLYWOOD
4 PLY
1. .._.. ,_"

•4.99

AIR CONDITIONER COVERS

8-Ct. Pkg.

CUT OR FRENCH STYLE

GREEN' BEANS

TEI','IP: GLASS . · RIGHT .

. 21816/.8
3/0x&amp;/8

l.;lb. Can

2-lb.
Can

1.-lb.
1-oz.

can

Columbia Bowling Balls.

'

•

'

I

'

Can

•

89e ~1:.1:. •1••

· LEFT
HAND

CARTER .AND
EVANS INC.
.
.

l

3-lb.

I .

-

Waterpr.oof ,vinyl cover
protects your alr conditioner from winter's
cold. Unaffected by subzero temperatures. Fits
all sizes up to 21"
overhang . (AC2).

.

CASH .&amp; CARRY

1-oz.69C

-.

,.
•••
~t71

Mon .- Fri. 7:30a.m . to 5 p.m.
S.turday7:30a.m. to 12 Noon

'

.

WE CARE THE
LIQUID PLUMR

.,••

After Sale Price $2.35

$TQ~E -HOURS

PHONE 446-4464

Can

SP.RA YCLEANER

"

1" thick

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

87 OLIVE ST.

.GREEN BEANS

FORMULA "409"

. '!.-Gal.
lottie

by

Come In and take advantage of the super low low
prkes during our sale. Prices good while quantities
last. All sale ite~s cash and pick up at store~

~

89c

16x25-20x2~12x2~16x2~

.. CUT

COFFEE
1~z. $242
Jar

67c

ventilating systems . Following sizes

· HANOVEil

INSTANT

409"

1-Pt.
~··· .
Aero10l

K.anauga, Ohio .
•

~~·

FOLGER'S

BATHROOM
CLEANER.

''All New.AMF Equipment"·

...

1-lb.
39c1c.az.
11

446-3362.

CHURCH GROUPS
' PARTI!'S, STUDENTS.

Pd. Pol. Adv.

Can.

. KIDNEY BEANS

'469S

&amp;

SPEC lA

only:

NO LAYAWAYS

CAT LinER

.'

Specializing in AMF &amp;

ELE(:TION: TUESDAY, NOV. 5, 1974
QUALIFIED • RESPONSIBLE • EXPERIENCED

CQFFEE
$255 3-lb. $369
·

. ..

.REGULAR 11.49 EAat

Keeps home cl eaning , fr esher ,

healthier .
Lower heating costs.
For use In all forced air heating and

LITT.ER GREEN

JOAN OF ARC
LIGHT

PROFESSIONAL BALL FITTING,
DRILLING&amp; INSTRUCTION
AVAILABI.E
'
. SPECIAL
RATES TO: '

SALE

MAXWELL HOUSE

2x4
Studs
For
.
.
·All Those. Fall
Prolects

White CrossBuCk·
Numi~um Sbm Doors

STOKELY

SKYLINE LANES·
and PRO-SHOP .

AMER-GlAS

COX-EXT• .

BUNS

· Captain's Lounge

'·

SALE

•

'

·

75~

2-lb. iar

e24 New ·AMF Lanes
esnack' Bar and .

Republican Cand_ldate
COUNTY ENGINEER .
Melgi County .

'

NEW CROP
GOLDEN YELLOW

GRAPE JELLY

"For That Personal &amp; Pro;tessional Touch"
FEATURING

WESLEY A. BUEHL

.

·~

WIENER OR SANDWICH

.

II:IM NIGHT lATCH

Kon

year"· grads would be pitted

VOTE FOR

Rli:GULAR $6.99
SALE '5.7

TAYLOJt No. IIOOCG

ALUMI.UMROOP

SMUCKER'S

graduateo.
Tbe game would be played
oo Memorial Field around 10
or 11 a. m. Admlnion would
be $Z lor adults and $1 for
students. Coaches for the
proposed event would be Joe
D1111&lt;an aod BW Eachus,
members
of
Gallia
Academy's 1980 SEOAL
championship football team.
By expandlug tbe present
faeWtles, vlllllnll teamo anc!
the junior hlllb aad lreobmen
team. would be able to dress
aDd llhower lbere Instead of
havtns lo use the old
Wa1blagtoa · School locker
room faciUtles.

·

AVOCADO • CARMEL BONE AND MOCHA

.........

andsiding .

Interest Is shown, "odd

"even

••'

1 !h

·w e 'J":t.:e..:c..:.:.m).: .._.u .. .iS

•

•••••••••

•

STATE FARE

against

Committee For Re-election of Judge
Earl E ..Stephen59f1, Court of Appeals
Glenn Manley, Sclotovllle, Ohio Chmn.

'

SAVE

•

FRESH ROASTING CHICKENSan3ci 1 ~., •• ~~-59c
FRESH FRYING CHICKENS wHoLe ••••• lb.49c

In an
eftort lo raise money to help
pay for lbe PI'OJIOied expansion of lbe GAllS foolbaU
locker rooms on Memorial
Field, Blue DevU Boosters
and . grid fans are considering, sponoorlng an
alumni football game here
on Thanksgiving Day
(Tbunday, Nov. !8).•
Chairman of lbe event Is
Bob MarcbL
All former Blue Devil
grldders from 11113 through
1973 Interested In playing In
tbe contest are asked to
attend a meetlag In the
GAHS varsity gym on
Wednesday,
Nov.
6,
be&amp;bmlag at 7 p. m.
Marchi said II enough

JUDGE

''

•••••••••

lb.

GALUPOLIS -

[!]

'

SAUNDERS RACES TOONE -Gallla'~Brent Saunders (11, right) raced to the one yard .
line late in the third period following a 21-yard gain before taking in over from Ute one. Rocket
defender braced for a tackle is Pete Rupert (24). Closing in on left is Wellston's Rick Brooks.
GAHS won, 3U.

'.

\

.•

S~VE

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

The Frion&lt;ty ~

.WHOLE ·YEAR LONG

DRAIN OPENER

.·Q'·95C
lot.

.

.

.C

~,

'

l
.

~,

, ,.
.1: .

.I

'

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•

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...

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•

I

22 - Tl!e Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 3, 1974

Bucks rip lllini 49-7
Greene, a six-yard pass from
Greene, the Buckeyes' quickGreene to tight end Doug footed junior quarterback,
France, an eight yard pass · completed eight of 12 passes
from Greene to Mike Bar- for 143 yards and also rushed
toszek, a 311-yard run by Ray for 126 more yards in 25
Griffin , Archie 's younger carries.
Griffin picked up his 144
brother, and a 53-yard run by
Lenny Willis.
yard.! 00 20 carries while
Olinoi~ • only score came on
the first play of the second
quarter when tailback Tracy
campbell fired a five yard pass
to wingback Frank Johnson to
tie the sc&lt;X'e at 7-7.
The Buckeyes, however, who
fumbled twice and had a pass
intercepted in the first 30
minutes, put together two long
touchdown drives going 74yards in 13 plays, climaxed by
Greene's 15 yard touchdown
run and 80 yards in 10 plays
with Greene six · yards to
France with only 17 seconds
left in the half.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Archie Griffin rushed for 144
yards and two touchdowns in a
record breaking performance
Saturday to lead top-ranked
Ohio State to a 49-7 victory over
Illinois, giving Buckeye Coach
Woody Hayes his 200th
collegiate coaching victory .
It was the 18th straight
regular season game in which
the junior All-American and
Heisman Trophy candidate
rushed for 100 or more yards,
breaking the former record set
by Steve Owens of Oklahoma .
Griffin, who raced 16 yards
for Ohio State's firs t score
midway in the first quarter,
broke the record with a 22-yard
scoring burst up the middle
early in the third period.
Ohio State's other touchdowns came on a lf&gt;-yard run
by quarterback Cornelius

'

·'

brother Ray, a freshman, had 1951. Hayes joins Alabama 's
116 yards in eight tries.
Bear Bryant as ihe only active
The victory was the 200th of coaches with 200 or more
Hayes' c ollegiate coachin g vic tories .
career, which began at
Ohio State is now 8-0 and f&gt;-0
Denison University in !946. His in the Big Ten and Olinois. is 4overall record is 200-611-8, 167- 3-1 overall and 2-2-1 in the Big
49-Ssince ~oing to Ohio State In Ten.

23 -;- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 3, 1974

~--

FOR THE BUDGET MINDED. SMOPPEII
.

.OPEN DAILY 9 TIL 9 - CLOSED SUNDAY
252 THIRD AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS

SAVE

.........

We reserve Ilie rig!! I to lim II quanlilles on illll !I ems in I hit. •d. Prices elfeclive fhru S.t., Nov. ' · 1974. None sold to dtoalers.

' . FAMILY PAK

.

EN'· PARIS "

from bluegrdss to new grdss....

Includes: 3 Breast ·Ouarters w/Backs
3 leg Quarters w/Backs
2 Pkgs. Giblets and 2 Necks.

A
5 pm. tonight

.a u

·RE-ELECT FOR SECOND TERM

Michigan drops Indiana
Bl.OOMINGTON,lnd. (UP[) its field.
Tailback Gordon Bell
After a scoreless third
crashed for two second quarter period, the Hoosiers scored
touchdowns !ll'd second ranked fh&lt;lir only touchdown on a fiveMichigan then held off aroused yard pass from Terry Jones to
Indiana far a 21-7 Big Ten Trent Smock to narrow the
· margin to 14-7.
victory Saturday.
Bell, a slender 175 pounder
It wasn't until 36 seconds
from Troy, Ohio, gained 149 remained to be played in the
yard.! in 23 attempts and was game that Michigan scored Its
sent across the goal line twice clincher on a one-yard run by
when veteran quarterback wingback Gil Chapman.
Dennis Franklin took over
The Wolverines extended
from Mark Elzinga to open the · their perfect string to eight
second period.
games and f&gt;-0 in the Big Ten to
But Indiana, which has won remain tied for the lead with
only from Minnesota in eight Ohio State.
They permitted the lowly
games, refused to be blown off
Hoosiers only II yards rushing
;smn.e.m.u.t.&amp;.n. . no::t&gt;.a.nm;e: in the first half. But Indiana
remained in the game until
Chapman's TD put it out of
Alumni game
reach for them.
Bell's first touchdown, a 12is considered
yard-run, climaxed a 93-yard

drive in 12 plays the fourth
time the Wolverines had
possession . On their very next
march, totaling 80 yards,
Franklin sent his No. 2 tailback
across from the three yard
line.
· Indiana, 1-4 in Big Ten play,
launched ils 8().yard scoring
drive late in the third period.
The touchdown was set up by a .
16-yard pass from Jones to '·
Smock. Three plays later the
rangy split end scored on a
five-yard pass.
Michigan launched its final
touchdown drive from the m.
48. Chapman's touchdown run
was setup by Bell's 27-yard run
to the Indiana 2.
Franklin completed three of
just six passes for 36 yards
while Jones hit on 12 of 18 for
the Hoosiers, ga ining · 137
yards.

EARL E. STEPHENSON
TO
COURT OF APPEALS
Vote For

Earl E. Stephenson j
Present Presiding Judge
Fourth District Court of Appeals

'

Previously Served as:

'I

Common Pleas Judge
Municipal Judge
· CitY Prosecutor
Special Agent F.B.I.
Education:
Ohio State University

~

Colleges of Commerce and Law
Issued By:

•

-~1/4" MAS~OiiNHITnE;.....;~~

'

SWEET

Aller · S.le Price $1.07

CORN

2 Gal.
•r-........
•s.. ...... ........
·~

......... ..

•c:o:..;,-

•w..r-• .....

REGULAR '9.75
SALE'

SALE

$775

•3.4.5

I .

EACH

Perfect insulation for
hot or cold water pipes .
Halts sweating or
I
25 ff. ol
3"
and·25 ft. of
2"
wrap. ( SP-

'

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Ovl11d0 ,ip••o l;&lt;&gt;" by
or i"•id• b'y 11 t~v111 b tvrn .
lg ll " lte iG r~ !t l&gt;&lt;!o d "'
d~o d ! cc~ ~d by on nor bu tton
!do~l tor• •op lo&lt; o"'""' '
0,
..... , ., , ,~ u ., r ; cn o

REGULAR $4.95

SALE 69•
RELY-oN

CAULKING , ~
CAITIIDGES

28"l(60"
REGULAR

11-\.S .......""" fliS • · ... ~ ..,, slap -~lostlc.

•3.99 SHEET

--...;SALE-.,..:

-·

SHEET

...

REG.

SUPER SPECIALS
'l:lx4x8

year"

' FURNACE FILTERS

PLYWOOD
4 PLY
1. .._.. ,_"

•4.99

AIR CONDITIONER COVERS

8-Ct. Pkg.

CUT OR FRENCH STYLE

GREEN' BEANS

TEI','IP: GLASS . · RIGHT .

. 21816/.8
3/0x&amp;/8

l.;lb. Can

2-lb.
Can

1.-lb.
1-oz.

can

Columbia Bowling Balls.

'

•

'

I

'

Can

•

89e ~1:.1:. •1••

· LEFT
HAND

CARTER .AND
EVANS INC.
.
.

l

3-lb.

I .

-

Waterpr.oof ,vinyl cover
protects your alr conditioner from winter's
cold. Unaffected by subzero temperatures. Fits
all sizes up to 21"
overhang . (AC2).

.

CASH .&amp; CARRY

1-oz.69C

-.

,.
•••
~t71

Mon .- Fri. 7:30a.m . to 5 p.m.
S.turday7:30a.m. to 12 Noon

'

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WE CARE THE
LIQUID PLUMR

.,••

After Sale Price $2.35

$TQ~E -HOURS

PHONE 446-4464

Can

SP.RA YCLEANER

"

1" thick

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

87 OLIVE ST.

.GREEN BEANS

FORMULA "409"

. '!.-Gal.
lottie

by

Come In and take advantage of the super low low
prkes during our sale. Prices good while quantities
last. All sale ite~s cash and pick up at store~

~

89c

16x25-20x2~12x2~16x2~

.. CUT

COFFEE
1~z. $242
Jar

67c

ventilating systems . Following sizes

· HANOVEil

INSTANT

409"

1-Pt.
~··· .
Aero10l

K.anauga, Ohio .
•

~~·

FOLGER'S

BATHROOM
CLEANER.

''All New.AMF Equipment"·

...

1-lb.
39c1c.az.
11

446-3362.

CHURCH GROUPS
' PARTI!'S, STUDENTS.

Pd. Pol. Adv.

Can.

. KIDNEY BEANS

'469S

&amp;

SPEC lA

only:

NO LAYAWAYS

CAT LinER

.'

Specializing in AMF &amp;

ELE(:TION: TUESDAY, NOV. 5, 1974
QUALIFIED • RESPONSIBLE • EXPERIENCED

CQFFEE
$255 3-lb. $369
·

. ..

.REGULAR 11.49 EAat

Keeps home cl eaning , fr esher ,

healthier .
Lower heating costs.
For use In all forced air heating and

LITT.ER GREEN

JOAN OF ARC
LIGHT

PROFESSIONAL BALL FITTING,
DRILLING&amp; INSTRUCTION
AVAILABI.E
'
. SPECIAL
RATES TO: '

SALE

MAXWELL HOUSE

2x4
Studs
For
.
.
·All Those. Fall
Prolects

White CrossBuCk·
Numi~um Sbm Doors

STOKELY

SKYLINE LANES·
and PRO-SHOP .

AMER-GlAS

COX-EXT• .

BUNS

· Captain's Lounge

'·

SALE

•

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75~

2-lb. iar

e24 New ·AMF Lanes
esnack' Bar and .

Republican Cand_ldate
COUNTY ENGINEER .
Melgi County .

'

NEW CROP
GOLDEN YELLOW

GRAPE JELLY

"For That Personal &amp; Pro;tessional Touch"
FEATURING

WESLEY A. BUEHL

.

·~

WIENER OR SANDWICH

.

II:IM NIGHT lATCH

Kon

year"· grads would be pitted

VOTE FOR

Rli:GULAR $6.99
SALE '5.7

TAYLOJt No. IIOOCG

ALUMI.UMROOP

SMUCKER'S

graduateo.
Tbe game would be played
oo Memorial Field around 10
or 11 a. m. Admlnion would
be $Z lor adults and $1 for
students. Coaches for the
proposed event would be Joe
D1111&lt;an aod BW Eachus,
members
of
Gallia
Academy's 1980 SEOAL
championship football team.
By expandlug tbe present
faeWtles, vlllllnll teamo anc!
the junior hlllb aad lreobmen
team. would be able to dress
aDd llhower lbere Instead of
havtns lo use the old
Wa1blagtoa · School locker
room faciUtles.

·

AVOCADO • CARMEL BONE AND MOCHA

.........

andsiding .

Interest Is shown, "odd

"even

••'

1 !h

·w e 'J":t.:e..:c..:.:.m).: .._.u .. .iS

•

•••••••••

•

STATE FARE

against

Committee For Re-election of Judge
Earl E ..Stephen59f1, Court of Appeals
Glenn Manley, Sclotovllle, Ohio Chmn.

'

SAVE

•

FRESH ROASTING CHICKENSan3ci 1 ~., •• ~~-59c
FRESH FRYING CHICKENS wHoLe ••••• lb.49c

In an
eftort lo raise money to help
pay for lbe PI'OJIOied expansion of lbe GAllS foolbaU
locker rooms on Memorial
Field, Blue DevU Boosters
and . grid fans are considering, sponoorlng an
alumni football game here
on Thanksgiving Day
(Tbunday, Nov. !8).•
Chairman of lbe event Is
Bob MarcbL
All former Blue Devil
grldders from 11113 through
1973 Interested In playing In
tbe contest are asked to
attend a meetlag In the
GAHS varsity gym on
Wednesday,
Nov.
6,
be&amp;bmlag at 7 p. m.
Marchi said II enough

JUDGE

''

•••••••••

lb.

GALUPOLIS -

[!]

'

SAUNDERS RACES TOONE -Gallla'~Brent Saunders (11, right) raced to the one yard .
line late in the third period following a 21-yard gain before taking in over from Ute one. Rocket
defender braced for a tackle is Pete Rupert (24). Closing in on left is Wellston's Rick Brooks.
GAHS won, 3U.

'.

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S~VE

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

The Frion&lt;ty ~

.WHOLE ·YEAR LONG

DRAIN OPENER

.·Q'·95C
lot.

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�:.H - Till' ::iumtuv Tllltl;' ~ · &amp;&gt;nt inel , Sunday , Nov . 3. 1974

·'

,••

,•

'• .

'•

It was a rushing night for
both teams , as the Jronmen of
Ron Fenick carried for 270
yards in 5:1 trips , For Meigs, it
was a refreshing return to
respectable running, as the
Marauders ran for 184 yards in
just 33 carries, a 5.6 average.
The game, marred by
nwnerous first half penalties
as 7 motion or offsides
penalties were caJied on the
Marauders in the first two
quarters, saw the lronmen
open the scoring in strange
fashion .
,
Randy Ridge, last season's
most valuable player in the
league, was injured midway
through the first period on a
crushing tackle by Marauder
Terry QuallS. Ridge, who does
most of the Ironma11 punt
returning, was replaced by
fullback Dave Davis.
With. less than two minutes

gone in the second period.
Davls hauled in a Ga ry Gt•orgl'
punt and dashed untouched
down the right sideline 77 yards
to put Jac kson in front. Conroy
just sneaked into the corner of
the er'ld zone for the conver sion
points.
That's the way it stood until
Qualls recovered a Conroy
fumbled on the Jackson 34 ·
midway through period three .
The Marauders, behind the ·
running of Anderson, drove to
tile I yard lin¥ where tailback
Terry Whitlatch, on a spec. tacular fourth down effort, just
managed to dive over the flag
in the corner of the end zone to
set the stage for Anderson's
pass to Coats.
Neither team could move the
ball following the Marauder
score; but just a little over four
and a half minutes later,
Conroy faked into the line and
took off around his left end,

cutting back through the
secondary on his 67 yard jaunt.
The run for the extra poin tS'
was stopped cold.
The lronmen added an insurance score with just 8
seconds left in the game as
Conroy again circled left end,
this time from 14 yards out. ·
It was a night for outstanding
individual
performances .

INDIVIDUAL STATS
Rushing
Meigs
Pl41yer
C. Yds TO
Ander son
9 83
Qua us
8 60
Whitlatch
13 35
Coats
I .3
Buff ington
2 3
Jilckson
Player
C Yds TO
Davi s
26 109
Conroy
12 92
2
R: idge
7 38
Shields
8 31

.'

Davis accwnulated 109 yards
in 26 bursts to go with tl!at punt
return and a 38 yard kickoff
return , while Conroy added 92
J.-footers . Jackson defensive
back Bryan Joseph picked off 3
Anderson aerials, returning 2
of them for a total of 29 yards .
On the other side of the fence ,
";"derson p~t on a running
displa~ of hiS own,, going . 83
yards m ju~t 9 cames. Tw1ce
the junior signal caller almost
broke the long one, once going ·
52 yards and being caught
another liQ'le by the last

lronman defende r after a 19
yard sprint.
Qualls, although he totaled
just 60 yards, had a 4{ yard
dash stopped by the final
Jackson defender who just
managed to .force the speedy
· junior out of bOunds late in the
first period.
.
Neither Anderson nor Conroy .
was very effective with the
:•erial game, both'.; managing
.· just 1 c~pletion, Anderson's
in lO ·)rie8 and Conroy 'In &amp;·attempts.
' ,,, · : .
·
The Ironmen tota1'ed 15 first

..

.•.

..~· ·

(Anderson pasS to Coats).
J - Conroy, 67 yard run
failed) .
J - Conroy, 14 yard
(Conroy pass to Jenkins).
By quarters:
Jackson
0 8
Meigs
0 0

downs to just:B for Meigs, while
Jackson fumbled the ball 3
times, losing I. The Marauders
did not fumble.
Meigs was penalized 9 times
for 55 yards, while 30 yards
were marked off against the
lronmen in 5 goofs.
.
Friday the Marauders try to
break into the victory column
against
Waverly,
while
Jackson entertains Logan,
Seorl~g

J - Davis, 77 yard punt
return (Conroy run) .
M - Whitlatch, I yard run

:2

Player
Conroy

10

1 , 10

3

0

Jackson
A C Yds rnt TO
6 I
14
0 0

!

Pass Receiving
Meigs

v~~

Whitlatch

ca:

Plilyer

Cat Yds

,

Player

.. ''

P Yds Ave

Fenwick

2 51

I

1 35

M

First Downs
First Downs Ru shing

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GRAPPLERS BEGIN - Practice for the toughest sport of all began at Meigs High Friday.
Pictured here is a Marauder wrestler in control during a match last year against Point
Pleasant.

NOV.

t

33.5

t.

JS
25.5

I

Punt Returns
Jackson
Pl1yer
Ret. Yds TD
Davis
2
BO
1
Kickoff Returns
Meigs
. Player
Ret Yds
Qvalls
I
17
Magnotla
I
9
Coats
I
5
Jackson
Player
Ret Yds
Joseph
1
s
Davis
1
38
Interception Returns
Jackson
Play_er
lnt Yds
Joseph
3
29
TEAM STATS

•.

THRU

Player

· Ridge

l

.

.

'''

.,
•'

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E - Long, 42 yard run
t Bla ke run ).
E - Jackson, I yard run
1Long pass from Blake ).
NG - Runyon, 2 yard run
! Tacke tt pass from Theiss).
NG - · Spencer, 3 yard pass
from Theiss 1Runyon run J. ·
E - Bowen, 17 yard pass
from Blake (run failed) .

By quarters :
Eas tern
18 8 8 6-'!0
North Gallia
0 0 8 8-IG

V an c ouver

6 3 2

Ch icag o
M in neso ta
st . Lou i s

6
'2

2

l.t

42 30

J

1 lJ

46 23

.:1

3
3

18
'16

5

7
7

2J
JO

K an sasCi ty
0 7 1
I 17 39
Divi sion 3
w . 1. t . pts gf ga
L os An g e les
6 1 4 16 35 IB
M ontreal
D etr o it

4

1

12 37 32
11 3 1 42

P i tts burgh
2 5 I
W as h i n g ton
1 B I
Division 4

5 28 34
3 17 39

4

3

S 4

6 14
FirstOownsRush . Pass. 1
1
First Downs by Penalty
I
0
Rushing AUempls
33 53
Yards Rushing
184 270
Yards Passing
10 14
Passes Attempted
10
6
Passes Completed
1
1
Passes Intercepted by
0
J
Total Yards
.194 284
Fumbles
0
3
Fumbles Lost
0
1
Punts
6
3
Pun 1 Yards
201 86
Ave . Yds. Per Pun t
33.5 28 .7
Punt Ret. Yardag e
0 80
Ki c koff Ret . Yard .
31 43
Penalties
9
5
Penalty YardaQe
55 30

You can talk to Ralph Welker! Ralph wlllllstenl
Former legislator•••former county sherfH•••
active poultry farmer and businessr~~an •••HE
WILL UNDERSTAND•••

TAWNEY'S
PIPE
SHOP
Ave.

BY RAY GOODMAN
waiting for something to
Melgs Wrestling Coach
happen. It's strlcUy a skill
Would you like to start a fight sport.
that would make the · AliBasketball? A tough game,
F oreman bout look like a but not if you're in shape.
picnic? Then throw this bone There are enough outside balls
into a den of sports fans : What and free throws to give
is
the
toughest,
most everyone a rest.
demanding sport of all?
Soccer? Tennis? Put them in
Remember, now, I'm not the same class as basketball.
talking about thrills or spills. I ,Golf? A beautiful game,
mean the sport that takes the demanding great skill, but
most out of you .
about as tough as walking .
Baseball? It's a snap. Except
Football? Now we're getting
for the pitcher and the catcher, warm. The contact is tough and
e veryone stands around you need guts to play. You
could get hurt on every play,
but it still isn't number I In
toughness . You can rest after
every play and there are time
outs. In fact, there are only
about eight minutes of live
action in a 6&lt;kninute game.
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Hockey? Another tough
Thur sday Strikers
demanding
and dangerous
Oct . 24 , I'J74
Team
W.
L.
sport. It's the fastest game on
Mi tc h ell 's T ri o
66
6
H . F rank 's G irls
40 32 earth, but like football and
Shakl ee G ir ls
36 36 basketball you can always
30 42
Simon 's Pick a Pai r
catch a breather. Track?
T ea·m No . 6
24 48
Tea m No . 4
. 20 52
Swimmirig? Both sports take
H i gh team series. ~ Simon 's
P ick a Pair 1297 ; Mitchell 's skill and endurance, but they
Tri o 1292 ; Team No . 4 1253.
don't have body contact or
H ig h tea m game ~ Simon ' s danger.
P i ck. a P a i r &lt;171: H . Frank ' s
G ir ls 45 3 ; Tea m No. 4 439 .
Okay, let's get down to the
H ig h individual seri es toughest
aports of all. Boxing.
Co nni e Cha pman 461 ; Opal
Hup p 439 : Donna M c Farland
If you've never fought a match
407 .
in the ring, it's hard to imagine
H ig h in d i v idual ~a me - Opal
Hup p 171; Connie Chapman
how tough this sport is. Without
167 ; W anda Te aford ·156 .
long,
hard training you can't go
E unic e Duff w ill rec ei ve · a
w 1B C p at ch for p i ck i ng up the more than a round or two and a
7-4·6· 10 sp li t .
round is only 3 minutes. Your
Su e Haid will rec eive a WI B C
pa t c h f or bowling 3 c onsecuiiYe
arms will drop and your legs
gam es. of 123 on Oc tober 10 .
will feel like rubber and after
you've ~aken a couple 'or

53

111

3 1 31

3 2 . 34 109 3639
36 30
34

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Ci t y

a t L os A n g e les

" Mapl e Le af Ra g" . wa s
nam e d for a sa lo on in
Sedalia , Mo.

TEXWEAVE®
FASHION FIVER"'
OF 100 •.~o DACRON"
BY ~ ~

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Solirt colors have an impo rtant fashion t·o le tiJi.~.; season , .'"iO w h y
not let a Pa.lm Beach ': ' F as hion F i v~r ~ uit pla,v a big role in you!'

J

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appearance '! Th e F w.;h ion F ive r comes w ith an extra pair of
con t rast s lack&lt;; t hat do ubl e up with th e s ui t .i a&lt;' kct t o m al~ e an
exciti ng sp01-ts em;cm hl e. Bot h 'llit pants a nrl e xtra slacl&lt; co m e
with th eil' own eoloi'-&lt;'OOI'clinaterl helt. !'ai m Rea ch ta il ors th is
versat il e tw ill-patte rn ed s ui t in easy-r are l OOt ~ Dacron"!" po l,ves te r
in c la ~s i c bla ze r s t ~~ ling set off wi t h hand some go ld -tone bll tton s
in a wide 1·ange of sp r itel.v autu mn t ones.
3-Piece S uit &amp; 2 Belts , '115

I

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L-----GAUlPOLIS, O H I O - - - - - - - - - :~::o;l:'~o:d~i::o=o=l:_)

GallipOlis

Thomas Clothiers .

All price~ include Total Electric, Delivery and Set- UpPlus many deluxe optiona I features.

Lawrence,

THIS SALE IS •••

DISPLAY MODEL
'

"SUPER SENSATIONAL"
....

Meigs and part

*~ FOR AND SUPPORT :
**
**
: CHESTER TOWNSHIP
i
*
*

of Athens
..

Counties, to

!

FIRE LEVY

I

district, Gallia,

i**

VOTE

I

And, Ralph can
.ably ·explain the
problems of his

*•********************************'*

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punches your face will ache. tough that high schoohnatcbes
Still a well-trained boxer can
are limited to 6 minutes. When
go 15 rounds and that's why
the match is over the wrestler
boling Is nwnber 2 to ...
is completely worn out. I'm not
Wrestling! This is also a man talking about professional
to man combat sport, but your wrestliug which is all show
opponent always has his hands, business.
legs and body all over you. He
There is no way a wresUer
is squeezing, twisting or riding
can go 32 or 40 minutes as in
you. Every part of your body
basketball, or 60 minutes as in
has to be in constant action. football, or 10 to 15 rounds.
Wrestling calls for huge
After 6 minutes, he's had it for
amounts or strength, en- the day,
durance and speed. It's so
Tennis, anyone?

~*

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~~~~!f0°a~' T~~~~f~
I
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Scott Joplin 's first success, I
I
I
I

We have a very large
inventory to select
from. Stop in soon and
look them over.

II

1

~~~~~~~e%~:~,v~~~ 1 r ~:rder s
Det r o i t

II

I
I

A tlanta at St . L ou is

15

.I

w. t. t . p1S · gt ga

California
7 4 8 32 60
Friday '2s Results
A tlanta 5 Toronto 2
V
ouver
i ttsburg
D an
etrcoi
t 4 Cal7 iP
forn
i a 4, thie4
Saturday' s Game s
15

SAVE
$$$
NOW

lTJ~IlY Sf)JJJI) l~lJJ(JI~

I

NHL S!andings
B y United P re ss Internat i onal
Divio;;ion l
w. 1. t. pts gf g a
N Y Isla n der s 6 1 2 lJ 41 17
Atla n ta
6 · 4 2 14 ·II 28
Ph il ade lphi a 6 3 I 13 3 4 26
N Y RangersS321'13430 1
~~vi~io~. 2 pts gf g a

Wrestling--it's not for everybody

Local Bowling

I'

54 yard run

::~:~~::~;~~i~.~·~; :::~p:: I t~tt(t)It~ltJtiiii~il(~tl'"

Bos ton
Toronto

PIPES

J

8

"~~ ~.~~~~inger.

B uffalo

NOW ON

I

•

••

'

•t
!

Jackson ·

201

-

~-

P Yds Ave
6•

Eastern rushing game were
Long with 97 yards, Larkins
with 55, Jackson with 30 and
Blake with 27 yards.
Berkhimer had high praise
for his Eagle backs, especially

Long a nd Larkins who did a
"super job" according to Che
second-year mentor.
"It was by far our best job of
running the , ball all year, "
Berkhimer added .
The Pirate running attack.
meanwhile, was led by Runyon
with 74 yards, followed by Fred
Logan with 36 yards and Jeff
Hollenbaugh with 33 yards.
The Eagles converted for ' 13
firs t downs, while North Galli a
had 10.
The Pirates fwnbled 3 times,
losing 2. while Eastern fum bled twice ,. with North Gallia
recovering 1.
The Pirates were penalized 3
times for 25 yards , while 60
yards were marked off against
Eastern in 9 infractions.
Friday the . E~gles close out
their 1974 season at Alexander.
North Gallia hosts the Gallia
Academy reserves Saturday
evening.
Scoring

:.

Meigs

George

Long scored the second Eagle
tally on an 18 yard run before
Mike Larkins scored from II
yards out and Long ripped off a
42 yard run .
Th e Ea gle s uppe d the
margin to 34-0 on a 1 yard run
by Don Jackson before the
Pirates came back with a pair .
of touc hdowns on a 2 yard run
by fullback Bruce Runyon and
3 yard pass !rom Mark Theiss
to Don Spencer .
The Eagles closed out the
scoring in the final quarter on a
J7yard pass from Randy Blake
to Phil Bowen .
Blake completed 6 of 7
aerials , with that one in completion being dropped by a
wide open receiver.
Joining Eichinger in the

It'

I , H

Punting

tlle g(Ound.

Eastern's Don Eichinger, the
:I night's lop rusher with 102
:.'1. yards, opened the scoring in
~:· · the first qu~ter, sprinting 54
~ yards. Semor fullback Max

A C Yds lnt TO

Anderson

VINTON - The Eastern
Eagles captured second place
' ' in the final SV AC standings
' " ' • .. with a surprisingly easy 40-16
·victory over the North Gallia
''IT ' 'Pirates here Friday night .
The win, the birds' fourth
against one loss in the SVAC,
.%- -i- l ruined
the
Pirates '
,; - r; homecoming and dropped the
Bttcs to fourth place with a 3-3
loop mark .
It was a devastating groundaerial combination that gave '
the gridders of Spike Berkhi mer a comfortable 26-0
halftime lead.
On the night, the Eagles
rushc11 for 311 yards and
passed for 118 more, while the ·
Pirates churned up 210 total
yards, 93 in the air and 117 on

:

M&amp;lgs

Player

Swingle

I

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Eagles top

Pusing

Player

'

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Jackson outlasts Marauders, 22-8

MA RAUDER STADIUM - A
J im AlldPr son pa ss to Lonnie
Coats for the conversion lifted
the Mm·aude rs of Charley
Chancev to a n 8-8 tie la te in the
third q·Ua rter a nd Marauder
Stadium exploded like it hasn 't
in many a Frida y night.
Unfortun a tely for Marauder
followe rs. the excitement soon
turned lo dismay as on the
sec ond scrimmage play of the
,fi nal quar ter, J ackson quarterback Jeff Conroy dashed
and broke l&lt;lckles to the tune of
a 67 yard touc hdown as the
Jr onmen we nt on to defeat
Meigs 22-8.
The , lOss droppe d the
Ma ra ud ers to 1~ on the season ,
0-6 in the SEOAL, with Meigs'
las t chance for a league
triumph coming next Friday
night at Wa verly in the battle
for the basement.
J ackson, meanwhile, is 6-3
overall , 3-3 in loop play .

'

25 - Tht" Sw1day Ti1n~ti - Sentinel, Sumtay , Ntl\' . J . l~74

•

,,

YIN DALE
14'x70'

Congressman

*:* 11 IS A RENEWAL, NOT AN ADDED TAX :**
**
**
**
** ' YOUR SUPPORT WILL BE
!*
APPRECIATED
:*
**
*:*
· Pd. For By Committee :
*
.
*
*********************************

1975 MODEL

Miller for some

60'

X

12'

$5975

thunder in .
Washington~ • •

75

fum\s\\ed

•

FUQUA

HOME
1
15,471' , ... ,.,
...,., rumish
$

13,97474

44'x24'
HOM£

ed

$12 474/"

O~l1 ~74.7..4.,M"'o.RE

Unfurnished

·"

'

,Jhe Sacred Heart Church Bazaar
~

.

'

POMEROY,
OHIO
..
THURSDA~Y, NOV.

Keep in mind,
Ralph Welker, while
representing
.you at the
.
'
.
.
'

-

7, 1974

..

•' Gene~~ Assembly, was .a powe,r in
i

·'

taxes for' fanners; obtaining

The Pomeroy Catholic Church annual Tl)anksglvlng Bazaar this coming Thursday, Nov. 7th. The usual good home cooke!! meals will be served starting at 4:30
P.M. fill 7:00 P.M. Choose between Creamed Baked Chicken and Baked Ham
dinners.

•

•

'

'&lt;

'

'

•

personal ·property
'

.

"lt

'

•

'

••

'

'

I

'

chairman of the house agriculture and ~onservation commiu
. '
ee.
.

60X24 Vin.
SECTION~

MOBILE HOMES INC.

{2) Stand Behind Your Purchase

Route 7-Galllpolls, Ohio

(3) A Fine Mobile Home For The

f

PHON'E 446-3547

l.owj!St Dollar

.

X

RALPH
WELKER '
REPUBLICAN

(4) Quick Efficient Service

.

(5) To Gain Your Trust

Paid for by fhe ,c;onunltfft to
Elect Ratp/1 Welker, Fred CrOIM,o

;Jr:,. C~elrmarT, ..SyrecuH, 0.

•

•·
·,
I'
-

(l) Please The CuStomer

,.

For State. 'Representitlve (921id House
District)
'

•

-·

70x14 .

J-O HNSON'S

We. Need Ralph 'ln Columbus! Ralph Needs Your Votel

CHILDR.EN s1.50

-·

60x12
CHAMPION

.$637474

pqllution. 'control:and water ·

. · manage~ent~ •• aggressively
battling. for his district. whlle
'

Good place to bring the family for a night of fun and entertainment. Cash awards
to be giyen away throughout the night. EVERYONE WELCOME.

DINNER: ADULTS $3.00

..
lVate~

.

~movi,ng

. 60x12 ·
NEW. MOON

.

·.'

(

'·

••

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-( '

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.I·

I

�:.H - Till' ::iumtuv Tllltl;' ~ · &amp;&gt;nt inel , Sunday , Nov . 3. 1974

·'

,••

,•

'• .

'•

It was a rushing night for
both teams , as the Jronmen of
Ron Fenick carried for 270
yards in 5:1 trips , For Meigs, it
was a refreshing return to
respectable running, as the
Marauders ran for 184 yards in
just 33 carries, a 5.6 average.
The game, marred by
nwnerous first half penalties
as 7 motion or offsides
penalties were caJied on the
Marauders in the first two
quarters, saw the lronmen
open the scoring in strange
fashion .
,
Randy Ridge, last season's
most valuable player in the
league, was injured midway
through the first period on a
crushing tackle by Marauder
Terry QuallS. Ridge, who does
most of the Ironma11 punt
returning, was replaced by
fullback Dave Davis.
With. less than two minutes

gone in the second period.
Davls hauled in a Ga ry Gt•orgl'
punt and dashed untouched
down the right sideline 77 yards
to put Jac kson in front. Conroy
just sneaked into the corner of
the er'ld zone for the conver sion
points.
That's the way it stood until
Qualls recovered a Conroy
fumbled on the Jackson 34 ·
midway through period three .
The Marauders, behind the ·
running of Anderson, drove to
tile I yard lin¥ where tailback
Terry Whitlatch, on a spec. tacular fourth down effort, just
managed to dive over the flag
in the corner of the end zone to
set the stage for Anderson's
pass to Coats.
Neither team could move the
ball following the Marauder
score; but just a little over four
and a half minutes later,
Conroy faked into the line and
took off around his left end,

cutting back through the
secondary on his 67 yard jaunt.
The run for the extra poin tS'
was stopped cold.
The lronmen added an insurance score with just 8
seconds left in the game as
Conroy again circled left end,
this time from 14 yards out. ·
It was a night for outstanding
individual
performances .

INDIVIDUAL STATS
Rushing
Meigs
Pl41yer
C. Yds TO
Ander son
9 83
Qua us
8 60
Whitlatch
13 35
Coats
I .3
Buff ington
2 3
Jilckson
Player
C Yds TO
Davi s
26 109
Conroy
12 92
2
R: idge
7 38
Shields
8 31

.'

Davis accwnulated 109 yards
in 26 bursts to go with tl!at punt
return and a 38 yard kickoff
return , while Conroy added 92
J.-footers . Jackson defensive
back Bryan Joseph picked off 3
Anderson aerials, returning 2
of them for a total of 29 yards .
On the other side of the fence ,
";"derson p~t on a running
displa~ of hiS own,, going . 83
yards m ju~t 9 cames. Tw1ce
the junior signal caller almost
broke the long one, once going ·
52 yards and being caught
another liQ'le by the last

lronman defende r after a 19
yard sprint.
Qualls, although he totaled
just 60 yards, had a 4{ yard
dash stopped by the final
Jackson defender who just
managed to .force the speedy
· junior out of bOunds late in the
first period.
.
Neither Anderson nor Conroy .
was very effective with the
:•erial game, both'.; managing
.· just 1 c~pletion, Anderson's
in lO ·)rie8 and Conroy 'In &amp;·attempts.
' ,,, · : .
·
The Ironmen tota1'ed 15 first

..

.•.

..~· ·

(Anderson pasS to Coats).
J - Conroy, 67 yard run
failed) .
J - Conroy, 14 yard
(Conroy pass to Jenkins).
By quarters:
Jackson
0 8
Meigs
0 0

downs to just:B for Meigs, while
Jackson fumbled the ball 3
times, losing I. The Marauders
did not fumble.
Meigs was penalized 9 times
for 55 yards, while 30 yards
were marked off against the
lronmen in 5 goofs.
.
Friday the Marauders try to
break into the victory column
against
Waverly,
while
Jackson entertains Logan,
Seorl~g

J - Davis, 77 yard punt
return (Conroy run) .
M - Whitlatch, I yard run

:2

Player
Conroy

10

1 , 10

3

0

Jackson
A C Yds rnt TO
6 I
14
0 0

!

Pass Receiving
Meigs

v~~

Whitlatch

ca:

Plilyer

Cat Yds

,

Player

.. ''

P Yds Ave

Fenwick

2 51

I

1 35

M

First Downs
First Downs Ru shing

' '

T

\

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, I

GRAPPLERS BEGIN - Practice for the toughest sport of all began at Meigs High Friday.
Pictured here is a Marauder wrestler in control during a match last year against Point
Pleasant.

NOV.

t

33.5

t.

JS
25.5

I

Punt Returns
Jackson
Pl1yer
Ret. Yds TD
Davis
2
BO
1
Kickoff Returns
Meigs
. Player
Ret Yds
Qvalls
I
17
Magnotla
I
9
Coats
I
5
Jackson
Player
Ret Yds
Joseph
1
s
Davis
1
38
Interception Returns
Jackson
Play_er
lnt Yds
Joseph
3
29
TEAM STATS

•.

THRU

Player

· Ridge

l

.

.

'''

.,
•'

I

'•

·~

E - Long, 42 yard run
t Bla ke run ).
E - Jackson, I yard run
1Long pass from Blake ).
NG - Runyon, 2 yard run
! Tacke tt pass from Theiss).
NG - · Spencer, 3 yard pass
from Theiss 1Runyon run J. ·
E - Bowen, 17 yard pass
from Blake (run failed) .

By quarters :
Eas tern
18 8 8 6-'!0
North Gallia
0 0 8 8-IG

V an c ouver

6 3 2

Ch icag o
M in neso ta
st . Lou i s

6
'2

2

l.t

42 30

J

1 lJ

46 23

.:1

3
3

18
'16

5

7
7

2J
JO

K an sasCi ty
0 7 1
I 17 39
Divi sion 3
w . 1. t . pts gf ga
L os An g e les
6 1 4 16 35 IB
M ontreal
D etr o it

4

1

12 37 32
11 3 1 42

P i tts burgh
2 5 I
W as h i n g ton
1 B I
Division 4

5 28 34
3 17 39

4

3

S 4

6 14
FirstOownsRush . Pass. 1
1
First Downs by Penalty
I
0
Rushing AUempls
33 53
Yards Rushing
184 270
Yards Passing
10 14
Passes Attempted
10
6
Passes Completed
1
1
Passes Intercepted by
0
J
Total Yards
.194 284
Fumbles
0
3
Fumbles Lost
0
1
Punts
6
3
Pun 1 Yards
201 86
Ave . Yds. Per Pun t
33.5 28 .7
Punt Ret. Yardag e
0 80
Ki c koff Ret . Yard .
31 43
Penalties
9
5
Penalty YardaQe
55 30

You can talk to Ralph Welker! Ralph wlllllstenl
Former legislator•••former county sherfH•••
active poultry farmer and businessr~~an •••HE
WILL UNDERSTAND•••

TAWNEY'S
PIPE
SHOP
Ave.

BY RAY GOODMAN
waiting for something to
Melgs Wrestling Coach
happen. It's strlcUy a skill
Would you like to start a fight sport.
that would make the · AliBasketball? A tough game,
F oreman bout look like a but not if you're in shape.
picnic? Then throw this bone There are enough outside balls
into a den of sports fans : What and free throws to give
is
the
toughest,
most everyone a rest.
demanding sport of all?
Soccer? Tennis? Put them in
Remember, now, I'm not the same class as basketball.
talking about thrills or spills. I ,Golf? A beautiful game,
mean the sport that takes the demanding great skill, but
most out of you .
about as tough as walking .
Baseball? It's a snap. Except
Football? Now we're getting
for the pitcher and the catcher, warm. The contact is tough and
e veryone stands around you need guts to play. You
could get hurt on every play,
but it still isn't number I In
toughness . You can rest after
every play and there are time
outs. In fact, there are only
about eight minutes of live
action in a 6&lt;kninute game.
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Hockey? Another tough
Thur sday Strikers
demanding
and dangerous
Oct . 24 , I'J74
Team
W.
L.
sport. It's the fastest game on
Mi tc h ell 's T ri o
66
6
H . F rank 's G irls
40 32 earth, but like football and
Shakl ee G ir ls
36 36 basketball you can always
30 42
Simon 's Pick a Pai r
catch a breather. Track?
T ea·m No . 6
24 48
Tea m No . 4
. 20 52
Swimmirig? Both sports take
H i gh team series. ~ Simon 's
P ick a Pair 1297 ; Mitchell 's skill and endurance, but they
Tri o 1292 ; Team No . 4 1253.
don't have body contact or
H ig h tea m game ~ Simon ' s danger.
P i ck. a P a i r &lt;171: H . Frank ' s
G ir ls 45 3 ; Tea m No. 4 439 .
Okay, let's get down to the
H ig h individual seri es toughest
aports of all. Boxing.
Co nni e Cha pman 461 ; Opal
Hup p 439 : Donna M c Farland
If you've never fought a match
407 .
in the ring, it's hard to imagine
H ig h in d i v idual ~a me - Opal
Hup p 171; Connie Chapman
how tough this sport is. Without
167 ; W anda Te aford ·156 .
long,
hard training you can't go
E unic e Duff w ill rec ei ve · a
w 1B C p at ch for p i ck i ng up the more than a round or two and a
7-4·6· 10 sp li t .
round is only 3 minutes. Your
Su e Haid will rec eive a WI B C
pa t c h f or bowling 3 c onsecuiiYe
arms will drop and your legs
gam es. of 123 on Oc tober 10 .
will feel like rubber and after
you've ~aken a couple 'or

53

111

3 1 31

3 2 . 34 109 3639
36 30
34

1
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\\\.,:t_Y

I

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I
I

Ci t y

a t L os A n g e les

" Mapl e Le af Ra g" . wa s
nam e d for a sa lo on in
Sedalia , Mo.

TEXWEAVE®
FASHION FIVER"'
OF 100 •.~o DACRON"
BY ~ ~

,

•

l
I
·

1·.

Solirt colors have an impo rtant fashion t·o le tiJi.~.; season , .'"iO w h y
not let a Pa.lm Beach ': ' F as hion F i v~r ~ uit pla,v a big role in you!'

J

II
I
I
l
l

appearance '! Th e F w.;h ion F ive r comes w ith an extra pair of
con t rast s lack&lt;; t hat do ubl e up with th e s ui t .i a&lt;' kct t o m al~ e an
exciti ng sp01-ts em;cm hl e. Bot h 'llit pants a nrl e xtra slacl&lt; co m e
with th eil' own eoloi'-&lt;'OOI'clinaterl helt. !'ai m Rea ch ta il ors th is
versat il e tw ill-patte rn ed s ui t in easy-r are l OOt ~ Dacron"!" po l,ves te r
in c la ~s i c bla ze r s t ~~ ling set off wi t h hand some go ld -tone bll tton s
in a wide 1·ange of sp r itel.v autu mn t ones.
3-Piece S uit &amp; 2 Belts , '115

I

\
L-----GAUlPOLIS, O H I O - - - - - - - - - :~::o;l:'~o:d~i::o=o=l:_)

GallipOlis

Thomas Clothiers .

All price~ include Total Electric, Delivery and Set- UpPlus many deluxe optiona I features.

Lawrence,

THIS SALE IS •••

DISPLAY MODEL
'

"SUPER SENSATIONAL"
....

Meigs and part

*~ FOR AND SUPPORT :
**
**
: CHESTER TOWNSHIP
i
*
*

of Athens
..

Counties, to

!

FIRE LEVY

I

district, Gallia,

i**

VOTE

I

And, Ralph can
.ably ·explain the
problems of his

*•********************************'*

:

I

'

punches your face will ache. tough that high schoohnatcbes
Still a well-trained boxer can
are limited to 6 minutes. When
go 15 rounds and that's why
the match is over the wrestler
boling Is nwnber 2 to ...
is completely worn out. I'm not
Wrestling! This is also a man talking about professional
to man combat sport, but your wrestliug which is all show
opponent always has his hands, business.
legs and body all over you. He
There is no way a wresUer
is squeezing, twisting or riding
can go 32 or 40 minutes as in
you. Every part of your body
basketball, or 60 minutes as in
has to be in constant action. football, or 10 to 15 rounds.
Wrestling calls for huge
After 6 minutes, he's had it for
amounts or strength, en- the day,
durance and speed. It's so
Tennis, anyone?

~*

I

1

I
~~~~!f0°a~' T~~~~f~
I
I
Scott Joplin 's first success, I
I
I
I

We have a very large
inventory to select
from. Stop in soon and
look them over.

II

1

~~~~~~~e%~:~,v~~~ 1 r ~:rder s
Det r o i t

II

I
I

A tlanta at St . L ou is

15

.I

w. t. t . p1S · gt ga

California
7 4 8 32 60
Friday '2s Results
A tlanta 5 Toronto 2
V
ouver
i ttsburg
D an
etrcoi
t 4 Cal7 iP
forn
i a 4, thie4
Saturday' s Game s
15

SAVE
$$$
NOW

lTJ~IlY Sf)JJJI) l~lJJ(JI~

I

NHL S!andings
B y United P re ss Internat i onal
Divio;;ion l
w. 1. t. pts gf g a
N Y Isla n der s 6 1 2 lJ 41 17
Atla n ta
6 · 4 2 14 ·II 28
Ph il ade lphi a 6 3 I 13 3 4 26
N Y RangersS321'13430 1
~~vi~io~. 2 pts gf g a

Wrestling--it's not for everybody

Local Bowling

I'

54 yard run

::~:~~::~;~~i~.~·~; :::~p:: I t~tt(t)It~ltJtiiii~il(~tl'"

Bos ton
Toronto

PIPES

J

8

"~~ ~.~~~~inger.

B uffalo

NOW ON

I

•

••

'

•t
!

Jackson ·

201

-

~-

P Yds Ave
6•

Eastern rushing game were
Long with 97 yards, Larkins
with 55, Jackson with 30 and
Blake with 27 yards.
Berkhimer had high praise
for his Eagle backs, especially

Long a nd Larkins who did a
"super job" according to Che
second-year mentor.
"It was by far our best job of
running the , ball all year, "
Berkhimer added .
The Pirate running attack.
meanwhile, was led by Runyon
with 74 yards, followed by Fred
Logan with 36 yards and Jeff
Hollenbaugh with 33 yards.
The Eagles converted for ' 13
firs t downs, while North Galli a
had 10.
The Pirates fwnbled 3 times,
losing 2. while Eastern fum bled twice ,. with North Gallia
recovering 1.
The Pirates were penalized 3
times for 25 yards , while 60
yards were marked off against
Eastern in 9 infractions.
Friday the . E~gles close out
their 1974 season at Alexander.
North Gallia hosts the Gallia
Academy reserves Saturday
evening.
Scoring

:.

Meigs

George

Long scored the second Eagle
tally on an 18 yard run before
Mike Larkins scored from II
yards out and Long ripped off a
42 yard run .
Th e Ea gle s uppe d the
margin to 34-0 on a 1 yard run
by Don Jackson before the
Pirates came back with a pair .
of touc hdowns on a 2 yard run
by fullback Bruce Runyon and
3 yard pass !rom Mark Theiss
to Don Spencer .
The Eagles closed out the
scoring in the final quarter on a
J7yard pass from Randy Blake
to Phil Bowen .
Blake completed 6 of 7
aerials , with that one in completion being dropped by a
wide open receiver.
Joining Eichinger in the

It'

I , H

Punting

tlle g(Ound.

Eastern's Don Eichinger, the
:I night's lop rusher with 102
:.'1. yards, opened the scoring in
~:· · the first qu~ter, sprinting 54
~ yards. Semor fullback Max

A C Yds lnt TO

Anderson

VINTON - The Eastern
Eagles captured second place
' ' in the final SV AC standings
' " ' • .. with a surprisingly easy 40-16
·victory over the North Gallia
''IT ' 'Pirates here Friday night .
The win, the birds' fourth
against one loss in the SVAC,
.%- -i- l ruined
the
Pirates '
,; - r; homecoming and dropped the
Bttcs to fourth place with a 3-3
loop mark .
It was a devastating groundaerial combination that gave '
the gridders of Spike Berkhi mer a comfortable 26-0
halftime lead.
On the night, the Eagles
rushc11 for 311 yards and
passed for 118 more, while the ·
Pirates churned up 210 total
yards, 93 in the air and 117 on

:

M&amp;lgs

Player

Swingle

I

'

Eagles top

Pusing

Player

'

.

Jackson outlasts Marauders, 22-8

MA RAUDER STADIUM - A
J im AlldPr son pa ss to Lonnie
Coats for the conversion lifted
the Mm·aude rs of Charley
Chancev to a n 8-8 tie la te in the
third q·Ua rter a nd Marauder
Stadium exploded like it hasn 't
in many a Frida y night.
Unfortun a tely for Marauder
followe rs. the excitement soon
turned lo dismay as on the
sec ond scrimmage play of the
,fi nal quar ter, J ackson quarterback Jeff Conroy dashed
and broke l&lt;lckles to the tune of
a 67 yard touc hdown as the
Jr onmen we nt on to defeat
Meigs 22-8.
The , lOss droppe d the
Ma ra ud ers to 1~ on the season ,
0-6 in the SEOAL, with Meigs'
las t chance for a league
triumph coming next Friday
night at Wa verly in the battle
for the basement.
J ackson, meanwhile, is 6-3
overall , 3-3 in loop play .

'

25 - Tht" Sw1day Ti1n~ti - Sentinel, Sumtay , Ntl\' . J . l~74

•

,,

YIN DALE
14'x70'

Congressman

*:* 11 IS A RENEWAL, NOT AN ADDED TAX :**
**
**
**
** ' YOUR SUPPORT WILL BE
!*
APPRECIATED
:*
**
*:*
· Pd. For By Committee :
*
.
*
*********************************

1975 MODEL

Miller for some

60'

X

12'

$5975

thunder in .
Washington~ • •

75

fum\s\\ed

•

FUQUA

HOME
1
15,471' , ... ,.,
...,., rumish
$

13,97474

44'x24'
HOM£

ed

$12 474/"

O~l1 ~74.7..4.,M"'o.RE

Unfurnished

·"

'

,Jhe Sacred Heart Church Bazaar
~

.

'

POMEROY,
OHIO
..
THURSDA~Y, NOV.

Keep in mind,
Ralph Welker, while
representing
.you at the
.
'
.
.
'

-

7, 1974

..

•' Gene~~ Assembly, was .a powe,r in
i

·'

taxes for' fanners; obtaining

The Pomeroy Catholic Church annual Tl)anksglvlng Bazaar this coming Thursday, Nov. 7th. The usual good home cooke!! meals will be served starting at 4:30
P.M. fill 7:00 P.M. Choose between Creamed Baked Chicken and Baked Ham
dinners.

•

•

'

'&lt;

'

'

•

personal ·property
'

.

"lt

'

•

'

••

'

'

I

'

chairman of the house agriculture and ~onservation commiu
. '
ee.
.

60X24 Vin.
SECTION~

MOBILE HOMES INC.

{2) Stand Behind Your Purchase

Route 7-Galllpolls, Ohio

(3) A Fine Mobile Home For The

f

PHON'E 446-3547

l.owj!St Dollar

.

X

RALPH
WELKER '
REPUBLICAN

(4) Quick Efficient Service

.

(5) To Gain Your Trust

Paid for by fhe ,c;onunltfft to
Elect Ratp/1 Welker, Fred CrOIM,o

;Jr:,. C~elrmarT, ..SyrecuH, 0.

•

•·
·,
I'
-

(l) Please The CuStomer

,.

For State. 'Representitlve (921id House
District)
'

•

-·

70x14 .

J-O HNSON'S

We. Need Ralph 'ln Columbus! Ralph Needs Your Votel

CHILDR.EN s1.50

-·

60x12
CHAMPION

.$637474

pqllution. 'control:and water ·

. · manage~ent~ •• aggressively
battling. for his district. whlle
'

Good place to bring the family for a night of fun and entertainment. Cash awards
to be giyen away throughout the night. EVERYONE WELCOME.

DINNER: ADULTS $3.00

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lVate~

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NEW. MOON

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27 - The Sunday Times · Sentinel, Sunday, Nov . 3, 1974

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26 - Tl,., Sun\la)' Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Nov . 3, 1974

Blue Devils
WELLSTON - Fog, thick as
pea soup mos t of the time
throughout the first half, failed
to stop Gallia Academy High
School 's Blue Devils her e
Friday night as Coach C. L.
(Johnn y) E ck er 's gridde rs
rolled ove r Coa ch Jody
Mi chael's We lls ton Golden
Rocke ts , 32-6 be fore a pproximate ly 3,000 Parents
Night fans.
The South eastern Ohio
Leag ue victory left GAHS with
5-1 mark and in undisputed
second place, one-half game
ahead of Athens , Friday 's final
Blue Devil opponent. Overall,
Gi\HS is 8-1.
Wellston dropped to' 5-4 on
the year. The loss left WHS tied

lor fourth place witb Jackson
Inside the coaference wltb a 3-3
slate.
,
Ironton clinched at least a tie
for the 1974 SEOAL title Friday
by blanking Logan 35-0. GAHS
needs a victory over Athens
and Wellston must stop Ironton

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32-6
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After an exchange of touch·
downs on initial series in the
first period at Wellston Friday,
GAHS assun1ed command late
in the slanza following the first
of four Golden Rocket fumbles

no gain, the veteran Blue Devil
senior signal caller fired a 11yard louchdown pass to senior
tight end Tom Valentine. With
9:48 on the clock, GAHS led 6-0.
Niday hil Valentine for the two-

to win going away.

point c onversion pass

to make

GAHS '
Craig
Fisher
Friday or the . Lawrence returned Terry McKinniss'
Coun tians will own their third opening kickoff 12 yards to the
s traight undisputed loop Blue Devil 41.
crown, and fourth conference
Tailback David Graham
title in four years.
· smashed up the middle for
Despite blanking Waverly '1:1- four, then one. QB Jim Niday
0 Friday, Athens was uncorked a 43-yard slrlke 1o
eliminated for the 1974 title wingback Brent Saunders lo
picture. The Bulldogs, 4-1-1, put the oval on Wellston's 11.
can still finish all alone in Saunders was hauled down
second place by defeating from behind by safety Bruce
GAHS Friday night on Downard.
Gallipolis' Memorial Field.
After Niday was dropped for

it 8-0. The drive covered 59
yards in live plays.
Randy Peoples returned
Steve Wallis' ensuing kickoff 15
yards to the Wellston 35. Sixtylive yar&lt;,Is and 14 plays later,
Wellston was on the board.
Senior halfback Dick Gilliland
raced over from the 10 with
3:26left in the period . The run
for extra points failed .
Following a 43-yard punt by
Gallla 's Doug Brown later in
the period, Gallia 's Jeff Bane
pounced on a Pete Rupert
fumble on the Wellston 16. That
set up Gallia's second score.
Niday got one, Graham two,
then Graham a first down on
the seven as the period ended.
Graham crashed over from
Both
learns
created the six on the second play of.the
problems in the penalty second peri~ (11:24) to make
department as Waverly was It 14-6. After an exchange of
called 14 times for 122 yards in penalties, Niday ran the extra
walk.&lt;lffs while Athens drew points to give GAllS a 16-6
the flag seven times for 72 advantage.
penalty yards .
Two bad punts kept WHS in
Hull led all rushers with 193 hot water late in the second
yards in 10 carries wuth period. GAHS assumed control
Cunningham adding an even of the pigskin with 2:45 left in
100 on 10 attempts.
the half on Wellston's 34 after a
The score by quarters :
19-yard Mike Johnson punt
o o o ()- o rolled out of hounds.
Waverly
Atheno
6 12 7 2-'1:1
Niqay hit Valentine with a 23-

'Dogs top Tigers
ATH ENS - Fullback John
Hull sc ored a pair of topchdowns Friday night and ran for
193 yards in leading the Athens
Bulldogs to a 27-0 victory over
winless Waverly.
. By virtue of the win the
Bulldogs upped their league
record to 4-1-1 and have a shot
al second place if they can
upset the Gallipolis Blue Devils
next Friday night.
Hull tallied his first TD with
5: 18left in the first period on a
37 yard run, but Steve Green's
kick was no good.
Following a short Waverly
punt in the second quarter
Athens drove 22 yards in three
plays with ToM Ellwood
slamming over from the three
yard stripe and Green's kick
was again off target.
Hull set up the next Bulldog
score with a 75 yard run and he
packed it the final 12 yards to
score with 1:14 remaining In
the period for an 18-0 halftime

lead.
Jerry Cunningham, the other
Athens halfback who carries
the ball frequenUy but seldom

scores, accounted for the next
score on a 12 yard blast with
just seven seconds left in the
third period.
Steve Green toed the
placement to cap a 68 yard
drive in six plays.
Defensive ·end Don Jagers
accounted for the final Athens
points when he tackled
qtiarterback Chuck Thompson
in the end zone for a safety with
57 seconds remaining in the
contest.
The Athens offense clicked
for 18 first downs, J58 yards
rushing, and no pass completions In five attempts.
Waverly netted nine first
downs, had 53 yards on the
ground, but dld complete four
of 16 passes for 85 yards with
three of the aerials picked off
by Athens.

Bobcats outlast Falcons
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
(UP!) - Quarterback Rich
Bevly rushed for 146 yards and
passed for 105 while halfhack
L.C. Lyons gained 144 yards
rushing to lead Ohio University
to a 33-22 win over Bowling
Green State University in a
Mid-American Conference
game here Saturday.
Ohio University led 26-14
going into the fourtll period
when Bevly scored on a oneyard sneak and then hit OnJCk
Barrington with a rune:.yard
touchdown pass to puah the
Bobcats out In front 22-14 with
eight minutes remaining.
Bevly, who scored two touchdowns on one-yard quarterback sneaks, also hit Lyons
with a 13 yard touchdown pass
and Lyons rushed for the other

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Ohio U. score from four yards
out.
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The loss offset a brilliant
performance bY Falcon
sophomore running back Dave
Preston who gained 168 yards
in 30 carries and scored· two
touchdowns on runs of seven
and two yards,
The two touchdowns gave
Preston 12 for the year to
eclipse the old Bowling Green
State University marlt of 11
held by three players and tu
total of 72 points so far thla
year surpass_ed the school
record of 68 points held by
three players.
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Ohio University is now 5-3
overall and 3-2 in the MAC
while Bowling Green Ls 4-4
overall and 2-3 in the conference.,

GARS grid stats• ••
INDIVIDUAL NET
YARDS RUSHING
(Gallipolis)
Plaver- Pos .
TCB YG Avg .
B . Saund er s . WB
5 31
6.2
D . Salisbur y, T B
8 39
4.8
Brian Min k , F B
5 22
4.4
Davld Grhaam , TB21 92
4.3

W. J&lt;oomso'n , FB

3

J i m N iday . QB
7
Gar y Swain, QB
2
. C. Bry s lan , WB
1
TOTALS
52
(Wellston)
Player- Pas.
TCB
Ton y Gr ey, GB
2
Dic k Gi ll iland, HB 9
Randy Peoples, H B 13
8.. Downard. QB
1
Keith H enry. F B·
14
Pte Ru pert . Q B
4
TOTALS
43

1.

10

~0

3.3

18
1
.J
:210

2.5
.5
.3
4. 1

YG Avq.
10
5.0
41
4.5
44 · 3.3
3
3.0
38
2.7
1
.2
137
3. 1

PASSING
I Gallipolis}
Player
C· A T
Niday
4 -9 0
TOTALS
4-9 a
( Welhtonl
fl'liiy er ·
C·A I
Rupert
0·0 0

TOTALS

0

YG TO
8J
1
81
1
YG TO
0
0

0

0

Recovered enemy fumbles :
GAH S Jeff Bane, Scott
Epling, Brett Wilson·, 1 each .
Wells ton - Non e.
Kickoff returns:· GAHS ~obln s on, 1-14 -0; F isher, 1-12 -0.
·Wf!ll,ston H e nry, 2 -25 -0 ;
Peopl es, 1-15-0 ; Brooks , 1-14-0 ;
Fox, 1-0-0.
Punt r eturns: GAHS Wilson , 1-6-0; Groth, 1-0·0.
Wellston - Peoples. 1-6-0.
Punts :
GAHS ·- . Doug
•rown, 2-75. We ll ston - Mike
Johnson, 4-97 .
Pass i·nterception returns .. one.
Pa~s receptions : GAHS Valentine. 2-3-34 -1; B . Seun dcus , 2·6-47 .0. Wellston- None.
Scorint: GA!'fS - Valentine,
11 -yard pass from NJday, 9 : !18
tlrit (Va l entine, pass from
Niday) .· Graham , 6-yard run,
-11:24 second (Niday , run) ;
Niday, 1-y ard run , 1 : 58 second
fSeund ers , pass fro m Nida y) ;
Saunders, 1-yard run , 1:56.
•hlrd (N i day , run). wellston GIIIHand , 10-var d run . 3 : 26
tlrst, I run failed).
TEAM STATISTICS
ttepertment
G
w
~lrstdowns
18
10
Yards ru shing
220 150
. L:ostru!&gt;h lng
10
13
.Netrush ing ·
'210 137
Pesses atte mpted
9·
0
Passe$ complet ed
4
o
InterCepted by
o
0
Yards passing
81
0
total y ard s
291 137
' fl:eturn v~rd a g e
32
60
Pta~s
61
43 '
Fum~l es
1
4
lost fumbl es
0
3
~enaltl Bs
4-30 2-6. 5
Punts
2-75. 4 -97
LINEUPS
( Giilllpolis)
ENDS - 'B rett Wilson . Tom
Valent ine, John Grpth , Ed
Ha·ynan , Marly G ll le s p l ~ ,
KLES
k •TvA;nCJ
ac k son . .;.

S11unders (CC ); Mike Evans,
Jeff Bane, Dick. Burdette.
Lewis Schmidt, Paul Fin nicum , Pat Cochran .
GUARDS Doug Brown,
Bob Nibert , Jim Craft , Kent
Shawver, Steve Walli s, Brad
Yoho, Mike Wood ..
CENTERS - Scott Epling,
Rocky Rece, Mike Wiggle s worth. Chuck Lane .
BACKS - Jim Niday (CC) ;
Craig Fisher, Brian Mink ,
Bruce Scarberry , Gary Swain .
Wayne
Robinson,
Brent
Saunders, David · Graham.
Dennis Salisbur Y, John Myers.
Chris Brvslan, Sam Arm strong , Keith Ja&lt;:kson .
(Wellston)
ENDS Mike Johnson ,
Mark Fox , B_rick Brooks , Terry
McKinniss .
TACKLES - Denny Pearce ,
Jeff Brady , Randy Royster .
GUARDS
Dean
Argabright, Tim Ou sley., Wes
Perry, Morr i s Simpson , Ken
Hively .
CENTERS - Chip Lockard .
BACkS - Pele Rupert , Dick
Gillllllnd, Mike Watts, Randy
Peoples , Keith Henry , Randy
Henry, Doug Conger, Bruce
DoWnard, Tony Grey .
OFFICIALS · Graham ·
Thompson , Leo Wood , Fred
Davis and Bob Christian ,
Chillicothe Chapter .
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Scare by quarters:
Gal lipolis
8 16 8 0- 32
Wellston
6 0 0 0- 6
NEXT GAHS GAME .- Nov .
8 - Athens , home.

Mountaineers
beaten again
CHESTNUT HILL, Mass.
(UP!)- Keith Barnette tied a
school scoring record with four
touchdown runs Saturday as
Boston College handled West
Virginia; 35-3.
Barnette plied up 91 yards in
20 carries and became the
eighth BoSton Colleg~ i'unner to
score four touchdowns in a
game. His scoreS came from
13,'0oe, four, and one yard out.
Rwmlng mate Earl Strong,
taking over after Mike
Esposito suffered an arm in·
jury, added 118 yards in 19
carries and scored the other
Eagle touchdown . West
Vll'ginla's only score came tate
in the first period on a 36-yard
field goal by Emil Rc6.
The Eagle offense dominated
frooi the start, moving 4a yards
in eight plays on their secood
p11ssesslon of the game~ Baroette rwnbled the final 13
yards.
The Mountaineers mounted
their only offense on the next
series, moving to the Boston
College 15 on tltt strength of
two passes ' to All America
candidate Danny I!Jiggs. But
West Virginia stalled on a
fourth and eight and had to
settle for three points.
Before the hall ended, Barnette had scored two more
times to flnisli tim~lliWlling
marches and give the Eagles a

21-3 edge.
Strong, again providing the
puwer running in the third
quarter , notched his touchdown 9:23 after intermission on
a 14-yard IM'st over lhe right
side.
· Barnette bolted one yard
early in the last lieriod for the
Eagles' final score. The second
offense finished the game for
Boston· College.
Quarterback Mike Kruczek
engineered the Eagles throug~
all fiv~ toucMowns, picking qp
vital running yardsge in addition to completing eight of 12 ·
passes for 83 yards. ·
The Mountaineers were kept
from scoring a touchdown for
the first time since Perui,State
shut them out in 1969. · The
game left Boston College with a
~ record and dropped West
Vlrglnla to 2-6.

Grid
standings
W . LT
8 1 0
7 1 1
7 2 o
6 :J 0
5 J 0
5 4 0
4 4 1
2 6 1
1 8 0
1 8 0
0 9 0

·GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS &amp; LOA~ ,
ANNOUNCES

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221
305
200
187
161
84
104
81
94
126

OP
88
74
123
81
103
121
98

ON REGULAR PAS,SBOOK \
SAVINGS ACCOUNTS

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ALL DEPOSITS GUARANTEED

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OHIO Df:POSIT GUARANTEE FUND
SUB5!ANTIAL INTEREST PENALTY IS REQUIRED FOR EARLY
WITHDRAWAL,ON CERTIFI~TES OF DEPOSfl's'

Whitlatch's jersey is Jackson's Tim Meadows as Mark
Taylor tries to get hold of the Meigs captain from behind .
Other players in view are Marauders Jim Anderson (11),
Terry Qualls on right and Jackson's Rick Scilrlock (70) .
Photo by Katie Crow.
PRINCETON UPSET

LYNE CENTER GYM - POOL SCHEDULE
Rio Grande College

DATE- GYMNASIUM
Nov . 4 4-6 p.m . Community Dance
4-7 p.m . Athletics
9-10:30 p .m . Open Rec r ea ti on

POOL

9·1 0•30 p.m .
Open Swim
9-10 : 30 p .m .
Ope n Sw im

Nov . 7 4-6 p.m . Community Dance

4· 7 p.m. Athl etics
8: 10-9:30 p .m . 101 Found. Class
9-10: 30'p .m . Open Recreat ion

9-10: 30 p .m .
Open Swi m
8:30-ll a .m . GS I Swim

CLOSED

TOM

HERBERT

T·HE . GALLIPOL·
IS ·- SAVINGS
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AND LOAN COMPANY .

SUPREME COURT
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GALLI

OHIO
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VOTERS OF GALLIA COUNTY:

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The Comndttee ,for the Election of.James A. Bannett for
Common Pl~s Judge presents the following iuue fOr
your consideration:
ISSUE: PRESENTATION OF OUTDATED STATISTICS TO tHE VOTERS
SUBJECT
Probation statistics

Gallipolis' ,Dai~ Tribune
Qctober 30, 1974

Gallipolis Daily Tribune
October 29,1974

Caseload statistics

l'

1100 E. Main
Pomeroy, 0 .
Call 992-7034
Open Dally 11 to 7

Nov . 9 10- 12 noon Commun ity Gymnastics
10 a .ni .-5 p.m . Self Defense
for Wom en Workshop

CLOSED

CLOSED

ELECT

HOWARD E. FRANK
REPUBLICAN

FOR MEIGS COUNTY AUDITOR
10 YEARS BUDGET EXPERIENCE
10 YEARS BOARD OF REVISION EXPERIENCE

2- 4 Open Sw im

Nov . 10 CLOSED

2-4 Open Swim

1-5 p.m . Rules interpretation
Meet ino &amp; Varsity Scr immage
(Rio v s w. Va . State )
7-9p.m. Upen Recreat ion

7-9p.m .
All -College Swim

8 Years experience as County Investor of Public Funds
which has earned the tax payers of this county over
$600,000.00.

Now serving on the Legislative Committee for Ohio
County Officials Association. Passed experience as
secretary-treasurer for the South East Treasurers
Association. .
PO. POL. AOV. ~

THESE CHILDREN AND MANY MORE.,
WHO COULD BE ENROLLED ·IF WE HAD
·F ACILITIES, AR·E ASKING FOR

BENNEIT

CAutOUN
Sunday Times Sentinel
October 27, 1974

KINGSBURY
MOBILE HOMES

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"safe .Saiinis Since 1886"

., OPPOSITE THE POST OFFICE
PHONE 446-383t

Put

9· 10: 30

Nov . 6 4·7 p.m. Athleti cs
9-10:30 p .m . Open Recreation

Nov . 8 4-7 p .m . Athlet ics

Veterans $20 down will

you In thi5. home!

Open Sw im

Nov . 5 4-7 p.m . Athletics
8: 10-9: 30 p .m . 101 Found . Class
9-10: 30 p .m . Open Re&lt;:reation

1

O'Keefe with a 711-yard touchdown pass midway through the
PROVIDENCE, R. I. (UP! ) final period Saturday to give
- Backup quarlerback Pete Brown a 17-13 upset win over
Bea trice hit tight end Ken Princeton .

live in the rolling hills of
Southern Ohio in your own 3
BR .• all electric mobile
home in Southern Ohio's
newest mobile home park. IS
min .
from
Athens
or
Pomeroy . Price reduced to
get this mobile home park
started. Set up &amp; ready to
move into. For further
details contact . •

" Keep honesty and integrity In your local government.'

GaUipolis Dai~ Tribune
October.'31, 1974

YOUR HELP.
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When you review the above ads by the candidates you will not11 that the
committee ·to re-elect the . Judge used 1972 ;and 1973 statistics even tl)ough
·statistics were available through september 30, 1974 as public records · in 'fhe
Gallia County Clerks office which were used by the ,Corrtmittee for James Ben·
nett.
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JIM BENNETT BELIEVEs THAT THE STATISTics
PRESEN,T ED BY THE COMMITTEE TO RE- ELECT
THE. JUDGE ARE ' NO . LONGER VALID' IN
EVALUATING THE PRESENT CONDITION OF THE
COURT. WE IN GALLIA CoUNTY ARE NOT INTERE·S:fEP IN THE CONDITION OF .THE COURT IN
PAST ·YEARS. WE ARE INTER~STEQ IN THE CONDITION OF THE CQURT TODAY.
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JIM_ ~·ENNE~TT' BELIEVES THAT CURRENT
STATISTICS SHOW THAT OPERATION QF THE COURT
HAS PRACTICALLY CEASED. THIS IS EVIDENCE BY
l'HE FACT THAT ALTHOUGH 20.9 PCT• . OF THE
.PENDING CASES ARE OVER ONE' YEAR OLD, ONLY
~ ONE JURY TRIAL WAS HELD; AND 20 OTHER CON- ,
TESTED ' CASES HEARD, DURING THE FIRST 9
MONTHS OF '1974.
JIM BENNETT PLEDGES TO THE VOTERS ,OF
GALLIA COUNTY THAT HE WILL OPERATE · THE
COURT FOR THE BENEFIT AND CONVENIENCE OF
THE &lt;;:J:TIZEN~ OF GALLIA COUNTY AND FltRTHER.
THATTHE .BACK LOG OF; CASES, WILL BE REDUCED
AND THAT ALL CIT·IZENS WILL IN THE FUTURE
RECEIVE P~OMPT AND EQUAL JUSTICE.

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L.El'S RETURN DIE OOURT TO THE PEOPLE

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·Elect James : A~ ·Bennett
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FOR 'THE M 'E NTA·LLY RETARDED LEVY

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COMMON PLEAS JUDGE
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MARAUDER TAILBACK Terry Whitlatch struggles to
get past this Jackson defender on his 1 yard touchdown run.in
Friday night's 22-6loss to the Ironmen. Whitlatch just barely
made it inside the corner of the end zone here to bring the
Marauders to within 2 points of Jackson at 6-6. Clinging to

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RE-EL ECT

to

· OPEN LEITER .

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Vanderbilt 38 Army 14
Northwestern 21 Minnesota 13
Michigan St. 28 Wisconsin 21

Penn St . 24 Maryland 17

When I resigned my position at Holzer Medical Center Clinic in
September, ·1974, I thought I would be able to personally contact
everybody in Gallia County. Since then, I have learned two very im portant facts: Gall Ia County, geographically, is very big, and it ·iS filled
with wonderful people. The acquaintances and friendships I have made in
the past few months I shall cherish the rest of my life.
. During these past months, I have made·a thorough study of the duties
and responsibllfties of County Auditor . If elected, I feel I will be well
acquainted with the operation and procedures of the County Auditor's
office.
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I want the people of Gallia County to know I am beholden to no indivld:Jal nor group of individuals. I am a free, soverign Individual.
I have promised no one a job as I feel to do so would be intellectually
d(shonest because I do not know whether I will be elected . Neither do I
advocate that every person working in the Auditor 's office should be
terminated, because I will need the benefit of their advice and experience
in the operation of the office.
If you elect me as your County Auditor , the only promise that I will
make Is that to the best of my ability this office will be operated in an
honest, efficient, businesslike manner. Since the Auditor's office actually
belongs to you, the people of Galli a Couhty, your suggestions or criticisms
will always be welcomed.
I want to be your County Auditor and I hope you will help me by
voting for me on November 5, 1974.
Yours truly, .
Dorothy L Condee
Pd. Pot. Adv.

ON 2 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSITS
eiS,OOO MINIMUM

•

YOUR VOTE WILL BE GREA~'LY APPRECIATED

I

New Hampshir e 29 Rhode
Island 14
Morgan St. 20 North Carolina

" home"

PIONEERS ROMP
MARIETTA, Ohio (UPI ) Mike Glasser gained 104 yards
on 28 carries and scored two
touchdowns to lead Marietta to
a 3().t9 win over Heidelberg in
an Ohio Conference game here
Saturday. Glasser scored on
runs of four and 15 yards as
Marietta fou ght back to
overcome a 13-9 Heidelberg
halftime lead.

. ~ ', DOROTHY CON DEE

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ON 2 YEAR CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSITS
e'l,OOO MINIMUM

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As elec;tiol'! day approaches I find ·I have been unj.ble to
contact each of you in person. Please feel free to ·call or
see me at anytime.

W tnston· .

Concord 16 West Uberty 7
Brown 17 Princeton 13

\

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Henry Wells,
...

St. Lawrence 19 Rochester U.
16
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Hobart 21 Colby 7

J.

bac k

Milwaukee - scene of some
of his greatest triumphs Saturday when he -..as
traded by the Atlanta Braves•
to the Brewers for outfielder
Davey May and a player to
be named later.

TO THE PEOPLE
OF
GALLIA COUNTY

ON 1 YEAR CERTIFICATES OF·DEPOSITS ',
•'1,000 MINIMUM ·

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MEIGS COUNTY
·- COMMISSIONER

came

'· ------------~--Alfred 35 Rochester Tech o
Michigan 21 Indiana 7
Georgetown 35 Fordham 7
Alabama 35 Mississippi St . 0
Flrodia 25 Auburn 14
Texas 28 SMU 9
Pittsburgh 21 Syracuse 13
Delaware .49 Villanova 7
Cornell 2A Columbia o ·
Connecticut 9 Rutgers 7
Clemson 21 Wake Forest 9
Houston 31 Georgia 24
Akron 22 Indiana St. 21
Purdue 38 Iowa 14

ON 90 DAY·CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSITS
•'1,000 MINIMUM

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two pointers for the winners.
By quarters :
Point
0 · 0 0 7- 7
Parkersburg 16 14 0 6-38

Saturday's College
Football Results
Y United Press International
ent St . 35 ·Marshall 7
Ohio St . 49 Illinois 7
Duke 9 Georg; '!, Tech 0
N. C. St. 42 South Carolina 27
Bucknell 10 Lafayette 6
Harvard 39 Penn 0
Yale 1.4 Dartmouth 9
Notre Dame 14 Navy 6
Boston College 35 W. VIrginia 3
Clemson 21 Wake Forest 9
North Carolina 24 Virginia 10

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114

190
313

Parkersburg . Mike Shields,
Rich Duggan and Pat Earley
had/ single six-poinlers. Alan
Sle hens anrl T•rrv Goudv had

W»"-W.(.r.-m,;m;:.Wi:=:r-£ &amp;
AAKON TRADED
NEW YORK (UPI) ' ._
Hank A•ron, baseball'• alltime home run chamPion,

ON CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSITS

•

Team
. W. L . T
P . OP
Ironton
6 0 0 169 47 '·
Gallipoli s
5 1 o 196 68
Athens
4 1 1 77 42
Jackson
3 3 ' 0 106 69
Wellston
3 3 0 104 95
Log'an
2 3 1 91 106
Meigs
o 6 o 37 161
Waverly
0 6 0 64 iZ56
TOTALS
23 23 2 844 844
Friday's results :
Gallipolis 32 Wellston 6
Ironton 35 Logan 0
Jackson 22 Meios 8
Athens ~7 Waverly o
Rock Hill 44 Kyger Creek 7
Miller 32 Coal Grove 28
.Saturday ' s Game:
South POint at Ironton Sf Joe
(n ight)
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Nov. 8 games: .
Athen s at Gallipolis
Logan at Jackson
Meigs at Waverly·
Wellston at Ironton ·
Coal Grove at Chesapeake
R:ock Hill at sOuth Point

. :' ELECT

PARKERSBURG - The
Parkersburg Big Red built up a
huge .~ •halftime lead then
coasted to a 36-f over visiting
Pt. Pleasant here Friday night.
The loss left · Pt. Pleasant
wl th a . 6-4 season record.
Parkersburg upped its mark to
11-l.lt was the Blg.Blacks first
winning season since 1969.
QB Bill Rardin scored
Point's only touchdown with
6:12 left in the game . rS.rak
Pahunannon's placekick was
true.
The Big Reds picked up 22
first downs and pef111itted nine .
The home team led 382-118 in
total yards.
Deric Davis scored twice for

A&amp;.T 0

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NEW HIGHER INTEREST RATES

SEOAL ONlY

CUTS PRICES
LAKEWOOD, Ohio (UP!) Willlam Gallagher, a Shell
service station owner ordered
to repay the public for an
overcharge in gasoline · pricea
last . rear' cut his price
drastica!Jy Wednesday.
,
• Gallagher, ordered by a
federal court ·to repay the
public $8,800, sold gasoline for
10 cents a gallon. He- said ·h e
wasn :t sure how much gasoline
he sold, but said the sale
"caused big traffic jam" for
30 .minuteS.
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leg Injury and mld,tle
Brad Ypho , an ailkle IDJllfY
during tle coolest. , , ·
Wellaton ·played without the
services of senior tackle Rick
McCarley, qut for tile year 'with
a knee injury. West,' 'Perry,
senior Rocket guard, was
shaken up early in' the game
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and saw only limited acUon.

GAHS controlled the ball, Peoples, playing his third
running 61 plays to W ~ ltston's game ag~inst GAllS, paced
43.
Wellstorr with 44 Y81dS In 13
David
Graham
paced carries. Gililtand added 41 in
Gallia's running attack with 92 nine trips and Fullback Keith
ya~ds in 21 trips . . De~nis . . Henry 38 in 14 tries.
Salisbury had 39 yards in eight
GAllS played without !be
trips . Brent Saunders 31 in five services of , Keith Burdette,
attempts.
defeaslve sophomore end.
Junior halfba ck Randy . Guard boug B!"'WD ouffered a

1

ALL GAMES

Team
Gallipolis
Ironton
Rock H ill
Jackson
South Po int
Wellston
Athens
Logan
Meigs
Waverly
Coat Grove

yard pass to put it on the
Rockets' 11. Graham carried
twice for 10 lo the one. Niday
sneaked itoverwith 1:58on the
clock. That made it 22-6. Niday
passed to Brent Saunders for
.the extras, that made it 24-6.
Scott Epling recovered a
Wellston fumble on the fourth
play of the second half. GAHS
marched 46 yards in nine plays
to the Wellston 7, but the ·
Rockets held.
Wellston failed 'to gain. Brett
Wilson returned Johnson's 31·
yard punt from the WHS 35 to
the Rocket 29 to set up the
game's final touchdown .
Wayne · Robinson . senior
fullba ck got eight - up the
middle.
Brian
fyfink,
·sophomore fullback, slammed
for four. After a f&gt;.yard GAHS
penalty, Brent Saunders
squirted through the Rocket
defense for a first down on the
Wellston one. Saunders than
smashed over for the touch·
down with 1:56 left In the
period. Niday ran the · extra
points to give GAHS a 326lead.
Wilsou recovefed a Wellston
fumble on !be eosuillg kickoff
on the Wellston 41. The Blue
Devils marched 38 yards ill 12
plays, but a penalty and two
Incomplete passes ended that
GAHS threat on the WHS 10.
Coach . Ecker cleared . his
bench with, 5:43 left in the
game. Gallia's second unit, .
paced by sophomore tailback
Dennis Salisbury, marched 42·
yards in 11 plays, .but Wellston •.
held on its own 17 and moved
, back out to the WHS 32 as the
game ended . •
After picking up 65 yards in
14 trips in the first period,
Wellston, one of the loop's top
rushing teams, was limited to
72 yards in 29 attempts· from
scrimmage. The remainder of
the evening, the Rockets did
not attempt a pass during
Friday's 411-minute battle.
Meanwhile, GAHS rushed fo;
210 yards in 52 trips and Niday
hit on four of nine aerials for 81
·yards, giving the visitors 291
total YBrdS. Wellston finished
with 137 total yards.
The Blue Devils chalked up
1~ first downs, Wellaton had 10.

.Big Blacks lose fi~ale

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Paid by the Committee 1o··EiecV '' .,
A. Bennet Common PlejiS

Paid ·for by Promotion Committee ·of Mentally . ~etarded

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27 - The Sunday Times · Sentinel, Sunday, Nov . 3, 1974

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26 - Tl,., Sun\la)' Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Nov . 3, 1974

Blue Devils
WELLSTON - Fog, thick as
pea soup mos t of the time
throughout the first half, failed
to stop Gallia Academy High
School 's Blue Devils her e
Friday night as Coach C. L.
(Johnn y) E ck er 's gridde rs
rolled ove r Coa ch Jody
Mi chael's We lls ton Golden
Rocke ts , 32-6 be fore a pproximate ly 3,000 Parents
Night fans.
The South eastern Ohio
Leag ue victory left GAHS with
5-1 mark and in undisputed
second place, one-half game
ahead of Athens , Friday 's final
Blue Devil opponent. Overall,
Gi\HS is 8-1.
Wellston dropped to' 5-4 on
the year. The loss left WHS tied

lor fourth place witb Jackson
Inside the coaference wltb a 3-3
slate.
,
Ironton clinched at least a tie
for the 1974 SEOAL title Friday
by blanking Logan 35-0. GAHS
needs a victory over Athens
and Wellston must stop Ironton

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32-6
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After an exchange of touch·
downs on initial series in the
first period at Wellston Friday,
GAHS assun1ed command late
in the slanza following the first
of four Golden Rocket fumbles

no gain, the veteran Blue Devil
senior signal caller fired a 11yard louchdown pass to senior
tight end Tom Valentine. With
9:48 on the clock, GAHS led 6-0.
Niday hil Valentine for the two-

to win going away.

point c onversion pass

to make

GAHS '
Craig
Fisher
Friday or the . Lawrence returned Terry McKinniss'
Coun tians will own their third opening kickoff 12 yards to the
s traight undisputed loop Blue Devil 41.
crown, and fourth conference
Tailback David Graham
title in four years.
· smashed up the middle for
Despite blanking Waverly '1:1- four, then one. QB Jim Niday
0 Friday, Athens was uncorked a 43-yard slrlke 1o
eliminated for the 1974 title wingback Brent Saunders lo
picture. The Bulldogs, 4-1-1, put the oval on Wellston's 11.
can still finish all alone in Saunders was hauled down
second place by defeating from behind by safety Bruce
GAHS Friday night on Downard.
Gallipolis' Memorial Field.
After Niday was dropped for

it 8-0. The drive covered 59
yards in live plays.
Randy Peoples returned
Steve Wallis' ensuing kickoff 15
yards to the Wellston 35. Sixtylive yar&lt;,Is and 14 plays later,
Wellston was on the board.
Senior halfback Dick Gilliland
raced over from the 10 with
3:26left in the period . The run
for extra points failed .
Following a 43-yard punt by
Gallla 's Doug Brown later in
the period, Gallia 's Jeff Bane
pounced on a Pete Rupert
fumble on the Wellston 16. That
set up Gallia's second score.
Niday got one, Graham two,
then Graham a first down on
the seven as the period ended.
Graham crashed over from
Both
learns
created the six on the second play of.the
problems in the penalty second peri~ (11:24) to make
department as Waverly was It 14-6. After an exchange of
called 14 times for 122 yards in penalties, Niday ran the extra
walk.&lt;lffs while Athens drew points to give GAllS a 16-6
the flag seven times for 72 advantage.
penalty yards .
Two bad punts kept WHS in
Hull led all rushers with 193 hot water late in the second
yards in 10 carries wuth period. GAHS assumed control
Cunningham adding an even of the pigskin with 2:45 left in
100 on 10 attempts.
the half on Wellston's 34 after a
The score by quarters :
19-yard Mike Johnson punt
o o o ()- o rolled out of hounds.
Waverly
Atheno
6 12 7 2-'1:1
Niqay hit Valentine with a 23-

'Dogs top Tigers
ATH ENS - Fullback John
Hull sc ored a pair of topchdowns Friday night and ran for
193 yards in leading the Athens
Bulldogs to a 27-0 victory over
winless Waverly.
. By virtue of the win the
Bulldogs upped their league
record to 4-1-1 and have a shot
al second place if they can
upset the Gallipolis Blue Devils
next Friday night.
Hull tallied his first TD with
5: 18left in the first period on a
37 yard run, but Steve Green's
kick was no good.
Following a short Waverly
punt in the second quarter
Athens drove 22 yards in three
plays with ToM Ellwood
slamming over from the three
yard stripe and Green's kick
was again off target.
Hull set up the next Bulldog
score with a 75 yard run and he
packed it the final 12 yards to
score with 1:14 remaining In
the period for an 18-0 halftime

lead.
Jerry Cunningham, the other
Athens halfback who carries
the ball frequenUy but seldom

scores, accounted for the next
score on a 12 yard blast with
just seven seconds left in the
third period.
Steve Green toed the
placement to cap a 68 yard
drive in six plays.
Defensive ·end Don Jagers
accounted for the final Athens
points when he tackled
qtiarterback Chuck Thompson
in the end zone for a safety with
57 seconds remaining in the
contest.
The Athens offense clicked
for 18 first downs, J58 yards
rushing, and no pass completions In five attempts.
Waverly netted nine first
downs, had 53 yards on the
ground, but dld complete four
of 16 passes for 85 yards with
three of the aerials picked off
by Athens.

Bobcats outlast Falcons
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
(UP!) - Quarterback Rich
Bevly rushed for 146 yards and
passed for 105 while halfhack
L.C. Lyons gained 144 yards
rushing to lead Ohio University
to a 33-22 win over Bowling
Green State University in a
Mid-American Conference
game here Saturday.
Ohio University led 26-14
going into the fourtll period
when Bevly scored on a oneyard sneak and then hit OnJCk
Barrington with a rune:.yard
touchdown pass to puah the
Bobcats out In front 22-14 with
eight minutes remaining.
Bevly, who scored two touchdowns on one-yard quarterback sneaks, also hit Lyons
with a 13 yard touchdown pass
and Lyons rushed for the other

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Ohio U. score from four yards
out.
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The loss offset a brilliant
performance bY Falcon
sophomore running back Dave
Preston who gained 168 yards
in 30 carries and scored· two
touchdowns on runs of seven
and two yards,
The two touchdowns gave
Preston 12 for the year to
eclipse the old Bowling Green
State University marlt of 11
held by three players and tu
total of 72 points so far thla
year surpass_ed the school
record of 68 points held by
three players.
·
Ohio University is now 5-3
overall and 3-2 in the MAC
while Bowling Green Ls 4-4
overall and 2-3 in the conference.,

GARS grid stats• ••
INDIVIDUAL NET
YARDS RUSHING
(Gallipolis)
Plaver- Pos .
TCB YG Avg .
B . Saund er s . WB
5 31
6.2
D . Salisbur y, T B
8 39
4.8
Brian Min k , F B
5 22
4.4
Davld Grhaam , TB21 92
4.3

W. J&lt;oomso'n , FB

3

J i m N iday . QB
7
Gar y Swain, QB
2
. C. Bry s lan , WB
1
TOTALS
52
(Wellston)
Player- Pas.
TCB
Ton y Gr ey, GB
2
Dic k Gi ll iland, HB 9
Randy Peoples, H B 13
8.. Downard. QB
1
Keith H enry. F B·
14
Pte Ru pert . Q B
4
TOTALS
43

1.

10

~0

3.3

18
1
.J
:210

2.5
.5
.3
4. 1

YG Avq.
10
5.0
41
4.5
44 · 3.3
3
3.0
38
2.7
1
.2
137
3. 1

PASSING
I Gallipolis}
Player
C· A T
Niday
4 -9 0
TOTALS
4-9 a
( Welhtonl
fl'liiy er ·
C·A I
Rupert
0·0 0

TOTALS

0

YG TO
8J
1
81
1
YG TO
0
0

0

0

Recovered enemy fumbles :
GAH S Jeff Bane, Scott
Epling, Brett Wilson·, 1 each .
Wells ton - Non e.
Kickoff returns:· GAHS ~obln s on, 1-14 -0; F isher, 1-12 -0.
·Wf!ll,ston H e nry, 2 -25 -0 ;
Peopl es, 1-15-0 ; Brooks , 1-14-0 ;
Fox, 1-0-0.
Punt r eturns: GAHS Wilson , 1-6-0; Groth, 1-0·0.
Wellston - Peoples. 1-6-0.
Punts :
GAHS ·- . Doug
•rown, 2-75. We ll ston - Mike
Johnson, 4-97 .
Pass i·nterception returns .. one.
Pa~s receptions : GAHS Valentine. 2-3-34 -1; B . Seun dcus , 2·6-47 .0. Wellston- None.
Scorint: GA!'fS - Valentine,
11 -yard pass from NJday, 9 : !18
tlrit (Va l entine, pass from
Niday) .· Graham , 6-yard run,
-11:24 second (Niday , run) ;
Niday, 1-y ard run , 1 : 58 second
fSeund ers , pass fro m Nida y) ;
Saunders, 1-yard run , 1:56.
•hlrd (N i day , run). wellston GIIIHand , 10-var d run . 3 : 26
tlrst, I run failed).
TEAM STATISTICS
ttepertment
G
w
~lrstdowns
18
10
Yards ru shing
220 150
. L:ostru!&gt;h lng
10
13
.Netrush ing ·
'210 137
Pesses atte mpted
9·
0
Passe$ complet ed
4
o
InterCepted by
o
0
Yards passing
81
0
total y ard s
291 137
' fl:eturn v~rd a g e
32
60
Pta~s
61
43 '
Fum~l es
1
4
lost fumbl es
0
3
~enaltl Bs
4-30 2-6. 5
Punts
2-75. 4 -97
LINEUPS
( Giilllpolis)
ENDS - 'B rett Wilson . Tom
Valent ine, John Grpth , Ed
Ha·ynan , Marly G ll le s p l ~ ,
KLES
k •TvA;nCJ
ac k son . .;.

S11unders (CC ); Mike Evans,
Jeff Bane, Dick. Burdette.
Lewis Schmidt, Paul Fin nicum , Pat Cochran .
GUARDS Doug Brown,
Bob Nibert , Jim Craft , Kent
Shawver, Steve Walli s, Brad
Yoho, Mike Wood ..
CENTERS - Scott Epling,
Rocky Rece, Mike Wiggle s worth. Chuck Lane .
BACKS - Jim Niday (CC) ;
Craig Fisher, Brian Mink ,
Bruce Scarberry , Gary Swain .
Wayne
Robinson,
Brent
Saunders, David · Graham.
Dennis Salisbur Y, John Myers.
Chris Brvslan, Sam Arm strong , Keith Ja&lt;:kson .
(Wellston)
ENDS Mike Johnson ,
Mark Fox , B_rick Brooks , Terry
McKinniss .
TACKLES - Denny Pearce ,
Jeff Brady , Randy Royster .
GUARDS
Dean
Argabright, Tim Ou sley., Wes
Perry, Morr i s Simpson , Ken
Hively .
CENTERS - Chip Lockard .
BACkS - Pele Rupert , Dick
Gillllllnd, Mike Watts, Randy
Peoples , Keith Henry , Randy
Henry, Doug Conger, Bruce
DoWnard, Tony Grey .
OFFICIALS · Graham ·
Thompson , Leo Wood , Fred
Davis and Bob Christian ,
Chillicothe Chapter .
·
Scare by quarters:
Gal lipolis
8 16 8 0- 32
Wellston
6 0 0 0- 6
NEXT GAHS GAME .- Nov .
8 - Athens , home.

Mountaineers
beaten again
CHESTNUT HILL, Mass.
(UP!)- Keith Barnette tied a
school scoring record with four
touchdown runs Saturday as
Boston College handled West
Virginia; 35-3.
Barnette plied up 91 yards in
20 carries and became the
eighth BoSton Colleg~ i'unner to
score four touchdowns in a
game. His scoreS came from
13,'0oe, four, and one yard out.
Rwmlng mate Earl Strong,
taking over after Mike
Esposito suffered an arm in·
jury, added 118 yards in 19
carries and scored the other
Eagle touchdown . West
Vll'ginla's only score came tate
in the first period on a 36-yard
field goal by Emil Rc6.
The Eagle offense dominated
frooi the start, moving 4a yards
in eight plays on their secood
p11ssesslon of the game~ Baroette rwnbled the final 13
yards.
The Mountaineers mounted
their only offense on the next
series, moving to the Boston
College 15 on tltt strength of
two passes ' to All America
candidate Danny I!Jiggs. But
West Virginia stalled on a
fourth and eight and had to
settle for three points.
Before the hall ended, Barnette had scored two more
times to flnisli tim~lliWlling
marches and give the Eagles a

21-3 edge.
Strong, again providing the
puwer running in the third
quarter , notched his touchdown 9:23 after intermission on
a 14-yard IM'st over lhe right
side.
· Barnette bolted one yard
early in the last lieriod for the
Eagles' final score. The second
offense finished the game for
Boston· College.
Quarterback Mike Kruczek
engineered the Eagles throug~
all fiv~ toucMowns, picking qp
vital running yardsge in addition to completing eight of 12 ·
passes for 83 yards. ·
The Mountaineers were kept
from scoring a touchdown for
the first time since Perui,State
shut them out in 1969. · The
game left Boston College with a
~ record and dropped West
Vlrglnla to 2-6.

Grid
standings
W . LT
8 1 0
7 1 1
7 2 o
6 :J 0
5 J 0
5 4 0
4 4 1
2 6 1
1 8 0
1 8 0
0 9 0

·GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS &amp; LOA~ ,
ANNOUNCES

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P
'266
221
305
200
187
161
84
104
81
94
126

OP
88
74
123
81
103
121
98

ON REGULAR PAS,SBOOK \
SAVINGS ACCOUNTS

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ALL DEPOSITS GUARANTEED

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OHIO Df:POSIT GUARANTEE FUND
SUB5!ANTIAL INTEREST PENALTY IS REQUIRED FOR EARLY
WITHDRAWAL,ON CERTIFI~TES OF DEPOSfl's'

Whitlatch's jersey is Jackson's Tim Meadows as Mark
Taylor tries to get hold of the Meigs captain from behind .
Other players in view are Marauders Jim Anderson (11),
Terry Qualls on right and Jackson's Rick Scilrlock (70) .
Photo by Katie Crow.
PRINCETON UPSET

LYNE CENTER GYM - POOL SCHEDULE
Rio Grande College

DATE- GYMNASIUM
Nov . 4 4-6 p.m . Community Dance
4-7 p.m . Athletics
9-10:30 p .m . Open Rec r ea ti on

POOL

9·1 0•30 p.m .
Open Swim
9-10 : 30 p .m .
Ope n Sw im

Nov . 7 4-6 p.m . Community Dance

4· 7 p.m. Athl etics
8: 10-9:30 p .m . 101 Found. Class
9-10: 30'p .m . Open Recreat ion

9-10: 30 p .m .
Open Swi m
8:30-ll a .m . GS I Swim

CLOSED

TOM

HERBERT

T·HE . GALLIPOL·
IS ·- SAVINGS
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AND LOAN COMPANY .

SUPREME COURT
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GALLI

OHIO
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VOTERS OF GALLIA COUNTY:

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The Comndttee ,for the Election of.James A. Bannett for
Common Pl~s Judge presents the following iuue fOr
your consideration:
ISSUE: PRESENTATION OF OUTDATED STATISTICS TO tHE VOTERS
SUBJECT
Probation statistics

Gallipolis' ,Dai~ Tribune
Qctober 30, 1974

Gallipolis Daily Tribune
October 29,1974

Caseload statistics

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1100 E. Main
Pomeroy, 0 .
Call 992-7034
Open Dally 11 to 7

Nov . 9 10- 12 noon Commun ity Gymnastics
10 a .ni .-5 p.m . Self Defense
for Wom en Workshop

CLOSED

CLOSED

ELECT

HOWARD E. FRANK
REPUBLICAN

FOR MEIGS COUNTY AUDITOR
10 YEARS BUDGET EXPERIENCE
10 YEARS BOARD OF REVISION EXPERIENCE

2- 4 Open Sw im

Nov . 10 CLOSED

2-4 Open Swim

1-5 p.m . Rules interpretation
Meet ino &amp; Varsity Scr immage
(Rio v s w. Va . State )
7-9p.m. Upen Recreat ion

7-9p.m .
All -College Swim

8 Years experience as County Investor of Public Funds
which has earned the tax payers of this county over
$600,000.00.

Now serving on the Legislative Committee for Ohio
County Officials Association. Passed experience as
secretary-treasurer for the South East Treasurers
Association. .
PO. POL. AOV. ~

THESE CHILDREN AND MANY MORE.,
WHO COULD BE ENROLLED ·IF WE HAD
·F ACILITIES, AR·E ASKING FOR

BENNEIT

CAutOUN
Sunday Times Sentinel
October 27, 1974

KINGSBURY
MOBILE HOMES

'

"safe .Saiinis Since 1886"

., OPPOSITE THE POST OFFICE
PHONE 446-383t

Put

9· 10: 30

Nov . 6 4·7 p.m. Athleti cs
9-10:30 p .m . Open Recreation

Nov . 8 4-7 p .m . Athlet ics

Veterans $20 down will

you In thi5. home!

Open Sw im

Nov . 5 4-7 p.m . Athletics
8: 10-9: 30 p .m . 101 Found . Class
9-10: 30 p .m . Open Re&lt;:reation

1

O'Keefe with a 711-yard touchdown pass midway through the
PROVIDENCE, R. I. (UP! ) final period Saturday to give
- Backup quarlerback Pete Brown a 17-13 upset win over
Bea trice hit tight end Ken Princeton .

live in the rolling hills of
Southern Ohio in your own 3
BR .• all electric mobile
home in Southern Ohio's
newest mobile home park. IS
min .
from
Athens
or
Pomeroy . Price reduced to
get this mobile home park
started. Set up &amp; ready to
move into. For further
details contact . •

" Keep honesty and integrity In your local government.'

GaUipolis Dai~ Tribune
October.'31, 1974

YOUR HELP.
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When you review the above ads by the candidates you will not11 that the
committee ·to re-elect the . Judge used 1972 ;and 1973 statistics even tl)ough
·statistics were available through september 30, 1974 as public records · in 'fhe
Gallia County Clerks office which were used by the ,Corrtmittee for James Ben·
nett.
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JIM BENNETT BELIEVEs THAT THE STATISTics
PRESEN,T ED BY THE COMMITTEE TO RE- ELECT
THE. JUDGE ARE ' NO . LONGER VALID' IN
EVALUATING THE PRESENT CONDITION OF THE
COURT. WE IN GALLIA CoUNTY ARE NOT INTERE·S:fEP IN THE CONDITION OF .THE COURT IN
PAST ·YEARS. WE ARE INTER~STEQ IN THE CONDITION OF THE CQURT TODAY.
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JIM_ ~·ENNE~TT' BELIEVES THAT CURRENT
STATISTICS SHOW THAT OPERATION QF THE COURT
HAS PRACTICALLY CEASED. THIS IS EVIDENCE BY
l'HE FACT THAT ALTHOUGH 20.9 PCT• . OF THE
.PENDING CASES ARE OVER ONE' YEAR OLD, ONLY
~ ONE JURY TRIAL WAS HELD; AND 20 OTHER CON- ,
TESTED ' CASES HEARD, DURING THE FIRST 9
MONTHS OF '1974.
JIM BENNETT PLEDGES TO THE VOTERS ,OF
GALLIA COUNTY THAT HE WILL OPERATE · THE
COURT FOR THE BENEFIT AND CONVENIENCE OF
THE &lt;;:J:TIZEN~ OF GALLIA COUNTY AND FltRTHER.
THATTHE .BACK LOG OF; CASES, WILL BE REDUCED
AND THAT ALL CIT·IZENS WILL IN THE FUTURE
RECEIVE P~OMPT AND EQUAL JUSTICE.

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L.El'S RETURN DIE OOURT TO THE PEOPLE

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·Elect James : A~ ·Bennett
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FOR 'THE M 'E NTA·LLY RETARDED LEVY

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COMMON PLEAS JUDGE
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MARAUDER TAILBACK Terry Whitlatch struggles to
get past this Jackson defender on his 1 yard touchdown run.in
Friday night's 22-6loss to the Ironmen. Whitlatch just barely
made it inside the corner of the end zone here to bring the
Marauders to within 2 points of Jackson at 6-6. Clinging to

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RE-EL ECT

to

· OPEN LEITER .

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Vanderbilt 38 Army 14
Northwestern 21 Minnesota 13
Michigan St. 28 Wisconsin 21

Penn St . 24 Maryland 17

When I resigned my position at Holzer Medical Center Clinic in
September, ·1974, I thought I would be able to personally contact
everybody in Gallia County. Since then, I have learned two very im portant facts: Gall Ia County, geographically, is very big, and it ·iS filled
with wonderful people. The acquaintances and friendships I have made in
the past few months I shall cherish the rest of my life.
. During these past months, I have made·a thorough study of the duties
and responsibllfties of County Auditor . If elected, I feel I will be well
acquainted with the operation and procedures of the County Auditor's
office.
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I want the people of Gallia County to know I am beholden to no indivld:Jal nor group of individuals. I am a free, soverign Individual.
I have promised no one a job as I feel to do so would be intellectually
d(shonest because I do not know whether I will be elected . Neither do I
advocate that every person working in the Auditor 's office should be
terminated, because I will need the benefit of their advice and experience
in the operation of the office.
If you elect me as your County Auditor , the only promise that I will
make Is that to the best of my ability this office will be operated in an
honest, efficient, businesslike manner. Since the Auditor's office actually
belongs to you, the people of Galli a Couhty, your suggestions or criticisms
will always be welcomed.
I want to be your County Auditor and I hope you will help me by
voting for me on November 5, 1974.
Yours truly, .
Dorothy L Condee
Pd. Pot. Adv.

ON 2 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSITS
eiS,OOO MINIMUM

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YOUR VOTE WILL BE GREA~'LY APPRECIATED

I

New Hampshir e 29 Rhode
Island 14
Morgan St. 20 North Carolina

" home"

PIONEERS ROMP
MARIETTA, Ohio (UPI ) Mike Glasser gained 104 yards
on 28 carries and scored two
touchdowns to lead Marietta to
a 3().t9 win over Heidelberg in
an Ohio Conference game here
Saturday. Glasser scored on
runs of four and 15 yards as
Marietta fou ght back to
overcome a 13-9 Heidelberg
halftime lead.

. ~ ', DOROTHY CON DEE

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ON 2 YEAR CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSITS
e'l,OOO MINIMUM

.

As elec;tiol'! day approaches I find ·I have been unj.ble to
contact each of you in person. Please feel free to ·call or
see me at anytime.

W tnston· .

Concord 16 West Uberty 7
Brown 17 Princeton 13

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Henry Wells,
...

St. Lawrence 19 Rochester U.
16
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Hobart 21 Colby 7

J.

bac k

Milwaukee - scene of some
of his greatest triumphs Saturday when he -..as
traded by the Atlanta Braves•
to the Brewers for outfielder
Davey May and a player to
be named later.

TO THE PEOPLE
OF
GALLIA COUNTY

ON 1 YEAR CERTIFICATES OF·DEPOSITS ',
•'1,000 MINIMUM ·

\'

MEIGS COUNTY
·- COMMISSIONER

came

'· ------------~--Alfred 35 Rochester Tech o
Michigan 21 Indiana 7
Georgetown 35 Fordham 7
Alabama 35 Mississippi St . 0
Flrodia 25 Auburn 14
Texas 28 SMU 9
Pittsburgh 21 Syracuse 13
Delaware .49 Villanova 7
Cornell 2A Columbia o ·
Connecticut 9 Rutgers 7
Clemson 21 Wake Forest 9
Houston 31 Georgia 24
Akron 22 Indiana St. 21
Purdue 38 Iowa 14

ON 90 DAY·CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSITS
•'1,000 MINIMUM

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two pointers for the winners.
By quarters :
Point
0 · 0 0 7- 7
Parkersburg 16 14 0 6-38

Saturday's College
Football Results
Y United Press International
ent St . 35 ·Marshall 7
Ohio St . 49 Illinois 7
Duke 9 Georg; '!, Tech 0
N. C. St. 42 South Carolina 27
Bucknell 10 Lafayette 6
Harvard 39 Penn 0
Yale 1.4 Dartmouth 9
Notre Dame 14 Navy 6
Boston College 35 W. VIrginia 3
Clemson 21 Wake Forest 9
North Carolina 24 Virginia 10

,,

114

190
313

Parkersburg . Mike Shields,
Rich Duggan and Pat Earley
had/ single six-poinlers. Alan
Sle hens anrl T•rrv Goudv had

W»"-W.(.r.-m,;m;:.Wi:=:r-£ &amp;
AAKON TRADED
NEW YORK (UPI) ' ._
Hank A•ron, baseball'• alltime home run chamPion,

ON CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSITS

•

Team
. W. L . T
P . OP
Ironton
6 0 0 169 47 '·
Gallipoli s
5 1 o 196 68
Athens
4 1 1 77 42
Jackson
3 3 ' 0 106 69
Wellston
3 3 0 104 95
Log'an
2 3 1 91 106
Meigs
o 6 o 37 161
Waverly
0 6 0 64 iZ56
TOTALS
23 23 2 844 844
Friday's results :
Gallipolis 32 Wellston 6
Ironton 35 Logan 0
Jackson 22 Meios 8
Athens ~7 Waverly o
Rock Hill 44 Kyger Creek 7
Miller 32 Coal Grove 28
.Saturday ' s Game:
South POint at Ironton Sf Joe
(n ight)
_ .
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Nov. 8 games: .
Athen s at Gallipolis
Logan at Jackson
Meigs at Waverly·
Wellston at Ironton ·
Coal Grove at Chesapeake
R:ock Hill at sOuth Point

. :' ELECT

PARKERSBURG - The
Parkersburg Big Red built up a
huge .~ •halftime lead then
coasted to a 36-f over visiting
Pt. Pleasant here Friday night.
The loss left · Pt. Pleasant
wl th a . 6-4 season record.
Parkersburg upped its mark to
11-l.lt was the Blg.Blacks first
winning season since 1969.
QB Bill Rardin scored
Point's only touchdown with
6:12 left in the game . rS.rak
Pahunannon's placekick was
true.
The Big Reds picked up 22
first downs and pef111itted nine .
The home team led 382-118 in
total yards.
Deric Davis scored twice for

A&amp;.T 0

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NEW HIGHER INTEREST RATES

SEOAL ONlY

CUTS PRICES
LAKEWOOD, Ohio (UP!) Willlam Gallagher, a Shell
service station owner ordered
to repay the public for an
overcharge in gasoline · pricea
last . rear' cut his price
drastica!Jy Wednesday.
,
• Gallagher, ordered by a
federal court ·to repay the
public $8,800, sold gasoline for
10 cents a gallon. He- said ·h e
wasn :t sure how much gasoline
he sold, but said the sale
"caused big traffic jam" for
30 .minuteS.
. .,
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leg Injury and mld,tle
Brad Ypho , an ailkle IDJllfY
during tle coolest. , , ·
Wellaton ·played without the
services of senior tackle Rick
McCarley, qut for tile year 'with
a knee injury. West,' 'Perry,
senior Rocket guard, was
shaken up early in' the game
.
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and saw only limited acUon.

GAHS controlled the ball, Peoples, playing his third
running 61 plays to W ~ ltston's game ag~inst GAllS, paced
43.
Wellstorr with 44 Y81dS In 13
David
Graham
paced carries. Gililtand added 41 in
Gallia's running attack with 92 nine trips and Fullback Keith
ya~ds in 21 trips . . De~nis . . Henry 38 in 14 tries.
Salisbury had 39 yards in eight
GAllS played without !be
trips . Brent Saunders 31 in five services of , Keith Burdette,
attempts.
defeaslve sophomore end.
Junior halfba ck Randy . Guard boug B!"'WD ouffered a

1

ALL GAMES

Team
Gallipolis
Ironton
Rock H ill
Jackson
South Po int
Wellston
Athens
Logan
Meigs
Waverly
Coat Grove

yard pass to put it on the
Rockets' 11. Graham carried
twice for 10 lo the one. Niday
sneaked itoverwith 1:58on the
clock. That made it 22-6. Niday
passed to Brent Saunders for
.the extras, that made it 24-6.
Scott Epling recovered a
Wellston fumble on the fourth
play of the second half. GAHS
marched 46 yards in nine plays
to the Wellston 7, but the ·
Rockets held.
Wellston failed 'to gain. Brett
Wilson returned Johnson's 31·
yard punt from the WHS 35 to
the Rocket 29 to set up the
game's final touchdown .
Wayne · Robinson . senior
fullba ck got eight - up the
middle.
Brian
fyfink,
·sophomore fullback, slammed
for four. After a f&gt;.yard GAHS
penalty, Brent Saunders
squirted through the Rocket
defense for a first down on the
Wellston one. Saunders than
smashed over for the touch·
down with 1:56 left In the
period. Niday ran the · extra
points to give GAHS a 326lead.
Wilsou recovefed a Wellston
fumble on !be eosuillg kickoff
on the Wellston 41. The Blue
Devils marched 38 yards ill 12
plays, but a penalty and two
Incomplete passes ended that
GAHS threat on the WHS 10.
Coach . Ecker cleared . his
bench with, 5:43 left in the
game. Gallia's second unit, .
paced by sophomore tailback
Dennis Salisbury, marched 42·
yards in 11 plays, .but Wellston •.
held on its own 17 and moved
, back out to the WHS 32 as the
game ended . •
After picking up 65 yards in
14 trips in the first period,
Wellston, one of the loop's top
rushing teams, was limited to
72 yards in 29 attempts· from
scrimmage. The remainder of
the evening, the Rockets did
not attempt a pass during
Friday's 411-minute battle.
Meanwhile, GAHS rushed fo;
210 yards in 52 trips and Niday
hit on four of nine aerials for 81
·yards, giving the visitors 291
total YBrdS. Wellston finished
with 137 total yards.
The Blue Devils chalked up
1~ first downs, Wellaton had 10.

.Big Blacks lose fi~ale

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Paid by the Committee 1o··EiecV '' .,
A. Bennet Common PlejiS

Paid ·for by Promotion Committee ·of Mentally . ~etarded

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29 - The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 3, 1974

·Rock Hill

down~

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Southern .rolls over Southwestern, .42 to 14

Kyger Creek 44'-7

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a ceo~ ted for the ltnal two
tou c hdowns . The Lawrence
COunUiins Pushed lhe count to
36-0 on a 35. yard bomb from
Bond to Turvey. With 6.:47 left

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inside the 20, pushed across its South Point Friday for the
only point. on a 57 yard drive OVC crO\yn.
STATIST,ICS .
ending with senior fullback
KC
Mark Waller's four yard run. Department
13
First
DOwns
Lucas hooted the extra point.
175
.
' Although the Bobcats of . Yards Rushing
77
Coac h Jim Sprague, could only Yards Passing
12
muster one score, Kyger Creek Passes Attpt.
6
Passes
Compt.
moved the ball well against the
2
Fumbles
Redmen defense.
I
Kyger Creek, 6-2, closes out F.umbles Lost
0
2
Interceptions
·
its
1974
season
at
home
conversion was incompJ'e te.
10-105 7-95
The TD was set-up on a 30 yard
. PIULADELPHIA (UP!) - Pete Demmerle In the far a 27-yard field goal attempt. Saturday night In a 7:30 p.m. Penalties
By Quarters:
game against Wahama.
aerial from Bond to split · end · Fifth-ranked Notre Dame, corner of the end zone at 10:04
The upstart Middles in0 0 0
Rock Hill upped its season Kyger Creek
Brent Turvey. Rock .Hill put outfought and stunned by of the fourth quarter and Dave
creased the margin to 6-4l at
6
26 6
record to 7-~. The Redmen play . RockHill '
the game out ofreach with a 26 underdog Navy for three Reeve made the conversion to
.5:43 of the third quarter when
point second quarter . .
periods, fmally scored twice in put the Irish into the lead.
Dykes booted . a 37-yard field
The Redmen moved !14 yards the .fourth quarter on a pass
Later, with 2:12 left In the goa.
in 13 plays as sophomore Paul and an interception to squeeze game, Safety Randy ·Harrison
The field goal was set up
Johns~n bulled over from four
out a hard-fought i4-« victory intercepted a pass from Mlddie when Stuffleheem faked a punt
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yards out.
Saturday over the Middies.
quarterback Phll Poirier and from his own 36-yard line and
A pass for the extra point.
Navy, a 32-polnt underdog, dashed 40 yards for the final passed to hallhack Cleveland
fell Incomplete. Following the led 6-4l lifter three quarters on TD.
Cooper for a first down on the
ensuing kickoff, the Bobcats the strength of two field goals
VALENTINE SOORES - Tom Valentine scored
Navy , U,led 3-4at halftime . Notre Dame 19.
fumbled with Rock Hill by Steve Dykes and llie punting due to Dykes'. 48-yard field goal
GaillpollS'llrst eiglit points on passes from QB Jlm Niday at
The go-ahead touchdown
recovering on the KC 17 yard of John Stufflebeem, which early In the first quarter which followed a tough defensive
Wellston Friday niglit. Valentine is shown here In the end
line. Three plays later, Bond kept Notre Dame continually broke a Mlddie record set by series · by the Irish. which
zone after·catching a twOiJOint conversion. The lanky senior
We recommend
· bottle!! up.
scooted over from the 10.
el)dcaughllwQaer.iaisfor 34yards. (Steve Wilson photo.)
Greg Mather in 1961, also pUshed Navy back to its own
•.
the election of Sheldon •
A pass to Scott Mclntrye was
But the Irish finally got good against Notre Dame.
-' '
.
four-yard line and Stufflebeem
A. Taft as Justice of the
good for the conversion. Rock field J)OIIilion on the Navy 26
Notre Dame, 7-1, was able to was forced to punt from his
Suprema
Court.
Hill's Terry Baker Intercepted after a is-yard punt return and mount only one sustained drive own end zone.
a Tim Lucas pass on the next five plays later quarterback in the first half when it went
We have served
The game was played before
Bobca t series giving the Tom Clements hit split end from ita own 20 to the Navy 9, 48,634 at cily-&lt;Jwned Veterans
the people of Ohio as
BEREA, Ohio (UP!)- Wide brian Sipe of San Diego State. Redmen possession at the 28
but was held and Reeve missed Stadium.
'Judges,
legislators,
receivers Steve Holden and
Sipe and Holden got together
teachers of law, law/
Fair Hooker are expected to on one key play In Sipes twoyers and offl:cara of
start for the Cleveland Browns touchdown effort in the final
your American, Ohio
Sunday against the San Diego moments of the Denver game.
State and local Bar
Chargers, giving the offense a Sipe hit Holden with a fourth
Anoclatlona. We Include members of both
iace-lift. .
down .Pass for a first down to
political parties. Wa believe that Sheldon A. Taft
LOGAN - Coach Bob Lutz's conversion for a lfHl lead.
quarter when Mark Fairchild
Alfonso
Johnson ,
the
· GlOater JUchardsOn and Ju- keep alive Cleveland's first
Ia
the bast qualified candidate for Justice cit tha
Ironton
Tigers
assured
With just 17 seconds raced 58 yards with an In- league's leading rusher, ripped
bllee Dunbar were the wide touchdown drive .
Sup,.ma Court for the term beginning January
rpiV.rs through Cleveand's
The coaches said Sipe was themselves of at least a co- remaining in the h;!lf Vass tercepted pass with Hughes . out 108 yards in 14 carries for
1,
1975.
. '
championship
in
the
SEOAL
connected with end Paul adding the placement.
ronr.~· ' losing ' streak. impressive In the final heavy
the winners while Don Danis on .
Thomas D. Badger- ~..u. Vernon, Charles P.. Bak•r:. J'r.HOlden cifllliJ!)Jor Dunbar last drill here Friday aJJ&lt;L looked Friday night with a 35-0 McDaniel on a 21-yard screen
In rolling to their important was Logan's lop rusher with 18
Painesville, Cynthia F. Blank-Cincinnati, John W. E. ·sowweekel)d wheli"the Browns "especially sharp in passing thump,i ng of the Logan pass, with Hughes missing the victory the Tigers churned out yards in seven tries. ·
en-Columbus, Erie Bridgewater-Athens, W. Bitner BroWnilextra point for a 21.0 halftlme 13 first downs, had 182 yards
pUlled out a 23-21 vi~er · driils" aU week.
· · Chieftains.
Ironton can now see another
Springfield, Lawrence Burns-Coshocton, Albert l. Clovtsclin·
lead.
The
Tigers
hsve
thus
Columbus, James J . Cullers-Mt. Vernon, John C. Fi;_mln·
tht Denver Broncos to ra~~e Browns traveled 10 San
rushing, and completed five of undefeated league chamFindlay, Seabury H. Ford-Ravenna, Theodore P. Frericks·
Johnson opened the second eight passes for 105 yards.
ll!i!lr record to U .
, Di* af\&lt;!r Fridats .afternoon ched some part of their fourth
pionship as the Tigers hsve
Marion,
Robert E. Fryman-t-tamllton; Rankin M. GibSon'iBooter, a starter for Cleve- practice S&lt;!!fsioR an~ llue consecutive crown and also half with a scintillating 98 yard
The Chieftains had a terrible · only to defeat Wellston next
Columbus, Robert T. Green-Shelby, Wallor C. Gros~an­
Wooster, George Hall-Mansfield; Lawrance Herman-Columland l!JilU
,season when he to go. through a light workout extended their winning streak return of the opening kickoff evening as their offense netted : Friday night while Logan's
bus, Harry P. Jeffrey-Dayton, Robert E. Leach-Columbus,
in loop play to 24 games.
for a touchdown with Hughes seven first downs, only 39 record dips to 2-3-1.
was traded to N'!W Orleans lodliy at San Diego Stadium.
Wayne M. Leatherman-Perrysburg, William C. Leonardafter announeing he liad fligned
Fullback Jeff Kriebel bolted toeing the eJ&lt;Ira point.
yards on the ground, and
Score by quarters:
Lima, Robert K. McCurdy-Pottsmouth, Donald K .. Merwin·&lt;11· · with Uie' World Football
(
three yards for the first Tiger
The final Ironton TD came comple.t ed seven of 18 passes Ironton
Canton, James w. Miller-Lancaster, Lee C. ~iller-Warren ,
7 14 7 7--J5
Earl F. Morris-Columbus. John H. Ranz·Youngstow,n
League, was rehired just
score with · Stark Hughes with 11:11 showing in the fourth for 81 yards , with three In- Logan
o o o ().- 0
E. Rathman·Middletown, John C. Sheppard-cam:
William
booting the placement for a 7.j)
before the Plttsbl!rgh game.
tercepted by Ironton.
bridge, Robert G. Stachler-clnci~natl, Melvyn J . Stoulfer·
CYCWNES
BEATEN
!looker had been, released by
lead with 3:11 remaining in the
Sandusky, Wayne E. Stichter-Toledo. J . C. William Tatter·
AMES , Iowa (UP!)
sail-Elyria: Wimam H. Vodrey-East Livlrpool, Arthur 1.
the Saints just as Injuries and
first periOd.
Vorys.Columbus, Gerald P. Wadkowski-Columbus·,..Howard
lll~lt of IIP«'esl hlt Cleveland's (lkJahoma, leading only 7.j) at
In the second canto the Tiger
C. Walker, Jr.-Akron, E. Terry W.arren-A!Ihtabula, Karl H.
the
l)alf,
converted
two
Iowa
receiving corps.
defense picked off a Jim
Weaner-Oetianca, Benjamin l . lox-ColumbUs
As previously announced, the State turnovers into touch- Kemper pass on the Chief 37
. ENDORSED BY Cleveland Press, Columbus Dlspafch,
biggest change In Cleveland's downs in a !:&gt;-second span In yard stripe.
Columbus Clflzen Journal, Dllyfon Daily News, Dayfon
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Cin- good enough team· to make it to :much instead of watching
Journal, Cincinnati Post, Canton Repository, Youngstown
paiiing g""'e for San Diego the second 'half-and went on to
AlfonsQ Johnson then tallied
11
cinnati
defensive
end
Shennan
the
Super
Bowl.
I
figure
that
if
ourselves
.
Vindicator, Akron · Beacon Journal and other leading
whip
the
Cyclones
28-10
in
a
Big
will be the replacement of
the first of two touchdowns on a
White
says
It's
about
time
the
we
made
it
)nto
the
playoffs
newspapers.
What
we
've
got
to
do
is
regular quarterback Mike Eight Conference game 21-yard sprint with quarslumping Bengals " took ·last year we could make it to .concentrate on · ourse1ves, n
VOTE TO STRENGTHEN
PI!IPPI by backup signal caller Saturday.
terback Jbdy Vass running the
control of our own destiny."
the Super Bowl this year.
White said. "We got to go out
THE SUPREME COURT - ..
For the third consecutive
" But instead all :We've done there and win the ones we're
week, Benga1s coach and is just dug our.eives into a supposed to as well as the' ones
'·
general manager Paul Brown hole," White said.
we're not supposed to. We've
' 'I used to catch myself got to divor~e ourselves from
will be going after his 200th
professional lootball coaching during the game looking at the everybody else.
victory, agalpst the down trod- scoreboard and trying to see
"We've got to use ihe taleni
for SUPREME COURT
'
den Baltimore COlts, Sunday. · what the other teams were we have to control our own
Rob 'I. E. l.elctl, Chm .. Tlftlur SuPBn .Court Comm .• 325 E. ~ Aw .• Coli .• b. 43202
''•.
Baltimore has managed only doing, especially Pittsburgh. destiny," White said.
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one win this season.
But now we can't look at other
•
The Bengals have lost their people. We can't wait for
last two games, and White feels Pittsburgh to be beaten. We·
the pre-season dream of mak- were watching the otbers too
ing it to the Super Bowl is
slipping away
PLAYER CAll ED UP
"A lot of people thought we
NEW YORK (UPI) -The
would just go out there and New York Rangers SalurdlQI
win," White said. " '!bey took it called up 19-year-&lt;Jid defenfor granted thst we'd win. seman Ron Greschner from the
Maybe, we started believing Providence Reds . of the
•
that ourselves.
American Hockey l.Alague.
"! know that before the
The callup brought the
season
began I felt we had a Ranger roster to 21, two more
.,,
than a team can dre88 for a
National Hockey League
game.
SETS WORLD RECORD
Greschner was a second
WALTON - ON • THAMES,
round draft choice In the June
England (UP!) -Mick Mo]]Qy,
amateur draft. He will be on
PO. POL AOV.
the 35-year-&lt;Jid Irish Olympic
hand Sunday night for the
llllll'&amp;thon runner, set a new Rangers' home game against ·
world 34knile track running
Buffalo.
record of two :, hours, U
minutes, 47 secOnds Saturday.
M8JioY. clipped two minutes
AARON WINS EVENT
and 47 seconds off the previous
TOKYO (.UPI) _ Hank ·
record set by New Zealander Aaron, baseball's greatest
Jeff Julian m 1~.
· - homerunhitter,beatSadahatu
'
He was more tiJan fotr . a., Japan's home run king; 10,.
- nunu~ ah.ead of aecondi&gt;lace 9 Saturday
their contest at ·
Don R1tch1e, and . more ~ . Korakuerl Stadium. Aaron won
eight nunutes in front of third- $60,000 aDd Oh received ~.000 ·
•.
·placed Robert Her&lt;~~.
from the spoosor of the .Vent.
.
Thlolady really had no right to be famous. She waa ·
tho wife of a substantial Florentine merchant namad Gloconclo
·•
when, In 1499, Da Vinci's portrait made her Immortal. The
l!lyaterlous
Moria
Lisa
smile?
Perhaps
she
was
thinking
about
PROPOSED TAX LEVY
.
.
.
going shopping. Of course, If she'd had Master Charge,
(RENEWAL AND INCREASE)
like you do now, she'd be grinning from ear to ear.
· PEDRO - Rctk llil( playing
wi thpul the services of senior
Jeff Virgin, blitzed SVAC .
champion Kyger Creek, 44-7
here Friday night. ·The Red-'
men scored in the first period
and were never headed.
olunior quarterback Brett
Bond 'went over (rom 35 yards
out on an option for the first
Rock Hill point.. A pass for the

yard line. Johnson ran 27 yards
pushing ihe score to 32-0 at the
hslf.
The Redmen passing com. binatlon of Bond to Turvey

in the game, Bond hit Turvey
on a 25 yard aerial. .
Kyger Creek, denied a touchdown earlier on a dropped pass
in the end zone 'and a fumble

Irish rally nips Navy

X SHELDON ·A. TAFT.
for SUPREME CO.UR~

RACINE - The Southern here Friday night.
•Tornados, behind the running
The win concludes th e
of fullback Greg Dunning a11d Tornados' 1974 SVAC slate with
halfback .Mitch Nease, romped a 4-2 record and undisputed
'to an easy 42-14 triumph over · possession of third place in the
'the Southwestern Highlanders final league standings.

The Tornados of coach Bill
Jewell scored once in the first
frame before blowing the game
open in the second periOd with

.three touchdoyms.
,
Dunning Jugged the ball .18

WILLOW WOOD - For the
Second s traight week, Coach
Dave Owens' Hannan Trace
)Vildcats ·put on a second half
performance and last minute
~~~~~~heroics tQ win their second
"'!ame this season, 22-14 here
· Friday night against Symmes
;-"Valley.
l Last week, Hannan Trace did
I the same thing against the
!"Southwesterq Highlanders.
' Friday night, HT trailed IW at
the hslf, tied the game at 14-14
going into the final quarter and
won. it with just 51 seconds left

on the clock.
Host Symmes Valley jumped
into a 6-4l lead early in the first
period on Terry Pine's one
yard plunge. A run for the
extra point was slopped.
The Lawfence .Countians.,
trying to win their first game
this season , pushed the score to
1W in the second period behind
Riehle Stumbo's two yard run .

the two point con-

Pine ran
versiOn.

Hannan Tra ce began its
comeback with 8:38 left in the
third period when senior

.

halfback Kevin Swain da rted in
from seven yards out. Swain
also r an the conversion cutting

the lead to 14-ll.
Junior fullback Jeft Wells
tied the score with a nine yard
run with just 52 seconds left in
the third stanza. A run for the
extra point. was stopped.
With 51 seconds left on the
scoreboard, Swai~ zoomed
over from the two giving the
.Wildcats their second season

:victory.
·
The Wildcats finished SVAC
play with a 2-3 record and U

ELECT

Gordon H. Caldwell

Ironton earns slice of crown

FOR
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONER
I have not been able to contact each of
,,.,. in person, however I will let my
past record speak for itself as your
County Auditor for •15 years. Also my
6'12 years experience with tlie Ohio
Department of Highways.

fh!l

YOUR VOTE WILl BE GREATLY APPRECIATED

-

Pd. Pol . Adv .

•

Bengals .face Colts today

I.

I

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iA~

VOTE FOR

An

Wt"d nesdar. September 18. JYi4

JUDGE

OF MEIGS COUNTY COURT

* * *Your
*·*Vote* and
* *Support
* * *Appreciated
*****

'

AAUW

Believes that educational opportunities are the birthright

of MIJ child, including the mentally retarded.

In

Unofficial, Sample Ballot

~

·

TRAINING

·

MEIGS COUNTY
majority affirmative vote is necessary for passage"
Vote Ballot With an

If; youVe·..V.it
~· ,

"X''

A renewal of . 75 mills and an increase of 2.0
mills to constitute · a tax for the
Meigs County for the purpose of

bi!nefit

.•

of

The malntenanc~.-1!1'., op~r.a~_loll: . of sehools,
training centers, workshops . and clinics for
. mentally . retarded persons
at a rate not exceeding 2. 75 mills for each one
dollar of valuation; which amounts to Twenty
Seven ·and one-~ cents for each one hundred
dollars of valuation, for ·Five
years.
~
R

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a great future ... and over $3.40 and more a

..·'
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t~

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

Middleport-Pomeroy Area. American ·Associatio~
,of University Women
.....
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KATHRYN J.NIGHT, TREASURER
.,

..

.,

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!

I

f\0.' POL AOV.
)

;.

(USE IT WISELY)

medical and denfelcare . Get all the defalls from
your Air ~or~e recrUiter today .
·, '-'.,
La I . . . . . 1111 . IIM11 ... AirP01111

221 N, COLUMBUS ROAD
ATHENS, OHIO 45701
PH. 593~722
"

1) 1

I

.. . .

7

6
3
4
2

1
4
4
6

6

.875
.600
.429
.400

. 250

West

w. I. pet .
Denver
6 I .857
San Antonio
5 3 .625
Ind i ana
2 4 .333
Sa n D iego
3 6 .333
U tah
3 6 .333
Friday 's Re-sults
Kentucky 125 Virginia 93
Denver 128 Memphis 112
Ind i ana 99 New York 97
Utah 97 sa n Antonio ea
St . Louis 130 S_
a n D ieg o 106

2
Jlh
4
5

COMMERCIAL &amp; SAVINGS BANK
COUir mm 111 WUPOUS

· D. K

WOOD~A:-i
Editor

:\lansfie ld . Ohio

Page Four

OHIO VOTERS on Nov. 5 enough political influence .

* *

At least that was the status
Tracy has served two
of things in July. It 's entirely
terms in the Ohio House of
possible .some other relative . Representatives
· from Frankhas 'been hired since then. ·
lin County. ·He has a degree
Oh, yes. Th~re ' s one more in bus,iness administration
Ferguson on the state aUdi- from Miami University and a .
tor.' s payroll ..:. Thomas Doctor of Law degree from
E .Ferguson. He is Joe 's son. Ohio State.
He was brought into the doTracy has served on the Fi~in a few years ago especially to take up the reins nance, Taxation, and State
when Joe steps down. He is Government committees in
now a candidate for election. the Ohio legislature. He also
His salary is $23,546 a year. served a stint in Washington
as an apjlointee of President
Eisenhower. He has a good
. ADDING UP the salaries of record of non-political public
.these six Fergusons on the service as well.

* MANSFIELD NEWS JOURNAL
* PAINESVILLE TELEGRAPH

* CLEVELAND PRESS
* THE PLAIN DEALER (CLEVELANC
* CALL &amp;POST
*THE SALEM . NEWS
* THE NILES DAILY TIMES

payroll of the state auditor's
office as of July, you get the
befty total of $88,000.

-.\

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.,.

Don't you wish your family
had a state office it could call
its very own which paid you
$88.•000 a year!

•

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r,... . 1otl

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It's time to knock the FerYou could help your, guson .family '!l nest of nep&lt;r
friends,too , if they have tism out of the Buckeye tree.

~~U2lt

·•

·ROger W. Tracy, Jr. is eminently qualified to be auditor
of the state of Ohio. We urge
voter~ tq make up their mind s
to vpte for him right now.

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....._ _;_,_ _ _ _ _ _...__ _ _ _ _ _. .

·

I,

Southwestern

with a :!.;; mark.
teams haa the same number of
Scoring
rirst downs, 16, with the arm of
S - Nease, 11 yard run I kick
Carter making the big di(- failed).
S - Nease, 2 yard run ·
ference as the senior signal
caller completed 18 of 31 1Simpson run) .
SW - carter, 8 yard run
passing attempts for 184 yards.
Car ter's top receivers were !Walker run ).
Mike Russell with 73 yards in· 6
S - Nease, 70 yard kickoff
receptions, Bob Ruff with 6 return (Nease run).
S- Brown, 48 yard run (run
catches for 34 yards and Rick
Crouse with 5 r eceptions for 61 failed).
yards.
S - Nease, 12 yard run
Southern connected once in (Nease run).
S- Nease, 7 yard run (kick
two passing attempts !Qr 24
yards and had I pass in- failed ).
tercepted.
SW - Lewis, 1 yard run
Friday the Tornados host (pass failed).
By quarters:
Caldwell in the final week of
the season, while Southwestern Southern
6 22 8 6-42
hss concluded its campaign Southwestern 0 8 0 8-14
carries. ~ Amazingly, the two

L os A n ge les 109 Milwauk ee 86
Portland 113 Buffalo 106
Go ld en State 99 Seattle. 88
WHA Standing s
By United Press Inter nation a l

Ea st

w. I. t .

Toronto
Winnipeg
Quebec

ga
26
14
13
13

ga
15
16
1'1
29

gl ga
19 16

26 28
28 29
17 28
18 26

canadi·an
w. 1. t. pis gf ga
6
5
4

2 0 12 37 27
1010 3213
1 0
8 24 11

Van co uver
3 3 0 6 18 22
Edmonton
0 2 0 0 6 12
Friday's Res ult
Winnip~g 10 :ro r.o n!o 1

Grid Scores
D elaware 14 Reynoldsburg 0
Westerville 14 Groveport 13
Worthington 14 Hilliard 1
Col . Watterson 40 Co l. Hartle y

0

DeSa tes 29 Col . Wehr l e 6
Franklin He lgh s 44 Granv i ll e 6
Olentangy 8 Marysville 7
Teays Valley 28 Dubl in 12
Ham ilton Twp . 21 W . Jeffer son
7
Newa rk Catholic 2.8 Heath 0
Co l. East 22 Dayton Dunbar 20
Bexley 22 Tecums eh 0
Bed ford 7 Mayfi el d 0
North Olmsted a Westlake 2
H unf. Vinson {W . Va .) 7
Ch esa peake .O
Cin . Elder 36 Cin . P ur ce ll 0
M ilford 21 Glen Este 6
Mar i emont 21 Syc amore 14
West Union 31 Peebles 0
Blan chester oi l Waynesville 16
Kings 22 Little M iam i 16
Ma son 27 Springboro 6
Leba non 28 Lemon .Monroe 16
Fr an kli n :26 Oxford Talawanda
Philo 10 Maysvi ll e 6
Crooksville 2 1 New Concord
John· Glenn 13
Bellaire :28 Martins Ferry 14
Buckeye So ut h 27 Barnesvi lle
IS
Ind i an Vallev South U Jewett
Scioto 6

Kent tops
MU, 35-7

man.

~·,.,. lt(jfll 1, .. , . ,.., • .., ., •. ·~··~'-

.

second.

could
manage just 64 yards in 17
while

pts
New E ngla nd 5 1 o 10
2 2 1 5
g.b . Clevelan d
Ch i cago
1 5 0 2
l lf:l Indian apo l is 1 6 0
2
West
3lf:z
w. I. 1. pts
4
Sa n D iego
4
i I 0 8
Houston
4 ~ 0 8
Phoenix
2 4 1 5
Minnesota
2 ~ 0 4
Michigan
2 5 0 ~

NBA Standings
By United Pre ss International
' Eastern Conf er e nce
Atlantic D ivis ion
w. 1. pet. g .b .
Buffalo
4
J .571
N ew York
4
J .571
Boston
4
4 .500
lf~
Ph i l a
J
4 .-129
l
Central Division
w . 1. pel . g .b.
Was hin g ton
7
1 , 875
Hou st on
4
3 .571
2 1,-~
Cleveland
4
4 .500
3
At lan ta
3
A .429
3112
New Orleans
0
B .000 7
Wester n Conference
Midwest Division
w. I. pet . g .b.
K C-Omaha
5 1 .833
Detroi t
~
4 .500 2
Ch icago
3 5 . 375
3
M ilwaukee
1
6 . 143
4112
Pacific Division
w . I. pet . g .b.
G:'&gt;lo.. &lt;:.:tate
5 2 . 714
LO::i Anc, ..
4 3 .57 1 1
Sea t tle
4
4 .500
n ·,
Portla nd
4 4 .500 1112
Phoenix
3
3 .500
11,1
Friday 's R suits
Boston 114 Philadelphia 98
Detro it 103 New Or lea ns 93

*

(Kent State-Mal'lball )
HUNTINGTON, W. Va.
(UP!) - Tailback Larry Poole
ran for three touchdowns and
the Kent State defense intercepted two passes and
jumped on four Marshall
fumbles Saturday In . a 35-7
romp over the Thundering
Herd.
The Flashes, running their
season record to W, kept the
ha~less Marshall team scoreless until the fourth q\W'ter.
The Herd hss lost six straight
and is .1-7 this fall.
Poole soored on runs of one,
one and two yards and gained
122 yl\l'(lol, closing to within' 75
yards of· the all-tlme Kent
career l'Wihing record.
The Flashes also got a touchdown on 8 311-yard pass from
quarterback Greg Kokal to
wide receiver Kim Featsant
and one on a 35-yard pass theft
by Cedric Brown.
Marshall's lone touchdown
came on a five-yard run by Ned
Burks.
Kent scored the first tlme it
got the ball with Poole carrying
most of the tlme on a 54-yard
drive and blasting over• from
the one.
The Kokal-Featsanl touch·
down In the . second quarter
made it I~ for the Flashes.
An onslde kick by the Herd
opening the second half backfired when Kent State got the
ball and then marched 56 yards
In 10 plays with Poole again ·
smashing over from the one.
· The Flashes made II 211-0 in
the fourth quarter when Brown
picked off a pass by Marshall
freshman qqarterback Bob
WUI and dashed 35 yards to the
end zone.
Marshall followed with a 7:1yard drive, rughllghted by a ()4..
yard run by Bill Stevenson, and
got its only soore on Burks'
five-ya,rder.
Poole ilcored his third touchdown .for the Flashes late in the
game.

They stand for Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and it
means every penny on deposit in any individual savings account or savings certificate is insured up to 20 thousand dollars by an agency of the federal government.
It means your hard-earned dollars on deposit with the Ohio Valley
Bank, lor example , are safe and Insured . . . and you don't have
to deposit 10 or 20 thousand dollars 10 get this kind of protection.
Its yours regardless ollhe size of your savings account.
Look around and see what's being offered today!
You read advertising that offers gigantic high-percentage Interest
rates, PROVIDED . . , get glamorous and glittering premiums when
you open a savings account, PROVIDED . . . receive promisas of
annual yields to stagger tha Imagination, PROVIDED . . .

But what do you really want?
You want a lair return, the highest legally possible, with a guarantee
of safely lor your funds , and accessibility to these funds on reasonable nolice of withdrawal. This is exactly what Ohio Valley Bank
wants and promises their depositors. No wonder our savings deposits are at an all-time high.

QOLD£N PABSBOOK

PABBIIOOK IAYINQ8

S ~.s~~u%
RATE

YIELD

• Payable Quanerty • Minimum 11 .000.00

• Compounded Daily!

1-YEAR C!RTIFICATE

!I-MONTH CERTIFICATE

6~
RATE

• Payal;lle Quarterly . • Minimum $1,qoo.oo

• Payable Quarterly • Minlmt.~m $1 ,()00.00

3-YEAR CERTIFICATI!

2·YEAR CERTIFiCATE

6 ~.
RATE

• Payable Quarter!~ • Minimum $1.000.00

• Payable Quarterly

..
..
7114%

ANNUAL

4-YEAR CERTIFICATE

• Pay~ble

I

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• Minimum $1,000.00

..... . -

• Mlnln'!UR!_$5,000.00

And in addition to all this ... monthly or quilrterl y income ... paid on o~•·
two, three or four-year certificate&amp;!"""lnteres1 payable monthly If you des1re
on certificates with face amount of $5,000.00 or more .
Federal Regulation.&amp; require' a substantial penalty for pr~ma1ure withdrawal
of certificate funds.

GRANT APPROVED
CO[..UMBUS (UP!) ~ The ·
Cotincil on Aging In the Cincinnati' area · will receive a
$637,000 fe!leral grant to
con tinue its nutrition prQgram
for senior citi,ze~.

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Ken tu cky
New York
Virginia
St . Louis
Memphis

'

w. 1. pet . g.b.

Roger W. Tracy, Jr. has been
should take the state audi- Like: Auditor Ferguson this
endorsed by all Ohio newspapers tor's office away from the year employed Frank King,
to date, including these :
Joseph T. Ferguson family ousted president ef the Ohio
and give it back to the people AFL-CIO, at $17,800 a year
* THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
of the state .
Politically, that was probaThe present auditor, Joseph bly a good buy. King was just
* COLUMBUS CITIZEN JDWRNAL
T . Fergu s on , who is past about the second most powerJ eighty, has held the office so
ful figure in Ohio politics : he
* CINCINNATI ENQUIRER
long he treats it as his per- so ir.ked Gov . Gilligan that
sonal
lief.
* CINCiNNATI POST &amp; Tif.lES STAR
the governor is given credit
for skidding him out of hi s
* DAYTO~ DAILY NEWS
He gets $25,000 a year. He power base in the union.
pays his grandson, who bears
* THE JOURNAL HERALD (DAYTON; his name but is known as
" Terry, " $10,254 a year.
· SO, whom should Ohioans
* AKRON BEACON JOURNAL
Three other grandsons are put in the office of sta te audialso on the payroll : John torwhen they_guide the Fer* CANTON REPOSITORY
Voidness gets $8,69t, Thomas " guson's gently into the politi.Voldness gets $12,938, and cal sunset?
* LORAIN JOURNAL
John E . Gotherman is paid
Roger W. Tracy, Jr. is the
* ASHTABULA STAR BEACON
$7,571.

.....
. .......~=

youV:e got it. ,.

learnlri_g such · high., paying skills as . computer
techhlclan , aircraft mechanic, accountant, elec·
tronic techr11clah or one of dozens of.other technical
or buSiness specialties. You' ll ·recelve some extra
benefits, too-like J&gt;l'ld vacations,' promotions, free

AGAINST THE TAX LEVY
... ~

·~

month for

wheers and go,places, do-fhlngs acflon while you're

FOR THE TAX LEVY

Fad

* * *

Yes. Go fo school. and buy
new ·wheels, too :.,.You can
!"akt If h8PP.«O ·In .l!!e Air
Force. It's greffr~lnlng. The kim! thai will provide

•

because ...

* THE REGISTER HERALD (EATON)

•

ABA Standings
B y Un i ted Pre ss International

Knock Out This
Nest of Nepotism

for State Auditor

Robert E. Buck

..

Pro Standings

lndependent, e w ~ paper

HARRY R HORVITZ
Publisher

.

'"

score board in the

period to cut the margin to 14-8
as quarterback Terry Carter
scored from 8 yards out.
But it didn 't take Nease long
to retaliate, sprinting for a 70
yard touchdown on the ensuing
ki ckoff.
Junior ha lfback Danny
Brown was next in the Tornado
scori ng line, dashing 48 yards ,
before Nease tallied the last
' 12
two touchdowns on runs of
mark overall . Symmes Valley available.
and 7 yards .
By Quarters:
~ closes out its season next
Highlander Kip Lewis
week against Hannan, W. Va. Hannan Trace 0 0 14 8-22 finished the night's scoring
No game statistics were Symmes Valley 6 8 0 ().-14 with a l yard run.
The Tornados, as a team,
rushed 44 limes for 297 yards,

News Journal

·TAfT\!

CANDIDATE FOR

11 yard run in the
fir st qua r ter, followed by
anotner touchdown blast, this
one from two yards out.
Southwestern
hit · th e

scoring on an

~annan Trace topples Symmes V~ley

.

Holden, Hooker 'ready'

limes for 109 yards, joined in
triple ligures by Nease who
went an even 100 yards in 24
trips.
Nease opened the game 1s

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29 - The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 3, 1974

·Rock Hill

down~

•

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Southern .rolls over Southwestern, .42 to 14

Kyger Creek 44'-7

•.

a ceo~ ted for the ltnal two
tou c hdowns . The Lawrence
COunUiins Pushed lhe count to
36-0 on a 35. yard bomb from
Bond to Turvey. With 6.:47 left

'

•

t

inside the 20, pushed across its South Point Friday for the
only point. on a 57 yard drive OVC crO\yn.
STATIST,ICS .
ending with senior fullback
KC
Mark Waller's four yard run. Department
13
First
DOwns
Lucas hooted the extra point.
175
.
' Although the Bobcats of . Yards Rushing
77
Coac h Jim Sprague, could only Yards Passing
12
muster one score, Kyger Creek Passes Attpt.
6
Passes
Compt.
moved the ball well against the
2
Fumbles
Redmen defense.
I
Kyger Creek, 6-2, closes out F.umbles Lost
0
2
Interceptions
·
its
1974
season
at
home
conversion was incompJ'e te.
10-105 7-95
The TD was set-up on a 30 yard
. PIULADELPHIA (UP!) - Pete Demmerle In the far a 27-yard field goal attempt. Saturday night In a 7:30 p.m. Penalties
By Quarters:
game against Wahama.
aerial from Bond to split · end · Fifth-ranked Notre Dame, corner of the end zone at 10:04
The upstart Middles in0 0 0
Rock Hill upped its season Kyger Creek
Brent Turvey. Rock .Hill put outfought and stunned by of the fourth quarter and Dave
creased the margin to 6-4l at
6
26 6
record to 7-~. The Redmen play . RockHill '
the game out ofreach with a 26 underdog Navy for three Reeve made the conversion to
.5:43 of the third quarter when
point second quarter . .
periods, fmally scored twice in put the Irish into the lead.
Dykes booted . a 37-yard field
The Redmen moved !14 yards the .fourth quarter on a pass
Later, with 2:12 left In the goa.
in 13 plays as sophomore Paul and an interception to squeeze game, Safety Randy ·Harrison
The field goal was set up
Johns~n bulled over from four
out a hard-fought i4-« victory intercepted a pass from Mlddie when Stuffleheem faked a punt
'
yards out.
Saturday over the Middies.
quarterback Phll Poirier and from his own 36-yard line and
A pass for the extra point.
Navy, a 32-polnt underdog, dashed 40 yards for the final passed to hallhack Cleveland
fell Incomplete. Following the led 6-4l lifter three quarters on TD.
Cooper for a first down on the
ensuing kickoff, the Bobcats the strength of two field goals
VALENTINE SOORES - Tom Valentine scored
Navy , U,led 3-4at halftime . Notre Dame 19.
fumbled with Rock Hill by Steve Dykes and llie punting due to Dykes'. 48-yard field goal
GaillpollS'llrst eiglit points on passes from QB Jlm Niday at
The go-ahead touchdown
recovering on the KC 17 yard of John Stufflebeem, which early In the first quarter which followed a tough defensive
Wellston Friday niglit. Valentine is shown here In the end
line. Three plays later, Bond kept Notre Dame continually broke a Mlddie record set by series · by the Irish. which
zone after·catching a twOiJOint conversion. The lanky senior
We recommend
· bottle!! up.
scooted over from the 10.
el)dcaughllwQaer.iaisfor 34yards. (Steve Wilson photo.)
Greg Mather in 1961, also pUshed Navy back to its own
•.
the election of Sheldon •
A pass to Scott Mclntrye was
But the Irish finally got good against Notre Dame.
-' '
.
four-yard line and Stufflebeem
A. Taft as Justice of the
good for the conversion. Rock field J)OIIilion on the Navy 26
Notre Dame, 7-1, was able to was forced to punt from his
Suprema
Court.
Hill's Terry Baker Intercepted after a is-yard punt return and mount only one sustained drive own end zone.
a Tim Lucas pass on the next five plays later quarterback in the first half when it went
We have served
The game was played before
Bobca t series giving the Tom Clements hit split end from ita own 20 to the Navy 9, 48,634 at cily-&lt;Jwned Veterans
the people of Ohio as
BEREA, Ohio (UP!)- Wide brian Sipe of San Diego State. Redmen possession at the 28
but was held and Reeve missed Stadium.
'Judges,
legislators,
receivers Steve Holden and
Sipe and Holden got together
teachers of law, law/
Fair Hooker are expected to on one key play In Sipes twoyers and offl:cara of
start for the Cleveland Browns touchdown effort in the final
your American, Ohio
Sunday against the San Diego moments of the Denver game.
State and local Bar
Chargers, giving the offense a Sipe hit Holden with a fourth
Anoclatlona. We Include members of both
iace-lift. .
down .Pass for a first down to
political parties. Wa believe that Sheldon A. Taft
LOGAN - Coach Bob Lutz's conversion for a lfHl lead.
quarter when Mark Fairchild
Alfonso
Johnson ,
the
· GlOater JUchardsOn and Ju- keep alive Cleveland's first
Ia
the bast qualified candidate for Justice cit tha
Ironton
Tigers
assured
With just 17 seconds raced 58 yards with an In- league's leading rusher, ripped
bllee Dunbar were the wide touchdown drive .
Sup,.ma Court for the term beginning January
rpiV.rs through Cleveand's
The coaches said Sipe was themselves of at least a co- remaining in the h;!lf Vass tercepted pass with Hughes . out 108 yards in 14 carries for
1,
1975.
. '
championship
in
the
SEOAL
connected with end Paul adding the placement.
ronr.~· ' losing ' streak. impressive In the final heavy
the winners while Don Danis on .
Thomas D. Badger- ~..u. Vernon, Charles P.. Bak•r:. J'r.HOlden cifllliJ!)Jor Dunbar last drill here Friday aJJ&lt;L looked Friday night with a 35-0 McDaniel on a 21-yard screen
In rolling to their important was Logan's lop rusher with 18
Painesville, Cynthia F. Blank-Cincinnati, John W. E. ·sowweekel)d wheli"the Browns "especially sharp in passing thump,i ng of the Logan pass, with Hughes missing the victory the Tigers churned out yards in seven tries. ·
en-Columbus, Erie Bridgewater-Athens, W. Bitner BroWnilextra point for a 21.0 halftlme 13 first downs, had 182 yards
pUlled out a 23-21 vi~er · driils" aU week.
· · Chieftains.
Ironton can now see another
Springfield, Lawrence Burns-Coshocton, Albert l. Clovtsclin·
lead.
The
Tigers
hsve
thus
Columbus, James J . Cullers-Mt. Vernon, John C. Fi;_mln·
tht Denver Broncos to ra~~e Browns traveled 10 San
rushing, and completed five of undefeated league chamFindlay, Seabury H. Ford-Ravenna, Theodore P. Frericks·
Johnson opened the second eight passes for 105 yards.
ll!i!lr record to U .
, Di* af\&lt;!r Fridats .afternoon ched some part of their fourth
pionship as the Tigers hsve
Marion,
Robert E. Fryman-t-tamllton; Rankin M. GibSon'iBooter, a starter for Cleve- practice S&lt;!!fsioR an~ llue consecutive crown and also half with a scintillating 98 yard
The Chieftains had a terrible · only to defeat Wellston next
Columbus, Robert T. Green-Shelby, Wallor C. Gros~an­
Wooster, George Hall-Mansfield; Lawrance Herman-Columland l!JilU
,season when he to go. through a light workout extended their winning streak return of the opening kickoff evening as their offense netted : Friday night while Logan's
bus, Harry P. Jeffrey-Dayton, Robert E. Leach-Columbus,
in loop play to 24 games.
for a touchdown with Hughes seven first downs, only 39 record dips to 2-3-1.
was traded to N'!W Orleans lodliy at San Diego Stadium.
Wayne M. Leatherman-Perrysburg, William C. Leonardafter announeing he liad fligned
Fullback Jeff Kriebel bolted toeing the eJ&lt;Ira point.
yards on the ground, and
Score by quarters:
Lima, Robert K. McCurdy-Pottsmouth, Donald K .. Merwin·&lt;11· · with Uie' World Football
(
three yards for the first Tiger
The final Ironton TD came comple.t ed seven of 18 passes Ironton
Canton, James w. Miller-Lancaster, Lee C. ~iller-Warren ,
7 14 7 7--J5
Earl F. Morris-Columbus. John H. Ranz·Youngstow,n
League, was rehired just
score with · Stark Hughes with 11:11 showing in the fourth for 81 yards , with three In- Logan
o o o ().- 0
E. Rathman·Middletown, John C. Sheppard-cam:
William
booting the placement for a 7.j)
before the Plttsbl!rgh game.
tercepted by Ironton.
bridge, Robert G. Stachler-clnci~natl, Melvyn J . Stoulfer·
CYCWNES
BEATEN
!looker had been, released by
lead with 3:11 remaining in the
Sandusky, Wayne E. Stichter-Toledo. J . C. William Tatter·
AMES , Iowa (UP!)
sail-Elyria: Wimam H. Vodrey-East Livlrpool, Arthur 1.
the Saints just as Injuries and
first periOd.
Vorys.Columbus, Gerald P. Wadkowski-Columbus·,..Howard
lll~lt of IIP«'esl hlt Cleveland's (lkJahoma, leading only 7.j) at
In the second canto the Tiger
C. Walker, Jr.-Akron, E. Terry W.arren-A!Ihtabula, Karl H.
the
l)alf,
converted
two
Iowa
receiving corps.
defense picked off a Jim
Weaner-Oetianca, Benjamin l . lox-ColumbUs
As previously announced, the State turnovers into touch- Kemper pass on the Chief 37
. ENDORSED BY Cleveland Press, Columbus Dlspafch,
biggest change In Cleveland's downs in a !:&gt;-second span In yard stripe.
Columbus Clflzen Journal, Dllyfon Daily News, Dayfon
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Cin- good enough team· to make it to :much instead of watching
Journal, Cincinnati Post, Canton Repository, Youngstown
paiiing g""'e for San Diego the second 'half-and went on to
AlfonsQ Johnson then tallied
11
cinnati
defensive
end
Shennan
the
Super
Bowl.
I
figure
that
if
ourselves
.
Vindicator, Akron · Beacon Journal and other leading
whip
the
Cyclones
28-10
in
a
Big
will be the replacement of
the first of two touchdowns on a
White
says
It's
about
time
the
we
made
it
)nto
the
playoffs
newspapers.
What
we
've
got
to
do
is
regular quarterback Mike Eight Conference game 21-yard sprint with quarslumping Bengals " took ·last year we could make it to .concentrate on · ourse1ves, n
VOTE TO STRENGTHEN
PI!IPPI by backup signal caller Saturday.
terback Jbdy Vass running the
control of our own destiny."
the Super Bowl this year.
White said. "We got to go out
THE SUPREME COURT - ..
For the third consecutive
" But instead all :We've done there and win the ones we're
week, Benga1s coach and is just dug our.eives into a supposed to as well as the' ones
'·
general manager Paul Brown hole," White said.
we're not supposed to. We've
' 'I used to catch myself got to divor~e ourselves from
will be going after his 200th
professional lootball coaching during the game looking at the everybody else.
victory, agalpst the down trod- scoreboard and trying to see
"We've got to use ihe taleni
for SUPREME COURT
'
den Baltimore COlts, Sunday. · what the other teams were we have to control our own
Rob 'I. E. l.elctl, Chm .. Tlftlur SuPBn .Court Comm .• 325 E. ~ Aw .• Coli .• b. 43202
''•.
Baltimore has managed only doing, especially Pittsburgh. destiny," White said.
'
' '
one win this season.
But now we can't look at other
•
The Bengals have lost their people. We can't wait for
last two games, and White feels Pittsburgh to be beaten. We·
the pre-season dream of mak- were watching the otbers too
ing it to the Super Bowl is
slipping away
PLAYER CAll ED UP
"A lot of people thought we
NEW YORK (UPI) -The
would just go out there and New York Rangers SalurdlQI
win," White said. " '!bey took it called up 19-year-&lt;Jid defenfor granted thst we'd win. seman Ron Greschner from the
Maybe, we started believing Providence Reds . of the
•
that ourselves.
American Hockey l.Alague.
"! know that before the
The callup brought the
season
began I felt we had a Ranger roster to 21, two more
.,,
than a team can dre88 for a
National Hockey League
game.
SETS WORLD RECORD
Greschner was a second
WALTON - ON • THAMES,
round draft choice In the June
England (UP!) -Mick Mo]]Qy,
amateur draft. He will be on
PO. POL AOV.
the 35-year-&lt;Jid Irish Olympic
hand Sunday night for the
llllll'&amp;thon runner, set a new Rangers' home game against ·
world 34knile track running
Buffalo.
record of two :, hours, U
minutes, 47 secOnds Saturday.
M8JioY. clipped two minutes
AARON WINS EVENT
and 47 seconds off the previous
TOKYO (.UPI) _ Hank ·
record set by New Zealander Aaron, baseball's greatest
Jeff Julian m 1~.
· - homerunhitter,beatSadahatu
'
He was more tiJan fotr . a., Japan's home run king; 10,.
- nunu~ ah.ead of aecondi&gt;lace 9 Saturday
their contest at ·
Don R1tch1e, and . more ~ . Korakuerl Stadium. Aaron won
eight nunutes in front of third- $60,000 aDd Oh received ~.000 ·
•.
·placed Robert Her&lt;~~.
from the spoosor of the .Vent.
.
Thlolady really had no right to be famous. She waa ·
tho wife of a substantial Florentine merchant namad Gloconclo
·•
when, In 1499, Da Vinci's portrait made her Immortal. The
l!lyaterlous
Moria
Lisa
smile?
Perhaps
she
was
thinking
about
PROPOSED TAX LEVY
.
.
.
going shopping. Of course, If she'd had Master Charge,
(RENEWAL AND INCREASE)
like you do now, she'd be grinning from ear to ear.
· PEDRO - Rctk llil( playing
wi thpul the services of senior
Jeff Virgin, blitzed SVAC .
champion Kyger Creek, 44-7
here Friday night. ·The Red-'
men scored in the first period
and were never headed.
olunior quarterback Brett
Bond 'went over (rom 35 yards
out on an option for the first
Rock Hill point.. A pass for the

yard line. Johnson ran 27 yards
pushing ihe score to 32-0 at the
hslf.
The Redmen passing com. binatlon of Bond to Turvey

in the game, Bond hit Turvey
on a 25 yard aerial. .
Kyger Creek, denied a touchdown earlier on a dropped pass
in the end zone 'and a fumble

Irish rally nips Navy

X SHELDON ·A. TAFT.
for SUPREME CO.UR~

RACINE - The Southern here Friday night.
•Tornados, behind the running
The win concludes th e
of fullback Greg Dunning a11d Tornados' 1974 SVAC slate with
halfback .Mitch Nease, romped a 4-2 record and undisputed
'to an easy 42-14 triumph over · possession of third place in the
'the Southwestern Highlanders final league standings.

The Tornados of coach Bill
Jewell scored once in the first
frame before blowing the game
open in the second periOd with

.three touchdoyms.
,
Dunning Jugged the ball .18

WILLOW WOOD - For the
Second s traight week, Coach
Dave Owens' Hannan Trace
)Vildcats ·put on a second half
performance and last minute
~~~~~~heroics tQ win their second
"'!ame this season, 22-14 here
· Friday night against Symmes
;-"Valley.
l Last week, Hannan Trace did
I the same thing against the
!"Southwesterq Highlanders.
' Friday night, HT trailed IW at
the hslf, tied the game at 14-14
going into the final quarter and
won. it with just 51 seconds left

on the clock.
Host Symmes Valley jumped
into a 6-4l lead early in the first
period on Terry Pine's one
yard plunge. A run for the
extra point was slopped.
The Lawfence .Countians.,
trying to win their first game
this season , pushed the score to
1W in the second period behind
Riehle Stumbo's two yard run .

the two point con-

Pine ran
versiOn.

Hannan Tra ce began its
comeback with 8:38 left in the
third period when senior

.

halfback Kevin Swain da rted in
from seven yards out. Swain
also r an the conversion cutting

the lead to 14-ll.
Junior fullback Jeft Wells
tied the score with a nine yard
run with just 52 seconds left in
the third stanza. A run for the
extra point. was stopped.
With 51 seconds left on the
scoreboard, Swai~ zoomed
over from the two giving the
.Wildcats their second season

:victory.
·
The Wildcats finished SVAC
play with a 2-3 record and U

ELECT

Gordon H. Caldwell

Ironton earns slice of crown

FOR
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONER
I have not been able to contact each of
,,.,. in person, however I will let my
past record speak for itself as your
County Auditor for •15 years. Also my
6'12 years experience with tlie Ohio
Department of Highways.

fh!l

YOUR VOTE WILl BE GREATLY APPRECIATED

-

Pd. Pol . Adv .

•

Bengals .face Colts today

I.

I

I

iA~

VOTE FOR

An

Wt"d nesdar. September 18. JYi4

JUDGE

OF MEIGS COUNTY COURT

* * *Your
*·*Vote* and
* *Support
* * *Appreciated
*****

'

AAUW

Believes that educational opportunities are the birthright

of MIJ child, including the mentally retarded.

In

Unofficial, Sample Ballot

~

·

TRAINING

·

MEIGS COUNTY
majority affirmative vote is necessary for passage"
Vote Ballot With an

If; youVe·..V.it
~· ,

"X''

A renewal of . 75 mills and an increase of 2.0
mills to constitute · a tax for the
Meigs County for the purpose of

bi!nefit

.•

of

The malntenanc~.-1!1'., op~r.a~_loll: . of sehools,
training centers, workshops . and clinics for
. mentally . retarded persons
at a rate not exceeding 2. 75 mills for each one
dollar of valuation; which amounts to Twenty
Seven ·and one-~ cents for each one hundred
dollars of valuation, for ·Five
years.
~
R

•'
'

a great future ... and over $3.40 and more a

..·'
~

t~

--~
.

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

Middleport-Pomeroy Area. American ·Associatio~
,of University Women
.....
.

.

'

KATHRYN J.NIGHT, TREASURER
.,

..

.,

.

!

I

f\0.' POL AOV.
)

;.

(USE IT WISELY)

medical and denfelcare . Get all the defalls from
your Air ~or~e recrUiter today .
·, '-'.,
La I . . . . . 1111 . IIM11 ... AirP01111

221 N, COLUMBUS ROAD
ATHENS, OHIO 45701
PH. 593~722
"

1) 1

I

.. . .

7

6
3
4
2

1
4
4
6

6

.875
.600
.429
.400

. 250

West

w. I. pet .
Denver
6 I .857
San Antonio
5 3 .625
Ind i ana
2 4 .333
Sa n D iego
3 6 .333
U tah
3 6 .333
Friday 's Re-sults
Kentucky 125 Virginia 93
Denver 128 Memphis 112
Ind i ana 99 New York 97
Utah 97 sa n Antonio ea
St . Louis 130 S_
a n D ieg o 106

2
Jlh
4
5

COMMERCIAL &amp; SAVINGS BANK
COUir mm 111 WUPOUS

· D. K

WOOD~A:-i
Editor

:\lansfie ld . Ohio

Page Four

OHIO VOTERS on Nov. 5 enough political influence .

* *

At least that was the status
Tracy has served two
of things in July. It 's entirely
terms in the Ohio House of
possible .some other relative . Representatives
· from Frankhas 'been hired since then. ·
lin County. ·He has a degree
Oh, yes. Th~re ' s one more in bus,iness administration
Ferguson on the state aUdi- from Miami University and a .
tor.' s payroll ..:. Thomas Doctor of Law degree from
E .Ferguson. He is Joe 's son. Ohio State.
He was brought into the doTracy has served on the Fi~in a few years ago especially to take up the reins nance, Taxation, and State
when Joe steps down. He is Government committees in
now a candidate for election. the Ohio legislature. He also
His salary is $23,546 a year. served a stint in Washington
as an apjlointee of President
Eisenhower. He has a good
. ADDING UP the salaries of record of non-political public
.these six Fergusons on the service as well.

* MANSFIELD NEWS JOURNAL
* PAINESVILLE TELEGRAPH

* CLEVELAND PRESS
* THE PLAIN DEALER (CLEVELANC
* CALL &amp;POST
*THE SALEM . NEWS
* THE NILES DAILY TIMES

payroll of the state auditor's
office as of July, you get the
befty total of $88,000.

-.\

....•
.,.

Don't you wish your family
had a state office it could call
its very own which paid you
$88.•000 a year!

•

'

I

I) ....

r,... . 1otl

~

I',

It's time to knock the FerYou could help your, guson .family '!l nest of nep&lt;r
friends,too , if they have tism out of the Buckeye tree.

~~U2lt

·•

·ROger W. Tracy, Jr. is eminently qualified to be auditor
of the state of Ohio. We urge
voter~ tq make up their mind s
to vpte for him right now.

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....._ _;_,_ _ _ _ _ _...__ _ _ _ _ _. .

·

I,

Southwestern

with a :!.;; mark.
teams haa the same number of
Scoring
rirst downs, 16, with the arm of
S - Nease, 11 yard run I kick
Carter making the big di(- failed).
S - Nease, 2 yard run ·
ference as the senior signal
caller completed 18 of 31 1Simpson run) .
SW - carter, 8 yard run
passing attempts for 184 yards.
Car ter's top receivers were !Walker run ).
Mike Russell with 73 yards in· 6
S - Nease, 70 yard kickoff
receptions, Bob Ruff with 6 return (Nease run).
S- Brown, 48 yard run (run
catches for 34 yards and Rick
Crouse with 5 r eceptions for 61 failed).
yards.
S - Nease, 12 yard run
Southern connected once in (Nease run).
S- Nease, 7 yard run (kick
two passing attempts !Qr 24
yards and had I pass in- failed ).
tercepted.
SW - Lewis, 1 yard run
Friday the Tornados host (pass failed).
By quarters:
Caldwell in the final week of
the season, while Southwestern Southern
6 22 8 6-42
hss concluded its campaign Southwestern 0 8 0 8-14
carries. ~ Amazingly, the two

L os A n ge les 109 Milwauk ee 86
Portland 113 Buffalo 106
Go ld en State 99 Seattle. 88
WHA Standing s
By United Press Inter nation a l

Ea st

w. I. t .

Toronto
Winnipeg
Quebec

ga
26
14
13
13

ga
15
16
1'1
29

gl ga
19 16

26 28
28 29
17 28
18 26

canadi·an
w. 1. t. pis gf ga
6
5
4

2 0 12 37 27
1010 3213
1 0
8 24 11

Van co uver
3 3 0 6 18 22
Edmonton
0 2 0 0 6 12
Friday's Res ult
Winnip~g 10 :ro r.o n!o 1

Grid Scores
D elaware 14 Reynoldsburg 0
Westerville 14 Groveport 13
Worthington 14 Hilliard 1
Col . Watterson 40 Co l. Hartle y

0

DeSa tes 29 Col . Wehr l e 6
Franklin He lgh s 44 Granv i ll e 6
Olentangy 8 Marysville 7
Teays Valley 28 Dubl in 12
Ham ilton Twp . 21 W . Jeffer son
7
Newa rk Catholic 2.8 Heath 0
Co l. East 22 Dayton Dunbar 20
Bexley 22 Tecums eh 0
Bed ford 7 Mayfi el d 0
North Olmsted a Westlake 2
H unf. Vinson {W . Va .) 7
Ch esa peake .O
Cin . Elder 36 Cin . P ur ce ll 0
M ilford 21 Glen Este 6
Mar i emont 21 Syc amore 14
West Union 31 Peebles 0
Blan chester oi l Waynesville 16
Kings 22 Little M iam i 16
Ma son 27 Springboro 6
Leba non 28 Lemon .Monroe 16
Fr an kli n :26 Oxford Talawanda
Philo 10 Maysvi ll e 6
Crooksville 2 1 New Concord
John· Glenn 13
Bellaire :28 Martins Ferry 14
Buckeye So ut h 27 Barnesvi lle
IS
Ind i an Vallev South U Jewett
Scioto 6

Kent tops
MU, 35-7

man.

~·,.,. lt(jfll 1, .. , . ,.., • .., ., •. ·~··~'-

.

second.

could
manage just 64 yards in 17
while

pts
New E ngla nd 5 1 o 10
2 2 1 5
g.b . Clevelan d
Ch i cago
1 5 0 2
l lf:l Indian apo l is 1 6 0
2
West
3lf:z
w. I. 1. pts
4
Sa n D iego
4
i I 0 8
Houston
4 ~ 0 8
Phoenix
2 4 1 5
Minnesota
2 ~ 0 4
Michigan
2 5 0 ~

NBA Standings
By United Pre ss International
' Eastern Conf er e nce
Atlantic D ivis ion
w. 1. pet. g .b .
Buffalo
4
J .571
N ew York
4
J .571
Boston
4
4 .500
lf~
Ph i l a
J
4 .-129
l
Central Division
w . 1. pel . g .b.
Was hin g ton
7
1 , 875
Hou st on
4
3 .571
2 1,-~
Cleveland
4
4 .500
3
At lan ta
3
A .429
3112
New Orleans
0
B .000 7
Wester n Conference
Midwest Division
w. I. pet . g .b.
K C-Omaha
5 1 .833
Detroi t
~
4 .500 2
Ch icago
3 5 . 375
3
M ilwaukee
1
6 . 143
4112
Pacific Division
w . I. pet . g .b.
G:'&gt;lo.. &lt;:.:tate
5 2 . 714
LO::i Anc, ..
4 3 .57 1 1
Sea t tle
4
4 .500
n ·,
Portla nd
4 4 .500 1112
Phoenix
3
3 .500
11,1
Friday 's R suits
Boston 114 Philadelphia 98
Detro it 103 New Or lea ns 93

*

(Kent State-Mal'lball )
HUNTINGTON, W. Va.
(UP!) - Tailback Larry Poole
ran for three touchdowns and
the Kent State defense intercepted two passes and
jumped on four Marshall
fumbles Saturday In . a 35-7
romp over the Thundering
Herd.
The Flashes, running their
season record to W, kept the
ha~less Marshall team scoreless until the fourth q\W'ter.
The Herd hss lost six straight
and is .1-7 this fall.
Poole soored on runs of one,
one and two yards and gained
122 yl\l'(lol, closing to within' 75
yards of· the all-tlme Kent
career l'Wihing record.
The Flashes also got a touchdown on 8 311-yard pass from
quarterback Greg Kokal to
wide receiver Kim Featsant
and one on a 35-yard pass theft
by Cedric Brown.
Marshall's lone touchdown
came on a five-yard run by Ned
Burks.
Kent scored the first tlme it
got the ball with Poole carrying
most of the tlme on a 54-yard
drive and blasting over• from
the one.
The Kokal-Featsanl touch·
down In the . second quarter
made it I~ for the Flashes.
An onslde kick by the Herd
opening the second half backfired when Kent State got the
ball and then marched 56 yards
In 10 plays with Poole again ·
smashing over from the one.
· The Flashes made II 211-0 in
the fourth quarter when Brown
picked off a pass by Marshall
freshman qqarterback Bob
WUI and dashed 35 yards to the
end zone.
Marshall followed with a 7:1yard drive, rughllghted by a ()4..
yard run by Bill Stevenson, and
got its only soore on Burks'
five-ya,rder.
Poole ilcored his third touchdown .for the Flashes late in the
game.

They stand for Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and it
means every penny on deposit in any individual savings account or savings certificate is insured up to 20 thousand dollars by an agency of the federal government.
It means your hard-earned dollars on deposit with the Ohio Valley
Bank, lor example , are safe and Insured . . . and you don't have
to deposit 10 or 20 thousand dollars 10 get this kind of protection.
Its yours regardless ollhe size of your savings account.
Look around and see what's being offered today!
You read advertising that offers gigantic high-percentage Interest
rates, PROVIDED . . , get glamorous and glittering premiums when
you open a savings account, PROVIDED . . . receive promisas of
annual yields to stagger tha Imagination, PROVIDED . . .

But what do you really want?
You want a lair return, the highest legally possible, with a guarantee
of safely lor your funds , and accessibility to these funds on reasonable nolice of withdrawal. This is exactly what Ohio Valley Bank
wants and promises their depositors. No wonder our savings deposits are at an all-time high.

QOLD£N PABSBOOK

PABBIIOOK IAYINQ8

S ~.s~~u%
RATE

YIELD

• Payable Quanerty • Minimum 11 .000.00

• Compounded Daily!

1-YEAR C!RTIFICATE

!I-MONTH CERTIFICATE

6~
RATE

• Payal;lle Quarterly . • Minimum $1,qoo.oo

• Payable Quarterly • Minlmt.~m $1 ,()00.00

3-YEAR CERTIFICATI!

2·YEAR CERTIFiCATE

6 ~.
RATE

• Payable Quarter!~ • Minimum $1.000.00

• Payable Quarterly

..
..
7114%

ANNUAL

4-YEAR CERTIFICATE

• Pay~ble

I

'

. I

·.

• Minimum $1,000.00

..... . -

• Mlnln'!UR!_$5,000.00

And in addition to all this ... monthly or quilrterl y income ... paid on o~•·
two, three or four-year certificate&amp;!"""lnteres1 payable monthly If you des1re
on certificates with face amount of $5,000.00 or more .
Federal Regulation.&amp; require' a substantial penalty for pr~ma1ure withdrawal
of certificate funds.

GRANT APPROVED
CO[..UMBUS (UP!) ~ The ·
Cotincil on Aging In the Cincinnati' area · will receive a
$637,000 fe!leral grant to
con tinue its nutrition prQgram
for senior citi,ze~.

'·

••

'.

'

. I
'

Ken tu cky
New York
Virginia
St . Louis
Memphis

'

w. 1. pet . g.b.

Roger W. Tracy, Jr. has been
should take the state audi- Like: Auditor Ferguson this
endorsed by all Ohio newspapers tor's office away from the year employed Frank King,
to date, including these :
Joseph T. Ferguson family ousted president ef the Ohio
and give it back to the people AFL-CIO, at $17,800 a year
* THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
of the state .
Politically, that was probaThe present auditor, Joseph bly a good buy. King was just
* COLUMBUS CITIZEN JDWRNAL
T . Fergu s on , who is past about the second most powerJ eighty, has held the office so
ful figure in Ohio politics : he
* CINCINNATI ENQUIRER
long he treats it as his per- so ir.ked Gov . Gilligan that
sonal
lief.
* CINCiNNATI POST &amp; Tif.lES STAR
the governor is given credit
for skidding him out of hi s
* DAYTO~ DAILY NEWS
He gets $25,000 a year. He power base in the union.
pays his grandson, who bears
* THE JOURNAL HERALD (DAYTON; his name but is known as
" Terry, " $10,254 a year.
· SO, whom should Ohioans
* AKRON BEACON JOURNAL
Three other grandsons are put in the office of sta te audialso on the payroll : John torwhen they_guide the Fer* CANTON REPOSITORY
Voidness gets $8,69t, Thomas " guson's gently into the politi.Voldness gets $12,938, and cal sunset?
* LORAIN JOURNAL
John E . Gotherman is paid
Roger W. Tracy, Jr. is the
* ASHTABULA STAR BEACON
$7,571.

.....
. .......~=

youV:e got it. ,.

learnlri_g such · high., paying skills as . computer
techhlclan , aircraft mechanic, accountant, elec·
tronic techr11clah or one of dozens of.other technical
or buSiness specialties. You' ll ·recelve some extra
benefits, too-like J&gt;l'ld vacations,' promotions, free

AGAINST THE TAX LEVY
... ~

·~

month for

wheers and go,places, do-fhlngs acflon while you're

FOR THE TAX LEVY

Fad

* * *

Yes. Go fo school. and buy
new ·wheels, too :.,.You can
!"akt If h8PP.«O ·In .l!!e Air
Force. It's greffr~lnlng. The kim! thai will provide

•

because ...

* THE REGISTER HERALD (EATON)

•

ABA Standings
B y Un i ted Pre ss International

Knock Out This
Nest of Nepotism

for State Auditor

Robert E. Buck

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Pro Standings

lndependent, e w ~ paper

HARRY R HORVITZ
Publisher

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score board in the

period to cut the margin to 14-8
as quarterback Terry Carter
scored from 8 yards out.
But it didn 't take Nease long
to retaliate, sprinting for a 70
yard touchdown on the ensuing
ki ckoff.
Junior ha lfback Danny
Brown was next in the Tornado
scori ng line, dashing 48 yards ,
before Nease tallied the last
' 12
two touchdowns on runs of
mark overall . Symmes Valley available.
and 7 yards .
By Quarters:
~ closes out its season next
Highlander Kip Lewis
week against Hannan, W. Va. Hannan Trace 0 0 14 8-22 finished the night's scoring
No game statistics were Symmes Valley 6 8 0 ().-14 with a l yard run.
The Tornados, as a team,
rushed 44 limes for 297 yards,

News Journal

·TAfT\!

CANDIDATE FOR

11 yard run in the
fir st qua r ter, followed by
anotner touchdown blast, this
one from two yards out.
Southwestern
hit · th e

scoring on an

~annan Trace topples Symmes V~ley

.

Holden, Hooker 'ready'

limes for 109 yards, joined in
triple ligures by Nease who
went an even 100 yards in 24
trips.
Nease opened the game 1s

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Falcons win in two overtzmes

30- The SUnday Tin&amp;~· Sentinel, SWlday, Nov, 3,J974

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GIBSON

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CLEARANCE SALE

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Fort Fr ye 52 Shenendoah 19
Dayton Oakwood 15 T ipp City
14
Jefferson 35 BellbrOok 20
Carlisle 35 Nationa l Trail 20
D ixie 46 Preble Shawnee 0
Eaton B Twin Valley North 0
Sidney 57 Dayton Patterson 34
Fairborn
Park
Hill s
20
Miamisburg 6
Twin Valley South 30 Valley
View 6
·
Urbana 21 North easte rn 3
Lakota JJ Hamilton Taft 16
Canton McKinley 19 Warren
Harding 6
Massillon 39 A ll iance 12
Canton South 11 Stark Cou nty
· Perry 0
Louisville 9 N. Canton Hoover 0
Akron Garlleld 33 Akron So uth

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1:

H.v llob Hm'.flich

NANCY Tawney, 25, youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Max

'awney, Gallipolis, won $1;200on the women'spro golf circuit in

Teamsters
United Mine Workers

Black Lung Association
Aluminum Worllers of America
AFL-tiO Alitoworkers
AFL.CIO Communications WorkeiS

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GRANT McDONALD HAS BEEN ENDORSED IY THE.
CHILLI.COTHE GAZETTE AS THE lEST. ,COUNTY,
COMMISSIONER IN THE MEMORY OF THE PAPER. ·

One GOOD man can make a diff..-ence!

VOTE
McDONALD
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NOVEMBER 5th
.
by: CommlltH to Elect. McDoMid, Austin E. ;
• WOOdword, Treas., 23 S. Paint St., Chllllcoljle. Ohio. :.

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SlNCE ..-riving in ihe "land
loim un4er" she has earned
oore thait $1,800, on the pro
our. Na~tcy is considered
lallia 's first pro woman .
·IO!fer, Sbe got her start on the ·
ocii
IJ10re than a decade
1110 und.er the l"&amp;tchfiil eye of
, foward B.. Saun~s. ·
.
19, · mid-october, Nancy
panifcipa ted . d n
_lite
i,Qiio LPGA Open played on
lltel Maline Course. Nancy
:Ired a 243 in the 54-hole
tournament, finishing seventh.
ntat tournament was sponIC!Hd by Beneficial Finance
:::o:·.fhe Marino News carried a £
'eature article · on Nancy
NANCY TAWNEY
luring the LPGA event. It
'eads:
+++
APPARENTLY it is harder to swap from big ball to small
:.11 and back again than many people imagine.
Clrle of the latest to find the difference is United states
;troette, Nancy Tawney, who this weekend is competing in the
Beneficial Finance $6,000 LPGA championship of Australia at
he Marino Golf Club.
,
Talking with Nancy this week, I fowtd that her big worry was
lld)uslingfrom the big hall to the small Australian ball.
"Your whole set-up changes when you play with the small
:JBD," he said.
"Your hands are placed differently and you even address the
tllll differently juSt to keep the ball low. ,
"Il's strange, as It's th~ first time I've used the smaU ball.
"! only hope that by the time I leave Australia I've mastered
it.
"The biggest difference stiU seems to be with putting, as the
:q ball is so much easter to putt.
"You hltit harder, but it keeps its line much better."

iln)ls

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·TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the rues of the Daily Tribwte
md weekly Gailla Times ... Gallia·eounty has 7,464 voters In 1954
election. City and county schoolleavies approved but sewer
lOild 1sue Is ·aeleated ... D. 0. Taber reelected Gallia County
•esentatlve. Tom Jenkins returned to congress 16th time and
!'rank J, Lausche earns fifth term as Ohio governor ... Blue
Clevlls wallop Logan 31-7 in SEOAL grid outing.

:an

Ste11dy 1111d System11tit
Sllr;,,,
·M11ke lor 11

J.OHN M. FULLER

Fuller named
broker with
realty firm

POWELL'S SUPER VALl!E Store was the swinging spot In
Pomeroy 'Thursday night when the store staged a public
Halloween party .
• Mr. and Mrs. Larry Powell, owners, were a bit apprehensive
about the party since it hasn 1 been done frequently . They didn 'I
even know If the first person would show uP· WeU, people did
show up. In fa&lt;:l, the store was just jammed and everyone
seemed to have a ball with tbe exception, perhaps, of Earl Ingels.
and Rick Crow who had to wade among the over 100 masked kids
to pick out the costwne winners. The party was a huge success
and does indicate that people do enjoy this type thing.
Incidentally, store employes were In costume and Larry
Powell got more than one second glance earlier Thursday when
he litnched at the Meigs Inn in costume.

GALUPOLIS - John M.
Fuller, 31, State Route 160,
Gallipolis, has been named a
broker with Ohio River Realty
Inc. Douglas J. Wetherholt,
ptesident, said Fuller, who
joined the staff of Ohio River
Realty in 1973 as a salesman,
has satisfactorily completed
the real estate courses at Rio
Grande Coilege and passed the
broker's exam given by the
Ohio Real Estate Commission.
Fuller is the third full-time
licensed broker to be
associated with the Gaillpolls
firm established In 1971. Oscar
C. Baird and Douglas J .
Wetherhoit complete the full·
time staff.
The firm's office is located in
the Ohio River Realty Building
452 Second Ave.

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·Bryan of . Goodyear to. spea}J.
RIO GRANDE ~ W. R.
,(Dick ) Bryan, a dynamic
'speaker whose goal is "personto-person Wlderstanding", will
speak Tuesday, Nov. 5, in the
Rio Grande College dining hall,
at 1:40 p.m.
Currently the executive
director of community services
for Goodyear, Bryan has
directed
ma,nagement
development and held other
executive posts during his 25year career.
Speaking on the topic of
"Head' Em Off At the Gap", he
will approach the generation
~ap problem with the idea that

the vast majority of youth are
wiliing to assume' responsihility for closing the comIDWlication void.
Long active In Scouting and
other youth activities, Bryan
knows the yowtg people who
react responsibly and constructively to the challenge of
today. Educated at the College
of Wooster, Ohio State and
Harvard, he has been a teacher
of history and speech. He has
had audiences with 52 heads of
state and has visited 86
Counties as president of Uons
· International.

August . lt's a pretty big chore as I see it.
The election of the five board members from the 11 can·
didates will be held from 5 to 9 p.m. Thursday evenin~t in the
office of the Meigs County Commissioners in the courthouse.
Only persons holding 1974 membership tickets in the Meigs
County Agricultural Society can vote.
The fair board which generally meets at the fairgrounds on
Monday of each month will be meeting in November on Tuesday
night, Nov. 5.

FEri:NEY-BENNETT POST 1211, American Legion, is one of
the posts which has battled about the moving of veterans day to
October from the traditional Nov. II date.
To further emphasize its protest the post will stage a birth·
day dinner for the post members and their families at the post
home on Nov. II.

UNIT CALLED
POMEROY -The Pomeroy
emergency squad answered a
cal! to Marauder Stadium in
Pomeroy at 6:58 p.m. Friday
for Jimmy Hawley, 17,
Pomeroy, who suffered an arm
injury . He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
but was later removed to the
Holzer Medical Center by
SEOEMS. Hawley is not on the
Marauder footbail squad.

AUTO KICKED
GALLIPOLIS - City police
here Friday investigated two
acts of vandalism to a car
owned by Gallia County 4-H
agent Fred Deel of Rt. 2,
Vinton. Dee! told investigating
offlcers that someone kicked
the right side door of his car
and deflated a tire while the
vehicle was parked Thursday
night at lhe Ohio Valley
Livestock Yards.

Eddy's schedtde
POMEROY -

Mr.

Eddy

Educator's schedule for week
of November 4-Bth in Meigs
County :
,

MONDAY - School Lot,
6:30 . p.m.;

6-

6:40-

Carpenter,

Wolf Pen, 8-8: 30.
THURSDAY - Portland

Ele ., 9:30-11 a.m . ; Portland
Comm., 11 : 15-11:30; Riverview

Ele., 12: 45 -2: 15 p.m. ; Ree&lt;l•vllle, 2: 30-3; Eden Church,
3: 30·4; Long Bol!om , 4:Jo.,,
Stiversville. · 5:30-6: 30 ; Great
Bend, 7:30-8.
FRIDAY - Racine, 10-11 : 45
a.m. ; Southern, 12-1 p.m.;
Bowman 's Run , 1:15-1:30 ;
Arms Lane-McCallum, 2-2: 15 ;
Baums Addition, 4-4: 30·:
Krogers

Parking Lot , 5-6 ;

Krogers Parking Lot, 6: 30·8.

ELECT

HENRY
WELLS

IT'S SURPRISING TIIAT II CANDIDATES have filed for
election to the Meigs County Fair Board. The board meets yearround to plan for the county fair and then ~!ages the event in

ANOTHER CHARGE
OAKLAND, Calif. (UP!) An additional charge of
murder has been lodged
against missing Black Panther
Party cofowtder Huey Newton.
Police said Kathleen Smith, 17,
whom Newton was accused of
shooting on Aug. 6, has died at
a San Leandro, Calif., hospital.
Newton disappeared Aug. 23
when he failed to answer four
felony charges in Municipal
Court lind forfeited $42,000 bail.

W. R.BRYAN

7. 10 ,

ULA MITCH ADVISES YOU to avoid moving if possible.
The Mitch family has moved from Wright St. to Mulberry
Heights.
"I can't find a thing", Lila quips.

THE GET-WELL CARDS for Sis wise, a surgical patient at
Holzer Medical Center, conlinue to pour in. At the last cowtl she
had received 2'/$.
·
'Her room was decorated in a Halloween motif by husband,
Olink and Sis staged trick or treat night. She was visited by 10
high school kids who took her a jack-o-lantern. You can bel your
Ufe that the hospltallzaUon may be though but Sis will make the
best of it.

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POMEROY - If you haven't seen Cleo Smith of Chester
around for a whfle, small wonder.
Cleo is a mighty b..iy gal these days with her job traveling in
southeastern Ohio, .southern West Virginia and western Pennsylvania as a "ret8U salesman". Cleo is with the Dick Smailey
Brokerage Co., Toledo, associated with Scot tad products.
Cleo, in visiting grocery outlets throughout her territory, bas
traveled 45,000 miles in two years of seiling. Cleo finds it's ail
very exciting and Interesting and is amused with the situations
she encounters in being the only woman in selliruz for &amp;ot 1ad .
She was one of three women in the field who attended a National
Food ijrokers Association seminary held In September at
Detroit.
It's been a male field and since her name could belong to
either a male o~ female, Cleo gets mail addressed "Mr." and
found when she won an award for outstanding seiling that !hose
attending the presentation had expected a man to show up to
receive the award.
At any rate, Cleo is enjoying it all-and not only that - she's
probably a whiz at selling.

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wstralla last week. Nancy called home on Thursday to tell her
erents of her «,test earnings. She has been on tour in Australia
lnce Oct. 1.

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Of the Bend· -:·- · .

voters. As the late D. 0. Taber, fanner Gallia County
Repr~sentalive once said; "The right to live in America is worth
1 vote." Let's make sure Gallla has a 100 percent attendance in
all 38 precincts Tuesday. Remember, the polls wiD remain open
llldhoi!lllonger (7:30p.m.) this year. Polls will open at 6:30p.m.

I

22
New
Lex i ngton
14
West
Muskingum 7
W9oster 13 Cosho~ton 6
Mdrgan 35 IHvendew 0
Sheridan 56 Trl Valley 0
Cle John Hay 12 Cle East 6
Garfield Heights 37 Cleveland
He ights 20
Vall~y Forge 32 EuCli d 12
·
Spr irigfietd Local 14 Elyria
Catholic 6
West Holmes 19 Brunswick 10
Canal Winchester 27 Bern e
Union 0
Liberty -Un ion 3 Lane: . Fisher
Cath , 0
Bloom -Carroll 16 Millersport 0
Fai.rtiel~
Union
13
P1ckenngton 0
Dover 54 Youngstown Eas t 0
New Philadelphia 28 Yngstwn .
South 0
Elyria 35 Mansfield Senior B
Lexington 27 Loudonv ille 9
Clear Fork 52 Plym o uth B
Med ina 42 Olmsted Falls 8
Chagrin 35 Twinsburg B
New Boston 27 Portsmouth
East 0
Grove City 8 F'ortsmo uth
Sen ior 6
Ridgemont 20 W est -Liberty 0
Lima Senior 27 Springfield
South 0
Lima Bath 10 Celina 7
Columbus Grove 26 Wayne
Trace 0
P iqua 30 Lima Shawnee 19
Bluffton 43 Crestvi ew B
Bellefontaine 4 1 Greenon 8
Fremont Ross 12 Findlay 7
Marion Local 19 Coldwater 13
Marietta 21 Chillicothe 14

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, IT'S about all over but tbe shouting as Gallia Countians
.-:epare to go to the polls Tuesday. Gallla has 11,257 registered

GRANT McDONALD HAS BEEN ENDORSED BY SIX MAJOR STAT~WIDE
A.SSOCIATIONS

-y niuhf's urid

I,

Beat ...

. By Hobart Wilson Jr.

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Gallia

GRANT McDONALD'S ACCOMPLISHMENTS AS ROSS
COUNTY COMMISSIONER
,
1.
Instrumental
in
securing
several
new
indu•trie:s
1
worth approximately $50 million llteroby providing about
2500 jobs.
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2. There have been no tax incruses In Ron County
during his term.
3. Had Roulol59wldened post Industrial sites and hod .;.
access roads Into Industrial sites built.
4. Secured grant for tiM Appalachian Highway In Ro11 '
County to bring roods to liM new vocational schools.
.
.s. Commissioner of one of the few counHos in Ohio .
operating in tho block firYnclolly.

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rnateline

on the clock. The kick went a '
bit wide and the game went
into overtime.
WIUiamstown won the toss
and took the ball first in the
overtime series. The · hosts
failed to score on both of their
series of plays.
It was on the second
Wahama series that Holbrook
dashed to paydirt 'from five
yards out to give the Falcons
their victory.
The toss dropped Williamstown's season record to 1·9.

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WILLIAMSTOWN - The ·Chuck Johnson with a nine
Wahama White Falcons came
frotn far behil)d Friday nighi to yard touchdown pass. Terry
Tucker toed the extra point.
capture a 26-20 double overAs the fourth pariod got
time v·i ctory over host'
Wlderway,
Goldsberry hit Greg
Williamstown.
Camp for a 30 yard TD aerial.
The winning TO was by This lime, .Tucker's kick for the
Jwlior Marty Holbrook on a EP~ was blocked .
five yard rwt during the White
Later in the fourth stanza,
Falcons' second overtime
Wahama notched the score at
series.
20-20 as Duane Russell took a 16
Williamstown had the yard touchdown pass from .
pigskin first in each of the two
Goldsberry and then Tucker
overtimes but was stopped by
kieked the extra point.
detennined Wahama defense.
Wahama came close to
1
The White Falcons of Cgach winning the game in regulation
Marcus Rice trailed 2Q..O at the
play as. the Falcons' Scott
close of the first half, then
Kebler tried a 29 yard field goal
came on with a stinging attack with eight seconds remaining
the remainder of the contest to
finish their season with a 2-8
record.
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CLEMSON WINS
j
Sophomore Mike Goldsberry
WINSTON-SALEM,
N. C.
:came into his own ,as the
WISEMAN AGENCY RAIDERS - The Wiseman
Falcon quarterback as · he (UP!) - Quarterback Mark
- Eric Steger, Jeff Davies, Scott Russell, Danny Brown,
Agency Raiders cap~ed the 1974 post-season Gallipolis
heaved three touchdown Fellers threw two touchdown
Dave Robinson, Chip Henderson and John McCabe. Third
MFL tiil~ after downing Gillingham's Bucks 8-6 last week.
one in the third quarter passes Saturday to lead
aerials,
row - Greg Tapp, Baron H"!'er, Big Johh Armstrong, Bart
and two in the final period of Clemson to a 21.0 victory over
TheRaiderscompUeda 6-I.Oseason record. Front l'QW, left to
Bradshaw, Steve Mullins, Greg Steinebrunner and Rick
Wake Forest in an Atlantic
right are: Bryan Hamilton, Mike McDonald, Dewey Rhodes,
regulation play.
Whaley . Rear - Eric Saunders, fke Wiseman and Sam
Coast
Conference football
Mike Pasquale, Doug Brown, and Gary Caldwell. Second row
Williamstown
opened
the
Hamilton, coaches. Not pictured - David Johnson, coach.
game.
scoring in the first stanza when
Harold Marshall scored on a 16
SPEARS SHINES
yard pass from Ted Insco.
DURHAM,
N. C. (UP!)
Greg Campbell's kick for the
Quarterback
Hal Spears
extra point was g~ and llie
engineered a second · quarter
hosts led 7.0.
drive
that ended with fullback
fn the second period, Daye
Tony
Benjamin scoring from
Williamson got another
Williamstown tally by running the one while a rock-hard Duke
to paydirt from 10 yards out. defense scored on a safety too
Again, CampheU booted the as the Blue Devils shut out
Georgia Tech 9.(} Saturday.
PAT.
Williamstown's final sixpointer came later in the
THJSTLEDOWNS
second stanza when Insco
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
powered over from the one
yard line. This time, the lry for (UP!) -Half Shot ran the six
the extra points by way of a furlongs In I : 12 flat Friday to
· win the featured ninth race
run, was no good.
WiUiamstown, however, left here at ThiaUedown.
Gn.LINGHAM BUCKS .,. After sharing the . regular
Kuhn, Gene Wood, &lt;llris Gallian, Mike Cornett and Randy
the field for halftime with an
The winner, ridden by Joel
season Midget Football League title with the Wiseman
Blackburn,coach. TheBuckswer'eH-2ontheyear.
optimistic outlook and a 20.(} McCullar, paid $5, $3:20 and
Agency Raiders, Gillingham Bucks finished second in the
advantage.
$2.20. Scotts Swapped wa,s
post-Be88011 playoffs losing the title game 8-6 to the Raiders.
·
The second half, however, second and Irish Wedding
•J
SCO-..nS spelled diS.ster for the hos.ts. third.
Front row, left to n8ht are: Richard Roderick, Jr., coach; D
'
Ted Gillespie, Marc Hardway, Tony Armstrong, Brian I ' rltta
"'e'
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W~hama opened up .tis
The 0.5 dally double comMcDade, Ptfar~ A\llison, Matt O'Donnell, Marty Glenn, Mike
Ohio High School ,
Be l pre 21 Alexander 7
scormg m the thl~d period bination of Homerwt and Mr
CraftandRedDogJohnson. llecondrow-KevKnapp Mark
_Football Scores .
WoodSfield "
zanesville when Goldsberry htt Captain Giovanni paid $34 •
,
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Bv Un1ted Press International
Rosecrans 15
9\eets,J. D. Jones, Joe Yeagley, PatO Dormell, Matt Wlllis,
Newark Catholic 2B H ea th 0
warren Lo ca l 34 F edera 1
Barry Nelson, Robbie Nibert and Ron Ellis,.coach. Third row
Granville .28 Johnstown 12
Hocking 10
.
Gobi
De
Lancaster 23 Newark 7
Wheelersburg 54 Northwestern
Bill
Qualls
h
And
Mills
Robb
y
' coac ;
y
le
e,
an
Upper Arlington 28 Zanesville
0

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ll.=_'f.heSWiday 'l'imes - Sentinel, Sunday, Nov, 3,1974

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INCUMBENT

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MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONER
,
4 years experience road work with U. N. Holderman &amp;
Son.
Employed in Meigs County for 35 years at local garages,
presently employed at Karr &amp; Van Zandt just a short
distance from the Commissioner's Office.

Your Vote and Support Appreciated
PD. POL. ADV.

..

MERRIER

o

Akron Kenmore 28 Akron Ellet
12
Nil es 14 St eubenville 13
Yng.s twn North 20 Akren
Hoban J
Cloverleaf 20 Orrvill e 7
Wadswor t h 21 Tr iway 6
Tallmadge 26 Salem 13
canfie l d 22 Girrard 12
Poland 22 Warren !.1 F K 7
Walnut R idge 14 Col. Eastmool'

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Col. South 13 Marion -Franklin
7
Col. Central 32 Col. Mohawk 14
Col. Whets tone 20 CoL North 0
Col .
Northland
20
Col.
Brookhaven 6
Col. Mifflin 20 Col. Linden McK . o
Whitehall 14 Mount Ve rnon 0
Gahanna 35 Westland 6

&lt;

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MODEL

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GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

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WITH 219 lb. FREEZER

ALL FROST CLEAR

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ALL FROST CLEAR 16 -18 CU. FT.

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This fabulous fitting knit features a flared bottom and comes
In 100% polyester for the easi- est care. The slac ks any man
would feel comfortable in .

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CHRISTMAS CLUB '75.-NOW ·oPEN!.

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You may select one of the following amounts:
50&lt;: A WEEK
25.00
SO.OO
$. l.OOAWEEK
$ 2-00 A WEEK ·
$100.00
.$. 3.00 A WEEK
$150.00'
$ 4.00 WEEK
$200.00
$ 5.00 A WEEK_
$250.00
$500.00
510.00 A WEEK
$1000.00
$20.00 A WEEK

••

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2 Green-4 White-1 Gold

2 Groen-! Gold·2 White

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GAS RANGES .....................! 188 UP
'
.ELEC. RANGES.....................
.. . UP .

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R·IDENOUR.

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915·3307

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Current Cantlriuausfy'
The First.
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Payment For ·Youl

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AVliNUE o'_i6LLIPOLIS,OHIO

.. 100

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. call the people here our friends.
It is out hope come next Tuesday, that you; the 'pe()ple of Gallia County, will g!ve me,

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Ronald R: Calh~un. the opportunity, as well as the responsibility, to continue to serve you

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we are vel)' happy we decided to return to Gallia County, the home of my parents for it

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as your Common Pleas Judge.
Sincerely yours,

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is a pleasure to live and work with .~ther co~tented, hard-~orking people. who know and
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RONALD R. CALHOUN &amp; FAMILY

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eVINTON BRANat.• VINToN, OHIO

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picture, is a Junior at Capital Univers~y in Columbus, Ohio.

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My family. and 1·are proud to be a part of this County and to 'call it our county and to

Micki, my son Clay, and my daughter Kieran. My 2l·year-old son Crai~, who is not in the

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met my family. To those whJl do not know my family, I would like to introduce my wife

3 LOCATIONS TO
·SERVE YOU!

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Even though 1 have served ~u for six years and· you know me, still some of you have not

eAUTO BANK ·THIRD AVE. .

!We Service WhaUYe Sell) ·
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Chester. o.

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MY FELLOW CITIZENS: .

National Will Pay The La1t

.MAIN. OFFICE • SEOOND Avt

TV &amp; APPLIANCES
GAS SERVICE

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•• .'If You Make 49 Payments

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RONALD R. CALHOUN &amp; FAMILY

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STORE HOURS
Monday &amp; Friday
9:30 Til8:00
. Tuesday, Wednesday, ,
Thursday &amp; Saturday
9:30 Til5:00

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LAST PAYMENT
FREE
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Falcons win in two overtzmes

30- The SUnday Tin&amp;~· Sentinel, SWlday, Nov, 3,J974

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GIBSON

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CLEARANCE SALE

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Fort Fr ye 52 Shenendoah 19
Dayton Oakwood 15 T ipp City
14
Jefferson 35 BellbrOok 20
Carlisle 35 Nationa l Trail 20
D ixie 46 Preble Shawnee 0
Eaton B Twin Valley North 0
Sidney 57 Dayton Patterson 34
Fairborn
Park
Hill s
20
Miamisburg 6
Twin Valley South 30 Valley
View 6
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Urbana 21 North easte rn 3
Lakota JJ Hamilton Taft 16
Canton McKinley 19 Warren
Harding 6
Massillon 39 A ll iance 12
Canton South 11 Stark Cou nty
· Perry 0
Louisville 9 N. Canton Hoover 0
Akron Garlleld 33 Akron So uth

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H.v llob Hm'.flich

NANCY Tawney, 25, youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Max

'awney, Gallipolis, won $1;200on the women'spro golf circuit in

Teamsters
United Mine Workers

Black Lung Association
Aluminum Worllers of America
AFL-tiO Alitoworkers
AFL.CIO Communications WorkeiS

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GRANT McDONALD HAS BEEN ENDORSED IY THE.
CHILLI.COTHE GAZETTE AS THE lEST. ,COUNTY,
COMMISSIONER IN THE MEMORY OF THE PAPER. ·

One GOOD man can make a diff..-ence!

VOTE
McDONALD
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NOVEMBER 5th
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by: CommlltH to Elect. McDoMid, Austin E. ;
• WOOdword, Treas., 23 S. Paint St., Chllllcoljle. Ohio. :.

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SlNCE ..-riving in ihe "land
loim un4er" she has earned
oore thait $1,800, on the pro
our. Na~tcy is considered
lallia 's first pro woman .
·IO!fer, Sbe got her start on the ·
ocii
IJ10re than a decade
1110 und.er the l"&amp;tchfiil eye of
, foward B.. Saun~s. ·
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19, · mid-october, Nancy
panifcipa ted . d n
_lite
i,Qiio LPGA Open played on
lltel Maline Course. Nancy
:Ired a 243 in the 54-hole
tournament, finishing seventh.
ntat tournament was sponIC!Hd by Beneficial Finance
:::o:·.fhe Marino News carried a £
'eature article · on Nancy
NANCY TAWNEY
luring the LPGA event. It
'eads:
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APPARENTLY it is harder to swap from big ball to small
:.11 and back again than many people imagine.
Clrle of the latest to find the difference is United states
;troette, Nancy Tawney, who this weekend is competing in the
Beneficial Finance $6,000 LPGA championship of Australia at
he Marino Golf Club.
,
Talking with Nancy this week, I fowtd that her big worry was
lld)uslingfrom the big hall to the small Australian ball.
"Your whole set-up changes when you play with the small
:JBD," he said.
"Your hands are placed differently and you even address the
tllll differently juSt to keep the ball low. ,
"Il's strange, as It's th~ first time I've used the smaU ball.
"! only hope that by the time I leave Australia I've mastered
it.
"The biggest difference stiU seems to be with putting, as the
:q ball is so much easter to putt.
"You hltit harder, but it keeps its line much better."

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·TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the rues of the Daily Tribwte
md weekly Gailla Times ... Gallia·eounty has 7,464 voters In 1954
election. City and county schoolleavies approved but sewer
lOild 1sue Is ·aeleated ... D. 0. Taber reelected Gallia County
•esentatlve. Tom Jenkins returned to congress 16th time and
!'rank J, Lausche earns fifth term as Ohio governor ... Blue
Clevlls wallop Logan 31-7 in SEOAL grid outing.

:an

Ste11dy 1111d System11tit
Sllr;,,,
·M11ke lor 11

J.OHN M. FULLER

Fuller named
broker with
realty firm

POWELL'S SUPER VALl!E Store was the swinging spot In
Pomeroy 'Thursday night when the store staged a public
Halloween party .
• Mr. and Mrs. Larry Powell, owners, were a bit apprehensive
about the party since it hasn 1 been done frequently . They didn 'I
even know If the first person would show uP· WeU, people did
show up. In fa&lt;:l, the store was just jammed and everyone
seemed to have a ball with tbe exception, perhaps, of Earl Ingels.
and Rick Crow who had to wade among the over 100 masked kids
to pick out the costwne winners. The party was a huge success
and does indicate that people do enjoy this type thing.
Incidentally, store employes were In costume and Larry
Powell got more than one second glance earlier Thursday when
he litnched at the Meigs Inn in costume.

GALUPOLIS - John M.
Fuller, 31, State Route 160,
Gallipolis, has been named a
broker with Ohio River Realty
Inc. Douglas J. Wetherholt,
ptesident, said Fuller, who
joined the staff of Ohio River
Realty in 1973 as a salesman,
has satisfactorily completed
the real estate courses at Rio
Grande Coilege and passed the
broker's exam given by the
Ohio Real Estate Commission.
Fuller is the third full-time
licensed broker to be
associated with the Gaillpolls
firm established In 1971. Oscar
C. Baird and Douglas J .
Wetherhoit complete the full·
time staff.
The firm's office is located in
the Ohio River Realty Building
452 Second Ave.

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·Bryan of . Goodyear to. spea}J.
RIO GRANDE ~ W. R.
,(Dick ) Bryan, a dynamic
'speaker whose goal is "personto-person Wlderstanding", will
speak Tuesday, Nov. 5, in the
Rio Grande College dining hall,
at 1:40 p.m.
Currently the executive
director of community services
for Goodyear, Bryan has
directed
ma,nagement
development and held other
executive posts during his 25year career.
Speaking on the topic of
"Head' Em Off At the Gap", he
will approach the generation
~ap problem with the idea that

the vast majority of youth are
wiliing to assume' responsihility for closing the comIDWlication void.
Long active In Scouting and
other youth activities, Bryan
knows the yowtg people who
react responsibly and constructively to the challenge of
today. Educated at the College
of Wooster, Ohio State and
Harvard, he has been a teacher
of history and speech. He has
had audiences with 52 heads of
state and has visited 86
Counties as president of Uons
· International.

August . lt's a pretty big chore as I see it.
The election of the five board members from the 11 can·
didates will be held from 5 to 9 p.m. Thursday evenin~t in the
office of the Meigs County Commissioners in the courthouse.
Only persons holding 1974 membership tickets in the Meigs
County Agricultural Society can vote.
The fair board which generally meets at the fairgrounds on
Monday of each month will be meeting in November on Tuesday
night, Nov. 5.

FEri:NEY-BENNETT POST 1211, American Legion, is one of
the posts which has battled about the moving of veterans day to
October from the traditional Nov. II date.
To further emphasize its protest the post will stage a birth·
day dinner for the post members and their families at the post
home on Nov. II.

UNIT CALLED
POMEROY -The Pomeroy
emergency squad answered a
cal! to Marauder Stadium in
Pomeroy at 6:58 p.m. Friday
for Jimmy Hawley, 17,
Pomeroy, who suffered an arm
injury . He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
but was later removed to the
Holzer Medical Center by
SEOEMS. Hawley is not on the
Marauder footbail squad.

AUTO KICKED
GALLIPOLIS - City police
here Friday investigated two
acts of vandalism to a car
owned by Gallia County 4-H
agent Fred Deel of Rt. 2,
Vinton. Dee! told investigating
offlcers that someone kicked
the right side door of his car
and deflated a tire while the
vehicle was parked Thursday
night at lhe Ohio Valley
Livestock Yards.

Eddy's schedtde
POMEROY -

Mr.

Eddy

Educator's schedule for week
of November 4-Bth in Meigs
County :
,

MONDAY - School Lot,
6:30 . p.m.;

6-

6:40-

Carpenter,

Wolf Pen, 8-8: 30.
THURSDAY - Portland

Ele ., 9:30-11 a.m . ; Portland
Comm., 11 : 15-11:30; Riverview

Ele., 12: 45 -2: 15 p.m. ; Ree&lt;l•vllle, 2: 30-3; Eden Church,
3: 30·4; Long Bol!om , 4:Jo.,,
Stiversville. · 5:30-6: 30 ; Great
Bend, 7:30-8.
FRIDAY - Racine, 10-11 : 45
a.m. ; Southern, 12-1 p.m.;
Bowman 's Run , 1:15-1:30 ;
Arms Lane-McCallum, 2-2: 15 ;
Baums Addition, 4-4: 30·:
Krogers

Parking Lot , 5-6 ;

Krogers Parking Lot, 6: 30·8.

ELECT

HENRY
WELLS

IT'S SURPRISING TIIAT II CANDIDATES have filed for
election to the Meigs County Fair Board. The board meets yearround to plan for the county fair and then ~!ages the event in

ANOTHER CHARGE
OAKLAND, Calif. (UP!) An additional charge of
murder has been lodged
against missing Black Panther
Party cofowtder Huey Newton.
Police said Kathleen Smith, 17,
whom Newton was accused of
shooting on Aug. 6, has died at
a San Leandro, Calif., hospital.
Newton disappeared Aug. 23
when he failed to answer four
felony charges in Municipal
Court lind forfeited $42,000 bail.

W. R.BRYAN

7. 10 ,

ULA MITCH ADVISES YOU to avoid moving if possible.
The Mitch family has moved from Wright St. to Mulberry
Heights.
"I can't find a thing", Lila quips.

THE GET-WELL CARDS for Sis wise, a surgical patient at
Holzer Medical Center, conlinue to pour in. At the last cowtl she
had received 2'/$.
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'Her room was decorated in a Halloween motif by husband,
Olink and Sis staged trick or treat night. She was visited by 10
high school kids who took her a jack-o-lantern. You can bel your
Ufe that the hospltallzaUon may be though but Sis will make the
best of it.

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POMEROY - If you haven't seen Cleo Smith of Chester
around for a whfle, small wonder.
Cleo is a mighty b..iy gal these days with her job traveling in
southeastern Ohio, .southern West Virginia and western Pennsylvania as a "ret8U salesman". Cleo is with the Dick Smailey
Brokerage Co., Toledo, associated with Scot tad products.
Cleo, in visiting grocery outlets throughout her territory, bas
traveled 45,000 miles in two years of seiling. Cleo finds it's ail
very exciting and Interesting and is amused with the situations
she encounters in being the only woman in selliruz for &amp;ot 1ad .
She was one of three women in the field who attended a National
Food ijrokers Association seminary held In September at
Detroit.
It's been a male field and since her name could belong to
either a male o~ female, Cleo gets mail addressed "Mr." and
found when she won an award for outstanding seiling that !hose
attending the presentation had expected a man to show up to
receive the award.
At any rate, Cleo is enjoying it all-and not only that - she's
probably a whiz at selling.

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wstralla last week. Nancy called home on Thursday to tell her
erents of her «,test earnings. She has been on tour in Australia
lnce Oct. 1.

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Of the Bend· -:·- · .

voters. As the late D. 0. Taber, fanner Gallia County
Repr~sentalive once said; "The right to live in America is worth
1 vote." Let's make sure Gallla has a 100 percent attendance in
all 38 precincts Tuesday. Remember, the polls wiD remain open
llldhoi!lllonger (7:30p.m.) this year. Polls will open at 6:30p.m.

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New
Lex i ngton
14
West
Muskingum 7
W9oster 13 Cosho~ton 6
Mdrgan 35 IHvendew 0
Sheridan 56 Trl Valley 0
Cle John Hay 12 Cle East 6
Garfield Heights 37 Cleveland
He ights 20
Vall~y Forge 32 EuCli d 12
·
Spr irigfietd Local 14 Elyria
Catholic 6
West Holmes 19 Brunswick 10
Canal Winchester 27 Bern e
Union 0
Liberty -Un ion 3 Lane: . Fisher
Cath , 0
Bloom -Carroll 16 Millersport 0
Fai.rtiel~
Union
13
P1ckenngton 0
Dover 54 Youngstown Eas t 0
New Philadelphia 28 Yngstwn .
South 0
Elyria 35 Mansfield Senior B
Lexington 27 Loudonv ille 9
Clear Fork 52 Plym o uth B
Med ina 42 Olmsted Falls 8
Chagrin 35 Twinsburg B
New Boston 27 Portsmouth
East 0
Grove City 8 F'ortsmo uth
Sen ior 6
Ridgemont 20 W est -Liberty 0
Lima Senior 27 Springfield
South 0
Lima Bath 10 Celina 7
Columbus Grove 26 Wayne
Trace 0
P iqua 30 Lima Shawnee 19
Bluffton 43 Crestvi ew B
Bellefontaine 4 1 Greenon 8
Fremont Ross 12 Findlay 7
Marion Local 19 Coldwater 13
Marietta 21 Chillicothe 14

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, IT'S about all over but tbe shouting as Gallia Countians
.-:epare to go to the polls Tuesday. Gallla has 11,257 registered

GRANT McDONALD HAS BEEN ENDORSED BY SIX MAJOR STAT~WIDE
A.SSOCIATIONS

-y niuhf's urid

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Beat ...

. By Hobart Wilson Jr.

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Gallia

GRANT McDONALD'S ACCOMPLISHMENTS AS ROSS
COUNTY COMMISSIONER
,
1.
Instrumental
in
securing
several
new
indu•trie:s
1
worth approximately $50 million llteroby providing about
2500 jobs.
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2. There have been no tax incruses In Ron County
during his term.
3. Had Roulol59wldened post Industrial sites and hod .;.
access roads Into Industrial sites built.
4. Secured grant for tiM Appalachian Highway In Ro11 '
County to bring roods to liM new vocational schools.
.
.s. Commissioner of one of the few counHos in Ohio .
operating in tho block firYnclolly.

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rnateline

on the clock. The kick went a '
bit wide and the game went
into overtime.
WIUiamstown won the toss
and took the ball first in the
overtime series. The · hosts
failed to score on both of their
series of plays.
It was on the second
Wahama series that Holbrook
dashed to paydirt 'from five
yards out to give the Falcons
their victory.
The toss dropped Williamstown's season record to 1·9.

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WILLIAMSTOWN - The ·Chuck Johnson with a nine
Wahama White Falcons came
frotn far behil)d Friday nighi to yard touchdown pass. Terry
Tucker toed the extra point.
capture a 26-20 double overAs the fourth pariod got
time v·i ctory over host'
Wlderway,
Goldsberry hit Greg
Williamstown.
Camp for a 30 yard TD aerial.
The winning TO was by This lime, .Tucker's kick for the
Jwlior Marty Holbrook on a EP~ was blocked .
five yard rwt during the White
Later in the fourth stanza,
Falcons' second overtime
Wahama notched the score at
series.
20-20 as Duane Russell took a 16
Williamstown had the yard touchdown pass from .
pigskin first in each of the two
Goldsberry and then Tucker
overtimes but was stopped by
kieked the extra point.
detennined Wahama defense.
Wahama came close to
1
The White Falcons of Cgach winning the game in regulation
Marcus Rice trailed 2Q..O at the
play as. the Falcons' Scott
close of the first half, then
Kebler tried a 29 yard field goal
came on with a stinging attack with eight seconds remaining
the remainder of the contest to
finish their season with a 2-8
record.
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CLEMSON WINS
j
Sophomore Mike Goldsberry
WINSTON-SALEM,
N. C.
:came into his own ,as the
WISEMAN AGENCY RAIDERS - The Wiseman
Falcon quarterback as · he (UP!) - Quarterback Mark
- Eric Steger, Jeff Davies, Scott Russell, Danny Brown,
Agency Raiders cap~ed the 1974 post-season Gallipolis
heaved three touchdown Fellers threw two touchdown
Dave Robinson, Chip Henderson and John McCabe. Third
MFL tiil~ after downing Gillingham's Bucks 8-6 last week.
one in the third quarter passes Saturday to lead
aerials,
row - Greg Tapp, Baron H"!'er, Big Johh Armstrong, Bart
and two in the final period of Clemson to a 21.0 victory over
TheRaiderscompUeda 6-I.Oseason record. Front l'QW, left to
Bradshaw, Steve Mullins, Greg Steinebrunner and Rick
Wake Forest in an Atlantic
right are: Bryan Hamilton, Mike McDonald, Dewey Rhodes,
regulation play.
Whaley . Rear - Eric Saunders, fke Wiseman and Sam
Coast
Conference football
Mike Pasquale, Doug Brown, and Gary Caldwell. Second row
Williamstown
opened
the
Hamilton, coaches. Not pictured - David Johnson, coach.
game.
scoring in the first stanza when
Harold Marshall scored on a 16
SPEARS SHINES
yard pass from Ted Insco.
DURHAM,
N. C. (UP!)
Greg Campbell's kick for the
Quarterback
Hal Spears
extra point was g~ and llie
engineered a second · quarter
hosts led 7.0.
drive
that ended with fullback
fn the second period, Daye
Tony
Benjamin scoring from
Williamson got another
Williamstown tally by running the one while a rock-hard Duke
to paydirt from 10 yards out. defense scored on a safety too
Again, CampheU booted the as the Blue Devils shut out
Georgia Tech 9.(} Saturday.
PAT.
Williamstown's final sixpointer came later in the
THJSTLEDOWNS
second stanza when Insco
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
powered over from the one
yard line. This time, the lry for (UP!) -Half Shot ran the six
the extra points by way of a furlongs In I : 12 flat Friday to
· win the featured ninth race
run, was no good.
WiUiamstown, however, left here at ThiaUedown.
Gn.LINGHAM BUCKS .,. After sharing the . regular
Kuhn, Gene Wood, &lt;llris Gallian, Mike Cornett and Randy
the field for halftime with an
The winner, ridden by Joel
season Midget Football League title with the Wiseman
Blackburn,coach. TheBuckswer'eH-2ontheyear.
optimistic outlook and a 20.(} McCullar, paid $5, $3:20 and
Agency Raiders, Gillingham Bucks finished second in the
advantage.
$2.20. Scotts Swapped wa,s
post-Be88011 playoffs losing the title game 8-6 to the Raiders.
·
The second half, however, second and Irish Wedding
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SCO-..nS spelled diS.ster for the hos.ts. third.
Front row, left to n8ht are: Richard Roderick, Jr., coach; D
'
Ted Gillespie, Marc Hardway, Tony Armstrong, Brian I ' rltta
"'e'
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W~hama opened up .tis
The 0.5 dally double comMcDade, Ptfar~ A\llison, Matt O'Donnell, Marty Glenn, Mike
Ohio High School ,
Be l pre 21 Alexander 7
scormg m the thl~d period bination of Homerwt and Mr
CraftandRedDogJohnson. llecondrow-KevKnapp Mark
_Football Scores .
WoodSfield "
zanesville when Goldsberry htt Captain Giovanni paid $34 •
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Bv Un1ted Press International
Rosecrans 15
9\eets,J. D. Jones, Joe Yeagley, PatO Dormell, Matt Wlllis,
Newark Catholic 2B H ea th 0
warren Lo ca l 34 F edera 1
Barry Nelson, Robbie Nibert and Ron Ellis,.coach. Third row
Granville .28 Johnstown 12
Hocking 10
.
Gobi
De
Lancaster 23 Newark 7
Wheelersburg 54 Northwestern
Bill
Qualls
h
And
Mills
Robb
y
' coac ;
y
le
e,
an
Upper Arlington 28 Zanesville
0

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ll.=_'f.heSWiday 'l'imes - Sentinel, Sunday, Nov, 3,1974

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INCUMBENT

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MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONER
,
4 years experience road work with U. N. Holderman &amp;
Son.
Employed in Meigs County for 35 years at local garages,
presently employed at Karr &amp; Van Zandt just a short
distance from the Commissioner's Office.

Your Vote and Support Appreciated
PD. POL. ADV.

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MERRIER

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Akron Kenmore 28 Akron Ellet
12
Nil es 14 St eubenville 13
Yng.s twn North 20 Akren
Hoban J
Cloverleaf 20 Orrvill e 7
Wadswor t h 21 Tr iway 6
Tallmadge 26 Salem 13
canfie l d 22 Girrard 12
Poland 22 Warren !.1 F K 7
Walnut R idge 14 Col. Eastmool'

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Col. South 13 Marion -Franklin
7
Col. Central 32 Col. Mohawk 14
Col. Whets tone 20 CoL North 0
Col .
Northland
20
Col.
Brookhaven 6
Col. Mifflin 20 Col. Linden McK . o
Whitehall 14 Mount Ve rnon 0
Gahanna 35 Westland 6

&lt;

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MODEL

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GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

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WITH 219 lb. FREEZER

ALL FROST CLEAR

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ALL FROST CLEAR 16 -18 CU. FT.

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This fabulous fitting knit features a flared bottom and comes
In 100% polyester for the easi- est care. The slac ks any man
would feel comfortable in .

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CHRISTMAS CLUB '75.-NOW ·oPEN!.

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You may select one of the following amounts:
50&lt;: A WEEK
25.00
SO.OO
$. l.OOAWEEK
$ 2-00 A WEEK ·
$100.00
.$. 3.00 A WEEK
$150.00'
$ 4.00 WEEK
$200.00
$ 5.00 A WEEK_
$250.00
$500.00
510.00 A WEEK
$1000.00
$20.00 A WEEK

••

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2 Green-4 White-1 Gold

2 Groen-! Gold·2 White

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GAS RANGES .....................! 188 UP
'
.ELEC. RANGES.....................
.. . UP .

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R·IDENOUR.

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915·3307

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Current Cantlriuausfy'
The First.
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Payment For ·Youl

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AVliNUE o'_i6LLIPOLIS,OHIO

.. 100

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. call the people here our friends.
It is out hope come next Tuesday, that you; the 'pe()ple of Gallia County, will g!ve me,

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Ronald R: Calh~un. the opportunity, as well as the responsibility, to continue to serve you

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we are vel)' happy we decided to return to Gallia County, the home of my parents for it

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as your Common Pleas Judge.
Sincerely yours,

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is a pleasure to live and work with .~ther co~tented, hard-~orking people. who know and
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RONALD R. CALHOUN &amp; FAMILY

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eVINTON BRANat.• VINToN, OHIO

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picture, is a Junior at Capital Univers~y in Columbus, Ohio.

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My family. and 1·are proud to be a part of this County and to 'call it our county and to

Micki, my son Clay, and my daughter Kieran. My 2l·year-old son Crai~, who is not in the

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met my family. To those whJl do not know my family, I would like to introduce my wife

3 LOCATIONS TO
·SERVE YOU!

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Even though 1 have served ~u for six years and· you know me, still some of you have not

eAUTO BANK ·THIRD AVE. .

!We Service WhaUYe Sell) ·
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Chester. o.

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MY FELLOW CITIZENS: .

National Will Pay The La1t

.MAIN. OFFICE • SEOOND Avt

TV &amp; APPLIANCES
GAS SERVICE

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•• .'If You Make 49 Payments

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RONALD R. CALHOUN &amp; FAMILY

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STORE HOURS
Monday &amp; Friday
9:30 Til8:00
. Tuesday, Wednesday, ,
Thursday &amp; Saturday
9:30 Til5:00

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LAST PAYMENT
FREE
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majoring in English and
Eclinomics. A 1972 gr•duate of
Meigs High School, Miss Diehl
Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.·
James
Diehl,
Mulberry

Diehl returns
as copy boss
MARIETTA -

. 13 ;_ TheSunday~~-Sentinei,Sunday,Nov. 3,1974

Heights, Pomeroy.
She has been employed two
summers in the Daily Senl!nel
and Sunday Times-Sentinel
·editorial department.

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

the Collins report. • •

Marietta

Jo EUen
Diehl of · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
College
junior
Mulberry
Heights,
Pomeroy,
has been appointed copy editor
for the school news]iaper The
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Marcelian.
This is Miss Diehl's second
· year as copy editor. She is

ANNOUNCING

NEW MARLETTE CUSTOM
SERIES MOBILE HOME

Agnew's letter
lost or stolen

ON BEHALF OF THE HOLZER CLINIC, James M. Orr,M.D., left, and Charles E . Holzer,
Jr "! M.D., present the Abna V. Holzer Nursing Scholarship to Miss Diane Tackett of Waverly ,
Ohm, a second year student in the Holzer School of Nursing. Established in 1970 in memory of
Mrs. Holzer, mother of Charles E . Holzer, Jr., M.D., this annual award is presented to an
outstanding nursing student based on need and academic excellence.

Big Oil taken
onto carpet

Money problems limiting progress
in Gallia County school district
liALLIPUWS - C. Comer
Bradbury , Gallia County
Superintendent of Schools
Saturday explained ho..;
financial problems of the four
districts consolidated recently
into the Gallia County Local
School District have ·limited
improvements in the SJ'Stem.
His statement foliows:
"As you are aware, in 1973
tlu!'·Ohio State Departmt!nt of

Education forced consolidation
of the local schools by the
revocation of the charters of
three of our local districts,
namely : Hannan Trace Local,
North Gallia Local, and Southwestern Local , leaving no
choice as to the time the Gallia
County Board of Education
would execute its responsibility of the act of consolida-!ion which ultimately
took place on Jan. 7, 1974. The
new county district is the
Gallia County Local School
District.
" Prior to consolidation, the
minimum salary of a beginning
teacher with a · Bachelor
Degree was $6,400 in the
Hannan Trace, Southwestern
and North Gallia Local School
Districts and $6,900 in the
Kyger Creek Local District.
According to the laws of the
State of Ohio, all salaries must
be equalized to the highest
salary schedule.
Likewise, non - teaching
personnel such as secretaries,
janitors, cooks, bus drivers,
etc. must be raised to the
salary schedule of the former
Kyger Creek District. Due to
the legal increase in the salary
schedules and the assumption
of all unpaid bills by each
former district, the new
district became very limited
financially·
" The Gallia County Local
Teachers Association, assisted
by the Ohio Education Assn.
and the Gallia County Public
School Employees Assn.,
decided to strike and later
negotiated for an increase in
salaries. These groups asked
for larger increases than were
gran ted.
"The board of education felt
it c~uld not possibly finance the
salaries asked by_these groups,
but felt their employees
deserved and needed an increase due to the rising cost of
living. After an eight day strike

. Amembership in your AAA club
is daily protection. Crt1l for VI·
e~tlons to be sure, but usefUl

every day you · drive. Ptrsonal
Jr1vel Accident Insurance Bail
Bond ProtJ&lt;:tion. Einer1enci Road
Service. And a score of local servIces and benefits that m.oke drlv·
10( sale and enjoyable. C~l us
today for more informttlon. ·

and for
. 364
more
@;
A trNtfHa
ferovw"iOy-.
o o o/IOW JWIH'I ,
•rilf

and various proRosals and
counter proposals the board of
education and its employees
resolved their differences.
"A salary schedule was
adopted of $7,100 for a begin·
ning teacher' with a Bachelor
Degree until January 1, 1975,
thereafter going to $7,400. This
contract is in effect through
December 31,1975. All nonteaching employees receive a
. 7Y• percent increase in salary.
Also all employees, teachers
and .non-teaching personnel
received paid hospital and
major medical insurance. This
cost to the district was not to
exceed $80,000. Teachers were
to recelye extra pay for duties
performed in addition to
classroom duties, such as class
adv!Sor.s , yearbook advisor,
cheerleader advisor, club
sponsors, etc.
"The entire cost of teachers
and non-tea'ching ·salaries,
insurance, etc. is estimated to
cost $650,000 from the time of
consolidation, January 7, 1974,
to December 31, 1975.
"We are sure all of you are
aware of the increases
in the cost of · living
in your household. The
cost of supplies, books and
other items used in the schools
have increased too. For
example, gasoline for the buses
has increased almost 70 percent, the cost of coal has more
than doubled, .fuel oil has
almost tripled, eleciricity has
increased and all other items
used by the schools have in·
creased proportionately.
"Prior to the consolidation
an agreement was reached by
the former Gallla County
Board of Education and the
power plants in the Kyger
Creek area to set the millage
for the entire county local
district at 16 mills. On January
7, 1974, the Gallia County Local
Board · of Education honored
the agreement, made prior to

WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
Federal Traffic Commission
has accused four of the nation's
big oll companies of conspiring
to restrain trade by offering

WASHINGTON (UP!)- The
government is unable to find
former Vice President Spiro T.
Agn~w·s letter of resignation
and does not know whether It
has simply been misplaced or
has been stolen.
State Depai'lment spokesman John F. King, when
questioned on the matter
Friday, said, "it could have

.__.P•h•o•n•e•~~6-·9~3~4;o

Jobless rate
stands at 6%

. ( Plam Dealer). Received $250,000 for only two acres of his 18nd

rlght-of.way (Plain Dealer) .
EDUCATION

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a road

Voted against the Ohio Income Tax whiCh has kept down property taxes and

kept schools In Southeastern Ohio open for almost 95,000 children. Voted

against matching funds for vocational educat~on

LABOR
,
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Afte~ public disclosure, finally poillalmost.$4700 to the Ohio Bureau oi Work·
mens Compensation for back paymjfnfs (Plain Dealer). Introduced Bill No.

Will Initiate higher safety ·standards and improved pensions for min
workers through more stringent enforcement codes and a graduated lncam:

tax.

· SEN lOll .CITIZENS
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Will ·improve elderly's health , mobility, and housing status through
F~rally-funded 1) Hot Meals Program , 2) Senior citizens transportation
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system~ and 3) Local access to housing maintenance

CRI,MINAL JUSTICE·CIVIL RIGHTS

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Will press for Improved funding and juvenile rehabilitation to prevent
criminal records and make tax-paying. citizens of our youth

EljVtRONMENT
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:~~~~u~ '~~rid' strlp-fnl~ing ·regUt·atlbri:t and ~reclam~t. lon.. ~! . ~!r~pped

P~RSQI!IAL CREDIBILITY

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Has observed tax laws and ls.wllllng to disclose his· personal records . Favors
camp~~lgn and election r.torm.

479 disallowing unemployment compensation In summer months for non.
academic employees.

- , $36,604,602.21
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar ·
daysendlngwithcalldate · - - - - - - - - - - - - - "236106191
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Averag.. of total loans for ·the 15 calendar
. days ending With call date - - - - - - - - - $22,485,220.64
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
Pledged aasets and securities loaned (book value):
U.S. Govenunent obligations, direct and guaranteed,
pledged to secure deposits and other Uabllitles - - $1,940,3'19.19
Other auets pledged tb
deposits and other UablllUes
(InclUding notes and bllis redls¢unted and
. securities sold under repurchaSe agreeinent) ~ - . 96,651.00
- - - $2,037,030.19
TOTAL - - - - - - - · - - - - - - - - - - CAPITAL ACCOUNTS

Never voted for

tn.v.. conservation bill.

PERSONA!- CREDIBILITY

•

'59,000 In lax write-oils apparentiy wlihoul proper authorlz,tlon (Dayton
Dally News). Voted against campaign and election reform bills. Fatsley
·

. I, C. I..eon Saunders, Vlee President and Cashier· of the abovHtamed bank
. do solemn!~ af{lrm that this reportofcooditlanls~andconect, to the best oi
,my knowledge and belief.
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Fruk H. Milla, Jr. - Dlreeton
E.N; W.._•• ·

Sta\e of Ohio·, County of 1Gallia, ·ss: .
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! , Sw&lt;lm to and subllcribed before me this 29tli day of Oelobet, 1974, and 1

McDonald;
,.

By Committee to Elect
E. Woodward, Trea$ ..

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hereby certify that I am not an officer or .director of this bank.
·
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Det.le J. Burgess, N~tary ~bile
MY eomrnlsslon expires June 14, 1978. ·

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Meet a candidate

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.year.

~ELMT0
Rich grained, subtly rustic Benninglon Elm.
Real Elm veneer on lauan plywood panel·
ing, that makes the graceful , warm ·hearted
days of yesteryear come to life. And now- for
a limited ti'l1e only- this rugged , easily installed, easy-to-keep-clean paneling can be
yours at a special low price. Come see this
glorious legacy of American home design
today.
U.S. Plywood The Paneling People

Carolina Lumber &amp; Supply CQ.
Point Pleasant
Phone 675-1160
Store Hours
Mon.· Fri. 8:00.5:00, Sat. 8:00.12:00

312 6th St.

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Tlie Ohio Senate Has Brought

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New Heights Of Advantage and
Recognition To Southeastern

11
The thing consumers need
By CHERYL ARVIDSON
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A protection from .- more than
two-day conference on prices, anything else," Liebler said,
0011.1: and productivity in the "is government itself."
Liebler also suggested the
food industry ended Friday
with the consensus that the Agriculture Department and
avvemment "ttself may be the his own agency have not acted
major culprit contributing to strongly enough to halt anlicompetitive practices in the
ldgh retail food prices.
'l'liJs theme was emphasized food industry that also add to
DDt Oflly by food processors, costs. He said antitrust laws
retailers, cooslirners and the have been used to protect
tranSportation sector of the middlemen from competition,
food , industry but also by no) lniprove cgnsurner welfare
~GWfiunent representatives. and. said. state milk rilarketing
Slngled,.QIIt repeatedly for laws may he subject to future
crjtlc,l sni.,re the regulations antitrust pressure.
Consumer representatives
Gl · ~ Interstate eommerce
-·Commission that govern truck · said tbere is a need for revision
of. labeling and packaging
and rail carriers of food.
In the light of this -41lld of practices that not only add to
receni speeches by sbme Ford food costs but in rriany ·cases '
administration officials deny conswners the proper
aitlclzing ICC -it · appears nutritional infonnatlon.
lbat agency will be a prime
target in the move to
BLAST DETECTED
eliminate fedenil regulations
UPPSALA,
Sweden (UP!) lbat contribute to rlslr)g food
The
lJppsala
Seismological
0011.1.
In a keynote address to the Institute ·today registered a
calference, Albert Reel, direc- . fairly strong 11nderground
klr of the Council oo Wage ancj explosion in the southe.r n
Pl1ce Stability' suggested that mlclear test area of Novaja .
Cine of the major waysUI lower ?.emlya in the Soviet Union .
food costs Is to improve ef- · "T)Ie explosion, which had a
Delency in transportation Richter magnillide of 6.7, took
Whlc:h will ','require chanl!l!s in place at 6 a.m. (midnight
111e niles of the independent EST)," Pl:of. Marcus Baalh
,
l'fllulatory agencies of govern- said. .

· Another government spokes- ; Wesley ,Liebler of the
l'lder~ " Trade Commission,
c.Jied the peiformance of the
ICC as It relates to food
llalrlbutlon "a l~Siional sc8n' dal;; aDd estlniated ouimoded
fe8U]atlons cost conswners $4
blllloa to,,lo blli!OO a

&amp;TON

This Eighteen Year Veteran Of

Ohio
EDUCI'TlON
Over 75 Collins' measures for Education have been adopted by the Ohio
General Assembly for Elementary and Secondary. Vocational and
Technical Schools, Community Colleges. Branches and Universities.

WE WOULD
~PPRECIATE ,

A
JOHN L BELVILLE

HE WILL NOW SEEK MORE MONEY FOR EDUCATION F-ROM THE
STATE INCOME TAX - TO LESSEN . THE BURDEN ON REAL
ESTATE TAX.

V-OTE!

ELECT JOHN L. BELVILLE
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COUNTY COMMISSIONER
NOVEMBER
5TH
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Among his achleveml!nts as Chairman of the Senate Education Com·
mlttee for eight years, was the greatest Education bill in the history of
Ohio- SENATE BILL 350 Increased State ald to Education more than
... 300 Million dollars. The Collins' Amendment to House Bill 475 again
increased State assistance to Education more than ... 70 Million dollars.

ALL

HIGHWAYS
Whfle a member of the Senate Urban &amp; Highways· Committee, he
promoted support for the Appalachian Highway and other highway
Improvements. HE WILL PRESS FOR COMPLETION OF THE AP·
PALACHIAN HIGHWAY ANq THE UPGRADING OF OTHER HIGH·
WAYS THROUGHOUT SOUTHERN OHIO.
HEALTH
As Chairman of the Senate Education &amp; Health Committee he worked for
. Improved medical services an~ fjl.cllltles thr.oughout Southeastern· Ohio,.•
and as an honorary fT!ember of the OHIO VALLEY HEALTH SERVICES ,/
FOUNDA1JON HE WILL CONTINUE STRONG SUPPORT FOR .
UPGRADING THESE SERVICES.
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. LOCAL GOVERNMENT ·
,
He has Introduced numerous bills In support of local government. and
WILL CONTINUE TO PRESS FOR NEEDED STATE FUNDS . FOR
CITY, COUNTY, AND TOWNSHIP IMPROVEMENTS.

CONTINUE SOLID LEGISLATIVE ACTION AND
CONCER.
N FOR SOUTHEASTERN
OHIO'S FUTURE
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lttil ll

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HAS AREOORD OF .LEADERSHIP

Food cost issue takes boomerang

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Wal[hNoocf

OAKLEY COLLINS··

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Pd. Pol. Adv.

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X OAKLEY COLLINS~STATE SENATOR

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES: Mrs. Ray
Smith, 1Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
Larry Wptson, cr'Own City; ' .
Jack Hendricks, Marion' Kirk ·
Mrs. Orvllle Ellis, all Poini
Pleasant.

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Live with the mellow
magnificence of

Arch Masons , illustrious
master of the Royal and Select
Masler Bosworth · Council 46,
Commander of the Ohio Valley
Commandry 24, American
Legion Post 602, PomeroyMiddleport Lions Club, Mlddleport.Pomeroy Rotary Club,
Isaac Walton League, Meigs
County Executive Committeeman to · Buckeye HillsHocking
Hills
Regional
Development District, Road
Action
Planning
Committeeman, 1973 TB Chatrman,
1974 Cancer Co-Chairman, and
River Erosion Co-ordinator
and Chairman .
Through the Buckeye HillsHocking Valley Regional
Development DistriCt, Roush
has brought several grants to
this area . The largest of these
was the EDA Road Grant,,
$480,000 for western Meigs
County. Others include CETA
Funding, EEA Grant and
Senior Citizens Grants.

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Correct-A-: c. Leollllallllden

FOR
SJATE dSENATOR '
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,·GRANT;· M.cDONALD

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advertises_as this district's Senator and as a Veteran (according to our ln-

·formallon) .

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secure

pollufl~.-c:.e~t for Lawrence Co~mty for she. years (Columbus Dispatch).

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- $95,000 to the Lorain
County Community College for
contingencies
and
architectural and engineering
services for the LibraryLearning Resources Bulldlilg
and $365,000for the purchase of
movable and fixed equipment
for the building.

THE OHIO Constitution
might witness a few changes of
the powers of municipal corporations, if the recommendations of the Ohio Constitutional Revision Commi ssio n are approved. A
number of sections of Article 18
of the Ohio Constitution have
been re-drafted, which would
affect all local communities.
The amendments to Article
18 that were approved are:
- Section 2, to permit the
Legislature to pass laws for the
"consolidation, division,
dissolution, alteration of
boundaries" of municipal
corporations as well as for
their incorporation;
- Section 6, to exempt transportation and solid waste
management services from the
50 percent limitation on the
sale of surplus utility services.
(The same exemption is now
allowed for the sale of water
thhae se,. LaJU:I
aatendr and sewage services.);
-Section 8, dealing with the
equipmertt a11d $13,500 for land
creation and powers of charter
purchases;

sure that many of you,
~ especially those who are inleresled in
~ the early history of the Ohio Valley,
• have wondered l)ow the land looked 200
years ago. From the early accounts
I've read, it's apparent that trees of
gigantic proporti911s extended from
horizon tO horizon. Squirrels could
travel 'for hundreds
of miles
without touching the groWld. The
only .time sunlight touched the ground
;·. was when a hole was made in the forest
canopy by an act of God such as a
toniado or windstorm strong enough to
• topple some of the more sballow.'l"ooted
: . monarchs of the forest. · ·
If you have read ''The Trees," by
: ': C"'!rad Richter, you may remember
: almost feeling the permanent twilight
and some of •the mental depression
.:' · broughi on by that solid sky oflimlis
;I and leaves made by the giant hard~ woods wi)Jch.covered the Ohio Country.
This feeling was conveyed to many of
the farnlliea ;which filtered into this land
; ,' after ihe Rev.olutionary War.
:·
.To some of the men who moved
~ westward, It -was an adventure. To
t many it was a chance to own
~; something; to s~t 011t fresh. To some
' children lt.:was ajlappy excursion to a
new land where there was something
·new to see and do.
But to most of the women who
:. settled here first it meant exchanging
, her eastern home, her garden patch,
: the place where her children were born,
: for a hastily butlt lean-to or cabin in the
· ' weslern wilderness. It meant leaving
;· some of her prized possessions because
1 they could not be carried with her. It
, ' also meant leaving folks she knew she

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Has been dellnquent ,With his ,taxes since 19.43 (Pia in Del!der). Received ove~

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TOTAL LIABILITIES, RESERVES, AND

SENIOR CITIZENS
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Voted against lhe Ohio Income Tax whi&lt;h provides money making the
Homestead Act and lhe 10 Pet. Rollback possible.
·
CRIMINAL JUSTICE.CIVIL RIGHTS
Voted against House Bill No. Am. HB 73 setting a procedure for Incarcerated
persons awaiting trial to obtain absentee ballots. Voted against a House bill
permitting expungement of the record ol a fli'st offender . Voted against the
Equal Rights Amendment.
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ENVIRONMENT
/
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Faced three U.S. indictments and was fined for Illegally strlp·mlnlng
..• tlmber-c"ttlng, and polluting 32.6 acres of Wayne National Forest doing a~
-aJieJIOd $657,000 dama~e (Plain Dealer). Failed to make fhe required annual
.

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'Your Wayne National Forest

~G::a~lli2p:o:li:s,~Oh~l~o~ §
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LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnershlpa,
and corporations - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' 8,125,373.42
Time and 88vJn8ll deposits of individuals, ·
partnershlpa, and corporations - - - - - - - - - ~ - - 22,895,559.i9
Deposits of United Stales Government - - - - - - - - - - - 42,060.83
Deposits of States and political s11bdlvislons - - - - - - - - - - 1 'JZl 547 13
Deposits of commercial banks - - - - - - - - - - : t' ooo·oo
Certified and officers' checks, etc. - - - - - - - - - - - ao:613:44
TOTAL DEPOSITS - - - - - .$32,372,154.61
(a) Tola\ denumd deposits - - - - - - - - $ 8,~,594.82
(b) Total time and savinp deposits - - - - - $23,445,559.79
Other liabilities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ·1,121,001.82
TOTAL UABILITIES
$33,499,156.43
'RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURRlES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
· (set up pursuailt to IRS rulinp) • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $294 978 67
TOTAL RESERvEs ON I.DANS AND SECURITIES - - - - - $294:978:67
,
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity caPital, wtal _. - - • - . - - - - $2,810,487 Jl
Co!lUJlOII stock-total par vilue - - - - - - 750,000.00
No. shares authorized 75,000
No. shares" outstanding "7.5,000
Surplus - • - - - - - - . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1,350,000.00
undivided profits - - - - - - - - - - - - 710,487.11
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TOTAL CAPITAL ACOOUNTS
$2,810,487.11

•.•»x-;o;o-.o;.

By T. ~Uen Wolter
Dlstriel Ranger
IRONTON - Today's article is
• written by Ray Schoener, foresler OQ
• the Ironton District.

74 OPELS
SMITH BUICK

HIGHWAY DEVELOPMENT .
Ohio. $pont $885,000 to rebuild the r&lt;!Od ne.t to his strip mining company

LABOR

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develop a mandatory program
for non ....egulated utilities. All
of these measures necessitate
the approval of the Energy
Commission .
As the importance of coal as
a fuel source increases, both a
voluntary and a mandatory
coal allocation program are
being worked on. Such par·
ticular items to be included
are: a plan for determining
priority users; developing a
formula
for
levels
of
allocations; establishing a
policy on reimbursing those
who are forced to share their
coal, and finally, providing
staff to administer the
allocation program.
In other action by the State
Controlling
Board,
the
following were approved :
- $57,602 to the University of
Cincinnati for modification of
the chilled water system in its
academic buildings;
- $210,000 to the Universiiy
of Toledo for the renovation of
University Hall;
- $113,500 to .the Ohio State
University for ventilation work
at Evans Laboratory and
$110,000 for land purchases;
- $97,371 to Youngstown
State University for the pur-

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••
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•
•
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• •• •••••
;o;o.•.•, •••••••. ·•·•·•••••• .•. ......................

...

THE OHIO VALLEY BANK COMPANY

OAKLEY ·COLLINS

EDUCATION

CENTRAL AIR

MOBILE HOMES INC.

'

Will Introduce a bl.ll to promote a 14 Pet. funding raise for all education
(elementary, secondary. and higher).

SYSTEM cOMES TO OHIO -GroWldbreaking ceremonies were held last week
of. Ohio 93 in .Hocking County to begin the first completely metric highway
., project':" the Uru~ed States. According to an Ohio Department of Transportation
, will be studied .bY the Federal Highway Administration for establishment of
a
.
.
a1d m ed~ca\lng contractors and other transportation departments in the
the metric system. tu;ning~e first spadefuls of dirt are J. Phillip Richley, director Ohio
Department of Transportallon ; VIctor Wolff, design engineer for the project and a native of
• HoUand where be was. "raised" using the metric system; Max R. Farley, ODOT's District 10
: ~puty director; William Baker, ODOT deputy director, and Claire " Buzz" Ball Jr., 91st
: dlstnct representallve.
;

a-~e~

YOU CAN'T BEAT THE TRUTH"

Will push for the completion of the Appalachian Highway to accelerate industrial progress In Southeastern Olio and to raise tax bases to benefit
schools and health care programs.

'

SAVE •400.00

.

HIGHWAY DEVELOPMENT

~STOM fRONT KITCHEN MODEL

conswners a common line of
consolidation, and accepted the tires, batteries and other
millage for the entire local automobile accessories.
The action alleged that
district as 16 mills. It is
NOW ON OUR LOTI
estimated, the total increase in Exxon Corp., American Oil
revenue to finance the schools Co., Standard Oil of California
for the two year period of 1974 and The Standard Oil Co. of
and 1975 wiU be $342,000, plus Ohio eliminated competition
an additional $61 ,003.20 (a among themselves through
On any new unit purchased we will install
portion of surplus from state), common ownership of the Alias
Ce_nt~al Air for $450.00 as long as
making a total of $403,003.20, Supply Co.
ON NOVICE TEAM
ex1sftng
stock
lasts.
The
proposed
complaint
leaving us in the red.
MARIETTA - Marietta
"Only a small fraction of the seeks to have three of the
CoUege freshman Michael May
Gavin Plant wiU be assessed on companies sell the accessory
of Rutland has been selected as
the tax duplicate Wllil 1976. business to a fourth, or to have a member of the coUege's
· Therefore, we can purchase all four get out of the business. novice debate team. A 1974
only the bare necessities for A~cording to the complaint, graduate of Meigs High School
the schools, unless additional sales of Alias products during Michael is the son of Mr. and
HOURS: 9TOBMONDAYTHRU FRIDAY'
monies come into the district. 1973 amounted to $273 million. Mrs, Bruce May, Bryant Road
9T05SATURDAY-C~OSEDSUNDAY
The action alleged that the
Rutland .
'
"It is the desire of the board
of education and the ad- four companies put their senior
ministration to operate the best executives on the Atlas board,
schools possible for the Gallia wbere they then agreed to the
NAMED CHAffiMAN
County Local School District. types of products that would be
WASHINGTON (UP!)
However, we know that with sold as well the advertising,
President Ford has been
competlton
and
the financial .sltuation as it is at cost,
named hona-ary chairman of
the present time we are limited guarantee programs.
the 34th interfaith observance
in what we can do. There are
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
of National Bible Week Nov. 24
many things we would like to
to Dec. 1.
do to upgrade the school
..........
program, but because of the two out of every three persons
entering
the
labor
market
in
financial condition it is impossible
to
accomplish the past year did not get a job.
A total of 5.5 miUion persons
everything that is desirable for
were out of work across the
the school program.
Stale Bau No.lJI
country
last month, according
"This article is not to cause
alarm to residents of the to the report issued by the
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDmON OF
· district, but to explain why we deparlment's Bureau of Labor
cannot accomplish all the Statistics.. The October figure
things thai .our students represents a jwnp of twodeserve, parents and school tentha of I per cent from
officials desire, and should September unemployment and " ·
of Gallipolis In lhe Slale of Oblo a!¥1 DomesUc Subsldlarlel at lhe el- of
underlines warnings from
have at the present time."
business on Oclober U, U'l4.
economists of a deepending
· recession In the United States.
A&amp;'IETS
Cash and due from banks - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · f 3,044,528.78
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 4,782,098.48
Obligations of other U.S. Government
agencies and corporations. - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1,101,484.38
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Obligations of States and political sulxlivisions -. 4,544,130.82
OVER COST
Labor Department said Friday
Other securities
1.00
ON NEW
another 200,000 Americans
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
joined the · ranks of the
under agreements to resell - - - - - 1,600,000.00
unemployed in October and
20,557,1105.25
Otherloans - - - - - - - - - - - - pushed the nation's jobless rate
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
to 6 per cent, hlgbest in three
other assets representing bank premises - 686,647.38
years.
1
Oiherassets - - - - - - - - - - - - _
- 297,906.12
The department said that
TOTAL ASSETS - - - ,. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $36,604,802.21

'

GRANT McDONALD

•

eNEW DECOR eNEW STYLING eNEW EXTERIOR

been either."
·
King said the fact the
a-lginal copy of the letter was
millstng came to light several
weeks ago at the time when
President Richard M. Nixon's
resignation letter was ..being
sent to the National Archives.
It was discovered at that time
the National Archives had only
copies of the letter - not the
original itself.

YOU HAVE .A CHQ'ICE
''

•

'•

IRONTON - Action has been
taken · bY the Department of
Administrative Services to
insure' the state with a ready
supply of fuel. A $5 million
program has been approved
which would build up the
state's stockpile of coal and
would also take advantage of
any ~'bargains" that would
come along.
The Ohio Energy Emergency
Commission had recommended. such action on the part
of the state since there exists a
possibillty of a nation-wide coal
strike on November 12. The
Energy Commission has called
on some state agencies to
"intensify efforts tO build coal
stockpiles to assure continuation of essential services
throughout the 'state." One of
the first measures the Commtsston acted on
was
developing a public information program to promote
volWllary conservation of all
fuel materials and electricity.
Should voluntary efforts fall
short of the goal, the Energy
Commission; along with the
Public Utilities Commission
(PUCO), Is planning mandatory . measures to conserve
electricity and to attempt to

commissions. The nwnber of
MUST SPEAK OUT
signatur•s required to put the
MIDDLETOWN , C~nn .
question of creating a charter ( UPI) - Sen. Lowell P.
commission on the ballot would Weicker, R·Conn ., told a
be reduced from 10 percent to 6 Wesleyan University seminar
percent of the electors in a Friday night that the voter
municip81ity, proced ures to with facts on recent polillcai
insure the submission of a scandals in hand, must speak
charier to the voters would be out at the polls Tuesday so that
established, and If a charier is
the ~~unfinished business of
defeated. it could be re- Watergate can be properly
submitled to the voters;
comple ted ." In remarks
- Section 9, clarifying keynoting a Wesleyan alumni
provisions for amendments to ·program , Weicker thanked the
charters and their repeal;
press for "te Uing it straight" in
- Section 12, to permit the Watergate investigations,
revenue bonds to be used to and
"fo r
questioning
'~ improve" a public utility as
everything I did, but making
well as to acquire, construct, or sure the story was told ."
extend; to permit the issuance
of notes in anticipation of
CLOSING TUESDAY
bonds, and to permit revenue
COLUMBUS - All state
bonds to be used to refund liquor stores and agencies will
general obligation bonds that be closed Tuesday, November
have been issued to construct, 5, 1974, General Election Day.
acquire or extend a utility.
In issuing the reminder,
Ric hard E . Guggenheim,
director or the Ohio Department or Liquor Control, noted
ASK TOWED
Roy Homer Kesterson, 42, that permit holders may sell
Pomeroy, Rt. 3, and Marjorie nothing stronger than 3.2 pet.
beer between 6 a.m . and 7:30
· Maxine Sayre, 48, Racine.
p.m. that day .

I

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�...
•

•
majoring in English and
Eclinomics. A 1972 gr•duate of
Meigs High School, Miss Diehl
Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.·
James
Diehl,
Mulberry

Diehl returns
as copy boss
MARIETTA -

. 13 ;_ TheSunday~~-Sentinei,Sunday,Nov. 3,1974

Heights, Pomeroy.
She has been employed two
summers in the Daily Senl!nel
and Sunday Times-Sentinel
·editorial department.

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

the Collins report. • •

Marietta

Jo EUen
Diehl of · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
College
junior
Mulberry
Heights,
Pomeroy,
has been appointed copy editor
for the school news]iaper The
'
Marcelian.
This is Miss Diehl's second
· year as copy editor. She is

ANNOUNCING

NEW MARLETTE CUSTOM
SERIES MOBILE HOME

Agnew's letter
lost or stolen

ON BEHALF OF THE HOLZER CLINIC, James M. Orr,M.D., left, and Charles E . Holzer,
Jr "! M.D., present the Abna V. Holzer Nursing Scholarship to Miss Diane Tackett of Waverly ,
Ohm, a second year student in the Holzer School of Nursing. Established in 1970 in memory of
Mrs. Holzer, mother of Charles E . Holzer, Jr., M.D., this annual award is presented to an
outstanding nursing student based on need and academic excellence.

Big Oil taken
onto carpet

Money problems limiting progress
in Gallia County school district
liALLIPUWS - C. Comer
Bradbury , Gallia County
Superintendent of Schools
Saturday explained ho..;
financial problems of the four
districts consolidated recently
into the Gallia County Local
School District have ·limited
improvements in the SJ'Stem.
His statement foliows:
"As you are aware, in 1973
tlu!'·Ohio State Departmt!nt of

Education forced consolidation
of the local schools by the
revocation of the charters of
three of our local districts,
namely : Hannan Trace Local,
North Gallia Local, and Southwestern Local , leaving no
choice as to the time the Gallia
County Board of Education
would execute its responsibility of the act of consolida-!ion which ultimately
took place on Jan. 7, 1974. The
new county district is the
Gallia County Local School
District.
" Prior to consolidation, the
minimum salary of a beginning
teacher with a · Bachelor
Degree was $6,400 in the
Hannan Trace, Southwestern
and North Gallia Local School
Districts and $6,900 in the
Kyger Creek Local District.
According to the laws of the
State of Ohio, all salaries must
be equalized to the highest
salary schedule.
Likewise, non - teaching
personnel such as secretaries,
janitors, cooks, bus drivers,
etc. must be raised to the
salary schedule of the former
Kyger Creek District. Due to
the legal increase in the salary
schedules and the assumption
of all unpaid bills by each
former district, the new
district became very limited
financially·
" The Gallia County Local
Teachers Association, assisted
by the Ohio Education Assn.
and the Gallia County Public
School Employees Assn.,
decided to strike and later
negotiated for an increase in
salaries. These groups asked
for larger increases than were
gran ted.
"The board of education felt
it c~uld not possibly finance the
salaries asked by_these groups,
but felt their employees
deserved and needed an increase due to the rising cost of
living. After an eight day strike

. Amembership in your AAA club
is daily protection. Crt1l for VI·
e~tlons to be sure, but usefUl

every day you · drive. Ptrsonal
Jr1vel Accident Insurance Bail
Bond ProtJ&lt;:tion. Einer1enci Road
Service. And a score of local servIces and benefits that m.oke drlv·
10( sale and enjoyable. C~l us
today for more informttlon. ·

and for
. 364
more
@;
A trNtfHa
ferovw"iOy-.
o o o/IOW JWIH'I ,
•rilf

and various proRosals and
counter proposals the board of
education and its employees
resolved their differences.
"A salary schedule was
adopted of $7,100 for a begin·
ning teacher' with a Bachelor
Degree until January 1, 1975,
thereafter going to $7,400. This
contract is in effect through
December 31,1975. All nonteaching employees receive a
. 7Y• percent increase in salary.
Also all employees, teachers
and .non-teaching personnel
received paid hospital and
major medical insurance. This
cost to the district was not to
exceed $80,000. Teachers were
to recelye extra pay for duties
performed in addition to
classroom duties, such as class
adv!Sor.s , yearbook advisor,
cheerleader advisor, club
sponsors, etc.
"The entire cost of teachers
and non-tea'ching ·salaries,
insurance, etc. is estimated to
cost $650,000 from the time of
consolidation, January 7, 1974,
to December 31, 1975.
"We are sure all of you are
aware of the increases
in the cost of · living
in your household. The
cost of supplies, books and
other items used in the schools
have increased too. For
example, gasoline for the buses
has increased almost 70 percent, the cost of coal has more
than doubled, .fuel oil has
almost tripled, eleciricity has
increased and all other items
used by the schools have in·
creased proportionately.
"Prior to the consolidation
an agreement was reached by
the former Gallla County
Board of Education and the
power plants in the Kyger
Creek area to set the millage
for the entire county local
district at 16 mills. On January
7, 1974, the Gallia County Local
Board · of Education honored
the agreement, made prior to

WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
Federal Traffic Commission
has accused four of the nation's
big oll companies of conspiring
to restrain trade by offering

WASHINGTON (UP!)- The
government is unable to find
former Vice President Spiro T.
Agn~w·s letter of resignation
and does not know whether It
has simply been misplaced or
has been stolen.
State Depai'lment spokesman John F. King, when
questioned on the matter
Friday, said, "it could have

.__.P•h•o•n•e•~~6-·9~3~4;o

Jobless rate
stands at 6%

. ( Plam Dealer). Received $250,000 for only two acres of his 18nd

rlght-of.way (Plain Dealer) .
EDUCATION

'

tor

a road

Voted against the Ohio Income Tax whiCh has kept down property taxes and

kept schools In Southeastern Ohio open for almost 95,000 children. Voted

against matching funds for vocational educat~on

LABOR
,
·
.
Afte~ public disclosure, finally poillalmost.$4700 to the Ohio Bureau oi Work·
mens Compensation for back paymjfnfs (Plain Dealer). Introduced Bill No.

Will Initiate higher safety ·standards and improved pensions for min
workers through more stringent enforcement codes and a graduated lncam:

tax.

· SEN lOll .CITIZENS
,
.
Will ·improve elderly's health , mobility, and housing status through
F~rally-funded 1) Hot Meals Program , 2) Senior citizens transportation
·

system~ and 3) Local access to housing maintenance

CRI,MINAL JUSTICE·CIVIL RIGHTS

.

.

Will press for Improved funding and juvenile rehabilitation to prevent
criminal records and make tax-paying. citizens of our youth

EljVtRONMENT
.
1
:~~~~u~ '~~rid' strlp-fnl~ing ·regUt·atlbri:t and ~reclam~t. lon.. ~! . ~!r~pped

P~RSQI!IAL CREDIBILITY

·

-

.

Has observed tax laws and ls.wllllng to disclose his· personal records . Favors
camp~~lgn and election r.torm.

479 disallowing unemployment compensation In summer months for non.
academic employees.

- , $36,604,602.21
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar ·
daysendlngwithcalldate · - - - - - - - - - - - - - "236106191
' '
Averag.. of total loans for ·the 15 calendar
. days ending With call date - - - - - - - - - $22,485,220.64
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
Pledged aasets and securities loaned (book value):
U.S. Govenunent obligations, direct and guaranteed,
pledged to secure deposits and other Uabllitles - - $1,940,3'19.19
Other auets pledged tb
deposits and other UablllUes
(InclUding notes and bllis redls¢unted and
. securities sold under repurchaSe agreeinent) ~ - . 96,651.00
- - - $2,037,030.19
TOTAL - - - - - - - · - - - - - - - - - - CAPITAL ACCOUNTS

Never voted for

tn.v.. conservation bill.

PERSONA!- CREDIBILITY

•

'59,000 In lax write-oils apparentiy wlihoul proper authorlz,tlon (Dayton
Dally News). Voted against campaign and election reform bills. Fatsley
·

. I, C. I..eon Saunders, Vlee President and Cashier· of the abovHtamed bank
. do solemn!~ af{lrm that this reportofcooditlanls~andconect, to the best oi
,my knowledge and belief.
"
·

, I'··~

,,

i '

, "~'':',

Fruk H. Milla, Jr. - Dlreeton
E.N; W.._•• ·

Sta\e of Ohio·, County of 1Gallia, ·ss: .
.
. .
·
! , Sw&lt;lm to and subllcribed before me this 29tli day of Oelobet, 1974, and 1

McDonald;
,.

By Committee to Elect
E. Woodward, Trea$ ..

..

hereby certify that I am not an officer or .director of this bank.
·
·
Det.le J. Burgess, N~tary ~bile
MY eomrnlsslon expires June 14, 1978. ·

,.

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Meet a candidate

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1~ 3)

.year.

~ELMT0
Rich grained, subtly rustic Benninglon Elm.
Real Elm veneer on lauan plywood panel·
ing, that makes the graceful , warm ·hearted
days of yesteryear come to life. And now- for
a limited ti'l1e only- this rugged , easily installed, easy-to-keep-clean paneling can be
yours at a special low price. Come see this
glorious legacy of American home design
today.
U.S. Plywood The Paneling People

Carolina Lumber &amp; Supply CQ.
Point Pleasant
Phone 675-1160
Store Hours
Mon.· Fri. 8:00.5:00, Sat. 8:00.12:00

312 6th St.

.

'·

•

Tlie Ohio Senate Has Brought

•

New Heights Of Advantage and
Recognition To Southeastern

11
The thing consumers need
By CHERYL ARVIDSON
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A protection from .- more than
two-day conference on prices, anything else," Liebler said,
0011.1: and productivity in the "is government itself."
Liebler also suggested the
food industry ended Friday
with the consensus that the Agriculture Department and
avvemment "ttself may be the his own agency have not acted
major culprit contributing to strongly enough to halt anlicompetitive practices in the
ldgh retail food prices.
'l'liJs theme was emphasized food industry that also add to
DDt Oflly by food processors, costs. He said antitrust laws
retailers, cooslirners and the have been used to protect
tranSportation sector of the middlemen from competition,
food , industry but also by no) lniprove cgnsurner welfare
~GWfiunent representatives. and. said. state milk rilarketing
Slngled,.QIIt repeatedly for laws may he subject to future
crjtlc,l sni.,re the regulations antitrust pressure.
Consumer representatives
Gl · ~ Interstate eommerce
-·Commission that govern truck · said tbere is a need for revision
of. labeling and packaging
and rail carriers of food.
In the light of this -41lld of practices that not only add to
receni speeches by sbme Ford food costs but in rriany ·cases '
administration officials deny conswners the proper
aitlclzing ICC -it · appears nutritional infonnatlon.
lbat agency will be a prime
target in the move to
BLAST DETECTED
eliminate fedenil regulations
UPPSALA,
Sweden (UP!) lbat contribute to rlslr)g food
The
lJppsala
Seismological
0011.1.
In a keynote address to the Institute ·today registered a
calference, Albert Reel, direc- . fairly strong 11nderground
klr of the Council oo Wage ancj explosion in the southe.r n
Pl1ce Stability' suggested that mlclear test area of Novaja .
Cine of the major waysUI lower ?.emlya in the Soviet Union .
food costs Is to improve ef- · "T)Ie explosion, which had a
Delency in transportation Richter magnillide of 6.7, took
Whlc:h will ','require chanl!l!s in place at 6 a.m. (midnight
111e niles of the independent EST)," Pl:of. Marcus Baalh
,
l'fllulatory agencies of govern- said. .

· Another government spokes- ; Wesley ,Liebler of the
l'lder~ " Trade Commission,
c.Jied the peiformance of the
ICC as It relates to food
llalrlbutlon "a l~Siional sc8n' dal;; aDd estlniated ouimoded
fe8U]atlons cost conswners $4
blllloa to,,lo blli!OO a

&amp;TON

This Eighteen Year Veteran Of

Ohio
EDUCI'TlON
Over 75 Collins' measures for Education have been adopted by the Ohio
General Assembly for Elementary and Secondary. Vocational and
Technical Schools, Community Colleges. Branches and Universities.

WE WOULD
~PPRECIATE ,

A
JOHN L BELVILLE

HE WILL NOW SEEK MORE MONEY FOR EDUCATION F-ROM THE
STATE INCOME TAX - TO LESSEN . THE BURDEN ON REAL
ESTATE TAX.

V-OTE!

ELECT JOHN L. BELVILLE
.

I

COUNTY COMMISSIONER
NOVEMBER
5TH
,,

•

Among his achleveml!nts as Chairman of the Senate Education Com·
mlttee for eight years, was the greatest Education bill in the history of
Ohio- SENATE BILL 350 Increased State ald to Education more than
... 300 Million dollars. The Collins' Amendment to House Bill 475 again
increased State assistance to Education more than ... 70 Million dollars.

ALL

HIGHWAYS
Whfle a member of the Senate Urban &amp; Highways· Committee, he
promoted support for the Appalachian Highway and other highway
Improvements. HE WILL PRESS FOR COMPLETION OF THE AP·
PALACHIAN HIGHWAY ANq THE UPGRADING OF OTHER HIGH·
WAYS THROUGHOUT SOUTHERN OHIO.
HEALTH
As Chairman of the Senate Education &amp; Health Committee he worked for
. Improved medical services an~ fjl.cllltles thr.oughout Southeastern· Ohio,.•
and as an honorary fT!ember of the OHIO VALLEY HEALTH SERVICES ,/
FOUNDA1JON HE WILL CONTINUE STRONG SUPPORT FOR .
UPGRADING THESE SERVICES.
.
~.. "
~

.. ·

. LOCAL GOVERNMENT ·
,
He has Introduced numerous bills In support of local government. and
WILL CONTINUE TO PRESS FOR NEEDED STATE FUNDS . FOR
CITY, COUNTY, AND TOWNSHIP IMPROVEMENTS.

CONTINUE SOLID LEGISLATIVE ACTION AND
CONCER.
N FOR SOUTHEASTERN
OHIO'S FUTURE
.
.
'

ment"
lttil ll

B

HAS AREOORD OF .LEADERSHIP

Food cost issue takes boomerang

...

Wal[hNoocf

OAKLEY COLLINS··

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PD. POL AD\

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Pd. Pol. Adv.

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·~.

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X OAKLEY COLLINS~STATE SENATOR

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES: Mrs. Ray
Smith, 1Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
Larry Wptson, cr'Own City; ' .
Jack Hendricks, Marion' Kirk ·
Mrs. Orvllle Ellis, all Poini
Pleasant.

. ' '
'

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Live with the mellow
magnificence of

Arch Masons , illustrious
master of the Royal and Select
Masler Bosworth · Council 46,
Commander of the Ohio Valley
Commandry 24, American
Legion Post 602, PomeroyMiddleport Lions Club, Mlddleport.Pomeroy Rotary Club,
Isaac Walton League, Meigs
County Executive Committeeman to · Buckeye HillsHocking
Hills
Regional
Development District, Road
Action
Planning
Committeeman, 1973 TB Chatrman,
1974 Cancer Co-Chairman, and
River Erosion Co-ordinator
and Chairman .
Through the Buckeye HillsHocking Valley Regional
Development DistriCt, Roush
has brought several grants to
this area . The largest of these
was the EDA Road Grant,,
$480,000 for western Meigs
County. Others include CETA
Funding, EEA Grant and
Senior Citizens Grants.

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Emenot1 E. Evalll

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Correct-A-: c. Leollllallllden

FOR
SJATE dSENATOR '
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,·GRANT;· M.cDONALD

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advertises_as this district's Senator and as a Veteran (according to our ln-

·formallon) .

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secure

pollufl~.-c:.e~t for Lawrence Co~mty for she. years (Columbus Dispatch).

'

'•:,!

:.;·

- $95,000 to the Lorain
County Community College for
contingencies
and
architectural and engineering
services for the LibraryLearning Resources Bulldlilg
and $365,000for the purchase of
movable and fixed equipment
for the building.

THE OHIO Constitution
might witness a few changes of
the powers of municipal corporations, if the recommendations of the Ohio Constitutional Revision Commi ssio n are approved. A
number of sections of Article 18
of the Ohio Constitution have
been re-drafted, which would
affect all local communities.
The amendments to Article
18 that were approved are:
- Section 2, to permit the
Legislature to pass laws for the
"consolidation, division,
dissolution, alteration of
boundaries" of municipal
corporations as well as for
their incorporation;
- Section 6, to exempt transportation and solid waste
management services from the
50 percent limitation on the
sale of surplus utility services.
(The same exemption is now
allowed for the sale of water
thhae se,. LaJU:I
aatendr and sewage services.);
-Section 8, dealing with the
equipmertt a11d $13,500 for land
creation and powers of charter
purchases;

sure that many of you,
~ especially those who are inleresled in
~ the early history of the Ohio Valley,
• have wondered l)ow the land looked 200
years ago. From the early accounts
I've read, it's apparent that trees of
gigantic proporti911s extended from
horizon tO horizon. Squirrels could
travel 'for hundreds
of miles
without touching the groWld. The
only .time sunlight touched the ground
;·. was when a hole was made in the forest
canopy by an act of God such as a
toniado or windstorm strong enough to
• topple some of the more sballow.'l"ooted
: . monarchs of the forest. · ·
If you have read ''The Trees," by
: ': C"'!rad Richter, you may remember
: almost feeling the permanent twilight
and some of •the mental depression
.:' · broughi on by that solid sky oflimlis
;I and leaves made by the giant hard~ woods wi)Jch.covered the Ohio Country.
This feeling was conveyed to many of
the farnlliea ;which filtered into this land
; ,' after ihe Rev.olutionary War.
:·
.To some of the men who moved
~ westward, It -was an adventure. To
t many it was a chance to own
~; something; to s~t 011t fresh. To some
' children lt.:was ajlappy excursion to a
new land where there was something
·new to see and do.
But to most of the women who
:. settled here first it meant exchanging
, her eastern home, her garden patch,
: the place where her children were born,
: for a hastily butlt lean-to or cabin in the
· ' weslern wilderness. It meant leaving
;· some of her prized possessions because
1 they could not be carried with her. It
, ' also meant leaving folks she knew she

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Has been dellnquent ,With his ,taxes since 19.43 (Pia in Del!der). Received ove~

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··:·:v:o·

TOTAL LIABILITIES, RESERVES, AND

SENIOR CITIZENS
'
Voted against lhe Ohio Income Tax whi&lt;h provides money making the
Homestead Act and lhe 10 Pet. Rollback possible.
·
CRIMINAL JUSTICE.CIVIL RIGHTS
Voted against House Bill No. Am. HB 73 setting a procedure for Incarcerated
persons awaiting trial to obtain absentee ballots. Voted against a House bill
permitting expungement of the record ol a fli'st offender . Voted against the
Equal Rights Amendment.
• .
ENVIRONMENT
/
.
Faced three U.S. indictments and was fined for Illegally strlp·mlnlng
..• tlmber-c"ttlng, and polluting 32.6 acres of Wayne National Forest doing a~
-aJieJIOd $657,000 dama~e (Plain Dealer). Failed to make fhe required annual
.

~»

'Your Wayne National Forest

~G::a~lli2p:o:li:s,~Oh~l~o~ §
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LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnershlpa,
and corporations - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' 8,125,373.42
Time and 88vJn8ll deposits of individuals, ·
partnershlpa, and corporations - - - - - - - - - ~ - - 22,895,559.i9
Deposits of United Stales Government - - - - - - - - - - - 42,060.83
Deposits of States and political s11bdlvislons - - - - - - - - - - 1 'JZl 547 13
Deposits of commercial banks - - - - - - - - - - : t' ooo·oo
Certified and officers' checks, etc. - - - - - - - - - - - ao:613:44
TOTAL DEPOSITS - - - - - .$32,372,154.61
(a) Tola\ denumd deposits - - - - - - - - $ 8,~,594.82
(b) Total time and savinp deposits - - - - - $23,445,559.79
Other liabilities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ·1,121,001.82
TOTAL UABILITIES
$33,499,156.43
'RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURRlES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
· (set up pursuailt to IRS rulinp) • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $294 978 67
TOTAL RESERvEs ON I.DANS AND SECURITIES - - - - - $294:978:67
,
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity caPital, wtal _. - - • - . - - - - $2,810,487 Jl
Co!lUJlOII stock-total par vilue - - - - - - 750,000.00
No. shares authorized 75,000
No. shares" outstanding "7.5,000
Surplus - • - - - - - - . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1,350,000.00
undivided profits - - - - - - - - - - - - 710,487.11
_,
TOTAL CAPITAL ACOOUNTS
$2,810,487.11

•.•»x-;o;o-.o;.

By T. ~Uen Wolter
Dlstriel Ranger
IRONTON - Today's article is
• written by Ray Schoener, foresler OQ
• the Ironton District.

74 OPELS
SMITH BUICK

HIGHWAY DEVELOPMENT .
Ohio. $pont $885,000 to rebuild the r&lt;!Od ne.t to his strip mining company

LABOR

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'100

develop a mandatory program
for non ....egulated utilities. All
of these measures necessitate
the approval of the Energy
Commission .
As the importance of coal as
a fuel source increases, both a
voluntary and a mandatory
coal allocation program are
being worked on. Such par·
ticular items to be included
are: a plan for determining
priority users; developing a
formula
for
levels
of
allocations; establishing a
policy on reimbursing those
who are forced to share their
coal, and finally, providing
staff to administer the
allocation program.
In other action by the State
Controlling
Board,
the
following were approved :
- $57,602 to the University of
Cincinnati for modification of
the chilled water system in its
academic buildings;
- $210,000 to the Universiiy
of Toledo for the renovation of
University Hall;
- $113,500 to .the Ohio State
University for ventilation work
at Evans Laboratory and
$110,000 for land purchases;
- $97,371 to Youngstown
State University for the pur-

··~188!3::!:"'•••'•':S:':':::;:;:;:::ffl::;:::~::;:::;:::*W""*'&gt;''"*"'"""'~':::::&lt;::::::::-:··:::····:·······:·&gt;·······&lt;~&lt;·:·:&lt;&lt;·:·::x·:·:·:·:;·:;•:•:;·:·:·&gt;:&lt;•&gt;:•:•:•m»&gt;&gt;:«;:;·&gt;»&gt;·»-!. ;--.w -- ! I w~~:-&lt;~&amp;;o;8!8S&lt;:I:&lt;l*l§?'c ns-~~to~onooliofncghitollewderw
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• •• •••••
;o;o.•.•, •••••••. ·•·•·•••••• .•. ......................

...

THE OHIO VALLEY BANK COMPANY

OAKLEY ·COLLINS

EDUCATION

CENTRAL AIR

MOBILE HOMES INC.

'

Will Introduce a bl.ll to promote a 14 Pet. funding raise for all education
(elementary, secondary. and higher).

SYSTEM cOMES TO OHIO -GroWldbreaking ceremonies were held last week
of. Ohio 93 in .Hocking County to begin the first completely metric highway
., project':" the Uru~ed States. According to an Ohio Department of Transportation
, will be studied .bY the Federal Highway Administration for establishment of
a
.
.
a1d m ed~ca\lng contractors and other transportation departments in the
the metric system. tu;ning~e first spadefuls of dirt are J. Phillip Richley, director Ohio
Department of Transportallon ; VIctor Wolff, design engineer for the project and a native of
• HoUand where be was. "raised" using the metric system; Max R. Farley, ODOT's District 10
: ~puty director; William Baker, ODOT deputy director, and Claire " Buzz" Ball Jr., 91st
: dlstnct representallve.
;

a-~e~

YOU CAN'T BEAT THE TRUTH"

Will push for the completion of the Appalachian Highway to accelerate industrial progress In Southeastern Olio and to raise tax bases to benefit
schools and health care programs.

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SAVE •400.00

.

HIGHWAY DEVELOPMENT

~STOM fRONT KITCHEN MODEL

conswners a common line of
consolidation, and accepted the tires, batteries and other
millage for the entire local automobile accessories.
The action alleged that
district as 16 mills. It is
NOW ON OUR LOTI
estimated, the total increase in Exxon Corp., American Oil
revenue to finance the schools Co., Standard Oil of California
for the two year period of 1974 and The Standard Oil Co. of
and 1975 wiU be $342,000, plus Ohio eliminated competition
an additional $61 ,003.20 (a among themselves through
On any new unit purchased we will install
portion of surplus from state), common ownership of the Alias
Ce_nt~al Air for $450.00 as long as
making a total of $403,003.20, Supply Co.
ON NOVICE TEAM
ex1sftng
stock
lasts.
The
proposed
complaint
leaving us in the red.
MARIETTA - Marietta
"Only a small fraction of the seeks to have three of the
CoUege freshman Michael May
Gavin Plant wiU be assessed on companies sell the accessory
of Rutland has been selected as
the tax duplicate Wllil 1976. business to a fourth, or to have a member of the coUege's
· Therefore, we can purchase all four get out of the business. novice debate team. A 1974
only the bare necessities for A~cording to the complaint, graduate of Meigs High School
the schools, unless additional sales of Alias products during Michael is the son of Mr. and
HOURS: 9TOBMONDAYTHRU FRIDAY'
monies come into the district. 1973 amounted to $273 million. Mrs, Bruce May, Bryant Road
9T05SATURDAY-C~OSEDSUNDAY
The action alleged that the
Rutland .
'
"It is the desire of the board
of education and the ad- four companies put their senior
ministration to operate the best executives on the Atlas board,
schools possible for the Gallia wbere they then agreed to the
NAMED CHAffiMAN
County Local School District. types of products that would be
WASHINGTON (UP!)
However, we know that with sold as well the advertising,
President Ford has been
competlton
and
the financial .sltuation as it is at cost,
named hona-ary chairman of
the present time we are limited guarantee programs.
the 34th interfaith observance
in what we can do. There are
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
of National Bible Week Nov. 24
many things we would like to
to Dec. 1.
do to upgrade the school
..........
program, but because of the two out of every three persons
entering
the
labor
market
in
financial condition it is impossible
to
accomplish the past year did not get a job.
A total of 5.5 miUion persons
everything that is desirable for
were out of work across the
the school program.
Stale Bau No.lJI
country
last month, according
"This article is not to cause
alarm to residents of the to the report issued by the
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDmON OF
· district, but to explain why we deparlment's Bureau of Labor
cannot accomplish all the Statistics.. The October figure
things thai .our students represents a jwnp of twodeserve, parents and school tentha of I per cent from
officials desire, and should September unemployment and " ·
of Gallipolis In lhe Slale of Oblo a!¥1 DomesUc Subsldlarlel at lhe el- of
underlines warnings from
have at the present time."
business on Oclober U, U'l4.
economists of a deepending
· recession In the United States.
A&amp;'IETS
Cash and due from banks - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · f 3,044,528.78
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 4,782,098.48
Obligations of other U.S. Government
agencies and corporations. - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1,101,484.38
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Obligations of States and political sulxlivisions -. 4,544,130.82
OVER COST
Labor Department said Friday
Other securities
1.00
ON NEW
another 200,000 Americans
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
joined the · ranks of the
under agreements to resell - - - - - 1,600,000.00
unemployed in October and
20,557,1105.25
Otherloans - - - - - - - - - - - - pushed the nation's jobless rate
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
to 6 per cent, hlgbest in three
other assets representing bank premises - 686,647.38
years.
1
Oiherassets - - - - - - - - - - - - _
- 297,906.12
The department said that
TOTAL ASSETS - - - ,. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $36,604,802.21

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GRANT McDONALD

•

eNEW DECOR eNEW STYLING eNEW EXTERIOR

been either."
·
King said the fact the
a-lginal copy of the letter was
millstng came to light several
weeks ago at the time when
President Richard M. Nixon's
resignation letter was ..being
sent to the National Archives.
It was discovered at that time
the National Archives had only
copies of the letter - not the
original itself.

YOU HAVE .A CHQ'ICE
''

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IRONTON - Action has been
taken · bY the Department of
Administrative Services to
insure' the state with a ready
supply of fuel. A $5 million
program has been approved
which would build up the
state's stockpile of coal and
would also take advantage of
any ~'bargains" that would
come along.
The Ohio Energy Emergency
Commission had recommended. such action on the part
of the state since there exists a
possibillty of a nation-wide coal
strike on November 12. The
Energy Commission has called
on some state agencies to
"intensify efforts tO build coal
stockpiles to assure continuation of essential services
throughout the 'state." One of
the first measures the Commtsston acted on
was
developing a public information program to promote
volWllary conservation of all
fuel materials and electricity.
Should voluntary efforts fall
short of the goal, the Energy
Commission; along with the
Public Utilities Commission
(PUCO), Is planning mandatory . measures to conserve
electricity and to attempt to

commissions. The nwnber of
MUST SPEAK OUT
signatur•s required to put the
MIDDLETOWN , C~nn .
question of creating a charter ( UPI) - Sen. Lowell P.
commission on the ballot would Weicker, R·Conn ., told a
be reduced from 10 percent to 6 Wesleyan University seminar
percent of the electors in a Friday night that the voter
municip81ity, proced ures to with facts on recent polillcai
insure the submission of a scandals in hand, must speak
charier to the voters would be out at the polls Tuesday so that
established, and If a charier is
the ~~unfinished business of
defeated. it could be re- Watergate can be properly
submitled to the voters;
comple ted ." In remarks
- Section 9, clarifying keynoting a Wesleyan alumni
provisions for amendments to ·program , Weicker thanked the
charters and their repeal;
press for "te Uing it straight" in
- Section 12, to permit the Watergate investigations,
revenue bonds to be used to and
"fo r
questioning
'~ improve" a public utility as
everything I did, but making
well as to acquire, construct, or sure the story was told ."
extend; to permit the issuance
of notes in anticipation of
CLOSING TUESDAY
bonds, and to permit revenue
COLUMBUS - All state
bonds to be used to refund liquor stores and agencies will
general obligation bonds that be closed Tuesday, November
have been issued to construct, 5, 1974, General Election Day.
acquire or extend a utility.
In issuing the reminder,
Ric hard E . Guggenheim,
director or the Ohio Department or Liquor Control, noted
ASK TOWED
Roy Homer Kesterson, 42, that permit holders may sell
Pomeroy, Rt. 3, and Marjorie nothing stronger than 3.2 pet.
beer between 6 a.m . and 7:30
· Maxine Sayre, 48, Racine.
p.m. that day .

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34 - 'fhz Sunday T im~s- Sentinel, Sunday, Nov . :i , 1 ~74

$1 milk ( h gal.) predicted
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County agent.'s
corner

in proposed dairy policy
'By BERNARD BRE NNER
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
bu s iness- or ie nt ed
st udy
co minittee's ·proposals for
reforming government dairy
policy could lead to $1 per halfgallon price tags for m ilk in the
supermarket, a m ilk producer
spokesman charged today.
The plan for revising fe deral
dairy policy was a dvocated in a
repori issued this week by the
Committee for Economic
Development.
ThP. organization , made up of

on the farm fro nt
top business executives and
university leaders, proposed
lower support prices to make
Ameri ca n dair y pro du cts
"com pe titive
with
un subsidized tra de in wocld
markets." It also suggested
companion action to increase
import quotas for nonsubsidized cheese and other
dairy products.
Patrick B. Healy, Secretary
of the National Milk Producers
Federation, was sharpl y
critical of the CEO plan.
"They remind me of the

cong ressional candidate who
wa nts lower taxes , hig her
spe nding and a ba la nced
budget at th e same time,"
Healy sa id.
"They want cheaper milk
and a bundant milk at the same
time. What they fo rge t is that
da iry fa rming is not a public
utili ty."
Healy said dairymen, pinched by the fact that milk price
increases have not kept pace
with rising production . costs,
could go out of business at a n
increasing rate.
"Then they (CE O experts)
will look a round one day a nd
fin d milk selling at $2 a gallon
and th ey 'll be in the forefront of
those
demanding
mor e
production," the dairy farmer
spokesman said.
The CEO report stressed the
group was urging that U.S.
farmers be thrown into more
active competition with overseas dairy producers only on
an equal , non-subsidized basis.
In the past, some major foreign
dairy product exporters especially in !be European
Co!IIJilon Market -have cut
their export prices by · using
government subsidies.

Ext. Agent, Agriculture

Worksh()p .

Biggest "LiHie"
Tractor in its
Power Class!

offered on

'

• 45 PTO hp~' (Diesel) or
44 PTO hp':' (Gasoline).
• Small tractor handling
ease
medium size
tractor power!
• Precision, draft control 3point hitch.
• "Lightning Flash" shift.
on-the-go synchromesh
transmission to 8F - 4R
speeds - standard!

By Johu C. Rice

CEO analysts insisted that if
their polit-y is adopted, "U.S.
dairy products will be competitive with unsubsidized trade
and , at the same time, a
pl entiful supply of drinking
milk in U.S. markets will be
assured and milk producers
will be protec te-d ag a inst
competition from subsidized
imports. ''
" ft may be necessary in
certain ca~es to levy counter~
vailin g duties on subsidized
shipmen ts ," the repor t sa id.
Th e CEO referen ce to plentiful drinking milk reflected the
fact that U.S. dairy imports
consist entirely of manufactured products like cheese,
butter and nonfa t milk powder .
Drinking milk, beca use of its
perishability, is all produced in
the U.S. The report conceded,
however, that even if all imports come in without subsidy,
some America·n dairymen ma y
not be able to compete.
" Insofar as unsubsidized imports are concerned, dairy
farmers who are una ble to
compete effectively ...should be
to
a djus tme nt
entitled
assistance benefits ava ilable to
other producers," the report
said .

JACKSON -

Chilllcotbe at the Holiday Inn
Nov. 20·21, a ccording to
William P . Smith, Extension
area farm management agent.
All area tax consultants are
Invited to the workshop to
begin at 9 a .m .
Sessions will cover a wide
range of topics dealing wi th
cha.~ges in Federal and Ohio
income tax laws, reporting
p-ocedures and other tax information applicable to filing
farm tax reports. Examples of
timely tax problems will be
worked out and explained by
tax
authorities .
Social
Sec urity , estate taxes and
changes in the Ohio Workmen's
Compensation law also will be
discussed.
Everyone interested in attending should send reservatlons ·and a fee of $13 per
person to William P . Smith,
Area Extension Center, P . 0 .
Box 32, Jackson, Ohio 45640,
before Nov. 11. The workshop
will be limited Ia the fr.rst 100
paid reservations received.
The tax workshop is sponsored by the Exterision Service
in cooperation with the Inlerna! Revenue Service, Ohio
Department of Taxation ,
Social
Security
Administration, and the Bureau of
Workmen 's Compensation .

·

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Gov.
John J. Gilligan Friday announced four grants totaling
more than S1 million for
manpower programs in Ohio
for the coming fiscal year.
The grants, dis.tributed from
the Governor•s· Discretionary
Fund, will provide job-training
programs for more than 400
persons througqout the state.
The Ohio division of
voca tional education will
receive $142,164 to provide
technical
a ssistance
to
v o ca t i onal e ducation
programs. The division also
will sh are another $275,000
grant with the Bureau of
Employment Services to train
GO unemployed persons to drive
light, heavy and tractor-trailer
trucks.
Another grant for $250,000
will be given to the Depllrtment
of
Rehabilitation
and
Correction to train 225 inmates
in skilled trades to help them
re-en\er the job market when
released from prison.
The fourth grant, totaling
$500,000 will be given to the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources to subsidize work
experience to 144 unemployed,
under e m p 1 o y e.d
or
economica lly disadvantage
per sons in skills such as
forestry, park mliintenance,

GALLIPOLIS - " Sheep
farmers may ge t small
payments for wool under the
wool act for 1974 marketing, "
said J. Melvin Gilbert,
Chairman of The Gallia County
ASC Committee. "Prices for
this year's wool will average
between 60 and 65 cents per
pound - below the 72 cent
incentive price ."
· Fa rm prices of shorn wool
now run below last year's
average 82 cents per pound ;
however, this year 's price
stands substantially above the
depressed levels of receni'
years.
The 1974 price drop reflects a
decline In wool demand. Mill
use of raw wool has declined
sharply because of increased
competition from mann\ade
fibers and because of a. general
downturn in mill activity. Mill
us e of apparel wool may
decline to 8Q.85 million pounds,
scoured basis, this year •.
Manmade fibers also made.
sharp inroads into carpet wool
last year.

11 3 l tp

7 p .m .

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I

C A l·~ PE 1 S a l ri q hP M e~k e l h C ! I'
a b ea ut ifU l Sig ht With Bl ue
Lu s tr C'
Rent
e l ec tr i C
sh am pooer \ 1. Ba ker fu r
nilur f' Comp any
11 I ) ! C
II 3 H e

ll t-_\ 11{00(\A CO !I clqe •11 ~OC k
~ . 1J r 1 nq s, idea l . l o r ;;c~po i
pt•r s 6nn el ,
a dult s
o nl y .
r de r c nce d esi r ed . Phon e 99 2
.'l !i9

Lost

FLAT Sa x op h on e ,
rea son ab le . 99 2 76 8 ~

PUR E BRED Hc r c tor cl !;l ul l , 2
yr S Qld , Fc r~J u S on l r&lt;:~c tor
Conl a&lt;;: t Joh n Shee ts, L &lt;J SS1 e's
Cil r r yo u t , - 3 mi l es so uth of
Mi d d le por t on Rt : 7
10 J I l i p

10 79 26t c

s

Yard Sales

Contains 4 .Essentlal Vitamins
and 2 Electrolytes
The milk replacer formula saves you time and
labor because it feeds as It treats. With CALF :
SCOUR BUCKET MIX, you avoid the s.tr.ess of
injection. drenching and balling .
·

K N A PP

s ho es , soc k s an d
11 s ty l es on sale
Phon e 997 53/ 4.
10 1 tt c
i &lt;~ c k e l s,

L OCUST pos t s, 27 R em ing ton
an d 1 n ac r e l ot . Phone 742
) 6 56

10 18 :.l 6tp

Vine Street

·,.

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

--- ---------·

9 1 Slogan
20 Ri\l er in
92 Snake
Bel gium
93 Ext ras
23 Se parate
94 N ot e of sca le
25 Woo dy plant
96 Lam b' s pen
27 Soap plant s
name
28 Body of wa ter
97 Tan ered clo 1h s
31 Ma rsh es
100 S ymbol for
33 Bevera g es
tellurium
36 Boo ty
102 Cash d raw er
38 Ll'! t it stand
105 A pplaud
40 Barracuda
146 Stavs
109 Platf orm
4 1 Mov es from
148 Co mpe titor s
112 Seed coa tin g
side to side
150 In str ucto r
113 Twis1ed
152 M ak(!s in to taw 43 Clea ning
114 U se
subs tance
153 Lure
154 On e of Coium · 45 God of mot nl y 116 Hand le
118 Pro foun d
vou1h
bus's ships
120 Warm
46
Teem
156 Strike ou t
47 Food f ish
12 1 Hu rries
157 Erases
49 Rive r 1n Aff ic a 122 Enrages
1p rintin g 1
51 In vento r of
123 l ai rs
158 Heraldry ·
t elegrap h
125 M ade lov e
grafted
52
Qu
adr
upeds
l slang I
159 Pro jec tin g tooth
S3
Ernrnets
126
Ca lm
160 M ine ve ins
54 Bird 's bill
127 Wheel t rac ks
129 Stupid pe rson
56 Rid tculous
DOWN
13 1 Cylindr ical
59 lm pro¥ 1ng
60 Orig inate
132 Peeled
1 Cut
61 Tolled
133 Writ ing
2 Thoroughfa re
B3
A
ut
ho
rs
1m plemen1 s
3 Liquo r
107 Parent t c ol l o~ . t
42 God of love
Take one 's pa rt1 34 Growing ou t o f
65
flavo
ring
44 Impose as neces · 108 Wife of Gera1nt
136 Spikenard ,
67 Obt ain
4 Gra1n
. sary result ·
110 Excavat e
69
Penod
of
138 Bib lical
5
Spanish
f
or
111 Di st ance mea sure
46 Imitated
t
ime
!ab
br
.l
weeds
..
t
hree
"
47 Prohibits
!abbr .l
140 Humoris-t s
70 ~ pa nned
6
Paid
no
t
ic
e
Anon
11
2
Word
of
sorr
ow
48
72 Group of th ree 14 1 Landed
7 Vehicle
50 A month
113 Nip
74 Prefi x: two
142 Ireland
Roma n r oad
52 Ugly , oldwomen115 Sungod
76
Faroe
Islands
144 Irishman·
9 Place
53 Hebrew month 117 M e r~y
.
W
hirlw
ind
147 H igh ca rd
10 T est
119 ConJun ction
55 Caudal
77
M assive
148 Sha llow ves sel
11
M
e
r~t
appendage
120 Server
149 Na hoor sheep
12 Beast of bu rden 79 Number
57 Preposition
121 Pra Jse
Devoured
15 1 Int ernationa l
83
13 Ouiet 1
58 Chimney carb on 124 Fal se hoo ds
85
Play
over
again
Labo r
14 M el al s1rand
126 Ve sse l
59 Foreman
W
ea
ry
Organi.la l ion
86
15 Wort hless
60 Credit l abbr .)
127 Stun1ed perso n
Cook
labbr 1
87
leaving
62 Recent
128 W ent by
88
Final
153 Ex i st
16
Fores
t
wa
rdens
64 In eddition
130 Cla n
17 2)pir1ted ho rses 89 A s1a te tabbr .I 155 Symbol l or
132 Sk in of fr~n
66 Football
90 s'tern
silve r
18
c;; uu-t,lo-. e birds
position labbr .) 133 Football ki c k

Model WLW 5900P

18-lb. Washer with
Family-Size Dryer with
RAPID WASH, HANDWASH® PERMANENT PRESS and
and AUTOMATIC
SOAK
SPECIAL POLY-~NIT Settings
'
.
.
AND WASH Features
• Six Drying Selectlont, Including ·two

*Est.. max.

.

135 Later
137 B ard
139 Timetabl e
abbrevia ti on
140 Dampens
141 Po si ti ve pole
143 Waste 01eta l
14 5 An g lo -Saxon
m one y

.

• "Rapid Waah "- doe• a complete wa~h­
riM•~In cycle In 10 mlnulet.
•
• Handwash«~ - uses tepa rate agitator, with
..,.clal cycle, water level, and speed
..telnga to wath delicate ltema thoroughly.

e

AutOmatic Soak and Waah-solikt up to 10
houra, proceeds. automatically through

· complete waah-rlnee-epln.
.
• Five Wash Speeds-Five Water Tempera.

turH-In,llnlte W81er Levels.

e

EKira Rinse and Extra Walh Option•.

uttlnga.
,
•
• Audible, .-djuatable end-of-cycle algnal •.
•

filter.

Equip~ent

Co.

Ph. 992-2176
.
P()meroy, Ohio
.

.

.•

r

.. •

·

• nmed or .Autoii'UIIic Cycles.
• Separate . Start Button.

(Free of Steel)'

F R EE HOM E ES TIMAT ES

n~

SU PER IO R
VI N YL PROD UCT S

per pound

Ca ll Co llec t 1 - 592 - 554&lt;~
Athens, Ohio

The Rosenberg Co.

A F EW n ew ban d in strumen ts
Con t ac t Ren ee Stone 99? 7567 .
9-4 li e

79 Depot Street

Athens, Ohio

221 N. Columbus Road
Athens, Ohio 45701
Ph. : 593-6722

AUCTION

The following will be sold at the OLD MARY
PULL! NS Farm which is located on Horse
Cave Rd . 1 mile N. of Racine Bashan Rd.
Follow State Route 124 one mile east of Racine
and go N. on Racine- Bas han Rd. to Horse
Cave Rd . or approach by following State Rt. 7
to Forest Run Road and turn East and proceed
7 miles (Watch for Sale Arrows).

SATURDAY, NOV. 9, 1974 • 9:30 A.M.
Wa sh stand, pie sale, rush bottom cha irs.
chillarobe, cane chairs, child 's roll top desk .&amp;
rocker . glassware, Including Cambridge,
Carnival , Rub y, Pressed and Depression ,
butter mold, berry set , Popeye t in bank, iron
donkey, train &amp; track. Country Dr . horse &amp;
buggy , black doll (miniature) , picture frames,
Avon bottles. 6 Currier &amp; lves pr ints, coffee &amp;
meat grinders. lard press, butchr ing tools,
sausage stutter, powder horn, gun cabinet,
Bur nside sto ve, stone jar s, water pump. S. &amp;
P. Shakers, fuel oil healer. oak buffet . oak file
cabinet, drop leaf desk &amp; cabinet •. meta_l and
wood beds,-4ewing machines. mus1 c cab1nets.
cook stove wood &amp; coal . Magnavox rad io. T. V.
and miscellaneous. Man y items not listed.
TERMS: CASH
Lunch Served
Not Responsible for Accidents
Bradford Auction Co .
C. c; Bradford. Auct .- A. C. Bradford , Mgr.
Paul

Pullin s,

Briggs

3384

• Porcelain-Enamel Top and Drum.

PUBLIC SALE
!)f

the Est at e o( Ciitford Earwood,

To antl~u e guns, Col. Le M at lQ.shot revolve r , 1832, R .
.
John son m u zzle -loa ding pistol 1776 mode l :

'.

2 trunks, t elephon e, c rocks, ja r s a nd j ugs, s't eelyards ,
l ard press, ~ k raut cutter s. m il k cans, Ol&lt; yoke, qu ilt ing
f raryt es, cobbl er' s be nch and last , Fo r 1' Nec ess ity.
Miscella neous a ntiques.
One large lot caq:.enter and pl um bing · t ool s, ex t remel y good quality and condit ion, pipe dies, large
w r enches, J vi ses. 8 ft . work be11ch with wooden v ise,
grinder w ith rp otor , drills, lttt rg e lot ha nd tools ~ 2 soc ket

., •

sets, hydraulic jack, ste p ladder; exte nsion la dder, log

•

chains, wov en wi re stretc hers, t ool boxes, 2 furniture
clamps, many other It em s .
Attention Antique Car BuHs: 1946 eulck 2-door sedan ,
gar den t r actor , power mowe r .

•

Note: Car and guns will be sold at 12 : 00 NQ9n.

.POMEROY.LANDMARK

. '
.

...........

aii'IUL-

JOHN E. HALLIDA Y., EX EC .
ESTATE OF CLIFFORD EARWOOD, DE C' D.
John McNei ll , Aucti onerr
, Bibtiee, Rose &amp; - ShlrU.~ , C14tr~•·

Servil)ll Meigs, GaUia &amp; .Mason Counties .
JACK W. CARSEY, N\GR.
_ , !Ht 992-2181

G-I I ' 01111 '

Sale will be held of Gallia County Fa irgrounds.
Lunch will be served by Gallipolis Bond Booster Club '
.

.

.

ll!~lrltMnf'fl l" r n1t , ..1 F••l!tu~ · Svnrtn·otlt• lilt

~.

! ...

1

·'

Rd .,

l amps. c ha irs , br eak fast set wi th 4 chair s, ref r igerat or ,
el ectr ic st Ove, bottl ed gas stov e, q u ilts and comforter s,
r ock er s, 2 be ds, Dexter washer .

A a.hlen Corn Crib keeps Its high resale vaiLJII yMr after yMr ... because It's built for a
ltf.tlme of rugged service. Every Bohlen Crib Is Hot-Dip Galvanlud alter welding ...
compl.telycovered all surfaces -(lncluctlng weld spots) with upto6 times the amount of zinc
foundcr~ ordln•ry cribs. The Behlen Crib Is made of No. 2-gaUve B•r Mesh Steel lover 1~ ' ' In
'dl•metor). Wulher-llghl "Sleep Pilch" roof ftltsfo tho pNk wlthciul hand le\lellng. Extra
wide crib doors. In size!! from 679 to 2155 bushelS.
·
"

.

I
SCRAP AWMINUM I
Holiday Sp ecial!

6 r oom s of household f urnishi ngs, di ning ta b le· and eight
cha i rs. t w o 4-p iece be'droom sui tes. iron bed, dresse r s,
antique sew ing m ach ine , c hest, wash st a nd , end t a bles,

Removable, •••r-Io-clean, up-front lint

lHE ~ALITY lUNG OF OORN ~IBS
••

Prod uc ed frQm a specia l
vinyl co mpo un d ma de by B .
F . Goodr ic h an d M onsa nto . 5
li m es thi c k er than m eta l
si d ing . Wi ll no t d en t , chi p ,
cr ack, peel , r ot , ru st or
ch alk .

c :oc k s, ic c boxes. b r ass bed s.
dishes, d esk s, o r com p lett·
h o u seho ld s . Wr ite M . D
M ill er , R l . 4, Po meroy, Ohio ,
c all 992 -7760 .
5 13d fc

decea sed.

.

•

SOLI D
VIN YL SIDIN G

Tfle personal property

. Permanent Pr••• and Special Polr·Knlllt..

• Porcelain-enamel finish Inside and,. ouL

.

10

SATURDAY, NOV. 9 · 11:00 A. M.

e Automatic delergent, bleach and fabric
conditioner diapenaera. .

.

OL D F U R N I TURE , oa k l abres,

997 ~ .

134 Old !poe t . t

68 Sym bol fo r

rutheniu m
69 Possessive
1 Wooden shoe
pro nou n
6 Tart
70 Neckpiece
10 Afternoon
71 Fruit cake
parties
14 Most unplea11ant 73 Esculen t
75 Forc es a1 r
19 Place f or
through nose
keeping birds
77 Facial
21 Tropical fru ll
22 Imprudent
eitpression
23 Buccaneer
78 Garmen t
80 Simpleton
24 Most damp
8 1 Dutch 1own
26 Mends
Mate
8 2 Ripping
28
29 Suffhc form ing
84 Liquid m easure
adjectiVes
86 Tried
30 Slave
87 Tidier
32 Citiien of Rome 89 Doctrine
33 Uninterestin g
92 Moving
person
95 Ardent
98 Difficult
34 Army officer
l abbU
99 Vegetable
35 Fight between 10 1 Ent h usia sm
two
103 Tissue
37 Female ruffs
104 Worm
39 The sun
105 Hint
106 Football
40 D ispatched
position labbr. 1
41 Marries

Model DLB 2750P Electri c

-~

19 6t p

99 ?

Look up. Be looked up to. Air Force

a

•

mode l s o f mo bi l e hom es.
Phone ar ea c ode 6 14 423 -953 1
A· 13·1h:.

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER
ACROS S

------

CA ~ H· ·pa id l or a ll m akes an d

TABLE S &lt;~ n d ch ai r s. su it aht e
lor bar or r es taur,1 n t Phon e

S UNDAY , NO VE MB ER 3 . 1974

'

Meigs

1973 HARLEY D Avid son 350 SX
Moto r c y cl e, 1. 9DU n11 les, $650 .
Phone 985 )].11 between 8 il m .
and 5 p .m &lt;on (l ilS k tor Ra y .
10 296t p

Yes. Go t o school a nd buy
new wheels, t oo. You can
m a ke it happen in the Air
Force . It's great tra ining. The kind that will p ro v id e a great futur&amp; , .. and over 5340 and more a
month for wheels and go .p laces, do -t hi ngs act ion
wh ile yo u' re learn ing su ch h igh pa ying skills as
c o m puter t ech nicia n. ai rcra ft m ec hanic , account·
a nt electronic te chnicia n or one o f doze ns o f oth er
techn ica l o r business specia lties. Yo u' ll receive
some e Ktra benef it s, too like paid vacatio ns,
promot ions, free m ed ica l an d dental care. Get all
t h e d eta il s f ro m your Air Force recru iter today.

-------- ------

Ga·ilipolis, Ohio ·

au tos , com plete a nd
de l iver ed t o ou r ya rd We
p1 c K up Au to bod ie!. and b uy
all Kind &lt;&gt; ot s.crap m eta l s and
1ron . R ider' s Sa l vage , St . ~ t
t24 . Rl d , Pom eroy , Oh 10
Cull 992 5468 .
10 17 l f c

J UN K

·18] l

SEWI N G Ma c t1i nes, b ra nd n ew
Zig Zag in n ic e wal nut l ab te .
In or ig ,n al cartons . Ne ve r
Cl e i'lra n c e o n
'7 A
u sed
M od e l s
(O nly
a
f ew
av &lt;:~ ila bl e l.
'1.43 . 40 ca sh or
t er m s av a1la ble Ph on e 99 2
77 55 .
10 15 tt c

--------------

J. D. NORTH PRODUCE CO.

CAS H nn fo r j un k c ar s com
p l ete F ry C"s T r uck and Au to
Pur ls. Ru tlan d, Ohi O. ~hon Q
742 609 4.
10 16 201 G

P I C K IN G up a p ian o 10 you r
ar ea , l oo k ing to r a r ~sp on
sib l e pa r t y to tak.e ov er
pa yme nt s. Call coll ect Credit
Ma n age r 772 5669 or Writ e
Cre d i t Ma n ag er 260 E . Ma1n
St , Ch ill ico the . Oh io ·1560 1.
10 22 ti c

--------·-------- -

wildlife and reclamation.
The money In the fund is
made up of 4 per cent of all the
federal monies coming into
Ohio from the Comprehensive
Employment and Training Act
of 1973.

See this big producing utility tractor . . .
drive it!

m

F I R E WOOD fo r sal e Phon e
99 7 33 63 or 99 2 3:1 12
i O 24 17t p

---------------

PLUS
.CALF SCOUR BUCKET MIX

30 p

10 30 .J i q

---------- - ---

C ROCE R Y bu si ness l or ~ a I.e.
Bui l d inq t or sa te or lc .:tse
Phon e 77 3 56 1R f rorn 8 30 P . m
to 10 p .m for &lt;op po i nlm ent .
3 20 li e
r tR E WO O D fo r sal e Ca l l 742

M A PLE c oc kt ail a nd end ta bl es
by Hasse tt , swi v el r oc ke r. a ll
l 1k e new Cul l 992 7090 aft er

- -- ------------

Wanted To Buy

11 I 6t p

1951 C H EV Y p an s
NEW
L a k cowood t ra c t io n ba r s, h i
1a ck c r ai r Sl;oc k s, hoo k er
head er s, w i t h 3"' co ll ec tor s for
sn1a ll b loc k
Ca ll 992 ) 496
,; tt cr 6 p m B ES T O FFE R .
10 17 ti c

For Rent

In addition to oxytetracycline and neomycin, -.
CALF SCOUR BUCKET MIX contains - 20
Pet. Pure Milk Protein for palatability.

v ery

M I X E D HE RE F ORD ve-a l c al f
Ph one !i •IJ 'lJ Y.! a lt er A 30 p m
10 3 t Jt c

Pets For Sale

.More effective against calf scours .

GIRL TO PUNT
SAN FRANCISCO (U.PI ) A 10-year-nld Hawaii girl will
be among 12 youngsters
competing In the area Punt,
Pass and Kick competition
during half-time of nex t
Monday night's 49ers-Rams
game. Cynthia Stenhouwer, a
104-pounder whose dad played
at Colorado State in the 1950s,
won the compe tition at
Honolulu to become the first
girl ever to win a district
competition.

n igh t ,

EXPEI&lt;IE N CE D b.u w.1 1lrt.·..,~
Inq ui r e a t Ki n q 's /\rp-1!-. .
Sat urd ay an d M ond a y , 7 to .1
I I 3 Jtp

E

For Sale

fGr r.ent

For Sale

For Sale
GI-/ 1\ VF 1• • &lt;;,1 n rL M a&lt;;o n sand·,
l lnl"·, ton c . P 1t Run tJ y l hc ton .
Deli v t r ed Ph one 4&lt;16 l l.t2
10 18 li e

547 ) .
A NY th anks to th e bus iness
HO W to earn up to $200 W('Ck l y
p eople of Ch este r and t he m en
a ddr essi n g , stuffin g . maili ng
10 3 tfc
an d w om en of th e Chester - ·
T RA IL ER ,space on privat e lot , 75,000 BTU q &lt;~ !'i
e n vel op es . Se nd 75 c and
Pho ne 7.\'J 18 ·17
Vol : F.i r e Dept . and A u x . for
s tamp ed AddrC' SSC' d envelop ('
J mil ns 1r 9m Po m e r oy . P.hone
I I I Jtc
to
AC
L
E
NT
E
R
P
RI
SES
.
BOX
Jt.l
n.n
the ntc.e H allow een party for WA P
SE L L
B U Y Flea
our childr en . ,
::.
.
11 3 31C
49 . T ROY , IL L 61'294
11 3 li p Mark et.
Sp r 1n g
Av e nu e ,
11 3 7tp
M OD ERN wa l nut s tereo rud io
- -·,-·- ---· - - - - ------Po m eroy , Ohi o Saturd ay and
TWO 4 r oom and ba th a pt s. in
c om b ina t ion , 8 tr a c k t.;p c,
Sunda y . AUC TI ON SUND A Y ,
M i ddl eport . For info .-m ation .
am f m r Adio , 4 spea k er 5oun d
~ 00 CO N SIG NME N T , IS P et
ca ll 992 · 2550 or 742·655 1.
sys t em . Ba l an ce $1 09 .37 or
10 17 li e
OOTif" G M a tch . Ra c ine Gun
·
7-3-tfc
easy term s. Ca ll 992 3961
Sund·ay . Nov . 3, 1 p m
10 ] 0 I l L
10 -J0 .4tc POMEROY
Sacred
H ea rl
COUN T R Y M obile Ho m e P ark ,
Ch ur c h Fall Festiva l Bazaar
RE DU CTION ol grb w n A KC toy
R t . 33. ten mil es nor th . of V ACU U M CL EA N ER S E lec lro
··;;u;;; I a t F r ed d ie Moore' s, w i ll be Thur sday , Nov . 7, 1974 .
poodl es , SSO each, pups 565,
P o m e roy. L arge tots w1th
H ygien e New Demonstr a l or s
•r
sout h of M idd leport .
D10 ners ~- Cr eamed ba k ed
Si am ese ki tt ens , SI S. Ph on e I
c on crete patios , sid ew alks ,
ha s all c l ea nin g att ac hm ent s
S•tuo·a • y an d Sunday , 10 ti ll 6
c h ic ke n ·an d ham , ga m es an d
256 62A7
~·unn e r s
and
off
s tr eet
p lu s th l'! new El ec tro Sud s l or
f an cy s tan ds , dinn er s tarts
parking . Al so. spaces fo r
10 1 26t c
s hampooi n g c ar p et . On ly
II . 1 21c
4: 30pm . Ad ults, S3, child re n
sm a ll trailer s. Phon e 99 2·7479.
S27 .50
cash
or
l er m s
S1. 50. .
,----,----------7·21.tf c
ava il Ab le . Phon e 992 77 55
IRI SH SETTER P U P S, AKC .
ION and Ru mmage Sal e,
10-30 Sic
Call 7&lt;12 -5909 aft er 5 : 30.
10 J O tt c
9, 11 a .m . a t l he Ra c ine
]Q . J1.3tp
2 BED R OO M d ou b l e w i de
Par k . Sponsored b y
N EED L E
SEW I N G
-- ------ ---- ~- -- ·--- m ob i l e hom e In Syr ac use . No TW IN
C it y
Shr i ne C l ub .
M AC HIN E S 1974 Mod e l 1n
ch i l d r e n or p e ts. d epo sit
AKC Co ll 1e pup pi es, phon e .985
wa l nut stan d A ll fea l urc s
3809 .
r e quired . Ph on e 992-244 1 after
l~.~~:~;~
~~~d~i~s-ebr ing
sol d on con . RE O I RIS H SE TT E R mal e dog ,
,~
what YOU
bui lt in to make fan c y d cs 1g ns
11 -1-3t c
6 p .m .
1
y
r
old
w
ea
ring
no
coll
ar
.
or ca ll 949-249 1.
and do s tr etc h se wi nq A l so
10 79 H e
An swerS to t he name of
AU nobles are
button ho l es , b l ind hem s. et c
" Sh awn " . Ca ll 667 -6263 aff E: r 6
b r in g an it em to
S43 JS
c a s ll
or
t er rn s
3 BEDROO M trail er and 2
p
m
.,
d
ur
ing
t
he
da
y
ca
ll
667
invited to l ak e
ava il ab le . Ph one 99 / nss
bed r o 9 m apt .; 1 child onl y in
3842
an yth in g yo u wa nt
10 JO t f c
eac h . Con ta c t John Sh ee t S: at
J0.31-3t c J A ND 4 ROOM f u rni shed and
un ch ser ved by
unfu r n ish ed
a p a r t m ent s .
L ass ie's Ca rr you t, 3 mil es
Shriners w"iv es . Co m e enjoy
Phon e 992-543 4.
sout h of Middl e port on R f. 7· A NT I QUE dut c h sc r ub tab l e,
at
th e
P o m eroy
th e day , Not respo n si bl e f or L OST
antiq ue tr un k , o ld woo l r uq ,
4-12-tfc
.
10 ·31 3t p
E l e m ent ary H obo P a rt y , a
accidents .
co ff ee tab le, c ran e bo ttom
blon
d
e
w
ig
,
f
inde
r
p
lease
ca
ll
11-l -7t c
cha ir . Ca ll a lt er 5 p m , 99 7
PRIV A T E meeting room fo r
992 2076 .
T
RA
ILE
R,
2
bed
room
s
,
A
dults
5397 , or Q97 -3507.
any organization : phone 992o nl y . Phon e 992 -3324.
10 -30 3t p
397'5 .
II 3 Il l=
TING M A T C H , Cor n . --------- - - - - - -10 -I S tf c
3-ll
·tfc
"i&lt;ollow Gun Clu b, tu rn firs t M AL E r edbon e coonhound los t .- - - -- - -- - - -- -- E F L AT Sa x. ¥e r y r c.Jsonabl e.
2
a'~ ter Mi les Ce m et ery,
BE DR OO M
tr a i le r
in
3 F URNI SH E D roo ms on Eas t
Phon e 997 7685 .
in R ut l and
Har ri sonv ill e
utland . Fa ctory c h o.ked
Syracuse
,
cl
ose
to
schoo
l
.
No
M ain St . Phon e 992 -2381.
11 I 6t p
ar ea . R ewar d a lter ed . Phone
guns onl y . Sunday , Nov . 3, I p .
chi ldr en o r pets
Depo s i t
10 -J1.Jt c
742-4447 or 742 -5329
m.
r eQuir ed . Phone 992 244 1 afte r O N E No . 10 New Id ea (.Ocn
11 ·3-Jtc
6 : 30 p .m .
10 -31-Jt c
pic ker. Ph on e 378 6?9 1
O NE second floor a partm ent
10 18 -tfc
I I J 21p
furni
shed
tw
o
bedroom
s
.
WILL NOT b e in m)' office at
Loc
at
e
d
on
Main
St.
.
in
' the Meig s Co unty H ea lth
ap a rt me nt. FIR EWOOO for sal e, cu i yo ur
Po m er oy . Off st r eet par k1ng F URN IS HED
Dept . in clu din g Oct. 30 GARAGE Sa le, Item s fr om
ut
iliti
es
furn
is
hed
, su i t a bl e
own size or p iece . Phon e 99 7
w ithin wa lking dis tance fr om
f a bri c shop g oing out of
through n oon , No\1 . 6 du e to
for
two
w
orking
m
en
.
o
r
57 17
b us iness d is t.-i c l , r ea sona bl e
b us iness . Nov . 4 throug h 9,
va c atio n . Signe d , Hil to n
r etir ed coupl e. L i ving ,r oom ,
II 3 1fc
re nt . ca n 992·3863 till J p .m . ;
1284 Powell St ., Mid d leport .
W~lf e .
kit c hen, show er an d b ath . On ·
99
2-584&lt;1
after
6
p
.m
.
Ra
in
o
r
sh
ine,
Sim
p
li
city
10-Jl .Jtp
m ain h ig h wa )' , Maso n , w. v a . O N E g ood Si n ge r E l ec 1r 1c
10·27 .7f c
p a tterns for 3Sc, a ll new and
P hone 773 ·51 47 .
sew ing ma chine , $5 5, No r ge
curr ent patt er ns of a ll Sizes.
10. 27 -tf c
dry er w ith h ook up . b.ox
OSCOT
K O S M E TI CS :
trim , button s, seam binding F URNI SHED apartment , S
el ect ri c S15 ; Mod ern l1 v 1ng
R e meinber Chr iS tma s i s
t h r ea d , f a br i cs and lot of
roQm s and bath with enclosed O N"E bedroom apartm ent , full y
room s'o ta a nd cha ir. SI S:
coming . We Have ma n y new
other m i sc . fabr i c it e m s .
bac k porc h , also furni shed
Ze n it h Bla ck and w h i te T .V .
furnistJ_ed .
Av ~ita b t e . i n
produ cts th a i wi ll rnake n ice
Cloth i ng ,
Ch ri s tm as
a p ar t m ent. 3 rooms and bat h ,
Mi d d l epo rt ,
n 1ce
n e 1g h
SI S, wo r ks ; 2 pl a tfo r m
gift s. Phone BR OW N ' S, 99 2:
d ecorat ion s, glasswa r e, and
fir st floor . Phone 992.2937 .
r ockers usab l e, \ ?0. pho ne
bor hood . No pet s. Phone 992
5113 .
m isc . furn i tur e.
992 7310.
3863 till 3 p .m .; a ft er 6 p .m .
1l -1·3t c
11 -3-tfc
11 · 1·3t c
II 3 ] t p
call 992 ·58&lt;1 4.
10 -27 71c
NDP A INTE O,
ha r dboa r d Y A RD SA LE , F r id a y , Sa t. and 1'2x 60 2 B E DR O OM mob i l e
3 PIECE Rose Sec t io na l. e )t
nursery anim al p.os t er s . M a k e
Sunday , Nov . I , 2, 3. New and
ho m e . Phon e 9&lt;19 ·24 61 .
celle nt cond i t ion . Phone 99 2
O
N
E
t
w
o
bedroo
m
apart
ment.
Ideal Ch r i stm as gi ft s. V a ri ety
used mer chand ise at Hobar t
10-29.6tc
7667
fully
furn
ished
,
ni
ce
ne
igh
of patter ns . Call 992 .5147 aft er
Sm a ll ey r esl den c: e. Chester ,
11 3 3tc
bOrh ood , p l ent y of off s t ree t
5 p .m .
Ohio .
par k ing . L oca t ed i n M i d
11-3-6t p
10 -Jl .3tc TR A I L E R spac:;-e, 2 .miles. fro m
Pomer oy, Rt. 143. Phone '99 2.
dleport . Ca ll 99 2.J863 till 3 FL OOR furn ace . 11ea t s A or 5
585 8.
rooms. $25. 7A7 Oli ver St ,
p .m . ; aft er 6 cal l 992 ·584 A.
Y
ard
Sci
tes
ka t e · A · W a y
ann.ou !"' ce d
Mid
dl e por t , OhiO , p hon e 997
J0
.
27
.tf
c
10-27
71c
Hallo wee n Parf\1 , F r1d a y , GARAGE Sale at R ay Young's,
7875
Success
Road
.
Ph
one
667
-3462
.
Oc1'. 25, Ra ces , pri zes, ba t.
11 3 3l p
11·3·61p 2 B EDR OOM trail er at Hyse ll ON E 2 bedroom unfurn ished
loons, lll \18i l abl e f or privat e
h ou se loca t ed on Fish er St .
R un . Phone 992 .3975 or 99 2partie$ , Monda y , T uesda y ,
Po m eroy . Reason abl e re-n t F 1R EWOO"D lor l irep la ce or
2571 .
Thursday , n ig ht s, Sa t . or Sun . P tA N 0 , mat tress and spr in gs,
s love . Cu t to leng t h . Phone
Ca ll 992 ·3863 tilt 3 p .m .: 992 ·
10
-27
·tfC
end tables , ring s, curta ins,
afternoon .
O pen
Wed .,
5844 a tt er 6 p .m .
992 7644 .
s,
b
ik
e,
o
dd
s
and
bed
spread
Friday , and Sat . 7 : 30 10 · 30.
11 .J.16t c
10-27 .7t c
4 ROOM furnish ed a pt . Cl ose to
Phone 985 -3929, 985 ·41&lt;11 . or
end s . No \1 . 4, 5 and 6 at 305
Powell
'
s
Sup
er
va
ru
.
ph
on
e
W ri ght St ., Pom eroy . ·
985 .9996.
992·3658 .
10·24 ·12t c
11 ·3· 2tp
10 -IJ .Ifc

WITH ANCHOR
CALf SCOUR BUCKET MIX

. SYRACUSE - Village .of
Syracuse voters are reminded
that funds derived from the
town's Current Expense levy
a re used t~ provide street
lighting.
A three-mill renewal of the
Current Expense levy will be
on the November 5 ballot. The
village of Syracuse currently
has 77 street lights.

Saturday

an d

Mason Aucti on , Horton St. in
Mason . W. v a . Cons ignm en ts
w ekome . Phone {3041 773·

AND SUPPLY NUTRITION AT THE SAME TIME

lighting fund

Help 'Wanted

A U C TI ON , . Thu rs d av

STOP CALF SCOURS

Levy produces

The other two winners from Ohio were Charles M. Martin,
area agent, anlinal industrv. Wooster, and Robert W. Cole,
county a gent, ag riculture, Napoleon.

A two-day

Notice

Consolidate your bills
.and lower your payn!ents ·

THREE AGENTS OF THE OHIO Cooperative Extension
Service were honored last week for professional achievements at
the annua l meeting of the National Associa tion of County
Agricultural Agents, held last week in Tucson, Arizona.
J ohn Un de rwood , Jackson Area Extension Agent ,
Agronomy. was named an achievement award wirmer .
John has been with Extension five years. He strved
both the Jackson and Belle Valley Extension areas, consisting of 19 counties. One of his outstanding contributions has
been promoting the use of no-tilla~e corn production . He has
worked with other agencies and commercial firms in setting up
on-farm field demonstrations, summer tours, and multi~ounty
No-Tillage Corn Clinics each winter; He has won wide support for
his efforts in improving crop production in southeastern Ohio.

Small payments
predicted for
WOO} producers

or.Fast Results Us~ The Classifieds

GALUPOUS
According
to figures released Saturday by .
;:V~
the Gallia County Extension
Service, a total of 182 steers
sold for $24,943.03; an av~rage
of $137.00 per head during the
Gallipolis Area Feeder Calf
MaJOr Improvements co~t money. And paying .them off
sale Thursday night.
one
by one at different places and r~tes .of 1nterest can !'e
The average weight was 463
inconvenient and increase your cost of credtt.
. .
pounds and the average per
Let
us
.
r
eview
your
credit
obligatiOii
s.
A
new,
long-term
hundred weight for the sieers
financing program tailored to lit your income can prov1de
was $29.62. In ·all there were
a
comfortable and efficient repayment schedule ... can
\hree prime animals, 21 high
make
your. debt easier to manage with just one place to
choice ; 101 choice ; 41 high
.
make payments. Your payments will
good animals, and 16 good
refl ect a competiti ve interest rata
animals.
with rio prepayment penalty
A total of 125 heifers sold for
228 Upper River Road
$13,173.32 an average of $100.39
P. O. Box 207, Gallipolis
per head.
·
Clyde B. Wall~er, Mgr.
The heifers were graded as
follows : high choice, 25;
choice, 59; high good, 21 and
good, 20.

POMERO Y - A two-day workshop for fa rm tax consultants
will be held in Chillicothe a t the Holiday Inn on November 20 and
21, according to William P . Smith , Extension area farm
management ageni. All area tax consultants are invited to
participate in the work shop which is to begin at 9 a.m.,
Noveinbe~ 20.
Workshop sessions will cover a wide range of topics dealing
with cha nges in Federal and Ohio income tax laws, reporting
procedures a nd other tax information applicable w filing farm
tax reports . Examples of timely tax problems will be worked out
and expla ined by tax authorities.
Social Security, estate taxes and changes in.the Ohio Workmen's Compensation law will be discussed during the workshop.
Anyone interested in attending the workshop should send
reservations and a fee of $13 per person to William P . Smith,
Area Extension Center, P. 0. Box 32, Jackson, Ohio 45640, prior
to November 11. The workshop will be limited to the ftrst 100 paid
reservations received.
The ta x workshop is sponsored by the Extension &amp;ervice in
cooi&gt;eration with the I11ternal Revenue Service, Ohio Department
of Taxation, Social Security Administration, and the Bureau of
Workmen 's Compensation,

Four grants
f~ taxing announced
::~~t; ~~I fa~~ ~~d coin~ for training

- The Sunday Times -Se ntinel, Sunday , Nov: 3. 1974

Steers bring
$137.05 each
at calf sale

.'

.I

. ..,..

,.

'.

' '·

~·

i

I

I

'
'

'

·'

I

�'·
34 - 'fhz Sunday T im~s- Sentinel, Sunday, Nov . :i , 1 ~74

$1 milk ( h gal.) predicted
1

i
••
•

•

,.
'

County agent.'s
corner

in proposed dairy policy
'By BERNARD BRE NNER
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
bu s iness- or ie nt ed
st udy
co minittee's ·proposals for
reforming government dairy
policy could lead to $1 per halfgallon price tags for m ilk in the
supermarket, a m ilk producer
spokesman charged today.
The plan for revising fe deral
dairy policy was a dvocated in a
repori issued this week by the
Committee for Economic
Development.
ThP. organization , made up of

on the farm fro nt
top business executives and
university leaders, proposed
lower support prices to make
Ameri ca n dair y pro du cts
"com pe titive
with
un subsidized tra de in wocld
markets." It also suggested
companion action to increase
import quotas for nonsubsidized cheese and other
dairy products.
Patrick B. Healy, Secretary
of the National Milk Producers
Federation, was sharpl y
critical of the CEO plan.
"They remind me of the

cong ressional candidate who
wa nts lower taxes , hig her
spe nding and a ba la nced
budget at th e same time,"
Healy sa id.
"They want cheaper milk
and a bundant milk at the same
time. What they fo rge t is that
da iry fa rming is not a public
utili ty."
Healy said dairymen, pinched by the fact that milk price
increases have not kept pace
with rising production . costs,
could go out of business at a n
increasing rate.
"Then they (CE O experts)
will look a round one day a nd
fin d milk selling at $2 a gallon
and th ey 'll be in the forefront of
those
demanding
mor e
production," the dairy farmer
spokesman said.
The CEO report stressed the
group was urging that U.S.
farmers be thrown into more
active competition with overseas dairy producers only on
an equal , non-subsidized basis.
In the past, some major foreign
dairy product exporters especially in !be European
Co!IIJilon Market -have cut
their export prices by · using
government subsidies.

Ext. Agent, Agriculture

Worksh()p .

Biggest "LiHie"
Tractor in its
Power Class!

offered on

'

• 45 PTO hp~' (Diesel) or
44 PTO hp':' (Gasoline).
• Small tractor handling
ease
medium size
tractor power!
• Precision, draft control 3point hitch.
• "Lightning Flash" shift.
on-the-go synchromesh
transmission to 8F - 4R
speeds - standard!

By Johu C. Rice

CEO analysts insisted that if
their polit-y is adopted, "U.S.
dairy products will be competitive with unsubsidized trade
and , at the same time, a
pl entiful supply of drinking
milk in U.S. markets will be
assured and milk producers
will be protec te-d ag a inst
competition from subsidized
imports. ''
" ft may be necessary in
certain ca~es to levy counter~
vailin g duties on subsidized
shipmen ts ," the repor t sa id.
Th e CEO referen ce to plentiful drinking milk reflected the
fact that U.S. dairy imports
consist entirely of manufactured products like cheese,
butter and nonfa t milk powder .
Drinking milk, beca use of its
perishability, is all produced in
the U.S. The report conceded,
however, that even if all imports come in without subsidy,
some America·n dairymen ma y
not be able to compete.
" Insofar as unsubsidized imports are concerned, dairy
farmers who are una ble to
compete effectively ...should be
to
a djus tme nt
entitled
assistance benefits ava ilable to
other producers," the report
said .

JACKSON -

Chilllcotbe at the Holiday Inn
Nov. 20·21, a ccording to
William P . Smith, Extension
area farm management agent.
All area tax consultants are
Invited to the workshop to
begin at 9 a .m .
Sessions will cover a wide
range of topics dealing wi th
cha.~ges in Federal and Ohio
income tax laws, reporting
p-ocedures and other tax information applicable to filing
farm tax reports. Examples of
timely tax problems will be
worked out and explained by
tax
authorities .
Social
Sec urity , estate taxes and
changes in the Ohio Workmen's
Compensation law also will be
discussed.
Everyone interested in attending should send reservatlons ·and a fee of $13 per
person to William P . Smith,
Area Extension Center, P . 0 .
Box 32, Jackson, Ohio 45640,
before Nov. 11. The workshop
will be limited Ia the fr.rst 100
paid reservations received.
The tax workshop is sponsored by the Exterision Service
in cooperation with the Inlerna! Revenue Service, Ohio
Department of Taxation ,
Social
Security
Administration, and the Bureau of
Workmen 's Compensation .

·

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Gov.
John J. Gilligan Friday announced four grants totaling
more than S1 million for
manpower programs in Ohio
for the coming fiscal year.
The grants, dis.tributed from
the Governor•s· Discretionary
Fund, will provide job-training
programs for more than 400
persons througqout the state.
The Ohio division of
voca tional education will
receive $142,164 to provide
technical
a ssistance
to
v o ca t i onal e ducation
programs. The division also
will sh are another $275,000
grant with the Bureau of
Employment Services to train
GO unemployed persons to drive
light, heavy and tractor-trailer
trucks.
Another grant for $250,000
will be given to the Depllrtment
of
Rehabilitation
and
Correction to train 225 inmates
in skilled trades to help them
re-en\er the job market when
released from prison.
The fourth grant, totaling
$500,000 will be given to the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources to subsidize work
experience to 144 unemployed,
under e m p 1 o y e.d
or
economica lly disadvantage
per sons in skills such as
forestry, park mliintenance,

GALLIPOLIS - " Sheep
farmers may ge t small
payments for wool under the
wool act for 1974 marketing, "
said J. Melvin Gilbert,
Chairman of The Gallia County
ASC Committee. "Prices for
this year's wool will average
between 60 and 65 cents per
pound - below the 72 cent
incentive price ."
· Fa rm prices of shorn wool
now run below last year's
average 82 cents per pound ;
however, this year 's price
stands substantially above the
depressed levels of receni'
years.
The 1974 price drop reflects a
decline In wool demand. Mill
use of raw wool has declined
sharply because of increased
competition from mann\ade
fibers and because of a. general
downturn in mill activity. Mill
us e of apparel wool may
decline to 8Q.85 million pounds,
scoured basis, this year •.
Manmade fibers also made.
sharp inroads into carpet wool
last year.

11 3 l tp

7 p .m .

at

I

C A l·~ PE 1 S a l ri q hP M e~k e l h C ! I'
a b ea ut ifU l Sig ht With Bl ue
Lu s tr C'
Rent
e l ec tr i C
sh am pooer \ 1. Ba ker fu r
nilur f' Comp any
11 I ) ! C
II 3 H e

ll t-_\ 11{00(\A CO !I clqe •11 ~OC k
~ . 1J r 1 nq s, idea l . l o r ;;c~po i
pt•r s 6nn el ,
a dult s
o nl y .
r de r c nce d esi r ed . Phon e 99 2
.'l !i9

Lost

FLAT Sa x op h on e ,
rea son ab le . 99 2 76 8 ~

PUR E BRED Hc r c tor cl !;l ul l , 2
yr S Qld , Fc r~J u S on l r&lt;:~c tor
Conl a&lt;;: t Joh n Shee ts, L &lt;J SS1 e's
Cil r r yo u t , - 3 mi l es so uth of
Mi d d le por t on Rt : 7
10 J I l i p

10 79 26t c

s

Yard Sales

Contains 4 .Essentlal Vitamins
and 2 Electrolytes
The milk replacer formula saves you time and
labor because it feeds as It treats. With CALF :
SCOUR BUCKET MIX, you avoid the s.tr.ess of
injection. drenching and balling .
·

K N A PP

s ho es , soc k s an d
11 s ty l es on sale
Phon e 997 53/ 4.
10 1 tt c
i &lt;~ c k e l s,

L OCUST pos t s, 27 R em ing ton
an d 1 n ac r e l ot . Phone 742
) 6 56

10 18 :.l 6tp

Vine Street

·,.

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

--- ---------·

9 1 Slogan
20 Ri\l er in
92 Snake
Bel gium
93 Ext ras
23 Se parate
94 N ot e of sca le
25 Woo dy plant
96 Lam b' s pen
27 Soap plant s
name
28 Body of wa ter
97 Tan ered clo 1h s
31 Ma rsh es
100 S ymbol for
33 Bevera g es
tellurium
36 Boo ty
102 Cash d raw er
38 Ll'! t it stand
105 A pplaud
40 Barracuda
146 Stavs
109 Platf orm
4 1 Mov es from
148 Co mpe titor s
112 Seed coa tin g
side to side
150 In str ucto r
113 Twis1ed
152 M ak(!s in to taw 43 Clea ning
114 U se
subs tance
153 Lure
154 On e of Coium · 45 God of mot nl y 116 Hand le
118 Pro foun d
vou1h
bus's ships
120 Warm
46
Teem
156 Strike ou t
47 Food f ish
12 1 Hu rries
157 Erases
49 Rive r 1n Aff ic a 122 Enrages
1p rintin g 1
51 In vento r of
123 l ai rs
158 Heraldry ·
t elegrap h
125 M ade lov e
grafted
52
Qu
adr
upeds
l slang I
159 Pro jec tin g tooth
S3
Ernrnets
126
Ca lm
160 M ine ve ins
54 Bird 's bill
127 Wheel t rac ks
129 Stupid pe rson
56 Rid tculous
DOWN
13 1 Cylindr ical
59 lm pro¥ 1ng
60 Orig inate
132 Peeled
1 Cut
61 Tolled
133 Writ ing
2 Thoroughfa re
B3
A
ut
ho
rs
1m plemen1 s
3 Liquo r
107 Parent t c ol l o~ . t
42 God of love
Take one 's pa rt1 34 Growing ou t o f
65
flavo
ring
44 Impose as neces · 108 Wife of Gera1nt
136 Spikenard ,
67 Obt ain
4 Gra1n
. sary result ·
110 Excavat e
69
Penod
of
138 Bib lical
5
Spanish
f
or
111 Di st ance mea sure
46 Imitated
t
ime
!ab
br
.l
weeds
..
t
hree
"
47 Prohibits
!abbr .l
140 Humoris-t s
70 ~ pa nned
6
Paid
no
t
ic
e
Anon
11
2
Word
of
sorr
ow
48
72 Group of th ree 14 1 Landed
7 Vehicle
50 A month
113 Nip
74 Prefi x: two
142 Ireland
Roma n r oad
52 Ugly , oldwomen115 Sungod
76
Faroe
Islands
144 Irishman·
9 Place
53 Hebrew month 117 M e r~y
.
W
hirlw
ind
147 H igh ca rd
10 T est
119 ConJun ction
55 Caudal
77
M assive
148 Sha llow ves sel
11
M
e
r~t
appendage
120 Server
149 Na hoor sheep
12 Beast of bu rden 79 Number
57 Preposition
121 Pra Jse
Devoured
15 1 Int ernationa l
83
13 Ouiet 1
58 Chimney carb on 124 Fal se hoo ds
85
Play
over
again
Labo r
14 M el al s1rand
126 Ve sse l
59 Foreman
W
ea
ry
Organi.la l ion
86
15 Wort hless
60 Credit l abbr .)
127 Stun1ed perso n
Cook
labbr 1
87
leaving
62 Recent
128 W ent by
88
Final
153 Ex i st
16
Fores
t
wa
rdens
64 In eddition
130 Cla n
17 2)pir1ted ho rses 89 A s1a te tabbr .I 155 Symbol l or
132 Sk in of fr~n
66 Football
90 s'tern
silve r
18
c;; uu-t,lo-. e birds
position labbr .) 133 Football ki c k

Model WLW 5900P

18-lb. Washer with
Family-Size Dryer with
RAPID WASH, HANDWASH® PERMANENT PRESS and
and AUTOMATIC
SOAK
SPECIAL POLY-~NIT Settings
'
.
.
AND WASH Features
• Six Drying Selectlont, Including ·two

*Est.. max.

.

135 Later
137 B ard
139 Timetabl e
abbrevia ti on
140 Dampens
141 Po si ti ve pole
143 Waste 01eta l
14 5 An g lo -Saxon
m one y

.

• "Rapid Waah "- doe• a complete wa~h­
riM•~In cycle In 10 mlnulet.
•
• Handwash«~ - uses tepa rate agitator, with
..,.clal cycle, water level, and speed
..telnga to wath delicate ltema thoroughly.

e

AutOmatic Soak and Waah-solikt up to 10
houra, proceeds. automatically through

· complete waah-rlnee-epln.
.
• Five Wash Speeds-Five Water Tempera.

turH-In,llnlte W81er Levels.

e

EKira Rinse and Extra Walh Option•.

uttlnga.
,
•
• Audible, .-djuatable end-of-cycle algnal •.
•

filter.

Equip~ent

Co.

Ph. 992-2176
.
P()meroy, Ohio
.

.

.•

r

.. •

·

• nmed or .Autoii'UIIic Cycles.
• Separate . Start Button.

(Free of Steel)'

F R EE HOM E ES TIMAT ES

n~

SU PER IO R
VI N YL PROD UCT S

per pound

Ca ll Co llec t 1 - 592 - 554&lt;~
Athens, Ohio

The Rosenberg Co.

A F EW n ew ban d in strumen ts
Con t ac t Ren ee Stone 99? 7567 .
9-4 li e

79 Depot Street

Athens, Ohio

221 N. Columbus Road
Athens, Ohio 45701
Ph. : 593-6722

AUCTION

The following will be sold at the OLD MARY
PULL! NS Farm which is located on Horse
Cave Rd . 1 mile N. of Racine Bashan Rd.
Follow State Route 124 one mile east of Racine
and go N. on Racine- Bas han Rd. to Horse
Cave Rd . or approach by following State Rt. 7
to Forest Run Road and turn East and proceed
7 miles (Watch for Sale Arrows).

SATURDAY, NOV. 9, 1974 • 9:30 A.M.
Wa sh stand, pie sale, rush bottom cha irs.
chillarobe, cane chairs, child 's roll top desk .&amp;
rocker . glassware, Including Cambridge,
Carnival , Rub y, Pressed and Depression ,
butter mold, berry set , Popeye t in bank, iron
donkey, train &amp; track. Country Dr . horse &amp;
buggy , black doll (miniature) , picture frames,
Avon bottles. 6 Currier &amp; lves pr ints, coffee &amp;
meat grinders. lard press, butchr ing tools,
sausage stutter, powder horn, gun cabinet,
Bur nside sto ve, stone jar s, water pump. S. &amp;
P. Shakers, fuel oil healer. oak buffet . oak file
cabinet, drop leaf desk &amp; cabinet •. meta_l and
wood beds,-4ewing machines. mus1 c cab1nets.
cook stove wood &amp; coal . Magnavox rad io. T. V.
and miscellaneous. Man y items not listed.
TERMS: CASH
Lunch Served
Not Responsible for Accidents
Bradford Auction Co .
C. c; Bradford. Auct .- A. C. Bradford , Mgr.
Paul

Pullin s,

Briggs

3384

• Porcelain-Enamel Top and Drum.

PUBLIC SALE
!)f

the Est at e o( Ciitford Earwood,

To antl~u e guns, Col. Le M at lQ.shot revolve r , 1832, R .
.
John son m u zzle -loa ding pistol 1776 mode l :

'.

2 trunks, t elephon e, c rocks, ja r s a nd j ugs, s't eelyards ,
l ard press, ~ k raut cutter s. m il k cans, Ol&lt; yoke, qu ilt ing
f raryt es, cobbl er' s be nch and last , Fo r 1' Nec ess ity.
Miscella neous a ntiques.
One large lot caq:.enter and pl um bing · t ool s, ex t remel y good quality and condit ion, pipe dies, large
w r enches, J vi ses. 8 ft . work be11ch with wooden v ise,
grinder w ith rp otor , drills, lttt rg e lot ha nd tools ~ 2 soc ket

., •

sets, hydraulic jack, ste p ladder; exte nsion la dder, log

•

chains, wov en wi re stretc hers, t ool boxes, 2 furniture
clamps, many other It em s .
Attention Antique Car BuHs: 1946 eulck 2-door sedan ,
gar den t r actor , power mowe r .

•

Note: Car and guns will be sold at 12 : 00 NQ9n.

.POMEROY.LANDMARK

. '
.

...........

aii'IUL-

JOHN E. HALLIDA Y., EX EC .
ESTATE OF CLIFFORD EARWOOD, DE C' D.
John McNei ll , Aucti onerr
, Bibtiee, Rose &amp; - ShlrU.~ , C14tr~•·

Servil)ll Meigs, GaUia &amp; .Mason Counties .
JACK W. CARSEY, N\GR.
_ , !Ht 992-2181

G-I I ' 01111 '

Sale will be held of Gallia County Fa irgrounds.
Lunch will be served by Gallipolis Bond Booster Club '
.

.

.

ll!~lrltMnf'fl l" r n1t , ..1 F••l!tu~ · Svnrtn·otlt• lilt

~.

! ...

1

·'

Rd .,

l amps. c ha irs , br eak fast set wi th 4 chair s, ref r igerat or ,
el ectr ic st Ove, bottl ed gas stov e, q u ilts and comforter s,
r ock er s, 2 be ds, Dexter washer .

A a.hlen Corn Crib keeps Its high resale vaiLJII yMr after yMr ... because It's built for a
ltf.tlme of rugged service. Every Bohlen Crib Is Hot-Dip Galvanlud alter welding ...
compl.telycovered all surfaces -(lncluctlng weld spots) with upto6 times the amount of zinc
foundcr~ ordln•ry cribs. The Behlen Crib Is made of No. 2-gaUve B•r Mesh Steel lover 1~ ' ' In
'dl•metor). Wulher-llghl "Sleep Pilch" roof ftltsfo tho pNk wlthciul hand le\lellng. Extra
wide crib doors. In size!! from 679 to 2155 bushelS.
·
"

.

I
SCRAP AWMINUM I
Holiday Sp ecial!

6 r oom s of household f urnishi ngs, di ning ta b le· and eight
cha i rs. t w o 4-p iece be'droom sui tes. iron bed, dresse r s,
antique sew ing m ach ine , c hest, wash st a nd , end t a bles,

Removable, •••r-Io-clean, up-front lint

lHE ~ALITY lUNG OF OORN ~IBS
••

Prod uc ed frQm a specia l
vinyl co mpo un d ma de by B .
F . Goodr ic h an d M onsa nto . 5
li m es thi c k er than m eta l
si d ing . Wi ll no t d en t , chi p ,
cr ack, peel , r ot , ru st or
ch alk .

c :oc k s, ic c boxes. b r ass bed s.
dishes, d esk s, o r com p lett·
h o u seho ld s . Wr ite M . D
M ill er , R l . 4, Po meroy, Ohio ,
c all 992 -7760 .
5 13d fc

decea sed.

.

•

SOLI D
VIN YL SIDIN G

Tfle personal property

. Permanent Pr••• and Special Polr·Knlllt..

• Porcelain-enamel finish Inside and,. ouL

.

10

SATURDAY, NOV. 9 · 11:00 A. M.

e Automatic delergent, bleach and fabric
conditioner diapenaera. .

.

OL D F U R N I TURE , oa k l abres,

997 ~ .

134 Old !poe t . t

68 Sym bol fo r

rutheniu m
69 Possessive
1 Wooden shoe
pro nou n
6 Tart
70 Neckpiece
10 Afternoon
71 Fruit cake
parties
14 Most unplea11ant 73 Esculen t
75 Forc es a1 r
19 Place f or
through nose
keeping birds
77 Facial
21 Tropical fru ll
22 Imprudent
eitpression
23 Buccaneer
78 Garmen t
80 Simpleton
24 Most damp
8 1 Dutch 1own
26 Mends
Mate
8 2 Ripping
28
29 Suffhc form ing
84 Liquid m easure
adjectiVes
86 Tried
30 Slave
87 Tidier
32 Citiien of Rome 89 Doctrine
33 Uninterestin g
92 Moving
person
95 Ardent
98 Difficult
34 Army officer
l abbU
99 Vegetable
35 Fight between 10 1 Ent h usia sm
two
103 Tissue
37 Female ruffs
104 Worm
39 The sun
105 Hint
106 Football
40 D ispatched
position labbr. 1
41 Marries

Model DLB 2750P Electri c

-~

19 6t p

99 ?

Look up. Be looked up to. Air Force

a

•

mode l s o f mo bi l e hom es.
Phone ar ea c ode 6 14 423 -953 1
A· 13·1h:.

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER
ACROS S

------

CA ~ H· ·pa id l or a ll m akes an d

TABLE S &lt;~ n d ch ai r s. su it aht e
lor bar or r es taur,1 n t Phon e

S UNDAY , NO VE MB ER 3 . 1974

'

Meigs

1973 HARLEY D Avid son 350 SX
Moto r c y cl e, 1. 9DU n11 les, $650 .
Phone 985 )].11 between 8 il m .
and 5 p .m &lt;on (l ilS k tor Ra y .
10 296t p

Yes. Go t o school a nd buy
new wheels, t oo. You can
m a ke it happen in the Air
Force . It's great tra ining. The kind that will p ro v id e a great futur&amp; , .. and over 5340 and more a
month for wheels and go .p laces, do -t hi ngs act ion
wh ile yo u' re learn ing su ch h igh pa ying skills as
c o m puter t ech nicia n. ai rcra ft m ec hanic , account·
a nt electronic te chnicia n or one o f doze ns o f oth er
techn ica l o r business specia lties. Yo u' ll receive
some e Ktra benef it s, too like paid vacatio ns,
promot ions, free m ed ica l an d dental care. Get all
t h e d eta il s f ro m your Air Force recru iter today.

-------- ------

Ga·ilipolis, Ohio ·

au tos , com plete a nd
de l iver ed t o ou r ya rd We
p1 c K up Au to bod ie!. and b uy
all Kind &lt;&gt; ot s.crap m eta l s and
1ron . R ider' s Sa l vage , St . ~ t
t24 . Rl d , Pom eroy , Oh 10
Cull 992 5468 .
10 17 l f c

J UN K

·18] l

SEWI N G Ma c t1i nes, b ra nd n ew
Zig Zag in n ic e wal nut l ab te .
In or ig ,n al cartons . Ne ve r
Cl e i'lra n c e o n
'7 A
u sed
M od e l s
(O nly
a
f ew
av &lt;:~ ila bl e l.
'1.43 . 40 ca sh or
t er m s av a1la ble Ph on e 99 2
77 55 .
10 15 tt c

--------------

J. D. NORTH PRODUCE CO.

CAS H nn fo r j un k c ar s com
p l ete F ry C"s T r uck and Au to
Pur ls. Ru tlan d, Ohi O. ~hon Q
742 609 4.
10 16 201 G

P I C K IN G up a p ian o 10 you r
ar ea , l oo k ing to r a r ~sp on
sib l e pa r t y to tak.e ov er
pa yme nt s. Call coll ect Credit
Ma n age r 772 5669 or Writ e
Cre d i t Ma n ag er 260 E . Ma1n
St , Ch ill ico the . Oh io ·1560 1.
10 22 ti c

--------·-------- -

wildlife and reclamation.
The money In the fund is
made up of 4 per cent of all the
federal monies coming into
Ohio from the Comprehensive
Employment and Training Act
of 1973.

See this big producing utility tractor . . .
drive it!

m

F I R E WOOD fo r sal e Phon e
99 7 33 63 or 99 2 3:1 12
i O 24 17t p

---------------

PLUS
.CALF SCOUR BUCKET MIX

30 p

10 30 .J i q

---------- - ---

C ROCE R Y bu si ness l or ~ a I.e.
Bui l d inq t or sa te or lc .:tse
Phon e 77 3 56 1R f rorn 8 30 P . m
to 10 p .m for &lt;op po i nlm ent .
3 20 li e
r tR E WO O D fo r sal e Ca l l 742

M A PLE c oc kt ail a nd end ta bl es
by Hasse tt , swi v el r oc ke r. a ll
l 1k e new Cul l 992 7090 aft er

- -- ------------

Wanted To Buy

11 I 6t p

1951 C H EV Y p an s
NEW
L a k cowood t ra c t io n ba r s, h i
1a ck c r ai r Sl;oc k s, hoo k er
head er s, w i t h 3"' co ll ec tor s for
sn1a ll b loc k
Ca ll 992 ) 496
,; tt cr 6 p m B ES T O FFE R .
10 17 ti c

For Rent

In addition to oxytetracycline and neomycin, -.
CALF SCOUR BUCKET MIX contains - 20
Pet. Pure Milk Protein for palatability.

v ery

M I X E D HE RE F ORD ve-a l c al f
Ph one !i •IJ 'lJ Y.! a lt er A 30 p m
10 3 t Jt c

Pets For Sale

.More effective against calf scours .

GIRL TO PUNT
SAN FRANCISCO (U.PI ) A 10-year-nld Hawaii girl will
be among 12 youngsters
competing In the area Punt,
Pass and Kick competition
during half-time of nex t
Monday night's 49ers-Rams
game. Cynthia Stenhouwer, a
104-pounder whose dad played
at Colorado State in the 1950s,
won the compe tition at
Honolulu to become the first
girl ever to win a district
competition.

n igh t ,

EXPEI&lt;IE N CE D b.u w.1 1lrt.·..,~
Inq ui r e a t Ki n q 's /\rp-1!-. .
Sat urd ay an d M ond a y , 7 to .1
I I 3 Jtp

E

For Sale

fGr r.ent

For Sale

For Sale
GI-/ 1\ VF 1• • &lt;;,1 n rL M a&lt;;o n sand·,
l lnl"·, ton c . P 1t Run tJ y l hc ton .
Deli v t r ed Ph one 4&lt;16 l l.t2
10 18 li e

547 ) .
A NY th anks to th e bus iness
HO W to earn up to $200 W('Ck l y
p eople of Ch este r and t he m en
a ddr essi n g , stuffin g . maili ng
10 3 tfc
an d w om en of th e Chester - ·
T RA IL ER ,space on privat e lot , 75,000 BTU q &lt;~ !'i
e n vel op es . Se nd 75 c and
Pho ne 7.\'J 18 ·17
Vol : F.i r e Dept . and A u x . for
s tamp ed AddrC' SSC' d envelop ('
J mil ns 1r 9m Po m e r oy . P.hone
I I I Jtc
to
AC
L
E
NT
E
R
P
RI
SES
.
BOX
Jt.l
n.n
the ntc.e H allow een party for WA P
SE L L
B U Y Flea
our childr en . ,
::.
.
11 3 31C
49 . T ROY , IL L 61'294
11 3 li p Mark et.
Sp r 1n g
Av e nu e ,
11 3 7tp
M OD ERN wa l nut s tereo rud io
- -·,-·- ---· - - - - ------Po m eroy , Ohi o Saturd ay and
TWO 4 r oom and ba th a pt s. in
c om b ina t ion , 8 tr a c k t.;p c,
Sunda y . AUC TI ON SUND A Y ,
M i ddl eport . For info .-m ation .
am f m r Adio , 4 spea k er 5oun d
~ 00 CO N SIG NME N T , IS P et
ca ll 992 · 2550 or 742·655 1.
sys t em . Ba l an ce $1 09 .37 or
10 17 li e
OOTif" G M a tch . Ra c ine Gun
·
7-3-tfc
easy term s. Ca ll 992 3961
Sund·ay . Nov . 3, 1 p m
10 ] 0 I l L
10 -J0 .4tc POMEROY
Sacred
H ea rl
COUN T R Y M obile Ho m e P ark ,
Ch ur c h Fall Festiva l Bazaar
RE DU CTION ol grb w n A KC toy
R t . 33. ten mil es nor th . of V ACU U M CL EA N ER S E lec lro
··;;u;;; I a t F r ed d ie Moore' s, w i ll be Thur sday , Nov . 7, 1974 .
poodl es , SSO each, pups 565,
P o m e roy. L arge tots w1th
H ygien e New Demonstr a l or s
•r
sout h of M idd leport .
D10 ners ~- Cr eamed ba k ed
Si am ese ki tt ens , SI S. Ph on e I
c on crete patios , sid ew alks ,
ha s all c l ea nin g att ac hm ent s
S•tuo·a • y an d Sunday , 10 ti ll 6
c h ic ke n ·an d ham , ga m es an d
256 62A7
~·unn e r s
and
off
s tr eet
p lu s th l'! new El ec tro Sud s l or
f an cy s tan ds , dinn er s tarts
parking . Al so. spaces fo r
10 1 26t c
s hampooi n g c ar p et . On ly
II . 1 21c
4: 30pm . Ad ults, S3, child re n
sm a ll trailer s. Phon e 99 2·7479.
S27 .50
cash
or
l er m s
S1. 50. .
,----,----------7·21.tf c
ava il Ab le . Phon e 992 77 55
IRI SH SETTER P U P S, AKC .
ION and Ru mmage Sal e,
10-30 Sic
Call 7&lt;12 -5909 aft er 5 : 30.
10 J O tt c
9, 11 a .m . a t l he Ra c ine
]Q . J1.3tp
2 BED R OO M d ou b l e w i de
Par k . Sponsored b y
N EED L E
SEW I N G
-- ------ ---- ~- -- ·--- m ob i l e hom e In Syr ac use . No TW IN
C it y
Shr i ne C l ub .
M AC HIN E S 1974 Mod e l 1n
ch i l d r e n or p e ts. d epo sit
AKC Co ll 1e pup pi es, phon e .985
wa l nut stan d A ll fea l urc s
3809 .
r e quired . Ph on e 992-244 1 after
l~.~~:~;~
~~~d~i~s-ebr ing
sol d on con . RE O I RIS H SE TT E R mal e dog ,
,~
what YOU
bui lt in to make fan c y d cs 1g ns
11 -1-3t c
6 p .m .
1
y
r
old
w
ea
ring
no
coll
ar
.
or ca ll 949-249 1.
and do s tr etc h se wi nq A l so
10 79 H e
An swerS to t he name of
AU nobles are
button ho l es , b l ind hem s. et c
" Sh awn " . Ca ll 667 -6263 aff E: r 6
b r in g an it em to
S43 JS
c a s ll
or
t er rn s
3 BEDROO M trail er and 2
p
m
.,
d
ur
ing
t
he
da
y
ca
ll
667
invited to l ak e
ava il ab le . Ph one 99 / nss
bed r o 9 m apt .; 1 child onl y in
3842
an yth in g yo u wa nt
10 JO t f c
eac h . Con ta c t John Sh ee t S: at
J0.31-3t c J A ND 4 ROOM f u rni shed and
un ch ser ved by
unfu r n ish ed
a p a r t m ent s .
L ass ie's Ca rr you t, 3 mil es
Shriners w"iv es . Co m e enjoy
Phon e 992-543 4.
sout h of Middl e port on R f. 7· A NT I QUE dut c h sc r ub tab l e,
at
th e
P o m eroy
th e day , Not respo n si bl e f or L OST
antiq ue tr un k , o ld woo l r uq ,
4-12-tfc
.
10 ·31 3t p
E l e m ent ary H obo P a rt y , a
accidents .
co ff ee tab le, c ran e bo ttom
blon
d
e
w
ig
,
f
inde
r
p
lease
ca
ll
11-l -7t c
cha ir . Ca ll a lt er 5 p m , 99 7
PRIV A T E meeting room fo r
992 2076 .
T
RA
ILE
R,
2
bed
room
s
,
A
dults
5397 , or Q97 -3507.
any organization : phone 992o nl y . Phon e 992 -3324.
10 -30 3t p
397'5 .
II 3 Il l=
TING M A T C H , Cor n . --------- - - - - - -10 -I S tf c
3-ll
·tfc
"i&lt;ollow Gun Clu b, tu rn firs t M AL E r edbon e coonhound los t .- - - -- - -- - - -- -- E F L AT Sa x. ¥e r y r c.Jsonabl e.
2
a'~ ter Mi les Ce m et ery,
BE DR OO M
tr a i le r
in
3 F URNI SH E D roo ms on Eas t
Phon e 997 7685 .
in R ut l and
Har ri sonv ill e
utland . Fa ctory c h o.ked
Syracuse
,
cl
ose
to
schoo
l
.
No
M ain St . Phon e 992 -2381.
11 I 6t p
ar ea . R ewar d a lter ed . Phone
guns onl y . Sunday , Nov . 3, I p .
chi ldr en o r pets
Depo s i t
10 -J1.Jt c
742-4447 or 742 -5329
m.
r eQuir ed . Phone 992 244 1 afte r O N E No . 10 New Id ea (.Ocn
11 ·3-Jtc
6 : 30 p .m .
10 -31-Jt c
pic ker. Ph on e 378 6?9 1
O NE second floor a partm ent
10 18 -tfc
I I J 21p
furni
shed
tw
o
bedroom
s
.
WILL NOT b e in m)' office at
Loc
at
e
d
on
Main
St.
.
in
' the Meig s Co unty H ea lth
ap a rt me nt. FIR EWOOO for sal e, cu i yo ur
Po m er oy . Off st r eet par k1ng F URN IS HED
Dept . in clu din g Oct. 30 GARAGE Sa le, Item s fr om
ut
iliti
es
furn
is
hed
, su i t a bl e
own size or p iece . Phon e 99 7
w ithin wa lking dis tance fr om
f a bri c shop g oing out of
through n oon , No\1 . 6 du e to
for
two
w
orking
m
en
.
o
r
57 17
b us iness d is t.-i c l , r ea sona bl e
b us iness . Nov . 4 throug h 9,
va c atio n . Signe d , Hil to n
r etir ed coupl e. L i ving ,r oom ,
II 3 1fc
re nt . ca n 992·3863 till J p .m . ;
1284 Powell St ., Mid d leport .
W~lf e .
kit c hen, show er an d b ath . On ·
99
2-584&lt;1
after
6
p
.m
.
Ra
in
o
r
sh
ine,
Sim
p
li
city
10-Jl .Jtp
m ain h ig h wa )' , Maso n , w. v a . O N E g ood Si n ge r E l ec 1r 1c
10·27 .7f c
p a tterns for 3Sc, a ll new and
P hone 773 ·51 47 .
sew ing ma chine , $5 5, No r ge
curr ent patt er ns of a ll Sizes.
10. 27 -tf c
dry er w ith h ook up . b.ox
OSCOT
K O S M E TI CS :
trim , button s, seam binding F URNI SHED apartment , S
el ect ri c S15 ; Mod ern l1 v 1ng
R e meinber Chr iS tma s i s
t h r ea d , f a br i cs and lot of
roQm s and bath with enclosed O N"E bedroom apartm ent , full y
room s'o ta a nd cha ir. SI S:
coming . We Have ma n y new
other m i sc . fabr i c it e m s .
bac k porc h , also furni shed
Ze n it h Bla ck and w h i te T .V .
furnistJ_ed .
Av ~ita b t e . i n
produ cts th a i wi ll rnake n ice
Cloth i ng ,
Ch ri s tm as
a p ar t m ent. 3 rooms and bat h ,
Mi d d l epo rt ,
n 1ce
n e 1g h
SI S, wo r ks ; 2 pl a tfo r m
gift s. Phone BR OW N ' S, 99 2:
d ecorat ion s, glasswa r e, and
fir st floor . Phone 992.2937 .
r ockers usab l e, \ ?0. pho ne
bor hood . No pet s. Phone 992
5113 .
m isc . furn i tur e.
992 7310.
3863 till 3 p .m .; a ft er 6 p .m .
1l -1·3t c
11 -3-tfc
11 · 1·3t c
II 3 ] t p
call 992 ·58&lt;1 4.
10 -27 71c
NDP A INTE O,
ha r dboa r d Y A RD SA LE , F r id a y , Sa t. and 1'2x 60 2 B E DR O OM mob i l e
3 PIECE Rose Sec t io na l. e )t
nursery anim al p.os t er s . M a k e
Sunday , Nov . I , 2, 3. New and
ho m e . Phon e 9&lt;19 ·24 61 .
celle nt cond i t ion . Phone 99 2
O
N
E
t
w
o
bedroo
m
apart
ment.
Ideal Ch r i stm as gi ft s. V a ri ety
used mer chand ise at Hobar t
10-29.6tc
7667
fully
furn
ished
,
ni
ce
ne
igh
of patter ns . Call 992 .5147 aft er
Sm a ll ey r esl den c: e. Chester ,
11 3 3tc
bOrh ood , p l ent y of off s t ree t
5 p .m .
Ohio .
par k ing . L oca t ed i n M i d
11-3-6t p
10 -Jl .3tc TR A I L E R spac:;-e, 2 .miles. fro m
Pomer oy, Rt. 143. Phone '99 2.
dleport . Ca ll 99 2.J863 till 3 FL OOR furn ace . 11ea t s A or 5
585 8.
rooms. $25. 7A7 Oli ver St ,
p .m . ; aft er 6 cal l 992 ·584 A.
Y
ard
Sci
tes
ka t e · A · W a y
ann.ou !"' ce d
Mid
dl e por t , OhiO , p hon e 997
J0
.
27
.tf
c
10-27
71c
Hallo wee n Parf\1 , F r1d a y , GARAGE Sale at R ay Young's,
7875
Success
Road
.
Ph
one
667
-3462
.
Oc1'. 25, Ra ces , pri zes, ba t.
11 3 3l p
11·3·61p 2 B EDR OOM trail er at Hyse ll ON E 2 bedroom unfurn ished
loons, lll \18i l abl e f or privat e
h ou se loca t ed on Fish er St .
R un . Phone 992 .3975 or 99 2partie$ , Monda y , T uesda y ,
Po m eroy . Reason abl e re-n t F 1R EWOO"D lor l irep la ce or
2571 .
Thursday , n ig ht s, Sa t . or Sun . P tA N 0 , mat tress and spr in gs,
s love . Cu t to leng t h . Phone
Ca ll 992 ·3863 tilt 3 p .m .: 992 ·
10
-27
·tfC
end tables , ring s, curta ins,
afternoon .
O pen
Wed .,
5844 a tt er 6 p .m .
992 7644 .
s,
b
ik
e,
o
dd
s
and
bed
spread
Friday , and Sat . 7 : 30 10 · 30.
11 .J.16t c
10-27 .7t c
4 ROOM furnish ed a pt . Cl ose to
Phone 985 -3929, 985 ·41&lt;11 . or
end s . No \1 . 4, 5 and 6 at 305
Powell
'
s
Sup
er
va
ru
.
ph
on
e
W ri ght St ., Pom eroy . ·
985 .9996.
992·3658 .
10·24 ·12t c
11 ·3· 2tp
10 -IJ .Ifc

WITH ANCHOR
CALf SCOUR BUCKET MIX

. SYRACUSE - Village .of
Syracuse voters are reminded
that funds derived from the
town's Current Expense levy
a re used t~ provide street
lighting.
A three-mill renewal of the
Current Expense levy will be
on the November 5 ballot. The
village of Syracuse currently
has 77 street lights.

Saturday

an d

Mason Aucti on , Horton St. in
Mason . W. v a . Cons ignm en ts
w ekome . Phone {3041 773·

AND SUPPLY NUTRITION AT THE SAME TIME

lighting fund

Help 'Wanted

A U C TI ON , . Thu rs d av

STOP CALF SCOURS

Levy produces

The other two winners from Ohio were Charles M. Martin,
area agent, anlinal industrv. Wooster, and Robert W. Cole,
county a gent, ag riculture, Napoleon.

A two-day

Notice

Consolidate your bills
.and lower your payn!ents ·

THREE AGENTS OF THE OHIO Cooperative Extension
Service were honored last week for professional achievements at
the annua l meeting of the National Associa tion of County
Agricultural Agents, held last week in Tucson, Arizona.
J ohn Un de rwood , Jackson Area Extension Agent ,
Agronomy. was named an achievement award wirmer .
John has been with Extension five years. He strved
both the Jackson and Belle Valley Extension areas, consisting of 19 counties. One of his outstanding contributions has
been promoting the use of no-tilla~e corn production . He has
worked with other agencies and commercial firms in setting up
on-farm field demonstrations, summer tours, and multi~ounty
No-Tillage Corn Clinics each winter; He has won wide support for
his efforts in improving crop production in southeastern Ohio.

Small payments
predicted for
WOO} producers

or.Fast Results Us~ The Classifieds

GALUPOUS
According
to figures released Saturday by .
;:V~
the Gallia County Extension
Service, a total of 182 steers
sold for $24,943.03; an av~rage
of $137.00 per head during the
Gallipolis Area Feeder Calf
MaJOr Improvements co~t money. And paying .them off
sale Thursday night.
one
by one at different places and r~tes .of 1nterest can !'e
The average weight was 463
inconvenient and increase your cost of credtt.
. .
pounds and the average per
Let
us
.
r
eview
your
credit
obligatiOii
s.
A
new,
long-term
hundred weight for the sieers
financing program tailored to lit your income can prov1de
was $29.62. In ·all there were
a
comfortable and efficient repayment schedule ... can
\hree prime animals, 21 high
make
your. debt easier to manage with just one place to
choice ; 101 choice ; 41 high
.
make payments. Your payments will
good animals, and 16 good
refl ect a competiti ve interest rata
animals.
with rio prepayment penalty
A total of 125 heifers sold for
228 Upper River Road
$13,173.32 an average of $100.39
P. O. Box 207, Gallipolis
per head.
·
Clyde B. Wall~er, Mgr.
The heifers were graded as
follows : high choice, 25;
choice, 59; high good, 21 and
good, 20.

POMERO Y - A two-day workshop for fa rm tax consultants
will be held in Chillicothe a t the Holiday Inn on November 20 and
21, according to William P . Smith , Extension area farm
management ageni. All area tax consultants are invited to
participate in the work shop which is to begin at 9 a.m.,
Noveinbe~ 20.
Workshop sessions will cover a wide range of topics dealing
with cha nges in Federal and Ohio income tax laws, reporting
procedures a nd other tax information applicable w filing farm
tax reports . Examples of timely tax problems will be worked out
and expla ined by tax authorities.
Social Security, estate taxes and changes in.the Ohio Workmen's Compensation law will be discussed during the workshop.
Anyone interested in attending the workshop should send
reservations and a fee of $13 per person to William P . Smith,
Area Extension Center, P. 0. Box 32, Jackson, Ohio 45640, prior
to November 11. The workshop will be limited to the ftrst 100 paid
reservations received.
The ta x workshop is sponsored by the Extension &amp;ervice in
cooi&gt;eration with the I11ternal Revenue Service, Ohio Department
of Taxation, Social Security Administration, and the Bureau of
Workmen 's Compensation,

Four grants
f~ taxing announced
::~~t; ~~I fa~~ ~~d coin~ for training

- The Sunday Times -Se ntinel, Sunday , Nov: 3. 1974

Steers bring
$137.05 each
at calf sale

.'

.I

. ..,..

,.

'.

' '·

~·

i

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'

'

·'

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.,

36 - The Sunday Time&gt;· Sentinel, Sunday . Nuv . 3, 1974
37 - The SUnday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, No": 3, 1974

,

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Real Estate For Sale

LINCOLN
HILL
Older 10-room frame, 4 bedroom
house, modern kitchen, formal dining
room, 2 fuil baths, new wiring and
plumbing, carpeted throughout 3
years old. Nice yard.

FOR APPOINTMENT
CALL 992-7684
------------NICE five room and bath one floor plan at 205 Spring Ave .,

i i;,T'""'" -

This new
10 -27 -tt c home Is ready for you. 3
bedrooms with closets, oak

-----------97
ACRES .
wooded

and trim , and kitchen, plus garage.
secluded . Ideal tor summer,
home , recreation , or camping Lot 100 by @ . Only $20,000.00,

.
within S miles of pro posed near T. P .
Ravens wood bridge . Call 614 RUTLAND Large
older
843-2256 .
home In Rutland, o4 bedrooms ,
11 -J Jtc

1

frame

house

Fl'almer

with

bath ,

Street , Middleport.

Pr iced reuonable . Phone 992 -

3896 after 5 p .m .

11 -3-Jtp

-------------SEVE N room , 3 bedroom , house

bath , garage, and barn. All for
only $12,000.00.
49 ACRES - On good gravel
road, water tap and old house
with garage.
l
LAUREL CLIFF - 6 rooms,
beth, electric heat, level lot
and garoge. Needs paint but
will sell for only S/500.00.
HUNTING LAND - Lots of.

With bath , complete modern
kitchen with bar. panelling ,
lots of cupboards and car pellng. gas hot water heat. young timber (90 Acres)
Full basement, priced and
seen by appointment. Call 992 - maybe, gas well for heaf, arid
2020.
old house.
BUY A HOME AND SAVE
YOUR MONEY. PAYMENTS
8U ILO lNG 'lot, 80ft. frOntage x WILL SOON PAY FOR YOUR
165ft . The second lot on lett on
Riverview Drive , Lincoln ESTATE.
Hill . Pom eroy , Oh io. If In terested , call 992 -3230 alter 5
p.m .
""'
10-17-ffc

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

____ ________

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

-1971------------BUICK Estate wagon ,

3
seats, ps .. pb ., air conditioning , new radial tires .
Phone 992-7625.
11 -1-3tc

-------------1969 FORO Galitxle 302 engine ,
good gas mileage , extra
condition . Phone C1) 667 -3685
after 5 p .m. or call 9ti5-JIIJ6.
ll -1-6tc

-------------1973 OLOS Cutlass · s. chestnut

;)

•""

brown In color, like new lnsld.e
and out , 350 engine with air
conditioning, power brakes,
power steering and automatic
transmission . 2~.000 actual
miles . .c new Goodyear fires
and original sports wheels .
Call 992 -3914 after s p .m .
11 -1-lfp
1963 MERCURY - Comef, 6
cyl . S300. Good condition .
Phone 992 -7663.

--------------

------------1968 BUICK Sky lark Special, 2

dr . hardtop , very clear . $150.
Call 742-4831.
10-29-6tc
1974
PLYMOUTH Satellite
Sebring , excellent condition
for S3,100. Phone 992-3410.
I0-29-6tc
-MiJST' ~e lL 1972 Vega gas saver
· wagon , -4 speed am . S1 ,875.
Phone 992-1&amp;05 .
10-27 -7805.
I0 -27-6tc

--------------

- -------------

••

i

I•

----------1911 M'ONTE cal-t o, A.C ., phone
\. 992-5611.

10-30-Jtc
------------1969 CHEVROLET Capl-ice ,
saoo, ex. cond ition. p.b ., p .s.
Phone 992-7876 after 6 p. m.
10-30-61p

66 CHEV .ROLET 1!~ ton pickup ~
• --------------Clarence Cooper, Portland.
~

•

! -------------10-30·3tp

i

· Wanted To Buy
SMALL station wagon wfth
good gas mileage _ Phone 992-

••=
10-30-tfc
•I -------------5186 .

i

=
'-

Mobile
Homes For Sale.
..
...,...

,. ~

f970 VAL 1,1\Nt' 65x 12. J~bedro0rri .
fully clir,:teted, LP gas heat .
Phone 992-1'751 ,
8-25-tfc

i ------------•=•..

f

~

BRING YOUR
UNHUUED

~-

-BLACK
WALNUTS

•.

.To Our Mechanical
'
HUU£R-

I

~

I

!•

NOW ·

Commercial-Residential
Construction &amp; Remodel

REALTY

MAIN
. POMERQY...

o. ·.

RUTLAND- Close In- o45
acres. fenced, stocked pond,
minerals, 12 acres timber, 10
acres tillable. JUST Sll,OOO.
MIDDLE PORT - Business
room wllh ·lovely 3 B. R.
apa rfment over. H. W. floors
· carpeted. Dining room .
Central
H.W.
heat .
$20,000.00.
POMEROY-I slory frame,
3 B.R .• bath, lots of kitchen
cabinets, paneling, tile, lots
of ground. $7 .900.00.
MANY
OTHER
PROPERTIES, CALL 'FOR
YOUR NEEDS TODAY.
992-2259 or 992-2568

All Mechanical Work
Open Mon.· sat.
8 A.M.- 6 P.M.

D&amp;D

Anown &amp;
R ellable !';ervice

PHONE
, 949-3832 or 843·2667
I All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING
From a shelf to a house.
Painting, siding, roofing,
paper hanging, kitchen
cabinets, etc.

SEE US FOR YOUR
UPHOLSTERING NEEDS
FREE ESTIMATE
Pickup and Delivery

f

All Small Appliances
lawn MoweiS
Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

EX PER IEN CEO auto body
man needed . Conta ct Buck
Buchana n . 675 -3370, Ma so n
County Motor Co . Chev rol et
and · Old smobi le in Pt .
Pl easa nt, W. Va .
254-12
--------------- - - NEAT eager young man for
por ter in Holzer Clin ic . Apply
in person at Clini c Ad min istra tion. second fl oor .
25 9·3

---- ----------

Does
your
home
require any of these
services?

992-5162
Syracuse, Ohio

!

Ai.L-'NEATHER

I

..
,................. "lWt
THE DEPENI»"' E.

OONlRACilNG.00.

.

GREAT PAINT VALUES AT
ALL -WEATHER
HARD ·
WARE .
On Sale Now qual ity Devoe
Bright White Latex House
Paint in 2 gallon cans. Only
16 .49 per gallon.
Brand name Roof Paint, 10
pet. off while they last .
Take advantage of these
gre'at buy s while they are
still in stock .
ALL-WEATHER
HARDWARE
337 North Second Ave·.
Middleport, Ohio
992 -2550
I

•.,.... .... .
~

•.I.,... •f ._ ~ --- · lioOOfMO
hod AV

IIUOII ~ ii'Oft.

0

GHEEN'S PAINnNG
If &gt;O. Call us Now for
Free Estimate .

a

949-3295
Racine, 0.

Interior &amp;

REMODELING?

YARD Sa le at Melvin Lltlle
re sidence . Cheshire , Ohio .
Nov . 2 and 3.
259 _2
-------------DE~NEY' S GARAGE SALE .
B1dwe11 - Rodney Roacf in
Bidwell. Nov . 4th thru 71h . 9 til
6 . Large se lecti on of new an d
used item s.
260 -3
TWO -WAY Rad ios Sa les &amp;Se r~ice . New &amp; used CB's ,
PO I1ce monitors , antennas ,
etc . Bob 's Citizen Band Radio
Equip., Georges · Creek Rd ..
Gall ipoli s, Oh io 446 -451 7.
212 -lf
- s AiHlEN'T aRos. coN sTAL L types of carpenter work .
conc re te fi nishing , paint ing ,
free esti mates , reasonable
rates . Ph . 367-7239or 367 -7777 ,
224 -78

-------------

Exterior Work

Keep out the cold and cut the cost of heating!
Dress your home up warm for cold days
ahea.d • . Siding: Insulates, adds beauty, is
durable, adds value, is colorful. Siding can be
iJJstalled anytime. Ask us about SoHit, Fascia,
Gutters and Downspouts,. too.
FREE ESTIMATE

MORNING
HUNTINGTON
PAPER
Delivered to your home
before 6:30.a.m. Upper Rt. 7
to Pomeroy inclusive, New
Haven to Pt. Pleasant. Call
Gallipolis 446·7911 .

ji92-255:§]

,,. N.

VOTE for Ro nald H. James tor
State Rep r esen ta t ive 92 nd
Dis tri ct.
207 -tf

FREE ESTIMATE
Fully Insured

SECRETARY
Position available for
secretary with typing,
shorthand, some accounting.
Salary
comensurate
with
·
S
d
ex.perlence.
en
resume to P . O. Box

Strout Realty

-------------

owner.

258·5

1971 P~mouth Satellite......................... '1895

Beauty Salon. Sliver Bridge
Plaza . Ca ll 4-46-335.3.
....._
258·4
BABY S ITTER
Who
likes
children to care for 2 year old
boy , 8-S Mon .- Fri. Wr ite care
of Gallipolis Daily Tr ibune ,
Box 348.
258 -3

Sebring 2 dr. hardtop, JIB V-8 engine, power steering, a uto.
trans. Very low mileage .

1970 CHEV. MONTE CARLO ........ s1995

1974 Ford Pinto 4 cyL ........................ '2695

------------- GREAT .
COUNTaY

Far sale or will trade for
mobile home: 1970 Cougar,
351 auto ., red wjth black
vinyl top, p.s .• p.b., radio, air
cond., fac!ory 8 traclc, new
radial !ires, in excellen!
cond. Ph. after 5, u• -••n.

197i -CHRYSLER Newport
Wanted TO Buy
Custom 4 or., p .s. , p.b.; air
cond ., good cond .. 4 new tires
LIMESTONE for driveways .
Call 388-8666. ·
·
Car l Winters . ~hone 245 -5115.
258 -3
2~5 - tf
- - -- - - -- -- - -.
STA NDING timber . 388-8490. 1967 FIRE BI-RD C-onvert ibl e, 6
cyl. , exc . cond ., auto . S600.
254 -lf
Ph . 367-7704 .
·
25,6-6
STANDING t imber . 388-8490.
260-1
1972 MONTEGO M.&gt;.. , ll;:'fJ With
STANDING
timb e~.
-a ny
black vinyl top, afr P S
amount. top pr ice. Ca lf after
~ - B . , auto.-, new steel ' belied
7. 388-9906.
t1res, S28,0QO, extr;· sharp
260-6
S2,350.~h. &lt;46·3343. ·
.
- - -- -- - -- -----260-6
JU NK cars or' fun k ca r bodies --- ----- ~--:-- -::- .
and will p ick up old stoves, • 1969 s uN BEAM 34.000 m 1., 4
refrigerators , washers and
cyl. , good gas miluge . exC!-.
dryers . 388-8668.
cond . $1;50. 4-46-9627 .
256-6.
' . '
26J?·6

1970 Ford LTD 4 Dr. Hard Top................. .'1495

11969 Clev. Biscayne 4 DR...... J9951

Air cpndltloned, power steering, power brak~s, auto. trans.,
local owner. Like new finish .

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

-------------------------------- --------

---------- ----

-------- ------

SliRE0.92.1

COMP.l£TE

.- . .

·.

"' .•I • ....

,,

-· •., .1

··-

74·Cadillac Coupe DeVille

••

Charcoal grey with leather Interior, full power
equipment. AM-FM stereo, new steel radial
tires, climate control air conditioning.

Choice'7500

..

Cadillac. Oldsmobile
GMAC Financino Available

992-5342

Open Eves.

Pomeroy

Til6- Til 5 P.M. Sat.

" You'll Like dlrr Quality Way of Doing Business;,

e Low Cost Auto ' lrisu'rance-compare our rates.
elow Cost' Homeowner Polley.
eLow Cost HomeownerS Polley for Renters.
•FarlnO't\rr.ers Pollcy - -C.:.rr.r:!@t~ Protect ion In One Poli cy.
tA Modern Mobile Homeowner Polley.
e LOw Cost Fire Polley.
.
.
· e A ~pecial Multi-Peril Package Policy for Your Bus1~ess.

.'

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

••
~
*•
t

co1np,;ire our rates with your present
know we can save
money. ·

Leadingham Agency
1

Ph. 4467699
512 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio·

1973 atEVROLET
Custom Deluxe Pickup, 307
V-B, std. shift, radio, wheel
covers, w-s-w tires, baby
blue, low mileage, and as
sharp as a tack .

-

;...
•
••

1971 OLDS
Tornado, 2 dr. H. T., auto. ,
P.S., P.B., all power, a real
sharp machine and priced
for the bargain hunter.

1972 atEVROLET
Nova Coupe, 350 V-8, pow .
st., three on the floor,
factory shifter, radio,
black and sharp.

'1995

'2195

'3195
1970 BUICK

1973 DODGE

. Skylark, 2 dr. H. T., V-8,
auto., pow . st .• air, sharp.

'1395

'1695
1972 CHEVROLET
Caprice 2 Door H. T., low
mileage. loaded with extras. Very, very clean .

'2695

1973 QIEVROLET

D-1001h Ton Pickup, 318 v.
8, std. shift, local owner, 8'
bed.

Cheyenne Pickup, 350 V-8,
auto., P.B., P.S., deluxe
two tone , new rubber,
factory air. The sharpest In
the area.

'2695

•3395

1971 atEVROLET
Impala • door H.T., V-1,
auto., radio, low mileage.
No air, but very nlc.e .

'1695
1974 PLYMOUI}f
Ouster, 318, ·auto, P.S.,
radio, spacemaker pkg .•
little over 9,000 mi.

•2995

Sears

•

:•

••

••..

•
••""

CHRISTMAS.
••
•z 11 WISH BOOKS"
..
.,
~

-.-'---,-

'

'

we still have a few books on hand: If
you don't have one, stop by and ptck
one up.'
So you can take advantage
. of Sears' low prices .on
·· Christmas tqys '&amp; · gif·

'tidaas.
I

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·. ·
•

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·

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~

,._

...

·I

HON DA XR 75, good cond . Ph .
446 4116.
260 -1
MOTORC:VC LE '73 Hond.a XR ·
75 s moothe s t riding , best
look ing trail bike ever made,
not too sma ll for adult , not to
big for 10.12 yea r old . Exc.
cond . Call 4A6 .0161 even on
sa t.
_:
260·3

__ ____________

WOOD cui off saw . Ph 379-2166.
260·3
GORDON Setter male 7 mos.
old . Housebroken , exc .
pedigree and temperamerit.
446-4191.
260 -3
STEVEN S Shotgun 20 Gauge.
Call 379-2240 .
260·3
SMA LL gas heater . Ph . 446 1927 .
.
260 -3
1974 KAW Z! 900 C.C., 7,900
m ile5 , John:so11 Tra ilei- Park,
Lot 4, Eas tern p.ve. Between 9
and 12 p.m .
260"t-2 N·EW 25 Colt Auto . Con
seculi ve se rial No . S2SO. U8
Smith &amp; Wilson Police
SpeciaL nic kel plated , S125.
256 ·11 23.
260 -6

1939 CHEVROLET
Deluxe. 379-2546.

MT work .,.s suddenly required me to rolocale so must
sel the following tools, houHhold &amp; cofltcton Items. Go
1wo miles Nortto of JICkson, 0 . on now Rt. 124, then Eul1
milt on Pa1tenavllle Road.
SATURDAY NOV. 9TH ATlO:JO A.M.
Oek secretary-book case w-curved glass door ; walnut
vonlly 'd resser ; mahogany &amp; birds eye maple vanlly
dresser; 2 Seth Thomas mantel clocks; Big Ben clocks;
gold pocket watches: walnut lamp table; -wlcker rocker &amp;
·. chair: parlor table w-lorge claw &amp; ball feet ; 9fd oak
swl'flll desk chair; etek stralght ehalrs; GE stereo w ~ AM &amp;
"AM i mefol wardroba: rtcllo testing equipment; old oak
dresser : cherry lamp table w-paw loot; new carpet
6'6"x12~ &amp; 12'x8'10"; Roseville pottery; 2 Weller vases ;
Nl_, cups a saucers: Bavaria, Milk Gloss, Depression
gloss, service of 8 dishes &amp; many other _pes. of glau &amp;
dilna; milk can; Avon boHies; Beam, Ezra Broof&lt; and
. other bbllles &amp; lora; 2 'Sheraton' poHern gloss pitchers:
olllomps; oil lanterns, DT &amp; land K &amp; IT: Premier oak
walllelellhone; lr.., POls; old crocks &amp; lugs ; old Toledo
scale; Ofd lodae sword 38 cal. Smith &amp; Wesson revolver;
old ·50 Cal. ·rifle ; old 12 go . single &amp; ofd 12 go. While
Po-r w..,der ; garden IIIIer: wood planes : corn
sheller; wheat cradle-; wooden tool chest ; power saw,.
drills &amp; jig saw ; bench vice : hand saws ; r,lpe &amp; C:re-1
wrenches ; many carpenter tools; roll '4 ' plastic piper
oprox. 8' of 4" sloe! casing ; &amp; other Items too numerous to
advertise.

•

4

Master

30-JO LEVER action Winc hester
r_itle. Phone 446-4376.
259-3

AN OPEN LETTER TO NEW CAR CUSTOMERS
Dear Customer:
By now you have probably read or heard that 1975
car prices are up. Although this Is true, we believe there
are some facts you should consider that will assist you in
your new car purchase.
First, the 1975 Buicks &amp; Pontiacs come equipped with
High Energy Ignition along with a Catalytic Converter in
the exhaust system. These two features provide a 15 per
cent fuel savings along with . fewer required tune-ups.
·Since the · engine runs cleaner-- oil, oil filters, spark
plugs, etc. have a longer life. In total, we anticipate that
this could save a 1975 Buick or Pontiac owner as much as
$450.00 over 50,000 miles of driving.
Secondlv, we in our business, know that when new
car prices go liP• used car prices also go up, and since
there is a shortage of good used cars available to us, we
anticipate allowing more for trade-Ins. As a result, the
dollar difference for new car customers will pleasingly
surprise many and gratify everyone.
Buick and Pontiac have provided our dealership with
the best selection of quality automobiles that virtually fit
every customer in their motoring needs. They are
competitively priced and offer you the greatest value for
your dollar . .
We will be very pleased to have the opportunity of
showing you the 1975 Bulcks and Pontiacs in our
showroom today.
Looking forward to seeing you .

W. H. NELSON, PRESIDENT
SOMETHING TO BELIEVE IN

SMITH
NELSON
MOTORS,
INC.
soo E. M~in St.
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy, 0.
Dealership Hours ; Mon.- Fri. 8 a.m .· 7 p.m .-Saturdays 8 a .m. ' 5 p.m.

ForSaiP.

'~ 9 OLDS Della

2 dr . std . sh.ift ,
STARCRAFT
45S eng ine, 2'ba rrel . $795. Ph .
GIGANTIC SALE
245-9176 .
9 3 ON fOiddowns, .all. mode ls , free
25 .
heater ph.rs t'ligh est disco1,1nt ·
- In Tri -State. camp conley
Starcraft sates, Rt. 62 N. at
SELl:,~ 1 t.urnmun red bricks ,
Point Pleuant Behind Red
any amount , field fife . cement .
Car.pet II!Rblock·; Cement , mortar. Gal·
_ IIDolfJ Block Co., 122'12 Pine.
St .. 4&lt;6-2783.
1&lt;0·11

AUCTION
SERVIa
"SEU THE
AUCTIQN WAY" .

AOCI'IONEER ·
: ,

259·6

19" COLOR Curlis Mathis TV ,
Stereo, AM -F M comb, maple
cabinet. Good condition. 379- .
25-46.
259.6

JIMME SAY~E

.
CHARLES HAMMOND-OWNER
,·
jiM HALDANE
Complete Auction Strvlct

7033rdSirMt,W~vtrly,0.,9,7~.

chai n Sa w. Phone 379260-J

7 -ALUMINUM , comb . storm
windows sizes 28 7/e" by 61% "
to 30" b'V 62" . 1 storm door 31
)( 80. 379-25.6.
259-6

AUCTION

.'

~VJiR ,BRIDGE PLAZA

60lC12 2 BR mobile hom e. ni ce
256 -6816 .
260 -3
WELL kept carpets shOw the
r esulls of reg ular Blue Lustre
spol cleanin g. Rent electric
shampooe r
$ 1.
Central
· Supply
260 -6

2671.

luiiCit Served.
•

for Sale

!!!~!!!~~~~~~~===========:..-"-"Use e

See one of these courteous ' salesmen:
Pete Burris
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaugh

••
=

.

a

Wrl't es All Types of Insurance For
Your Auto, Home or Business
Wepresent
Lightning Rod Mutual
Insurance Company

Apollo yellow, brown vinyl top, matching
lnterl6r, full power equipment, Climate
Control air conditioning, T&amp; T wheel, Cruise
Control, AM-FM stereo &amp; tape, new w -s-w
tires •

•"

t

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. Til
Pomeroy, Ohi~.

992-2126

74 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

•
t
••
••
••

·cc,.,....Mon._,.

co.·

Leadingham Agency

••

ATHENS LIVESTOCK:SALES1INC.

·

:•

••

I

YOUR ·LOCAL COUNTY.
- AGENT
,.

"WE RUN A VERY SIMPLE BUSINESS"
We Sell &amp; Service Chevrolet Cars &amp; Trucks

POMEROY MOTOR

•

'1595

'2195

....

••"

'

•2295

.

••
•••
•

$1495

PAUL H. BAER

r

w

110 lb. Set Of .
,
. ~Bc!.:..r~Bel...... ·:"':"al.;. .lm_eta_l....:..:...·...:.·_· :....': .._..J ·

Country sedi!l n sta . wagon,
V-8, a uto ., pow . st., pow.
br ., radio, low mileage.

Gran Torino, -4 door, V-8,
auto., pow. st., fact . air,
radio, vinyl roof, w-s-w
tires . Ni ce as they come.

Models In Stock.

=
••=
•"•
•
•••
••
••

,,1,

Contact:

'

•

Oo

i:'Ei'o&amp;.M'isC: ..._. ,

'"'
-

"••

.

Gal. 500, 2 0... H. T., bucket
seats, v.e. auto .. pow. br .,
pow. st .. miles are a IIHte
high but a real baby doll.

Fury Ill 4 door sedan, V~e.
auto., pow . st .. vinyl roof,
fa c. alr, radio, baby blue wblack roof. ex tre mely
sharp .

Special Prices
On All New 74 Chevy

'
,'

•
••

--7'"- - ---:--------

NOVEMBER 11 - .8:00 P.M.
ATHENS uvESIOcK satFS INC.,
. ATHENSi OHIO
-CONSIGNORS &amp;BUYERS WElCOME

.." '

k

2 USED FREEZERS
·IN STOCK

1971 FORD

'2995

Sta. Wagon . Air con d., P.S., P.B., A. T., shows good care.

••

~

FEEDER CALF ·SALE ·

,,

;

·wMPQ.FM

1971 FORD

Cab &amp; chassis, 108" cab to axle, V-8, 350 engln~,
15,000 lb., 2 speed R. axle, good B25x20 tires, solid
cab.

1970 Chevrolet VB Brookwood ...................'l395

"=

$2495

1972 FORD

1970 QIEVROLET 2 TON

a.

Notice

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

I
I
I

:

- -------------

PUBLIC SALE

Local car, bucket seat, vinyl Interior. 4 s~
trans., 351 -V-B, radio, good tires. Real nice.

it-t--

---------------

BABY BED,

I
I
I

4 Dr. Sedan, small V-8, power steering, auto. trans.

, .2:.:58::.•...:G~a~l.:.:li!::po~l~is:.:..--.,._""
· _.J -~----- -------

1972 PLYMOUlH

11969 Ford Torino Cpe..............t951

1970' fqrd Torino......................................'1395

-=-=-

Sate llite 4 Door Custom.
318 V-8, low mileage, vinyl
rOof. 18,000 mile factory
warranty, low mileage.

•3995

J Spt . Cj..le ., red fin ish. blk . vinyl tor•. spot le5s tnlerior, 1
1 good. tires, radio , autom ·l lic lr_ans ., V-8. power I
I steerl nQ.
.
1

Grabber. 2 dr. Very low rolleage. Auto. trans . Extra nice.

.

o·oELL

I
I
I

Local 1· ow ner . gootl W-$·W ti res . delu)(€' in l. ft im,
wheel covers. rcld io. "cyl .. re,11 r!conomy wit h std.
tr a ns., blue fin ., nice .

Charger, vinyl roof, factory air, 31 8 V-8. many nice
edras . Balance of 18,000
mile
warranty,
low
mileage.

11968 Chevrolet Impala ............ '895 I

1971 Ford 6 cyt. Maverick ...................... 51995

--------------

- - ---- ---------=-

I
I
I

1970 COUGAR reo wllh blo ck
vinYl top , exc. cond . P.s .•
P .8 .. Fac . air,bullt -in8track.
New Radial Ti r es . Asking
st ,700 . cau 446 -4&lt;62 .
\
253 -lf

-- ------ -- - -

------- --------

I 70 Ford Maverick ............... ..S1295I

Monaco • dr . H.T., vinyl
rOQf, factory air, all the
nice extras yov would want
Including the balance of an
mile
factory
18,000
warranty ,
low.
low
mileage .

1974 PLYMOUTH

•4295

1

-- 3 dr. Runabout, almost like the day it was Sold . Very low
mileage . Opens In rear like sta. wagon .

--- ------------

------ - ----- - -

r-------------------RED HOT BUYS!
I

-4 Dr. Sedan, one careful local owner. Low mileage. Sharp.

Auto Sales

1974 DODGE

'4395

350 V -8, automatic, P. steering &amp; brak es, dark blut&gt;- finish.
blue interior, blue vinyl roof. factory air conditioned. like
new w -w tires, r-adio. Many other extras.

1972 Chevrolet Nova 6 cyl....................... 12195

- --------------

---------------

Employment Wanted

1972 VEGA GT........................ $1995

351 V-8eng lne, power ste-ering, power brakes. auto. trans. Local

- co N e

---------------

31.-J V a t" ng ln P, duforn1.1 tic TraP~ . ,
power steering, a 'r ccndi1ion,'&lt;L v1n yl h im . vi nyl top.
Autum gold li nior;.h, w-w tir"s !· Ia&gt; 'II'W, rddio .

-1 D..:~.or , !ot.:a! I owner '--d' .

Hat chba ck, low mile;~ge by 1 owner. new "!" w f ir~/,'·~~-;;
lerred lrorn new car, 4 speed lra 11s ., r."l d i O, gt L-.en .1 n1..h .
bla ck vi nyl inter ior, de luxe tri m.

_________ __

o-------------

1972 OOOGE DART CUSTOM ......s2495

1

. 1970 Ford Gal. 500 2 Dr. Sedan ................ 5995

______________

DODGE

'6195

.

lnfllllon fighter sale.

o.

&gt;EPTic

Door, orange finish, blk. vin yl inleritir , buc kt- t ~e~)f~;. I{'SS
than 5. 000 m iles &amp; J mfJ . old. Rad io, dE- I u~~:e bump • n ~

?

wtwn the seller is anxious to sell! Come get our dell ...... It is the
best anywhere. Run ... run ... run ... to 461 S. Third Street for our

--------------

1 2

Town &amp; Country, 9 pass.
sta. wagon , luggage rack,
factory air, all the fine
extras
including
the
balance of an 18,000 mile
warranty . Low mileage.

1974 OPEL M"NTA ................}2895

INFLATION FIGHTER SALE!

'

1974

SERVICE WHEN YOU BUY FROM

Why bUy a 74 when you can gain a year and save dePreclltion on
a 75? We're loaded with 1975 pickup trucks.· We're anxious to
sell! We desperately need good ued pickups. The time fa buy Is

"TIRED
-~-:--------~--,_;-OF :"
Dry Red, llchy SkinRed, Smelly
Hard Water992-7608
AAA
Driver 's
Education
/Then call us for a FREE
Classes will begin Nov . , 5,
Rt. 7 &amp; Union Ave.
Pome'r oy,
Tue s day. For further in /Water Analysis .
formation , call the AAA
C. BH:ADFOR.D, Auctioneer
PIANO tuning and r epair . /
RighfNowAt:
Office at 446,·0699 .
Complete Service
.....,
257 -4
Phone 9-49 -3821 or 949 -3161
_ Pho:~~a~les Scott , ~9 2;3; 1,~
CULLIGAN
Racine, Ohio
SW EEPER Repa ir ; Parts and ·
Critt Bradford
T;N~~-~~ .;;;,-;. .
WATER
Supplies . P ick up and
5-1-ttc
delivery . Dav is Vag.w..m
~~·
~~~sanilalion
.
9923954
or
CONDITIONING
7
Cleaner 17:;. m ile up Georges
FOR FREE estimates on
Creek Road . Ph . 446-0294.
alum lnum
repla cement
9-18-tfc
windows, Siding , storm doors
593-6366
75-tf
DOZER or back hoe wOrk . L_...:,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...J
and wlnd~w,s , Reiling . Phone
Phon e -446-398 1 or -446 1459.
Charl•s L1sle, Syracuse, Ohio .
~RUss·S - riLAS s ~ ERVtCE.'
Cerr
Jacob ,
Sales·
9-B-ttc- EXCAVATING , dozer , loader
Stor'!" Windows repaired .
v.
v.
Re presentative ,
backhoe
work
;
septic
Ple xrglass, auto . glass .
and
~ii:~~~EANS
cR' TE'
Johnson and Son. lnc .
tanks Installed ; dump trucks
mirrors , decorator &amp; cut to
deliver e d Monday through
-4-30-tfc
and lo -boys tor hire ; Will haul
size. 435 Sec . AVe ., across
Saturday and evenings
fill dirt, top sOli, limestone &amp;
from the P.O. in Gallipolis
Phone
446
-11-42.
·
·
g
a
1
c
Ph , 446 -763 2.
·
'AUTOMOBILE Insurance been ·
r· ve ; au Bob or Roger
cancelled?
Lost
your
6-13 -tfc
J~ffers , day ph,one 992 -7089;. ~--------.22:!,23!;.·7lJ!8·
operator 's license . Call 992.
n1ght P.hone 992 -3525 or 992RT. 143 - All elec. home, 3
w~l~ri
;~~~~tree~
end
5232
.
7428.
BR, carpeted, bath &amp; •;,,
Shrubbery, also Clea n out
6-15
-tfc
1
.2-11 -tfc
carport, 1 12 a'cres.
basements and at!ics. Phone
949-3221 or 742 -44-41.
CONCRETii 10 -l8 -26tc REAPY ·MIX
160 A. 3 mi. trom
del.tvered right to your
Harrisonville, 15 mi. from
PIANO tuning and repair ing , prolect. Fast and easy _ Free
Athens. Beef or ·dairy farm,
. Phone 992 -328-4 .
'
.
Lane Daniels , Phon e 992·2082 . estimates
Goegteln Ready -Mi x co
all elec. home, barn, out·
lLECTRIC RANG.ES
.
Reference
:
Elberfeld
s.
WILL
do
baby
sitting
in
my
Ohio.
·•.
_
Middleport,
buildings, 6 ponds.
1 A\&gt;O~adO Grun Elee. - 1 Co- Elec~ - 4 While
10-25 -12tp
~f4'"2_e day or night . Phone 992 .
.
6-JO-tfc
· Eledroc!S. Priced 569.95 oncl u~.
S EWI~G MACHINES . Repair
RUTLAND .,.. 3 bedrooms,
GAS
RANGES
10-30-6tc
serv1ce, all makes, 992-2284 . EXC~LSIOR !)aJt Works , E:·.full basement. all electric
2 Av~cado. Greop - 1 Horvost Gold- Severo I wltl,. gas
-~-- -- -------Ma ln St., Pomeroy . All kinds.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
home, $18,500.
ranges to chooie from. Priced U'-95 lnd up,
of salt water pellets, watet
Author ized Singer Sales and
nuggets, block ·salt and own,
WILL DO babys itting In my
•
Service. We sharpen Sc iSsors .
home . Ph!)ne 992-7126.
Ohfo Rive r Salt . Phon e 992·-ALL ELECTRIC new home,
S
P
E
C
I
A
L
OF
.WEEK.
!.-.- - 3-29-tfe
3891 .
10-27 -tfc
3 bedroOms, carpeted, range
DOZER wor~ . land clearing by
6-5-.tfc
and air conditioning, $17,500.
the acre hourly or contract.
farm ponds, roads, etc . Large CHARLES R. Hatfie-ld , m ini NOW
50 A.CR ES - With house and
ONLY
dozer a nd operator with oVer
bac'k hoe and dozer. water
some timber . Alfred area .
20 years experience . Pullins
lines, drain s, footers , brush
Excavating, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Sl/,500.
cleaning. Rt. 1, Rut land , Ohio .
'
Phone 992-2478.
Phont 742 -6092 .
WHIP INFt,ATION NOW Is
12-19-tfc .
11 -J-25tc
the Preslqenl!s slogan, but
115 ACRES - Bottom &amp;
MAYTAG AUTOMATIC WASHERS
Inflation fighting has been
hillside with barn . Chester
Ai!;;;en"t,-locat~d
KUHL'S
philosophy
going
area.
1 Avocado Green Washer- 1 White Washer- ·1 Ha~est
behind Rutland Grade Sch~.
on -4 years now! YES,
complete front end service, "
·
Gold Dryo~ - 1 While Dryer.
bra kes and tuneups, wheels ·
KUHL'S has had .the same ·
(Check the new prlco and save on lhose USED MODELS.
balan ced electronically . Open DEAD Stock Re' moved' · N~·
307 Spring Avenue
price of ·$35 on standard
8
to
8
dally
,
Cilill
7-42-3232
on
charge_
Call
2~_5 - 551-4 .
·
elec. dryers, -$.45 ·on ' .stanPomeroy ·
992-2298
Sunday for appt.
Several Bedroom Suites - -.
19.95 up
dard autO. washers' since
207
7- 16-tfc - - - -- - - - - - --.
-lf
Good Selection BrNkfost Seh
20.00 up'
started
business!
CONTACT:
- - -- - - -- - - -- ' )(Jy'B, sEl.£ U. 5. Colni·: MT.S~
Wringer Washers ·. . . - .
.
'
.
39.95 up ·
ER •' APPLIANCES
Lois' Pouley,
SEPr1C · lANKS
lea ned ,
Coins of Gallipolis, 121 State
Branch Manager
reasonable rates. Ph . -4~6St. Ph . 446-18-42.
·
with
moneyMiddleDOrf.Pomeroy
4782 , Ga llipolis. John Russell, .
132-tf !
~~--- -------'----- · .
owner and operator .
" S19.t5 up
.
'5-12-Uc .IF
.
from S35
voung woman seen taking
- - - -- - - - - - -.- 2 Just Sold!
SEPiiC TANKS, AROBIC
wallet containing large sum
2 .Just Arrived 1
s y s T EM s
of mon-ey and valuable papers
s EwAG e
S59.951
•.
CLEANED,
REP·AIRED :
In Ber:nedine•s Wednesda-Y
slacked
MILLER SAN 1TAT ION ,: will return same to owner , s he'
dr.••• green.wh.,
SATURDAY, NOV, 9, 1974
may avoid embarrassm ent STEWAR.T, OHIO. PH . 662 S14U5
LIKE NEW
3035.
and . prosecution . Address In
10.
-tfc
wallet
or
call
Point
Pleasant,
(A
real
·space
&amp;
energy
4
•
10:30 A~M.
26 Chesh &amp; Dresaeri • • • . • : • . .
19.95 up
675-3720. I
·saver!&gt;
U11111y
C.blnel
•
.
•
.
•
.
•
79,95
Coppertone
:rile ·following will be sold at IJ,. residence localtcl on
254-tf
USED ."FURNITURE :
Old Dini"!! !loom Sullo, tiOOd .... pe • • • .
• "9.95
Storys Run CCounty Road 34SI off St. Rt. 7 one milo south
Chests, dressers, bedrm . .
Several Lovo!l9 Roo_m Sullts a Sotaa . • • • . 3f.9S up ,
of Middleport, Ohio. Watch lor sole sign• on S.R. ' ·
suites, beds, nlte stands ;
Loads of Odd (l!oors - Rockora, Recllnor$, ond Eaay
TRACTOR, PICKUP, SHOP TOOLS
baby . items; wardrobes;
. .
10 oo
Chairs
1971 GMC 1500 V-8, automatic transmission, power
dinettes ; dining rm. suites;
Mahogany Desk, 44"x22", ond Chair . •
•· ·
steering 111nd brakes; radio, heater . Less·ttuin 40,000 miles occas. tables &amp; table sets;
.
on good ru~r .
tWall-to-wall .c arpets &amp;
,.__ _ _ SPECIAL THIS w ·EI:K""
. --rugs ; kitchen cabinets &amp;
8N Ford, Ford 6' 3 pt. mower, J . D. side rake, 3 pt. 2B, 12"
cupbOards ; much. much
plow, 3 pt. scoop, 3 pl. blade, steel wheel N. j. Organic ·
mpre!
· fertilizer spreader, Electric start. Whe,l Horse riding
,
1
, mower, 2 .c orn jobbers.; ·2 drum pumps, log chains, 180·
'
'
:NEW FURNITURE: 3 pc.
AMP Hobert Welder, Marquelle cutting &amp; W.l~lng torch.
maple finish -bedrm. (In: ..
Is,...;.
.
with aauget complete; air ·grease gun, transmlulon
''
~ludes: . 4 dr . ctM&gt;'s t, dbl .
grease gun, large air COmpressor, Blshman tire changer,
dresser&amp;. mirrOr, book~"se
fioor Jack ,'hydro~ilc Jack, broke shoe rlveier, fac~ sfandi,
hdbd. bed) S132.SO; 4 dr.
Boby 5-Drlwer Clttsl &amp; Robe
cr..por, chain come-a -long, Williams tool chest, Electric
'maple
finish
chest
SJO;
2
Combln.tlon • · • • • • •
• Prlc:wd to Sell
grinder &amp; wheel dresser, large C clampS; box end, open
pc. liVing rm. sultn from
22 Sets of Tables • • • · • • • .. • • • · • • • 29.95 up
Calves to -be dellvl!red ·between 1:
·p.m; &amp; 6
end and combination wrenches from~ to 111•; socket sets ·'
S175 : vinyl recliners 5.49.95;
• 2 MaYtag · Portable Wo.shers 1nd
-• ·
·
~ ln .. lh ln. drive ; pipe wrenches, vice, bench vic~, wheel
p.m . November · 10 ..., before 12:00 noon
heavy
dk
.
.oak
3
pc
.
·
I
Dryer
·
·'
·
•
•
·
•
•
•
·
•
•
•
•
•
Prletcl
to Sell
and gear pullers, 'h ln. &amp; lf• ln. drills, mAsonry tools,
November 11.
SPANISH table seto $89.95,
Refrigerators, gr-. gold, copper and wlil,.
49.95 up
Black &amp; Decker skill saw, plus misc. ltema.
'
with red velvet 'lnsom S119.
For Further InfOrmation
· HoRsES:
,
SPANISH living room
Sorrel work horse, Block r iding horse, pony, single se(
chair &amp; 3 lables with
We also buy househol.d s of furn lture at TOP
harness, harness parts &amp; repair, horH eolian, pony
velvet Inserts) REG.
PRICES.
.
·
-NOW 5495.
collar, rope, sleigh bells, sled, Hlof horH shoeing fools, I
Minersville, Ohio 4576~
lot horse shoes, a'pprox . 150 bales hay, 10x12 torp, fuel oil
I '(,fjl.~R••to-moclol, floor ,
,
TeleDhone 985-3830
,
T\1, · Mllgnlvox· · stove, coal healing ltove, plus o R-rtolre of used Pllrll
SUU51
,
(junk pile) . •
· ·
•
Torms: Ciosh
·
·
Lunch Served
Durin.
the
winter
KUHL'S
.
MRS. EUGEN'E WYATT, OWNER
BARGAIN CENTER Is
·• " Telephone 592-2322 or 644-2451
,, ,
· .
.
CARNAHAN 'AUCTION SERVICE I
l
'·L·
~
Or
•
'
.
'opon5dlyso-:
949-27-J. C.m1hon ·. Rlclno, Oflloi D. Sml-49-2032
Wednesclly lhru Suftdoy 1
Nol Rts-slbltlor Acdclenh or·uss of l'l"opt
••. m. ~ 7,.m.
T""l ,

JOHNSON MASONRY

1974 atRYSLER

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

MANAGER-TRANEE --------------HAIRSTYLIST at Steepes ·
Immediate opening for
promotable person with
expanding 200 unit retail
shoe chain. We will train ·you
for _s tore man1gement .
Excellent vacation, in·
sura nee &amp; retirement plans.
Apply at Nosco Shoe Dept,.
c-o Buckeye Mart, Jackson,
0.

0~ EVERYTHING"

QUALITY, PRICE, COURTEOUS

,

BABYSITTER . Mon .- Fri. 84:30. Ph . 446 -4526.

. Jtice

SRVIA'S
UPHOLSTERING

I

Interested individuals should contact :
.
.
.
KEN WHITE .
The Good~ear T•re &amp; Rubber Company, Jackson, Ohio, ,1._,216 •4111
An Equal opportunity employer.
"'
·

BOWERS
REPAIR

OONSTRUCTION

F - Estim•,_a, Mldci~,Q

608 E .,

Ph. 992-5682 or 992-7121

777 Poarl Streel
Middleport, Ohio
Phone 992-5347 or 992-3861

REGISTERED 'NURSE
,

On State Rt. 124, lf2 mi . from
Route 7 by-pass towards
Rutland .

8-K EXCAVATING
OOMPANY

992-712;

1968 -0LOS'. 4 dr . hardtop, p.s .,
p.b .. air , low mileage, saso.
Phone 949-3211.
11 -3-3tp

11 -1-3tp

Limestone &amp; Fiff Dirt

VINYL SIDING
PH. 992-7454 Ot

Auto Sales

Phone 992 -7625 .

home . Have a bea utiful new
$OOf installed by All -Weather
Roof ing Co.

__ ....__

_IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR A REGISTERED
NURSE TO FILL VACANCY IN LOCAL PLANT
DISPENSARY. EXCELLENT FRINGE BENEFIT
PROGRAM, 8-4:30 HOURS, AND A 5 DAY
WEEK ARE OFFERED.

GARAGE .

Dozer, B•ckhoe, Trucks

RernC..ehnO

- -------------

=
1971 BUICK Estate Wagon , 3
..,,~' -------------seats, p .s., p.b. . air con ditioning , new radial tires:

Don't forget the roof of you r

Decorath,ia._,

NEW
~i - l evel
home , -3
bedrooms , built-in kitchen.
basement with on e car
garage . Phone 742 -3615 or see
Milo Hut chison .
11 -1-tfc

·ROGER HYSEll'S

guaranteed.

337 N. 2, Middleport
992-2550

10 - 15-26t c

-----'---------NEWlY decorated 5 room

Water, Electric, Gas, Sewer
Lines, installed.
Work

All-WEATHER

Pomeroy . Phone- 992 -3478.

Redone
and
inside and out
furnace system :
pri ce d . Phone

~.=·=·==-====~========
-~~~~~-=-=-~
REDEOORAnNG
All that is needed for a free
estimate is a phone ca ll.
Please Ph~e :

7 ROOM house w i th 2 baths In

Pomeroy; .
redecorated
New lu x aire
Reasonably
992 -529 2.

Business Services
.7

MORE

Help Wanted

CHAI.N UNK FENCE. FORI
Hom~ -

Store ·
36" to 144" hlth. .. lvd. er
vinyl coated. ·
All 1101fs sol In c:oncrele.
Quick lnslalletiGna or I!D-It·
Yourself.

Wt . soli on ~~·1nl~:::;
anYbody •t DUr
Born or In your llome.
llnfornuolla•n .ond pickup
...rvlo,. call256-6967 aftor 5

1

none Too
1

Every S.turdly Night

At7o.m.

Free Estimat.'s
No'Obllgatlons

In Galllpells A-'C.II '' Unclt Jolon" -1697
In Jackson-O.k Hill A"" Coli (~14) n6-2237
'

FENCE DIVIS 10M, OF .
.
RAY HQUCKoiNC.: .· . '
Pllrt$moutll;-

�-

'

.,

36 - The Sunday Time&gt;· Sentinel, Sunday . Nuv . 3, 1974
37 - The SUnday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, No": 3, 1974

,

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Real Estate For Sale

LINCOLN
HILL
Older 10-room frame, 4 bedroom
house, modern kitchen, formal dining
room, 2 fuil baths, new wiring and
plumbing, carpeted throughout 3
years old. Nice yard.

FOR APPOINTMENT
CALL 992-7684
------------NICE five room and bath one floor plan at 205 Spring Ave .,

i i;,T'""'" -

This new
10 -27 -tt c home Is ready for you. 3
bedrooms with closets, oak

-----------97
ACRES .
wooded

and trim , and kitchen, plus garage.
secluded . Ideal tor summer,
home , recreation , or camping Lot 100 by @ . Only $20,000.00,

.
within S miles of pro posed near T. P .
Ravens wood bridge . Call 614 RUTLAND Large
older
843-2256 .
home In Rutland, o4 bedrooms ,
11 -J Jtc

1

frame

house

Fl'almer

with

bath ,

Street , Middleport.

Pr iced reuonable . Phone 992 -

3896 after 5 p .m .

11 -3-Jtp

-------------SEVE N room , 3 bedroom , house

bath , garage, and barn. All for
only $12,000.00.
49 ACRES - On good gravel
road, water tap and old house
with garage.
l
LAUREL CLIFF - 6 rooms,
beth, electric heat, level lot
and garoge. Needs paint but
will sell for only S/500.00.
HUNTING LAND - Lots of.

With bath , complete modern
kitchen with bar. panelling ,
lots of cupboards and car pellng. gas hot water heat. young timber (90 Acres)
Full basement, priced and
seen by appointment. Call 992 - maybe, gas well for heaf, arid
2020.
old house.
BUY A HOME AND SAVE
YOUR MONEY. PAYMENTS
8U ILO lNG 'lot, 80ft. frOntage x WILL SOON PAY FOR YOUR
165ft . The second lot on lett on
Riverview Drive , Lincoln ESTATE.
Hill . Pom eroy , Oh io. If In terested , call 992 -3230 alter 5
p.m .
""'
10-17-ffc

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

____ ________

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

-1971------------BUICK Estate wagon ,

3
seats, ps .. pb ., air conditioning , new radial tires .
Phone 992-7625.
11 -1-3tc

-------------1969 FORO Galitxle 302 engine ,
good gas mileage , extra
condition . Phone C1) 667 -3685
after 5 p .m. or call 9ti5-JIIJ6.
ll -1-6tc

-------------1973 OLOS Cutlass · s. chestnut

;)

•""

brown In color, like new lnsld.e
and out , 350 engine with air
conditioning, power brakes,
power steering and automatic
transmission . 2~.000 actual
miles . .c new Goodyear fires
and original sports wheels .
Call 992 -3914 after s p .m .
11 -1-lfp
1963 MERCURY - Comef, 6
cyl . S300. Good condition .
Phone 992 -7663.

--------------

------------1968 BUICK Sky lark Special, 2

dr . hardtop , very clear . $150.
Call 742-4831.
10-29-6tc
1974
PLYMOUTH Satellite
Sebring , excellent condition
for S3,100. Phone 992-3410.
I0-29-6tc
-MiJST' ~e lL 1972 Vega gas saver
· wagon , -4 speed am . S1 ,875.
Phone 992-1&amp;05 .
10-27 -7805.
I0 -27-6tc

--------------

- -------------

••

i

I•

----------1911 M'ONTE cal-t o, A.C ., phone
\. 992-5611.

10-30-Jtc
------------1969 CHEVROLET Capl-ice ,
saoo, ex. cond ition. p.b ., p .s.
Phone 992-7876 after 6 p. m.
10-30-61p

66 CHEV .ROLET 1!~ ton pickup ~
• --------------Clarence Cooper, Portland.
~

•

! -------------10-30·3tp

i

· Wanted To Buy
SMALL station wagon wfth
good gas mileage _ Phone 992-

••=
10-30-tfc
•I -------------5186 .

i

=
'-

Mobile
Homes For Sale.
..
...,...

,. ~

f970 VAL 1,1\Nt' 65x 12. J~bedro0rri .
fully clir,:teted, LP gas heat .
Phone 992-1'751 ,
8-25-tfc

i ------------•=•..

f

~

BRING YOUR
UNHUUED

~-

-BLACK
WALNUTS

•.

.To Our Mechanical
'
HUU£R-

I

~

I

!•

NOW ·

Commercial-Residential
Construction &amp; Remodel

REALTY

MAIN
. POMERQY...

o. ·.

RUTLAND- Close In- o45
acres. fenced, stocked pond,
minerals, 12 acres timber, 10
acres tillable. JUST Sll,OOO.
MIDDLE PORT - Business
room wllh ·lovely 3 B. R.
apa rfment over. H. W. floors
· carpeted. Dining room .
Central
H.W.
heat .
$20,000.00.
POMEROY-I slory frame,
3 B.R .• bath, lots of kitchen
cabinets, paneling, tile, lots
of ground. $7 .900.00.
MANY
OTHER
PROPERTIES, CALL 'FOR
YOUR NEEDS TODAY.
992-2259 or 992-2568

All Mechanical Work
Open Mon.· sat.
8 A.M.- 6 P.M.

D&amp;D

Anown &amp;
R ellable !';ervice

PHONE
, 949-3832 or 843·2667
I All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING
From a shelf to a house.
Painting, siding, roofing,
paper hanging, kitchen
cabinets, etc.

SEE US FOR YOUR
UPHOLSTERING NEEDS
FREE ESTIMATE
Pickup and Delivery

f

All Small Appliances
lawn MoweiS
Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

EX PER IEN CEO auto body
man needed . Conta ct Buck
Buchana n . 675 -3370, Ma so n
County Motor Co . Chev rol et
and · Old smobi le in Pt .
Pl easa nt, W. Va .
254-12
--------------- - - NEAT eager young man for
por ter in Holzer Clin ic . Apply
in person at Clini c Ad min istra tion. second fl oor .
25 9·3

---- ----------

Does
your
home
require any of these
services?

992-5162
Syracuse, Ohio

!

Ai.L-'NEATHER

I

..
,................. "lWt
THE DEPENI»"' E.

OONlRACilNG.00.

.

GREAT PAINT VALUES AT
ALL -WEATHER
HARD ·
WARE .
On Sale Now qual ity Devoe
Bright White Latex House
Paint in 2 gallon cans. Only
16 .49 per gallon.
Brand name Roof Paint, 10
pet. off while they last .
Take advantage of these
gre'at buy s while they are
still in stock .
ALL-WEATHER
HARDWARE
337 North Second Ave·.
Middleport, Ohio
992 -2550
I

•.,.... .... .
~

•.I.,... •f ._ ~ --- · lioOOfMO
hod AV

IIUOII ~ ii'Oft.

0

GHEEN'S PAINnNG
If &gt;O. Call us Now for
Free Estimate .

a

949-3295
Racine, 0.

Interior &amp;

REMODELING?

YARD Sa le at Melvin Lltlle
re sidence . Cheshire , Ohio .
Nov . 2 and 3.
259 _2
-------------DE~NEY' S GARAGE SALE .
B1dwe11 - Rodney Roacf in
Bidwell. Nov . 4th thru 71h . 9 til
6 . Large se lecti on of new an d
used item s.
260 -3
TWO -WAY Rad ios Sa les &amp;Se r~ice . New &amp; used CB's ,
PO I1ce monitors , antennas ,
etc . Bob 's Citizen Band Radio
Equip., Georges · Creek Rd ..
Gall ipoli s, Oh io 446 -451 7.
212 -lf
- s AiHlEN'T aRos. coN sTAL L types of carpenter work .
conc re te fi nishing , paint ing ,
free esti mates , reasonable
rates . Ph . 367-7239or 367 -7777 ,
224 -78

-------------

Exterior Work

Keep out the cold and cut the cost of heating!
Dress your home up warm for cold days
ahea.d • . Siding: Insulates, adds beauty, is
durable, adds value, is colorful. Siding can be
iJJstalled anytime. Ask us about SoHit, Fascia,
Gutters and Downspouts,. too.
FREE ESTIMATE

MORNING
HUNTINGTON
PAPER
Delivered to your home
before 6:30.a.m. Upper Rt. 7
to Pomeroy inclusive, New
Haven to Pt. Pleasant. Call
Gallipolis 446·7911 .

ji92-255:§]

,,. N.

VOTE for Ro nald H. James tor
State Rep r esen ta t ive 92 nd
Dis tri ct.
207 -tf

FREE ESTIMATE
Fully Insured

SECRETARY
Position available for
secretary with typing,
shorthand, some accounting.
Salary
comensurate
with
·
S
d
ex.perlence.
en
resume to P . O. Box

Strout Realty

-------------

owner.

258·5

1971 P~mouth Satellite......................... '1895

Beauty Salon. Sliver Bridge
Plaza . Ca ll 4-46-335.3.
....._
258·4
BABY S ITTER
Who
likes
children to care for 2 year old
boy , 8-S Mon .- Fri. Wr ite care
of Gallipolis Daily Tr ibune ,
Box 348.
258 -3

Sebring 2 dr. hardtop, JIB V-8 engine, power steering, a uto.
trans. Very low mileage .

1970 CHEV. MONTE CARLO ........ s1995

1974 Ford Pinto 4 cyL ........................ '2695

------------- GREAT .
COUNTaY

Far sale or will trade for
mobile home: 1970 Cougar,
351 auto ., red wjth black
vinyl top, p.s .• p.b., radio, air
cond., fac!ory 8 traclc, new
radial !ires, in excellen!
cond. Ph. after 5, u• -••n.

197i -CHRYSLER Newport
Wanted TO Buy
Custom 4 or., p .s. , p.b.; air
cond ., good cond .. 4 new tires
LIMESTONE for driveways .
Call 388-8666. ·
·
Car l Winters . ~hone 245 -5115.
258 -3
2~5 - tf
- - -- - - -- -- - -.
STA NDING timber . 388-8490. 1967 FIRE BI-RD C-onvert ibl e, 6
cyl. , exc . cond ., auto . S600.
254 -lf
Ph . 367-7704 .
·
25,6-6
STANDING t imber . 388-8490.
260-1
1972 MONTEGO M.&gt;.. , ll;:'fJ With
STANDING
timb e~.
-a ny
black vinyl top, afr P S
amount. top pr ice. Ca lf after
~ - B . , auto.-, new steel ' belied
7. 388-9906.
t1res, S28,0QO, extr;· sharp
260-6
S2,350.~h. &lt;46·3343. ·
.
- - -- -- - -- -----260-6
JU NK cars or' fun k ca r bodies --- ----- ~--:-- -::- .
and will p ick up old stoves, • 1969 s uN BEAM 34.000 m 1., 4
refrigerators , washers and
cyl. , good gas miluge . exC!-.
dryers . 388-8668.
cond . $1;50. 4-46-9627 .
256-6.
' . '
26J?·6

1970 Ford LTD 4 Dr. Hard Top................. .'1495

11969 Clev. Biscayne 4 DR...... J9951

Air cpndltloned, power steering, power brak~s, auto. trans.,
local owner. Like new finish .

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

-------------------------------- --------

---------- ----

-------- ------

SliRE0.92.1

COMP.l£TE

.- . .

·.

"' .•I • ....

,,

-· •., .1

··-

74·Cadillac Coupe DeVille

••

Charcoal grey with leather Interior, full power
equipment. AM-FM stereo, new steel radial
tires, climate control air conditioning.

Choice'7500

..

Cadillac. Oldsmobile
GMAC Financino Available

992-5342

Open Eves.

Pomeroy

Til6- Til 5 P.M. Sat.

" You'll Like dlrr Quality Way of Doing Business;,

e Low Cost Auto ' lrisu'rance-compare our rates.
elow Cost' Homeowner Polley.
eLow Cost HomeownerS Polley for Renters.
•FarlnO't\rr.ers Pollcy - -C.:.rr.r:!@t~ Protect ion In One Poli cy.
tA Modern Mobile Homeowner Polley.
e LOw Cost Fire Polley.
.
.
· e A ~pecial Multi-Peril Package Policy for Your Bus1~ess.

.'

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

••
~
*•
t

co1np,;ire our rates with your present
know we can save
money. ·

Leadingham Agency
1

Ph. 4467699
512 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio·

1973 atEVROLET
Custom Deluxe Pickup, 307
V-B, std. shift, radio, wheel
covers, w-s-w tires, baby
blue, low mileage, and as
sharp as a tack .

-

;...
•
••

1971 OLDS
Tornado, 2 dr. H. T., auto. ,
P.S., P.B., all power, a real
sharp machine and priced
for the bargain hunter.

1972 atEVROLET
Nova Coupe, 350 V-8, pow .
st., three on the floor,
factory shifter, radio,
black and sharp.

'1995

'2195

'3195
1970 BUICK

1973 DODGE

. Skylark, 2 dr. H. T., V-8,
auto., pow . st .• air, sharp.

'1395

'1695
1972 CHEVROLET
Caprice 2 Door H. T., low
mileage. loaded with extras. Very, very clean .

'2695

1973 QIEVROLET

D-1001h Ton Pickup, 318 v.
8, std. shift, local owner, 8'
bed.

Cheyenne Pickup, 350 V-8,
auto., P.B., P.S., deluxe
two tone , new rubber,
factory air. The sharpest In
the area.

'2695

•3395

1971 atEVROLET
Impala • door H.T., V-1,
auto., radio, low mileage.
No air, but very nlc.e .

'1695
1974 PLYMOUI}f
Ouster, 318, ·auto, P.S.,
radio, spacemaker pkg .•
little over 9,000 mi.

•2995

Sears

•

:•

••

••..

•
••""

CHRISTMAS.
••
•z 11 WISH BOOKS"
..
.,
~

-.-'---,-

'

'

we still have a few books on hand: If
you don't have one, stop by and ptck
one up.'
So you can take advantage
. of Sears' low prices .on
·· Christmas tqys '&amp; · gif·

'tidaas.
I

•

·. ·
•

.

·

.•.__ ......

~

,._

...

·I

HON DA XR 75, good cond . Ph .
446 4116.
260 -1
MOTORC:VC LE '73 Hond.a XR ·
75 s moothe s t riding , best
look ing trail bike ever made,
not too sma ll for adult , not to
big for 10.12 yea r old . Exc.
cond . Call 4A6 .0161 even on
sa t.
_:
260·3

__ ____________

WOOD cui off saw . Ph 379-2166.
260·3
GORDON Setter male 7 mos.
old . Housebroken , exc .
pedigree and temperamerit.
446-4191.
260 -3
STEVEN S Shotgun 20 Gauge.
Call 379-2240 .
260·3
SMA LL gas heater . Ph . 446 1927 .
.
260 -3
1974 KAW Z! 900 C.C., 7,900
m ile5 , John:so11 Tra ilei- Park,
Lot 4, Eas tern p.ve. Between 9
and 12 p.m .
260"t-2 N·EW 25 Colt Auto . Con
seculi ve se rial No . S2SO. U8
Smith &amp; Wilson Police
SpeciaL nic kel plated , S125.
256 ·11 23.
260 -6

1939 CHEVROLET
Deluxe. 379-2546.

MT work .,.s suddenly required me to rolocale so must
sel the following tools, houHhold &amp; cofltcton Items. Go
1wo miles Nortto of JICkson, 0 . on now Rt. 124, then Eul1
milt on Pa1tenavllle Road.
SATURDAY NOV. 9TH ATlO:JO A.M.
Oek secretary-book case w-curved glass door ; walnut
vonlly 'd resser ; mahogany &amp; birds eye maple vanlly
dresser; 2 Seth Thomas mantel clocks; Big Ben clocks;
gold pocket watches: walnut lamp table; -wlcker rocker &amp;
·. chair: parlor table w-lorge claw &amp; ball feet ; 9fd oak
swl'flll desk chair; etek stralght ehalrs; GE stereo w ~ AM &amp;
"AM i mefol wardroba: rtcllo testing equipment; old oak
dresser : cherry lamp table w-paw loot; new carpet
6'6"x12~ &amp; 12'x8'10"; Roseville pottery; 2 Weller vases ;
Nl_, cups a saucers: Bavaria, Milk Gloss, Depression
gloss, service of 8 dishes &amp; many other _pes. of glau &amp;
dilna; milk can; Avon boHies; Beam, Ezra Broof&lt; and
. other bbllles &amp; lora; 2 'Sheraton' poHern gloss pitchers:
olllomps; oil lanterns, DT &amp; land K &amp; IT: Premier oak
walllelellhone; lr.., POls; old crocks &amp; lugs ; old Toledo
scale; Ofd lodae sword 38 cal. Smith &amp; Wesson revolver;
old ·50 Cal. ·rifle ; old 12 go . single &amp; ofd 12 go. While
Po-r w..,der ; garden IIIIer: wood planes : corn
sheller; wheat cradle-; wooden tool chest ; power saw,.
drills &amp; jig saw ; bench vice : hand saws ; r,lpe &amp; C:re-1
wrenches ; many carpenter tools; roll '4 ' plastic piper
oprox. 8' of 4" sloe! casing ; &amp; other Items too numerous to
advertise.

•

4

Master

30-JO LEVER action Winc hester
r_itle. Phone 446-4376.
259-3

AN OPEN LETTER TO NEW CAR CUSTOMERS
Dear Customer:
By now you have probably read or heard that 1975
car prices are up. Although this Is true, we believe there
are some facts you should consider that will assist you in
your new car purchase.
First, the 1975 Buicks &amp; Pontiacs come equipped with
High Energy Ignition along with a Catalytic Converter in
the exhaust system. These two features provide a 15 per
cent fuel savings along with . fewer required tune-ups.
·Since the · engine runs cleaner-- oil, oil filters, spark
plugs, etc. have a longer life. In total, we anticipate that
this could save a 1975 Buick or Pontiac owner as much as
$450.00 over 50,000 miles of driving.
Secondlv, we in our business, know that when new
car prices go liP• used car prices also go up, and since
there is a shortage of good used cars available to us, we
anticipate allowing more for trade-Ins. As a result, the
dollar difference for new car customers will pleasingly
surprise many and gratify everyone.
Buick and Pontiac have provided our dealership with
the best selection of quality automobiles that virtually fit
every customer in their motoring needs. They are
competitively priced and offer you the greatest value for
your dollar . .
We will be very pleased to have the opportunity of
showing you the 1975 Bulcks and Pontiacs in our
showroom today.
Looking forward to seeing you .

W. H. NELSON, PRESIDENT
SOMETHING TO BELIEVE IN

SMITH
NELSON
MOTORS,
INC.
soo E. M~in St.
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy, 0.
Dealership Hours ; Mon.- Fri. 8 a.m .· 7 p.m .-Saturdays 8 a .m. ' 5 p.m.

ForSaiP.

'~ 9 OLDS Della

2 dr . std . sh.ift ,
STARCRAFT
45S eng ine, 2'ba rrel . $795. Ph .
GIGANTIC SALE
245-9176 .
9 3 ON fOiddowns, .all. mode ls , free
25 .
heater ph.rs t'ligh est disco1,1nt ·
- In Tri -State. camp conley
Starcraft sates, Rt. 62 N. at
SELl:,~ 1 t.urnmun red bricks ,
Point Pleuant Behind Red
any amount , field fife . cement .
Car.pet II!Rblock·; Cement , mortar. Gal·
_ IIDolfJ Block Co., 122'12 Pine.
St .. 4&lt;6-2783.
1&lt;0·11

AUCTION
SERVIa
"SEU THE
AUCTIQN WAY" .

AOCI'IONEER ·
: ,

259·6

19" COLOR Curlis Mathis TV ,
Stereo, AM -F M comb, maple
cabinet. Good condition. 379- .
25-46.
259.6

JIMME SAY~E

.
CHARLES HAMMOND-OWNER
,·
jiM HALDANE
Complete Auction Strvlct

7033rdSirMt,W~vtrly,0.,9,7~.

chai n Sa w. Phone 379260-J

7 -ALUMINUM , comb . storm
windows sizes 28 7/e" by 61% "
to 30" b'V 62" . 1 storm door 31
)( 80. 379-25.6.
259-6

AUCTION

.'

~VJiR ,BRIDGE PLAZA

60lC12 2 BR mobile hom e. ni ce
256 -6816 .
260 -3
WELL kept carpets shOw the
r esulls of reg ular Blue Lustre
spol cleanin g. Rent electric
shampooe r
$ 1.
Central
· Supply
260 -6

2671.

luiiCit Served.
•

for Sale

!!!~!!!~~~~~~~===========:..-"-"Use e

See one of these courteous ' salesmen:
Pete Burris
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaugh

••
=

.

a

Wrl't es All Types of Insurance For
Your Auto, Home or Business
Wepresent
Lightning Rod Mutual
Insurance Company

Apollo yellow, brown vinyl top, matching
lnterl6r, full power equipment, Climate
Control air conditioning, T&amp; T wheel, Cruise
Control, AM-FM stereo &amp; tape, new w -s-w
tires •

•"

t

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. Til
Pomeroy, Ohi~.

992-2126

74 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

•
t
••
••
••

·cc,.,....Mon._,.

co.·

Leadingham Agency

••

ATHENS LIVESTOCK:SALES1INC.

·

:•

••

I

YOUR ·LOCAL COUNTY.
- AGENT
,.

"WE RUN A VERY SIMPLE BUSINESS"
We Sell &amp; Service Chevrolet Cars &amp; Trucks

POMEROY MOTOR

•

'1595

'2195

....

••"

'

•2295

.

••
•••
•

$1495

PAUL H. BAER

r

w

110 lb. Set Of .
,
. ~Bc!.:..r~Bel...... ·:"':"al.;. .lm_eta_l....:..:...·...:.·_· :....': .._..J ·

Country sedi!l n sta . wagon,
V-8, a uto ., pow . st., pow.
br ., radio, low mileage.

Gran Torino, -4 door, V-8,
auto., pow. st., fact . air,
radio, vinyl roof, w-s-w
tires . Ni ce as they come.

Models In Stock.

=
••=
•"•
•
•••
••
••

,,1,

Contact:

'

•

Oo

i:'Ei'o&amp;.M'isC: ..._. ,

'"'
-

"••

.

Gal. 500, 2 0... H. T., bucket
seats, v.e. auto .. pow. br .,
pow. st .. miles are a IIHte
high but a real baby doll.

Fury Ill 4 door sedan, V~e.
auto., pow . st .. vinyl roof,
fa c. alr, radio, baby blue wblack roof. ex tre mely
sharp .

Special Prices
On All New 74 Chevy

'
,'

•
••

--7'"- - ---:--------

NOVEMBER 11 - .8:00 P.M.
ATHENS uvESIOcK satFS INC.,
. ATHENSi OHIO
-CONSIGNORS &amp;BUYERS WElCOME

.." '

k

2 USED FREEZERS
·IN STOCK

1971 FORD

'2995

Sta. Wagon . Air con d., P.S., P.B., A. T., shows good care.

••

~

FEEDER CALF ·SALE ·

,,

;

·wMPQ.FM

1971 FORD

Cab &amp; chassis, 108" cab to axle, V-8, 350 engln~,
15,000 lb., 2 speed R. axle, good B25x20 tires, solid
cab.

1970 Chevrolet VB Brookwood ...................'l395

"=

$2495

1972 FORD

1970 QIEVROLET 2 TON

a.

Notice

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

I
I
I

:

- -------------

PUBLIC SALE

Local car, bucket seat, vinyl Interior. 4 s~
trans., 351 -V-B, radio, good tires. Real nice.

it-t--

---------------

BABY BED,

I
I
I

4 Dr. Sedan, small V-8, power steering, auto. trans.

, .2:.:58::.•...:G~a~l.:.:li!::po~l~is:.:..--.,._""
· _.J -~----- -------

1972 PLYMOUlH

11969 Ford Torino Cpe..............t951

1970' fqrd Torino......................................'1395

-=-=-

Sate llite 4 Door Custom.
318 V-8, low mileage, vinyl
rOof. 18,000 mile factory
warranty, low mileage.

•3995

J Spt . Cj..le ., red fin ish. blk . vinyl tor•. spot le5s tnlerior, 1
1 good. tires, radio , autom ·l lic lr_ans ., V-8. power I
I steerl nQ.
.
1

Grabber. 2 dr. Very low rolleage. Auto. trans . Extra nice.

.

o·oELL

I
I
I

Local 1· ow ner . gootl W-$·W ti res . delu)(€' in l. ft im,
wheel covers. rcld io. "cyl .. re,11 r!conomy wit h std.
tr a ns., blue fin ., nice .

Charger, vinyl roof, factory air, 31 8 V-8. many nice
edras . Balance of 18,000
mile
warranty,
low
mileage.

11968 Chevrolet Impala ............ '895 I

1971 Ford 6 cyt. Maverick ...................... 51995

--------------

- - ---- ---------=-

I
I
I

1970 COUGAR reo wllh blo ck
vinYl top , exc. cond . P.s .•
P .8 .. Fac . air,bullt -in8track.
New Radial Ti r es . Asking
st ,700 . cau 446 -4&lt;62 .
\
253 -lf

-- ------ -- - -

------- --------

I 70 Ford Maverick ............... ..S1295I

Monaco • dr . H.T., vinyl
rOQf, factory air, all the
nice extras yov would want
Including the balance of an
mile
factory
18,000
warranty ,
low.
low
mileage .

1974 PLYMOUTH

•4295

1

-- 3 dr. Runabout, almost like the day it was Sold . Very low
mileage . Opens In rear like sta. wagon .

--- ------------

------ - ----- - -

r-------------------RED HOT BUYS!
I

-4 Dr. Sedan, one careful local owner. Low mileage. Sharp.

Auto Sales

1974 DODGE

'4395

350 V -8, automatic, P. steering &amp; brak es, dark blut&gt;- finish.
blue interior, blue vinyl roof. factory air conditioned. like
new w -w tires, r-adio. Many other extras.

1972 Chevrolet Nova 6 cyl....................... 12195

- --------------

---------------

Employment Wanted

1972 VEGA GT........................ $1995

351 V-8eng lne, power ste-ering, power brakes. auto. trans. Local

- co N e

---------------

31.-J V a t" ng ln P, duforn1.1 tic TraP~ . ,
power steering, a 'r ccndi1ion,'&lt;L v1n yl h im . vi nyl top.
Autum gold li nior;.h, w-w tir"s !· Ia&gt; 'II'W, rddio .

-1 D..:~.or , !ot.:a! I owner '--d' .

Hat chba ck, low mile;~ge by 1 owner. new "!" w f ir~/,'·~~-;;
lerred lrorn new car, 4 speed lra 11s ., r."l d i O, gt L-.en .1 n1..h .
bla ck vi nyl inter ior, de luxe tri m.

_________ __

o-------------

1972 OOOGE DART CUSTOM ......s2495

1

. 1970 Ford Gal. 500 2 Dr. Sedan ................ 5995

______________

DODGE

'6195

.

lnfllllon fighter sale.

o.

&gt;EPTic

Door, orange finish, blk. vin yl inleritir , buc kt- t ~e~)f~;. I{'SS
than 5. 000 m iles &amp; J mfJ . old. Rad io, dE- I u~~:e bump • n ~

?

wtwn the seller is anxious to sell! Come get our dell ...... It is the
best anywhere. Run ... run ... run ... to 461 S. Third Street for our

--------------

1 2

Town &amp; Country, 9 pass.
sta. wagon , luggage rack,
factory air, all the fine
extras
including
the
balance of an 18,000 mile
warranty . Low mileage.

1974 OPEL M"NTA ................}2895

INFLATION FIGHTER SALE!

'

1974

SERVICE WHEN YOU BUY FROM

Why bUy a 74 when you can gain a year and save dePreclltion on
a 75? We're loaded with 1975 pickup trucks.· We're anxious to
sell! We desperately need good ued pickups. The time fa buy Is

"TIRED
-~-:--------~--,_;-OF :"
Dry Red, llchy SkinRed, Smelly
Hard Water992-7608
AAA
Driver 's
Education
/Then call us for a FREE
Classes will begin Nov . , 5,
Rt. 7 &amp; Union Ave.
Pome'r oy,
Tue s day. For further in /Water Analysis .
formation , call the AAA
C. BH:ADFOR.D, Auctioneer
PIANO tuning and r epair . /
RighfNowAt:
Office at 446,·0699 .
Complete Service
.....,
257 -4
Phone 9-49 -3821 or 949 -3161
_ Pho:~~a~les Scott , ~9 2;3; 1,~
CULLIGAN
Racine, Ohio
SW EEPER Repa ir ; Parts and ·
Critt Bradford
T;N~~-~~ .;;;,-;. .
WATER
Supplies . P ick up and
5-1-ttc
delivery . Dav is Vag.w..m
~~·
~~~sanilalion
.
9923954
or
CONDITIONING
7
Cleaner 17:;. m ile up Georges
FOR FREE estimates on
Creek Road . Ph . 446-0294.
alum lnum
repla cement
9-18-tfc
windows, Siding , storm doors
593-6366
75-tf
DOZER or back hoe wOrk . L_...:,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...J
and wlnd~w,s , Reiling . Phone
Phon e -446-398 1 or -446 1459.
Charl•s L1sle, Syracuse, Ohio .
~RUss·S - riLAS s ~ ERVtCE.'
Cerr
Jacob ,
Sales·
9-B-ttc- EXCAVATING , dozer , loader
Stor'!" Windows repaired .
v.
v.
Re presentative ,
backhoe
work
;
septic
Ple xrglass, auto . glass .
and
~ii:~~~EANS
cR' TE'
Johnson and Son. lnc .
tanks Installed ; dump trucks
mirrors , decorator &amp; cut to
deliver e d Monday through
-4-30-tfc
and lo -boys tor hire ; Will haul
size. 435 Sec . AVe ., across
Saturday and evenings
fill dirt, top sOli, limestone &amp;
from the P.O. in Gallipolis
Phone
446
-11-42.
·
·
g
a
1
c
Ph , 446 -763 2.
·
'AUTOMOBILE Insurance been ·
r· ve ; au Bob or Roger
cancelled?
Lost
your
6-13 -tfc
J~ffers , day ph,one 992 -7089;. ~--------.22:!,23!;.·7lJ!8·
operator 's license . Call 992.
n1ght P.hone 992 -3525 or 992RT. 143 - All elec. home, 3
w~l~ri
;~~~~tree~
end
5232
.
7428.
BR, carpeted, bath &amp; •;,,
Shrubbery, also Clea n out
6-15
-tfc
1
.2-11 -tfc
carport, 1 12 a'cres.
basements and at!ics. Phone
949-3221 or 742 -44-41.
CONCRETii 10 -l8 -26tc REAPY ·MIX
160 A. 3 mi. trom
del.tvered right to your
Harrisonville, 15 mi. from
PIANO tuning and repair ing , prolect. Fast and easy _ Free
Athens. Beef or ·dairy farm,
. Phone 992 -328-4 .
'
.
Lane Daniels , Phon e 992·2082 . estimates
Goegteln Ready -Mi x co
all elec. home, barn, out·
lLECTRIC RANG.ES
.
Reference
:
Elberfeld
s.
WILL
do
baby
sitting
in
my
Ohio.
·•.
_
Middleport,
buildings, 6 ponds.
1 A\&gt;O~adO Grun Elee. - 1 Co- Elec~ - 4 While
10-25 -12tp
~f4'"2_e day or night . Phone 992 .
.
6-JO-tfc
· Eledroc!S. Priced 569.95 oncl u~.
S EWI~G MACHINES . Repair
RUTLAND .,.. 3 bedrooms,
GAS
RANGES
10-30-6tc
serv1ce, all makes, 992-2284 . EXC~LSIOR !)aJt Works , E:·.full basement. all electric
2 Av~cado. Greop - 1 Horvost Gold- Severo I wltl,. gas
-~-- -- -------Ma ln St., Pomeroy . All kinds.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
home, $18,500.
ranges to chooie from. Priced U'-95 lnd up,
of salt water pellets, watet
Author ized Singer Sales and
nuggets, block ·salt and own,
WILL DO babys itting In my
•
Service. We sharpen Sc iSsors .
home . Ph!)ne 992-7126.
Ohfo Rive r Salt . Phon e 992·-ALL ELECTRIC new home,
S
P
E
C
I
A
L
OF
.WEEK.
!.-.- - 3-29-tfe
3891 .
10-27 -tfc
3 bedroOms, carpeted, range
DOZER wor~ . land clearing by
6-5-.tfc
and air conditioning, $17,500.
the acre hourly or contract.
farm ponds, roads, etc . Large CHARLES R. Hatfie-ld , m ini NOW
50 A.CR ES - With house and
ONLY
dozer a nd operator with oVer
bac'k hoe and dozer. water
some timber . Alfred area .
20 years experience . Pullins
lines, drain s, footers , brush
Excavating, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Sl/,500.
cleaning. Rt. 1, Rut land , Ohio .
'
Phone 992-2478.
Phont 742 -6092 .
WHIP INFt,ATION NOW Is
12-19-tfc .
11 -J-25tc
the Preslqenl!s slogan, but
115 ACRES - Bottom &amp;
MAYTAG AUTOMATIC WASHERS
Inflation fighting has been
hillside with barn . Chester
Ai!;;;en"t,-locat~d
KUHL'S
philosophy
going
area.
1 Avocado Green Washer- 1 White Washer- ·1 Ha~est
behind Rutland Grade Sch~.
on -4 years now! YES,
complete front end service, "
·
Gold Dryo~ - 1 While Dryer.
bra kes and tuneups, wheels ·
KUHL'S has had .the same ·
(Check the new prlco and save on lhose USED MODELS.
balan ced electronically . Open DEAD Stock Re' moved' · N~·
307 Spring Avenue
price of ·$35 on standard
8
to
8
dally
,
Cilill
7-42-3232
on
charge_
Call
2~_5 - 551-4 .
·
elec. dryers, -$.45 ·on ' .stanPomeroy ·
992-2298
Sunday for appt.
Several Bedroom Suites - -.
19.95 up
dard autO. washers' since
207
7- 16-tfc - - - -- - - - - - --.
-lf
Good Selection BrNkfost Seh
20.00 up'
started
business!
CONTACT:
- - -- - - -- - - -- ' )(Jy'B, sEl.£ U. 5. Colni·: MT.S~
Wringer Washers ·. . . - .
.
'
.
39.95 up ·
ER •' APPLIANCES
Lois' Pouley,
SEPr1C · lANKS
lea ned ,
Coins of Gallipolis, 121 State
Branch Manager
reasonable rates. Ph . -4~6St. Ph . 446-18-42.
·
with
moneyMiddleDOrf.Pomeroy
4782 , Ga llipolis. John Russell, .
132-tf !
~~--- -------'----- · .
owner and operator .
" S19.t5 up
.
'5-12-Uc .IF
.
from S35
voung woman seen taking
- - - -- - - - - - -.- 2 Just Sold!
SEPiiC TANKS, AROBIC
wallet containing large sum
2 .Just Arrived 1
s y s T EM s
of mon-ey and valuable papers
s EwAG e
S59.951
•.
CLEANED,
REP·AIRED :
In Ber:nedine•s Wednesda-Y
slacked
MILLER SAN 1TAT ION ,: will return same to owner , s he'
dr.••• green.wh.,
SATURDAY, NOV, 9, 1974
may avoid embarrassm ent STEWAR.T, OHIO. PH . 662 S14U5
LIKE NEW
3035.
and . prosecution . Address In
10.
-tfc
wallet
or
call
Point
Pleasant,
(A
real
·space
&amp;
energy
4
•
10:30 A~M.
26 Chesh &amp; Dresaeri • • • . • : • . .
19.95 up
675-3720. I
·saver!&gt;
U11111y
C.blnel
•
.
•
.
•
.
•
79,95
Coppertone
:rile ·following will be sold at IJ,. residence localtcl on
254-tf
USED ."FURNITURE :
Old Dini"!! !loom Sullo, tiOOd .... pe • • • .
• "9.95
Storys Run CCounty Road 34SI off St. Rt. 7 one milo south
Chests, dressers, bedrm . .
Several Lovo!l9 Roo_m Sullts a Sotaa . • • • . 3f.9S up ,
of Middleport, Ohio. Watch lor sole sign• on S.R. ' ·
suites, beds, nlte stands ;
Loads of Odd (l!oors - Rockora, Recllnor$, ond Eaay
TRACTOR, PICKUP, SHOP TOOLS
baby . items; wardrobes;
. .
10 oo
Chairs
1971 GMC 1500 V-8, automatic transmission, power
dinettes ; dining rm. suites;
Mahogany Desk, 44"x22", ond Chair . •
•· ·
steering 111nd brakes; radio, heater . Less·ttuin 40,000 miles occas. tables &amp; table sets;
.
on good ru~r .
tWall-to-wall .c arpets &amp;
,.__ _ _ SPECIAL THIS w ·EI:K""
. --rugs ; kitchen cabinets &amp;
8N Ford, Ford 6' 3 pt. mower, J . D. side rake, 3 pt. 2B, 12"
cupbOards ; much. much
plow, 3 pt. scoop, 3 pl. blade, steel wheel N. j. Organic ·
mpre!
· fertilizer spreader, Electric start. Whe,l Horse riding
,
1
, mower, 2 .c orn jobbers.; ·2 drum pumps, log chains, 180·
'
'
:NEW FURNITURE: 3 pc.
AMP Hobert Welder, Marquelle cutting &amp; W.l~lng torch.
maple finish -bedrm. (In: ..
Is,...;.
.
with aauget complete; air ·grease gun, transmlulon
''
~ludes: . 4 dr . ctM&gt;'s t, dbl .
grease gun, large air COmpressor, Blshman tire changer,
dresser&amp;. mirrOr, book~"se
fioor Jack ,'hydro~ilc Jack, broke shoe rlveier, fac~ sfandi,
hdbd. bed) S132.SO; 4 dr.
Boby 5-Drlwer Clttsl &amp; Robe
cr..por, chain come-a -long, Williams tool chest, Electric
'maple
finish
chest
SJO;
2
Combln.tlon • · • • • • •
• Prlc:wd to Sell
grinder &amp; wheel dresser, large C clampS; box end, open
pc. liVing rm. sultn from
22 Sets of Tables • • • · • • • .. • • • · • • • 29.95 up
Calves to -be dellvl!red ·between 1:
·p.m; &amp; 6
end and combination wrenches from~ to 111•; socket sets ·'
S175 : vinyl recliners 5.49.95;
• 2 MaYtag · Portable Wo.shers 1nd
-• ·
·
~ ln .. lh ln. drive ; pipe wrenches, vice, bench vic~, wheel
p.m . November · 10 ..., before 12:00 noon
heavy
dk
.
.oak
3
pc
.
·
I
Dryer
·
·'
·
•
•
·
•
•
•
·
•
•
•
•
•
Prletcl
to Sell
and gear pullers, 'h ln. &amp; lf• ln. drills, mAsonry tools,
November 11.
SPANISH table seto $89.95,
Refrigerators, gr-. gold, copper and wlil,.
49.95 up
Black &amp; Decker skill saw, plus misc. ltema.
'
with red velvet 'lnsom S119.
For Further InfOrmation
· HoRsES:
,
SPANISH living room
Sorrel work horse, Block r iding horse, pony, single se(
chair &amp; 3 lables with
We also buy househol.d s of furn lture at TOP
harness, harness parts &amp; repair, horH eolian, pony
velvet Inserts) REG.
PRICES.
.
·
-NOW 5495.
collar, rope, sleigh bells, sled, Hlof horH shoeing fools, I
Minersville, Ohio 4576~
lot horse shoes, a'pprox . 150 bales hay, 10x12 torp, fuel oil
I '(,fjl.~R••to-moclol, floor ,
,
TeleDhone 985-3830
,
T\1, · Mllgnlvox· · stove, coal healing ltove, plus o R-rtolre of used Pllrll
SUU51
,
(junk pile) . •
· ·
•
Torms: Ciosh
·
·
Lunch Served
Durin.
the
winter
KUHL'S
.
MRS. EUGEN'E WYATT, OWNER
BARGAIN CENTER Is
·• " Telephone 592-2322 or 644-2451
,, ,
· .
.
CARNAHAN 'AUCTION SERVICE I
l
'·L·
~
Or
•
'
.
'opon5dlyso-:
949-27-J. C.m1hon ·. Rlclno, Oflloi D. Sml-49-2032
Wednesclly lhru Suftdoy 1
Nol Rts-slbltlor Acdclenh or·uss of l'l"opt
••. m. ~ 7,.m.
T""l ,

JOHNSON MASONRY

1974 atRYSLER

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

MANAGER-TRANEE --------------HAIRSTYLIST at Steepes ·
Immediate opening for
promotable person with
expanding 200 unit retail
shoe chain. We will train ·you
for _s tore man1gement .
Excellent vacation, in·
sura nee &amp; retirement plans.
Apply at Nosco Shoe Dept,.
c-o Buckeye Mart, Jackson,
0.

0~ EVERYTHING"

QUALITY, PRICE, COURTEOUS

,

BABYSITTER . Mon .- Fri. 84:30. Ph . 446 -4526.

. Jtice

SRVIA'S
UPHOLSTERING

I

Interested individuals should contact :
.
.
.
KEN WHITE .
The Good~ear T•re &amp; Rubber Company, Jackson, Ohio, ,1._,216 •4111
An Equal opportunity employer.
"'
·

BOWERS
REPAIR

OONSTRUCTION

F - Estim•,_a, Mldci~,Q

608 E .,

Ph. 992-5682 or 992-7121

777 Poarl Streel
Middleport, Ohio
Phone 992-5347 or 992-3861

REGISTERED 'NURSE
,

On State Rt. 124, lf2 mi . from
Route 7 by-pass towards
Rutland .

8-K EXCAVATING
OOMPANY

992-712;

1968 -0LOS'. 4 dr . hardtop, p.s .,
p.b .. air , low mileage, saso.
Phone 949-3211.
11 -3-3tp

11 -1-3tp

Limestone &amp; Fiff Dirt

VINYL SIDING
PH. 992-7454 Ot

Auto Sales

Phone 992 -7625 .

home . Have a bea utiful new
$OOf installed by All -Weather
Roof ing Co.

__ ....__

_IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR A REGISTERED
NURSE TO FILL VACANCY IN LOCAL PLANT
DISPENSARY. EXCELLENT FRINGE BENEFIT
PROGRAM, 8-4:30 HOURS, AND A 5 DAY
WEEK ARE OFFERED.

GARAGE .

Dozer, B•ckhoe, Trucks

RernC..ehnO

- -------------

=
1971 BUICK Estate Wagon , 3
..,,~' -------------seats, p .s., p.b. . air con ditioning , new radial tires:

Don't forget the roof of you r

Decorath,ia._,

NEW
~i - l evel
home , -3
bedrooms , built-in kitchen.
basement with on e car
garage . Phone 742 -3615 or see
Milo Hut chison .
11 -1-tfc

·ROGER HYSEll'S

guaranteed.

337 N. 2, Middleport
992-2550

10 - 15-26t c

-----'---------NEWlY decorated 5 room

Water, Electric, Gas, Sewer
Lines, installed.
Work

All-WEATHER

Pomeroy . Phone- 992 -3478.

Redone
and
inside and out
furnace system :
pri ce d . Phone

~.=·=·==-====~========
-~~~~~-=-=-~
REDEOORAnNG
All that is needed for a free
estimate is a phone ca ll.
Please Ph~e :

7 ROOM house w i th 2 baths In

Pomeroy; .
redecorated
New lu x aire
Reasonably
992 -529 2.

Business Services
.7

MORE

Help Wanted

CHAI.N UNK FENCE. FORI
Hom~ -

Store ·
36" to 144" hlth. .. lvd. er
vinyl coated. ·
All 1101fs sol In c:oncrele.
Quick lnslalletiGna or I!D-It·
Yourself.

Wt . soli on ~~·1nl~:::;
anYbody •t DUr
Born or In your llome.
llnfornuolla•n .ond pickup
...rvlo,. call256-6967 aftor 5

1

none Too
1

Every S.turdly Night

At7o.m.

Free Estimat.'s
No'Obllgatlons

In Galllpells A-'C.II '' Unclt Jolon" -1697
In Jackson-O.k Hill A"" Coli (~14) n6-2237
'

FENCE DIVIS 10M, OF .
.
RAY HQUCKoiNC.: .· . '
Pllrt$moutll;-

�TIVI ~mll hl\' 1'mu~s- Sent mel Sunda\o. Nov :1,197-1

,\8

\

For Fast Results U~e The Su~day Ti.m es-Sentinel Classifieds

Card .of Thanks

For Rent

FA MIL Y Of Mrs Gcr h e
Oi' r St WI Sh to th.:tnk a ll of our

Hh SI'

•T H E

frlerf d s a nd n e- u;Jh bor s t or
Th e1 r
k m dn ess du r mq h er
il l n ess ilnd d ea th
To Dr
Hard er an d th e- staff a t H o l ze r

Med• ca l Ce nte r . to Cam e ron
Sp e;;ns fr o m th e Hom e H ea lth

Serv 1ce Es pec•a llv to
Noe l H enm a n an d R e v

R ev
J o t1n

Real Estate For Sale

MO B I LE

( h eS IH n ' , Q OO&lt;t

1{17 7 10 q

hom e
lo c atiOn Ca ll

"'

Real Estate For Sale

an d M rs Mdes Trout an d
Mrs Ed Spears fo r t he song'i
an d m uS IC T he R awl1 n S an d
c oa t s fun er al llom e f or th e1r
wo n d ~.: r ful

Rev

B

2 BR Mo bil e Home a t Quail
Cr ee k Mob ile
145 5021

~erv1ce

L

D ar s t

MOU IL E HO ME ... KERR
~ E TH EL R O
'71 A uburn ,
1 }' x 60' full fu r n 1shed wtth
a 1r N ew b loc k ga r 24 ' x 28'
a nd 1 1 A to t $ 12 900

Hom e

Park
229 tf

and

fam ll v

260 I

TR A ILER space
or 367 7438

Ph

446 3879
216 If

MOBILE hom e total e1ectr1 c, '2
bedroom S100 . 3 bedroom
Sl 25 Phon e 44 6 017 5 or 446
1934
105 If

Wanted To Do

LIKE THE PICTURE? MAKE ~URE YOU SEE THIS

ONE. Like new tri -level offers 2800 sq f1 of hvmg space
plus a 2 car garage Other features are 4 BR 's, 2t;2 baths ,
sunken LR, dream k1tch en , family nn w1th WB fireplace,
cent. a1r, patio, &amp; large lot Loca ted Ill on e of the a r ea 's
mcpr subdiVISIOns

WA LL P APE RIN G and tnt e rlor
SLEEPING ROOMS , weekiV
pa m l •ng Ph 446 9865
ra te s Park Central Hotel
60 tf
306 If
HOU SE . 129 Third . 3 BR , 2
baths . utii•IY room , basement
and gar a ge , S175 Ava1lab\e
Dec 1 Ph 4460111
258 6

INEXPENSIVE COUNTRY
LIVING - S rm s &amp; ba t h ,
ce ll a r s m a ll ba rn , shop &amp; 2
acres n ea r Vtn ton , $10 500

IA AL._L
p ape r1ng .
1nt e r1 or
pa mtm g Re asonabl e rat es
Ph 146 4423 or 446 363 1
242 tf

24 NEW Regency Inc Apts , 2
bedroom s. carpeted , total
e1ec tr 1c , located on Sand Hill
Ro ad . Pt Pleasant , W Va
Phone 67 5 5104 or 675 5386
258 tf

OWNER
WILL
HELP
FINANCE - M od ern hom e
off e r s
6
rm s
b a th ,
base m ent &amp; ov er I ac re of
rottmg land J u st II Sf Qd ,
$15 500

P I A NO TUNING a nd r epc11r
Co ll eg e g ra duat e wtth 15
ye ars ex p er. e n ce
EIm e r
Ge •ser 388 8666
25 8 3

SLEEPING rooms .
rates libby Hotel

1 Y P IN GS ERV t CES w •tldoa tl
kmd s ot t y p 1ng •n my ho m e
Call t 16 ·•999
254 tf

CU STOM se wmg , aller a l•on s on
al l typ es of clothmg , furs .
r ew eav 1ng Ph 446 7520 or
44 6 177 1
'133 fl

Mobde Homes For Sale
ECONOMY MOTORMOBILE HOME SALES
PRE U SED Mobile hom es 446
14 25
tO x SS Magnolia
IOx SO Detro 1ter 3 BR
10x 50 Sk y l m e
10x 48 Bud d y
Bx 30 Comet
1401 East ern A ve , ne xt t o
l a undrom a t
248 tf

For Rent

- - --·- ---- ----

w ee kly
257 II

LOW DOWN PAYMENT
New sec t 1onat h om e IS a ll
electr• c fo r your conv en i en ce
&amp; com t ort Feat ures 3 B R ' s,
bath , shag carpet. k 1tchen
wllh
range ,
ho o d .
refr i g e rator
&amp;
to t s of
cabmets S1tuat ed on a l ar ge
f l at tot on a BT rd

FOUR ofltce spa ces t~r s t floor
Second Av e Apply co The
Dail y Tnbune . Box 347
251 tf
Upper

2 BR Mobile Home ,
Route 7 -446 0008

PERRY TWP ~ 147 A, 52
A flat l and. (now m corn l ,
some comm er c1a l t•m ber ,
large tob base , 6 r m hom e.
large barn, BT r d, $35.000

5 room house apt , ground floor ,

centrally located on Se cond
Av e Ph .446 161 5 or 446 1243
24Btf

A GIANT - BOTH IN SIZE &amp;
VALUE , 1,076 ac re s. 500 A
woods, 200 A. l1lla ble, 500 A
fenced . 3 houses, 6 barns 3
pond s, 2 m1 rd fro nt , 2 m1
Raccoon
Cr ee k
fr o n t
$295,000, an av er ag e of $:.175
per ac r e

Services Offered
OOZt ER work , clear ing , ex
cavat1ng , s tump r e moval.
brush hopp1ng Ph 446 0051
259 If

1 BR tra•l er , 10 x 41 m trailer
par k '" Ga ll•polls $140 mo
All ut•t•ttes patd Ph 446 3844
after 1 p m
256 6
2 BR 12x50 mobile home With a i r
cond1I10n1ng m Add• son Ph
446 0294
260 If
NICE furn1shed apartment 4
rooms and bath , centrally
located Call 446 0444 after 6
pm

260 6

52x 12 2 OR mobile home
6816

256
260 3

FRENCH CITY BLOCK , 446
3608, located at Kerr Bethel
Kemper Hollow mtetsec tion
150 If

- ----- ------ - -

THREE
room
apartment.
furn. shed , m town , SIOO a
mon t h and utd•ties pa1d
Phon e 446 1066
259 3
BEDROOM Mo,b1le Home ,
tot al e lectnc , near hosp 1tal
Ph 446 1315
_.._
259 3

2

____________

• 2 BR trader OrY pr1vate lot on
Mad1son Ave ba t:: k of Pizza
Hut , ad ults only &lt;;all 446 0959
259 3
IN CITY , 6 large ro9ms. call
416 4311 Saturday or Sunday
258 3

- ---- - - -...l-------

TARA
Townhouse
, Apartments

2 Bedroom
.Townhouses

-.

ex.
landscap1ng
258 If

-------------TERMITE PEST CONTROL

FREE inspection Call 446 3245
Merrill O'Dell , Operator by
Extermlnal Term1te Service,
10 Belmont Or
267 .tf

1964
1965
1965
1968
1970
1972
1967
1953

TooL--sharP~!;;;:- r;;ws ,

GILLENWATER'S SEPTIC
TANK
CLEANING
AND

REPAIR

ALSO

HOUSE

WRECKING Ph . 446 9499
EstabliShed tn 19-tO
169·11

ALBERT EHMAN

Water Delivery Service
Patriot Star, GaiHpolls

B&amp;S MOBILE HOMES
PT. PLEASANT
Parkwood 10x 56 2 BR
National 10xso 2 BR
Camelot 12x55 3 BR
Globemaster 12x60 2 BR
Statesman 12x50 2 BR
FAWN 12x60 2 BR
'PMC 12x 60 3 BR
ABC 8x32 1 BR

TRI - STATE
MOBILE HOMES
1220 Eutern A~ e
8x45 M system
2BR8x2818R
lOxSO Branstratter 2 BR
lOx.so Marietta 2 B R
10XS0 Wolverlnf: 2 BR
,10x50 Marlette 2 BR
10x50 Belmont 2 BR
· 10x50 Kaywood 2 BR
446-7 S72

Ph . 3'19·2133
243 If

BANKS TREE SERVICE

FREE estim~les , liability In ·
surance • P'f',llnlng trimming
and cavity work, tree and
stump removal. Ph. 4.46 .4953
73 If

SANDY &amp; BEAVER

INSURANCE
SANdY AND BEAVER
tn
surance Co
has offered
services tor Ftre InSurance
coverage In Gall Ia County tor
almost a Century
Farms ,
homes and personal pror,erty
coverages are ava/lab e to
meet
Individual
needs
Contact your neighbor and
agent Lewis Hughes
257 6

___.... _________ _

CARPET INSTALLATION

71 MOBILE Home Shull 12x6 5
3 BR ttlt oul m livmg r oom
446 1323
25 4 If

For Sale
'
GOOD clean lump ;;~net
coal
Carl Wmters
Grande Ph 24S 511 5.
245 tf

PARSON'S
ARDWAR
Vinton, Ohio

FREE estimates, profess•onal
and
economy
Work
guaranteed , Jute or rub
berback Ph •46 .4224
260 3

SPECIAL
THIS MONTH

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

KOTALIC LANDSCAPING
RIO GRANDE, OHIO

•

10 sp. Huffy

COMPLETE PROGRESSIVE
LANDSCAPIIjG

BICYQ.E

SHRUBS . trees, rock garde"'s.
all guaranteed Pat10 and pool
landscaping . Stone, sand,
coal , Shrubbery trlmm1n9
Dump truck services 2.45·
9131
\

~.95

8 Track

PlAYER

187 If

------------•
CREMEANS
PIPE

With Speaker

&amp;

SUPPLIES
Bidwefl, Ohio
HGT and cold plastic ptpe and
f•lflrlgS, sewer and drain ptpe,
kitchen Sinks, fiberglass tubs
and shower, van
and Slue
R tdge Pa1nt Ph 388 8576
New Owners
Arnold Smith •nd
• Charles Sm lth
1
~31 tf

$49.95
Rockwell

'''es

llh BAniS
Pay Qnly one
Utilit,y
Addison, Ohio
For Information
Call Shirlev. Adkins

367-7250

------------THOMAS Fain Exterminating
Co Termite and Pest Control ,
Wheetersburr~~ , OhiO

_________ ___ _

233 tf

0

, Teflon 2 Coating

'

COOKWARE SET
su.95
mas

......

'

'j

·-·-·

•

PA TRI OT - 7 rm s. 2 story
w lfh b ase . furn h eat. ce n
a.r ba th . ca rpet ove r H w
floo r s, 25 ' beaut1 f u t k•t chen
cab It h as a barn and 1 ' 2 A
l ot Pr tce 51 8,000
CHE SHIRE - Nee d a b ig
ho use" Hav e on e on Rt 7,
no rth of v 1tta ge on 1 A lo t , 8
b 1g r m s, 11 .. bath s, n1ce new
fac t or y k1lch en , w1 th bar ,
o v en an d stove Mu ch of fh1 s
ho use ha s b ee n n~ con
d 1f1 on ed N1 ce r ec r m • new
fvrn • n ew w1 n ng n ew sep t 1c
tank . A lum s•d•ng , storm
doors and w1ndo ws Pn ce
525 ,000
CE NT E NAR Y
Ea s y
tm an c lng , new 3 bd rm
fram e an d br •ck, all carpet ,
a ll e lec W1fh h eat p ump and
ce n
a1r
Kit chen 13 'x26' ,
equ1pp ed Lot 80' x 180 '
Pr1 ce 52 6,000
G REEN ACRE S - Beauty ,
on ly 6 m o old , all e lec W1th
cen atr , all quality carpet,
1' ~ baths , plenty stor age ,
fully
e qu,pped
k ll chen ,
copp er plum bmg , b1g 2 car
g ar , large lot Asklng In
m 1d lh1r t •es
•
Any li' 446-1998

NEW HOME
BEING BUll T
Y es. see lh1 s she ll of a
hou se
tha t
can
be
arr an g ed , and f1n1she d to
your n eed s and des .res A I
a pn ce you ca n aff or d Ca ll
f or an a p po mtme nt
1 HOUSE
1 MOBILE HOME
NEW LI STING 14 A
4 Room Bloc k home - 55 x
10' c l ea n and good m obil e
h_om e Pl us I .J ac r es o f g ood
lan d on Ke ystone Rd n eiH
Vm ton appl e an d cherr y
tre es Won 'l las t long See
11 no w
J B E DROOM
6 Room Hou se m Bidwell.
Rt 554 N1 ce r em odeled old
house w1t h 6 r oom s- of
t urnd ur e a ll goes N ew
r et . fr eezer co ok sto ve
dm mg r oom 3 bed roo ms
compl et£&gt; 1 V and st er eo
all goes Front a nd Sid e
por ch es
s to rm
door s,
stor m w •nd aws dow nst a irs 1
l or cell a.r furn a ce Stora g e
build i ng ga rd e n space
Only $ 14 500
14 ACRES
Bl oc k Home -- 3 b edroom ,
b ar n rnac hm e ry bl d g
f en ces 2.000 lb tobac co
a ll o t men t.
o ne
ac re
g r ow1ng now and go es W1lh
lh •s sul e rott m g land Good
pas t ur e or far m mg
All
m1 n era1 n g hts goes Only
$12 500
47ACRES
T,~~~
~.~~?,;'~
36'x 48'
I
I1 ~;~' wnew
ell Approx
ac r es tillabl e, 15 a c r es ,
g ood pa stur e , new 1974, 3
be dr o om mobile h o m e
R educed tor qu 1ck sa te
3BEDROOM
On Nei ghborhood R d,
fron t
porch
lot
S1Z e
85 ' x 170' Na t g a s forc ed a ir
furn ace. large living room,
a ll st or m wmdows ,
co ndtt• oned A steal at on
$12 500
7 YEARS OLD
BRICK HOME
Ran ch Sty le, 4 bedroom ,
lar ge l•vtng room W1fh
wood b ur n 1ng fireplac e ,
mod ern k it chen with buill
m e lectn c cook sto v e.
r ef
full basem ent , 3
out b uil d•n gs , lots of shad e
tr ees, ap pl eS, c he r ry •fr ees,
g ra pe arbor , a real buy
JUST OUT OF CITY
LIMITS, STATE RT 141
N1 ce com for t able 5 ro om
house lo'cated on 1 acre of
l and w1! h to ts of shade
t r ees basement, modern
ktt c h en ,
natural
gas,
fur nace , c •IY wat er, l arg e
ntce ca rport
R eal g ood
16' X18' stor age build •ng ,
gard en space Just li sted
Ask •ng $1 8,900 Call now
VACANT LAND
4 8 acres A.pprox 2 m lies
fro m Gall ipoli S o n Rt 588,
rur a l w ut er

F or Sale
In Clly , thr ee bedrooms ,
l a rg er
o lder hom e, bath
up s tatr s storm wmdow s andsto r m
doors ,
furn ac t ,
ove rt ook 1ng c tty , $26,500
Green Acr es sub diVISton , !of
70 x 150, frame house , thre e
bedroom 11 2 bath , carpeted ,
f ir eplace , k1tch en cabmets ,
di shwasher, stove built m
Pr •c ed $27,500
Rodn e Y Vtlla g e 11. sub .
diVI SIOn . three bedroom
hom e s. carpeted, garag e,
etectr• c heat, $530 down ,
balanc e ove r ee years
F or Rent
Three b edroom double w 1d e,
co mp l etely furni Shed , 1 mile
from c 1ty, S150 a month
Farm
house , carpeted ,
k1lchen cabmets , 4 bedroom s
ov er BOO pound toba cco bas e
and barn , want t o rent for
one y ea r at 5125 a month and
tenant gets all the tobacco
crop
Referen ces required
and ftr st and la st month 's
r e nt Tobacco crop should
pay for year's r ent
•
Thre e room a partm e nt ,
furn•shed , 1n town , SlOO a
month and ut1lthes patd
Lives of great men all
remmd us
We can make our 11ves
subltme,
A nd , depert1ng , leave behind

us ,

Footprmts on the sands of
hme
- Longfellow
Phone
Russell D Wood, 446-1066
446-4618 (Evenings)
Ronald K Canaday
446-1066
Even•ngs f46-3&amp;36 '

Cloltd Sundl•

"'

NEW BRICK R A NCH
Beau t iful h ome w 1fh t hr ee
bedroom s. 11 7 bath s, utll1ty
ro om , la r ge tw o car ga rag e ,
buy now and p1 c k you r col o r s
of wa ll s und car pet loca ted
on a n 1ce level lo t 6 m 1l es
from to wn
R T H - L ove ly r anc h hom e
W1 lh three bedroo m s l amd y
roo m , w•f e a p p r o v ed k 1t
Ch en p , b a th s l1v1n g r oom
w1 th f.re p l ace . ba sement
large two ca r gara ge w1th
e lec t n c eye Located on a
n•c e l eve l l ot
GARFIELD AVE - r 0ort
two bedroom hom e. no •ur:J I
ga s h eat. full base m en t7 n ce
v •ew of th e r1 ver lilrg l l o l
with ro om fo r a gard en
GEORGE ' S CREEK RD Larg e hom e w 1ht for ce d a.r
furna ce, J1 1 bath s, county
w a t er , lo cated on 217 acres of
n• ce l and Pr •c ed a t S17 ,000

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

SM WHITE male k 1tten Wtfh
black spot between ears No
collar, house pet Lost •n the
vlcmity of Th1rd and Locust
Reward 4.46 1337
' 258 3

Thts new b rtck
frame ran c her ha s thre e
bedr'oom s, n1 ce bath , utilit y
room , f ull y ca rp e ted love l y
k itc h en d 1n 1n g a r ea, one car
garag e Loca ted m Ky g er
Cr ee k Sc hool o. str •c f

Circle l Kennels
BOARDING, A K C Pupp1es , 2
m1ies from City , 446 4824
215 If

------------BOARDING, AKC PUPPIES
K&amp;P Kennels, 388 8274 Rt 554;
'h m 1 E Porter
195 tf

---;:oi'
"-------;:-, - -'--AKC Reg Toy Poodle PuppieS,
SE A L PL Mal @Sia mese K1tten
ha s been d ec lawed Ph 446,

0371.

25 9 3

- -~ ----:...-+--;- ---::-

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I'

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'

, THIS HOME MUST BE SOLD IMMEDIATELY
Owner must se ll th1 s beautiful, nearly new tn level home,
Cathedral ce1hngs, dtmng r oom , 3 bedroo m s, family
room , 21f2 baths, central a1r, located on a J/4 a cre flat

DELUXE MODULE HOME
- 1972Marltte 24'x60 ' 3 BR , 2
ba t hs , F dlnlng Rm , fa~lly
room, good water, 4 m i from
hosptlat , • 2 A corner lot
$24 ,500
RT 141 - Very good 3 BR
r e mod e led
home ,
w w
carp e t. family rm
F
dming , •~ base m ent. gas
furn , pat 10 , 2 ac r es , she lt er
s tor age $23 1500
3 ACRE LOT - A beautifUl
locat1on for that new hom e
you want to budd $9,000
LISTING S
WANTED
Wh eth er buy 1ng or se lli ng
c ontact
BR A NNON
R EA L TV - "W e Sell Be tt er
L 1vmg" call today - II w111
pay
25 Locust St.
Howard Brannon, Broker
Off. 446·2674
Lucille Brannon
Eve. 446-1226 or 446-2674

Plumbin11 &amp; Healing
CARTER'S PLUMut...,G

Ai'ID HEATING

Cor. Fiourth&amp; Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 446-4477
165 ff

Gallipolis, 446-11782
297 ,f
DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone 446-2735
STANLI~r&lt;U

Plumbing- Heat•ng
Third Ave., 446-3782
•
187 tf

21~

- -- -------- -..,...._'ilnE PLANTS &amp; so,_--

PLUMBING - Heating - A1r
Conditioning. JOO Fourth Av e
Ph. 446 1637
48 If

For Sale

•1795 '4995

·~
,~

1973 BUICK

1973 BUICK
Custom 4 dr. hdtp., air con d., AMFM, 10,000 miles, expect the best.

---..

BEFORE YOlo ~ U . l EE 7'~ 1 5 BEAUTY

Ch ef 33
5 00 - Untamed World 6, Art of Footbal l 33, At Issue 3; M a n

n"

" U'I

6 00 - Vtlla All egre 33, Green A cres 3, News 4, Saga of Sara
M c Swee t 33
6 JO - News6 ; Zoom 33, NBCNews3, 4,1 5
7 00 - Last of the Wild 3, 4, Nat1onal Geographic 6 . Wtl d
K 1ngdom 13, 15 , Animal World 8 , In T he Know 10 , Journey to
Japan 20 , Lilias, Yoga and You 33
1 10 World of D1snev 3 4. 15 , Untamed World 13 , M ovt e
" Autobtography of Miss Jane P1tfman" 8, 10 ; Nova 20. In
Pe rformance of Wolf Trap 33.
8 00 - Sonny Comed y Revue 6, 13.
8 30 - Masterpiece Theatre 20, 33. Me: Cloud 3, 4, 15
9 00 - Movie " Mtdnight Cowboy" 6, 13
9 30 - Flnng lme20, 33 , Kojak 8,10
10 30 - We Thmk You Should Know 3 , News 4, 8; H1gh Road to
Ad ventur e 10 , Police Surgeon 15 . M o untain Scene 33, Beh md
t he Lmes 20
11 00 - CBS News 10, Mov1e "V1va Zapata" 8
11 30 - Face the Naf1on 10 . Mov 1e " H• Ya , Chum " J , Jo hnny
Carson 15, Don Ktrshner 's Rock Concert 13
11 35 ~ Good News 6
11 45 - New s 8, 10
12· 00 - Urban League 10 · Johnny Cars on 4
12 05 - News 6
12 30 - Mov1e " Coffee. T ea or Me? " 10
'130 - News 4
2 30 - News 13

4 Dr. hdtp., air cond., p. windows,

seats, 17,000 miles . Nice.
Was $4495.00

"'.

~·

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-~

...••
·-. .
.~
M

-~

THIS LOW INTEREST LOAN

MONDAY, NOVEMBER4, 1974

Th1 s home must be sold NOW Prtce has been redu ced
Y ou ' ll r ea lly appre Ciate th1 s 3 bedroom, fully carpeted
homewtth family r oom , l'h b ath s. super kttc hen, cent a•r
and 2 car ga rage

6 00 -

"

GALLIPOLIS

.,

·-••.,.

IF YOU HAVE BEEN THINKING
ABOUT BUYING

,.
""••

A'

..•

•••

,

..
.....
"

~

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~

...-.
....
"'

-·.

BIG USED CAR SALE!

...
...

1972 RALLY NOVA 2 DR .........................................'2195
1971 DODGE POLARA 4 DR HT.................................. lll95
1971 MUSTANG •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.••••••••• s2195
1969 VOLKSWAGEN •••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $795
1.970 MONTEGO 2 DR HT. .................................. : ...... 11095
1973 MAVERICK 2 DR ••••••••••••••••.••••••
·'2795
1969 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON .................................'995
_1971 TORINO STATION WAGON ................................... 11395
1965 CHEVROLET 2 DOOR ......................................... 1399
1971 CHEVELLE 4 DR SEDAN..................................... 11595
1972 PONTIAC 4 DR SEDAN ...................................... 12095
1970 TORINO 4 DR SEDAN ...................................... 11295

2 FINANCIAL HELP TH E
OW NER
W I LL
M AK E
SURE
A
QU A LI F I E D B UY E R CA N
OWN THI S 1 Y R OLD 3
BED R OOM
HOME
B U l L TIN
R A NG E
&amp;
DI SHWA SHER , GARA G E
:l ~ A CRE , REDUCED TO
S2 1,5 00
THI S
IS
A
BAR G A IN

8 BRAND NEW - F U L LY
CAR P ETE D W ITH V E RY ,
V E RY NI CE KIT CHEN , 2
CA R
GAR A G E
EX
CE L LE NT
LOC AT ION
P R I CE I S RIG HT

·~
:......

9
$15,000
A
REAL
BARGAIN - I F Y OU ' RE
L OOK IN G F OR A RE A L
GOOD HOU SE CHE A P ,
H EA R IT I S
OLDER
H OME IN VER Y G OO D
CO NDI T IO N , B A TH A ND
N EW F U RN ACE

....

5
BRAND
NEW
OWNER
Wlb-L
HEL P
FINAN C E ,
HI LEVE k,
WITH
B E A UT I F U L ~
KITCHEN ,
HU G E
FAMILY ROO M $33 ,900
6
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION - ' SUP E R
BRIC K HOME Ot-4 '7 A ON
RA C COON CK , F AMI L Y
AND
DININ G
F ULL
B ASE MENT ,
PRICE
RE D U CE D ,
OW N E R
VERY
AN XI OU S
TO
SEL L

••
&lt;•'
••
•••

......._

~-

-.....

T

N

State Patrol office,
$14,900. $500 down
$125 mo'&lt;
Ph. 245-5439
NEAL REALTY
15 A farm 5 rm house w1th
bath , 'rur a l Wat er , locat ed 5
m1 from town on blacktop
road
•
Off1ce Ph . 446 · 1694
Even.ngs
Charles M. Neat , 446·1546
J . MIChael Neat, 446-1"503
Sam Neat, 446-7358

I

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;:

.."'""...,
:'}

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

10 BRAND NEW ON RT.
:15 - OW N E R WI L L HELP
F IN ANCE T H IS SUP E R
B RI CK A ND F R AM E A LL
YOU NE E: D DO I S MOVE
IN 526 900

..."'..

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~

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Galha Co.'s Largest Rear
Estate Sales Agency
Offic e 446-3643
Evenm~s Call
tk l" Wiseman 446 3706
E. N_~WJ..!.eman , 44to -45!Q.
Bud McGhee, 446 - t.n:.

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t...
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......

REAL ESTATE
FO~ SALE

NEW 3 BR HOME
Fully carpeted, plenty of
cab1nets, large kitchen,
range &amp; disposal, large
utility
room.
Attached
garage, nice level lot,
blacktop road. Located 6 mr.
up Rt. 7, County Atr Estate .
Prtced $24 ,900. ' Can help
fmance Call 446- 1171, after
I, 446 ·2573

RANCHO COMfiANY
REALTORS&amp;
AUCTIONEERS
446 0001 . 367 -0300
2 NEw 3 BR homes, on lots , 1 2 42 A Farm , $2.4 ,900 . 5 A hom e
BR home with 4 62 acres, for
stte 56,000, Ca mpafg n Cr eek
sal e by build er Call 446 2890
Home , $1 3, 500 New hom es
$5 0,0 down We will build on
'
260 I
your lot See our plans .,

.

' Fdr~Sale~~ Trade____

,

1:

,.

For-Sale---------

-------,~---'-----.:..!57 ·6)

~LL

TYPES of
bulldliig
materialS , block , brick, sewer FIRE WOOD , $15 per 3!. ton
pipes, windows, lintels, etc .
pi ckup load
Clllt 446 7534
anyt1me
5
1
258 6
• 123-n'
•
15 MO OLD fema le Bnllany
Spaniel , 1 4X8 pool t abl e, Ph
' 73 YAHAMA J::.U, rots of extra s,
446 3413
•
perfec t cond 256- 1123 .
256 6

.5 ·~~:n~'~lt~ 1'2f~~t~;~~cr~

--------------

______v , ___ ___ _

For Sale

9 30 10
10 30 -

' f\ • •

'',,

'"

CAMPIN'G tr~uler , 26 ft long. PINTO MARE HOR SE, $150
Quarter Horse and Appaloosa
Trotwood ' 68 model, iUr cond •
, 4-H projec t , s200 256
full awn ing , full baUl , self • mare
6247
contained . total ele c , $2,800
2SB 6
AA6 966-t after 5 p m 1
..... - - ~--2S6 6

----~·---~- ----

--------

Rhoda 8, 10
Wash mgton Stra 1ghtTalk 33 ; News 20 ; Medtcal Center 8,

Da y a l N1ghl 33

11 00 - News3.4. 6,8, 10, 13, 15
11 30 John ny Carson 3, .4, 15; Movie " Unsinkable Molly
Brown'' 8, M ov 1e '' Brtdge to the Sun" 10 ; Janak 133
12 00 - News 6, 13
12 30 - M tss1on lm po ss•ble 6, Untouchables 13
J·OO - l om orr ow 3, 4
1 30 - N ~ ws 13
2 00 - News 4

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
7 oo p.m - M e1gs High School Football
9. 30 p .m -- Opera t1 on Gangbuster.

For Sale

For Sale

COA CHM A N Tr av el tr ailer!, FOR your T.re and Battery
need s, come to sears T.re
M oto r Homes, 5t h Wheel,
Shop In The Silve r Bridge
T ru c k Campers , App l e C1 f y
A uto Slltes , Rt 35 N Jackson ,
Plaza
If
236
Oh 10 Phon e 286 57 00
118 If
- - - -- - - - - - - - - • G RAVEL . l tme s ton e. sand ,
VtRCO Fold1n g c ha 1r s a n d
M ason sand, f i ll d.rt P 1t run
tables sa te - L• m tt ed , Oct 15
D e livered by the ton 446 1142
Nov I S 5 PcJ 25 Pel off
247 -lf
s,m mons Pi g &amp; Off E q u1p - - -- - - - - -- - - - - 446 1397
F IREWOOD , an y am o unt- Ph .
247 19
446 4999 ...
226 tf

=----------- - ----

I··

'72

CHEVROLET IMPALA

4 Dr. hardtop, 350 cu. in. V-8 engine, P.
steering, P. brakes; radio, auto. trans., fac.
air ~ond., w-s-w tires, Sequoia green finish,
matchinq interior with vinyl top. Extra nice.

For Sale
F UEL OIL DRUM . 275 gal
Ready for hookup , S50 Ph
446 0466 &lt;!!fter 5 p m
258 3
1974 FAYETTE 24 tt
a xles , Ph 446 9777

\
Ne ws 3, 4, 1s, 8. 10. 13 , Bewlt~hed 6, Pyle 13

10 00 -

1639 EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS,

For Sale

Elec Co 33, Hodgepodge Lodge 20; News6, Trails West

15
6· 00 -

lns lghl 33

GALLIPOLIS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH

-..

5 30 -

7· 30 - That Good Ole Na shv•lle Music 3, Buck Owens 8;
Ep1sode Acf1on 33 . Help Thy Neighbor 4 1 Pol ice Surgeon 6,
Mumc1pa l Court 10 , To Tell the Truth 13 , Mountwood Park,
M o un ta 1n Song 20
8 00 - Gunsm oke 8, Born Free 4, 6, 15. The RookieS 6, 13,
Inherita nce 20, 33
9 00 - Maude 8, 10 , NFL Foolball 6, 13 ; Movie " The Greatest
G1ft " 3, 4, 15, Ormandy International 20, 33

MANY '74 NEW PLYMOUTH$ LEn-··
HURRY &amp; SAVE MONEY-I BUY NOWI

-r

eCOURTEOUS SALESMEN TO SERVE YOU.

7 00 - Truth or Cons 3; News 10, ~at' s My Lme 8 , Elec. Co
20 . Wor k shop 15, Bowltng for Dollars 6; Cand 1d Camers 13 ,

1973 COMET 4 DR SEDAN... ••• •••.... •••.... •••••••.. •••••••.. ••'2395. .
1974 CHRYSLER 4 DR CDEMO\ .................................... SAVE

f\~~~~~ . .,. . . . . . . . . . . . . ~.995.

_,

Do 13 ; F 61 3, Andy Gnfllth 8; l'onslde 13 .

1972 COMET Z-DRI AlR .•••••••••••••••••••••••• -. ................. $1995

I,

New GMC
Truck Headquarters .
2HouSEs-:;-crow--;;C~y;rl ce
968 12 T GMC Ptckup
$16,500 PI") 256 6793 afte r 4
1
1965 ' 1 T Ch ev P 1ckup
pm
OFF ICE
Publi c seat1nQ
1970 ~~ T Ch ev P te kup
D es k s - 4 dr . f 1les, Sec a nd
260
6
1974 1;;o T Ch ev P lckup
E xe c
f o ldtng and s ta c~
1968 l " T G MC P1 ckop
cl"! a irs Storage cabinets In
• 196~ '1 T GMC P tckup
stock Sfmmon s Ptg &amp; Office
1969 11 T GMC P1 ck up
Equ i p Phone 446 1397
1
1972 HON OA 250 Mot or Spo rt ,
1971 ' T Ford P1 c kup
230-tt
exc,ellent condition Ph 367
1970 4 T GMC W1th Stoc k body
7462 after 4 30
1968 ' ' T GMC P1ckup
N O h un t mg S•gn s ol all k•nds
260 3
1971 2 T Dodg e Tab and ChaSSIS
Ca r s ,
tr u Ck i
Magn et•c ,
1967 ' 2 T GM C P•ckup
p1as llc , meta l
Nam e and
1
1969 ;- T G M C P.ic kup
m a •l box p l,t es. Si mmons
1968 11 T GMC Pic kup
Ptg and Office Equ ip
1968 ' l T Ch evy P 1c kup
HoNDA X R 75 , good condition
230 ·11
197 1 G MC Su burban
Hooker h ead er , just tuned .
1067 1 T Ford P•c kup
av
O
WNE
R
2
yea
;-;
;-;BR..
Phone 4A6 0161 or Aot6 0300
SOMMERS 'G. M. C.
ho m e, family room , modern
258 3
TRUCkS, INC
kit c hen Will acce pt rnobile '
~oRo-;;;;u;;;-;;;; lo~M-F
133 P1ne St.
hom e o n trad e Bulav i Ue Rd
at Bul avl\l e P h J67 0140
446 2532
mo~er . 7 ft Pnone 25 6 64IJ
147 If
......,.
m~

a.

1972 CHEVY MAILBU 2 DR HT.................................... 12295
1970 NOVA 4 DR SEDAN.......................................... 11595
1971 VOLKSWAGEN•••••••••••••••••••••.•.••••••••••••••.••••.••••• '1395
1971 TORINO GT •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '1895
1973 VENTURA 2 DR .............................................. '2395
1973 DUSTER. SHARP.............................................. '2995
1974 MAVERICK 2 DR ............................................ '2895
1974 DODGE CHARGER SE 2 DR HT............................. 13995
1970 OLDS CUTLASS 2 DR ....................................... 1189~
1973 GREMLIN X 2 DR........................................... 12595
1972 JAVELIN 2 DR •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .'$2395
1966 OODGE 4 OOOR··············································S399
1972 CHEVROLET IMPAlA 2 DR HT...............................12495

~

11
AS
PRETTY
AS
YOU'LL EVER SEE E XCELLENT
FLOOR
PLAN , FAMILY ROOM, 2
CAR G ARAGE , 2 BATHS,
OWNER
WILL
HELP
FINANCE .

73 GMC PICKUP • EXTRA NICE
73 FORD XLT - 1/i TON
72 CHEVROLET C-10 PICKUP
68 FORD PICKUP - BLUE

3 00 - Ano th er Wor ld 3, 4, 15 , Price is Right 8, 10 ; General
Hospital 6, 13, Great American Dream Machine 33.
3 30 - How to Survive a Marriage 3, 15; Match Game 8, 10, One
Lite to L 1ve 13 ; lasste6. Dollar Decisions 20
4· 00 - Mr Cartoon &amp; the Banana Splits 3 , Somerset 15, Tat&amp;
tletales
Sesame St 33 , G illigan ' s Is. 6 , $10,000 Pyram1d 13,
Bonanza 4, M ov•e " Forty Guns" 10.
4 30 - Jackpot 4, Bonanza 15, Mod Squad 6, Gilligan ' s Is . 13.
Bonanza 15 Bewtt ch ed 3, lucy Show 8
5. 00 - Merv Gnffm 4, Mister Rogers 20, 33 , Anything You Can

•••••• t •••••••• I ••••

-

GOOD USED TRUCKS SPECIALS

2. 30 - Gtrl In My L1fe 6, 13, Edge of Night 8, 10, Doclo" 3, 4, 15

1969 CHEVROLET 4 DOOR........................................... '895

=
If.·

.

2 Bedroom House near

Bill Joe Jahnson

d

7
JU ST
LIST E D
BE A UTI F UL BRIC K AND
F R A ME , 7 o A, MOVE
R IGHT IN E X CELLENT
K IT CHEN ,
B AS EMENT
GO OD
L OCAT ION ,
&amp;
CAR
H AR DW O OD
PETIN G

4 VA
APPROVED -A TTRA C TIVE 5 R OOM
HOME
WITH
FULL
BA S E MENT
A ND
GARAGE , NEW CA R
P E TIN G, QU I E T NEI G H
BO R HOOD
CLOS E T O
TOWN

'

PLYMOUTH

"'

I LOAN ASSUMPTION S4.000 00 ON SIBS 29 MO 19
YRS , 7112 PCL INT , 1
yg 01 D 3 BEDROOM
HOME , LARG E BUILT IN
KIT ,
C ENT
A IR ,
GA R AG E
L ARGE
COUNTRY LOT 1 MIL E

NO MONEY
DOWN -- VERY NI CE 3
BED R OOM HOME WITH.
DIN I N G A ND FA MIL Y
ROOM , 112 MILE FROM
' I OWrQ ON LARGE L OT IN
EX C ELLENT
N E IG H
BORH OOD

:

~

SEE ALL OF THESE 3 BEDROOM
HOMES AND MAKE US AN OFFER

J . VETS -

Sunrise Semtnar 4 Summer Semes1er 10
6 25 - Far m Report 13
6 30 - B1bl e A nswers 8 . News 6 , Five Minutes to L1ve By 4,
Rev Cl eophu s Robm son 13 , Concerns and Comments 10
6 35 - Colum b us Today 4
6 45 - Morning Report 3, Farmtime 10.
7• 00 - Today 3, 4, 15, CBS News 8, 10, Osmonds 6 . Farmer' s
Daug hter 13.
7' 30 - New Zoo Revu e 6 , H R Pufn stuf 13
8 00 - Capt. Kangaroo 9 , New Zoo Revue 13 , Sesame St 33 .
J eff's Collie 6, Po peye 10
6 25 - Ja ck lalanne 13 , Capt Kangaroo 10 .
8 30 - Brady Bunc h 6
6 55 - News 13
8 00 - Paul D1 xon 4, A M 3. Ph1l Donahue 14, Wdd , Wild West 6,
Bullwtnk le 8 . M ov 1e " Danger Has Two Faces " 13
9 . 30 - Not For Wo m en Onfy 3, HazelS , Taffletales 10
10 00 - Com pany 6, Name That Tune 3, 15; Maga z1ne 8, 10
10 30 - Wtnmng Str ea k 3, 15 , Phil Donahue 4.
ll 00 - Password 13, Now You See It 8, 10, Htgh Rollers 3, 15,
$10,000 Pyramid 6
11 . 30 - Brady Bunch 13, Hollywood SquarEfS 3, 4, 15 . Love Of
life 8, 10 , lu cy Show 6
11 55 - C BS News 8; Dan I mel 's Wortd 10
12 .00 - Pass word 6 , News 6. 10, 13, Bob Braun's SO SO Club 4;
Mr Roger s 33, JackPOt! 3, 15
12 3o- Aftern oo n w1th OJ 13 , Celebnty Sweepstakes 3, 15 ,
El ectnc Co 33 , Spl1t Second 6 . Search For Tomorrow 6, 10
12 55 - News 3, 15
1 00 - News 3. All My Children 6, 13, Not For Women Only 15 ,
Phil Donahue 8 Young and Restless 10
1 25 - Chu ck Whtfe Reports 10
1 30 - J eo pardy 3, 4, 15; let 's f!l.ake A Deal6, 13; As The World
Turn s 8, 10
2 00 Day s Of Our Lives 3, 4, 15 ; Gu1d1ng light 8, 10 ,
N ewlywed Garne 6, 13

CHR~S.LER-

~

DON'T-Pu·y.
IT OFF-

O UT

TBA

15
5 30 - FBI6 , The Way It Was 33

ELECTRA

NEW CAR TRADE-INS
USED CAR INVENTORY
MUST BE REDUCED. • •

74 MUSTANG II - BRONZE METALLIC
73 MONTEGO 4 DR GREEN &amp; WHITE
73 GRAN TORINO 4 DR WHITE
73 GALAXIE REAL NICE
73 LTD FORD - GREEN
72 TORINO STA. WAG. NEW CAR TRADE
72 FORD PINTO 2 DR. - BLUE
72 MAVERICK 2 DR - WHITE &amp; BLUE
72 MUSTANG - WHITE
71 PLYMOUTH- BLUE
71 GALAXIE 500 4 DR SEDAN • BROWN
71 TOYOTA CORONA ST.W. - NICE
71 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN STW.
71 MAVERICK 2 DR · CLEAN
71 RAMBLER HORNET 2 DR
70 CHEVROLET CAMARO 2 DR GREEN
70 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill 2 DR HT - BLUE
70 PONTIAC • WHITE &amp; BlUE
70 FORD STW. COUNTRY SQUfft'E
' MONTEREY 2 DR HT
70 ' MERCURY
70 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR
68 PLYMOUTH FURY 2 DR HT- BLUE
68 PLYMOUTH STW. • BROWN

Football 6

$3895 $3995

~

T he price Is right a nd ) &gt;t..' ll lo\lor;: a ll the room 5
bedrooms, 2 ba1hs, u~
; h ag carpeting, huge family
room, cent. air, ov er JIZed
'lr f}arageon a flat lot.

(

3 00 - World of Surv•val13 , Wally ' s Workshop6
3· 30 - J•mmy Dea n 6 ; Lower Lighthouse ll
4 00 - Anhques33 , NFL FootballS, 10 . Future of Us All1 3
4 30 - Othe r People, Other Places 13, Inner Spa ce 6 , F r ench
from U. N C l E 4, Movie " Q\JIIIer M e morandum" 13

------------J--

RUSSELL'S
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING

Granville 4 dr. hdtp., silver mist,
black vinyl top. demonstrator .
Orig. Price $6369.00.

••

~·

landscaped lot with large garden spot

NEW LISTING - 3 BR bnck
&amp; frame ran ch styl e on a n1 ce
le vel 1;o ac r e lot 3 yr s o ld
eat •n k1t chen wtth pl enty
c abm et s, w w c arpe ting. 2
bath s g ar age. electri c heat ,
$?5,500

COTTAGE - Down t own . 5
rooms , br eeze way , stor ag e,
garag e, w w car p et , ,,..,
ba sement $13,'W0

1974 PONTIAC

P.ed, radio, standard , 20.000
miles. Sharp. Was $2195.00.

~

A~SUME

ACRE LOT - 3 BR ran c h 1
ea t m kttchen , larg e tam dy
r m patio . $26 500

1973 CHEV. VEGA

~

~

Eventng Call
John M Fulter-446· 4327
Lee Johnson-256-6740
Doug Weth erholf-446 ·11244

1h

Vista Cruiser, St. Wagon. , 3
seater, wood grain, air cond. Was
$3295.00.

•

WE BUY, SELL, TRADE

152 ACRES - 13 mi from
town 3 OQO tb T B , 40 A ,
tillabl e, 55 A f 1mber , 2 large
barns &amp; Ghteken H Ont! story
3 BR &amp; b ath hom e. Plenty
tr ees &amp; Shrub s \ 58, 000

OLDS

$3695$2995

....

\
...

-.-..
••

~·

Ta k e a l ook at
t h• s
l o vel y
o ld
h om e
overtook m g t he cou nlr y S1 d e
Wtlh fiv e ac r es ntce land
Loc at ed c lose to Tyc oon
Lake A b ar9 am at ss,coo

~
REALTY

1972

4 Dr ,, air cond., 18,000 miles, local
banker's trade, serviced by us.

"'

'·

5 ACRES -

---- ----------Pets

-....
_,

IJ ACRES -

Lost '
BLACK With brown markmgs.
dog VI Ctnlty Of Fa 1rview
Subdtv . 4.46 1423
259 3

1973 BUICK

.

•
'.

·~

187

lobbl' i ,.Uiunt eoutlqU,
PROFESSIONAL grooming by
appo intment only. Ph Bobble
Casto , 446 1944
21 2 tf

I-12Thu..-y
1-ll'rl. a Slot.

...

BROKERS
Oscar Ba•rd, John Fuller,
Doug W etherholl
452 Second Av enue
Galhpoh~ . OhtO 45631

CLOSE IN - J B R r anch e 1
br 1ck and fr am e, w w ca rp et
ext ra n ~t:e k!lc h en a nd
dmtng, garag e and pat1 o,
now vacan t $26,000

------- ---- - -

'

~

~ :.:

HILL VIEW Beautiful 4
BR , 2 ba t h ho me
w w
carpet. d e luxe ktf ch en w 1th
all th e b uilt 1n s, full dlvtd ed
b as em e nts ,
f a m il y
R ,
g ar ag e. s paciou s roll1ng
lawn , $36 ,000

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

Hrs.: 8•5, Mon.-Wed.

2·11

C IT Y 821 Second A v e
L ease or sell . 6 b 1g rms and
bath , 2 story on a larg e c 1ty
l o t It has a 111e bl oc k gar
plu s a sto ra g e bldg A goo d
buy for Sl7 ,500

Whtt e. pn ce r educed Ph 446
1266
'
260-6

Many other speci'alsLavaway for Chrish

''

'

Drill

'9.95
7pc.

P. Martin &amp; Son Water
Deltvery
Service .
Your
Pltrontgt
Wllf
bt
ep .
prtclated. Ph . A 6·0463 .

- - -- .- - -:;--- --oj"" __ _

1/4'

DRill

PROTECT your mobile hom&amp;
with TIE DOWN ANCHORS
Call Ron Skidmore, AA6 1156
after 3 p m
'
121 .If

_::

ROOM S,

BEDROOM S, BATI::I S, DEN S,
ETC SEE NOW AT K &amp; K
Mobile Hom e Sales , 3411
Jac kson Ave . Pomt Pl ea sant .
W va
260 1

------ - - ---DOZER work , clearmg ,

scissors, shears, home and
garden tools
Sllarp ShoR,
Alley rear, 147 Second
216 tf

FAMILY

BA B Y F AR M - 6 mil e down
Rt 7 b.ea ut d ul 3 bd rm
fra m e ra n ch, n ew carp et
ov er H W . eq u•p ped k1lchen ,
fu ll ba&gt;e w 1th F B , 2 car
a tt ac hed g ar , root cellar
an d stor age b ldg • 4 A lo t
w 1th fro n ta g e on n ver and
Rt 7 A ll kmd s of fru1t tr ees
a nd g ar de n
Prt ce only
$39 ,500

WOOD,
REALTOR
446-1066

CRAMPED FO R SP A CE IN
YOUR MOB iiLE HOME?
REMODEL NOW 1 VEMCO
ADD A ROOM S
SOLVE
YOUR PROBLEM IN JU ST
ONE
OA1' 1 16 F LOOR

PLANS.

FA I R F I ELD CE N RO
Spill ~.:n t r y all b rt c k , a ll
c arp et co lon hJI , panel and
d r y wall
full y e qutpp e d
k i! chc n , '/ 1 1 bat h s, 8 rms
W1t11 a 2 car ga r age Th1S 1S
one o t th e bett er houses m
th e ur ea
'2 ,000 SQ fl llv
a r e~1
9 A 101 Pr rce up pe r
So10s

RUSSEi.t.'F

Moo1ie 1iollle-; For Sale

BLOCK
and
br1ck
work ,
f.replaces spec•alty. Logue
Contra t; tmg, Ph 388 9939
231 261

l'HREE bedroom double w•d e.
completely furnished, 1 mtle
from c •tv , S150 a month
Phone 446 1066
259 3
FARM house , carpeted. k1tchen
cabinets. 4 bedrooms over BOO
pound tobacco base arid barn ,
want to rent for one year at
Sl 25 a month and tenant gets "
all
the
toba c co
crop
Ref e ren ces reQuired and first
a nd la st
month's
rent
Tqba cco cro p should pay for
y ~r · s rent
Phone 446-1066
259 3

HANNY IIACKBURN,

NEED your furnace repa1red
and cleaned ? Oil. ga s and
electric. Call me. E
G
Skaggs , 367 0140 Any t1me
250 12

cavatlng, and
Ph . 446 0051

COMMER CIAL BUILDING
IN Ga lli pO liS Sch ool D1Sf
f ea t ur es off1 e.e , show r oom
an d 2 g ar ag es PLU S a love l y
6 rm
&amp; bat h a pa r tm ent
up sta trs
WORLD ' S LARGEST
THE LEADER SINCE HOD
IN
SERVING
THE
!'IIATION'S
BUYERS
&amp;
SELLERS
Ph . 446· 0003

ENJOY COUNTRY LIVING
in thiS modern 3 BR hom e
Wtlh HW floors , modern
kitchen . 2 car garage and
br tck front Th1s home can
be bought w1th 1 acre or 42
See th1s one

GARAGE . attic and basement
clean lng Trash hauling Free
est1mates Ph 446 0355 or 4-t6
?950
218 78

NEAR PATRIO'T
\ J7 A ,
52 A Sand Fo r k Bo tto m
Ba l an ce •n pa st u r e &amp; woods.
lo ts of wa l nut li mb er 6 r m
hom e large b arn 1735 1b
to b ba se $35 000
US 35
10 A ap pr o x 1850
f r r d fron tag e ail ul il lll eS
ava il ab le Buy &amp; sub d•v •de

NO DOWN PAYMENT 1f YOU
Quality L1ke new 3 BR r an ch
has br tck fron t w w ca rp et
garage &amp; locat ed •n c1 t y
school d1 St

6t:ron:KAL CONTRACTING
Home Improvements and ad
dltlons Roofing , vinyl Std•ng
Call 446 0668 or 245 5138
152 56

\

M E I G S COUNTY
190 A
r o 111 n q past u re f a r m N1ce ty
r e mode l ed home Wit h 5 rms.
bath and ba sem en t, 2 ponds ,
f r e e gas and 6 pet f.n .J n Ci ng
av&lt;J d a b le

'

---- ---------- -

OPENING SOON
For rental information
Ph. 446-4905 or write
P. O.
Box
301.
Gallipolis, Ohio

DON'T B E B EAT BY IN
FLATION
I nv es t
yo ur
sav 1ng s 1n la n d
Ex pert s
c onclu d e t ha i the na t•o n 's
land w ill n se m v&lt;JI\Je b y at
leas t 15 p et 1n 19 7 1 We h av e
32 8 acres o f wood l and 9 m 1
from tow n fo r only '!. 130 p er
acre

256 tf

TRI·STAR
2 BR F urn1 shed apartment , a1r
Electric Contractors
c ond , d e postt requ1red
Adults only , 446 2852
• COMPLETE etectncal serv1ce ,
GathpohS , Oh10 Ph. 367 -0311.
256 If
207 tf

SPRING VAlLEY
GREEN
APARTMENTS

MON E Y MAK E R
2
co m m e r c tal r en ta ls ,md 2
T h• s
l ilrgc apa r tm ent s
bu lid m a IS loca t ed on a
cor ner to t 1n dow ntown
Po m er oy
I n com e f 1g ur es
a v a li a b l e
to
1nt e r es t ed
p er son s
NEW HOMES
RA N CHE S
&amp; SPLI T LEVE LS
Pr1 ces
ran g e f rom $17 000 to $35.000

LAND
CONTRACT
Spac .ous old er hom e h as •I
BR 's , bat h l a undry fo r ced
a~r
fu r na ce, c o
w ater
sep ar a t e doubl e garage 8. 200
It front on state rd S.ll ,OOO

w ee kly
174 tt

SL EEPING rooms .
r ate Gatlia Hotel

RIO GR A N DE
HOME
PLU S
INC OM E
wilh
tm an c mQ a vull a ble to lh&lt;.•
n g hl pa r ty ( I ) 6 rm an d
ba th ap t (2 J 3 rm &amp; bat h
ap t (3 ) sl ce p1ng r m w ll h
pnvn t e bat h (4) eff iC i ency
ap t 15 1 m ob il e hom e pad

WH EATO N RO f A RM
au A sto c k f arm , 6 r m h ou se
With fur hea t and bath
p t e nl -t water , 2 mobtl e
1'1 o me s lu rn •sh e d
G ood
tr ac to r un d ot her f arm tool s
You c an buy th e b und le for
S43 500

AGENCY.

6 ' 30 - T r a ve logue .A , Lamp Unto My F e et 10
7 00 - Je rry Falwell 13 · Commun1q ue 6 . Ounce of Pre ventt on
4 , T a lk mg H and s 8 , Look Up and L1v e 10
7 15 - Te l e A B1bl e T•me 4 .
7 30 - Chur ch by S1de of Road 4 ; Camera Three 10 , Gospel
Ca r a van 6 , Day of Dtscovery 6
8 00 - Billy Jame s Hargis and H1 s All Am en can K1ds 10 , Rev
Le ona rd Re pass B. Mormon Chotr 3 , M a m re Chur ch 13 , Da y
o f DI SCOV erv 4
B 30 - Your Hea lth A, Get Toge ther 10 , Rex Humbard 13. Ora l
Ro ber t s 3. Kathryn Kuhlman 6 , Evangelist Bobby Mar1m 15
8 55 - Bla ck Cameo 4.
9 00 - Cadl e Cha pel 4, Or al Ro bed s 10, Rex Humba rd 6, 15 .
Gospe l Smgmg J u b •lee 3 , What Does the Bibl e Sa y? 8.
9 30 - Christ tS the Answer 13, Churc h Ser v tce s 10 Yours for
t h e A skmg 4 , TBA 8
10 00 - Ch urch Serv1 ce 4, F a ith for Today 15 . B•g Blue Marble 3,
Notre Dame H1ghl1ghts 6, 8, Movi e ''K1ss •n ' Cous1ns'' 10
10 30 - What t he Btble Plainly Says 13 , Go 3, Th1 s •s the l 1f e 15
lns •ght 4
11 00 - TV Chapel 3, Point of V1ew 6. Across the Fenc e 15 . Rev
He nry Mahan 13, Re x Humbard 8, Focus on Columbus 4
11 30 - Make a W1sh 13 . Btshop She en 6 . lns•ght 15 , At Issue 3
12· 00 - Rev Calvm Evans 13 , Sacred Heart 15, Meet th e Press
3; Bobby Bowden 8, 0 S U Football H1ghl1ghts 4. Co lumbus
Town M ee tmg 10
12 30 - Day of M•racles 13 ; NF l Pr e Gam e 8. Meet th e Press 4
12 55 - Ftve M 1nutes to K 1ck Off 10
1 00 - L ower Lighthouse 13, NFL Football 8, 10 , B1ll Dal ey' s
Hoc us Pocus Gang 3 , Issues and Answer s 13, Open Btble 15
1 30 - Sale of the Century 4, TBA 15 .
2 00 - Coll ege Football 13 . NFL Football 3, A, 15 , College

••

WISEM.AN

Tel. 614-446-1991l

&lt;~ 31 1

~UNDAY , NOVEMBER 3, 1974
6 00 - - Th1s Is Th e ltfe 10

"

-:nm·

Realty, 32 State St

NI CE mo bll e hom e sp a ce
loc&lt;tl ed R o dn ey , Oh• o Ca ll
Jo hn Fu ll e r 1.16 3J 34 o r 446

Television Log

•

Real Estate· For' Sale

Real Estate For Sale

MASSIE

STROUT REALTY

15 4 It

Jefl e n es Th e Le ml e y S 1n ge r s

t

..

long , 3
258 3

C HU R CH- P ewS- alldPUtp• t
t urn• tur e Rea sona b tv Dr•cAd
Wrtt e at once for Chnstmu
and New Year ' s. Spec ial fr ee
of fer Steven s Ct\ur ch Su ppl y
Hun
Co , P 0 ... Sox 781
tmgton , w v a
25 4 26

'2495
WOOD MOTOR· SALES
EASTERN AVE.

For sale

For Sale

"AUL T ' S Mob1l-e H om e Ser v 1ce 1973 MOBILE home , reasonable
Sk irting .. r oo f co at 1n g . pat iOS,
W1lh or Without central ~tr .
a wni ngs, a nc ho r s , ceme nt
Pr lest Tr
Ct
Add 1s.on
work F r ee estimat es Ca l l
Bulaville Rd , Ad d iSOn , Oh
446 2950 aft er 4 30 p m
A sk Han sha w
"l
2586
1
2 11 1f

GALLI'POLIS, OHIO
~

'I •

------ -- --------), ~

. .
.... I ......... ...~

for Sale
1973 14FT STARCRAFT alum .
boat . Complete with 7'h h p .
motor and t 11t away t r a 11er
Ph 446 2973
.

,

i 256 6

�TIVI ~mll hl\' 1'mu~s- Sent mel Sunda\o. Nov :1,197-1

,\8

\

For Fast Results U~e The Su~day Ti.m es-Sentinel Classifieds

Card .of Thanks

For Rent

FA MIL Y Of Mrs Gcr h e
Oi' r St WI Sh to th.:tnk a ll of our

Hh SI'

•T H E

frlerf d s a nd n e- u;Jh bor s t or
Th e1 r
k m dn ess du r mq h er
il l n ess ilnd d ea th
To Dr
Hard er an d th e- staff a t H o l ze r

Med• ca l Ce nte r . to Cam e ron
Sp e;;ns fr o m th e Hom e H ea lth

Serv 1ce Es pec•a llv to
Noe l H enm a n an d R e v

R ev
J o t1n

Real Estate For Sale

MO B I LE

( h eS IH n ' , Q OO&lt;t

1{17 7 10 q

hom e
lo c atiOn Ca ll

"'

Real Estate For Sale

an d M rs Mdes Trout an d
Mrs Ed Spears fo r t he song'i
an d m uS IC T he R awl1 n S an d
c oa t s fun er al llom e f or th e1r
wo n d ~.: r ful

Rev

B

2 BR Mo bil e Home a t Quail
Cr ee k Mob ile
145 5021

~erv1ce

L

D ar s t

MOU IL E HO ME ... KERR
~ E TH EL R O
'71 A uburn ,
1 }' x 60' full fu r n 1shed wtth
a 1r N ew b loc k ga r 24 ' x 28'
a nd 1 1 A to t $ 12 900

Hom e

Park
229 tf

and

fam ll v

260 I

TR A ILER space
or 367 7438

Ph

446 3879
216 If

MOBILE hom e total e1ectr1 c, '2
bedroom S100 . 3 bedroom
Sl 25 Phon e 44 6 017 5 or 446
1934
105 If

Wanted To Do

LIKE THE PICTURE? MAKE ~URE YOU SEE THIS

ONE. Like new tri -level offers 2800 sq f1 of hvmg space
plus a 2 car garage Other features are 4 BR 's, 2t;2 baths ,
sunken LR, dream k1tch en , family nn w1th WB fireplace,
cent. a1r, patio, &amp; large lot Loca ted Ill on e of the a r ea 's
mcpr subdiVISIOns

WA LL P APE RIN G and tnt e rlor
SLEEPING ROOMS , weekiV
pa m l •ng Ph 446 9865
ra te s Park Central Hotel
60 tf
306 If
HOU SE . 129 Third . 3 BR , 2
baths . utii•IY room , basement
and gar a ge , S175 Ava1lab\e
Dec 1 Ph 4460111
258 6

INEXPENSIVE COUNTRY
LIVING - S rm s &amp; ba t h ,
ce ll a r s m a ll ba rn , shop &amp; 2
acres n ea r Vtn ton , $10 500

IA AL._L
p ape r1ng .
1nt e r1 or
pa mtm g Re asonabl e rat es
Ph 146 4423 or 446 363 1
242 tf

24 NEW Regency Inc Apts , 2
bedroom s. carpeted , total
e1ec tr 1c , located on Sand Hill
Ro ad . Pt Pleasant , W Va
Phone 67 5 5104 or 675 5386
258 tf

OWNER
WILL
HELP
FINANCE - M od ern hom e
off e r s
6
rm s
b a th ,
base m ent &amp; ov er I ac re of
rottmg land J u st II Sf Qd ,
$15 500

P I A NO TUNING a nd r epc11r
Co ll eg e g ra duat e wtth 15
ye ars ex p er. e n ce
EIm e r
Ge •ser 388 8666
25 8 3

SLEEPING rooms .
rates libby Hotel

1 Y P IN GS ERV t CES w •tldoa tl
kmd s ot t y p 1ng •n my ho m e
Call t 16 ·•999
254 tf

CU STOM se wmg , aller a l•on s on
al l typ es of clothmg , furs .
r ew eav 1ng Ph 446 7520 or
44 6 177 1
'133 fl

Mobde Homes For Sale
ECONOMY MOTORMOBILE HOME SALES
PRE U SED Mobile hom es 446
14 25
tO x SS Magnolia
IOx SO Detro 1ter 3 BR
10x 50 Sk y l m e
10x 48 Bud d y
Bx 30 Comet
1401 East ern A ve , ne xt t o
l a undrom a t
248 tf

For Rent

- - --·- ---- ----

w ee kly
257 II

LOW DOWN PAYMENT
New sec t 1onat h om e IS a ll
electr• c fo r your conv en i en ce
&amp; com t ort Feat ures 3 B R ' s,
bath , shag carpet. k 1tchen
wllh
range ,
ho o d .
refr i g e rator
&amp;
to t s of
cabmets S1tuat ed on a l ar ge
f l at tot on a BT rd

FOUR ofltce spa ces t~r s t floor
Second Av e Apply co The
Dail y Tnbune . Box 347
251 tf
Upper

2 BR Mobile Home ,
Route 7 -446 0008

PERRY TWP ~ 147 A, 52
A flat l and. (now m corn l ,
some comm er c1a l t•m ber ,
large tob base , 6 r m hom e.
large barn, BT r d, $35.000

5 room house apt , ground floor ,

centrally located on Se cond
Av e Ph .446 161 5 or 446 1243
24Btf

A GIANT - BOTH IN SIZE &amp;
VALUE , 1,076 ac re s. 500 A
woods, 200 A. l1lla ble, 500 A
fenced . 3 houses, 6 barns 3
pond s, 2 m1 rd fro nt , 2 m1
Raccoon
Cr ee k
fr o n t
$295,000, an av er ag e of $:.175
per ac r e

Services Offered
OOZt ER work , clear ing , ex
cavat1ng , s tump r e moval.
brush hopp1ng Ph 446 0051
259 If

1 BR tra•l er , 10 x 41 m trailer
par k '" Ga ll•polls $140 mo
All ut•t•ttes patd Ph 446 3844
after 1 p m
256 6
2 BR 12x50 mobile home With a i r
cond1I10n1ng m Add• son Ph
446 0294
260 If
NICE furn1shed apartment 4
rooms and bath , centrally
located Call 446 0444 after 6
pm

260 6

52x 12 2 OR mobile home
6816

256
260 3

FRENCH CITY BLOCK , 446
3608, located at Kerr Bethel
Kemper Hollow mtetsec tion
150 If

- ----- ------ - -

THREE
room
apartment.
furn. shed , m town , SIOO a
mon t h and utd•ties pa1d
Phon e 446 1066
259 3
BEDROOM Mo,b1le Home ,
tot al e lectnc , near hosp 1tal
Ph 446 1315
_.._
259 3

2

____________

• 2 BR trader OrY pr1vate lot on
Mad1son Ave ba t:: k of Pizza
Hut , ad ults only &lt;;all 446 0959
259 3
IN CITY , 6 large ro9ms. call
416 4311 Saturday or Sunday
258 3

- ---- - - -...l-------

TARA
Townhouse
, Apartments

2 Bedroom
.Townhouses

-.

ex.
landscap1ng
258 If

-------------TERMITE PEST CONTROL

FREE inspection Call 446 3245
Merrill O'Dell , Operator by
Extermlnal Term1te Service,
10 Belmont Or
267 .tf

1964
1965
1965
1968
1970
1972
1967
1953

TooL--sharP~!;;;:- r;;ws ,

GILLENWATER'S SEPTIC
TANK
CLEANING
AND

REPAIR

ALSO

HOUSE

WRECKING Ph . 446 9499
EstabliShed tn 19-tO
169·11

ALBERT EHMAN

Water Delivery Service
Patriot Star, GaiHpolls

B&amp;S MOBILE HOMES
PT. PLEASANT
Parkwood 10x 56 2 BR
National 10xso 2 BR
Camelot 12x55 3 BR
Globemaster 12x60 2 BR
Statesman 12x50 2 BR
FAWN 12x60 2 BR
'PMC 12x 60 3 BR
ABC 8x32 1 BR

TRI - STATE
MOBILE HOMES
1220 Eutern A~ e
8x45 M system
2BR8x2818R
lOxSO Branstratter 2 BR
lOx.so Marietta 2 B R
10XS0 Wolverlnf: 2 BR
,10x50 Marlette 2 BR
10x50 Belmont 2 BR
· 10x50 Kaywood 2 BR
446-7 S72

Ph . 3'19·2133
243 If

BANKS TREE SERVICE

FREE estim~les , liability In ·
surance • P'f',llnlng trimming
and cavity work, tree and
stump removal. Ph. 4.46 .4953
73 If

SANDY &amp; BEAVER

INSURANCE
SANdY AND BEAVER
tn
surance Co
has offered
services tor Ftre InSurance
coverage In Gall Ia County tor
almost a Century
Farms ,
homes and personal pror,erty
coverages are ava/lab e to
meet
Individual
needs
Contact your neighbor and
agent Lewis Hughes
257 6

___.... _________ _

CARPET INSTALLATION

71 MOBILE Home Shull 12x6 5
3 BR ttlt oul m livmg r oom
446 1323
25 4 If

For Sale
'
GOOD clean lump ;;~net
coal
Carl Wmters
Grande Ph 24S 511 5.
245 tf

PARSON'S
ARDWAR
Vinton, Ohio

FREE estimates, profess•onal
and
economy
Work
guaranteed , Jute or rub
berback Ph •46 .4224
260 3

SPECIAL
THIS MONTH

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

KOTALIC LANDSCAPING
RIO GRANDE, OHIO

•

10 sp. Huffy

COMPLETE PROGRESSIVE
LANDSCAPIIjG

BICYQ.E

SHRUBS . trees, rock garde"'s.
all guaranteed Pat10 and pool
landscaping . Stone, sand,
coal , Shrubbery trlmm1n9
Dump truck services 2.45·
9131
\

~.95

8 Track

PlAYER

187 If

------------•
CREMEANS
PIPE

With Speaker

&amp;

SUPPLIES
Bidwefl, Ohio
HGT and cold plastic ptpe and
f•lflrlgS, sewer and drain ptpe,
kitchen Sinks, fiberglass tubs
and shower, van
and Slue
R tdge Pa1nt Ph 388 8576
New Owners
Arnold Smith •nd
• Charles Sm lth
1
~31 tf

$49.95
Rockwell

'''es

llh BAniS
Pay Qnly one
Utilit,y
Addison, Ohio
For Information
Call Shirlev. Adkins

367-7250

------------THOMAS Fain Exterminating
Co Termite and Pest Control ,
Wheetersburr~~ , OhiO

_________ ___ _

233 tf

0

, Teflon 2 Coating

'

COOKWARE SET
su.95
mas

......

'

'j

·-·-·

•

PA TRI OT - 7 rm s. 2 story
w lfh b ase . furn h eat. ce n
a.r ba th . ca rpet ove r H w
floo r s, 25 ' beaut1 f u t k•t chen
cab It h as a barn and 1 ' 2 A
l ot Pr tce 51 8,000
CHE SHIRE - Nee d a b ig
ho use" Hav e on e on Rt 7,
no rth of v 1tta ge on 1 A lo t , 8
b 1g r m s, 11 .. bath s, n1ce new
fac t or y k1lch en , w1 th bar ,
o v en an d stove Mu ch of fh1 s
ho use ha s b ee n n~ con
d 1f1 on ed N1 ce r ec r m • new
fvrn • n ew w1 n ng n ew sep t 1c
tank . A lum s•d•ng , storm
doors and w1ndo ws Pn ce
525 ,000
CE NT E NAR Y
Ea s y
tm an c lng , new 3 bd rm
fram e an d br •ck, all carpet ,
a ll e lec W1fh h eat p ump and
ce n
a1r
Kit chen 13 'x26' ,
equ1pp ed Lot 80' x 180 '
Pr1 ce 52 6,000
G REEN ACRE S - Beauty ,
on ly 6 m o old , all e lec W1th
cen atr , all quality carpet,
1' ~ baths , plenty stor age ,
fully
e qu,pped
k ll chen ,
copp er plum bmg , b1g 2 car
g ar , large lot Asklng In
m 1d lh1r t •es
•
Any li' 446-1998

NEW HOME
BEING BUll T
Y es. see lh1 s she ll of a
hou se
tha t
can
be
arr an g ed , and f1n1she d to
your n eed s and des .res A I
a pn ce you ca n aff or d Ca ll
f or an a p po mtme nt
1 HOUSE
1 MOBILE HOME
NEW LI STING 14 A
4 Room Bloc k home - 55 x
10' c l ea n and good m obil e
h_om e Pl us I .J ac r es o f g ood
lan d on Ke ystone Rd n eiH
Vm ton appl e an d cherr y
tre es Won 'l las t long See
11 no w
J B E DROOM
6 Room Hou se m Bidwell.
Rt 554 N1 ce r em odeled old
house w1t h 6 r oom s- of
t urnd ur e a ll goes N ew
r et . fr eezer co ok sto ve
dm mg r oom 3 bed roo ms
compl et£&gt; 1 V and st er eo
all goes Front a nd Sid e
por ch es
s to rm
door s,
stor m w •nd aws dow nst a irs 1
l or cell a.r furn a ce Stora g e
build i ng ga rd e n space
Only $ 14 500
14 ACRES
Bl oc k Home -- 3 b edroom ,
b ar n rnac hm e ry bl d g
f en ces 2.000 lb tobac co
a ll o t men t.
o ne
ac re
g r ow1ng now and go es W1lh
lh •s sul e rott m g land Good
pas t ur e or far m mg
All
m1 n era1 n g hts goes Only
$12 500
47ACRES
T,~~~
~.~~?,;'~
36'x 48'
I
I1 ~;~' wnew
ell Approx
ac r es tillabl e, 15 a c r es ,
g ood pa stur e , new 1974, 3
be dr o om mobile h o m e
R educed tor qu 1ck sa te
3BEDROOM
On Nei ghborhood R d,
fron t
porch
lot
S1Z e
85 ' x 170' Na t g a s forc ed a ir
furn ace. large living room,
a ll st or m wmdows ,
co ndtt• oned A steal at on
$12 500
7 YEARS OLD
BRICK HOME
Ran ch Sty le, 4 bedroom ,
lar ge l•vtng room W1fh
wood b ur n 1ng fireplac e ,
mod ern k it chen with buill
m e lectn c cook sto v e.
r ef
full basem ent , 3
out b uil d•n gs , lots of shad e
tr ees, ap pl eS, c he r ry •fr ees,
g ra pe arbor , a real buy
JUST OUT OF CITY
LIMITS, STATE RT 141
N1 ce com for t able 5 ro om
house lo'cated on 1 acre of
l and w1! h to ts of shade
t r ees basement, modern
ktt c h en ,
natural
gas,
fur nace , c •IY wat er, l arg e
ntce ca rport
R eal g ood
16' X18' stor age build •ng ,
gard en space Just li sted
Ask •ng $1 8,900 Call now
VACANT LAND
4 8 acres A.pprox 2 m lies
fro m Gall ipoli S o n Rt 588,
rur a l w ut er

F or Sale
In Clly , thr ee bedrooms ,
l a rg er
o lder hom e, bath
up s tatr s storm wmdow s andsto r m
doors ,
furn ac t ,
ove rt ook 1ng c tty , $26,500
Green Acr es sub diVISton , !of
70 x 150, frame house , thre e
bedroom 11 2 bath , carpeted ,
f ir eplace , k1tch en cabmets ,
di shwasher, stove built m
Pr •c ed $27,500
Rodn e Y Vtlla g e 11. sub .
diVI SIOn . three bedroom
hom e s. carpeted, garag e,
etectr• c heat, $530 down ,
balanc e ove r ee years
F or Rent
Three b edroom double w 1d e,
co mp l etely furni Shed , 1 mile
from c 1ty, S150 a month
Farm
house , carpeted ,
k1lchen cabmets , 4 bedroom s
ov er BOO pound toba cco bas e
and barn , want t o rent for
one y ea r at 5125 a month and
tenant gets all the tobacco
crop
Referen ces required
and ftr st and la st month 's
r e nt Tobacco crop should
pay for year's r ent
•
Thre e room a partm e nt ,
furn•shed , 1n town , SlOO a
month and ut1lthes patd
Lives of great men all
remmd us
We can make our 11ves
subltme,
A nd , depert1ng , leave behind

us ,

Footprmts on the sands of
hme
- Longfellow
Phone
Russell D Wood, 446-1066
446-4618 (Evenings)
Ronald K Canaday
446-1066
Even•ngs f46-3&amp;36 '

Cloltd Sundl•

"'

NEW BRICK R A NCH
Beau t iful h ome w 1fh t hr ee
bedroom s. 11 7 bath s, utll1ty
ro om , la r ge tw o car ga rag e ,
buy now and p1 c k you r col o r s
of wa ll s und car pet loca ted
on a n 1ce level lo t 6 m 1l es
from to wn
R T H - L ove ly r anc h hom e
W1 lh three bedroo m s l amd y
roo m , w•f e a p p r o v ed k 1t
Ch en p , b a th s l1v1n g r oom
w1 th f.re p l ace . ba sement
large two ca r gara ge w1th
e lec t n c eye Located on a
n•c e l eve l l ot
GARFIELD AVE - r 0ort
two bedroom hom e. no •ur:J I
ga s h eat. full base m en t7 n ce
v •ew of th e r1 ver lilrg l l o l
with ro om fo r a gard en
GEORGE ' S CREEK RD Larg e hom e w 1ht for ce d a.r
furna ce, J1 1 bath s, county
w a t er , lo cated on 217 acres of
n• ce l and Pr •c ed a t S17 ,000

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

SM WHITE male k 1tten Wtfh
black spot between ears No
collar, house pet Lost •n the
vlcmity of Th1rd and Locust
Reward 4.46 1337
' 258 3

Thts new b rtck
frame ran c her ha s thre e
bedr'oom s, n1 ce bath , utilit y
room , f ull y ca rp e ted love l y
k itc h en d 1n 1n g a r ea, one car
garag e Loca ted m Ky g er
Cr ee k Sc hool o. str •c f

Circle l Kennels
BOARDING, A K C Pupp1es , 2
m1ies from City , 446 4824
215 If

------------BOARDING, AKC PUPPIES
K&amp;P Kennels, 388 8274 Rt 554;
'h m 1 E Porter
195 tf

---;:oi'
"-------;:-, - -'--AKC Reg Toy Poodle PuppieS,
SE A L PL Mal @Sia mese K1tten
ha s been d ec lawed Ph 446,

0371.

25 9 3

- -~ ----:...-+--;- ---::-

'~

•

·-..
"

_

"' ... ..

~"ll~

.~.

I

"

~--

~.

. ' ..
I'

,

''

.'

--·
.....
'

, THIS HOME MUST BE SOLD IMMEDIATELY
Owner must se ll th1 s beautiful, nearly new tn level home,
Cathedral ce1hngs, dtmng r oom , 3 bedroo m s, family
room , 21f2 baths, central a1r, located on a J/4 a cre flat

DELUXE MODULE HOME
- 1972Marltte 24'x60 ' 3 BR , 2
ba t hs , F dlnlng Rm , fa~lly
room, good water, 4 m i from
hosptlat , • 2 A corner lot
$24 ,500
RT 141 - Very good 3 BR
r e mod e led
home ,
w w
carp e t. family rm
F
dming , •~ base m ent. gas
furn , pat 10 , 2 ac r es , she lt er
s tor age $23 1500
3 ACRE LOT - A beautifUl
locat1on for that new hom e
you want to budd $9,000
LISTING S
WANTED
Wh eth er buy 1ng or se lli ng
c ontact
BR A NNON
R EA L TV - "W e Sell Be tt er
L 1vmg" call today - II w111
pay
25 Locust St.
Howard Brannon, Broker
Off. 446·2674
Lucille Brannon
Eve. 446-1226 or 446-2674

Plumbin11 &amp; Healing
CARTER'S PLUMut...,G

Ai'ID HEATING

Cor. Fiourth&amp; Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 446-4477
165 ff

Gallipolis, 446-11782
297 ,f
DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone 446-2735
STANLI~r&lt;U

Plumbing- Heat•ng
Third Ave., 446-3782
•
187 tf

21~

- -- -------- -..,...._'ilnE PLANTS &amp; so,_--

PLUMBING - Heating - A1r
Conditioning. JOO Fourth Av e
Ph. 446 1637
48 If

For Sale

•1795 '4995

·~
,~

1973 BUICK

1973 BUICK
Custom 4 dr. hdtp., air con d., AMFM, 10,000 miles, expect the best.

---..

BEFORE YOlo ~ U . l EE 7'~ 1 5 BEAUTY

Ch ef 33
5 00 - Untamed World 6, Art of Footbal l 33, At Issue 3; M a n

n"

" U'I

6 00 - Vtlla All egre 33, Green A cres 3, News 4, Saga of Sara
M c Swee t 33
6 JO - News6 ; Zoom 33, NBCNews3, 4,1 5
7 00 - Last of the Wild 3, 4, Nat1onal Geographic 6 . Wtl d
K 1ngdom 13, 15 , Animal World 8 , In T he Know 10 , Journey to
Japan 20 , Lilias, Yoga and You 33
1 10 World of D1snev 3 4. 15 , Untamed World 13 , M ovt e
" Autobtography of Miss Jane P1tfman" 8, 10 ; Nova 20. In
Pe rformance of Wolf Trap 33.
8 00 - Sonny Comed y Revue 6, 13.
8 30 - Masterpiece Theatre 20, 33. Me: Cloud 3, 4, 15
9 00 - Movie " Mtdnight Cowboy" 6, 13
9 30 - Flnng lme20, 33 , Kojak 8,10
10 30 - We Thmk You Should Know 3 , News 4, 8; H1gh Road to
Ad ventur e 10 , Police Surgeon 15 . M o untain Scene 33, Beh md
t he Lmes 20
11 00 - CBS News 10, Mov1e "V1va Zapata" 8
11 30 - Face the Naf1on 10 . Mov 1e " H• Ya , Chum " J , Jo hnny
Carson 15, Don Ktrshner 's Rock Concert 13
11 35 ~ Good News 6
11 45 - New s 8, 10
12· 00 - Urban League 10 · Johnny Cars on 4
12 05 - News 6
12 30 - Mov1e " Coffee. T ea or Me? " 10
'130 - News 4
2 30 - News 13

4 Dr. hdtp., air cond., p. windows,

seats, 17,000 miles . Nice.
Was $4495.00

"'.

~·

........
-~

...••
·-. .
.~
M

-~

THIS LOW INTEREST LOAN

MONDAY, NOVEMBER4, 1974

Th1 s home must be sold NOW Prtce has been redu ced
Y ou ' ll r ea lly appre Ciate th1 s 3 bedroom, fully carpeted
homewtth family r oom , l'h b ath s. super kttc hen, cent a•r
and 2 car ga rage

6 00 -

"

GALLIPOLIS

.,

·-••.,.

IF YOU HAVE BEEN THINKING
ABOUT BUYING

,.
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A'

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•••

,

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"

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a

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...-.
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-·.

BIG USED CAR SALE!

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...

1972 RALLY NOVA 2 DR .........................................'2195
1971 DODGE POLARA 4 DR HT.................................. lll95
1971 MUSTANG •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.••••••••• s2195
1969 VOLKSWAGEN •••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $795
1.970 MONTEGO 2 DR HT. .................................. : ...... 11095
1973 MAVERICK 2 DR ••••••••••••••••.••••••
·'2795
1969 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON .................................'995
_1971 TORINO STATION WAGON ................................... 11395
1965 CHEVROLET 2 DOOR ......................................... 1399
1971 CHEVELLE 4 DR SEDAN..................................... 11595
1972 PONTIAC 4 DR SEDAN ...................................... 12095
1970 TORINO 4 DR SEDAN ...................................... 11295

2 FINANCIAL HELP TH E
OW NER
W I LL
M AK E
SURE
A
QU A LI F I E D B UY E R CA N
OWN THI S 1 Y R OLD 3
BED R OOM
HOME
B U l L TIN
R A NG E
&amp;
DI SHWA SHER , GARA G E
:l ~ A CRE , REDUCED TO
S2 1,5 00
THI S
IS
A
BAR G A IN

8 BRAND NEW - F U L LY
CAR P ETE D W ITH V E RY ,
V E RY NI CE KIT CHEN , 2
CA R
GAR A G E
EX
CE L LE NT
LOC AT ION
P R I CE I S RIG HT

·~
:......

9
$15,000
A
REAL
BARGAIN - I F Y OU ' RE
L OOK IN G F OR A RE A L
GOOD HOU SE CHE A P ,
H EA R IT I S
OLDER
H OME IN VER Y G OO D
CO NDI T IO N , B A TH A ND
N EW F U RN ACE

....

5
BRAND
NEW
OWNER
Wlb-L
HEL P
FINAN C E ,
HI LEVE k,
WITH
B E A UT I F U L ~
KITCHEN ,
HU G E
FAMILY ROO M $33 ,900
6
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION - ' SUP E R
BRIC K HOME Ot-4 '7 A ON
RA C COON CK , F AMI L Y
AND
DININ G
F ULL
B ASE MENT ,
PRICE
RE D U CE D ,
OW N E R
VERY
AN XI OU S
TO
SEL L

••
&lt;•'
••
•••

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~-

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T

N

State Patrol office,
$14,900. $500 down
$125 mo'&lt;
Ph. 245-5439
NEAL REALTY
15 A farm 5 rm house w1th
bath , 'rur a l Wat er , locat ed 5
m1 from town on blacktop
road
•
Off1ce Ph . 446 · 1694
Even.ngs
Charles M. Neat , 446·1546
J . MIChael Neat, 446-1"503
Sam Neat, 446-7358

I

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.."'""...,
:'}

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

10 BRAND NEW ON RT.
:15 - OW N E R WI L L HELP
F IN ANCE T H IS SUP E R
B RI CK A ND F R AM E A LL
YOU NE E: D DO I S MOVE
IN 526 900

..."'..

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~

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Galha Co.'s Largest Rear
Estate Sales Agency
Offic e 446-3643
Evenm~s Call
tk l" Wiseman 446 3706
E. N_~WJ..!.eman , 44to -45!Q.
Bud McGhee, 446 - t.n:.

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REAL ESTATE
FO~ SALE

NEW 3 BR HOME
Fully carpeted, plenty of
cab1nets, large kitchen,
range &amp; disposal, large
utility
room.
Attached
garage, nice level lot,
blacktop road. Located 6 mr.
up Rt. 7, County Atr Estate .
Prtced $24 ,900. ' Can help
fmance Call 446- 1171, after
I, 446 ·2573

RANCHO COMfiANY
REALTORS&amp;
AUCTIONEERS
446 0001 . 367 -0300
2 NEw 3 BR homes, on lots , 1 2 42 A Farm , $2.4 ,900 . 5 A hom e
BR home with 4 62 acres, for
stte 56,000, Ca mpafg n Cr eek
sal e by build er Call 446 2890
Home , $1 3, 500 New hom es
$5 0,0 down We will build on
'
260 I
your lot See our plans .,

.

' Fdr~Sale~~ Trade____

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1:

,.

For-Sale---------

-------,~---'-----.:..!57 ·6)

~LL

TYPES of
bulldliig
materialS , block , brick, sewer FIRE WOOD , $15 per 3!. ton
pipes, windows, lintels, etc .
pi ckup load
Clllt 446 7534
anyt1me
5
1
258 6
• 123-n'
•
15 MO OLD fema le Bnllany
Spaniel , 1 4X8 pool t abl e, Ph
' 73 YAHAMA J::.U, rots of extra s,
446 3413
•
perfec t cond 256- 1123 .
256 6

.5 ·~~:n~'~lt~ 1'2f~~t~;~~cr~

--------------

______v , ___ ___ _

For Sale

9 30 10
10 30 -

' f\ • •

'',,

'"

CAMPIN'G tr~uler , 26 ft long. PINTO MARE HOR SE, $150
Quarter Horse and Appaloosa
Trotwood ' 68 model, iUr cond •
, 4-H projec t , s200 256
full awn ing , full baUl , self • mare
6247
contained . total ele c , $2,800
2SB 6
AA6 966-t after 5 p m 1
..... - - ~--2S6 6

----~·---~- ----

--------

Rhoda 8, 10
Wash mgton Stra 1ghtTalk 33 ; News 20 ; Medtcal Center 8,

Da y a l N1ghl 33

11 00 - News3.4. 6,8, 10, 13, 15
11 30 John ny Carson 3, .4, 15; Movie " Unsinkable Molly
Brown'' 8, M ov 1e '' Brtdge to the Sun" 10 ; Janak 133
12 00 - News 6, 13
12 30 - M tss1on lm po ss•ble 6, Untouchables 13
J·OO - l om orr ow 3, 4
1 30 - N ~ ws 13
2 00 - News 4

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
7 oo p.m - M e1gs High School Football
9. 30 p .m -- Opera t1 on Gangbuster.

For Sale

For Sale

COA CHM A N Tr av el tr ailer!, FOR your T.re and Battery
need s, come to sears T.re
M oto r Homes, 5t h Wheel,
Shop In The Silve r Bridge
T ru c k Campers , App l e C1 f y
A uto Slltes , Rt 35 N Jackson ,
Plaza
If
236
Oh 10 Phon e 286 57 00
118 If
- - - -- - - - - - - - - • G RAVEL . l tme s ton e. sand ,
VtRCO Fold1n g c ha 1r s a n d
M ason sand, f i ll d.rt P 1t run
tables sa te - L• m tt ed , Oct 15
D e livered by the ton 446 1142
Nov I S 5 PcJ 25 Pel off
247 -lf
s,m mons Pi g &amp; Off E q u1p - - -- - - - - -- - - - - 446 1397
F IREWOOD , an y am o unt- Ph .
247 19
446 4999 ...
226 tf

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I··

'72

CHEVROLET IMPALA

4 Dr. hardtop, 350 cu. in. V-8 engine, P.
steering, P. brakes; radio, auto. trans., fac.
air ~ond., w-s-w tires, Sequoia green finish,
matchinq interior with vinyl top. Extra nice.

For Sale
F UEL OIL DRUM . 275 gal
Ready for hookup , S50 Ph
446 0466 &lt;!!fter 5 p m
258 3
1974 FAYETTE 24 tt
a xles , Ph 446 9777

\
Ne ws 3, 4, 1s, 8. 10. 13 , Bewlt~hed 6, Pyle 13

10 00 -

1639 EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS,

For Sale

Elec Co 33, Hodgepodge Lodge 20; News6, Trails West

15
6· 00 -

lns lghl 33

GALLIPOLIS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH

-..

5 30 -

7· 30 - That Good Ole Na shv•lle Music 3, Buck Owens 8;
Ep1sode Acf1on 33 . Help Thy Neighbor 4 1 Pol ice Surgeon 6,
Mumc1pa l Court 10 , To Tell the Truth 13 , Mountwood Park,
M o un ta 1n Song 20
8 00 - Gunsm oke 8, Born Free 4, 6, 15. The RookieS 6, 13,
Inherita nce 20, 33
9 00 - Maude 8, 10 , NFL Foolball 6, 13 ; Movie " The Greatest
G1ft " 3, 4, 15, Ormandy International 20, 33

MANY '74 NEW PLYMOUTH$ LEn-··
HURRY &amp; SAVE MONEY-I BUY NOWI

-r

eCOURTEOUS SALESMEN TO SERVE YOU.

7 00 - Truth or Cons 3; News 10, ~at' s My Lme 8 , Elec. Co
20 . Wor k shop 15, Bowltng for Dollars 6; Cand 1d Camers 13 ,

1973 COMET 4 DR SEDAN... ••• •••.... •••.... •••••••.. •••••••.. ••'2395. .
1974 CHRYSLER 4 DR CDEMO\ .................................... SAVE

f\~~~~~ . .,. . . . . . . . . . . . . ~.995.

_,

Do 13 ; F 61 3, Andy Gnfllth 8; l'onslde 13 .

1972 COMET Z-DRI AlR .•••••••••••••••••••••••• -. ................. $1995

I,

New GMC
Truck Headquarters .
2HouSEs-:;-crow--;;C~y;rl ce
968 12 T GMC Ptckup
$16,500 PI") 256 6793 afte r 4
1
1965 ' 1 T Ch ev P 1ckup
pm
OFF ICE
Publi c seat1nQ
1970 ~~ T Ch ev P te kup
D es k s - 4 dr . f 1les, Sec a nd
260
6
1974 1;;o T Ch ev P lckup
E xe c
f o ldtng and s ta c~
1968 l " T G MC P1 ckop
cl"! a irs Storage cabinets In
• 196~ '1 T GMC P tckup
stock Sfmmon s Ptg &amp; Office
1969 11 T GMC P1 ck up
Equ i p Phone 446 1397
1
1972 HON OA 250 Mot or Spo rt ,
1971 ' T Ford P1 c kup
230-tt
exc,ellent condition Ph 367
1970 4 T GMC W1th Stoc k body
7462 after 4 30
1968 ' ' T GMC P1ckup
N O h un t mg S•gn s ol all k•nds
260 3
1971 2 T Dodg e Tab and ChaSSIS
Ca r s ,
tr u Ck i
Magn et•c ,
1967 ' 2 T GM C P•ckup
p1as llc , meta l
Nam e and
1
1969 ;- T G M C P.ic kup
m a •l box p l,t es. Si mmons
1968 11 T GMC Pic kup
Ptg and Office Equ ip
1968 ' l T Ch evy P 1c kup
HoNDA X R 75 , good condition
230 ·11
197 1 G MC Su burban
Hooker h ead er , just tuned .
1067 1 T Ford P•c kup
av
O
WNE
R
2
yea
;-;
;-;BR..
Phone 4A6 0161 or Aot6 0300
SOMMERS 'G. M. C.
ho m e, family room , modern
258 3
TRUCkS, INC
kit c hen Will acce pt rnobile '
~oRo-;;;;u;;;-;;;; lo~M-F
133 P1ne St.
hom e o n trad e Bulav i Ue Rd
at Bul avl\l e P h J67 0140
446 2532
mo~er . 7 ft Pnone 25 6 64IJ
147 If
......,.
m~

a.

1972 CHEVY MAILBU 2 DR HT.................................... 12295
1970 NOVA 4 DR SEDAN.......................................... 11595
1971 VOLKSWAGEN•••••••••••••••••••••.•.••••••••••••••.••••.••••• '1395
1971 TORINO GT •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '1895
1973 VENTURA 2 DR .............................................. '2395
1973 DUSTER. SHARP.............................................. '2995
1974 MAVERICK 2 DR ............................................ '2895
1974 DODGE CHARGER SE 2 DR HT............................. 13995
1970 OLDS CUTLASS 2 DR ....................................... 1189~
1973 GREMLIN X 2 DR........................................... 12595
1972 JAVELIN 2 DR •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .'$2395
1966 OODGE 4 OOOR··············································S399
1972 CHEVROLET IMPAlA 2 DR HT...............................12495

~

11
AS
PRETTY
AS
YOU'LL EVER SEE E XCELLENT
FLOOR
PLAN , FAMILY ROOM, 2
CAR G ARAGE , 2 BATHS,
OWNER
WILL
HELP
FINANCE .

73 GMC PICKUP • EXTRA NICE
73 FORD XLT - 1/i TON
72 CHEVROLET C-10 PICKUP
68 FORD PICKUP - BLUE

3 00 - Ano th er Wor ld 3, 4, 15 , Price is Right 8, 10 ; General
Hospital 6, 13, Great American Dream Machine 33.
3 30 - How to Survive a Marriage 3, 15; Match Game 8, 10, One
Lite to L 1ve 13 ; lasste6. Dollar Decisions 20
4· 00 - Mr Cartoon &amp; the Banana Splits 3 , Somerset 15, Tat&amp;
tletales
Sesame St 33 , G illigan ' s Is. 6 , $10,000 Pyram1d 13,
Bonanza 4, M ov•e " Forty Guns" 10.
4 30 - Jackpot 4, Bonanza 15, Mod Squad 6, Gilligan ' s Is . 13.
Bonanza 15 Bewtt ch ed 3, lucy Show 8
5. 00 - Merv Gnffm 4, Mister Rogers 20, 33 , Anything You Can

•••••• t •••••••• I ••••

-

GOOD USED TRUCKS SPECIALS

2. 30 - Gtrl In My L1fe 6, 13, Edge of Night 8, 10, Doclo" 3, 4, 15

1969 CHEVROLET 4 DOOR........................................... '895

=
If.·

.

2 Bedroom House near

Bill Joe Jahnson

d

7
JU ST
LIST E D
BE A UTI F UL BRIC K AND
F R A ME , 7 o A, MOVE
R IGHT IN E X CELLENT
K IT CHEN ,
B AS EMENT
GO OD
L OCAT ION ,
&amp;
CAR
H AR DW O OD
PETIN G

4 VA
APPROVED -A TTRA C TIVE 5 R OOM
HOME
WITH
FULL
BA S E MENT
A ND
GARAGE , NEW CA R
P E TIN G, QU I E T NEI G H
BO R HOOD
CLOS E T O
TOWN

'

PLYMOUTH

"'

I LOAN ASSUMPTION S4.000 00 ON SIBS 29 MO 19
YRS , 7112 PCL INT , 1
yg 01 D 3 BEDROOM
HOME , LARG E BUILT IN
KIT ,
C ENT
A IR ,
GA R AG E
L ARGE
COUNTRY LOT 1 MIL E

NO MONEY
DOWN -- VERY NI CE 3
BED R OOM HOME WITH.
DIN I N G A ND FA MIL Y
ROOM , 112 MILE FROM
' I OWrQ ON LARGE L OT IN
EX C ELLENT
N E IG H
BORH OOD

:

~

SEE ALL OF THESE 3 BEDROOM
HOMES AND MAKE US AN OFFER

J . VETS -

Sunrise Semtnar 4 Summer Semes1er 10
6 25 - Far m Report 13
6 30 - B1bl e A nswers 8 . News 6 , Five Minutes to L1ve By 4,
Rev Cl eophu s Robm son 13 , Concerns and Comments 10
6 35 - Colum b us Today 4
6 45 - Morning Report 3, Farmtime 10.
7• 00 - Today 3, 4, 15, CBS News 8, 10, Osmonds 6 . Farmer' s
Daug hter 13.
7' 30 - New Zoo Revu e 6 , H R Pufn stuf 13
8 00 - Capt. Kangaroo 9 , New Zoo Revue 13 , Sesame St 33 .
J eff's Collie 6, Po peye 10
6 25 - Ja ck lalanne 13 , Capt Kangaroo 10 .
8 30 - Brady Bunc h 6
6 55 - News 13
8 00 - Paul D1 xon 4, A M 3. Ph1l Donahue 14, Wdd , Wild West 6,
Bullwtnk le 8 . M ov 1e " Danger Has Two Faces " 13
9 . 30 - Not For Wo m en Onfy 3, HazelS , Taffletales 10
10 00 - Com pany 6, Name That Tune 3, 15; Maga z1ne 8, 10
10 30 - Wtnmng Str ea k 3, 15 , Phil Donahue 4.
ll 00 - Password 13, Now You See It 8, 10, Htgh Rollers 3, 15,
$10,000 Pyramid 6
11 . 30 - Brady Bunch 13, Hollywood SquarEfS 3, 4, 15 . Love Of
life 8, 10 , lu cy Show 6
11 55 - C BS News 8; Dan I mel 's Wortd 10
12 .00 - Pass word 6 , News 6. 10, 13, Bob Braun's SO SO Club 4;
Mr Roger s 33, JackPOt! 3, 15
12 3o- Aftern oo n w1th OJ 13 , Celebnty Sweepstakes 3, 15 ,
El ectnc Co 33 , Spl1t Second 6 . Search For Tomorrow 6, 10
12 55 - News 3, 15
1 00 - News 3. All My Children 6, 13, Not For Women Only 15 ,
Phil Donahue 8 Young and Restless 10
1 25 - Chu ck Whtfe Reports 10
1 30 - J eo pardy 3, 4, 15; let 's f!l.ake A Deal6, 13; As The World
Turn s 8, 10
2 00 Day s Of Our Lives 3, 4, 15 ; Gu1d1ng light 8, 10 ,
N ewlywed Garne 6, 13

CHR~S.LER-

~

DON'T-Pu·y.
IT OFF-

O UT

TBA

15
5 30 - FBI6 , The Way It Was 33

ELECTRA

NEW CAR TRADE-INS
USED CAR INVENTORY
MUST BE REDUCED. • •

74 MUSTANG II - BRONZE METALLIC
73 MONTEGO 4 DR GREEN &amp; WHITE
73 GRAN TORINO 4 DR WHITE
73 GALAXIE REAL NICE
73 LTD FORD - GREEN
72 TORINO STA. WAG. NEW CAR TRADE
72 FORD PINTO 2 DR. - BLUE
72 MAVERICK 2 DR - WHITE &amp; BLUE
72 MUSTANG - WHITE
71 PLYMOUTH- BLUE
71 GALAXIE 500 4 DR SEDAN • BROWN
71 TOYOTA CORONA ST.W. - NICE
71 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN STW.
71 MAVERICK 2 DR · CLEAN
71 RAMBLER HORNET 2 DR
70 CHEVROLET CAMARO 2 DR GREEN
70 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill 2 DR HT - BLUE
70 PONTIAC • WHITE &amp; BlUE
70 FORD STW. COUNTRY SQUfft'E
' MONTEREY 2 DR HT
70 ' MERCURY
70 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR
68 PLYMOUTH FURY 2 DR HT- BLUE
68 PLYMOUTH STW. • BROWN

Football 6

$3895 $3995

~

T he price Is right a nd ) &gt;t..' ll lo\lor;: a ll the room 5
bedrooms, 2 ba1hs, u~
; h ag carpeting, huge family
room, cent. air, ov er JIZed
'lr f}arageon a flat lot.

(

3 00 - World of Surv•val13 , Wally ' s Workshop6
3· 30 - J•mmy Dea n 6 ; Lower Lighthouse ll
4 00 - Anhques33 , NFL FootballS, 10 . Future of Us All1 3
4 30 - Othe r People, Other Places 13, Inner Spa ce 6 , F r ench
from U. N C l E 4, Movie " Q\JIIIer M e morandum" 13

------------J--

RUSSELL'S
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING

Granville 4 dr. hdtp., silver mist,
black vinyl top. demonstrator .
Orig. Price $6369.00.

••

~·

landscaped lot with large garden spot

NEW LISTING - 3 BR bnck
&amp; frame ran ch styl e on a n1 ce
le vel 1;o ac r e lot 3 yr s o ld
eat •n k1t chen wtth pl enty
c abm et s, w w c arpe ting. 2
bath s g ar age. electri c heat ,
$?5,500

COTTAGE - Down t own . 5
rooms , br eeze way , stor ag e,
garag e, w w car p et , ,,..,
ba sement $13,'W0

1974 PONTIAC

P.ed, radio, standard , 20.000
miles. Sharp. Was $2195.00.

~

A~SUME

ACRE LOT - 3 BR ran c h 1
ea t m kttchen , larg e tam dy
r m patio . $26 500

1973 CHEV. VEGA

~

~

Eventng Call
John M Fulter-446· 4327
Lee Johnson-256-6740
Doug Weth erholf-446 ·11244

1h

Vista Cruiser, St. Wagon. , 3
seater, wood grain, air cond. Was
$3295.00.

•

WE BUY, SELL, TRADE

152 ACRES - 13 mi from
town 3 OQO tb T B , 40 A ,
tillabl e, 55 A f 1mber , 2 large
barns &amp; Ghteken H Ont! story
3 BR &amp; b ath hom e. Plenty
tr ees &amp; Shrub s \ 58, 000

OLDS

$3695$2995

....

\
...

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••

~·

Ta k e a l ook at
t h• s
l o vel y
o ld
h om e
overtook m g t he cou nlr y S1 d e
Wtlh fiv e ac r es ntce land
Loc at ed c lose to Tyc oon
Lake A b ar9 am at ss,coo

~
REALTY

1972

4 Dr ,, air cond., 18,000 miles, local
banker's trade, serviced by us.

"'

'·

5 ACRES -

---- ----------Pets

-....
_,

IJ ACRES -

Lost '
BLACK With brown markmgs.
dog VI Ctnlty Of Fa 1rview
Subdtv . 4.46 1423
259 3

1973 BUICK

.

•
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·~

187

lobbl' i ,.Uiunt eoutlqU,
PROFESSIONAL grooming by
appo intment only. Ph Bobble
Casto , 446 1944
21 2 tf

I-12Thu..-y
1-ll'rl. a Slot.

...

BROKERS
Oscar Ba•rd, John Fuller,
Doug W etherholl
452 Second Av enue
Galhpoh~ . OhtO 45631

CLOSE IN - J B R r anch e 1
br 1ck and fr am e, w w ca rp et
ext ra n ~t:e k!lc h en a nd
dmtng, garag e and pat1 o,
now vacan t $26,000

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'

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~ :.:

HILL VIEW Beautiful 4
BR , 2 ba t h ho me
w w
carpet. d e luxe ktf ch en w 1th
all th e b uilt 1n s, full dlvtd ed
b as em e nts ,
f a m il y
R ,
g ar ag e. s paciou s roll1ng
lawn , $36 ,000

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

Hrs.: 8•5, Mon.-Wed.

2·11

C IT Y 821 Second A v e
L ease or sell . 6 b 1g rms and
bath , 2 story on a larg e c 1ty
l o t It has a 111e bl oc k gar
plu s a sto ra g e bldg A goo d
buy for Sl7 ,500

Whtt e. pn ce r educed Ph 446
1266
'
260-6

Many other speci'alsLavaway for Chrish

''

'

Drill

'9.95
7pc.

P. Martin &amp; Son Water
Deltvery
Service .
Your
Pltrontgt
Wllf
bt
ep .
prtclated. Ph . A 6·0463 .

- - -- .- - -:;--- --oj"" __ _

1/4'

DRill

PROTECT your mobile hom&amp;
with TIE DOWN ANCHORS
Call Ron Skidmore, AA6 1156
after 3 p m
'
121 .If

_::

ROOM S,

BEDROOM S, BATI::I S, DEN S,
ETC SEE NOW AT K &amp; K
Mobile Hom e Sales , 3411
Jac kson Ave . Pomt Pl ea sant .
W va
260 1

------ - - ---DOZER work , clearmg ,

scissors, shears, home and
garden tools
Sllarp ShoR,
Alley rear, 147 Second
216 tf

FAMILY

BA B Y F AR M - 6 mil e down
Rt 7 b.ea ut d ul 3 bd rm
fra m e ra n ch, n ew carp et
ov er H W . eq u•p ped k1lchen ,
fu ll ba&gt;e w 1th F B , 2 car
a tt ac hed g ar , root cellar
an d stor age b ldg • 4 A lo t
w 1th fro n ta g e on n ver and
Rt 7 A ll kmd s of fru1t tr ees
a nd g ar de n
Prt ce only
$39 ,500

WOOD,
REALTOR
446-1066

CRAMPED FO R SP A CE IN
YOUR MOB iiLE HOME?
REMODEL NOW 1 VEMCO
ADD A ROOM S
SOLVE
YOUR PROBLEM IN JU ST
ONE
OA1' 1 16 F LOOR

PLANS.

FA I R F I ELD CE N RO
Spill ~.:n t r y all b rt c k , a ll
c arp et co lon hJI , panel and
d r y wall
full y e qutpp e d
k i! chc n , '/ 1 1 bat h s, 8 rms
W1t11 a 2 car ga r age Th1S 1S
one o t th e bett er houses m
th e ur ea
'2 ,000 SQ fl llv
a r e~1
9 A 101 Pr rce up pe r
So10s

RUSSEi.t.'F

Moo1ie 1iollle-; For Sale

BLOCK
and
br1ck
work ,
f.replaces spec•alty. Logue
Contra t; tmg, Ph 388 9939
231 261

l'HREE bedroom double w•d e.
completely furnished, 1 mtle
from c •tv , S150 a month
Phone 446 1066
259 3
FARM house , carpeted. k1tchen
cabinets. 4 bedrooms over BOO
pound tobacco base arid barn ,
want to rent for one year at
Sl 25 a month and tenant gets "
all
the
toba c co
crop
Ref e ren ces reQuired and first
a nd la st
month's
rent
Tqba cco cro p should pay for
y ~r · s rent
Phone 446-1066
259 3

HANNY IIACKBURN,

NEED your furnace repa1red
and cleaned ? Oil. ga s and
electric. Call me. E
G
Skaggs , 367 0140 Any t1me
250 12

cavatlng, and
Ph . 446 0051

COMMER CIAL BUILDING
IN Ga lli pO liS Sch ool D1Sf
f ea t ur es off1 e.e , show r oom
an d 2 g ar ag es PLU S a love l y
6 rm
&amp; bat h a pa r tm ent
up sta trs
WORLD ' S LARGEST
THE LEADER SINCE HOD
IN
SERVING
THE
!'IIATION'S
BUYERS
&amp;
SELLERS
Ph . 446· 0003

ENJOY COUNTRY LIVING
in thiS modern 3 BR hom e
Wtlh HW floors , modern
kitchen . 2 car garage and
br tck front Th1s home can
be bought w1th 1 acre or 42
See th1s one

GARAGE . attic and basement
clean lng Trash hauling Free
est1mates Ph 446 0355 or 4-t6
?950
218 78

NEAR PATRIO'T
\ J7 A ,
52 A Sand Fo r k Bo tto m
Ba l an ce •n pa st u r e &amp; woods.
lo ts of wa l nut li mb er 6 r m
hom e large b arn 1735 1b
to b ba se $35 000
US 35
10 A ap pr o x 1850
f r r d fron tag e ail ul il lll eS
ava il ab le Buy &amp; sub d•v •de

NO DOWN PAYMENT 1f YOU
Quality L1ke new 3 BR r an ch
has br tck fron t w w ca rp et
garage &amp; locat ed •n c1 t y
school d1 St

6t:ron:KAL CONTRACTING
Home Improvements and ad
dltlons Roofing , vinyl Std•ng
Call 446 0668 or 245 5138
152 56

\

M E I G S COUNTY
190 A
r o 111 n q past u re f a r m N1ce ty
r e mode l ed home Wit h 5 rms.
bath and ba sem en t, 2 ponds ,
f r e e gas and 6 pet f.n .J n Ci ng
av&lt;J d a b le

'

---- ---------- -

OPENING SOON
For rental information
Ph. 446-4905 or write
P. O.
Box
301.
Gallipolis, Ohio

DON'T B E B EAT BY IN
FLATION
I nv es t
yo ur
sav 1ng s 1n la n d
Ex pert s
c onclu d e t ha i the na t•o n 's
land w ill n se m v&lt;JI\Je b y at
leas t 15 p et 1n 19 7 1 We h av e
32 8 acres o f wood l and 9 m 1
from tow n fo r only '!. 130 p er
acre

256 tf

TRI·STAR
2 BR F urn1 shed apartment , a1r
Electric Contractors
c ond , d e postt requ1red
Adults only , 446 2852
• COMPLETE etectncal serv1ce ,
GathpohS , Oh10 Ph. 367 -0311.
256 If
207 tf

SPRING VAlLEY
GREEN
APARTMENTS

MON E Y MAK E R
2
co m m e r c tal r en ta ls ,md 2
T h• s
l ilrgc apa r tm ent s
bu lid m a IS loca t ed on a
cor ner to t 1n dow ntown
Po m er oy
I n com e f 1g ur es
a v a li a b l e
to
1nt e r es t ed
p er son s
NEW HOMES
RA N CHE S
&amp; SPLI T LEVE LS
Pr1 ces
ran g e f rom $17 000 to $35.000

LAND
CONTRACT
Spac .ous old er hom e h as •I
BR 's , bat h l a undry fo r ced
a~r
fu r na ce, c o
w ater
sep ar a t e doubl e garage 8. 200
It front on state rd S.ll ,OOO

w ee kly
174 tt

SL EEPING rooms .
r ate Gatlia Hotel

RIO GR A N DE
HOME
PLU S
INC OM E
wilh
tm an c mQ a vull a ble to lh&lt;.•
n g hl pa r ty ( I ) 6 rm an d
ba th ap t (2 J 3 rm &amp; bat h
ap t (3 ) sl ce p1ng r m w ll h
pnvn t e bat h (4) eff iC i ency
ap t 15 1 m ob il e hom e pad

WH EATO N RO f A RM
au A sto c k f arm , 6 r m h ou se
With fur hea t and bath
p t e nl -t water , 2 mobtl e
1'1 o me s lu rn •sh e d
G ood
tr ac to r un d ot her f arm tool s
You c an buy th e b und le for
S43 500

AGENCY.

6 ' 30 - T r a ve logue .A , Lamp Unto My F e et 10
7 00 - Je rry Falwell 13 · Commun1q ue 6 . Ounce of Pre ventt on
4 , T a lk mg H and s 8 , Look Up and L1v e 10
7 15 - Te l e A B1bl e T•me 4 .
7 30 - Chur ch by S1de of Road 4 ; Camera Three 10 , Gospel
Ca r a van 6 , Day of Dtscovery 6
8 00 - Billy Jame s Hargis and H1 s All Am en can K1ds 10 , Rev
Le ona rd Re pass B. Mormon Chotr 3 , M a m re Chur ch 13 , Da y
o f DI SCOV erv 4
B 30 - Your Hea lth A, Get Toge ther 10 , Rex Humbard 13. Ora l
Ro ber t s 3. Kathryn Kuhlman 6 , Evangelist Bobby Mar1m 15
8 55 - Bla ck Cameo 4.
9 00 - Cadl e Cha pel 4, Or al Ro bed s 10, Rex Humba rd 6, 15 .
Gospe l Smgmg J u b •lee 3 , What Does the Bibl e Sa y? 8.
9 30 - Christ tS the Answer 13, Churc h Ser v tce s 10 Yours for
t h e A skmg 4 , TBA 8
10 00 - Ch urch Serv1 ce 4, F a ith for Today 15 . B•g Blue Marble 3,
Notre Dame H1ghl1ghts 6, 8, Movi e ''K1ss •n ' Cous1ns'' 10
10 30 - What t he Btble Plainly Says 13 , Go 3, Th1 s •s the l 1f e 15
lns •ght 4
11 00 - TV Chapel 3, Point of V1ew 6. Across the Fenc e 15 . Rev
He nry Mahan 13, Re x Humbard 8, Focus on Columbus 4
11 30 - Make a W1sh 13 . Btshop She en 6 . lns•ght 15 , At Issue 3
12· 00 - Rev Calvm Evans 13 , Sacred Heart 15, Meet th e Press
3; Bobby Bowden 8, 0 S U Football H1ghl1ghts 4. Co lumbus
Town M ee tmg 10
12 30 - Day of M•racles 13 ; NF l Pr e Gam e 8. Meet th e Press 4
12 55 - Ftve M 1nutes to K 1ck Off 10
1 00 - L ower Lighthouse 13, NFL Football 8, 10 , B1ll Dal ey' s
Hoc us Pocus Gang 3 , Issues and Answer s 13, Open Btble 15
1 30 - Sale of the Century 4, TBA 15 .
2 00 - Coll ege Football 13 . NFL Football 3, A, 15 , College

••

WISEM.AN

Tel. 614-446-1991l

&lt;~ 31 1

~UNDAY , NOVEMBER 3, 1974
6 00 - - Th1s Is Th e ltfe 10

"

-:nm·

Realty, 32 State St

NI CE mo bll e hom e sp a ce
loc&lt;tl ed R o dn ey , Oh• o Ca ll
Jo hn Fu ll e r 1.16 3J 34 o r 446

Television Log

•

Real Estate· For' Sale

Real Estate For Sale

MASSIE

STROUT REALTY

15 4 It

Jefl e n es Th e Le ml e y S 1n ge r s

t

..

long , 3
258 3

C HU R CH- P ewS- alldPUtp• t
t urn• tur e Rea sona b tv Dr•cAd
Wrtt e at once for Chnstmu
and New Year ' s. Spec ial fr ee
of fer Steven s Ct\ur ch Su ppl y
Hun
Co , P 0 ... Sox 781
tmgton , w v a
25 4 26

'2495
WOOD MOTOR· SALES
EASTERN AVE.

For sale

For Sale

"AUL T ' S Mob1l-e H om e Ser v 1ce 1973 MOBILE home , reasonable
Sk irting .. r oo f co at 1n g . pat iOS,
W1lh or Without central ~tr .
a wni ngs, a nc ho r s , ceme nt
Pr lest Tr
Ct
Add 1s.on
work F r ee estimat es Ca l l
Bulaville Rd , Ad d iSOn , Oh
446 2950 aft er 4 30 p m
A sk Han sha w
"l
2586
1
2 11 1f

GALLI'POLIS, OHIO
~

'I •

------ -- --------), ~

. .
.... I ......... ...~

for Sale
1973 14FT STARCRAFT alum .
boat . Complete with 7'h h p .
motor and t 11t away t r a 11er
Ph 446 2973
.

,

i 256 6

�.'

.,· . ..

·~

,

40 - T ht• Sund:-~y Timt•s- ~n linl'l , Sunday , Nuv . ;), 19H

.-

'

Riding clubs ' season concluded
·. at dinner, award presentations
....

By FRANK W. SLUSSER
U'!l Business Writer
NEW YORK tUPI) - The
stock market generally discounted news this week that
bu siness co nditions were
deteriorating amid unchecked
inflationary trends to register
a solid gain in fa irly active
trading on the New York Stock
Exchange .
Investors, who had bee n
bombarded with negative news
for weeks, found encouragement in reports a crippling
na tivnwide coal strike may be
averted, speculation that oilproducing nations may make a.
small reduction in the prices
they have sent rocketin g this
year , and in dec linin g int erest
rates.
That news sparked a midweek rally that propelled the
Dow · Jon es indus trial a verage to a gain of 29.09
to 665.28 for the week .
Other averages also gain ed . Standard &amp; Poor's 500stock index rose 3.76 to 73.88.
The NYSE common sto ck
index gained 1.87 to 38.94 .
The week's gain was broad,
with 1,131 issues advancing and
59! d~clpning , among the 1,987
croSSing the tape. The niiDlber
of stocks .reaching new highs
for the year totaled 24, up from
20 last week, and 108 reached
new lows.
Turnover totaled 78,617,485
share s,
compared
with
75,178,4110 traded last week and
116,714,278 traded during the
same week a year ago.
Rally Igolted
Reports Saudi Arabia may
.cut oil prices-oil producing

nations raised them fourfold
thi s y e a r ~ ig nit e d a ra lly
· Tuesday that pushed the Dow
~ ayerage to a gain or more than
39 poin ts in two days. Although
a high Sa udi offi cial denied th e
reports, observers such as
a na lyst Larry Wacht el of
Bache &amp; Co., sa id they thought
t h ~re

was something valid in

them.

'TUPPERS Pl-AINS - Activities . of the membe•·s of
seven·area riding clubs in the
Ohio Va lley Hor se Show ·
Association all swnmer long
have been " hig h good times"
. and Saturday night was no
John T. Scopes was found
g u ilty of hav ing t aug ht evolu tion m a Dayton. Te n~ .• hig h
sc hool on July 24, 1925. The
las t la w prohibiting th e
teac hin g of e volution in
A m ~ ri ca n public sc hools was
r ule d unconsti tutional bv the
Miss issipp i Sup re me CoUrt on
De c . 2. 197 0. Th e World
Alma nac notes. Scopes died
Oc t. 21. 1970.

Also, investors took heart
from reports the United Mine
Workers uni on a nd coal
produ cers had made progress
towa rd a new contract that
would av ert a cr ipplin g
nationwide strike threa tened
for Nov . 12.
They ignored an Agriculture
Department report that farm
prices surged 4 per cent in
October as well a s a Commerce
Depa rtment report that its
index of lea ding eco nomic
indicators declined by 2.5 per
cent in the third .quarter. Also
ignore d was a Labor Depart- By CHARLES E. FLINNER Coal Operators Association .
WA SHINGTON ( UP! ) The present contract expires
m e nt report tha t un employment climbed to 6 per cent High among the coal industry's Nov. 12.
Opening position s in the
in October from 5.8 per cent. proble ms in m ee ting the
Wall Street had been stunned sudden new offi cial emphasis negotiations were predictable.
BCOA President Walter C.
befor e last weekend when on coal as a main energy
for
the
nation
,
is
the
source
Wallace
sa id a drop in
General Motors reported its
for
grea
ter
productivity.
need
productivity in re&lt;.'ent years
third qua rter earnings fell to
For mine operators, that "must be reversed if the coal
five cents a share from 92 cents
the year before. Investors had trans lates as profits; for industry is to be expected to
expected a depressing report, miners , improvements in pr~1Vide increased wages, imbut not one of this magnitude. health, welfare and retirement proved benefits and the like. "
The automobile industry has benefits because their fund
' 'The surest cure for lost
made plans to layoff thousands swells with every ton of coal productivity due to wildcats
(strikes) and absenteeism is to
of workers and close plants mined. ·
Productivity is a major give coal miners a contract
because of lagging sales and
sharply lower profits . The question in the current national they can work and live under in
effects of the cutbacks will be negotiations between the decency and fa irness," said
felt throughout the remainder ·United Mine Workers Union of UMWA President Arnold Milof the nation's industry. A America and the Bituminous ler.
Productivity Dips
lengthy coal strike would be
Productivity in the mines
devastating, analysts said.
dipped from about 14 tons per
Rates Up
increases this year. ,
Banks continued to lower
Occidental Petrolewn was man per day in 1965 to about 12
If you're looking
interest rates, which investor second, up '!. to 10 7/s on &amp;12,800 tons in 1973 alter peaking at
for the best value in
found ~couraglng. First Na. shares. McDonald's was third, around 16 tons in 1969.' Labor,
tiona! City Bank, the nation 's up 2 % on 609,600 shares. Both management, technology and
second largest and a trendset- firms reported higher third government regulation have .
had an impact.
ter, Friday lowered its prime quarter earnings.
lending ra te for creditworthy
Getty Oil was the week's Because of the 1969 mine
corporate customers to 10 o/, biggest ga iner, climbing 14 1h. safety legislation many manper cent despite a slight rise in Other oils and oil.,.elated issues days previously sperit digging
loan demands on New Yor k's also a dvanced. Schlwnberger coal were used for safety work.
1nsurance
12 largest banks.
rose 9 lo, Superior Oil 8 o/s, J. But miners still die - 81 be
The prime had risen to 12 per Ray McDermott 8, Phillips tween the beginni ng of
you'll find it at State Farm cent in July and this was a Petroleum 6 '1.! and Shell Oil 6 th e yea r and · Sept. 3
depressant to Wall Street for
when negotiations began .
Give me a call today. You'll
months. The raie began to
Xerox fell 2 11s in active Miller said safer mines
discover what's made State Farm
decline as the Federal Reserve trading . Th e firm had a are more productive mines and
the number one homeowners inBoard gradually ,eased its tight disappointin g third quarter "The lives and s afety of
surer in the world.
moneta ry policies. The market and there were reports on Wall American coal miners are not
was j olted late Thursday , Street Friday a major broker- negotiable items."
however, when the Fed report- age had put out a negative
Wallace said the operators
CARROL K. SNOWDEN ed
the nation's money supply appraisal of the copier giant. recognize safety is a priority
declined by $2.1 billion in the Xerox officials said they knew Issue and are willing to adopt
week ended Oct. 23. Analysts of no r eason for the surge of "reasonable" programs to imK Central
. disagreed whether.the Fed was activity in thz stock.
prove it.
Hotel Bldg.
again tightening its policies.
Retail sales rose surprisingly
According to the operators,
Second AventH!
of
E
.F
.
Hutton
Newton
Zinder
in
October,
and
Sears,
Roebuck
in
!973 about 28 days of
Gallipolis,
said
"
deteriotating
business
benefited
from
the
report
,
production per man- not
Phone 446-4290
conditions ensure continuing gaining 7 \It for tbe week.
counting holidays and vacation
lower inter es t rates and
MSL Industries climbed 7 time-were lost due to work
Like a good neighbor,
eventually the aba1ement of after Alleghany Corp. said it stoppages and atsenteeism.
tnnation."
planned to go through with a
His side is targeting on
Slate Farm is !here.
For the week, General tender offer for .MSL common stoppages, abseilteeism and
Motors was the most active stock.
"outmoded and wasteful pracIMU MIM
issue, up v, to 33 % on 744,900
Other big gainers during the tices which interfere with
shares: The Issue had been off week included ffiM, up 14 v. ; efficiency and increased proearly iri the week , but gained Texas Instruments, 9 :y,.; duction."
on speculation GM would Schering-Plough, 7; Bristol
Miller told the operators
State fife fif1 IIIII C.wtlly Com!:IIMt'f
Home Ol!iu:
·
continue paying its quarterly Myers, 6 % ; stone Webster, 6 absenteeism and wildcat work
BIUOIIIin;ton, Ql inoi1
dividend. Also, GM said it had 'k, and Merck, DuPont and stoppages can be. curbed if
no plans to a sk for further price Digital Equipment, 6 % each. management will adopt his
7404
ideas.
Guy Farmer, Wallace's tqp
lieutenant in the talks, said
management has idea s that
will increase productivity and
may lead to more jobs.
For example, the present
contract bars production on
Sundays.
~&lt;That is a major lhing,"
Farmer said , "Continuous
' operation would allow us to
work seven days a week using
extra men in extra shifts."
Where mines are highly
automated, the expensive machinery could be used more
efficiently, he said.
There is work around the
mines Sundays for preni!um
pay but actull\ coal digging Is.
not allowed.
"I think we· could guarantee
no loss in eafnings to anyoOe,''
Farmer said. "By moving
around, everybody can· get the
advantage of some of these
premiums. The average miner
does not gel the adv!intages of ·
some premi~. We feel they
can earn more by· working
less."
. Miners woilld not be required
to worli Suri\lay . . " We're not 1
· trying to cram ,anything down ;anybody's throat," he said.
Technology A Problem
But technology-or lack of it
-is another problems. "You
can't move coal as fast as you
can Produce It," said ooe
BCOA spokesman. A con. tinuous mining machine
ootruns the capacity to move
coal out of the mine. That, he

SHERRY INDASTED, right, Rock Springs, receives her
reserve champion trophy from Ohio Valley Horse Show
Association Queen Polly Burger in the barrel race for horses
class at the association's recognition dinner held at Tuppers
Plains Saturday night.
.~~.,_:-x:w~:~.:m-z,."'(.:.w-;

training program," he complained.

''Too many C9mpanies some-.
how assume -that new miners
will be able. to operate and
service complex equipment
with no experience, no training
and no skilled Sllpervision. This
is no way to produce coal safely
or efficiently," he said. Of the

ews .. in Briefs,.
By United Press IDteruatlonal
BELGRADE - SECRETARY OF STATE Henry A.
Kissinger appealed to the Arab and Israeli governments today to
make an effort to bring their positions closer to each other in the
interests of achieving a Middle East peace settlement. He also
moved to patch up the United States' quarrel with Turkey. Mter
talks With President Tito of Yugoslavia, Kissinger pledged in a
carefully worded statement that " the United Slates would llke to
do its best t~ prevent a stalemate from developing" following the
hard-line decisions of the Arab siiiiUillt conference In Rabat.
Emerging froin his meeting with the 82-y4¥1r-old Yugoslav
leader, Kissinger told newsmen that his forthcoming Middle
East peaceseeking mission "requires that aU of the parties on
both sides understand the special necessities of eoch other and
make an effort to bring their positions closer to each other."
Aa Kissinger breezed through his seven-hour stopover in
Yugoslavia, he announced that he would make a peace~king
mission to Turkey Nov. 11-S in search of a settlement of the
Cyprus conflict. He will seek to convince the Turks to make a
peace gesture - possibly by removing some of their 40,000 troops
. from Cyprus.

tlsen

WASHINGTON - THE PROSECUTION IN the Watergate
cover-up trial today disclosed new evidence it said showed the
, seven original burglars knew they were being pa.id to keep quiet
and believed they would be pardoned by the Nixoo administration. Prosecutor James F . Neal told the cover-up trlal of
five former aides to Richard M. Nixon that the evidence - a
memo from bugging conspirator E. Howard Hunt Jr. which had
been missing for two years - was uncovered during the past
weell:end.
.
He called It a "sad chapter''ln the cover-up plot.
The memo, described by Neal as a "bombshell" document
that had been deliberately withheld by Hunt's attorney, William
0. Bittman, was written Nov. II, 1972, as UJe. Watergate burglars
\Vere prephring for their trial tbe following J imuary.
·
'.'The defendants have followed all instructions metiCI!Iously
ljlld a_re malntainin~~tJ!eir P!'rt of th~ .b'!."j!ain," i~1
"The
Ddminlstration, however, remains-deficient ;:." It said tlie White
House had not met its "commitments" which included "!.
financial support ... 2. legal defense fees ... 3. pardons ... 4.
rebabilltation.'' ·

"O'\C6

owncQJ

"•·

salfl·.

'·•'

WNG BEACH, CALIF. - RICHARD NIXON'S health was
better today than It has been since his medical ·crisls began a
week ago, and doctors say he is no longer in ·critical condition.
Nixon, buoyed by a surprise weekerid visit for President Ford,
was taken off the critical Jist Sunday, allowed to eat soft foods
and sit up.
His doctor called it "the most encouraging report" since
Nixon entered Long Beach Memorial Hospital 12 days ago, and
underwent urgent surgery last Tuesday morning. The 61-yearold former president ''Is now off the critical list," said an announcement by Dr. John Lungren, his chief physician. Nixon "is
now under subintensive care," LWigren said.

Pa.

99

Regularly.... ~ to $12

A

~

WASHINGTON- DESPITE A NEW WAVE of optimism
among Republicans in the last hours of the 1974 campaign,
Democrats were still confident today they would tighten their
already finn grip on Congress and the nation 's stale houses in
Tuesday's elections.
A United Press International survey in the last week of the
campaign showed the Democrats with a likely net gain of five
governorships, five seats in the Senate and 20 House·seats. That
would give them 37 of the 50 governorships, 63 seats in the 100member Senate and 288 of the 435 House seats - dominotion in
the states and continuation of a generation of control on. Capitol
Hlll, but not the "veto-proof Congress" denounced by President
Ford.

r

0"
'

Knit Shirts
. and·

FOOTtONG
HOT ·DOGS

Cottl)n Po~ester Blends
Stripes and Neat

. PH. 446-2~82

2nd ·&amp; ·ouvE ST. .

GAlliPOU~

OHIO

~·

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"ECK SIZES 14lh TO 17
MEN'S DEPARTMENT ON .
THE 1ST FLOOR

ELBERFELD.S
IN . . POM ER·ov

•is·the~oftbe

"l'HAt OLD FASHIONED GOODNESS"

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"FIXED THE WAY
YOU LIKE 'EM"

mmer-"That's technology. A
lot of people 1&lt;re working 011 it."
MIUer has added. some other
ideas to the productivity
· bor gaining hopper. "The coill
industry has ~o manpqwer

•

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Su,day, Nov. 3 thru Saturday, Nov. 9th

~4akt ~qnppr

'

.

120,000 underground miners
today, 13,000 have been in the
mines less than a year.
Miller added some mines are
numing "on equipment which
is worn out or oboolele . Thia is
not only unsafe ; it's inefficient
as well. Companies fall to train
repairmen and mechanics. u

ELBE·RFELDS I'N ·poMEROY
..

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guests mel at the Tuppers
Plains Elementary School for a
dinner , the presentation of
almost 100 beautiful trophies
plus ribbons and cash awards
in recognition or outstanding
accomplishm ent a nd th en
wrapped up the evening with a

exception.
Over 200 members an d dance.
Homer Cole or Tuppe rs
Plains, presiden t of th e
association,
ma s ter · of
cereinonies, said this wa s the
"bigge st
sea so n"
th e
association has had. The seven
clubs t hat belon g to th e
association are the Meigs,
Riverview , Ja-Vin , Belpre,
Saddle and Sirloin, Ravenswood and the Bar 30 Horsemen
clubs. Three others have indicated i interest in joining the ~
association in the near future.
Polly Burger , Gallipolis ,
reigning association · queen the first queen was selected
this season - presented
irophies to members for outstanding achievement during
the past season with Bill Cole,
HOMER OOLE, Tllppen
Tuppers
Plains , a lso an
Plains, preoldeDI of the Ohio
association officer, annoWlcing
Valley
Horae
Show
winners.
Aasoclalloo, was master of
Norma Newland of the
ceremonies for lbe eod of the
Tuppers Plains ar.ea was given
oeason dinner-dance held by
a
round of applause for her
the Association Saturday
with association activities
help
nlf,bi.
and she presented remem-

"\

Nelsonville-York High School.
She is a member of the
National Honor Society,
marching and concert bands
and the Future Teachers club.
She is a cheerleader and
particip!'ted in the state-wide
American History Scholarship .
contest. Miss Devol has been
on the scholarship ~ain three
years. Last June she played the
role of Terry Thompson in
Rodgers and Hart's Musical
" Babes in Arms" presented 'by .
the Berean Theatre, Nelsonville.
Miss Devol plans a career in
Theater. She is spOnsored by
Village Pharmacy ; Middleport.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday through
Friday, a ehance of rain
Wednesday and fair Thursday and Friday. Mild
weather with highs In the 50s
in northern areas to the
lower 60s In southern
counties. Overnight lows will
be In the 40s. _

VOL. XXVI

NO. 143

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

' '

Lows tonight in the 40s.
Ooudy and cooler Tuesday
with a chance of showers ending in the west portions late in
the day. Highs Tuesday in the
upper 40s north to lower 50s
south .

TAMMY KENNEDY, ONLY FOUR YEARS OLD,
received this "bigger than she is" trophy at Saturday night's
Ohio Valley Horse Show Association recognition banquet for
being the association chlimplon in the "walk-trot horse"
class for the season. An excellent rider, Tammy is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J . R. KeMedy of Tuppers Plains.
She also took the first place trophy In the walk-trot horse
category for the season riding "Clarice McQue."

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1974

•

•

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Coal negotiations broke off
Sunday night and a bloc of
union delegates who must
approve a new ~ntract voted
unaQimously to go home and
prepare for a nationwide
strike.
.. ,Whil~ the , top ,\lrlr8Jilning
people on both sides of the table
said it was possible to avert a
strike, United Mine Workers
President Arnold Miller said
the outlook was "pretty glwn."
But when asked if a strike
was inevilab.Ie, as the union
secretary-treasurer H~rry Patrick indicated, Miller said
wrhat wouldn 't be true."
A prolonged national coal
strike would.be a serious blow
to the nation's already shaky
economy and even a brief
shutdown could boost innation
by.crippling industrial production.
Guy Farmer, general
counsel and chief negotiator
for the Bituminous Coal
Operators Association, said "I
still think we have a chance of
averting a strike."
But chances for an early
settlement appeared dim despite the stated optimism.
White House labor troubleshooter Willlam J. Usery Jr.
was in touch with both sides
ljlld said he would attempt to
get them talking again .
The strike deadUne is a week
away -12:01 a .m., Nov. 12.
The union, which represents
120,000 miners in. 25 states, has

a "no contract, no work" would meet If there was
tradition and under Miller 's anything to meet on," he said.
leadership has adopted a
ratification process that requires secret balloting by each
member.
The ratilication process also
requires approval by the
union'§)!&amp;rAAining CO\I!!.cil. Jl;!e
presidents of !9 local districts
and the union's executive
board.
Mter talks broke off at a
Washington hotel, Miller
walked a block to union
headquarters and briefed the
bargaining council. It voted
unanimously to go home.
Mlerwards, Miller said he
still thought there was a
chance to avert a strike. 111

The coal association eald in a
statement : "In the hope of
reaching.an agreement before
lime runs out we are willing to
continue to negotiate around
the clock."

or str1 e
in cl u ding g r i eva n c e
procedures, viewed as a means
of avoiding wildcat strikes.
"We will be getting back
together," Farmer said.
"We've made a great deal of
progress. We were shooting for
trying to get It settled today but

~'\~.t':lo~~ ·!~ii7:~.

to
·
contract before the breakdown,
according to sources close to
the talks, the bargaining broke
off on procedures.
Tl\e union accused coal
negotiators of not responding
to revised economic demands
presented Saturday morning.
The operators apparently
wan led to wind up bargaining
on the noneconomic issues,

TEN CENTS

•

tners gtr

lll*t

since that time the operatOrs
1
'won 't even give us an answer."
Miller eaid there still were
" four or five " significant
noneconomic Issues. "Most of
the other Items are just a
matter o( changing words," he

per man was lost in 1973 due to
scattered walkouts. Company
neg ot iators also sought
changes to permit around-thec lo c k,
a r ound-the -week
mining. There is now no mining
on Sunday,s.
The union presented a Jist of:i
about 200 .mnands, \ncludint('
they 're ''tar pay
and
pens ion
Imapart on the Issues," said a provements, sick pay, changes
spokesman for the company in grievance procedures, job
negotiators.
classification, and trea tment of
Talks began Sept. 3. The senior members.
Especially high on the list
company negotiators have
were
safety features, but the
been pressing l.ssues that would
improve coal mine produc- union also asked for helpers on:
tlvlly,. especially contract complex mining machinery,
language th at would help halt manpower tra ining , safety
training,andon the money side
wUdcat strikes.
a
cost of living cla use .
About 28 days of production

no\l;,h\lt!l8lllY-.&lt;~. don:t :th~'

The union revised its
economic demands and
presented them Friday, but
union spokesmen said the
company negotiators said
"no."
"We tried to compromise,"
the union official said. "We
came back with a-new
proposal." He said thet was
offered Saturday morning and

GOP hopes revived in last hour rally
WASHINGTON (UP!) Republican morale showed
signs of a rally in the last hours
of the 1974 campaign today.
The Democrats were still
confident they would tighten
their already firm grip on
Congress and the nation 's
state houses in Tuesday 's
elections.
A United Press International
survey in the last week of the
campaign showed the Demoerato with a llkely net gain of
five governorships, five seats
in the Senate and 20 House
seats.
That would give them 37 of

the 50 governorships, 63 seats
in the !OOmember Senate and
288 of the 435 House seats 'dominotion in the states and
continuation of a generation of
control on Capitol Hill, but not
the "veto-proof Congress" deoounced by P.tesident Ford.
The Democrats based their
confidence on public opinion
and
political
polls
professionals' predictions of
solid gains In a year that eaw
the GOP battered by the
Watergate disclosures, the
Nixon resignation and tben

2 autos go
into ditch
Two single car accldeni!J
were investigated by the Meigl!
County Sheriff's Dept. over 11Je
weekend. There were rio ·
personal · injuries or proper!)'\
1
damage reported.
Saturday at 7:20p.m. on SR
648 in Pagetown, Maurice 0.
Wright, 76, Albany, Rt. 2,
traveling east, went off the
highway Into a dltch. He was
cited for driving while intoxicated.
Sunday at I a.m. on County
Road 25, Chesler Township,
George Allen Blanks, Fayetteville, W. Va., attempting to
turn around, backed into a
ditch.
William J. Ritchie, Coolville
Rt. I, was picked up by the
Athens County Sheriff's Dept.
on a warrant from Meigs
County for contempt of court. A
local Sheriff's Dept. deputy
went to Athens today to return
Ritchie here .

area settles

three-week strike which had
closed 52 supermarkets in
central and 'sciuthern West
Virginia, and parts of Kentucky and Ohio.
Ca'ldwe)l said tbe new eontract ·provides wage increa!Jl!S
of 70 cents an hour for meat
department worliers and departmentheadsand50centsan
hour wage boosta for other full
and partlime workers. ·There
will also be 35 cents an hour
increases for all workers ·
during the second and third .
years of the contract.
.
In addition, he said, there
will be cost-of-living raises
during the second and-. third
years of the contract. Caldwell
said the cost-of ..Jiving raise was
the principal Issui. in the strike.
Health and · welfare benefit.s
were also increased, CaldweU
. LOCAL,TEMPS
said, with fulltime employes to
The
lempetature in down-.
. be e¥gible for a prescription
town
Pomeroy
at ~I a.m.
drug plan in the second year of
the . ~ntrac~ and a dental Monday was 72 degrees under
'cloudy skies.
program In the third.

both by inflation and rising
unemployment.
The Republicans were not
specific about their rising
expectations, but two GOP
spoke s men
mentioned
President Ford's cross-country
campaigning as a plus.
The UP! survey meshed with
the public assessment of the
llkely Senate outcome made
Sunday
by
Democratic
national chairman Robert S.
strauss, but was below his
estimate of a 27 to 32 seat increase in the House.
Strauss did not give a
number for governorships,
preferring to predict instead
that "85 to 90 per cent of the
people In the nation will be
living under Democratic

governors.''
Republican National chairman Mar;y Louise Smith, as she
has all during the campaign,
declined "to play the nwnbers
game" In her joint television
appearance with strauss, but

...

.'

·,

(

.

ventured "! see a turning
around" of GOP prospects.
The same cautious optimism
came from the chairmen of the
party's congressional campaign committees - Sen .
William Brock, R-Tenn., and
Rep . Robert Michel, R-m.
They appeared after Gov.
Jlnuny Carter of Georgia, the
Democratic National Committee's campaign coordinator,
predicted Democratic gains of
five to seven in the Senate, 35 to
40 in the House and seven to 10
governorships .
"We're going to do much
better than that ," Brock
replied. "We have an excellent
chance to pick up some incumbent Democratic seats ."
(The UP! survey gave the
GOP two governorships now
beld by Democrats, but estlmated a loss of seven
Republican governorships. It
foresaw no Democratic Senate
losses.)
·"We're going to suffer some

losses," Michel conceded, but
added that he would not am'
sider the loss of 20 to 25 sea~ a
GOP wipeout.
The party chalnnen were
interlewed on NBC 's " Meet the
Press" and Carter, Brock and
Michel on ABC's " Issues and

ArJsJv.ers."
One likely reason for the
optimism is midterm election
history - the party controlling
the While House traditionally
has lost sea ts between
presidential election years.
Michel said a 28-.seat loss was
the recent midterm average
and if the Democra ts feUbelow
· that , he would see it as a
partial victory .
Another reason is tha t except
for the most extreme prediclions, the prospects do not
seem firm for the Democrats to
gain a numerically " vetoproof" Congress ~7 seats in
the Senate and . 29() in the
House.

Homicide charged
Multiple cl)arges have been false information to a police
filed against a Cleveland man officer, accordirfg to the patrol.
following a fatal traffic acMullins was reported driving
cldent at 4 p. m. Saturday in a stolen pick-up truck owned by
Gallia County which took the Ed Smalley of Oeveland.
According to the .patrol, the
life of 58-year-old Steven J .
Dickerson of Les'age, W. Va. accident occurred on Rt. 55.4,
The Gallla-Melgs Post Stale one and seven tenths miles east
Highway Patrol said today of Rt. 160 when the Mullins
Loren W. Mullins, 23, of vehicle went left of the center
Cleveland, formerly of Rt. I, striking a pickup operated by
Galllpolis, has been charged Dickerson.
Mrs. Gertrude E . Dickerson,
with auto larceny, vehicular
homicide , driving under · 60, of Lesage, a pa5llenger in
suapenslon and driving lelt of the Dickerson truck , is listed in
center.
critical condition in intensive
In Cleveland, Mullins is care at the Holzer Medical
being . sought for attempted Center.
aggravated murder, attempted
Mullins was also hospitalized
aggravated robbery, 'carrying with , abr a sions
and
a concealed weapon and giving questionable internal injW"ies.

••

~

..

Weather

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

PITTSBURGH (UP! )
Member.• of Local 500, Amalgamated Food Employes
Union, Sunday approved a new
three-year contract with the
Kroger Co., ending a walkout
which had closed 56 Kroger
supermarkets in the company's Pittsburgh Division
since Sept. 30.
Clifton Caldwell, president of
Local ·500, .said ratiiiClltlon by
about 1,700unionmembers was
bY voice vote and "It was
overwhelmingly ratified."
The 2,500 union members
UNITCAU.ED
began returnihg to woJ:k today
The Pomeroy E-R squad.was · i'"d Caldwell sa.id Kroger ofcalled tO an East Main St. cafe ficials told him stores could
at about 6 p.m. Saturday for begin reopening Wednesday.
Carl Jeffers who had fallen . He
The Pitt.sburgh pivlsion inwas taken to Veterans cludes stores in the trl-atate
Memorial Hospital where he area of western Pennsylvania,
was treated and released.
~~ir=. $d n~hern
CLOSED TUESDAY
. ID ,Charleston, W.va., FO.:ld
The , Meigs County · Court- Employes .Union Local 347
house · will be closed all day ratified a . new contract with
Tuesday elec tion day .
Kroger Saturday, ending a

...

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::ox:~-====-

BILL COLE , Tappen
PlaiDS, aDDOUilCIDg lbe
winDers of some 100 trophies
and other awords given by
the Ohio Valley Horse Sbow
Association at a dlooer
meeting Saturday night.

en tine

f Jr. Miss Pageant i Kroger's _Pitt

The first two contestants in
the Southeast Ohio Junior Miss
Pagea·n t Nov. 23 at the
Pomeroy Junior High School
auditoriwn were announced
today.
They are Basheba ( Babs)
Ann Witte and Beth Anne
Devol.
Miss Witte, a senior at Meigs
High sChool, is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. William Wille,
·Pomeroy Route 3. She. was a
majorette 'tw~ years and is now
field commander of the Meigs
High Band. She Is a member of
lbe marching, pep and concert
band, Spanish club, pep band,
camera club, Meigs High
Chorille on the yearbook staff, .
and has been a member of the
Big Bend Minstrel .Assn.
several years.
She is president of the senior
class and was e lected
homecoming queen this fall .
She plans a · caree r In
Dramatics . Miss Witte Is
sponsored by City Loa n,
Pomeroy.
Miss Devol, daughter of Mr.
and Mr s . · Calvih Devol ,
Buch\el, is a senior at .

br ances to those traveling the
most distance and to the
youngest and oldest persons
attending .
Receivin g trophies, rosettfs
and other awards from the
several clubs were Dan Elias,
Polly Burger, Tony Kennedy,
J eff Roach , Eddi e Roush,
Cindy Dau ghe rty , Robin
Ritchie, Kathy Stanley , Eddie
Roush, Bill Cole, Duke Bierly,
Dan Notter - Kim Notter, Bob
Frazee, 0 . J . Fletcher, Brenda
Davis, Marilyn Layne, Mareie
Lewis, Roger Wilson , Duke
Bierly, Danny Sayre, Darla
Stanley, Gary Roach, Arnold
Daugher ty. Mike Cochran ,
Larry Bond, Roger Cwn.mings,
Joe Greathouse, Gloria Miller,
Cindy Simpson, Tana Cum. mings, Frank Beckner, Debbie
Continued on page 10

He is in satisfactory condition.
Another passenger in the
sto len ve hicle,. Larry E .
Williams, 23, of' Cleveland,
s uffe r ed lacer a tions and
a brasiorts and is in satisfactory
condition .

Funeral services for Mr.
Dickerson will be held Tuesday
at I p. m. fr om Chapman's
Mortuar y at Huntingto n.
Burial will follow in the While
Chapel Memor ial Garde ns
near Ona, W. Va. He is survived by his wife , Gertrude, a ... '
son , Larry, of Proctorville , a
fosler-daughle~, Mrs .. JoAnn.
Ba rney of Huntington, six
·sisters and three· brothers.
It wa~ Gallla County's
seventh traffic fa talityof 1974.

'

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