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                  <text>·10 ~ The u.Jy Sentinel, Middle port-Pomeroy,

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Friday, Nov . l5,1974

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Three hurt in co~sion .

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Wieners at end
RACINE - The Southern
High School· marching band
topped its foo\ball season with
a hayride an'd wiener roast last
Saturday wh en gifts were
presented to J oy Bigler, band
instructor.
Friday night during half·
time activities of the Southern Caldwell clash two senior band
members were honored. They
were Howard Black, tuba
player, son of Rev. and Mrs.
Howard Black, Syracuse, and
David Smith, tim-tom player,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Smith, Siracuse.

Three persons were injured ning In Meigs unty on County
In a collision at 5:10 p.m. Rd, ~. three te ths of a mile
Thursday on Rt. 160, eight east of Rt. 7. 'J'I!e ' patrol said
~&lt;onths of a mile south of Rt. 35. Dale A. Clonch.' 2:l Middleport,
The Gallia-Meigs Post State lostconiJ"ol ofhls'c~\hich ran
Highway Patrol said an auto off the road striki
a power
driven by Okey H. Henry, 78, pole . There was
oderate
Gallipolis, struck the rear of a damage to Clonch's car .
·
car operated by Betty J .
A deer was killed when
Barnett, 32, of Gallipolis.
struck by a car at 1:35 p.m.
Mrs. Barnett suffered a back Thursday on Rt. 124, seven
injury and her five year old t&lt;onths of a mtle south of Rt. 35.
son, Eric, had a fractured arm. The animal ran into the path of
Henry, who suffered a head a car driven by Harley E.
laceration , was charged with McD&lt;lnald, 34, of Pomeroy .
failure to stop ·within assured
clear distance.
No one was cited in a single
car accident Thursday mor-

One fin
• ed ' 4

ROOF COAT
5 Gal.

'2295

BAUM'S TRUE

VAWE STORE
985-3301

Chester,

o.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonighi-Sat.-Sun.
November 15·16-17

THE CHINESE
PROFESSIONALS

One defendant was fined and
four others forfei!&lt;od bonds in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Dale E;. Smith Thursday night.
Sherry Hutton , Pomeroy ,
was fined $10 and costs on a
conviction of disorderly
manner and $10 and costs for
assault.
Eddie Glover, Sharon, W.
Va., forfeited a $250 bond
posted on a charge of driving
while intoxicated; motorcyclist Michael Caton, Vinton ,
forfeited a $30 bond for not
wearing protectlve.,yeglasses ;
Lee PeUing, no address listed,
forfeited a $100 bond posted for
assault, and $50 for disturbing
the peace ; Melanie Walters,
Middleport, forfeited her $50
bond for disturbing the peace
and one of $30 for intoxication.

(\

E-R UNIT CALLED
RACINE - The Racine
Emergency Squad answered a
call: at 3 p.m. Thursday for
Fred Roush, Rt. 1, Racine. A
medical patient, Roush was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he was admitted. Wednesday, the squad
was called to the home of Mrs.
Katie Roush in Racine . Mrs.
Roush was dead upon the
squad's arrival. The body was
taken to the Ewing Funeral
Home by the squad.

Our Drive-in Banking keeps you
The service is super fast. ·
Accurate. Efficient.
Friendly ... but no dilly-dally.

pomeroy
rutland

A.OWERS

pomeroy
national
bank

For All uccaSIOIIs
We Wire Flowers·
Everywhere

the bank of
the century
established 1872

992-2039
Pomeroy Rower Sho~
- Mrs Millard Van Meter
Ph. m- 203 ~
Ph. 992-57.,

brnexldOorneighbur•.

It's The

Entertainment
SPOT

Inn Place

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharges - Vickie Gaul!,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Johnny
Donohue
and
daughter,
Henderson;
Mrs. . William Harbor and son ,
Point Pleasant; · Mrs. Paul
Chadwell , Middleport; Doddee
Foran , Point Pleasant; Homer .
Hill, Sr., New Haven; Jimmie
Atkins, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
David Sneed, Mt. Alto; Sylvia
Harper, Kerr; Joe Hammack,
Point Pleasant.

assured

over
other
senators.

freshmen

Metzenbaum said during a
news conference that he had
polled other senators who
are not ret1:lllllng next year
and learned · there was a

"resentment" among them
to suggestions of helping a
new senator gain a seniority
edge.
"But I'm willing to discuss
this with Glenn," said
Metzenbaum. · " I' ve been
known to cbaoge my mind."

DRIVER CITED
.lames R. Hill, 41, Rt. 2
Racine, was cited for failure to

maintain

WELL, MAVBE
WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. Howard Metzenbaum,
I&gt;-Ohio, indleated Thursday
that as of right now he would
not resign his Senate seat
early to give Sen.-eleet John
Glenn a seniority advantage

clear

distance followin g a chain
reaction traffic mishap on
Eastern Ave in Gallipolis

~i&gt;.=.:.:;;:::~::-:.:::m:-;::::;:::;;':!--&amp;:?m::'*'-'!ili-;

Thursday morniilg. He drove a
car that hit the rear end of
another operated by Carol J .
Borden, 28, Rt. I Vinton, which
hit the rear end of another
operated by Glenn H. Adkins,
42, Rt. 1, Gallipolis, which hit
the rear end of still another
owned by Charles E. Cottrill,
60, of Pt . Pleasant. Four.
persons had minor injuries.

DINNER SET
RACINE - Racine Grange
will hold il.&gt;! annual Thanks-.
giving dinner Saturday, Nov .
23 at 6:30p.m. Members are to
bring covered dish, table
service and gifts for patienl.&gt;! at
Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health Center, Athens. There
will also be an auction.

TO PLAY SOONERS
COLUMBUS, Ohio {UP! ) Athletic officials at Ohio State
University announced Thursday the Buckeyes would play
Oklahoma during the 1983
football season.
The game will be the
Buckeyes' lith of the season
and will be played Sept. 17 at
Norman, Okla .
Ohio State meel.&gt;! the Sooners
for the first time during the
1977 season. That game will be
played at Columbus.

TALKS NEEDED

COLUMBUS (UPI) -A law
mandating Ohio nursing homes
to install sprinkler systems
before Jan. I wiU be dlacussed
at a meeting here Monday,
Assistant Ohio House Minority
Leader Norman A. Murdock,
R-Cincinnati, said Thursday.
TALKS BREAK OFF
One-baH of the state's 1,200
CLEVELAND (UPI)
nursing homes wiU oot ·be' able
Talks broke off Thursday night to meet 'the deadline for inin the dispute between the stalling sprinklers, Murdock
striking Newspaper Guild and estimated.
aeveland's two major daily
newspapers, neither of which
has publisbed for a week.
PHELAN DIES
HONOLULU (UPI) - James
Phelan, 81, who was the head
DIVORCE GRANTED
football
coach at the University
Sharon L. Kuhn, Middleport,
has been granted a divorce in of Washington 193(1.1941 and a
Meigs County Cormrion Pleas player at Notre Dame under
Court from · Charles W. Kuhn, Knute Rockne from 1915
Middleport, on charges of through 1917, died at Queen's
gross neglect of duty and ex- Medleal Center Thursday.
treme cruelty.

Bend Area

East

TONIGHT
AND SATURDAY
9:30
TIL 2:00
.

Fida

.,Authorized dealer for Zenith
- Gibson - Hardwick - Kit-

chen Aid · Litton I Microwave

OVen).

Also

I

nour .
T. V. &amp; Appf~ance
Ga5 Selliee

•

AND THE HALLMARKS

'
Phone 985-3307
Chester, Ohio

The .Meigs In~

Ph il a
X·Jxnvl

14 ~
10 10
B 11
4 10

0
0
0
0

419
41&gt;7
491
258

.x ~team disbanded

~

Thursday's ResuH
· Florida 27 Southern Cal 24

.

OFFICE HOURS9:Jului2; 2 TOS .!CLOSE
AT .NOON ON ;rHUR.SJ _; EAS1 COURT ST., .
. POMEROY.
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TOEATTURKEY
Drew Webster Post 39, of the
American Legion, Pomeroy,
will hold its annual Thanksgiving dinner Tuesday, Nov.
19. Dinner will he served at 7
p.m. All members are urged to
be on time.

::..C;,!p'e,~f'i.;:.

m

TOKYO - CHIAO KUAN·HUA, CLOSE confidant of
Premier Chou En~al and architeCt of tJ. S. - Sino rapproclnnent,
took over today as Cl!lna's foreign rniniJter, reports from Peking
said. Japan's Kyodo News Agency said Chiao, tlie ·vice foreign
minister, replaced Chi Peng.fel in what \he.llllnese government
described as a ' 'routine reshuffle."
Kyodo, in a dispatch from Peking, said the appointment of
68-year-old protege of Cl!ou to head Ollna's diPlomatic corps
became effective today. Chiao has been the premier's chief
adviser on a foreign poUcy that saw former President Richard
M. Nixon visit Peking in 1972 after more than a decade of antagorifsm between China and the United States.

.,

PLAY FAMILY

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TTP .TOWER
B!'ld ~

CAR
SET
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$}299:
Ferry Set ,,
.
and

.,.
,,

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.KIDDIE
·fONDUE

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'SQUIRMLES

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GALIJPOIJS - Stephen M. Jonesh,as
ilaken up duties of eKecutl ve for the Mason- .
f[&gt;allla-Meigs District, Boy Scouts · of
. ;'\,w erica, according to the Tri.State Area
· Jcouncil.
·
··
' . · A native of Norfolk, Va., Jones . has
',~,esided In Huntington, W. Va., the past 10
years: He graduated from Ma~shall
•lliliversity with an AB degree in socao\ogy
1

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$'144'

MAIN STORE, TOYLAND AND WAREHOUSE
ON MECHANIC STREET OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL
SHOP
SATURDAY
Ch30 'AM.,TO 8 PM ' ·.
.
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"

a:'

1-BERFELDS IN.' POME.RO

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KfRKEL ON TUB);;
•
GALUPOIJS - Hugh P. Klrkel ,.
e.necutlvevice president of Holzer Medical
.C&lt;!nter, will he the guest on .aiannel 13's
h.).Jf.!Jour week:.Iay feature, "Afternoon
:Wl th PJ," at 12:30 p.ln. Monday, Nov. 11.
p ~ r, ]lpstess, will interview Kirkel about
tt.;,, role of Ho1zer Medical Center II) ,the ,
arl•a the hospital serves.

,...

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Sbriver Church of Rt . I, .Crown City.
He is survived by his wife, Cynthia
Stapleton whom he married Dec. 15, 1972;
his parents, a son, Matthew Allen, 18months old ; a sister, Mrs. Cody (Joyce)
Boothe of Eureka Star Rt.; four halfsisters, Mrs. Virginia Walter of Northup;
Mrs. Lenora Saunders of Chesapeake ;
Mrs. Lavada Harvey of Gallipolis and Gay
JlaUey of Crown City and two ·half~i'others,
Larry Church or Crown City and
1
Murray Franklin Church of Philadelphia,
Pa.
Mr . Church graduatecf from Hannan
Trace High School in 1970 and. the Hunlinger Barber College in 1971. He was
owner and operator of Jerry's Barber Shop
in Crown City and formerly worked at the
Gavin Plant and Wilcoxen Barber Shop.
He attended King's Chapel Cl!urch.
Funeral services will be held at I p.m.
,Tuesday from the Waugh-Halley-Wood
. F!meral Hom-. with Rev . Ernest Baker
officiating. Burial ,will be in Ridgelawn
Cetnetery at Mercerville. Visitation will be
llleld at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9

'\Jones has exec's job

Monopoly $433
Game ,

,

$666

GALIJPOLIS - Investigation continued here today in the apparent accidental shooting death of Jerry Allen
Church, 21, Rt. I, Crown City, early.
Saturday morning.
The Galiia County Sheriff's Department and Prosecuting Attorney's Olfice
jWere called at 1:37 a.m. to the Church
1 ·· home located on Rt. 218.
1·
Deputies said Mr. Church, father of an
1
18-month-oid son had been shot once in the
side by a .22. H~ was dead on arrival at
Holzer Medical Center. According to
deputies an unidentified man had come to
' the OJurch home and started arguing with
Cl!urch. HIS wife, Cynthia, apparently got
,. the gun, and was bringing It to her husband
when it discharged.
Mrs. Cl!urch was in shock Saturday
afternoon and could not be questioned. Dr.
1 :D&lt;lnald R. warehim~, Gallia Co~ty
,Corner, is also involved in the mi vesUgation. The Gallia County E-R unat
• ~a'nswered the call to the Church home.
,'
Jerry Allen Church was born Dee. 16,
II 1952 in Gallipolis· to Murray and Georgia

PARKER

,,

carillon chimes in Holy Redeemer Church
for .18 years. His mother was church
organist, and choir director for over 50
years. At one time his career almost
turned to music when he was invited to join
a touring orchestra on the Keith Circuit as
. saxophonist - clarinetist, shortly afier his
graduation from Portsmouth High School.
· Wagner married bls secretary, the
for~~~er Ruth tndene Outiel, in 1946 al)lil in
1947 was offered the opportunity
to build what was to become the
inost powerful FM station in the nation at
that time, WCSI-FM, Columbus, Ind.
There he helped organize the Indiana FM
Broadcasters Association, becoming its
first president and secretary of Region In
of the National Association of Broadcasters (FM). WCSI-FM was selected as
the subject for the National Association of
. Broadcast;rs' Malll!gement Study No. D.
Paul Wagner
· In 1949,-' Wagner took over the
'·ailana&amp;elJlent ol J!a.dio_ Station ·w4L, .,
. Midll.le!own, N. Y., where .he re-built the the country. Later, he joine&lt;l the R . C.
station, fl)&lt;:luding new facilities, riHIIaffed Criillet Company, Inc ., fadio1 and
It, meanwhile becotillng an officer and television station brokers and consUltants
director In lhe Cl!amber of Commerce and as Vice President. This new position inRotary aubs, Director of the Civilian volved sales in many states and overseas.
DefenseAlertSystemandamemberofthe
In that period Wagner suffered a
Elks.
.
coronary attack and consequently,
In 1951, eager to learn . televaslon wishing to curtail such extensive travel
operation, Wagner was invited to join ~e · and activities demanded by the brokerage
staff of Taft Broadeasting Company s ·position he was quick to accept the opWKRC-TV in Cincinnati, where he served portunit~ to purchase WJEH-AM-FM,
as salesman and later as commercial from its owner, John E. Halliday.
ProdUction Mana~er, a n~w department Prophetically during the time Wagner
organized under has directwn and used as
·
.' ed
Conhnu on page 2
amodelforothertelevision stations across

Young father killed

NERF
3
3
FOOTBALLS $2

Bridge

West
(
w. I. t. pd. pf pa
Sou Cal
13 7 o .650 ,486 341
Hawaiians 9 11 0 .#() ~13 '422

OPTOMETRIST ·

·'

HOusr

Wagner of WJEH

Continued from page 1
Thursday he is ready to defy a presidential ban and seek the
p-esidency of his old union IOC!II, the traditional springboard to
national Teamsters power.
"I am sure I wiU get the nomination," Hoffa said. "People
have told me I wiU." The 81-year-old'on&amp;time union powerhouse
said he expects to lje noJninated as president of Local 299 some
time next· month.
Hoffa was freed from prison in late 1971 after
he served nearly five years of a 13-year sentence for mall ·
---·
- -'--fruad and jury tampering. His sentence was commuted by former President Richard Nixon with the stipulation that Hoffa not
engage
union activities unW 1980.

A FRAME $846

Bringhm 15 5 0 .750 500 394
Chicago · 7 12 0 .368 441&gt; 600
x-Oetroif· 1 13 0 .071 209 358

· N. W. CQMPTON, 0. D.

POMEROY

FISHER PRI

.

GALIJPOIJS - Paul E . Wagner,
owner of WJEH Radio, Gallipolis, and past
p-esident of the Gallipolis Area Chamber
· of Commerce, wiU be one of 11 outatanding
southeastern Ohio commw!lty leaders
honored diU'lilg the 1974 Southeastern Ohio
Regional Council's awards banquet at the
Ohio University Inn Thursday in Athens.
W:agnetl began his career in .radio
while at WPAY in Portsmouth in 1936 as
announcer, sportscaster and salelqllBn.
Wagner later became news editor of
the station as well as Sales Manager unW
December, 1942, when he was named
general manager. In 1944,.he was named
Man of the Year in Scioto County, honoring
his role ln the sale of War Bonds and in
recognition pf his outstanding 'f&lt;JntrlbuUon
00: ·.~ war effort and civilian defense
activities.
'
In Marl;h, 1947, !)~ was named to a
three-man, l'bmuhlttee rep-esenlb!g the
Naif 'a! .tiso:&amp;'t!ilti · r Btbliacais'ter(' to
set :what iS now the
tween the Associated Plt~,, nema, "'tilj~
lmdUK! Bi'oadcailters~ Aiioclatfon. In that
same year WPAY was the subject for a
Management Study No. 7 for the National
Association of Broa~ers.
During his years at WPAY, Portsmouth, Mr. Wagner served as an officer of
the Portsmouth &lt;llamber of Commerce
and Rotary Clubs, as well as ~ on the
. board of directors for the YMCA, Salvation
ArmyandBoyScoutsofAmerlca,andwas
a member of the Elks Club.
One facet of Paul's activltles which he
has never publicized is that he played the

·~.

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1974

Council will honor

News. •. ·in Briefs

SEWING
MAGIC

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

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Reaching More
Than 12,000
Families

Valley

VOL 9 NO 42

General Motors cars currently
oot heing p-oduced, including
the Cl!evrolet Vega which Is
p-oduced at I.AJrdtown.
.
Packard announced earUer
this week that It had
furloughed almost 600 employes for the same reason.

LIMITED QUANTITIES

Central
w. 1. t. pet. pf pa

7 12 1 .375 264 426 .
·Shreveprl 7 12 1 .375 24ll 415

A decline in new car sales'
has triggered the layoffs of
nearly 9,000 persons at General
Motors
Corp.
facilities
throughout Northern Ohio, It
was announced today and
Thursday.
Packard Electric Division of
GM in Warren announced .
today the company would
suspend production in several
departments for one week
beginning Monday with the
layoffs of between 500 and 550
persons with another 1,000 to be
laid off Dec. 2.
Ron Woods, a spokesman for
Packal'd, said the layoffs
would nffect those employes
who assemble parts for

Your Invited Guest

tmts

Cloudy, warmer today, rain
likely in southeast. Highs In the
upper 40s. Lows tonight in the
low 30s. Monday cloudy, no
rain until evening. Highs in the
40s.

GM layoffs near 9,000

and five remain tp be darted.
well as chemica ls and high-valued steel
"So long as gaps rf·rriain in the new producl.&gt;!.
.
system," OVIA poinlfl~ out, "trafric
In addition, OVIA pointed out that
growt h,
particul8rty
Iong~haul
large tonnages of low-sulphur coal rrom
moveme nl.&gt;!, wi:l be severely depressed,
the West and of other essentia ls of enprolongi ng under-utiliza tion of the modern
vir:onmental protection are progranuned
racilities already installed and depriving to move through the Gallipolis lock long
the public of a sig nifican t portion of their
before the replacement work can be
poten tial benefit."
completed.
In view of the clear prospect that
As to the Lower Ohio River where
traffic growth would overtake capacity at
traffic congestion in the reach of the onthe Gallipolis Locks and Dam, before go ing Smithland Project and the
urgenUy needed replacement facilities can aut horized Mound City Project has
be completed, OVIA strongly recoma lready reached crisis proportions, OVJA
lliended fund s to · continue advanced W'ged continued construction of Smithland
engineering and design work to assure at the rriaximum efficient rate and conprogres8 at maximum efficient rat&lt;os .
tin ued construction on a supplemental
OV[A's statement detailed the critical 1;21J().foot lock at Lock and Dam 53.
importance of the Gallipolis replacement
For other Ohio River main stem
projeet, to provide an efficien t channel of projects under construction OVIA
supply .for energy materials, notably recommended that funds be budget&lt;od a t
petroleum fue ls a nd bituminous coal, as the full capacity of the Corps of E ngineers.

+

Weather

TOYLAND SPECIALS

280
350
413
358 .

Portland

lrn: .

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.704)
.500
.421
;286

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ELBERFEL.DS

w. I. t. pel. pf pa

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CINCINNATI - The Ohio Valley national energy base and energy delivery · 20 years.
Improvement Association, representing a system · for the efficient functioning or
In suppor,l. Of itS r~commendations fqr program .
broad range of the Valley interests, Friday w()ich flood protection , wa ter supply ; ·a nd
OVIA further emphasized that of a
presented to the Office of Management low -cost wa ter transportation are adequate fundin g of multipurpose lola l of 102 active , a uthorized lakes and
reservoirs, ~ rving Pressi ng public needs
and 'Budget in Washington il.&gt;! recom- esse ntial.
reservoirs carrying flood control
!Qr. water qua lity control, water supply,
mendations for fiscall976 funding of Ohio
The extensive waterborne distribution s tream flow a ugmentation, recreati on, ca pabilily, only 64 have been completed.
River valley. water resource projects for . of energy forl)1s and of other basic
In the case of loca l protection projecl.&gt;!, of a
environmen tal ~ nha ncement a nd other
flood conlrol, navigation, water supply, materials and food stuffs, at low-cost and
total of 101, 82 have ·bOe n complet&lt;od, with
water quality co ntrol, .recreational rising efficiency , conserves investment, vital purposes, in addition to flood control, 19 rema ining, and sta ted that each year of
development, · and other beneficial pur- counteracts nationwide inflation and OVIA called attentinn to the emphasis delay in completing these projects Inplaced on progress with respect to
poses.
expands job opportunities. A rapidly reservoirs in the Oh io River Basin Com- creases the exposure of life and property ··
The statement stressed the urgency of growing portion of the Valley's production
which could be prot&lt;oct&lt;od, and delays the
rehensive Survey.
proceeding rapidly on replacement of the and commerce consists of materials for
time when benefil.&gt;! will be returned .
OVIA pointed out tha i the survey
new Gallipolis locks and dam at Eureka. environmental protection. ''
Clearly,
the work should go forward as
repOrt pr oj ec ts
an
eXpe nditure
It also emphasized the heightened
as
sound budgetary considerations
rapidly
With · regard to the flood control requirementfor the Basin by a ll agencies
importance generally of progress in Ohio program, OVIA's statement pointed out
between lhe dale or the Survey Report and permit.
River Basin water resource development that Ohio Valley flood control projects
or the Gallipolis and similar urgent
198Q of $3.91 billion for fl ood control an d
in view of' the critical problems now costing $1.43 billion have prevented a total
projecl.&gt;!, OVIA 's presenta tion stressed the
multi~purpose, low-flow a ugme nta ti on
ccnfronting the· Nation .
of $3.20 billion in damages - including reservoirs. and by 2020 of $12.46 billion. necessi ty for maintaining progress on the
In trans mitting its fiscal 1976 those of more than $1 billion prevented
· Ohio River modernization program. It
The expenditures would provice 15.8
recommendaiions, OVIA stated that , " The during the Agnes flood of 1972 - an imnot&lt;od that while eight projects out ·of the
million acre-feet by 1980 and 49.5 million
water-based industries 'and ..commerce of pressive return on the public investment in
project&lt;od total of 19 permanent structures
acre-feet by 2020, in addition to s torage
the Valley constitute a vital and expanding projects whose average age is only about
have been completed, six are Wlder way
space provied in the 1965 ongoing

"/ was going io give. you another car to~ your
collection, but auto sales are down. How d you·
like to BUY one?"

f«

Memphis 17 3 o .850 629 365

.

GEO• HALL•

Chrllte

Doxol

Propane Service.

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WILIJAMSPORT,Pa. (UP!)
- The United States has
guaranteed one of Its teams
will win the Little League
World Series. The rest of the
world has been disqualified.
For the past four years
teams from Taiwan have won
the championship.
Peter J. McGovern, chief
executive officer and board
chairman of the Utile League,
announced Monday that the
World Series will be restricted
to teams from the United
States: "The international/ormat of the annual World series
will be discontinued." He
declined to state a reason.
The teams from Taiwan have
won five of the last sill World
Series. The last U.S. winner
was from Wayne, N.J., in 1970.
Teams from the Far East have
won seven of the last eight
series with Japan the champions in 1967 and 1968.
McGovern announced the
decision in a Little League
newsletter. He said the move
was reached "following a
review and reassessment of
World Series competi\(on for
children of age 12 and under."
He said the Senior League
(ages 13-15) and Big League
(1().18) World Series would not
be affected and would be
played in Gary, Ind. , and Fort
Lauderdale, Fla. Little League
headquarters said the regional
championships in Canada,
Europe, Latin America and the
Far East wiU be held as usual
but the winners will not
compete In the series here.
Little League spokesman
George Gedon said the decisiOn
also will affect teams compoised of sons of U.S. servicemen stationed overseas and
those teams from Puerto Rico,
a U.S. 'territory.
Service teams, Gedon said,
"are considered foreign entries" and Puerto Rico Is "part
of Latin America."
The 1975 series wiU be played
Aug. 19 to Aug. 23.

AMTRAK RATE UP
WASHINGTON ( UP!)
SAUDIAN DIES
Starting today, traveling by
NEW YORK (UP!)- Omar ~·rail will be 10 per cent more
Sakkaf,
Saudi
Arabia's . expensive on most Amlrack
minislef of state for foreign- trains . Family groups will pay
affairs and a close adv,i ser to an even beftier increase.
King Faisal, died Thursday
night in his Waldorf Astoria
Final WFB Standings
hotel suite. He was 50.
By United Press International

Of The Big

PH. 992-3629

:~:;:::'§&gt;~:f«."[.:::-~-::i(o-;.;::::;:~'«;*~'SX~

HOSPITAL NEWS

}Ope)\ ~

for - ·

() 1974 by

BASEBALL

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged, Nov. H)
and
Beverl y Absten, Shelvia
, THE SCALAWAG
( Technicolor)
Adkins, Esther Anderson ,
IGJ
LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown Viole.! Anthony, Ralph BarShow Starts 7 p . m.
Pomeroy Friday at 11 a .m. was bour, Janet Browning, George
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . 39 degrees under cloudy skies. corbin, Sarah Drummond,
Esta Glass burn, Margaret
Gray, Mrs. John Hauldren and
daughte r , Melissa Jayjohn ,
J ohn Lee, Donna Lucas, Ernest
McD&lt;lnald, Joseph McMillin,
Charles McNickle , Betty
Michael, David Mitchell,- Paul
North, James Osborne, Mrs.
Walte r Rawlins and son,
Evelyn Rice, Rosie Roach,
Nancy Rose, Cora Sharp,
Robert Sheets, Mrs. Jackie
Simpkins and daughter, Mary
Stanson, Mrs. Robert Taylor
and son, Dianne Wallis, Edgar
Woolfe, Helen Wood, Vicki
Woods, Harry Yarbrough.
(Births)
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Berry ,
a son, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs .
C1arence Glenn, a son, Pt .
Pleasant; Mr . .and Mrs. Roger
. Young, a d~ughlef , Pomeroy.

IRI

New Locks, at Eureka urgent budget makers told

SQUAD RUNS
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a call to 846 E.
Main St., at 6:09p.m. Thursday
for Marty McAngus who was
laken to l he Holzer Medical
Center.

forfeit bonds

ALUMINUM
FIBER

"

Berry's World

and religion.
While attending Marshall, Jones .was
employed· four years by the county
asse8aor•s office in Cabell County. He has
se.Ved as , a deacon in the First
Presbyterian Church yr Huntington and is
presently active in the U. S. . Army
Reserves.
He is married to the former Karen
Russell . The couple resides in the Town
House Aparlments, Gallipolis .

UNDERGDIN~ TESTS

'PT. PLEASANT ..:. Robert Wingett, .
editor of the Point Pleasant ,Register, is
confiDed to Holzer Medical Center 'un'dergoing tests following chest Pl!ins
'Thursday night .

,.

Middleport-Pomeroy

Severance payment made
to two school employes
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County
Local Board of Education ·Saturday approved · severance pay ror Mrs. Doris
Roush and Mrs. Esther Gordon, formerly
employed by the old Kyger Creek Boards
of Education and the Gallia Local Board.
Mrs . Gordon retired after 32 years of
service as bookkeeper last February. Mrs.
Roush retired after a long tenure as clerk
of. the Cheshlre-Kyger Creek and assistant
clerk of the Gallia Local Board last March.
A legal question had developed on the
payment of up to one-fourth of Mrs.
Gordon's unu~ sick leave based on 120
days because she retired one month prior
tq the board's approval of lis severance
pay policy. . .
However , according to Assislanl
Prosecuting Attorney William . Eachus, a
new law signed last June 29, permitted
severance pay to 1\lrs. Gordon.
The board also placed upon u, minutes
a resolution permi ttlng two days of personnel leave for its non-certificated employes. The board had agreed to the policy
during teacher-classified employees'
negotiations last September.
Classified personnel employed were

Noble idea
advanced

Shirley Palmer of Rt. 1, Cheshire, on a 9().
day probation period as custodian al
Kyger Creek High School; Clara Day as a
regular bus driver ; Fern Mooney as a
substitute bus driver and Sharon Saunders
as an aide for the tutoring program at the
Gallia County &lt;llildren 's Home.
In other matters, the board approved
home Instruction for J oseph Ellis; granted
William Bahr and Howard Neekamp
permission to attend the Ohio Education
Association meeting Dec. ().7 in Columbus ;
approved the addition of a substitute
custodian at Bidwell-Porter and Vinton
Elementary schools and agreed tb continue a lease with the American Legion
Post at Ewington on the old " Gtllla
Academy" !lutlding, and assigned Steve
Dunn, an Dak Hill High s~dent who
recently moved to Gallla CountY to the Oak
Hill District to play sports and finish his
high School career there.
Donald Polcyn of Rl. 1, Gallipolis, met
with the board concerning the paddling of
his son, Greg, by Kyger Creek Principal
Robert L Lanning. Polcyn said he didn't
object to paddllngs, but to the severity of
the paddllngs.
"
County Supt. Comer Bradbury said he
had talked to Lanning concerning the
paddling and that according to the principal, the child was paddled In "his normal

manner." Lanning told Bradbury that
there was no malice when the paddling
was done and that two other junior high
studenl.&gt;! involved in the same incident had
also been paddled. .
Harold Wiseman of lhe Wiseman
Insurance Agency, which has Insured all
board owned property, outlined an increase in the policy's premium to cover at
least 90 pet. of the valuation of the
properties instead or just 50 pet. under the
present coverage which recenUy was
revaluation by $3 mtllion. The matter was
tabled for further conslde atlon.
A long dlacusslon was held on the use
of high school· and elementary gyths by
alumni, church groups and outside groups.
The board authoriied building principals t~ decide whether .gyms will be
used . If ~lumnl or community groups use
gyms, usage will be under' the Immediate
superirlslon of a coach or teacher at that
building. The· board also discussed the
placing of a fee for the use of gyms , butodid
not arrive at any figure.
Another major problem reviewed was
truancy.
Supt. Bradbury was authorized to
inform the County Attendance Olficer
Donald Hardesty to be available- early
each morning and ·to begin filing truancy
Continued on page 2

MIDDLEPORT - Miss Thekke
Garuppath Nandini, of Calicut, India told
members of the Middleport - Pomeroy
Rotary Club Friday evening evening at
Heath United Methodist Church that peace
through understanding between peoples is
one of the great, noble ideas of mankind.
It was in that mood that she addressed
the club in excellent English and answered
questions later as a Rotary International
exchange student in Science at Ohio
University. She began training this year as
a future teacher.
·
She is one of Tl college students in the
Rotary Foundation program sponsored by
District 669 of Rotary. The program was
markedly expanded two years ago under
lhe leadership of District Governor Carl
Roberts; retired Ohio University
professor, who brought Misa Nandini to
Middleport and presented her.
Wearing a native - styled gown, and
JERRY CHURCH
clear evidence of the beauty of Indian
women, Misa Nandini pdinted out differences in the customs of her country and
the United Slates in the areas of family
Monday.
and social life, business, and policies.
Pallbearers will be Charles H. Waugh,
Other guesl.&gt;! at the meeting were Mrs.
Leland Watson, Willis Wilcoxen, Dean
Roberts and Mrs. Ruth ·B umgarner, wife
Newman, Steve Walter and Ron Delaney.
of Club President Bob Bumgarner. Wilbur
Theobald was program chairman. ·
The Christmas party of the club will be
December 6. Arrangemenl.&gt;! will be announced later.
The club will attend the Rotary
Football banquet next Monday evening at
Meigs High School.
Ladies of the church served a steak
POMEROY - Tammy Eichinger, Majorette of Ohio" competition, it is
dinner .
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Eichinger, reported, and was pictured in Drum Major
Mulberry Heights, won the queen title in Magazine recently as a contestant in the
lh e National Baton Twirlers Assn., Miss Majorette of Ohio Pageant.
"Holiday Twirlararna" held on Nov. 9 at
Miss Eichinger's dance and baton
Charleston, W. Va;
teacher, Mrs. Gloria (Buck) Wallace of
Competing with twirlers from several Gallipolis also won the leathers' trophy at
states, Tammy won in every category she Charleston for having the students who
entered. Alo~g with the queen's trophy, compiled the most winning points. One of
GALLIPOIJS - Dick Barrett, Rt. I she won first place in advanced twirling, her students, Joy Henderson of Ga!Upolis,
~'allipolis (Mill Creek Rd'. ), will take a
first in parade majorette, 'f irst in advanced entered nine categories in the 11-14 group
.long, hard look at the price of pork liver his · military strut, first in besl appearing and won nine trophies.
;ext visit to the meat courlter.
· military, first lil pretty military costume,
Director of the contest was Mrs. Judy
Saturday Barrett had two hogs but- second in advanced fancy strut, and Carney whOse daughter, Paige, is ·the
'chered, and not wanting to keep the liver , second In basic ·str9t, , .
reigning Junior Miss Majorette .of .West.
hear!, and fatbac(\, sold the 63lbs. of meat
The girl winning first in the last two Virg,tnla. Paige served as hootess for the
for .$6.36.
' ·
categories was from Lexington, Ky. affair .
.
,
" I know the fat isn'fworth much," he During the competition, Mls:! Eichinger
Mrs. Wallace allio wao tn. Lezlngton,
said ''but the liver? Ten cents a pound? won eight ·trophies'in !Ill for ages seven Ky., whereshe; served as Judge rot the
It's going for a 1ot m6re 'than· that down- through 10. She is the only twirler from NBTA Kentucky. Stllte Twirling ,ChamS'fEPJIEN M. JONES
town.''
Meigs , County' eve.r to place i~ the "Miss .· pionship.

Tammy Eichirtger of
Polneroy ·is baton queen

'Pork liver brought ·
butcherer 10e pound

f

I•

PRICE 20 CENTS

•.

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I

- I

�.,

-

1 _ The SunOay Times - Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 11: 197t

Rolling

3- The Sunday Times ·Sentinel, Sunday, Nov.l7, 1974

Quota cut may. steady price ·of sugar

darkout

By

~
~

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•

"That thing may get lighter as time goes on!"

•

••

~;.

Berry's World

Deer hit,
killed

.•

•
",.•
•

GALLIPOLIS - A deer was
killed in one of two trafric
accidents investigated Friday
by the Gallia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol.
Officers said the deer mishap
· occurred at 5:05p.m. Friday
on Rt. 35, ohe and two tenths
miles east of Rt. 160 where the
animal ran into the path of a

·.
'

car operated by Herman
Yates, 40t Rt. 2, Wheelersburg.

No one was cited following an

'I

.

.•

IV

''

•

1974 bV NEA,

Inc ~

"Is it true that things are so bad in America that
on Novem.ber 28th. millions of people will have
nothing to eat but a piece of poultry and stale
scraps of bread?"

\

"

;

.•,

I

'

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G :;.; =:auu~t

u~r n~=;=u n t~
··;~::~~~ 1;1 ~ 1

::;::~::.~:a ;:

POMEROY

The Neelo Mountain Boys (Van Johnson, Mike Willlams, Duf
Craig, and Tony Branham) second place, and Jim Soulsby,
· vocalist, third place. Honorable mention went to Roger
Gilmore.

9-1 0:15a .m .; Rutland Ele ., 11 .2
p.m. ; Brick Street, 2:30·3 ;
Rutland Bra leys, J : 15· 3: 45;
Fort Meigs, 4-4: 30; Rutland New Lima Rd ., 4: 45-5; Langs .
ville, 5: 30-6:30; Rutland-Salem

commission showed average
backlogs of less than two
months.
peiay in ratifying the coal
contract will result in cutting
into coal reserves, pointed out
Carney. The commission is
monitoring coal supplies and
prices and will call a special
meeting to put the coal
allocation plan into effect if the
UMW rejects the contract, said
Sweet.

Old

WINNERS IN THE YOUTH DMSION- Taking hon6'rs
(at left) in tbe youth division were, front, 1.... Carol and Unda
O'Brien, third place winners who sang two duets; back row,
Ondy Patterson, first place, who did a dance as the preen
Martian, and Kim Batey, second, who sang and played the
guitar. Honorable mention went to Teresa Carr .

'
'

I

12-12:15 p.m.; East Letart, 1-3;
Apple Grove. 3: 30-4; Antiquity,
4: 30-4: 45 ; Racine-Broadway &amp;
~ag~ers, 5-5: 30; Oorc.as, 5.: 45~
6. 10, Bashan Rd .. 6.15-6.35 .
Racine Deem s, 6:45-7; Ra ci ne
Bank, 8·8:30.

( :()I,()~\--- ..

J':

~'

Published

weekday evening n_.

at Gallipolis, Oh.lo 4.5631.

'

SECOND AVE. ..

(Technicolorl
Lucille Ba ll

GALLIPOLIS, 0.

Show Starts 7 p.m .

I PGJ

BEAUTIFUL

f .'};:i '

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.

FULl LENGTH

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Murphys Own

GOWN

,I

I' .

Sizes 5 to 10
. Trim Filling
Elastic Waist
and Legs.

II

Acetate Tricot
Tailored Briefs

MADE OF
100% NYLON

! :... :

REG. '1.59 PKG.

f.-;, . ~ '

f

. (.'

.

.I

REG.
$3.74

I

PACKAGE

$327

· yMr $18.00: sill months 19.50; three
l onths Sti.OO. Elsewhere $22 per year ; sl%
months $11 .50; three months " .50; motor

$ 27

OF

CHARGE
IT

The Dally Sentinel, one mon th 12.50; one

THREE BRIEFS

PKG.

CLEAR or MULTICOLOR ·

24 Midget Light Set
FOR INDOOR OR
OUTDOOR USE
Snap In Lights
Gives A Merry
Twinkling Look
To Your
Holiday Tree

OUR$
LOW

PRICE

27'

REG. '26.88 FIREPROOF

6lh FT. SCOTCH PINE
TREE
SA~E 15 )

(

Beautiful.
rel!listlc looking
tree

has thick
branches .

Ol;,;~ro,of

PVC
Stand

CHARGE
IT

route l2.60 monthly.
The United Pr!M International Is ex-

i elusively entitled to the use for publication

rmmasnus

rJf all news dispatches credited to lhls
1 newspaper and also the
· pubtlshed herein .

::
8
d
b
k
t• • t d
;i;:~.~~~njy~nd ~~~~r~~~
a
oo s case an ICipa e

prizes of $25, $15 and $10 for

the

r-------------------------·1

1

s.

·.:

Icept Saturday.every
Second Clau Pottage Paid

: monthly.

Severance pay

I

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MAlL
.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
' The GaJUpoJls Tribune in Ohio and West '
, Vlrjlnia one month $2.50: ooe year Sli .OO; 1
1 siJ months $9.50; three montha ts .OO. 1
i Elsewhere $22 per year: six months Slt50; r
\ tllree months ·Sii.50; motor route $2.60

Released th rv

MITCHELL'S OFFICE SUPPLY

Pastels

I

Umted Arf1sfs

FRI.· SAT. .SUN .
NOV . 22 -13-24
"MAME"

Wllite or _

DAILY TRIBUNE
825 Third )(ve., Gallipolill, Ollio 4$631.

Wl!ek. Motor roule 12.60 per morof'l.

•

PARTY .DECORATIONS

THE FAMILY PLACE TO SAVE

,jo

matter at Pomeroy, Ohio Post Office .
By carrier daiJJ and Sunday 60c per

Vehicles collide

..

Tlr• •fJirt·

I

NOV. 17-21
NOT OPEN

..

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, 0 . tS169.l
Published every weekday evening l'ICotP•
SatW'day. Entered as sei:!!Jfld class rna lUna;

SYRACUSE - A variety
show packed with talent was
enjoyed by over 300 persons
Friday night at the Syracuse
Elementary School.
The event was sponsored by
the Syracuse Fire Depariment
and the Ladies Auxiliary with
proceeds going toward the
purchase of a new fire truck.
Janet Korn , one of the judges,
presented awards.
THE GOSPEL TONES added to the entertainment, presenUng several numbers. Front row
Taking first place in the
are Mr. and Mrs. Willard Ebersbach, back,!..-, Shells Arnold, Mary Janice Lavender, aJXI
youth division was Cindy
Russell Spencer. Others offering entertainment, not in competition, were The Norris Quartet
Patterson, second place to Kim
and
Will. Cundiff, all we'll received.
Batey and third to Unda and
Carol O'Brien. They received : ':

THANKSGIVING CARDS

Tonight thru Thursday

T

THE DAIJX SENTINEL

Council will ·honor Wagner

•

r Valley Publahing Co.
·
GALUPOLIS

TO~IGHTTHRU
TUESDAY

! Area Deaths !

•

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MEIGS THEATRE

·~
. ·. · .

~.~.~y"~"Ms~~:Tir~~h}I

•&lt; ,

Benefit
show was
success

deputy

\

4 : 30·5;

7: 30; Bob's Gulf, 8·8: 30.
FRIDAY - Letart Ele., 9:30·
11:30 a .m. ; Letart Community,

,. ,

CALL ANSWERED
MIDDL EPORT
The
Middleport E mergency Squad
answered a ca ll to Long St. in
Rutland at 5:49p.m. Friday for
Katherine Lares, a medica ·
patient, who was taken to
Veterans Memorial HospitaL

HALLMARK

~.IISil.

COLUMBUS
i UPII
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown warned Ssturday that
persons expec ting to run for
office next year who already
have begun to spend funds
mus t file a sta Iemen! of
r eceipts and expenditures with
their county Boards of Elec·
lions by Nov. 30.
Brown said under Ohio law,
every campaign committee,
political committee and
political party which made or
received a co ntribution or
made an expenditure in connection with any candidate
must file the report

I

Edwards nanted

.

Rd .,

laws, imports could come from
any foreign sugar producing
country as long as the prearranged import total is not
surpassed.
Cuba, however, would still be
barred from U.S. sales under
legislation forbidding Imports
from countries with which the
V .S. does not have diplomatic
relations .

reports soon

. Flatwoods, 5:15-5: 45; Chester
Texas Rd ., 6-6: 30 ; Chester, 7-

in South Station

Scotland Yard

Chesler

being c:onsidered because a n
old tariff law wiD force the
government to lriple the
current seven4.enths of a cent
per pound sugar import duty in
1975 if no quota program is in
effect. H a new quota is
proclaimed, the tariff can be
left at current levels , he said.
For the past 40 years, the
federal Sugar Act has set In·
dividual imporl quotas on a
country by country basis for
somt.&gt; 30 roreign nations . Last
June, however. the House
killed a bill to extend the law
and it is now scheduled to die at
the end of 197t
Under a globs! quota system,
which can be sel up by the
White House under existing

ONENAVVOTE
OKLAHOMA CITY IUPI ) Sen . Henry Belimon, R-Okla. ,
said "'riday he will not vote for
co nfi rm ation
of
Nelson
Rockefeller as vice president
Wlless the former New York
governor provides additional
exp lanation of cash gifts tO
friends and associates.

to me expense

Crew' s, 10: 30·10: 45; Syracuse
Ele., 11 •2 p.m . : Minersville
HilL 2: 15·2: 30 ; Forest Run, 3·
3: 30; Five Po ints, 3: 45-4: 15 ;

I

a.m. and 5 p.m. for residences.

servation plan for regulated
utilities was expected to be
completed next month by the
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio.
An updated inventory of coal
supplies received by the

MONDAY- Bradbury Ele.,

~,,

GALLIPOLIS - Thursday's
visit here by the Disabled
American VeterajJs r- rnobile
field unit was sponsored by
Gallia County Chapter Nu. 5,
Disable~ American Veterans,
}lerb McQuaid, commander
and Richard Mayo, treasurer .
The visit was not sponsored
by the VFW, and besides
McQuaid and Mayo, Billy
Starcher assisted local DAV
officials during the day-long

nation's biggest sugar · com~
pany friday .
Am~l.ar Corp. boosted JIB
whol.. •le price of groc.,..y
sugar r7per cent to 65.9 centS~
pouna' an Increase which wlll
almos(, certainly be' passe.d
along ~ consumers.
·
Sincq Jan 1, when ~ pound ol
sugar sold for 18 cents, the
supermarket price' has skyrockted more than 300 per cent
to 60 and 65 cents a pound.
'"The quota would not be
\lesigned as a measure to
restrict imports," an offlcial
said, implying that such a
quota would not be set ·at low
levels just to keep prices up for
American sugar growers.
He said the new , quota is

PI.f:ASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGI':S : Debr a SchwHrz, Point Pleasant : Mrs.
DHle Miller , daughter , Poinl
Plea s ant; Rhonda Walli s,
Gallipolis Ferry ; Pe gg y
Duncan, GH llipoli~ F e n·y;
Charles Pe rry , Poinl Pleas:m t:

1975 candidates

St., 7·7:30 : Cook·Gap Hill, 88:30.
THURSDA Y - Sy racu se·
Lisle, 9:30·9:45 a.m .; Syracuse
R . H .• 10· 10:15; Syracuse-

Blackouts would last between one hour and 45 minutes
and two hours and 15 minutes
per day, some time between 8

Work on a mandatory con-

hy DA V chapter

Eddy

real serious situation."
The needs of "priority"
consumers would be satisfied
for two inonths, according to
the coal allocation plan
presented to the commission.
Homes, hospitals and other
institutions have top priority on
use of the fuel, under the plan.
The draft of an emergency
action plan for Ohio's electric
utilities , which proposed
" rolling blackouts" for industry and homes when the
generating fuel supply dwindles to two weeks' supply, also
was received by the Com.

mention went to Teresa Car.
POMEROY
George will be Middleport versus
In the adult division, first
CHARLESTON, W. Va . Kanawha County parents, attack on a state police car
Nesselroad and William (Bub ) everybody else.
place went
to Maxine (UP!) Five Kanawha were signed by Mayor John escorting a school bus loaded
Stivers will coach Pomeroy
All players who have signed Kesterson, second place to The County school officials named Hudnall of nearby Cedar with children.
and Rutland alumni and Bob but do not have equipment
The anti-textbook crusade
AShley and John Blake the should get it today (Sunday) at Neelo Mountain Boys (Mike : Friday in criminal warrants Grove, one of the trouble spots
has
also triggered dynamiting
approving
"anti· in an 11-week-old ban-theMiddleport players in a 7 p.m. at the Meigs High Williams, Tony Branham, Duf · for
of schools and vandalism .
Craig and Van Johnson), third · American"
and
"anti- books movement.
PITTSBURGH (UP!) And Officer Adam Me· renewal of the old Thanks· School.
Also, for the first time, the
to Jim Soulsby. They were Christian" school textbooks
The officials were arrested
Four police officers from the Meekin's chase of burglary giving Day football game be·
Scheduled practices are the awarded prizes of $50, $25 and said today they looked forward at the Christ United Methodist West Virginia Legislature got
city's South Side station suspects through South Side tween Pomeroy and Mid· Pomeroy club at 6:30 p.m.,
invo)ved in the controversy.
Saturday were nursing injuries backyards was aborted wheil . dleport Nov. 28 at an hour to be Monday, the Middleport club at $15 respectively . Honorable to settling their cases in court. Church here during a meeting
Delegate Thomas Goodwin of
mention went to Roger
" !look forward tp the legal with Bishop Frederick Wertz
suffered in a series of he caught a low-hanging announced.
6:30p.m. Tuesday, both at the Gtlmore.
Boone
County, offered a
process. The dispute shouldn't who has been try.ing to serve as
calamitous Friday night clothesline across the throat.
Approximately 60 former Middleport field.
resolution
calling for the
Offering additional en· be settled under threats of a mediator In the dispute.
mishaps that even the He was treated at the scene.
stars - and a few bench
Tickets are ·on sale at tertainment, not in com- shooting and dynamiting of
The fifth board member, removal of the books from the
Keystone Kops might have had
warmers - have been signed, nwnerous places in the county.
petition, were The Gospel schools. My conscience is books opponent Alice Moore, school system.
trouble matching.
30 on each squad. Generally, it
But the resolution died when
Tones, The Norris Quartet, and clear," said. Board • of was not named in the warrants.
One of the policemen,
Will Cundiff. Cundiff also Education member Harry
The case will go to the it was referred to the House of
Patrolman Richard Gross, 40, Houses raided
served
as
emcee.
Stansbury.
prosecuting attorney for Delegates' Rules Committee in
was injured seriously when he
The show was opened and
The officials, who were possible grand · jury con- the final hours of the session
fell on a pipe while chasing a
· prior to adjournment.
POMEROY - Two vehicles
The pickup truck, owned by closed with prayer by Rev. charged with contributing to sideration.
suspected cat burglar in the
Hundreds of children were
"I'm innocent," Underwood
were heavily damaged and two the Leading Creek Con· Howard Black. Other judges the delinquency of children by
city's St. Clair Village.
kept
away from claasrooms by
were
Jocelyn
Baer
and
Katie
adopting
the
controversial
declared. "The burden of proof
District,
was
He was reported Saturday
LONDON (UP!) -Scotland persons injured in an accident servancy
parents
opposed to the books
texts, were freed on $5110 bond is on the accuser."
in stable condition in Yard detecUves raided scores on Route 124 in Langsville at demolished according to the Crow.
The warrants came as band· which contain passages on
when they appeared before a
sheriff's department, and the
South
Side
Hospital's of houses around London and 2:49p.m. Saturday.
the • books demonstrations drugs, prostitution and radical •
magislrate' Friday.
The deparlment of Sheriff Walker vehicle was heavily
intensive care unit with the Midlands Saturday In a
In addition to Stansbury, the cooled off during the third day politics, but the attendance
a pos~ible cut . j?gUI'Ir search for Irish Republican Robert Hartenbach said ·a car damaged.
rate was at about 80 per cent
driven by Alisha K. Walker, 17,
vein, a shoulder separabon and Army bombers.
warrants named County School of . heavy . police security orwake of a sniper and gradually rising.
a broken collar bone. The
Supt. Kenneth Underwood and dered In
Police sources said the raids Langsville Route I, P.ulled from
board members Matthew
suspect escaped.
were latinched on the basis of county road lOin to the path of a
Klnsolvlng, Douglas Stump
Officer Thomas Gladhill, 4~, information gleaned from a . westbound pickup truck driven
m~ster
CONTRACT
SIGNED
by
Jack
W.
Crisp,
44,
Langsand RusseU Isaacs.
broke an ankle' when he was bomb blast in Coventry Thurs·
The warrants, sworn out by
pushl!ll down a flight of stairs day night which killed one ville Route I, traveling west on . LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UP!) - . • PROCTORVILLE - ' At the
Ubbey Owens Ford &lt;;o. and the !65th Annual Communication
during the apprehension of bomber and led to the arrest of . State Route 124.
The Walker car was struck in United Glaas and Ceramics of The Grand Lodge, Free and
three burglary suspects.
a second suspect. The suspect,
. HENiY SHEETS
MRS. HAYMAN
the side. Mias Walker and her Workers union Ssturday signed · Accepted Masons of Ohio,
Patrolman Robert Yagh, 30, 23-year-old construction
CROWN CITY ~ Henry
MIDDLEPORT Mrs.
Clarlous Sheets, 9.4, Rt. 1• . Richard (June Sa'1sbury)
reqUired .hospital treatment worker Raymond .McLaughlin, sister, Ruth Ann, were taken to a new three year contract Robert D. Sager, Grand
BIG VOTE SEEN
Crown City, died Friday nigh! Hayman , 58, formerly of
after he was allegedly hit in the was charged with causing an the Holzer .Medical Center by calling for wage increases of Master appointed Proctorville
ATHENS
(UP!) - Political
at the Delber Nvrslng Home, Middleport, a resident of
about
slx-and..one
half
per
cent
businessman
Clifford
Edwards
face with a board by 8; susp~ct explosion in a heavily guard&lt;.! · SEOEMS. Ruth Ann was
Chllllcofhe. He was born Dec. Huntingdon Valley, Pa ., a
analysts Saturday predicted
he and a detective team were Coventry courtroom Ssturday. treated and released. Alisha · in the first year and three per to serve during the coming the largest iurnout in history 5, 1879, In Galli a County, to the number of years, · died
late Gory Joe Sheets and Mary Sa~urday morning at the home
was admitted for contusions ' cent In each· of the second and year as District Deputy Grand
chaSing.
when Greeks vote Sunday for
Lear Sheets.
of a nlece. Mrs . Richard
third
years
.
Master
for
the
Twelfth
and abdominal. injuries.
Survivors
Include
his (Jenn.y Lou) · Koehler In
the
first
time in 10 years.
Masonic District.
Mrs.
Charles Columbus following a lingering
l
Thousands of city dwellers children,
He will be in charge of
!Gladys)
Lusher,
Rt.
1,
Crown
lttness.
.'
.1_
W_yman E. Sheets,, Lower
Mrs . -Hayman was born In
Lawrence, Gallia, Meigs and feg!Stered In the ·p"!Vinces City;
River Rd. , Gallipolis ; Lester Middleport, the daughter of the
were
slreaming
back
to
their
Jackson
Counties
with
· D. Sheets, Za.nesvltle; 13 late Roy and Jessie Smith
authority to visit, inspect, native villages to cast their grandchildren and 11 gr .. t. Sansbury. Besides her parents,
• .
.
.
"Ilene," and IS-year old daughter, Lynn; instruct, and advise the 19 · ballots in the parliamentary grandchildren. His wife; Roma Mrs. Hayman was ,preceded In
CooUnued from page I
.
Study Committee; served ·on the Gallia reside at Rt. 1, Thurman.
Lanier Sheets died In 1938; one death by her .husband, 0
was serwigas 'broker and consultant with County Cltl%ens Committee for Mental
lodges in his district in all election. ' The vote was ex- son,
Day1on, of Ashville, died Richard, last February, a~ .a
•
pected
to
top
5
million
in
this
the Crisler Company, he did an appraisal Health and Retardation. He and his
rna tiers
pertaining
to
In 1971 ; one daughter, Rachel, · slst,er, Mrs . Eleanor Sansbury : nation of 8.5 million ll"ople. died In 1936.
and management study of WJEH in 1956. wife have been Co.chalrmi!n of . the
Schaaf of Middleport.
,
Freemasonry.
Funeral
·servlces
will
-be
at
S~rvlvlng In addltlon ·to Mrs .
:
Voting
is
compulsory
for
.all
In Gallipolis since 1967 he has served .Gallipolis State Instltl!f:e Christmas r;'und
Deputy Edwards will be
the
Mercerville
Bi.ptlst Koehler are another niece.
•
as Rotarr president and represented the providing gifts for each of tbe residents;
Continued from page 1
installed in this position on Greeks aged 21 to 70.
Church, 2 p.m .. Monday, with MI .. Sally Schaaf of Alhens; a •
club at the Rotary International in for two years was President of the Gallla warrants against students who are Monday night, Nov. · 18 In
Rev. Ja'ck Templeton of- nephew; Jon Schaaf, of •
flclatlng.
Burial wlll'fOIIow in Hilliard, and a cousin, Mrs. ,:
Atlanta, Georgia in 1970. He has been Dramatic Arts Society, a non·Pr.oflt habitually absent from school. ·
ceremonies at the Proctorville
Ridge
lawn
Cemetery.
George Ressler of O..rvllle.
, ,.
active In the affairs of Gallipolis Area organization, producers of "Gallla
Bills approved for payment for the Masonic Temple . Installing
Friends may call · at Willis
Memorial services will be 1 •
CALL
ANSWERED
Chamber of Commerce, serving as Country,'~ an historical ·musical pageant month o!Octoher totaled ~27,775.43.
Fuileral Home from 2 to 4 and 7 held at .7 p . m ~ Monday\ at the , . :
officer will be Judge Daniel C.
RACINE - The Racine to 9 p.m. Sunday. Pallbearers . Evan$ Funeral Home, ~161 · t1
President in 19'13-74 and on the Board of relating the founding and development of ,
Substitute teachers approved were Jenkins, Past Grand Master,
llvlng.s ton·
Ave., ' ;
Directors for six years; he is a member of the area, and for four Y.e ars bas served as Maurice .Thomas, Rt. 1, Sidwell: Mrs. F&amp;AM of New Lexington, Ohio. Emergency Sq'!ad answered a will be the grandsons, Dr. Easl
.Keith Sheels, Stanley . David Columbus. Graveside rill'S will · •
call
Wednesday
fo
the
home
of
the Pt. Pleasant-Mason County Chamber Master of Ceremonle~ .tor the ~ Georgia Y ..Nogle, Crown City; Robert W.
Charles
Daniel be held. Saturday, Nov·. 23, at ·' '·
A dinner honoring him will . Mrs : Katie Blake who was dead Lusher,
11f Commerce; a member and Director of annual Bob Evans Farm Fall Festival.
Lusher,
Kendall
Sheets,
· 1: 30 p.m. at the GriNilwood , : ,
Oliver, Mason ; !\Irs. Patricia Graham, be served in the (,odge dining . upon arrival. The squad took Sheets, Barry · Sheets,Duonil
'
J
eff
Cemetery,. Racine, wl.th fhe "? •
!be Retail Merchants A.ssc!ci!lt,ion of
His hobbles Include sports, gardening · Rt. 3, Chesapeake; and Mrs. Carole Pope, room at 6:30. p.m . All Master the body to the Ewing Funeral Sheets, Terry Sheets, James Rev . Robert Bumgardner · ~
Gallipolis ; a member of the Gallia County and woodworklnl!. Wamet. his wife, Rt. 3, Gallipolis.
Lusher, John H. Lusher.
officiating.
"41 •
•
. Masons are invited.
· Home.
,
. il

by

- ·

Educator 's schedUle in Meigs
County this week:

Also Friday at its regular
monthly meeting, the commission agreed to go ahead
with a campaign to 8sk nonregulated utilities in rural
areas and municipalities and
the general public to conserve
energy.

lJnit spon sored

Eddy's schedule
ADULT DIVISION WINNERS - Winners In tbe adult
division were, 1-r, Maxine Kesterson, vocalist, first place;

Turkey day coaches set·

Bad day for cops
..'

accident at 9:10 p.m. on
Georges Creek Rd . one and
eight tenths miles west of Rt. 7
where Charles Booth, 17, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, lost control of his
car which ran off the left side of
the road striking a ditch and
embankment.
In a two car accident Thurs.
day it -,as incorrectly reported
that a five year old child suf.
fered a broken arm in a
collision involving cars driven
by Okey H. Henry, 78,
Gallipolis, and Betty J. Bar·
nett, 32, of Gallipolis. Mrs.
Hanna Henry, a passenger in
the Henry car had the !rae·
tured arm .

n •H II III\\.

state repres entative from
Youngstown, "it will put us in a

mission.

tariff hike on tmpurted sugar
which \,VOuld be passed along to
the American consumer, already hit by had news from the

WASHINGTON (UP!) - •
The Fora administration may
~n annolUlce a new sugar
unport quota to head off an
automatic 1975 boost in the
already skyhigh--price of
satisfying Ameri ca's sweet
tooth, a government source
said Saturday.
The proposal would se t up a
"globs! quota" for U.S. sugar
Imports- which make up about
half of the nation's sugar
supply. Current import quotas,
set up on a nation-by;~ation
basis, are to expire Dec. 31.
The move would be strictly a
tool to prevent an automatic fat

. ~~~~ \\\U ,
IIJ UU ;\\U.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Energy Emergency
Com mi ssio n
1EEC)
is
prepared to put emergency
plans including "rolling
blackouts" for homes and
industries into effect if the
United Mine Workers of
America 1UMW ) fail to ratify a
proposed nationwide contract
with .the soft coal industry,
comffiission Chairman Dr.
David C. Sweet said Friday.
"If the UMW rejects the
contract," said EEC Commissioner Thomas J. Carney, a

d

BERNARD BRENNER

UP! Farm Editor

planned

......
.,
',,

'
Mrs . Griffin Boggess, Po inl
Pleasa nt ; Mrs . Birdie Dunca n ,
So uth s ide; William Blake,
Florence. Ky .; James Devore ,
Robertsb'urg; Sheldo n Hili,
Poin l Pleasant; Ronnie McCoy, Point Pleasant, and Mrs.
LowlS Martin, Robertsburg .

local new'

CHORD ORGAN
AND BENCH

at

OhioVallev. Bank
your money 1s now
insured up to ...

., I I

OLD TIME
RADIO
AM-FM
WALNUT GRAIN
UNBREAKABLE CABINET

REGULAR •39.94

REG. '29.94

OUR
LOW

*

PRICE

94

$

94

$

CHARGE
IT

CHARGE IT

by the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, an agency of the
Federal Government. This new
protection, twi~e the .amount
previously available, IS now
effective and applicable to all
funds on deposit at .. .

Complete~

OHIO VALLEY BANK.

Regular '8.44

Now more than ever before, your
hard-earned dollars on deposit with
Ohio Valley 9ank are safe and
insured .. . and you don 't have to deposit 10 or 20 thousa~d d~llars to
get this kind of protection. Its yours
regardless of the size of your
account ... as a matter of fact,- 40
thousand dollars in insurance protection is provided for every depositor at Ohio Valley Bank.

Not Exactly
As Pictured

SAVE '5.00

Washable
72x90
Size

SLUMBER ROSE BLANKET
Warm care free Polyester and Nylon for
years of service.

$ 97
CHARGE IT

AUTOMATIC
COOKER AND
DEEP FRYER
REG. 112.44

SAVE

*Effective November 27, 1974·

2.56

1

Cooker and Deep Fryer enables you to cook
easily, more economically and turn out
delicious fl.avor perfect meals.

.

I.•
I

$ 88
THE PERFECT
CHRISTMAS GIFT

Regular 117.77
2 YEAR
AT ONCE
REPLACEMENT
GUARANTEE

AutomaJic
Single Control
ELEORIC BLANKET

OUR

LOW
PRICE

8 CUP
COFFEEMAKER
Re~t.

'15.99

Save '3.55

$

44

Includes
Handy 2·3 Cup
Min. Brewer

..........

.,

'

�.,

-

1 _ The SunOay Times - Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 11: 197t

Rolling

3- The Sunday Times ·Sentinel, Sunday, Nov.l7, 1974

Quota cut may. steady price ·of sugar

darkout

By

~
~

..,,•
...
••.

... ;,•,
··:-:-,,

-·

~

~

...."'
•

"That thing may get lighter as time goes on!"

•

••

~;.

Berry's World

Deer hit,
killed

.•

•
",.•
•

GALLIPOLIS - A deer was
killed in one of two trafric
accidents investigated Friday
by the Gallia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol.
Officers said the deer mishap
· occurred at 5:05p.m. Friday
on Rt. 35, ohe and two tenths
miles east of Rt. 160 where the
animal ran into the path of a

·.
'

car operated by Herman
Yates, 40t Rt. 2, Wheelersburg.

No one was cited following an

'I

.

.•

IV

''

•

1974 bV NEA,

Inc ~

"Is it true that things are so bad in America that
on Novem.ber 28th. millions of people will have
nothing to eat but a piece of poultry and stale
scraps of bread?"

\

"

;

.•,

I

'

I

G :;.; =:auu~t

u~r n~=;=u n t~
··;~::~~~ 1;1 ~ 1

::;::~::.~:a ;:

POMEROY

The Neelo Mountain Boys (Van Johnson, Mike Willlams, Duf
Craig, and Tony Branham) second place, and Jim Soulsby,
· vocalist, third place. Honorable mention went to Roger
Gilmore.

9-1 0:15a .m .; Rutland Ele ., 11 .2
p.m. ; Brick Street, 2:30·3 ;
Rutland Bra leys, J : 15· 3: 45;
Fort Meigs, 4-4: 30; Rutland New Lima Rd ., 4: 45-5; Langs .
ville, 5: 30-6:30; Rutland-Salem

commission showed average
backlogs of less than two
months.
peiay in ratifying the coal
contract will result in cutting
into coal reserves, pointed out
Carney. The commission is
monitoring coal supplies and
prices and will call a special
meeting to put the coal
allocation plan into effect if the
UMW rejects the contract, said
Sweet.

Old

WINNERS IN THE YOUTH DMSION- Taking hon6'rs
(at left) in tbe youth division were, front, 1.... Carol and Unda
O'Brien, third place winners who sang two duets; back row,
Ondy Patterson, first place, who did a dance as the preen
Martian, and Kim Batey, second, who sang and played the
guitar. Honorable mention went to Teresa Carr .

'
'

I

12-12:15 p.m.; East Letart, 1-3;
Apple Grove. 3: 30-4; Antiquity,
4: 30-4: 45 ; Racine-Broadway &amp;
~ag~ers, 5-5: 30; Oorc.as, 5.: 45~
6. 10, Bashan Rd .. 6.15-6.35 .
Racine Deem s, 6:45-7; Ra ci ne
Bank, 8·8:30.

( :()I,()~\--- ..

J':

~'

Published

weekday evening n_.

at Gallipolis, Oh.lo 4.5631.

'

SECOND AVE. ..

(Technicolorl
Lucille Ba ll

GALLIPOLIS, 0.

Show Starts 7 p.m .

I PGJ

BEAUTIFUL

f .'};:i '

'

rt.~

/ ...
I

'

.

FULl LENGTH

/
I

.I '1~::;
' :

1

I'

I

\..'

.': .

''

•

I

"'~r
! -., :;,:.~;)

r

•'

• I

'

Murphys Own

GOWN

,I

I' .

Sizes 5 to 10
. Trim Filling
Elastic Waist
and Legs.

II

Acetate Tricot
Tailored Briefs

MADE OF
100% NYLON

! :... :

REG. '1.59 PKG.

f.-;, . ~ '

f

. (.'

.

.I

REG.
$3.74

I

PACKAGE

$327

· yMr $18.00: sill months 19.50; three
l onths Sti.OO. Elsewhere $22 per year ; sl%
months $11 .50; three months " .50; motor

$ 27

OF

CHARGE
IT

The Dally Sentinel, one mon th 12.50; one

THREE BRIEFS

PKG.

CLEAR or MULTICOLOR ·

24 Midget Light Set
FOR INDOOR OR
OUTDOOR USE
Snap In Lights
Gives A Merry
Twinkling Look
To Your
Holiday Tree

OUR$
LOW

PRICE

27'

REG. '26.88 FIREPROOF

6lh FT. SCOTCH PINE
TREE
SA~E 15 )

(

Beautiful.
rel!listlc looking
tree

has thick
branches .

Ol;,;~ro,of

PVC
Stand

CHARGE
IT

route l2.60 monthly.
The United Pr!M International Is ex-

i elusively entitled to the use for publication

rmmasnus

rJf all news dispatches credited to lhls
1 newspaper and also the
· pubtlshed herein .

::
8
d
b
k
t• • t d
;i;:~.~~~njy~nd ~~~~r~~~
a
oo s case an ICipa e

prizes of $25, $15 and $10 for

the

r-------------------------·1

1

s.

·.:

Icept Saturday.every
Second Clau Pottage Paid

: monthly.

Severance pay

I

1.')' ...,, \

MAlL
.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
' The GaJUpoJls Tribune in Ohio and West '
, Vlrjlnia one month $2.50: ooe year Sli .OO; 1
1 siJ months $9.50; three montha ts .OO. 1
i Elsewhere $22 per year: six months Slt50; r
\ tllree months ·Sii.50; motor route $2.60

Released th rv

MITCHELL'S OFFICE SUPPLY

Pastels

I

Umted Arf1sfs

FRI.· SAT. .SUN .
NOV . 22 -13-24
"MAME"

Wllite or _

DAILY TRIBUNE
825 Third )(ve., Gallipolill, Ollio 4$631.

Wl!ek. Motor roule 12.60 per morof'l.

•

PARTY .DECORATIONS

THE FAMILY PLACE TO SAVE

,jo

matter at Pomeroy, Ohio Post Office .
By carrier daiJJ and Sunday 60c per

Vehicles collide

..

Tlr• •fJirt·

I

NOV. 17-21
NOT OPEN

..

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, 0 . tS169.l
Published every weekday evening l'ICotP•
SatW'day. Entered as sei:!!Jfld class rna lUna;

SYRACUSE - A variety
show packed with talent was
enjoyed by over 300 persons
Friday night at the Syracuse
Elementary School.
The event was sponsored by
the Syracuse Fire Depariment
and the Ladies Auxiliary with
proceeds going toward the
purchase of a new fire truck.
Janet Korn , one of the judges,
presented awards.
THE GOSPEL TONES added to the entertainment, presenUng several numbers. Front row
Taking first place in the
are Mr. and Mrs. Willard Ebersbach, back,!..-, Shells Arnold, Mary Janice Lavender, aJXI
youth division was Cindy
Russell Spencer. Others offering entertainment, not in competition, were The Norris Quartet
Patterson, second place to Kim
and
Will. Cundiff, all we'll received.
Batey and third to Unda and
Carol O'Brien. They received : ':

THANKSGIVING CARDS

Tonight thru Thursday

T

THE DAIJX SENTINEL

Council will ·honor Wagner

•

r Valley Publahing Co.
·
GALUPOLIS

TO~IGHTTHRU
TUESDAY

! Area Deaths !

•

"

MEIGS THEATRE

·~
. ·. · .

~.~.~y"~"Ms~~:Tir~~h}I

•&lt; ,

Benefit
show was
success

deputy

\

4 : 30·5;

7: 30; Bob's Gulf, 8·8: 30.
FRIDAY - Letart Ele., 9:30·
11:30 a .m. ; Letart Community,

,. ,

CALL ANSWERED
MIDDL EPORT
The
Middleport E mergency Squad
answered a ca ll to Long St. in
Rutland at 5:49p.m. Friday for
Katherine Lares, a medica ·
patient, who was taken to
Veterans Memorial HospitaL

HALLMARK

~.IISil.

COLUMBUS
i UPII
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown warned Ssturday that
persons expec ting to run for
office next year who already
have begun to spend funds
mus t file a sta Iemen! of
r eceipts and expenditures with
their county Boards of Elec·
lions by Nov. 30.
Brown said under Ohio law,
every campaign committee,
political committee and
political party which made or
received a co ntribution or
made an expenditure in connection with any candidate
must file the report

I

Edwards nanted

.

Rd .,

laws, imports could come from
any foreign sugar producing
country as long as the prearranged import total is not
surpassed.
Cuba, however, would still be
barred from U.S. sales under
legislation forbidding Imports
from countries with which the
V .S. does not have diplomatic
relations .

reports soon

. Flatwoods, 5:15-5: 45; Chester
Texas Rd ., 6-6: 30 ; Chester, 7-

in South Station

Scotland Yard

Chesler

being c:onsidered because a n
old tariff law wiD force the
government to lriple the
current seven4.enths of a cent
per pound sugar import duty in
1975 if no quota program is in
effect. H a new quota is
proclaimed, the tariff can be
left at current levels , he said.
For the past 40 years, the
federal Sugar Act has set In·
dividual imporl quotas on a
country by country basis for
somt.&gt; 30 roreign nations . Last
June, however. the House
killed a bill to extend the law
and it is now scheduled to die at
the end of 197t
Under a globs! quota system,
which can be sel up by the
White House under existing

ONENAVVOTE
OKLAHOMA CITY IUPI ) Sen . Henry Belimon, R-Okla. ,
said "'riday he will not vote for
co nfi rm ation
of
Nelson
Rockefeller as vice president
Wlless the former New York
governor provides additional
exp lanation of cash gifts tO
friends and associates.

to me expense

Crew' s, 10: 30·10: 45; Syracuse
Ele., 11 •2 p.m . : Minersville
HilL 2: 15·2: 30 ; Forest Run, 3·
3: 30; Five Po ints, 3: 45-4: 15 ;

I

a.m. and 5 p.m. for residences.

servation plan for regulated
utilities was expected to be
completed next month by the
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio.
An updated inventory of coal
supplies received by the

MONDAY- Bradbury Ele.,

~,,

GALLIPOLIS - Thursday's
visit here by the Disabled
American VeterajJs r- rnobile
field unit was sponsored by
Gallia County Chapter Nu. 5,
Disable~ American Veterans,
}lerb McQuaid, commander
and Richard Mayo, treasurer .
The visit was not sponsored
by the VFW, and besides
McQuaid and Mayo, Billy
Starcher assisted local DAV
officials during the day-long

nation's biggest sugar · com~
pany friday .
Am~l.ar Corp. boosted JIB
whol.. •le price of groc.,..y
sugar r7per cent to 65.9 centS~
pouna' an Increase which wlll
almos(, certainly be' passe.d
along ~ consumers.
·
Sincq Jan 1, when ~ pound ol
sugar sold for 18 cents, the
supermarket price' has skyrockted more than 300 per cent
to 60 and 65 cents a pound.
'"The quota would not be
\lesigned as a measure to
restrict imports," an offlcial
said, implying that such a
quota would not be set ·at low
levels just to keep prices up for
American sugar growers.
He said the new , quota is

PI.f:ASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGI':S : Debr a SchwHrz, Point Pleasant : Mrs.
DHle Miller , daughter , Poinl
Plea s ant; Rhonda Walli s,
Gallipolis Ferry ; Pe gg y
Duncan, GH llipoli~ F e n·y;
Charles Pe rry , Poinl Pleas:m t:

1975 candidates

St., 7·7:30 : Cook·Gap Hill, 88:30.
THURSDA Y - Sy racu se·
Lisle, 9:30·9:45 a.m .; Syracuse
R . H .• 10· 10:15; Syracuse-

Blackouts would last between one hour and 45 minutes
and two hours and 15 minutes
per day, some time between 8

Work on a mandatory con-

hy DA V chapter

Eddy

real serious situation."
The needs of "priority"
consumers would be satisfied
for two inonths, according to
the coal allocation plan
presented to the commission.
Homes, hospitals and other
institutions have top priority on
use of the fuel, under the plan.
The draft of an emergency
action plan for Ohio's electric
utilities , which proposed
" rolling blackouts" for industry and homes when the
generating fuel supply dwindles to two weeks' supply, also
was received by the Com.

mention went to Teresa Car.
POMEROY
George will be Middleport versus
In the adult division, first
CHARLESTON, W. Va . Kanawha County parents, attack on a state police car
Nesselroad and William (Bub ) everybody else.
place went
to Maxine (UP!) Five Kanawha were signed by Mayor John escorting a school bus loaded
Stivers will coach Pomeroy
All players who have signed Kesterson, second place to The County school officials named Hudnall of nearby Cedar with children.
and Rutland alumni and Bob but do not have equipment
The anti-textbook crusade
AShley and John Blake the should get it today (Sunday) at Neelo Mountain Boys (Mike : Friday in criminal warrants Grove, one of the trouble spots
has
also triggered dynamiting
approving
"anti· in an 11-week-old ban-theMiddleport players in a 7 p.m. at the Meigs High Williams, Tony Branham, Duf · for
of schools and vandalism .
Craig and Van Johnson), third · American"
and
"anti- books movement.
PITTSBURGH (UP!) And Officer Adam Me· renewal of the old Thanks· School.
Also, for the first time, the
to Jim Soulsby. They were Christian" school textbooks
The officials were arrested
Four police officers from the Meekin's chase of burglary giving Day football game be·
Scheduled practices are the awarded prizes of $50, $25 and said today they looked forward at the Christ United Methodist West Virginia Legislature got
city's South Side station suspects through South Side tween Pomeroy and Mid· Pomeroy club at 6:30 p.m.,
invo)ved in the controversy.
Saturday were nursing injuries backyards was aborted wheil . dleport Nov. 28 at an hour to be Monday, the Middleport club at $15 respectively . Honorable to settling their cases in court. Church here during a meeting
Delegate Thomas Goodwin of
mention went to Roger
" !look forward tp the legal with Bishop Frederick Wertz
suffered in a series of he caught a low-hanging announced.
6:30p.m. Tuesday, both at the Gtlmore.
Boone
County, offered a
process. The dispute shouldn't who has been try.ing to serve as
calamitous Friday night clothesline across the throat.
Approximately 60 former Middleport field.
resolution
calling for the
Offering additional en· be settled under threats of a mediator In the dispute.
mishaps that even the He was treated at the scene.
stars - and a few bench
Tickets are ·on sale at tertainment, not in com- shooting and dynamiting of
The fifth board member, removal of the books from the
Keystone Kops might have had
warmers - have been signed, nwnerous places in the county.
petition, were The Gospel schools. My conscience is books opponent Alice Moore, school system.
trouble matching.
30 on each squad. Generally, it
But the resolution died when
Tones, The Norris Quartet, and clear," said. Board • of was not named in the warrants.
One of the policemen,
Will Cundiff. Cundiff also Education member Harry
The case will go to the it was referred to the House of
Patrolman Richard Gross, 40, Houses raided
served
as
emcee.
Stansbury.
prosecuting attorney for Delegates' Rules Committee in
was injured seriously when he
The show was opened and
The officials, who were possible grand · jury con- the final hours of the session
fell on a pipe while chasing a
· prior to adjournment.
POMEROY - Two vehicles
The pickup truck, owned by closed with prayer by Rev. charged with contributing to sideration.
suspected cat burglar in the
Hundreds of children were
"I'm innocent," Underwood
were heavily damaged and two the Leading Creek Con· Howard Black. Other judges the delinquency of children by
city's St. Clair Village.
kept
away from claasrooms by
were
Jocelyn
Baer
and
Katie
adopting
the
controversial
declared. "The burden of proof
District,
was
He was reported Saturday
LONDON (UP!) -Scotland persons injured in an accident servancy
parents
opposed to the books
texts, were freed on $5110 bond is on the accuser."
in stable condition in Yard detecUves raided scores on Route 124 in Langsville at demolished according to the Crow.
The warrants came as band· which contain passages on
when they appeared before a
sheriff's department, and the
South
Side
Hospital's of houses around London and 2:49p.m. Saturday.
the • books demonstrations drugs, prostitution and radical •
magislrate' Friday.
The deparlment of Sheriff Walker vehicle was heavily
intensive care unit with the Midlands Saturday In a
In addition to Stansbury, the cooled off during the third day politics, but the attendance
a pos~ible cut . j?gUI'Ir search for Irish Republican Robert Hartenbach said ·a car damaged.
rate was at about 80 per cent
driven by Alisha K. Walker, 17,
vein, a shoulder separabon and Army bombers.
warrants named County School of . heavy . police security orwake of a sniper and gradually rising.
a broken collar bone. The
Supt. Kenneth Underwood and dered In
Police sources said the raids Langsville Route I, P.ulled from
board members Matthew
suspect escaped.
were latinched on the basis of county road lOin to the path of a
Klnsolvlng, Douglas Stump
Officer Thomas Gladhill, 4~, information gleaned from a . westbound pickup truck driven
m~ster
CONTRACT
SIGNED
by
Jack
W.
Crisp,
44,
Langsand RusseU Isaacs.
broke an ankle' when he was bomb blast in Coventry Thurs·
The warrants, sworn out by
pushl!ll down a flight of stairs day night which killed one ville Route I, traveling west on . LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UP!) - . • PROCTORVILLE - ' At the
Ubbey Owens Ford &lt;;o. and the !65th Annual Communication
during the apprehension of bomber and led to the arrest of . State Route 124.
The Walker car was struck in United Glaas and Ceramics of The Grand Lodge, Free and
three burglary suspects.
a second suspect. The suspect,
. HENiY SHEETS
MRS. HAYMAN
the side. Mias Walker and her Workers union Ssturday signed · Accepted Masons of Ohio,
Patrolman Robert Yagh, 30, 23-year-old construction
CROWN CITY ~ Henry
MIDDLEPORT Mrs.
Clarlous Sheets, 9.4, Rt. 1• . Richard (June Sa'1sbury)
reqUired .hospital treatment worker Raymond .McLaughlin, sister, Ruth Ann, were taken to a new three year contract Robert D. Sager, Grand
BIG VOTE SEEN
Crown City, died Friday nigh! Hayman , 58, formerly of
after he was allegedly hit in the was charged with causing an the Holzer .Medical Center by calling for wage increases of Master appointed Proctorville
ATHENS
(UP!) - Political
at the Delber Nvrslng Home, Middleport, a resident of
about
slx-and..one
half
per
cent
businessman
Clifford
Edwards
face with a board by 8; susp~ct explosion in a heavily guard&lt;.! · SEOEMS. Ruth Ann was
Chllllcofhe. He was born Dec. Huntingdon Valley, Pa ., a
analysts Saturday predicted
he and a detective team were Coventry courtroom Ssturday. treated and released. Alisha · in the first year and three per to serve during the coming the largest iurnout in history 5, 1879, In Galli a County, to the number of years, · died
late Gory Joe Sheets and Mary Sa~urday morning at the home
was admitted for contusions ' cent In each· of the second and year as District Deputy Grand
chaSing.
when Greeks vote Sunday for
Lear Sheets.
of a nlece. Mrs . Richard
third
years
.
Master
for
the
Twelfth
and abdominal. injuries.
Survivors
Include
his (Jenn.y Lou) · Koehler In
the
first
time in 10 years.
Masonic District.
Mrs.
Charles Columbus following a lingering
l
Thousands of city dwellers children,
He will be in charge of
!Gladys)
Lusher,
Rt.
1,
Crown
lttness.
.'
.1_
W_yman E. Sheets,, Lower
Mrs . -Hayman was born In
Lawrence, Gallia, Meigs and feg!Stered In the ·p"!Vinces City;
River Rd. , Gallipolis ; Lester Middleport, the daughter of the
were
slreaming
back
to
their
Jackson
Counties
with
· D. Sheets, Za.nesvltle; 13 late Roy and Jessie Smith
authority to visit, inspect, native villages to cast their grandchildren and 11 gr .. t. Sansbury. Besides her parents,
• .
.
.
"Ilene," and IS-year old daughter, Lynn; instruct, and advise the 19 · ballots in the parliamentary grandchildren. His wife; Roma Mrs. Hayman was ,preceded In
CooUnued from page I
.
Study Committee; served ·on the Gallia reside at Rt. 1, Thurman.
Lanier Sheets died In 1938; one death by her .husband, 0
was serwigas 'broker and consultant with County Cltl%ens Committee for Mental
lodges in his district in all election. ' The vote was ex- son,
Day1on, of Ashville, died Richard, last February, a~ .a
•
pected
to
top
5
million
in
this
the Crisler Company, he did an appraisal Health and Retardation. He and his
rna tiers
pertaining
to
In 1971 ; one daughter, Rachel, · slst,er, Mrs . Eleanor Sansbury : nation of 8.5 million ll"ople. died In 1936.
and management study of WJEH in 1956. wife have been Co.chalrmi!n of . the
Schaaf of Middleport.
,
Freemasonry.
Funeral
·servlces
will
-be
at
S~rvlvlng In addltlon ·to Mrs .
:
Voting
is
compulsory
for
.all
In Gallipolis since 1967 he has served .Gallipolis State Instltl!f:e Christmas r;'und
Deputy Edwards will be
the
Mercerville
Bi.ptlst Koehler are another niece.
•
as Rotarr president and represented the providing gifts for each of tbe residents;
Continued from page 1
installed in this position on Greeks aged 21 to 70.
Church, 2 p.m .. Monday, with MI .. Sally Schaaf of Alhens; a •
club at the Rotary International in for two years was President of the Gallla warrants against students who are Monday night, Nov. · 18 In
Rev. Ja'ck Templeton of- nephew; Jon Schaaf, of •
flclatlng.
Burial wlll'fOIIow in Hilliard, and a cousin, Mrs. ,:
Atlanta, Georgia in 1970. He has been Dramatic Arts Society, a non·Pr.oflt habitually absent from school. ·
ceremonies at the Proctorville
Ridge
lawn
Cemetery.
George Ressler of O..rvllle.
, ,.
active In the affairs of Gallipolis Area organization, producers of "Gallla
Bills approved for payment for the Masonic Temple . Installing
Friends may call · at Willis
Memorial services will be 1 •
CALL
ANSWERED
Chamber of Commerce, serving as Country,'~ an historical ·musical pageant month o!Octoher totaled ~27,775.43.
Fuileral Home from 2 to 4 and 7 held at .7 p . m ~ Monday\ at the , . :
officer will be Judge Daniel C.
RACINE - The Racine to 9 p.m. Sunday. Pallbearers . Evan$ Funeral Home, ~161 · t1
President in 19'13-74 and on the Board of relating the founding and development of ,
Substitute teachers approved were Jenkins, Past Grand Master,
llvlng.s ton·
Ave., ' ;
Directors for six years; he is a member of the area, and for four Y.e ars bas served as Maurice .Thomas, Rt. 1, Sidwell: Mrs. F&amp;AM of New Lexington, Ohio. Emergency Sq'!ad answered a will be the grandsons, Dr. Easl
.Keith Sheels, Stanley . David Columbus. Graveside rill'S will · •
call
Wednesday
fo
the
home
of
the Pt. Pleasant-Mason County Chamber Master of Ceremonle~ .tor the ~ Georgia Y ..Nogle, Crown City; Robert W.
Charles
Daniel be held. Saturday, Nov·. 23, at ·' '·
A dinner honoring him will . Mrs : Katie Blake who was dead Lusher,
11f Commerce; a member and Director of annual Bob Evans Farm Fall Festival.
Lusher,
Kendall
Sheets,
· 1: 30 p.m. at the GriNilwood , : ,
Oliver, Mason ; !\Irs. Patricia Graham, be served in the (,odge dining . upon arrival. The squad took Sheets, Barry · Sheets,Duonil
'
J
eff
Cemetery,. Racine, wl.th fhe "? •
!be Retail Merchants A.ssc!ci!lt,ion of
His hobbles Include sports, gardening · Rt. 3, Chesapeake; and Mrs. Carole Pope, room at 6:30. p.m . All Master the body to the Ewing Funeral Sheets, Terry Sheets, James Rev . Robert Bumgardner · ~
Gallipolis ; a member of the Gallia County and woodworklnl!. Wamet. his wife, Rt. 3, Gallipolis.
Lusher, John H. Lusher.
officiating.
"41 •
•
. Masons are invited.
· Home.
,
. il

by

- ·

Educator 's schedUle in Meigs
County this week:

Also Friday at its regular
monthly meeting, the commission agreed to go ahead
with a campaign to 8sk nonregulated utilities in rural
areas and municipalities and
the general public to conserve
energy.

lJnit spon sored

Eddy's schedule
ADULT DIVISION WINNERS - Winners In tbe adult
division were, 1-r, Maxine Kesterson, vocalist, first place;

Turkey day coaches set·

Bad day for cops
..'

accident at 9:10 p.m. on
Georges Creek Rd . one and
eight tenths miles west of Rt. 7
where Charles Booth, 17, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, lost control of his
car which ran off the left side of
the road striking a ditch and
embankment.
In a two car accident Thurs.
day it -,as incorrectly reported
that a five year old child suf.
fered a broken arm in a
collision involving cars driven
by Okey H. Henry, 78,
Gallipolis, and Betty J. Bar·
nett, 32, of Gallipolis. Mrs.
Hanna Henry, a passenger in
the Henry car had the !rae·
tured arm .

n •H II III\\.

state repres entative from
Youngstown, "it will put us in a

mission.

tariff hike on tmpurted sugar
which \,VOuld be passed along to
the American consumer, already hit by had news from the

WASHINGTON (UP!) - •
The Fora administration may
~n annolUlce a new sugar
unport quota to head off an
automatic 1975 boost in the
already skyhigh--price of
satisfying Ameri ca's sweet
tooth, a government source
said Saturday.
The proposal would se t up a
"globs! quota" for U.S. sugar
Imports- which make up about
half of the nation's sugar
supply. Current import quotas,
set up on a nation-by;~ation
basis, are to expire Dec. 31.
The move would be strictly a
tool to prevent an automatic fat

. ~~~~ \\\U ,
IIJ UU ;\\U.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Energy Emergency
Com mi ssio n
1EEC)
is
prepared to put emergency
plans including "rolling
blackouts" for homes and
industries into effect if the
United Mine Workers of
America 1UMW ) fail to ratify a
proposed nationwide contract
with .the soft coal industry,
comffiission Chairman Dr.
David C. Sweet said Friday.
"If the UMW rejects the
contract," said EEC Commissioner Thomas J. Carney, a

d

BERNARD BRENNER

UP! Farm Editor

planned

......
.,
',,

'
Mrs . Griffin Boggess, Po inl
Pleasa nt ; Mrs . Birdie Dunca n ,
So uth s ide; William Blake,
Florence. Ky .; James Devore ,
Robertsb'urg; Sheldo n Hili,
Poin l Pleasant; Ronnie McCoy, Point Pleasant, and Mrs.
LowlS Martin, Robertsburg .

local new'

CHORD ORGAN
AND BENCH

at

OhioVallev. Bank
your money 1s now
insured up to ...

., I I

OLD TIME
RADIO
AM-FM
WALNUT GRAIN
UNBREAKABLE CABINET

REGULAR •39.94

REG. '29.94

OUR
LOW

*

PRICE

94

$

94

$

CHARGE
IT

CHARGE IT

by the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, an agency of the
Federal Government. This new
protection, twi~e the .amount
previously available, IS now
effective and applicable to all
funds on deposit at .. .

Complete~

OHIO VALLEY BANK.

Regular '8.44

Now more than ever before, your
hard-earned dollars on deposit with
Ohio Valley 9ank are safe and
insured .. . and you don 't have to deposit 10 or 20 thousa~d d~llars to
get this kind of protection. Its yours
regardless of the size of your
account ... as a matter of fact,- 40
thousand dollars in insurance protection is provided for every depositor at Ohio Valley Bank.

Not Exactly
As Pictured

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Washable
72x90
Size

SLUMBER ROSE BLANKET
Warm care free Polyester and Nylon for
years of service.

$ 97
CHARGE IT

AUTOMATIC
COOKER AND
DEEP FRYER
REG. 112.44

SAVE

*Effective November 27, 1974·

2.56

1

Cooker and Deep Fryer enables you to cook
easily, more economically and turn out
delicious fl.avor perfect meals.

.

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I

$ 88
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Regular 117.77
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REPLACEMENT
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44

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..........

.,

'

�...

.

..

'

\

.;

5-TheSundayTim es • Se ntmel,
·
Sunday, Nov. 17, 1974

,Rio singers to tour

.•

:·············~······················ · ···· ····· ···················· · ····· ~ -·~ ··· ····· ···~

.•
••
•••
•

Dorothy Countryman

Charlene Hoeflich

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Pomeroy-Middleport

· l 'I(J - 2)/1~

~)!) ~ :~J 5(J

'

Gardeners contribute to Santa
EDWIN BARON
MASTER HYPNOTIST Edwin L. Baron, Chicago, a
pionL.!r in medical hypnosis
will appear at Rio Grande
College, Monday at 9:15p.m.
in the College Dining Hall.
Baron's visit is presented as
part of the college artist and
lecture series and there is no
charge for the program. The
public is cordially invited .

POMEROY - A box of
Ch•istmas gifts for "Operation
Santa Claus" will be sent to the
Athens Metnal Health Center
by the Winding Trail Garden
Club. Meeting Tuesday night at
the home of Mrs. Ruth Moore,
club members voted to contribute to the project after a
letter from the center telling of
the need was read.
Mrs. Dollie Hayes presided
at the meeting while the Meigs
Coun ty Christmas flower show,
"Chrisbnas in the Air" Was
discussed.
Mrs . Robert
Thompson, Mrs. Aaron Kelton
and Mrs . Robert Lewis at-·
tended the recent county
meeting on the show Dec. 7 and

8 at the Pomeroy Elementary
SchooL
Schedules were
distributed and members
made plans for exhibiting.
The Christmas dinner party
was announced for TueSday,
Dec. 10, at 6 p.m. at Trinity
Churc h with the Happy Harvesters Class to prepare the
dinner , Members drew names
for a gift exchange.
It was noted that Mrs. Nancy
Collins won a blue ribbon in the
Rutland Garden Club flower
show . Mrs. Dollins reported on
being in Parkersburg to hear
Bob Thomas, national lecturer
flower arranging. Mrs .. Kelton
also attended the program. A
report was given by Mrs.
Collins and Mrs. Thompson on
a program by the OAGC in
Columbus on 11 ChristmB.s at

Your

Fingertips ."

Thompson and Mrs . Collins

received certificates on a
judges' school which they
attended .
Garden
calendar
for
November and December was
given by Mrs. Collins who
suggested that now is the time
to plant dormant rose bushes
being sure to mulch two to four
inches, to drain the hoses, and
shut off outside faucets. She

Country Fare

also recommended a live
Holiday Hoors
Mon .. sat. t0-9

Sprflig Valley Plaza
4-16-7333

Christmas tree which can be

•

planted outdoors after the
holidays, and urged that
members not forget the birds.
The ecology report was given
by Mrs. Susie Miller who
presented ecology shopping
guide lines. She said that
shoppers should buy only what
they really need, that wrappings on meats and vegetables
only increase garbage and that
it is better to shop where items
are not individually packages,
and that women should refuse
·w buy animal fur and leather
products.
Mrs . Earl Thoma displayed a
variety of containers, and Mrs.
Thompson showed painted
backgrounds
for
arrangements. Also displayed
were dried materials for use in
arrangements, with an auction
of the dried materials being
held at the conclusion of the
meeting to replenish the
lreasury. A note from Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority was read
thanking the club for providing
flower arrangements for the
Houston home at the time of
the historical home tour.
Refreshments were served
by the hostess to th05e named
and Mr.s. Mildred Deeth, Mrs.
Cora Beegle, Mrs. Wilma
Terrell and Mrs. Dora Heaton.

Mrs .

•· RIO GRANDE - The ·Grand Community Co!lege and the
•• Chorale of Rio Grande College others are members of Rio's
• Will sponsor a products party regular student body.
,, ~ay evening at the college
jn order to make the tour the
• dlrung !'all to raise funds for young people need $3,400, ..,f
the spnng tour.
which they now have $tbo.
.A troupe of 24 young people
Funds will be spent In traveling
under the direction of Merly~ expenses and costuming for the
Ross, wtU leave Rio Grande group.
March 12, 1975 to present
Starting time for the
. musical
programs
in Tuesday party' is 7:30 p.m.
Lakeland, Fla., Macon and Donations for the group will
.. Atlanta, Ga., Chattanooga
also be accepted.
· Tenn., Lexington, Ky ., and at
• Adventure Fair in Disney
World. The musicians will
return March 24. .
. The group Includes 16
Macon B. Allen, in 1845,
~ng~rs, pianist, sound and was the ftrst American Negro
lightin~ technicians. Eight of formally admitted to the bar
'
~ ~tudents are enrolled in at Worcester, Mass. !1 •

•

Woman's World

'·

..'I
;

present, with two guests to
.enjoy
th e
refreshments

...

.King .

I'
'I

\

\

COMING SOON•••

TOM'S STEREO CENTER
IN GALLIPOLIS

"A complete line of Hi-Fi &amp; Stereo Equip·
ment'.'

Mr. and Mrs. F

J Smithson ·

Miss Cathy Small .

'

~

.

NEW HAVEN - In a double flower girls. They wore deep
ring ceremony Sept. 28, Miss purple satin gowns with white
Bonnie Staats became the lace pinafores. Their headbride of Francis Joy Smithson pieces were of orchid pompons
at the New Haven United with short veils of orchid
Methodist (:hurch with Rev. illusion. They carried white
Bobby Woods offiCiating at the baskets of orchid pompons.
')
~en church ceremony.
Each attendant wore a pearl
The bride is the daughter of neckla~e . gifts from the bride.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Staats,
Master Scott Brannon, evening, Sept. 27 at the hosted a party for the cou~.l~
Letart, W. Va. Smithson is the Charleston, nephew of the Fellowship Hall; Mason. Mr. and members of their weddinC
son of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard groom, served as ringbearer. and Mrs. Rich Broadwater and party the same e"ening. · •
~ ;~
Smithson, Letart.
Alan Smithron, brother of the Mr. and Mrs. Don Meadows coMrs.
Paul
Powell,
organist,
groom,
was
best
man.
Ushers
ATTEND OPEN HOUSE
RUTLAND - Eight mem- presented pre-nuptial music were Bruce Staats, Mason,
bers of the Rutland Friendly including "Love -Theme from brother of the bride ; James
•
I• I
Gardeners were at Parkers- Romeo and Juliet," "Theme Brannon, Charleston, brotherLove
Story ," . in-law of the groom; · Don
burg Tuesday night for the From
annual Christmas open house ''Somewhere My Love. '' Meadows, Letart, brother-inof Dudley's. They. were Mrs. "Somewhere Over the Rain- · law of the bride; Ron Jackson ,
SILVER BRIDGE 'PL.;zA
.,
Janet Bolin, Mrs. Margie bow" and "The Shadow of Gallipolis, and Jeff Staats,
Davis, Mrs. Joan Fetty, Mrs. Your Smile." Mrs. Bernita · Mason, nephew of the bride.
For her daughter's wedding,
Charlotte Willford , Mrs. Meadows, sister of the bride,
Marvel Quillen, ~rs. Judy was soloist and sang "We've Mrs. Staats chose an aqua
.. . .~
Juanita &lt;lnly Just Begun," " I 'm polyester knit gown with black
Snowden,
Mrs.
Lambert and Mrs. Susie Yours" and "The Wedding accessories. The mother of the
Carpenter.
Song."
groom selected a floral knit
Given in .marriage by her gown with floral accessories.
I
parents, the bride was attired Both mothers had corsages of
DAUGIITER BORN
m an empire waisted gown white orchids.
'
.; ,,. '"
MINERSVILLE -Mr. and with long, full chiffon sleeves ·~· Following the ceremony, the ,
Mrs. 4\lle~ Williams, former . and a long lace train. She )lledding reception was held in .
Marilyn Btr.own, announce the carried a white silk hand- :111e church social rooms. Miss r-..,.---------~··---~~---4
birth of
. ir first child, a kerchief belonging to her Carol
Staats ,
Letart,
"
-···
daughter, oily Allyn, Nov. 5 g.randmother and wore her regis,tered guests and Miss
•
J
oooUfftf.u -b..
W
at Holzer Medical Center The Sister's headpiece, double satin Beverly Staats, Akron, served
infant weighed 71bs. and oz. bow with small flowers holding as h05tess. AssiSting with the
Grandparents are Mr. and a shoulder length, illusion veil. re~eption were Mrs. Mary
Mrs. Wendall Williams, · Her only jewelry was a Ueving, Mrs. Barbara Zerkle
Rutland, and Mr. and Mrs. diamond necklace given to her )lnd Mrs. Carolyn Hesson, all of
V1c~r Brown, Minersville, .
by the groom. She carried a New Haven, and Miss Unda
cascade of white mums, Kelvington, Akron. The bride's
pompons, white rosebuds and table was centered with an
carnations tied with white satin orchid pompon and mum
. Onio~ were widely grown lover's knots.
candelabra arrangement. The
m ~ed1eval English monasMrs. Bernita Meadows, five tiered-chocolate and white
tenes. Combined with cloves
Letart,
served her sister as wedding cake was decorated
they were used for fragranc~
as sachets.
matron of honor. Her deep with orchid and white roses.
For traveling the bride wore
purple polyester knit gown was:
styled with empire waist and' an orchid polyester knit gown
long sleeves. The gown was made by Mrs. Karen Broadtrimmed with white lace on the water. Her corsage was from
collar and sleeves. Sprays of her bridal bouquet. Following a
pompons and greenery held the trip to Hawk's Nest, the couple
short veil of orchid illusion and resides at Rt. 1, Letart.
she carried a nosegay of orchi&lt;l
The bride is a graduate of
pompons and baby's breath Wabama High School and is
tied with orchid satin ribbons. employed by the Holzer
Attendants were Mrs. Judy Medical Center in pediatrics.
Carleton, Gallipolis, cousin of The groom, also a graduate of
the bride; Mrs. Esther Wahama, is employed by
Brannon, Charleston, sister of Central Coal Co., New Haven.
Gajlia-Meigs residents atthe groom; Mrs . Karen
Broadwater, Letart, cousin of tending the ceremony included
BOYS
the'bride; Miss Sharon Miller, Thelma Boyer, Middleport ;
Si tes 2· 16
by Tom &amp; Jerry
Gallipolis, and Miss Christi Phyllis Boggs, Gallipolis; Rose
ROBES
$7 .00-$10,00
Staats, Mason, niece of the Ginther, Pomeroy ' Marti
PAJAMAS
bride. Their gowns and M~ce,
Gallipolis;
Mrs .
S5.50-S9.50
?ead~leces
were styled Clar~nce Tucker and Missy, ·
Identically to the honor at- Gallipolis; Mrs. Marvin Baird
tendant's in pale orchid. They Buddy and Angie, Gallipolis;
carr~ed nll!!egays of orchid · Mrs . Maxine Little , Mid- ,
GIRLS
Siz~s 2-14
pompons and baby's bteath dleport; ' Nancy Castell
bv: Kid Duds,
with .orchid satin streamers Gallipolis; Susan Swann'
lsaccson and
Carrico
.
Gallipolis, · and Mr. and Mrs:
tied in lover's knots.
. Miss Lori Lrnn Meadows, : Dencil Hoffman, Patriot. ·
s6~o~-~fi~oo
PAJAMAS
mece of the bride, and Miss "
-U.00 -59.00
Bethany Brannon, Charleston,
The groom's parents hosted
GOWNS
SS. S0-$8 ,00
niece of the groom, served as a rehearsal dinner, · Friday

WATCH FOR

GRAND OPENING SOONI

COLUMBUS- Nuptial mass
at St. Mary Magdalene 's
Catholic Church, Saturday ,
Nov. 16, at 1:30 p.m. joined
Miss Deborah Lynne Malone
and William Joseph Holtsberry
in marriage.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Quentin
Malone, 508 Fifth St., Buckeye
Lake, a nd formerly of
Gallipolis. The groom is the son
of Mr. a.1d Mrs. Harold B.
Holtsberry, 3750 Washburn St.,
Columbus.
,·
Rev . William D. tluber read
the ceremony with Larry
Harper, Jr., and Scott Garrison
serving as altar boys.
Given in marriage by her
lather, the bride selected a
chantilly lace gown with scoop
neckline, fitted bodice and
waist and long fitted sleeves. A
ruffled hooped skirt completed
the gown and her chapel length
train was attached. A chapel
length mantilla of tulle was
trimmed in matching chantilly
lace. The bride carried a
bouquet of white carnations
and blue-tipped daisies with
white streamers.
Mrs . Carmela Harper,
cousin of the bride, served as
matron of honor. She was attired in a light blue, sleeveless
cr~pe gown with empire waist.
Her long sleeved jacket was in
dark blue velvet and she wore a
dark blue lace headpiece with
light blue veil. She carried
yellow and blue tipped white
carnations. Miss Stephanie
Wuerch, maid of honor, wore a
gown idepticat' to that of the
1
matron with yellow and blue
tipped white carnations. Miss
Angela Harper, cousin of the
bride, served as junior bridesmaid. Her gown and flowers
·matched those of the other
attendants. Miss Sherrie
Williamson was the flower girl
and wore a royal blue velvet
gown with empire waist and
carried a decorated basket of
rose petals.
Paul Holtsberry served his
brother as bes.t man. Ushers
were John Holtsberry, brother
of the groom, and Robert
Augustine, cousin of the
groom. Chuck Holtsberry,
nephew of the groom, was ringbearer.
A four tiered wedding cake
with blue and yellow roses
highlighted the reception in the
church hall following the
ceremony, Two sheet cakes
flanked the wedding cake,
which was topped by bridal

. NOVEMBER 17th THRU NOV. 23rd

SNACK
BOX

SUNDAY

SHOP FOR-NICE
THINGS TO WEAR ,

• 2 Pieces Olicken
e French Fries
eRoll
No Substitutions

.
'

Try Our Delicious Homemade

Chill and Bean Soup

•IJ

\

Wedding vows exchanged

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY,

ro·f

&gt;': .

Mrs. William Holtsberry

CLOSE~··.w

AGOOD PLACE

-~

.

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED- Mr. and Mrs. Leslie
&amp;nail, Crown City, announce the engagement I and ap. ·
pro aching marriage of their daughter, Cathy, to John 1
ThOIDfS Pope, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Pope, Rt. I, Patriot.
Miss Small Is a 1971 graduate of Hannan Trace High Schooi )
and is presently employed by the Cooperative Extens!oll ·
Service. Her fiance is a 1965 grad\tate of Squthwestern High .!
School and a 1970 graduate of Ohio State University with a',
Bachelor of Science Degree from the College of Agriculture; )
He Is employed a~ vocational a'grlcWture instructor at '
Hannan Trace High School. A June wedding is being planned• f

Couple exchanges vows

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I

··;,-&lt;t ,•

4

it

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prepared by Goldie and Jim

2nd &amp;OLIVE ST.

GALLIPOLIS. OHICJ

fOR QUl~K PICKUP SERVICE PHONE 446-2682

(jifty
JWbes ...
for her leisure
Beautiful robes,

. ' to
wraps, peignoirs
warm her after hours.
Soft nylon fleeces

'•I

Miss Rhonda Lynn Stewart

I

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Stewart, Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mr. and David Rees, Rio
Grande, announce the engagement and approaching
marriage of their children, Rhonda Lynn Stewart and David
Lewis Rees. A spring wedding is planned. Miss Stewart is a
student at Preston's Beauty College, Chesapeake. Rees is
employed at Russ Glass Service, Gallipolis.

'

Campers have meet
BY ETHEL ROBINSON
GALLIPOLIS - The French
City Campers met for their
regular session Thursday, Nov.
7, at the Buckeye Rural
Electric Bldg . The business
meeting was conducted by the
president, Art Wroblews ki.
Names were presented for
officers for the coming year ;
president, BiU and Mildred
Seyfried: vice president, Hoke
and
Ethel
Robinson;
secretary, Harland and
Emogene Sanders; treasurer,
Marion and Anna Williams.
They we re unanimously
elected.
Marvin and Elsie Saunders
were voted on to become
members of the French City
Campers. We welcome them.
A book " Hiking [n America 11
which shows the joys of
walking in different parts of
the country was placed in the
Gallia County District Library
in memory of Mrs . George
Ward, mother of Goldie King.
The club voted, that in the
future ; they would place a book
in the library . instead of
sending flowers, in memory of
a deceased person.
The club had decided that as
a conservation project they
would make bird houses and
bird feeders to take care of our
feathered friends this winter.
There was a large display.
these are very attractive. Jim
King, conservation chairman,
was pleased with the work.
figurines. Punch, mints, coffee
and nuts were served by
Marsha Holtsberry, sister-inlaw of the groom, Nancy Webb;
sister of the groom, Barb
Smith, sister of the bride and
Sandy Lynch, cousin of the
bride. Sharon Smith, niece of
the bride, registered guests.
The new Mrs. Holtsberry is a
1973 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and
attended Ohio State School of
Cosmetology. She is ·employed
by the J . C. Penney Co.,
Catalog Distribution Center.
Holtsberry is a 1973 graduate of
Whitehall-Yearling High
School and is ail electrician
wi th Burroughs-Hatfield,
Electric Co.
After Nov. 26, the couple will
be at home at 266 South Powell
Ave., Colwnbus.

It was decided to have a
Christmas party in December
with a $1 gift exchange.
The guest speaker for the
evening was Don Nelson, of the
State Division of Forests, who
spoke on air conservation.
Nelson is a fire patrol pilot,
also pilots the helicopter . His
department is primarily
responsible for forest fires·
they also help with local fires:
He spoke on the air pollution
from fires which causes illness
- is especially hard on the
respiratory system also causes
asthma attacks. He told us that
200 pounds of leaves burned
leaves 50 pounds of pollutan~
in the air. He cautioned about
open fire burning. He does a lot
of spea king to groups,
especially elementary school
childre n.
He said in ·our district there
are 19 fire towers, and 39 in the
state. These help locate fires .
But the best way to rfduce
forest damage is prevention of
fires.
Ray Bush of the local fire ·
department was present at !he
meeting. Ten families were

USE OUR
CHRISTMAS
LAY-AWAY

loRRAINE
Goes to the Mysterio us East
FOR THE MING DYNA STY

l orraine selec ts cloud so. It .l ourlgewci gil !
Antrcn " 111 Nylon Tn co t Jnd &lt;J cJd s
impecca bl e elega nce wrll1 rnl ric~te
Chi
' nese symbo ls on glenrning sa tin . Rt~ vei in the
luxury of the front but toned robe with its

disti nctive collar ami t.:ommoclious side slit pocket
In Bluctte. Bonny Pin k, Dragan Fire or Indigo.
Short robe at $1 4.00 1n XS ·S·M·L, XL at $15.00.
Shift gown at $8.00 in XS·S·M-L, XL at $9.00.
Matching scuffs at $5.00 in S-M-L-XL .

GALLIPOLIS

\

PRE·THANKSGIVING

SALE

I

JUST IN TIME FOR HOLIDAY SEWING

200
FULL BOLTS
•100% POLYESTER

and comfy quilts.

•POLY. &amp; WOOL
ePOLY, &amp; SILK

Luscious colors .. ,

•60"-62" WIDE
eYARN DYES

flattering styles.

eCOLOR COORDINATED
•SOLIDS &amp; FANCIES

o_

MOTOROLA~

1!:,' "BLACK •

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WHITE PORTABLE TV

What a great way to say that you care! Smar·tly styled
personal size portable with built-in side carry handle, single
dial Contrast-Brightness Control, solid state chassis
(except 2 tubes). Beige &amp; brown plastic cabinet.
Model BP3103KN •

DIAM OSoFO
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LARRY'S
.

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.· ~alliporls, Ohio, .

·

low •••

•

low Prices Tool

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-1 00% POI.YESTER

THREAD
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In blended
Wool/ Nylon/
Acrylic, in

·A Real V.a lue Treat·

.

Ai

rust and

14K GO.LD MOUNTINGS
Sure YCiu Can. ChGrge II

412-414 ·SECOND
AVE.
.
.GAU,IPOLIS. OHIO

J:ACK . &amp;·JILL_:

·. TAWNEY

JEWELERs ·

'

. "Soothostern Ohio's Largest Chlldr~'s Store
. . Featurlng•Fa'shlons For The Young" .
326 SeCond Ave.
' Phono ~4343 .
, Go Ill lls, 0 .

4%2 Second Ave.
.. Ci&lt;lllipolla, Ollio

'i

•, .

·-

•

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.

evergreen ·

4

REG. 69'

FOR

100% POLYESTER
NON-ROLL ELASTIC
REG. 59• YARD

'1 00

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'

3

J1 00

YAROS
•

KNIT MILL STORE
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA

.,

·-

Gallipolis, Ohio

·Sat. 9:30til5: 00

••
'

.

rrut&lt;.;:t•l

Mon.Thur. l=ri . 9:30til9:00p.m.

,I

,.

BONUS SPECIAL

300 YARD SPOOL

shades of

''

I .·

'tI

i

• •
.

I'

\

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'I

Prices

'99.50

WAYSIDE f ·URNIJU·RE

Third &amp; Olive Street

B~dget

Distinctively

Prices St;~rt

'

At

FOR-MEN

We didn't invent good tat.te .
We juu never forgot it .

BONUS SPECIAL

'

~d

..

Jt
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I 1

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5-TheSundayTim es • Se ntmel,
·
Sunday, Nov. 17, 1974

,Rio singers to tour

.•

:·············~······················ · ···· ····· ···················· · ····· ~ -·~ ··· ····· ···~

.•
••
•••
•

Dorothy Countryman

Charlene Hoeflich

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Pomeroy-Middleport

· l 'I(J - 2)/1~

~)!) ~ :~J 5(J

'

Gardeners contribute to Santa
EDWIN BARON
MASTER HYPNOTIST Edwin L. Baron, Chicago, a
pionL.!r in medical hypnosis
will appear at Rio Grande
College, Monday at 9:15p.m.
in the College Dining Hall.
Baron's visit is presented as
part of the college artist and
lecture series and there is no
charge for the program. The
public is cordially invited .

POMEROY - A box of
Ch•istmas gifts for "Operation
Santa Claus" will be sent to the
Athens Metnal Health Center
by the Winding Trail Garden
Club. Meeting Tuesday night at
the home of Mrs. Ruth Moore,
club members voted to contribute to the project after a
letter from the center telling of
the need was read.
Mrs. Dollie Hayes presided
at the meeting while the Meigs
Coun ty Christmas flower show,
"Chrisbnas in the Air" Was
discussed.
Mrs . Robert
Thompson, Mrs. Aaron Kelton
and Mrs . Robert Lewis at-·
tended the recent county
meeting on the show Dec. 7 and

8 at the Pomeroy Elementary
SchooL
Schedules were
distributed and members
made plans for exhibiting.
The Christmas dinner party
was announced for TueSday,
Dec. 10, at 6 p.m. at Trinity
Churc h with the Happy Harvesters Class to prepare the
dinner , Members drew names
for a gift exchange.
It was noted that Mrs. Nancy
Collins won a blue ribbon in the
Rutland Garden Club flower
show . Mrs. Dollins reported on
being in Parkersburg to hear
Bob Thomas, national lecturer
flower arranging. Mrs .. Kelton
also attended the program. A
report was given by Mrs.
Collins and Mrs. Thompson on
a program by the OAGC in
Columbus on 11 ChristmB.s at

Your

Fingertips ."

Thompson and Mrs . Collins

received certificates on a
judges' school which they
attended .
Garden
calendar
for
November and December was
given by Mrs. Collins who
suggested that now is the time
to plant dormant rose bushes
being sure to mulch two to four
inches, to drain the hoses, and
shut off outside faucets. She

Country Fare

also recommended a live
Holiday Hoors
Mon .. sat. t0-9

Sprflig Valley Plaza
4-16-7333

Christmas tree which can be

•

planted outdoors after the
holidays, and urged that
members not forget the birds.
The ecology report was given
by Mrs. Susie Miller who
presented ecology shopping
guide lines. She said that
shoppers should buy only what
they really need, that wrappings on meats and vegetables
only increase garbage and that
it is better to shop where items
are not individually packages,
and that women should refuse
·w buy animal fur and leather
products.
Mrs . Earl Thoma displayed a
variety of containers, and Mrs.
Thompson showed painted
backgrounds
for
arrangements. Also displayed
were dried materials for use in
arrangements, with an auction
of the dried materials being
held at the conclusion of the
meeting to replenish the
lreasury. A note from Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority was read
thanking the club for providing
flower arrangements for the
Houston home at the time of
the historical home tour.
Refreshments were served
by the hostess to th05e named
and Mr.s. Mildred Deeth, Mrs.
Cora Beegle, Mrs. Wilma
Terrell and Mrs. Dora Heaton.

Mrs .

•· RIO GRANDE - The ·Grand Community Co!lege and the
•• Chorale of Rio Grande College others are members of Rio's
• Will sponsor a products party regular student body.
,, ~ay evening at the college
jn order to make the tour the
• dlrung !'all to raise funds for young people need $3,400, ..,f
the spnng tour.
which they now have $tbo.
.A troupe of 24 young people
Funds will be spent In traveling
under the direction of Merly~ expenses and costuming for the
Ross, wtU leave Rio Grande group.
March 12, 1975 to present
Starting time for the
. musical
programs
in Tuesday party' is 7:30 p.m.
Lakeland, Fla., Macon and Donations for the group will
.. Atlanta, Ga., Chattanooga
also be accepted.
· Tenn., Lexington, Ky ., and at
• Adventure Fair in Disney
World. The musicians will
return March 24. .
. The group Includes 16
Macon B. Allen, in 1845,
~ng~rs, pianist, sound and was the ftrst American Negro
lightin~ technicians. Eight of formally admitted to the bar
'
~ ~tudents are enrolled in at Worcester, Mass. !1 •

•

Woman's World

'·

..'I
;

present, with two guests to
.enjoy
th e
refreshments

...

.King .

I'
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COMING SOON•••

TOM'S STEREO CENTER
IN GALLIPOLIS

"A complete line of Hi-Fi &amp; Stereo Equip·
ment'.'

Mr. and Mrs. F

J Smithson ·

Miss Cathy Small .

'

~

.

NEW HAVEN - In a double flower girls. They wore deep
ring ceremony Sept. 28, Miss purple satin gowns with white
Bonnie Staats became the lace pinafores. Their headbride of Francis Joy Smithson pieces were of orchid pompons
at the New Haven United with short veils of orchid
Methodist (:hurch with Rev. illusion. They carried white
Bobby Woods offiCiating at the baskets of orchid pompons.
')
~en church ceremony.
Each attendant wore a pearl
The bride is the daughter of neckla~e . gifts from the bride.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Staats,
Master Scott Brannon, evening, Sept. 27 at the hosted a party for the cou~.l~
Letart, W. Va. Smithson is the Charleston, nephew of the Fellowship Hall; Mason. Mr. and members of their weddinC
son of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard groom, served as ringbearer. and Mrs. Rich Broadwater and party the same e"ening. · •
~ ;~
Smithson, Letart.
Alan Smithron, brother of the Mr. and Mrs. Don Meadows coMrs.
Paul
Powell,
organist,
groom,
was
best
man.
Ushers
ATTEND OPEN HOUSE
RUTLAND - Eight mem- presented pre-nuptial music were Bruce Staats, Mason,
bers of the Rutland Friendly including "Love -Theme from brother of the bride ; James
•
I• I
Gardeners were at Parkers- Romeo and Juliet," "Theme Brannon, Charleston, brotherLove
Story ," . in-law of the groom; · Don
burg Tuesday night for the From
annual Christmas open house ''Somewhere My Love. '' Meadows, Letart, brother-inof Dudley's. They. were Mrs. "Somewhere Over the Rain- · law of the bride; Ron Jackson ,
SILVER BRIDGE 'PL.;zA
.,
Janet Bolin, Mrs. Margie bow" and "The Shadow of Gallipolis, and Jeff Staats,
Davis, Mrs. Joan Fetty, Mrs. Your Smile." Mrs. Bernita · Mason, nephew of the bride.
For her daughter's wedding,
Charlotte Willford , Mrs. Meadows, sister of the bride,
Marvel Quillen, ~rs. Judy was soloist and sang "We've Mrs. Staats chose an aqua
.. . .~
Juanita &lt;lnly Just Begun," " I 'm polyester knit gown with black
Snowden,
Mrs.
Lambert and Mrs. Susie Yours" and "The Wedding accessories. The mother of the
Carpenter.
Song."
groom selected a floral knit
Given in .marriage by her gown with floral accessories.
I
parents, the bride was attired Both mothers had corsages of
DAUGIITER BORN
m an empire waisted gown white orchids.
'
.; ,,. '"
MINERSVILLE -Mr. and with long, full chiffon sleeves ·~· Following the ceremony, the ,
Mrs. 4\lle~ Williams, former . and a long lace train. She )lledding reception was held in .
Marilyn Btr.own, announce the carried a white silk hand- :111e church social rooms. Miss r-..,.---------~··---~~---4
birth of
. ir first child, a kerchief belonging to her Carol
Staats ,
Letart,
"
-···
daughter, oily Allyn, Nov. 5 g.randmother and wore her regis,tered guests and Miss
•
J
oooUfftf.u -b..
W
at Holzer Medical Center The Sister's headpiece, double satin Beverly Staats, Akron, served
infant weighed 71bs. and oz. bow with small flowers holding as h05tess. AssiSting with the
Grandparents are Mr. and a shoulder length, illusion veil. re~eption were Mrs. Mary
Mrs. Wendall Williams, · Her only jewelry was a Ueving, Mrs. Barbara Zerkle
Rutland, and Mr. and Mrs. diamond necklace given to her )lnd Mrs. Carolyn Hesson, all of
V1c~r Brown, Minersville, .
by the groom. She carried a New Haven, and Miss Unda
cascade of white mums, Kelvington, Akron. The bride's
pompons, white rosebuds and table was centered with an
carnations tied with white satin orchid pompon and mum
. Onio~ were widely grown lover's knots.
candelabra arrangement. The
m ~ed1eval English monasMrs. Bernita Meadows, five tiered-chocolate and white
tenes. Combined with cloves
Letart,
served her sister as wedding cake was decorated
they were used for fragranc~
as sachets.
matron of honor. Her deep with orchid and white roses.
For traveling the bride wore
purple polyester knit gown was:
styled with empire waist and' an orchid polyester knit gown
long sleeves. The gown was made by Mrs. Karen Broadtrimmed with white lace on the water. Her corsage was from
collar and sleeves. Sprays of her bridal bouquet. Following a
pompons and greenery held the trip to Hawk's Nest, the couple
short veil of orchid illusion and resides at Rt. 1, Letart.
she carried a nosegay of orchi&lt;l
The bride is a graduate of
pompons and baby's breath Wabama High School and is
tied with orchid satin ribbons. employed by the Holzer
Attendants were Mrs. Judy Medical Center in pediatrics.
Carleton, Gallipolis, cousin of The groom, also a graduate of
the bride; Mrs. Esther Wahama, is employed by
Brannon, Charleston, sister of Central Coal Co., New Haven.
Gajlia-Meigs residents atthe groom; Mrs . Karen
Broadwater, Letart, cousin of tending the ceremony included
BOYS
the'bride; Miss Sharon Miller, Thelma Boyer, Middleport ;
Si tes 2· 16
by Tom &amp; Jerry
Gallipolis, and Miss Christi Phyllis Boggs, Gallipolis; Rose
ROBES
$7 .00-$10,00
Staats, Mason, niece of the Ginther, Pomeroy ' Marti
PAJAMAS
bride. Their gowns and M~ce,
Gallipolis;
Mrs .
S5.50-S9.50
?ead~leces
were styled Clar~nce Tucker and Missy, ·
Identically to the honor at- Gallipolis; Mrs. Marvin Baird
tendant's in pale orchid. They Buddy and Angie, Gallipolis;
carr~ed nll!!egays of orchid · Mrs . Maxine Little , Mid- ,
GIRLS
Siz~s 2-14
pompons and baby's bteath dleport; ' Nancy Castell
bv: Kid Duds,
with .orchid satin streamers Gallipolis; Susan Swann'
lsaccson and
Carrico
.
Gallipolis, · and Mr. and Mrs:
tied in lover's knots.
. Miss Lori Lrnn Meadows, : Dencil Hoffman, Patriot. ·
s6~o~-~fi~oo
PAJAMAS
mece of the bride, and Miss "
-U.00 -59.00
Bethany Brannon, Charleston,
The groom's parents hosted
GOWNS
SS. S0-$8 ,00
niece of the groom, served as a rehearsal dinner, · Friday

WATCH FOR

GRAND OPENING SOONI

COLUMBUS- Nuptial mass
at St. Mary Magdalene 's
Catholic Church, Saturday ,
Nov. 16, at 1:30 p.m. joined
Miss Deborah Lynne Malone
and William Joseph Holtsberry
in marriage.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Quentin
Malone, 508 Fifth St., Buckeye
Lake, a nd formerly of
Gallipolis. The groom is the son
of Mr. a.1d Mrs. Harold B.
Holtsberry, 3750 Washburn St.,
Columbus.
,·
Rev . William D. tluber read
the ceremony with Larry
Harper, Jr., and Scott Garrison
serving as altar boys.
Given in marriage by her
lather, the bride selected a
chantilly lace gown with scoop
neckline, fitted bodice and
waist and long fitted sleeves. A
ruffled hooped skirt completed
the gown and her chapel length
train was attached. A chapel
length mantilla of tulle was
trimmed in matching chantilly
lace. The bride carried a
bouquet of white carnations
and blue-tipped daisies with
white streamers.
Mrs . Carmela Harper,
cousin of the bride, served as
matron of honor. She was attired in a light blue, sleeveless
cr~pe gown with empire waist.
Her long sleeved jacket was in
dark blue velvet and she wore a
dark blue lace headpiece with
light blue veil. She carried
yellow and blue tipped white
carnations. Miss Stephanie
Wuerch, maid of honor, wore a
gown idepticat' to that of the
1
matron with yellow and blue
tipped white carnations. Miss
Angela Harper, cousin of the
bride, served as junior bridesmaid. Her gown and flowers
·matched those of the other
attendants. Miss Sherrie
Williamson was the flower girl
and wore a royal blue velvet
gown with empire waist and
carried a decorated basket of
rose petals.
Paul Holtsberry served his
brother as bes.t man. Ushers
were John Holtsberry, brother
of the groom, and Robert
Augustine, cousin of the
groom. Chuck Holtsberry,
nephew of the groom, was ringbearer.
A four tiered wedding cake
with blue and yellow roses
highlighted the reception in the
church hall following the
ceremony, Two sheet cakes
flanked the wedding cake,
which was topped by bridal

. NOVEMBER 17th THRU NOV. 23rd

SNACK
BOX

SUNDAY

SHOP FOR-NICE
THINGS TO WEAR ,

• 2 Pieces Olicken
e French Fries
eRoll
No Substitutions

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Try Our Delicious Homemade

Chill and Bean Soup

•IJ

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Wedding vows exchanged

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY,

ro·f

&gt;': .

Mrs. William Holtsberry

CLOSE~··.w

AGOOD PLACE

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ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED- Mr. and Mrs. Leslie
&amp;nail, Crown City, announce the engagement I and ap. ·
pro aching marriage of their daughter, Cathy, to John 1
ThOIDfS Pope, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Pope, Rt. I, Patriot.
Miss Small Is a 1971 graduate of Hannan Trace High Schooi )
and is presently employed by the Cooperative Extens!oll ·
Service. Her fiance is a 1965 grad\tate of Squthwestern High .!
School and a 1970 graduate of Ohio State University with a',
Bachelor of Science Degree from the College of Agriculture; )
He Is employed a~ vocational a'grlcWture instructor at '
Hannan Trace High School. A June wedding is being planned• f

Couple exchanges vows

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··;,-&lt;t ,•

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prepared by Goldie and Jim

2nd &amp;OLIVE ST.

GALLIPOLIS. OHICJ

fOR QUl~K PICKUP SERVICE PHONE 446-2682

(jifty
JWbes ...
for her leisure
Beautiful robes,

. ' to
wraps, peignoirs
warm her after hours.
Soft nylon fleeces

'•I

Miss Rhonda Lynn Stewart

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ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Stewart, Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mr. and David Rees, Rio
Grande, announce the engagement and approaching
marriage of their children, Rhonda Lynn Stewart and David
Lewis Rees. A spring wedding is planned. Miss Stewart is a
student at Preston's Beauty College, Chesapeake. Rees is
employed at Russ Glass Service, Gallipolis.

'

Campers have meet
BY ETHEL ROBINSON
GALLIPOLIS - The French
City Campers met for their
regular session Thursday, Nov.
7, at the Buckeye Rural
Electric Bldg . The business
meeting was conducted by the
president, Art Wroblews ki.
Names were presented for
officers for the coming year ;
president, BiU and Mildred
Seyfried: vice president, Hoke
and
Ethel
Robinson;
secretary, Harland and
Emogene Sanders; treasurer,
Marion and Anna Williams.
They we re unanimously
elected.
Marvin and Elsie Saunders
were voted on to become
members of the French City
Campers. We welcome them.
A book " Hiking [n America 11
which shows the joys of
walking in different parts of
the country was placed in the
Gallia County District Library
in memory of Mrs . George
Ward, mother of Goldie King.
The club voted, that in the
future ; they would place a book
in the library . instead of
sending flowers, in memory of
a deceased person.
The club had decided that as
a conservation project they
would make bird houses and
bird feeders to take care of our
feathered friends this winter.
There was a large display.
these are very attractive. Jim
King, conservation chairman,
was pleased with the work.
figurines. Punch, mints, coffee
and nuts were served by
Marsha Holtsberry, sister-inlaw of the groom, Nancy Webb;
sister of the groom, Barb
Smith, sister of the bride and
Sandy Lynch, cousin of the
bride. Sharon Smith, niece of
the bride, registered guests.
The new Mrs. Holtsberry is a
1973 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and
attended Ohio State School of
Cosmetology. She is ·employed
by the J . C. Penney Co.,
Catalog Distribution Center.
Holtsberry is a 1973 graduate of
Whitehall-Yearling High
School and is ail electrician
wi th Burroughs-Hatfield,
Electric Co.
After Nov. 26, the couple will
be at home at 266 South Powell
Ave., Colwnbus.

It was decided to have a
Christmas party in December
with a $1 gift exchange.
The guest speaker for the
evening was Don Nelson, of the
State Division of Forests, who
spoke on air conservation.
Nelson is a fire patrol pilot,
also pilots the helicopter . His
department is primarily
responsible for forest fires·
they also help with local fires:
He spoke on the air pollution
from fires which causes illness
- is especially hard on the
respiratory system also causes
asthma attacks. He told us that
200 pounds of leaves burned
leaves 50 pounds of pollutan~
in the air. He cautioned about
open fire burning. He does a lot
of spea king to groups,
especially elementary school
childre n.
He said in ·our district there
are 19 fire towers, and 39 in the
state. These help locate fires .
But the best way to rfduce
forest damage is prevention of
fires.
Ray Bush of the local fire ·
department was present at !he
meeting. Ten families were

USE OUR
CHRISTMAS
LAY-AWAY

loRRAINE
Goes to the Mysterio us East
FOR THE MING DYNA STY

l orraine selec ts cloud so. It .l ourlgewci gil !
Antrcn " 111 Nylon Tn co t Jnd &lt;J cJd s
impecca bl e elega nce wrll1 rnl ric~te
Chi
' nese symbo ls on glenrning sa tin . Rt~ vei in the
luxury of the front but toned robe with its

disti nctive collar ami t.:ommoclious side slit pocket
In Bluctte. Bonny Pin k, Dragan Fire or Indigo.
Short robe at $1 4.00 1n XS ·S·M·L, XL at $15.00.
Shift gown at $8.00 in XS·S·M-L, XL at $9.00.
Matching scuffs at $5.00 in S-M-L-XL .

GALLIPOLIS

\

PRE·THANKSGIVING

SALE

I

JUST IN TIME FOR HOLIDAY SEWING

200
FULL BOLTS
•100% POLYESTER

and comfy quilts.

•POLY. &amp; WOOL
ePOLY, &amp; SILK

Luscious colors .. ,

•60"-62" WIDE
eYARN DYES

flattering styles.

eCOLOR COORDINATED
•SOLIDS &amp; FANCIES

o_

MOTOROLA~

1!:,' "BLACK •

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WHITE PORTABLE TV

What a great way to say that you care! Smar·tly styled
personal size portable with built-in side carry handle, single
dial Contrast-Brightness Control, solid state chassis
(except 2 tubes). Beige &amp; brown plastic cabinet.
Model BP3103KN •

DIAM OSoFO
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LARRY'S
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.· ~alliporls, Ohio, .

·

low •••

•

low Prices Tool

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-1 00% POI.YESTER

THREAD
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In blended
Wool/ Nylon/
Acrylic, in

·A Real V.a lue Treat·

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rust and

14K GO.LD MOUNTINGS
Sure YCiu Can. ChGrge II

412-414 ·SECOND
AVE.
.
.GAU,IPOLIS. OHIO

J:ACK . &amp;·JILL_:

·. TAWNEY

JEWELERs ·

'

. "Soothostern Ohio's Largest Chlldr~'s Store
. . Featurlng•Fa'shlons For The Young" .
326 SeCond Ave.
' Phono ~4343 .
, Go Ill lls, 0 .

4%2 Second Ave.
.. Ci&lt;lllipolla, Ollio

'i

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evergreen ·

4

REG. 69'

FOR

100% POLYESTER
NON-ROLL ELASTIC
REG. 59• YARD

'1 00

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YAROS
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KNIT MILL STORE
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA

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Gallipolis, Ohio

·Sat. 9:30til5: 00

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rrut&lt;.;:t•l

Mon.Thur. l=ri . 9:30til9:00p.m.

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BONUS SPECIAL

300 YARD SPOOL

shades of

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Prices

'99.50

WAYSIDE f ·URNIJU·RE

Third &amp; Olive Street

B~dget

Distinctively

Prices St;~rt

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At

FOR-MEN

We didn't invent good tat.te .
We juu never forgot it .

BONUS SPECIAL

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8- The SwldayTimes-Sentlnel,Sw\day, Nov. 17,1974

-

Le~y

Coming
Events

r

Mrs. john Wilhelm Holzer

welcome.

Holzer-Sherer vows read
RICHMOND, Ind. - The
wedding of Miss Ann Elizabeth
Sherer, daughter of Dr. and
Mrs.. Kenneth Sherer, Richmond, Ind., and John Wilhelm
. Holzer, son of Dr. and Mrs.
Charles D. Holzer, 525 First
Ave., Gallipolis, . took place
Oct. 28 at2:30 p.m. in the Stout
Meeting House at Earlham
College, Richmond.
The wedding was performed
under the auspices of the
Whitewater Monthly Meeting
of F'riends with Mr. and Mrs.
Alfred Deutsch and Mr. and
Mrs. Lorton Heusel designated
the overseers.
Barker,
Mrs .
Wayne
vocalist, accompanied by
Garland Anderson sang
11
Wedding Song" and "The
Lord's Prayer." The couple
walked into the meeting house
wgether and after a period of
silence repeated their vows
and exchanged rings.
gown of
The bride wore
unbleached muslin, trimmed
heavily with lace and a
hcodpiece of ivy and bsby's
breath. Her colonial bouquet
was of yellow and bronze
pompons, serena roses and
baby's breath.
Ushers · were Charles E.
Holzer Ill, GainesvUie, Fla.,

brother of the groom, and
Dennis O'Neil, Northampton,
Mass., brother-in-law of the
groom.
A buffet reception for 2110
guests was given at the
Ramada Inn following the
ceremony.
The -bride is a graduate of
Earlham College and is employed as a case worker with
the Wayne County Publlc
Welfare Dept. Holzer is a
graduate of Westtown School, a
boarding school in Pennsylvania,
and
Earlham
College, He is associated with
the Adam H. Bartel Co., in
Richmond.
Out-of-town guests attending
from the Tri-state included the
immediate family of the
groom, Mr. and Mrs. Forrest
Borden, Mr. and Mrs. James
Betz, Dr. and Mrs. Joseph
Brady, Mr. and Mrs. Louis
Pord, Dr. and Mrs. Sigismund
Harder, Att'y. and Mrs.
Michael Gibson, Bluefield, W.
va:, and Mr. and Mrs. John
Rokowsky.
Following a wedding trip to
Brown Collllty, Ind., Mr, and
Mrs. Holzer are residing at
1520 South G St., Richmond.
Photo by Ralph Pyle, Richmond, Ind.

a

Baptist women mee:_t
RIO GRANDE - . The
American Baptist Women of
Calvary Baptist ChW'ch met in
the. fellowship room . of the
Church for the regular monthly
mt!j!IJng, Tuesday, Nov. 12, at
7:30p.m.
• Serving on. the social committee were Mrs. Cecelia
Jenkins and ~rs. MUdrejl
' Winters.
'l'.he devotions were given ,by
Mrs. Jennie Myers. She used
many appropriate poems on
age. Age is a state of mind. It
doesn't matter how iong you
live · but how well. Life is an
inspiration
death a
benediction.
Mrs. Reva Evans had charge
of t)le program, tiUed, "The
Best of Two Worlds." She
reminded members that both
young and old give, In this way
they work in harmony. She
gsve examples o( people who
had :not had the privilege of
perbilps finishing high school.
When given that chance they
fulfill the desires of their life
and . become productive
citizens.
One never knows what one
may do for or againat the older
or yo1111ger. Many ~ttitudes are
callfiht. Even· lack of , confidence and self"steem hurts
someone else. H one,is).stu'e !If
his goals it is a great' help to ·
othel'S.
·
· Parlictpaling in · an interesting discussion were, ·
Cecelia
Jenkins,
Esta
Vollborn, Mildred Winters,
GaYJ11!ll• Lynch, Lorie Ewing,
olerinfe Myers and Irene

VINTON PTC meeting, 6:30
p.m., 50 cents each. Bring
covered dish and table service.
Guest speaker on drugs .
TUESDAY
PEMBROKE Club meets at 8
p.m. with Mrs. Donald
Warehime.
VINTON Masonic L&lt;ldge, 131,
Special FC degree, 7:30 p.m.
PRODUCTS party to raise
funds for Grande Chorale to
make loW' in Southern US, Rio
Grande College Cafeteria, 7:30
p.m. Everyone welcome.
VINTON Friendship Garden
Club meets at the home of
Thelma Barnes, I p.m.
RIO
GRANDE
Mothers
League meets with Mrs.
Margie Ferguson, 7:30p.m.
F AC
interdepartmental
meeting, 8 p.m.
LAFAYETTE Shrine 44,
ceremonial, 7:30 p.m. Bring
covered dish for refreshments
after the meeting. Officers,
please wear formals.
PATRIOT Grange meets at
7:30 p.m. Potluck.
HAPPY Days Senior Citizens
Club meets at Cora, 6 p.m. for
ttu'key supper. Mrs. Dorothy
Shaw, guest speaker.

'

Christmas album
now availabk
ce~06i.nstm~al~:::~;

I

SEARCH CONDUCTED
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Several workers in the
downtown Columbus business
office of Gov.-eiect James A.
Rhodes were ordered to leave
their jobs Priday while the
Ohio Highway Patrol searched
for a bomb. Officials said a
telephone caller had warned a
bomb had been planted in the
office . The patrol found
nothing .

GALL!PO!JS - Mrs. Mary
E. Patterson, state legislation
chainnan of The Ohio Business
and Professional Women's
Club, will be the guest speaker
at the regular meeting of the
Gallipolis Club, Monday, Nov.
18, at 6:30p.m. at Oscar's.
Mrs. Patterson was educated
in the Salem Public School
System. An alwnni of Mount
Union College, Alliance, she
majored in chemistry and
. biology. Her internship was
served at the Alliance City
Hospital School of Medical
Technology. She is employed at
Columbiana
Medical
Laboratory, Inc . as chief
technologist, and supervisor of

suggests:
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WHI'nSWAN
UNI"O"MS

Serving her second term as
state legislation chairwoman,
Mrs. Patterson has served her
local club in all offices and
committees, likewise served on
the district level.
She is a board member of the
Eastern Ohlo Heart Ass'n.
League of Women Voters and
charter members of WYCA.
Married to John "Bert"
Patterson, she has two
children, age 17 and 15. They
live at 482 West Pidgeon Rd.,
Salem.
The legislation committee is
in charge of arrangements for
the meeting with Mrs. Madge
Neal as chairwoman:

DAh THOMAS
AND SON

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•Since 1859 ·

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£COtiQM¥ ORIGIIflUS

Everything Is
Guaraliteed
To Satisfy.
Or Money
Back ·
.
A&amp;P

~--!

FROZEN

SELECT

VEGETABLES
eG.REEN BEANS
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ott: '..,,

•PEAS.

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MONDAY
.POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce, noon at Meigs Inn.
FAMILY Night supper ,
Merchants who are parMiddleport Pirst United
ticipating in the annual
Presbyterian Church, 6:30
Christmas program are urged
to attend as well as other inp.m. at the church. Meat,
beverage and dessert furteresled merchants.
TIJESDAY
nished. Members to take
covered dish and their own
CHESTER Council 323,
table service.
Daughters of America, 7:30
MONDAY
p.m. at the hall. Members to
MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7:30
wear white for initiatory work.
p.m.,attheschool.Mrs.CourtWOMEN'S Auxiliary ,
ney Knight's third grade
Velerans Memorial Hospital,
presents program. Dr. Harold cafeteria, 7:30 p.m. meeting.
White elephant sale.
Brown, speaker.
RACINE PTO, 7:~9,P·~·. at :' OHIO Eta Phi Chapter, Beta
the ~rade school; babySitting_ ,, Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30p.m.,
prov1ded; everyone welcome. Colwnbus and Southern Ohio
. ORGANIZATIONAL meet- Electric Co , Cultural report by
mg of Southern Local Sch~l Debbie Buck on "All Together
Dtstnct
Gtrls
Athletic Now," and a film on planned
Boosters, 7:30p.m. at the hi~h parenthood. Sandi Sargent and
school; all parents. and 10 • Karen Stanley, hostesses.
terested persons invtted.
THEODORUS CoWlclll7, D .• REV!VALnowinprogressat
of A anniversary observance .',: ;Rutland Church of God through
Potl~ck dinner at 6 p.m. with · :t-1":'· . 23. Rev. Chester Estep,
members to lake a covered Chillicothe, evangelist, 7 p.m.
Everyone welcome.
RACINE Lodge 461 P&amp;AM
University of Toledo, is em- special meeting, 7,:30 p.m.
.
ployed at Lasalle's. The groom Work in EA degree .
CHESTER
Council
323,
D
of
attended the University of
7:30 p.m., initiation. All
Toledo, served with the United
Slates Navy and is employed at ,members asked to attend and
wear white.
Benton Sanilatl :n.
SOUTHERN
Athletic
After a wedding trip Ill Pt.
Lauderdale, Pia. they will be Boosters, 7:30 p.m ., high
school, Racine. Everyone
living in Toled~.
invited.
!. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .
GROUP U, Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church,
Thanksgiving dinner at
Oscar's, Gallipolis. Members
to meet at the home of Mrs.
Dorothy Morris, 6:15 to go to
Gallipolis, and then will return
there for business meeting.
MIDDLEPORT - Pomeroy
Area Branch of the American
Association · of University
Women , 7:30p.m. at the Meigs
High School Library, (one
week earlier than regular
meeting date) . Program Ill be
presented by Mrs. Sharron
Helen, AAUW secretary, and
the Athens Branch program
chairwoman. Plans to be made
for annual Christmas brunch.
Refreshments .

son
DRI~KS

HOliDAYS
FROM OUR

FINE

FAMU..Y OF

PRODUCI'S

you'w
(·U·se it· ~isa·l~)

•,

'. p'

BRIDGE PLAZA

•

Mon. thru Sat,.', 10 til9
;:sunday 1 Til s

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ROYAL CROWN
BOmiNG ·
COMP.ANY ,

Commercial
&amp;
Savin
Court
St. GaDijJoJi$, OhiO

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FIFTH&amp; MILL ST•
MIDDLIPoR1', OHIO

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dleport, or taken to the Davis Hunter . Members responded to
InsUrance Office, Pomeroy . roll call by commenting on a
The 3f1nual Christmas party • Thanksg iving of long ago. Two
will be at the home of Mrs . readin gs given by Mrs .
Waller Crooks. Members will Thomas we re " Thank You"
have a $3 gift exchange and co- and "The Art of Thimkshostesses will be Mrs. Daniel giving:."
Thomas and Mrs. James
Mrs. Walter Crooks com~
Sheel.s.
men ted ·on her .arrangement of
Earliest Thanksgivings as an
the month which featured a
expression of hwnan thanks to gold candle with d1'ied leaves,
God were reviewed by Mrs. berries and pine.
Bert Grimm, Meigs County
A dessert course was.served
Garden Club contact chair- by the hostesses, Mi-s. Davi ~
woman , as a feature of the and Mrs. Pratt . Mrs. Ralph
program . She presented the McKenzie, a guest, was award·
Thanksgiving sermon, ed the door prize.
"Fantasy ." by Dr . Ri('hard

.

.

SOUTHERN Local Band
Boosters, 7:30 p.m ., high
school, Racine.
JUNIOR Unit of Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion, meets 7 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. ·Harry Davis.
WEDNESDAY
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
home of Mrs. Ed Bar~ls.
Minersville, 7:30 p.m. Each
member to make and take a
Christmas arrangement for the
Athens Mental Health Center.
PAST PRESIDENTS,
American Legion Awdliaty,
Drew Webster Post 39, 7:30
p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Isabelle Couch with Mrs. Ellen
Couch as co-hostess.
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
Beta Si8'Jl8 Phi Sorority, 7:30
p.m., Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. with Mrs.
Joan
Lancaster,
home
as
speaker .
economist,
Mothers of members to be
guests . Mrs.- Ruth Rlffie and
Mrs. Beverly Long to prekent
cultural report.

~

Mrs. Kelly has club
MIDDLEPORT - A luncheon at the home of Mrs. Tom
Kelly preceded the November
meeting of the Ladies
Auxiliary of the Middleport
United Pentecostal Church.
The chicken and noodle
luncheon was followed by the
business session whjch opened
with prayer by . Mrs. Linda
Knitlel, president. Mrs. Joyce
Sauters gave the secretary's
report, and the sale of several
items including knives and dish
cloth calendars was discussed .
The group also discussed
quilting as a project. A handmade baby quilt was presented
Ill Mrs. Kelly by Mrs. May
Mason.
Games were played with
prized going to Mrs . Sauters,
Mrs. Amanda Lee and Mrs.
Mason . Plans were made for a

spaghetti dinner at the church
alter completion of the new
kitchen . The
December
meeting was planned and
members will draw for secret
sisters at that time. The
meeting will be at the home of,
Mrs . Michsel Zerkle and the
husbands will be invited to join]
their wives for a dinner and gift
exchange.
Mrs. Mason, Mrs. Dora Holly
ljlld Mrs. Alice Priddy, related
experiences of their early
years in the church . Prayer by
Mrs . Ruth Gosney concluded
the meeting. Attending besides
those named were Mrs . Linda
Acree., Mrs. Velma Keller,
Mrs. Mabel Pearman, Mrs.
Manda Eastman , Mrs. Jean
Cunningham, Pal Sauters,
Carol Kroft, Tony Knittel , Mrs.
Torrence Lawrence and her
daughler .
1

Hearthstone class names kaders._
MIDDLEPORT - Officers
were elected and several
holiday projects planned
during the Tuesday night
meeting of the Hearthstone
Class of the Middleport First
Baptist Church at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hubbard .
Elected for the year were
Edison Baker, president; John
Werner, vice president; Mrs.
Allen Hughes, secretary;
Milton Hood, treasurer; and
Mrs. Willis Anthony, cards and
flowers.
It was voted to make a
contribution w the Middleport
firemen for Christmas, w send
gifl.'l to the Meigs County
children at the Gallla County
Home, and to parUcipate in the
food basket project of the
Meigs County Ministerial
Association.
· The class also agre~d to
decorate the inside of the

church for Chrisimas and to
buy three poinsettias for the
sanctuary .
The
annual
Christmas party will be at the
home of Mr . and Mrs. John
Werner and there will be a gift
exchange.
Mrs. Paul · Smart gave
devOtions using the meditation,
"Thanksgiving Sermon
Fantasy." For the program
each member gave a reading
or poem on Than~sglving.
Refreshments were served.

Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow W Engk

October ceremony held
MIDDLEPORT Miss her fa ther. Mrs. Charles RathDebora Louise Rathburn , burn, Tiffin, the bride's sisterdaughter of Mrs. Betty Rath- in~law, was the matron of
burn, Tiffin, and Rex Tath- honor, and Mrs. Calvin Dowell,
burn, Fostoria, and Woodrow Middleport, and Mrs. Gary
Wilson Engle, Jr ., son of Mr, Cooper, Racine, sisters of the
and Mrs . Woodrow Engle, bridegroom,
were brides,
Middleport, were married Oct. maids.
26 at the Middleport United
Dave Acree, Harrlsonville,
Penlecostal Church.
atlended the groom as best
Rev. William Knittel of- man . Seating the guests were
ficiated at the ceremony. The Charles Rathburn, Tiffin,
bride was given in marriage by brother of the bride, and
Ronald Thomas, Harrison viDe.
A reception was held
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. following the ceremony in the
Edison Baker, Mr. and Mrs. Orchid Room at Pomeroy.
Willis Anthony, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Engle Is a 1974 graduate
Paul Smart, Mr. and Mrs . of Colwnbian High School. Her
Allen Hughes, the Rev . and husband attended Middleport
Mrs. Skaggs, Mr. and Mrs. HJgh School, served four years .
. John Werner , Mr. and Mrs. in the U.S. Army, and is now in
David Darst, Mrs . Louise construction 'lj'Ork.
Davis and Mr. and Mrs. Milton
The newlyweds are residing
Hood.
in Middleport.
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FOR THE HOLlO A YS

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PARTS
AND
LA BOll

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YOUR

If you've

REGULAR '~1.00
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dish; meat will he furnished .
All charier members urged to
attend.
OPEN House, Chester PTA
. meet, 7 p.m., at the school.
Teachers will be in their rooms
to answer questions of visitors ;
business meeting, 8; refreshmenl.'l.

FOR THE

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The Akove
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If ever there was a man who wanted to keep track of his
money, it was Scrooge. Too bad he didn't:h'ave Ma~tE!t. Charge,;_
.
·Bob Cratchit would have had more days·
Master Charge provides an accurate monthly rec()rd of wliat
you spehd and Where. S? it beats the Dickens out of cash.

.CORN

99~

full bishop sleeves with white
cuffs. Bridesmaids, Peggy Jo
Walczak, sister of the groom
and Alice Buehrle were attired
in identicai ·gowns of a darker
blue. The attendants wore bl~e
satin ribbons in their hairand
carried bouquets of blue lipped
carnations with blue satin
ribbons. The gowns were.
made, the bride's and matron
of honor's by their mother,
. Miss Walczak's by her mother
and Miss Buerhle's by her.
Best man was Jan Wiemer and
ushers were Jiunes Walczak,
brother of the groom, and
Mark Burgan, cousin of the
bride.
The mother of the bride wore ·
a long sleeved shirtwaist gown
of champagne crepe. Her
.,eorsage_was yellow carnations.
IJ'he moi.her of the groom wore
a short sleeved shirtwaist gown of rose and
. silver. metallic knit . She
'lj'Ore pin~ carnations. Mrs.
John Smith, grandmother of
the bride wore a pink floral
dress and white carnations.
Miss Tammy Walczak, niece of
the groom distributed the rice,
and guests were registered by
Mrs. John Burgan, cousin of
the bride.
Immediately following the
ceremony a reception was held
at Lakevue Hall, Perrysburg.
The five tiered wedding cake,
decorated with clusters of blue
forget-me-nots and topped with
three wedding bells was served
by Mrs. Richard Maier, aunt of
the bride, and Mrs . Burgan.
The bride, a graduate of the

SUNDAY
REVIVAL at Bethlehem
Baptist ChW'ch jWlction of SR
124 and 338 in Great Bend
SWlday through Dec. I. Rev.
Bud Hatfield, evangelist. Earl
Shuler, pastor. Public invited.
FALL open house for
prospective students and their
parents, Holzer Medical Center
School of Nursing, Pirst Ave.,
Gallipolis, 2 p.m.

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Ph.' 41t,7653

ROSSFORD - Melinda Ann
Walter and Mark Stanley
Walcza~ were married at
Rossford United Methodist
ChUrch,' Rossford, Nov . 9, in a
double ring ceremony performed by Rev . Grant Montgomery. The bride is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Homer R. Walter, Oregon Rd.,
Toledo, and the granddaughter
of Mrs/:&lt; ·John A. Smith ,
Pomer~;~ ·~d Mr. and Mrs .
Homer [\V,. Walter, Gallipolis.
The groofifls the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Walczak, Brophy
Dr., Toledo.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a gown
of white satinessa with a
detachable train . The .scoop
neckline was edged with Irish
rose lace and the front of, the
skirt was trimmed iVlt6
alternating wide and narrow
bands of the same lace embroidered
with
crystal
rocailles accented with small
bows of blue satin. The cuff of
the full bishop sleeves was
trimmed with the same lace.
Blue satin ribbon accented the
empire winstline and formed a
tailored "oow at the front. Her
fingertiJ&gt; veil of illusion feU
from · ,j : crown of the same
embroidered lace and ribbon .
The bride wore a single strand
of pearls and carried a bouquet
of white roses, b,a by's breath
and fern.
Mrs. Suella Wright was
matron of honor for her sister
and wore an empire styled
gown of blue double knit with
lace trimmed white collar and

"Se.-ving you since 1936"
Gallipolis, Ohio

Peter. Principle
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Nuptial vows exchanged

contributed ' their unique
talents, offering 15 Christmas
favorites to suit every listening
mood, Kelley adds.
The "Carols &amp; Candlelight"
album will be sold at more thsn
4,000 Goodyeal- service stores
and dealershi~s.

2

chairwoman, Mrs . Errol
Conroy , Mrs. Kenneth Ams~
bary an1 Mrs . Arthur Strauss .
Plans were made for the club
to participate in the Meigs
County Christmas flower show,
"Christmas in the Air," at the
Pomeroy Elementary School,
Dec. 7 and 8. Announced at the
meeting was the Nov , 21
" Holiday Happening" to lake
place at the St . Paul 's
Lutheran Church under
sponsorship of the Mei gs
County Extension Service.
Mrs .
Harold
Lohse .
president, conducted the.
meeting during which time
members voted to take part in
"Operation Santa Claus" by
giving gifts to the 24 Meigs
CoWlty men and women who
are patients at the Athens
Mental Health Center, and by
making and delivering six
Christmas arrangements. The
gifts are to be either delivered
w Mrs. Grace Pratt, Mid-

Mrs. Mark Stanley Walczak

OPEN: Monday&amp; Frlday-9:30 Tlll8:00
Tuesday, Wednesday, Saturday 9:30tlll5: 00
Thursday-9:30·tlll 12 Noon

"&amp;
·~

by Eric Sloane

COurt St.
.
O.lllpolls, Olil• 4U31 ,

Come in now and make your selections while we still ha~e '!II
styles, colors and sizes to choose from. Then put 1t m
Layaway 'till Christmas. We welcome your BankAmericard
ana Master Charge.

HUNTING
BOOTS
.

RodMcKuen

4~

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SMOCKS &amp; TOPS
FOR CHRISTMAS

services.

LB.
PKG.

While the contest was not
held last year due to the energy
crisis, it had been the
cooperative effort of the two
garden clubs and the Middleport Chamber of Commerce
w make the village more
festive for the holidays for
many years before . While the
ArnaleW' Gardeners voled to
cooperate with the contest, it
was emphasized that lavish
lighting is not intended and
, creativity is encouraged in line
with the energy shortage.
Named to the committee
were Mrs. · Edgar Reynolds,

•

guest speaker

Willi(

contest.

Mrs . Nora Rice , secretary -

MEN'S ALL WEATHER .
INSULATED

CALEN.DARS

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MIDDLEPORT
A
Christmas lighting contest will
be held in Middleport and
meetin g Wednesday night at
the home of Mrs . Harry Davis,
the Middleport Amateur
Gardeners appointed a committee which will work with
representatives of the Middleport Garden Club on the

FOR EVERY ROOM IN YOUR HOME

BPW to hear

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L(ghts to glow for yule ·contest

DECORATNE ACCESSORIES

MARY PATTERSON

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NOVEMBER 17th ONLY

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Astrological
Chiid's Wolilbook
Cyndy's Animal
.1 Remember America

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A WHOLE SHOP FUll OF UNUS_l}AL

SUNDAY SPECIAL
~ 1

Mlddleport Christmas Gift-A-Rama Starts Monday

Peddler's Pan~

, ~ produced is heading for the 21Brannon.
million-copy sales mark with
h
Some of the questions for
discussion were, How can older Goody~ release of t is
year's ''Carols and Canwomen encourage younger dlelight.n "
-...........
women to find their own
idenUties? Do we have Wl·
The albwn is Goodyear's
fulfilled dreams? How can we !4th Great Songs of Christmas
offering since 1961.
,
identifywithotherage.groups?
John p ,, Kelley, Goodyear's
The program clQSed by the
reading pf a litany, "Older · vice president of advertising,
says despite a price increase
from $1:2:&gt; 'to $1.50 per album,
Women, YoWlger Women."
-The group voted to support a Goodyear expects minimwn
child through World Vision.
sales of a half-11\illion copies
The white cross chall'woman, for the 1974 edition. Last year's
Katlrryn Jones, set the date of . sales put the album that turn,.
Nov. 29tomeetat the church to tire stores into music meccas
make roller b~dages.
at Christmastime well over the
Cecelia · Jenkms and Mrs. 26-million m k
Mildred Winters served a
"The 'Car':,'ls; side of the
dessert and sandwich course, album . features traditional '
tea and coffee, from a table, songs and religious music b~
centered with an arrangement such artists as Mahalia
of mwns, grapes and candles. Jackson, Andre Kostelanetz;
Present were Mrs. GayneUe Julie Andrews and John
Lynch, president, Mrs. Reva Davidson," Kelley sayg. "The
Evans, Mrs. _Joyce Murphy, flip side, 'Candlelight,' offers
Mrs. Lorte Ewmg, Mrs. Jennie- contemporary sounds by Andy
Myers, Mrs. Kathryn Jones, Williams Doris Day Percy
·Mrs. Esb! Vollborn, Mrs. Irene Faith, . 'Enoch Light and
Brannon and the hostesses,
th
.,
• li J ki
d Mr
o ers.
Mrs Cece
·
a en ns an
s.
A t0 tal of 14 artists have
Mildred Winters.

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FALL
open
house for
prospective students and their
parents, Holzer Medical Center
School of Nursing, 2 p.m.
LAP AYETTE
Shrine 44
rehearsal for officers, 2 p.m.
VICTORY party for Ron
James at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Wright, Bob
McCormick Rd., 12 noon, for
interested Democrats and
supporters., Bring covered dish
and table service.
-MONDAY
GALLIPO!JS BPW meets at
Oscar's, 6:30p.m. Mrs. Mary
E. Patterson, state legislation
chairwoman, guest speaker.
REVIVAL tonight through
Sunday at the Church of God of
Prophecy, O.J. White Rd., 7:30
p.m. Rev. Bernie Levesque,
guest speaker. Everyone ·

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committee meet$

POMEROY - The com- treasurer ; and Mrs. Phyllis
mittee for the prumotfon of the Skinner, reporter .
levy for the . operation of the ' Meetings were 1set for the
Mei~s ComniWlily School for ' firstThursday of e~~h month in ·
the mentally retarded mel . the Meigs County tCourthouse. ·
Priday night at the Pomerpy ' It was decided that every
Pirst Baptist Church and voted organization in he county.
I
I
fo rontiriue as an organized including churches, civic
committee for the mentally , groups, lodges, and youth
retarded .
groups will be invited to send at
'
J.las
.)
.
Purpose of the committee least one representative to
will be to support and strength- become a member of the
en the educational op - committee. A vote of thanks
·portWlities for the mentally was extended to the Pomeroy
retarded and lo keep the lines Baptist Church officials for use
\
of commWlication open be- of the facilities and a token gift
tween the school authorities will be sent.
and the people of the county.
. Attending the meeting
Officers elected were Mrs. besides those named were Mrs. ·- STA&gt;Tf: &amp; THIRD--:------GALLIPOLIS, OMIG,_ __.
Fay Sauer, chairwoman; Mrs .
Ruth Karr, vice chairwoman ;

SUNDAY loaTH Anniversary of New
Hope Church, SR 554, four
miles from Bidwell. Morning
service at 11. Afternoon
speaker. Special singing.

c \.

Roush, Mrs. Margaret .'Mrs. Wlima Par~,~. Mrs.
a Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Maxine Whitehead, Mrs. Grace
Clarence Might and David'. • Weber 'and Man~ing Webster.

•

7 :-Th~Sunday Times-Sentlnel,SWlday, Nov. 17,1974

Party given
for patients

ON 100% SOLID STATE PHILCO ~ COLOR TV CONSOLE.

"For two years after delivery,
we'll fix anything that's our fault."

MIDDLEPORT - Fifty ·
eight patients at tl1e Athens
Mental Health Center were
guests at the Tuesday night
party
there
by
the
Homebuilders Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ.
Tile group enjoyed hymn
singing, and refreshments of
sandwiches, potato chips,
candy, Kool-Aid and fruit
provided by the class. Games
were played with prizes being
awarded . Going from the
church were ' Mrs. Clyda
Allensworth, Mrs. Reva Beach,
Mrs. Dorothy Roach and
Trudy, Lawrence Stewart, Bud
Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. George
Glaze, Trey and Clinton, Mrs.
Coleen Van Meter, Mrs.
Shirley Baumgardner and Mrs.
Nora Rice.

Sr. Citizens
Cakndar
POMEROY - The Meigs
Senior Citizens Center in the
Pomeroy Junior High School is
open 9 a.m.-4 ·p.m. Monday
through Prlday.
Activltl~s include:
Monday, Nov. 18, Crafts
must be in for bazaar; Square
Dancing, 1-3 p.m.
Tuesday, Nov. 19, Cards and
Games, Chorus, 12:3{).2 p.m .
Wednesday, Nov. 20, Set up
for Bazaar, Quilting.
Thursday, _Nov. 21, Christmas Bazaar, 10 a .m.-3 p.ll).
Priday, Nov. 22, Christmas
Bazaar, 10 a:m.•a p.m .;
Bowling, 1-3 p.m.
Senior Citizens Lunch
program , 11 :30 a .m.-12 :30
p.m., Monday through Friday .

Model C2511EMA. Early American. Finished to ri1alch Plank Maple.

PHILCOMATICTM IltcOLOR TV
with "Hands-Off" Automati'c Tuning
Truly automatic! "Hands-Off" tuning locks In
all 5 vital elements of a good color picturec&lt;:&gt;lor, tir1t, brightness, &lt;;:ont,rast and automati c
line tuning.
• 100% solid state chassis with 14 replaceable
plug-in modules, 8 integrated Circuits
• Super Black Matrix picture tube
• Phllco~ Picture Guard System
• 70-posi'tion "Channel-Set" UHF selecto r
• 75-ohm coaxial oable TV antenna jack

2

FOREMA.N·,
.

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

S':lagonal plciure

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8- The SwldayTimes-Sentlnel,Sw\day, Nov. 17,1974

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Le~y

Coming
Events

r

Mrs. john Wilhelm Holzer

welcome.

Holzer-Sherer vows read
RICHMOND, Ind. - The
wedding of Miss Ann Elizabeth
Sherer, daughter of Dr. and
Mrs.. Kenneth Sherer, Richmond, Ind., and John Wilhelm
. Holzer, son of Dr. and Mrs.
Charles D. Holzer, 525 First
Ave., Gallipolis, . took place
Oct. 28 at2:30 p.m. in the Stout
Meeting House at Earlham
College, Richmond.
The wedding was performed
under the auspices of the
Whitewater Monthly Meeting
of F'riends with Mr. and Mrs.
Alfred Deutsch and Mr. and
Mrs. Lorton Heusel designated
the overseers.
Barker,
Mrs .
Wayne
vocalist, accompanied by
Garland Anderson sang
11
Wedding Song" and "The
Lord's Prayer." The couple
walked into the meeting house
wgether and after a period of
silence repeated their vows
and exchanged rings.
gown of
The bride wore
unbleached muslin, trimmed
heavily with lace and a
hcodpiece of ivy and bsby's
breath. Her colonial bouquet
was of yellow and bronze
pompons, serena roses and
baby's breath.
Ushers · were Charles E.
Holzer Ill, GainesvUie, Fla.,

brother of the groom, and
Dennis O'Neil, Northampton,
Mass., brother-in-law of the
groom.
A buffet reception for 2110
guests was given at the
Ramada Inn following the
ceremony.
The -bride is a graduate of
Earlham College and is employed as a case worker with
the Wayne County Publlc
Welfare Dept. Holzer is a
graduate of Westtown School, a
boarding school in Pennsylvania,
and
Earlham
College, He is associated with
the Adam H. Bartel Co., in
Richmond.
Out-of-town guests attending
from the Tri-state included the
immediate family of the
groom, Mr. and Mrs. Forrest
Borden, Mr. and Mrs. James
Betz, Dr. and Mrs. Joseph
Brady, Mr. and Mrs. Louis
Pord, Dr. and Mrs. Sigismund
Harder, Att'y. and Mrs.
Michael Gibson, Bluefield, W.
va:, and Mr. and Mrs. John
Rokowsky.
Following a wedding trip to
Brown Collllty, Ind., Mr, and
Mrs. Holzer are residing at
1520 South G St., Richmond.
Photo by Ralph Pyle, Richmond, Ind.

a

Baptist women mee:_t
RIO GRANDE - . The
American Baptist Women of
Calvary Baptist ChW'ch met in
the. fellowship room . of the
Church for the regular monthly
mt!j!IJng, Tuesday, Nov. 12, at
7:30p.m.
• Serving on. the social committee were Mrs. Cecelia
Jenkins and ~rs. MUdrejl
' Winters.
'l'.he devotions were given ,by
Mrs. Jennie Myers. She used
many appropriate poems on
age. Age is a state of mind. It
doesn't matter how iong you
live · but how well. Life is an
inspiration
death a
benediction.
Mrs. Reva Evans had charge
of t)le program, tiUed, "The
Best of Two Worlds." She
reminded members that both
young and old give, In this way
they work in harmony. She
gsve examples o( people who
had :not had the privilege of
perbilps finishing high school.
When given that chance they
fulfill the desires of their life
and . become productive
citizens.
One never knows what one
may do for or againat the older
or yo1111ger. Many ~ttitudes are
callfiht. Even· lack of , confidence and self"steem hurts
someone else. H one,is).stu'e !If
his goals it is a great' help to ·
othel'S.
·
· Parlictpaling in · an interesting discussion were, ·
Cecelia
Jenkins,
Esta
Vollborn, Mildred Winters,
GaYJ11!ll• Lynch, Lorie Ewing,
olerinfe Myers and Irene

VINTON PTC meeting, 6:30
p.m., 50 cents each. Bring
covered dish and table service.
Guest speaker on drugs .
TUESDAY
PEMBROKE Club meets at 8
p.m. with Mrs. Donald
Warehime.
VINTON Masonic L&lt;ldge, 131,
Special FC degree, 7:30 p.m.
PRODUCTS party to raise
funds for Grande Chorale to
make loW' in Southern US, Rio
Grande College Cafeteria, 7:30
p.m. Everyone welcome.
VINTON Friendship Garden
Club meets at the home of
Thelma Barnes, I p.m.
RIO
GRANDE
Mothers
League meets with Mrs.
Margie Ferguson, 7:30p.m.
F AC
interdepartmental
meeting, 8 p.m.
LAFAYETTE Shrine 44,
ceremonial, 7:30 p.m. Bring
covered dish for refreshments
after the meeting. Officers,
please wear formals.
PATRIOT Grange meets at
7:30 p.m. Potluck.
HAPPY Days Senior Citizens
Club meets at Cora, 6 p.m. for
ttu'key supper. Mrs. Dorothy
Shaw, guest speaker.

'

Christmas album
now availabk
ce~06i.nstm~al~:::~;

I

SEARCH CONDUCTED
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Several workers in the
downtown Columbus business
office of Gov.-eiect James A.
Rhodes were ordered to leave
their jobs Priday while the
Ohio Highway Patrol searched
for a bomb. Officials said a
telephone caller had warned a
bomb had been planted in the
office . The patrol found
nothing .

GALL!PO!JS - Mrs. Mary
E. Patterson, state legislation
chainnan of The Ohio Business
and Professional Women's
Club, will be the guest speaker
at the regular meeting of the
Gallipolis Club, Monday, Nov.
18, at 6:30p.m. at Oscar's.
Mrs. Patterson was educated
in the Salem Public School
System. An alwnni of Mount
Union College, Alliance, she
majored in chemistry and
. biology. Her internship was
served at the Alliance City
Hospital School of Medical
Technology. She is employed at
Columbiana
Medical
Laboratory, Inc . as chief
technologist, and supervisor of

suggests:
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WHI'nSWAN
UNI"O"MS

Serving her second term as
state legislation chairwoman,
Mrs. Patterson has served her
local club in all offices and
committees, likewise served on
the district level.
She is a board member of the
Eastern Ohlo Heart Ass'n.
League of Women Voters and
charter members of WYCA.
Married to John "Bert"
Patterson, she has two
children, age 17 and 15. They
live at 482 West Pidgeon Rd.,
Salem.
The legislation committee is
in charge of arrangements for
the meeting with Mrs. Madge
Neal as chairwoman:

DAh THOMAS
AND SON

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•Since 1859 ·

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£COtiQM¥ ORIGIIflUS

Everything Is
Guaraliteed
To Satisfy.
Or Money
Back ·
.
A&amp;P

~--!

FROZEN

SELECT

VEGETABLES
eG.REEN BEANS
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ott: '..,,

•PEAS.

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MONDAY
.POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce, noon at Meigs Inn.
FAMILY Night supper ,
Merchants who are parMiddleport Pirst United
ticipating in the annual
Presbyterian Church, 6:30
Christmas program are urged
to attend as well as other inp.m. at the church. Meat,
beverage and dessert furteresled merchants.
TIJESDAY
nished. Members to take
covered dish and their own
CHESTER Council 323,
table service.
Daughters of America, 7:30
MONDAY
p.m. at the hall. Members to
MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7:30
wear white for initiatory work.
p.m.,attheschool.Mrs.CourtWOMEN'S Auxiliary ,
ney Knight's third grade
Velerans Memorial Hospital,
presents program. Dr. Harold cafeteria, 7:30 p.m. meeting.
White elephant sale.
Brown, speaker.
RACINE PTO, 7:~9,P·~·. at :' OHIO Eta Phi Chapter, Beta
the ~rade school; babySitting_ ,, Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30p.m.,
prov1ded; everyone welcome. Colwnbus and Southern Ohio
. ORGANIZATIONAL meet- Electric Co , Cultural report by
mg of Southern Local Sch~l Debbie Buck on "All Together
Dtstnct
Gtrls
Athletic Now," and a film on planned
Boosters, 7:30p.m. at the hi~h parenthood. Sandi Sargent and
school; all parents. and 10 • Karen Stanley, hostesses.
terested persons invtted.
THEODORUS CoWlclll7, D .• REV!VALnowinprogressat
of A anniversary observance .',: ;Rutland Church of God through
Potl~ck dinner at 6 p.m. with · :t-1":'· . 23. Rev. Chester Estep,
members to lake a covered Chillicothe, evangelist, 7 p.m.
Everyone welcome.
RACINE Lodge 461 P&amp;AM
University of Toledo, is em- special meeting, 7,:30 p.m.
.
ployed at Lasalle's. The groom Work in EA degree .
CHESTER
Council
323,
D
of
attended the University of
7:30 p.m., initiation. All
Toledo, served with the United
Slates Navy and is employed at ,members asked to attend and
wear white.
Benton Sanilatl :n.
SOUTHERN
Athletic
After a wedding trip Ill Pt.
Lauderdale, Pia. they will be Boosters, 7:30 p.m ., high
school, Racine. Everyone
living in Toled~.
invited.
!. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .
GROUP U, Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church,
Thanksgiving dinner at
Oscar's, Gallipolis. Members
to meet at the home of Mrs.
Dorothy Morris, 6:15 to go to
Gallipolis, and then will return
there for business meeting.
MIDDLEPORT - Pomeroy
Area Branch of the American
Association · of University
Women , 7:30p.m. at the Meigs
High School Library, (one
week earlier than regular
meeting date) . Program Ill be
presented by Mrs. Sharron
Helen, AAUW secretary, and
the Athens Branch program
chairwoman. Plans to be made
for annual Christmas brunch.
Refreshments .

son
DRI~KS

HOliDAYS
FROM OUR

FINE

FAMU..Y OF

PRODUCI'S

you'w
(·U·se it· ~isa·l~)

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BRIDGE PLAZA

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Mon. thru Sat,.', 10 til9
;:sunday 1 Til s

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ROYAL CROWN
BOmiNG ·
COMP.ANY ,

Commercial
&amp;
Savin
Court
St. GaDijJoJi$, OhiO

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FIFTH&amp; MILL ST•
MIDDLIPoR1', OHIO

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dleport, or taken to the Davis Hunter . Members responded to
InsUrance Office, Pomeroy . roll call by commenting on a
The 3f1nual Christmas party • Thanksg iving of long ago. Two
will be at the home of Mrs . readin gs given by Mrs .
Waller Crooks. Members will Thomas we re " Thank You"
have a $3 gift exchange and co- and "The Art of Thimkshostesses will be Mrs. Daniel giving:."
Thomas and Mrs. James
Mrs. Walter Crooks com~
Sheel.s.
men ted ·on her .arrangement of
Earliest Thanksgivings as an
the month which featured a
expression of hwnan thanks to gold candle with d1'ied leaves,
God were reviewed by Mrs. berries and pine.
Bert Grimm, Meigs County
A dessert course was.served
Garden Club contact chair- by the hostesses, Mi-s. Davi ~
woman , as a feature of the and Mrs. Pratt . Mrs. Ralph
program . She presented the McKenzie, a guest, was award·
Thanksgiving sermon, ed the door prize.
"Fantasy ." by Dr . Ri('hard

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SOUTHERN Local Band
Boosters, 7:30 p.m ., high
school, Racine.
JUNIOR Unit of Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion, meets 7 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. ·Harry Davis.
WEDNESDAY
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
home of Mrs. Ed Bar~ls.
Minersville, 7:30 p.m. Each
member to make and take a
Christmas arrangement for the
Athens Mental Health Center.
PAST PRESIDENTS,
American Legion Awdliaty,
Drew Webster Post 39, 7:30
p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Isabelle Couch with Mrs. Ellen
Couch as co-hostess.
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
Beta Si8'Jl8 Phi Sorority, 7:30
p.m., Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. with Mrs.
Joan
Lancaster,
home
as
speaker .
economist,
Mothers of members to be
guests . Mrs.- Ruth Rlffie and
Mrs. Beverly Long to prekent
cultural report.

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Mrs. Kelly has club
MIDDLEPORT - A luncheon at the home of Mrs. Tom
Kelly preceded the November
meeting of the Ladies
Auxiliary of the Middleport
United Pentecostal Church.
The chicken and noodle
luncheon was followed by the
business session whjch opened
with prayer by . Mrs. Linda
Knitlel, president. Mrs. Joyce
Sauters gave the secretary's
report, and the sale of several
items including knives and dish
cloth calendars was discussed .
The group also discussed
quilting as a project. A handmade baby quilt was presented
Ill Mrs. Kelly by Mrs. May
Mason.
Games were played with
prized going to Mrs . Sauters,
Mrs. Amanda Lee and Mrs.
Mason . Plans were made for a

spaghetti dinner at the church
alter completion of the new
kitchen . The
December
meeting was planned and
members will draw for secret
sisters at that time. The
meeting will be at the home of,
Mrs . Michsel Zerkle and the
husbands will be invited to join]
their wives for a dinner and gift
exchange.
Mrs. Mason, Mrs. Dora Holly
ljlld Mrs. Alice Priddy, related
experiences of their early
years in the church . Prayer by
Mrs . Ruth Gosney concluded
the meeting. Attending besides
those named were Mrs . Linda
Acree., Mrs. Velma Keller,
Mrs. Mabel Pearman, Mrs.
Manda Eastman , Mrs. Jean
Cunningham, Pal Sauters,
Carol Kroft, Tony Knittel , Mrs.
Torrence Lawrence and her
daughler .
1

Hearthstone class names kaders._
MIDDLEPORT - Officers
were elected and several
holiday projects planned
during the Tuesday night
meeting of the Hearthstone
Class of the Middleport First
Baptist Church at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hubbard .
Elected for the year were
Edison Baker, president; John
Werner, vice president; Mrs.
Allen Hughes, secretary;
Milton Hood, treasurer; and
Mrs. Willis Anthony, cards and
flowers.
It was voted to make a
contribution w the Middleport
firemen for Christmas, w send
gifl.'l to the Meigs County
children at the Gallla County
Home, and to parUcipate in the
food basket project of the
Meigs County Ministerial
Association.
· The class also agre~d to
decorate the inside of the

church for Chrisimas and to
buy three poinsettias for the
sanctuary .
The
annual
Christmas party will be at the
home of Mr . and Mrs. John
Werner and there will be a gift
exchange.
Mrs. Paul · Smart gave
devOtions using the meditation,
"Thanksgiving Sermon
Fantasy." For the program
each member gave a reading
or poem on Than~sglving.
Refreshments were served.

Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow W Engk

October ceremony held
MIDDLEPORT Miss her fa ther. Mrs. Charles RathDebora Louise Rathburn , burn, Tiffin, the bride's sisterdaughter of Mrs. Betty Rath- in~law, was the matron of
burn, Tiffin, and Rex Tath- honor, and Mrs. Calvin Dowell,
burn, Fostoria, and Woodrow Middleport, and Mrs. Gary
Wilson Engle, Jr ., son of Mr, Cooper, Racine, sisters of the
and Mrs . Woodrow Engle, bridegroom,
were brides,
Middleport, were married Oct. maids.
26 at the Middleport United
Dave Acree, Harrlsonville,
Penlecostal Church.
atlended the groom as best
Rev. William Knittel of- man . Seating the guests were
ficiated at the ceremony. The Charles Rathburn, Tiffin,
bride was given in marriage by brother of the bride, and
Ronald Thomas, Harrison viDe.
A reception was held
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. following the ceremony in the
Edison Baker, Mr. and Mrs. Orchid Room at Pomeroy.
Willis Anthony, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Engle Is a 1974 graduate
Paul Smart, Mr. and Mrs . of Colwnbian High School. Her
Allen Hughes, the Rev . and husband attended Middleport
Mrs. Skaggs, Mr. and Mrs. HJgh School, served four years .
. John Werner , Mr. and Mrs. in the U.S. Army, and is now in
David Darst, Mrs . Louise construction 'lj'Ork.
Davis and Mr. and Mrs. Milton
The newlyweds are residing
Hood.
in Middleport.
·
_,.
• •

•-

•

J

FOR THE HOLlO A YS

.,
PARTS
AND
LA BOll

.t•

I

97

-.

••

YOUR

If you've

REGULAR '~1.00
.'

dish; meat will he furnished .
All charier members urged to
attend.
OPEN House, Chester PTA
. meet, 7 p.m., at the school.
Teachers will be in their rooms
to answer questions of visitors ;
business meeting, 8; refreshmenl.'l.

FOR THE

'

'~

The Akove
-

-~

. '

If ever there was a man who wanted to keep track of his
money, it was Scrooge. Too bad he didn't:h'ave Ma~tE!t. Charge,;_
.
·Bob Cratchit would have had more days·
Master Charge provides an accurate monthly rec()rd of wliat
you spehd and Where. S? it beats the Dickens out of cash.

.CORN

99~

full bishop sleeves with white
cuffs. Bridesmaids, Peggy Jo
Walczak, sister of the groom
and Alice Buehrle were attired
in identicai ·gowns of a darker
blue. The attendants wore bl~e
satin ribbons in their hairand
carried bouquets of blue lipped
carnations with blue satin
ribbons. The gowns were.
made, the bride's and matron
of honor's by their mother,
. Miss Walczak's by her mother
and Miss Buerhle's by her.
Best man was Jan Wiemer and
ushers were Jiunes Walczak,
brother of the groom, and
Mark Burgan, cousin of the
bride.
The mother of the bride wore ·
a long sleeved shirtwaist gown
of champagne crepe. Her
.,eorsage_was yellow carnations.
IJ'he moi.her of the groom wore
a short sleeved shirtwaist gown of rose and
. silver. metallic knit . She
'lj'Ore pin~ carnations. Mrs.
John Smith, grandmother of
the bride wore a pink floral
dress and white carnations.
Miss Tammy Walczak, niece of
the groom distributed the rice,
and guests were registered by
Mrs. John Burgan, cousin of
the bride.
Immediately following the
ceremony a reception was held
at Lakevue Hall, Perrysburg.
The five tiered wedding cake,
decorated with clusters of blue
forget-me-nots and topped with
three wedding bells was served
by Mrs. Richard Maier, aunt of
the bride, and Mrs . Burgan.
The bride, a graduate of the

SUNDAY
REVIVAL at Bethlehem
Baptist ChW'ch jWlction of SR
124 and 338 in Great Bend
SWlday through Dec. I. Rev.
Bud Hatfield, evangelist. Earl
Shuler, pastor. Public invited.
FALL open house for
prospective students and their
parents, Holzer Medical Center
School of Nursing, Pirst Ave.,
Gallipolis, 2 p.m.

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

'

'

Ph.' 41t,7653

ROSSFORD - Melinda Ann
Walter and Mark Stanley
Walcza~ were married at
Rossford United Methodist
ChUrch,' Rossford, Nov . 9, in a
double ring ceremony performed by Rev . Grant Montgomery. The bride is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Homer R. Walter, Oregon Rd.,
Toledo, and the granddaughter
of Mrs/:&lt; ·John A. Smith ,
Pomer~;~ ·~d Mr. and Mrs .
Homer [\V,. Walter, Gallipolis.
The groofifls the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Walczak, Brophy
Dr., Toledo.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a gown
of white satinessa with a
detachable train . The .scoop
neckline was edged with Irish
rose lace and the front of, the
skirt was trimmed iVlt6
alternating wide and narrow
bands of the same lace embroidered
with
crystal
rocailles accented with small
bows of blue satin. The cuff of
the full bishop sleeves was
trimmed with the same lace.
Blue satin ribbon accented the
empire winstline and formed a
tailored "oow at the front. Her
fingertiJ&gt; veil of illusion feU
from · ,j : crown of the same
embroidered lace and ribbon .
The bride wore a single strand
of pearls and carried a bouquet
of white roses, b,a by's breath
and fern.
Mrs. Suella Wright was
matron of honor for her sister
and wore an empire styled
gown of blue double knit with
lace trimmed white collar and

"Se.-ving you since 1936"
Gallipolis, Ohio

Peter. Principle
'

'

Nuptial vows exchanged

contributed ' their unique
talents, offering 15 Christmas
favorites to suit every listening
mood, Kelley adds.
The "Carols &amp; Candlelight"
album will be sold at more thsn
4,000 Goodyeal- service stores
and dealershi~s.

2

chairwoman, Mrs . Errol
Conroy , Mrs. Kenneth Ams~
bary an1 Mrs . Arthur Strauss .
Plans were made for the club
to participate in the Meigs
County Christmas flower show,
"Christmas in the Air," at the
Pomeroy Elementary School,
Dec. 7 and 8. Announced at the
meeting was the Nov , 21
" Holiday Happening" to lake
place at the St . Paul 's
Lutheran Church under
sponsorship of the Mei gs
County Extension Service.
Mrs .
Harold
Lohse .
president, conducted the.
meeting during which time
members voted to take part in
"Operation Santa Claus" by
giving gifts to the 24 Meigs
CoWlty men and women who
are patients at the Athens
Mental Health Center, and by
making and delivering six
Christmas arrangements. The
gifts are to be either delivered
w Mrs. Grace Pratt, Mid-

Mrs. Mark Stanley Walczak

OPEN: Monday&amp; Frlday-9:30 Tlll8:00
Tuesday, Wednesday, Saturday 9:30tlll5: 00
Thursday-9:30·tlll 12 Noon

"&amp;
·~

by Eric Sloane

COurt St.
.
O.lllpolls, Olil• 4U31 ,

Come in now and make your selections while we still ha~e '!II
styles, colors and sizes to choose from. Then put 1t m
Layaway 'till Christmas. We welcome your BankAmericard
ana Master Charge.

HUNTING
BOOTS
.

RodMcKuen

4~

'

SMOCKS &amp; TOPS
FOR CHRISTMAS

services.

LB.
PKG.

While the contest was not
held last year due to the energy
crisis, it had been the
cooperative effort of the two
garden clubs and the Middleport Chamber of Commerce
w make the village more
festive for the holidays for
many years before . While the
ArnaleW' Gardeners voled to
cooperate with the contest, it
was emphasized that lavish
lighting is not intended and
, creativity is encouraged in line
with the energy shortage.
Named to the committee
were Mrs. · Edgar Reynolds,

•

guest speaker

Willi(

contest.

Mrs . Nora Rice , secretary -

MEN'S ALL WEATHER .
INSULATED

CALEN.DARS

..

MIDDLEPORT
A
Christmas lighting contest will
be held in Middleport and
meetin g Wednesday night at
the home of Mrs . Harry Davis,
the Middleport Amateur
Gardeners appointed a committee which will work with
representatives of the Middleport Garden Club on the

FOR EVERY ROOM IN YOUR HOME

BPW to hear

.

L(ghts to glow for yule ·contest

DECORATNE ACCESSORIES

MARY PATTERSON

.

..

.

NOVEMBER 17th ONLY

-

Astrological
Chiid's Wolilbook
Cyndy's Animal
.1 Remember America

.

\

A WHOLE SHOP FUll OF UNUS_l}AL

SUNDAY SPECIAL
~ 1

Mlddleport Christmas Gift-A-Rama Starts Monday

Peddler's Pan~

, ~ produced is heading for the 21Brannon.
million-copy sales mark with
h
Some of the questions for
discussion were, How can older Goody~ release of t is
year's ''Carols and Canwomen encourage younger dlelight.n "
-...........
women to find their own
idenUties? Do we have Wl·
The albwn is Goodyear's
fulfilled dreams? How can we !4th Great Songs of Christmas
offering since 1961.
,
identifywithotherage.groups?
John p ,, Kelley, Goodyear's
The program clQSed by the
reading pf a litany, "Older · vice president of advertising,
says despite a price increase
from $1:2:&gt; 'to $1.50 per album,
Women, YoWlger Women."
-The group voted to support a Goodyear expects minimwn
child through World Vision.
sales of a half-11\illion copies
The white cross chall'woman, for the 1974 edition. Last year's
Katlrryn Jones, set the date of . sales put the album that turn,.
Nov. 29tomeetat the church to tire stores into music meccas
make roller b~dages.
at Christmastime well over the
Cecelia · Jenkms and Mrs. 26-million m k
Mildred Winters served a
"The 'Car':,'ls; side of the
dessert and sandwich course, album . features traditional '
tea and coffee, from a table, songs and religious music b~
centered with an arrangement such artists as Mahalia
of mwns, grapes and candles. Jackson, Andre Kostelanetz;
Present were Mrs. GayneUe Julie Andrews and John
Lynch, president, Mrs. Reva Davidson," Kelley sayg. "The
Evans, Mrs. _Joyce Murphy, flip side, 'Candlelight,' offers
Mrs. Lorte Ewmg, Mrs. Jennie- contemporary sounds by Andy
Myers, Mrs. Kathryn Jones, Williams Doris Day Percy
·Mrs. Esb! Vollborn, Mrs. Irene Faith, . 'Enoch Light and
Brannon and the hostesses,
th
.,
• li J ki
d Mr
o ers.
Mrs Cece
·
a en ns an
s.
A t0 tal of 14 artists have
Mildred Winters.

• '

.I

-,.

FALL
open
house for
prospective students and their
parents, Holzer Medical Center
School of Nursing, 2 p.m.
LAP AYETTE
Shrine 44
rehearsal for officers, 2 p.m.
VICTORY party for Ron
James at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Wright, Bob
McCormick Rd., 12 noon, for
interested Democrats and
supporters., Bring covered dish
and table service.
-MONDAY
GALLIPO!JS BPW meets at
Oscar's, 6:30p.m. Mrs. Mary
E. Patterson, state legislation
chairwoman, guest speaker.
REVIVAL tonight through
Sunday at the Church of God of
Prophecy, O.J. White Rd., 7:30
p.m. Rev. Bernie Levesque,
guest speaker. Everyone ·

•

committee meet$

POMEROY - The com- treasurer ; and Mrs. Phyllis
mittee for the prumotfon of the Skinner, reporter .
levy for the . operation of the ' Meetings were 1set for the
Mei~s ComniWlily School for ' firstThursday of e~~h month in ·
the mentally retarded mel . the Meigs County tCourthouse. ·
Priday night at the Pomerpy ' It was decided that every
Pirst Baptist Church and voted organization in he county.
I
I
fo rontiriue as an organized including churches, civic
committee for the mentally , groups, lodges, and youth
retarded .
groups will be invited to send at
'
J.las
.)
.
Purpose of the committee least one representative to
will be to support and strength- become a member of the
en the educational op - committee. A vote of thanks
·portWlities for the mentally was extended to the Pomeroy
retarded and lo keep the lines Baptist Church officials for use
\
of commWlication open be- of the facilities and a token gift
tween the school authorities will be sent.
and the people of the county.
. Attending the meeting
Officers elected were Mrs. besides those named were Mrs. ·- STA&gt;Tf: &amp; THIRD--:------GALLIPOLIS, OMIG,_ __.
Fay Sauer, chairwoman; Mrs .
Ruth Karr, vice chairwoman ;

SUNDAY loaTH Anniversary of New
Hope Church, SR 554, four
miles from Bidwell. Morning
service at 11. Afternoon
speaker. Special singing.

c \.

Roush, Mrs. Margaret .'Mrs. Wlima Par~,~. Mrs.
a Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Maxine Whitehead, Mrs. Grace
Clarence Might and David'. • Weber 'and Man~ing Webster.

•

7 :-Th~Sunday Times-Sentlnel,SWlday, Nov. 17,1974

Party given
for patients

ON 100% SOLID STATE PHILCO ~ COLOR TV CONSOLE.

"For two years after delivery,
we'll fix anything that's our fault."

MIDDLEPORT - Fifty ·
eight patients at tl1e Athens
Mental Health Center were
guests at the Tuesday night
party
there
by
the
Homebuilders Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ.
Tile group enjoyed hymn
singing, and refreshments of
sandwiches, potato chips,
candy, Kool-Aid and fruit
provided by the class. Games
were played with prizes being
awarded . Going from the
church were ' Mrs. Clyda
Allensworth, Mrs. Reva Beach,
Mrs. Dorothy Roach and
Trudy, Lawrence Stewart, Bud
Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. George
Glaze, Trey and Clinton, Mrs.
Coleen Van Meter, Mrs.
Shirley Baumgardner and Mrs.
Nora Rice.

Sr. Citizens
Cakndar
POMEROY - The Meigs
Senior Citizens Center in the
Pomeroy Junior High School is
open 9 a.m.-4 ·p.m. Monday
through Prlday.
Activltl~s include:
Monday, Nov. 18, Crafts
must be in for bazaar; Square
Dancing, 1-3 p.m.
Tuesday, Nov. 19, Cards and
Games, Chorus, 12:3{).2 p.m .
Wednesday, Nov. 20, Set up
for Bazaar, Quilting.
Thursday, _Nov. 21, Christmas Bazaar, 10 a .m.-3 p.ll).
Priday, Nov. 22, Christmas
Bazaar, 10 a:m.•a p.m .;
Bowling, 1-3 p.m.
Senior Citizens Lunch
program , 11 :30 a .m.-12 :30
p.m., Monday through Friday .

Model C2511EMA. Early American. Finished to ri1alch Plank Maple.

PHILCOMATICTM IltcOLOR TV
with "Hands-Off" Automati'c Tuning
Truly automatic! "Hands-Off" tuning locks In
all 5 vital elements of a good color picturec&lt;:&gt;lor, tir1t, brightness, &lt;;:ont,rast and automati c
line tuning.
• 100% solid state chassis with 14 replaceable
plug-in modules, 8 integrated Circuits
• Super Black Matrix picture tube
• Phllco~ Picture Guard System
• 70-posi'tion "Channel-Set" UHF selecto r
• 75-ohm coaxial oable TV antenna jack

2

FOREMA.N·,
.

.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

S':lagonal plciure

�••
•

.

-

.

•

"

'

8 - The Sunday Times · Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 17, 1974

'

••

SALE STARTS TOMORROW
MONDAY, NOV. 18 THRU SATURDAY, NOV. 23·
AT
DANS

SCOPE
oz.
99¢
18

'

.FREE DRAWING
REGISTER FOR

THIS COUPON WORTH

&amp;.·•

10-SPEED BIKE
TO BE GIVEN AWAY FOR CHRISTMAS
DECEMBER 23rd.
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

PUFFS

'

COUGH DROPS

FACIAL TISSUES
.

SPECIALI

SHOE
STRINGS

JUMBO SIZE

12's

~

REG:

REG. ·
69' EACH

151

ONLY

65'

~

i .

PARK DAVIS

¢.

BLACK

~

ST. JOSEPH

EA.

DATE BOOK

7.e

w

' .
'

REG. 431

~
~

"['
!'to-

.-.

IOO's

~
~

FOR 1975

PROPHYLACTIC

••'
••
•

.

.••

TOOTHBRUSH

PRELL

HAIR BR-USHES

SHAMPOO

ASSORTED

•
••
•
•

..

••
•••
•

REG. 79' and 98'
•

.

-

ADORN

\ .

OVERNIGHT

•
•

.

~

•••
•

.,
•

3 EA&amp;H

(LIMIT 4)

••
•••
•

·

....••
•

SP,ECIAL :

...

'

.

·~

25~

JUST WONDERFUL

REG•
$2.49

HAIR SPRAY .

"
"
"

-......
-...
.••
v•
•••

GJLLETTE

SUN ·MARK
· lOis

'

30 I.U. VITAMIN E

REG. 't89

•

--·:COMBINATION SYR-INGE

•'

·

DRAWING EACH WEEK

.

USTERINE

$ 95

. . 1~4 GAllON
OPERATES 12 HOURS .

'

20

'I

.
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.

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·'

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$_

NO. 112
' 1%' GAL ·,

REG•.
Sl,75 .· .
o

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HOT STEAM

ANTISEPTIC

FREEl 59~
. · C'EPACOL .M OUTHWASH .•
: . 'wHILE THEY LAST ·.

r ·

Plan to VU!it Us!
· Something
For Everybody!

.

.~ HUMIDIFI~R·,
(ONLY 24 LEFI)

REG.
$1.69

MII)DLEPORT MERCHANTS
GIFT-A-RAMA
FREE TI_CKETS -

"'

'8.95

· COOL·:· MIST NO. ·.3·12 .
,.

·.

REG.

7.7¢

.

REG•
$1.95

'OPTILETS 500
,.4
~00 MG. VITAMIN C AND · ~

·~

BLADES •·

'

I

9 oz.

THERAPEUTIC VITAMINS

~.

PLATINUM:
'
. PLUS

'

DEODORANT

SUPER SIZE • 16 Ol

.RAZOR

)

SURE

'

~

Antacid

..

REG. sl.67

DAYTIME

•
••

EXTRA

The
Nu.mber One

IOO's

$} 10

REG. Sl.J9

•".,
•'
••
•

Nylon Combs
REG.

ANACIN

REG. 12.35

12's

.''•

MEN'S &amp; LADIES'

HAIR SPRAY

"

•"

REG. s1 79

It

~

••

-----~~~--------·
SUSPENSION

:;

:-.l . '

PAMPERS

•
"
'e"

REG.

77e

.

••

'

Ma_
aloi
12 oz.

____ ~ .. 500 'MG. WITH 400 I.U.

~

PRO

ONLY

...

'a"

'

$}50

VITAMIN E

BABY ASPIRIN

-

'

REG.

47e

REG.

(CHERRY OR MENTHOL)

280 COUNT

lOO's
REG. s1.25

1

27"

REG. s1.09

·. KOTEX .

EXTRA

FREEl
AMERICAN
GREETING

VICK'S

ASPIRIN

REGULAR

BOUNTY·
TOWELS

congestion
due to
. colds

BAYER

REG. SJ.52
'

FAMILY
SIZE

of breathing

8 oz.

REG. 59'

MEDIUM SIZE

For relief

FOR STUFFED AND
RUNNY NOSES

. MIDDLEPORT, OHI.O·

'

-

TRIAMINIC
SYRUP

495

~71 NtJJ2r11.1'R"~N#

· ,qveNve · .

e9?t·f75'1 ·.
· MIDDLERXZr:' ·
OHIO · .

,.
"

.

l

'
'

.

.

'

�••
•

.

-

.

•

"

'

8 - The Sunday Times · Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 17, 1974

'

••

SALE STARTS TOMORROW
MONDAY, NOV. 18 THRU SATURDAY, NOV. 23·
AT
DANS

SCOPE
oz.
99¢
18

'

.FREE DRAWING
REGISTER FOR

THIS COUPON WORTH

&amp;.·•

10-SPEED BIKE
TO BE GIVEN AWAY FOR CHRISTMAS
DECEMBER 23rd.
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

PUFFS

'

COUGH DROPS

FACIAL TISSUES
.

SPECIALI

SHOE
STRINGS

JUMBO SIZE

12's

~

REG:

REG. ·
69' EACH

151

ONLY

65'

~

i .

PARK DAVIS

¢.

BLACK

~

ST. JOSEPH

EA.

DATE BOOK

7.e

w

' .
'

REG. 431

~
~

"['
!'to-

.-.

IOO's

~
~

FOR 1975

PROPHYLACTIC

••'
••
•

.

.••

TOOTHBRUSH

PRELL

HAIR BR-USHES

SHAMPOO

ASSORTED

•
••
•
•

..

••
•••
•

REG. 79' and 98'
•

.

-

ADORN

\ .

OVERNIGHT

•
•

.

~

•••
•

.,
•

3 EA&amp;H

(LIMIT 4)

••
•••
•

·

....••
•

SP,ECIAL :

...

'

.

·~

25~

JUST WONDERFUL

REG•
$2.49

HAIR SPRAY .

"
"
"

-......
-...
.••
v•
•••

GJLLETTE

SUN ·MARK
· lOis

'

30 I.U. VITAMIN E

REG. 't89

•

--·:COMBINATION SYR-INGE

•'

·

DRAWING EACH WEEK

.

USTERINE

$ 95

. . 1~4 GAllON
OPERATES 12 HOURS .

'

20

'I

.
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·'

..· .

'
•

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. .

1'

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VAPORIZER
.

.
.

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.

·'

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$_

NO. 112
' 1%' GAL ·,

REG•.
Sl,75 .· .
o

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.

HOT STEAM

ANTISEPTIC

FREEl 59~
. · C'EPACOL .M OUTHWASH .•
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' .

10-The Sunday Times -Sentinel. Sunday, Nov. 17.1974.

Sorority plans ·holiday bazaar

Lewis Manley ·Auxiliary meets
' I

POMEROY
Annual
holiday bazaar of Xi Gamma
Mu Chapter. Beta Sigma Phi
'Sorority, wassetforNov .30at
the Dale Warner Insuranee
Co., when chapter members
met Wednesday night at the
home of Mrs. Martha McPhail.
The chapter also planned a
used loy sale Dec. 14 with the
place to be a nnounced later ,

MIDDLEPORT
A
donation t.o the Eighth .District
birthday
party a t
th e
Chillicothe Veterans Hospital
next mohth was made when the
Aplerican Legion Auxiliary,
Lewis Manley Post 263, met
Tuesday night at the · Naomi
Baptist Church.
A subscription was sent to
the leg islative bulletin and the
c hildre n and yo uth and
veterans affairs assessments
were paid . A Christmas party
was set for Dec. 10 at the home

and decided to award a por- presrnt~d the cultu ral report.
table telev ision se t at the li!lt~d " The Good Ufe," and
Mrs. McPhail and Mrs. Carol
b~zaar . Wedn£'sday night a
met:'ting will be held at the Adams served rclreshments .
Columbus and Southerri Ohio
E lcctrk Co. with Mrs . Joan
Lancaster. home economist, to
prespnt a demons tr atio n.
Membt•rs were asked to take
MIDDLEPORT - The an·
their mo thers.
nua
l holiday bazaar ol the
.
Mr s . Caro l McCullough.
Heath
United Methodist
Church will be DOc. 3 at the
church with a luncheon to be
served at 11 :30 a.m.
P lan s for the bazaar were
Anth ony; Mr s. Charlotte
made a t a meeting ol the Af.
Hannin g and nephew, Scott.
ternoon Circle Thursday at the
Mrs . Evelyn Knight and church. Mrs. Edith Jividen
gr anddaugh tcr ,
Da phanie
presented the lesson on the last
Dillar: Mrs. Carol Mc- chapter o[ the book, "G&lt;l
Cullough. Kim and Laura;
Free," li lied "A Reconciling
Mrs. Martha McPhail, Scott God." A holiday luncheon was
and Corey: Mrs . Donna Nease, set lor Dec. l2 , a l 12: 30 p.m.
Jill and Travis: Mrs. Iris Mrs. Beulah Hayes and Mrs.
Payne. Kim and Angie; Mrs . Fra nces
Wilson
served
Ruth Riffle. Cindy and Cheryl; refreshments.
Mrs. Carolyn Satterfield, Amy
and Kelly ; Mrs. Edwi na Scutt,
Bismarck, North Dakota,
Tony and Keith; Mrs . Jeanette
was
originally ca lled Edwi_n·
Thomas. Danny a nd Kathy;
ton . The rail town changed •.U.
Mrs. Judy Werry, De bbie and na me in a promotion effort to
Tommy ; and Mrs. Sue Zirkle,
attract German investment
Brian an d Brent.
capital.

Bazaar set -

Halloween
party enjoyed
•
A Halloween party was held
r&lt;cently at St. Paul's Lutheran
Church lor members a nd their
c hildren. Attending were Mrs .
Adams, Todd and Kim ; Mrs.
Becky Anderson a nd J amie;
Mrs . Jennifer Anderson,
Kristin, Billy and E rin ; Mrs.
Susie Baer and Eddie; Mrs.
Phyllis Bennett, Ladonna a nd
Jim; Mrs . Jane Bourne a nd
Carli Mrs . Donna Byer, Julie ,
Larry and Mary; Mrs. Judy
Crooks, Pam, Cindy a nd Eddie; Mrs . Debbie -Finlaw ,
Heather and Matt; Mrs. Vikki
Gloeckrier and Beth; Mrs.
Carolyn Grueser , Barbara and

'

.,

Miss Peggy Ann Chaney

Sr. Citizens
Caktuhr

•

Wrangler
Blue Swan
Converse
Phil Maid
Hanes
Formfit

Fruit of the Loom
Berkshire
Aileen
Pinehurst
Dan River
Lee Trevino

Wilson

Exquisite Form

Crown
Devon
Butwin
Red Eye

Open: 9 Til8 Friday
9 Til 9 saturday

Adler

::i\1r. .:and Mrs. H Thomas Reese
•

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Miss
Shuler marries
.•

PUT A

Fla . ~ IIUI!riage of Miss Audry
Jpn ShUler and H. Thomas
Heese ·was solemnized in a
d&amp;,bie ring ·ceremony In the
c•pel llf' tl)e Arlington United
lltthodi.St Church, Jacksonvjpe, Fla., Aug. 11.
~~ bride iS the daughter o[
.:,
'·.
!hie late' Mrs. Ullian Shuler,
Mason. Tlie groom is the son ol
r.t. ahd Mrs. Herman Reese,

UNDER THE TREE FOR A
MEMBERSHIP AT THE MEIGS .
SLIM 'N TRIM FOR DETAILS
PHONE: 992-5853 HURRY I

'

CUesi&gt;Jre.

J!ev. Coxton Doggett offitljated at the ceremony.
l program of organ music
wlls presented by Charles
~een . Selections included

"1)u'n, Turn", "We've Only

..-.

Marshall Univ~rsity . She is
employed as a special
education teacher at R . L .
Brown Elementary School in
Jacksonville.
The groom is a graduate of
Kyger Creek High School and
Marshall University. He is
employed as a teacher-coach in
J . E . B. Stuart Jr . High. He iS
assistant manager of CharChamp and Co. Restaurant.
After a wedding trip to the
Bahama Islands, the couple
resides at Lake Arlington
Apts., Jacksonville.
Out-ol-town guests attending
the wedding were Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin Roush, II and sons
Marvin III and Allred, Cincinnati. Mrs. Jean Stout, Mrs.
Hollie Rober'-'on, Syracuse,
and Mr. and Mrs. H. Rusaell
Knapp and Wendy, Burgoon,
John Shuler, Huntington,l W.
Va., Mrs . Willard Reese ,
Marilyn Reese, Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Reese, Rosalie Reese,
Cheshire.

~

STARTING MONDAY, NOVEMBER 18TH

This Christ m&lt;Js wr• huvt' Ull imprt•ssive as.wrlllll'l/1
&lt;J(/II'alltifid :&gt; 1yi1'J , t11l.Jin islt1•d in}i,ll' cuhim•twoud$ und lin ed ll'ithfrugrunt
n•1l n·dur. Cmt you 1It ink o(a /11(/rt• imuflinul i1• e way to say " I lov1• you? "

~':!" (AoJI

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TIES

JEWELRY

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MERcHANDISE
Many Other !Ieins
To Choose From

·. ALSO GIFT CERTIFICATES

SUCH a busy week iS on its way and with this eolurnn I extend congratulations and best wiohes to Holzer Medical Center
Student Nurses who are celebrating "their week" with a talent
show, style revue and big banquet and to 4-H advisors who will be
honored for meritorious service thiS week.
HAVE a nice week.

PUWE~

TUULS
10% DISCOUNT

' .

save 10 Pet. on
our entire ·stock
of power and
hand tools from
now until
CHRISTMAS!

I

.

I· •

. I

....

on you.

BIBLES

Gift Books

Thompson Chain
Scofield
World
Oxford
Nelson
Oakes

CR Gibson
Baby Books
Scrapbook
Photo Album
Family Record
Snapshot

Fenlon
Imperial
STONEWARE
York Town

TEA &amp; CANDY
Bigelow
Pennsylvania
Amish

PICTURES

WOODEN WA'RE

Religious
Cape Craft

Cape Craft

Free Gift Wrap
$2.00 Purchase Up.

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT 0.

SLIPPERS
For the entire family.
Daniel Green and
Angel Tread
Poll Parrot patents for
the young set.

COWBOY BOOTS
by Acme
Infants S lhru boys 6

DINGO BOOTS
denim and leather

Also Thom MeAn Shoes for'the man of the
house.

Shoes For Women by
Connie
. Miss Wonderful &amp; Thom
WINTER BOOTS ' -by Connie and Reindeer
for the Entire Family.

'·
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with their more meaningful,
slow songs and thrill you with
the happy, loot tapping, hand
clapping ones.
When you lecve a Stamps
concert, you will walk out with
your heart lighter, a smile on
your lace and you will be
singing praises. You too, will
begin believing in music and
love.
They have that kind ol~t

PURSES
Patents,
Suede
and
Tapestry

Girls &amp; Boys
HIKING BOOTS In suede and leather.

HARDWARE

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ALL-WEATHER

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JACKETS
CASUAL PANTS

music· Hke you have never
witnessed.
The Stamps literally put
their own being into a
program. When they walk off
A th underous applause s ta ge, wrin gin g weat with
gree'-' their lirsl song, l ollowed sweat and grins as big as Texas
by hand clapping and loot on their faces, you know you
palling. Encourage Ed Enoch, have been entertained .
Bill Baise, Ed Hill , Ronnie
J.D. and The Stamps believe
Mabe and the genial· J. D. in giving all they have to their
Sum ner and you will see a aud ience. They will raise you
program ol stimulating gospel to new heights o[ joy, bless you

BOOKS

LAY·A·WAY

FREE PARKING
DfCEMBEP. lu·&lt;~·•· 1
BY MIDDLEPORT RETAIL MERtHA~TS
IN APPREGIAliON
OF YOUR SUPPOIU
.
.

...

SUITS
SPORT COATS '
SWEATERS
CAR COATS

BRAND NAME

.TIL 9 P.M.

·J

HIM

CAR COATS
SLACK SUITS
BLOUSES .
'
ORESSES
WGGAGE
MEEKER
.
. . PURSES
&amp; BILlfOLDS

FOLLOWED BY MOONLIGHT SALE·

~

Jan's Side

~

GIFTS FOR

HER .

MONDAY NIGHT,. DEC. 2 ·6:30P.M.

0.

been a success at it. But they
love gospel music, and the
peop le who make up the wide
world of gospel lans.
Excitement runs the gam ut
when the Stamps walk out on
stage to g ive a performance.
Their faces shine, their voices
ring out in clarity and they
sing, oh, how they sing.

Surely, the writer, Ma c
Davis, had J . D. Sumner and
by
The Stamps in mind when he
composed those lines. They lit
"~ Dorothy . Countryman
so well.
Believing in gospel music
also means believing in love ...
GAL!JPO!JS _My fellow romanticists will appreciate that
a love so great that The Man streak in me which makes me love the sound ol rain on rooftol?"
laid down His lile lor late at night and quiet walks through winter landscapes as t~e
humanity. This is the message snow comes down .
.
of The Stamps.
It is the same streak which made me take courses bke
They sing it. They believe it. Drama 103 in the same quarter with Shakespeare 205 and Poetry
They show it.
106. That was considered a real no-no and was probably one o[
Most people try to label a my best quarters in college any way. I simply preferred the
gospel group. They use words intoxication of Shelly and KeaU; in conjunction with the ramlike: " Pure Gospel", "Con- bllngs of Will to almost anything I k~w. .
.
.
temporary Gospel " , " Rock
So on days when it rains, and espectally rughUi when 11 ra'?"•
Gospel", "Pop Gospel". J. D. 1am particularly reminded of walks through center campus wtth
Sumner and The Stamps dely : ;,.,vera! tomes olmanunoth weight tucked between my arms and
labeling. Tbey are singers who a vision of BG's taU library looming up amidst the downpour .
sing gospel music. They sing ·' ', It was on days and nights like that when I took refuge m the
gospel music by choice and not llhrary with my big books and thousands ol other books and I
because they have !ailed in always wondered why there seemed to be such a shortage of
other fields.
students in that happy building.
J. D. Sumner and The
For it was happy .
·
BG's library can be seen a good two miles belore you reach
Stamps have helped to open
new doors for the gospel music .the campus on I-75. It stands like Gulliver among the
profession. They have sung Lilliputians, " towering" nine stories.
gospel music L church a nd
The building was ooe of the newest when I was on campus
concert halls all over the and the library's old home had become tbe graduate student
country. They have reached center almost before we kriew it. Yet the small nwnber of
countless thousands through students who visited iUi environs thoroughly depressed me, even
their recorda and tapes. They though 1 often went there when I wanted to be completely alo~e.
have stood on television and
ThUB It Is with a certain joy that I lmd myself brushmg
shoulders with other folk when I go up town to the Gallia County
Ubrary. It's nice having to share a shelf with other folk and
there's a certain hwn about that quiet library when the chtldren
come in after school that isn't dlsrespect[ulat aU. My lreshman
English teacher would have called it the song ol happy hooks,
joyful because they will be read. Do go up and visit ... and catch
up on your reading.

THINK!

SANTA ·WILL
A,RRIVE
WITH A PARADE
Lane·

The s~mg says, 11 [ believe in
music , [ believe in love ... ''

THAN YOU

DRAWING EVERY FRIDAY TILL CHRISTMAS
f tl tftltftl tftltftltf tlL
.J 1./&lt;1 '"'"'· "'"'''' '
rr d . ~· ··~·", ,.,., od ru, •

A lreewill oflerlng will be
taken at the concert, which is
sponsored by the Southeastern
Ohio Gospel Music Ass'n., and
seats for groups of 10 or more
may be reserved by calling 4469586 or 446-1502 ' alter 5 p.m.

proclaimed their music. Music
by J . D. Sumner and The
Stamps occupys a prominen t
place in the White House
Record Library.
Why do they sing gospel
music? Love. They love it. The
Stamps have had many opportunities to sing other types
o[ music, and they would have

IT'S LATER

GET YOUR FREE TICKETS FROM ANY•
PARTICIPATING MERatANT. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.

t'I'NJ' .\'I'UY.

GALLIPOLIS J . D.
Sumner and The Stamps
Quartet, NashvUle, Tenn ., will
join the Waymarks , Huntington, W. Va., for a concert at
Gallia Academy High School
Auditorium at 8 p.m. Tuesday .

J!ft Begun," "The Wedding
Softg" and " A Tiffie for Us."
Civen hi milrrlage by her
brllher, John; the bride wore a
willie polyester· princess style
gotn fashioped with empire
w.,.t and c!i"pel sleeves. The
gown was trimmed with lace
appliqUes and she wore a
pk_lure hat with a Oowing veil,
and carried a . bouquet ol
yeQow, white.and pink daisies .
tliJSalle Reese, siSter Oi the
SEEN AND HEARD
groOm, was maid o[ honor and
KANAUGA - John Raike,
AnL8 De }:M! Torre, Miami, 461 Pike St., is confined to room
Fll., was ·bridesmaid.. The 410 Holzer Medical Center.
brOjal attendan'-', attired in Cards !rom his lriends would
id\fltically styled gowns and be appreciated.
'
~bing picture ha'-', carried
baskets of daisies . Wendy
GALLIPO!JS - Friends and
Klilq,p, cousin of .the bride, · r~latives of Mrs. Bill Griffin
sewed as the flower girl. traveled to Huntington ThursH&lt;tman Reese, lather of the day evening to attend her
griJ!ml, was the best man. senior recital and reception at
Rllfllell Knapp served as usher. Marshall University.
Belf;y llowae presided at the
~t register.
..... Reese, mother of the
REVIVAL OPENS
grllP!n, wore a navy blue gown,
GAL!JPO!JS - The Church
of God of Prophecy on 0. J .
anlfa corsage of daisies.
l'ollowing the wedding White Road, will hold revival
ceftmony, a reception was Monday, Nov . 19, through
hellf at the Char-Champ Sunday, Nov . 24. Services
begin at 7:30 p.m. with Rev .
ReAiaurant, Jacksonville.
'Q1e bride Is a graduate of Bernie Levesque, guest pastor.
W'4tama High School and Everyone welcome.
·

.'

p .m . Pictured are, I tor, front row, BiD Baise, tenor, J. D.
Sumner, bass, Ed Enoch, lead ; second row, Ronnie Mabe.•
pianist, and Ed Hill, baritone.

OBSERVE ANNIVERSARY - The 60th wedding anniversary ol Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cohen will be observed
Sunday, Nov. 24, !rom 2 p.m. unti15 p.m. with an open house .
at their residence, 130 Butternut Ave. , Pomeroy. Mr. and
Mrs. Cohen, the lonner Charlotte (Lottie) Church, were
married Nov. 23, 1914, at the Methodist parsonage at Point
Pleasant, W. Va . They were the parents ol one daughter,
Allee Cohen Sisson, deceased, and have three grandsons,
Frank Sisson, Pomeroy, John Sisson, Mason, W. Va ., and
James Sisson, Pomeroy who along with their wives will host
the observance. They also have nine great-granddaughters.
Relatives and friends of the eouple are invited to call .durlng
the open house hours.

Stamps, Wa)'marks sing

~

·•
"';JACK~ONVILLE ,

JOIN THEIR HOLIDAY GIFT-A-RAMA

Thr• /(}I'(• cllf •st. It '_~: , ill' most personal. chf•ri :&gt; il f'd piece o(l'umit ure :she 'II
t ' l't'l' /JW/1. A f,!i/i :&gt;I t 'I'Jll'tl i11 r
: mturies ol ronHWCt' and lt~~~·nd, a rrudirion I hut

WILLSING-J. D. &amp;unnerand The Stamps Quartet will
sing at Gallla Academy High School, Tuesday, Nov. 19 at 8

"

Program serves meals each

witl. your CJ.ristnJas gilt of a Love CJ.est.
i n ils churm

SHE WILL REALLY ENJOY

day that the center Is open on a
donation basis only. Meal time
is 12 noon to I p.m.

.~f if!htJf'rfOit ~ kaattj/tltf
J.:l'flll'.\

·''

Middleport Retail ·Merchants

Cedar Crest

MIDDLEPORT DEPT. STORE
. MILL ST.

I

SALEM CENTER - The 1110. It was noted that the new
Salem Center PTA meeting stage curtains have arrived
recently at tbe school planned · and are now hung. The bottle
a !all les tival lor Nov. 23 at 6:30 cap redemption funds will be
p.m . at the school.
used lor the purchase of stage
Mrs. Leta Fetty presided carpeting. Arrangements were
with devotions being given by made for new band lUl ifor ms to
one ol the teachers [r om Psalm be made lor the lirst grade
rhythm band. A report on the
re cen t convention of the Ohio
PTA held in Cincinnati was
given by Mrs . Phyllis Dugan.
'
Mrs. Roberta Wilson's sixth
grade presented a program on
GALLtPOLIS - The Senior
the history o[ Thanksgiving.
Citizens .Center, located a t 220 Manning Webster of the Meigs
Jackson Pike in the County Co unty Board o[ Mental
Home Bldg., is open Monday Retarda lion s poke on the
through Friday [rom 9 a.m . to 3 operating levy lor the Meigs
p.m . The schedule lor this Community
School.
A
week is as follows:
Christmas program was set lor
Monday, Nov. 18, Chorus . Dec . 4. Relreshmen ts were
Practice, I :30 p.m.
served.
Tuesday, Nov . 19, Movies, I
p.m.; Produc'-' demonstration ,
2:30p.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 20, Blood
Pressure Check, 1-2 p.m .; Card
Games, 1·3 p.m .; Advanced
Rug Crochet Class, 1·3 p.m.
Thursday, Nov . 21, Quilting,
9a.m.-3p.m.; Council Meeting ,
2p.m.
Friday, Nov . 22, Art Class,
Snak &amp; Yak, 1-3 p.m .
The
Senior
Nutrition

-,

....

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cohen

Salem Center PTA meets

'sfLECfYOUR'~
CHRISTMAS_
GIFTS
"···
FOR EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAMILY
FROM OUR STORE • • •

. ...

GIVE HER A
GIFT

YOUNG'S SUPER MARKET

l

I!

.101

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. John
Chaney, Rt . I, Minersville, are announcing the engagement
and approaching marriage ol their daughter, Peggy Ann, to
George Wtlliam Young,son o[ Mr. and Mrs. Joe Young, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy . Wedding plans are incomplete.

The Store Complete
"Open Seven Days Per Week"
Phone 992·3094
.441 LOCUST ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

of Mrs. Sherman Butler with meeting were Mrs. Butler,
Mrs. William Smith a nd Mrs. sergeant at arms, and Mrs.
Ernes t Bowles· to serve with Bowles and Mrs. Smith, color
her on the planning committee. · bearers.
Mrs.
Allen
Hampton,
president, turned in $5 which
the Wlit received for being
second in the district to attain
There is record of a Ver·
membership goal.
s ifi cator Regis, or Krng's
Mrs. Campbell Harp er Poet, in England in the 13th·
presented the program which century reign of · Henry !II,
included discussion on flag but Geoffrey Cljaucer filii
assumed the title-P,oet Lau~­
e tiquette. Members sa ng ate. In 1389, he got', ~ ro:r!Jl
" America ." Taking part in the patent for a yearly a.llowaltlll!
r it uali stic ope nin g of t he of wine for the po~t.':
:

I

'

Converse
&amp;

KeelS

�!

,,

•

' .

10-The Sunday Times -Sentinel. Sunday, Nov. 17.1974.

Sorority plans ·holiday bazaar

Lewis Manley ·Auxiliary meets
' I

POMEROY
Annual
holiday bazaar of Xi Gamma
Mu Chapter. Beta Sigma Phi
'Sorority, wassetforNov .30at
the Dale Warner Insuranee
Co., when chapter members
met Wednesday night at the
home of Mrs. Martha McPhail.
The chapter also planned a
used loy sale Dec. 14 with the
place to be a nnounced later ,

MIDDLEPORT
A
donation t.o the Eighth .District
birthday
party a t
th e
Chillicothe Veterans Hospital
next mohth was made when the
Aplerican Legion Auxiliary,
Lewis Manley Post 263, met
Tuesday night at the · Naomi
Baptist Church.
A subscription was sent to
the leg islative bulletin and the
c hildre n and yo uth and
veterans affairs assessments
were paid . A Christmas party
was set for Dec. 10 at the home

and decided to award a por- presrnt~d the cultu ral report.
table telev ision se t at the li!lt~d " The Good Ufe," and
Mrs. McPhail and Mrs. Carol
b~zaar . Wedn£'sday night a
met:'ting will be held at the Adams served rclreshments .
Columbus and Southerri Ohio
E lcctrk Co. with Mrs . Joan
Lancaster. home economist, to
prespnt a demons tr atio n.
Membt•rs were asked to take
MIDDLEPORT - The an·
their mo thers.
nua
l holiday bazaar ol the
.
Mr s . Caro l McCullough.
Heath
United Methodist
Church will be DOc. 3 at the
church with a luncheon to be
served at 11 :30 a.m.
P lan s for the bazaar were
Anth ony; Mr s. Charlotte
made a t a meeting ol the Af.
Hannin g and nephew, Scott.
ternoon Circle Thursday at the
Mrs . Evelyn Knight and church. Mrs. Edith Jividen
gr anddaugh tcr ,
Da phanie
presented the lesson on the last
Dillar: Mrs. Carol Mc- chapter o[ the book, "G&lt;l
Cullough. Kim and Laura;
Free," li lied "A Reconciling
Mrs. Martha McPhail, Scott God." A holiday luncheon was
and Corey: Mrs . Donna Nease, set lor Dec. l2 , a l 12: 30 p.m.
Jill and Travis: Mrs. Iris Mrs. Beulah Hayes and Mrs.
Payne. Kim and Angie; Mrs . Fra nces
Wilson
served
Ruth Riffle. Cindy and Cheryl; refreshments.
Mrs. Carolyn Satterfield, Amy
and Kelly ; Mrs. Edwi na Scutt,
Bismarck, North Dakota,
Tony and Keith; Mrs . Jeanette
was
originally ca lled Edwi_n·
Thomas. Danny a nd Kathy;
ton . The rail town changed •.U.
Mrs. Judy Werry, De bbie and na me in a promotion effort to
Tommy ; and Mrs. Sue Zirkle,
attract German investment
Brian an d Brent.
capital.

Bazaar set -

Halloween
party enjoyed
•
A Halloween party was held
r&lt;cently at St. Paul's Lutheran
Church lor members a nd their
c hildren. Attending were Mrs .
Adams, Todd and Kim ; Mrs.
Becky Anderson a nd J amie;
Mrs . Jennifer Anderson,
Kristin, Billy and E rin ; Mrs.
Susie Baer and Eddie; Mrs.
Phyllis Bennett, Ladonna a nd
Jim; Mrs . Jane Bourne a nd
Carli Mrs . Donna Byer, Julie ,
Larry and Mary; Mrs. Judy
Crooks, Pam, Cindy a nd Eddie; Mrs . Debbie -Finlaw ,
Heather and Matt; Mrs. Vikki
Gloeckrier and Beth; Mrs.
Carolyn Grueser , Barbara and

'

.,

Miss Peggy Ann Chaney

Sr. Citizens
Caktuhr

•

Wrangler
Blue Swan
Converse
Phil Maid
Hanes
Formfit

Fruit of the Loom
Berkshire
Aileen
Pinehurst
Dan River
Lee Trevino

Wilson

Exquisite Form

Crown
Devon
Butwin
Red Eye

Open: 9 Til8 Friday
9 Til 9 saturday

Adler

::i\1r. .:and Mrs. H Thomas Reese
•

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Miss
Shuler marries
.•

PUT A

Fla . ~ IIUI!riage of Miss Audry
Jpn ShUler and H. Thomas
Heese ·was solemnized in a
d&amp;,bie ring ·ceremony In the
c•pel llf' tl)e Arlington United
lltthodi.St Church, Jacksonvjpe, Fla., Aug. 11.
~~ bride iS the daughter o[
.:,
'·.
!hie late' Mrs. Ullian Shuler,
Mason. Tlie groom is the son ol
r.t. ahd Mrs. Herman Reese,

UNDER THE TREE FOR A
MEMBERSHIP AT THE MEIGS .
SLIM 'N TRIM FOR DETAILS
PHONE: 992-5853 HURRY I

'

CUesi&gt;Jre.

J!ev. Coxton Doggett offitljated at the ceremony.
l program of organ music
wlls presented by Charles
~een . Selections included

"1)u'n, Turn", "We've Only

..-.

Marshall Univ~rsity . She is
employed as a special
education teacher at R . L .
Brown Elementary School in
Jacksonville.
The groom is a graduate of
Kyger Creek High School and
Marshall University. He is
employed as a teacher-coach in
J . E . B. Stuart Jr . High. He iS
assistant manager of CharChamp and Co. Restaurant.
After a wedding trip to the
Bahama Islands, the couple
resides at Lake Arlington
Apts., Jacksonville.
Out-ol-town guests attending
the wedding were Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin Roush, II and sons
Marvin III and Allred, Cincinnati. Mrs. Jean Stout, Mrs.
Hollie Rober'-'on, Syracuse,
and Mr. and Mrs. H. Rusaell
Knapp and Wendy, Burgoon,
John Shuler, Huntington,l W.
Va., Mrs . Willard Reese ,
Marilyn Reese, Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Reese, Rosalie Reese,
Cheshire.

~

STARTING MONDAY, NOVEMBER 18TH

This Christ m&lt;Js wr• huvt' Ull imprt•ssive as.wrlllll'l/1
&lt;J(/II'alltifid :&gt; 1yi1'J , t11l.Jin islt1•d in}i,ll' cuhim•twoud$ und lin ed ll'ithfrugrunt
n•1l n·dur. Cmt you 1It ink o(a /11(/rt• imuflinul i1• e way to say " I lov1• you? "

~':!" (AoJI

BAKER FURNITURE

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DRESS PANTS
TIES

JEWELRY

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MERcHANDISE
Many Other !Ieins
To Choose From

·. ALSO GIFT CERTIFICATES

SUCH a busy week iS on its way and with this eolurnn I extend congratulations and best wiohes to Holzer Medical Center
Student Nurses who are celebrating "their week" with a talent
show, style revue and big banquet and to 4-H advisors who will be
honored for meritorious service thiS week.
HAVE a nice week.

PUWE~

TUULS
10% DISCOUNT

' .

save 10 Pet. on
our entire ·stock
of power and
hand tools from
now until
CHRISTMAS!

I

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I· •

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on you.

BIBLES

Gift Books

Thompson Chain
Scofield
World
Oxford
Nelson
Oakes

CR Gibson
Baby Books
Scrapbook
Photo Album
Family Record
Snapshot

Fenlon
Imperial
STONEWARE
York Town

TEA &amp; CANDY
Bigelow
Pennsylvania
Amish

PICTURES

WOODEN WA'RE

Religious
Cape Craft

Cape Craft

Free Gift Wrap
$2.00 Purchase Up.

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT 0.

SLIPPERS
For the entire family.
Daniel Green and
Angel Tread
Poll Parrot patents for
the young set.

COWBOY BOOTS
by Acme
Infants S lhru boys 6

DINGO BOOTS
denim and leather

Also Thom MeAn Shoes for'the man of the
house.

Shoes For Women by
Connie
. Miss Wonderful &amp; Thom
WINTER BOOTS ' -by Connie and Reindeer
for the Entire Family.

'·
j,.

with their more meaningful,
slow songs and thrill you with
the happy, loot tapping, hand
clapping ones.
When you lecve a Stamps
concert, you will walk out with
your heart lighter, a smile on
your lace and you will be
singing praises. You too, will
begin believing in music and
love.
They have that kind ol~t

PURSES
Patents,
Suede
and
Tapestry

Girls &amp; Boys
HIKING BOOTS In suede and leather.

HARDWARE

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ALL-WEATHER

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JACKETS
CASUAL PANTS

music· Hke you have never
witnessed.
The Stamps literally put
their own being into a
program. When they walk off
A th underous applause s ta ge, wrin gin g weat with
gree'-' their lirsl song, l ollowed sweat and grins as big as Texas
by hand clapping and loot on their faces, you know you
palling. Encourage Ed Enoch, have been entertained .
Bill Baise, Ed Hill , Ronnie
J.D. and The Stamps believe
Mabe and the genial· J. D. in giving all they have to their
Sum ner and you will see a aud ience. They will raise you
program ol stimulating gospel to new heights o[ joy, bless you

BOOKS

LAY·A·WAY

FREE PARKING
DfCEMBEP. lu·&lt;~·•· 1
BY MIDDLEPORT RETAIL MERtHA~TS
IN APPREGIAliON
OF YOUR SUPPOIU
.
.

...

SUITS
SPORT COATS '
SWEATERS
CAR COATS

BRAND NAME

.TIL 9 P.M.

·J

HIM

CAR COATS
SLACK SUITS
BLOUSES .
'
ORESSES
WGGAGE
MEEKER
.
. . PURSES
&amp; BILlfOLDS

FOLLOWED BY MOONLIGHT SALE·

~

Jan's Side

~

GIFTS FOR

HER .

MONDAY NIGHT,. DEC. 2 ·6:30P.M.

0.

been a success at it. But they
love gospel music, and the
peop le who make up the wide
world of gospel lans.
Excitement runs the gam ut
when the Stamps walk out on
stage to g ive a performance.
Their faces shine, their voices
ring out in clarity and they
sing, oh, how they sing.

Surely, the writer, Ma c
Davis, had J . D. Sumner and
by
The Stamps in mind when he
composed those lines. They lit
"~ Dorothy . Countryman
so well.
Believing in gospel music
also means believing in love ...
GAL!JPO!JS _My fellow romanticists will appreciate that
a love so great that The Man streak in me which makes me love the sound ol rain on rooftol?"
laid down His lile lor late at night and quiet walks through winter landscapes as t~e
humanity. This is the message snow comes down .
.
of The Stamps.
It is the same streak which made me take courses bke
They sing it. They believe it. Drama 103 in the same quarter with Shakespeare 205 and Poetry
They show it.
106. That was considered a real no-no and was probably one o[
Most people try to label a my best quarters in college any way. I simply preferred the
gospel group. They use words intoxication of Shelly and KeaU; in conjunction with the ramlike: " Pure Gospel", "Con- bllngs of Will to almost anything I k~w. .
.
.
temporary Gospel " , " Rock
So on days when it rains, and espectally rughUi when 11 ra'?"•
Gospel", "Pop Gospel". J. D. 1am particularly reminded of walks through center campus wtth
Sumner and The Stamps dely : ;,.,vera! tomes olmanunoth weight tucked between my arms and
labeling. Tbey are singers who a vision of BG's taU library looming up amidst the downpour .
sing gospel music. They sing ·' ', It was on days and nights like that when I took refuge m the
gospel music by choice and not llhrary with my big books and thousands ol other books and I
because they have !ailed in always wondered why there seemed to be such a shortage of
other fields.
students in that happy building.
J. D. Sumner and The
For it was happy .
·
BG's library can be seen a good two miles belore you reach
Stamps have helped to open
new doors for the gospel music .the campus on I-75. It stands like Gulliver among the
profession. They have sung Lilliputians, " towering" nine stories.
gospel music L church a nd
The building was ooe of the newest when I was on campus
concert halls all over the and the library's old home had become tbe graduate student
country. They have reached center almost before we kriew it. Yet the small nwnber of
countless thousands through students who visited iUi environs thoroughly depressed me, even
their recorda and tapes. They though 1 often went there when I wanted to be completely alo~e.
have stood on television and
ThUB It Is with a certain joy that I lmd myself brushmg
shoulders with other folk when I go up town to the Gallia County
Ubrary. It's nice having to share a shelf with other folk and
there's a certain hwn about that quiet library when the chtldren
come in after school that isn't dlsrespect[ulat aU. My lreshman
English teacher would have called it the song ol happy hooks,
joyful because they will be read. Do go up and visit ... and catch
up on your reading.

THINK!

SANTA ·WILL
A,RRIVE
WITH A PARADE
Lane·

The s~mg says, 11 [ believe in
music , [ believe in love ... ''

THAN YOU

DRAWING EVERY FRIDAY TILL CHRISTMAS
f tl tftltftl tftltftltf tlL
.J 1./&lt;1 '"'"'· "'"'''' '
rr d . ~· ··~·", ,.,., od ru, •

A lreewill oflerlng will be
taken at the concert, which is
sponsored by the Southeastern
Ohio Gospel Music Ass'n., and
seats for groups of 10 or more
may be reserved by calling 4469586 or 446-1502 ' alter 5 p.m.

proclaimed their music. Music
by J . D. Sumner and The
Stamps occupys a prominen t
place in the White House
Record Library.
Why do they sing gospel
music? Love. They love it. The
Stamps have had many opportunities to sing other types
o[ music, and they would have

IT'S LATER

GET YOUR FREE TICKETS FROM ANY•
PARTICIPATING MERatANT. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.

t'I'NJ' .\'I'UY.

GALLIPOLIS J . D.
Sumner and The Stamps
Quartet, NashvUle, Tenn ., will
join the Waymarks , Huntington, W. Va., for a concert at
Gallia Academy High School
Auditorium at 8 p.m. Tuesday .

J!ft Begun," "The Wedding
Softg" and " A Tiffie for Us."
Civen hi milrrlage by her
brllher, John; the bride wore a
willie polyester· princess style
gotn fashioped with empire
w.,.t and c!i"pel sleeves. The
gown was trimmed with lace
appliqUes and she wore a
pk_lure hat with a Oowing veil,
and carried a . bouquet ol
yeQow, white.and pink daisies .
tliJSalle Reese, siSter Oi the
SEEN AND HEARD
groOm, was maid o[ honor and
KANAUGA - John Raike,
AnL8 De }:M! Torre, Miami, 461 Pike St., is confined to room
Fll., was ·bridesmaid.. The 410 Holzer Medical Center.
brOjal attendan'-', attired in Cards !rom his lriends would
id\fltically styled gowns and be appreciated.
'
~bing picture ha'-', carried
baskets of daisies . Wendy
GALLIPO!JS - Friends and
Klilq,p, cousin of .the bride, · r~latives of Mrs. Bill Griffin
sewed as the flower girl. traveled to Huntington ThursH&lt;tman Reese, lather of the day evening to attend her
griJ!ml, was the best man. senior recital and reception at
Rllfllell Knapp served as usher. Marshall University.
Belf;y llowae presided at the
~t register.
..... Reese, mother of the
REVIVAL OPENS
grllP!n, wore a navy blue gown,
GAL!JPO!JS - The Church
of God of Prophecy on 0. J .
anlfa corsage of daisies.
l'ollowing the wedding White Road, will hold revival
ceftmony, a reception was Monday, Nov . 19, through
hellf at the Char-Champ Sunday, Nov . 24. Services
begin at 7:30 p.m. with Rev .
ReAiaurant, Jacksonville.
'Q1e bride Is a graduate of Bernie Levesque, guest pastor.
W'4tama High School and Everyone welcome.
·

.'

p .m . Pictured are, I tor, front row, BiD Baise, tenor, J. D.
Sumner, bass, Ed Enoch, lead ; second row, Ronnie Mabe.•
pianist, and Ed Hill, baritone.

OBSERVE ANNIVERSARY - The 60th wedding anniversary ol Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cohen will be observed
Sunday, Nov. 24, !rom 2 p.m. unti15 p.m. with an open house .
at their residence, 130 Butternut Ave. , Pomeroy. Mr. and
Mrs. Cohen, the lonner Charlotte (Lottie) Church, were
married Nov. 23, 1914, at the Methodist parsonage at Point
Pleasant, W. Va . They were the parents ol one daughter,
Allee Cohen Sisson, deceased, and have three grandsons,
Frank Sisson, Pomeroy, John Sisson, Mason, W. Va ., and
James Sisson, Pomeroy who along with their wives will host
the observance. They also have nine great-granddaughters.
Relatives and friends of the eouple are invited to call .durlng
the open house hours.

Stamps, Wa)'marks sing

~

·•
"';JACK~ONVILLE ,

JOIN THEIR HOLIDAY GIFT-A-RAMA

Thr• /(}I'(• cllf •st. It '_~: , ill' most personal. chf•ri :&gt; il f'd piece o(l'umit ure :she 'II
t ' l't'l' /JW/1. A f,!i/i :&gt;I t 'I'Jll'tl i11 r
: mturies ol ronHWCt' and lt~~~·nd, a rrudirion I hut

WILLSING-J. D. &amp;unnerand The Stamps Quartet will
sing at Gallla Academy High School, Tuesday, Nov. 19 at 8

"

Program serves meals each

witl. your CJ.ristnJas gilt of a Love CJ.est.
i n ils churm

SHE WILL REALLY ENJOY

day that the center Is open on a
donation basis only. Meal time
is 12 noon to I p.m.

.~f if!htJf'rfOit ~ kaattj/tltf
J.:l'flll'.\

·''

Middleport Retail ·Merchants

Cedar Crest

MIDDLEPORT DEPT. STORE
. MILL ST.

I

SALEM CENTER - The 1110. It was noted that the new
Salem Center PTA meeting stage curtains have arrived
recently at tbe school planned · and are now hung. The bottle
a !all les tival lor Nov. 23 at 6:30 cap redemption funds will be
p.m . at the school.
used lor the purchase of stage
Mrs. Leta Fetty presided carpeting. Arrangements were
with devotions being given by made for new band lUl ifor ms to
one ol the teachers [r om Psalm be made lor the lirst grade
rhythm band. A report on the
re cen t convention of the Ohio
PTA held in Cincinnati was
given by Mrs . Phyllis Dugan.
'
Mrs. Roberta Wilson's sixth
grade presented a program on
GALLtPOLIS - The Senior
the history o[ Thanksgiving.
Citizens .Center, located a t 220 Manning Webster of the Meigs
Jackson Pike in the County Co unty Board o[ Mental
Home Bldg., is open Monday Retarda lion s poke on the
through Friday [rom 9 a.m . to 3 operating levy lor the Meigs
p.m . The schedule lor this Community
School.
A
week is as follows:
Christmas program was set lor
Monday, Nov. 18, Chorus . Dec . 4. Relreshmen ts were
Practice, I :30 p.m.
served.
Tuesday, Nov . 19, Movies, I
p.m.; Produc'-' demonstration ,
2:30p.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 20, Blood
Pressure Check, 1-2 p.m .; Card
Games, 1·3 p.m .; Advanced
Rug Crochet Class, 1·3 p.m.
Thursday, Nov . 21, Quilting,
9a.m.-3p.m.; Council Meeting ,
2p.m.
Friday, Nov . 22, Art Class,
Snak &amp; Yak, 1-3 p.m .
The
Senior
Nutrition

-,

....

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cohen

Salem Center PTA meets

'sfLECfYOUR'~
CHRISTMAS_
GIFTS
"···
FOR EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAMILY
FROM OUR STORE • • •

. ...

GIVE HER A
GIFT

YOUNG'S SUPER MARKET

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ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. John
Chaney, Rt . I, Minersville, are announcing the engagement
and approaching marriage ol their daughter, Peggy Ann, to
George Wtlliam Young,son o[ Mr. and Mrs. Joe Young, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy . Wedding plans are incomplete.

The Store Complete
"Open Seven Days Per Week"
Phone 992·3094
.441 LOCUST ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

of Mrs. Sherman Butler with meeting were Mrs. Butler,
Mrs. William Smith a nd Mrs. sergeant at arms, and Mrs.
Ernes t Bowles· to serve with Bowles and Mrs. Smith, color
her on the planning committee. · bearers.
Mrs.
Allen
Hampton,
president, turned in $5 which
the Wlit received for being
second in the district to attain
There is record of a Ver·
membership goal.
s ifi cator Regis, or Krng's
Mrs. Campbell Harp er Poet, in England in the 13th·
presented the program which century reign of · Henry !II,
included discussion on flag but Geoffrey Cljaucer filii
assumed the title-P,oet Lau~­
e tiquette. Members sa ng ate. In 1389, he got', ~ ro:r!Jl
" America ." Taking part in the patent for a yearly a.llowaltlll!
r it uali stic ope nin g of t he of wine for the po~t.':
:

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Converse
&amp;

KeelS

�'o 'I
12-The Sunday Times-Sentlnel,Sunday, Nov. 1?, 1974

Alberta

~oung,

Cliff Clay marry

WES:I' COLUMB IA, W. Va·.
Music for the ceremony was
- Miss Alberta Marie Young, · played by Mrs . Jose phine
daughter of ·Mr. and Mrs. Kirby and included '"! Love
Russell J . Young. We st You Truly, " " Melody -of
. CQiumbia, became the bride of Love~ · HThe One Rose That's in
Cliff Allen Clay, Point My Heart'" and the traditional
Pleasant, June 22 at the West wedding march. The wedding
Columbia United Met hodi st party was surrounded by
Church with Rev . George candelabra , and baskets of
Hoschar officiating at the white gla dioli with blue and
double..ring ceremony .
white chrysanthemums.
The bride was given in
marriage by her parenls and
escorted to the altar by her
father.
She wore" a gown fashioned
with empire wais t and long full
chiffon sleeves. Her shoulder
length veil was held by a lace
KANAUGA - The •Silver juliet ca p. She carried a
Memorial Youth Group opened bouquet of white carnations,
its meeting Nov. 10 at 5:30p.m. pink roses and baby's breath.
by singing "Leaning on lhe
Miss Nanty Young served as
Everlasting Arms.''
'bridesmaid for her sister's
Prayer was led by Sharon wedding. Sh? wore a gown of
Hively. Secretary's report was
by Doris Hively. Treasurer 's
report was by Sharon Hively.
Old and new business was
discussed. They had a lesson of
the Good News Course.
Refreshments were enjoyed by

light blue polyester knit, styled
with empire waist , and
trimmed with a white 'collar.
White lac e trimmed the
sleeves. She carried pink roses
with white and blue ribbons
tied in love knots.
Paul Clay, the groom 's
brother, served as the best
man. Ushers were Russell
Young, brother of the bride,
a nd Danny Rice, Point
Pleasant.
Mrs. David Hall, West
Columbia, registered guests.
Mrs. Wayne Zurcher served as
hostess. Both wore rosebud

Youth group
has meeting

''

\

"

cors~ges .

·

For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Young wore a light pink
polyester knit dress. Her ac·
cessories were white . The
groom 's mother wore a white,
red and blue polyester knit
dress with navy blue · ac·

cessorles. Both moth~rs wore
white carnation co~sages.
A reception was held at the
chlirch. Assisting were Mrs:
Wayne Zurcher, Mrs. David
Hall and Miss Nancy Proffitt.
The bride is a graduate of
Wahama High School and is
employed at the Holzer
Medical Center. The groom Is a
graduate of Point Pleasant
High School and is employed at
Robbins and Myers, Gallipolis.
Following the wedding trip to
King's Island Mr. and Mrs.
Clay reside at West Columbia.
Out-{J{-town guests were Mrs.
Ruby McGee, Miss Kathy
McGee, Hurricane; Mrs. Judy
Arbaugh, St. Albans; Mr. and
Mrs .. Lenny Hodge, Ravenswood; Mr. and Mrs. Cleon Clay
and children, Terry aiid Pam,
Letart ; Mr. and Mrs. Russell
0 . Young, Clarksburg.

~ I'

Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Allen Clay

all. Seventeen members were
present.

:;.-~-.:~.~:-.;:!,.:'-:)!.:' ····c:};±~«::::».:*:~=:::::=:«@::~:~~=~~::;::;:::=:::::-":::::::=:::::::::::~:::::::::::~~

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Candlelit vows read ·

Beta Alpha--35 years \ \

!!/1

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. white sequence. She also wore
GALUPOLIS - The Beta
Before an altar flanked with white accessories and a deep Alpha Chapter of Delta Kappa
large baskets of white gladioli, rose pink double carnation Gamma held its 35th birthday
spider mums, tinted blue corsage . Both of the mothers' meeting at • the Hi-Way
carnations, baby's breath, and corsages featured a bridal Restaurant , Oak Hill. The
greenery, and two large seven wreath in the center of the group of hostesses, which inbranched candelabra, Miss flowers .
eluded Dallie Forgey and
Patricia Dawn Clark, daughter
A reception honoring the Josine Moses, used the Delta
of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald E. couple was held in the church Kappa Gamma colors of red
Clark, New Haven, became the social room. The bride's lable and gold for the birthday cake
bride
of
Larry
Elton featured pink and blue and table decorations.
Clevenger, son of Mr.'and Mrs. decorations. A three-layer
Grace was given by Mrs.
Elton G. Clevenger, Letart.
wedding cake, with pink and Mary Lanier and timely and
The double ring ceremony blue roses and miniature inspirational devotions were
was read by Rev. William doves, was topped with the presented by Mrs. Marjorie
DeMoss, Huntington, Aug. 9, at traditional bride and groom. Payne. Mrs . Zelma Northcutt
? p.m. in the New Haven United Traditional wedding candles directed the singing of "Come,
•Methodist Church, New Haven. were placed in crystal candle Ye Thankful People, Come,"
A hair hour program of holders. Mrs. Cleon Pratt, ' 1 Biess This House," uwe
nuptial music preceded the Porneroy, aunt of the brl"d e, Gather Together t'' "Over The
candlelit ceremony. Serving as Mrs. Rex Roush, sister-in-law River and Through the Woods'"
pianist was Mrs. Lee Steele, of the bride, Letart, and Mrs. and " America.' '
cousin of the groom. She
One charter member. Mrs.
Clark,
also
sister-in-law
Marie
Richards, who served as
Gary
presented the traditional
ofthebride,fromHazen,N. D., th
hate , r· t
.d
wedding marches.
presided at the table . Miss
e c P r s ll"S prest ent
Given in marriage by her Diane Bumgarner' Letart, during 193!1-1941 was present.
father, the bride wore a
She and several other past
.. presidents were given an
traditional gown made of white registered the guests.
The bride is a 1974 graduate applause of thanks for their
quana and alencon lace. The
of
Wahama High School and many years of service.
empire bodice was styled with attends
West Virginia Career
re-embroidered lace and small College, Huntington.
Mrs. Eva Caulley and Mrs.
seed pearls. It featured a
The groom is a 1971 graduate Dorothy Webb presented the
square neckline of re· of Wahama High School and a program. · They gave an
embroidered lace, miniature senior at Marshall University.
seed peals outlining the collar,
Out-{J(.town guests at the Naoma Porter, Detroit, Mich.;
and long alencon lace fitted wedding were Miss Barbara
Miss Karen Porter, Detroit,
sleeves, which were scalloped Clark, West Columbia; Mrs.
Mich. ; Mrs. Delphia Parsons,
at the edge. The skirt of the Blaine Carter, Sr., Gallipolis;
Orma, W.Va.
gown was a-line and scalloped Mrs. Denzil Welsh, Mid·
Richard Porter, Detroit;
lace bordered the hem. The dleport ; Mrs. Eunice Hart,
Miss Conn~e Lewis, Point
floor length train was made of Mason; Mr. and Mrs. Gary
ale neon lace, and featured Clark and Kristin Leigh, Pleasant ; Jack Rottgen ,
scalloped edging. "It was at- Hazen, N.D.; Mr. and Mrs. Mason; Mrs. Mike Lieving,
Glenville;
Miss Sharon
tached to the empire waist with Cleon Pratt, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Froendt, West Columbia. and
re-embroldered lace and Mrs. Blaine Carter, Jr .,
Miss Sue Fox, Mason.
small seed pearls. The bride's Theresa and Joey, Middleport;
Mrs . Margaret Cooke,
headpiece was a juliet cap of Richard Lee Porter, Detroit,
Letart; Mr . and Mrs. Rex
white satin trimmed with re- Mich.
Roush, Letart; Mr. and Mrs.
embroidered daisieS,
Mrs , Mel Clark, West Denver Gibbs, Stephanie and
miniature seed pearls and Columbia; Jeff Harbrecht,
Annette, Letart; Mrs. Mark
rhinestones .from which fell a Point Pleasant; Rev. and Mrs.
Ward, Letart; Mrs. Robert
chapel length, 1 three tiered J . W. DeMoss, Mark, Mike and
Dye, Letart ; Mr. and Mrll. R.
bouffat nylon tulle veil. She · Michelle , Huntington; Miss
P. Dye II, Letart; Paul Sayre,
carried a caseade bouquet of Vivian Woodrum, Clifton;
Letart; Roger Keefer, Letart.
pink and white rosebuds, blue Milton Tennant, MaSon;· Brent
Mr. and Mrs. Clevenger are
and white carnations, baby's Clark, West Point Military
now residing at 3201'.! Fifth
breath and greenery. Her Academy, New York; Mrs.
Avenue, Huntington.
ensemble was completed with
white accessories and a white
gold bell..,haped pendant with
a diamond In the center, which
was a gift from the groom.
Mrs. Brenda Cooke Adams
served as matron of honor. She
was attired in an a-line gown of
pink crepe with pink and white
daisy trim. The gown was
fashioned with an empire waist
and puffed sleeves. She wore a·
Infant-Sizes 6x
white picture hat with pink and
Crib Sets
white daisy trim and carried a
Mix
&amp; Match Slacks,
colonlal bouquet of pink daisies
Shirts, Angel Tops,
and pink tinted carnations with ·
pink and white satin streamers
lied In lover's knots.
The bridesmaids were Miss
Kimberly Sue Fields, New
Haven, and Miss Barbara Ann ·
Girls &amp; Boys
Clark, West , Columbia, bo.th
Infant to 6x-7
cousins of the bride. They wore
· gowns Identical to the matron
.of honor of blue crepe with blue
Slacks, Shirts
and white daisy trim. They
Jackets, 2 &amp; 3 piece
carried colonial bouquets of
Slack Sets
blue daisies and blue tinted
carnations with blue and white
strearilers tied in lover's knots.
They also wore a white picture
hat with blue and white daisy
,.
trim.
The
Slacks
l{ent Brown, Kettering,
Rob Roy Shoes
served as" best man. Ushers
were Gary Clark, brother of
Rob Roy Shirts, Belts,
·the bride, Hazen, N. D., and
Rez Roush, brother-In-law· of '
Sweater Vests, Toboggans
the groom, I:;etart.
For her daughter's wedding
Mrll. Clark w.oce a tight pink
polyester d&lt;!!Jble knit dress
which featUred long taPered
aleeves and a-Une siY,ling. She
wore white accessories and a
dtiep pink double carnation
corsage. Mrs. Clevenger was
.
attired in a long slee~e empire ·
.style ensemble of rose pink
polyester knit, trimmed in
. '

illustrated resume of their tour
of Canada and Alaska. Scenes
of British Columbia, Mt.
McKinley, Juneau, and An·
chorage were vividly por trayed . The ladies spoke of the
customs and economy of the
people of Alaska. After their
tour of Alaska, they went to
Seattle, Wash. to attend the
International Delta Kappa
Gamma Convention. Many
highlights of the convention
were presented. Fifty-two
members from Ohio attended
the convention.
The president, Mrs. Elsie
Bradshaw, presided over the
business
session .
[rene
Brannon, slate professional
affairs c hairwoman, ' gave a
look into the future in reR:ard to

GALLIPOUS - On Sunday
afternoon , Nov. 3, friends and
relatives from far and near
came to help Lucille and Earl
Tawney to celebrate their 50th
wedding anniversary.
The table was set with a
white cloth, with a centerpiece
of yellow chrysanthemums and
golden candlesticks.
Edith Joachim and Martha
Bingham presided at the table
serving punch, cake, nuts and
mints. After this, the many
gifts were opened ' and
acknowledged.
Those from out of town at·
tending were Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Mossman, Youngstown;
Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Jones,
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs.
William Southworth, Colum·
bus; Mrs. Ira Powell;
. Columbus; Mr. and Mrs .
James Ridgeway , Jackson ;
Mr. and Mrs. Beverly Sum·
mers, Clendenin, W. Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Denney Plumley and
son, Charleston, W. Va.; Mrs.
C. M. McCoy, Charleston, W.

CURITY STRETCH &amp;
REG. DIAPE·R~oz.
50

SPECIAL

$8

4

·=l

I

~;

..,.&lt;r

Ail·WEATHER

Q::.r~~

SPORTING
GOODS
AUTO PARTS

POWER TOOLS
HANn TOoLS
RADIOS-T.V.'s CORD ORGANS-STEREO'S

TIRES &amp; BATTERIES

992-5515

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

,,

Ho, Ho, Ho!

WERN E.R RADI.Q· &amp;TV

'{ake a peek at these pre-Christmas buys!

r•

All Bans Restricting Christmas
Lighting Have Been Removed For 1974

..

~t OlvtiimMGittli'M!

Carters

Health·rex

Boys 8-14

Billy

Kid

Gift Items

Overalls,
Also
2-4 Pajamas,
Underwear.

AND

ORNAMENTS

From Color Slide

•'

Of/er

•

BILLY THE KID

&lt;

,2T-4T
SlACKS &amp; JACKETS
To Match
Navy&amp; Berry
JEANS &amp; JEAN
. JACKETS
Sizes 4-U
1

SNAPSHOTS
25 to 49-16ci each
50 to 74-ISc each
·25 to 49-21c each
50 to 74-20c each
Dec. I Bth

79~

Reg. $1.19

•

••
••

..•

Girls 7·14

G. E.

DIGITAL CLOCK
Reg. 519.95 •

~ AYDS

BREAD &amp; ROLL TRAY

Reg. 11.39

.,••
Win a S50.oo Gift Certificate. Get Free' tickets at this store · starting· Moriday,'
November 18th. The first drawing will be Friday, Novt!mber 22 and every Friday until December 20th. Watch our window each week for the winning numbers.
Winners must claim their prize before 3 p.m. the ·f ollowing Friday. Good Luckl

For Holidays .

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"• ·
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$12.50

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BOx. ··

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7 FT. SOOTCH

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Church, Athens, since 1971,
having served churches
previously in DeKalb, Mt. Zion,
and Decatur, 01. A graduate of
the College of Wooster and
McCormick Seminary in
Chicago, Dr . Kreider also
studied at Dubuque Seminary
and received the S.T.D. degree
from San Francisco Seminary.
He has been involved in the
campus ministry at Ohio
University and is a part of the
United Presbyterian Ministry
in Athens County which gives
dynamic
leadership
to
congregations throughout the
county. He is a member of the
Department of Ministries of
the Synod of the Covenant
along with his Moderatorship
of the Presbytery of Scioto
Valley.

..-

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PIN~

-$1499
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The Shoe Box·

'r'

CHRISTMAS TREE

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GALLIPOLIS Grace ·
United Methodist Church will
be the site of an appreciation
luncheon honoring members of
the RSVP 1Retired Senior
Volunteer Program).
Mrs. Maye Roush , Gallia
County Coordin3tor and Mrs.
Mary Kathryn Smalley,
reg ional
director ,
have
plan~ed the luncheon for approximately 80 volunteer ·
workers, membe rs of the
advisory board and other
special guests .
Mrs . Roush and ' Mrs.
Smalley are using this means
to say "Thank you" for the
many hours these dedicated
pe ople have given to the
community.
RSVP
members
are
volunteer workers at The
Guiding Hand School in
Cheshire; The Gallia County
Chapter of the American Red
Cross; the Holzer Medical
Center; the Senior Citizen
Center; the Gallia County
Children's Home and the Gallia
County Volunteer Emergency
Squad. Other work stations in
the area have been acquired
but are inactive at the present
time.
The luncheon will be served
Friday, Nov. 22 at 12 noon.
Slides of RSVP activities will
be shown by Mrs. Smalley with
Rev. Tim Heaton, associate

Also In Women's Lined
. HickOI"y C:~l~r

$J77

~

1'1

Were $4.98 Yd.
SALE

'

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$3!1

··········~········ ··· ····

SPECIAL
PURCHASE

FUR FABRICS
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

98'
.....,.•..•....................

RSVP 'luncheon set

ALSO IN
UNLINED
COLOR HOUNDAWG

PORTABLE MIXER

"•

..•

I'

Double Knits

SALE

8 oz.

• 56.00
ION A

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CLUB TO DINE
BIDWELL - The Bidwell .
Porter Senior Citizens CluH"will
meet for Thanksgiving dinner,
Thursday, Nov. 21 at 6 p.m. in
the Bidwell • Porter cafeteria .
Turkey furnish ed . Bring
covered dish. Old a nd new
members please come.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY- The children of Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Harrington, Rt. I, Bidwell, will honor their
parents on their 50th wedding anniversary with an open
house celebration Sunday, Nov. 24 from 2 to 5 p.m. at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Gary Chambers, 2345 Borror Rd.,
Grove City. Harrington married the fonner Ethel Marie
Day, Nov. 24, 1924, in Gallia County. The couple has ..ven
children, Mrs. William (Catherine) Van,Meter, Reynoldsburg; Mrs. Buddy (Ruth) Sanders, Columbus; Jack,
Baltimore; Herbert, Jr., Gallipolis; Mrs. James (Janet)
Martin, Highland Heights; Richard, Rodney; and Mrs. Gary
(Donna) Chambers, Grove City. They also have 24 grandchildren and 11 great-grandchildren. Harrington Is a retired
carpenter, and they have lived at their present residence for
more than 26 years.

Mens

HYNOTIQUE colooNE

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Mr. and Mrs. H. Harrington

Hush Puppies~. toasty wa rm
fleece lined bOOt of brushed
pi gskin that's trea ted to be
water and stain resistant.
Under foot a thick cu shy crepe
sole and heel.

$J19

40's

Reg. $1.93

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.

.

TAMPAX

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young
Gallia
Academy
students, Mary Epling and
Barbara Edelmann have
shared the plano work.
Plan now to be in the
audience if not in the choir. It is
a joyful work and an inspiration not only to the participants but to the liste ners as
well. There are many family
groups Involved in the
" Messia h".
Mark
your
calendar today.

Special Sale
on Fabrics

POL VESTER
VELOUR

pastor of the church, fur·
nishing the music for the
guests.
Persons wishing more in·
forflllllion on RSVP may call
Mrs . Roush at 446-3361 or Rene
Broyles, van driver, at 4460515.

Ml.DDLEPORT .
OHIO

NOW AND SAVE

INGELS
Furniture

for the
ALWAYS. A GREAT
VALUE ••• NOW MADI
EVEN GREATER!

NIWIURIKA

li:W-Gf!J:t:l\1 ,,.,

-•1 CLIANS
RIGHT
UPTOTHI

I-•

BASIBOARDII

EUREKA
A CLEANER CRAMMED
WITH SO MANY

ssg
Scoop design swivel rocker,
plumply cushioned and In
tufted vinyl. Reg. S89.00

EXTRAS, YET
PRICED SO LOWI

Just
$79.95
• Adjustable 3-po· .
sitlon handle •
Convenient on/oN

foot switch • Dec-

orator designed
vinyl dust bag •
Converts easily
for

. Middleport

Yd.

SEW FOR
CHRISTMAS

above-t~e­

floor cleaning
(toolsopllonal)

lliPP,!~!!' are your dogs best friends!

79f;

BABY LOTION

•

.

. GALLIPOLIS - The combined choirs of Gallia Academy
High School and Rio Grande
College and coinmunity choirs
are rehearsing each Sunday at
5 p.m. in the Grace Methodist
Church for the presentation of
the "Messiah" . There is sllll
lime to join in if you sing and
want to be a part of this endeavor come to rehearsal on
Sunday.
Those singers interested in
doing one of the solos will be
auditioned this Sunday at 4:30
p.m. in the church . .
The performance will be at 3
p.m. Sunday, Dec. 8 at the
Lyne Center on the Rio Grande
campus . Directors Merlyn
Ross and Anne Fischer will
have a string ensemble and
organist from Ohio University
Music department as well as
Brant Adams playing the
piano. For the rehearssls two

Hush

JOHNSON

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'Messiah' singers sought

K.ROMEX

, $3.95 '

•

Hill Billy
· F.lare leg Jeans
Knit Shjrts
&amp; Slacks
2 and 3 piece
Slack Sets
Cinderella Dresses .

'
COLUMBUS
- Moderators,
highest elective officers, or
lh ree United Presbyterian
•odi es, will participate in
~rvices today in the Colwnbua
Area. They are Rev. Robert C.
'Lamar , Albany, N. Y.,
moderator of the !86th General
Assembly ( 1974) of the United
Presbyterian Church in the
U.S.A. which is the nati onal
United Presbyterian body,
Elaine Homrighouse, Newark,
Moderator of the Synod of the
Cove nan t governing United
Presbyterian work in Kentucky, Michigan and Ohio, and
Rev . Lorrin Kreider, Athens,
Moderator of the Presbytery of
Scioto Valley with over 40,000
members in all 111 churches in
central and southern Ohio.
The three Moderators will
participate in the 9:30 and 11
a.m. services at the Covenant
United Presbyterian Church,
Ridgecliff and Redding Roads
in Upper Arlington , as a part of
the 20th Anniversary of the
founding of the congregation.
,Rev . Francis W. Park is pastor
of the church.
Under the sponsorship of the
Presbytery of Scioto Valley,
Dr. Lamar will be honored and
will speak at a Presbytery·
wide service at the Overbrook
Presbyterian Church , 4131
North High Street, Columbus
at 4 p.m. This will give United
Presbyterians and others interested in the life and.ministry
of the church opportunity to
hear
and
di scuss
th e
challenges and opportunities of
the church tdday. A reception
will be held following the
se rvice .
Dr . Lamar was elected
Moderator June 18 at the
de n omi n atio n s General
Assembly in Louisville, Ky . A
lifelo ne Presbyterian, Dr.
. Lamar was born in Salt Lake
City, Utah and grew up in
Pueblo, Colo. and Topeka, Kan .
He is a graduate of Yale
University and Yale Divinity
School. He has served
pastorates in Milford , a nd
Stamford, Conn., prior to being
called as Pastor of the First
Presbyterian Church, Albany,
N.Y., in 1958 ..
He , along with Rev . John
Laske, pastor of the Overbrook
Church who was in Albany,
prior to coming to Columbus,
helped organize the FOCUS
Churches, a seven-year old
ecumenical cluster of four
downtown Albany churches,
inter-staffed and united in
community mission, providing
lay and minis terial involvement and funding for a
variety of programs and
projects. He ha s also served as
co.ebairperson of the Join\
Committee on Presbyterian
Union, a group spearheading
work to reunite the United
~sbyterian Church and the
southern-b~· .cd Presbyterian
Church U.~lf which have been
separated ~,ce the Civil War
era .
.
.
Homnghouse ts presently on
the' 'staff of the Seco~d .
Presbyter tan Church
'"
Newark. Following extensive
expertence m the church . m
New York Slate, she has been
active in women's work and in
the Task Force on Women of
the national church. She served
as vice moderator of the Synod
of the Covenant at its inception
in January, 1973 and was
elected Moderator in May,
19?4. She has been suggested
the
for nomination to
Moderatorship of the !87th
General Assembly (1975) as
successor to Dr. Lamar.
Dr. Kreider, has been pastor
of the First Presbyterian

family are gone, friends, of my
age, are gon~ , and sorrietimes
it gets kind of lonesome ... but
when it does I talk to the Lord."
Pa tterson belongs to the
congregation of the Trinity
Wesleyan Church.

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SEND F~MILY
. From Color Negativ·e

•

;The Kiddie Sho~~e
.MIDDLEPORT ·

Editor's Note- Charles
Patterson,
Oak
Hill,
cenebrated his 96th birthday
Nov. 6. He paid a vlJlt to
Ellzabeth Jones at the Oak Hill
offlce
of
th e Jackson
Publlshlng Co. to whom we are
Indebted for this Interview and
photograph.

QUASAR ·

WESTERN AUTO ASSOC. STORE
N. 2ND AVE.

Lynn made her debut as Miss
Prevention of BlindnesS in
September during the Ohio
Society for the Prevention of
Blindness campaign to raise
funds to continue their"work in
the state-: Thousands of other
youngsters 1ike · Lynn have
Wldergone similar vision tests.
Her brother , Eric, 8, was also a
victim of the disease which was
found through a similar
screening when he was four
years old. Statistics ..show that
one out of every 20 children
three to six years of age has a
vision problem. Anlblyopia, if
left untreated, before the age of
seven, progresses and blindness often results.
r
The Ohio Society for the
Prevention of Blindness is the
only voluntary agency committed solely to the prevention
of blindness. Besides the fr ee
preschool vision tests such as
Lynn and Eric had, the
Society 's programs include
free glaucoma sCreenings for
adults, home eye tests for tots,
and eye educational and safety
programs in schools, industries
and community groups.

OAK HILL - When Charles
Patterson came to our office
last week, we persuaded him to
let us take the above picture .
He brought his birth certificate
in for us to see. Not that we
,REDECORATING
would doubt Patterson 's word,
'.
but one almost needs the birth
FOR.·THE
HOLIDAYS?
to prove he is as old
certificate
'·
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'r
as he is. He was 96 years young
DOn' t forge11he roof of your
home. Have a be'autiful new
Nov . 6.
roof Installed by All -Weather
To the people in Oak Hill,
Roofing Co.
Patterson Is a familiar figure,
as he is seen often on the
All that is needed for a free
es11mate · is a phone ca II.
village streets, not slowly
Please Phone:
walking but almos t on the run.
With the exception of being a
little hard of hearing, Patterson is alert, both physically
and
mentally, and has very
337 N. 2, Middleport
good eyesight. He told us he
992-2550
had read the Bible through
twice this swnmer.
Known &amp;
Since the death of his wife
Ancient Greeks :awarded several years ago, he has lived
Reliable Service celery to winne rs of athletic alone on Hyland Ave., Qak Hill.
events.
According to his birth certificate he was born Aug . 6,
1878, but he said, "When I got
my birth certificate, I told the
month was wrong and they
.
~
offered to change It, but at this
' '
late date, I told them it didn't
make any 'difference."
He was born in Walnut Twp.,
Gallia County, which is at
Cadmus. He lacked three days
of being a month old when liis
mother died, Dec. 3, 18?8. His
father was 45 years old when he
was born and he lived to be 91.
He had a sister who lived to
be 98. Three of her chlldre~ are
living in another part of the
state. One will be 93 Nov. 13.
. The other two, twins, are '83. To
his knowledge he has only two
first cousins living: Mildred
Model WP5510KW
Carter, Cadmus, and Opal
ROLL·ABOUT CART INCLUDED!
Harkens, Vega.
When we told Patterson that
we thought it was won&lt;li!rful he
'
had attained such an, f!ge, he
''
·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
.said, " In somewaysit't· but in
'-•---..;,;,;.;;.,;ii.iiiiiiiii..iiiiiiiiiii.oiiii_ilil_____.. !some ways It isn't, forlall my

~l.i
bt~
;r

co"'"

Birthday.
observed

Hall is poster girl

GALLIPOUS :._ Without the
vision test Lynn
f Rebecca Hall, granddaughter
; of Mr. , and Mrs. William J.
• W.oolf, Sr. , Raccoon Rd .,
Gallipolis , had in 1972, her
amblyopia or '"lazy eye" might
have gone undetected until too
Ulate.
As it is, ~n, 6, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. James R. Hall,
Worthington , now has almost
normal vision with the aid of
glasses.

~~-1-tb

\.\.~ ....'4-t\":&gt;

Va .; Mrs. F. A. Swnmers,
Charleston, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Bruce Bingham, son and
daughter,
W.Va.

· Miss Lynn Rebecca Hall

pr~sc,hgo!.

SPORTING
GOO OS
~~\t.

Tawneys celebrate

·.CHARLES PATTERSON

~Miss

~

several seminars that will be
held in different localities.
Several members from
· Gallia county attended, ineluding Mrs. Joan Wood, Mrs.
Eugenia Gardner, Mrs. 'oallie
Forgey, Mrs. Irene Brannon,
Mrs. Virginia Covert, Mrs.
Louise Greenlee, Mrs. Winnie
Guthrie, Mrs. Doris Lanham,
Mrs . Mary Lanier, Mrs.
Fannie Metcalf, Mrs. Josine
Moses , Mrs. Zelma Northcutt,
Mrs. Marjorie Payne, Mrs.
Marie Richards, Miss Faye
Roberts,
Mrs . Florence
Trainer, Mrs. Mary Walker,
Mrs. Mary Withee, Miss
Gladys Frederick, Mrs. Carrie
Dale and guest. Miss Ruth
Baker.

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AT WESTERN AUTO···

Next meeting will be Nov. 24
at 5:30p.m. at Silver Memorial
Free Will Baptist Church,
Kanauga. All youth invited .

I

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ALL YOUR CHRISTMAS NEEDS

Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Clevenfer

.

Presbyters
participate

Sale

sas

This swivel rocker fea·
tures charming Colonial
styling. with rich maple
finish trim. Reg. Sl29

s-wu· IIIAI.·A-NAP®
makes Cleaning . even
easier ••• settings for
ali pile heights .from
low, flat pile to deep
dense
Middleport Merchants
$2,500
INGIFTCEilTIFICATES .

First Driowlng Nov ..22
' Fll!i'E TICKETS

..-ceuar.y.

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�'o 'I
12-The Sunday Times-Sentlnel,Sunday, Nov. 1?, 1974

Alberta

~oung,

Cliff Clay marry

WES:I' COLUMB IA, W. Va·.
Music for the ceremony was
- Miss Alberta Marie Young, · played by Mrs . Jose phine
daughter of ·Mr. and Mrs. Kirby and included '"! Love
Russell J . Young. We st You Truly, " " Melody -of
. CQiumbia, became the bride of Love~ · HThe One Rose That's in
Cliff Allen Clay, Point My Heart'" and the traditional
Pleasant, June 22 at the West wedding march. The wedding
Columbia United Met hodi st party was surrounded by
Church with Rev . George candelabra , and baskets of
Hoschar officiating at the white gla dioli with blue and
double..ring ceremony .
white chrysanthemums.
The bride was given in
marriage by her parenls and
escorted to the altar by her
father.
She wore" a gown fashioned
with empire wais t and long full
chiffon sleeves. Her shoulder
length veil was held by a lace
KANAUGA - The •Silver juliet ca p. She carried a
Memorial Youth Group opened bouquet of white carnations,
its meeting Nov. 10 at 5:30p.m. pink roses and baby's breath.
by singing "Leaning on lhe
Miss Nanty Young served as
Everlasting Arms.''
'bridesmaid for her sister's
Prayer was led by Sharon wedding. Sh? wore a gown of
Hively. Secretary's report was
by Doris Hively. Treasurer 's
report was by Sharon Hively.
Old and new business was
discussed. They had a lesson of
the Good News Course.
Refreshments were enjoyed by

light blue polyester knit, styled
with empire waist , and
trimmed with a white 'collar.
White lac e trimmed the
sleeves. She carried pink roses
with white and blue ribbons
tied in love knots.
Paul Clay, the groom 's
brother, served as the best
man. Ushers were Russell
Young, brother of the bride,
a nd Danny Rice, Point
Pleasant.
Mrs. David Hall, West
Columbia, registered guests.
Mrs. Wayne Zurcher served as
hostess. Both wore rosebud

Youth group
has meeting

''

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cors~ges .

·

For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Young wore a light pink
polyester knit dress. Her ac·
cessories were white . The
groom 's mother wore a white,
red and blue polyester knit
dress with navy blue · ac·

cessorles. Both moth~rs wore
white carnation co~sages.
A reception was held at the
chlirch. Assisting were Mrs:
Wayne Zurcher, Mrs. David
Hall and Miss Nancy Proffitt.
The bride is a graduate of
Wahama High School and is
employed at the Holzer
Medical Center. The groom Is a
graduate of Point Pleasant
High School and is employed at
Robbins and Myers, Gallipolis.
Following the wedding trip to
King's Island Mr. and Mrs.
Clay reside at West Columbia.
Out-{J{-town guests were Mrs.
Ruby McGee, Miss Kathy
McGee, Hurricane; Mrs. Judy
Arbaugh, St. Albans; Mr. and
Mrs .. Lenny Hodge, Ravenswood; Mr. and Mrs. Cleon Clay
and children, Terry aiid Pam,
Letart ; Mr. and Mrs. Russell
0 . Young, Clarksburg.

~ I'

Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Allen Clay

all. Seventeen members were
present.

:;.-~-.:~.~:-.;:!,.:'-:)!.:' ····c:};±~«::::».:*:~=:::::=:«@::~:~~=~~::;::;:::=:::::-":::::::=:::::::::::~:::::::::::~~

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Candlelit vows read ·

Beta Alpha--35 years \ \

!!/1

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. white sequence. She also wore
GALUPOLIS - The Beta
Before an altar flanked with white accessories and a deep Alpha Chapter of Delta Kappa
large baskets of white gladioli, rose pink double carnation Gamma held its 35th birthday
spider mums, tinted blue corsage . Both of the mothers' meeting at • the Hi-Way
carnations, baby's breath, and corsages featured a bridal Restaurant , Oak Hill. The
greenery, and two large seven wreath in the center of the group of hostesses, which inbranched candelabra, Miss flowers .
eluded Dallie Forgey and
Patricia Dawn Clark, daughter
A reception honoring the Josine Moses, used the Delta
of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald E. couple was held in the church Kappa Gamma colors of red
Clark, New Haven, became the social room. The bride's lable and gold for the birthday cake
bride
of
Larry
Elton featured pink and blue and table decorations.
Clevenger, son of Mr.'and Mrs. decorations. A three-layer
Grace was given by Mrs.
Elton G. Clevenger, Letart.
wedding cake, with pink and Mary Lanier and timely and
The double ring ceremony blue roses and miniature inspirational devotions were
was read by Rev. William doves, was topped with the presented by Mrs. Marjorie
DeMoss, Huntington, Aug. 9, at traditional bride and groom. Payne. Mrs . Zelma Northcutt
? p.m. in the New Haven United Traditional wedding candles directed the singing of "Come,
•Methodist Church, New Haven. were placed in crystal candle Ye Thankful People, Come,"
A hair hour program of holders. Mrs. Cleon Pratt, ' 1 Biess This House," uwe
nuptial music preceded the Porneroy, aunt of the brl"d e, Gather Together t'' "Over The
candlelit ceremony. Serving as Mrs. Rex Roush, sister-in-law River and Through the Woods'"
pianist was Mrs. Lee Steele, of the bride, Letart, and Mrs. and " America.' '
cousin of the groom. She
One charter member. Mrs.
Clark,
also
sister-in-law
Marie
Richards, who served as
Gary
presented the traditional
ofthebride,fromHazen,N. D., th
hate , r· t
.d
wedding marches.
presided at the table . Miss
e c P r s ll"S prest ent
Given in marriage by her Diane Bumgarner' Letart, during 193!1-1941 was present.
father, the bride wore a
She and several other past
.. presidents were given an
traditional gown made of white registered the guests.
The bride is a 1974 graduate applause of thanks for their
quana and alencon lace. The
of
Wahama High School and many years of service.
empire bodice was styled with attends
West Virginia Career
re-embroidered lace and small College, Huntington.
Mrs. Eva Caulley and Mrs.
seed pearls. It featured a
The groom is a 1971 graduate Dorothy Webb presented the
square neckline of re· of Wahama High School and a program. · They gave an
embroidered lace, miniature senior at Marshall University.
seed peals outlining the collar,
Out-{J(.town guests at the Naoma Porter, Detroit, Mich.;
and long alencon lace fitted wedding were Miss Barbara
Miss Karen Porter, Detroit,
sleeves, which were scalloped Clark, West Columbia; Mrs.
Mich. ; Mrs. Delphia Parsons,
at the edge. The skirt of the Blaine Carter, Sr., Gallipolis;
Orma, W.Va.
gown was a-line and scalloped Mrs. Denzil Welsh, Mid·
Richard Porter, Detroit;
lace bordered the hem. The dleport ; Mrs. Eunice Hart,
Miss Conn~e Lewis, Point
floor length train was made of Mason; Mr. and Mrs. Gary
ale neon lace, and featured Clark and Kristin Leigh, Pleasant ; Jack Rottgen ,
scalloped edging. "It was at- Hazen, N.D.; Mr. and Mrs. Mason; Mrs. Mike Lieving,
Glenville;
Miss Sharon
tached to the empire waist with Cleon Pratt, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Froendt, West Columbia. and
re-embroldered lace and Mrs. Blaine Carter, Jr .,
Miss Sue Fox, Mason.
small seed pearls. The bride's Theresa and Joey, Middleport;
Mrs . Margaret Cooke,
headpiece was a juliet cap of Richard Lee Porter, Detroit,
Letart; Mr . and Mrs. Rex
white satin trimmed with re- Mich.
Roush, Letart; Mr. and Mrs.
embroidered daisieS,
Mrs , Mel Clark, West Denver Gibbs, Stephanie and
miniature seed pearls and Columbia; Jeff Harbrecht,
Annette, Letart; Mrs. Mark
rhinestones .from which fell a Point Pleasant; Rev. and Mrs.
Ward, Letart; Mrs. Robert
chapel length, 1 three tiered J . W. DeMoss, Mark, Mike and
Dye, Letart ; Mr. and Mrll. R.
bouffat nylon tulle veil. She · Michelle , Huntington; Miss
P. Dye II, Letart; Paul Sayre,
carried a caseade bouquet of Vivian Woodrum, Clifton;
Letart; Roger Keefer, Letart.
pink and white rosebuds, blue Milton Tennant, MaSon;· Brent
Mr. and Mrs. Clevenger are
and white carnations, baby's Clark, West Point Military
now residing at 3201'.! Fifth
breath and greenery. Her Academy, New York; Mrs.
Avenue, Huntington.
ensemble was completed with
white accessories and a white
gold bell..,haped pendant with
a diamond In the center, which
was a gift from the groom.
Mrs. Brenda Cooke Adams
served as matron of honor. She
was attired in an a-line gown of
pink crepe with pink and white
daisy trim. The gown was
fashioned with an empire waist
and puffed sleeves. She wore a·
Infant-Sizes 6x
white picture hat with pink and
Crib Sets
white daisy trim and carried a
Mix
&amp; Match Slacks,
colonlal bouquet of pink daisies
Shirts, Angel Tops,
and pink tinted carnations with ·
pink and white satin streamers
lied In lover's knots.
The bridesmaids were Miss
Kimberly Sue Fields, New
Haven, and Miss Barbara Ann ·
Girls &amp; Boys
Clark, West , Columbia, bo.th
Infant to 6x-7
cousins of the bride. They wore
· gowns Identical to the matron
.of honor of blue crepe with blue
Slacks, Shirts
and white daisy trim. They
Jackets, 2 &amp; 3 piece
carried colonial bouquets of
Slack Sets
blue daisies and blue tinted
carnations with blue and white
strearilers tied in lover's knots.
They also wore a white picture
hat with blue and white daisy
,.
trim.
The
Slacks
l{ent Brown, Kettering,
Rob Roy Shoes
served as" best man. Ushers
were Gary Clark, brother of
Rob Roy Shirts, Belts,
·the bride, Hazen, N. D., and
Rez Roush, brother-In-law· of '
Sweater Vests, Toboggans
the groom, I:;etart.
For her daughter's wedding
Mrll. Clark w.oce a tight pink
polyester d&lt;!!Jble knit dress
which featUred long taPered
aleeves and a-Une siY,ling. She
wore white accessories and a
dtiep pink double carnation
corsage. Mrs. Clevenger was
.
attired in a long slee~e empire ·
.style ensemble of rose pink
polyester knit, trimmed in
. '

illustrated resume of their tour
of Canada and Alaska. Scenes
of British Columbia, Mt.
McKinley, Juneau, and An·
chorage were vividly por trayed . The ladies spoke of the
customs and economy of the
people of Alaska. After their
tour of Alaska, they went to
Seattle, Wash. to attend the
International Delta Kappa
Gamma Convention. Many
highlights of the convention
were presented. Fifty-two
members from Ohio attended
the convention.
The president, Mrs. Elsie
Bradshaw, presided over the
business
session .
[rene
Brannon, slate professional
affairs c hairwoman, ' gave a
look into the future in reR:ard to

GALLIPOUS - On Sunday
afternoon , Nov. 3, friends and
relatives from far and near
came to help Lucille and Earl
Tawney to celebrate their 50th
wedding anniversary.
The table was set with a
white cloth, with a centerpiece
of yellow chrysanthemums and
golden candlesticks.
Edith Joachim and Martha
Bingham presided at the table
serving punch, cake, nuts and
mints. After this, the many
gifts were opened ' and
acknowledged.
Those from out of town at·
tending were Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Mossman, Youngstown;
Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Jones,
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs.
William Southworth, Colum·
bus; Mrs. Ira Powell;
. Columbus; Mr. and Mrs .
James Ridgeway , Jackson ;
Mr. and Mrs. Beverly Sum·
mers, Clendenin, W. Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Denney Plumley and
son, Charleston, W. Va.; Mrs.
C. M. McCoy, Charleston, W.

CURITY STRETCH &amp;
REG. DIAPE·R~oz.
50

SPECIAL

$8

4

·=l

I

~;

..,.&lt;r

Ail·WEATHER

Q::.r~~

SPORTING
GOODS
AUTO PARTS

POWER TOOLS
HANn TOoLS
RADIOS-T.V.'s CORD ORGANS-STEREO'S

TIRES &amp; BATTERIES

992-5515

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

,,

Ho, Ho, Ho!

WERN E.R RADI.Q· &amp;TV

'{ake a peek at these pre-Christmas buys!

r•

All Bans Restricting Christmas
Lighting Have Been Removed For 1974

..

~t OlvtiimMGittli'M!

Carters

Health·rex

Boys 8-14

Billy

Kid

Gift Items

Overalls,
Also
2-4 Pajamas,
Underwear.

AND

ORNAMENTS

From Color Slide

•'

Of/er

•

BILLY THE KID

&lt;

,2T-4T
SlACKS &amp; JACKETS
To Match
Navy&amp; Berry
JEANS &amp; JEAN
. JACKETS
Sizes 4-U
1

SNAPSHOTS
25 to 49-16ci each
50 to 74-ISc each
·25 to 49-21c each
50 to 74-20c each
Dec. I Bth

79~

Reg. $1.19

•

••
••

..•

Girls 7·14

G. E.

DIGITAL CLOCK
Reg. 519.95 •

~ AYDS

BREAD &amp; ROLL TRAY

Reg. 11.39

.,••
Win a S50.oo Gift Certificate. Get Free' tickets at this store · starting· Moriday,'
November 18th. The first drawing will be Friday, Novt!mber 22 and every Friday until December 20th. Watch our window each week for the winning numbers.
Winners must claim their prize before 3 p.m. the ·f ollowing Friday. Good Luckl

For Holidays .

'.

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"•
"• ·
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$12.50

~

BOx. ··

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7 FT. SOOTCH

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Church, Athens, since 1971,
having served churches
previously in DeKalb, Mt. Zion,
and Decatur, 01. A graduate of
the College of Wooster and
McCormick Seminary in
Chicago, Dr . Kreider also
studied at Dubuque Seminary
and received the S.T.D. degree
from San Francisco Seminary.
He has been involved in the
campus ministry at Ohio
University and is a part of the
United Presbyterian Ministry
in Athens County which gives
dynamic
leadership
to
congregations throughout the
county. He is a member of the
Department of Ministries of
the Synod of the Covenant
along with his Moderatorship
of the Presbytery of Scioto
Valley.

..-

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''I.•·
'

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PIN~

-$1499
'

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The Shoe Box·

'r'

CHRISTMAS TREE

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,/ r

GALLIPOLIS Grace ·
United Methodist Church will
be the site of an appreciation
luncheon honoring members of
the RSVP 1Retired Senior
Volunteer Program).
Mrs. Maye Roush , Gallia
County Coordin3tor and Mrs.
Mary Kathryn Smalley,
reg ional
director ,
have
plan~ed the luncheon for approximately 80 volunteer ·
workers, membe rs of the
advisory board and other
special guests .
Mrs . Roush and ' Mrs.
Smalley are using this means
to say "Thank you" for the
many hours these dedicated
pe ople have given to the
community.
RSVP
members
are
volunteer workers at The
Guiding Hand School in
Cheshire; The Gallia County
Chapter of the American Red
Cross; the Holzer Medical
Center; the Senior Citizen
Center; the Gallia County
Children's Home and the Gallia
County Volunteer Emergency
Squad. Other work stations in
the area have been acquired
but are inactive at the present
time.
The luncheon will be served
Friday, Nov. 22 at 12 noon.
Slides of RSVP activities will
be shown by Mrs. Smalley with
Rev. Tim Heaton, associate

Also In Women's Lined
. HickOI"y C:~l~r

$J77

~

1'1

Were $4.98 Yd.
SALE

'

'

$3!1

··········~········ ··· ····

SPECIAL
PURCHASE

FUR FABRICS
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

98'
.....,.•..•....................

RSVP 'luncheon set

ALSO IN
UNLINED
COLOR HOUNDAWG

PORTABLE MIXER

"•

..•

I'

Double Knits

SALE

8 oz.

• 56.00
ION A

·~

..

CLUB TO DINE
BIDWELL - The Bidwell .
Porter Senior Citizens CluH"will
meet for Thanksgiving dinner,
Thursday, Nov. 21 at 6 p.m. in
the Bidwell • Porter cafeteria .
Turkey furnish ed . Bring
covered dish. Old a nd new
members please come.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY- The children of Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Harrington, Rt. I, Bidwell, will honor their
parents on their 50th wedding anniversary with an open
house celebration Sunday, Nov. 24 from 2 to 5 p.m. at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Gary Chambers, 2345 Borror Rd.,
Grove City. Harrington married the fonner Ethel Marie
Day, Nov. 24, 1924, in Gallia County. The couple has ..ven
children, Mrs. William (Catherine) Van,Meter, Reynoldsburg; Mrs. Buddy (Ruth) Sanders, Columbus; Jack,
Baltimore; Herbert, Jr., Gallipolis; Mrs. James (Janet)
Martin, Highland Heights; Richard, Rodney; and Mrs. Gary
(Donna) Chambers, Grove City. They also have 24 grandchildren and 11 great-grandchildren. Harrington Is a retired
carpenter, and they have lived at their present residence for
more than 26 years.

Mens

HYNOTIQUE colooNE

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Mr. and Mrs. H. Harrington

Hush Puppies~. toasty wa rm
fleece lined bOOt of brushed
pi gskin that's trea ted to be
water and stain resistant.
Under foot a thick cu shy crepe
sole and heel.

$J19

40's

Reg. $1.93

...•

.

.

TAMPAX

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I

young
Gallia
Academy
students, Mary Epling and
Barbara Edelmann have
shared the plano work.
Plan now to be in the
audience if not in the choir. It is
a joyful work and an inspiration not only to the participants but to the liste ners as
well. There are many family
groups Involved in the
" Messia h".
Mark
your
calendar today.

Special Sale
on Fabrics

POL VESTER
VELOUR

pastor of the church, fur·
nishing the music for the
guests.
Persons wishing more in·
forflllllion on RSVP may call
Mrs . Roush at 446-3361 or Rene
Broyles, van driver, at 4460515.

Ml.DDLEPORT .
OHIO

NOW AND SAVE

INGELS
Furniture

for the
ALWAYS. A GREAT
VALUE ••• NOW MADI
EVEN GREATER!

NIWIURIKA

li:W-Gf!J:t:l\1 ,,.,

-•1 CLIANS
RIGHT
UPTOTHI

I-•

BASIBOARDII

EUREKA
A CLEANER CRAMMED
WITH SO MANY

ssg
Scoop design swivel rocker,
plumply cushioned and In
tufted vinyl. Reg. S89.00

EXTRAS, YET
PRICED SO LOWI

Just
$79.95
• Adjustable 3-po· .
sitlon handle •
Convenient on/oN

foot switch • Dec-

orator designed
vinyl dust bag •
Converts easily
for

. Middleport

Yd.

SEW FOR
CHRISTMAS

above-t~e­

floor cleaning
(toolsopllonal)

lliPP,!~!!' are your dogs best friends!

79f;

BABY LOTION

•

.

. GALLIPOLIS - The combined choirs of Gallia Academy
High School and Rio Grande
College and coinmunity choirs
are rehearsing each Sunday at
5 p.m. in the Grace Methodist
Church for the presentation of
the "Messiah" . There is sllll
lime to join in if you sing and
want to be a part of this endeavor come to rehearsal on
Sunday.
Those singers interested in
doing one of the solos will be
auditioned this Sunday at 4:30
p.m. in the church . .
The performance will be at 3
p.m. Sunday, Dec. 8 at the
Lyne Center on the Rio Grande
campus . Directors Merlyn
Ross and Anne Fischer will
have a string ensemble and
organist from Ohio University
Music department as well as
Brant Adams playing the
piano. For the rehearssls two

Hush

JOHNSON

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'Messiah' singers sought

K.ROMEX

, $3.95 '

•

Hill Billy
· F.lare leg Jeans
Knit Shjrts
&amp; Slacks
2 and 3 piece
Slack Sets
Cinderella Dresses .

'
COLUMBUS
- Moderators,
highest elective officers, or
lh ree United Presbyterian
•odi es, will participate in
~rvices today in the Colwnbua
Area. They are Rev. Robert C.
'Lamar , Albany, N. Y.,
moderator of the !86th General
Assembly ( 1974) of the United
Presbyterian Church in the
U.S.A. which is the nati onal
United Presbyterian body,
Elaine Homrighouse, Newark,
Moderator of the Synod of the
Cove nan t governing United
Presbyterian work in Kentucky, Michigan and Ohio, and
Rev . Lorrin Kreider, Athens,
Moderator of the Presbytery of
Scioto Valley with over 40,000
members in all 111 churches in
central and southern Ohio.
The three Moderators will
participate in the 9:30 and 11
a.m. services at the Covenant
United Presbyterian Church,
Ridgecliff and Redding Roads
in Upper Arlington , as a part of
the 20th Anniversary of the
founding of the congregation.
,Rev . Francis W. Park is pastor
of the church.
Under the sponsorship of the
Presbytery of Scioto Valley,
Dr. Lamar will be honored and
will speak at a Presbytery·
wide service at the Overbrook
Presbyterian Church , 4131
North High Street, Columbus
at 4 p.m. This will give United
Presbyterians and others interested in the life and.ministry
of the church opportunity to
hear
and
di scuss
th e
challenges and opportunities of
the church tdday. A reception
will be held following the
se rvice .
Dr . Lamar was elected
Moderator June 18 at the
de n omi n atio n s General
Assembly in Louisville, Ky . A
lifelo ne Presbyterian, Dr.
. Lamar was born in Salt Lake
City, Utah and grew up in
Pueblo, Colo. and Topeka, Kan .
He is a graduate of Yale
University and Yale Divinity
School. He has served
pastorates in Milford , a nd
Stamford, Conn., prior to being
called as Pastor of the First
Presbyterian Church, Albany,
N.Y., in 1958 ..
He , along with Rev . John
Laske, pastor of the Overbrook
Church who was in Albany,
prior to coming to Columbus,
helped organize the FOCUS
Churches, a seven-year old
ecumenical cluster of four
downtown Albany churches,
inter-staffed and united in
community mission, providing
lay and minis terial involvement and funding for a
variety of programs and
projects. He ha s also served as
co.ebairperson of the Join\
Committee on Presbyterian
Union, a group spearheading
work to reunite the United
~sbyterian Church and the
southern-b~· .cd Presbyterian
Church U.~lf which have been
separated ~,ce the Civil War
era .
.
.
Homnghouse ts presently on
the' 'staff of the Seco~d .
Presbyter tan Church
'"
Newark. Following extensive
expertence m the church . m
New York Slate, she has been
active in women's work and in
the Task Force on Women of
the national church. She served
as vice moderator of the Synod
of the Covenant at its inception
in January, 1973 and was
elected Moderator in May,
19?4. She has been suggested
the
for nomination to
Moderatorship of the !87th
General Assembly (1975) as
successor to Dr. Lamar.
Dr. Kreider, has been pastor
of the First Presbyterian

family are gone, friends, of my
age, are gon~ , and sorrietimes
it gets kind of lonesome ... but
when it does I talk to the Lord."
Pa tterson belongs to the
congregation of the Trinity
Wesleyan Church.

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SEND F~MILY
. From Color Negativ·e

•

;The Kiddie Sho~~e
.MIDDLEPORT ·

Editor's Note- Charles
Patterson,
Oak
Hill,
cenebrated his 96th birthday
Nov. 6. He paid a vlJlt to
Ellzabeth Jones at the Oak Hill
offlce
of
th e Jackson
Publlshlng Co. to whom we are
Indebted for this Interview and
photograph.

QUASAR ·

WESTERN AUTO ASSOC. STORE
N. 2ND AVE.

Lynn made her debut as Miss
Prevention of BlindnesS in
September during the Ohio
Society for the Prevention of
Blindness campaign to raise
funds to continue their"work in
the state-: Thousands of other
youngsters 1ike · Lynn have
Wldergone similar vision tests.
Her brother , Eric, 8, was also a
victim of the disease which was
found through a similar
screening when he was four
years old. Statistics ..show that
one out of every 20 children
three to six years of age has a
vision problem. Anlblyopia, if
left untreated, before the age of
seven, progresses and blindness often results.
r
The Ohio Society for the
Prevention of Blindness is the
only voluntary agency committed solely to the prevention
of blindness. Besides the fr ee
preschool vision tests such as
Lynn and Eric had, the
Society 's programs include
free glaucoma sCreenings for
adults, home eye tests for tots,
and eye educational and safety
programs in schools, industries
and community groups.

OAK HILL - When Charles
Patterson came to our office
last week, we persuaded him to
let us take the above picture .
He brought his birth certificate
in for us to see. Not that we
,REDECORATING
would doubt Patterson 's word,
'.
but one almost needs the birth
FOR.·THE
HOLIDAYS?
to prove he is as old
certificate
'·
•
'r
as he is. He was 96 years young
DOn' t forge11he roof of your
home. Have a be'autiful new
Nov . 6.
roof Installed by All -Weather
To the people in Oak Hill,
Roofing Co.
Patterson Is a familiar figure,
as he is seen often on the
All that is needed for a free
es11mate · is a phone ca II.
village streets, not slowly
Please Phone:
walking but almos t on the run.
With the exception of being a
little hard of hearing, Patterson is alert, both physically
and
mentally, and has very
337 N. 2, Middleport
good eyesight. He told us he
992-2550
had read the Bible through
twice this swnmer.
Known &amp;
Since the death of his wife
Ancient Greeks :awarded several years ago, he has lived
Reliable Service celery to winne rs of athletic alone on Hyland Ave., Qak Hill.
events.
According to his birth certificate he was born Aug . 6,
1878, but he said, "When I got
my birth certificate, I told the
month was wrong and they
.
~
offered to change It, but at this
' '
late date, I told them it didn't
make any 'difference."
He was born in Walnut Twp.,
Gallia County, which is at
Cadmus. He lacked three days
of being a month old when liis
mother died, Dec. 3, 18?8. His
father was 45 years old when he
was born and he lived to be 91.
He had a sister who lived to
be 98. Three of her chlldre~ are
living in another part of the
state. One will be 93 Nov. 13.
. The other two, twins, are '83. To
his knowledge he has only two
first cousins living: Mildred
Model WP5510KW
Carter, Cadmus, and Opal
ROLL·ABOUT CART INCLUDED!
Harkens, Vega.
When we told Patterson that
we thought it was won&lt;li!rful he
'
had attained such an, f!ge, he
''
·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
.said, " In somewaysit't· but in
'-•---..;,;,;.;;.,;ii.iiiiiiiii..iiiiiiiiiii.oiiii_ilil_____.. !some ways It isn't, forlall my

~l.i
bt~
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co"'"

Birthday.
observed

Hall is poster girl

GALLIPOUS :._ Without the
vision test Lynn
f Rebecca Hall, granddaughter
; of Mr. , and Mrs. William J.
• W.oolf, Sr. , Raccoon Rd .,
Gallipolis , had in 1972, her
amblyopia or '"lazy eye" might
have gone undetected until too
Ulate.
As it is, ~n, 6, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. James R. Hall,
Worthington , now has almost
normal vision with the aid of
glasses.

~~-1-tb

\.\.~ ....'4-t\":&gt;

Va .; Mrs. F. A. Swnmers,
Charleston, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Bruce Bingham, son and
daughter,
W.Va.

· Miss Lynn Rebecca Hall

pr~sc,hgo!.

SPORTING
GOO OS
~~\t.

Tawneys celebrate

·.CHARLES PATTERSON

~Miss

~

several seminars that will be
held in different localities.
Several members from
· Gallia county attended, ineluding Mrs. Joan Wood, Mrs.
Eugenia Gardner, Mrs. 'oallie
Forgey, Mrs. Irene Brannon,
Mrs. Virginia Covert, Mrs.
Louise Greenlee, Mrs. Winnie
Guthrie, Mrs. Doris Lanham,
Mrs . Mary Lanier, Mrs.
Fannie Metcalf, Mrs. Josine
Moses , Mrs. Zelma Northcutt,
Mrs. Marjorie Payne, Mrs.
Marie Richards, Miss Faye
Roberts,
Mrs . Florence
Trainer, Mrs. Mary Walker,
Mrs. Mary Withee, Miss
Gladys Frederick, Mrs. Carrie
Dale and guest. Miss Ruth
Baker.

'

'(

AT WESTERN AUTO···

Next meeting will be Nov. 24
at 5:30p.m. at Silver Memorial
Free Will Baptist Church,
Kanauga. All youth invited .

I

~

ALL YOUR CHRISTMAS NEEDS

Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Clevenfer

.

Presbyters
participate

Sale

sas

This swivel rocker fea·
tures charming Colonial
styling. with rich maple
finish trim. Reg. Sl29

s-wu· IIIAI.·A-NAP®
makes Cleaning . even
easier ••• settings for
ali pile heights .from
low, flat pile to deep
dense
Middleport Merchants
$2,500
INGIFTCEilTIFICATES .

First Driowlng Nov ..22
' Fll!i'E TICKETS

..-ceuar.y.

•
'

''

�.

.

.

~

'.

OPEN DAILY
10 TO 9
SUNDAY
. 1 TO 7

PRICES II
EFFECT SUIDA Y
AID MONDAY

NOVEMBER 17 &amp; 18

OILY WHILE
QUANTITIES LAST

COLEMAN
5000-8000 BTU

HEATER

. . :_. . WiNCHESTER

SINClE:$HOT.SHOTGUN
1,'

HECK'S

;

·

. RIG. ·. . .' '
~.:):1 ;95 . .

·s·.
.... ,.

SLEEPING BAG

$34'' /Ill '

Durable sleepi ng bag, wra ps yo u in o cushio n of ~or mth all night long.

HECK'S
. REG.
$21.99
S/IUTS .

HECK'S REG.
$46.99

$

Mo~ e ~ur_e yov are seen! Greater Sa fe ty in traff ic, on
streets, hrlls or poths. Bri;ht permanl s in Fluroescent
colors. Mounted on unbreakable sol id fib re g lo M pole
wi th brocket. for ea~y a tta chment.
.

TOOL
BOOK
-

· '·

·. Heck'.s. give you quality seal ed beam
· bulbs in numbe r 4000, 4001 and 6006.

09

$

. ..

.
..

MANTLES

78tAK

EACH

HECK'S REG.
99'Pak

HECK'S REG.
To 1.99

.

·~ .

.· ROBERK

OirMhonol •e lle&lt;!or for :n o ond l18 (alemon lon·
lef n\. Pal i&gt;hed aluminvm .,.;,h mol&lt;kd A8S hondl~ .

HECK'S
REG.
$4.99

EACH

.

,

..

.&amp; ROLLER
SET

12fL. OZ.
PRESTONE

14 OZ. NET
PRESTONE

PRIME

sac

GAS DRYER

HECK'S REG. 99 1

.. AND BASE

,. CABINETS
.. '
88
'

,.

•14
..

HECK'S REG.. •19.88

HAND WARMER

$]99
HECK'S REG.
' $5.71

SPORT SHIRTS

$244

HICK'S
REG.
UP TO. $3.99
EACH

MAGAZINE
RACK
H:~::s SJ99

HOUSEWARE

IIEPT.
5 PIECE

$6.44

$

·BOWL ·

33~~Fi .

'

IRONING
BOARD

oil ·

$544
HECK'SREG.
$9.99

DII'T.

.

.

FLASH BAR.·

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

FOR SX·70POLAIOID

CAMIIA

HICK'SIIG. $2.19

$199

JIWEUY IIEI'T.

Housewares

·.sse

. G. E.

,.

It•

M·24

ASSOIIiD COLORS

HECK' S REG. $10.96

JEWElRY DEPT.

. MWIUY 11111.

-'

3-SPEED ·
MIXER .

HECK'S REG. 69' ·

$2.99

-SIIIA• . ,
.

$159

LABEL
TAPE

IIG.

.

' ...
,!:)

.

'·

·r .

I

.

.'

HICK'SIIG.
$1 .19

COSMETIC

LABEL MAKER
HICK'S

99c

T-leg de~ign . Non-slip rubbe r-tip ped
feet. Single Spring Stop ac tivates ·
co ntrol posi tion.

. DYMO ¥1,''

.. fti~IC·s RIG. $4.99 .

OIL.

l;cl~

DYMO
USU'k'TAPI .

:y,
·.,.
oil:.
;

HECK'SRIG. $2 .39

HousewareS Dept. · ,Dept

.

·'

$119

Heck's.Reg. 12.99

r, . .
'·

aa~

BABY

COOKIE PRESS
WITH
RECIPE lOOK

•

KING SIZE

HOUSEWARI DEPT.

SET

l:OMPUTE WITH AnACHMIITS

.

SNACK
TABLE

T~V.

WOOD

SEAT CUSHIONS
.
.

. HECK'S REG. 19.88

SHAMPOO
Heck's Reg. •1.49

MARSHALLAN

ALL AUJO

•

HAIR

EVEREADY

HICK' $ RIG.
$1.61

$6~41SET

1

GEE

160%.
JOHNSON'S

HEC"'S REG.

·. $}§88 '

COSMETIC
DEPT.

SIZE 3-7

$1''

99c

HICK'S RIG.
$1.19

•-·-

.."'i J!'
LANTERN

Thi s time of year yo ur boys wi ll
need long -s leeve permone11f p re11
\pori ~ hirts . These ore gteo l fo r
wo rk o r lei,ure be cause they're
comfo rtable a nd hove added 1tyle
an d o re mo chine woshoble- nev·
er 'need iron ing . Select from a va riety of plaids, solids, prints a nd
knits . Sizes 3·7 &amp; 8· 16.

BUFFERIN 100' s.

Cosmetics Dept.

ChooSe from a ssorted colors. Two-

2MANTLE •

HECK'S REG . $8.88
JIWIUIY DEPT.

CHOICE

$119

'

,(ARMATS ·

COLEMAN

$599

•••

'

]99

COSMinc MilT.

-o•••

BOYS &amp; JR. BOYS
PERM PRESS

lACI

MUG TREE

RWB

:;;r,;:d•d.

DISINFECTANT

$5''

AUTO. DEPT.

"l4,0,'"0'

$

M"nd~ Ia• ,m(,n &lt; Ito"'"~ 1o b. ooou"d oh, ho•nt. &lt;OII OIJI" a o&lt;&gt;ffi&lt;e
Alwnl'"' oood~ Ia• u"' (In '11{1• ond ' "'l&gt;e""9 Pu1h b.. non o...,.y
'"9 olio -. 1 ~, «ny d"PDI&lt;II ol wou• f a •y tol!onl,j •ubt'"' ....... h,
b..•l• '" &lt;O'""b ·" "" '"''~·"
a" ~ th•~om. a"d k~ep• 1'-o
\I*"U',.. ,..,,..,..,, bo•tlloo• ''""" orod ello&lt;O e"'

HICK'S RIG.

. LYSOL
sPRAY

STADIUM
SEAT

· HECK'S
REG.
19'

22c .

•o·

HICK'S RIG.
$1.09

FLOOR SWEEPER

140%.

Sturd y,leightweig ht tu bing, futl loom padded
seo t and boO. re5f· covt~ ,.d with washable
vinyl. Fold up for easy carryin g. Heo vy- duty
1pring clamp to haeC on bl&amp;odl.ar.

.FOOTBALL
~::.s
$
.
$5.99
.: . UTILITY.

COSIIETIC
MilT.

HECK'S REG. 17.99

sac
DE-ICER

'

$488

SPRAY

~upe!!"r. i:ld;~thiH' J?erfofinonct . UniYIIrKJ I fit for bot h bo)'onet rJnd
stele p1n ·a~men t l.

54c

•

STARTING
FLUID

... .\f:Ut'IR BLADES
::~· ,., $
44
HICKS

BATH OIL
BEADS

11.4 OZ. NET
. PRESTON!

.

Equ1pped wi th ma tri11 . Ploys stereo throvgh 2
'peo~ers or twi n- stereo " quo d-soulld" throug h
~ !pea~ers . Slide CO ill rols for volume bala11u!
a nd tone. lll um i11ated color-coded channel indica tor. Aulomol ic and mo11uol channel I

Your boy wiN· enjoy t~ wi d, Jelection of !tyle1 and colors of these
paiamos. And MQm will e njo.y the
eo1y-core-fo r polyestt rl be cause ·
th ey' re machine wa s ha bl e a nd
flame re tardant . St yles ind vde
numbered de sign, prints, so lidi,
.flannels . and ' ki-style in sites ~-7
ottd 10·16.

170%.
SOniQUI

FlANNEL · ' .

$299

STDEO TAPE PLAYEI

A.vt~motic 8 -t roc:~ cor stere o ta pe player.

PAJAMAS

. .

78C

AUTOMOBILE 8-TRACK

BOYS fr JR. BOYS

IIEPT.

cOLD WEATHER·
·SHIRT

LANTERN
REFLECTOR ·

INLAND

JEWEUY DEPT.

COSMETIC
HECK'S REG. $2 .25

JERGENS
LOTION

HECK'S RIG.
$59.96

99'

IIAIDWAMDIPT.
COLEMAN

Set includes bulb and holder.

&lt;HOKI68C ""

rHCK'S REG. $21.88

· .;·· tBULBS

SUNLAMP
AND HOLDER

HECK'S REG.
$2.21

HARDWARE DEPT.

· SEALED BEAM

-

I

·.~-·_,._:.::&gt;.- -·~~
. . .J.J·.
_.. . ~;\\
\.~
' SYLVANIA

HICK'SIIG.

$1188

HARDWARE DEPT.

;\:~~ ~&gt;
' . i~~~j
;[_·-·.·~ ,.
J. '
. ~ , ..

POWERED AND, NATURAL SCENT

A COMPlETE GUIDI
TO HAID AID POWER TOOLS
OVER 300 ILLUSTIA TIOIS.

panels a nd univer$01 mo unting
cro ss bar. Bloc!: post has cro ss

HECK'S REG.
$9.88

..

AITI·PEISPIIAIT

a rms a nd go ld decora tive balls.

AUTO DEPT.

l ·~

RIGHT GUARD

AID POST
th froste d beveled ac r ylic

$

100%.

50Z.

HARDWAIIE

LANTERN

With fr osted ocry.l ic pan·
e ls . 1 p iece p orce lain
soc ket.

...............
· .c~owMf

-

,. ., _ ·.. I''

.

COSMITIC DEPT.

COLONIAL STYLE

LANTERN

~

29

$

ial

HECK'S
REG.
$1.99

COACH STYLE

QUANTITIES LAST

ANTI-PERSPIRANT .

SAFETY
FLAG
FOR BICYCLE

. DEPT.

ONLY

DIAL

6FOOT

TtoMI&lt;&gt;rm•" ••~• "' ' "bon lrom a ~hilly IHdtol inla a ,..arm • •~r;,n&lt;• .,nd
del i,..&lt;! oil llM heat, ·, •o••d •a g; ...- up ta 11 .000 l tU :• 101 "''• · ftorrlll• " ·
odorl.,u &lt;omlo•t '-&gt;1, ••t~~&gt;~dle" at aulude 1e mpor&lt;Ji vre! Ell!&lt;'" "'· e a&lt;r 1o
&lt;arry. 1irrp&amp;. ta opera!t ond quic-k Ia Mol - all '"'"' hom Cal•mun .

PRICES IN
EFFECT SUNDAY
AND MONDAY
NOVEMBER 17 &amp; 18

.I

I

'.

$988·.·
_

'

.
~

.

' ..
'

'
.I

�.

.

.

~

'.

OPEN DAILY
10 TO 9
SUNDAY
. 1 TO 7

PRICES II
EFFECT SUIDA Y
AID MONDAY

NOVEMBER 17 &amp; 18

OILY WHILE
QUANTITIES LAST

COLEMAN
5000-8000 BTU

HEATER

. . :_. . WiNCHESTER

SINClE:$HOT.SHOTGUN
1,'

HECK'S

;

·

. RIG. ·. . .' '
~.:):1 ;95 . .

·s·.
.... ,.

SLEEPING BAG

$34'' /Ill '

Durable sleepi ng bag, wra ps yo u in o cushio n of ~or mth all night long.

HECK'S
. REG.
$21.99
S/IUTS .

HECK'S REG.
$46.99

$

Mo~ e ~ur_e yov are seen! Greater Sa fe ty in traff ic, on
streets, hrlls or poths. Bri;ht permanl s in Fluroescent
colors. Mounted on unbreakable sol id fib re g lo M pole
wi th brocket. for ea~y a tta chment.
.

TOOL
BOOK
-

· '·

·. Heck'.s. give you quality seal ed beam
· bulbs in numbe r 4000, 4001 and 6006.

09

$

. ..

.
..

MANTLES

78tAK

EACH

HECK'S REG.
99'Pak

HECK'S REG.
To 1.99

.

·~ .

.· ROBERK

OirMhonol •e lle&lt;!or for :n o ond l18 (alemon lon·
lef n\. Pal i&gt;hed aluminvm .,.;,h mol&lt;kd A8S hondl~ .

HECK'S
REG.
$4.99

EACH

.

,

..

.&amp; ROLLER
SET

12fL. OZ.
PRESTONE

14 OZ. NET
PRESTONE

PRIME

sac

GAS DRYER

HECK'S REG. 99 1

.. AND BASE

,. CABINETS
.. '
88
'

,.

•14
..

HECK'S REG.. •19.88

HAND WARMER

$]99
HECK'S REG.
' $5.71

SPORT SHIRTS

$244

HICK'S
REG.
UP TO. $3.99
EACH

MAGAZINE
RACK
H:~::s SJ99

HOUSEWARE

IIEPT.
5 PIECE

$6.44

$

·BOWL ·

33~~Fi .

'

IRONING
BOARD

oil ·

$544
HECK'SREG.
$9.99

DII'T.

.

.

FLASH BAR.·

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

FOR SX·70POLAIOID

CAMIIA

HICK'SIIG. $2.19

$199

JIWEUY IIEI'T.

Housewares

·.sse

. G. E.

,.

It•

M·24

ASSOIIiD COLORS

HECK' S REG. $10.96

JEWElRY DEPT.

. MWIUY 11111.

-'

3-SPEED ·
MIXER .

HECK'S REG. 69' ·

$2.99

-SIIIA• . ,
.

$159

LABEL
TAPE

IIG.

.

' ...
,!:)

.

'·

·r .

I

.

.'

HICK'SIIG.
$1 .19

COSMETIC

LABEL MAKER
HICK'S

99c

T-leg de~ign . Non-slip rubbe r-tip ped
feet. Single Spring Stop ac tivates ·
co ntrol posi tion.

. DYMO ¥1,''

.. fti~IC·s RIG. $4.99 .

OIL.

l;cl~

DYMO
USU'k'TAPI .

:y,
·.,.
oil:.
;

HECK'SRIG. $2 .39

HousewareS Dept. · ,Dept

.

·'

$119

Heck's.Reg. 12.99

r, . .
'·

aa~

BABY

COOKIE PRESS
WITH
RECIPE lOOK

•

KING SIZE

HOUSEWARI DEPT.

SET

l:OMPUTE WITH AnACHMIITS

.

SNACK
TABLE

T~V.

WOOD

SEAT CUSHIONS
.
.

. HECK'S REG. 19.88

SHAMPOO
Heck's Reg. •1.49

MARSHALLAN

ALL AUJO

•

HAIR

EVEREADY

HICK' $ RIG.
$1.61

$6~41SET

1

GEE

160%.
JOHNSON'S

HEC"'S REG.

·. $}§88 '

COSMETIC
DEPT.

SIZE 3-7

$1''

99c

HICK'S RIG.
$1.19

•-·-

.."'i J!'
LANTERN

Thi s time of year yo ur boys wi ll
need long -s leeve permone11f p re11
\pori ~ hirts . These ore gteo l fo r
wo rk o r lei,ure be cause they're
comfo rtable a nd hove added 1tyle
an d o re mo chine woshoble- nev·
er 'need iron ing . Select from a va riety of plaids, solids, prints a nd
knits . Sizes 3·7 &amp; 8· 16.

BUFFERIN 100' s.

Cosmetics Dept.

ChooSe from a ssorted colors. Two-

2MANTLE •

HECK'S REG . $8.88
JIWIUIY DEPT.

CHOICE

$119

'

,(ARMATS ·

COLEMAN

$599

•••

'

]99

COSMinc MilT.

-o•••

BOYS &amp; JR. BOYS
PERM PRESS

lACI

MUG TREE

RWB

:;;r,;:d•d.

DISINFECTANT

$5''

AUTO. DEPT.

"l4,0,'"0'

$

M"nd~ Ia• ,m(,n &lt; Ito"'"~ 1o b. ooou"d oh, ho•nt. &lt;OII OIJI" a o&lt;&gt;ffi&lt;e
Alwnl'"' oood~ Ia• u"' (In '11{1• ond ' "'l&gt;e""9 Pu1h b.. non o...,.y
'"9 olio -. 1 ~, «ny d"PDI&lt;II ol wou• f a •y tol!onl,j •ubt'"' ....... h,
b..•l• '" &lt;O'""b ·" "" '"''~·"
a" ~ th•~om. a"d k~ep• 1'-o
\I*"U',.. ,..,,..,..,, bo•tlloo• ''""" orod ello&lt;O e"'

HICK'S RIG.

. LYSOL
sPRAY

STADIUM
SEAT

· HECK'S
REG.
19'

22c .

•o·

HICK'S RIG.
$1.09

FLOOR SWEEPER

140%.

Sturd y,leightweig ht tu bing, futl loom padded
seo t and boO. re5f· covt~ ,.d with washable
vinyl. Fold up for easy carryin g. Heo vy- duty
1pring clamp to haeC on bl&amp;odl.ar.

.FOOTBALL
~::.s
$
.
$5.99
.: . UTILITY.

COSIIETIC
MilT.

HECK'S REG. 17.99

sac
DE-ICER

'

$488

SPRAY

~upe!!"r. i:ld;~thiH' J?erfofinonct . UniYIIrKJ I fit for bot h bo)'onet rJnd
stele p1n ·a~men t l.

54c

•

STARTING
FLUID

... .\f:Ut'IR BLADES
::~· ,., $
44
HICKS

BATH OIL
BEADS

11.4 OZ. NET
. PRESTON!

.

Equ1pped wi th ma tri11 . Ploys stereo throvgh 2
'peo~ers or twi n- stereo " quo d-soulld" throug h
~ !pea~ers . Slide CO ill rols for volume bala11u!
a nd tone. lll um i11ated color-coded channel indica tor. Aulomol ic and mo11uol channel I

Your boy wiN· enjoy t~ wi d, Jelection of !tyle1 and colors of these
paiamos. And MQm will e njo.y the
eo1y-core-fo r polyestt rl be cause ·
th ey' re machine wa s ha bl e a nd
flame re tardant . St yles ind vde
numbered de sign, prints, so lidi,
.flannels . and ' ki-style in sites ~-7
ottd 10·16.

170%.
SOniQUI

FlANNEL · ' .

$299

STDEO TAPE PLAYEI

A.vt~motic 8 -t roc:~ cor stere o ta pe player.

PAJAMAS

. .

78C

AUTOMOBILE 8-TRACK

BOYS fr JR. BOYS

IIEPT.

cOLD WEATHER·
·SHIRT

LANTERN
REFLECTOR ·

INLAND

JEWEUY DEPT.

COSMETIC
HECK'S REG. $2 .25

JERGENS
LOTION

HECK'S RIG.
$59.96

99'

IIAIDWAMDIPT.
COLEMAN

Set includes bulb and holder.

&lt;HOKI68C ""

rHCK'S REG. $21.88

· .;·· tBULBS

SUNLAMP
AND HOLDER

HECK'S REG.
$2.21

HARDWARE DEPT.

· SEALED BEAM

-

I

·.~-·_,._:.::&gt;.- -·~~
. . .J.J·.
_.. . ~;\\
\.~
' SYLVANIA

HICK'SIIG.

$1188

HARDWARE DEPT.

;\:~~ ~&gt;
' . i~~~j
;[_·-·.·~ ,.
J. '
. ~ , ..

POWERED AND, NATURAL SCENT

A COMPlETE GUIDI
TO HAID AID POWER TOOLS
OVER 300 ILLUSTIA TIOIS.

panels a nd univer$01 mo unting
cro ss bar. Bloc!: post has cro ss

HECK'S REG.
$9.88

..

AITI·PEISPIIAIT

a rms a nd go ld decora tive balls.

AUTO DEPT.

l ·~

RIGHT GUARD

AID POST
th froste d beveled ac r ylic

$

100%.

50Z.

HARDWAIIE

LANTERN

With fr osted ocry.l ic pan·
e ls . 1 p iece p orce lain
soc ket.

...............
· .c~owMf

-

,. ., _ ·.. I''

.

COSMITIC DEPT.

COLONIAL STYLE

LANTERN

~

29

$

ial

HECK'S
REG.
$1.99

COACH STYLE

QUANTITIES LAST

ANTI-PERSPIRANT .

SAFETY
FLAG
FOR BICYCLE

. DEPT.

ONLY

DIAL

6FOOT

TtoMI&lt;&gt;rm•" ••~• "' ' "bon lrom a ~hilly IHdtol inla a ,..arm • •~r;,n&lt;• .,nd
del i,..&lt;! oil llM heat, ·, •o••d •a g; ...- up ta 11 .000 l tU :• 101 "''• · ftorrlll• " ·
odorl.,u &lt;omlo•t '-&gt;1, ••t~~&gt;~dle" at aulude 1e mpor&lt;Ji vre! Ell!&lt;'" "'· e a&lt;r 1o
&lt;arry. 1irrp&amp;. ta opera!t ond quic-k Ia Mol - all '"'"' hom Cal•mun .

PRICES IN
EFFECT SUNDAY
AND MONDAY
NOVEMBER 17 &amp; 18

.I

I

'.

$988·.·
_

'

.
~

.

' ..
'

'
.I

�l

. '

16-,- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 17, 1974

Stay away from the hollows

·.

'
'

'

,-,

•'

By BRUCE A. COOK
that ? Kids~ play ing a rpund
CAMPBELL'S
CREEK , with a rifle?"
W.Va . (UP! ) - The road
"I dunno. Maybe. There's
lhrough lhis hollow outside the been some trouble around
capita l city of Charleston here. Lots of rumors."
winds on for miles between
In downtown Charleston it's
tree~ined hills rising sharply to
not unusua l for a stra nger to be
advised. "Stay a way from the
the sky.
ll is bordered by small hoilows, like Ca mpbell's
dwellings on both sides , bu n- Creek. "
galows, prefabs, hundreds of
ll has be!!n one of lhe trouble
mobile homes.
spots during the long Kana wha
Dogs bark. Children play. County textbook feud .
Neighbors
cha t
over
Wednesday, a sniper put a
backyard. barbecues. Women bullet hole In a state police car
tote srocery bags from lillie escorting a school bus. Earlier
roadside markets.
· in the protest, someone set off a
A service station attendant dynamite charge at a n empty
makes minor repairs on an old elementary school here .
car, cleverly using tape to
With few exceptions, the acts
patch up a loose vacuum line. of violence in lhe textbook
" No charge, buddy," he says. battle have occurred in rural
" Glad I could help ."
areas around Charleston A young hitchhiker is thumb- Campbell's Creek, East Bank,
Ing his . way down the road to . Pinch, Cedar Grove, Rand and
see a friend.
oth ers.
"I work five miles back in a
No arrests have been made .
coal mine, when we're wor- The people who have been
kin,"' he says . "My dad drives firebombin g s chools a nd
a truck."
sniping at school buses seem to
He looks at the passing vanish afterwards.
forest .
Textbook protest leade r s
" Good huntin' weather / ' he have.appealed almost daily for
says.
an end to violence. But it has
"Hear about the sniper this continued, often when least
morning?"
expected, and usually In the
"Yeah."
cover of .darkness.
"Who do you suppose is doing
A squad car sal in a school

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parking lot . On a faded while
building a sign said "Anlilextbook Headquarters.'' The
building was empty .
Otherwise, on a lazy autumn
afternoon, there were no indications that this was one or
the hot spots of the ba ttle over
lhe books.
Back on the main highway,
cars ca rrying '.ho mewa rd bo und commuter~ from lhe
ch emical plants a nd office
buildin gs
of
Cha rles(on
churned up clouds of dust
tllrough a stretch of road
construction.
On a muddy bank stood a
cardboard sign with a message
printed in red :
"Save Our Childre n," it said.
" Ban the Books."

Tutorial help

1

NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY INDUCTEES - Twentyfive GAHll seniors were Inducted into the· National Honor
Society Friday. First row, left to right are Debbie Carhart,
Ruth Lane, Mona Houck, Sally Berridge, Kathy Boggs and
Susan Gloss. Second row ,;_ Raymond Adams, advisor ; Mark

.b y NHS Friday

under GI hill
CLEVELAND - Few of the
72 7,000 veteran s a nd servicemen enrolled in Gl Bill
college courses this fall will
need lulorial help, but the
Vel&lt;!rans Administration will
pay for it if it Is.
L. M. Merritt, director of the
Cleveland VA Regional Office,
said under a program not
available under the World War
II and Korea n GI Bills, VA
pays costs of tutoring, not to
exceed $50 in any month, up to
a maximum of $450. The
benefit is not charged ·against
the veteran 's or serviceman's
basic educational entitlement,
he pain ted out.
Any post - secondary trainee
is eligible if he trains half-time
or more and has a deficiency in
a subject required in an a ppr oved program of education.
In order to receive payment
for tutorial a ssistance, eligible
GI Bill trainees are advised to
complel&lt;! a 'v A application and
have it ceriifie&lt;j by the school.
Applications should be sent
within a year of tutoring lo
the VA regional office which
has lhe vel&lt;!rans claim folder .
the director explained .

"'

GALLI PO LIS - Twenty fiv e Galli a Academ y Hi gh
&amp; hoot seniors were inducted
into the Vernon Chapter of the
National Honor Society during
Friday morning's assembly in
lhe high school auditorium .
Principal James N. M. Da vis
said se niors tapped for
membership were qualified by
a 3 point a verage or higher.
Fa cui ty members voted for 10
percent of the senior class,
considering se lecti on on the
bas is
of
sc holarship ,
char acter, le ad e rship ~n d
service.
Accepted were: . Tami Anderson •. Greg Ba ne, William

J.sraeU Defense Minister Shimon Peres said Saturday both
larael and Syria have alerted
lheir armed forces on the
uneasy Golan Heights frontier.
- The double alert came amid
• Increasing fears among world
, powers that a threatened
,, Syrian refusal to renew the
• mandate of the U.N. peace:· keeping , force on the Golan
,. Heights could touch off the fifth
,.. Middle East war since World

Harvey, John Myers, Judy Whittington, LuAnn Whitley,
Tami Weiher , Tami Anderson , Ann Circle, Mark Slump and
F1oyd Wright. Third row - Debbie Kinder, Scott Epling,
Alice Baughman, Greg Bane, Handy Breech, J im Musgrove,
Brad Yoho, .Scott Cameron, Bill Barcus and Jim Saunders.

S K Y LIN E LEAGU E
N ov c mb er 7, 1974
W on L os t
Oh io R i ver Rea l ty
60
20
Heine r s Bakery
60
20
Ce ntra l Supp l y
50
30
Woo ten 's Lounge
42
30
Loca l 699 No . 2
&lt;1 2
36

Peres, without giving details;
· said the Syrian alert was ln;: tensified and Israeli forces
.,responded In Uke fashion.
, , " There has been an upgrad• lng In the Syrian alert and that

I ~ ~
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VOL. 9 NO. 42

•

---ri

GALLIPOLIS - This week, Nov . 17
through 22 has been proclaimed by City
Manager Paul Willer as Student Nurse
:Week in Gallipolis. Activities during the
week are being sponsored by the Student
Nurses Ass'n. of Ohio District 14.
The studenfs begin the week today by
wearing their uniforms to Grace United
Methodist Church and a Recruilment Tea
al Davis Hallin the afternoon from 2unlil4
p.m.

h&lt;"!!!--&lt;"1!1
.. &lt;"1!1
. 011!11.

m i nu le.

Second Aveml
says-

CHOIR NAMED
COLUMBUS , Ohio (UP! ) Ohio 1UP! )
ZANESVILLE,
Saxbe's hard line on treatment
Former U. S. Attorney Genera l of criminals. Clark said "all - The All.Qhio State Fair
Ramsey Clark said her e Saxbe has is a line ."
Youth Choir has beeri named
Friday night the causes of
" Under live years of the the first , marching choir to
crime must be understood Ni xo n
a nd
Fo rd
ad- participate in the Rose Bowl
before the problem of crime mi nistra tions , violent crime Para de New Yea r 's Day in
Ca lif.
.Eac h
can be solved. Clark, al a news ha"s increased 50 per Cen t," Pas aden a ,
c on~erence here ·prior to an
of
the
choir
will
have
member
Cla rk sa id. " The prese nt
a ddr ess at Ohio We sleya n criminal jus tice system is as a backpack sound sys l&lt;!m to
In
nearby muc h an aggra va te a s a help overcome' lhe sounds of
Uni versity
Delawa r e, was critical of solution to the cr ime," he said .. the ban ds in lhe six-mile long
parade .
Attorney General William B. ., &lt;'

I

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••

17, 1974

PAGE

----

An Amal&lt;!ur Hour (student lalenlshow) •.
that promises an hour of fun-filled
laughl&lt;!r al 7 p.m. in the Main Lounge of
SIGN PROCLAMATION - Gallipolis City Manager Paul Willer presents a
Davis Hall is planned for Monday night.
signed cupy of the proclamation of Student Nurse Week to Susan Sheets, Gallipolis,
TUesday at 7 p .m. in the Davis Hall
center, and Charlotte Grimm, Pt. Pleasant. The young women are members of the
main lounge "My Sister's Closet11 and
Student Nurses of Gallipolls and students of the Holzer Medical Center School of
''Carl's Shoe Store'' wlll sponsor a fashion
Nursing.
show of' the newest fashions . Models will be
Pat Meeks, Pam Stanley and Deneda
Swingle, freshmen; Debbie Bailey, Kathe
United Metllodlst Church fellowship hall. president of the Student Nurses' Ass 'n.
Steiner, and Diane Sword, juniors; Becky
Balley1 Pat Kinder and- N~ncy Tippens1 . The speake• will be Mr.~..Jeljll ~aw-;· R. N11 · ...'!'he· · public· is· • welcome · to attend the
from the Morgan Clinic In P,fcConnelsville, Recruitment Tea on Sunday, Talen t Show
seniors .
•·
on Monday, a nd the F ashion · show on
Anouncement and celebrallon of lhe who wiil speak on Ntirse Clinicians.
Tuesday. Advisor to the organization is
Arrangements for the week have b~en
Student Nurses of Gallipolis will be at a
made
by
Charlot!&lt;!
Grimm,
third
vice
Mrs. Betty Jo l!arsolti, R. N.
banquet Thursday, Nov. 21 at Grace

NOW FOR CHRISTMAS
•

'·

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER

"Week set
,:for nurses

J '

Amer ic an L e gion ~ G: Perry
198 532 .
Loca l 6&lt;14 N o . 2 - - j , Kennedy
18 4-52·1'

troops battled youlhs in street tlle re has been no change of
demonstrations supporting the significance on the ground,
P a lestinian guerrilla move- there are certain doubts about
· th e Syrian Intentions. The steps
ment.
Israeli miliU.ry sources said have bee n ta ken a gains t
lhe girl was hit on the head by a possible developments."
I sra el impos ed wa rtimee
stone thrown by an Arab ·mob,
level
cellSQl'ship and slapped a
but Arab sources In the occupied territory said she was news bla ckout on troop
run over by a military vehicle. movem ents on th e Gola n
The demonstrallons were the · He ights . But the Israeli
lhird within a week on the West national radio quoted foreign
Bank by Arabs protesting press reports saying a lhird of
Israel's reserves had been
Israeli rule.
Peres said Saturday's Golan mobilized,
United Nations Sec re tar y
Heights alert was not Israel's
first and ' was precautionary. General Kurt Waldheim said
Earlier, In a briefing lo local through a spokesman Saturday
military correspondents he was "concerned" at the
reported by the national radio, srowing military activity on
Peres said that " although the Golan Heights .

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180 -487 .

'has Ul a certain bulb," he said
In a national television inl&lt;!rvieW.
In_ Damascus ,
Syrian
Foreign Minister Abdel llalim
Khaddam charged Israel with
with planning an attack.
He said on Damascus radio
Syr'- was abiding by the
ceasefire but would retaliate
''fifmly and strongly against
any Israeli aggreslon ."
Diplomats In London said the
United States and the Soviet
Union have opened urgent,
high-level consultations to
head off a lhreatenlng, aU-out
Middle East war.
In the Israeli-occupied West
Bank of Jordan, an Arab girl
died Saturday when Israeli

juubalf ~imts • jentintl

ififr'? /,........_ · -

·~ ;_ ..

V i sit
a ny
par • tici p at ing
DOWN -l
•
TOWN
merc
hant
and
30
50 'l 'L~ - \\
C hris Cr all
~t
~}r VJ'I
1 :;.:-~,..~~inh ~legion
~~ ~: 1~ ~-\~~- 11 •
~ v-\ tJ 1~ · select an en chanting
. FR EE letter that will
Lo c a1644 No . 1
2J
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·
46
Wooten's
L.oun ge n -L
11
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_
..
br ing th e wonder of
G l eason 162 -536
~,-~
. Santa Cl aus to that
_Ru ss Gla ss Shop ~ R .
1..' ,
f I~
N •ck. l es 205.528 .
'·...._ __ r l...
. special c hild. We will
Ch ris Craft - J Warren 199
·~-~~ --.'- ~ '
'~ ;; , &lt;'.
507 .
'"'- "·~· ·· ~· have it postmarked
'48 ~u r ge r Chef - B. P'r i ce , 166- "He l akes afte r his father - but
· fr om Santa Claus ,
Jon es Boys -'-- A . Gab r i ell i I 'm not givi ng up hope ."
' Ind iana. It's another
187 -53 1.
•
way
'that
the
Hei n ers
Bak ery
0
Bloom e r . 186 -485.
.
·.
T
h
roughout
the
Uni
ted
· DOWNTOWN
Oh io R ivP. r R~a l ty -e
Stales, peo ple drop nearly 200 • m erchants are saying
Cook , 197 -521.
·
m Jihon coms in to ve ndi ng • Nlerry Christmas to
Local 644 No . 2 - w . Morri s,
205 -606.
'
mac ~1 ines every 24 hou rs.
Central Su pp l M . Sha w
That s about 139,000 coi ns a ' , you!

:~g;:~~H~~~~,

Bar cus, Alice Baug hman, Sally
Berridge, J ane t Kathy Boggs,
Rand all
Breech,
Scott
Camer on, Debbie Carhart, An n
Circle, Scott Epling, Susan
Gl oss, Mark Harvey, Manna
Houck, Debbie Kinder , Ruth
Layne, J ames Musgrove, J ohn
Myers, Jim Sa unders, Mate
Stump, Tami Weihe r, LuAnn
Wh itley, Judy Whi tting ton,
F loyd Wrig ht, a nd Allan Brad
Yoho.
Ofricers are: Greg Thomas,
pres iqenl; J ohn Cha ng, vice
pr es id ent; Cindy Roush,
treasure r an d Jo Wi gglesworth , secretary. Fa culty
spon sor is Raymond Adams .

... war 11.

LAFF - A - DAY

Causes come first says Oark

•

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By United Press International

NOW YOU KNOW
The firs t concrete pa vement
in America was la id on
Bellefontaine, Ohio in 1893.

25 seniors inducted

available now

Israeli, Syrian armies
put on alert at border

~IDE GE'ITING OUT
COLUMBUS
I UPI )
George Jenkins, first ass istant
to Ohio Attor ney Ge ne ral
William J. Brown announ ced 1
Friday he would res1gn h1s 1
state job to return to. priyate I
law pra t tice some time afte~
the fi rst of the year. J enkins 1\
and Brown were cla ssmates at
Cadiz high school and was lhe
fir st person Brown appoinl&lt;!d I
following Br'o wn's election in
1970.

REPORT from AMERICA

'J , • •

He said he had talked with
Secretary of Stale Henry A.
Kissinger by telephone a nd
with senior government of~
ficials or Syria, Israel and
E gypt.
"I
am
conce rned, "
Waldheim said through his
spokesman. "The reports from
the area are not very good."
He said reports from lhe
1,200-man U.N . force told of "a
slight increase in. air activity"
in the region but no shooting.
Egyptian
governmen t
sources accused Israel of
mobilizing its reserves and
beefing up its forces on lhe
Golan Heights front wilh Syria.
The Pales tinian gue rrilla
news agency WAFA said Israel
was massing troops along Its
norlhern border lor a combined assault on both Syria and
Lebanon.
Newsmen visiting the
Israeli occupied Golan Heighls
sector found themselves
severely restricted on what
they could report, but they did
say residents of the area had
spent the nighlln underground
shell&lt;!rs.
One of the few reports
allowed to fllter out by Israeli
censorship said that civilian
traffic was flowing as usual on
lhe Golan Heights on the
Jewish Sabbath.
In Washington, a While
House spokesman denied
diplomatic reports from
London lhal the MoscowWashington holline, designed
for urgent consultations in
International emergencies, had
been activated, but he refused
to deny or confirm the urgent
superpower consultations.
In Cairo, President Anwar
Sadat sent messages Saturday
to President Ford and Leonid I.
Brezhnev, secretary general of
the Soviet Communist party,
on the reported tension along
the Golan Heights, government
sources said.
·The sources said the messages were connected wilh the
"tension In the Golan Heights,
which was caused by the
moblllzation of Israeli reservists and tlie movements of
Israeli troops ."
Egyptian Foreign Minister
Ismail Fshmi also discussed
Continued on page 18

HIGHEST HONOR - One of the highest bonors of BeU. Sigma Phi Sorority was bestowed
on Reva Vaughan, right, when the order of roses was conducted for her. The honor was given
Mrs. Vaughan for 15yearsof active service In the sorority. Conducting lhe ceremony was June
VanVranken, left, president of Beta Beta Preceptor Chapter, which mel allhe home of Lillian
Moore, Lincoln Hill.

Contract review
put hack 4 days
I

the new contract before a rankand-file ratification vote, to
Cancel plans to continue the
con tracl review Saturda y.
Litllelield 's funeral was
scheduled for Tuesday In
Bessemer, Ala . A UMW
spokesman said the remamlng
37 members of the Bargaining
Council would fly lo Alabama
to all&lt;!nd it.
The spokesman said consideration of the 175-page
contract would
resume'
Wednesday In Washington. He
said Littlefield's seat on lhe
council probably would remain
vacant for lhe lime being.
Union sources said completion of the contract ra tlflcation
probably would take "at least
10 days" afl&lt;!r resumption of
the review . Because of lhe
Thanksgiving holiday, that
would make the earliest Ukely
end of the strike fall In tbe first
week of December. ·
The coal strike already has
idled lhousands of industrial
workers across the country and
threatens to Idle thousands

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The department has already
made public Hoover directives
aiming Colntelpro-4iu'ough .Infiltration and tJ:icks.,-at' New
Left groups across lbe country.
Also releaaed last swmner
was a 1971 Hoover dlreclive
canceling Cointelpro
operations
without
explanation.
There
was
speculation that Hoover
became .concerned about the
FBI's public image during the
last of ~ 41 years at the helm
before hls death at 77 In 1972.
The Washington Star-News
published SaWrday a 21-page
draft copy of the new report
ou~ some of the Coin·
telpro operations which It said

••can only be considef ed
abhorrent in a free societ y."
But the report added that
much of tile Colntelpro project
was jusllfled and legitimate,
and said a "a fair, accurate
and comprehenlsve understanding" of all lhe activity should
be made with due consideration to the problems ·
Hoover was dealing with.

espionage, black extremists
and New Left groups became
successive t.argels.
The draft report charged
that some of the Cointelpro
activities resembled " dirty
tricks" In political campaigns
and included :
-Sending anonymous communications to famllles of
individuals advising them of
••immoral or radical ' ' activities of tbe Individual.

One section · of the ctran
report covers · 2,337 operations
- Informing
employers,
of FBI agents In five programs,
' credit bureaus, and creditors
starting with one directed
of alleged Immoral or radical
ag,insl the Communist Party
activlliea of members of the
U.S.A.
Communist Party U.S.A .
The Socll;liat Workers Party,
- Leaking Information to
tile Ku Klux Klan, Soviet
civic and religious leaders to
gain tbeir support in opposition
to the targeted sroups and
!Jl'OD)Oting pressure on state
and local governments and
employers and landlords to
disrupt them.
·
'
/
Kansas City, Mo., and Dearyear starting Dec. 1
- Leaking Information to
The company declined to born, Mich.
newspapers and reporters conconfirm or deny the reports
General · Motors Corp., the sidered friendly to the FBI
.Friday night, saying Its industry giant, announced it about arrest records ·of Inptoduction schedule for was adding 550 more workers dividuals In the targeted
December was stlll under to Its list of temporarily m: sroups.
review.
permanenUy laldo0ff workers.
-Sending out anonymous
AutO Industry sources said a
And Cllrysler said It would letters about suspected Infinal declalon was awal~ the not reopen ·Its assembly plant dividuals wbo campaigned for
return of Ctrysler Chalrnwl In Newark, Del., as scheduled election to local office ..
L~ A. Townsend !run an Monday but .would keep it
The draft report said tile
out-of-toWn ·trip. ·
c!ooect Indefinitely' Tha.l will committee could find no eviThe reports IWept Detroit keep 3,800 workers at borne. dence that any attorney
The latest layof! announce- general or anyone else outside
shortly before Ford Motor Co.
said It would lay off 9,2$0 more · menta will raise the lndu.stry the F"I In position )o approve
workers starling Mmday and ' \Diemploymenltotalto 92,439- , ""'h a profiram was ever
cloee a.enibly Unes for me about :one of every 13 blue , consulted or.~en Informed of '
week 111 San Jose, Calif., ·collar worker in the Industry.
its existence .

DETROIT (UP!)- A United
Auto Workers spokesman: said
Saturday Uiat· CJrysler Corp .
hila asked union leaders to a ·
meeting Monday, possibly to
announce Ills balling Its tJ .S.
·c~r production for all of
December.
The I,!AW spokesman said
the meeting was set for 2 p.m.
EST at Chrysler world
heacliJ..iartera in lbe Detroit
enclave city 'of Highland Park.
NewBofthe meellng f~
reports that Chrysler; the
'nation's lhlrd largest antomaker, plalined to suspend all car
production for lbe. rest of tile

'

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CHEHAI.JS, Wash. (UP!) meet Emperor Hirohilo and to Sheriff William Wisler,
visit Kyoto-the holy city of refusing to spend any more
Japanese culture specifically taxpayers ' money uchasing
spared by the United Slates shadows," called his men off
from atomic devastation 29 tile search Saturday for a
years ag&lt;&gt;-l'ecognlzes Japan's meteor tllal was· reported to
rise from post-World War II have crashed In rugged limber
occupation to a poslllon of country.
But military authorities and
equality among world powers
with global economic ·and scientists working for NASA
said they would continue to
political might.
Ford flies from Japan to look for the elusive flying
South Korea, where President object that flashed Thursdsy
Park Chung Hee is under at- night through the western
tack by lbe opposition for his Washington sky . It was
believed to have plunged to
strong-man rule .
Diplomats said a failure by · earth about three miles north
Ford to visit Seoul while In tile of the tiny community of
area would be taken by Park as Cinebar.
Some skeptics spec ulated
an expression of American
that
a fire-ringed crater
disfavor. They said that reason
alone was enoup to make an reported by two Army
overnight stop In South Korea helicopter pilots sholly afl&lt;!r
tile meteor was a slash fire
virtually mandatory.
consuming
debris of a logging
From Seoul Ford travels to
Vladivostok , a
Siberian operation.
The crater was described by
military and diplomatic
John
James and Rich Morga n,
bastion and warm-water port.
both
of
Fl. Lewis, as about 100
He will meat there with
Brezhnev Nov. 23 and 24 only feel long and 20 feet wide.
An all-day search fr om
I20 miles north of China.

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as
ers pen
~
under Sen. Percy's plan ·~
WASHINGTON (UP!)- Sen. Charlea H. Percy, R-m.,
called Satarday for a carrot and slick fuel savlllg plan
which woold tu gas-tUZzllng automobiles and give re._tes
lo owners of can that gel more than 18 miles to the gallon.
'!'be DUnoll RepnbUcan allo pi'O(IOied In a statemeDI ~
released from h1s WublDgton office lbat lbe federal blgb·
way trust fund be aballsbed, opening the way for use of the
money to support IDBII tl'aDIII programs. Under Percy's
plan, buyers of gas-thinly .can woald pay a purchase tu of ;:;;
up to f680 for a car gettlllg ellb! miles per gallon or Ieos.
The buyer of a car that gets 24 miles per gallon or more
would get a n&amp;0 calli rebate from the Treasury. He allo

'I

I'

t
·&gt;.:

~j

scale, so lues and rebates would be moved up one callou
every year to encOUflllle lbe design of more fuel-efflcleDI
cars.

i

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mllllary, private, state and law
enforcement aircraft Friday
failed lo turn up a clue, but
soggy clouds hung low over the
area obscuring most of the
densely forested, mountainous
terrain.
An Army spokesman said
one of the memllers of the
search was Dr. Ned Wagman,
Richland, Wash., a scientist for
Battelle Northwest who is

und er contract with the
National
Space
and
Aeronautics Adminlstrallon.
NASA is extremely Interested In meteorites because
they provide c lues about
material and conditions In
outer space.
Mel&lt;!ors, rarely reach the
earth ilseU and leave a crater.
Usually they burn up in tile
atmosphere.

One ·thing is fun, .these days
WASHINGTON (UP!) - All
in all, s~ys Gerald · Ford, it's
kind of fun lo be President. ·
Sure, he admits he was ua
provincial ' ' w~en he came to
Washington 25 ye~rs ago. And, ,
he says, he's sllll a man who
won't cut people's lhroats and
who psyches himself up for an
elec tion by assuming he will
lose it. Nonetheless , Ford
thinks he's grown to \Je a
President. He likes the job.
Relaxing like a new .country
square at Camp David, the
splendid presid~ntlal country
retoeat, the President gave a
nationwide TV audience
Saturday some inl imale
glimpses of his life and some
idea of ,how he aees himself.
"Is ll kind of . fun
sometimes? ,'' asked Harry
R~as oner, who intervi ewed
Ford at Camp David for the ·
ABC-TV presentation.
".Harry, It 'might be very
hard to believe, but I really
I

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SA.VI. N
.·Gs·
coloRs roR~
~~_:c~~~:"':·~"~·~::=;:;~~~~~~==~~--~:::;~::::..~~...J~~:f!!Q!!J2!~2!~l_~~~::::::::....·:·.-_...~..l.~lll
;l;l

Diplomats haue stressed that
leaders around the world will
be watching closely Ford's
performance at the Soviet
summit . The outcome will,
they say, in some measure
determine U.S. Influence

f;hrysler may erase 1 month

• InteriOr light

..

CABINErS
·.GUN .
CABINErS

WAsHINGTON. (UPI) -Attorney General William B.
Saxbe wiD release a report
Monday which labels "abhorrent" parts of a secret
Jk'Osram which tile late FBI
Director J . Ebgar Hoover
utilized to disrupt radical
organizations in the United
slates, It was learned Saturday,
A committee headed by
Assistant Attorney General
Henry E. Pete~sen · spent
montlls searching FBI fl)es for
details of seven operations
Conducted for .15 years under
the code name "Cointelpro,"
JusU&lt;:e Department sources
told UP!.

'
"''
i

Hi-performance
5-temp dryer

•

' Note:. ll

.CURIO

LAMPS &amp; OCCASIONAL TABLES

The President was scheduled
to leave from Andrews Air
Force Base at 9:45 a.m. llST
Sunday for a seven-hour and
50-minute flight to Anchorage,

Alaska. He was to deliver a
· speecn in Anchorage before
flying on to Tokyo.
The trip is historic both for
the United States and for Ford.

Secret Hoover operation 'Abhorrent'

95

• 5 pushbutton wash/ rinse water

THE AREA'S LARGEST SELECTION
OF

Saturday with Secretary of
State Henry A. Kisainger for a
final review of the trip .
Kisainger will accompany the
President as guide and adviser
-the role he played so ofl&lt;!n for
Richard M. Nixon.

STARTING AT

STARTING AT

'299

WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford flies to the Far
East Sunday for a .historic
debut In world power politics
aimed at pleasing the Japanese, reassuring the South Koreans and-most delicatelygetting to know and starting to
work with Soviet leader Leonid
I. Brezhnev.

elsewhere - just as have
previous first meetings between U. S. and Sovie t leaders .
In addition , no U.S .
President has set fool In the
Land of lhe Rising Sun In the
century since Commodore
Perry opened Japan to tile
world. Nixon hoped to be the
lirst to do so, but his plans were
thwarted by his forced
resignallon .
Ford's journey to Tokyo, to

more. The miners involved dig
70 per cent of the nation 's soft
coal, but lhere has been almost
no coal production for more
than a week.
Sources In the Fede ral
Bureau of Mines have wa rned
that a coal strike of between
two weeks and a month-the
length ll now appears lhe
walkout will last-eould curb
power supplies for hospitals,
rural schools and other Institutions in some states.
Negotiators for tile UMW and
tile Bituminous Coal Operators
Association tentatively agreed
late Wednesday on the new
contract, which Includes an $80
sweetener when miners return
to work plus a 9 per cent pay
raise In lhe first year and 3 per
cent raises In the second and
tlllrd years .
Approval by lbe Bargaining
Council-the union's top of.
ilcers, its execullve board and
the presidents of affected
districts- is essenllal to the
ratification process.

By EDWARD K. DeWNG
WASHINGTON (UP! ) United Mine Workers of!lcials
declared a memorial day for a .
slain union leader Saturday
and Interrupted for four days
their review of a proposed
contract, virtually Insuring the
nationwide coal strike would
drag on into early December.
The shooting death Friday of
Samuel Littlefield, one of those
involved in the review, was the
second snag to hit the contract
ratification effort. Only a few
hours earlier, a key district
UMW meeting was delayed
because the review was going
slower than expected.
A UMW spokesman stressed
there was no link between the
strike by 120,000 minerswhich s tarted al midnight
Monday- and lbe shooting of
Littlefield, who was killed
when he :rurprised a robber al
his Washington motel after
Friday's review session.
But Llttlerl'e ld 's death
caused tbe UMW Bargaining
Council, which must approve

enjoy il," Ford said.
" The lhlngs like this , of
course , are a wiully nice.ln the
course of the interview, Ford
showed the audience just how
nice il is, discussing wilh
delight the goldfish pond, lhe
swimming pool, the sumptuous
lodges and other features of the
guarded, 200-acre Maryland
moun lain retreat .
''I ~ustsay , it 1s nice living in
the Whil&lt;! House, but tile
challenge of the problems I
also enjoy. It's great to. have
the opportunity to make some
decisions,''
The interview was taped la.te
last month for later broadcast.
Ill the inl&lt;!rim, Friday, the
Whil&lt;! House announced F ord
plans definil&lt;!ly to run for
reelection.
" I always enter a contest,
whether I'h athletics or
politics, on the assumption that
I'm probably not going to win,
because I work a little harder

including stints on ke y
and try a li ttle better," F ord
told Reasoner . He said that decision-making committees .
Asked whether he felt he had
would be his stra tegy in 1976,
changed
the " Nixon . Whil&lt;!
too.
House"
into
a uFord White
What about lhe criticism that
F ord is just "a nice guy from House." lhe President said, ·
Michigan ," too small-time to " we haven't done as well as we
intend. to. "
be an effec tive President ?
· 'He said the transition had
" Well, I honestly believe,
Harry, that I grew Into it in ·lhe been too sudden, the feelings of
25 years I served in the the holdover staffers had to be
considered, uand I'm ' not the
Congress.
" Whe n ' I c ame fr om kind of person who likes to cut ·
Mic higan in 1940 I concede I ·somebody off, cut their throat ,
was provincial. Ej&lt;cepl I'd had so to speak, overnight."
On substantive
policy
probably more ' educational
matl&lt;!rs,
Ford
restated
his
breadth having gone to the
University of Michigan and familiar positions - .he supYale Law School which was a . ports Nelson , A. · Rockefeller
great experience for me . But completely, he'. counts on
when I came to COngress ... I ~gress to enact the major
did have the focus on the pomts of his economic
asree
problems of wesl&lt;!rn !'fichlgan program, and he
to
'
ralslnr
lbe
lnccme
level '
and the stale of Michigan."
affected
by
his
prO(tlsed
'
5
·per
But the "blessing" of his
cent
income
siJrtax
so
lqng
as
expe rience
congr essional
changed all that, Ford said, spme surta x provision Is
passed.
.

woJw

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16-,- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 17, 1974

Stay away from the hollows

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By BRUCE A. COOK
that ? Kids~ play ing a rpund
CAMPBELL'S
CREEK , with a rifle?"
W.Va . (UP! ) - The road
"I dunno. Maybe. There's
lhrough lhis hollow outside the been some trouble around
capita l city of Charleston here. Lots of rumors."
winds on for miles between
In downtown Charleston it's
tree~ined hills rising sharply to
not unusua l for a stra nger to be
advised. "Stay a way from the
the sky.
ll is bordered by small hoilows, like Ca mpbell's
dwellings on both sides , bu n- Creek. "
galows, prefabs, hundreds of
ll has be!!n one of lhe trouble
mobile homes.
spots during the long Kana wha
Dogs bark. Children play. County textbook feud .
Neighbors
cha t
over
Wednesday, a sniper put a
backyard. barbecues. Women bullet hole In a state police car
tote srocery bags from lillie escorting a school bus. Earlier
roadside markets.
· in the protest, someone set off a
A service station attendant dynamite charge at a n empty
makes minor repairs on an old elementary school here .
car, cleverly using tape to
With few exceptions, the acts
patch up a loose vacuum line. of violence in lhe textbook
" No charge, buddy," he says. battle have occurred in rural
" Glad I could help ."
areas around Charleston A young hitchhiker is thumb- Campbell's Creek, East Bank,
Ing his . way down the road to . Pinch, Cedar Grove, Rand and
see a friend.
oth ers.
"I work five miles back in a
No arrests have been made .
coal mine, when we're wor- The people who have been
kin,"' he says . "My dad drives firebombin g s chools a nd
a truck."
sniping at school buses seem to
He looks at the passing vanish afterwards.
forest .
Textbook protest leade r s
" Good huntin' weather / ' he have.appealed almost daily for
says.
an end to violence. But it has
"Hear about the sniper this continued, often when least
morning?"
expected, and usually In the
"Yeah."
cover of .darkness.
"Who do you suppose is doing
A squad car sal in a school

SKYLINE
LANES
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and PRO-SHOP
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'J
·'

-

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.snack Bar and
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·specializing in AMF &amp;

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j

I,

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parking lot . On a faded while
building a sign said "Anlilextbook Headquarters.'' The
building was empty .
Otherwise, on a lazy autumn
afternoon, there were no indications that this was one or
the hot spots of the ba ttle over
lhe books.
Back on the main highway,
cars ca rrying '.ho mewa rd bo und commuter~ from lhe
ch emical plants a nd office
buildin gs
of
Cha rles(on
churned up clouds of dust
tllrough a stretch of road
construction.
On a muddy bank stood a
cardboard sign with a message
printed in red :
"Save Our Childre n," it said.
" Ban the Books."

Tutorial help

1

NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY INDUCTEES - Twentyfive GAHll seniors were Inducted into the· National Honor
Society Friday. First row, left to right are Debbie Carhart,
Ruth Lane, Mona Houck, Sally Berridge, Kathy Boggs and
Susan Gloss. Second row ,;_ Raymond Adams, advisor ; Mark

.b y NHS Friday

under GI hill
CLEVELAND - Few of the
72 7,000 veteran s a nd servicemen enrolled in Gl Bill
college courses this fall will
need lulorial help, but the
Vel&lt;!rans Administration will
pay for it if it Is.
L. M. Merritt, director of the
Cleveland VA Regional Office,
said under a program not
available under the World War
II and Korea n GI Bills, VA
pays costs of tutoring, not to
exceed $50 in any month, up to
a maximum of $450. The
benefit is not charged ·against
the veteran 's or serviceman's
basic educational entitlement,
he pain ted out.
Any post - secondary trainee
is eligible if he trains half-time
or more and has a deficiency in
a subject required in an a ppr oved program of education.
In order to receive payment
for tutorial a ssistance, eligible
GI Bill trainees are advised to
complel&lt;! a 'v A application and
have it ceriifie&lt;j by the school.
Applications should be sent
within a year of tutoring lo
the VA regional office which
has lhe vel&lt;!rans claim folder .
the director explained .

"'

GALLI PO LIS - Twenty fiv e Galli a Academ y Hi gh
&amp; hoot seniors were inducted
into the Vernon Chapter of the
National Honor Society during
Friday morning's assembly in
lhe high school auditorium .
Principal James N. M. Da vis
said se niors tapped for
membership were qualified by
a 3 point a verage or higher.
Fa cui ty members voted for 10
percent of the senior class,
considering se lecti on on the
bas is
of
sc holarship ,
char acter, le ad e rship ~n d
service.
Accepted were: . Tami Anderson •. Greg Ba ne, William

J.sraeU Defense Minister Shimon Peres said Saturday both
larael and Syria have alerted
lheir armed forces on the
uneasy Golan Heights frontier.
- The double alert came amid
• Increasing fears among world
, powers that a threatened
,, Syrian refusal to renew the
• mandate of the U.N. peace:· keeping , force on the Golan
,. Heights could touch off the fifth
,.. Middle East war since World

Harvey, John Myers, Judy Whittington, LuAnn Whitley,
Tami Weiher , Tami Anderson , Ann Circle, Mark Slump and
F1oyd Wright. Third row - Debbie Kinder, Scott Epling,
Alice Baughman, Greg Bane, Handy Breech, J im Musgrove,
Brad Yoho, .Scott Cameron, Bill Barcus and Jim Saunders.

S K Y LIN E LEAGU E
N ov c mb er 7, 1974
W on L os t
Oh io R i ver Rea l ty
60
20
Heine r s Bakery
60
20
Ce ntra l Supp l y
50
30
Woo ten 's Lounge
42
30
Loca l 699 No . 2
&lt;1 2
36

Peres, without giving details;
· said the Syrian alert was ln;: tensified and Israeli forces
.,responded In Uke fashion.
, , " There has been an upgrad• lng In the Syrian alert and that

I ~ ~
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VOL. 9 NO. 42

•

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GALLIPOLIS - This week, Nov . 17
through 22 has been proclaimed by City
Manager Paul Willer as Student Nurse
:Week in Gallipolis. Activities during the
week are being sponsored by the Student
Nurses Ass'n. of Ohio District 14.
The studenfs begin the week today by
wearing their uniforms to Grace United
Methodist Church and a Recruilment Tea
al Davis Hallin the afternoon from 2unlil4
p.m.

h&lt;"!!!--&lt;"1!1
.. &lt;"1!1
. 011!11.

m i nu le.

Second Aveml
says-

CHOIR NAMED
COLUMBUS , Ohio (UP! ) Ohio 1UP! )
ZANESVILLE,
Saxbe's hard line on treatment
Former U. S. Attorney Genera l of criminals. Clark said "all - The All.Qhio State Fair
Ramsey Clark said her e Saxbe has is a line ."
Youth Choir has beeri named
Friday night the causes of
" Under live years of the the first , marching choir to
crime must be understood Ni xo n
a nd
Fo rd
ad- participate in the Rose Bowl
before the problem of crime mi nistra tions , violent crime Para de New Yea r 's Day in
Ca lif.
.Eac h
can be solved. Clark, al a news ha"s increased 50 per Cen t," Pas aden a ,
c on~erence here ·prior to an
of
the
choir
will
have
member
Cla rk sa id. " The prese nt
a ddr ess at Ohio We sleya n criminal jus tice system is as a backpack sound sys l&lt;!m to
In
nearby muc h an aggra va te a s a help overcome' lhe sounds of
Uni versity
Delawa r e, was critical of solution to the cr ime," he said .. the ban ds in lhe six-mile long
parade .
Attorney General William B. ., &lt;'

I

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••

17, 1974

PAGE

----

An Amal&lt;!ur Hour (student lalenlshow) •.
that promises an hour of fun-filled
laughl&lt;!r al 7 p.m. in the Main Lounge of
SIGN PROCLAMATION - Gallipolis City Manager Paul Willer presents a
Davis Hall is planned for Monday night.
signed cupy of the proclamation of Student Nurse Week to Susan Sheets, Gallipolis,
TUesday at 7 p .m. in the Davis Hall
center, and Charlotte Grimm, Pt. Pleasant. The young women are members of the
main lounge "My Sister's Closet11 and
Student Nurses of Gallipolls and students of the Holzer Medical Center School of
''Carl's Shoe Store'' wlll sponsor a fashion
Nursing.
show of' the newest fashions . Models will be
Pat Meeks, Pam Stanley and Deneda
Swingle, freshmen; Debbie Bailey, Kathe
United Metllodlst Church fellowship hall. president of the Student Nurses' Ass 'n.
Steiner, and Diane Sword, juniors; Becky
Balley1 Pat Kinder and- N~ncy Tippens1 . The speake• will be Mr.~..Jeljll ~aw-;· R. N11 · ...'!'he· · public· is· • welcome · to attend the
from the Morgan Clinic In P,fcConnelsville, Recruitment Tea on Sunday, Talen t Show
seniors .
•·
on Monday, a nd the F ashion · show on
Anouncement and celebrallon of lhe who wiil speak on Ntirse Clinicians.
Tuesday. Advisor to the organization is
Arrangements for the week have b~en
Student Nurses of Gallipolis will be at a
made
by
Charlot!&lt;!
Grimm,
third
vice
Mrs. Betty Jo l!arsolti, R. N.
banquet Thursday, Nov. 21 at Grace

NOW FOR CHRISTMAS
•

'·

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER

"Week set
,:for nurses

J '

Amer ic an L e gion ~ G: Perry
198 532 .
Loca l 6&lt;14 N o . 2 - - j , Kennedy
18 4-52·1'

troops battled youlhs in street tlle re has been no change of
demonstrations supporting the significance on the ground,
P a lestinian guerrilla move- there are certain doubts about
· th e Syrian Intentions. The steps
ment.
Israeli miliU.ry sources said have bee n ta ken a gains t
lhe girl was hit on the head by a possible developments."
I sra el impos ed wa rtimee
stone thrown by an Arab ·mob,
level
cellSQl'ship and slapped a
but Arab sources In the occupied territory said she was news bla ckout on troop
run over by a military vehicle. movem ents on th e Gola n
The demonstrallons were the · He ights . But the Israeli
lhird within a week on the West national radio quoted foreign
Bank by Arabs protesting press reports saying a lhird of
Israel's reserves had been
Israeli rule.
Peres said Saturday's Golan mobilized,
United Nations Sec re tar y
Heights alert was not Israel's
first and ' was precautionary. General Kurt Waldheim said
Earlier, In a briefing lo local through a spokesman Saturday
military correspondents he was "concerned" at the
reported by the national radio, srowing military activity on
Peres said that " although the Golan Heights .

~

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180 -487 .

'has Ul a certain bulb," he said
In a national television inl&lt;!rvieW.
In_ Damascus ,
Syrian
Foreign Minister Abdel llalim
Khaddam charged Israel with
with planning an attack.
He said on Damascus radio
Syr'- was abiding by the
ceasefire but would retaliate
''fifmly and strongly against
any Israeli aggreslon ."
Diplomats In London said the
United States and the Soviet
Union have opened urgent,
high-level consultations to
head off a lhreatenlng, aU-out
Middle East war.
In the Israeli-occupied West
Bank of Jordan, an Arab girl
died Saturday when Israeli

juubalf ~imts • jentintl

ififr'? /,........_ · -

·~ ;_ ..

V i sit
a ny
par • tici p at ing
DOWN -l
•
TOWN
merc
hant
and
30
50 'l 'L~ - \\
C hris Cr all
~t
~}r VJ'I
1 :;.:-~,..~~inh ~legion
~~ ~: 1~ ~-\~~- 11 •
~ v-\ tJ 1~ · select an en chanting
. FR EE letter that will
Lo c a1644 No . 1
2J
~II~
·
46
Wooten's
L.oun ge n -L
11
\ '\
_
..
br ing th e wonder of
G l eason 162 -536
~,-~
. Santa Cl aus to that
_Ru ss Gla ss Shop ~ R .
1..' ,
f I~
N •ck. l es 205.528 .
'·...._ __ r l...
. special c hild. We will
Ch ris Craft - J Warren 199
·~-~~ --.'- ~ '
'~ ;; , &lt;'.
507 .
'"'- "·~· ·· ~· have it postmarked
'48 ~u r ge r Chef - B. P'r i ce , 166- "He l akes afte r his father - but
· fr om Santa Claus ,
Jon es Boys -'-- A . Gab r i ell i I 'm not givi ng up hope ."
' Ind iana. It's another
187 -53 1.
•
way
'that
the
Hei n ers
Bak ery
0
Bloom e r . 186 -485.
.
·.
T
h
roughout
the
Uni
ted
· DOWNTOWN
Oh io R ivP. r R~a l ty -e
Stales, peo ple drop nearly 200 • m erchants are saying
Cook , 197 -521.
·
m Jihon coms in to ve ndi ng • Nlerry Christmas to
Local 644 No . 2 - w . Morri s,
205 -606.
'
mac ~1 ines every 24 hou rs.
Central Su pp l M . Sha w
That s about 139,000 coi ns a ' , you!

:~g;:~~H~~~~,

Bar cus, Alice Baug hman, Sally
Berridge, J ane t Kathy Boggs,
Rand all
Breech,
Scott
Camer on, Debbie Carhart, An n
Circle, Scott Epling, Susan
Gl oss, Mark Harvey, Manna
Houck, Debbie Kinder , Ruth
Layne, J ames Musgrove, J ohn
Myers, Jim Sa unders, Mate
Stump, Tami Weihe r, LuAnn
Wh itley, Judy Whi tting ton,
F loyd Wrig ht, a nd Allan Brad
Yoho.
Ofricers are: Greg Thomas,
pres iqenl; J ohn Cha ng, vice
pr es id ent; Cindy Roush,
treasure r an d Jo Wi gglesworth , secretary. Fa culty
spon sor is Raymond Adams .

... war 11.

LAFF - A - DAY

Causes come first says Oark

•

'

By United Press International

NOW YOU KNOW
The firs t concrete pa vement
in America was la id on
Bellefontaine, Ohio in 1893.

25 seniors inducted

available now

Israeli, Syrian armies
put on alert at border

~IDE GE'ITING OUT
COLUMBUS
I UPI )
George Jenkins, first ass istant
to Ohio Attor ney Ge ne ral
William J. Brown announ ced 1
Friday he would res1gn h1s 1
state job to return to. priyate I
law pra t tice some time afte~
the fi rst of the year. J enkins 1\
and Brown were cla ssmates at
Cadiz high school and was lhe
fir st person Brown appoinl&lt;!d I
following Br'o wn's election in
1970.

REPORT from AMERICA

'J , • •

He said he had talked with
Secretary of Stale Henry A.
Kissinger by telephone a nd
with senior government of~
ficials or Syria, Israel and
E gypt.
"I
am
conce rned, "
Waldheim said through his
spokesman. "The reports from
the area are not very good."
He said reports from lhe
1,200-man U.N . force told of "a
slight increase in. air activity"
in the region but no shooting.
Egyptian
governmen t
sources accused Israel of
mobilizing its reserves and
beefing up its forces on lhe
Golan Heights front wilh Syria.
The Pales tinian gue rrilla
news agency WAFA said Israel
was massing troops along Its
norlhern border lor a combined assault on both Syria and
Lebanon.
Newsmen visiting the
Israeli occupied Golan Heighls
sector found themselves
severely restricted on what
they could report, but they did
say residents of the area had
spent the nighlln underground
shell&lt;!rs.
One of the few reports
allowed to fllter out by Israeli
censorship said that civilian
traffic was flowing as usual on
lhe Golan Heights on the
Jewish Sabbath.
In Washington, a While
House spokesman denied
diplomatic reports from
London lhal the MoscowWashington holline, designed
for urgent consultations in
International emergencies, had
been activated, but he refused
to deny or confirm the urgent
superpower consultations.
In Cairo, President Anwar
Sadat sent messages Saturday
to President Ford and Leonid I.
Brezhnev, secretary general of
the Soviet Communist party,
on the reported tension along
the Golan Heights, government
sources said.
·The sources said the messages were connected wilh the
"tension In the Golan Heights,
which was caused by the
moblllzation of Israeli reservists and tlie movements of
Israeli troops ."
Egyptian Foreign Minister
Ismail Fshmi also discussed
Continued on page 18

HIGHEST HONOR - One of the highest bonors of BeU. Sigma Phi Sorority was bestowed
on Reva Vaughan, right, when the order of roses was conducted for her. The honor was given
Mrs. Vaughan for 15yearsof active service In the sorority. Conducting lhe ceremony was June
VanVranken, left, president of Beta Beta Preceptor Chapter, which mel allhe home of Lillian
Moore, Lincoln Hill.

Contract review
put hack 4 days
I

the new contract before a rankand-file ratification vote, to
Cancel plans to continue the
con tracl review Saturda y.
Litllelield 's funeral was
scheduled for Tuesday In
Bessemer, Ala . A UMW
spokesman said the remamlng
37 members of the Bargaining
Council would fly lo Alabama
to all&lt;!nd it.
The spokesman said consideration of the 175-page
contract would
resume'
Wednesday In Washington. He
said Littlefield's seat on lhe
council probably would remain
vacant for lhe lime being.
Union sources said completion of the contract ra tlflcation
probably would take "at least
10 days" afl&lt;!r resumption of
the review . Because of lhe
Thanksgiving holiday, that
would make the earliest Ukely
end of the strike fall In tbe first
week of December. ·
The coal strike already has
idled lhousands of industrial
workers across the country and
threatens to Idle thousands

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Ford off to try hand in world politics
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The department has already
made public Hoover directives
aiming Colntelpro-4iu'ough .Infiltration and tJ:icks.,-at' New
Left groups across lbe country.
Also releaaed last swmner
was a 1971 Hoover dlreclive
canceling Cointelpro
operations
without
explanation.
There
was
speculation that Hoover
became .concerned about the
FBI's public image during the
last of ~ 41 years at the helm
before hls death at 77 In 1972.
The Washington Star-News
published SaWrday a 21-page
draft copy of the new report
ou~ some of the Coin·
telpro operations which It said

••can only be considef ed
abhorrent in a free societ y."
But the report added that
much of tile Colntelpro project
was jusllfled and legitimate,
and said a "a fair, accurate
and comprehenlsve understanding" of all lhe activity should
be made with due consideration to the problems ·
Hoover was dealing with.

espionage, black extremists
and New Left groups became
successive t.argels.
The draft report charged
that some of the Cointelpro
activities resembled " dirty
tricks" In political campaigns
and included :
-Sending anonymous communications to famllles of
individuals advising them of
••immoral or radical ' ' activities of tbe Individual.

One section · of the ctran
report covers · 2,337 operations
- Informing
employers,
of FBI agents In five programs,
' credit bureaus, and creditors
starting with one directed
of alleged Immoral or radical
ag,insl the Communist Party
activlliea of members of the
U.S.A.
Communist Party U.S.A .
The Socll;liat Workers Party,
- Leaking Information to
tile Ku Klux Klan, Soviet
civic and religious leaders to
gain tbeir support in opposition
to the targeted sroups and
!Jl'OD)Oting pressure on state
and local governments and
employers and landlords to
disrupt them.
·
'
/
Kansas City, Mo., and Dearyear starting Dec. 1
- Leaking Information to
The company declined to born, Mich.
newspapers and reporters conconfirm or deny the reports
General · Motors Corp., the sidered friendly to the FBI
.Friday night, saying Its industry giant, announced it about arrest records ·of Inptoduction schedule for was adding 550 more workers dividuals In the targeted
December was stlll under to Its list of temporarily m: sroups.
review.
permanenUy laldo0ff workers.
-Sending out anonymous
AutO Industry sources said a
And Cllrysler said It would letters about suspected Infinal declalon was awal~ the not reopen ·Its assembly plant dividuals wbo campaigned for
return of Ctrysler Chalrnwl In Newark, Del., as scheduled election to local office ..
L~ A. Townsend !run an Monday but .would keep it
The draft report said tile
out-of-toWn ·trip. ·
c!ooect Indefinitely' Tha.l will committee could find no eviThe reports IWept Detroit keep 3,800 workers at borne. dence that any attorney
The latest layof! announce- general or anyone else outside
shortly before Ford Motor Co.
said It would lay off 9,2$0 more · menta will raise the lndu.stry the F"I In position )o approve
workers starling Mmday and ' \Diemploymenltotalto 92,439- , ""'h a profiram was ever
cloee a.enibly Unes for me about :one of every 13 blue , consulted or.~en Informed of '
week 111 San Jose, Calif., ·collar worker in the Industry.
its existence .

DETROIT (UP!)- A United
Auto Workers spokesman: said
Saturday Uiat· CJrysler Corp .
hila asked union leaders to a ·
meeting Monday, possibly to
announce Ills balling Its tJ .S.
·c~r production for all of
December.
The I,!AW spokesman said
the meeting was set for 2 p.m.
EST at Chrysler world
heacliJ..iartera in lbe Detroit
enclave city 'of Highland Park.
NewBofthe meellng f~
reports that Chrysler; the
'nation's lhlrd largest antomaker, plalined to suspend all car
production for lbe. rest of tile

'

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J

''

CHEHAI.JS, Wash. (UP!) meet Emperor Hirohilo and to Sheriff William Wisler,
visit Kyoto-the holy city of refusing to spend any more
Japanese culture specifically taxpayers ' money uchasing
spared by the United Slates shadows," called his men off
from atomic devastation 29 tile search Saturday for a
years ag&lt;&gt;-l'ecognlzes Japan's meteor tllal was· reported to
rise from post-World War II have crashed In rugged limber
occupation to a poslllon of country.
But military authorities and
equality among world powers
with global economic ·and scientists working for NASA
said they would continue to
political might.
Ford flies from Japan to look for the elusive flying
South Korea, where President object that flashed Thursdsy
Park Chung Hee is under at- night through the western
tack by lbe opposition for his Washington sky . It was
believed to have plunged to
strong-man rule .
Diplomats said a failure by · earth about three miles north
Ford to visit Seoul while In tile of the tiny community of
area would be taken by Park as Cinebar.
Some skeptics spec ulated
an expression of American
that
a fire-ringed crater
disfavor. They said that reason
alone was enoup to make an reported by two Army
overnight stop In South Korea helicopter pilots sholly afl&lt;!r
tile meteor was a slash fire
virtually mandatory.
consuming
debris of a logging
From Seoul Ford travels to
Vladivostok , a
Siberian operation.
The crater was described by
military and diplomatic
John
James and Rich Morga n,
bastion and warm-water port.
both
of
Fl. Lewis, as about 100
He will meat there with
Brezhnev Nov. 23 and 24 only feel long and 20 feet wide.
An all-day search fr om
I20 miles north of China.

•

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.

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·•··

as
ers pen
~
under Sen. Percy's plan ·~
WASHINGTON (UP!)- Sen. Charlea H. Percy, R-m.,
called Satarday for a carrot and slick fuel savlllg plan
which woold tu gas-tUZzllng automobiles and give re._tes
lo owners of can that gel more than 18 miles to the gallon.
'!'be DUnoll RepnbUcan allo pi'O(IOied In a statemeDI ~
released from h1s WublDgton office lbat lbe federal blgb·
way trust fund be aballsbed, opening the way for use of the
money to support IDBII tl'aDIII programs. Under Percy's
plan, buyers of gas-thinly .can woald pay a purchase tu of ;:;;
up to f680 for a car gettlllg ellb! miles per gallon or Ieos.
The buyer of a car that gets 24 miles per gallon or more
would get a n&amp;0 calli rebate from the Treasury. He allo

'I

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·&gt;.:

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scale, so lues and rebates would be moved up one callou
every year to encOUflllle lbe design of more fuel-efflcleDI
cars.

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mllllary, private, state and law
enforcement aircraft Friday
failed lo turn up a clue, but
soggy clouds hung low over the
area obscuring most of the
densely forested, mountainous
terrain.
An Army spokesman said
one of the memllers of the
search was Dr. Ned Wagman,
Richland, Wash., a scientist for
Battelle Northwest who is

und er contract with the
National
Space
and
Aeronautics Adminlstrallon.
NASA is extremely Interested In meteorites because
they provide c lues about
material and conditions In
outer space.
Mel&lt;!ors, rarely reach the
earth ilseU and leave a crater.
Usually they burn up in tile
atmosphere.

One ·thing is fun, .these days
WASHINGTON (UP!) - All
in all, s~ys Gerald · Ford, it's
kind of fun lo be President. ·
Sure, he admits he was ua
provincial ' ' w~en he came to
Washington 25 ye~rs ago. And, ,
he says, he's sllll a man who
won't cut people's lhroats and
who psyches himself up for an
elec tion by assuming he will
lose it. Nonetheless , Ford
thinks he's grown to \Je a
President. He likes the job.
Relaxing like a new .country
square at Camp David, the
splendid presid~ntlal country
retoeat, the President gave a
nationwide TV audience
Saturday some inl imale
glimpses of his life and some
idea of ,how he aees himself.
"Is ll kind of . fun
sometimes? ,'' asked Harry
R~as oner, who intervi ewed
Ford at Camp David for the ·
ABC-TV presentation.
".Harry, It 'might be very
hard to believe, but I really
I

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Diplomats haue stressed that
leaders around the world will
be watching closely Ford's
performance at the Soviet
summit . The outcome will,
they say, in some measure
determine U.S. Influence

f;hrysler may erase 1 month

• InteriOr light

..

CABINErS
·.GUN .
CABINErS

WAsHINGTON. (UPI) -Attorney General William B.
Saxbe wiD release a report
Monday which labels "abhorrent" parts of a secret
Jk'Osram which tile late FBI
Director J . Ebgar Hoover
utilized to disrupt radical
organizations in the United
slates, It was learned Saturday,
A committee headed by
Assistant Attorney General
Henry E. Pete~sen · spent
montlls searching FBI fl)es for
details of seven operations
Conducted for .15 years under
the code name "Cointelpro,"
JusU&lt;:e Department sources
told UP!.

'
"''
i

Hi-performance
5-temp dryer

•

' Note:. ll

.CURIO

LAMPS &amp; OCCASIONAL TABLES

The President was scheduled
to leave from Andrews Air
Force Base at 9:45 a.m. llST
Sunday for a seven-hour and
50-minute flight to Anchorage,

Alaska. He was to deliver a
· speecn in Anchorage before
flying on to Tokyo.
The trip is historic both for
the United States and for Ford.

Secret Hoover operation 'Abhorrent'

95

• 5 pushbutton wash/ rinse water

THE AREA'S LARGEST SELECTION
OF

Saturday with Secretary of
State Henry A. Kisainger for a
final review of the trip .
Kisainger will accompany the
President as guide and adviser
-the role he played so ofl&lt;!n for
Richard M. Nixon.

STARTING AT

STARTING AT

'299

WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford flies to the Far
East Sunday for a .historic
debut In world power politics
aimed at pleasing the Japanese, reassuring the South Koreans and-most delicatelygetting to know and starting to
work with Soviet leader Leonid
I. Brezhnev.

elsewhere - just as have
previous first meetings between U. S. and Sovie t leaders .
In addition , no U.S .
President has set fool In the
Land of lhe Rising Sun In the
century since Commodore
Perry opened Japan to tile
world. Nixon hoped to be the
lirst to do so, but his plans were
thwarted by his forced
resignallon .
Ford's journey to Tokyo, to

more. The miners involved dig
70 per cent of the nation 's soft
coal, but lhere has been almost
no coal production for more
than a week.
Sources In the Fede ral
Bureau of Mines have wa rned
that a coal strike of between
two weeks and a month-the
length ll now appears lhe
walkout will last-eould curb
power supplies for hospitals,
rural schools and other Institutions in some states.
Negotiators for tile UMW and
tile Bituminous Coal Operators
Association tentatively agreed
late Wednesday on the new
contract, which Includes an $80
sweetener when miners return
to work plus a 9 per cent pay
raise In lhe first year and 3 per
cent raises In the second and
tlllrd years .
Approval by lbe Bargaining
Council-the union's top of.
ilcers, its execullve board and
the presidents of affected
districts- is essenllal to the
ratification process.

By EDWARD K. DeWNG
WASHINGTON (UP! ) United Mine Workers of!lcials
declared a memorial day for a .
slain union leader Saturday
and Interrupted for four days
their review of a proposed
contract, virtually Insuring the
nationwide coal strike would
drag on into early December.
The shooting death Friday of
Samuel Littlefield, one of those
involved in the review, was the
second snag to hit the contract
ratification effort. Only a few
hours earlier, a key district
UMW meeting was delayed
because the review was going
slower than expected.
A UMW spokesman stressed
there was no link between the
strike by 120,000 minerswhich s tarted al midnight
Monday- and lbe shooting of
Littlefield, who was killed
when he :rurprised a robber al
his Washington motel after
Friday's review session.
But Llttlerl'e ld 's death
caused tbe UMW Bargaining
Council, which must approve

enjoy il," Ford said.
" The lhlngs like this , of
course , are a wiully nice.ln the
course of the interview, Ford
showed the audience just how
nice il is, discussing wilh
delight the goldfish pond, lhe
swimming pool, the sumptuous
lodges and other features of the
guarded, 200-acre Maryland
moun lain retreat .
''I ~ustsay , it 1s nice living in
the Whil&lt;! House, but tile
challenge of the problems I
also enjoy. It's great to. have
the opportunity to make some
decisions,''
The interview was taped la.te
last month for later broadcast.
Ill the inl&lt;!rim, Friday, the
Whil&lt;! House announced F ord
plans definil&lt;!ly to run for
reelection.
" I always enter a contest,
whether I'h athletics or
politics, on the assumption that
I'm probably not going to win,
because I work a little harder

including stints on ke y
and try a li ttle better," F ord
told Reasoner . He said that decision-making committees .
Asked whether he felt he had
would be his stra tegy in 1976,
changed
the " Nixon . Whil&lt;!
too.
House"
into
a uFord White
What about lhe criticism that
F ord is just "a nice guy from House." lhe President said, ·
Michigan ," too small-time to " we haven't done as well as we
intend. to. "
be an effec tive President ?
· 'He said the transition had
" Well, I honestly believe,
Harry, that I grew Into it in ·lhe been too sudden, the feelings of
25 years I served in the the holdover staffers had to be
considered, uand I'm ' not the
Congress.
" Whe n ' I c ame fr om kind of person who likes to cut ·
Mic higan in 1940 I concede I ·somebody off, cut their throat ,
was provincial. Ej&lt;cepl I'd had so to speak, overnight."
On substantive
policy
probably more ' educational
matl&lt;!rs,
Ford
restated
his
breadth having gone to the
University of Michigan and familiar positions - .he supYale Law School which was a . ports Nelson , A. · Rockefeller
great experience for me . But completely, he'. counts on
when I came to COngress ... I ~gress to enact the major
did have the focus on the pomts of his economic
asree
problems of wesl&lt;!rn !'fichlgan program, and he
to
'
ralslnr
lbe
lnccme
level '
and the stale of Michigan."
affected
by
his
prO(tlsed
'
5
·per
But the "blessing" of his
cent
income
siJrtax
so
lqng
as
expe rience
congr essional
changed all that, Ford said, spme surta x provision Is
passed.
.

woJw

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'

18 - The Slll}day Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 17, 1974

G~vernors
By ARNOLD B. SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editog
HILTON HEAD , S. C. (UPI )
- Flushed with November's
victories but concerned about
prospects of party squabbling
next month, Democratic

governors ·gathered at this potential for drawing a the ; largest number of
seaside. colony Sunday to hash record numbf r uf De mo· state~ouses in recent political
ove r t~eir own a~ d the .cratic
go vernors
and history .
governors-elect: Democrats
country's problems.
Included in the group, of
The conference, the first won '1:1 of the 3i; governorship governors-elect were the winpost elec tion ga thering of elections Nov. 5, and with nine ners of three choice prizes. The
party notables, had the holdovers will go into 1975 with . victories of Edmund G. Brown

Flanigan nomination recalled
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford Saturday withdrew his controversial nomination offormer Nixon aide Poter
M. !'Ianigan to be U.S. ambassador to Spain.

Ford acted at. the request of
Flanigan, who had run into
severe opposition at Senate
confirmation hearings because
of allegations that he was involved in offers to "sell"

foreign ambassadorships in
return for flnanci31 contributions to then-president Richard
M. Nixon's reelection campaign.
At the same time, the Whire

Lawyers' paths crossed in
new., unhappy circumstances
WASHINGTON (UP!) Back in the '60s, two tough
young government lawyers
named James F. Neal and
William 0 . Bittman prosecuted
Teamsters President James R.
Hoffa. They were friends. And
both succeeded.
Bittman, then 33, was the
chief prosecutor in the conviction of Hoffa in Chicago in 1964
for mail fraud. A short time
later, Neal, then also 33, won a
conviction of Hoffa in Nashville
for jury tampering .
Their lives were notably
parallel. Neal graduated from
the University of Wyoming and
Vanderbilt law school, was a
. Marine captain and has two
children. Bittman graduated
from Marquette University
and Vanderbilt law school, and
has seven children.
Both men subsequenUy left
the Justice Department and
went into lucrative private
praciice, Bittman in Washington and Neal in Nashville.
Bittman went on to represent
E. Howard Hunt Jr., the former CIA agent and White
House ''plumber" who was a
mastermin«! of the Watergate
bugging. Bittman, according to
testimony, received about
'150,000 in legal fees in the
early months after the
Watergate arrests.
Neal twice took leave from
his practice to join the
Watergate Special Prosecution
Force in 1973 as chief of the
cover.up investigation and
again in 1974, this time as chief
!rial lawyer in the case.
Two weeks ago at the trial, a
noticeably shaken Neal, his
glasses characteristically
pushed up on his forehead and
speaking in soft Tennessee
tonea ; told the court that his old
friend bad failed to disclose the
existence of a ''bombshell
document" in the Watergate
cover-up.
The document, which the
jury bas not ·yet seen, was a
memo written by Hunt to
Bittman .Just after Nixon's
•

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•••••••••••••••

0

•••

••

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Surprise .
your Santa ~
witha :
SeikoDX.

landslide
reelection
in
November 1972, demanding
that the administration live up
to its "commitments" for hush
money and pardons for the
Watergate burglars and hinting at trouble if the demands
weren't met.
Bitiman allegedly was sup. posed to pass t!le demands on.
Both Hunt and Bittman had
denied exisrence of the memo
for two years, even under oath,
until Hunt decided to tell the
truth on the witness stand at
the cover-up trial. That weekend, Bittman walked into
Neal's office and surrendered a
copy of the document.
Later, Neal acknowledged
painfully in an interview that
the prosecutors had not believed Hunt at first, but instead
had taken the word of his old
friend Bill Bittman. Then came
the bombshell.
The memo was damaging to
the five conspiracy defendants
in that it, as one lawyer put It,
"rehabilitated "
Hunt's
veracity
following
his
acknowledgement that he lied
frequenty
during
the
Waterga!Al cover-up.
But it was even more
damaging to Bittman, who
already had been named an
unindicted co-eonspirator in
the cover-up case. Now he
faces much more serious
problems- perhaps even
criminal indictment.
U.S. District Judge John J .
Sirica is expected to rule early
this week whether the Hunt
memo is admissible as evidence to the jury. If he does,
Neal will put !lunt back on the
stand to vouch for it. But he

OFFER RECEIVED
BUENOS AIRES (UPI)- It
may he just wishful thinking
but Argentine heavyweight
boxer Oscar Bonavena said
Friday he received an offer for
a title bout in March with world
heavyweight
champ
Muhammad Ali.
Bonavena, ranked sixth in
the world heavyweight class,
said that Ali's promoter Ike
Malltz offered him 20 per cent
of about a $21knillion purse. No
location has been set for the
bout.
The match would be
· Bonavena's second encmmter
in the ring with Ali.
In
1970, Ali
downed
Bonavena with the one and
only knockout of the Argen,
tine's career. There was no
title at stake in the match.

won't call Bittman because he
now can ' t vouch for his
credibility.
"We were inclined to call Mr.
Bittman until, I must say, we
were jarred by the circumstances surrounding the
memo," Neal told Sirica
Friday. "Now I don't want Mr.
Bit~n on the stand during
the govermnent's case."
The defense said they wanted
to question Bittman but didn't
want -him as their witness,
either, Sirica understood and
said a "good showing 11 could be
made for making Bittman a
court witness so neither side
would have to endorse him.
"What he would say when
called to the stand is another
thing," Sirica said. "I can't
make him restify if he doesn't
want to."

Israeli
Continued from page 17
the Golan situation separarely
with the ambassadors of
France, Britain and China
which, in addition to the two
super-powers, make up the
permanent members of the
U.N. Security Council, the
sources said.
They said Fahmi will sum·
mon the ambassadors of other
member..tates of the council to
"draw their attention to the
gravity of the Israeli move-

19 ~Jl'.e Sunday Times-Sent mel, Sunday. Nov. 17, 1974

prospeCt~

to review

House announced Ford is
nominating Frank c. car Iucci,
undersecretary of Health,
Education and Welfare, to be
ambassador to Portugal.
He would succeed Stuart N.
Scott in Lisbon.
Flanigan's request, which
denied "false charges" against
him, and Ford's acceptance
were stated in an exchange of
letters dated Saturday and
released by the White House.
Ford said he was granting
the Flanigan "with reluctance
and deep regret" and that "I
want to assure you (Flanigan)
once again of my confidence in
you and my admiration for

your abilities."
Flanigan, who · served five
years as an assistant to Nixon
and a specialist in international economic policy,
told Ford that "distortion" of
his record in government
service had forced long delay
of action on his nomination.
"Though the false charges
and insinuations have already
heen fully answered, I must
now conclude that the.confir·
motion process would not be
completed by the end or the
year and the 93rd Congress,"
Flanigan added.

GIRL KILLED
TEL AVIV ( UP!) - Israeli
troops battled young Arabs in
street
demonstration s
Saturday on the occupied West
Bank of Jordan, and one girl
died of injuries, military
sourc es ~aid. A military
command said a girl "was hil
on the head by a stone" in the
northern town .of Jenin "and
died of her injuries. She was
buried shortly afterward."
Arab sources in the territory
said the girl was run over by a
mill tary vehicle.

fMichigan
II

Jr., in call!ornia and Rep.
Hugh carey in New York gave
the Democrats control of the
nation's largest states, and
Rep. Ella Grasso's win in
Connecticut gave the party the
first woman governor to win ,
the office without succeeding
her husband.
But the Democrats came to
Hilton Head for more than
ce lebration . High on their

I

••
•I
•
!•
'

iI

••

••
••

I

More than 3,000 delegates-the governors among themare scheduled to adopt a new

OPEN DAILY 9 'TIL 9-CLOSED. SUNDAY

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William 0. Neill, chief justice
or the Ohio Supreme Court, will
be principal speaker at fall
commencement teXercises at
Ohio State University Dec. 13.
O'Neill is the only person to
have held the highest ·office in
all three branches of Ohio
government - chief justice,
governor and speaker of the
Ohio House of Representatives.

ARMOUR tr STAIII BEEF-U.S.D.A. GRADED CHOICE-U.S. GOVT,INSP.

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chester drawers, metal bed and others. old cabinet record
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quarter touchdown s.

Buck eye tai lb a ck Archi e

I

when

Tigers blank Jackets 17-0
to capture 1974 OC crown
moving the ball rrom its own 20
to the Baldwin-Wallace 7 in
nine plays, the big play heing a
49-yard pa ss fr om Brian Aschenbrenner to Harold Smith.
On fourth down at the seve n
yard line, Bob Levy kicked a
23-yard field goal.
Two series later the Tigers
moved to the Yellow Jackets '
36 yard line in 10 plays and
halfback Ernie Brown, who
rolled up 66 yards in 9 carries,
skirted right end for a 36-yard
touchdown run .
Baldwin Wallace never made
it to midfield the rest of the
game.

back George Keen blocked Ken
Preser an's punt. Preseran fell
on the balt"a t the one yard line.
Wittnberg fullback ·Dino
Johnson took it over for the
score on the next play for a 7-0
Witwnberg lead a t the half.
The Tigers stopped two
Baldwin-Wallace threats in the
third quarter with intercep-tions . The second was by senior
cornerback Ed Teague who
grabhed the bwil in the endzone
when Yellow Jackets' quarterback Jim Tressel lhrew on
fourth and goal.
Wittenberg :s offense took
over in the fourth qua rter,

Buckeye

sa£ety

Irish rally, nip Pittsburgh
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UP!) Tom Clements, a candidate for
the Reisman trophy, ran three
yards for a touchdown with
2:49 to play Saturday to bring
Notre Dame from behind for a
. 14·10 win over determined
Pittsburgh.
It was the sixth straight win
for the No. 4 rated Irish, who
already have accepted a bid to
play in the Orange Bowl New
Year's night. The victory broke
a five-game Pittsburgh win·
ning streak and left the Panthers with a 7-3 record.
It was the Uth straight year
in which the Irish have

defeated Pittsburgh .
But the victory wos hard-won
· for the erratic Irish , who
turned the hall over twice on
fumbles, once on a pass interception, and once on a
blocked punt, whUe recovering
only two Pittsburgh fumble~.
Nevertheless, Notre Dame's
defense was able to handle
Pittsburgh's strongest threats .
The Irish, the top defensive
team in the nation, limited the
Panthers to 96 yards on the
ground and 104 passing compared to the average of Notre
Dame's opponents this ses!llon

help. It came down on the
crossbar of the goal post and
bounced across for the three
points.
Notre
Dame's
Wayne
Bullock shared honors with
Clements on the Irish offense,
rushing for 124 yards in 25
carries, while Clements passed
for 151 yards on 13 completions
in 22 atrempts. Notre Dame
piled up 223 yards rushing .

of !11 rushing and 68 passing . Notre Dame 23, reserve
Pitt..burgh's Tony Dorsett, quarterback Bob Medwid ran
who lasl year ran for a record over from the one on the sixth
209 yards, the highest ever play of the Panther drive, and
attained in one game against placekicker Carson Long
Notre Dame, was limited to 22 converted to tie the score.
Long, who missed one field
carries and 61 yards Saturday.
Notre Dame scored the first goal attempt of 57 yards,
time it had the ball, moving 54 connected on a record-tying 52yards in eight plays, with yard try with four seconds to
Clements passing to Pete play in the third quarter to give
Demmerle for 35 yards and Pittsburgh a short-lived 11).7
then hitting him for three yards lead.
The field goal tied a team
and the score.
record
set by Fred Cox against
But Pittsburgh came back
and, after Lar ry Felton Notre Dame in 1961. Long's
returned a punt 11 yards to the successful kick needed some

0~\
coftlt.

-.))0...

Fireplace Construction
Old Fireplace Rebuilding

Penn State wallops OU Bobcats
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. Quar!Alrback Rich Bevly ran
(UPI) -Senior fullback Tom for one two.point conversion
Donchez ran for three touch· and passed for the other.
The Cotton Bowl-bound Lions
downs and quarterb,ck Tom
Shuman threw for another were plagued by nine penalties
score to power Penn Stare to a to drive them back 85 yards
35-16 victory Saturday over and they committed four costly
outmanned Ohio University. fumbles . The Bobcats had only
The Nittany Lion defense one five-yard penalty, but Penn
prevented the Bobcats from State intercepted twice. to
scoring until the final period, thwart Ohio U. drives, and
when L. C. Lyons ran lrom one Bevly completed only 11 out of
yard out to climax a 34-yard 32' passes.
Penn State scored in the first
drive in 13 plays and minures
three
minutes of the game on a
later sprilited 16 yards to cap a
38-yard drive in four plays.

Dayton edges
Marshall, 14-13
(Marshall-Dayton)
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) Calvin Kirk returned the
second half kickoff 91 yards for
a touchdown to lift the
University of Dayton to a 1~13
come-froin -behind win over
Marshall University here
Saturday.
Marshall took a 7-0 lead in
the first perod on a two-yard
plunge by freshman tailback
J .C. Felton following a pass
interference call against Dayton on the Flyers !().yard line.
Early in the second peril&lt;)
Dayton put together a 57-yard
, drive in !Oplays to tie the score
with Mark Zimmerman going
in from the one yard line.

The drive was highlighted by
four pass cOmpletions by Flyer
quarterback Tom Vosberg
which covered 50 yards.
However, Marshall came
right back to take the lead at
1:1-7 when Ned Burks returned
the kickoff 97 yards lor a
Marshall touchdown.
Zinunennan paced the Day·
ton rushing attack with 93
yards in 25 carrries while
Vosberg completed 13 of 19
passes for 139 yards.
Felton was the · Herd 's
leading rusher with 60 yards in
13 carries . .
Dayton finished the season
with a U , record while Marshall Is 1-9.

six-yard run by Donchez. The
touchdown capped a 28-yard
drive in six plays.
The Lions, hurt by two
penalties in the first period,
rallied in the second quarrer
and put together a 97-yard
drive in 15 plays, climaxed by
Donchez' one-yard plunge.
Still plagued by penalties,
the Lions managed another
score, marching 55 yards in 12
plays to give Shuman an opportunity to pass to Dan
Natale to bring the score to 21-0
in the second period .

Eight Nittany Lion backs
rushed for a 286 yards, while
Ohio U. depended on Lyons and
Bevly who rushed for 149 yards
in 54 carries.
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Donchez rushed for 96 yards
in 18 carries, including his
three touchdowns. He also
caught two passes for 38 yards .

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Phone 992-3684

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992-3863

I(
I

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Doug

Plank recovered a .Jim Je nsen
fumh le on the OSU 31. Five
plays later, He nson scored
from the four to give OSU a 7-0
lead they never relinquished .
Late r in t he quarter ,
tlefensive back Steve Lul'"e
picked off a Rob Fick pass on
the Iowa 34 an d Griffin broke
loose two plays later on an I Byard scoring romp.
Iowa came back, ma rching
71 ya rds in 15 plays ending in a
two - ~·ar d touchdown run by
halfback Rod Wellington . Nick
Quartaro booted a n Iowa
Sc hool record 47-yard fie ld goal
with 1: 29 left in the half to
make it 14-10.
The previous mark was 45
yards held by Bob Prescott and
Harry Kokulus.
OSU reserve fullback Pete
J ohnson added a 12-yard
scoring run with 1: llleft in the
gwne to cap the scoring.

CHEFS DELIGHT

· · ••. ·· ;:.: .·: · · · ::· ... · r·
ti

first half 187-153 and ran 45

plays to only 23 for OSU .

key 11.urnovers

WE PAY THE 50th

18"x2S' SAVE 16'
LIMIT 2

FOL.GERS COFFEE
.

were hurt by two
tha t Ohio State turnctt into first

the conference, actually

has surpassed the 101)-yard
mark .
.
Iowa was driving on their
firs t possession of the game

Griffi n again had .an impressive rushi ng performance,
g ~1i ni n g 176 yards and scoring
one touchd own . Il marked the
2"1s t s traig ht game the junior

t he IJ aw k eyes

uutgained Ohio State in the

in

BEREA, Ohio (UP! ) - The
Wittenberg Tigers • defense
throttled usually high-scoring
Ba ldwin-Wallace College
Saturday to give the Tigers a
including two tn the th1rd 17~ victory for their second
quarter, for Ohio State.
straight Ohio Athletic ConTh e Buckeyes appea red ference football championship .
sluggis h in th e first half
After a scoreless fir st
coming off last w~ek's con- quarter Baldwin -Wallace
trovers ia l 16-13 lo ss to drove lo the Wittenberg 26, but
Michigan State.
Tigers ' defensive e nd Bob
But the Buckeys broke loose Lonsbury came up with a
in the third quarter , driving 78 fumble to stop the drive cold.
and 73 yards for two Henson
The next time the Yellow·
touchdowns in
one-yard jackets had the hall they were
plunges to expand Ohio State's hacked up at their own 12 yard
14-10 halftime lead to 28-10.
line and freshman defensive

PAN

At :zo North 2nd St., Middleport, Ohio. at Ouie' s
Recreation Room.

KNOIT'S
AUCTION SERVICE
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$39.50

How ever,

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Make 49 l1rompt Deposffs

FOIL

PARMESAN CHEESE • , •••••••• , • , • ._. $1.29
MAYONNAISE•••••••••••••• , , • • :,: $1.39
FREMCH DRESSING • • • .. .. • .. .. • • • .':.;. 52'
OIL &amp;viNEGAR DRESSING • • • • • • • • • • .':.;. 59'
SAFFLOWER OIL ••••••••••• , • , • ·~· $1.19

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FOR CHRISTMAS

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS

MISC.: Brass belL old coins. metal toys. calendar plate,
several old stone jars and jugs, some ·blue writing old
baskets, knives, gun, jewelry, toy tin train, dishes, and old
advertisements, oil lantern, old tin ware. depression
glass , old tools, bottles, old typewriter, old marbles, many
books. glass candy bottles, German bayonet, roll top
trunk, many other ltem·s too numerous to mention.

WHITE/GOlD lACE

To

Iowa, now 3-7 overall and 2-5

1975 Christmas Club

damp
cloth.

COLUMBUS
(UP!) ,
Speedy Tyrone Hicks raced 34
yards for a touchdown late in
the fourth quarter to spark
third-ranked Warren Harding
to a' come-from-behind 21).10
victory over to]H'anked Cincinnati Moeller Saturday in the
Class AAA semi-finals of the
state high school playoffs.
Upper Arlington scored four
fourth quarter touchdowns to
defeat New Philadelsphia, 27-7,
in the other semifinal game.
Harding, 11).1, now plays
unbeaten Upper Arlington for
the championship at Akron's
Rubber Bowl next Friday.
Upper Arlington, the secondranked team in the final UP!
Board of Coaches ratings,
explnded for four touchdowns
in the final quarter in its hardearned victory over New
Philly, which finished the
season with a 9-1-1 mark.
Hardings' outstanding tailback John Ziegler, a 5-11, 184polUld senior, gave the Panthers a !Hllead the second time
they had the ball racing 50
yards for a touchdown with
5:31 left in the opening period.
That was the only Warren
· score until Hicks scoring dash
which overcame a I~ Moeller
lead.
The Crusaders, who finished
the year with a 11).1 record,
took advantage of a fumble by
Harding quarterback Jim
Richburg for its only touch·
down early In the second
quarter.
·
Richburg, back to pass was
hit by defensive end Greg King.
The ball pepped into the air
into the arms of defensive
tackle Jay Case, who returned
to the Panther 17. Three plays
later tailback Pat While raced
over from the five and Tim
Moorman's conversion gave
the Crusaders a 7-6 margin.

lb.

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lOW A CITY, Iowa ( UPI)
Third-ranked and boiling mad
Ohio State ,leading by only four
points at halftime. launched
two long scoring drives in the
third quarter to shake off a
stubborn luwa team , 35~ 10,
Saturday.
The victory, Ohio Slate's
ninth in 10 games and their
sixth agai nst one defea t in the
Big Ten, sets up next week's
showdown a t Columbus, Ohio,
against unbeaten Michigan for
a trip to the Rose Bowl.
Fullback Champ He nson
scored three .t ouchdow~ s,

Moeller
upset b Y
•
ar
1ng
H d

yard rollout around right end
with 3: 43 to play in the third
quarter .
It was the same ankle which
ha d slowed the senior from
Massillon , Ohio, the previous
three weeks. Franklin missed
the fir st game of the season
co.mpletely wi th an une xpla ined virus.
Junior tailback Gordon Bell
put on a show of hi s own by
gaining 166 yards in 23 carries
and scoring on ct six-yard run.

COMING SOON •••

GRAPES

LcagUl' &lt;'oa&lt;•ht•s

and play&lt;•rs will bo hold in
tho .varsity gym thts •.!·
b.• rn,on. League coa&lt;•hes a~
to re1ort.to the gym at 2 p.r11,
acc'.-dlng to Coa&lt;·h Ji1.n
Osburne. All R·D players
frum the 16 participating
teams are to report tu the
GAHS gym at 3:30 p.m.

Miami mauls
Bearcats 27-7

CALIFORNIA
RED EMPI!ROR

With new
fixtures ...

Rin~y·Dink

'
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Op- Jeff West.
On lhe game's opening
' portunlstic Miami converted a
series,
Miami fullback Rob
fun\ble and three pass in·
terceptions into scores in Carpenter broke loose on a
whipping outclassed Cincinnati hln from the Cincinnati 3:1-yard
'1:1·7 and extending its im- line but fumbled on the seven
' pressive unheaten string to 22 yard line. The ball bounced into
the end zone anrl t.hf alert
games here Saturday ..
Benjamin
grabbed it for a
The 12th ranked Redsklns,
touchdown.
headed for the Tangerine Bowl,
Early in the second quarrer,
wrapped up their regular
Miami middle guard Brad
season with a 9-6-1 mark.
Miami offensive tackle Cousino intercepred a deflected
Chuck Benjamin jumped on a Miller pass on the Cincinnati 10
Miami fumble in the Cincinnati and three plays later the
end zone for a touchdown and scrambling Sanna hit Jack
three pass inrerceptions led to Schulte on a 12-yard touchdown
touchdown passes of 12 and 16 pass.
With only 1:59 left in the first
yards by quarrerback Steve
Sanna and a 23-yard field goal half Ron Zook picked off
another Miller aerial and just
by David Draudt.
Cincinati's lone touchdown 67 seconds later Sanna threw a
came !are in the third period 18-yard scoring pass to Ricky
after most of the Miami Taylor for a 21~ halftime lead
damage had heen dpne-a 69- for the Mid-American Conferyard pass from Henry Miller to ence champions.

Justice O'Neil at

ments."
..The Israeli national radio
reported a section of Kissinger's Washington press conference· in which he warned that
Syria had indicawd "grave
doubts" that it would allow the
U.N. Emergency Force to
extend Its patrols on the Golan
Heights.
Israel launched a surprise
attack against Egypt in 1967
when it ordered U.N. peacekeeping forces withdrawn from
the Sinal desert.
Diplomats in London said the
United Slates and Russia are
worried that war might he
unleashed by miscalculation,
with Israel jit!Alry and determined not to be taken by
surprise again, as was the case
in the October war of last year.
Russian supplies of a large
variety of new weai&gt;ons to
Syria apparently have played
an important though not exclusive part in alerting Israel, the
diplomats said.
London diplomats said the
fact that Russian arms have
been shipped at this crucial
stage were said to bave set off
fears that Syria may not renew
the agreement on the continuing pr"!!ence of United Nations
forces .

I
••

party charter, or constitution,

•

ANN ARBOR, Mich. &lt;UPD - Injury-plagued
Dennis Franklin put on his best passing show of the
. season before getting hurt again Saturday,
throwing two touchdown passes and leading
Michigan to atleast a share of the Big Ten title with
a 51-0 smashing of Purdue.
Second-rated Michigan, now
10-0, won t he Big Ten Title
outright in 1971 a nd ha s shared
it with Ohio Sta te the past two
seasons. The Wolverines mee t
the Buckeyes in Columbus,
Ohio, next Saturday in a game
that will decide who goes to the
Rose Bowl and whether or not
they will share the title for the
third season in a row .
Franklin completed seven of
12 passes for 143 yards and the
two scores, but reinjw·ed his
just-healed left ankle on a five-

Bucks win .ninth, 35-10

CLINIC TODAY
GALLIPOLIS
Tho
annual dinie for Gallipolis

has share
of crown.

I

conference agenda was a
discussion of prospects for the
party's ''mini-convention''
Dec. 6-8 at Kansas City. ·

at that meeting, and there is
widespread concern within the
party that bitter squabbling
over the document will make
the Democrats look like the
same old divided party that
lost the presidency in 1968 and
1972.
The governors had reason to
worry. The last meeting of the
Democratic Charter Commission was in August, when
reformers walked out in a
dispu!Al witl) party regulars
and labor representatives over
language seeking to guarantee
blacks, women and young
people a full voice in party
affairs.
Although the Democrats
came out of the eleclioos with
governorships in 38 states,
there were 45 persons eligible
for· the conference. The extra
nine were eight Democratic
governors who are retiring at
the end of current terms and
one-John Gilligan of Ohio-who lost his bid for re-election.

•

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18 - The Slll}day Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 17, 1974

G~vernors
By ARNOLD B. SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editog
HILTON HEAD , S. C. (UPI )
- Flushed with November's
victories but concerned about
prospects of party squabbling
next month, Democratic

governors ·gathered at this potential for drawing a the ; largest number of
seaside. colony Sunday to hash record numbf r uf De mo· state~ouses in recent political
ove r t~eir own a~ d the .cratic
go vernors
and history .
governors-elect: Democrats
country's problems.
Included in the group, of
The conference, the first won '1:1 of the 3i; governorship governors-elect were the winpost elec tion ga thering of elections Nov. 5, and with nine ners of three choice prizes. The
party notables, had the holdovers will go into 1975 with . victories of Edmund G. Brown

Flanigan nomination recalled
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford Saturday withdrew his controversial nomination offormer Nixon aide Poter
M. !'Ianigan to be U.S. ambassador to Spain.

Ford acted at. the request of
Flanigan, who had run into
severe opposition at Senate
confirmation hearings because
of allegations that he was involved in offers to "sell"

foreign ambassadorships in
return for flnanci31 contributions to then-president Richard
M. Nixon's reelection campaign.
At the same time, the Whire

Lawyers' paths crossed in
new., unhappy circumstances
WASHINGTON (UP!) Back in the '60s, two tough
young government lawyers
named James F. Neal and
William 0 . Bittman prosecuted
Teamsters President James R.
Hoffa. They were friends. And
both succeeded.
Bittman, then 33, was the
chief prosecutor in the conviction of Hoffa in Chicago in 1964
for mail fraud. A short time
later, Neal, then also 33, won a
conviction of Hoffa in Nashville
for jury tampering .
Their lives were notably
parallel. Neal graduated from
the University of Wyoming and
Vanderbilt law school, was a
. Marine captain and has two
children. Bittman graduated
from Marquette University
and Vanderbilt law school, and
has seven children.
Both men subsequenUy left
the Justice Department and
went into lucrative private
praciice, Bittman in Washington and Neal in Nashville.
Bittman went on to represent
E. Howard Hunt Jr., the former CIA agent and White
House ''plumber" who was a
mastermin«! of the Watergate
bugging. Bittman, according to
testimony, received about
'150,000 in legal fees in the
early months after the
Watergate arrests.
Neal twice took leave from
his practice to join the
Watergate Special Prosecution
Force in 1973 as chief of the
cover.up investigation and
again in 1974, this time as chief
!rial lawyer in the case.
Two weeks ago at the trial, a
noticeably shaken Neal, his
glasses characteristically
pushed up on his forehead and
speaking in soft Tennessee
tonea ; told the court that his old
friend bad failed to disclose the
existence of a ''bombshell
document" in the Watergate
cover-up.
The document, which the
jury bas not ·yet seen, was a
memo written by Hunt to
Bittman .Just after Nixon's
•

••

•••••••••••••••

0

•••

••

·.

Surprise .
your Santa ~
witha :
SeikoDX.

landslide
reelection
in
November 1972, demanding
that the administration live up
to its "commitments" for hush
money and pardons for the
Watergate burglars and hinting at trouble if the demands
weren't met.
Bitiman allegedly was sup. posed to pass t!le demands on.
Both Hunt and Bittman had
denied exisrence of the memo
for two years, even under oath,
until Hunt decided to tell the
truth on the witness stand at
the cover-up trial. That weekend, Bittman walked into
Neal's office and surrendered a
copy of the document.
Later, Neal acknowledged
painfully in an interview that
the prosecutors had not believed Hunt at first, but instead
had taken the word of his old
friend Bill Bittman. Then came
the bombshell.
The memo was damaging to
the five conspiracy defendants
in that it, as one lawyer put It,
"rehabilitated "
Hunt's
veracity
following
his
acknowledgement that he lied
frequenty
during
the
Waterga!Al cover-up.
But it was even more
damaging to Bittman, who
already had been named an
unindicted co-eonspirator in
the cover-up case. Now he
faces much more serious
problems- perhaps even
criminal indictment.
U.S. District Judge John J .
Sirica is expected to rule early
this week whether the Hunt
memo is admissible as evidence to the jury. If he does,
Neal will put !lunt back on the
stand to vouch for it. But he

OFFER RECEIVED
BUENOS AIRES (UPI)- It
may he just wishful thinking
but Argentine heavyweight
boxer Oscar Bonavena said
Friday he received an offer for
a title bout in March with world
heavyweight
champ
Muhammad Ali.
Bonavena, ranked sixth in
the world heavyweight class,
said that Ali's promoter Ike
Malltz offered him 20 per cent
of about a $21knillion purse. No
location has been set for the
bout.
The match would be
· Bonavena's second encmmter
in the ring with Ali.
In
1970, Ali
downed
Bonavena with the one and
only knockout of the Argen,
tine's career. There was no
title at stake in the match.

won't call Bittman because he
now can ' t vouch for his
credibility.
"We were inclined to call Mr.
Bittman until, I must say, we
were jarred by the circumstances surrounding the
memo," Neal told Sirica
Friday. "Now I don't want Mr.
Bit~n on the stand during
the govermnent's case."
The defense said they wanted
to question Bittman but didn't
want -him as their witness,
either, Sirica understood and
said a "good showing 11 could be
made for making Bittman a
court witness so neither side
would have to endorse him.
"What he would say when
called to the stand is another
thing," Sirica said. "I can't
make him restify if he doesn't
want to."

Israeli
Continued from page 17
the Golan situation separarely
with the ambassadors of
France, Britain and China
which, in addition to the two
super-powers, make up the
permanent members of the
U.N. Security Council, the
sources said.
They said Fahmi will sum·
mon the ambassadors of other
member..tates of the council to
"draw their attention to the
gravity of the Israeli move-

19 ~Jl'.e Sunday Times-Sent mel, Sunday. Nov. 17, 1974

prospeCt~

to review

House announced Ford is
nominating Frank c. car Iucci,
undersecretary of Health,
Education and Welfare, to be
ambassador to Portugal.
He would succeed Stuart N.
Scott in Lisbon.
Flanigan's request, which
denied "false charges" against
him, and Ford's acceptance
were stated in an exchange of
letters dated Saturday and
released by the White House.
Ford said he was granting
the Flanigan "with reluctance
and deep regret" and that "I
want to assure you (Flanigan)
once again of my confidence in
you and my admiration for

your abilities."
Flanigan, who · served five
years as an assistant to Nixon
and a specialist in international economic policy,
told Ford that "distortion" of
his record in government
service had forced long delay
of action on his nomination.
"Though the false charges
and insinuations have already
heen fully answered, I must
now conclude that the.confir·
motion process would not be
completed by the end or the
year and the 93rd Congress,"
Flanigan added.

GIRL KILLED
TEL AVIV ( UP!) - Israeli
troops battled young Arabs in
street
demonstration s
Saturday on the occupied West
Bank of Jordan, and one girl
died of injuries, military
sourc es ~aid. A military
command said a girl "was hil
on the head by a stone" in the
northern town .of Jenin "and
died of her injuries. She was
buried shortly afterward."
Arab sources in the territory
said the girl was run over by a
mill tary vehicle.

fMichigan
II

Jr., in call!ornia and Rep.
Hugh carey in New York gave
the Democrats control of the
nation's largest states, and
Rep. Ella Grasso's win in
Connecticut gave the party the
first woman governor to win ,
the office without succeeding
her husband.
But the Democrats came to
Hilton Head for more than
ce lebration . High on their

I

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More than 3,000 delegates-the governors among themare scheduled to adopt a new

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O'Neill is the only person to
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quarter touchdown s.

Buck eye tai lb a ck Archi e

I

when

Tigers blank Jackets 17-0
to capture 1974 OC crown
moving the ball rrom its own 20
to the Baldwin-Wallace 7 in
nine plays, the big play heing a
49-yard pa ss fr om Brian Aschenbrenner to Harold Smith.
On fourth down at the seve n
yard line, Bob Levy kicked a
23-yard field goal.
Two series later the Tigers
moved to the Yellow Jackets '
36 yard line in 10 plays and
halfback Ernie Brown, who
rolled up 66 yards in 9 carries,
skirted right end for a 36-yard
touchdown run .
Baldwin Wallace never made
it to midfield the rest of the
game.

back George Keen blocked Ken
Preser an's punt. Preseran fell
on the balt"a t the one yard line.
Wittnberg fullback ·Dino
Johnson took it over for the
score on the next play for a 7-0
Witwnberg lead a t the half.
The Tigers stopped two
Baldwin-Wallace threats in the
third quarter with intercep-tions . The second was by senior
cornerback Ed Teague who
grabhed the bwil in the endzone
when Yellow Jackets' quarterback Jim Tressel lhrew on
fourth and goal.
Wittenberg :s offense took
over in the fourth qua rter,

Buckeye

sa£ety

Irish rally, nip Pittsburgh
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UP!) Tom Clements, a candidate for
the Reisman trophy, ran three
yards for a touchdown with
2:49 to play Saturday to bring
Notre Dame from behind for a
. 14·10 win over determined
Pittsburgh.
It was the sixth straight win
for the No. 4 rated Irish, who
already have accepted a bid to
play in the Orange Bowl New
Year's night. The victory broke
a five-game Pittsburgh win·
ning streak and left the Panthers with a 7-3 record.
It was the Uth straight year
in which the Irish have

defeated Pittsburgh .
But the victory wos hard-won
· for the erratic Irish , who
turned the hall over twice on
fumbles, once on a pass interception, and once on a
blocked punt, whUe recovering
only two Pittsburgh fumble~.
Nevertheless, Notre Dame's
defense was able to handle
Pittsburgh's strongest threats .
The Irish, the top defensive
team in the nation, limited the
Panthers to 96 yards on the
ground and 104 passing compared to the average of Notre
Dame's opponents this ses!llon

help. It came down on the
crossbar of the goal post and
bounced across for the three
points.
Notre
Dame's
Wayne
Bullock shared honors with
Clements on the Irish offense,
rushing for 124 yards in 25
carries, while Clements passed
for 151 yards on 13 completions
in 22 atrempts. Notre Dame
piled up 223 yards rushing .

of !11 rushing and 68 passing . Notre Dame 23, reserve
Pitt..burgh's Tony Dorsett, quarterback Bob Medwid ran
who lasl year ran for a record over from the one on the sixth
209 yards, the highest ever play of the Panther drive, and
attained in one game against placekicker Carson Long
Notre Dame, was limited to 22 converted to tie the score.
Long, who missed one field
carries and 61 yards Saturday.
Notre Dame scored the first goal attempt of 57 yards,
time it had the ball, moving 54 connected on a record-tying 52yards in eight plays, with yard try with four seconds to
Clements passing to Pete play in the third quarter to give
Demmerle for 35 yards and Pittsburgh a short-lived 11).7
then hitting him for three yards lead.
The field goal tied a team
and the score.
record
set by Fred Cox against
But Pittsburgh came back
and, after Lar ry Felton Notre Dame in 1961. Long's
returned a punt 11 yards to the successful kick needed some

0~\
coftlt.

-.))0...

Fireplace Construction
Old Fireplace Rebuilding

Penn State wallops OU Bobcats
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. Quar!Alrback Rich Bevly ran
(UPI) -Senior fullback Tom for one two.point conversion
Donchez ran for three touch· and passed for the other.
The Cotton Bowl-bound Lions
downs and quarterb,ck Tom
Shuman threw for another were plagued by nine penalties
score to power Penn Stare to a to drive them back 85 yards
35-16 victory Saturday over and they committed four costly
outmanned Ohio University. fumbles . The Bobcats had only
The Nittany Lion defense one five-yard penalty, but Penn
prevented the Bobcats from State intercepted twice. to
scoring until the final period, thwart Ohio U. drives, and
when L. C. Lyons ran lrom one Bevly completed only 11 out of
yard out to climax a 34-yard 32' passes.
Penn State scored in the first
drive in 13 plays and minures
three
minutes of the game on a
later sprilited 16 yards to cap a
38-yard drive in four plays.

Dayton edges
Marshall, 14-13
(Marshall-Dayton)
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) Calvin Kirk returned the
second half kickoff 91 yards for
a touchdown to lift the
University of Dayton to a 1~13
come-froin -behind win over
Marshall University here
Saturday.
Marshall took a 7-0 lead in
the first perod on a two-yard
plunge by freshman tailback
J .C. Felton following a pass
interference call against Dayton on the Flyers !().yard line.
Early in the second peril&lt;)
Dayton put together a 57-yard
, drive in !Oplays to tie the score
with Mark Zimmerman going
in from the one yard line.

The drive was highlighted by
four pass cOmpletions by Flyer
quarterback Tom Vosberg
which covered 50 yards.
However, Marshall came
right back to take the lead at
1:1-7 when Ned Burks returned
the kickoff 97 yards lor a
Marshall touchdown.
Zinunennan paced the Day·
ton rushing attack with 93
yards in 25 carrries while
Vosberg completed 13 of 19
passes for 139 yards.
Felton was the · Herd 's
leading rusher with 60 yards in
13 carries . .
Dayton finished the season
with a U , record while Marshall Is 1-9.

six-yard run by Donchez. The
touchdown capped a 28-yard
drive in six plays.
The Lions, hurt by two
penalties in the first period,
rallied in the second quarrer
and put together a 97-yard
drive in 15 plays, climaxed by
Donchez' one-yard plunge.
Still plagued by penalties,
the Lions managed another
score, marching 55 yards in 12
plays to give Shuman an opportunity to pass to Dan
Natale to bring the score to 21-0
in the second period .

Eight Nittany Lion backs
rushed for a 286 yards, while
Ohio U. depended on Lyons and
Bevly who rushed for 149 yards
in 54 carries.
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Doug

Plank recovered a .Jim Je nsen
fumh le on the OSU 31. Five
plays later, He nson scored
from the four to give OSU a 7-0
lead they never relinquished .
Late r in t he quarter ,
tlefensive back Steve Lul'"e
picked off a Rob Fick pass on
the Iowa 34 an d Griffin broke
loose two plays later on an I Byard scoring romp.
Iowa came back, ma rching
71 ya rds in 15 plays ending in a
two - ~·ar d touchdown run by
halfback Rod Wellington . Nick
Quartaro booted a n Iowa
Sc hool record 47-yard fie ld goal
with 1: 29 left in the half to
make it 14-10.
The previous mark was 45
yards held by Bob Prescott and
Harry Kokulus.
OSU reserve fullback Pete
J ohnson added a 12-yard
scoring run with 1: llleft in the
gwne to cap the scoring.

CHEFS DELIGHT

· · ••. ·· ;:.: .·: · · · ::· ... · r·
ti

first half 187-153 and ran 45

plays to only 23 for OSU .

key 11.urnovers

WE PAY THE 50th

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were hurt by two
tha t Ohio State turnctt into first

the conference, actually

has surpassed the 101)-yard
mark .
.
Iowa was driving on their
firs t possession of the game

Griffi n again had .an impressive rushi ng performance,
g ~1i ni n g 176 yards and scoring
one touchd own . Il marked the
2"1s t s traig ht game the junior

t he IJ aw k eyes

uutgained Ohio State in the

in

BEREA, Ohio (UP! ) - The
Wittenberg Tigers • defense
throttled usually high-scoring
Ba ldwin-Wallace College
Saturday to give the Tigers a
including two tn the th1rd 17~ victory for their second
quarter, for Ohio State.
straight Ohio Athletic ConTh e Buckeyes appea red ference football championship .
sluggis h in th e first half
After a scoreless fir st
coming off last w~ek's con- quarter Baldwin -Wallace
trovers ia l 16-13 lo ss to drove lo the Wittenberg 26, but
Michigan State.
Tigers ' defensive e nd Bob
But the Buckeys broke loose Lonsbury came up with a
in the third quarter , driving 78 fumble to stop the drive cold.
and 73 yards for two Henson
The next time the Yellow·
touchdowns in
one-yard jackets had the hall they were
plunges to expand Ohio State's hacked up at their own 12 yard
14-10 halftime lead to 28-10.
line and freshman defensive

PAN

At :zo North 2nd St., Middleport, Ohio. at Ouie' s
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FOR CHRISTMAS

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS

MISC.: Brass belL old coins. metal toys. calendar plate,
several old stone jars and jugs, some ·blue writing old
baskets, knives, gun, jewelry, toy tin train, dishes, and old
advertisements, oil lantern, old tin ware. depression
glass , old tools, bottles, old typewriter, old marbles, many
books. glass candy bottles, German bayonet, roll top
trunk, many other ltem·s too numerous to mention.

WHITE/GOlD lACE

To

Iowa, now 3-7 overall and 2-5

1975 Christmas Club

damp
cloth.

COLUMBUS
(UP!) ,
Speedy Tyrone Hicks raced 34
yards for a touchdown late in
the fourth quarter to spark
third-ranked Warren Harding
to a' come-from-behind 21).10
victory over to]H'anked Cincinnati Moeller Saturday in the
Class AAA semi-finals of the
state high school playoffs.
Upper Arlington scored four
fourth quarter touchdowns to
defeat New Philadelsphia, 27-7,
in the other semifinal game.
Harding, 11).1, now plays
unbeaten Upper Arlington for
the championship at Akron's
Rubber Bowl next Friday.
Upper Arlington, the secondranked team in the final UP!
Board of Coaches ratings,
explnded for four touchdowns
in the final quarter in its hardearned victory over New
Philly, which finished the
season with a 9-1-1 mark.
Hardings' outstanding tailback John Ziegler, a 5-11, 184polUld senior, gave the Panthers a !Hllead the second time
they had the ball racing 50
yards for a touchdown with
5:31 left in the opening period.
That was the only Warren
· score until Hicks scoring dash
which overcame a I~ Moeller
lead.
The Crusaders, who finished
the year with a 11).1 record,
took advantage of a fumble by
Harding quarterback Jim
Richburg for its only touch·
down early In the second
quarter.
·
Richburg, back to pass was
hit by defensive end Greg King.
The ball pepped into the air
into the arms of defensive
tackle Jay Case, who returned
to the Panther 17. Three plays
later tailback Pat While raced
over from the five and Tim
Moorman's conversion gave
the Crusaders a 7-6 margin.

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lOW A CITY, Iowa ( UPI)
Third-ranked and boiling mad
Ohio State ,leading by only four
points at halftime. launched
two long scoring drives in the
third quarter to shake off a
stubborn luwa team , 35~ 10,
Saturday.
The victory, Ohio Slate's
ninth in 10 games and their
sixth agai nst one defea t in the
Big Ten, sets up next week's
showdown a t Columbus, Ohio,
against unbeaten Michigan for
a trip to the Rose Bowl.
Fullback Champ He nson
scored three .t ouchdow~ s,

Moeller
upset b Y
•
ar
1ng
H d

yard rollout around right end
with 3: 43 to play in the third
quarter .
It was the same ankle which
ha d slowed the senior from
Massillon , Ohio, the previous
three weeks. Franklin missed
the fir st game of the season
co.mpletely wi th an une xpla ined virus.
Junior tailback Gordon Bell
put on a show of hi s own by
gaining 166 yards in 23 carries
and scoring on ct six-yard run.

COMING SOON •••

GRAPES

LcagUl' &lt;'oa&lt;•ht•s

and play&lt;•rs will bo hold in
tho .varsity gym thts •.!·
b.• rn,on. League coa&lt;•hes a~
to re1ort.to the gym at 2 p.r11,
acc'.-dlng to Coa&lt;·h Ji1.n
Osburne. All R·D players
frum the 16 participating
teams are to report tu the
GAHS gym at 3:30 p.m.

Miami mauls
Bearcats 27-7

CALIFORNIA
RED EMPI!ROR

With new
fixtures ...

Rin~y·Dink

'
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Op- Jeff West.
On lhe game's opening
' portunlstic Miami converted a
series,
Miami fullback Rob
fun\ble and three pass in·
terceptions into scores in Carpenter broke loose on a
whipping outclassed Cincinnati hln from the Cincinnati 3:1-yard
'1:1·7 and extending its im- line but fumbled on the seven
' pressive unheaten string to 22 yard line. The ball bounced into
the end zone anrl t.hf alert
games here Saturday ..
Benjamin
grabbed it for a
The 12th ranked Redsklns,
touchdown.
headed for the Tangerine Bowl,
Early in the second quarrer,
wrapped up their regular
Miami middle guard Brad
season with a 9-6-1 mark.
Miami offensive tackle Cousino intercepred a deflected
Chuck Benjamin jumped on a Miller pass on the Cincinnati 10
Miami fumble in the Cincinnati and three plays later the
end zone for a touchdown and scrambling Sanna hit Jack
three pass inrerceptions led to Schulte on a 12-yard touchdown
touchdown passes of 12 and 16 pass.
With only 1:59 left in the first
yards by quarrerback Steve
Sanna and a 23-yard field goal half Ron Zook picked off
another Miller aerial and just
by David Draudt.
Cincinati's lone touchdown 67 seconds later Sanna threw a
came !are in the third period 18-yard scoring pass to Ricky
after most of the Miami Taylor for a 21~ halftime lead
damage had heen dpne-a 69- for the Mid-American Conferyard pass from Henry Miller to ence champions.

Justice O'Neil at

ments."
..The Israeli national radio
reported a section of Kissinger's Washington press conference· in which he warned that
Syria had indicawd "grave
doubts" that it would allow the
U.N. Emergency Force to
extend Its patrols on the Golan
Heights.
Israel launched a surprise
attack against Egypt in 1967
when it ordered U.N. peacekeeping forces withdrawn from
the Sinal desert.
Diplomats in London said the
United Slates and Russia are
worried that war might he
unleashed by miscalculation,
with Israel jit!Alry and determined not to be taken by
surprise again, as was the case
in the October war of last year.
Russian supplies of a large
variety of new weai&gt;ons to
Syria apparently have played
an important though not exclusive part in alerting Israel, the
diplomats said.
London diplomats said the
fact that Russian arms have
been shipped at this crucial
stage were said to bave set off
fears that Syria may not renew
the agreement on the continuing pr"!!ence of United Nations
forces .

I
••

party charter, or constitution,

•

ANN ARBOR, Mich. &lt;UPD - Injury-plagued
Dennis Franklin put on his best passing show of the
. season before getting hurt again Saturday,
throwing two touchdown passes and leading
Michigan to atleast a share of the Big Ten title with
a 51-0 smashing of Purdue.
Second-rated Michigan, now
10-0, won t he Big Ten Title
outright in 1971 a nd ha s shared
it with Ohio Sta te the past two
seasons. The Wolverines mee t
the Buckeyes in Columbus,
Ohio, next Saturday in a game
that will decide who goes to the
Rose Bowl and whether or not
they will share the title for the
third season in a row .
Franklin completed seven of
12 passes for 143 yards and the
two scores, but reinjw·ed his
just-healed left ankle on a five-

Bucks win .ninth, 35-10

CLINIC TODAY
GALLIPOLIS
Tho
annual dinie for Gallipolis

has share
of crown.

I

conference agenda was a
discussion of prospects for the
party's ''mini-convention''
Dec. 6-8 at Kansas City. ·

at that meeting, and there is
widespread concern within the
party that bitter squabbling
over the document will make
the Democrats look like the
same old divided party that
lost the presidency in 1968 and
1972.
The governors had reason to
worry. The last meeting of the
Democratic Charter Commission was in August, when
reformers walked out in a
dispu!Al witl) party regulars
and labor representatives over
language seeking to guarantee
blacks, women and young
people a full voice in party
affairs.
Although the Democrats
came out of the eleclioos with
governorships in 38 states,
there were 45 persons eligible
for· the conference. The extra
nine were eight Democratic
governors who are retiring at
the end of current terms and
one-John Gilligan of Ohio-who lost his bid for re-election.

•

I'•

�•

•

•

•

,,
:.·.

ro- The Sunday Times- Sentinel,Sunp~, Nov. 17, 1974

•

;

Upper ~lington, down 7-0
•
In fourth, ·triumphs, 27-7

Middletown,
Fremont
•
garn 'A '-finals
Defending champion Middletown Fenwick ( 10-0-1 1 and
Fremont St. J oseph t 9-2.()),
both winners in the semi£inals
of the Class A Ohio High School
Athletic Association Football
Championship, meet at Upper
Arlington Friday night for the
state small-school grid title .
Fenwick's Falcons , ranked
No. I among Ohio single-A
teams in United Press In-

COLUMBUS (U P! )
ranked
Upper
Second
scampered 22 yards for a score Arlington, trailing 7~ at the
in the third stanza.
end of three quarters, exploded
Running back Gary Muthert
for four touchdowns in the final
dashed 35 yards in the third : 12 minutes ol flle game to down
quarter for Fenwick's other
New Philadelphia 27-7 here
touchdown:
Saturday In the semi-finids of
Newark Catholic's only score the Class AAA state high school
came on a six-yard pass from football playoffs.
,
quarterback Steve Johnson to
Upper Arlington wiU meet
running back Tom Baker.
the winner of the second semiTight end Tony Paradiso final game here Saturday
snagged a five-yard pass from between top ranked Cincinati
quarterback Greg Kuns with 51

ternational's Board of Coaches

seco nd s remaining in ' the

By United Press International

ratings, toppled Newark
Catholic by a score of 3~
Friday night at Lancaster. The
unranked St. Joe Crimson
Streak defeated fifth-rated
Windham, 6.(), in the other
semifinals contest, at Findlay,
Friday evening.
The ·Green Wave of Newark
closed out the season with a 9-2
record. Windham's Bombers
ended with a 9-1-1 mark.
Running
back
Mike
Harkrader gained 137 yards on
22 carries and scored four of
his teams five touchdowns in
leading the Middletown club to
victory. The son of Fenwick
coach Jerry Harkrader, he
opened the scoring with touchdown runs of nine and three
yards in the first quarter,
caught a 15-yard touchdown
pass from quarterback Dave
South in the second period and ·

opening stanza for the lone
touchdown in St . Joseph 's
triumph.
Crimson Streak senior
tailback Joe Guyer rushed for
132 yards on 28 carries, and

teammate Tom Hoelzie , a
senior fullback , picked up 86
rushing yards on 17 totes.
The Windham offense was
kept to just one first down, that
on a 50-yard pass to Bill Roupe
from quarterback Dave Flegal
in the fourth frame . Defensive
halfback Vince Swint tackled
Roupe at the Fremont
seven yard Une, through, and
two plays later intercepted a
·Flegal pass in the end zone to
finish off the Bombers drive.
Windha~ ruriners were
stung for a minus 12 yards, and
the Crimson Streak defense
yielded only 57 total yards the
entire game.

Oilers seek 4th

Moeller and third ranked
Warren Harding. The Class
AAA championship game is
scheduled for Friday at the
Akron Rubber Bowl.
The Golden Bears, now 1141
on the season, spotted seventh
ranked New Philadelphia a 7.()
lead when junior quaiterback
Les Freshwater hit senior tight
end Ted MetcaH with a 63-yard
tourlldown pass with 5:44 left
in the third quarter.
The Bears, however, came to

life on their next possession
marching 75-yards in 13 plays
with fullback Ben Tenuta
blasting over from the one
yaad line on the fu-st play of the
final quarter . Quarterback
Gary Ginther's attempted twopoint conversion pays fell
incomplete,
It didn't take Upper
Arlington long to get rolling
again .
After
a
New
Philadelphia punt to the
Quaker 46-yard line, Arlington

HOUSTON (UP!) - In flle
past the youthful excesses of
outspoken Houston Oiler
running back Fred Willis would
be dismissed .
But Willis, as he pointed out,
has been through three tough
years in flle NFL, one disappointing trade, one players'
strike and now, .three straight
Oiler victories.
''The Houston Oilers,' ' he
said, "are not planning on
losing any more games this
year. We're going to win the
rest of 'em and finish with a 9-5

score.

GALUPOUS - Coach Jim session against the rangy
Osborne's Gallipolis Blue Ashland Tomcats with Tom
Devils held their own In a Valenline, Mike Sickles, Jim
three-way scrimmage with Niday, Gary Snowden and
Zanesville and Asllland, Ky., Tony Folden, Coach Osborne
on the GAHS planks Saturday. experimented the remainder of
Each team played a total of the scrimmage with Calvin
eight 8-minute quarters, four VVarren,BrentSaunders,Brent
each in the morning session Johnson, Brett Wilson · and
and four more in the afternoon, Roger -Brandeberry,
••n was a good opportunity,"
During the two bour morning
Osborne said, ''for our boys to session, GaUia Academy hit 25
work against two types of of ~9 field goal attempts for 42
competition.''
percent. The Gallians collected
He continued, "Ashland had ~ rebounds and had 14 turnsize and power, Zanesville had overs. ·
speed and quiCkness. Ashland
Ashland and Zanesville sank
liked to J;,Un, Zanesville was a 27 of 63 field goal attempts for
control-type ball club."
42 percent; picked off 4~
After opening the four-hour

rebounds and had ro turnovers.
No more than s•,,.n pnln•s
separated any of the teams
during the morning workouts,
Two sessions ended in ties, two
were decided by two points, a
pair by four, and two others by
seven.
For GAllS, Mike Sickles
picked off 10 rebounds in the
morning sessions. From the
field, Niday had five of seven In
t_wo sessions, leaving the
scrimmage early with blisters;
Brent Saunders was four for
six, Gary Snowden four for
seven, Tony Folden and Mike
Sickles each had three for eight
and Tom Valentine four for 10.
Brent Johnson was two for

Oilers' latest game - which
were supposed to be flown here
the day after the game - had
THE -PLAINS - Belpre,
In the third pre-season straight markers to start the
not arrived.
Federal - Hocking, Logan and contest, Logan outlasted second period and won going
meticulous
Brown,
a
Columbus Northland scored Alexander, 34-28. Logan led 18- away,'33-!7.
organizer and planner, termed
victories In the lOth annual 10 after one period. The
Darrell Miller led Columbus
the delay "a frustrating and Athens Shrine Cage Preview
to
four
Spartans
closed
the
gap
with
eight points. Bill Greer
maddening thing that upsets here Frldaynight
points
with
three
minutes
left,
paced
Athens with eight points.
our whole schedule."
In the opening 16-mlnute but goals by Mitch Wright and
will open Its 1974-75
Athens
Brown notified NFL officials exhibition, Belpre's Golden
Jim Kemper iced the victory campaign on Wednesday, Nov.
of the delay and finally made Eagles downed Trimble, 32-19.
for the Chiefs.
20, at home against the
arrangements to get a copy of
In the second outing, Federal
Kemper
and
Wright
each
had
Nelsonville-York.
Houston's game filrh from - Hocking's Lancers outlasted
10 points for Logan, Jim Reed
On Nov. 28, Ironton Is at Coal
Buffalo, the Oilers' opponent Nelsonville-York, 39-35, The
12
for
Alexander.
had
Grove
and WellSton at Vinton
last weekend.
score was tied 24.aJJ after the
In the nightcap, bost Athens County in non-league openers:
Giilman exploded when he , first eight minutes. The
held Columbus Northland to a
rec()['d,"
Meigs, Gallipolis an~ ,.
learned of Brown's complaint. Lancers rlpped off 10 straight
12-12 tie after one period but Waverly will not open up untjl .
Nobody was laughing, least " You tell him (Brown ) for me"
·
of all the Cincinnati Bengals, Gillman told a Cincinnati points to open second period the big city boys zipped off 10 Nov. 29.
play
and
were
never
headed.
·who suffered only their second reporter, "that he's full of -.
Kev Canter's 23 points led the
loss of the season, 34-21 ,
"Sometimes that man Buckeyes' attack. Don Vise
igniting the Oilers' most (Brown) really surprises me,"
successful road trip in the continued Gillman. "If things had 21 for Federal - Hocking.
history of the franchise.
don't go his way he's upset.
The two teams meet again He's that ·kind of guy,
Sunday in the Astrodome in an
"Tell him to keep his mouth
ali important American shut. He's getting senile. Tell
Footbali Conference game.
him he's senile."
In their first meeting CinGillman said the film Issue
CLEVELAND (UP!) - EnglandwiththeSJ*Ial teams
cinnati lost five fumbles.
was "crazy" and "a stupid
&lt;lluck
Noll, the head coach of producing one touchdown, the
"I
believe
we
un· thing to get upset about."
the Pittsburgh Steelers, defense one and the offense one
derestimated them," Bengal
"Every third week this same
wouldn't want tO upset the in a classic blend.
linebacker Ron Pritcluird, a thing seems to happen to "" but
It was Brian Sipe's first
plans of his old buddy, Coach
foMner Oiler, Said. ''By ·them you don't ever hear the Oilers
NiCk Skorlch of the Cleveland victory as starting quarwinning their last three games complaining about it," he Said.
NEW YORK (UP!) - Jim Browns, would he?
terback in place of Mike
we've got to take them dead
However, Gillman did admit "Catfish" Hunter won the Cy
You bet he would, If it could Phipps, and early In the week
serioUs now.
the Oilers were 11in eiTor" Young award last month, but help the Steelers beat the Skorlch declared Slpe would
"We're back up against the about the film, saying a he goes after the big prize No. Browns Sunday in aeveland- start against the Steelers.
wall.ln our division. We're a ''young, inexperienced fellOW''
28.
where Pittsburgh haan't won
For Pittsburgh, the game
half-game back and we know was shooting the film and that
That'sthedayHunter goes to for nine years.
was critically important to
we've got to win every game "the camera broke down arbitration with Ills claim of
All week Skorlch has admit- maintain their half-game lead
from here on out. We can't rely during the Buffalo game."
free agent status. Hunter tedly been preparing his In the AFC Central race over
on what somebody else does ...
Gillman figured Brown was contends Oakland owner defense with two game plans, Cincinnati.
AFC Central . leading Pitts- insinuating that flle film holdup Charles 0. Finley defaulted on one to use If .conservative
Cincinnati plays Houston
burgh, ·who the Bengals beat was deliberate.
their contract, making him a Terry Bradshaw opens at Sunday and Is a solid favorite
last Simday, leads by 21'.!
"We don 't like people to free agent able to deal with any quarterback for Pillsburgh, so on form, Pittsburgh must
games over Houston.
accuse us of such childish of baseball's 24 major league and the other designed against win to keep Its lead over the
Oiler fans, who have watched things as holding up films," he teamsb
, ·
f
pass-minded Joe Gilliam.
Beilgals.
only five wins in the past four said. "Withholding films went
0 viously • a
avorable
So on Saturday, rumors
Fans might look for a short
years , apparently thought out with greas,ed pants,"
decision in. the arbitration came from Pittsburgh that passing game from Slpe as
make
Hunter's neither Bradshaw nor Gilliam
ell
there was hope for their team
The reference was to an old would
when they lined up for tickets tactic of greasing a players' bargaining position an en- would start but Terry w ch.cinnat! ,.quarterback Ken •
fllis week. A sellout was not pan Is so he could slip out of . viable one.
I
Hanratty, the former Notre Anderson had an NFL record ·•·
expected .
tackles.
The contract dispute be- Dame star who has heeD a ro completions in 22 attempts
"These have been the busiest
tween Hunter and Finley arose reserve most of his career.
against Pittsburgh last week
days during the regular season
out of terms concerning
"lgota!Otofworkduringthe and Skorich revealed the
"since I've been here," said
deferred paynients. The pit- week," ~atty said, . ''but I seouting rePort llbQwed Andercher's contract called ' for didn't realize why.
fr
11 "d
·
Gordon Johnson, the Oiler
son was equen y
umpmg
.
NBA
Standings
ticket manager of seven years.
$100,000 a year - half on a
"I'll be okay just ail soon as I off" tbe' ball to his backs.
By United Press .International
· A near ' sellout crowd exThe Steelers, used to the ·
deferred
basis,
payable
to
any
learn
where to put my hands
Eastern Conference
pected a passing due! between
peljon,
firm
or
corporation
for
the
snap.
Yes,
I'm
artificial
turf at Three Rivers
Atlantic Division
red hot Ken Anderson of the
w. t. pet. g.b. named by H\Ulter.
. shocked."
.
Stadlwn, schaduled a final
Buffalo
10 3 .769
Bengals and the Oilers' Dan Boston
Marvh\
.
Mlller,
who
wlll
.
GUiiam,
who
started
the
first workout · ' Saturday
on
87 .5333 Pastorini, who early in the NewYbrk
represent
Hunter
in
~
arseven
games
and
led
.
the
·
Municl~
Stadiwn's
grass
In
76.5383
week suffered some back Phlla.
5 ~ .385 5
bitratlon as executive director St~ers to l;-1-1 mark before he nearfreeZtng weather.
Central Division
problems but was expected to
of the Players Association, said .• was benched In 'favor · of
For the game, the weatherw.. I. pet. g.b, Friday
start.
that Hunger 1\&amp;d named BradsH_aw,
said .. "'Rat' .man predicted a 40 per cent
Washington
11 2 .846
Despite Houston's six in- Houston
8 5 .615 3
chance of rain or snow and
an annuity to which Finley deserves the chance. ·
6 6 .500 41f2 . should make flle payments and
terceptions of the Bills' Joe Cleveland
"U we were going to do temperatures In the lower
5 8 .385 6
Ferguson last Sunday, the Atlanta
New Orleans
1 lJ .071 l01J2 the Oakland owner failed to do " something " Noll said In
so, even after being 'notified in refusing to' 'conunent on the
Oilers' pass defense still
Western Conference
Midwest
Division
writing by Hunter's attorney as report "We'd want it to surranked last in the AFC. Cinw. t. pet. g.b. _stipulated by the contract. .
clrinatl's ivas the best against Detroit
. prise i11em, wouldn't we?"
OPEN ADDED
9 6 .600
the pass. ·
· John Gaherln, who_ will For ·the Browns it's evert. AKRON, Ohio (UPI) - The
KC-Omaha
7 7 .500 1'12
7 8 .467 2
Bengal Doug Dressier was Chicago.
represent the 24 major league tlitng to gain and nothing . to Professional• Bowlers ·
1 12 .on 7
expected · to fill in again for Milwaukee
owners, said the dispute be- lose In Cleveland's first sellout Association Friday added the
Pacific Division
·
$80.~ Monroe Max-Air Open
injured running ·backs Bobbie
w. I. pet. g.b. tween Hunter and Finley is or the season. .
Golden
St.
10
3
.769
merely a dlasgreement over
.Qevelandls3-6golnglntothe to the 1975 winter PBA tour.
Clark and Essex Johnson. The
a 5 .615 2
the
method
of
payment,
which
,
game
and two -ks ago OWiler , The tournament will be held
Oilers'
Willfs, ' healthy Seattle
Portland
7 8 .tiJ7 4
foliowlng an lmtatlng 8erle~ of Phoenix
~lerinlned
,belpre
a
.'
Ant
Modell
~ that .lt ' a.t Pelican Lanes in . New .
must
be
6 7 .462 4
Los
Angeles
5
7
.417
4'h
pulleg hamstrings, expected to
decision 18 made ccmcern,tng
a tehodlding ~ rre~ Orleans, L,a., 1\farch 18-22, ' .·
Friday's ·ResultS
Hunter's
free
agent
claim;
'
,
,
..
SIIbiich
1ry new ill8Yers and · · Paul Colwell of Tucson,
sbate ·running baCk duties with KC-Omaha
110 .Boston lli9 ,
The Players ~ssociatlon new comblnatlona tci lee Wfiat ' Ariz., '!'On the 1874 tournament .
Vlc -.Washlng~n. "
, 1 Wash 104 New Orleans 95
Detroit 117 Seattle 103
contends Finley haS 4efaultec! . worked 'beat.
. _. at New Orleans and will be
Earlier this week . Brown Chicago
102 Phoenix 95 ·
th~ contract and Hunter ,is a The Browns responded last co~sid~red · the defending
c&lt;mpl8ined th8, fllnls of the 'Los Ang 105 Philadelphia 99
free
agent ~w.
\
I· week wi~ a .?1·14 upset at.Neir c~plQII,,
J
~

Hunter is

i .•

· POMEROY - Following_ the recent Halloween party ln
1, , Syracuse for the young folks of the S)Tacuse and Minersville
area the COmmittee in charge had 57 treats !eft over after giving
each youngster two each.
.
·
We would like for those who so generously donated for the
;. Halloween party to know that the 57 treats were given to
. residents of the Meigs County Infirmary.
·
, Mildred Jacobs, superintendent of the infinnary, wrote a note
thanking those who contributed toward the treats and to the
; committee for remembering the residents. She said they were
; delighted. It makes one feel good to spread a little thought'
. fulnesa, doesn't it.

Interesting
a
profitable . career
for
meo . and
women
s.e iling
Sarah Coventry, 18
and over. 1=or · information -w.rite
Fay .Westfall, Box
24, Long Bottom,
Ohio.
'·
• ' I'• I '

LIKE TO MENTION a few people who have or will celebrate
their birthdays : Eleanor 'Robson, county recorder, Louise
Heines, Larry Spencer, clerk of courts, antl Johnny Moon; also,
Mrs. Norbert Compton and her two sisters, Erna and Martha,
born In November two years kpart.
.
Also, that Mrs. Ella Cleland Kimes, who was reared on a
~· farm near &lt;llester, now a patient at Maple Heights Nursing
: Home in Wellston, was 99 years old on Oct. 30.
&lt;.:: L Gladys M. Frederick, Bidwell, Gallia County, wrote to us
• abOut Mrs. Kimes, revealing that Mrs. Kimes has been at the
;, borne the past five years and, although In a wheel chair, Is
- mentally alert, conducts an interesting conversation, and reada
:".newspapers and books which nurses bring her from the library.
! The oldest living member of her family, she has two l;&gt;rofllers,
• She received gifts offrults and flowers "on her day."
~
WE SEND BffiTHDAY WISHES TO EACH AND
EVERYONE, BELATED OR OTHERWISE.

i

••

; Certainly wish you both a speedy recovery. We miss seeing you
; around;

~

•

/

• and Dam several weeks ago caught a rare bowfin fish.
~
VVigal sald the fish, somellmes called a mudfish usually is
: found In the Mississippi basin. Wigal said that he never saw
• anything quite like It, and when it came out of the water It was
: like a weU erupting. The fish has an oblong body covered with
l hard round scales, has a rounded snout, powerful teeth, and a
t long soft dorsal fin,

SPECIAL
PRICED I

------------------

•"

ON BEHALF OF SYRACUSE MAYOR Herman London and
:'. vlllage officials l wish to conunend Elva Dailey for taking care of
~ the lovely flowers around the flag pole fllis past summer,

RIDENOUR

•

TV &amp; APPLIANCES
GAS SERVICE

''

'f

CHESTER, OHIO

S-T-R-E-T-C-H
YOUR DOLLAR AT

DISASTER NEAR
\,
' INDIANAPOUS, Ind. (UP!)
· - A United Auto Workers
:-.union official said Friday
:.,.America's economy is "borj dering on disaster" and that
~;the unemployment rate , could
j.'Teach 7 to 8 per cent by the
Mniddle of 1975. Director Dallas

LARRY'S
~I;

.

,.

he said.

BUS STRIKE NEAR
PHOENIX, Ariz. (UP!)
Representatives . of
the
Greyhound Bus Line and union
employes were asked to meet
Saturday with two federal
mediators in an effort to avert
a nationwide strike. Ellis B.
Franklin , chairman of the
Amalgamated Council of
Greyhound Divisions, said the
employes voted 11,606 to 816 in
favor of striking and that
workers across the country
rejected a company offer.

"'

WE HAVE RECEIVED
A •
}".'I,
...

di~ste~,' '

the Academy 's temporary

facilities completed course
work and field problems using
lnost modern skills a nd
techniques available to law
enforcement.
The 260 hours of intensive
work included criminal and
traffic law , psychol ogy,
sociology, traffic control,
forensi c science , ethical
standards and law enforcement arts.
Ali who successfully completed the course have met
mtmmum standards of
educational, physical, menta!
and moral fitness set by the
training board and were
certified as law enforcement
officers at the ceremony.
Simpson plans to take advanced Narcotic and' Drug
School and Homicide training
at the University in the near
future . He \s the son of Mr, and
Mrs. Calvin (Bud) Simpson,
formerly of Pomeroy, now
residing in Seymour.

•

."

'·
•

Sells of the UAW's Region 3
told a news conference that
immediate state and federal
action is needed . " The
economic situation in America ,
and particularly in the auto
industry, is bo~dering on

SUPERIOR'S

POMEROY - Police officer
Galvin Bruce Simpson of the
Seymour, lnd. Police Dept.,
graduated in the 32nd sessioll'''
from the Indiana Law . e~; ·:
forcem.ent Academy's basi~ 1
training course in ceremonies
Nov . 2 at Whittenberger
Auditorium ,
Indiana
University. Justice Richard M.
Given, Indiana Supreme Court,
was the speaker .
Sixty-&lt;!ight Indiana officers
ih residence at Bloomington in

FRANKIES
DAVID SMITH

Postmaster

THE
KEENER
WEINERS
12

is just 19

PKG.

HARTFORD, W. Va . David W. Smith, 19, of Mason,
has been appointed as Postmaster at Hartford to become
one of, if not , the youngest
ever to hold the job.
Son of, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Smith of Mason, David Smith
assumed the post Nov. 9. Prior
to his appoinlment he was a
substitute rural carrier and
worked out of the Letart Post
Office since last April 24 .
Smith's election was made
by appoinlment by the Board of
Eastern Region out of
Philadelphia . The fivemember board, one of five in
the country, selected Smith
from a group of three, after
interviewing him in its
Philadelphia office.
Smith, a gra duate of
Wahama High School, was an
honor student and active in the
Future Farmers

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ADMITTED
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Jr .,
Middleport;
Catherine Lares, Rutland; Gail
Pierce; Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Margaret
Donahue, Christine Branham,
Anne Marchese, Edith Hines,

Drexal Lambert, Oscar Imboden, Marcia Capehart,
Nellie Boring.
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Guarantee appliee to tiret on vehicle~
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RALPH 'NIGAL, TEACHER at Southern Local School

~ District, an avid sportsman, while fishing at the Bellville Locks

free agent

. I

SORRY TO liEAR ABOUT the Illness of Wiiloughby Hill and

;

claiming

was

at academy

• Aaroo Zahl. Both men are confined at Holzer Medical Center,

Steelers hope to
end jinx tpday

40s:

'

,.

CONSOLE
COLOR TV
CLEARANCE SALE

four.
Gallla Academy • had little
difficulty against the famous
Ashland zone press, and
worked well offensively despite
the visitors height advantage.
Defensively, the Galllans
looked sharp throughout most
of the scr1mmage.
"We'll atep back•and look at
our mistakes on video tape
Monday,'' Osliorne continued.
"Then we'll prepare for
another toughie against
Barboursville Tuesday," he
concluded.
The Barboursville Pirates
wili scrimmage GAHS on the
local boards, beginning at 4:30
Tuesday. This will be followed
by a scrimmage between the
GAllS Blue Imps and Barboursville's Jayvees.

graduates

By Katie Crow

Quasa..: ~

•
Devils hold own rn scrrmmage
against Zanesville, Ashland

Simpson

Katie's Korner

Gregg Amicon.,
The Quakers' made it to
Arlington 10 later on In
period · only to have
Tidrick's 27-yard field goal
wide to the right.
The Golden Bears
moved into field goal range
Dave Goldthwaite%issed
goal attempts from the
42 yard lines:

The final Golden Bear touchdown came on a 25-yd. run by
Mercer after the Quakers
gambled and fal!ed on a fourthand-five situation.
Both teams had scoring
opportunities early in the
game.
New Philadelphia drove to
the Arlington 1G-yard line after
recoving a fumble by Staker
but Freshwater's pass was
intercepted In the end zone by

•

Logan,·Northland, Belpre
and ·Lancers win previews

strldght victory·

took it in in three plays with the
score coming on an II yard
pass from Ginther to Scott
Staker.
The touchdown was set up by
ityle Mercer's 30-yard run to
the New Philadelphia 11.
· Arlington made it 20-7
shortly after recovering a
Freshwater fumble on the New
Philadzlphia 33, Ginther going
the final nine yards for the

.....
''

'

'l(lnfer Hours: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.-Closed SINidays

SILVER BRII)GE PLAZA

'I
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�•

•

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ro- The Sunday Times- Sentinel,Sunp~, Nov. 17, 1974

•

;

Upper ~lington, down 7-0
•
In fourth, ·triumphs, 27-7

Middletown,
Fremont
•
garn 'A '-finals
Defending champion Middletown Fenwick ( 10-0-1 1 and
Fremont St. J oseph t 9-2.()),
both winners in the semi£inals
of the Class A Ohio High School
Athletic Association Football
Championship, meet at Upper
Arlington Friday night for the
state small-school grid title .
Fenwick's Falcons , ranked
No. I among Ohio single-A
teams in United Press In-

COLUMBUS (U P! )
ranked
Upper
Second
scampered 22 yards for a score Arlington, trailing 7~ at the
in the third stanza.
end of three quarters, exploded
Running back Gary Muthert
for four touchdowns in the final
dashed 35 yards in the third : 12 minutes ol flle game to down
quarter for Fenwick's other
New Philadelphia 27-7 here
touchdown:
Saturday In the semi-finids of
Newark Catholic's only score the Class AAA state high school
came on a six-yard pass from football playoffs.
,
quarterback Steve Johnson to
Upper Arlington wiU meet
running back Tom Baker.
the winner of the second semiTight end Tony Paradiso final game here Saturday
snagged a five-yard pass from between top ranked Cincinati
quarterback Greg Kuns with 51

ternational's Board of Coaches

seco nd s remaining in ' the

By United Press International

ratings, toppled Newark
Catholic by a score of 3~
Friday night at Lancaster. The
unranked St. Joe Crimson
Streak defeated fifth-rated
Windham, 6.(), in the other
semifinals contest, at Findlay,
Friday evening.
The ·Green Wave of Newark
closed out the season with a 9-2
record. Windham's Bombers
ended with a 9-1-1 mark.
Running
back
Mike
Harkrader gained 137 yards on
22 carries and scored four of
his teams five touchdowns in
leading the Middletown club to
victory. The son of Fenwick
coach Jerry Harkrader, he
opened the scoring with touchdown runs of nine and three
yards in the first quarter,
caught a 15-yard touchdown
pass from quarterback Dave
South in the second period and ·

opening stanza for the lone
touchdown in St . Joseph 's
triumph.
Crimson Streak senior
tailback Joe Guyer rushed for
132 yards on 28 carries, and

teammate Tom Hoelzie , a
senior fullback , picked up 86
rushing yards on 17 totes.
The Windham offense was
kept to just one first down, that
on a 50-yard pass to Bill Roupe
from quarterback Dave Flegal
in the fourth frame . Defensive
halfback Vince Swint tackled
Roupe at the Fremont
seven yard Une, through, and
two plays later intercepted a
·Flegal pass in the end zone to
finish off the Bombers drive.
Windha~ ruriners were
stung for a minus 12 yards, and
the Crimson Streak defense
yielded only 57 total yards the
entire game.

Oilers seek 4th

Moeller and third ranked
Warren Harding. The Class
AAA championship game is
scheduled for Friday at the
Akron Rubber Bowl.
The Golden Bears, now 1141
on the season, spotted seventh
ranked New Philadelphia a 7.()
lead when junior quaiterback
Les Freshwater hit senior tight
end Ted MetcaH with a 63-yard
tourlldown pass with 5:44 left
in the third quarter.
The Bears, however, came to

life on their next possession
marching 75-yards in 13 plays
with fullback Ben Tenuta
blasting over from the one
yaad line on the fu-st play of the
final quarter . Quarterback
Gary Ginther's attempted twopoint conversion pays fell
incomplete,
It didn't take Upper
Arlington long to get rolling
again .
After
a
New
Philadelphia punt to the
Quaker 46-yard line, Arlington

HOUSTON (UP!) - In flle
past the youthful excesses of
outspoken Houston Oiler
running back Fred Willis would
be dismissed .
But Willis, as he pointed out,
has been through three tough
years in flle NFL, one disappointing trade, one players'
strike and now, .three straight
Oiler victories.
''The Houston Oilers,' ' he
said, "are not planning on
losing any more games this
year. We're going to win the
rest of 'em and finish with a 9-5

score.

GALUPOUS - Coach Jim session against the rangy
Osborne's Gallipolis Blue Ashland Tomcats with Tom
Devils held their own In a Valenline, Mike Sickles, Jim
three-way scrimmage with Niday, Gary Snowden and
Zanesville and Asllland, Ky., Tony Folden, Coach Osborne
on the GAHS planks Saturday. experimented the remainder of
Each team played a total of the scrimmage with Calvin
eight 8-minute quarters, four VVarren,BrentSaunders,Brent
each in the morning session Johnson, Brett Wilson · and
and four more in the afternoon, Roger -Brandeberry,
••n was a good opportunity,"
During the two bour morning
Osborne said, ''for our boys to session, GaUia Academy hit 25
work against two types of of ~9 field goal attempts for 42
competition.''
percent. The Gallians collected
He continued, "Ashland had ~ rebounds and had 14 turnsize and power, Zanesville had overs. ·
speed and quiCkness. Ashland
Ashland and Zanesville sank
liked to J;,Un, Zanesville was a 27 of 63 field goal attempts for
control-type ball club."
42 percent; picked off 4~
After opening the four-hour

rebounds and had ro turnovers.
No more than s•,,.n pnln•s
separated any of the teams
during the morning workouts,
Two sessions ended in ties, two
were decided by two points, a
pair by four, and two others by
seven.
For GAllS, Mike Sickles
picked off 10 rebounds in the
morning sessions. From the
field, Niday had five of seven In
t_wo sessions, leaving the
scrimmage early with blisters;
Brent Saunders was four for
six, Gary Snowden four for
seven, Tony Folden and Mike
Sickles each had three for eight
and Tom Valentine four for 10.
Brent Johnson was two for

Oilers' latest game - which
were supposed to be flown here
the day after the game - had
THE -PLAINS - Belpre,
In the third pre-season straight markers to start the
not arrived.
Federal - Hocking, Logan and contest, Logan outlasted second period and won going
meticulous
Brown,
a
Columbus Northland scored Alexander, 34-28. Logan led 18- away,'33-!7.
organizer and planner, termed
victories In the lOth annual 10 after one period. The
Darrell Miller led Columbus
the delay "a frustrating and Athens Shrine Cage Preview
to
four
Spartans
closed
the
gap
with
eight points. Bill Greer
maddening thing that upsets here Frldaynight
points
with
three
minutes
left,
paced
Athens with eight points.
our whole schedule."
In the opening 16-mlnute but goals by Mitch Wright and
will open Its 1974-75
Athens
Brown notified NFL officials exhibition, Belpre's Golden
Jim Kemper iced the victory campaign on Wednesday, Nov.
of the delay and finally made Eagles downed Trimble, 32-19.
for the Chiefs.
20, at home against the
arrangements to get a copy of
In the second outing, Federal
Kemper
and
Wright
each
had
Nelsonville-York.
Houston's game filrh from - Hocking's Lancers outlasted
10 points for Logan, Jim Reed
On Nov. 28, Ironton Is at Coal
Buffalo, the Oilers' opponent Nelsonville-York, 39-35, The
12
for
Alexander.
had
Grove
and WellSton at Vinton
last weekend.
score was tied 24.aJJ after the
In the nightcap, bost Athens County in non-league openers:
Giilman exploded when he , first eight minutes. The
held Columbus Northland to a
rec()['d,"
Meigs, Gallipolis an~ ,.
learned of Brown's complaint. Lancers rlpped off 10 straight
12-12 tie after one period but Waverly will not open up untjl .
Nobody was laughing, least " You tell him (Brown ) for me"
·
of all the Cincinnati Bengals, Gillman told a Cincinnati points to open second period the big city boys zipped off 10 Nov. 29.
play
and
were
never
headed.
·who suffered only their second reporter, "that he's full of -.
Kev Canter's 23 points led the
loss of the season, 34-21 ,
"Sometimes that man Buckeyes' attack. Don Vise
igniting the Oilers' most (Brown) really surprises me,"
successful road trip in the continued Gillman. "If things had 21 for Federal - Hocking.
history of the franchise.
don't go his way he's upset.
The two teams meet again He's that ·kind of guy,
Sunday in the Astrodome in an
"Tell him to keep his mouth
ali important American shut. He's getting senile. Tell
Footbali Conference game.
him he's senile."
In their first meeting CinGillman said the film Issue
CLEVELAND (UP!) - EnglandwiththeSJ*Ial teams
cinnati lost five fumbles.
was "crazy" and "a stupid
&lt;lluck
Noll, the head coach of producing one touchdown, the
"I
believe
we
un· thing to get upset about."
the Pittsburgh Steelers, defense one and the offense one
derestimated them," Bengal
"Every third week this same
wouldn't want tO upset the in a classic blend.
linebacker Ron Pritcluird, a thing seems to happen to "" but
It was Brian Sipe's first
plans of his old buddy, Coach
foMner Oiler, Said. ''By ·them you don't ever hear the Oilers
NiCk Skorlch of the Cleveland victory as starting quarwinning their last three games complaining about it," he Said.
NEW YORK (UP!) - Jim Browns, would he?
terback in place of Mike
we've got to take them dead
However, Gillman did admit "Catfish" Hunter won the Cy
You bet he would, If it could Phipps, and early In the week
serioUs now.
the Oilers were 11in eiTor" Young award last month, but help the Steelers beat the Skorlch declared Slpe would
"We're back up against the about the film, saying a he goes after the big prize No. Browns Sunday in aeveland- start against the Steelers.
wall.ln our division. We're a ''young, inexperienced fellOW''
28.
where Pittsburgh haan't won
For Pittsburgh, the game
half-game back and we know was shooting the film and that
That'sthedayHunter goes to for nine years.
was critically important to
we've got to win every game "the camera broke down arbitration with Ills claim of
All week Skorlch has admit- maintain their half-game lead
from here on out. We can't rely during the Buffalo game."
free agent status. Hunter tedly been preparing his In the AFC Central race over
on what somebody else does ...
Gillman figured Brown was contends Oakland owner defense with two game plans, Cincinnati.
AFC Central . leading Pitts- insinuating that flle film holdup Charles 0. Finley defaulted on one to use If .conservative
Cincinnati plays Houston
burgh, ·who the Bengals beat was deliberate.
their contract, making him a Terry Bradshaw opens at Sunday and Is a solid favorite
last Simday, leads by 21'.!
"We don 't like people to free agent able to deal with any quarterback for Pillsburgh, so on form, Pittsburgh must
games over Houston.
accuse us of such childish of baseball's 24 major league and the other designed against win to keep Its lead over the
Oiler fans, who have watched things as holding up films," he teamsb
, ·
f
pass-minded Joe Gilliam.
Beilgals.
only five wins in the past four said. "Withholding films went
0 viously • a
avorable
So on Saturday, rumors
Fans might look for a short
years , apparently thought out with greas,ed pants,"
decision in. the arbitration came from Pittsburgh that passing game from Slpe as
make
Hunter's neither Bradshaw nor Gilliam
ell
there was hope for their team
The reference was to an old would
when they lined up for tickets tactic of greasing a players' bargaining position an en- would start but Terry w ch.cinnat! ,.quarterback Ken •
fllis week. A sellout was not pan Is so he could slip out of . viable one.
I
Hanratty, the former Notre Anderson had an NFL record ·•·
expected .
tackles.
The contract dispute be- Dame star who has heeD a ro completions in 22 attempts
"These have been the busiest
tween Hunter and Finley arose reserve most of his career.
against Pittsburgh last week
days during the regular season
out of terms concerning
"lgota!Otofworkduringthe and Skorich revealed the
"since I've been here," said
deferred paynients. The pit- week," ~atty said, . ''but I seouting rePort llbQwed Andercher's contract called ' for didn't realize why.
fr
11 "d
·
Gordon Johnson, the Oiler
son was equen y
umpmg
.
NBA
Standings
ticket manager of seven years.
$100,000 a year - half on a
"I'll be okay just ail soon as I off" tbe' ball to his backs.
By United Press .International
· A near ' sellout crowd exThe Steelers, used to the ·
deferred
basis,
payable
to
any
learn
where to put my hands
Eastern Conference
pected a passing due! between
peljon,
firm
or
corporation
for
the
snap.
Yes,
I'm
artificial
turf at Three Rivers
Atlantic Division
red hot Ken Anderson of the
w. t. pet. g.b. named by H\Ulter.
. shocked."
.
Stadlwn, schaduled a final
Buffalo
10 3 .769
Bengals and the Oilers' Dan Boston
Marvh\
.
Mlller,
who
wlll
.
GUiiam,
who
started
the
first workout · ' Saturday
on
87 .5333 Pastorini, who early in the NewYbrk
represent
Hunter
in
~
arseven
games
and
led
.
the
·
Municl~
Stadiwn's
grass
In
76.5383
week suffered some back Phlla.
5 ~ .385 5
bitratlon as executive director St~ers to l;-1-1 mark before he nearfreeZtng weather.
Central Division
problems but was expected to
of the Players Association, said .• was benched In 'favor · of
For the game, the weatherw.. I. pet. g.b, Friday
start.
that Hunger 1\&amp;d named BradsH_aw,
said .. "'Rat' .man predicted a 40 per cent
Washington
11 2 .846
Despite Houston's six in- Houston
8 5 .615 3
chance of rain or snow and
an annuity to which Finley deserves the chance. ·
6 6 .500 41f2 . should make flle payments and
terceptions of the Bills' Joe Cleveland
"U we were going to do temperatures In the lower
5 8 .385 6
Ferguson last Sunday, the Atlanta
New Orleans
1 lJ .071 l01J2 the Oakland owner failed to do " something " Noll said In
so, even after being 'notified in refusing to' 'conunent on the
Oilers' pass defense still
Western Conference
Midwest
Division
writing by Hunter's attorney as report "We'd want it to surranked last in the AFC. Cinw. t. pet. g.b. _stipulated by the contract. .
clrinatl's ivas the best against Detroit
. prise i11em, wouldn't we?"
OPEN ADDED
9 6 .600
the pass. ·
· John Gaherln, who_ will For ·the Browns it's evert. AKRON, Ohio (UPI) - The
KC-Omaha
7 7 .500 1'12
7 8 .467 2
Bengal Doug Dressier was Chicago.
represent the 24 major league tlitng to gain and nothing . to Professional• Bowlers ·
1 12 .on 7
expected · to fill in again for Milwaukee
owners, said the dispute be- lose In Cleveland's first sellout Association Friday added the
Pacific Division
·
$80.~ Monroe Max-Air Open
injured running ·backs Bobbie
w. I. pet. g.b. tween Hunter and Finley is or the season. .
Golden
St.
10
3
.769
merely a dlasgreement over
.Qevelandls3-6golnglntothe to the 1975 winter PBA tour.
Clark and Essex Johnson. The
a 5 .615 2
the
method
of
payment,
which
,
game
and two -ks ago OWiler , The tournament will be held
Oilers'
Willfs, ' healthy Seattle
Portland
7 8 .tiJ7 4
foliowlng an lmtatlng 8erle~ of Phoenix
~lerinlned
,belpre
a
.'
Ant
Modell
~ that .lt ' a.t Pelican Lanes in . New .
must
be
6 7 .462 4
Los
Angeles
5
7
.417
4'h
pulleg hamstrings, expected to
decision 18 made ccmcern,tng
a tehodlding ~ rre~ Orleans, L,a., 1\farch 18-22, ' .·
Friday's ·ResultS
Hunter's
free
agent
claim;
'
,
,
..
SIIbiich
1ry new ill8Yers and · · Paul Colwell of Tucson,
sbate ·running baCk duties with KC-Omaha
110 .Boston lli9 ,
The Players ~ssociatlon new comblnatlona tci lee Wfiat ' Ariz., '!'On the 1874 tournament .
Vlc -.Washlng~n. "
, 1 Wash 104 New Orleans 95
Detroit 117 Seattle 103
contends Finley haS 4efaultec! . worked 'beat.
. _. at New Orleans and will be
Earlier this week . Brown Chicago
102 Phoenix 95 ·
th~ contract and Hunter ,is a The Browns responded last co~sid~red · the defending
c&lt;mpl8ined th8, fllnls of the 'Los Ang 105 Philadelphia 99
free
agent ~w.
\
I· week wi~ a .?1·14 upset at.Neir c~plQII,,
J
~

Hunter is

i .•

· POMEROY - Following_ the recent Halloween party ln
1, , Syracuse for the young folks of the S)Tacuse and Minersville
area the COmmittee in charge had 57 treats !eft over after giving
each youngster two each.
.
·
We would like for those who so generously donated for the
;. Halloween party to know that the 57 treats were given to
. residents of the Meigs County Infirmary.
·
, Mildred Jacobs, superintendent of the infinnary, wrote a note
thanking those who contributed toward the treats and to the
; committee for remembering the residents. She said they were
; delighted. It makes one feel good to spread a little thought'
. fulnesa, doesn't it.

Interesting
a
profitable . career
for
meo . and
women
s.e iling
Sarah Coventry, 18
and over. 1=or · information -w.rite
Fay .Westfall, Box
24, Long Bottom,
Ohio.
'·
• ' I'• I '

LIKE TO MENTION a few people who have or will celebrate
their birthdays : Eleanor 'Robson, county recorder, Louise
Heines, Larry Spencer, clerk of courts, antl Johnny Moon; also,
Mrs. Norbert Compton and her two sisters, Erna and Martha,
born In November two years kpart.
.
Also, that Mrs. Ella Cleland Kimes, who was reared on a
~· farm near &lt;llester, now a patient at Maple Heights Nursing
: Home in Wellston, was 99 years old on Oct. 30.
&lt;.:: L Gladys M. Frederick, Bidwell, Gallia County, wrote to us
• abOut Mrs. Kimes, revealing that Mrs. Kimes has been at the
;, borne the past five years and, although In a wheel chair, Is
- mentally alert, conducts an interesting conversation, and reada
:".newspapers and books which nurses bring her from the library.
! The oldest living member of her family, she has two l;&gt;rofllers,
• She received gifts offrults and flowers "on her day."
~
WE SEND BffiTHDAY WISHES TO EACH AND
EVERYONE, BELATED OR OTHERWISE.

i

••

; Certainly wish you both a speedy recovery. We miss seeing you
; around;

~

•

/

• and Dam several weeks ago caught a rare bowfin fish.
~
VVigal sald the fish, somellmes called a mudfish usually is
: found In the Mississippi basin. Wigal said that he never saw
• anything quite like It, and when it came out of the water It was
: like a weU erupting. The fish has an oblong body covered with
l hard round scales, has a rounded snout, powerful teeth, and a
t long soft dorsal fin,

SPECIAL
PRICED I

------------------

•"

ON BEHALF OF SYRACUSE MAYOR Herman London and
:'. vlllage officials l wish to conunend Elva Dailey for taking care of
~ the lovely flowers around the flag pole fllis past summer,

RIDENOUR

•

TV &amp; APPLIANCES
GAS SERVICE

''

'f

CHESTER, OHIO

S-T-R-E-T-C-H
YOUR DOLLAR AT

DISASTER NEAR
\,
' INDIANAPOUS, Ind. (UP!)
· - A United Auto Workers
:-.union official said Friday
:.,.America's economy is "borj dering on disaster" and that
~;the unemployment rate , could
j.'Teach 7 to 8 per cent by the
Mniddle of 1975. Director Dallas

LARRY'S
~I;

.

,.

he said.

BUS STRIKE NEAR
PHOENIX, Ariz. (UP!)
Representatives . of
the
Greyhound Bus Line and union
employes were asked to meet
Saturday with two federal
mediators in an effort to avert
a nationwide strike. Ellis B.
Franklin , chairman of the
Amalgamated Council of
Greyhound Divisions, said the
employes voted 11,606 to 816 in
favor of striking and that
workers across the country
rejected a company offer.

"'

WE HAVE RECEIVED
A •
}".'I,
...

di~ste~,' '

the Academy 's temporary

facilities completed course
work and field problems using
lnost modern skills a nd
techniques available to law
enforcement.
The 260 hours of intensive
work included criminal and
traffic law , psychol ogy,
sociology, traffic control,
forensi c science , ethical
standards and law enforcement arts.
Ali who successfully completed the course have met
mtmmum standards of
educational, physical, menta!
and moral fitness set by the
training board and were
certified as law enforcement
officers at the ceremony.
Simpson plans to take advanced Narcotic and' Drug
School and Homicide training
at the University in the near
future . He \s the son of Mr, and
Mrs. Calvin (Bud) Simpson,
formerly of Pomeroy, now
residing in Seymour.

•

."

'·
•

Sells of the UAW's Region 3
told a news conference that
immediate state and federal
action is needed . " The
economic situation in America ,
and particularly in the auto
industry, is bo~dering on

SUPERIOR'S

POMEROY - Police officer
Galvin Bruce Simpson of the
Seymour, lnd. Police Dept.,
graduated in the 32nd sessioll'''
from the Indiana Law . e~; ·:
forcem.ent Academy's basi~ 1
training course in ceremonies
Nov . 2 at Whittenberger
Auditorium ,
Indiana
University. Justice Richard M.
Given, Indiana Supreme Court,
was the speaker .
Sixty-&lt;!ight Indiana officers
ih residence at Bloomington in

FRANKIES
DAVID SMITH

Postmaster

THE
KEENER
WEINERS
12

is just 19

PKG.

HARTFORD, W. Va . David W. Smith, 19, of Mason,
has been appointed as Postmaster at Hartford to become
one of, if not , the youngest
ever to hold the job.
Son of, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Smith of Mason, David Smith
assumed the post Nov. 9. Prior
to his appoinlment he was a
substitute rural carrier and
worked out of the Letart Post
Office since last April 24 .
Smith's election was made
by appoinlment by the Board of
Eastern Region out of
Philadelphia . The fivemember board, one of five in
the country, selected Smith
from a group of three, after
interviewing him in its
Philadelphia office.
Smith, a gra duate of
Wahama High School, was an
honor student and active in the
Future Farmers

or

oz.

CAMPBELL'S
VEGETABLE

or

TOMATO

SOUP

America.

CANS

Veterans Memorial Hospital

ADMITTED
Marvin
Doddrill, Pomeroy; William E.
Evans, . Long Bottom; Guy
Bing,
Jr .,
Middleport;
Catherine Lares, Rutland; Gail
Pierce; Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Margaret
Donahue, Christine Branham,
Anne Marchese, Edith Hines,

Drexal Lambert, Oscar Imboden, Marcia Capehart,
Nellie Boring.
'

CARNATION

),&gt;

•,

..

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:

COFFEE MATE

q

.

t.'

f]NAL CLOSE-OUT SALE

..'

ONLY IO ,LEFT· AT THIS PRICE!

..."'•
"",.,.

FACTORY DISCOUNT
AND WE ARE PASSING IT ON
TO YOU •••

w

11 oz.
JAR

~-

1'-

,,r

.,.L-------'
Sears'
'

ALL ARE 1975 MODELS
, .
ALL ARE TOTAL ELECTRIC •

SAVE '500 TO '1,000 ON .THESE

•

:: SEARS, ROEBUCK
"'
AND CO.

,.,.,.

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....•

·

,,

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~

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~--~--------------~---,
Sean Highway Passenger Tire Guarantee
'•

~12' -o"----.+-a--o.._j.___e·:4" ----.o:-

- - 1&amp;'-10"- - ---1'--- to·

••

-to"~

REG. $6,995

·. ..

'

-.

Now 56,495 c;ave

If

u do not receive the number or mile. •pec:ified

~uee of' your tire becornin1 unaerviceable due to (1)

{2) normal road hau.rd•, or (3) tread wear-out,
•• defect.,
our option exchange it for a new tire or Jive
, • we'"·n·· At
you refund' eharJing in either c:aae O!JIY the

·-•

.1.012-2K

•
•,.

ssoo.oo

'

701.. · 3~1!'_ __
l

Now $9,995 ·Save

.

.
'

~····--~··-·--§IE~~~~
..

. fl

'

'''

'

'·

l:I '•MI"
MODEL &amp;224-302

N-~:t~::::==~:;~~~::~

---1--

Unfurnished, Reg. 516.400,
'

-

.
'

~

.

SMOOTH
18 Ol JAR ·

WHITEWALL ONLY:

- -

G-78-15.
H-78-15

NOW

WAS

-

8.15-15/8.25-1~

48!15

8.45-15/8.55-15

50!15

.

21.00
21.00

U.S. NO. 1 MAINE

Potatoes

SAVE

27!15
29!15

50 LB. BAG

~

..

Now S15,400-Save
. s1:ooo

'-

NEW20.000 MILE GUARANTEE

PRICE INCLUDES FEDERAL
EXCISE TAX-MOUNTING AND BALANCING

..

"NOW
-· $,16,500 .
. _.,,e-.111.- ; SAYE
$1,000
I

..; A MODERN WIDE LOW PROFILE

·each

-

Furnished ·
.·. Reg.
$ll',500

PEANUT BUTTER

..; TOUGH 4-PL Y POL VESTER CONSTRUCTION

.'''

"

,i

..; LIMITED
QUANTITIES

atOICE OF 2 SIZES

''

REG. $10,495.00

I.G.A.

..; SLIGHTLY BLEMISHED
SIDEWALLS

8

proportion or the then c. urrent aellinf. pnce plua
Federal Excil&amp;e tax that repre.ente mtlea1e uaed .
If the tire ie unaeniceable due to any of' the
above cauaet bef"ore 10% of the ~U&amp;ranteed
ileare ia received the replacement or ref'und
:U1 be made with n~ chatre for mileage received.
Nail puDC"turel will be repai~ at no charp.
Guarantee appliee to tiret on vehicle~
u.ed. f'or private f'amily purp08e8.

'•
''•
·:•L___ _ _ _ _ ____.

'

SEARS HAS A CONVENIENT

CREDI~ ~LAN

TO SUIT YO_UR NEEDS .. ·

Phone: 446·2770
For your Automotive needs
SHOP AT SEA!IS AND SAVE
Satisfac1ion guarante~d or your money back

to

~ ~ •,

RALPH 'NIGAL, TEACHER at Southern Local School

~ District, an avid sportsman, while fishing at the Bellville Locks

free agent

. I

SORRY TO liEAR ABOUT the Illness of Wiiloughby Hill and

;

claiming

was

at academy

• Aaroo Zahl. Both men are confined at Holzer Medical Center,

Steelers hope to
end jinx tpday

40s:

'

,.

CONSOLE
COLOR TV
CLEARANCE SALE

four.
Gallla Academy • had little
difficulty against the famous
Ashland zone press, and
worked well offensively despite
the visitors height advantage.
Defensively, the Galllans
looked sharp throughout most
of the scr1mmage.
"We'll atep back•and look at
our mistakes on video tape
Monday,'' Osliorne continued.
"Then we'll prepare for
another toughie against
Barboursville Tuesday," he
concluded.
The Barboursville Pirates
wili scrimmage GAHS on the
local boards, beginning at 4:30
Tuesday. This will be followed
by a scrimmage between the
GAllS Blue Imps and Barboursville's Jayvees.

graduates

By Katie Crow

Quasa..: ~

•
Devils hold own rn scrrmmage
against Zanesville, Ashland

Simpson

Katie's Korner

Gregg Amicon.,
The Quakers' made it to
Arlington 10 later on In
period · only to have
Tidrick's 27-yard field goal
wide to the right.
The Golden Bears
moved into field goal range
Dave Goldthwaite%issed
goal attempts from the
42 yard lines:

The final Golden Bear touchdown came on a 25-yd. run by
Mercer after the Quakers
gambled and fal!ed on a fourthand-five situation.
Both teams had scoring
opportunities early in the
game.
New Philadelphia drove to
the Arlington 1G-yard line after
recoving a fumble by Staker
but Freshwater's pass was
intercepted In the end zone by

•

Logan,·Northland, Belpre
and ·Lancers win previews

strldght victory·

took it in in three plays with the
score coming on an II yard
pass from Ginther to Scott
Staker.
The touchdown was set up by
ityle Mercer's 30-yard run to
the New Philadelphia 11.
· Arlington made it 20-7
shortly after recovering a
Freshwater fumble on the New
Philadzlphia 33, Ginther going
the final nine yards for the

.....
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'

'l(lnfer Hours: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.-Closed SINidays

SILVER BRII)GE PLAZA

'I
•

.,

••

\.

•

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�'

'

22-The SIUiday Times -Sentinel, SWiday, Nov: 17, 1974

..

23- The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. l7, 1974

Only heating gas

Bt~aL

..

.O f the
•,I

'

to

•

short· this winter
a.\,

\.

WASHINGTON (UP!) heated homes will be hurt
Most of Ule fuelB Americans because • they top Ule gas
need for Ule winter,. witll Ule priority lists.
painful aceptlon of natural
The American Petroleum
gas, are in adequate supply,"' • li.lt\itute said inventories of oil
industry and government prO'a\leta~far abo.ve a year
sources predicted Saturday. ago and at ~ table levelB,
The U .8. Bureau of Mines if there is no emergency from
said coal supplies vary greatly' weather or Import inat different plants, but invento- terruption . Those products
ries are. at an adequate level, include heating oils, tranbarrln3 a. long strike which is sportatlon fuels, and Industrial
now ex~ to last from two olla.
to four weeks.
The natural gas situation
The Federal Powe~ ~- ' appears most serious. The FPC
slon said electric utilities are said pipelines Ulat cross state
putting out power "generally lines planned curtailments of
adequate to meet Ule expected supply to certain customers
winter peak loads."
"107 per cent greater this
But Ule FPC added Ulat coming winter Ulan they were
"su.,ply deficiencies" of a year earlier."
natural gas w1l! be twice as
Industries on curtailment
sev,re as last winter. contracts can switch to other
Generally, Ulatmeanslndustry fuel or slow down their
will;lJ!!ffer but few if any gas- operations. For the 12 monthS
;· .
from · last September through
next August, deliveries will fall
short of demand by 2.3 trllUon
cubic feet. Curtailments In Ule
previous 12-month period were
' 1.3 trllUon cubic feet.
Picking the winter heating
season out of those statistics
shows that curtailments last
winter were 443.6 bllUon cubic
feet and expected curtailments
this winter are to be 91~ •

Relr1fOrced toe.
CusnlonedtnSOie. Lace

uptolt.

1

Air bags may

I

WASHINGTON (UP!)
Earlier thlB year Congress
repealed laws requiring new
cars to be equipped wlth the
unpopular seat belt -interlock
system. Now a government
advisory council wants to
forget
about
installing
protective air bags in cars.
On a 11-5 vote, the National
Mot~r Vehicle Safety Advisory
Council has asked the Transportation_ Department to drop
proposed requirements for air
bags - devices which inflate
within sec9nds of a collision
cushioning the occupants of

ALL FOR NOUGHT
LONDON (UP!) - Thomas
Shaw thought he could avoid
car
theft
charges
by
swallowing the only '\vidence
pollee had against him - three
car keys found in his pocket.
Authorities X-rayed ' his
stomach and entered the X-ray
plates showing the outline of
the keys as evidence.

.

AREN'T IJLL1AN Am&gt; FERMAN Moore about' the best
hosts you've seen? They both have that knack In making anyone
feel comfortable. The l!foores are more than enjoying their.
residence on Uncoln Hill despite the some six acres of grass that
Ferman has to keep up with in the summer. The home was the
former residence of'Mrs. PhylllB Mullen and the late Dr. Charles
Mullen.

be going out

MOn. &amp; Fri. 9: 30tit 8 p.m.

'

car.

.

I

.. &gt;:'~ .

Pllone 444-f:Mo,
I
.

'

'·

Gallipolis, Ohio

DOYLESTOWN, Ohio (UP[)
- The citizens of Chippewa
Township
have
banded
togetller in an attempt to raise
$70,000 to keep their schools
open.
The three schools In the
Chippewa School District
closed their doors to' 1 800
students Friday because of
financial problems. The state
auditor ordered the schools

.

.

Never mind whal the big and
electric meter hidden in a back
liltle
hands have to say. The
room at Ashton Gate, the
Caravella Digit ron watch
stadium used by England
says It all with the greatest of
ease." The clearly evident time
Second Division soccer club
panels tell the hour, minute·
Bristol City. But the meter was
and second at a glance. WitH
there and it was ticking away
17Jewel precision. Shield- "
and. when Electricity Board · shaped case, stain leu steel
link ba:nd and handsome
officials discovered it by'
metalliC? blue dial. Go modem;·
chance recenUy they realized
wear a Caravelle Oigltron.
no one had read it for more
$45.00
than 10 years.
.
CLARK'S .. ,. The result? A 5,000-pound
JEWELRY.
($12,000) electricity bill for
Bristol City's fan club. "They
I STORE used Ule electricity, didn't
342 Second Ave.
, Ga ttipa lis, Ohto
they?" said a board official.

CARTER &amp;

rifANs·INC
,..'

·-.,

f

.I

'

"I

GallipOlis, Ohio

~

•'

-.

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..,,.
·",.

"'

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Athens site for
...
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.)

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=

ATHENS - An evening
course dealing with the rules,
mechanics and procedures of
officiating basketball games
will !Jegin at Ohio University's
Grover Center on Thursday,
November 21.
wriile the ~ourse is designed
primarily fpr men and women
interestetl I n
becoming
basketball officials, Ule course
is open to all area residentsincluding coaches, players, or
just plain sports fans.
The course will be composed
of eight sessions lasting from 1
to 9:3o p.m. on· Monday and,
Thurs&lt;jay .evenings through
December 19, when Ule ·state
certification test will be given.
Participants will have the

TIL 8 PM

tQ my many friends and
supporters in Gallia and
Meigs County.

~

'DuPoni.Rcr. T¥

I

.I '

THE GREATEST NAME IN SPORTSWEAR
••

•

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-

.
, -

-'

opportunity to officiate intramural league basketball
games if they desire .
Richard Woolison, Ohio
University instructor in health,
physical education, and
recreation and an experienced
official, will teach the course.
The course fee of $30 includes
an Ohio School Athletic
Association charge of $11 for
texts, the state certification
test and membership dues. A
college credi t option is
available. Registration must
be made in advance of the first
meeting through. the Office · of
Workshops, 301 Tupper Hall,
where further information may
he obtained by calling 594-4907.

~

Ramjet
•
McGregor takes
rutrae1a Dacron• polyesfer and cotton
insLJiatr~s it with polyurethane toa'rf,
and adds warm knit collar and cuffs.
All completely machln' washable.' 'io'!

..

Small financial

CIJYfllltl
lr~ttr

Wt IIIIA'I lhl rl1ht
ti111 it ~u1titin .

Kraaer Storts uu,t

to

•

•

gam m playoff
PORTLAND (UP!) - Coach
Dick Coury of the Portland
Storm says the World Football
League should go ahead with
its playoffs despite the
possibility the players will gain
little financially.
.
"That's the reason we played
our last two games - to get
into the Playoffs," Coury said
Friday after returning here
from Hawaii, where the Storm
lost 23-0 to Hawaii in its fina l
regular season game.
Coury was responding to
commenls by Curley Morrison,
general manager of the Southern California Sun, who said,
"I think it's ridicuious for the
players to risk Injuries for a
couple hundred bucks." He
said players will get "less than
a game salary" for the
Playoffs.
Coury said,
however,

of his 18 points in the second
half. Charlit Scott was high
scorer for Phoenix with 26
points, the first time in live
games he failed to hit 30.
Lakers 105 Sixers 99:
Lucius Allen scored eight of
his 24 points in the final period
to rally the Lakers over
Philadelphia and break a four
game losing sireak. Alien hit
four consecutive jump shots in
the final6\l minutes, including
a basket with 3:04 left, to pul
Los Angeles ahead, 98-96.
Stars 109 Nets 98 :
Ron Boone's 32 points and
SPRINGFIELD, Mass.
Jim Eakins' 23 helped Utah
(UP!)
- Vermont's 77-year
beat the Nels. New York Coach
intercollegiate football history
Kevin Loughery protested the
ended
on a losing note Saturgame, claiming his team was
day
as
American International
cheated out of seven seconds
College
rolled to a 41-15 victory
with 3:38 remaining In the
game and the score at 98-93 for as bo. .' 'lcbools finished their
Utah. But he decided to drop season .
Vermont, playing its final
the prote~t afier watching an
game
after UVM preaident
instant replay on teieivislon.
Edward Andrews Jr . anNui!gets 120 Pacers 114:
nouncetl
the deelsion to end
Mike Green and Mack Calvin
football
for
budgetary reasons,
each had" 23 points to pace
was
unable
to generate a
seven Denver players in double
figures as the Nuggets held off consistent offense until Ule
a three-point shot barrage by fourth Quarter, when AIC had
Indiana for the win . The piled up a 28-0 lead.
Verhwnt finished the season
Nuggets led by as many as 24 in
the third quarter but Indiana witll a 4-6 record. Coach earl
cut that to six with 1:40 left in Fallvene has pronlised to fight
the game as Bill Keller hit fo.W the decision to end the
three-point shols, Wayne Pack program, but the UVM trustees
are expected to ratify it nat
hit two and Don Buse one.
month.

Vermont ends
grid history
on sour note

everything was set for the
Portland-Memphis Playoff
game in Memphis Thursday

night. 11 We have to start a new
season - a three game
season,, Coury said. His team
has los is its last two games and
has not scored in 10 quarters.
Coury said the cancellation
talk was "Just another case of
not having a league commissioner with authority and
power right from the start."

The Rams are 10\l.polnt
Division races can end. Should
Oakland defeat San Diego picks to wrap it up today.
Other key games will have
Sunday and Denver lose its
Monday night game to Kansas the AFC East leaders, Miami
City, then the AFC West title and Buffalo, squaring off for
sole possession of first place,
belongs to the Raiders.
Dallas
meeting
And if Los Angeles gets a win and
or a tie agairlst New Orleans, Washington for survival in the
then the NFC West belongs to NFC East race. Minnesota can
the Rams for the second clinch at least a tie for the NFC
Central title by beating Green
straight year.
Oakland has won eight Bay and St. Louis tries to hold
consecutive gllliles and could its slim one-game edge in the
East
against
finish just one point shy of a NFC
perfect season. That loss came Philadelphia.
Pitisburgh, with a half-game
In the opener when the Buffalo
Bills scored in the final seconds lead over Cincinnati in the AFC
to defeat the Raiders, ~1-20. Central, is at Oeveland while
Oakland is a 14\l.pointfavorite the Bengals are In Houston to
play the Oilers, who. have won
over San Diego.
Los Angeles, which was three in a row.
ElBewhere, the New York
struggling early in the season,
traded veteran quarterback Jets are at New England,
John Hadl to Green Bay a which is trying to stay in Ule
montll ago and replaced him AFC East race, San Francisco
with James Harris. Harris has is at Chicago, the New York
led Ule Rams to four con- Giants at Detroit and
secutive triumphs and the Baliirnore at Allanta.
brink of the NFC West title.

MOtU
SGLD
DUURS.

Who w;/re so ki~d and nice to me and had faith ..
In my- ability to serve yo~r county !n Colum~.
tius. HoWever. I will contu1ue to ab1de l;ly the
' prayer 1 have always had on my_cards and
letters .. " God grant me the serenity to accept.
·
the things I cannot change.':
..
"Your BuGkeye Buddy"
•,
Grant Me Oi!nald
Pd. Pol. Adv.

1114 TU

co. 111•1 ud

Pri ~u 1ad Mn. 17
l~n Nn. U , IIJ4,
ill 111 Wut Viflilil

•• tllo Narthr• 1'11·
llandtt at Won Yirlillia Jlld MtDIWIII

TO

ud Mercer CHitin.

Pre-ThlnkSDIVIng
sav1nas1 ~

Saturday's
grid scores
By United Press International

American lnt' 41 Vermont 15
Boston Coil. 45 Syracuse 0
Temple 35 West· Virginia 21
Clemson 28 VIrginia 9
Brown 10 Harvard 7

Penn St. 35 Ohio U. 16
Yale 19 Princeton 6
Penn 21 Columbia :J
Rutgers 6 Boston 0
Dartmouth 21 Cornell 9
Michigan 51 Purdue 0
Notre Dame 14 Pittsburgh 10
Michigan 51. 19 Indiana 10
Cenl. Michigan 42 S. Illinois o
Depauw 15 Wabash 12
Norih Carolina 56 Army 42
Georgia Tech 22 Navy 0
•
E. Carolina 31 Wm . &amp; IV!ary 10
fjpalachtan St. 14 Richmond

Pho~

lhoJ

E. X 1 RA IH.IIl\1\

~ .ov 1 ny ~

&lt;JI

TOPVAWE
STAMPS!

U.S. Govt. Inspected
I 0 to 14-Jb. Averaga

Massachusetts
27
New
Hampshire 17
Gettysburg 27 Georgetown o

.

Hen.
p ·····

.Tutlieys

Maryland 56 Duke 13
Tennessee 29 Mississippi 17
VMI 31 Cotgale 14
Amburn 17 Georgia 13
Kentucky 41 Florida 24

Wisconsin 52 Northwestern 7
Colorado 37 Oklahoma St. 20
Illinois 17 Minnesota 14
,
Rhode Island 14 Connecticut 13 .

..

t#(\s

df.ie
.
re.
,o ay

+,

Amembership in your AM cl~b

is daily protection. Great tor VI·
cations to be sure, but usefUl
mry day you drive. Persootl

Travel Accident Insurance. Blil

Bond Protection. Emergency Ro1d
Service. And a score of loc11 Mn·
ices aild benefits that make drlv.
in1 SO!fe and enjoyable. Call

iJS

today for more information. · ··

and for
3 4.

U.S.D.A. Grade A Marvel o~ Virginia
14 to 18 lb. Avg .

In the Piece

Fresh
·
Turkeys .•• '~·.

Serve 'n' Save
Bologna . . . .'~·

69f

69I

t&lt;"'1"11..,.,

., '

m re

· O.s.D.A.

lnspecled

Kroger Fresh Grade A

@

Large Eggs

•

I

Agn~~~W..

for over 70 y..S

•••

• , , IHIW IIIOIW tfNm trfrl

•

I

AUTOMOBILE Wl8

I

OF SOUTHERN OHIO
J3 Court St., O.ttlpotio
Pllono 444-06"

,.,,.,.,y-Phone m-mt .

THRU
NOV.

$1
Coca
4
Cola ...•. .
Beldale 3 $138 Country Club
Shortenlnv... . . ·•n . · Butter . . . .

•
••

Kroger

White.
Bread.

20-o&lt;.

Loaves

• • •

Quorterr -·

Pure

i:.1_b.

..

'

I· lb.

.

, E·Z PHI

Large Zipper Skinned

Tasty

Tangerines

Fresh
Broccoli

. SINCERE THANKS
I will be forever grateful

-

Ferrari (baseball), Charles
Smith (track), Ollie Johnson
(basektball), a nd Gerry .
Mullen (basketball).

MY

MONDAY
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"I

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OPEN

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officials' course

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was high scorer for the Celtics
with 28 points and Don Nelson
added 24. The win snapped a
four-game losing streak for the
Kings.
Bullets 104 Jazz 95:
J;;lvin Hayes had 34 points
and 14 rebounds to give
Washington its lith victory in
13 games and New Orleans its
13th loss in 14 games. Hayes
had 15 points in the first half
but Pete · Maravich got 14 to
cap.ta!ri, ' u~·derwent an pace New Orleans to a 46-46 tie .
emergency appendectomy Washington had a 65-56 lead in
Friday night and will be the third quarter when Marh"!'pitalized at least a week. vich was . ejected for getting
The. Braves, who lead the two technical fouls . He haij 20
NBNs Atil!iitic Division will poinls.
have to get by . without McPistons 117 Sonics 103:
MllUan for the next four-to ..ix
Detroit blistered Seattle 62-33
weeks. Combined with the Joss in the first half and went on to
of DiGregor;o, the back-court snap the Sonics' four-game
leader and last season's Rookie winning streak. John Mengelt
· of the Year, the Braves' lead led
Detroit
with
20
does not seem very secure.
points
while
Dave
With the Qeltics struggling Bing collected 18 and
witpout CoW.ns, the Knicks
Bob Lanier 15 as the PIStons
wilhout th~ir retired stars
held Seattle to 15 first quarter
Wlilis
{ Reed,
Dave
points and 18 in the second
DeBusschere iind Jerry Lucas,
quarter.
the· division . is a wide open
Bulls 102 Suns 95:
race. Philadelphia may sneak
Chet Walker and Norm Van
to the lead by default.
Lier sparked a second half
In NBA action Friday night,
surge as Chicago defeated
Kansas City surprised Boston,
Phoenix and snapped the Suns'
110!109, W9'1'Jington beat New
three-game win streak. Walker
Orleans,
104-95, Detroit ·had 16 pointS in the second half
whipped,., ~!'l'ttle, , 117-103,. and .finished as the game's top
Chibago•de;\;lred Phoenix, 102scorer with 27. Van Lier got 10
95, . and Los Angeles topped
Philadelphia, 105-~. In the
America,n Baske tbail
Association, Utah beat the New
;vork Nets, 109-98, and Denver
neat Indiana, 120-114.
Kings 110 Celtlcs 109:
Nate Archibald scored eight
By United Press International
of his 29 -points in the final
Today is the day the West
quarter as the Kings survived a can be won in the National
Jast..minute Celtic surge to Football League.
Both the American and
defeat Boston. John Havlicek
National Conference West

president of the American
Ass_o ciahon of Neurological
surgeons (baseball) .
Also inducted were Richard
Baptis ta (soccer), Elmo

Races could end today

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No one knew there was an

closed until the first of Ule
year.
The shutdown instigated Ule
start of the 700.0ub, headed by
Paul Stanley, a father of two
girlB in the middle school. The
members were asking for
donations of $100 each from 700
people in order to keep the
schools going until Jan. ! 'when
more money is available.

. Pol. Adv.

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StOps water leaks
Re,dy to u:re ,
White and colors
Alkali·reslstant

VEHICLES COUNTED
BEREA, Ohio (UP!) - The
TOO SLOW
Ohio Turnpike Commission
SALINAS, Calif. (UPI) - A COIUited more trucks and fewer
th
·
fl3..year-old man wound up In
the h&lt;&gt;ipital Friday because he cars on e Ohio Turnpike last
than the previous Octraveled too slow on a busy montll
t b
"t
freeway The Calif . Hi ho. er, I
was announced
·
orma g , Friday. Last month trucks
fr
Ul
way Patrol sa.id L. D. Sheldon :, numbered 488 005
was piloting his wheelchair' ,
• • up om e
along the fOW'-Ian U S 101 99,335 the previous year. ·
when he collide: ~Ul·
r~sseng~r cars numbered 1.3
automobile ·
1\D ~Ilion, down from , the , 1.5
·
ffilD1on Ule previous October.

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$70,000; needed to keep school

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YOUR 'FRIEND, OAKLEY .COLLINS
.

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YIARS
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As your St~te Senator IOie~t I look forward to working 1Nith you a~ a .
!'ers_ona! fr~end a.nd vo•r legislator. Please know your confidence is a real
msp1rat1on and I welcome the,opportunity to be of service to you at 'the
·
.
State Level in C(llumbtls,
. . '

See Jill) Staats or J~ Giles

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· • Easy to apply

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WATERPROOFING
GCJARANTEED .

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. .·.· &lt;?AsMi ~~
MOBILE.HOMES INC.

By Unit&lt;;d Presslnteraationai
Lady Misfort\Uie, what have
you got against the Naiionai
Basketball .Association•
Not sati~fietj with knocking
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Dave
Cowens, Bill Walton, Ernie
DIGregorio; Cazzie Russell
John, Shumate, Herm Gilli~
and Jeff Mullins out of com' mission;:rou· p\cked on another
star Fri~ay n,ight.
Jim McMllliim, Buffalo's

great sentimental value. She asks·that anyone who borrowed or
accidentally picked it up return it to her.

FOR YOUR ·coNTINUED
CONFIDENCE AND SUPPORT ·
ON 'NOVEMBER 5TH

HoURS: 9TO~MONDAYTHRUFRlDAY
9T0_5 SATURDAY-CL,OSEDSUNDAY

.h er,toll again in NBA

the new
Caravelle®-..
Digital Watch ·
byBulova

COSTLY DISCOVERY
BRISTOL, j;:ngland (UP!)'-

in May or June . We wiD
develop players, hopefully'; and
test crowd rea,ction. We think
each lean( will have four
games. It will be interesting."
He also said that regardless
of how much football shifts to
cable TV, he Ullnks "There will
always be some form of free
TV. We never want our sport to
become a studio event."
Others installed In the USF
Hall of Fame included another
non-athlete, noted therapist
Ivar Johnson, wbo has treated
USF a thletes for almost 40
years; Chancellor Louis
Bat.male of City College of San
Francisco (basetball); and Dr.
!;;dward Morrissey' former

L~dy Misfortune takes

'

MY SINCERE
THANKS

-NOW ON DISPlAY_
: BU1'NOW ,AND SA,VEI

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) _
The ~ational Football League tween two factions .
When he took the job 15 years
now 26 teams, will expand to 30
by 1978 or so, but "That will ago, "there Were 12 teams and a
probably be it," according to minor TV program, but now,
Commissioner Pete Rozelle. he quipped here Friday night,
Rozelle was here Friday as "We're improving. At one point
one of ,.the inductees in the we had 20 suits going against
us . Now we're down to about
University of San Francisco's ten."
Athletic Hall of Fame
On a more serious note,
something Rozelle scarce!;
Rozelle said the league had
dreamed could happen when he
was the school publicist in the been hurt by the . two recent
player strikes, but looked
early 1950's.
From , USF, he went into ahead to "A league with •Six
advertising, then to the Los divisions of five clubs each.
That would allow balanced
Angeles Rams, where he
schedul ing."
.
moved up to general managet
He also ll8id that · "We're
!llld '&gt;ecame COmmissioner as
talking about a mini- ·
the compromise candidate beinstructional league in Europe

MRS. THELMA ORR liAS LOST an umbrella which has

LESSER PENALTY
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Despite new medical studies
· suggesting harmful effects of
marijuana smoking, the Ford
administration 's top drug
abuse official says he is ready
to lessen criminal penalties for
personal use of the drug. Dr.
Robert L. Dupont Friday told a
convention of ,.ALB-tijuana
reforl1\ers that "criminal
· 'i&gt;enaltle,1 have clearly failed to
prevent widespread use of
marijuana." But he said
marijuana is not harmless ..

"be .Sharon" with three bedrooms,
two .f ull baths, unique angle kitchen .
layotit with snack bar and lighted drop
ctiJigg -:; ;dining room with built-in
hutch adjoins the . spacious living
rciOm. · ·

According to pollee, Miss Stever.on's,
Circle was driving a car that
Another roadway mishap
struck a parked car owned by was in:ve!ltigated by city 'police
Homer Challdier of Route I, Thursday Involving two ears at
Mil ton , Police · estimated the interseeUon of Maple Drive
damiig.S to the Circle. car at and Sand Hill R~ad. · '
$1,000 and Chandler's was a
Poiice said WeSley Spertce of
total loss.
Howanl Ave: was cited for
Miss Circle was cited for , faUtire.tOYteld the right of way
failure to maintain control.
wheiYthe car he was driving
Mrs. Wray was a pa~nger turned ieft Into the path of
in a vehicle driven by Arley L. another which was .driven by
Wray of Route I, Greenwood, Pamela Rose ·Donohue of
W. Va. Police identified the Route t, Oshel Road, I'()lnt
other drivel'S as James Dell Pieasarit.
Damages · as
Upton of Leon and I'()sey estimated by police were MOO
Stevenson of Point Pleasant. to each vehicle. No injuries
Police said Stevenson had were reported.
stopped to make a left turn and
·
that Upton siruck Wray's car. r---..;....;.._ _ _.;..._-,
in the rear, knocking it into
Stevenson's.
Uptonwascitedforfailureto
have vehicle under control.
Damages to the Upton vehicle
were estimated to be $100, $290

INCIDENTALLY, WE PLAN to publish the addresses of
servicemen very soon so that residents wishing to send them
Christmas C8l1lls may do so. U you have someone in the service
just send along the address by mall, please.

The council said the value of
passive restraint devices had
not been proven, that they
would add to higher auto costs,
and warned air bags might be
as unpopular as now discarded
seat belt Interlock.

•

Garfield. She marked her IJith.birthday last April 28, but shortly
after that became very ill.
She was taken to Columbus by her Son-In-law and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Harris, both formerly of Mlddlepart, and
was confined to the Grant Hospital for a period. It was "touch
and go" for Ule summer, but Mrs. Hennesy has improved quite a
bit over the past few weeks.

As much as she hated to leave Middleport, Mrs. Hennesy
. IJ!BUZed Ulat she couldn't live alone any more. The "homeplace"
.~has been sold to Mr. and Mrs. John Reece, lincoln Drive,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Hennesy will remain In Columbus. The
Reeces are moving today.
)"teres ted in such an event are
Now about Ule Harris family.
encouraged to attend the
Gordon retired last summer
. after 39 years in the field of
pliihniQg session. The fair has
been tenlltw•tv scheduled for educatloo In Middleport, Adena and Columbus. Capt. James R.
' -;t
·Harris, one son, .left , Sunday for Taiwan where he will be
June 29 though July 5.
staUoned for a year. He's In his third year in the U.S. Air Force
Ia
George Jenkins, Belwont,
Ohio, who is coordinator for as a wyer In Ule Judge Advocate's Dept. His wife, Clndi and
health fairs In Ohio, will be -.c:i)ildren, are with Gordon and Mary Ewrlce, liut hope to join
Capt. Harris in a month or two.
present at Ulis meeting to
Gordon..._Jr., the other son of Gordon and Mary, lives in
assist wi,Ul planning. Anyone Columbus with his wife and son, Grant.
wishing any further inAt ·any rate, even though Mrs. Hennesy had to leave Midformation may caD the Rev· dleport, she Is pretty well supplied with family in Columbus
Dwight Zavitz, 992-3876.
which should help her over some lonely spots.
Incidentally, the Harris address is 4155 Kendale Road,
Columbus, In case friends would like to drop a Une to Mrs.
Hennesy.

HARTFORD, W. Va. - No
Injuries were reported but a
driver was cited for. a.,.traffic
..Violation as Ule result of a tw&lt;&gt;, yehicle mishap Friday at 12:35
p.m._ near Hartford on West
Point Road.
.
Deputy James Craddock of
the Mason Co.iillrs..Sho:_riff's
Department cited Lewis Rlffle
of Leon for failure to yield right
of way when the vehicle he was
driving collided with another
driven by Vonna R. Frye of
Mill Street, New Haven.
Craddock said Frye was
going south on West Point Road
on the far right side and Riffle
came aroiUid a curve traveling
north, driving in center of
roadway and hit the vehicle
driven by Frye and owned by
Janice Stanley in the left side.
Doris Jordan was identified as
owner of the vehicle driven by

"SHARON"

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MRS. C. M. HENNESY will be missed in Middleport.
For the past 54 years she has lived at the corner of Third and

MIDDLEPORT
A
preliminary planning session
for a second health fair in
M01
·
gs County will be held at
l:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
Presbyterian Church, 163 N.
Fourth Ave., Middleport.
A health fair is a community
developed project of week-long
health education. Ail individuals and organizations

~'()lice estimated damages as
$300 to each vehicle. ·

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fair planned

Riffle.

Tues .. Wed. Sat. 9:30tll5 p.m .
Thursday 9:30til12 noon

,'S, . •

Second health

in collision

gnp ruiJI?er SOle. .

i~jured in thr'ee
of four traffic accidents • in· vestigated by Point Pleasant
City Police . Three drivers were
also cited for traffic violations.
Two of the injured - neither
seriously - were Gallla County
girls.
Roy Bush, 24, of Mason, was
admitted to Pleasant Valley
Hospital with a neck injury and
is said by attendants to be in
"good' condition.
.
Ann E.. Circle of Gatllpolis,
and LeAnn Johnson, or Route 2,
Bidwell, both 17, seniors at
Galiia Academy High School,
were treated and released at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
City police also reported that
Madeline Wray, 39, of
Greenwood, w. Va. , compiained of a neck injury, but
the local hospital had no
record .
Police said Bush was a
passenger in a vehicle driven
by Buddy Eugene Flowers of
Letart that was in an accident
at 4:55p.m. Friday on Jackson
Blvd.
According to police, Flowers
had stopped in line of traffic
and was followed by James
Fletcher Young, Jr ., of Letart
when another vehicle, driven
by Michael D. Zeoli of
Gallipolis, struck Young's car
knocking it into Flowers' .
Police said Zeoli hit his
brakes when something came
from under Ule seat, jainming
them. The~e were no citations.
Damages to the Flowers
vehicle were estimated as $47:;,
Young's was a total loss and
damages to Zeoli's were placed
at $200.
The two girls, Miss Circle
and Miss Johnson, were in a
mishap at 11:45 p.m. Friday in

1

Driver cited

Tile fUtl Pl!l formance

f persons were

.1

POMEROY -Occasionally, we get letters from people doing
genealogical studies which apparenUy have Meigs County ties.
Most Urnes there's iitUe we can do except pass along Ule
billion, or more than 100 per
requests
for help to you readers.
cent greater.
The latest request comes from mrs. E. A. Neese, Route I;
As for coal supplies, the
Adell,
Wisconsin, ~1.
Bureau of Mines said utilities
,
Mrs.
Neese is seeking !n1ormation on her greatestimated they had 90 mllUon
grandmother,
who was Carissa Wood Cook. Mrs. Neese has a
tons on hand Oct. 31, an lllklay
supply. Coke vgjnts reported copy of Mrs. Cook's marriage certificate from Meigs County, but
having 9 million tons, a 3Hiay has been unable to locate any further information especially on
supply, with the ability to parentage.
U any of you can help, Mrs. Neese would certainly be glad to
stretch out Uletf schedule if
hear
from you.
· things get tight. And other
Industries using coal had 10
NOVEMBER MOVES RIGHT ALONG and the deadline for
million tons, a Glklay supply.
The API said motor gasoline providing Olristmas remembrances for 24 Meigs Countians - 13
stocks as of Nov. 8 totaled 221.3 men and II women - confined to the Southeast Mental Health
mllUon barrelB (each barrel Center at Atllens Is approaching.
A box has been placed in the Davis In:;urance Agency at
has 42 gallons). Last year at
the same Ume, the figure was Pomeroy where remembrances, \Uiwrapped, may he left.
Women patients can use nail polish, hose, handkerchiefs,
204.8m11llon barrelB, before the
combs
and brushes, jewelry, purses, pajamas, gowns, sweaters
oil embargo hit the hardest.
and
cosmetics.
Gifts suitable for male patients are shirts,
Jet fuel stocks totaled 31.1
mllUon barrels, compared with sweaters, gloves, scarves, belts, neckties, billfolds, pens and
25.2 mlllloo a year previously. pencils, candy, and grooming items.
Any contribution you wish to make should be left at the InDistlilates-suCb as home
surance
agency }y Dec. 1.
heating oil-totaled 210.5
million barrels, .up frOm 206
SIS WISE HAS BEEN RETURNED to her horne in Waverly
million, and heavier oils
and
anyone who knows who is aware Ulat she never really
totaled 60.3 mllUon barrels, up
moved from Middleport - after a four week confinement at the
from 55.2 mllUon.
Holzer Medical Center. Sis underwent surgery while there. Sis
received 333 get-well cards during her hospitalization and is just
delighted Ulat so many friends remembered her.

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shoe. Padded top. Fast-

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N:F L to add· ·f our ntore-teants

Wray's

· Bunch

Each

20%
TO.
P

40% OFF
We have a very large
inventory to sele'ct
from. ,Stop in $00n and
look them over.

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TAWNEY'S
PIPE
SHOP
422 Second' Ave.

Gallipolis .
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22-The SIUiday Times -Sentinel, SWiday, Nov: 17, 1974

..

23- The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. l7, 1974

Only heating gas

Bt~aL

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.O f the
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to

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short· this winter
a.\,

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WASHINGTON (UP!) heated homes will be hurt
Most of Ule fuelB Americans because • they top Ule gas
need for Ule winter,. witll Ule priority lists.
painful aceptlon of natural
The American Petroleum
gas, are in adequate supply,"' • li.lt\itute said inventories of oil
industry and government prO'a\leta~far abo.ve a year
sources predicted Saturday. ago and at ~ table levelB,
The U .8. Bureau of Mines if there is no emergency from
said coal supplies vary greatly' weather or Import inat different plants, but invento- terruption . Those products
ries are. at an adequate level, include heating oils, tranbarrln3 a. long strike which is sportatlon fuels, and Industrial
now ex~ to last from two olla.
to four weeks.
The natural gas situation
The Federal Powe~ ~- ' appears most serious. The FPC
slon said electric utilities are said pipelines Ulat cross state
putting out power "generally lines planned curtailments of
adequate to meet Ule expected supply to certain customers
winter peak loads."
"107 per cent greater this
But Ule FPC added Ulat coming winter Ulan they were
"su.,ply deficiencies" of a year earlier."
natural gas w1l! be twice as
Industries on curtailment
sev,re as last winter. contracts can switch to other
Generally, Ulatmeanslndustry fuel or slow down their
will;lJ!!ffer but few if any gas- operations. For the 12 monthS
;· .
from · last September through
next August, deliveries will fall
short of demand by 2.3 trllUon
cubic feet. Curtailments In Ule
previous 12-month period were
' 1.3 trllUon cubic feet.
Picking the winter heating
season out of those statistics
shows that curtailments last
winter were 443.6 bllUon cubic
feet and expected curtailments
this winter are to be 91~ •

Relr1fOrced toe.
CusnlonedtnSOie. Lace

uptolt.

1

Air bags may

I

WASHINGTON (UP!)
Earlier thlB year Congress
repealed laws requiring new
cars to be equipped wlth the
unpopular seat belt -interlock
system. Now a government
advisory council wants to
forget
about
installing
protective air bags in cars.
On a 11-5 vote, the National
Mot~r Vehicle Safety Advisory
Council has asked the Transportation_ Department to drop
proposed requirements for air
bags - devices which inflate
within sec9nds of a collision
cushioning the occupants of

ALL FOR NOUGHT
LONDON (UP!) - Thomas
Shaw thought he could avoid
car
theft
charges
by
swallowing the only '\vidence
pollee had against him - three
car keys found in his pocket.
Authorities X-rayed ' his
stomach and entered the X-ray
plates showing the outline of
the keys as evidence.

.

AREN'T IJLL1AN Am&gt; FERMAN Moore about' the best
hosts you've seen? They both have that knack In making anyone
feel comfortable. The l!foores are more than enjoying their.
residence on Uncoln Hill despite the some six acres of grass that
Ferman has to keep up with in the summer. The home was the
former residence of'Mrs. PhylllB Mullen and the late Dr. Charles
Mullen.

be going out

MOn. &amp; Fri. 9: 30tit 8 p.m.

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car.

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Pllone 444-f:Mo,
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Gallipolis, Ohio

DOYLESTOWN, Ohio (UP[)
- The citizens of Chippewa
Township
have
banded
togetller in an attempt to raise
$70,000 to keep their schools
open.
The three schools In the
Chippewa School District
closed their doors to' 1 800
students Friday because of
financial problems. The state
auditor ordered the schools

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Never mind whal the big and
electric meter hidden in a back
liltle
hands have to say. The
room at Ashton Gate, the
Caravella Digit ron watch
stadium used by England
says It all with the greatest of
ease." The clearly evident time
Second Division soccer club
panels tell the hour, minute·
Bristol City. But the meter was
and second at a glance. WitH
there and it was ticking away
17Jewel precision. Shield- "
and. when Electricity Board · shaped case, stain leu steel
link ba:nd and handsome
officials discovered it by'
metalliC? blue dial. Go modem;·
chance recenUy they realized
wear a Caravelle Oigltron.
no one had read it for more
$45.00
than 10 years.
.
CLARK'S .. ,. The result? A 5,000-pound
JEWELRY.
($12,000) electricity bill for
Bristol City's fan club. "They
I STORE used Ule electricity, didn't
342 Second Ave.
, Ga ttipa lis, Ohto
they?" said a board official.

CARTER &amp;

rifANs·INC
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GallipOlis, Ohio

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Athens site for
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ATHENS - An evening
course dealing with the rules,
mechanics and procedures of
officiating basketball games
will !Jegin at Ohio University's
Grover Center on Thursday,
November 21.
wriile the ~ourse is designed
primarily fpr men and women
interestetl I n
becoming
basketball officials, Ule course
is open to all area residentsincluding coaches, players, or
just plain sports fans.
The course will be composed
of eight sessions lasting from 1
to 9:3o p.m. on· Monday and,
Thurs&lt;jay .evenings through
December 19, when Ule ·state
certification test will be given.
Participants will have the

TIL 8 PM

tQ my many friends and
supporters in Gallia and
Meigs County.

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'DuPoni.Rcr. T¥

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THE GREATEST NAME IN SPORTSWEAR
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opportunity to officiate intramural league basketball
games if they desire .
Richard Woolison, Ohio
University instructor in health,
physical education, and
recreation and an experienced
official, will teach the course.
The course fee of $30 includes
an Ohio School Athletic
Association charge of $11 for
texts, the state certification
test and membership dues. A
college credi t option is
available. Registration must
be made in advance of the first
meeting through. the Office · of
Workshops, 301 Tupper Hall,
where further information may
he obtained by calling 594-4907.

~

Ramjet
•
McGregor takes
rutrae1a Dacron• polyesfer and cotton
insLJiatr~s it with polyurethane toa'rf,
and adds warm knit collar and cuffs.
All completely machln' washable.' 'io'!

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Small financial

CIJYfllltl
lr~ttr

Wt IIIIA'I lhl rl1ht
ti111 it ~u1titin .

Kraaer Storts uu,t

to

•

•

gam m playoff
PORTLAND (UP!) - Coach
Dick Coury of the Portland
Storm says the World Football
League should go ahead with
its playoffs despite the
possibility the players will gain
little financially.
.
"That's the reason we played
our last two games - to get
into the Playoffs," Coury said
Friday after returning here
from Hawaii, where the Storm
lost 23-0 to Hawaii in its fina l
regular season game.
Coury was responding to
commenls by Curley Morrison,
general manager of the Southern California Sun, who said,
"I think it's ridicuious for the
players to risk Injuries for a
couple hundred bucks." He
said players will get "less than
a game salary" for the
Playoffs.
Coury said,
however,

of his 18 points in the second
half. Charlit Scott was high
scorer for Phoenix with 26
points, the first time in live
games he failed to hit 30.
Lakers 105 Sixers 99:
Lucius Allen scored eight of
his 24 points in the final period
to rally the Lakers over
Philadelphia and break a four
game losing sireak. Alien hit
four consecutive jump shots in
the final6\l minutes, including
a basket with 3:04 left, to pul
Los Angeles ahead, 98-96.
Stars 109 Nets 98 :
Ron Boone's 32 points and
SPRINGFIELD, Mass.
Jim Eakins' 23 helped Utah
(UP!)
- Vermont's 77-year
beat the Nels. New York Coach
intercollegiate football history
Kevin Loughery protested the
ended
on a losing note Saturgame, claiming his team was
day
as
American International
cheated out of seven seconds
College
rolled to a 41-15 victory
with 3:38 remaining In the
game and the score at 98-93 for as bo. .' 'lcbools finished their
Utah. But he decided to drop season .
Vermont, playing its final
the prote~t afier watching an
game
after UVM preaident
instant replay on teieivislon.
Edward Andrews Jr . anNui!gets 120 Pacers 114:
nouncetl
the deelsion to end
Mike Green and Mack Calvin
football
for
budgetary reasons,
each had" 23 points to pace
was
unable
to generate a
seven Denver players in double
figures as the Nuggets held off consistent offense until Ule
a three-point shot barrage by fourth Quarter, when AIC had
Indiana for the win . The piled up a 28-0 lead.
Verhwnt finished the season
Nuggets led by as many as 24 in
the third quarter but Indiana witll a 4-6 record. Coach earl
cut that to six with 1:40 left in Fallvene has pronlised to fight
the game as Bill Keller hit fo.W the decision to end the
three-point shols, Wayne Pack program, but the UVM trustees
are expected to ratify it nat
hit two and Don Buse one.
month.

Vermont ends
grid history
on sour note

everything was set for the
Portland-Memphis Playoff
game in Memphis Thursday

night. 11 We have to start a new
season - a three game
season,, Coury said. His team
has los is its last two games and
has not scored in 10 quarters.
Coury said the cancellation
talk was "Just another case of
not having a league commissioner with authority and
power right from the start."

The Rams are 10\l.polnt
Division races can end. Should
Oakland defeat San Diego picks to wrap it up today.
Other key games will have
Sunday and Denver lose its
Monday night game to Kansas the AFC East leaders, Miami
City, then the AFC West title and Buffalo, squaring off for
sole possession of first place,
belongs to the Raiders.
Dallas
meeting
And if Los Angeles gets a win and
or a tie agairlst New Orleans, Washington for survival in the
then the NFC West belongs to NFC East race. Minnesota can
the Rams for the second clinch at least a tie for the NFC
Central title by beating Green
straight year.
Oakland has won eight Bay and St. Louis tries to hold
consecutive gllliles and could its slim one-game edge in the
East
against
finish just one point shy of a NFC
perfect season. That loss came Philadelphia.
Pitisburgh, with a half-game
In the opener when the Buffalo
Bills scored in the final seconds lead over Cincinnati in the AFC
to defeat the Raiders, ~1-20. Central, is at Oeveland while
Oakland is a 14\l.pointfavorite the Bengals are In Houston to
play the Oilers, who. have won
over San Diego.
Los Angeles, which was three in a row.
ElBewhere, the New York
struggling early in the season,
traded veteran quarterback Jets are at New England,
John Hadl to Green Bay a which is trying to stay in Ule
montll ago and replaced him AFC East race, San Francisco
with James Harris. Harris has is at Chicago, the New York
led Ule Rams to four con- Giants at Detroit and
secutive triumphs and the Baliirnore at Allanta.
brink of the NFC West title.

MOtU
SGLD
DUURS.

Who w;/re so ki~d and nice to me and had faith ..
In my- ability to serve yo~r county !n Colum~.
tius. HoWever. I will contu1ue to ab1de l;ly the
' prayer 1 have always had on my_cards and
letters .. " God grant me the serenity to accept.
·
the things I cannot change.':
..
"Your BuGkeye Buddy"
•,
Grant Me Oi!nald
Pd. Pol. Adv.

1114 TU

co. 111•1 ud

Pri ~u 1ad Mn. 17
l~n Nn. U , IIJ4,
ill 111 Wut Viflilil

•• tllo Narthr• 1'11·
llandtt at Won Yirlillia Jlld MtDIWIII

TO

ud Mercer CHitin.

Pre-ThlnkSDIVIng
sav1nas1 ~

Saturday's
grid scores
By United Press International

American lnt' 41 Vermont 15
Boston Coil. 45 Syracuse 0
Temple 35 West· Virginia 21
Clemson 28 VIrginia 9
Brown 10 Harvard 7

Penn St. 35 Ohio U. 16
Yale 19 Princeton 6
Penn 21 Columbia :J
Rutgers 6 Boston 0
Dartmouth 21 Cornell 9
Michigan 51 Purdue 0
Notre Dame 14 Pittsburgh 10
Michigan 51. 19 Indiana 10
Cenl. Michigan 42 S. Illinois o
Depauw 15 Wabash 12
Norih Carolina 56 Army 42
Georgia Tech 22 Navy 0
•
E. Carolina 31 Wm . &amp; IV!ary 10
fjpalachtan St. 14 Richmond

Pho~

lhoJ

E. X 1 RA IH.IIl\1\

~ .ov 1 ny ~

&lt;JI

TOPVAWE
STAMPS!

U.S. Govt. Inspected
I 0 to 14-Jb. Averaga

Massachusetts
27
New
Hampshire 17
Gettysburg 27 Georgetown o

.

Hen.
p ·····

.Tutlieys

Maryland 56 Duke 13
Tennessee 29 Mississippi 17
VMI 31 Cotgale 14
Amburn 17 Georgia 13
Kentucky 41 Florida 24

Wisconsin 52 Northwestern 7
Colorado 37 Oklahoma St. 20
Illinois 17 Minnesota 14
,
Rhode Island 14 Connecticut 13 .

..

t#(\s

df.ie
.
re.
,o ay

+,

Amembership in your AM cl~b

is daily protection. Great tor VI·
cations to be sure, but usefUl
mry day you drive. Persootl

Travel Accident Insurance. Blil

Bond Protection. Emergency Ro1d
Service. And a score of loc11 Mn·
ices aild benefits that make drlv.
in1 SO!fe and enjoyable. Call

iJS

today for more information. · ··

and for
3 4.

U.S.D.A. Grade A Marvel o~ Virginia
14 to 18 lb. Avg .

In the Piece

Fresh
·
Turkeys .•• '~·.

Serve 'n' Save
Bologna . . . .'~·

69f

69I

t&lt;"'1"11..,.,

., '

m re

· O.s.D.A.

lnspecled

Kroger Fresh Grade A

@

Large Eggs

•

I

Agn~~~W..

for over 70 y..S

•••

• , , IHIW IIIOIW tfNm trfrl

•

I

AUTOMOBILE Wl8

I

OF SOUTHERN OHIO
J3 Court St., O.ttlpotio
Pllono 444-06"

,.,,.,.,y-Phone m-mt .

THRU
NOV.

$1
Coca
4
Cola ...•. .
Beldale 3 $138 Country Club
Shortenlnv... . . ·•n . · Butter . . . .

•
••

Kroger

White.
Bread.

20-o&lt;.

Loaves

• • •

Quorterr -·

Pure

i:.1_b.

..

'

I· lb.

.

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Large Zipper Skinned

Tasty

Tangerines

Fresh
Broccoli

. SINCERE THANKS
I will be forever grateful

-

Ferrari (baseball), Charles
Smith (track), Ollie Johnson
(basektball), a nd Gerry .
Mullen (basketball).

MY

MONDAY
•

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"I

."

OPEN

'

officials' course

•

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'

was high scorer for the Celtics
with 28 points and Don Nelson
added 24. The win snapped a
four-game losing streak for the
Kings.
Bullets 104 Jazz 95:
J;;lvin Hayes had 34 points
and 14 rebounds to give
Washington its lith victory in
13 games and New Orleans its
13th loss in 14 games. Hayes
had 15 points in the first half
but Pete · Maravich got 14 to
cap.ta!ri, ' u~·derwent an pace New Orleans to a 46-46 tie .
emergency appendectomy Washington had a 65-56 lead in
Friday night and will be the third quarter when Marh"!'pitalized at least a week. vich was . ejected for getting
The. Braves, who lead the two technical fouls . He haij 20
NBNs Atil!iitic Division will poinls.
have to get by . without McPistons 117 Sonics 103:
MllUan for the next four-to ..ix
Detroit blistered Seattle 62-33
weeks. Combined with the Joss in the first half and went on to
of DiGregor;o, the back-court snap the Sonics' four-game
leader and last season's Rookie winning streak. John Mengelt
· of the Year, the Braves' lead led
Detroit
with
20
does not seem very secure.
points
while
Dave
With the Qeltics struggling Bing collected 18 and
witpout CoW.ns, the Knicks
Bob Lanier 15 as the PIStons
wilhout th~ir retired stars
held Seattle to 15 first quarter
Wlilis
{ Reed,
Dave
points and 18 in the second
DeBusschere iind Jerry Lucas,
quarter.
the· division . is a wide open
Bulls 102 Suns 95:
race. Philadelphia may sneak
Chet Walker and Norm Van
to the lead by default.
Lier sparked a second half
In NBA action Friday night,
surge as Chicago defeated
Kansas City surprised Boston,
Phoenix and snapped the Suns'
110!109, W9'1'Jington beat New
three-game win streak. Walker
Orleans,
104-95, Detroit ·had 16 pointS in the second half
whipped,., ~!'l'ttle, , 117-103,. and .finished as the game's top
Chibago•de;\;lred Phoenix, 102scorer with 27. Van Lier got 10
95, . and Los Angeles topped
Philadelphia, 105-~. In the
America,n Baske tbail
Association, Utah beat the New
;vork Nets, 109-98, and Denver
neat Indiana, 120-114.
Kings 110 Celtlcs 109:
Nate Archibald scored eight
By United Press International
of his 29 -points in the final
Today is the day the West
quarter as the Kings survived a can be won in the National
Jast..minute Celtic surge to Football League.
Both the American and
defeat Boston. John Havlicek
National Conference West

president of the American
Ass_o ciahon of Neurological
surgeons (baseball) .
Also inducted were Richard
Baptis ta (soccer), Elmo

Races could end today

L

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.o

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No one knew there was an

closed until the first of Ule
year.
The shutdown instigated Ule
start of the 700.0ub, headed by
Paul Stanley, a father of two
girlB in the middle school. The
members were asking for
donations of $100 each from 700
people in order to keep the
schools going until Jan. ! 'when
more money is available.

. Pol. Adv.

• I

,,

StOps water leaks
Re,dy to u:re ,
White and colors
Alkali·reslstant

VEHICLES COUNTED
BEREA, Ohio (UP!) - The
TOO SLOW
Ohio Turnpike Commission
SALINAS, Calif. (UPI) - A COIUited more trucks and fewer
th
·
fl3..year-old man wound up In
the h&lt;&gt;ipital Friday because he cars on e Ohio Turnpike last
than the previous Octraveled too slow on a busy montll
t b
"t
freeway The Calif . Hi ho. er, I
was announced
·
orma g , Friday. Last month trucks
fr
Ul
way Patrol sa.id L. D. Sheldon :, numbered 488 005
was piloting his wheelchair' ,
• • up om e
along the fOW'-Ian U S 101 99,335 the previous year. ·
when he collide: ~Ul·
r~sseng~r cars numbered 1.3
automobile ·
1\D ~Ilion, down from , the , 1.5
·
ffilD1on Ule previous October.

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$70,000; needed to keep school

·

YOUR 'FRIEND, OAKLEY .COLLINS
.

'

YIARS
~..
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j

As your St~te Senator IOie~t I look forward to working 1Nith you a~ a .
!'ers_ona! fr~end a.nd vo•r legislator. Please know your confidence is a real
msp1rat1on and I welcome the,opportunity to be of service to you at 'the
·
.
State Level in C(llumbtls,
. . '

See Jill) Staats or J~ Giles

"

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· • Easy to apply

~-

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WATERPROOFING
GCJARANTEED .

I.

(•

. .·.· &lt;?AsMi ~~
MOBILE.HOMES INC.

By Unit&lt;;d Presslnteraationai
Lady Misfort\Uie, what have
you got against the Naiionai
Basketball .Association•
Not sati~fietj with knocking
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Dave
Cowens, Bill Walton, Ernie
DIGregorio; Cazzie Russell
John, Shumate, Herm Gilli~
and Jeff Mullins out of com' mission;:rou· p\cked on another
star Fri~ay n,ight.
Jim McMllliim, Buffalo's

great sentimental value. She asks·that anyone who borrowed or
accidentally picked it up return it to her.

FOR YOUR ·coNTINUED
CONFIDENCE AND SUPPORT ·
ON 'NOVEMBER 5TH

HoURS: 9TO~MONDAYTHRUFRlDAY
9T0_5 SATURDAY-CL,OSEDSUNDAY

.h er,toll again in NBA

the new
Caravelle®-..
Digital Watch ·
byBulova

COSTLY DISCOVERY
BRISTOL, j;:ngland (UP!)'-

in May or June . We wiD
develop players, hopefully'; and
test crowd rea,ction. We think
each lean( will have four
games. It will be interesting."
He also said that regardless
of how much football shifts to
cable TV, he Ullnks "There will
always be some form of free
TV. We never want our sport to
become a studio event."
Others installed In the USF
Hall of Fame included another
non-athlete, noted therapist
Ivar Johnson, wbo has treated
USF a thletes for almost 40
years; Chancellor Louis
Bat.male of City College of San
Francisco (basetball); and Dr.
!;;dward Morrissey' former

L~dy Misfortune takes

'

MY SINCERE
THANKS

-NOW ON DISPlAY_
: BU1'NOW ,AND SA,VEI

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) _
The ~ational Football League tween two factions .
When he took the job 15 years
now 26 teams, will expand to 30
by 1978 or so, but "That will ago, "there Were 12 teams and a
probably be it," according to minor TV program, but now,
Commissioner Pete Rozelle. he quipped here Friday night,
Rozelle was here Friday as "We're improving. At one point
one of ,.the inductees in the we had 20 suits going against
us . Now we're down to about
University of San Francisco's ten."
Athletic Hall of Fame
On a more serious note,
something Rozelle scarce!;
Rozelle said the league had
dreamed could happen when he
was the school publicist in the been hurt by the . two recent
player strikes, but looked
early 1950's.
From , USF, he went into ahead to "A league with •Six
advertising, then to the Los divisions of five clubs each.
That would allow balanced
Angeles Rams, where he
schedul ing."
.
moved up to general managet
He also ll8id that · "We're
!llld '&gt;ecame COmmissioner as
talking about a mini- ·
the compromise candidate beinstructional league in Europe

MRS. THELMA ORR liAS LOST an umbrella which has

LESSER PENALTY
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Despite new medical studies
· suggesting harmful effects of
marijuana smoking, the Ford
administration 's top drug
abuse official says he is ready
to lessen criminal penalties for
personal use of the drug. Dr.
Robert L. Dupont Friday told a
convention of ,.ALB-tijuana
reforl1\ers that "criminal
· 'i&gt;enaltle,1 have clearly failed to
prevent widespread use of
marijuana." But he said
marijuana is not harmless ..

"be .Sharon" with three bedrooms,
two .f ull baths, unique angle kitchen .
layotit with snack bar and lighted drop
ctiJigg -:; ;dining room with built-in
hutch adjoins the . spacious living
rciOm. · ·

According to pollee, Miss Stever.on's,
Circle was driving a car that
Another roadway mishap
struck a parked car owned by was in:ve!ltigated by city 'police
Homer Challdier of Route I, Thursday Involving two ears at
Mil ton , Police · estimated the interseeUon of Maple Drive
damiig.S to the Circle. car at and Sand Hill R~ad. · '
$1,000 and Chandler's was a
Poiice said WeSley Spertce of
total loss.
Howanl Ave: was cited for
Miss Circle was cited for , faUtire.tOYteld the right of way
failure to maintain control.
wheiYthe car he was driving
Mrs. Wray was a pa~nger turned ieft Into the path of
in a vehicle driven by Arley L. another which was .driven by
Wray of Route I, Greenwood, Pamela Rose ·Donohue of
W. Va. Police identified the Route t, Oshel Road, I'()lnt
other drivel'S as James Dell Pieasarit.
Damages · as
Upton of Leon and I'()sey estimated by police were MOO
Stevenson of Point Pleasant. to each vehicle. No injuries
Police said Stevenson had were reported.
stopped to make a left turn and
·
that Upton siruck Wray's car. r---..;....;.._ _ _.;..._-,
in the rear, knocking it into
Stevenson's.
Uptonwascitedforfailureto
have vehicle under control.
Damages to the Upton vehicle
were estimated to be $100, $290

INCIDENTALLY, WE PLAN to publish the addresses of
servicemen very soon so that residents wishing to send them
Christmas C8l1lls may do so. U you have someone in the service
just send along the address by mall, please.

The council said the value of
passive restraint devices had
not been proven, that they
would add to higher auto costs,
and warned air bags might be
as unpopular as now discarded
seat belt Interlock.

•

Garfield. She marked her IJith.birthday last April 28, but shortly
after that became very ill.
She was taken to Columbus by her Son-In-law and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Harris, both formerly of Mlddlepart, and
was confined to the Grant Hospital for a period. It was "touch
and go" for Ule summer, but Mrs. Hennesy has improved quite a
bit over the past few weeks.

As much as she hated to leave Middleport, Mrs. Hennesy
. IJ!BUZed Ulat she couldn't live alone any more. The "homeplace"
.~has been sold to Mr. and Mrs. John Reece, lincoln Drive,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Hennesy will remain In Columbus. The
Reeces are moving today.
)"teres ted in such an event are
Now about Ule Harris family.
encouraged to attend the
Gordon retired last summer
. after 39 years in the field of
pliihniQg session. The fair has
been tenlltw•tv scheduled for educatloo In Middleport, Adena and Columbus. Capt. James R.
' -;t
·Harris, one son, .left , Sunday for Taiwan where he will be
June 29 though July 5.
staUoned for a year. He's In his third year in the U.S. Air Force
Ia
George Jenkins, Belwont,
Ohio, who is coordinator for as a wyer In Ule Judge Advocate's Dept. His wife, Clndi and
health fairs In Ohio, will be -.c:i)ildren, are with Gordon and Mary Ewrlce, liut hope to join
Capt. Harris in a month or two.
present at Ulis meeting to
Gordon..._Jr., the other son of Gordon and Mary, lives in
assist wi,Ul planning. Anyone Columbus with his wife and son, Grant.
wishing any further inAt ·any rate, even though Mrs. Hennesy had to leave Midformation may caD the Rev· dleport, she Is pretty well supplied with family in Columbus
Dwight Zavitz, 992-3876.
which should help her over some lonely spots.
Incidentally, the Harris address is 4155 Kendale Road,
Columbus, In case friends would like to drop a Une to Mrs.
Hennesy.

HARTFORD, W. Va. - No
Injuries were reported but a
driver was cited for. a.,.traffic
..Violation as Ule result of a tw&lt;&gt;, yehicle mishap Friday at 12:35
p.m._ near Hartford on West
Point Road.
.
Deputy James Craddock of
the Mason Co.iillrs..Sho:_riff's
Department cited Lewis Rlffle
of Leon for failure to yield right
of way when the vehicle he was
driving collided with another
driven by Vonna R. Frye of
Mill Street, New Haven.
Craddock said Frye was
going south on West Point Road
on the far right side and Riffle
came aroiUid a curve traveling
north, driving in center of
roadway and hit the vehicle
driven by Frye and owned by
Janice Stanley in the left side.
Doris Jordan was identified as
owner of the vehicle driven by

"SHARON"

-

MRS. C. M. HENNESY will be missed in Middleport.
For the past 54 years she has lived at the corner of Third and

MIDDLEPORT
A
preliminary planning session
for a second health fair in
M01
·
gs County will be held at
l:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
Presbyterian Church, 163 N.
Fourth Ave., Middleport.
A health fair is a community
developed project of week-long
health education. Ail individuals and organizations

~'()lice estimated damages as
$300 to each vehicle. ·

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fair planned

Riffle.

Tues .. Wed. Sat. 9:30tll5 p.m .
Thursday 9:30til12 noon

,'S, . •

Second health

in collision

gnp ruiJI?er SOle. .

i~jured in thr'ee
of four traffic accidents • in· vestigated by Point Pleasant
City Police . Three drivers were
also cited for traffic violations.
Two of the injured - neither
seriously - were Gallla County
girls.
Roy Bush, 24, of Mason, was
admitted to Pleasant Valley
Hospital with a neck injury and
is said by attendants to be in
"good' condition.
.
Ann E.. Circle of Gatllpolis,
and LeAnn Johnson, or Route 2,
Bidwell, both 17, seniors at
Galiia Academy High School,
were treated and released at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
City police also reported that
Madeline Wray, 39, of
Greenwood, w. Va. , compiained of a neck injury, but
the local hospital had no
record .
Police said Bush was a
passenger in a vehicle driven
by Buddy Eugene Flowers of
Letart that was in an accident
at 4:55p.m. Friday on Jackson
Blvd.
According to police, Flowers
had stopped in line of traffic
and was followed by James
Fletcher Young, Jr ., of Letart
when another vehicle, driven
by Michael D. Zeoli of
Gallipolis, struck Young's car
knocking it into Flowers' .
Police said Zeoli hit his
brakes when something came
from under Ule seat, jainming
them. The~e were no citations.
Damages to the Flowers
vehicle were estimated as $47:;,
Young's was a total loss and
damages to Zeoli's were placed
at $200.
The two girls, Miss Circle
and Miss Johnson, were in a
mishap at 11:45 p.m. Friday in

1

Driver cited

Tile fUtl Pl!l formance

f persons were

.1

POMEROY -Occasionally, we get letters from people doing
genealogical studies which apparenUy have Meigs County ties.
Most Urnes there's iitUe we can do except pass along Ule
billion, or more than 100 per
requests
for help to you readers.
cent greater.
The latest request comes from mrs. E. A. Neese, Route I;
As for coal supplies, the
Adell,
Wisconsin, ~1.
Bureau of Mines said utilities
,
Mrs.
Neese is seeking !n1ormation on her greatestimated they had 90 mllUon
grandmother,
who was Carissa Wood Cook. Mrs. Neese has a
tons on hand Oct. 31, an lllklay
supply. Coke vgjnts reported copy of Mrs. Cook's marriage certificate from Meigs County, but
having 9 million tons, a 3Hiay has been unable to locate any further information especially on
supply, with the ability to parentage.
U any of you can help, Mrs. Neese would certainly be glad to
stretch out Uletf schedule if
hear
from you.
· things get tight. And other
Industries using coal had 10
NOVEMBER MOVES RIGHT ALONG and the deadline for
million tons, a Glklay supply.
The API said motor gasoline providing Olristmas remembrances for 24 Meigs Countians - 13
stocks as of Nov. 8 totaled 221.3 men and II women - confined to the Southeast Mental Health
mllUon barrelB (each barrel Center at Atllens Is approaching.
A box has been placed in the Davis In:;urance Agency at
has 42 gallons). Last year at
the same Ume, the figure was Pomeroy where remembrances, \Uiwrapped, may he left.
Women patients can use nail polish, hose, handkerchiefs,
204.8m11llon barrelB, before the
combs
and brushes, jewelry, purses, pajamas, gowns, sweaters
oil embargo hit the hardest.
and
cosmetics.
Gifts suitable for male patients are shirts,
Jet fuel stocks totaled 31.1
mllUon barrels, compared with sweaters, gloves, scarves, belts, neckties, billfolds, pens and
25.2 mlllloo a year previously. pencils, candy, and grooming items.
Any contribution you wish to make should be left at the InDistlilates-suCb as home
surance
agency }y Dec. 1.
heating oil-totaled 210.5
million barrels, .up frOm 206
SIS WISE HAS BEEN RETURNED to her horne in Waverly
million, and heavier oils
and
anyone who knows who is aware Ulat she never really
totaled 60.3 mllUon barrels, up
moved from Middleport - after a four week confinement at the
from 55.2 mllUon.
Holzer Medical Center. Sis underwent surgery while there. Sis
received 333 get-well cards during her hospitalization and is just
delighted Ulat so many friends remembered her.

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shoe. Padded top. Fast-

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·1.......,;' ....r.

•

N:F L to add· ·f our ntore-teants

Wray's

· Bunch

Each

20%
TO.
P

40% OFF
We have a very large
inventory to sele'ct
from. ,Stop in $00n and
look them over.

~

1

~· Y I

~

TAWNEY'S
PIPE
SHOP
422 Second' Ave.

Gallipolis .
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24 - Tbe Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 17, 1974

25 -:-- The Sunday Times·- Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 17, 1974

\

Improvements, needs of (;allia schoo~.~r-=e:;..;;:;v~i~~
Q~ick-Namel4

Ed's Note - The following is curriculLUII at Hannan 'l:race in
another report in a series ~rades 4-8: Southwestern
prepared by the offi ce of Gallia Juni or Hi gh: Vinton a nd
County School Superintendent Bidwell-Porter, 7-8th. gra des
C. Comer Bradbury of the and music books were added at
needs and improvemen Is of the Vinton and Bidwell-Por ter.
newly consolidated county · Under the Title I program
school system.
supe rvi sed
by
Frank
Cremeans, a Title I reading
GALLIPOLIS - In the last teacher was added at Addaville
article , Sunday, Nov. 3, Cuun ty and Cheshire-Kyger Schools.
Supt. Bradbury explained how The teacher uni t was dropPed
financial problems of the four in 1973-74 after the title funds
districts consolidated last Jan. for the former Kyger Creek
7 have limited improvements District were reduced from
in the system. Today, several- $22,000 per year to $2,500. :
improvements are discussed
For the first time in b.everal
' and new proposals outlined.
years, a vocal music teacher is
With the assistance of Mrs. assigned in the Southwestern
Eugenia
Gardner,
In - area . Mrs. Martha Edelman,
div id ualiz ed Instru c ti on Patriot Star Rt., Ga llipolis, ·
Sui&gt;ervisor, three new units of spends 21&gt; days per week
individualized instruction were there.
added to the county schools.
Earlier this week, Paige
One unit each was added in the Sheets
be ca me
fulltime
Southwestern and Kyger Creek principal at Cadmus and
Junior High Buildings and a Centerville
Elementary
primary unit was added at Schools. He previously had
Cheshire-Kyger Elementary been teacher - principal at
PAIGE SHEETS, former School.
Cadmus. A fulltime library
teacher - principal at CadAccording to Mrs. Adelaide aide' was also employed for
mus Is now fuUtlme principal Sanders, elementary super- Bidwell-Porter, permitting the
at Cadmus and Centerville visor of the Gallia County library to remain open all day.
Schools.
Schools, new basic reading
At the secondary level ,
textbooks were added to the guidance has been increased to
provide senior in terviews to
help guide all s tudents towards
suitable colleges a nd oc-

•••
.,,_•

'•
'

. ''

.'
MISS.CYNTHlA DINEEN, standing, is the new Individualized Education teacher at Kyger

Creek Jr. High .

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•'

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cupations.

impr ovements in transportation, especially at the

level of equalizing the day for
elementary and secondary·

"'.(.

. •..- ., "., .
..

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J~.

' ,\_.

•

explains the program to

two of her students.

New faces, talents in
Assembly's leadership
By~ELEONARD

UPI Statehi&gt;use Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) Ohio General Assembly will be
taking on a fresh look, particularly at the leadership
level, when tbe new session
reconvenes in January.
Sen. Oliver Of:asek, D-Akron,
a bridesmaid since 1971, a])o
pears to finaUy ·have enough
support to win the ~te
Democratic leader's job, apd
Rep. Vernal G. Riffle, Jr., DNew Boston, is in the process of

nie

Ohio politics
. overthrowing his mentor,
House Speaker A. G. Lancione,
D-Bellaire.
M o r ·e o v e r ,

Se na t e

Republican leader .Theodore
M. Gray, R-Columbus, is
stepping bock ln!A&gt; lhe rank and
me and will be succeooed by
Sen. Michael J. Maloney, RClnclnnati.
The mly caucus keeping Its
leadership will be th~ !!;ase
Republican group, with
Mlmrlty Leader Charleo F.
Kurfess, R-Bowllng Green ;
Rep. Norman a. Murdock, RClnclnnati, . asaidtant lead&lt;~;;
and Rep. Alan E. Norris, RWesterville, whip.
Fight Last Time
· "We had
fight the last
time," , explaina Norris. The
GOP caucus has been hit hard
by atlrliloo. In fact, at. least
lour of Kurfesa' ·most vocal
conservative opponents will be
gone. Hta supporters have
IUrvlved, and they easily win
lbe ~wcomers away frOM any
dlallintlng tendencies.
Not
so
among. the
•llelna t ala. Rllfe evidently has
Wllflatd tjle Inc:oinlrig frellh111111 111e1r liipes -for· the future
lie wltb blm, 111d not with the
e&amp;,)'elr cild Lapclane, who was

our

B\lpjiCMIIIA&gt; llllw Wen speaker
anotber teftn under tile acrlpt
be says he wrote witll Rifle.

Repub1'9'•,are chQrtllng at

the possibility that Riffe may points.
not be ·able to satisfy aU
Maloney wiU be an ideal
elements of his caucus, and minority leader, observers
- minor revolts may break out feel. He has always been a
from time to time.
skiUful negotiator . and an arFurthermore, Riffe will ticulate · spokesman
on
probobly have to do some hard legislation.
bargaining with Republican
Now he will probably be able
Gov .-elect James A. Rhodes if to lead unified troops against
he wants to accomplish any- the Democrats, uing his good
thing and keep aUve his own relationllhlp with the news
faint hopes for governor in media to get his points across.
1978,
With Rhodes downstairs, it
Concillatory tactics may not should make for an interesting
go over with young liberal session.
Democrats who will be waiting
to squallh Rhodes at every
turn:
By Mrs. Francis Morris
In the Semite the new influx
The Esther Circle met
of Democrats apparently will Monday evening Nov. 11 with
furrdsh Ocasek wiih the votes Mrs. Grella Slmp.On, hostess,
be needs to bonlsh Sen. An- at her home: Tbe hymn "Tell .
thony 0. Calabrese, D- Me the Story of Jesus" opened
Cleveland,. the Democratic the meeting followed with
devotions by Mrs. Mildred
leader for foiir years.
Ocasek will thr!Ve·OiuUI)port Hart, using the subject "Th~
from the · 14ealistic young Extra
Blessings
of
senators who have been getting Thanksgiving" with scripture,
elected. P!'eviously, Calabrese a·poem, a reading, "Thank God
used h&gt;.' y backing from' for Life" and prayer. After a
organiz.:.; labor to carry his business session, Mrs. Lillian
old-style politics Into the Hayman gave a ·book review
leadership spot.
"Go Home and'' Tell." Tbe
Ocasek, more issueo()_riente~ group sang " I'll Go Where You
than people-&lt;~rlented, will need Want Me to Go" and closed
a skillful asaistant lA&gt; keep his with the Lord's Prayer in
troops in line on lmportan_t unison. Delicious refreshments
voteo.
were served to ten members by
Could Cause Trouble
· the hostess at the table ,
Four or five Calabrese beautiful with a Thanksgiving
supporters, combined with the theme.
dozen Republicans, could
Mrs. !rene Taylor of Beaver,
cause . trouble on major Pa.' and sister, Mrs. George
legislation. Alld Rhodes wiU VanHorn of Beaver Falls,. Pa., ·
use his four decades worth of here to pay respects to Mr. ·
political know-how . to get . Charlie Spencer at , Ewing
dissatisfied Democrats to bolt Funeral Home were overnight
tO his side. He'll promise them guests of Mrs. Hazel Carnahan
anything:
· and spent Saturday afternoon
. FinallY, the Senate Republl- With Mr. and Mrs. Roy Rime.
can complexion wiU change,
Mr. and · Mrs. Ralph Webb
perhaps most noticeably of aU. and Mrs. Lillian Weese enGray has been a "con- tertained the. o!Hcers and 11ew
sensus" leader for 10 years - members of Racine chapter
that Is, he has been ln. the OES on Saturday evening . at
maJority and has allowed that the· Webb home. Mrs. Chlortls
majority to work Its will. H~ Gri!nm, chairman of the Inhis refrained from getting out. structlon ' committee infront on any issue. And it has structed the new mem~rs at
cost the Republicans some this time.

Racine Events

'
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students, equalize class size
and teacher load, equalize or
add secre tarial and janitorial
help, introduce job description
for all employes, adopt new
boa rd policies, and adopt
sta ndard transportation
discipline policies.

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D
I.
1
ate me
! Gallia
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By Hobart Wilson Jr.

I

TOM Tope, president of the Gallipolis Retail Merchants
Association, Saturday reminded members of Thursday's 7 p.m.
meeting concerning downtown improvements in the Old French
City.

--

T

'Olive Street
GaHipolis, Ohio

Sox' Conigliaro to try again
BOSTON' (UPI) - Tony
Cunigllaro, who left baseball
I I be ·
1971
as
a
resu
t o a willanmg
•our ._ years earlier,
try
''
another comeback with the

----

Boston Red Sox next spr in g.
. liaro, 29, who broke in
Curug
with Boston in•1964, wrote Red
Sox general manager 01ck
O'Connell and subsequently

received permission to try out when struck
b near't the
h leftJ eye
k
asadesignatedhitterlnWlnter Aug. 18 y p1 c er ac
Ha
F1a .
H '!ton of the California
ven ,
anu
Tony was Boston's right Angels. Cunigliaro,
.
f . .sul'fering
t at
fielder and power hitter in 1967 deterioration o VIBion, sa ou
the 1968 season before making

SENSATIONAL

'74 CLOSE-OUT SALE
I"

1974 SPECIALS

+++

LOOSE NOTES - Among those planning to participate in

'

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60x 12' NEW MOON

60x 12' CHAMPION

Reg . Price $6,995

Reg . PriCe $7,495

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5

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titwJ.s

60x24' VINDALE

70x 14' .FLEETWOOD

Sectionai .(Unfurnished)
Reg Price $19,900

Reg . Price $10,200

ONLY

'

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$18,674

74

'

XMA~ CLUB

ONLY

9 174

5

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3·LOCATIONS.TO
SERVE YOU!.

'

.· •VINToN
BRANDt_• VINTON,' OHIO t~· :
..
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•'

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Unfurnished

$13,974.74

JOHNSON'S MOBilE HOMES INC.
t: i

'

3(,r::•~~~e2t1:=r~~~~~~~t'tl:
I

$15,474.74 ·

"OLDEST MOBILE HOME DEALER IN SOUTHEASTERN OHIO"

~ BANK .· tHIRD AVl '\ .

I

14'~70' VINDALE HOME

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FURNISHED

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OFFicE . SEOOND AVl

•MAIN

a

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; Pt-IONF 4tlti J~47 GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

a comeback in 1969.
He hit 36 home runs for the
Red Sox in 1970 before being
traded to california for several
·players, including second
baseman Doug Griffin.
Cunlgllaro, still property of
the Angels, quit basebaU in
1971 after 74 games with
caJHornia. Since that time he
has run a nightclub in Nahant
and has taken up karate. The
last time he played basebaU
)"88 this past winter in the
Arizona Instructional League.
He passed an eye test in Los
Angeleo then went to the Instructional League where he
hit .300. But the Angels placed
him on their Triple A team
roster in Salt ·Lake City.

FRESH PA-SCAL

DEL MONTE

Razorback head

74 .·

START YOUR CLUB ACCOUNT NOW

I

3 LBS. OR MORE

coaches' trophy; Jeff HoUenbaugh, best defensive back;
Mark Theiss, most valuable player; Fred Log~n. best offensive back ; Greg George, best offensive lineman, and Ron
Justus, best defensive lineman.

These seven North Gallia
grtdders were awarded trophies at Friday evening 's banquet
held in the high school cafeteria. Honored we~e, from 1-r,
Bruce Runyon, best defensive lineman ; Bret Tackett,
. PIRATE AWARDEES -

SUPER

and weekly GaUla Times ... New county school merger talks
proposed ... SaUy Reynolds named 1954 Rio Grande. CoUege
bomecoming queen ... Dr. J001es II'. Cacy joins Holzer Hospital
staff ... Mrs. John Krawsczyn named Gallia County Christnias
Seals sale chairman ... Twency-nlne cage prospects greet Coach
Dick Shrider at GAHS.
· •

GROUND BEEF

R()AST

CARTER &amp; EVANS INC.

city building. Koe-Krompecher Associates will present ideas on
downtown Improvement projects. Tope said, "All merchants
directly affected by these architectural plans should definitely
see the direction we are taking and aU other concerned citizens
and merchants interested in the betterment of downtown
Gallipolis llhould attend."

I
Mrs. UU!an Weese, Mrs.
Opid Diddle, Mr. and Mrs. with their grandparents, Mr.
Ralph Webb attended Grand fond Mrs. Ralph Badgley.
\)Iapier, Order of Eastern
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Simpson .
Star, In Cleveland.
and children of Baltimore we~e
Mrs. Walter Bikacsan spent. guest.s over the weekend of . ·
several cjays in Akron with her their parents, Mrs. Chester
son, Mr. and Mrs . . Dennis Simpson and Mr. and Mrs.
Bikacsan. .
Ralph Badgley.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil MiUer of
Miss Patti Shain of Antiquity
Ridgeway, Ohio were over- · was a dinner guest FJ;iday
night guests Saturday of her evening of Mr. and' Mrs. Roy
parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Riffle.
Neigler. They left Sun~ay
Mrs. ·carrie Nease spent
morning to go to Columbus to week in Balitomore, as guest of
the home of his parents to help Mr. and Mrs. David Nease arid
celebrate his father 's birthday. son, David. '
Mrs. Rev a Beach of MidMr. and Mrs. Robert Roush
of Columbus · were weekend dieport spent Sunday with Mr. ·
'
guests .Of her parents, Mr ..and and Mrs. Linley Hart. · .
Mrs. Owen Watson . · ,
Mrs , Vasti Grinlm of Letart
Derek and Dallon Badgley of Falls . Si&gt;e~t an liftern!&gt;On with
New H~ven speolthe weekend · Mrs. Frankie Nelgler.

SMOKEY SPEAKS - Bob "Smokey" Wion, highly
successful footboll coach at Worthington High School, is
shown here as he addressed the annual North GaUia football
banquet Friday night. On the left Is Pirate assistant coach
Ron Janey.

'

TWENTY YE"'-RS AGO, from the mes of the Dally Tribune :

Monday thru Saturday 8 AM to 10 PM
Sundays 10 AM to 10 PM

USDA CHOICE

/;

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Store Hours:

CHUCK

+++

+++

NO SALES TO DEALERS

BLADE CUT USDA CHOICE

'/

the first annual Turkey Bowl gllj1le on Memorial Field Thanksgiving Day (to help raise money for the expansion of locker room
facilities on Memorial Field) are several members of the Blue
Devils 1970 championship squad. They are: Dave Burnett, the
SEGAL's Most Valuable Player four years ago ; Pete Neal,
leading scorer; Ken Wamsley, John Davis, Mark Davis, Chuck
Wood and Mike WoHe. Another GAHS great, Bill Wamsley, who
played college baD at Morehead state, is expected to play In the
alumni contest. Ghe game will begin at 11 a.m. on Nov. ·28.

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

SPEC\~lS~

A versatile product.. Use in.side or out
side on metal or wood. Dries quickly
to a full gloss. Safe ... free of all
lead pigments.
Available in all popular colors.
.
.
. ·: ' '
"

THE session wiU be held in the Municipal Court Room in the

.

PRICES GOOD THRU 11127174

St.out, Karen Ge ise r , Lisa MeMi tli n. Russell Potts. Ron
Cisneros ' Krista] Hash, Tanya Plants . Martin Hash, Brett
Robinson a nd Don na Spencer . Tackett, Bill Baker, Ma rk
Gridders - Seniors, Ron Theiss, Tom Brumfield: freshJustus, Benny Hash, Greg me n, Tim Davis, Mike Casey ,
George:
Junior s,
Bruce Calvin Min nis , Jim D6bbins,
Runyon ,
Mike jRoberts, Rex Justis. David Shaw, Scott
Bill Garnes, Jeff Bur ger , Rob inson, Jim Thevenir, J ohn
Don Spencer, Gene Welch, Swisher, James Kemp, Terry
Richard
Egg le ton,
Jeff Russell and Den nis Dodrill.
Hollenbaugh, Ken Davis ;
Managers - Bill Shaw, Carl
sophomores, Fred Logan, Ca rl Tackett and Rick Theiss.
Moore, Tom Cai ns, Homer

•~.or anything ~lse in 'it!

I\III........ OTA

-

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298 SECOND ST
POMEROY, OHIO

·-~.,.,OII-•xT•"' 011

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

I

by Bob ·" Smokey" Wion head
football coach at .Worthington
High School, as he addressed
North Gallia footballer s,
cheerleaders and parents at
the annual Pirate banquet here
Friday night.
Wion, the last ever Rio
Grande. College quarterback,
spiced what he termed "earthy" conversation a nd jokes
within his main address on the
four Ingredients of life pre):aration , presentation,
application and evaluation.·
Preparation, according to
Wion, is both physical and
mental, built around a good
weight program designed to
, produce strength and agility
rather than bulk .
Wion also stressed presen.
tat!on, in other words a football
player's appearance and
personality; while also emphasizing application, as he
slated, ''What you do now will
reflect in the future. No man
ever drowned in his own
sweat."
Evaluation, Wion indicated,
·revolves around the fact that
"Y:ou've got to like yourself."
Wion, who in five yearS at
·Covington , High School had
three championships, and four
titles in five years at Martins
Ferry, including a 32 ga me win
streak, concluded his talk
stating, " If I am anything
today, I owe it to those boys,"
referring to the gridders he ha s
coached for 21 years.
Wion 's address, which was
preceded by a turkey dinner
served by North Gallia home

eco nomie s tudents, was
followed by the introduction of
the Pirate cheerleaders by
their advisor, Joyce Boothe.
Assistant coac h Ron Janey
then introduced the No rth
Galli a linemen, fo ll owed by
coa ch
Ron
Twyma n' s
presentation of the backs.
Head coach John Blake,
stating "I want the whole ball
of wax next year," then gave a
br ief ca psul e of the 1974
season , citing lack of experience as one reason for the
Pirates' 4-5 record and fourth
place finish in the SV/\C.
Blake then presented six
awards, Fred Loga n being
named the best offensive back,
Greg George the best offe nsive
lineman, Jeff Hollenbaug h the
best defens ive back , Ron
Justus and Bruce Rllllyon the
best defensive linemen, Bret
Tackett th e winner of
the Coaches ' Trophy and Mark
Theiss the Most Valuable
Player.
Blake noted that all the
awards, with the exception of
the coaches' award, are voted
on by the players themselves.
The Pirates will only lose 3
players this year due to
gra duati on, Justus, George
and Benny Hash.
The tri-captains for next
season were also announced.
They are Runyon , Gene Welch
and Don Spencer.
The Rev. J ohn Bryant gave
the invocation and Bill Gray,
sports director of WJEH, was
the master of ceremonies.
Those honored Friday
evening were :
Cheer leaders - Chri stia

QlJICK-N.AMEL

AT
LEFT,
CITY
. LOCATIO!IIS Is one of the
many areas of Information
taught ·by Mrs. Maxine
Wells, ' right, lndlviduaUzecf
lnslructlon teacher at Southwestern. This uoJt also was
added this fall.

SENIOR INTERVIEWS are now a part of the total
guidance jB'Ograrn In the Gallia Cuunty Schools. Mrs. Betty
Wllmoth, guidance coWlllelor at Hannan Trace High School,

VINTON - " What's What in

Lif~" was the theme of a talk

•

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at's what 'in life?

.

'•

...

MRS. JEAN CASSIDY and her aide, Mrs. Ray Roberts are shown in one of the county's
specialized Remedial Reading Classes under the Title I program.

'

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'''

Enamel .you can ••.

Hopefully, with the help of
the new board of education, the
district a dministration would
like to add county-wide
adopted
textbooks
and
curricula for the high schools,
expand the curricula · at both
elementary and secondary
levels, update all textbooks,
add
more supplementary
1
·, materials to meet the varied
• needs of all students, add
· kindergarten in all elementary
buildings (a mandatory
requirement of the state in
1975), renovate the physical
facilities of aU schools, add

Wion
gives some answers ,
.

;&gt;

coach ·Wider fire
LITtLE ROCK (UPI) State Rep. H. Woody Clark of
Forrest City wants , the
University of Arkaru1as at·
Fayettevllle to hire a new
footboU coach.
Clark said Friday he wiU
introduce a resolution when the
legislature. convenes· In
January as(dng the Unlverolty
BoBI'd of Trustees to make
Arkansas Cuach and Athletic
Director Frarik Broyles
fuUtlme athletic direc!A&gt;r.
Broyles now holds both
positions.
''I want to make him athletic
director and hire a coach to do
the coaching," Clark said.
"I just think he's got too
much · to llo. He's . a. good
recruiter and a pretty good, coordinator, · but' ,h~: needs
soinebody'IA&gt; reaDy get will' It
on ~ coaching," Cork said.
Arkansas is 5-4· this season.

·MAPLE HURST VANILLA
TINY TOWN.

I~ CE

CREAM
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24 - Tbe Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 17, 1974

25 -:-- The Sunday Times·- Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 17, 1974

\

Improvements, needs of (;allia schoo~.~r-=e:;..;;:;v~i~~
Q~ick-Namel4

Ed's Note - The following is curriculLUII at Hannan 'l:race in
another report in a series ~rades 4-8: Southwestern
prepared by the offi ce of Gallia Juni or Hi gh: Vinton a nd
County School Superintendent Bidwell-Porter, 7-8th. gra des
C. Comer Bradbury of the and music books were added at
needs and improvemen Is of the Vinton and Bidwell-Por ter.
newly consolidated county · Under the Title I program
school system.
supe rvi sed
by
Frank
Cremeans, a Title I reading
GALLIPOLIS - In the last teacher was added at Addaville
article , Sunday, Nov. 3, Cuun ty and Cheshire-Kyger Schools.
Supt. Bradbury explained how The teacher uni t was dropPed
financial problems of the four in 1973-74 after the title funds
districts consolidated last Jan. for the former Kyger Creek
7 have limited improvements District were reduced from
in the system. Today, several- $22,000 per year to $2,500. :
improvements are discussed
For the first time in b.everal
' and new proposals outlined.
years, a vocal music teacher is
With the assistance of Mrs. assigned in the Southwestern
Eugenia
Gardner,
In - area . Mrs. Martha Edelman,
div id ualiz ed Instru c ti on Patriot Star Rt., Ga llipolis, ·
Sui&gt;ervisor, three new units of spends 21&gt; days per week
individualized instruction were there.
added to the county schools.
Earlier this week, Paige
One unit each was added in the Sheets
be ca me
fulltime
Southwestern and Kyger Creek principal at Cadmus and
Junior High Buildings and a Centerville
Elementary
primary unit was added at Schools. He previously had
Cheshire-Kyger Elementary been teacher - principal at
PAIGE SHEETS, former School.
Cadmus. A fulltime library
teacher - principal at CadAccording to Mrs. Adelaide aide' was also employed for
mus Is now fuUtlme principal Sanders, elementary super- Bidwell-Porter, permitting the
at Cadmus and Centerville visor of the Gallia County library to remain open all day.
Schools.
Schools, new basic reading
At the secondary level ,
textbooks were added to the guidance has been increased to
provide senior in terviews to
help guide all s tudents towards
suitable colleges a nd oc-

•••
.,,_•

'•
'

. ''

.'
MISS.CYNTHlA DINEEN, standing, is the new Individualized Education teacher at Kyger

Creek Jr. High .

'

•'

l•
'I
;
I
'!

cupations.

impr ovements in transportation, especially at the

level of equalizing the day for
elementary and secondary·

"'.(.

. •..- ., "., .
..

.

J~.

' ,\_.

•

explains the program to

two of her students.

New faces, talents in
Assembly's leadership
By~ELEONARD

UPI Statehi&gt;use Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) Ohio General Assembly will be
taking on a fresh look, particularly at the leadership
level, when tbe new session
reconvenes in January.
Sen. Oliver Of:asek, D-Akron,
a bridesmaid since 1971, a])o
pears to finaUy ·have enough
support to win the ~te
Democratic leader's job, apd
Rep. Vernal G. Riffle, Jr., DNew Boston, is in the process of

nie

Ohio politics
. overthrowing his mentor,
House Speaker A. G. Lancione,
D-Bellaire.
M o r ·e o v e r ,

Se na t e

Republican leader .Theodore
M. Gray, R-Columbus, is
stepping bock ln!A&gt; lhe rank and
me and will be succeooed by
Sen. Michael J. Maloney, RClnclnnati.
The mly caucus keeping Its
leadership will be th~ !!;ase
Republican group, with
Mlmrlty Leader Charleo F.
Kurfess, R-Bowllng Green ;
Rep. Norman a. Murdock, RClnclnnati, . asaidtant lead&lt;~;;
and Rep. Alan E. Norris, RWesterville, whip.
Fight Last Time
· "We had
fight the last
time," , explaina Norris. The
GOP caucus has been hit hard
by atlrliloo. In fact, at. least
lour of Kurfesa' ·most vocal
conservative opponents will be
gone. Hta supporters have
IUrvlved, and they easily win
lbe ~wcomers away frOM any
dlallintlng tendencies.
Not
so
among. the
•llelna t ala. Rllfe evidently has
Wllflatd tjle Inc:oinlrig frellh111111 111e1r liipes -for· the future
lie wltb blm, 111d not with the
e&amp;,)'elr cild Lapclane, who was

our

B\lpjiCMIIIA&gt; llllw Wen speaker
anotber teftn under tile acrlpt
be says he wrote witll Rifle.

Repub1'9'•,are chQrtllng at

the possibility that Riffe may points.
not be ·able to satisfy aU
Maloney wiU be an ideal
elements of his caucus, and minority leader, observers
- minor revolts may break out feel. He has always been a
from time to time.
skiUful negotiator . and an arFurthermore, Riffe will ticulate · spokesman
on
probobly have to do some hard legislation.
bargaining with Republican
Now he will probably be able
Gov .-elect James A. Rhodes if to lead unified troops against
he wants to accomplish any- the Democrats, uing his good
thing and keep aUve his own relationllhlp with the news
faint hopes for governor in media to get his points across.
1978,
With Rhodes downstairs, it
Concillatory tactics may not should make for an interesting
go over with young liberal session.
Democrats who will be waiting
to squallh Rhodes at every
turn:
By Mrs. Francis Morris
In the Semite the new influx
The Esther Circle met
of Democrats apparently will Monday evening Nov. 11 with
furrdsh Ocasek wiih the votes Mrs. Grella Slmp.On, hostess,
be needs to bonlsh Sen. An- at her home: Tbe hymn "Tell .
thony 0. Calabrese, D- Me the Story of Jesus" opened
Cleveland,. the Democratic the meeting followed with
devotions by Mrs. Mildred
leader for foiir years.
Ocasek will thr!Ve·OiuUI)port Hart, using the subject "Th~
from the · 14ealistic young Extra
Blessings
of
senators who have been getting Thanksgiving" with scripture,
elected. P!'eviously, Calabrese a·poem, a reading, "Thank God
used h&gt;.' y backing from' for Life" and prayer. After a
organiz.:.; labor to carry his business session, Mrs. Lillian
old-style politics Into the Hayman gave a ·book review
leadership spot.
"Go Home and'' Tell." Tbe
Ocasek, more issueo()_riente~ group sang " I'll Go Where You
than people-&lt;~rlented, will need Want Me to Go" and closed
a skillful asaistant lA&gt; keep his with the Lord's Prayer in
troops in line on lmportan_t unison. Delicious refreshments
voteo.
were served to ten members by
Could Cause Trouble
· the hostess at the table ,
Four or five Calabrese beautiful with a Thanksgiving
supporters, combined with the theme.
dozen Republicans, could
Mrs. !rene Taylor of Beaver,
cause . trouble on major Pa.' and sister, Mrs. George
legislation. Alld Rhodes wiU VanHorn of Beaver Falls,. Pa., ·
use his four decades worth of here to pay respects to Mr. ·
political know-how . to get . Charlie Spencer at , Ewing
dissatisfied Democrats to bolt Funeral Home were overnight
tO his side. He'll promise them guests of Mrs. Hazel Carnahan
anything:
· and spent Saturday afternoon
. FinallY, the Senate Republl- With Mr. and Mrs. Roy Rime.
can complexion wiU change,
Mr. and · Mrs. Ralph Webb
perhaps most noticeably of aU. and Mrs. Lillian Weese enGray has been a "con- tertained the. o!Hcers and 11ew
sensus" leader for 10 years - members of Racine chapter
that Is, he has been ln. the OES on Saturday evening . at
maJority and has allowed that the· Webb home. Mrs. Chlortls
majority to work Its will. H~ Gri!nm, chairman of the Inhis refrained from getting out. structlon ' committee infront on any issue. And it has structed the new mem~rs at
cost the Republicans some this time.

Racine Events

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students, equalize class size
and teacher load, equalize or
add secre tarial and janitorial
help, introduce job description
for all employes, adopt new
boa rd policies, and adopt
sta ndard transportation
discipline policies.

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I.
1
ate me
! Gallia
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By Hobart Wilson Jr.

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TOM Tope, president of the Gallipolis Retail Merchants
Association, Saturday reminded members of Thursday's 7 p.m.
meeting concerning downtown improvements in the Old French
City.

--

T

'Olive Street
GaHipolis, Ohio

Sox' Conigliaro to try again
BOSTON' (UPI) - Tony
Cunigllaro, who left baseball
I I be ·
1971
as
a
resu
t o a willanmg
•our ._ years earlier,
try
''
another comeback with the

----

Boston Red Sox next spr in g.
. liaro, 29, who broke in
Curug
with Boston in•1964, wrote Red
Sox general manager 01ck
O'Connell and subsequently

received permission to try out when struck
b near't the
h leftJ eye
k
asadesignatedhitterlnWlnter Aug. 18 y p1 c er ac
Ha
F1a .
H '!ton of the California
ven ,
anu
Tony was Boston's right Angels. Cunigliaro,
.
f . .sul'fering
t at
fielder and power hitter in 1967 deterioration o VIBion, sa ou
the 1968 season before making

SENSATIONAL

'74 CLOSE-OUT SALE
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1974 SPECIALS

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; Pt-IONF 4tlti J~47 GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

a comeback in 1969.
He hit 36 home runs for the
Red Sox in 1970 before being
traded to california for several
·players, including second
baseman Doug Griffin.
Cunlgllaro, still property of
the Angels, quit basebaU in
1971 after 74 games with
caJHornia. Since that time he
has run a nightclub in Nahant
and has taken up karate. The
last time he played basebaU
)"88 this past winter in the
Arizona Instructional League.
He passed an eye test in Los
Angeleo then went to the Instructional League where he
hit .300. But the Angels placed
him on their Triple A team
roster in Salt ·Lake City.

FRESH PA-SCAL

DEL MONTE

Razorback head

74 .·

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I

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coaches' trophy; Jeff HoUenbaugh, best defensive back;
Mark Theiss, most valuable player; Fred Log~n. best offensive back ; Greg George, best offensive lineman, and Ron
Justus, best defensive lineman.

These seven North Gallia
grtdders were awarded trophies at Friday evening 's banquet
held in the high school cafeteria. Honored we~e, from 1-r,
Bruce Runyon, best defensive lineman ; Bret Tackett,
. PIRATE AWARDEES -

SUPER

and weekly GaUla Times ... New county school merger talks
proposed ... SaUy Reynolds named 1954 Rio Grande. CoUege
bomecoming queen ... Dr. J001es II'. Cacy joins Holzer Hospital
staff ... Mrs. John Krawsczyn named Gallia County Christnias
Seals sale chairman ... Twency-nlne cage prospects greet Coach
Dick Shrider at GAHS.
· •

GROUND BEEF

R()AST

CARTER &amp; EVANS INC.

city building. Koe-Krompecher Associates will present ideas on
downtown Improvement projects. Tope said, "All merchants
directly affected by these architectural plans should definitely
see the direction we are taking and aU other concerned citizens
and merchants interested in the betterment of downtown
Gallipolis llhould attend."

I
Mrs. UU!an Weese, Mrs.
Opid Diddle, Mr. and Mrs. with their grandparents, Mr.
Ralph Webb attended Grand fond Mrs. Ralph Badgley.
\)Iapier, Order of Eastern
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Simpson .
Star, In Cleveland.
and children of Baltimore we~e
Mrs. Walter Bikacsan spent. guest.s over the weekend of . ·
several cjays in Akron with her their parents, Mrs. Chester
son, Mr. and Mrs . . Dennis Simpson and Mr. and Mrs.
Bikacsan. .
Ralph Badgley.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil MiUer of
Miss Patti Shain of Antiquity
Ridgeway, Ohio were over- · was a dinner guest FJ;iday
night guests Saturday of her evening of Mr. and' Mrs. Roy
parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Riffle.
Neigler. They left Sun~ay
Mrs. ·carrie Nease spent
morning to go to Columbus to week in Balitomore, as guest of
the home of his parents to help Mr. and Mrs. David Nease arid
celebrate his father 's birthday. son, David. '
Mrs. Rev a Beach of MidMr. and Mrs. Robert Roush
of Columbus · were weekend dieport spent Sunday with Mr. ·
'
guests .Of her parents, Mr ..and and Mrs. Linley Hart. · .
Mrs. Owen Watson . · ,
Mrs , Vasti Grinlm of Letart
Derek and Dallon Badgley of Falls . Si&gt;e~t an liftern!&gt;On with
New H~ven speolthe weekend · Mrs. Frankie Nelgler.

SMOKEY SPEAKS - Bob "Smokey" Wion, highly
successful footboll coach at Worthington High School, is
shown here as he addressed the annual North GaUia football
banquet Friday night. On the left Is Pirate assistant coach
Ron Janey.

'

TWENTY YE"'-RS AGO, from the mes of the Dally Tribune :

Monday thru Saturday 8 AM to 10 PM
Sundays 10 AM to 10 PM

USDA CHOICE

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Store Hours:

CHUCK

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NO SALES TO DEALERS

BLADE CUT USDA CHOICE

'/

the first annual Turkey Bowl gllj1le on Memorial Field Thanksgiving Day (to help raise money for the expansion of locker room
facilities on Memorial Field) are several members of the Blue
Devils 1970 championship squad. They are: Dave Burnett, the
SEGAL's Most Valuable Player four years ago ; Pete Neal,
leading scorer; Ken Wamsley, John Davis, Mark Davis, Chuck
Wood and Mike WoHe. Another GAHS great, Bill Wamsley, who
played college baD at Morehead state, is expected to play In the
alumni contest. Ghe game will begin at 11 a.m. on Nov. ·28.

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

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THE session wiU be held in the Municipal Court Room in the

.

PRICES GOOD THRU 11127174

St.out, Karen Ge ise r , Lisa MeMi tli n. Russell Potts. Ron
Cisneros ' Krista] Hash, Tanya Plants . Martin Hash, Brett
Robinson a nd Don na Spencer . Tackett, Bill Baker, Ma rk
Gridders - Seniors, Ron Theiss, Tom Brumfield: freshJustus, Benny Hash, Greg me n, Tim Davis, Mike Casey ,
George:
Junior s,
Bruce Calvin Min nis , Jim D6bbins,
Runyon ,
Mike jRoberts, Rex Justis. David Shaw, Scott
Bill Garnes, Jeff Bur ger , Rob inson, Jim Thevenir, J ohn
Don Spencer, Gene Welch, Swisher, James Kemp, Terry
Richard
Egg le ton,
Jeff Russell and Den nis Dodrill.
Hollenbaugh, Ken Davis ;
Managers - Bill Shaw, Carl
sophomores, Fred Logan, Ca rl Tackett and Rick Theiss.
Moore, Tom Cai ns, Homer

•~.or anything ~lse in 'it!

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298 SECOND ST
POMEROY, OHIO

·-~.,.,OII-•xT•"' 011

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by Bob ·" Smokey" Wion head
football coach at .Worthington
High School, as he addressed
North Gallia footballer s,
cheerleaders and parents at
the annual Pirate banquet here
Friday night.
Wion, the last ever Rio
Grande. College quarterback,
spiced what he termed "earthy" conversation a nd jokes
within his main address on the
four Ingredients of life pre):aration , presentation,
application and evaluation.·
Preparation, according to
Wion, is both physical and
mental, built around a good
weight program designed to
, produce strength and agility
rather than bulk .
Wion also stressed presen.
tat!on, in other words a football
player's appearance and
personality; while also emphasizing application, as he
slated, ''What you do now will
reflect in the future. No man
ever drowned in his own
sweat."
Evaluation, Wion indicated,
·revolves around the fact that
"Y:ou've got to like yourself."
Wion, who in five yearS at
·Covington , High School had
three championships, and four
titles in five years at Martins
Ferry, including a 32 ga me win
streak, concluded his talk
stating, " If I am anything
today, I owe it to those boys,"
referring to the gridders he ha s
coached for 21 years.
Wion 's address, which was
preceded by a turkey dinner
served by North Gallia home

eco nomie s tudents, was
followed by the introduction of
the Pirate cheerleaders by
their advisor, Joyce Boothe.
Assistant coac h Ron Janey
then introduced the No rth
Galli a linemen, fo ll owed by
coa ch
Ron
Twyma n' s
presentation of the backs.
Head coach John Blake,
stating "I want the whole ball
of wax next year," then gave a
br ief ca psul e of the 1974
season , citing lack of experience as one reason for the
Pirates' 4-5 record and fourth
place finish in the SV/\C.
Blake then presented six
awards, Fred Loga n being
named the best offensive back,
Greg George the best offe nsive
lineman, Jeff Hollenbaug h the
best defens ive back , Ron
Justus and Bruce Rllllyon the
best defensive linemen, Bret
Tackett th e winner of
the Coaches ' Trophy and Mark
Theiss the Most Valuable
Player.
Blake noted that all the
awards, with the exception of
the coaches' award, are voted
on by the players themselves.
The Pirates will only lose 3
players this year due to
gra duati on, Justus, George
and Benny Hash.
The tri-captains for next
season were also announced.
They are Runyon , Gene Welch
and Don Spencer.
The Rev. J ohn Bryant gave
the invocation and Bill Gray,
sports director of WJEH, was
the master of ceremonies.
Those honored Friday
evening were :
Cheer leaders - Chri stia

QlJICK-N.AMEL

AT
LEFT,
CITY
. LOCATIO!IIS Is one of the
many areas of Information
taught ·by Mrs. Maxine
Wells, ' right, lndlviduaUzecf
lnslructlon teacher at Southwestern. This uoJt also was
added this fall.

SENIOR INTERVIEWS are now a part of the total
guidance jB'Ograrn In the Gallia Cuunty Schools. Mrs. Betty
Wllmoth, guidance coWlllelor at Hannan Trace High School,

VINTON - " What's What in

Lif~" was the theme of a talk

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at's what 'in life?

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MRS. JEAN CASSIDY and her aide, Mrs. Ray Roberts are shown in one of the county's
specialized Remedial Reading Classes under the Title I program.

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Enamel .you can ••.

Hopefully, with the help of
the new board of education, the
district a dministration would
like to add county-wide
adopted
textbooks
and
curricula for the high schools,
expand the curricula · at both
elementary and secondary
levels, update all textbooks,
add
more supplementary
1
·, materials to meet the varied
• needs of all students, add
· kindergarten in all elementary
buildings (a mandatory
requirement of the state in
1975), renovate the physical
facilities of aU schools, add

Wion
gives some answers ,
.

;&gt;

coach ·Wider fire
LITtLE ROCK (UPI) State Rep. H. Woody Clark of
Forrest City wants , the
University of Arkaru1as at·
Fayettevllle to hire a new
footboU coach.
Clark said Friday he wiU
introduce a resolution when the
legislature. convenes· In
January as(dng the Unlverolty
BoBI'd of Trustees to make
Arkansas Cuach and Athletic
Director Frarik Broyles
fuUtlme athletic direc!A&gt;r.
Broyles now holds both
positions.
''I want to make him athletic
director and hire a coach to do
the coaching," Clark said.
"I just think he's got too
much · to llo. He's . a. good
recruiter and a pretty good, coordinator, · but' ,h~: needs
soinebody'IA&gt; reaDy get will' It
on ~ coaching," Cork said.
Arkansas is 5-4· this season.

·MAPLE HURST VANILLA
TINY TOWN.

I~ CE

CREAM
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26 - The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 17, 1974

Opposition sure
WASHIN GTON (UPI ) Sen. Richard Clark, D-lowa,
will face strong industry op.
position Monday when he introduces a bill designed to help
curb fertilizer use for lawns
a nd other '~o r name nt al"
purposes so farmers here and
a broa d can ex pand food

Prices going

production.
A spokesman for The Fertilizer Institute, an industry
trade assoc iation, said in an
interview, ille group would!·
oppose Clark 's bill on grounds
it would do little or noth ing to!
mcrease food supplies.

ByT. Allan Wolter
·
Di~rlct Ranger
BURNS, Col . ~ The endless miles of
. Kansas and e stern Colorado plains
rising gradu al · to distant mountains
were behin J us. The first grea t spiney

puff of smoke will rise

range of the Rockies had successfull y
been crossed via ille 12,000 fo ot Berthoud Pass west of Denver. We wondered, wi th head shaking awe, how ille
pioneers ever got through such im·
possible terrain.

today when some 300 per sons in

Now we were in a huge basin cut

this Bergen County commWl ity
th row their cigare ttes, cigars
miles south of the capi tal city ' and tobacco into.a fire and vow
of Phnom Penh, killing six to stup smoking, a spokespersons, field reports said.
woman sa id tOday.

with canyons, washes, small and large

SIX KI LLED
PHNOM PENH (UP! )
Communist soldiers Saturday
fired four rockets into the
center or Takamau , just three

LA RGE TRY
NORWOOD, N. J . 1UP!)- A
~ i g antlc

streams, including the Colorado River.
The basin is completely surrounded by
snowcapped peaks illat serve double
duty. The beauty of such surroundngs
adds immensely to our enjoyment of
the hunt; they also serve as guideposts
in unfamiliar country .
Sagebrush . Bent and buffalo grass.
Pinion pine , juniper. aspen and scrub
oa k. That 's it : " There ain ' t no more, "
yet a varie ty of game and lives tock
thrive in illis seemingly hostile environment.
Our first , hunt Sunday afternoon
and evening was Wlsuccessfut.in tenns
of game bagged. But we did become
familiar with ille terrain and saw
plenty of deer, two of which were nice
bucks. (Bucks were the only legal game
for the first five days of season) .
The combination of thin air at 8,000
fee t and steep, rugged terrain for ced us
to go slowly. We all wished we were in
better shape. We looked upon this first
hunt as a warm up to the first full day
hunt Monday.
Pre-dawn strategy Monday morning was to hunt several large draws
which led to a large irrigated alfalfa
field situated on a flat overlooking the
Colorado River. Five hunters were
dropped off at the head of these draws
while two of us drove to ille field to take
up stands.
.
As we paused to open a gate near

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Clyde B. Walker, Mgr.

Awinter
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the field, J oe, our guide, noticed three
dark shapes streaking across ille flat .
"Look! Look !" he whispered. I was
already halfway to the gate, but
crouched down and ran back to the
pickup for my rifle. Joe took a look
through his scope to see if illey were
bucks or does. In the poor pre-dawn
light it was difficult to make them out.
"Bucks" Joe hissed, but it was too late,
th ey were out of range and moving fast.
"Wow" I illought, "this ought to be
duck soup".
We drove into a shallow draw just
below the field . Suddenly a doe ap.
peared silhouetted against the morning
sky. Then an other, and another , and
still more! There must have been 15
deer in all marching in single file,
leaving the field, alarmed at our
presence. Soon, a good sized buck took
his place at the end of ille line.
I scram bled out of the truck and
bellied down in ille wet grass for a
steady shot. They were all running now,
but like most mule deer, they stopped
300 yards out for anoiller look. I
cranked the scope up to 5 power for a
better look at his antlers: a nice apointer, but not the trophy I was looking
for. It was still the first day of our hunt
so I held off, a decision I was to regret
mildly later. The herd disappeared
over a ri se, and we took up positions for
the drive which had•already begun .
I took a stand on a cliff overlooking
the Colorado River where llle river flat
below and the sagebrush plain were
both visible. Joe took a position several
hundred yards away. No deer came but
of that drive, but Wayne Mann, Forest
Supervisor
of
Wisconsin's
Chequamegon National Forest, jumped
a nice 7-point buck on il1e drive and
dropped it wiill one shot.
On another drive later in the day, a
reai trophy 7-pointer. fell .to Stann
Opsahl, a friend from St. Paul, Minn.

POMEROY - The way food prices keep putting ille squeeze
on food budgets has families asking more about gardens.
So this week we'll steer you In the right direction for a good
home garden next spring, namely, laying away materials in ille
fonn of compost for use in improving ille structure and fertility
of your garden sci!.
Compost is nature's approach to sci! lrtlprovement.
Sometimes the product is referred to as "synthetic manure,"
especially valuable to the gardener who does not have access to
animal manures.·
It improves il1e physical condition of ille soil by promoting
soil granulation. Soils with good physical condition are more

No sweat with a

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SWISHER IMPLEMENT
UPPER RT. 7 GALLIPOLIS

·~.,.,

By BERNARD BRENNER
, WASHINGTON (UP!) - For
a combination of reasons
ranging from weight-watching
to price, the average American
these days has cut conswnption of dairy foods by
more il1an a fourth from the
levels of a generation ago,
government records indicate.
There are some signs,
however, illat the long decline
is leveling off.
Records assembled by
Agri c ulture Department
economists show Americans
this year will conswne ille
equivalent of 541 pounds of
milk in forms ranging from
fresh whole milk to cheese,

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-1:

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"J.' ·lifE QUAUlY. KING OF mRN CRIBS
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33; McCloud 3, 4, 15.

10:~ -

LATE SHIPMENT
: r;'
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Baler Twine
(9,000 Feet Bales)

We Think
3; News 4; B; High Road to
· dv&amp;nture 10 ;
· Mountain Scene 33 .
11: - News 3, 10.
Star
4; CBS News B; National Town
oMeetlnA 33.
11 : ~-CBS News 10; Movie " The Foxes of Harrow" B.
11:~ - Weekend 15; Don Kirshner's ·Concert 13; Face The
!]all on 10; Movie " If I Had A Million" 3.
12:~- Urban League 10; Weekend 4; Good News6.
12:10- Mov1 ~ "Beware! The Blob" 10.
1:®- News 4! Speakeasy 13.
2: :JD- News 13.
:
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1B, 1974
6:(8 - Sunrise Seminar 4 ; Summer Semester 10.
6:1J - Farm Report 13.
6:31- Five Minutes to Llve By 4 ; News 6; Bible Answers 8;
eood News 13; Concerns &amp; Comments 10.
6::15- Columbus Today 4.
•
6:41- Morning Report 3; Farmllme 10.
7: (()-Today 3, 4, 15; CBS News B. 10; Former's Daughter 13;
lugs Bunny 6.
7:, .- New Zoo Revue6 ; Eighty Days 13.
8: - Capt. Kangaroo 8; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 13;
opeye 10.

B: 2'- Jack La La nne 13; Capt. Kangaroo 10.
B: 30- Brady Bunch 6.
B: SJ- News 13.
9:00-AM3; Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15; Mister Rogers33;
llullwlnkle 8; Movie " Hombre" 13.
9 : ~- Lucy Shows; Etec. Co. 20: Nolfor Women Only 3; Hazel
Bi Tattletales 10.
10:011- Company 6; Lilias, Yoga and You 33 ; Joker's Wild B, 10;
Name That Tune 3, 15.
·
10:30- Gamblt 8, 10; Winning Streak 3, 4, 15; Phil Donahue4.
11 :00- Password 13; Now you See II B, 10; High Rollers 3, 4, IS;
$10,000 Pyramid 6; Sesame St. 33.
11 :30- Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15; Brady Bunch 13; Love of Life
B; 10.
11 :5$'- CBS News B; Dan Imet's Wor ld 10.
12:00- Jackpot 3, 15; Password 6; Bob Braun's 50·50 Club 4 ;
News B, 10; Mr. Rocers 33; News 13. I
12:311.. ,- Celebrity Sweepstakes 3, )5; Split Second 6; Search for
Tomorrow a, 10; Afternoon with DJ 13; Elec. Co . 33.
12: 55- NBC News 3, 15.
1:00'- News 3; All My Children 6, 13; Green Acres 10; Not for
Women Only 15; Maklr:&gt;!l :rhlngs Grow 33; Phil Donahue B;
Young and ~esiless 10.

We··Got A Good Price

and

.~ ·

'

WE'LL GIVE YOU THE

SAVINGS NOW!
.,

Come In or Call

.,

Meigs Equipment
PH. 992-2176

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Adlerian Counseling Techniques 33. ·
6:30- NBC News 3, 4, 15; CBS News B, 10; Bewitched 6; Gomer
Pyte 13.
eo
7:00-,Truth or Cons. J; News 10; What's My Line 8; Elec. .
20; Workshop 15; Bowling for Dollars 6; Candid Camera 13;
Insight 33.
·
~..
B
7· 30 - That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Buck ~ens ;
' Episode Action 33; Help Thy Neighbor 4; Pollee Surgeon 6 ;
Municipal Court 6; To Tell the Truth 13; Washington Straight
' 00
Talk
20.
G
k B 10 ·
f:
- Born Free 3, 4, 15; Rookies 6, 13 ; unsmo e • .
· Hollywood TV Theatre 20, 33.
.,
9:110- NFL Football 6,13; Maude B. 10; Movie "Godfather 3, 4,
' 15.
'9: 30 - Rhoda B, 10.
10:110- Medical Center B, 10; News 20; Washington Straight Talk
. ' 33.

-

1t :I10-N_ews3,4,6, B, 10, 13, 15.
N y k" S·
11:30- JOhnny Carson 3, .4, 15; Movies ''Sunday In ew or
•
1.

" The Big Game" 10.

12:11012:301:00 ·1 :302:00-

News 6, 13.
Mission Impossible 6; Untouchables 13.
Tomorrow 3, 4.
News 13.
News 4.

They'll Do It Every Time

easier.

'

eLAMBS,

f~::~~~==~~;~~~~;,~~~~--~·

'

. ePIGLETS

eCOLTS ·

ASk us about our CO·OP Tire "Ute of the Tread" guarantee with no time

or mileage limitation.

,

'

'

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

I I.
7

01111 .

eSHOW ANIMALS

See LANDMARK for Plug•, FIINri, Shoclra,Be~rle•~ Trucl( &amp; Tr..:tor, 1/r~,'loo.

'

J. D. NQrth Produce Co.
Vin!l! Street

I

-;'

AT ·PARTICIPATING
LANDMARK D.Ef\LER~ .

Ga Ill polis, Ohio

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• J

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11 17 61p
FIREWOOD l or sale. cu t your
I own size or p iece . Phon e 99'1
'i717
I I 3 tic
F I REWOOD to r sa le . Ca l l 7d2
·18 3 I
10 ?9 16 t c
1'970 YAMAHA m o to rcycle.
g oo d
ru nn 1ng
con dition
Ph one &lt;t92 72'26
1 I 17 Mp

F I REWOOD
s tove . Cut
992 76·1&lt;1

for ! •replace or
to l en g th Phon e
11 3 26 1C

B ABY Bed com p l ete Exce ll ent
co nd i t ion $15 P h one 965 39 88
I I 17 Jtc
COAL , delivered $20

per to n .

1970 1 TON C hcvrolel tru c k.
d ua l whee ls. VB. ·1 speed
Look s and run s good Harol(l
Brewe r , Long Bottom, Ohio
Phone 98~ 355 4
1 1 17 lfc

B EAUTIFUL AK.C S&lt;Jble and
Wh •t e Col li (' puppie S, SJO each
Phone 98 5 3609
11 17 76c

1 WO ridmq horses. on e pony ,
l i flh house on ri g ht past golf
c ou rse a! Ches ter on SR 1.t B.
11 17 lip

H P. N DAY OLD ar star ted
L c qhorn pul l e ts Both floor or
c age
grow n
avai l able .
Poultry
ho u s m g
and
automat 1o n Modern Pou lt ry.
399 w Ma m . Pomeroy, 991
1 164
11 17 H e

Call 742 66Z1

ELECTRO LUX
vacu u m
c lea n e r , A I con dition , uses
pape r bags. has cor dw 1n der
and many allclchment s Also.
s hampooer a ttachm ent 1n
e l ud ed (On ly 4 ava d clble) a t
\37 70
ca s h
or
te rm s
a vai l nble Phone 992 7755.
11 13 .lfc
NEW l97d Z I G ZAG SEW ING
MACHINES
In
o r1gi na1
factory carton N ew l1g Zag
to make but lon holes , sew on
bu1 t on s. monograms , and
make f ancy d es igns with just
the twist of a Slngl e·di a l Left
m l ay a way and never be en
used Will se l l l or only S.47
cash , or ter m s available
Phone 992 7755
11 13 tf c
'A FEW new band in st rument s
Con t act Renee Stone 992 ·7567
9·4-tfc

· G RAVEL . sa n d, Mason sand,
11mes tone , Pit Run by th e to n .
De l i vered Phone 1111 6· 11 42.

10 18 ttc

1967 MUSTANG 289, au tomat ic,
dua l el1: hausl. On e dou b le
P•ckup
electric
guitar .
Harmony solid bod y ele c tr ic
bass guita r ; K i mberly fta• .
Llo p guitar. 2 speake r cabinets
w 1th two 12 In ch speakers per
cabinet . Bell Tempo 150 P .. A .
power un 11 All above items
are in very good cor,di t lon .
Ph one 9119 3151 before 5 p . m .
or qA9. ]611d afte r 5 p . m
11 hi Jtc

.....

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"

1974 360 YAMAHA E n duro, tow
mileage, l1ke new co nd it ion
Lo t s of el(tras Phone 247 22 45.
11 · 14 .3t c

FI R EWOOD , any length Ca ll
992 ·5422 or 992 ·3312.
J1 . 1Q .26t p

- - -------------

GRA I N fed Angus b ee f . Phon1
965 39411 .
11 10 611
ONE two year otd draft colt, on e
black lle• ter, t wo Holstei n
he •fe rs Phone 992 5795 .
11 13 Jtc
1953 FERG U SO N with mower,
$1,1100 Phon e 965 3594 .
II 17 7tp

FUNNY BUSINESS

By RogerBo/1.,.

+++
NOTE : For Your Copies of "What Is a Crush - What Is a
First Love - What Is Getting to Know Yourself?" send a
STAMPED, self-addressed, LONG enevelope to Helen and Sue
Bottel, P. 0 . Box 23057, Sacramento, calif., 95823. Send extra
stamps If you want extra copies.

Th e co unt ry wit h t h e
lowest recorded s uicide ra te
is Ma lta , wi th on ly one
sui cide in 1967.
F-------r;
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We.talk to you

•

•

'•

.

like. a person.

·'

WMP0/1390:
ON YOUR DIPI
I,.

1

• 2 plus 2 heavy duty carcass construction,

• Country Squire 120 runs cooler, 'the extra
deep· tread means longer life andgreater
economy.
•.
· • c,n be pinned Yiilh ,No. 16 size meial .ice
: grip studs lqr the ullimi te in traction an4
·' \ ,~;topping ability on 'Ice, ' , I' ,. r · ·.;: ·
, • Strong, durable Chlorob.utyJ inner liner;;•.
duces air loss to an absolute minimum.

P!lo n e

.111 0 JO l iN
DEERE d o1 e r ,
hydr iHJii c l) l,l d l' ;, n (l w ·m c h .·~
(, •. UOr'J rrwnf' 9ft "&gt; 1 59d
I 1 17 7tp

ANTIQUES
pic cab in et.
LOC!JS T po s t s. 22 Remi n gton
sewinq mach m e , (over 10.0 ...... an 'd - 1.72 acre lot . P h on e 7A2 ·
y enr s o ld l •ce box Call 99'7
3656
11qR or 7.t1 609 1
10 18 -26t p
11 13 &lt;li e

Dear LMA:
A habit that boillejs you before marriage will drive you wlld
after marriage when you must face it every day. Tell your fiance
exactly how you feel about his table manners and ask illat he let
you help revise them.
Get him to watch how others eat (this is someilling gluttons
seldom do), and maybehe'llreallzehe needs lessons.
"What If he resents your criticism ? Well, It's better illan
"losing your appetite" ille rest of your life. Take that chance ! HELEN
Dear LMA :
Maybe you could try the healill angle. Fast eaters who
stuff themselves usually have weight problems .- which can
eventually lead to high blood pressure, heart trouble, etc. If your
b.f. slows down, he'll eat less because his stomach will have time
to tell his mind he's full beforeanoiller load arrives.
Get it across you're trying to help - illat you love him sc
much you don't want him sick, or people criticizing him.
And here' san Idea : maybe you have a habit illat knocks him
out. &amp;ynake a pact you'll BOTH change, wiill ille oilier's ald. SUE

1:30-:Jecpardy 4, 15; tel's Make A Deal 6, 13 ; As the World
Turns B, 10; Dig II 33 ; Telethon 3.
2:00- DoysofOUrLives3, 4, 15 ; Newlywed Game 13; Guiding
Light 8, 10; Insight 33.
2: 30- Doctors 3, 4, 15; Gltf In My Lite 13; Edge of Night B, 10;
Performance 33.
3·110- Another World 3, 4, 15; Price Is Right B. 10; General
· Hospital 6 ll; Great American Dream Machine 33.
3:30- How to Survive a Marriage 3, 15; Match Game B. 10; One
Life to Live 13; Lassie 6; Dollar Decisions 20.
4:110- Mr. Cartoon and the Banana Spills 3; Somerset 15;
Tattletales 8; Sesame St. 33; Gilligan's Is. 6; $10,000 Pyramid
13; Bonanza 4; Movie " The Lone Ranger'' 10.
,
.
4:30- Jackpol4 ; Bonanza15; Mod Squad 6; Gilligan sIs. 13 ,
Bewitched 3; Lucy Show B. "
5:00- Merv Griffin 4; Mister Rogers 20, 33; Anything You Ca ~
Do 13; FB13; Andy Griffith 8; Ironside 13.
5:30 - Elec. Co. 33 ; Hodgepodge Lodge 20 ; News 6; Trails West

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
7:30p.m.- Family Favorites
9: 30- Operation Gangbuster.

Dynacor belted, · criss ·crossed to provide
strengih equal to 4 full plies-plus 2 additional criss-crossed,belts.
• Extra safety and traction of husky tread ele·
ments that dig deep for mobility in mud
and snow.
• Special construction reduces·tread squirm,
. . stabilizes tread elements so your ·c~r rolls

lease .

For Sale

~: ~:_ News3, 4,115; News B. 10; Sesame St. 20; ABC News 6, 13;

POMEROY, OHIO

CO-OP c·ountry Squire 120POSITIVE Stop and Go In
Mud\or Snowl

IREWOOD for sale
99') ~~!J~ al t er 3 p m

+++

.r

lor s ole or

For Sale

,,,.,u 1 ER G tJ '; ON
front end
10r1d er , t i ,'I UO Phone 9B S 3'.94
11 17 ltp

11 10·6tc

Dear Helen and Sue:
I love my boyfriend and we're planning to get married, but
there's one big problem : his table manners.
He gobbles his food, ticks his fingers, sticks ille knife in his
mouill, uses his own dirty utensils to get butter or second
helpings. It's bad enough when he's at my house, but at a dinner,
I get terribly embarrassed.
I've tried hwnor, like, "Robert Redford wouldn't do that."
And compliments: " You have such class illat you really
shouldn't put your knife inyourmouill." No luck.
He just doesn't illink table manners are important, maybe
because he never learned them at home. He sees nothing wrong
wiill the way he eats.
Shall l just try to get used to it, or what? -LOSING MY
APPETITE

::~- ~~~i~ B,

·'

Here Is one which is all of that because of Its
easy to mix qualities, high nutritional value
, and low cost. Calves like Its fresh taste, Its
palatiblllfy and naturalness.
·

eCALVES

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B:,JJ-

'

A e.llltn COrn Crib keepo Its high r..-le value year attar yer ... because Irs 'built for a :
llf.tlmo of "'1111«1 setvloe. Every, f!ehlen Crib Is Hol-lllp Galva~lzad otter welding. ...
compl.tely coverad all surfaces I inclUding weld spots) with up to 6 times the amount of zinc
· t~UM~on l!l'dlnary cribs. The Behlen Crib Is made of No. 2-gouge Bar Mesh Steel (over '!.'' in
'IIMriM!II'). Welher-llghl "Steep Pilch" roof flits to the peak without hand leveling. Extra
..._~lbdaors. In sizes from 679 to 2155 bushels.

Dear Clean :
Or you might say, "I'm allergic." That usually stops 'em. If
you're stuck with a per~i:;tent smoker yo)! can't shake, tell him,
"Look, I won't try to argue you out of using pot If you don't try to
argue me into it, okay ?" - HELEN

..______,"·"

.•'•'...

She Needs a Pot Put-()H
'
What do you say to friends who insist I should try pot ' One
guycouldn 'tbetieve I hadn~ touched it at ille age of 15.
,
Everyone tells me I should get turned on, but I don't want to
pollute my mind any more than it is already. !'in no saint - l
smoke and drink a tittle - but I just don't want to get mixed up
'wiill drugs .
What's a good reply?- CLEAN BUT NOT SO clEAN

+++

ii

DIVISION CREATED .
BUYER$
~:::
'
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
@ Ohio Agricultural Markeling The livestock Industry Is ·
~owing and needs qualified
:...::.. Associalion created ille Farm
uyer's . You must be able to
Friday to
:;:~ Market Division
eep
up with today's volatile ,
!'~ r epresen t farm roadside
rarkels.
.•
::;: marke t operators in Ohio. The
ITo qualify you should have a :
•'•' division will help iLs membCrs
,.,::::
·:·: by organizing group purchases
arm . or
agr lcu ltura'l .
....
:-:·
"ackground
enjoy
....
.... of paper bags, fruit and oilier r,,orklng with andlivestock.
·:·:
:·:·
•'•' input items, supply market ~~ite today with your ex.
&amp; background, for
information, helping individual ~rlence
n Interview In your area.
.... marketers purchase fruit and Include name. address ,
hone number and age..
:~:j veg e tables , organizing
:-:·
•'•' workshops, helping to merAMERICAN CATTLE CO,
.•.·
..•.
chandise producLs ·and con175 W. Jackson Blvd.--.14
Chicago, Illinois 60604
ducting
market
research
and
=~
;.,.
-:··
analysis.
....;

EASY AND
ECONOMICAL
TO FEED.
'

·"'

busin ess for sale .

ra n.u , e 17 3 ',lltR from 8 : 30p . m .
tl) •0 p n1 f or appointmcnl
:1 ?0 lie

Dear CBNSC :
How about "No, illank you" and change the subject?
H somecne keeps on and on and on (as dopers sometimes
do ), walk away. - SUE

r---------~.
~~~
NEEDED
Cattle. Hog· &amp; Sheep

'f\•l+l!l illtl

Rap:

I

For Sale

GROCERY

By Helen and Sue Bottel ,

~=~

REPLACER

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.:*•.
~:~:

MILK

.

WASHINGTON (UP!) Soybean prices already are
sharply above last year 's
harvest • season level and will
advance further In coming
months,
according
to
Agriculture Department
economists.
Experts writing in a Fats and
Oils Situation sununary noted
illat wiill production down this
year because of unfavorable
weather, farmers have been
averaging about $8 a bushelfot

For Sale

Generation
Rap
'

u·J!

By John C. Rice
Ext. Agent, Agrlculture

butter and other dairy food s.
This is more than 28 per cent
below the 740-pound per capita
consumption figure for 1950.
A Department dairy expert
said the 1974 estimate, down 15
pounds or 2.7 per cent from
·1973, is the smallest in
government records which go
back half a century to 1924.
A detailed study of the
records also
indicates,
however, that part of the long
decline has been due to a factor
which will have comparatively
II tile impact In ille future - the
sharp drop over the past two
generations in the amount of
milk consumed on the farm .
With farm use of milk down to
an
almost
irreducible
minimum in recent years, per
capita consumpUon of milk has
been holding a t a com- !ices in the motel were used for
paratively steady level.
the coaching staff and were not
the team's corporate offices.
The team's coaches set up a
AMS THROWN OUT
temporary office at Legion
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UP!) Field and waited for ille return
- A motel chain threw ille of club owneo 1 Bill Putnam.
World Foothall League Bir- Putnam has been in New York
mingham Americans out on ille trying to borrow money for ille
street Tlllrsday because the tea m.
team could not pay its bllls.
The state says the 14jam owes
The Americans also revealed almost $90,000 in back taxes.
they had not paid their players The team also owes Jefferson
for five weeks nor illelr County and the city of Bircoaches and staff in two weeks. milngham around $14,000 each
Team officials said the of. in

\

up.

the high-protein beans which.,
are a major feed ingrellient far
meat and poultry produ~ : ;
During the harvest ~son p· '
year ago, fanners w~ . get~ · ·
$5.50 a bushel.
'
More price hikes are ell' ··
peeled later, the rejlort aa~ . a
because
farmers
are ·v
marketing the ~educed 1974 ,
crop slowly ln an effort to mlii ·
top returns' from the ,market . ~;
•

;:~
:;~

easily worked, have good drainage, and are well aerated, all of
which provide desirable conditions for good plant root growih
and development.
Composting may be done in a pile, heap, pit, or a bin type
structure. You'll probably want to screen \he composting area
from view with 'landscape plantings, or a ·fence .
A suggested procedure for coinpost layering follows (some
gardeners may want to adjust the procedure to fit their individual preferences and materials they have on hand):
- Use available plant materials; avoidlng diseased
materials, fruit pits, bones, etc. The pile may be built over a
period of time as materials become available.
-Apply materials IQ be composted in alternating layers.
First layer, use plant residues 6 to_}2 inche.s thl~k,; second _layer,
garden soil or liharp aand about l·mch thick; Iiilrd layer, thin
layer of nutrients or elements to promote decomposition.
Commercial fertlli2er or dehydrated animal manures may be
used. A limestone additive is desirable, also.
- Moisten ille three layers of material but do not create a
soggy condition by adding too much water too often. Repeat ille
layering process unW the heap is about five feet keep.
. - To provide aeration, make the (irst layer a coarse plant
material such as coarse stalks to adlitit air to the base of the pile.
Turn the plle periodically willl a pitch fork or hay or garden fork.
Be sure to turn the pile over and incorporate the material at the
edges into the center of the pile when turning.
The time required to produce a good-compost depends on ille
type of material uaed, Its fineness or coarseness, and wheiller or
not desirable environmental conditions for rnicroblcal activity
are maintained (adequate nutrients, aeration, and moisture).
Compost material can be made in as short a time as 14 days, If
the materijll Is finely ground or shredded, kept moist and turned
frequently to provide good aeration. In most cailes, you' should
not plan on cOmpost being ready to use in less ilion four to six
months, Just piling up materials and allowing nature to take Its
course can take a year or more for compost to'result.
Compost Is ready to use when it Is dark brown in color,
friable, and breaks up readily when furned over.

Dairy foods use is down

''

Our spiriLs were high that evening,
two nice ·bucks in one day and the
prospecLs looked excellent for ille rest
of our hunt. ·
The next day two more lucky
hun ters. My broiller, Mike from St.
Paul, Minn. downed a 7-point buck· as it
moved from its morning feeding area to
iLs bedding area. It was the bes t shot
made on the trip, 275 yards off-hand and
it was running. One shot ! We said ·Juck.
Mike says skill.
·
Midway through the second day
Rick Hann, Wayne National Fores t
Engineer, took his venison, a nice fat
fork-horn , again with one shot.
Our guide, Joe Brunetti, had to
leave after the second day but by now
we knew il1e Jay of ille land fairly well .
We 're averaging two bucks a day: to
J ohn Weiss, a free lance outdoor writer
from Athens, and myself figure no
problems. However ...
After two more days of dawn to
dusk hunting in snows torms , h ot
we ath er, cold weather, plans,
stra tegies, stalks, drives and bone
aching weariness, not another buck was
sighted!
Doe season began on the last day
we planned to hunt. John and I decided
the 'evening before to take one If ille
opportunity arose.
.
We saw a few during il1e morning .
hunt on drives which normally
produced 10 to 15 deer, but none offered
a goodshot. Had we hunted the
remainder or the day I'm sure we could
have put venison on the table. However
illere was a 1500 mile trip to consider,
so by I p.m. we were on the way home.
I still think of illat buck I passed up
ille first morning but not·in a bitter sort
of way at all. I was looking for a trophy
and didn't get it. With all the fun and
adventure ,- good companions, and
·stories to tell, there can never be an
unsuccessful hunt for me.

County agent's corner

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~OI.lfi'IOS

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SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZI.ER

I

SUNf)AV, NOVEMBER 11,1974
ACROSS
1 Rock

71 '£quality
72 Guido's high
note
74 LtiMI

131
132
133
135

At this place
Obtain
Levees

Definite article

20
27
29
31

Periods of time
Dine

91 Kind of

Ou1rrel1

9~

foot race

••
••

Takes unlawfully

Rubbenree
93 Small plant
36 GOalt
95 Country of Asia
76 Period of time 138 Chicken
11 Wipt1 out ld .
37 0 e b111 bl e
96 Beneath
lpl. abbr.I
139 Sooka
18 lndiln 10 11r
D'
97 Goe1 by water
39
Pterc:e
1~
A
ltltt
1
abbr
.)
tttance
77
21 Foot Iever
99 Liquefy
78 Leuen
141 Sodium chloride
muture
22 P'·co 1·n 11·ne
~
· 1o · --..
••clite .
101 Writ of execution 'Ht--t23 mature
79 Typifie1
142 Spanith en•c
24 Soep plant
82 Followed a cir- 143 Latin conjunction41 ApportiOn
105 Expired
25 Goat
cular courn
144 Addltlonol
~2 Of bod
t06 Care for
ful
84
Communidn
145
Trumpetlr
bird
diapotition
107
Wife of Geraint
26 L.w
.
n
111
Winglike
••
43
F
hiO
7
N
28 l'onnod
plote
14 ec ....rv
G
f
· · b. d
85 Saucy
149 Greek tetter
44 rent uae o
112 European
30
lr I
·
46 Note.of aca1e 113 Winter vehicle
32 D1v1ng
Nate of ecale
86 Instrument
150 TranNCtlon•
,
88 River in Africa . 152 Gown•
48 Oanilh llland 115 Dampens
33 Nanative
-•
89
Bold
.
154
Old
Sco1tith
49 Evaluate
116 vOeprettion
34 Prtnt' t
118
e
vntment
90 Place lor combat
clen chief
50 Journey
erv
35 Poem
92 Lana•
156 Adjudge
51 Having le••
119 Pottessive
Pertaining to
158 Puff up
color
pronoun
94
96 Competent
· 52 Rom on
121 Getting up
lilies
169 lean ·tot
37
Dotace
·1
123 Symbol for iron
.d
98 Conduct
180 Warbles
o11·ICII
38 Arl
125 Becomes
53 Stop
99 Majority
161 Taut
40 Vepor
S5 World War I
exhausted
100 Pronoun
42 Beln dobt
do
oow'N
President
!colloq.I
43 Dlttance
102 Fhted perto
56 Snatch
128 Paper measure
me..ure
time sheep
·
57 Growin"'• out of 127 Foot runners
•• Dofoot
103_ot
Nahoor
1 Squander
-45 Unit Of S iomese 104 Sick
2 s·'"g 1ng vo&gt;ee
·
58 Enticingwoman129 The ones here
61 Biblicol wood 130 Briattelike
3 Unuaua I
currency·
105 Amount owed
• 1 Beom·•rches
108 wooden pin
4 A continent
63 Cleyey et,.nh
131 PronOun
••a Euro~•n
(• bb r. i
6A MerN
132 G
Drinking vessel
108 Obstruct
·'
· h
'"" copitll
•·•
c
h
68
One
who
134
uido·o h&gt;g
109 Romen gods
6 lot measure
110 Symbol for
6 King of bird1
treats tee1h.
nate
50 A.......
....,
( 1J
_ 70 Made resolute 136 Li1tens to
71 S uttering
1 A
51 Punctuotlon
P1·tit.
137 Evade
mork
111 calcium
Ioiii
139
Flower
~· Solar d1•1 k
112 Makes deaper
8 Snome
73 Beg
9 prtn
· to r's
74 Wito of Zous 140
Matured
55 Smattlump•
114 Recent
,._.Encountered
~ lrrttotn
116 Astate (abbr .I
measure
75 European
"" Sum up
10 Recent
145 Poueuivo
Man's nickname
·w
117 .PHpholo
71 ermine
Rent
146
~ Fondle
119 Workman
11 Wnrowoy
..,
12 C emany
78 Foundation
pronoun
.12 Hermh
120 River in
"
80 Tear ·
147 Large truck
13
lA Facial
Arizona
Simien
148 Unit of Latvian
oxpr-n
122 Pull off
14 Campau p_oint 81 Drunkard
86 Symbolfor
124 Young boy
15 Moke pouiblo : . ~!cri:,·~~s
149 -~",;~~~~~
nlckOt
125 Awoitoettloment 18 Benofrt
161 Note otscale
• ChinMI mile
126 Th.;tte borne
17 Printer'•
87 Whipped
153 E ~ec la mation
17 Mournful
128 Number
.
ff!111~fl lpU
89 Battered
165 Greeting
18 Pope's veil
129 F.ormer Run •an 18 Rtver.tn Italy
90 ~~~~~~~ me
167 Pronoun .
10 $Uike
ruler
19 Spentlh potl
.6 Dined

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26 - The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 17, 1974

Opposition sure
WASHIN GTON (UPI ) Sen. Richard Clark, D-lowa,
will face strong industry op.
position Monday when he introduces a bill designed to help
curb fertilizer use for lawns
a nd other '~o r name nt al"
purposes so farmers here and
a broa d can ex pand food

Prices going

production.
A spokesman for The Fertilizer Institute, an industry
trade assoc iation, said in an
interview, ille group would!·
oppose Clark 's bill on grounds
it would do little or noth ing to!
mcrease food supplies.

ByT. Allan Wolter
·
Di~rlct Ranger
BURNS, Col . ~ The endless miles of
. Kansas and e stern Colorado plains
rising gradu al · to distant mountains
were behin J us. The first grea t spiney

puff of smoke will rise

range of the Rockies had successfull y
been crossed via ille 12,000 fo ot Berthoud Pass west of Denver. We wondered, wi th head shaking awe, how ille
pioneers ever got through such im·
possible terrain.

today when some 300 per sons in

Now we were in a huge basin cut

this Bergen County commWl ity
th row their cigare ttes, cigars
miles south of the capi tal city ' and tobacco into.a fire and vow
of Phnom Penh, killing six to stup smoking, a spokespersons, field reports said.
woman sa id tOday.

with canyons, washes, small and large

SIX KI LLED
PHNOM PENH (UP! )
Communist soldiers Saturday
fired four rockets into the
center or Takamau , just three

LA RGE TRY
NORWOOD, N. J . 1UP!)- A
~ i g antlc

streams, including the Colorado River.
The basin is completely surrounded by
snowcapped peaks illat serve double
duty. The beauty of such surroundngs
adds immensely to our enjoyment of
the hunt; they also serve as guideposts
in unfamiliar country .
Sagebrush . Bent and buffalo grass.
Pinion pine , juniper. aspen and scrub
oa k. That 's it : " There ain ' t no more, "
yet a varie ty of game and lives tock
thrive in illis seemingly hostile environment.
Our first , hunt Sunday afternoon
and evening was Wlsuccessfut.in tenns
of game bagged. But we did become
familiar with ille terrain and saw
plenty of deer, two of which were nice
bucks. (Bucks were the only legal game
for the first five days of season) .
The combination of thin air at 8,000
fee t and steep, rugged terrain for ced us
to go slowly. We all wished we were in
better shape. We looked upon this first
hunt as a warm up to the first full day
hunt Monday.
Pre-dawn strategy Monday morning was to hunt several large draws
which led to a large irrigated alfalfa
field situated on a flat overlooking the
Colorado River. Five hunters were
dropped off at the head of these draws
while two of us drove to ille field to take
up stands.
.
As we paused to open a gate near

Want a loan to buy ·
a country home?
Your Federal Land Bank Association can help!
Are yc • a city-dweller who woul d like to buy your fi rst
country home? Or do ··ou already li ve 1n the co untry and
plan to build. or buy a new home? We can he lp
with a
ru ral r ome loan.
The
·
are sim ple. So why not come m and
ta lk to us ab out yo ur mo rtg age
credit needs.
228 Upper River Road
P.O. Box 207, Gallipolis
Clyde B. Walker, Mgr.

Awinter
supply of
firewOod .

the field, J oe, our guide, noticed three
dark shapes streaking across ille flat .
"Look! Look !" he whispered. I was
already halfway to the gate, but
crouched down and ran back to the
pickup for my rifle. Joe took a look
through his scope to see if illey were
bucks or does. In the poor pre-dawn
light it was difficult to make them out.
"Bucks" Joe hissed, but it was too late,
th ey were out of range and moving fast.
"Wow" I illought, "this ought to be
duck soup".
We drove into a shallow draw just
below the field . Suddenly a doe ap.
peared silhouetted against the morning
sky. Then an other, and another , and
still more! There must have been 15
deer in all marching in single file,
leaving the field, alarmed at our
presence. Soon, a good sized buck took
his place at the end of ille line.
I scram bled out of the truck and
bellied down in ille wet grass for a
steady shot. They were all running now,
but like most mule deer, they stopped
300 yards out for anoiller look. I
cranked the scope up to 5 power for a
better look at his antlers: a nice apointer, but not the trophy I was looking
for. It was still the first day of our hunt
so I held off, a decision I was to regret
mildly later. The herd disappeared
over a ri se, and we took up positions for
the drive which had•already begun .
I took a stand on a cliff overlooking
the Colorado River where llle river flat
below and the sagebrush plain were
both visible. Joe took a position several
hundred yards away. No deer came but
of that drive, but Wayne Mann, Forest
Supervisor
of
Wisconsin's
Chequamegon National Forest, jumped
a nice 7-point buck on il1e drive and
dropped it wiill one shot.
On another drive later in the day, a
reai trophy 7-pointer. fell .to Stann
Opsahl, a friend from St. Paul, Minn.

POMEROY - The way food prices keep putting ille squeeze
on food budgets has families asking more about gardens.
So this week we'll steer you In the right direction for a good
home garden next spring, namely, laying away materials in ille
fonn of compost for use in improving ille structure and fertility
of your garden sci!.
Compost is nature's approach to sci! lrtlprovement.
Sometimes the product is referred to as "synthetic manure,"
especially valuable to the gardener who does not have access to
animal manures.·
It improves il1e physical condition of ille soil by promoting
soil granulation. Soils with good physical condition are more

No sweat with a

Softone'" muffler makes the
Super E-Z fun to use. AuloAutoniatic Chain Saw. ~~~~c bar and cham oiling,

HOMEUTE SUPER E·Z'•

J ust push one button to set
See for yourself-come in
and ' hold the controls in and ask lor a tree demonstarting position without the stratton.

~-=~~::;:";;;;;;~,
chain turning.
You out with ease. Home- (
lite's excellent balance,
•
thick rubber coated handle
bar and pistol grip, plus · CHAIN SAWS

HOMEIII t:')

SWISHER IMPLEMENT
UPPER RT. 7 GALLIPOLIS

·~.,.,

By BERNARD BRENNER
, WASHINGTON (UP!) - For
a combination of reasons
ranging from weight-watching
to price, the average American
these days has cut conswnption of dairy foods by
more il1an a fourth from the
levels of a generation ago,
government records indicate.
There are some signs,
however, illat the long decline
is leveling off.
Records assembled by
Agri c ulture Department
economists show Americans
this year will conswne ille
equivalent of 541 pounds of
milk in forms ranging from
fresh whole milk to cheese,

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33; McCloud 3, 4, 15.

10:~ -

LATE SHIPMENT
: r;'
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Baler Twine
(9,000 Feet Bales)

We Think
3; News 4; B; High Road to
· dv&amp;nture 10 ;
· Mountain Scene 33 .
11: - News 3, 10.
Star
4; CBS News B; National Town
oMeetlnA 33.
11 : ~-CBS News 10; Movie " The Foxes of Harrow" B.
11:~ - Weekend 15; Don Kirshner's ·Concert 13; Face The
!]all on 10; Movie " If I Had A Million" 3.
12:~- Urban League 10; Weekend 4; Good News6.
12:10- Mov1 ~ "Beware! The Blob" 10.
1:®- News 4! Speakeasy 13.
2: :JD- News 13.
:
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1B, 1974
6:(8 - Sunrise Seminar 4 ; Summer Semester 10.
6:1J - Farm Report 13.
6:31- Five Minutes to Llve By 4 ; News 6; Bible Answers 8;
eood News 13; Concerns &amp; Comments 10.
6::15- Columbus Today 4.
•
6:41- Morning Report 3; Farmllme 10.
7: (()-Today 3, 4, 15; CBS News B. 10; Former's Daughter 13;
lugs Bunny 6.
7:, .- New Zoo Revue6 ; Eighty Days 13.
8: - Capt. Kangaroo 8; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 13;
opeye 10.

B: 2'- Jack La La nne 13; Capt. Kangaroo 10.
B: 30- Brady Bunch 6.
B: SJ- News 13.
9:00-AM3; Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15; Mister Rogers33;
llullwlnkle 8; Movie " Hombre" 13.
9 : ~- Lucy Shows; Etec. Co. 20: Nolfor Women Only 3; Hazel
Bi Tattletales 10.
10:011- Company 6; Lilias, Yoga and You 33 ; Joker's Wild B, 10;
Name That Tune 3, 15.
·
10:30- Gamblt 8, 10; Winning Streak 3, 4, 15; Phil Donahue4.
11 :00- Password 13; Now you See II B, 10; High Rollers 3, 4, IS;
$10,000 Pyramid 6; Sesame St. 33.
11 :30- Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15; Brady Bunch 13; Love of Life
B; 10.
11 :5$'- CBS News B; Dan Imet's Wor ld 10.
12:00- Jackpot 3, 15; Password 6; Bob Braun's 50·50 Club 4 ;
News B, 10; Mr. Rocers 33; News 13. I
12:311.. ,- Celebrity Sweepstakes 3, )5; Split Second 6; Search for
Tomorrow a, 10; Afternoon with DJ 13; Elec. Co . 33.
12: 55- NBC News 3, 15.
1:00'- News 3; All My Children 6, 13; Green Acres 10; Not for
Women Only 15; Maklr:&gt;!l :rhlngs Grow 33; Phil Donahue B;
Young and ~esiless 10.

We··Got A Good Price

and

.~ ·

'

WE'LL GIVE YOU THE

SAVINGS NOW!
.,

Come In or Call

.,

Meigs Equipment
PH. 992-2176

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Adlerian Counseling Techniques 33. ·
6:30- NBC News 3, 4, 15; CBS News B, 10; Bewitched 6; Gomer
Pyte 13.
eo
7:00-,Truth or Cons. J; News 10; What's My Line 8; Elec. .
20; Workshop 15; Bowling for Dollars 6; Candid Camera 13;
Insight 33.
·
~..
B
7· 30 - That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Buck ~ens ;
' Episode Action 33; Help Thy Neighbor 4; Pollee Surgeon 6 ;
Municipal Court 6; To Tell the Truth 13; Washington Straight
' 00
Talk
20.
G
k B 10 ·
f:
- Born Free 3, 4, 15; Rookies 6, 13 ; unsmo e • .
· Hollywood TV Theatre 20, 33.
.,
9:110- NFL Football 6,13; Maude B. 10; Movie "Godfather 3, 4,
' 15.
'9: 30 - Rhoda B, 10.
10:110- Medical Center B, 10; News 20; Washington Straight Talk
. ' 33.

-

1t :I10-N_ews3,4,6, B, 10, 13, 15.
N y k" S·
11:30- JOhnny Carson 3, .4, 15; Movies ''Sunday In ew or
•
1.

" The Big Game" 10.

12:11012:301:00 ·1 :302:00-

News 6, 13.
Mission Impossible 6; Untouchables 13.
Tomorrow 3, 4.
News 13.
News 4.

They'll Do It Every Time

easier.

'

eLAMBS,

f~::~~~==~~;~~~~;,~~~~--~·

'

. ePIGLETS

eCOLTS ·

ASk us about our CO·OP Tire "Ute of the Tread" guarantee with no time

or mileage limitation.

,

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7

01111 .

eSHOW ANIMALS

See LANDMARK for Plug•, FIINri, Shoclra,Be~rle•~ Trucl( &amp; Tr..:tor, 1/r~,'loo.

'

J. D. NQrth Produce Co.
Vin!l! Street

I

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AT ·PARTICIPATING
LANDMARK D.Ef\LER~ .

Ga Ill polis, Ohio

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11 17 61p
FIREWOOD l or sale. cu t your
I own size or p iece . Phon e 99'1
'i717
I I 3 tic
F I REWOOD to r sa le . Ca l l 7d2
·18 3 I
10 ?9 16 t c
1'970 YAMAHA m o to rcycle.
g oo d
ru nn 1ng
con dition
Ph one &lt;t92 72'26
1 I 17 Mp

F I REWOOD
s tove . Cut
992 76·1&lt;1

for ! •replace or
to l en g th Phon e
11 3 26 1C

B ABY Bed com p l ete Exce ll ent
co nd i t ion $15 P h one 965 39 88
I I 17 Jtc
COAL , delivered $20

per to n .

1970 1 TON C hcvrolel tru c k.
d ua l whee ls. VB. ·1 speed
Look s and run s good Harol(l
Brewe r , Long Bottom, Ohio
Phone 98~ 355 4
1 1 17 lfc

B EAUTIFUL AK.C S&lt;Jble and
Wh •t e Col li (' puppie S, SJO each
Phone 98 5 3609
11 17 76c

1 WO ridmq horses. on e pony ,
l i flh house on ri g ht past golf
c ou rse a! Ches ter on SR 1.t B.
11 17 lip

H P. N DAY OLD ar star ted
L c qhorn pul l e ts Both floor or
c age
grow n
avai l able .
Poultry
ho u s m g
and
automat 1o n Modern Pou lt ry.
399 w Ma m . Pomeroy, 991
1 164
11 17 H e

Call 742 66Z1

ELECTRO LUX
vacu u m
c lea n e r , A I con dition , uses
pape r bags. has cor dw 1n der
and many allclchment s Also.
s hampooer a ttachm ent 1n
e l ud ed (On ly 4 ava d clble) a t
\37 70
ca s h
or
te rm s
a vai l nble Phone 992 7755.
11 13 .lfc
NEW l97d Z I G ZAG SEW ING
MACHINES
In
o r1gi na1
factory carton N ew l1g Zag
to make but lon holes , sew on
bu1 t on s. monograms , and
make f ancy d es igns with just
the twist of a Slngl e·di a l Left
m l ay a way and never be en
used Will se l l l or only S.47
cash , or ter m s available
Phone 992 7755
11 13 tf c
'A FEW new band in st rument s
Con t act Renee Stone 992 ·7567
9·4-tfc

· G RAVEL . sa n d, Mason sand,
11mes tone , Pit Run by th e to n .
De l i vered Phone 1111 6· 11 42.

10 18 ttc

1967 MUSTANG 289, au tomat ic,
dua l el1: hausl. On e dou b le
P•ckup
electric
guitar .
Harmony solid bod y ele c tr ic
bass guita r ; K i mberly fta• .
Llo p guitar. 2 speake r cabinets
w 1th two 12 In ch speakers per
cabinet . Bell Tempo 150 P .. A .
power un 11 All above items
are in very good cor,di t lon .
Ph one 9119 3151 before 5 p . m .
or qA9. ]611d afte r 5 p . m
11 hi Jtc

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1974 360 YAMAHA E n duro, tow
mileage, l1ke new co nd it ion
Lo t s of el(tras Phone 247 22 45.
11 · 14 .3t c

FI R EWOOD , any length Ca ll
992 ·5422 or 992 ·3312.
J1 . 1Q .26t p

- - -------------

GRA I N fed Angus b ee f . Phon1
965 39411 .
11 10 611
ONE two year otd draft colt, on e
black lle• ter, t wo Holstei n
he •fe rs Phone 992 5795 .
11 13 Jtc
1953 FERG U SO N with mower,
$1,1100 Phon e 965 3594 .
II 17 7tp

FUNNY BUSINESS

By RogerBo/1.,.

+++
NOTE : For Your Copies of "What Is a Crush - What Is a
First Love - What Is Getting to Know Yourself?" send a
STAMPED, self-addressed, LONG enevelope to Helen and Sue
Bottel, P. 0 . Box 23057, Sacramento, calif., 95823. Send extra
stamps If you want extra copies.

Th e co unt ry wit h t h e
lowest recorded s uicide ra te
is Ma lta , wi th on ly one
sui cide in 1967.
F-------r;
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We.talk to you

•

•

'•

.

like. a person.

·'

WMP0/1390:
ON YOUR DIPI
I,.

1

• 2 plus 2 heavy duty carcass construction,

• Country Squire 120 runs cooler, 'the extra
deep· tread means longer life andgreater
economy.
•.
· • c,n be pinned Yiilh ,No. 16 size meial .ice
: grip studs lqr the ullimi te in traction an4
·' \ ,~;topping ability on 'Ice, ' , I' ,. r · ·.;: ·
, • Strong, durable Chlorob.utyJ inner liner;;•.
duces air loss to an absolute minimum.

P!lo n e

.111 0 JO l iN
DEERE d o1 e r ,
hydr iHJii c l) l,l d l' ;, n (l w ·m c h .·~
(, •. UOr'J rrwnf' 9ft "&gt; 1 59d
I 1 17 7tp

ANTIQUES
pic cab in et.
LOC!JS T po s t s. 22 Remi n gton
sewinq mach m e , (over 10.0 ...... an 'd - 1.72 acre lot . P h on e 7A2 ·
y enr s o ld l •ce box Call 99'7
3656
11qR or 7.t1 609 1
10 18 -26t p
11 13 &lt;li e

Dear LMA:
A habit that boillejs you before marriage will drive you wlld
after marriage when you must face it every day. Tell your fiance
exactly how you feel about his table manners and ask illat he let
you help revise them.
Get him to watch how others eat (this is someilling gluttons
seldom do), and maybehe'llreallzehe needs lessons.
"What If he resents your criticism ? Well, It's better illan
"losing your appetite" ille rest of your life. Take that chance ! HELEN
Dear LMA :
Maybe you could try the healill angle. Fast eaters who
stuff themselves usually have weight problems .- which can
eventually lead to high blood pressure, heart trouble, etc. If your
b.f. slows down, he'll eat less because his stomach will have time
to tell his mind he's full beforeanoiller load arrives.
Get it across you're trying to help - illat you love him sc
much you don't want him sick, or people criticizing him.
And here' san Idea : maybe you have a habit illat knocks him
out. &amp;ynake a pact you'll BOTH change, wiill ille oilier's ald. SUE

1:30-:Jecpardy 4, 15; tel's Make A Deal 6, 13 ; As the World
Turns B, 10; Dig II 33 ; Telethon 3.
2:00- DoysofOUrLives3, 4, 15 ; Newlywed Game 13; Guiding
Light 8, 10; Insight 33.
2: 30- Doctors 3, 4, 15; Gltf In My Lite 13; Edge of Night B, 10;
Performance 33.
3·110- Another World 3, 4, 15; Price Is Right B. 10; General
· Hospital 6 ll; Great American Dream Machine 33.
3:30- How to Survive a Marriage 3, 15; Match Game B. 10; One
Life to Live 13; Lassie 6; Dollar Decisions 20.
4:110- Mr. Cartoon and the Banana Spills 3; Somerset 15;
Tattletales 8; Sesame St. 33; Gilligan's Is. 6; $10,000 Pyramid
13; Bonanza 4; Movie " The Lone Ranger'' 10.
,
.
4:30- Jackpol4 ; Bonanza15; Mod Squad 6; Gilligan sIs. 13 ,
Bewitched 3; Lucy Show B. "
5:00- Merv Griffin 4; Mister Rogers 20, 33; Anything You Ca ~
Do 13; FB13; Andy Griffith 8; Ironside 13.
5:30 - Elec. Co. 33 ; Hodgepodge Lodge 20 ; News 6; Trails West

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
7:30p.m.- Family Favorites
9: 30- Operation Gangbuster.

Dynacor belted, · criss ·crossed to provide
strengih equal to 4 full plies-plus 2 additional criss-crossed,belts.
• Extra safety and traction of husky tread ele·
ments that dig deep for mobility in mud
and snow.
• Special construction reduces·tread squirm,
. . stabilizes tread elements so your ·c~r rolls

lease .

For Sale

~: ~:_ News3, 4,115; News B. 10; Sesame St. 20; ABC News 6, 13;

POMEROY, OHIO

CO-OP c·ountry Squire 120POSITIVE Stop and Go In
Mud\or Snowl

IREWOOD for sale
99') ~~!J~ al t er 3 p m

+++

.r

lor s ole or

For Sale

,,,.,u 1 ER G tJ '; ON
front end
10r1d er , t i ,'I UO Phone 9B S 3'.94
11 17 ltp

11 10·6tc

Dear Helen and Sue:
I love my boyfriend and we're planning to get married, but
there's one big problem : his table manners.
He gobbles his food, ticks his fingers, sticks ille knife in his
mouill, uses his own dirty utensils to get butter or second
helpings. It's bad enough when he's at my house, but at a dinner,
I get terribly embarrassed.
I've tried hwnor, like, "Robert Redford wouldn't do that."
And compliments: " You have such class illat you really
shouldn't put your knife inyourmouill." No luck.
He just doesn't illink table manners are important, maybe
because he never learned them at home. He sees nothing wrong
wiill the way he eats.
Shall l just try to get used to it, or what? -LOSING MY
APPETITE

::~- ~~~i~ B,

·'

Here Is one which is all of that because of Its
easy to mix qualities, high nutritional value
, and low cost. Calves like Its fresh taste, Its
palatiblllfy and naturalness.
·

eCALVES

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'

A e.llltn COrn Crib keepo Its high r..-le value year attar yer ... because Irs 'built for a :
llf.tlmo of "'1111«1 setvloe. Every, f!ehlen Crib Is Hol-lllp Galva~lzad otter welding. ...
compl.tely coverad all surfaces I inclUding weld spots) with up to 6 times the amount of zinc
· t~UM~on l!l'dlnary cribs. The Behlen Crib Is made of No. 2-gouge Bar Mesh Steel (over '!.'' in
'IIMriM!II'). Welher-llghl "Steep Pilch" roof flits to the peak without hand leveling. Extra
..._~lbdaors. In sizes from 679 to 2155 bushels.

Dear Clean :
Or you might say, "I'm allergic." That usually stops 'em. If
you're stuck with a per~i:;tent smoker yo)! can't shake, tell him,
"Look, I won't try to argue you out of using pot If you don't try to
argue me into it, okay ?" - HELEN

..______,"·"

.•'•'...

She Needs a Pot Put-()H
'
What do you say to friends who insist I should try pot ' One
guycouldn 'tbetieve I hadn~ touched it at ille age of 15.
,
Everyone tells me I should get turned on, but I don't want to
pollute my mind any more than it is already. !'in no saint - l
smoke and drink a tittle - but I just don't want to get mixed up
'wiill drugs .
What's a good reply?- CLEAN BUT NOT SO clEAN

+++

ii

DIVISION CREATED .
BUYER$
~:::
'
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
@ Ohio Agricultural Markeling The livestock Industry Is ·
~owing and needs qualified
:...::.. Associalion created ille Farm
uyer's . You must be able to
Friday to
:;:~ Market Division
eep
up with today's volatile ,
!'~ r epresen t farm roadside
rarkels.
.•
::;: marke t operators in Ohio. The
ITo qualify you should have a :
•'•' division will help iLs membCrs
,.,::::
·:·: by organizing group purchases
arm . or
agr lcu ltura'l .
....
:-:·
"ackground
enjoy
....
.... of paper bags, fruit and oilier r,,orklng with andlivestock.
·:·:
:·:·
•'•' input items, supply market ~~ite today with your ex.
&amp; background, for
information, helping individual ~rlence
n Interview In your area.
.... marketers purchase fruit and Include name. address ,
hone number and age..
:~:j veg e tables , organizing
:-:·
•'•' workshops, helping to merAMERICAN CATTLE CO,
.•.·
..•.
chandise producLs ·and con175 W. Jackson Blvd.--.14
Chicago, Illinois 60604
ducting
market
research
and
=~
;.,.
-:··
analysis.
....;

EASY AND
ECONOMICAL
TO FEED.
'

·"'

busin ess for sale .

ra n.u , e 17 3 ',lltR from 8 : 30p . m .
tl) •0 p n1 f or appointmcnl
:1 ?0 lie

Dear CBNSC :
How about "No, illank you" and change the subject?
H somecne keeps on and on and on (as dopers sometimes
do ), walk away. - SUE

r---------~.
~~~
NEEDED
Cattle. Hog· &amp; Sheep

'f\•l+l!l illtl

Rap:

I

For Sale

GROCERY

By Helen and Sue Bottel ,

~=~

REPLACER

'·

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.:*•.
~:~:

MILK

.

WASHINGTON (UP!) Soybean prices already are
sharply above last year 's
harvest • season level and will
advance further In coming
months,
according
to
Agriculture Department
economists.
Experts writing in a Fats and
Oils Situation sununary noted
illat wiill production down this
year because of unfavorable
weather, farmers have been
averaging about $8 a bushelfot

For Sale

Generation
Rap
'

u·J!

By John C. Rice
Ext. Agent, Agrlculture

butter and other dairy food s.
This is more than 28 per cent
below the 740-pound per capita
consumption figure for 1950.
A Department dairy expert
said the 1974 estimate, down 15
pounds or 2.7 per cent from
·1973, is the smallest in
government records which go
back half a century to 1924.
A detailed study of the
records also
indicates,
however, that part of the long
decline has been due to a factor
which will have comparatively
II tile impact In ille future - the
sharp drop over the past two
generations in the amount of
milk consumed on the farm .
With farm use of milk down to
an
almost
irreducible
minimum in recent years, per
capita consumpUon of milk has
been holding a t a com- !ices in the motel were used for
paratively steady level.
the coaching staff and were not
the team's corporate offices.
The team's coaches set up a
AMS THROWN OUT
temporary office at Legion
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UP!) Field and waited for ille return
- A motel chain threw ille of club owneo 1 Bill Putnam.
World Foothall League Bir- Putnam has been in New York
mingham Americans out on ille trying to borrow money for ille
street Tlllrsday because the tea m.
team could not pay its bllls.
The state says the 14jam owes
The Americans also revealed almost $90,000 in back taxes.
they had not paid their players The team also owes Jefferson
for five weeks nor illelr County and the city of Bircoaches and staff in two weeks. milngham around $14,000 each
Team officials said the of. in

\

up.

the high-protein beans which.,
are a major feed ingrellient far
meat and poultry produ~ : ;
During the harvest ~son p· '
year ago, fanners w~ . get~ · ·
$5.50 a bushel.
'
More price hikes are ell' ··
peeled later, the rejlort aa~ . a
because
farmers
are ·v
marketing the ~educed 1974 ,
crop slowly ln an effort to mlii ·
top returns' from the ,market . ~;
•

;:~
:;~

easily worked, have good drainage, and are well aerated, all of
which provide desirable conditions for good plant root growih
and development.
Composting may be done in a pile, heap, pit, or a bin type
structure. You'll probably want to screen \he composting area
from view with 'landscape plantings, or a ·fence .
A suggested procedure for coinpost layering follows (some
gardeners may want to adjust the procedure to fit their individual preferences and materials they have on hand):
- Use available plant materials; avoidlng diseased
materials, fruit pits, bones, etc. The pile may be built over a
period of time as materials become available.
-Apply materials IQ be composted in alternating layers.
First layer, use plant residues 6 to_}2 inche.s thl~k,; second _layer,
garden soil or liharp aand about l·mch thick; Iiilrd layer, thin
layer of nutrients or elements to promote decomposition.
Commercial fertlli2er or dehydrated animal manures may be
used. A limestone additive is desirable, also.
- Moisten ille three layers of material but do not create a
soggy condition by adding too much water too often. Repeat ille
layering process unW the heap is about five feet keep.
. - To provide aeration, make the (irst layer a coarse plant
material such as coarse stalks to adlitit air to the base of the pile.
Turn the plle periodically willl a pitch fork or hay or garden fork.
Be sure to turn the pile over and incorporate the material at the
edges into the center of the pile when turning.
The time required to produce a good-compost depends on ille
type of material uaed, Its fineness or coarseness, and wheiller or
not desirable environmental conditions for rnicroblcal activity
are maintained (adequate nutrients, aeration, and moisture).
Compost material can be made in as short a time as 14 days, If
the materijll Is finely ground or shredded, kept moist and turned
frequently to provide good aeration. In most cailes, you' should
not plan on cOmpost being ready to use in less ilion four to six
months, Just piling up materials and allowing nature to take Its
course can take a year or more for compost to'result.
Compost Is ready to use when it Is dark brown in color,
friable, and breaks up readily when furned over.

Dairy foods use is down

''

Our spiriLs were high that evening,
two nice ·bucks in one day and the
prospecLs looked excellent for ille rest
of our hunt. ·
The next day two more lucky
hun ters. My broiller, Mike from St.
Paul, Minn. downed a 7-point buck· as it
moved from its morning feeding area to
iLs bedding area. It was the bes t shot
made on the trip, 275 yards off-hand and
it was running. One shot ! We said ·Juck.
Mike says skill.
·
Midway through the second day
Rick Hann, Wayne National Fores t
Engineer, took his venison, a nice fat
fork-horn , again with one shot.
Our guide, Joe Brunetti, had to
leave after the second day but by now
we knew il1e Jay of ille land fairly well .
We 're averaging two bucks a day: to
J ohn Weiss, a free lance outdoor writer
from Athens, and myself figure no
problems. However ...
After two more days of dawn to
dusk hunting in snows torms , h ot
we ath er, cold weather, plans,
stra tegies, stalks, drives and bone
aching weariness, not another buck was
sighted!
Doe season began on the last day
we planned to hunt. John and I decided
the 'evening before to take one If ille
opportunity arose.
.
We saw a few during il1e morning .
hunt on drives which normally
produced 10 to 15 deer, but none offered
a goodshot. Had we hunted the
remainder or the day I'm sure we could
have put venison on the table. However
illere was a 1500 mile trip to consider,
so by I p.m. we were on the way home.
I still think of illat buck I passed up
ille first morning but not·in a bitter sort
of way at all. I was looking for a trophy
and didn't get it. With all the fun and
adventure ,- good companions, and
·stories to tell, there can never be an
unsuccessful hunt for me.

County agent's corner

.I

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~OI.lfi'IOS

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SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZI.ER

I

SUNf)AV, NOVEMBER 11,1974
ACROSS
1 Rock

71 '£quality
72 Guido's high
note
74 LtiMI

131
132
133
135

At this place
Obtain
Levees

Definite article

20
27
29
31

Periods of time
Dine

91 Kind of

Ou1rrel1

9~

foot race

••
••

Takes unlawfully

Rubbenree
93 Small plant
36 GOalt
95 Country of Asia
76 Period of time 138 Chicken
11 Wipt1 out ld .
37 0 e b111 bl e
96 Beneath
lpl. abbr.I
139 Sooka
18 lndiln 10 11r
D'
97 Goe1 by water
39
Pterc:e
1~
A
ltltt
1
abbr
.)
tttance
77
21 Foot Iever
99 Liquefy
78 Leuen
141 Sodium chloride
muture
22 P'·co 1·n 11·ne
~
· 1o · --..
••clite .
101 Writ of execution 'Ht--t23 mature
79 Typifie1
142 Spanith en•c
24 Soep plant
82 Followed a cir- 143 Latin conjunction41 ApportiOn
105 Expired
25 Goat
cular courn
144 Addltlonol
~2 Of bod
t06 Care for
ful
84
Communidn
145
Trumpetlr
bird
diapotition
107
Wife of Geraint
26 L.w
.
n
111
Winglike
••
43
F
hiO
7
N
28 l'onnod
plote
14 ec ....rv
G
f
· · b. d
85 Saucy
149 Greek tetter
44 rent uae o
112 European
30
lr I
·
46 Note.of aca1e 113 Winter vehicle
32 D1v1ng
Nate of ecale
86 Instrument
150 TranNCtlon•
,
88 River in Africa . 152 Gown•
48 Oanilh llland 115 Dampens
33 Nanative
-•
89
Bold
.
154
Old
Sco1tith
49 Evaluate
116 vOeprettion
34 Prtnt' t
118
e
vntment
90 Place lor combat
clen chief
50 Journey
erv
35 Poem
92 Lana•
156 Adjudge
51 Having le••
119 Pottessive
Pertaining to
158 Puff up
color
pronoun
94
96 Competent
· 52 Rom on
121 Getting up
lilies
169 lean ·tot
37
Dotace
·1
123 Symbol for iron
.d
98 Conduct
180 Warbles
o11·ICII
38 Arl
125 Becomes
53 Stop
99 Majority
161 Taut
40 Vepor
S5 World War I
exhausted
100 Pronoun
42 Beln dobt
do
oow'N
President
!colloq.I
43 Dlttance
102 Fhted perto
56 Snatch
128 Paper measure
me..ure
time sheep
·
57 Growin"'• out of 127 Foot runners
•• Dofoot
103_ot
Nahoor
1 Squander
-45 Unit Of S iomese 104 Sick
2 s·'"g 1ng vo&gt;ee
·
58 Enticingwoman129 The ones here
61 Biblicol wood 130 Briattelike
3 Unuaua I
currency·
105 Amount owed
• 1 Beom·•rches
108 wooden pin
4 A continent
63 Cleyey et,.nh
131 PronOun
••a Euro~•n
(• bb r. i
6A MerN
132 G
Drinking vessel
108 Obstruct
·'
· h
'"" copitll
•·•
c
h
68
One
who
134
uido·o h&gt;g
109 Romen gods
6 lot measure
110 Symbol for
6 King of bird1
treats tee1h.
nate
50 A.......
....,
( 1J
_ 70 Made resolute 136 Li1tens to
71 S uttering
1 A
51 Punctuotlon
P1·tit.
137 Evade
mork
111 calcium
Ioiii
139
Flower
~· Solar d1•1 k
112 Makes deaper
8 Snome
73 Beg
9 prtn
· to r's
74 Wito of Zous 140
Matured
55 Smattlump•
114 Recent
,._.Encountered
~ lrrttotn
116 Astate (abbr .I
measure
75 European
"" Sum up
10 Recent
145 Poueuivo
Man's nickname
·w
117 .PHpholo
71 ermine
Rent
146
~ Fondle
119 Workman
11 Wnrowoy
..,
12 C emany
78 Foundation
pronoun
.12 Hermh
120 River in
"
80 Tear ·
147 Large truck
13
lA Facial
Arizona
Simien
148 Unit of Latvian
oxpr-n
122 Pull off
14 Campau p_oint 81 Drunkard
86 Symbolfor
124 Young boy
15 Moke pouiblo : . ~!cri:,·~~s
149 -~",;~~~~~
nlckOt
125 Awoitoettloment 18 Benofrt
161 Note otscale
• ChinMI mile
126 Th.;tte borne
17 Printer'•
87 Whipped
153 E ~ec la mation
17 Mournful
128 Number
.
ff!111~fl lpU
89 Battered
165 Greeting
18 Pope's veil
129 F.ormer Run •an 18 Rtver.tn Italy
90 ~~~~~~~ me
167 Pronoun .
10 $Uike
ruler
19 Spentlh potl
.6 Dined

'.
'\

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..

••

•

••~
..•

•
, ..,.•

:

e

~:
~

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\

28 - The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday. Nov. 17, 1974

.

'

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For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
In Memory

For Rent

Yard Sales

IN MEMORY of. James 0 Hu nt YARD SALE . -' 20 Sp rin~ Ave .
Pomer oy , Frid av . S~ l . an d
who pas~e d away Nov n .
Sund,w .- ~ nt i Que q\a ss wAr e .
1973 . on e year ago .
clo th in q ,,nd mise items
I I 1.1 J t c
The old home p l ace is lonely
Sin ce you l eff me t h at day ,
Lifen nd h ome are n ot th e sa m e,
Since you w er e called away
I som e ti mes sit and wonder
Just why you had to go ,

We were so happy toge the r
A nd 0 , I mi ss you so ,

Jusr a c lu s t er of b{'autiful
· memor ies.
Sprayed wilh a mil l io n ter~n. .
W is h you could
h im, L ord ,

hav e

spnrcd

Just lor a fe w more yea r s
Kathryn , G rands.on Sc o tt .
Beverlee. Bi ll W:ick.line , Mr
and Mr s . Berl Hunt.
11 17 ll c

------ - - - - -----

IN MEMORY o f our father ,
Richard B Row e. who had to
l ea\le us .one year ag o, No v .

14.

Pets For Sale
J

A.KC ma le toy poodles .
Woul d make nice Christmas
q d ts See at Carl Rairden ·s
r es iden ce. Hartford . w va .
11 17 6t C

SA 1NT tjer nard pups , l i DO . 3
mon th s old . Phone 843 2438
I I 15-6t c
E N GLI SH Shepher d puppi es .
$10 619 Page St .. M iddleport .
Phone 997 39~3 .
11 13 ~ lp
POODLE qrooming , SS
667 3 9 1 ~
Coo l vi ll e
welcome you r bus in ess

Ca ll
We

11

13 61p

'
It seems only yesterday w e ha d
to w a t &lt;; P, you go ; and t h e loss

------------ ---

--- - -------- -Card of Thanks

- ---- - ----- - ---

Notice

TURKEY SHOOT
TODAY
STARTING I P.M.

Racine Gun Cub
Ohio

Racine

TURKEY MATCH . Corn Hollow
Gun Club , tu rn right after
Miles Cemetery , Rutl and .
Factory choked guns only .
Sunday, Nov . 17. 1 p , m .
ll -14-3tc

'\

SHOOTING Match, Racine Gun
Club , Sunday. Nov . 17, 1 p .m .
· Jl -13 -4t c
TURKEY Shoot, Racine Gun
Club , f p .m . Sunday, Nov . 17.
11 -17 -H c

Employment Wanted
wI L L

00

or
Phon£'" 99 '2 -

babysitti n-g

h ousec l e~ n i ng .

'2 403.

GEN-ERA

Help Wanted
HOW TO EARN MONE Y A T
HOME
MAILIN G
COM
MI SS I ON
C IR CULARS!
EXCELL"ENT
PROFIT
POTENTIAL OFFER
DETA IL S 25c &amp; STAMFIED
A DDRE SS ED ENVELOPE
ANN CLARK. 122 3 LA CLA ~R .
PGH . P A. 152 18 .
11 -I0 -26tp

For Rent
FURN "I SHED apa r tmen t , 4
r oom s an d bath . 104 Sp ring
Ave ., Pome r oy . 99 2-5908 .
11-17 -6tc
3 F URNI SHED rooms on East
Main St . Phone 992 -2381 .
11-17-3tc

HOUSE for r ent , •- ~ mile below
Eastern Hi gh" Sc hool. For
interview , call 985 -3516 .
ll -l7 -3tc
TRAILER space on priva te lot ,
3 m iles from Pom eroy . Phone
367 -7743 .
11 -17 -Jtc

AUCTION ,
Thur sday
and TRAILER , 2 bedroom. Brow n's
Saturday night. 7 p .m . at
Trailer Park . Phone 992 -332 4.
Mason Auct i on , Horton . St. in
11 -8-tfc
Muon , W . Va . Consignments
wel Come . Phon e ( 304) 773 T RAILER space, 2 mi !e5 from
5471 .
'
10-3-ffc . Porn ero y, R t . 143. Phone 992
5858 .
10-27 -tf c
KCHcol
K6..SMETICS :
Rememb er Christmas is
H OUSE and trailer for rent in
com ing . we have many new
town. 2 bedrooms . Phone 992 -·
products that will make ni ce
3975 and 992 -2571 .
gifts. Phone BROWN 'S, 99211 -6-lfc
51 13.
11 -3 -lfc
~ AND 4 ROOM furnished and
unfurnished
apartments .
Phone 992-5434 .
4-12-tfc

OPEN HOUSE
..
Attend our open. house,
Sunday, Nov. 17, I to 5 ~
p.m. Take an envelope
from our treasure
chest and receive free
gift of 10 to 50 Pet. off
purchases. Novelty
1 F•bric and Craft, 230
Washington
Blvd.,
Belpre, ·Ohio.
Craft Classes Every
Thursday Night
7 p.m.
ATTENTION
FARMERS .
Lumber for sate . Rough
lumber for. farm use . Contact
· Pomerov Forest Produc ts, P .
0 . BOx 726, -Pomeroy , Ohio .
Phone 99~ - 5965 .
11 -7-12tc

F UR NI SH ED
apartment ,
ul ilit ics f urn is hed, suita bl e
t or tw o working men or
r e l ir~d coup le . L iv in g room.
k1 tc hen . shower and ba th On
ma in highwa y , M a5on . W Va
Phone 773 SIJ 7
10

'}7

th:

FUR NI SHED apt. tor r ent , 3
rooms and bath . fi rst floor ,
newly d ecorated . Phone 99 2
2937 .
11 15 Jtc

Auto Sales
l &lt;f68 OLOS hardtop . p .s ., p _b ..
air , goo d cond i t io n , ssoo
Phone 949 32 11.
11 17-3tp
1966 GMC handy van , good
running and good bod y Phone
99'1 7889 or 992 5310 .
111 7 11 c
1969 FOR D VB , air c on
ditioning , 390 motor with new
pai nl io b , in excell ent con dit ion Phon e 949 3927
11 -lS -lfC

---- - - - - - - - -

19 63 CHEVROLET co nvert ible ,
n ew tir es, runs good . 1972
Che v rolet , 11 ton pickup
!ruck , ( 10 ca b, low mi leage .
Phone 742 -4461 .
11 14 -Jtc
1969 LJUU t;; t LJart Swinger 340 .
4 speed, b right re d with black
hood Phone 949 -3754 .
11 -lJ.6tp

For Sale

FOR

SA i.E
'

Excellent opportunity for a
couple to own &amp; operate gas
station and grocerY carry
out. Has three pop machines,
tire changer, air compresser
&amp; room for three cars. Has a
modern apartment above
business. Two enclosed
porches, two bedrooms &amp;
hardwood
floors .
Has
modern kitchen with side-byside freezer &amp; refrigerator
and gas stove.
Located on Sa I em
51.,

Rulland, 0 . Can be seen by
calling 742-5061 or 1-419-841-

4012.
Priced lo sell S2o,ooo
SUPER stuff. sure nuf! That's
Blue Lustre for c l eaning
carpe l s.
Rent
e lectr i c
sha mpooer Sl. Baker Fur niture Co mpany , Middleport.
Oh io
ll -15 -3tc
L OWERY organ with ac cess ories. A beautiful Christ . ma s gilt. must be seen to
apprecia t e. May be seen at
249 Union Avenue or call 992 56 17.
ll -15 -12tc
078 x 14 Goodyear whitewall
tire . Phone 992 -5485 .
11 -15-Jtp

PRIVATE meeting room for
any organ ization ; phone 992 3975 .
3-11 -tfc

DELU XE
electr i c
stove.
avocado green, double oven
rot is serie , exce ll ent condition. only used a few
; owners moved out of
'lotiNTRY;;;;;·;-~~e ; ; k , · months
state, wi ll sacrifice for $250,,
Rt . 33 , t en miles north of
cost S500 n ew . Call 992 -2677 or
Pomeroy . Large lots with
992 -2437 .
concrete ·patios. s idewalks,
11 -tS -3tc
1· unners
and
off
street .
parking , Also, spaces for
small trailers . Phone 992-7479. HEREFORD Ho ls te in ca lves.
Phone 843-2353.
7-21-tfc
ll -15-3tc;
2 BE-DROOM doub l e w1d e
mobi le home in Sy r ac vse. No CLOSE OUT on new Zig -Zag
Se w ing Machines . For sewing
c hildren or pets, deposit
st retch fabrics, buttonholes,
r equired. Phone 992 -2441 after
fancy designs, etc . Paint
6 p.m .
s lightly blemished . Choice of
10-29-tfc
carrying case or sewing
FuRNisHEo a pt.- AdUits Only,
s tbnd $49 .80 cash or terms
M iddleport . Phone 992 -3874.
availabl e. P'hone ?V2 -7755 .
11 -14 -tt c
11 -S-tfc

--'---------- ---

--------------

UNFURNI SHED
house ,
4
room s and b ath . 1650 Lincoln
H.eigh t s. Phone 992-3874.
11 -1.4 -lfc
- - - - - - - - -- - - - - HOUSE tor renl , furnish ed or
unfurni s hed at Langsv i ll e.
Call 742 -5986 .
11 -14 -3tc

STEREO . radio, am -fm , 8
track tape combin.!r1tion, 4
speaker
sound
system
Balance S109 .56 or easy
terms . Call 992 -3965 .
11 -S-tfc

:~o; n es

Moh''''

For s.-1e

Real Estate· For Sale .

1970 VALIA NT 65x 12, 3bedroom
fully carpe ted . LP·gas h eat .
Phone 997 7751 .
ll ?5 lfc
1RAOE in
like new·, Jq 77
1 r cedo m
17 )( 60 . 3 door ,
corp c f e d
~hrouqhout ,
2
bed ro om ,
ma n y
luxu ry
tco tu r es. &lt;&gt;ave -1 0 pet . of
o riQint~l sal t' p r ice . Buy with
or wilhoul fur nitu r e Can be
see n n t K in qs bu ry Home
\ales to! . 1100 E Main St ,
Pomer oy . Oh io . or ca ll 99'/
"103-1
11 I ) 'riC

Real Estate For Sale

Special
.

ALL

REPLACE those tired sagging
sofa cush ion s Wi!t;J new foam
cui to size , only S10.95 -atJack's
Furniture
and
Upholstery Supplies, 236 E.
Ma in St., Pomeroy . Phone
992-3903.
11 -6-12tc

'

- - ----------.,-1957 CHEVY parts : NEW

DRESSES

Lakewood tracti on bars , fli jacker lllr shocks, hooker
headers , with 3" c oll ~ ctors tor
small block . Call 992 -J496
after 6 p . m', BEST OFFER .
1
10-17 -tfc

1f2
PANT SUITS · .
1 , AND

PRICE

FOR SALE
The Belly Cline real estate
,located at 224 Walnut Street.
Middleport , Ohio , ·i s being of fered for sale . Previous asking
price Sts ,OOO.OO; now wlll"ing to
sell property at $10,000 .00 . Sale
sub jec t to the approval of the
Probate Court, Meigs County ,
Ohio . If i nterested . please
contact the undersigned .
FrP.d W . Crow
Pomeroy , Ohio.
(11) 15 , t 7, 18, 3t c

...

~·

I

Vrrq1ll~

T~ · ,Jir,,rl

11 ( ()~ '· r
h,Jrl !I 'lt1 ,,, ·I

r',,r'(

ny Ohro

!)/t/1

lfiNYL SIDING

o ·n

Rt . 7. Central heat and air, 2900
NEW
b i -l evet
home ,
3
bedrooms , b uilt in kit chen . Sq . Ft . of floor space. LC.
base ment with o ne ca r water . Excellent location for a
ga r age . Ph one 742 361 5 or see business .
Mi lo H utchison .
Ni ce
4
11 1 tf c SYRACUSE
bedrooms, bath , Na-t. gas F . A.
7 ROOM house wi th '1 baths in furna ce. Basement . 2 porches
Pomeroy . Phon e 99'2 -3478 .
and 2 ca r carpo rt.
10- 15 26tc BUSINESS - A good grocery
on State Rt . All stock , and
25 ACRES in Olive Twp ., 34
acres ii1 Rutland Twp . and 96 some fixtures . This is your
acres i n Ca rlha ge Twp ., chance for only
A ~h ens
Co . Wrile Box 25, NEW LISTING Large 11
Tupp ers Pla ins, Ohio, or call
room
s,
2
apartments.
2 baths .
667 .31 31.
11 14 -3tc Good place for antiques, or flea
-- ---· -- '--- -- - -------market . Plenty of parking.
HOU SE for sa l e. 249 Union
Asking Sl2,SOO.OO .
Ave , All n@wly decorated
HOME SITE - Nearly an acre
inside . May be seen by ap
lot on T. P. wa1er . in good subpointment . Phone 99 '1 5617 .
11 J5-11tc
d iv ision.

S8.ooo:oo.

MANY
BARGAINS
TO
CHOOSE FROM . SHOULD
YOU WANT TO DISPOSE OF
ANY PROPERTY, SEE US.
WE WILL HELP YOU, OR NO
CHARGE.

FOR SALE

7 ROOM HOUSE
AND BATH
Garage . 2 Lois.

THE DEPENDABLE
OONTRACTING 00.
bterlor
Decorating and
Remodeling

',•

PH. 992-7454 or
Free Estimates, Middleport, 0 -

Quiel neighborhood .

Reasonably Prit ed "
On lincoln Drive

Business Opportunities

For Appointment Ph. 992-

1974 CHRYSLER

Town &amp; Countrv , 9 pass .
sta . wagon , luggage r ack ,
f~ctor'r' air. all the fine
e1dras
In c luding
the
M lance of an 18.000 m l'e
warranty . Low milea ge.

All Sman ApplianceS
Lawn Mowers

By day or hour, reasonable
rates, reliable people with
m edica l training .

Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

or742-4902 after 5 p .m.

GHEEN'S PAINTING
9,1J9-3295

Racine, 0.

Interior &amp;
Exterior Work
FREE ESTIMATE
Fully Insured

]~==========;
D&amp;D
OONSTRUCTION
PHONE

Keep1out the cold and cut the cost of heating!
Dress your home UP. warm · for cold da~s
ahead. Siding: Insulates, adds beauty' IS
durable, adds value, is colorful. Siding can be
installed anytime. Ask us about Soffit, Fascia,
Gutters and Downspouts, too.
FREE EST·IMATE

OOMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE &amp; REPAIR

Water, Electric, Ga!., Sewer .
Lines ,
ins1a lied.
Work
guaranteed.
Dozer, Backhoe, Trucks

Llmoslone &amp; Fill Dirl

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

OL D 4 ·room house with 2 ni ce
lot s in Sy ra cu se, $3.000 or
possible land contract_ Ph
99 2 5898.
11 11 61C
BUILDING lot , 80ft . fron tage x
165ft. Th e second lot on left on ·
Riverview Drive, L in coin
Hill , Pomeroy , Ohio . If in terested , call 992 -3230 after 5
p .m .
10-17 -tfc

NO COMPETITION
No Fees
No Warehousing
Patent Protection
Six Year History
Repair windshield and plate
glass at less than 20 per cent
of replacement cost.
Minim u m investment of

SlO,OOO.OO.
Call Collect : Mr. Franklin

(214) 242-8581
The Glass Doctor, Inc .
· 2225 Belt Line Road
Carrollton, Texas 7S006

HEll

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING ,
Complete plumbing &amp;
heating service. Free
Estimates.
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992-3995
or 992-5700

----- ~

All
work
guaranteed. Phone 949-"3611.

FoR- FREE- - ;stim-;les on:
aluminum
replacement·
windows. siding , storm doors:
and wirldows, Ra ili ng . Phone.
Charles Lisle, Syracuse, Ohio.,
Carl
Jacob ,
Sa les.
Representativ e ,
V.
V.
Johnson and Son, In c.
4-30-tfc

Ranch, OVached

garage, modern kitchen, city
water, additional cement

block bldg., $23,00.00.
3 BR-frame, full basement,

---------------

all elec .. nice lol , $18,500.00.
NEW- All elec., carpeled, J
BR., air condlllonlng,
$17,500.00.

·WILL trim or cu t trees and
shrubbery, also clean out
basements and attics . Phone
949 -322 1 or 742 -4441.
10-18 -26tc

50 A. -Alfred area, some
timber,
· older
home,

$17,500.00.
4 ACRES - 3 BR ranch style
home, full basement, owner.
wi ll take land contract.

.307 Spring Avenue
Pomeroy
· 992-2298
CONTACT:
Lois Pauley,
Branch Manager

CREMEAN"S
CONCRE TE"
delivered Monday through ·
Saturday
and
eve nings ,
Phone 446-1142.
6-13 -ttc .

------------LARPET insta lla tion . S1.25 per.
yard . Pho ne Ri ch ard West ,
a.;J -2667
11 -13-6tp
~E PTIC

TANK S cleaned.
Modern Sanitation, 99 '1-3954 or
992-7349.
9 - 18 - tfc ~

-------------REMODELING , plumbing, and

heating , general repair. Work
guaranteed. Phone 992-2409 .
11 -10-12tp
PI A NO tun i ng an(i '" r e.pair.
Phone Charles Sco tt, 992 -3718 .
9-17 ·32tp

PORTLAND - 4 nice level
lots close to river. Large
older home, 7 rooms, wrap
around porch, garage &amp;
oulbulldlng, good drilled
well.. Asking jus! $4,700.00.
POMEROY - Good 5 room

trame,

natural

gas

heat;

balh, fUll basemen!. Asking
SlO,SOO. Make "a n offer .
·CARPENTER 2 story
freme, 4 . B. R!:, 1V2 bath.s,

dining room. bloc~ oul·
building, 2 garag.., about. 2
acres, can help finance to

right party. $8,000.00 .
TUPPERS PLAINS
1
level acre, lovely ranch lype
home, 2 B.R, Ullllty R. Balh,
H .W .

floors ,

basement .

S13,500.
MIDDLEPORT -

Rl. 1 · 27
acres, nlce . home, 3 B . R .,
balh, "basemen!, N.G. fur·
nace, large barn &amp; silo, milk
house, lool shed. Asking

· DozER or backhoe work ."
Phone 446-3981 or 446 -3459 .
9-8-tfc

----------------

Live' in the rolling hills of
Southern Ohio in. your own
3 BR, all electric mobile
home in Southern Ohio's

newesl mobile home park.
15 min. from Alhens or
. Pomeroy. Price reduced. to
gaf this mobile haqte park
$larled. Sol up &amp; ready lo
move Into. For fUrther

delalls conlact ...
NO DOWN PAYMENT
TO VETERANS

KINGSBURY
MOBILE HOMES
1100 E. Main

Pomeroy, 0.

Ca 11992-7034
Open O&lt;lily 1110 1

SJO,OOO.

74 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

1971 FORD

Middleport, Ohio

Phone 992-5367 or 992-3861

1969 VOLKSWAGEN

SEE US FOR YOUR
UPHOLSTERING NEEDS

ROGER HYSEU'S
GARAGE

FREE ESTIMATE
Pickup ,and Delivery

st.,

air, sharp.

On State Rt . 124, •12 mi. from
Route

7

by-pciss

towards

Rufland.

SYLVIA'S
UPHOLSTERING

'1.395

Ph. 992-5682 or 992-7121

'2695

Pllone 992-2259 or 992-2568

" You ' ll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Bus iness"

See one of these courteous salesmen :
Pete Burris
lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaugh

JUST ARRIVED

z: Oak Dressers,

1974 PLYMOUTH

1-Huge load of collecllblo
furnture: oak china, hutch,
many beautiful

12-2 Piece Livjng Room Sui~s

"49.95 up_

LEATHER TOP !abies,
desks; rockers; and lots of

olher "goodies" In !he
furniture line!
2-0ider small items: ruby
&amp; other depression glass,

beaulilul
hand

lamps,

carved

dolls,
marble

slalufe of Joseph and baby

Notite
ENCLOSED PORCH
TREASURE SALE
Children ' s
clothes .
glassware , &amp; many ather
items. Mon . &amp; Tue s. from 10·
4, the Frank Belvi _fl e
residents, Bob McCormick
Rd.
' Two . wAY Radios s a"les "&amp;
Serv ice . New &amp; used CB's,
pollee mon i tor s, antennas ,
etc. Bob's Citizen Band Radio
'Equip[ , Georges Creek Rd ., ·
Gallipolis, Ohio 446 -4517 .
212-tf

--- ----------

Jesus ; much, much more:

3-NEW
newest

ITEMS :
fad

kllchen -

for

!he

Mama's

!he alr-llghl

apothecafy
bottle
In
several styles, from 67c;

CARNIVAL glass punch
sel~ lor !he ho11days S9.SO,
complele ;
CARN IVAL
covered

turkey

blue willow coffee mugs;

Mainland China ; over 50
prs . sail '&amp; peppers wllh
2 alike!
AND REMEMBER
KUHL'S ALWAYS carries
a full ' line of clean, used

APPLIANCES (ALL with
30-day
M()NEY-"''"'~·
GUARANTEES) : .
now

we

have

a

selecllon of WRING
WASHERS; I us!
hauled, your ch~~·~·
Maylag, Kenmor.e
Qu~n.

Gas or elect . .
S35 (1 beaullful ·
elec1. built-in
refrigerators from
port. dishwasher $25 ;

dryers S35.
COME OUT &amp; SEE
lioocl selecllon of ~lean,
used

("~---CHRISTMAS SPECIAL;;;.·- - - ,
Just arrived, Nov. 1\, 1974, $3,000 .00 worth

of lamps ...

Supplies .
Pick
up
and
deliver y. Davi s Va ~IJJ,I.m
Cleaner 1h mile up Georges
Creek Road . Ph . 446 -0294 .
'
75 -tf

------------

·

•
•
•

..'

PART Ba ss et , part Beag le ,
mate. Last seen in vic inity of
Gage . Reward 379-2364 .
266 -6

~1!!1-~®u..J .,.,~u~-' ,_.
hy I•H N fll 41lNOl D ol11&lt; 1 11 1111 I I I

- -------------

Unacramblethfse r.,..rJumblu,

Notice

Several Bedroom Suil••.-;;::;:-:----'----89 ..95 up
Baby 5-Drawer Chesl &amp; Robe
Combinallo
Priced to Sell
1-While Baby Bed, complote'---------'- 24.9S
1-5-Shelf Round Curio Corner with
5 Levels
-

....-.
"....
·,.,.
....
••
...
......
~

I IKKAH

--------------

NOTICE
The Gallia County Boa rd of
Revis ions have co mpleted
their wor,k and the books are
open for inspect ion .

I HECKE

KJ

Signed by
Gallia County
Board of Rev isi ons
265-10
"RUSS 'S G LA SS SERVICE .
Storm Windows repaired ,
Plexig l ass.
auto .
glass ,
mir ro rs. decorator &amp; cut l o
size. 435 Sec . Ave .• acro ss
from the P.O . in Gall ipol is.
Ph . 446 -7632.
223 -78

2 Door , orange finish, blk. vinyl interior, bucket seats, less
than 5,000 miles &amp; 3 mo. old. Radio. deluxe bumpers.

------------- -

J

1972 DODGE DART WSTOM.. .'... ,.$2495

·=~~·-

4 Door, locall owner car, 318 V -8 engine, automatic trans.,
power steering, air con ditioned, vinyl lrlm, vinyl top,
Autumn gold finish, w -w tires, like new, radio.

J

I

1972 VEGA GT..........................~1995

I

tKRANET~

Hatchback, low mileage by 1 owner, new w -w tires transferred from new car, A speed trans ., radio, green finish ,
black Vinyl Interior, deluxe trim .
JU~T

THE "THlNC&gt;
IF A F'UN.::H
1€- P:EQUIREI7.

I

.'/

'

1970 CHEV. MONTE CARL0..........'1995

RlJFTUEJ
Now JUTIU)(e the circled lettero
V
V:
~ to form the aurpriae anawer, u
I r-...._
~ A aurgested by the above cartoon.
·[~J~~~~~~~~~=J
Pliii . . . . IIISWIIIIllli
I A I I IX I]

I

u-,

r

(An.wl!n Mond•y)
Juml.t~~~:

BROIL DRONE ADAGIO WORTHY

Antwer:

Wired in a tfrange UJalf- "'WEIRD'"

-...•
••
...

-

SALE.!

.

'~

~

;

.,

·2-Component Shelves for Stereo Home

Enlertoinment0ulfil _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,;n,J5

_ 2-Bookcases; __: . _ _ : - - - - - - your choice 39.95

t"""---·_sPE.CIAL THIS WEEK--.....,._,

3 MEDITERRANEAN
TABLES ·.
.

.........
•••

...
=
........
.....
..
::1

""

CNewl with Red Velyei
Inserts. Reg. $210 Set

~

'!

..

~

furniture

quallly,
budge·lI·Pl'ICIHI
NEW · furniture .
ALWAYS ,GET A GCJIOO
DFAL AT KUHL'SI
During 1he winter K~IHlc~•

BARGAIN CENTER
open 5 days a week :
~~silay lhru Sunday
.
9a.m. -7p.m. . ·
(Closed Mon. &amp; Tues.~

'

4-1974 DODGE' PIC~UPS
t,, \ 25..;.NEW 1975 .DODGE
.
CARS AND TRUCKS
·~

No Reasonable Offer
wm Be Refused!

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Sunday, Nov . 17, the
321st day of 1974 with 44 to
follow .
The moon is approaching ils
first quarter.

The

morning

stars

are

Mercury, Mars and Juipter .
·The evening stars are Venus
and Jupiter.
Those born on this day in
history are under the sign of
SCorpio.
social · worker

Grace Abbotl"was born Nov . 17,
1878. This is the 49th birthday
of American actor Rock Hudson
( born Roy Fitzgerald ).
On this day in history:
In 1800, Ule U.S. Congress
convened in Washington, D.C.,
for the first time .
In . 1869, the Suez Canal In
Egypt ·was opened, llnklng the
Red Sea and the Mediter-

fJ
I

II

I
I

I
I
I
I

70 Ford Maverick .................. '1295

Local 1 owner, good w -s-w tires, de/u)( e Int. trim,
wheel covers. radio. 6 cy l. , real economv with std.
trans .• blUe fin., nice.

1968 Chevrolet lmpala .............SS95
.ipt. Cpe., red finish, blk. vinvl top, spotless interior,
good tires, rad io, automatic trans .~ V-8, power
steering.

1------------------------1972 CHEVROLET C-20 % T. ..... ..'2295
8' fleets! de, V-8 engine, 4 speed trans .•. H. duty 151 ' tires,
solid c ab, radio.

1970 CHEVROLET 2 TON
cab &amp; chassis. 108" cab lo axle, V-8, 350 engine,
15,000 lb., 2 speed R. axle, good 82Sx20 !Ires, solid ·
cab.

Hardtop, power steering, auto. trans .

•I
I

i\
'
•I
I

:.
·'
'
'

'

.I

'

'
'·•.

1970 GMC '12 Ton,

• In 1881, Samuel Gompers
organized Ule Federation of
Organized Trades and Labor
Unions ..·. forerunner of the
American Federation of Labor.
In 1969, Ule slrategic anns
limitation talks (SALT) between the United States and Ule
Soviet Union began In Helsinki,
Flnlapd.

Ufe.~·

~'There'

is no wealth but
,

·

e cyl.

ir---__,;,-----.,·;.,
Great Used Car Buys!

You Can Count On For Dependability

1974 GMC lh T. Pickup $3895
P.S., P . B., auto. trans, AM- FM, super custom cab .

1974 Opel Manta Luxus $3195

- -

--- -$995

.-.

Models In Stock.
"WE RUN AVERY SIMPLE BUSINESS"
We Sell &amp; Service Chevrolt"t Cars &amp; Trucks.

Air cond ., P.S., P. BJ' vinyl top, radio, auto. trans .

1973 Plymouth Fury 1.. .....$2595
V-8, P.S., P. B., radio, auto. trans.

'

1973 VW Formula Vee. ... }2395
4 Sp., rallye stripes, radio.

''Y~ur Ctievy Qe'aler~' ·

·992-2126

. Ope_
n Eves. Til&amp;

_
Pomeroy, Ofi!C

~. . . .- - - - -. .---~. .~-----•
.,

'

I

I

''
'
I

. I'

I :
,,
'

I

'

'

'I
'I
• I
'

I

~

!

1972 VW Type 111... ...........$2395 -~
Fuel ln lection, radio, • sp.

1973 Opel Manta ...........}2695
Economical, auto. trans., radio, power brakes.

1971 Pontiac GTO............ 2195
Auto. trans. , air cond., P.S., P. B., radio.

4 ,Dr., P.S., P . 8. , auto. trans.., air cond.

1971 Ford Pinto..:.:...........
Auto. tr~ns .• -4 cyl., low mileage•

1970 Plymouth Duster.....~l
"Slant 6", auto. trans., radio.

SH Caword Colver!, Smllln Art,or Bill Notson ,

POMEROY ·MOTOR CU.

I

1973 Pontiac Catalina....;..s3595

Year-End Deals

On All New '74 Chevy

·,

4 Sp., AM -FM, low mileage, luxury Interior.

1971 Ford Torino .............. ~1

'2995

ranean.

A thougl!t ' lor · the day :
EngUsh writer John · Ruskin

'

r----------~------------I
I

I
I

American

11-197 MODELS LEfl

350 V -8, automatic, P. steering &amp; brakes, dark blue finish,
blue Interior, blue vinyl roof~ factory air conditioned, like
new w -w tires, radio. Many other extras.

I
I

Yl!t lf'rday'"

.

.

1974 OPEL MANTA ................... ~2895

form foul' ordinar~ worda.

1,-EAD Stock Removed . Nn
charge. Call 245 -551"4.
207-tf

1': NVENTORY .REDUCTION

,~

29.9S

car Pickup. Air conditioned plus full squire equipment . Shows
good care.
~

Air cond. , power windows, plus full power. Extra good for
model.

TIME

one lettel'" to each squal'"e, to

NEW CAR

,,'
"

"l.oJ' ~·

42" Coppertone U!lllty C.binol, like no..______.79.9S

1972 Ford Squire Ranchero ......................'2695

•

BETTER
VALUES
EVERY

, SARGENT BROS. CON ST.
ALL lypes of carpenter work , S
concrete fini shing , painling ,
FAMILY garage sa l e. Bill
~g~"h~:rrHarriSburg
free estimates , reasonab le
rates. Ph . 367 -7239 or 367 -7777 .
268 -6
124 -78
THANKS GI VING -Turkey Shoot
--·
Sunday, Nov . 24 . Trap and
Sta tionary . Noon till
, Gatlia
scf?:-a. st:.u:. u . ·s. Coin~. M'fs
County Gun Club, Buck
COins of Gall ipolis , 121 State
Ridge.
St. Ph :. ~46 - 1842 .
132-ff
268-12

~

All Lamps In Stock, 20% OFF

Hardtop, air conditioned, fully equipped . Extra clean!

•2395

(Check !he new price and save on these USED MOD"ELS.

dlshesi

bea,n . pots ; brown Qvenwate by Hull; large DOG
banks '; · tea cups from

'SWEE~ER Repilir : Parts and

2

Green Gas, (continuous clean), Range 3 months old 199.95

"'

4 Dr . hardtop, 3.51 V-B engine, air conditioned, fully equipped .
Like new finish .

.•

3 Green Refrigerators, 2 copper and 15 white.•--49.95 up
1 Harvest Gold Dryer -

Only 7.635 miles. Like new in every way. ()pen!- like sta . wagon :}
In rear.
•

,c,.

20 cu. fl. Gold Side by Side Refrigerator, only6 mo.
ol'"-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -399,95

1 Avocado Green Washer White Dryers.

1974 Pinto 3 Dr. Runabout ..................... 12695

1967 Mercury VB 2· Dr...........................'295

1 Red Maple Dresser, 2 Walnut Chests, 1

29.95 up

-

1970 Ford LTD ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••'1495

Duster, 318, auto, P .S.,
rad io, spacemaker -pkg .•
little over 9,000 mi.

DRIVE AN OK USED CAR

Solid Maple Chesl. Many others to choose from

2 Dr . Choice of three good cars .

1969 Olds 98 4 Dr. Sedan ........................ '995

RUTLAND
BARGAIN CENTER

--

1095

As low .............. 1

•
•
•

Open Mon .. Sal:
8 A.M .. 6 P.M.

Syracuse. Ohio

1970 Ford 6 cyl. Maverick

1972 Ford LTD 4 Dr............................. '2795

All Mechanical Work

992-5162

THANKS! For your response 1o our Inflation Fighter Sale!
Again we are first in the County . We are also thankful for our
baHer gas miles on 1975's because of Solid State Ignition. Steel
belted tires (also on 1974 Fords), Catalitic Converter, and many
other improvements. We are thankful because Ford has sent us
such a large and good selection of both cars and trucks . We want
volume and are ready to give you top dollar on trade-in. We're
thankful for our large selection of locally owned used cars and
for the fact that we can back them by thoroU9h reconditioning
by the very best service department, and can sell you
locally ownect satisfied owner trade-in. Please let us be with you
on Thanksgiving with our free turkev. Thanks againl

Pomeroy

Open Eves. 'nl6- TiiS P.M. Sat.

'1695

Said,

•

Cadillac . Oldsmobile
GMAC Fin~ncing Availabl e

992 -5342

Impala 4 door H. T., V -8,
auto ., radio, low mileage.
No air, but very nice.

Custom 10 P ickup, 8' bo x,
307 \l.s, radio, delu xe walk·
in ~t Doorsman Camper
wi1h bed . Both units in
excellent condition. A
tr-emendous outfit for deer
hunters .

D-100 '12 Ton Pickup, 318 v.
8, std . shift, local owner , 8'
bed.

KARR &amp; VANZANDT

1971 CHEVROLET

1971 CHEVROLET

1973 OODGE

before Thanksgiving.

4 Dr. Sedan . Onlv 12,501 easy miles . One of the most luxurious
Interiors of any car under $9,000.00. Air conditioning and full
equipment even to reclin ing seats, 302 V-8.

'1095

'2695

'1995

On any New or Used Car or Truck purchased.

1973 Ford Luxury Maverick ..................... '3195 "

Caprice 2 Door H. T., low
mileage, loaded with ex tra s. Very , very clean.

v.s,

'

FREE TURKEY

Gold with matching gold Interior , power, air,
AM-FM radio, like new W· S · W tires.

1972 CHEVROLET

Nova Coupe, 350
poW.
st ., three on the floor,
factory shifter, radio, "
black and sharp.

'2495

Skylark, 2 dr . H.T., V-8,
auto ., pow.

68 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

'895

1972 CHEVROLET

Picku p , auto. Extra sharp .

1970 BUICK

Racine, 0.

51h Sl.

Choice s7 500

'1695

soo. 2 Dr . H.T.. bucke l

'1595

1600

'

RACINE GARAGE

777 PNrl Street

Apollo yellow, brown vinyl lop, Climate
Contr-ol air conditioning , T&amp; T wheel, AM- FM
stereo &amp; tape, new w-s·w tires .

Coun try sedan st a . wagon,
V-8, auto., pow . st., pow.
br .• radio. low mileag e.

seats, V-8, auto ., pow . br.,
pow . st ., miles are a little
high but ·a real baby doll.

1973 DATSUN

'3195

.Strout Realty
3 BR. -

Gal.

'2095

Pick up daily in Pomeroy &amp;

Middleporl.

--------- -----

carport, Jll:z acres.

1971 FORD

Charcoal grey with leather interior, full power
equipment, AM· F M stereo. new steel radial
tires, climate control air conditioning .

Business Services

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

RT. 143 - All e lec. home, 3
BR, carpeled. balh &amp; 'h,

1972 FORD

·'2195

..

SEWING MACHINES . Repair
TANKS
cleanld,
se rv ice, ali makes , 992-2284 . CATTLE A . I Se rvi ce : Phone SEPTIC
reasonable · rates. Ph . -446 -.
The Fabr ic Shop , Pomeroy .
L. Parker, 992 -2264, Pom eroy,
NO MONEY DOWN - Month ly EXCEL SIOR Sa lt Works , E . :
4782, Gallipolis . John Russeu , ·
Author i zed Sin ger Sa les and
or 667 -3251 , Coolville station .
paym ents a cc ord ing to in Ma in St ., Pomeroy . All k inds .
owner and operator . ·
Serv ice. We sharpen Scissors .
11 -17- fltc
come . New 3 bedroom home,
of sal t water pellets , water
.5-12-lfc '
3-29 -tfc
w i th wa ll to wa ll carpetin g on
nuggets, block salt and own
1 1 ac r e l andscaped tots . Ca ll
Ohio River Salt . Phone 992 ·
DOZER work, land clearing by
today for more infoi- ma t ion .
3891 .
the acre hourly or contract,
992 -5976 .
farm pOnds, roads, etc. Large
11 - t 7-ltc
dozer and oper.ator with over
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
20 years ex perien ce. Pullins
W ILL TRADE - FINANCING
cancelled?
Lost
your
Excavating, Pomeroy , Ohio. ·
ARRANGED
WITH
operat.or's license . Call 992 ,
Phone 992-2478 .
MINIMUM
DOWN .
W i ll
7428.
12 -19-ffc ,
cons i d er trade for older
6-15-tfc ·
.
hom e. trailer or land on this
- -- CONCRETE
new 3 bedroom , 2 bath home EXCAVATING , dozer , 10aoer :. ·2ADY -MIX
with 2 cllr garage , large
delivered right to your·
. . . has !he BEST selecllon of good used furniture everl
and backhoe work ; se pt ic
fami ly room , air condition in g .
project . Fast and easy . Free
tanks installed: d ump truc-ks
All
furnii\Jre will be sold al LOWEST possible prices now
Move in im mediate l y. Call
estimate s. Phone 992 -3284.
and lo -boysfor hire ; will haul
until Chrl•lmas to reduce ourslock. Comeand look I
Goeglein
Ready
-M
ix
Co
.
•
now 992 -5976.
f i ll d irt , top soil, l imestone &amp;
Midd l eport. Ohio.
ll -17 -Hc
gravel ; Call Bob or Roger
6-30-tfc.
J effers , day phone 992 -7089 ;
n ight phone 992 -3525 or 992 · -- - --------- --~
FOR SAL E by owner , price
5232 .
reduced S2, 000 . Beautiful
older home, 3 bedroom. larg e
2-11 -lfc
bath, · new sidihg, storm
w indow s and doors, complete CHARLES to! . Hatt1 e1o , mlnl ·
carpe ted, fenced yard, two
ba ckhoe an d . dozer , water
nice porches, located con lines, dra in s, footers. brush
veniently , now just $16,500 .
cleaning . Rt. I. Rutland. Oh) o .
Must se ll . F or appointment.
Phone 742 -6092 .
call 992 -7210 .
11 -3-25 tC
ll -10-7tc
:: . BRADFORD, AuctiOneer
Complete Service
Phone 949 -3821 or 949 -3161
Racine, Ohio
Critt Bradford
5-1 -ttC:

- - ----- ------ -

'4295

74 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

G rand Prix. V-8, auto.,
pow . st ., pow . br., vl nvl
root , factory air , f actory
road whee l s, w -s-w t ir es.
Extra -E xtra .. Nice .

2 Door , 4 speed , radio, goOd
second vehicle . New paint .

Custom Deluxe Pickup, 307
V-B. std. shift, rad io, wheel
covers, w -s-w tires, baby
blue, low mileage,· and as
~ha r p as a tack .

2679
GRAVEL HIL L, 5 room and
ba th house . garage , a nd
doub l e
outbuilding ,
575
Broadway .
M i ddl eport .
Phone 992 3333 or 992 -5546
11 -1J -6tc

'4395

1973 CHEVROLET

Pomeroy,O.

1970 PONTIAC

Charger. v invt roo f, f~ c­
tory air, 318 V -8, many mce
e-.:tras. Balance of 18,000
mite
warranty ,
low
m llel!tge . '

Gra n Torino, 4 door, V-8,
auto .• pow . st. , fact . air,
rad io , vinyl roof. w -s-w
tires . Nice a s they come.

'1995

JOHNSON
MASONRY
992-7608

Commercial-Residential
Construdion &amp; Remodel • ·

From a shelf to a house.
Painting, siding, roofing,
paper hanging, kitchen
cabinets, etc.

Ton Pickup, snow t ires ,
standard shift. f
lf2

1974 DODGE

Monaco 4 dr . H.T .. vinyl
roof , factory a ir, all the
nice extras you wou ld want
including the balance of an
18. 000
mile
fa c tory
warranty.
low ,
low
mileage .

1972 GMC

REMODELING?

Rt. 1 &amp; Union Ave.

1974 DODGE

' '6195

"----------------------'

All Types of
BUILDING
,
and REMODELING

redecorated. and carpeted .

P.M.
ANY AGE CHILD
8-6

SALE

'

BOWERS
REPAIR

DAY NURSERY

Ph. 992-7608 before 5 p .m .

992-7129

949-3832 or 843-2667

Newly

THANKSGIVING

Business Services_____.
~nterlor,

TEAFORD

BUSINESS BUILDING -

___________

'INE'S HOLIDAY

~\ U&lt;t. :, o v ~ rl ooking b.c auli fvl
view of r iver, 2 bedroom s
down , 11 •• up , ceramic til e
bAth , bui lt in k i t.c hen , dry
b asemen ! , firepla ce , ro c k
wa l l pa t io , gar ag e. co mp l et e
privacy .
2
mi l es
f rom
Pomeroy in M in er sv ill e. 992 ·
5792.
11 15-Stp

P omr'f

ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe
model. Complete .with all
cleaning attachments and
2 BEDROOM . turn . cottage at
uses paper bags . Slightly used
Rock Springs, ideal for schoql
but cleans and loo'ks like new .
personneL
adults
only,
Will sell tor 537 .25 cash or
r eference desired . Phone 992 terms available. Phone 992 2789 .
7155.
tl -3-tfc - - _....._
11 ·5-tfc
SEWII'olu Mach ines, brand new
Z ig -Zag In nice walnut tabl'e .
In · original cartons . Never
used . Clearance on
'74
Models . · (Onlv
a
few
available), $43 .40 cash or .
terms available . Phone 992 7755 .
10 -1.5 -lfc

•I

I )(r

19 57 CHEVROL ET . $400. Call
99'15857 .
11-14 -6tp

t1 -14 -6tp
L - ...-;piir .- Plumbi ng, 1973 OLO S Cutla ss S, like new ,
IH." J ~ : :-:;;
and remode l i ng .
lns icte and out , 350 engine,
Work guaranteed . Phone 99 2·
p .s .. p .b ., air, and automatic
2409
transm ission. 24, 000 actual
11 -7. l2tp
mile s. Ca ll 992 3914 afte r 5
---------pm
Wil.Lk;! p pres chOol ch ildren
11 -13 -41p
in my home , 2 t o 6 y ears old . 5
da ys per w ee k . Phone 992 1968 FO RD station wagon . S300 .
5098
Phon e 992 -5301.
11 -12-6tc
11-12 -Mc

- --------------

\.

'

BED ROOM
trai l er
in
Syril cusc , close to sc hoo l No
c hildr en o r pe t s Depo si t
reQ ui r ed . Phon ~ 9Q'l '}4J I cl fler
6 10 p m
10 18 t f c

Wanted To Buy

we have lelf n obody w ill ever
know , Your love and un
CASrl SSSS fo r j u n ~ cars com
derstand ing had sustained v s
p lete . F r ye 's Tr uck and Au t o
each hour of each day , and - PdriS , Rutland , Ohio . Phon e
th ere is nobody left who tr ies
742 609-'
in that special way . Though
10 - 16 26t c
your sorrow s ended when you
.. - .
left yOur worldly p lace , ou rs G L D f urnit ure , i ce bo xes. br ass
will not be over unt i l we again
beds . or com plet e ho usehold s .
~ee your face .
Write M D . Miller . R t 4 ,
E ternally missed by the
Pom e roy , Ohio Call 992 7760 .
children
10 7 7"
11. 17 li e
CA!::.H pa id tor all makes and
IN LOV IN G memory Of Leroy
mod e l s of mob i le home s .
Holm es who died in Nov , 1937
Phone area code 61&lt;1 -423 -9531.
from the effe c t s of World War
4-13 -lfc
I . He is sadly missed by one
daughter , Kathryn Cr ow and JUN K autos, complete and
2 sisters , Dorothy Roller and
delivered to our yard . W e
Alice Freeland .
pic k. up auto bod ies ! nd b uy
11. 17 . ltc
all k inds of sc r ap metals and
iron . Rider's Sa lvage , St ~~
114. Rt 4 , Pomeroy , O h• O
Call 992 -5468 .
10-17 -tfc

WE WISH t o express our tha nks
and appreciation to all tor
their thoughtfulness and
sympathy after the death of
Floss i e Brickles . The lovely
flowers. Dr . Kemp, and Dr .
Abets, and all the nurses at
Holzer Medical .center . Th e
Hughes
Funeral
Hom e,
Colleen Dougan , and Rev
Kenneth Vane .
The Family
11 -17-ltp

L-OCATED ~~ 1676 l i rHoln
H&lt;'icth ts . n ~ w 1 bed r oom hou se
WtHl ll i'll~ ~ . b&lt;~ sc mcn~ . qets
ll oor flrr n t'ICl' . storm door s
.1n d wmdow s. ccl sity he&gt;at cd
Cc~ ll Tr&lt;tey Whal ey , 99'"/ 3054
I 1 I '"I 6tc

Something, To BelieVe In . '

SMITH ·NELSON MOTORS, · I
soo E. Mlin

. Ph. m -zt74

\

�..

.
\

28 - The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday. Nov. 17, 1974

.

'

'

.

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
In Memory

For Rent

Yard Sales

IN MEMORY of. James 0 Hu nt YARD SALE . -' 20 Sp rin~ Ave .
Pomer oy , Frid av . S~ l . an d
who pas~e d away Nov n .
Sund,w .- ~ nt i Que q\a ss wAr e .
1973 . on e year ago .
clo th in q ,,nd mise items
I I 1.1 J t c
The old home p l ace is lonely
Sin ce you l eff me t h at day ,
Lifen nd h ome are n ot th e sa m e,
Since you w er e called away
I som e ti mes sit and wonder
Just why you had to go ,

We were so happy toge the r
A nd 0 , I mi ss you so ,

Jusr a c lu s t er of b{'autiful
· memor ies.
Sprayed wilh a mil l io n ter~n. .
W is h you could
h im, L ord ,

hav e

spnrcd

Just lor a fe w more yea r s
Kathryn , G rands.on Sc o tt .
Beverlee. Bi ll W:ick.line , Mr
and Mr s . Berl Hunt.
11 17 ll c

------ - - - - -----

IN MEMORY o f our father ,
Richard B Row e. who had to
l ea\le us .one year ag o, No v .

14.

Pets For Sale
J

A.KC ma le toy poodles .
Woul d make nice Christmas
q d ts See at Carl Rairden ·s
r es iden ce. Hartford . w va .
11 17 6t C

SA 1NT tjer nard pups , l i DO . 3
mon th s old . Phone 843 2438
I I 15-6t c
E N GLI SH Shepher d puppi es .
$10 619 Page St .. M iddleport .
Phone 997 39~3 .
11 13 ~ lp
POODLE qrooming , SS
667 3 9 1 ~
Coo l vi ll e
welcome you r bus in ess

Ca ll
We

11

13 61p

'
It seems only yesterday w e ha d
to w a t &lt;; P, you go ; and t h e loss

------------ ---

--- - -------- -Card of Thanks

- ---- - ----- - ---

Notice

TURKEY SHOOT
TODAY
STARTING I P.M.

Racine Gun Cub
Ohio

Racine

TURKEY MATCH . Corn Hollow
Gun Club , tu rn right after
Miles Cemetery , Rutl and .
Factory choked guns only .
Sunday, Nov . 17. 1 p , m .
ll -14-3tc

'\

SHOOTING Match, Racine Gun
Club , Sunday. Nov . 17, 1 p .m .
· Jl -13 -4t c
TURKEY Shoot, Racine Gun
Club , f p .m . Sunday, Nov . 17.
11 -17 -H c

Employment Wanted
wI L L

00

or
Phon£'" 99 '2 -

babysitti n-g

h ousec l e~ n i ng .

'2 403.

GEN-ERA

Help Wanted
HOW TO EARN MONE Y A T
HOME
MAILIN G
COM
MI SS I ON
C IR CULARS!
EXCELL"ENT
PROFIT
POTENTIAL OFFER
DETA IL S 25c &amp; STAMFIED
A DDRE SS ED ENVELOPE
ANN CLARK. 122 3 LA CLA ~R .
PGH . P A. 152 18 .
11 -I0 -26tp

For Rent
FURN "I SHED apa r tmen t , 4
r oom s an d bath . 104 Sp ring
Ave ., Pome r oy . 99 2-5908 .
11-17 -6tc
3 F URNI SHED rooms on East
Main St . Phone 992 -2381 .
11-17-3tc

HOUSE for r ent , •- ~ mile below
Eastern Hi gh" Sc hool. For
interview , call 985 -3516 .
ll -l7 -3tc
TRAILER space on priva te lot ,
3 m iles from Pom eroy . Phone
367 -7743 .
11 -17 -Jtc

AUCTION ,
Thur sday
and TRAILER , 2 bedroom. Brow n's
Saturday night. 7 p .m . at
Trailer Park . Phone 992 -332 4.
Mason Auct i on , Horton . St. in
11 -8-tfc
Muon , W . Va . Consignments
wel Come . Phon e ( 304) 773 T RAILER space, 2 mi !e5 from
5471 .
'
10-3-ffc . Porn ero y, R t . 143. Phone 992
5858 .
10-27 -tf c
KCHcol
K6..SMETICS :
Rememb er Christmas is
H OUSE and trailer for rent in
com ing . we have many new
town. 2 bedrooms . Phone 992 -·
products that will make ni ce
3975 and 992 -2571 .
gifts. Phone BROWN 'S, 99211 -6-lfc
51 13.
11 -3 -lfc
~ AND 4 ROOM furnished and
unfurnished
apartments .
Phone 992-5434 .
4-12-tfc

OPEN HOUSE
..
Attend our open. house,
Sunday, Nov. 17, I to 5 ~
p.m. Take an envelope
from our treasure
chest and receive free
gift of 10 to 50 Pet. off
purchases. Novelty
1 F•bric and Craft, 230
Washington
Blvd.,
Belpre, ·Ohio.
Craft Classes Every
Thursday Night
7 p.m.
ATTENTION
FARMERS .
Lumber for sate . Rough
lumber for. farm use . Contact
· Pomerov Forest Produc ts, P .
0 . BOx 726, -Pomeroy , Ohio .
Phone 99~ - 5965 .
11 -7-12tc

F UR NI SH ED
apartment ,
ul ilit ics f urn is hed, suita bl e
t or tw o working men or
r e l ir~d coup le . L iv in g room.
k1 tc hen . shower and ba th On
ma in highwa y , M a5on . W Va
Phone 773 SIJ 7
10

'}7

th:

FUR NI SHED apt. tor r ent , 3
rooms and bath . fi rst floor ,
newly d ecorated . Phone 99 2
2937 .
11 15 Jtc

Auto Sales
l &lt;f68 OLOS hardtop . p .s ., p _b ..
air , goo d cond i t io n , ssoo
Phone 949 32 11.
11 17-3tp
1966 GMC handy van , good
running and good bod y Phone
99'1 7889 or 992 5310 .
111 7 11 c
1969 FOR D VB , air c on
ditioning , 390 motor with new
pai nl io b , in excell ent con dit ion Phon e 949 3927
11 -lS -lfC

---- - - - - - - - -

19 63 CHEVROLET co nvert ible ,
n ew tir es, runs good . 1972
Che v rolet , 11 ton pickup
!ruck , ( 10 ca b, low mi leage .
Phone 742 -4461 .
11 14 -Jtc
1969 LJUU t;; t LJart Swinger 340 .
4 speed, b right re d with black
hood Phone 949 -3754 .
11 -lJ.6tp

For Sale

FOR

SA i.E
'

Excellent opportunity for a
couple to own &amp; operate gas
station and grocerY carry
out. Has three pop machines,
tire changer, air compresser
&amp; room for three cars. Has a
modern apartment above
business. Two enclosed
porches, two bedrooms &amp;
hardwood
floors .
Has
modern kitchen with side-byside freezer &amp; refrigerator
and gas stove.
Located on Sa I em
51.,

Rulland, 0 . Can be seen by
calling 742-5061 or 1-419-841-

4012.
Priced lo sell S2o,ooo
SUPER stuff. sure nuf! That's
Blue Lustre for c l eaning
carpe l s.
Rent
e lectr i c
sha mpooer Sl. Baker Fur niture Co mpany , Middleport.
Oh io
ll -15 -3tc
L OWERY organ with ac cess ories. A beautiful Christ . ma s gilt. must be seen to
apprecia t e. May be seen at
249 Union Avenue or call 992 56 17.
ll -15 -12tc
078 x 14 Goodyear whitewall
tire . Phone 992 -5485 .
11 -15-Jtp

PRIVATE meeting room for
any organ ization ; phone 992 3975 .
3-11 -tfc

DELU XE
electr i c
stove.
avocado green, double oven
rot is serie , exce ll ent condition. only used a few
; owners moved out of
'lotiNTRY;;;;;·;-~~e ; ; k , · months
state, wi ll sacrifice for $250,,
Rt . 33 , t en miles north of
cost S500 n ew . Call 992 -2677 or
Pomeroy . Large lots with
992 -2437 .
concrete ·patios. s idewalks,
11 -tS -3tc
1· unners
and
off
street .
parking , Also, spaces for
small trailers . Phone 992-7479. HEREFORD Ho ls te in ca lves.
Phone 843-2353.
7-21-tfc
ll -15-3tc;
2 BE-DROOM doub l e w1d e
mobi le home in Sy r ac vse. No CLOSE OUT on new Zig -Zag
Se w ing Machines . For sewing
c hildren or pets, deposit
st retch fabrics, buttonholes,
r equired. Phone 992 -2441 after
fancy designs, etc . Paint
6 p.m .
s lightly blemished . Choice of
10-29-tfc
carrying case or sewing
FuRNisHEo a pt.- AdUits Only,
s tbnd $49 .80 cash or terms
M iddleport . Phone 992 -3874.
availabl e. P'hone ?V2 -7755 .
11 -14 -tt c
11 -S-tfc

--'---------- ---

--------------

UNFURNI SHED
house ,
4
room s and b ath . 1650 Lincoln
H.eigh t s. Phone 992-3874.
11 -1.4 -lfc
- - - - - - - - -- - - - - HOUSE tor renl , furnish ed or
unfurni s hed at Langsv i ll e.
Call 742 -5986 .
11 -14 -3tc

STEREO . radio, am -fm , 8
track tape combin.!r1tion, 4
speaker
sound
system
Balance S109 .56 or easy
terms . Call 992 -3965 .
11 -S-tfc

:~o; n es

Moh''''

For s.-1e

Real Estate· For Sale .

1970 VALIA NT 65x 12, 3bedroom
fully carpe ted . LP·gas h eat .
Phone 997 7751 .
ll ?5 lfc
1RAOE in
like new·, Jq 77
1 r cedo m
17 )( 60 . 3 door ,
corp c f e d
~hrouqhout ,
2
bed ro om ,
ma n y
luxu ry
tco tu r es. &lt;&gt;ave -1 0 pet . of
o riQint~l sal t' p r ice . Buy with
or wilhoul fur nitu r e Can be
see n n t K in qs bu ry Home
\ales to! . 1100 E Main St ,
Pomer oy . Oh io . or ca ll 99'/
"103-1
11 I ) 'riC

Real Estate For Sale

Special
.

ALL

REPLACE those tired sagging
sofa cush ion s Wi!t;J new foam
cui to size , only S10.95 -atJack's
Furniture
and
Upholstery Supplies, 236 E.
Ma in St., Pomeroy . Phone
992-3903.
11 -6-12tc

'

- - ----------.,-1957 CHEVY parts : NEW

DRESSES

Lakewood tracti on bars , fli jacker lllr shocks, hooker
headers , with 3" c oll ~ ctors tor
small block . Call 992 -J496
after 6 p . m', BEST OFFER .
1
10-17 -tfc

1f2
PANT SUITS · .
1 , AND

PRICE

FOR SALE
The Belly Cline real estate
,located at 224 Walnut Street.
Middleport , Ohio , ·i s being of fered for sale . Previous asking
price Sts ,OOO.OO; now wlll"ing to
sell property at $10,000 .00 . Sale
sub jec t to the approval of the
Probate Court, Meigs County ,
Ohio . If i nterested . please
contact the undersigned .
FrP.d W . Crow
Pomeroy , Ohio.
(11) 15 , t 7, 18, 3t c

...

~·

I

Vrrq1ll~

T~ · ,Jir,,rl

11 ( ()~ '· r
h,Jrl !I 'lt1 ,,, ·I

r',,r'(

ny Ohro

!)/t/1

lfiNYL SIDING

o ·n

Rt . 7. Central heat and air, 2900
NEW
b i -l evet
home ,
3
bedrooms , b uilt in kit chen . Sq . Ft . of floor space. LC.
base ment with o ne ca r water . Excellent location for a
ga r age . Ph one 742 361 5 or see business .
Mi lo H utchison .
Ni ce
4
11 1 tf c SYRACUSE
bedrooms, bath , Na-t. gas F . A.
7 ROOM house wi th '1 baths in furna ce. Basement . 2 porches
Pomeroy . Phon e 99'2 -3478 .
and 2 ca r carpo rt.
10- 15 26tc BUSINESS - A good grocery
on State Rt . All stock , and
25 ACRES in Olive Twp ., 34
acres ii1 Rutland Twp . and 96 some fixtures . This is your
acres i n Ca rlha ge Twp ., chance for only
A ~h ens
Co . Wrile Box 25, NEW LISTING Large 11
Tupp ers Pla ins, Ohio, or call
room
s,
2
apartments.
2 baths .
667 .31 31.
11 14 -3tc Good place for antiques, or flea
-- ---· -- '--- -- - -------market . Plenty of parking.
HOU SE for sa l e. 249 Union
Asking Sl2,SOO.OO .
Ave , All n@wly decorated
HOME SITE - Nearly an acre
inside . May be seen by ap
lot on T. P. wa1er . in good subpointment . Phone 99 '1 5617 .
11 J5-11tc
d iv ision.

S8.ooo:oo.

MANY
BARGAINS
TO
CHOOSE FROM . SHOULD
YOU WANT TO DISPOSE OF
ANY PROPERTY, SEE US.
WE WILL HELP YOU, OR NO
CHARGE.

FOR SALE

7 ROOM HOUSE
AND BATH
Garage . 2 Lois.

THE DEPENDABLE
OONTRACTING 00.
bterlor
Decorating and
Remodeling

',•

PH. 992-7454 or
Free Estimates, Middleport, 0 -

Quiel neighborhood .

Reasonably Prit ed "
On lincoln Drive

Business Opportunities

For Appointment Ph. 992-

1974 CHRYSLER

Town &amp; Countrv , 9 pass .
sta . wagon , luggage r ack ,
f~ctor'r' air. all the fine
e1dras
In c luding
the
M lance of an 18.000 m l'e
warranty . Low milea ge.

All Sman ApplianceS
Lawn Mowers

By day or hour, reasonable
rates, reliable people with
m edica l training .

Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

or742-4902 after 5 p .m.

GHEEN'S PAINTING
9,1J9-3295

Racine, 0.

Interior &amp;
Exterior Work
FREE ESTIMATE
Fully Insured

]~==========;
D&amp;D
OONSTRUCTION
PHONE

Keep1out the cold and cut the cost of heating!
Dress your home UP. warm · for cold da~s
ahead. Siding: Insulates, adds beauty' IS
durable, adds value, is colorful. Siding can be
installed anytime. Ask us about Soffit, Fascia,
Gutters and Downspouts, too.
FREE EST·IMATE

OOMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE &amp; REPAIR

Water, Electric, Ga!., Sewer .
Lines ,
ins1a lied.
Work
guaranteed.
Dozer, Backhoe, Trucks

Llmoslone &amp; Fill Dirl

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

OL D 4 ·room house with 2 ni ce
lot s in Sy ra cu se, $3.000 or
possible land contract_ Ph
99 2 5898.
11 11 61C
BUILDING lot , 80ft . fron tage x
165ft. Th e second lot on left on ·
Riverview Drive, L in coin
Hill , Pomeroy , Ohio . If in terested , call 992 -3230 after 5
p .m .
10-17 -tfc

NO COMPETITION
No Fees
No Warehousing
Patent Protection
Six Year History
Repair windshield and plate
glass at less than 20 per cent
of replacement cost.
Minim u m investment of

SlO,OOO.OO.
Call Collect : Mr. Franklin

(214) 242-8581
The Glass Doctor, Inc .
· 2225 Belt Line Road
Carrollton, Texas 7S006

HEll

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING ,
Complete plumbing &amp;
heating service. Free
Estimates.
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992-3995
or 992-5700

----- ~

All
work
guaranteed. Phone 949-"3611.

FoR- FREE- - ;stim-;les on:
aluminum
replacement·
windows. siding , storm doors:
and wirldows, Ra ili ng . Phone.
Charles Lisle, Syracuse, Ohio.,
Carl
Jacob ,
Sa les.
Representativ e ,
V.
V.
Johnson and Son, In c.
4-30-tfc

Ranch, OVached

garage, modern kitchen, city
water, additional cement

block bldg., $23,00.00.
3 BR-frame, full basement,

---------------

all elec .. nice lol , $18,500.00.
NEW- All elec., carpeled, J
BR., air condlllonlng,
$17,500.00.

·WILL trim or cu t trees and
shrubbery, also clean out
basements and attics . Phone
949 -322 1 or 742 -4441.
10-18 -26tc

50 A. -Alfred area, some
timber,
· older
home,

$17,500.00.
4 ACRES - 3 BR ranch style
home, full basement, owner.
wi ll take land contract.

.307 Spring Avenue
Pomeroy
· 992-2298
CONTACT:
Lois Pauley,
Branch Manager

CREMEAN"S
CONCRE TE"
delivered Monday through ·
Saturday
and
eve nings ,
Phone 446-1142.
6-13 -ttc .

------------LARPET insta lla tion . S1.25 per.
yard . Pho ne Ri ch ard West ,
a.;J -2667
11 -13-6tp
~E PTIC

TANK S cleaned.
Modern Sanitation, 99 '1-3954 or
992-7349.
9 - 18 - tfc ~

-------------REMODELING , plumbing, and

heating , general repair. Work
guaranteed. Phone 992-2409 .
11 -10-12tp
PI A NO tun i ng an(i '" r e.pair.
Phone Charles Sco tt, 992 -3718 .
9-17 ·32tp

PORTLAND - 4 nice level
lots close to river. Large
older home, 7 rooms, wrap
around porch, garage &amp;
oulbulldlng, good drilled
well.. Asking jus! $4,700.00.
POMEROY - Good 5 room

trame,

natural

gas

heat;

balh, fUll basemen!. Asking
SlO,SOO. Make "a n offer .
·CARPENTER 2 story
freme, 4 . B. R!:, 1V2 bath.s,

dining room. bloc~ oul·
building, 2 garag.., about. 2
acres, can help finance to

right party. $8,000.00 .
TUPPERS PLAINS
1
level acre, lovely ranch lype
home, 2 B.R, Ullllty R. Balh,
H .W .

floors ,

basement .

S13,500.
MIDDLEPORT -

Rl. 1 · 27
acres, nlce . home, 3 B . R .,
balh, "basemen!, N.G. fur·
nace, large barn &amp; silo, milk
house, lool shed. Asking

· DozER or backhoe work ."
Phone 446-3981 or 446 -3459 .
9-8-tfc

----------------

Live' in the rolling hills of
Southern Ohio in. your own
3 BR, all electric mobile
home in Southern Ohio's

newesl mobile home park.
15 min. from Alhens or
. Pomeroy. Price reduced. to
gaf this mobile haqte park
$larled. Sol up &amp; ready lo
move Into. For fUrther

delalls conlact ...
NO DOWN PAYMENT
TO VETERANS

KINGSBURY
MOBILE HOMES
1100 E. Main

Pomeroy, 0.

Ca 11992-7034
Open O&lt;lily 1110 1

SJO,OOO.

74 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

1971 FORD

Middleport, Ohio

Phone 992-5367 or 992-3861

1969 VOLKSWAGEN

SEE US FOR YOUR
UPHOLSTERING NEEDS

ROGER HYSEU'S
GARAGE

FREE ESTIMATE
Pickup ,and Delivery

st.,

air, sharp.

On State Rt . 124, •12 mi. from
Route

7

by-pciss

towards

Rufland.

SYLVIA'S
UPHOLSTERING

'1.395

Ph. 992-5682 or 992-7121

'2695

Pllone 992-2259 or 992-2568

" You ' ll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Bus iness"

See one of these courteous salesmen :
Pete Burris
lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaugh

JUST ARRIVED

z: Oak Dressers,

1974 PLYMOUTH

1-Huge load of collecllblo
furnture: oak china, hutch,
many beautiful

12-2 Piece Livjng Room Sui~s

"49.95 up_

LEATHER TOP !abies,
desks; rockers; and lots of

olher "goodies" In !he
furniture line!
2-0ider small items: ruby
&amp; other depression glass,

beaulilul
hand

lamps,

carved

dolls,
marble

slalufe of Joseph and baby

Notite
ENCLOSED PORCH
TREASURE SALE
Children ' s
clothes .
glassware , &amp; many ather
items. Mon . &amp; Tue s. from 10·
4, the Frank Belvi _fl e
residents, Bob McCormick
Rd.
' Two . wAY Radios s a"les "&amp;
Serv ice . New &amp; used CB's,
pollee mon i tor s, antennas ,
etc. Bob's Citizen Band Radio
'Equip[ , Georges Creek Rd ., ·
Gallipolis, Ohio 446 -4517 .
212-tf

--- ----------

Jesus ; much, much more:

3-NEW
newest

ITEMS :
fad

kllchen -

for

!he

Mama's

!he alr-llghl

apothecafy
bottle
In
several styles, from 67c;

CARNIVAL glass punch
sel~ lor !he ho11days S9.SO,
complele ;
CARN IVAL
covered

turkey

blue willow coffee mugs;

Mainland China ; over 50
prs . sail '&amp; peppers wllh
2 alike!
AND REMEMBER
KUHL'S ALWAYS carries
a full ' line of clean, used

APPLIANCES (ALL with
30-day
M()NEY-"''"'~·
GUARANTEES) : .
now

we

have

a

selecllon of WRING
WASHERS; I us!
hauled, your ch~~·~·
Maylag, Kenmor.e
Qu~n.

Gas or elect . .
S35 (1 beaullful ·
elec1. built-in
refrigerators from
port. dishwasher $25 ;

dryers S35.
COME OUT &amp; SEE
lioocl selecllon of ~lean,
used

("~---CHRISTMAS SPECIAL;;;.·- - - ,
Just arrived, Nov. 1\, 1974, $3,000 .00 worth

of lamps ...

Supplies .
Pick
up
and
deliver y. Davi s Va ~IJJ,I.m
Cleaner 1h mile up Georges
Creek Road . Ph . 446 -0294 .
'
75 -tf

------------

·

•
•
•

..'

PART Ba ss et , part Beag le ,
mate. Last seen in vic inity of
Gage . Reward 379-2364 .
266 -6

~1!!1-~®u..J .,.,~u~-' ,_.
hy I•H N fll 41lNOl D ol11&lt; 1 11 1111 I I I

- -------------

Unacramblethfse r.,..rJumblu,

Notice

Several Bedroom Suil••.-;;::;:-:----'----89 ..95 up
Baby 5-Drawer Chesl &amp; Robe
Combinallo
Priced to Sell
1-While Baby Bed, complote'---------'- 24.9S
1-5-Shelf Round Curio Corner with
5 Levels
-

....-.
"....
·,.,.
....
••
...
......
~

I IKKAH

--------------

NOTICE
The Gallia County Boa rd of
Revis ions have co mpleted
their wor,k and the books are
open for inspect ion .

I HECKE

KJ

Signed by
Gallia County
Board of Rev isi ons
265-10
"RUSS 'S G LA SS SERVICE .
Storm Windows repaired ,
Plexig l ass.
auto .
glass ,
mir ro rs. decorator &amp; cut l o
size. 435 Sec . Ave .• acro ss
from the P.O . in Gall ipol is.
Ph . 446 -7632.
223 -78

2 Door , orange finish, blk. vinyl interior, bucket seats, less
than 5,000 miles &amp; 3 mo. old. Radio. deluxe bumpers.

------------- -

J

1972 DODGE DART WSTOM.. .'... ,.$2495

·=~~·-

4 Door, locall owner car, 318 V -8 engine, automatic trans.,
power steering, air con ditioned, vinyl lrlm, vinyl top,
Autumn gold finish, w -w tires, like new, radio.

J

I

1972 VEGA GT..........................~1995

I

tKRANET~

Hatchback, low mileage by 1 owner, new w -w tires transferred from new car, A speed trans ., radio, green finish ,
black Vinyl Interior, deluxe trim .
JU~T

THE "THlNC&gt;
IF A F'UN.::H
1€- P:EQUIREI7.

I

.'/

'

1970 CHEV. MONTE CARL0..........'1995

RlJFTUEJ
Now JUTIU)(e the circled lettero
V
V:
~ to form the aurpriae anawer, u
I r-...._
~ A aurgested by the above cartoon.
·[~J~~~~~~~~~=J
Pliii . . . . IIISWIIIIllli
I A I I IX I]

I

u-,

r

(An.wl!n Mond•y)
Juml.t~~~:

BROIL DRONE ADAGIO WORTHY

Antwer:

Wired in a tfrange UJalf- "'WEIRD'"

-...•
••
...

-

SALE.!

.

'~

~

;

.,

·2-Component Shelves for Stereo Home

Enlertoinment0ulfil _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,;n,J5

_ 2-Bookcases; __: . _ _ : - - - - - - your choice 39.95

t"""---·_sPE.CIAL THIS WEEK--.....,._,

3 MEDITERRANEAN
TABLES ·.
.

.........
•••

...
=
........
.....
..
::1

""

CNewl with Red Velyei
Inserts. Reg. $210 Set

~

'!

..

~

furniture

quallly,
budge·lI·Pl'ICIHI
NEW · furniture .
ALWAYS ,GET A GCJIOO
DFAL AT KUHL'SI
During 1he winter K~IHlc~•

BARGAIN CENTER
open 5 days a week :
~~silay lhru Sunday
.
9a.m. -7p.m. . ·
(Closed Mon. &amp; Tues.~

'

4-1974 DODGE' PIC~UPS
t,, \ 25..;.NEW 1975 .DODGE
.
CARS AND TRUCKS
·~

No Reasonable Offer
wm Be Refused!

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Sunday, Nov . 17, the
321st day of 1974 with 44 to
follow .
The moon is approaching ils
first quarter.

The

morning

stars

are

Mercury, Mars and Juipter .
·The evening stars are Venus
and Jupiter.
Those born on this day in
history are under the sign of
SCorpio.
social · worker

Grace Abbotl"was born Nov . 17,
1878. This is the 49th birthday
of American actor Rock Hudson
( born Roy Fitzgerald ).
On this day in history:
In 1800, Ule U.S. Congress
convened in Washington, D.C.,
for the first time .
In . 1869, the Suez Canal In
Egypt ·was opened, llnklng the
Red Sea and the Mediter-

fJ
I

II

I
I

I
I
I
I

70 Ford Maverick .................. '1295

Local 1 owner, good w -s-w tires, de/u)( e Int. trim,
wheel covers. radio. 6 cy l. , real economv with std.
trans .• blUe fin., nice.

1968 Chevrolet lmpala .............SS95
.ipt. Cpe., red finish, blk. vinvl top, spotless interior,
good tires, rad io, automatic trans .~ V-8, power
steering.

1------------------------1972 CHEVROLET C-20 % T. ..... ..'2295
8' fleets! de, V-8 engine, 4 speed trans .•. H. duty 151 ' tires,
solid c ab, radio.

1970 CHEVROLET 2 TON
cab &amp; chassis. 108" cab lo axle, V-8, 350 engine,
15,000 lb., 2 speed R. axle, good 82Sx20 !Ires, solid ·
cab.

Hardtop, power steering, auto. trans .

•I
I

i\
'
•I
I

:.
·'
'
'

'

.I

'

'
'·•.

1970 GMC '12 Ton,

• In 1881, Samuel Gompers
organized Ule Federation of
Organized Trades and Labor
Unions ..·. forerunner of the
American Federation of Labor.
In 1969, Ule slrategic anns
limitation talks (SALT) between the United States and Ule
Soviet Union began In Helsinki,
Flnlapd.

Ufe.~·

~'There'

is no wealth but
,

·

e cyl.

ir---__,;,-----.,·;.,
Great Used Car Buys!

You Can Count On For Dependability

1974 GMC lh T. Pickup $3895
P.S., P . B., auto. trans, AM- FM, super custom cab .

1974 Opel Manta Luxus $3195

- -

--- -$995

.-.

Models In Stock.
"WE RUN AVERY SIMPLE BUSINESS"
We Sell &amp; Service Chevrolt"t Cars &amp; Trucks.

Air cond ., P.S., P. BJ' vinyl top, radio, auto. trans .

1973 Plymouth Fury 1.. .....$2595
V-8, P.S., P. B., radio, auto. trans.

'

1973 VW Formula Vee. ... }2395
4 Sp., rallye stripes, radio.

''Y~ur Ctievy Qe'aler~' ·

·992-2126

. Ope_
n Eves. Til&amp;

_
Pomeroy, Ofi!C

~. . . .- - - - -. .---~. .~-----•
.,

'

I

I

''
'
I

. I'

I :
,,
'

I

'

'

'I
'I
• I
'

I

~

!

1972 VW Type 111... ...........$2395 -~
Fuel ln lection, radio, • sp.

1973 Opel Manta ...........}2695
Economical, auto. trans., radio, power brakes.

1971 Pontiac GTO............ 2195
Auto. trans. , air cond., P.S., P. B., radio.

4 ,Dr., P.S., P . 8. , auto. trans.., air cond.

1971 Ford Pinto..:.:...........
Auto. tr~ns .• -4 cyl., low mileage•

1970 Plymouth Duster.....~l
"Slant 6", auto. trans., radio.

SH Caword Colver!, Smllln Art,or Bill Notson ,

POMEROY ·MOTOR CU.

I

1973 Pontiac Catalina....;..s3595

Year-End Deals

On All New '74 Chevy

·,

4 Sp., AM -FM, low mileage, luxury Interior.

1971 Ford Torino .............. ~1

'2995

ranean.

A thougl!t ' lor · the day :
EngUsh writer John · Ruskin

'

r----------~------------I
I

I
I

American

11-197 MODELS LEfl

350 V -8, automatic, P. steering &amp; brakes, dark blue finish,
blue Interior, blue vinyl roof~ factory air conditioned, like
new w -w tires, radio. Many other extras.

I
I

Yl!t lf'rday'"

.

.

1974 OPEL MANTA ................... ~2895

form foul' ordinar~ worda.

1,-EAD Stock Removed . Nn
charge. Call 245 -551"4.
207-tf

1': NVENTORY .REDUCTION

,~

29.9S

car Pickup. Air conditioned plus full squire equipment . Shows
good care.
~

Air cond. , power windows, plus full power. Extra good for
model.

TIME

one lettel'" to each squal'"e, to

NEW CAR

,,'
"

"l.oJ' ~·

42" Coppertone U!lllty C.binol, like no..______.79.9S

1972 Ford Squire Ranchero ......................'2695

•

BETTER
VALUES
EVERY

, SARGENT BROS. CON ST.
ALL lypes of carpenter work , S
concrete fini shing , painling ,
FAMILY garage sa l e. Bill
~g~"h~:rrHarriSburg
free estimates , reasonab le
rates. Ph . 367 -7239 or 367 -7777 .
268 -6
124 -78
THANKS GI VING -Turkey Shoot
--·
Sunday, Nov . 24 . Trap and
Sta tionary . Noon till
, Gatlia
scf?:-a. st:.u:. u . ·s. Coin~. M'fs
County Gun Club, Buck
COins of Gall ipolis , 121 State
Ridge.
St. Ph :. ~46 - 1842 .
132-ff
268-12

~

All Lamps In Stock, 20% OFF

Hardtop, air conditioned, fully equipped . Extra clean!

•2395

(Check !he new price and save on these USED MOD"ELS.

dlshesi

bea,n . pots ; brown Qvenwate by Hull; large DOG
banks '; · tea cups from

'SWEE~ER Repilir : Parts and

2

Green Gas, (continuous clean), Range 3 months old 199.95

"'

4 Dr . hardtop, 3.51 V-B engine, air conditioned, fully equipped .
Like new finish .

.•

3 Green Refrigerators, 2 copper and 15 white.•--49.95 up
1 Harvest Gold Dryer -

Only 7.635 miles. Like new in every way. ()pen!- like sta . wagon :}
In rear.
•

,c,.

20 cu. fl. Gold Side by Side Refrigerator, only6 mo.
ol'"-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -399,95

1 Avocado Green Washer White Dryers.

1974 Pinto 3 Dr. Runabout ..................... 12695

1967 Mercury VB 2· Dr...........................'295

1 Red Maple Dresser, 2 Walnut Chests, 1

29.95 up

-

1970 Ford LTD ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••'1495

Duster, 318, auto, P .S.,
rad io, spacemaker -pkg .•
little over 9,000 mi.

DRIVE AN OK USED CAR

Solid Maple Chesl. Many others to choose from

2 Dr . Choice of three good cars .

1969 Olds 98 4 Dr. Sedan ........................ '995

RUTLAND
BARGAIN CENTER

--

1095

As low .............. 1

•
•
•

Open Mon .. Sal:
8 A.M .. 6 P.M.

Syracuse. Ohio

1970 Ford 6 cyl. Maverick

1972 Ford LTD 4 Dr............................. '2795

All Mechanical Work

992-5162

THANKS! For your response 1o our Inflation Fighter Sale!
Again we are first in the County . We are also thankful for our
baHer gas miles on 1975's because of Solid State Ignition. Steel
belted tires (also on 1974 Fords), Catalitic Converter, and many
other improvements. We are thankful because Ford has sent us
such a large and good selection of both cars and trucks . We want
volume and are ready to give you top dollar on trade-in. We're
thankful for our large selection of locally owned used cars and
for the fact that we can back them by thoroU9h reconditioning
by the very best service department, and can sell you
locally ownect satisfied owner trade-in. Please let us be with you
on Thanksgiving with our free turkev. Thanks againl

Pomeroy

Open Eves. 'nl6- TiiS P.M. Sat.

'1695

Said,

•

Cadillac . Oldsmobile
GMAC Fin~ncing Availabl e

992 -5342

Impala 4 door H. T., V -8,
auto ., radio, low mileage.
No air, but very nice.

Custom 10 P ickup, 8' bo x,
307 \l.s, radio, delu xe walk·
in ~t Doorsman Camper
wi1h bed . Both units in
excellent condition. A
tr-emendous outfit for deer
hunters .

D-100 '12 Ton Pickup, 318 v.
8, std . shift, local owner , 8'
bed.

KARR &amp; VANZANDT

1971 CHEVROLET

1971 CHEVROLET

1973 OODGE

before Thanksgiving.

4 Dr. Sedan . Onlv 12,501 easy miles . One of the most luxurious
Interiors of any car under $9,000.00. Air conditioning and full
equipment even to reclin ing seats, 302 V-8.

'1095

'2695

'1995

On any New or Used Car or Truck purchased.

1973 Ford Luxury Maverick ..................... '3195 "

Caprice 2 Door H. T., low
mileage, loaded with ex tra s. Very , very clean.

v.s,

'

FREE TURKEY

Gold with matching gold Interior , power, air,
AM-FM radio, like new W· S · W tires.

1972 CHEVROLET

Nova Coupe, 350
poW.
st ., three on the floor,
factory shifter, radio, "
black and sharp.

'2495

Skylark, 2 dr . H.T., V-8,
auto ., pow.

68 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

'895

1972 CHEVROLET

Picku p , auto. Extra sharp .

1970 BUICK

Racine, 0.

51h Sl.

Choice s7 500

'1695

soo. 2 Dr . H.T.. bucke l

'1595

1600

'

RACINE GARAGE

777 PNrl Street

Apollo yellow, brown vinyl lop, Climate
Contr-ol air conditioning , T&amp; T wheel, AM- FM
stereo &amp; tape, new w-s·w tires .

Coun try sedan st a . wagon,
V-8, auto., pow . st., pow.
br .• radio. low mileag e.

seats, V-8, auto ., pow . br.,
pow . st ., miles are a little
high but ·a real baby doll.

1973 DATSUN

'3195

.Strout Realty
3 BR. -

Gal.

'2095

Pick up daily in Pomeroy &amp;

Middleporl.

--------- -----

carport, Jll:z acres.

1971 FORD

Charcoal grey with leather interior, full power
equipment, AM· F M stereo. new steel radial
tires, climate control air conditioning .

Business Services

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

RT. 143 - All e lec. home, 3
BR, carpeled. balh &amp; 'h,

1972 FORD

·'2195

..

SEWING MACHINES . Repair
TANKS
cleanld,
se rv ice, ali makes , 992-2284 . CATTLE A . I Se rvi ce : Phone SEPTIC
reasonable · rates. Ph . -446 -.
The Fabr ic Shop , Pomeroy .
L. Parker, 992 -2264, Pom eroy,
NO MONEY DOWN - Month ly EXCEL SIOR Sa lt Works , E . :
4782, Gallipolis . John Russeu , ·
Author i zed Sin ger Sa les and
or 667 -3251 , Coolville station .
paym ents a cc ord ing to in Ma in St ., Pomeroy . All k inds .
owner and operator . ·
Serv ice. We sharpen Scissors .
11 -17- fltc
come . New 3 bedroom home,
of sal t water pellets , water
.5-12-lfc '
3-29 -tfc
w i th wa ll to wa ll carpetin g on
nuggets, block salt and own
1 1 ac r e l andscaped tots . Ca ll
Ohio River Salt . Phone 992 ·
DOZER work, land clearing by
today for more infoi- ma t ion .
3891 .
the acre hourly or contract,
992 -5976 .
farm pOnds, roads, etc. Large
11 - t 7-ltc
dozer and oper.ator with over
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
20 years ex perien ce. Pullins
W ILL TRADE - FINANCING
cancelled?
Lost
your
Excavating, Pomeroy , Ohio. ·
ARRANGED
WITH
operat.or's license . Call 992 ,
Phone 992-2478 .
MINIMUM
DOWN .
W i ll
7428.
12 -19-ffc ,
cons i d er trade for older
6-15-tfc ·
.
hom e. trailer or land on this
- -- CONCRETE
new 3 bedroom , 2 bath home EXCAVATING , dozer , 10aoer :. ·2ADY -MIX
with 2 cllr garage , large
delivered right to your·
. . . has !he BEST selecllon of good used furniture everl
and backhoe work ; se pt ic
fami ly room , air condition in g .
project . Fast and easy . Free
tanks installed: d ump truc-ks
All
furnii\Jre will be sold al LOWEST possible prices now
Move in im mediate l y. Call
estimate s. Phone 992 -3284.
and lo -boysfor hire ; will haul
until Chrl•lmas to reduce ourslock. Comeand look I
Goeglein
Ready
-M
ix
Co
.
•
now 992 -5976.
f i ll d irt , top soil, l imestone &amp;
Midd l eport. Ohio.
ll -17 -Hc
gravel ; Call Bob or Roger
6-30-tfc.
J effers , day phone 992 -7089 ;
n ight phone 992 -3525 or 992 · -- - --------- --~
FOR SAL E by owner , price
5232 .
reduced S2, 000 . Beautiful
older home, 3 bedroom. larg e
2-11 -lfc
bath, · new sidihg, storm
w indow s and doors, complete CHARLES to! . Hatt1 e1o , mlnl ·
carpe ted, fenced yard, two
ba ckhoe an d . dozer , water
nice porches, located con lines, dra in s, footers. brush
veniently , now just $16,500 .
cleaning . Rt. I. Rutland. Oh) o .
Must se ll . F or appointment.
Phone 742 -6092 .
call 992 -7210 .
11 -3-25 tC
ll -10-7tc
:: . BRADFORD, AuctiOneer
Complete Service
Phone 949 -3821 or 949 -3161
Racine, Ohio
Critt Bradford
5-1 -ttC:

- - ----- ------ -

'4295

74 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

G rand Prix. V-8, auto.,
pow . st ., pow . br., vl nvl
root , factory air , f actory
road whee l s, w -s-w t ir es.
Extra -E xtra .. Nice .

2 Door , 4 speed , radio, goOd
second vehicle . New paint .

Custom Deluxe Pickup, 307
V-B. std. shift, rad io, wheel
covers, w -s-w tires, baby
blue, low mileage,· and as
~ha r p as a tack .

2679
GRAVEL HIL L, 5 room and
ba th house . garage , a nd
doub l e
outbuilding ,
575
Broadway .
M i ddl eport .
Phone 992 3333 or 992 -5546
11 -1J -6tc

'4395

1973 CHEVROLET

Pomeroy,O.

1970 PONTIAC

Charger. v invt roo f, f~ c­
tory air, 318 V -8, many mce
e-.:tras. Balance of 18,000
mite
warranty ,
low
m llel!tge . '

Gra n Torino, 4 door, V-8,
auto .• pow . st. , fact . air,
rad io , vinyl roof. w -s-w
tires . Nice a s they come.

'1995

JOHNSON
MASONRY
992-7608

Commercial-Residential
Construdion &amp; Remodel • ·

From a shelf to a house.
Painting, siding, roofing,
paper hanging, kitchen
cabinets, etc.

Ton Pickup, snow t ires ,
standard shift. f
lf2

1974 DODGE

Monaco 4 dr . H.T .. vinyl
roof , factory a ir, all the
nice extras you wou ld want
including the balance of an
18. 000
mile
fa c tory
warranty.
low ,
low
mileage .

1972 GMC

REMODELING?

Rt. 1 &amp; Union Ave.

1974 DODGE

' '6195

"----------------------'

All Types of
BUILDING
,
and REMODELING

redecorated. and carpeted .

P.M.
ANY AGE CHILD
8-6

SALE

'

BOWERS
REPAIR

DAY NURSERY

Ph. 992-7608 before 5 p .m .

992-7129

949-3832 or 843-2667

Newly

THANKSGIVING

Business Services_____.
~nterlor,

TEAFORD

BUSINESS BUILDING -

___________

'INE'S HOLIDAY

~\ U&lt;t. :, o v ~ rl ooking b.c auli fvl
view of r iver, 2 bedroom s
down , 11 •• up , ceramic til e
bAth , bui lt in k i t.c hen , dry
b asemen ! , firepla ce , ro c k
wa l l pa t io , gar ag e. co mp l et e
privacy .
2
mi l es
f rom
Pomeroy in M in er sv ill e. 992 ·
5792.
11 15-Stp

P omr'f

ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe
model. Complete .with all
cleaning attachments and
2 BEDROOM . turn . cottage at
uses paper bags . Slightly used
Rock Springs, ideal for schoql
but cleans and loo'ks like new .
personneL
adults
only,
Will sell tor 537 .25 cash or
r eference desired . Phone 992 terms available. Phone 992 2789 .
7155.
tl -3-tfc - - _....._
11 ·5-tfc
SEWII'olu Mach ines, brand new
Z ig -Zag In nice walnut tabl'e .
In · original cartons . Never
used . Clearance on
'74
Models . · (Onlv
a
few
available), $43 .40 cash or .
terms available . Phone 992 7755 .
10 -1.5 -lfc

•I

I )(r

19 57 CHEVROL ET . $400. Call
99'15857 .
11-14 -6tp

t1 -14 -6tp
L - ...-;piir .- Plumbi ng, 1973 OLO S Cutla ss S, like new ,
IH." J ~ : :-:;;
and remode l i ng .
lns icte and out , 350 engine,
Work guaranteed . Phone 99 2·
p .s .. p .b ., air, and automatic
2409
transm ission. 24, 000 actual
11 -7. l2tp
mile s. Ca ll 992 3914 afte r 5
---------pm
Wil.Lk;! p pres chOol ch ildren
11 -13 -41p
in my home , 2 t o 6 y ears old . 5
da ys per w ee k . Phone 992 1968 FO RD station wagon . S300 .
5098
Phon e 992 -5301.
11 -12-6tc
11-12 -Mc

- --------------

\.

'

BED ROOM
trai l er
in
Syril cusc , close to sc hoo l No
c hildr en o r pe t s Depo si t
reQ ui r ed . Phon ~ 9Q'l '}4J I cl fler
6 10 p m
10 18 t f c

Wanted To Buy

we have lelf n obody w ill ever
know , Your love and un
CASrl SSSS fo r j u n ~ cars com
derstand ing had sustained v s
p lete . F r ye 's Tr uck and Au t o
each hour of each day , and - PdriS , Rutland , Ohio . Phon e
th ere is nobody left who tr ies
742 609-'
in that special way . Though
10 - 16 26t c
your sorrow s ended when you
.. - .
left yOur worldly p lace , ou rs G L D f urnit ure , i ce bo xes. br ass
will not be over unt i l we again
beds . or com plet e ho usehold s .
~ee your face .
Write M D . Miller . R t 4 ,
E ternally missed by the
Pom e roy , Ohio Call 992 7760 .
children
10 7 7"
11. 17 li e
CA!::.H pa id tor all makes and
IN LOV IN G memory Of Leroy
mod e l s of mob i le home s .
Holm es who died in Nov , 1937
Phone area code 61&lt;1 -423 -9531.
from the effe c t s of World War
4-13 -lfc
I . He is sadly missed by one
daughter , Kathryn Cr ow and JUN K autos, complete and
2 sisters , Dorothy Roller and
delivered to our yard . W e
Alice Freeland .
pic k. up auto bod ies ! nd b uy
11. 17 . ltc
all k inds of sc r ap metals and
iron . Rider's Sa lvage , St ~~
114. Rt 4 , Pomeroy , O h• O
Call 992 -5468 .
10-17 -tfc

WE WISH t o express our tha nks
and appreciation to all tor
their thoughtfulness and
sympathy after the death of
Floss i e Brickles . The lovely
flowers. Dr . Kemp, and Dr .
Abets, and all the nurses at
Holzer Medical .center . Th e
Hughes
Funeral
Hom e,
Colleen Dougan , and Rev
Kenneth Vane .
The Family
11 -17-ltp

L-OCATED ~~ 1676 l i rHoln
H&lt;'icth ts . n ~ w 1 bed r oom hou se
WtHl ll i'll~ ~ . b&lt;~ sc mcn~ . qets
ll oor flrr n t'ICl' . storm door s
.1n d wmdow s. ccl sity he&gt;at cd
Cc~ ll Tr&lt;tey Whal ey , 99'"/ 3054
I 1 I '"I 6tc

Something, To BelieVe In . '

SMITH ·NELSON MOTORS, · I
soo E. Mlin

. Ph. m -zt74

\

�..
30 - The Stmday) unes-SeJll.blei,.S'!'i~ay,Nov. 17, 1974

Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Nov_ 17

~·

•

72 CHEVROLET IMPALA

Fol"lfliM,; !J-esuits Use TheSunday Times-Sentinel Classified$
Wanted To Buy
,STA NDING

For Rent

f 1mber

r--c:---=· - - -.;...

U N r URN I S H E 0 C'III CIC II f Y a pt
$ 115 per mo Ph J .l r. v .. ,J

388 8-l90 .
272 If

12xt.O MOB ILE H OME

STA NDIN G
TIMBER
amount . 388 91jl06 .

1n

ilf.'l\1'

R1 o

Gri'lnde ,

loca t ed

Pl 1ou f'

2J S

MAKE SURE YOU SEE
THIO:: ONE Lttl. e n f'w In
l eve l o lt e&gt;rs l IH10 SQ It ot
11Vrl1(1 space plus cl ( car
q&lt;~ra ~e O t hf'r f eatur es are
·I FIR's , 7 ' · b.1tt1s , sunken
l R Or eam lo. rtc l1cn . tomily
rm
wdh WO l 1rep tace
cent i'l1r , pa t ro , .Jnd Iaroe
lot Locr~lcd 111 one at the
ilrca·s n 1cer subdrv is ton s

52~7.
2 ~!1

270.3

tf

TRAILER SPACE . Wilier and
sew a g£&gt;
prov•df.'d
c h• ldr&lt;' n $20 p er m onth
4l98 a lt e r 5

TOP pr,u s paid for j unk autos
and scrap mer at Ph 388 8776
?62 12

SLEEP IN G r ooms
ra t e G a ll1a Ho te l

For Sale, Rent or Trade .
P

chen.

1'

2

baths ,

FIRST floor

full

week I y

furn

For Rent or Sale
2 STORY house . 4 BR , I1V 1n g
room. famil y room , fireplace ,
dining room , k1tchen , den, 11 2
baths. full basement, front
porch. enclosed back porch-t 2
car garage , a lso a 7 rm .
"house
Approx
1 acre in
Vinton Owner wdl finance .
388 -8483 or 471 -1472 .

--------------

2 B R all e l ectr1c turn . mobile
home ( I f rented , adults onlyl.
2.459225 21 2 miles south of
R 10 Grande on Rt . 325 .
268 5

MOBILE HOME close to Crown
C lly

TEEN 'S C.:trryout. Crown CJty ,
reduced for quick !ale Large
lot on Rl . 7 block build1ng ,
also
su i table
for
other
tlusiness or converti ng . 1-o
restaurant . s 12,000 Phone
377 -4774 after 6 p .m

5 ROOM house, bath , close to
Crown C1ty . Call 446 0893
260 tf

------------ --- WANTED SPEEDEX
TRACTOR DEALERS
PROTECTED
area
manufacturers to dea le r
direct , good dea·ler discount .
Contact Sales Dept , 367 North
Freedom St , Ravenna , Oh10
44 266 216 -297 -1484 .
271 -8

TARA

Wanted To Do
WALL PAPER INU ana 1nterior
painting . Ph . 446 -986.5
VvA [L
!Jct p ~r!ny ,
r n 1 ~r1or
painting . Reasonable rates
Ph . 446-4423 or 446 3631
242 tf

T YPiNG s-EirviCES-;illdo all
kinds of typing 1n my home.
Call 446 4999
2$4 . tf·
CARPENTRY WORK ; Rootiri~,
block laymg and condrifte
work . Phon e 4.46-27.87.
•
my

home.
269 6

PEAVEY P A system wrlh four
Shu r e m 1cr op hones $600 f1 rm

1968
19 71
1967
1969
1968
1968
19 71
1967

-

all.. types of clothing, furs,
reweaving. F'h . 446 -7520 or
446-1771.
233 -rf

•.:.Cirll Shirley. Adkins

·367-7250
...

-----~-------.!......

Pets

-,•

BOARDING, AKC PUPPIES
K&amp;,P Kennels, lBB -827.t . Rt . 554;'
~rLEEPING rooms ,
1
12 mi. E . Porter .
S.tf ~" ri:ttes. Ubby HoteL
19
--r:---=---=-----~-

PINE RIDGE COLLIES
BEAUTIFUL AKC Reg. Ccllles .
sable and white . Wonderful
gifts for Christmas . , Ca.ll
afternoons or evenings. 614
256 1267.
, 268 -.5.

Help Wanted

---~ --------¥-~f8·~ -

For Rent
-f R~~te ~ 0 ~~ 1i 00~8ome,

Upper
256 .tf

_ 2 BR fd ' (liShed apartment , a ,rcond ll. dults on l y 446 2851
272 tf

FURN~ apf.4-;~m ;- andbath ,

seco .n d floor , off street
park1ng . Adults only. S120 per
'iv Nr:;vV t&lt;e!iJency tnc . Apts . 2 mo Ph. 446-4416 after I p .m.
bedrooms. carpeted, total - -- -- - - 272 6
electric, located on Sand Hilt FUR-----Road , Pt. Pleasant. Ph b?S·
N eff~eiency apt. in Rio
5104 or 675 5386.
_.;
Grande. SSO Ph . .446 -1315.
'
269-T,T
·•
272 3
-----~-.---- ---

Gallipolis, 446-4782
DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone 446- 2735
187 -tf

aR·Ao-;;~Rv- •mc,:;,~;-;:p,,, .:M.obil; Homes Fo;--Sale

------ -

QUALIFIED
BUYER
ASS UM E PRE SENT L OA N
OWN E R MUST SELL T HI S
A ND
FRAM E
B RICK
RANCH W ITH PARTIAL
BASE MEN T. BE AUT)FUL
K I TC HEN . 3 B E DROOMS,
LO CA TED O N 3 .1 ACRE
LOT EXCELLENT NEIGH
BO RHOOD O N R T 160, 3
MI . FROM H OS PITA L

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

GENE PLANTS&amp; SON
PLUMBING - H eati ng - Air
Co nd1t 1oning, 300 Fourth Ave .
Ph . 4.46 -1637 .
48 tf

Services Offered

-

- - - - - --- ---

Paul Smith 24 h r wrecke r
se r v 1ce Ph . 245 5034 or 446
9] 11
264 If

-------------KOTALIC LANDSCAPING

RIO GRANDE , OHIO
COMPLETE PROGRESSIVE
LANDSCAPING
SHRUB S, tr ees, ro c k garde ns,
all g uar- anteed . Patio and pool
land sca ping
Stone, sa nd ,
coa l . shrub ber y trimm1ng
Dum p truc k ser'v1ces
245 913 1
187 tf
cavaf1ng. stump removal,
bu sh hopp1ng P h 446 0051.
266-11

TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FREE inspection Call 446-3245
Mer-r ill O ' Dell. Opera tor by
Exterminal Termite Serv-Ice,
10 Belmont Dr
267 tf
-- - --~--~~ -

TOO L
s ha rpen ing ,
saws,
scissors, sh ea rs , home and
garden too l s
Sharp Shop ,
Alley r ea r , 1.47 Second
'216-tf

GENERAl CONTRACTING
Hom e improv ements and ad ditions Roofing , vinyl S1d1ng
Call .446 -0668 or 245 5138
152 56

G I L L t:o-. vv,... , t:r&lt;. .l

GARAGE, a,, . ~, &lt;&gt; ttu ua:. .,.rnent
c l ean1 ng Trash hautmg . Free
es tim at es Ph 446 -03 55 or 446
2950
21 8 78

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

FRENCH CITY BLOCK, 4i6 .
3608, loca ted at K err . Beth el .
Kemper Holl ow intersection.
15Q .tf

::-- - ---~...:::;;...~-~-~- -

D

.

P Mart1n &amp; Son Water
Delivery
Serv ic e.
Your
patronage
w111
be
ap
prec i at ed. Ph . 446 -0463 .
2H

BEDRO OM W I TH FA MILY
ROOM , 2 CAR GARAGE
OW NER
WILL
HE L P
F IN A NC E
THIS
N EW
HOME

Galha Co. 's L argest R:eai
Estate Sates Agency
Offic e 446 ·3643
EvenmQs Call
rke .Wiseman 441i- 'H 9f,
E' N . Wrseman. 446-4500
Bud M-cGhee, 446 - t'lSS

.lt:tJ I IC...

TANK
CLEANING
AND
REPAIR
A L SO
H O USE
WRECKING Ph 4.4~9499
Establ,shed in 1940.
169 tf
ALBERT EHMAN
Water- Delivery Service
Pa1rtot Star, Gallipoli s
Ph. 379-2133
243 -l f

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

BANKS TREE SERVICE
FRE E estimates, liabi! 1ty 10 .
sura nce. Pruning ' trimming
and cav it y work , tree and
stump remova l . Ph . .446 -4953.
7].tf

•

GARFIELD AVE . We
hav e two ni ce hom es here.
one fu l ly furnished , bo t h
have garag es
Take you r
pi ck t or $16,500
COURT ST. Good com
mer c ia I b ulldmg 1n t he heart
of town Wtth two a par tments
upsta 1r s and a l arge gro und
fl oo r
SECOND AVE .
Small
res ta ura n I. a gomg b u sm ess,
sui t ab l e for hu sb and and
W1fe Ca ll for Information
GEORGE'S CREEK RD . Large home w1th forced a1 r
furnace , 1 1 '~ bath s, county
wate r , l ocated on 2' , acres of
ni ce land . Price r ed uced to
$16,000 .

Evening Call
John M . Futler--446- 43 27
Lee- Johnson-256· 6740
Doug Wether-hotl-446-4244
B Y OWNER 2 year s Ol d, 4 BR
be.aut 1ful home on 2 acr es.
W ilt take mobi l e home or
cam per on lrude Ph 3 ~7 01 ·10 .
26 3 10

-- - - - - · - - -- - -

"SELL THE
AUCTION WAY"

All utilities -·· p.lfd.' ' 1 ·a',. 2
wortcing ladles . Refltren_cf'
required . Upp_e r,,Rt . 7. Phort't'

'-"·2f06.
,,

-

.

'

·,

. 270-]

·

_.__,.~-r---:-- ~-T~-_-

' I

~

j,.

l

. ,.

~..,.

"J

~

•

:
·.
272 6
--LL------ -~- -­
'6' 'AI..PHINE Sumbeam . Must
s·@ill '. 'No reasonable offer
refused . Ph . 446 -9627.
272 6
-·---~ - - -- ~ ---

'.. .
.·

..

p.m.

..

'.

----

------ ------P ALM rea dmys, discreet a~ '

..

I

. .-' ...

..

&lt;It

~

•

•

.. .
-·

,

I
-

.,

.,.,

'

. ".

..

..

town, $.4,500

·"'-

'. .

1972
MAVERICK

1971
PLYMOUTH

Metalic

1972
FORD
PINTO
~!

2 Dool
Wh1te &amp; Blue

Door, Blue

+ Q964

""J85 2
WEST
.,09872
'J5
+A73

Country Sedan
Station Wagon

3'

1

I

1 I

'

finesse.
..:outh was one ot .nose
cu "tpulstve fin esser~~ _He
wa ted no tim e plunKmg
dUI my's jack of spades on
We. ,'s 101 spot. t..hereupon
East produced thb queen. The

Blue

1970
MAVERICK

presence of both mrnor sUJt

aces in the West hand, together wtth a ftve·card spade
suit, saw poor South l os tng
three spade tricks and these

two aces.

2 Dr. Sedan

"Clean"

All South had to do to m-

sure hi s contract was to

p ia ~

make

f1v e

odd. but

th at play wo uld cost him In s
co ntract tf 'A- es t held t he
q u et:"n of spades. This way tile
con t ract was safe.

,.

11-i

Wesl

Nort h

Eas l

Dh iP

l'i.JS.'&gt;

South
l'ass

.,

\'au. Sou th . hol d

+K J 43 ,foA 9 5 4
do you do now' 1

• 43 • A Q 7
\~' h&lt;ll

A-Bid

thr ee spades.

""ant to be in game m so me

You
KUit.

TOOAv·s &lt;IUESTION

All NEW 1974 MODELS WILL BE

Send $1 lor JAC OBY MODERN
book ro "Wm ar Bndge · (clo th1 s
ne wspaper}. P 0 Box 489 RadiO
C1/yS /at10n New York NY 10019

2 HEAVY winter gir l 's coats
with fur co llar s, g'ize 10 12
Excellent cond . S20 each Ph
367 -756.4 .
272 3

Tru ck for sa l e
'68 FO RD 1 T ca ttl e tru ck.
good c ond . M us t sell due to
dea th Make offer 245 5663
.
271 3

AGR! CO Fertil,ze r , buy now
and sa ve Ph 256 6474 or see
Jerry Shaffer
27 1 3

PHONE 388·9969

270 ·3

270 5

......

PLYMOUTH

Yuur pa1tner b1d s four h ~ar t s
1n respon se to ~o ur cue b1d. Whul
do you do rr uw''

For Sale

1971 FORD WINDOW VAN

--~_

CHRYSLER~

hut don't know which one.

For Sale

In good condition. Gets good
gas mileage and has QOOd
tires.

Phone

GALLIPOLIS

245-

____ _

270-6

'27 0 6

588.

C HUR C,., .-.,.ws and Pulpit
fur-n .tu r- e Reaso nab lv oricf!d
Writ e at once for Chris tm as
and New Year 's. Spec ial free
FIRE WOOD , 515 per J., fen
offer St even s Church Supply
p ickup toad Call 446 753J ani
Co, P 0
Box 781
Hun t ime .
tington , w. Va
258-6
254 2~

For Sale

1 COPPERTONE refrigerator
and stove, bedroom suite. all
in good shape. Can be seen
Saturday 2-6, Box 81. St. Rt.
27i .2

3 GAS forced sir space heaters
Two 140,000 BTU at S8S
each. one . - 88,000 BTU sso
All heaters have thermostats,
valves , and new roof top
vents . See at Tope Furniture
or phone 446 -0332 .
,271 -3

Corbin-Snyder
------ ~ ------NEW Gibson and Admiral Food NEW 24" 3 spd Girl ' s bicycle '
Freezers, chest type and
$70 new , by pr ivate owner .
uprighf. 955 S;econ d Ave . f'Jh .
Will sell tor S40 . Ph 256 1123.
446-1171.
268 ·6
268-3
.
________ ...______
TRUCK Camper Special
OUPLEX40x'321n GallipollsOr
Qeer hunters, 16 ft . Chrts
will trade for farm rand-In city
Craft flbe-rgf,us boat 75 h .p ..
school ctlstriCt . Can't be buttt
elect. Start. Johnson Motor
for asking price . Call 446 -3964.
with gator trailer . 25 6 1123.
268 -6
269 6
f~r

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

••

eBIG SAVINGS .
ON 1975 MODELS
No Reasonable Offer Refused
Come Prepared To Deal

STOP and chat Browse or buy
GOOD clean lump and stoker
Corner Cra ft s, ChtiiiC,Othe RCI
'
272 8
c oal . Ca r l Wmters, Rio
G rand e Ph 245 -5115
245 If
1971 FORD Maverick 6 cy l ,
auto . trans . Viny l fop, delu~t:e
inte-rior
Ex cetle nt c ond
GRAvt::L. 11me$lone. sand.
$1,450 Call 446 -1993 art~r 5· 30 .
Mason san d . fill dirt. Pi t run
272 3
De l ivered by the ton 446 1142.
247- tf
2 - 9 mas old Charola is bu ll s
Ph . 2.4.5 -5007
272 3 NO Tr a d e 1q65 v w Trans
porte-r- , good cond Has builf ·ln
cab1 net , por t able smk Sleeps
two Ph 44 6 1322
27 1.3

SATURDAY, NOV. 23 AT 10:30 A.M. &amp;
·SUNDAY, NOV.24ATI1:·30A.M.

CHEVY Blazer K -S, 350
auto trans ., full power,
.
AM -FM radio, 2
Call 379-2597.

.

l messe dummy 's Jac k. The
ftnesse wou ld lose, but East
wouldn't have a spade to le ad
hack . South wou ld have Lime
to knock out t he oth er ace
and w1nd up ma kmg to ur
not rump .
Of cou rse, a South playe r
us tng mtrror s could refuse
111 e ftn esse the seco nd ttm c

ONE of the finer t hi ng s of life - ' AUL T 'S Mobile Hom e Ser- v1ce
B lu e Lus tre carpet and
Ski rfmg , r-oof coating. pat 1os,
' upholste ry c l eanlf r
R ent
awnings, anchor s. ceme nt
electric
sh ampooer
$1
work Free estimat es Ca ll
Central Supply
446 -2950 aft er 4'30 p .m
271 3
213 If

1
FORD
PICKUP

For Sale

DELir:RED
GAWPOI.IS

'

Station Wagon

1970
GMC
..
TRUCK

0 9 3.

a second

Blue

1969
TORINO

HOME.

AS .

t z:H;J :~ ''t?,9.3 :J·

may well be a 'good reaso n to
climb a mount arn, rt 1s n ota l ~
ways a good reaso n to··.ake a

•

miles iauth of ZaiHisvhte, 35 mi'los northw,;.t of
Mort ella, or 35 miles northlut of Athens, Ohio. Toil miles.
1-i_:_::!:~~~::S~ of McConnetsville &amp; Motto, Ohio on St. Rt. 377
, Athens In Pennsville otlho ·am ·J ones Form. . ,, l
Selling high quality antlquas from several astates ' from ·
the Cleveland. Canton, and Akron area Including some
Items at one time belonging to Pres. Wm. 'McKinley
Among the Items for sate are several rare lteins as wall a~
museum pieces. Many of the Items go back to the 1700 and

3 NT

Openmg lea d - lO•

'

'

West wou ld

r ou nd a nd

South

Pass

2 DAY ANTIQ~E ·SALE
-

East

I NT
Pass

Eastern Ave.

.

I

fY Oswald &amp; James .Jacoby
: The fact th&lt;h It IS ther e

1970
NIIAVERICK

~$3

spade . T h iS tt me South shoul d

Tht! b 1dd1 11g lw s bel!tl'

BOB EVANS DRIVE-IN

PENNSVILLE~ OHiO

' Q1074:t2
+8 52
·

Both vu ln eruhl c

2 Door

We _offer paid vacations, profif
shar1og, paid hospital insurance
pleasant working conditions. Apply i~
person.
·· ~ ~

PUBLIC.AUCTION .

I

. &lt;l3

+

Camaro

Bonneville
Green

'·

JANITOR

1

EAST

SOU Till[))"" 76
• K 65
'A86
K J 10
""KQ10 3
North

•

e1thcr minor su1 t ace and

"" A 9 4

1970 CHEVROLET

owner, 75 Buick trade. Expect the
best.

TUDORS AND STATION WAGONS 10 IN
STOCK. 4 SPEED AND AUTOMAnC

1nck o n~ and lei the 10 run
around to h1 s kin g
So uth wo uld kno c k out

'K 9

II~ONTIAC

CLOSEOU

r efuse that spade fm esse at
IG

2 Or. hdtp., air. 24,000 miles, one

$2295 •3695

It takes great finesse not to

1971
FORD

1971

P. steering &amp; brakes, 35,000 miles,
8 ft . bed. Red.

WIN AT BRIDGE

• AJ 4

Gran Prix, white, while vinyl top,
white bucket seats, 5,000 miles .
This is no misprint . Like New.

1972 CHEV. PICKUP.. 1972 BUICK- ELECJ;RA.

GAlliPOliS, OHIO

Blue

'-

$3995 $449

DON WATTS
VOLKSWAGEN, INC.

NORTII

Phone

,This Is really a 3 d~y sale. sate held regardless of weath.,:
under large lent and in healed garage. This will be a very
out~tanqlng sale that you Y(Oft't· want. to miss.
See THi PAR!(ERSBURG SENTINEL SUNDAY, NOV.
17 FOR COMPLETE LISTING. •.
·,
Parking. Lundl. Positive to: · · Termo-Coshdlyafsole.
Nat relpOIISible for ICcldonts. ·
AuctiOIHitrs---'llltl Jones &amp; Ott Opperman
Phone 962-211511 - "7-:J.UI

I. -.

Stat1on Wagon

5 ROOM and bath, 5 m i l

along ,wfth any small Items remaining from Saturday

- - --- - --- -r----i?---

White

Bronze

Dr . Hdtp. , p. windows &amp; seat,

17,000 miles. Sharp. Was $4195.

WITH MOUNTING AND F.E.T.

1970
PONTIAC

lamps, several hundred old &amp; good qualltysmalrttems lot
beautiful old pictures &amp; frames, extra old on ta,..;p 1,
Oriental rugs and many other Items. Glass, china,
lewelry, lamps, Sterling, and all small Items will be sold
saturday, Nov. 23. t:urnlture to be sold S~nday, Nov. 24

1•

. ..

OfOce Ph . 446-1694
·' Evenings
Charles M . Neal, 446- 1546
J. Michael Neat, 446·1503
Sam Neal, 446-7358

1800's. Furnlture, .china, glass,lewelry, lot sterling sliver,
several stained ·gl~ss windows, a lot of very unusual

comple t e reveals innerselt,
strengths, weakness . health ,
romance
Se nd tor free
details L B ur ch. Box 289, Rio
Gran de, Oh io 45674
268 -.4

TORINO

7 rms., 2

HELP WANTED

FARM FOR REN.T
Farm
house,
ca rpet ed.
kitchen ca binets , 4.bedrooms
over BOO pound toba cco base
and barn , want to rent for
·o ne year at $125 a mqnth and
tenant gets all the tobacco
crop . References required
and first and last month's
rent . Tobac,co crop 'sh ould
pay tor year's ren t

wd

MUSTANG

4

SET OF TWO

White &amp;

In the V i llage of Crown City
on Sta t e Route 7, 2 bedroom
hou se r e mod el ed, 1 story
buil d1ng, 1 summer hou se
with storage area. Priced
$25.500

Phone:
R usselt D. Wo:Od, 444 : 1066
1 446 -4618 ( E;.oenings)
Ronald K . Canaday·r
446-1066
Eve nings 446-1636

USTANG II

atr, bath , carpet over
floors, 25' beautiful
i
cab . It has a barn and
lot . Price $18.000.

ES

L arge
older
h ome
overlooking th e c1ty, 100x1 20
tot
s 1ze,
3
bedroom,
basem ent w it h g as turnace,
with 1n walking d1 s tance to
school, priced at $26,500 .

e

5

PATRIOT -

Small farm 50 acres more or
l ess, all c l ean with Impr oved
pa st ur-e, de v elop ed spr1 ng,
3' , m lies f rom tlie hosp 1tat.
two bedroom ho me, large
bath ,
furnace,
some
ca b1n ets, barn 36~e.4 0 . Land
and barn prtced at $22 ,500,
Lan d , bar n ahd dwe lling
pr iced at $36,500

Writes All Types of Insurance For '
Your 'Auto, Home or Business
Lightni~ Rod Mu.t ual
J Represent
.
· Insurance Company

Green

~ilh base ., turn. heat,

Block home - 3 bedroom ,
bC[Irn, ml'lc.,inery bldg.,
fences , '·2,000 lb. tobacco
a llotm ent,
one
acre
growing .now and goes wi1h
this sa l e, rolling .land . Good
pasture of farming. All
mineral rights goes. Only
$12,500 . .

We need fiv e buyers to buy
th e rema1 ning houses at
Rodn ey Village 1r $532 00
down wi t h balan ce Over 33
years Don't let th ese houses
pass yo u buy 1

JIMME SAYRE

·""-

NEAL REALTY
15 A farm 5, rm . house with
bath, rural water , located 5
mi. from town on blacktop
road .

Three bedroom home on
T ex as Road , 1 acre of
grou nd , g ar age. priced at
$12,5 00 for qu1ck sa l e .
On Chat ham Avenu e, 2 lots, 2
out building s, nice c lean siK
room h ouse w1th new bath,
fen ced m l ot, basement,
e)(ce llent buy at $15,500 .

AUCTION
SERVICE

2 Door

3800 miles. air cond., vinyl top,
showroom cond.. New Buick
trade .

I.

1973 PONTIAC

1973 BUICK

560x15
MUD &amp; SNOW
TIRES

ANY HR. 446::"1998

Here is how t o -b uy your~elf a
n 1c e ChriStmas president
yo u have l on g awa it ed A
nice three b edroo m home,
good hardwood flo ors , l arge
ex tra n1ce kitchen cab in et s,
uti l1ty room. gas furna ce,
bat h ,
s mall
ba seme nt,
wat k1ng d istance to sc hoo l.
l ot 42x.1.42, w il l sell on land
contr act with a reas onabl e
down payment 515,500.

e

- · ·---"'_:_..,-:--~:--- · • •
'U PSTAIRS Duplt&amp; t 4 )"m ~ turn .-

NEW LISTING 14 A .
4 Room Block home
55 'x. 10 ' c lean and good
mobile home Plus 1.4 acres
of good land on Keystone
Rd near Vinton. apple and
cherry trees . Won 't last
long See Jt now .

Lot on Route 141 wit h rura l
water tap, 100ft frontage by
255 fl d eep Pr1ced at $4,500,
terms
one -third
down,
bal ance of 6 percent , no
r estr1Ct1o n s.
·

WE BUY, SELL, TRADE

1973
FORD
LTD

CITY 821 Second A
Lease or sell. 6 .big
rms. ~~·~l)i:
bath , 2 story on1 a large
iof. It has a tile block
plus a storage b ldg. A 'ci"o().ci"&gt;l'!"·
buy for S17,SOO .

.446·1066
CLOSE TO TOWN r n1:.
th ree bedroom ran c h has a
lOvely bath , n1ce kitchen
Wilh buil t in range ov en,
natural ga5 he.:t t , City water
and -.ich oo ls Good 1ocat 1on
lUSt outs1 d e of town

.

BABY FARM ~ 6 mile down
Rt . 7, beautiful 3 bd . rm .
frame ranch , new carpet
over H W , equ ipped kitchen.
full base with F B., 2 car
attached gar. , root ce llar
Clf!d storage bldg ., 4 A . Jot
w tth frontage on rlver and
Rt . 7. All kinds ot truit trees
and garden . Pr ice only
S39,SOO.

REALIDR

AUCTIONEER

Auto Sales

:

YtOOD,

Leadingham Agency

5\:I!E;.NG ':-

-

FA IRFIELD -CEN.
Split entry, all
carpet, colonIa I, ·
. . o •. ' o
dry -wall. full
. I
kitchen , 2 1J~
W1th a 2 ca.: garage. ,.,:.c·;
one of the better houses
the area, 2,000 scr. ft . li
area . 9 A lot Price up,pet""!!
S40s

RUSSELL

seCond floor , adults only 1 DP·: l2x60 ,Al l electri c Sh ultz mobil e
- ---- .T Rt -~;;,; -,-pets . Phone 446-0957 .
- ;. . : :
heine, fur nished , new washer
Electric: Contractors
'
.
269 -tf:
and dryer- , 7x10 metal bldg
COMPLETE elec tnca l service ,
- --:''; -.- - -- - - - -- - - ; ·
porch and underpinning on
Gallipolis , Ohio Ph . 367·0311. ·
FARM house, carpe1ed, kif · ~
75'X145' lot on Rt, 160, near
~07 tf
ctlen cabine't s, 4 bedrooms ~ .
NGHS, $8700. Phone 388
-~-~---- - -~--over 800 pound tobacco base
8706.
ar\q barn, want to rerit tor one
"
270 3 ---- ~ - -- ------year at $125 a month anti ----~ ---------CREMEANS PIPE&amp;
te'i-nmt gets all the tobac:co
B&amp;SMOBILE HOMES
SUPPLIES
. Bidwell , Ohio
' e:r9P - References required
· PT. PlEASANT
and first. and , last !,. month'sJ;' 1964 Park wood 10x56 2 BR
HOT and cold pla stic pip e and
rent . Tobacco
c:rop·should pay.,;_ 1'965 ' Naflonal lOx SO 2 BR
fitt i n gs, sewer and dra i n pipe ,
1
. kitchen sin k s, fiberglass tub s
- ... 1965 _Cam·elot 12x55 3 BR
tor1 year S r.ent . Phone 2444
1 1 11
and shower. vanities and B lu e
1066 ""- ·
1968 Globemnter 12x60 2 BR
-....!!....--~---'------•
;
·'
1970
Sfetesman
12x50
2
BR
R 1d ge Paint . Ph 388 -8576.
FUR1 NISHED apt . Adults onl_(
'1972 FAWN 12x60 2 BR
New Owner s
Cheshlr:e . Ph . 367 7512
-1967 PMC l2x60 ' 3 BR
Arnold Smith ·a nd
Charle s Smith
_.....;...;.;..~~~-~.:__ ____ 271 3 ~Sl'-~~c 8x3:_1..:_BR____ _
231 tf
SMALL. ' modern 3 BR home in
.-~- --~ - ------~ \
th ·"' countiy . Ideal for· retired
TRI-STATE
PROTECT your mobile home
co'UP te : Ad_ults only. Ph. 245 MOBilE HOMES
with TIE DOWN A NCHOR S. .
'
5210 after ·B p.m .
1220 Eastern Ave.
Call Ron Skidmore, 446 1756
271-6
8X45 M system
after 3 p . m
' .
'
- - - -- - - ----....---2 BR 8x2B 1 BR
221 -tf
• LoW. Cost AuTo Insurance---compare our ra1es .
H ICE turn .. apartment, .4 rms·. , 10x50 Branstratter 2 BR
Low Cost Homeowner Poli'Cy.
and batt~ . ~entrally loc:ated: · 10x50 ~arie tta 2 BR
THOMA S Fa in Exterminating
ca~1 446-0444 after ~p . m.~ ...
• 10x50 1 Wolverin e 2 BR
•Low
Cost Homeowners Polley for Renters .
Co . Term ife arld Pest Con1rot.
270-tf 10)( 50•· Martette 2 BR
e .l:armowners Policy-Complete Protect ion. in One POlicy . .
Wheel
er
sburg
,
Ohio
- - - - - -- - -- - . __ _.__:_ ·r
IO~e. 5 0 Belmont 2 BR
lA Modern Mobile Homeowner Poli cy.
233 -t l
6 ROOM home· in country, 9 10x 50 KaywOod 2 BR
t LoW Cost Fire Policy .
-- ~- ----~----miiH from town . 367-7441.
446·7572
271 -_3 --~ - ~--------A Spec ial Mu'lti -Peril Pac~ag e Policy for Your Business .
RE F RIGERATION .
washer
dry er se rv, ce. 20 yea r s ex
1J~Ihy· not compare our rates wtth YI!.Ur present . RbO MS,-,:_;eekly
p er1ence . R easo n able . 379 ,
2318
rat ... Park Ce!lfral HoteL .
1974 PINTO Station Wagon ,
can save
:
·policy? We
'262 26
l
'
· 306-tf
E ~ c. cond . C·all 446 -9553 affer

.

NEAR
HO S PI TA L
K IT,
B EAUTIFUL
FAMILY ROOM , 2 CAR
GARAGE , CE NTRAL A1R,
OWNER
WILL
HE LP
FI N A N C E 535,900.

-----

ROOFI N G &amp; Spo utmg Sh 1ngle
an d Bu i ld up ro of. Hot and
Cold p rocess, Home 1m
~:J r ovement in ge neral
F or
free est 1m at es, phone Robert
Meade, 388 8114, Bidwe ll
Oh 10
'
'
264 tf

..

Split Level

---- - - ~ --

- - -~- -

. ...

it l ,':i OO

VERY PRETTY , LARGE 3

.

1974
MERCURY
COUGAR

FARM - WHEATON R D
80 A stock farm , 6 rm.
with fur heat and bot Mr~•:
plenty water. 2
homes
furnished
tractor and other
You can buy the bun·••c c.c-::.
$.4],500.

3 BEDRObM
. OLD, HOUSE
2 YR.
Ac r es, c l ea n level land,
tus n1ce bath ,
"
hen , carpeting,
I
•
0
o
good
water. Like
Close
Tycoon
1n fron t
a real nice new
cQuntry home on clean
level land Only 515,500.00
3'- BEbROOM HOUSE
FOR RENT
6 Rooms . In Gallipolis.
Must have referen ces
45ACRES
VACANT LAND
Tobacco base, new 36'x18'
barn, drilled welt , approx .
20 acres ti llable , 15 acres
good pas ture . Asking only
i l6,000 00 for all of it .
NEW HOME
BEING BUILT
Yes. see this shell of a
house
that
ca n
be
arranged , and f inished to
your needs and desires. At
a pn ce you can afford . Call
for an appointmen\.
1 HOUSE ,
t MOBILE HOME

QUALI F I ED BUYER CAN
PUR CHA SE THI S LOVELY
3 BEDROOM RA NCH WITH
NI C E KITCHEN (DIS H
WASHER
&amp;
RA N GE),
GARAGE , J4 A COU NTRY
LOT
F UL L
PR ICE
IS

Attractive and
Sensible

Sr.

Real Estate Broker
51 Z Second Avenue
Galhpolts, Ohio

Owner Will
Help Finance

SANOY &amp; BEAVER
INSURANCE
SA NDY A ND BEAVER In
surance Co
ha s Off('red
serv1ces for F 1r e I ns urance
co verage 1n Gallia County tor
almost a Century
Fa rms.
hom es and personal pr-operty
coverages are available to
mee t
mdi v idua l
n ee d s
Con tact yo ur netghbor and
agent Emmett Church
269 -6

M&amp;M - -

TEAFO RD

THI S
H A ND SOM E
3
BEDROOM FA NCY KIT CHE N ( DI SHW AS HER &amp;
RANGE),
F IREP LAC E ,
CE NTRA L
A IR ,
SHAG
CAR PETING
THROUG HOUT THI S I S AN
EXT R A NIC E HOME IN
EXC ELLE NT CONDIT ION
O N A HUGE COUNTRY
LOT $2 6,500

$2,500 Down

FOR Do1er , bac kh oe, tr enc h erwork, sand, gr-ave l haul,ng
roof1ng, concr- e te, elecf r ,cal :
p lumb ing, car p enter work ,
old a nd n ew Phon e 614 379
2637
272 8

Virg1l B.

4 Dr.
·&amp;White

1974 DODGE
SWINGER

$449.5 $3595

GALLI POLIS, OH 10

*WHILE
*SPECIAL* *
QUANTITIES LAST

1973
MONTEGO

ST -RT. 160 Near ne ~~
spacio us , all Elec Secti on•~..
home, located on 66 A , lot " ..
New metal storage bld' Q ~"''
Pnced 1n 20s.
,"',~

"'

EASTERN AVE.

BIGGEST
SELECTION EVERI
.

CLARK EVAN·$ RD. -....~
BABY FARM 2 to l~ "
acres . 5 rm . 2. story house.'''
with bath . Als~ has a barn :
Pr1ce $12,600 )v.j th 2 A o-._._.
good garden 1'\n d .
."'.:~

ST. R T. 35 - Brick, 2 yr o l d, '&lt;&gt;~
5 rms , Jl;lbaths,allelec., all ~
carpet, H W . trim , copper 'ur;
p lumbi ng , 2 car gar . w ith ,:
etec door and IOCI!Ited on a .....
lo t lOO'x 180'. Asking $.40,000 ....
MOBILE' HOME 'KERR
BETHEL RD '7 1 Auburn '
12' x 60', full furnished, w ith
air . New block gar. 24' x 26'
and 1. 1 A . tot S12,900

WOOD MOTOR SALES

MORE?check our priees

i";

.

Owner Must Sell .

EXCELLEN T
COUNTRY
H OME WI T H 6 A OF FLAT
L AN 0
10 R 00M5,
J l ·~
B A TH S,
JU ST
COM
PL E TELY
REDECORATED
YOU
WON ' T F INO A BETTER
B U Y IN GALL I A COUNTY
U N DER $20.000 00

CARPET INSTALLATION
F R EE es t imat es, pr of ess,onal
a nd
ec onomy
W ork
gua r an teed
Jute or r ub
be rb ack Ph ·146 :J224
272 3

-----------DOZER work, c tear1ng , €x

STANDARD
Plumbtng - Heating
214 Th1rd Ave ., 446 -3782
18 7-If

1

WE HAVE space in a Second
'd' rAve .
busine- ss
build;n g
ERIENCED
b ar I en_
EXP
,.,
S'u itabte fo r offiC:e, bar
and waitress. Apply KJno'h
bershop , beauty sho p or small
Arm Kn ight Night Club . Rt. 7
Cheshire .
. ; .1
bu_SJI'f'SS . Ph .4.46-1694 .
268 .tf
..
~11{.3 '
,.,

RUSSELL 'S
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
297 tf

60x12 MOBILE home, uti li ties
MACt- or- Female , 18 year
furnished
Roush
Lane,
m 1nimum age
Apply i n
Chesh,re . 367 -7272.
person , P 1zza Hut , 1300
268 If
Eastern Ave. No phone ciills . • --~-~--~------~

---=--~~--------

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

W• rent mobile home lots,
not tust a place to park your
home. We have more to offer
than any mobile commllnity
in Southeastern Ohio.
MOBILE Home, turn , l ocated
on Rt. 35. A l so a la r- ge lot on
Jackson Pike . P h 446-3805
266 -lf

Gallia Co
Best Buy

Us 35 - 10 A , approx 1,850
lr rd frontage . all ulil1t1 eS
availab l e
Buy an d sub
d 1vide

~----

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourth &amp; Ptn e
Phone 446· 3888 or- 446-4477
165 -tf

Rodney, Ohio
Ph. 245-9374-245.5021

________ ____

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

174 tf

Quail Creek
Mobile Community
r&amp; Sales

Clrr.:le i. Kennels
BOARDIN-G , A .K C . Puppies, 2
miles from city, 446-4824.
_}:....._
21.5-tf
.

21t.tf

lJ 7 I f

Pl11mbing &amp; Healing

268-3

Bobbi 's Poodle B6utlque
PROFESSIONAL grooming by
appointment only. Ph. Bobbre
Casto , 446-1944

T GMC P 1ckup
2 T Dodge Tab and Chassrs
1 ] T GMC P1ckup
1, T
GMC P1ckup
1, T 'GMC P tc kup
1' T Chevy P1 c kup
GMC Subur b an
1 ' T
Ford P ick up
SOMMERSGMC
TRUCKS, INC
133 P u'te St
44 6·2 Sl2
17

weekly

Contac1 Newt Jones
Rodney -Cora Rd.

MEIGS COUNTY - 190 A
rolli~g
pasture
f arm
N 1ce ly re m ode l ed h eme
W1th 5 rms, ba t h an d
basemen t , 2 ponds , tr ee q as
and
6 pet
f1nan Cing
avail ab l e

------

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

8 PUPPIES. '2 females, 6 males :
Part German , Shepherd and
Elk hound. $8. 6 weeks old ,

Ph. 256·6003

--

New GMC
Truck H eadquarter s
1968 1 , T GMC Prck un
19 66 1~ T GM C
1970 1 , T Cn ev PJCkup
197-1 ' ? T Ch ev P 1ck.u p
1968 ~ , r GMc P1ckup
]965
T GMC P1ckup
1969 1 ~ T GMC P1ckup
19 71 1 : T Ford Ptckup

.1..: ·. For Information

' cuSToM-sewing~alt;ntio;~Oo ,

27 1 7

- - - - ------------ -

Addison, Ohio

CARPENTER work, finish or
rough, also interior pa inting
Call after 4 p m. 367 -1560 . .. .
',., ~ 267l i6

Need m or e room? ~h 1s o~e should do it for you - 4
bedrooms,. l.a rge b u 1lt-1n kitchen , dming r oom, large
bea,m ed cetltng fam1Jy room with-fireplace, 2'12 baths, full
ba sement with rec . room and fireplace 2 car garage and
l'/2 acre lot Ow ner must sell immediately and has
red uced pnce from $42,900 down to $39,900 . It's going to
sel l and you'll be pleased you l ook ed at 1t.

Black, black Landau top, air,
stee l belted tires. Sharp.

HVPAY

2:

NEIGHBORHOOD RD. -ho uses on nearly l A l ot. No 1
I , has B rms , bath, en cl osed "
porch &amp; plenty storage room '
Ptenty ,good , free water No t
2, has j rm s. , propert y has
cellars. topped wtth stor-ag e ,
bld 'gs .. gar .• with s tora ge ·~
overhead , workshop &amp; 1:"
poultry houses
Land • !i
e)Cce llent for garden in g Th1s ,
pr-operty is being sold to
se ttle an e\late &amp; priced for a •
quick
sale
at
526. 00 0
\ Potential plus ) J
· ·.o;;

ANX I OUS
OWNER
+
EMPTY
HOM E
OPPORTUN IT Y I 3 BR near
n ew ranche r , w w carp et.
gar-age, outstand ing view &amp;
r ea11st,cally price-d $26,000
ATTENTION
HOME OWNER
We need lt shng s ~ call today
- IT WILL PAY.

Special Buy For Someone

Services Offered

3 ALL purpose box traps, 2
Shotguns ~ma lt meat mil l
Ph 4·16 4 127
27 1 3

Pay Only One
Utility

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

BABYSITTING in
Ph one 446 .7667 .

For Sale

llh BATHS

2)0 . 12

REMODELED2 STORY Th1 S l ovely hom e is loc ated
111 Ad d •son T wp
&amp; offers
lo t s of good l oving for only
S:l3,900 Some featu res are
new t'tiUm1num
Sl dtn g,
s t orm w rndows. n at ur al
gas heat , n ew fact ory
kdche-n w1t h ca b1 nets,
range.
di Shw as h er
&amp;
re tng erator. format d m1n g
rm &amp; almost 2 acres cl ose
to tow n

RANNY BbACKBURN, BRANCH MANAGER

Ph . 446 0235.

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

RANCHES
Pr1ces
r-ang e from $17, 000 to t35. 000

WORLD'S LARGEST
THE LEADER SINCE noo
IN
SERVING
THE
NATION ' S BUYERS AND
SELLERS
Ph . 446-0008

NO DOWN PAYMENT 1f
you quali f y L1ke new 3 BR
ran ch ha s brrck fro nt , W·W
carp e t . garage an d located
,n ctty school di sl

Townhouse
Apartments
2 Bedroom
Townhouses

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

NEW HOMES -

PERRY TWP - 147 A, 51
A fi.Jt land (now 111 corn ),
some- commercial l im ber,
l ar ge lob
base, 6 rm
home , large b arn , BT r d,
1135,000

- ------ ------

25 Locust Sf
Howard Brannon, Broker
Off . 446-2674
Lucille Brannon
Eve . 446 -1226 or 446 -2674
BUY
NOW 1 G 1v e yo ur
farn ll y the gift thut k eep s on
g rvtng
E S P
Extra
spec ial
proper t y A J A lot m a
cho1ce l ocation $9,000
WILL HELP FINANCE - 'l
beaut1ful h omes, all el ec lr1 c.
J 8 R, r, t ba th , w .w ca rp et
"" A tots. qv1 ck possess i on

&amp; SPLIT, L EVE LS -

LOV.' DOWN PAYMENT New se.:t1onal hOm E' 1S all
el ectric tcr your con
ven 1E' nc c ana com fo r t
Features 3 BR's, bath,
shag carpet , k 1tchen W1t h
r an ge, hood , refrigera tor
and
l o t s of
cab1 n ets
Sduu ted on a larqe fl at lot
on a 8 T r-d
-

MOBILE HOME close to GS I

Business Opportunities

Tel. 614-446-1998

$2 9 .500 .

LAND
CO NTRACT
Spac 1ous ol de r hom e has 4
BR's, b ath , laundry . forced
a1r furna ce . co
wate r ,
sepa rat e double garage
and 200 It f ron t on state rd
'!ill .000

OPENING SOON
For rental information
Ph , 446-1599 or write
P.O.
Box
301,
Gallipolis, Ohio

AGENCY

1974.MONTE CARLO

Realty, 32 State St '

REALTY

MONE Y MAK· ER
7
cornmcr-c1al ren tat s an d 2
Th is
l arge .rtpartments
bull d 1n g IS l ocated on a
corn cr lot 1n downtown
Pomeroy In come frgur es
ava 1lilble 10 rn t eres t ed
p£&gt;rson s

OWNER
WILL
MELP
FINANCE - Moder n home
otters
6
rms,
balh .
basement and over 1 ac r e
of ro111ng l and Jus.t l 1sled
$15.500

SPRING VALLEY
GREEN
APARTMENTS

'

'·

WISEMAN

E NJOY
CO UNTRY
liV IN G 1n lh1 S m oder n ]
BR home W1 l h HW fl oor s,
mo d ern ktt c h en , 7 cur
q,1raqc . ,ln d brr c k fr ont
T111S horne c an be t:louqht
w1th l acre or- 47 S('(' lh1 5
on£'

IN EXPENSIVE
COUN ·
TRY LIVIN G - Sr111s and
bath ce ll ar . s.ma ll b.Jrn .
shot &lt;~ n d 'J acres near
Vmton $10 500

apartm ent

or 47 1 1472

266 ] . - - -- -·- - - - - - - -

f

"'

Adult s, refer ences 631 Fourt h
Ave
/66 t1

basement , l arge enclosed
porch , 1 ac re, orchard , in N
E . Columbus Will trade for
farm Owner W+ll fmanc~ :- 388
8483

No

757 tf

2
story 4 tHC ltv . rntl .,
fireplace . di n1ng room , kU ·

mE ~

STROUT REALTY

.' "' l I I

4 dr. hardtop, 350 cu . in. v.a engi ne, P.
steering. P. brkes. radio, auto. tran s., fac . air
con&lt;i .. w -s-w tir es, green finish with matching
inteeoor, viny l top. Extra clean .

PARSON'S
HARDWARE
Vinton, Ohio .
Special Thts. Month - 10 sp.;
Huffy Btcycl e, 599.95; 8
Track Player w i th speaker ,
S49 . 9S,· Rockw et' 14" Or i rr ,
59 . 95 ,· 1 pc . Tetlon •2 CoMing
Coololware Set, 1Sil . 9S.
Many
other
'specials .
Lttvaway l,or Christmu . ·
,
Hrs .: 8-5, Mon.- W ed .
B-12 Thur sday , 8·5 Fn . &amp; Sat .
CIO$ed Sunday

.,

J

40 NICE, CLEAN USED

CA~S

TO CHOOSE FROM

GALLIPOLIS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
1639 EASTERN AVENUE,

GALUPO~IS,

446-3273 -

For Sale

For Sale

ALL
TYPE S -of
buil d ing
F'ublic s~aflfl\o .
mater i al s, block , bri ck. sewer OFFICE
Desks - 4 dr files , Sec and
pipes , wi ndow s, linte ls. vtc.
E xec
fo l dlng and stac:k
Ct aude Winters. Rio G rande.cha.rs Storage cabinets In
. 0 . PhoOe 24 5~11 1 after 5.
stock Simm ons Ptg. &amp; Office
123- "
Equip . Phone 4"6-1397 .
- - -----~-- 230-tt
LlMEsTONt: t or arlveways
"co ACHMA!'J Travel !rai l er s,
Carl Winters. Phone 245-5 115
Motor Hom es, 5th Wheel ,
245 tl NO hunt ing Signs of all kinds.
c ars ,
trucks ~ -Magnetic,
Truc k Campers , A ppl e City
-~--------plasti c, metal
Name ana
Auto Seles, Rt 35 N Jackson,
STA R CRAFT
mai l box plates . Si mmons .
Ohio . P,hone 286·5700
GIGANTIC SALE
Ptg . •and Office Equip .
118 -tf ON f olddOwns, 'all models, tre'
230·tf
t'reat.e r p l us highest d1scou nt
FOR your Tire and Ba tt ery
in Tr l St ate . Camp Conley
n eeds, come to sears Tire
Slarcraft Sales, Rt . 62 N . of
Shop i n The Sit v'er Bndgc1
Point Pl easa nt Behtnd Red FIR EWOOD , any amount : Ph
446 .499P
Pl,aza
Car-pet Inn .
236-ft
226-lf
238 tf
SELEC T commo n red br ick s,
any amount , field ti le, cement ,
b l ock , cement, mortar . Gal
llcol!2 S tock Co , 122 1h Pine.
St _, A-46 .278 3
140-ff

--------------

'--~---- -

--

--- -----

For

Saki

1971 CHEVELLE VB; auto , p .s.,
mag wheels, good condition .
Call after &lt;4 :30 p .m . 446-4659 .
'
'
269 -3
-------~---- · --

3 AKC Chinese Pugs , 29 Neil
Ave . SlOO each . ,
269-J

e LE G ANT-:---;-c-;-;;;;-;; e ct

tablecloth, · approximatel y 80
Inches diameter . 367 -7474
269 3
COPPERTONE refr igerator
and stove, tlvlng room suite,
all In good shape . Can be seen
Saturday, 2-6. Sox B1 St . Rt
588
26P 3
·

·'

�..
30 - The Stmday) unes-SeJll.blei,.S'!'i~ay,Nov. 17, 1974

Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Nov_ 17

~·

•

72 CHEVROLET IMPALA

Fol"lfliM,; !J-esuits Use TheSunday Times-Sentinel Classified$
Wanted To Buy
,STA NDING

For Rent

f 1mber

r--c:---=· - - -.;...

U N r URN I S H E 0 C'III CIC II f Y a pt
$ 115 per mo Ph J .l r. v .. ,J

388 8-l90 .
272 If

12xt.O MOB ILE H OME

STA NDIN G
TIMBER
amount . 388 91jl06 .

1n

ilf.'l\1'

R1 o

Gri'lnde ,

loca t ed

Pl 1ou f'

2J S

MAKE SURE YOU SEE
THIO:: ONE Lttl. e n f'w In
l eve l o lt e&gt;rs l IH10 SQ It ot
11Vrl1(1 space plus cl ( car
q&lt;~ra ~e O t hf'r f eatur es are
·I FIR's , 7 ' · b.1tt1s , sunken
l R Or eam lo. rtc l1cn . tomily
rm
wdh WO l 1rep tace
cent i'l1r , pa t ro , .Jnd Iaroe
lot Locr~lcd 111 one at the
ilrca·s n 1cer subdrv is ton s

52~7.
2 ~!1

270.3

tf

TRAILER SPACE . Wilier and
sew a g£&gt;
prov•df.'d
c h• ldr&lt;' n $20 p er m onth
4l98 a lt e r 5

TOP pr,u s paid for j unk autos
and scrap mer at Ph 388 8776
?62 12

SLEEP IN G r ooms
ra t e G a ll1a Ho te l

For Sale, Rent or Trade .
P

chen.

1'

2

baths ,

FIRST floor

full

week I y

furn

For Rent or Sale
2 STORY house . 4 BR , I1V 1n g
room. famil y room , fireplace ,
dining room , k1tchen , den, 11 2
baths. full basement, front
porch. enclosed back porch-t 2
car garage , a lso a 7 rm .
"house
Approx
1 acre in
Vinton Owner wdl finance .
388 -8483 or 471 -1472 .

--------------

2 B R all e l ectr1c turn . mobile
home ( I f rented , adults onlyl.
2.459225 21 2 miles south of
R 10 Grande on Rt . 325 .
268 5

MOBILE HOME close to Crown
C lly

TEEN 'S C.:trryout. Crown CJty ,
reduced for quick !ale Large
lot on Rl . 7 block build1ng ,
also
su i table
for
other
tlusiness or converti ng . 1-o
restaurant . s 12,000 Phone
377 -4774 after 6 p .m

5 ROOM house, bath , close to
Crown C1ty . Call 446 0893
260 tf

------------ --- WANTED SPEEDEX
TRACTOR DEALERS
PROTECTED
area
manufacturers to dea le r
direct , good dea·ler discount .
Contact Sales Dept , 367 North
Freedom St , Ravenna , Oh10
44 266 216 -297 -1484 .
271 -8

TARA

Wanted To Do
WALL PAPER INU ana 1nterior
painting . Ph . 446 -986.5
VvA [L
!Jct p ~r!ny ,
r n 1 ~r1or
painting . Reasonable rates
Ph . 446-4423 or 446 3631
242 tf

T YPiNG s-EirviCES-;illdo all
kinds of typing 1n my home.
Call 446 4999
2$4 . tf·
CARPENTRY WORK ; Rootiri~,
block laymg and condrifte
work . Phon e 4.46-27.87.
•
my

home.
269 6

PEAVEY P A system wrlh four
Shu r e m 1cr op hones $600 f1 rm

1968
19 71
1967
1969
1968
1968
19 71
1967

-

all.. types of clothing, furs,
reweaving. F'h . 446 -7520 or
446-1771.
233 -rf

•.:.Cirll Shirley. Adkins

·367-7250
...

-----~-------.!......

Pets

-,•

BOARDING, AKC PUPPIES
K&amp;,P Kennels, lBB -827.t . Rt . 554;'
~rLEEPING rooms ,
1
12 mi. E . Porter .
S.tf ~" ri:ttes. Ubby HoteL
19
--r:---=---=-----~-

PINE RIDGE COLLIES
BEAUTIFUL AKC Reg. Ccllles .
sable and white . Wonderful
gifts for Christmas . , Ca.ll
afternoons or evenings. 614
256 1267.
, 268 -.5.

Help Wanted

---~ --------¥-~f8·~ -

For Rent
-f R~~te ~ 0 ~~ 1i 00~8ome,

Upper
256 .tf

_ 2 BR fd ' (liShed apartment , a ,rcond ll. dults on l y 446 2851
272 tf

FURN~ apf.4-;~m ;- andbath ,

seco .n d floor , off street
park1ng . Adults only. S120 per
'iv Nr:;vV t&lt;e!iJency tnc . Apts . 2 mo Ph. 446-4416 after I p .m.
bedrooms. carpeted, total - -- -- - - 272 6
electric, located on Sand Hilt FUR-----Road , Pt. Pleasant. Ph b?S·
N eff~eiency apt. in Rio
5104 or 675 5386.
_.;
Grande. SSO Ph . .446 -1315.
'
269-T,T
·•
272 3
-----~-.---- ---

Gallipolis, 446-4782
DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone 446- 2735
187 -tf

aR·Ao-;;~Rv- •mc,:;,~;-;:p,,, .:M.obil; Homes Fo;--Sale

------ -

QUALIFIED
BUYER
ASS UM E PRE SENT L OA N
OWN E R MUST SELL T HI S
A ND
FRAM E
B RICK
RANCH W ITH PARTIAL
BASE MEN T. BE AUT)FUL
K I TC HEN . 3 B E DROOMS,
LO CA TED O N 3 .1 ACRE
LOT EXCELLENT NEIGH
BO RHOOD O N R T 160, 3
MI . FROM H OS PITA L

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

GENE PLANTS&amp; SON
PLUMBING - H eati ng - Air
Co nd1t 1oning, 300 Fourth Ave .
Ph . 4.46 -1637 .
48 tf

Services Offered

-

- - - - - --- ---

Paul Smith 24 h r wrecke r
se r v 1ce Ph . 245 5034 or 446
9] 11
264 If

-------------KOTALIC LANDSCAPING

RIO GRANDE , OHIO
COMPLETE PROGRESSIVE
LANDSCAPING
SHRUB S, tr ees, ro c k garde ns,
all g uar- anteed . Patio and pool
land sca ping
Stone, sa nd ,
coa l . shrub ber y trimm1ng
Dum p truc k ser'v1ces
245 913 1
187 tf
cavaf1ng. stump removal,
bu sh hopp1ng P h 446 0051.
266-11

TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FREE inspection Call 446-3245
Mer-r ill O ' Dell. Opera tor by
Exterminal Termite Serv-Ice,
10 Belmont Dr
267 tf
-- - --~--~~ -

TOO L
s ha rpen ing ,
saws,
scissors, sh ea rs , home and
garden too l s
Sharp Shop ,
Alley r ea r , 1.47 Second
'216-tf

GENERAl CONTRACTING
Hom e improv ements and ad ditions Roofing , vinyl S1d1ng
Call .446 -0668 or 245 5138
152 56

G I L L t:o-. vv,... , t:r&lt;. .l

GARAGE, a,, . ~, &lt;&gt; ttu ua:. .,.rnent
c l ean1 ng Trash hautmg . Free
es tim at es Ph 446 -03 55 or 446
2950
21 8 78

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

FRENCH CITY BLOCK, 4i6 .
3608, loca ted at K err . Beth el .
Kemper Holl ow intersection.
15Q .tf

::-- - ---~...:::;;...~-~-~- -

D

.

P Mart1n &amp; Son Water
Delivery
Serv ic e.
Your
patronage
w111
be
ap
prec i at ed. Ph . 446 -0463 .
2H

BEDRO OM W I TH FA MILY
ROOM , 2 CAR GARAGE
OW NER
WILL
HE L P
F IN A NC E
THIS
N EW
HOME

Galha Co. 's L argest R:eai
Estate Sates Agency
Offic e 446 ·3643
EvenmQs Call
rke .Wiseman 441i- 'H 9f,
E' N . Wrseman. 446-4500
Bud M-cGhee, 446 - t'lSS

.lt:tJ I IC...

TANK
CLEANING
AND
REPAIR
A L SO
H O USE
WRECKING Ph 4.4~9499
Establ,shed in 1940.
169 tf
ALBERT EHMAN
Water- Delivery Service
Pa1rtot Star, Gallipoli s
Ph. 379-2133
243 -l f

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

BANKS TREE SERVICE
FRE E estimates, liabi! 1ty 10 .
sura nce. Pruning ' trimming
and cav it y work , tree and
stump remova l . Ph . .446 -4953.
7].tf

•

GARFIELD AVE . We
hav e two ni ce hom es here.
one fu l ly furnished , bo t h
have garag es
Take you r
pi ck t or $16,500
COURT ST. Good com
mer c ia I b ulldmg 1n t he heart
of town Wtth two a par tments
upsta 1r s and a l arge gro und
fl oo r
SECOND AVE .
Small
res ta ura n I. a gomg b u sm ess,
sui t ab l e for hu sb and and
W1fe Ca ll for Information
GEORGE'S CREEK RD . Large home w1th forced a1 r
furnace , 1 1 '~ bath s, county
wate r , l ocated on 2' , acres of
ni ce land . Price r ed uced to
$16,000 .

Evening Call
John M . Futler--446- 43 27
Lee- Johnson-256· 6740
Doug Wether-hotl-446-4244
B Y OWNER 2 year s Ol d, 4 BR
be.aut 1ful home on 2 acr es.
W ilt take mobi l e home or
cam per on lrude Ph 3 ~7 01 ·10 .
26 3 10

-- - - - - · - - -- - -

"SELL THE
AUCTION WAY"

All utilities -·· p.lfd.' ' 1 ·a',. 2
wortcing ladles . Refltren_cf'
required . Upp_e r,,Rt . 7. Phort't'

'-"·2f06.
,,

-

.

'

·,

. 270-]

·

_.__,.~-r---:-- ~-T~-_-

' I

~

j,.

l

. ,.

~..,.

"J

~

•

:
·.
272 6
--LL------ -~- -­
'6' 'AI..PHINE Sumbeam . Must
s·@ill '. 'No reasonable offer
refused . Ph . 446 -9627.
272 6
-·---~ - - -- ~ ---

'.. .
.·

..

p.m.

..

'.

----

------ ------P ALM rea dmys, discreet a~ '

..

I

. .-' ...

..

&lt;It

~

•

•

.. .
-·

,

I
-

.,

.,.,

'

. ".

..

..

town, $.4,500

·"'-

'. .

1972
MAVERICK

1971
PLYMOUTH

Metalic

1972
FORD
PINTO
~!

2 Dool
Wh1te &amp; Blue

Door, Blue

+ Q964

""J85 2
WEST
.,09872
'J5
+A73

Country Sedan
Station Wagon

3'

1

I

1 I

'

finesse.
..:outh was one ot .nose
cu "tpulstve fin esser~~ _He
wa ted no tim e plunKmg
dUI my's jack of spades on
We. ,'s 101 spot. t..hereupon
East produced thb queen. The

Blue

1970
MAVERICK

presence of both mrnor sUJt

aces in the West hand, together wtth a ftve·card spade
suit, saw poor South l os tng
three spade tricks and these

two aces.

2 Dr. Sedan

"Clean"

All South had to do to m-

sure hi s contract was to

p ia ~

make

f1v e

odd. but

th at play wo uld cost him In s
co ntract tf 'A- es t held t he
q u et:"n of spades. This way tile
con t ract was safe.

,.

11-i

Wesl

Nort h

Eas l

Dh iP

l'i.JS.'&gt;

South
l'ass

.,

\'au. Sou th . hol d

+K J 43 ,foA 9 5 4
do you do now' 1

• 43 • A Q 7
\~' h&lt;ll

A-Bid

thr ee spades.

""ant to be in game m so me

You
KUit.

TOOAv·s &lt;IUESTION

All NEW 1974 MODELS WILL BE

Send $1 lor JAC OBY MODERN
book ro "Wm ar Bndge · (clo th1 s
ne wspaper}. P 0 Box 489 RadiO
C1/yS /at10n New York NY 10019

2 HEAVY winter gir l 's coats
with fur co llar s, g'ize 10 12
Excellent cond . S20 each Ph
367 -756.4 .
272 3

Tru ck for sa l e
'68 FO RD 1 T ca ttl e tru ck.
good c ond . M us t sell due to
dea th Make offer 245 5663
.
271 3

AGR! CO Fertil,ze r , buy now
and sa ve Ph 256 6474 or see
Jerry Shaffer
27 1 3

PHONE 388·9969

270 ·3

270 5

......

PLYMOUTH

Yuur pa1tner b1d s four h ~ar t s
1n respon se to ~o ur cue b1d. Whul
do you do rr uw''

For Sale

1971 FORD WINDOW VAN

--~_

CHRYSLER~

hut don't know which one.

For Sale

In good condition. Gets good
gas mileage and has QOOd
tires.

Phone

GALLIPOLIS

245-

____ _

270-6

'27 0 6

588.

C HUR C,., .-.,.ws and Pulpit
fur-n .tu r- e Reaso nab lv oricf!d
Writ e at once for Chris tm as
and New Year 's. Spec ial free
FIRE WOOD , 515 per J., fen
offer St even s Church Supply
p ickup toad Call 446 753J ani
Co, P 0
Box 781
Hun t ime .
tington , w. Va
258-6
254 2~

For Sale

1 COPPERTONE refrigerator
and stove, bedroom suite. all
in good shape. Can be seen
Saturday 2-6, Box 81. St. Rt.
27i .2

3 GAS forced sir space heaters
Two 140,000 BTU at S8S
each. one . - 88,000 BTU sso
All heaters have thermostats,
valves , and new roof top
vents . See at Tope Furniture
or phone 446 -0332 .
,271 -3

Corbin-Snyder
------ ~ ------NEW Gibson and Admiral Food NEW 24" 3 spd Girl ' s bicycle '
Freezers, chest type and
$70 new , by pr ivate owner .
uprighf. 955 S;econ d Ave . f'Jh .
Will sell tor S40 . Ph 256 1123.
446-1171.
268 ·6
268-3
.
________ ...______
TRUCK Camper Special
OUPLEX40x'321n GallipollsOr
Qeer hunters, 16 ft . Chrts
will trade for farm rand-In city
Craft flbe-rgf,us boat 75 h .p ..
school ctlstriCt . Can't be buttt
elect. Start. Johnson Motor
for asking price . Call 446 -3964.
with gator trailer . 25 6 1123.
268 -6
269 6
f~r

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

••

eBIG SAVINGS .
ON 1975 MODELS
No Reasonable Offer Refused
Come Prepared To Deal

STOP and chat Browse or buy
GOOD clean lump and stoker
Corner Cra ft s, ChtiiiC,Othe RCI
'
272 8
c oal . Ca r l Wmters, Rio
G rand e Ph 245 -5115
245 If
1971 FORD Maverick 6 cy l ,
auto . trans . Viny l fop, delu~t:e
inte-rior
Ex cetle nt c ond
GRAvt::L. 11me$lone. sand.
$1,450 Call 446 -1993 art~r 5· 30 .
Mason san d . fill dirt. Pi t run
272 3
De l ivered by the ton 446 1142.
247- tf
2 - 9 mas old Charola is bu ll s
Ph . 2.4.5 -5007
272 3 NO Tr a d e 1q65 v w Trans
porte-r- , good cond Has builf ·ln
cab1 net , por t able smk Sleeps
two Ph 44 6 1322
27 1.3

SATURDAY, NOV. 23 AT 10:30 A.M. &amp;
·SUNDAY, NOV.24ATI1:·30A.M.

CHEVY Blazer K -S, 350
auto trans ., full power,
.
AM -FM radio, 2
Call 379-2597.

.

l messe dummy 's Jac k. The
ftnesse wou ld lose, but East
wouldn't have a spade to le ad
hack . South wou ld have Lime
to knock out t he oth er ace
and w1nd up ma kmg to ur
not rump .
Of cou rse, a South playe r
us tng mtrror s could refuse
111 e ftn esse the seco nd ttm c

ONE of the finer t hi ng s of life - ' AUL T 'S Mobile Hom e Ser- v1ce
B lu e Lus tre carpet and
Ski rfmg , r-oof coating. pat 1os,
' upholste ry c l eanlf r
R ent
awnings, anchor s. ceme nt
electric
sh ampooer
$1
work Free estimat es Ca ll
Central Supply
446 -2950 aft er 4'30 p .m
271 3
213 If

1
FORD
PICKUP

For Sale

DELir:RED
GAWPOI.IS

'

Station Wagon

1970
GMC
..
TRUCK

0 9 3.

a second

Blue

1969
TORINO

HOME.

AS .

t z:H;J :~ ''t?,9.3 :J·

may well be a 'good reaso n to
climb a mount arn, rt 1s n ota l ~
ways a good reaso n to··.ake a

•

miles iauth of ZaiHisvhte, 35 mi'los northw,;.t of
Mort ella, or 35 miles northlut of Athens, Ohio. Toil miles.
1-i_:_::!:~~~::S~ of McConnetsville &amp; Motto, Ohio on St. Rt. 377
, Athens In Pennsville otlho ·am ·J ones Form. . ,, l
Selling high quality antlquas from several astates ' from ·
the Cleveland. Canton, and Akron area Including some
Items at one time belonging to Pres. Wm. 'McKinley
Among the Items for sate are several rare lteins as wall a~
museum pieces. Many of the Items go back to the 1700 and

3 NT

Openmg lea d - lO•

'

'

West wou ld

r ou nd a nd

South

Pass

2 DAY ANTIQ~E ·SALE
-

East

I NT
Pass

Eastern Ave.

.

I

fY Oswald &amp; James .Jacoby
: The fact th&lt;h It IS ther e

1970
NIIAVERICK

~$3

spade . T h iS tt me South shoul d

Tht! b 1dd1 11g lw s bel!tl'

BOB EVANS DRIVE-IN

PENNSVILLE~ OHiO

' Q1074:t2
+8 52
·

Both vu ln eruhl c

2 Door

We _offer paid vacations, profif
shar1og, paid hospital insurance
pleasant working conditions. Apply i~
person.
·· ~ ~

PUBLIC.AUCTION .

I

. &lt;l3

+

Camaro

Bonneville
Green

'·

JANITOR

1

EAST

SOU Till[))"" 76
• K 65
'A86
K J 10
""KQ10 3
North

•

e1thcr minor su1 t ace and

"" A 9 4

1970 CHEVROLET

owner, 75 Buick trade. Expect the
best.

TUDORS AND STATION WAGONS 10 IN
STOCK. 4 SPEED AND AUTOMAnC

1nck o n~ and lei the 10 run
around to h1 s kin g
So uth wo uld kno c k out

'K 9

II~ONTIAC

CLOSEOU

r efuse that spade fm esse at
IG

2 Or. hdtp., air. 24,000 miles, one

$2295 •3695

It takes great finesse not to

1971
FORD

1971

P. steering &amp; brakes, 35,000 miles,
8 ft . bed. Red.

WIN AT BRIDGE

• AJ 4

Gran Prix, white, while vinyl top,
white bucket seats, 5,000 miles .
This is no misprint . Like New.

1972 CHEV. PICKUP.. 1972 BUICK- ELECJ;RA.

GAlliPOliS, OHIO

Blue

'-

$3995 $449

DON WATTS
VOLKSWAGEN, INC.

NORTII

Phone

,This Is really a 3 d~y sale. sate held regardless of weath.,:
under large lent and in healed garage. This will be a very
out~tanqlng sale that you Y(Oft't· want. to miss.
See THi PAR!(ERSBURG SENTINEL SUNDAY, NOV.
17 FOR COMPLETE LISTING. •.
·,
Parking. Lundl. Positive to: · · Termo-Coshdlyafsole.
Nat relpOIISible for ICcldonts. ·
AuctiOIHitrs---'llltl Jones &amp; Ott Opperman
Phone 962-211511 - "7-:J.UI

I. -.

Stat1on Wagon

5 ROOM and bath, 5 m i l

along ,wfth any small Items remaining from Saturday

- - --- - --- -r----i?---

White

Bronze

Dr . Hdtp. , p. windows &amp; seat,

17,000 miles. Sharp. Was $4195.

WITH MOUNTING AND F.E.T.

1970
PONTIAC

lamps, several hundred old &amp; good qualltysmalrttems lot
beautiful old pictures &amp; frames, extra old on ta,..;p 1,
Oriental rugs and many other Items. Glass, china,
lewelry, lamps, Sterling, and all small Items will be sold
saturday, Nov. 23. t:urnlture to be sold S~nday, Nov. 24

1•

. ..

OfOce Ph . 446-1694
·' Evenings
Charles M . Neal, 446- 1546
J. Michael Neat, 446·1503
Sam Neal, 446-7358

1800's. Furnlture, .china, glass,lewelry, lot sterling sliver,
several stained ·gl~ss windows, a lot of very unusual

comple t e reveals innerselt,
strengths, weakness . health ,
romance
Se nd tor free
details L B ur ch. Box 289, Rio
Gran de, Oh io 45674
268 -.4

TORINO

7 rms., 2

HELP WANTED

FARM FOR REN.T
Farm
house,
ca rpet ed.
kitchen ca binets , 4.bedrooms
over BOO pound toba cco base
and barn , want to rent for
·o ne year at $125 a mqnth and
tenant gets all the tobacco
crop . References required
and first and last month's
rent . Tobac,co crop 'sh ould
pay tor year's ren t

wd

MUSTANG

4

SET OF TWO

White &amp;

In the V i llage of Crown City
on Sta t e Route 7, 2 bedroom
hou se r e mod el ed, 1 story
buil d1ng, 1 summer hou se
with storage area. Priced
$25.500

Phone:
R usselt D. Wo:Od, 444 : 1066
1 446 -4618 ( E;.oenings)
Ronald K . Canaday·r
446-1066
Eve nings 446-1636

USTANG II

atr, bath , carpet over
floors, 25' beautiful
i
cab . It has a barn and
lot . Price $18.000.

ES

L arge
older
h ome
overlooking th e c1ty, 100x1 20
tot
s 1ze,
3
bedroom,
basem ent w it h g as turnace,
with 1n walking d1 s tance to
school, priced at $26,500 .

e

5

PATRIOT -

Small farm 50 acres more or
l ess, all c l ean with Impr oved
pa st ur-e, de v elop ed spr1 ng,
3' , m lies f rom tlie hosp 1tat.
two bedroom ho me, large
bath ,
furnace,
some
ca b1n ets, barn 36~e.4 0 . Land
and barn prtced at $22 ,500,
Lan d , bar n ahd dwe lling
pr iced at $36,500

Writes All Types of Insurance For '
Your 'Auto, Home or Business
Lightni~ Rod Mu.t ual
J Represent
.
· Insurance Company

Green

~ilh base ., turn. heat,

Block home - 3 bedroom ,
bC[Irn, ml'lc.,inery bldg.,
fences , '·2,000 lb. tobacco
a llotm ent,
one
acre
growing .now and goes wi1h
this sa l e, rolling .land . Good
pasture of farming. All
mineral rights goes. Only
$12,500 . .

We need fiv e buyers to buy
th e rema1 ning houses at
Rodn ey Village 1r $532 00
down wi t h balan ce Over 33
years Don't let th ese houses
pass yo u buy 1

JIMME SAYRE

·""-

NEAL REALTY
15 A farm 5, rm . house with
bath, rural water , located 5
mi. from town on blacktop
road .

Three bedroom home on
T ex as Road , 1 acre of
grou nd , g ar age. priced at
$12,5 00 for qu1ck sa l e .
On Chat ham Avenu e, 2 lots, 2
out building s, nice c lean siK
room h ouse w1th new bath,
fen ced m l ot, basement,
e)(ce llent buy at $15,500 .

AUCTION
SERVICE

2 Door

3800 miles. air cond., vinyl top,
showroom cond.. New Buick
trade .

I.

1973 PONTIAC

1973 BUICK

560x15
MUD &amp; SNOW
TIRES

ANY HR. 446::"1998

Here is how t o -b uy your~elf a
n 1c e ChriStmas president
yo u have l on g awa it ed A
nice three b edroo m home,
good hardwood flo ors , l arge
ex tra n1ce kitchen cab in et s,
uti l1ty room. gas furna ce,
bat h ,
s mall
ba seme nt,
wat k1ng d istance to sc hoo l.
l ot 42x.1.42, w il l sell on land
contr act with a reas onabl e
down payment 515,500.

e

- · ·---"'_:_..,-:--~:--- · • •
'U PSTAIRS Duplt&amp; t 4 )"m ~ turn .-

NEW LISTING 14 A .
4 Room Block home
55 'x. 10 ' c lean and good
mobile home Plus 1.4 acres
of good land on Keystone
Rd near Vinton. apple and
cherry trees . Won 't last
long See Jt now .

Lot on Route 141 wit h rura l
water tap, 100ft frontage by
255 fl d eep Pr1ced at $4,500,
terms
one -third
down,
bal ance of 6 percent , no
r estr1Ct1o n s.
·

WE BUY, SELL, TRADE

1973
FORD
LTD

CITY 821 Second A
Lease or sell. 6 .big
rms. ~~·~l)i:
bath , 2 story on1 a large
iof. It has a tile block
plus a storage b ldg. A 'ci"o().ci"&gt;l'!"·
buy for S17,SOO .

.446·1066
CLOSE TO TOWN r n1:.
th ree bedroom ran c h has a
lOvely bath , n1ce kitchen
Wilh buil t in range ov en,
natural ga5 he.:t t , City water
and -.ich oo ls Good 1ocat 1on
lUSt outs1 d e of town

.

BABY FARM ~ 6 mile down
Rt . 7, beautiful 3 bd . rm .
frame ranch , new carpet
over H W , equ ipped kitchen.
full base with F B., 2 car
attached gar. , root ce llar
Clf!d storage bldg ., 4 A . Jot
w tth frontage on rlver and
Rt . 7. All kinds ot truit trees
and garden . Pr ice only
S39,SOO.

REALIDR

AUCTIONEER

Auto Sales

:

YtOOD,

Leadingham Agency

5\:I!E;.NG ':-

-

FA IRFIELD -CEN.
Split entry, all
carpet, colonIa I, ·
. . o •. ' o
dry -wall. full
. I
kitchen , 2 1J~
W1th a 2 ca.: garage. ,.,:.c·;
one of the better houses
the area, 2,000 scr. ft . li
area . 9 A lot Price up,pet""!!
S40s

RUSSELL

seCond floor , adults only 1 DP·: l2x60 ,Al l electri c Sh ultz mobil e
- ---- .T Rt -~;;,; -,-pets . Phone 446-0957 .
- ;. . : :
heine, fur nished , new washer
Electric: Contractors
'
.
269 -tf:
and dryer- , 7x10 metal bldg
COMPLETE elec tnca l service ,
- --:''; -.- - -- - - - -- - - ; ·
porch and underpinning on
Gallipolis , Ohio Ph . 367·0311. ·
FARM house, carpe1ed, kif · ~
75'X145' lot on Rt, 160, near
~07 tf
ctlen cabine't s, 4 bedrooms ~ .
NGHS, $8700. Phone 388
-~-~---- - -~--over 800 pound tobacco base
8706.
ar\q barn, want to rerit tor one
"
270 3 ---- ~ - -- ------year at $125 a month anti ----~ ---------CREMEANS PIPE&amp;
te'i-nmt gets all the tobac:co
B&amp;SMOBILE HOMES
SUPPLIES
. Bidwell , Ohio
' e:r9P - References required
· PT. PlEASANT
and first. and , last !,. month'sJ;' 1964 Park wood 10x56 2 BR
HOT and cold pla stic pip e and
rent . Tobacco
c:rop·should pay.,;_ 1'965 ' Naflonal lOx SO 2 BR
fitt i n gs, sewer and dra i n pipe ,
1
. kitchen sin k s, fiberglass tub s
- ... 1965 _Cam·elot 12x55 3 BR
tor1 year S r.ent . Phone 2444
1 1 11
and shower. vanities and B lu e
1066 ""- ·
1968 Globemnter 12x60 2 BR
-....!!....--~---'------•
;
·'
1970
Sfetesman
12x50
2
BR
R 1d ge Paint . Ph 388 -8576.
FUR1 NISHED apt . Adults onl_(
'1972 FAWN 12x60 2 BR
New Owner s
Cheshlr:e . Ph . 367 7512
-1967 PMC l2x60 ' 3 BR
Arnold Smith ·a nd
Charle s Smith
_.....;...;.;..~~~-~.:__ ____ 271 3 ~Sl'-~~c 8x3:_1..:_BR____ _
231 tf
SMALL. ' modern 3 BR home in
.-~- --~ - ------~ \
th ·"' countiy . Ideal for· retired
TRI-STATE
PROTECT your mobile home
co'UP te : Ad_ults only. Ph. 245 MOBilE HOMES
with TIE DOWN A NCHOR S. .
'
5210 after ·B p.m .
1220 Eastern Ave.
Call Ron Skidmore, 446 1756
271-6
8X45 M system
after 3 p . m
' .
'
- - - -- - - ----....---2 BR 8x2B 1 BR
221 -tf
• LoW. Cost AuTo Insurance---compare our ra1es .
H ICE turn .. apartment, .4 rms·. , 10x50 Branstratter 2 BR
Low Cost Homeowner Poli'Cy.
and batt~ . ~entrally loc:ated: · 10x50 ~arie tta 2 BR
THOMA S Fa in Exterminating
ca~1 446-0444 after ~p . m.~ ...
• 10x50 1 Wolverin e 2 BR
•Low
Cost Homeowners Polley for Renters .
Co . Term ife arld Pest Con1rot.
270-tf 10)( 50•· Martette 2 BR
e .l:armowners Policy-Complete Protect ion. in One POlicy . .
Wheel
er
sburg
,
Ohio
- - - - - -- - -- - . __ _.__:_ ·r
IO~e. 5 0 Belmont 2 BR
lA Modern Mobile Homeowner Poli cy.
233 -t l
6 ROOM home· in country, 9 10x 50 KaywOod 2 BR
t LoW Cost Fire Policy .
-- ~- ----~----miiH from town . 367-7441.
446·7572
271 -_3 --~ - ~--------A Spec ial Mu'lti -Peril Pac~ag e Policy for Your Business .
RE F RIGERATION .
washer
dry er se rv, ce. 20 yea r s ex
1J~Ihy· not compare our rates wtth YI!.Ur present . RbO MS,-,:_;eekly
p er1ence . R easo n able . 379 ,
2318
rat ... Park Ce!lfral HoteL .
1974 PINTO Station Wagon ,
can save
:
·policy? We
'262 26
l
'
· 306-tf
E ~ c. cond . C·all 446 -9553 affer

.

NEAR
HO S PI TA L
K IT,
B EAUTIFUL
FAMILY ROOM , 2 CAR
GARAGE , CE NTRAL A1R,
OWNER
WILL
HE LP
FI N A N C E 535,900.

-----

ROOFI N G &amp; Spo utmg Sh 1ngle
an d Bu i ld up ro of. Hot and
Cold p rocess, Home 1m
~:J r ovement in ge neral
F or
free est 1m at es, phone Robert
Meade, 388 8114, Bidwe ll
Oh 10
'
'
264 tf

..

Split Level

---- - - ~ --

- - -~- -

. ...

it l ,':i OO

VERY PRETTY , LARGE 3

.

1974
MERCURY
COUGAR

FARM - WHEATON R D
80 A stock farm , 6 rm.
with fur heat and bot Mr~•:
plenty water. 2
homes
furnished
tractor and other
You can buy the bun·••c c.c-::.
$.4],500.

3 BEDRObM
. OLD, HOUSE
2 YR.
Ac r es, c l ea n level land,
tus n1ce bath ,
"
hen , carpeting,
I
•
0
o
good
water. Like
Close
Tycoon
1n fron t
a real nice new
cQuntry home on clean
level land Only 515,500.00
3'- BEbROOM HOUSE
FOR RENT
6 Rooms . In Gallipolis.
Must have referen ces
45ACRES
VACANT LAND
Tobacco base, new 36'x18'
barn, drilled welt , approx .
20 acres ti llable , 15 acres
good pas ture . Asking only
i l6,000 00 for all of it .
NEW HOME
BEING BUILT
Yes. see this shell of a
house
that
ca n
be
arranged , and f inished to
your needs and desires. At
a pn ce you can afford . Call
for an appointmen\.
1 HOUSE ,
t MOBILE HOME

QUALI F I ED BUYER CAN
PUR CHA SE THI S LOVELY
3 BEDROOM RA NCH WITH
NI C E KITCHEN (DIS H
WASHER
&amp;
RA N GE),
GARAGE , J4 A COU NTRY
LOT
F UL L
PR ICE
IS

Attractive and
Sensible

Sr.

Real Estate Broker
51 Z Second Avenue
Galhpolts, Ohio

Owner Will
Help Finance

SANOY &amp; BEAVER
INSURANCE
SA NDY A ND BEAVER In
surance Co
ha s Off('red
serv1ces for F 1r e I ns urance
co verage 1n Gallia County tor
almost a Century
Fa rms.
hom es and personal pr-operty
coverages are available to
mee t
mdi v idua l
n ee d s
Con tact yo ur netghbor and
agent Emmett Church
269 -6

M&amp;M - -

TEAFO RD

THI S
H A ND SOM E
3
BEDROOM FA NCY KIT CHE N ( DI SHW AS HER &amp;
RANGE),
F IREP LAC E ,
CE NTRA L
A IR ,
SHAG
CAR PETING
THROUG HOUT THI S I S AN
EXT R A NIC E HOME IN
EXC ELLE NT CONDIT ION
O N A HUGE COUNTRY
LOT $2 6,500

$2,500 Down

FOR Do1er , bac kh oe, tr enc h erwork, sand, gr-ave l haul,ng
roof1ng, concr- e te, elecf r ,cal :
p lumb ing, car p enter work ,
old a nd n ew Phon e 614 379
2637
272 8

Virg1l B.

4 Dr.
·&amp;White

1974 DODGE
SWINGER

$449.5 $3595

GALLI POLIS, OH 10

*WHILE
*SPECIAL* *
QUANTITIES LAST

1973
MONTEGO

ST -RT. 160 Near ne ~~
spacio us , all Elec Secti on•~..
home, located on 66 A , lot " ..
New metal storage bld' Q ~"''
Pnced 1n 20s.
,"',~

"'

EASTERN AVE.

BIGGEST
SELECTION EVERI
.

CLARK EVAN·$ RD. -....~
BABY FARM 2 to l~ "
acres . 5 rm . 2. story house.'''
with bath . Als~ has a barn :
Pr1ce $12,600 )v.j th 2 A o-._._.
good garden 1'\n d .
."'.:~

ST. R T. 35 - Brick, 2 yr o l d, '&lt;&gt;~
5 rms , Jl;lbaths,allelec., all ~
carpet, H W . trim , copper 'ur;
p lumbi ng , 2 car gar . w ith ,:
etec door and IOCI!Ited on a .....
lo t lOO'x 180'. Asking $.40,000 ....
MOBILE' HOME 'KERR
BETHEL RD '7 1 Auburn '
12' x 60', full furnished, w ith
air . New block gar. 24' x 26'
and 1. 1 A . tot S12,900

WOOD MOTOR SALES

MORE?check our priees

i";

.

Owner Must Sell .

EXCELLEN T
COUNTRY
H OME WI T H 6 A OF FLAT
L AN 0
10 R 00M5,
J l ·~
B A TH S,
JU ST
COM
PL E TELY
REDECORATED
YOU
WON ' T F INO A BETTER
B U Y IN GALL I A COUNTY
U N DER $20.000 00

CARPET INSTALLATION
F R EE es t imat es, pr of ess,onal
a nd
ec onomy
W ork
gua r an teed
Jute or r ub
be rb ack Ph ·146 :J224
272 3

-----------DOZER work, c tear1ng , €x

STANDARD
Plumbtng - Heating
214 Th1rd Ave ., 446 -3782
18 7-If

1

WE HAVE space in a Second
'd' rAve .
busine- ss
build;n g
ERIENCED
b ar I en_
EXP
,.,
S'u itabte fo r offiC:e, bar
and waitress. Apply KJno'h
bershop , beauty sho p or small
Arm Kn ight Night Club . Rt. 7
Cheshire .
. ; .1
bu_SJI'f'SS . Ph .4.46-1694 .
268 .tf
..
~11{.3 '
,.,

RUSSELL 'S
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
297 tf

60x12 MOBILE home, uti li ties
MACt- or- Female , 18 year
furnished
Roush
Lane,
m 1nimum age
Apply i n
Chesh,re . 367 -7272.
person , P 1zza Hut , 1300
268 If
Eastern Ave. No phone ciills . • --~-~--~------~

---=--~~--------

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

W• rent mobile home lots,
not tust a place to park your
home. We have more to offer
than any mobile commllnity
in Southeastern Ohio.
MOBILE Home, turn , l ocated
on Rt. 35. A l so a la r- ge lot on
Jackson Pike . P h 446-3805
266 -lf

Gallia Co
Best Buy

Us 35 - 10 A , approx 1,850
lr rd frontage . all ulil1t1 eS
availab l e
Buy an d sub
d 1vide

~----

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourth &amp; Ptn e
Phone 446· 3888 or- 446-4477
165 -tf

Rodney, Ohio
Ph. 245-9374-245.5021

________ ____

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

174 tf

Quail Creek
Mobile Community
r&amp; Sales

Clrr.:le i. Kennels
BOARDIN-G , A .K C . Puppies, 2
miles from city, 446-4824.
_}:....._
21.5-tf
.

21t.tf

lJ 7 I f

Pl11mbing &amp; Healing

268-3

Bobbi 's Poodle B6utlque
PROFESSIONAL grooming by
appointment only. Ph. Bobbre
Casto , 446-1944

T GMC P 1ckup
2 T Dodge Tab and Chassrs
1 ] T GMC P1ckup
1, T
GMC P1ckup
1, T 'GMC P tc kup
1' T Chevy P1 c kup
GMC Subur b an
1 ' T
Ford P ick up
SOMMERSGMC
TRUCKS, INC
133 P u'te St
44 6·2 Sl2
17

weekly

Contac1 Newt Jones
Rodney -Cora Rd.

MEIGS COUNTY - 190 A
rolli~g
pasture
f arm
N 1ce ly re m ode l ed h eme
W1th 5 rms, ba t h an d
basemen t , 2 ponds , tr ee q as
and
6 pet
f1nan Cing
avail ab l e

------

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

8 PUPPIES. '2 females, 6 males :
Part German , Shepherd and
Elk hound. $8. 6 weeks old ,

Ph. 256·6003

--

New GMC
Truck H eadquarter s
1968 1 , T GMC Prck un
19 66 1~ T GM C
1970 1 , T Cn ev PJCkup
197-1 ' ? T Ch ev P 1ck.u p
1968 ~ , r GMc P1ckup
]965
T GMC P1ckup
1969 1 ~ T GMC P1ckup
19 71 1 : T Ford Ptckup

.1..: ·. For Information

' cuSToM-sewing~alt;ntio;~Oo ,

27 1 7

- - - - ------------ -

Addison, Ohio

CARPENTER work, finish or
rough, also interior pa inting
Call after 4 p m. 367 -1560 . .. .
',., ~ 267l i6

Need m or e room? ~h 1s o~e should do it for you - 4
bedrooms,. l.a rge b u 1lt-1n kitchen , dming r oom, large
bea,m ed cetltng fam1Jy room with-fireplace, 2'12 baths, full
ba sement with rec . room and fireplace 2 car garage and
l'/2 acre lot Ow ner must sell immediately and has
red uced pnce from $42,900 down to $39,900 . It's going to
sel l and you'll be pleased you l ook ed at 1t.

Black, black Landau top, air,
stee l belted tires. Sharp.

HVPAY

2:

NEIGHBORHOOD RD. -ho uses on nearly l A l ot. No 1
I , has B rms , bath, en cl osed "
porch &amp; plenty storage room '
Ptenty ,good , free water No t
2, has j rm s. , propert y has
cellars. topped wtth stor-ag e ,
bld 'gs .. gar .• with s tora ge ·~
overhead , workshop &amp; 1:"
poultry houses
Land • !i
e)Cce llent for garden in g Th1s ,
pr-operty is being sold to
se ttle an e\late &amp; priced for a •
quick
sale
at
526. 00 0
\ Potential plus ) J
· ·.o;;

ANX I OUS
OWNER
+
EMPTY
HOM E
OPPORTUN IT Y I 3 BR near
n ew ranche r , w w carp et.
gar-age, outstand ing view &amp;
r ea11st,cally price-d $26,000
ATTENTION
HOME OWNER
We need lt shng s ~ call today
- IT WILL PAY.

Special Buy For Someone

Services Offered

3 ALL purpose box traps, 2
Shotguns ~ma lt meat mil l
Ph 4·16 4 127
27 1 3

Pay Only One
Utility

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

BABYSITTING in
Ph one 446 .7667 .

For Sale

llh BATHS

2)0 . 12

REMODELED2 STORY Th1 S l ovely hom e is loc ated
111 Ad d •son T wp
&amp; offers
lo t s of good l oving for only
S:l3,900 Some featu res are
new t'tiUm1num
Sl dtn g,
s t orm w rndows. n at ur al
gas heat , n ew fact ory
kdche-n w1t h ca b1 nets,
range.
di Shw as h er
&amp;
re tng erator. format d m1n g
rm &amp; almost 2 acres cl ose
to tow n

RANNY BbACKBURN, BRANCH MANAGER

Ph . 446 0235.

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

RANCHES
Pr1ces
r-ang e from $17, 000 to t35. 000

WORLD'S LARGEST
THE LEADER SINCE noo
IN
SERVING
THE
NATION ' S BUYERS AND
SELLERS
Ph . 446-0008

NO DOWN PAYMENT 1f
you quali f y L1ke new 3 BR
ran ch ha s brrck fro nt , W·W
carp e t . garage an d located
,n ctty school di sl

Townhouse
Apartments
2 Bedroom
Townhouses

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

NEW HOMES -

PERRY TWP - 147 A, 51
A fi.Jt land (now 111 corn ),
some- commercial l im ber,
l ar ge lob
base, 6 rm
home , large b arn , BT r d,
1135,000

- ------ ------

25 Locust Sf
Howard Brannon, Broker
Off . 446-2674
Lucille Brannon
Eve . 446 -1226 or 446 -2674
BUY
NOW 1 G 1v e yo ur
farn ll y the gift thut k eep s on
g rvtng
E S P
Extra
spec ial
proper t y A J A lot m a
cho1ce l ocation $9,000
WILL HELP FINANCE - 'l
beaut1ful h omes, all el ec lr1 c.
J 8 R, r, t ba th , w .w ca rp et
"" A tots. qv1 ck possess i on

&amp; SPLIT, L EVE LS -

LOV.' DOWN PAYMENT New se.:t1onal hOm E' 1S all
el ectric tcr your con
ven 1E' nc c ana com fo r t
Features 3 BR's, bath,
shag carpet , k 1tchen W1t h
r an ge, hood , refrigera tor
and
l o t s of
cab1 n ets
Sduu ted on a larqe fl at lot
on a 8 T r-d
-

MOBILE HOME close to GS I

Business Opportunities

Tel. 614-446-1998

$2 9 .500 .

LAND
CO NTRACT
Spac 1ous ol de r hom e has 4
BR's, b ath , laundry . forced
a1r furna ce . co
wate r ,
sepa rat e double garage
and 200 It f ron t on state rd
'!ill .000

OPENING SOON
For rental information
Ph , 446-1599 or write
P.O.
Box
301,
Gallipolis, Ohio

AGENCY

1974.MONTE CARLO

Realty, 32 State St '

REALTY

MONE Y MAK· ER
7
cornmcr-c1al ren tat s an d 2
Th is
l arge .rtpartments
bull d 1n g IS l ocated on a
corn cr lot 1n downtown
Pomeroy In come frgur es
ava 1lilble 10 rn t eres t ed
p£&gt;rson s

OWNER
WILL
MELP
FINANCE - Moder n home
otters
6
rms,
balh .
basement and over 1 ac r e
of ro111ng l and Jus.t l 1sled
$15.500

SPRING VALLEY
GREEN
APARTMENTS

'

'·

WISEMAN

E NJOY
CO UNTRY
liV IN G 1n lh1 S m oder n ]
BR home W1 l h HW fl oor s,
mo d ern ktt c h en , 7 cur
q,1raqc . ,ln d brr c k fr ont
T111S horne c an be t:louqht
w1th l acre or- 47 S('(' lh1 5
on£'

IN EXPENSIVE
COUN ·
TRY LIVIN G - Sr111s and
bath ce ll ar . s.ma ll b.Jrn .
shot &lt;~ n d 'J acres near
Vmton $10 500

apartm ent

or 47 1 1472

266 ] . - - -- -·- - - - - - - -

f

"'

Adult s, refer ences 631 Fourt h
Ave
/66 t1

basement , l arge enclosed
porch , 1 ac re, orchard , in N
E . Columbus Will trade for
farm Owner W+ll fmanc~ :- 388
8483

No

757 tf

2
story 4 tHC ltv . rntl .,
fireplace . di n1ng room , kU ·

mE ~

STROUT REALTY

.' "' l I I

4 dr. hardtop, 350 cu . in. v.a engi ne, P.
steering. P. brkes. radio, auto. tran s., fac . air
con&lt;i .. w -s-w tir es, green finish with matching
inteeoor, viny l top. Extra clean .

PARSON'S
HARDWARE
Vinton, Ohio .
Special Thts. Month - 10 sp.;
Huffy Btcycl e, 599.95; 8
Track Player w i th speaker ,
S49 . 9S,· Rockw et' 14" Or i rr ,
59 . 95 ,· 1 pc . Tetlon •2 CoMing
Coololware Set, 1Sil . 9S.
Many
other
'specials .
Lttvaway l,or Christmu . ·
,
Hrs .: 8-5, Mon.- W ed .
B-12 Thur sday , 8·5 Fn . &amp; Sat .
CIO$ed Sunday

.,

J

40 NICE, CLEAN USED

CA~S

TO CHOOSE FROM

GALLIPOLIS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
1639 EASTERN AVENUE,

GALUPO~IS,

446-3273 -

For Sale

For Sale

ALL
TYPE S -of
buil d ing
F'ublic s~aflfl\o .
mater i al s, block , bri ck. sewer OFFICE
Desks - 4 dr files , Sec and
pipes , wi ndow s, linte ls. vtc.
E xec
fo l dlng and stac:k
Ct aude Winters. Rio G rande.cha.rs Storage cabinets In
. 0 . PhoOe 24 5~11 1 after 5.
stock Simm ons Ptg. &amp; Office
123- "
Equip . Phone 4"6-1397 .
- - -----~-- 230-tt
LlMEsTONt: t or arlveways
"co ACHMA!'J Travel !rai l er s,
Carl Winters. Phone 245-5 115
Motor Hom es, 5th Wheel ,
245 tl NO hunt ing Signs of all kinds.
c ars ,
trucks ~ -Magnetic,
Truc k Campers , A ppl e City
-~--------plasti c, metal
Name ana
Auto Seles, Rt 35 N Jackson,
STA R CRAFT
mai l box plates . Si mmons .
Ohio . P,hone 286·5700
GIGANTIC SALE
Ptg . •and Office Equip .
118 -tf ON f olddOwns, 'all models, tre'
230·tf
t'reat.e r p l us highest d1scou nt
FOR your Tire and Ba tt ery
in Tr l St ate . Camp Conley
n eeds, come to sears Tire
Slarcraft Sales, Rt . 62 N . of
Shop i n The Sit v'er Bndgc1
Point Pl easa nt Behtnd Red FIR EWOOD , any amount : Ph
446 .499P
Pl,aza
Car-pet Inn .
236-ft
226-lf
238 tf
SELEC T commo n red br ick s,
any amount , field ti le, cement ,
b l ock , cement, mortar . Gal
llcol!2 S tock Co , 122 1h Pine.
St _, A-46 .278 3
140-ff

--------------

'--~---- -

--

--- -----

For

Saki

1971 CHEVELLE VB; auto , p .s.,
mag wheels, good condition .
Call after &lt;4 :30 p .m . 446-4659 .
'
'
269 -3
-------~---- · --

3 AKC Chinese Pugs , 29 Neil
Ave . SlOO each . ,
269-J

e LE G ANT-:---;-c-;-;;;;-;; e ct

tablecloth, · approximatel y 80
Inches diameter . 367 -7474
269 3
COPPERTONE refr igerator
and stove, tlvlng room suite,
all In good shape . Can be seen
Saturday, 2-6. Sox B1 St . Rt
588
26P 3
·

·'

�32- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Nov.l7,1974

the ., Collins report

26 cases heard
·
.'
.in county court
•

IR,ONTON

POMEROY Fourteen restrk.tions: Jo"rank M. Brooks,
defend:jllts were fined and 12 Rt . I, Middleport, $10 and
others forfeited bonds in Meigs·· costs. £ailure to register and
County Court Friday.
James Priddy, Rl. 1, MidFined by Judge Frank W. dleport. $10 and costs, left of
Porter were Charles D. renter .
Ohlinger, Letart, W. VIi..,
Forfeiting bonds we re John
Victor L. Roush, Shade, Rt . 1, P. Baker, Jr., Verona , Pa .,
and Leo C. Hill, Racine, Rt. 1, Lawrence Darst, Rt. 3,
$10 and costs each, speeding;
Pomeroy. John W. Dyer. ByesRonald Taylor, Middleport, $10 ville, Teddy A. Runyon,
and costs, stop sign violation : Radcliff and William J .
Robert L. Cole, Reedsville, Rt. Wylam , Muncie. Ind .. $27.50
1, $150 and costs, three davs each, speeding; Clarence M.
confinement,
two
yeai-s Parsons,
Philo,
$32 .50
probation, driving while in- speeding ; Kenneth J . Russell,
toxicated ; Larry W. Lavander, Coolville, $27.50, pass ing at
Syracuse , $5 and costs, intersec tion ;
Steve
A.
speeding; Terry Napper , Millhone, Tuppers Plains,
Langsville, Rt. 1, $5 and costs, $27.50, failure to t ran sfer
insecure load ; Hal Borden, Jr., reg istration; Charles R.
Bidwell, Rt. 1, $20 and casts, Conkle, Bidwell, $25, failure lo
left of center ; Lawrt nce display registrat ion ; Edward
Yeauger, Cheshire, Rt. 2, $7 E. Sigler, Rutland , $59.55,
and costs, speeding; John T. casting artificial light from
Williams, Syracuse, $8 and vehicle after 10 p.m.; William
costs, speeding;· Charles E . J . Smith, Rutland, $32.50,
Martin, Little Hocking, and speeding and Charles S.
Ronnie M. Pickens, Syracuse, Keeton, Vinton. $27.50, turning
$5 and costs each, violations of on roadwa&gt;'·

The Ohio
Legis:lature returned to
Columbus last week for what
was probably the final full day
of activ ity by the llOth General
Assembly . The main reason for
I he November 12 session was to
deal with a bill &lt;HB 870) that
would create an Ohio Housing
Financing Agency. Several
ot her bills were . also passed.
HB 870 empowers the Ohio
Housing Development Board,
established under the previous
Rhodes Administration in' l970,
to issue up to $100 million in
bonds per year to finance
housing for low and moderate-

bill, which had alceady b~n
approved by the House
receive'&lt;! Senate approval by ~
29-2 margin .
·
Other bills passed by the
legislature iiiclude:
HB 482 - allows independent
contract .haulers to have a
union negoliate with emplQyers;
HB 1242 - allows embalmers
to remove the eyes or deceased
persons who had willed their
eyes to medical science: and
HB 1312 - gives sheriffs and
deputies pension benefits now
available to police and
firemen.

income families. Because Lhe
le g i ~ lation

eontains

·i.m

eme rgency clause, it will
become effective immediately
upon signing by Governor
Gilligan .
Govcrnur - elect James
Rhndes ur~ed legislators to
give favorabl~ consideration to
the bill . In a letter to
Republican Senators, Rhodes
noted that he supported
passage of the bill because of
the "current dire need for jobs
but also to establish a method
of providing needed housing for

those on fixed and low incomes

particularly the elderly." Th~

see us now

operating levies for schlOls
were approved. That record is
the second wprst in \( lhio
history, the OEA says. Or1t the
other hand, only one i lax
renewal levy was defeate ~ d in
1
the entire state.

..

FAR FROM OUT
MONTREAL ( UPI I - ~I enri
Richard ssys his broken ~t nkle
may have him down, but he's
far from out and plan-!' to
resume his 20th season witit. the
Montreal Canadiens beforr• his
39th birthday in Februaf)l.
Richard learned Thur aday
that the cast on his left u nkle
will not be removed for !I bout
six weeks. He broke it ea','IIY In
the first period in Montre•~ · 's 116 loss to the Buffalo Su bres
Wednesday night.

•

•

I
November 18 th

,,

ae

.,'

and Health OCcupations.
In her new capacity at
Buckeye
Hills ,
Mrs.
Wetherholt will be responsible
for the curriculum development in the areas Of ,Home
Economics and Diversified
Health Occupations (DHO) .
Prior to joining the Buckeye
H!Us staff, Mrs. Wetherholt
was
Dim
instructorcoordinator
at
Gallia
Academy High Sehool.
Mrs. Wetherholt has taught
Home Economics in the
Gallipolis City Schools, served
as dietitian at Marietta
Memorial Hospital, Charleston
General Hospital, Charleston
Memorial High School, Indiana
Stat~ University,
Holzer
Medical Center, and also
taught in the Vigo County,

.r-

NO. 15J

.. '

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Chapman

To see for all your
family insurance needs.

CARROL It "-EN
.MftlnU

Park Control.....,.. Bldg.
Second Avo., Gollipolls
Phone441_.2t0
Home 441-tSII

,..,..-,-,.-,,-.' STATE FARM
;A_
IMurat~ee Compt~nMII

L~':':'":'·:·:c:~.,

Indiana, vocational program
for 8dul ts.

t

"!

Bloomjt\8lgn, llllngl!

Post graduate courses hB.ve
been taken by Mrs. Wetherholt
at Morris Harvey College,
West Virginia State Institute,
University of Cincinnati ,
Marshall University, and Kent
State University.
Mrs. Wetherholt is married
to Douglas J. Wetherholt,
president of Ohio River Realty,
Inc.

_ _P_7_304
_ _ _!

International Hockey
League Standings
By United Press International

North

w. I. I. pis gf ga

Flint
10 2 2 22 60 31
Muskegon 10 4 1 21 71 54
Saginaw 9 4 1 19 54 44
Port Huron ,. 9 1 13 60 57

Lansing

J 7 1
Kalamazoo 0 10 0

5 39 67
0 21 47

WASHINGTON - THE WINNERS AND THE LOSERS
return today for a "lame duck'' session expected to complete
only a bare minimum of its unfinished business. By the calendar,
the 93rd Congress has seven weeks until it formally expires at
noon Jan.3, butirome ofthetimewill be taken up in holidays.
Many Democrats are Inclined to put off some controversial
iasues until their ranks are bolstered by newly elected
Democrats In the next Congress.• The House now has 248
Democrats to 187 Republicans; the Senate, 58 Democrats and 42
Republicans. liB a result of the November elections, the
Democrats In January will be 291-144 in the Hoose and 61-391n the
Senate.
.
. .
,
. N~ly a fifth of the members of.~ngr~ ret~mng l&lt;&gt;,day - ,
92 House members and II senators deCided to retlte at
the end of this session or the voters decided to rellre them. That
lsnotarecordturnoverbutoneofthebtggestlnrecentyears.

•!thei'

KROEHLER - Livin'g Room Suites - Sofas - Love Seats - Occasional Chairs Lounge Chairs - Recliners · Sleep or Lounges.

1

SAN CLEMENTE, CALIF. -RICHARD NIXON is ready to
be eumlned by three court-appointed pbysicians to determine
whether he tsphyslcally able to testify in the Watergate cover-up
trlal, a spokesman says. A Nixon spbkesman said this weekend
the former president has no objection to undergoing an
examlnatlon by a team of doctors appointed by U. S. District
Court Judge John J. Sirlca.
'"lbere's never ~n any qu~stion about that," the spokesman llaid. "Of course, they fthe doc\ors) are welcome to
eumlne him." Nlxon's~ttorney, Herbert J . MiUer, told Sirica
Friday be would fly fO Nixon's oceanside viUa during the
weekend to conferwlth his client about the exam, and would try
to have a response by Tuesday.
'
The spokesman said MWer talked with Nixon by telephone.
Watergate defendants In Washington contend Nixon's testimony
Is lndlspenssble to their cases.

BERKLINE and ·PONTIAC - Recliners - Swivel Rockers - Wall-A-Ways
·Rock-0-Loungers.
BASSETT, RIVERSIDE, .BROYHILl, WEBB, MANOR HOUSE-- HEYWOOD
WAKEFIELD BEDROOM SUITES
LANE CEDAR CHESTS and REOORD CABINETS
BASSETT • RIVERSIDE • DMT DESKS
GUN CABINETS 6 and 12 ~un - Maple, Pine, Oak.
CURIO CABINETS • BOOK SHELVES
TABLE LAMPS · A.OOR LAMPS • GRANDFAlHER CLOCKS PICTURES • HASSOCKS

•

SMOKERS • WAll PLAQUES · OCCASIONAL TABLES

•'
•
•
•

SERTA and SIMMONS -Mattresses and Hide-a-Beds

South

Dayton
Columbus
Des Moines
Toledo
Ft. Wayne

Wed., Dep. 25

w. I. I. pis gf go

9 3 0 tB 57 38
7 5 0 14 SS 46

6 9 o 12 42 52
5 10 0 10 47 54
3 7 2 8 38 52

t:=riday's Results

Flint 4 Des M~lnes 0
Ft. Wayne 2 Kalamazoo ·1
Muskegon 7 Columbus 6, of
· Saginaw 7 Lansing 3
Pt. HuronS Toledo 0

·PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS
404 Second Ave.

DINING ROOM FURNITURE by Temple Stuart Province Town, Virginia Highlands, •
Authentic, Webb.
.,

Gallipolis, Ohio
When you care enough
to send the very best.

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL

BASKETBALL RESULTS
By United Press International
Col. Central 83 Col . Hartley 58
Col. North 77 Col. DeSales 61

·~·

Lane. Reemelln 75 COl. Deaf 38

All of These Items

- ".

··COMING SOON •••

Shop Monday through Thursday,

TOM'S STEREO CENTER

· 9:30 to· 5 P-111·-:-Friday and

3rd Floor Furniture Department

IN GALLIPOLIS

"K

complete line

nlent"

of

Hi-Fi &amp; Stereo Equip-

'

WATCH FOR
,

•

'

•

•

'

E.L·BERFELDS IN POMEROY·

I

GRAND
OPENING ' SOONI
.
'

Saturday 9:30 to 8 p.m.

.

.

it,

~

.,

·.

'

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'

'.

-J.

....

•.

j

./

-

au

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I

Jennifer Chapman, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs . Paul Chapman .
of Pomeroy , is the seventh and
final entry in the 1975 Southeast
Ohio Junior Miss Pageant to be
held Saturday night.
Miss Chapman is a senior at
Meigs High School where she Is
a majorette. She was a
. .hom"!!~!"ing .qll.\)~~ .~t!!J~d'!"! .
and has been m 4-H club work
for five years. She was vice
president of her freshman and
sophomore classes, a member
of the flute trio which won
excellent ratings during those
two years. She is a member of
the symphonic and concert
bands and belongs to the Pep
Club. The Sweetheart Queen·
during her junior year, she
plans to study anthropology at

wlie
• £-!a.IJ.ed
~

0 fl

1

•

promiSe

NORWOOD, N.J. (UP!) When !50 citizens gathered in a
baD field this weekend to drop
their cigarettes into a basket
and set them on fire, Mayor
Raymond McKenna and his
wife, Hazel, were among those
who vowed to quit.
The mayor has made It so
far, but Mrs. McKenna admitted Sunday night she had been
unable to go "cold tW'key," the
slogan of the 'town's antismoking campaign, inspired
by the movie "Cold Turkey."
11
l've had a ·couple," Mrs.
McKenna said. "I'm doing
very weD, though, but not as
wen as my husband." .
During the anti-smoking
ISRAELi GUNBOATS BOMBARDED PALESTINIAN
ceremonies
Saturday at
targets along the Lebanese coast today, but diplomatic ln,tervention by the superpowers ~ tensions on the Golan Kennedy Memorial Park, Mrs.
McKenna, who 'quit smoking
~eights. Israel vowed to keep Its mobilized troops on war alert
pittll Syria agrees to Jet U. N. truce observers keep patrolling the the day before, sucked on a
,buffet zone between the opposing armies on the Golan
Heights. lollipop as residents lined up to
.
drop their cigarettes, cigars
,.
r.rael has attacked Palestinian targets in Lebanon on a daily and pipe \ohacco Into a fourfoot
.basis for the past week'. The weekend .tension along the Golan metal basket.
The mayor passed over five
Jront foDowed reports of a partial Israeli moblllzation ~nd a
cigars
to his wife, who dropped
·Syrian mlliisry alert. Syrian Foreign Minister Abdel Halim
.Khaddam promised Saturday to abide by the cesse-fire, but them Into the basket.
P a t r i c 1 a Harrison, a
·.threatened to retaliate "flnnly and strongly" against any Israeli
housewife who organlzed the
attack.
rally, dropped two packs of
cigarettes Into tbe basket and
ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE - SECRETARY OF State
Henry A. Kissinger believes chances are better than even that a set the pile on fire.
Cheers arose from the
c.!~ treaty lbniUng offensive and defensive missiles will be
crowd.
:.lilpecl by the United States and Soviet Union next year.
· But by Sunday, the mayor
Kluinger said President Ford's meeting with Soviet leader
Leonid 1. Brezhnev In Vladivostok next weekend could mBke said he was feeling the effects
111011- ''maybe on numbers, maybe on the approach" of a new oi "the withdrawal." He said
he wl'" "still trying -11'.8
atnteglc 111'111!1 agreement.
"I think there Is a slightly better than even chance of an pretty bad, and I'm chewing a
8ifW11ril\ln 1975," Kissinger \old reporters aboard Air Force lot of gum,"
McKenna said hls wife had
One on the firS\ leg of Ford's trip to Japan, South Korea and the
one
cigarette after breakfast,
Soviet lllllllnil meeting. The new strategic arms lbnltation
one
In the aftermon and one
lnii\Y; So\LT 11, would be more compr~henslve than the SALT I
Sunday night. "I told her once
111ter1m agreement signed In Moscow m 1972.
·
\you start, it's like overeating," he said.
Mrs. Harrison, who along
NOW YOU KNOW
Jupiter. has more than two- with her husba11d, Harry,
thirds of
the planetary previously consum.ed some 60
material in the solar system . cigarettes a day, said she woke
( Con\inued on page 8)
WASHINGTON- PI;{EVIOUSLY SECRET documents show
the Internal Revenue Service compiled dossiers on 11,000
potential Nixon White House enemies.lt was not known whether
the gpvernment hss destroyed the documents.
The Public Citizens'-Tax Research Reform Group disclosed
Sunday It had obtained 41 IRS files on the subject after a year of
trying, Including the threat of a lawsuit against the federal tax
agency. The Ralph Nader· affiliated group circulated copies of
aome of the documents to support its conclusion that there were
"3,000 groupo snd 8,000 organizations targeted for top-&lt;~ecret
investigations by the IRS ... under a plan instigated in 1969 by the
Nixon White House."
.
It released a partial list of organizations targeted for special
Investigation by the IRS between 1969 and 1973, including the
National Councll of Churches, Americans for Democratic Action,
the John Birch Society, the Congress of Racial E:quality, the
.United Klans of America, Inc., the Founding Church of Scientology and the Urban League .

.

HOWELL DINETrES

architects' fees .

Otilders mourned
DUBLIN (UPJI- Mourners
arOW1d the world paid tribute
today to Erskine Childers, the
Protestant
only elected
president of the predominantly
Romah
Catholic
Irish
Republic.
Childers, 69, died early
Sunday only 18 months after he
assumed the presidency. He
was stricken by a heart attack
a few hours after warning a
group of doctors about the
strains of modern living.
The body of the English born leader was scheduled to
be taken from Mater Hospital
today to lie in state at Dublin
Castle.
Premier Liam Cosgrave

decreed a day of nallonal
mourning on Thursday when
Childers' remains were to be
buried near his boyhood home
in CoW1ty Wicklow.
Chief Justice Thomas
O'Hig g in s, transitional
president until a successor is
elected within 60 days, was to
lead the cortege from the
hospital to the castle.

Weather
Mostly sW1ny today, highs
today in the lower 60s . Cloudy
tonight. Low in the mid 40s.
Tuesday cloudy, continued
mild, chance of showers by
evening. Highs in the mid 50s.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday through
Friday, occasional rain
likely during the period and
temperatures a little above
normal. Daytime highs
averaging 45 to 50 north and
50 to 55 south. Lows at night
In the 30s and lower 40s.

Road job to
start soon

o ff high way
Sherif! Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept. investigated
two accidents Sunday, the first
at 9:15 a. m. in Rutland
Township on County Road
Three, New Lima Road.
Jennie Sue Williamson, 31,
Rt. 1, Rutland, traveling east,
met a weaving truck coming at
a high rate of speed. She
braked, lost control, went off
the highway on the right and
stopped in a field. There was
moderate damage with no
injuries or arrests.
At 7: 18 p. m. in Sutton
Township on SR 124 Keith G.
Bradford, 18, Racine, Rt. 2,
was passing another vehicle
when a deer leaped into the
side of his car and was !tiDed.
There was moderate damage .
No citation was issued.

Warden Ours, commissioners;
Wesley Buehl, engineer, and
Mary Hobstetter, acting clerk .'

Jaycees
ask help
The Meigs CoW1ty Jaycees
today announced plans for
their 1974 Christmas Basket
Project.
Ralph H. Werry, chairman,
said letters are being mailed to
homes and business establishments inviting support for the
project. About 75 baskets will
be ![lied tl)ls yea~, h\lllefully,
Anyone knowing of a family
that needs help during the
Christmas season is asked to
write the Meigs County
Jaycees, P. 0. Box 603,
Pomeroy, by Dec. 1. Each
letter should give the name and
address of the family, number
in the family , and sex of each
child.
Those wishing to donate to
the program may send contribution to the Jaycees.

Cop shoots 5, then dies
PINE RIDGE, S.D. (UP!) A veteran Bureau of Indian
Affairs policeman burst Into a
Pine Ridge Indian Reservation
home with a shotgun Sunday,
wounded five i&gt;ersons and then
was shot to death.
The shootings were believed
triggered by tensions between
several groups or factions on
the reservation.
BIA officer Jess Trueblood
was found at the edge of the
v!Uage of Pine Ridge, a half
mile from the home where the
shootings occurred. He hsd
been shot In the back of the
head. Trueblood died while
being transferred ' from the
Pine Ridge Hospital to a
hO!ipltal at Rapid City.

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Nipponese

•

greet Ford
No speeches upon landing as

TEN CENTS

Marietta College. She is
sponsored by Chapman Shoes
of Pomeroy.
The six other contestants
competing for the 1975 tiUe are
Babs Witte, sponsored by The
City Loan and Savings co. of
Pomeroy; Cindy Lawson,
sponsored by Francis Florists;
_Be~~' ,]2!;;~Q.l ~po.nsqred .bY.
Village Pliarmilcy; Diane • -Trailers to be. u8ed as-offices
Strong, sponsored by the for the construction work on
Wilkesville Branch of the Hiland Church Road have
Vinton County National Bank; moved in , according to the
Cookie Weddle, sponsored by Meigs County commissioners .
Work on the road project Is
The Racine Home National
expected
to begin soon.
Bank, and Judy Owen, sponOnly routine business was
sored by The Meigs Inn.
conducted by the board this
morning. Attending were
Robert Clark, Henry WeUs,

Car forced

STEVEN HARTENBACH, Mel~s County sheriff's
deputy, opens the door to the new jli.ll facility for the first
time Saturday following months of remodeling work.

authorities impose tightest

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1974

h November 23

or Have It Delivered At Your Convenience

and eat their meals .
The new complex, according
to the Meigs CoW1 ty commissioners, cost $115,771, plus

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

-.VOL XXVI

Lay It Away For Christmas

JANET WETHERHOLT

dining area, closed the sliding
door, then pushes the
automatic control which opens
the cell doors permitting
prisoners to leave their cells

en tine

By United Press International

Education in Home Economics

'"

never enters the cell area.
The matron (Mrs. Robert C.
Hartenbach), can serve meals
without fear. After food is
placed on tables she [eaves the

at

•I '

'
. •' '

Science in Home Economics

Home Offices:

conversation. The attorney

•

from Indiana State University.
She is a registered dietitian
with the American Dietetic
Assn. and holds certificates
with Ohio State Depariment of.

. .

Pictures and Report
by Katie Crow
A modern jail facility located
ih the Meigs County Sheriff's
building was opened Saturday
months
of
following
remodeling.
The new facility includes a
dining area with stainless steel
picnic type tables. Five cells
each have two bunks, with
lavatory and bathing facilities,
and a water fountain.
The cell doors are closed
simultaneously by an electric
automatic controL
There are also two booths on
the outside of the cell area , one
for the prisoner and the other
for his attorney. A prisoner is
ushered into the booth without
leaving the cell area. There is a
mirror in the booth and a
screen opening below for

PROBABLY ONE OF THE MOST modern facilities in Ohio Is the new Meigs County Jail,
located In the building of the Meigs County Sheriff's Dept. The new facility cost $115,771 plus
arc_hl_lecture fees. Shown In the dining facility are 1-r, Steve Hartenbach, Meigs County Deputy,
and Jeff Shank. The dining area has stainless steel picnic type tables of which there are two.
t'nsoners cannot enter the area until their ceil doors are opened by Mrs. Robert Hartenbach by
uslhg an electric automatic control switch.

ELBERFELDS IN POM·ERO:Y,

RIO GRANDE - Janet B.
Wetherholl, 24 State St. ,
.Gallipolis, has been named
Intern Supervisor of Home
Economics Education at the
Buckeye Hills Career Center of
the Gallia-Jackson-Vinton
Joint Vocational
School
District.
Mrs . Wetherholl holds a
Bachelor of Science in Home
Economics
from
Ohio
University, and a Master of

Remodeled Meigs
jail in ,business

you heardif right

here

Supervisor named
at career center

In uth~r legislative ·action
reqeived overwhelming ap.
the Senate rejected the ap: . pr~val by the elec\orale on
pomtment by Gov. Gilligan of November 5. 1
one man to two different
Issue 2 passed, which repeals
boards . Anti-Gi'iligan . Dem- a section of the -. Ohlo Con'
crats joined .with Republicans sli tution ' ' requiring
. ,the
in votirig against confirmation
governor · to appoint a
of John W. Kessler to the Ohio superintendent of public works
Building Authority 119-JO) and for a ·one-year term . IssUes 1
the Ohio State Univers ity . and 3 also passed, paving the
Board of Trustees ( 20-9) . Some way for legislation in the lllth
legislators said they opposed General Assembly to extend
Mr. Kessler, a financial sup ~ the state's homestead exempporter or Governor Gilligan,
tion to permanenUy and totally
because they did not like the disabled homeowners in Ohio
idea of the man getting two and expanding the use of public
jobs.
industrial
development
F.leclion Wrap-Up
revenue bonds .
Unofficial results from the
The
Ohio
Education
office of Secretary of State Ted
Association (OEA ) teported
Brown show that all lhree
that retW'ns it compiled from
proposed
co n ~ tituti on a l
around the state show ,that only
amendments on the ballot
28.6 per cent of the additional

Trueblood was found shorUy
after he burst Into the home of
Chesler "Dutch" Stone with a
shotgun and wounded Stone,
Stone's wife, Bernice, their
step-daughter,
Debbie
Richards Mousseau, Mrs.
Mousseau 's 3-year-old son,
John Joseph, and a house
guest, Louis Tyon.
FOURTEEN KILLED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Highway Patrol said
today at least 14 persons, including four who died in two
double-fatality mishaps, were
killed in traffic accidents
around the state over the
weekend.

.:: ""*·""'·' .';.:,;;,==:::;~~.;:::::m;;::m-.Q.W"oo/.&gt;m,

Long-living new particle holds together
100 billionth of a billionth of a second

~

I
i

SfANFORD, Calif. (UPI) -Scientists announced this weekend the discovery of a new
kind of atomic particle with a longer life than any previOUB!y found .
,.
"This Is one of the blgge.et discoveries In high energy physics In years anywhere in the f.~
world," a spokesman for Stanford University ssld.
r-;
The particle was discovered accidentally at almOBlthe same time by scientists working .. ~
at Stanford'sLinear Accelerator Center and the Brookhaven National Laboratory In Upton, ~
N.Y.
.
Burton Richter, head of the Stanford team, ssld the particle Is "different from aU the ~.
other part!~ we know. It llves 100,1100 times longer than any other particle, and therefore ~
must have a new kind ofstructure holding It together."
_ . ~
Scientists at both Stanford and Brookhaven said dooens of theoretical physicists were
dropping their current projects to work on the Implications of the new find.
The particle was expected to fiU In a basic gap In knowledge of the fundamental ~~
Struciure of matter. Its existence may explain numerous phenomena which do not fit ~
presenltheorles.
,Richter and Samuel C. C. Tlng, head of the Brookhaven team, said In a joint statement
that the suddennea of the discovery was what made It so exCiting.
~thgroup11 of scientists said lhenew .particle occurred at an energy level of just above ' ~
three billion electron volts.
They said the particle decays ln\o other heavy particles In one hundred billionth of a
billionth of a second. On a nuclear lime scale, this Is a remarkably long life.
1bls suggests that !be particle has some novel, not yet understood-properUes which
preventltfromdecliylnglnamuchshorterUme:
.
·
"The theorists are working franllcaUy to Ht it Into the framework of our present
jmowledge of the eleinentary particle," the two men said 1n their statement.
· "W~ experimenters hope to keep them busy for some time to come."

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·~~~~~~~~~~~~.~.~~~:~s~·~,~~~~~~
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security since World War II
TOKYO (UPI) - President Ford, protected by
the tightest security seen here since World War II,
arrived in Japan today on the first leg of his historic
Far East tour .
Within 20 minutes after the presidential jetliner
Air Force One touched down at 3:27p.m. (I :~7 a.m.
EST) at Haneda airport, Ford and his party had
been whisked by American helicopter to the official
state guest house in central Tokyo.
A 21-gun salute boomed out across Tokyo Bay to
welcome the first American President to visit
Japan, and hundreds of carefully selected airport
guests waved tiny rising sun flags as the smiling,
waving Ford walked to his helicopter. But because
of the security, there were no welcoming speeches.
Ford and Secretagy of State touched down, pollee closed the
Henry
walked .along airport to all but authorized
a red carpet through an official visitors.
receiving line headed by U.S.
Battleship-grey riot vehicles
Ambassador to Japan James with water cannon and other
D. Hod~son and Japanese police trucks and cars were
Ambassador to the U.S. positioned along a 10-mlle
Takeshi Yasukawa.
expressway leading to Haneda.
The Japanese Government
Ford, In a dark blue business
suit and blue shirt, stayed at at midday Issued a statement
the Gelhinkan, the recently welcoming Ford and eaUed the
renovated $33 million guest trip "an epoch-making event In
bouse.
more than a century of friendly
He appeared somewhat tired relaUons between the United
after the .long fllght across the States and Japan."
Pacific from Alaska.
"The President's visit is part
The airport was sealed off \o of a deepening dlslogue beair traffic from 30 minutes tween the two nations and Is an
before the President's arrival event we should welcome," the
until 30 minutes after he had statement said.
left for the guest house.
"Together with the (JapaneAt least 25,000 pollee were· se) people we heartily welcome
mobilized In Tokyo, lnctuamg the visit of President Ford as it
8,500 at the airport, to protect Is a major miles\one In further
Ford and his party.
strengthening relations beThe massive security was tween Japan and the United
ordered because of the fear of States: ·
anti-American and anti"I would rather travel
government demonstrations by thousands of miles for peace
leftists and extremists.
than luke a single step toward
Rioting here in 1960 caused war," Ford told 290 weDthe cancellation of a visit to wishers who gathered on the
Japan by 'the late President White House lawn 1n a rold
Dwight D. Eisenhower.
drizzle Sunday morning \o say
Ford, who described his goodby.
They included ambassadors
journey as "a quest for peace"
prior to leaving the continental from the countries he will visit,
United States, wore no over- c a b i n e t m e m b e r s ,
coat as he stepped off his plane congressional leaders and two
under sunny, partially cloudy Boy Scout troops.
Soviet Ambassador Anatoly
skies with temperatures In the
high 80s.
Dobrynln gave him a large,
Neither Emperor Hirohlto brown, Cossack style hat to
nor Prime Minister Kakuei wear In Vladivostok, where
Tanaka was at the airport and temperatures this time of year
Ford ha~ no official functions run from the 20s to below zero.
Ford said his trip was
scheduled for Monday night
after the nearly 20-hour flight " timely" and "in the highest
which began Sunday In national interest of the United
States."
Washlngtoo.
On Tuesday, the President
" We live In a world whose
meets the Emperor, l24th problems are Interrelated," he
Japanese sovereign In a line sald. "No nation can move
founded 2,634 years ago, ·and forward In Isolation .... " He
also will confer with Tanaka, said he was "deeply conscious
who Is fighting a battle for his of the need to continue the
political Ufe because of allega- quest for peace."
lions of corruption. •
Mrs. Ford flew by helicopter
Tanaka ordered his cablnet with him to Andrews Air Force
Monday to ensure ''perfect just outside Washington, where
security" for Ford and his she kissed him goodby and
party. The national pollee were waved as be boarded Air Force
mobilizing a xorce of 160,000 One and took off for a refueling
security men across the coun- stop at Elmendorf Air Force
try for the five-day visit.
Base, Anchorage, Alaska.
Ford's journey wiD take him
There, In the ssme Jiangar
to the central Japanese cities
where Richard M. Nixon met
of Kyoto and Osuka before he
Japanese Emperor Hirohito a
departs Friday for an over- year ago, Ford . repeated his
night visit to Seoul.
"quest for peace" theme to
.Then the President travels to several thousand Air Force
the Soviet Siberian port of personnel and Uieir families; ·
viadivostok. for a summit
" Alaska gives us an inspiring
cOnference with Soviet Com- farewell boost as we proceed
mWllst . party Orlef Leonid on America's quest for peace
Brezhnev.
and improved lnternatinal
Hours before Ford's plane
(Continued on page 8)

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